HENRY THE FOURTH, PART 1


By William Shakespeare


Dramatis Personae.


    KING HENRY the Fourth.

    PRINCE HENRY, Prince of Wales,    }
    Lord John of LANCASTER,            }    Sons to the king.

    Earl of WESTMORELAND.
    Sir Walter BLUNT.

    Sir John FALSTAFF.
    POINS.
    PETO.
    BARDOLPH.
    GADSHILL.
    Mistress Quickly, HOSTESS of the Boar's Head tavern in Eastcheap.

    1st CARRIER, 2nd CARRIER.
    OSTLER.
    CHAMBERLAIN.
    FRANCIS, a drawer.
    A VINTNER.

    A SHERIFF.

    1st TRAVELLER, 2nd TRAVELLER, six or eight other Travellers.

    Lords, Soldiers.


Rebels against the King:

    Thomas Percy, Earl of WORCESTER.

    Henry Percy, Earl of NORTHUMBERLAND, brother to Worcester.
    Henry Percy, surnamed HOTSPUR, his son.
    LADY PERCY, Wife to Hotspur, and sister to Mortimer.

    Edmund MORTIMER, Earl of March.
    Lady Mortimer, daughter to Glendower, and wife to Mortimer.

    Archibald, Earl of DOUGLAS.
    Owen GLENDOWER, father to Lady Mortimer.
    Sir Richard VERNON.

    Richard Scroop, ARCHBISHOP of York.
    SIR MICHAEL, a friend to the Archbishop of York.

    A SERVANT to Hotspur.




Scene: England and Wales.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++


ACT 1.

Scene 1. London. The Palace.

Enter KING HENRY, Lord John of LANCASTER, Earl of WESTMORELAND, Sir Walter 
BLUNT, with OTHERS.

King Henry    So shaken as we are, so wan with care,
    Find we a time for frighted peace to pant
    And breathe short-winded accents of new broils
    To be commenced in stronds afar remote.

    No more the thirsty entrance of this soil
    Shall daub her lips with her own children's blood;
    No more shall trenching war channel her fields,
    Nor bruise her flow'rets with the armed hoofs
    Of hostile paces. Those opposed eyes
    Which, like the meteors of a troubled heaven,
    All of one nature, of one substance bred,
    Did lately meet in the intestine shock
    And furious close of civil butchery,
    Shall now in mutual well-beseeming ranks
    March all one way, and be no more opposed
    Against acquaintance, kindred, and allies.
    The edge of war, like an ill-sheathed knife,
    No more shall cut his master. Therefore, friends,
    As far as to the sepulchre of Christ - 
    Whose soldier now, under whose blessed cross
    We are impressed and engaged to fight - 
    Forthwith a power of English shall we levy,
    Whose arms were moulded in their mothers' womb
    To chase these pagans in those holy fields
    Over whose acres walked those blessed feet
    Which fourteen hundred years ago were nailed
    For our advantage on the bitter cross.
    But this our purpose now is twelvemonth old,
    And bootless 'tis to tell you we will go:
    Therefor we meet not now. Then let me hear
    Of you, my gentle cousin Westmoreland,
    What yesternight our Council did decree
    In forwarding this dear expedience.

Westmoreland    My liege, this haste was hot in question,
    And many limits of the charge set down
    But yesternight, when all athwart there came
    A post from Wales, loaden with heavy news,
    Whose worst was that the noble Mortimer,
    Leading the men of Herefordshire to fight
    Against the irregular and wild Glendower,
    Was by the rude hands of that Welshman taken,
    A thousand of his people butchered,
    Upon whose dead corpse there was such misuse,
    Such beastly shameless transformation,
    By those Welshwomen done, as may not be
    Without much shame retold or spoken of.

King Henry    It seems then that the tidings of this broil
    Brake off our business for the Holy Land.

Westmoreland    This matched with other did, my gracious lord;
    For more uneven and unwelcome news
    Came from the north, and thus it did import:
    On Holy-rood Day the gallant Hotspur there - 
    Young Harry Percy -and brave Archibald,
    That ever-valiant and approved Scot,
    At Holmedon met,
    Where they did spend a sad and bloody hour;
    As by discharge of their artillery
    And shape of likelihood the news was told;
    For he that brought them, in the very heat
    And pride of their contention did take horse,
    Uncertain of the issue any way.

King Henry    Here is a dear, a true industrious friend,
    Sir Walter Blunt, new lighted from his horse,
    Stained with the variation of each soil
    Betwixt that Holmedon and this seat of ours;
    And he hath brought us smooth and welcome news.
    The Earl of Douglas is discomfited;
    Ten thousand bold Scots, two-and-twenty knights,
    Balked in their own blood did Sir Walter see
    On Holmedon's plains. Of prisoners Hotspur took
    Mordake, Earl of Fife and eldest son
    To beaten Douglas, and the Earl of Athol,
    Of Murray, Angus, and Menteith:
    And is not this an honourable spoil?
    A gallant prize? Ha, cousin, is it not?

Westmoreland    In faith, it is a conquest for a prince to boast of.

King Henry    Yea, there thou mak'st me sad, and mak'st me sin
    In envy that my Lord Northumberland
    Should be the father to so blest a son:
    A son who is the theme of honour's tongue,
    Amongst a grove the very straightest plant,
    Who is sweet Fortune's minion and her pride;
    Whilst I, by looking on the praise of him,
    See riot and dishonour stain the brow
    Of my young Harry. O that it could be proved
    That some night-tripping fairy had exchanged
    In cradle-clothes our children where they lay,
    And called mine Percy, his Plantagenet!
    Then would I have his Harry, and he mine.
    But let him from my thoughts. What think you, coz,
    Of this young Percy's pride? The prisoners
    Which he in this adventure hath surprised
    To his own use he keeps, and sends me word
    I shall have none but Mordake, Earl of Fife.

Westmoreland    This is his uncle's teaching, this is Worcester,
    Malevolent to you in all aspects,
    Which makes him prune himself, and bristle up
    The crest of youth against your dignity.

King Henry    But I have sent for him to answer this;
    And for this cause awhile we must neglect
    Our holy purpose to Jerusalem.
    Cousin, on Wednesday next our Council we
    Will hold at Windsor, so inform the lords;
    But come yourself with speed to us again,
    For more is to be said and to be done
    Than out of anger can be uttered.

Westmoreland    I will, my liege.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. London. The Prince's Lodging.

Enter PRINCE OF WALES and SIR JOHN FALSTAFF.

Falstaff    Now, Hal, what time of day is it, lad?

Prince Henry    Thou art so fat-witted with drinking of old sack, and 
unbuttoning thee after supper, and sleeping upon benches after noon, that thou 
hast forgotten to demand that truly which thou wouldst truly know. What a 
devil hast thou to do with the time of the day? Unless hours were cups of 
sack, and minutes capons, and clocks the tongues of bawds, and dials the signs 
of leaping-houses, and the blessed sun himself a fair hot wench in 
flame-coloured taffeta, I see no reason why thou shouldst be so superfluous to 
demand the time of the day.

Falstaff    Indeed you come near me now, Hal, for we that take purses go by 
the moon and the seven stars, and not "by Phoebus, he, that wand'ring knight 
so fair". And I prithee, sweet wag, when thou art a king, as God save thy 
grace -majesty I should say, for grace thou wilt have none - 

Prince Henry    What, none?

Falstaff    No, by my troth, not so much as will serve to be prologue to an 
egg and butter.

Prince Henry    Well, how then? Come, roundly, roundly.

Falstaff    Marry then, sweet wag, when thou art king let not us that are 
squires of the night's body be called thieves of the day's beauty: let us be 
Diana's foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions of the moon; and let men 
say we be men of good government, being governed, as the sea is, by our noble 
and chaste mistress the moon, under whose countenance we steal.

Prince Henry    Thou sayst well, and it holds well too; for the fortune of us 
that are the moon's men doth ebb and flow like the sea, being governed as the 
sea is by the moon. As for proof now: a purse of gold most resolutely snatched 
on Monday night, and most dissolutely spent on Tuesday morning; got with 
swearing "Lay by!", and spent with crying "Bring in!"; now in as low an ebb as 
the foot of the ladder, and by and by in as high a flow as the ridge of the 
gallows.

Falstaff    By the Lord, thou sayst true, lad -and is not my hostess of the 
tavern a most sweet wench?

Prince Henry    As the honey of Hybla, my old lad of the castle; and is not a 
buff jerkin a most sweet robe of durance?

Falstaff    How now, how now, mad wag? What, in thy quips and thy quiddities? 
What a plague have I to do with a buff jerkin?

Prince Henry    Why, what a pox have I to do with my hostess of the tavern?

Falstaff    Well, thou hast called her to a reckoning many a time and oft.

Prince Henry    Did I ever call for thee to pay thy part?

Falstaff    No, I'll give thee thy due, thou hast paid all there.

Prince Henry    Yea, and elsewhere, so far as my coin would stretch; and where 
it would not I have used my credit.

Falstaff    Yea, and so used it that were it not here apparent that thou art 
heir apparent -but I prithee, sweet wag, shall there be gallows standing in 
England when thou art king? And resolution thus fubbed as it is with the rusty 
curb of old father Antic the law? Do not thou when thou art king hang a thief.

Prince Henry    No, thou shalt.

Falstaff    Shall I? O rare! By the Lord, I'll be a brave judge.

Prince Henry    Thou judgest false already. I mean thou shalt have the hanging 
of the thieves, and so become a rare hangman.

Falstaff    Well, Hal, well; and in some sort it jumps with my humour as well 
as waiting in the court, I can tell you.

Prince Henry    For obtaining of suits?

Falstaff    Yea, for obtaining of suits, whereof the hangman hath no lean 
wardrobe. 'Sblood, I am as melancholy as a gib-cat or a lugged bear.

Prince Henry    Or an old lion, or a lover's lute.

Falstaff    Yea, or the drone of a Lincolnshire bagpipe.

Prince Henry    What sayst thou to a hare, or the melancholy of Moorditch?

Falstaff    Thou hast the most unsavoury similes, and art indeed the most 
comparative, rascalliest, sweet young prince. But, Hal, I prithee trouble me 
no more with vanity. I would to God thou and I knew where a commodity of good 
names were to be bought. An old lord of the Council rated me the other day in 
the street about you, sir, but I marked him not; and yet he talked very 
wisely, but I regarded him not; and yet he talked wisely, and in the street too.

Prince Henry    Thou didst well, for wisdom cries out in the streets, and no 
man regards it.

Falstaff    O, thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeed able to corrupt a 
saint. Thou hast done much harm upon me, Hal, God forgive thee for it. Before 
I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing; and now am I, if a man should speak truly, 
little better than one of the wicked. I must give over this life, and I will 
give it over -by the Lord, an I do not I am a villain! I'll be damned for 
never a king's son in Christendom.

Prince Henry    Where shall we take a purse tomorrow, Jack?

Falstaff    Zounds, where thou wilt, lad! I'll make one; an I do not, call me 
villain and baffle me.

Prince Henry    I see a good amendment of life in thee, from praying to 
purse-taking.

Falstaff    Why, Hal, 'tis my vocation, Hal; 'tis no sin for a man to labour 
in his vocation.

Enter POINS.

    Poins! Now shall we know if Gadshill have set a match. O, if men were to 
be saved by merit, what hole in hell were hot enough for him? This is the most 
omnipotent villain that ever cried "Stand!" to a true man.

Prince Henry    Good morrow, Ned.

Poins    Good morrow, sweet Hal. What says Monsieur Remorse? What says Sir 
John Sack-and-Sugar? Jack, how agrees the devil and thee about thy soul, that 
thou soldest him on Good Friday last for a cup of Madeira and a cold capon's 
leg?

Prince Henry    Sir John stands to his word, the devil shall have his bargain; 
for he was never yet a breaker of proverbs: he will give the devil his due.

Poins    Then art thou damned for keeping thy word with the devil.

Prince Henry    Else he had been damned for cozening the devil.

Poins    But my lads, my lads, tomorrow morning, by four o'clock early at Gads 
Hill! There are pilgrims going to Canterbury with rich offerings, and traders 
riding to London with fat purses. I have vizards for you all; you have horses 
for yourselves; Gadshill lies tonight in Rochester; I have bespoke supper 
tomorrow night in Eastcheap: we may do it as secure as sleep. If you will go, 
I will stuff your purses full of crowns; if you will not, tarry at home and be 
hanged.

Falstaff    Hear ye, Yedward: if I tarry at home and go not, I'll hang you for 
going.

Poins    You will, chops?

Falstaff    Hal, wilt thou make one?

Prince Henry    Who, I rob? I a thief? Not I, by my faith.

Falstaff    There's neither honesty, manhood, nor good fellowship in thee, nor 
thou camest not of the blood royal if thou darest not stand for ten shillings.

Prince Henry    Well then, once in my days I'll be a madcap.

Falstaff    Why, that's well said.

Prince Henry    Well, come what will, I'll tarry at home.

Falstaff    By the Lord, I'll be a traitor then, when thou art king.

Prince Henry    I care not.

Poins    Sir John, I prithee leave the Prince and me alone. I will lay him 
down such reasons for this adventure that he shall go.

Falstaff    Well, God give thee the spirit of persuasion and him the ears of 
profiting, that what thou speakest may move, and what he hears may be 
believed, that the true prince may, for recreation sake, prove a false thief, 
for the poor abuses of the time want countenance. Farewell, you shall find me 
in Eastcheap.

Prince Henry    Farewell, the latter spring! Farewell, All-hallown summer!
[Exit FALSTAFF.

Poins    Now, my good sweet honey lord, ride with us tomorrow. I have a jest 
to execute that I cannot manage alone. Falstaff, Bardolph, Peto, and Gadshill 
shall rob those men that we have already waylaid -yourself and I will not be 
there -and when they have the booty, if you and I do not rob them, cut this 
head off from my shoulders.

Prince Henry    How shall we part with them in setting forth?

Poins    Why, we will set forth before or after them, and appoint them a place 
of meeting, wherein it is at our pleasure to fail; and then will they 
adventure upon the exploit themselves, which they shall have no sooner 
achieved but we'll set upon them.

Prince Henry    Yea, but 'tis like that they will know us by our horses, by 
our habits, and by every other appointment, to be ourselves.

Poins    Tut, our horses they shall not see, I'll tie them in the wood; our 
vizards we will change after we leave them; and, sirrah, I have cases of 
buckram for the nonce, to immask our noted outward garments.

Prince Henry    Yea, but I doubt they will be too hard for us.

Poins    Well, for two of them, I know them to be as true-bred cowards as ever 
turned back; and for the third, if he fight longer than he sees reason, I'll 
forswear arms. The virtue of this jest will be the incomprehensible lies that 
this same fat rogue will tell us when we meet at supper: how thirty at least 
he fought with, what wards, what blows, what extremities he endured; and in 
the reproof of this lives the jest.

Prince Henry    Well, I'll go with thee. Provide us all things necessary and 
meet me tomorrow night in Eastcheap; there I'll sup. Farewell.

Poins    Farewell, my lord.
[Exit.

Prince Henry    I know you all, and will awhile uphold
    The unyoked humour of your idleness.
    Yet herein will I imitate the sun,
    Who doth permit the base contagious clouds
    To smother up his beauty from the world,
    That, when he please again to be himself,
    Being wanted, he may be more wondered at
    By breaking through the foul and ugly mists
    Of vapours that did seem to strangle him.
    If all the year were playing holidays,
    To sport would be as tedious as to work;
    But when they seldom come, they wished-for come,
    And nothing pleaseth but rare accidents.
    So when this loose behaviour I throw off
    And pay the debt I never promised,
    By how much better than my word I am,
    By so much shall I falsify men's hopes;
    And like bright metal on a sullen ground,
    My reformation, glitt'ring o'er my fault,
    Shall show more goodly and attract more eyes
    Than that which hath no foil to set it off.
    I'll so offend to make offence a skill,
    Redeeming time when men think least I will.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Windsor. The Council Chamber.

Enter the KING, NORTHUMBERLAND, WORCESTER, HOTSPUR, SIR WALTER BLUNT, with 
OTHERS.

King Henry    My blood hath been too cold and temperate,
    Unapt to stir at these indignities,
    And you have found me, for accordingly
    You tread upon my patience; but be sure
    I will from henceforth rather be myself,
    Mighty and to be feared, than my condition,

    Which hath been smooth as oil, soft as young down,
    And therefore lost that title of respect
    Which the proud soul ne'er pays but to the proud.

Worcester    Our house, my sovereign liege, little deserves
    The scourge of greatness to be used on it,
    And that same greatness, too, which our own hands
    Have holp to make so portly.

Northumberland                                        My lord - 

King Henry    Worcester, get thee gone, for I do see
    Danger and disobedience in thine eye.
    O, sir, your presence is too bold and peremptory,
    And majesty might never yet endure
    The moody frontier of a servant brow.
    You have good leave to leave us; when we need
    Your use and counsel we shall send for you.
[Exit WORCESTER.
    [To NORTHUMBERLAND.]
    You were about to speak.

Northumberland                                    Yea, my good lord.
    Those prisoners in your highness' name demanded,
    Which Harry Percy here at Holmedon took,
    Were, as he says, not with such strength denied
    As is delivered to your majesty.
    Either envy, therefore, or misprision,
    Is guilty of this fault, and not my son.

