With the Death of the Duke of Guise.
[Scene i]
Enter
Charles the French King, [Catherine] the Queene Mother,
the
King of Navarre, the Prince of Condye, the Lord high
Admirall,
and [Margaret] the Queene of Navarre, with others.
Charles. Prince of Navarre
my honourable brother, Prince Condy, and my good
Lord Admirall, wishe this union and religious league,
Knit in these hands, thus joyn’d in nuptiall
rites, May not desolve, till death desolve our
lives, And that the native sparkes of princely
love, That kindled first this motion in our hearts,
May still be feweld in our progenye.
NAVAREE. The many favours which
your grace has showne,
From time to time, but specially
in this,
Shall binde me ever to your highnes
will,
In what Queen Mother or your grace
commands.
Queene mother. Thanks
sonne Navarre, you see we love you well,
That linke you in mariage
with our daughter heer:
And as you know, our difference
in Religion
Might be a meanes to crosse you
in your love.
Charles. Well Madam, let
that rest:
And now my Lords the mariage
rites perfourm’d,
We think it good to goe and consumate
The rest, with hearing of an holy
Masse:
Sister, I think your selfe will
beare us company.
Queene Margaret.
I will my good Lord.
Charles. The rest that
will not goe (my Lords) may stay:
Come Mother,
Let us goe to honor this solemnitie.
Queene mother. Which
Île desolve with bloud and crueltie.
[Aside.]
Exit
[Charles] the King, Queene Mother, and [Margaret]
the
Queene of Navar [with others], and manet Navar,
the
Prince of Condy, and the Lord high Admirall.
Navarre. Prince Condy
and my good Lord Admiral,
Now Guise may storme but does us
little hurt:
Having the King, Queene Mother on
our side,
To stop the mallice of his envious
heart,
That seekes to murder all the Protestants:
Have you not heard of late how he
decreed,
If that the King had given consent
thereto,
That all the protestants that are
in Paris,
Should have been murdered the other
night?
Admirall. My Lord I mervaile
that th’aspiring Guise
Dares once adventure without the
Kings assent,
To meddle or attempt such dangerous
things.
Condy. My Lord you need
not mervaile at the Guise,
For what he doth the Pope will ratifie:
In murder, mischeefe, or in tiranny.
Navarre. But he that sits
and rules above the clowdes,
Doth heare and see the praiers of
the just:
And will revenge the bloud of innocents,
That Guise hath slaine by treason
of his heart,
And brought by murder to their timeles
ends.
Admirall. My Lord, but
did you mark the Cardinall
The Guises brother, and the Duke
Dumain:
How they did storme at these your
nuptiall rites,
Because the house of Burbon now
comes in,
And joynes your lineage to the crowne
of France?
Navarre. And thats the
cause that Guise so frowns at us,
And beates his braines to catch
us in his trap,
Which he hath pitcht within his
deadly toyle.
Come my Lords lets go to the Church
and pray,
That God may still defend the right
of France:
And make his Gospel flourish in
this land.
Exeunt.
[Scene ii]
Enter
the Duke of Guise.
Guise. If ever Hymen lowr’d
at marriage rites,
And had his alters decks with duskie
lightes:
If ever sunne stainde heaven with
bloudy clowdes,
And made it look with terrour on
the worlde:
If ever day were turnde to ugly
night,
And night made semblance of the
hue of hell,
This day, this houre, this fatall
night,
Shall fully shew the fury of them
all.
Apothecarie.
Enter
the Pothecarie.
Pothecarie. My Lord.
Guise. Now shall I prove
and guerdon to the ful,
The love thou bear’st unto
the house of Guise:
Where are those perfumed gloves
which late I sent
To be poysoned, hast thou done them?
speake,
Will every savour breed a pangue
of death?
Pothecarie. See where
they be my Lord, and he that smelles
but to them, dyes.
Guise. Then thou remainest
resolute.
Pothecarie. I am my Lord,
in what your grace commaundes till death.
Guise. Thankes my good
freend, I wil requite thy love.
Goe then, present them to the Queene
Navarre:
For she is that huge blemish in
our eye,
That makes these upstart hérésies
in Fraunce:
Be gone my freend, present them
to her straite.
Souldyer.
Exit
Pothecaier.
Enter
a Souldier.
Souldier. My Lord.
Guise. Now come thou forth
and play thy tragick part,
Stand in some window opening neere
the street,
And when thou seest the Admirall
ride by,
Discharge thy musket and perfourme
his death:
And then Île guerdon thee with
store of crownes.
Souldier. I will my Lord.
Exit
Souldier.
Guise. Now Guise, begin
those deepe ingendred thoughts
To burst abroad, those never dying
flames,
Which cannot be extinguisht but
by bloud.
Oft have I leveld, and at last have
learnd,
That perill is the cheefest way
to happines,
And resolution honors fairest aime.
What glory is there in a common
good,
That hanges for every peasant to
atchive?
That like I best that flyes beyond
my reach.
Set me to scale the high Peramides,
And thereon set the Diadem of Fraunce,
Île either rend it with my
nayles to naught,
Or mount the top with my aspiring
winges,
Although my downfall be the deepest
hell.
For this, I wake, when others think
I sleepe,
For this, I waite, that scorn attendance
else:
For this, my quenchles thirst whereon
I builde,
Hath often pleaded kindred to the
King.
For this, this head, this heart,
this hand and sworde,
Contrive, imagine and fully execute
Matters of importe, aimed at
by many,
Yet understoode by none.
For this, hath heaven engendred
me of earth,
For this, the earth sustaines my
bodies weight,
And with this wait Île counterpoise
a Crowne,
Or with séditions weary all
the worlde:
For this, from Spaine the stately
Catholic
Sends Indian golde to coyne me French
ecues:
For this have I a largesse from
the Pope,
A pension and a dispensation too:
And by that priviledge to worke
upon,
My policye hath framde religion.
Religion: O Diabole.
Fye, I am ashamde, how ever that
I seeme,
To think a word of such a simple
sound,
Of so great matter should be made
the ground.
The gentle King whose pleasure uncontrolde,
Weakneth his body, and will waste
his Realme,
If I repaire not what he ruinates:
Him as a childe I dayly winne with
words,
So that for proofe, he barely beares
the name:
I execute, and he sustaines the
blame.
The Mother Queene workes wonders
for my sake,
And in my love entombes the hope
of Fraunce:
Rifling the bowels of her treasurie,
To supply my wants and necessitie.
Paris hath full five hundred Colledges,
As Monestaries, Priories, Abbyes
and halles,
Wherein are thirtie thousand able
men,
Besides a thousand sturdy student
Catholicks,
And more: of my knowledge in
one cloyster keep,
Five hundred fatte Franciscan Fryers
and priestes.
All this and more, if more may be
comprisde,
To bring the will of our desires
to end.
Then Guise,
Since thou hast all the Cardes within
thy hands
To shuffle or to cut, take this
as surest thing:
That right or wrong, thou deal’st
thy selfe a King.
I but, Navarre. Tis but a nook
of France.
Sufficient yet for such a pettie
King:
That with a rablement of his hereticks,
Blindes Europs eyes and troubleth
our estate:
Him will we
Pointing
to his Sworde.
But first lets follow those in France.
That hinder our possession to the
crowne:
As Cæsar to his souldiers, so say
I:
Those that hate me, will I learn
to loath.
Give me a look, that when I bend
the browes,
Pale death may walke in furrowes
of my face:
A hand, that with a graspe may gripe
the world,
An eare, to heare what my detractors
say,
A royall seate, a scepter and a
crowne:
That those which doe behold them
may become
As men that stand and gase against
the Sunne.
The plot is laide, and things
shall come to passe,
Where resolution strives for victory.
Exit.
