ANNE BOLEYN. A, I ANN.] BOLYN: A TRAGEDY. BY GEORGE H. BOKER, Author of Calaynos," &c. PHILADELPHIA: A. HART, LATE CAREY AND HART, 126 Chestnut Street. 1850. l ! Entered, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1849, BY GEORGZ H. BOKER, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. PHILADELPHIA: T. K. AND P. G. COLLINS, PRINTERS. ,lb DRAMIATIS PERSONA.E HENRY VIII,.. DUKE OF NORFOL. K,.. DUKE OF SUFFOLK. DUKE OF RICHMON)D, MARQUIS OF EXETER. EARL OF ARUNDEL. VISCOUNT ROCIRFORD,. THOMAS WYATT. SIR HENRY NORRIS,. SIR WILLIAM KINGSTON, MARK SMEATON,. RALPH LONEr,.. Q AFormerly anne Boleyn. J. S Maid of Honour. M.. Maid of Honour, sister to Thomas Wyatt. . Sister-in.-law to the Queen. . dunt to the Queen. VISCOUNqTESS ROCHEFORD,. LADY BOLEYN,.. MRS. COSYNS. Lords, Ladies, Knights, Ushers, three Informers, Officers, Heralds, Guards, Citizens, attendants, 4c. SCEr.E, London and Greenwich. Time, A. D. 1536. 4 A; ) - l - iL 3 N . King of England. . Uncle to the Queen. Natural son of the King. Brother to the Queen. Groom o the Chamber. if Lieutenant of the Tower. Groom of the Chamber. ,I creature of Suffolk's. Q-uiEEiv ANNR,,. JANE SFYMOUlt, MAITY WYATT,. I PR OL 0 GUE. "Besotted dunce!" some modern Dennis cries, And shakes his pen, and rolls his threatening eyes; "Shalt thou, presumptuous bantling, dare to tread The wondrous path where mighty Shakespeare led? What, use his characters-re-write them too, Changying the sterling old for feeble new!Perish, aspiring impudent!" and then The foolscap quivers'neath his fery pen. Hold, noble Critic!-" What, draw Norfolk!-zounds!" And the poor Poet writhes with inky wounds. Prithee, dear Critic!-"Nay, and Suffolk, sir! Boy, give my ink a deeper, darker stir; Rouse all the venom in its sleeping dregs."Alas! alas! "The coward miscreant begs, Begs me for mercy! Vengeance, death, I say! Use bluff King Harry in his twaddling play, Of Anne Boleryn take another view!There, print my'Notice' in the next Review." But, says the Poet, with an humble look, Good Master Bilious, have you read my book? k PROLOGUE. "I read thy book? ha! ha! the fellow raves!" Notpraise, but justice'tis the Author craves. Pray, sir, skim o'er it, dipping here and there. "Thy fustian, wretch! I'd see thee" —Hold, don't swear! My readers will. "Thy readers? bless the zany!" And if they read not-'sblood! I'll not have any! viii ANNE BOLEYN. ACT I. SCENE I. A Room in Whitehall Palace. Enter, as from the Council, Duke of NORFOLK, Duke of SUF FOLK, Duke of RICHMOND, Marquis of EXETER, and Earl of ARUNDEL. NORFOLK. Nay, nay, my lords, affairs must not stand thus. She is my kinswoman, and I confess, If but on my estate her influence bore, I would pass it by unchecked. No private griefs Should wring a word firom me, nor tutor me To raise the hand that snaps a natural tie. But see, my lords SUFFOLK. 'Ods blood! we have seen enough: 2 ANNE BOLEYN: We have been open-eyed, your grace of Norfolk. I trust we hold one mind? ALL. We do, we do. SUFFOLK. Why then, your grace, we have stared ourselves stone-blind, Stared all our man to palsied impotence At this she-basilisk. Some years ago, From the mere dregs and offscourings of your house, We saw this girl emerge, and step by step Crawl slowly upward to the top of powerWhy she was queen before her crown was onTill now she threatens us from such a throne Of downright rule as queen ne'er held before. Nay, pucker not your brows, good duke of Richmond, While conscience echoes what I bluntly speak: Your royal father, more than any here, Has felt her deadly witchcraft. RICHMOND. Fie, for shame! I thought this meeting one of policy: It never crossed me that five stalwart men 14 A TRAGEDY. Had leagued their brains to gabble scandal thus Of a poor queen, whose sole discovered crime Heaven send a rain of such bewildering sin Is too much beauty. NORFOLK. Therein lies her power. RICHMOND. Then we depute you, as her nearest kin, To play Saint Dunstan to this fair Elgiva; To rase her eyes out, sear her blushing skin, Twist off her nose, and slit her pretty mouth; But 0,'fore heaven! lay not your manhoods off, And stand a-railing like a pack of drabs! ARUNDEL. Patienlce, your grace; let Suffolk have his say; This was but prelude to the main affair. RICHMOND. Nay, if his song cannot out-go that pitch, Henceforth I'll herd with women. Know, my lords, To ease you of her beauty's deadly grief, Her so-called strongest hold, my father's love, 15 II 1 ANNE BOLEYN: Is wellnigh yielded to a nimble wightNo higher than your arm, your grace of SuffolkThrough herald words, and showers of gentle looks. Therefore, I counsel we withdraw our powers Of bearded men, nor strive to win by storm That woman's citadel, our sovereign's heart. SUFFOLK. Your grace may flout and gamre at holy writ, Or any solemn truth; nor stands a fact Less in repute, because an empty jest Has cracked thereon, and shown its hollowness. RICHMOND. I cry you mercy, lord of gravity! Now wherefore meet we? Exeter, speak out. You have not strayed away in idle words; From which I argue you have kept to heart This grave affair. EXETER. Thus is it then, my lords. We all have sorrowing seen the growing power Of her we call the queen-we call, I say; 16 A TRAGEDY. For, in my humble judgment, Katharine, Our sometime mistress RICHMOND. Heaven defend us all! He'll talk till cock-crow on that threadbare theme. Will no one help us? Is there no one here Who knows exactly why five fools have met? NORFOLK. Thus then, your grace. We peers have nigh become A mere encumbrance in the council seats. RICHMOND. Why here is a man who has his wits alive! NORFOLK. Spare me, your grace; too heavy this for sport. RICHMOND. Well, I'll be silent till the end. Go on. NORFOLK. This spawn of ours, whom I must blush to own RICH3IOND. Ha! more abuse! 17' l', ANNE BOLEYN: NORFOLK. -usurps the state entire; Makes and breaks treaties; changes faiths and priests; Empties the treasury, and fills it up, By loans and taxes, such as she may will; Sends one abroad, and calls another home; Orders a marquis here, and there a duke. All this she does, and more than I can name, With but such counsel as her wits may lend, Counting us peers as toys. RICHMOND. Ah, now indeed We reach the body of things politic. If'tis a fight of wits, I am with you, sirs; Though I misgive we shall be shrewdly cuffed. SUFFOLK. All this-your grace of Richmond, mark me wellAll this unqueenly power she strictly holds By the fond tenure of our sovereign's love: Let but the light, which now he suns her in, Vanish in frowns, and this same haughty moon, That floods our prospect with her filched beams, Sinks to her native blackness. 18 A TRAGEDY. RICHMOND. So, stop there! My lords, I'll join you in your enterprise Against the sweet usurpings of our queen, Perchance, when I behold you four tall men Ranked on Tower Hill, the headsman standing by; When meek-faced Suffolk is about to say, "Good people, I confess I suffer justly." ARUNDEL. Exeter, I have caught cold by standing here; I feel the shrewdest of rheumatic pains Twitching my spine above the shoulder blades.I must withdraw. (Apart to EXETER.) EXETER. Nay, nay, stand fast, he jests. RICHMOND. When noble Norfolk's humbly-worded letter, "Touching his close connection with the queen," lIeets in reply her gracious writ of death; W hen scurvy poets sing in bastard rhymes, "The doleful ballad of lord Arundel;" When slip-shod wenches, with out-popping eyes, 19 i, r I ANNE BOLEYN: And all unbreathed, pant out to passers by, "Pray, tell me, sirs, where dies false Exeter?" Then will I aid you, then I'll run amain, Grovel and crawl, and kiss the royal shoe, And howl for pardon which she will not grant.Till then, adieu! NORFOLK. Your grace will keep our counsel? RICHMOND. Zounds! I am a gentleman; and prove it, sir, By having better business to my hands Than the undoing of my female kin. EXETER. He's a hot heart; but such are mostly true. SUFFOLK. What was the hint yon brain-struck bastard dropped About the king's love suffering change to Anne? ARUNDEL. Nay, I know not; he dealt so much in tropes: His grace of Norfolk is a poet's father, He may resolve us. 20 [.&.;t. A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. I have thought of that. 'Twas a bare hint, but worth our scrutiny. EXETER. Ay, ay, indeed. SUFFOLK. I half believe it meant: When Richmond bays, there is store of game afoot; We have found it so. NORFOLK. I'll to his majesty. If this prove true, our cause is wellnigh won. SUFFOLK. Your grace will summon us to hear the news? NORFOLK. Trust me; if true, I'll be too full to hold. ARUNDEL. RIethinks the country air would ease these aches About my neck, another talk like this Nigh wrench my head off. (Aside.) 21 ANNE BOLEYN: NORFOLK. Till we meet, farewell! Be secret, but be watchful. EXETER. Time is fate. SUFFOLK. We have not pulled the crafty Wolsey down, To whimper tamely at a woman's heels! SCENE II. Another Room in the Palace. Enter JANE SEYMOUR, pur sued by KING HENRY. KING HENRY. Oh! prithee tarry! I am out of windI'll not have breath to tell you how I love. Stand, I adjure you, on your loyalty! JANE SEYMOUR. Now am I safe; I owe you loyalty, And you owe me protection. (Kieels.) 22 [Exeunt. A TRAGEDY. KING HENRY. Nonsense, child! (Raises her.) You are far safer with plain Harry Tudor, Than if the monarchs of all Christendom Circled you round. For what are angry swords To the raised finger of the baby Love? I say, I love you; that implies respect. JANE SEYMOUR. Respect should teach you not to urge your love. KING HENRY. Sweetheart, pray hear me. I am all unused To lovers' logic, to the mincing phrase That snares a heart in nets of sophistry; I'll not attack your passion through your brain; But at your love's unconquered citadel I'll sit me down, with rough, unmannered haste, And bid you open in your sovereign's name. Jane, do you love me? JANE SEYMOUR. With all duty, sir. KING HENRY. Tut, tut! no duty. Would you be my queen? 23 ANNE BOLEYN: JANE SEYMOUR. Your wife, my liege: the tempting name of queen Makes no addition to a loving mind. Love asks but love. KING HENRY. So, well said, mistress mine! I never thought to win your dainty heart By bartering for it an unfeeling crown. Love comes unsought, nor heeds the voice of power: The very gem which, from his purple throne, A fuming king may gaze and thunder for, Beneath the willows of some muddy brook A listless rustic may disclose and wear. Then, as mere Hal, the shepherd, if you listBarring all sovereignty with equal termsSay, do you love me? (Kneels.) JANE SEYMOUR. Maiden shame, my liege KING HENRY. Liege me no more-Hal —Harry-what you will. JANE SEYMOUR. Mv maiden heart should send its blushing force 24 A TRAGEDY. Of startled blood to whelm my guilty face, While I stand parleying with her dearest foe; Yet am I pale-ah! pale with fear, to think What woful fate may be reserved for me, If our right noble queen KING HENRY. Hell blast the queen! (Starts up.) JANE SEYMOUR. Ha! did I gall you so? (Aside.) 0 pardon me! KING HENRY. Girl, I am wellnigh maddened by the queen. A pack of yelling fancies bait my soul, And each tongue seems to cheer the horrid rout, When my fierce conscience cries-The queen, the queen! JANE SEYMOUR. O had I suffered her extremest rage, Ere I had angered you! KING HENRY. Nay, I'll not scold. Forgive me, sweetheart, my unmannered spleen. My soul is much perplexed and tempest-tossed 3 25 I ANNE BOLEYN: About my marriage with this cunning queen: I fear me, Lucifer made her a bait To trap my soul. JANE SEYMOUR. 0, you arch hypocrite! (Aside.) KING HENRY. Methinks the Pope was right-ay, must be right; Since by the creed he is infallible. JANE SEYMOUR. Not by the new one. KING HENRY. There the sorrow lies: I have main doubts of our new-gendered creed. If he be right, then is our union void; For, by his voice, poor Katharine was my wife.I will consult my lords on this grave point. JANE SEYMOUR. Your nobles wear your eyes; but then the people KING HENRY. I'll make half England see without their heads, 26 A TRAGEDY. But I will wed you! Sweetheart, promise me, If I can offer an unmortgaged hand, That you will take it. JANE SEYMOUR. Thus I promise you. (Gives her hand.) KING HENRY. When next we meet, I'll show you many a way To lead us from this labyrinth of doubt, As soft and thornless to your pretty feet As the rich velvet whereon you shall tread To mount the dais of our English throne. Till then, adieu! (They separatshe rushes back.) JANE SEYMOUR. Sweet Harry, be not rash. KING HENRY. 0, I would fawn, and play the stricken cur To any groom, whose love-illumined wit Could steal from time the weary chain of days That links our purpose to its hopeful end. [Exeunt severally. 27 ANNE BOLEYN: SCENE III. An ante-room in the Palace. Enter the Duke of NORFOLK, meeting an Usher. NORFOLK. Has the king risen? USHER. Anon, he will come forth. NORFOLK. I will await him. USHER. That is spared your grace. Enter KING HENRY. KING HENRY. Ha! Norfolk, Norfolk, you have come in time; There is no face more welcome than your own. I would rather see you in this private way Than in your dignity of counsellor. 28 A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. Your majesty o'errates my little worth. KING HENRY. Not a whit, man. Sir Usher, keep the door; Let no one enter till his grace withdraws. [Exit USHER. NORFOLK. I came on business of her majesty KING HENRY. 