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King John
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  • ACT II SCENE I

    
     Dramatis Personae 
     Act I   Scene I 
      
     Act III Scene I
     Act III Scene II
     Act III Scene III
     Act III Scene IV
     Act IV  Scene I 
     Act IV  Scene II
    
     Act IV  Scene III 
     Act V   Scene I 
     Act V   Scene II 
     Act V   Scene III 
     Act V   Scene IV 
     Act V   Scene V
     Act V   Scene VI
     Act V   Scene VII
     Complete play
    


     Act II 

    
    ACT II: SCENE I	France. Before Angiers.

    
    	Enter AUSTRIA and forces, drums, etc. on one side:
    	on the other KING PHILIP and his power; LEWIS,
    	ARTHUR, CONSTANCE and attendants
    
    LEWIS	Before Angiers well met, brave Austria.
    	Arthur, that great forerunner of thy blood,
    	Richard, that robb'd the lion of his heart
    	And fought the holy wars in Palestine,
    	By this brave duke came early to his grave:
    	And for amends to his posterity,
    	At our importance hither is he come,
    	To spread his colours, boy, in thy behalf,
    	And to rebuke the usurpation
    	Of thy unnatural uncle, English John:
    	Embrace him, love him, give him welcome hither.
    
    ARTHUR	God shall forgive you Coeur-de-lion's death
    	The rather that you give his offspring life,
    	Shadowing their right under your wings of war:
    	I give you welcome with a powerless hand,
    	But with a heart full of unstained love:
    	Welcome before the gates of Angiers, duke.
    
    LEWIS	A noble boy! Who would not do thee right?
    
    AUSTRIA	Upon thy cheek lay I this zealous kiss,
    	As seal to this indenture of my love,
    	That to my home I will no more return,
    	Till Angiers and the right thou hast in France,
    	Together with that pale, that white-faced shore,
    	Whose foot spurns back the ocean's roaring tides
    	And coops from other lands her islanders,
    	Even till that England, hedged in with the main,
    	That water-walled bulwark, still secure
    	And confident from foreign purposes,
    	Even till that utmost corner of the west
    	Salute thee for her king: till then, fair boy,
    	Will I not think of home, but follow arms.
    
    CONSTANCE	O, take his mother's thanks, a widow's thanks,
    	Till your strong hand shall help to give him strength
    	To make a more requital to your love!
    
    AUSTRIA	The peace of heaven is theirs that lift their swords
    	In such a just and charitable war.
    
    KING PHILIP	Well then, to work: our cannon shall be bent
    	Against the brows of this resisting town.
    	Call for our chiefest men of discipline,
    	To cull the plots of best advantages:
    	We'll lay before this town our royal bones,
    	Wade to the market-place in Frenchmen's blood,
    	But we will make it subject to this boy.
    
    CONSTANCE	Stay for an answer to your embassy,
    	Lest unadvised you stain your swords with blood:
    	My Lord Chatillon may from England bring,
    	That right in peace which here we urge in war,
    	And then we shall repent each drop of blood
    	That hot rash haste so indirectly shed.
    
    	Enter CHATILLON
    
    KING PHILIP	A wonder, lady! lo, upon thy wish,
    	Our messenger Chatillon is arrived!
    	What England says, say briefly, gentle lord;
    	We coldly pause for thee; Chatillon, speak.
    
    CHATILLON	Then turn your forces from this paltry siege
    	And stir them up against a mightier task.
    	England, impatient of your just demands,
    	Hath put himself in arms: the adverse winds,
    	Whose leisure I have stay'd, have given him time
    	To land his legions all as soon as I;
    	His marches are expedient to this town,
    	His forces strong, his soldiers confident.
    	With him along is come the mother-queen,
    	An Ate, stirring him to blood and strife;
    	With her her niece, the Lady Blanch of Spain;
    	With them a bastard of the king's deceased,
    	And all the unsettled humours of the land,
    	Rash, inconsiderate, fiery voluntaries,
    	With ladies' faces and fierce dragons' spleens,
    	Have sold their fortunes at their native homes,
    	Bearing their birthrights proudly on their backs,
    	To make hazard of new fortunes here:
    	In brief, a braver choice of dauntless spirits
    	Than now the English bottoms have waft o'er
    	Did nearer float upon the swelling tide,
    	To do offence and scath in Christendom.
    
