- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chaucer's Works, Volume 4 (of 7) -- The
- Canterbury Tales, by Geoffrey Chaucer
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- Title: Chaucer's Works, Volume 4 (of 7) -- The Canterbury Tales
- Author: Geoffrey Chaucer
- Editor: Walter Skeat
- Release Date: July 22, 2007 [EBook #22120]
- Language: Middle English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAUCER'S WORKS, VOLUME 4 ***
- Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
- The symbol [gh] represents the Middle English letter "yogh". This occurs
- only in the variant reading notes.
- HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
- PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
- LONDON, EDINBURGH, AND NEW YORK
- * * * * *
- THE COMPLETE WORKS
- OF
- GEOFFREY CHAUCER
- _EDITED, FROM NUMEROUS MANUSCRIPTS_
- BY THE
- REV. WALTER W. SKEAT, M.A.
- LITT.D., LL.D., D.C.L., PH.D.
- ELRINGTON AND BOSWORTH PROFESSOR OF ANGLO-SAXON
- AND FELLOW OF CHRIST'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
- * * * *
- THE CANTERBURY TALES: TEXT
- 'Let every felawe telle his tale aboute,
- And lat see now who shal the soper winne.'
- _The Knightes Tale;_ A890
- SECOND EDITION
- Oxford
- AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- M DCCCC
- * * * * *
- [Illustration: _Frontispiece_. CAMBRIDGE MS. (Gg. 4. 27). Prol. 326-342]
- Oxford
- PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- BY HORACE HART, M.A.,
- PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
- [v]
- * * * * *
- CONTENTS
- INTRODUCTION.--§ 1. The Present Text. § 2. The MSS.--I. In the British
- Museum. II. In Oxford. III. In Cambridge. IV. In other Public Libraries. V.
- In private hands. § 3. The Printed Editions. § 4. Plan of the present
- Edition. § 5. Table of symbols denoting MSS. § 6. Table showing various
- ways of numbering the lines. § 7. The four types of MSS.
- THE CANTERBURY TALES
- GROUP A. THE PROLOGUE
- THE KNIGHTES TALE
- THE MILLER'S PROLOGUE
- THE MILLERES TALE
- THE REEVE'S PROLOGUE
- THE REVES TALE
- THE COOK'S PROLOGUE
- THE COKES TALE
- GROUP B. INTRODUCTION TO THE MAN OF LAW'S PROLOGUE
- MAN OF LAW'S PROLOGUE
- THE TALE OF THE MAN OF LAWE
- THE SHIPMAN'S PROLOGUE
- THE SHIPMANNES TALE
- THE PRIORESS'S PROLOGUE
- THE PRIORESSES TALE
- PROLOGUE TO SIR THOPAS
- SIR THOPAS
- PROLOGUE TO MELIBEUS
- THE TALE OF MELIBEUS
- THE MONK'S PROLOGUE
- THE MONKES TALE:--Lucifer; Adam; Sampson; Hercules;
- Nabugodonosor; Balthasar; Cenobia; De Petro Rege Ispannie;
- De Petro Rege De Cipro; De Barnabo de Lumbardia;
- De Hugelino Comite de Pize; Nero; De Oloferno;
- De Rege Anthiocho; De Alexandro; De Iulio Cesare; Cresus
- [vi]
- THE PROLOGUE OF THE NONNE PRESTES TALE
- THE NONNE PRESTES TALE
- EPILOGUE TO THE NONNE PRESTES TALE
- GROUP C. THE PHISICIENS TALE
- WORDS OF THE HOST
- PROLOGUE OF THE PARDONERS TALE
- THE PARDONERS TALE
- GROUP D. THE WIFE OF BATH'S PROLOGUE
- THE TALE OF THE WYF OF BATHE
- THE FRIAR'S PROLOGUE
- THE FRERES TALE
- THE SOMNOUR'S PROLOGUE
- THE SOMNOURS TALE
- GROUP E. THE CLERK'S PROLOGUE
- THE CLERKES TALE
- THE MERCHANT'S PROLOGUE
- THE MARCHANTES TALE
- EPILOGUE TO THE MARCHANTES TALE
- GROUP F. THE SQUIERES TALE
- WORDS OF THE FRANKLIN
- THE FRANKLIN'S PROLOGUE
- THE FRANKELEYNS TALE
- GROUP G. THE SECONDE NONNES TALE
- THE CANON'S YEOMAN'S PROLOGUE
- THE CHANOUNS YEMANNES TALE
- GROUP H. THE MANCIPLE'S PROLOGUE
- THE MAUNCIPLES TALE
- GROUP I. THE PARSON'S PROLOGUE
- THE PERSONES TALE
- APPENDIX TO GROUP A. The Tale of Gamelyn
- [vii]
- * * * * *
- INTRODUCTION
- § 1. THE PRESENT TEXT.
- The text of the 'Canterbury Tales,' as printed in the present volume, is an
- entirely new one, owing nothing to the numerous printed editions which have
- preceded it. The only exceptions to this statement are to be found in the
- case of such portions as have been formerly edited, for the Clarendon
- Press, by Dr. Morris and myself. The reasons for the necessity of a
- formation of an absolutely new text will appear on a perusal of the text
- itself, as compared with any of its predecessors.
- On the other hand, it owes everything to the labours of Dr. Furnivall for
- the Chaucer Society, but for which no satisfactory results could have been
- obtained, except at the cost of more time and toil than I could well devote
- to the subject. In other words, my work is entirely founded upon the
- splendid 'Six-text' Edition published by that Society, supplemented by the
- very valuable reprint of the celebrated 'Harleian' manuscript in the same
- series. These Seven Texts are all exact reproductions of seven important
- MSS., and are, in two respects, more important to the student than the MSS.
- themselves; that is to say, they can be studied simultaneously instead of
- separately, and they can be consulted and re-consulted at any moment, being
- always accessible. The importance of such opportunities is obvious.
- § 2. THE MANUSCRIPTS.
- The following list contains all the MSS. of the existence of which I am
- aware. As to their types, see § 7. [viii]
- I. MSS. IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
- 1. Harl. 7334; denoted here by HL. By Tyrwhitt called 'C.' A MS of the
- B-type (see below). Printed in full for the Chaucer Society, 1885. Collated
- throughout.
- A MS. of great importance, but difficult to understand or describe. For
- the greater clearness, I shall roughly describe the MSS. as being of
- the A-type, the B-type, the C-type, and the D-type (really a second
- C-type). Of the A-type, the best example is the Ellesmere MS.; of the
- B-type, the best example is the Harleian MS. 7334; of the C-type, the
- Corpus and Lansdowne MSS.; the D-type is that exhibited by Caxton and
- Thynne in the early printed editions. They may be called the
- 'Ellesmere,' 'Harleian,' 'Corpus,' and 'Caxton' types respectively.
- These types differ as to the arrangement of the Tales, and even MSS. of
- a similar type differ slightly, in this respect, among themselves. They
- also frequently differ as to certain characteristic readings, although
- many of the variations of reading are peculiar to one or two MSS. only.
- MS. Hl. contains the best copy of the Tale of Gamelyn, for which see p.
- 645; this Tale is not found in MSS. of the A-type. Moreover, Group G
- here precedes Group C and a large part of Group B, whereas in the
- Ellesmere MS. it follows them. In the Monk's Tale, the lines numbered B
- 3565-3652 (containing the Tales called the 'modern instances')
- immediately follow B 3564 (as in this edition), whereas in the
- Ellesmere MS. these lines come at the end of the Tale.
- The 'various readings' of this MS. are often peculiar, and it is
- difficult to appraise them. I take them to be of two kinds: (i)
- readings which are better than those of the Six-text, and should
- certainly be preferred, such as _halfe_ in A 8, _cloysterlees_ in A
- 179, _a_ (not _a ful_) in A 196, and the like; and (2) readings due to
- a terrible blundering on the part of the scribe, such as _fleyng_ for
- _flikeringe_ in A 1962, _greene_ for _kene_ in A 1966, and the like. It
- is, in fact, a most dangerous MS. to trust to, unless constantly
- corrected by others, and is not at all fitted to be taken as the
- _basis_ of a text. For further remarks, see the description of Wright's
- printed edition at p. xvi.
- As regards age, this MS. is one of the oldest; and it is beautifully
- written. Its chief defect is the loss of eight leaves, so that ll.
- 617-1223 in Group F are missing. It also misses several lines in
- various places; as A 2013-8, 2958, 3721-2, 4355, 4358, 4375-6, 4415-22;
- B 417, 1186-90, 1355, 1376-9, 1995, 3213-20, 4136-7, 4479-80; C 299,
- 300, 305-6, 478-9; D 575-584, 605-612, 619-626, 717-720; E 2356-7; F
- 1455-6, 1493-8; G 155, 210-216; besides some lines in Melibee and the
- Persones Tale. Moreover, it has nine spurious lines, D 2004 _b_, _c_,
- 2012 _b_, _c_, 2037 _b_, _c_ 2048 _b_, _c_, F 592. These imperfections
- furnish an additional reason for not founding a text upon this MS.
- 2. Harl. 7335; by Tyrwhitt called 'A.' Of the B-type. Very imperfect,
- especially at the end. A few lines are printed in the Six-text edition to
- fill up gaps in various MSS., viz. E 1646-7, F 1-8, 1423-4, 1433-4, G 158,
- 213-4, 326-337, 432-3, 484. Collated so far.
- [ix] 3. Harl. 7333; by Tyrwhitt called 'E.' Of the D-type. One of Shirley's
- MSS. Some lines are printed in the Six-text edition, viz. B 4233-8, E
- 1213-44, F 1147-8, 1567-8, G 156-9, 213-4, 326-337, 432. It also contains
- some of the Minor Poems; see the description of MS. 'Harl.' in the
- Introduction to those poems in vol. i.[1]
- 4. Harl. 1758, denoted by HARL. at p. 645; by Tyrwhitt called 'F.' In
- Urry's list, i. Of the D-type, but containing Gamelyn. Many lines are
- printed in the Six-text, including the whole of 'Gamelyn.' It is freely
- used to fill up gaps, as B 1-9, 2096-2108, 3049-78, 4112, 4114, 4581-4636,
- &c.
- 5. Harl. 1239; in Tyrwhitt, 'I.' In Urry's list, ii. Imperfect both at
- beginning and end.
- 6. Royal 18 C II; denoted by RL.; in Tyrwhitt, 'B.' In Urry, vii. Of the
- D-type, but containing Gamelyn. Used to fill up gaps in the Six-text; e.g.
- in B 1163-1190 (Shipman's Prologue, called in this MS. the Squire's
- Prologue), 2109-73, 3961-80, E 65, 73, 81, 143, G 1337-40, I 472-511. The
- whole of 'Gamelyn' is also printed from this MS. in the Six-text.
- 7. Royal 17 D xv; in Tyrwhitt, 'D.' In Urry, viii. Of the D-type, but
- containing Gamelyn. Used to fill up gaps in the Six-text; e.g. in B
- 2328-61, 3961-80, 4112, 4114, 4233-8, 4637-51, D 609-612, 619-626, 717-720,
- E 1213-44, F 1423-4, 1433-4, H 47-52; and in the Tale of Gamelyn.
- 8. Sloane 1685; denoted by SL. In Tyrwhitt, 'G.' In Urry, iii. Of the
- D-type, but containing Gamelyn. In two handwritings, one later than the
- other. Imperfect; has no Sir Thopas, Melibee, Manciple, or Parson. Very
- frequently quoted in the Six-text, to fill up rather large gaps in the
- Cambridge MS.; e.g. A 754-964, 3829-90, 4365-4422, &c. Gamelyn is printed
- from this MS. in the Six-text, the gaps in it being filled up from MS. 7
- (above).
- 9. Sloane 1686; in Tyrwhitt, 'H.' In Urry, iv. Of the C-type; containing
- Gamelyn. A late MS., on paper. Imperfect; no Canon's Yeoman or Parson.
- 10. Lansdowne 851; denoted by LN. In Tyrwhitt, 'W,' because at that time in
- the possession of P. C. Webb, Esq. Used by Mr. Wright to fill up the large
- gap in Hl., viz. F 617-1223, and frequently consulted by him and others.
- Printed in full as [x] the sixth MS. of the Six-text. Of the C-type;
- containing Gamelyn. Not a good MS., being certainly the worst of the six;
- but worth printing owing to the frequent use that has been made of it by
- editors.
- 11. Additional 5140; in Tyrwhitt, 'Ask. _2_,' as being one of two MSS. lent
- to him by Dr. Askew. It has in it the arms of H. Deane, Archbp. of
- Canterbury, 1501-3. Of the A-type. Quoted in the Six-text to fill up gaps;
- e.g. B 3961-80, 4233-8, 4637-52, D 2158-2294, E 1213-44, 1646-7, 2419-40, F
- 1-8, 673-708, G 103, I 887-944, 1044-92.
- 12. Additional 25718. A mere fragment. A short passage from it, C 409-427,
- is quoted in the Six-text, to fill up a gap in Ln.
- 13. Egerton 2726; called the 'Haistwell MS.'; in Tyrwhitt denoted by 'HA,'
- and formerly belonging to E. Haistwell, Esq. Of the A-type, but imperfect.
- The Six-text quotes F 679, 680: also F 673-708 in the Preface.
- II. MSS. IN OXFORD.
- 14. Bodley 686; no. 2527 in Bernard's list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B [alpha].' A
- neat MS., with illuminations. Of the A-type; imperfect. The latter part of
- the Cook's Tale is on an inserted leaf (leaf 55), and concludes the Tale in
- a manner that is not Chaucer's. After the Canterbury Tales occur several
- poems by Lydgate.
- 15. Bodley 414; not noticed by Tyrwhitt. Given to the library by B. Heath
- in 1766. A late MS. of the D-type, and imperfect. No Cook, Gamelyn, Squire,
- or Merchant.
- 16. Laud 739: no. 1234 in Bernard's list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B [beta].' A poor
- and late MS. of the D-type, but containing Gamelyn; imperfect at the end;
- ends with Sir Thopas, down to B 2056.
- 17. Laud 600; no. 1476 in Bernard's list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B [gamma].'
- Imperfect; several leaves 'restored.' Apparently, of the B-type; but Group
- D and the Clerk's Tale follow Gamelyn. Some extracts from it are given in
- the Six-text, viz. B 2328-61, D 717-20 (no other Oxford MS. has these
- scarce lines), F 673-708.
- 18. Arch. Selden B 14; no. 3360 in Bernard's list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B
- [delta].' Perhaps the best and earliest of the Bodleian MSS., but not very
- good. Sometimes here quoted as SELD. Apparently of the A-type, having no
- copy of Gamelyn; but it practically [xi] represents a transition-state
- between the A and B types, and has one correction of prime importance, as
- it is the only MS. which links together all the Tales in Group B, making
- the Shipman follow the Man of Law. Frequent extracts from it occur in the
- Six-text; e.g. A 1-72, B 1163-1190, &c. In particular, a large portion of
- the Parson's Tale, I 290-1086, is printed from this MS. in the same.
- 19. Barlow 20; no. 6420 in Bernard's list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B [zeta]' A
- clearly written MS. of the D-type, including Gamelyn; imperfect after Sir
- Thopas, but contains a portion of the Manciple's Tale. It contains the
- somewhat rare lines F 679, 680, which are quoted from it in the Six-text.
- 20. Hatton, Donat. 1 (not the same MS. as Hatton 1); no. 4138 in Bernard's
- list; in Tyrwhitt, 'B [epsilon].' The Tales are in great disorder, the Man
- of Law being thrust in between the Reeve and the Cook, as in no other MS.
- It contains Gamelyn. Lines F 679, 680 are quoted from it in the Six-text;
- and a few lines are again quoted from it at the end of the Parson's Tale.
- 21. Rawlinson Poet. 149. Apparently of the D-type, but it is very
- imperfect, having lost several leaves in various places. A late MS.
- 22. Rawlinson Poet. 141. Not a bad MS., but several Tales are omitted, and
- the Shipman follows the Clerk. Groups C and G do not appear at all. The
- Latin side-notes are numerous.
- 23. Rawlinson Poet. 223; the same as that called Rawl. Misc. 1133 in the
- Six-text 'Trial-table.' No copy of Gamelyn. The Tales are strangely
- misplaced. Slightly imperfect here and there.
- 24. Corpus Christi College (Oxford), no. 198; denoted by CP. The best of
- the Oxford MSS., printed in full as the fourth MS. in the Six-text edition.
- Of the C-type; collated throughout. It contains a copy of Gamelyn, which is
- duly printed. It is rather imperfect from the loss of leaves in various
- places; the gaps being usually supplied from the Selden MS. (no. 18 above).
- 25. Christ Church (Oxford), no. 152. Contains Gamelyn. The Tales are
- extraordinarily arranged, but the MS. is nearly perfect, except at the end.
- A large part of the Parson's Tale, after I 550, being lost from the Hengwrt
- MS., the gap is supplied, in the Six-text, from this MS. and Addit. 5140.
- The Second Nun follows the Shipman. Of the A-type.
- [xii] 26. New College (Oxford), no. 314; called 'NC' in Tyrwhitt. Of the
- D-type; imperfect at the beginning. No copy of Gamelyn.
- 27. Trinity College (Oxford), no. 49; containing 302 leaves; formerly in
- the possession of John Leche, temp. Edw. IV. It contains Gamelyn. The Tales
- are misplaced; the Pardoner and Man of Law being thrust into the middle of
- Group B, after the Prioress.
- III. MSS. AT CAMBRIDGE.
- 28. University Library, Gg. 4. 27, not noticed by Tyrwhitt; here denoted by
- CM. Also denoted, in vol. iii., by C.; and in vol. i., by GG. A highly
- valuable and important MS. of the A-type, printed as the third text in the
- Six-text edition. The best copy in any public library. See the description
- of 'Gg.' in vol. i.; and the full description in the Library Catalogue.
- 29. University Library, Dd. 4. 24; in Tyrwhitt, 'C 1.' Quoted as DD. A good
- MS. of the A-type, much relied upon by Tyrwhitt, who made good use of it.
- Has lost several leaves. The whole of the Clerk's Tale was printed from
- this MS. by Mr. Aldis Wright. The passage in B 4637-52 occurs only in this
- MS. and a few others, viz. Royal 17 D xv, Addit. 5140, and the Chr. Ch. MS.
- It also contains the rare lines D 575-84, 609-12, 619-26, 717-20, all
- printed from this MS. in the Six-text. Lines E 1213-44 are also quoted, to
- fill a gap in Cm.
- 30. University Library, Ii. 3. 26; in Tyrwhitt, 'C 2.' Of the D-type,
- including Gamelyn; but the Franklin's Tale is inserted after the Merchant.
- Contains many corrupt readings.
- 31. University Library, Mm. 2. 5. The arrangement of the Tales is very
- unusual, but resembles that in the Petworth MS., than which it is a little
- more irregular. A complete MS. of the D-type, including Gamelyn.
- 32. Trinity College (Cambridge), R. 3. 15; in Tyrwhitt, 'Tt.' In quarto, on
- paper. Some leaves are missing, so that the Canon's Yeoman, Prioress, and
- Sir Thopas are lost. Of the D-type, without Gamelyn.
- N.B. This MS. also contains the three poems printed as Chaucer's
- (though not his) in the edition of 1687, and numbered 66, 67, and 68,
- in my Account of 'Speght's edition' in vol. i. It also contains the
- best MS. of Pierce the Ploughman's Crede, edited by me from this MS. in
- 1867.
- [xiii] 33. Trinity College (Cambridge), R. 3. 3; in Tyrwhitt, 'T.' A folio
- MS., on vellum; of the D-type, without Gamelyn; but several Tales are
- misplaced.
- IV. IN OTHER PUBLIC LIBRARIES.
- 34. Sion College, London. A mere fragment, containing only the Clerk's Tale
- and Group D.
- 35. Lichfield Cathedral Library; quoted as LICH. or LI. Of the D-type,
- omitting Gamelyn. The Tale of Melibee is missing. As the Hengwrt MS. has no
- Canon's Yeoman's Tale, lines G 554-1481 are printed from this MS. in the
- Six-text.
- 36. Lincoln Cathedral Library; begins with A 381. Resembles no. 42.
- 37. Glasgow; in the Hunterian Museum. Begins with A 353; dated 1476.
- 38. MS. at Paris, mentioned by Dr. Furnivall. Of the B-type.
- 39. MS. at Naples, mentioned by Dr. Furnivall.[2]
- V. MSS. IN PRIVATE HANDS.
- These include some of the very best.
- 40. The 'Ellesmere' MS., in the possession of the Earl of Ellesmere;
- denoted by E. It formerly belonged to the Duke of Bridgewater, and
- afterwards to the Marquis of Stafford. The finest and best of all the MSS.
- now extant. Of the A-type; printed as the first of the MSS. in the
- Six-text, and taken as the basis of the present edition.
- It contains the curious coloured drawings of 23 of the Canterbury
- Pilgrims which have been reproduced for the Chaucer Society. At the end
- of the MS. is a valuable copy of Chaucer's Balade of 'Truth'; see vol.
- i. At the beginning of the MS., in a later hand, are written two poems
- printed in Todd's Illustrations of Gower, &c., pp. 295-309, which Todd
- absurdly attributed to Chaucer! They are of slight value or interest.
- It may suffice to say that, at the beginning of the former poem, we
- find _revyved_ rimed with _meved_, and many of the lines in it are too
- long; e.g.--'I supposed yt to have been some noxiall fantasy.' In the
- latter poem, a compliment to the family of Vere, _by_ rimes with
- _auncestrye_, and _quarter_ with _hereafter_; and the lines are of
- similar over-length, e.g.--'Of whom prophesyes of antiquite makyth
- mencion.'
- 41. The 'Hengwrt' MS., no. 154, belonging to Mr. Wm. W. E. Wynne, of
- Peniarth; denoted by HN. A valuable MS.; [xiv] it is really of the A-type,
- though the Tales are strangely misplaced, and the Canon's Yeoman's Tale is
- missing. The readings frequently agree so closely with those of E. (no. 40)
- that it is, to some extent, almost a duplicate of it. Printed as the second
- MS. in the Six-text. It also contains Chaucer's Boethius (imperfect).
- 42. The 'Petworth' MS., belonging to Lord Leconfield; denoted by PT. A
- folio MS., on vellum, of high value. Formerly in the possession of the Earl
- of Egremont (Todd's Illustrations, p. 118). Of the D-type, including
- Gamelyn; but the Shipman and Prioress wrongly precede the Man of Law.
- Printed as the fifth MS. in the Six-text.
- 43. The 'Holkham' MS., noted by Todd (Illustrations, p. 127) as then
- belonging to Mr. Coke, of Norfolk, and now belonging to the Earl of
- Leicester. The Tales are out of order; perhaps the leaves are misarranged.
- Imperfect in various places; has no Parson's Tale.
- 44. The 'Helmingham' MS., at Helmingham Hall, Suffolk, belonging to Lord
- Tollemache. On paper and vellum; about 1460 A.D. For a specimen, see the
- Shipman's Prologue, printed in the Six-text, in the Preface, p. ix*. Either
- of the C-type or the D-type.
- 45-48. Four MSS. in the collection of the late Sir Thos. Phillipps, at
- Cheltenham, viz. nos. 6570, 8136, 8137, 8299.
- Two of these are mentioned in Todd's Illustrations, p. 127, as being
- 'now [in 1810] in the collection of John P. Kemble, Esq., and in that
- belonging to the late Duke of Roxburghe; the latter is remarkably
- beautiful, and is believed to have been once the property of Sir Henry
- Spelman.' No. 8299 contains the Clerk's Tale only.
- 49-52. Four MSS. belonging to the Earl of Ashburnham; numbered 124-127 in
- the Appendix. Of these, no. 124 wants the end of the Man of Law's Tale and
- the beginning of the Squire's, and therefore belongs to either the C-type
- or D-type. Nos. 125 and 126 are imperfect. No. 127 seems to be complete.
- 53. A MS. belonging to the Duke of Devonshire, at Chatsworth; and formerly
- to Sir N. L'Estrange. (Of the A-type.)
- 54. A MS. belonging to Sir Henry Ingilby, of Ripley Castle, Yorkshire. (Of
- the A-type.)
- 55. A MS. belonging to the Duke of Northumberland, at Alnwick; and formerly
- to Mrs. Thynne. (Of the A-type.)
- [xv] 56. A MS. now (in 1891) in the possession of Lady Cardigan.
- 57-59. Tyrwhitt uses the symbol 'Ask. 1' to denote a MS. lent to him by the
- late Dr. Askew. He also uses the symbols 'Ch.' and 'N.' to denote 'two MSS.
- described in the Preface to Urry's edition, the one as belonging to Chas.
- Cholmondeley, Esq. of Vale Royal, in Cheshire, and the other to Mr. Norton,
- of Southwick, in Hampshire.' Of these, 'Ch.' is now Lord Delamere's MS.,
- described by Dr. Furnivall in Notes and Queries, 4 Ser. ix. 353. The others
- I cannot trace.
- § 3. THE PRINTED EDITIONS.
- In the first five editions, the Canterbury Tales were published separately.
- 1. Caxton; about 1477-8, from a poor MS. Copies are in the British Museum,
- Merton College, and in the Pepysian Library (no. 2053).
- 2. Caxton; about 1483, from a better MS. A perfect copy exists in St.
- John's College Library, Oxford. Caxton bravely issued this new edition
- because he had found that his former one was faulty.
- 3. Pynson; about 1493. Copied from Caxton's 2nd edition.
- 4. Wynkyn de Worde; in 1498. In the British Museum.
- 5. Pynson; in 1526. Copied from Caxton's 2nd edition.
- After this the Canterbury Tales were invariably issued with the rest of
- Chaucer's Works, until after 1721. Some account of these editions is given
- in the Preface to the Minor Poems, in vol. i.; which see. They are:
- Thynne's three editions, in 1532, 1542, and 1550 (the last is undated);
- Stowe's edition, 1561; Speght's editions, in 1598, 1602, and 1687; Urry's
- edition, in 1721.
- Two modernised editions of the Canterbury Tales were published in London in
- 1737 or 1740, and in 1741.
- Next came: 'Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, to which is added, an Essay on his
- Language and Versification; an introductory discourse; notes, and a
- glossary. By Thomas Tyrwhitt, London, 1775-8, 8vo, 5 vols.' A work of high
- literary value, to which I am greatly indebted for many necessary notes.
- Reprinted in 1798 in 4to, 2 vols., by the University of Oxford; and again,
- at London, in 1822, in post 8vo, 5 vols.; (by Pickering) in 1830, 8vo, 5
- vols.; [xvi] and (by Moxon) in 1845, in 1 vol. imp. 8vo. The last of these
- adds poor texts of the rest of Chaucer's Works, from old black-letter
- editions, with which Tyrwhitt had nothing to do. In Tyrwhitt's text, the
- number of grammatical errors is very large, and he frequently introduces
- words into the text without authority. For some account of the later
- editions of Chaucer's Works, see the Introduction to the Legend of Good
- Women, in vol. iii. I may note, by the way, that the editions by Wright,
- Bell, and Morris are all founded on MS. Harl. 7334, a very unsafe MS. in
- some respects; see p. viii (above).
- It is necessary to add here a few words of warning. Wright's edition,
- though it has many merits, turns out, in practice, to be dangerously
- untrustworthy. He frequently inserts words, borrowed from Tyrwhitt's
- edition (which he heartily condemns as being full of errors in
- grammar), without the least indication that they are _not in the MS._
- This becomes the more serious when we find, upon examination, that
- Tyrwhitt had likewise no authority for some of such insertions, but
- simply introduced them, by guess, to fill up a line in a way that
- pleased him. For example, A 628 runs thus, in all the seven MSS.:--
- 'Of his visage children were aferd.' It is quite correct; for 'viság-e'
- is trisyllabic. Tyrwhitt did not know this, and counted the syllables
- as _two_ only, neglecting the final e. The line seemed then too short;
- so he inserted _sore_ before _aferd_, thus ruining the scansion. Wright
- follows suit, and inserts _sore_, though it is not in his MS.; giving
- no notice at all of what he has done. Bell follows suit, and the word
- is even preserved in Morris; but the latter prints the word in italics,
- to shew that it is not in the MS. Nor is it in the Six-text.
- I shall not adduce more instances, but shall content myself with saying
- that, until the publications of the Chaucer Society appeared, no reader
- had the means of knowing what the best MS. texts were really like. All
- who have been accustomed to former (complete) editions have necessarily
- imbibed hundreds of false impressions, and have necessarily accepted
- numberless theories as to the scansion of lines which they will, in
- course of due time, be prepared to abandon. In the course of my work,
- it has been made clear to me that Chaucer's text has been manipulated
- and sophisticated, frequently in most cunning and plausible ways, to a
- far greater extent than I could have believed to be possible. This is
- not a pleasant subject, and I only mention it for the use of scholars.
- Such variations fortunately seldom affect the sense; but they vitiate
- the scansion, the grammar, and the etymology in many cases. Of course
- it will be understood that I am saying no more than I can fully
- substantiate.
- It is absolutely appalling to read such a statement as the following in
- Bell's edition, vol. i. p. 60. 'All deviations, either from Mr.
- Wright's edition, or from the original MS., are pointed out in the
- footnotes for the ultimate satisfaction of the reader.' For the
- instances in which this is really done are very rare indeed, in spite
- of the large number of such deviations.
- Of Tyrwhitt's text, it is sufficient to remark that it was hardly
- possible, at [xvii] that date, for a better text to have been produced.
- The rules of Middle English grammar had not been formulated, so that we
- are not surprised to find that he constantly makes the past tense of a
- weak verb monosyllabic, when it should be dissyllabic, and treats the
- past participle as dissyllabic, when it should be monosyllabic: which
- makes wild work with the scansion. It is also to be regretted that he
- based his text upon the faulty black-letter editions, though he took a
- great deal of pains in collating them with various MSS.
- On the other hand, his literary notes are full of learning and
- research; and the number of admirable illustrations by which he has
- efficiently elucidated the text is very great. His reputation as one of
- the foremost of our literary critics is thoroughly established, and
- needs no comment.
- Mr. Wright's notes are likewise excellent, and resulted from a wide
- reading. I have also found some most useful hints in the notes to
- Bell's edition. Of all such sources of information I have been only too
- glad to avail myself, as is more fully shewn in the succeeding volume.
- § 4. PLAN OF THE PRESENT EDITION.
- The text of the present edition of the Canterbury Tales is founded upon
- that of the Ellesmere MS. (E.) It has been collated throughout with that of
- the other six MSS. published by the Chaucer Society. Of these seven MSS.,
- the Harleian MS. 7334 (Hl.) was printed separately. The other six were
- printed in the valuable 'Six-text' edition, to which I constantly have
- occasion to refer, in parallel columns. The six MSS. are: E. (Ellesmere),
- Hn. (Hengwrt), Cm. (Cambridge, Gg. 4. 27), Cp. (Corpus Coll., Oxford), Pt.
- (Petworth), and Ln. (Lansdowne). MSS. E. Hn. Cm. represent the earliest
- type (A) of the text; Hl., a transitional type (B); Cp. and Ln., a still
- later type (C); and Pt., the latest of all (D), but hardly differing from
- C.
- In using these terms, 'earliest,' &c., I do not refer to the age of the
- MSS., but to the type of text which they exhibit.
- In the list of MSS. given above, Hl. is no. 1; E., Hn., Cm., are nos. 40,
- 41, and 28; and Cp., Pt., Ln., are nos. 24, 42, and 10 respectively.
- Of all the MSS., E. is the best in nearly every respect. It not only gives
- good lines and good sense, but is also (usually) grammatically accurate and
- thoroughly well spelt. The publication of it has been a very great boon to
- all Chaucer students, for which Dr. Furnivall will be ever gratefully
- remembered. We must not omit, at the same time, to recognise the liberality
- and generosity of the owner of the MS., who so freely permitted such full
- use of it to be made; the same remark applies, equally, to the [xviii]
- owners of the Hengwrt and the Petworth MSS. The names of the Earl of
- Ellesmere, Mr. Wm. W. E. Wynne of Peniarth, and Lord Leconfield have
- deservedly become as 'familiar as household words' to many a student of
- Chaucer.
- This splendid MS. has also the great merit of being complete, requiring no
- supplement from any other source, except in the few cases where a line or
- two has been missed. For example, it does not contain A 252 _b-c_ (found in
- Hn. only); nor A 2681-2 (also not in Hn. or Cm.); nor B 1163-1190 (also not
- in Hn. or Cm.); nor B 1995 (very rare indeed).
- It is slightly imperfect in B 2510, 2514, 2525, 2526, 2623-4, 2746, 2967.
- It drops B 3147-8, C 103-4, C 297-8 (not in Hn. Cm. Pt.), E 1358-61, G
- 564-5; and has a few defects in the Parson's Tale in I 190, 273, &c. In the
- Tale of Melibeus, the French original shews that _all_ the MSS. have lost B
- 2252-3, 2623-4, which have to be supplied by translation.
- None of the seven MSS. have B 4637-4652; these lines are genuine, but were
- probably meant to be cancelled. They only occur, to my knowledge, in four
- MSS., nos. 7, 11, 25, and 29; though found also in the old black-letter
- editions.
- On the other hand, E. preserves lines rarely found elsewhere. Such are A
- 3155-6, 3721-2, F 1455-6, 1493-9; twelve genuine lines, none of which are
- in Tyrwhitt, and only the first two are in Wright. Observe also the stanza
- in the footnote to p. 424; with which compare B 3083, on p. 241.
- The text of the Ellesmere MS. has only been corrected in cases where
- careful collation suggests a desirable improvement. Every instance of this
- character is invariably recorded in the footnotes. Thus, in A 8, the
- grammar and scansion require _half-e_, not _half_; though, curiously
- enough, this correct form appears in Hl. only, among all the seven MSS. In
- very difficult cases, other MSS. (besides the seven) have been collated,
- but I have seldom gained much by it. The chief additional MSS. thus used
- are Dd.= Cambridge, Dd. 4. 24 (no. 29 above); Slo. or Sl. = Sloane 1685
- (no. 8); Roy. or Rl. = Royal 18 C 2 (no. 6); Harl. = Harleian 1758 (see p.
- 645); Li. or Lich. = Lichfield MS. (no. 35), for the Canon's Yeoman's Tale;
- and others that are sufficiently indicated.
- I have paid especial attention to the suffixes required by Middle-English
- grammar, to the scansion, and to the pronunciation; and I suppose that this
- is the first complete edition in which the [xix] spelling has been tested
- by phonetic considerations. With a view to making the spelling a little
- clearer and more consistent, I have ventured to adopt certain methods which
- I here explain.
- In certain words of variable spelling in E., such as _whan_ or _whanne,
- than_ or _thanne_, I have adopted that form which the scansion requires;
- but the MS. is usually right.
- E. usually has _hise_ for _his_ with a plural sb., as in l. 1; I use _his_
- always, except in prose. E. has _hir, here_, for her, their; I use _hir_
- only, except at the end of a line.
- E. uses the endings _-ight_ or _-yght_, _-inde_ or _-ynde_; I use _-ight_
- _-inde_ only; and, in general, I use _i_ to represent short _i_, and _y_ to
- represent long _i_, as in _king, wyf_. Such is the usual habit of the
- scribe, but he often changes _i_ into _y_ before _m_ and _n_, to make his
- writing clearer; such a precaution is needless in modern printing. Thus, in
- l. 42, I replace the scribe's _bigynne_ by _biginne_; and in l. 78, I
- replace his _pilgrymage_ by _pilgrimage_. This makes the text easier to
- read.
- For a like reason, where equivalent spellings occur, I select the simpler;
- writing _couthe_ (as in Pt.) for _kowthe_, _sote_ for _soote_, _sege_ for
- _seege_, and so on. In words such as _our_ or _oure_, _your_ or _youre_,
- _hir_ or _hire_, _neuer_ or _neuere_, I usually give the simpler forms,
- without the final _-e_, when the _-e_ is obviously silent.
- For consonantal _u_, as in _neuer_, I write _v_, as in _never_. This is
- usual in all editions. But I could not bring myself to use _j_ for _i_
- consonant; the anachronism is too great. _Never_ for _neuer_ is common in
- the fifteenth century, but _j_ does not occur even in the first folio of
- Shakespeare. I therefore usually keep the capital _i_ of the MSS. and of
- the Elizabethan printers, as in _Ioye_ (=_joye_) where initial, and the
- small _i_, as in _enioinen_=_enjoinen_) elsewhere. Those who dislike such
- conservatism may be comforted by the reflection that the sound rarely
- occurs.
- The word _eye_ has to be altered to _yë_ at the end of a line, to preserve
- the rimes. The scribes usually write _eye_ in the middle of a line, but
- when they come to it at the end of one, they are fairly puzzled. In l. 10,
- the scribe of Hn. writes _Iye_, and that of Ln. writes _yhe_; and the
- variations on this theme are most curious. The spelling _ye_ (=_yë_) is,
- however, common; as in A 1096 (Cm., Pt.). I print it 'yë' to distinguish it
- from _ye_, the pl. pronoun.
- These minute variations are, I trust, legitimate, and I have not recorded
- them. They cause trouble to the editor, but afford ease [xx] to the reader,
- which seems a sufficient justification for adopting them. But the
- scrupulous critic need not fear that the MS. has been departed from in any
- case, where it could make any phonetic difference, without due notice.
- Thus, in l. 9, where I have changed _foweles_ into _fowles_ as being a more
- usual form, the fact that _foweles_ is the Ellesmere spelling is duly
- recorded in the footnotes. And so in other cases.
- The footnotes do not record various readings where E. is correct as it
- stands; they have purposely been made as concise as possible. It would have
- been easy to multiply them fourfold without giving much information of
- value; this is not unfrequently done, but the gain is slight. With so good
- a MS. as the basis of the text, it did not seem desirable.
- The following methods for shortening the footnotes have been adopted.
- 1. Sometimes only the readings of _some_ of the MSS. are given. Thus at
- l. 9 (p. 1), I omit the readings of Cp. and of Cm. As a fact, neither
- of these MSS. contain the line; but it was not worth while to take up
- space by saying so. At l. 10 (p. 1), I again omit the readings of Cp.
- and of Cm., for the same reason; also of Ln., which is a poor MS.,
- though here it agrees with Hl. (having _yhe_); also of Pt., which has
- _eyghe_, a spelling not here to be thought of. At l. 12, I just note
- that E. has _pilgrimage_ (by mistake); of course this means that it
- should have had _pilgrimages_ in the plural, as in other MSS., and as
- required by the rime.
- 2. At l. 23 (p. 2), the remark '_rest_ was' implies that all the rest
- of the seven MSS. specially collated have 'was.' The word '_rest_' is a
- convenient abbreviation.
- 3. When, as at l. 53, I give _nacions_ as a rejected reading of E. in
- the footnote, it will be understood that _naciouns_ is a better
- spelling, justified by other MSS., and by other lines in E. itself.
- E.g., _naciouns_ occurs in Hl. and Pt., and Cm. has _naciounnys_.
- 4. I often use '_om._' for '_omit_,' or '_omits_' as in the footnote to
- l. 188 (p. 6).
- 5. At l. 335 (p. 11), I give the footnote:--'ever] Hl. al.' This means
- that MS. Hl. has _al_ instead of the word _ever_ of the other MSS. It
- seemed worth noting; but _ever_ is probably right.
- 6. At l. 520 (p. 16), the note is:--'_All but_ Hl. this was.' That is,
- Hl. has _was_, as in the text; the rest have _this was_, where the
- addition of _this_ sadly clogs the line.
- With these hints, the footnotes present no difficulty.
- As a rule, I have refrained from all emendation; but, in B 1189, I have
- ventured to suggest _physices_[3], for reasons explained in the Notes.
- Those who prefer the reading _Phislyas_ can adopt it.
- For further details regarding particular passages, I beg leave to refer the
- reader to the Notes in vol. v.
- [xxi]
- § 5. TABLE OF SYMBOLS DENOTING MSS.
- Cm.--Cambridge Univ. Lib. Gg. 4. 27 (Ellesmere type). No. 28 in list.
- Cp.--Carpus Chr. Coll., Oxford, no. 198. No. 24.
- Dd.--Cambridge Univ. Lib. Dd. 4. 24 (Ellesmere type). No. 29.
- E.--Ellesmere MS. (basis of the text). No. 40.
- Harl.--Harl. 1758; Brit. Mus.; see p. 645. No. 4.
- Hl.--Harl. 7334; British Museum. No. 1.
- Hn.--Hengwrt MS. no. 154. No. 41.
- Li. _or_ Lich.--Lichfield MS.; see pp. 533-553. No. 35.
- Ln.--Lansdowne 851; Brit. Mus. (Corpus type). No. 10.
- Pt.--Petworth MS. No. 42.
- Rl. _or_ Roy.--Royal 18 C. II; Brit. Mus.; see p. 645. No. 6.
- Seld.--Arch. Selden, B. 14; Bodleian Library. No. 18.
- Sl. _or_ Slo.--Sloane 1685: Brit. Mus.; see p. 645. No. 8.
- § 6. TABLE SHEWING THE VARIOUS WAYS OF NUMBERING THE LINES.
- SIX-TEXT (as here) TYRWHITT. WRIGHT.
- A--1-4422 1-4420[4] 1-4420[4]
- B--1-1162 4421-5582 4421-5582
- B--1163-2156 12903-13894[5] 14384-15374[6]
- B--2157-3078[7] Prose; not counted[8]. Prose; not counted.
- B--3079-3564 13895-14380 15375-15860
- B--3565-3652 14685-14772 15861-15948
- [xxii]
- B--3653-3956 14381-14684 15949-16262
- B--3957-4652 14773-15468 16253-16932[9]
- _Spurious_; see p. 11929-11934 13410-13415
- 289, note.
- C--1-968 11935-12902 13416-14383
- D (2294 lines); E 5583-11928[10] 5583-11928
- (2440); F(1624)
- G--1-1481 15469-16949 11929-13409
- H--(362); I 1-74 16950-17385 16933-17368
- Hence, to obtain the order of the lines in Tyrwhitt, see A-B 1162; D, E, F;
- p. 289, footnote; C; B 1163-2156, 3079-3564, 3653-3956, 3565-3652,
- 3957-4652; G, H, I.
- Or (by pages), see pp. 1-164, 320-508, 289 (footnote), 290-319, 165-256
- (which includes Melibeus), 259-268, 256-258, 269-289, 509-end.
- To facilitate reference, the numbering of the lines in Tyrwhitt's text is
- marked at the top of every page, preceded by the letter 'T.'; lines which
- Tyrwhitt omits are marked '[T. _om._', as on p. 90; and his paragraphs (all
- numbered in this edition) are carefully preserved in Melibeus and the
- Parson's Tale, which are in prose. In the Prologue, after l. 250, his
- numbering is given within marks of parenthesis.
- The lines in every piece are also numbered _separately_, within marks of
- parenthesis, as (10), (20), on p. 26. This numbering (borrowed from Dr.
- Murray) agrees with the references given in the New English Dictionary. It
- also gives, in most cases, either exactly or approximately, the references
- to Dr. Morris's edition, who adopts a similar method, with a few variations
- of detail. The lines in Bell's edition are not numbered at all.
- To obtain the order in Wright's edition, see pp. 1-164, 320-554, 289
- (footnote), 290-319, 165-289, 555-end. The variations are fewer.
- Some may find it more convenient to observe the names of the Tales.
- [xxiii] Tyrwhitt's order of the Tales is as follows[11]:--Prologue, Knight,
- Miller, Reeve, Cook--Man of Lawe--Wife, Friar, Somnour--Clerk,
- Merchant--Squire, Franklin--Doctor (Physician), Pardoner--Shipman,
- Prioress, Sir Thopas, Melibeus, Monk[12], Nun's Priest--Second Nun, Canon's
- Yeoman--Manciple--Parson.
- §7. THE FOUR LEADING TYPES OF THE MSS.
- The four leading types of MSS. usually exhibit a variation in the order of
- the Tales, as well as many minor differences. I only note here the former
- (omitting Gamelyn, which is absent from MSS. of the A-type, and from some
- of the D-type).
- A.--1. Prologue, Knight, Miller, Reeve, Cook.
- 2. Man of Lawe.
- 3. Wife of Bath, Friar, Sompnour.
- 4. Clerk, Merchant.
- 5. Squire, Franklin.
- 6. Doctor, Pardoner.
- 7. Shipman, Prioress, Sir Thopas, Melibeus, Monk, Nun's Priest.
- 8. Second Nun, Canon's Yeoman.
- 9. Manciple, (_slightly linked to_) Parson.
- B.--Places 8 before 6. Order: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 6, 7, 9.
- C.--Not only places 8 before 6 (as B), but splits 5 into 5 a
- (Squire) and 5 b (Franklin), and places 5 a before 3. Order: 1,
- 2, 5 a, 3, 4, 5 b, 8, 6, 7, 9.
- D.--As C, but further splits 4 into 4 a (Clerk), and 4 b
- (Merchant), and places 4 b after 5 a. Order: 1, 2, 5 a, 4 b, 3, 4 a,
- 5 b, 8, 6, 7, 9. (D. is really a mere variety of C., with an external
- difference.)
- Observe the position of the Franklin. Thus: A. Squire, Franklin, Doctor. B.
- Squire, Franklin, Second Nun. C. Merchant, Franklin, Second Nun. D. Clerk,
- Franklin, Second Nun.
- For further remarks on this subject, see vol. v.
- [xxiv] ERRATA
- N.B. The following are all the Errata that I have observed. Those
- marked with an asterisk should be noticed. The rest are unimportant.
- P. 14. A 467. Perhaps the full stop at the end of the line should be a
- colon.
- P. 15. Footnote to A 503. For 'Hl. _alone_' _read_ 'Tyrwhitt.'
- P. 85. A 3016. _For_ eye _read_ yë
- *P. 110. A 3822. _For_ celle _read_ selle
- *P. 131. B 59, 60. _For_ eek _and_ seek _read_ eke _and_ seke
- P. 133. B 115. Insert marks of quotation at the beginning and end of
- the line.
- P. 133. B 120, 121. Insert marks of quotation at the beginning of l.
- 120 and at the end of l. 121.
- P. 134. In the headline; _for_ T. 4454 _read_ T. 4554.
- P. 146. B 540, 541, 547. _For_ cristen _read_ Cristen
- P. 146. B 544 _For_ cristianitee _read_ Cristianitee. So also at p.
- 525; G 535.
