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Enter KING EDWARD and [Young] SPENCER, [BALDOCK, and Nobles of the KINGS side, and Soldiers] with drums and fifes K. Edw. I long to hear an answer from the barons | |
| Touching my friend, my dearest Gaveston. | |
| Ah! Spencer, not the riches of my realm | |
| Can ransom him! Ah, he is markd to die! | 4 |
| I know the malice of the younger Mortimer, | |
| Warwick I know is rough, and Lancaster | |
| Inexorable, and I shall never see | |
| My lovely Pierce, my Gaveston again! | 8 |
| The barons overbear me with their pride. | |
| Y. Spen. Were I King Edward, Englands sovereign, | |
| Son to the lovely Eleanor of Spain, | |
| Great Edward Longshanks issue, would I bear | 12 |
| These braves, this rage, and suffer uncontrolld | |
| These barons thus to beard me in my land, | |
| In mine own realm? My lord, pardon my speech: | |
| Did you retain your fathers magnanimity, | 16 |
| Did you regard the honour of your name, | |
| You would not suffer thus your majesty | |
| Be counterbuffd of 1 your nobility. | |
| Strike off their heads, and let them preach on poles! | 20 |
| No doubt, such lessons they will teach the rest, | |
| As by their preachments they will profit much, | |
| And learn obedience to their lawful king. | |
| K. Edw. Yea, gentle Spencer, we have been too mild, | 24 |
| Too kind to them; but now have drawn our sword, | |
| And if they send me not my Gaveston, | |
| Well steel it on their crest, and poll their tops. | |
| Bald. This haught 2 resolve becomes your majesty, | 28 |
| Not to be tied to their affection, | |
| As though your highness were a schoolboy still, | |
| And must be awd and governd like a child. | |
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Enter the Elder SPENCER, with his truncheon and Soldiers E. Spen. Long live my sovereign, the noble Edward, | 32 |
| In peace triumphant, fortunate in wars! | |
| K. Edw. Welcome, old man, comst thou in Edwards aid? | |
| Then tell thy prince of whence, and what thou art. | |
| E. Spen. Lo, with a band of bowmen and of pikes, | 36 |
| Brown bills and targeteers, four hundred strong, | |
| Sworn to defend King Edwards royal right, | |
| I come in person to your majesty, | |
| Spencer, the father of Hugh Spencer there, | 40 |
| Bound to your highness everlastingly, | |
| For favour done, in him, unto us all. | |
| K. Edw. Thy father, Spencer? | |
| Y. Spen. True, an it like your grace, | 44 |
| That pours, in lieu of all your goodness shown, | |
| His life, my lord, before your princely feet. | |
| K. Edw. Welcome ten thousand times, old man, again. | |
| Spencer, this love, this kindness to thy king, | 48 |
| Argues thy noble mind and disposition. | |
| Spencer, I here create thee Earl of Wiltshire, | |
| And daily will enrich thee with our favour, | |
| That, as the sunshine, shall reflect oer thee. | 52 |
| Beside, the more to manifest our love, | |
| Because we hear Lord Bruce doth sell his land, | |
| And that the Mortimers are in hand withal, | |
| Thou shalt have crowns of us t outbid the barons: | 56 |
| And, Spencer, spare them not, but lay it on. | |
| Soldiers, a largess, and thrice welcome all! | |
| Y. Spen. My lord, here comes the queen. | |
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Enter QUEEN ISABELLA, and her son [PRINCE EDWARD,] and LEVUNE, a Frenchman K. Edw. Madam, what news? | 60 |
| Q. Isab. News of dishonour, lord, and discontent. | |
| Our friend Levune, faithful and full of trust, | |
| Informeth us, by letters and by words, | |
| That Lord Valois our brother, King of France, | 64 |
| Because your highness hath been slack in homage, | |
| Hath seized Normandy into his hands. | |
| These be the letters, this the messenger. | |
| K. Edw. Welcome, Levune. Tush, Sib, if this be all | 68 |
| Valois and I will soon be friends again. | |
| But to my Gaveston; shall I never see, | |
| Never behold thee now?Madam, in this matter, | |
| We will employ you and your little son; | 72 |
| You shall go parley with the King of France. | |
| Boy, see you bear you bravely to the king, | |
| And do your message with a majesty. | |
| P. Edw. Commit not to my youth things of more weight | 76 |
| Than fits a prince so young as I to bear, | |
| And fear not, lord and father, Heavens great beams | |
| On Atlas shoulder shall not lie more safe, | |
| Than shall your charge committed to my trust. | 80 |
| Q. Isab. Ah, boy! this towardness makes thy mother fear | |
| Thou art not markd to many days on earth. | |
| K. Edw. Madam, we will that you with speed be shippd, | |
| And this our son; Levune shall follow you | 84 |
| With all the haste we can despatch him hence. | |
| Choose of our lords to bear you company, | |
| And go in peace; leave us in wars at home. | |
| Q. Isab. Unnatural wars, where subjects brave their king; | 88 |
| God end them once! My lords, I take my leave, | |
| To make my preparation for France. [Exit with PRINCE EDWARD.] | |
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K. Edw. What, Lord Arundel, dost thou come alone? | |
