Read The Tragedy of Arthur: A Novel Online
Authors: Arthur Phillips
ARTHUR
O, gray old Duke of Gloucester, kindly lord,
For all thy gifts, sage counsel, and sweet care
I mean to clip thee to my kingly breast
When round my temples flows the stream of gold.
7But be not now nor then a wit-poor prophet,
Who cloaks his lank advice in piety.
I would not have my second father’s voice
Now sing this priestly strain,
8
nay, Duke, not you.
GLOUCESTER
Do you then call me father, good my prince?
With love I call you only son, from when
That night our gate did croak and murder sleep,
9There came a courser,
10
black against the sky,And wondrous dispatch from th’embattled king
Was read to me, great confidence bestowed.
Then soldiers pushed th’unwilling nurse to me,
I marked the fardle
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in her weak, old arms,And she did sob to you, “Farewell, my boy,”
And would not ope her fists to give thee o’er.
Then I and my new bride, yet half abed,
Before we passed scarce one black night’s embrace,
Did gaze upon a tiny boy’s bare head.
ARTHUR
A mother more than my own dam was she,
Your blessèd wife.
GLOUCESTER
Who lived else issueless,
And loved you as her son unto her grave.
Cries off
ARTHUR
GLOUCESTER
Then have you nothing of a conscience, Prince?
ARTHUR
I have a conscience of a nothing, Duke.
17And ere I float upon remembered days,
I’ll take me down the hill to where she droops,
20And dreams soft or of princes or of swains.
21Exit
[
Arthur
]
GLOUCESTER
“In Gloucestershire is Arthur safe from war.”
Thus read King Uter’s posted words, and Gloucester—
When time was
25
war-like Gloucester—was unmanned.Each freshly knighted squire, each new-made earl—
To hollowed title raised, for lack of pates
To fill the bloodied casques of warm dead lords—
Did frown on me, a nurse, far off from war.
I nothing chose, but did obey my king:
Not only stand protector for the prince,
But warrant him the future of the realm,
Be England’s Mentor
26
to the Prince of WalesAnd tend a manly heir to wisely reign
Then banish war from off our bloodied shores.
I ne’er had other son, nor wife for long.
The day I cut that boy a sword of lath
27And leapt for him and made to die when touched
28And held him pick-a-back
29
near all the day,Smacks
30
not more distant flown than half a week.Yet he was never mine, but only lent.
Now bounds away this gallant-springing
31
man,No more a boy mistaking me for Mars,
But cockered,
32
half-made prince ’pon whose slight armAnon must trusting lean all Albion.
33I am to raise a king or fly with one
As fate decrees, and vicious Saxon
34
arms,And Scottish breed-bates’
35
whining discontent.To lead or to be led. For both he’s bred.
The censure is on Gloucester’s weary duke
Who sacrificed his name to make this prince.
What king forged I? All England will be judge.
Enter messenger
Short-winded, boy?
MESSENGER
Aye, save your grace. Am I
The first to bear you tidings of the day?
GLOUCESTER
There’s none of any other, nor of thee.
MESSENGER
Were ten of us when we were sent from York
To speed to you and Arthur heavy cheer.
38
GLOUCESTER
Is’t he or I were meant to hear thee first?
MESSENGER
That wants a learnèd herald to unknot.
’Tis you, my lord, as you are lord protector,
’Tis he, my lord, for he is now your king.
GLOUCESTER
My king? How king? What of the king his sire?
MESSENGER
It is on this my embassy depends.
He quaffed of water drawn from venomed well,
Undone by filthy Saxon perfidy,
39With truncheon slipping from his fingers’ grasp
He whispered terms of manage
43
few men heard.But hoarsely forth he called, to no effect.
And now on York’s high wall the Saxon flag
Does whip, and Pictish
44
Loth does claim our throne.
GLOUCESTER
Thus one man’s death so bolds the bashful north
Conspiring all to reach at Britain’s crown.
MESSENGER
Where waits the prince, my lord?
GLOUCESTER
The prince? The king
Is there, below, at hunt.
MESSENGER
Shall I to him?
GLOUCESTER
Anon. Allow him yet one weightless breath.
[
Exit messenger
]His office and the times will bide a trice.
47The feared-desirèd day has startled us.
Who waits?
[
Enter servant
]
SERVANT
My lord?
GLOUCESTER
Go bid the master couple up the hounds
And knot the slips,
48
uncall this day’s last pleasures.Then send to all our friends across the Wye
49To speed to London’s abbey, thence to York.
We grieve a king, anoint his heir, and fight.
Exeunt
[
Location: A field in Gloucestershire
]
Enter Arthur for Swain
1
and Shepherdess
SHEPHERDESS
An it like thee, sit and watch my flock with me.
There’s grass enough to rest a body on. And trees to booth
2
thy white face,
3
an it like thee.
ARTHUR
SHEPHERDESS
Itching,
8
are you? I find my own flowers with none to help, thanks.
ARTHUR
Sweet goose, you speak true. But can you weave ’em to
a crown? I was learnèd once in twisting stems in what what
form I conceive. Would you a crown, Queen?
SHEPHERDESS
Thou namest me what?
ARTHUR
A queen, a royal lady of all these demesnes about.
SHEPHERDESS
Oh, and wouldst thou be my king then? There’s not a
Jack sits before me promises less than empires for a
kiss. And not a one but delivers me none.
ARTHUR
The wretches! But you stretch ’em no credit,
9
myJoan, or more’s the pity. And now I am no common
goat-herd. Find me so?
SHEPHERDESS
More pretty, true, but that’s a cloud in stag’s form,
soon enough to turn to other shapes, if only grow its its
horns a foot or two.
10
ARTHUR
She’s witty wise enough to be a queen! All’s well for me
then. Wouldst thou a ring of shoots for thy pretty
hand? Shall I shape these flowers into our banns?
11