'Ods blood! the queen again! Enough, good Norfolk. I have met no man, since I arose to-day, Who came not whimpering of her majesty. Pray change your style; the fashion had grown stale Ere you were up. NORFOLK. Oh, ho! And how is this? (Aside.) KING HENRY. Norfolk,'tis pitiful! No hour last night, But my sharp senses, tuned to painful pitch, Started, like guilt, upon the faintest sound; The very mice stalked by like sentinels Ringing in proof; the clock beside my bed 3* 29 ,iL ANNE BOLEYN: Hammered the hours like a gross forging smith; The gentlest gust of air howled like the damned; And when a noise, which in the joyous day Would scarce make damsels wink, fell on mine ear, Up from my restless bed, like one possessed, I bounded, with wide-stretched and glaring eyes, And half cried-Treason! NORFOLK. Sir, I am amazed. Shall I go seek your majesty's physicians? KING HENRY. Ah!'tis a grief their physic cannot touch. My conscience, Norfolk. NORFOLK. Hum! join this to that, And I might get some credit as a prophet. (Aside.) KING HENRY. My conscience-oh! NORFOLK. And'twas his-"conscience, oh!" MIade such a pother ere Queen Katharine fell. (Aside.) 30 A TRAGEDY. KING HENRY. Nay; do you hear me?'twas my conscience, sir. NORFOLK. Certes, within a month, another queen. (Aside.) Grief has bereft me of the power of speech. Might Cranmer help you? KING HENRY. No; you are the man. NORFOLK. Deign to unfold your majesty's distress; And what so weak a man as Norfolk can, He'll gladly undertake. KING HENRY. Hear, then, the cause. You know our present queen-(Listens.) NORFOLK. And hear her, sir. QUEEN ANNE. (Without.) What, sir, deny me to his majesty? 31 ANNE BOLEYN: USHER. ( Without.) But'tis his majesty's direct command. QUEEN ANNE. (Without.) Stand from before me; I will answer it. Enter QUEEN ANNE, followed by the USHER. QUEEN ANNE. Your highness KING HENRY. Fellow with an usher's wand, Hand me your cane. Begone, your place is wanted. USHER. Your highness,'twas the queen KING HENRY. Knave, bite your tongue, Or you may talk your head off. Fly, I say! And if within the precincts of our Court Your traitor face is seen two hours from now, I'll break your body in as many pieces As this frail stick! (Breaks up the wand.) [Exit USHFR. 32 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Nay, royal sir, I pray Some show of mercy to yon guiltless man. If there was fault, believe it mine alone: He dared not stop my entrance. KING HENRY. Say you so? Well, madam, I believe it yours alone: And much it vexes us that you, our queen, Whose acts should but reflect our royal will, Show thus a glass whence every traitor's eye May take the foul impression of himself. QUEEN ANNE. My liege, forgive my over zealous haste; The cause that brought me is no common one. Our faithful Protestants in Germany Are sorely pressed KING HENRY. If they be pressed to death, I care not. There are those within my realm, Gross, headstrong Protestants, puffed up with pride, Who should be sent abroad to get a squeeze. I 33 ANNE BOLEYN: NORFOLK. Ha! ha! your majesty. (Laughing.) QUEEN ANNE. What owl is that Crying so merrily as shadows thicken? 0, I beseech your majesty, sustain The noble cause so happily begun! You are the instrument, by Heaven picked out From all the famous potentates of earth, To work its high behest. Yea, after times Shall lay your memory as a sacred thing Upon their altars, radiant with such beams, Shot clear from heaven, that slander's eagle eye, Dazzled with light, can challenge no defect. Most blessed of men! when the great trump of doom Shall to its centre crack the startled world, And cheek by cheek the king and slave awake, Think what a band of heaven-persuading saints Shall circle God, and raise their tongues for you! KING HENRY. Why here's Erasmus in a farthingale! What say you, Norfolk? 34 A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. Nothing now, my liege: My brain is clearer in the council room. I pray her majesty, the queen, may cease To load her spirits with our state affairs: The rugged shoulders of tried counsellors Can scarce endure the burden of these times; And much I fear QUEEN ANNE. I see through what you mean, Good uncle Norfolk. You are one of those Big bloated toads that cumber up sweet earth, A mere deformity in common sight; Yet,'neath the royal sun, you swell and swell, Blinking your dull but self-sufficient eyes Around the narrow bound your view may grasp, And then shake heaven with angel merriment, To hear you splutter-"Lord, all this is ours!" KING HENRY. 'Ods wounds! forbear! NORFOLK. I'll give receipt for this. (Aside.) 35 ANNE BOLEYN: KING HENRY. Why rate you thus our friend and counsellor? Your uncle, Norfolk, whose unfaltering zeal H as seemed to b e the shadow of our will! QUEEN ANNE. But seen in sunshine. KING HENRY. If'twould please your highness To blow these noxious vapors from your mind, Have pity on us, nor infect our ears. QUEEN ANNE. Your pardon, sir, if my unbroken tongue For once ran riot with my better sense. KING HENRY. Ay,'tis a wilful jade. QUEEN ANNE. But hear me out. KING HENRY. We'll make no purchase from the samples givenPreaching and railing..'Tis but courtesy, 36 A TRAGEDY. If you require this room, that we withdraw. Come, Norfolk, come.-What said his holiness? [Exit, leaning on NORFOLK. QUEEN ANNE. What means this heavy feeling at my heart? What means the king by this unwonted coldness? What means my uncle by his insolence? Why stood the king with an approving smile, And heard my most unnatural enemy Offer reproof in semblance of advice? I have seen the time-ay, not a month agoWhen, in the fury of his lion mood, He'd brained the scoffer with his royal hand. But times have changed-ah! have they changed indeed? Has my life passed the zenith of its glory? Must I make ready for the gathering clouds That dog the pathway of a setting sun? We]l, let them come! The blaze of my decline Shall turn to gold the dull enshrouding mists, And show the world a spectacle more grand Than the young splendor in which first I rose. HIa! ha! par Dieiu! now this is marvellous! 4 37 ANNE BOLEYN: A queen whose crown has scarcely ta'en the shape Of her young brow, the anointing oil scarce dried, The shouts still buzzing in my deafened ears, With which the people hailed me on the throne; Not two years queen, and moralizing thus, Like fourscore crawling to its certain grave! This is sheer weakness, the dull malady Of little minds that chafe at little ills. Great souls are cheerful with their inborn power, Feeling themselves the rulers of events, The sinewy smoothers of the roughest times, And not the slaves of outward influence. Despair is a fellow with a moody brow, Who shuts a dungeon door upon himself, And then groans at his bondage. Fear, avaunt! Thy shades but trespass on my noon of power. (Several Courtiers cross the stage, bowing. Enter THOMAS WYATT.) Ho! Wyatt, hither. WYATT. Did your highness call? 38 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Where go you, sir? WYATT. I and these gentlemen, Inflamed with holy zeal of selfishness, MIake to the Mecca of our hopes, the king, A solemn pilgrimage. QUEEN ANNE. What news abroad? WYATT. Not a breath stirring. QUEEN ANNE. Say they aught of me? WYATT. If praise might tire the courtiers' flowing tongues, Eire this they had been mute: to-day, as ever, The sweets of Hybla drop from every mouth. As I came here, a crowd of Protestants, All fire-burned artisans and men of pith, Their new-made zeal sitting like riot on them, 39 ANNE BOLEYN: Brandished the fragments of some papal crosiers, And cried-"Long live Saint Anne!" QUEEN ANNE. Mockery! If history should hand my name to time, God grant its fame may rest on firmer base Than the disjointed sainthood of a mob! I keep you waiting. Fortune speed your suit. [Exit WYATT. (Another throej: of Courtiers cross the stage, bowing pro foundly.) These straws of courtiers watch the royal wind, And first predict the coming hurricane; Certes, as yet I see no adverse signs. Some state affairs have galled the fretful edge Of hasty Harry's rash but loving heart: Anon he will return, and, cap in hand, Cry, "Pardon, Anne!" But I'll pout and swell, Tossing my head, and tapping thus my foot; Then all my pride at one great, eager gulp I'll seem to swallow, as I bound to him; And then I'll pat his cheeks, and call him "Bear," 40 A TRAGEDY. And chide him gently for his angry mood. But when his eyes blush at their starting tears, I'll laugh aloud, and puzzle all his wits. So from this egg, of seeming noxious wrath, Shall spring a new-born love of double power. To-morrow sees a messenger dispatched To threaten Germany with fiery war, If wrong befall our faithful Lutherans: Whereat our uncle, the good duke of Norfolk, Shall gnaw his nether lip off with chagrin. Ho! cheer thee, Anne! darksome passages Oft mount to prospects, but for them unknown! [Exit. 4* 41 Iy ANNE BOLEYN: ACT II. SCENE I. A Room it Whitehall Palace. Enter JANE SEYMOUR. JANE SEYMOUR. A queen, a queen! a real anointed queen, With trains of maids and smiling courtiers, Diamonds like stones, and softest velvet pall To grace the shoulders of my majesty! All eyes on me, my beauties sung in verse; Each feature-ay, the tithe of any oneMore than enough to swell a rondeau up! My wishes fairies, flying at a sign To bring the substance of my latest thought! My kin ennobled to the last degree; My son a king, my daughters wed to kings; My name the pith of gravest history! This is too much! I cannot, if I would, Put by the crown which fortune offers me. 42 A TRAGEDY. But then the queen?-The queen o'erruns with pride; Last Tuesday week she cruelly rated me. What mercy showed she to poor Katharine? I am but the instrument of justest Heaven To make requital for her own misdeeds. The king abhors her, and inclines to meLo! nature points the path which I should take. Just as I mount, so must the queen descend; We hang in adverse scales. Now'tis too late; MIy faith is plighted to the king, and I Will dare the issue for the glittering prize! -Elter KING HENRY. KING HENRY. All joy befall you, darling! (Embraces h(x.) JANE SEYMOUR. Welcome, sir! KING HENRY. Are you still constant? JANE SEYMIOUR. Can you ask me that? You have descended from your royal state, 43 i ANNE BOLEYN: And deigned to honor one so low as I; Chosen me, unworthy, from the common throng, Nor cast your eyes upon the maiden hands Of princesses that wait outstretched for you: As well might the poor clown reject the sun That changes his grimed face to virgin gold, As I refuse the glory of your love. Henceforth my person is a sacred thing, A common vessel turned to holy use; And should you now disdain my little worth, All your great kingdom holds no mate for me. KING HENRY. Tut! mistress, with your gloomy fantasies; And be not jealous of my love so soon. Ours is a mere exchange of heart for heart; Crowns and such baubles enter not our trade. That which I have, the sceptre of a king, Possession makes nigh worthless in mine eyes; That which I have not, your own beauteous self, O'er all stale toys of royalty I prize. JANE SEYMOUR. Then be content; my heart is yours alone, 44 A TRAGEDY. As virgin as the breast wherein it beats. It rests with you to lift my fortunes up On level with your own. I8 KING HENRY. By Heaven, I will!But how, but how? Let us to counsel, love. (Seats himself, with JANE SEYMOUR on his kntee.) There's Norfolk, eager at our first design; But he is a Papist; to restore the Pope Part of his creed;-a doubtful counsellor. If I retrieve the Pope's authority, Upon the act my marriage is annulled, And I am free. True, true; but pause we here: How shall we satisfy the plundered monks Whom we have ousted from their fat domains? How our good nobles who possess them now? JANE SEYMOUR. And how the people? KING HENRY. Let them fight it out. They are half and half, Papists and Protestants, 45 i ,ol,,;, ANNE BOLEYN: And so divided, easily subdued. I mainly fear to reinstate the Pope; His holy finger is in every dish: I must be king within my own domain; Yet if the thing must be-'Ods wounds! my love, This matrimonial knot was hard to tie; But'twas mere pastime to undoing it. Would that the Grecian's sword might cut it-Ha! JANE SEYMOUR. What mean you, sir? Why do you glare around? And pale as death! KING HENRY. As death! JANE SEYMOUR. Ay, and as fearful. Rouse, rouse, sir! You are ill-I'll call relief. KING HENRY. Nay, sit you down again. JANE SEYMOUR. But are you well? 46 A TRAGEDY. KING HENRY. 'Twas but a passing thought that tortured me, Like one may feel who murders. Clasp me tight; Pain would be comfort to such awful visions. Enrter QUEEN ANNE, behind. QUEEN ANNE. Ha! JANE SEYMOUR. 0, good heavens! the queen! QUEEN ANNE. In luckless time For you, base minion, treble traitoress, False to yourself, false to your state and me! The foulest sin that woman may commit, Made doubly hideous by the circumstance! What! in the palace that contains your queen, The very seat of England's dignity, Whence virtue, as the simple commons deem, Springs to illumine this majestic realm! Have you no shame? Wear you that brazen front When I hold up a mirror to your crime? i 4T ANNE BOLEYN: Is not your Gorgon nature turned to stone, At the bare glimpse of your own ugliness? KING HENRY. Peace, sweetheart, peace; all shall be well for you; Your maid is guiltless. QUEEN ANNE. Hlave you found a tongue? What sorcery bestowed this power of speech? Or has poor shame, bedazzled at her glory, Shrunk from the world? KING HENRY. This foully slandered maid Is half distraught at your mad violence. QUEEN ANNE. And dare you, sir, before your injured queen You, the copartner of her guilt and shame, Protect yon wanton? KING IIENRY. Dare I, dare I, madam! 'Ods wounds! who's king in England? Hlold your tongue, 48 A TRAGEDY. You rank defier of your sovereign's power! Have you not learned whose presence you are in? Or must I teach you by some sterner means? QUEEN ANNE. Oh! shameless husband! KING HENRY. She is pure, I say: And, by high Heaven, as pure shall you remain From touch of mine, till malice gnaw you up!This is forever. Come, sweet mistress Jane. [Exit, leading off JANE SEYMOUR. QUEEN ANNE. Oh God! oh God!