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@@ -1,42 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Scottish History of James the Fourth, by
-Robert Greene
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Scottish History of James the Fourth
- 1598
-
-Author: Robert Greene
-
-Editor: A. E. H. Swaen
-
-Release Date: September 8, 2013 [EBook #43668]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTTISH HISTORY OF JAMES 4TH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43668 ***
Transcriber's Note
@@ -3939,361 +3901,4 @@ FINIS.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Scottish History of James the
Fourth, by Robert Greene
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTTISH HISTORY OF JAMES 4TH ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43668 ***
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<title>
The Scottish History of James the Fourth, by Robert Greene--The Project Gutenberg eBook
@@ -184,48 +184,7 @@ td {
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Scottish History of James the Fourth, by
-Robert Greene
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Scottish History of James the Fourth
- 1598
-
-Author: Robert Greene
-
-Editor: A. E. H. Swaen
-
-Release Date: September 8, 2013 [EBook #43668]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTTISH HISTORY OF JAMES 4TH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43668 ***</div>
<div class="transnote">
<h2>Transcriber's Note</h2>
@@ -4120,384 +4079,6 @@ Men learne at last to know their good estate. <span class="directionright"><i
</div></div></div></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Scottish History of James the
-Fourth, by Robert Greene
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTTISH HISTORY OF JAMES 4TH ***
-
-***** This file should be named 43668-h.htm or 43668-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/3/6/6/43668/
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
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-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43668 ***</div>
</body>
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diff --git a/43668.txt b/43668.txt
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--- a/43668.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4302 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Scottish History of James the Fourth, by
-Robert Greene
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Scottish History of James the Fourth
- 1598
-
-Author: Robert Greene
-
-Editor: A. E. H. Swaen
-
-Release Date: September 8, 2013 [EBook #43668]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTTISH HISTORY OF JAMES 4TH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-
-Italic text is marked by _underscores_, and non-italic text within italic
-blocks by ~tildes~. Subscript text is indicated by @at signs@.
-
-Vowels with tildes representing nasal sounds have been expanded to
-vowel + _n_ or _m_. Circumflexes on _o_s have been discarded.
-
-All inconsistent spelling, hyphenation, and punctuation has been
-retained as printed.
-
-In addition to those listed in the List of Doubtful and Irregular
-Readings, the following apparent errors have been retained as printed:
-
-l. 677 inscription
-
-l. 1021 _Doug._
-
-l. 1179 bog
-
-l. 1275 a fraid
-
-l. 1346 harpe
-
-l. 1354 _Iaque_
-
-l. 1634 _An._
-
-l. 1671 _Tay._
-
-l. 1822 swoord
-
-No speaker is given for lines 2400-2405
-
-
-
-
-PRINTED FOR THE MALONE SOCIETY BY
-FREDERICK HALL AT THE
-OXFORD UNIVERSITY
-PRESS
-
-
-
-
-THE SCOTTISH HISTORY
-OF JAMES THE FOURTH
-
-1598
-
-THE MALONE SOCIETY
-REPRINTS
-
-1921
-
-
-
-
-This reprint of _James IV_ has been prepared by A. E. H. Swaen with the
-assistance of the General Editor.
-
-_Nov. 1921._
-
-W. W. Greg.
-
-
-The following entries are found in the Register of the Stationers'
-Company for 1594:
-
- xiiij^o maij /
-
- [Sidenote: Thomas
- Creede./.]
-
- Entred for his copie vnder thand of master Cawood warden / a booke
- intituled /. The famous victories of henrye the ffyft / conteyninge
- the honorable battell of Agincourt / vj^d C
-
- [Sidenote: Thomas
- Creede/]
-
- Entred vnto him by the like warrant a booke intituled the Scottishe
- story of Iames the ffourthe slayne at Fflodden intermixed with a
- plesant Comedie presented by Oboron kinge of ffayres vj^d C /
-
- [Arber's Transcript, II. 648.]
-
-No edition, however, is known before 1598, and it would be natural
-to suspect that the original impression had perished were it not for
-the fact that 1598 is also the date of the earliest known edition
-of the _Famous Victories_. In the circumstances we may suppose that
-publication was for some reason delayed. The impression of 1598 is
-a quarto printed by Creede in roman type of a size approximating
-to modern pica (20 ll. = 84 mm.). Of this four copies are known to
-survive. That in the British Museum wants the leaf A 4, which has been
-supplied in very inaccurate modern reprint. Fortunately the leaf is
-present in the Dyce copy at South Kensington, though in this H 1 is
-defective (a corner being supplied in not quite accurate facsimile) and
-sheet K is wrongly perfected. Another copy, formerly at Bridgewater
-House, is now in the possession of Mr. Henry E. Huntington; while a
-fourth is in a collected volume once in the possession of Charles
-II, which formed lot 8258 in the Huth Sale (25 June 1920). All four
-want the first leaf, which was presumably blank, except perhaps for
-a signature. It has not been possible to use more than the first two
-copies mentioned in preparing the present reprint.
-
-The title-page bears the name of Robert Greene as author, together with
-a motto used by him in other works, which suggests that the manuscript
-may have been in some manner prepared for press before his death in
-1592. Three passages from the play are quoted, rather inaccurately,
-in _England's Parnassus_, 1600, above Greene's name. The title-page
-also states that the play had been 'sundrie times publikely plaide',
-without, however, mentioning any company.
-
-The plot is entirely unhistorical, and P. A. Daniel and W. Creizenach
-independently traced its source to the first novel of the third day
-of the _Ecatommiti_ of Giraldi Cintio, a story in which, however, the
-identity of the characters is quite different. Whether Greene was also
-acquainted with Cintio's play _Arrenopia_, based on the same story, is
-not known.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF DOUBTFUL AND IRREGULAR READINGS.
-
-
-The play, evidently printed from a much altered and probably illegible
-manuscript, abounds in errors of every description. The following list
-is confined to such readings as are to some extent doubtful in the
-original and to a few literal misprints which might otherwise perhaps
-be thought due to the reprint. No irregularities recorded by previous
-editors are included. No variations of any importance have been found
-between the two copies collated.
-
- 3 _plac'st_
- 36 deele
- 65 because
- 88 Idy
- 109 mifled
- 120 _Attus_
- 203 choyseff (ff _broken_, _read_ choysest)
- 316 drie (? _read_ dire)
- 323 c.w. _X. of S._
- 334 Beheld
- _Venns_
- 373 moaths
- 440 autthoritie
- 482 bettet,
- 493 _Steu._
- 611 Os
- 618 _Ba._
- 643 part,
- 646 theworld,
- 648 weele (_perhaps_ we ele)
- 655 Simi Ranus,
- 661 _Simeranus_,
- 675 _king_,
- 691 wrethednesse:
- 702 _eate._
- 742 loure,
- 757 louer
- 765 _letter._
- 784 hath
- 801 what
- 834 doo shifting,
- 880 _Ateu._ (perhaps _Ate u._)
- 918 denounced, it
- 983 same.)
- 988 to ... too
- 996 nye. (_perhaps_ ny e.)
-1019 consider
-1026 tryees
-1028 step (_perhaps_ ste p)
-1030 becauso
-1045 sings.
-1048 loue
-1078 ean (e _not absolutely certain, read_ can)
-1094 Bur
-1159 Thon
-1163 _Exennt._
-1175 the
-1183 thee
-1190 _Slip._ (there is a faint trace of the _i_ in the Dyce
- copy only)
-1192 _Sip._
-1205 viutnerd (_original_ viutnerd)
-1213 _Guatoes_
-1268 thon (_original_ tho@n@)
-1279 (fe-)re ie. (_space not certain_)
-1292 the (_perhaps_ th e)
-1294 your (_perhaps_ y our)
-1324 bettet
-1332 yout
-1355 esteemd, (_original_ esteemd')
-1367 _ic pour._ Yea
-1370 mee,
-1378 woman, (_comma not quite certain_)
-1398 Court,,
-1399 stricknesse
-1405 mstaled:
-1411 preuention you (_original_ preuent ion you)
-1423 _Nauo._
-1424 shildish
-1433 appooued
-1449 displac'ff, (ff _broken, read_ displac'st,)
-1451 _Auteukin_,
-1464 bnt
- speakie
-1497 are
-1504 Mistresle
-1511 you, drawe a
-1546 _Exeuut._
-1607 Prepare (_cf. c.w._)
-1621 Hart,
-1626 (indentation doubtful)
-1626, 1627 _Deiu_,
-1637 (_speaker's name omitted_)
- _ditte_
-1644 _tout, vn_
-1646 fllattering
-1681 thee Shoo-maker.
-1702 progenators _Cutler_.
-1706 edge,
-1713 a (_failed to print in the B.M. copy_)
-1720 Ohn, o (_read_ Oh, no)
-1763 thing:
-1777 fals
-1789 _strumpet, ta Matressa_
-1790 _foy_
-1791 _me_
-1796 _morglay_,
-1799 soule, (_the comma failed to print in the Dyce copy_)
-1801 stay.
-1803 _Ie meu_
-1845 alreadle
-1848 _For_
-1863 alosse,
-1897 on
-1908 missed, (ss _broken, read_ misled,)
-1917 ouerthtow.
-1924 slrange (_read_ strange)
-1990 wartes:
-1993 _Dambac_
-2000 slaine. (sl _not quite certain, possibly broken_ ss)
-2002 but
-2007 _Doro,_
-2019 effate: (ff _broken, read_ estate:)
-2024 but on the (_perhaps_ buton th e)
-2037 _Nana_,
-2060 _fontre_
-2092 purschase
-2101 place (_read_ plow)
-2113 Lyon, (king
-2114 slaine? (sl _not certain, perhaps broken_ ss)
-2142 _Exeunt_, (original _Exeunt_, or _Fxeunt_, apparently the
- latter, but the letter may be a broken E)
-2144 state, (_so the Dyce copy, the B.M. copy apparently has a
- full point, but this is probably a broken comma_)
-2162 sect,
-2166 countriees (_first_ e _not quite certain, possibly_ c)
-2169 toexcept:
-2182 greatmens
-2189 guise, (_perhaps_ gu ise,)
-2204 warre?
-2215 summonies
-2241 ofcontention:
-2254 true,
- ._Exeun_.. (what appears like a full point after the _n_
- may be the remains of a very broken _t_)
-2260 sarre
- _Twearde._
-2283 mistresse:
-2294-5 he ... she
-2300 Alhough
-2310 Qeene,
-2331 change,
-2355 these (_perhaps_ th ese)
-2370 wasmisled, (sl _not quite certain, possibly broken_ ss)
-2383 _K. of S._ (apparently _S:_ in the B.M. copy, but the upper
- dot is accidental)
-2424 (indentation doubtful)
-2426 for (_perhaps_ fo r)
-2438 ttumpets
-2443 _Cutber tohis_
-2463 Scortish
-2509 missed: (ss _broken, read_ misled:)
-2522 Thou (_original_ Tho@u@)
-2540 our (_perhaps_ ou r)
-2545 ffaies, (ff _broken, read_ staies,)
-2547 reeoncile
-2562 _Auteukin_,
-2579 when,
-
-In ll. 1062, 1090 the speaker's name is given as '_8. Atten._' Whatever
-this may be meant for it is clear that the speeches belong to the
-Bishop of St. Andrews. In ll. 2015-6 a complicated error has occurred,
-the 'e' of 'her' in the lower line having worked its way up into an
-accidental space after the 'd' of 'and' in the upper.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF CHARACTERS
-in order of appearance.
-
-
-_In the Induction and Chorus_:
-
-OBERON, king of fairies.
-BOHAN, a Scot.
-
-SLIPPER } his sons.
-NANO }
-
-an antic (dance), fairies, a dancer 'boy or wench'.
-
-_In the Dumb Shows_:
-
-SEMIRAMIS, queen of Assiria.
-STABROBATES, king of India.
-CYRUS, king of Persia.
-OLIVE PAT, (?).
-ALEXANDER, king of Macedon.
-SESOSTRIS, king of Egypt.
-
-_In the Play_:
-
-The King of SCOTS.
-The King of ENGLAND.
-DOROTHEA, his daughter, wife of the King of Scots.
-The Countess of ARRAN.
-IDA, her daughter.
-ATEUKIN (or GNATO).
-ANDREW SNOORD, a servingman.
-SLIPPER, a clown.
-NANO, a dwarf.
-Sir BARTRAM, a Scottish gentleman.
-Sir EUSTACE (DICK), an English gentleman.
-(A Servant of Sir Bartram.)
-The Bishop of SAINT ANDREWS.
-Earl DOUGLAS.
-Lord MORTON.
-a Purveyor.
-JAQUES, a Frenchman.
-Lord Ross.
-a Huntsman.
-a Tailor.
-a Shoemaker.
-a Cutler.
-Sir CUTBERT ANDERSON.
-Lady ANDERSON.
-a Servant of the Countess of Arran.
-a Lawyer.
-a Merchant.
-a Divine.
-a Scout.
-
-Lady Douglas, Sir Egmond, Lord Percy, Samles, an English Herald, lords,
-ladies, huntsmen, soldiers, antics.
-
-In V. iii the speeches of the King of England have the prefix 'Arius'
-(ll. 2095, 2105, 2126, 2129), a name which in a stage-direction in II.
-ii (l. 1050) is apparently applied to the King of Scots. Ateukin (twice
-misprinted 'Auteukin', ll. 1451, 2562) is repeatedly called Gnato,
-which would seem to have been the original name of the character,
-subsequently altered, for in I. i 'Ateukin' several times scans as a
-dissyllable (ll. 355, 362, 365). Twice Ateukin and Gnato are mentioned
-together in a stage-direction (ll. 1550, 2053), apparently through
-misunderstanding of an alteration. Sir Eustace, who is also addressed
-as Lord Eustace, is several times called Dick (ll. 565, 568, 571,
-601, 608, 629). One speech (l. 629) assigned to him, clearly belongs
-to a servant, who has therefore been added to the characters. In II.
-ii Nano is throughout called 'Dwarfe' except in the exit at l. 1049.
-Andrew's surname appears from l. 551. The name of the King of Fairies
-is Oberon: 'Oboram' on the title and 'Obiran' in l. 1934. seem to be
-mere misprints, and 'Obiron' (ll. 1164, 1923, 1931) a sporadic variant.
-In l. 2 his name is given as 'After Oberon', but this is most likely a
-misprint for '_after_ Oberon'. Dyce supposed that Oberon entered at l.
-2398, and Grosart assumed that 'Adam' was the name of the actor who
-played the part, but it is more likely to be a compositor's misreading
-of 'A danc(e)'. At l. 1953 the direction 'Ladie Anderson ouerheares' is
-due to a misunderstanding; it should be 'Sir Cutbert'. Lady Douglas and
-Sir Egmond are mentioned in l. 1606 as present, but nothing further is
-known of them: Lord Percy and Samles enter in V. iii (l. 2094), and the
-former again in V. vi (l. 2407), also the English herald in V. vi (l.
-2338), but none of them speak. Nano does not speak in the Induction.
-
-In l. 656 (cf. 666) the form 'Staurobates', in place of Stabrobates,
-proves that Greene drew from Poggio's Latin translation of Diodorus
-Siculus and not from the original.
-
-The text of the play contains nothing to identify either the English or
-the Scottish king, and the date 1520 given in the Induction is seven
-years after the death of James IV at Flodden.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The two collotype plates represent A2 recto (title page) and A3 recto
-in the Dyce copy of the original.
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-SCOTTISH
-
-Historie of Iames the
-fourth, slaine at _Flodden_.
-
-Entermixed with a pleasant Comedie, presented by
-_Oboram_ King of _Fayeries_:
-
-_As it hath bene sundrie times publikely
-plaide._
-
-Written by _Robert Greene_, Maister of Arts.
-
-_Omne tulit punctum._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-LONDON
-Printed by Thomas Creede. 1598.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-THE SCOTTISH
-Hystorie of Iames the
-fourth, slaine at _Flodden_.
-
-
-Musicke playing within. _I. Chor._
-
-_Enter ~After Oberon~, King of Fayries, an Antique, who dance about
-a Tombe, plac'st conueniently on the Stage, out of the which, suddainly
-starts vp as they daunce, ~Bohan~ a Scot, attyred like a ridstall
-man, from whom the Antique flyes. ~Oberon~ Manet._
-
-_Bohan._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Ay say, whats thou?
-
-_Oberon._ Thy friend _Bohan_.
-
-_Bohan._ What wot I, or reck
-I that, whay guid man, I reck
-no friend, nor ay reck no foe, als 10
-ene to me, git the ganging, and
-trouble not may whayet, or ays
-gar the recon me nene of thay friend, by the mary masse sall I.
-
-_Ober._ Why angrie Scot, I visit thee for loue: then what
-mooues thee to wroath?
-
-_Bohan._ The deele awhit reck I thy loue. For I knowe
-too well, that true loue tooke her flight twentie winter sence to
-heauen, whither till ay can, weele I wot, ay sal nere finde loue:
-an thou lou'st me, leaue me to my selfe. But what were those
-Puppits that hopt and skipt about me year whayle? 20
-
-_Oberon._ My subiects.
-
-_Boh._ Thay subiects, whay art thou a King?
-
-_Ober._ I am.
-
-_Bohan._ The deele thou art, whay thou look'st not so big as
-the king of Clubs, nor so sharpe as the king of Spades, nor so
-faine as the king Adaymonds, be the masse ay take thee to bee
-the king of false harts: therfore I rid thee away, or ayse so curry
-your Kingdome, that yous be glad to runne to saue your life.
-
-_Ober._ Why stoycall Scot, do what thou dar'st to me, heare is
-my brest strike. 30
-
-_Boh._ Thou wilt not threap me, this whiniard has gard many
-better men to lope them thou: but how now? Gos sayds what wilt
-not out? whay thou wich, thou deele, gads sute may whiniard.
-
-_Ober._ Why pull man: but what an twear out, how then?
-
-_Boh._ This then, thou weart best begon first: for ayl so lop
-thy lyms, that thouse go with half a knaues carkasse to the deele
-
-_Ober._ Draw it out, now strike foole, canst thou not?
-
-_Boh._ Bread ay gad, what deele is in me, whay tell mee thou
-skipiack what art thou?
-
-_Ober._ Nay first tell me what thou wast from thy birth, what 40
-thou hast past hitherto, why thou dwellest in a Tombe, & leauest
-the world? and then I will release thee of these bonds, before
-not.