    	Drum beats
    
    	The interruption of their churlish drums
    	Cuts off more circumstance: they are at hand,
    	To parley or to fight; therefore prepare.
    
    KING PHILIP	How much unlook'd for is this expedition!
    
    AUSTRIA	By how much unexpected, by so much
    	We must awake endavour for defence;
    	For courage mounteth with occasion:
    	Let them be welcome then: we are prepared.
    
    	Enter KING JOHN, QUEEN ELINOR, BLANCH, the BASTARD,
    	Lords, and forces
    
    KING JOHN	Peace be to France, if France in peace permit
    	Our just and lineal entrance to our own;
    	If not, bleed France, and peace ascend to heaven,
    	Whiles we, God's wrathful agent, do correct
    	Their proud contempt that beats His peace to heaven.
    
    KING PHILIP	Peace be to England, if that war return
    	From France to England, there to live in peace.
    	England we love; and for that England's sake
    	With burden of our armour here we sweat.
    	This toil of ours should be a work of thine;
    	But thou from loving England art so far,
    	That thou hast under-wrought his lawful king
    	Cut off the sequence of posterity,
    	Out-faced infant state and done a rape
    	Upon the maiden virtue of the crown.
    	Look here upon thy brother Geffrey's face;
    	These eyes, these brows, were moulded out of his:
    	This little abstract doth contain that large
    	Which died in Geffrey, and the hand of time
    	Shall draw this brief into as huge a volume.
    	That Geffrey was thy elder brother born,
    	And this his son; England was Geffrey's right
    	And this is Geffrey's: in the name of God
    	How comes it then that thou art call'd a king,
    	When living blood doth in these temples beat,
    	Which owe the crown that thou o'ermasterest?
    
    KING JOHN	From whom hast thou this great commission, France,
    	To draw my answer from thy articles?
    
    KING PHILIP	From that supernal judge, that stirs good thoughts
    	In any breast of strong authority,
    	To look into the blots and stains of right:
    	That judge hath made me guardian to this boy:
    	Under whose warrant I impeach thy wrong
    	And by whose help I mean to chastise it.
    
    KING JOHN	Alack, thou dost usurp authority.
    
    KING PHILIP	Excuse; it is to beat usurping down.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	Who is it thou dost call usurper, France?
    
    CONSTANCE	Let me make answer; thy usurping son.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	Out, insolent! thy bastard shall be king,
    	That thou mayst be a queen, and cheque the world!
    
    CONSTANCE	My bed was ever to thy son as true
    	As thine was to thy husband; and this boy
    	Liker in feature to his father Geffrey
    	Than thou and John in manners; being as like
    	As rain to water, or devil to his dam.
    	My boy a bastard! By my soul, I think
    	His father never was so true begot:
    	It cannot be, an if thou wert his mother.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	There's a good mother, boy, that blots thy father.
    
    CONSTANCE	There's a good grandam, boy, that would blot thee.
    
    AUSTRIA	Peace!
    
    BASTARD	     Hear the crier.
    
    AUSTRIA	What the devil art thou?
    
    BASTARD	One that will play the devil, sir, with you,
    	An a' may catch your hide and you alone:
    	You are the hare of whom the proverb goes,
    	Whose valour plucks dead lions by the beard;
    	I'll smoke your skin-coat, an I catch you right;
    	Sirrah, look to't; i' faith, I will, i' faith.
    
    BLANCH	O, well did he become that lion's robe
    	That did disrobe the lion of that robe!
    
    BASTARD	It lies as sightly on the back of him
    	As great Alcides' shows upon an ass:
    	But, ass, I'll take that burthen from your back,
    	Or lay on that shall make your shoulders crack.
    
    AUSTRIA	What craker is this same that deafs our ears
    	With this abundance of superfluous breath?
    
    KING PHILIP	Lewis, determine what we shall do straight.
    
    LEWIS	Women and fools, break off your conference.
    	King John, this is the very sum of all;
    	England and Ireland, Anjou, Touraine, Maine,
    	In right of Arthur do I claim of thee:
    	Wilt thou resign them and lay down thy arms?
    
    KING JOHN	My life as soon: I do defy thee, France.
    	Arthur of Bretagne, yield thee to my hand;
    	And out of my dear love I'll give thee more
    	Than e'er the coward hand of France can win:
    	Submit thee, boy.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	                  Come to thy grandam, child.
    
