书城公版King Edward the Third
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第12章 ACT III(3)

Away,away;me thinks I hear their drums:--

Ah,wretched France,I greatly fear thy fall;Thy glory shaketh like a tottering wall.

[Exeunt.]

SCENE III.The same.Drums.

[Enter King Edward,and the Earl of Darby,With Soldiers,and Gobin de Grey.]

KING EDWARD.

Where's the French man by whose cunning guide We found the shallow of this River Somme,And had directions how to pass the sea?

GOBIN.

Here,my good Lord.

KING EDWARD.

How art thou called?tell me thy name.

GOBIN.

Gobin de Graie,if please your excellence.

KING EDWARD.

Then,Gobin,for the service thou hast done,We here enlarge and give thee liberty;And,for recompense beside this good,Thou shalt receive five hundred marks in gold.--I know not how,we should have met our son,Whom now in heart I wish I might behold.

[Enter Artois.]

ARTOIS.

Good news,my Lord;the prince is hard at hand,And with him comes Lord Awdley and the rest,Whom since our landing we could never meet.

[Enter Prince Edward,Lord Awdley,and Soldiers.]

KING EDWARD.

Welcome,fair Prince!How hast thou sped,my son,Since thy arrival on the coast of France?

PRINCE EDWARD.

Successfully,I thank the gracious heavens:

Some of their strongest Cities we have won,As Harflew,Lo,Crotay,and Carentigne,And others wasted,leaving at our heels A wide apparent field and beaten path For solitariness to progress in:

Yet those that would submit we kindly pardoned,But who in scorn refused our proffered peace,Endured the penalty of sharp revenge.

KING EDWARD.

Ah,France,why shouldest thou be thus obstinate Against the kind embracement of thy friends?

How gently had we thought to touch thy breast And set our foot upon thy tender mould,But that,in froward and disdainful pride,Thou,like a skittish and untamed colt,Dost start aside and strike us with thy heels!

But tell me,Ned,in all thy warlike course,Hast thou not seen the usurping King of France?

PRINCE EDWARD.

Yes,my good Lord,and not two hours ago,With full a hundred thousand fighting men--Upon the one side of the river's bank And on the other both,his multitudes.

I feared he would have cropped our smaller power:

But happily,perceiving your approach,He hath with drawn himself to Cressey plains;Where,as it seemeth by his good array,He means to bid us battle presently.

KING EDWARD.

He shall be welcome;that's the thing we crave.

[Enter King John,Dukes of Normandy and Lorrain,King of Boheme,young Phillip,and Soldiers.]

KING JOHN.

Edward,know that John,the true king of France,Musing thou shouldst encroach upon his land,And in thy tyranous proceeding slay His faithful subjects and subvert his Towns,Spits in thy face;and in this manner following Obraids thee with thine arrogant intrusion:

First,I condemn thee for a fugitive,A thievish pirate,and a needy mate,One that hath either no abiding place,Or else,inhabiting some barren soil,Where neither herb or fruitful grain is had,Doest altogether live by pilfering:

Next,insomuch thou hast infringed thy faith,Broke leage and solemn covenant made with me,I hold thee for a false pernicious wretch:

And,last of all,although I scorn to cope With one so much inferior to my self,Yet,in respect thy thirst is all for gold,Thy labour rather to be feared than loved,To satisfy thy lust in either part,Here am I come,and with me have I brought Exceeding store of treasure,pearl,and coin.

Leave,therefore,now to persecute the weak,And armed entering conflict with the armed,Let it be seen,mongest other petty thefts,How thou canst win this pillage manfully.

KING EDWARD.

If gall or wormwood have a pleasant taste,Then is thy salutation honey sweet;But as the one hath no such property,So is the other most satirical.

Yet wot how I regard thy worthless taunts:

If thou have uttered them to foil my fame Or dim the reputation of my birth,Know that thy wolvish barking cannot hurt;If slyly to insinuate with the world,And with a strumpet's artificial line To paint thy vicious and deformed cause,Be well assured,the counterfeit will fade,And in the end thy foul defects be seen;But if thou didst it to provoke me on,As who should say I were but timorous.

Or,coldly negligent,did need a spur,Bethink thy self how slack I was at sea,How since my landing I have won no towns,Entered no further but upon the coast,And there have ever since securely slept.

But if I have been other wise employed,Imagine,Valois,whether I intend To skirmish,not for pillage,but for the Crown Which thou dost wear;and that I vow to have,Or one of us shall fall into his grave.

PRINCE EDWARD.

Look not for cross invectives at our hands,Or railing execrations of despite:

Let creeping serpents,hid in hollow banks,Sting with their tongues;we have remorseless swords,And they shall plead for us and our affairs.

Yet thus much,briefly,by my father's leave:

As all the immodest poison of thy throat Is scandalous and most notorious lies,And our pretended quarrel is truly just,So end the battle when we meet to day:

May either of us prosper and prevail,Or,luckless,curst,receive eternal shame!

KING EDWARD.

That needs no further question;and I know,His conscience witnesseth,it is my right.--Therefore,Valois,say,wilt thou yet resign,Before the sickles thrust into the Corn,Or that inkindled fury turn to flame?

KING JOHN.

Edward,I know what right thou hast in France;And ere I basely will resign my Crown,This Champion field shall be a pool of blood,And all our prospect as a slaughter house.

PRINCE EDWARD.

Aye,that approves thee,tyrant,what thou art:

No father,king,or shepherd of thy realm,But one,that tears her entrails with thy hands,And,like a thirsty tyger,suckst her blood.

AUDLEY.

You peers of France,why do you follow him That is so prodigal to spend your lives?

CHARLES.

Whom should they follow,aged impotent,But he that is their true borne sovereign?

KING EDWARD.

Obraidst thou him,because within his face Time hath ingraved deep characters of age?