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Where lies a heart that dies when thou art

sad:

It is not love that loves to anger love. Alice. It is not love that loves to murder love.

Mosbie. How mean you that?

Alice. Thou know'st how dearly Arden loved me.

Mosbie. And then

Alice. And then conceal the rest, for 't is too bad,

Lest that my words be carried with the wind, And publish'd in the world to both our shames!

I pray thee, Mosbie, let our spring-time

wither;

Our harvest else will yield but loathsome weeds:

Forget, I pray thee, what has pass'd betwixt

us,

For now I blush and tremble at the thoughts. Mosbie. What, are you chang'd?

Alice. Ay! to my former happy life again;
From title of an odious strumpet's name,
To honest Arden's wife, not Arden's honest
wife.

Ah, Mosbie! 't is thou hast rifled me of that,
And made me slanderous to all my kin:
Even in my forehead is thy name engraven-
A mean artificer;-that low-born name!
I was bewitch'd-wo-worth the hapless hour
And all the causes that enchanted me!

Mosbie. Nay, if thou ban, let me breathe curses forth;

And if you stand so nicely at your fame,
Let me repent the credit I have lost.
I have neglected matters of import
That would have stated me above thy state;
Forslow'd advantages, and spurn'd at time;
Ay, Fortune's right hand Mosbie hath for-
sook,

To take a wanton giglot by the left.

I left the marriage of an honest maid, Whose dowry would have weigh'd down all thy wealth,

Whose beauty and demeanour far exceeded thee:

This certain good I lost for changing bad,
And wrapp'd my credit in thy company.
I was bewitch'd-that is no theme of thine,
And thou, unhallow'd, hast enchanted me.
But I will break thy spells and exorcisms,
And put another sight upon these eyes,
That show'd my heart a raven for a dove.

Thou art not fair; I view'd thee not till now:
Thou art not kind; till now I knew thee not:
And now the rain hath beaten off thy gilt,
Thy worthless copper shows thee counterfeit.
It grieves me not to see how foul thou art,
But mads me that ever I thought thee fair.
Go, get thee gone, a copesmate for thy hinds;
I am too good to be thy favourite.

Alice. Ay, now I see, and too soon find it

true,

Which often hath been told me by my friends,
That Mosbie loves me not but for my wealth,
Which, too incredulous, I ne'er believed.
Nay, hear me speak, Mosbie, a word or two:
I'll bite my tongue if it speak bitterly.
Look on me, Mosbie, or else I'll kill myself;
Nothing shall hide me from thy stormy look.
If thou cry war, there is no peace for me;
I will do penance for offending thee,
And burn this prayer-book, where I here use
The holy word that hath converted me.
See, Mosbie, I will tear away the leaves,
And all the leaves, and in this golden cover
Shall thy sweet phrases and thy letters dwell,
And thereon will I chiefly meditate,

And hold no other sect but such devotion.
Wilt thou not look? Is all thy love o'erwhelm'd?
Wilt thou not hear? What malice stops thine

ears?

Why speak'st thou not? What silence ties thy tongue?

Thou hast been sighted as the eagle is,
And heard as quickly as the fearful hare,
And spoke as smoothly as an orator,
When I have bid thee hear, or see, or speak.
And art thou sensible in none of these?
Weigh all my good turns with this little
fault,

And I deserve not Mosbie's muddy looks;
A fence of trouble is not thicken'd still;
Be clear again; I'll no more trouble thee.

Mosbie. O fie, no; I am a base artificer; My wings are feather'd for a lowly flight; Mosbie, fie! no, not for a thousand poundMake love to you-why 't is unpardonableWe beggars must not breathe where gentles are!

Alice. Sweet Mosbie is as gentle as a king, And I too blind to judge him otherwise : Flowers sometimes spring in fallow lands, Weeds in gardens; roses grow on thorns: So, whatsoe'er my Mosbie's father was, Himself is valued gentle by his worth. Mosbie. Ah! how you women can insinuate

And clear a trespass with your sweetest
tongue!

I will forget this quarrel, gentle Alice,
Provided I'll be tempted so no more."

The man who wrote that scene was no ordinary judge of the waywardness and wickedness of the human heart. It would be difficult to say that Shakspere at any time could have more naturally painted the fearful contest of a lingering virtue with an overwhelming passion.