-
-_Boh._ And not before, then needs must needs sal: I was borne
-a gentleman of the best bloud in all _Scotland_, except the king,
-when time brought me to age, and death tooke my parents, I
-became a Courtier, where though ay list not praise my selfe, ay
-engraued the memory of _Boughon_ on the skin-coate of some of
-them, and reueld with the proudest.
-
-_Ober._ But why liuing in such reputation, didst thou leaue to 50
-be a Courtier?
-
-_Boh._ Because my pride was vanitie, my expence losse, my reward
-faire words and large promises, & my hopes spilt, for that
-after many yeares seruice, one outran me, and what the deele
-should I then do there. No no, flattering knaues that can cog
-and prate fastest, speede best in the Court.
-
-_Ober._ To what life didst thou then betake thee?
-
-_Boh._ I then chang'd the Court for the countrey, and the wars
-for a wife: but I found the craft of swaines more vile, then the
-knauery of courtiers: the charge of children more heauie then 60
-seruants, and wiues tongues worse then the warres it selfe: and
-therefore I gaue ore that, & went to the Citie to dwell, & there
-I kept a great house with smal cheer, but all was nere the neere.
-
-_Ober._ And why?
-
-_Boh._ because in seeking friends, I found table guests to eate
-me, & my meat, my wiues gossops to bewray the secrets of my
-heart, kindred to betray the effect of my life, which when I noted,
-the court ill, the country worse, and the citie worst of all, in
-good time my wife died: ay wood she had died twentie winter
-sooner by the masse, leauing my two sonnes to the world, and 70
-shutting my selfe into this Tombe, where if I dye, I am sure I
-am safe from wilde beasts, but whilest I liue, cannot be free from
-ill companie. Besides, now I am sure gif all my friends faile me,
-I sall haue a graue of mine owne prouiding: this is all. Now
-what art thou?
-
-_Ober._ _Oberon_ King of Fayries, that loues thee because thou
-hatest the world, and to gratulate thee, I brought those Antiques
-to shew thee some sport in daunsing, which thou haste
-loued well.
-
-_Bohan._ Ha, ha, ha, thinkest thou those puppits can please 80
-me? whay I haue two sonnes, that with one scottish gigge shall
-breake the necke of thy Antiques.
-
-_Ober._ That would I faine see.
-
-_Boha._ Why thou shalt, howe boyes.
-
- _Enter Slipper and Nano._
-
-Haud your clacks lads, trattle not for thy life, but gather vppe
-your legges and daunce me forthwith a gigge worth the sight.
-
-_Slip._ Why I must talk on Idy fort, wherefore was my tongue
-made.
-
-_Boha._ Prattle an thou darst ene word more, and ais dab this 90
-whiniard in thy wembe.
-
-_Ober._ Be quiet _Bohan_, Ile strike him dumbe, and his brother
-too, their talk shal not hinder our gyg, fall to it, dance I say man.
-
-_Boh._ Dance Humer, dance, ay rid thee.
-
-_The two dance a gig deuised for the nonst._
-
-Now get you to the wide world with more then my father gaue
-me, thats learning enough, both kindes, knauerie & honestie:
-and that I gaue you, spend at pleasure.
-
-_Ober._ Nay for their sport I will giue them this gift, to the
-Dwarfe I giue a quicke witte, prettie of body, and awarrant his 100
-preferment to a Princes seruice, where by his wisdome he shall
-gaine more loue then common. And to loggerhead your sonne,
-I giue a wandering life, and promise he shall neuer lacke: and
-auow that if in all distresses he call vpon me to helpe him: now
-let them go.
-
- _Exeunt with curtesies._
-
-_Boh._ Now King, if thou bee a King, I will shew thee whay I
-hate the world by demonstration, in the year 1520. was in
-_Scotland_, a king ouerruled with parasites, mifled by lust, & many
-circumstances, too long to trattle on now, much like our 110
-court of _Scotland_ this day, that story haue I set down, gang with
-me to the gallery, & Ile shew thee the same in Action, by guid
-fellowes of our country men, and then when thou seest that,
-iudge if any wise man would not leaue the world if he could.
-
-_Ober._ That will I see, lead and ile follow thee. _Exeunt._
-
-
-
-
-_Laus Deo detur in Eternum._ _I. i._
-
-_Enter the King of England, the King of Scots, ~Dorithe~ his Queen,
-the Countesse, Lady ~Ida~, with other Lords. And ~Ateukin~ with
-them aloofe._
-
-_Attus primus. Scena prima._ 120
-
-
-_K. of Scots._ Brother of England, since our neighboring land,
-And neare alliance doth inuite our loues,
-The more I think vpon our last accord,
-The more I greeue your suddaine parting hence:
-First lawes of friendship did confirme our peace,
-Now both the seale of faith and marriage bed,
-The name of father, and the style of friend,
-These force in me affection full confirmd,
-So that I greeue, and this my heartie griefe 130
-The heauens record, the world may witnesse well
-To loose your presence, who are now to me
-A father, brother, and a vowed friend.
-
-_K. of Eng._ Link all these louely stiles good king in one,
-And since thy griefe exceeds in my depart,
-I leaue my _Dorithea_ to enioy, thy whole compact
-Loues, and plighted vowes.
-Brother of _Scotland_, this is my ioy, my life,
-Her fathers honour, and her Countries hope,
-Her mothers comfort, and her husbands blisse: 140
-I tell thee king, in louing of my _Doll_,
-Thou bindst her fathers heart and all his friends
-In bands of loue that death cannot dissolue.
-
-_K. of Scots._ Nor can her father loue her like to me,
-My liues light, and the comfort of my soule:
-Faire _Dorithea_, that wast Englands pride,
-Welcome to _Scotland_, and in signe of loue,
-Lo I inuest thee with the Scottish Crowne.
-Nobles and Ladies, stoupe vnto your Queene.
-And Trumpets sound, that Heralds may proclaime, 150
-Faire _Dorithea_ peerlesse Queene of Scots.
-
-_All._ Long liue and prosper our faire Q. of Scots.
-
- _Enstall and Crowne her._
-
-_Dor._ Thanks to the king of kings for my dignity,
-Thanks to my father, that prouides so carefully,
-Thanks to my Lord and husband for this honor,
-And thanks to all that loue their King and me.
-
-_All._ Long liue faire _Dorithea_ our true Queene.
-
-_K. of E._ Long shine the sun of _Scotland_ in her pride,
-Her fathers comfort, and faire _Scotlands_ Bride. 160
-But _Dorithea_, since I must depart,
-And leaue thee from thy tender mothers charge,
-Let me aduise my louely daughter first,
-What best befits her in a forraine land,
-Liue _Doll_, for many eyes shall looke on thee,
-Haue care of honor and the present state:
-For she that steps to height of Maiestie,
-Is euen the marke whereat the enemy aimes.
-Thy vertues shall be construed to vice,
-Thine affable discourse to abiect minde. 170
-If coy, detracting tongues will call thee proud:
-Be therefore warie in this slippery state,
-Honour thy husband, loue him as thy life:
-Make choyce of friends, as Eagles of their yoong,
-Who sooth no vice, who flatter not for gaine:
-But loue such friends as do the truth maintaine.
-Thinke on these lessons when thou art alone,
-And thou shalt liue in health when I am gone.
-
-_Dor._ I will engraue these preceps in my heart,
-And as the wind with calmnesse woes you hence, 180
-Euen so I wish the heauens in all mishaps,
-May blesse my father with continuall grace.
-
-_K. of E._ Then son farwell, the fauouring windes inuites vs to depart.
-Long circumstance in taking princely leaues,
-Is more officious then conuenient.
-Brother of _Scotland_, loue me in my childe,
-You greet me well, if so you will her good.
-
-_K. of Sc._ Then louely _Doll_, and all that fauor me,
-Attend to see our English friends at sea,
-Let all their charge depend vpon my purse: 190
-They are our neighbors, by whose kind accord,
-We dare attempt the proudest Potentate.
-Onely faire Countesse, and your daughter stay,
-With you I haue some other thing to say.
-
- _Exeunt all saue the King, the Countesse,
- ~Ida~, ~Ateukin~, in all royaltie._
-
-_K. of S._ So let them tryumph that haue cause to ioy,
-But wretched King, thy nuptiall knot is death:
-Thy Bride the breeder of thy Countries ill,
-For thy false heart dissenting from thy hand, 200
-Misled by loue, hast made another choyce,
-Another choyce, euen when thou vowdst thy soule
-To _Dorithea_, Englands choyseff pride,
-O then thy wandring eyes bewitcht thy heart,
-Euen in the Chappell did thy fancie change,
-When periur'd man, though faire _Doll_ had thy hand,
-The Scottish _Idaes_ bewtie stale thy heart:
-Yet feare and loue hath tyde thy readie tongue
-From blabbing forth the passions of thy minde,
-Lest fearefull silence haue in suttle lookes 210
-Bewrayd the treason of my new vowd loue,
-Be faire and louely _Doll_, but here's the prize
-That lodgeth here, and entred through mine eyes,
-Yet how so ere I loue, I must be wise.
-Now louely Countesse, what reward or grace,
-May I imploy on you for this your zeale,
-And humble honors done vs in our Court,
-In entertainment of the English King.
-
-_Countesse._ It was of dutie Prince that I haue done:
-And what in fauour may content me most, 220
-Is, that it please your grace to giue me leaue,
-For to returne vnto my Countrey home.
-
-_K. of Scots._ But louely _Ida_ is your mind the same?
-
-_Ida._ I count of Court my Lord, as wise men do,
-Tis fit for those that knowes what longs thereto:
-Each person to his place, the wise to Art,
-The Cobler to his clout, the Swaine to Cart.
-
-_K. of Sc._ But _Ida_ you are faire, and bewtie shines,
-And seemeth best, where pomp her pride refines.
-
-_Ida._ If bewtie (as I know there's none in me) 230
-Were sworne my loue, and I his life should be:
-The farther from the Court I were remoued,
-The more I thinke of heauen I were beloued.
-
-_K. of Scots._ And why?
-
-_Ida._ Because the Court is counted _Venus_ net,
-Where gifts and vowes for stales are often set,
-None, be she chaste as _Vesta_, but shall meete
-A curious toong to charme her eares with sweet.
-
-_K. of Scots._ Why _Ida_ then I see you set at naught,
-The force of loue. 240
-
-_Ida._ In sooth this is my thoght most gratious king,
-That they that little proue
-Are mickle blest, from bitter sweets of loue:
-And weele I wot, I heard a shepheard sing,
-That like a Bee, Loue hath a little sting:
-He lurkes in flowres, he pearcheth on the trees,
-He on Kings pillowes, bends his prettie knees:
-The Boy is blinde, but when he will not spie,
-He hath a leaden foote, and wings to flie:
-Beshrow me yet, for all these strange effects, 250
-If I would like the Lad, that so infects.
-
-_K. of Scots._ Rare wit, fair face, what hart could more desire?
-But _Doll_ is faire, and doth concerne thee neere.
-Let _Doll_ be faire, she is wonne, but I must woe,
-And win faire _Ida_, theres some choyce in two.
-But _Ida_ thou art coy.
-
-_Ida._ And why dread King?
-
-_K. of Scots._ In that you will dispraise so sweet
-A thing, as loue, had I my wish.
-
-_Ida._ What then? 260
-
-_K. of Scots._ Then would I place his arrow here,
-His bewtie in that face.
-
-_Ida._ And were _Apollo_ moued and rulde by me,
-His wisedome should be yours, and mine his tree.
-
-_K. of Scots._ But here returnes our traine.
-Welcome faire _Doll_: how fares our father, is he shipt and gone.
-
-_Enters the traine backe._
-
-_Dor._ My royall father is both shipt and gone,
-God and faire winds direct him to his home.
-
-_K. of Sc._ Amen say I, wold thou wert with him too: 270
-Then might I haue a fitter time to woo.
-But Countesse you would be gone, therfore farwell
-Yet _Ida_ if thou wilt, stay thou behind,
-To accompany my Queene.
-But if thou like the pleasures of the Court,
-Or if she likte me tho she left the Court,
-What should I say? I know not what to say,
-You may depart, and you my curteous Queene,
-Leaue me a space, I haue a waightie cause to thinke vpon:
-_Ida_, it nips me neere: 280
-It came from thence, I feele it burning heere.
-
-_Exeunt all sauing the King and ~Ateukin~._
-
-_K. of Scot._ Now am I free from sight of common eie,
-Where to my selfe I may disclose the griefe
-That hath too great a part in mine affects.
-
-_Ateu._ And now is my time, by wiles & words to rise,
-Greater then those, that thinks themselues more wise.
-
-_K. of Scots._ And first fond King, thy honor doth engraue,
-Vpon thy browes, the drift of thy disgrace:
-Thy new vowd loue in sight of God and men, 290
-Linke thee to _Dorithea_, during life.
-For who more faire and vertuous then thy wife,
-Deceitfull murtherer of a quiet minde,
-Fond loue, vile lust, that thus misleads vs men,
-To vowe our faithes, and fall to sin againe.
-But Kings stoupe not to euery common thought,
-_Ida_ is faire and wise, fit for a King:
-And for faire _Ida_ will I hazard life,
-Venture my Kingdome, Country, and my Crowne:
-Such fire hath loue, to burne a kingdome downe. 300
-Say _Doll_ dislikes, that I estrange my loue,
-Am I obedient to a womans looke?
-Nay say her father frowne when he shall heare
-That I do hold faire _Idaes_ loue so deare:
-Let father frowne and fret, and fret and die,
-Nor earth, nor heauen shall part my loue and I.
-Yea they shall part vs, but we first must meet,
-And wo, and win, and yet the world not seet.
-Yea ther's the wound, & wounded with that thoght
-So let me die: for all my drift is naught. 310
-
-_Ateu._ Most gratious and imperiall Maiestie,
-
-_K. of S._ A little flattery more were but too much,
-Villaine what art thou that thus darest interrupt a Princes secrets.
-
-_Ateu._ Dread King, thy vassall is a man of Art,
-Who knowes by constellation of the stars,
-By oppositions and by drie aspects,
-The things are past, and those that are to come.
-
-_K. of S._ But where's thy warrant to approach my presence?
-
-_Ateu._ My zeale and ruth to see your graces wrong,
-Makes me lament, I did detract so long. 320
-
-_K. of S._ If thou knowst thoughts, tell me what mean I now?
-
-_Ateu._ Ile calculate the cause of those your highnesse smiles,
-And tell your thoughts.
-
-_K. of S._ But least thou spend thy time in idlenesse,
-And misse the matter that my mind aimes at,
-Tell me what star was opposite when that was thought?
-
- He strikes him on the eare.
-
-_Ateu._ Tis inconuenient mightie Potentate,
-Whose lookes resembles _Ioue_ in Maiestie,
-To scorne the sooth of science with contempt, 330
-I see in those imperiall lookes of yours,
-The whole discourse of loue, _Saturn_ combust,
-With direfull lookes at your natiuitie:
-Beheld faire _Venns_ in her siluer orbe,
-I know by certaine exiomies I haue read,
-Your graces griefs, & further can expresse her name,
-That holds you thus in fancies bands.
-
-_K. of S._ Thou talkest wonders.
-
-_Ateu._ Nought but truth O King,
-Tis _Ida_ is the mistresse of your heart, 340
-Whose youth must take impression of affects,
-For tender twigs will bowe, and milder mindes
-Will yeeld to fancie be they followed well.
-
-_K. of S._ What god art thou composde in humane shape,
-Or bold _Trophonius_ to decide our doubts,
-How knowst thou this?
-
-_Ateu._ Euen as I know the meanes,
-To worke your graces freedome and your loue:
-Had I the mind as many Courtiers haue,
-To creepe into your bosome for your coyne, 350
-And beg rewards for euery cap and knee,
-I then would say, if that your grace would giue
-This lease, this manor, or this pattent seald,
-For this or that I would effect your loue:
-But _Ateukin_ is no Parasite O Prince,
-I know your grace knowes schollers are but poore,
-And therefore as I blush to beg a fee,
-Your mightinesse is so magnificent
-You cannot chuse but cast some gift apart,
-To ease my bashfull need that cannot beg, 360
-As for your loue, oh might I be imployd,
-How faithfully would _Ateukin_ compasse it:
-But Princes rather trust a smoothing tongue,
-Then men of Art that can accept the time.
-
-_K. of Scots._ _Ateu._ If so thy name, for so thou saist,
-Thine Art appeares in entrance of my loue:
-And since I deeme thy wisedom matcht with truth,
-I will exalt thee, and thy selfe alone
-Shalt be the Agent to dissolue my griefe.
-Sooth is, I loue, and _Ida_ is my loue, 370
-But my new marriage nips me neare, _Ateukin_:
-For _Dorithea_ may not brooke th'abuse.
-
-_Ateu._ These lets are but as moaths against the sun,
-Yet not so great, like dust before the winde:
-Yet not so light. Tut pacifie your grace,
-You haue the sword and scepter in your hand,
-You are the King, the state depends on you:
-Your will is law, say that the case were mine,
-Were she my sister whom your highnesse loues,
-She should consent, for that our liues, our goods, 380
-Depend on you, and if your Queene repine,
-Although my nature cannot brooke of blood,
-And Schollers grieue to heare of murtherous deeds,
-But if the Lambe should let the Lyons way,
-By my aduise the Lambe should lose her life.
-Thus am I bold to speake vnto your grace,
-Who am too base to kisse your royall feete,
-For I am poore, nor haue I land nor rent,
-Nor countenance here in Court, but for my loue,
-Your Grace shall find none such within the realme. 390
-
-_K. of S._ Wilt thou effect my loue, shal she be mine?
-
-_Ateu._ Ile gather Moly-rocus, and the earbes,
-That heales the wounds of body and the minde,
-Ile set out charmes and spels, nought else shalbe left,
-To tame the wanton if she shall rebell,
-Giue me but tokens of your highnesse trust.
-
-_K. of S._ Thou shalt haue gold, honor and wealth inough,
-Winne my Loue, and I will make thee great.
-
-_Ateu._ These words do make me rich most noble Prince,
-I am more proude of them then any wealth, 400
-Did not your grace suppose I flatter you,
-Beleeue me I would boldly publish this:
-Was neuer eye that saw a sweeter face,
-Nor neuer eare that heard a deeper wit,
-Oh God how I am rauisht in your woorth.
-
-_K. of S._ _Ateu._ Follow me, loue must haue ease.
-
-_Ateu._ Ile kisse your highnesse feet, march when you please.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter ~Slipper~, ~Nano~, and ~Andrew~, with their billes readie _I. ii._
-written in their hands._ 410
-
-_Andrew._ Stand back sir, mine shall stand highest.
