Shakespeare Plays and Sonnets
The Life of King Henry the Fifth
Players:
    - King Henry the Fifth
 
    - Humphrey of Gloucester
 
    - Duke of Bedford
 
    - Duke of Exeter
 
    - Duke of York
 
    - Earls of Salisbury, Westmoreland, and Warwick
 
    - Archbishop of Canterbury
 
    - Bishop of Ely
 
    - Earl of Cambridge
 
    - Lord Scroop
 
    - Sir Thomas Grey
 
    - Sir Thomas Erpingham, Gower, Fluellen, Macmorris, Jamy
 
    - Bates, Court, Williams
 
    - Pistol, Nym, Bardolph
 
    - Boy
 
    - A Herald
 
    - Charles the Sixth, King of France
 
    - Lewis, the Dauphin
 
    - Dukes of Burgundy, Orleans, and Bourbon
 
    - The Constable of France
 
    - Rambures and Grandpr?
 
    - Montjoy
 
    - Governor of Harfleur
 
    - Ambassadors to England
 
    - Isabel, Queen of France
 
    - Katherine, daughter of Charles and Isabel
 
    - Alice
 
    - Hostess of the tavern, wife of Pistol
 
    - Lords, Ladies, Officers, Soldiers, Citizens
 
    - Chorus
 
ACT I, (PROLOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend
 
- The brightest heaven of invention,
 
- A kingdom for a stage, princes to act
 
- And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!
 
- Then should the warlike Harry, like himself,
 
- Assume the port of Mars; and at his heels,
 
- Leash'd in like hounds, should famine, sword and fire
 
- Crouch for employment. But pardon, and gentles all,
 
- The flat unraised spirits that have dared
 
- On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth
 
- So great an object: can this cockpit hold
 
- The vasty fields of France? or may we cram
 
- Within this wooden O the very casques
 
- That did affright the air at Agincourt?
 
- O, pardon! since a crooked figure may
 
- Attest in little place a million;
 
- And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,
 
- On your imaginary forces work.
 
- Suppose within the girdle of these walls
 
- Are now confined two mighty monarchies,
 
- Whose high upreared and abutting fronts
 
- The perilous narrow ocean parts asunder:
 
- Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts;
 
- Into a thousand parts divide on man,
 
- And make imaginary puissance;
 
- Think when we talk of horses, that you see them
 
- Printing their proud hoofs i' the receiving earth;
 
- For 'tis your thoughts that now must deck our kings,
 
- Carry them here and there; jumping o'er times,
 
- Turning the accomplishment of many years
 
- Into an hour-glass: for the which supply,
 
- Admit me Chorus to this history;
 
- Who prologue-like your humble patience pray,
 
- Gently to hear, kindly to judge, our play.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT I, SCENE I.
London. An ante-chamber in the KING'S palace.
[Enter the ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, and the BISHOP OF ELY]
CANTERBURY:
 
- My lord, I'll tell you; that self bill is urged,
 
- Which in the eleventh year of the last king's reign
 
- Was like, and had indeed against us pass'd,
 
- But that the scambling and unquiet time
 
- Did push it out of farther question.
 
ELY:
 
- But how, my lord, shall we resist it now?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- It must be thought on. If it pass against us,
 
- We lose the better half of our possession:
 
- For all the temporal lands which men devout
 
- By testament have given to the church
 
- Would they strip from us; being valued thus:
 
- As much as would maintain, to the king's honour,
 
- Full fifteen earls and fifteen hundred knights,
 
- Six thousand and two hundred good esquires;
 
- And, to relief of lazars and weak age,
 
- Of indigent faint souls past corporal toil.
 
- A hundred almshouses right well supplied;
 
- And to the coffers of the king beside,
 
- A thousand pounds by the year: thus runs the bill.
 
ELY:
 
- This would drink deep.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- 'Twould drink the cup and all.
 
ELY:
 
- But what prevention?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- The king is full of grace and fair regard.
 
ELY:
 
- And a true lover of the holy church.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- The courses of his youth promised it not.
 
- The breath no sooner left his father's body,
 
- But that his wildness, mortified in him,
 
- Seem'd to die too; yea, at that very moment
 
- Consideration, like an angel, came
 
- And whipp'd the offending Adam out of him,
 
- Leaving his body as a paradise,
 
- To envelop and contain celestial spirits.
 
- Never was such a sudden scholar made;
 
- Never came reformation in a flood,
 
- With such a heady currance, scouring faults
 
- Nor never Hydra-headed wilfulness
 
- So soon did lose his seat and all at once
 
- As in this king.
 
ELY:
 
- We are blessed in the change.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- Hear him but reason in divinity,
 
- And all-admiring with an inward wish
 
- You would desire the king were made a prelate:
 
- Hear him debate of commonwealth affairs,
 
- You would say it hath been all in all his study:
 
- List his discourse of war, and you shall hear
 
- A fearful battle render'd you in music:
 
- Turn him to any cause of policy,
 
- The Gordian knot of it he will unloose,
 
- Familiar as his garter: that, when he speaks,
 
- The air, a charter'd libertine, is still,
 
- And the mute wonder lurketh in men's ears,
 
- To steal his sweet and honey'd sentences;
 
- So that the art and practic part of life
 
- Must be the mistress to this theoric:
 
- Which is a wonder how his grace should glean it,
 
- Since his addiction was to courses vain,
 
- His companies unletter'd, rude and shallow,
 
- His hours fill'd up with riots, banquets, sports,
 
- And never noted in him any study,
 
- Any retirement, any sequestration
 
- From open haunts and popularity.
 
ELY:
 
- The strawberry grows underneath the nettle
 
- And wholesome berries thrive and ripen best
 
- Neighbour'd by fruit of baser quality:
 
- And so the prince obscured his contemplation
 
- Under the veil of wildness; which, no doubt,
 
- Grew like the summer grass, fastest by night,
 
- Unseen, yet crescive in his faculty.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- It must be so; for miracles are ceased;
 
- And therefore we must needs admit the means
 
- How things are perfected.
 
ELY:
 
- But, my good lord,
 
- How now for mitigation of this bill
 
- Urged by the commons? Doth his majesty
 
- Incline to it, or no?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- He seems indifferent,
 
- Or rather swaying more upon our part
 
- Than cherishing the exhibiters against us;
 
- For I have made an offer to his majesty,
 
- Upon our spiritual convocation
 
- And in regard of causes now in hand,
 
- Which I have open'd to his grace at large,
 
- As touching France, to give a greater sum
 
- Than ever at one time the clergy yet
 
- Did to his predecessors part withal.
 
ELY:
 
- How did this offer seem received, my lord?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- With good acceptance of his majesty;
 
- Save that there was not time enough to hear,
 
- As I perceived his grace would fain have done,
 
- The severals and unhidden passages
 
- Of his true titles to some certain dukedoms
 
- And generally to the crown and seat of France
 
- Derived from Edward, his great-grandfather.
 
ELY:
 
- What was the impediment that broke this off?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- The French ambassador upon that instant
 
- Craved audience; and the hour, I think, is come
 
- To give him hearing: is it four o'clock?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- Then go we in, to know his embassy;
 
- Which I could with a ready guess declare,
 
- Before the Frenchman speak a word of it.
 
ELY:
 
- I'll wait upon you, and I long to hear it.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT I, SCENE II.
The same. The Presence chamber.
[Enter KING HENRY V, GLOUCESTER, BEDFORD, EXETER, WARWICK, WESTMORELAND, and Attendants]
KING HENRY V:
 
- Where is my gracious Lord of Canterbury?
 
EXETER:
 
- Not here in presence.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Send for him, good uncle.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- Shall we call in the ambassador, my liege?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- God and his angels guard your sacred throne
 
- And make you long become it!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Sure, we thank you.
 
- My learned lord, we pray you to proceed
 
- And justly and religiously unfold
 
- Why the law Salique that they have in France
 
- Or should, or should not, bar us in our claim:
 
- And God forbid, my dear and faithful lord,
 
- That you should fashion, wrest, or bow your reading,
 
- Or nicely charge your understanding soul
 
- With opening titles miscreate, whose right
 
- Suits not in native colours with the truth;
 
- For God doth know how many now in health
 
- Shall drop their blood in approbation
 
- Of what your reverence shall incite us to.
 
- Therefore take heed how you impawn our person,
 
- How you awake our sleeping sword of war:
 
- We charge you, in the name of God, take heed;
 
- For never two such kingdoms did contend
 
- Without much fall of blood; whose guiltless drops
 
- Are every one a woe, a sore complaint
 
- 'Gainst him whose wrong gives edge unto the swords
 
- That make such waste in brief mortality.
 
- Under this conjuration, speak, my lord;
 
- For we will hear, note and believe in heart
 
- That what you speak is in your conscience wash'd
 
- As pure as sin with baptism.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- Then hear me, gracious sovereign, and you peers,
 
- That owe yourselves, your lives and services
 
- To this imperial throne. There is no bar
 
- To make against your highness' claim to France
 
- But this, which they produce from Pharamond,
 
- 'In terram Salicam mulieres ne succedant:'
 
- 'No woman shall succeed in Salique land:'
 
- Which Salique land the French unjustly gloze
 
- To be the realm of France, and Pharamond
 
- The founder of this law and female bar.
 
- Yet their own authors faithfully affirm
 
- That the land Salique is in Germany,
 
- Between the floods of Sala and of Elbe;
 
- Where Charles the Great, having subdued the Saxons,
 
- There left behind and settled certain French;
 
- Who, holding in disdain the German women
 
- For some dishonest manners of their life,
 
- Establish'd then this law; to wit, no female
 
- Should be inheritrix in Salique land:
 
- Which Salique, as I said, 'twixt Elbe and Sala,
 
- Is at this day in Germany call'd Meisen.
 
- Then doth it well appear that Salique law
 
- Was not devised for the realm of France:
 
- Nor did the French possess the Salique land
 
- Until four hundred one and twenty years
 
- After defunction of King Pharamond,
 
- Idly supposed the founder of this law;
 
- Who died within the year of our redemption
 
- Four hundred twenty-six; and Charles the Great
 
- Subdued the Saxons, and did seat the French
 
- Beyond the river Sala, in the year
 
- Eight hundred five. Besides, their writers say,
 
- King Pepin, which deposed Childeric,
 
- Did, as heir general, being descended
 
- Of Blithild, which was daughter to King Clothair,
 
- Make claim and title to the crown of France.
 
- Hugh Capet also, who usurped the crown
 
- Of Charles the duke of Lorraine, sole heir male
 
- Of the true line and stock of Charles the Great,
 
- To find his title with some shows of truth,
 
- 'Through, in pure truth, it was corrupt and naught,
 
- Convey'd himself as heir to the Lady Lingare,
 
- Daughter to Charlemain, who was the son
 
- To Lewis the emperor, and Lewis the son
 
- Of Charles the Great. Also King Lewis the Tenth,
 
- Who was sole heir to the usurper Capet,
 
- Could not keep quiet in his conscience,
 
- Wearing the crown of France, till satisfied
 
- That fair Queen Isabel, his grandmother,
 
- Was lineal of the Lady Ermengare,
 
- Daughter to Charles the foresaid duke of Lorraine:
 
- By the which marriage the line of Charles the Great
 
- Was re-united to the crown of France.
 
- So that, as clear as is the summer's sun.
 
- King Pepin's title and Hugh Capet's claim,
 
- King Lewis his satisfaction, all appear
 
- To hold in right and title of the female:
 
- So do the kings of France unto this day;
 
- Howbeit they would hold up this Salique law
 
- To bar your highness claiming from the female,
 
- And rather choose to hide them in a net
 
- Than amply to imbar their crooked titles
 
- Usurp'd from you and your progenitors.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- May I with right and conscience make this claim?
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- The sin upon my head, dread sovereign!
 
- For in the book of Numbers is it writ,
 
- When the man dies, let the inheritance
 
- Descend unto the daughter. Gracious lord,
 
- Stand for your own; unwind your bloody flag;
 
- Look back into your mighty ancestors:
 
- Go, my dread lord, to your great-grandsire's tomb,
 
- From whom you claim; invoke his warlike spirit,
 
- And your great-uncle's, Edward the Black Prince,
 
- Who on the French ground play'd a tragedy,
 
- Making defeat on the full power of France,
 
- Whiles his most mighty father on a hill
 
- Stood smiling to behold his lion's whelp
 
- Forage in blood of French nobility.
 
- O noble English. that could entertain
 
- With half their forces the full Pride of France
 
- And let another half stand laughing by,
 
- All out of work and cold for action!
 
ELY:
 
- Awake remembrance of these valiant dead
 
- And with your puissant arm renew their feats:
 
- You are their heir; you sit upon their throne;
 
- The blood and courage that renowned them
 
- Runs in your veins; and my thrice-puissant liege
 
- Is in the very May-morn of his youth,
 
- Ripe for exploits and mighty enterprises.
 
EXETER:
 
- Your brother kings and monarchs of the earth
 
- Do all expect that you should rouse yourself,
 
- As did the former lions of your blood.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- They know your grace hath cause and means and might;
 
- So hath your highness; never king of England
 
- Had nobles richer and more loyal subjects,
 
- Whose hearts have left their bodies here in England
 
- And lie pavilion'd in the fields of France.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- O, let their bodies follow, my dear liege,
 
- With blood and sword and fire to win your right;
 
- In aid whereof we of the spiritualty
 
- Will raise your highness such a mighty sum
 
- As never did the clergy at one time
 
- Bring in to any of your ancestors.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We must not only arm to invade the French,
 
- But lay down our proportions to defend
 
- Against the Scot, who will make road upon us
 
- With all advantages.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- They of those marches, gracious sovereign,
 
- Shall be a wall sufficient to defend
 
- Our inland from the pilfering borderers.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We do not mean the coursing snatchers only,
 
- But fear the main intendment of the Scot,
 
- Who hath been still a giddy neighbour to us;
 
- For you shall read that my great-grandfather
 
- Never went with his forces into France
 
- But that the Scot on his unfurnish'd kingdom
 
- Came pouring, like the tide into a breach,
 
- With ample and brim fulness of his force,
 
- Galling the gleaned land with hot assays,
 
- Girding with grievous siege castles and towns;
 
- That England, being empty of defence,
 
- Hath shook and trembled at the ill neighbourhood.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- She hath been then more fear'd than harm'd, my liege;
 
- For hear her but exampled by herself:
 
- When all her chivalry hath been in France
 
- And she a mourning widow of her nobles,
 
- She hath herself not only well defended
 
- But taken and impounded as a stray
 
- The King of Scots; whom she did send to France,
 
- To fill King Edward's fame with prisoner kings
 
- And make her chronicle as rich with praise
 
- As is the ooze and bottom of the sea
 
- With sunken wreck and sunless treasuries.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- But there's a saying very old and true,
 
- 'If that you will France win,
 
- Then with Scotland first begin:'
 
- For once the eagle England being in prey,
 
- To her unguarded nest the weasel Scot
 
- Comes sneaking and so sucks her princely eggs,
 
- Playing the mouse in absence of the cat,
 
- To tear and havoc more than she can eat.
 
EXETER:
 
- It follows then the cat must stay at home:
 
- Yet that is but a crush'd necessity,
 
- Since we have locks to safeguard necessaries,
 
- And pretty traps to catch the petty thieves.
 
- While that the armed hand doth fight abroad,
 
- The advised head defends itself at home;
 
- For government, though high and low and lower,
 
- Put into parts, doth keep in one consent,
 
- Congreeing in a full and natural close,
 
- Like music.
 
CANTERBURY:
 
- Therefore doth heaven divide
 
- The state of man in divers functions,
 
- Setting endeavour in continual motion;
 
- To which is fixed, as an aim or butt,
 
- Obedience: for so work the honey-bees,
 
- Creatures that by a rule in nature teach
 
- The act of order to a peopled kingdom.
 
- They have a king and officers of sorts;
 
- Where some, like magistrates, correct at home,
 
- Others, like merchants, venture trade abroad,
 
- Others, like soldiers, armed in their stings,
 
- Make boot upon the summer's velvet buds,
 
- Which pillage they with merry march bring home
 
- To the tent-royal of their emperor;
 
- Who, busied in his majesty, surveys
 
- The singing masons building roofs of gold,
 
- The civil citizens kneading up the honey,
 
- The poor mechanic porters crowding in
 
- Their heavy burdens at his narrow gate,
 
- The sad-eyed justice, with his surly hum,
 
- Delivering o'er to executors pale
 
- The lazy yawning drone. I this infer,
 
- That many things, having full reference
 
- To one consent, may work contrariously:
 
- As many arrows, loosed several ways,
 
- Come to one mark; as many ways meet in one town;
 
- As many fresh streams meet in one salt sea;
 
- As many lines close in the dial's centre;
 
- So may a thousand actions, once afoot.
 
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne
 
- Without defeat. Therefore to France, my liege.
 
- Divide your happy England into four;
 
- Whereof take you one quarter into France,
 
- And you withal shall make all Gallia shake.
 
- If we, with thrice such powers left at home,
 
- Cannot defend our own doors from the dog,
 
- Let us be worried and our nation lose
 
- The name of hardiness and policy.
 
First Ambassador:
 
- May't please your majesty to give us leave
 
- Freely to render what we have in charge;
 
- Or shall we sparingly show you far off
 
- The Dauphin's meaning and our embassy?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We are no tyrant, but a Christian king;
 
- Unto whose grace our passion is as subject
 
- As are our wretches fetter'd in our prisons:
 
- Therefore with frank and with uncurbed plainness
 
- Tell us the Dauphin's mind.
 
First Ambassador:
 
- Thus, then, in few.
 
- Your highness, lately sending into France,
 
- Did claim some certain dukedoms, in the right
 
- Of your great predecessor, King Edward the Third.
 
- In answer of which claim, the prince our master
 
- Says that you savour too much of your youth,
 
- And bids you be advised there's nought in France
 
- That can be with a nimble galliard won;
 
- You cannot revel into dukedoms there.
 
- He therefore sends you, meeter for your spirit,
 
- This tun of treasure; and, in lieu of this,
 
- Desires you let the dukedoms that you claim
 
- Hear no more of you. This the Dauphin speaks.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What treasure, uncle?
 
EXETER:
 
- Tennis-balls, my liege.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We are glad the Dauphin is so pleasant with us;
 
- His present and your pains we thank you for:
 
- When we have march'd our rackets to these balls,
 
- We will, in France, by God's grace, play a set
 
- Shall strike his father's crown into the hazard.
 
