Read The Tragedy of Arthur: A Novel Online
Authors: Arthur Phillips
SHEPHERDESS
Wouldst thou grudge it me?
ARTHUR
No man could, nor highest devoted nor basest knave.
For lips as red I’d not begrudge an empire. But talk
of kingdoms? Why is this willow not realm enough?
Not vast enough for empire the sedge
12
that holdsthat near bank? And sure this day and night are time
enough for friends?
SHEPHERDESS
Sure there’s time enough for swains to talk a girl and
find yet an hour of sun to run away by.
ARTHUR
None could be so dull to run, given taste of thy
flowered company.
SHEPHERDESS
A ring of flowers is nothing to plight a troth
13
for all alife.
ARTHUR
What girl’s tilly-vally
14
prattle! What day are we?Come, tell.
SHEPHERDESS
’Tis Monday, Jack. ’Tis sure ’twere only yesterday at
morning the priest talked of such and other.
ARTHUR
Monday, then, ’tis Monday. And what knowest thou of
Thursday still a-foot? Tell, sorceress, that I might
know the future! Perhaps we’ll fly a Saxon army, or
this overbold river o’er-wet the fields and town, or a
pox to carry every third man to his end? So tell me,
Joan, what knowest thou of Thursday next?
SHEPHERDESS
as thine have ne’er hissed sweet to me? What know I
of Thursday! Pah! I know I fear it not. I know it will
will from this day be different so little as those two
green grasses are the one the other. I know I’ll see it
from this willow or that one there, where my bell-
wether
17
likes best the sweet clover. I’ll sit hereThursday, my flower-prince, upon this very throne.
Can I so easy outsee thee by seeing that? Where
wilt thou be Thursday? Afeard
18
boy, doth Thursdaynext or ten years on danger thee to quaking?
ARTHUR
Ha! I do love thee, Joan. Nay, no day at thy side, afloat
in this broad main
19
of green can fright me. I tellthee, Joan, I know it, I’ll ne’er leave thy side. I
cannot see a day, Thursday or other, when I would
would not feel as I do now. I am a turtle,
20
have noconceit
21
of a time but this, a planted, growing,swelling seed forever.
SHEPHERDESS
Growing, swelling, aye, aye.
22
Just words, no differentif thou speakest or make mute that voice, the sun
moves no fleeter for all thy wild tongue doth whip.
ARTHUR
Queen of wisdom! Chide me roughly, then! Close my
vexing mouth, prison my rebel words under soft lock.
Come, make fast my silence.
[
They kiss
]Flourish, trumpets off, cries
[
of
]
“Arthur,” “Prince”
SHEPHERDESS
They call some royal name.
ARTHUR
Some hapless duke, bid to weigh some caitiff’s
23
claimof law, or called to lead trembling boys to buffets
’gainst Saxon steel.
Cries off
SHEPHERDESS
They seek him at an inch now. They will upon us.
ARTHUR
I bleed remorse for such a one as this, his days in
chambers, closets,
24
armor. I had fled by breakfastwere I that cursed prince.
SHEPHERDESS
They come, they come, now nigh.
25
Yet none ofprincely mien
26
are by. Wherefore should theydisturb our close quiet?
ARTHUR
Ah, ah, ah, unless thou art some lady playing at
pastoral belike,
27
beflowering her skirts! I see now,tricksy, thy flock are courtiers, thy ladies attendant
linger above, enbranched and dressed in leaves and
birds-nest. And there thy most lank-lean chamberlain
28will slip loose at thy command to bite my ankles.
Cries off
SHEPHERDESS
But still they come at us.
ARTHUR
Then I must needs flee ere your highness has me
sequestered at your pleasure into a dungeon, or
stretched an inch or two for my rude attentions.
SHEPHERDESS
ARTHUR
But from your sergeants at arms. If thou art not some
hidden queen, be here for me an hour hence and I’ll
to thee. Stand’st thou affected
31
to swear it?
SHEPHERDESS
Wouldst flee? Then flee. Wherefore? But here, a
token, and from thee.
[
They exchange tokens
]
ARTHUR
An hour, an hour.
SHEPHERDESS
Lies and lies, but here I’ll be an hour on and an hour
yet ’til folding,
32
and days and days if thou wilt haveme.
Cries off
ARTHUR
An hour, but a single hour, Joan, I swear it.
Exeunt
[
Location: the
]
Pictish court
Flourish and trumpets. Enter Loth of Pictland in litter, Conranus of Scotland, Mordred of Rothesay
,
1
[
Calvan
],
Alda
,
2
,
3
and others
LOTH
Too hot, my son, too hot.
4
MORDRED
There were a time,
My lord, such heat did blast
5
from your own bile,When all did know King Loth of Pictland’s moods.
For when but crabbed
6
he havoc-shaked this isle,Provoked to whirling bangstry
7
and dread force,Think I forgot what was to be your son?
CONRANUS
Leave off, fierce Duke, your father begs his rest.
MORDRED
Nay, Uncle, I’m the deathsman
10
of repose.—[
To Loth
] Your vigor melts away too soon, great king.Think on your crown! Hold on
11
with sovereign’scares,
Not fall away from temporal affairs,
While yet your shape doth fill that earthly seat,
But bridle all events to your control.—
[
To Calvan
] My brother, chafe
14
your father’s icy hideWith selfsame news was read to us below.
15
CALVAN
Prince Arthur flies to London’s Roman tower
16So soon as he doth make a potent head
17And therewith at the Abbey butt
18
the crown,From whence, with benison as Britain’s king,
He purposes with fearful sway
19
to YorkTo venge his father’s death upon the Saxon.
MORDRED
To make a head! And post with sway! To venge!
Who acts thus, Calvan? Say you? Mouldwarp
20Arthur,
Bescreened in Wales, now dares to ope his eye!
That vain and liberal
21
boy would stain the crown,Would brave the London air and Saxon blades,
While valiant Pict and Scot—with whinyards
22
sheathedAnd buttoned belts
23
left hanging by the wall—Do ladylike sit fond and bluntly
24
still.
CONRANUS
What though, if Arthur is of Uter’s seed?
For legacy he gains but bonny
25
strife.Long may he live as his dead sire did live,
Distract
26
by constant war ’gainst Saxony,Who’ll parallel
27
the English king alongFor ev’ry season of the years whilst we,
From Tweed to Tyne to Tees, extend our claim.
Let o’ercharged
28
Arthur bleed and hold his crownAs northern tide flows unrelenting south.