[Scene iii]
Enter the King of Navar and Queen
[Margaret], and his [olde] Mother Queen [of
Navarre], the Prince of Condy, the Admirall, and
the Pothecary with the gloves, and gives them to the
olde Queene.
Pothecarie. Maddame, I
beseech your grace to except this simple gift.
Old Queene. Thanks
my good freend, holde, take thou this reward.
Pothecarie. I humbly thank
your Majestie.
Exit
Pothecary.
Old Queene. Me thinkes
the gloves have a very strong perfume,
The sent whereof doth make my head
to ake.
Navarre. Doth not your
grace know the man that gave them you?
Old Queene. Not wel,
but do remember such a man.
Admirall. Your grace was
ill advisde to take them then,
Considering of these dangerous times.
Old Queene. Help
sonne Navarre, I am poysoned.
Queene Margaret.
The heavens forbid your highnes such mishap.
Navarre. The late suspition
of the Duke of Guise,
Might well have moved your highnes
to beware
How you did meddle with such dangerous
giftes.
Queene Margaret.
Too late it is my Lord if that be true
To blame her highnes, but I hope
it be
Only some naturall passion makes
her sicke.
Old Queene. O no,
sweet Margaret, the fatall poyson
Doth work within my heart, my brain
pan breakes,
My heart doth faint, I dye.
She
dyes.
Navarre. My Mother poysoned
heere before my face:
O gracious God, what times are these?
O graunt sweet God my daies may
end with hers,
That I with her may dye and live
againe.
Queene Margaret.
Let not this heavy chaunce my dearest Lord,
(For whose effects my soule is massacred)
Infect thy gracious brest with fresh
supply,
To agravate our sodaine miserie.
Admirall. Come my Lords
let us beare her body hence,
And see it honoured with just solemnitie.
As
they are going, [enter] the Souldier [above, who] dischargeth
his
musket at the Lord Admirall [and exit].
Condy. What are you hurt
my Lord high Admiral?
Admirall. I my good Lord,
shot through the arme.
Navarre. We are betraide,
come my Lords, and let us goe tell
the King of this.
Admirall. These are the
cursed Guisians that doe seeke our death.
Oh fatall was this mariage
to us all.
They
beare away the [olde] Queene [of Navarre] and
goe out.
[Scene iv]
Enter
[Charles] the King, [Catherine] the Queene Mother,
Duke of Guise,
Duke
Anjou, Duke Demayne [and Cossin, Captain of the Kings
Guard].
Queene mother. My
noble sonne, and princely Duke of Guise,
Now have we got the fatall stragling
deere,
Within the compasse of a deadly
toyle,
And as we late decreed we may perfourme.
Charles. Madam, it wilbe
noted through the world,
An action bloudy and tirannicall:
Cheefely since under safetie of
our word,
They justly challenge their protection:
Besides my heart relentes that
noble men,
Onely corrupted in religion,
Ladies of honor, Knightes and Gentlemen,
Should for their conscience taste
such rutheles ends.
Anjoy. Though gentle minces
should pittie others paines,
Yet will the wisest note their proper
greefes:
And rather seeke to scourge their
enemies,
Then be themselves base subjects
to the whip.
Guise. Me thinkes my Lord,
Anjoy hath well advisde
Your highnes to consider of the
thing,
And rather chuse to seek your countries
good,
Then pittie or releeve these upstart
hereticks.
Queene mother. I
hope these reasons mayserve my princely, Sonne,
To have some care for feare of enemies.
Charles. Well Madam, I
referre it to your Majestie,
And to my Nephew heere the Duke
of Guise:
What you determine, I will ratifie.
Queene mother. Thankes
to my princely sonne, then tell me Guise,
What order wil you set downe for
the Massacre?
Guise. Thus Madame.
They that shalbe actors in this
Massacre,
Shall weare white crosses on their
Burgonets,
And tye white linnen scarfes about
their armes.
He that wantes these, and is suspect
of hérésie,
Shall dye, or be he King or Emperour.
Then Île have a peale of ordinance
shot from the tower,
At which they all shall issue out
and set the streetes.
And then the watchword being given,
a bell shall ring,
Which when they heare, they shall
begin to kill:
And never cease untill that bell
shall cease,
Then breath a while.
Enter
the Admirals man.
Charles. How now fellow,
what newes?
Man. And it please your
grace the Lord high Admirall,
Riding the streetes was traiterously
shot,
And most humbly intreates your Majestie
To visite him sick in his bed.
Charles. Messenger, tell
him I will see him straite.
Exit
Messenger.
What shall we doe now with the Admirall?
Queene mother. Your
Majesty had best goe visite him,
And make a shew as if all were well.
Charles. Content, I will
goe visite the Admirall.
Guise. And I will goe
take order for his death.
Exit
Guise.
Enter
the Admirall in his bed.
Charles. How fares it
with my Lord high Admiral,
Hath he been hurt with villaines
in the street?
I vow and sweare as I am King of
France,
To finde and to repay the man with
death:
With death delay’d and torments
never usde,
That durst presume for hope of any
gaine,
To hurt the noble man his sovereign
loves.
Admirall. Ah my good Lord,
these are the Guisians,
That seeke to massacre our guiltles
lives.
Charles. Assure your selfe
my good Lord Admirall,
I deepely sorrow for your trecherous
wrong:
And that I am not more secure my
selfe,
Then I am carefull you should be
preserved.
Cossin, take twenty of our strongest
guarde,
And under your direction see they
keep
All trecherous violence from our
noble freend,
Repaying all attempts with present
death,
Upon the cursed breakers of our
peace.
And so be pacient good Lord Admirall,
And every hower I will visite
you.
Exeunt
omnes.
[Scene v]
Enter
Guise, Anjoy, Dumaine, Gonzago, Retes, Montsorrell,
and
Souldiers
to the massacre.
Guise. Anjoy, Dumaine,
Gonzago, Retes, sweare by
The argent crosses on your burgonets,
To kill all that you suspect of
hérésie.
Dumaine. I sweare by this
to be unmercifull.
Anjoy. I am disguisde
and none nows who I am,
And therfore meane to murder all
I meet.
Gonzago. And so will I.
Retes. And I.
Guise. Away then, break
into the Admirals house.
GETES. I let the Admirall be
first dispatcht.
Guise. The Admirall,
Cheefe standard bearer to the Lutheranes,
Shall in the entrance of this Massacre,
Be murdered in his bed.
Gonzago conduct them hither, and
then
Beset his house that not a man may
live.
Anjoy. That charge is
mine. Swizers keepe you the streetes,
And at ech corner shall the Kings
garde stand.
Gonzago. Come sirs follow
me.
Exit
Gonzago and others with him.
Anjoy. Cossin, the Captaine
of the Admirals guarde,
Plac’d by my brother, will
betray his Lord:
Now Guise shall catholiques
flourish once againe,
The head being of, the members cannot
stand.
Retes. But look my Lord,
ther’s some in the Admirals house.
Enter
[above Gonzago and others] into the Admirals house,
and
he in his bed.
Anjoy. In lucky time,
come let us keep this lane,
And slay his servants that shall
issue out.
Gonzago. Where is the
Admirall?
Admirall. O let me pray
before I dye.
Gonzago. Then pray unto
our Ladye, kisse this crosse.
Stab
him.
Admirall. O God forgive
my sins.
Guise. What, is he dead
Gonzago?
Gonzago. I my Lord.
Guise. Then throw him
down.
[The
body is thrown down. Exeunt Gonzago and rest above.]
Anjoy. Now cosin view
him well,
It may be it is some other, and
he escapte.
Guise. Cosin tis he, I
know him by his look.
See where my Souldier shot him through
the arm.
He mist him neer, but we have strook
him now.
Ah base Shatillian and degenerate,
Cheef standard bearer to the Lutheranes,
Thus in despite of thy Religion,
The Duke of Guise stampes on thy
liveles bulke.
