Thou canst experience that thy will is free.

Make trial, and declare thou hatest blood,

And that thou wilt protect thy sister's life;

Show those who wish to give thee other counsels,

That here thy royal anger is not feigned,

And thou shalt see how stern necessity

Can vanish, and what once was titled justice

Into injustice be converted: thou

Thyself must pass the sentence, thou alone

Trust not to this unsteady, trembling reed,

But hear the gracious dictates of thy heart.

God hath not planted rigor in the frame

Of woman; and the founders of this realm,

Who to the female hand have not denied

The reins of government, intend by this

To show that mercy, not severity,

Is the best virtue to adorn a crown.

ELIZABETH.

Lord Shrewsbury is a fervent advocate

For mine and England's enemy; I must

Prefer those counsellors who wish my welfare.

TALBOT.

Her advocates have an invidious task!

None will, by speaking in her favor, dare

To meet thy anger: stiffer, then, an old

And faithful counsellor (whom naught on earth

Can tempt on the grave's brink) to exercise

The pious duty of humanity.

It never shall be said that, in thy council,

Passion and interest could find a tongue,

While mercy's pleading voice alone was mute,

All circumstances have conspired against her;

Thou ne'er hast seen her face, and nothing speaks

Within thy breast for one that's stranger to thee.

I do not take the part of her misdeeds;

They say 'twas she who planned her husband's murder:

'Tis true that she espoused his murderer.

A grievous crime, no doubt; but then it happened

In darksome days of trouble and dismay,

In the stern agony of civil war,

When she, a woman, helpless and hemmed in

By a rude crowd of rebel vassals, sought

Protection in a powerful chieftain's arms.

God knows what arts were used to overcome her!

For woman is a weak and fragile thing.

ELIZABETH.

Woman's not weak; there are heroic souls

Among the sex; and, in my presence, sir,

I do forbid to speak of woman's weakness.

TALBOT.

Misfortune was for thee a rigid school;

Thou wast not stationed on the sunny side

Of life; thou sawest no throne, from far, before thee;

The grave was gaping for thee at thy feet.

At Woodstock, and in London's gloomy tower,

'Twas there the gracious father of this land

Taught thee to know thy duty, by misfortune.

No flatterer sought thee there: there learned thy soul,

Far from the noisy world and its distractions,

To commune with itself, to think apart,

And estimate the real goods of life.

No God protected this poor sufferer:

Transplanted in her early youth to France,

The court of levity and thoughtless joys,

There, in the round of constant dissipation,

She never heard the earnest voice of truth;

She was deluded by the glare of vice,

And driven onward by the stream of ruin.

Hers was the vain possession of a face,

And she outshone all others of her sex

As far in beauty, as in noble birth.

ELIZABETH.

Collect yourself, my Lord of Shrewsbury;

Bethink you we are met in solemn council.

Those charms must surely be without compare,

Which can engender, in an elder's blood,

Such fire. My Lord of Leicester, you alone

Are silent; does the subject which has made

Him eloquent, deprive you of your speech?

LEICESTER.

Amazement ties my tongue, my queen, to think

That they should fill thy soul with such alarms,

And that the idle tales, which, in the streets,

Of London, terrify the people's ears,

Should reach the enlightened circle of thy council,

And gravely occupy our statesmen's minds.

Astonishment possesses me, I own,

To think this lackland Queen of Scotland, she

Who could not save her own poor throne, the jest

Of her own vassals, and her country's refuse,

[Who in her fairest days of freedom, was

But thy despised puppet,] should become

At once thy terror when a prisoner.

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