-
-_Slip._ Come vnder mine arme sir, or get a footstoole,
-Or else by the light of the Moone, I must come to it.
-
-_Nano._ Agree my maisters, euery man to his height,
-Though I stand lowest, I hope to get the best maister.
-
-_Andr._ Ere I will stoupe to a thistle, I will change turnes,
-As good lucke comes on the right hand, as the left:
-Here's for me, and me, and mine.
-
-_Andr._ But tell me fellowes till better occasion come,
-Do you seeke maisters? 420
-
-_Ambo._ We doo.
-
-_Andr._ But what can you do worthie preferment?
-
-_Nano._ Marry I can smell a knaue from a Rat.
-
-_Slip._ And I can licke a dish before a Cat.
-
-_Andr._ And I can finde two fooles vnfought,
-How like you that?
-But in earnest, now tell me of what trades are you two?
-
-_Slip._ How meane you that sir, of what trade?
-Marry Ile tell you, I haue many trades,
-The honest trade when I needs must, 430
-The filching trade when time serues,
-The Cousening trade as I finde occasion.
-And I haue more qualities, I cannot abide a ful cup vnkist,
-A fat Capon vncaru'd,
-A full purse vnpickt,
-Nor a foole to prooue a Iustice as you do.
-
-_Andr._ Why sot why calst thou me foole?
-
-_Nano._ For examining wiser then thy selfe.
-
-_Andr._ So doth many more then I in _Scotland_.
-
-_Nano._ Yea those are such, as haue more autthoritie then wit, 440
-And more wealth then honestie.
-
-_Slip._ This is my little brother with the great wit, ware him,
-But what canst thou do, tel me, that art so inquisitiue of vs?
-
-_Andr._ Any thing that concernes a gentleman to do, that can I do.
-
-_Slip._ So you are of the gentle trade?
-
-_Andr._ True.
-
-_Slip._ Then gentle sir, leaue vs to our selues,
-For heare comes one as if he would lack a seruant ere he went.
-
-Ent. _Ateu._ Why so _Ateukin_? this becomes thee best,
-Wealth, honour, ease, and angelles in thy chest: 450
-Now may I say, as many often sing,
-No fishing to the sea, nor seruice to a king.
-Vnto this high promotions doth belong,
-Meanes to be talkt of in the thickest throng:
-And first to fit the humors of my Lord,
-Sweete layes and lynes of loue I must record.
-And such sweete lynes and louelayes ile endite:
-As men may wish for, and my leech delight,
-And next a traine of gallants at my heeles,
-That men may say, the world doth run on wheeles. 460
-For men of art, that rise by indirection,
-To honour and the fauour of their King,
-Must vse all meanes to saue what they haue got,
-And win their fauours whom he neuer knew.
-If any frowne to see my fortunes such,
-A man must beare a little, not too much:
-But in good time these billes partend, I thinke,
-That some good fellowes do for seruice seeke.
-
-Read. _If any gentleman, spirituall or temperall, will entertaine
-out of his seruice, a young stripling of the age of 30. yeares, that can 470
-sleep with the soundest, eate with the hungriest, work with the sickest,
-lye with the lowdest, face with the proudest, &c. that can wait in a
-Gentlemans chamber, when his maister is a myle of, keepe his stable
-when tis emptie, and his purse when tis full, and hath many qualities
-woorse then all these, let him write his name and goe his way,
-and attendance shall be giuen._
-
-_Ateu._ By my faith a good seruant, which is he?
-
-_Slip._ Trulie sir that am I?
-
-_Ateu._ And why doest thou write such a bill,
-Are all these qualities in thee? 480
-
-_Slip._ O Lord I sir, and a great many more,
-Some bettet, some worse, some richer some porer,
-Why sir do you looke so, do they not please you?
-
-_Ateu._ Trulie no, for they are naught and so art thou,
-If thou hast no better qualities, stand by.
-
-_Slip._ O sir, I tell the worst first, but and you lack a man,
-I am for you, ile tell you the best qualities I haue.
-
-_Ateu._ Be breefe then.
-
-_Slip._ If you need me in your chamber,
-I can keepe the doore at a whistle, in your kitchin, 490
-Turne the spit, and licke the pan, and make the fire burne.
-But if in the stable.
-
-_Ateu._ Yea there would I vse thee.
-
-_Slip._ Why there you kill me, there am I,
-And turne me to a horse & a wench, and I haue no peere.
-
-_Ateu._ Art thou so good in keeping a horse,
-I pray thee tell me how many good qualities hath a horse?
-
-_Slip._ Why so sir, a horse hath two properties of a man,
-That is a proude heart, and a hardie stomacke,
-Foure properties of a Lyon, a broad brest, a stiffe docket, 500
-Hold your nose master. A wild countenance, and 4. good legs.
-Nine properties of a Foxe, nine of a Hare, nine of an Asse,
-And ten of a woman.
-
-_Ateu._ A woman, why what properties of a woman hath a Horse?
-
-_Slip._ O maister, know you not that?
-Draw your tables, and write what wise I speake.
-First a merry countenance.
-Second, a soft pace.
-Third, a broad forehead.
-Fourth, broad buttockes. 510
-Fift, hard of warde.
-Sixt, easie to leape vpon.
-Seuenth, good at long iourney.
-Eight, mouing vnder a man.
-Ninth, alway busie with the mouth.
-Tenth. Euer chewing on the bridle.
-
-_Ateu._ Thou art a man for me, whats thy name?
-
-_Slip._ An auncient name sir, belonging to the
-Chamber and the night gowne. Gesse you that.
-
-_Ateu._ Whats that, _Slipper_? 520
-
-_Slip._ By my faith well gest, and so tis indeed:
-Youle be my maister?
-
-_Ateu._ I meane so.
-
-_Slip._ Reade this first.
-
-_Ateu._ Pleaseth it any Gentleman to entertaine
-A seruant of more wit then stature,
-Let them subscribe, and attendance shall be giuen.
-What of this?
-
-_Slip._ He is my brother sir, and we two were borne togither,
-Must serue togither, and will die togither, 530
-Though we be both hangd.
-
-_Ateu._ Whats thy name?
-
-_Nano._ _Nano._
-
-_Ateu._ The etimologie of which word, is a dwarfe:
-Art not thou the old stoykes son that dwels in his Tombe?
-
-_Ambo._ We are.
-
-_Ateu._ Thou art welcome to me,
-Wilt thou giue thy selfe wholly to be at my disposition?
-
-_Nano._ In all humilitie I submit my selfe.
-
-_Ateu._ Then will I deck thee Princely, instruct thee courtly, 540
-And present thee to the Queene as my gift.
-Art thou content?
-
-_Nano._ Yes, and thanke your honor too.
-
-_Slip._ Then welcome brother, and fellow now.
-
-_Andr._ May it please your honor to abase your eye so lowe,
-As to looke either on my bill or my selfe.
-
-_Ateu._ What are you?
-
-_An._ By birth a gentleman, in profession a scholler,
-And one that knew your honor in _Edenborough_,
-Before your worthinesse cald you to this reputation. 550
- By me _Andrew Snoord_.
-
-_Ateu._ _Andrew_ I remember thee, follow me,
-And we will confer further, for my waightie affaires
-For the king, commands me to be briefe at this time.
-Come on _Nano_, _Slipper_ follow.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-Enter sir _Bartram_ with _Eustas_ and others, booted. _I. iii._
-
-_S. Bar._ But tell me louely _Eustas_ as thou lou'st me,
-Among the many pleasures we haue past,
-Which is the rifest in thy memorie, 560
-To draw thee ouer to thine auncient friend?
-
-_Eu._ What makes Sir _Bartram_ thus inquisitiue?
-Tell me good knight, am I welcome or no?
-
-_Sir Bar._ By sweet S. _Andrew_ and may sale I sweare,
-As welcom is my honest _Dick_ to me,
-As mornings sun, or as the watry moone,
-In merkist night, when we the borders track.
-I tell thee _Dick_, thy sight hath cleerd my thoughts,
-Of many banefull troubles that there woond.
-Welcome to sir _Bartram_ as his life: 570
-Tell me bonny _Dicke_, hast got a wife?
-
-_Eust._ A wife God shield sir _Bartram_, that were ill
-To leaue my wife and wander thus astray:
-But time and good aduise ere many yeares,
-May chance to make my fancie bend that way,
-What newes in _Scotland_? therefore came I hither:
-To see your Country, and to chat togither.
-
-_Sir Bar._ Why man our Countries blyth, our king is well.
-Our Queene so, so, the Nobles well, and worse
-And weele are they that were about the king, 580
-But better are the Country Gentlemen.
-And I may tell thee _Eustace_, in our liues,
-We old men neuer saw so wondrous change:
-But leaue this trattle, and tell me what newes,
-In louely England with our honest friends?
-
-_Eust._ The king, the Court, and all our noble frends
-Are well, and God in mercy keepe them so.
-The Northren Lords and Ladies here abouts,
-That knowes I came to see your Queen and Court,
-Commends them to my honest friend sir _Bartram_, 590
-And many others that I haue not seene:
-Among the rest, the Countesse _Elinor_ from _Carlile_
-Where we merry oft haue bene,
-Greets well my Lord, and hath directed me,
-By message this faire Ladies face to see.
-
-_Sir Bar._ I tell thee _Eustace_, lest mine old eyes daze,
-This is our Scottish moone and euenings pride:
-This is the blemish of your English Bride:
-Who sailes by her, are sure of winde at will.
-Her face is dangerous, her sight is ill: 600
-And yet in sooth sweet _Dicke_, it may be said,
-The king hath folly, their's vertue in the mayd.
-
-_Eust._ But knows my friend this portrait, be aduisd?
-
-_Sir Bar._ Is it not _Ida_ the Countesse of _Arains_ daughters?
-
-_Eust._ So was I told by _Elinor_ of _Carlile_,
-But tell me louely _Bartram_, is the maid euil inclind,
-Misled, or Concubine vnto the King or any other Lord?
-
-_Ba._ Shuld I be brief & true, then thus my _Dicke_,
-All Englands grounds yeelds not a blyther Lasse.
-Nor _Europ_ can art her for her gifts, 610
-Of vertue, honour, beautie, and the rest:
-But our fond king not knowing sin in lust,
-Makes loue by endlesse meanes and precious gifts,
-And men that see it dare not sayt my friend,
-But wee may wish that it were otherwise:
-But I rid thee to view the picture still,
-For by the persons sights there hangs som ill.
-
-_Ba._ Oh good sir _Bartram_, you suspect I loue,
-Then were I mad, hee whom I neuer sawe,
-But how so ere, I feare not entisings, 620
-Desire will giue no place vnto a king:
-Ile see her whom the world admires so much,
-That I may say with them, there liues none such.
-
-_Bar._ Be Gad and sal, both see and talke with her,
-And when th' hast done, what ere her beautie be,
-Ile wartant thee her vertues may compare,
-With the proudest she that waits vpon your Queen.
-
-_Eu._ My Ladie intreats your Worship in to supper.
-
-_Ba._ Guid bony _Dick_, my wife will tel thee more,
-Was neuer no man in her booke before: 630
-Be Gad shees blyth, faire lewely, bony, &c.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-
-
-_Enter ~Bohan~ and the fairy king after the first act, to _II. Chor._
-them a rownd of Fairies, or some prittie dance._
-
-_Boh._ Be Gad gramersis little king for this,
-This sport is better in my exile life,
-Then euer the deceitfuil werld could yeeld.
-
-_Ober._ I tell thee _Bohan_, _Oberon_ is king,
-Of quiet, pleasure, profit, and content,
-Of wealth, of honor, and of all the world, 640
-Tide to no place, yet all are tide to one,
-Liue thou in this life, exilde from world and men,
-And I will shew thee wonters ere we part,
-
-_Boh._ Then marke my stay, and the strange doubts,
-That follow flatterers, lust and lawlesse will,
-And then say I haue reason to forsake theworld,
-And all that are within the same.
-Gow shrowd vs in our harbor where weele see,
-The pride of folly, as it ought to be.
-
- _Exeunt._ 650
-
-_After the first act._
-
-_Ober._ Here see I good fond actions in thy gyg,
-And meanes to paint the worldes in constant waies
-But turne thine ene, see which for I can commaund.
-
-_Enter two battailes strongly fighting, the one ~Simi Ranus~, the
-other, ~Staurobates~, she flies, and her Crowne is taken,
-and she hurt._
-
-_Boh._ What gars this din of mirk and balefull harme,
-Where euery weane is all betaint with bloud?
-
-_Ober._ This shewes thee _Bohan_ what is worldly pompe. 660
-_Simeranus_, the proud Assirrian Queene,
-When _Ninus_ died, did tene in her warres,
-Three millions of footemen to the fight,
-Fiue hundreth thousand horse, of armed chars,
-A hundreth thousand more yet in her pride
-Was hurt and conquered by _S. Taurobates_.
-Then what is pompe?
-
-_Bohan._ I see thou art thine ene.
-Thou bonny King, if Princes fall from high,
-My fall is past, vntill I fall to die. 670
-Now marke my talke, and prosecute my gyg.
-
-2.
-
-_Ober._ How shuld these crafts withdraw thee from the world?
-But looke my _Bohan_, pompe allureth.
-
-_Enter ~Cirus~ king, humbling themselues: himselfe crowned by
-~Oliue Pat~, at last dying, layde in a marbell tombe with this
-inscription_
-
-Who so thou bee that passest,
-For I know one shall passe, knowe I
-I am _Cirus_ of _Persia_, 680
-And I prithee leaue me not thus like a clod of clay
-Wherewith my body is couered.
-
- _All exeunt._
-
-_Enter the king in great pompe, who reads it, & issueth,
-crieth vermeum._
-
-_Boha._ What meaneth this?
-
-_Ober._ _Cirus_ of _Persia_,
-Mightie in life, within a marbell graue,
-Was layde to rot, whom _Alexander_ once
-Beheld in tombde, and weeping did confesse 690
-Nothing in life could scape from wrethednesse:
-Why then boast men?
-
-_Boh._ What recke I then of life,
-Who makes the graue my tomb, the earth my wife:
-But marke mee more.
-
-3.
-
-_Boh._ I can no more, my patience will not warpe.
-To see these flatteries how they scorne and carpe.
-
-_Ober._ Turne but thy head.
-
-_Enter our kings carring Crowns, Ladies presenting odors 700
-to Potentates in thrond, who suddainly is slaine
-by his seruaunts, and thrust out, and so they eate._
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-Sike is the werld, but whilke is he I sawe.
-
-_Ober._ _Sesostris_ who was conquerour of the werld,
-Slaine at the last, and stampt on by his slaues.
-
-_Boh._ How blest are peur men then that know their graue,
-Now marke the sequell of my Gig.
-
-_Boh._ An he weele meete ends: the mirk and sable night
-Doth leaue the pering morne to prie abroade, 710
-Thou nill me stay, haile then thou pride of kings,
-I ken the world, and wot well worldly things,
-Marke thou my gyg, in mirkest termes that telles
-The loathe of sinnes, and where corruption dwells
-Haile me ne mere with showes of gudlie sights:
-My graue is mine, that rids me from dispights.
-Accept my gig guid King, and let me rest,
-The graue with guid men, is a gay built nest.
-
-_Ober._ The rising sunne doth call me hence away,
-Thankes for thy gyg, I may no longer stay: 720
-But if my traine, did wake thee from thy rest,
-So shall they sing, thy lullabie to nest.
-
-
-
-
-_Actus Secundus. Schena Prima._ _II. i._
-
-
-_Enter the Countesse of Arrain, with Ida her daughter
-in theyr porch, sitting at worke._
-
-_A Song._
-
-_Count._ Faire _Ida_, might you chuse the greatest good
-Midst all the world, in blessings that abound:
-Wherein my daughter shuld your liking be?
-
-_Ida._ Not in delights, or pompe, or maiestie. 730
-
-_Count._ And why?
-
-_Ida._ Since these are meanes to draw the minde
-From perfect good, and make true iudgement blind.
-
-_Count._ Might you haue wealth, and fortunes ritchest store?
-
-_Ida._ Yet would I (might I chuse) be honest poore.
-For she that sits at fortunes feete alowe
-Is sure she shall not taste a further woe.
-But those that prancke one top of fortunes ball,
-Still feare a change: and fearing catch a fall.
-
-_Count._ Tut foolish maide, each one contemneth need. 740
-
-_Ida._ Good reason why, they know not good indeed.
-
-_Count._ Many marrie then, on whom distresse doth loure,
-
-_Ida._ Yes they that vertue deeme an honest dowre.
-Madame, by right this world I may compare,
-Vnto my worke, wherein with heedfull care,
-The heauenly workeman plants with curious hand,
-As I with needle drawe each thing one land,
-Euen as hee list, some men like to the Rose,
-Are fashioned fresh, some in their stalkes do close,
-And borne do suddaine die: some are but weeds, 750
-And yet from them a secret good proceeds:
-I with my needle if I please may blot,
-The fairest rose within my cambricke plot,
-God with a becke can change each worldly thing,
-The poore to earth, the begger to the king.
-What then hath man, wherein hee well may boast,
-Since by a becke he liues, a louer is lost?
-
-_Enter Eustace with letters._
-
-_Count._ Peace _Ida_, heere are straungers neare at hand.
-
-_Eust._ Madame God speed. 760
-
-_Count._ I thanke you gentle squire.
-
-_Eust._ The countrie Countesse of _Northumberland_,
-Doth greete you well, and hath requested mee,
-To bring these letters to your Ladiship.
-
-_He carries the letter._
-
-_Count._ I thanke her honour, and your selfe my friend.
-
- _Shee receiues and peruseth them._
-
-I see she meanes you good braue Gentleman,
-Daughter, the Ladie _Elinor_ salutes
-Your selfe as well as mee, then for her sake 770
-T'were good you entertaind that Courtiour well.
-
-_Ida._ As much salute as may become my sex,
-And hee in vertue can vouchsafe to thinke,
-I yeeld him for the courteous Countesse sake.
-Good sir sit downe, my mother heere and I,
-Count time mispent, an endlesse vanitie.
-
-_Eust._ Beyond report, the wit, the faire, the shape,
-What worke you heere, faire Mistresse may I see it?
-
-_Id._ Good Sir looke on, how like you this compact?
-
-_Eust._ Me thinks in this I see true loue in act: 780
-The Woodbines with their leaues do sweetly spred,
-The Roses blushing prancke them in their red,
-No flower but boasts the beauties of the spring,
-This bird hath life indeed if it could sing:
-What meanes faire Mistres had you in this worke?
