114 as't. Emended by ed.; Q, as.
[A Parade-Ground near Cambrai.]
Alarum within: Excursions over the Stage.
The [Soldiers disguised as] Lackies running, Maillard following them.
Maillard. Villaines, not hold him when ye had him downe!
1[st Soldier.] Who can hold lightning? Sdeath a man as well
Might catch a canon bullet in his mouth,
And spit it in your hands, as take and hold him.
Mail. Pursue, enclose him! stand or fall on him,5
And yee may take him. Sdeath! they make him guards. Exit.
Alarum still, and enter Chalon.
Challon. Stand, cowards, stand; strike, send your bullets at him.
1[st Soldier.] Wee came to entertaine him, sir, for honour.
2[d Soldier.] Did ye not say so?
Chal. Slaves, hee is a traitor;
Command the horse troopes to over-runne the traitor. Exeunt. 10
Shouts within. Alarum still, and Chambers shot off. Then enter Aumall.
Aumale. What spirit breathes thus in this more then man,
Turnes flesh to ayre possest, and in a storme
Teares men about the field like autumne leaves?
He turnd wilde lightning in the lackies hands,
Who, though their sodaine violent twitch unhorst him,15
Yet when he bore himselfe, their saucie fingers
Flew as too hot off, as hee had beene fire.
The ambush then made in, through all whose force
Hee drave as if a fierce and fire-given canon
Had spit his iron vomit out amongst them.20
The battailes then in two halfe-moones enclos'd him,
In which he shew'd as if he were the light,
And they but earth, who, wondring what hee was,
Shruncke their steele hornes and gave him glorious passe.
And as a great shot from a towne besieg'd25
At foes before it flyes forth blacke and roring,
But they too farre, and that with waight opprest
(As if disdaining earth) doth onely grasse,
Strike earth, and up againe into the ayre,
Againe sinkes to it, and againe doth rise,30
And keepes such strength that when it softliest moves
It piece-meale shivers any let it proves—
So flew brave Clermont forth, till breath forsooke him,
Then fell to earth; and yet (sweet man) even then
His spirits convulsions made him bound againe35
Past all their reaches; till, all motion spent,
His fixt eyes cast a blaze of such disdaine,
All stood and star'd, and untouch'd let him lie,
As something sacred fallen out of the skie. A cry within.
O now some rude hand hath laid hold on him!40
Enter Maillard, Chalon leading Clermont, Captaines and Souldiers following.
See, prisoner led, with his bands honour'd more
Then all the freedome he enjoy'd before.
Mail. At length wee have you, sir.
Clermont. You have much joy too;
I made you sport. Yet, but I pray you tell mee,
Are not you perjur'd?
Mail. No: I swore for the King. 45
Cler. Yet perjurie, I hope, is perjurie.
Mail. But thus forswearing is not perjurie.
You are no politician: not a fault,
How foule soever, done for private ends,
Is fault in us sworne to the publike good:50
Wee never can be of the damned crew;
Wee may impolitique our selves (as 'twere)
Into the kingdomes body politique,
Whereof indeede we're members; you misse termes.
Cler. The things are yet the same.55
Mail. Tis nothing so; the propertie is alter'd:
Y'are no lawyer. Or say that othe and othe
Are still the same in number, yet their species
Differ extreamely, as, for flat example,
When politique widowes trye men for their turne,60
Before they wed them, they are harlots then,
But when they wed them, they are honest women:
So private men, when they forsweare, betray,
Are perjur'd treachers, but being publique once,
That is, sworne-married to the publique good—65
Cler. Are married women publique?
Mail. Publique good;
For marriage makes them, being the publique good,
And could not be without them: so I say
Men publique, that is, being sworne-married
To the good publique, being one body made70
With the realmes body politique, are no more
Private, nor can be perjur'd, though forsworne,
More then a widow married, for the act
Of generation is for that an harlot,
Because for that shee was so, being unmarried:75
An argument a paribus.
Chal. Tis a shrow'd one.
Cler. "Who hath no faith to men, to God hath none:"
Retaine you that, sir? who said so?