- P. 194. B 2043. _Dele_; _after_ spicerye
- P. 202. B 2222. _For_ yevynge _read_ yevinge
- P. 205. B 2253. _For_ owe _read_ ow
- P. 207. B 2303. _For_ se _read_ see
- P. 219, footnotes. _For_ 2251 and 2252 _read_ 2551 and 2552
- *P. 222. B 2624. _For_ Iurisdicctioun _read_ Iurisdiccioun
- P. 232, ll. 9, 10. _Dele the quotation-mark after_ certeyne, _and
- insert it after_ another.
- *P. 245. B 3230. _For_ my _read_ ny
- *P. 253. B 3490. _For_ warre _read_ werre
- P. 271. B 4011. _For_ stope _a better reading is_ stape
- P. 285. B 4510. _For_ charitee _perhaps read_ Charitee
- P. 285. B 4541. _For_ chide _read_ chyde
- P. 299. C 291. _Either read_ advocas, _or note that the_ t _in_
- advocats _is silent_.
- *P. 309. C 601. _For_ opinoun _read_ opinioun
- P. 318. C 955. _For_ Thay _read_ They
- P. 338. In the headline; _for_ 6225 _read_ 6235.
- P. 339. In the headline; for 6226 _read_ 6236.
- P. 344. D 846. _For_ But if _read_ But-if
- P. 345. D 859. _For_ All _read_ Al
- P. 354. Footnotes; last line. _For_ 1205 _read_ 1204
- P. 355. D 1219, 1227. _For_ Chese _and_ chese _read_ Chees _and_ chees.
- P. 363. D 1436. _For_ But if _read_ But-if
- P. 387. D 2242. _Perhaps insert a comma after_ himself
- P. 419. E 994. _For_ gouernance _read_ governance
- P. 428. E 1304, 1306. Insert quotation-mark at the end of l. 1304,
- instead of the end of l. 1306.
- P. 438. E 1635. _For_ Saue _read_ Save
- P. 444. E 1866. _Insert_ Auctor _opposite this line_.
- P. 449. E 2058. _For_ scorpion _read_ scorpioun; _as the last syllable
- is accented_.
- P. 459. E 2418. _For_ bless _read_ blesse
- P. 461. F 20. After all, the right reading probably is that given by E.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl., but with the form _pietous_ for _pitous_ as in
- Troilus, iii. 1444, and v. 451. Read--And piëtous and Iust, alwey
- y-liche.
- P. 468. F 266. _For_ Cambynskan _read_ Cambinskan. So also at p. 480,
- first line.
- P. 474. F 462. _For_ sle _read_ slee
- P. 505, footnotes. _For_ 1527 _read_ 1526
- P. 527. G 558, footnote. _The real reading of_ E _is_--
- And vndernethe he wered a surplys
- P. 543. G 1107. _For_ shall _read_ shal
- *P. 545. G 1171. _For_ torned _read_ terved. [_The reading in_ E is
- _really_ terued=terved, i.e. stripped, flayed. The _reading_ torned _is
- a poor substitution_.]
- *P. 548. G 1274. _For_ torne, _read_ terve,
- *P. 560. H 144. _For_ hept _read_ kept
- P. 626. Footnotes; last line. _For_ E. Seld. Ln. beauteis; _read_ E.
- Seld. Ln. beautees;
- P. 634. I 955. _For_ Daniel, _read_ David. [N.B. MSS. E. Cm. Danyel;
- _the rest_, Dauid. Probably Chaucer wrote 'Daniel' at first, and
- afterwards corrected it (by the original) to 'David.' Nevertheless,
- 'Daniel' is a good reading.]
- * * * * *
- [xxv]
- ADDITIONS
- TO
- 'THE MINOR POEMS' IN VOL. I.
- * * * * *
- [Further researches have brought to light some more of Chaucer's Minor
- Poems. I first met with the excellent Balade on 'Womanly Noblesse' in MS.
- Phillipps 9030 (now MS. Addit. 34360) on June 1, 1894; and on the following
- day I noticed in MS. Harl. 7578 (partly described in vol. i. p. 58) two
- Complaints that may perhaps be attributed to our author. As, from the
- nature of the case, they could not be included in Vol. i, they are inserted
- here.]
- * * * * *
- XXIV. WOMANLY NOBLESSE.
- * * * * *
- BALADE THAT CHAUCIER MADE.
- So hath my herte caught in rémembraunce
- Your beautè hool, and stedfast governaunce,
- Your vertues allè, and your hy noblesse,
- That you to serve is set al my plesaunce;
- So wel me lykth your womanly contenaunce, 5
- [xxvi]
- Your fresshe fetures and your comlinesse,
- That, whyl I live, my herte to his maistresse,
- You hath ful chose, in trew perséveraunce,
- Never to chaunge, for no maner distresse.
- From MS. Addit. 34360, fol. 21, back (with ascription by Shirley);
- hitherto unprinted. Rejected readings of the MS. are here given.
- 1. hert. 2. Yowre (_throughout_); hoole; stidefast. 3. al; hie.
- 4. yow; sette. 5. likith; _for_ womanly _perhaps read_ wyfly. 6:
- comlynesse. 7: whiles; myn hert; maystresse. 8: triev.
- And sith I [you] shal do this observaunce 10
- Al my lyf, withouten displesaunce,
- You for to serve with al my besinesse,
- [Taketh me, lady, in your obeisaunce,]
- And have me somwhat in your souvenaunce.
- My woful herte suffreth greet duresse; 15
- And [loke] how humbl[el]y, with al simplesse,
- My wil I cónforme to your ordenaunce,
- As you best list, my peynes to redresse.
- 10: _I insert_ you. 11: (_Accent on_ Al); live. 12: besynesse.
- 13. _Dr. Furnivall supplies this lost line_; cf. Complaint to Pity, l.
- 84. 15. hert suffrith grete. 16: _I supply_ loke; humbly. 17:
- ordynaunce. 18: for to (_I omit_ for).
- Considring eek how I hange in balaunce
- In your servysè; swich, lo! is my chaunce, 20
- Abyding grace, whan that your gentilnesse
- Of my gret wo list doon allegeaunce,
- And with your pitè me som wyse avaunce,
- In ful rebating of my hevinesse;
- And thinkth, by reson, wommanly noblesse 25
- Shuld nat desyre for to doon outrance
- Ther-as she findeth noon unbuxumnesse.
- 19: eke. 20: service suche loo. 21: (_Perhaps omit_ that). 22:
- grete woo; do. 23: wise. 24: rebatyng; myn hevynesse. 25: And
- thynkith be raison that (_too long_). 26: desire; for til do the (_I
- omit_ the). 27: fyndith non vn-.
- _Lenvoye._
- Auctour of norture, lady of plesaunce,
- Soveraine of beautè, flour of wommanhede,
- Take ye non hede unto myn ignoraunce, 30
- But this receyveth of your goodlihede,
- Thinking that I have caught in remembraunce
- Your beautè hool, your stedfast governaunce.
- 29. Soueraigne; floure. 31. receyvith; goodelyhede. 32. Thynkyng.
- 33. hole; stidefast.
- [xxvii]
- * * * * *
- XXV. COMPLAINT TO MY MORTAL FOE.
- * * * * *
- Al hoolly youres, withouten otheres part!
- Wherefore? y-wis, that I ne can ne may
- My service chaungen; thus of al suche art
- The lerninge I desyre for ever and ay.
- And evermore, whyl that I live may, 5
- In trouthe I wol your servant stille abyde,
- Although my wo encresè day by day,
- Til that to me be come the dethes tyde.
- From MS. Harl. 7578, fol. 15. At the bottom of fol. 14, back, is the
- last line of Chaucer's Complaint to Pity, beneath which is written
- 'Balade.' But the present poem is really a Complaint, like the
- preceding one. Rejected readings of the MS. are here given. There is no
- title in the MS. except 'Balade.'
- 1. holly; others parte. 2. I wisse. 3. By (_surely an error for_
- My); arte. 4. lernynge; desire; euer (_and_ u _for_ v _often_). 5.
- while; leue. 6. trought (_sic_); youre; abide. 7. be (_for_ by).
- Seint Valentyne! to you I rénovele
- My woful lyf, as I can, compleyninge; 10
- But, as me thinketh, to you a quarele
- Right greet I have, whan I, rememberinge
- Bitwene, how kinde, ayeins the yeres springe,
- Upon your day, doth ech foul chese his make;
- And you list not in swich comfórt me bringe, 15
- That to her grace my lady shulde me take.
- 9. valentine; Renouele. 10. compleynynge. 12. grete; whanne;
- remembringe. 13. Bytwene howe kende. 14. Vppon youre; doith eche
- foule. 15. lyste; suche comforte.
- [xxviii]
- Wherfor unto you, Cupide, I beseche,
- Furth with Venús, noble lusty goddesse,
- Sith ye may best my sorowe lesse and eche;
- And I, your man, oppressed with distresse, 20
- Can not crye 'help!' but to your gentilnesse:
- So voucheth sauf, sith I, your man, wol dye,
- My ladies herte in pitè folde and presse,
- That of my peyne I finde remedye.
- 21. cry helpe; vnto (_for_ to); gentelnesse. 22. safe. 24. peine;
- fynde I may (_for_ I finde); remydie.
- To your conning, my hertes right princesse, 25
- My mortal fo, whiche I best love and serve,
- I recommaunde my boistous lewednesse.
- And, for I can not altherbest deserve
- Your grace, I preye, as he that wol nat swerve,
- That I may fare the better for my trouthe; 30
- Sith I am youres, til deth my herte kerve,
- On me, your man, now mercy have and routhe.
- 25. konnyngge; princes. 26. foo. 27. leudenesse. 29. prey;
- swerue. 30. trouth. 31. herte wol kerue (_I omit_ wol). 32. haue;
- routh.
- [xxix]
- * * * * *
- XXVI. COMPLAINT TO MY LODE-STERRE.
- * * * * *
- Of gretter cause may no wight him compleyne
- Than I; for love hath set me in swich caas
- That lasse Ioye and more encrees of peyne
- Ne hath no man; wherfore I crye 'allas!'
- A thousand tyme, whan I have tyme and space. 5
- For she, that is my verray sorowes grounde,
- Wol with her grace no wyse my sorowes sounde.
- From MS. Harl. 7578, fol. 15, back. No title but 'Balade'; but it is
- really a Complaint. Rejected readings of the MS. are here given.
- 2. y (_for_ I); hath me sette in swiche. 3. encrese. 5. whenne;
- haue. 6. sheo; werry (_for_ verray). 7. Wolle; wise; (sounde
- _means_ heal).
- And that, shulde be my sorowes hertes leche,
- Is me ageins, and maketh me swich werre,
- That shortly, [in] al maner thought and speche, 10
- Whether it be that I be nigh or ferre,
- I misse the grace of you, my lode-sterre,
- Which causeth me on you thus for to crye;
- And al is it for lakke of remedye.
- 9. Ys; swide (_miswritten for_ swiche). 10. _I supply_ in; alle
- manere. 11. Whethre. 12. mys; loode-. 13. Whiche. 14. alle;
- remydie.
- My soverain Ioye thus is my mortal fo; 15
- She that shulde causen al my lustinesse
- List in no wyse of my sorowes saye 'ho!'
- [xxx]
- But let me thus darraine, in hevinesse,
- With woful thoughtes and my grete distresse,
- The which she might right wele, [at] every tyde, 20
- If that her liste, out of my herte gyde.
- 15. souu_er_aine; foo. 16. alle; lustynesse. 17. Liste; wise; say
- hoo. 18. lete; heuinesse. 19. wooful; grette. 20. sheo; _I
- supply_ at; eu_ery_. 21. oute; guyde.
- But it is so, that her list, in no wyse,
- Have pitè on my woful besinesse;
- And I ne can do no maner servyse
- That may me torne out of my hevinesse; 25
- So woldè god, that she now wolde impresse
- Right in her herte my trouthe and eek good wille;
- And let me not, for lakke of mercy, spille.
- 22. liste; wise. 23. Haue pitee. 24. kanne; manere seruice. 25.
- be (_for_ me); oute; heuynesse. 26. sheo nowe. 27. herre (_for_
- her); trough (_sic_); eke. 28. lette; lake.
- Now wele I woot why thus I smerte sore;
- For couthe I wele, as othere folkes, feyne, 30
- Than neded me to live in peyne no more,
- But, whan I were from you, unteye my reyne,
- And, for the tyme, drawe in another cheyne.
- But woldè god that alle swich were y-knowe,
- And duely punisshed of hye and lowe. 35
- 29. woote; why that I thus smerte so sore (_two syllables too much_).
- 30. couth; sayne (_for_ feyne). 31. Thanne nedes; lyue. 32. whenne;
- vnteye. 33. into (_for_ in); a-nothre. 35. punisshede both of high
- (_I omit_ both).
- Swich lyf defye I, bothe in thoughte and worde,
- For yet me were wel lever for to sterve
- Than in my herte for to make an horde
- Of any falshood; for, til deth to-kerve
- My herte and body, shal I never swerve 40
- From you, that best may be my fynal cure,
- But, at your liste, abyde myn aventure;
- 36. Swiche; defie. 37. yette; sterue. 38. Thanne; hoorde. 39.
- falshode; til deth the kerue (_but see note on_ p. xxxii). 40.
- neu_er_e swerue. 41. youre (_for_ my). 42. atte youre; abide.
- And preye to you, noble seint Valentyne,
- My ladies herte that ye wolde enbrace,
- [xxxi]
- And make her pitè to me more enclyne 45
- That I may stonden in her noble grace
- In hasty tyme, whyl I have lyves space:
- For yit wiste I never noon, of my lyve,
- So litel hony in so fayre hyve.
- 43. prey; sainte valentine. 45. pitee. 46. here. 47. whiles; haue
- lyues. 48. yitte; neuere none; lyfe. 49. hiue.
- * * * * *
- NOTES TO THE PRECEDING POEMS.
- * * * * *
- XXIV.--I take the title from l. 25; cf. Troil. i. 287.
- The metre exhibits the nine-line stanza, as in Anelida, 211-9; but the
- same rimes recur in all three stanzas. The six-line Envoy, with the
- rime-formula _a b a b a a_, is unique in Chaucer. There are nineteen
- lines ending in _-aunce_, twelve in _-esse_, and two in _-ede_.
- 1. Note how ll. 1 and 2 are re-echoed in ll. 32, 33. For a similar
- effect, see Anelida, 211, 350.
- 8. _ful chose_, fully chosen; parallel to _ful drive_ in C. T., F 1230.
- 14. _souvenance_, remembrance; not found elswhere in Chaucer.
- 16. _humblely_ is trisyllabic; see Leg. 156, Troil. ii. 1719, v. 1354.
- 20. _lo_ emphasises _swich_; cf. _lo, this_, T. v. 54; _lo, which_, T.
- iv. 1231.
- 22. _allegeaunce_, _alleviation_; the verb _allegge_ is in the
- Glossary.
- 26. _outrance_, extreme violence, great hurt; see Godefroy.
- 27. _unbuxumnesse_, unsubmissiveness; cf. _buxumnesse_, Truth, 15.
- XXV.--I take the title from l. 26; cf. Compl. to his Lady, 41, 64.
- 1. Cf. Amorous Complaint, 87; Troil. v. 1318, i. 960.
- 3. 'Love hath me taught no more of his art,' &c.; Compl. to his Lady,
- 42-3.
- 9. Cf. Compl. of Mars, 13, 14; p. xxx above, l. 43; Parl. Foules,
- 386-9; Amorous Complaint, 85-6.
- 19. _eche_, augment; 'hir sorwes _eche_,' T. i. 705.
- 27. 'And to your trouthe ay I me recomaunde;' T. v. 1414. 'I am a
- _boistous_ man;' C. T., H 211.
- XXVI.--I take the title from l. 12; see T. v. 232, 638, 1392.
- 7. _sounde_, heal, cure; as in Anelida, 242.
- 8. Perhaps read _hertes sorwes leche_; see T. ii. 1066.
- 10. Cf. 'as _in_ his speche;' T. ii. 1069.
- 26. _impresse_; cf. T. ii. 1371.
- [xxxii] 28. _spille_; cf. Compl. to his Lady, 121.
- 32. _reyne_, bridle. For this image, cf. Anelida, 184.
- 39. MS. _deth the kerue_. As _e_ and _o_ are constantly confused, the
- prefix _to_ (written apart) may have looked like _te_, and would easily
- be altered to _the_. Cf. _forkerveth_ in the Manc. Tale, H 340.
- 47. Here _spac-e_ rimes with _embrac-e_, but in l. 5 it rimes with
- _allas_. This variation is no worse than the riming of _embrace_ with
- _compas_ in Proverbs, 8 (vol. i. p. 407). Cf. _plac-e_ in C.T., B 1910,
- with its variant _plas_, B 1971.
- N.B. The Complaints numbered XXV and XXVI are obviously by the same
- author; compare XXV. 26 with XXVI. 15; XXV. 9 with XXVI. 43; and XXV.
- 29-31 with XXVI. 39, 40. They were probably written nearly at the same
- time.
- * * * * *
- [1: T. 1-22.]
- THE CANTERBURY TALES.
- * * * * *
- GROUP A. THE PROLOGUE.
- HERE BIGINNETH THE BOOK OF THE TALES OF CAUNTERBURY.
- Whan that Aprille with his shoures sote
- The droghte of Marche hath perced to the rote,
- And bathed every veyne in swich licour,
- Of which vertu engendred is the flour;
- Whan Zephirus eek with his swete breeth 5
- Inspired hath in every holt and heeth
- The tendre croppes, and the yonge sonne
- Hath in the Ram his halfe cours y-ronne,
- And smale fowles maken melodye,
- That slepen al the night with open yë, 10
- (So priketh hem nature in hir corages):
- Than longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
- (And palmers for to seken straunge strondes)
- To ferne halwes, couthe in sondry londes;
- And specially, from every shires ende 15
- Of Engelond, to Caunterbury they wende,
- The holy blisful martir for to seke,
- That hem hath holpen, whan that they were seke.
- HEADING. _From_ E. 1. E. hise; _rest_ his. 8. Hl. halfe; _rest_
- half. 9. Hl. fowles; Pt. Ln. foules; E. Hn. foweles. 10. Hl. yhe;
- Hn. Iye; E. eye. 12. Pt. Ln. Than; E. Thanne. E. pilg_ri_mage (_by
- mistake_). 13. Pt. Hl. palmers; E. Palmeres. 16. Hn. Caunter-; E.
- Cauntur-. 18. E. seeke.
- Bifel that, in that seson on a day,
- In Southwerk at the Tabard as I lay 20
- Redy to wenden on my pilgrimage
- To Caunterbury with ful devout corage,
- [2: T. 23-58.]
- At night was come in-to that hostelrye
- Wel nyne and twenty in a companye,
- Of sondry folk, by aventure y-falle 25
- In felawshipe, and pilgrims were they alle,
- That toward Caunterbury wolden ryde;
- The chambres and the stables weren wyde,
- And wel we weren esed atte beste.
- And shortly, whan the sonne was to reste, 30
- So hadde I spoken with hem everichon,
- That I was of hir felawshipe anon,
- And made forward erly for to ryse,
- To take our wey, ther as I yow devyse.
- 19. Hn. Bifel; E. Bifil. 23. E. were; _rest_ was. 24. E. Hn.
- compaignye. 26, 32. E. felaweshipe. Hl. pilgryms; E. pilgrimes.
- 34. E. oure.
- But natheles, whyl I have tyme and space, 35
- Er that I ferther in this tale pace,
- Me thinketh it acordaunt to resoun,
- To telle yow al the condicioun
- Of ech of hem, so as it semed me,
- And whiche they weren, and of what degree; 40
- And eek in what array that they were inne:
- And at a knight than wol I first biginne.
- 35. E. Hn. nathelees. 40. Hl. weren; _rest_ were, weere.
- A KNIGHT ther was, and that a worthy man, KNIGHT.
- That fro the tyme that he first bigan
- To ryden out, he loved chivalrye, 45
- Trouthe and honour, fredom and curteisye.
- Ful worthy was he in his lordes werre,
- And therto hadde he riden (no man ferre)
- As wel in Cristendom as hethenesse,
- And ever honoured for his worthinesse. 50
- 49. Hn. Hl. as; _rest_ as in.
- At Alisaundre he was, whan it was wonne;
- Ful ofte tyme he hadde the bord bigonne
- Aboven alle naciouns in Pruce.
- In Lettow hadde he reysed and in Ruce,
- No Cristen man so ofte of his degree. 55
- In Gernade at the sege eek hadde he be
- Of Algezir, and riden in Belmarye.
- At Lyeys was he, and at Satalye,
- [3: T. 59-92.]
- Whan they were wonne; and in the Grete See
- At many a noble aryve hadde he be. 60
- At mortal batailles hadde he been fiftene,
- And foughten for our feith at Tramissene
- In listes thryes, and ay slayn his foo.
- This ilke worthy knight had been also
- Somtyme with the lord of Palatye, 65
- Ageyn another hethen in Turkye:
- And evermore he hadde a sovereyn prys.
- And though that he were worthy, he was wys,
- And of his port as meke as is a mayde.
- He never yet no vileinye ne sayde 70
- In al his lyf, un-to no maner wight.
- He was a verray parfit gentil knight.
- But for to tellen yow of his array,
- His hors were gode, but he was nat gay.
- Of fustian he wered a gipoun 75
- Al bismotered with his habergeoun;
- For he was late y-come from his viage,
- And wente for to doon his pilgrimage.
- 53. E. nacions. 56. E. seege. 60. Hl. ariue; Cm. aryue; E. Hn.
- armee; Cp. Ln. arme. 62. E. oure. 64. Pt. had; _rest_ hadde. 67.
- E. -moore. 68. E. Hn. Cm. were; _rest_ was. 74. E. Pt. weren; Hl.
- Ln. was; _rest_ were. Hl. Hn. he ne was.
- With him ther was his sone, a yong SQUYER, SQUYER.
- A lovyere, and a lusty bacheler, 80
- With lokkes crulle, as they were leyd in presse.
- Of twenty yeer of age he was, I gesse.
- Of his stature he was of evene lengthe,
- And wonderly deliver, and greet of strengthe.
- And he had been somtyme in chivachye, 85
- In Flaundres, in Artoys, and Picardye,
- And born him wel, as of so litel space,
- In hope to stonden in his lady grace.
- Embrouded was he, as it were a mede
- Al ful of fresshe floures, whyte and rede. 90
- Singinge he was, or floytinge, al the day;
- He was as fresh as is the month of May.
- [4: T. 93-127.]
- Short was his goune, with sleves longe and wyde.
- Wel coude he sitte on hors, and faire ryde.
- He coude songes make and wel endyte, 95
- Iuste and eek daunce, and wel purtreye and wryte,
- So hote he lovede, that by nightertale
- He sleep namore than dooth a nightingale.
- Curteys he was, lowly, and servisable,
- And carf biforn his fader at the table. 100
- 83. Ln. euen; _rest_ euene. 84. Hl. Ln. delyuer; _rest_ delyuere.
- E. Hn. of greet; Cm. of gret; _rest_ gret of. 85. Ln. had. 87. E.
- weel. 89, 90. E. meede, reede. 92. E. fressh. E. in; _rest_ is.
- E. Hn. Monthe; Cp. month; Hl. Pt. Ln. moneth; Cm. monyth. 96. E.
- weel. 98. Hl. Cp. sleep; _rest_ slepte. E. -moore. 99. Hl. Cp.
- Ln. lowly; E. Hn. Pt. lowely.
- A YEMAN hadde he, and servaunts namo YEMAN.
- At that tyme, for him liste ryde so;
- And he was clad in cote and hood of grene;
- A sheef of pecok-arwes brighte and kene
- Under his belt he bar ful thriftily; 105
- (Wel coude he dresse his takel yemanly:
- His arwes drouped noght with fetheres lowe),
- And in his hand he bar a mighty bowe.
- A not-heed hadde he, with a broun visage.
- Of wode-craft wel coude he al the usage. 110
- Upon his arm he bar a gay bracer,
- And by his syde a swerd and a bokeler,
- And on that other syde a gay daggere,
- Harneised wel, and sharp as point of spere;
- A Cristofre on his brest of silver shene. 115
- An horn he bar, the bawdrik was of grene;
- A forster was he, soothly, as I gesse.
- 101. E. seruantz. 102. E. soo. 104. Hl. Cp. Pt. Ln. pocok. Cm.
- bryghte; _rest_ bright. 107. E. Hise. 108, 111. E. baar. 113. E.
- oother. 115. Hn. Cristofre; E. Cristophere. E. sheene.
- Ther was also a Nonne, a PRIORESSE, PRIORESSE.
- That of hir smyling was ful simple and coy;
- Hir gretteste ooth was but by sëynt Loy; 120
- And she was cleped madame Eglentyne.
- Ful wel she song the service divyne,
- Entuned in hir nose ful semely;
- And Frensh she spak ful faire and fetisly,
- After the scole of Stratford atte Bowe, 125
- For Frensh of Paris was to hir unknowe.
- At mete wel y-taught was she with-alle;
- [5: T. 128-161.]
- She leet no morsel from hir lippes falle,
- Ne wette hir fingres in hir sauce depe.
- Wel coude she carie a morsel, and wel kepe, 130
- That no drope ne fille up-on hir brest.
- In curteisye was set ful muche hir lest.
- Hir over lippe wyped she so clene,
- That in hir coppe was no ferthing sene
- Of grece, whan she dronken hadde hir draughte. 135
- Ful semely after hir mete she raughte,
- And sikerly she was of greet disport,
- And ful plesaunt, and amiable of port,
- And peyned hir to countrefete chere
- Of court, and been estatlich of manere, 140
- And to ben holden digne of reverence.
- But, for to speken of hir conscience,
- She was so charitable and so pitous,
- She wolde wepe, if that she sawe a mous
- Caught in a trappe, if it were deed or bledde. 145
- Of smale houndes had she, that she fedde
- With rosted flesh, or milk and wastel-breed.
- But sore weep she if oon of hem were deed,
- Or if men smoot it with a yerde smerte:
- And al was conscience and tendre herte. 150
- Ful semely hir wimpel pinched was;
- Hir nose tretys; hir eyen greye as glas;
- Hir mouth ful smal, and ther-to softe and reed;
- But sikerly she hadde a fair forheed;
- It was almost a spanne brood, I trowe; 155
- For, hardily, she was nat undergrowe.
- Ful fetis was hir cloke, as I was war.
- Of smal coral aboute hir arm she bar
- A peire of bedes, gauded al with grene;
- And ther-on heng a broche of gold ful shene, 160
- On which ther was first write a crowned A,
- [6: T. 162-195.]
- And after, _Amor vincit omnia._
- 122. E. soong. 123. E. semeely. 131. Cm. brest; E. Hn. brist.
- 132. Cp. moche; Cm. meche; E. Hn. muchel. Hl. lest; E. Hn. Cm.
- list. 134. Hl. was; _rest_ ther was. 137. E. Hn. desport; _rest_
- disport. 140. E. to been; Hl. Hn. _omit_ to. 144. Hl. Hn. Cp. Ln.
- sawe; E. saugh; Cm. seye. 146. Pt. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 148. Ln.
- wepped; _rest_ wepte; _read_ weep; _cf_. l. 2878. E. any; _rest_ oon,
- on, one. 151. E. semyly. E. wympul; Hn. wympel. 160. E. Hn. brooch;
- _rest_ broche.
- Another NONNE with hir hadde she, NONNE.
- That was hir chapeleyne, and PREESTES three. 3 PREESTES.
- A MONK ther was, a fair for the maistrye, MONK.
- An out-rydere, that lovede venerye; 166
- A manly man, to been an abbot able.
- Ful many a deyntee hors hadde he in stable:
- And, whan he rood, men mighte his brydel here
- Ginglen in a whistling wind as clere, 170
- And eek as loude as dooth the chapel-belle,
- Ther as this lord was keper of the celle.
- The reule of seint Maure or of seint Beneit,
- By-cause that it was old and som-del streit,
- This ilke monk leet olde thinges pace, 175
- And held after the newe world the space.
- He yaf nat of that text a pulled hen,
- That seith, that hunters been nat holy men;
- Ne that a monk, whan he is cloisterlees,
- Is lykned til a fish that is waterlees; 180
- This is to seyn, a monk out of his cloistre.
- But thilke text held he nat worth an oistre;
- And I seyde, his opinioun was good.
- What sholde he studie, and make him-selven wood,
- Upon a book in cloistre alwey to poure, 185
- Or swinken with his handes, and laboure,
- As Austin bit? How shal the world be served?
- Lat Austin have his swink to him reserved.
- Therfore he was a pricasour aright;
- Grehoundes he hadde, as swifte as fowel in flight; 190
- Of priking and of hunting for the hare
- Was al his lust, for no cost wolde he spare.
- I seigh his sleves purfiled at the hond
- With grys, and that the fyneste of a lond;
- And, for to festne his hood under his chin, 195
- [7: T. 196-231.]
- He hadde of gold y-wroght a curious pin:
- A love-knotte in the gretter ende ther was.
- His heed was balled, that shoon as any glas,
- And eek his face, as he had been anoint.
- He was a lord ful fat and in good point; 200
- His eyen stepe, and rollinge in his heed,
- That stemed as a forneys of a leed;
- His botes souple, his hors in greet estat.
- Now certeinly he was a fair prelat;
- He was nat pale as a for-pyned goost. 205
- A fat swan loved he best of any roost.
- His palfrey was as broun as is a berye.
- 170. Hl. Cp. whistlyng; E. whistlynge. E. Cm. als; Ln. al-so; Hl. so;
- _rest_ as. 176. E. Hn. heeld; Cm. held. 178. Hn. Hl. been; E.
- beth. 179. Hl. cloysterles; E. Hn. recchelees; Cp. Pt. Ln. recheles;
- Cm. rekeles (Ten Brink _proposes_ recetlees). 182. E. Hn. heeld; Cm.
- held. 188. E. his owene; _rest om._ owene. 190. Hl. swifte; _rest_
- swift. 193. Hl. Hn. purfiled; Cm. purfilid; E. ypurfiled. 196. Hl.
- a; _rest_ a ful. 196, 218. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 199. E. it;
- _rest_ he. 203, 4. E. estaat, prelaat.
- A FRERE ther was, a wantown and a merye, FRERE.
- A limitour, a ful solempne man.
- In alle the ordres foure is noon that can 210
- So muche of daliaunce and fair langage.
- He hadde maad ful many a mariage
- Of yonge wommen, at his owne cost.
- Un-to his ordre he was a noble post.
- Ful wel biloved and famulier was he 215
- With frankeleyns over-al in his contree,
- And eek with worthy wommen of the toun:
- For he had power of confessioun,
- As seyde him-self, more than a curat,
- For of his ordre he was licentiat. 220
- Ful swetely herde he confessioun,
- And plesaunt was his absolucioun;
- He was an esy man to yeve penaunce
- Ther as he wiste to han a good pitaunce;
- For unto a povre ordre for to yive 225
- Is signe that a man is wel y-shrive.
- For if he yaf, he dorste make avaunt,
- He wiste that a man was repentaunt.
- For many a man so hard is of his herte,
- He may nat wepe al-thogh him sore smerte. 230
- Therfore, in stede of weping and preyeres,
- [8: T. 232-265.]
- Men moot yeve silver to the povre freres.
- His tipet was ay farsed ful of knyves
- And pinnes, for to yeven faire wyves.
- And certeinly he hadde a mery note; 235
- Wel coude he singe and pleyen on a rote.
- Of yeddinges he bar utterly the prys.
- His nekke whyt was as the flour-de-lys;
- Ther-to he strong was as a champioun.
- He knew the tavernes wel in every toun, 240
- And everich hostiler and tappestere
- Bet than a lazar or a beggestere;
- For un-to swich a worthy man as he
- Acorded nat, as by his facultee,
- To have with seke lazars aqueyntaunce. 245
- It is nat honest, it may nat avaunce
- For to delen with no swich poraille,
- But al with riche and sellers of vitaille.
- And over-al, ther as profit sholde aryse,
- Curteys he was, and lowly of servyse. 250
- Ther nas no man no-wher so vertuous.
- He was the beste beggere in his hous;
- [And yaf a certeyn ferme for the graunt; 252 b
- Noon of his bretheren cam ther in his haunt;] 252 c
- For thogh a widwe hadde noght a sho,
- So plesaunt was his "_In principio_,"
- Yet wolde he have a ferthing, er he wente. 255
- His purchas was wel bettre than his rente.
- And rage he coude, as it were right a whelpe.
- In love-dayes ther coude he muchel helpe. (260)
- For there he was nat lyk a cloisterer,
- With a thredbar cope, as is a povre scoler, 260
- But he was lyk a maister or a pope.
- Of double worsted was his semi-cope,
- That rounded as a belle out of the presse.
- [9: T. 266-300.]
- Somwhat he lipsed, for his wantownesse,
- To make his English swete up-on his tonge; 265
- And in his harping, whan that he had songe,
- His eyen twinkled in his heed aright,
- As doon the sterres in the frosty night. (270)
- This worthy limitour was cleped Huberd.
- 208. E. wantowne. 211. Hn. muche; E. muchel. 213. Hl. owne; E.
- owene. 215. E. And; _rest_ Ful. 217. Hl. Hn. eek; _rest omit_.
- 224. Hl. Cm. han; E. haue. 229. E. harde. 231. E. wepynge. 232.
- E. Hn. moote; _see note_. 234. E. yonge; _rest_ faire. 235. Hl.
- mery; E. murye. 237. E. baar. Pt. vttirly; Hl. vtturly; E. Hn.
- outrely. 240. E. al the; _rest_ euery. 245. E. Hn. Cm. sike; Pt.
- Ln. seke; see l. 18. 246. Cm. honest; E. honeste. 248. E.
- selleres. 250. E. lowely. _After_ l. 252, Hn. _alone inserts_ ll. 252
- _b_ and 252 c. 259. Hl. Cm. cloysterer; E. Hn. Cloystrer. 260. _So
- all the_ MSS. (_but with_ -bare); _cf_. l. 290. 262. _All_ worstede
- (_badly_). 266. Pt. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde.
- A MARCHANT was ther with a forked berd, MARCHANT.
- In mottelee, and hye on horse he sat, 271
- Up-on his heed a Flaundrish bever hat;
- His botes clasped faire and fetisly.
- His resons he spak ful solempnely,
- Souninge alway thencrees of his winning. 275
- He wolde the see were kept for any thing
- Bitwixe Middelburgh and Orewelle.
- Wel coude he in eschaunge sheeldes selle. (280)
- This worthy man ful wel his wit bisette;
- Ther wiste no wight that he was in dette, 280
- So estatly was he of his governaunce,
- With his bargaynes, and with his chevisaunce.
- For sothe he was a worthy man with-alle,
- But sooth to seyn, I noot how men him calle.
- 271. Ln. motteley; Hl. motteleye; E. Hn. motlee. 272. E. beu_er_e.
- 273. Cp. Pt. clapsed; Hl. clapsud. 274. E. Hise. 281. Cp. statly.
- A CLERK ther was of Oxenford also, CLERK.
- That un-to logik hadde longe y-go. 286
- As lene was his hors as is a rake,
- And he nas nat right fat, I undertake; (290)
- But loked holwe, and ther-to soberly.
- Ful thredbar was his overest courtepy; 290
- For he had geten him yet no benefyce,
- Ne was so worldly for to have offyce.
- For him was lever have at his beddes heed
- Twenty bokes, clad in blak or reed,
- Of Aristotle and his philosophye, 295
- Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sautrye.
- But al be that he was a philosophre,
- Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre; (300)
- [10: T. 301-336.]
- But al that he mighte of his freendes hente,
- On bokes and on lerninge he it spente, 300
- And bisily gan for the soules preye
- Of hem that yaf him wher-with to scoleye.
- Of studie took he most cure and most hede.
- Noght o word spak he more than was nede,
- And that was seyd in forme and reverence, 305
- And short and quik, and ful of hy sentence.
- Souninge in moral vertu was his speche,
- And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche. (310)
- 287. E. And; Hl. Al so; _rest_ As. 289. E. Hn. sobrely; _rest_
- soburly. 290. _All_ -bare. Hl. ouerest; E. Hn. Cm. ouereste. 291.
- Cp. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 293. Cp. Ln. Hl. leuer; _rest_ leuere.
- 300. E. Hl. his; _rest_ on.
- A SERGEANT OF THE LAWE, war and wys, MAN OF LAWE.
- That often hadde been at the parvys, 310
- Ther was also, ful riche of excellence.
- Discreet he was, and of greet reverence:
- He semed swich, his wordes weren so wyse.
- Iustyce he was ful often in assyse,
- By patente, and by pleyn commissioun; 315
- For his science, and for his heigh renoun
- Of fees and robes hadde he many oon.
- So greet a purchasour was no-wher noon. (320)
- Al was fee simple to him in effect,
- His purchasing mighte nat been infect. 320
- No-wher so bisy a man as he ther nas,
- And yet he semed bisier than he was.
- In termes hadde he caas and domes alle,
- That from the tyme of king William were falle.
- Therto he coude endyte, and make a thing, 325
- Ther coude no wight pinche at his wryting;
- And every statut coude he pleyn by rote.
- He rood but hoomly in a medlee cote (330)
- Girt with a ceint of silk, with barres smale;
- Of his array telle I no lenger tale.
- 324. E. yfalle; _rest_ falle. 326. E. Hn. pynchen; _rest_ pynche,
- pinche.
- A FRANKELEYN was in his companye; FRANKELEYN.
- Whyt was his berd, as is the dayesye.
- Of his complexioun he was sangwyn.
- Wel loved he by the morwe a sop in wyn.
- [11: T. 337-370.]
- To liven in delyt was ever his wone, 335
- For he was Epicurus owne sone,
- That heeld opinioun, that pleyn delyt
- Was verraily felicitee parfyt.
- An housholdere, and that a greet, was he; (340)
- Seint Iulian he was in his contree.
- His breed, his ale, was alwey after oon;
- A bettre envyned man was no-wher noon.
- With-oute bake mete was never his hous,
- Of fish and flesh, and that so plentevous,
- It snewed in his hous of mete and drinke, 345
- Of alle deyntees that men coude thinke.
- After the sondry sesons of the yeer,
- So chaunged he his mete and his soper. (350)
- Ful many a fat partrich hadde he in mewe,
- And many a breem and many a luce in stewe. 350
- Wo was his cook, but-if his sauce were
- Poynaunt and sharp, and redy al his gere.
- His table dormant in his halle alway
- Stood redy covered al the longe day.
- At sessiouns ther was he lord and sire; 355
- Ful ofte tyme he was knight of the shire.
- An anlas and a gipser al of silk
- Heng at his girdel, whyt as morne milk. (360)
- A shirreve hadde he been, and a countour;
- Was no-wher such a worthy vavasour. 360
- 332. E. heed; _ rest_ berd, berde. E. a; _rest_ the. 335. ever] Hl.
- al. 336. E. Hn. Cm. owene; _rest_ owne. 338. Hl. verraily; _rest_
- verray, verrey, uery. 340. E. was he; _rest_ he was. 341. Cm. Ln.
- alwey; Hl. alway; E. Hn. Cp. alweys. 342. Hl. Pt. nowher; Cm. nower:
- _rest_ neuere; _cf_. l. 360. 349, 350. E. Hn. muwe, stuwe. 357. E.
- Hn. anlaas; Hl. Cm. anlas. 358. E. Hn. heeng. 359. E. Hn. Cm. _om._
- a.
- An HABERDASSHER and a CARPENTER, HABAERDASSHER.
- A WEBBE, a DYERE, and a TAPICER, CARPENTER.
- Were with us eek, clothed in o liveree, WEBBE. DYERE.
- Of a solempne and greet fraternitee. TAPICER.
- Ful fresh and newe hir gere apyked was; 365
- Hir knyves were y-chaped noght with bras,
- But al with silver, wroght ful clene and weel,
- Hir girdles and hir pouches every-deel. (370)
- [12: T. 371-406.]
- Wel semed ech of hem a fair burgeys,
- To sitten in a yeldhalle on a deys. 370
- Everich, for the wisdom that he can,
- Was shaply for to been an alderman.
- For catel hadde they y-nogh and rente,
- And eek hir wyves wolde it wel assente;
- And elles certein were they to blame. 375
- It is ful fair to been y-clept "_ma dame_,"
- And goon to vigilyës al bifore,
- And have a mantel royalliche y-bore. (380)
- 363. _So_ Hl.; _rest_ And they were clothed alle. 364. _All but_ Hl.
- and a. 366. Hl. I-chapud; Cm. chapid; _rest_ chaped. 370. E.
- yeldehalle. 376. E. Hn. ycleped; Hl. clept; _rest_ cleped, clepid.
- 380. Hl. _om. 1st_ the.
- A COOK they hadde with hem for the nones, COOK.
- To boille the chiknes with the mary-bones, 380
- And poudre-marchant tart, and galingale.
- Wel coude he knowe a draughte of London ale.
- He coude roste, and sethe, and broille, and frye,
- Maken mortreux, and wel bake a pye.
- But greet harm was it, as it thoughte me, 385
- That on his shine a mormal hadde he;
- For blankmanger, that made he with the beste. (389)
- 383. E. Hl. boille; Cm. boyle; _rest_ broille, broile. 388. E.
- wonynge; Hn. wonyng.
- A SHIPMAN was ther, woning fer by weste: SHIPMAN.
- For aught I woot, he was of Dertemouthe.
- He rood up-on a rouncy, as he couthe, 390
- In a gowne of falding to the knee.
- A daggere hanging on a laas hadde he
- Aboute his nekke under his arm adoun.
- The hote somer had maad his hewe al broun;
- And, certeinly, he was a good felawe. 395
- Ful many a draughte of wyn had he y-drawe
- From Burdeux-ward, whyl that the chapman sleep.
- Of nyce conscience took he no keep. (400)
- If that he faught, and hadde the hyer hond,
- By water he sente hem hoom to every lond. 400
- But of his craft to rekene wel his tydes,
- His stremes and his daungers him bisydes,
- His herberwe and his mone, his lodemenage,
- Ther nas noon swich from Hulle to Cartage.
- [13: T. 407-441.]
- Hardy he was, and wys to undertake; 405
- With many a tempest hadde his berd been shake.
- He knew wel alle the havenes, as they were,
- From Gootlond to the cape of Finistere, (410)
- And every cryke in Britayne and in Spayne;
- His barge y-cleped was the Maudelayne. 410
- 396. Cm. I-drawe; _rest_ drawe. 407. Hl. _ins._ wel; _rest om._
- With us ther was a DOCTOUR OF PHISYK, DOCTOUR.
- In al this world ne was ther noon him lyk
- To speke of phisik and of surgerye;
- For he was grounded in astronomye.
- He kepte his pacient a ful greet del 415
- In houres, by his magik naturel.
- Wel coude he fortunen the ascendent
- Of his images for his pacient. (420)
- He knew the cause of everich maladye,
- Were it of hoot or cold, or moiste, or drye, 420
- And where engendred, and of what humour;
- He was a verrey parfit practisour.
- The cause y-knowe, and of his harm the rote,
- Anon he yaf the seke man his bote.
- Ful redy hadde he his apothecaries, 425
- To sende him drogges and his letuaries,
- For ech of hem made other for to winne;
- Hir frendschipe nas nat newe to biginne. (430)
- Wel knew he the olde Esculapius,
- And Deiscorides, and eek Rufus, 430
- Old Ypocras, Haly, and Galien;
- Serapion, Razis, and Avicen;
- Averrois, Damascien, and Constantyn;
- Bernard, and Gatesden, and Gilbertyn.
- Of his diete mesurable was he, 435
- For it was of no superfluitee,
- But of greet norissing and digestible.
- His studie was but litel on the Bible. (440)
- In sangwin and in pers he clad was al,
- [14: T. 442-478.]
- Lyned with taffata and with sendal; 440
- And yet he was but esy of dispence;
- He kepte that he wan in pestilence.
- For gold in phisik is a cordial,
- Therfore he lovede gold in special.
- 415. Hl. wondurly wel; _rest_ a ful greet deel (del). 416. E. Hn.
- natureel. 418. E. Hn. hise; Cm. hese. 421. E. Cm. Hl. where they;
- Hn. where it. 424. Cm. Ln. seke; _rest_ sike. 425. E. hise. 426.
- E. Hn. Cm. drogges; Cp. Pt. Ln. drugges; Hl. dragges. 430. Pt. Rufus;
- Cm. Rufijs; Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. Rusus; E. Risus. 431. Hl. Pt. Old; _rest_
- Olde.
- A good WYF was ther of bisyde BATHE, WYF OF BATHE.
- But she was som-del deef, and that was scathe. 446
- Of clooth-making she hadde swiche an haunt,
- She passed hem of Ypres and of Gaunt. (450)
- In al the parisshe wyf ne was ther noon
- That to the offring bifore hir sholde goon; 450
- And if ther dide, certeyn, so wrooth was she,
- That she was out of alle charitee.
- Hir coverchiefs ful fyne were of ground;
- I dorste swere they weyeden ten pound
- That on a Sonday were upon hir heed. 455
- Hir hosen weren of fyn scarlet reed,
- Ful streite y-teyd, and shoos ful moiste and newe.
- Bold was hir face, and fair, and reed of hewe. (460)
- She was a worthy womman al hir lyve,
- Housbondes at chirche-dore she hadde fyve, 460
- Withouten other companye in youthe;
- But therof nedeth nat to speke as nouthe.
- And thryes hadde she been at Ierusalem;
- She hadde passed many a straunge streem;
- At Rome she hadde been, and at Boloigne, 465
- In Galice at seint Iame, and at Coloigne.
- She coude muche of wandring by the weye.
- Gat-tothed was she, soothly for to seye. (470)
- Up-on an amblere esily she sat,
- Y-wimpled wel, and on hir heed an hat 470
- As brood as is a bokeler or a targe;
- A foot-mantel aboute hir hipes large,
- And on hir feet a paire of spores sharpe.
- In felawschip wel coude she laughe and carpe.
- Of remedyes of love she knew per-chaunce, 475
- For she coude of that art the olde daunce.
- 452. Hl. was thanne out. 453, 455. E. weren. 457. Cp. Hl. schoos;
- E. Pt. Ln. shoes. 458. E. Hn. Boold. 463. Ln. had. 467. Ln.
- muche; Hl. Pt. Cp. moche; E. Hn. muchel. 474. E. Hn. felaweschip.
- 476. Hl. For of that art sche knew.
- [15: T. 479-513.]
- A good man was ther of religioun, PERSOUN.
- And was a povre PERSOUN of a toun; (480)
- But riche he was of holy thoght and werk.
