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    The Tragedy of Arthur: A Novel

    Page 36
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      ARTHUR

      A friend, i’truth, and his stiff bishopric

      I visit oft, where he and I partake

      Of meals of fish and pear, ’til full to burst.15

      GLOUCESTER

      What priest can talk such filth upon his lord?

      My blade will teach thee mannerly discourse!

      [He draws his sword]

      ARTHUR

      But Gloucester, nay! Slice not this royal meat,

      Or wait until we change again our coats

      So by my carbonado16 you might whet

      An appetite for vengeance in my men.

      GLOUCESTER

      Is’t Arthur safely back to us from York,

      And first of all his business is to sport?

      ARTHUR

      But soft, let’s dress each one in rightful cloak,

      [They exchange armor]

      To each our own apparel and our mien.

      GLOUCESTER

      Your time in York, O King, did serve its need,

      Did rightly beg your absence from the field?

      ARTHUR

      Good Duke, take pains not to omit my helm

      Else company might think we swapped our heads.

      GLOUCESTER

      You take me for a joint-stool,17 King, then sit.

      You welcome not my counsel, Majesty.

      ARTHUR

      I clip it to my breast at dawn and dusk.

      There’s none save you enthroned within my heart.

      GLOUCESTER

      Then hear my words. Today was battle won—

      ARTHUR

      Such joyous tidings, Duke, do glad me well.

      GLOUCESTER

      By gross deception came this victory.

      Your men believe you led them into war.

      ARTHUR

      An if they so believe, then so I did.18

      But now, our royal transformation done,

      [Enter nobles with prisoners including Mordred, Calvan, and Colgerne]

      We greet our men with fettered prisoners—

      What guests have you, my English chivalry?

      CUMBRIA

      These bales19 are but a tithing20 of our crop.

      They wait their fate upon this lower world21

      And we our fortunes as you judge our worth.—

      Hail, Gloucester, hail! At battle’s end you come

      To fright the prisoners with your martial air.

      ARTHUR

      Great lords of Britain, by your arms is peace,

      So long extirped,22 replanted on our isle.

      ALL

      Hail Arthur! Hail Britain! To our king!

      ARTHUR

      For two score years these knaves cast pestilence

      From north and sea ’pon our abusèd land,

      And crushed beneath their tread our wealth, our crop,

      Our churches, beasts, and golden English corn.

      I sweep my eye across these hanging23 looks,

      These villain Saxons, Picts, and shamèd Scots.

      With but a breath could our worse nature burst

      And wash again this new-dried ground with blood.

      O, Englishmen! Is there yet one of us

      Who would not venge on Scotchman’s neck the cries

      Most pitiful of murdered English babes?

      What joys have they not thieved from out our homes?

      My youthful days, my kingdom, and my sire:

      All this I lost and this far past enough

      T’excuse a slaughter of this murrained24 herd.

      Anointed king, still I am but a man,

      And men do long for blood to balm their wounds.

      ALL

      Then kill them all! For Arthur! Kill them all!

      ARTHUR

      But do these cringing mice contain enough

      Of blood to slake and chill our burning thirst?

      Or will their cries not satisfy our hate,

      But feed and thereby swell our hate’s desire,

      While their own mothers, orphans, widows shrike25

      In twisted tongues and curse us to their gods,

      Demand our blood to wash their tear-stained cheeks?

      There’s none so swift to carve this tendered flesh

      As I, who look on them and grows hate-drunk.

      But this eternal hatred is a pox,

      Which e’en struck down and slew my father-king.

      As royal touch can heal a man’s disease,26

      It can as quick transform man’s hate to love,

      And in a trice sweep winter from the land,

      To reap the fruit of peace.

      CUMBRIA

      [Aside] What talk is this?

      ARTHUR

      Let Colgerne, vassal now to Britain’s king,

      To German lands with all his men repair

      Without delay, but know that they will die

      If e’er they do return.

      CUMBRIA

      [Aside] Have I my wits?

      ARTHUR

      Familiarity did breed contempt;27

      Disloignèd28 far, love ’twixt us may increase,

      And by exampled English mercy shown

      May Saxons now embrace our Lord. Cast off

      By Lincoln Wash, and from our realm begone.

      GLOUCESTER

      You will I know hold some as surety.

      And not deny your iron men29 their prize.

      ARTHUR

      I do intend precisely that, my duke.—

      Here Mordred, thou didst wager dad’s own crown,

      But frozen luck, thou lost it to thy betters.

      To Pictland now and fetch thy father here

      T’impress the wax of his remembrance, boy,

      That he doth rule his Picts at Arthur’s pleasure.

      In earnest of this love I bear for him,

      We hold for now young Calvan to our breast

      And in great London’s tower feast our guest.

      Exeunt, manet30 Cumbria

      CUMBRIA

      Did e’er his father win such victory?

      Did e’er his father cast away the like?

      To clutch in mailèd fist his enemies,

      Then careless drop them back into the fight?

      This cock-a-prance!31 This beadsman,32 preached of love,

      Yet loved us not enow to preach of ransom.

      Bright-armored33 Gloucester called his mind to it;

      War counsel comes from one who shunned the brawl!

      What man would wink at that one’s cowardice

      Then heed the stratagems he would propose?