Away with him, cut of his head and
handes,
And send them for a present to the
Pope:
And when this just revenge is finished,
Unto mount Faucon will we dragge
his coarse:
And he that living hated so the
crosse,
Shall being dead, be hangd thereon
in chaines.
Guise. Anjoy, Gonzago,
Retes, if that you three,
Will be as resolute as I and Dumaine:
There shall not a Hugonet breath
in France.
Anjoy. I sweare by this
crosse, wee’l not be partiall,
But slay as many as we can come
neer.
Guise. Mountsorrett, go
and shoote the ordinance of,
That they which have already set
the street
May know their watchword, and then
tole the bell,
And so lets forward to the Massacre.
Mountsorrell. I will my
Lord.
Exit
Mountsorrell.
Guise. And now my Lords
let us closely to our busines.
Anjoy. Anjoy will follow
thee.
Dumaine. And so will Dumaine.
The
ordinance being shot of, the bell tollés.
Guise. Come then, lets
away.
Exeunt.
The
Guise enters againe, with all the rest, with their
Swords drawne,
chasing
the Protestants.
Guise. Tue, tue,
tue,
Let none escape, murder the Hugonets.
Anjoy. Kill them, kill
them.
Exeunt.
Enter
Loreine running, the Guise and the rest pursuing him.
Guise. Loreine, Loreine,
follow Loreine.. Sirra,
Are you a preacher of these hérésies?
Loreine. I am a preacher
of the word of God,
And thou a traitor to thy soule
and him.
Guise. Dearely beloved
brother, thus tis written.
He
stabs him.
Anjoy. Stay my Lord, let
me begin the psalme.
Guise. Come dragge him
away and throw him in a ditch.
Exeunt
[omnes].
[Scene vi]
Enter
Mountsorrell and knocks at Serouns doore.
Serouns wife. Who
is’t that knocks there?
[Within.]
Mountsorrell. Mountsorrett
from the Duke of Guise.
Serouns wife. Husband
come down, heer’s one would speak with
you from the Duke of Guise.
Enter
Seroune.
Seroune. To speek with
me from such a man as he?
Mountsorrell. I, I, for
this Seroune, and thou shalt ha’t.
Shewing
his dagger.
Seroune. O let me pray
before I take my death.
Mountsorrell. Despatch
then quickly.
Seroune. O Christ my Saviour
Mountsorrell. Christ,
villaine?
Why, darst thou presume to call
on Christ,
Without the intercession of some
Saint?
Sanctus Jacobus hee was my Saint,
pray to him.
Seroune. O let me pray
unto my God.
Mountsorrell. Then take
this with you.
Stab
him [and he falls within and dies].
Exit.
[Scene vii]
Enter
Ramus in his studie.
Ramus. What fearfull cries
come from the river Séné,
That fright poore Ramus sitting
at his book?
I feare the Guisians have past the
bridge,
And meane once more to menace me.
Enter
Taleus.
Taleus. Flye Ramus flye,
if thou wilt save thy life.
Ramus. Tell me Taleus,
wherfore should I flye?
Taleus. The Guisians are
hard at thy doore,
And meane to murder us:
Harke, harke they come, Île
leap out at the window.
[Runs
out from studie.]
Ramus. Sweet Taleus stay.
Enter
Gonzago and Retes.
Gonzago. Who goes there?
Retes. Tis Taleus, Ramus
bedfellow.
Gonzago. What art thou?
Taleus. I am as Ramus
is, a Christian.
Retes. O let him goe,
he is a catholick.
Exit
Taleus.
Enter
Ramus [out of his studie].
Gonzago. Come Ramus, more
golde, or thou shalt have the stabbe.
Ramus. Alas I am a scholler,
how should I have golde?
All that I have is but my stipend
from the King,
Which is no sooner receiv’d
but it is spent.
Enter
the Guise and Anjoy [, Dumaine, Mountsorrell,
with
soldiers].
Anjoy. Whom have you there?
Retes. Tis Ramus, the
Kings professor of Logick.
Guise. Stab him.
Ramus. O good my Lord,
Wherein hath Ramus been so offencious?
Guise. Marry sir, in having
a smack in all,
And yet didst never sound any thing
to the depth.
Was it not thou that scoff’dst
the Organon,
And said it was a heape of vanities?
He that will be a flat decotamest,
And seen in nothing but Epitomies:
Is in your judgment thought a learned
man.
And he forsooth must goe and preach
in Germany:
Excepting against Doctors actions,
And ipse dixi with this
quidditie,
Argumentum testimonis est in
arte partialis.
To contradict which, I say Ramus
shall dye:
How answere you that? your nego
argumentum
Cannot serve, Sirrah, kill him.
Ramus. O good my Lord,
let me but speak a word.
Anjoy. Well, say on.
Ramus. Not for my life
doe I desire this pause,
But in my latter houre to purge
my selfe,
In that I know the things that I
have wrote,
Which as I heare one Shekins takes
it ill,
Because my places being but three,
contain all his:
I knew the Organon to be confusde,
And I reduc’d it into better
forme.
And this for Aristotle will I say,
That he that despiseth him, can
nere
Be good in Logick or Philosophie.
And thats because the blockish Sorbonests
Attribute as much unto their workes,
As to the service of the eternall
God.
Guise. Why suffer you
that peasant to declaime?
Stab him I say and send him to his
freends in hell.
Anjoy. Nere was there
Colliars sonne so full of pride.
Kill
him. [Close the studie.]
Guise. My Lord Anjoy,
there are a hundred Protestants,
Which we have chaste into the river
Séné,
That swim about and so preserve
their lives:
How may we doe? I feare me
they will live.
Dumaine. Goe place some
men upon the bridge,
With bowes and cartes to shoot
at them they see,
And sinke them in the river as they
swim.
Guise. Tis well advisde
Dumain, goe see it done.
Exit
Dumaine.
And in the mean time my Lord, could
we devise,
To get those pedantes from
the King Navarre,
That are tutors to him and the prince
of Condy
Anjoy. For that let me
alone, Cousin stay heer,
And when you see me in, then follow
hard.
He
knocketh, and enter the King of Navarre and Prince
of
Condy, with their scholmaisters.
How now my Lords, how fare you?
Navarre. My Lord, they
say
That all the protestants are massacred.
Anjoy. I, so they are,
but yet what remedy:
I have done all I could to stay
this broile.
Navarre. But yet my Lord
the report doth run,
That you were one that made this
Massacre.
Anjoy. Who I? you are
deceived, I rose but now
Enter
[to them] Guise.
Guise. Murder the Hugonets,
take those pedantes hence.
Navarre. Thou traitor
Guise, lay of thy bloudy hands.
Condy. Come let us goe
tell the King.
Exeunt
[Condy and Navarre].
Guise. Come sirs, Île
whip you to death with my punniards point.
He
kils them.
Anjoy. Away with them
both.
Exit
Anjoy [and soldiers with bodies].
Guise. And now sirs for
this night let our fury stay.
Yet will we not the Massacre shall
end:
Gonzago posse you to Orleance, Retes
to Deep,
Mountsorrell unto Roan, and spare
not one
That you suspect of heresy.
And now stay
That bel that to the devils mattins
rings.
Now every man put of his burgonet,
And so convey him closely to his
bed.
Exeunt.
[Scene viii]
Enter
Anjoy, with two Lords of Poland.
Anjoy. My Lords of Poland
I must needs confesse,
The offer of your Prince Elector’s,
farre
Beyond the reach of my desertes:
For Poland is as I have been enformde,
A martiall people, worthy such a
King,
As hath sufficient counsaile in
himselfe,
To lighten doubts and frustrate
subtile foes.
