King John & Henry VIII (32 page)

Read King John & Henry VIII Online

Authors: William Shakespeare

KING HENRY VIII
    Ha? What, so
rank
210
? Ah, ha!

    There’s mischief in this man: canst thou say further?

SURVEYOR
    I can, my liege.

KING HENRY VIII
    Proceed.

SURVEYOR
    Being at
Greenwich
214
,

    After your highness had reproved the duke

    About Sir William Bulmer—

KING HENRY VIII
    I remember

    Of such a time: being my sworn servant,

    The duke retained him
his
219
. But on: what hence?

SURVEYOR
    ‘If’, quoth he, ‘I for this had been
committed
220
’ —

    As to the Tower, I thought, — ‘I would have played

    The part my father meant to act upon

    Th’usurper
Richard
, who, being at
Salisbury
223
,

    Made
suit
224
to come in’s presence: which if granted,

    As he
made semblance of his duty
225
, would

    Have put his knife to him.’

KING HENRY VIII
    A giant traitor.

CARDINAL WOLSEY
    Now, madam, may his highness live in freedom,

    And this man out of prison?

QUEEN KATHERINE
    
God mend all
230
.

KING HENRY VIII
    There’s something more would out of thee: what say’st?

SURVEYOR
    After ‘the duke his father’, with ‘the knife’,

    He
stretched him
233
, and with one hand on his dagger,

    Another spread on’s breast,
mounting
234
his eyes,

    He did discharge a horrible oath, whose tenor

    Was, were he
evil used
, he would
outgo
236

    His father by as much as a performance

    Does an
irresolute
238
purpose.

KING HENRY VIII
    There’s his
period
239
:

    To sheathe his knife in us: he is
attached
240
:

    Call him to
present
241
trial: if he may

    Find mercy in the law, ’tis his: if none,

    Let him not seek’t of us: by day and night,

    He’s traitor
to th’height
244
.

Exeunt

Act 1 Scene 3

running scene 2 continues

Enter
[
the
]
Lord Chamberlain and Lord Sands

CHAMBERLAIN
    Is’t possible the
spells
of France should
juggle
1

    Men into such strange
mysteries
2
?

SANDS
    New customs,

    Though they be never so ridiculous,

    Nay,
let ’em be
5
unmanly, yet are followed.

CHAMBERLAIN
    As far as I see, all the good our English

    Have got by the
late
7
voyage is but merely

    A
fit or two o’th’face
: but they are
shrewd
8
ones,

    For when they
hold ’em
9
, you would swear directly

    Their very noses had been counsellors

    To
Pepin or Clotharius
, they
keep state so
11
.

SANDS
    They have all new
legs
, and lame ones: one would
take it
12
,

    That never see ’em pace before, the
spavin
13

    Or
springhalt
14
reigned among ’em.

CHAMBERLAIN
    
Death
15
, my lord,

    Their clothes are
after such a pagan cut to’t
16

    That sure they’ve
worn out
17
Christendom.

Enter Sir Thomas Lovell

              How now?

    What news, Sir Thomas Lovell?

LOVELL
    Faith, my lord,

    I hear of none, but the new proclamation

    That’s
clapped
21
upon the court gate.

CHAMBERLAIN
    What is’t for?

LOVELL
    The reformation of our travelled gallants,

    That fill the court with quarrels, talk and tailors.

CHAMBERLAIN
    I’m glad ’tis there: now I would pray our monsieurs

    To think an English courtier may be wise,

    And never see the
Louvre
27
.

LOVELL
    They must either,

    For so run the conditions, leave those remnants

    Of
fool and feather
30
that they got in France,

    With all their
honourable points of ignorance
31

    Pertaining thereunto —
as
fights
and
fireworks
32
,

    
Abusing
33
better men than they can be

    
Out of a foreign wisdom
,
renouncing clean
34

    The faith they have in tennis and
tall stockings
35
,

    Short
blistered
breeches, and those
types
of
travel
36

    And
understand
again like
honest
37
men,

    Or
pack
to their old
playfellows
38
: there, I take it,

    They may
cum privilegio

oui

39
away

    The
lag end
of their
lewdness
40
and be laughed at.

SANDS
    ’Tis time to give ’em
physic
41
, their diseases

    Are grown so catching.