Hotspur    My liege, I did deny no prisoners;
    But I remember, when the fight was done,
    When I was dry with rage and extreme toil,
    Breathless and faint, leaning upon my sword,
    Came there a certain lord, neat and trimly dressed,
    Fresh as a bridegroom, and his chin new reaped
    Showed like a stubble-land at harvest-home.
    He was perfumed like a milliner,
    And 'twixt his finger and his thumb he held
    A pouncet-box, which ever and anon
    He gave his nose, and took't away again - 
    Who therewith angry, when it next came there
    Took it in snuff -and still he smiled and talked;
    And as the soldiers bore dead bodies by,
    He called them untaught knaves, unmannerly,
    To bring a slovenly unhandsome corpse
    Betwixt the wind and his nobility.
    With many holiday and lady terms
    He questioned me; amongst the rest demanded
    My prisoners in your majesty's behalf.
    I then, all smarting with my wounds being cold,
    To be so pestered with a popinjay,
    Out of my grief and my impatience
    Answered neglectingly, I know not what,
    He should, or he should not, for he made me mad
    To see him shine so brisk, and smell so sweet,
    And talk so like a waiting-gentlewoman
    Of guns and drums and wounds -God save the mark!
    And telling me the sovereign'st thing on earth
    Was parmacity for an inward bruise,
    And that it was great pity, so it was,
    This villainous saltpetre should be digged
    Out of the bowels of the harmless earth,
    Which many a good tall fellow had destroyed
    So cowardly, and but for these vile guns
    He would himself have been a soldier.
    This bald unjointed chat of his, my lord,
    I answered indirectly, as I said,
    And I beseech you let not his report
    Come current for an accusation
    Betwixt my love and your high majesty.

Blunt    The circumstance considered, good my lord,
    Whate'er Lord Harry Percy then had said
    To such a person, and in such a place
    At such a time, with all the rest retold,
    May reasonably die, and never rise
    To do him wrong, or any way impeach
    What then he said, so he unsay it now.

King Henry    Why, yet he doth deny his prisoners,
    But with proviso and exception
    That we at our own charge shall ransom straight
    His brother-in-law, the foolish Mortimer,
    Who, on my soul, hath wilfully betrayed
    The lives of those that he did lead to fight
    Against that great magician, damned Glendower,
    Whose daughter, as we hear, that Earl of March
    Hath lately married. Shall our coffers then
    Be emptied to redeem a traitor home?
    Shall we buy treason, and indent with fears
    When they have lost and forfeited themselves?
    No, on the barren mountains let him starve;
    For I shall never hold that man my friend
    Whose tongue shall ask me for one penny cost
    To ransom home revolted Mortimer.

Hotspur    Revolted Mortimer?
    He never did fall off, my sovereign liege,
    But by the chance of war. To prove that true
    Needs no more but one tongue for all those wounds,
    Those mouthed wounds, which valiantly he took
    When on the gentle Severn's sedgy bank,
    In single opposition, hand to hand,
    He did confound the best part of an hour
    In changing hardiment with great Glendower.
    Three times they breathed, and three times did they drink,
    Upon agreement, of swift Severn's flood,
    Who then, affrighted with their bloody looks,
    Ran fearfully among the trembling reeds
    And hid his crisp head in the hollow bank,
    Bloodstained with these valiant combatants.
    Never did bare and rotten policy
    Colour her working with such deadly wounds,
    Nor never could the noble Mortimer
    Receive so many, and all willingly.
    Then let not him be slandered with revolt.

King Henry    Thou dost belie him, Percy, thou dost belie him:
    He never did encounter with Glendower.
    I tell thee, he durst as well have met the devil alone
    As Owen Glendower for an enemy.
    Art thou not ashamed? But, sirrah, henceforth
    Let me not hear you speak of Mortimer.
    Send me your prisoners with the speediest means,
    Or you shall hear in such a kind from me
    As will displease you. My Lord Northumberland,
    We license your departure with your son.
    Send us your prisoners, or you will hear of it.
[Exeunt all but HOTSPUR and NORTHUMBERLAND.

Hotspur    An if the devil come and roar for them,
    I will not send them. I will after straight
    And tell him so, for I will ease my heart,
    Albeit I make a hazard of my head.

Northumberland    What, drunk with choler? Stay, and pause awhile;
    Here comes your uncle.

Re-enter WORCESTER.

Hotspur                                        Speak of Mortimer?
    Zounds, I will speak of him; and let my soul
    Want mercy if I do not join with him.
    Yea, on his part I'll empty all these veins,
    And shed my dear blood drop by drop in the dust,
    But I will lift the down-trod Mortimer
    As high in the air as this unthankful king,
    As this ingrate and cankered Bolingbroke.

Northumberland    Brother, the king hath made your nephew mad.

Worcester    Who struck this heat up after I was gone?

Hotspur    He will forsooth have all my prisoners;
    And when I urged the ransom once again
    Of my wife's brother, then his cheek looked pale,
    And on my face he turned an eye of death,
    Trembling even at the name of Mortimer.

Worcester    I cannot blame him: was not he proclaimed,
    By Richard that dead is, the next of blood?

Northumberland    He was, I heard the proclamation;
    And then it was when the unhappy king - 
    Whose wrongs in us God pardon! -did set forth
    Upon his Irish expedition;
    From whence he, intercepted, did return
    To be deposed, and shortly murdered.

Worcester    And for whose death we in the world's wide mouth
    Live scandalized and foully spoken of.

Hotspur    But soft, I pray you; did king Richard then
    Proclaim my brother Edmund Mortimer
    Heir to the crown?

Northumberland                            He did, myself did hear it.

Hotspur    Nay, then I cannot blame his cousin king,
    That wished him on the barren mountains starve.
    But shall it be that you that set the crown
    Upon the head of this forgetful man,
    And for his sake wear the detested blot
    Of murderous subornation -shall it be
    That you a world of curses undergo,
    Being the agents, or base second means,
    The cords, the ladder, or the hangman rather?
    O, pardon me that I descend so low
    To show the line and the predicament
    Wherein you range under this subtle king!
    Shall it for shame be spoken in these days,
    Or fill up chronicles in time to come,
    That men of your nobility and power
    Did gage them both in an unjust behalf - 
    As both of you, God pardon it, have done - 
    To put down Richard, that sweet lovely rose,
    And plant this thorn, this canker, Bolingbroke?
    And shall it in more shame be further spoken
    That you are fooled, discarded, and shook off
    By him for whom these shames ye underwent?
    No, yet time serves wherein you may redeem
    Your banished honours, and restore yourselves
    Into the good thoughts of the world again;
    Revenge the jeering and disdained contempt
    Of this proud king, who studies day and night
    To answer all the debt he owes to you
    Even with the bloody payment of your deaths.
    Therefore I say - 

Worcester                            Peace, cousin, say no more.
    And now I will unclasp a secret book,
    And to your quick-conceiving discontents
    I'll read you matter deep and dangerous,
    As full of peril and adventurous spirit
    As to o'erwalk a current roaring loud
    On the unsteadfast footing of a spear.

Hotspur    If he fall in, good night, or sink or swim!
    Send danger from the east unto the west,
    So honour cross it from the north to south,
    And let them grapple. O, the blood more stirs
    To rouse a lion than to start a hare!

Northumberland    Imagination of some great exploit
    Drives him beyond the bounds of patience.

Hotspur    By heaven, methinks it were an easy leap
    To pluck bright honour from the pale-faced moon,
    Or dive into the bottom of the deep,
    Where fathom-line could never touch the ground,
    And pluck up drowned honour by the locks,
    So he that doth redeem her thence might wear
    Without corrival all her dignities.
    But out upon this half-faced fellowship!

Worcester    He apprehends a world of figures here,
    But not the form of what he should attend.
    Good cousin, give me audience for a while.

Hotspur    I cry you mercy.

Worcester                        Those same noble Scots
    That are your prisoners - 

Hotspur                                        I'll keep them all.
    By God, he shall not have a Scot of them!
    No, if a Scot would save his soul he shall not.
    I'll keep them, by this hand!

Worcester                                    You start away,
    And lend no ear unto my purposes.
    Those prisoners you shall keep.

Hotspur                                        Nay, I will; that's flat.
    He said he would not ransom Mortimer,
    Forbade my tongue to speak of Mortimer,
    But I will find him when he lies asleep,
    And in his ear I'll holla "Mortimer!"
    Nay, I'll have a starling shall be taught to speak
    Nothing but "Mortimer", and give it him
    To keep his anger still in motion.

Worcester    Hear you, cousin, a word.

Hotspur    All studies here I solemnly defy
    Save how to gall and pinch this Bolingbroke;
    And that same sword-and-buckler Prince of Wales,
    But that I think his father loves him not
    And would be glad he met with some mischance,
    I would have him poisoned with a pot of ale.

Worcester    Farewell, kinsman; I'll talk to you
    When you are better tempered to attend.

Northumberland    Why, what a wasp-stung and impatient fool
    Art thou to break into this woman's mood,
    Tying thine ear to no tongue but thine own!

Hotspur    Why, look you, I am whipped and scourged with rods,
    Nettled, and stung with pismires, when I hear
    Of this vile politician Bolingbroke.
    In Richard's time -what do you call the place?
    A plague upon't, it is in Gloucestershire.
    'Twas where the madcap duke his uncle kept,
    His uncle York; where I first bowed my knee
    Unto this king of smiles, this Bolingbroke.
    'Sblood, when you and he came back from Ravenspurgh.

Northumberland    At Berkeley castle.

Hotspur    You say true.
    Why, what a candy deal of courtesy
    This fawning greyhound then did proffer me!
    "Look when his infant fortune came to age",
    And "gentle Harry Percy", and "kind cousin".
    O, the devil take such cozeners! God forgive me!
    Good uncle, tell your tale; I have done.

Worcester    Nay, if you have not, to it again;
    We'll stay your leisure.

Hotspur                                    I have done, i'faith.

Worcester    Then once more to your Scottish prisoners.
    Deliver them up without their ransom straight,
    And make the Douglas' son your only mean
    For powers in Scotland, which, for divers reasons
    Which I shall send you written, be assured
    Will easily be granted. [To NORTHUMBERLAND.] You, my lord,
    Your son in Scotland being thus employed,
    Shall secretly into the bosom creep
    Of that same noble prelate well-beloved,
    The Archbishop.

Hotspur                Of York, is it not?

Worcester                                        True; who bears hard
    His brother's death at Bristol, the Lord Scroop.
    I speak not this in estimation
    As what I think might be, but what I know
    Is ruminated, plotted, and set down,
    And only stays but to behold the face
    Of that occasion that shall bring it on.

Hotspur    I smell it. Upon my life it will do well!

Northumberland    Before the game is afoot thou still lett'st slip.

Hotspur    Why, it cannot choose but be a noble plot;
    And then the power of Scotland and of York
    To join with Mortimer, ha?

Worcester                                        And so they shall.

Hotspur    In faith, it is exceedingly well aimed.

Worcester    And 'tis no little reason bids us speed
    To save our heads by raising of a head;
    For, bear ourselves as even as we can,
    The king will always think him in our debt,
    And think we think ourselves unsatisfied,
    Till he hath found a time to pay us home.
    And see already how he doth begin
    To make us strangers to his looks of love.

Hotspur    He does, he does. We'll be revenged on him.

Worcester    Cousin, farewell. No further go in this
    Than I by letters shall direct your course.
    When time is ripe, which will be suddenly,
    I'll steal to Glendower and Lord Mortimer,
    Where you and Douglas and our powers at once,
    As I will fashion it, shall happily meet,
    To bear our fortunes in our own strong arms,
    Which now we hold at much uncertainty.

Northumberland    Farewell, good brother. We shall thrive, I trust.

Hotspur    Uncle, adieu. O, let the hours be short
    Till fields and blows and groans applaud our sport!
[Exeunt.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 2.

Scene 1. Rochester. An Inn yard.

Enter a CARRIER with a lantern in his hand.

1st Carrier    Heigh-ho! An it be not four by the day, I'll be hanged. 
Charles' Wain is over the new chimney, and yet our horse not packed. What, 
ostler!

Ostler    [Within.] Anon, anon.

1st Carrier    I prithee, Tom, beat Cut's saddle, put a few flocks in the 
point; poor jade is wrung in the withers out of all cess.

Enter another CARRIER.

2nd Carrier    Peas and beans are as dank here as a dog, and that is the next 
way to give poor jades the bots. This house is turned upside down since Robin 
Ostler died.

1st Carrier    Poor fellow never joyed since the price of oats rose -it was 
the death of him.

2nd Carrier    I think this be the most villainous house in all London road 
for fleas; I am stung like a tench.

1st Carrier    Like a tench? By the mass, there is ne'er a king christen could 
be better bit than I have been since the first cock.

2nd Carrier    Why, they will allow us ne'er a jordan, and then we leak in 
your chimney, and your chamber-lye breeds fleas like a loach.

1st Carrier    What, ostler! Come away and be hanged, come away!

2nd Carrier    I have a gammon of bacon and two razes of ginger to be 
delivered as far as Charing Cross.

1st Carrier    Godsbody! The turkeys in my pannier are quite starved. What, 
ostler! A plague on thee! Hast thou never an eye in thy head? Canst not hear? 
And 'twere not as good deed as drink to break the pate on thee, I am a very 
villain. Come, and be hanged! Hast no faith in thee?

Enter GADSHILL.

Gadshill    Good morrow, carriers, what's o'clock?

1st Carrier    I think it be two o'clock.

Gadshill    I prithee lend me thy lantern to see my gelding in the stable.

1st Carrier    Nay, by God, soft! I know a trick worth two of that, i'faith.

Gadshill    [To 2nd CARRIER.] I pray thee lend me thine.

2nd Carrier    Ay, when? Canst tell? Lend me thy lantern, quoth he! Marry, 
I'll see thee hanged first.

Gadshill    Sirrah carrier, what time do you mean to come to London?

2nd Carrier    Time enough to go to bed with a candle, I warrant thee. Come, 
neighbour Mugs, we'll call up the gentlemen; they will along with company, for 
they have great charge.
[Exeunt CARRIERS.

Gadshill    What ho, Chamberlain!

Enter CHAMBERLAIN.

Chamberlain    "At hand, quoth pick-purse."

Gadshill    That's even as fair as "At hand, quoth the chamberlain"; for thou 
variest no more from picking of purses than giving direction doth from 
labouring: thou layst the plot how.

Chamberlain    Good morrow, master Gadshill. It holds current that I told you 
yesternight: there's a franklin in the Wild of Kent hath brought three hundred 
marks with him in gold. I heard him tell it to one of his company last night 
at supper -a kind of auditor, one that hath abundance of charge too, God knows 
what. They are up already, and call for eggs and butter. They will away 
presently.

Gadshill    Sirrah, if they meet not with Saint Nicholas' clerks, I'll give 
thee this neck.

Chamberlain    No, I'll none of it; I pray thee keep that for the hangman, for 
I know thou worshippest Saint Nicholas as truly as a man of falsehood may.

Gadshill    What talkest thou to me of the hangman? If I hang I'll make a fat 
pair of gallows; for, if I hang, old Sir John hangs with me, and thou knowest 
he is no starveling. Tut, there are other Trojans that thou dream'st not of, 
the which for sport sake are content to do the profession some grace, that 
would, if matters should be looked into, for their own credit sake make all 
whole. I am joined with no foot-landrakers, no long-staff sixpenny strikers, 
none of these mad mustachio purple-hued maltworms, but with nobility and 
tranquillity, burgomasters and great oneyers, such as can hold in, such as 
will strike sooner than speak, and speak sooner than drink, and drink sooner 
than pray; and yet, zounds, I lie, for they pray continually to their saint, 
the commonwealth, or, rather, not pray to her, but prey on her, for they ride 
up and down on her and make her their boots.

Chamberlain    What, the commonwealth their boots? Will she hold out water in 
foul way?

Gadshill    She will, she will; justice hath liquored her. We steal as in a 
castle, cocksure. We have the receipt of fern-seed, we walk invisible.

Chamberlain    Nay, by my faith, I think you are more beholding to the night 
than to fern-seed for your walking invisible.

Gadshill    Give me thy hand; thou shalt have a share in our purchase, as I am 
a true man.

Chamberlain    Nay, rather let me have it, as you are a false thief.

Gadshill    Go to; homo is a common name to all men. Bid the ostler bring my 
gelding out of the stable. Farewell, you muddy knave.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. The Highway, near Gad's Hill.

Enter PRINCE, POINS, and PETO.

Poins    Come, shelter, shelter! I have removed Falstaff's horse, and he frets 
like a gummed velvet.

Prince Henry    Stand close!
[They stand aside.
Enter FALSTAFF.

Falstaff    Poins! Poins, and be hanged! Poins!

Prince Henry    [Advancing.] Peace, ye fat-kidneyed rascal! What a brawling 
dost thou keep!

Falstaff    Where's Poins, Hal?

Prince Henry    He is walked up to the top of the hill; I'll go seek him.
[Stands aside.

Falstaff    I am accursed to rob in that thief's company; the rascal hath 
removed my horse and tied him I know not where. If I travel but four foot by 
the square further afoot I shall break my wind. Well, I doubt not but to die a 
fair death for all this if I scape hanging for killing that rogue. I have 
forsworn his company hourly any time this two-and-twenty years, and yet I am 
bewitched with the rogue's company. If the rascal have not given me medicines 
to make me love him, I'll be hanged: it could not be else -I have drunk 
medicines. Poins! Hal! A plague upon you both! Bardolph! Peto! I'll starve ere 
I'll rob a foot further. And 'twere not as good a deed as drink to turn true 
man and to leave these rogues, I am the veriest varlet that ever chewed with a 
tooth. Eight yards of uneven ground is threescore and ten miles afoot with me, 
and the stony-hearted villains know it well enough. A plague upon it when 
thieves cannot be true one to another!
[They whistle.
    Whew! A plague upon you all! Give me my horse, you rogues. Give me my 
horse and be hanged!