    CONSTANCE	Do, child, go to it grandam, child:
    	Give grandam kingdom, and it grandam will
    	Give it a plum, a cherry, and a fig:
    	There's a good grandam.
    
    ARTHUR	Good my mother, peace!
    	I would that I were low laid in my grave:
    	I am not worth this coil that's made for me.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	His mother shames him so, poor boy, he weeps.
    
    CONSTANCE	Now shame upon you, whether she does or no!
    	His grandam's wrongs, and not his mother's shames,
    	Draws those heaven-moving pearls from his poor eyes,
    	Which heaven shall take in nature of a fee;
    	Ay, with these crystal beads heaven shall be bribed
    	To do him justice and revenge on you.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	Thou monstrous slanderer of heaven and earth!
    
    CONSTANCE	Thou monstrous injurer of heaven and earth!
    	Call not me slanderer; thou and thine usurp
    	The dominations, royalties and rights
    	Of this oppressed boy: this is thy eld'st son's son,
    	Infortunate in nothing but in thee:
    	Thy sins are visited in this poor child;
    	The canon of the law is laid on him,
    	Being but the second generation
    	Removed from thy sin-conceiving womb.
    
    KING JOHN	Bedlam, have done.
    
    CONSTANCE	                  I have but this to say,
    	That he is not only plagued for her sin,
    	But God hath made her sin and her the plague
    	On this removed issue, plague for her
    	And with her plague; her sin his injury,
    	Her injury the beadle to her sin,
    	All punish'd in the person of this child,
    	And all for her; a plague upon her!
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	Thou unadvised scold, I can produce
    	A will that bars the title of thy son.
    
    CONSTANCE	Ay, who doubts that? a will! a wicked will:
    	A woman's will; a canker'd grandam's will!
    
    KING PHILIP	Peace, lady! pause, or be more temperate:
    	It ill beseems this presence to cry aim
    	To these ill-tuned repetitions.
    	Some trumpet summon hither to the walls
    	These men of Angiers: let us hear them speak
    	Whose title they admit, Arthur's or John's.
    
    	Trumpet sounds. Enter certain Citizens upon the walls
    
    First Citizen	Who is it that hath warn'd us to the walls?
    
    KING PHILIP	'Tis France, for England.
    
    KING JOHN	England, for itself.
    	You men of Angiers, and my loving subjects--
    
    KING PHILIP	You loving men of Angiers, Arthur's subjects,
    	Our trumpet call'd you to this gentle parle--
    
    KING JOHN	For our advantage; therefore hear us first.
    	These flags of France, that are advanced here
    	Before the eye and prospect of your town,
    	Have hither march'd to your endamagement:
    	The cannons have their bowels full of wrath,
    	And ready mounted are they to spit forth
    	Their iron indignation 'gainst your walls:
    	All preparation for a bloody siege
    	All merciless proceeding by these French
    	Confronts your city's eyes, your winking gates;
    	And but for our approach those sleeping stones,
    	That as a waist doth girdle you about,
    	By the compulsion of their ordinance
    	By this time from their fixed beds of lime
    	Had been dishabited, and wide havoc made
    	For bloody power to rush upon your peace.
    	But on the sight of us your lawful king,
    	Who painfully with much expedient march
    	Have brought a countercheque before your gates,
    	To save unscratch'd your city's threatened cheeks,
    	Behold, the French amazed vouchsafe a parle;
    	And now, instead of bullets wrapp'd in fire,
    	To make a shaking fever in your walls,
    	They shoot but calm words folded up in smoke,
    	To make a faithless error in your ears:
    	Which trust accordingly, kind citizens,
    	And let us in, your king, whose labour'd spirits,
    	Forwearied in this action of swift speed,
    	Crave harbourage within your city walls.
    