Mail. Twas I.
Cler. Thy owne tongue damne thy infidelitie!
But, Captaines all, you know me nobly borne;80
Use yee t'assault such men as I with lackyes?
Chal. They are no lackyes, sir, but souldiers
Disguis'd in lackyes coates.
1 Sold. Sir, wee have seene the enemie.
Cler. Avant! yee rascols, hence!
Mail. Now leave your coates.
Cler. Let me not see them more. 85
Aum. I grieve that vertue lives so undistinguisht
From vice in any ill, and though the crowne
Of soveraigne law, shee should be yet her footstoole,
Subject to censure, all the shame and paine
Of all her rigor.
Cler. Yet false policie 90
Would cover all, being like offenders hid,
That (after notice taken where they hide)
The more they crouch and stirre, the more are spide.
Aum. I wonder how this chanc'd you.
Cler. Some informer,
Bloud-hound to mischiefe, usher to the hang-man,95
Thirstie of honour for some huge state act,
Perceiving me great with the worthy Guise,
And he (I know not why) held dangerous,
Made me the desperate organe of his danger,
Onely with that poore colour: tis the common100
And more then whore-like tricke of treacherie
And vermine bred to rapine and to ruine,
For which this fault is still to be accus'd;
Since good acts faile, crafts and deceits are us'd.
Aum. Sir, we are glad, beleeve it, and have hope
The King will so conceit it.
Cler. At his pleasure.
In meane time, what's your will, Lord Lieutenant?
Mail. To leave your owne horse, and to mount the trumpets.
Cler. It shall be done. This heavily prevents110
My purpos'd recreation in these parts;
Which now I thinke on, let mee begge you, sir,
To lend me some one captaine of your troopes,
To beare the message of my haplesse service
And miserie to my most noble mistresse,115
Countesse of Cambray; to whose house this night
I promist my repaire, and know most truely,
With all the ceremonies of her favour,
She sure expects mee.
Mail. Thinke you now on that?
Cler. On that, sir? I, and that so worthily,120
That if the King, in spight of your great service,
Would send me instant promise of enlargement,
Condition I would set this message by,
I would not take it, but had rather die.
Aum. Your message shall be done, sir: I, my selfe,125
Will be for you a messenger of ill.
Cler. I thanke you, sir, and doubt not yet to live
To quite your kindnesse.
Aum. Meane space use your spirit
And knowledge for the chearfull patience
Of this so strange and sodaine consequence.130
Cler. Good sir, beleeve that no particular torture
Can force me from my glad obedience
To any thing the high and generall Cause,
To match with his whole fabricke, hath ordainde;
And know yee all (though farre from all your aymes,135
Yet worth them all, and all mens endlesse studies)
That in this one thing, all the discipline
Of manners and of manhood is contain'd:—
A man to joyne himselfe with th'Universe
In his maine sway, and make (in all things fit)140
One with that all, and goe on round as it;
Not plucking from the whole his wretched part,
And into straites, or into nought revert,
Wishing the compleate Universe might be
Subject to such a ragge of it as hee;145
But to consider great Necessitie
All things, as well refract as voluntarie,
Reduceth to the prime celestiall cause;
Which he that yeelds to with a mans applause,
And cheeke by cheeke goes, crossing it no breath,150
But like Gods image followes to the death,
That man is truely wise, and every thing
(Each cause and every part distinguishing)
In nature with enough art understands,
And that full glory merits at all hands155
That doth the whole world at all parts adorne,
And appertaines to one celestiall borne. Exeunt omnes.
Exeunt. Q, Exit.
54 We're. Q, We'are.
A Room at the Court in Paris.]
Enter Baligny, Renel.
Baligny. So foule a scandall never man sustain'd,
Which caus'd by th'King is rude and tyrannous:
Give me a place, and my Lieutenant make
The filler of it!
Renel. I should never looke
For better of him; never trust a man5
For any justice, that is rapt with pleasure;
To order armes well, that makes smockes his ensignes,
And his whole governments sayles: you heard of late
Hee had the foure and twenty wayes of venerie
Done all before him.