-
-_Ida._ My needle sir.
-
-_Eust._ In needles then there lurkes,
-Some hidden grace I deeme beyond my reach.
-
-_Id._ Not grace in them good sir, but those that teach.
-
-_Eust._ Say that your needle now were _Cupids_ sting, 790
-But ah her eie must bee no lesse,
-In which is heauen and heauenlinesse,
-In which the foode of God is shut,
-Whose powers the purest mindes do glut.
-
-_Ida._ What if it were?
-
-_Eust._ Then see a wondrous thing,
-I feare mee you would paint in _Teneus_ heart,
-Affection in his power and chiefest parts.
-
-_Ida._ Good Lord sir no, for hearts but pricked soft,
-Are wounded sore, for so I heare it oft. 800
-
-_Eust._ what recks the second,
-Where but your happy eye,
-May make him liue, whom _Ioue_ hath iudgd to die.
-
-_Ida._ Should life & death within this needle lurke,
-Ile pricke no hearts, Ile pricke vpon my worke.
-
-_Enter Ateuken, with Slipper the Clowne._
-
-_Coun._ Peace _Ida_, I perceiue the fox at hand.
-
-_Eust._ The fox? why fetch your hounds & chace him hence.
-
-_Count._ Oh sir these great men barke at small offence.
-
-_Ateu._ Come will it please you to enter gentle sir? 810
-
- _Offer to exeunt._
-
-Stay courteous Ladies, fauour me so much,
-As to discourse a word or two apart.
-
-_Count._ Good sir, my daughter learnes this rule of mee,
-To shun resort, and straungers companie:
-For some are shifting mates that carrie letters,
-Some such as you too good, because our betters.
-
-_Slip._ Now I pray you sir what a kin are you to a pickrell?
-
-_Ateu._ Why knaue?
-
-_Slip._ By my troth sir, because I neuer knew a proper scituation 820
-fellow of your pitch, fitter to swallow a gudgin.
-
-_Ateu._ What meanst thou by this?
-
-_Slip._ Shifting fellow sir, these be thy words, shifting fellow:
-This Gentlewoman I feare me, knew your bringing vp.
-
-_Ateu._ How so?
-
-_Slip._ Why sir your father was a Miller,
-That could shift for a pecke of grist in a bushell,
-And you a faire spoken Gentleman, that can get more land by
-a lye, then an honest man by his readie mony.
-
-_Ateu._ Catiue what sayest thou? 830
-
-_Slip._ I say sir, that if shee call you shifting knaue,
-You shall not put her to the proofe.
-
-_Ateu._ And why?
-
-_Slip._ Because sir, liuing by your wit as you doo shifting, is
-your letters pattents, it were a hard matter for mee to get my
-dinner that day, wherein my Maister had not solde a dozen of
-deuices, a case of cogges, and a shute of shifts in the morning:
-I speak this in your commendation sir, & I pray you so take it.
-
-_Ateu._ If I liue knaue I will bee reuenged, what Gentleman
-would entertaine a rascall, thus to derogate from his honour? 840
-
-_Ida._ My Lord why are you thus impatient?
-
-_Ateu._ Not angrie _Ida_, but I teach this knaue,
-How to behaue himselfe among his betters:
-Behold faire Countesse to assure your stay,
-I heere present the signet of the king,
-Who now by mee faire _Ida_ doth salute you:
-And since in secret I haue certaine things,
-In his behalfe good Madame to impart,
-I craue your daughter to discourse a part.
-
-_Count._ Shee shall in humble dutie bee addrest, 850
-To do his Highnesse will in what shee may.
-
-_Id._ Now gentle sir what would his grace with me?
-
-_Ateu._ Faire comely Nimph, the beautie of your face,
-Sufficient to bewitch the heauenly powers,
-Hath wrought so much in him, that now of late
-Hee findes himselfe made captiue vnto loue,
-And though his power and Maiestie requires,
-A straight commaund before an humble sute,
-Yet hee his mightinesse doth so abase,
-As to intreat your fauour honest maid. 860
-
-_Ida._ Is hee not married sir vnto our Queen?
-
-_Ateu._ Hee is.
-
-_Ida._ And are not they by God accurst,
-That seuer them whom hee hath knit in one?
-
-_Ateu._ They bee: what then? wee seeke not to displace
-The Princesse from her seate, but since by loue
-The king is made your owne, shee is resolude
-In priuate to accept your dalliance,
-In spight of warre, watch, or worldly eye.
-
-_Ida._ Oh how hee talkes as if hee should not die, 870
-As if that God in iustice once could winke,
-Vpon that fault I am a sham'd to thinke.
-
-_Ateu._ Tut Mistresse, man at first was born to erre,
-Women are all not formed to bee Saints:
-Tis impious for to kill our natiue king,
-Whom by a little fauour wee may saue.
-
-_Ida._ Better then liue vnchaste, to liue in graue.
-
-_Ateu._ Hee shall erect your state & wed you well.
-
-_Ida._ But can his warrant keep my soule from hell?
-
-_Ateu._ He will inforce, if you resist his sute. 880
-
-_Id._ What tho, the world may shame to him account
-To bee a king of men and worldly pelfe.
-
-_Ateu._ Yet hath to power no rule and guide himselfe,
-I know you gentle Ladie and the care,
-Both of your honour and his graces health,
-Makes me confused in this daungerous state.
-
-_Ida._ So counsell him, but sooth thou not his sinne,
-Tis vaine alurement that doth make him loue,
-I shame to heare, bee you a shamde to mooue.
-
-_Count._ I see my daughter growes impatient, 890
-I feare me hee pretends some bad intent.
-
-_Ateu._ Will you dispise the king, & scorne him so?
-
-_Ida._ In all alleageance I will serue his grace,
-But not in lust, oh how I blush to name it?
-
-_Ateu._ An endlesse worke is this, how should I frame it?
-
-_They discourse priuately._
-
-_Slip._ Oh Mistresse may I turne a word vpon you.
-
-_Ateu._ Friend what wilt thou?
-
-_Slip._ Oh what a happie Gentlewoman bee you trulie, the
-world reports this of you Mistresse, that a man can no sooner 900
-come to your house, but the Butler comes with a blacke Iack
-and sayes welcome friend, heeres a cup of the best for you, verilie
-Mistresse you are said to haue the best Ale in al _Scotland_.
-
-_Count._ Sirrha go fetch him drinke, how likest thou this?
-
-_Slip._ Like it Mistresse? why this is quincy quarie pepper
-de watchet, single goby, of all that euer I tasted: Ile prooue in
-this Ale and tost, the compasse of the whole world. First this
-is the earth, it ties in the middle a faire browne tost, a goodly
-countrie for hungrie teeth to dwell vpon: next this is the sea,
-a fair poole for a drie tongue to fish in: now come I, & seing the 910
-world is naught, I diuide it thus, & because the sea cannot stand
-without the earth, as _Arist._ saith, I put them both into their first
-_Chaos_ which is my bellie, and so mistresse you may see your ale
-is become a myracle.
-
-_Eustace._ A merrie mate Madame I promise you.
-
-_Count._ Why sigh you sirrah?
-
-_Slip._ Trulie Madam, to think vppon the world, which since
-I denounced, it keepes such a rumbling in my stomack, that vnlesse
-your Cooke giue it a counterbuffe with some of your rosted
-Capons or beefe, I feare me I shal become a loose body, so 920
-daintie I thinke, I shall neither hold fast before nor behinde.
-
-_Count._ Go take him in and feast this merrie swaine,
-Syrrha, my cooke is your phisitian.
-He hath a purge for to disiest the world.
-
-_Ateu._ Will you not, _Ida_, grant his highnesse this?
-
-_Ida._ As I haue said, in dutie I am his:
-For other lawlesse lusts, that ill beseeme him,
-I cannot like, and good I will not deeme him.
-
-_Count._ _Ida_ come in, and sir if so you please,
-Come take a homelie widdowes intertaine. 930
-
-_Ida._ If he haue no great haste, he may come nye.
-If haste, tho he be gone, I will not crie.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-_Ateu._ I see this labour lost, my hope in vaine,
-Yet will I trie an other drift againe.
-
-
-_Enter the Bishop of S. Andrewes, Earle Douglas, _II. ii._
-Morton, with others, one way, the Queene with
-Dwarfes an other way._
-
-_B. S. Andr._ Oh wrack of Common-weale! Oh wretched state!
-
-_Doug._ Oh haplesse flocke whereas the guide is blinde? 940
-
- _They all are in a muse._
-
-_Mort._ Oh heedlesse youth, where counsaile is dispis'd.
-
-_Dorot._ Come prettie knaue, and prank it by my side,
-Lets see your best attendaunce out of hande.
-
-_Dwarfe._ Madame altho my lims are very small,
-My heart is good, ile serue you therewithall.
-
-_Doro._ How if I were assaild, what couldst thou do?
-
-_Dwarf._ Madame call helpe, and boldly fight it to,
-Altho a Bee be but a litle thing:
-You know faire Queen, it hath a bitter sting. 950
-
-_Dor._ How couldst thou do me good were I in greefe?
-
-_Dwar._ Counsell deare Princes, is a choyce releefe.
-Tho _Nestor_ wanted force, great was his wit,
-And tho I am but weake, my words are fit.
-
-_S. And._ Like to a ship vpon the Ocean seas,
-Tost in the doubtfull streame without a helme,
-Such is a Monarke without good aduice,
-I am ore heard, cast raine vpon thy tongue,
-_Andrewes_ beware, reproofe will breed a fear.
-
-_Mor._ Good day my Lord. 960
-
-_B. S. And._ Lord _Morton_ well ymet:
-Whereon deemes Lord _Douglas_ all this while?
-
-_Dou._ Of that which yours and my poore heart doth breake:
-Altho feare shuts our mouths we dare not speake.
-
-_Dor._ What meane these Princes sadly to consult?
-Somewhat I feare, betideth them amisse,
-They are so pale in lookes, so vext in minde:
-In happie houre the Noble Scottish Peeres
-Haue I incountred you, what makes you mourne?
-
-_B. S. And._ If we with patience may attentiue gaine, 970
-Your Grace shall know the cause of all our griefe.
-
-_Dor._ Speake on good father, come and sit by me:
-I know thy care is for the common good.
-
-_B. S. And._ As fortune mightie Princes reareth some,
-To high estate, and place in Common-weale,
-So by diuine bequest to them is lent,
-A riper iudgement and more searching eye:
-Whereby they may discerne the common harme,
-For where importunes in the world are most,
-Where all our profits rise and still increase, 980
-There is our minde, thereon we meditate,
-And what we do partake of good aduice,
-That we imploy for to concerne the same.)
-To this intent these nobles and my selfe,
-That are (or should bee) eyes of Common-weale,
-Seeing his highnesse reachlesse course of youth
-His lawlesse and vnbridled vaine in loue,
-His to intentiue trust too flatterers,
-His abiect care of councell and his friendes,
-Cannot but greeue, and since we cannot drawe 990
-His eye or Iudgement to discerne his faults
-Since we haue spake and counsaile is not heard,
-I for my part, (let others as they list)
-Will leaue the Court, and leaue him to his will:
-Least with a ruthfull eye I should behold,
-His ouerthrow which sore I feare is nye.
-
-_Doro._ Ah father are you so estranged from loue,
-From due alleageance to your Prince and land,
-To leaue your King when most he needs your help,
-The thriftie husbandmen, are neuer woont 1000
-That see their lands vnfruitfull, to forsake them:
-But when the mould is barraine and vnapt,
-They toyle, they plow, and make the fallow fatte:
-The pilot in the dangerous seas is knowne,
-In calmer waues the sillie sailor striues,
-Are you not members Lords of Common-weale,
-And can your head, your deere annointed King,
-Default ye Lords, except your selues do faile?
-Oh stay your steps, returne and counsaile him.
-
-_Doug._ Men seek not mosse vpon a rowling stone, 1010
-Or water from the siue, or fire from yce:
-Or comfort from a rechlesse monarkes hands.
-Madame he sets vs light that seru'd in Court,
-In place of credit in his fathers dayes,
-If we but enter presence of his grace,
-Our payment is a frowne, a scoffe, a frumpe,
-Whilst flattering _Gnato_ prancks it by his side,
-Soothing the carelesse King in his misdeeds,
-And if your grace consider your estate,
-His life should vrge you too if all be true. 1020
-
-_Doug._ Why _Douglas_ why?
-
-_Doug._ As if you haue not heard
-His lawlesse loue to _Ida_ growne of late,
-His carelesse estimate of your estate.
-
-_Doro._ Ah _Douglas_ thou misconstrest his intent,
-He doth but tempt his wife, he tryees my loue:
-This iniurie pertaines to me, not to you.
-The King is young, and if he step awrie,
-He may amend, and I will loue him still.
-Should we disdaine our vines becauso they sprout 1030
-Before their time? or young men if they straine
-Beyond their reach? no vines that bloome and spread
-Do promise fruites, and young men that are wilde,
-In age growe wise, my freendes and Scottish Peeres,
-If that an English Princesse may preuaile,
-Stay, stay with him, lo how my zealous prayer
-Is plead with teares, fie Peeres will you hence?
-
-_S. And._ Madam tis vertue in your grace to plead,
-But we that see his vaine vntoward course,
-Cannot but flie the fire before it burne, 1040
-And shun the Court before we see his fall.
-
-_Doro._ Wil you not stay? then Lordings fare you well.
-Tho you forsake your King, the heauens I hope
-Will fauour him through mine incessant prayer.
-
-_Dwar._ Content you Madam, thus old _Ouid_ sings.
-Tis foolish to bewaile recurelesse things.
-
-_Dorothea._ Peace Dwarffe, these words my patience moue.
-
-_Dwar._ All tho you charme my speech, charme not my loue
-
- _Exeunt Nano Dorothea._
-
-_Enter the King of Scots, Arius, the nobles spying 1050
-him, returnes._
-
-_K. of S._ _Douglas_ how now? why changest thou thy cheere?
-
-_Dougl._ My priuate troubles are so great my liege,
-As I must craue your licence for a while:
-For to intend mine owne affaires at home. _Exit._
-
-_King._ You may depart, but why is _Morton_ sad?
-
-_Mor._ The like occasion doth import me too,
-So I desire your grace to giue me leaue.
-
-_K. of S._ Well sir you may betake you to your ease,
-When such grim syrs are gone, I see no let 1060
-To worke my will.
-
-_8. Atten._ What like the Eagle then,
-With often flight wilt thou thy feathers loose?
-O King canst thou indure to see thy Court,
-Of finest wits and Iudgements dispossest,
-Whilst cloking craft with soothing climbes so high,
-As each bewailes ambition is so bad?
-Thy father left thee with estate and Crowne,
-A learned councell to direct thy Court,
-These careleslie O King thou castest off, 1070
-To entertaine a traine of Sicophants:
-Thou well mai'st see, although thou wilt not see,
-That euery eye and eare both sees and heares
-The certaine signes of thine inconstinence:
-Thou art alyed vnto the English King,
-By marriage a happie friend indeed,
-If vsed well, if not a mightie foe.
-Thinketh your grace he ean indure and brooke,
-To haue a partner in his daughters loue?
-Thinketh your grace the grudge of priuie wrongs 1080
-Will not procure him chaunge his smiles to threats?
-Oh be not blinde to good, call home your Lordes,
-Displace these flattering Gnatoes, driue them hence:
-Loue and with kindnesse take your wedlocke wife
-Or else (which God forbid) I feare a change,
-Sinne cannot thriue in courts without a plague.
-
-_K. of S._ Go pack thou too, vnles thou mend thy talk:
-On paine of death proud Bishop get you gone,
-Vnlesse you headlesse mean to hoppe away.
-
-_8. Atten._ Thou god of heauen preuent my countries fall. 1090
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-_K. of S._ These staies and lets to pleasure, plague my thoughts,
-Forcing my greeuous wounds a new to bleed:
-Bur care that hath transported me so farre,
-Faire _Ida_ is disperst in thought of thee:
-Whose answere yeeldes me life, or breeds my death:
-Yond comes the messenger of weale or woe.
-
- _Enter Gnato._
-
-_Ateukin_ What newes?
-
-_Ateu._ The adament o King will not be filde, 1100
-But by it selfe, and beautie that exceeds,
-By some exeeding fauour must be wrought,
-_Ida_ is coy as yet, and doth repine,
-Obiecting marriage, honour, feare, and death,
-Shee's holy, wise, and too precise for me.
-
-_K. of S._ Are these thy fruites of wits, thy sight in Art?
-Thine eloquence? thy pollicie? thy drift?
-To mocke thy Prince, then catiue packe thee hence,
-And let me die deuoured in my loue.
-
-_Ateu._ Good Lord how rage gainsayeth reasons power, 1110
-My deare, my gracious, and beloued Prince,
-The essence of my sute, my God on earth,
-Sit downe and rest your selfe, appease your wrath,
-Least with a frowne yee wound me to the death:
-Oh that I were included in my graue,
-That eyther now to saue my Princes life,
-Must counsell crueltie, or loose my King.
-
-_K. of S._ Why sirrha, is there meanes to mooue her minde?
-
-_Ateu._ Oh should I not offend my royall liege.
-
-_K. of S._ Tell all, spare nought, so I may gaine my loue. 1120
-
-_Ateu._ Alasse my soule why art thou torne in twaine,
-For feare thou talke a thing that should displease?
-
-_K. of S._ Tut, speake what so thou wilt I pardon thee.
-
-_Ateu._ How kinde a word, how courteous is his grace:
-Who would not die to succour such a king?
-My liege, this louely mayde of modest minde,
-Could well incline to loue, but that shee feares,
-Faire _Dorotheas_ power, your grace doth know,
-Your wedlocke is a mightie let to loue:
-Were _Ida_ sure to bee your wedded wife, 1130
-That then the twig would bowe, you might command.
-Ladies loue, presents pompe and high estate.
-
-_K. of S._ Ah _Ateukin_, how shuld we display this let?
-
-_Ateu._ Tut mightie Prince, oh that I might bee whist.
-
-_K. of S._ Why dalliest thou?
-
-_Ateu._ I will not mooue my Prince,
-I will preferre his safetie before my life:
-Heare mee o king, tis _Dorotheas_ death,
-Must do you good.
-
-_K. of S._ What, murther of my Queene? 1140
-Yet to enioy my loue, what is my Queene?
-Oh but my vowe and promise to my Queene:
-I but my hope to gaine a fairer Queene,
-With how contrarious thoughts am I with drawne?
