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第6章

king richard ii(理查二世)-第6章

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eager feeding food doth choke the feeder; Light vanity; insatiate cormorant; 

Consuming means; soon preys upon itself。 This royal throne of kings; this 

scept'red   isle;  This   earth   of   majesty;   this   seat   of   Mars;  This   other   Eden; 

demi…paradise; This fortress built by Nature for herself Against infection 

and   the   hand   of   war;   This   happy   breed   of   men;   this   little   world;   This 

precious stone set in the silver sea; Which serves it in the office of a wall; 

Or as a moat defensive to a house; Against the envy of less happier lands; 

This   blessed   plot;   this   earth;   this   realm;   this   England;   This   nurse;   this 



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                             KING RICHARD THE SECOND 



teeming womb of royal kings; Fear'd by their breed; and famous by their 

birth; Renowned for their deeds as far from home; For Christian service 

and   true   chivalry; As   is   the   sepulchre   in   stubborn   Jewry   Of   the   world's 

ransom; blessed Mary's Son; This land of such dear souls; this dear dear 

land;   Dear   for   her   reputation   through   the   world;   Is   now   leas'd   out…I   die 

pronouncing   it…   Like   to   a   tenement   or   pelting   farm。   England;   bound   in 

with the triumphant sea; Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege 

Of   wat'ry   Neptune;   is   now   bound   in   with   shame;   With   inky   blots   and 

rotten parchment bonds; That England; that was wont to conquer others; 

Hath   made   a   shameful   conquest   of   itself。 Ah;   would   the   scandal   vanish 

with my life; How happy then were my ensuing death! 

       Enter KING and QUEEN; AUMERLE; BUSHY; GREEN; BAGOT; 

Ross; and WILLOUGHBY 

       YORK。 The King is come; deal mildly with his youth; For young hot 

colts being rag'd do rage the more。 QUEEN。 How fares our noble uncle 

Lancaster?   KING   RICHARD。   What   comfort;   man?   How   is't   with   aged 

Gaunt?   GAUNT。   O;   how   that   name   befits   my   composition!   Old   Gaunt; 

indeed; and gaunt in being old。 Within me grief hath kept a tedious fast; 

And who abstains from meat that is not gaunt? For sleeping England long 

time have I watch'd; Watching breeds leanness; leanness is an gaunt。 The 

pleasure that some fathers feed upon Is my strict fast…I mean my children's 

looks; And therein fasting; hast thou made me gaunt。 Gaunt am I for the 

grave; gaunt as a grave; Whose hollow womb inherits nought but bones。 

KING      RICHARD。        Can    sick   men    play  so   nicely   with   their   names? 

GAUNT。 No; misery makes sport to mock itself: Since thou dost seek to 

kill my name in   me; I   mock my name; great king; to flatter thee。 KING 

RICHARD。 Should dying men flatter with those that live? GAUNT。 No; 

no; men living flatter those that die。 KING RICHARD。 Thou; now a…dying; 

sayest thou flatterest me。 GAUNT。 O; no! thou diest; though I the sicker 

be。 KING RICHARD。 I am in health; I breathe; and see thee ill。 GAUNT。 

Now He that made me knows I see thee ill; Ill in myself to see; and in thee 

seeing ill。 Thy death…bed is no lesser than thy land Wherein thou liest in 

reputation sick; And thou; too careless patient as thou art; Commit'st thy 

anointed body to the cure Of those physicians that first wounded thee: A 



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                             KING RICHARD THE SECOND 



thousand flatterers sit within thy crown; Whose compass is no bigger than 

thy head; And yet; incaged in so small a verge; The waste is no whit lesser 

than thy land。 O; had thy grandsire with a prophet's eye Seen how his son's 

son should destroy his sons; From forth thy reach he would have laid thy 

shame; Deposing thee before thou wert possess'd; Which art possess'd now 

to depose thyself。 Why; cousin; wert thou regent of the world; It were a 

shame to let this land by lease; But for thy world enjoying but this land; Is 

it not more than shame to shame it so? Landlord of England art thou now; 

not   King。   Thy   state   of   law   is   bondslave   to   the   law;   And   thou…   KING 

