Page images
PDF
EPUB

Enter ROBIN HOOD, and MARIAN, and his Train.
Geo. Happy am I to have so sweet a love.
But what are these come 26 trasing here along?
Bet. Three men come striking through the
corn, my love.

Geo. Back again, you foolish travellers,
For you are wrong, and may not 27 wend this

way.

R. Hood. That were great shame. Now by
my soul, proud sir,

We be three 28 tall yeomen, and thou but one.
Come, we will forward in despite of him."

Geo. Leap the ditch, or I will make you skip.
What, cannot the highway serve your turn,
But you must make a path over the corn?
R. Hood. Why, art thou mad? dar'st thou
encounter three?

We are no babes, man, look upon our limbs.
Geo. Sirrah, the biggest limbs have not the
stoutest hearts.

Were ye as good as Robin Hood, and his three

merry men,

I'll drive you back the same way that ye came.
Be ye men, ye scorn to encounter me all at once,
But be ye cowards, set upon me all three,
And try the Pinner what he dares perform.
Scar. Wert thou as high in deeds
As thou art haughty in words,

Thou well mightest be a champion for a King:
But empty vessels have the loudest sounds,
And cowards prattle more than men of worth.
Geo. Sirrah, darest thou try me?

Scar. Ay, sirrah, that I dare.

[blocks in formation]

And go with me?

Two liveries will I give thee every year,
And forty crowns shall be thy fee.
Geo. Why, who art thou?

R. Hood. Why, Robin Hood:
I am come hither with my Marian,
And these my yeomen for to visit thee.
Geo. Robin Hood!

Next to king Edward art thou leefe 30 to me.
Welcome, sweet Robin Hood; welcome, maid
Marian;

And welcome, you my friends. Will you to my
poor house?

You shall have wafer-cakes your fill,

A piece of beef hung up since 31 Martlemas,
Mutton and veal; if this like you not,
Take that you find, or that you bring for me.
R. Hood. Godamercies, good George,

[They fight, and GEORGE A GREENE beats him. I'll be thy guest to-day.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

28 Tall Yeomen.-The word tall in this place, and in most of our ancient writers, is not designed to give us an idea of height or bulk, but signifies stout, bold, or courageous. Thus, in Pierce Pennilesse's Supplication to the Divell, p. 9: " Ulysses was a tall man under Ajax shield: but by himselfe hee would

never adventure but in the night."

Hall's Chronicle, Henry IV. p. 14: "And with that word Sir Piers entered into the chamber well armed with eight tall men in harness."

66

Ibid p. 17: "— dyd gather a houge armye of twentie thousande talle menne and more."

So Bobadil addresses Downright by the title of Tall man. See Every Man in his Humour, A. 4. S. 7. and Mr Whalley's Note thereon.

29 George, wilt thou, &c.-See the ballad in Evans's Collection, vol. 1. p. 109.

30 Leefe.-See Note to Gammer Gurton's Needle, p. 114.

31 Martlemas.-Martlemas is corrupted from Martinmas, the feast of St Martin, the eleventh of November. The corruption, as Mr Steevens remarks (Note to the Second Part of Henry IV. A. 9. S. 2.) is general in all the old Plays.

[blocks in formation]

Shoe. Down with your staves, my friends, Down with them.

Edw. Down with our staves! I pray thee, why so?

Shoe. My friend, I see thou art a stranger here, Else would'st thou not have question'd of the thing.

This is the town of merry Bradford,
And here hath been a custom kept of old,
That none may bear his staff upon his neck,
But trail it all along throughout the town,
Unless they mean to have a bout with me.
Edw. But hear you, sir, hath the king
Granted you this custom?

Shoe. 3 King or Kaisar, none shall pass this

[blocks in formation]

No, not the stoutest groom that haunts his court: Therefore down with your staves.

Edw. What were we best to do?

James. Faith, my lord, they are stout fellows;
And, because we will see some sport,
We will trail our staves.

Edw. Hear'st thou, my friend?
Because we are men of peace and travellers,
We are content to trail our staves.

Shoe. The way lies before you, go along.

Enter ROBIN HOOD and GEORGE A GREENE disguised.

R. Hood. See, George, two men are passing through the town,

Two lusty men, and yet they trail their staves.

[blocks in formation]

Edw. Do you hear, my friends? and you be wise,

Keep down your staves, for all the town
Will rise upon you.

Geo. Thou speakest like an honest quiet fellow.
But hear you me; in spite of all the swains
Of Bradford town, bear me your staves upon
your necks,

Or, to begin withal, I'll baste you both so well, You were never better basted in your lives. Edw. We will hold up our staves.

[GEORGE A GREENE fights with the Shoemakers, and beats them all down.