-The king-Nay, Harry, Harry, Come back; I will-Oh! killing agony! Is there no pity in the heart of man? Plead for me, girl-he loves you-plead for me! I am his wife, your queen, your loving mistress. I will forgive you, I will cherish you, I'll love you dearer than my dearest friend. Gone, gone forever! Said he not, forever? Kind Heaven, have mercy on my feebleness! 5 49 I I I ANNE BOLEYN: If this is trial of my strength, I yield; I do confess my utter helplessness; I bow me prostrate, a poor nerveless womanA queen no more. I'll trample on my pride, And follow meekly where thy finger points. By Heaven, not so! This is a grievous wrong, By man inflicted. Devils ordered this, And they shall pay it!-Hear me, writhing souls, That minister around sin's ebon throne! If to these murderers of my heart's dear peace A child be born, may she, in that sweet time When infant babble opes all heaven to her, Feel the cold hand of death draw day by day The clinging spirit from her! May her child Live in the vexings of a troubled time, And issueless die young! May he-O God, I cannot bid a curse light on the head Of him my child calls father! Bless him, Heaven! Give him the peace which he has stolen from me! [Exit. 50 A TRAGEDY. SCENE II. A Street in London. Enter MARK SMEATON and RALPH LONEY, meeting. LONEY. Mark Smeaton, if I breathe! SMEATON. Who are you, fellow, That thus accost her majesty's chief groom? LONEY. So soon forgotten! Know you not Ralph Loney, Whilom your school-mate? Shame upon you, Mark! Had I turned Peter, and denied you thus, When the big smith made at you with his hammer, You had not borne your silken coat to-day. SMEATON. Ralph Coney-Coney? 51 ANNE BOI,EYN: LONEY. Loney, Master Mark. How should I call your name, not knowing you? SMEATON. Think you, this is the first or hundredth time That knaves have claimed acquaintance with my name? We of the Court are known to every one; And I in chief, as the queen's favored groomNay, I may say, her most familiar groom, Ranked more as friend than courtly servitorAm most conspicuous to the vulgar gaze. It would but prove a new-come clown in town, Had you not known me. LONEY. Here are tidings gained To please his grace of Suffolk. This same Mark Is worth my powder. (Aside.)-Bless me, gracious sir! I pray forgive my vulgar forwardness; Indeed I knew not of your dignity. Your worship would not harm a thoughtless man. Nay, frown not, good Sir Mark.-Do I misjudge, In calling you Sir Mark? 52 A TRAGEDY. SMEATON. On the way thither; To-morrow, or next day, that style may suit; Perchance, a higher one. Resume your beaver. Let me see-Loney-Ralph?-Upon my life, When I reflect, I have a faint idea That once I knew you. LONEY. I will freshen you. Do you remember, on an Easter day, How the fierce urchins, half insane for meat, And rancorous with the bile of fishy Lent, Into a green and filthy pool bobbed you, Merely because they could? How I alone, In pity of your plight-your slimy plightYour most nose-wrenching plight SMEATON. Good Loney, cease! The zenith-topping sun forgets the clouds Which, in the dirty dawn, he struggled through! LONEY. Now what bystander that had seen you rise 53 5* ANNE BOLEYN: From that green pond, fresh with your miry coat, Had ever prophesied these gilded clothes? And who that saw me, with my broken staff, Thrash to their doors your routed enemies, Could have foretold my present mean estate? I should be captain of a great armada, You should be dragging horse-ponds. SMEATON. Prithee, cease! These boyish pranks disgust my nicer sense. LONEY. I would not vex you; but it comforts me, And reconciles me to my lot on earth, To summon back my childhood. As I then Hlad my full hours of triumph and renown, So have you now; thus fate is justified. SMEATON. You seem to be an honest fellow, Ralph; Nor care I if from my abounding store, Ever replenished by my gracious mistress, I give a parcel. (Gives a purse.) 54 A TRAGEDY. LONEY. Luck be with you, sir! SMEATON. When that is emptied, I'll replenish it, If you will drink my royal lady's health. LONEY. You stand high in her favor. SMEATON. Did you know The height I stand, it would amaze your ears. Adieu! we'll meet again. LONEY. Farewell, poor fool! We'll meet too soon for you. Hell snatch the purse! (Throws it from him.) It burns like heated brass. Now to the duke. Mark Smeaton's vanity, a seeming trifle, May in his grace's hands work great results; Ay, even the unqueening of a queen. Alas! alas! poor Mark, that thy fine feathers 55 [Exit. t ANNE BOLEYN: Should draw the fowler's closely prying eye! So must it be; why should I hesitate? Curse on his bounty! While we are beasts of prey, The little game must ever feed the great. [Exit. SCENE III. A Room in the Palace of the Duke of SUFFOLK. Enter Duke of NORFOLK, Duke of SUFFOLK, and Marquis of EXETER. SUFFOLK. Where's Arundel, Lord Exeter? EXETER. Poor man! His over boldness in once joining us Has scared him from a second wish of it: One valiant thought has terrified the rest. He bade me mention that some strict affairs Drew him away. When we have won the game, I pledge my faith, we'll have him bickering hot, And bold as Mars to share the dangerous spoils. 56 A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. We can well spare him. Since his majesty Has shown such favor to our enterprise, They who at first turned from us, virtue-sick, Deem it a blessed thing to be enrolled. Enter Earl of ARUNDEL. Welcome, my lord! ARUNDEL. A dear salute to me. I rode four horses dead, to keep my faith, And only reached you as the fifth fell lame. Good Lord! good Lord! they say his majestyI had this from a sure but private sourceHas gained intelligence of our design, And smiles at it. Ugh! sirs, I'm out of breath: When I have blown awhile, I'll tell you more. SUFFOLK. Nay, spare your wind. NORFOLK. Poh! poh! don't anger him. (Apart to SUFFOLK.) 57 ANNE BOLEYN: ARUNDEL. Ha! you know all? NORFOLK. Yes, every tittle of it. ARUNDEL. Then, sirs, to counsel. EXETER. Now he is head assassin. (Aside.) NORFOLK. His majesty is much perplexed with doubts; Nor knows he, better than ourselves, a plan To rid the state of his ambitious queen. She has committed no so gross excess As may subject her to the common law: A faithful wife, untainted in her fame EXETER. And so was Katharine. SUFFOLK. Come, come, be blunt: We must destroy her, by fair means or foul. 58 A TRAGEDY. Enter a SERVANT. SERVANT. Your grace's servant, Master Loney, waits. SUFFOLK. Let him wait, fellow-I am much engaged. SERVANT. I told him so. He said his business was About the matter you have now in hand. SUFFOLK. Ha! said he so? Admit him then. [Exit SERVANT.] My lords, Be not provoked by his familiar bearing. He is my jackal, a most useful one, But one who hates his trade. Enter RALPH LONEY. LONEY. My speech is short. I met a youthful schoolfellow of mine, A rare musician, now her highness' groom: The man's a fool, and boasted of the love His mistress bore him. He would go still further, 59 ANNE BOLEYN: To gratify his itching vanity, And criminate the queen. SUFFOLK. Go make him drunk; Take witnesses, fit men, and pump him dry. LONEY. I will obey, sir.-'Tis but one man more. SUFFOLK. You'll scarce believe, at times that fellow laughs; But never when about my secret work; Then he is ever sullen. ARUNDEL. A strange knave. SUFFOLK. B]3ut faithful. EXETER. Something grave may come of this. SUFFOLK. Ay, something which, by us interpreted, May compromise the virtue of the queen. 60 [Exit. A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. Perhaps. 0 find me but some little charge, Less weighty than the air-drawn gossamerSome dim tradition, gathered in a dream Seen by the blearing vision of a drunkardSome hearsay mumbled by a maniac's lips, With fever scorched upon his dying bedSome words the roaring tongues of angry blasts, Or zephyrs, lisping through the sluggish trees, Hummed in the ears of musing fantasyFind one of these, to frame a charge upon, And I will warrant trial expedite, And sure conviction, though an angel plead. SUFFOLK. I'll answer, Loney's craft unearths a charge As horrible as death. EXETER. What mean you, sirs, To bring a deadly fault against the guiltless? ARUNDEL. Ay, prove it too. 61 (i r ANNE BOLEYN: EXETER. This is flat villany! 'Tis now too late to shape my course anew; And England's weal outweighs a woman's life. (Aside.) NORFOLK. Should this affair fulfil its promises, We'll meet anon. ARUNDEL. If'twould assist you, sirs, Pray use my house. EXETER. This fellow glows with zeal; He'd stab she-Cesar in the Capitol. What is so cruel as cowardice in power! (Aside.) [Exeunt severally. 62 A TRAGEDY. SCENE IV. A by-street in London. Knots of vagabonds occasionally cross the scene. Enter Viscount ROCHFORD and THO MAS WYATT. ROCHFORD. Here is indeed a walk to take a friend, Good master Poet! Pray what place is this? Are we in London or in Tartarus? For, by my life, the visions we have passed Seemed fit induction to the place of shades. WYATT. No, Heaven be praised, we are in "Safety," sir; So call the thieves this well of girding walls. Here is a place as innocent of rule As the dun sands of savage Araby; Here pilferers divide their filched rags, And bolder robbers share their golden spoils; Here crime is native, natural, unabashed, 63 I ANNE BOLEYN: Walking abroad in easy confidence; Here treason stalks, the dreaded ghost of courts, Whetting his knife, and mixing deadly bowls. From yonder porch, I heard a hoarse-voiced Jew Harangue a crowd of frowning murderers, Cursing the king, the state, the holy church, Until he choked with mere malignity. On yonder steps, I saw a quiet wretch Coolly thrust in an ell or so of steel Between his brother's ribs.-There they both walk, The Jew and murderer. No law is here, Save what the dwellers make, and that is shifting. I oft have thought the watchful eye of God Upon this place ne'er rested; or that hell Had raised so black a smoke of densest sin, That the All-Beautiful, appalled, shrunk back From its fierce ugliness. I tell you, friend, When the great treason, which shall surely come To burst in shards law-bound society, Gives the first shudder, ere it grinds to dust Thrones, ranks, and fortunes, and most cunning lawsWhen the great temple of our social state Staggers, and throbs, and totters back to chaos 64 A TRAGEDY. Let men look here, here in this fiery mass Of aged crime and primal ignorance, For the hot heart of all the mystery!Here, on this howling sea, let fall the scourge, Or pour the oil of mercy! ROCHFORD. Pour the oil,In God's name, pour the blessed oil! The scourge, Bloody and fierce, has fallen for ages past Upon the foreward crests within its reach; Yet-made no more impression on the mass Than Persia's whips upon the -Iellespont. WYATT. 'Twas not to harrow up your heart with crimeThough, haply, such amazement is not lostI brought you hither.'Twas to stand beyond The utmost pale and influence of the Court, Where men interpret a malignant mind From every look the changing features wear; Find danger in the meeting of two friends; Rank treason in devices of our arms; Open rebellion to their gracious king, 6* 65 r ANNE BOLEYN: Should we but furbish our time-rusted blades.Now, Rochford, listen. ROCHFORD. Heavens! you frighten me. WYATT. No, I but caution you. My tale, though sad, May rest on fears as thin as summer clouds. ROCHFORD. Why that is cheering. WYATT. 'Tis not for yourself, But for her sacred majesty, the queen, I have these vague misgivings. ROCHFORD. What, the queen! Pshaw! Wyatt, was there ever woman blessed As she is? Courted and bepraised by all, Sharing no empty title in the crown, No mere producer of a royal brood; But by the force of her own intellect, 66 A TRAGEDY. To all effects, an equal with the king. Why, man, just now she stands at zenith height, Flooding our land with peerless majesty, The gaze and wonder of all Christendom. The great reformer, Anne, pre-ordained By Heaven to work its solemn purposes!Pob,! this is idle-we are wasting time: Your fears indeed were thin as summer clouds. WYATT. Ah! know you not, when the rejoicing sun Has reached its mid-day station in the sky, At that same time its mournful fall begins? ROCHFORD. Sir Poet, I confess me figure-beaten: Now croak away. WYATT. What I shall tell, MIy sister Mary told to me alone. She says, of late her majesty remains, Hour after hour, with dull and vacant eyes, Picking the fringe around her garment's hcn. 67 ANNE BOLEYN: Anon, big tears, like slow-paced mourners, come Forth from the woful mansion of her grief, As if they followed at hope's funeral. If they arouse her from this lethargy, She looks bewildered, asks the time of day, Appears surprised at lateness of the hour, Gives more commands than she has several hairs; Talking, meanwhile, at such a rattling pace, In bitter sneers and heartless gayety, That not an ear can gather her discourse: And then again, all suddenly, she falls Into her former state of revery. ROCHFORD. Good sir, you startle me. Art sure of this? For'tis the dreamy torpor of the brain That oft foreshadows madness. WYATT. Very sure; But'tis not madness. Listen, till the end. One day my sister entered suddenly, But unperceived, the chamber of her highness. Scarce had she crossed the threshold ere she saw, 68 A TRAGEDY. Rolled in a heap and crammed into a corner, The person of the queen. She stood amazed, Not daring to approach; and saw such grief, So absolute, so past all earthly bounds, So fiercely raging to pain's topmost pitch, That she shrunk quivering to the ante-room. But there her ears made pictures to her eyes: Anon, she heard her clawing at the floor, Sobbing and railing like a soul possessed: Then into one long, piercing, hellish