MARY STUART.

I will not hear them.

BURGHLEY.

Yet

Hear them will we.

MARY STUART.

And in another place

I too will hear them, and defend myself.

GAWDY.

First let your letters to Charles Paget speak,

Wherein you show him there is none other way

For Spain to bring the Netherlands again

To the old obedience, but by setting up

A prince in England that might help his cause:

Then to Lord Paget, to bring hastilier

His forces up for help to invade this land:

And Cardinal Allen's letter, hailing you

His most dread sovereign lady, and signifying

The matter to the prince of Parma's care

To be commended.

MARY STUART.

I am so sore beset

I know not how by point and circumstance

To meet your manifold impeachments: this

I see through all this charge for evil truth,

That Babington and my two secretaries

Have even to excuse themselves accused me: yet,

As touching their conspiracy, this I say,

Of those six men for execution chosen

I never heard: and all the rest is nought

To this pretended purpose of your charge.

For Cardinal Allen, whatsoe'er he have writ,

I hold him for a reverend prelate, so

To be esteemed, no more: none save the Pope

Will I acknowledge for the church's head

And sovereign thence on thought or spirit of mine:

But in what rank and place I stand esteemed

Of him and foreign princes through the world

I know not: neither can I hinder them

By letters writ of their own hearts and hands

To hail me queen of England. As for those

Whose duty and plain allegiance sworn to me

Stands flawed in all men's sight, my secretaries,

These merit no belief. They which have once

Forsworn themselves, albeit they swear again

With oaths and protestations ne'er so great,

Are not to be believed. Nor may these men

By what sworn oath soever hold them bound

In court of conscience, seeing they have sworn to me

Their secrecy and fidelity before,

And are no subjects of this country. Nau

Hath many times writ other than I bade,

And Curle sets down whate'er Nau bids him write;

But for my part I am ready in all to bear

The burden of their fault, save what may lay

A blot upon mine honour. Haply too

These things did they confess to save themselves;

Supposing their avowal could hurt not me,

Who, being a queen, they thought, good ignorant men,

More favourably must needs be dealt withal.

For Ballard, I ne'er heard of any such,

But of one Hallard once that proffered me

Such help as I would none of, knowing this man

Had vowed his service too to Walsingham.

GAWDY.

Next, from your letters to Mendoza, writ

By Curle, as freely his confession shows,

In privy cipher, take these few brief notes

For perfect witness of your full design.

You find yourself, the Spaniard hears thereby,

Sore troubled what best course to take anew

For your affairs this side the sea, whereon

Charles Paget hath a charge to impart from you

Some certain overtures to Spain and him

In your behalf, whom you desire with prayer

Show freely what he thinks may be obtained

Thus from the king his master. One point more

Have you reserved thereon depending, which

On your behalf you charge him send the king

Some secret word concerning, no man else,

If this be possible, being privy to it:

Even this, that seeing your son's great obstinacy

In heresy, and foreseeing too sure thereon

Most imminent danger and harm thence like to ensue

To the Catholic church, he coming to bear rule

Within this kingdom, you are resolved at heart

In case your son be not reduced again

To the Catholic faith before your death, whereof

Plainly you say small hope is yours so long

As he shall bide in Scotland, to give up

To that said king, and grant in absolute right,

Your claim upon succession to this crown,

By your last will made; praying him on this cause

From that time forth wholly to take yourself

Into his keeping, and therewith the state

And charge of all this country: which, you say,

You cannot for discharge of conscience think

That you could put into a prince's hands

More zealous for your faith, and abler found

To build it strong upon this side again,

Even as through all parts else of Christendom.

But this let silence keep in secret, lest

Being known it be your dowry's loss in France,

And open breach in Scotland with your son,

And in this realm of England utterly

Your ruin and destruction. On your part

Next is he bidden thank his lord the king

For liberal grace and sovereign favour shown

Lord Paget and his brother, which you pray him

Most earnestly to increase, and gratify

Poor Morgan with some pension for your sake

Who hath not for your sake only endured so much

But for the common cause. Likewise, and last,

Is one he knows commended to his charge

With some more full supply to be sustained

Than the entertainment that yourself allot

According to the little means you have.

BURGHLEY.

Hereon stands proof apparent of that charge

Which you but now put by, that you design

To give your right supposed upon this realm

Into the Spaniard's hold; and on that cause

Lie now at Rome Allen and Parsons, men

Your servants and our traitors.

MARY STUART.

No such proof

Lives but by witness of revolted men,

My traitors and your helpers; who to me

Have broken their allegiance bound by oath.