- Tell him he hath made a match with such a wrangler
 
- That all the courts of France will be disturb'd
 
- With chaces. And we understand him well,
 
- How he comes o'er us with our wilder days,
 
- Not measuring what use we made of them.
 
- We never valued this poor seat of England;
 
- And therefore, living hence, did give ourself
 
- To barbarous licence; as 'tis ever common
 
- That men are merriest when they are from home.
 
- But tell the Dauphin I will keep my state,
 
- Be like a king and show my sail of greatness
 
- When I do rouse me in my throne of France:
 
- For that I have laid by my majesty
 
- And plodded like a man for working-days,
 
- But I will rise there with so full a glory
 
- That I will dazzle all the eyes of France,
 
- Yea, strike the Dauphin blind to look on us.
 
- And tell the pleasant prince this mock of his
 
- Hath turn'd his balls to gun-stones; and his soul
 
- Shall stand sore charged for the wasteful vengeance
 
- That shall fly with them: for many a thousand widows
 
- Shall this his mock mock out of their dear husbands;
 
- Mock mothers from their sons, mock castles down;
 
- And some are yet ungotten and unborn
 
- That shall have cause to curse the Dauphin's scorn.
 
- But this lies all within the will of God,
 
- To whom I do appeal; and in whose name
 
- Tell you the Dauphin I am coming on,
 
- To venge me as I may and to put forth
 
- My rightful hand in a well-hallow'd cause.
 
- So get you hence in peace; and tell the Dauphin
 
- His jest will savour but of shallow wit,
 
- When thousands weep more than did laugh at it.
 
- Convey them with safe conduct. Fare you well.
 
- 
[Exeunt Ambassadors]
 
EXETER:
 
- This was a merry message.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We hope to make the sender blush at it.
 
- Therefore, my lords, omit no happy hour
 
- That may give furtherance to our expedition;
 
- For we have now no thought in us but France,
 
- Save those to God, that run before our business.
 
- Therefore let our proportions for these wars
 
- Be soon collected and all things thought upon
 
- That may with reasonable swiftness add
 
- More feathers to our wings; for, God before,
 
- We'll chide this Dauphin at his father's door.
 
- Therefore let every man now task his thought,
 
- That this fair action may on foot be brought.
 
- 
[Exeunt. Flourish]
 
ACT II, (PROLOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- Now all the youth of England are on fire,
 
- And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies:
 
- Now thrive the armourers, and honour's thought
 
- Reigns solely in the breast of every man:
 
- They sell the pasture now to buy the horse,
 
- Following the mirror of all Christian kings,
 
- With winged heels, as English Mercuries.
 
- For now sits Expectation in the air,
 
- And hides a sword from hilts unto the point
 
- With crowns imperial, crowns and coronets,
 
- Promised to Harry and his followers.
 
- The French, advised by good intelligence
 
- Of this most dreadful preparation,
 
- Shake in their fear and with pale policy
 
- Seek to divert the English purposes.
 
- O England! model to thy inward greatness,
 
- Like little body with a mighty heart,
 
- What mightst thou do, that honour would thee do,
 
- Were all thy children kind and natural!
 
- But see thy fault! France hath in thee found out
 
- A nest of hollow bosoms, which he fills
 
- With treacherous crowns; and three corrupted men,
 
- One, Richard Earl of Cambridge, and the second,
 
- Henry Lord Scroop of Masham, and the third,
 
- Sir Thomas Grey, knight, of Northumberland,
 
- Have, for the gilt of France,--O guilt indeed!
 
- Confirm'd conspiracy with fearful France;
 
- And by their hands this grace of kings must die,
 
- If hell and treason hold their promises,
 
- Ere he take ship for France, and in Southampton.
 
- Linger your patience on; and we'll digest
 
- The abuse of distance; force a play:
 
- The sum is paid; the traitors are agreed;
 
- The king is set from London; and the scene
 
- Is now transported, gentles, to Southampton;
 
- There is the playhouse now, there must you sit:
 
- And thence to France shall we convey you safe,
 
- And bring you back, charming the narrow seas
 
- To give you gentle pass; for, if we may,
 
- We'll not offend one stomach with our play.
 
- But, till the king come forth, and not till then,
 
- Unto Southampton do we shift our scene.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT II, SCENE I.
London. A street.
[Enter Corporal NYM and Lieutenant BARDOLPH]
BARDOLPH:
 
- Well met, Corporal Nym.
 
NYM:
 
- Good morrow, Lieutenant Bardolph.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- What, are Ancient Pistol and you friends yet?
 
NYM:
 
- For my part, I care not: I say little; but when
 
- time shall serve, there shall be smiles; but that
 
- shall be as it may. I dare not fight; but I will
 
- wink and hold out mine iron: it is a simple one; but
 
- what though? it will toast cheese, and it will
 
- endure cold as another man's sword will: and
 
- there's an end.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- I will bestow a breakfast to make you friends; and
 
- we'll be all three sworn brothers to France: let it
 
- be so, good Corporal Nym.
 
NYM:
 
- Faith, I will live so long as I may, that's the
 
- certain of it; and when I cannot live any longer, I
 
- will do as I may: that is my rest, that is the
 
- rendezvous of it.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- It is certain, corporal, that he is married to Nell
 
- Quickly: and certainly she did you wrong; for you
 
- were troth-plight to her.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Here comes Ancient Pistol and his wife: good
 
- corporal, be patient here. How now, mine host Pistol!
 
PISTOL:
 
- Base tike, call'st thou me host? Now, by this hand,
 
- I swear, I scorn the term; Nor shall my Nell keep lodgers.
 
Hostess:
 
- No, by my troth, not long; for we cannot lodge and
 
- board a dozen or fourteen gentlewomen that live
 
- honestly by the prick of their needles, but it will
 
- be thought we keep a bawdy house straight.
 
- 
[NYM and PISTOL draw]
 
- O well a day, Lady, if he be not drawn now! we
 
- shall see wilful adultery and murder committed.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Good lieutenant! good corporal! offer nothing here.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Pish for thee, Iceland dog! thou prick-ear'd cur of Iceland!
 
Hostess:
 
- Good Corporal Nym, show thy valour, and put up your sword.
 
NYM:
 
- Will you shog off? I would have you solus.
 
PISTOL:
 
- 'Solus,' egregious dog? O viper vile!
 
- The 'solus' in thy most mervailous face;
 
- The 'solus' in thy teeth, and in thy throat,
 
- And in thy hateful lungs, yea, in thy maw, perdy,
 
- And, which is worse, within thy nasty mouth!
 
- I do retort the 'solus' in thy bowels;
 
- For I can take, and Pistol's cock is up,
 
- And flashing fire will follow.
 
NYM:
 
- I am not Barbason; you cannot conjure me. I have an
 
- humour to knock you indifferently well. If you grow
 
- foul with me, Pistol, I will scour you with my
 
- rapier, as I may, in fair terms: if you would walk
 
- off, I would prick your guts a little, in good
 
- terms, as I may: and that's the humour of it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- O braggart vile and damned furious wight!
 
- The grave doth gape, and doting death is near;
 
- Therefore exhale.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Hear me, hear me what I say: he that strikes the
 
- first stroke, I'll run him up to the hilts, as I am a soldier.
 
- 
[Draws]
 
PISTOL:
 
- An oath of mickle might; and fury shall abate.
 
- Give me thy fist, thy fore-foot to me give:
 
- Thy spirits are most tall.
 
NYM:
 
- I will cut thy throat, one time or other, in fair
 
- terms: that is the humour of it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- 'Couple a gorge!'
 
- That is the word. I thee defy again.
 
- O hound of Crete, think'st thou my spouse to get?
 
- No; to the spital go,
 
- And from the powdering tub of infamy
 
- Fetch forth the lazar kite of Cressid's kind,
 
- Doll Tearsheet she by name, and her espouse:
 
- I have, and I will hold, the quondam Quickly
 
- For the only she; and--pauca, there's enough. Go to.
 
- 
[Enter the Boy]
 
Boy:
 
- Mine host Pistol, you must come to my master, and
 
- you, hostess: he is very sick, and would to bed.
 
- Good Bardolph, put thy face between his sheets, and
 
- do the office of a warming-pan. Faith, he's very ill.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Away, you rogue!
 
Hostess:
 
- By my troth, he'll yield the crow a pudding one of
 
- these days. The king has killed his heart. Good
 
- husband, come home presently.
 
- 
[Exeunt Hostess and Boy]
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Come, shall I make you two friends? We must to
 
- France together: why the devil should we keep
 
- knives to cut one another's throats?
 
PISTOL:
 
- Let floods o'erswell, and fiends for food howl on!
 
NYM:
 
- You'll pay me the eight shillings I won of you at betting?
 
PISTOL:
 
- Base is the slave that pays.
 
NYM:
 
- That now I will have: that's the humour of it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- As manhood shall compound: push home.
 
- 
[They draw]
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- By this sword, he that makes the first thrust, I'll
 
- kill him; by this sword, I will.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Sword is an oath, and oaths must have their course.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Corporal Nym, an thou wilt be friends, be friends:
 
- an thou wilt not, why, then, be enemies with me too.
 
- Prithee, put up.
 
NYM:
 
- I shall have my eight shillings I won of you at betting?
 
PISTOL:
 
- A noble shalt thou have, and present pay;
 
- And liquor likewise will I give to thee,
 
- And friendship shall combine, and brotherhood:
 
- I'll live by Nym, and Nym shall live by me;
 
- Is not this just? for I shall sutler be
 
- Unto the camp, and profits will accrue.
 
- Give me thy hand.
 
NYM:
 
- I shall have my noble?
 
PISTOL:
 
- In cash most justly paid.
 
NYM:
 
- Well, then, that's the humour of't.
 
- 
[Re-enter Hostess]
 
Hostess:
 
- As ever you came of women, come in quickly to Sir
 
- John. Ah, poor heart! he is so shaked of a burning
 
- quotidian tertian, that it is most lamentable to
 
- behold. Sweet men, come to him.
 
NYM:
 
- The king hath run bad humours on the knight; that's
 
- the even of it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Nym, thou hast spoke the right;
 
- His heart is fracted and corroborate.
 
NYM:
 
- The king is a good king: but it must be as it may;
 
- he passes some humours and careers.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Let us condole the knight; for, lambkins we will live.
 
ACT II, SCENE II.
Southampton. A council-chamber.
[Enter EXETER, BEDFORD, and WESTMORELAND]
BEDFORD:
 
- 'Fore God, his grace is bold, to trust these traitors.
 
EXETER:
 
- They shall be apprehended by and by.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- How smooth and even they do bear themselves!
 
- As if allegiance in their bosoms sat,
 
- Crowned with faith and constant loyalty.
 
BEDFORD:
 
- The king hath note of all that they intend,
 
- By interception which they dream not of.
 
EXETER:
 
- Nay, but the man that was his bedfellow,
 
- Whom he hath dull'd and cloy'd with gracious favours,
 
- That he should, for a foreign purse, so sell
 
- His sovereign's life to death and treachery.
 
- 
[Trumpets sound. Enter KING HENRY V, SCROOP, CAMBRIDGE, GREY, and Attendants]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Now sits the wind fair, and we will aboard.
 
- My Lord of Cambridge, and my kind Lord of Masham,
 
- And you, my gentle knight, give me your thoughts:
 
- Think you not that the powers we bear with us
 
- Will cut their passage through the force of France,
 
- Doing the execution and the act
 
- For which we have in head assembled them?
 
SCROOP:
 
- No doubt, my liege, if each man do his best.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I doubt not that; since we are well persuaded
 
- We carry not a heart with us from hence
 
- That grows not in a fair consent with ours,
 
- Nor leave not one behind that doth not wish
 
- Success and conquest to attend on us.
 
CAMBRIDGE:
 
- Never was monarch better fear'd and loved
 
- Than is your majesty: there's not, I think, a subject
 
- That sits in heart-grief and uneasiness
 
- Under the sweet shade of your government.
 
GREY:
 
- True: those that were your father's enemies
 
- Have steep'd their galls in honey and do serve you
 
- With hearts create of duty and of zeal.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We therefore have great cause of thankfulness;
 
- And shall forget the office of our hand,
 
- Sooner than quittance of desert and merit
 
- According to the weight and worthiness.
 
SCROOP:
 
- So service shall with steeled sinews toil,
 
- And labour shall refresh itself with hope,
 
- To do your grace incessant services.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We judge no less. Uncle of Exeter,
 
- Enlarge the man committed yesterday,
 
- That rail'd against our person: we consider
 
- it was excess of wine that set him on;
 
- And on his more advice we pardon him.
 
SCROOP:
 
- That's mercy, but too much security:
 
- Let him be punish'd, sovereign, lest example
 
- Breed, by his sufferance, more of such a kind.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- O, let us yet be merciful.
 
CAMBRIDGE:
 
- So may your highness, and yet punish too.
 
GREY:
 
- Sir,
 
- You show great mercy, if you give him life,
 
- After the taste of much correction.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Alas, your too much love and care of me
 
- Are heavy orisons 'gainst this poor wretch!
 
- If little faults, proceeding on distemper,
 
- Shall not be wink'd at, how shall we stretch our eye
 
- When capital crimes, chew'd, swallow'd and digested,
 
- Appear before us? We'll yet enlarge that man,
 
- Though Cambridge, Scroop and Grey, in their dear care
 
- And tender preservation of our person,
 
- Would have him punished. And now to our French causes:
 
- Who are the late commissioners?
 
CAMBRIDGE:
 
- I one, my lord:
 
- Your highness bade me ask for it to-day.
 
SCROOP:
 
- So did you me, my liege.
 
GREY:
 
- And I, my royal sovereign.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then, Richard Earl of Cambridge, there is yours;
 
- There yours, Lord Scroop of Masham; and, sir knight,
 
- Grey of Northumberland, this same is yours:
 
- Read them; and know, I know your worthiness.
 
- My Lord of Westmoreland, and uncle Exeter,
 
- We will aboard to night. Why, how now, gentlemen!
 
- What see you in those papers that you lose
 
- So much complexion? Look ye, how they change!
 
- Their cheeks are paper. Why, what read you there
 
- That hath so cowarded and chased your blood
 
- Out of appearance?
 
CAMBRIDGE:
 
- I do confess my fault;
 
- And do submit me to your highness' mercy.
 
GREY SCROOP:
 
- To which we all appeal.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- The mercy that was quick in us but late,
 
- By your own counsel is suppress'd and kill'd:
 
- You must not dare, for shame, to talk of mercy;
 
- For your own reasons turn into your bosoms,
 
- As dogs upon their masters, worrying you.
 
- See you, my princes, and my noble peers,
 
- These English monsters! My Lord of Cambridge here,
 
- You know how apt our love was to accord
 
- To furnish him with all appertinents
 
- Belonging to his honour; and this man
 
- Hath, for a few light crowns, lightly conspired,
 
- And sworn unto the practises of France,
 
- To kill us here in Hampton: to the which
 
- This knight, no less for bounty bound to us
 
- Than Cambridge is, hath likewise sworn. But, O,
 
- What shall I say to thee, Lord Scroop? thou cruel,
 
- Ingrateful, savage and inhuman creature!
 
- Thou that didst bear the key of all my counsels,
 
- That knew'st the very bottom of my soul,
 
- That almost mightst have coin'd me into gold,
 
- Wouldst thou have practised on me for thy use,
 
- May it be possible, that foreign hire
 
- Could out of thee extract one spark of evil
 
- That might annoy my finger? 'tis so strange,
 
- That, though the truth of it stands off as gross
 
- As black and white, my eye will scarcely see it.
 
- Treason and murder ever kept together,
 
- As two yoke-devils sworn to either's purpose,
 
- Working so grossly in a natural cause,
 
- That admiration did not whoop at them:
 
- But thou, 'gainst all proportion, didst bring in
 
- Wonder to wait on treason and on murder:
 
- And whatsoever cunning fiend it was
 
- That wrought upon thee so preposterously
 
- Hath got the voice in hell for excellence:
 
- All other devils that suggest by treasons
 
- Do botch and bungle up damnation
 
- With patches, colours, and with forms being fetch'd
 
- From glistering semblances of piety;
 
- But he that temper'd thee bade thee stand up,
 
- Gave thee no instance why thou shouldst do treason,
 
- Unless to dub thee with the name of traitor.
 
- If that same demon that hath gull'd thee thus
 
- Should with his lion gait walk the whole world,
 
- He might return to vasty Tartar back,
 
- And tell the legions 'I can never win
 
- A soul so easy as that Englishman's.'
 
- O, how hast thou with 'jealousy infected
 
- The sweetness of affiance! Show men dutiful?
 
- Why, so didst thou: seem they grave and learned?
 
- Why, so didst thou: come they of noble family?
 
- Why, so didst thou: seem they religious?
 
- Why, so didst thou: or are they spare in diet,
 
- Free from gross passion or of mirth or anger,
 
- Constant in spirit, not swerving with the blood,
 
- Garnish'd and deck'd in modest complement,
 
- Not working with the eye without the ear,
 
- And but in purged judgment trusting neither?
 
- Such and so finely bolted didst thou seem:
 
- And thus thy fall hath left a kind of blot,
 
- To mark the full-fraught man and best indued
 
- With some suspicion. I will weep for thee;
 
- For this revolt of thine, methinks, is like
 
- Another fall of man. Their faults are open:
 
- Arrest them to the answer of the law;
 
- And God acquit them of their practises!
 
EXETER:
 
- I arrest thee of high treason, by the name of
 
- Richard Earl of Cambridge.
 
- I arrest thee of high treason, by the name of
 
- Henry Lord Scroop of Masham.
 
- I arrest thee of high treason, by the name of
 
- Thomas Grey, knight, of Northumberland.
 
SCROOP:
 
- Our purposes God justly hath discover'd;
 
- And I repent my fault more than my death;
 
- Which I beseech your highness to forgive,
 
- Although my body pay the price of it.
 
CAMBRIDGE:
 
- For me, the gold of France did not seduce;
 
- Although I did admit it as a motive
 
- The sooner to effect what I intended:
 
- But God be thanked for prevention;
 
- Which I in sufferance heartily will rejoice,
 
- Beseeching God and you to pardon me.
 
GREY:
 
- Never did faithful subject more rejoice
 
- At the discovery of most dangerous treason
 
- Than I do at this hour joy o'er myself.
 
- Prevented from a damned enterprise:
 
- My fault, but not my body, pardon, sovereign.
 
