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  4. RIchard II
  • A Monologue from the play "RIchard II" by William Shakespeare
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Character Duchess
Gender Female
Age Range(s) Young Adult (20-35), Adult (36-50)
Type of monologue / Character is Angry, Scolding, Flips out, Frustrated
Type Dramatic
Period Renaissance
Genre Historical, Drama
Description The Duchess curses Hereford and Mowbray
Location ACT I, Scene 2

Summary

The play is about the fall from power and death of Richard II and the rise of the first king of the house of Lancaster, Henry Bolingbroke, who will become Henry IV.
In the first scene we find Richard II acting as a judge for a dispute between Henry Bolingbroke, the king's cousin and son of John of Gaunt, and Thomas Mowbray, the Duke of Norfolk. Henry Bolingbroke accuses Thomas Mowbray of having killed the Duke of Gloucester, of being a traitor and conspiring against the king. Eventually they decide to fight in a duel.

In the second scene of the play the Duchess of Gloucester, the widow of the murdered Duke who was John Gaunt's brother, visits John Gaunt and asks him to seek revenge for his brother's death. John Gaunt, however, knows that the Duke of Gloucester was killed in a conspiracy in which King Richard himself was part of and refuses to take action. He claims that God will punish the perpetrators of the crime. The Duchess, disappointed, decides to leave and curses Henry Bolingbroke and Thomas Mowbray. She tells John Gaunt she hopes they both will die in the duel since she considers them to be responsible for he husband's death.

Written by Administrator

Excerpt
DUCHESS
Why, then, I will. Farewell, old Gaunt.
Thou goest to Coventry, there to behold
Our cousin Hereford and fell Mowbray fight:
O, sit my husband's wrongs on Hereford's spear,
That it may enter butcher Mowbray's breast!
Or, if misfortune miss the first career,
Be Mowbray's sins so heavy in his bosom,
They may break his foaming courser's back,
And throw the rider headlong in the lists,
A caitiff recreant to my cousin Hereford!
Farewell, old Gaunt: thy sometimes brother's wife
With her companion grief must end her life.

[JOHN OF GAUNT
Sister, farewell; I must to Coventry:
As much good stay with thee as go with me!]

DUCHESS
Yet one word more: grief boundeth where it falls,
Not with the empty hollowness, but weight:
I take my leave before I have begun,
For sorrow ends not when it seemeth done.
Commend me to thy brother, Edmund York.
Lo, this is all:--nay, yet depart not so;
Though this be all, do not so quickly go;
I shall remember more. Bid him--ah, what?--
With all good speed at Plashy visit me.
Alack, and what shall good old York there see
But empty lodgings and unfurnish'd walls,
Unpeopled offices, untrodden stones?
And what hear there for welcome but my groans?
Therefore commend me; let him not come there,
To seek out sorrow that dwells every where.
Desolate, desolate, will I hence and die:
The last leave of thee takes my weeping eye.

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