And such a King whom practice long
hath taught,
To please himselfe with mannage
of the warres,
The greatest warres within our Christian
bounds,
I meane our warres against the Muscovites:
And on the other side against the
Turke,
Rich Princes both, and mighty Emperours:
Yet by my brother Charles our King
of France,
And by his graces councell it is
thought,
That if I undertake to weare the
crowne
Of Poland, it may prejudice their
hope
Of my inheritance to the crowne
of France:
For if th’almighty take my
brother hence,
By due discent the Regall seat is
mine.
With Poland therfore must I covenant
thus,
That if by death of Charles, the
diadem
Of France be cast on me, then with
your leaves
I may retire me to my native home.
If your commission serve to warrant
this,
I thankfully shall undertake the
charge
Of you and yours, and carefully
maintaine
The wealth and safety of your kingdomes
right.
Lord. All this and more
your highnes shall commaund,
For Polands crowne and kingly diadem.
Anjoy. Then come my Lords,
lets goe.
Exeunt.
[Scene ix]
Enter
two with the Admirals body.
1. Now sirra, what shall we
doe with the Admirall?
2. Why let us burne him for
a heretick.
1. O no, his bodye will infect
the fire, and the fire the aire, and
so we shall be poysoned with him.
2. What shall we doe then?
1. Lets throw him into the
river.
2. Oh twill corrupt the water,
and the water the fish, and the
fish our selves when we eate them.
1. Then throw him into the
ditch.
2. No, no, to decide all doubts,
be rulde by me, lets hang him
upon this tree.
1. Agreede.
They
hang him.
Enter
the Duke of Guise, and Queene Mother, and the
Cardinall
[of Loraine].
Guise. Now Madame, how
like you our lusty Admirall?
Queene mother. Beleeve
me Guise he becomes the place so well,
That I could long ere this have
wisht him there.
But come lets walke aside, th’airs
not very sweet.
Guise. No by my faith
Madam.
Sirs, take him away and throw him
in some ditch.
Carry
away the dead body.
And now Madam as I understand, There
anre a hundred Hugonets and more, Which in the
woods doe horde their synagogue: And dayly
meet about this time of day, thither will I to
put them to the sword.
Queene mother. Doe
so sweet Guise, let us delay no time,
For if these straglers gather head
againe,
And disperse themselves throughout
the Realme of France,
It will be hard for us to worke
their deaths.
Guise. Madam,
I goe as whirl-winces rage before
a storme.
Exit
Guise.
Queene mother. My
Lord of Loraine have you marks of late,
How Charles our sonne begins
for to lament
For the late nights worke which
my Lord of Guise
Did make in Paris amongst the Hugonites?
Cardinall. Madam, I have
heard him solemnly vow,
With the rebellious King of Navarre,
For to revenge their deaths upon
us all.
Queene mother. I,
but my Lord, let me alone for that,
For Katherine must have her will
in France:
As I doe live, so surely shall he
dye,
And Henry then shall weare the diadem.
And if he grudge or crosse his Mothers
will,
Île disinherite him and all
the rest:
For Île rule France, but they
shall weare the crowne:
And if they storme, I then may pull
them downe.
Come my Lord let’s goe.
Exeunt.
[Scene x]
Enter
five or sixe Protestants with bookes, and kneele together.
Enter
also the Guise [and others].
Guise. Downe with the
Hugonites, murder them.
Protestant. O Mounser
de Guise, heare me but speake.
Guise. No villain, no
that toung of thine,
That hath blasphemde the holy Church
of Rome,
Shall drive no plaintes into the
Guises eares,
To make the justice of my heart
relent:
Tue, tue, tue, let
none escape:
Kill
them.
So, dragge them away.
Exeunt.
[Scene xi]
Enter
[Charles] the King of France, Navar and Epernoune
staying
him: enter Queene Mother, and the Cardinall [of
Loraine,
and Pleshe].
Charles. O let me stay
and rest me heer a while,
A griping paine hath ceasde upon
my heart:
A sodaine pang, the messenger of
death.
Queene mother. O
say not so, thou kill’st thy mothers heart.
Charles. I must say so,
paine forceth me to complain.
Navarre. Comfort your
selfe my Lord I have no doubt,
But God will sure restore you to
your health.
Charles. O no, my loving
brother of Navarre.
I have deserv’d a scourge
I must confesse,
Yet is there pacience of another
sort,
Then to misdoe the welfare of their
King:
God graunt my neerest freends may
prove no worse.
O horde me up, my sight begins to
faire,
My sinnewes shrinke, my brain turns
upside downe,
My heart doth break, I faint and
dye.
He
dies.
Queene mother. What
art thou dead, sweet sonne? speak to thy Mother.
O no, his soule is fled from out
his breast,
And he nor heares, nor sees us what
we doe:
My Lords, what resteth now for to
be done?
But that we presently despatch Embassadours
To Poland, to call Henry back againe,
To weare his brothers crowne and
dignity.
Epernoune, goe see it presently
be done,
And bid him come without delay to
us.
Epernoune Madam, I will.
Exit
Epernoune.
Queene mother. And
now my Lords after these funerals be done,
We will with all the speed we can,
provide
For Henries coronation from
Polonia:
Come let us take his body hence.
All
goe out, but Navarre and Pleshe.
Navarre. And now Navarre
whilste that these broiles doe last,
My opportunity may serve me fit,
To steale from France, and hye me
to my home.
For heers no saftie in the Realme
for me,
And now that Henry is cal’d
from Polland,
It is my due by just succession:
And therefore as speedily as I can
perfourme,
Île muster up an army secretdy,
For feare that Guise joyn’d
with the King of Spaine,
Might seek to crosse me in mine
enterprise.
But God that alwaies doth defend
the right,
Will shew his mercy and preserve
us still.
Pleshe. The vertues of
our poor Religion,
Cannot but march with many graces
more:
Whose army shall discomfort all
your foes,
And at the length in Pampelonia
crowne,
In spite of Spaine and all the popish
power,
That hordes it from your highnesse
wrongfully:
Your Majestie her rightfull Lord
and Soveraigne.
Navarre Truth Pleshe, and God so
prosper me in all,
As I entend to labour for the truth,
And true profession of his holy
word:
Come Pleshe, lets away while time
doth serve.
Exeunt.
[Scene xii]
Sound
Trumpets within, and then all crye vive lé
Roy two or
three
times.
Enter
Henry crowned: Queene [Mother], Cardinall [of
Loraine],
Duke
of Guise, Epernoone, [Mugeroun,] the kings Minions,
with
others,
and the Cutpurse.
All. Vive lé
Roy, vive lé Roy.
Sound
Trumpets.
Queene mother. Welcome
from Poland Henry once agayne,
Welcome to France thy fathers royall
seate,
Heere hast thou a country voice
of feares,
A warlike people to maintaine thy
right,
A watchfull Senate for ordaining
lawes,
A loving mother to preserve thy
state,
And all things that a King may wish
besides:
All this and more hath Henry with
his crowne.
Cardinall. And long may
Henry enjoy all this and more.
All. Vive lé
Roy, vive lé Roy.
Sound
trumpets.
King. Thanks to you al.
The guider of all crownes,
Graunt that our deeds may wel deserve
your loves:
And so they shall, if fortune speed
my will,
And yeeld our thoughts to height
of my desertes.
What say our Minions, think they
Henries heart
Will not both harbour love and Majestie?
Put of that feare, they are already
joynde,
No person, place, or time, or circumstance,
Shall slacke my loves affection
from his bent.
As now you are, so shall you still
persist,
Remooveles from the favours of your
King.
Mugeroun. We know that
noble minces change not their thoughts
For wearing of a crowne: in
that your grace,
Hath worne the Poland diadem, before
You were withvested in the crowne
of France.
King. I tell thee Mugeroun
we will be freends,
And fellowes to, what ever stormes
arise.
