| Front Matter | |
| ACT 1 | |
| ACT 2 | |
| ACT 3 | |
| ACT 4 | |
| ACT 5 |
It is hard to imagine a world without Shakespeare. Since their composition four hundred years ago, Shakespeare’s plays and poems have traveled the globe, inviting those who see and read his works to make them their own.
Readers of the New Folger Editions are part of this ongoing process of “taking up Shakespeare,” finding our own thoughts and feelings in language that strikes us as old or unusual and, for that very reason, new. We still struggle to keep up with a writer who could think a mile a minute, whose words paint pictures that shift like clouds. These expertly edited texts are presented to the public as a resource for study, artistic adaptation, and enjoyment. By making the classic texts of the New Folger Editions available in electronic form as Folger Digital Texts, we place a trusted resource in the hands of anyone who wants them.
The New Folger Editions of Shakespeare’s plays, which are the basis for the texts realized here in digital form, are special because of their origin. The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is the single greatest documentary source of Shakespeare’s works. An unparalleled collection of early modern books, manuscripts, and artwork connected to Shakespeare, the Folger’s holdings have been consulted extensively in the preparation of these texts. The Editions also reflect the expertise gained through the regular performance of Shakespeare’s works in the Folger’s Elizabethan Theater.
I want to express my deep thanks to editors Barbara Mowat and Paul Werstine for creating these indispensable editions of Shakespeare’s works, which incorporate the best of textual scholarship with a richness of commentary that is both inspired and engaging. Readers who want to know more about Shakespeare and his plays can follow the paths these distinguished scholars have tread by visiting the Folger either in-person or online, where a range of physical and digital resources exists to supplement the material in these texts. I commend to you these words, and hope that they inspire.
Michael Witmore
Director, Folger Shakespeare Library
Until now, with the release of the Folger Digital Texts, readers in search of a free online text of Shakespeare’s plays had to be content primarily with using the Moby™ Text, which reproduces a late-nineteenth century version of the plays. What is the difference? Many ordinary readers assume that there is a single text for the plays: what Shakespeare wrote. But Shakespeare’s plays were not published the way modern novels or plays are published today: as a single, authoritative text. In some cases, the plays have come down to us in multiple published versions, represented by various Quartos (Qq) and by the great collection put together by his colleagues in 1623, called the First Folio (F). There are, for example, three very different versions of Hamlet, two of King Lear, Henry V, Romeo and Juliet, and others. Editors choose which version to use as their base text, and then amend that text with words, lines or speech prefixes from the other versions that, in their judgment, make for a better or more accurate text.
Other editorial decisions involve choices about whether an unfamiliar word could be understood in light of other writings of the period or whether it should be changed; decisions about words that made it into Shakespeare’s text by accident through four hundred years of printings and misprinting; and even decisions based on cultural preference and taste. When the Moby™ Text was created, for example, it was deemed “improper” and “indecent” for Miranda to chastise Caliban for having attempted to rape her. (See The Tempest, 1.2: “Abhorred slave,/Which any print of goodness wilt not take,/Being capable of all ill! I pitied thee…”). All Shakespeare editors at the time took the speech away from her and gave it to her father, Prospero.
The editors of the Moby™ Shakespeare produced their text long before scholars fully understood the proper grounds on which to make the thousands of decisions that Shakespeare editors face. The Folger Library Shakespeare Editions, on which the Folger Digital Texts depend, make this editorial process as nearly transparent as is possible, in contrast to older texts, like the Moby™, which hide editorial interventions. The reader of the Folger Shakespeare knows where the text has been altered because editorial interventions are signaled by square brackets (for example, from Othello: “
If she in chains of magic were not bound,
”), half-square brackets (for example, from Henry V: “With
blood
and sword and fire to win your right,”), or angle brackets (for example, from Hamlet: “O farewell, honest
soldier.
Who hath relieved/you?”). At any point in the text, you can hover your cursor over a bracket for more information.