Prince Henry    [Advancing.] Peace, ye fat guts! Lie down, lay thine ear close 
to the ground and list if thou canst hear the tread of travellers.

Falstaff    Have you any levers to lift me up again, being down? 'Sblood, I'll 
not bear my own flesh so far afoot again for all the coin in thy father's 
exchequer. What a plague mean ye to colt me thus?

Prince Henry    Thou liest, thou art not colted, thou art uncolted.

Falstaff    I prithee, good Prince Hal, help me to my horse, good king's son.

Prince Henry    Out, ye rogue! Shall I be your ostler?

Falstaff    Hang thyself in thine own heir-apparent garters! If I be ta'en, 
I'll peach for this. And I have not ballads made on you all, and sung to 
filthy tunes, let a cup of sack be my poison. When a jest is so forward, and 
afoot too, I hate it.

Enter GADSHILL and BARDOLPH.

Gadshill    Stand!

Falstaff    So I do, against my will.

Poins    O, 'tis our setter, I know his voice.
    [Advancing with PETO.] Bardolph, what news?

Bardolph    Case ye, case ye, on with your vizards! There's money of the 
king's coming down the hill; 'tis going to the king's exchequer.

Falstaff    You lie, ye rogue, 'tis going to the king's tavern.

Gadshill    There's enough to make us all.

Falstaff    To be hanged.

Prince Henry    Sirs, you four shall front them in the narrow lane; Ned Poins 
and I will walk lower. If they scape from your encounter, then they light on us.

Peto    How many be there of them?

Gadshill    Some eight or ten.

Falstaff    Zounds, will they not rob us?

Prince Henry    What, a coward, Sir John Paunch?

Falstaff    Indeed I am not John of Gaunt, your grandfather; but yet no 
coward, Hal.

Prince Henry    Well, we leave that to the proof.

Poins    Sirrah Jack, thy horse stands behind the hedge; when thou need'st him 
there thou shalt find him. Farewell, and stand fast.

Falstaff    Now cannot I strike him if I should be hanged.

Prince Henry    [Aside to POINS.] Ned, where are our disguises?

Poins    [Aside to PRINCE.] Here, hard by. Stand close.
[Exeunt PRINCE and POINS.

Falstaff    Now, my masters, happy man be his dole, say I. Every man to his 
business.

Enter the TRAVELLERS.

1st Traveller    Come, neighbour, the boy shall lead our horses down the hill; 
we'll walk afoot awhile and ease our legs.

Thieves    Stand!

2nd Traveller    Jesus bless us!

Falstaff    Strike! Down with them! Cut the villains' throats! Ah, whoreson 
caterpillars, bacon-fed knaves! They hate us youth. Down with them! Fleece them!

1st Traveller    O, we are undone, both we and ours for ever!

Falstaff    Hang ye, gorbellied knaves, are ye undone? No, ye fat chuffs; I 
would your store were here! On, bacons, on! What, ye knaves! -Young men must 
live. You are grand-jurors, are ye? We'll jure ye, faith.
[Here they rob them and bind them.
[Exeunt.
Re-enter PRINCE and POINS, disguised.

Prince Henry    The thieves have bound the true men; now could thou and I rob 
the thieves and go merrily to London -it would be argument for a week, 
laughter for a month, and a good jest for ever.

Poins    Stand close, I hear them coming.
[They stand aside.

Enter the Thieves again (FALSTAFF, BARDOLPH and PETO).

Falstaff    Come, my masters, let us share, and then to horse before day. And 
the Prince and Poins be not two arrant cowards there's no equity stirring. 
There's no more valour in that Poins than in a wild duck.
[As they are sharing, the PRINCE and POINS set upon them.
Prince Henry    Your money!

Poins    Villains!
[They all run away, and FALSTAFF, after a blow or two, runs away too, leaving 
the booty behind them.

Prince Henry    Got with much ease. Now merrily to horse.
    The thieves are all scattered, and possessed with fear
    So strongly that they dare not meet each other:
    Each takes his fellow for an officer.
    Away, good Ned. Falstaff sweats to death,
    And lards the lean earth as he walks along.
    Were't not for laughing, I should pity him.

Poins    How the fat rogue roared!
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Warkworth. A Room in the Castle.

Enter HOTSPUR solus, reading a letter.

Hotspur    [Reads.]    "But for mine own part, my lord, I could be well 
contented to be there, in respect of the love I bear your house."

    He could be contented -why is he not then? In respect of the love he bears 
our house! He shows in this he loves his own barn better than he loves our 
house. Let me see some more.

    [Reads.]    "The purpose you undertake is dangerous" - 

    Why, that's certain! 'Tis dangerous to take a cold, to sleep, to drink; 
but I tell you, my lord fool, out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this 
flower, safety.

    [Reads.]    "The purpose you undertake is dangerous, the friends you have 
named uncertain, the time itself unsorted, and your whole plot too light for 
the counterpoise of so great an opposition."

    Say you so, say you so? I say unto you again, you are a shallow cowardly 
hind, and you lie. What a lack-brain is this! By the Lord, our plot is a good 
plot as ever was laid, our friends true and constant -a good plot, good 
friends, and full of expectation; an excellent plot, very good friends. What a 
frosty-spirited rogue is this! Why, my Lord of York commends the plot and the 
general course of the action. Zounds, and I were now by this rascal I could 
brain him with his lady's fan. Is there not my father, my uncle, and myself? 
Lord Edmund Mortimer, my Lord of York, and Owen Glendower? Is there not, 
besides, the Douglas? Have I not all their letters to meet me in arms by the 
ninth of the next month, and are they not some of them set forward already? 
What a pagan rascal is this, an infidel! Ha, you shall see now, in very 
sincerity of fear and cold heart will he to the king and lay open all our 
proceedings! O, I could divide myself and go to buffets for moving such a dish 
of skim milk with so honourable an action! Hang him, let him tell the king -we 
are prepared. I will set forward tonight.

Enter LADY PERCY.

    How now, Kate! I must leave you within these two hours.

Lady Percy    O my good lord, why are you thus alone?
    For what offence have I this fortnight been
    A banished woman from my Harry's bed?
    Tell me, sweet lord, what is't that takes from thee
    Thy stomach, pleasure, and thy golden sleep?
    Why dost thou bend thine eyes upon the earth,
    And start so often when thou sitt'st alone?
    Why hast thou lost the fresh blood in thy cheeks,
    And given my treasures and my rights of thee
    To thick-eyed musing and curst melancholy?
    In thy faint slumbers I by thee have watched,
    And heard thee murmur tales of iron wars,
    Speak terms of manage to thy bounding steed,
    Cry "Courage! To the field!" And thou hast talked
    Of sallies and retires, of trenches, tents,
    Of palisadoes, frontiers, parapets,
    Of basilisks, of cannon, culverin,
    Of prisoners' ransom, and of soldiers slain,
    And all the currents of a heady fight.
    Thy spirit within thee hath been so at war,
    And thus hath so bestirred thee in thy sleep,
    That beads of sweat have stood upon thy brow
    Like bubbles in a late-disturbed stream;
    And in thy face strange motions have appeared,
    Such as we see when men restrain their breath
    On some great sudden hest. O, what portents are these?
    Some heavy business hath my lord in hand,
    And I must know it, else he loves me not.

Hotspur    What ho!

Enter a SERVANT.

                    Is Gilliams with the packet gone?

Servant    He is, my lord, an hour ago.

Hotspur    Hath Butler brought those horses from the sheriff?

Servant    One horse, my lord, he brought even now.

Hotspur    What horse? A roan, a crop-ear, is it not?

Servant    It is, my lord.

Hotspur                        That roan shall be my throne.
    Well, I will back him straight. O Esperance!
    Bid Butler lead him forth into the park.
[Exit SERVANT.

Lady Percy    But hear you, my lord.

Hotspur                            What sayst thou, my lady?

Lady Percy    What is it carries you away?

Hotspur    Why, my horse, my love, my horse.

Lady Percy    Out, you mad-headed ape!
    A weasel hath not such a deal of spleen
    As you are tossed with. In faith,
    I'll know your business, Harry, that I will.
    I fear my brother Mortimer doth stir
    About his title, and hath sent for you
    To line his enterprise; but if you go - 

Hotspur    So far afoot, I shall be weary, love.

Lady Percy    Come, come, you paraquito, answer me
    Directly unto this question that I ask.
    In faith, I'll break thy little finger, Harry,
    And if thou wilt not tell me all things true.

Hotspur    Away, away, you trifler! Love? I love thee not;
    I care not for thee, Kate. This is no world
    To play with mammets and to tilt with lips.
    We must have bloody noses and cracked crowns,
    And pass them current too. Gods-me, my horse!
    What sayst thou, Kate? What wouldst thou have with me?

Lady Percy    Do you not love me? Do you not indeed?
    Well, do not then; for since you love me not,
    I will not love myself. Do you not love me?
    Nay, tell me if you speak in jest or no.

Hotspur    Come, wilt thou see me ride?
    And when I am a-horseback I will swear
    I love thee infinitely. But hark you, Kate,
    I must not have you henceforth question me
    Whither I go, nor reason whereabout.
    Whither I must, I must; and, to conclude,
    This evening must I leave you, gentle Kate.
    I know you wise, but yet no farther wise
    Than Harry Percy's wife; constant you are,
    But yet a woman; and for secrecy
    No lady closer, for I well believe
    Thou wilt not utter what thou dost not know;
    And so far will I trust thee, gentle Kate.

Lady Percy    How? So far?

Hotspur    Not an inch further. But hark you, Kate,
    Whither I go, thither shall you go too.
    Today will I set forth, tomorrow you.
    Will this content you, Kate?

Lady Percy                                        It must of force.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Eastcheap. A Room in the Boar's Head Tavern.

Enter PRINCE.

Prince Henry    Ned, prithee come out of that fat room, and lend me thy hand 
to laugh a little.

Enter POINS.

Poins    Where hast been, Hal?

Prince Henry    With three or four loggerheads, amongst three or fourscore 
hogsheads. I have sounded the very base-string of humility. Sirrah, I am sworn 
brother to a leash of drawers, and can call them all by their christen names, 
as Tom, Dick, and Francis. They take it already, upon their salvation, that 
though I be but Prince of Wales, yet I am the king of courtesy, and tell me 
flatly I am no proud Jack like Falstaff, but a Corinthian, a lad of mettle, a 
good boy -by the Lord, so they call me! -and when I am king of England I shall 
command all the good lads in Eastcheap. They call drinking deep `dyeing 
scarlet', and when you breathe in your watering they cry `hem!' and bid you 
`Play it off'. To conclude, I am so good a proficient in one quarter of an 
hour that I can drink with any tinker in his own language during my life. I 
tell thee, Ned, thou hast lost much honour that thou wert not with me in this 
action. But, sweet Ned -to sweeten which name of Ned I give thee this 
pennyworth of sugar, clapped even now into my hand by an under-skinker, one 
that never spake other English in his life than `Eight shillings and 
sixpence', and `You are welcome', with this shrill addition, `Anon, anon, sir! 
Score a pint of bastard in the Half-moon!', or so -but, Ned, to drive away the 
time till Falstaff come, I prithee do thou stand in some byroom, while I 
question my puny drawer to what end he gave me the sugar, and do thou never 
leave calling `Francis!', that his tale to me may be nothing but `Anon'. Step 
aside, and I'll show thee a precedent.
[POINS stands aside.
Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Prince Henry    Thou art perfect.

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Enter FRANCIS, a Drawer.

Francis    Anon, anon, sir. [Calling.] Look down into the Pomgarnet, Ralph.

Prince Henry    Come hither, Francis.

Francis    My lord?

Prince Henry    How long hast thou to serve, Francis?

Francis    Forsooth, five years, and as much as to - 

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Francis    Anon, anon, sir.

Prince Henry    Five year? Byrlady, a long lease for the clinking of pewter. 
But, Francis, darest thou be so valiant as to play the coward with thy 
indenture, and show it a fair pair of heels and run from it?

Francis    O Lord, sir, I'll be sworn upon all the books in England I could 
find in my heart - 

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Francis    Anon, sir.

Prince Henry    How old art thou, Francis?

Francis    Let me see -about Michaelmas next I shall be - 

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Francis    Anon, sir. Pray, stay a little, my lord.

Prince Henry    Nay, but hark you, Francis. For the sugar thou gavest me, 
'twas a pennyworth, was't not?

Francis    O Lord, I would it had been two!

Prince Henry    I will give thee for it a thousand pound. Ask me when thou 
wilt, and thou shalt have it.

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Francis    Anon, anon.

Prince Henry    Anon, Francis? No, Francis; but tomorrow, Francis; or, 
Francis, a Thursday; or indeed, Francis, when thou wilt. But, Francis - 

Francis    My lord?

Prince Henry    Wilt thou rob this leathern-jerkin, crystal-button, 
knot-pated, agate-ring, puke-stocking, caddis-garter, smooth-tongue, Spanish 
pouch?

Francis    O Lord, sir, who do you mean?

Prince Henry    Why then, your brown bastard is your only drink; for look you, 
Francis, your white canvas doublet will sully. In Barbary, sir, it cannot come 
to so much.

Francis    What, sir?

Poins    [Within.] Francis!

Prince Henry    Away, you rogue! Dost thou not hear them call?
[Here they both call him; he stands amazed, not knowing which way to go.

Enter VINTNER.

Vintner    What, stand'st thou still and hear'st such a calling? Look to the 
guests within.
[Exit FRANCIS.
    My lord, old Sir John with half a dozen more are at the door. Shall I let 
them in?

Prince Henry    Let them alone awhile, and then open the door.
[Exit VINTNER.
    Poins!

Re-enter POINS.

Poins.    Anon, anon, sir.

Prince Henry    Sirrah, Falstaff and the rest of the thieves are at the door. 
Shall we be merry?

Poins    As merry as crickets, my lad. But hark ye, what cunning match have 
you made with this jest of the drawer? Come, what's the issue?

Prince Henry    I am now of all humours that have showed themselves humours 
since the old days of goodman Adam to the pupil age of this present twelve 
o'clock at midnight.

Re-enter FRANCIS.

    What's o'clock, Francis?

Francis    Anon, anon, sir.
[Exit.

Prince Henry    That ever this fellow should have fewer words than a parrot, 
and yet the son of a woman! His industry is upstairs and downstairs, his 
eloquence the parcel of a reckoning. I am not yet of Percy's mind, the Hotspur 
of the north -he that kills me some six or seven dozen of Scots at a 
breakfast, washes his hands, and says to his wife "Fie upon this quiet life! I 
want work". "O my sweet Harry," says she "how many hast thou killed today?" 
"Give my roan horse a drench," says he, and answers "Some fourteen" an hour 
after, "a trifle, a trifle". I prithee call in Falstaff; I'll play Percy, and 
that damned brawn shall play Dame Mortimer his wife. "Rivo!" says the 
drunkard. Call in Ribs, call in Tallow.

Enter FALSTAFF, GADSHILL, BARDOLPH, and PETO; followed by FRANCIS, with wine.

Poins    Welcome, Jack, where hast thou been?

Falstaff    A plague of all cowards, I say, and a vengeance too, marry and 
amen! Give me a cup of sack, boy. Ere I lead this life long, I'll sew 
netherstocks, and mend them and foot them too. A plague of all cowards! Give 
me a cup of sack, rogue; is there no virtue extant?
[He drinketh.

Prince Henry    Didst thou never see Titan kiss a dish of butter 
-pitiful-hearted Titan! -that melted at the sweet tale of the sun's? If thou 
didst, then behold that compound.

Falstaff    You rogue, here's lime in this sack too. There is nothing but 
roguery to be found in villainous man; yet a coward is worse than a cup of 
sack with lime in it. A villainous coward! Go thy ways, old Jack, die when 
thou wilt. If manhood, good manhood, be not forgot upon the face of the earth, 
then am I a shotten herring. There lives not three good men unhanged in 
England, and one of them is fat and grows old, God help the while! A bad 
world, I say. I would I were a weaver: I could sing psalms, or anything. A 
plague of all cowards, I say still.

Prince Henry    How now, woolsack, what mutter you?

Falstaff    A king's son! If I do not beat thee out of thy kingdom with a 
dagger of lath, and drive all thy subjects afore thee like a flock of wild 
geese, I'll never wear hair on my face more. You, Prince of Wales?

Prince Henry    Why, you whoreson round man, what's the matter?

Falstaff    Are not you a coward? Answer me to that -and Poins there?

Poins    Zounds, ye fat paunch! And ye call me coward, by the Lord, I'll stab 
thee.

Falstaff    I call thee coward? I'll see thee damned ere I call thee coward; 
but I would give a thousand pound I could run as fast as thou canst. You are 
straight enough in the shoulders, you care not who sees your back. Call you 
that backing of your friends? A plague upon such backing, give me them that 
will face me. Give me a cup of sack: I am a rogue if I drunk today.

Prince Henry    O villain, thy lips are scarce wiped since thou drunk'st last.

Falstaff    All is one for that.
[He drinketh.
    A plague of all cowards, still say I.

Prince Henry    What's the matter?

Falstaff    What's the matter? There be four of us here have ta'en a thousand 
pound this day morning.


Prince Henry    Where is it, Jack, where is it?

Falstaff    Where is it? Taken from us it is. A hundred upon poor four of us.

Prince Henry    What, a hundred, man?

Falstaff    I am a rogue if I were not at half-sword with a dozen of them two 
hours together. I have scaped by miracle. I am eight times thrust through the 
doublet, four through the hose; my buckler cut through and through, my sword 
hacked like a handsaw -ecce signum! I never dealt better since I was a man: 
all would not do. A plague of all cowards! Let them speak. If they speak more 
or less than truth, they are villains, and the sons of darkness.