Bal. Twas abhorr'd and beastly.10
Ren. Tis more then natures mightie hand can doe
To make one humane and a letcher too.
Looke how a wolfe doth like a dogge appeare,
So like a friend is an adulterer;
Voluptuaries, and these belly-gods,15
No more true men are then so many toads.
A good man happy is a common good;
Vile men advanc'd live of the common bloud.
Bal. Give, and then take, like children!
Ren. Bounties are
As soone repented as they happen rare.20
Bal. What should Kings doe, and men of eminent places,
But, as they gather, sow gifts to the graces?
And where they have given, rather give againe
(Being given for vertue) then, like babes and fooles,
Take and repent gifts? why are wealth and power?25
Ren. Power and wealth move to tyranny, not bountie;
The merchant for his wealth is swolne in minde,
When yet the chiefe lord of it is the winde.
Bal. That may so chance to our state-merchants too;
Ren. That's the maine point, my lord; insist on that.
Bal. But doth this fire rage further? hath it taken
The tender tynder of my wifes sere bloud?
Is shee so passionate?
Ren. So wilde, so mad,
Shee cannot live and this unwreakt sustaine.35
The woes are bloudy that in women raigne.
The Sicile gulfe keepes feare in lesse degree;
There is no tyger not more tame then shee.
Bal. There is no looking home, then?
Ren. Home! Medea
With all her hearbs, charmes, thunders, lightning,40
Made not her presence and blacke hants more dreadfull.
Bal. Come, to the King; if he reforme not all,
Marke the event, none stand where that must fall. Exeunt.
A Room in the House of the Countess of Cambrai.]
Enter Countesse, Riova, and an Usher.
Usher. Madame, a captaine come from Clermont D'Ambois
Desires accesse to you.
Countess. And not himselfe?
Ush. No, madame.
Count. That's not well. Attend him in. Exit Ush[er].
The last houre of his promise now runne out!
And hee breake, some brack's in the frame of nature5
That forceth his breach.
Enter Usher and Aumal.
Aumale. Save your ladiship!
Coun. All welcome! Come you from my worthy servant?
Aum. I, madame, and conferre such newes from him—
Coun. Such newes! what newes?
Aum. Newes that I wish some other had the charge of.10
Coun. O, what charge? what newes?
Aum. Your ladiship must use some patience,
Or else I cannot doe him that desire
He urg'd with such affection to your graces.
Coun. Doe it, for heavens love, doe it! if you serve15
His kinde desires, I will have patience.
Is hee in health?
Aum. He is.
Count. Why, that's the ground
Of all the good estate wee hold in earth;
All our ill built upon that is no more
Then wee may beare, and should; expresse it all.20
Coun. His libertie! Without that health is nothing.
Why live I, but to aske in doubt of that?
Is that bereft him?
Aum. You'll againe prevent me.
Coun. No more, I sweare; I must heare, and together25
Come all my miserie! Ile hold, though I burst.
Aum. Then, madame, thus it fares; he was envited,
By way of honour to him, to take view
Of all the powers his brother Baligny
Hath in his government; which rang'd in battailes,30
Maillard, Lieutenant to the Governour,
Having receiv'd strickt letters from the King,
To traine him to the musters and betray him
To their supprise; which, with Chalon in chiefe,
And other captaines (all the field put hard35
By his incredible valour for his scape)
They haplesly and guiltlesly perform'd;
And to Bastile hee's now led prisoner.
Count. What change is here! how are my hopes prevented!
O my most faithfull servant, thou betraid!40
Will Kings make treason lawfull? Is societie
(To keepe which onely Kings were first ordain'd)
Lesse broke in breaking faith twixt friend and friend
Then twixt the King and subject? let them feare
Kings presidents in licence lacke no danger.45
Kings are compar'd to Gods, and should be like them,
Full in all right, in nought superfluous,
Nor nothing straining past right for their right.
Raigne justly, and raigne safely. Policie
Is but a guard corrupted, and a way50
Venter'd in desarts, without guide or path.
Kings punish subjects errors with their owne.