ACT II, SCENE III.
London. Before a tavern.
[Enter PISTOL, Hostess, NYM, BARDOLPH, and Boy]
Hostess:
 
- Prithee, honey-sweet husband, let me bring thee to Staines.
 
PISTOL:
 
- No; for my manly heart doth yearn.
 
- Bardolph, be blithe: Nym, rouse thy vaunting veins:
 
- Boy, bristle thy courage up; for Falstaff he is dead,
 
- And we must yearn therefore.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Would I were with him, wheresome'er he is, either in
 
- heaven or in hell!
 
Hostess:
 
- Nay, sure, he's not in hell: he's in Arthur's
 
- bosom, if ever man went to Arthur's bosom. A' made
 
- a finer end and went away an it had been any
 
- christom child; a' parted even just between twelve
 
- and one, even at the turning o' the tide: for after
 
- I saw him fumble with the sheets and play with
 
- flowers and smile upon his fingers' ends, I knew
 
- there was but one way; for his nose was as sharp as
 
- a pen, and a' babbled of green fields. 'How now,
 
- sir John!' quoth I 'what, man! be o' good
 
- cheer.' So a' cried out 'God, God, God!' three or
 
- four times. Now I, to comfort him, bid him a'
 
- should not think of God; I hoped there was no need
 
- to trouble himself with any such thoughts yet. So
 
- a' bade me lay more clothes on his feet: I put my
 
- hand into the bed and felt them, and they were as
 
- cold as any stone; then I felt to his knees, and
 
- they were as cold as any stone, and so upward and
 
- upward, and all was as cold as any stone.
 
NYM:
 
- They say he cried out of sack.
 
Hostess:
 
- Ay, that a' did.
 
Hostess:
 
- Nay, that a' did not.
 
Boy:
 
- Yes, that a' did; and said they were devils
 
- incarnate.
 
Hostess:
 
- A' could never abide carnation; 'twas a colour he
 
- never liked.
 
Boy:
 
- A' said once, the devil would have him about women.
 
Hostess:
 
- A' did in some sort, indeed, handle women; but then
 
- he was rheumatic, and talked of the whore of Babylon.
 
Boy:
 
- Do you not remember, a' saw a flea stick upon
 
- Bardolph's nose, and a' said it was a black soul
 
- burning in hell-fire?
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Well, the fuel is gone that maintained that fire:
 
- that's all the riches I got in his service.
 
NYM:
 
- Shall we shog? the king will be gone from
 
- Southampton.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Come, let's away. My love, give me thy lips.
 
- Look to my chattels and my movables:
 
- Let senses rule; the word is 'Pitch and Pay:'
 
- Trust none;
 
- For oaths are straws, men's faiths are wafer-cakes,
 
- And hold-fast is the only dog, my duck:
 
- Therefore, Caveto be thy counsellor.
 
- Go, clear thy c rystals. Yoke-fellows in arms,
 
- Let us to France; like horse-leeches, my boys,
 
- To suck, to suck, the very blood to suck!
 
Boy:
 
- And that's but unwholesome food they say.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Touch her soft mouth, and march.
 
BARDOLPH:
 
- Farewell, hostess.
 
- 
[Kissing her]
 
NYM:
 
- I cannot kiss, that is the humour of it; but, adieu.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Let housewifery appear: keep close, I thee command.
 
Hostess:
 
- Farewell; adieu.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT II, SCENE IV.
France. The KING'S palace.
[Flourish. Enter the FRENCH KING, the DAUPHIN,
the DUKES of BERRI and BRETAGNE, the Constable, and others]
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Thus comes the English with full power upon us;
 
- And more than carefully it us concerns
 
- To answer royally in our defences.
 
- Therefore the Dukes of Berri and of Bretagne,
 
- Of Brabant and of Orleans, shall make forth,
 
- And you, Prince Dauphin, with all swift dispatch,
 
- To line and new repair our towns of war
 
- With men of courage and with means defendant;
 
- For England his approaches makes as fierce
 
- As waters to the sucking of a gulf.
 
- It fits us then to be as provident
 
- As fear may teach us out of late examples
 
- Left by the fatal and neglected English
 
- Upon our fields.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- My most redoubted father,
 
- It is most meet we arm us 'gainst the foe;
 
- For peace itself should not so dull a kingdom,
 
- Though war nor no known quarrel were in question,
 
- But that defences, musters, preparations,
 
- Should be maintain'd, assembled and collected,
 
- As were a war in expectation.
 
- Therefore, I say 'tis meet we all go forth
 
- To view the sick and feeble parts of France:
 
- And let us do it with no show of fear;
 
- No, with no more than if we heard that England
 
- Were busied with a Whitsun morris-dance:
 
- For, my good liege, she is so idly king'd,
 
- Her sceptre so fantastically borne
 
- By a vain, giddy, shallow, humorous youth,
 
- That fear attends her not.
 
Constable:
 
- O peace, Prince Dauphin!
 
- You are too much mistaken in this king:
 
- Question your grace the late ambassadors,
 
- With what great state he heard their embassy,
 
- How well supplied with noble counsellors,
 
- How modest in exception, and withal
 
- How terrible in constant resolution,
 
- And you shall find his vanities forespent
 
- Were but the outside of the Roman Brutus,
 
- Covering discretion with a coat of folly;
 
- As gardeners do with ordure hide those roots
 
- That shall first spring and be most delicate.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Well, 'tis not so, my lord high constable;
 
- But though we think it so, it is no matter:
 
- In cases of defence 'tis best to weigh
 
- The enemy more mighty than he seems:
 
- So the proportions of defence are fill'd;
 
- Which of a weak or niggardly projection
 
- Doth, like a miser, spoil his coat with scanting
 
- A little cloth.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Think we King Harry strong;
 
- And, princes, look you strongly arm to meet him.
 
- The kindred of him hath been flesh'd upon us;
 
- And he is bred out of that bloody strain
 
- That haunted us in our familiar paths:
 
- Witness our too much memorable shame
 
- When Cressy battle fatally was struck,
 
- And all our princes captiv'd by the hand
 
- Of that black name, Edward, Black Prince of Wales;
 
- Whiles that his mountain sire, on mountain standing,
 
- Up in the air, crown'd with the golden sun,
 
- Saw his heroical seed, and smiled to see him,
 
- Mangle the work of nature and deface
 
- The patterns that by God and by French fathers
 
- Had twenty years been made. This is a stem
 
- Of that victorious stock; and let us fear
 
- The native mightiness and fate of him.
 
- 
[Enter a Messenger]
 
Messenger:
 
- Ambassadors from Harry King of England
 
- Do crave admittance to your majesty.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- From our brother England?
 
EXETER:
 
- From him; and thus he greets your majesty.
 
- He wills you, in the name of God Almighty,
 
- That you divest yourself, and lay apart
 
- The borrow'd glories that by gift of heaven,
 
- By law of nature and of nations, 'long
 
- To him and to his heirs; namely, the crown
 
- And all wide-stretched honours that pertain
 
- By custom and the ordinance of times
 
- Unto the crown of France. That you may know
 
- 'Tis no sinister nor no awkward claim,
 
- Pick'd from the worm-holes of long-vanish'd days,
 
- Nor from the dust of old oblivion raked,
 
- He sends you this most memorable line,
 
- In every branch truly demonstrative;
 
- Willing to overlook this pedigree:
 
- And when you find him evenly derived
 
- From his most famed of famous ancestors,
 
- Edward the Third, he bids you then resign
 
- Your crown and kingdom, indirectly held
 
- From him the native and true challenger.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Or else what follows?
 
EXETER:
 
- Bloody constraint; for if you hide the crown
 
- Even in your hearts, there will he rake for it:
 
- Therefore in fierce tempest is he coming,
 
- In thunder and in earthquake, like a Jove,
 
- That, if requiring fail, he will compel;
 
- And bids you, in the bowels of the Lord,
 
- Deliver up the crown, and to take mercy
 
- On the poor souls for whom this hungry war
 
- Opens his vasty jaws; and on your head
 
- Turning the widows' tears, the orphans' cries
 
- The dead men's blood, the pining maidens groans,
 
- For husbands, fathers and betrothed lovers,
 
- That shall be swallow'd in this controversy.
 
- This is his claim, his threatening and my message;
 
- Unless the Dauphin be in presence here,
 
- To whom expressly I bring greeting too.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- For us, we will consider of this further:
 
- To-morrow shall you bear our full intent
 
- Back to our brother England.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- For the Dauphin,
 
- I stand here for him: what to him from England?
 
EXETER:
 
- Scorn and defiance; slight regard, contempt,
 
- And any thing that may not misbecome
 
- The mighty sender, doth he prize you at.
 
- Thus says my king; an' if your father's highness
 
- Do not, in grant of all demands at large,
 
- Sweeten the bitter mock you sent his majesty,
 
- He'll call you to so hot an answer of it,
 
- That caves and womby vaultages of France
 
- Shall chide your trespass and return your mock
 
- In second accent of his ordnance.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Say, if my father render fair return,
 
- It is against my will; for I desire
 
- Nothing but odds with England: to that end,
 
- As matching to his youth and vanity,
 
- I did present him with the Paris balls.
 
EXETER:
 
- He'll make your Paris Louvre shake for it,
 
- Were it the mistress-court of mighty Europe:
 
- And, be assured, you'll find a difference,
 
- As we his subjects have in wonder found,
 
- Between the promise of his greener days
 
- And these he masters now: now he weighs time
 
- Even to the utmost grain: that you shall read
 
- In your own losses, if he stay in France.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- To-morrow shall you know our mind at full.
 
EXETER:
 
- Dispatch us with all speed, lest that our king
 
- Come here himself to question our delay;
 
- For he is footed in this land already.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- You shall be soon dispatch's with fair conditions:
 
- A night is but small breath and little pause
 
- To answer matters of this consequence.
 
- 
[Flourish. Exeunt]
 
ACT III, (PROLOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- Thus with imagined wing our swift scene flies
 
- In motion of no less celerity
 
- Than that of thought. Suppose that you have seen
 
- The well-appointed king at Hampton pier
 
- Embark his royalty; and his brave fleet
 
- With silken streamers the young Phoebus fanning:
 
- Play with your fancies, and in them behold
 
- Upon the hempen tackle ship-boys climbing;
 
- Hear the shrill whistle which doth order give
 
- To sounds confused; behold the threaden sails,
 
- Borne with the invisible and creeping wind,
 
- Draw the huge bottoms through the furrow'd sea,
 
- Breasting the lofty surge: O, do but think
 
- You stand upon the ravage and behold
 
- A city on the inconstant billows dancing;
 
- For so appears this fleet majestical,
 
- Holding due course to Harfleur. Follow, follow:
 
- Grapple your minds to sternage of this navy,
 
- And leave your England, as dead midnight still,
 
- Guarded with grandsires, babies and old women,
 
- Either past or not arrived to pith and puissance;
 
- For who is he, whose chin is but enrich'd
 
- With one appearing hair, that will not follow
 
- These cull'd and choice-drawn cavaliers to France?
 
- Work, work your thoughts, and therein see a siege;
 
- Behold the ordnance on their carriages,
 
- With fatal mouths gaping on girded Harfleur.
 
- Suppose the ambassador from the French comes back;
 
- Tells Harry that the king doth offer him
 
- Katharine his daughter, and with her, to dowry,
 
- Some petty and unprofitable dukedoms.
 
- The offer likes not: and the nimble gunner
 
- With linstock now the devilish cannon touches,
 
- Alarum, and chambers go off
 
- And down goes all before them. Still be kind,
 
- And eke out our performance with your mind.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT III, SCENE I.
France. Before Harfleur.
[Alarum. Enter KING HENRY, EXETER, BEDFORD, GLOUCESTER, and Soldiers, with scaling-ladders]
ACT III, SCENE II.
The same.
[Enter NYM, BARDOLPH, PISTOL, and Boy]
BARDOLPH:
 
- On, on, on, on, on! to the breach, to the breach!
 
NYM:
 
- Pray thee, corporal, stay: the knocks are too hot;
 
- and, for mine own part, I have not a case of lives:
 
- the humour of it is too hot, that is the very
 
- plain-song of it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- The plain-song is most just: for humours do abound:
 
- Knocks go and come; God's vassals drop and die;
 
- And sword and shield,
 
- In bloody field,
 
- Doth win immortal fame.
 
Boy:
 
- Would I were in an alehouse in London! I would give
 
- all my fame for a pot of ale and safety.
 
PISTOL:
 
- And I:
 
- If wishes would prevail with me,
 
- My purpose should not fail with me,
 
- But thither would I hie.
 
Boy:
 
- As duly, but not as truly,
 
- As bird doth sing on bough.
 
- 
[Enter FLUELLEN]
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Up to the breach, you dogs! avaunt, you cullions!
 
- 
[Driving them forward]
 
PISTOL:
 
- Be merciful, great duke, to men of mould.
 
- Abate thy rage, abate thy manly rage,
 
- Abate thy rage, great duke!
 
- Good bawcock, bate thy rage; use lenity, sweet chuck!
 
NYM:
 
- These be good humours! your honour wins bad humours.
 
- 
[Exeunt all but Boy]
 
GOWER:
 
- Captain Fluellen, you must come presently to the
 
- mines; the Duke of Gloucester would speak with you.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- To the mines! tell you the duke, it is not so good
 
- to come to the mines; for, look you, the mines is
 
- not according to the disciplines of the war: the
 
- concavities of it is not sufficient; for, look you,
 
- the athversary, you may discuss unto the duke, look
 
- you, is digt himself four yard under the
 
- countermines: by Cheshu, I think a' will plough up
 
- all, if there is not better directions.
 
GOWER:
 
- The Duke of Gloucester, to whom the order of the
 
- siege is given, is altogether directed by an
 
- Irishman, a very valiant gentleman, i' faith.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- It is Captain Macmorris, is it not?
 
GOWER:
 
- Here a' comes; and the Scots captain, Captain Jamy, with him.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Captain Jamy is a marvellous falourous gentleman,
 
- that is certain; and of great expedition and
 
- knowledge in th' aunchient wars, upon my particular
 
- knowledge of his directions: by Cheshu, he will
 
- maintain his argument as well as any military man in
 
- the world, in the disciplines of the pristine wars
 
- of the Romans.
 
JAMY:
 
- I say gud-day, Captain Fluellen.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- God-den to your worship, good Captain James.
 
GOWER:
 
- How now, Captain Macmorris! have you quit the
 
- mines? have the pioneers given o'er?
 
MACMORRIS:
 
- By Chrish, la! tish ill done: the work ish give
 
- over, the trompet sound the retreat. By my hand, I
 
- swear, and my father's soul, the work ish ill done;
 
- it ish give over: I would have blowed up the town, so
 
- Chrish save me, la! in an hour: O, tish ill done,
 
- tish ill done; by my hand, tish ill done!
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Captain Macmorris, I beseech you now, will you
 
- voutsafe me, look you, a few disputations with you,
 
- as partly touching or concerning the disciplines of
 
- the war, the Roman wars, in the way of argument,
 
- look you, and friendly communication; partly to
 
- satisfy my opinion, and partly for the satisfaction,
 
- look you, of my mind, as touching the direction of
 
- the military discipline; that is the point.
 
JAMY:
 
- It sall be vary gud, gud feith, gud captains bath:
 
- and I sall quit you with gud leve, as I may pick
 
- occasion; that sall I, marry.
 
MACMORRIS:
 
- It is no time to discourse, so Chrish save me: the
 
- day is hot, and the weather, and the wars, and the
 
- king, and the dukes: it is no time to discourse. The
 
- town is beseeched, and the trumpet call us to the
 
- breach; and we talk, and, be Chrish, do nothing:
 
- 'tis shame for us all: so God sa' me, 'tis shame to
 
- stand still; it is shame, by my hand: and there is
 
- throats to be cut, and works to be done; and there
 
- ish nothing done, so Chrish sa' me, la!
 
JAMY:
 
- By the mess, ere theise eyes of mine take themselves
 
- to slomber, ay'll de gud service, or ay'll lig i'
 
- the grund for it; ay, or go to death; and ay'll pay
 
- 't as valourously as I may, that sall I suerly do,
 
- that is the breff and the long. Marry, I wad full
 
- fain hear some question 'tween you tway.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Captain Macmorris, I think, look you, under your
 
- correction, there is not many of your nation--
 
MACMORRIS:
 
- Of my nation! What ish my nation? Ish a villain,
 
- and a bastard, and a knave, and a rascal. What ish
 
- my nation? Who talks of my nation?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Look you, if you take the matter otherwise than is
 
- meant, Captain Macmorris, peradventure I shall think
 
- you do not use me with that affability as in
 
- discretion you ought to use me, look you: being as
 
- good a man as yourself, both in the disciplines of
 
- war, and in the derivation of my birth, and in
 
- other particularities.
 
MACMORRIS:
 
- I do not know you so good a man as myself: so
 
- Chrish save me, I will cut off your head.
 
GOWER:
 
- Gentlemen both, you will mistake each other.
 
JAMY:
 
- A! that's a foul fault.
 
- 
[A parley sounded]
 
GOWER:
 
- The town sounds a parley.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Captain Macmorris, when there is more better
 
- opportunity to be required, look you, I will be so
 
- bold as to tell you I know the disciplines of war;
 
- and there is an end.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT III, SCENE III.
The same. Before the gates.
[The Governor and some Citizens on the walls; the English forces below.
Enter KING HENRY and his train]
KING HENRY V:
 
- How yet resolves the governor of the town?
 
- This is the latest parle we will admit;
 
- Therefore to our best mercy give yourselves;
 
- Or like to men proud of destruction
 
- Defy us to our worst: for, as I am a soldier,
 
- A name that in my thoughts becomes me best,
 
- If I begin the battery once again,
 
- I will not leave the half-achieved Harfleur
 
- Till in her ashes she lie buried.
 
- The gates of mercy shall be all shut up,
 
- And the flesh'd soldier, rough and hard of heart,
 
- In liberty of bloody hand shall range
 
- With conscience wide as hell, mowing like grass
 
- Your fresh-fair virgins and your flowering infants.
 
- What is it then to me, if impious war,
 
- Array'd in flames like to the prince of fiends,
 
- Do, with his smirch'd complexion, all fell feats
 
- Enlink'd to waste and desolation?
 
- What is't to me, when you yourselves are cause,
 
- If your pure maidens fall into the hand
 
- Of hot and forcing violation?
 
- What rein can hold licentious wickedness
 
- When down the hill he holds his fierce career?
 
