Be sure, you be not loose; for those you make friends, And give your hearts to, when they once perceive But where they mean to sink ye. All good people, Farewell: And when you would say something that is sad,8 Speak how I fell.-I have done; and God forgive me! [Exeunt BUCKINGHAM and Train. 1 GENT. O, this is full of pity!-Sir, it calls, I fear, too many curses on their heads, That were the authors. 2 GENT. If the duke be guiltless, 'Tis full of woe: yet I can give you inkling Of an ensuing evil, if it fall, Greater than this. 1 GENT. Good angels keep it from us! Where may it be? You do not doubt my faith, sir? 2 GENT. This secret is so weighty, 'twill require A strong faith to conceal it. 1 GENT. I do not talk much. Let me have it; 7 be not loose;] This expression occurs again in Othello: "There are a kind of men so loose of soul, “That in their sleeps will mutter their affairs." STEEVENS. And when you would say something that is sad, &c.] So, in King Richard II: "Tell thou the lamentable tale of me, STEEVENS. strong faith-] Is great fidelity. JOHNSON. 2 GENT. I am confident; You shall, sir: Did you not of late days hear Between the king and Katharine? 1 GENT. Yes, but it held not: For when the king once heard it, out of anger He sent command to the lord mayor, straight To stop the rumour, and allay those tongues That durst disperse it. 2 GENT. But that slander, sir, Is found a truth now: for it grows again Fresher than e'er it was; and held for certa in1 The king will venture at it. Either the cardinal, Or some about him near, have, out of malice To the good queen, possess'd him with a scruple That will undo her: To confirm this too, Cardinal Campeius is arriv'd, and lately; As all think, for this business. 1 GENT. 'Tis the cardinal; And merely to revenge him on the emperor, For not bestowing on him, at his asking, The archbishoprick of Toledo, this is purpos'd. 2 GENT. I think, you have hit the mark: But is't not cruel, That she should feel the smart of this? The cardinal Will have his will, and she must fall. 1 GENT. We are too open here to argue this; 'Tis woful. [Exeunt. --and held for certain,] To hold, is to believe. So, in Lord Surrey's translation of the fourth Æneid: "I hold thee not, nor yet gainsay thy words." STEEVENS. SCENE II. An Ante-chamber in the Palace. Enter the Lord Chamberlain, reading a Letter. CHAM. My lord,-The horses your lordship sent for, with all the care I had, I saw well chosen, ridden, and furnished. They were young, and handsome; and of the best breed in the north. When they were ready to set out for London, a man of my lord cardinal's, by commission, and main power, took 'em from me; with this reason,-His master would be served before a subject, if not before the king: which stopped our mouths, sir. I fear, he will, indeed: Well, let him have them: He will have all, I think. Enter the Dukes of NORFOLK and SUFFOLK. NOR. Lord chamberlain. CHAM. Well met, my good' Good day to both your graces. I left him private, What's the cause? SUF. How is the king employ'd? Full of sad thoughts and troubles. NOR. CHAM. It seems, the marriage with his brother's wife Has crept too near his conscience. Well met, my good-] The epithet-good, was inserted by Sir Thomas Hanmer, for the sake of measure. STEEVENS. SUF. No, his conscience Has crept too near another lady. 'Tis so; NOR. This is the cardinal's doing, the king-cardinal: That blind priest, like the eldest son of fortune, Turns what he lists. The king will know him one day. SUF. Pray God, he do! he'll never know himself else. NOR. How holily he works in all his business! And with what zeal! For, now he has crack'd the league Between us and the emperor, the queen's great nephew, He dives into the king's soul; and there scatters These news are every where; every tongue speaks them, And every true heart weeps for't: All, that dare Look into these affairs, see this main end, 3 That, like a jewel, has hung twenty years &c.] See Vol. IX. p. 242, n. 2. MALONE. see this main end,] Thus the old copy. All, &c. The French king's sister". Heaven will one day open The king's eyes, that so long have slept upon SUF. And free us from his slavery. NOR. We had need pray, And heartily, for our deliverance; 6 Or this imperious man will work us all SUF. perceive this main end of these counsels, namely, the French king's sister. The editor of the fourth folio and all the subsequent editors read-his; but y or this were not likely to be confounded with his. Besides, the King, not Wolsey, is the person last mentioned; and it was the main end or object of Wolsey to bring about a marriage between Henry and the French king's sister. End has already been used for cause, and may be so here. See p. 61: "The cardinal is the end of this." Malone. 'The French king's sister.] i. e. the Duchess of Alençon. 6 STEEVENS, From princes into pages:] This may allude to the retinue of the Cardinal, who had several of the nobility among his menial servants. JOHNSON. Into what pitch he please.] The mass must be fashioned into pitch or height, as well as into particular form. The meaning is, that the Cardinal can, as he pleases, make high or low. JOHNSON, The allusion seems to be to the 21st verse of the 9th chapter of the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans: "Hath not the potter power over the clay of the same lump, to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour" COLLINS. |