Prince Henry    Speak, sirs, how was it?

Gadshill    We four set upon some dozen - 

Falstaff    Sixteen at least, my lord.

Gadshill    And bound them.

Peto    No, no, they were not bound.

Falstaff    You rogue, they were bound, every man of them, or I am a Jew else 
-an Ebrew Jew.

Gadshill    As we were sharing, some six or seven fresh men set upon us - 

Falstaff    And unbound the rest, and then come in the other.

Prince Henry    What, fought you with them all?

Falstaff    All? I know not what you call all, but if I fought not with fifty 
of them I am a bunch of radish. If there were not two- or three-and-fifty upon 
poor old Jack, then am I no two-legged creature.

Prince Henry    Pray God you have not murdered some of them.

Falstaff    Nay, that's past praying for: I have peppered two of them. Two I 
am sure I have paid -two rogues in buckram suits. I tell thee what, Hal, if I 
tell thee a lie, spit in my face, call me horse. Thou knowest my old ward 
-here I lay, and thus I bore my point. Four rogues in buckram let drive at me.

Prince Henry    What, four? Thou said'st but two even now.

Falstaff    Four, Hal, I told thee four.

Poins    Ay, ay, he said four.

Falstaff    These four came all affront, and mainly thrust at me. I made me no 
more ado, but took all their seven points in my target, thus.

Prince Henry    Seven? Why, there were but four even now.

Falstaff    In buckram?

Poins    Ay, four, in buckram suits.

Falstaff    Seven, by these hilts, or I am a villain else.

Prince Henry    [Aside to POINS.] Prithee let him alone, we shall have more 
anon.

Falstaff    Dost thou hear me, Hal?

Prince Henry    Ay, and mark thee too, Jack.

Falstaff    Do so, for it is worth the listening to. These nine in buckram 
that I told thee of - 

Prince Henry    [Aside to POINS.] So, two more already.

Falstaff    Their points being broken - 

Poins    Down fell their hose.

Falstaff    Began to give me ground; but I followed me close, came in foot and 
hand, and, with a thought, seven of the eleven I paid.

Prince Henry    [Aside to POINS.] O monstrous! Eleven buckram men grown out of 
two!

Falstaff    But, as the devil would have it, three misbegotten knaves in 
Kendal green came at my back and let drive at me; for it was so dark, Hal, 
that thou couldst not see thy hand.

Prince Henry    These lies are like their father that begets them -gross as a 
mountain, open, palpable. Why, thou clay-brained guts, thou knotty-pated fool, 
thou whoreson obscene greasy tallow-catch - 

Falstaff    What, art thou mad, art thou mad? Is not the truth the truth?

Prince Henry    Why, how couldst thou know these men in Kendal green when it 
was so dark thou couldst not see thy hand? Come, tell us your reason. What 
sayst thou to this?

Poins    Come, your reason, Jack, your reason.

Falstaff    What, upon compulsion? Zounds, and I were at the strappado or all 
the racks in the world, I would not tell you on compulsion. Give you a reason 
on compulsion! If reasons were as plentiful as blackberries, I would give no 
man a reason upon compulsion, I.

Prince Henry    I'll be no longer guilty of this sin. This sanguine coward, 
this bed-presser, this horse-back-breaker, this huge hill of flesh - 

Falstaff    'Sblood, you starveling, you eel-skin, you dried neat's-tongue, 
you bull's-pizzle, you stockfish! -O for breath to utter what is like thee! 
-you tailor's-yard, you sheath, you bow-case, you vile standing tuck!

Prince Henry    Well, breathe awhile, and then to it again; and when thou hast 
tired thyself in base comparisons, hear me speak but this.

Poins    Mark, Jack.

Prince Henry    We two saw you four set on four, and bound them, and were 
masters of their wealth. Mark now how a plain tale shall put you down. Then 
did we two set on you four, and, with a word, outfaced you from your prize, 
and have it, yea, and can show it you here in the house. And, Falstaff, you 
carried your guts away as nimbly, with as quick dexterity, and roared for 
mercy, and still run and roared, as ever I heard bull-calf. What a slave art 
thou to hack thy sword as thou hast done, and then say it was in fight! What 
trick, what device, what starting-hole canst thou now find out to hide thee 
from this open and apparent shame?

Poins    Come, let's hear, Jack. What trick hast thou now?

Falstaff    By the Lord, I knew ye as well as he that made ye. Why, hear you, 
my masters, was it for me to kill the heir-apparent? Should I turn upon the 
true prince? Why, thou knowest I am as valiant as Hercules; but beware 
instinct. The lion will not touch the true prince -instinct is a great matter. 
I was now a coward on instinct. I shall think the better of myself, and thee, 
during my life: I for a valiant lion, and thou for a true prince. But, by the 
Lord, lads, I am glad you have the money. Hostess, clap to the doors! Watch 
tonight, pray tomorrow. Gallants, lads, boys, hearts of gold, all the titles 
of good fellowship come to you! What, shall we be merry, shall we have a play 
extempore?

Prince Henry    Content, and the argument shall be thy running away.

Falstaff    Ah, no more of that, Hal, and thou lovest me.

Enter HOSTESS.

Hostess    O Jesu, my lord the Prince!

Prince Henry    How now, my lady the hostess, what sayst thou to me?

Hostess    Marry, my lord, there is a nobleman of the court at door would 
speak with you. He says he comes from your father.

Prince Henry    Give him as much as will make him a royal man, and send him 
back again to my mother.

Falstaff    What manner of man is he?

Hostess    An old man.

Falstaff    What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight? Shall I give him his 
answer?

Prince Henry    Prithee do, Jack.

Falstaff    Faith, and I'll send him packing.
[Exit.

Prince Henry    Now, sirs; byrlady, you fought fair. So did you, Peto; so did 
you, Bardolph. You are lions too: you ran away upon instinct, you will not 
touch the true prince; no, fie!

Bardolph    Faith, I ran when I saw others run.

Prince Henry    Faith, tell me now in earnest, how came Falstaff's sword so 
hacked?

Peto    Why, he hacked it with his dagger, and said he would swear truth out 
of England but he would make you believe it was done in fight, and persuaded 
us to do the like.

Bardolph    Yea, and to tickle our noses with speargrass to make them bleed, 
and then to beslubber our garments with it and swear it was the blood of true 
men. I did that I did not this seven year before -I blushed to hear his 
monstrous devices.

Prince Henry    O villain, thou stolest a cup of sack eighteen years ago, and 
wert taken with the manner, and ever since thou hast blushed extempore. Thou 
hadst fire and sword on thy side, and yet thou rann'st away. What instinct 
hadst thou for it?

Bardolph    My lord, do you see these meteors, do you behold these exhalations?

Prince Henry    I do.

Bardolph    What think you they portend?


Prince Henry    Hot livers and cold purses.

Bardolph    Choler, my lord, if rightly taken.

Prince Henry    No, if rightly taken, halter.

Re-enter FALSTAFF.

    Here comes lean Jack, here comes barebone. How now, my sweet creature of 
bombast! How long is't ago, Jack, since thou sawest thine own knee?

Falstaff    My own knee? When I was about thy years, Hal, I was not an eagle's 
talon in the waist; I could have crept into any alderman's thumb-ring. A 
plague of sighing and grief -it blows a man up like a bladder. There's 
villainous news abroad. Here was Sir John Bracy from your father: you must to 
the court in the morning. That same mad fellow of the north, Percy, and he of 
Wales that gave Amamon the bastinado, and made Lucifer cuckold, and swore the 
devil his true liegeman upon the cross of a Welsh hook -what a plague call you 
him?

Poins    Owen Glendower.

Falstaff    Owen, Owen, the same; and his son-in-law Mortimer, and old 
Northumberland, and that sprightly Scot of Scots, Douglas, that runs 
a-horseback up a hill perpendicular - 

Prince Henry    He that rides at high speed and with his pistol kills a 
sparrow flying.

Falstaff    You have hit it.

Prince Henry    So did he never the sparrow.

Falstaff    Well, that rascal hath good mettle in him; he will not run.

Prince Henry    Why, what a rascal art thou then to praise him so for running!

Falstaff    A-horseback, ye cuckoo; but afoot he will not budge a foot.

Prince Henry    Yes, Jack, upon instinct.

Falstaff    I grant ye, upon instinct. Well, he is there too, and one Mordake, 
and a thousand bluecaps more. Worcester is stolen away tonight; thy father's 
beard is turned white with the news. You may buy land now as cheap as stinking 
mackerel.

Prince Henry    Why then, it is like if there come a hot June and this civil 
buffeting hold, we shall buy maidenheads as they buy hobnails -by the hundreds.

Falstaff    By the mass, lad, thou sayst true; it is like we shall have good 
trading that way. But tell me, Hal, art not thou horrible afeard? Thou being 
heir apparent, could the world pick thee out three such enemies again as that 
fiend Douglas, that spirit Percy, and that devil Glendower? Art thou not 
horribly afraid? Doth not thy blood thrill at it?

Prince Henry    Not a whit, i'faith. I lack some of thy instinct.

Falstaff    Well, thou wilt be horribly chid tomorrow when thou comest to thy 
father. If thou love me, practise an answer.

Prince Henry    Do thou stand for my father, and examine me upon the 
particulars of my life.

Falstaff    Shall I? Content. This chair shall be my state, this dagger my 
sceptre, and this cushion my crown.

Prince Henry    Thy state is taken for a joint-stool, thy golden sceptre for a 
leaden dagger, and thy precious rich crown for a pitiful bald crown.

Falstaff    Well, and the fire of grace be not quite out of thee, now shalt 
thou be moved. Give me a cup of sack to make my eyes look red, that it may be 
thought I have wept, for I must speak in passion, and I will do it in King 
Cambyses' vein.

Prince Henry    Well, here is my leg.

Falstaff    And here is my speech. Stand aside, nobility.

Hostess    O Jesu, this is excellent sport, i'faith.

Falstaff    Weep not, sweet queen, for trickling tears are vain.

Hostess    O the Father, how he holds his countenance!

Falstaff    For God's sake, lords, convey my tristful queen;
    For tears do stop the floodgates of her eyes.

Hostess    O Jesu, he doth it as like one of these harlotry players as ever I 
see!

Falstaff    Peace, good pint-pot! Peace, good tickle-brain! Harry, I do not 
only marvel where thou spendest thy time, but also how thou art accompanied: 
for though the camomile, the more it is trodden on the faster it grows, yet 
youth, the more it is wasted the sooner it wears. That thou art my son I have 
partly thy mother's word, partly my own opinion, but chiefly a villainous 
trick of thine eye and a foolish hanging of thy nether lip, that doth warrant 
me. If then thou be son to me, here lies the point: why, being son to me, art 
thou so pointed at? Shall the blessed sun of heaven prove a micher and eat 
blackberries? A question not to be asked. Shall the son of England prove a 
thief and take purses? A question to be asked. There is a thing, Harry, which 
thou hast often heard of, and it is known to many in our land by the name of 
pitch. This pitch, as ancient writers do report, doth defile; so doth the 
company thou keepest; for, Harry, now I do not speak to thee in drink, but in 
tears; not in pleasure, but in passion; not in words only, but in woes also. 
And yet there is a virtuous man whom I have often noted in thy company, but I 
know not his name.

Prince Henry    What manner of man, and it like your majesty?

Falstaff    A goodly portly man, i'faith, and a corpulent; of a cheerful look, 
a pleasing eye, and a most noble carriage; and, as I think, his age some 
fifty, or byrlady, inclining to threescore; and now I remember me, his name is 
Falstaff. If that man should be lewdly given, he deceiveth me; for, Harry, I 
see virtue in his looks. If then the tree may be known by the fruit, as the 
fruit by the tree, then, peremptorily I speak it, there is virtue in that 
Falstaff: him keep with, the rest banish. And tell me now, thou naughty 
varlet, tell me where hast thou been this month?

Prince Henry    Dost thou speak like a king? Do thou stand for me, and I'll 
play my father.

Falstaff    Depose me? If thou dost it half so gravely, so majestically, both 
in word and matter, hang me up by the heels for a rabbit-sucker or a poulter's 
hare.

Prince Henry    Well, here I am set.

Falstaff    And here I stand. Judge, my masters.

Prince Henry    Now, Harry, whence come you?

Falstaff    My noble lord, from Eastcheap.

Prince Henry    The complaints I hear of thee are grievous.

Falstaff    'Sblood, my lord, they are false. Nay, I'll tickle ye for a young 
prince, i'faith.

Prince Henry    Swearest thou, ungracious boy? Henceforth ne'er look on me. 
Thou art violently carried away from grace. There is a devil haunts thee in 
the likeness of an old fat man; a tun of man is thy companion. Why dost thou 
converse with that trunk of humours, that bolting-hutch of beastliness, that 
swollen parcel of dropsies, that huge bombard of sack, that stuffed cloak-bag 
of guts, that roasted Manningtree ox with the pudding in his belly, that 
reverend vice, that grey iniquity, that father ruffian, that vanity in years? 
Wherein is he good but to taste sack and drink it? Wherein neat and cleanly 
but to carve a capon and eat it? Wherein cunning but in craft? Wherein crafty 
but in villainy? Wherein villainous but in all things? Wherein worthy but in 
nothing?

Falstaff    I would your grace would take me with you. Whom means your grace?

Prince Henry    That villainous abominable misleader of youth, Falstaff, that 
old white-bearded Satan.

Falstaff    My lord, the man I know.

Prince Henry    I know thou dost.

Falstaff    But to say I know more harm in him than in myself were to say more 
than I know. That he is old, the more the pity, his white hairs do witness it; 
but that he is, saving your reverence, a whoremaster, that I utterly deny. If 
sack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked! If to be old and merry be a 
sin, then many an old host that I know is damned. If to be fat be to be hated, 
then Pharaoh's lean kine are to be loved. No, my good lord, banish Peto, 
banish Bardolph, banish Poins, but for sweet Jack Falstaff, kind Jack 
Falstaff, true Jack Falstaff, valiant Jack Falstaff, and therefore more 
valiant being, as he is, old Jack Falstaff, banish not him thy Harry's 
company, banish not him thy Harry's company -Banish plump Jack, and banish all 
the world.

Prince Henry    I do, I will.
[A knocking heard.
[Exeunt HOSTESS, FRANCIS and BARDOLPH.

Re-enter BARDOLPH, running.

Bardolph    O my lord, my lord! The sheriff with a most monstrous watch is at 
the door.

Falstaff    Out, ye rogue! Play out the play: I have much to say in the behalf 
of that Falstaff.

Re-enter HOSTESS.

Hostess    O Jesu, my lord, my lord!

Prince Henry    Heigh, heigh, the devil rides upon a fiddlestick! What's the 
matter?

Hostess    The sheriff and all the watch are at the door; they are come to 
search the house. Shall I let them in?

Falstaff    Dost thou hear, Hal? Never call a true piece of gold a 
counterfeit: thou art essentially made without seeming so.

Prince Henry    And thou a natural coward without instinct.

Falstaff    I deny your major. If you will deny the sheriff, so; if not, let 
him enter. If I become not a cart as well as another man, a plague on my 
bringing up! I hope I shall as soon be strangled with a halter as another.

Prince Henry    Go hide thee behind the arras; the rest walk up above. Now, my 
masters, for a true face and good conscience.

Falstaff    Both which I have had; but their date is out, and therefore I'll 
hide me.
[Exeunt all but the PRINCE and PETO.

Prince Henry    Call in the sheriff.

Enter SHERIFF and the CARRIER.

    Now, master sheriff, what is your will with me?

Sheriff    First, pardon me, my lord. A hue and cry
    Hath followed certain men unto this house.

Prince Henry    What men?

Sheriff    One of them is well known, my gracious lord,
    A gross fat man.

Carrier                            As fat as butter.

Prince Henry    The man, I do assure you, is not here,
    For I myself at this time have employed him.
    And, sheriff, I will engage my word to thee
    That I will by tomorrow dinner-time
    Send him to answer thee, or any man,
    For anything he shall be charged withal.
    And so let me entreat you leave the house.

Sheriff    I will, my lord. There are two gentlemen
    Have in this robbery lost three hundred marks.

Prince Henry    It may be so. If he have robbed these men
    He shall be answerable. And so, farewell.

Sheriff    Good night, my noble lord.

Prince Henry    I think it is good morrow, is it not?

Sheriff    Indeed, my lord, I think it be two o'clock.
[Exeunt SHERIFF and CARRIER.

Prince Henry    This oily rascal is known as well as Paul's. Go call him forth.

Peto    Falstaff! Fast asleep behind the arras, and snorting like a horse.

Prince Henry    Hark how hard he fetches breath. Search his pockets.
[He searcheth his pockets and findeth certain papers.

    What hast thou found?

Peto                            Nothing but papers, my lord.

Prince Henry    Let's see what they be: read them.

Peto    [Reads.]
    "Item,    a capon:                2s.2d.
    Item,    sauce:                       4d.
    Item,    sack, two gallons:    5s.8d.
    Item,    anchovies and sack
            after supper:            2s.6d.
    Item,    bread:                       ob."

Prince Henry    O monstrous! But one halfpennyworth of bread to this 
intolerable deal of sack! What there is else, keep close; we'll read it at 
more advantage. There let him sleep till day. I'll to the court in the 
morning. We must all to the wars, and thy place shall be honourable. I'll 
procure this fat rogue a charge of foot, and I know his death will be a march 
of twelve score. The money shall be paid back again with advantage. Be with me 
betimes in the morning. And so good morrow, Peto.

Peto    Good morrow, good my lord.
[Exeunt.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 3.

Scene 1. Wales. A Room in the Archdeacon's House.