| Arun. Yea, my good lord, for Gaveston is dead. | 92 |
| K. Edw. Ah, traitors! have they put my friend to death? | |
| Tell me, Arundel, died he ere thou camst, | |
| Or didst thou see my friend to take his death? | |
| Arun. Neither, my lord; for as he was surprisd, | 96 |
| Begirt with weapons and with enemies round, | |
| I did your highness message to them all; | |
| Demanding him of them, entreating rather, | |
| And said, upon the honour of my name, | 100 |
| That I would undertake to carry him | |
| Unto your highness, and to bring him back. | |
| K. Edw. And tell me, would the rebels deny me that? | |
| Y. Spen. Proud recreants! | 104 |
| K. Edw. Yea, Spencer, traitors all. | |
| Arun. I found them at the first inexorable; | |
| The Earl of Warwick would not bide the hearing, | |
| Mortimer hardly; Pembroke and Lancaster | 108 |
| Spake least: and when they flatly had denied, | |
| Refusing to receive me pledge for him, | |
| The Earl of Pembroke mildly thus bespake; | |
| My lords, because our sovereign sends for him, | 112 |
| And promiseth he shall be safe returnd, | |
| I will this undertake, to have him hence, | |
| And see him re-delivered to your hands. | |
| K. Edw. Well, and how fortunes [it] that he came not? | 116 |
| Y. Spen. Some treason, or some villainy, was the cause. | |
| Arun. The Earl of Warwick seizd him on his way; | |
| For being delivered unto Pembrokes men, | |
| Their lord rode home thinking his prisoner safe; | 120 |
| But ere he came, Warwick in ambush lay, | |
| And bare him to his death; and in a trench | |
| Strake off his head, and marchd unto the camp. | |
| Y. Spen. A bloody part, flatly gainst law of arms! | 124 |
| K. Edw. O shall I speak, or shall I sigh and die! | |
| Y. Spen. My lord, refer your vengeance to the sword | |
| Upon these barons; hearten up your men; | |
| Let them not unrevengd murder your friends! | 128 |
| Advance your standard, Edward, in the field, | |
| And march to fire them from their starting holes. | |
| K. Edw. (Kneeling.) By earth, the common mother of us all, | |
| By Heaven, and all the moving orbs thereof, | 132 |
| By this right hand, and by my fathers sword, | |
| And all the honours longing to my crown, | |
| I will have heads, and lives for him, as many | |
| As I have manors, castles, towns, and towers! [Rises.] | 136 |
| Treacherous Warwick! traitorous Mortimer! | |
| If it be Englands king, in lakes of gore | |
| Your headless trunks, your bodies will I trail, | |
| That you may drink your fill, and quaff in blood, | 140 |
| And stain my royal standard with the same, | |
| That so my bloody colours may suggest | |
| Remembrance of revenge immortally | |
| On your accursed traitorous progeny, | 144 |
| You villains, that have slain my Gaveston! | |
| And in this place of honour and of trust, | |
| Spencer, sweet Spencer, I adopt thee here: | |
| And merely of our love we do create thee | 148 |
| Earl of Gloucester, and Lord Chamberlain, | |
| Despite of times, despite of enemies. | |
| Y. Spen. My lord, heres a messenger from the barons. | |
| Desires access unto your majesty. | 152 |
| K. Edw. Admit him near. | |
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Enter the Herald, with his coat of arms Her. Long live King Edward, Englands lawful lord! | |
| K. Edw. So wish not they, I wis, that sent thee hither. | |
| Thou comst from Mortimer and his complices, | 156 |
| A ranker rout of rebels never was. | |
| Well, say thy message. | |
| Her. The barons up in arms, by me salute | |
| Your highness with long life and happiness; | 160 |
| And bid me say, as plainer to your grace, | |
| That if without effusion of blood | |
| You will this grief have ease and remedy, | |
| That from your princely person you remove | 164 |
| This Spencer, as a putrifying brance, | |
| That deads the royal vine, whose golden leaves | |
| Empale your princely head, your diadem, | |
| Whose brightness such pernicious upstarts dim, | 168 |
| Say they; and lovingly advise your grace, | |
| To cherish virtue and nobility, | |
| And have old servitors in high esteem, | |
| And shake off smooth dissembling flatterers. | 172 |
| This granted, they, their honours, and their lives, | |
| Are to your highness vowd and consecrate. | |
| Y. Spen. Ah, traitors! will they still display their pride? | |
| K. Edw. Away, tarry no answer, but be gone! | 176 |
| Rebels, will they appoint their sovereign | |
| His sports, his pleasures, and his company? | |
| Yet, ere thou go, see how I do divorce Embraces SPENCER. | |
| Spencer from me.Now get thee to thy lords, | 180 |
| And tell them I will come to chastise them | |
| For murdering Gaveston; hie thee, get thee gone! | |
| Edward with fire and sword follows at thy heels. [Exit Herald.] | |
| My lords, perceive you how these rebels swell? | 184 |
| Soldiers, good hearts, defend your sovereigns right, | |
| For now, even now, we march to make them stoop. | |
| Away! Exeunt. Alarums, excursions, a great fight, and a retreat [sounded, within]. | |