King Edward. How
fast they run to banish him I love!
They would not stir, were it to do me good.
Why should a king be subject to a priest?
Proud Rome, that hatchest such imperial
grooms,
With these thy superstitious taper-lights,
Wherewith thy antichristian churches blaze,
I'll fire thy crazed buildings, and enforce
The papal towers to kiss the lowly ground,
With slaughter'd priests make Tiber's
channel swell,
And banks rais'd higher with their
sepulchres!
As for the peers, that back the clergy thus,
If I be king, not one of them shall live.
Re-enter GAVESTON.
Gaveston. My
lord, I hear it whisper'd everywhere,
That I am banish'd and must fly the land.
King Edward. 'Tis
true, sweet Gaveston: O were it false!
The legate of the Pope will have it so,
And thou must hence, or I shall be depos'd.
But I will reign to be reveng'd of them;
And therefore, sweet friend, take it
patiently.
Live where thou wilt, I'll send thee gold
enough;
And long thou shalt not stay; or, if thou
dost,
I'll come to thee; my love shall ne'er
decline.
Gaveston. Is
all my hope turn'd to this hell of grief?
King Edward. Rend
not my heart with thy too-piercing words:
Thou from this land, I from myself am
banish'd.
Gaveston. To
go from hence grieves not poor Gaveston;
But to forsake you, in whose gracious looks
The blessedness of Gaveston remains;
For nowhere else seeks he felicity.
King Edward. And
only this torments my wretched soul,
That, whether I will or no, thou must
depart.
Be governor of Ireland in my stead,
And there abide till fortune call thee home.
Here, take my picture, and let me wear
thine:
[They exchange pictures.
O, might I keep thee here, as I do this,
Happy were I! but now most miserable.
Gaveston.
'Tis something to be pitied of a king.
King Edward. Thou
shalt not hence; I'll hide thee, Gaveston.
Gaveston. I
shall be found, and then 'twill grieve me more.
King Edward. Kind
words and mutual talk makes our grief greater:
Therefore, with dumb embracement, let us
part,
Stay, Gaveston; I cannot leave thee thus.
Gaveston. For
every look, my love drops down a tear:
Seeing I must go, do not renew my sorrow.
King Edward. The
time is little that thou hast to stay,
And, therefore, give me leave to look my
fill.
But, come, sweet friend; I'll bear thee on
thy way.
Gaveston. The
peers will frown.
King Edward. I
pass not for their anger. Come, let's go:
O, that we might as well return as go!
Enter QUEEN ISABELLA.
Queen Isabella. Whither
goes my lord?
King Edward. Fawn
not on me, French strumpet; get thee gone!
Queen Isabella. On
whom but on my husband should I fawn?
Gaveston. On
Mortimer; with whom, ungentle queen,—
I judge no more—judge you the rest, my lord.
Queen Isabella. In
saying this, thou wrong'st me, Gaveston:
Is't not enough that thou corrupt'st my
lord,
And art a bawd to his affections,
But thou must call mine honour thus in question?
Gaveston. I
mean not so; your grace must pardon me.
King Edward. Thou
art too familiar with that Mortimer,
And by thy means is Gaveston exil'd:
But I would wish thee reconcile the lords,
Or thou shalt ne'er be reconcil'd to me.
Queen Isabella. Your
highness knows, it lies not in my power.
King Edward. Away,
then! touch me not.—Come, Gaveston.
Queen Isabella. Villain,
'tis thou that robb'st me of my lord.
Gaveston.
Madam, 'tis you that rob me of my lord.
King Edward. Speak
not unto her: let her droop and pine.
Queen Isabella. Wherein,
my lord, have I deserv'd these words?
Witness the tears that Isabella sheds,
Witness this heart, that, sighing for thee,
breaks,
How dear my lord is to poor Isabel!
King Edward. And
witness heaven how dear thou art to me:
There weep; for, till my Gaveston be
repeal'd,
Assure thyself thou com'st not in my sight.
[Exeunt
King Edward and Gaveston.
Queen Isabella. O
miserable and distressed queen!
Would, when I left sweet France, and was
embarked,
That charming Circe, walking on the waves,
Had chang'd my shape! or at the marriage-day
The cup of Hymen had been full of poison!
Or with those arms, that twin'd about my
neck,
I had been stifled, and not liv'd to see
The king my lord thus to abandon me!
Like frantic Juno, will I fill the earth
With ghastly murmur of my sighs and cries;
For never doted Jove on Ganymede
So much as he on cursed Gaveston:
But that will more exasperate his wrath;
I must entreat him, I must speak him fair,
And be a means to call home Gaveston:
And yet he'll ever dote on Gaveston;
And so am I for ever miserable.
Re-enter
Lancaster, Warwick, Pembroke, the elder Mortimer, and the younger Mortimer.
Lancaster. Look,
where the sister of the king of France
Sits wringing of her hands and beats her
breast!
Warwick. The
king, I fear, hath ill-treated her.
Pembroke. Hard
is the heart that injures such a saint.
Young Mortimer. I
know 'tis 'long of Gaveston she weeps.
Elder Mortimer. Why,
he is gone.
Young Mortimer. Madam,
how fares your grace?
Queen Isabella. Ah,
Mortimer, now breaks the king's hate forth,
And he confesseth that he loves me not!
Young Mortimer. Cry
quittance, madam, then, and love not him.
