Shakespeare - First Folio facsimile (1910)/The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth/Act 1 Scene 4

Scena Quarta.


Enter Archbishop, Hastings, Mowbray, andLord Bardolfe.
Ar. Thus haue you heard our causes, & kno our Means:And my most noble Friends, I pray you allSpeake plainly your opinions of our hopes,And first (Lord Marshall) what say you to it?
Mow. I well allow the occasion of our Armes,But gladly would be better satisfied,How (in our Meanes) we should aduance our seluesTo looke with forhead bold and big enoughVpon the Power and puisance of the King.
Hast. Our present Musters grow vpon the FileTo fiue and twenty thousand men of choice:And our Supplies, liue largely in the hopeOf great Northumberland, whose bosome burnesWith an incensed Fire of Iniuries.
L.Bar. The question then (Lord Hastings) standeth thusWhether our present fiue and twenty thousandMay hold-vp-head, without Northumberland:
Hast. With him, we may.
L.Bar. I marry, there's the point:But if without him we be thought to feeble,My iudgement is, we should not step too farreTill we had his Assistance by the hand.For in a Theame so bloody fac'd, as this,Coniecture, Expectation, and SurmiseOf Aydes incertaine, should not be admitted.
Arch. 'Tis very true Lord Bardolfe, for indeedIt was yong Hotspurres case, at Shrewsbury.
L.Bar. It was (my Lord) who lin'd himself with hope,Eating the ayre, on promise of Supply,Flatt'ring himselfe with Proiect of a power,Much smaller, then the smallest of his Thoughts,And so with great imagination(Proper to mad men) led his Powers to death,And (winking) leap'd into destruction.
Hast. But (by your leaue) it neuer yet did hurt,To lay downe likely-hoods, and formes of hope.
L.Bar. Yes, if this present quality of warre,Indeed the instant action: a cause on foot,Liues so in hope: As in an early Spring,We see th' appearing buds, which to proue fruite,Hope giues not so much warrant, as DispaireThat Frosts will bite them. When we meane to build,We first suruey the Plot, then draw the Modell,And when we see the figure of the house,Then must we rate the cost of the Erection,Which if we finde out-weighes Ability,What do we then, but draw a-new the ModellIn fewer offices? Or at least, desistTo builde at all? Much more, in this great worke,(Which is (almost) to plucke a Kingdome downe,And set another vp) should we surueyThe plot of Situation, and the Modell;Consent vpon a sure Foundation:Question Surueyors, know our owne estate,How able such a Worke to vndergo,To weigh against his Opposite? Or else,We fortifie in Paper, and in Figures,Vsing the Names of men, instead of men:Like one, that drawes the Modell of a houseBeyond his power to builde it; who (halfe through)Giues o're, and leaues his part-created CostA naked subiect to the Weeping Clouds,And waste, for churlish Winters tyranny.
Hast. Grant that our hopes (yet likely of faire byrth)Should be still-borne: and that we now possestThe vtmost man of expectation:I thinke we are a Body strong enough(Euen as we are) to equall with the King.
L.Bar. What is the King but fiue & twenty thousand?
Hast. To vs no more: nay not so much Lord Bardolf.For0his diuisions (as the Times do braul)Are in three Heads: one Power against the French,And one against Glendower: Perforce a thirdMust take vp vs: So is the vnfirme KingIn three diuided: and his Coffers soundWith hollow Pouerty, and Emptinesse.
Ar. That he should draw his seuerall strengths togitherAnd come against vs in full puissanceNeed not be dreaded.
Hast. If he should do so,He leaues his backe vnarm'd, the French, and WelchBaying him at the heeles: neuer feare that.
L.Bar. Who is it like should lead his Forces hither?
Hast. The Duke of Lancaster, and Westmerland:Against the Welsh himselfe, and Harrie Monmouth.But who is substituted 'gainst the French,I haue no certaine notice.
Arch. Let vs on:And publish the occasion of our Armes.The Common-wealth is sicke of their owne Choice,Their ouer-greedy loue hath surfetted:An habitation giddy, and vnsureHath he that buildeth on the vulgar heart.O thou fond Many, with what loud applauseDid'st thou beate heauen with blessing Bullingbrooke,Before he was, what thou would'st haue him be?And being now trimm'd in thine owne desires,Thou (beastly Feeder) art so full of him,That thou prouok'st thy selfe to cast him vp.So, so, (thou common Dogge) did'st thou disgorgeThy glutton-bosome of the Royall Richard,And now thou would'st eate thy dead vomit vp,And howl'st to finde it. What trust is in these Times?They, that when Richard liu'd, would haue him dye,Are now become enamour'd on his graue.Thou that threw'st dust vpon his goodly headWhen through proud London he came sighing on,After th' admired heeles of Bullingbrooke,Cri'st now, O Earth, yeeld vs that King agine, And take thou this (O thoughts of men accurs'd)"Past, and to Come, seemes best; things Present, worst.
Mow. Shall we go draw our numbers, and set on?
Hast. We are Times subiects, and Time bids, be gon.