- He was also a lerned man, a clerk, 480
- That Cristes gospel trewely wolde preche;
- His parisshens devoutly wolde he teche.
- Benigne he was, and wonder diligent,
- And in adversitee ful pacient;
- And swich he was y-preved ofte sythes. 485
- Ful looth were him to cursen for his tythes,
- But rather wolde he yeven, out of doute,
- Un-to his povre parisshens aboute (490)
- Of his offring, and eek of his substaunce.
- He coude in litel thing han suffisaunce. 490
- Wyd was his parisshe, and houses fer a-sonder,
- But he ne lafte nat, for reyn ne thonder,
- In siknes nor in meschief, to visyte
- The ferreste in his parisshe, muche and lyte,
- Up-on his feet, and in his hand a staf. 495
- This noble ensample to his sheep he yaf,
- That first he wroghte, and afterward he taughte;
- Out of the gospel he tho wordes caughte; (500)
- And this figure he added eek ther-to,
- That if gold ruste, what shal iren do? 500
- For if a preest be foul, on whom we truste,
- No wonder is a lewed man to ruste;
- And shame it is, if a preest take keep,
- A shiten shepherde and a clene sheep.
- Wel oghte a preest ensample for to yive, 505
- By his clennesse, how that his sheep shold live.
- He sette nat his benefice to hyre,
- And leet his sheep encombred in the myre, (510)
- And ran to London, un-to sëynt Poules,
- To seken him a chaunterie for soules, 510
- Or with a bretherhed to been withholde;
- [16: T. 514-547.]
- But dwelte at hoom, and kepte wel his folde,
- So that the wolf ne made it nat miscarie;
- He was a shepherde and no mercenarie.
- And though he holy were, and vertuous, 515
- He was to sinful man nat despitous,
- Ne of his speche daungerous ne digne,
- But in his teching discreet and benigne. (520)
- To drawen folk to heven by fairnesse
- By good ensample, was his bisinesse: 520
- But it were any persone obstinat,
- What-so he were, of heigh or lowe estat,
- Him wolde he snibben sharply for the nones.
- A bettre preest, I trowe that nowher noon is.
- He wayted after no pompe and reverence, 525
- Ne maked him a spyced conscience,
- But Cristes lore, and his apostles twelve,
- He taughte, and first he folwed it him-selve. (530)
- 485. Hl. I-proued; E. Cp. Pt. preued. 486. E. hise. 490. Hl. Cm.
- Pt. han; E. Hn. Cp. Ln. haue. 493. E. siknesse. 497. E. firste.
- E. _ins._ that (_by mistake_) _before_ he. 503. Hl. _alone ins._ that
- _after_ if. 505. Hl. [gh]iue; E. yeue. 509. Hl. Cp. seynte. 510.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. chaunterie; E. Hn. chauntrie. 512. E. dwelleth;
- _rest_ dwelte. E. keepeth; Ln. keped; _rest_ kepte. 514. Hl. no;
- _rest_ not a. 516. Hl. to senful man nought; _rest_ nat to sinful
- man. 520. _All but_ Hl. this was. 522. Hn. lowe; E. lough. 523.
- E. nonys. 525. E. waiteth; _rest_ waited. 527. E. hise. 528. Hl.
- and; _rest_ but.
- With him ther was a PLOWMAN, was his brother, PLOWMAN.
- That hadde y-lad of dong ful many a fother, 530
- A trewe swinker and a good was he,
- Livinge in pees and parfit charitee.
- God loved he best with al his hole herte
- At alle tymes, thogh him gamed or smerte,
- And thanne his neighebour right as him-selve. 535
- He wolde thresshe, and ther-to dyke and delve,
- For Cristes sake, for every povre wight,
- Withouten hyre, if it lay in his might. (540)
- His tythes payed he ful faire and wel,
- Bothe of his propre swink and his catel. 540
- In a tabard he rood upon a mere.
- 534. E. Pt. Ln. he; _rest_ him. 537. for] Hn. Hl. with. 539. Cp.
- Pt. payed; Cm. Hl. payede; E. Hn. payde. 540. propre] Hl. owne.
- Ther was also a Reve and a Millere,
- A Somnour and a Pardoner also,
- A Maunciple, and my-self; ther were namo.
- The MILLER was a stout carl, for the nones, MILLER.
- [17: T. 548-582.]
- Ful big he was of braun, and eek of bones; 546
- That proved wel, for over-al ther he cam,
- At wrastling he wolde have alwey the ram. (550)
- He was short-sholdred, brood, a thikke knarre,
- Ther nas no dore that he nolde heve of harre, 550
- Or breke it, at a renning, with his heed.
- His berd as any sowe or fox was reed,
- And ther-to brood, as though it were a spade.
- Up-on the cop right of his nose he hade
- A werte, and ther-on stood a tuft of heres, 555
- Reed as the bristles of a sowes eres;
- His nose-thirles blake were and wyde.
- A swerd and bokeler bar he by his syde; (560)
- His mouth as greet was as a greet forneys.
- He was a Ianglere and a goliardeys, 560
- And that was most of sinne and harlotryes.
- Wel coude he stelen corn, and tollen thryes;
- And yet he hadde a thombe of gold, pardee.
- A whyt cote and a blew hood wered he.
- A baggepype wel coude he blowe and sowne, 565
- And ther-with-al he broghte us out of towne.
- 550. Cp. Hl. nolde; Hn. noolde; E. ne wolde. 555. E. toft; Ln. tofte:
- _rest_ tuft. E. herys. 556. Hn. bristles; E. brustles; Pt. brysteles;
- Hl. Cp. berstles. E. erys. 558. _All but_ Cp. and a. 559. Hl.
- wyde; _rest_ greet, gret. 565. Hl. _om._ wel.
- A gentil MAUNCIPLE was ther of a temple, MAUNCIPLE.
- Of which achatours mighte take exemple (570)
- For to be wyse in bying of vitaille.
- For whether that he payde, or took by taille, 570
- Algate he wayted so in his achat,
- That he was ay biforn and in good stat.
- Now is nat that of God a ful fair grace,
- That swich a lewed mannes wit shal pace
- The wisdom of an heep of lerned men? 575
- Of maistres hadde he mo than thryes ten,
- That were of lawe expert and curious;
- Of which ther were a doseyn in that hous, (580)
- Worthy to been stiwardes of rente and lond
- Of any lord that is in Engelond, 580
- [18: T. 583-615.]
- To make him live by his propre good,
- In honour dettelees, but he were wood,
- Or live as scarsly as him list desire;
- And able for to helpen al a shire
- In any cas that mighte falle or happe; 585
- And yit this maunciple sette hir aller cappe.
- 570. E. Hn. wheither. 571. E. Achaat. 572. E. staat. 577. E.
- weren. 578. E. whiche. Cm. doseyn; E. duszeyne. 581. E. maken.
- 582. Cm. but; Cp. Pt. but if that; _rest_ but if. 585. E. Hn. caas.
- The REVE was a sclendre colerik man, REVE.
- His berd was shave as ny as ever he can. (590)
- His heer was by his eres round y-shorn.
- His top was dokked lyk a preest biforn. 590
- Ful longe were his legges, and ful lene,
- Y-lyk a staf, ther was no calf y-sene.
- Wel coude he kepe a gerner and a binne;
- Ther was noon auditour coude on him winne.
- Wel wiste he, by the droghte, and by the reyn, 595
- The yelding of his seed, and of his greyn.
- His lordes sheep, his neet, his dayerye,
- His swyn, his hors, his stoor, and his pultrye, (600)
- Was hoolly in this reves governing,
- And by his covenaunt yaf the rekening, 600
- Sin that his lord was twenty yeer of age;
- Ther coude no man bringe him in arrerage.
- Ther nas baillif, ne herde, ne other hyne,
- That he ne knew his sleighte and his covyne;
- They were adrad of him, as of the deeth. 605
- His woning was ful fair up-on an heeth,
- With grene treës shadwed was his place.
- He coude bettre than his lord purchace. (610)
- Ful riche he was astored prively,
- His lord wel coude he plesen subtilly, 610
- To yeve and lene him of his owne good,
- And have a thank, and yet a cote and hood.
- In youthe he lerned hadde a good mister;
- [19: T. 616-652.]
- He was a wel good wrighte, a carpenter.
- This reve sat up-on a ful good stot, 615
- That was al pomely grey, and highte Scot.
- A long surcote of pers up-on he hade,
- And by his syde he bar a rusty blade. (620)
- Of Northfolk was this reve, of which I telle,
- Bisyde a toun men clepen Baldeswelle. 620
- Tukked he was, as is a frere, aboute,
- And ever he rood the hindreste of our route.
- 589. _All but_ Hl. Ln. _ins._ ful _after_ eres. 590. E. doked. 594.
- E. of; _rest_ on. 603. ne (2)] E. Hn. Cp. Pt. nor. 604. Hl. they
- (_for_ he). E. Cm. _om._ ne. 606. Hl. fair; E. faire. 607. E. Hn.
- shadwed; Hl. I-schadewed; Cm. I-schadewid; Cp. Pt. shadewed; Ln.
- schadowed. 611. Hl. owne; E. owene. 612. E. _om._ and. E. gowne;
- _rest_ cote. 613. _So_ Hn. Hl.; E. _and rest_ hadde lerned. Cp. Hl.
- mester. 618. E. baar.
- A SOMNOUR was ther with us in that place, SOMNOUR.
- That hadde a fyr-reed cherubinnes face,
- For sawcefleem he was, with eyen narwe. 625
- As hoot he was, and lecherous, as a sparwe;
- With scalled browes blake, and piled berd;
- Of his visage children were aferd. (630)
- Ther nas quik-silver, litarge, ne brimstoon,
- Boras, ceruce, ne oille of tartre noon, 630
- Ne oynement that wolde dense and byte,
- That him mighte helpen of his whelkes whyte,
- Nor of the knobbes sittinge on his chekes.
- Wel loved he garleek, oynons, and eek lekes,
- And for to drinken strong wyn, reed as blood. 635
- Thanne wolde he speke, and crye as he were wood.
- And whan that he wel dronken hadde the wyn,
- Than wolde he speke no word but Latyn. (640)
- A fewe termes hadde he, two or three,
- That he had lerned out of som decree; 640
- No wonder is, he herde it al the day;
- And eek ye knowen wel, how that a Iay
- Can clepen 'Watte,' as well as can the pope.
- But who-so coude in other thing him grope,
- Thanne hadde he spent al his philosophye; 645
- Ay '_Questio quid iuris_' wolde he crye.
- He was a gentil harlot and a kinde;
- A bettre felawe sholde men noght finde. (650)
- He wolde suffre, for a quart of wyn,
- A good felawe to have his concubyn 650
- [20: T. 653-687.]
- A twelf-month, and excuse him atte fulle:
- Ful prively a finch eek coude he pulle.
- And if he fond o-wher a good felawe,
- He wolde techen him to have non awe,
- In swich cas, of the erchedeknes curs, 655
- But-if a mannes soule were in his purs;
- For in his purs he sholde y-punisshed be.
- 'Purs is the erchedeknes helle,' seyde he. (660)
- But wel I woot he lyed right in dede;
- Of cursing oghte ech gilty man him drede-- 660
- For curs wol slee, right as assoilling saveth--
- And also war him of a _significavit_.
- In daunger hadde he at his owne gyse
- The yonge girles of the diocyse,
- And knew hir counseil, and was al hir reed. 665
- A gerland hadde he set up-on his heed,
- As greet as it were for an ale-stake;
- A bokeler hadde he maad him of a cake. (670)
- 623. Cm. Pt. Somnour; Hl. sompnour; E. Hn. Somonour. 627. E. Hn. Cm.
- scaled. 629. Cp. Pt. Hl. bremston. 632. E. the; _rest_ his. 652.
- E. Ln. Hl. And; _rest_ Ful. 655. Cm. Cp. erche-; E. erce-; Hl.
- arche-. 660. Cp. Ln. him; Hl. Pt. to; _rest om._ 661. Hl. Pt.
- saueth; E. sauith. 663. Hl. owne; E. owene. 668. E. bokeleer.
- With him ther rood a gentil PARDONER PARDONER.
- Of Rouncival, his freend and his compeer, 670
- That streight was comen fro the court of Rome.
- Ful loude he song, 'Com hider, love, to me.'
- This somnour bar to him a stif burdoun,
- Was never trompe of half so greet a soun.
- This pardoner hadde heer as yelow as wex, 675
- But smothe it heng, as dooth a strike of flex;
- By ounces henge his lokkes that he hadde,
- And ther-with he his shuldres overspradde; (680)
- But thinne it lay, by colpons oon and oon;
- But hood, for Iolitee, ne wered he noon, 680
- For it was trussed up in his walet.
- Him thoughte, he rood al of the newe Iet;
- Dischevele, save his cappe, he rood al bare.
- Swiche glaringe eyen hadde he as an hare.
- A vernicle hadde he sowed on his cappe. 685
- [21: T. 688-722.]
- His walet lay biforn him in his lappe,
- Bret-ful of pardoun come from Rome al hoot.
- A voys he hadde as smal as hath a goot. (690)
- No berd hadde he, ne never sholde have,
- As smothe it was as it were late y-shave; 690
- I trowe he were a gelding or a mare.
- But of his craft, fro Berwik into Ware,
- Ne was ther swich another pardoner.
- For in his male he hadde a pilwe-beer,
- Which that, he seyde, was our lady veyl: 695
- He seyde, he hadde a gobet of the seyl
- That sëynt Peter hadde, whan that he wente
- Up-on the see, til Iesu Crist him hente. (700)
- He hadde a croys of latoun, ful of stones,
- And in a glas he hadde pigges bones. 700
- But with thise relikes, whan that he fond
- A povre person dwelling up-on lond,
- Up-on a day he gat him more moneye
- Than that the person gat in monthes tweye.
- And thus, with feyned flaterye and Iapes, 705
- He made the person and the peple his apes.
- But trewely to tellen, atte laste,
- He was in chirche a noble ecclesiaste. (710)
- Wel coude he rede a lessoun or a storie,
- But alderbest he song an offertorie; 710
- For wel he wiste, whan that song was songe,
- He moste preche, and wel affyle his tonge,
- To winne silver, as he ful wel coude;
- Therefore he song so meriely and loude.
- 669. E. was; _rest_ rood, rode. 670. E. Cm. Pt. Rounciuale. 672. E.
- soong. 676. E. heeng. 677, 678. E. hise. 680. But] Cm. Hl. And.
- Hl. ne; _rest omit_. 683. E. Discheuelee. 685. Hl. Cp. on; _rest_
- vp on. 686. Hl. lay; _which the rest omit._ 687. Hl. Cm. come;
- _rest_ comen. 688. Hl. eny (_for_ hath a). 690. Hn. yshaue; E.
- shaue. 695. _All_ oure. 713. Hl. right (_for_ ful). 714. Cp. Pt.
- Ln. so meriely; E. Hn. Cm. the murierly.
- Now have I told you shortly, in a clause, 715
- Thestat, tharray, the nombre, and eek the cause
- Why that assembled was this companye
- In Southwerk, at this gentil hostelrye, (720)
- That highte the Tabard, faste by the Belle.
- But now is tyme to yow for to telle 720
- [22: T. 723-758.]
- How that we baren us that ilke night,
- Whan we were in that hostelrye alight.
- And after wol I telle of our viage,
- And al the remenaunt of our pilgrimage.
- But first I pray yow, of your curteisye, 725
- That ye narette it nat my vileinye,
- Thogh that I pleynly speke in this matere,
- To telle yow hir wordes and hir chere; (730)
- Ne thogh I speke hir wordes properly.
- For this ye knowen al-so wel as I, 730
- Who-so shal telle a tale after a man,
- He moot reherce, as ny as ever he can,
- Everich a word, if it be in his charge,
- Al speke he never so rudeliche and large;
- Or elles he moot telle his tale untrewe, 735
- Or feyne thing, or finde wordes newe.
- He may nat spare, al-thogh he were his brother;
- He moot as wel seye o word as another. (740)
- Crist spak him-self ful brode in holy writ,
- And wel ye woot, no vileinye is it. 740
- Eek Plato seith, who-so that can him rede,
- The wordes mote be cosin to the dede.
- Also I prey yow to foryeve it me,
- Al have I nat set folk in hir degree
- Here in this tale, as that they sholde stonde; 745
- My wit is short, ye may wel understonde.
- 715. E. Hl. shortly; _rest_ soothly. 716. Hl. Thestat; Hn. Thestaat;
- E. The staat; Cm. Cp. The estat. 718. E. as; _rest_ at. 724. E.
- oure (_but_ our _in_ l. 723). 725. E. youre; Hl. [gh]our. 726. E.
- Hn. Cm. narette; Cp. Pt. Hl. ne rette. 734. E. or; Hl. ne; _rest_
- and. 741. _All but_ Hl. _om._ that.
- Greet chere made our hoste us everichon,
- And to the soper sette he us anon; (750)
- And served us with vitaille at the beste.
- Strong was the wyn, and wel to drinke us leste. 750
- A semely man our hoste was with-alle
- For to han been a marshal in an halle;
- A large man he was with eyen stepe,
- A fairer burgeys is ther noon in Chepe:
- Bold of his speche, and wys, and wel y-taught, 755
- And of manhod him lakkede right naught.
- [23: T. 759-793.]
- Eek therto he was right a mery man,
- And after soper pleyen he bigan, (760)
- And spak of mirthe amonges othere thinges,
- Whan that we hadde maad our rekeninges; 760
- And seyde thus: 'Now, lordinges, trewely,
- Ye been to me right welcome hertely:
- For by my trouthe, if that I shal nat lye,
- I ne saugh this yeer so mery a companye
- At ones in this herberwe as is now. 765
- Fayn wolde I doon yow mirthe, wiste I how.
- And of a mirthe I am right now bithoght,
- To doon yow ese, and it shal coste noght. (770)
- 747. E. chiere. E. hoost (_see_ l. 751). 752. Hl. han; _rest om._
- 754. E. Hn. was. 755. E. Hn. Boold. 756. Cm. Cp. lakkede; E.
- lakked. 761. now] Hl. lo. 764. Hl. ne saugh; _rest_ saugh nat
- (seigh not, &c.). Hl. Cm. mery; E. myrie.
- Ye goon to Caunterbury; God yow spede,
- The blisful martir quyte yow your mede. 770
- And wel I woot, as ye goon by the weye,
- Ye shapen yow to talen and to pleye;
- For trewely, confort ne mirthe is noon
- To ryde by the weye doumb as a stoon;
- And therfore wol I maken yow disport, 775
- As I seyde erst, and doon yow som confort.
- And if yow lyketh alle, by oon assent,
- Now for to stonden at my Iugement, (780)
- And for to werken as I shal yow seye,
- To-morwe, whan ye ryden by the weye, 780
- Now, by my fader soule, that is deed,
- But ye be merye, I wol yeve yow myn heed.
- Hold up your hond, withouten more speche.'
- 774. a] E. the; Hn. _om._ 778. _All but_ Hl. _om._ Now. 782. E. But
- if; _rest_ But. E. myrie. Hl. merye smyteth of.
- Our counseil was nat longe for to seche;
- Us thoughte it was noght worth to make it wys, 785
- And graunted him withouten more avys,
- And bad him seye his verdit, as him leste.
- 785. Hl. nas. 787. Cp. verdit; Pt. veredit; Hl. Ln. verdite; Cm.
- verdoit; E. Hn. voirdit.
- 'Lordinges,' quod he, 'now herkneth for the beste; (790)
- But tak it not, I prey yow, in desdeyn;
- This is the poynt, to speken short and pleyn, 790
- That ech of yow, to shorte with your weye,
- [24: T. 794-827.]
- In this viage, shal telle tales tweye,
- To Caunterbury-ward, I mene it so,
- And hom-ward he shal tellen othere two,
- Of aventures that whylom han bifalle. 795
- And which of yow that bereth him best of alle,
- That is to seyn, that telleth in this cas
- Tales of best sentence and most solas, (800)
- Shal have a soper at our aller cost
- Here in this place, sitting by this post, 800
- Whan that we come agayn fro Caunterbury.
- And for to make yow the more mery,
- I wol my-selven gladly with yow ryde,
- Right at myn owne cost, and be your gyde.
- And who-so wol my Iugement withseye 805
- Shal paye al that we spenden by the weye.
- And if ye vouche-sauf that it be so,
- Tel me anon, with-outen wordes mo, (810)
- And I wol erly shape me therfore.'
- 789. E. taak; Ln. tak; Cp. Pt. take; Hl. Hn. taketh. 791. Cp. Hl.
- your; _rest_ our; _cf._ l. 803. 795. Hl. ther (_for_ whylom). 797,
- 798. E. caas, solaas. 802. E. Hn. Cp. mury. 803. Hl. my seluen
- gladly; E. my self goodly. 805. E. wole (_but_ wol _in_ l. 809).
- This thing was graunted, and our othes swore 810
- With ful glad herte, and preyden him also
- That he wold vouche-sauf for to do so,
- And that he wolde been our governour,
- And of our tales Iuge and reportour,
- And sette a soper at a certeyn prys; 815
- And we wold reuled been at his devys,
- In heigh and lowe; and thus, by oon assent,
- We been acorded to his Iugement. (820)
- And ther-up-on the wyn was fet anon;
- We dronken, and to reste wente echon, 820
- With-outen any lenger taryinge.
- 812. E. would. 816. Hl. wolde; Pt. wold; _rest_ wol, wolen, wiln,
- wil. 817. Hl. lowe; E. lough.
- A-morwe, whan that day bigan to springe,
- Up roos our host, and was our aller cok,
- And gadrede us togidre, alle in a flok,
- And forth we riden, a litel more than pas, 825
- [25: T. 828-860.]
- Un-to the watering of seint Thomas.
- And there our host bigan his hors areste,
- And seyde; 'Lordinges, herkneth, if yow leste. (830)
- Ye woot your forward, and I it yow recorde.
- If even-song and morwe-song acorde, 830
- Lat se now who shal telle the firste tale.
- As ever mote I drinke wyn or ale,
- Who-so be rebel to my Iugement
- Shal paye for al that by the weye is spent.
- Now draweth cut, er that we ferrer twinne; 835
- He which that hath the shortest shal biginne.
- Sire knight,' quod he, 'my maister and my lord,
- Now draweth cut, for that is myn acord. (840)
- Cometh neer,' quod he, 'my lady prioresse;
- And ye, sir clerk, lat be your shamfastnesse, 840
- Ne studieth noght; ley hond to, every man.'
- 822. E. Hn. that; Hl. that the; _rest_ the. E. gan for; Hn. Cp. Hl.
- bigan. 823. E. Hn. aller; Hl. althur; Cp. alther; Pt. Ln. alder.
- 825. E. paas. 829. E. foreward (_badly_). E. Hn. _om._ I. 831.
- Hl. ferst a tale. 835. Cp. Pt. Ln. ferther; Hl. forther. 836. E.
- Hn. shorteste. 840. E. shamefastnesse.
- Anon to drawen every wight bigan,
- And shortly for to tellen, as it was,
- Were it by aventure, or sort, or cas,
- The sothe is this, the cut fil to the knight, 845
- Of which ful blythe and glad was every wight;
- And telle he moste his tale, as was resoun,
- By forward and by composicioun, (850)
- As ye han herd; what nedeth wordes mo?
- And whan this gode man saugh it was so, 850
- As he that wys was and obedient
- To kepe his forward by his free assent,
- He seyde: 'Sin I shal biginne the game,
- What, welcome be the cut, a Goddes name!
- Now lat us ryde, and herkneth what I seye.' 855
- 848, 852. E. foreward (_badly_). 850. _All insert_ that _after_ saugh
- (_needlessly_). 854. Hl. thou (_for_ the).
- And with that word we riden forth our weye;
- And he bigan with right a mery chere
- His tale anon, and seyde in this manere. (860)
- HERE ENDETH THE PROLOG OF THIS BOOK; AND HERE BIGINNETH THE FIRST TALE,
- WHICH IS THE KNIGHTES TALE.
- 857. Cm. mery; E. myrie. 858. _So_ E. Hl.; _rest_ as ye may here.
- COLOPHON: _from_ MS. Sloane 1685, _which has_ Heere endith, heere,
- knyghte (_sic_).
- [26: T. 861-885.]
- * * * * *
- THE KNIGHTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- _Iamque domos patrias, Scithice post aspera gentis_
- _Prelia, laurigero, &c._
- [Statius, _Theb._ xii. 519.]
- Whylom, as olde stories tellen us,
- Ther was a duk that highte Theseus; 860
- Of Athenes he was lord and governour,
- And in his tyme swich a conquerour,
- That gretter was ther noon under the sonne.
- Ful many a riche contree hadde he wonne;
- What with his wisdom and his chivalrye, 865
- He conquered al the regne of Femenye,
- That whylom was y-cleped Scithia;
- And weddede the quene Ipolita, (10)
- And broghte hir hoom with him in his contree
- With muchel glorie and greet solempnitee, 870
- And eek hir yonge suster Emelye.
- And thus with victorie and with melodye
- Lete I this noble duk to Athenes ryde,
- And al his hoost, in armes, him bisyde.
- QUOTATION; _so in_ E. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. 865. E. Hl. That; _rest_
- What. 868. Cp. Hl. weddede; Slo. weddide; _rest_ wedded. 871. E.
- faire; Pt. yenge; _rest_ yonge.
- And certes, if it nere to long to here, 875
- I wolde han told yow fully the manere,
- How wonnen was the regne of Femenye
- By Theseus, and by his chivalrye; (20)
- And of the grete bataille for the nones
- Bitwixen Athenës and Amazones; 880
- And how asseged was Ipolita,
- The faire hardy quene of Scithia;
- And of the feste that was at hir weddinge,
- [27: T. 886-921.]
- And of the tempest at hir hoom-cominge;
- But al that thing I moot as now forbere. 885
- I have, God woot, a large feeld to ere,
- And wayke been the oxen in my plough.
- The remenant of the tale is long y-nough. (30)
- I wol nat letten eek noon of this route;
- Lat every felawe telle his tale aboute, 890
- And lat see now who shal the soper winne;
- And ther I lefte, I wol ageyn biginne.
- 876. Hl. han told [gh]ow; E. yow haue toold; _rest_ haue toold
- (told). 880. Tyrwhitt _inserts_ the _after_ and; _but see_ 968, 973,
- 1023, &c. 889. Hl. lette eek non of al; _rest_ letten, _and omit_
- al. 892. Hl. agayn; E. Hn. Cp. Pt. ayeyn.
- This duk, of whom I make mencioun,
- When he was come almost unto the toun,
- In al his wele and in his moste pryde, 895
- He was war, as he caste his eye asyde,
- Wher that ther kneled in the hye weye
- A companye of ladies, tweye and tweye, (40)
- Ech after other, clad in clothes blake;
- But swich a cry and swich a wo they make, 900
- That in this world nis creature livinge,
- That herde swich another weymentinge;
- And of this cry they nolde never stenten,
- Til they the reynes of his brydel henten.
- 897. E. _om._ hye; _rest_ hye, heighe, hihe, highe, high.
- 'What folk ben ye, that at myn hoom-cominge 905
- Perturben so my feste with cryinge?'
- Quod Theseus, 'have ye so greet envye
- Of myn honour, that thus compleyne and crye? (50)
- Or who hath yow misboden, or offended?
- And telleth me if it may been amended; 910
- And why that ye ben clothed thus in blak?'
- The eldest lady of hem alle spak,
- When she hadde swowned with a deedly chere,
- That it was routhe for to seen and here,
- And seyde: 'Lord, to whom Fortune hath yiven 915
- Victorie, and as a conquerour to liven,
- Noght greveth us your glorie and your honour;
- But we biseken mercy and socour. (60)
- Have mercy on our wo and our distresse.
- [28: T. 922-957.]
- Som drope of pitee, thurgh thy gentillesse, 920
- Up-on us wrecched wommen lat thou falle.
- For certes, lord, ther nis noon of us alle,
- That she nath been a duchesse or a quene;
- Now be we caitifs, as it is wel sene:
- Thanked be Fortune, and hir false wheel, 925
- That noon estat assureth to be weel.
- And certes, lord, to abyden your presence,
- Here in the temple of the goddesse Clemence (70)
- We han ben waytinge al this fourtenight;
- Now help us, lord, sith it is in thy might. 930
- 912. Cm. eldest; E. eldeste. 914. E. routhe; Ln. rewthe; Slo.
- reuthe. Hl. or; _rest_ and. 915. Hn. yiuen; E. yeuen. 916. Hn.
- conquerour; E. conqueror. 917. Hn. Hl. Noght; E. Pt. Ln. Nat. Hl.
- _om. 2nd _ your. 922. Hl. nys; _rest_ is. 923. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. ne
- hath. 924. Cp. Hl. caytifs; E. Hn. Pt. caytyues.
- I wrecche, which that wepe and waille thus,
- Was whylom wyf to king Capaneus,
- That starf at Thebes, cursed be that day!
- And alle we, that been in this array,
- And maken al this lamentacioun, 935
- We losten alle our housbondes at that toun,
- Whyl that the sege ther-aboute lay.
- And yet now the olde Creon, weylaway! (80)
- That lord is now of Thebes the citee,
- Fulfild of ire and of iniquitee, 940
- He, for despyt, and for his tirannye,
- To do the dede bodyes vileinye,
- Of alle our lordes, whiche that ben slawe,
- Hath alle the bodyes on an heep y-drawe,
- And wol nat suffren hem, by noon assent, 945
- Neither to been y-buried nor y-brent,
- But maketh houndes ete hem in despyt.'
- And with that word, with-outen more respyt, (90)
- They fillen gruf, and cryden pitously,
- 'Have on us wrecched wommen som mercy, 950
- And lat our sorwe sinken in thyn herte.'
- 931. E. crie; Hn. Hl. waille; Cp. Pt. weile. 938. _Only_ Hl. _om._
- now. 943. Hl. i-slawe. 944. E. He hath; _rest_ Hath.
- This gentil duk doun from his courser sterte
- With herte pitous, whan he herde hem speke.
- Him thoughte that his herte wolde breke,
- Whan he saugh hem so pitous and so mat, 955
- [29: T. 958-995.]
- That whylom weren of so greet estat.
- And in his armes he hem alle up hente,
- And hem conforteth in ful good entente; (100)
- And swoor his ooth, as he was trewe knight,
- He wolde doon so ferforthly his might 960
- Up-on the tyraunt Creon hem to wreke,
- That al the peple of Grece sholde speke
- How Creon was of Theseus y-served,
- As he that hadde his deeth ful wel deserved.
- And right anoon, with-outen more abood, 965
- His baner he desplayeth, and forth rood
- To Thebes-ward, and al his host bisyde;
- No neer Athenës wolde he go ne ryde, (110)
- Ne take his ese fully half a day,
- But onward on his wey that night he lay; 970
- And sente anoon Ipolita the quene,
- And Emelye hir yonge suster shene,
- Un-to the toun of Athenës to dwelle;
- And forth he rit; ther nis namore to telle.
- 955. E. maat. 956. E. estaat. 974. Hn. Cp. nys; _rest_ is.
- The rede statue of Mars, with spere and targe, 975
- So shyneth in his whyte baner large,
- That alle the feeldes gliteren up and doun;
- And by his baner born is his penoun (120)
- Of gold ful riche, in which ther was y-bete
- The Minotaur, which that he slough in Crete. 980
- Thus rit this duk, thus rit this conquerour,
- And in his host of chivalrye the flour,
- Til that he cam to Thebes, and alighte
- Faire in a feeld, ther as he thoghte fighte.
- But shortly for to speken of this thing, 985
- With Creon, which that was of Thebes king,
- He faught, and slough him manly as a knight
- In pleyn bataille, and putte the folk to flight; (130)
- And by assaut he wan the citee after,
- And rente adoun bothe wal, and sparre, and rafter; 990
- And to the ladyes he restored agayn
- The bones of hir housbondes that were slayn,
- To doon obsequies, as was tho the gyse.
- [30: T. 996-1031.]
- But it were al to long for to devyse
- The grete clamour and the waymentinge 995
- That the ladyes made at the brenninge
- Of the bodyes, and the grete honour
- That Theseus, the noble conquerour, (140)
- Doth to the ladyes, whan they from him wente;
- But shortly for to telle is myn entente. 1000
- Whan that this worthy duk, this Theseus,
- Hath Creon slayn, and wonne Thebes thus,
- Stille in that feeld he took al night his reste,
- And dide with al the contree as him leste.
- 984. Hn. thoghte; E. thoughte. 992. E. weren. 996. Hl. Which that.
- To ransake in the tas of bodyes dede, 1005
- Hem for to strepe of harneys and of wede,
- The pilours diden bisinesse and cure,
- After the bataille and disconfiture. (150)
- And so bifel, that in the tas they founde,
- Thurgh-girt with many a grevous blody wounde, 1010
- Two yonge knightes ligging by and by,
- Bothe in oon armes, wroght ful richely,
- Of whiche two, Arcita hight that oon,
- And that other knight hight Palamon.
- Nat fully quike, ne fully dede they were, 1015
- But by hir cote-armures, and by hir gere,
- The heraudes knewe hem best in special,
- As they that weren of the blood royal (160)
- Of Thebes, and of sustren two y-born.
- Out of the tas the pilours han hem torn, 1020
- And han hem caried softe un-to the tente
- Of Theseus, and he ful sone hem sente
- To Athenës, to dwellen in prisoun
- Perpetuelly, he nolde no raunsoun.
- And whan this worthy duk hath thus y-don, 1025
- He took his host, and hoom he rood anon
- With laurer crowned as a conquerour;
- And there he liveth, in Ioye and in honour, (170)
- Terme of his lyf; what nedeth wordes mo?
- [31: T. 1032-1066.]
- And in a tour, in angwish and in wo, 1030
- Dwellen this Palamoun and eek Arcite,
- For evermore, ther may no gold hem quyte.
- 1005, 1009, 1020. E. Hn. Cm. taas; Hl. cas; Cp. Pt. Ln. caas; _read_
- tas. 1005. Hn. Cm. Hl. of; _rest_ of the. 1013, 1014. Hl. hight; E.
- highte. 1022. E. Hl. ful soone he. 1023. Hl. Tathenes for to.
- 1029. E. Cm. _om._ his. E. lyue; _rest_ lyf, lif. 1031. E. Cm. Hl.
- This Palamon and his felawe Arcite.
- This passeth yeer by yeer, and day by day,
- Til it fil ones, in a morwe of May,
- That Emelye, that fairer was to sene 1035
- Than is the lilie upon his stalke grene,
- And fressher than the May with floures newe--
- For with the rose colour stroof hir hewe, (180)
- I noot which was the fairer of hem two--
- Er it were day, as was hir wone to do, 1040
- She was arisen, and al redy dight;
- For May wol have no slogardye a-night.
- The sesoun priketh every gentil herte,
- And maketh him out of his sleep to sterte,
- And seith, 'Arys, and do thyn observaunce.' 1045
- This maked Emelye have remembraunce
- To doon honour to May, and for to ryse.
- Y-clothed was she fresh, for to devyse; (190)
- Hir yelow heer was broyded in a tresse,
- Bihinde hir bak, a yerde long, I gesse. 1050
- And in the gardin, at the sonne up-riste,
- She walketh up and doun, and as hir liste
- She gadereth floures, party whyte and rede,
- To make a sotil gerland for hir hede,
- And as an aungel hevenly she song. 1055
- The grete tour, that was so thikke and strong,
- Which of the castel was the chief dongeoun,
- (Ther-as the knightes weren in prisoun, (200)
- Of whiche I tolde yow, and tellen shal)
- Was evene Ioynant to the gardin-wal, 1060
- Ther as this Emelye hadde hir pleyinge.
- Bright was the sonne, and cleer that morweninge,
- And Palamon, this woful prisoner,
- As was his wone, by leve of his gayler,
- [32: T. 1067-1103.]
- Was risen, and romed in a chambre on heigh, 1065
- In which he al the noble citee seigh,
- And eek the gardin, ful of braunches grene,
- Ther-as this fresshe Emelye the shene (210)
- Was in hir walk, and romed up and doun.
- This sorweful prisoner, this Palamoun, 1070
- Goth in the chambre, roming to and fro,
- And to him-self compleyning of his wo;
- That he was born, ful ofte he seyde, 'alas!'
- And so bifel, by aventure or cas,
- That thurgh a window, thikke of many a barre 1075
- Of yren greet, and square as any sparre,
- He caste his eye upon Emelya,
- And ther-with-al he bleynte, and cryde 'a!' (220)
- As though he stongen were un-to the herte.
- And with that cry Arcite anon up-sterte, 1080
- And seyde, 'Cosin myn, what eyleth thee,
- That art so pale and deedly on to see?
- Why crydestow? who hath thee doon offence?
- For Goddes love, tak al in pacience
- Our prisoun, for it may non other be; 1085
- Fortune hath yeven us this adversitee.
- Som wikke aspect or disposicioun
- Of Saturne, by sum constellacioun, (230)
- Hath yeven us this, al-though we hadde it sworn;
- So stood the heven whan that we were born; 1090
- We moste endure it: this is the short and pleyn.'
- 1036. Hl. on hire. 1039. E. Hl. fyner; Cm. fynere; Hn. Cp. Pt.
- fairer. 1042. E. slogardrie; _rest_ slogardye (sloggardye,
- sluggardie). 1049. E. Hn. Cm. Cp. broyded; Pt. breided; Ln. Hl.
- browded. 1054. Ln. sotil; Cp. sotyl; E. Hn. Cm. subtil; Pt. subtile;
- Hl. certeyn. 1055. Hl. Pt. heuenly; Cm. heueneliche; E. Hn. Cp. Ln.
- heuenysshly. 1063. E. And this Palamon. 1065. Hl. Cp. Pt. on;
- _rest_ an. 1091. _Only_ E. _om._ it.
- This Palamon answerde, and seyde ageyn,
- 'Cosyn, for sothe, of this opinioun
- Thou hast a veyn imaginacioun.
- This prison caused me nat for to crye. 1095
- But I was hurt right now thurgh-out myn yë
- In-to myn herte, that wol my bane be.
- The fairnesse of that lady that I see (240)
- Yond in the gardin romen to and fro,
- Is cause of al my crying and my wo. 1100
- I noot wher she be womman or goddesse;
- [33: T. 1104-1139.]
- But Venus is it, soothly, as I gesse.'
- And ther-with-al on kneës doun he fil,
- And seyde: 'Venus, if it be thy wil
- Yow in this gardin thus to transfigure 1105
- Bifore me, sorweful wrecche creature,
- Out of this prisoun help that we may scapen.
- And if so be my destinee be shapen (250)
- By eterne word to dyen in prisoun,
- Of our linage have som compassioun, 1110
- That is so lowe y-broght by tirannye.'
- And with that word Arcite gan espye
- Wher-as this lady romed to and fro.
- And with that sighte hir beautee hurte him so,
- That, if that Palamon was wounded sore, 1115
- Arcite is hurt as muche as he, or more.
- And with a sigh he seyde pitously:
- 'The fresshe beautee sleeth me sodeynly (260)
- Of hir that rometh in the yonder place;
- And, but I have hir mercy and hir grace, 1120
- That I may seen hir atte leeste weye,
- I nam but deed; ther nis namore to seye.'
- 1096. Cm. Pt. ye; Hn. Iye; Cp. Hl. yhe; E. eye. 1101. Cm. wheþer; Hl.
- wheþur. 1103. Hl. Cp. a doun. 1115. E. _wrongly om._ was. 1116.
- Hn. muche; E. moche. 1122. E. is; _rest_ nys.
- This Palamon, whan he tho wordes herde,
- Dispitously he loked, and answerde:
- 'Whether seistow this in ernest or in pley?' 1125
- 1125 E. Wheither.
- 'Nay,' quod Arcite, 'in ernest, by my fey!
- God help me so, me list ful yvele pleye.'
- This Palamon gan knitte his browes tweye: (270)
- 'It nere,' quod he, 'to thee no greet honour
- For to be fals, ne for to be traytour 1130
- To me, that am thy cosin and thy brother
- Y-sworn ful depe, and ech of us til other,
- That never, for to dyen in the peyne,
- Til that the deeth departe shal us tweyne,
- Neither of us in love to hindren other, 1135
- Ne in non other cas, my leve brother;
- But that thou sholdest trewely forthren me
- [34: T. 1140-1174.]
- In every cas, and I shal forthren thee. (280)
- This was thyn ooth, and myn also, certeyn;
- I wot right wel, thou darst it nat withseyn. 1140
- Thus artow of my counseil, out of doute.
- And now thou woldest falsly been aboute
- To love my lady, whom I love and serve,
- And ever shal, til that myn herte sterve.
- Now certes, fals Arcite, thou shalt nat so. 1145
- I loved hir first, and tolde thee my wo
- As to my counseil, and my brother sworn
- To forthre me, as I have told biforn. (290)
- For which thou art y-bounden as a knight
- To helpen me, if it lay in thy might, 1150
- Or elles artow fals, I dar wel seyn.'
- 1132. til] Cm. Pt. Ln. Hl. to. 1134. E. Ln. Hl. _om._ the. 1135. E.
- hyndre; Cm. hynderyn. 1138. E. as; _rest_ and. 1141, 1151. E. Hn.
- artow; _rest_ art thou. 1145. E. Nay; _rest_ Now. 1147. E. Cm. and
- to my.
- This Arcitë ful proudly spak ageyn,
- 'Thou shalt,' quod he, 'be rather fals than I;
- But thou art fals, I telle thee utterly;
- For _par amour_ I loved hir first er thow. 1155
- What wiltow seyn? thou wistest nat yet now
- Whether she be a womman or goddesse!
- Thyn is affeccioun of holinesse, (300)
- And myn is love, as to a creature;
- For which I tolde thee myn aventure 1160
- As to my cosin, and my brother sworn.
- I pose, that thou lovedest hir biforn;
- Wostow nat wel the olde clerkes sawe,
- That 'who shal yeve a lover any lawe?'
- Love is a gretter lawe, by my pan, 1165
- Than may be yeve to any erthly man.
- And therefore positif lawe and swich decree
- Is broke al-day for love, in ech degree. (310)
- A man moot nedes love, maugree his heed.
- He may nat fleen it, thogh he sholde be deed, 1170
- Al be she mayde, or widwe, or elles wyf.
- And eek it is nat lykly, al thy lyf,
- [35: T. 1175-1210.]
- To stonden in hir grace; namore shal I;
- For wel thou woost thy-selven, verraily,
- That thou and I be dampned to prisoun 1175
- Perpetuelly; us gayneth no raunsoun.
- We stryve as dide the houndes for the boon,
- They foughte al day, and yet hir part was noon; (320)
- Ther cam a kyte, whyl that they were wrothe,
- And bar awey the boon bitwixe hem bothe. 1180
- And therfore, at the kinges court, my brother,
- Ech man for him-self, ther is non other.
- Love if thee list; for I love and ay shal;
- And soothly, leve brother, this is al.
- Here in this prisoun mote we endure, 1185
- And everich of us take his aventure.'
- 1154. E. Hn. And; _rest_ But. Hl. Cm. uttirly; Cp. Pt. Ln. witterly; E.
- Hn. outrely. 1156. Cp. Pt. wilt thou; Hl. wolt thou. 1157. E.
- Wheither. 1163. Cm. Wist thou; Hl. Ln. Wost thou; Pt. Woost thow.
- 1166. E. of; _rest_ to. 1167. Hl. _om._ And. 1168. L. Cm. broken.
- 1170. Hn. Cp. Pt. fleen; E. Hl. flee. 1177. Hn. Cm. Hl. stryue;
- _rest_ stryuen. 1179. E. _om._ that. _All but_ Cm. Hl. _ins._ so
- _after_ were.
- Greet was the stryf and long bitwixe hem tweye,
- If that I hadde leyser for to seye; (330)
- But to theffect. It happed on a day,
- (To telle it yow as shortly as I may) 1190
- A worthy duk that highte Perotheus,
- That felawe was un-to duk Theseus
- Sin thilke day that they were children lyte,
- Was come to Athenes, his felawe to visyte,
- And for to pleye, as he was wont to do, 1195
- For in this world he loved no man so:
- And he loved him as tendrely ageyn.
- So wel they loved, as olde bokes seyn, (340)
- That whan that oon was deed, sothly to telle,
- His felawe wente and soghte him doun in helle; 1200
- But of that story list me nat to wryte.
- Duk Perotheus loved wel Arcite,
- And hadde him knowe at Thebes yeer by yere;
- And fynally, at requeste and preyere
- Of Perotheus, with-oute any raunsoun, 1205
- Duk Theseus him leet out of prisoun,
- Freely to goon, wher that him liste over-al,
- In swich a gyse, as I you tellen shal. (350)
- [36: T. 1211-1247.]
- This was the forward, pleynly for tendyte,
- Bitwixen Theseus and him Arcite: 1210
- That if so were, that Arcite were y-founde
- Ever in his lyf, by day or night or stounde
- In any contree of this Theseus,
- And he were caught, it was acorded thus,
- That with a swerd he sholde lese his heed; 1215
- Ther nas non other remedye ne reed,
- But taketh his leve, and homward he him spedde;
- Let him be war, his nekke lyth to wedde! (360)
- 1192. E. to; Hl. to the; _rest_ un-to. 1195. E. won; Cm. wone; _rest_
- wont. 1197. E. Cp. als; Hn. Cm. Hl. as. 1198. E. louede. 1200.
- Hn. soghte; E. soughte. 1205. Hl. Cp. Pt. with-oute; _rest_
- with-outen. 1217. Hl. (_alone_) took.
- How greet a sorwe suffreth now Arcite!
- The deeth he feleth thurgh his herte smyte; 1220
- He wepeth, wayleth, cryeth pitously;
- To sleen him-self he wayteth prively.
- He seyde, 'Allas that day that I was born!
- Now is my prison worse than biforn;
- Now is me shape eternally to dwelle 1225
- Noght in purgatorie, but in helle.
- Allas! that ever knew I Perotheus!
- For elles hadde I dwelled with Theseus (370)
- Y-fetered in his prisoun ever-mo.
- Than hadde I been in blisse, and nat in wo. 1230
- Only the sighte of hir, whom that I serve,
- Though that I never hir grace may deserve,
- Wolde han suffised right y-nough for me.
- O dere cosin Palamon,' quod he,
- 'Thyn is the victorie of this aventure, 1235
- Ful blisfully in prison maistow dure;
- In prison? certes nay, but in paradys!
- Wel hath fortune y-turned thee the dys, (380)
- That hast the sighte of hir, and I thabsence.