- We may as bootless spend our vain command
 
- Upon the enraged soldiers in their spoil
 
- As send precepts to the leviathan
 
- To come ashore. Therefore, you men of Harfleur,
 
- Take pity of your town and of your people,
 
- Whiles yet my soldiers are in my command;
 
- Whiles yet the cool and temperate wind of grace
 
- O'erblows the filthy and contagious clouds
 
- Of heady murder, spoil and villany.
 
- If not, why, in a moment look to see
 
- The blind and bloody soldier with foul hand
 
- Defile the locks of your shrill-shrieking daughters;
 
- Your fathers taken by the silver beards,
 
- And their most reverend heads dash'd to the walls,
 
- Your naked infants spitted upon pikes,
 
- Whiles the mad mothers with their howls confused
 
- Do break the clouds, as did the wives of Jewry
 
- At Herod's bloody-hunting slaughtermen.
 
- What say you? will you yield, and this avoid,
 
- Or, guilty in defence, be thus destroy'd?
 
GOVERNOR:
 
- Our expectation hath this day an end:
 
- The Dauphin, whom of succors we entreated,
 
- Returns us that his powers are yet not ready
 
- To raise so great a siege. Therefore, great king,
 
- We yield our town and lives to thy soft mercy.
 
- Enter our gates; dispose of us and ours;
 
- For we no longer are defensible.
 
ACT III, SCENE IV.
The FRENCH KING's palace.
[Enter KATHARINE and ALICE]
KATHARINE:
 
- Alice, tu as ete en Angleterre, et tu parles bien le langage.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Je te prie, m'enseignez: il faut que j'apprenne a
 
- parler. Comment appelez-vous la main en Anglois?
 
ALICE:
 
- La main? elle est appelee de hand.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De hand. Et les doigts?
 
ALICE:
 
- Les doigts? ma foi, j'oublie les doigts; mais je me
 
- souviendrai. Les doigts? je pense qu'ils sont
 
- appeles de fingres; oui, de fingres.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- La main, de hand; les doigts, de fingres. Je pense
 
- que je suis le bon ecolier; j'ai gagne deux mots
 
- d'Anglois vitement. Comment appelez-vous les ongles?
 
ALICE:
 
- Les ongles? nous les appelons de nails.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De nails. Ecoutez; dites-moi, si je parle bien: de
 
- hand, de fingres, et de nails.
 
ALICE:
 
- C'est bien dit, madame; il est fort bon Anglois.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Dites-moi l'Anglois pour le bras.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De elbow. Je m'en fais la repetition de tous les
 
- mots que vous m'avez appris des a present.
 
ALICE:
 
- Il est trop difficile, madame, comme je pense.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Excusez-moi, Alice; ecoutez: de hand, de fingres,
 
- de nails, de arma, de bilbow.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- O Seigneur Dieu, je m'en oublie! de elbow. Comment
 
- appelez-vous le col?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De nick. Et le menton?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De sin. Le col, de nick; de menton, de sin.
 
ALICE:
 
- Oui. Sauf votre honneur, en verite, vous prononcez
 
- les mots aussi droit que les natifs d'Angleterre.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Je ne doute point d'apprendre, par la grace de Dieu,
 
- et en peu de temps.
 
ALICE:
 
- N'avez vous pas deja oublie ce que je vous ai enseigne?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Non, je reciterai a vous promptement: de hand, de
 
- fingres, de mails--
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De nails, de arm, de ilbow.
 
ALICE:
 
- Sauf votre honneur, de elbow.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Ainsi dis-je; de elbow, de nick, et de sin. Comment
 
- appelez-vous le pied et la robe?
 
ALICE:
 
- De foot, madame; et de coun.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- De foot et de coun! O Seigneur Dieu! ce sont mots
 
- de son mauvais, corruptible, gros, et impudique, et
 
- non pour les dames d'honneur d'user: je ne voudrais
 
- prononcer ces mots devant les seigneurs de France
 
- pour tout le monde. Foh! le foot et le coun!
 
- Neanmoins, je reciterai une autre fois ma lecon
 
- ensemble: de hand, de fingres, de nails, de arm, de
 
- elbow, de nick, de sin, de foot, de coun.
 
ALICE:
 
- Excellent, madame!
 
KATHARINE:
 
- C'est assez pour une fois: allons-nous a diner.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT III, SCENE V.
The same.
[Enter the KING OF FRANCE, the DAUPHIN, the DUKE oF BOURBON,
the Constable Of France, and others]
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- 'Tis certain he hath pass'd the river Somme.
 
Constable:
 
- And if he be not fought withal, my lord,
 
- Let us not live in France; let us quit all
 
- And give our vineyards to a barbarous people.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- O Dieu vivant! shall a few sprays of us,
 
- The emptying of our fathers' luxury,
 
- Our scions, put in wild and savage stock,
 
- Spirt up so suddenly into the clouds,
 
- And overlook their grafters?
 
BOURBON:
 
- Normans, but bastard Normans, Norman bastards!
 
- Mort de ma vie! if they march along
 
- Unfought withal, but I will sell my dukedom,
 
- To buy a slobbery and a dirty farm
 
- In that nook-shotten isle of Albion.
 
Constable:
 
- Dieu de batailles! where have they this mettle?
 
- Is not their climate foggy, raw and dull,
 
- On whom, as in despite, the sun looks pale,
 
- Killing their fruit with frowns? Can sodden water,
 
- A drench for sur-rein'd jades, their barley-broth,
 
- Decoct their cold blood to such valiant heat?
 
- And shall our quick blood, spirited with wine,
 
- Seem frosty? O, for honour of our land,
 
- Let us not hang like roping icicles
 
- Upon our houses' thatch, whiles a more frosty people
 
- Sweat drops of gallant youth in our rich fields!
 
- Poor we may call them in their native lords.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- By faith and honour,
 
- Our madams mock at us, and plainly say
 
- Our mettle is bred out and they will give
 
- Their bodies to the lust of English youth
 
- To new-store France with bastard warriors.
 
BOURBON:
 
- They bid us to the English dancing-schools,
 
- And teach lavoltas high and swift corantos;
 
- Saying our grace is only in our heels,
 
- And that we are most lofty runaways.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Where is Montjoy the herald? speed him hence:
 
- Let him greet England with our sharp defiance.
 
- Up, princes! and, with spirit of honour edged
 
- More sharper than your swords, hie to the field:
 
- Charles Delabreth, high constable of France;
 
- You Dukes of Orleans, Bourbon, and of Berri,
 
- Alencon, Brabant, Bar, and Burgundy;
 
- Jaques Chatillon, Rambures, Vaudemont,
 
- Beaumont, Grandpre, Roussi, and Fauconberg,
 
- Foix, Lestrale, Bouciqualt, and Charolois;
 
- High dukes, great princes, barons, lords and knights,
 
- For your great seats now quit you of great shames.
 
- Bar Harry England, that sweeps through our land
 
- With pennons painted in the blood of Harfleur:
 
- Rush on his host, as doth the melted snow
 
- Upon the valleys, whose low vassal seat
 
- The Alps doth spit and void his rheum upon:
 
- Go down upon him, you have power enough,
 
- And in a captive chariot into Rouen
 
- Bring him our prisoner.
 
Constable:
 
- This becomes the great.
 
- Sorry am I his numbers are so few,
 
- His soldiers sick and famish'd in their march,
 
- For I am sure, when he shall see our army,
 
- He'll drop his heart into the sink of fear
 
- And for achievement offer us his ransom.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Therefore, lord constable, haste on Montjoy.
 
- And let him say to England that we send
 
- To know what willing ransom he will give.
 
- Prince Dauphin, you shall stay with us in Rouen.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Not so, I do beseech your majesty.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Be patient, for you shall remain with us.
 
- Now forth, lord constable and princes all,
 
- And quickly bring us word of England's fall.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT III, SCENE VI.
The English camp in Picardy.
[Enter GOWER and FLUELLEN, meeting]
GOWER:
 
- How now, Captain Fluellen! come you from the bridge?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I assure you, there is very excellent services
 
- committed at the bridge.
 
GOWER:
 
- Is the Duke of Exeter safe?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- The Duke of Exeter is as magnanimous as Agamemnon;
 
- and a man that I love and honour with my soul, and my
 
- heart, and my duty, and my life, and my living, and
 
- my uttermost power: he is not-God be praised and
 
- blessed!--any hurt in the world; but keeps the
 
- bridge most valiantly, with excellent discipline.
 
- There is an aunchient lieutenant there at the
 
- pridge, I think in my very conscience he is as
 
- valiant a man as Mark Antony; and he is a man of no
 
- estimation in the world; but did see him do as
 
- gallant service.
 
GOWER:
 
- What do you call him?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- He is called Aunchient Pistol.
 
GOWER:
 
- I know him not.
 
- 
[Enter PISTOL]
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Here is the man.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Captain, I thee beseech to do me favours:
 
- The Duke of Exeter doth love thee well.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Ay, I praise God; and I have merited some love at
 
- his hands.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Bardolph, a soldier, firm and sound of heart,
 
- And of buxom valour, hath, by cruel fate,
 
- And giddy Fortune's furious fickle wheel,
 
- That goddess blind,
 
- That stands upon the rolling restless stone--
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- By your patience, Aunchient Pistol. Fortune is
 
- painted blind, with a muffler afore her eyes, to
 
- signify to you that Fortune is blind; and she is
 
- painted also with a wheel, to signify to you, which
 
- is the moral of it, that she is turning, and
 
- inconstant, and mutability, and variation: and her
 
- foot, look you, is fixed upon a spherical stone,
 
- which rolls, and rolls, and rolls: in good truth,
 
- the poet makes a most excellent description of it:
 
- Fortune is an excellent moral.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Fortune is Bardolph's foe, and frowns on him;
 
- For he hath stolen a pax, and hanged must a' be:
 
- A damned death!
 
- Let gallows gape for dog; let man go free
 
- And let not hemp his wind-pipe suffocate:
 
- But Exeter hath given the doom of death
 
- For pax of little price.
 
- Therefore, go speak: the duke will hear thy voice:
 
- And let not Bardolph's vital thread be cut
 
- With edge of penny cord and vile reproach:
 
- Speak, captain, for his life, and I will thee requite.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Aunchient Pistol, I do partly understand your meaning.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Why then, rejoice therefore.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Certainly, aunchient, it is not a thing to rejoice
 
- at: for if, look you, he were my brother, I would
 
- desire the duke to use his good pleasure, and put
 
- him to execution; for discipline ought to be used.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Die and be damn'd! and figo for thy friendship!
 
PISTOL:
 
- The fig of Spain!
 
- 
[Exit]
 
GOWER:
 
- Why, this is an arrant counterfeit rascal; I
 
- remember him now; a bawd, a cutpurse.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I'll assure you, a' uttered as brave words at the
 
- bridge as you shall see in a summer's day. But it
 
- is very well; what he has spoke to me, that is well,
 
- I warrant you, when time is serve.
 
GOWER:
 
- Why, 'tis a gull, a fool, a rogue, that now and then
 
- goes to the wars, to grace himself at his return
 
- into London under the form of a soldier. And such
 
- fellows are perfect in the great commanders' names:
 
- and they will learn you by rote where services were
 
- done; at such and such a sconce, at such a breach,
 
- at such a convoy; who came off bravely, who was
 
- shot, who disgraced, what terms the enemy stood on;
 
- and this they con perfectly in the phrase of war,
 
- which they trick up with new-tuned oaths: and what
 
- a beard of the general's cut and a horrid suit of
 
- the camp will do among foaming bottles and
 
- ale-washed wits, is wonderful to be thought on. But
 
- you must learn to know such slanders of the age, or
 
- else you may be marvellously mistook.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- How now, Fluellen! camest thou from the bridge?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Ay, so please your majesty. The Duke of Exeter has
 
- very gallantly maintained the pridge: the French is
 
- gone off, look you; and there is gallant and most
 
- prave passages; marry, th' athversary was have
 
- possession of the pridge; but he is enforced to
 
- retire, and the Duke of Exeter is master of the
 
- pridge: I can tell your majesty, the duke is a
 
- prave man.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What men have you lost, Fluellen?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- The perdition of th' athversary hath been very
 
- great, reasonable great: marry, for my part, I
 
- think the duke hath lost never a man, but one that
 
- is like to be executed for robbing a church, one
 
- Bardolph, if your majesty know the man: his face is
 
- all bubukles, and whelks, and knobs, and flames o'
 
- fire: and his lips blows at his nose, and it is like
 
- a coal of fire, sometimes plue and sometimes red;
 
- but his nose is executed and his fire's out.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We would have all such offenders so cut off: and we
 
- give express charge, that in our marches through the
 
- country, there be nothing compelled from the
 
- villages, nothing taken but paid for, none of the
 
- French upbraided or abused in disdainful language;
 
- for when lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom, the
 
- gentler gamester is the soonest winner.
 
- 
[Tucket. Enter MONTJOY]
 
MONTJOY:
 
- You know me by my habit.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Well then I know thee: what shall I know of thee?
 
MONTJOY:
 
- My master's mind.
 
MONTJOY:
 
- Thus says my king: Say thou to Harry of England:
 
- Though we seemed dead, we did but sleep: advantage
 
- is a better soldier than rashness. Tell him we
 
- could have rebuked him at Harfleur, but that we
 
- thought not good to bruise an injury till it were
 
- full ripe: now we speak upon our cue, and our voice
 
- is imperial: England shall repent his folly, see
 
- his weakness, and admire our sufferance. Bid him
 
- therefore consider of his ransom; which must
 
- proportion the losses we have borne, the subjects we
 
- have lost, the disgrace we have digested; which in
 
- weight to re-answer, his pettiness would bow under.
 
- For our losses, his exchequer is too poor; for the
 
- effusion of our blood, the muster of his kingdom too
 
- faint a number; and for our disgrace, his own
 
- person, kneeling at our feet, but a weak and
 
- worthless satisfaction. To this add defiance: and
 
- tell him, for conclusion, he hath betrayed his
 
- followers, whose condemnation is pronounced. So far
 
- my king and master; so much my office.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What is thy name? I know thy quality.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Thou dost thy office fairly. Turn thee back.
 
- And tell thy king I do not seek him now;
 
- But could be willing to march on to Calais
 
- Without impeachment: for, to say the sooth,
 
- Though 'tis no wisdom to confess so much
 
- Unto an enemy of craft and vantage,
 
- My people are with sickness much enfeebled,
 
- My numbers lessened, and those few I have
 
- Almost no better than so many French;
 
- Who when they were in health, I tell thee, herald,
 
- I thought upon one pair of English legs
 
- Did march three Frenchmen. Yet, forgive me, God,
 
- That I do brag thus! This your air of France
 
- Hath blown that vice in me: I must repent.
 
- Go therefore, tell thy master here I am;
 
- My ransom is this frail and worthless trunk,
 
- My army but a weak and sickly guard;
 
- Yet, God before, tell him we will come on,
 
- Though France himself and such another neighbour
 
- Stand in our way. There's for thy labour, Montjoy.
 
- Go bid thy master well advise himself:
 
- If we may pass, we will; if we be hinder'd,
 
- We shall your tawny ground with your red blood
 
- Discolour: and so Montjoy, fare you well.
 
- The sum of all our answer is but this:
 
- We would not seek a battle, as we are;
 
- Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it:
 
- So tell your master.
 
MONTJOY:
 
- I shall deliver so. Thanks to your highness.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
GLOUCESTER:
 
- I hope they will not come upon us now.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- We are in God's hand, brother, not in theirs.
 
- March to the bridge; it now draws toward night:
 
- Beyond the river we'll encamp ourselves,
 
- And on to-morrow, bid them march away.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT III, SCENE VII.
The French camp, near Agincourt:
[Enter the Constable of France, the LORD RAMBURES, ORLEANS, DAUPHIN, with others]
Constable:
 
- Tut! I have the best armour of the world. Would it were day!
 
ORLEANS:
 
- You have an excellent armour; but let my horse have his due.
 
Constable:
 
- It is the best horse of Europe.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Will it never be morning?
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- My lord of Orleans, and my lord high constable, you
 
- talk of horse and armour?
 
ORLEANS:
 
- You are as well provided of both as any prince in the world.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- What a long night is this! I will not change my
 
- horse with any that treads but on four pasterns.
 
- Ca, ha! he bounds from the earth, as if his
 
- entrails were hairs; le cheval volant, the Pegasus,
 
- chez les narines de feu! When I bestride him, I
 
- soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth
 
- sings when he touches it; the basest horn of his
 
- hoof is more musical than the pipe of Hermes.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- He's of the colour of the nutmeg.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- And of the heat of the ginger. It is a beast for
 
- Perseus: he is pure air and fire; and the dull
 
- elements of earth and water never appear in him, but
 
- only in Patient stillness while his rider mounts
 
- him: he is indeed a horse; and all other jades you
 
- may call beasts.
 
Constable:
 
- Indeed, my lord, it is a most absolute and excellent horse.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- It is the prince of palfreys; his neigh is like the
 
- bidding of a monarch and his countenance enforces homage.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- No more, cousin.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Nay, the man hath no wit that cannot, from the
 
- rising of the lark to the lodging of the lamb, vary
 
- deserved praise on my palfrey: it is a theme as
 
- fluent as the sea: turn the sands into eloquent
 
- tongues, and my horse is argument for them all:
 
- 'tis a subject for a sovereign to reason on, and for
 
- a sovereign's sovereign to ride on; and for the
 
- world, familiar to us and unknown to lay apart
 
- their particular functions and wonder at him. I
 
- once writ a sonnet in his praise and began thus:
 
- 'Wonder of nature,'--
 
ORLEANS:
 
- I have heard a sonnet begin so to one's mistress.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Then did they imitate that which I composed to my
 
- courser, for my horse is my mistress.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Your mistress bears well.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Me well; which is the prescript praise and
 
- perfection of a good and particular mistress.
 
Constable:
 
- Nay, for methought yesterday your mistress shrewdly
 
- shook your back.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- So perhaps did yours.
 
Constable:
 
- Mine was not bridled.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- O then belike she was old and gentle; and you rode,
 
- like a kern of Ireland, your French hose off, and in
 
- your straight strossers.
 
Constable:
 
- You have good judgment in horsemanship.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Be warned by me, then: they that ride so and ride
 
- not warily, fall into foul bogs. I had rather have
 
- my horse to my mistress.
 
Constable:
 
- I had as lief have my mistress a jade.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- I tell thee, constable, my mistress wears his own hair.
 