Because the Folger Digital Texts are edited in accord with twenty-first century knowledge about Shakespeare’s texts, the Folger here provides them to readers, scholars, teachers, actors, directors, and students, free of charge, confident of their quality as texts of the plays and pleased to be able to make this contribution to the study and enjoyment of Shakespeare.
With a weak, unworldly king on the throne, the English nobility heightens its struggle for power in Henry VI, Part 2, leading to the brink of civil war.
At the start of the play, Henry meets his new bride, Margaret, to whom he has been married by proxy through Suffolk, her lover. Henry’s popular and powerful uncle Gloucester, the Lord Protector, soon comes under attack by Margaret, Suffolk, Cardinal Beaufort, and others.
Gloucester’s wife is shamed and exiled and Gloucester himself removed from office, then murdered on Suffolk’s orders. Suffolk is banished, captured by pirates, and killed. Meanwhile, the cardinal dies, raving in madness because of his part in Gloucester’s death.
A Kentish rebel, Jack Cade, leads a short-lived revolt, seizing London before his supporters desert him. He dies fighting in a garden. Soon another revolt emerges: Richard, Duke of York, leads an army against King Henry, who flees back to London. As the play ends, Richard’s forces also move toward London.




Henry,
Duke Humphrey
of Gloucester,
Cardinal
Beaufort, on the one
Margaret,
Suffolk, York, Somerset, and
He kneels.
Suffolk rises.
He kisses her.
All rise.
to Gloucester
He hands Gloucester a paper.
He drops the paper.
picks up the paper and reads
FTLN 0061Item, it is further
duchies
of
Suffolk kneels.
Suffolk rises.
Cousin
had
his Highness in his infancy
Protector,
aside
for he hath greatest
Scene 2
of Gloucester
and his wife
the Duchess
Eleanor.
hour
when I imagine ill
with Messenger.
Sir John
Hume.
She gives him money.
Scene 3
Peter,
the
wearing the red rose,
Margaret.
FIRST PETITIONER
FTLN 0387Here he comes, methinks, and the
He steps forward.
takes a petition and reads.
FTLN 0395To my
Taking a petition.
What’s here?
(Reads.)
Against the Duke of Suffolk for enclosing
showing his petition
FTLN 0408Against my master,
master
was? No, forsooth. My master
calling
FTLN 041635Who is there?
Peter
exits
with Servant.
They
exit.
Henry,
Duke Humphrey
of Gloucester,
Cardinal,
Somerset, wearing the red
Buckingham, Salisbury; York and Warwick,
both
and the Duchess
of
to Gloucester
to Gloucester
to Gloucester
to Gloucester
Queen Margaret drops her fan.
To Duchess.
Give me my fan. What, minion, can
I’d
set my ten commandments in your face.
the Duchess,
exits.
aside to Cardinal
Duke of Gloucester.
Horner, the
Armorer, and his Man
Peter, under guard.
to Horner
Scene 4
Margery Jourdain,
the two Priests
Hume and Southwell,
and Bolingbroke,
a conjurer.
She lies face downward.
John Southwell,
Duchess of Gloucester,
aloft.
they
do the ceremonies belonging, and
reading from a paper, while Southwell
reads
reads
descending.
and Sir Humphrey Stafford,
and
The Guard arrest Margery Jourdain and her
To Jourdain.
Beldam, I think we watched you at an
To the Duchess, aloft.
What, madam, are you
He holds up the papers seized.
Stafford exits.
Jourdain, Southwell, and Bolingbroke
under guard, below; Duchess and Hume
Buckingham hands him the papers.
(Reads.)
The duke yet lives that Henry shall depose,
te,
Aeacida,
(Reads.)
Tell me what fate awaits the Duke of
lord,
these oracles
Buckingham exits.