scream Of hideous laughter broke her aching soul. At that my sister fled, with echoing laugh, And knew no more till from a lengthened swoon Her maids awoke her. ROCHIFORD. This is past belief. Without a doubt, the queen or she is mad. WYATT. My sister says, the king and queen ne'er meet; That notes unnumbered of her majesty's He has returned unopened. More,'tis noised, The king and Seymour's daughter oft of late 69 ANNE BOLEYN: Have been observed together; that the foes, Once secret, but now open, of the queen Stand in high favor with his majesty, And share his private counsels. ROCHFORD. Gracious Heaven! If this be certain, there is more in it Than I dare utter. Have I been bewitched, That I remained o'erconfident so long? Now you have mentioned it, a thousand things Which I have seen, but shuffled by unweighed, Rise to confirm the gloomiest belief. My cold receptions, Suffolk's insolence, Arundel's vaporings, Norfolk's tart replies, My sudden dearth of courtly sycophants, And Wyatt's warming friendship. Noble man, Through all my life I never aided you WYATT. Because I never asked it. Pshaw! George Boleyn, Were we not playfellows'neath Blickling's oaks, Where first my muse essayed her feeble lisp? Did you not praise and wonder at my rhymes, 70 A TRAGEDY. And cheer my heart with kindred sympathy? Hlave we not written sonnets and rondeaux, In kindly rivalry, to Anne's eyes? Did you not always swear my songs the best, Ere half were read, and force fair Anne's hand To place the laurel on my victor brow? Can I forget you? Can I cease to see, In England's queen, our little playfellow? Forgive me, Rochford; this is not a time To babble of our childhood. You are hemmed With scores of bold and ruthless enemies; And, God assoil him! the worst foe of all Is the first man in England's wide domain! ROCHFORD. What shall be done? WYATT. Fly to her majesty; Drain to the dregs her secret cause of grief; Learn all her fears, the blackest of her fears, Nor care to know her dimmest gleam of hope. Armed for the worst, we gain a double strengthThe power to conquer at the last extreme, 71 .k ANNE BOLEYN: And chance that such extreme may ne'er arrive I will not slumber. What the brain of man Can summon from its viewless armory, Shall be arrayed to battle for her right. I'll see You safe beyond this wretched place, And then we part, but not without a hope. 72 [Exeunt. A TRAGEDY. ACT III. SCENE I. A Tavern. MARK SMEATON, drunk, with RALPH LONEY and three Informers seated at a table spread with wine, &c. SMEATON. Now that's a song, and that's what I call singing. Roar it again, brave master bull-throat, roar! FIRST INFORMER. (Sings.) Old sack, old sack, Thou hast a happy knack, When fortune deals a sorry thwack, When friends may flout, and credit crack, Old sack, old sack. Old sack, old suck, We'll bide the world's attack, Though rosy Cupid turn his back, We ask but this, that thou'lt not lack, Old sack, old sack. 73 ANNE BOLEYN: SMEATON. Is that the end of your rare melody? Loney, my boy-Loney, you are dull as mudWere you not ravished by yon fellow's song? That is the neat's-tongue of true poesy: Nature applauds it in the thirst it brings. The song is a miracle; that one being full Yet asks for more upon it. Wine, there, wine! (They drink.) What are such poets as my lord of Surrey, Or whining Wyatt-Some one curse Tom Wyatt. You singer with the stormy lungs, pray curse This Thomas Wyatt! Have I ne'er a friend Whose oaths are potent? Curse him black and blue, My rival Wyatt! LONEY. Rival, boy! and how? SMEATON. Answer me, leather-lungs. FIRST INFORMER. Nay, sir, I know not. 74 Who is my love? A TRAGEDY. SMEATON. Then you are an ass, Not knowing, and a wizard, knowing her. LONEY. We cannot miss by drinking her a round. Give us the toast. SMEATON. Here's to our noble queen! LONEY. That's good and loyal, and we'll quaff it off; But not what we intended. We would drink To your sweet darling, to your pretty May, Your wanton plaything. Come, boy, never halt! SMEATON. Loney, observe me-every piece of me Edgewise, before, behind. Now tell me, sir, What woman in this realm is worthy of me? LONEY. Some great one, without doubt. 75 (D,rinks.) ANNE BOLEYN: SMEATON. I say, the queen. LONEY. (Apart to the INFORMERS.) INFORMERS. Ho! ho! the man is drunk! SMEATON. What do you take me for, you foul-mouthed knaves, A man of worship, or a common liar? Where have you lived, you scum of filthy earth, Not to know me? LONEY. Pardon the simple men; Indeed they knew not of your dignity. This is her majesty's chief groom of stateThe very front door to her royal ear; You must needs pass him ere you reach the queenPray you, respect him. FIRST INFORMER. 0, that alters it; A royal servant. 76 Now maxk him, sirs. A TRAGEDY. 77 SMEATON. Are the villains blind? Well, well, I have comfort. LONEY. What may comfort you? SMEATON. That some fair day a goodly son of mine May mount the throne, and chop off all their heads. LONEY. Mark that again. (Apart to the INFORMERS.) SECOND INFORMER. There is not a word escapes: I have engrossed it in my table-book. SMEATON. Come, Loney, come; we'll leave these stupid knaves. SECOND INFORMER. Whither away, sir? SMEATON. To the queen, good dolt! (Going.) 7* 77 ANNE BOLEYN: LONEY. Forget not, masters, "To the queen," he said; And at this hour. So, boy, away, away! [Exit with SMEATON. SECOND INFORMER. There is hanging in this. THIRD INFORMER. Curse him! what car I nigh had struck the braggart down myself, For slandering thus her gracious majesty. The base, ungrateful cur! I'll see him hang. SCENE II. The Queen's Apartments in Whitehall Palace. Enter QUEEN ANNE. QUEEN ANNE. So this is day, a broad, sun-staring dayAnd what had it been night? the same, the same. All time to me is one confused mass 78 [Exeunt. A TRAGEDY. Drowned in a flood of bitter misery. There is no time to one without a hope: Hopes are the figures on life's changing dial, That first betray to us the passing hours, Ere the great bell may summon us away. All blank and meaningless is life to me: I have no future. One eternal present, Rayless as Lapland winter, wraps my soul; One ceaseless wrong, affording but one sense Of cruelest agony, makes up my life, Stretching from day to day its sole event. What if the sun arise? what if the lark Put on the glory of his morning song? What if the flow'rs perk up their loaded heads, And swing their incense down the thirsting gale? What if the frame of this whole universe Warm in the glow, and join the matin hymn? While i remain in this dull lethargy, There is no morn to me. Eternal One, Who sent'st that joyous thing, the rising sun, As if in mockery of my sullen wo, To show how cheerless is my nighted soul0, end this mere existence! Rouse to life 79 ANNE BOLEYN: The fire of my consuming energies! 0, give me scope, and fate-subduing power Ay, though a pang be coupled with each act Lest, in this trance, the erring scythe of death Pass o'er my frame, as o'er the trampled grain, And nature be defeated! Gracious God, Are we mere puppets of a rigid fate? Is all this labyrinth of cunning thought Bestowed to snare us? Must our exit be Through that one door which destiny holds wide? To me alone, of all the human race, Has this dread secret clearly been revealed? It seems so; for where'er I bend mine eyes Some ugly phantom bars the hopeless way, And bids me wait the will of circumstance. This shall not be! Arise, my drowsing soul! Gird on thy blazing arms of intellect! One struggle more to master coming time; And if thy earthy walls then fall consumed, We'll scale those heights where conquering time is not! Enter MARY WYATT. MARY WYATT. A fair good morning to your majesty! 80 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Welcome, sweet mistress MAary! MARY WYATT. Joyful sight! There is a flush of triumph on your brow, Such as it wore on coronation day, Or when the spleenful butcher met his fall. QUEEN ANNE. Speak not of Wolsey. MARY WYATT. Have I ruffled you? QUEEN ANNE. O no, O no! to-day my heart is light. I feel as if another goodly crown Hung o'er my head. MIARY WYATT. Your brother, Rochford, waits. Since break of day he has been biding here. QUEEN ANNE. Ha! what has happened? 81 ANNE BOLEYN: MARY WYATT. Nothing, that I know. QUEEN ANNE. Well, well, admit him. [Exit MARY WYATT.] Rochford, at this hour? A man of ease-and waited here since dawn? MIy heart is failing.-Nonsense! what can come, Worse than the vision of that weak-brained girl Locked in the circle of my husband's arms? Enter Viscount ROCHFORD. Good morrow, Rochford! You are stirring soon. ROCHFORD. One stirs betimes who keeps a sleepless night. QUEEN ANNE. Have you been ill? ROCHFORD. Indeed I cannot tell. Perchance a fever brought my waking dreams. QUEEN ANNE. What dreams? 82 A TRAGEDY. ROCHFORD. I lay half slumbering, half awake, And ever, as my senses leaned to sleep, The same wild vision roused me from my rest. QUEEN ANNE. So you came here, before the break of day, To tell your dreams? I am no soothsayer. Pshaw! Rochford, this is trifling. You have griefs, Big, weighty griefs;-I see them on your brow. ROCHFORD. First hear my dream. I swear, no common one, For you were mingled in it. QUEEN ANNE. Well, say on. ROCHFORD. I thought, that you and I, for years and years, Had climbed the rundles of a slippery ladder. I knew not why we clambered; though above A blazing halo, like a sunset sky, Shone glorious, and towards it we bent our steps Urged by resistless impulse. You were first; 83 ANNE BOLEYN: And when I halted, by the labor tired, Or dizzy at the awful depth beneath, You cheered me on, and with your nimble feet Spurned the frail rounds, till sundered'neath your tread They fell around me. Woful, woful sight! Each stick in falling to a ghastly head Was metamorphosed. Here, Queen Katharine's fell; There Wolsey's; More's and Fisher's, spouting blood; And many a one whose face I could not catch. These, as they passed me, whispered in mine ears A horrid curse, and grinned, and winked their eyes. QUEEN ANNE. Good heaven, how awful! Was there more of this? ROCHFORD. Ay, far more dreadful fancies. QUEEN ANNE. Could there be? ROCHFORD. Already through the radiant clouds above Your form was piercing, when our frail support Shook till I sickened; and aloft I saw 84 A TRAGEDY. A dreadful shape, in features like the king, Tugging and straining with his threatening hand To hurl our ladder to the depths below. I saw you clutching at the dazzling clouds, That, unsubstantial, melted in your grasp; I heard you cry to the unpitying fiend Who held our lives in his relentless hands; I saw you turn on me one fearful look, In whose dread meaning desolate despair Ihad crowded all pale shapes of agony, Ere, with spasmodic catching at my breath, I shot down headlong.-With the fall, I woke. QUEEN ANNE. A fearful dream. ROCHFORD. A most connected one. The thing seems now an uttered prophecy, Whose power shall bend the neck of stubborn time To do its bidding. QUEEN ANNE. Cheer up, Rochford, cheer! Some one has told you that his majesty 8 85 ANNE BOLEYN: Looks coldly on me. So has he before, When I have crossed him in his fiery moods. To-day, I mean to win him back again. I must confess I have been negligent, Not to have closed our matrimonial flaw. ROCHFORD. Sister, this levity is forced. I know That your proud soul has suffered keen chagrin; Nor in hope's sunshine stand you more than I. Jane Seymour QUEEN ANNE. Nonsense, man, to place my worth Against the nothing of so weak a girl. The king's time lags; his ever-roving eye, Perchance his appetite, was caught by her: The eye soon tires, the heart is never full; The first is hers, the nobler prize is mine. Hope for the best. If I return to-day A conquered soldier, from this war of hearts, I'll give you leave to ease your sorry eyes O'er my afflictions. 86 A TRAGEDY. ROCIIFORD. Joy be with you, sister! Your merry mood has stolen my fear away. (Going.) Yet what I have heard QUEEN ANNE. Nay, what anon you'll hear! [Exit ROCHFORD. 0, misery! to play this queenly part Even to my brother! To be so supreme That the sweet flood of human sympathy, In which the beggar's ragged form may lave, Can never touch me! This is royalty, To feel for all that have no sense for me: To have no kindred, no companionshipThe lonely phoenix on her spicy fire. Alone, alone! Kind Heaven, the king remains3My rightful mate, sole partner of my lotAnd I will win him in the throat of death! 87 [EExit. ANNE BOLEYN: SCENE III. Another Room in the Palace. Enter KING HENRY and the Du?ke of NORFOLK. NORFOLK. Admit the boastings of this silly knave Are merely grounded on his vanity; Yet these same boasts, converted to a charge, Would wear another aspect. KING HENRY. Very true; But'tis too horrible. Disclose a charge Less dyed in blackness, bearing yet a colour Sufficient for divorce, but not for death. I do believe her a most faithful wife, Loving and true; though now her tenderness, Like healthy food to a distempered mouth, Disgusts the thing'twould nourish. 88 A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. I am dumb. I know no charge but what involves a crime As great as treason. For the lighter fault, Of secret correspondence with King Francis, We have no witness, and but scanty grounds To base our own suspicions on. KING IIENRY. 'Ods wounds! Would I could rack the French ambassador! Is there no other way? NORFOLK. None, that I know. KING HENRY. Then, in the name of all the lying fiends, Clear out this woman by what means you can! But mind you, sir, let there be proof enough To force conviction to the very core Of mine own conscience. NORFOLK. Ah! that tender conscience! (Aside.' S* 89 ANNE BO LEYN: Doubt not, my liege; the proof shall be direct. Suffolk has sent a follower of his, With three grave witnesses, most truthful men, To bring Mark Smeaton to that mellow state In which the tongue o'erleaps the sober will, And blusters out its secrets.