- For possible is, sin thou hast hir presence, 1240
- And art a knight, a worthy and an able,
- That by som cas, sin fortune is chaungeable,
- Thou mayst to thy desyr som-tyme atteyne.
- But I, that am exyled, and bareyne
- Of alle grace, and in so greet despeir, 1245
- [37: T. 1248-1283.]
- That ther nis erthe, water, fyr, ne eir,
- Ne creature, that of hem maked is,
- That may me helpe or doon confort in this. (390)
- Wel oughte I sterve in wanhope and distresse;
- Farwel my lyf, my lust, and my gladnesse! 1250
- 1223. that (i)] Hn. Hl. the. E. he; _rest_ I. 1226. Hn. Noght; E.
- Nat; Cm. Not; _rest_ Nought. E. _ins._ my _after_ in. 1228. Hl.
- dweld. 1237. Cp. Pt. Ln. _om._ in. 1242. E. (_alone_) _om._ by.
- 1248. E. heele; _rest_ helpe.
- Allas, why pleynen folk so in commune
- Of purveyaunce of God, or of fortune,
- That yeveth hem ful ofte in many a gyse
- Wel bettre than they can hem-self devyse?
- Som man desyreth for to han richesse, 1255
- That cause is of his mordre or greet siknesse.
- And som man wolde out of his prison fayn,
- That in his hous is of his meynee slayn. (400)
- Infinite harmes been in this matere;
- We witen nat what thing we preyen here. 1260
- We faren as he that dronke is as a mous;
- A dronke man wot wel he hath an hous,
- But he noot which the righte wey is thider;
- And to a dronke man the wey is slider.
- And certes, in this world so faren we; 1265
- We seken faste after felicitee,
- But we goon wrong ful often, trewely.
- Thus may we seyen alle, and namely I, (410)
- That wende and hadde a greet opinioun,
- That, if I mighte escapen from prisoun, 1270
- Than hadde I been in Ioye and perfit hele,
- Ther now I am exyled fro my wele.
- Sin that I may nat seen yow, Emelye,
- I nam but deed; ther nis no remedye.'
- 1256. Cp. Ln. mordre; E. Hn. moerdre; Cm. Pt: mordere; Hl. morthre.
- 1260. E. (_alone_) _om._ thing. 1262. E. Cm. wel that he. 1268. Hl.
- seyen; E. Hn. Cm. Cp. seyn. 1272. Ther] E. That.
- Up-on that other syde Palamon, 1275
- Whan that he wiste Arcite was agon,
- Swich sorwe he maketh, that the grete tour
- Resouneth of his youling and clamour. (420)
- The pure fettres on his shines grete
- Weren of his bittre salte teres wete. 1280
- 'Allas!' quod he, 'Arcita, cosin myn,
- [38: T. 1284-1317.]
- Of al our stryf, God woot, the fruyt is thyn.
- Thow walkest now in Thebes at thy large,
- And of my wo thou yevest litel charge.
- Thou mayst, sin thou hast wisdom and manhede, 1285
- Assemblen alle the folk of our kinrede,
- And make a werre so sharp on this citee,
- That by som aventure, or som tretee, (430)
- Thou mayst have hir to lady and to wyf,
- For whom that I mot nedes lese my lyf. 1290
- For, as by wey of possibilitee,
- Sith thou art at thy large, of prison free,
- And art a lord, greet is thyn avauntage,
- More than is myn, that sterve here in a cage.
- For I mot wepe and wayle, whyl I live, 1295
- With al the wo that prison may me yive,
- And eek with peyne that love me yiveth also,
- That doubleth al my torment and my wo.' (440)
- Ther-with the fyr of Ielousye up-sterte
- With-inne his brest, and hente him by the herte 1300
- So woodly, that he lyk was to biholde
- The box-tree, or the asshen dede and colde.
- Tho seyde he; 'O cruel goddes, that governe
- This world with binding of your word eterne,
- And wryten in the table of athamaunt 1305
- Your parlement, and your eterne graunt,
- What is mankinde more un-to yow holde
- Than is the sheep, that rouketh in the folde? (450)
- For slayn is man right as another beste,
- And dwelleth eek in prison and areste, 1310
- And hath siknesse, and greet adversitee,
- And ofte tymes giltelees, pardee!
- 1278. E. Resouned; _rest_ Resouneth. Cp. Hl. yollyng; Pt. Ln.
- yellinge. 1290. _All_ moste, most, muste; _but read_ mot: _see_ l.
- 1295. 1296. Hl. [gh]yue; E. yeue. 1297. E. yeueth. 1299. Hl.
- Ielousye; E. Ialousie. 1303. Hl. Tho; E. Thanne. E. crueel
- gooddes(!). 1305. Hl. Cm. athamaunte; E. Atthamaunt. 1309. Cm. Hl.
- beste; E. beest. 1310. Cm. areste; Hl. arreste; E. arreest. 1312,
- 1314. Cm. Cp. Hl. gilteles; E. giltlees.
- What governaunce is in this prescience,
- That giltelees tormenteth innocence?
- And yet encreseth this al my penaunce, 1315
- [39: T. 1318-1353.]
- That man is bounden to his observaunce,
- For Goddes sake, to letten of his wille,
- Ther as a beest may al his lust fulfille. (460)
- And whan a beest is deed, he hath no peyne;
- But man after his deeth moot wepe and pleyne, 1320
- Though in this world he have care and wo:
- With-outen doute it may stonden so.
- The answere of this I lete to divynis,
- But wel I woot, that in this world gret pyne is.
- Allas! I see a serpent or a theef, 1325
- That many a trewe man hath doon mescheef,
- Goon at his large, and wher him list may turne.
- But I mot been in prison thurgh Saturne, (470)
- And eek thurgh Iuno, Ialous and eek wood,
- That hath destroyed wel ny al the blood 1330
- Of Thebes, with his waste walles wyde.
- And Venus sleeth me on that other syde
- For Ielousye, and fere of him Arcite.'
- 1315. Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. encreseth; E. encresseth. 1320. _So_ Hn. Cm.
- Hl.; _rest_ after his deeth man. 1323. _So_ Hl.; _rest_ lete I.
- 1331. E. hise. 1333. E. Ialousie.
- Now wol I stinte of Palamon a lyte,
- And lete him in his prison stille dwelle, 1335
- And of Arcita forth I wol yow telle.
- The somer passeth, and the nightes longe
- Encresen double wyse the peynes stronge (480)
- Bothe of the lovere and the prisoner.
- I noot which hath the wofullere mester. 1340
- For shortly for to seyn, this Palamoun
- Perpetuelly is dampned to prisoun,
- In cheynes and in fettres to ben deed;
- And Arcite is exyled upon his heed
- For ever-mo as out of that contree, 1345
- Ne never-mo he shal his lady see.
- 1337. E. (_alone_) sonne. 1338. E. Encressen. 1344. Cm. Cp. Pt. vp
- (_perhaps rightly_).
- Yow loveres axe I now this questioun,
- Who hath the worse, Arcite or Palamoun? (490)
- That oon may seen his lady day by day,
- But in prison he moot dwelle alway. 1350
- That other wher him list may ryde or go,
- [40: T. 1354-1386.]
- But seen his lady shal he never-mo.
- Now demeth as yow liste, ye that can,
- For I wol telle forth as I bigan.
- 1347. E. Now (_wrongly_); rest Yow. 1350. Hn. Cp. Pt. moot he.
- 1353. Ln. liste; Cm. lyste; Hl. luste; _rest_ list.
- EXPLICIT PRIMA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS SECUNDA.
- Whan that Arcite to Thebes comen was, 1355
- Ful ofte a day he swelte and seyde 'allas,'
- For seen his lady shal he never-mo.
- And shortly to concluden al his wo, (500)
- So muche sorwe had never creature
- That is, or shal, whyl that the world may dure. 1360
- His sleep, his mete, his drink is him biraft,
- That lene he wex, and drye as is a shaft.
- His eyen holwe, and grisly to biholde;
- His hewe falwe, and pale as asshen colde,
- And solitarie he was, and ever allone, 1365
- And wailling al the night, making his mone.
- And if he herde song or instrument,
- Then wolde he wepe, he mighte nat be stent; (510)
- So feble eek were his spirits, and so lowe,
- And chaunged so, that no man coude knowe 1370
- His speche nor his vois, though men it herde.
- And in his gere, for al the world he ferde
- Nat oonly lyk the loveres maladye
- Of Hereos, but rather lyk manye
- Engendred of humour malencolyk, 1375
- Biforen, in his celle fantastyk.
- And shortly, turned was al up-so-doun
- Bothe habit and eek disposicioun (520)
- Of him, this woful lovere daun Arcite.
- 1359. Hl. Pt. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 1362. E. Pt. wexeth. 1364. Hi.
- Cm. Cp. falwe; E. Hn. falow. 1369. E. spiritz. 1376. E. Biforn his
- owene; Cm. Be-forn hese owene; Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. Biforn his; Hl. Beforne
- in his.
- What sholde I al-day of his wo endyte? 1380
- Whan he endured hadde a yeer or two
- This cruel torment, and this peyne and wo,
- At Thebes, in his contree, as I seyde,
- Up-on a night, in sleep as he him leyde,
- [41: T. 1387-1424.]
- Him thoughte how that the winged god Mercurie 1385
- Biforn him stood, and bad him to be murye.
- His slepy yerde in hond he bar uprighte;
- An hat he werede up-on his heres brighte. (530)
- Arrayed was this god (as he took keep)
- As he was whan that Argus took his sleep; 1390
- And seyde him thus: 'To Athenes shaltou wende;
- Ther is thee shapen of thy wo an ende.'
- And with that word Arcite wook and sterte.
- 'Now trewely, how sore that me smerte,'
- Quod he, 'to Athenes right now wol I fare; 1395
- Ne for the drede of deeth shal I nat spare
- To see my lady, that I love and serve;
- In hir presence I recche nat to sterve.' (540)
- 1382. E. crueel. 1388. E. vp (_perhaps rightly_); _rest_ vp-on.
- 1389. E. I; _rest_ he.
- And with that word he caughte a greet mirour,
- And saugh that chaunged was al his colour, 1400
- And saugh his visage al in another kinde.
- And right anoon it ran him in his minde,
- That, sith his face was so disfigured
- Of maladye, the which he hadde endured,
- He mighte wel, if that he bar him lowe, 1405
- Live in Athenes ever-more unknowe,
- And seen his lady wel ny day by day.
- And right anon he chaunged his array, (550)
- And cladde him as a povre laborer,
- And al allone, save oonly a squyer, 1410
- That knew his privetee and al his cas,
- Which was disgysed povrely, as he was,
- To Athenes is he goon the nexte way.
- And to the court he wente up-on a day,
- And at the gate he profreth his servyse, 1415
- To drugge and drawe, what so men wol devyse.
- And shortly of this matere for to seyn,
- He fil in office with a chamberleyn, (560)
- The which that dwelling was with Emelye.
- For he was wys, and coude soon aspye 1420
- Of every servaunt, which that serveth here.
- Wel coude he hewen wode, and water bere,
- [42: T. 1425-1461.]
- For he was yong and mighty for the nones,
- And ther-to be was strong and big of bones
- To doon that any wight can him devyse. 1425
- A yeer or two he was in this servyse,
- Page of the chambre of Emelye the brighte;
- And 'Philostrate' he seide that he highte. (570)
- But half so wel biloved a man as he
- Ne was ther never in court, of his degree; 1430
- He was so gentil of condicioun,
- That thurghout al the court was his renoun.
- They seyden, that it were a charitee
- That Theseus wolde enhauncen his degree,
- And putten him in worshipful servyse, 1435
- Ther as he mighte his vertu excercyse.
- And thus, with-inne a whyle, his name is spronge
- Bothe of his dedes, and his goode tonge, (580)
- That Theseus hath taken him so neer
- That of his chambre he made him a squyer, 1440
- And yaf him gold to mayntene his degree;
- And eek men broghte him out of his contree
- From yeer to yeer, ful prively, his rente;
- But honestly and slyly he it spente,
- That no man wondred how that he it hadde. 1445
- And three yeer in this wyse his lyf he ladde,
- And bar him so in pees and eek in werre,
- Ther nas no man that Theseus hath derre. (590)
- And in this blisse lete I now Arcite,
- And speke I wol of Palamon a lyte. 1450
- 1424. E. Cm. long; _rest_ strong. 1431. E. Hl. _ins._ his _after_
- of. 1441. E. Hn. Cp. gaf.
- In derknesse and horrible and strong prisoun
- This seven yeer hath seten Palamoun,
- Forpyned, what for wo and for distresse;
- Who feleth double soor and hevinesse
- But Palamon? that love destreyneth so, 1455
- That wood out of his wit he gooth for wo;
- And eek therto he is a prisoner
- Perpetuelly, noght oonly for a yeer. (600)
- Who coude ryme in English proprely
- [43: T. 1462-1497.]
- His martirdom? for sothe, it am nat I; 1460
- Therefore I passe as lightly as I may.
- 1454. E. Hn. Pt. soor; Cp. Ln. sore; Cm. Hl. sorwe. E. _om._ and.
- It fel that in the seventhe yeer, in May,
- The thridde night, (as olde bokes seyn,
- That al this storie tellen more pleyn,)
- Were it by aventure or destinee, 1465
- (As, whan a thing is shapen, it shal be,)
- That, sone after the midnight, Palamoun,
- By helping of a freend, brak his prisoun, (610)
- And fleeth the citee, faste as he may go;
- For he had yive his gayler drinke so 1470
- Of a clarree, maad of a certeyn wyn,
- With nercotikes and opie of Thebes fyn,
- That al that night, thogh that men wolde him shake,
- The gayler sleep, he mighte nat awake;
- And thus he fleeth as faste as ever he may. 1475
- The night was short, and faste by the day,
- That nedes-cost he moste him-selven hyde,
- And til a grove, faste ther besyde, (620)
- With dredful foot than stalketh Palamoun.
- For shortly, this was his opinioun, 1480
- That in that grove he wolde him hyde al day,
- And in the night than wolde he take his way
- To Thebes-ward, his freendes for to preye
- On Theseus to helpe him to werreye;
- And shortly, outher he wolde lese his lyf, 1485
- Or winnen Emelye un-to his wyf;
- This is theffect and his entente pleyn.
- 1470. Hl. [gh]iue; E. yeue. 1472. E. Of; _rest_ With. 1477. E.
- moot; _rest_ moste, most, muste. 1479. E. Hn. Cm. thanne; _rest_
- than.
- Now wol I torne un-to Arcite ageyn, (630)
- That litel wiste how ny that was his care,
- Til that fortune had broght him in the snare. 1490
- 1488. E. Hn. Ln. to; _rest_ vn-to.
- The bisy larke, messager of day,
- Saluëth in hir song the morwe gray;
- And fyry Phebus ryseth up so brighte,
- That al the orient laugheth of the lighte,
- And with his stremes dryeth in the greves 1495
- [44: T. 1498-1532.]
- The silver dropes, hanging on the leves.
- And Arcite, that is in the court royal
- With Theseus, his squyer principal, (640)
- Is risen, and loketh on the myrie day.
- And, for to doon his observaunce to May, 1500
- Remembring on the poynt of his desyr,
- He on a courser, sterting as the fyr,
- Is riden in-to the feeldes, him to pleye,
- Out of the court, were it a myle or tweye;
- And to the grove, of which that I yow tolde, 1505
- By aventure, his wey he gan to holde,
- To maken him a gerland of the greves,
- Were it of wodebinde or hawethorn-leves, (650)
- And loude he song ageyn the sonne shene:
- 'May, with alle thy floures and thy grene, 1510
- Wel-come be thou, faire fresshe May,
- I hope that I som grene gete may.'
- And from his courser, with a lusty herte,
- In-to the grove ful hastily he sterte,
- And in a path he rometh up and doun, 1515
- Ther-as, by aventure, this Palamoun
- Was in a bush, that no man mighte him see,
- For sore afered of his deeth was he. (660)
- No-thing ne knew he that it was Arcite:
- God wot he wolde have trowed it ful lyte. 1520
- But sooth is seyd, gon sithen many yeres,
- That 'feeld hath eyen, and the wode hath eres.'
- It is ful fair a man to bere him evene,
- For al-day meteth men at unset stevene.
- Ful litel woot Arcite of his felawe, 1525
- That was so ny to herknen al his sawe,
- For in the bush he sitteth now ful stille.
- 1491. day] Hl. May. 1495. E. hise. 1497. Hl. Arcite; _rest_
- Arcita. 1502. E. Hn. Cm. a; _rest_ his. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. stertyng;
- E. Hn. startlynge; Cm. stertelynge. 1511. Hl. wel faire; _rest om._
- wel. 1512. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. In; _rest_ I. 1514. E. a; _rest_ the.
- 1518. Hn. Hl. afered; Cm. ofered; _rest_ aferd. E. (_alone_) _ins._
- thanne _bef._ was. 1521. Hl. Pt. goon; Cm. Ln. gon; E. Hn. Cp. go.
- 1526. E. Hn. al; _rest_ of.
- Whan that Arcite had romed al his fille, (670)
- And songen al the roundel lustily,
- In-to a studie he fil sodeynly, 1530
- [45: T. 1533-1567.]
- As doon thise loveres in hir queynte geres,
- Now in the croppe, now doun in the breres,
- Now up, now doun, as boket in a welle.
- Right as the Friday, soothly for to telle,
- Now it shyneth, now it reyneth faste, 1535
- Right so can gery Venus overcaste
- The hertes of hir folk; right as hir day
- Is gerful, right so chaungeth she array. (680)
- Selde is the Friday al the wyke y-lyke.
- 1530. E. fil al: _rest om._ al. 1532. E. Hn. Cm. crop; Cp. Hl. Pt.
- croppe. 1536. E. Hn. Cm. kan; _rest_ gan. 1538. E. gereful; Cp.
- geerful; Hl. grisful; _rest_ gerful. 1539. Hl. wyke; Hn. Cp. wike;
- Pt. Ln. weke; Cm. wouke; E. wowke.
- Whan that Arcite had songe, he gan to syke, 1540
- And sette him doun with-outen any more:
- 'Alas!' quod he, 'that day that I was bore!
- How longe, Iuno, thurgh thy crueltee,
- Woltow werreyen Thebes the citee?
- Allas! y-broght is to confusioun 1545
- The blood royal of Cadme and Amphioun;
- Of Cadmus, which that was the firste man
- That Thebes bulte, or first the toun bigan, 690
- And of the citee first was crouned king,
- Of his linage am I, and his of-spring 1550
- By verray ligne, as of the stok royal:
- And now I am so caitif and so thral,
- That he, that is my mortal enemy,
- I serve him as his squyer povrely.
- And yet doth Iuno me wel more shame, 1555
- For I dar noght biknowe myn owne name;
- But ther-as I was wont to highte Arcite,
- Now highte I Philostrate, noght worth a myte. 700
- Allas! thou felle Mars, allas! Iuno,
- Thus hath your ire our kinrede al fordo, 1560
- Save only me, and wrecched Palamoun,
- That Theseus martyreth in prisoun.
- And over al this, to sleen me utterly,
- Love hath his fyry dart so brenningly
- Y-stiked thurgh my trewe careful herte, 1565
- [46: T. 1568-1602.]
- That shapen was my deeth erst than my sherte.
- Ye sleen me with your eyen, Emelye;
- Ye been the cause wherfor that I dye. (710)
- Of al the remenant of myn other care
- Ne sette I nat the mountaunce of a tare, 1570
- So that I coude don aught to your plesaunce!'
- And with that word he fil doun in a traunce
- A longe tyme; and after he up-sterte.
- 1551. Cm. Pt. Hl. lyne. 1556. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. owne; E. owene. 1557.
- highte] Hl. hote. 1560. E. kynrede; _rest_ lynage (lignage). 1563.
- Hl. vtterly; E. outrely. 1573. _So_ E.; _rest_ afterward (_for_
- after). Hl. _om_ he.
- This Palamoun, that thoughte that thurgh his herte
- He felte a cold swerd sodeynliche glyde, 1575
- For ire he quook, no lenger wolde he byde.
- And whan that he had herd Arcites tale,
- As he were wood, with face deed and pale, (720)
- He sterte him up out of the buskes thikke,
- And seyde: 'Arcite, false traitour wikke, 1580
- Now artow hent, that lovest my lady so,
- For whom that I have al this peyne and wo,
- And art my blood, and to my counseil sworn,
- As I ful ofte have told thee heer-biforn,
- And hast by-iaped here duk Theseus, 1585
- And falsly chaunged hast thy name thus;
- I wol be deed, or elles thou shalt dye.
- Thou shalt nat love my lady Emelye, (730)
- But I wol love hir only, and namo;
- For I am Palamoun, thy mortal fo. 1590
- And though that I no wepne have in this place,
- But out of prison am astert by grace,
- I drede noght that outher thou shalt dye,
- Or thou ne shalt nat loven Emelye.
- Chees which thou wilt, for thou shalt nat asterte.' 1595
- 1579. Hl. bussches; Cm. boschis; Ln. boskes. 1581. E. Hn. artow;
- _rest_ art thou. 1584. told] E. Cm. seyd. 1589. E. Hn. namo; Hl.
- Cm. no mo. 1595. E. Hn. wolt. Hl. for; _rest_ or.
- This Arcitë, with ful despitous herte,
- Whan he him knew, and hadde his tale herd,
- As fiers as leoun, pulled out a swerd, (740)
- And seyde thus: 'by God that sit above,
- Nere it that thou art sik, and wood for love, 1600
- [47: T. 1603-1639.]
- And eek that thou no wepne hast in this place,
- Thou sholdest never out of this grove pace,
- That thou ne sholdest dyen of myn hond.
- For I defye the seurtee and the bond
- Which that thou seyst that I have maad to thee. 1605
- What, verray fool, think wel that love is free,
- And I wol love hir, maugre al thy might!
- But, for as muche thou art a worthy knight, (750)
- And wilnest to darreyne hir by batayle,
- Have heer my trouthe, to-morwe I wol nat fayle, 1610
- With-outen witing of any other wight,
- That here I wol be founden as a knight,
- And bringen harneys right y-nough for thee;
- And chees the beste, and leve the worste for me.
- And mete and drinke this night wol I bringe 1615
- Y-nough for thee, and clothes for thy beddinge.
- And, if so be that thou my lady winne,
- And slee me in this wode ther I am inne, (760)
- Thou mayst wel have thy lady, as for me.'
- This Palamon answerde: 'I graunte it thee.' 1620
- And thus they been departed til a-morwe,
- When ech of hem had leyd his feith to borwe.
- 1598. E. Hn. his; _rest_ a. 1599. E. sit; Cm. set; _rest_ sitteth.
- 1604. Hl. seurte; Cp. sewrte; E. seurete; Hn. seuretee. 1609. Cp.
- derreyne; Hl. dereyne. 1614. Hn. chees; Cm. Hl. ches; _rest_ chese.
- O Cupide, out of alle charitee!
- O regne, that wolt no felawe have with thee!
- Ful sooth is seyd, that love ne lordshipe 1625
- Wol noght, his thankes, have no felaweshipe;
- Wel finden that Arcite and Palamoun.
- Arcite is riden anon un-to the toun, (770)
- And on the morwe, er it were dayes light,
- Ful prively two harneys hath he dight, 1630
- Bothe suffisaunt and mete to darreyne
- The bataille in the feeld bitwix hem tweyne.
- And on his hors, allone as he was born,
- He carieth al this harneys him biforn;
- And in the grove, at tyme and place y-set, 1635
- This Arcite and this Palamon ben met.
- Tho chaungen gan the colour in hir face;
- [48: T. 1640-1675.]
- Right as the hunter in the regne of Trace, (780)
- That stondeth at the gappe with a spere,
- Whan hunted is the leoun or the bere, 1640
- And hereth him come russhing in the greves,
- And breketh bothe bowes and the leves,
- And thinketh, 'heer cometh my mortel enemy,
- With-oute faile, he moot be deed, or I;
- For outher I mot sleen him at the gappe, 1645
- Or he mot sleen me, if that me mishappe:'
- So ferden they, in chaunging of hir hewe,
- As fer as everich of hem other knewe. (790)
- Ther nas no good day, ne no saluing;
- But streight, with-outen word or rehersing, 1650
- Everich of hem halp for to armen other,
- As freendly as he were his owne brother;
- And after that, with sharpe speres stronge
- They foynen ech at other wonder longe.
- Thou mightest wene that this Palamoun 1655
- In his fighting were a wood leoun,
- And as a cruel tygre was Arcite:
- As wilde bores gonne they to smyte, (800)
- That frothen whyte as foom for ire wood.
- Up to the ancle foghte they in hir blood. 1660
- And in this wyse I lete hem fighting dwelle;
- And forth I wol of Theseus yow telle.
- 1626. E. hir; _rest_ his. 1634. E. the; Hn. Cm. Hl. this. 1637. Hl.
- Tho; _rest_ To. 1638. Hl. honter_us_; _rest_ hunters, hunterys; _ed._
- 1542, hunter. 1640. E. and; _rest_ or. 1651. Cm. halp; Cp. hilp; E.
- Hn. heelp; Hl. Pt. helpeth; Ln. helpe. Hl. Ln. _om._ for. 1652. E.
- owene. 1656. Tyrwhitt _ins._ as _bef._ a. 1659. E. Hn. whit.
- 1660. E. anclee. 1662. E. wole.
- The destinee, ministre general,
- That executeth in the world over-al
- The purveyaunce, that God hath seyn biforn, 1665
- So strong it is, that, though the world had sworn
- The contrarie of a thing, by ye or nay,
- Yet somtyme it shal fallen on a day (810)
- That falleth nat eft with-inne a thousand yere.
- For certeinly, our appetytes here, 1670
- Be it of werre, or pees, or hate, or love,
- Al is this reuled by the sighte above.
- This mene I now by mighty Theseus,
- [49: T. 1676-1712.]
- That for to honten is so desirous,
- And namely at the grete hert in May, 1675
- That in his bed ther daweth him no day,
- That he nis clad, and redy for to ryde
- With hunte and horn, and houndes him bisyde. (820)
- For in his hunting hath he swich delyt,
- That it is al his Ioye and appetyt 1680
- To been him-self the grete hertes bane;
- For after Mars he serveth now Diane.
- 1672. this] Hl. it.
- Cleer was the day, as I have told er this,
- And Theseus, with alle Ioye and blis,
- With his Ipolita, the fayre quene, 1685
- And Emelye, clothed al in grene,
- On hunting be they riden royally.
- And to the grove, that stood ful faste by, (830)
- In which ther was an hert, as men him tolde,
- Duk Theseus the streighte wey hath holde. 1690
- And to the launde he rydeth him ful right,
- For thider was the hert wont have his flight,
- And over a brook, and so forth on his weye.
- This duk wol han a cours at him, or tweye,
- With houndes, swiche as that him list comaunde. 1695
- 1693. E. Hl. in; _rest_ on. 1695. Hn. Cp. Pt. that; _rest om._
- And whan this duk was come un-to the launde,
- Under the sonne he loketh, and anon
- He was war of Arcite and Palamon, (840)
- That foughten breme, as it were bores two;
- The brighte swerdes wenten to and fro 1700
- So hidously, that with the leeste strook
- It seemed as it wolde felle an ook;
- But what they were, no-thing he ne woot.
- This duk his courser with his spores smoot,
- And at a stert he was bitwix hem two, 1705
- And pulled out a swerd and cryed, 'ho!
- Namore, up peyne of lesing of your heed.
- By mighty Mars, he shal anon be deed, (850)
- That smyteth any strook, that I may seen!
- But telleth me what mister men ye been, 1710
- [50: T. 1713-1749.]
- That been so hardy for to fighten here
- With-outen Iuge or other officere,
- As it were in a listes royally?'
- 1699. E. Cm. Hl. bores; _rest_ boles. 1702. E. fille. 1706. E.
- cride; Hn. Cp. Pt. cryed. 1707. E. Hn. Ln. vp-on; _rest_ vp. 1710.
- Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. myster; E. mystiers; Ln. mester; Hl. mestir.
- This Palamon answerde hastily,
- And seyde: 'sire, what nedeth wordes mo? 1715
- We have the deeth deserved bothe two.
- Two woful wrecches been we, two caytyves,
- That been encombred of our owne lyves; (860)
- And as thou art a rightful lord and Iuge,
- Ne yeve us neither mercy ne refuge, 1720
- But slee me first, for seynte charitee;
- But slee my felawe eek as wel as me.
- Or slee him first; for, though thou knowe it lyte,
- This is thy mortal fo, this is Arcite,
- That fro thy lond is banished on his heed, 1725
- For which he hath deserved to be deed.
- For this is he that cam un-to thy gate,
- And seyde, that he highte Philostrate. (870)
- Thus hath he Iaped thee ful many a yeer,
- And thou has maked him thy chief squyer; 1730
- And this is he that loveth Emelye.
- For sith the day is come that I shal dye,
- I make pleynly my confessioun,
- That I am thilke woful Palamoun,
- That hath thy prison broken wikkedly. 1735
- I am thy mortal fo, and it am I
- That loveth so hote Emelye the brighte,
- That I wol dye present in hir sighte. (880)
- Therfore I axe deeth and my Iuwyse;
- But slee my felawe in the same wyse, 1740
- For bothe han we deserved to be slayn.'
- 1716. E. Hn. disserued. 1718. E. Hn. Cm. owene. 1723. Hl. Hn.
- knowe; _rest_ knowest. 1741. Ln. Hl. we haue.
- This worthy duk answerde anon agayn,
- And seyde, 'This is a short conclusioun:
- Youre owne mouth, by your confessioun,
- Hath dampned you, and I wol it recorde, 1745
- It nedeth noght to pyne yow with the corde.
- Ye shul be deed, by mighty Mars the rede!'
- [51: T. 1750-1787.]
- The quene anon, for verray wommanhede, (890)
- Gan for to wepe, and so dide Emelye,
- And alle the ladies in the companye. 1750
- Gret pitee was it, as it thoughte hem alle,
- That ever swich a chaunce sholde falle;
- For gentil men they were, of greet estat,
- And no-thing but for love was this debat;
- And sawe hir blody woundes wyde and sore; 1755
- And alle cryden, bothe lasse and more,
- 'Have mercy, lord, up-on us wommen alle!'
- And on hir bare knees adoun they falle, (900)
- And wolde have kist his feet ther-as he stood,
- Til at the laste aslaked was his mood; 1760
- For pitee renneth sone in gentil herte.
- And though he first for ire quook and sterte,
- He hath considered shortly, in a clause,
- The trespas of hem bothe, and eek the cause:
- And al-though that his ire hir gilt accused, 1765
- Yet in his reson he hem bothe excused;
- As thus: he thoghte wel, that every man
- Wol helpe him-self in love, if that he can, (910)
- And eek delivere him-self out of prisoun;
- And eek his herte had compassioun 1770
- Of wommen, for they wepen ever in oon;
- And in his gentil herte he thoghte anoon,
- And softe un-to himself he seyde: 'fy
- Up-on a lord that wol have no mercy,
- But been a leoun, bothe in word and dede, 1775
- To hem that been in repentaunce and drede
- As wel as to a proud despitous man
- That wol maynteyne that he first bigan! (920)
- That lord hath litel of discrecioun,
- That in swich cas can no divisioun, 1780
- But weyeth pryde and humblesse after oon.'
- And shortly, whan his ire is thus agoon,
- He gan to loken up with eyen lighte,
- And spak thise same wordes al on highte:--
- The god of love, a! _benedicite_, 1785
- [52: T. 1788-1823.]
- How mighty and how greet a lord is he!
- Ayeins his might ther gayneth none obstacles,
- He may be cleped a god for his miracles; (930)
- For he can maken at his owne gyse
- Of everich herte, as that him list devyse. 1790
- Lo heer, this Arcite and this Palamoun,
- That quitly weren out of my prisoun,
- And mighte han lived in Thebes royally,
- And witen I am hir mortal enemy,
- And that hir deeth lyth in my might also, 1795
- And yet hath love, maugree hir eyen two,
- Y-broght hem hider bothe for to dye!
- Now loketh, is nat that an heigh folye? (940)
- Who may been a fool, but-if he love?
- Bihold, for Goddes sake that sit above, 1800
- Se how they blede! be they noght wel arrayed?
- Thus hath hir lord, the god of love, y-payed
- Hir wages and hir fees for hir servyse!
- And yet they wenen for to been ful wyse
- That serven love, for aught that may bifalle! 1805
- But this is yet the beste game of alle,
- That she, for whom they han this Iolitee,
- Can hem ther-for as muche thank as me; (950)
- She woot namore of al this hote fare,
- By God, than woot a cokkow or an hare! 1810
- But al mot been assayed, hoot and cold;
- A man mot been a fool, or yong or old;
- I woot it by my-self ful yore agoon:
- For in my tyme a servant was I oon.
- And therfore, sin I knowe of loves peyne, 1815
- And woot how sore it can a man distreyne,
- As he that hath ben caught ofte in his las,
- I yow foryeve al hoolly this trespas, (960)
- At requeste of the quene that kneleth here,
- And eek of Emelye, my suster dere. 1820
- And ye shul bothe anon un-to me swere,
- [53: T. 1824-1859.]
- That never-mo ye shul my contree dere,
- Ne make werre up-on me night ne day,
- But been my freendes in al that ye may;
- I yow foryeve this trespas every del.' 1825
- And they him swore his axing fayre and wel,
- And him of lordshipe and of mercy preyde,
- And he hem graunteth grace, and thus he seyde: (970)
- 1744. E. Hn. Cm. owene; Hl. Cp. Pt. owne. 1747. Hn. Pt. shul; Cm. Hl.
- schul; E. shal. 1753. E. estaat. 1754. E. debaat. 1767. Hn. Cm.
- Cp. As; _rest_ And. 1770. Hl. Pt. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 1771. Hn.
- wepten; _rest_ wepen. 1788. E. hise. 1789. E. Hn. Cm. owene; Cp.
- Pt. owne. 1790. E. diuyse. 1797. Hl. I-brought; _rest_ Broght,
- Brought. 1799. _See note._ Hl. if that; _rest_ but if. 1810. E. Hn.
- Cp. of; _rest_ or. 1811. and] Cm. Hl. or. 1817. E. Hn. Cp. Pt.
- laas; Cm. las; Hl. Ln. lace. 1818. E. Pt. trespaas. 1822. E. Hn.
- Cp. Ln. shal. contree] Cp. Ln. Hl. coroune. 1825, 1826. E. deel,
- weel; Hn. Cm. Cp. del, wel. Hl. Pt. swore; _rest_ sworen, sworne,
- sworyn. 1828. Hl. Cm. graunted.
- 'To speke of royal linage and richesse,
- Though that she were a quene or a princesse, 1830
- Ech of yow bothe is worthy, doutelees,
- To wedden whan tyme is, but nathelees
- I speke as for my suster Emelye,
- For whom ye have this stryf and Ielousye;
- Ye woot your-self, she may not wedden two 1835
- At ones, though ye fighten ever-mo:
- That oon of yow, al be him looth or leef,
- He moot go pypen in an ivy-leef; (980)
- This is to seyn, she may nat now han bothe,
- Al be ye never so Ielous, ne so wrothe. 1840
- And for-thy I yow putte in this degree,
- That ech of yow shal have his destinee
- As him is shape; and herkneth in what wyse;
- Lo, heer your ende of that I shal devyse.
- 1832. E. _wrongly repeats_ doutelees. 1834. E. Hn. Cp. Ialousye.
- 1837. E. Hn. Pt. lief. 1838. E. _om._ go. 1840. E. Hn. Cp. Ialouse.
- My wil is this, for plat conclusioun, 1845
- With-outen any replicacioun,
- If that yow lyketh, tak it for the beste,
- That everich of yow shal gon wher him leste (990)
- Frely, with-outen raunson or daunger;
- And this day fifty wykes, fer ne ner, 1850
- Everich of yow shal bringe an hundred knightes,
- Armed for listes up at alle rightes,
- Al redy to darreyne hir by bataille.
- And this bihote I yow, with-outen faille,
- Up-on my trouthe, and as I am a knight, 1855
- That whether of yow bothe that hath might,
- This is to seyn, that whether he or thou
- [54: T. 1860-1892.]
- May with his hundred, as I spak of now, (1000)
- Sleen his contrarie, or out of listes dryve,
- Him shal I yeve Emelya to wyve, 1860
- To whom that fortune yeveth so fair a grace.
- The listes shal I maken in this place,
- And God so wisly on my soule rewe,
- As I shal even Iuge been and trewe.
- Ye shul non other ende with me maken, 1865
- That oon of yow ne shal be deed or taken.
- And if yow thinketh this is wel y-sayd,
- Seyeth your avys, and holdeth yow apayd. (1010)
- This is your ende and your conclusioun.'
- 1856, 7. E. wheither. 1860. Hl. Him; Cp. Ln. That; E. Hn. Thanne; Cm.
- Pt. Than. E. Cp. Ln. Emelya; Hl. Hn. Emelye.
- Who loketh lightly now but Palamoun? 1870
- Who springeth up for Ioye but Arcite?
- Who couthe telle, or who couthe it endyte,
- The Ioye that is maked in the place
- Whan Theseus hath doon so fair a grace?
- But doun on knees wente every maner wight, 1875
- And thanked him with al her herte and might,
- And namely the Thebans ofte sythe.
- And thus with good hope and with herte blythe (1020)
- They take hir leve, and hom-ward gonne they ryde
- To Thebes, with his olde walles wyde. 1880
- 1872. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ it. 1876. Hl. thanked; Cm. thankede; Cp. Pt.
- Ln. thonked; E. Hn. thonken. 1877. E. often; Ln. oft; Pt. mony;
- _rest_ ofte.
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS TERCIA.
- I trowe men wolde deme it necligence,
- If I foryete to tellen the dispence
- Of Theseus, that goth so bisily
- To maken up the listes royally;
- That swich a noble theatre as it was, 1885
- I dar wel seyn that in this world ther nas.
- The circuit a myle was aboute,
- Walled of stoon, and diched al with-oute. (1030)
- Round was the shap, in maner of compas,
- Ful of degrees, the heighte of sixty pas, 1890
- [55: T. 1893-1928.]
- That, whan a man was set on o degree,
- He letted nat his felawe for to see.
- 1886. Hl. that; _rest om._ 1889. E. compaas. 1892. E. lette; Cm.
- lettyth; _rest_ letted.
- Est-ward ther stood a gate of marbel whyt,
- West-ward, right swich another in the opposit.
- And shortly to concluden, swich a place 1895
- Was noon in erthe, as in so litel space;
- For in the lond ther nas no crafty man,
- That geometrie or ars-metrik can, (1040)
- Ne purtreyour, ne kerver of images,
- That Theseus ne yaf him mete and wages 1900
- The theatre for to maken and devyse.
- And for to doon his ryte and sacrifyse,
- He est-ward hath, up-on the gate above,
- In worship of Venus, goddesse of love,
- Don make an auter and an oratorie; 1905
- And west-ward, in the minde and in memorie
- Of Mars, he maked hath right swich another,
- That coste largely of gold a fother. (1050)
- And north-ward, in a touret on the wal,
- Of alabastre whyt and reed coral 1910
- An oratorie riche for to see,
- In worship of Dyane of chastitee,
- Hath Theseus don wroght in noble wyse.
- 1893. E. Hn. Hl. marbul. 1899. Hl. Hn. Cp. purtreyour; E.
- portreitour. 1900. Cp. Pt. Cm. him; Hl. hem; _rest om._ 1906. _So_
- Hl.; E. Hn. Cm. (_wrongly_) And on the west-ward in memorie.
- But yet hadde I foryeten to devyse
- The noble kerving, and the portreitures, 1915
- The shap, the countenaunce, and the figures,
- That weren in thise oratories three.
- First in the temple of Venus maystow see (1060)
- Wroght on the wal, ful pitous to biholde,
- The broken slepes, and the sykes colde; 1920
- The sacred teres, and the waymenting;
- The fyry strokes of the desiring,
- That loves servaunts in this lyf enduren;
- The othes, that hir covenants assuren;
- Plesaunce and hope, desyr, fool-hardinesse, 1925
- Beautee and youthe, bauderie, richesse,
- [56: T. 1929-1963.]
- Charmes and force, lesinges, flaterye,
- Dispense, bisynesse, and Ielousye, (1070)
- That wered of yelwe goldes a gerland,
- And a cokkow sitting on hir hand; 1930
- Festes, instruments, caroles, daunces,
- Lust and array, and alle the circumstaunces
- Of love, whiche that I rekne and rekne shal,
- By ordre weren peynted on the wal,
- And mo than I can make of mencioun. 1935
- For soothly, al the mount of Citheroun,
- Ther Venus hath hir principal dwelling,
- Was shewed on the wal in portreying, (1080)
- With al the gardin, and the lustinesse.
- Nat was foryeten the porter Ydelnesse, 1940
- Ne Narcisus the faire of yore agon,
- Ne yet the folye of king Salamon,
- Ne yet the grete strengthe of Hercules--
- Thenchauntements of Medea and Circes--
- Ne of Turnus, with the hardy fiers corage, 1945
- The riche Cresus, caytif in servage.
- Thus may ye seen that wisdom ne richesse,
- Beautee ne sleighte, strengthe, ne hardinesse, (1090)
- Ne may with Venus holde champartye;
- For as hir list the world than may she gye. 1950
- Lo, alle thise folk so caught were in hir las,
- Til they for wo ful ofte seyde 'allas!'
- Suffyceth heer ensamples oon or two,
- And though I coude rekne a thousand mo.
- 1922. E. Hl. and; _rest_ of. 1928. E. Hn. Cp. Ialousye. 1929. Hl.
- guldes. 1930. Cp. Ln. Cm. his. 1933. Cm. I reken and rekne schal;
- Hn. Hl. I rekned and rekne shal; E. I rekned haue and rekne shal (_too
- long_). 1942. E. Cm. And; _rest_ Ne. 1943. E. Cm. And eek; Hn. Cp.
- Pt. Ln. Ne yet; Hl. Ne eek. E. Hn. Cm. Ercules. 1948. E. Hn. Pt.
- _om._ ne.
- The statue of Venus, glorious for to see, 1955
- Was naked fleting in the large see,
- And fro the navele doun all covered was
- With wawes grene, and brighte as any glas. (1100)
- A citole in hir right hand hadde she,
- And on hir heed, ful semely for to see, 1960
- A rose gerland, fresh and wel smellinge;
- [57: T. 1964-1997.]
- Above hir heed hir dowves flikeringe.
- Biforn hir stood hir sone Cupido,
- Up-on his shuldres winges hadde he two;
- And blind he was, as it is ofte sene; 1965
- A bowe he bar and arwes brighte and kene.
- 1965. E. it was; _rest_ it is.
- Why sholde I noght as wel eek telle yow al
- The portreiture, that was up-on the wal (1110)
- With-inne the temple of mighty Mars the rede?
- Al peynted was the wal, in lengthe and brede, 1970
- Lyk to the estres of the grisly place,
- That highte the grete temple of Mars in Trace,
- In thilke colde frosty regioun,
- Ther-as Mars hath his sovereyn mansioun.
- First on the wal was peynted a foreste, 1975
- In which ther dwelleth neither man ne beste,
- With knotty knarry bareyn treës olde
- Of stubbes sharpe and hidous to biholde; (1120)
- In which ther ran a rumbel and a swough,
- As though a storm sholde bresten every bough: 1980
- And downward from an hille, under a bente,
- Ther stood the temple of Mars armipotente,
- Wroght al of burned steel, of which thentree
- Was long and streit, and gastly for to see.
- And ther-out cam a rage and such a vese, 1985
- That it made al the gates for to rese.
- The northren light in at the dores shoon,
- For windowe on the wal ne was ther noon, (1130)
- Thurgh which men mighten any light discerne.
- The dores were alle of adamant eterne, 1990
- Y-clenched overthwart and endelong
- With iren tough; and, for to make it strong,
- Every piler, the temple to sustene,
- Was tonne-greet, of iren bright and shene.
- 1975. Hl. foreste; E. forest. 1976. Hl. beste; E. best. 1977. E.
- Hn. Cm. Cp. bareyne. 1979. E. rumbel; Cm. ru_m_bil; Hn. rombul; Cp.
- Ln. rombel; Hl. swymbul. E. Pt. and; _rest_ in. 1980. Ln. berste;
- Hl. berst. 1981. Hn. Hl. on (_for_ from). 1983. E. Hn. the
- entree. 1985. Cp. vese; Cm. wese; E. Hn. Ln. veze; Hl. prise. 1986.
- E. Hn. Cm. gate. Hl. rise. 1990. E. Hn. Pt. dore was.
- Ther saugh I first the derke imagining 1995
- [58: T. 1998-2033.]
- Of felonye, and al the compassing;
- The cruel ire, reed as any glede;
- The pykepurs, and eek the pale drede; (1140)
- The smyler with the knyf under the cloke;
- The shepne brenning with the blake smoke; 2000
- The treson of the mordring in the bedde;
- The open werre, with woundes al bi-bledde;
- Contek, with blody knyf and sharp manace;
- Al ful of chirking was that sory place.
- The sleere of him-self yet saugh I ther, 2005
- His herte-blood hath bathed al his heer;
- The nayl y-driven in the shode a-night;
- The colde deeth, with mouth gaping up-right. (1150)
- Amiddes of the temple sat meschaunce,
- With disconfort and sory contenaunce. 2010
- Yet saugh I woodnesse laughing in his rage;
- Armed compleint, out-hees, and fiers outrage.
- The careyne in the bush, with throte y-corve:
- A thousand slayn, and nat of qualm y-storve;
- The tiraunt, with the prey by force y-raft; 2015
- The toun destroyed, ther was no-thing laft.
- Yet saugh I brent the shippes hoppesteres;
- The hunte strangled with the wilde beres: (1160)
- The sowe freten the child right in the cradel;
- The cook y-scalded, for al his longe ladel. 2020
- Noght was foryeten by the infortune of Marte;
- The carter over-riden with his carte,
- Under the wheel ful lowe he lay adoun.
- Ther were also, of Martes divisioun,
- The barbour, and the bocher, and the smith 2025
- That forgeth sharpe swerdes on his stith.
- And al above, depeynted in a tour,
- Saw I conquest sittinge in greet honour, (1170)
- With the sharpe swerde over his heed
- Hanginge by a sotil twynes threed. 2030
- Depeynted was the slaughtre of Iulius,
- [59: T. 2034-2069.]