Mugeroun. Then may it
please your Majestie to give me leave,
To punish those that doe prophane
this holy feast.
He
cuts of the Cutpurse eare, for cutting of the golde
buttons
off his cloake.
King. How meanst thou
that?
Cutpurse. O Lord, mine
eare.
Mugeroun. Come sir, give
me my buttons and heers your eare.
Guise. Sirra, take him
away.
King. Hands of good fellow,
I will be his baile
For this offence: goe sirra,
worke no more,
Till this our Coronation day be
past:
And now,
Our rites of Coronation done,
What now remaines, but for a while
to feast,
And spend some daies in barriers,
tourny, tylte,
And like disportes, such as doe
fit the Coutr?
Lets goe my Lords, our dinner staies
for us.
Goe
out all, but the Queene [Mother] and the Cardinall.
Queene mother. My
Lord Cardinall of Loraine, tell me,
How likes your grace my sonnes pleasantnes?
His mince you see runnes on his
minions,
And all his heaven is to delight
himselfe:
And whilste he sleepes securely
thus in ease,
Thy brother Guise and we may now
provide,
To plant our selves with such authoritie,
That not a man may live without
our leaves.
Then shall the Catholick faith of
Rome,
Flourish in France, and none deny
the same.
Cardinall Madam, as I in secresy
was tolde,
My brother Guise hath gathered a
power of men,
Which are he saith, to kill the
Puritans,
But tis the house of Burbon that
he meanest
Now Madam must you insinuate with
the King,
And tell him that tis for his Countries
good,
And common profit of Religion.
Queene mother. Tush
man, let me alone with him,
To work the way to bring this thing
to passe:
And if he doe deny what I doe say,
Île dispatch him with his brother
presently.
And then shall Mounser weare the
diadem.
Tush, all shall dye unles I have
my will:
For while she lives Katherine will
be Queene.
Come my Lord, let us goe to seek
the Guise,
And then determine of this enterprise.
Exeunt.
[Scene xiii]
Enter
the Duchesse of Guise, and her Maide.
Duchesse. Goe fetch me
pen and inke.
Maid. I will Madam.
Exit
Maid.
Duchesse. That I may write
unto my dearest Lord.
Sweet Mugeroune, tis he that hath
my heart,
And Guise usurpes it, cause I am
his wife:
Faine would I finde some means to
speak with him
But cannot, and therfore am enforst
to write,
That he may come and meet me in
some place,
Where we may one injoy the others
sight.
Enter
the Maid with Inke and Paper.
So, set it down and leave me to
my selfe.
O would to God this quill that heere
doth write,
She
writes.
Had late been plucks from out
faire Cupids wing:
That it might print these lines
within his heart.
Enter
the Guise.
Guise. What, all alone
my love, and writing too:
I prethee say to whome thou writes?
Duchesse. To such a one,
as when she reads my lines,
Will laugh I feare me at their good
aray.
Guise. I pray thee let
me see.
Duchesse. O no my Lord,
a woman only must
Partake the secrets of my heart.
Guise. But Madam I must
see.
He
takes it.
Are these your secrets that no man
must know?
Duchesse. O pardon me
my Lord.
Guise. Thou trothles and
unjust, what lines are these?
Am I growne olde, or is thy lust
growne yong,
Or hath my love been so obscurde
in thee,
That others need to comment on my
text?
Is all my love forgot which helde
thee deare?
I, dearer then the apple of mine
eye?
Is Guises glory but a clowdy mist,
In sight and judgement of thy lustfull
eye?
Mor du, were not the fruit within
thy wombe,
On whose encrease I set some longing
hope:
This wrathfull hand should strike
thee to the hart
Hence strumpet, hide thy head for
shame,
And fly my presence if thou look’st
to live.
Exit
[Duchesse].
O wicked sexe, perjured and
unjust,
Now doe I see that from the very
first,
Her eyes and lookes sow’d
seeds of perjury,
But villaine he to whom these lines
should goe,
Shall buy her love even with his
dearest bloud.
Exit.
[Scene xiv]
Enter
the King of Navarre, Pleshe and Bartus, and their train,
with
drums and trumpets.
Navarre. Now Lords, since
in a quarrell just and right,
We undertake to mannage these our
warres
Against the proud disturbers of
the faith,
I meane the Guise, the Pope, and
King of Spaine,
Who set themselves to tread us under
foot,
And rend our true religion from
this land:
But for you know our quarrell is
no more,
But to defend their strange inventions,
Which they will put us to with sword
and fire:
We must with resolute minces resolve
to fight,
In honor of our God and countries
good.
Spaine is the counsell chamber of
the pope,
Spaine is the place where he makes
peace and warre,
And Guise for Spaine hath now incenst
the King,
To send his power to meet us in
the field.
Bartus. Then in this bloudy
brunt they may beholde,
The sole endevour of your princely
care,
To plant the true succession of
the faith,
In spite of Spaine and all his hérésies.
Navarre. The power of
vengeance now implants it selfe,
Upon the hauty mountains of my brest:
Plaies with her goary coulours
of revenge,
Whom I respect as leaves of boasting
greene,
That change their coulour when the
winter comes,
When I shall vaunt as victor in
revenge.
Enter
a Messenger.
How now sirra, what newes?
Messenger. My Lord, as
by our scoutes we understande,
A mighty army comes from France
with speed:
Which is already mustered in the
land,
And meanesto meet your highnes in
the field.
Navarre. In Gods name,
let them come.
This is the Guise that hath incenst
the King,
To leavy armes and make these civill
broyles:
But canst thou tell me who is their
generall?
Messenger. Not yet my
Lord, for thereon doe they stay:
But as report doth goe, the Duke
of Joyeux
Hath made great sute unto
the King therfore.
Navarre. It will not countervaile
his paines I hope,
I would the Guise in his steed might
have come,
But he doth lurke within his drousie
couch,
And makes his footstoole on securitie:
So he be safe he cares not what
becomes,
Of King or Country, no not for them
both.
But come my Lords, let us away with
speed,
And place our selves in order for
the fight.
Exeunt.
[Scene xv]
Enter
[Henry] the King of France, Duke of Guise, Epernoune,
and
Duke Joyeux.
King. My sweet Joyeux,
I make thee Generall,
Of all my army now in readines,
To march against the rebellious
King Navarre:
At thy request I am content thou
go’st,
Although my love to thee can hardly
suffer’t,
Regarding still the danger of thy
life.
Joyeux. Thanks to your
Majestie, and so I take my leave.
Farwell my Lord of Guise and Epernoune.
Guise. Health and harty
farwell to my Lord Joyeux.
Exit
Joyeux.
King. How kindely Cosin
of Guise you and your wife
Doe both salute our lovely Minions.
He
makes hornes at the Guise.
Remember you the letter gentle sir,
Which your wife writ to my deare
Minion,
And her chosen freend?
Guise. How now my Lord,
faith this is more then need,
Am I to be thus jested at and scornde?
Tis more then kingly or Emperious.
And sure if all the proudest kings
beside
In Christendome, should beare
me such derision,
They should know I scornde them
and their mockes.
I love your Minions? dote on them
your selfe,
I know none els but hordes them
in disgrace:
And heer by all the Saints in heaven
I sweare,
That villain for whom I beare
this deep disgrace,
Even for your words that have incenst
me so,
Shall buy that strumpets favour
with his blood,
Whether he have dishonoured me or
no.
Par la mor du, Il
mora.
Exit.
King. Beleeve me, Epernoune
this jest bites sore.
Epernoune. My Lord, twere
good to make them frends,
For his othes are seldome spent
in vaine.
Enter
Mugeroun.
King. How now Mugeroun,
metst thou not the Guise at the doore?
Mugeroun. Not I my Lord,
what if I had?
King. Marry if thou hadst,
thou mightst have had the stab,
For he hath solemnely sworne thy
death.