-Truth is a fool, And drunkenness an artificial folly. KING HENRY. Now, by my soul, perchance the charge is true! NORFOLK. Doubtless, my liege. Nor is the groom alone The only evidence may be produced. I have brought one, a deeply injured wife, The good Viscountess Rochford; she awaits Your royal pleasure in the ante-room. KING HENRY. "The good Viscountess Rochford," NORFOLK. She can tell Some wondrous matters to your majesty. 90 0 A TRAGEDY. KING HENRY. Go bring her up. [Exit NORFOLK.] "The good Vis countess Rochford!" If hell were swept, to find its vilest soul, That soul would blush at sight of this good lady. Re-enter NORFOLK with Viscountess ROCHFORD. NORFOLK. I pray your majesty, be gentle with her. (Apart to KING HENRY.) KING HENRY. Welcome, my lady! LADY ROCHFORD. Heaven protect your highness! KING HENRY. His grace of Norfolk says your ladyship Can tell some wondrous matters of the queen. LADY ROCHFORD. Not I, my liege. KING HENRY. 'Fore heaven! what brought you then? 91 ANNE BOLEYN: NORFOLK. Nay, draw her gently on. She must be led, my liege. (Apart to KING HENRY.) KING HENRY. Who are familiar with her majesty? LADY ROCHFORD. Why, 3Iary Wyatt, and sweet mistress Seymour KING HENRY. Zounds, woman!-and what men? LADY ROCHFORD. I know not all. Besides the Council, and the Churchmen KING HENRY. 'Sblood! And all my army, and my navy too! IMadam, you trifle with us; pray speak out: I swear no harm shall come, whate'er you say. What paramours has she? Nay, I command; Speak, if you love my honor. LADY ROCIIFORD. Doleful hour, 92 A TRAGEDY. That I was forced to see her wickedness; MIore doleful far, to tell it! Pray, my liege KING HENRY. I'll have no faltering. Speak! or, by high Heaven, Look to yourself! LADY ROCHFORD. I am but a timid woman; You are my king, and may compel my tongue: But did not duty-pardon what I say KING HENRY. Enough, enough! LADY ROCHFORD. These are her paramoursNot fancied, but with certainty of proofSir Henry Norris, William Brereton, Sir Francis Weston, master Thomas WyattAll proper men, all men of gallant parts KING HENRY. We'll spare your comments on the lady's taste. LADY ROCHFORD. But there's iIark Smeaton, a low common knave, 93 ANNE BOLEYN: By virtue of her favour made a groom; And last of all, my husband, Viscount Rochford. KING HENRY. But he's her brother. LADY ROCHFORD. All the worse, my liege. KING HENRY. Monstrous! The name that you reserved to crown The utter horror of this long-drawn list Throws a discredit on the whole device. Have you no enemy to name for him? Have you denounced them all? LADY ROCHFORD. I'll prove his guilt More clearly than the crime of any other. 'Twas but this morn KING HENRY. For God's sake, take her hence! ( IValls apart.) 94 A TRAGEDY. NORFOLK. The king is satisfied. You may withdraw. You have pleased him, lady, more than he dare show. [Exit Viscountess ROCHFORD. KING HENRY. Mlust all these die? NORFOLK. They all are mortal, sir; And our fair witness must have that agreed, Ere she impugns them. KING HENRY. Ay, her serpent mouth Had rather spit its rancorous member forth Than bate one jot of its malicious spleen: But Wyatt shall not, Wyatt shall not die. We have had enough of executing scholars. Who ever heard such hubbub through the world As when Sir Thomas More was put to death? Herod and Pilate were crowned saints to me! Why, men that looked like moles, old dusty things, Came from their folios, leaving fear behind, And to my teeth talked of the infamy 95 ANNE BOLEYN: To which they would damn me.-Wyatt shall not die. In my wide realm are herds of courtiers, Knights, and viscounts, and gallant gentlemen; There's but one Wyatt.-Wyatt shall not die! [Exeunt. SCENE IV. A Room in the Duke of SUFFOLK'S Palace. Enter Duke of SUFFOLK, Duke of NORFOLK, Marquis of EXETER, and Earl of ARUNDEL, followed by MARK SMEATON and RALPH LONEY. NORFOLK. I tell you, fellow, you have not a hope, Save by agreeing to forswear the queen. Your guilty boastings, urged against your head, Will bring you to the gallows ARUNDEL. Ay, and shall. NORFOLK. Unless before the Council you appear, And there denounce your royal paramour. 96 A TRAGEDY. SMEATON. But will that save me? NORFOLK. 'Tis your only hope. SMEATON. But'tis a lie-a gross, atrocious lieAnd I am a villain if I uttered it. Curse on the wine! It was the babbling wine, And not my tongue, that forged this calumny. SUFFOLK. The boast you made was heard by witnesses, Who say you were but warmed, not drunk with wine. SMEATON. 'Tis false,'tis false! Have mercy on me, sirs! I am but an humble man, of no account; MIy death at this time, or a century hence, Could make no difference to such mighty lords. If noble mercy stoops not to the low, At least b e just t o me. ARUNDEL. Cease whining, cur! 9 97 ANNE BOLEYN: The game we are playing is to check the queen; What care we for a pawn? SMEATON. She is innocent. The words I dropped were from a foolish whim, To see myself admired by simple men: I never thought to injure her, nor hear My harmless folly rigidly explained By noblemen. Ah! Loney, you did this; And'tis the foulest act you ever did, Though you have committed murder. LONEY. Help yourself. Be not a double fool, first to get trapped, Then lack the art to burrow out of harm. Forget my deeds; they are my own concern; Nor stand there moralizing on the past. Seize on to-day-perchance'tis golden, man. SMEATON. "Perchance, perchance!" but not one promise given, Even by you. 98 A TRAGEDY. LONEY. The course they offer you Is bright with hope; despair and frightful death, By wrenching tortures and heart-shrivelling fires, Threaten you darkly from all other ways. I know your courage. When you have been racked For one short fortnight, or a month at most, You'll yield perforce. Why not confess at once, And gaiythe hope of pardon and reward? Pray did you ever see a felon racked, Even for an hour? ARUNDEL. Come, fellow, will you speak? Or shall I sound your carcass with my sword, To find your tongue? EXETER. The valiant gentleman! (Aside.) SMEATON. O horror, horror! Have compassion, sirs. O my poor mistress! Is there not a handNow, while I shut mine eyes-so merciful As to dispatch me, and deliver her?.:. * 99 * ~.., *.. ANNE BOLEYN: She is my maker,-she created me, From my vile dust, to be whate'er I am: As well might I blaspheme as stain her honour! Good sirs, have pity! SUFFOLK. Cease your agonies, You foul-mouthed slanderer of Heaven's majesty! Speak to the point-will you comply or not? SMEATON. But will that save me? SUFFOLK. Are we prophets, fool? What else can save you? SMEATON. But her majesty What will befall her? NORFOLK. What is that to you? Have you the power to influence her fate? 100 I A TRAGEDY. ARUNDEL. Are we the answers in your catechism, That you so glibly question? SMEATON. I will not! SUFFOLK. Loney, prepare the rack. SMEATON. Forgive me, Heaven! I will do anything: but spare my life! Oh! this is awful! I that never dared To touch her robe, or raise my fearful eyes To the full glory of her angel faceWhen her twin orbs of conquering majesty I felt upon me-now, with stubborn front, To stand before the gaze of frowning Heaven, And call its host to register a lie,A black, soul-killing lie! 0, urge it not! There's not an honest man in England's realm Who will not sicken at my perfidy, Or cram the falsehood down my caitiff throat 9* 101 [Exit LONEY. ANNE BOLEYN: Ere I half utter it! This is too foul, And useless for the end to which you urge it. SUFFOLK. Loney, the rack. (A curtain is drawn, and the rack disclosed, with Attendants standing near it.) ARUNDEL. Look there, Sir Constancy r There's what shall move you, every joint and limbThere's what shall stretch you more than you'll stretch truth. You'll strain a point for this-hey! hey! my boy? SMEATON. 0, nerve me, Heaven!-uplift my faltering heart! Give me the strength to foil these sinful men, And here assert thy might! ARUNDEL. Away with him! (Attendants seize SMEATON.) SMEATON. I yield, I yield! 102 A TRAGEDY. SUFFOLK. Then sign this paper, Mark; And wait the issue. (SMEATON signs.) EXETER. There an angel fell! Hlere is a wretch who damns his endless soul To save his mortal body. I had hoped, For the poor cause of frail humanity, To see yon fellow win a martyr's crown, And give the Calendar of our new creed Its first accomplished sainthood. (Aside.) SUFFOLK. It is done. NORFOLK. In the king's name, Mark Smeaton I arrest For treason manifest. (Attendants seize SMEATON.) SMEATON. Is this your mercy? SUFFOLK. Traitor, no words! Away with him, away! [Exeunt. 103 ANNE BOLEYN: SCENE V. An Apartment in Whitehall Palace. Enter KING HENRY. KING HENRY. How easy'tis to run an evil course, How many stubborn checks a virtuous meets! Sure all the fiends have turned them engineers, And smoothed the thousand pathways to their gulf, So quickly trod by man. There's not a let, As far as reason's straining eye can pierce, To the career which sin points out for me. Jane daily warms; the queen grows proud and cold, Nor now besieges me with tender notes; My nobles leave her, all afire for me; And the most powerful-ay, her very kinHatch plots to work her sudden overthrow. My love goes smoothly.-Hum! and yet'tis strange, When not within the circle of mine eyesThat drink her beauties like the thirsting sands, And bear the hot thrill of her loveliness 104 A TRAGEDY. Into my very soul-how this same fever, That fiercely glowed erewhile, calms and is cooled; How in the place of sudden pangs and starts, And all unrest, a holy peace succeeds; When comes the shape of my much wrong6d queen, Crossing my mind in quiet majesty, And trampling on the dust of noxious fancies, That throng the long, long avenues of thought, As if of right she crushed my base desires. Enter QUEEN ANNE, behind. QUEEN ANNE. Henry. KING HENRY. Was that a spirit? QUEEN ANNE. Husband, king. KING HENRY. How came you here? I had left strict command That no one should disturb my privacy. Have you again been tampering with my knaves? 105 ANNE BOLEYN: QUEEN ANNE. I came by a small passage-if forgot By you, my liege, still to my memory dearMade by yourself, in that once happy time, When, unobserved, you came to woo "The Boleyn." Is there no secret passage, you can tell, Through which so poor a one as I may creep Back to your heart, and see again the face Of hidden love? 0, sir, it must be rough, And small, and frightful to a valiant gaze, But I will tempt it. KING HENRY. There is none for you. Your pride, and haughtiness, and stubborn will Are all too big for love's slight passages.Now, by my faith, I am indeed amazed, To hear you pleading in this gentle tone. Have you forgot your character? Begin! Rail, like the thunders, at our guilty world! So ho! brave censor of morality, Embodied purity, untouched by earthWhat, are you pitiful? or have you sinned, And therefore feel compassion? 106 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. I have sinned, And tried the mercy of indulgent Heaven Beyond all bounds that human reason knows. I have been arrogant, to judge my kind By God's own law, not seeing in myself A guilty judge condemning the less vile. I have forgotten that the hand of death Would snatch the royal circle from my brow, And set me, but encumbered by my guilt, Equal with all, before the judgment seat. I have forgotten mercy: so might God Forget His mercy in my utmost need. I have KING HENRY. Hoot! madam; pray restrain yourself! I have no office to receive confessions. Yet-since you force me to play ghostly fatherIs there no other sin, of grosser cast, By you committed, not towards Heaven alone, But to my honour? 107 ANNE BOLEYN: QUEEN ANNE. 'Tis a hideous lie! Who has abused your majesty's belief With such unworthy tattle? Did you stand And tamely hear your honour thus belied? I knew that I had enemies enough, Unscrupulous and cruel; but never deemed Such base, malicious, and unfounded charge Could move a human lip, or find an ear, So used to gorging sickly mental stuff, As to receive it. Try me, try me, sir. Wring every fibre of my woman's frame With piercing tortures-hold my modesty, In truth's keen sunlight, to the vulgar gazeConfront me crownless with my slanderers: If at the last my trial prove me clear, And reunite our long-dissevered hearts, I'll hold the pain but lightly. KING HENRY. Pshaw! my child, You waste your energy. This base report Is the light mintage of some idle tongue, In want of truer metal. 108 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Ah! my liege, I hold this shallow falsehood at its worth; But it afflicts me sadly, to behold Your easy method of avoiding it, Without a thought of punishing the wrong. How have I changed?-O, Henry, you have changed From that true Henry who, in bygone days, Rode, with the hurry of a northern gale, Towards Hever's heights, and ere the park was gained, Made the glad air a messenger of love, By many a blast upon your hunting-horn. Have you forgotten that old oaken room, Fearful with portraits of my buried race, Where I received you panting from your horse; As breathless, from my dumb excess of joy, As you with hasty travel? Do you think Of our sweet meetings'neath the gloomy yews Of Sopewell nunnery, when the happy day That made me yours seemed lingering as it came, More slowly moving as it nearer drew? How you chid time, and vowed the hoary knave Might mark each second of his horologe 10 109 ANNE BOLEYN: With dying groans, from those you cherished most, So he would hasten? KING HENRY. Anne, that was you. Have you forgotten my ear-stunning laugh At your quaint figure of time's human clock, Whose every beat a soul's flight registered? QUEEN ANNE. God bless you, Henry! (Embraces himn.) KING HENRY. Pshaw! why touch so deep? These softening memories of our early love Come o'er me like my childhood. QUEEN ANNE. Love be praised, That with such pure reflections couples me! Be steadfast, Henry. KING HENRY. Fear not: love is poor That seals not compacts with the stamp of faith. 