Farewell!a long farewell,to all my greatness!This is the state of man:today he puts forth The tender leaves of hope;tomorrow blossoms,And bears his blushing honours thick upon him;The third day comes a frost,a killing frost,And.when he thinks,good easy man,full surely His greatness is aripening,nips his root,And then he falls,as I do.I have ventured,Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders,This many summers in a sea of glory,But far beyond my depth:my highblown pride At length broke under me;and now has left me,Weary,and old with service,to the mercyOf a rude stream,that must for ever hide me.Vain pomp and glory of this world,I hate ye:I feel my heart new open’d.O,how wretchedIs that poor man that hangs on princes‘favours!There is,betwixt that smile we would aspire to,That sweet aspect of princes,and their ruin,More pangs and fears than wars or women have;And when he falls,he falls like Lucifer,Never to hope again.[Enter Cromwell,and stands amazed ]
Why,how now,Cromwell!
Crom .I have no power to speak,sir.
At my misfortunes?can thy spirit wonderA great man should decline?Nay,an you weep,I am fall‘n indeed.
Crom .How does your grace?
Wol .Why,well;
Never so truly happy,my good Cromwell.I know myself now;and I feel within me A peace above all earthly dignities,A still and quiet conscience.The king has cur’d me,I humbly thank his grace;and from these shoulders,These ruin‘d pillars,out of pity,takenA load would sink a navy,too much honour:O,’t is a burden,Cromwell,‘t is a burden,Too heavy for a man that hopes for heaven!
Crom .I am glad your grace has made that right use of it.
Wol .I hope I have:I am able now,methinks,Out of a fortitude of soul I feelTo endure more miseries,and greater far,Than my weakhearted enemies dare offer.What news abroad?
Crom .The heaviest and the worst Is your displeasure with the king.
Wol .God bless him!
Crom .The next is,that Sir Thomas More is chosen Lord chancellor in your place.
Wol .That’s somewhat sudden:
But he‘s a learned man.May he continue Long in his highness’favour,and do justiceFor truth‘s sake and his conscience;that his bones,When he has run his course and sleeps in blessings,May have a tomb of orphans’tears wept on ‘em!What more?
Crom .That Cranmer is return’d with welcome,Install‘d Lord Archbishop of Canterbury.
Wol .That’s news indeed.
Crom .Last,that the Lady Anne,Whom the king hath in secrecy long married,This day was view‘d in open,as his queen,Going to chapel;and the voice is now Only about her coronation.
Wol .There was the weight that pull’d me down.
The king has gone beyond me:all my glories In that one woman I have lost for ever.
No sun shall ever usher forth mine honours,Or gild again the noble troops that waitedUpon my smiles.Go,get thee from me,Cromwell;I am a poor fall‘n man,unworthy nowTo be thy lord and master.Seek the king;That sun,I pray,may never set!I have told him What and how true thou art:he will advance thee;Some little memory of me will stir himI know his noble naturenot to letThy hopeful service perish too.Good Cromwell,Neglect him not;make use now,and provideFor thine own future safety.
Must I,then,leave you?must I needs forego So good,so noble,and so true a master?
Bear witness,all that have not hearts of iron,With what a sorrow Cromwell leaves his lord.The king shall have my service;but my prayers,For ever and for ever,shall be yours.
?Wol .Cromwell,I did not think to shed a tearIn all my miseries;but thou hast forced me,Out of thy honest truth,to play the woman.
Let’s dry our eyes;and thus far hear me,Cromwell:And when I am forgotten,as I shall be,And sleep in dull cold marble,where no mention Of me more must be heard ofsay,I taught thee,Say,Wolsey,that once trod the ways of glory,And sounded all the depths and shoals of honour,Found thee a way,out of his wrack,to rise in;A sure and safe one,though thy master miss‘d it.Mark but my fall,and that that ruin’d me.Cromwell,I charge thee,fling away ambition:By that sin fell the angels;how can man,then,The image of his Maker,hope to win by ‘t?
Love thyself last;cherish those hearts that hate thee;Corruption wins not more than honesty.
Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace,To silence envious tongues.Be just,and fear not:Let all the ends thou aim’st at be thy country‘s,Thy God’s,and truth‘s:then if thou fall’st,O Cromwell,Thou fall‘st a blessed martyr.Serve the king;Andpr’ythee lead me in:
To the last penny;‘t is the king’s:my robe,And my integrity to Heaven,is allI dare now call my own.O Cromwell,Cromwell!Had I but served my God with half the zealI served my king,He would not in mine age Have left me naked to mine enemies.
Crom .Good sir,have patience.
The hopes of court!my hopes in heaven do dwell.