ACT III.
1. SCENE I. Westminster. The palace.
 (continued)
WARWICK.
 
It is but as a body yet distemper'd;
 
Which to his former strength may be restored
 
With good advice and little medicine:
 
My Lord Northumberland will soon be cool'd. 
 
KING.
 
O God! that one might read the book of fate,
 
And see the revolution of the times
 
Make mountains level, and the continent,
 
Weary of solid firmness, melt itself
 
Into the sea! and, other times, to see
 
The beachy girdle of the ocean
 
Too wide for Neptune's hips; how chances mock,
 
And changes fill the cup of alteration
 
With divers liquors! O, if this were seen,
 
The happiest youth, viewing his progress through,
 
What perils past, what crosses to ensue,
 
Would shut the book, and sit him down and die.
 
'Tis not ten years gone
 
Since Richard and Northumberland, great friends,
 
Did feast together, and in two years after
 
Were they at wars:  it is but eight years since
 
This Percy was the man nearest my soul,
 
Who like a brother toil'd in my affairs
 
And laid his love and life under my foot,
 
Yea, for my sake, even to the eyes of Richard
 
Gave him defiance. But which of you was by--
 
You, cousin Nevil, as I may remember--
 
 
[To Warwick.]
 
 
When Richard, with his eye brimful of tears,
 
Then check'd and rated by Northumberland,
 
Did speak these words, now proved a prophecy?
 
"Northumberland, thou ladder by the which
 
My cousin Bolingbroke ascends my throne;"
 
Though then, God knows, I had no such intent,
 
But that necessity so bow'd the state
 
That I and greatness were compell'd to kiss:
 
"The time shall come," thus did he follow it,
 
"The time will come, that foul sin, gathering head,
 
Shall break into corruption:" so went on,
 
Foretelling this same time's condition
 
And the division of our amity. 
 
WARWICK.
 
There is a history in all men's lives,
 
Figuring the natures of the times deceased;
 
The which observed, a man may prophesy,
 
With a near aim, of the main chance of things
 
As yet not come to life, who in their seeds
 
And weak beginning lie intreasured.
 
Such things become the hatch and brood of time;
 
And by the necessary form of this
 
King Richard might create a perfect guess
 
That great Northumberland, then false to him,
 
Would of that seed grow to a greater falseness;
 
Which should not find a ground to root upon,
 
Unless on you. 
 
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