Kings are like archers, and their subjects, shafts:
For as when archers let their arrowes flye,
They call to them, and bid them flye or fall,55
As if twere in the free power of the shaft
To flye or fall, when onely tis the strength,
Straight shooting, compasse given it by the archer,
That makes it hit or misse; and doing eyther,
Hee's to be prais'd or blam'd, and not the shaft:60
So Kings to subjects crying, "Doe, doe not this,"
Must to them by their owne examples strength,
The straightnesse of their acts, and equall compasse,
Give subjects power t'obey them in the like;
Not shoote them forth with faultie ayme and strength,65
And lay the fault in them for flying amisse.
Aum. But for your servant, I dare sweare him guiltlesse.
Count. Hee would not for his kingdome traitor be;
His lawes are not so true to him, as he.
O knew I how to free him, by way forc'd70
Through all their armie, I would flye, and doe it:
And had I of my courage and resolve
But tenne such more, they should not all retaine him.
But I will never die, before I give
Maillard an hundred slashes with a sword,75
Chalon an hundred breaches with a pistoll.
They could not all have taken Clermont D'Ambois
Without their treacherie; he had bought his bands out
With their slave blouds: but he was credulous;
Hee would beleeve, since he would be beleev'd;80
Your noblest natures are most credulous.
Who gives no trust, all trust is apt to breake;
Hate like hell mouth who thinke not what they speake.
Aum. Well, madame, I must tender my attendance
On him againe. Will't please you to returne85
No service to him by me?
Count. Fetch me straight
My little cabinet. Exit Ancil[la].
Tis little, tell him,
And much too little for his matchlesse love:
But as in him the worths of many men
Are close contracted, (Intr[at] Ancil[la.]) so in this are jewels90
Worth many cabinets. Here, with this (good sir)
Commend my kindest service to my servant,
Thanke him, with all my comforts, and, in them,
With all my life for them; all sent from him
In his remembrance of mee and true love.95
And looke you tell him, tell him how I lye She kneeles downe at his feete.
Prostrate at feet of his accurst misfortune,
Pouring my teares out, which shall ever fall,
Till I have pour'd for him out eyes and all.
Aum. O madame, this will kill him; comfort you100
With full assurance of his quicke acquitall;
Be not so passionate; rise, cease your teares.
Usher. This might have beene before, and sav'd much charge. Exit.
5 brack's. Emended by all editors; Q, brack.
20 and should; expresse it all. So punctuated by all editors; Q, and should expresse it all.
31 Maillard. Q, Mailiard.
A Room at the Court in Paris.]
Enter Henry, Guise, Baligny, Esp[ernone], Soisson. Pericot with pen, incke, and paper.
Guise. Now, sir, I hope you're much abus'd eyes see
In my word for my Clermont, what a villaine
Hee was that whisper'd in your jealous eare
His owne blacke treason in suggesting Clermonts,
Colour'd with nothing but being great with mee.5
Signe then this writ for his deliverie;
Your hand was never urg'd with worthier boldnesse:
Come, pray, sir, signe it. Why should Kings be praid
To acts of justice? tis a reverence
Makes them despis'd, and showes they sticke and tyre10
In what their free powers should be hot as fire.
Henry. Well, take your will, sir;—Ile have mine ere long.— Aversus.
But wherein is this Clermont such a rare one?
Gui. In his most gentle and unwearied minde,
Rightly to vertue fram'd in very nature;15
In his most firme inexorable spirit
To be remov'd from any thing hee chuseth
For worthinesse; or beare the lest perswasion
To what is base, or fitteth not his object;
In his contempt of riches, and of greatnesse20
In estimation of th'idolatrous vulgar;
His scorne of all things servile and ignoble,
Though they could gaine him never such advancement;
His liberall kinde of speaking what is truth,
In spight of temporising; the great rising25
And learning of his soule so much the more
Against ill fortune, as shee set her selfe
Sharpe against him or would present most hard,
To shunne the malice of her deadliest charge;
His detestation of his speciall friends,30
When he perceiv'd their tyrannous will to doe,
Or their abjection basely to sustaine
Any injustice that they could revenge;
The flexibilitie of his most anger,
Even in the maine careere and fury of it,35
When any object of desertfull pittie
Offers it selfe to him; his sweet disposure,
As much abhorring to behold as doe
Any unnaturall and bloudy action;
His just contempt of jesters, parasites,40
Servile observers, and polluted tongues—
In short, this Senecall man is found in him,
Hee may with heavens immortall powers compare,
To whom the day and fortune equall are;
Come faire or foule, whatever chance can fall,45
Fixt in himselfe, hee still is one to all.