- Of grete Nero, and of Antonius;
- Al be that thilke tyme they were unborn,
- Yet was hir deeth depeynted ther-biforn,
- By manasinge of Mars, right by figure; 2035
- So was it shewed in that portreiture
- As is depeynted in the sterres above,
- Who shal be slayn or elles deed for love. (1180)
- Suffyceth oon ensample in stories olde,
- I may not rekne hem alle, thogh I wolde. 2040
- 1995. E. Hn. dirke. 1996. E. Cm. on. al. 1998. E. Cm. _om._ eek.
- 2012. Cm. outes. 2013. E. Cp. Ln. busk; Cm. bosch; Hn. Pt. bussh.
- 2014. E. _ins._ oon _after_ nat. 2021. Hl. _om._ by. 2025. E. Cm.
- laborer; _rest_ barbour. 2029. Pt. Ln. swerde; _rest_ swerd. 2030.
- E. soutil; Hn. Cp. Ln. subtil. 2037. Hl. sterres; E. Pt. certres;
- _rest_ sertres.
- The statue of Mars up-on a carte stood,
- Armed, and loked grim as he were wood;
- And over his he'ed ther shynen two figures
- Of sterres, that been cleped in scriptures,
- That oon Puella, that other Rubeus. 2045
- This god of armes was arrayed thus:--
- A wolf ther stood biforn him at his feet
- With eyen rede, and of a man he eet; (1190)
- With sotil pencel was depeynt this storie,
- In redoutinge of Mars and of his glorie. 2050
- 2049. Cm. sotyl; E. soutil. _All_ depeynted (_badly_); _see_ C. 950.
- Now to the temple of Diane the chaste
- As shortly as I can I wol me haste,
- To telle yow al the descripcioun.
- Depeynted been the walles up and doun
- Of hunting and of shamfast chastitee. 2055
- Ther saugh I how woful Calistopee,
- Whan that Diane agreved was with here,
- Was turned from a womman til a bere, (1200)
- And after was she maad the lode-sterre;
- Thus was it peynt, I can say yow no ferre; 2060
- Hir sone is eek a sterre, as men may see.
- Ther saugh I Dane, y-turned til a tree,
- I mene nat the goddesse Diane,
- But Penneus doughter, which that highte Dane.
- Ther saugh I Attheon an hert y-maked, 2065
- For vengeaunce that he saugh Diane al naked;
- I saugh how that his houndes have him caught,
- [60: T. 2070-2106.]
- And freten him, for that they knewe him naught. (1210)
- Yet peynted was a litel forther-moor,
- How Atthalante hunted the wilde boor, 2070
- And Meleagre, and many another mo,
- For which Diane wroghte him care and wo.
- Ther saugh I many another wonder storie,
- The whiche me list nat drawen to memorie.
- This goddesse on an hert ful hye seet, 2075
- With smale houndes al aboute hir feet;
- And undernethe hir feet she hadde a mone,
- Wexing it was, and sholde wanie sone. (1220)
- In gaude grene hir statue clothed was,
- With bowe in honde, and arwes in a cas. 2080
- Hir eyen caste she ful lowe adoun,
- Ther Pluto hath his derke regioun.
- A womman travailinge was hir biforn,
- But, for hir child so longe was unborn,
- Ful pitously Lucyna gan she calle, 2085
- And seyde, 'help, for thou mayst best of alle.'
- Wel couthe he peynten lyfly that it wroghte,
- With many a florin he the hewes boghte. (1230)
- 2058. E. Pt. Ln. Hl. to; _rest_ til; _see_ l. 2062. 2060. _All_
- peynted; _see_ l. 2049. Hl. _om._ yow. 2062. Hl. Cp. Pt. Ln.
- turned. 2067. E. Hn. hise; Cm. hese. 2069. E. _om._ was. 2071. E.
- Hn. Meleagree. 2075. E. Cp. Pt. _ins._ wel _after_ ful.
- Now been thise listes maad, and Theseus,
- That at his grete cost arrayed thus 2090
- The temples and the theatre every del,
- Whan it was doon, him lyked wonder wel.
- But stinte I wol of Theseus a lyte,
- And speke of Palamon and of Arcite.
- 2089. thise] E. the.
- The day approcheth of hir retourninge, 2095
- That everich sholde an hundred knightes bringe,
- The bataille to darreyne, as I yow tolde;
- And til Athenes, hir covenant for to holde, (1240)
- Hath everich of hem broght an hundred knightes
- Wel armed for the werre at alle rightes. 2100
- And sikerly, ther trowed many a man
- That never, sithen that the world bigan,
- As for to speke of knighthod of hir hond,
- As fer as God hath maked see or lond,
- [61: T. 2107-2143.]
- Nas, of so fewe, so noble a companye. 2105
- For every wight that lovede chivalrye,
- And wolde, his thankes, han a passant name,
- Hath preyed that he mighte ben of that game; (1250)
- And wel was him, that ther-to chosen was.
- For if ther fille to-morwe swich a cas, 2110
- Ye knowen wel, that every lusty knight,
- That loveth paramours, and hath his might,
- Were it in Engelond, or elles-where,
- They wolde, hir thankes, wilnen to be there.
- To fighte for a lady, _benedicite!_ 2115
- It were a lusty sighte for to see.
- 2098. E. couenantz. Hl. _om._ for. 2108. E. preyd; Hn. prayd; Hl. Cm.
- preyed. 2110. E. Cp. Pt. Hl. caas.
- And right so ferden they with Palamon.
- With him ther wenten knightes many oon; (1260)
- Som wol ben armed in an habergeoun,
- In a brest-plat and in a light gipoun; 2120
- And somme woln have a peyre plates large;
- And somme woln have a Pruce sheld, or a targe;
- Somme woln ben armed on hir legges weel,
- And have an ax, and somme a mace of steel.
- Ther nis no newe gyse, that it nas old. 2125
- Armed were they, as I have you told,
- Everich after his opinioun.
- 2120. Hl. In a; E. And in; Hn. Cm. Cp. Ln. And in a; Pt. And a.
- Ther maistow seen coming with Palamoun (1270)
- Ligurge him-self, the grete king of Trace;
- Blak was his berd, and manly was his face. 2130
- The cercles of his eyen in his heed,
- They gloweden bitwixe yelow and reed;
- And lyk a griffon loked he aboute,
- With kempe heres on his browes stoute;
- His limes grete, his braunes harde and stronge, 2135
- His shuldres brode, his armes rounde and longe.
- And as the gyse was in his contree,
- Ful hye up-on a char of gold stood he, (1280)
- With foure whyte boles in the trays.
- In-stede of cote-armure over his harnays, 2140
- With nayles yelwe and brighte as any gold,
- [62: T. 2144-2179.]
- He hadde a beres skin, col-blak, for-old.
- His longe heer was kembd bihinde his bak,
- As any ravenes fether it shoon for-blak:
- A wrethe of gold arm-greet, of huge wighte, 2145
- Upon his heed, set ful of stones brighte,
- Of fyne rubies and of dyamaunts.
- Aboute his char ther wenten whyte alaunts, (1290)
- Twenty and mo, as grete as any steer,
- To hunten at the leoun or the deer, 2150
- And folwed him, with mosel faste y-bounde,
- Colers of gold, and torets fyled rounde.
- An hundred lordes hadde he in his route
- Armed ful wel, with hertes sterne and stoute.
- 2132. E. Hn. bitwyxen. 2134, 5, 6. E. hise. 2141. Hn. Cm. yelwe; E.
- yelewe; Hl. yolwe. 2148. E. chaar. 2152. Pt. Ln. Colers; Cp.
- Coleres; Hl. Colerd; E. Hn. Colered; Cm. Colerid. E. to_u_rettes; Cp.
- Pt. torettes; Hl. torettz (_better_ torets); Ln. turettes. 2154. E.
- Hn. stierne.
- With Arcita, in stories as men finde, 2155
- The grete Emetreus, the king of Inde,
- Up-on a stede bay, trapped in steel,
- Covered in cloth of gold diapred weel, (1300)
- Cam ryding lyk the god of armes, Mars.
- His cote-armure was of cloth of Tars, 2160
- Couched with perles whyte and rounde and grete.
- His sadel was of brend gold newe y-bete;
- A mantelet upon his shuldre hanginge
- Bret-ful of rubies rede, as fyr sparklinge.
- His crispe heer lyk ringes was y-ronne, 2165
- And that was yelow, and glitered as the sonne.
- His nose was heigh, his eyen bright citryn,
- His lippes rounde, his colour was sangwyn, (1310)
- A fewe fraknes in his face y-spreynd,
- Betwixen yelow and somdel blak y-meynd, 2170
- And as a leoun he his loking caste.
- Of fyve and twenty yeer his age I caste.
- His berd was wel bigonne for to springe;
- His voys was as a trompe thunderinge.
- Up-on his heed he wered of laurer grene 2175
- A gerland fresh and lusty for to sene.
- Up-on his hand he bar, for his deduyt,
- [63: T. 2180-2215.]
- An egle tame, as eny lilie whyt. (1320)
- An hundred lordes hadde he with him there,
- Al armed, sauf hir heddes, in al hir gere, 2180
- Ful richely in alle maner thinges.
- For trusteth wel, that dukes, erles, kinges,
- Were gadered in this noble companye,
- For love and for encrees of chivalrye.
- Aboute this king ther ran on every part 2185
- Ful many a tame leoun and lepart.
- And in this wyse thise lordes, alle and some,
- Ben on the Sonday to the citee come (1330)
- Aboute pryme, and in the toun alight.
- 2155. E. Pt. Arcite; _rest_ Arcita. 2163. E. Cm. Pt. mantel. 2164.
- E. Brat-ful. 2180. Hl. _om._ al. 2186. Hl. Cp. Ln. lepart; E.
- leopard.
- This Theseus, this duk, this worthy knight, 2190
- Whan he had broght hem in-to his citee,
- And inned hem, everich in his degree,
- He festeth hem, and dooth so greet labour
- To esen hem, and doon hem al honour,
- That yet men weneth that no mannes wit 2195
- Of noon estat ne coude amenden it.
- The minstralcye, the service at the feste,
- The grete yiftes to the moste and leste, (1340)
- The riche array of Theseus paleys,
- Ne who sat first ne last up-on the deys, 2200
- What ladies fairest been or best daunsinge,
- Or which of hem can dauncen best and singe,
- Ne who most felingly speketh of love:
- What haukes sitten on the perche above,
- What houndes liggen on the floor adoun: 2205
- Of al this make I now no mencioun;
- But al theffect, that thinketh me the beste;
- Now comth the poynt, and herkneth if yow leste. (1350)
- 2192. E. in; Pt. after; _rest_ at. 2195. E. maner. 2198. E. Hn.
- meeste; Cm. Cp. meste; _rest_ most. 2205. E. Cm. Hl. in; _rest_ on.
- 2207. al] Hl. of. 2208. Hn. Hl. comth; _rest_ cometh.
- The Sonday night, er day bigan to springe,
- When Palamon the larke herde singe, 2210
- Although it nere nat day by houres two,
- Yet song the larke, and Palamon also.
- With holy herte, and with an heigh corage
- [64: T. 2216-2251.]
- He roos, to wenden on his pilgrimage
- Un-to the blisful Citherea benigne, 2215
- I mene Venus, honurable and digne.
- And in hir houre he walketh forth a pas
- Un-to the listes, ther hir temple was, (1360)
- And doun he kneleth, and with humble chere
- And herte soor, he seyde as ye shul here. 2220
- 2212. also] Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. right tho. 2217. E. paas. 2219. E. with
- ful; _rest_ and with. 2220. E. and seyde in this manere.
- 'Faireste of faire, o lady myn, Venus,
- Doughter to Iove and spouse of Vulcanus,
- Thou glader of the mount of Citheroun,
- For thilke love thou haddest to Adoun,
- Have pitee of my bittre teres smerte, 2225
- And tak myn humble preyer at thyn herte.
- Allas! I ne have no langage to telle
- Theffectes ne the torments of myn helle; (1370)
- Myn herte may myne harmes nat biwreye;
- I am so confus, that I can noght seye. 2230
- But mercy, lady bright, that knowest weel
- My thought, and seest what harmes that I feel,
- Considere al this, and rewe up-on my sore,
- As wisly as I shal for evermore,
- Emforth my might, thy trewe servant be, 2235
- And holden werre alwey with chastitee;
- That make I myn avow, so ye me helpe.
- I kepe noght of armes for to yelpe, (1380)
- Ne I ne axe nat to-morwe to have victorie,
- Ne renoun in this cas, ne veyne glorie 2240
- Of pris of armes blowen up and doun,
- But I wolde have fully possessioun
- Of Emelye, and dye in thy servyse;
- Find thou the maner how, and in what wyse.
- I recche nat, but it may bettre be, 2245
- To have victorie of hem, or they of me,
- So that I have my lady in myne armes.
- For though so be that Mars is god of armes, (1390)
- Your vertu is so greet in hevene above,
- [65: T. 2252-2287.]
- That, if yow list, I shal wel have my love, 2250
- Thy temple wol I worshipe evermo,
- And on thyn auter, wher I ryde or go,
- I wol don sacrifice, and fyres bete.
- And if ye wol nat so, my lady swete,
- Than preye I thee, to-morwe with a spere 2255
- That Arcita me thurgh the herte bere.
- Thanne rekke I noght, whan I have lost my lyf,
- Though that Arcita winne hir to his wyf. (1400)
- This is theffect and ende of my preyere,
- Yif me my love, thou blisful lady dere.' 2260
- 2222. to] Hn. Hl. of. of] _all but_ E. Cm. to. 2226. E. Cm.
- preyere; Hn. prayere. at] Hl. to. 2227. to] Hl. for to. 2231, 2.
- Cm. Hl. wel, fel; _rest_ wele, fele. 2239. Hl. aske. Hl. Ln. to
- morn.
- Whan thorisoun was doon of Palamon,
- His sacrifice he dide, and that anon
- Ful pitously, with alle circumstaunces,
- Al telle I noght as now his observaunces.
- But atte laste the statue of Venus shook, 2265
- And made a signe, wher-by that he took
- That his preyere accepted was that day.
- For thogh the signe shewed a delay, (1410)
- Yet wiste he wel that graunted was his bone;
- And with glad herte he wente him hoom ful sone. 2270
- 2261. Hl. thorisoun; _rest_ the orison (orisoun). 2263. E. Cm.
- circumstaunce. 2264. E. Cm. obseruaunce.
- The thridde houre inequal that Palamon
- Bigan to Venus temple for to goon,
- Up roos the sonne, and up roos Emelye,
- And to the temple of Diane gan hye.
- Hir maydens, that she thider with hir ladde, 2275
- Ful redily with hem the fyr they hadde,
- Thencens, the clothes, and the remenant al
- That to the sacrifyce longen shal; (1420)
- The hornes fulle of meth, as was the gyse;
- Ther lakked noght to doon hir sacrifyse. 2280
- Smoking the temple, ful of clothes faire,
- This Emelye, with herte debonaire,
- Hir body wessh with water of a welle;
- But how she dide hir ryte I dar nat telle,
- But it be any thing in general; 2285
- [66: T. 2288-2324.]
- And yet it were a game to heren al;
- To him that meneth wel, it were no charge:
- But it is good a man ben at his large. (1430)
- Hir brighte heer was kempt, untressed al;
- A coroune of a grene ook cerial 2290
- Up-on hir heed was set ful fair and mete.
- Two fyres on the auter gan she bete,
- And dide hir thinges, as men may biholde
- In Stace of Thebes, and thise bokes olde.
- Whan kindled was the fyr, with pitous chere 2295
- Un-to Diane she spak, as ye may here.
- 2274. Pt. Hl. _ins._ she _after_ gan. 2276. E. ladde; _rest_ hadde.
- 2279. Cp. Pt. Ln. methe; Hl. meth; E. meeth; Hn. mede. 2287. were]
- Hn. Cp. Ln. nere. 2289. E. kempd.
- 'O chaste goddesse of the wodes grene,
- To whom bothe hevene and erthe and see is sene, (1440)
- Quene of the regne of Pluto derk and lowe,
- Goddesse of maydens, that myn herte hast knowe 2300
- Ful many a yeer, and woost what I desire,
- As keep me fro thy vengeaunce and thyn ire,
- That Attheon aboughte cruelly.
- Chaste goddesse, wel wostow that I
- Desire to been a mayden al my lyf, 2305
- Ne never wol I be no love ne wyf.
- I am, thou woost, yet of thy companye,
- A mayde, and love hunting and venerye, (1450)
- And for to walken in the wodes wilde,
- And noght to been a wyf, and be with childe. 2310
- Noght wol I knowe companye of man.
- Now help me, lady, sith ye may and can,
- For tho thre formes that thou hast in thee.
- And Palamon, that hath swich love to me,
- And eek Arcite, that loveth me so sore, 2315
- This grace I preye thee with-oute more,
- As sende love and pees bitwixe hem two;
- And fro me turne awey hir hertes so, (1460)
- That al hir hote love, and hir desyr,
- And al hir bisy torment, and hir fyr 2320
- Be queynt, or turned in another place;
- And if so be thou wolt not do me grace,
- [67: T. 2325-2360.]
- Or if my destinee be shapen so,
- That I shal nedes have oon of hem two,
- As sende me him that most desireth me. 2325
- Bihold, goddesse of clene chastitee,
- The bittre teres that on my chekes falle.
- Sin thou are mayde, and keper of us alle, (1470)
- My maydenhede thou kepe and wel conserve,
- And whyl I live a mayde, I wol thee serve.' 2330
- 2303. Hl. Atheon. cruelly] Hl. trewely. 2311. E. Hl. _ins._ the
- _after_ knowe. 2317. Hn. As; _rest_ And; _see_ l. 2325. 2322. not
- do me] E. Hl. Pt. do me no. 2323. E. And; _rest_ Or. 2328. E. Cm.
- Cp. kepere.
- The fyres brenne up-on the auter clere,
- Whyl Emelye was thus in hir preyere;
- But sodeinly she saugh a sighte queynte,
- For right anon oon of the fyres queynte,
- And quiked agayn, and after that anon 2335
- That other fyr was queynt, and al agon;
- And as it queynte, it made a whistelinge,
- As doon thise wete brondes in hir brenninge, (1480)
- And at the brondes ende out-ran anoon
- As it were blody dropes many oon; 2340
- For which so sore agast was Emelye,
- That she was wel ny mad, and gan to crye,
- For she ne wiste what it signifyed;
- But only for the fere thus hath she cryed,
- And weep, that it was pitee for to here. 2345
- And ther-with-al Diane gan appere,
- With bowe in hond, right as an hunteresse,
- And seyde: 'Doghter, stint thyn hevinesse. (1490)
- Among the goddes hye it is affermed,
- And by eterne word write and confermed, 2350
- Thou shalt ben wedded un-to oon of tho
- That han for thee so muchel care and wo;
- But un-to which of hem I may nat telle.
- Farwel, for I ne may no lenger dwelle.
- The fyres which that on myn auter brenne 2355
- Shul thee declaren, er that thou go henne,
- Thyn aventure of love, as in this cas.'
- And with that word, the arwes in the cas (1500)
- [68: T. 2361-2398.]
- Of the goddesse clateren faste and ringe,
- And forth she wente, and made a vanisshinge; 2360
- For which this Emelye astoned was,
- And seyde, 'What amounteth this, allas!
- I putte me in thy proteccioun,
- Diane, and in thy disposicioun.'
- And hoom she gooth anon the nexte weye. 2365
- This is theffect, ther is namore to seye.
- 2337. E. Hn. Cp. whistlynge. 2338. Hl. (_only_) As doth a wete brond
- in his. 2344. Pt Hl. _om._ hath. 2350. Hl. write; Pt. writt; _rest_
- writen. 2356. E. Cp. Hl. declare. 2358. E. caas.
- The nexte houre of Mars folwinge this,
- Arcite un-to the temple walked is (1510)
- Of fierse Mars, to doon his sacrifyse,
- With alle the rytes of his payen wyse. 2370
- With pitous herte and heigh devocioun,
- Right thus to Mars he seyde his orisoun:
- 2369. E. Hn. fierse; Cm. ferse; Hl. fyry.
- 'O stronge god, that in the regnes colde
- Of Trace honoured art, and lord y-holde,
- And hast in every regne and every lond 2375
- Of armes al the brydel in thyn hond,
- And hem fortunest as thee list devyse,
- Accept of me my pitous sacrifyse. (1520)
- If so be that my youthe may deserve,
- And that my might be worthy for to serve 2380
- Thy godhede, that I may been oon of thyne,
- Than preye I thee to rewe up-on my pyne.
- For thilke peyne, and thilke hote fyr,
- In which thou whylom brendest for desyr,
- Whan that thou usedest the grete beautee 2385
- Of fayre yonge fresshe Venus free,
- And haddest hir in armes at thy wille,
- Al-though thee ones on a tyme misfille (1530)
- Whan Vulcanus had caught thee in his las,
- And fond thee ligging by his wyf, allas! 2390
- For thilke sorwe that was in thyn herte,
- Have routhe as wel up-on my peynes smerte.
- I am yong and unkonning, as thou wost,
- And, as I trowe, with love offended most,
- That ever was any lyves creature; 2395
- For she, that dooth me al this wo endure,
- [69: T. 2399-2436.]
- Ne reccheth never wher I sinke or flete.
- And wel I woot, er she me mercy hete, (1540)
- I moot with strengthe winne hir in the place;
- And wel I woot, withouten help or grace 2400
- Of thee, ne may my strengthe noght availle.
- Than help me, lord, to-morwe in my bataille,
- For thilke fyr that whylom brente thee,
- As wel as thilke fyr now brenneth me;
- And do that I to-morwe have victorie. 2405
- Myn be the travaille, and thyn be the glorie!
- Thy soverein temple wol I most honouren
- Of any place, and alwey most labouren (1550)
- In thy plesaunce and in thy craftes stronge,
- And in thy temple I wol my baner honge, 2410
- And alle the armes of my companye;
- And evere-mo, un-to that day I dye,
- Eterne fyr I wol biforn thee finde.
- And eek to this avow I wol me binde:
- My berd, myn heer that hongeth long adoun, 2415
- That never yet ne felte offensioun
- Of rasour nor of shere, I wol thee yive,
- And ben thy trewe servant whyl I live. (1560)
- Now lord, have routhe up-on my sorwes sore,
- Yif me victorie, I aske thee namore.' 2420
- 2385. Hl. the gret; _rest om._ gret. 2402. E. Hn. Thanne. 2420.
- _All ins._ the (Hl. thy) _after_ me; (_read_ victórie).
- The preyere stinte of Arcita the stronge,
- The ringes on the temple-dore that honge,
- And eek the dores, clatereden ful faste,
- Of which Arcita som-what him agaste.
- The fyres brende up-on the auter brighte, 2425
- That it gan al the temple for to lighte;
- And swete smel the ground anon up-yaf,
- And Arcita anon his hand up-haf, (1570)
- And more encens in-to the fyr he caste,
- With othere rytes mo; and atte laste 2430
- The statue of Mars bigan his hauberk ringe.
- And with that soun he herde a murmuringe
- Ful lowe and dim, that sayde thus, 'Victorie:'
- For which he yaf to Mars honour and glorie.
- [70: T. 2437-2473.]
- And thus with Ioye, and hope wel to fare, 2435
- Arcite anon un-to his inne is fare,
- As fayn as fowel is of the brighte sonne.
- 2425. Hn. Cm. brende; E. Cp. Hl. brenden. 2433. E. Hn. Hl. and;
- _rest_ that. 2436. E. Hn. Cm. in.
- And right anon swich stryf ther is bigonne (1580)
- For thilke graunting, in the hevene above,
- Bitwixe Venus, the goddesse of love, 2440
- And Mars, the sterne god armipotente,
- That Iupiter was bisy it to stente;
- Til that the pale Saturnus the colde,
- That knew so manye of aventures olde,
- Fond in his olde experience an art, 2445
- That he ful sone hath plesed every part.
- As sooth is sayd, elde hath greet avantage;
- In elde is bothe wisdom and usage; (1590)
- Men may the olde at-renne, and noght at-rede.
- Saturne anon, to stinten stryf and drede, 2450
- Al be it that it is agayn his kynde,
- Of al this stryf he gan remedie fynde.
- 2441. E. stierne. 2445. an] E. Pt. and. 2449. Hl. Pt. but; _rest_
- and.
- 'My dere doghter Venus,' quod Saturne,
- 'My cours, that hath so wyde for to turne,
- Hath more power than wot any man. 2455
- Myn is the drenching in the see so wan;
- Myn is the prison in the derke cote;
- Myn is the strangling and hanging by the throte; (1600)
- The murmure, and the cherles rebelling,
- The groyning, and the pryvee empoysoning: 2460
- I do vengeance and pleyn correccioun
- Whyl I dwelle in the signe of the leoun.
- Myn is the ruine of the hye halles,
- The falling of the toures and of the walles
- Up-on the mynour or the carpenter. 2465
- I slow Sampsoun in shaking the piler;
- And myne be the maladyes colde,
- The derke tresons, and the castes olde; (1610)
- My loking is the fader of pestilence.
- Now weep namore, I shal doon diligence 2470
- That Palamon, that is thyn owne knight,
- [71: T. 2474-2506.]
- Shal have his lady, as thou hast him hight.
- Though Mars shal helpe his knight, yet nathelees
- Bitwixe yow ther moot be som tyme pees,
- Al be ye noght of o complexioun, 2475
- That causeth al day swich divisioun.
- I am thin ayel, redy at thy wille;
- Weep thou namore, I wol thy lust fulfille.' (1620)
- 2462. E. _om. 1st_ the. 2466. Hl. in; _rest om._ 2468. Hl. tresoun.
- Now wol I stinten of the goddes above,
- Of Mars, and of Venus, goddesse of love, 2480
- And telle yow, as pleynly as I can,
- The grete effect, for which that I bigan.
- EXPLICIT TERCIA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS QUARTA.
- Greet was the feste in Athenes that day,
- And eek the lusty seson of that May
- Made every wight to been in swich plesaunce, 2485
- That al that Monday Iusten they and daunce,
- And spenden it in Venus heigh servyse.
- But by the cause that they sholde ryse (1630)
- Erly, for to seen the grete fight,
- Unto hir reste wente they at night. 2490
- And on the morwe, whan that day gan springe,
- Of hors and harneys, noyse and clateringe
- Ther was in hostelryes al aboute;
- And to the paleys rood ther many a route
- Of lordes, up-on stedes and palfreys. 2495
- Ther maystow seen devysing of herneys
- So uncouth and so riche, and wroght so weel
- Of goldsmithrie, of browding, and of steel; (1640)
- The sheeldes brighte, testers, and trappures;
- Gold-hewen helmes, hauberks, cote-armures; 2500
- Lordes in paraments on hir courseres,
- Knightes of retenue, and eek squyeres
- Nailinge the speres, and helmes bokelinge,
- Gigginge of sheeldes, with layneres lacinge;
- [72: T. 2507-2543.]
- Ther as need is, they weren no-thing ydel; 2505
- The fomy stedes on the golden brydel
- Gnawinge, and faste the armurers also
- With fyle and hamer prikinge to and fro; (1650)
- Yemen on fote, and communes many oon
- With shorte staves, thikke as they may goon; 2510
- Pypes, trompes, nakers, clariounes,
- That in the bataille blowen blody sounes;
- The paleys ful of peples up and doun,
- Heer three, ther ten, holding hir questioun,
- Divyninge of thise Thebane knightes two. 2515
- Somme seyden thus, somme seyde it shal be so;
- Somme helden with him with the blake berd,
- Somme with the balled, somme with the thikke-herd; (1660)
- Somme sayde, he loked grim and he wolde fighte;
- He hath a sparth of twenty pound of wighte. 2520
- Thus was the halle ful of divyninge,
- Longe after that the sonne gan to springe.
- 2489. Hl. Erly a-morwe for to see that fight. 2493. E. _ins._ the
- _after_ in. 2500. Hl. Gold-beten. 2503. Nailinge] Hl. Rayhyng.
- 2504. Hl. Girdyng. 2511. E. nakerers (_wrongly_). 2513. Hl. pepul;
- Pt. puple; Ln. peple.
- The grete Theseus, that of his sleep awaked
- With minstralcye and noyse that was maked,
- Held yet the chambre of his paleys riche, 2525
- Til that the Thebane knightes, bothe y-liche
- Honoured, were into the paleys fet.
- Duk Theseus was at a window set, (1670)
- Arrayed right as he were a god in trone.
- The peple preesseth thider-ward ful sone 2530
- Him for to seen, and doon heigh reverence,
- And eek to herkne his hest and his sentence.
- An heraud on a scaffold made an ho,
- Til al the noyse of the peple was y-do;
- And whan he saugh the peple of noyse al stille, 2535
- Tho showed he the mighty dukes wille.
- 2533. E. Hn. Pt. oo. 2534. E. _om. 2nd_ the. 2535. E. Cm. the noyse
- of peple.
- 'The lord hath of his heigh discrecioun
- Considered, that it were destruccioun (1680)
- To gentil blood, to fighten in the gyse
- Of mortal bataille now in this empryse; 2540
- Wherfore, to shapen that they shul not dye,
- [73: T. 2544-2579.]
- He wol his firste purpos modifye.
- No man therfor, up peyne of los of lyf,
- No maner shot, ne pollax, ne short knyf
- Into the listes sende, or thider bringe; 2545
- Ne short swerd for to stoke, with poynt bytinge,
- No man ne drawe, ne bere it by his syde.
- Ne no man shal un-to his felawe ryde (1690)
- But o cours, with a sharp y-grounde spere;
- Foyne, if him list, on fote, him-self to were. 2550
- And he that is at meschief, shal be take,
- And noght slayn, but be broght un-to the stake
- That shal ben ordeyned on either syde;
- But thider he shal by force, and ther abyde.
- And if so falle, the chieftayn be take 2555
- On either syde, or elles slee his make,
- No lenger shal the turneyinge laste.
- God spede yow; goth forth, and ley on faste. (1700)
- With long swerd and with maces fight your fille.
- Goth now your wey; this is the lordes wille.' 2560
- 2544. E. Cm. _om. 1st_ ne. 2545. or] E. Cm. Ln. ne. 2547. E. Hl.
- _om._ it. 2555. falle] E. be. Cm. cheuynteyn; Cp. cheuentein; Hl.
- cheuenten. 2556. Hl. sle; _rest_ sleen (sclayn). 2559. Hl. fight;
- Ln. fihten; _rest_ fighteth.
- The voys of peple touchede the hevene,
- So loude cryden they with mery stevene:
- 'God save swich a lord, that is so good,
- He wilneth no destruccioun of blood!'
- Up goon the trompes and the melodye. 2565
- And to the listes rit the companye
- By ordinaunce, thurgh-out the citee large,
- Hanged with cloth of gold, and nat with sarge. (1710)
- Ful lyk a lord this noble duk gan ryde,
- Thise two Thebanes up-on either syde; 2570
- And after rood the quene, and Emelye,
- And after that another companye
- Of oon and other, after hir degree.
- And thus they passen thurgh-out the citee,
- And to the listes come they by tyme. 2575
- It nas not of the day yet fully pryme,
- Whan set was Theseus ful riche and hye,
- [74: T. 2580-2617.]
- Ipolita the quene and Emelye, (1720)
- And other ladies in degrees aboute.
- Un-to the seetes preesseth al the route. 2580
- And west-ward, thurgh the gates under Marte,
- Arcite, and eek the hundred of his parte,
- With baner reed is entred right anon;
- And in that selve moment Palamon
- Is under Venus, est-ward in the place, 2585
- With baner whyt, and hardy chere and face.
- In al the world, to seken up and doun,
- So even with-outen variacioun, (1730)
- Ther nere swiche companyes tweye.
- For ther nas noon so wys that coude seye, 2590
- That any hadde of other avauntage
- Of worthinesse, ne of estaat, ne age,
- So even were they chosen, for to gesse.
- And in two renges faire they hem dresse.
- Whan that hir names rad were everichoon, 2595
- That in hir nombre gyle were ther noon,
- Tho were the gates shet, and cryed was loude:
- 'Do now your devoir, yonge knightes proude!' (1740)
- 2561. Cm. Cp. touchede; Hl. touchith; _rest_ touched. 2562. Cm.
- cryedyn; E. cride. E. murie. 2570. E. Hn. Hl. Thebans; _see_ l.
- 2623. 2593. E. _om._ they. 2598. Hl. Dooth.
- The heraudes lefte hir priking up and doun;
- Now ringen trompes loude and clarioun; 2600
- Ther is namore to seyn, but west and est
- In goon the speres ful sadly in arest;
- In goth the sharpe spore in-to the syde.
- Ther seen men who can Iuste, and who can ryde;
- Ther shiveren shaftes up-on sheeldes thikke; 2605
- He feleth thurgh the herte-spoon the prikke.
- Up springen speres twenty foot on highte;
- Out goon the swerdes as the silver brighte. (1750)
- The helmes they to-hewen and to-shrede;
- Out brest the blood, with sterne stremes rede. 2610
- With mighty maces the bones they to-breste.
- He thurgh the thikkeste of the throng gan threste.
- Ther stomblen stedes stronge, and doun goth al.
- He rolleth under foot as dooth a bal.
- He foyneth on his feet with his tronchoun, 2615
- [75: T. 2618-2655.]
- And he him hurtleth with his hors adoun.
- He thurgh the body is hurt, and sithen y-take,
- Maugree his heed, and broght un-to the stake, (1760)
- As forward was, right ther he moste abyde;
- Another lad is on that other syde. 2620
- And som tyme dooth hem Theseus to reste,
- Hem to refresshe, and drinken if hem leste.
- Ful ofte a-day han thise Thebanes two
- Togidre y-met, and wroght his felawe wo;
- Unhorsed hath ech other of hem tweye. 2625
- Ther nas no tygre in the vale of Galgopheye,
- Whan that hir whelp is stole, whan it is lyte,
- So cruel on the hunte, as is Arcite (1770)
- For Ielous herte upon this Palamoun:
- Ne in Belmarye ther nis so fel leoun, 2630
- That hunted is, or for his hunger wood,
- Ne of his praye desireth so the blood,
- As Palamon to sleen his fo Arcite.
- The Ielous strokes on hir helmes byte;
- Out renneth blood on bothe hir sydes rede. 2635
- 2608. E. gooth; _rest_ goon. 2613. stomblen] E. Cm. semblen. 2622.
- E. fresshen.
- Som tyme an ende ther is of every dede;
- For er the sonne un-to the reste wente,
- The stronge king Emetreus gan hente (1780)
- This Palamon, as he faught with Arcite,
- And made his swerd depe in his flesh to byte; 2640
- And by the force of twenty is he take
- Unyolden, and y-drawe unto the stake.
- And in the rescous of this Palamoun
- The stronge king Ligurge is born adoun;
- And king Emetreus, for al his strengthe, 2645
- Is born out of his sadel a swerdes lengthe,
- So hitte him Palamon er he were take;
- But al for noght, he was broght to the stake. (1790)
- His hardy herte mighte him helpe naught;
- He moste abyde, whan that he was caught 2650
- By force, and eek by composicioun.
- 2643. E. rescus; Pt. rescowe; _rest_ rescous.
- Who sorweth now but woful Palamoun,
- That moot namore goon agayn to fighte?
- [76: T. 2656-2691.]
- And whan that Theseus had seyn this sighte,
- Un-to the folk that foghten thus echoon 2655
- He cryde, 'Ho! namore, for it is doon!
- I wol be trewe Iuge, and no partye.
- Arcite of Thebes shal have Emelye, (1800)
- That by his fortune hath hir faire y-wonne.'
- Anon ther is a noyse of peple bigonne 2660
- For Ioye of this, so loude and heigh with-alle,
- It semed that the listes sholde falle.
- What can now faire Venus doon above?
- What seith she now? what dooth this quene of love?
- But wepeth so, for wanting of hir wille, 2665
- Til that hir teres in the listes fille;
- She seyde: 'I am ashamed, doutelees.'
- Saturnus seyde: 'Doghter, hold thy pees. (1810)
- Mars hath his wille, his knight hath al his bone,
- And, by myn heed, thou shalt ben esed sone.' 2670
- The trompes, with the loude minstralcye,
- The heraudes, that ful loude yolle and crye,
- Been in hir wele for Ioye of daun Arcite.
- But herkneth me, and stinteth now a lyte,
- Which a miracle ther bifel anon. 2675
- 2671. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. trompours.
- This fierse Arcite hath of his helm y-don,
- And on a courser, for to shewe his face,
- He priketh endelong the large place, (1820)
- Loking upward up-on this Emelye;
- And she agayn him caste a freendlich yë, 2680
- (For wommen, as to speken in comune,
- They folwen al the favour of fortune),
- And she was al his chere, as in his herte.
- Out of the ground a furie infernal sterte,
- From Pluto sent, at requeste of Saturne, 2685
- For which his hors for fere gan to turne,
- And leep asyde, and foundred as he leep;
- And, er that Arcite may taken keep, (1830)
- He pighte him on the pomel of his heed,
- [77: T. 2692-2729.]
- That in the place he lay as he were deed, 2690
- His brest to-brosten with his sadel-bowe.
- As blak he lay as any cole or crowe,
- So was the blood y-ronnen in his face.
- Anon he was y-born out of the place
- With herte soor, to Theseus paleys. 2695
- Tho was he corven out of his harneys,
- And in a bed y-brought ful faire and blyve,
- For he was yet in memorie and alyve, (1840)
- And alway crying after Emelye.
- 2676. Cm. ferse; E. Hn. fierse. 2679. E. Pt. _om._ this. 2681. E.
- Hn. Cm. _omit_ ll. 2681, 2682. 2683. Hn. she; _rest om._ 2684. E.
- furie; Hn. Cm. furye; _rest_ fyr, fir, fire, fyre; _see note_. 2698.
- Hl. Pt. on lyue.
- Duk Theseus, with al his companye, 2700
- Is comen hoom to Athenes his citee,
- With alle blisse and greet solempnitee.
- Al be it that this aventure was falle,
- He nolde noght disconforten hem alle.
- Men seyde eek, that Arcite shal nat dye; 2705
- He shal ben heled of his maladye.
- And of another thing they were as fayn,
- That of hem alle was ther noon y-slayn, (1850)
- Al were they sore y-hurt, and namely oon,
- That with a spere was thirled his brest-boon. 2710
- To othere woundes, and to broken armes,
- Some hadden salves, and some hadden charmes;
- Fermacies of herbes, and eek save
- They dronken, for they wolde hir limes have.
- For which this noble duk, as he wel can, 2715
- Conforteth and honoureth every man,
- And made revel al the longe night,
- Un-to the straunge lordes, as was right. (1860)
- Ne ther was holden no disconfitinge,
- But as a Iustes or a tourneyinge; 2720
- For soothly ther was no disconfiture,
- For falling nis nat but an aventure;
- Ne to be lad with fors un-to the stake
- Unyolden, and with twenty knightes take,
- O persone allone, with-outen mo, 2725
- And haried forth by arme, foot, and to,
- And eek his stede driven forth with staves,
- [78: T. 2730-2767.]
- With footmen, bothe yemen and eek knaves, (1870)
- It nas aretted him no vileinye,
- Ther may no man clepen it cowardye. 2730
- 2714. limes] Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. lyues. 2726. E. Hn. Cm. arm.
- For which anon duk Theseus leet crye,
- To stinten alle rancour and envye,
- The gree as wel of o syde as of other,
- And either syde y-lyk, as otheres brother;
- And yaf hem yiftes after hir degree, 2735
- And fully heeld a feste dayes three;
- And conveyed the kinges worthily
- Out of his toun a Iournee largely. (1880)
- And hoom wente every man the righte way.
- Ther was namore, but 'far wel, have good day!' 2740
- Of this bataille I wol namore endyte,
- But speke of Palamon and of Arcite.
- 2737. E. conuoyed. 2740. E. fare; Cm. Hl. far.
- Swelleth the brest of Arcite, and the sore
- Encreesseth at his herte more and more.
- The clothered blood, for any lechecraft, 2745
- Corrupteth, and is in his bouk y-laft,
- That neither veyne-blood, ne ventusinge,
- Ne drinke of herbes may ben his helpinge. (1890)
- The vertu expulsif, or animal,
- Fro thilke vertu cleped natural 2750
- Ne may the venim voyden, ne expelle.
- The pypes of his longes gonne to swelle,
- And every lacerte in his brest adoun
- Is shent with venim and corrupcioun.
- Him gayneth neither, for to gete his lyf, 2755
- Vomyt upward, ne dounward laxatif;
- Al is to-brosten thilke regioun,
- Nature hath now no dominacioun. (1900)
- And certeinly, ther nature wol nat wirche,
- Far-wel, phisyk! go ber the man to chirche! 2760
- This al and som, that Arcita mot dye,
- For which he sendeth after Emelye,
- And Palamon, that was his cosin dere;
- Than seyde he thus, as ye shul after here.
- 2746. Hl. Pt. Corrumpith. 2760. E. fare; Cm. Hl. far.
- 'Naught may the woful spirit in myn herte 2765
- [79: T. 2768-2803.]
- Declare o poynt of alle my sorwes smerte
- To yow, my lady, that I love most;
- But I biquethe the service of my gost (1910)
- To yow aboven every creature,
- Sin that my lyf may no lenger dure. 2770
- Allas, the wo! allas, the peynes stronge,
- That I for yow have suffred, and so longe!
- Allas, the deeth! allas, myn Emelye!
- Allas, departing of our companye!
- Allas, myn hertes quene! allas, my wyf! 2775
- Myn hertes lady, endere of my lyf!
- What is this world? what asketh men to have?
- Now with his love, now in his colde grave (1920)
- Allone, with-outen any companye.
- Far-wel, my swete fo! myn Emelye! 2780
- And softe tak me in your armes tweye,
- For love of God, and herkneth what I seye.
- 2770. Tyrwhitt _has_ ne may; ne _is not in the_ MSS. 2781. E. taak.
- I have heer with my cosin Palamon
- Had stryf and rancour, many a day a-gon,
- For love of yow, and for my Ielousye. 2785
- And Iupiter so wis my soule gye,
- To speken of a servant proprely,
- With alle circumstaunces trewely, (1930)
- That is to seyn, trouthe, honour, and knighthede,
- Wisdom, humblesse, estaat, and heigh kinrede, 2790
- Fredom, and al that longeth to that art,
- So Iupiter have of my soule part,
- As in this world right now ne knowe I non
- So worthy to ben loved as Palamon,
- That serveth yow, and wol don al his lyf. 2795
- And if that ever ye shul been a wyf,
- Foryet nat Palamon, the gentil man.'
- And with that word his speche faille gan, (1940)
- For from his feet up to his brest was come
- The cold of deeth, that hadde him overcome. 2800
- And yet more-over, in his armes two
- [80: T. 2804-2840.]
- The vital strengthe is lost, and al ago.
- Only the intellect, with-outen more,
- That dwelled in his herte syk and sore,
- Gan faillen, when the herte felte deeth, 2805
- Dusked his eyen two, and failled breeth.
- But on his lady yet caste he his yë;
- His laste word was, 'mercy, Emelye!' (1950)
- His spirit chaunged hous, and wente ther,
- As I cam never, I can nat tellen wher. 2810
- Therfor I stinte, I nam no divinistre;
- Of soules finde I nat in this registre,
- Ne me ne list thilke opiniouns to telle
- Of hem, though that they wryten wher they dwelle.
- Arcite is cold, ther Mars his soule gye; 2815
- Now wol I speken forth of Emelye.
- 2785. E. Hn. Cp. Ialousye. 2789. Cp. Pt. Hl. and; rest _om._ 2799.
- For] E. And. feet] E. Hl. Cm. herte. 2801. _All but_ Hl. _ins._ for
- _before_ in.
- Shrighte Emelye, and howleth Palamon,
- And Theseus his suster took anon (1960)
- Swowninge, and bar hir fro the corps away.
- What helpeth it to tarien forth the day, 2820
- To tellen how she weep, bothe eve and morwe?
- For in swich cas wommen have swich sorwe,
- Whan that hir housbonds been from hem ago,
- That for the more part they sorwen so,
- Or elles fallen in swich maladye, 2825
- That at the laste certeinly they dye.
- 2819. E. Hn. baar. 2822. Hl. can haue; _rest om._ can. 2823. E.
- housbond is.
- Infinite been the sorwes and the teres
- Of olde folk, and folk of tendre yeres, (1970)
- In al the toun, for deeth of this Theban;
- For him ther wepeth bothe child and man; 2830
- So greet a weping was ther noon, certayn,
- Whan Ector was y-broght, al fresh y-slayn,
- To Troye; allas! the pitee that was ther,
- Cracching of chekes, rending eek of heer.
- 'Why woldestow be deed,' thise wommen crye, 2835
- 'And haddest gold y-nough, and Emelye?'
- No man mighte gladen Theseus,
- Savinge his olde fader Egeus, (1980)
- [81: T. 2841-2876.]
- That knew this worldes transmutacioun,
- As he had seyn it chaungen up and doun, 2840
- Ioye after wo, and wo after gladnesse:
- And shewed hem ensamples and lyknesse.
- 2828. E. eek; _for 2nd_ folk. 2834. E. Hn. Cm. Pt. rentynge. 2840.
- Hn. chaungen; Hl. torne; _rest om._
- 'Right as ther deyed never man,' quod he,
- 'That he ne livede in erthe in som degree,
- Right so ther livede never man,' he seyde, 2845
- 'In al this world, that som tyme he ne deyde.
- This world nis but a thurghfare ful of wo,
- And we ben pilgrimes, passinge to and fro; (1990)
- Deeth is an ende of every worldly sore.'
- And over al this yet seyde he muchel more 2850
- To this effect, ful wysly to enhorte
- The peple, that they sholde hem reconforte.
- 2843. Hn. deyed; E. dyed. 2849. E. worldes.
- Duk Theseus, with al his bisy cure,
- Caste now wher that the sepulture
- Of good Arcite may best y-maked be, 2855
- And eek most honurable in his degree.
- And at the laste he took conclusioun,
- That ther as first Arcite and Palamoun (2000)
- Hadden for love the bataille hem bitwene,
- That in that selve grove, swote and grene, 2860
- Ther as he hadde his amorous desires,
- His compleynt, and for love his hote fires,
- He wolde make a fyr, in which thoffice
- Funeral he mighte al accomplice;
- And leet comaunde anon to hakke and hewe 2865
- The okes olde, and leye hem on a rewe
- In colpons wel arrayed for to brenne;
- His officers with swifte feet they renne (2010)
- And ryde anon at his comaundement.
- And after this, Theseus hath y-sent 2870
- After a bere, and it al over-spradde
- With cloth of gold, the richest that he hadde.