-Why linger I twixt hope and doubtfull feare:
-If _Dorothe_ die, will _Ida_ loue?
-
-_Ateu._ Shee will my Lord.
-
-_K. of S._ Then let her die.
-Deuise, aduise the meanes,
-Al likes me wel that lends me hope in loue. 1150
-
-_Ateu._ What will your grace consent, then let mee worke:
-Theres heere in Court a Frenchman _Iaques_ calde,
-A fit performer of our enterprise,
-Whom I by gifts and promise will corrupt,
-To slaye the Queene, so that your grace will seale
-A warrant for the man to saue his life.
-
-_K. of S._ Nought shall he want, write thou and I wil signe
-And gentle _Gnato_, if my _Ida_ yeelde,
-Thon shalt haue what thou wilt, Ile giue the straight,
-A Barrony, an Earledome for reward. 1160
-
-_Ateu._ Frolicke young king, the Lasse shall bee your owne,
-Ile make her blyth and wanton by my wit.
-
- _Exennt._
-
-
-
-
-_Enter Bohan with Obiron._ _III. Chor._
-
-3. _Act._
-
-
-_Boh._ So _Oberon_, now it beginnes to worke in kinde,
-The auncient Lords by leauing him aliue,
-Disliking of his humors and respight,
-Lets him run headlong till his flatterers,
-Sweeting his thoughts of lucklesse lust, 1170
-With vile perswations and alluring words,
-Makes him make way by murther to his will,
-Iudge fairie king, hast heard a greater ill?
-
-_Ober._ Nor send more vertue in a countrie mayd,
-I tell the _Bohan_ it doth make me merrie,
-To thinke the deeds the king meanes to performe.
-
-_Boha._ To change that humour stand and see the rest,
-I trow my sonne _Slipper_ will shewes a iest.
-
-_Enter Slipper with a companion, bog, or wench, dauncing a
-hornpipe, and daunce out againe._ 1180
-
-_Boha._ Now after this beguiling of our thoughts,
-And changing them from sad to better glee,
-Lets to our sell, and sit and see thee rest,
-For I beleeue this Iig will prooue no iest. _Exeunt._
-
-
-
-
-_Chorus Actus 3. Schena Prima._ _III. i._
-
-
-_Enter Slipper one way, and S. Bartram another way._
-
-_Bar._ Ho fellow, stay and let me speake with thee.
-
-_Sli._ Fellow, frend thou doest disbuse me, I am a Gentleman.
-
-_Bar._ A Gentleman, how so?
-
-_Slip._ Why I rub horses sir. 1190
-
-_Bar._ And what of that?
-
-_Sip._ Oh simple witted, marke my reason, they that do good
-seruice in the Common-weale are Gentlemen, but such as rub
-horses do good seruice in the Common-weale, Ergo tarbox
-Maister Courtier, a Horse-keeper is a Gentleman.
-
-_Bar._ Heere is ouermuch wit in good earnest:
-But sirrha where is thy Maister?
-
-_Slip._ Neither aboue ground nor vnder ground,
-Drawing out red into white,
-Swallowing that downe without chawing, 1200
-That was neuer made without treading.
-
-_Bar._ Why where is hee then?
-
-_Slip._ Why in his seller, drinking a cup of neate and briske
-claret, in a boule of siluer: Oh sir the wine runnes trillill down
-his throat, which cost the poore viutnerd many a stampe before
-it was made: but I must hence sir, I haue haste.
-
-_Bar._ Why whither now I prithee?
-
-_Slip._ Faith sir, to Sir _Siluester_ a Knight hard by, vppon my
-Maisters arrand, whom I must certifie this, that the lease of
-_Est Spring_ shall bee confirmed, and therefore must I bid him 1210
-prouide trash, for my Maister is no friend without mony.
-
-_Bar._ This is the thing for which I sued so long,
-This is the lease which I by _Guatoes_ meanes,
-Sought to possesse by pattent from the King:
-But hee iniurious man, who liues by crafts,
-And selles kings fauours for who will giue most,
-Hath taken bribes of mee, yet couertly
-Will sell away the thing pertaines to mee:
-But I haue found a present helpe I hope,
-For to preuent his purpose and deceit: 1220
-Stay gentle friend.
-
-_Slip._ A good word, thou haste won me,
-This word is like a warme candle to a colde stomacke.
-
-_Bar._ Sirra wilt thou for mony and reward,
-Conuay me certaine letters out of hand,
-From out thy maisters pocket.
-
-_Slip._ Will I sir, why, were it to rob my father, hang
-my mother, or any such like trifles, I am at your
-commaundement sir, what will you giue me sir?
-
-_S. Bar._ A hundreth pounds. 1230
-
-_Slip._ I am your man, giue me earnest, I am dead at a pocket
-sir, why I am a lifter maister, by my occupation.
-
-_S. Bar._ A lifter, what is that?
-
-_Slip._ Why sir, I can lift a pot as well as any man, and picke a
-purse assoone as any theefe in my countrie.
-
-_S. Bar._ Why fellow hold, heere is earnest,
-Ten pound to assure thee, go dispatch,
-And bring it me to yonder Tauerne thou seest,
-And assure thy selfe thou shalt both haue
-Thy skin full of wine, and the rest of thy mony. 1240
-
-_Slip._ I will sir. Now roome for a Gentleman, my maisters,
-who giues mee mony for a faire new Angell, a trimme new
-Angell?
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter Andrew and Purueyer._ _III. ii._
-
-_Pur._ Sirrha, I must needes haue your maisters horses,
-The king cannot bee vnserued.
-
-_And._ Sirrha you must needs go without them,
-Because my Maister must be serued.
-
-_Pur._ Why I am the kings Purueyer, 1250
-And I tell thee I will haue them.
-
-_And._ I am _Ateukins_ seruant, Signior _Andrew_,
-And I say thou shalt not haue them.
-
-_Pur._ Heeres my ticket, denie it if thou darst.
-
-_And._ There is the stable, fetch them out if thou darst.
-
-_Pur._ Sirrha, sirrha, tame your tongue, least I make you.
-
-_And._ Sirrha, sirrha, hold your hand, least I bum you.
-
-_Pur._ I tell thee, thy Maisters geldings are good,
-And therefore fit for the king.
-
-_An._ I tell thee, my Maisters horses haue gald backes, 1260
-And therefore cannot fit the King.
-Purueyr, Purueyer, puruey thee of more wit, darst thou presume
-to wrong my Lord _Ateukins_, being the chiefest man in
-Court.
-
-_Pur._ The more vnhappie Common-weale,
-Where flatterers are chiefe in Court.
-
-_And._ What sayest thou?
-
-_Pur._ I say thon art too presumptuous,
-And the officers shall schoole thee.
-
-_And._ A figge for them and thee Purueyer, 1270
-They seeke a knot in a ring, that would wrong
-My maister or his seruants in this Court.
-
-_Enter Iaques._
-
-_Pur._ The world is at a wise passe,
-When Nobilitie is a fraid of a flatterer.
-
-_Iaq._ Sirrha, what be you that parley, contra Monsieur my
-Lord _Ateukin_, _en bonne foy_, prate you against syr _Altesse_, mee
-maka your test to leap from your shoulders, per ma foy cy fere
-ie.
-
-_And._ Oh signior Captaine, you shewe your selfe a forward 1280
-and friendly Gentleman in my Maisters behalfe, I will cause
-him to thanke you.
-
-_Iaq._ _Poultron_ speake me one parola against my bon Gentilhome,
-I shal estrampe your guttes, and thumpe your backa,
-that you no poynt mannage this tenne ours.
-
-_Pur._ Sirrha come open me the stable,
-And let mee haue the horses:
-And fellow, for all your French bragges I will doo my dutie.
-
-_And._ Ile make garters of thy guttes,
-Thou villaine if thou enter this office. 1290
-
-_Iaq._ Mort lieu, take me that cappa
-Pour nostre labeur, be gonne villein in the mort.
-
-_Pur._ What will you resist mee then?
-Well the Councell fellow, Shall know of your insolency.
-
- _Exit._
-
-_Andr._ Tell them what thou wilt, and eate that I can best
-spare from my backe partes, and get you gone with a vengeance.
-
- _Enter Gnato._
-
-_Ateu._ _Andrew._ 1300
-
-_Andr._ Sir.
-
-_Ateu._ Where be my writings I put in my pocket last night.
-
-_Andr._ Which sir, your annoations vpon Matchauell?
-
-_Ateu._ No sir, the letters pattents for east spring.
-
-_An._ Why sir you talk wonders to me, if you ask that question.
-
-_Ateu._ Yea sir, and wil work wonders too, which you vnlesse
-you finde them out, villaine search me them out and bring them
-me, or thou art but dead.
-
-_Andr._ A terrible word in the latter end of a sessions. Master
-were you in your right wits yesternight? 1310
-
-_Ateu._ Doest thou doubt it?
-
-_Andr._ I and why not sir, for the greatest Clarkes are not the
-wisest, and a foole may dance in a hood, as wel as a wise man in
-a bare frock: besides such as giue themselues to _Plulantia_, as you
-do maister, are so cholericke of complection, that that which
-they burne in fire ouer night, they seeke for with furie the
-next morning. Ah I take care of your worship, this common-weale
-should haue a great losse of so good a member as you
-are.
-
-_Ateu._ Thou flatterest me. 1320
-
-_Andr._ Is it flatterie in me sir to speake you faire?
-What is it then in you to dallie with the King?
-
-_Ateu._ Are you prating knaue,
-I will teach you bettet nurture?
-Is this the care you haue of my wardrop?
-Of my accounts, and matters of trust?
-
-_Andr._ Why alasse sir, in times past your garments haue
-beene so well inhabited, as your Tenants woulde giue no
-place to a Moathe to mangle them, but since you
-are growne greater and your Garments more fine and gaye, 1330
-if your garments are not fit for hospitallitie, blame your pride,
-and commend my cleanlinesse: as for yout writings, I am not
-for them, nor they for mee.
-
-_Ateu._ Villaine go, flie, finde them out:
-If thou loosest them, thou loosest my credit.
-
-_And._ Alasse sir? can I loose that you neuer had.
-
-_Ateu._ Say you so, then hold feel you that you neuer felt.
-
-_Ia._ Oh Monsieur, aies patient, pardon your pouure vallet,
-Me bee at your commaundement.
-
-_Ateu._ Signior _Iaques_ wel met, you shall commaund me, 1340
-Sirra go cause my writings be proclamed in the Market place,
-Promise a great reward to them that findes them,
-Looke where I supt and euery where.
-
-_And._ I will sir, now are two knaues well met, and three well
-parted, if you conceiue mine enigma, Gentlemen what shal I
-bee then, faith a plaine harpe shilling. _Exeunt._
-
-_Ateu._ _Sieur Iaques_, this our happy meeting hides,
-Your friends and me, of care and greeuous toyle,
-For I that looke into deserts of men,
-And see among the souldiers in this court, 1350
-A noble forward minde, and iudge thereof,
-Cannot but seeke the meanes to raise them vp:
-Who merrit credite in the Common-weale.
-To this intent friend _Iaque_ I haue found
-A meanes to make you great, and well esteemd,
-Both with the king, and with the best in Court:
-For I espie in you a valiant minde,
-Which makes mee loue, admire, and honour you:
-To this intent (if so your trust and faith,
-Your secrecie be equall with your force) 1360
-I will impart a seruice to thy selfe,
-Which if thou doest effect, the King, my selfe,
-And what or hee, and I with him can worke,
-Shall be imployd in what thou wilt desire.
-
-_Iaq._ Me sweara by my ten bones, my singniar, to be loyal to
-your Lordships intents, affaires, ye my monsignieur, _qui non
-fera ic pour_. Yea pleasure?
-By my sworda me be no babie Lords.
-
-_Ateu._ Then hoping one thy truth, I prithe see,
-How kinde _Ateukin_ is to forward mee, 1370
-Hold take this earnest pennie of my loue.
-And marke my words, the King by me requires,
-No slender seruice _Iaques_ at thy hands.
-Thou must by privie practise make a way,
-The Queene faire _Dorethea_ as she sleepes:
-Or how thou wilt, so she be done to death:
-Thou shalt not want promotion heare in Court.
-
-_Iaq._ Stabba the woman, per ma foy, monsignieur, me thrusta
-my weapon into her belle, so me may be gard per le roy.
-Mee de your seruice. 1380
-But me no be hanged pur my labor.
-
-_Ateu._ Thou shalt haue warrant _Iaques_ from the King,
-None shall outface, gainsay and wrong my friend.
-Do not I loue thee _Iaques_? feare not then,
-I tell thee who so toucheth thee in ought,
-Shall iniure me, I loue, I tender thee:
-Thou art a subiect fit to serue his grace,
-_Iaques_, I had a written warrant once,
-But that by great misfortune late is lost,
-Come wend we to S. _Andrewes_, where his grace 1390
-Is now in progresse, where he shall assure
-Thy safetie, and confirme thee to the act.
-
-_Iaques._ We will attend your noblenesse.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-
-
-_Enter Sir Bartram, Dorothea, the Queene, _III. iii._
- Nano, Lord Ross. Ladies
- attendants._
-
-_Doro._ Thy credite _Bartram_ in the Scottish Court,,
-Thy reuerend yeares, the stricknesse of thy vowes,
-All these are meanes sufficient to perswade, 1400
-But loue the faithfull lincke of loyall hearts,
-That hath possession of my constant minde,
-Exiles all dread, subdueth vaine supect,
-Me thinks no craft should harbour in that brest,
-Where Maiestie and vertue is mstaled:
-Me thinke my beautie should not cause my death.
-
-_Bar._ How gladly soueraigne Princesse would I erre,
-And binde my shame to saue your royall life:
-Tis Princely in your selfe to thinke the best,
-To hope his grace is guiltlesse of this crime, 1410
-But if in due preuention you default,
-How blinde are you that were forwarnd before.
-
-_Doro._ Suspition without cause deserueth blame.
-
-_Bar._ Who sees, and shunne not harmes, deserue the same:
-Beholde the tenor of this traiterous plot.
-
-_Doro._ What should I reade? Perhappes he wrote it not.
-
-_Bar._ Heere is his warrant vnder seale and signe,
-To _Iaques_ borne in _France_ to murther you.
-
-_Doro._ Ah carelesse King, would God this were not thine
-What tho I reade? Ah should I thinke it true? 1420
-
-_Rosse._ The hand and seale confirmes the deede is his.
-
-_Doro._ What know I tho, if now he thinketh this?
-
-_Nauo._ Madame _Lucretius_ faith, that to repent,
-Is shildish wisdome to preuent.
-
-_Doro._ What tho?
-
-_Nano._ Then cease your teares, that haue dismaid you,
-And crosse the foe before hee haue betrayed you.
-
-_Bar._ What needes this long suggestions in this cause?
-When euery circumstance confirmeth trueth:
-First let the hidden mercie from aboue, 1430
-Confirme your grace, since by a wondrous meanes,
-The practise of your daungers came to light:
-Next let the tokens of appooued trueth,
-Gouerne and stay your thoughts, too much seduc't,
-And marke the sooth, and listen the intent,
-Your highnesse knowes, and these my noble Lords,
-Can witnesse this, that whilest your husbands sirre
-In happie peace possest the Scottish Crowne,
-I was his sworne attendant heere in Court,
-In daungerous sight I neuer fail'd my Lord. 1440
-And since his death, and this your husbands raigne,
-No labour, dutie, haue I left vndone,
-To testifie my zeale vnto the Crowne:
-But now my limmes are weake, mine eyes are dim,
-Mine age vnweldie and vnmeete for toyle:
-I came to court in hope for seruice past,
-To gaine some lease to keepe me beeing olde,
-There found I all was vpsie turuy turnd,
-My friends displac'ff, the Nobles loth to craue,
-Then fought I to the minion of the King, 1450
-_Auteukin_, who allured by a bribe,
-Assur'd me of the lease for which I fought:
-But see the craft, when he had got the graunt,
-He wrought to sell it to Sir _Siluester_,
-In hope of greater earnings from his hands:
-In briefe, I learnt his craft, and wrought the meanes,
-By one his needie seruants for reward,
-To steale from out his pocket all the briefes,
-Which hee perform'd, and with reward resignd
-Them when I read (now marke the power of God) 1460
-I found this warrant seald among the rest,
-To kill your grace, whom God long keepe aliue.
-Thus in effect, by wonder are you sau'd,
-Trifle not then, bnt seeke a speakie flight,
-God will conduct your steppes, and shield the right.
-
-_Dor._ What should I do, ah poore vnhappy Queen?
-Borne to indure what fortune can containe,
-Ah lasse the deed is too apparant now:
-But oh mine eyes were you as bent to hide,
-As my poore heart is forward to forgiue. 1470
-Ah cruell king, my loue would thee acquite,
-Oh what auailes to be allied and matcht
-With high estates that marry but in shewe?
-Were I baser borne, my meane estate
-Could warrant me from this impendent harme,
-But to be great and happie these are twaine.
-Ah _Rosse_ what shall I do, how shall I worke?
-
-_Rosse._ With speedie letters to your father send,
-Who will reuenge you, and defend your right.
-
-_Dor._ As if they kill not me, who with him fight? 1480
-As if his brest be toucht, I am not wounded,
-As if he waild, my ioyes were not confounded:
-We are one heart, tho rent by hate in twaine:
-One soule, one essence doth our weale containe:
-What then can conquer him that kils not me?
-
-_Rosse._ If this aduice displease, then Madame flee.
-
-_Dor._ Where may I wend or trauel without feare?
-
-_Na._ Where not, in changing this attire you weare?
-
-_Dor._ What shall I clad me like a Country maide?
-
-_Na._ The pollicie is base I am affraide. 1490
-
-_Dor._ Why _Nano_?
-
-_Na._ Aske you why? what may a Queene
-March foorth in homely weede and be not seene?
-The Rose although in thornie shrubs she spread:
-Is still the Rose, her beauties waxe not dead.
-And noble mindes altho the coate be bare,
-Are by their semblance knowne, how great they are
-
-_Bar._ The Dwarfe saith true.
-
-_Dor._ What garments likste thou than?
-
-_Na._ Such as may make you seeme a proper man. 1500
-
-_Dor._ He makes me blush and smile, tho I am sad.
-
-_Na._ The meanest coat for safetie is not bad.
-
-_Dor._ What shall I iet in breeches like a squire?
-Alasse poore dwarfe, thy Mistresle is vnmeete.
