Nor may man

That looks upon your present majesty

In such clear wise apparent, and retains

Remembrance of your name through all the world

For virtuous wisdom, bring his mind to think

That England's royal-souled Elizabeth,

Being set so high in fame, can so forget

Wise Plato's word, that common souls are wrought

Out of dull iron and slow lead, but kings

Of gold untempered with so vile alloy

As makes all metal up of meaner men.

But say this were not thus, and all men's awe

Were from all time toward kingship merely vain,

And state no more worth reverence, yet the plea

Were nought which here your ministers pretend,

That while the queen of Scots lives you may live

No day that knows not danger. Were she dead,

Rather might then your peril wax indeed

To shape and sense of heavier portent, whom

The Catholic states now threat not, nor your land,

For this queen's love, but rather for their faith's,

Whose cause, were she by violent hand removed,

Could be but furthered, and its enterprise

Put on more strong and prosperous pretext; yea,

You shall but draw the invasion on this land

Whose threat you so may think to stay, and bring

Imminence down of inroad. Thus far forth

The queen of Scots hath for your person been

Even as a targe or buckler which has caught

All intercepted shafts against your state

Shot, or a stone held fast within your hand,

Which, if you cast it thence in fear or wrath

To smite your adversary, is cast away,

And no mean left therein for menace. If

You lay but hand upon her life, albeit

There were that counselled this, her death will make

Your enemies weapons of their own despair

And give their whetted wrath excuse and edge

More plausibly to strike more perilously.

Your grace is known for strong in foresight: we

These nineteen years of your wise reign have kept

Fast watch in France upon you: of those claims

Which lineally this queen here prisoner may

Put forth on your succession have you made

The stoutest rampire of your rule: and this

Is grown a byword with us, that their cause

Who shift the base whereon their policies lean

Bows down toward ruin: and of loyal heart

This will I tell you, madam, which hath been

Given me for truth assured of one whose place

Affirms him honourable, how openly

A certain prince's minister that well

May stand in your suspicion says abroad

That for his master's greatness it were good

The queen of Scots were lost already, seeing

He is well assured the Catholics here should then

All wholly range them on his master's part.

Thus long hath reigned your highness happily,

Who have loved fair temperance more than violence: now,

While honour bids have mercy, wisdom holds

Equal at least the scales of interest. Think

What name shall yours be found in time far hence,

Even as you deal with her that in your hand

Lies not more subject than your fame to come

In men's repute that shall be. Bid her live,

And ever shall my lord stand bound to you

And you for ever firm in praise of men.

ELIZABETH.

I am sorry, sir, you are hither come from France

Upon no better errand. I appeal

To God for judge between my cause and hers

Whom here you stand for. In this realm of mine

The queen of Scots sought shelter, and therein

Hath never found but kindness; for which grace

In recompense she hath three times sought my life.

No grief that on this head yet ever fell

Shook ever from mine eyes so many a tear

As this last plot upon it. I have read

As deep I doubt me in as many books

As any queen or prince in Christendom,

Yet never chanced on aught so strange and sad

As this my state's calamity. Mine own life

Is by mere nature precious to myself,

And in mine own realm I can live not safe.

I am a poor lone woman, girt about

With secret enemies that perpetually

Lay wait for me to kill me. From your king

Why have not I my traitor to my hands

Delivered up, who now this second time

Hath sought to slay me, Morgan? On my part,

Had mine own cousin Hunsdon here conspired

Against the French king's life, he had found not so

Refuge of me, nor even for kindred's sake

From the edge of law protection: and this cause

Needs present evidence of this man's mouth.

BELLIÈVRE.

Madam, there stand against the queen of Scots

Already here in England on this charge

So many and they so dangerous witnesses

No need can be to bring one over more:

Nor can the king show such unnatural heart

As to send hither a knife for enemies' hands

To cut his sister's throat. Most earnestly

My lord expects your resolution; which

If we receive as given against his plea,

I must crave leave to part for Paris hence.

