The Second part of King Henry the Sixth — Act 1, Scene 2: GLOUCESTER'S house.

In Gloucester’s house, the Duke of Gloucester speaks sadly about troubling dreams, and his duchess, Eleanor, teases him by turning the conversation toward her own ambition. Gloucester’s dream of his staff broken and the heads of Somerset and Suffolk on the pieces worries him, but Eleanor dismisses it and then confesses a dream in which she sat in the king’s chair and was crowned. Gloucester rebukes her for such proud thoughts, then softens when a messenger orders him to ride to St. Alban’s with the king. After he leaves, Eleanor arranges a meeting with Hume about raising spirits, and Hume reveals that Suffolk and the Cardinal have bribed him to feed her ambition.