Enter HOTSPUR, WORCESTER, Lord MORTIMER, OWEN GLENDOWER.

Mortimer    These promises are fair, the parties sure,
    And our induction full of prosperous hope.

Hotspur    Lord Mortimer, and cousin Glendower,
    Will you sit down?
    And uncle Worcester? A plague upon it,
    I have forgot the map!

Glendower                                    No, here it is.
    Sit, cousin Percy. Sit, good cousin Hotspur;
    For by that name as oft as Lancaster doth speak of you,
    His cheek looks pale, and with a rising sigh
    He wisheth you in heaven.

Hotspur                                        And you in hell,
    As oft as he hears Owen Glendower spoke of.

Glendower    I cannot blame him: at my nativity
    The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes,
    Of burning cressets; and at my birth
    The frame and huge foundation of the earth
    Shaked like a coward.

Hotspur                                Why, so it would have done
    At the same season if your mother's cat
    Had but kittened, though yourself had never been born.

Glendower    I say the earth did shake when I was born.

Hotspur    And I say the earth was not of my mind
    If you suppose as fearing you it shook.

Glendower    The heavens were all on fire, the earth did tremble.

Hotspur    O, then the earth shook to see the heavens on fire,
    And not in fear of your nativity.
    Diseased nature oftentimes breaks forth
    In strange eruptions; oft the teeming earth
    Is with a kind of colic pinched and vexed
    By the imprisoning of unruly wind
    Within her womb, which, for enlargement striving,
    Shakes the old beldam earth, and topples down
    Steeples and moss-grown towers. At your birth
    Our grandam earth, having this distemp'rature,
    In passion shook.

Glendower                            Cousin, of many men
    I do not bear these crossings. Give me leave
    To tell you once again that at my birth
    The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes,
    The goats ran from the mountains, and the herds
    Were strangely clamorous to the frighted fields.
    These signs have marked me extraordinary,
    And all the courses of my life do show
    I am not in the roll of common men.
    Where is he living, clipped in with the sea
    That chides the banks of England, Scotland, Wales,
    Which calls me pupil or hath read to me?
    And bring him out that is but woman's son
    Can trace me in the tedious ways of art,
    And hold me pace in deep experiments.

Hotspur    I think there's no man speaks better Welsh.
    I'll to dinner.

Mortimer    Peace, cousin Percy; you will make him mad.

Glendower    I can call spirits from the vasty deep.

Hotspur    Why, so can I, or so can any man;
    But will they come when you do call for them?

Glendower    Why, I can teach you, cousin, to command the devil.

Hotspur    And I can teach thee, coz, to shame the devil,
    By telling truth. Tell truth and shame the devil.
    If thou have power to raise him, bring him hither,
    And I'll be sworn I have power to shame him hence.
    O, while you live, tell truth and shame the devil!

Mortimer    Come, come, no more of this unprofitable chat.

Glendower    Three times hath Henry Bolingbroke made head
    Against my power; thrice from the banks of Wye
    And sandy-bottomed Severn have I sent him
    Bootless home, and weather-beaten back.

Hotspur    Home without boots, and in foul weather too!
    How scapes he agues, in the devil's name?

Glendower    Come, here is the map. Shall we divide our right
    According to our threefold order ta'en?

Mortimer    The archdeacon hath divided it
    Into three limits very equally:
    England, from Trent and Severn hitherto,
    By south and east is to my part assigned;
    All westward, Wales beyond the Severn shore,
    And all the fertile land within that bound,
    To Owen Glendower; and, dear coz, to you
    The remnant northward lying off from Trent.
    And our indentures tripartite are drawn,
    Which being sealed interchangeably,
    A business that this night may execute,
    Tomorrow, cousin Percy, you and I
    And my good Lord of Worcester will set forth
    To meet your father and the Scottish power,
    As is appointed us, at Shrewsbury.
    My father Glendower is not ready yet,
    Nor shall we need his help these fourteen days.
    [To GLENDOWER.]
    Within that space you may have drawn together
    Your tenants, friends, and neighbouring gentlemen.

Glendower    A shorter time shall send me to you, lords;
    And in my conduct shall your ladies come,
    From whom you now must steal and take no leave,
    For there will be a world of water shed
    Upon the parting of your wives and you.

Hotspur    Methinks my moiety, north from Burton here,
    In quantity equals not one of yours.
    See how this river comes me cranking in,
    And cuts me from the best of all my land
    A huge half-moon, a monstrous cantle out.
    I'll have the current in this place dammed up,
    And here the smug and silver Trent shall run
    In a new channel fair and evenly.
    It shall not wind with such a deep indent
    To rob me of so rich a bottom here.

Glendower    Not wind? It shall, it must; you see it doth.

Mortimer    Yea, but mark how he bears his course, and runs me up
    With like advantage on the other side,
    Gelding the opposed continent as much
    As on the other side it takes from you.

Worcester    Yea, but a little charge will trench him here,
    And on this north side win this cape of land;
    And then he runs straight and even.

Hotspur    I'll have it so, a little charge will do it.

Glendower    I'll not have it altered.

Hotspur    Will not you?

Glendower    No, nor you shall not.

Hotspur    Who shall say me nay?

Glendower    Why, that will I.

Hotspur    Let me not understand you then; speak it in Welsh.

Glendower    I can speak English, lord, as well as you,
    For I was trained up in the English court,
    Where, being but young, I framed to the harp
    Many an English ditty lovely well,
    And gave the tongue a helpful ornament - 
    A virtue that was never seen in you.

Hotspur    Marry, and I am glad of it with all my heart!
    I had rather be a kitten and cry `mew'
    Than one of these same metre balladmongers;
    I had rather hear a brazen canstick turned,
    Or a dry wheel grate on the axle-tree,
    And that would set my teeth nothing on edge,
    Nothing so much as mincing poetry.
    'Tis like the forced gait of a shuffling nag.

Glendower    Come, you shall have Trent turned.

Hotspur    I do not care. I'll give thrice so much land
    To any well-deserving friend;
    But in the way of bargain, mark ye me,
    I'll cavil on the ninth part of a hair.
    Are the indentures drawn? Shall we be gone?

Glendower    The moon shines fair, you may away by night.
    I'll haste the writer, and withal
    Break with your wives of your departure hence.
    I am afraid my daughter will run mad,
    So much she doteth on her Mortimer.
[Exit.
Mortimer    Fie, cousin Percy, how you cross my father!

Hotspur    I cannot choose; sometime he angers me
    With telling me of the moldwarp and the ant,
    Of the dreamer Merlin and his prophecies,
    And of a dragon and a finless fish,
    A clip-winged griffin and a moulten raven,
    A couching lion and a ramping cat,
    And such a deal of skimble-skamble stuff
    As puts me from my faith. I tell you what,
    He held me last night at least nine hours
    In reckoning up the several devils' names
    That were his lackeys. I cried "Hum" and "Well, go to!"
    But marked him not a word. O, he is as tedious
    As a tired horse, a railing wife;
    Worse than a smoky house. I had rather live
    With cheese and garlic in a windmill, far,
    Than feed on cates and have him talk to me
    In any summer-house in Christendom.

Mortimer    In faith, he is a worthy gentleman,
    Exceedingly well read, and profited
    In strange concealments, valiant as a lion,
    And wondrous affable, and as bountiful
    As mines of India. Shall I tell you, cousin?
    He holds your temper in a high respect,
    And curbs himself even of his natural scope
    When you come 'cross his humour -faith, he does.
    I warrant you that man is not alive
    Might so have tempted him as you have done,
    Without the taste of danger and reproof.
    But do not use it oft, let me entreat you.

Worcester    In faith, my lord, you are too wilful-blame,
    And since your coming hither have done enough
    To put him quite besides his patience.
    You must needs learn, lord, to amend this fault.
    Though sometimes it show greatness, courage, blood - 
    And that's the dearest grace it renders you - 
    Yet oftentimes it doth present harsh rage,
    Defect of manners, want of government,
    Pride, haughtiness, opinion, and disdain;
    The least of which, haunting a nobleman,
    Loseth men's hearts and leaves behind a stain
    Upon the beauty of all parts besides,
    Beguiling them of commendation.

Hotspur    Well, I am schooled. Good manners be your speed!
    Here come our wives, and let us take our leave.

Re-enter GLENDOWER, with LADY PERCY and LADY MORTIMER.

Mortimer    This is the deadly spite that angers me - 
    My wife can speak no English, I no Welsh.

Glendower    My daughter weeps: she'll not part with you,
    She'll be a soldier too, she'll to the wars.

Mortimer    Good father, tell her that she and my aunt Percy
    Shall follow in your conduct speedily.
[GLENDOWER speaks to her in Welsh, and she answers him in the same.

Glendower    She is desperate here. A peevish self-willed harlotry,
    One that no persuasion can do good upon.
[LADY MORTIMER speaks in Welsh.

Mortimer    I understand thy looks. That pretty Welsh
    Which thou pourest down from these swelling heavens
    I am too perfect in; and, but for shame,
    In such a parley should I answer thee.
[The Lady again in Welsh.
    I understand thy kisses, and thou mine,
    And that's a feeling disputation;
    But I will never be a truant, love,
    Till I have learnt thy language, for thy tongue
    Makes Welsh as sweet as ditties highly penned,
    Sung by a fair queen in a summer's bow'r,
    With ravishing division, to her lute.

Glendower    Nay, if you melt, then will she run mad.
[The Lady speaks again in Welsh.

Mortimer    O, I am ignorance itself in this!

Glendower    She bids you on the wanton rushes lay you down,
    And rest your gentle head upon her lap;
    And she will sing the song that pleaseth you,
    And on your eyelids crown the god of sleep,
    Charming your blood with pleasing heaviness,
    Making such difference 'twixt wake and sleep
    As is the difference betwixt day and night
    The hour before the heavenly-harnessed team
    Begins his golden progress in the east.

Mortimer    With all my heart I'll sit and hear her sing;
    By that time will our book, I think, be drawn.

Glendower    Do so, and those musicians that shall play to you
    Hang in the air a thousand leagues from hence,
    And straight they shall be here. Sit, and attend.

Hotspur    Come, Kate, thou art perfect in lying down.
    Come, quick, quick, that I may lay my head in thy lap.

Lady Percy    Go, ye giddy goose.
[The music plays.

Hotspur    Now I perceive the devil understands Welsh,
    And 'tis no marvel he is so humorous.
    Byrlady, he's a good musician.

Lady Percy    Then should you be nothing but musical,
    For you are altogether governed by humours.
    Lie still, ye thief, and hear the lady sing in Welsh.

Hotspur    I had rather hear Lady, my brach, howl in Irish.

Lady Percy    Wouldst thou have thy head broken?

Hotspur    No.

Lady Percy    Then be still.

Hotspur    Neither, 'tis a woman's fault.

Lady Percy    Now God help thee!

Hotspur    To the Welsh lady's bed.

Lady Percy    What's that?

Hotspur    Peace, she sings.
[Here the Lady sings a Welsh song.
    Come, Kate, I'll have your song too.

Lady Percy    Not mine, in good sooth.

Hotspur    Not yours, in good sooth? Heart, you swear like a comfit-maker's 
wife. "Not you, in good sooth!" and "as true as I live!", and "as God shall 
mend me!" and "as sure as day!"
    And givest such sarcenet surety for thy oaths
    As if thou never walk'st further than Finsbury.
    Swear me, Kate, like a lady as thou art,
    A good mouth-filling oath, and leave "in sooth"
    And such protest of pepper gingerbread
    To velvet-guards and Sunday citizens.
    Come, sing.

Lady Percy    I will not sing.

Hotspur    'Tis the next way to turn tailor or be redbreast teacher. And the 
indentures be drawn, I'll away within these two hours; and so come in when ye 
will.
[Exit.
Glendower    Come, come, Lord Mortimer, you are as slow
    As hot Lord Percy is on fire to go.
    By this our book is drawn; we'll but seal,
    And then to horse immediately.

Mortimer                                        With all my heart.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. London. A Room in the Palace.

Enter the KING, PRINCE OF WALES, and OTHERS.

King Henry    Lords, give us leave: the Prince of Wales and I
    Must have some private conference; but be near at hand,
    For we shall presently have need of you.
[Exeunt LORDS.
    I know not whether God will have it so
    For some displeasing service I have done,
    That, in his secret doom, out of my blood
    He'll breed revengement and a scourge for me;
    But thou dost in thy passages of life
    Make me believe that thou art only marked
    For the hot vengeance and the rod of heaven
    To punish my mistreadings. Tell me else,
    Could such inordinate and low desires,
    Such poor, such bare, such lewd, such mean attempts,
    Such barren pleasures, rude society,
    As thou art matched withal and grafted to,
    Accompany the greatness of thy blood,
    And hold their level with thy princely heart?

Prince Henry    So please your majesty, I would I could
    Quit all offences with as clear excuse
    As well as I am doubtless I can purge
    Myself of many I am charged withal.
    Yet such extenuation let me beg,
    As, in reproof of many tales devised,
    Which oft the ear of greatness needs must hear,
    By smiling pick-thanks and base newsmongers,
    I may, for some things true wherein my youth
    Hath faulty wandered and irregular,
    Find pardon on my true submission.

King Henry    God pardon thee! Yet let me wonder, Harry,
    At thy affections, which do hold a wing
    Quite from the flight of all thy ancestors.
    Thy place in Council thou hast rudely lost,
    Which by thy younger brother is supplied,
    And art almost an alien to the hearts
    Of all the court and princes of my blood.
    The hope and expectation of thy time
    Is ruined, and the soul of every man
    Prophetically do forethink thy fall.
    Had I so lavish of my presence been,
    So common-hackneyed in the eyes of men,
    So stale and cheap to vulgar company,
    Opinion, that did help me to the crown,
    Had still kept loyal to possession,
    And left me in reputeless banishment,
    A fellow of no mark nor likelihood.
    By being seldom seen, I could not stir
    But like a comet I was wondered at,
    That men would tell their children "This is he!"
    Others would say "Where? Which is Bolingbroke?"
    And then I stole all courtesy from heaven,
    And dressed myself in such humility
    That I did pluck allegiance from men's hearts,
    Loud shouts and salutations from their mouths,
    Even in the presence of the crowned king.
    Thus did I keep my person fresh and new,
    My presence, like a robe pontifical,
    Ne'er seen but wondered at; and so my state,
    Seldom but sumptuous, showed like a feast,
    And won by rareness such solemnity.
    The skipping king, he ambled up and down
    With shallow jesters and rash bavin wits,
    Soon kindled and soon burnt, carded his state,
    Mingled his royalty with cap'ring fools,
    Had his great name profaned with their scorns,
    And gave his countenance against his name
    To laugh at gibing boys, and stand the push
    Of every beardless vain comparative;
    Grew a companion to the common streets,
    Enfeoffed himself to popularity,
    That, being daily swallowed by men's eyes,
    They surfeited with honey and began
    To loathe the taste of sweetness, whereof a little
    More than a little is by much too much.
    So, when he had occasion to be seen,
    He was but as the cuckoo is in June,
    Heard, not regarded; seen, but with such eyes
    As, sick and blunted with community,
    Afford no extraordinary gaze
    Such as is bent on sunlike majesty
    When it shines seldom in admiring eyes;
    But rather drowsed and hung their eyelids down,
    Slept in his face, and rendered such aspect
    As cloudy men use to their adversaries,
    Being with his presence glutted, gorged, and full.
    And in that very line, Harry, standest thou;
    For thou hast lost thy princely privilege
    With vile participation. Not an eye
    But is aweary of thy common sight,
    Save mine, which hath desired to see thee more,
    Which now doth that I would not have it do:
    Make blind itself with foolish tenderness.

Prince Henry    I shall hereafter, my thrice gracious lord,
    Be more myself.

King Henry                        For all the world,
    As thou art to this hour was Richard then
    When I from France set foot at Ravenspurgh;
    And even as I was then is Percy now.
    Now, by my sceptre, and my soul to boot,
    He hath more worthy interest to the state
    Than thou the shadow of succession;
    For of no right, nor colour like to right,
    He doth fill fields with harness in the realm,
    Turns head against the lion's armed jaws,
    And, being no more in debt to years than thou,
    Leads ancient lords and reverend bishops on
    To bloody battles and to bruising arms.
    What never-dying honour hath he got
    Against renowned Douglas! whose high deeds,
    Whose hot incursions and great name in arms,
    Holds from all soldiers chief majority
    And military title capital
    Through all the kingdoms that acknowledge Christ.
    Thrice hath this Hotspur, Mars in swathling clothes,
    This infant warrior, in his enterprises
    Discomfited great Douglas; ta'en him once,
    Enlarged him, and made a friend of him,
    To fill the mouth of deep defiance up,
    And shake the peace and safety of our throne.
    And what say you to this? Percy, Northumberland,
    The Archbishop's grace of York, Douglas, Mortimer,
    Capitulate against us and are up.
    But wherefore do I tell these news to thee?
    Why, Harry, do I tell thee of my foes,
    Which art my nearest and dearest enemy?
    Thou that art like enough, through vassal fear,
    Base inclination, and the start of spleen,
    To fight against me under Percy's pay,
    To dog his heels, and curtsy at his frowns,
    To show how much thou art degenerate.

