![]() ![]() As favour turns against him and Bolingbroke returns to reclaim his land, Richard is humbled and grieved to see that the throne given to him by God might be taken from him by men. ![]() But Richard is an arrogant and despotic ruler, prone to tyranny and vanity, who listens only to his flatterers. 'Not all the water in the rough rude sea Can wash the balm off from an anointed king' Banishing his cousin, Bolingbroke, King Richard II prevents a dispute from turning bloody. This Penguin Shakespeare edition is edited by Stanley Wells with an introduction by Paul Edmondson. The first part of the 'Henriad', continued with the two parts of Henry IV and concluded by Henry V, William Shakespeare's Richard II is a history play dramatizing the rebellion of Henry Bolingbroke, that would eventually see him made King of England. ![]()
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