PROLOGUE. I come no more to make you laugh; things now, Sad, high, and working, full of state and woe, The play may pass; if they be still, and willing, Richly in two short hours. Only they, Our own brains, and the opinion that we bring, As fool and fight is,] This is not the only passage in which Shakspeare has discovered his conviction of the impropriety of battles represented on the stage. He knew that five or six men with swords, gave a very unsatisfactory idea of an army, and therefore, without much care to excuse his former practice, he allows that a theatrical fight would destroy all opinion of truth, and leave him never an understanding friend. Magnis ingeniis et multa nihilominus habituris simplex convenit erroris confessio. Yet I know not whether the coronation shown in this play may not be liable to all that can be objected against a battle. JOHNSON. (To make that only true we now intend',) Be sad, as we would make you: Think, ye see As they were living; think, you see them great, A man may weep upon his wedding day. (To make that only true we now intend,)] To intend, in our author, has sometimes the same meaning as to pretend, but this line is somewhat obscure. PERSONS REPRESENTED. King HENRY the Eighth. Cardinal WOLSEY. Cardinal CAMPEIUS. CAPUCIUS, Ambassador from the Emperor Charles V. Duke of NORFOLK. Duke of BUCKINGHAM. Lord Chamberlain. Lord Chancellor. Bishop of LINCOLN. Lord ABERGAVENNY. Lord SANDS. Sir HENRY GUILDFORD. Sir THOMAS LOVELL. CROMWELL, Servant to Wolsey. GRIFFITH, Gentleman-Usher to Queen Katharine. Three other Gentlemen. Doctor BUTTS, Physician to the King. Garter, King at Arms. Surveyor to the Duke of Buckingham. BRANDON, and a Sergeant at Arms. Door-keeper of the Council-Chamber. Porter, and his Man. Page to Gardiner. A Crier. Queen KATHARINE, Wife to King Henry, afterwards divorced. ANNE BULLEN, her Maid of Honour, afterwards Queen. Several Lords and Ladies in the Dumb Shows; Women attending upon the Queen; Spirits which appear to her: Scribes, Officers, Guards, and other Attendants. SCENE, chiefly in LONDON and WESTMINSTER; once at KIMBOLTON. KING HENRY VIII. ACT I. SCENE I-London. An Ante-chamber in the Palace. Enter the Duke of NORFOLK, at one Door; at the other, the Duke of BUCKINGHAM, and the Lord Aberga VENNY. Buckingham Good morrow, and well met. How have you done, Nor. I thank your grace: Healthful; and ever since a fresh admirer Of what I saw there. Buck. An untimely ague Stay'd me a prisoner in my chamber when Those suns of glory, those two lights of men, Nor. "Twixt Guynes and Arde3: I was then present, saw them salute on horseback; 3 Guynes and Arde :] Guynes then belonged to the English, and Arde to the French: they are towns in Picardy, and the valley of Ardren lay between them. Arde is Ardres, but both Hall and Holinshed write it as Shakspeare does. Which had they, what four thron'd ones could have The view of earthly glory: Men might say, Beyond thought's compass; that former fabulous story, Buck. O, you go far. All clinquant,] All glittering, all shining. Clarendon uses this word in his description of the Spanish Juego de Toros. 5 Durst wag his tongue in censure.] Censure for determination of which had the noblest appearance. • That Bevis was believ'd.] The old romantick legend of Bevis of Southampton. |