Yet give me pardon first if yet once more

I pray your highness be assured, and so

Take heed in season, you shall find this queen

More dangerous dead than living. Spare her life,

And not my lord alone but all that reign

Shall be your sureties in all Christian lands

Against all scathe of all conspiracies

Made on her party: while such remedies' ends

As physic states with bloodshedding, to cure

Danger by death, bring fresh calamities

Far oftener forth than the old are healed of them

Which so men thought to medicine. To refrain

From that red-handed way of rule, and set

Justice no higher than mercy sits beside,

Is the first mean of kings' prosperity

That would reign long: nor will my lord believe

Your highness could put off yourself so much

As to reverse and tread upon the law

That you thus long have kept and honourably:

But should this perilous purpose hold right on,

I am bounden by my charge to say, the king

Will not regard as liable to your laws

A queen's imperial person, nor will hold

Her death as but the general wrong of kings

And no more his than as his brethren's all,

But as his own and special injury done,

More than to these injurious.

ELIZABETH.

Doth your lord

Bid you speak thus?

BELLIÈVRE.

Ay, madam: from his mouth

Had I command what speech to use.

ELIZABETH.

You have done

Better to speak than he to send it. Sir,

You shall not presently depart this land

As one denied of mere discourtesy.

I will return an envoy of mine own

To speak for me at Paris with the king.

You shall bear back a letter from my hand,

And give your lord assurance, having seen,

I cannot be so frighted with men's threats

That they shall not much rather move my mind

To quicken than to slack the righteous doom

Which none must think by menace to put back,

Or daunt it with defiance. Sirs, good day.

 

Exeunt Ambassadors.

 

I were as one belated with false lights

If I should think to steer my darkling way

By twilight furtherance of their wiles and words.

Think you, my lords, France yet would have her live?

BURGHLEY.

If there be other than the apparent end

Hid in this mission to your majesty,

Mine envoys can by no means fathom it,

Who deal for me at Paris: fear of Spain

Lays double hand as 'twere upon the king,

Lest by removal of the queen of Scots

A way be made for peril in the claim

More potent then of Philip; and if there come

From his Farnese note of enterprise

Or danger this way tending, France will yet

Cleave to your friendship though his sister die.

ELIZABETH.

So, in your mind, this half-souled brother would

Steer any way that might keep safe his sail

Against a southern wind, which here, he thinks,

Her death might strengthen from the north again

To blow against him off our subject straits,

Made servile then and Spanish? Yet perchance

There swells behind our seas a heart too high

To bow more easily down, and bring this land

More humbly to such handling, than their waves

Bow down to ships of strangers, or their storms

To breath of any lord on earth but God.

What thinks our cousin?

HUNSDON.

That if Spain or France

Or both be stronger than the heart in us

Which beats to battle ere they menace, why,

In God's name, let them rise and make their prey

Of what was England: but if neither be,

The smooth-cheeked French man-harlot, nor that hand

Which holp to light Rome's fires with English limbs,

Let us not keep to make their weakness strong

A pestilence here alive in England, which

Gives force to their faint enmities, and burns

Half the heart out of loyal trust and hope

With heat that kindles treason.

ELIZABETH.

By this light,

I have heard worse counsel from a wise man's tongue

Than this clear note of forthright soldiership.

How say you, Dudley, to it?

LEICESTER.

Madam, ere this

You have had my mind upon the matter, writ

But late from Holland, that no public stroke

Should fall upon this princess, who may be

By privy death more happily removed

Without impeach of majesty, nor leave

A sign against your judgment, to call down

Blame of strange kings for wrong to kinship wrought

Though right were done to justice.

ELIZABETH.

Of your love

We know it is that comes this counsel; nor,

Had we such friends of all our servants, need

Our mind be now distraught with dangerous doubts

That find no screen from dangers. Yet meseems

One doubt stands now removed, if doubt there were

Of aught from Scotland ever: Walsingham,

You should have there intelligence whereof

To make these lords with us partakers.

WALSINGHAM.

Nay,

Madam, no more than from a trustless hand

Protest and promise: of those twain that come

Hot on these Frenchmen's heels in embassy,

He that in counsel on this cause was late

One with my lord of Leicester now, to rid

By draught of secret death this queen away,

Bears charge to say as these gone hence have said

In open audience, but by personal note

Hath given me this to know, that howsoe'er

His king indeed desire her life be spared

Much may be wrought upon him, would your grace

More richly line his ragged wants with gold

And by full utterance of your parliament

Approve him heir in England.