When being a prisoner clothed about with cares

I languished out of hope of liberty,

Nor yet saw hope to effect of those things aught

Which many and many looked for at my hands,

Declining now through age and sickness, this

To some seemed good, even for religion's sake,

That the succession here of the English crown

Should or be stablished in the Spanish king

Or in some English Catholic. And a book

Was sent to me to avow the Spaniard's claim;

Which being of me allowed not, some there were

In whose displeasure thence I fell; but now

Seeing all my hope in England desperate grown,

I am fully minded to reject no aid

Abroad, but resolute to receive it.

WALSINGHAM.

Sirs,

Bethink you, were the kingdom so conveyed,

What should become of you and all of yours,

Estates and honours and posterities,

Being to such hands delivered.

BURGHLEY.

Nay, but these

In no such wise can be conveyed away

By personal will, but by successive right

Still must descend in heritage of law.

Whereto your own words witness, saying if this

Were blown abroad your cause were utterly

Lost in all hearts of English friends. Therein

Your thoughts hit right: for here in all men's minds

That are not mad with envying at the truth

Death were no loathlier than a stranger king.

If you would any more, speak: if not aught,

This cause is ended.

MARY STUART.

I require again

Before a full and open parliament

Hearing, or speech in person with the queen,

Who shall, I hope, have of a queen regard,

And with the council. So, in trust hereof,

I crave a word with some of you apart,

And of this main assembly take farewell.

 

 

Act IV

Elizabeth
Scene I. Richmond

Walsingham and Davison.

 

WALSINGHAM.

It is God's wrath, too sure, that holds her hand;

His plague upon this people, to preserve

By her sole mean her deadliest enemy, known

By proof more potent than approof of law

In all points guilty, but on more than all

Toward all this country dangerous. To take off

From the court held last month at Fotheringay

Authority with so full commission given

To pass upon her judgment – suddenly

Cut short by message of some three lines writ

With hurrying hand at midnight, and despatched

To maim its work upon the second day,

What else may this be in so wise a queen

But madness, as a brand to sear the brain

Of one by God infatuate? yea, and now

That she receives the French ambassador

With one more special envoy from his king,

Except their message touch her spleen with fire

And so undo itself, we cannot tell

What doubt may work upon her. Had we but

Some sign more evident of some private seal

Confirming toward her by more personal proof

The Scottish queen's inveteracy, for this

As for our country plucked from imminent death

We might thank God: but with such gracious words

Of piteous challenge and imperial plea

She hath wrought by letter on our mistress' mind,

We may not think her judgment so could slip,

Borne down with passion or forgetfulness,

As to leave bare her bitter root of heart

And core of evil will there labouring.

DAVISON.

Yet

I see no shade of other surety cast

From any sign of likelihood. It were

Not shameful more than dangerous, though she bade,

To have her prisoner privily made away;

Yet stands the queen's heart wellnigh fixed hereon

When aught may seem to fix it; then as fast

Wavers, but veers to that bad point again

Whence blowing the wind blows down her honour, nor

Brings surety of life with fame's destruction.

WALSINGHAM.

Ay,

We are no Catholic keepers, and his charge

Need fear no poison in our watch-dog's fang,

Though he show honest teeth at her, to threat

Thieves' hands with loyal danger.

 

Enter Queen Elizabeth, attended by Burghley, Leicester, Hunsdon, Hatton, and others of the Council.

 

ELIZABETH.

No, my lords,

We are not so weak of wit as men that need

Be counselled of their enemies. Blame us not

That we accuse your friendship on this cause

Of too much fearfulness: France we will hear,

Nor doubt but France shall hear us all as loud

As friend or foe may threaten or protest,

Of our own heart advised, and resolute more

Than hearts that need men's counsel. Bid them in.

 

Enter Châteauneuf and Bellièvre, attended.

 

From our fair cousin of France what message, sirs?

BELLIÈVRE.

I, madam, have in special charge to lay

The king's mind open to your majesty,

Which gives my tongue first leave of speech more free

Than from a common envoy. Sure it is,

No man more grieves at what his heart abhors,

The counsels of your highness' enemies,

Than doth the king of France: wherein how far

The queen your prisoner have borne part, or may

Seem of their works partaker, he can judge

Nought: but much less the king may understand

What men may stand accusers, who rise up

Judge in so great a matter. Men of law

May lay their charges on a subject: but

The queen of Scotland, dowager queen of France,

And sister made by wedlock to the king,

To none being subject, can be judged of none

Without such violence done on rule as breaks

Prerogative of princes.