Hen. Showes he to others thus?
Omnes. To all that know him.
Hen. And apprehend I this man for a traitor?
Gui. These are your Machevilian villaines,
Your bastard Teucers, that, their mischiefes done,50
Runne to your shield for shelter; Cacusses
That cut their too large murtherous theveries
To their dens length still. Woe be to that state
Where treacherie guards, and ruine makes men great!
Om. Thankes to your Highnesse; ever live your Highnesse! Exeunt.
Baligny. Better a man were buried quicke then live
A propertie for state and spoile to thrive. Exit.
Aversus. In left margin in Q.
51 Cacusses. Ed.; Q, Caucusses.
A Country Road, between Cambrai and Paris.]
Enter Clermont, Mail[lard], Chal[on] with Souldiers.
Maillard. Wee joy you take a chance so ill, so well.
Clermont. Who ever saw me differ in acceptance
Of eyther fortune?
Chalon. What, love bad like good!
How should one learne that?
Cler. To love nothing outward,
Or not within our owne powers to command;5
And so being sure of every thing we love,
Who cares to lose the rest? if any man
Would neyther live nor dye in his free choise,
But as hee sees necessitie will have it
(Which if hee would resist, he strives in vaine)10
What can come neere him that hee doth not well?
And if in worst events his will be done,
How can the best be better? all is one.
Mail. Me thinkes tis prettie.
Cler. Put no difference
If you have this, or not this; but as children15
Playing at coites ever regard their game,
And care not for their coites, so let a man
The things themselves that touch him not esteeme,
But his free power in well disposing them.
Chal. Prettie, from toyes!
Cler. Me thinkes this double disticke 20
Seemes prettily too to stay superfluous longings:
"Not to have want, what riches doth exceede?
Not to be subject, what superiour thing?
He that to nought aspires, doth nothing neede;
Who breakes no law is subject to no King."25
Mail. This goes to mine eare well, I promise you.
Chal. O, but tis passing hard to stay one thus.
Cler. Tis so; rancke custome raps men so beyond it.
And as tis hard so well mens dores to barre
To keepe the cat out and th'adulterer:30
So tis as hard to curbe affections so
Wee let in nought to make them over-flow.
And as of Homers verses, many critickes
On those stand of which times old moth hath eaten
The first or last feete, and the perfect parts35
Of his unmatched poeme sinke beneath,
With upright gasping and sloath dull as death:
So the unprofitable things of life,
And those we cannot compasse, we affect;
All that doth profit and wee have, neglect,40
Like covetous and basely getting men
That, gathering much, use never what they keepe;
But for the least they loose, extreamely weepe.
Mail. This prettie talking, and our horses walking
Downe this steepe hill, spends time with equall profit.45
Cler. Tis well bestow'd on ye; meate and men sicke
Agree like this and you: and yet even this
Is th'end of all skill, power, wealth, all that is.
Chal. I long to heare, sir, how your mistresse takes this.
Enter Aumal with a cabinet.
Mail. Wee soone shall know it; see Aumall return'd.50
Aumale. Ease to your bands, sir!
Cler. Welcome, worthy friend!
Aum. As great rich men take sodaine povertie.
I never witness'd a more noble love,
Nor a more ruthfull sorrow: I well wisht55
Some other had beene master of my message.
Mail. Y'are happy, sir, in all things, but this one
Of your unhappy apprehension.
Cler. This is to mee, compar'd with her much mone,
As one teare is to her whole passion.60
Aum. Sir, shee commends her kindest service to you,
And this rich cabinet.
Chal. O happy man!