ELIZABETH.

Ay! no more?

God's blood! what grace is proffered us at need,

And on what mild conditions! Say I will not

Redeem such perils at so dear a price,

Shall not our pensioner too join hands with France

And pay my gold with iron barter back

At edge of sword he dares not look upon,

They tell us, for the scathe and scare he took

Even in this woman's womb when shot and steel

Undid the manhood in his veins unborn

And left his tongue's threats handless?

WALSINGHAM.

Men there be,

Your majesty must think, who bear but ill,

For pride of country and high-heartedness,

To see the king they serve your servant so

That not his mother's life and once their queen's

Being at such point of peril can enforce

One warlike word of his for chance of war

Conditional against you. Word came late

From Edinburgh that there the citizens

With hoot and hiss had bayed him through the streets

As he went heartless by; of whom they had heard

This published saying, that in his personal mind

The blood of kindred or affinity

So much not binds us as the friendship pledged

To them that are not of our blood: and this

Stands clear for certain, that no breath of war

Shall breathe from him against us though she die,

Except his titular claim be reft from him

On our succession: and that all his mind

Is but to reign unpartnered with a power

Which should weigh down that half his kingdom's weight

Left to his hand's share nominally in hold:

And for his mother, this would he desire,

That she were kept from this day to her death

Close prisoner in one chamber, never more

To speak with man or woman: and hereon

That proclamation should be made of her

As of one subject formally declared

To the English law whereby, if she offend

Again with iterance of conspiracy,

She shall not as a queen again be tried,

But as your vassal and a private head

Live liable to the doom and stroke of death.

ELIZABETH.

She is bounden to him as he long since to her,

Who would have given his kingdom up at least

To his dead father's slayer, in whose red hand

How safe had lain his life too doubt may guess,

Which yet kept dark her purpose then on him,

Dark now no more to usward. Think you then

That they belie him, whose suspicion saith

His ear and heart are yet inclined to Spain,

If from that brother-in-law that was of yours

And would have been our bridegroom he may win

Help of strange gold and foreign soldiership,

With Scottish furtherance of those Catholic lords

Who are stronger-spirited in their faith than ours,

Being harried more of heretics, as they say,

Than these within our borders, to root out

The creed there stablished now, and do to death

Its ministers, with all the lords their friends,

Lay hands on all strong places there, and rule

As prince upon their party? since he fain

From ours would be divided, and cast in

His lot with Rome against us too, from these

Might he but earn assurance of their faith,

Revolting from his own. May these things be

More than mere muttering breath of trustless lies,

And half his heart yet hover toward our side

For all such hope or purpose?

WALSINGHAM.

Of his heart

We know not, madam, surely; nor doth he

Who follows fast on their first envoy sent,

And writes to excuse him of his message here

On her behalf apparent, but in sooth

Aimed otherwise; the Master I mean of Gray,

Who swears me here by letter, if he be not

True to the queen of England, he is content

To have his head fall on a scaffold: saying,

To put from him this charge of embassy

Had been his ruin, but the meaning of it

Is modest and not menacing: whereto

If you will yield not yet to spare the life

So near its forfeit now, he thinks it well

You should be pleased by some commission given

To stay by the way his comrade and himself,

Or bid them back.

ELIZABETH.

What man is this then, sent

With such a knave to fellow?

WALSINGHAM.

No such knave,

But still your prisoner's friend of old time found:

Sir Robert Melville.

ELIZABETH.

And an honest man

As faith might wish her servants: but what pledge

Will these produce me for security

That I may spare this dangerous life and live

Unscathed of after practice?

WALSINGHAM.

As I think,

The king's self and his whole nobility

Will be her personal pledges; and her son,

If England yield her to his hand in charge,

On no less strait a bond will undertake

For her safe keeping.

ELIZABETH.

That were even to arm

With double power mine adversary, and make him

The stronger by my hand to do me hurt –

Were he mine adversary indeed: which yet

I will not hold him. Let them find a mean

For me to live unhurt and save her life,

It shall well please me.