Queen Isabella. No,
rather will I die a thousand deaths:
And yet I love in vain; he'll ne'er love me.
Lancaster. Fear
ye not, madam; now his minion's gone,
His wanton humour will be quickly left.
Queen Isabella. O,
never, Lancaster! I am enjoin'd,
To sue unto you all for his repeal:
This wills my lord, and this must I perform,
Or else be banish'd from his highness'
presence.
Lancaster. For
his repeal, madam! he comes not back,
Unless the sea cast up his shipwreck'd body.
Warwick. And
to behold so sweet a sight as that,
There's none here but would run his horse to
death.
Young Mortimer. But,
madam, would you have us call him home?
Queen Isabella. Ay,
Mortimer, for, till he be restor'd,
The angry king hath banish'd me the court;
And, therefore, as thou lov'st and tender'st
me,
Be thou my advocate unto these peers.
Young Mortimer. What,
would you have me plead for Gaveston?
Elder Mortimer. Plead
for him that will, I am resolv'd.
Lancaster. And
so am I, my lord: dissuade the queen.
Queen Isabella. O,
Lancaster, let him dissuade the king!
For 'tis against my will he should return.
Warwick.
Then speak not for him; let the peasant go.
Queen Isabella. 'Tis
for myself I speak, and not for him.
Pembroke. No
speaking will prevail; and therefore cease.
Young Mortimer. Fair
queen, forbear to angle for the fish
Which, being caught, strikes him that takes
it dead;
I mean that vile torpedo, Gaveston,
That now, I hope, floats on the Irish seas.
Queen Isabella. Sweet
Mortimer, sit down by me a while,
And I will tell thee reasons of such weight
As thou wilt soon subscribe to his repeal.
Young Mortimer. It
is impossible: but speak your mind.
Queen Isabella. Then,
thus;—but none shall hear it but ourselves.
[Talks to Young Mortimer. apart.
Lancaster. My
lords, albeit the queen win Mortimer,
Will you be resolute and hold with me?
Elder Mortimer. Not
I, against my nephew.
Pembroke. Fear
not; the queen's words cannot alter him.
Warwick. No?
do but mark how earnestly she pleads!
Lancaster. And
see how coldly his looks make denial!
Warwick. She
smiles: now, for my life, his mind is chang'd!
Lancaster. I'll
rather lose his friendship, I, than grant.
Young Mortimer. Well,
of necessity it must be so.—
My lords, that I abhor base Gaveston
I hope your honours make no question.
And therefore, though I plead for his
repeal,
'Tis not for his sake, but to our avail;
Nay, for the realm's behoof, and for the
king's.
Lancaster. Fie,
Mortimer, dishonour not thyself!
Can this be true, 'twas good to banish him?
And is this true, to call him home again?
Such reasons make white black, and dark
night day.
Young Mortimer. My
Lord of Lancaster, mark the respect.
Lancaster. In
no respect can contraries be true.
Queen Isabella. Yet,
good my lord, hear what he can allege.
Warwick. All
that he speaks is nothing; we are resolv'd.
Young Mortimer. Do
you not wish that Gaveston were dead?
Pembroke. I
would he were!
Young Mortimer. Why,
then, my lord, give me but leave to speak.
Elder Mortimer. But,
nephew, do not play the sophister.
Young Mortimer. This
which I urge is of a burning zeal
To mend the king and do our country good.
Know you not Gaveston hath store of gold,
Which may in Ireland purchase him such
friends
As he will front the mightiest of us all?
And whereas he shall live and be belov'd,
'Tis hard for us to work his overthrow.
Warwick.
Mark you but that, my lord of Lancaster.
Young Mortimer. But,
were he here, detested as he is,
How easily might some base slave be suborn'd
To greet his lordship with a poniard,
And none so much as blame the murderer,
But rather praise him for that brave
attempt,
And in the chronicle enrol his name
For purging of the realm of such a plague!
Pembroke. He
saith true.
Lancaster. Ay,
but how chance this was not done before?
Young Mortimer. Because,
my lords, it was not thought upon.
Nay, more, when he shall know it lies in us
To banish him, and then to call him home,
'Twill make him vail the top flag of his
pride,
And fear to offend the meanest nobleman.
Elder Mortimer. But
how if he do not, nephew?
Young Mortimer. Then
may we with some colour rise in arms;
For, howsoever we have borne it out,
'Tis treason to be up against the king;
So shall we have the people of our side,
Which, for his father's sake, lean to the
king,
But cannot brook a night-grown mushroom,
Such a one as my Lord of Cornwall is,
Should bear us down of the nobility:
And, when the commons and the nobles join,
'Tis not the king can buckler Gaveston;
We'll pull him from the strongest hold he
hath.
My lords, if to perform this I be slack,
Think me as base a groom as Gaveston.
Lancaster. On
that condition Lancaster will grant.
Warwick. And
so will Pembroke and I.
Elder Mortimer. And
I.
Young Mortimer. In
this I count me highly gratified,
And Mortimer will rest at your command.
Queen Isabella. And
when this favour Isabel forgets,
Then let her live abandon'd and forlorn.—
But see, in happy time, my lord the king,
Having brought the Earl of Cornwall on his
way,
Is new return'd. This news will glad him
much:
Yet not so much as me; I love him more
Than he can Gaveston: would he lov'd me
But half so much! then were I treble-blest.
Re-enter
King Edward, mourning.