Page:CromwellHugo.djvu/139

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ACT SECOND. THE SPIES
127

A few more days in London I must have.
Mistress Fleetwood [sourly.]To make yourself a throne, is it not so?
In candour, father, would you not be king?
But Fleetwood, yes, my husband, will prevent!
Cromwell.How now! my son-in-law—
Mistress Fleetwood. How now! my son-in-law—He does not choose
To fake a crooked line. There is no place
In a republic for a king. Therein
I am with him opposed to your designs.
Cromwell.And my own daughter, too!
Lady Falconbridge [to Mistress Fleetwood.] Upon my word,
I do not understand you, sister mine!
Our father's a free man, his throne is ours.
Why should not he be king, like any other?
And why deny ourselves th' ecstatic joy
Of being princesses of royal blood?
Mistress Fleetwood.Sister, I am by worldly vanities
But little moved. My thoughts are all intent
Upon salvation.
Lady Falconbridge. Upon salvation. I do love the court,
And know not why, my husband being a lord,
My father is not king.
Mistress Fleetwood. My father is not king. The pride of Eve,
My sister, the first man destroyed!
Lady Falconbridge [turning away, disdainfully.
My sister, the first man destroyed! 'Tis plain
That of a nobleman she's not the wife!
Cromwell [in an irritated tone.
Be silent, both! Of your young sister, pray,
The mild and placid bearing imitate.

[To Frances, who is lost in reverie, her eyes fixed on the window of Charles the First.

Frances, of what think you?