We have seen the conspiracy to murder Arden on Rainhamdown. The devoted man again escapes by accident, and the 'Chronicle' thus briefly records the circumstance :—

"When Master Arden came to Rochester, his man, still fearing that Black Will would kill him with his master, pricked his horse of purpose and made him to halt, to the end he might protract the time, and tarry behind. His master asked him why his horse halted. He said, I know not. Well, quoth his master, when ye come at the smith here before (between Rochester and the hill-foot over against Chatham) remove his shoe, and search him, and then come after me. So Master Arden rode on: and ere he came at the place where Black Will lay in wait for him, there overtook him divers gentle

men of his acquaintance, who kept him company; so that Black Will missed here also of his purpose."

The dramatist shows us Greene and the two ruffians waiting for their prey, and the excuse of Michael to desert his master. Arden and Franklin are now upon the stage; and the dialogue which passes between them is a very remarkable example of the dramatic skill with which the principal characters are made to sustain an indifferent conversation, but which is still in harmony with the tone of thought that pervades the whole drama. Arden is unhappy in his domestic circumstances, and he eagerly listens to the tale of another's unhappiness. The perfect ease with which this conversation is managed appears to us a singular excellence, when we regard the early date of this tragedy:

"Frank. Do you remember where my tale did cease?

Arden. Ay, where the gentleman did check his wife.

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And with a majesty address'd herself
To encounter all their accusations:---
Pardon me, Master Arden, I can no more;
This fighting at my heart makes short my
wind.

Arden. Come, we are almost now at Rain-
hamdown:

Your pretty tale beguiles the weary way;
I would you were in case to tell it out."

lin complains, is an augury of ill. Black This "fighting at the heart," of which FrankWill and Shakebag are lurking around them; but the "divers gentlemen" of Arden's acquaintance arrive. Lord Cheinie and his men interrupt the murderers' purpose. Arden and his friend agree to dine with the nobleman the next day. They reach Feversham in safety. The occurrences of the next day are thus told in the 'Chronicle:

"After that Master Arden was come home, he sent (as he usually did) his man to Sheppy, to Sir Thomas Cheinie's, then lord warden of the Cinque Ports, about certain business, and at his coming away he had a letter delivered, sent by

Sir Thomas Cheinie to his master. When he came home, his mistress took the letter and kept it, willing her man to tell his master that he had a letter delivered him by Sir Thomas Cheinie, and that he had lost it: adding, that he thought it best that his master should go the next morning to Sir Thomas, because he knew not the matter: he said he would, and therefore he willed his man to be stirring betimes. In this mean while, Black Will, and one George

!

den of a gross injustice in depriving him of
a piece of land. This incident is founded
upon a statement of the chronicler, in ac-
cordance with the superstition of the times,
that where the murdered body of Arden was
first laid the grass did not grow for two
years, and that of this very field he had
wrongfully possessed himself:-
:-

Shakebag, his companion, were kept in a store- | tercepted by Read, a sailor, who accuses Arhouse of Sir Anthony Ager's, at Preston, by Greene's appointment; and thither came Mrs. Arden to see him, bringing and sending him meat and drink many times. He, therefore, lurking there, and watching some opportunity for his purpose, was willed in any wise to be up early in the morning, to lie in wait for Master Arden in a certain broomclose betwixt Feversham and the ferry (which close he must needs pass), there to do his feat. Now Black Will stirred in the morning betimes, but missed the way, and tarried in a wrong place.

"Master Arden and his man coming on their way early in the morning towards Shornelan, where Sir Thomas Cheinie lay, as they were almost come to the broomclose, his man, always fearing that Black Will would kill him with his master, feigned that he had lost his purse. Why, said his master, thou foolish knave, couldst thou not look to thy purse, but lose it? What was in it? Three pounds, said he. Why, then, go thy ways back again, like a knave (said his master), and seek it, for being so early as it is there is no man stirring, and therefore thou mayst be sure to find it; and then come and overtake me at the ferry. But nevertheless, by reason that Black Will lost his way, Master Arden escaped yet once again. At that time Black Will yet thought that he should have been sure to have met him homewards; but whether that some of the lord warden's men accompanied him back to Feversham, or that being in doubt, for that it was late, to go through the broomclose, and therefore took another way, Black Will was disappointed then also."