    KING PHILIP	When I have said, make answer to us both.
    	Lo, in this right hand, whose protection
    	Is most divinely vow'd upon the right
    	Of him it holds, stands young Plantagenet,
    	Son to the elder brother of this man,
    	And king o'er him and all that he enjoys:
    	For this down-trodden equity, we tread
    	In warlike march these greens before your town,
    	Being no further enemy to you
    	Than the constraint of hospitable zeal
    	In the relief of this oppressed child
    	Religiously provokes. Be pleased then
    	To pay that duty which you truly owe
    	To that owes it, namely this young prince:
    	And then our arms, like to a muzzled bear,
    	Save in aspect, hath all offence seal'd up;
    	Our cannons' malice vainly shall be spent
    	Against the invulnerable clouds of heaven;
    	And with a blessed and unvex'd retire,
    	With unhack'd swords and helmets all unbruised,
    	We will bear home that lusty blood again
    	Which here we came to spout against your town,
    	And leave your children, wives and you in peace.
    	But if you fondly pass our proffer'd offer,
    	'Tis not the roundure of your old-faced walls
    	Can hide you from our messengers of war,
    	Though all these English and their discipline
    	Were harbour'd in their rude circumference.
    	Then tell us, shall your city call us lord,
    	In that behalf which we have challenged it?
    	Or shall we give the signal to our rage
    	And stalk in blood to our possession?
    
    First Citizen	In brief, we are the king of England's subjects:
    	For him, and in his right, we hold this town.
    
    KING JOHN	Acknowledge then the king, and let me in.
    
    First Citizen	That can we not; but he that proves the king,
    	To him will we prove loyal: till that time
    	Have we ramm'd up our gates against the world.
    
    KING JOHN	Doth not the crown of England prove the king?
    	And if not that, I bring you witnesses,
    	Twice fifteen thousand hearts of England's breed,--
    
    BASTARD	Bastards, and else.
    
    KING JOHN	To verify our title with their lives.
    
    KING PHILIP	As many and as well-born bloods as those,--
    
    BASTARD	Some bastards too.
    
    KING PHILIP	Stand in his face to contradict his claim.
    
    First Citizen	Till you compound whose right is worthiest,
    	We for the worthiest hold the right from both.
    
    KING JOHN	Then God forgive the sin of all those souls
    	That to their everlasting residence,
    	Before the dew of evening fall, shall fleet,
    	In dreadful trial of our kingdom's king!
    
    KING PHILIP	Amen, amen! Mount, chevaliers! to arms!
    
    BASTARD	Saint George, that swinged the dragon, and e'er since
    	Sits on his horseback at mine hostess' door,
    	Teach us some fence!
    
    	To AUSTRIA
    
    		Sirrah, were I at home,
    	At your den, sirrah, with your lioness
    	I would set an ox-head to your lion's hide,
    	And make a monster of you.
    
    AUSTRIA	Peace! no more.
    
    BASTARD	O tremble, for you hear the lion roar.
    
    KING JOHN	Up higher to the plain; where we'll set forth
    	In best appointment all our regiments.
    
    BASTARD	Speed then, to take advantage of the field.
    
    KING PHILIP	It shall be so; and at the other hill
    	Command the rest to stand. God and our right!
    
    	Exeunt
    
    	Here after excursions, enter the Herald of France,
    	with trumpets, to the gates
    
    French Herald	You men of Angiers, open wide your gates,
    	And let young Arthur, Duke of Bretagne, in,
    	Who by the hand of France this day hath made
    	Much work for tears in many an English mother,
    	Whose sons lie scattered on the bleeding ground;
    	Many a widow's husband grovelling lies,
    	Coldly embracing the discolour'd earth;
    	And victory, with little loss, doth play
    	Upon the dancing banners of the French,
    	Who are at hand, triumphantly display'd,
    	To enter conquerors and to proclaim
    	Arthur of Bretagne England's king and yours.
    
    	Enter English Herald, with trumpet
    
    English Herald	Rejoice, you men of Angiers, ring your bells:
    	King John, your king and England's doth approach,
    	Commander of this hot malicious day:
    	Their armours, that march'd hence so silver-bright,
    	Hither return all gilt with Frenchmen's blood;
    	There stuck no plume in any English crest
    	That is removed by a staff of France;
    	Our colours do return in those same hands
    	That did display them when we first march'd forth;
    	And, like a troop of jolly huntsmen, come
    	Our lusty English, all with purpled hands,
    	Dyed in the dying slaughter of their foes:
    	Open your gates and gives the victors way.
    
    First Citizen	Heralds, from off our towers we might behold,
    	From first to last, the onset and retire
    	Of both your armies; whose equality
    	By our best eyes cannot be censured:
    	Blood hath bought blood and blows have answered blows;
    	Strength match'd with strength, and power confronted power:
    	Both are alike; and both alike we like.
    	One must prove greatest: while they weigh so even,
    	We hold our town for neither, yet for both.
    