Constable:
 
- I could make as true a boast as that, if I had a sow
 
- to my mistress.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- 'Le chien est retourne a son propre vomissement, et
 
- la truie lavee au bourbier;' thou makest use of any thing.
 
Constable:
 
- Yet do I not use my horse for my mistress, or any
 
- such proverb so little kin to the purpose.
 
RAMBURES:
 
- My lord constable, the armour that I saw in your tent
 
- to-night, are those stars or suns upon it?
 
Constable:
 
- Stars, my lord.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Some of them will fall to-morrow, I hope.
 
Constable:
 
- And yet my sky shall not want.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- That may be, for you bear a many superfluously, and
 
- 'twere more honour some were away.
 
Constable:
 
- Even as your horse bears your praises; who would
 
- trot as well, were some of your brags dismounted.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Would I were able to load him with his desert! Will
 
- it never be day? I will trot to-morrow a mile, and
 
- my way shall be paved with English faces.
 
Constable:
 
- I will not say so, for fear I should be faced out of
 
- my way: but I would it were morning; for I would
 
- fain be about the ears of the English.
 
RAMBURES:
 
- Who will go to hazard with me for twenty prisoners?
 
Constable:
 
- You must first go yourself to hazard, ere you have them.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- 'Tis midnight; I'll go arm myself.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ORLEANS:
 
- The Dauphin longs for morning.
 
RAMBURES:
 
- He longs to eat the English.
 
Constable:
 
- I think he will eat all he kills.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- By the white hand of my lady, he's a gallant prince.
 
Constable:
 
- Swear by her foot, that she may tread out the oath.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- He is simply the most active gentleman of France.
 
Constable:
 
- Doing is activity; and he will still be doing.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- He never did harm, that I heard of.
 
Constable:
 
- Nor will do none to-morrow: he will keep that good name still.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- I know him to be valiant.
 
Constable:
 
- I was told that by one that knows him better than
 
- you.
 
Constable:
 
- Marry, he told me so himself; and he said he cared
 
- not who knew it
 
ORLEANS:
 
- He needs not; it is no hidden virtue in him.
 
Constable:
 
- By my faith, sir, but it is; never any body saw it
 
- but his lackey: 'tis a hooded valour; and when it
 
- appears, it will bate.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Ill will never said well.
 
Constable:
 
- I will cap that proverb with 'There is flattery in friendship.'
 
ORLEANS:
 
- And I will take up that with 'Give the devil his due.'
 
Constable:
 
- Well placed: there stands your friend for the
 
- devil: have at the very eye of that proverb with 'A
 
- pox of the devil.'
 
ORLEANS:
 
- You are the better at proverbs, by how much 'A
 
- fool's bolt is soon shot.'
 
Constable:
 
- You have shot over.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- 'Tis not the first time you were overshot.
 
- 
[Enter a Messenger]
 
Messenger:
 
- My lord high constable, the English lie within
 
- fifteen hundred paces of your tents.
 
Constable:
 
- Who hath measured the ground?
 
Messenger:
 
- The Lord Grandpre.
 
Constable:
 
- A valiant and most expert gentleman. Would it were
 
- day! Alas, poor Harry of England! he longs not for
 
- the dawning as we do.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- What a wretched and peevish fellow is this king of
 
- England, to mope with his fat-brained followers so
 
- far out of his knowledge!
 
Constable:
 
- If the English had any apprehension, they would run away.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- That they lack; for if their heads had any
 
- intellectual armour, they could never wear such heavy
 
- head-pieces.
 
RAMBURES:
 
- That island of England breeds very valiant
 
- creatures; their mastiffs are of unmatchable courage.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Foolish curs, that run winking into the mouth of a
 
- Russian bear and have their heads crushed like
 
- rotten apples! You may as well say, that's a
 
- valiant flea that dare eat his breakfast on the lip of a lion.
 
Constable:
 
- Just, just; and the men do sympathize with the
 
- mastiffs in robustious and rough coming on, leaving
 
- their wits with their wives: and then give them
 
- great meals of beef and iron and steel, they will
 
- eat like wolves and fight like devils.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Ay, but these English are shrewdly out of beef.
 
Constable:
 
- Then shall we find to-morrow they have only stomachs
 
- to eat and none to fight. Now is it time to arm:
 
- come, shall we about it?
 
ORLEANS:
 
- It is now two o'clock: but, let me see, by ten
 
- We shall have each a hundred Englishmen.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, (PROLOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- Now entertain conjecture of a time
 
- When creeping murmur and the poring dark
 
- Fills the wide vessel of the universe.
 
- From camp to camp through the foul womb of night
 
- The hum of either army stilly sounds,
 
- That the fixed sentinels almost receive
 
- The secret whispers of each other's watch:
 
- Fire answers fire, and through their paly flames
 
- Each battle sees the other's umber'd face;
 
- Steed threatens steed, in high and boastful neighs
 
- Piercing the night's dull ear, and from the tents
 
- The armourers, accomplishing the knights,
 
- With busy hammers closing rivets up,
 
- Give dreadful note of preparation:
 
- The country cocks do crow, the clocks do toll,
 
- And the third hour of drowsy morning name.
 
- Proud of their numbers and secure in soul,
 
- The confident and over-lusty French
 
- Do the low-rated English play at dice;
 
- And chide the cripple tardy-gaited night
 
- Who, like a foul and ugly witch, doth limp
 
- So tediously away. The poor condemned English,
 
- Like sacrifices, by their watchful fires
 
- Sit patiently and inly ruminate
 
- The morning's danger, and their gesture sad
 
- Investing lank-lean; cheeks and war-worn coats
 
- Presenteth them unto the gazing moon
 
- So many horrid ghosts. O now, who will behold
 
- The royal captain of this ruin'd band
 
- Walking from watch to watch, from tent to tent,
 
- Let him cry 'Praise and glory on his head!'
 
- For forth he goes and visits all his host.
 
- Bids them good morrow with a modest smile
 
- And calls them brothers, friends and countrymen.
 
- Upon his royal face there is no note
 
- How dread an army hath enrounded him;
 
- Nor doth he dedicate one jot of colour
 
- Unto the weary and all-watched night,
 
- But freshly looks and over-bears attaint
 
- With cheerful semblance and sweet majesty;
 
- That every wretch, pining and pale before,
 
- Beholding him, plucks comfort from his looks:
 
- A largess universal like the sun
 
- His liberal eye doth give to every one,
 
- Thawing cold fear, that mean and gentle all,
 
- Behold, as may unworthiness define,
 
- A little touch of Harry in the night.
 
- And so our scene must to the battle fly;
 
- Where--O for pity!--we shall much disgrace
 
- With four or five most vile and ragged foils,
 
- Right ill-disposed in brawl ridiculous,
 
- The name of Agincourt. Yet sit and see,
 
- Minding true things by what their mockeries be.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT IV, SCENE I.
The English camp at Agincourt.
[Enter KING HENRY, BEDFORD, and GLOUCESTER]
KING HENRY V:
 
- Gloucester, 'tis true that we are in great danger;
 
- The greater therefore should our courage be.
 
- Good morrow, brother Bedford. God Almighty!
 
- There is some soul of goodness in things evil,
 
- Would men observingly distil it out.
 
- For our bad neighbour makes us early stirrers,
 
- Which is both healthful and good husbandry:
 
- Besides, they are our outward consciences,
 
- And preachers to us all, admonishing
 
- That we should dress us fairly for our end.
 
- Thus may we gather honey from the weed,
 
- And make a moral of the devil himself.
 
- 
[Enter ERPINGHAM]
 
- Good morrow, old Sir Thomas Erpingham:
 
- A good soft pillow for that good white head
 
- Were better than a churlish turf of France.
 
ERPINGHAM:
 
- Not so, my liege: this lodging likes me better,
 
- Since I may say 'Now lie I like a king.'
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- 'Tis good for men to love their present pains
 
- Upon example; so the spirit is eased:
 
- And when the mind is quicken'd, out of doubt,
 
- The organs, though defunct and dead before,
 
- Break up their drowsy grave and newly move,
 
- With casted slough and fresh legerity.
 
- Lend me thy cloak, Sir Thomas. Brothers both,
 
- Commend me to the princes in our camp;
 
- Do my good morrow to them, and anon
 
- Desire them an to my pavilion.
 
GLOUCESTER:
 
- We shall, my liege.
 
ERPINGHAM:
 
- Shall I attend your grace?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No, my good knight;
 
- Go with my brothers to my lords of England:
 
- I and my bosom must debate awhile,
 
- And then I would no other company.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- God-a-mercy, old heart! thou speak'st cheerfully.
 
- 
[Enter PISTOL]
 
PISTOL:
 
- Discuss unto me; art thou officer?
 
- Or art thou base, common and popular?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I am a gentleman of a company.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Trail'st thou the puissant pike?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Even so. What are you?
 
PISTOL:
 
- As good a gentleman as the emperor.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then you are a better than the king.
 
PISTOL:
 
- The king's a bawcock, and a heart of gold,
 
- A lad of life, an imp of fame;
 
- Of parents good, of fist most valiant.
 
- I kiss his dirty shoe, and from heart-string
 
- I love the lovely bully. What is thy name?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Harry le Roy.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Le Roy! a Cornish name: art thou of Cornish crew?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No, I am a Welshman.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Know'st thou Fluellen?
 
PISTOL:
 
- Tell him, I'll knock his leek about his pate
 
- Upon Saint Davy's day.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Do not you wear your dagger in your cap that day,
 
- lest he knock that about yours.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Art thou his friend?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- And his kinsman too.
 
PISTOL:
 
- The figo for thee, then!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I thank you: God be with you!
 
PISTOL:
 
- My name is Pistol call'd.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- So! in the name of Jesu Christ, speak lower. It is
 
- the greatest admiration of the universal world, when
 
- the true and aunchient prerogatifes and laws of the
 
- wars is not kept: if you would take the pains but to
 
- examine the wars of Pompey the Great, you shall
 
- find, I warrant you, that there is no tiddle toddle
 
- nor pibble pabble in Pompey's camp; I warrant you,
 
- you shall find the ceremonies of the wars, and the
 
- cares of it, and the forms of it, and the sobriety
 
- of it, and the modesty of it, to be otherwise.
 
GOWER:
 
- Why, the enemy is loud; you hear him all night.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- If the enemy is an ass and a fool and a prating
 
- coxcomb, is it meet, think you, that we should also,
 
- look you, be an ass and a fool and a prating
 
- coxcomb? in your own conscience, now?
 
GOWER:
 
- I will speak lower.
 
COURT:
 
- Brother John Bates, is not that the morning which
 
- breaks yonder?
 
BATES:
 
- I think it be: but we have no great cause to desire
 
- the approach of day.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- We see yonder the beginning of the day, but I think
 
- we shall never see the end of it. Who goes there?
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Under what captain serve you?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Under Sir Thomas Erpingham.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- A good old commander and a most kind gentleman: I
 
- pray you, what thinks he of our estate?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Even as men wrecked upon a sand, that look to be
 
- washed off the next tide.
 
BATES:
 
- He hath not told his thought to the king?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No; nor it is not meet he should. For, though I
 
- speak it to you, I think the king is but a man, as I
 
- am: the violet smells to him as it doth to me: the
 
- element shows to him as it doth to me; all his
 
- senses have but human conditions: his ceremonies
 
- laid by, in his nakedness he appears but a man; and
 
- though his affections are higher mounted than ours,
 
- yet, when they stoop, they stoop with the like
 
- wing. Therefore when he sees reason of fears, as we
 
- do, his fears, out of doubt, be of the same relish
 
- as ours are: yet, in reason, no man should possess
 
- him with any appearance of fear, lest he, by showing
 
- it, should dishearten his army.
 
BATES:
 
- He may show what outward courage he will; but I
 
- believe, as cold a night as 'tis, he could wish
 
- himself in Thames up to the neck; and so I would he
 
- were, and I by him, at all adventures, so we were quit here.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- By my troth, I will speak my conscience of the king:
 
- I think he would not wish himself any where but
 
- where he is.
 
BATES:
 
- Then I would he were here alone; so should he be
 
- sure to be ransomed, and a many poor men's lives saved.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I dare say you love him not so ill, to wish him here
 
- alone, howsoever you speak this to feel other men's
 
- minds: methinks I could not die any where so
 
- contented as in the king's company; his cause being
 
- just and his quarrel honourable.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- That's more than we know.
 
BATES:
 
- Ay, or more than we should seek after; for we know
 
- enough, if we know we are the kings subjects: if
 
- his cause be wrong, our obedience to the king wipes
 
- the crime of it out of us.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- But if the cause be not good, the king himself hath
 
- a heavy reckoning to make, when all those legs and
 
- arms and heads, chopped off in battle, shall join
 
- together at the latter day and cry all 'We died at
 
- such a place;' some swearing, some crying for a
 
- surgeon, some upon their wives left poor behind
 
- them, some upon the debts they owe, some upon their
 
- children rawly left. I am afeard there are few die
 
- well that die in a battle; for how can they
 
- charitably dispose of any thing, when blood is their
 
- argument? Now, if these men do not die well, it
 
- will be a black matter for the king that led them to
 
- it; whom to disobey were against all proportion of
 
- subjection.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- So, if a son that is by his father sent about
 
- merchandise do sinfully miscarry upon the sea, the
 
- imputation of his wickedness by your rule, should be
 
- imposed upon his father that sent him: or if a
 
- servant, under his master's command transporting a
 
- sum of money, be assailed by robbers and die in
 
- many irreconciled iniquities, you may call the
 
- business of the master the author of the servant's
 
- damnation: but this is not so: the king is not
 
- bound to answer the particular endings of his
 
- soldiers, the father of his son, nor the master of
 
- his servant; for they purpose not their death, when
 
- they purpose their services. Besides, there is no
 
- king, be his cause never so spotless, if it come to
 
- the arbitrement of swords, can try it out with all
 
- unspotted soldiers: some peradventure have on them
 
- the guilt of premeditated and contrived murder;
 
- some, of beguiling virgins with the broken seals of
 
- perjury; some, making the wars their bulwark, that
 
- have before gored the gentle bosom of peace with
 
- pillage and robbery. Now, if these men have
 
- defeated the law and outrun native punishment,
 
- though they can outstrip men, they have no wings to
 
- fly from God: war is his beadle, war is vengeance;
 
- so that here men are punished for before-breach of
 
- the king's laws in now the king's quarrel: where
 
- they feared the death, they have borne life away;
 
- and where they would be safe, they perish: then if
 
- they die unprovided, no more is the king guilty of
 
- their damnation than he was before guilty of those
 
- impieties for the which they are now visited. Every
 
- subject's duty is the king's; but every subject's
 
- soul is his own. Therefore should every soldier in
 
- the wars do as every sick man in his bed, wash every
 
- mote out of his conscience: and dying so, death
 
- is to him advantage; or not dying, the time was
 
- blessedly lost wherein such preparation was gained:
 
- and in him that escapes, it were not sin to think
 
- that, making God so free an offer, He let him
 
- outlive that day to see His greatness and to teach
 
- others how they should prepare.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- 'Tis certain, every man that dies ill, the ill upon
 
- his own head, the king is not to answer it.
 
BATES:
 
- But I do not desire he should answer for me; and
 
- yet I determine to fight lustily for him.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I myself heard the king say he would not be ransomed.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Ay, he said so, to make us fight cheerfully: but
 
- when our throats are cut, he may be ransomed, and we
 
- ne'er the wiser.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- If I live to see it, I will never trust his word after.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- You pay him then. That's a perilous shot out of an
 
- elder-gun, that a poor and private displeasure can
 
- do against a monarch! you may as well go about to
 
- turn the sun to ice with fanning in his face with a
 
- peacock's feather. You'll never trust his word
 
- after! come, 'tis a foolish saying.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Your reproof is something too round: I should be
 
- angry with you, if the time were convenient.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Let it be a quarrel between us, if you live.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I embrace it.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- How shall I know thee again?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Give me any gage of thine, and I will wear it in my
 
- bonnet: then, if ever thou darest acknowledge it, I
 
- will make it my quarrel.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Here's my glove: give me another of thine.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- This will I also wear in my cap: if ever thou come
 
- to me and say, after to-morrow, 'This is my glove,'
 
- by this hand, I will take thee a box on the ear.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- If ever I live to see it, I will challenge it.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Thou darest as well be hanged.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Well. I will do it, though I take thee in the
 
- king's company.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Keep thy word: fare thee well.
 
BATES:
 
- Be friends, you English fools, be friends: we have
 
- French quarrels enow, if you could tell how to reckon.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Indeed, the French may lay twenty French crowns to
 
- one, they will beat us; for they bear them on their
 
- shoulders: but it is no English treason to cut
 
- French crowns, and to-morrow the king himself will
 
- be a clipper.
 
- 
[Exeunt soldiers]
 
- Upon the king! let us our lives, our souls,
 
- Our debts, our careful wives,
 
- Our children and our sins lay on the king!
 
- We must bear all. O hard condition,
 
- Twin-born with greatness, subject to the breath
 
- Of every fool, whose sense no more can feel
 
- But his own wringing! What infinite heart's-ease
 
- Must kings neglect, that private men enjoy!
 
- And what have kings, that privates have not too,
 
- Save ceremony, save general ceremony?
 
- And what art thou, thou idle ceremony?
 
- What kind of god art thou, that suffer'st more
 
- Of mortal griefs than do thy worshippers?
 
- What are thy rents? what are thy comings in?
 
- O ceremony, show me but thy worth!
 
- What is thy soul of adoration?
 
- Art thou aught else but place, degree and form,
 
- Creating awe and fear in other men?
 
- Wherein thou art less happy being fear'd
 
- Than they in fearing.
 
- What drink'st thou oft, instead of homage sweet,
 
- But poison'd flattery? O, be sick, great greatness,
 
- And bid thy ceremony give thee cure!
 
- Think'st thou the fiery fever will go out
 
- With titles blown from adulation?
 
- Will it give place to flexure and low bending?
 