- And of the same suyte he cladde Arcite;
- Upon his hondes hadde he gloves whyte;
- [82: T. 2877-2913.]
- Eek on his heed a croune of laurer grene, 2875
- And in his hond a swerd ful bright and kene.
- He leyde him bare the visage on the bere,
- Therwith he weep that pitee was to here. (2020)
- And for the peple sholde seen him alle,
- Whan it was day, he broghte him to the halle, 2880
- That roreth of the crying and the soun.
- 2854. Hn. Caste; E. Hl. Cast. now] Hl. busyly. 2861. E. amorouse.
- 2863. E. the office; Hl. thoffice. 2869. E. ryden. 2875. Cp. Pt.
- Hl. croune; _rest_ coroune.
- Tho cam this woful Theban Palamoun,
- With flotery berd, and ruggy asshy heres,
- In clothes blake, y-dropped al with teres;
- And, passing othere of weping, Emelye, 2885
- The rewfulleste of al the companye.
- In as muche as the service sholde be
- The more noble and riche in his degree, (2030)
- Duk Theseus leet forth three stedes bringe,
- That trapped were in steel al gliteringe, 2890
- And covered with the armes of daun Arcite.
- Up-on thise stedes, that weren grete and whyte,
- Ther seten folk, of which oon bar his sheeld,
- Another his spere up in his hondes heeld;
- The thridde bar with him his bowe Turkeys, 2895
- Of brend gold was the cas, and eek the harneys;
- And riden forth a pas with sorweful chere
- Toward the grove, as ye shul after here. (2040)
- The nobleste of the Grekes that ther were
- Upon hir shuldres carieden the bere, 2900
- With slakke pas, and eyen rede and wete,
- Thurgh-out the citee, by the maister-strete,
- That sprad was al with blak, and wonder hye
- Right of the same is al the strete y-wrye.
- Up-on the right hond wente old Egeus, 2905
- And on that other syde duk Theseus,
- With vessels in hir hand of gold ful fyn,
- Al ful of hony, milk, and blood, and wyn; (2050)
- Eek Palamon, with ful greet companye;
- And after that cam woful Emelye, 2910
- With fyr in honde, as was that tyme the gyse,
- [83: T. 2914-2949.]
- To do thoffice of funeral servyse.
- 2883. E. rugged. 2892. Hl. that weren; _rest om._ 2893. E. Ln.
- sitten. 2894. E. _om._ up. 2901. Ln. slake (_for_ slakke); _rest_
- slak. 2904. Hl. al; _rest om._ 2912. _So_ Hl. Cp.; _rest_ the
- office.
- Heigh labour, and ful greet apparaillinge
- Was at the service and the fyr-makinge,
- That with his grene top the heven raughte, 2915
- And twenty fadme of brede the armes straughte;
- This is to seyn, the bowes were so brode.
- Of stree first ther was leyd ful many a lode. (2060)
- But how the fyr was maked up on highte,
- And eek the names how the treës highte, 2920
- As ook, firre, birch, asp, alder, holm, popler,
- Wilow, elm, plane, ash, box, chasteyn, lind, laurer,
- Mapul, thorn, beech, hasel, ew, whippeltree,
- How they weren feld, shal nat be told for me;
- Ne how the goddes ronnen up and doun, 2925
- Disherited of hir habitacioun,
- In which they woneden in reste and pees,
- Nymphes, Faunes, and Amadrides; (2070)
- Ne how the bestes and the briddes alle
- Fledden for fere, whan the wode was falle; 2930
- Ne how the ground agast was of the light,
- That was nat wont to seen the sonne bright;
- Ne how the fyr was couched first with stree,
- And than with drye stokkes cloven a three,
- And than with grene wode and spycerye, 2935
- And than with cloth of gold and with perrye,
- And gerlandes hanging with ful many a flour,
- The mirre, thencens, with al so greet odour; (2080)
- Ne how Arcite lay among al this,
- Ne what richesse aboute his body is; 2940
- Ne how that Emelye, as was the gyse,
- Putte in the fyr of funeral servyse;
- Ne how she swowned whan men made the fyr,
- Ne what she spak, ne what was hir desyr;
- Ne what Ieweles men in the fyr tho caste, 2945
- Whan that the fyr was greet and brente faste;
- Ne how som caste hir sheeld, and som hir spere,
- [84: T. 2950-2986.]
- And of hir vestiments, whiche that they were, (2090)
- And cuppes ful of wyn, and milk, and blood,
- Into the fyr, that brente as it were wood; 2950
- Ne how the Grekes with an huge route
- Thryës riden al the fyr aboute
- Up-on the left hand, with a loud shoutinge,
- And thryës with hir speres clateringe;
- And thryës how the ladies gonne crye; 2955
- Ne how that lad was hom-ward Emelye;
- Ne how Arcite is brent to asshen colde;
- Ne how that liche-wake was y-holde (2100)
- Al thilke night, ne how the Grekes pleye
- The wake-pleyes, ne kepe I nat to seye; 2960
- Who wrastleth best naked, with oille enoynt,
- Ne who that bar him best, in no disioynt.
- I wol nat tellen eek how that they goon
- Hoom til Athenes, whan the pley is doon;
- But shortly to the poynt than wol I wende, 2965
- And maken of my longe tale an ende.
- 2916. Hl. tharme. 2920. how] E. that. 2921. Hn. Hl. popler; _rest_
- popelere. 2924. E. fild. 2926. Hl. Disheryt. 2928. E. Cm.
- Nymphus. 2934, 5, 6. Pt. Ln. than; _rest_ thanne. 2934. E. Cp.
- stokkes; _rest_ stikkes. 2943. E. _om._ the. 2945. Hl. tho; _rest
- om._ 2952. _So all but_ Hl., _which has_ Thre tymes; _see_ l. 2954.
- E. place (_for_ fyr). 2956. E. Hn. And (_for_ Ne). 2958. E. Hn.
- lych; _rest_ liche.
- By processe and by lengthe of certeyn yeres
- Al stinted is the moorning and the teres (2110)
- Of Grekes, by oon general assent.
- Than semed me ther was a parlement 2970
- At Athenes, up-on certeyn poynts and cas;
- Among the whiche poynts y-spoken was
- To have with certeyn contrees alliaunce,
- And have fully of Thebans obeisaunce.
- For which this noble Theseus anon 2975
- Leet senden after gentil Palamon,
- Unwist of him what was the cause and why;
- But in his blake clothes sorwefully (2120)
- He cam at his comaundement in hye.
- Tho sente Theseus for Emelye. 2980
- Whan they were set, and hust was al the place,
- And Theseus abiden hadde a space
- Er any word cam from his wyse brest,
- His eyen sette he ther as was his lest,
- [85: T. 2987-3020.]
- And with a sad visage he syked stille, 2985
- And after that right thus he seyde his wille.
- 'The firste moevere of the cause above,
- Whan he first made the faire cheyne of love, (2130)
- Greet was theffect, and heigh was his entente;
- Wel wiste he why, and what ther-of he mente; 2990
- For with that faire cheyne of love he bond
- The fyr, the eyr, the water, and the lond
- In certeyn boundes, that they may nat flee;
- That same prince and that moevere,' quod he,
- 'Hath stablissed, in this wrecched world adoun, 2995
- Certeyne dayes and duracioun
- To al that is engendred in this place,
- Over the whiche day they may nat pace, (2140)
- Al mowe they yet tho dayes wel abregge;
- Ther needeth non auctoritee allegge, 3000
- For it is preved by experience,
- But that me list declaren my sentence.
- Than may men by this ordre wel discerne,
- That thilke moevere stable is and eterne.
- Wel may men knowe, but it be a fool, 3005
- That every part deryveth from his hool.
- For nature hath nat take his beginning
- Of no partye ne cantel of a thing, (2150)
- But of a thing that parfit is and stable,
- Descending so, til it be corrumpable. 3010
- And therfore, of his wyse purveyaunce,
- He hath so wel biset his ordinaunce,
- That speces of thinges and progressiouns
- Shullen enduren by successiouns,
- And nat eterne be, with-oute lye: 3015
- This maistow understonde and seen at eye.
- 2994. Hn. Ln. that; _rest_ (_except_ Hl.) that same. Hl. and moeuere
- eek. 2995. Hl. Ln. stabled. 2997. Hl. alle that er; Cp. alle that
- beth. 3000. E. Cp. _ins._ noght _bef._ noon. Hl. tallegge; Hn. to
- allegge; Cm. Cp. Pt. to legge. 3006. E. dirryueth. 3007. Hl. Ln.
- take; _rest_ taken; E. Cm. _om._ nat. 3008. Hl. ne; E. Hn. Pt. or of;
- Cm. or of a. 3015. _So_ Hl.; _rest_ eterne with-outen any lye.
- 3016. at] E. it.
- 'Lo the ook, that hath so long a norisshinge
- From tyme that it first biginneth springe, (2160)
- [86: T. 3021-3058.]
- And hath so long a lyf, as we may see,
- Yet at the laste wasted is the tree. 3020
- 'Considereth eek, how that the harde stoon
- Under our feet, on which we trede and goon,
- Yit wasteth it, as it lyth by the weye.
- The brode river somtyme wexeth dreye.
- The grete tounes see we wane and wende. 3025
- Than may ye see that al this thing hath ende.
- 3025. E. toures.
- 'Of man and womman seen we wel also,
- That nedeth, in oon of thise termes two, (2170)
- This is to seyn, in youthe or elles age,
- He moot ben deed, the king as shal a page; 3030
- Som in his bed, som in the depe see,
- Som in the large feeld, as men may se;
- Ther helpeth noght, al goth that ilke weye.
- Thanne may I seyn that al this thing moot deye.
- What maketh this but Iupiter the king? 3035
- The which is prince and cause of alle thing,
- Converting al un-to his propre welle,
- From which it is deryved, sooth to telle. (2180)
- And here-agayns no creature on lyve
- Of no degree availleth for to stryve. 3040
- 3034. E. Cm. _om._ that. 3036. _So_ Hl.; _rest_ That is.
- 'Thanne is it wisdom, as it thinketh me,
- To maken vertu of necessitee,
- And take it wel, that we may nat eschue,
- And namely that to us alle is due.
- And who-so gruccheth ought, he dooth folye, 3045
- And rebel is to him that al may gye.
- And certeinly a man hath most honour
- To dyen in his excellence and flour, (2190)
- Whan he is siker of his gode name;
- Than hath he doon his freend, ne him, no shame. 3050
- And gladder oghte his freend ben of his deeth,
- Whan with honour up-yolden is his breeth,
- Than whan his name apalled is for age;
- For al forgeten is his vasselage.
- Than is it best, as for a worthy fame, 3055
- To dyen whan that he is best of name.
- [87: T. 3059-3095.]
- The contrarie of al this is wilfulnesse.
- Why grucchen we? why have we hevinesse, (2200)
- That good Arcite, of chivalrye flour
- Departed is, with duetee and honour, 3060
- Out of this foule prison of this lyf?
- Why grucchen heer his cosin and his wyf
- Of his wel-fare that loved hem so weel?
- Can he hem thank? nay, God wot, never a deel,
- That bothe his soule and eek hem-self offende, 3065
- And yet they mowe hir lustes nat amende.
- 3056. Hl. whan a man. 3059. Hl. Cp. Pt. Ln. _ins._ the _bef._ flour.
- 'What may I conclude of this longe serie,
- But, after wo, I rede us to be merie, (2210)
- And thanken Iupiter of al his grace?
- And, er that we departen from this place, 3070
- I rede that we make, of sorwes two,
- O parfyt Ioye, lasting ever-mo;
- And loketh now, wher most sorwe is her-inne,
- Ther wol we first amenden and biginne.
- 3071. Hl. that; _rest om._
- 'Suster,' quod he, 'this is my fulle assent, 3075
- With al thavys heer of my parlement,
- That gentil Palamon, your owne knight,
- That serveth yow with wille, herte, and might, (2220)
- And ever hath doon, sin that ye first him knewe,
- That ye shul, of your grace, up-on him rewe, 3080
- And taken him for housbonde and for lord:
- Leen me your hond, for this is our acord.
- Lat see now of your wommanly pitee.
- He is a kinges brother sone, pardee;
- And, though he were a povre bacheler, 3085
- Sin he hath served yow so many a yeer,
- And had for yow so greet adversitee,
- It moste been considered, leveth me; (2230)
- For gentil mercy oghte to passen right.'
- 3077. your] E. thyn. 3082. Hn. Leen; _rest_ Lene.
- Than seyde he thus to Palamon ful right; 3090
- 'I trowe ther nedeth litel sermoning
- To make yow assente to this thing.
- Com neer, and tak your lady by the hond.'
- [88: T. 3096-3110.]
- Bitwixen hem was maad anon the bond,
- That highte matrimoine or mariage, 3095
- By al the counseil and the baronage.
- And thus with alle blisse and melodye
- Hath Palamon y-wedded Emelye. (2240)
- And God, that al this wyde world hath wroght,
- Sende him his love, that hath it dere a-boght. 3100
- For now is Palamon in alle wele,
- Living in blisse, in richesse, and in hele;
- And Emelye him loveth so tendrely,
- And he hir serveth al-so gentilly,
- That never was ther no word hem bitwene 3105
- Of Ielousye, or any other tene.
- Thus endeth Palamon and Emelye;
- And God save al this faire companye!--Amen. (2250)
- HERE IS ENDED THE KNIGHTES TALE.
- 3095. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. matrimoigne; Pt. matrimoyne; Hl. matrimoyn.
- 3100. E. _om._ hath. 3104. Hl. also; _rest_ so. 3106. E. Hn. Cp.
- Ialousye. Hl. ne of non othir teene. COLOPHON; _so_ E. Hn.; Pt. Hl.
- endeth.
- [89: T. 3111-3133.]
- * * * * *
- THE MILLER'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWEN THE WORDES BITWENE THE HOST AND THE MILLERE.
- Whan that the Knight had thus his tale y-told,
- In al the route nas ther yong ne old 3110
- That he ne seyde it was a noble storie,
- And worthy for to drawen to memorie;
- And namely the gentils everichoon.
- Our Hoste lough and swoor, 'so moot I goon,
- This gooth aright; unbokeled is the male; 3115
- Lat see now who shal telle another tale:
- For trewely, the game is wel bigonne.
- Now telleth ye, sir Monk, if that ye conne, (10)
- Sumwhat, to quyte with the Knightes tale.'
- The Miller, that for-dronken was al pale, 3120
- So that unnethe up-on his hors he sat,
- He nolde avalen neither hood ne hat,
- Ne abyde no man for his curteisye,
- But in Pilates vois he gan to crye,
- And swoor by armes and by blood and bones, 3125
- 'I can a noble tale for the nones,
- With which I wol now quyte the Knightes tale.'
- HEADING. _From_ E. Heere; hoost. 3118. E. on; _rest_ ye.
- Our Hoste saugh that he was dronke of ale, (20)
- And seyde: 'abyd, Robin, my leve brother,
- Som bettre man shal telle us first another: 3130
- Abyd, and lat us werken thriftily.'
- 3128. Ln. oste; E. hoost; Hl. _has_--Oure hoost saugh wel how.
- [90: T. 3134-3166.]
- 'By goddes soul,' quod he, 'that wol nat I;
- For I wol speke, or elles go my wey.'
- Our Hoste answerde: 'tel on, a devel wey!
- Thou art a fool, thy wit is overcome.' 3135
- 3134. Pt. hooste; Ln. oste; E. hoost.
- 'Now herkneth,' quod the Miller, 'alle and some!
- But first I make a protestacioun
- That I am dronke, I knowe it by my soun; (30)
- And therfore, if that I misspeke or seye,
- Wyte it the ale of Southwerk, I yow preye; 3140
- For I wol telle a legende and a lyf
- Bothe of a Carpenter, and of his wyf,
- How that a clerk hath set the wrightes cappe.'
- 3140. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ yow.
- The Reve answerde and seyde, 'stint thy clappe,
- Lat be thy lewed dronken harlotrye. 3145
- It is a sinne and eek a greet folye
- To apeiren any man, or him diffame,
- And eek to bringen wyves in swich fame. (40)
- Thou mayst y-nogh of othere thinges seyn.'
- 3147. E. Ln. Hl. defame; _rest_ diffame.
- This dronken Miller spak ful sone ageyn, 3150
- And seyde, 'leve brother Osewold,
- Who hath no wyf, he is no cokewold.
- But I sey nat therfore that thou art oon;
- Ther been ful gode wyves many oon, 3154
- And ever a thousand gode ayeyns oon badde, [T. _om._
- That knowestow wel thy-self, but-if thou madde. [T. _om._
- Why artow angry with my tale now?
- I have a wyf, pardee, as well as thou, (50)
- Yet nolde I, for the oxen in my plogh,
- Taken up-on me more than y-nogh, 3160
- As demen of my-self that I were oon;
- I wol beleve wel that I am noon.
- An housbond shal nat been inquisitif
- Of goddes privetee, nor of his wyf.
- So he may finde goddes foyson there, 3165
- Of the remenant nedeth nat enquere.'
- 3150. E. dronke; Cm. dronkyn; _rest_ dronken. 3155, 6. _These two
- lines are in_ E. Cm. Hl. only. 3160. Cm. Takyn; _rest_ Take, Tak.
- 3166. enquere] Cp. Pt. Ln. to enquere.
- [91: T. 3167-3186.]
- What sholde I more seyn, but this Millere
- He nolde his wordes for no man forbere, (60)
- But tolde his cherles tale in his manere;
- Me thinketh that I shal reherce it here. 3170
- And ther-fore every gentil wight I preye,
- For goddes love, demeth nat that I seye
- Of evel entente, but that I moot reherce
- Hir tales alle, be they bettre or werse,
- Or elles falsen som of my matere. 3175
- And therfore, who-so list it nat y-here,
- Turne over the leef, and chese another tale;
- For he shal finde y-nowe, grete and smale, (70)
- Of storial thing that toucheth gentillesse,
- And eek moralitee and holinesse; 3180
- Blameth nat me if that ye chese amis.
- The Miller is a cherl, ye knowe wel this;
- So was the Reve, and othere many mo,
- And harlotrye they tolden bothe two.
- Avyseth yow and putte me out of blame; 3185
- And eek men shal nat make ernest of game.
- HERE ENDETH THE PROLOGE.
- 3170. E. Mathynketh; Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. Me athynketh; Cm. Me thynkyth.
- 3172. demeth] Hl. as deme. 3173. E. yuel; Cm. euyl. 3177. Cp.
- chees; Cm. ches; _rest_ chese. 3185. E. Cm. _om._ and. E. Cp.
- putteth; _rest_ putte, put. 3186. E. Hn. Cm. maken; _rest_ make.
- COLOPHON. _From_ Cm.; Pt. Thus endeth the prologe; Ln. Explicit
- prologus; Hl. Here endeth the prologe of the Miller.
- [92: T. 3187-3214.]
- * * * * *
- THE MILLERES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE MILLERE HIS TALE.
- Whylom ther was dwellinge at Oxenford
- A riche gnof, that gestes heeld to bord,
- And of his craft he was a Carpenter.
- With him ther was dwellinge a povre scoler, 3190
- Had lerned art, but al his fantasye
- Was turned for to lerne astrologye,
- And coude a certeyn of conclusiouns
- To demen by interrogaciouns,
- If that men axed him in certein houres, 3195
- Whan that men sholde have droghte or elles shoures, (10)
- Or if men axed him what sholde bifalle
- Of every thing, I may nat rekene hem alle.
- 3187. Cm. Pt. in (_for_ at). 3190. Cm. Pt. Hl. pore; E. Hn. poure (=
- povre); Cp. Ln. pouer (= pover). 3195, 7. E. asked; _rest_ axed.
- This clerk was cleped hende Nicholas;
- Of derne love he coude and of solas; 3200
- And ther-to be was sleigh and ful privee,
- And lyk a mayden meke for to see.
- A chambre hadde he in that hostelrye
- Allone, with-outen any companye,
- Ful fetisly y-dight with herbes swote; 3205
- And he him-self as swete as is the rote (20)
- Of licorys, or any cetewale.
- His Almageste and bokes grete and smale,
- His astrelabie, longinge for his art,
- His augrim-stones layen faire a-part 3210
- On shelves couched at his beddes heed:
- His presse y-covered with a falding reed.
- And al above ther lay a gay sautrye,
- On which he made a nightes melodye
- [93: T. 3215-3250.]
- So swetely, that al the chambre rong; 3215
- And _Angelus ad virginem_ he song; (30)
- And after that he song the kinges note;
- Ful often blessed was his mery throte.
- And thus this swete clerk his tyme spente
- After his freendes finding and his rente. 3220
- 3218. Cm. Pt. Ln. Hl. mery; E. myrie.
- This Carpenter had wedded newe a wyf
- Which that he lovede more than his lyf;
- Of eightetene yeer she was of age.
- Ialous he was, and heeld hir narwe in cage,
- For she was wilde and yong, and he was old 3225
- And demed him-self ben lyk a cokewold. (40)
- He knew nat Catoun, for his wit was rude,
- That bad man sholde wedde his similitude.
- Men sholde wedden after hir estaat,
- For youthe and elde is often at debaat. 3230
- But sith that he was fallen in the snare,
- He moste endure, as other folk, his care.
- 3223. Hl. eyghteteene; _rest_ xviij. 3225. E. yong and wylde. 3230.
- Cm. Hl. ben; _rest_ is.
- Fair was this yonge wyf, and ther-with-al
- As any wesele hir body gent and smal.
- A ceynt she werede barred al of silk, 3235
- A barmclooth eek as whyt as morne milk (50)
- Up-on hir lendes, ful of many a gore.
- Whyt was hir smok, and brouded al bifore
- And eek bihinde, on hir coler aboute,
- Of col-blak silk, with-inne and eek with-oute. 3240
- The tapes of hir whyte voluper
- Were of the same suyte of hir coler;
- Hir filet brood of silk, and set ful hye:
- And sikerly she hadde a likerous yë.
- Ful smale y-pulled were hir browes two, 3245
- And tho were bent, and blake as any sloo. (60)
- She was ful more blisful on to see
- Than is the newe pere-ionette tree;
- And softer than the wolle is of a wether.
- And by hir girdel heeng a purs of lether 3250
- [94: T. 3251-3285.]
- Tasseld with silk, and perled with latoun.
- In al this world, to seken up and doun,
- There nis no man so wys, that coude thenche
- So gay a popelote, or swich a wenche.
- Ful brighter was the shyning of hir hewe 3255
- Than in the tour the noble y-forged newe. (70)
- But of hir song, it was as loude and yerne
- As any swalwe sittinge on a berne.
- Ther-to she coude skippe and make game,
- As any kide or calf folwinge his dame. 3260
- Hir mouth was swete as bragot or the meeth,
- Or hord of apples leyd in hey or heeth.
- Winsinge she was, as is a Ioly colt,
- Long as a mast, and upright as a bolt.
- A brooch she baar up-on hir lowe coler, 3265
- As brood as is the bos of a bocler. (80)
- Hir shoes were laced on hir legges hye;
- She was a prymerole, a pigges-nye
- For any lord to leggen in his bedde,
- Or yet for any good yeman to wedde. 3270
- 3235. E. y-barred; _rest_ barred. 3236. Hl. eek; _rest om._ 3238.
- Cp. brouded; Hl. browdid; Cm. I-brouded; E. Hn. broyden. 3251. E. Hn.
- Tasseled; Ln. Tassilde; Hl. Cp. Tassid. E. grene; _rest_ silk.
- 3253. E. nas; Hn. Pt. Hl. nys; Cm. Cp. Ln. is. 3261. Cm. Pt. Cp. Ln.
- braket. 3265. Cm. lowe; _rest_ loue. 3266. Cp. bocler; Hl. bocleer;
- _rest_ bokeler.
- Now sire, and eft sire, so bifel the cas,
- That on a day this hende Nicholas
- Fil with this yonge wyf to rage and pleye,
- Whyl that hir housbond was at Oseneye,
- As clerkes ben ful subtile and ful queynte; 3275
- And prively he caughte hir by the queynte, (90)
- And seyde, 'y-wis, but if ich have my wille,
- For derne love of thee, lemman, I spille.'
- And heeld hir harde by the haunche-bones,
- And seyde, 'lemman, love me al at-ones, 3280
- Or I wol dyen, also god me save!'
- And she sprong as a colt doth in the trave,
- And with hir heed she wryed faste awey,
- And seyde, 'I wol nat kisse thee, by my fey,
- Why, lat be,' quod she, 'lat be, Nicholas, 3285
- [95: T. 3286-3322.]
- Or I wol crye out "harrow" and "allas." (100)
- Do wey your handes for your curteisye!'
- 3283. Cm. wrythed. 3285. Pt. she; Cm. Hl. sche; Ln. iche; _rest_ ich.
- This Nicholas gan mercy for to crye,
- And spak so faire, and profred hir so faste,
- That she hir love him graunted atte laste, 3290
- And swoor hir ooth, by seint Thomas of Kent,
- That she wol been at his comandement,
- Whan that she may hir leyser wel espye.
- 'Myn housbond is so ful of Ialousye,
- That but ye wayte wel and been privee, 3295
- I woot right wel I nam but deed,' quod she. (110)
- 'Ye moste been ful derne, as in this cas.'
- 'Nay ther-of care thee noght,' quod Nicholas,
- 'A clerk had litherly biset his whyle,
- But-if he coude a Carpenter bigyle.' 3300
- And thus they been acorded and y-sworn
- To wayte a tyme, as I have told biforn.
- Whan Nicholas had doon thus everydeel,
- And thakked hir aboute the lendes weel,
- He kist hir swete, and taketh his sautrye, 3305
- And pleyeth faste, and maketh melodye. (120)
- 3289. E. hir; _rest_ him.
- Than fil it thus, that to the parish-chirche,
- Cristes owne werkes for to wirche,
- This gode wyf wente on an haliday;
- Hir forheed shoon as bright as any day, 3310
- So was it wasshen whan she leet hir werk.
- Now was ther of that chirche a parish-clerk,
- The which that was y-cleped Absolon.
- Crul was his heer, and as the gold it shoon,
- And strouted as a fanne large and brode; 3315
- Ful streight and even lay his Ioly shode. (130)
- His rode was reed, his eyen greye as goos;
- With Powles window corven on his shoos,
- In hoses rede he wente fetisly.
- Y-clad he was ful smal and proprely, 3320
- Al in a kirtel of a light wachet;
- Ful faire and thikke been the poyntes set.
- [96: T. 3323-3358.]
- And ther-up-on he hadde a gay surplys
- As whyt as is the blosme up-on the rys.
- A mery child he was, so god me save, 3325
- Wel coude he laten blood and clippe and shave, (140)
- And make a chartre of lond or acquitaunce.
- In twenty manere coude he trippe and daunce
- After the scole of Oxenforde tho,
- And with his legges casten to and fro, 3330
- And pleyen songes on a small rubible;
- Ther-to he song som-tyme a loud quinible;
- And as wel coude he pleye on his giterne.
- In al the toun nas brewhous ne taverne
- That he ne visited with his solas, 3335
- Ther any gaylard tappestere was. (150)
- But sooth to seyn, he was somdel squaymous
- Of farting, and of speche daungerous.
- 3319. Cm. hosyn; Pt. hosen; _rest_ hoses. 3321. Hl. fyn (_for_
- light). Hl. Ln. wachet; Cm. vachet; _rest_ waget. 3325. E. myrie;
- Hn. murye. 3327. E. Hn. maken. 3329. E. Hn. Oxenford; Cm.
- Oxenforthe; _rest_ Oxenforde. 3333. E. his; _rest_ a.
- This Absolon, that Iolif was and gay,
- Gooth with a sencer on the haliday, 3340
- Sensinge the wyves of the parish faste;
- And many a lovely look on hem he caste,
- And namely on this carpenteres wyf.
- To loke on hir him thoughte a mery lyf,
- She was so propre and swete and likerous. 3345
- I dar wel seyn, if she had been a mous, (160)
- And he a cat, he wolde hir hente anon.
- 3344. E. myrie; Hn. murye. 3347. E. Hl. wold; _rest_ wolde.
- This parish-clerk, this Ioly Absolon,
- Hath in his herte swich a love-longinge,
- That of no wyf ne took he noon offringe; 3350
- For curteisye, he seyde, he wolde noon.
- The mone, whan it was night, ful brighte shoon,
- And Absolon his giterne hath y-take,
- For paramours, he thoghte for to wake.
- And forth he gooth, Iolif and amorous, 3353
- Til he cam to the carpenteres hous (170)
- A litel after cokkes hadde y-crowe;
- And dressed him up by a shot-windowe
- [97: T. 3359-3392.]
- That was up-on the carpenteres wal.
- He singeth in his vois gentil and smal, 3360
- 'Now, dere lady, if thy wille be,
- I preye yow that ye wol rewe on me,'
- Ful wel acordaunt to his giterninge.
- This carpenter awook, and herde him singe,
- And spak un-to his wyf, and seyde anon, 3365
- 'What! Alison! herestow nat Absolon (180)
- That chaunteth thus under our boures wal?'
- And she answerde hir housbond ther-with-al,
- 'Yis, god wot, Iohn, I here it every-del.'
- 3350. Hn. Hl. ne; _rest om._ 3362. Cm. preye; Hl. praye; Ln. preie;
- E. Hn. Cp. Pt. pray. E. wole; Cm. wele; Hn. Hl. wol; _rest_ wil. E.
- thynke; _rest_ rewe. 3364. E. _om._ him.
- This passeth forth; what wol ye bet than wel? 3370
- Fro day to day this Ioly Absolon
- So woweth hir, that him is wo bigon.
- He waketh al the night and al the day;
- He kempte hise lokkes brode, and made him gay;
- He woweth hir by menes and brocage, 3375
- And swoor he wolde been hir owne page; (190)
- He singeth, brokkinge as a nightingale;
- He sente hir piment, meeth, and spyced ale,
- And wafres, pyping hote out of the glede;
- And for she was of toune, he profred mede. 3380
- For som folk wol ben wonnen for richesse,
- And som for strokes, and som for gentillesse.
- 3371. E. _repeats_ to day. 3374. Cm. kempte; Hn. Ln. kembed; Cp.
- kembede; E. Pt. kembeth. 3379. Cm. Pt. Ln. hote; E. Hn. Cp. hoot.
- 3380. E. profreth.
- Somtyme, to shewe his lightnesse and maistrye,
- He pleyeth Herodes on a scaffold hye.
- But what availleth him as in this cas? 3385
- She loveth so this hende Nicholas, (200)
- That Absolon may blowe the bukkes horn;
- He ne hadde for his labour but a scorn;
- And thus she maketh Absolon hir ape,
- And al his ernest turneth til a Iape. 3390
- Ful sooth is this proverbe, it is no lye,
- Men seyn right thus, 'alwey the nye slye
- [98: T. 3393-3429.]
- Maketh the ferre leve to be looth.'
- For though that Absolon be wood or wrooth,
- By-cause that he fer was from hir sighte, 3395
- This nye Nicholas stood in his lighte. (210)
- 3384. Hl. Herodz; Ln. Heraude; _rest_ Herodes, Heraudes. Hl. on;
- _rest_ vp on. 3390. Hl. Pt. to; _rest_ til.
- Now bere thee wel, thou hende Nicholas!
- For Absolon may waille and singe 'allas.'
- And so bifel it on a Saterday,
- This carpenter was goon til Osenay; 3400
- And hende Nicholas and Alisoun
- Acorded been to this conclusioun,
- That Nicholas shal shapen him a wyle
- This sely Ialous housbond to bigyle;
- And if so be the game wente aright, 3405
- She sholde slepen in his arm al night, (220)
- For this was his desyr and hir also.
- And right anon, with-outen wordes mo,
- This Nicholas no lenger wolde tarie,
- But doth ful softe un-to his chambre carie 3410
- Bothe mete and drinke for a day or tweye,
- And to hir housbonde bad hir for to seye,
- If that he axed after Nicholas,
- She sholde seye she niste where he was,
- Of al that day she saugh him nat with yë; 3415
- She trowed that he was in maladye, (230)
- For, for no cry, hir mayde coude him calle;
- He nolde answere, for no-thing that mighte falle.
- 3415. Cm. Pt. ye; Hl. Iye; _rest_ eye. 3418. Hn. Cm. Cp. Ln. no
- thyng; Pt. Hl. nought; E. thyng. Pt. Hl. may bifalle. (_Read_ mighte
- _as_ might').
- This passeth forth al thilke Saterday,
- That Nicholas stille in his chambre lay, 3420
- And eet and sleep, or dide what him leste,
- Til Sonday, that the sonne gooth to reste.
- This sely carpenter hath greet merveyle
- Of Nicholas, or what thing mighte him eyle,
- And seyde, 'I am adrad, by seint Thomas, 3425
- It stondeth nat aright with Nicholas. (240)
- God shilde that he deyde sodeynly!
- This world is now ful tikel, sikerly;
- I saugh to-day a cors y-born to chirche
- [99: T. 3430-3465.]
- That now, on Monday last, I saugh him wirche. 3430
- Go up,' quod he un-to his knave anoon,
- 'Clepe at his dore, or knokke with a stoon,
- Loke how it is, and tel me boldely.'
- This knave gooth him up ful sturdily,
- And at the chambre-dore, whyl that he stood, 3435
- He cryde and knokked as that he were wood:-- (250)
- 'What! how! what do ye, maister Nicholay?
- How may ye slepen al the longe day?'
- But al for noght, he herde nat a word;
- An hole he fond, ful lowe up-on a bord, 3440
- Ther as the cat was wont in for to crepe;
- And at that hole he looked in ful depe,
- And at the laste he hadde of him a sighte.
- This Nicholas sat gaping ever up-righte,
- As he had kyked on the newe mone. 3445
- Adoun he gooth, and tolde his maister sone (260)
- In what array he saugh this ilke man.
- 3440. E. Hn. foond; Pt. foonde. 3444. E. Hn. Cp. capyng. 3445. Cp.
- Ln. keked; Hl. loked. 3447. E. Pt. that; _rest_ this.
- This carpenter to blessen him bigan,
- And seyde, 'help us, seinte Frideswyde!
- A man woot litel what him shal bityde. 3450
- This man is falle, with his astromye,
- In som woodnesse or in som agonye;
- I thoghte ay wel how that it sholde be!
- Men sholde nat knowe of goddes privetee.
- Ye, blessed be alwey a lewed man, 3455
- That noght but oonly his bileve can! (270)
- So ferde another clerk with astromye;
- He walked in the feeldes for to prye
- Up-on the sterres, what ther sholde bifalle,
- Til he was in a marle-pit y-falle; 3460
- He saugh nat that. But yet, by seint Thomas,
- Me reweth sore of hende Nicholas.
- He shal be rated of his studying,
- If that I may, by Iesus, hevene king!
- 3451. E. Hn. Astromye; Ln. Arstromye; _rest_ astronomye; _but_ Astromye
- _is meant; see_ l. 3457. 3457. _So_ E. Hn.; _rest_ astronomye.
- 3460. E. -put.
- Get me a staf, that I may underspore, 3465
- [100: T. 3466-3498.]
- Whyl that thou, Robin, hevest up the dore. (280)
- He shal out of his studying, as I gesse'--
- And to the chambre-dore he gan him dresse.
- His knave was a strong carl for the nones,
- And by the haspe he haf it up atones; 3470
- In-to the floor the dore fil anon.
- This Nicholas sat ay as stille as stoon,
- And ever gaped upward in-to the eir.
- This carpenter wende he were in despeir,
- And hente him by the sholdres mightily, 3475
- And shook him harde, and cryde spitously, (290)
- 'What! Nicholay! what, how! what! loke adoun!
- Awake, and thenk on Cristes passioun;
- I crouche thee from elves and fro wightes!'
- Ther-with the night-spel seyde he anon-rightes 3480
- On foure halves of the hous aboute,
- And on the threshfold of the dore with-oute:--
- 'Iesu Crist, and seynt Benedight,
- Blesse this hous from every wikked wight,
- For nightes verye, the white _pater-noster_! 3485
- Where wentestow, seynt Petres soster?' (300)
- 3466. E. of; _rest_ vp, vpe. 3470. Cm. Hl. haf; E. Hn. haaf; Cp.
- heef. Hn. Pt. Ln. Hl. vp; _rest_ of. 3473. E. Hn. caped; Hl. capyd;
- Cp. capede; _rest_ gaped, gapede. 3477. Hl. man (_for 3rd_ what);
- _rest om._ 3485. _All but_ E. Hl. For the nyghtes. E. Hn. uerye;
- Cm. verie; Cp. Pt. verye; Ln. very; Hl. verray. 3486. Cm. wonyst
- þ_o_u; Hl. wonestow; _after which_ Cm. Hl. _ins._ now.
- And atte laste this hende Nicholas
- Gan for to syke sore, and seyde, 'allas!
- Shal al the world be lost eftsones now?'
- 3487. Hl. _om._ this. 3489. E. this; _rest_ the.
- This carpenter answerde, 'what seystow? 3490
- What! thenk on god, as we don, men that swinke.'
- 3491. Hn. Pt. Hl. thenk; _rest_ thynk; _see_ 3478. Cm. as men don whan
- they swinke.
- This Nicholas answerde, 'fecche me drinke;
- And after wol I speke in privetee
- Of certeyn thing that toucheth me and thee;
- I wol telle it non other man, certeyn.' 3495
- This carpenter goth doun, and comth ageyn, (310)
- And broghte of mighty ale a large quart;
- And whan that ech of hem had dronke his part,
- [101: T. 3499-3534.]
- This Nicholas his dore faste shette,
- And doun the carpenter by him he sette. 3500
- He seyde, 'Iohn, myn hoste lief and dere,
- Thou shall up-on thy trouthe swere me here,
- That to no wight thou shalt this conseil wreye;
- For it is Cristes conseil that I seye,
- And if thou telle it man, thou are forlore; 3505
- For this vengaunce thou shalt han therfore, (320)
- That if thou wreye me, thou shalt be wood!'
- 'Nay, Crist forbede it, for his holy blood!'
- Quod tho this sely man, 'I nam no labbe,
- Ne, though I seye, I nam nat lief to gabbe. 3510
- Sey what thou wolt, I shal it never telle
- To child ne wyf, by him that harwed helle!'
- 3501. Cp. Pt. hooste; Ln. ostee; Hl. host ful; E. Hn. hoost; Cm. ost.
- 3505. E. _om._ it. 3510. E. Hl. am; _rest_ nam, ne am.
- 'Now John,' quod Nicholas, 'I wol nat lye;
- I have y-founde in myn astrologye,
- As I have loked in the mone bright, 3515
- That now, a Monday next, at quarter-night, (330)
- Shal falle a reyn and that so wilde and wood,
- That half so greet was never Noës flood.
- This world,' he seyde, 'in lasse than in an hour
- Shal al be dreynt, so hidous is the shour; 3520
- Thus shal mankynde drenche and lese hir lyf.'
- 3516. a] Hl. on. 3519. Cm. Hl. _om. 2nd_ in.
- This carpenter answerde, 'allas, my wyf!
- And shal she drenche? allas! myn Alisoun!'
- For sorwe of this he fil almost adoun,
- And seyde, 'is ther no remedie in this cas?' 3525
- 3525. Pt. Ln. _om._ ther.
- 'Why, yis, for gode,' quod hende Nicholas, (340)
- 'If thou wolt werken after lore and reed;
- Thou mayst nat werken after thyn owene heed.
- For thus seith Salomon, that was ful trewe,
- "Werk al by conseil, and thou shalt nat rewe." 3530
- And if thou werken wolt by good conseil,
- I undertake, with-outen mast and seyl,
- Yet shal I saven hir and thee and me
- Hastow nat herd how saved was Noë,
- [102: T. 3535-3570.]
- Whan that our lord had warned him biforn 3535
- That al the world with water sholde be lorn?' (350)
- 3527. E. aftir. 3534. E. hou. 3535. Hl. had; E. Hn. Cm. hadde.
- 'Yis,' quod this carpenter, 'ful yore ago.'
- 'Hastow nat herd,' quod Nicholas, 'also
- The sorwe of Noë with his felawshipe,
- Er that he mighte gete his wyf to shipe? 3540
- Him had be lever, I dar wel undertake,
- At thilke tyme, than alle hise wetheres blake,
- That she hadde had a ship hir-self allone.
- And ther-fore, wostou what is best to done?
- This asketh haste, and of an hastif thing 3545
- Men may nat preche or maken tarying. (360)
- 3539. E. felaweshipe. 3540. E. brynge; _rest_ gete. 3541. E. hadde;
- leuere. 3544. E. woostou; doone.
- Anon go gete us faste in-to this in
- A kneding-trogh, or elles a kimelin,
- For ech of us, but loke that they be large,
- In whiche we mowe swimme as in a barge, 3550
- And han ther-inne vitaille suffisant
- But for a day; fy on the remenant!
- The water shal aslake and goon away
- Aboute pryme up-on the nexte day.
- But Robin may nat wite of this, thy knave, 3555
- Ne eek thy mayde Gille I may nat save; (370)
- Axe nat why, for though thou aske me,
- I wol nat tellen goddes privetee.
- Suffiseth thee, but if thy wittes madde,
- To han as greet a grace as Noë hadde. 3560
- Thy wyf shal I wel saven, out of doute,
- Go now thy wey, and speed thee heer-aboute.
- 3548. E. ellis. E. kymelyn; Hl. kemelyn.
- But whan thou hast, for hir and thee and me,
- Y-geten us thise kneding-tubbes three,
- Than shaltow hange hem in the roof ful hye, 3565
- That no man of our purveyaunce spye. (380)
- And whan thou thus hast doon as I have seyd,
- And hast our vitaille faire in hem y-leyd,
- And eek an ax, to smyte the corde atwo
- When that the water comth, that we may go, 3570
- [103: T. 3571-3606.]
- And broke an hole an heigh, up-on the gable,
- Unto the gardin-ward, over the stable,
- That we may frely passen forth our way
- Whan that the grete shour is goon away--
- Than shaltow swimme as myrie, I undertake, 3575
- As doth the whyte doke after hir drake. (390)
- Than wol I clepe, "how! Alison! how! John!
- Be myrie, for the flood wol passe anon."
- And thou wolt seyn, "hayl, maister Nicholay!
- Good morwe, I se thee wel, for it is day." 3580
- And than shul we be lordes al our lyf
- Of al the world, as Noë and his wyf.
- 3565: E. Thanne. 3571. E. Pt. Ln. broke; _rest_ breke. 3575. E.
- Thanne. E. shal I; _rest_ shaltow, shalt thou. 3577. E. Thanne.
- But of o thyng I warne thee ful right,
- Be wel avysed, on that ilke night
- That we ben entred in-to shippes bord, 3585
- That noon of us ne speke nat a word, (400)
- Ne clepe, ne crye, but been in his preyere;
- For it is goddes owne heste dere.
- 3588. E. heeste.
- Thy wyf and thou mote hange fer a-twinne,
- For that bitwixe yow shal be no sinne 3590
- No more in looking than ther shal in dede;
- This ordinance is seyd, go, god thee spede!
- Tomorwe at night, whan men ben alle aslepe,
- In-to our kneding-tubbes wol we crepe,
- And sitten ther, abyding goddes grace. 3595
- Go now thy wey, I have no lenger space (410)
- To make of this no lenger sermoning.
- Men seyn thus, "send the wyse, and sey no-thing;"
- Thou art so wys, it nedeth thee nat teche;
- Go, save our lyf, and that I thee biseche.' 3600
- 3591. E. Hn. Na. 3592. E. Pt. Hl. so; _rest_ go. 3593. E. folk; Cm.
- we; _rest_ men. 3598. E. sende. 3599. E. to preche; Cp. to teche;
- _rest_ teche.
- This sely carpenter goth forth his wey.
- Ful ofte he seith 'allas' and 'weylawey,'
- And to his wyf he tolde his privetee;
- And she was war, and knew it bet than he,
- What al this queynte cast was for to seye. 3605
- But nathelees she ferde as she wolde deye, (420)
- [104: T. 3607-3641.]
- And seyde, 'allas! go forth thy wey anon,
- Help us to scape, or we ben lost echon;
- I am thy trewe verray wedded wyf;
- Go, dere spouse, and help to save our lyf.' 3610
- 3608. Cm. er (_for_ or). E. lost; _rest_ dede, deede, ded. 3609.
- Cm. Hl. verray trewe.
- Lo! which a greet thyng is affeccioun!
- Men may dye of imaginacioun,
- So depe may impressioun be take.
- This sely carpenter biginneth quake;
- Him thinketh verraily that he may see 3615
- Noës flood come walwing as the see (430)
- To drenchen Alisoun, his hony dere.
- He wepeth, weyleth, maketh sory chere,
- He syketh with ful many a sory swogh.
- He gooth and geteth him a kneding-trogh, 3620
- And after that a tubbe and a kimelin,
- And prively he sente hem to his in,
- And heng hem in the roof in privetee.
- His owne hand he made laddres three,
- To climben by the ronges and the stalkes 3625
- Un-to the tubbes hanginge in the balkes, (440)
- And hem vitailled, bothe trogh and tubbe,
- With breed and chese, and good ale in a Iubbe,
- Suffysinge right y-nogh as for a day.
- But er that he had maad al this array, 3630
- He sente his knave, and eek his wenche also,
- Up-on his nede to London for to go.
- And on the Monday, whan it drow to night,
- He shette his dore with-oute candel-light,
- And dressed al thing as it sholde be. 3635
- And shortly, up they clomben alle three; (450)
- They sitten stille wel a furlong-way.
- 3611. E. Auctor (_in margin_). 3612. Hl. A man. E. Hn. dyen. Pt.
- Hl. for; Cm. thour; _rest_ of. 3624. E. _om._ he; Hl. _has_ þan.
- 3626. E. In-to; Cm. Onto; _rest_ Vnto. 3627. E. vitailleth. 3630.
- E. hadde. 3635. E. dresseth; _rest_ dressed. E. Hn. Cm. alle.
- Hn. Cp. scholde; E. shal.
- 'Now, _Pater-noster_, clom!' seyde Nicholay,
- And 'clom,' quod John, and 'clom,' seyde Alisoun.
- This carpenter seyde his devocioun, 3640
- And stille he sit, and biddeth his preyere,
- [105: T. 3642-3677.]
- Awaytinge on the reyn, if he it here.
- The dede sleep, for wery bisinesse,
- Fil on this carpenter right, as I gesse,
- Aboute corfew-tyme, or litel more; 3645
- For travail of his goost he groneth sore, (460)
- And eft he routeth, for his heed mislay.
