The Second part of King Henry the Sixth — Act 2, Scene 1: Saint Alban's.

At Saint Alban’s, King Henry, Queen Margaret, Gloucester, Winchester, and Suffolk watch a falconry display, and their old political grudges quickly surface in sharp, hostile remarks. Henry tries to keep peace, but Gloucester and the Cardinal exchange private threats. A townsman interrupts to announce a miracle: a blind man has supposedly regained his sight at Saint Alban’s shrine. The mayor brings Saunder Simpcox and his wife before the king, and Gloucester questions the man closely, exposing inconsistencies in his story. He orders the beadle to whip Simpcox, who then leaps up and runs away, revealing the fraud. Buckingham then arrives with news that Eleanor has been linked to conjuring, and Gloucester is shaken by the accusation.