Mugeroun. I may be stabd,
and live till he be dead,
But wherfore beares he me such deadly
hate?
King. Because his wife
beares thee such kindely love.
Mugeroun. If that be all,
the next time that I meet her,
Île make her shake off love
with her heeles.
But which way is he gone? Île
goe take a walk
On purpose from the Court to meet
with him.
Exit.
King. I like not this,
come Epernoune
Lets goe seek the Duke and make
them freends.
Exeunt.
[Scene xvi]
Alarums
within. The Duke Joyeux slaine.
Enter
the King of Navarre [, Bartus,] and his traîne.
Navarre. The Duke is slaine
and all his power dispearst,
And we are grac’d with wreathes
of victory:
Thus God we see doth ever guide
the right,
To make his glory great upon the
earth.
Bartus. The terrour of
this happy victory,
I hope will make the King surcease
his hate:
And either never mannage army more,
Or else employ them in some better
cause.
Navarre. How many noble
men have lost their lives,
In prosecution of these quell armes,
Is ruth and almost death to call
to mince:
Put God we know will alwaies put
them downe,
That lift themselves against the
perfect truth,
Which Île maintaine as long
as life doth last:
And with the Queene of England joyne
my force,
To beat the papall Monarck from
our lands,
And keep those relicks from our
countries coastes.
Come my Lords, now that the storme
is overpass,
Let us away with triumph to our
tents.
Exeunt.
[Scene xvii]
Enter a Souldier.
Souldier. Sir, to you sir,
that dare make the Duke a cuckolde, and use a counterfeite
key to his privie Chamber doore: And although
you take out nothing but your owne, yet you put in
that which displeaseth him, and so forestall his
market, and set up your standing where you should
not: and whereas tree is your Landlord, you
would take upon you to be his, and tyll the ground
that he himself should occupy, which is his own
free land. If it be not too free there’s
the question: and though I come not to take possession
(as I would I might) yet I meane to keepe you out,
which I will if this geare horde: what are
ye come so soone? have at ye sir.
Enter
Mugeroun.
He
shootes at him and killes him.
Enter
the Guise [attended].
Guise. Holde thee tall
Souldier, take thou this and flye.
Exit
Souldier.
Lye there the Kings delight, and
Guises scorne.
Revenge it Henry as thou list’st
or dar’st,
I did it only in despite of thee.
Take
him away.
Enter
the King and Epernoune.
King. My Lord of Guise,
we understand that you
Have gathered a power of men.
What your intent is yet we cannot
learn,
But we presume it is not for our
good.
Guise. Why I am no traitor
to the crowne of France.
What I have done tis for the Gospel’s
sake.
Epernoune. Nay for the
Popes sake, and shine owne benefite.
What Peere in France but thou (aspiring
Guise)
Durst be in armes without the Kings
consent?
I challenge thee for treason in
the cause.
Guise. Oh base Epernoune,
were not his highnes heere,
Thou shouldst perceive the Duke
of Guise is mov’d.
King. Be patient Guise
and threat not Epernoune,
Least thou perceive the King of
France be mov’d.
Guise. Why? I am
a Prince of the Valoyses line,
Therfore an enemy to the Burbonites.
I am a juror in the holy league,
And therfore hated of the Protestants.
What should I doe but stand upon
my guarde?
And being able, Île keep
an hoast in pay.
Epernoune. Thou able to
maintaine an hoast in pay,
That livest by forraine exhibition?
The Pope and King of Spaine are
thy good frends,
Else all France knowes how poor
a Duke thou art.
King. I, those are they
that feed him with their golde,
To countermaund our will and check
our freends.
Guise. My Lord, to speak
more plainely, thus it is:
Being animated by Religious zeale,
I meane to muster all the power
I can,
To overthrow those factious Puritans:
And know, the Pope will sell his
triple crowne,
I, and the catholick Philip King
of Spaine,
Ere I shall want, will cause his
Indians,
To rip the golden bowels of America.
Navarre that cloakes them underneath
his wings,
Shall feele the house of Lorayne
is his foe:
Your highnes need not feare mine
armies force,
Tis for your safetie and your enemies
wrack.
King. Guise, weare our
crowne, and be thou King of France,
And as Dictator make or warre or
peace,
Whilste I cry placet like a Senator.
I cannot brook thy hauty insolence,
Dismisse thy campe or else
by our Edict,
Be thou proclaimde a traitor throughout
France.
Guise. The choyse is hard,
I must dissemble.
[Aside.]
My Lord, in token of my true humilitie,
And simple meaning to your Majestie,
I kisse your graces hand, and take
my leave,
Intending to dislodge my campe
with speed.
King. Then farwell Guise,
the King and thou art freends.
Exit
Guise.
Epernoune. But trust him
not my Lord,
For had your highnesse seene with
what a pompe
He entred Paris, and how the Citizens
With gifts and shewes did entertaine
him
And promised to be at his commaund:
Nay, they fear’d not to speak
in the streetes,
That Guise ch, durst stand
in armes against the King,
For not effecting of his holines
will.
King. Did they of Paris
entertaine him so?
Then meanes he present treason to
our state.
Well, let me alone, whose within
there?
Enter one
with e pen and inke.
Make a discharge of all my counsell
straite,
And Île subscribe my name and
seale it straight.
My head shall be my counsell, they
are false:
And Epernoune I will be rulde by
thee.
Epernoune. My Lord,
I think for safety of your person,
It would be good the Guise were
made away,
And so to quite your grace of all
suspect.
King. First let us set
our hand and seale to this,
And then Île tell thee
what I meane to doe.
He
writes.
So, convey this to the counsell
presently.
Exit
one.
And Epernoune though I seeme milde
and calme,
Thinke not but I am tragicall within:
Île secretly convey me unto
Bloyse,
For now that Paris takes the Guises
parse,
Heere is not staying for the King
of France,
Unles he means to be betraide and
dye:
But as I live, so sure the Guise
shall dye.
Exeunt.
[Scene xviii]
Enter
the King of Navarre reading of a letter, and Bartus.
Navarre. My Lord, I am
advertised from France,
That the Guise hath taken armes
against the King,
And that Paris is revolted from
his grace.
Bartus. Then hath your
grace fit oportunitie,
To shew your love unto the King
of France:
Offering him aide against his enemies,
Which cannot but be thankfully receiv’d.
Navarre. Bartus, it shall
be so, poast then to Fraunce,
And there salute his highnesse in
our name,
Assure him all the aide we can provide,
Against the Guisians and their complices.
Bartus be gone, commend me to his
grace,
And tell him ere it be long,
Île visite him.
Bartus. I will my Lord.
Exit.
Navarre. Pleshe.
Enter
Pleshe.
Pleshe. My Lord.
Navarre. Pleshe, goe muster
up our men with speed,
And let them march away to France
amaine:
For we must aide the King against
the Guise.
Be gone I say, tis time that we
were there.
Pleshe. I goe my Lord.
[Exit.]
Navarre. That wicked Guise
I feare me much will be,
The wine of that famous Realme of
France:
For his aspiring thoughts aime
at the crowne,
He takes his vantage on Religion,
To plant the Pope and popelings
in the Realme,
And binde it wholy to the Sea of
Rome:
But if that God doe prosper mine
attempts,
And send us safely to arrive in
France:
Wee’l beat him back, and drive
him to his death,
That basely seekes the wine of his
Realme.
Exit.
[Scene xix]
Enter
the Captaine of the guarde, and three murtherers.
Captaine. Come on sirs,
what, are you resolutely bent,
Hating the life and honour of the
Guise?
What, will you not feare when you
see him come?
1. Feare him said you? tush,
were he heere, we would kill him
presently.
2. O that his heart were leaping
in my hand.
31. But when will he come that
we may murther him?