This may enough hold to redeeme your bands.
Cler. These clouds, I doubt not, will be soone blowne over.
Enter Baligny, with his discharge: Renel, and others.
Aum. Your hope is just and happy; see, sir, both65
In both the looks of these.
Baligny. Here's a discharge
For this your prisoner, my good Lord Lieutenant.
Mail. Alas, sir, I usurpe that stile, enforc't,
And hope you know it was not my aspiring.
Mail. I sorrow for it, sir.
Renel. You see, sir, there
Your prisoners discharge autenticall.
Mail. It is, sir, and I yeeld it him with gladnesse.
Bal. Brother, I brought you downe to much good purpose.
Cler. Repeate not that, sir; the amends makes all.75
Ren. I joy in it, my best and worthiest friend;
O, y'have a princely fautor of the Guise.
Bal. I thinke I did my part to.
Ren. Well, sir, all
Is in the issue well: and (worthiest friend)
Here's from your friend, the Guise; here from the Countesse,80
Your brothers mistresse, the contents whereof
I know, and must prepare you now to please
Th'unrested spirit of your slaughtered brother,
If it be true, as you imagin'd once,
His apparition show'd it. The complot85
Is now laid sure betwixt us; therefore haste
Both to your great friend (who hath some use waightie
For your repaire to him) and to the Countesse,
Whose satisfaction is no lesse important.
Cler. I see all, and will haste as it importeth.90
And good friend, since I must delay a little
My wisht attendance on my noblest mistresse,
Excuse me to her, with returne of this,
And endlesse protestation of my service;
And now become as glad a messenger,95
As you were late a wofull.
Aum. Happy change!
I ever will salute thee with my service. Exit.
Bal. Yet more newes, brother; the late jesting Monsieur
Makes now your brothers dying prophesie equall
Ren. Heaven shield the Guise from seconding that truth
With what he likewise prophesied on him!
Cler. It hath enough, twas grac'd with truth in one;
To'th other falshood and confusion!
Leade to the Court, sir.
Bal. You Ile leade no more; 105
It was to ominous and foule before. Exeunt.
Finis Actus quarti.
105 to the. Shepherd, Phelps; Q, to'th.
[A Room in the Palace of the Duke of Guise.]
Ascendit Umbra Bussi.
Umbra Bussi. Up from the chaos of eternall night
(To which the whole digestion of the world
Is now returning) once more I ascend,
And bide the cold dampe of this piercing ayre,
To urge the justice whose almightie word5
Measures the bloudy acts of impious men
With equall pennance, who in th'act it selfe
Includes th'infliction, which like chained shot
Batter together still; though (as the thunder
Seemes, by mens duller hearing then their sight,10
To breake a great time after lightning forth,
Yet both at one time teare the labouring cloud)
So men thinke pennance of their ils is slow,
Though th'ill and pennance still together goe.
Reforme, yee ignorant men, your manlesse lives15
Whose lawes yee thinke are nothing but your lusts;
When leaving (but for supposition sake)
The body of felicitie, religion,
Set in the midst of Christendome, and her head
Cleft to her bosome, one halfe one way swaying,20
Another th'other, all the Christian world
And all her lawes whose observation
Stands upon faith, above the power of reason—
Leaving (I say) all these, this might suffice
To fray yee from your vicious swindge in ill25
And set you more on fire to doe more good;
That since the world (as which of you denies?)
Stands by proportion, all may thence conclude
That all the joynts and nerves sustaining nature
As well may breake, and yet the world abide,30
As any one good unrewarded die,
Or any one ill scape his penaltie. The Ghost stands close.
Enter Guise, Clermont.
Guise. Thus (friend) thou seest how all good men would thrive,
Did not the good thou prompt'st me with prevent
The jealous ill pursuing them in others.35
But now thy dangers are dispatcht, note mine.
Hast thou not heard of that admired voyce
That at the barricadoes spake to mee,
(No person seene) "Let's leade my lord to Reimes"?
Clermont. Nor could you learne the person?