      No oath adheres to such a paltry king,

      But for the love I bore his poisoned sire. Exit

      [ACT II, SCENE VIII]

      [Location: Arthur’s camp at Lincoln]

      Enter Arthur, Gloucester, servants, messengers

      ARTHUR

      Our late inspect1 of Britain’s sorrowing breadth

      Shows us a land all brought to waste by war,

      From hunger lamed, abandoned of the law.

      Now plague and famine stalk our market towns,

      And gripes2 make claim of sovereignty for death

      Where Arthur would establish gentler court.

      Here is a worthy challenge for a king.

      No Pendragon forepast3 hath seen as I

      The glory of a king is weighed on scale

      By what prosperity his kingdom joys.

      Watch Arthur now drive sickness, dearth, and war

      From out his realm as I did whip the Scot.

      Send men to learn what towns have stores of corn.

      Set reeves to fix my law in every shire.4

      Strong fort each town on coast and northern line.

      Enter Constantine [Cornwall]

      My dear, good Cornwall! Rise and let me kiss you!

      CORNWALL

      My king, I bring all love and of more boot5

      Five thousand Cornish blades as you require.

      ARTHUR

      Again, again, embrace me, Constantine, brave

      Cornwall!6 Now help me to
    remember, friend: when

      were we last together?

      CORNWALL

      ’Twas Gloucestershire. Our fathers lived and we

      did pass each day at swim and running. You ever

      were the best.

      ARTHUR

      And thou, to make a match of heaven,7 wert always

      second.

      CORNWALL

      Too sadly true.

      ARTHUR

      And when thou wert king of the woods and I was king

      of the waters, or I king of the woods and thou of

      waters, our pastance8 was to act great deeds for the

      the princess of the flowers. How fares thy gentle

      sister? Still pleasant in her humors, the girl we

      strived9 to please?

      CORNWALL

      No more a girl, but still doth ask in humility to be

      remembered.

      ARTHUR

      I remember no store of humility in her.

      CORNWALL

      Your wit10 is most royally acute. But you will observe

      her alterations, for she rides to join with us anon. It

      was her will, and her will is beyond my certain

      manage.

      ARTHUR

      You were my joy of younger days, good earl,

      And now I swear upon this fruitful plain,

      That you and I will be inseparate.

      CORNWALL

      You deem this blasted,11 war-ripped turf so rich?

      ARTHUR

      Ay, Cornwall! All our enemies are flown,

      And we will in this loam plant seeds of peace.

      Enter messenger

      A frantic look in this one’s eye.—What is’t?

      MESSENGER

      My king, as you did by their bond require,

      The Saxons lifted sail from Lincoln Wash.

      But soon a change of wind did hale12 them back.

      Their priests addeemed13 this blessed by pagan gods.

      They spilled from ship anew upon our isle,

      Contemptibly stepped back onto our sands.

      They throw their eyes on gold and church and field,

      They kill our countrymen and burn our land.

      ARTHUR

      O, God! What scorn I do deserve from thee!

      What villainy is this? What have I wrought?

      What arrogant and idle prince am I!

      And where were men to chide my fond, mad youth?

      I should be scorned for my vain clemency.

      I am not mocked enough! O sugar-prince,

      A headstrong jade14 that should be roughly spurred!

      Let those who judge me weak be made at once

      My chosen privy councillors.—Which way?

      MESSENGER

      Towards Bath, my king.

      ARTHUR

      We’ll cote15 them ere they wash.

      This crime has touched me; I am powder-hot.

      To rear now post my word: our mercy’s pact

      Refused, each prisoner’s throat is to be cut.

      GLOUCESTER

      The tidings speak but Saxon perfidy,

      Not Scot nor Pict. A moment’s calm, I beg.

      ARTHUR

      I’ll not be tender pitying more, good duke.—

      Exit messenger

      My men, imperfect16 is our bloody task

      So follow me, unsheathe your late-hacked blade

      And dispatch hell-born foes to hellish shade.

      Exeunt

      [ACT II, SCENE IX]

      [Location: The Pictish Court]

      Enter Doctor and Conranus

      DOCTOR

      I have to all my texts submitted Loth,

      To all my wit, invention, fancy, hopes,

      To strong balsamo,1 leeches, pastes, and cuts.

      Yet still he falters and outstreams his life.

      It flows from ev’ry outlet, king. He fails.

      Enter Mordred, with train.

      CONRANUS

      The prince with retinue is back from war,

      And surely wants the king his father’s ear.

      Go learn if audience may yet be had.—

      Exit Doctor

      Good Mordred, Duke, we missed you here at court.

      MORDRED

      I bear hard news of noble death, war’s tithe.

      The thanes2 of Bute and Moray, Linlithgow,

      And Douglas ride birlinns3 to Colmekill’s shores.4

      CONRANUS

      Such heavy loss, so light an argument.

      MORDRED

      How light, my uncle? Tell. A crown? A throne?

      A kingdom stole from thee stirs not thy gall?

      A tyrant who doth threat thy land and clan?5

      Who torments lawful embassy, hates peace

      And would lock Pict and Scot in steely yoke?

      CONRANUS

      A petty prince thou told’st this court was weak,

      Who wanted nought of us ’til thou like dog

     


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