Captaine. Well then, I
see you are resolute.
1. Let us alone, I warrant
you.
Captaine. Then sirs take
your standings within this Chamber,
For anon the Guise will come.
All. You will give us
our money?
Captaine. I, I, feare
not: stand close, be resolute:
[The
murtherers go aside as if in the next room.]
Now fals the star whose influence
governes France,
Whose light was deadly to the Protestants:
Now must he fall and perish in his
height.
Enter
the King and Epernoune.
King. Now Captain of my
guarde, are these murtherers ready?
Captaine. They be my good
Lord.
King. But are they resolute
and armde to kill,
Hating the life and honour of the
Guise?
Captaine. I warrant you
my Lord.
[Exit.]
King. Then come proud
Guise and heere disgordge thy brest,
Surchargde with surfet of ambitious
thoughts:
Breath out that life wherein my
death was hid,
And end thy endles treasons with
thy death.
Enter
the Guise [within] and knocketh.
Guise. Holla varlet, hey:
Epernoune, where is the King?
Epernoune. Mounted his
royall Cabonet.
Guise. I prethee tell
him that the Guise is heere.
Epernoune. And please
your grace the Duke of Guise doth crave
Accesse unto your highnes.
King. Let him come in.
Come Guise and see thy traiterous
guile outreacht,
And perish in the pit thou mad’st
for me.
The
Guise comes to the King.
Guise. Good morrow to
your Majestie.
King. Good morrow to my
loving Cousin of Guise.
How fares it this morning with your
excellence?
Guise. I heard your Majestie
was scarcely pleasde,
That in the Court I bear so great
a traîne.
King. They were to blame
that said I was displeasde,
And you good Cosin to imagine it.
Twere hard with me if I should doubt
my kinne,
Or be suspicious of my deerest freends:
Cousin, assure you I am resolute,
Whatever any whisper in mine eares,
Not to suspect disloyaltye in thee,
And so sweet Cuz farwell.
Exit
King [and Epernoune].
Guise. So,
Now sues the King for favour to
the Guise,
And all his Minions stoup when I
commaund:
Why this tis to have an army in
the fielde.
Now by the holy sacrament I sweare,
As ancient Romanes over their Captive
Lords,
So will I triumph over this wanton
King,
And he shall follow my proud Chariots
wheeles.
Now doe I but begin to look about,
And all my former time was spent
in vaine:
Holde Sworde,
For in thee is the Guises hope.
Enter
one of the Murtherers.
Villaine, why cost thou look so
gastly? speake.
3. O pardon me my Lord of Guise.
Guise. Pardon thee, why
what hast thou done?
3. O my Lord, I am one of them
that is set to murder you.
Guise. To murder me, villaine?
3. I my Lord, the rest have
taine their standings in the next
roome, therefore good my Lord goe
not foorth.
Guise. Yet Cæsar shall
goe forth.
Let mean consaits, and baser men
feare death,
Tut they are pesants, I am Duke
of Guise:
And princes with their lookes ingender
feare.
2 MURD. Stand close, he is
comming, I know him by his voice.
Guise. As pale as ashes,
nay then tis time to look about.
All. Downe with him, downe
with him.
They
stabbe him.
Guise. Oh I have my death
wound, give me leave to speak.
2. Then pray to God, and aske
forgivenes of the King.
Guise. Trouble me not,
I neare offended him,
Nor will I aske forgivenes of the
King.
Oh that I have not power to stay
my life,
Nor immortalitie to be reveng’d:
To dye by Pesantes, what a greefe
is this?
Ah Sextus, be reveng’d
upon the King,
Philip and Parma, I am slaine for
you:
Pope excommunicate, Philip depose,
The wicked branch of curst Valois’s
line.
Vive la messe, perish
Hugonets,
Thus Cæsar did goe foorth, and
thus he dies.
He
dyes.
Enter
Captaine of the Guarde.
Captaine. What, have you
done?
Then stay a while and Île goe
call the King,
[Enter
King and Epernoune attended.]
But see where he comes.
My Lord, see where the Guise is
slaine.
King. Oh this sweet sight
is phisick to my soule,
Goe fetch his sonne for to
beholde his death:
[Exit
attendant.]
Surchargde with guilt of thousand
massacres,
Mounser of Loraine sinke away to
hell,
In just remembrance of those bloudy
broyles,
To which thou didst alure me being
alive:
And heere in presence of you all
I sweare,
I nere was King of France untill
this houre:
This is the traitor that hath spent
my golde,
In making forraine warres and cruel
broiles.
Did he not draw a sorte of English
priestes
From Doway to the Seminary at Remes,
To hatch forth treason gainst their
naturall Queene?
Did he not cause the King of Spaines
huge fleete,
To threaten England and to menace
me?
Did he not injure Mounser thats
deceast?
Hath he not made me in the Popes
defence,
To spend the treasure that should
strength my land,
In civill broiles between Navarre
and me?
Tush, to be short, he meant to make
me Munke,
Or else to murder me, and so be
King.
Let Christian princes that shall
heare of this,
(As all the world shall know our
Guise is dead)
Rest satisfed with this that heer
I sweare,
Nere was there King of France
so yoakt as I.
Epernoune. My Lord heer
is his sonne.
Enter
the Guises sonne.
King. Boy, look where
your father lyes.
Yong Guise. My father
slaine, who hath done this deed?
King. Sirra twas I that
slew him, and will slay
Thee too, and thou prove such a
traitor.
Yong Guise. Art thou
King, and hast done this bloudy deed?
Île be revengde.
He
offereth to throwe his dagger.
King. Away to prison with
him, Île clippe his winges
Or ere he passe my handes, away
with him.
Exit
Boy.
But what availeth that this traitors
dead,
When Duke Dumaine his brother is
alive,
And that young Cardinall that is
growne so proud?
Goe to the Governour of Orleance,
And will him in my name to kill
the Duke.
[Exit
Captaine of the Guarde.]
Get you away and strangle the Cardinall.
[Exit
murtherers.]
These two will make one entire Duke
of Guise,
Especially with our olde mothers
helpe.
Epernoune. My Lord, see
where she comes, as if she droupt
To heare these newest
Enter
Queene Mother [attended].
King. And let her croup,
my heart is light enough.
Mother, how like you this device
of mine?
I slew the Guise, because I would
be King.
Queene mother. King,
why so thou wert before.
Pray God thou be a King now this
is done.
King. Nay he was King
and countermanded me,
But now I will be King and rule
my selfe,
And make the Guisians stoup that
are alive.
Queene mother. I
cannot speak for greefe: when thou went home,
I would that I had murdered thee
my sonne.
My sonne: thou art a changeling,
not my sonne.
I curse thee and exclaime thee miscreant,
Traitor to God, and to the realme
of France.
King. Cry out, exclaime,
houle till thy throat be hoarce,
The Guise is slaine, and I rejoyce
therefore:
And now will I to armes, come Epernoune:
And let her greeve her heart out
if she will.
Exit
the King and Epernoune.
Queene mother. Away,
leave me alone to meditate.
Sweet Guise, would he had died so
thou wert heere:
To whom shall I bewray my secrets
now,
Or who will helpe to builde Religion?
The Protestants will glory and insulte,
Wicked Navarre will get the crowne
of France,
The Popedome cannot stand, all goes
to wrack,
And all for thee my Guise:
what may I doe?
But sorrow seaze upon my toyling
soule,
For since the Guise is dead, I will
not live.
Exit
[the attendants taking up body of the Guise].
[Scene xx]
Enter
two [Murtherers] dragging in the Cardenall [of Loraine].
Cardinall. Murder me not,
I am a Cardenall.
1. Wert thou the Pope thou
mightst not scape from us.
Cardinall. What, will
you fyle your handes with Churchmens bloud?
