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- King
Henry
the
Fourth
139
that as mine owne, and not as yours. Well, faire
sonne, said the king with a great sigh, what right I
had to it God knoweth. Well, said the prince, if you
die king, I will haue the garland and trust to keepe
it with the sword against all mine enemies as you
haue done. Then said the king, I commit all to God,
and remember you to doo well. With that he turned
himself in his bed and shortlie after departed to
God in a chamber of the abbats of Westminster called
Jerusalem, . . . when he had reigned thirteene yeares
in great perplexitie and little pleasure/
Holinshed then tells us that 'king Henrie the fift
was crowned the ninth of Aprill, being Passion Sun-
daie, which was a sore, ruggie, and tempestuous daie,
with wind, snow, and sleet, that men greatlie mar-
uelled thereat, making diuerse interpretations what
that might signifie. But this king, to show that in
his person princelie honors should change publike
manners, he determined to put on him the shape of a
new man. For whereas aforetime he had made him
self a companion vnto misrulie mates of dissolute
order and life, he now banished them all from his
presence, but not vnrewarded or else vnpreferred,
inhibiting them vpon a great paine not once to ap
proach, lodge, or soiourne within ten miles of his
court or presence: and in their places he chose men
of grauitie, wit, and high policie, by whose wise
councel he might at all times rule to his honor and
dignity; calling to mind how once to hie offence of
the king his father he had with his fist striken the
cheefe iustice for sending one of his minions, vpon
desert, to prison, when the iustice stoutlie commanded
himself also streict to ward, and the prince obeied.'
Daniel's Civill Wars
In the fourth book of his Civill Wars, Daniel con
denses history even more radically than Shakespeare.
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