110 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Mly stay is trespass. We will meet anon. Love needs no counsel in his little realm. [Embraces him, and exit. KING HENRY. I hang'tween heaven and hell.-Anne, return; For, by my soul, one half my virtuous strength Has gone with you! 0 I had rather be The snarling cynic in his squalid tub, And master of myself, than England's king, Reared to indulgence of each flimsy whim That passion hints at.'Tis the curse of kings, This slaving to our pampered appetites; Which thwarted men nursed in vicissitude, And by compulsion taught to check desire, Gain strength to vanquish. Enter JANE SEYMOUR. JANE SEYMOUR. Harry, royal Harry! KING HENRY. Good morrow, mistress Seymour. ill ANNE BOLEYN: JANE SEYMOUR. Ha! so coldThe queen just gone! I'll match you, whirligig. (Aside.) I crave your pardon, that with rude alarm I thus disturbed your gracious majesty, Seeking for one I nicknamed royal HarryNot meaning disrespect to you, my liege, But from a wanton fancy. Had I thought Your majesty here present, I had held A stricter rein upon my noisy tongue. KING HENRY. Ah! she is beautiful. This little mood, Of mingled coquetry and tearful spite, Sits like the angry rain-drops on a rose, Giving fresh lustre to its crimson cheeks. You have miy pardon. JANE SEYMOUR. Nay, I wish it not. Pray cast your pardon on a graver slip: Forgive the maiden greenness of a heart That prattled to itself a silly tale 112 (As,ide.) A TRAGEDY. Of love, and hope, and thoughtless confidence, Even in your very presence. KING HENRY. Jane, what mean you? JANE SEYMOUR. But what my words imply. KING HENRY. And are you angry? JANE SEYMOUR. No, I am deceived. KING HENRY. Truce, truce, fair mistress! JANE SEYMOUR. Nay, peace is not my purpose. KING HENRY. Prithee stop! JANE SEYMOUR. You may be king of half the universe, 10* 113 ANNE BOLEYN: For aught I care; you are not king of hearts: My heart shall speak, though every word cry treason! KING HENRY. Forgive my coldness. JANE SEYMOUR. 0, I never deemed A truer spirit lived than yours, my liege: Else why did you, from your exalted height, Descend with flattering promises of love?Only to make me wretched! 0'tis base! A brutal hind might show more constancy Than this anointed king. ( Weeps.) KING HENRY. Nay, weep not, Jane. (Iiteels.) See me thus lowly in my penitence. I swear I meant no insult to you, darling; And here, upon my knees, I once again Put on the easy fetters of nmy heart. JANE SEYMOUR. Swear fealty to love: Your fickleness 114 A TRAGEDY. Reproaches more your mnanly character Than the poor wrong to me KING HENRY. I swear, by HIleaven, henceforth to love you with all constancy, By night, by day, in sunshine and in storm; Nor will I alter in my steadfast aim To crown you queen, though every mortal sin, That fiends can reckon in their calendar, Lies between me and my unfaltering wish! (Rises.) JANE SEYMOUR. This oath is fearful. KING HENRY. But irrevocable. What ask you more? JANE SEYMOUR. 0, sir, I asked not that: I but demnand of you a bare return For the great venture of my woman's heart, Unhappily launched upon a sea of lovie 115 ANNE BOLEYN: With you for careless pilot.'Tis my all; Though you esteem the charge of little worth. KING HENRY. Tut, tut! my darling; if our hearts respond, Our windy tongues are poor ambassadors To bear their gentle greetings. Love is dumb, A potent spirit, felt, but never heard, Save when he murmurs inarticulate 'Tween meeting lips, or buzzes wild conceits, That mnock the language of our grosser sense, In lovers' brains. Words are love's counterfeits: When stumbling fools would ape a shallow passion, Lies slide full glibly, and false rhetoric, Lashed to a foam, roars opposition down, And for effect kills feeling. Rail no more; Or I shall doubt that sweet sincerity On which I live. JANE SEYMOUR. 0, never doubt my faith. KING HENRY. Nor will I. (Embraces her.) I will bar my pliant ears Against the witchery of sly Anne's tongue: 116 A TRAGEDY. Her airy magic cheats my spell-bound heart, And for a moment shows a fancied spot, Bright with the May-day flowers of early love, Amid December's snow. And now for Norfolk. JANE SEYMOUR. Nothing in haste, my liege. KING HENRY. No; all in love. [Exeunt. 117 ANNE BOLEYN: ACT IV. SCENE I. The Lists at Greenwich, prepared for a Tournanment. Flourish. Enter KING HENRY, QUEEN ANNE, Lords, Ladies, Attendants, Jlien-at-arms, &c. The King and Queen seat themselves under the cloth of state. Then enter the lists Viscount ROCHFORD and other KJzights, as Challengers, with Jieralds Squires, Pages, &c. Trumpets sound a challenge. To them enter Sir HENRY NORRIS and other Knights, as De fenders, with Attendants, &c. Flourish. ROCHFORD, NORRIS, and their respective Knights engage. NORRIS and his party are driven back. QUEEN ANNE. I pray your highness, let them breathe awhile; Their sport grows earnest. Ill may come of this: Rochford is dangerous when his blood is up. KING HENRY. Poh! poh! mere bruises. Would you rather see Rochford or Norris murdered? 118 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Neither, neither! Good sir,'tis frightful. KING HENRY. Ha! so kind to both? Then love admits not of relationship. QUEEN ANNE. Sound, herald, sound! (Trumpets sound a retreat, and tihe combat ceases.) KING HENRY. Now, by the holy rood! (Starts up.) If we were speechless, Heaven had been most kind In sending one to exercise our function. QUEEN ANNE. I feared, my liege KING HENRY. 0, this is nothing new: You have governed England, me amongst the rest, Since God knows when!-You thing of painted cloth, When next you blow without your king's command, 119 ANNE BOLEYN: Look to your tabard.-Is our queen our tongue? (QUEEN ANNE, in her terror, drops her handkerchief NORRIS picks it uLp, kisses, and returns it.) Monstrous, by Jove! What, in our very presence!Shameless adulteress! Let the tilt be stopped! We are as patient as most ill-used men, But this we cannot bear. Set on, before! Was ever king thus openly defied? [Exit with Courtiers. QUEEN ANNE. Oh! horror, horror! (She faints, and'is borne off.) ROCHFORD. Norris, did I hear? Or am I singled from among you all To bear the terrors of this fantasy? NORRIS. Alas! your senses serve too faithfully: Would I could doubt you sane! Eater THOMAS WYATT, hastily. WYATT. Fly, Rochford, fly! And you, Sir Henry Norris, if you'd live. 120 A TRAGEDY. NORRIS. I fly I and wherefore? WYATT. Ask not, but awayAway to Scotland; nor till every inch Of English ground has vanished from your sight, Draw rein or spare the spur! ROCHFORD. Oh! I am stunned With dull intensity of present grief; No after blow, that cuts my torpid soul Loose from its clay, can bear a pang for me! I will not fly to live. I have beheld A sight to force me into love with deathThe most unkingly, meanest, foulest deed That brother's eyes e'er saw. WYATT. Now'tis too late. Enter an OFFICER and GUARD. OFFICER. Lord Rochford and Sir Henry Norris, yield! 11 121 ANNE BOLEYN: I do arrest you for high treason, sirs. Give up your arms, and follow to the Tower. RO(CHFORD. Yes, yes. Come, Norris; for I make no doubt, What was our virtue has become our guilt: Love to the queen is treason to the king. When the great fall the little must be crushed. NORRIS. Wyatt, what means this? I accused of treason! WYATT. Ay,'tis a royal charge! NORRIS. Ha! say you so? Had you this order from his majesty, Or from the Council? (To the OFFICER.) OFFICER. From the king direct. Come, gentlemen; my office stands in peril By my indulgence to you. 122 A TRAGEDY. ROCHFORD. Farewell! Wyatt. NORRIS. My lord, be not down-hearted. This affair Will soon blow over. ROCHFORD. Yes, to other men; But I much fear that on my latest day It will have reached its climax. OFFICER. Come, sirs, come! WYATT. Heaven send your innocence a quick release! ROCHFORD With death to bear the warrant. [Exeunt ROCHFORD, NORRIS, OFFICER, and GUARD. WYATT. So I fear, Doomed victims of a ruthless tyranny. 0, coming shape of English liberty, 123 ANNE BOLEYN: Have my desires played wanton to mine ears? Or do I hear the faint prophetic sound Of thine approaching footsteps echoing through The mists of coming time? Ye noble souls, Grim heroes of the field of Runnymede, Showing more glorious in your iron arms, On peaceful deeds, than in successful warsInspire the souls of your too slothful race! .Iust all the liberty your courage won Slip from the hands to which you rendered it; Till the supineness of our base neglect Sink us to slaves? Is there no man aliveNo heaven-marked hero, from the people sprungTo lead the roaring multitudes of earth Along the fated pathway they must treadAy, though they cross the throne, and trample out The sacred name and dignity of king? Has man no rights but what a tyrant doles?No fate above his will? no claim on justice? Then doth God wrong His own dread sovereignty; For He has sworn to render mankind right, Even against Himself. And she has fallen, Sole star amid this night of tyranny 124 A TRAGEDY. How low I know not; but the shallowest depth A queen may fall is deeper than the grave. I feel my weakness to support her cause, Even though my mounting soul could touch the sun, Against this pampered monster of a kingThis frightful idol of the people's will, Throned on the superstitious reverence Of the poor fools that glut his savage maw. O what a curse to have an honest heart, Hemmed in and cramped by the fixed frame of things, That, were it flee, might move the stubborn world, And hang its glories on the brow of time! [Exit. SCENE II. A Room in the Palace of Whitehall. Enter KING HENRY. KING HENRY. Too late, too late! I charged her openly; The issue now lies between her and me, And not between her innocence and guilt. I am a villain, or the queen is false, 11* 125 ANNE BOLEYN: Since I became accuser of her truth: If she escape conviction, on the crown Descends the infamy of calumny, And through our person England will be shamed Before the jealous powers of Christendom. So, so! we owe it to our people then To prove our charge, or by conviction sure Seem to attest it.-This is plain enough. Besides, in what regard stands common life Before our kingly honour? Julius said That Caesar's wife must be without a taint; And, but suspecting, put Pompeia by.Wise Caesar!'twas a solemn precedent That kings should follow. Wherefore halt I now? A limping purpose never reached its mark, Though justice pointed. Should her guilt be proved? Should an impartial court of noble peers Condemn her too? O woful, woful thought! How shall I pardon her gross treachery? Their candid verdict will stop pity's ears, And force conviction to my doubting mind. She shall have trial, fair and open trialNo honest men would wrong the innocent; 126 A TRAGEDY. And if they do?-her blood but swells their crimes; I escape stainless. Enter Sir HENRY NORRIS in custody of OFFICER and GUARD. Officer, withdraw; But stand in hail. [Exeunt OFFICER and GUARD.] Ah! Norris, Henry Norris, You have abused that open confidence In which we held you. NORRIS. I! and how, my liege? KING HENRY. Nay, strive not, sir, to hide your secret guilt With artful candour and affected starts. Sin can put on the guise of innocence; Nor ever cheats us with its ugliness, But with its seeming beauty. NORRIS. On my life, I know not to what sin your tongue directs. KING HENRY. Have you not wronged me? 127 ANNE BOLEYN: NORRIS. Wronged your majesty! KING HENRY. Yes; have you not, to swell your amorous triumphs, And make yourself an envied libertine, Seduced the virtue of our fickle queen? NORRIS. Your grace is merry. (Laughing.) KING HENRY. "Merry!" are you mad? I say it can be proved. NORRIS. "Proved!" Set the hound, That howled this lying folly in your ears, Within the reach of my chastising sword, And if I send him not to fiery hell, With his foul tattle warm upon his lips, Rack me to powder! KING HENRY. Acted to the life! 128 A TRAGEDY. NORRIS. 0 no, my liege;'tis but the natural heat That would boil over every English lip, To hear their queen traduced. KING HENRY. Be calm, Sir Harry. So much we hold the honour of our realm Before the vengeance due to private wrongs, That we have vowed to bury our own grief, And grant free pardon to whatever manEven though he were her fondest paramourWill fix the crime upon her guilty head. NORRIS. I am not he. I thought, until this hourAy, and still think, and will, despite reportOur queen as loyal to your majesty As the chaste moon is to her regal sun, Drinking no other beams. What though she shine Upon the darkness of our grateful earth, To cheer the spirits of night-foundered men?That which she gives, she borrows from yourself; 129 ANNE BOLEYN: Fruitful to her, but, when it falls on us, The calm, cold splendour of reflected light. KING HENRY. Norris, beware! you carry this too far: If you confess not, instant, shameful death Awaits your stubborn spirit. NORRIS. Be it so: I'll rather add a thousand stings to death, Than give one pang to suffering innocence. KING HENRY. Then be it so, you contumacious boy! Have I embraced you in my trusting heart, To be denied when I demand return? NORRIS. Ha! do I hear? What saw your majesty, Even in so poor a man as Henry Norris, To make you hold me for a supple tool To work your bloody purpose? You must go A step below a knight and gentleman, To find a villain fitted to your wish. 130 A TRAGEDY. KING HENRY. Poh! poh! coy virtue, is it villainous To show obedience when your king commands? NORRIS. Is there no power in every honest breast, Above the terrors of your threatening will, 'Neath whose fixed look my guilty memory Shall cower in horror? KING HENRY. You must do this deed. Nay, I adjure you. NORRIS. 