-
-_Na._ Tut, go me thus, your cloake before your face,
-Your sword vpreard with queint & comely grace,
-If any come and question what you bee,
-Say you a man, and call for witnesse mee.
-
-_Dor._ What should I weare a sword, to what intent?
-
-_Na._ Madame for shewe, it is an ornament, 1510
-If any wrong you, drawe a shining blade
-Withdrawes a coward theese that would inuade.
-
-_Dor._ But if I strike, and hee should strike againe,
-What should I do? I feare I should bee slaine.
-
-_Nano._ No, take it single on your dagger so,
-Ile teach you Madame how to ward a blow.
-
-_Do._ How litle shapes much substance may include?
-Sir _Bartram_, _Rosse_, yee Ladies and my friends,
-Since presence yeelds me death, and absence life,
-Hence will I flie disguised like a squire, 1520
-As one that seekes to liue in Itish warres,
-You gentle _Rosse_, shal furnish my depart.
-
-_Ross._ Yea Prince, & die with you with all my hart,
-Vouchsafe me then in all extreamest states,
-To waight on you and serue you with my best.
-
-_Dor._ To me pertaines the woe, liue then in rest:
-Friends fare you well, keepe secret my depart,
-_Nano_ alone shall my attendant bee.
-
-_Nan._ Then Madame are you mand, I warrant ye,
-Giue me a sword, and if there grow debate, 1530
-Ile come behinde, and breake your enemies pate.
-
-_Ross._ How sore wee greeue to part so soone away.
-
-_Dor._ Greeue not for those that perish if they stay.
-
-_Nano._ The time in words mispent, is litle woorth,
-Madam walke on, and let them bring vs foorth.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-
-
-_Chorus._ _IV. Chor._
-
-
-_Ent. Boha._ So these sad motions makes the faire sleepe,
-And sleep hee shall in quiet and content,
-For it would make a marbell melt and weepe 1540
-To see these treasons gainst the innocent:
-But since shee scapes by flight to saue her life,
-The king may chance repent she was his wife:
-The rest is ruthfull, yet to beguilde the time,
-Tis interlast with merriment and rime.
-
- _Exeuut._
-
-
-
-
-_Actus Quartus. Schena Prima._ _IV. i._
-
-
-_After a noyse of hornes and showtings, enter certaine
-Huntsmen, if you please, singing one way: another
-way Ateukin and Iaques, Gnato._ 1550
-
-_Ateu._ Say Gentlemen, where may wee finde the king?
-
-_Hunts._ Euen heere at hand on hunting.
-And at this houre hee taken hath a stand,
-To kill a Deere.
-
-_Ateu._ A pleasant worke in hand,
-Follow your sport, and we will seeke his grace.
-
-_Hunts._ When such him seeke, it is a wofull case.
-
- _Exeunt Huntsman one way, Ateu. and Iaq. another,
-Enter Eustace, Ida, and the Countesse._ _IV. ii._
-
-_Count._ Lord _Eustace_, as your youth & vertuous life, 1560
-Deserues a faire, more faire and richer wife,
-So since I am a mother, and do wit
-What wedlocke is, and that which longs to it,
-Before I meane my daughter to bestow,
-Twere meete that she and I your state did know.
-
-_Eust._ Madame if I consider _Idas_ woorth,
-I know my portions merrit none so faire,
-And yet I hold in farme and yearly rent,
-A thousand pound, which may her state content.
-
-_Count._ But what estate my Lord shall she possesse? 1570
-
-_Eust._ All that is mine, graue Countesse & no lesse.
-But _Ida_ will you loue?
-
-_Ida._ I cannot hate.
-
-_Eust._ But will you wedde?
-
-_Ida._ Tis Greeke to mee my Lord,
-Ile wish you well, and thereon take my word.
-
-_Eust_. Shall I some signe of fauour then receiue?
-
-_Ida._ I, if her Ladiship will giue me leaue.
-
-_Count._ Do what thou wilt.
-
-_Ida._ Then noble English Peere, 1580
-Accept this ring, wherein my heart is set,
-A constant heart, with burning flames befret:
-But vnder written this: _O morte dura_:
-Heereon when so you looke with eyes _Pura_,
-The maide you fancie most will fauour you.
-
-_Eust._ Ile trie this heart, in hope to finde it true.
-
-_Enter certaine Huntsmen and ladies._
-
-_Hunts._ Widdowe Countesse well ymet,
-Euer may thy ioyes bee many,
-Gentle _Ida_ faire beset, 1590
-Faire and wise, not fairer any:
-Frolike Huntsmen of the game,
-Willes you well, and giues you greeting.
-
-_Ida._ Thanks good Woodman for the same,
-And our sport and merrie meeting.
-
-_Hunts._ Vnto thee we do present,
-Siluer heart with arrow wounded.
-
-_Eust._ This doth shadow my lament,
-Both feare and loue confounded.
-
-_Ladies._ To the mother of the mayde, 1600
-Faire as th'lillies, red as roses,
-Euen so many goods are saide,
-As her selfe in heart supposes.
-
-_Count._ What are you friends, that thus doth wish vs wel?
-
-_Hunts._ Your neighbours nigh, that haue on hunting beene,
-Who vnderstanding of your walking foorth,
-Prepare this traine to entertaine you with,
-This Ladie _Douglas_, this Sir _Egmond_ is.
-
-_Count._ Welcome ye Ladies, and thousand thanks for this,
-Come enter you a homely widdowes house, 1610
-And if mine entertainment please you let vs feast.
-
-_Hunts._ A louely ladie neuer wants a guest.
-
-_Exeunt Manet, Eustace, Ida._
-
-_Eust._ Stay gentle _Ida_, tell me what you deeme,
-What doth this hast, this tender heart beseeme?
-
-_Ida._ Why not my Lord, since nature teacheth art,
-To sencelesse beastes to cure their greeuous smart.
-_Dictanum_ serues to close the wound againe.
-
-_Eust._ What helpe for those that loue?
-
-_Ida._ Why loue againe. 1620
-
-_Eust._ Were I the Hart,
-
-_Ida._ Then I the hearbe would bee.
-You shall not die for help, come follow me.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter Andrew and Iaques._ _IV. iii._
-
-_Iaq._ _Mon Deiu_, what _malheure_ be this, me come a the chamber,
-Signior _Andrew_, _Mon Deiu_, taka my _poinyard en mon maine_,
-to giue the _Estocade_ to the _Damoisella, per ma foy, there was
-no person, elle cest en alle_.
-
-_And._ The woorse lucke _Iaques_, but because I am thy friend 1630
-I will aduise the somewhat towards the attainement of the
-gallowes.
-
-_Iaq._ Gallowes, what be that?
-
-_An._ Marrie sir, a place of great promotion, where thou shalt
-by one turne aboue ground, rid the world of a knaue, & make
-a goodly ensample for all bloodie villaines of thy profession.
-
-_Que ditte vous, Monsieur Andrew?_
-
-_And._ I say _Iaques_, thou must keep this path, and high thee,
-for the Q. as I am certified, is departed with her dwarfe, apparelled
-like a squire, ouertake her Frenchman, stab her, Ile 1640
-promise thee this dubblet shall be happy. _Iaq._ _Purquoy?_
-
-_And._ It shall serue a iolle Gentleman,
-Sir _Dominus Monsignior_ Hangman.
-
-_Iaq._ _Cest tout_, _vn_ me will _rama pour le monoy_.
-
-_And._ Go, and the rot consume thee? Oh what a trim world
-is this? My maister lius by cousoning the king, I by fllattering
-him: _Slipper_ my fellow by stealing: and I by lying: is not this
-a wylie accord, Gentlemen. This last night our iolly horsekeeper
-beeing well stept in licor, confessed to me the stealing of
-my Maisters writings, and his great reward: now dare I not 1650
-bewraye him, least he discouer my knauerie, but thus haue I
-wrought: I vnderstand he will passe this way, to prouide him
-necessaries, but if I and my fellowes faile not, wee will teach
-him such a lesson, as shall cost him a chiefe place on pennilesse
-bench for his labour: but yond he comes.
-
-_Enter Slipper with a Tailor, a Shoomaker, and a Cutler._
-
-_Slip._ Taylor. _Tayl._ Sir.
-
-_Slip._ Let my dubblet bee white Northren, fiue groates the
-yard, I tell thee I will bee braue.
-
-_Tayl._ It shall sir. 1660
-
-_Slip._ Now sir, cut it me like the battlements of a Custerd,
-ful of round holes: edge me the sleeues with Couentry-blew,
-and let the lynings bee of tenpenny locorum.
-
-_Tayl._ Very good sir.
-
-_Slip._ Make it the amorous cut, a flappe before.
-
-_Tayl._ And why so? that fashion is stale.
-
-_Slip._ Oh friend, thou art a simple fellow, I tell thee, a flap is
-a great friend to a storrie, it stands him in stead of cleane napery,
-and if a mans shert bee torne, it is a present penthouse to
-defend him from a cleane huswifes scoffe. 1670
-
-_Tay._ You say sooth sir.
-
-_Slip._ Holde take thy mony, there is seuen shillings for the
-dubblet, and eight for the breeches, seuen and eight, birladie
-thirtie sixe is a faire deale of mony.
-
-_Tayl._ Farwell sir.
-
-_Slip._ Nay but stay Taylor.
-
-_Tayl._ Why sir?
-
-_Slipper._ Forget not this speciall mate,
-Let my back parts bee well linde,
-For there come many winter stormes from a windie bellie, 1680
-I tell thee Shoo-maker.
-
-_Shoe-ma._ Gentleman what shoo will it please you to haue?
-
-_Slip._ A fine neate calues leather my friend.
-
-_Shoo._ Oh sir, that is too thin, it will not last you.
-
-_Slip._ I tell thee, it is my neer kinsman, for I am _Slipper_, which
-hath his best grace in summer to bee suted in lakus skins,
-Guidwife Clarke was my Grandmother, and Goodman Neatherleather
-mine Vnckle, but my mother good woman. Alas,
-she was a Spaniard, and being wel tande and drest by a good-fellow,
-an Englishman, is growne to some wealth: as when I 1690
-haue but my vpper parts, clad in her husbands costlie Spannish
-leather, I may bee bold to kisse the fayrest Ladies foote
-in this contrey.
-
-_Shoo._ You are of high birth sir,
-But haue you all your mothers markes on you?
-
-_Slip._ Why knaue?
-
-_Shoomaker._ Because if thou come of the bloud of the _Slippers_,
-you should haue a Shoomakers Alle thrust through your
-eare.
-
- _Exit._ 1700
-
-_Slip._ Take your earnest friend and be packing,
-And meddle not with my progenators _Cutler_.
-
-_Cutler._ Heare sir.
-
-_Slip._ I must haue a Rapier and Dagger.
-
-_Cutler._ A Rapier and Dagger you meane sir?
-
-_Slipper._ Thou saiest true, but it must haue a verie faire edge,
-
-_Cutler._ Why so sir?
-
-_Slip._ Because it may cut by himselfe, for trulie my freende,
-I am a man of peace, and weare weapons but for facion.
-
-_Cutler._ Well sir, giue me earnest I will fit you. 1710
-
-_Slip._ Hold take it, I betrust thee friend, let me be wel armed.
-
-_Cutler._ You shall. _Exit Cutler._
-
-_Slip._ Nowe what remaines? theres twentie Crownes for a
-house, three crownes for houshol stuffe, six pence to buie a
-Constables staffe: nay I will be the chiefe of my parish, there
-wants nothing but a wench, a cat, a dog, a wife and a seruant, to
-make an hole familie, shall I marrie with _Alice_, good man _Grimshaues_
-daughter, shee is faire, but indeede her tongue is like
-Clocks on Shrouetuesday, alwaies out of temper? shall I wed
-_Sisley_ of the Whighton? Ohn, o she is like a frog in a parcely bed, 1720
-as scittish as an ele, if I seek to hamper her, she wil horne me: but
-a wench must be had maister _Slip_. Yea and shal be deer friend.
-
-_And._ I now wil driue him from his contemplations. Oh my
-mates come forward, the lamb is vnpent, the fox shal preuaile.
-
-_Enter three Antiques, who dance round, and take
-Slipper with them._
-
-_Slip._ I will my freend, and I thanke you heartilie, pray keepe
-your curtesie, I am yours in the way of an hornepipe, they
-are strangers, I see they vnderstand not my language, wee
-wee. 1730
-
-_VVhilest they are dauncing, Andrew takes away his money,
-and the other Antiques depart._
-
-_Slip._ Nay but my friends, one hornpipe, further a refluence
-backe, and two doubles forward: what not one crosse point against
-Sundayes. What ho sirrha, you gone, you with the nose
-like an Eagle, and you be a right greeke, one turne more,
-theeues theeues, I am robd theeues. Is this the knauerie of Fidlers?
-Well, I will then binde the hole credit of their occupation
-on a bagpiper, and he for my money, but I will after, and
-teach them to caper in a halter, that haue cousoned me of my 1740
-money.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter_ Nano, Dorothea, _in mans apparell._ _IV. iv._
-
-_Doro._ Ah _Nano_, I am wearie of these weedes,
-Wearie to weeld this weapon that I bare:
-Wearie of loue, from whom my woe proceedes.
-Wearie of toyle, since I haue lost my deare,
-O wearie life, where wanted no distresse,
-But euery thought is paide with heauinesse.
-
-_Na._ Too much of wearie madame, if you please, 1750
-Sit downe, let wearie dye, and take your ease.
-
-_Dorot._ How looke I _Nano_ like a man or no?
-
-_Nano._ If not a man, yet like a manlie shrowe.
-
-_Doro._ If any come and meete vs on the way,
-What should we do if they inforce vs stay.
-
-_Na._ Set cap a huffe, and challenge him the field,
-Suppose the worst, the weake may fight to yeeld.
-
-_Dorot._ The battaile _Nano_ in this troubled minde,
-Is farre more fierce then euer we may finde.
-The bodies wounds by medicines may be eased, 1760
-But griefes of mindes, by salues are not appealed.
-
-_Na._ Say Madame, will you heare your _Nano_ sing?
-
-_Dor._ Of woe good boy, but of no other thing:
-
-_Na._ What if I sing of fancie will it please?
-
-_Dor._ To such as hope successe, such noats breede ease.
-
-_Na._ What if I sing like _Damon_ to my sheepe?
-
-_Dor._ Like _Phillis_ I will sit me downe to weepe.
-
-_Na._ Nay since my songs afford such pleasure small,
-Ile sit me downe, and sing you none at all.
-
-_Doro._ Oh be not angrie _Nano_. 1770
-
-_Nano._ Nay you loath,
-To thinke on that, which doth content vs both.
-
-_Doro._ And how?
-
-_Nano._ You scorne desport when you are wearie,
-And loath my mirth, who liue to make you merry.
-
-_Doro._ Danger and fear withdraw me from delight.
-
-_Na._ Tis vertue to contemne fals Fortunes spight.
-
-_Do._ What shuld I do to please thee friendly squire?
-
-_Na._ A smile a day, is all I will require:
-And if you pay me well the smiles you owe me, 1780
-Ile kill this cursed care, or else beshrowe me.
-
-_Doug._ We are descried, oh _Mano_ we are dead.
-
- _Enter Iaques his sword drawne._
-
-_Nano._ Tut yet you walk, you are not dead indeed,
-Drawe me your sword, if he your way withstand.
-
-_Do._ And I will seeke for rescue out of hand,
-Run _Nano_ runne, preuent thy Princes death.
-
-_Na._ Feare not, ile run all danger out of breath.
-
-_Iaq._ Ah you _calletta_, you _strumpet_, _ta Matressa Doretie este, vous
-surprius_ come say your pater noster, _car vous est mort par ma foy_ 1790
-
-_Do._ _Callet_, _me strumpet_, _Catiue_ as thou art
-But euen a Princesse borne, who scorne thy threats.
-Shall neuer French man say, an English mayd,
-Of threats of forraine force will be afraid.
-
-_Iaq._ You no _dire vostre prieges, vrbleme merchants famme_,
-_guarda_ your _bresta_, _there me make you die on my morglay_,
-
-_Doro._ God sheeld me haplesse princes and a wife.
-
-_They fight, and shee is sore wounded._
-
-And saue my soule, altho I loose my life.
-Ah I am slaine, some piteous power repay, 1800
-This murtherers cursed deed, that doth me stay.
-
-_Iaq._ _Elle est tout mort_, me will runne _pur_ a wager, for feare me
-be _surpryes_ and _pendu_ for my labour. Be in _Ie meu alera au roy
-auy cits me affaires, Ie serra vn chiualier_, for this daies trauaile.
-
- _Exit._
-
-_Enter ~Nano~, S. Cutbert Anderson,
-his sword drawne._
-
-_S. Cutb._ Where is this poore distressed gentleman?
-
-_Nano._ Here laid on ground, and wounded to the death. 1810
-Ah gentle heart, how are these beautious lookes,
-Dimd by the tyrant cruelties of death:
-Oh wearie soule, breake thou from forth my brest,
-And ioyne thee with the soule I honoured most.
-
-_S. Cut._ Leaue mourning friend, the man is yet aliue,
-Some helpe me to conuey him to my house:
-There will I see him carefully recured,
-And send priuie search to catch the murtherer.
-
-_Nano._ The God of heauen reward the curteous knight.
-
- _Exeunt._ And they beare out _Dorothea_. 1820
-
-
-_Enter the King of Scots, ~Iaques~, ~Ateukin~, ~Andrew~, ~Iaques~ _IV. v._
-running with his swoord one way, the King with his
-traine an other way._
-
-_K. of S._ Stay _Iaques_, feare not, sheath thy murthering blade:
-Loe here thy King and friends are come abroad,
-To saue thee from the terrors of pursuite:
-What is she dead?
-
-_Iaq._ Wee Monsieur, elle is blesse per lake teste, oues les espanles,
-I warrant she no trouble you.
-
-_Ateu._ Oh then my liege, how happie art thou growne, 1830
-How fauoured of the heauens, and blest by loue:
-Mee thinkes I see faire _Ida_ in thine armes,
-Crauing remission for her late attempt,
-Mee thinke I see her blushing steale a kisse:
-Vniting both your soules by such a sweete,
-And you my King suck Nectar from her lips.
-Why then delaies your grace to gaine the rest
-You long desired? why loose we forward time?