CHAMBERLAIN
    What a loss our ladies

    Will have of these
trim vanities
44
!

LOVELL
    Ay,
marry
45
,

    There will be woe indeed, lords: the sly
whoresons
46

    Have got a
speeding
trick to
lay down
47
ladies:

    A French song and a
fiddle
has no
fellow
48
.

SANDS
    The devil
fiddle
49
’em! I am glad they are going,

    For sure there’s no
converting of ’em
50
: now

    An honest country lord, as I am, beaten

    A long time out of
play
, may bring his
plainsong
52

    And have an hour of
hearing
, and,
by’r lady
53
,

    
Held
current
54
music too.

CHAMBERLAIN
    Well said, Lord Sands:

    Your
colt’s tooth
is not
cast
56
yet?

SANDS
    No, my lord,

    Nor shall not, while I have a
stump
58
.

To Lovell

CHAMBERLAIN
    Sir Thomas,

    Whither were you a-going?

LOVELL
    To the cardinal’s:

    Your lordship is a guest too.

CHAMBERLAIN
    O, ’tis true:

    This night he
makes
64
a supper, and a great one,

    To many lords and ladies: there will be

    The beauty of this kingdom, I’ll assure you.

LOVELL
    That churchman bears a bounteous mind indeed,

    A hand as
fruitful
68
as the land that feeds us:

    His
dews
69
fall everywhere.

CHAMBERLAIN
    No doubt he’s noble:

    He had a
black
mouth that said
other
71
of him.

SANDS
    He may, my lord,
he’s wherewithal
72
in him:

    
Sparing
73
would show a worse sin than ill doctrine:

    
Men of his
way
74
should be most liberal:

    They are set here for examples.

CHAMBERLAIN
    True, they are so:

    But few now give so great
ones
. My barge
stays
77
:

To Lovell

    Your lordship shall
along
78
. Come, good Sir Thomas,

    We shall be late else, which I would not be,

    For I was
spoke to
80
, with Sir Henry Guildford,

    This night to be
comptrollers
81
.

SANDS
    I am
your lordship’s
82
.

Exeunt

Act 1 Scene 4

running scene 3

Hautboys
. A small table under a
state
for the Cardinal, a longer table for the guests. Then enter Anne Bullen, and
divers
other Ladies and Gentlemen, as guests at one door; at another door enter Sir Henry Guildford

GUILDFORD
    Ladies, a general welcome from his grace

    Salutes ye all: this night he dedicates

    To fair content and you: none here, he hopes,

    In all this noble
bevy
4
, has brought with her

    One care
abroad
5
: he would have all as merry

    As, first, good company, good wine, good welcome,

    Can make good people.

Enter Lord Chamberlain, Lords Sands and Lovell

To Chamberlain

              O, my lord, you’re
tardy
:

    The very thought of this fair company

    
Clapped
9
wings to me.

CHAMBERLAIN
    You are young, Sir Harry Guildford.

SANDS
    Sir Thomas Lovell, had the cardinal

    But half my
lay
12
thoughts in him, some of these

    
Should find a
running banquet
13
ere they rested

    I think would better please ’em: by my life,

    They are a sweet
society
15
of fair ones.

LOVELL
    O, that your lordship were but now
confessor
16

    To one or two of these.

SANDS
    I would I were:

    They should find
easy penance
19
.

LOVELL
    Faith, how easy?

SANDS
    As easy as a
down
21
bed would afford it.

To Guildford

CHAMBERLAIN
    Sweet ladies, will it please you sit?— Sir Harry,

    
Place you
23
that side, I’ll take the charge of this:

    His grace is ent’ring. Nay, you must not freeze:

    Two women placed together makes
cold
25
weather:

    My lord Sands, you are one will keep ’em
waking
26
:

    Pray sit between these ladies.

SANDS
    By my faith,

He sits between Anne and another lady

    And
thank
29
your lordship.—

                 By your leave, sweet ladies,

    If I chance to talk a little
wild
30
, forgive me:

    I had it from my father.

ANNE
    Was he
mad
32
, sir?

SANDS
    O, very mad, exceeding mad, in love too:

    But he would
bite
34
none: just as I do now,

He kisses her

    He would kiss you
twenty
with a breath
35
.

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