0, my gracious liege KING HENRY. No words, no words! NORRIS. Avaunt, damned hypocrite! I here defy your utmost reach of wrath: The cruelest death your wickedness can shape Would be a joy to what you offer me. Stretch your base tortures through all coming time, 131 ANNE BOLEYN: And in the end they can but kill my clay; But you would turn my hand to impious use, And make me, like a frantic suicide, Stab at the roots of mine eternal soulThat, by God's blessing, shall outlast your hate, And reign triumphant when your crown is dross I KING HENRY. Hold, villain, hold! or I will let the breath Out of your treacherous body! (Draws.) NORRIS. Do, my liege, And join assassination to the crimes That blot your monstrous heart.-I will not hold: I see you are bent upon destroying me, And as a reckless man I'll know your worst. O wo to England, when this sinful king, Grown hard in crime, shall reach the fearful height That evil points him! Then shall KING HENRY, Brazen traitor! Dare you invoke our vengeance on your head? 1'0'2 A TRAGEDY. Without there! (Re-enter OFFICER and GUARD.) See your prisoner to the Tower. If he escape, you had better hang yourselves Than live to tell it. Out, malignant traitor! [Exit Sir HENRY NORRIS, in custody of the GUARD. O the ingratitude of fickle man! The shifting sand that tumbles in the tide, Taking new form from every wanton surge, Is not more changeful than his rootless heart. He is a bark upon an angry sea, Unballasted, yet ever crowding sail; Careening now to passion's fiery gust, Now to the other side prostrated fiat By self-styled reason's icy hurricane; Yet never sailing on an even keelEver extreme, and no extreme the best. Who that had seen the favours I have showered, As thick and prodigal as Spring's warm sun, Upon the head of that remorseless wretch, Could have foreknown the desert barrenness Of his rude heart!-Pah! I am sick of it. O the ingratitude of wicked man! [Exit. 12 4 133 ANNE BOLEYN: SCENE III. The Queen's Apartments in the Palace. QUEEN ANNE and MARY WYATT. QUEEN ANNE. No audience, said you? MARY WYATT. None, your highness, none, QUEEN ANNE. But are you sure his majesty refused To read my letter? MARY WYATT. Very sure; or whence The new-sprung insolence of every groom? They passed me by, for nigh a weary hour, Without observance. When at length I spoke, Demanding audience in your highness' name, They almost thrust me from the ante-room, With taunts and sneers. One knave, a malpert page, 134 A TRAGEDY. By you presented to his majesty, Said, with his arms akimbo, in a style That mimicked the king's bearing-"Mistress Mary, When we desire to know of blubbering spells, At your sad corner of our merry house, We'll come to seek them;-till that time, adieu!" At this his fellows grinned, like tickled apes, And winked, and leered at me; till I abashed, More that such things were human, than for fear Of any shame their insults might provoke, Came sadly here, my mission unachieved. QUEEN ANNE. I blame you not: I trusted in your zeal, Knowing its failure set all hope aside Save that which harbours in myself. Must I Again go begging for his chary love, After the public shame he put me to? MIust I go whimpering like a stricken curI who am wronged, and should demand redressAnd pray, in mercy to my feebleness, This blow may be the last? Degrading thought! Were I the housewife of his lowest clown, 135 i i ANNE BOLEYN: Caned to obedience by a drunkard's hand, Mly woman's heart has in it pride enough To burst ere bear this last humility. MARY WYATT. If pity move him QUEEN ANNE. "Pity!" there is a shame, More fearful in its furious rebuke, That follows threatening on the heels of wrongAn earthly hell in which the conscience writhes, And lashes round its fiery barrier, Till suffering purifies the tortured soul;This he must feel, ere meek-eyed pity's hand will ope the silver gates of penitence, And through forgiveness show the way to peace. MARY WYATT. 0 may he feel it! QUEEN ANNE. "Feel it!" he is human. 136 A TRAGEDY. MARY WYATT. Yes; but before some heavier injury Makes pity useless. QUEEN ANNE. Pray, speak plainly, girl! I see your heart is big with mystery. What new misfortune is about to fall? MARY WYATT. None, as I hope. QUEEN ANNE. Nay, this is churlishness: You have some secret that may profit me. If I am ignorant of coming ills, IHow shall I guard me with expedients Against their wrath? The man by death assailed Is last to know the danger he is in. I make no doubt, but half the palace lackeys Have drawn a surer presage of my fate, From buzzing rumour, could more truly mark What will befal me for a year to come, Than I, with my own lot to outward seeming 12* 137 ANNE BOLEYN: Within my grasp, could compass by design. So hangs our fate upon the breath of all, That oft a rumour shapes the destiny Of feeble wills. MARY WYATT. 'Twould but fatigue your ears, Not profit you, to hear the thousand woes That fools predict upon your majesty: But there's much comfort in the croak of folly. QUEEN ANNE. 0, merely thus? naught in particular? Well, let them rail; the gale is adverse now, I must expect this dash of saucy spray Full in my face: anon the wind will change; Then they'll come tripping to my very heels, Sparkling with joy, and glad to decorate MIy rearward path. MARY WYATT. Heaven guard your cheerful mind! QUEEN ANNE. Actions begun in cheerfulness, display 138 A TRAGEDY. The merry herald that foreruns success. The smile that lights an earnest countenance Seems as a gleam from some vast mental fire That burns within, and ever flashes out, Like tropic lightning on a summer night; Harmless indeed, yet hinting of a power That, moved to wrath, might shake the seated earth. To sulk at sorrow dulls the edge of will, And half unfits us for prosperity; Much more for danger, where each faculty That gives us sway is needed at its full. MARY WYATT. When took your highness to philosophy? QUEEN ANNE. iHa! you malicious elf! When heavy griefs First leaguered my poor heart, through it I found A path to wander from perplexing fears, That lost in speculation dismal self. Sorrow makes many a deep philosopher. Far-reaching thought and his blithe offspring hope Are leech and nurse to morbid memory. 139 ANNE BOLEYN: MIARY WYATT. Great minds may carry a great load unbowed. Ah me! it brings me to my woman's part, To hear these strains of sweet philosophy Rise from her injured spirit. (Aside, weeping.) Sure the God Who suffers mischief to afflict you thus, Gives you the strength to bear it. QUEEN ANNE. Doubtless, doubtless. Enter THOMAS WYATT. MARY WYATT. My brother, please you. QUEEN ANNE. Ah! good master WyattWhat news abroad? Why do you shake your head?Why wear that funeral face? It seems to me That all my friends would plunder me of grief. Came you alone? Where are my other friends? 140 [Retires. A TRAGEDY. WYATT. Gone with the summer flies. The day is dark; And they that erewhile revelled in your light, Now sluggish hide in close obscurity, And prophesy of falling weather soon. QUEEN ANNE. But Rochford? he is true in sun or shade. WYATT. Ay, by my soul! And know you not? QUEEN ANNE. Not I. WYATT. Indeed?-That I should bear the intelligence! QUEEN ANNE. These dread inductions to ill-omened news Pitch swift imagination far below The heaviest fact. Out with it, tender sir - What ever saw you like a fear in me? WYATT. Lodged in the Tower. 141 ANNE BOLEYN: QUEEN ANNE. A prisoner! on what charge? WYATT. A charge as common now as larceny,High treason. QUEEN ANNE. Treason! who is loyal then? 0 what a shallow matter for arrest! Poor Rochford!-This is strange.-H-ow bears he it? WYATT. As innocence e'er bears calamity,Suffering in body, but content at heart. QUEEN ANNE. I'll to the king. Are not my wrongs enough, But that my foes must vex my kindred too? For Rochford's sake, I'll quell my stubborn pride, And ask the justice I deny myself. WYATT. 0 would you might! See you yon sentinel Who counts his steps along the corridor? 142 A TRAGEDY. That knave has orders from his majesty, On no account to let your highness pass, QUEEN ANNE. Good sir, what augurs this? I feel it hereHere at my heart-a quaking like the step Of some advancing doom.'Tis terrible, To be environed by an enemy Whose very aims are hidden. Give me light I 0, Wyatt, show me but my coward foes, Though they are numberless as Egypt's plagueLet me but see the weapons in their hands, Though they can blast the angry Thunderer, And I'll confront them! But to be assailed By arrows that seem raining from the cloudsTo see my tribe, like Niobe's, cut down, Nor know what time my breast may be transfixedTo feel myself the cause of all this wo, Without the chance of offering stroke for stroke, Is next to madness! WYATT. All I know is this,Lord Rochford, Norris, Brereton and Weston, 143 ANNE BOLEYN: As the most noted followers of your highness, Have been arrested, charged with secret treason. In what particulars their guilt consists, Even wakeful rumour has not been informed; Nor are the prisoners wiser than the world. That popinjay, Lark Smeaton, too, has had Some private hearings in the council-room, After a tampering which he underwent At Suffolk's house. QUEEN ANNE. No more of him;-he is harmless. All these brave hearts to suffer for my sake! 0 deadly cowards! to remove these props, Whose sturdy valour might have long upheld Even the structure of a tottering cause. WYATT. Whatever scheme your enemies have formed Is now converted to a state affair: Your highness therefore must expect a blow, Not from the lords Suffolk, Norfolk, and their friends, But from the Council. 144 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Let them only come! My heart is aching to begin the fray: I vow, the conquered shall not fight again! What of the king? WYATT. His majesty is silent, Gloomy and sad, and given to muttering; Flying at pleasures with an eagerness That crushes out the dainty soul of joy: As one a cup of rich, untasted wine Might crack with furious bacchanalian haste, And spill its fruity treasures. QUEEN ANNE. So I thought: His love is wrestling with an agony, By fancied justice thrust upon his mind. When through this fire of malice I have passedWhose purifying ordeal he allows, Only to prove the temper of my heartLook, Wyatt, look to see mine enemies, Drossy with crime, hurled headlong in the flame, 13 145 ANNE BOLEYN: To show the baseness of their earthy souls! Kings should be just. WYATT. Ay, should be just, QUEEN ANNE. flow now? Would you arraign his royal qualities, Because my foes have led his mind astray With seeming justice? 0 be careful, sir, Not to malign him, in your zeal for me I WYATT. She hugs her ruin, (Aside.) Mistress Seymour says QUEEN ANNE, Out, wizard, out! Dare you to summon up The horrid phantom that pursues my steps, And ever shadowy flits before mine eyes, Veiling the sun) and deepening deepest night? 0 Wyatt, Wyatt, would you mock me too? 0 would you rend the feeble barrier That hides mine anguish from the gaping world, And show me in my naked wretchedness, 146 A TRAGEDY. WIithout a rag of pride to cover me, For prying fools to carp on? Cruel leech, To probe this wound, even though my tortured heart Mlight work salvation out of agony. Begone, begone! WYATT. I meant not QUEEN ANNE. I forgive you. Go, go, in mercy! If you love my health, Never again recall that fearful name. [Exit WYATT. 'Tis hard'tis hard!-but it must be endured. 0 vanished peace, that with my girlish hours Shook hands and parted, as they proudly strode Down the dark paths of untried womanhood,Return, return! O couldst thou bring again Those pleasant days, when at the source of life My spirit sat, and heard, with nature's tones, The blended music of a higher life Mlix and flow on in one grand harmony; When every sense, content with what it felt, Longed not for action, never-ending action, 14T 1 .4. ANNE BOLEYN: That once embraced makes us its slaves till death.Death, death! There is more sweetness in that name Than I e'er knew of. Does thy pallid hand Unite the two extremes of human life, Linking our earliest with our latest days, In one unbroken circle? Art thou she, The meek-faced peace of childhood, changed in name, But undistinguished in thy quality, Come from afar to lead us back again From where we started? Ah! I know not now, Nor can I till I pass, beyond recall, The narrow lintel of the voiceless grave.Oh God! oh God! I am weary of the day! [ Scene closes. SCENE IV. Another Room in the Palace. EEnter KING HENRY and JANE SEYMOUR. KING HENRY. Poh!'tis too late for pity. 148 A TRAGEDY. JANE SEYMOUR. "Pity," sir! I feel no pity for her wantonness: 'Tis for yourself, so wickedly abused, So unsuspecting till the common voice Thrust its belief in your reluctant ears. The hand of justice is in everything: How strange it was our budding love put forth Just as her impious crimes had reached their full! Showing how Heaven may visit secret guilt In an avenging form of innocence, That sadly marvels at its own result. KING HENRY. Yes, very strange. JANE SEYMOUR. What proof can be produced? A mind so subtle in committing sin, Must be adept in masking stratagems. KING HENRY. That's Norfolk's part. His grace has pledged himself To bring more evidence before the court 13* .