ACT 2
Scene 1
Henry,
Queen
Margaret, Gloucester the
Protector, Cardinal, and Suffolk,
and
with Falconers hallowing.
to Gloucester
to Gloucester
Lord
Protectorship.
aside to Cardinal
aside to Gloucester
FTLN 0734Marry, when thou
aside to Cardinal
aside to Gloucester
(Aside to Gloucester.)
(Aside to Cardinal.)
Are you advised?
aside to Gloucester
(Aside to Cardinal.)
Now, by God’s mother, priest,
aside to Gloucester
FTLN 075360 Medice, teipsum;
a man from St. Albans
crying “A miracle!”
Simpcox
between two in a chair,
followed by Simpcox’s Wife and Others.
The two bearers bring the chair forward.
Alban.
pointing
FTLN 0826What’s his name?
pointing to someone else
FTLN 0828135Nor his?
his
cunning to be great that could
A man
exits.
One brings a stool.
Now, sirrah, if you mean to
to the Beadle
The Beadle, Mayor, Wife, and the others from
exit.
Aside to Gloucester.
This news, I think, hath turned
Scene 2
son
kneeling
They rise.
But I am not your
Scene 3
Henry
and State
(Queen Margaret, Gloucester, York, Salisbury, Suffolk,
with Guard, to banish the Duchess
of
sins
To Jourdain, Southwell, Hume, and Bolingbroke.
To Duchess
You, madam, for you are more nobly
Duchess and the other prisoners exit under guard.
He puts down his staff before Henry.
Henry picks up the staff.
Horner
and his
Peter,
with a Drum and sandbag, and Prentices
They drink.
He
FTLN 1078O Lord, bless me, I
Trumpet sounds.
He dies.
bearing Horner’s body.
Scene 4
of Gloucester
and his Men,
of Gloucester, barefoot, and
in a
with papers pinned to her back
and a
Sir John Stanley,
Herald exits.
with his Men.
The Sheriff and Officers exit.
ACT 3
Scene 1
Henry,
Queen
Margaret,
and Others
to the Parliament.
lords
of Suffolk, Buckingham, and York,
aside
to his Men
guarded by Cardinal’s Men.
strains,
with Buckingham, Salisbury, Warwick,
to Cardinal, Suffolk, and York
He exits.
advancing
Scene 2
The Murderers
exit.
Henry,
Queen
Margaret,
Cardinal, Somerset, with Attendants.
Meg.
These words content me much.
Henry
swoons.
King Henry stirs.
Margaret
was ne’er thy joy.
Margaret.
Margaret,
and Salisbury,
Warwick exits through one door; Salisbury and
bearing Gloucester’s body.
The bed is removed.
To Cardinal.
And you, forsooth, had the good duke
Warwick and Suffolk
exit.
to the offstage Commons
To Salisbury.
But you, my lord, were glad to be
COMMONS ,
within
Salisbury exits.
To Suffolk.
If, after three days’ space, thou here
All but the Queen and Suffolk
exit.
calling after King Henry and
enemies
?
Could
curses kill, as doth the mandrake’s groan,
turn
the force of them upon thyself.
She kisses his hand.
They embrace.
Vaux
exits.
through different doors.
Scene 3
Henry,
Salisbury and Warwick, to the
raving and staring.
The Cardinal dies.
After the curtains are closed around
they exit.
The bed is removed.
ACT 4
Scene 1
Offstage
fight at sea. Ordnance goes off.
captive and in disguise,
including a Master, a Master’s Mate,
Three gentlemen prisoners, including Suffolk,
to the Second Gentleman
to Suffolk
Suffolk starts.
Jove sometimes went disguised, and why not I?
SUFFOLK
LIEUTENANT 
mother’s
bleeding heart.
are
rising up in arms.
Walter.
SUFFOLK
Walter Whitmore
exits with
and Others.
To Second Gentleman.
Therefore come you with us,
Whitmore
with the body
and severed head of Suffolk.
Whitmore
exits.
He exits with the head and body.