2. Shed your bloud,
O Lord no: for we entend to
strangle you.
Cardinall. Then there
is no remedye but I must dye?
1. No remedye, therefore prepare
your selfe.
Cardinall. Yet lives
My brother Duke Dumaine, and many
moe:
To revenge our deaths upon that
cursed King,
Upon whose heart may all the furies
gripe,
And with their pawes drench his
black soule in hell.
1. Yours my Lord Cardinall,
you should have saide.
Now
they strangle him.
So, pluck amaine,
He is hard hearted, therfore pull
with violence.
Come take him away.
Exeunt.
[Scene xxi]
Enter
Duke Dumayn reading of a letter, with others.
Dumaine. My noble brother
murthered by the King,
Oh what may I doe, to revenge thy
death?
The Kings alone, it cannot satisfie.
Sweet Duke of Guise our prop to
leane upon,
Now thou art dead, heere is no stay
for us:
I am thy brother, and île revenge
thy death,
And roote Valois’s line from
forth of France,
And béate proud Burbon to his
native home,
That basely seekes to joyne with
such a King,
Whose murderous thoughts will be
his overthrow.
Hee wild the Governour of Orleance
in his name,
That I with speed should have beene
put to death.
But thats prevented, for to end
his life,
And all those traitors to the Church
of Rome,
That durst attempt to murder noble
Guise.
Enter
the Frier.
Frier. My Lord, I come
to bring you newes, that your brother
the Cardinall of Loraine by the
Kings consent is lately strangled
unto death.
Dumaine. My brother Cardenall
slaine and I alive?
O wordes of power to kill a thousand
men.
Come let us away and leavy men,
Tis warre that must asswage the
tyrantes pride.
Frier. My Lord, heare
me but speak.
I am a Frier of the order of the
Jacobyns, that for my
conscience sake will kill the King.
Dumaine. But what doth
move thee above the rest to doe the deed?
Frier. O my Lord, I have
beene a great sinner in my dayes, and
the deed is meritorious.
Dumaine. But how wilt
thou get opportunitye?
Frier. Tush my Lord, let
me alone for that.
Dumaine. Frier come with
me,
We will goe talke more of this within.
Exeunt.
[Scene xxii]
Sound
Drumme and Trumpets, and enter the King of France,
and
Navarre, Epernoune, Bartus, Pleshe and Souldiers.
King. Brother of Navarre,
I sorrow much,
That ever I was prov’d your
enemy,
And that the sweet and princely
minde you beare,
Was ever troubled with injurious
warres:
I vow as I am lawfull King of France,
To recompence your reconciled love,
With all the honors and affections,
That ever I vouchsafte my dearest
freends.
Navarre. It is enough
if that Navarre may be
Esteemed faithfull to the King of
France:
Whose service he may still commaund
to death.
King. Thankes to my Kingly
Brother of Navarre.
Then there wee’l lye before
Lutetia’s walles,
Girting this strumpet Cittie with
our siege,
Till surfeiting with our afflicting
armes,
She cast her hatefull stomack to
the earth.
Enter
a Messenger.
Messenger. And it please
your Majestie heere is a Frier of the
order of the Jacobins, sent from
the President of Paris, that
craves accesse unto your grace.
King. Let him come in.
Enter
Frier with a Letter.
Epernoune. I like not
this Friers look.
Twere not amisse my Lord, if he
were searcht.
King. Sweete Epernoune,
our Friers are holy men,
And will not offer violence to their
King,
For all the wealth and treasure
of the world.
Frier, thou dost acknowledge me
thy King?
Frier. I my good Lord,
and will dye therein.
King. Then come thou neer,
and tell what newes thou bringst.
Frier. My Lord,
The President of Paris greetes your
grace,
And sends his dutie by these speedye
lines,
Humblye craving your gracious reply.
King. Île read them
Frier, and then Île answere thee.
Frier. Sancte Jacobus,
now have mercye on me.
He
stabs the King with a knife as he readeth the letter,
and
then
the King getteth the knife and killes him.
Epernoune. O my Lord,
let him live a while.
King. No, let the villaine
dye, and feele in hell,
Just torments for his trechery.
Navarre. What, is your
highnes hurt?
King. Yes Navarre, but
not to death I hope.
Navarre. God shield your
grace from such a sodaine death:
Goe call a surgeon hether strait.
[Exit
attendant.]
King. What irreligeous
Pagans partes be these,
Of such as horde them of the holy
church?
Take hence that damned villaine
from my sight.
[Exeunt
attendants with body]
Epernoune. Ah, had your
highnes let him live,
We might have punisht him for his
deserts.
King. Sweet Epernoune
all Rebels under heaven,
Shall take example by his punishment,
How they beare armes against
their soveraigne.
Goe call the English Agent hether
strait,
Île send my sister England
newes of this,
And give her warning of her trecherous
foes.
[Enter
Surgeon.]
Navarre. Pleaseth your
grace to let the Surgeon search your wound.
King. The wound I warrant
you is deepe my Lord,
Search Surgeon and resolve me what
thou seest.
The
Surgeon searcheth.
Enter
the English Agent.
Agent for England, send thy mistres
word,
What this detested Jacobin hath
done.
Tell her for all this that I hope
to live,
Which if I doe, the Papall Monarck
goes
To wrack, an antechristian kingdome
falles.
These bloudy hands shall teare his
triple Crowne,
And fire accursed Rome about his
eares.
Île fire his erased buildings
and incense
The papall towers to kisse the holy
earth.
Navarre, give me thy hand, I heere
do sweare,
To ruinate this wicked Church of
Rome,
That hatcheth up such bloudy practices.
And heere protest eternall love
to thee,
And to the Queene of England especially,
Whom God hath blest for hating Popery.
Navarre. These words revive
my thoughts and comfort me,
To see your highnes in this vertuous
minde.
King. Tell me Surgeon,
shall I live?
Surgeon. Alas my Lord,
the wound is dangerous,
For you are stricken with a poysoned
knife.
King. A poysoned knife?
what, shall the French king dye,
Wounded and poysoned, both at once?
Epernoune. O that that
damned villaine were alive againe,
That we might torture him with some
new found death.
Bartus. He died a death
too good, the devill of hell
Torture his wicked soule.
King. Oh curse him not
since he is dead.
O the fatall poyson workes within
my brest,
Tell me Surgeon and flatter not,
may I live?
Surgeon. Alas my Lord,
your highnes cannot live.
Navarre. Surgeon, why
saist thou so? the King may live.
King. Oh no Navarre, thou
must be King of France.
Navarre. Long may you
live, and still be King of France.
Epernoune. Or else dye
Epernoune.
King. Sweet Epernoune
thy King must dye. My Lords,
Fight in the quarrell of this valiant
Prince,
For he is your lawfull King and
my next heire:
Valoyses lyne ends in my tragédie.
Now let the house of Bourbon weare
the crowne,
And may it never end in bloud as
mine hath done.
Weep not sweet Navarre, but revenge
my death.
Ah Epernoune, is this thy love to
me?
Henry thy King wipes of these childish
teares,
And bids thee whet thy sword on
Sextus bones,
That it may keenly slice the Catholicks.
He loves me not the best that sheds
most teares,
But he that makes most lavish of
his bloud.
Fire Paris where these trecherous
rebels lurke.
I dye Navarre, come beare me
to my Sepulchre.
Salute the Queene of England in
my name,
And tell her Henry dyes her faithfull
freend.
He
dyes.
Navarre. Come Lords, take
up the body of the King,
That we may see it honourably interde:
And then I vow so to revenge his
death,
That Rome and all those popish Prelates
there,
Shall curse the time that ere Navarre
was King,
And rulde in France by Henries
fatall death.
They
march out with the body of the King, lying on foure
mens
shoulders with a dead march, drawing weapons on
the
ground.
Finis.