Read The Tragedy of Arthur: A Novel Online
Authors: Arthur Phillips
[
Location: The Royal Court, London
]
[
Enter Arthur
]
ARTHUR
There is, in truth, no urgency abroad
But one must find a place to practice war,
And Cumbria did touch me when quoth he,
“Your father ne’er could subjugate the kern.”
1So we shall capriole
2
o’er Irish bogs,And silence, for the now, rebellion’s plaints.
I say not “always”: I am taught at last,
Conceive no dream to peg
3
e’er-lasting peace,But slay an Irishman or two and breathe,
Fight Germans, rest, kill Picts, then infidels.
A proper king am I and love my wars.
I taste my peace in thimbles, drams, and grains,
Not by the hogshead but the pennyworth,
And count him glutton who would ask for more.
Enter Gloucester
How fares the queen?
GLOUCESTER
She waits upon you, sire.
The joyless Guenhera is grief’s poor slave,
But smiles and dries her cheeks to know you come.
ARTHUR
Anon. Is all afoot for our departure?
GLOUCESTER
We stay but for the giddy
4
wind to choose.Yet, too: there’s one would speak with you, my liege,
Rode hard from Yorkshire for your ear, he says.
He hath attended here for you these weeks,
And hath refused to publish his desire
To any but the king.
ARTHUR
Bring him to us.
Exit Gloucester
My loving lovèd queen awaits her king
And I would pass my hours of peace with her,
Empillowed
5
on her breast before my ship,Refresh all wearied ache within th’embrace,
For she and I have duties to perform,
Else we shall wake one morn and find us Picts.
Returns Gloucester with Philip
A strong-limbed, comely youth, of noble face.
What art thou, boy, and wherefore needs our ear?
PHILIP
God save you. I am Philip, come from York.
And carry you remembrance from my mother,
Who from her dying bed sends tender love
To her one king and true.
ARTHUR
Who is thy dam?
PHILIP
In York she sewed for the lord mayor’s wife.
ARTHUR
A lady of the wardrobe, yes—that’s she?
Elizabeth was that good lady’s name.
Thy mother is Elizabeth? Of York?
But in her dying bed?
PHILIP
She is, my lord.
ARTHUR
We sorrow at those words. What says she, child?
PHILIP
She bids me kneel and love you as my father.
6
GLOUCESTER
Speak no word more of this deceit, queer
7
boy.
ARTHUR
To love me as thou lovest thy own father?
PHILIP
To love you, father mine.
GLOUCESTER
No more.
ARTHUR
Is’t so?
8
PHILIP
In this alone do I claim more than kings,
For I have known our truth since I could speak.
She sang to me of you and of her love,
But said we must ne’er trouble you at court.
GLOUCESTER
I am impatient for the swift and sure
Conclusion of this show of cozenage,
9So skip us quickly to your humble foist.
10Come, come, yield up your catalogue of boons.
11
PHILIP
But nay, good lords, I hope of you no gift
More than your royal hands upon my head,
And you admit
12
my mother’s dying loveFrom her poor orphaned boy, then I’ll to York.
ARTHUR
An if now orphaned, Philip, yet new-fathered,
Or better far, restored to father true:
I see in every sinew and thine eye
Thy testimony’s proof: thou art my print.
13I know these lineaments
14
as if I peeredInto a glass of other years, which guards
In it past images long sith reflect.
Come to my arms, my Philip, prince and heir.
In court shalt thou adoptedly reside.
GLOUCESTER
You course so speedily as this, my liege?
He came to London hoping for a coin,
And you’ll emboss his face on every one.
’Tis not so plain to me the evidence
You spy in this base sharker’s
15
reddening cheek.Nor is there policy in circumstance
Determining the fate of kings and realms.
E’en it is true, are there not other such?
Perchance this one hath not the claim of age.
ARTHUR
’Tis so, all so, but this one came to me
And this one has no parent now, but me.
I will not banish my own son by night
Nor nurse my lineage in stranger’s lands,
But bind him to my side, to shape him king.
Good Gloucester, call the queen to share our joy.
Uprouse her from her weeping bed and we
Will consolate her in her grieving mood.
For three small heirs she gains a prince today
And must rejoice God’s equability.
16
GLOUCESTER
Your majesty, there is a haste in this
That ill beseems
17
the matter and its cost.This moment’s consequence will echo long.
ARTHUR
Thou ne’er hadst son, old Gloucester, as I do,
And in his eyes perceive our future strength.
But lead my gloomy
20
queen to greet our son.Exit Gloucester
Young Philip, dost thou love to fish and hunt?
And canst thou ride and thrust a keen-edged sword?
PHILIP
I have acquired skill in manly arts,
And by my father’s side, would prove my worth.
ARTHUR
’Tis spoke like any prince, my noble boy.
With pride we’ll watch you stare into the sun
21Then soar as Britain’s eagle, Prince of Wales.
PHILIP
If I do stumble or speak slow, my lord,
I am astonished that I orphaned woke,
But will fall to my bed a son and prince.
ARTHUR
I too have supped on such perplexity.
Returns Gloucester
[
leading
]
by arm Guenhera
I am today the queen and you the king,
Dear Guen, and here present to you an heir.
GUENHERA
You compassed
22
this rare feat as thund’ring JoveDid pop Minerva from his splitting pate?
23Did not your skull protest at such invention?
24
ARTHUR
New prince, embrace for me your mother-queen.
GUENHERA
And will his brother Mordred love him well?
ARTHUR
More dread have I of April rain and wind
Than of that flea-bit tench,
25
that ape, that patch,That league was pashed
28
in bits upon its terms.
GLOUCESTER
Shall we send word to him of his mischance?
ARTHUR
But wait for our return from Irish wars,
For he is one who poorly learns bad news.
GUENHERA
What further need have you of queen, my lord?
Have I not failed what you have asked of me?
ARTHUR
Hush, Guen! Thou must not speak such wretched stuff!
We have made whole our question, only queen,
Be jovial now and kiss our son and heir.
GUENHERA
So as you bid, so shall I do. Come, Prince.
[
They embrace
]
GLOUCESTER
What war will follow on from this fond kiss?
ARTHUR
Such war as would have followed all the same,
Such war as clouds the sky or dews the grass.
Our people ne’er would tolerate the Pict
And he had ruled ’gainst endless mutiny.
No English will abide a stranger-king
But offer up commotion without end.
We sealed that pact in other, different days;
He sure cannot conceive that it would hold.
Go see, my lord, that all is readiness,—
And, Prince, when I return, we shall converse.—
Come, Guen, a night of peace is granted us
And savors it more nectared ’twixt two wars.
Exeunt
[
except Philip
]