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The Arden Shakespeare Complete Works

Page 305

by William Shakespeare


  The play’s popularity derives from the outrageous wickedness of its title character. Richard is a star role irresistible to actors: always aware of his own impressive theatricality, he delights himself as much as the audience with his virtuosity and range. He plays the concerned brother, the good-natured uncle, the pious student, the passionate lover. This last is the most audacious, as the misshapen Richard sets out to seduce Lady Anne, whose husband and father-in-law he has murdered. After his success, he shares the audience’s amazement: ‘Was ever woman in this humour woo’d? / Was ever woman in this humour won?’

  Shakespeare did not invent the character of the villainous Richard. About 1516, Sir Thomas More wrote an unfinished History of Richard III, which was appropriated by chroniclers and forms part of the account of Richard’s reign in Edward Hall’s Union of the Two Noble and Illustre Families of Lancaster and York (1548) and the Chronicles of Raphael Holinshed (1577, second edition 1587). Shakespeare dramatizes More’s deformed villain, a monstrous tyrant with a self-dramatizing will to power. More provides much of the ironic action and commentary concerning Edward IV, Buckingham and Hastings, but the unhistorical roles of Queen Margaret (dead in exile before Richard became king) and Lady Anne (Richard’s wife of many years and mother of his only son) are Shakespeare’s invention.

  Already in Shakespeare’s time some questioned the accuracy of this portrait of Richard. In 1617 Sir William Cornwallis offered his paradoxical ‘Praise of King Richard III’, bemoaning the ‘malicious credulity’ of ‘witty playmakers’ who had unfairly denigrated the King’s character and achievement. The effort to rehabilitate Richard continues today (including, in popular form, a fine detective novel, Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time). His defenders insist – despite evidence dating from his own lifetime of suspicion that Richard had had his nephews murdered in the Tower – that the blackening of Richard’s character is the result of a Tudor conspiracy designed to legitimize Henry VII’s path to the throne. Some of the myth was undoubtedly so motivated: a coronation portrait of Richard shows no sign of his alleged deformity, which can be traced to a hostile early chronicler, and he was not implicated in the death of Clarence.

  Shakespeare’s acceptance of the legitimacy of Edward IV and his sons shows that he was no propagandist for the Tudors, though the play does confirm the providential vision of English history in which Henry Richmond’s victory at Bosworth in 1485 (and his inauguration of the Tudor dynasty) is seen as divine deliverance of England from Richard’s evil, which was itself punishment for the nation’s sins. Far more important, though, for Shakespeare than these Tudor orthodoxies is the role of Richard himself, a charismatic villain who candidly shares his thoughts with us as he contrives and dominates the action.

  The Arden text is based on the 1623 First Folio, with some readings from the 1597 First Quarto.

  LIST OF ROLES

  RICHARD, Duke of Gloucester, later KING RICHARD III

  The Duke of CLARENCE

  his brother (later, his GHOST)

  Sir Robert BRAKENBURY

  Lieutenant of the Tower

  Lord HASTINGS

  the Lord Chamberlain (later, his GHOST)

  Lady ANNE

  widow of Edward, Prince of Wales (later, her GHOST)

  Gentlemen attending Lady Anne

  QUEEN ELIZABETH

  wife of King Edward IV

  Lord RIVERS

  her brother (later, his GHOST)

  Lord GREY

  her son (later, his GHOST)

  The Marquess of DORSET

  her son

  The Duke of BUCKINGHAM

  (later, his GHOST)

  STANLEY, Earl of Derby

  QUEEN MARGARET

  widow of King Henry VI

  Sir William CATESBY

  Two MURDERERS

  The KEEPER of the Tower

  KING EDWARD IV

  Sir Richard RATCLIFFE

  The DUCHESS of York

  mother of Richard, Edward IV, and Clarence

  Clarence’s children

  GIRL

  Three CITIZENS

  ARCHBISHOP of York

  Richard, the Duke of YORK

  younger son of King Edward IV (later, his GHOST)

  PRINCE Edward, Prince of Wales

  elder son of King Edward IV (later, his GHOST)

  Lord CARDINAL Bourchier

  Archbishop of Canterbury

  Lord MAYOR of London

  HASTINGS, a PURSUIVANT

  PRIEST

  Sir Thomas VAUGHAN

  (later, his GHOST)

  The Bishop of ELY, John Morton

  The Duke of NORFOLK

  Lord LOVELL

  SCRIVENER

  Two Bishops (Shaa and Penker)

  PAGE

  Sir James TYRREL

  Seven MESSENGERS

  CHRISTOPHER Urswick

  a priest

  SHERIFF

  of Wiltshire

  The Earl of RICHMOND

  afterwards King Henry VII

  The Earl of OXFORD

  Sir James BLUNT

  Sir Walter HERBERT

  The Earl of SURREY

  Sir William BRANDON

  GHOST OF EDWARD

  Prince of Wales, son of Henry VI

  GHOST OF KING HENRY VI

  Guards, Halberdiers, Gentlemen, Lords, Citizens, Attendants, Soldiers

  1.1 Enter RICHARD, DUKE OF GLOUCESTER, alone.

  RICHARD Now is the winter of our discontent

  Made glorious summer by this son of York;

  And all the clouds that lour’d upon our House

  In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.

  Now are our brows bound with victorious wreaths,

  5

  Our bruised arms hung up for monuments,

  Our stern alarums chang’d to merry meetings,

  Our dreadful marches to delightful measures.

  Grim-visag’d War hath smooth’d his wrinkled front:

  And now, instead of mounting barbed steeds

  10

  To fright the souls of fearful adversaries,

  He capers nimbly in a lady’s chamber,

  To the lascivious pleasing of a lute.