- Canst thou, when thou command'st the beggar's knee,
 
- Command the health of it? No, thou proud dream,
 
- That play'st so subtly with a king's repose;
 
- I am a king that find thee, and I know
 
- 'Tis not the balm, the sceptre and the ball,
 
- The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,
 
- The intertissued robe of gold and pearl,
 
- The farced title running 'fore the king,
 
- The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp
 
- That beats upon the high shore of this world,
 
- No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,
 
- Not all these, laid in bed majestical,
 
- Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave,
 
- Who with a body fill'd and vacant mind
 
- Gets him to rest, cramm'd with distressful bread;
 
- Never sees horrid night, the child of hell,
 
- But, like a lackey, from the rise to set
 
- Sweats in the eye of Phoebus and all night
 
- Sleeps in Elysium; next day after dawn,
 
- Doth rise and help Hyperion to his horse,
 
- And follows so the ever-running year,
 
- With profitable labour, to his grave:
 
- And, but for ceremony, such a wretch,
 
- Winding up days with toil and nights with sleep,
 
- Had the fore-hand and vantage of a king.
 
- The slave, a member of the country's peace,
 
- Enjoys it; but in gross brain little wots
 
- What watch the king keeps to maintain the peace,
 
- Whose hours the peasant best advantages.
 
- 
[Enter ERPINGHAM]
 
ERPINGHAM:
 
- My lord, your nobles, jealous of your absence,
 
- Seek through your camp to find you.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Good old knight,
 
- Collect them all together at my tent:
 
- I'll be before thee.
 
ERPINGHAM:
 
- I shall do't, my lord.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- O God of battles! steel my soldiers' hearts;
 
- Possess them not with fear; take from them now
 
- The sense of reckoning, if the opposed numbers
 
- Pluck their hearts from them. Not to-day, O Lord,
 
- O, not to-day, think not upon the fault
 
- My father made in compassing the crown!
 
- I Richard's body have interred anew;
 
- And on it have bestow'd more contrite tears
 
- Than from it issued forced drops of blood:
 
- Five hundred poor I have in yearly pay,
 
- Who twice a-day their wither'd hands hold up
 
- Toward heaven, to pardon blood; and I have built
 
- Two chantries, where the sad and solemn priests
 
- Sing still for Richard's soul. More will I do;
 
- Though all that I can do is nothing worth,
 
- Since that my penitence comes after all,
 
- Imploring pardon.
 
- 
[Enter GLOUCESTER]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- My brother Gloucester's voice? Ay;
 
- I know thy errand, I will go with thee:
 
- The day, my friends and all things stay for me.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE II.
The French camp.
[Enter the DAUPHIN, ORLEANS, RAMBURES, and others]
ORLEANS:
 
- The sun doth gild our armour; up, my lords!
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Montez A cheval! My horse! varlet! laquais! ha!
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Via! les eaux et la terre.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Rien puis? L'air et la feu.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Ciel, cousin Orleans.
 
- 
[Enter Constable]
 
- Now, my lord constable!
 
Constable:
 
- Hark, how our steeds for present service neigh!
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Mount them, and make incision in their hides,
 
- That their hot blood may spin in English eyes,
 
- And dout them with superfluous courage, ha!
 
RAMBURES:
 
- What, will you have them weep our horses' blood?
 
- How shall we, then, behold their natural tears?
 
- 
[Enter Messenger]
 
Messenger:
 
- The English are embattled, you French peers.
 
Constable:
 
- To horse, you gallant princes! straight to horse!
 
- Do but behold yon poor and starved band,
 
- And your fair show shall suck away their souls,
 
- Leaving them but the shales and husks of men.
 
- There is not work enough for all our hands;
 
- Scarce blood enough in all their sickly veins
 
- To give each naked curtle-axe a stain,
 
- That our French gallants shall to-day draw out,
 
- And sheathe for lack of sport: let us but blow on them,
 
- The vapour of our valour will o'erturn them.
 
- 'Tis positive 'gainst all exceptions, lords,
 
- That our superfluous lackeys and our peasants,
 
- Who in unnecessary action swarm
 
- About our squares of battle, were enow
 
- To purge this field of such a hilding foe,
 
- Though we upon this mountain's basis by
 
- Took stand for idle speculation:
 
- But that our honours must not. What's to say?
 
- A very little little let us do.
 
- And all is done. Then let the trumpets sound
 
- The tucket sonance and the note to mount;
 
- For our approach shall so much dare the field
 
- That England shall couch down in fear and yield.
 
- 
[Enter GRANDPRE]
 
GRANDPRE:
 
- Why do you stay so long, my lords of France?
 
- Yon island carrions, desperate of their bones,
 
- Ill-favouredly become the morning field:
 
- Their ragged curtains poorly are let loose,
 
- And our air shakes them passing scornfully:
 
- Big Mars seems bankrupt in their beggar'd host
 
- And faintly through a rusty beaver peeps:
 
- The horsemen sit like fixed candlesticks,
 
- With torch-staves in their hand; and their poor jades
 
- Lob down their heads, dropping the hides and hips,
 
- The gum down-roping from their pale-dead eyes
 
- And in their pale dull mouths the gimmal bit
 
- Lies foul with chew'd grass, still and motionless;
 
- And their executors, the knavish crows,
 
- Fly o'er them, all impatient for their hour.
 
- Description cannot suit itself in words
 
- To demonstrate the life of such a battle
 
- In life so lifeless as it shows itself.
 
Constable:
 
- They have said their prayers, and they stay for death.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Shall we go send them dinners and fresh suits
 
- And give their fasting horses provender,
 
- And after fight with them?
 
Constable:
 
- I stay but for my guidon: to the field!
 
- I will the banner from a trumpet take,
 
- And use it for my haste. Come, come, away!
 
- The sun is high, and we outwear the day.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE III.
The English camp.
[Enter GLOUCESTER, BEDFORD, EXETER, ERPINGHAM,
with all his host: SALISBURY and WESTMORELAND]
GLOUCESTER:
 
- Where is the king?
 
BEDFORD:
 
- The king himself is rode to view their battle.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- Of fighting men they have full three score thousand.
 
EXETER:
 
- There's five to one; besides, they all are fresh.
 
SALISBURY:
 
- God's arm strike with us! 'tis a fearful odds.
 
- God be wi' you, princes all; I'll to my charge:
 
- If we no more meet till we meet in heaven,
 
- Then, joyfully, my noble Lord of Bedford,
 
- My dear Lord Gloucester, and my good Lord Exeter,
 
- And my kind kinsman, warriors all, adieu!
 
BEDFORD:
 
- Farewell, good Salisbury; and good luck go with thee!
 
EXETER:
 
- Farewell, kind lord; fight valiantly to-day:
 
- And yet I do thee wrong to mind thee of it,
 
- For thou art framed of the firm truth of valour.
 
- 
[Exit SALISBURY]
 
BEDFORD:
 
- He is full of valour as of kindness;
 
- Princely in both.
 
- 
[Enter the KING]
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- O that we now had here
 
- But one ten thousand of those men in England
 
- That do no work to-day!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What's he that wishes so?
 
- My cousin Westmoreland? No, my fair cousin:
 
- If we are mark'd to die, we are enow
 
- To do our country loss; and if to live,
 
- The fewer men, the greater share of honour.
 
- God's will! I pray thee, wish not one man more.
 
- By Jove, I am not covetous for gold,
 
- Nor care I who doth feed upon my cost;
 
- It yearns me not if men my garments wear;
 
- Such outward things dwell not in my desires:
 
- But if it be a sin to covet honour,
 
- I am the most offending soul alive.
 
- No, faith, my coz, wish not a man from England:
 
- God's peace! I would not lose so great an honour
 
- As one man more, methinks, would share from me
 
- For the best hope I have. O, do not wish one more!
 
- Rather proclaim it, Westmoreland, through my host,
 
- That he which hath no stomach to this fight,
 
- Let him depart; his passport shall be made
 
- And crowns for convoy put into his purse:
 
- We would not die in that man's company
 
- That fears his fellowship to die with us.
 
- This day is called the feast of Crispian:
 
- He that outlives this day, and comes safe home,
 
- Will stand a tip-toe when the day is named,
 
- And rouse him at the name of Crispian.
 
- He that shall live this day, and see old age,
 
- Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,
 
- And say 'To-morrow is Saint Crispian:'
 
- Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars.
 
- And say 'These wounds I had on Crispin's day.'
 
- Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,
 
- But he'll remember with advantages
 
- What feats he did that day: then shall our names.
 
- Familiar in his mouth as household words
 
- Harry the king, Bedford and Exeter,
 
- Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester,
 
- Be in their flowing cups freshly remember'd.
 
- This story shall the good man teach his son;
 
- And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,
 
- From this day to the ending of the world,
 
- But we in it shall be remember'd;
 
- We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
 
- For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
 
- Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
 
- This day shall gentle his condition:
 
- And gentlemen in England now a-bed
 
- Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
 
- And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
 
- That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.
 
- 
[Re-enter SALISBURY]
 
SALISBURY:
 
- My sovereign lord, bestow yourself with speed:
 
- The French are bravely in their battles set,
 
- And will with all expedience charge on us.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- All things are ready, if our minds be so.
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- Perish the man whose mind is backward now!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Thou dost not wish more help from England, coz?
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- God's will! my liege, would you and I alone,
 
- Without more help, could fight this royal battle!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Why, now thou hast unwish'd five thousand men;
 
- Which likes me better than to wish us one.
 
- You know your places: God be with you all!
 
- 
[Tucket. Enter MONTJOY]
 
MONTJOY:
 
- Once more I come to know of thee, King Harry,
 
- If for thy ransom thou wilt now compound,
 
- Before thy most assured overthrow:
 
- For certainly thou art so near the gulf,
 
- Thou needs must be englutted. Besides, in mercy,
 
- The constable desires thee thou wilt mind
 
- Thy followers of repentance; that their souls
 
- May make a peaceful and a sweet retire
 
- From off these fields, where, wretches, their poor bodies
 
- Must lie and fester.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Who hath sent thee now?
 
MONTJOY:
 
- The Constable of France.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I pray thee, bear my former answer back:
 
- Bid them achieve me and then sell my bones.
 
- Good God! why should they mock poor fellows thus?
 
- The man that once did sell the lion's skin
 
- While the beast lived, was killed with hunting him.
 
- A many of our bodies shall no doubt
 
- Find native graves; upon the which, I trust,
 
- Shall witness live in brass of this day's work:
 
- And those that leave their valiant bones in France,
 
- Dying like men, though buried in your dunghills,
 
- They shall be famed; for there the sun shall greet them,
 
- And draw their honours reeking up to heaven;
 
- Leaving their earthly parts to choke your clime,
 
- The smell whereof shall breed a plague in France.
 
- Mark then abounding valour in our English,
 
- That being dead, like to the bullet's grazing,
 
- Break out into a second course of mischief,
 
- Killing in relapse of mortality.
 
- Let me speak proudly: tell the constable
 
- We are but warriors for the working-day;
 
- Our gayness and our gilt are all besmirch'd
 
- With rainy marching in the painful field;
 
- There's not a piece of feather in our host--
 
- Good argument, I hope, we will not fly--
 
- And time hath worn us into slovenry:
 
- But, by the mass, our hearts are in the trim;
 
- And my poor soldiers tell me, yet ere night
 
- They'll be in fresher robes, or they will pluck
 
- The gay new coats o'er the French soldiers' heads
 
- And turn them out of service. If they do this,--
 
- As, if God please, they shall,--my ransom then
 
- Will soon be levied. Herald, save thou thy labour;
 
- Come thou no more for ransom, gentle herald:
 
- They shall have none, I swear, but these my joints;
 
- Which if they have as I will leave 'em them,
 
- Shall yield them little, tell the constable.
 
MONTJOY:
 
- I shall, King Harry. And so fare thee well:
 
- Thou never shalt hear herald any more.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I fear thou'lt once more come again for ransom.
 
- 
[Enter YORK]
 
YORK:
 
- My lord, most humbly on my knee I beg
 
- The leading of the vaward.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Take it, brave York. Now, soldiers, march away:
 
- And how thou pleasest, God, dispose the day!
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE IV.
The field of battle.
[Alarum. Excursions. Enter PISTOL, French Soldier, and Boy]
French Soldier:
 
- Je pense que vous etes gentilhomme de bonne qualite.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Qualtitie calmie custure me! Art thou a gentleman?
 
- what is thy name? discuss.
 
French Soldier:
 
- O Seigneur Dieu!
 
PISTOL:
 
- O, Signieur Dew should be a gentleman:
 
- Perpend my words, O Signieur Dew, and mark;
 
- O Signieur Dew, thou diest on point of fox,
 
- Except, O signieur, thou do give to me
 
- Egregious ransom.
 
French Soldier:
 
- O, prenez misericorde! ayez pitie de moi!
 
PISTOL:
 
- Moy shall not serve; I will have forty moys;
 
- Or I will fetch thy rim out at thy throat
 
- In drops of crimson blood.
 
French Soldier:
 
- Est-il impossible d'echapper la force de ton bras?
 
PISTOL:
 
- Brass, cur!
 
- Thou damned and luxurious mountain goat,
 
- Offer'st me brass?
 
French Soldier:
 
- O pardonnez moi!
 
PISTOL:
 
- Say'st thou me so? is that a ton of moys?
 
- Come hither, boy: ask me this slave in French
 
- What is his name.
 
Boy:
 
- Ecoutez: comment etes-vous appele?
 
French Soldier:
 
- Monsieur le Fer.
 
Boy:
 
- He says his name is Master Fer.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Master Fer! I'll fer him, and firk him, and ferret
 
- him: discuss the same in French unto him.
 
Boy:
 
- I do not know the French for fer, and ferret, and firk.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Bid him prepare; for I will cut his throat.
 
French Soldier:
 
- Que dit-il, monsieur?
 
Boy:
 
- Il me commande de vous dire que vous faites vous
 
- pret; car ce soldat ici est dispose tout a cette
 
- heure de couper votre gorge.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Owy, cuppele gorge, permafoy,
 
- Peasant, unless thou give me crowns, brave crowns;
 
- Or mangled shalt thou be by this my sword.
 
French Soldier:
 
- O, je vous supplie, pour l'amour de Dieu, me
 
- pardonner! Je suis gentilhomme de bonne maison:
 
- gardez ma vie, et je vous donnerai deux cents ecus.
 
PISTOL:
 
- What are his words?
 
Boy:
 
- He prays you to save his life: he is a gentleman of
 
- a good house; and for his ransom he will give you
 
- two hundred crowns.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Tell him my fury shall abate, and I the crowns will take.
 
French Soldier:
 
- Petit monsieur, que dit-il?
 
Boy:
 
- Encore qu'il est contre son jurement de pardonner
 
- aucun prisonnier, neanmoins, pour les ecus que vous
 
- l'avez promis, il est content de vous donner la
 
- liberte, le franchisement.
 
French Soldier:
 
- Sur mes genoux je vous donne mille remercimens; et
 
- je m'estime heureux que je suis tombe entre les
 
- mains d'un chevalier, je pense, le plus brave,
 
- vaillant, et tres distingue seigneur d'Angleterre.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Expound unto me, boy.
 
Boy:
 
- He gives you, upon his knees, a thousand thanks; and
 
- he esteems himself happy that he hath fallen into
 
- the hands of one, as he thinks, the most brave,
 
- valorous, and thrice-worthy signieur of England.
 
PISTOL:
 
- As I suck blood, I will some mercy show.
 
- Follow me!
 
ACT IV, SCENE V.
Another part of the field.
[Enter Constable, ORLEANS, BOURBON, DAUPHIN, and RAMBURES]
ORLEANS:
 
- O seigneur! le jour est perdu, tout est perdu!
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- Mort de ma vie! all is confounded, all!
 
- Reproach and everlasting shame
 
- Sits mocking in our plumes. O merchante fortune!
 
- Do not run away.
 
- 
[A short alarum]
 
Constable:
 
- Why, all our ranks are broke.
 
DAUPHIN:
 
- O perdurable shame! let's stab ourselves.
 
- Be these the wretches that we play'd at dice for?
 
ORLEANS:
 
- Is this the king we sent to for his ransom?
 
BOURBON:
 
- Shame and eternal shame, nothing but shame!
 
- Let us die in honour: once more back again;
 
- And he that will not follow Bourbon now,
 
- Let him go hence, and with his cap in hand,
 
- Like a base pander, hold the chamber-door
 
- Whilst by a slave, no gentler than my dog,
 
- His fairest daughter is contaminated.
 
Constable:
 
- Disorder, that hath spoil'd us, friend us now!
 
- Let us on heaps go offer up our lives.
 
ORLEANS:
 
- We are enow yet living in the field
 
- To smother up the English in our throngs,
 
- If any order might be thought upon.
 
BOURBON:
 
- The devil take order now! I'll to the throng:
 
- Let life be short; else shame will be too long.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE VI.
Another part of the field.
[Alarums. Enter KING HENRY and forces, EXETER, and others] 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Well have we done, thrice valiant countrymen:
 
- But all's not done; yet keep the French the field.
 
EXETER:
 
- The Duke of York commends him to your majesty.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Lives he, good uncle? thrice within this hour
 
- I saw him down; thrice up again and fighting;
 
- From helmet to the spur all blood he was.
 
EXETER:
 
- In which array, brave soldier, doth he lie,
 
- Larding the plain; and by his bloody side,
 
- Yoke-fellow to his honour-owing wounds,
 
- The noble Earl of Suffolk also lies.
 
- Suffolk first died: and York, all haggled over,
 
- Comes to him, where in gore he lay insteep'd,
 
- And takes him by the beard; kisses the gashes
 
- That bloodily did spawn upon his face;
 
- And cries aloud 'Tarry, dear cousin Suffolk!
 
- My soul shall thine keep company to heaven;
 
- Tarry, sweet soul, for mine, then fly abreast,
 
- As in this glorious and well-foughten field
 
- We kept together in our chivalry!'
 
- Upon these words I came and cheer'd him up:
 
- He smiled me in the face, raught me his hand,
 
- And, with a feeble gripe, says 'Dear my lord,
 
- Commend my service to me sovereign.'
 
- So did he turn and over Suffolk's neck
 
- He threw his wounded arm and kiss'd his lips;
 
- And so espoused to death, with blood he seal'd
 
- A testament of noble-ending love.
 
- The pretty and sweet manner of it forced
 
- Those waters from me which I would have stopp'd;
 
- But I had not so much of man in me,
 
- And all my mother came into mine eyes
 
- And gave me up to tears.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I blame you not;
 
- For, hearing this, I must perforce compound
 
- With mistful eyes, or they will issue too.
 
- 
[Alarum]
 
- But, hark! what new alarum is this same?
 