-Write, make me spokesman now, vow marriage,
-If she deny your fauour let me die. 1840
-
-_Andr._ Mightie and magnificent potentate, giue credence to
-mine honorable good Lord, for I heard the Midwife sweare at
-his natiuitie, that the Faieries gaue him the propertie of the
-Thracian stone, for who toucheth it, is exempted from griefe,
-and he that heareth my Maisters counsell, is alreadle possessed
-of happinesse: nay which is more myraculous, as the Noble
-man in his infancie lay in his Cradle, a swarme of Bees laid honey
-on his lippes, in token of his eloquence. _For melle dulcier
-fluit oratio._
-
-_Ateu._ Your grace must beare with imperfections: 1850
-This is exceeding loue that makes him speake.
-
-_K. of S._ _Ateukin_ I am rauisht in conceit,
-And yet deprest againe with earnest thoughts,
-Me thinkes this murther soundeth in mine eare,
-A threatning noyse of dire and sharp reuenge.
-I am incenst with greefe, yet faine would ioy,
-What may I do to end me of these doubts?
-
-_Ateu._ Why Prince it is no murther in a King,
-To end an others life to saue his owne,
-For you are not as common people bee. 1860
-Who die and perish with a fewe mans teares,
-But if you faile, the state doth whole default
-The Realme is rent in twaine, in such alosse,
-And _Aristotle_ holdeth this for true,
-Of euills needs we must chuse the least,
-Then better were it, that a woman died,
-Then all the helpe of _Scotland_ should be blent,
-Tis pollicie my liege, in euerie state,
-To cut off members that disturbe the head.
-And by corruption generation growes. 1870
-And contraries maintaine the world and state.
-
-_K. of S._ Enough I am confirmed, _Ateukin_ come,
-Rid me of loue, and rid me of my greefe,
-Driue thou the tyrant from this tainted brest,
-Then may I triumph in the height of ioy,
-Go to mine _Ida_, tell her that I vowe,
-To raise her head and make her honours great.
-Go to mine _Ida_, tell her that her haires,
-Salbe embollished with orient pearles,
-And Crownes of Saphyrs compassing her browes, 1880
-Shall weare with those sweete beauties of her eyes.
-Go to mine _Ida_, tell her that my soule
-Shall keepe her semblance closed in my brest,
-And I in touching of her milke-white mould,
-Will thinke me deified in such a grace:
-I like no stay, go write and I will signe.
-Reward me _Iaques_, giue him store of Crowne.
-And sirrha _Andrew_, scout thou here in Court:
-And bring me tydings if thou canst perceiue
-The least intent of muttering in my traine, 1890
-For either those that wrong thy Lord or thee,
-Shall suffer death. _Exit_ the King.
-
-_Ateu._ How much o mightie king,
-Is thy _Ateukin_ bound to honour thee:
-Bowe thee _Andrew_, bend thine sturdie knees,
-Seest thou not here thine onely God on earth?
-
-_Iaq._ Mes on est mon argent Signior.
-
-_Ateu._ Come follow me, his graue I see is made,
-That thus on suddain he hath left vs here.
-Come _Iaques_, we wil haue our packet soone dispatcht 1900
-And you shall be my mate vpon the way.
-
-_Iaq._ Come vous plera Monsieur.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-_Andr._ Was neuer such a world I thinke before,
-When sinners seeme to daunce within a net,
-The flatterer and the murtherer they grow big,
-By hooke or crooke promotion now is sought,
-In such a world where men are so missed,
-What should I do? but as the Prouerbe saith,
-Runne with the Hare, and hunt with the Hound. 1910
-To haue two meanes, beseemes a wittie man:
-Now here in Court I may aspire and clime,
-By subtiltie for my maisters death.
-And if that faile, well fare an other drift:
-I will in secret certaine letters send
-Vnto the English King, and let him know
-The order of his daughters ouerthtow.
-That if my maister crack his credit here,
-As I am sure long flattery cannot hold,
-I may haue meanes within the English Court 1920
-To scape the scourge that waits on bad aduice. _Exit._
-
-
-
-
-_Chorus._ _V. Chor._
-
-
-_Enter Bohan and Obiron._
-
-_Ober._ Beleue me bonny Scot, these slrange euents,
-Are passing pleasing, may they end as well.
-
-_Boha._ Else say that _Bohan_ hath a barren skull,
-If better motions yet then any past,
-Do not more glee to make the fairie greet,
-But my small son made prittie hansome shift,
-To saue the Queene his Mistresse by his speed. 1930
-
-_Obiro._ Yea you Ladie for his sport he made,
-Shall see when least he hopes, Ile stand his friend,
-Or else hee capers in a halters end.
-
-_Boha._ What hang my son? I trowe not _Obiran_:
-Ile rather die, then see him woe begon.
-
-_Enter a rownd, or some daunce at Pleasure._
-
-_Ober._ _Bohan_ be pleasd, for do they what they will,
-Heere is my hand, Ile saue thy son from ill.
-
- _Exit._
-
-
-
-
-_Actus Quintus. Schena Prima._ _V. i._
-
-
-_Enter the Queene in a night gowne, Ladie Anderson, 1941
- and Nano._
-
-_La. And._ My gentle friend beware in taking aire,
-Your walkes growe not offensiue to your woundes.
-
-_Do._ Madame I thank you of your courteous care,
-My wounds are well nigh clos'd, tho sore they are.
-
-_L. And._ Me thinks these closed wounds should breed more griefe,
-Since open wounds haue cure, and find reliefe.
-
-_Dor._ Madame, if vndiscouered wounds you meane,
-They are not curde, because they are not seene. 1950
-
-_L. And._ I meane the woundes which do the heart subdue.
-
-_Nano._ Oh that is loue, Madame speake I not true?
-
-_Ladie Anderson ouerheares._
-
-_La. And._ Say it were true, what salue for such a sore?
-
-_Nano._ Be wise, and shut such neighbours out of dore.
-
-_La. And._ How if I cannot driue him from my brest?
-
-_Nano._ Then chaine him well, and let him do his best.
-
-_S. Cutb._ In ripping vp their wounds, I see their wit,
-But if these woundes be cured I sorrow it.
-
-_Doro._ Why are you so intentiue to behold, 1960
-My pale and wofull lookes, by care controld?
-
-_La. And._ Because in them a readie way is found,
-To cure my care, and heale my hidden wound.
-
-_Nano._ Good Maister shut your eyes, keepe that conceit,
-Surgeons giue _Quoine_, to get a good receit.
-
-_Doro._ Peace wanton son, this Ladie did amend
-My woundes: mine eyes her hidden griefe shall end,
-Looke not too much, it is a waightie case.
-
-_Nano._ Where as a man puts on a maidens face,
-For many times if Ladies weare them not, 1970
-A nine moneths wound with little worke is got.
-
-_S. Cutb._ Ile breake off their dispute, least loue proceed,
-From couert smiles, to perfect loue indeed.
-
-_Nano._ The cats abroad, stirre not, the mice bee still.
-
-_L. And._ Tut, wee can flie such cats when so we will.
-
-_S. Cutb._ How fares my guest, take cheare, nought shall default,
-That eyther doth concerne your health or ioy,
-Vse me, my house, and what is mine is yours.
-
-_Doro._ Thankes gentle knight, and if all hopes be true,
-I hope ere long to do as much for you. 1980
-
-_S. Cutb._ Your vertue doth acquite me of that doubt:
-But courteous sir, since troubles calles me hence,
-I must to _Edenbourg_ vnto the king,
-There to take charge, and waight him in his warres:
-Meane while good Madame take this squire in charge,
-And vse him so as if it were my selfe.
-
-_L. And._ Sir _Cutbert_ doubt not of my dilligence:
-Meane while, till your returne God send you health.
-
-_Doro._ God blesse his grace, and if his cause be iust,
-Prosper his wartes: if not hee'l mend I trust: 1990
-Good sir what mooues the king to fall to armes?
-
-_S. Cutb._ The king of England forrageth his land,
-And hath besieged _Dambac_ with mightie force:
-What other newes are common in the Court,
-Reade you these letters Madame tell the squire,
-The whole affaires of state, for I must hence.
-
- _Exit._
-
-_Doro._ God prosper you, and bring you backe from thence:
-Madame what newes?
-
-_La. And._ They say the Queene is slaine. 2000
-
-_Doro._ Tut, such reports more false then trueth containe.
-
-_L. And._ but these reports haue made his Nobles leaue him.
-
-_Doro._ Ah carelesse men, and would they so deceiue him?
-
-_La. And._ The land is spoylde, the commons fear the crosse,
-All crie against the king, their cause of losse:
-The English king subdues and conquers all.
-
-_Doro,_ Ah lasse, this warre growes great, on causes small.
-
-_L. And._ Our Court is desolate, our Prince alone,
-Still dreading death.
-
-_Doro._ Woes me, for him I moane, 2010
-Helpe, now helpe, a suddaine qualme
-Assayles my heart.
-
-_Nano._ Good Madame stand her friend,
-Giue vs some licor to refresh her heart.
-
-_L. And._ Daw thou her vp, ande I will fetch thee foorth
-Potions of comfort to represse h r paine.
-
- _Exit._
-
-_Nano._ Fie Princesse, faint on euery fond report,
-How well nigh had you opened your effate:
-Couer these sorrowes with the vaile of ioy, 2020
-And hope the best, for why this warre will cause,
-A great repentance in your husbands minde.
-
-_Doro._ Ah _Nano_, trees liue not without their sap,
-And _Clitia_ cannot blush but on the sunne,
-The thirstie earth is broke with many a gap,
-And lands are leane, where riuers do not runne,
-Where soule is reft from that it loueth best,
-How can it thriue or boast of quiet rest?
-Thou knowest the Princes losse must be my death,
-His griefe, my griefe: his mischiefe must be mine: 2030
-Oh if thou loue me, _Nano_ high to court,
-Tell _Rosse_, tell _Bartram_ that I am aliue,
-Conceale thou yet, the place of my aboade,
-Will them euen as they loue their Queene,
-As they are charie of my soule and ioy,
-To guard the King, to serue him as my Lord:
-Haste thee good _Nana_, for my husbands care,
-Consumeth mee and wounds mee to the heart.
-
-_Nano._ Madame I go, yet loth to leaue you heere.
-
- _Exeunt._ 2040
-
-_Dor._ Go thou with speed, euen as thou holdst me deare,
-Returne in haste.
-
-_Enter Ladie Anderson._
-
-_L. An._ Now sir, what cheare? come tast this broth I bring.
-
-_Doro._ My griefe is past, I feele no further sting.
-
-_L. And._ Where is your dwarfe? Why hath hee left you sir?
-
-_Doro._ For some affaires, hee is not traueld farre.
-
-_L. And._ If so you please, come in and take your rest.
-
-_Doro._ Feare keepes awake a discontented brest.
-
- _Exeunt._ 2050
-
-
-_After a solemne seruice, enter from the widdowes house a seruice, _V. ii._
- musical songs of marriages, or a maske, or what prettie
- triumph you list, to them, Ateukin and Gnato._
-
-_Ate._ What means this triumph frend? why are these feasts?
-
-_Serui._ Faire _Ida_ sir, was marryed yesterday,
-Vnto sir _Eustace_, and for that intent,
-Wee feast and sport it thus to honour them:
-And if you please, come in and take your part,
-My Ladie is no niggard of her cheare. _Exit._
-
-_Iaq._ _Monsigneur_, why be you so sadda, _fette bon chere fontre 2060
-de ce monde_.
-
-_Ateu._ What? was I borne to bee the scorne of kinne?
-To gather feathers like to a hopper crowe,
-And loose them in the height of all my pompe:
-Accursed man now is my credite lost:
-Where is my vowes I made vnto the king?
-What shall become of mee, if hee shall heare,
-That I haue causde him kill a vertuous Queene?
-And hope in vaine for that which now is lost:
-Where shall I hide my head? I knowe the heauens 2070
-Are iust, and will reuenge: I know my sinnes
-Exceede compare: should I proceed in this?
-This _Eustace_ must a man be made away:
-Oh were I dead, how happy should I bee?
-
-_Iaq._ _Est ce donque a tell poynt vostre estat_, faith then
-adeiu _Scotland_, adeiu _Signior Ateukin_, me will homa
-to _France_, and no be hanged in a strange country. _Exit._
-
-_Ateu._ Thou doest me good to leaue me thus alone,
-That galling griefe and I may yoake in one:
-Oh what are subtile meanes to clime on high? 2080
-When euery fall swarmes with exceeding shame?
-I promist _Idaes_ loue vnto the Prince,
-But shee is lost, and I am false forsworne:
-I practis'd _Dorotheas_ haplesse death,
-And by this practise haue commenst a warre.
-Oh cursed race of men that traficque guile,
-And in the end, themselues and kings beguile:
-A shamde to looke vpon my Prince againe:
-A shamde of my suggestions and aduise:
-A shamde of life: a shamde that I haue erde: 2090
-Ile hide my selfe, expecting for my shame.
-Thus God doth worke with those, that purschase fame
-By flattery, and make their Prince their gaine. _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter the King of England, Lord Percey, Samles, and others._ _V. iii._
-
-_Arius._ Thus farre the English Peeres haue we displayde,
-Our wauing Ensignes with a happy warre,
-Thus neerely hath our furious rage reuengde,
-My daughters death vpon the traiterous Scot,
-And now before _Dambar_ our campe is pitcht,
-Which if it yeeld not to our compremise, 2100
-The place shall furrow where the pallace stood,
-And furie shall enuy so high a power,
-That mercie shall bee bannisht from our swords.
-
-_Doug._ What seekes the English King?
-
-_Arius._ Scot open those gates, and let me enter in,
-Submit thy selfe and thine vnto my grace,
-Or I will put each mothers sonne to death,
-And lay this Cittie leuell with the ground.
-
-_Doug._ For what offence? for what default of ours?
-Art thou incenst so sore against our state? 2110
-Can generous hearts in nature bee so sterne
-To pray on those that neuer did offend?
-What tho the Lyon, (king of brutish race,
-Through outrage sinne, shall lambes be therefore slaine?
-Or is it lawfull that the humble die,
-Because the mightie do gainsay the right?
-O English King, thou bearest in thy brest,
-The King of beasts, that harmes not yeelding ones,
-The Roseall crosse is spred within thy field,
-A signe of peace, not of reuenging warre: 2120
-Be gracious then vnto this little towne,
-And tho we haue withstood thee for a while,
-To shew alleageance to our liefest liege,
-Yet since wee know no hope of any helpe,
-Take vs to mercie, for wee yeeld our selues.
-
-_Ari._ What shall I enter then and be your Lord?
-
-_Doug._ We will submit vs to the English king.
-
-_They descend downe, open the gates, and humble them._
-
-_Arius._ Now life and death dependeth on my sword:
-This hand now reard, my _Douglas_ if I list, 2130
-Could part thy head and shoulders both in twaine:
-But since I see thee wise and olde in yeares,
-True to thy king, and faithfull in his warres,
-Liue thou and thine, _Dambar_ is too too small,
-To giue an entrance to the English king,
-I Eaglelike disdaine these little soules,
-And looke on none but those that dare resist,
-Enter your towne as those that liue by me,
-For others that resist, kill, forrage, spoyle:
-Mine English souldiers, as you loue your king, 2140
-Reuenge his daughters death, and do me right.
-
- _Exeunt_,
-
-
-_Enter the Lawyer, the Merchant, and the Diuine._ _V. iv._
-
-_Lawyer._ My friends, what thinke you of this present state,
-Were euer seene such changes in a time?
-The manners and the fashions of this age,
-Are like the _Ermine_ skinne so full of spots,
-As soone may the Moore bee washed white,
-Then these corruptions bannisht from this Realme.
-
-_Merch._ What sees mas Lawyer in this state amisse? 2150
-
-_Law._ A wresting power that makes a nose of wax,
-Of grounded lawe, a damde and subtile drift,
-In all estates to clime by others losse,
-An eager thrift of wealth, forgetting trueth,
-Might I ascend vnto the highest states,
-And by discent discouer euery crime,
-My friends I should lament, and you would greeue
-To see the haplesse ruines of this Realme.
-
-_Diu._ O Lawyer, thou haste curious eyes to prie,
-Into the secrets maimes of their estate, 2160
-But if thy vaile of error were vnmaskt,
-Thy selfe should see your sect, do maime her most:
-Are you not those that should maintaine the peace,
-Yet onely are the patrones of our strife?
-If your profession haue his ground and spring,
-First from the lawes of God, then countriees right,
-Not any waies inuerting natures power,
-Why thriue you by contentions? Why deuise you
-Clawses, and subtile reasons toexcept:
-Our state was first before you grew so great, 2170
-A Lanterne to the world for vnitie:
-Now they that are befriended, and are rich,
-Or presse the poore, come _Homer_ without quoine,
-He is not heard: What shall we terme this drift?
-To say the poore mans cause is good and iust,
-And yet the rich man gaines the best in lawe:
-It is your guise, (the more the world laments)
-To quoine _Prouisoes_ to beguile your lawes,
-To make a gay pretext of due proceeding,
-When you delay your common pleas for yeares: 2180
-Mark what these dealings lately here haue wroght:
-The craftie men haue purchaste greatmens lands
-They powle, they pinch, their tennants are vndone:
-If these complaine by you they are vndone,
-You fleese them of their quoine, their children beg,
-And many want, because you may bee rich,
-This scarre is mightie maister Lawyer,
-Now man hath gotten head within this land,
-Marke but the guise, the poore man that is wrongd,
-Is readie to rebell: hee spoyles, he pilles, 2190
-We need no foes to forrage that wee haue,
-The lawe (say they) in peace consumed vs,
-And now in warre wee will consume the lawe:
-Looke to this mischiefe, Lawyers conscience knowes
-You liue amisse, amend it, least you end.
-
-_Law._ Good Lord, that their Diuines should see so farre
-In others faults, without amending theirs?
-Sir, sir, the generall defaults in state,
-(If you would read before you did correct)
-Are by a hidden working from aboue, 2200
-By their successiue changes still remainde,
-Were not the lawe by contraries maintainde,
-How could the trueth from falsehood be discernde?
-Did wee not tast the bitternesse of warre?
-How could wee knowe the sweet effects of peace?
-Did wee not feele the nipping winter frostes,
-How should we know the sweetnesse of the spring?
-Should all things still remaine in one estate,
-Should not in greatest arts some scarres be found,
-Were all vpright and changd, what world were this? 2210
-A _Chaos_, made of quiet, yet no world,
-Because the parts thereof did still accord,
-This matter craues a variance not a speech,
-But sir Diuine to you, looke on your maimes,
-Diuisions, sects, your summonies and bribes:
-Your cloaking with the great, for feare to fall,
-You shall perceiue you are the cause of all.