  But I, that am not shap’d for sportive tricks,

  Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;

  15

  I, that am rudely stamp’d, and want love’s majesty

  To strut before a wanton ambling nymph:

  I, that am curtail’d of this fair proportion,

  Cheated of feature by dissembling Nature,

  Deform’d, unfinish’d, sent before my time

  20

  Into this breathing world scarce half made up –

  And that so lamely and unfashionable

  That dogs bark at me, as I halt by them –

  Why, I, in this weak piping time of peace,

  Have no delight to pass away the time,

  25

  Unless to spy my shadow in the sun,

  And descant on mine own deformity.

  And therefore, since I cannot prove a lover

  To entertain these fair well-spoken days,

  I am determined to prove a villain,

  30

  And hate the idle pleasures of these days.

  Plots have I laid, inductions dangerous,

  By drunken prophecies, libels, and dreams,

  To set my brother Clarence and the King

  In deadly hate, the one against the other:

  35

  And if King Edward be as true and just

  As I am subtle, false, and treacherous,

  This day should Clarence closely be mew’d up

  About a prophecy, which says that ‘G’

  Of Edward’s heirs the murderer shall be –

  40

  Dive, thoughts, down to my soul: here Clarence comes.

  Enter CLARENCE and BRAKENBURY, with a guard of men.

  Brother, good day; what means this armed guard
>
  That waits upon your Grace?

  CLARENCE His Majesty,

  Tend’ring my person’s safety, hath appointed

  This conduct to convey me to the Tower.

  45

  RICHARD Upon what cause?

  CLARENCE Because my name is George.

  RICHARD Alack, my lord, that fault is none of yours:

  He should for that commit your godfathers.

  O, belike his Majesty hath some intent

  That you should be new-christen’d in the Tower.

  50

  But what’s the matter, Clarence, may I know?

  CLARENCE Yea, Richard, when I know: for I protest

  As yet I do not. But, as I can learn,

  He hearkens after prophecies and dreams,

  And from the cross-row plucks the letter G;

  55

  And says a wizard told him that by ‘G’

  His issue disinherited should be.

  And for my name of George begins with G.

  It follows in his thought that I am he.

  These, as I learn, and such like toys as these,

  60

  Have mov’d his Highness to commit me now.

  RICHARD Why, this it is, when men are rul’d by women:

  ’Tis not the King that sends you to the Tower;

  My Lady Grey, his wife, Clarence, ’tis she

  That tempers him to this extremity.

  65

  Was it not she, and that good man of worship,

  Anthony Woodeville, her brother there,

  That made him send Lord Hastings to the Tower,

  From whence this present day he is deliver’d?

  We are not safe, Clarence, we are not safe!

  70

  CLARENCE By heaven, I think there is no man secure,

  But the Queen’s kindred, and night-walking heralds

  That trudge betwixt the King and Mistress Shore.

  Heard you not what an humble suppliant

  Lord Hastings was to her, for his delivery?

  75

  RICHARD Humbly complaining to her deity

  Got my Lord Chamberlain his liberty.

  I’ll tell you what: I think it is our way,

  If we will keep in favour with the King,

  To be her men, and wear her livery.

  80

  The jealous o’er-worn widow and herself,

  Since that our brother dubb’d them gentlewomen,

  Are mighty gossips in our monarchy.

  BRAKENBURY

  I beseech your Graces both to pardon me:

  His Majesty hath straitly given in charge

  85

  That no man shall have private conference –

  Of what degree soever – with his brother.

  RICHARD

  Even so; and please your worship, Brakenbury,

  You may partake of any thing we say.

  We speak no treason, man: we say the King

  90

  Is wise and virtuous, and his noble Queen

  Well struck in years, fair, and not jealous.

  We say that Shore’s wife hath a pretty foot,

  A cherry lip, a bonny eye, a passing pleasing tongue,

  And that the Queen’s kindred are made gentlefolks.

  95

  How say you, sir? Can you deny all this?

  BRAKENBURY

  With this, my lord, myself have nought to do.

  RICHARD

  Naught with Mistress Shore? I tell thee, fellow,

  He that doth naught with her (excepting one)

  Were best to do it secretly, alone.

  100

  BRAKENBURY What one, my lord?

  RICHARD

  Her husband, knave! Wouldst thou betray me?

  BRAKENBURY

  I do beseech your Grace to pardon me, and withal

  Forbear your conference with the noble Duke.

  CLARENCE

  We know thy charge, Brakenbury, and will obey.

  105

  RICHARD We are the Queen’s abjects, and must obey.

  Brother, farewell. I will unto the King,

  And whatso’er you will employ me in –

  Were it to call King Edward’s widow ‘sister’ –

  I will perform it to enfranchise you.

  110

  Meantime, this deep disgrace in brotherhood

  Touches me deeper than you can imagine.

  [Embraces Clarence, weeping.]

  CLARENCE I know it pleaseth neither of us well.

  RICHARD Well, your imprisonment shall not be long:

  I will deliver you, or else lie for you.

  115

  Meantime, have patience.

  CLARENCE I must, perforce. Farewell.

  Exeunt Clarence, Brakenbury and guard.

  RICHARD

  Go, tread the path that thou shalt ne’er return;

  Simple, plain Clarence, I do love thee so

  That I will shortly send thy soul to Heaven –

  If Heaven will take the present at our hands.

  120

  But who comes here? The new-deliver’d Hastings?

  Enter LORD HASTINGS.

  HASTINGS Good time of day unto my gracious lord.

  RICHARD As much unto my good Lord Chamberlain:

 

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