- Doun of the laddre stalketh Nicholay,
- And Alisoun, ful softe adoun she spedde;
- With-outen wordes mo, they goon to bedde 3650
- Ther-as the carpenter is wont to lye.
- Ther was the revel and the melodye;
- And thus lyth Alison and Nicholas,
- In bisinesse of mirthe and of solas,
- Til that the belle of laudes gan to ringe, 3655
- And freres in the chauncel gonne singe. (470)
- 3643. Cm. Hl. verray; _rest_ wery.
- This parish-clerk, this amorous Absolon,
- That is for love alwey so wo bigon,
- Up-on the Monday was at Oseneye
- With companye, him to disporte and pleye, 3660
- And axed up-on cas a cloisterer
- Ful prively after Iohn the carpenter;
- And he drough him a-part out of the chirche,
- And seyde, 'I noot, I saugh him here nat wirche
- Sin Saterday; I trow that he be went 3665
- For timber, ther our abbot hath him sent; (480)
- For he is wont for timber for to go,
- And dwellen at the grange a day or two;
- Or elles he is at his hous, certeyn;
- Wher that he be, I can nat sothly seyn.' 3670
- 3660. E. With a compaignye. 3661. E. Cloistrer; Pt. Ln. Cloystrere.
- This Absolon ful Ioly was and light,
- And thoghte, 'now is tyme wake al night;
- For sikirly I saugh him nat stiringe
- Aboute his dore sin day bigan to springe.
- So moot I thryve, I shal, at cokkes crowe, 3675
- Ful prively knokken at his windowe (490)
- That stant ful lowe up-on his boures wal.
- [106: T. 3678-3712.]
- To Alison now wol I tellen al
- My love-longing, for yet I shal nat misse
- That at the leste wey I shal hir kisse. 3680
- Som maner confort shal I have, parfay,
- My mouth hath icched al this longe day;
- That is a signe of kissing atte leste.
- Al night me mette eek, I was at a feste.
- Therfor I wol gon slepe an houre or tweye, 3685
- And al the night than wol I wake and pleye.' (500)
- 3672. E. Hl. wake; Cm. to waky_n_; _rest_ to wake. 3676. Hn. Cp. Pt.
- Ln. knokken; E. Cm. knokke; Hl. go knokke.
- Whan that the firste cok hath crowe, anon
- Up rist this Ioly lover Absolon,
- And him arrayeth gay, at point-devys.
- But first he cheweth greyn and lycorys, 3690
- To smellen swete, er he had kembd his heer.
- Under his tonge a trewe love he beer,
- For ther-by wende he to ben gracious.
- He rometh to the carpenteres hous,
- And stille he stant under the shot-windowe; 3695
- Un-to his brest it raughte, it was so lowe; (510)
- And softe he cogheth with a semi-soun--
- 'What do ye, hony-comb, swete Alisoun?
- My faire brid, my swete cinamome,
- Awaketh, lemman myn, and speketh to me! 3700
- Wel litel thenken ye up-on my wo,
- That for your love I swete ther I go.
- No wonder is thogh that I swelte and swete;
- I moorne as doth a lamb after the tete.
- Y-wis, lemman, I have swich love-longinge, 3705
- That lyk a turtel trewe is my moorninge; (520)
- I may nat ete na more than a mayde.'
- 3690. E. of; _rest_ and. 3696. E. brist. 3697. Hn. cogheth; Cp.
- coughed; Hl. cowhith; Pt. kougheþ; Cm. coude; E. knokketh. 3701. Cp.
- Pt. thenken; _rest_ thynken, thynke.
- 'Go fro the window, Iakke fool,' she sayde,
- 'As help me god, it wol nat be "com ba me,"
- I love another, and elles I were to blame, 3710
- Wel bet than thee, by Iesu, Absolon!
- Go forth thy wey, or I wol caste a ston,
- [107: T. 3713-3745.]
- And lat me slepe, a twenty devel wey!'
- 3709. E. Hn. com pa me; Cp. com pame; Cm. cu_m_pame; Pt. compame; Hl.
- Ln. compaine; _several_ MSS. come bame, combame; _see note_.
- 'Allas,' quod Absolon, 'and weylawey!
- That trewe love was ever so yvel biset! 3715
- Than kisse me, sin it may be no bet, (530)
- For Iesus love and for the love of me.'
- 3716. Cp. Pt. Ln. kisse; Hl. kisseth; _rest_ kys.
- 'Wiltow than go thy wey ther-with?' quod she.
- 3718. E. _om._ ther-with.
- 'Ye, certes, lemman,' quod this Absolon.
- 'Thanne make thee redy,' quod she, 'I come anon;' 3720
- And un-to Nicholas she seyde stille, [T. _om._
- 'Now hust, and thou shall laughen al thy fille.' [T. _om._
- 3721, 2. _These 2 lines in_ E. _only._
- This Absolon doun sette him on his knees,
- And seyde, 'I am a lord at alle degrees;
- For after this I hope ther cometh more! 3725
- Lemman, thy grace, and swete brid, thyn ore!' (540)
- 3724. E. _om._ a.
- The window she undoth, and that in haste,
- 'Have do,' quod she, 'com of, and speed thee faste,
- Lest that our neighebores thee espye.'
- 3728. Cm. don; Hl. doon; Pt. doo; _rest_ do. Hn. thee; _rest_ the.
- This Absolon gan wype his mouth ful drye; 3730
- Derk was the night as pich, or as the cole,
- And at the window out she putte hir hole,
- And Absolon, him fil no bet ne wers,
- But with his mouth he kiste hir naked ers
- Ful savourly, er he was war of this. 3735
- 3731. E. Dirk. 3732. E. pitte.
- Abak he sterte, and thoghte it was amis, (550)
- For wel he wiste a womman hath no berd;
- He felte a thing al rough and long y-herd,
- And seyde, 'fy! allas! what have I do?'
- 3736. E. Cm. stirte.
- 'Tehee!' quod she, and clapte the window to; 3740
- And Absolon goth forth a sory pas.
- 'A berd, a berd!' quod hende Nicholas,
- 'By goddes _corpus_, this goth faire and weel!'
- This sely Absolon herde every deel,
- And on his lippe he gan for anger byte; 3745
- And to him-self he seyde, 'I shal thee quyte!' (560)
- 3743, 4. E. weel, deel; Ln. wele, dele; _rest_ wel, del.
- Who rubbeth now, who froteth now his lippes
- [108: T. 3746-3780.]
- With dust, with sond, with straw, with clooth, with chippes,
- But Absolon, that seith ful ofte, 'allas!
- My soule bitake I un-to Sathanas, 3750
- But me wer lever than al this toun,' quod he,
- 'Of this despyt awroken for to be!
- Allas!' quod he, 'allas! I ne hadde y-bleynt!'
- His hote love was cold and al y-queynt;
- For fro that tyme that he had kiste hir ers, 3755
- Of paramours he sette nat a kers, (570)
- For he was heled of his maladye;
- Ful ofte paramours he gan deffye,
- And weep as dooth a child that is y-bete.
- A softe paas he wente over the strete 3760
- Un-til a smith men cleped daun Gerveys,
- That in his forge smithed plough-harneys;
- He sharpeth shaar and culter bisily.
- This Absolon knokketh al esily,
- And seyde, 'undo, Gerveys, and that anon.' 3765
- 3753. Hl. nadde bleynt. 3759. Cm. wepte; Hl. wept. 3763. E. Hn.
- kultour; Cp. Pt. Ln. culter.
- 'What, who artow?' 'It am I, Absolon.' (580)
- 'What, Absolon! for Cristes swete tree,
- Why ryse ye so rathe, ey, _benedicite!_
- What eyleth yow? som gay gerl, god it woot,
- Hath broght yow thus up-on the viritoot; 3770
- By sëynt Note, ye woot wel what I mene.'
- 3766. E. I am heere; _rest_ it am I. 3770. E. Hn. Cp. viritoot; Pt.
- Vyritote; Ln. veritote; Cm. merytot; Hl. verytrot. 3771. Pt. Ln.
- seynt; _rest_ seinte. Pt. Hl. Noet.
- This Absolon ne roghte nat a bene
- Of al his pley, no word agayn he yaf;
- He hadde more tow on his distaf
- Than Gerveys knew, and seyde, 'freend so dere, 3775
- That hote culter in the chimenee here, (590)
- As lene it me, I have ther-with to done,
- And I wol bringe it thee agayn ful sone.'
- 3776. E. kultour.
- Gerveys answerde, 'certes, were it gold,
- Or in a poke nobles alle untold, 3780
- Thou sholdest have, as I am trewe smith;
- Ey, Cristes foo! what wol ye do ther-with?'
- [109: T. 3781-3815.]
- 3781. Hl. Ye schul him haue. 3782. Hl. fo; _rest_ foo; ed. 1561,
- fote.
- 'Ther-of,' quod Absolon, 'be as be may;
- I shal wel telle it thee to-morwe day'--
- And caughte the culter by the colde stele. 3785
- Ful softe out at the dore he gan to stele, (600)
- And wente un-to the carpenteres wal.
- He cogheth first, and knokketh ther-with-al
- Upon the windowe, right as he dide er.
- 3785. E. kultour.
- This Alison answerde, 'Who is ther 3790
- That knokketh so? I warante it a theef.'
- 'Why, nay,' quod he, 'god woot, my swete leef,
- I am thyn Absolon, my dereling!
- Of gold,' quod he, 'I have thee broght a ring;
- My moder yaf it me, so god me save, 3795
- Ful fyn it is, and ther-to wel y-grave; (610)
- This wol I yeve thee, if thou me kisse!'
- 3793. E. Hn. my; Cm. myn; Hl. O my; Cp. thi; Pt. thine; Ln. þin. E.
- deerelyng; Hn. Cm. Cp. derelyng.
- This Nicholas was risen for to pisse,
- And thoghte he wolde amenden al the Iape,
- He sholde kisse his ers er that he scape. 3800
- And up the windowe dide he hastily,
- And out his ers he putteth prively
- Over the buttok, to the haunche-bon;
- And ther-with spak this clerk, this Absolon,
- 'Spek, swete brid, I noot nat wher thou art.' 3805
- 3800. E. _om._ ers.
- This Nicholas anon leet flee a fart, (620)
- As greet as it had been a thonder-dent,
- That with the strook he was almost y-blent;
- And he was redy with his iren hoot,
- And Nicholas amidde the ers he smoot. 3810
- 3810. E. _om._ the.
- Of gooth the skin an hande-brede aboute,
- The hole culter brende so his toute,
- And for the smert he wende for to dye.
- As he were wood, for wo he gan to crye--
- Help! water! water! help, for goddes herte!' 3815
- 3812. E. kultour. 3813. And] Hn. That.
- This carpenter out of his slomber sterte, (630)
- And herde oon cryen 'water' as he were wood,
- [110: T. 3816-3848.]
- And thoghte, 'Allas! now comth Nowelis flood!'
- He sit him up with-outen wordes mo,
- And with his ax he smoot the corde a-two, 3820
- And doun goth al; he fond neither to selle,
- Ne breed ne ale, til he cam to the celle
- Up-on the floor; and ther aswowne he lay.
- 3818. E. Hn. Nowelis; Cp. Noweles (_intentionally_); Cm. Newel_is_; Pt.
- Ln. Hl. noes. 3821. Hl. he goth (_for_ goth al). E. Hn. foond.
- Up sterte hir Alison, and Nicholay,
- And cryden 'out' and 'harrow' in the strete. 3835
- The neighebores, bothe smale and grete, (640)
- In ronnen, for to gauren on this man,
- That yet aswowne he lay, bothe pale and wan;
- For with the fal he brosten hadde his arm;
- But stonde he moste un-to his owne harm. 3830
- For whan he spak, he was anon bore doun
- With hende Nicholas and Alisoun.
- They tolden every man that he was wood,
- He was agast so of 'Nowelis flood'
- Thurgh fantasye, that of his vanitee 3835
- He hadde y-boght him kneding-tubbes three, (650)
- And hadde hem hanged in the roof above;
- And that he preyed hem, for goddes love,
- To sitten in the roof, _par companye_.
- 3828. E. Hn. he; _rest om._ 3831. Pt. Ln. Hl. born. 3834. E. Hn.
- Nowelis; Cp. Ln. the Nowels; Pt. þe Noes; Hl. Noes. 3837. E. roue;
- _see_ l. 3839. 3838. E. Hn. Ln. preyde.
- The folk gan laughen at his fantasye; 3840
- In-to the roof they kyken and they gape,
- And turned al his harm un-to a Iape.
- For what so that this carpenter answerde,
- It was for noght, no man his reson herde;
- With othes grete he was so sworn adoun, 3845
- That he was holden wood in al the toun; (660)
- For every clerk anon-right heeld with other.
- They seyde, 'the man is wood, my leve brother;'
- And every wight gan laughen of this stryf.
- 3841. E. Hn. Cp. cape. 3846. E. holde. 3848. E. Hn. Hl. was; _rest_
- is. 3849. E. of this; Hn. at this; _rest_ at his.
- Thus swyved was the carpenteres wyf, 3850
- [111: T. 3849-3852.]
- For al his keping and his Ialousye;
- And Absolon hath kist hir nether yë;
- And Nicholas is scalded in the toute. (667)
- This tale is doon, and god save al the route! 3854
- HERE ENDETH THE MILLERE HIS TALE.
- 3850. E. this; _rest_ the. 3852. Pt. Hl. ye; Hn. Iye; E. Ln. eye.
- 3853. E. Hn. the; _rest_ his. COLOPHON. _So_ E. (_with_ Heere); Hl.
- Pn. Here endeth the Millers tale; Hn. Here is ended the Millerys tale;
- Cp. Ln. Explicit fabula Molendinarii.
- [112: T. 3853-3882.]
- * * * * *
- THE REEVE'S PROLOGUE
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE REVES TALE.
- Whan folk had laughen at this nyce cas 3855
- Of Absolon and hende Nicholas,
- Diverse folk diversely they seyde;
- But, for the more part, they loughe and pleyde,
- Ne at this tale I saugh no man him greve,
- But it were only Osewold the Reve, 3860
- By-cause he was of carpenteres craft.
- A litel ire is in his herte y-laft,
- He gan to grucche and blamed it a lyte.
- 3862. E. Pt. _om._ is.
- 'So theek,' quod he, 'ful wel coude I yow quyte (10)
- With blering of a proud milleres yë, 3865
- If that me liste speke of ribaudye.
- But ik am old, me list not pley for age;
- Gras-tyme is doon, my fodder is now forage,
- This whyte top wryteth myne olde yeres,
- Myn herte is al-so mowled as myne heres, 3870
- But-if I fare as dooth an open-ers;
- That ilke fruit is ever leng the wers,
- Til it be roten in mullok or in stree.
- We olde men, I drede, so fare we; (20)
- Til we be roten, can we nat be rype; 3875
- We hoppen ay, whyl that the world wol pype.
- For in oure wil ther stiketh ever a nayl,
- To have an hoor heed and a grene tayl,
- As hath a leek; for thogh our might be goon,
- Our wil desireth folie ever in oon. 3880
- For whan we may nat doon, than wol we speke;
- Yet in our asshen olde is fyr y-reke.
- 3865. E. Ln. eye. 3867. E. Hn. no (_for_ not). 3869. Hl. My (_for_
- This). 3870. E. mowled also. 3872. E. leng; Ln. longe: _rest_
- lenger. 3876. E. ay whil that; Hn. alwey whil þat; _rest_ alwey
- while.
- Foure gledes han we, whiche I shal devyse,
- Avaunting, lying, anger, coveityse; (30)
- [113: T. 3883-3918.]
- Thise foure sparkles longen un-to elde. 3885
- Our olde lemes mowe wel been unwelde,
- But wil ne shal nat faillen, that is sooth.
- And yet ik have alwey a coltes tooth,
- As many a yeer as it is passed henne
- Sin that my tappe of lyf bigan to renne. 3890
- For sikerly, whan I was bore, anon
- Deeth drogh the tappe of lyf and leet it gon;
- And ever sith hath so the tappe y-ronne,
- Til that almost al empty is the tonne. (40)
- The streem of lyf now droppeth on the chimbe; 3895
- The sely tonge may wel ringe and chimbe
- Of wrecchednesse that passed is ful yore;
- With olde folk, save dotage, is namore.'
- 3885. E. eelde. 3886. E. vnweelde. 3893. Hn. sith; E. sithe.
- Whan that our host hadde herd this sermoning,
- He gan to speke as lordly as a king; 3900
- He seide, 'what amounteth al this wit?
- What shul we speke alday of holy writ?
- The devel made a reve for to preche,
- And of a souter a shipman or a leche. (50)
- Sey forth thy tale, and tarie nat the tyme, 3905
- Lo, Depeford! and it is half-way pryme.
- Lo, Grenewich, ther many a shrewe is inne;
- It were al tyme thy tale to biginne.'
- 3904. E. Cm. And; _rest_ Or. _All but_ Hn. _om. 2nd_ a. 3907. Cp.
- Pt. Ln. that (_for_ ther). 3908. Pt. hie (_for_ al).
- 'Now, sires,' quod this Osewold the Reve,
- 'I pray yow alle that ye nat yow greve, 3910
- Thogh I answere and somdel sette his howve;
- For leveful is with force force of-showve.
- 3912. _In margin of_ E.--vim vi repellere.
- This dronke millere hath y-told us heer,
- How that bigyled was a carpenteer, (60)
- Peraventure in scorn, for I am oon. 3915
- And, by your leve, I shal him quyte anoon;
- Right in his cherles termes wol I speke.
- I pray to god his nekke mote breke;
- He can wel in myn yë seen a stalke,
- But in his owne he can nat seen a balke. 3920
- 3918. Hl. tobreke; Pt. alto-breke. 3919. Pt. ye; Cp. [gh]e; rest eye.
- [114: T. 3919-3943.]
- * * * * *
- THE REVES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE REVES TALE.
- At Trumpington, nat fer fro Cantebrigge,
- Ther goth a brook and over that a brigge,
- Up-on the whiche brook ther stant a melle;
- And this is verray soth that I yow telle.
- A Miller was ther dwelling many a day; 3925
- As eny pecok he was proud and gay.
- Pypen he coude and fisshe, and nettes bete,
- And turne coppes, and wel wrastle and shete;
- And by his belt he baar a long panade,
- And of a swerd ful trenchant was the blade. 3930
- A Ioly popper baar he in his pouche; (11)
- Ther was no man for peril dorste him touche.
- A Sheffeld thwitel baar he in his hose;
- Round was his face, and camuse was his nose.
- As piled as an ape was his skulle. 3935
- He was a market-beter atte fulle.
- Ther dorste no wight hand up-on him legge,
- That he ne swoor he sholde anon abegge.
- A theef he was for sothe of corn and mele,
- And that a sly, and usaunt for to stele. 3940
- His name was hoten dëynous Simkin. (21)
- A wyf he hadde, y-comen of noble kin;
- The person of the toun hir fader was.
- With hir he yaf ful many a panne of bras,
- For that Simkin sholde in his blood allye. 3945
- [115: T. 3944-3976.]
- She was y-fostred in a nonnerye;
- For Simkin wolde no wyf, as he sayde,
- But she were wel y-norissed and a mayde,
- To saven his estaat of yomanrye.
- And she was proud, and pert as is a pye. 3950
- A ful fair sighte was it on hem two; (31)
- On haly-dayes biforn hir wolde he go
- With his tipet bounden about his heed,
- And she cam after in a gyte of reed;
- And Simkin hadde hosen of the same. 3955
- Ther dorste no wight clepen hir but 'dame.'
- Was noon so hardy that wente by the weye
- That with hir dorste rage or ones pleye,
- But-if he wolde be slayn of Simkin
- With panade, or with knyf, or boydekin. 3960
- For Ialous folk ben perilous evermo, (41)
- Algate they wolde hir wyves wenden so.
- And eek, for she was somdel smoterlich,
- She was as digne as water in a dich;
- And ful of hoker and of bisemare. 3965
- Hir thoughte that a lady sholde hir spare,
- What for hir kinrede and hir nortelrye
- That she had lerned in the nonnerye.
- 3923. E. Hn. Cm. which; _rest_ whiche. 3928. Hl. wrastle wel (_om._
- and). 3934. Hl. camois; Pt. camoyse. 3939. E. was of corn and eek
- of Mele. 3941. E. Cp. Hl. hoote; Cm. hotyn; _rest_ hoten. Pt.
- deyne[gh]ouse. 3944. panne] Cm. peny. 3948. E. But if; _rest_
- But. 3949. Hn. Cm. Pt. yemanrye. 3950. E. Hn. Pt. peert. 3951.
- Cm. Hl. on; _rest_ vp-on. 3953. Cm. boundyn; Pt. bounden; Hn. Cp. Ln.
- wounden; Hl. ybounde. 3956. Hl. ma dame. 3958. Hl. elles (_for_
- ones). 3959. Hl. Symekyn. 3965. Hn. Cm. And; _rest_ As. Hl.
- bissemare; Cp. bisemare; E. Hn. Pt. Ln. bismare.
- A doghter hadde they bitwixe hem two
- Of twenty yeer, with-outen any mo, 3970
- Savinge a child that was of half-yeer age; (51)
- In cradel it lay and was a propre page.
- This wenche thikke and wel y-growen was,
- With camuse nose and yën greye as glas;
- With buttokes brode and brestes rounde and hye, 3975
- But right fair was hir heer, I wol nat lye.
- 3974. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. camoys. MSS. eyen, ey[gh]en. 3975. E. Cm.
- _om._ With.
- The person of the toun, for she was feir,
- In purpos was to maken hir his heir
- [116: T. 3977-4012.]
- Bothe of his catel and his messuage,
- And straunge he made it of hir mariage. 3980
- His purpos was for to bistowe hir hye (61)
- In-to som worthy blood of auncetrye;
- For holy chirches good moot been despended
- On holy chirches blood, that is descended.
- Therfore he wolde his holy blood honoure, 3985
- Though that he holy chirche sholde devoure.
- 3977. E. Cm. This; _rest_ The.
- Gret soken hath this miller, out of doute,
- With whete and malt of al the land aboute;
- And nameliche ther was a greet collegge,
- Men clepen the Soler-halle at Cantebregge, 3990
- Ther was hir whete and eek hir malt y-grounde. (71)
- And on a day it happed, in a stounde,
- Sik lay the maunciple on a maladye;
- Men wenden wisly that he sholde dye.
- For which this miller stal bothe mele and corn 3995
- An hundred tyme more than biforn;
- For ther-biforn he stal but curteisly,
- But now he was a theef outrageously,
- For which the wardeyn chidde and made fare.
- But ther-of sette the miller nat a tare; 4000
- He craketh boost, and swoor it was nat so. (81)
- 3987. E. Cm. sokene.
- Than were ther yonge povre clerkes two,
- That dwelten in this halle, of which I seye.
- Testif they were, and lusty for to pleye,
- And, only for hir mirthe and revelrye, 4005
- Up-on the wardeyn bisily they crye,
- To yeve hem leve but a litel stounde
- To goon to mille and seen hir corn y-grounde;
- And hardily, they dorste leye hir nekke,
- The miller shold nat stele hem half a pekke 4010
- Of corn by sleighte, ne by force hem reve; (91)
- And at the laste the wardeyn yaf hem leve.
- Iohn hight that oon, and Aleyn hight that other;
- Of o toun were they born, that highte Strother,
- [117: T. 4013-4045.]
- Fer in the north, I can nat telle where. 4015
- 4002. Pt. Ln. Than; _rest_ Thanne. 4004. Pt. Teestif. 4005. Ln.
- revelrie; _rest_ reuerye; ed. 1561, reuelry. 4013. E. highte (_1st_);
- heet (_2nd_). Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. hight.
- This Aleyn maketh redy al his gere,
- And on an hors the sak he caste anon.
- Forth goth Aleyn the clerk, and also Iohn,
- With good swerd and with bokeler by hir syde.
- Iohn knew the wey, hem nedede no gyde, 4020
- And at the mille the sak adoun he layth. (101)
- Aleyn spak first, 'al hayl, Symond, y-fayth;
- How fares thy faire doghter and thy wyf?'
- 4019. E. Cm. Pt. _om._ with. 4020. Cp. needede (_see_ l. 4161); E.
- Hn. Pt. neded; Cm. Hl. nedyth; Ln. nedeþ. 4022. Hn. Symkyn; _rest_
- Symond, Symon; _see_ l. 4026.
- 'Aleyn! welcome,' quod Simkin, 'by my lyf,
- And Iohn also, how now, what do ye heer?' 4025
- 'Symond,' quod Iohn, 'by god, nede has na peer;
- Him boës serve him-selve that has na swayn,
- Or elles he is a fool, as clerkes sayn.
- Our manciple, I hope he wil be deed,
- Swa werkes ay the wanges in his heed. 4030
- And forthy is I come, and eek Alayn, (111)
- To grinde our corn and carie it ham agayn;
- I pray yow spede us hethen that ye may.'
- 4027. E. boes (= North. E. _bus_); Hn. Cp. bihoues; Pt. Ln. byhoueþ;
- Cm. muste; Hl. falles. 4033. E. Hn. Cp. heythen; Ln. hethen (_the
- right form_); Cm. hene; Pt. hepen (_for_ heþen).
- 'It shal be doon,' quod Simkin, 'by my fay;
- What wol ye doon whyl that it is in hande?' 4035
- 'By god, right by the hoper wil I stande,'
- Quod Iohn, 'and se how that the corn gas in;
- Yet saugh I never, by my fader kin,
- How that the hoper wagges til and fra.'
- 4036. E. hopur.
- Aleyn answerde, 'Iohn, and wiltow swa, 4040
- Than wil I be bynethe, by my croun, (121)
- And se how that the mele falles doun
- In-to the trough; that sal be my disport.
- For Iohn, in faith, I may been of your sort;
- I is as ille a miller as are ye.' 4045
- 4040. Cp. Hl. and; _rest om._ 4044. E. Cm. yfayth. 4045. Cm. Pt. is
- (_for_ are); Ln. es.
- This miller smyled of hir nycetee,
- And thoghte, 'al this nis doon but for a wyle;
- [118: T. 4046-4079.]
- They wene that no man may hem bigyle;
- But, by my thrift, yet shal I blere hir yë
- For al the sleighte in hir philosophye. 4050
- The more queynte crekes that they make, (131)
- The more wol I stele whan I take.
- In stede of flour, yet wol I yeve hem bren.
- "The gretteste clerkes been noght the wysest men,"
- As whylom to the wolf thus spak the mare; 4055
- Of al hir art I counte noght a tare.'
- 4049. E. Ln. eye. 4051. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. crekes; Hl. knakkes. 4053.
- E. stide. 4054. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ the. 4056. Cm. I counte; Hl. ne
- counte I; _rest_ counte I.
- Out at the dore he gooth ful prively,
- Whan that he saugh his tyme, softely;
- He loketh up and doun til he hath founde
- The clerkes hors, ther as it stood y-bounde 4060
- Bihinde the mille, under a levesel; (141)
- And to the hors he gooth him faire and wel;
- He strepeth of the brydel right anon.
- And whan the hors was loos, he ginneth gon
- Toward the fen, ther wilde mares renne, 4065
- Forth with wehee, thurgh thikke and thurgh thenne.
- 4061. Cm. Cp. Ln. Hl. leuesel; E. lefsel; Hn. leefsel. 4064. E. Hn.
- Cp. Ln. laus; Hl. loos; Cm. los; Pt. louse; _see_ l. 4138.
- This miller gooth agayn, no word he seyde,
- But dooth his note, and with the clerkes pleyde,
- Til that hir corn was faire and wel y-grounde.
- And whan the mele is sakked and y-bounde, 4070
- This Iohn goth out and fynt his hors away, (151)
- And gan to crye 'harrow' and 'weylaway!
- Our hors is lorn! Alayn, for goddes banes,
- Step on thy feet, com out, man, al at anes!
- Allas, our wardeyn has his palfrey lorn.' 4075
- This Aleyn al forgat, bothe mele and corn,
- Al was out of his mynde his housbondrye.
- 'What? whilk way is he geen?' he gan to crye.
- 4069. E. weel. 4074. E. out; Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. of; Hl. on. 4078.
- E. geen; Hn. Ln. gane; Hl. gan; Cm. Cp. Pt. gon.
- The wyf cam leping inward with a ren,
- She seyde, 'allas! your hors goth to the fen 4080
- With wilde mares, as faste as he may go. (161)
- [119: T. 4080-4114.]
- Unthank come on his hand that bond him so,
- And he that bettre sholde han knit the reyne.'
- 4082. E. Hn. boond.
- 'Allas,' quod Iohn, 'Aleyn, for Cristes peyne,
- Lay doun thy swerd, and I wil myn alswa; 4085
- I is ful wight, god waat, as is a raa;
- By goddes herte he sal nat scape us bathe.
- Why nadstow pit the capul in the lathe?
- Il-hayl, by god, Aleyn, thou is a fonne!'
- 4084. E. Cm. _om._ Iohn. 4087. E. Hn. god; _rest_ goddes, goddis.
- 4088. E. Hn. Cm. pit; _rest_ put (putte).
- This sely clerkes han ful faste y-ronne 4090
- To-ward the fen, bothe Aleyn and eek Iohn. (171)
- And whan the miller saugh that they were gon,
- He half a busshel of hir flour hath take,
- And bad his wyf go knede it in a cake.
- He seyde, 'I trowe the clerkes were aferd; 4095
- Yet can a miller make a clerkes berd
- For al his art; now lat hem goon hir weye.
- Lo wher they goon, ye, lat the children pleye;
- They gete him nat so lightly, by my croun!'
- 4094. E. _om._ a.
- Thise sely clerkes rennen up and doun 4100
- With 'keep, keep, stand, stand, Iossa, warderere, (181)
- Ga whistle thou, and I shal kepe him here!'
- But shortly, til that it was verray night,
- They coude nat, though they do al hir might,
- Hir capul cacche, he ran alwey so faste, 4105
- Til in a dich they caughte him atte laste.
- 4101. Cm. ware þe rere; Hl. ware derere; _rest_ warderere; ed. 1561,
- wartherere. 4104. E. do; Cm. don; _rest_ dide (did).
- Wery and weet, as beste is in the reyn,
- Comth sely Iohn, and with him comth Aleyn.
- 'Allas,' quod Iohn, 'the day that I was born!
- Now are we drive til hething and til scorn. 4110
- Our corn is stole, men wil us foles calle, (191)
- Bathe the wardeyn and our felawes alle,
- And namely the miller; weylaway!'
- 4107. Cm. beste; E. Hn. beest. 4110. E. Hl. dryue; _rest_ dryuen
- (dreven). 4111. E. stoln me.
- Thus pleyneth Iohn as he goth by the way
- Toward the mille, and Bayard in his hond. 4115
- The miller sitting by the fyr he fond,
- [120: T. 4115-4147.]
- For it was night, and forther mighte they noght;
- But, for the love of god, they him bisoght
- Of herberwe and of ese, as for hir peny.
- The miller seyde agayn, 'if ther be eny, 4120
- Swich as it is, yet shal ye have your part. (201)
- Myn hous is streit, but ye han lerned art;
- Ye conne by argumentes make a place
- A myle brood of twenty foot of space.
- Lat see now if this place may suffyse, 4125
- Or make it roum with speche, as is youre gyse.'
- 4123. E. Hn. Argumentz; Cm. argumentis; Cp. Hl. argumentes. 4126. E.
- in (_for_ is).
- 'Now, Symond,' seyde Iohn, 'by seint Cutberd,
- Ay is thou mery, and this is faire answerd.
- I have herd seyd, man sal taa of twa thinges
- Slyk as he fyndes, or taa slyk as he bringes. 4130
- But specially, I pray thee, hoste dere, (211)
- Get us som mete and drinke, and make us chere,
- And we wil payen trewely atte fulle.
- With empty hand men may na haukes tulle;
- Lo here our silver, redy for to spende.' 4135
- 4128. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. mery; E. Hn. myrie. 4129. E. taa; Cm. tan; Pt.
- taken; Hn. tak; Cp. take. 4131. E. Hn. hoost; Hl. host ful; Pt.
- hooste; Cp. Ln. ooste. 4134. Hl. na; Cp. naan; E. Hn. Cm. none; Pt.
- not.
- This miller in-to toun his doghter sende
- For ale and breed, and rosted hem a goos,
- And bond hir hors, it sholde nat gon loos;
- And in his owne chambre hem made a bed
- With shetes and with chalons faire y-spred, 4140
- Noght from his owne bed ten foot or twelve. (221)
- His doghter hadde a bed, al by hir-selve,
- Right in the same chambre, by and by;
- It mighte be no bet, and cause why,
- Ther was no roumer herberwe in the place. 4145
- They soupen and they speke, hem to solace,
- And drinken ever strong ale atte beste.
- Aboute midnight wente they to reste.
- 4138. E. Hn. Cp. boond. E. nat; Cm. not; Hn. namoore; Cp. namore; Pt.
- Ln. Hl. no more. 4147. E. drynke; Hn. Cp. Pt. drynken; Hl. Cm.
- dronken.
- Wel hath this miller vernisshed his heed;
- [121: T. 4148-4180.]
- Ful pale he was for-dronken, and nat reed. 4150
- He yexeth, and he speketh thurgh the nose (231)
- As he were on the quakke, or on the pose.
- To bedde he gooth, and with him goth his wyf.
- As any Iay she light was and Iolyf,
- So was hir Ioly whistle wel y-wet. 4155
- The cradel at hir beddes feet is set,
- To rokken, and to yeve the child to souke.
- And whan that dronken al was in the crouke,
- To bedde went the doghter right anon;
- To bedde gooth Aleyn and also Iohn; 4160
- Ther nas na more, hem nedede no dwale. (241)
- This miller hath so wisly bibbed ale,
- That as an hors he snorteth in his sleep,
- Ne of his tayl bihinde he took no keep.
- His wyf bar him a burdon, a ful strong, 4165
- Men mighte hir routing here two furlong;
- The wenche routeth eek _par companye_.
- 4151. Hl. yoxeth. 4160. E. wente; _rest_ gooth (goth). 4161. Cp.
- needede (_see_ l. 4020); _rest_ neded. 4162. Hl. wysly; Cm. wysely;
- E. wisely; _rest_ wisly. 4166. Hl. Cp. a (_for_ two).
- Aleyn the clerk, that herd this melodye,
- He poked Iohn, and seyde, 'slepestow?
- Herdestow ever slyk a sang er now? 4170
- Lo, whilk a compline is y-mel hem alle! (251)
- A wilde fyr up-on thair bodyes falle!
- Wha herkned ever slyk a ferly thing?
- Ye, they sal have the flour of il ending.
- This lange night ther tydes me na reste; 4175
- But yet, na fors; al sal be for the beste.
- For Iohn,' seyde he, 'als ever moot I thryve,
- If that I may, yon wenche wil I swyve.
- Som esement has lawe y-shapen us;
- For Iohn, ther is a lawe that says thus, 4180
- That gif a man in a point be y-greved, (261)
- That in another he sal be releved.
- [122: T. 4181-4216.]
- Our corn is stoln, shortly, it is na nay,
- And we han had an il fit al this day.
- And sin I sal have neen amendement, 4185
- Agayn my los I wil have esement.
- By goddes saule, it sal neen other be!'
- 4170. Cp. Herdestow; Cm. Ln. Herdist thou; Hl. Herdistow; E. Herdtow;
- Hn. Herd thow. 4171. E. whilk; Hn. Cp. Ln. swilke; Cm. swich; Pt.
- sclike; Hl. slik. 4171. Ln. compline; Hn. conplyng; Pt. conplinge;
- Hl. couplyng (_wrongly_); E. cowplyng; Cm. copil. 4181. Hl.
- (_margin_) Qui in vno grauatur in alio debet releuari. 4183. E. Cm.
- shortly; _rest_ sothly. E. is; _rest_ it is. Hn. Hl. na; E. ne;
- _rest_ no (non). 4185. E. neen; Hn. naan; Hl. nan; _rest_ non (noon);
- _so in_ 4187.
- This Iohn answerde, 'Alayn, avyse thee,
- The miller is a perilous man,' he seyde,
- 'And gif that he out of his sleep abreyde, 4190
- He mighte doon us bathe a vileinye.' (271)
- Aleyn answerde, 'I count him nat a flye;'
- And up he rist, and by the wenche he crepte.
- This wenche lay upright, and faste slepte,
- Til he so ny was, er she mighte espye, 4195
- That it had been to late for to crye,
- And shortly for to seyn, they were at on;
- Now pley, Aleyn! for I wol speke of Iohn.
- This Iohn lyth stille a furlong-wey or two,
- And to him-self he maketh routhe and wo: 4200
- 'Allas!' quod he, 'this is a wikked Iape; (281)
- Now may I seyn that I is but an ape.
- Yet has my felawe som-what for his harm;
- He has the milleris doghter in his arm.
- He auntred him, and has his nedes sped, 4205
- And I lye as a draf-sek in my bed;
- And when this Iape is tald another day,
- I sal been halde a daf, a cokenay!
- I wil aryse, and auntre it, by my fayth!
- "Unhardy is unsely," thus men sayth.' 4210
- And up he roos and softely he wente (291)
- Un-to the cradel, and in his hand it hente,
- And baar it softe un-to his beddes feet.
- 4206. E. Cm. sek; _rest_ sak. 4213. E. the; _rest_ his.
- Sone after this the wyf hir routing leet,
- And gan awake, and wente hir out to pisse, 4215
- And cam agayn, and gan hir cradel misse,
- And groped heer and ther, but she fond noon.
- 'Allas!' quod she, 'I hadde almost misgoon;
- [123: T. 4217-4252.]
- I hadde almost gon to the clerkes bed.
- By, _benedicite!_ thanne hadde I foule y-sped:' 4220
- And forth she gooth til she the cradel fond. (301)
- She gropeth alwey forther with hir hond,
- And fond the bed, and thoghte noght but good,
- By-cause that the cradel by it stood,
- And niste wher she was, for it was derk; 4225,
- But faire and wel she creep in to the clerk,
- And lyth ful stille, and wolde han caught a sleep.
- With-inne a whyl this Iohn the clerk up leep,
- And on this gode wyf he leyth on sore.
- So mery a fit ne hadde she nat ful yore; 4230
- He priketh harde and depe as he were mad. (311)
- This Ioly lyf han thise two clerkes lad
- Til that the thridde cok bigan to singe.
- 4217. E. Hn. Pt. foond. 4223. E. Hn. foond. 4226. to] Cm. bi.
- 4230. E. myrie; _om._ ne. 4231. E. soore; Cm. sore; _rest_ depe
- (deepe).
- Aleyn wex wery in the daweninge,
- For he had swonken al the longe night; 4235
- And seyde, 'far wel, Malin, swete wight!
- The day is come, I may no lenger byde;
- But evermo, wher so I go or ryde,
- I is thyn awen clerk, swa have I seel!'
- 4234. Cm. Ln. Pt. wex; _rest_ wax. 4236. Cm. Cp. Hl. far; _rest_
- fare; _see note._
- 'Now dere lemman,' quod she, 'go, far weel! 4240
- But er thou go, o thing I wol thee telle, (321)
- Whan that thou wendest homward by the melle,
- Right at the entree of the dore bihinde,
- Thou shalt a cake of half a busshel finde
- That was y-maked of thyn owne mele, 4245
- Which that I heelp my fader for to stele.
- And, gode lemman, god thee save and kepe!'
- And with that word almost she gan to wepe.
- 4246. Cm. halp; E. Hn. heelp.
- Aleyn up-rist, and thoughte, 'er that it dawe,
- I wol go crepen in by my felawe; 4250
- And fond the cradel with his hand anon, (331)
- 'By god,' thoghte he, 'al wrang I have misgon;
- Myn heed is toty of my swink to-night,
- That maketh me that I go nat aright.
- [124: T. 4253-4288.]
- I woot wel by the cradel, I have misgo, 4255
- Heer lyth the miller and his wyf also.'
- And forth he goth, a twenty devel way,
- Un-to the bed ther-as the miller lay.
- He wende have cropen by his felawe Iohn;
- And by the miller in he creep anon, 4260
- And caughte hym by the nekke, and softe he spak: (341)
- He seyde, 'thou, Iohn, thou swynes-heed, awak
- For Cristes saule, and heer a noble game.
- For by that lord that called is seint Iame,
- As I have thryes, in this shorte night, 4265
- Swyved the milleres doghter bolt-upright,
- Whyl thow hast as a coward been agast.'
- 'Ye, false harlot,' quod the miller, 'hast?
- A! false traitour! false clerk!' quod he,
- 'Thou shalt be deed, by goddes dignitee! 4270
- Who dorste be so bold to disparage (351)
- My doghter, that is come of swich linage?'
- And by the throte-bolle he caughte Alayn.
- And he hente hym despitously agayn,
- And on the nose he smoot him with his fest. 4275
- Doun ran the blody streem up-on his brest;
- And in the floor, with nose and mouth to-broke,
- They walwe as doon two pigges in a poke.
- And up they goon, and doun agayn anon,
- Til that the miller sporned at a stoon, 4280
- And doun he fil bakward up-on his wyf, (361)
- That wiste no-thing of this nyce stryf;
- For she was falle aslepe a lyte wight
- With Iohn the clerk, that waked hadde al night.
- And with the fal, out of hir sleep she breyde-- 4285
- 'Help, holy croys of Bromeholm,' she seyde,
- _In manus tuas!_ lord, to thee I calle!
- Awak, Symond! the feend is on us falle,
- Myn herte is broken, help, I nam but deed;
- There lyth oon up my wombe and up myn heed; 4290
- [125: T. 4289-4322.]
- Help, Simkin, for the false clerkes fighte.' (371)
- 4277. in] Hn. on. 4278. Hl. walweden as pigges. 4280. Hn. on; Cm.
- a[gh]en; _rest_ at. 4283. E. lite; Cm. lyte; _rest_ litel. 4286.
- Cm. Pt. Ln. Bromeholm; _rest_ Bromholm. 4290. Cp. Ln. vp (_twice_).
- E. Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. vp on (_for 1st_ up). E. Cm. Pt. Hl. on (Hn. vp);
- _for 2nd_ vp.
- This Iohn sterte up as faste as ever he mighte,
- And graspeth by the walles to and fro,
- To finde a staf; and she sterte up also,
- And knew the estres bet than dide this Iohn, 4295
- And by the wal a staf she fond, anon,
- And saugh a litel shimering of a light,
- For at an hole in shoon the mone bright;
- And by that light she saugh hem bothe two,
- But sikerly she niste who was who, 4300
- But as she saugh a whyt thing in hir yë. (38l)
- And whan she gan the whyte thing espye,
- She wende the clerk hadde wered a volupeer.
- And with the staf she drough ay neer and neer,
- And wende han hit this Aleyn at the fulle, 4305
- And smoot the miller on the pyled skulle,
- That doun he gooth and cryde, 'harrow! I dye!'
- Thise clerkes bete him weel and lete him lye;
- And greythen hem, and toke hir hors anon,
- And eek hir mele, and on hir wey they gon. 4310
- And at the mille yet they toke hir cake (391)
- Of half a busshel flour, ful wel y-bake.
- 4292. E. Cm. stirte. E. soone (_for_ faste). 4296. E. Hn. foond;
- Hl. took. 4301. Hl. ye; Hn. Iye; _rest_ eye. 4307. E. Cm. Hl. And;
- _rest_ That. 4309. Hl. greyth; Cm. hastede.
- Thus is the proude miller wel y-bete,
- And hath y-lost the grinding of the whete,
- And payed for the soper every-deel 4315
- Of Aleyn and of Iohn, that bette him weel.
- His wyf is swyved, and his doghter als;
- Lo, swich it is a miller to be fals!
- And therfore this proverbe is seyd ful sooth,
- 'Him thar nat wene wel that yvel dooth; 4320
- A gylour shal him-self bigyled be.' (401)
- And God, that sitteth heighe in magestee,
- Save al this companye grete and smale!
- Thus have I quit the miller in my tale.
- HERE IS ENDED THE REVES TALE.
- 4320. E. Hn. yuele; Cm. euele. 4322. E. Trinitee; _rest_ magestee
- (mageste). COLOPHON. Hn. Hl. Here endeth the Reves tale.
- [126: T. 4323-4347.]
- * * * * *
- THE COOK'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE COKES TALE.
- The Cook of London, whyl the Reve spak, 4325
- For Ioye, him thoughte, he clawed him on the bak,
- 'Ha! ha!' quod he, 'for Cristes passioun,
- This miller hadde a sharp conclusioun
- Upon his argument of herbergage!
- Wel seyde Salomon in his langage, 4330
- "Ne bringe nat every man in-to thyn hous;"
- For herberwing by nighte is perilous.
- Wel oghte a man avysed for to be
- Whom that he broghte in-to his privetee. (10)
- I pray to god, so yeve me sorwe and care, 4335
- If ever, sith I highte Hogge of Ware,
- Herde I a miller bettre y-set a-werk.
- He hadde a Iape of malice in the derk.
- But god forbede that we stinten here;
- And therfore, if ye vouche-sauf to here 4340
- A tale of me, that am a povre man,
- I wol yow telle as wel as ever I can
- A litel Iape that fil in our citee.'
- 4325. E. whil that the. 4332. Hl. herburgage. 4336. Hn. sith; E.
- sitthe; Hl. siþþe; Cp. Pt. Ln. sithen. 4339. Hn. Hl. stynten; E.
- stynte. 4339, 4340. _Last two words glossed_ hic _and_ audire _in_ E.
- Hn.
- Our host answerde, and seide, 'I graunte it thee; (20)
- Now telle on, Roger, loke that it be good; 4345
- For many a pastee hastow laten blood,
- And many a Iakke of Dover hastow sold
- That hath been twyes hoot and twyes cold.
- Of many a pilgrim hastow Cristes curs,
- [127: T. 4348-4362.]
- For of thy persly yet they fare the wors, 4350
- That they han eten with thy stubbel-goos;
- For in thy shoppe is many a flye loos.
- Now telle on, gentil Roger, by thy name.
- But yet I pray thee, be nat wrooth for game, (30)
- A man may seye ful sooth in game and pley.' 4355
- 4347. E. Hn. Cm. Ln. Douere. E. Hn. soold. 4348. E. Hn. coold.
- 4350. Hl. persly; Hn. p_er_sle; E. p_er_cely. 4355. Hl. _omits_.
