GLOUCESTER

  My words have then consumed but their own tails?

  ARTHUR

  Go, lead our furious arms for us. Take care

  That you advance no swifter than the rear.

  The hindmost rank27 is every army’s heel.28

  GLOUCESTER

  The body, lacking head, will range29 about

  If king they saw in battle now’s dislodged.

  It is too hard upon your first assay.30

  Your nobles still mistrust and countermand

  Each other’s words, bend not to my impose.31

  Thick-sinew’d32 Cumbria and saucy33 Norfolk

  Will bow to king but never seneschal.

  Arthur, you are no single man, but king.

  You must in every act revolve upon34

  The country’s cares and gracious God’s intent

  For this the flock of which you wield the crook.

  ARTHUR

  You show that I am truant35 in command.

  Your warming sun-bright words have dried a path

  Which I perceive at last through muddy cares.

  GLOUCESTER

  My lord, I am in all humility

  Made glad and do admire this sovereign lord

  Pursuing wiser course when ’tis revealed.

  ARTHUR

  To quell the noble plaints and cheer the men,

  The colors of the king will ride on you,

  My armor and close helm, my flag and shield.

  You will not speak, but gesture royally,

  Short-tongued36 for military stratagems

  Outrav’ling37 in your bloodied silent mind.

  And I will gallop up anon,38 to ride

  With you afore the Humber’s far behind.

  GLOUCESTER

  What gear so notable39 can stay40 a king?

  This pulls dishonor down on both our heads.

  ARTHUR

  Smooth not thy tongue, but smooth thy brow its cares.

  Though kingdom’s needs concern my every thought,

  A king is licensed still to be a man.

  GLOUCESTER

  Of this, I fear, my lord, you are mistook.

  ARTHUR

  ’Tis of no moment, none by cock and pie.41

  You’ll make a country ride on sun-gold day,

  To glad these moody lords who want but some

  Brief show of royal confidence, which you

  From me reflect on steel and painted skin.42

  And when, at Lincoln’s gate, the arrows sing,

  To me they’ll sing, in my own proper coat.

  GLOUCESTER

  Yet list me still, my boy, my wayward boy.

  ARTHUR

  No longer, Duke of Gloucester, but thy king.

  If chartered are thy words to gainsay kings,43

  Still king it is that grants these liberties.

  Or, soft, thy boy, but king as well, good Duke.

  Now come and do as I command of thee.

  Exeunt

  [ACT II, SCENE V]

  [Location: The road to Lincoln]

  Enter Denton, Sumner, and Bell

  DENTON

  High words ride on high wind,1 I say. When they

  would have your guts to stuff their pudding-bags,2

  they start at singing of Troy for us to love our labors

  more.

  BELL

  I grant York was but first I ever knew of war. Never

  had I chance until now, I was not able, but what I saw

  in York’s turned3 roads calls shame on talk like that.

  SUMNER

  A new warrior, la! And all the glories fall in for him.

  And thou’rt equal to the king! Had his first taste at

  York. Didst thou and he stand with shoulders

  touching?

  BELL

  Why bend thy brows?4 Do I go boasting? Nay. I

  walked in tremble-knee’d, sure. But did I skirr?5

  When the dragon6 belched fire and the ordnance7

  thundered, I stood firm. Knocked two Germans

  down, I did. Lifted one his beaver back when I put

  him on the turf. Put my blade through. I did, thus,

  just pushed it through. Like when I would kill

  coneys8 with my brother, like that, some, tough, yet

  not so tough, in truth. It goes in soft. I never cared to

  look the coney in his eye neither, when time came.

  Nor cared to look at this big yellow9 one. Said

  something in Saxonish, I suppose it was.

  DENTON

  Like as not only giving thee “rest you merry.”10

  BELL

  Think you so?

  SUMNER

  Or “fair fall you, valiant soldier.”

  BELL

  He may, he may have.

  SUMNER

  What block art thou? Needest thou be set to school in

  Saxon talk to know he begged thee mercy or swore

  out upon thy soul or cried for his new orphan or his

  own Saxon mother in Saxonland, which is far from

  York, I tell thee, too far to be wandering in hope of

  friendly greetings. Hast thou hope he did forgive

  thee? Honors thee thy valor? What tales to sing

  thyself to bed withal!

  BELL

  No stories, but what I have seen I’ll sing: men do with

  valor face death and all the doom beyond when for

  their king they fight.

  DENTON

  Bend, boy, bend thy head, thy battle-mate’s on hoof.

  Gloucester for Arthur passes

  SUMNER

  His visor down, all silence.

  DENTON

  A ghost, like. I first knew battle for his father. Thou

  mightst have eaten butter had I stepped in cream.11

  SUMNER

  But this one fights the same as his sire, no fear at all in him.

  DENTON

  Is he not flesh? Is he of other stuff and feels not a

  blade peel off skin? His eyes are agates? They do not

  jelly if an arrow pinch ’em? His bones so hard as will

  not splinter out the skin as I saw Nick Safe’s arm do?

  BELL

  What serves this talk? To fright a man before a battle’s

  fought is no victory, nor like to win us one. Every

  fool can say the price to flesh, but marching in

  withal, as our king there does march, that’s a lesson,

  not to gabble subtle meant to void an army’s guts

  afore the fight. What more corruption could a

  canker12 spread in corn or rose than that? Thou

  mightst be a Saxon tongue to make us weak in heart.