-Did each man know there were a storme at hand,
-Who would not cloath him well, to shun the wet?
-Did Prince and Peere, the Lawyer and the least, 2220
-Know what were sinne, without a partiall glose,
-Wee need no long discouery then of crimes,
-For each would mend, aduis'de by holy men:
-Thus but slightly shadow out your sinnes,
-But if they were depainted out for life,
-Alasse wee both had wounds inough to heale.
-
-_Merch._ None of you both I see but are in fault,
-Thus simple men as I do swallow flies,
-This graue Diuine can tell vs what to do,
-But wee may say: Phisitian mend thy selfe, 2230
-This Lawyer hath a pregnant wit to talke,
-But all are words, I see no deeds of woorth.
-
-_Law._ Good Merchant lay your fingers on your mouth,
-Be not a blab, for feare you bite your selfe,
-What should I terme your state, but euen the way
-To euery ruine in this Common-weale,
-You bring vs in the meanes of all excesse,
-You rate it, and retalde it as you please,
-You sweare, forsweare, and all to compasse wealth,
-Your mony is your God, your hoord your heauen, 2240
-You are the groundworke ofcontention:
-First heedlesse youth, by you is ouerreacht,
-Wee are corrupted by your many crownes:
-The Gentlemen, whose titles you haue bought,
-Loose all their fathers toyle within a day,
-Whilst _Hob_ your sonne, and _Sib_ your nutbrowne childe,
-Are Gentle folkes, and Gentles are beguilde:
-This makes so many Noble maides to stray,
-And take sinister courses in the state. _Enter a Scout._
-
-_Scout._ My friends begone and if you loue your liues, 2250
-The King of England marcheth heere at hand,
-Enter the campe for feare you bee surprisde.
-
-_Diuine._ Thankes gentle scout, God mend that is amisse,
-And place true, zeale whereas corruption is. ._Exeun.._
-
-
-_Enter Dorothea, Ladie Anderson and Nano._ _V. v._
-
-_Doro._ What newes in Court, _Nano_ let vs know it?
-
-_Nano._ If so you please my Lord, I straight will shew it:
-The English king hath all the borders spoyld,
-Hath taken _Morton_ prisoner, and hath slaine
-Seuen thousand Scottish Lords, not sarre from _Twearde_. 2260
-
-_Doro._ A wofull murther, and a bloodie deed.
-
-_Nano._ Thinking our liege hath sought by many meanes
-For to appease his enemie by prayers,
-Nought will preuaile vnlesse hee can restore,
-Faire _Dorothea_ long supposed dead:
-To this intent he hath proclaimed late,
-That who so euer returne the Queene to Court,
-Shall haue a thousand Markes for his reward.
-
-_L. And._ He loues her then I see, altho inforst,
-That would bestow such gifts for to regaine her: 2270
-Why sit you sad, good sir be not dismaide.
-
-_Na._ Ile lay my life this man would be a maide.
-
-_Dor._ Faine would I shewe my selfe, and change my tire.
-
-_And._ Whereon diuine you sir?
-
-_Na._ Vppon desire.
-Madam marke but my skill, ile lay my life,
-My maister here, will prooue a married wife.
-
-_Doro._ Wilt thou bewray me _Nano_?
-
-_Nano._ Madam no:
-You are a man, and like a man you goe. 2280
-But I that am in speculation seene,
-Know you would change your state to be a Queen.
-
-_Dor._ Thou art not dwarffe to learne thy mistresse mind:
-Faine would I with thy selfe disclose my kind,
-But yet I blush.
-
-_Na._ What blush you Madam than,
-To be your selfe, who are a fayned man?
-Let me alone.
-
-_La. And._ Deceitfull beautie hast thou scornd me so?
-
-_Nano._ Nay muse not maiden, for she tels you true. 2290
-
-_La. An._ Beautie bred loue, and loue hath bred my shame.
-
-_N._ And womens faces work more wrongs then these:
-Take comfort Madam to cure our disease.
-And yet he loues a man as well as you,
-Onely this difference, she cannot fancie too.
-
-_La. An._ Blush, greeue, and die, in thine insaciat lust.
-
-_Do._ Nay liue and ioy that thou hast won a friend,
-That loues thee as his life, by god desert.
-
-_La. And._ I ioy my Lord more then my tongue can tell:
-Alhough not as I desir'd, I loue you well: 2300
-But modestie, that neuer blusht before,
-Discouer my false heart. I say no more.
-Let me alone.
-
-_Doro._ Good _Nano_ stay a while.
-Were I not sad, how kindlie could I smile,
-To see how faine I am to leaue this weede:
-And yet I faint to shewe my selfe indeede.
-But danger hates delay, I will be bold,
-Faire Ladie I am not, suppose
-A man, but euen that Qeene, more haplesse I, 2310
-Whom Scottish King appointed hath to die:
-I am the haplesse Princesse, for whose right,
-These kings in bloudie warres reuenge dispight.
-I am that _Dorothea_ whom they seeke,
-Yours bounden for your kindnesse and releefe:
-And since you are the meanes that saue my life,
-Your selfe and I will to the Camp repaire,
-Whereas your husband shal enioy reward,
-And bring me to his highnesse once againe.
-
-_An._ Pardon most gratious Princesse, if you please, 2320
-My rude discourse and homelie entertaine,
-And if my words may sauour any worth,
-Vouchsafe my counsaile in this waightie cause:
-Since that our liege hath so vnkindly dealt:
-Giue him no trust, returne vnto your syre,
-There may you safelie liue in spight of him.
-
-_Doro._ Ah Ladie, so wold worldly counsell work,
-But constancie, obedience, and my loue,
-In that my husband is my Lord and chiefe,
-These call me to compassion of his estate, 2330
-Disswade me not, for vertue will not change,
-
-_An._ What woonderous constancie is this I heare?
-If English dames their husbands loue so deer,
-I feare me in the world they haue no peere.
-
-_Na._ Come Princes wend, and let vs change your weede,
-I long to see you now a Queene indeede.
-
- _Exeunt._
-
-
-_Enter the King of Scots, the English Herauld & Lords._ _V. vi._
-
-_K. of S._ He would haue parly Lords, Herauld say he shall,
-And get thee gone: goe leaue me to my selfe: 2340
-Twixt loue and feare, continuall is the warres:
-The one assures me of my _Idaes_ loue,
-The other moues me for my murthred Queene.
-Thus finde I greefe of that whereon I ioy,
-And doubt, in greatest hope, and death in weale,
-Ah lasse what hell may be compared with mine,
-Since in extreames my comforts do consist?
-Warre then will cease, when dead ones are reuiued.
-Some then will yeelde, when I am dead for hope.
-Who doth disturbe me? _Andrew?_ 2350
-
- _Andrew enter with Slipper._
-
-_Andr._ I my liege.
-
-_K. of S._ What newes?
-
-_Andr._ I thinke my mouth was made at first,
-To tell these tragique tales my liefest Lord.
-
-_K. of S._ What is _Ateukin_ dead, tell me the worst?
-
-_Andr._ No but your _Ida_, shall I tell him all?
-Is married late (ah shall I say to whom?)
-My maister sad: (for why he shames the Court)
-Is fled away? ah most vnhappie flight. 2360
-Onelie my selfe, ah who can loue you more?
-To shew my dutie (dutie past beliefe)
-Am come vnto your grace (oh gratious liege)
-To let you know, oh would it weare not thus,
-That loue is vain, and maids soone lost and wonne.
-
-_K. of S._ How haue the partial heauens then dealt with me,
-Boading my weale, for to abase my power?
-Alas what thronging thoughts do me oppresse?
-Iniurious loue is partiall in my right,
-And flattering tongues by whom I wasmisled, 2370
-Haue laid a snare to spoyle my state and me.
-Methinkes I heare my _Dorotheas_ goast,
-Howling reuenge for my accursed hate,
-The gifts of those my subiects that are slaine,
-Pursue me crying out, woe, woe, to lust,
-The foe pursues me at my pallace doore:
-He breakes my rest and spoyles me in my Camp,
-Ah flattering broode of _Sicophants_ my foes,
-First shall my dire reuenge begin on you,
-I will reward thee _Andrew_. 2380
-
-_Slip._ Nay sir if you be in your deeds of charitie, remember me
-I rubd M. _Ateukins_ horse heeles, when he rid to the medowes.
-
-_K. of S._ And thou shalt haue thy recompence for that.
-Lords beare them to the prison, chaine them fast,
-Vntil we take some order for their deathes.
-
-_And._ If so your grace in such sort giue rewards,
-Let me haue nought, I am content to want.
-
-_Slip._ Then I pray sir giue me all, I am as ready for a reward as
-an oyster for a fresh tide, spare not me sir.
-
-_K. of S._ Then hang them both as traitors to the King. 2390
-
-_Slip._ The case is altered, sir, ile none of your gifts, what I take
-a reward at your hands? Maister, faith sir no: I am a man of a
-better conscience.
-
-_K. of S._ Why dallie you? go draw them hence away.
-
-_Slip._ Why alas sir, I wil go away I thanke you gentle friends,
-I pray you spare your pains, I will not trouble his honors maistership,
-ile run away.
-
-_Enter ~Adam~, and Antiques, and carrie away the Clowne,
-he makes pots, and sports, and scornes._
-
-Why stay you? moue me not, let search be made, 2400
-For vile _Ateukin_, who so findes him out,
-Shall haue fiue hundreth markes for his reward.
-Away with the Lords troupes about my tent,
-Let all our souldiers stand in battaile ray,
-For lo the English to their parley come.
-
-_March ouer brauelie first the English hoste, the sword caried
-before the King by Percy. The Scottish on the other side,
-with all their pompe brauelie._
-
-_K. of S._ What seekes the King of _England_ in this land?
-
-_K. of Eng._ False traiterous Scot, I come for to reuenge 2410
-My daughters death: I come to spoyle thy wealth,
-Since thou hast spoyld me of my marriage ioy.
-I come to heape thy land with Carkasses,
-That this thy thriftie soyle choakt vp with blood,
-May thunder forth reuenge vpon thy head.
-I come to quit thy louelesse loue with death,
-In briefe, no meanes of peace shall ere be found,
-Except I haue my daughter or thy head.
-
-_K. of S._ My head proud King? abase thy prancking plaines,
-So striuing fondly, maiest thou catch thy graue. 2420
-But if true iudgement do direct thy course,
-These lawfull reasons should deuide the warre,
-Faith not by my consent thy daughter dyed.
-
-_K. of E._ Thou liest false Scot, thy agents haue confest it.
-These are but fond delayes, thou canst not thinke
-A meanes for to reconcile me for thy friend,
-I haue thy parasites confession pend:
-What then canst thou alleage in thy excuse?
-
-_K. of S._ I will repay the raunsome for her bloud.
-
-_K. of E._ What thinkst thou catiue, I wil sel my child, 2430
-No if thou be a Prince and man at armes,
-In singule combat come and trie thy right,
-Else will I prooue thee recreant to thy face.
-
-_K. of S._ I tooke no combat false iniurious King,
-But since thou needlesse art inclinde to warre,
-Do what thou darest we are in open field.
-Arming thy battailes I will fight with thee.
-
-_K. of E._ Agreed, now ttumpets sound a dreadfull charge
-Fight for your Princesse, braue English men:
-Now for your lands your children and your wiues, 2440
-My Scottish Peeres, and lastly for your King.
-
-_Alarum sounded, both the battailes offer to meet, & as the
-Kings are ioyning battaile, Enter sir Cutber tohis Lady
-Cutbert, with the Queene Dorothea richly attired._
-
-_S. Cut._ Stay Princes wage not warre, a priuie grudge
-Twixt such as you (most high in Maiestie)
-Afflicts both nocent and the innocent,
-How many swordes deere Princes see I drawne?
-The friend against his friend, a deadly friend:
-A desperate diuision in those lands, 2450
-Which if they ioyne in one, commaund the world.
-Oh stay with reason mittigate your rage,
-And let an old man humbled on his knees,
-Intreat a boone good Princes of you both.
-
-_K. of En._ I condiscend, for why thy reuerend years
-Import some newes of truth and consequence,
-I am content, for _Anderson_ I know.
-
-_K. of S._ Thou art my subiect and doest meane me good.
-
-_S. Cut. And._ But by your gratious fauours grant me this,
-To sweare vpon your sword to do me right. 2460
-
-_K. of Eng._ See by my sword, and by a Princes faith,
-In euery lawfull sort I am thine owne.
-
-_K. of S._ And by my Scepter and the Scortish Crowne,
-I am resolu'd to grant thee thy request.
-
-_Cutb._ I see you trust me Princes who repose,
-The waight of such a warre vpon my will.
-Now marke my sute, a tender Lyons whelpe,
-This other day came stragling in the woods,
-Attended by a young and tender hinde,
-In courage hautie, yet tyred like a lambe, 2470
-The Prince of beasts had left this young in keepe,
-To foster vp as louemate and compeere,
-Vnto the Lyons mate a naibour friend,
-This stately guide seduced by the fox,
-Sent forth an eger Woolfe bred vp in _France_,
-That gript the tender whelp, and wounded it.
-By chance as I was hunting in the woods,
-I heard the moane the hinde made for the whelpe,
-I tooke them both, and brought them to my house,
-With charie care I haue recurde the one, 2480
-And since I know the lyons are at strife,
-About the losse and dammage of the young,
-I bring her home, make claime to her who list.
-
-_Hee discouereth her._
-
-_Doro._ I am the whelpe, bred by this Lyon vp,
-This royall English king my happy sire,
-Poore _Nano_ is the hinde that tended me:
-My father Scottish king, gaue me to thee:
-A haplesse wife, thou quite misled by youth,
-Haste fought sinister loues and forraine ioyes, 2490
-The fox _Ateukin_, cursed Parasite,
-Incenst your grace to send the woolfe abroad,
-The French borne _Iaques_, for to end my daies,
-Hee traiterous man, pursued me in the woods,
-And left mee wounded, where this noble knight,
-Both rescued me and mine, and sau'd my life.
-Now keep thy promise, _Dorothea_ liues:
-Giue _Anderson_ his due and iust reward:
-And since you kings, your warres began by me,
-Since I am safe, returne surcease your fight. 2500
-
-_K. of S._ Durst I presume to looke vpon those eies,
-Which I haue tired with a world of woes,
-Or did I thinke submission were ynough,
-Or sighes might make an entrance to my soule:
-You heauens, you know how willing I wold weep:
-You heauens can tell, how glad I would submit:
-You heauens can say, how firmly I would sigh.
-
-_Do._ Shame me not Prince, companion in thy bed,
-Youth hath missed: tut but a little fault,
-Tis kingly to amend what is amisse: 2510
-Might I with twise as many paines as these,
-Vnite our hearts, then should my wedded Lord,
-See how incessaunt labours I would take.
-My gracious father gouerne your affects,
-Giue me that hand, that oft hath blest this head,
-And claspe thine armes, that haue embraced this,
-About the shoulders of my wedded spouse:
-Ah mightie Prince, this king and I am one,
-Spoyle thou his subiects, thou despoylest me:
-Touch thou his brest, thou doest attaint this heart, 2520
-Oh bee my father then in louing him.
-
-_K. of Eng._ Thou prouident kinde mother of increase,
-Thou must preuaile, ah nature thou must rule:
-Holde daughter, ioyne my hand and his in one,
-I will embrace him for to fauour thee,
-I call him friend, and take him for my sonne.
-
-_Dor._ Ah royall husband, see what God hath wrought,
-Thy foe is now thy friend: good men at armes,
-Do you the like, these nations if they ioyne,
-What Monarch with his leigemen in this world, 2530
-Dare but encounter you in open fielde?
-
-_K. of S._ Al wisedome ioynde with godly pietie,
-Thou English king, pardon my former youth,
-And pardon courteous Queen my great misdeed:
-And for assurance of mine after life,
-I take religious vowes before my God,
-To honour thee for fauour, her for wife.
-
-_L. And._ But yet my boones good Princes are not past,
-First English king I humbly do request,
-That by your meanes our Princesse may vnite, 2540
-Her loue vnto mine alder truest loue,
-Now you will loue, maintaine and helpe them both.
-
-_K. of Eng._ Good _Anderson_, I graunt thee thy request.
-
-_L. And._ But you my Prince must yeelde me mickle more:
-You know your Nobles are your chiefest ffaies,
-And long time haue been bannisht from your Court,
-Embrace and reeoncile them to your selfe:
-They are your hands, whereby you oght to worke.
-As for _Ateukin_, and his lewde compeeres,
-That sooth'd you in your sinnes and youthly pompe, 2550
-Exile, torment, and punish such as they,
-For greater vipers neuer may be found
-Within a date, then such aspiring heads,
-That reck not how they clime, so that they clime.
-
-_K. of S._ Guid Knight I graunt thy sute, first I submit
-And humble craue a pardon of your grace:
-Next courteous Queene, I pray thee by thy loues,
-Forgiue mine errors past, and pardon mee.
-My Lords and Princes, if I haue misdone,
-(As I haue wrongd indeed both you and yours) 2560
-Heereafter trust me, you are deare to me:
-As for _Auteukin_, who so findes the man,
-Let him haue Martiall lawe, and straight be hangd,
-As (all his vaine arbetters now are diuided)
-And _Anderson_ our Treasurer shall pay,
-Three thousand Markes, for friendly recompence.
-
-_L. Andr._ But Princes whilst you friend it thus in one,
-Me thinks of friendship, _Nano_ shall haue none.
-
-_Doro._ What would my Dwarfe, that I will not bestow?
-
-_Nano._ My boone faire Queene is this, that you would go, 2570
-Altho my bodie is but small and neate,
-My stomacke after toyle requireth meate,
-An easie sute, dread Princes will you wend?
-
-_K. of S._ Art thou a Pigmey borne my prettie frend?
-
-_Nano._ Not so great King, but nature when she framde me,
-Was scant of earth, and _Nano_ therefore namde me:
-And when she sawe my bodie was so small,
-She gaue me wit to make it big withall.
-
-_K._ Till time when, _Dor._ Eate then.
-
-_K._ My friend it stands with wit, 2580
-To take repast when stomacke serueth it.
-
-_Dor._ Thy pollicie my _Nano_ shall preuaile:
-Come royall father, enter we my tent:
-And souldiers feast it, frolike it like friends,
-My Princes bid this kinde and courteous traine,
-Partake some fauours of our late accord.
-Thus warres haue end, and after dreadfull hate,
-Men learne at last to know their good estate. _Exeunt._
-
-FINIS.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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