    	Re-enter KING JOHN and KING PHILIP, with their
    	powers, severally
    
    KING JOHN	France, hast thou yet more blood to cast away?
    	Say, shall the current of our right run on?
    	Whose passage, vex'd with thy impediment,
    	Shall leave his native channel and o'erswell
    	With course disturb'd even thy confining shores,
    	Unless thou let his silver water keep
    	A peaceful progress to the ocean.
    
    KING PHILIP	England, thou hast not saved one drop of blood,
    	In this hot trial, more than we of France;
    	Rather, lost more. And by this hand I swear,
    	That sways the earth this climate overlooks,
    	Before we will lay down our just-borne arms,
    	We'll put thee down, 'gainst whom these arms we bear,
    	Or add a royal number to the dead,
    	Gracing the scroll that tells of this war's loss
    	With slaughter coupled to the name of kings.
    
    BASTARD	Ha, majesty! how high thy glory towers,
    	When the rich blood of kings is set on fire!
    	O, now doth Death line his dead chaps with steel;
    	The swords of soldiers are his teeth, his fangs;
    	And now he feasts, mousing the flesh of men,
    	In undetermined differences of kings.
    	Why stand these royal fronts amazed thus?
    	Cry, 'havoc!' kings; back to the stained field,
    	You equal potents, fiery kindled spirits!
    	Then let confusion of one part confirm
    	The other's peace: till then, blows, blood and death!
    
    KING JOHN	Whose party do the townsmen yet admit?
    
    KING PHILIP	Speak, citizens, for England; who's your king?
    
    First Citizen	The king of England; when we know the king.
    
    KING PHILIP	Know him in us, that here hold up his right.
    
    KING JOHN	In us, that are our own great deputy
    	And bear possession of our person here,
    	Lord of our presence, Angiers, and of you.
    
    First Citizen	A greater power then we denies all this;
    	And till it be undoubted, we do lock
    	Our former scruple in our strong-barr'd gates;
    	King'd of our fears, until our fears, resolved,
    	Be by some certain king purged and deposed.
    
    BASTARD	By heaven, these scroyles of Angiers flout you, kings,
    	And stand securely on their battlements,
    	As in a theatre, whence they gape and point
    	At your industrious scenes and acts of death.
    	Your royal presences be ruled by me:
    	Do like the mutines of Jerusalem,
    	Be friends awhile and both conjointly bend
    	Your sharpest deeds of malice on this town:
    	By east and west let France and England mount
    	Their battering cannon charged to the mouths,
    	Till their soul-fearing clamours have brawl'd down
    	The flinty ribs of this contemptuous city:
    	I'ld play incessantly upon these jades,
    	Even till unfenced desolation
    	Leave them as naked as the vulgar air.
    	That done, dissever your united strengths,
    	And part your mingled colours once again;
    	Turn face to face and bloody point to point;
    	Then, in a moment, Fortune shall cull forth
    	Out of one side her happy minion,
    	To whom in favour she shall give the day,
    	And kiss him with a glorious victory.
    	How like you this wild counsel, mighty states?
    	Smacks it not something of the policy?
    
    KING JOHN	Now, by the sky that hangs above our heads,
    	I like it well. France, shall we knit our powers
    	And lay this Angiers even to the ground;
    	Then after fight who shall be king of it?
    
    BASTARD	An if thou hast the mettle of a king,
    	Being wronged as we are by this peevish town,
    	Turn thou the mouth of thy artillery,
    	As we will ours, against these saucy walls;
    	And when that we have dash'd them to the ground,
    	Why then defy each other and pell-mell
    	Make work upon ourselves, for heaven or hell.
    
    KING PHILIP	Let it be so. Say, where will you assault?
    
    KING JOHN	We from the west will send destruction
    	Into this city's bosom.
    
    AUSTRIA	I from the north.
    
    KING PHILIP	                  Our thunder from the south
    	Shall rain their drift of bullets on this town.
    
    BASTARD	O prudent discipline! From north to south:
    	Austria and France shoot in each other's mouth:
    	I'll stir them to it. Come, away, away!
    
