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As give a crutch to the dead: But our count-cardinal
Has done this, and 'tis well; for worthy Wolsey,
Who cannot err, he did it. Now this follows,
(Which, as I take it, is a kind of puppy

To the old dam, treason,)-Charles the emperor,
Under pretence to see the queen his aunt,
(For 'twas, indeed, his colour; but he came
To whisper Wolsey,) here makes visitation:
His fears were, that the interview, betwixt
England and France, might, through their amity,
Breed him some prejudice; for from this league
Peep'd harms that menac'd him: He privily
Deals with our cardinal; and, as I trow,-
Which I do well; for, I am sure, the emperor
Paid ere he promis'd; whereby his suit was granted,
Ere it was ask'd;-but when the way was made,
And pav'd with gold, the emperor thus desir'd ;-
That he would please to alter the king's course,
And break the foresaid peace. Let the king know,
(As soon he shall by me) that thus the cardinal
Does buy and sell his honour as he pleases,"
And for his own advantage.

Nor.

I am sorry

To hear this of him; and could wish, he were
Something mistaken in 't.8

Buck.

No, not a syllable;
I do pronounce him in that very shape,
He shall appear in proof.

5

our count-cardinal-] Wolsey is afterwards called king cardinal. Mr. Pope and the subsequent editors read-court-cardinal. Malone.

6

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He privily - He, which is not in the original copy, was added by the editor of the second folio. Malone.

7- thus the cardinal Does buy and sell his honour as he pleases,] This was a proverbial expression. See King Richard III, Act V, sc. iii.

The same phrase occurs also in King Henry VI, Part I: •from bought and sold lord Talbot."

Malone.

Again, in The Comedy of Errors: "It would make a man as mad as a buck, to be so bought and sold." Steevens.

8

he were

Something mistaken in 't.] That is, that he were something different from what he is taken or supposed by you to be. Malone.

Enter BRANDON; a Sergeant at Arms before him, and two or three of the Guard.

Bran. Your office, sergeant; execute it.
Serg.
My lord the duke of Buckingham, and earl
Of Hereford, Stafford, and Northampton, I
Arrest thee of high treason, in the name
Of our most sovereign king.

Buck.

Sir,

Lo you, my lord, The net has fall'n upon me; I shall perish Under device and practice."

Bran.

I am sorry

To see you ta'en from liberty, to look on

The business present: 'Tis his highness' pleasure,
You shall to the Tower.

Buck.

It will help me nothing,

To plead mine innocence; for that die is on me,
Which makes my whitest part black. The will of heaven
Be done in this and all things!-I obey.—

O my lord Abergaʼny, fare you well.

Bran. Nay, he must bear you company:-The king

Is pleas'd, you shall to the Tower, till
How he determines further.

Aber.

you

[To ABER.

know

As the duke said

The will of heaven be done, and the king's pleasure
By me obey'd.

Bran.

Here is a warrant from

The king, to attach lord Montacute;2 and the bodies Of the duke's confessor, John de la Court,3

– practice.] i, é. unfair stratagem. So, in Othello, Act V: "Fallen in the practice of a cursed slave "

And in this play, Surrey, speaking of Wolsey, says: "How came his practices to light?" Reed.

1 I am sorry

To see you ta'en from liberty, to look on

The business present:] I am sorry that I am obliged to be present and an eye-witness of your loss of liberty. Johnson.

2

lord Montacute;] This was Henry Pole, grandson to George Duke of Clarence, and eldest brother to Cardinal Pole. He had married the Lord Abergavenny's daughter. He was restored to favour at this juncture, but was afterwards executed for another treason in this reign. Reed.

One Gilbert Peck, his chancellor,4

Buck.

So, so;

These are the limbs of the plot: No more, I hope.
Bran. A monk o' the Chartreux.

Buck.

Bran.

O, Nicholas Hopkins?5

He.

Buck. My surveyor is false; the o'er-great cardinal Hath show'd him gold: my life is spann'd already: I am the shadow of poor Buckingham;7 Whose figure even this instant cloud puts on,

By dark'ning my clear sun.8-My lord, farewel. [Exeunt.

3

John de la Court,] The name of this monk of the Char. treux was John de la Car, alias de la Court. See Holinshed, p. 863. Steevens.

4 One Gilbert Peck, his chancellor,] The old copies have ithis counsellor; but I, from the authorities of Hall and Holinshed changed it to chancellor. And our poet himself, in the beginning of the second Act, vouches for this correction:

"At which, appear'd against him his surveyor,
"Sir Gilbert Peck, his chancellor."

Theobald.

I believe [in the former instance] the author wrote—And Gjlbert &c. Malone.

5 Nicholas Hopkins?] The old copy has-Michael Họpkins. Mr. Theobald made the emendation, conformably to the Chronicle: "Nicholas Hopkins, a monk of an house of the Chartreux order, beside Bristow, called Henton." In the MS. Nich. only was probably set down, and mistaken for Mich. Malone.