The incident of the visit to Lord Cheinie is, as we have seen, differently managed by the dramatist. The escape of Arden on this occasion is very ingeniously contrived. sudden mist renders it impossible for the ruffians to find their way. Black Will thus describes his misadventure:

A

"Mosbie. Black Will and Shakebag, what
make you here?

What is the deed done? is Arden dead?
Will. What could a blinded man perform
in arms?

Saw you not how till now the sky was dark,
That neither horse nor man could be discern'd?
Yet did we hear their horses as they pass'd."

As Arden and Franklin return they are in

"Many strangers came in that mean time, beside the townsmen, to see the print of his body there on the ground in that field; which field he had, as some have reported, most cruelly taken from a woman that had been a widow to one Cooke, and after married to one Richard Read, a mariner, to the great hindrance of her and her husband, the said Read; for they had long enjoyed it by a lease, which they had of it for many years, not then expired; nevertheless he got it from them. For the which the said Read's wife not only exclaimed against him in shedding many a salt tear, but also cursed him most bitterly even to his face, wishing many a vengeance to light upon him, and that all the world might wonder on him."

There is surely great power in the following passage; and the denunciation of the sailor comes with a terrible solemnity after the manifold escapes to which we have been witness :

"Read. What! wilt thou do me wrong and threaten me too?

Nay, then, I'll tempt thee, Arden; do thy

worst.

God! I beseech thee show some miracle
On thee or thine, in plaguing thee for this:
That plot of ground which thou detainest from
me,-

I speak it in an agony of spirit,—
Be ruinous and fatal unto thee!
Either there be butcher'd by thy dearest
friends,

Or else be brought for men to wonder at,
Or thou or thine miscarry in that place,
Or there run mad and end thy cursed days.
Frank. Fie, bitter knave! bridle thine en-
vious tongue;

For curses are like arrows shot upright,
Which falling down light on the shooter's head.
Read. Light where they will, were I upon

the sea,

As oft I have in many a bitter storm,

And saw a dreadful southern flaw at hand,
The pilot quaking at the doubtful storm,
And all the sailors praying on their knees,
Even in that fearful time would I fall down,
And ask of God, whate'er betide of me,
Vengeance on Arden, or some misevent,
To show the world what wrong the carle hath
done.

This charge I'll leave with my distressful wife; My children shall be taught such prayers as these ;

And thus I go, but leave my curse with thee."

We have next a scene in which, by the device of Alice, Mosbie and Black Will fasten a pretended quarrel upon Arden and his friend; but Mosbie is wounded, and Black Will runs away. A reconcilement takes place through the subtilty of the wife. Arden invites Mosbie with other friends to supper, and the conspirators agree that their deed of wickedness shall be done that night. The Chronicler briefly tells the story :—

"They conveyed Black Will into Master Arden's house, putting him into a closet at the end of his parlour. Before this they had sent out of the house all the servants, those excepted which were privy to the devised murder. Then went Mosbie to the door, and there stood in a nightgown of silk girded about him, and this was betwixt six and seven of the clock at night Master Arden, having been at a neighbour's house of his, named Dumpkin, and having cleared certain reckonings betwixt them, came home, and, finding Mosbie standing at the door, asked him if it were supper-time? I think not (quoth Mosbie); it is not yet ready. Then let us go and play a game at the tables in the mean season, said Master Arden. And so they went straight into the parlour; and as they came by through the hall, his wife was walking there, and Master Arden said, How now, Mistress Alice? But she made small answer to him. In the mean time one chained the wicket-door of the entry. When they came into the parlour, Mosbie sat down on the bench, having his face toward the place where Black Will stood. Then Michael, Master Arden's man, stood at his master's back, holding a candle in his hand, to shadow Black Will, that Arden might by no means perceive him coming forth. In their play Mosbie said thus (which seemed to be the watchword for Black Will's coming forth), Now

Take me? quoth With that Black

may I take you, sir, if I will. Master Arden; which way? Will stepped forth, and cast a towel about his neck, so to stop his breath and strangle him. Then Mosbie, having at his girdle a pressingiron of fourteen pounds weight, struck him on the head with the same, so that he fell down and gave a great groan, insomuch that they thought he had been killed."