  DENTON

  A fig13 for all thy corn and flowers, boy.

  BELL

  Thy breath stinks enough. A flower might cover o’er thy toothless mouth and worse.

  SUMNER

  That stink he borrowed of certain French

  companions, all now burning night and day, and off

  to powder tubs.14

  DENTON

  I’ll learn you both some Saxon words, you knaves.

  BELL

  I need no more words of thee, coward, nor can my nose take none.

  Trumpets

  SUMNER

  Quiet now, the both. That’s Lincoln there and the trumpets sound.

  BELL

  After York, it will be nothing. I had some chance to be

  at York at all. They’ll stand me a spigot at the Pard’s

  Head,15 if I tell my tale.

  DENTON

  Again a fool, before and after a fool, a fool from claw

  to beak. You sit mum, not you who tells it, you, the

  man by you tells it and you sit mute as marble and

  first you say it was not this, it was nothing, then you

  say you want no talk, and then, when the noise fo
r a

  tale is up, then, then you say, “So. I’ll tell you how it

  was at York, but it’s no tale I can tell swift, and—” and

  you wait a time, you cough, and say, “Throat’s dry.”

  Then old Francis opens wide the taps for a man who was at York.

  Trumpets

  BELL

  That’s the trumpet of our company. To the walls and

  later learn me more of this soldier science.

  Exeunt

  [ACT II, SCENE VI]

  [Location: Lincoln]

  Alarums and excursions, including Gloucester in Arthur’s armor

  Enter Mordred, Calvan, Colgerne, Scottish and Pictish nobles, Saxon soldiers

  MORDRED

  What dev’lish hag was mother to this fiend?

  Yet Arthur holds the field, untouched by blades!

  No man is he but war itself come down

  To earth to look upon the death of souls.

  We melt before his charge, our heart is broke!

  COLGERNE

  No Uter, he: more war-like is the son.

  He stalks full silent as with windpipe slit.

  CALVAN

  We are enow still armed and holding ranks

  That with a voice to stir us to our task

  We yet can thrash back south these enemies

  And hoist our father’s arms on Lincoln’s walls.

  But ope your throat and lust’ly call the fight!

  MORDRED

  Great Calvan’s words do fill my lungs with air:

  On northmen, on! To arms, to arms, to th’fight!

  In Arthur’s blood I’ll bathe my limbs tonight,

  And Britain stride undoubted in my right!

  Alarums and exeunt

  [ACT II, SCENE VII]

  [Location: Lincoln]

  Alarums, excursions. Enter Gloucester for Arthur and Hebrides. They fight.

  Hebrides is slain. Enter English nobles

  NORFOLK

  The shamèd enemy displays his haunch!1

  DERBY

  ’Tis Lincoln now, not York, that English tongues

  Will speak when they would conjure victory.

  Four-fold the threat we doubted lurked in stealth,2

  The city was well-manned and fortified,

  But Arthur’s greyhound-sight did note a gap

  And lusty-blooded split it with his arm.

  CUMBRIA

  While Gloucester passed the battle’s day at rest.

  By this proud flesh3 upon my arms and face,

  All striped these many years in England’s wars,

  That seneschal is recreant4 and base.

  SOMERSET

  But softly, Cumbria, hold tongue. The king

  Doth wave us off to solitary pray.

  Exeunt

  [Gloucester unhelms and kneels]

  GLOUCESTER

  Deception ’pon deception preys and fats

  Itself, the stronger to deceive anew.

  ’Twas ever thus, but now is Gloucester’s name

  All shard bestrewn,5 so Arthur’s fledgèd6 name

  Might tower7 up to all the world’s esteem.

  Because I winked at his small boyish deeds,

  Now habit binds me tighter, cuts my flesh,

  And I omit behaviors grosser still.

  What kingdom have we won this day at war?

  What rule deserve from such unhonest8 toil?

  Enter Arthur as friar9

  ARTHUR

  [Aside] Why here’s a glass that shows one’s better face.

  Were I of suppler knee, as there I seem,

  I’d bow to earth my joints and plant my thanks.

  Would this one here could reign instead of me,

  A wise old king, resolved yet never rash.

  I would I saw such pious king as this

  When I do peer into my subjects’ eyes.

  But no.

  Imperfect is the glass of others’ eyes

  Wherein we seek in hope of handsome glimpse

  Yet find dim shapes, reversed and versed again,

  Which will not ease our self-love’s appetites.

  But let us make more pleasant now our thoughts:

  I’ll hood myself and from my bloodied twin

  [Hooding himself]

  Glean news of Lincoln’s fate and mine.— [To Gloucester] O, King!

  Might errant10 friar ease your soul’s distress?

  In earth and blood you are o’er-crusted, still

  The soul may be clean searched11 and truly healed.

  GLOUCESTER

  Thou startled, priest, and near did feel my blade.

  ARTHUR

  Confess and I will shrive you back to war

  New-cleansed and shent.12

  GLOUCESTER

  But I must hoard my act.

  The blackest sins I bear are sins I share,

  So my conspirator must kneel with me.13

  And kings, what’s more, may whisper14 but to popes,

  Or to your lord, my Bishop Caerleon.