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LYRIC GRANDEUR OF THE SUBJECT

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The didactic lessons of moral prudence, the brief sententious precepts, the descriptions of high actions and high passions, are alien from the whole spirit of Shakspere's drama. The Henry V constitutes an exception to the general rules upon which he worked. "High actions" are here described as well as exhibited; and high passions, in the Shaksperian sense of the term, scarcely make their appearance upon the scene. Here are no struggles between will and fate;-no frailties of humanity dragging down its virtues into an abyss of guilt and sorrow,-no crimes,―no obduracy, no penitence. We have the lofty and unconquerable spirit of national and individual heroism riding triumphantly over every danger; but the spirit is so lofty that we feel no uncertainty for the issue. We should know, even if we had no foreknowledge of the event, that it must conquer. We can scarcely weep over those who fall in that "glorious and well-foughten field," for "they kept together in their chivalry," and their last words. sound as a glorious hymn of exultation. The subject is altogether one of lyric grandeur; but it is not one, we think, which Shakspere would have chosen for a drama.— KNIGHT, Pictorial Shakspere.

THE LIFE OF KING HENRY V

DRAMATIS PERSONE

KING HENRY the Fifth

DUKE OF GLOUCESTER,

DUKE OF Bedford,

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brothers to the King

DUKE OF EXETER, uncle to the King

DUKE OF YORK, cousin to the King

EARLS OF SALISBURY, WESTMORELAND, and WARWICK

ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY

BISHOP OF ELY

EARL OF CAMBRIDGE

LORD SCROOP

SIR THOMAS GREY

SIR THOMAS ERPINGHAM, GOWER, FLUELLEN, MACMORRIS, JAMY,

officers in King Henry's army

BATES, COURT, WILLIAMS, soldiers in the same

PISTOL, NYM, BARDOLPH

Boy

A Herald

CHARLES the Sixth, King of France

LEWIS, the Dauphin

DUKES OF BURGUNDY, ORLEANS, and BOURBON

The Constable of France

RAMBURES and GRANDPRÉ, French Lords

Governor of Harfleur

MONTJOY, a French Herald

Ambassadors to the King of England

ISABEL, Queen of France

KATHARINE, daughter to Charles and Isabel

ALICE, a lady attending on her

Hostess of a tavern in Eastcheap, formerly Mistress Quickly, and

now married to Pistol

Lords, Ladies, Officers, Soldiers, Citizens, Messengers, and Attendants

Chorus

SCENE: England; afterwards France

SYNOPSIS

By J. ELLIS BURDICK

ACT I

Henry V resolves to claim the throne of France, basing his authority on the old Salic law. He first demands certain provinces and in reply the Dauphin sends him a bag of tennis-balls, evidently thinking that the English king has not outgrown his wild youth. Henry then declares

war.

ACT II

Sir John Falstaff and his friends cannot understand the commendable change in the character of the king, who has dismissed the wild associates of his youth. Falstaff dies of a broken heart. All England wishes success and conquest to attend the king in his invasion of France. The French, fearing for their country, bribe three English nobles to murder the king before his embarkation at South Hampton. But the plot is discovered in time and the conspirators put to death.

ACT III

The city of Harfleur in France is besieged and taken by the English. Sickness and lack of food weaken the English army, but nevertheless the king, relying upon the bravery of his men, pitches his camp at Agincourt, wellknowing that the French will give battle there.

ACT IV

The English prepare energetically for the battle, the king himself in disguise going through the camp and talk

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