-iIp 149 ANNE BOLEYN: Uncircumstantial, downright, stubborn proofThan it will hear. And let him look to it: For if his charge prove slander to our queen, And she escape, untainted in her fame, I'll hang him like a thief-by Heaven, I will! JANE SEYMOUR. Sweet hypocrite! (Aside.) But if his charge be proved? KING HENRY. Our realm has laws; too much we honour them, To stand between the culprit and their doom. Talk not of this. JANE SEYMOUR. Hlere comes the noble duke, Sending a smile before his onward path To ask a welcome. Enter Duke of NORFOLK. NORFOLK. All looks fair, my liege. KING HENRY. Looks foul, I say! Cannot I teach you, sir, 150 A TRAGEDY. That this discovered treachery of the queen Irks me to credit? Is it not enough, That the dear honour of my father's throne Is sullied in the eyes of Christendom, And I am made the laughing-stock of time, Without this giggling at my sorry plight? NORFOLK. A virtuous mood! (Aside.) Pardon the clownish haste That has disturbed your majesty's deep grief. You set me to pursue a wily chase; And if I feel the huntsman's eager flushlore from pursuit than wish to strike my gameThe heat of triumph should excuse my air. KING HENRY. Well, well,-what news? NORFOLK. So ho! king weathercock! (Aside.) I fear'tis too much for your majesty To hear the worst confirmed. 151 ANNE BOLEYN: KING HENRY. lHa! say you so? For to drift on upon a level sea Of settled wo, is better than to toss Between the heights of my delusive hopes And the deep gulfs of bottomless despair. Rest, Norfolk, rest from my o'erwhelming thoughts, Even in a port of quiet wretchedness, Would be a pleasure to this spirit-storm. NORFOLK. There is not a circumstance or shade of proof, By law demanded to convict the queen, But I can summon to outface her tongue. This is blunt truth, ungarbled by a phrase To smooth its meaning in a dainty ear; And though you shrink, your royal dignity Calls out for vengeance on her traitorous head. KING HENRY. Be well prepared: your life hangs by a thread. NORFOLK. I see your snares, sceptred duplicity; 152 A TRAGEDY. I am fairly entered, far beyond retreat: I know the issue is her death or mine. Thank Heaven, I do not need fear's ragged spur To drive me onward in my willing course. (Aside.) Trust to my zeal; I hold my sovereign's honour Above the selfish dread of common death. KING HENRY. What of this spinnet player? NORFOLK. Ah! the knave! He wavered sadly since his first confession: Now he'd confirm the paper which he signed, And now he'd suffer death ere swear to it. When strict imprisonment had cowed his mind, I by persuasion won him to my wish. KING HENRY. By what persuasion? Make no promises; The wretch shall hang. NORFOLK. 0, merely by the rack. 153 ANNE BOLEYN: KING IIENRY. Most delicate inducement! NORFOLK. Yes, my liege, It oft unclasps the rigid jaws of guilt. The pangs of death have many a time disclosed The murderer's secret; and the rack can bring A dying anguish, without fear of death. 'Tis a most potent questioner. JANE SEYMOUR. My liege, Pray come away; for I am sick at heart, Hearing details so awful. Please, your grace, To keep such horrors for your private thoughts. Come, Henry, come! KING HENRY. To please you, love. Adieu! Good Norfolk; slack not in your zealous care. NORFOLK. Heaven keep your majesties! 154 A TRAGEDY. JANE SEYMOUR. Pshaw! trifler. [ExEeunt KING HENRY and JANE SEYMOUR. NORFOLK. "Pshaw!" But did I tickle you, my demi-queen? So delicate, so royal in your tastes! Cannot endure the thoughts of brutal racks; And yet would kill a queen to wear her shoes! 'Sdeath I when you are crowned, our manly swords must rust, Butchers lose traffic, and your tender court Browse, like Assyria's king, on bloodless weeds;Ay, but our daggers shall be kept on edge, To stab our kind I WTell, you are happily matched: A squeamish king who circumvents two lives, To urge his purpose to its bloody end, Vowing that justice shall have one of them, And a meek queen who shudders at the means, Yet at the end grapples with furies' claws. You crocodiles can blubber o'er your prey, If a stray infant should fall overboard, 155 ANNE BOLEYN: And cry that drowning is a sorry thing, Ere you together gorge it! What a life, So comforting to conscience, you may lead When Hymen yokes you!-]Damn hypocrisy! Ente THOMAS WYATT. WYATT. So say I too, under your grace's oath. NORFOLK. Ha! ha! Sir Poet,'twas a pious oath. WYATT. Of sure fulfilment. NORFOLK. Pray what brings you here? WYATT. A moth to light, a poet to a prince; Thus is it ever. I would see the king. NORFOLK. He just retired. 156 A TRAGEDY. WYATT. 'Tis but a small affair; I'll come again. NORFOLK. Can I not aid you, sir? WYATT. I merely wished to see a prisoned rogueOne fellow Smeaton, caged for stealing geese, Or some such matter. HIas your grace a pass? The careless knave had my last madrigal To set for music.'Tis my only copy; And if he is hanged, my immortality Loses a hope. Now, reynard, play the fool! (Asi(le.) NORFOLK. So ho! my railer at hypocrisy, How smooth we lie! (Asfle.) Confound this gosling thief! The king has ordered-why I cannot sayThat none except the Council shall have leave To see the fellow. 14 I 157 ANNE BOLEYN: WYATT. Well, there is little lost. NORFOLK. 0 much! 0 much! I honour poesy; And vow to succour your brave madrigal.I'll make especial business of this matter. WYATT. As deep as hell! (Aside.) Nay, trouble not yourself; Perchance the knave, among his prison griefs, Has lost remembrance of my trifling song. NORFOLK. I will refresh him.'Twould amaze you, sir, To know how much I reverence your art. Each genuine poet, in each poem, forms What neither he nor any other man, Though he were equal in capacity, Can shape again. The moods of poets' minds Are, like the colours of chameleons, Seen in the same particulars but once. That combination of your shifting thoughts, Which you have pictured in a madrigal, Should make its due impression on our time. 158 A TRAGEDY. I would not see your chaplet lose a leaf:]3elieve me,'tis a duty. WYATT. Cunning hound, With what a relish he pursues intrigues! (Aside.) I thank your grace, in poesy's sweet name, For this regard. Pray, can you tell me, sir, Upon what charge my friend, Sir Henry Norris, Will be arraigned? NORFOLK. On many, many, sir. The gravest, I believe, is robbing goose-ponds:He is involved with Smeaton. WYATT. Ah! indeed? 'Tis an odd charge! But I observe of late How our good king takes the most famous geese, This realm produces,'neatlh his royal wing. Adieu! your grace.* (Going.) NORFOLK. HIo! scion of the muse! I have a little scandal for your ear. 159 ANNE BOLEYN: WYATT. For mine, your grace? (e s.) NORFOLK. Yes;'tis a trifling thing,No greater in my eyes than songs in yours. They say you read too many madrigals In the attentive hearing of the queen. Look to it, sir: his majesty is loth His royal consort should give up her time To so much poetry. WYATT. The sneering cur! I dare not brave him, for her highness' sake. (A.Si(le.) An idle rumour. NORFOLK. But it put your songs In fearful jeopardy. The king nigh swore To hang all future poems by the neck, In your good person. He hates poesy. The royal opposition on this point Is stranger than the patronage of geese. 160 A TRAGEDY. WYATT. 'Sblood! I must burst, if I remain to hear This cynic's gibes. (Asicde.) Farewell! once more. NORFOLK. Remembe, No private readings to her majesty Of the lost madrigal, when I restore it. WYATT. God shield the queen! for human aid is vain. (Aside.) [Exeunt severally. SCENE V. The Queen's 4partnients in the Palace. A table spread. QUEEN ANNE, MAIDS, and ATTENDANTS, at the back of the scene. QUEEN ANNE. (Advanci)ig.) Ah me! what fearful difference'tis, to view The self-same object unattained and won! For memories are the shadows of our hopes, 1-I* 161 ANNE BOLEYN: That ever lengthen as our day declines, Till death's oblivion wraps them both in night. When, from the lowly vale of common life, Ambition points us to the sunny tops Of the great hills of power, whose even sides, Ascending smoothly through the golden haze, Appear like stepping-stones from earth to heavenAh! who could tell the peril of the road That must be braved to reach their eminence? What stony paths-what thorny barriersWhat humble crawling under threatening rocksWhat dizzy ledges, wooing nerveless fear To swift forgetfulness-what hungry chasms, That picture death within their roaring jaws, And stagger reason on his solid throne3Iust be o'erpassed, ere on the toppling heights, Amidst the region of perpetual storms, We stand alone in chill supremacy! Enter THOMAS WYATT. Quick, Wyatt, quick! have my poor friends a hope? WYATT. But in the mercy of your enemies, Or the most tardy justice of the king. 162 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. Is this your zeal? 0 apathetic man! Can you see Rochford, noble, loyal RochfordYour friend, your playmate-one who ever bore His gathering honours with such humbleness That my hot pride has chid him-can you see George Boleyn pining in a dreary cell, While 3Iay's warm sunshine fills the universe? Bethink you, Wyatt, of those faithful men, Weston, and Brereton, and Henry Norris, Whose days, like fetters, gall their manly souls, In the cramped limits of a prison house, While you are slack to free them! WYATT. Gracious Heaven! QUEEN ANNE. Deeds would be better, sir, than windy oaths. Lend me your manhood for a little day, And, by my soul, I'll breach their prison doors, Or light a blaze in England that shall scare These skulking enemies of theirs and mine Into a frenzy! Heaven can testify, 163 ANNE BOLEYN: How much it grieves me that their doleful fate Seems woven with the tissue of my own! For were it not, their wrongs would muster friends, And Heaven would launch an angry squadron down, To succour virtue such as they possess. But I-oh God! I stand here all alone, Shunned by mankind, and tossed by careless chance To glut the appetite of enmityA helpless woman, full of wrongs and grief, WAVith nothing left me but the conscious power By which the guiltless bear their martyrdom! WYATT. 0 woful day! QUEEN ANNE. Have you but vain regrets? WYATT. Hear me, your highness. QUEEN ANNE. Words, and nothing more. Has innocence no power? has justice fled The side of right? or is it mere romance, 164 A TRAGEDY. To prate with poets of a heavenly might That nerves the weakness of a righteous cause? Fie! dreamer, fie! WYATT. I ask you not to laud 'Iy wakeful labour, day and night bestowed, Without a thought of safety for myself, Upon this hopeless matter; all I ask, Is thankless justice for a pure intent. I grant my efforts were of no availI grant some other and more skilful hand Blight have achieved a work beyond my power; But 0 believe, all intellectual strength, All hidden cunning, and all bold resource, That nature gave me, were employed in vain Ere I despaired. QUEEN ANNE. What was this mighty work? Had you the labour of a Hercules, That you so groan? Upon my life, I think This wondrous malady will heal itself 165 ANNE BOLEYN: Without your aid.-Shake not your solemn head. The king still loves me:-I have faith in love. WYATT. Ha! have you faith? then see my very heart. MIy memory reaches not that early day When I first loved you. Since remembrance threw The bright reflections of my childish thoughts Into the gloom of manhood's troubled hours, There is not a gleam, howe'er remote and dim, But owes its splendour to my love for you; There is not a hope QUEEN ANNE. Hold, traitor, on your life! Are you conspiring with my subtle foes? PMy maids observe us.-Would you ruin me? Is my last friend corrupted? Dare you, sir, Prattle this nonsense to your queen? 0 base! Thus to presume on my defencelessness; Implying frailty which, a week ago, You had better died than barely hinted at! WYATT. You thought me lukewarm. 166 A TRAGEDY. QUEEN ANNE. No; I only meant To whet the edge of blunted zeal. (Noise without.) WYATT. Hiow now? Prophetic fear! ~niter DZuke of NORFOLK, Duke of SUFFOLK, and other Lords of the Council, with Sir WILLIAM KINGSTON and GUARD. QUEEN ANNE. Good welcome, gentlemen! Bear you a message from his majesty? (A long pause.) What, not a word? SUFFOLK. We do. QUEEN ANNE. Do what, your grace? SUFFOLK. Bear you a message from the king. 167 ANNE BOLEYN: QUEEN ANNE. IHa! ha! (La g(hiig.) Your answer lagged so far behind my query, As quite to rupture sense. NORFOLK. Come, Suffolk, come; No faltering now. (Apart to SUFFOLK.) SUFFOLK. The king has ordered us, To see the person of her majesty Placed in your hands, Sir William, until he Mlakes such disposure of her as may suit His further pleasure. QUEEN ANNE. Back, ye urgent tears; I'll never pay your tribute to my foes! (Aside.) If'tis the pleasure of his majesty To change my present lodgings for the Tower, Like a true subject, I obey. WYATT. Brave, brave! Nature created thee from royal clay! (Aside.) 168 A TRAGEDY. KINGSTON. I will await your highness' preparation QUEEN ANNE, I need none, sir. NORFOLK. Away, away, Sir William! QUEEN ANNE. [Exeunt all but WYATT, WYATT. 0 were I a beast, And Norfolk but another, I would tear The bitter heart out of his spiteful breast I But as a man-0, as a gentleman, A Christian gentleman-I thank his grace That he allows my littleness to crawl 'Neath God's own light, and fret my weary soul With gazing on his huge monstrosity I What next? what next? -Divorce! And then, poor queen, She'll sit her down, like injured Katharine, And feed her heart with sorrow, till the bane 15 169 Well said, good uncle. ,4 t,. . 7-7t ANNE BOLEYN: Of cankering grief has poisoned every spring That pulses life along her shattered frame; And then she'll lapse, by scarce perceived degrees, Into her grave; and then-why then the world Will roar and scramble o'er her resting-place, And play the same stale antics which she saw, And dash its brimming tides of ruddy life Across her tomb, without a care for her.O! should we laugh or weep at human fate? There goes to shame the only mortal thing I ever loved, with all a poet's love, And I ask that, in mockery of myself! (Weeps.) [