6 my life is spann'd already:] To span is to gripe, or inclose in the hand; to span is also to measure by the palm and fingers. The meaning, therefore, may either be, that hold is taken of my life, my life is in the gripe of my enemies; or, that my time is measured, the length of my life is now determined. Johnson.

Man's life, in scripture, is said to be but a span long. Probably, therefore, it means, when 'tis spann'd 'tis ended. Reed.

7 I am the shadow of poor Buckingham;] So, in the old play of King Leir, 1605:

"And think me but the shadow of myself." Steevens.

8 I am the shadow of poor Buckingham;

Whose figure even this instant cloud puts on,

By dark ning my clear sun.] These lines have passed all the editors. Does the reader understand them? By me they are inexplicable, and must be left, I fear, to some happier sagacity. If the usage of our author's time could allow figure to be taken, as now, for dignity or importance, we might read:

Whose figure even this instant cloud puts out. But I cannot please myself with any conjecture.

SCENE II.

The Council-Chamber.

Cornets. Enter King HENRY, Cardinal WOLSEY, the Lords of the Council, Sir THOMAS LOVELL, Officers, and Attendants. The King enters leaning on the Cardinal's shoulder.

K. Hen. My life itself, and the best heart of it, 9 Thanks you for this great care: I stood i' the level

Another explanation may be given, somewhat harsh, but the best that occurs to me:

I am the shadow of poor Buckingham,

Whose figure even this instant cloud puts on,

whose port and dignity is assumed by the Cardinal, that overclouds and oppresses me, and who gains my place

By dark'ning my clear sun. Johnson.

Perhaps Shakspeare has expressed the same idea more clearly in The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Antony and Cleopatra, and King John:

"O, how this spring of love resembleth

"Th' uncertain glory of an April day,

"Which now shows all the beauty of the sun,
"And, by and by, a cloud takes all away."

Antony, remarking on the various appearances assumed by the flying vapours, adds:

now thy captain is

"Even such a body: here I am Antony,

"But cannot hold this visible shape, my knave."

Or yet, more appositely, in King John:

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being but the shadow of your son

"Becomes a sun, and makes your son a shadow."

Such another thought occurs in The famous History of Thomas Stukely, 1605:

"He is the substance of my shadowed love."

There is likewise a passage similar to the conclusion of this, in Rollo, or the Bloody Brother, of Beaumont and Fletcher:

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is drawn so high, that, like an ominous comet, "He darkens all your light."

We might, however, read-pouts on; i. e. looks gloomily upon. So, in Coriolanus, Act V, sc. i:

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"We pout upon the morning, are unapt
"To give, or to forgive."

Again, in Romeo and Juliet, Act III, sc. iii:

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"Thou pout'st upon thy fortune and thy love."

Wolsey could only reach Buckingham through the medium of the King's power. The Duke therefore compares the Cardinal

Of a full-charg'd confederacy,1 and give thanks that chok'd it.-Let be call'd before us

To

you

to a cloud, which intercepts the rays of the sun, and throws a gloom over the object beneath it. "I am (says he) but the shadow of poor Buckingham, on whose figure this impending cloud looks gloomy, having got between me and the sunshine of royal favour."

Our poet has introduced a somewhat similar idea in Much Ado about Nothing:

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the pleached bower,

"Where honeysuckles, ripen'd by the sun,

"Forbid the sun to enter;-like favourites

"Made proud by princes·

To pout is at this time a phrase descriptive only of infantine sullenness, but might anciently have had a more consequential meaning.

I should wish, however, instead of

By dark'ning my clear sun,

to read

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The following passage in Greene's Dorastus and Fawnia, 1588, (a book which Shakspeare certainly had read) adds support to Dr. Johnson's conjecture: "Fortune, envious of such happy successe, turned her wheele, and darkened their bright sunne of prosperitie with the mistie cloudes of mishap and misery."

Mr. M. Mason has observed that Dr. Johnson did not do justice to his own emendation, referring the words whose figure to Buckingham, when, in fact, they relate to shadow. Sir W. Blackstone had already explained the passage in this manner. Malone.

By adopting Dr. Johnson's first conjecture, "puts out," for "puts on," a tolerable sense may be given to these obscure lines. "I am but the shadow of poor Buckingham: and even the figure or outline of this shadow begins now to fade away, being extinguished by this impending cloud, which darkens (or interposes between me and) my clear sun; that is, the favour of my sovereign." Blackstone.

9

and the best heart of it,] Heart is not here taken for the great organ of circulation and life, but, in a common, and popular sense, for the most valuable or precious part Our author, in Hamlet, mentions the heart of heart. Exhausted and effete ground is said by the farmer to be out of heart The hard and inner part of the oak is called heart of oak. Johnson.

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Of a full-charg'd confederacy,] To stand in the level of a gun is to stand in a line with its mouth, so as to be hit by the shot.

Johnson.

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