Prince Henry    Do not think so; you shall not find it so.
    And God forgive them that so much have swayed
    Your Majesty's good thoughts away from me!
    I will redeem all this on Percy's head,
    And in the closing of some glorious day
    Be bold to tell you that I am your son;
    When I will wear a garment all of blood,
    And stain my favours in a bloody mask,
    Which, washed away, shall scour my shame with it;
    And that shall be the day, whene'er it lights,
    That this same child of honour and renown,
    This gallant Hotspur, this all-praised knight,
    And your unthought-of Harry chance to meet.
    For every honour sitting on his helm,
    Would they were multitudes, and on my head
    My shames redoubled! For the time will come
    That I shall make this northern youth exchange
    His glorious deeds for my indignities.
    Percy is but my factor, good my lord,
    To engross up glorious deeds on my behalf;
    And I will call him to so strict account
    That he shall render every glory up,
    Yea, even the slightest worship of his time,
    Or I will tear the reckoning from his heart.
    This, in the name of God, I promise here;
    The which, if He be pleased I shall perform,
    I do beseech your majesty may salve
    The long-grown wounds of my intemperance;
    If not, the end of life cancels all bands,
    And I will die a hundred thousand deaths
    Ere break the smallest parcel of this vow.

King Henry    A hundred thousand rebels die in this:
    Thou shalt have charge and sovereign trust herein.

Enter BLUNT.

    How now, good Blunt? Thy looks are full of speed.

Blunt    So hath the business that I come to speak of.
    Lord Mortimer of Scotland hath sent word
    That Douglas and the English rebels met
    The eleventh of this month at Shrewsbury.
    A mighty and a fearful head they are,
    If promises be kept on every hand,
    As ever offered foul play in a state.

King Henry    The Earl of Westmoreland set forth today,
    With him my son, Lord John of Lancaster,
    For this advertisement is five days old.
    On Wednesday next, Harry, you shall set forward;
    On Thursday we ourselves will march.
    Our meeting is Bridgnorth; and, Harry, you
    Shall march through Gloucestershire, by which account,
    Our business valued, some twelve days hence
    Our general forces at Bridgnorth shall meet.
    Our hands are full of business; let's away:
    Advantage feeds him fat while men delay.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Eastcheap. A Room in the Boar's Head Tavern.

Enter FALSTAFF and BARDOLPH.

Falstaff    Bardolph, am I not fall'n away vilely since this last action? Do I 
not bate? Do I not dwindle? Why, my skin hangs about me like an old lady's 
loose gown. I am withered like an old apple-john. Well, I'll repent, and that 
suddenly, while I am in some liking. I shall be out of heart shortly, and then 
I shall have no strength to repent. And I have not forgotten what the inside 
of a church is made of, I am a peppercorn, a brewer's horse. The inside of a 
church! Company, villainous company, hath been the spoil of me.

Bardolph    Sir John, you are so fretful you cannot live long.

Falstaff    Why, there is it. Come, sing me a bawdy song, make me merry. I was 
as virtuously given as a gentleman need to be: virtuous enough; swore little; 
diced not above seven times (a week); went to a bawdy-house not above once in 
a quarter (of an hour); paid money that I borrowed (three or four times); 
lived well, and in good compass; and now I live out of all order, out of all 
compass.

Bardolph    Why, you are so fat, Sir John, that you must needs be out of all 
compass, out of all reasonable compass, Sir John.

Falstaff    Do thou amend thy face, and I'll amend my life. Thou art our 
admiral, thou bearest the lantern in the poop, but 'tis in the nose of thee: 
thou art the Knight of the Burning Lamp.

Bardolph    Why, Sir John, my face does you no harm.

Falstaff    No, I'll be sworn, I make as good use of it as many a man doth of 
a death's-head or a memento mori. I never see thy face but I think upon 
hell-fire and Dives that lived in purple; for there he is in his robes, 
burning, burning. If thou wert any way given to virtue, I would swear by thy 
face: my oath should be "By this fire, that's God's angel!" But thou art 
altogether given over, and wert indeed, but for the light in thy face, the son 
of utter darkness. When thou rann'st up Gad's Hill in the night to catch my 
horse, if I did not think thou hadst been an ignis fatuus or a ball of 
wildfire, there's no purchase in money. O, thou art a perpetual triumph, an 
everlasting bonfire-light! Thou hast saved me a thousand marks in links and 
torches, walking with thee in the night betwixt tavern and tavern; but the 
sack that thou hast drunk me would have bought me lights as good cheap at the 
dearest chandler's in Europe. I have maintained that salamander of yours with 
fire any time this two-and-thirty years. God reward me for it!

Bardolph    'Sblood, I would my face were in your belly!

Falstaff    God-a-mercy! So should I be sure to be heart-burned.

Enter HOSTESS.

    How now, dame Partlet the hen, have you enquired yet who picked my pocket?

Hostess    Why, Sir John, what do you think, Sir John? Do you think I keep 
thieves in my house? I have searched, I have enquired, so has my husband, man 
by man, boy by boy, servant by servant. The tithe of a hair was never lost in 
my house before.

Falstaff    Ye lie, hostess: Bardolph was shaved and lost many a hair, and 
I'll be sworn my pocket was picked. Go to, you are a woman, go.

Hostess    Who, I? No, I defy thee. God's light, I was never called so in mine 
own house before!

Falstaff    Go to, I know you well enough.

Hostess    No, Sir John, you do not know me, Sir John. I know you, Sir John: 
you owe me money, Sir John, and now you pick a quarrel to beguile me of it. I 
bought you a dozen of shirts to your back.

Falstaff    Dowlas, filthy dowlas. I have given them away to bakers' wives; 
they have made bolters of them.

Hostess    Now as I am a true woman, holland of eight shillings an ell. You 
owe money here besides, Sir John, for your diet, and by-drinkings, and money 
lent you, four-and-twenty pound.

Falstaff    He had his part of it; let him pay.

Hostess    He? Alas, he is poor, he hath nothing.

Falstaff    How, poor? Look upon his face. What call you rich? Let them coin 
his nose, let them coin his cheeks. I'll not pay a denier. What, will you make 
a younker of me? Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn but I shall have my 
pocket picked? I have lost a seal-ring of my grandfather's worth forty mark.

Hostess    O Jesu, I have heard the Prince tell him, I know not how oft, that 
that ring was copper.

Falstaff    How? The Prince is a Jack, a sneak-up. 'Sblood, and he were here I 
would cudgel him like a dog if he would say so.

Enter the PRINCE and PETO, marching; and FALSTAFF meets them, playing upon his 
truncheon like a fife.

    How now, lad! Is the wind in that door, i'faith? Must we all march?

Bardolph    Yea, two and two, Newgate fashion.

Hostess    My lord, I pray you hear me.

Prince Henry    What sayst thou, Mistress Quickly? How doth thy husband? I 
love him well, he is an honest man.

Hostess    Good my lord, hear me.

Falstaff    Prithee let her alone, and list to me.

Prince Henry    What sayst thou, Jack?

Falstaff    The other night I fell asleep here, behind the arras, and had my 
pocket picked. This house is turned bawdy-house -they pick pockets.

Prince Henry    What didst thou lose, Jack?

Falstaff    Wilt thou believe me, Hal, three or four bonds of forty pound 
apiece, and a seal-ring of my grandfather's.

Prince Henry    A trifle, some eightpenny matter.

Hostess    So I told him, my lord, and I said I heard your grace say so; and, 
my lord, he speaks most vilely of you, like a foul-mouthed man as he is, and 
said he would cudgel you.

Prince Henry    What! He did not?

Hostess    There's neither faith, truth, nor womanhood in me else.

Falstaff    There's no more faith in thee than in a stewed prune, nor no more 
truth in thee than in a drawn fox; and for womanhood, Maid Marian may be the 
deputy's wife of the ward to thee. Go, you thing, go!

Hostess    Say, what thing? What thing?

Falstaff    What thing? Why, a thing to thank God on.

Hostess    I am no thing to thank God on, I would thou shouldst know it. I am 
an honest man's wife, and, setting thy knighthood aside, thou art a knave to 
call me so.

Falstaff    Setting thy womanhood aside, thou art a beast to say otherwise.

Hostess    Say, what beast, thou knave, thou?

Falstaff    What beast? Why, an otter.

Prince Henry    An otter, Sir John? Why an otter?

Falstaff    Why, she's neither fish nor flesh; a man knows not where to have 
her.

Hostess    Thou art an unjust man in saying so. Thou or any man knows where to 
have me, thou knave, thou.

Prince Henry    Thou sayst true, hostess, and he slanders thee most grossly.

Hostess    So he doth you, my lord, and said this other day you ought him a 
thousand pound.

Prince Henry    Sirrah, do I owe you a thousand pound?

Falstaff    A thousand pound, Hal? A million: thy love is worth a million; 
thou owest me thy love.

Hostess    Nay, my lord, he called you Jack, and said he would cudgel you.

Falstaff    Did I, Bardolph?

Bardolph    Indeed, Sir John, you said so.

Falstaff    Yea, if he said my ring was copper.

Prince Henry    I say 'tis copper; darest thou be as good as thy word now?

Falstaff    Why, Hal, thou knowest, as thou art but man, I dare; but as thou 
art prince, I fear thee as I fear the roaring of the lion's whelp.

Prince Henry    And why not as the lion?

Falstaff    The king himself is to be feared as the lion: dost thou think I'll 
fear thee as I fear thy father? Nay, and I do, I pray God my girdle break.

Prince Henry    O, if it should, how would thy guts fall about thy knees! But 
sirrah, there's no room for faith, truth, nor honesty in this bosom of thine; 
it is all filled up with guts and midriff. Charge an honest woman with picking 
thy pocket? Why, thou whoreson impudent embossed rascal, if there were 
anything in thy pocket but tavern reckonings, memorandums of bawdy-houses, and 
one poor pennyworth of sugar-candy to make thee long-winded -if thy pocket 
were enriched with any other injuries but these, I am a villain. And yet you 
will stand to it, you will not pocket up wrong! Art thou not ashamed?

Falstaff    Dost thou hear, Hal? Thou knowest in the state of innocency Adam 
fell; and what should poor Jack Falstaff do in the days of villainy? Thou 
seest I have more flesh than another man, and therefore more frailty. You 
confess then, you picked my pocket?

Prince Henry    It appears so by the story.

Falstaff    Hostess, I forgive thee. Go make ready breakfast, love thy 
husband, look to thy servants, cherish thy guests: thou shalt find me 
tractable to any honest reason; thou seest I am pacified still. Nay, prithee 
be gone.
[Exit HOSTESS.
    Now, Hal, to the news at court. For the robbery, lad, how is that answered?

Prince Henry    O, my sweet beef, I must still be good angel to thee: the 
money is paid back again.

Falstaff    O, I do not like that paying back, 'tis a double labour.


Prince Henry    I am good friends with my father, and may do anything.

Falstaff    Rob me the exchequer the first thing thou dost, and do it with 
unwashed hands too.

Bardolph    Do, my lord.

Prince Henry    I have procured thee, Jack, a charge of foot.

Falstaff    I would it had been of horse. Where shall I find one that can 
steal well? O, for a fine thief of the age of two-and-twenty or thereabouts! I 
am heinously unprovided. Well, God be thanked for these rebels: they offend 
none but the virtuous. I laud them, I praise them.

Prince Henry    Bardolph!

Bardolph    My lord?

Prince Henry    Go bear this letter to Lord John of Lancaster,
    To my brother John; this to my Lord of Westmoreland.
[Exit BARDOLPH.
    Go, Peto, to horse, to horse, for thou and I
    Have thirty miles to ride yet ere dinner-time.
[Exit PETO.
    Jack, meet me tomorrow in the Temple Hall
    At two o'clock in the afternoon.
    There shalt thou know thy charge, and there receive
    Money and order for their furniture.
    The land is burning, Percy stands on high,
    And either we or they must lower lie.
[Exit.

Falstaff    Rare words! Brave world! Hostess, my breakfast, come.
    O, I could wish this tavern were my drum!
[Exit.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 4.

Scene 1. The Rebel Camp near Shrewsbury.

Enter HOTSPUR, WORCESTER, and DOUGLAS.

Hotspur    Well said, my noble Scot! If speaking truth
    In this fine age were not thought flattery,
    Such attribution should the Douglas have
    As not a soldier of this season's stamp
    Should go so general current through the world.
    By God, I cannot flatter, I do defy
    The tongues of soothers, but a braver place
    In my heart's love hath no man than yourself.
    Nay, task me to my word, approve me, lord.

Douglas    Thou art the king of honour.
    No man so potent breathes upon the ground
    But I will beard him.

Hotspur                                Do so, and 'tis well. - 

Enter a MESSENGER with letters.

    What letters hast thou there?
                            [To DOUGLAS.] -I can but thank you.

Messenger    These letters come from your father.

Hotspur    Letters from him? Why comes he not himself?

Messenger    He cannot come, my lord, he is grievous sick.

Hotspur    Zounds, how has he the leisure to be sick
    In such a justling time? Who leads his power?
    Under whose government come they along?

Messenger    His letters bears his mind, not I, my lord.

Worcester    I prithee tell me, doth he keep his bed?

Messenger    He did, my lord, four days ere I set forth;
    And at the time of my departure thence
    He was much feared by his physicians.

Worcester    I would the state of time had first been whole
    Ere he by sickness had been visited:
    His health was never better worth than now.

Hotspur    Sick now? Droop now? This sickness doth infect
    The very life-blood of our enterprise;
    'Tis catching hither, even to our camp.
    He writes me here that inward sickness....
    And that his friends by deputation
    Could not so soon be drawn; nor did he think it meet
    To lay so dangerous and dear a trust
    On any soul removed but on his own.
    Yet doth he give us bold advertisement
    That with our small conjunction we should on,
    To see how fortune is disposed to us;
    For, as he writes, there is no quailing now,
    Because the king is certainly possessed
    Of all our purposes. What say you to it?

Worcester    Your father's sickness is a maim to us.

Hotspur    A perilous gash, a very limb lopped off.
    And yet, in faith, it is not. His present want
    Seems more than we shall find it. Were it good
    To set the exact wealth of all our states
    All at one cast? To set so rich a main
    On the nice hazard of one doubtful hour?
    It were not good; for therein should we read
    The very bottom and the soul of hope,
    The very list, the very utmost bound,
    Of all our fortunes.

Douglas                            Faith, and so we should.
    Where now remains a sweet reversion,
    We may boldly spend upon the hope of what is to come in.
    A comfort of retirement lives in this.

Hotspur    A rendezvous, a home to fly unto,
    If that the devil and mischance look big
    Upon the maidenhead of our affairs.

Worcester    But yet I would your father had been here.
    The quality and hair of our attempt
    Brooks no division. It will be thought
    By some that know not why he is away
    That wisdom, loyalty, and mere dislike
    Of our proceedings kept the earl from hence.
    And think how such an apprehension
    May turn the tide of fearful faction,
    And breed a kind of question in our cause;
    For well you know we of the off'ring side
    Must keep aloof from strict arbitrement,
    And stop all sight-holes, every loop from whence
    The eye of reason may pry in upon us.
    This absence of your father's draws a curtain
    That shows the ignorant a kind of fear
    Before not dreamt of.

Hotspur                                You strain too far.
    I rather of his absence make this use:
    It lends a lustre and more great opinion,
    A larger dare to our great enterprise,
    Than if the earl were here; for men must think,
    If we without his help can make a head
    To push against a kingdom, with his help
    We shall o'erturn it topsy-turvy down.
    Yet all goes well, yet all our joints are whole.

Douglas    As heart can think. There is not such a word
    Spoke of in Scotland as this term of fear.

Enter SIR RICHARD VERNON.

Hotspur    My cousin Vernon, welcome, by my soul!

Vernon    Pray God my news be worth a welcome, lord.
    The Earl of Westmoreland, seven thousand strong,
    Is marching hitherwards; with him Prince John.

Hotspur    No harm; what more?

Vernon                            And further, I have learned
    The king himself in person is set forth,
    Or hitherwards intended speedily,
    With strong and mighty preparation.

Hotspur    He shall be welcome too. Where is his son,
    The nimble-footed madcap Prince of Wales,
    And his comrades that daft the world aside
    And bid it pass?

Vernon                        All furnished, all in arms;
    All plumed like estridges that with the wind
    Bated like eagles having lately bathed,
    Glittering in golden coats, like images;
    As full of spirit as the month of May,
    And gorgeous as the sun at midsummer;
    Wanton as youthful goats, wild as young bulls.
    I saw young Harry with his beaver on,
    His cushes on his thighs, gallantly armed,
    Rise from the ground like feathered Mercury,
    And vaulted with such ease into his seat
    As if an angel dropped down from the clouds
    To turn and wind a fiery Pegasus
    And witch the world with noble horsemanship.

Hotspur    No more, no more. Worse than the sun in March
    This praise doth nourish agues. Let them come.
    They come like sacrifices in their trim,
    And to the fire-eyed maid of smoky war
    All hot and bleeding will we offer them.
    The mailed Mars shall on his altar sit
    Up to the ears in blood. I am on fire
    To hear this rich reprisal is so nigh
    And yet not ours. Come, let me taste my horse,
    Who is to bear me like a thunderbolt
    Against the bosom of the Prince of Wales.
    Harry to Harry shall, hot horse to horse,
    Meet, and ne'er part till one drop down a corse.
    O that Glendower were come!

Vernon                                        There is more news.
    I learned in Worcester, as I rode along,
    He cannot draw his power this fourteen days.

Douglas    That's the worst tidings that I hear of yet.

Worcester    Ay, by my faith, that bears a frosty sound.

Hotspur    What may the king's whole battle reach unto?

Vernon    To thirty thousand.

Hotspur                                Forty let it be.
    My father and Glendower being both away,
    The powers of us may serve so great a day.
    Come, let us take a muster speedily:
    Doomsday is near -die all, die merrily.

Douglas    Talk not of dying: I am out of fear
    Of death or death's hand for this one half year.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. A Road near Coventry.

Enter FALSTAFF and BARDOLPH.

Falstaff    Bardolph, get thee before to Coventry; fill me a bottle of sack. 
Our soldiers shall march through. We'll to Sutton Co'fil' tonight.