Cler. Twas but your fancie, then, a waking dreame:
For as in sleepe, which bindes both th'outward senses
And the sense common to, th'imagining power
(Stird up by formes hid in the memories store,
Or by the vapours of o'er-flowing humours45
In bodies full and foule, and mixt with spirits)
Faines many strange, miraculous images,
In which act it so painfully applyes
It selfe to those formes that the common sense
It actuates with his motion, and thereby50
Those fictions true seeme and have reall act:
So, in the strength of our conceits awake,
The cause alike doth [oft] like fictions make.
Gui. Be what it will, twas a presage of something
Waightie and secret, which th'advertisements55
I have receiv'd from all parts, both without
And in this kingdome, as from Rome and Spaine,
Lorraine and Savoye, gives me cause to thinke,
All writing that our plots catastrophe,
For propagation of the Catholique cause,60
Will bloudy prove, dissolving all our counsailes.
Cler. Retyre, then, from them all.
Gui. I must not doe so.
The Arch-Bishop of Lyons tels me plaine
I shall be said then to abandon France
In so important an occasion;65
And that mine enemies (their profit making
Of my faint absence) soone would let that fall,
That all my paines did to this height exhale.
Cler. Let all fall that would rise unlawfully!
Make not your forward spirit in vertues right70
A property for vice, by thrusting on
Further then all your powers can fetch you off.
It is enough, your will is infinite
To all things vertuous and religious,
Which, within limits kept, may without danger75
Let vertue some good from your graces gather.
Avarice of all is ever nothings father.
Umb. Danger (the spurre of all great mindes) is ever
The curbe to your tame spirits; you respect not
(With all your holinesse of life and learning)80
More then the present, like illiterate vulgars;
Your minde (you say) kept in your fleshes bounds
Showes that mans will must rul'd be by his power:
When by true doctrine you are taught to live
Rather without the body then within,85
And rather to your God still then your selfe.
To live to Him is to doe all things fitting
His image in which like Himselfe we live;
To be His image is to doe those things
That make us deathlesse, which by death is onely90
Doing those deedes that fit eternitie;
And those deedes are the perfecting that justice
That makes the world last, which proportion is
Of punishment and wreake for every wrong,
As well as for right a reward as strong:95
Away, then! use the meanes thou hast to right
The wrong I suffer'd. What corrupted law
Leaves unperform'd in Kings, doe thou supply,
And be above them all in dignitie. Exit.
Cler. Saw you nothing here?
Gui. Thou dream'st awake now; what was here to see?
Cler. My brothers spirit, urging his revenge.
Gui. Thy brothers spirit! pray thee mocke me not.
Cler. No, by my love and service.
Gui. Would he rise, 105
And not be thundring threates against the Guise?
Cler. You make amends for enmitie to him,
With tenne parts more love and desert of mee;
And as you make your hate to him no let
Of any love to mee, no more beares hee110
(Since you to me supply it) hate to you.
Which reason and which justice is perform'd
In spirits tenne parts more then fleshy men;
To whose fore-sights our acts and thoughts lie open:
And therefore, since hee saw the treacherie115
Late practis'd by my brother Baligny,
Hee would not honor his hand with the justice
(As hee esteemes it) of his blouds revenge,
To which my sister needes would have him sworne,
Before she would consent to marry him.120
Gui. O Baligny!—who would beleeve there were
A man that (onely since his lookes are rais'd
Upwards, and have but sacred heaven in sight)
Could beare a minde so more then divellish?
As for the painted glory of the countenance,125
Flitting in Kings, doth good for nought esteeme,
And the more ill hee does, the better seeme.
Cler. Wee easily may beleeve it, since we see
In this worlds practise few men better be.
Justice to live doth nought but justice neede,130
But policie must still on mischiefe feede.
Untruth, for all his ends, truths name doth sue in;
None safely live but those that study ruine.
A good man happy is a common good;
Ill men advanc'd live of the common bloud.135
Gui. But this thy brothers spirit startles mee,
These spirits seld or never hanting men
But some mishap ensues.
Cler. Ensue what can;
Tyrants may kill but never hurt a man;
All to his good makes, spight of death and hell.140
Enter Aumall.