The Life and Death of Richard the Third — Act 1, Scene 1: London. A street.

In a soliloquy, Gloucester explains that the wars are over and peace has returned, but he feels excluded from courtly pleasure because of his deformity. He decides to stop trying to play the lover and instead pursue villainy, laying schemes to turn King Edward against his brother Clarence. Clarence then enters under guard on his way to the Tower, apparently because of a prophecy naming a “G” as the murderer of Edward’s heirs. Gloucester pretends sympathy, blames the queen’s family for Clarence’s trouble, and then speaks privately with Hastings, who has just been released from imprisonment and reports that Edward is gravely ill. Gloucester leaves determined to press his plans.