Bardolph    Will you give me money, captain?

Falstaff    Lay out, lay out.

Bardolph    This bottle makes an angel.

Falstaff    And if it do, take it for thy labour; and if it make twenty, take 
them all -I'll answer the coinage. Bid my lieutenant Peto meet me at town's end.


Bardolph    I will, captain. Farewell.
[Exit.

Falstaff    If I be not ashamed of my soldiers, I am a soused gurnet. I have 
misused the king's press damnably. I have got in exchange of a hundred and 
fifty soldiers three hundred and odd pounds. I press me none but good 
householders, yeomen's sons; inquire me out contracted bachelors, such as had 
been asked twice on the banns -such a commodity of warm slaves as had as lief 
hear the devil as a drum, such as fear the report of a caliver worse than a 
struck fowl or a hurt wild duck. I pressed me none but such toasts-and-butter, 
with hearts in their bellies no bigger than pins' heads, and they have bought 
out their services; and now my whole charge consists of ensigns, corporals, 
lieutenants, gentlemen of companies -slaves as ragged as Lazarus in the 
painted cloth, where the glutton's dogs licked his sores -and such as indeed 
were never soldiers, but discarded unjust servingmen, younger sons to younger 
brothers, revolted tapsters, and ostlers trade-fall'n; the cankers of a calm 
world and a long peace, ten times more dishonourable-ragged than an old fazed 
ensign; and such have I to fill up the rooms of them as have bought out their 
services that you would think that I had a hundred and fifty tattered 
prodigals lately come from swine-keeping, from eating draff and husks. A mad 
fellow met me on the way and told me I had unloaded all the gibbets and 
pressed the dead bodies. No eye hath seen such scarecrows. I'll not march 
through Coventry with them, that's flat. Nay, and the villains march wide 
betwixt the legs, as if they had gyves on, for indeed I had the most of them 
out of prison. There's not a shirt and a half in all my company; and the half 
shirt is two napkins tacked together and thrown over the shoulders like a 
herald's coat without sleeves; and the shirt, to say the truth, stolen from my 
host at Saint Albans, or the red-nose innkeeper of Daventry. But that's all 
one; they'll find linen enough on every hedge.


Enter the PRINCE and the Lord of WESTMORELAND.

Prince Henry    How now, blown Jack? How now, quilt?

Falstaff    What, Hal! How now, mad wag? What a devil dost thou in 
Warwickshire? My good Lord of Westmoreland! I cry you mercy, I thought your 
honour had already been at Shrewsbury.

Westmoreland    Faith, Sir John, 'tis more than time that I were there, and 
you too; but my powers are there already. The king, I can tell you, looks for 
us all; we must away all night.

Falstaff    Tut, never fear me, I am as vigilant as a cat to steal cream.

Prince Henry    I think, to steal cream indeed, for thy theft hath already 
made thee butter. But tell me, Jack, whose fellows are these that come after?

Falstaff    Mine, Hal, mine.

Prince Henry    I did never see such pitiful rascals.

Falstaff    Tut, tut, good enough to toss; food for powder, food for powder; 
they'll fill a pit as well as better. Tush, man, mortal men, mortal men.

Westmoreland    Ay, but, Sir John, methinks they are exceeding poor and bare, 
too beggarly.

Falstaff    Faith, for their poverty, I know not where they had that; and for 
their bareness, I am sure they never learned that of me.

Prince Henry    No, I'll be sworn, unless you call three fingers in the ribs 
bare. But, sirrah, make haste. Percy is already in the field.
[Exit.
Falstaff    What, is the king encamped?

Westmoreland    He is, Sir John. I fear we shall stay too long.
[Exit.
Falstaff    Well, to the latter end of a fray and the beginning of a feast 
fits a dull fighter and a keen guest.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. The Rebel Camp near Shrewsbury.

Enter HOTSPUR, WORCESTER, DOUGLAS, VERNON.

Hotspur    We'll fight with him tonight.

Worcester                                    It may not be.

Douglas    You give him then advantage.

Vernon                                        Not a whit.

Hotspur    Why say you so? Looks he not for supply?

Vernon    So do we.

Hotspur            His is certain, ours is doubtful.

Worcester    Good cousin, be advised: stir not tonight.

Vernon    Do not, my lord.

Douglas                        You do not counsel well.
    You speak it out of fear and cold heart.

Vernon    Do me no slander, Douglas. By my life - 
    And I dare well maintain it with my life - 
    If well-respected honour bid me on,
    I hold as little counsel with weak fear
    As you, my lord, or any Scot that this day lives.
    Let it be seen tomorrow in the battle
    Which of us fears.

Douglas                        Yea, or tonight.

Vernon                                        Content.

Hotspur    Tonight, say I.

Vernon    Come, come, it may not be. I wonder much,
    Being men of such great leading as you are,
    That you foresee not what impediments
    Drag back our expedition. Certain horse
    Of my cousin Vernon's are not yet come up;
    Your uncle Worcester's horse came but today,
    And now their pride and mettle is asleep,
    Their courage with hard labour tame and dull,
    That not a horse is half the half himself.

Hotspur    So are the horses of the enemy
    In general journey-bated and brought low.
    The better part of ours are full of rest.

Worcester    The number of the king exceedeth ours.
    For God's sake, cousin, stay till all come in.
[The trumpet sounds a parley.

Enter Sir Walter BLUNT.

Blunt    I come with gracious offers from the king,
    If you vouchsafe me hearing and respect.

Hotspur    Welcome, Sir Walter Blunt; and would to God
    You were of our determination!
    Some of us love you well; and even those some
    Envy your great deservings and good name,
    Because you are not of our quality,
    But stand against us like an enemy.

Blunt    And God defend but still I should stand so,
    So long as out of limit and true rule
    You stand against anointed majesty.
    But to my charge. The king hath sent to know
    The nature of your griefs, and whereupon
    You conjure from the breast of civil peace
    Such bold hostility, teaching his duteous land
    Audacious cruelty. If that the king
    Have any way your good deserts forgot,
    Which he confesseth to be manifold,
    He bids you name your griefs, and with all speed
    You shall have your desires with interest,
    And pardon absolute for yourself and these
    Herein misled by your suggestion.

Hotspur    The king is kind, and well we know the king
    Knows at what time to promise, when to pay.
    My father and my uncle and myself
    Did give him that same royalty he wears,
    And when he was not six-and-twenty strong,
    Sick in the world's regard, wretched and low,
    A poor unminded outlaw sneaking home,
    My father gave him welcome to the shore;
    And when he heard him swear and vow to God
    He came but to be Duke of Lancaster,
    To sue his livery, and beg his peace
    With tears of innocency and terms of zeal,
    My father, in kind heart and pity moved,
    Swore him assistance, and performed it too.
    Now when the lords and barons of the realm
    Perceived Northumberland did lean to him,
    The more and less came in with cap and knee,
    Met him in boroughs, cities, villages,
    Attended him on bridges, stood in lanes,
    Laid gifts before him, proffered him their oaths,
    Gave him their heirs as pages, followed him
    Even at the heels in golden multitudes.
    He presently, as greatness knows itself,
    Steps me a little higher than his vow
    Made to my father while his blood was poor
    Upon the naked shore at Ravenspurgh;
    And now, forsooth, takes on him to reform
    Some certain edicts and some strait decrees
    That lie too heavy on the commonwealth,
    Cries out upon abuses, seems to weep
    Over his country's wrongs; and by this face,
    This seeming brow of justice, did he win
    The hearts of all that he did angle for;
    Proceeded further, cut me off the heads
    Of all the favourites that the absent king
    In deputation left behind him here
    When he was personal in the Irish war.

Blunt    Tut, I came not to hear this.

Hotspur                                        Then to the point.
    In short time after, he deposed the king;
    Soon after that deprived him of his life;
    And in the neck of that tasked the whole state;
    To make that worse, suffered his kinsman March - 
    Who is, if every owner were well placed,
    Indeed his king -to be engaged in Wales,
    There without ransom to lie forfeited;
    Disgraced me in my happy victories,
    Sought to entrap me by intelligence,
    Rated mine uncle from the Council-board,
    In rage dismissed my father from the court,
    Broke oath on oath, committed wrong on wrong,
    And, in conclusion, drove us to seek out
    This head of safety, and withal to pry
    Into his title, the which we find
    Too indirect for long continuance.

Blunt    Shall I return this answer to the king?

Hotspur    Not so, Sir Walter. We'll withdraw awhile.
    Go to the king; and let there be impawned
    Some surety for a safe return again,
    And in the morning early shall mine uncle
    Bring him our purposes. And so farewell.

Blunt    I would you would accept of grace and love.

Hotspur    And maybe so we shall.

Blunt                                    Pray God you do.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. York. A Room in the Archbishop's Palace.

Enter the ARCHBISHOP OF YORK and SIR MICHAEL.

Archbishop    Hie, good Sir Michael, bear this sealed brief
    With winged haste to the lord marshal;
    This to my cousin Scroop; and all the rest
    To whom they are directed. If you knew
    How much they do import you would make haste.

Sir Michael    My good lord, I guess their tenor.

Archbishop    Like enough you do.
    Tomorrow, good Sir Michael, is a day
    Wherein the fortune of ten thousand men
    Must bide the touch; for, sir, at Shrewsbury,
    As I am truly given to understand,
    The king with mighty and quick-raised power
    Meets with Lord Harry; and I fear, Sir Michael,
    What with the sickness of Northumberland,
    Whose power was in the first proportion,
    And what with Owen Glendower's absence thence,
    Who with them was a rated sinew too,
    And comes not in, o'erruled by prophecies,
    I fear the power of Percy is too weak
    To wage an instant trial with the king.

Sir Michael    Why, my good lord, you need not fear;
    There is Douglas and Lord Mortimer.

Archbishop    No, Mortimer is not there.

Sir Michael    But there is Mordake, Vernon, Lord Harry Percy,
    And there is my Lord of Worcester, and a head
    Of gallant warriors, noble gentlemen.

Archbishop    And so there is; but yet the king hath drawn
    The special head of all the land together:
    The Prince of Wales, Lord John of Lancaster,
    The noble Westmoreland, and warlike Blunt,
    And many more corrivals and dear men
    Of estimation and command in arms.

Sir Michael    Doubt not, my lord, they shall be well opposed.

Archbishop    I hope no less, yet needful 'tis to fear;
    And to prevent the worst, Sir Michael, speed.
    For if Lord Percy thrive not, ere the king
    Dismiss his power he means to visit us,
    For he hath heard of our confederacy,
    And 'tis but wisdom to make strong against him.
    Therefore make haste. I must go write again
    To other friends. And so farewell, Sir Michael.
[Exeunt.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 5.

Scene 1. The King's Camp near Shrewsbury.

Enter the KING, PRINCE OF WALES, Lord John of LANCASTER, SIR WALTER BLUNT, and 
FALSTAFF.

King Henry    How bloodily the sun begins to peer
    Above yon bulky hill! The day looks pale
    At his distemp'rature.

Prince Henry                                The southern wind
    Doth play the trumpet to his purposes,
    And by his hollow whistling in the leaves
    Foretells a tempest and a blust'ring day.

King Henry    Then with the losers let it sympathize,
    For nothing can seem foul to those that win.
 [The trumpet sounds.

Enter WORCESTER and VERNON.

    How now, my Lord of Worcester! 'Tis not well
    That you and I should meet upon such terms
    As now we meet. You have deceived our trust,
    And made us doff our easy robes of peace
    To crush our old limbs in ungentle steel.
    This is not well, my lord, this is not well.
    What say you to it? Will you again unknit
    This churlish knot of all-abhorred war,
    And move in that obedient orb again
    Where you did give a fair and natural light,
    And be no more an exhaled meteor,
    A prodigy of fear, and a portent
    Of broached mischief to the unborn times?

Worcester    Hear me, my liege.
    For mine own part I could be well content
    To entertain the lag-end of my life
    With quiet hours; for I protest
    I have not sought the day of this dislike.

King Henry    You have not sought it! How comes it then?

Falstaff    Rebellion lay in his way, and he found it.

Prince Henry    Peace, chewet, peace!

Worcester    It pleased your majesty to turn your looks
    Of favour from myself and all our house,
    And yet I must remember you, my lord,
    We were the first and dearest of your friends.
    For you my staff of office did I break
    In Richard's time, and posted day and night
    To meet you on the way and kiss your hand
    When yet you were in place and in account
    Nothing so strong and fortunate as I.
    It was myself, my brother, and his son
    That brought you home and boldly did outdare
    The dangers of the time. You swore to us,
    And you did swear that oath at Doncaster,
    That you did nothing purpose 'gainst the state,
    Nor claim no further than your new-fall'n right,
    The seat of Gaunt, dukedom of Lancaster.
    To this we swore our aid; but in short space
    It rained down fortune show'ring on your head,
    And such a flood of greatness fell on you,
    What with our help, what with the absent king,
    What with the injuries of a wanton time,
    The seeming sufferances that you had borne,
    And the contrarious winds that held the king
    So long in his unlucky Irish wars
    That all in England did repute him dead;
    And from this swarm of fair advantages
    You took occasion to be quickly wooed
    To gripe the general sway into your hand,
    Forgot your oath to us at Doncaster,
    And, being fed by us, you used us so
    As that ungentle gull, the cuckoo's bird,
    Useth the sparrow -did oppress our nest,
    Grew by our feeding to so great a bulk
    That even our love durst not come near your sight
    For fear of swallowing; but with nimble wing
    We were enforced for safety sake to fly
    Out of your sight, and raise this present head,
    Whereby we stand opposed by such means
    As you yourself have forged against yourself
    By unkind usage, dangerous countenance,
    And violation of all faith and troth
    Sworn to us in your younger enterprise.

King Henry    These things indeed you have articulate,
    Proclaimed at market crosses, read in churches,
    To face the garment of rebellion
    With some fine colour that may please the eye
    Of fickle changelings and poor discontents,
    Which gape and rub the elbow at the news
    Of hurly-burly innovation;
    And never yet did insurrection want
    Such water-colours to impaint his cause,
    Nor moody beggars, starving for a time
    Of pell-mell havoc and confusion.

Prince Henry    In both your armies there is many a soul
    Shall pay full dearly for this encounter
    If once they join in trial. Tell your nephew,
    The Prince of Wales doth join with all the world
    In praise of Henry Percy. By my hopes,
    This present enterprise set off his head,
    I do not think a braver gentleman,
    More active-valiant or more valiant-young,
    More daring or more bold, is now alive
    To grace this latter age with noble deeds.
    For my part, I may speak it to my shame,
    I have a truant been to chivalry;
    And so I hear he doth account me too.
    Yet this, before my father's majesty:
    I am content that he shall take the odds
    Of his great name and estimation,
    And will, to save the blood on either side,
    Try fortune with him in a single fight.

King Henry    And, Prince of Wales, so dare we venture thee,
    Albeit considerations infinite
    Do make against it. No, good Worcester, no.
    We love our people well; even those we love
    That are misled upon your cousin's part;
    And will they take the offer of our grace,
    Both he and they and you, yea, every man
    Shall be my friend again, and I'll be his.
    So tell your cousin, and bring me word
    What he will do; but if he will not yield,
    Rebuke and dread correction wait on us,
    And they shall do their office. So, be gone.
    We will not now be troubled with reply.
    We offer fair, take it advisedly.
[Exeunt WORCESTER and VERNON.

Prince Henry    It will not be accepted, on my life.
    The Douglas and the Hotspur both together
    Are confident against the world in arms.

King Henry    Hence, therefore, every leader to his charge;
    For on their answer will we set on them,
    And God befriend us as our cause is just!
[Exeunt all but the PRINCE and FALSTAFF.

Falstaff    Hal, if thou see me down in the battle, and bestride me, so; 'tis 
a point of friendship.

Prince Henry    Nothing but a Colossus can do thee that friendship. Say thy 
prayers, and farewell.

Falstaff    I would 'twere bedtime, Hal, and all well.

Prince Henry    Why, thou owest God a death.
[Exit.

Falstaff    'Tis not due yet; I would be loath to pay him before his day. What 
need I be so forward with him that calls not on me? Well, 'tis no matter; 
honour pricks me on. Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come on? How 
then? Can honour set to a leg? No. Or an arm? No. Or take away the grief of a 
wound? No. Honour hath no skill in surgery then? No. What is honour? A word. 
What is in that word `honour'? What is that `honour'? Air. A trim reckoning! 
Who hath it? He that died a-Wednesday. Doth he feel it? No. Doth he hear it? 
No. 'Tis insensible then? Yea, to the dead. But will it not live with the 
living? No. Why? Detraction will not suffer it. Therefore I'll none of it. 
Honour is a mere scutcheon -and so ends my catechism.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. The Rebel Camp near Shrewsbury.

Enter WORCESTER and SIR RICHARD VERNON.

Worcester    O no, my nephew must not know, Sir Richard,
    The liberal and kind offer of the king.

Vernon    'Twere best he did.

Worcester                            Then are we all undone.
    It is not possible, it cannot be,
    The king should keep his word in loving us;
    He will suspect us still, and find a time
    To punish this offence in other faults.
    Supposition all our lives shall be stuck full of eyes,
    For treason is but trusted like the fox,
    Who, never so tame, so cherished and locked up,
    Will have a wild trick of his ancestors.
    Look how we can, or sad or merrily,
    Interpretation will misquote our looks,
    And we shall feed like oxen at a stall,
    The better cherished still the nearer death.
    My nephew's trespass may be well forgot;
    It hath the excuse of youth and heat of blood,
    And an adopted name of privilege,
    A hare-brained Hotspur, governed by a spleen.
    All his offences live upon my head
    And on his father's. We did train him on,
    And, his corruption being ta'en from us,
    We, as the spring of all, shall pay for all.
    Therefore, good cousin, let not Harry know,
    In any case, the offer of the king.