    First Citizen	Hear us, great kings: vouchsafe awhile to stay,
    	And I shall show you peace and fair-faced league;
    	Win you this city without stroke or wound;
    	Rescue those breathing lives to die in beds,
    	That here come sacrifices for the field:
    	Persever not, but hear me, mighty kings.
    
    KING JOHN	Speak on with favour; we are bent to hear.
    
    First Citizen	That daughter there of Spain, the Lady Blanch,
    	Is niece to England: look upon the years
    	Of Lewis the Dauphin and that lovely maid:
    	If lusty love should go in quest of beauty,
    	Where should he find it fairer than in Blanch?
    	If zealous love should go in search of virtue,
    	Where should he find it purer than in Blanch?
    	If love ambitious sought a match of birth,
    	Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanch?
    	Such as she is, in beauty, virtue, birth,
    	Is the young Dauphin every way complete:
    	If not complete of, say he is not she;
    	And she again wants nothing, to name want,
    	If want it be not that she is not he:
    	He is the half part of a blessed man,
    	Left to be finished by such as she;
    	And she a fair divided excellence,
    	Whose fulness of perfection lies in him.
    	O, two such silver currents, when they join,
    	Do glorify the banks that bound them in;
    	And two such shores to two such streams made one,
    	Two such controlling bounds shall you be, kings,
    	To these two princes, if you marry them.
    	This union shall do more than battery can
    	To our fast-closed gates; for at this match,
    	With swifter spleen than powder can enforce,
    	The mouth of passage shall we fling wide ope,
    	And give you entrance: but without this match,
    	The sea enraged is not half so deaf,
    	Lions more confident, mountains and rocks
    	More free from motion, no, not Death himself
    	In moral fury half so peremptory,
    	As we to keep this city.
    
    BASTARD	Here's a stay
    	That shakes the rotten carcass of old Death
    	Out of his rags! Here's a large mouth, indeed,
    	That spits forth death and mountains, rocks and seas,
    	Talks as familiarly of roaring lions
    	As maids of thirteen do of puppy-dogs!
    	What cannoneer begot this lusty blood?
    	He speaks plain cannon fire, and smoke and bounce;
    	He gives the bastinado with his tongue:
    	Our ears are cudgell'd; not a word of his
    	But buffets better than a fist of France:
    	Zounds! I was never so bethump'd with words
    	Since I first call'd my brother's father dad.
    
    QUEEN ELINOR	Son, list to this conjunction, make this match;
    	Give with our niece a dowry large enough:
    	For by this knot thou shalt so surely tie
    	Thy now unsured assurance to the crown,
    	That yon green boy shall have no sun to ripe
    	The bloom that promiseth a mighty fruit.
    	I see a yielding in the looks of France;
    	Mark, how they whisper: urge them while their souls
    	Are capable of this ambition,
    	Lest zeal, now melted by the windy breath
    	Of soft petitions, pity and remorse,
    	Cool and congeal again to what it was.
    
    First Citizen	Why answer not the double majesties
    	This friendly treaty of our threaten'd town?
    
    KING PHILIP	Speak England first, that hath been forward first
    	To speak unto this city: what say you?
    
    KING JOHN	If that the Dauphin there, thy princely son,
    	Can in this book of beauty read 'I love,'
    	Her dowry shall weigh equal with a queen:
    	For Anjou and fair Touraine, Maine, Poictiers,
    	And all that we upon this side the sea,
    	Except this city now by us besieged,
    	Find liable to our crown and dignity,
    	Shall gild her bridal bed and make her rich
    	In titles, honours and promotions,
    	As she in beauty, education, blood,
    	Holds hand with any princess of the world.
    
    KING PHILIP	What say'st thou, boy? look in the lady's face.
    
    LEWIS	I do, my lord; and in her eye I find
    	A wonder, or a wondrous miracle,
    	The shadow of myself form'd in her eye:
    	Which being but the shadow of your son,
    	Becomes a sun and makes your son a shadow:
    	I do protest I never loved myself
    	Till now infixed I beheld myself
    	Drawn in the flattering table of her eye.
    
    	Whispers with BLANCH
    
    BASTARD	Drawn in the flattering table of her eye!
    	Hang'd in the frowning wrinkle of her brow!
    	And quarter'd in her heart! he doth espy
    	Himself love's traitor: this is pity now,
    	That hang'd and drawn and quartered, there should be
    	In such a love so vile a lout as he.
    