Geo. What, have you any more? Call all your town forth, Cut, and Longtail. The Shoemakers spy GEORGE A Greene. Shoe. What! George a Greene, is it you? A plague found you! 34

I think you long'd to swinge me well.

32 King or Kaisar.-The expression of King and Kaisar is frequently used by Spenser. See Mr Warton's Observations, vol. 2. p. 212. where several instances are produced.

Again, in Nobody and Somebody, N. D. Sigu. H 3: "My harts in my hose, but my face was never ashamed to shew itselfe yet before King or Keysar."

Skelton's Works, p. 196:

[blocks in formation]

Euphues, p. 65: "No King, nor Keyser be he never so royal in birth, &c.

The Return from Parnassus, A. 5. S. 1 :

"Fair fell good Orpheus, that would rather be
"King of a molehill, than a Keyser's slave,”

33 Drub.-The first edition reads shrub. 34 A plague found you.--i, e. confound you.

Come, George, we will 35 crush a pot before we part.

Geo. A pot! you slave, we will have an hundred.

Here, Will Perkins, take my purse,

Fetch me a stand of ale, and set in the marketplace,

That all may drink that are athirst this day;
For this is for a fee to welcome Robin Hood
To Bradford town.

fall a drinking.

Geo. I humbly thank your royal majesty. That which I did against the earl of Kendall, It was but a subject's duty to his sovereign, And therefore little merits such good words.

Edw. But ere I go, I'll grace thee with good deeds.

Say what king Edward may perform,

And thou shalt have it, being in England's bounds. Geo. I have a lovely lemman,

37 As bright of blee as is the silver moon,

[They bring out the Stand of Ale, and And old Grimes her father will not let her match
With me, because I am a Pinner,
Although I love her, and she me, dearly.
Edw. Where is she?

Here, Robin, sit thou here;

For thou art the best man at the board this day.
You that are strangers, place yourselves where
you will.
Robin, here's

36

a carouse to good king Edward's

se!f, And they that love him not, I would we had The basting of them a little.

Enter the Earl of WARWICK with other Noblemen, bringing out the King's garments; then GEORGE A GREENE and the rest kneel down to the King.

Edw. Come masters, all fellows. Nay, Robin, You are the best man at the board to-day. Rise up, George.

Geo. Nay, good my liege, ill nurtur'd we were

then:

Though we Yorkshire men be blunt of speech, And little skill'd in court, or such quaint fashions, Yet nature teacheth us duty to our king, Therefore I humbly beseech you pardon George a Greene.

Rob. And good my lord, a pardon for poor
Robin.

And for us all a pardon, good king Edward.
Shoe. I pray you, a pardon for the shoemakers.
Edw. I frankly grant a pardon to you all.
And George a Greene, give me thy hand;'
There is none in England that shall do thee wrong.
Even from my court I came to see thyself;
And now I see that fame speaks nought but truth.

Geo. At home at my poor house,
And vows never to marry unless her father
Give consent, which is my greatest grief, my lord.
Edw. If this be all, I will dispatch it straight;
I'll send for Grime, and force him give his grant;
He will not deny king Edward such a suit.
Enter JENKIN, and speaks.

Ho, who saw a master of mine?
Oh, he is gotten into company, and a body
Should rake hell for company.

Geo. Peace, ye slave, see where king Edward is.
Edw. George, what is he?

Geo. I beseech your grace pardon him, he is my man.

Shoe. Sirrah, the king hath been drinking with us, And did pledge us too.

Jenk. Hath he so? kneel, I dub you gentlemen. Shoe. Beg it of the king, Jenkin.

Jenk. I will.-I beseech your worship grant me one thing. Edw. What is that?

Jenk. Hark in your ear. [He whispers the King in the ear.

Edw. Go your ways, and do it.
Jenk. Come down on your knees, I have got it.
Shoe. Let us hear what it is, first.
Jenk. Marry, because you have drunk with the
king,

And the king hath so graciously pledged you,

35 Crush a pot. This cant expression, Mr Steevens observes, seems to have been once common among low people. It is often to be met with in ancient Plays. See some instances in Note to Romeo and Juliet, A. I. S. 2.

36 Carouse.—A carouse seems to be a more than ordinary quantity of liquor, probably as we now say a bumper.

Marston's First Part of Antonio and Melleda, A. 3.

66

O gallant youth,

"I'll drink carouse unto your countrie's health."

Tarlton's Newes out of Purgatory, 51: “Supper time being come, they fell to their victuals, and Lionelo was carroust unto by Mutio.'

37 As bright of blee. So p. 452 :

"To see fair Beatrice how bright she is of blee."

