Note: 1 Henry IV
has two main plots that intersect in a dramatic battle at the end of the play.
The first plot concerns King Henry IV, his son, Prince Harry, and their
strained relationship. The second concerns a rebellion that is being plotted
against King Henry by a discontented family of noblemen in the North, the
Percys, who are angry because of King Henry’s refusal to acknowledge his debt
to them. The play’s scenes alternate between these two plot strands until they
come together at the play’s end.
When the play opens, military news
interrupts the aging King Henry’s plans to lead a crusade. The Welsh rebel
Glyndwr has defeated King Henry’s army in the South, and the young Harry Percy
(nicknamed Hotspur), who is supposedly loyal to King Henry, is refusing to send
to the king the soldiers whom he has captured in the North. King Henry summons
Hotspur back to the royal court so that he can explain his actions.
Meanwhile, King Henry’s son, Prince
Harry, sits drinking in a bar with criminals and highwaymen. King Henry is very
disappointed in his son; it is common knowledge that Harry, the heir to the
throne, conducts himself in a manner unbefitting royalty. He spends most of his
time in taverns on the seedy side of London, hanging around with vagrants and other
shady characters. Harry’s closest friend among the crew of rascals is Falstaff,
a sort of substitute father figure. Falstaff is a worldly and fat old man who
steals and lies for a living. Falstaff is also an extraordinarily witty person
who lives with great gusto. Harry claims that his spending time with these men
is actually part of a scheme on his part to impress the public when he
eventually changes his ways and adopts a more noble personality.
Falstaff’s friend Poins arrives at
the inn and announces that he has plotted the robbery of a group of wealthy
travelers. Although Harry initially refuses to participate, Poins explains to
him in private that he is actually playing a practical joke on Falstaff.
Poins’s plan is to hide before the robbery occurs, pretending to ditch
Falstaff. After the robbery, Poins and Harry will rob Falstaff and then make
fun of him when he tells the story of being robbed, which he will almost
certainly fabricate.
Hotspur arrives at King Henry’s
court and details the reasons that his family is frustrated with the king: the
Percys were instrumental in helping Henry overthrow his predecessor, but Henry
has failed to repay the favor. After King Henry leaves, Hotspur’s family
members explain to Hotspur their plan to build an alliance to overthrow the
king.
Harry and Poins, meanwhile,
successfully carry out their plan to dupe Falstaff and have a great deal of fun
at his expense. As they are all drinking back at the tavern, however, a
messenger arrives for Harry. Harry’s father has received news of the civil war
that is brewing and has sent for his son; Harry is to return to the royal court
the next day.
Although the Percys have gathered a
formidable group of allies around them—leaders of large rebel armies from
Scotland and Wales as well as powerful English nobles and clergymen who have
grievances against King Henry—the alliance has begun to falter. Several key
figures announce that they will not join in the effort to overthrow the king,
and the danger that these defectors might alert King Henry of the rebellion
necessitates going to war at once.
Heeding his father’s request, Harry
returns to the palace. King Henry expresses his deep sorrow and anger at his
son’s behavior and implies that Hotspur’s valor might actually give him more
right to the throne than Prince Harry’s royal birth. Harry decides that it is
time to reform, and he vows that he will abandon his wild ways and vanquish
Hotspur in battle in order to reclaim his good name. Drafting his tavern
friends to fight in King Henry’s army, Harry accompanies his father to the
battlefront.
The civil war is decided in a great
battle at Shrewsbury. Harry boldly saves his father’s life in battle and
finally wins back his father’s approval and affection. Harry also challenges
and defeats Hotspur in single combat. King Henry’s forces win, and most of the
leaders of the Percy family are put to death. Falstaff manages to survive the
battle by avoiding any actual fighting.
Powerful rebel forces remain in
Britain, however, so King Henry must send his sons and his forces to the far
reaches of his kingdom to deal with them. When the play ends, the ultimate
outcome of the war has not yet been determined; one battle has been won, but
another remains to be fought (Shakespeare’s sequel to this play, 2 Henry IV,
begins where 1 Henry IV leaves off).
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