Vernon    Deliver what you will; I'll say 'tis so.
    Here comes your cousin.

Enter HOTSPUR and DOUGLAS.

Hotspur                                    My uncle is returned;
    Deliver up my Lord of Westmoreland.
    Uncle, what news?

Worcester    The king will bid you battle presently.

Douglas    Defy him by the Lord of Westmoreland.

Hotspur    Lord Douglas, go you and tell him so.

Douglas    Marry, and shall, and very willingly.
[Exit.
Worcester    There is no seeming mercy in the king.

Hotspur    Did you beg any? God forbid!

Worcester    I told him gently of our grievances,
    Of his oath-breaking; which he mended thus:
    By now forswearing that he is forsworn.
    He calls us rebels, traitors, and will scourge
    With haughty arms this hateful name in us.

Re-enter DOUGLAS.

Douglas    Arm, gentlemen, to arms! For I have thrown
    A brave defiance in king Henry's teeth,
    And Westmoreland, that was engaged, did bear it,
    Which cannot choose but bring him quickly on.

Worcester    The Prince of Wales stepped forth before the king,
    And, nephew, challenged you to single fight.

Hotspur    O, would the quarrel lay upon our heads,
    And that no man might draw short breath today
    But I and Harry Monmouth! Tell me, tell me,
    How showed his tasking? Seemed it in contempt?

Vernon    No, by my soul. I never in my life
    Did hear a challenge urged more modestly,
    Unless a brother should a brother dare
    To gentle exercise and proof of arms.
    He gave you all the duties of a man,
    Trimmed up your praises with a princely tongue,
    Spoke your deservings like a chronicle,
    Making you ever better than his praise
    By still dispraising praise valued with you,
    And, which became him like a prince indeed,
    He made a blushing cital of himself,
    And chid his truant youth with such a grace
    As if he mastered there a double spirit
    Of teaching and of learning instantly.
    There did he pause; -but let me tell the world,
    If he outlive the envy of this day,
    England did never owe so sweet a hope,
    So much misconstrued in his wantonness.

Hotspur    Cousin, I think thou art enamoured
    On his follies. Never did I hear
    Of any prince so wild a liberty.
    But be he as he will, yet once ere night
    I will embrace him with a soldier's arm,
    That he shall shrink under my courtesy.
    Arm, arm with speed! And, fellows, soldiers, friends,
    Better consider what you have to do
    Than I, that have not well the gift of tongue,
    Can lift your blood up with persuasion.

Enter a MESSENGER.

Messenger    My lord, here are letters for you.

Hotspur    I cannot read them now.
    O gentlemen, the time of life is short!
    To spend that shortness basely were too long
    If life did ride upon a dial's point,
    Still ending at the arrival of an hour.
    And if we live, we live to tread on kings;
    If die, brave death when princes die with us!
    Now, for our consciences, the arms are fair
    When the intent of bearing them is just.

Enter another MESSENGER.

2nd Messenger    My lord, prepare; the king comes on apace.

Hotspur    I thank him that he cuts me from my tale,
    For I profess not talking, only this:
    Let each man do his best; and here draw I
    A sword whose temper I intend to stain
    With the best blood that I can meet withal
    In the adventure of this perilous day.
    Now, Esperance! Percy! And set on!
    Sound all the lofty instruments of war,
    And by that music let us all embrace;
    For, heaven to earth, some of us never shall
    A second time do such a courtesy.
[Here they embrace. The trumpets sound.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Shrewsbury. The Battlefield.

The KING enters with his POWER.
Alarum, and exeunt to the battle.
Then enter DOUGLAS, and SIR WALTER BLUNT disguised as the king.

Blunt    What is thy name, that in the battle thus
    Thou crossest me? What honour dost thou seek
    Upon my head?

Douglas                        Know then my name is Douglas,
    And I do haunt thee in the battle thus
    Because some tell me that thou art a king.

Blunt    They tell thee true.

Douglas    The Lord of Stafford dear today hath bought
    Thy likeness, for instead of thee, King Harry,
    This sword hath ended him; so shall it thee,
    Unless thou yield thee as my prisoner.

Blunt    I was not born a yielder, thou proud Scot,
    And thou shalt find a king that will revenge
    Lord Stafford's death.

They fight. DOUGLAS kills BLUNT. Then enter HOTSPUR.

Hotspur    O Douglas, hadst thou fought at Holmedon thus,
    I never had triumphed upon a Scot.

Douglas    All's done, all's won: here breathless lies the king.

Hotspur    Where?

Douglas    Here.

Hotspur    This, Douglas? No; I know this face full well:
    A gallant knight he was, his name was Blunt;
    Semblably furnished like the king himself.

Douglas    A fool go with thy soul, whither it goes!
    A borrowed title hast thou bought too dear.
    Why didst thou tell me that thou wert a king?

Hotspur    The king hath many marching in his coats.

Douglas    Now, by my sword, I will kill all his coats;
    I'll murder all his wardrobe, piece by piece,
    Until I meet the king.

Hotspur                                    Up and away!
    Our soldiers stand full fairly for the day.
[Exeunt.

Alarum. Enter FALSTAFF solus.

Falstaff    Though I could scape shot-free at London, I fear the shot here; 
here's no scoring but upon the pate. Soft, who are you? Sir Walter Blunt 
-there's honour for you! Here's no vanity! I am as hot as molten lead, and as 
heavy too. God keep lead out of me; I need no more weight than mine own 
bowels. I have led my ragamuffins where they are peppered; there's not three 
of my hundred and fifty left alive, and they are for the town's end, to beg 
during life. But who comes here?

Enter the PRINCE.

Prince Henry    What, stands thou idle here? Lend me thy sword.
    Many a nobleman lies stark and stiff
    Under the hoofs of vaunting enemies, whose deaths are yet unrevenged. I 
prithee lend me thy sword.

Falstaff    O Hal, I prithee give me leave to breathe awhile. Turk Gregory 
never did such deeds in arms as I have done this day. I have paid Percy, I 
have made him sure.

Prince Henry    He is indeed, and living to kill thee.
    I prithee lend me thy sword.

Falstaff    Nay, before God, Hal, if Percy be alive thou gets not my sword; 
but take my pistol if thou wilt.

Prince Henry    Give it me. What, is it in the case?

Falstaff    Ay, Hal. 'Tis hot, 'tis hot. There's that will sack a city.
[The PRINCE draws it out, and finds it to be a bottle of sack.

Prince Henry    What, is it a time to jest and dally now?
[He throws the bottle at him. Exit.

Falstaff    Well, if Percy be alive, I'll pierce him. If he do come in my way, 
so; if he do not, if I come in his willingly, let him make a carbonado of me. 
I like not such grinning honour as Sir Walter hath. Give me life, which if I 
can save, so; if not, honour comes unlooked for, and there's an end.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Another Part of the Field.

Alarum. Excursions.
Enter the KING, the PRINCE, Lord John of LANCASTER, Earl of WESTMORELAND.

King Henry    I prithee Harry, withdraw thyself, thou bleed'st too much.
    Lord John of Lancaster, go you with him.

Lancaster    Not I, my lord, unless I did bleed too.

Prince Henry    I beseech your majesty, make up,
    Lest your retirement do amaze your friends.

King Henry    I will do so. My Lord of Westmoreland,
    Lead him to his tent.

Westmoreland    Come, my lord, I'll lead you to your tent.

Prince Henry    Lead me, my lord? I do not need your help,
    And God forbid a shallow scratch should drive
    The Prince of Wales from such a field as this,
    Where stained nobility lies trodden on,
    And rebels' arms triumph in massacres!

Lancaster    We breathe too long. Come, cousin Westmoreland,
    Our duty this way lies. For God's sake, come.
[Exeunt LANCASTER and WESTMORELAND.

Prince Henry    By God, thou hast deceived me, Lancaster;
    I did not think thee lord of such a spirit.
    Before, I loved thee as a brother, John,
    But now I do respect thee as my soul.

King Henry    I saw him hold Lord Percy at the point
    With lustier maintenance than I did look for
    Of such an ungrown warrior.

Prince Henry    O, this boy lends mettle to us all!
[Exit.
Enter DOUGLAS.

Douglas    Another king? They grow like Hydra's heads.
    I am the Douglas, fatal to all those
    That wear those colours on them. What art thou
    That counterfeit'st the person of a king?

King Henry    The king himself, who, Douglas, grieves at heart
    So many of his shadows thou hast met,
    And not the very king. I have two boys
    Seek Percy and thyself about the field,
    But seeing thou fall'st on me so luckily
    I will assay thee -and defend thyself.

Douglas    I fear thou art another counterfeit;
    And yet, in faith, thou bearest thee like a king.
    But mine I am sure thou art, whoe'er thou be,
    And thus I win thee.
[They fight, the king being in danger.

Re-enter PRINCE OF WALES.

Prince Henry    Hold up thy head, vile Scot, or thou art like
    Never to hold it up again. The spirits
    Of valiant Shirley, Stafford, Blunt, are in my arms.
    It is the Prince of Wales that threatens thee,
    Who never promiseth but he means to pay.
[They fight. DOUGLAS flieth.
    Cheerly, my lord, how fares your grace?
    Sir Nicholas Gawsey hath for succour sent,
    And so hath Clifton -I'll to Clifton straight.

King Henry    Stay, and breathe a while.
    Thou hast redeemed thy lost opinion,
    And showed thou mak'st some tender of my life,
    In this fair rescue thou hast brought to me.

Prince Henry    O God, they did me too much injury
    That ever said I hearkened for your death.
    If it were so, I might have let alone
    The insulting hand of Douglas over you,
    Which would have been as speedy in your end
    As all the poisonous potions in the world,
    And saved the treacherous labour of your son.

King Henry    Make up to Clifton; I'll to Sir Nicholas Gawsey.
[Exit.
Enter HOTSPUR.

Hotspur    If I mistake not, thou art Harry Monmouth.

Prince Henry    Thou speak'st as if I would deny my name.

Hotspur    My name is Harry Percy.

Prince Henry                                    Why, then I see
    A very valiant rebel of the name.
    I am the Prince of Wales; and think not, Percy,
    To share with me in glory any more:
    Two stars keep not their motion in one sphere,
    Nor can one England brook a double reign
    Of Harry Percy and the Prince of Wales.

Hotspur    Nor shall it, Harry, for the hour is come
    To end the one of us -and would to God
    Thy name in arms were now as great as mine!

Prince Henry    I'll make it greater ere I part from thee,
    And all the budding honours on thy crest
    I'll crop, to make a garland for my head.

Hotspur    I can no longer brook thy vanities.
[They fight.
Enter FALSTAFF.

Falstaff    Well said, Hal! To it, Hal! Nay, you shall find no boy's play 
here, I can tell you.

Re-enter DOUGLAS.
He fighteth with Falstaff, who falls down as if he were dead.
[Exit DOUGLAS.

The PRINCE wounds HOTSPUR, who falls.

Hotspur    O Harry, thou hast robbed me of my youth!
    I better brook the loss of brittle life
    Than those proud titles thou hast won of me:
    They wound my thoughts worse than thy sword my flesh.
    But thoughts, the slaves of life, and life, time's fool,
    And time, that takes survey of all the world,
    Must have a stop. O, I could prophesy,
    But that the earthy and cold hand of death
    Lies on my tongue. No, Percy, thou art dust,
    And food for - 
[Dies.

Prince Henry    For worms, brave Percy. Fare thee well, great heart.
    Ill-weaved ambition, how much art thou shrunk!
    When that this body did contain a spirit,
    A kingdom for it was too small a bound;
    But now two paces of the vilest earth
    Is room enough. This earth that bears thee dead
    Bears not alive so stout a gentleman.
    If thou wert sensible of courtesy,
    I should not make so dear a show of zeal.
    But let my favours hide thy mangled face,
    And, even in thy behalf, I'll thank myself
    For doing these fair rites of tenderness.
    Adieu, and take thy praise with thee to heaven!
    Thy ignominy sleep with thee in the grave,
    But not remembered in thy epitaph.
[He spieth FALSTAFF on the ground.
    What, old acquaintance, could not all this flesh
    Keep in a little life? Poor Jack, farewell!
    I could have better spared a better man.
    O, I should have a heavy miss of thee
    If I were much in love with vanity.
    Death hath not struck so fat a deer today,
    Though many dearer, in this bloody fray.
    Embowelled will I see thee by and by;
    Till then in blood by noble Percy lie.
[Exit.
FALSTAFF riseth up.

Falstaff    Embowelled? If thou embowel me today, I'll give you leave to 
powder me, and eat me too, tomorrow. 'Sblood, 'twas time to counterfeit, or 
that hot termagant Scot had paid me, scot and lot too. Counterfeit? I lie, I 
am no counterfeit. To die is to be a counterfeit, for he is but the 
counterfeit of a man who hath not the life of a man; but to counterfeit dying 
when a man thereby liveth is to be no counterfeit, but the true and perfect 
image of life indeed. The better part of valour is discretion, in the which 
better part I have saved my life. Zounds, I am afraid of this gunpowder Percy, 
though he be dead. How if he should counterfeit too, and rise? By my faith, I 
am afraid he would prove the better counterfeit. Therefore I'll make him sure; 
yea, and I'll swear I killed him. Why may not he rise as well as I? Nothing 
confutes me but eyes, and nobody sees me. Therefore, sirrah,
[Stabs him.
    with a new wound in your thigh, come you along with me.
[He takes up HOTSPUR on his back.

Re-enter PRINCE and John of LANCASTER.

Prince Henry    Come, brother John, full bravely hast thou fleshed
    Thy maiden sword.

Lancaster                        But soft, whom have we here?
    Did you not tell me this fat man was dead?

Prince Henry    I did; I saw him dead,
    Breathless and bleeding on the ground. -Art thou alive,
    Or is it fantasy that plays upon our eyesight?
    I prithee speak; we will not trust our eyes
    Without our ears. Thou art not what thou seem'st.

Falstaff    No, that's certain, I am not a double-man; but if I be not Jack 
Falstaff, then am I a Jack. There is Percy.
[Throwing the body down.
    If your father will do me any honour, so; if not, let him kill the next 
Percy himself. I look to be either earl or duke, I can assure you.

Prince Henry    Why, Percy I killed myself, and saw thee dead.

Falstaff    Didst thou? Lord, Lord, how this world is given to lying! I grant 
you I was down, and out of breath, and so was he; but we rose both at an 
instant and fought a long hour by Shrewsbury clock. If I may be believed, so; 
if not, let them that should reward valour bear the sin upon their own heads. 
I'll take it upon my death I gave him this wound in the thigh. If the man were 
alive and would deny it, 'zounds, I would make him eat a piece of my sword.

Lancaster    This is the strangest tale that ever I heard.

Prince Henry    This is the strangest fellow, brother John.
    Come, bring your luggage nobly on your back.
    For my part, if a lie may do thee grace,
    I'll gild it with the happiest terms I have.
[A retreat is sounded.
    The trumpet sounds retreat; the day is ours.
    Come, brother, let us to the highest of the field
    To see what friends are living, who are dead.
[Exeunt PRINCE HENRY and LANCASTER.

Falstaff    I'll follow, as they say, for reward. He that rewards me, God 
reward him. If I do grow great, I'll grow less; for I'll purge, and leave 
sack, and live cleanly, as a nobleman should do.
[Exit, bearing off the body.

+ + + + + +

Scene 5. Another Part of the Field.

The trumpets sound.
Enter the KING, PRINCE OF WALES, Lord John of LANCASTER, Earl of WESTMORELAND, 
with WORCESTER and VERNON prisoners, guarded by SOLDIERS.

King Henry    Thus ever did rebellion find rebuke.
    Ill-spirited Worcester, did not we send grace,
    Pardon, and terms of love to all of you?
    And wouldst thou turn our offers contrary?
    Misuse the tenor of thy kinsman's trust?
    Three knights upon our party slain today,
    A noble earl, and many a creature else,
    Had been alive this hour
    If, like a Christian, thou hadst truly borne
    Betwixt our armies true intelligence.

Worcester    What I have done my safety urged me to;
    And I embrace this fortune patiently,
    Since not to be avoided it falls on me.

King Henry    Bear Worcester to the death, and Vernon too;
    Other offenders we will pause upon.
[Exeunt WORCESTER and VERNON, guarded.
    How goes the field?

Prince Henry    The noble Scot, Lord Douglas, when he saw
    The fortune of the day quite turned from him,
    The noble Percy slain, and all his men
    Upon the foot of fear, fled with the rest;
    And falling from a hill he was so bruised
    That the pursuers took him. At my tent
    The Douglas is; and I beseech your grace
    I may dispose of him.

King Henry                                With all my heart.

Prince Henry    Then, brother John of Lancaster, to you
    This honourable bounty shall belong.
    Go to the Douglas, and deliver him
    Up to his pleasure, ransomless and free.
    His valours shown upon our crests today
    Have taught us how to cherish such high deeds,
    Even in the bosom of our adversaries.

Lancaster    I thank your grace for this high courtesy,
    Which I shall give away immediately.

King Henry    Then this remains, that we divide our power.
    You, son John, and my cousin Westmoreland,
    Towards York shall bend you with your dearest speed
    To meet Northumberland and the prelate Scroop,
    Who, as we hear, are busily in arms.
    Myself and you, son Harry, will towards Wales
    To fight with Glendower and the Earl of March.
    Rebellion in this land shall lose his sway,
    Meeting the check of such another day;
    And since this business so fair is done,
    Let us not leave till all our own be won.
[Exeunt.