Again Chaucer's Lamentation of Mary Magdalen, 1. 391 :—

"Onely for him, which is so bright of ble.
"As I trowe I shall him nevir se."

[blocks in formation]

Mus. Long live

My sovereign! long and happy be his days!
Vouchsafe, my gracious lord, a simple gift,
At Billy Musgrove's band.

King James at Meddellom-castle gave me this,
This won the honour, and this give I thee.

Edw. Godamercy, Musgrove, for this friendly
gift;

And for thou feld'st a king with this same weapon,
This blade shall here dub valiant Musgrove knight.
Mus. Alas, what hath your highness done? I
am poor.

Edw. 38 To mend thy living, take thou Meddel-
lom-castle,

The hold of both; and if thou want living, complain,

Thou shalt have more to maintain thine estate.
George, which is thy love?

Geo. This, if please your majesty.
Edw. Art thou her aged father?

Grime. I am, and it like your majesty.

Edw. And wilt not give thy daughter unte
George?

Grime. Yes, my lord, if he will let me marry
With this lovely lass.

Edw. What say'st thou, George?

Geo. With all my heart, my lord, I give con

sent.

Grime. Then do I give my daughter unto
George.

Wily. Then shall the marriage soon be at an
end.

Witness, my lord, if that I be a woman;
For I am Wily, boy to George a Greene,
Who for my master wrought this subtile shift.
Edw. What is it a boy? what say'st thou to

this, Grime?

Grime. Marry, my lord, I think this boy hath
More knavery than all the world besides.
Yet am I content that George shall both have
My daughter and my lands.

Edw. Now, George, it rests I gratify thy worth;
And therefore, here I do bequeath to thee,
In full possession, half that Kendall hath;
And what as Bradford holds of me in chief,
I give it frankly unto thee for ever.
Kneel down, George.

Geo. What will your majesty do?
Edw. Dub thee a knight, George.

Geo. I beseech your grace, grant me one thing.
Edw. What is that?

Geo. Then let me live and die a yeoman still:
So was my father, so must live his son.
For 'tis more credit to men of base degree,
To do great deeds, than men of dignity.
Edw. Well, be it so, George.

James. I beseech your grace dispatch with me,

38 To mend thy living, take thou Meddellom-castle.-Mr Grose, who has given two views of this Castle, and a very accurate history of the several changes of its owners, in his Antiquities of England and Wales, vol. iv. supposes, that this play hath little or no foundation in history." The king," says he, "here is simply named Edward, without any other distinction; but as the Scots King is called James, and mention is made of Edward's son, it can only be Edward the Fourth, he being the first of that name contemporary with a James, and the last that had issue.

"Having thus ascertained the king, the next step is to see, whether the other circumstances accord with the events of that reign; but in these there is very little similarity; for although there was a war with the Scots, no decisive battle was fought near Middleham, neither was the King of Scotland taken prisoner. It is true, there was an insurrection in Yorkshire towards the latter end of this reign, on account of a contribution demanded for the maintenance of an hospital at York; but this was terminated by the defeat of the rebels at Banbury. I will not object to the anachronism of introducing here Robin Hood, who lived in the reign of Richard the First. The introduction of imaginary characters was a liberty then frequently taken in old historical Plays, in order to divert the audience, and enliven the reIt may also be objected, that the presentation-a compliment to the upper galleries of those times. Castle of Middleham was, about that period, the property of Richard, Duke of Gloucester. To this it may be answered, That a man of the age old Musgrove is here described to be, would not, in all probabi lity, hold it above a year or two, after which it might be granted to Richard.'.

VOL. I.

3 M

And set down my ransom:

Put in pledge for these things to your grace,

Edw. George a Greene, set down the king of And so return. King James, are you content?

Scots

His ransom.

Geo. I beseech your grace pardon me,

It passeth my skill.

Edw. Do it, the honour's thine.

Geo. Then let king James make good

James. I am content, and like your majesty,
And will leave good castles in security.

Edw. I crave no more. Now George a Greene,
I'll to thy house; and when I have supt,
I'll go to Ask, and see if Jane a Barley be so fair,
As good king James reports her for to be.

Those towns which he hath burnt upon the bor- And for the ancient custom of Vail staff,

ders;

Give a small pension to the fatherless,

Keep it still, claim privilege from me.
If any ask a reason why? or how?

Whose fathers he caused murthered in those wars; Say, English Edward vail'd his staff to you.

[Exeunt.

EDITION.

A pleasant conceyted Comedie of George a Greene the Pinner of Wakefield. As it was sundry times acted by the Servants of the Right Honourable the Earl of Sussex. Imprinted at London, by Simon Stafford, for Cuthbert Burby; and are to be sold at his Shop neare the Royal Exchange, 1599, 4to.

« PreviousContinue »