FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37  
>>  
s burne him for a heretick. 1. O no, his bodye will infect the fire, and the fire the aire, and so we shall be poysoned with him. 2. What shall we doe then? 1. Lets throw him into the river. 2. Oh twill corrupt the water, and the water the fish, and the fish our selves when we eate them. 1. Then throw him into the ditch. 2. No, no, to decide all doubts, be rulde by me, lets hang him upon this tree. 1. Agreede. They hang him. Enter the Duke of Guise, and Queene Mother, and the Cardinall [of Loraine]. GUISE. Now Madame, how like you our lusty Admirall? QUEENE MOTHER. Beleeve me Guise he becomes the place so well, That I could long ere this have wisht him there. But come lets walke aside, th'airs not very sweet. GUISE. No by my faith Madam. Sirs, take him away and throw him in some ditch. Carry away the dead body. And now Madam as I understand, There anre a hundred Hugonets and more, Which in the woods doe horde their synagogue: And dayly meet about this time of day, thither will I to put them to the sword. QUEENE MOTHER. Doe so sweet Guise, let us delay no time, For if these straglers gather head againe, And disperse themselves throughout the Realme of France, It will be hard for us to worke their deaths. GUISE. Madam, I goe as whirl-winces rage before a storme. Exit Guise. QUEENE MOTHER. My Lord of Loraine have you marks of late, How Charles our sonne begins for to lament For the late nights worke which my Lord of Guise Did make in Paris amongst the Hugonites? CARDINALL. Madam, I have heard him solemnly vow, With the rebellious King of Navarre, For to revenge their deaths upon us all. QUEENE MOTHER. I, but my Lord, let me alone for that, For Katherine must have her will in France: As I doe live, so surely shall he dye, And Henry then shall weare the diadem. And if he grudge or crosse his Mothers will, Ile disinherite him and all the rest: For Ile rule France, but they shall weare the crowne: And if they storme, I then may pull them downe. Come my Lord let's goe. Exeunt. [Scene x] Enter five or sixe Protestants with bookes, and kneele together. Enter also the Guise [and others]. GUISE. Downe with the Hugonites, murder them. PROTESTANT. O Mounser d
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37  
>>  



Top keywords:

MOTHER

 
QUEENE
 

France

 
Loraine
 

Hugonites

 

deaths

 
storme
 

revenge

 

Navarre

 

rebellious


solemnly

 
CARDINALL
 

begins

 

winces

 

poysoned

 

lament

 

Charles

 
infect
 

nights

 

Protestants


Exeunt

 

bookes

 

kneele

 

PROTESTANT

 

Mounser

 
murder
 
surely
 

Katherine

 
diadem
 

grudge


crowne
 

disinherite

 

heretick

 

crosse

 
Mothers
 

disperse

 

decide

 

doubts

 
Madame
 

Cardinall


Mother

 
Agreede
 

Queene

 

Admirall

 

Beleeve

 
corrupt
 

thither

 
againe
 

straglers

 

gather