Henry VI, part 3
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Henry VI Part III is the third of William Shakespeare's plays set during the lifetime of King Henry VI of England, and prepares the ground for one of his best-known and most controversial plays: the tragedy of King Richard III (Richard III of England). It follows on from Henry VI, part 1 and Henry VI, part 2.
The play is considered the best of the three "Henry VI" plays and evidence of Shakespeare's ability to produce scenes of moving drama. Of particular note are Act I, Scene 4, a dramatic torture followed by an indictment of the vicious Queen, Act II, Scene 5, a gloomy commentary by the title character on the ravages of war and the trials of kingship, and Act V, Scenes 5 and 6, in which two significant characters are killed in an unrealistic albeit dramatically effective manner. Act III, Scene 2, a comic courtship, also hints at the romantic comedies to come.
Like the preceding plays, "King Henry VI, Part III" is biased. Shakespeare writes from an anti-Yorkist standpoint most of the time, with the exception of Act I, Scene 4, which slanders Margaret of Anjou. Richard, Duke of Gloucester in particular is treated unfairly, and aged considerably in order to enable his increased participation.
The play begins with the Earl of Warwick (Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick) presiding over a dispute between Richard, Duke of York and the reigning King Henry, in the course of which Henry agrees to make York his heir. The Queen, Margaret of Anjou, makes it clear that she will not agree to this, and declares war on the Yorkists, with the assistance of the young Lord Clifford and other supporters, including her son, Edward, Prince of Wales.
At the Battle of Wakefield, the Yorkists are defeated, and there follow some of the bloodiest and most heart-rending scenes in all of Shakespeare, as Clifford murders York's young son, the Earl of Rutland. (In reality, Rutland was seventeen and had taken full part in the battle.) Margaret and Clifford then taunt the duke of York before killing him. The Earl of Warwick now takes York's eldest son, Edward (King Edward IV of England) under his wing. At the Battle of Towton, they take revenge on Margaret's army, and Clifford is killed. Following the battle, Edward is proclaimed king, and his two brothers, George and Richard are created Dukes of Clarence and Gloucester respectively. Richard is already showing signs of turning into one of Shakespeare's most famous villains, though in reality he was less than ten years old at the time of the battle.
Warwick turns against Edward when he marries Lady Grey (Elizabeth Woodville) without his knowledge, and he changes sides, joining Queen Margaret and allowing his daughter to marry the Prince of Wales, her son. The Duke of Clarence goes over to Warwick, marrying his other daughter, and Edward IV is taken prisoner. He is rescued by his brother Richard and the faithful Lord Hastings. King Henry VI has been restored to the throne, and the young Earl of Richmond (the future King Henry VII of England) is given a prominent part in the action, as he is shown going into exile in France to escape the Yorkists. Edward defeats and kills Warwick at the Battle of Barnet. In a subsequent battle, he kills the Prince of Wales and captures Queen Margaret. Richard of Gloucester begins his campaign to remove all obstacles in his path to the throne by murdering King Henry VI who is a captive in the Tower of London. Henry prophesies Richard's career of villainy and his future notoriety. However, King Edward's wife has just given birth to a son, the future King Edward V of England, and this is how the play ends.
Cast
- King Henry VI
- Edward, Prince of Wales, his son
- King of France (Louis XI of France)
- Duke of Somerset (Edmund Beaufort, 4th Duke of Somerset)
- Duke of Exeter (Henry Holland, 3rd Duke of Exeter)
- Earl of Oxford (John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford)
- Earl of Northumberland (Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland)
- Earl of Westmorland (Ralph Nevill, 2nd Earl of Westmorland)
- Lord Clifford (John Clifford, 9th Baron Clifford)
- Duke of York (Richard, Duke of York)
- Edward, Earl of March, afterwards King Edward IV, son to the Duke of York
- Edmund, Earl of Rutland, son to the Duke of York (Edmund, Earl of Rutland)
- George, afterwards Duke of Clarence, son to the Duke of York
- Richard, afterwards Duke of Gloucester, son to the Duke of York (later Richard III)
- Duke of Norfolk (John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk)
- Marquess of Montagu (John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu)
- Earl of Warwick (Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick)
- Earl of Pembroke (William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke)
- Lord Hastings (William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings)
- Lord Stafford
- Sir John Mortimer, uncle to the Duke of York
- Sir Hugh Mortimer, uncle to the Duke of York
- Henry, Earl of Richmond, a youth (later Henry VII)
- Lord Rivers, brother to Lady Grey (Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers)
- Sir William Stanley
- Sir John Montgomery
- Sir John Somervile
- Tutor to Rutland
- Mayors of York and Coventry
- Lieutenant of the Tower
- Nobleman
- Two Keepers
- Huntsman
- Son that has killed his father
- Father than his killed his son
- Queen Margaret (Margaret of Anjou)
- Lady Grey, afterwards Queen to Edward IV (Elizabeth Woodville)
- Bona, sister to the French Queen
- Soldiers, attendants, etc.
External links
- Henry VI, part 3 (http://www.shakespeare-literature.com/Henry_VI,_part_3/index.html) - searchable, indexed e-text
- The third Part of Henry the Sixt (http://william-shakespeare.classic-literature.co.uk/the-third-part-of-henry-the-sixt/) - HTML version of this title.
- Henry the Sixth part 3 (http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/2256) - plain vanilla text from Project Gutenberg