RICHARD。 A lunatic lean…witted fool; Presuming on an ague's privilege; 

Darest with thy frozen admonition Make pale our cheek; chasing the royal 

blood With fury from his native residence。 Now by my seat's right royal 

majesty; Wert thou not brother to great Edward's son; This tongue that runs 

so roundly in thy head Should run thy head from thy unreverent shoulders。 

GAUNT。 O;   Spare  me not;  my  brother Edward's   son;  For that   I  was his 

father Edward's son; That blood already; like the pelican; Hast thou tapp'd 

out;   and   drunkenly  carous'd。   My  brother   Gloucester;   plain   well…meaning 

soul…    Whom      fair  befall  in  heaven     'mongst    happy    souls!…   May    be   a 

precedent   and   witness   good   That   thou   respect'st   not   spilling   Edward's 

blood。 Join with the present sickness that I have; And thy unkindness be 

like crooked age; To crop at once a too long withered flower。 Live in thy 

shame; but die not shame with thee! These words hereafter thy tormentors 

be! Convey me to my bed; then to my grave。 Love they to live that love 

and honour have。 Exit; borne out by his attendants KING RICHARD。 And 

let   them   die   that   age   and   sullens   have;   For   both   hast   thou;   and  both 

become the grave。 YORK。 I do beseech your Majesty impute his words To 

wayward sickliness and age in him。 He loves you; on my life; and holds 

you   dear As   Harry   Duke   of   Hereford;   were   he   here。   KING   RICHARD。 

Right; you say true: as Hereford's love; so his; As theirs; so mine; and all 

be as it is。 

       Enter NORTHUMBERLAND 

       NORTHUMBERLAND。 My liege; old Gaunt commends him to your 

Majesty。 KING RICHARD。 What says he? NORTHUMBERLAND。 Nay; 

nothing; all is said。 His tongue is now a stringless instrument; Words; life; 



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                             KING RICHARD THE SECOND 



and all; old Lancaster hath spent。 YORK。 Be York the next that must be 

bankrupt      so!  Though      death   be   poor;   it  ends   a   mortal    woe。   KING 

RICHARD。 The ripest fruit first falls; and so doth he; His time is spent; 

our   pilgrimage   must   be。   So   much   for   that。   Now   for   our   Irish   wars。   We 

must     supplant   those    rough   rug…headed      kerns;  Which     live  like   venom 

where no venom else But only they have privilege to live。 And for these 

great affairs do ask some charge; Towards our assistance we do seize to us 

The   plate;   coin;   revenues;   and   moveables; Whereof our   uncle   Gaunt   did 

stand possess'd。 YORK。 How long shall I be patient? Ah; how long Shall 

tender duty make me suffer wrong? Not Gloucester's death; nor Hereford's 

banishment; Nor Gaunt's rebukes; nor England's private wrongs; Nor the 

prevention of poor Bolingbroke About his marriage; nor my own disgrace; 

Have   ever   made   me   sour   my  patient   cheek   Or   bend   one   wrinkle   on   my 

sovereign's face。 I am the last of noble Edward's sons; Of whom thy father; 

Prince   of   Wales;   was   first。   In   war   was   never   lion   rag'd   more   fierce;   In 

peace was never gentle lamb more mild; Than was that young and princely 

gentleman。 His face thou hast; for even so look'd he; Accomplish'd with 

the number of thy hours; But when he frown'd; it was against the French 

And not against his friends。 His noble hand Did win what he did spend; 

and spent not that Which his triumphant father's hand had won。 His hands 

were guilty of no kindred blood; But bloody with the enemies of his kin。 O 

Richard! York is too far gone with grief; Or else he never would compare 

between… KING RICHARD。 Why; uncle; what's the matter? YORK。 O my 

liege; Pardon me; if you please; if not; I; pleas'd Not to be p

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