K. HEN. And, once more, in mine arms I bid him welcome, And thank the holy conclave for their loves; They have sent me such a man I would have wish'd for. CAM. Your grace must needs deserve all strangers' loves, You are so noble: To your highness' hand K. HEN. Two equal men. The queen acquainted shall be Forthwith, for what you come:-Where's Gardiner? K. HEN. Ay, and the best, she shall have; and my favour To him that does best; God forbid else. Cardinal, [Exit WOLSEY. Re-enter WOLSEY, with GARDINER. WOL. Give me your hand: much joy and favour to you; You are the king's now. GARD. But to be commanded For ever by your grace, whose hand has rais'd me. [Aside. K. HEN. Come hither, Gardiner. [They converse apart. CAM. My lord of York, was not one doctor Pace In this man's place before him? WOL. CAM. Was he not held a learned man? WOL. Yes, he was. Yes, surely. CAM. Believe me, there's an ill opinion spread then Even of yourself, lord cardinal. WOL. How! of me? CAM. They will not stick to say, you envied him; And, fearing he would rise, he was so virtuous, Kept him a foreign man still; which so griev'd him, That he ran mad, and died. WOL. Heaven's peace be with him! That's christian care enough: for living murmurers, There's places of rebuke. He was a fool; For he would needs be virtuous: That good fellow, If I command him, follows my appointment; I will have none so near else. Learn this, brother, We live not to be grip'd by meaner persons... K. HEN. Deliver this with modesty to the queen. The most convenient place that I can think of, So sweet a bedfellow? But, conscience, consci ence, O, 'tis a tender place, and I must leave her. [Exeunt. Kept him a foreign man still;] Kept him out of the king's presence, employed in foreign embassies. JOHNSON. SCENE III. An Ante-chamber in the Queen's Apartments. Enter ANNE BULLEN, and an old Lady. ANNE. Not for that neither;-Here's the pang that pinches: His highness having liv'd so long with her: and she 5 Still growing in a majesty and pomp,-the which Would move a monster. OLD L. Hearts of most hard temper Melt and lament for her. ANNE She ne'er had known pomp: though it be temporal, Yet, if that quarrel, fortune," do divorce O, God's will! much better, 5 To leave is-] The latter word was added by Mr. Theobald. MALONE. • To give her the avaunt!] To send her away contemptuously; to pronounce against her a sentence of ejection. JOHNSON. 7 Yet, if that quarrel, fortune,] She calls Fortune a quarrel or arrow, from her striking so deep and suddenly. Quarrel was a large arrow so called. Thus Fairfax: -twang'd the string, out flew the quarrel long." WARBURTON. Such is Dr. Warburton's interpretation. Sir Thomas Hanmer reads: That quarreller Fortune. It from the bearer, 'tis a sufferance, panging OLD L. She's a stranger now again.9 Alas, poor lady! I think the poet may be easily supposed to use quarrel for quarreller, as murder for the murderer, the act for the agent. JOHNSON. Dr. Johnson may be right. So, in Antony and Cleopatra: "but that your royalty "Hold idleness your subject, I should take you "For Idleness itself." Like Martial's—" Non vitiosus homo es, Zoile, sed Vitium." We might, however, read: Yet if that quarrel fortune to divorce It from the bearer. 1. e. if any quarrel happen or chance to divorce it from the bearer. To fortune is a verb used by Shakspeare in The Two Gentlemen of Verona : 66 66 -I'll tell you as we pass along, That you will wonder what hath fortuned." Again, in Spenser's Fairy Queen, B. I. c. ii: "It fortuned (high heaven did so ordaine)" &c. -panging STEEVENS. As soul and body's severing.] So Bertram, in All's well that ends well: "I grow to you, and our parting is a tortur'd body." STEEVENS. 9 Again, in Antony and Cleopatra: "The soul and body rive not more at parting, "Than greatness going off." MALONE. stranger now again.]__ Again an alien; not only no longer queen, but no longer an Englishwoman. JOHNSON. It rather means, she is alienated from the King's affection, is a stranger to his bed; for she still retained the rights of an Englishwoman, and was princess dowager of Wales. So, in the second scene of the third Act: Katharine no more "Shall be call'd queen; but princess dowager, Dr. Johnson's interpretation appears to me to be the true one. MALONE. ANNE. Must pity drop upon her. So much the more Verily, I swear, 'tis better to be lowly born, And venture maidenhead for't; and so would you, You, that have so fair parts of woman on you, Of your soft cheveril conscience would receive, ANNE. Nay, good troth,— OLD L. Yes, troth, and troth,-You would not be a queen? I agree with Mr. Tollet. So, in King Lear:. "Dower'd with our curse, and stranger'd with our oath," i. e. the revocation of my love has reduced her to the condition of an unfriended stranger. STEEvens. 1our best having.] That is, our best possession. So, in Macbeth: "Of noble having and of royal hope." In Spanish, hazienda. JOHNSON. 2-cheveril-] is kid-skin, soft leather. JOHNSON. So, in Histriomastix, 1610: "The cheveril conscience of corrupted law." STEEVENS. |