[Exit DRURY.

[And ye have found the means to hide from us

Such costly things, and screen them, until now,

From our inquiring eyes?]

KENNEDY.

Oh, insolent

And tyrant power, to which we must submit.

PAULET.

She can work ill as long as she hath treasures;

For all things turn to weapons in her hands.

KENNEDY (supplicating).

Oh, sir! be merciful; deprive us not

Of the last jewel that adorns our life!

'Tis my poor lady's only joy to view

This symbol of her former majesty;

Your hands long since have robbed us of the rest.

PAULET.

'Tis in safe custody; in proper time

'Twill be restored to you with scrupulous care.

KENNEDY.

Who that beholds these naked walls could say

That majesty dwelt here? Where is the throne?

Where the imperial canopy of state?

Must she not set her tender foot, still used

To softest treading, on the rugged ground?

With common pewter, which the lowliest dame

Would scorn, they furnish forth her homely table.

PAULET.

Thus did she treat her spouse at Stirling once;

And pledged, the while, her paramour in gold.

KENNEDY.

Even the mirror's trifling aid withheld.

PAULET.

The contemplation of her own vain image

Incites to hope, and prompts to daring deeds.

KENNEDY.

Books are denied her to divert her mind.

PAULET.

The Bible still is left to mend her heart.

KENNEDY.

Even of her very lute she is deprived!

PAULET.

Because she tuned it to her wanton airs.

KENNEDY.

Is this a fate for her, the gentle born,

Who in her very cradle was a queen?

Who, reared in Catherine's luxurious court,

Enjoyed the fulness of each earthly pleasure?

Was't not enough to rob her of her power,

Must ye then envy her its paltry tinsel?

A noble heart in time resigns itself

To great calamities with fortitude;

But yet it cuts one to the soul to part

At once with all life's little outward trappings!

PAULET.

These are the things that turn the human heart

To vanity, which should collect itself

In penitence; for a lewd, vicious life,

Want and abasement are the only penance.

KENNEDY.

If youthful blood has led her into error,

With her own heart and God she must account:

There is no judge in England over her.

PAULET.

She shall have judgment where she hath transgressed.

KENNEDY.

Her narrow bonds restrain her from transgression.

PAULET.

And yet she found the means to stretch her arm

Into the world, from out these narrow bonds,

And, with the torch of civil war, inflame

This realm against our queen (whom God preserve).

And arm assassin bands. Did she not rouse

From out these walls the malefactor Parry,

And Babington, to the detested crime

Of regicide? And did this iron grate

Prevent her from decoying to her toils

The virtuous heart of Norfolk? Saw we not

The first, best head in all this island fall

A sacrifice for her upon the block?

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