- The French have reinforced their scatter'd men:
 
- Then every soldier kill his prisoners:
 
- Give the word through.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE VII.
Another part of the field.
[Enter FLUELLEN and GOWER]
FLUELLEN:
 
- Kill the poys and the luggage! 'tis expressly
 
- against the law of arms: 'tis as arrant a piece of
 
- knavery, mark you now, as can be offer't; in your
 
- conscience, now, is it not?
 
GOWER:
 
- 'Tis certain there's not a boy left alive; and the
 
- cowardly rascals that ran from the battle ha' done
 
- this slaughter: besides, they have burned and
 
- carried away all that was in the king's tent;
 
- wherefore the king, most worthily, hath caused every
 
- soldier to cut his prisoner's throat. O, 'tis a
 
- gallant king!
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Ay, he was porn at Monmouth, Captain Gower. What
 
- call you the town's name where Alexander the Pig was born!
 
GOWER:
 
- Alexander the Great.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Why, I pray you, is not pig great? the pig, or the
 
- great, or the mighty, or the huge, or the
 
- magnanimous, are all one reckonings, save the phrase
 
- is a little variations.
 
GOWER:
 
- I think Alexander the Great was born in Macedon; his
 
- father was called Philip of Macedon, as I take it.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I think it is in Macedon where Alexander is porn. I
 
- tell you, captain, if you look in the maps of the
 
- 'orld, I warrant you sall find, in the comparisons
 
- between Macedon and Monmouth, that the situations,
 
- look you, is both alike. There is a river in
 
- Macedon; and there is also moreover a river at
 
- Monmouth: it is called Wye at Monmouth; but it is
 
- out of my prains what is the name of the other
 
- river; but 'tis all one, 'tis alike as my fingers is
 
- to my fingers, and there is salmons in both. If you
 
- mark Alexander's life well, Harry of Monmouth's life
 
- is come after it indifferent well; for there is
 
- figures in all things. Alexander, God knows, and
 
- you know, in his rages, and his furies, and his
 
- wraths, and his cholers, and his moods, and his
 
- displeasures, and his indignations, and also being a
 
- little intoxicates in his prains, did, in his ales and
 
- his angers, look you, kill his best friend, Cleitus.
 
GOWER:
 
- Our king is not like him in that: he never killed
 
- any of his friends.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- It is not well done, mark you now take the tales out
 
- of my mouth, ere it is made and finished. I speak
 
- but in the figures and comparisons of it: as
 
- Alexander killed his friend Cleitus, being in his
 
- ales and his cups; so also Harry Monmouth, being in
 
- his right wits and his good judgments, turned away
 
- the fat knight with the great belly-doublet: he
 
- was full of jests, and gipes, and knaveries, and
 
- mocks; I have forgot his name.
 
GOWER:
 
- Sir John Falstaff.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- That is he: I'll tell you there is good men porn at Monmouth.
 
GOWER:
 
- Here comes his majesty.
 
- 
[Alarum. Enter KING HENRY, and forces;
WARWICK, GLOUCESTER, EXETER, and others]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I was not angry since I came to France
 
- Until this instant. Take a trumpet, herald;
 
- Ride thou unto the horsemen on yon hill:
 
- If they will fight with us, bid them come down,
 
- Or void the field; they do offend our sight:
 
- If they'll do neither, we will come to them,
 
- And make them skirr away, as swift as stones
 
- Enforced from the old Assyrian slings:
 
- Besides, we'll cut the throats of those we have,
 
- And not a man of them that we shall take
 
- Shall taste our mercy. Go and tell them so.
 
- 
[Enter MONTJOY]
 
EXETER:
 
- Here comes the herald of the French, my liege.
 
GLOUCESTER:
 
- His eyes are humbler than they used to be.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- How now! what means this, herald? know'st thou not
 
- That I have fined these bones of mine for ransom?
 
- Comest thou again for ransom?
 
MONTJOY:
 
- No, great king:
 
- I come to thee for charitable licence,
 
- That we may wander o'er this bloody field
 
- To look our dead, and then to bury them;
 
- To sort our nobles from our common men.
 
- For many of our princes--woe the while!--
 
- Lie drown'd and soak'd in mercenary blood;
 
- So do our vulgar drench their peasant limbs
 
- In blood of princes; and their wounded steeds
 
- Fret fetlock deep in gore and with wild rage
 
- Yerk out their armed heels at their dead masters,
 
- Killing them twice. O, give us leave, great king,
 
- To view the field in safety and dispose
 
- Of their dead bodies!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I tell thee truly, herald,
 
- I know not if the day be ours or no;
 
- For yet a many of your horsemen peer
 
- And gallop o'er the field.
 
MONTJOY:
 
- The day is yours.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Praised be God, and not our strength, for it!
 
- What is this castle call'd that stands hard by?
 
MONTJOY:
 
- They call it Agincourt.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then call we this the field of Agincourt,
 
- Fought on the day of Crispin Crispianus.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Your grandfather of famous memory, an't please your
 
- majesty, and your great-uncle Edward the Plack
 
- Prince of Wales, as I have read in the chronicles,
 
- fought a most prave pattle here in France.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- They did, Fluellen.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Your majesty says very true: if your majesties is
 
- remembered of it, the Welshmen did good service in a
 
- garden where leeks did grow, wearing leeks in their
 
- Monmouth caps; which, your majesty know, to this
 
- hour is an honourable badge of the service; and I do
 
- believe your majesty takes no scorn to wear the leek
 
- upon Saint Tavy's day.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I wear it for a memorable honour;
 
- For I am Welsh, you know, good countryman.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- All the water in Wye cannot wash your majesty's
 
- Welsh plood out of your pody, I can tell you that:
 
- God pless it and preserve it, as long as it pleases
 
- his grace, and his majesty too!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Thanks, good my countryman.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- By Jeshu, I am your majesty's countryman, I care not
 
- who know it; I will confess it to all the 'orld: I
 
- need not to be ashamed of your majesty, praised be
 
- God, so long as your majesty is an honest man.
 
EXETER:
 
- Soldier, you must come to the king.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Soldier, why wearest thou that glove in thy cap?
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- An't please your majesty, 'tis the gage of one that
 
- I should fight withal, if he be alive.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- An Englishman?
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- An't please your majesty, a rascal that swaggered
 
- with me last night; who, if alive and ever dare to
 
- challenge this glove, I have sworn to take him a box
 
- o' th' ear: or if I can see my glove in his cap,
 
- which he swore, as he was a soldier, he would wear
 
- if alive, I will strike it out soundly.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What think you, Captain Fluellen? is it fit this
 
- soldier keep his oath?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- He is a craven and a villain else, an't please your
 
- majesty, in my conscience.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- It may be his enemy is a gentleman of great sort,
 
- quite from the answer of his degree.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Though he be as good a gentleman as the devil is, as
 
- Lucifer and Belzebub himself, it is necessary, look
 
- your grace, that he keep his vow and his oath: if
 
- he be perjured, see you now, his reputation is as
 
- arrant a villain and a Jacksauce, as ever his black
 
- shoe trod upon God's ground and his earth, in my
 
- conscience, la!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then keep thy vow, sirrah, when thou meetest the fellow.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- So I will, my liege, as I live.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Who servest thou under?
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Under Captain Gower, my liege.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Gower is a good captain, and is good knowledge and
 
- literatured in the wars.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Call him hither to me, soldier.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- I will, my liege.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Here, Fluellen; wear thou this favour for me and
 
- stick it in thy cap: when Alencon and myself were
 
- down together, I plucked this glove from his helm:
 
- if any man challenge this, he is a friend to
 
- Alencon, and an enemy to our person; if thou
 
- encounter any such, apprehend him, an thou dost me love.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Your grace doo's me as great honours as can be
 
- desired in the hearts of his subjects: I would fain
 
- see the man, that has but two legs, that shall find
 
- himself aggrieved at this glove; that is all; but I
 
- would fain see it once, an please God of his grace
 
- that I might see.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Knowest thou Gower?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- He is my dear friend, an please you.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Pray thee, go seek him, and bring him to my tent.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I will fetch him.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- My Lord of Warwick, and my brother Gloucester,
 
- Follow Fluellen closely at the heels:
 
- The glove which I have given him for a favour
 
- May haply purchase him a box o' th' ear;
 
- It is the soldier's; I by bargain should
 
- Wear it myself. Follow, good cousin Warwick:
 
- If that the soldier strike him, as I judge
 
- By his blunt bearing he will keep his word,
 
- Some sudden mischief may arise of it;
 
- For I do know Fluellen valiant
 
- And, touched with choler, hot as gunpowder,
 
- And quickly will return an injury:
 
- Follow and see there be no harm between them.
 
- Go you with me, uncle of Exeter.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT IV, SCENE VIII.
Before KING HENRY'S pavilion.
[Enter GOWER and WILLIAMS]
WILLIAMS:
 
- I warrant it is to knight you, captain.
 
- 
[Enter FLUELLEN]
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- God's will and his pleasure, captain, I beseech you
 
- now, come apace to the king: there is more good
 
- toward you peradventure than is in your knowledge to dream of.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Sir, know you this glove?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Know the glove! I know the glove is glove.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- I know this; and thus I challenge it.
 
- 
[Strikes him]
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- 'Sblood! an arrant traitor as any is in the
 
- universal world, or in France, or in England!
 
GOWER:
 
- How now, sir! you villain!
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Do you think I'll be forsworn?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Stand away, Captain Gower; I will give treason his
 
- payment into ploughs, I warrant you.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- I am no traitor.
 
WARWICK:
 
- How now, how now! what's the matter?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- How now! what's the matter?
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- My liege, here is a villain and a traitor, that,
 
- look your grace, has struck the glove which your
 
- majesty is take out of the helmet of Alencon.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- My liege, this was my glove; here is the fellow of
 
- it; and he that I gave it to in change promised to
 
- wear it in his cap: I promised to strike him, if he
 
- did: I met this man with my glove in his cap, and I
 
- have been as good as my word.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Your majesty hear now, saving your majesty's
 
- manhood, what an arrant, rascally, beggarly, lousy
 
- knave it is: I hope your majesty is pear me
 
- testimony and witness, and will avouchment, that
 
- this is the glove of Alencon, that your majesty is
 
- give me; in your conscience, now?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Give me thy glove, soldier: look, here is the
 
- fellow of it.
 
- 'Twas I, indeed, thou promised'st to strike;
 
- And thou hast given me most bitter terms.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- An please your majesty, let his neck answer for it,
 
- if there is any martial law in the world.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- How canst thou make me satisfaction?
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- All offences, my lord, come from the heart: never
 
- came any from mine that might offend your majesty.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- It was ourself thou didst abuse.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- Your majesty came not like yourself: you appeared to
 
- me but as a common man; witness the night, your
 
- garments, your lowliness; and what your highness
 
- suffered under that shape, I beseech you take it for
 
- your own fault and not mine: for had you been as I
 
- took you for, I made no offence; therefore, I
 
- beseech your highness, pardon me.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Here, uncle Exeter, fill this glove with crowns,
 
- And give it to this fellow. Keep it, fellow;
 
- And wear it for an honour in thy cap
 
- Till I do challenge it. Give him the crowns:
 
- And, captain, you must needs be friends with him.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- By this day and this light, the fellow has mettle
 
- enough in his belly. Hold, there is twelve pence
 
- for you; and I pray you to serve Got, and keep you
 
- out of prawls, and prabbles' and quarrels, and
 
- dissensions, and, I warrant you, it is the better for you.
 
WILLIAMS:
 
- I will none of your money.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Now, herald, are the dead number'd?
 
Herald:
 
- Here is the number of the slaughter'd French.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What prisoners of good sort are taken, uncle?
 
EXETER:
 
- Charles Duke of Orleans, nephew to the king;
 
- John Duke of Bourbon, and Lord Bouciqualt:
 
- Of other lords and barons, knights and squires,
 
- Full fifteen hundred, besides common men.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Come, go we in procession to the village.
 
- And be it death proclaimed through our host
 
- To boast of this or take the praise from God
 
- Which is his only.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Is it not lawful, an please your majesty, to tell
 
- how many is killed?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Yes, captain; but with this acknowledgement,
 
- That God fought for us.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Yes, my conscience, he did us great good.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Do we all holy rites;
 
- Let there be sung 'Non nobis' and 'Te Deum;'
 
- The dead with charity enclosed in clay:
 
- And then to Calais; and to England then:
 
- Where ne'er from France arrived more happy men.
 
- 
[Exeunt]
 
ACT V, (PROLOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- Vouchsafe to those that have not read the story,
 
- That I may prompt them: and of such as have,
 
- I humbly pray them to admit the excuse
 
- Of time, of numbers and due course of things,
 
- Which cannot in their huge and proper life
 
- Be here presented. Now we bear the king
 
- Toward Calais: grant him there; there seen,
 
- Heave him away upon your winged thoughts
 
- Athwart the sea. Behold, the English beach
 
- Pales in the flood with men, with wives and boys,
 
- Whose shouts and claps out-voice the deep mouth'd sea,
 
- Which like a mighty whiffler 'fore the king
 
- Seems to prepare his way: so let him land,
 
- And solemnly see him set on to London.
 
- So swift a pace hath thought that even now
 
- You may imagine him upon Blackheath;
 
- Where that his lords desire him to have borne
 
- His bruised helmet and his bended sword
 
- Before him through the city: he forbids it,
 
- Being free from vainness and self-glorious pride;
 
- Giving full trophy, signal and ostent
 
- Quite from himself to God. But now behold,
 
- In the quick forge and working-house of thought,
 
- How London doth pour out her citizens!
 
- The mayor and all his brethren in best sort,
 
- Like to the senators of the antique Rome,
 
- With the plebeians swarming at their heels,
 
- Go forth and fetch their conquering Caesar in:
 
- As, by a lower but loving likelihood,
 
- Were now the general of our gracious empress,
 
- As in good time he may, from Ireland coming,
 
- Bringing rebellion broached on his sword,
 
- How many would the peaceful city quit,
 
- To welcome him! much more, and much more cause,
 
- Did they this Harry. Now in London place him;
 
- As yet the lamentation of the French
 
- Invites the King of England's stay at home;
 
- The emperor's coming in behalf of France,
 
- To order peace between them; and omit
 
- All the occurrences, whatever chanced,
 
- Till Harry's back-return again to France:
 
- There must we bring him; and myself have play'd
 
- The interim, by remembering you 'tis past.
 
- Then brook abridgment, and your eyes advance,
 
- After your thoughts, straight back again to France.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT V, SCENE I.
France. The English camp.
[Enter FLUELLEN and GOWER]
GOWER:
 
- Nay, that's right; but why wear you your leek today?
 
- Saint Davy's day is past.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- There is occasions and causes why and wherefore in
 
- all things: I will tell you, asse my friend,
 
- Captain Gower: the rascally, scald, beggarly,
 
- lousy, pragging knave, Pistol, which you and
 
- yourself and all the world know to be no petter
 
- than a fellow, look you now, of no merits, he is
 
- come to me and prings me pread and salt yesterday,
 
- look you, and bid me eat my leek: it was in place
 
- where I could not breed no contention with him; but
 
- I will be so bold as to wear it in my cap till I see
 
- him once again, and then I will tell him a little
 
- piece of my desires.
 
- 
[Enter PISTOL]
 
GOWER:
 
- Why, here he comes, swelling like a turkey-cock.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- 'Tis no matter for his swellings nor his
 
- turkey-cocks. God pless you, Aunchient Pistol! you
 
- scurvy, lousy knave, God pless you!
 
PISTOL:
 
- Ha! art thou bedlam? dost thou thirst, base Trojan,
 
- To have me fold up Parca's fatal web?
 
- Hence! I am qualmish at the smell of leek.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I peseech you heartily, scurvy, lousy knave, at my
 
- desires, and my requests, and my petitions, to eat,
 
- look you, this leek: because, look you, you do not
 
- love it, nor your affections and your appetites and
 
- your digestions doo's not agree with it, I would
 
- desire you to eat it.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Not for Cadwallader and all his goats.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- There is one goat for you.
 
- 
[Strikes him]
 
- Will you be so good, scauld knave, as eat it?
 
PISTOL:
 
- Base Trojan, thou shalt die.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- You say very true, scauld knave, when God's will is:
 
- I will desire you to live in the mean time, and eat
 
- your victuals: come, there is sauce for it.
 
- 
[Strikes him]
 
- You called me yesterday mountain-squire; but I will
 
- make you to-day a squire of low degree. I pray you,
 
- fall to: if you can mock a leek, you can eat a leek.
 
GOWER:
 
- Enough, captain: you have astonished him.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- I say, I will make him eat some part of my leek, or
 
- I will peat his pate four days. Bite, I pray you; it
 
- is good for your green wound and your ploody coxcomb.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Yes, certainly, and out of doubt and out of question
 
- too, and ambiguities.
 
PISTOL:
 
- By this leek, I will most horribly revenge: I eat
 
- and eat, I swear--
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Eat, I pray you: will you have some more sauce to
 
- your leek? there is not enough leek to swear by.
 
PISTOL:
 
- Quiet thy cudgel; thou dost see I eat.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Much good do you, scauld knave, heartily. Nay, pray
 
- you, throw none away; the skin is good for your
 
- broken coxcomb. When you take occasions to see leeks
 
- hereafter, I pray you, mock at 'em; that is all.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Ay, leeks is good: hold you, there is a groat to
 
- heal your pate.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- Yes, verily and in truth, you shall take it; or I
 
- have another leek in my pocket, which you shall eat.
 
PISTOL:
 
- I take thy groat in earnest of revenge.
 
FLUELLEN:
 
- If I owe you any thing, I will pay you in cudgels:
 
- you shall be a woodmonger, and buy nothing of me but
 
- cudgels. God b' wi' you, and keep you, and heal your pate.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
PISTOL:
 
- All hell shall stir for this.
 
GOWER:
 
- Go, go; you are a counterfeit cowardly knave. Will
 
- you mock at an ancient tradition, begun upon an
 
- honourable respect, and worn as a memorable trophy of
 
- predeceased valour and dare not avouch in your deeds
 
- any of your words? I have seen you gleeking and
 
- galling at this gentleman twice or thrice. You
 
- thought, because he could not speak English in the
 
- native garb, he could not therefore handle an
 
- English cudgel: you find it otherwise; and
 
- henceforth let a Welsh correction teach you a good
 
- English condition. Fare ye well.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
PISTOL:
 
- Doth Fortune play the huswife with me now?
 
- News have I, that my Nell is dead i' the spital
 
- Of malady of France;
 
- And there my rendezvous is quite cut off.
 
