Read The Tragedy of Arthur: A Novel Online
Authors: Arthur Phillips
GLOUCESTER
Or no?
NORFOLK
To be black Uter’s son makes not an heir.
By such a stamp
7
ten thousand British kingsDo dance a-maypole, yoke the ox to coulter,
8Or skink
9
the wine at table for my thirst,Though none so like their sire as Arthur be,
Who with his mawks on beef and ling
10
doth dine,Who’d ’change all England for St. George’s field.
11
SOMERSET
GLOUCESTER
Ignoble, rude and slanderous babble, lords
Ill suits the love that’s due your sovereign prince.
NORFOLK
Come morrow, Gloucester, what names you the king?
GLOUCESTER
The king will have me England’s seneschal.
SOMERSET
You’ll hold the keys to all the postern gates
14Until the midnight king doth steal the guard.
GLOUCESTER
These hare-brained comments will find quittance, Dukes.
CUMBRIA
But who makes doubt of Arthur’s godly right?
These arms embraced King Uter as he died,
A man twice me, twice thee, twice any lord.
Beneath the walls of York he cried to me,
“Prince Arthur now will be your lawful king.”
KENT
O, tender-feeling Cumbria, ’tis well,
But you have not seen Arthur sith his youth
When that boy sprouted no more manly beard
Than trims a raspberry
15
in August heat.
SOMERSET
And sith his beard has grown, you’ll find no man
Hath seen the prince’s thumbs.
16
KENT
So long as that?
17
SOMERSET
Renowned like to a serpent or a tailor’s.
18
GLOUCESTER
What ancient barons’ rights are these t’abuse?
NORFOLK
These ten and seven summers hath the prince
In Gloucestershire reclined, whence rumor tells
That Arthur’s luxury-amazed,
19
but kingOf milking maids, and each new queen he leads
By kecksie flourish
20
to a clover bed.No continence
21
hath he and none dare barThe boy from exercising his mad lusts.
SOMERSET
The father’s passions storm within the son!
Will abbey words becalm the prince’s rage,
The ire descried
22
by those who should speak love,That Arthur soars to fury when but touched,
Doth strike a man of noble birth for spite,
And spends his words of love upon a cook?
GLOUCESTER
Thus tales lead beasts, and heads too willing follow
23The boy is stern for war. Come tilt with him.
First pass he’ll lay you on your plated back
Like to a flea within a walnut-shell.
He’ll lift great sword and drop it on your pate
24With edge or flat or fig-ball pommel: choose.
25In York will he course fast as rolling floods,
As swift as you in thought may cross the globe.
KENT
Like to his father then he longs for war?
The father’s war did steal the father’s life.
The father’s son would match the father’s feat
And on his feet march all of us to death,
So son might set, like father, in the north.
26Forever war, forever war, and on.
Yet Saxons find war-stubbled York a prize
And would content themselves in its embrace.
This land’s o’er-marched, o’er-bled, o’er-wearied o’war,
Yet still Prince Arthur comes to wield a sword!
CUMBRIA
What danger cowards so the southern Kent
While Cumbria is gripped from north and east?
KENT
I am not wished to hear thy slanders, cur!
CUMBRIA
Nor Saxons wished to peace by Kent’s desires!
CAERLEON
Enough vain heat! My lords of England, peace!
27
Enter Alexander
GLOUCESTER
What word hast thou, sirrah?
28
ALEXANDER
No king is here.
GLOUCESTER
He comes anon. Again: what word? Make haste.
ALEXANDER
My master bids me say: “No king is here.”
NORFOLK
What master, fool?
ALEXANDER
Which is the lord protector?
GLOUCESTER
ALEXANDER
He greets you thus:
“Vice-regent for unrightful, sneaking prince.”
GLOUCESTER
What master lays such words upon thy tongue?
ALEXANDER
Grant leave, ye English nobles, I my words
May unconstrained display, as charged by Loth,
Great Pictish king, and Mordred, Duke of Rothesay.
GLOUCESTER
Thou tarried long for license, messenger,
By now is absolution pertinent.
31Yet doubt
32
no moody welcome here. Proceed.
ALEXANDER
Then thus speaks Loth, the king of Picts.
KENT
And Mordred.
ALEXANDER
Yes, too, and Mordred, Duke of Rothesay, too.
’Tis thus they speak, in fewness and in truth.
KENT
So plainly warned do I now hope for neither.
Come, tell, what would thy dwarfish duke
33
proclaim?
ALEXANDER
That Arthur was by boist’rous violence
34And out of holy wedded state begot.
King Uter stole a womb from Cornwall’s bed,
There planted criminal
35
seed, and slew the earl,Ennobled false pretender, spawned no heir.
By any Christian law, adultery
Creates a bastard with no right to throne,
And crime ’gainst God it is to lift a sword
Nor Uter nor his brother left no issue.
38Their elder sister, Anne, was wife to Loth,
Who rules all Pictland, Scots, and Irish lands,
Who’s now, by Anne’s bond, English king and Welsh.
King Loth and Mordred bid you, English lords
And bishops, rouse up London, ope its abbey
Wherein pay homage due to Loth, your king,
According as the Britons’ custom is.
DERBY
’Tis all?
ALEXANDER
With this complete and with your love,
He bids the Welsh and English chivalry
Unite with all his lands and western isles,
Together dash the Saxon from his realm.
DERBY
Art breathless yet?
GLOUCESTER
He asks no more than this?
Our lives, our wealth, vouchsafe his endless line,
ALEXANDER
The duke hath taught me more should you dispute
The logic of my principal dispatch,
Although the latter words I fear to voice.
DERBY
How feculent
41
thy northern vapors stink!Would Mercury’s low wings be fixed above
And beating blow away these winds thou pip’st!
42Didst thou us beg pre-pardon
43
and free tongueTo lick our ears with gleeks
44
so sour and hot?Come, take my true reply to your King Loth.
He strikes
[
Alexander
]
ALEXANDER
Unrighteous knight, this violence
45
done cold’Gainst embassy’s anathema to God.