Scene 2
with staves.
the
butcher, Smith the
all with staves.
aside
FTLN 2258Or rather of stealing a cade of herrings.
fall
before us, inspired
aside
FTLN 226440He was an honest man and a good
aside
FTLN 2267I knew her well; she was a midwife.
aside
FTLN 226945She was indeed a peddler’s daughter, and
aside
FTLN 2271But now of late, not able to travel with
aside
FTLN 227450Ay, by my faith, the field is honorable;
aside
FTLN 2278He must needs, for beggary is valiant.
aside
FTLN 2280No question of that; for I have seen him
aside
FTLN 2283He need not fear the sword, for his coat
aside
FTLN 2285But methinks he should stand in fear of
of Chartham, under guard.
an
He kneels.
Rise up Sir John Mortimer.
He rises.
Now have at him!
a Herald,
Drum, and Soldiers.
aside
for I invented it myself.—Go to,
to Stafford
The Staffords, Soldiers, and Herald
exit.
They exit.
Scene 3
He puts on
with the bodies of the Staffords.
Scene 4
Henry,
with a supplication, and
Margaret
with Suffolk’s head, the Duke
aside
to King Henry
He reads.
aside
SECOND
MESSENGER
to Saye
be
betrayed.
Scene 5
Scene 6
Takes a paper from the dead Soldier and
Scene 7
aside
FTLN 2525Mass, ’twill be sore law, then, for he
aside
FTLN 252810Nay, John, it will be stinking law, for
aside
FTLN 253315Then we are like to have biting
on
a footcloth, dost thou not?
caudle,
then, and
Some exit with Lord Saye.
of Lord Saye and Sir James
The
FTLN 2650Now part them again,
with his company.
Scene 8
with Attendants.
They fling their caps in the air.
aside
FTLN 2711Was ever feather so lightly blown to and
running.
Scene 9
Henry,
Queen
Margaret,
aloft.
old
Clifford.
below
multitudes with halters about their necks.
The multitudes exit.
calmed
and boarded with a pirate.
to Buckingham
Scene 10
o’er
a brick wall have I climbed into
and his Men.
waning,
aside
FTLN 280225Here’s the lord of the soil come to seize
He draws his sword.
He draws his sword.
God
on my
and Cade falls.
)
with his Men, dragging Cade’s body.
ACT 5
Scene 1
wearing the white rose,
and his army of
Attendants,
Drum and Colors.
wearing the red rose.
Aside.
Whom have we here? Buckingham, to
aside
Soldiers exit.
They walk arm in arm.
Henry
and Attendants.
He kneels.
Rise up a knight.
He
Margaret
and Somerset,
wearing the red rose.
aside to Buckingham
Buckingham whispers to the Queen.
aside
these
To an Attendant.
Sirrah, call in my
sons
to be my
Attendant exits.
for
my enfranchisement.
to Buckingham
Buckingham exits.
to Queen Margaret
York’s sons
Edward and Richard,
wearing the white rose.
old
Clifford
and his Son, wearing the red rose.
kneeling before King Henry
He rises.
To an Attendant.
Bid Salisbury and Warwick come
Attendant exits.
wearing the
to an Attendant
Attendant exits.
to King Henry
or
dignity.
house’s
badge.
They exit separately.
Scene 2
The sign of the Castle Inn is displayed. Alarms.
wearing the white rose.
wearing the white rose.
old
Clifford,
wearing the red rose.
They fight and Clifford falls.
He dies.
He exits.
wearing the red rose.
He sees his father, lying dead.
O,
He takes his father’s body onto his back.
He exits.
wearing the white rose,
and Somerset,
wearing the red rose,
to fight.
Richard kills Somerset under the sign of Castle Inn.
He exits.
Henry,
Queen
Margaret, both wearing the red rose,
and Others.
Young
Clifford,
wearing the red rose.
Scene 3
Edward,
Richard,
all wearing the white rose,
wearing the white rose.
Flourish.
They exit.