- Old I do wax; and from my weary limbs
 
- Honour is cudgelled. Well, bawd I'll turn,
 
- And something lean to cutpurse of quick hand.
 
- To England will I steal, and there I'll steal:
 
- And patches will I get unto these cudgell'd scars,
 
- And swear I got them in the Gallia wars.
 
- 
[Exit]
 
ACT V, SCENE II.
France. A royal palace.
[Enter, at one door KING HENRY, EXETER, BEDFORD, GLOUCESTER, WARWICK,
WESTMORELAND, and other Lords; at another, the FRENCH KING, QUEEN ISABEL,
the PRINCESS KATHARINE, ALICE and other Ladies;
the DUKE of BURGUNDY, and his train]
KING HENRY V:
 
- Peace to this meeting, wherefore we are met!
 
- Unto our brother France, and to our sister,
 
- Health and fair time of day; joy and good wishes
 
- To our most fair and princely cousin Katharine;
 
- And, as a branch and member of this royalty,
 
- By whom this great assembly is contrived,
 
- We do salute you, Duke of Burgundy;
 
- And, princes French, and peers, health to you all!
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- Right joyous are we to behold your face,
 
- Most worthy brother England; fairly met:
 
- So are you, princes English, every one.
 
QUEEN ISABEL:
 
- So happy be the issue, brother England,
 
- Of this good day and of this gracious meeting,
 
- As we are now glad to behold your eyes;
 
- Your eyes, which hitherto have borne in them
 
- Against the French, that met them in their bent,
 
- The fatal balls of murdering basilisks:
 
- The venom of such looks, we fairly hope,
 
- Have lost their quality, and that this day
 
- Shall change all griefs and quarrels into love.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- To cry amen to that, thus we appear.
 
QUEEN ISABEL:
 
- You English princes all, I do salute you.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- My duty to you both, on equal love,
 
- Great Kings of France and England! That I have labour'd,
 
- With all my wits, my pains and strong endeavours,
 
- To bring your most imperial majesties
 
- Unto this bar and royal interview,
 
- Your mightiness on both parts best can witness.
 
- Since then my office hath so far prevail'd
 
- That, face to face and royal eye to eye,
 
- You have congreeted, let it not disgrace me,
 
- If I demand, before this royal view,
 
- What rub or what impediment there is,
 
- Why that the naked, poor and mangled Peace,
 
- Dear nurse of arts and joyful births,
 
- Should not in this best garden of the world
 
- Our fertile France, put up her lovely visage?
 
- Alas, she hath from France too long been chased,
 
- And all her husbandry doth lie on heaps,
 
- Corrupting in its own fertility.
 
- Her vine, the merry cheerer of the heart,
 
- Unpruned dies; her hedges even-pleach'd,
 
- Like prisoners wildly overgrown with hair,
 
- Put forth disorder'd twigs; her fallow leas
 
- The darnel, hemlock and rank fumitory
 
- Doth root upon, while that the coulter rusts
 
- That should deracinate such savagery;
 
- The even mead, that erst brought sweetly forth
 
- The freckled cowslip, burnet and green clover,
 
- Wanting the scythe, all uncorrected, rank,
 
- Conceives by idleness and nothing teems
 
- But hateful docks, rough thistles, kecksies, burs,
 
- Losing both beauty and utility.
 
- And as our vineyards, fallows, meads and hedges,
 
- Defective in their natures, grow to wildness,
 
- Even so our houses and ourselves and children
 
- Have lost, or do not learn for want of time,
 
- The sciences that should become our country;
 
- But grow like savages,--as soldiers will
 
- That nothing do but meditate on blood,--
 
- To swearing and stern looks, diffused attire
 
- And every thing that seems unnatural.
 
- Which to reduce into our former favour
 
- You are assembled: and my speech entreats
 
- That I may know the let, why gentle Peace
 
- Should not expel these inconveniences
 
- And bless us with her former qualities.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- If, Duke of Burgundy, you would the peace,
 
- Whose want gives growth to the imperfections
 
- Which you have cited, you must buy that peace
 
- With full accord to all our just demands;
 
- Whose tenors and particular effects
 
- You have enscheduled briefly in your hands.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- The king hath heard them; to the which as yet
 
- There is no answer made.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Well then the peace,
 
- Which you before so urged, lies in his answer.
 
KING OF FRANCE:
 
- I have but with a cursorary eye
 
- O'erglanced the articles: pleaseth your grace
 
- To appoint some of your council presently
 
- To sit with us once more, with better heed
 
- To re-survey them, we will suddenly
 
- Pass our accept and peremptory answer.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Brother, we shall. Go, uncle Exeter,
 
- And brother Clarence, and you, brother Gloucester,
 
- Warwick and Huntingdon, go with the king;
 
- And take with you free power to ratify,
 
- Augment, or alter, as your wisdoms best
 
- Shall see advantageable for our dignity,
 
- Any thing in or out of our demands,
 
- And we'll consign thereto. Will you, fair sister,
 
- Go with the princes, or stay here with us?
 
QUEEN ISABEL:
 
- Our gracious brother, I will go with them:
 
- Haply a woman's voice may do some good,
 
- When articles too nicely urged be stood on.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Yet leave our cousin Katharine here with us:
 
- She is our capital demand, comprised
 
- Within the fore-rank of our articles.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Fair Katharine, and most fair,
 
- Will you vouchsafe to teach a soldier terms
 
- Such as will enter at a lady's ear
 
- And plead his love-suit to her gentle heart?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Your majesty shall mock at me; I cannot speak your England.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- O fair Katharine, if you will love me soundly with
 
- your French heart, I will be glad to hear you
 
- confess it brokenly with your English tongue. Do
 
- you like me, Kate?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Pardonnez-moi, I cannot tell vat is 'like me.'
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- An angel is like you, Kate, and you are like an angel.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Que dit-il? que je suis semblable a les anges?
 
ALICE:
 
- Oui, vraiment, sauf votre grace, ainsi dit-il.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I said so, dear Katharine; and I must not blush to
 
- affirm it.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- O bon Dieu! les langues des hommes sont pleines de
 
- tromperies.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- What says she, fair one? that the tongues of men
 
- are full of deceits?
 
ALICE:
 
- Oui, dat de tongues of de mans is be full of
 
- deceits: dat is de princess.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- The princess is the better Englishwoman. I' faith,
 
- Kate, my wooing is fit for thy understanding: I am
 
- glad thou canst speak no better English; for, if
 
- thou couldst, thou wouldst find me such a plain king
 
- that thou wouldst think I had sold my farm to buy my
 
- crown. I know no ways to mince it in love, but
 
- directly to say 'I love you:' then if you urge me
 
- farther than to say 'do you in faith?' I wear out
 
- my suit. Give me your answer; i' faith, do: and so
 
- clap hands and a bargain: how say you, lady?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Sauf votre honneur, me understand vell.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Marry, if you would put me to verses or to dance for
 
- your sake, Kate, why you undid me: for the one, I
 
- have neither words nor measure, and for the other, I
 
- have no strength in measure, yet a reasonable
 
- measure in strength. If I could win a lady at
 
- leap-frog, or by vaulting into my saddle with my
 
- armour on my back, under the correction of bragging
 
- be it spoken. I should quickly leap into a wife.
 
- Or if I might buffet for my love, or bound my horse
 
- for her favours, I could lay on like a butcher and
 
- sit like a jack-an-apes, never off. But, before God,
 
- Kate, I cannot look greenly nor gasp out my
 
- eloquence, nor I have no cunning in protestation;
 
- only downright oaths, which I never use till urged,
 
- nor never break for urging. If thou canst love a
 
- fellow of this temper, Kate, whose face is not worth
 
- sun-burning, that never looks in his glass for love
 
- of any thing he sees there, let thine eye be thy
 
- cook. I speak to thee plain soldier: If thou canst
 
- love me for this, take me: if not, to say to thee
 
- that I shall die, is true; but for thy love, by the
 
- Lord, no; yet I love thee too. And while thou
 
- livest, dear Kate, take a fellow of plain and
 
- uncoined constancy; for he perforce must do thee
 
- right, because he hath not the gift to woo in other
 
- places: for these fellows of infinite tongue, that
 
- can rhyme themselves into ladies' favours, they do
 
- always reason themselves out again. What! a
 
- speaker is but a prater; a rhyme is but a ballad. A
 
- good leg will fall; a straight back will stoop; a
 
- black beard will turn white; a curled pate will grow
 
- bald; a fair face will wither; a full eye will wax
 
- hollow: but a good heart, Kate, is the sun and the
 
- moon; or, rather, the sun, and not the moon; for it
 
- shines bright and never changes, but keeps his
 
- course truly. If thou would have such a one, take
 
- me; and take me, take a soldier; take a soldier,
 
- take a king. And what sayest thou then to my love?
 
- speak, my fair, and fairly, I pray thee.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Is it possible dat I sould love de enemy of France?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No; it is not possible you should love the enemy of
 
- France, Kate: but, in loving me, you should love
 
- the friend of France; for I love France so well that
 
- I will not part with a village of it; I will have it
 
- all mine: and, Kate, when France is mine and I am
 
- yours, then yours is France and you are mine.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- I cannot tell vat is dat.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No, Kate? I will tell thee in French; which I am
 
- sure will hang upon my tongue like a new-married
 
- wife about her husband's neck, hardly to be shook
 
- off. Je quand sur le possession de France, et quand
 
- vous avez le possession de moi,--let me see, what
 
- then? Saint Denis be my speed!--donc votre est
 
- France et vous etes mienne. It is as easy for me,
 
- Kate, to conquer the kingdom as to speak so much
 
- more French: I shall never move thee in French,
 
- unless it be to laugh at me.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Sauf votre honneur, le Francois que vous parlez, il
 
- est meilleur que l'Anglois lequel je parle.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No, faith, is't not, Kate: but thy speaking of my
 
- tongue, and I thine, most truly-falsely, must needs
 
- be granted to be much at one. But, Kate, dost thou
 
- understand thus much English, canst thou love me?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- I cannot tell.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Can any of your neighbours tell, Kate? I'll ask
 
- them. Come, I know thou lovest me: and at night,
 
- when you come into your closet, you'll question this
 
- gentlewoman about me; and I know, Kate, you will to
 
- her dispraise those parts in me that you love with
 
- your heart: but, good Kate, mock me mercifully; the
 
- rather, gentle princess, because I love thee
 
- cruelly. If ever thou beest mine, Kate, as I have a
 
- saving faith within me tells me thou shalt, I get
 
- thee with scambling, and thou must therefore needs
 
- prove a good soldier-breeder: shall not thou and I,
 
- between Saint Denis and Saint George, compound a
 
- boy, half French, half English, that shall go to
 
- Constantinople and take the Turk by the beard?
 
- shall we not? what sayest thou, my fair
 
- flower-de-luce?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- I do not know dat
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- No; 'tis hereafter to know, but now to promise: do
 
- but now promise, Kate, you will endeavour for your
 
- French part of such a boy; and for my English moiety
 
- take the word of a king and a bachelor. How answer
 
- you, la plus belle Katharine du monde, mon tres cher
 
- et devin deesse?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Your majestee ave fausse French enough to deceive de
 
- most sage demoiselle dat is en France.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Now, fie upon my false French! By mine honour, in
 
- true English, I love thee, Kate: by which honour I
 
- dare not swear thou lovest me; yet my blood begins to
 
- flatter me that thou dost, notwithstanding the poor
 
- and untempering effect of my visage. Now, beshrew
 
- my father's ambition! he was thinking of civil wars
 
- when he got me: therefore was I created with a
 
- stubborn outside, with an aspect of iron, that, when
 
- I come to woo ladies, I fright them. But, in faith,
 
- Kate, the elder I wax, the better I shall appear:
 
- my comfort is, that old age, that ill layer up of
 
- beauty, can do no more, spoil upon my face: thou
 
- hast me, if thou hast me, at the worst; and thou
 
- shalt wear me, if thou wear me, better and better:
 
- and therefore tell me, most fair Katharine, will you
 
- have me? Put off your maiden blushes; avouch the
 
- thoughts of your heart with the looks of an empress;
 
- take me by the hand, and say 'Harry of England I am
 
- thine:' which word thou shalt no sooner bless mine
 
- ear withal, but I will tell thee aloud 'England is
 
- thine, Ireland is thine, France is thine, and Harry
 
- Plantagenet is thine;' who though I speak it before
 
- his face, if he be not fellow with the best king,
 
- thou shalt find the best king of good fellows.
 
- Come, your answer in broken music; for thy voice is
 
- music and thy English broken; therefore, queen of
 
- all, Katharine, break thy mind to me in broken
 
- English; wilt thou have me?
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Dat is as it sall please de roi mon pere.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Nay, it will please him well, Kate it shall please
 
- him, Kate.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Den it sall also content me.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Upon that I kiss your hand, and I call you my queen.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Laissez, mon seigneur, laissez, laissez: ma foi, je
 
- ne veux point que vous abaissiez votre grandeur en
 
- baisant la main d'une de votre seigeurie indigne
 
- serviteur; excusez-moi, je vous supplie, mon
 
- tres-puissant seigneur.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then I will kiss your lips, Kate.
 
KATHARINE:
 
- Les dames et demoiselles pour etre baisees devant
 
- leur noces, il n'est pas la coutume de France.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Madam my interpreter, what says she?
 
ALICE:
 
- Dat it is not be de fashion pour les ladies of
 
- France,--I cannot tell vat is baiser en Anglish.
 
ALICE:
 
- Your majesty entendre bettre que moi.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- It is not a fashion for the maids in France to kiss
 
- before they are married, would she say?
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- God save your majesty! my royal cousin, teach you
 
- our princess English?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I would have her learn, my fair cousin, how
 
- perfectly I love her; and that is good English.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- Is she not apt?
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Our tongue is rough, coz, and my condition is not
 
- smooth; so that, having neither the voice nor the
 
- heart of flattery about me, I cannot so conjure up
 
- the spirit of love in her, that he will appear in
 
- his true likeness.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- Pardon the frankness of my mirth, if I answer you
 
- for that. If you would conjure in her, you must
 
- make a circle; if conjure up love in her in his true
 
- likeness, he must appear naked and blind. Can you
 
- blame her then, being a maid yet rosed over with the
 
- virgin crimson of modesty, if she deny the
 
- appearance of a naked blind boy in her naked seeing
 
- self? It were, my lord, a hard condition for a maid
 
- to consign to.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Yet they do wink and yield, as love is blind and enforces.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- They are then excused, my lord, when they see not
 
- what they do.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Then, good my lord, teach your cousin to consent winking.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- I will wink on her to consent, my lord, if you will
 
- teach her to know my meaning: for maids, well
 
- summered and warm kept, are like flies at
 
- Bartholomew-tide, blind, though they have their
 
- eyes; and then they will endure handling, which
 
- before would not abide looking on.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- This moral ties me over to time and a hot summer;
 
- and so I shall catch the fly, your cousin, in the
 
- latter end and she must be blind too.
 
BURGUNDY:
 
- As love is, my lord, before it loves.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- It is so: and you may, some of you, thank love for
 
- my blindness, who cannot see many a fair French city
 
- for one fair French maid that stands in my way.
 
FRENCH KING:
 
- Yes, my lord, you see them perspectively, the cities
 
- turned into a maid; for they are all girdled with
 
- maiden walls that war hath never entered.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Shall Kate be my wife?
 
FRENCH KING:
 
- So please you.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I am content; so the maiden cities you talk of may
 
- wait on her: so the maid that stood in the way for
 
- my wish shall show me the way to my will.
 
FRENCH KING:
 
- We have consented to all terms of reason.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Is't so, my lords of England?
 
WESTMORELAND:
 
- The king hath granted every article:
 
- His daughter first, and then in sequel all,
 
- According to their firm proposed natures.
 
EXETER:
 
- Only he hath not yet subscribed this:
 
- Where your majesty demands, that the King of France,
 
- having any occasion to write for matter of grant,
 
- shall name your highness in this form and with this
 
- addition in French, Notre trescher fils Henri, Roi
 
- d'Angleterre, Heritier de France; and thus in
 
- Latin, Praeclarissimus filius noster Henricus, Rex
 
- Angliae, et Haeres Franciae.
 
FRENCH KING:
 
- Nor this I have not, brother, so denied,
 
- But your request shall make me let it pass.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- I pray you then, in love and dear alliance,
 
- Let that one article rank with the rest;
 
- And thereupon give me your daughter.
 
FRENCH KING:
 
- Take her, fair son, and from her blood raise up
 
- Issue to me; that the contending kingdoms
 
- Of France and England, whose very shores look pale
 
- With envy of each other's happiness,
 
- May cease their hatred, and this dear conjunction
 
- Plant neighbourhood and Christian-like accord
 
- In their sweet bosoms, that never war advance
 
- His bleeding sword 'twixt England and fair France.
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Now, welcome, Kate: and bear me witness all,
 
- That here I kiss her as my sovereign queen.
 
- 
[Flourish]
 
QUEEN ISABEL:
 
- God, the best maker of all marriages,
 
- Combine your hearts in one, your realms in one!
 
- As man and wife, being two, are one in love,
 
- So be there 'twixt your kingdoms such a spousal,
 
- That never may ill office, or fell jealousy,
 
- Which troubles oft the bed of blessed marriage,
 
- Thrust in between the paction of these kingdoms,
 
- To make divorce of their incorporate league;
 
- That English may as French, French Englishmen,
 
- Receive each other. God speak this Amen!
 
KING HENRY V:
 
- Prepare we for our marriage--on which day,
 
- My Lord of Burgundy, we'll take your oath,
 
- And all the peers', for surety of our leagues.
 
- Then shall I swear to Kate, and you to me;
 
- And may our oaths well kept and prosperous be!
 
- 
[Sennet. Exeunt]
 
ACT V, (EPILOGUE)
[Enter Chorus]
Chorus:
 
- Thus far, with rough and all-unable pen,
 
- Our bending author hath pursued the story,
 
- In little room confining mighty men,
 
- Mangling by starts the full course of their glory.
 
- Small time, but in that small most greatly lived
 
- This star of England: Fortune made his sword;
 
- By which the world's best garden be achieved,
 
- And of it left his son imperial lord.
 
- Henry the Sixth, in infant bands crown'd King
 
- Of France and England, did this king succeed;
 
- Whose state so many had the managing,
 
- That they lost France and made his England bleed:
 
- Which oft our stage hath shown; and, for their sake,
 
- In your fair minds let this acceptance take.
 
- 
[Exit]