    BLANCH	My uncle's will in this respect is mine:
    	If he see aught in you that makes him like,
    	That any thing he sees, which moves his liking,
    	I can with ease translate it to my will;
    	Or if you will, to speak more properly,
    	I will enforce it easily to my love.
    	Further I will not flatter you, my lord,
    	That all I see in you is worthy love,
    	Than this; that nothing do I see in you,
    	Though churlish thoughts themselves should be your judge,
    	That I can find should merit any hate.
    
    KING JOHN	What say these young ones? What say you my niece?
    
    BLANCH	That she is bound in honour still to do
    	What you in wisdom still vouchsafe to say.
    
    KING JOHN	Speak then, prince Dauphin; can you love this lady?
    
    LEWIS	Nay, ask me if I can refrain from love;
    	For I do love her most unfeignedly.
    
    KING JOHN	Then do I give Volquessen, Touraine, Maine,
    	Poictiers and Anjou, these five provinces,
    	With her to thee; and this addition more,
    	Full thirty thousand marks of English coin.
    	Philip of France, if thou be pleased withal,
    	Command thy son and daughter to join hands.
    
    KING PHILIP	It likes us well; young princes, close your hands.
    
    AUSTRIA	And your lips too; for I am well assured
    	That I did so when I was first assured.
    
    KING PHILIP	Now, citizens of Angiers, ope your gates,
    	Let in that amity which you have made;
    	For at Saint Mary's chapel presently
    	The rites of marriage shall be solemnized.
    	Is not the Lady Constance in this troop?
    	I know she is not, for this match made up
    	Her presence would have interrupted much:
    	Where is she and her son? tell me, who knows.
    
    LEWIS	She is sad and passionate at your highness' tent.
    
    KING PHILIP	And, by my faith, this league that we have made
    	Will give her sadness very little cure.
    	Brother of England, how may we content
    	This widow lady? In her right we came;
    	Which we, God knows, have turn'd another way,
    	To our own vantage.
    
    KING JOHN	We will heal up all;
    	For we'll create young Arthur Duke of Bretagne
    	And Earl of Richmond; and this rich fair town
    	We make him lord of. Call the Lady Constance;
    	Some speedy messenger bid her repair
    	To our solemnity: I trust we shall,
    	If not fill up the measure of her will,
    	Yet in some measure satisfy her so
    	That we shall stop her exclamation.
    	Go we, as well as haste will suffer us,
    	To this unlook'd for, unprepared pomp.
    
    	Exeunt all but the BASTARD
    
    BASTARD	Mad world! mad kings! mad composition!
    	John, to stop Arthur's title in the whole,
    	Hath willingly departed with a part,
    	And France, whose armour conscience buckled on,
    	Whom zeal and charity brought to the field
    	As God's own soldier, rounded in the ear
    	With that same purpose-changer, that sly devil,
    	That broker, that still breaks the pate of faith,
    	That daily break-vow, he that wins of all,
    	Of kings, of beggars, old men, young men, maids,
    	Who, having no external thing to lose
    	But the word 'maid,' cheats the poor maid of that,
    	That smooth-faced gentleman, tickling Commodity,
    	Commodity, the bias of the world,
    	The world, who of itself is peised well,
    	Made to run even upon even ground,
    	Till this advantage, this vile-drawing bias,
    	This sway of motion, this Commodity,
    	Makes it take head from all indifferency,
    	From all direction, purpose, course, intent:
    	And this same bias, this Commodity,
    	This bawd, this broker, this all-changing word,
    	Clapp'd on the outward eye of fickle France,
    	Hath drawn him from his own determined aid,
    	From a resolved and honourable war,
    	To a most base and vile-concluded peace.
    	And why rail I on this Commodity?
    	But for because he hath not woo'd me yet:
    	Not that I have the power to clutch my hand,
    	When his fair angels would salute my palm;
    	But for my hand, as unattempted yet,
    	Like a poor beggar, raileth on the rich.
    	Well, whiles I am a beggar, I will rail
    	And say there is no sin but to be rich;
    	And being rich, my virtue then shall be
    	To say there is no vice but beggary.
    	Since kings break faith upon commodity,
    	Gain, be my lord, for I will worship thee.
    
    	Exit
    
    
    

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