The tragedy follows, with very slight variation, the circumstances here detailed. The guests arrive; but Alice betrays the greatest inquietude: she gets rid of them one by one, imploring them to seek her husband, and in the mean while the body is removed. The dramatist appears here to have depended upon the terrible interest of the circumstances more than upon any force of expression in the characters. The discovery of the murder follows pretty closely the narrative of the Chronicler :

:

"Here enter the Mayor and the Watch. Alice. How now, master Mayor? have you brought my husband home?

Mayor. I saw him come into your house an hour ago.

Alice. You are deceived; it was a Londoner.

Mayor. Mistress Arden, know you not one that is call'd Black Will?

Alice. I know none such; what mean these questions?

Mayor. I have the council's warrant to apprehend him.

Alice. I am glad it is no worse. [Aside. Why, master Mayor, think you I harbour any such?

Mayor. We are informed that here he is; And therefore pardon us, for we must search. Alice. Ay, search and spare you not, through

every room:

Were my husband at home you would not offer this.

Here enter FRANKLIN. Master Franklin, what mean you come so sad?

Frank. Arden thy husband, and my friend,

is slain.

Alice. Ah! by whom? master Franklin, can you tell?

Frank. I know not, but behind the abbey There he lies murder'd, in most piteous case.

Mayor. But, master Franklin, are you sure 't is he?

Frank. I am too sure; would God I were deceiv'd!

Alice. Find out the murderers; let them be known.

Frank. Ay, so they shall come you along with us.

Alice. Wherefore?

Frank. Know you this hand-towel and this knife?

Susan. Ah, Michael through this thy negligence, Thou hast betrayed and undone us all. [Aside.

Mich. I was so afraid, I knew not what I
did;

I thought I had thrown them both into the
well.
[Aside.

Alice. It is the pig's blood we had to sup-
per.

But wherefore stay you? find out the murderers.

Mayor. I fear me you'll prove one of them yourself.

Alice. I one of them? what mean such questions?

Frank. I fear me he was murder'd in this
house,

And carried to the fields; for from that place,
Backwards and forwards, may you see
The print of many feet within the snow;
And look about this chamber where we are,
And you shall find part of his guiltless blood,
For in his slip-shoe did I find some rushes,
Which argue he was murder'd in this room.
Mayor. Look in the place where he was
wont to sit :

See, see, his blood; it is too manifest.

Alice. It is a cup of wine which Michael shed.

Mich. Ay, truly.

Frank. It is his blood, which, strumpet,
thou hast shed;

But, if I live, thou and thy complices,
Which have conspired and wrought his death,

Shall rue it."

The more I sound his name the more he
bleeds.

This blood condemns me, and in gushing forth
Speaks as it falls, and asks me why I did it.
Forgive me, Arden! I repent me now;

And would my death save thine, thou shouldst
not die.

Rise up, sweet Arden, and enjoy thy love,
And frown not on me when we meet in heaven:
In heaven I love thee, though on earth I did
not."

The concluding scene shows us the principal
culprits condemned to die :—

Mayor. Leave to accuse each other now,
And listen to the sentence I shall give:
Bear Mosbie and his sister to London straight,
Where they in Smithfield must be executed:
Bear Mistress Arden unto Canterbury,
Where her sentence is, she must be burnt:
Michael and Bradshaw in Feversham
Must suffer death.

Alice. Let my death make amends for all
my sin.

Mosbie. Fie upon women, this shall be my song."

After the play, Franklin, in a sort of epilogue, somewhat inartificially tells us that Shakebag was murdered in Southwark, and Black Will burnt at Flushing; that Greene was hanged at Osbridge, and the painter fled. Bradshaw, according to the 'Chronicle' and the dramatic representation, was an innocent person. The drama concludes with the following apologetical lines:

"Gentlemen, we hope you 'll pardon this naked
tragedy,

Wherein no filed points are foisted in
To make it gracious to the ear or eye;
For simple truth is gracious enough,

And needs no other points of glozing stuff."

These lines appear to us as an indication
that the author of 'Arden of Feversham,'
whoever he might be, was aware that such a
story did not call for the highest efforts of
dramatic art. It was a naked tragedy,"

In a subsequent scene the unhappy woman
makes confession :-
"Mayor. See, Mistress Arden, where your "simple truth,"-requiring "no

husband lies.

Confess this foul fault, and be penitent.

filed

points" or "glozing stuff." To a very young man, whose principles of art were not

Alice. Arden, sweet husband, what shall I formed, and who had scarcely any models say?

before him, this tragic story might have ap

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