- 'Thou seist ful sooth,' quod Roger, 'by my fey,
- But "sooth pley, quaad pley," as the Fleming seith;
- And ther-fore, Herry Bailly, by thy feith,
- Be thou nat wrooth, er we departen heer,
- Though that my tale be of an hostileer. 4360
- But nathelees I wol nat telle it yit,
- But er we parte, y-wis, thou shalt be quit.'
- And ther-with-al he lough and made chere,
- And seyde his tale, as ye shul after here. (40)
- THUS ENDETH THE PROLOGE OF THE COKES TALE.
- 4357. E. Cm. quaad; Cp. Hl. quad; _rest_ quade. 4359. E. na (_for_
- nat). COLOPHON. _In_ Pt.; Ln. Explicit prologus.
- [128: T. 4363-4390.]
- * * * * *
- THE COKES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HEER BIGYNNETH THE COKES TALE.
- A prentis whylom dwelled in our citee, 4365
- And of a craft of vitaillers was he;
- Gaillard he was as goldfinch in the shawe,
- Broun as a berie, a propre short felawe,
- With lokkes blake, y-kempt ful fetisly.
- Dauncen he coude so wel and Iolily, 4370
- That he was cleped Perkin Revelour.
- He was as ful of love and paramour
- As is the hyve ful of hony swete;
- Wel was the wenche with him mighte mete. (10)
- At every brydale wolde he singe and hoppe, 4375
- He loved bet the taverne than the shoppe.
- 4366. E. vitailliers. 4369. E. ykempd; Hn. ykembd; _rest_ ykempt.
- For whan ther any ryding was in Chepe,
- Out of the shoppe thider wolde he lepe.
- Til that he hadde al the sighte y-seyn,
- And daunced wel, he wolde nat come ageyn. 4380
- And gadered him a meinee of his sort
- To hoppe and singe, and maken swich disport.
- And ther they setten Steven for to mete
- To pleyen at the dys in swich a strete. (20)
- For in the toune nas ther no prentys, 4385
- That fairer coude caste a paire of dys
- Than Perkin coude, and ther-to he was free
- Of his dispense, in place of privetee.
- That fond his maister wel in his chaffare;
- For often tyme he fond his box ful bare. 4390
- For sikerly a prentis revelour,
- That haunteth dys, riot, or paramour,
- [129: T. 4391-4420.]
- His maister shal it in his shoppe abye,
- Al have he no part of the minstralcye; (30)
- For thefte and riot, they ben convertible, 4395
- Al conne he pleye on giterne or ribible.
- Revel and trouthe, as in a low degree,
- They been ful wrothe al day, as men may see.
- 4380. E. ayeyn. 4383. Pt. Ln. steuen; _rest_ steuene. 4385. Pt. Ln.
- toune; _rest_ toun. 4396. E. Ln. ribible; _rest_ rubible. 4397. E.
- lowe.
- This Ioly prentis with his maister bood,
- Til he were ny out of his prentishood, 4400
- Al were he snibbed bothe erly and late,
- And somtyme lad with revel to Newgate;
- But atte laste his maister him bithoghte,
- Up-on a day, whan he his paper soghte, (40)
- Of a proverbe that seith this same word, 4405
- 'Wel bet is roten appel out of hord
- Than that it rotie al the remenaunt.'
- So fareth it by a riotous servaunt;
- It is wel lasse harm to lete him pace,
- Than he shende alle the servants in the place. 4410
- Therfore his maister yaf him acquitance,
- And bad him go with sorwe and with meschance;
- And thus this Ioly prentis hadde his leve.
- Now lat him riote al the night or leve. (50)
- 4402. E. Newegate. 4404. E. Hn. Hl. papir. 4406. E. Hn. Cp. Hl.
- Appul. 4410. E. seruantz.
- And for ther is no theef with-oute a louke, 4415
- That helpeth him to wasten and to souke
- Of that he brybe can or borwe may,
- Anon he sente his bed and his array
- Un-to a compeer of his owne sort,
- That lovede dys and revel and disport, 4420
- And hadde a wyf that heeld for countenance
- A shoppe, and swyved for hir sustenance. 4422
- OF THIS COKES TALE MAKED CHAUCER NA MORE.
- [_For_ The Tale of Gamelin, _see the_ Appendix.]
- 4415-22. Hl. _omits._ 4415. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. lowke; Pt. louke; Cm.
- loke. 4416. Pt. souke; _rest_ sowke. 4419. E. compier; Hn. compeer;
- Cp. Pt. Ln. conpere. COLOPHON. _In_ Hn. _only. Blank space in_ E.
- [130: T. 4421-4446.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP B.
- INTRODUCTION TO THE MAN OF LAW'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE WORDES OF THE HOOST TO THE COMPANYE.
- Our Hoste sey wel that the brighte sonne
- The ark of his artificial day had ronne
- The fourthe part, and half an houre, and more;
- And though he were not depe expert in lore,
- He wiste it was the eightetethe day 5
- Of April, that is messager to May;
- And sey wel that the shadwe of every tree
- Was as in lengthe the same quantitee
- That was the body erect that caused it.
- And therfor by the shadwe he took his wit 10
- That Phebus, which that shoon so clere and brighte,
- Degrees was fyve and fourty clombe on highte;
- And for that day, as in that latitude,
- It was ten of the clokke, he gan conclude,
- And sodeynly he plighte his hors aboute. 15
- 1. Hl. Hoste; Ln. oste; _rest_ hoost (oost). _On_ sey, see note. 2.
- E. Hn. Hl. hath; _rest_ had. 4. Cm. _wanting_; Cp. Pt. Ln. expert; E.
- Hn. ystert; Hl. _om._ 5. Hn. xviijthe; Cp. xviije; Pt. Ln. xviij; E.
- eighte and twentithe; Hl. threttenthe. 14. Cm. Pt. Hl. of the; E. Hn.
- at the; Cp. atte; Ln. att.
- 'Lordinges,' quod he, 'I warne yow, al this route,
- The fourthe party of this day is goon;
- Now, for the love of god and of seint Iohn,
- Leseth no tyme, as ferforth as ye may;
- Lordinges, the tyme wasteth night and day, 20
- And steleth from us, what prively slepinge,
- And what thurgh necligence in our wakinge,
- As dooth the streem, that turneth never agayn,
- Descending fro the montaigne in-to playn.
- Wel can Senek, and many a philosophre 25
- Biwailen tyme, more than gold in cofre.
- [131: T. 4447-4483.]
- "For los of catel may recovered be,
- But los of tyme shendeth us," quod he.
- It wol nat come agayn, with-outen drede,
- Na more than wol Malkins maydenhede, 30
- Whan she hath lost it in hir wantownesse;
- Lat us nat moulen thus in ydelnesse.
- Sir man of lawe,' quod he, 'so have ye blis,
- Tel us a tale anon, as forward is;
- Ye been submitted thurgh your free assent 35
- To stonde in this cas at my Iugement.
- Acquiteth yow, and holdeth your biheste,
- Than have ye doon your devoir atte leste.'
- 37. Hl. and holdeth; _rest_ now of (_badly_). 38. E. do.
- 'Hoste,' quod he, '_depardieux_ ich assente,
- To breke forward is not myn entente. 40
- Biheste is dette, and I wol holde fayn
- Al my biheste; I can no better seyn.
- For swich lawe as man yeveth another wight,
- He sholde him-selven usen it by right;
- Thus wol our text; but natheles certeyn 45
- I can right now no thrifty tale seyn,
- But Chaucer, though he can but lewedly
- On metres and on ryming craftily,
- Hath seyd hem in swich English as he can
- Of olde tyme, as knoweth many a man. 50
- And if he have not seyd hem, leve brother,
- In o book, he hath seyd hem in another.
- For he hath told of loveres up and doun
- Mo than Ovyde made of mencioun
- In his Epistelles, that been ful olde. 55
- What sholde I tellen hem, sin they ben tolde?
- In youthe he made of Ceys and Alcion,
- And sithen hath he spoke of everichon,
- Thise noble wyves and thise loveres eek.
- Who-so that wol his large volume seek 60
- Cleped the Seintes Legende of Cupyde,
- Ther may he seen the large woundes wyde
- Of Lucresse, and of Babilan Tisbee;
- [132: T. 4484-4518.]
- The swerd of Dido for the false Enee;
- The tree of Phillis for hir Demophon; 65
- The pleinte of Dianire and Hermion,
- Of Adriane and of Isiphilee;
- The bareyne yle stonding in the see;
- The dreynte Leander for his Erro;
- The teres of Eleyne, and eek the wo 70
- Of Brixseyde, and of thee, Ladomëa;
- The crueltee of thee, queen Medëa,
- Thy litel children hanging by the hals
- For thy Iason, that was of love so fals!
- O Ypermistra, Penelopee, Alceste, 75
- Your wyfhod he comendeth with the beste!
- 43. Cm. man; _rest_ a man. 45. E. wole; Hn. wol. 47. MS. Camb. Dd.
- 4. 24 _has_ But; _rest_ That; _see note_. 55. Hl. Cm. Epistelles; E.
- Hn. Cp. Epistles. 56. E. Hn. telle; _rest_ tellen. 64. Hl. sorwe;
- _rest_ swerd. 66. E. Cm. Hl. Diane; Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. Dianire, _or_
- Dyanyre. 69. E. Hn. Ln. Leandre. 70. E. _omits_ eek. 71. E.
- _omits_ of. 72. Cp. Hl. queen; _rest_ quene. 74. E. Cm. in; _rest_
- of. 75. E. Hn. Cm. Penolopee. 76. E. wifhede.
- But certeinly no word ne wryteth he
- Of thilke wikke ensample of Canacee,
- That lovede hir owne brother sinfully;
- Of swiche cursed stories I sey 'fy'; 80
- Or elles of Tyro Apollonius,
- How that the cursed king Antiochus
- Birafte his doghter of hir maydenhede,
- That is so horrible a tale for to rede,
- Whan he hir threw up-on the pavement. 85
- And therfor he, of ful avysement,
- Nolde never wryte in none of his sermouns
- Of swiche unkinde abhominaciouns,
- Ne I wol noon reherse, if that I may.
- But of my tale how shal I doon this day? 90
- Me were looth be lykned, doutelees,
- To Muses that men clepe Pierides--
- _Metamorphoseos_ wot what I mene:--
- But nathelees, I recche noght a bene
- Though I come after him with hawe-bake; 95
- I speke in prose, and lat him rymes make.'
- And with that word he, with a sobre chere,
- Bigan his tale, as ye shal after here.
- 95. Hn. Cp. Pt. Hl. hawe bake; E. hawebake; Cm. aw bake; Ln. halve
- bake.
- [133: T. 4519-4553.]
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE MANNES TALE OF LAWE.
- O hateful harm! condicion of poverte!
- With thurst, with cold, with hunger so confounded! 100
- To asken help thee shameth in thyn herte;
- If thou noon aske, with nede artow so wounded,
- That verray nede unwrappeth al thy wounde hid!
- Maugree thyn heed, thou most for indigence
- Or stele, or begge, or borwe thy despence! 105
- Thou blamest Crist, and seyst ful bitterly,
- He misdeparteth richesse temporal;
- Thy neighebour thou wytest sinfully, (10)
- And seyst thou hast to lyte, and he hath al.
- 'Parfay,' seistow, 'somtyme he rekne shal, 110
- Whan that his tayl shal brennen in the glede,
- For he noght helpeth needfulle in hir nede.'
- Herkne what is the sentence of the wyse:--
- 'Bet is to dyën than have indigence;'
- Thy selve neighebour wol thee despyse; 115
- If thou be povre, farwel thy reverence!
- Yet of the wyse man tak this sentence:--
- 'Alle the dayes of povre men ben wikke;' (20)
- Be war therfor, er thou come in that prikke!
- If thou be povre, thy brother hateth thee, 120
- And alle thy freendes fleen fro thee, alas!
- O riche marchaunts, ful of wele ben ye,
- O noble, o prudent folk, as in this cas!
- Your bagges been nat filled with _ambes as_,
- But with _sis cink_, than renneth for your chaunce; 125
- At Cristemasse merie may ye daunce!
- Ye seken lond and see for your winninges,
- As wyse folk ye knowen al thestaat (30)
- Of regnes; ye ben fadres of tydinges
- And tales, bothe of pees and of debat. 130
- I were right now of tales desolat,
- Nere that a marchaunt, goon is many a yere,
- Me taughte a tale, which that ye shal here.
- 102. _So_ Hn.; Cp. Pt. art þou so; Ln. þou art so; Hl. so art thou;
- _but_ E. so soore artow ywoundid. 109. E. Hn. lite; _rest_ litel.
- 118. E. _om._ the. 119. E. Hn. Hl. to; Cp. Pt. Ln. in. 124. E.
- fild.
- [134: T. 4554-4579.]
- * * * * *
- THE TALE OF THE MAN OF LAWE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BEGINNETH THE MAN OF LAWE HIS TALE.
- In Surrie whylom dwelte a companye
- Of chapmen riche, and therto sadde and trewe, 135
- That wyde-wher senten her spycerye,
- Clothes of gold, and satins riche of hewe;
- Her chaffar was so thrifty and so newe, (40)
- That every wight hath deyntee to chaffare
- With hem, and eek to sellen hem hir ware. 140
- Now fel it, that the maistres of that sort
- Han shapen hem to Rome for to wende;
- Were it for chapmanhode or for disport,
- Nan other message wolde they thider sende,
- But comen hem-self to Rome, this is the ende; 145
- And in swich place, as thoughte hem avantage
- For her entente, they take her herbergage.
- Soiourned han thise marchants in that toun (50)
- A certein tyme, as fel to hir plesance.
- And so bifel, that thexcellent renoun 150
- Of themperoures doghter, dame Custance,
- Reported was, with every circumstance,
- Un-to thise Surrien marchants in swich wyse,
- Fro day to day, as I shal yow devyse.
- 150. E. And; _rest_ But. 153. E. swich a wyse; _the rest omit_ a.
- This was the commune vois of every man-- 155
- 'Our Emperour of Rome, god him see,
- A doghter hath that, sin the world bigan,
- To rekne as wel hir goodnesse as beautee, (60)
- Nas never swich another as is she;
- [135: T. 4580-4616.]
- I prey to god in honour hir sustene, 160
- And wolde she were of al Europe the quene.
- In hir is heigh beautee, with-oute pryde,
- Yowthe, with-oute grenehede or folye;
- To alle hir werkes vertu is hir gyde,
- Humblesse hath slayn in hir al tirannye. 165
- She is mirour of alle curteisye;
- Hir herte is verray chambre of holinesse,
- Hir hand, ministre of fredom for almesse.' (70)
- And al this vois was soth, as god is trewe,
- But now to purpos lat us turne agayn; 170
- Thise marchants han doon fraught hir shippes newe,
- And, whan they han this blisful mayden seyn,
- Hoom to Surryë been they went ful fayn,
- And doon her nedes as they han don yore,
- And liven in wele; I can sey yow no more. 175
- Now fel it, that thise marchants stode in grace
- Of him, that was the sowdan of Surrye;
- For whan they came from any strange place, (80)
- He wolde, of his benigne curteisye,
- Make hem good chere, and bisily espye 180
- Tydings of sondry regnes, for to lere
- The wondres that they mighte seen or here.
- Amonges othere thinges, specially
- Thise marchants han him told of dame Custance,
- So gret noblesse in ernest, ceriously, 185
- That this sowdan hath caught so gret plesance
- To han hir figure in his remembrance,
- That al his lust and al his bisy cure (90)
- Was for to love hir whyl his lyf may dure.
- Paraventure in thilke large book 190
- Which that men clepe the heven, y-writen was
- With sterres, whan that he his birthe took,
- That he for love shulde han his deeth, allas!
- For in the sterres, clerer than is glas,
- Is writen, god wot, who-so coude it rede, 195
- The deeth of every man, withouten drede.
- [136: T. 4617-4651.]
- In sterres, many a winter ther-biforn,
- Was writen the deeth of Ector, Achilles, (100)
- Of Pompey, Iulius, er they were born;
- The stryf of Thebes; and of Ercules, 200
- Of Sampson, Turnus, and of Socrates
- The deeth; but mennes wittes been so dulle,
- That no wight can wel rede it atte fulle.
- This sowdan for his privee conseil sente,
- And, shortly of this mater for to pace, 205
- He hath to hem declared his entente,
- And seyde hem certein, 'but he mighte have grace
- To han Custance with-inne a litel space, (110)
- He nas but deed;' and charged hem, in hye,
- To shapen for his lyf som remedye. 210
- Diverse men diverse thinges seyden;
- They argumenten, casten up and doun;
- Many a subtil resoun forth they leyden,
- They speken of magik and abusioun;
- But finally, as in conclusioun, 215
- They can not seen in that non avantage,
- Ne in non other wey, save mariage.
- 212. Hl. Cp. argumentes.
- Than sawe they ther-in swich difficultee (120)
- By wey of resoun, for to speke al playn,
- By-cause that ther was swich diversitee 220
- Bitwene hir bothe lawes, that they sayn,
- They trowe 'that no cristen prince wolde fayn
- Wedden his child under oure lawes swete
- That us were taught by Mahoun our prophete.'
- 220. Cm. _om._ that.
- And he answerde, 'rather than I lese 225
- Custance, I wol be cristned doutelees;
- I mot ben hires, I may non other chese.
- I prey yow holde your arguments in pees; (130)
- Saveth my lyf, and beeth noght recchelees
- To geten hir that hath my lyf in cure; 230
- For in this wo I may not longe endure.'
- [137: T. 4652-4686.]
- What nedeth gretter dilatacioun?
- I seye, by tretis and embassadrye,
- And by the popes mediacioun,
- And al the chirche, and al the chivalrye, 235
- That, in destruccioun of Maumetrye,
- And in encrees of Cristes lawe dere,
- They ben acorded, so as ye shal here; (140)
- How that the sowdan and his baronage
- And alle his liges shulde y-cristned be, 240
- And he shal han Custance in mariage,
- And certein gold, I noot what quantitee,
- And her-to founden suffisant seurtee;
- This same acord was sworn on eyther syde;
- Now, faire Custance, almighty god thee gyde! 245
- Now wolde som men waiten, as I gesse,
- That I shulde tellen al the purveyance
- That themperour, of his grete noblesse, (150)
- Hath shapen for his doghter dame Custance.
- Wel may men knowe that so gret ordinance 250
- May no man tellen in a litel clause
- As was arrayed for so heigh a cause.
- 255. E. ynough; Hn. Cp. Hl. ynowe; Cm. Ln. Inowe.
- Bisshopes ben shapen with hir for to wende,
- Lordes, ladyes, knightes of renoun,
- And other folk y-nowe, this is the ende; 255
- And notifyed is thurgh-out the toun
- That every wight, with gret devocioun,
- Shulde preyen Crist that he this mariage (160)
- Receyve in gree, and spede this viage.
- The day is comen of hir departinge, 260
- I sey, the woful day fatal is come,
- That ther may be no lenger taryinge,
- But forthward they hem dressen, alle and some;
- Custance, that was with sorwe al overcome,
- Ful pale arist, and dresseth hir to wende; 265
- For wel she seeth ther is non other ende.
- [138: T. 4687-4721.]
- Allas! what wonder is it though she wepte,
- That shal be sent to strange nacioun (170)
- Fro freendes, that so tendrely hir kepte,
- And to be bounden under subieccioun 270
- Of oon, she knoweth not his condicioun.
- Housbondes been alle gode, and han ben yore,
- That knowen wyves, I dar say yow no more.
- 'Fader,' she sayde, 'thy wrecched child Custance,
- Thy yonge doghter, fostred up so softe, 275
- And ye, my moder, my soverayn plesance
- Over alle thing, out-taken Crist on-lofte,
- Custance, your child, hir recomandeth ofte (180)
- Un-to your grace, for I shal to Surryë,
- Ne shal I never seen yow more with yë. 280
- Allas! un-to the Barbre nacioun
- I moste anon, sin that it is your wille;
- But Crist, that starf for our redempcioun,
- So yeve me grace, his hestes to fulfille;
- I, wrecche womman, no fors though I spille. 285
- Wommen are born to thraldom and penance,
- And to ben under mannes governance.'
- 282. E. goon; _rest_ anon. 283. E. sauacioun; _rest_ redempcioun.
- I trowe, at Troye, whan Pirrus brak the wal (190)
- Or Ylion brende, at Thebes the citee,
- Nat Rome, for the harm thurgh Hanibal 290
- That Romayns hath venquisshed tymes thre,
- Nas herd swich tendre weping for pitee
- As in the chambre was for hir departinge;
- Bot forth she moot, wher-so she wepe or singe.
- 289. Cm. at; _rest om._ (Or _means_ ere, _and_ brende _is
- intransitive_.) 290. E. Hn. Cm. Nat (_for_ Ne at); Hl. Ne at.
- O firste moevyng cruel firmament, 295
- With thy diurnal sweigh that crowdest ay
- And hurlest al from Est til Occident,
- That naturelly wolde holde another way, (200)
- Thy crowding set the heven in swich array
- At the beginning of this fiers viage, 300
- That cruel Mars hath slayn this mariage.
- [139: T. 4722-4756.]
- Infortunat ascendent tortuous,
- Of which the lord is helples falle, allas!
- Out of his angle in-to the derkest hous.
- O Mars, O Atazir, as in this cas! 305
- O feble mone, unhappy been thy pas!
- Thou knittest thee ther thou art nat receyved,
- Ther thou were weel, fro thennes artow weyved. (210)
- 306. E. Hn. Cp. fieble.
- Imprudent emperour of Rome, allas!
- Was ther no philosophre in al thy toun? 310
- Is no tyme bet than other in swich cas?
- Of viage is ther noon eleccioun,
- Namely to folk of heigh condicioun,
- Nat whan a rote is of a birthe y-knowe?
- Allas! we ben to lewed or to slowe. 315
- To shippe is brought this woful faire mayde
- Solempnely, with every circumstance.
- 'Now Iesu Crist be with yow alle,' she sayde; (220)
- Ther nis namore but 'farewel! faire Custance!'
- She peyneth hir to make good countenance, 320
- And forth I lete hir sayle in this manere,
- And turne I wol agayn to my matere.
- 316. E. come; _rest_ brought.
- The moder of the sowdan, welle of vyces,
- Espyëd hath hir sones pleyn entente,
- How he wol lete his olde sacrifyces, 325
- And right anon she for hir conseil sente;
- And they ben come, to knowe what she mente.
- And when assembled was this folk in-fere, (230)
- She sette hir doun, and sayde as ye shal here.
- 'Lordes,' quod she, 'ye knowen everichon, 330
- How that my sone in point is for to lete
- The holy lawes of our Alkaron,
- Yeven by goddes message Makomete.
- But oon avow to grete god I hete,
- The lyf shal rather out of my body sterte 335
- Than Makometes lawe out of myn herte!
- 330. E. she seyde; _rest_ quod she. 333. Cp. Pt. Ln. messager; Hl.
- messanger; _see note._
- [140: T. 4757-4791.]
- What shulde us tyden of this newe lawe
- But thraldom to our bodies and penance? (240)
- And afterward in helle to be drawe
- For we reneyed Mahoun our creance? 340
- But, lordes, wol ye maken assurance,
- As I shal seyn, assenting to my lore,
- And I shall make us sauf for evermore?'
- They sworen and assenten, every man,
- To live with hir and dye, and by hir stonde; 345
- And everich, in the beste wyse he can,
- To strengthen hir shal alle his freendes fonde;
- And she hath this empryse y-take on honde, (250)
- Which ye shal heren that I shal devyse,
- And to hem alle she spak right in this wyse. 350
- 'We shul first feyne us cristendom to take,
- Cold water shal not greve us but a lyte;
- And I shal swich a feste and revel make,
- That, as I trowe, I shal the sowdan quyte.
- For though his wyf be cristned never so whyte, 355
- She shal have nede to wasshe awey the rede,
- Thogh she a font-ful water with hir lede.'
- O sowdanesse, rote of iniquitee, (260)
- Virago, thou Semyram the secounde,
- O serpent under femininitee, 360
- Lyk to the serpent depe in helle y-bounde,
- O feyned womman, al that may confounde
- Vertu and innocence, thurgh thy malyce,
- Is bred in thee, as nest of every vyce!
- O Satan, envious sin thilke day 365
- That thou were chased from our heritage,
- Wel knowestow to wommen the olde way!
- Thou madest Eva bringe us in servage. (270)
- Thou wolt fordoon this cristen mariage.
- Thyn instrument so, weylawey the whyle! 370
- Makestow of wommen, whan thou wolt begyle.
- [141: T. 4792-4824.]
- This sowdanesse, whom I thus blame and warie,
- Leet prively hir conseil goon hir way.
- What sholde I in this tale lenger tarie?
- She rydeth to the sowdan on a day, 375
- And seyde him, that she wolde reneye hir lay,
- And cristendom of preestes handes fonge,
- Repenting hir she hethen was so longe, (280)
- Biseching him to doon hir that honour,
- That she moste han the cristen men to feste; 380
- 'To plesen hem I wol do my labour.'
- The sowdan seith, 'I wol don at your heste,'
- And kneling thanketh hir of that requeste.
- So glad he was, he niste what to seye;
- She kiste hir sone, and hoom she gooth hir weye. 385
- 385. E. hoome; Hn. Cm. hom.
- EXPLICIT PRIMA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS SECUNDA.
- Arryved ben this cristen folk to londe,
- In Surrie, with a greet solempne route,
- And hastily this sowdan sente his sonde, (290)
- First to his moder, and al the regne aboute,
- And seyde, his wyf was comen, out of doute, 390
- And preyde hir for to ryde agayn the quene,
- The honour of his regne to sustene.
- Gret was the prees, and riche was tharray
- Of Surriens and Romayns met y-fere;
- The moder of the sowdan, riche and gay, 395
- Receyveth hir with al-so glad a chere
- As any moder mighte hir doghter dere,
- And to the nexte citee ther bisyde (300)
- A softe pas solempnely they ryde.
- Noght trowe I the triumphe of Iulius, 400
- Of which that Lucan maketh swich a bost,
- Was royaller, ne more curious
- Than was thassemblee of this blisful host.
- But this scorpioun, this wikked gost,
- [142: T. 4825-4859.]
- The sowdanesse, for al hir flateringe, 405
- Caste under this ful mortally to stinge.
- 402. E. or; _rest_ ne. E. curius.
- The sowdan comth him-self sone after this
- So royally, that wonder is to telle, (310)
- And welcometh hir with alle Ioye and blis.
- And thus in merthe and Ioye I lete hem dwelle. 410
- The fruyt of this matere is that I telle.
- Whan tyme cam, men thoughte it for the beste
- That revel stinte, and men goon to hir reste.
- 411. E. Cm. Cp. matiere; Hn. Pt. matere. 413. E. The; _rest_ That.
- The tyme cam, this olde sowdanesse
- Ordeyned hath this feste of which I tolde, 415
- And to the feste cristen folk hem dresse
- In general, ye! bothe yonge and olde.
- Here may men feste and royaltee biholde, (320)
- And deyntees mo than I can yow devyse,
- But al to dere they boughte it er they ryse. 420
- 418. E. bihold.
- O sodeyn wo! that ever art successour
- To worldly blisse, spreynd with bitternesse;
- Thende of the Ioye of our worldly labour;
- Wo occupieth the fyn of our gladnesse.
- Herke this conseil for thy sikernesse, 425
- Up-on thy glade day have in thy minde
- The unwar wo or harm that comth bihinde.
- 423. _So_ Cm.; _rest_ The ende.
- For shortly for to tellen at o word, (330)
- The sowdan and the cristen everichone
- Ben al to-hewe and stiked at the bord, 430
- But it were only dame Custance allone.
- This olde sowdanesse, cursed crone,
- Hath with hir frendes doon this cursed dede,
- For she hir-self wolde al the contree lede.
- 428. E. soothly; _rest_ shortly. 432. Pt. Hl. this cursed; _rest
- omit_ this.
- Ne ther was Surrien noon that was converted 435
- That of the conseil of the sowdan woot,
- That he nas al to-hewe er he asterted.
- And Custance han they take anon, foot-hoot, (340)
- And in a shippe al sterelees, god woot,
- [143: T. 4860-4889.]
- They han hir set, and bidde hir lerne sayle 440
- Out of Surrye agaynward to Itayle.
- 435. E. _omits_ ther. 440. Hn. Cm. bidde; Cp. Pt. bidden; Ln. beden;
- E. biddeth; Hl. bad.
- A certein tresor that she thider ladde,
- And, sooth to sayn, vitaille gret plentee
- They han hir yeven, and clothes eek she hadde,
- And forth she sayleth in the salte see. 445
- O my Custance, ful of benignitee,
- O emperoures yonge doghter dere,
- He that is lord of fortune be thy stere! (350)
- 442. E. with hir_e_; _rest_ thider.
- She blesseth hir, and with ful pitous voys
- Un-to the croys of Crist thus seyde she, 450
- 'O clere, o welful auter, holy croys,
- Reed of the lambes blood full of pitee,
- That wesh the world fro the olde iniquitee,
- Me fro the feend, and fro his clawes kepe,
- That day that I shal drenchen in the depe. 455
- 451. E. woful; _rest_ welful, wilful, weleful. 453. E. wesshe; Cm.
- wesch; Pt. wessh.
- Victorious tree, proteccioun of trewe,
- That only worthy were for to bere
- The king of heven with his woundes newe, (360)
- The whyte lamb, that hurt was with the spere,
- Flemer of feendes out of him and here 460
- On which thy limes feithfully extenden,
- Me keep, and yif me might my lyf tamenden.'
- 462. Cm. Ln. kep; Hn. Pt. Hl. kepe; Cp. keepe; E. helpe.
- Yeres and dayes fleet this creature
- Thurghout the see of Grece un-to the strayte
- Of Marrok, as it was hir aventure; 465
- On many a sory meel now may she bayte;
- After her deeth ful often may she wayte,
- Er that the wilde wawes wole hir dryve (370)
- Un-to the place, ther she shal arryve.
- 463. E. fleteth; but Hn. Cp. Pt. fleet. 469. _Read_ placë; Hl. _alone
- inserts_ as _after_ ther.
- [144: T. 4890-4924.]
- Men mighten asken why she was not slayn? 470
- Eek at the feste who mighte hir body save?
- And I answere to that demaunde agayn,
- Who saved Daniel in the horrible cave,
- Ther every wight save he, maister and knave,
- Was with the leoun frete er he asterte? 475
- No wight but god, that he bar in his herte.
- 473. Hl. thorrible.
- God liste to shewe his wonderful miracle
- In hir, for we sholde seen his mighty werkes; (380)
- Crist, which that is to every harm triacle,
- By certein menes ofte, as knowen clerkes, 480
- Doth thing for certein ende that ful derk is
- To mannes wit, that for our ignorance
- Ne conne not knowe his prudent purveyance.
- Now, sith she was not at the feste y-slawe,
- Who kepte hir fro the drenching in the see? 485
- Who kepte Ionas in the fisshes mawe
- Til he was spouted up at Ninivee?
- Wel may men knowe it was no wight but he (390)
- That kepte peple Ebraik fro hir drenchinge,
- With drye feet thurgh-out the see passinge. 490
- 489. Pt. Ln. _om._ hir.
- Who bad the foure spirits of tempest,
- That power han tanoyen land and see,
- 'Bothe north and south, and also west and est,
- Anoyeth neither see, ne land, ne tree?'
- Sothly, the comaundour of that was he, 495
- That fro the tempest ay this womman kepte
- As wel whan [that] she wook as whan she slepte.
- 497. _I insert_ that; Hl. awok.
- Wher mighte this womman mete and drinke have? (400)
- Three yeer and more how lasteth hir vitaille?
- Who fedde the Egipcien Marie in the cave, 500
- Or in desert? no wight but Crist, sans faille.
- Fyve thousand folk it was as gret mervaille
- With loves fyve and fisshes two to fede.
- God sente his foison at hir grete nede.
- [145: T. 4925-4959.]
- She dryveth forth in-to our occean 505
- Thurgh-out our wilde see, til, atte laste,
- Under an hold that nempnen I ne can,
- Fer in Northumberlond the wawe hir caste, (410)
- And in the sond hir ship stiked so faste,
- That thennes wolde it noght of al a tyde, 510
- The wille of Crist was that she shulde abyde.
- The constable of the castel doun is fare
- To seen this wrak, and al the ship he soghte,
- And fond this wery womman ful of care;
- He fond also the tresor that she broghte. 515
- In hir langage mercy she bisoghte
- The lyf out of hir body for to twinne,
- Hir to delivere of wo that she was inne. (420)
- A maner Latin corrupt was hir speche,
- But algates ther-by was she understonde; 520
- The constable, whan him list no lenger seche,
- This woful womman broghte he to the londe;
- She kneleth doun, and thanketh goddes sonde.
- But what she was, she wolde no man seye,
- For foul ne fair, thogh that she shulde deye. 525
- She seyde, she was so mased in the see
- That she forgat hir minde, by hir trouthe;
- The constable hath of hir so greet pitee, (430)
- And eek his wyf, that they wepen for routhe,
- She was so diligent, with-outen slouthe, 530
- To serve and plesen everich in that place,
- That alle hir loven that loken on hir face.
- 531. MSS. plese. 532. E. Cm. in; _rest_ on.
- This constable and dame Hermengild his wyf
- Were payens, and that contree every-where;
- But Hermengild lovede hir right as hir lyf, 535
- And Custance hath so longe soiourned there,
- In orisons, with many a bitter tere,
- Til Iesu hath converted thurgh his grace (440)
- Dame Hermengild, constablesse of that place.
- 536. soiourned] Hl. herberwed.
- [146: T. 4960-4994.]
- In al that lond no cristen durste route, 540
- Alle cristen folk ben fled fro that contree
- Thurgh payens, that conquereden al aboute
- The plages of the North, by land and see;
- To Walis fled the cristianitee
- Of olde Britons, dwellinge in this yle; 545
- Ther was hir refut for the mene whyle.
- But yet nere cristen Britons so exyled
- That ther nere somme that in hir privetee (450)
- Honoured Crist, and hethen folk bigyled;
- And ny the castel swiche ther dwelten three. 550
- That oon of hem was blind, and mighte nat see
- But it were with thilke yën of his minde,
- With whiche men seen, after that they ben blinde.
- 553. E. whan; _rest_ after.
- Bright was the sonne as in that someres day,
- For which the constable and his wyf also 555
- And Custance han y-take the righte way
- Toward the see, a furlong wey or two,
- To pleyen and to romen to and fro; (460)
- And in hir walk this blinde man they mette
- Croked and old, with yën faste y-shette. 560
- 561. E. olde; Hl. old; _rest_ blynde, blynd.
- 'In name of Crist,' cryde this blinde Britoun,
- 'Dame Hermengild, yif me my sighte agayn.'
- This lady wex affrayed of the soun,
- Lest that hir housbond, shortly for to sayn,
- Wolde hir for Iesu Cristes love han slayn, 565
- Til Custance made hir bold, and bad hir werche
- The wil of Crist, as doghter of his chirche.
- The constable wex abasshed of that sight, (470)
- And seyde, 'what amounteth al this fare?'
- Custance answerde, 'sire, it is Cristes might, 570
- That helpeth folk out of the feendes snare.'
- And so ferforth she gan our lay declare,
- That she the constable, er that it were eve,
- Converted, and on Crist made him bileve.
- 574. Hl. Cm. Conuerted; _rest_ Conuerteth. E. maketh; Ln. maad;
- _rest_ made.
- [147: T. 4995-5029.]
- This constable was no-thing lord of this place 575
- Of which I speke, ther he Custance fond,
- But kepte it strongly, many wintres space,
- Under Alla, king of al Northumberlond, (480)
- That was ful wys, and worthy of his hond
- Agayn the Scottes, as men may wel here, 580
- But turne I wol agayn to my matere.
- Sathan, that ever us waiteth to bigyle,
- Saugh of Custance al hir perfeccioun,
- And caste anon how he mighte quyte hir whyle,
- And made a yong knight, that dwelte in that toun 585
- Love hir so hote, of foul affeccioun,
- That verraily him thoughte he shulde spille
- But he of hir mighte ones have his wille. (490)
- He woweth hir, but it availleth noght,
- She wolde do no sinne, by no weye; 590
- And, for despyt, he compassed in his thoght
- To maken hir on shamful deth to deye.
- He wayteth whan the constable was aweye,
- And prively, up-on a night, he crepte
- In Hermengildes chambre whyl she slepte. 595
- Wery, for-waked in her orisouns,
- Slepeth Custance, and Hermengild also.
- This knight, thurgh Sathanas temptaciouns, (500)
- Al softely is to the bed y-go,
- And kitte the throte of Hermengild a-two, 600
- And leyde the blody knyf by dame Custance,
- And wente his wey, ther god yeve him meschance!
- 598. E. Hn. Sathans; Hl. Satanas; _but_ Sathanas _in_ Cp. Pt. Ln.
- Sone after comth this constable hoom agayn,
- And eek Alla, that king was of that lond,
- And saugh his wyf despitously y-slayn, 605
- For which ful ofte he weep and wrong his hond,
- And in the bed the blody knyf he fond
- By dame Custance; allas! what mighte she seye? (510)
- For verray wo hir wit was al aweye.
- 606. E. Hn. weep; Cm. Cp. Pt. wepte; Hl. wept. E. wroong.
- [148: T. 5030-5064.]
- To king Alla was told al this meschance, 610
- And eek the tyme, and where, and in what wyse
- That in a ship was founden dame Custance,
- As heer-biforn that ye han herd devyse.
- The kinges herte of pitee gan agryse,
- Whan he saugh so benigne a creature 615
- Falle in disese and in misaventure.
- For as the lomb toward his deeth is broght,
- So stant this innocent bifore the king; (520)
- This false knight that hath this tresoun wroght
- Berth hir on hond that she hath doon this thing. 620
- But nathelees, ther was greet moorning
- Among the peple, and seyn, 'they can not gesse
- That she hath doon so greet a wikkednesse.
- 620. _So in_ E.; _rest_ Bereth. 621. _All_ moorning (mornyng);
- Tyrwhitt _has_ murmuring; _see note_.
- For they han seyn hir ever so vertuous,
- And loving Hermengild right as her lyf.' 625
- Of this bar witnesse everich in that hous
- Save he that Hermengild slow with his knyf.
- This gentil king hath caught a gret motyf (530)
- Of this witnesse, and thoghte he wolde enquere
- Depper in this, a trouthe for to lere. 630
- 626. E. baar.
- Allas! Custance! thou hast no champioun,
- Ne fighte canstow nought, so weylawey!
- But he, that starf for our redempcioun
- And bond Sathan (and yit lyth ther he lay)
- So be thy stronge champioun this day! 635
- For, but-if Crist open miracle kythe,
- Withouten gilt thou shalt be slayn as swythe.
- She sette her doun on knees, and thus she sayde, (540)
- 'Immortal god, that savedest Susanne
- Fro false blame, and thou, merciful mayde, 640
- Mary I mene, doghter to Seint Anne,
- Bifore whos child aungeles singe Osanne,
- If I be giltlees of this felonye,
- My socour be, for elles I shal dye!'
- 638. E. sit; Hn. Cm. Pt. sette; Hl. set. 644. E. or; _rest_ for.
- [149: T. 5065-5099.]
- Have ye nat seyn som tyme a pale face, 645
- Among a prees, of him that hath be lad
- Toward his deeth, wher-as him gat no grace,
- And swich a colour in his face hath had, (550)
- Men mighte knowe his face, that was bistad,
- Amonges alle the faces in that route: 650
- So stant Custance, and loketh hir aboute.
- 647. gat] Cp. get; Pt. gete; Hl. geyneth.
- O quenes, livinge in prosperitee,
- Duchesses, and ye ladies everichone,
- Haveth som routhe on hir adversitee;
- An emperoures doghter stant allone; 655
- She hath no wight to whom to make hir mone.
- O blood royal, that stondest in this drede,
- Fer ben thy freendes at thy grete nede! (560)
- 654. E. Ln. _om._ ye.
- This Alla king hath swich compassioun,
- As gentil herte is fulfild of pitee, 660
- That from his yën ran the water doun.
- 'Now hastily do fecche a book,' quod he,
- 'And if this knight wol sweren how that she
- This womman slow, yet wole we us avyse
- Whom that we wole that shal ben our Iustyse.' 665
- A Briton book, writen with Evangyles,
- Was fet, and on this book he swoor anoon
- She gilty was, and in the mene whyles (570)
- A hand him smoot upon the nekke-boon,
- That doun he fil atones as a stoon, 670
- And bothe his yën broste out of his face
- In sight of every body in that place.
- A vois was herd in general audience,
- And seyde, 'thou hast desclaundred giltelees
- The doghter of holy chirche in hey presence; 675
- Thus hastou doon, and yet holde I my pees.'
- Of this mervaille agast was al the prees;
- As mased folk they stoden everichone, (580)
- For drede of wreche, save Custance allone.
- [150: T. 5100-5134.]
- Greet was the drede and eek the repentance 680
- Of hem that hadden wrong suspeccioun
- Upon this sely innocent Custance;
- And, for this miracle, in conclusioun,
- And by Custances mediacioun,
- The king, and many another in that place, 685
- Converted was, thanked be Cristes grace!
- This false knight was slayn for his untrouthe
- By Iugement of Alla hastifly; (590)
- And yet Custance hadde of his deeth gret routhe.
- And after this Iesus, of his mercy, 690
- Made Alla wedden ful solempnely
- This holy mayden, that is so bright and shene,
- And thus hath Crist y-maad Custance a quene.
- But who was woful, if I shal nat lye,
- Of this wedding but Donegild, and na mo, 695
- The kinges moder, ful of tirannye?
- Hir thoughte hir cursed herte brast a-two;
- She wolde noght hir sone had do so; (600)
- Hir thoughte a despit, that he sholde take
- So strange a creature un-to his make. 700
- Me list nat of the chaf nor of the stree
- Maken so long a tale, as of the corn.
- What sholde I tellen of the royaltee
- At mariage, or which cours gooth biforn,
- Who bloweth in a trompe or in an horn? 705
- The fruit of every tale is for to seye;
- They ete, and drinke, and daunce, and singe, and pleye.
- 701. Cm. nor; E. or; _rest_ ne. 704. E. Hn. mariages; Ln. þe mariage;
- _rest_ mariage; Hl. Of mariage. 705. a] E. the; Hn. Pt. _omit_.
- They goon to bedde, as it was skile and right; (610)
- For, thogh that wyves been ful holy thinges,
- They moste take in pacience at night 710
- Swich maner necessaries as been plesinges
- To folk that han y-wedded hem with ringes,
- And leye a lyte hir holinesse asyde
- As for the tyme; it may no bet bityde.
- [151: T. 5135-5169.]
- On hir he gat a knave-child anoon, 715
- And to a bishop and his constable eke
- He took his wyf to kepe, whan he is goon
- To Scotland-ward, his fo-men for to seke; (620)
- Now faire Custance, that is so humble and meke,
- So longe is goon with childe, til that stille 720
- She halt hir chambre, abyding Cristes wille.
- The tyme is come, a knave-child she ber;
- Mauricius at the font-stoon they him calle;
- This Constable dooth forth come a messager,
- And wroot un-to his king, that cleped was Alle, 725
- How that this blisful tyding is bifalle,
- And othere tydings speedful for to seye;
- He takth the lettre, and forth he gooth his weye. (630)
- 728. Hn. tath; Cm. taath; _rest_ taketh.
- This messager, to doon his avantage,
- Un-to the kinges moder rydeth swythe, 730
- And salueth hir ful faire in his langage,
- 'Madame,' quod he, 'ye may be glad and blythe,
- And thanke god an hundred thousand sythe;
- My lady quene hath child, with-outen doute,
- To Ioye and blisse of al this regne aboute. 735
- 733. Cp. Hl. thanke; E. Hn. thanketh; Cm. thankede; Pt. Ln. thonketh.
- 735. E. Cm. to; _rest_ of.
- Lo, heer the lettres seled of this thing,
- That I mot bere with al the haste I may;
- If ye wol aught un-to your sone the king, (640)
- I am your servant, bothe night and day.'
- Donegild answerde, 'as now at this tyme, nay; 740
- But heer al night I wol thou take thy reste,
- Tomorwe wol I seye thee what me leste.'
- 740. Hl. _om._ at.
- This messager drank sadly ale and wyn,
- And stolen were his lettres prively
- Out of his box, whyl he sleep as a swyn; 745
- And countrefeted was ful subtilly
- Another lettre, wroght ful sinfully,
- Un-to the king direct of this matere (650)
- Fro his constable, as ye shul after here.
- [152: T. 5170-5204.]
- The lettre spak, 'the queen delivered was 750
- Of so horrible a feendly creature,
- That in the castel noon so hardy was
- That any whyle dorste ther endure.
- The moder was an elf, by aventure
- Y-come, by charmes or by sorcerye, 755
- And every wight hateth hir companye.'
- 750. MSS. queene, queen. 755. E. Hn. Cm. Y-comen. 756. E. Hn. _om._
- wight; Hl. man.
- Wo was this king whan he this lettre had seyn,
- But to no wighte he tolde his sorwes sore, (660)
- But of his owene honde he wroot ageyn,
- 'Welcome the sonde of Crist for evermore 760
- To me, that am now lerned in his lore;
- Lord, welcome be thy lust and thy plesaunce,
- My lust I putte al in thyn ordinaunce!
- Kepeth this child, al be it foul or fair,
- And eek my wyf, un-to myn hoom-cominge; 765
- Crist, whan him list, may sende me an heir
- More agreable than this to my lykinge.'
- This lettre he seleth, prively wepinge, (670)
- Which to the messager was take sone,
- And forth he gooth; ther is na more to done. 770
- O messager, fulfild of dronkenesse,
- Strong is thy breeth, thy limes faltren ay,
- And thou biwreyest alle secreenesse.
- Thy mind is lorn, thou Ianglest as a Iay,
- Thy face is turned in a newe array! 775
- Ther dronkenesse regneth in any route,
- Ther is no conseil hid, with-outen doute.
- O Donegild, I ne have noon English digne (680)
- Un-to thy malice and thy tirannye!
- And therfor to the feend I thee resigne, 780
- Let him endyten of thy traitorye!
- Fy, mannish, fy! o nay, by god, I lye,
- Fy, _feendly_ spirit, for I dar wel telle,
- Though thou heer walke, thy spirit is in helle!
- [153: T. 5205-5239.]
- This messager comth fro the king agayn, 785
- And at the kinges modres court he lighte,
- And she was of this messager ful fayn,
- And plesed him in al that ever she mighte. (690)
- He drank, and wel his girdel underpighte.
- He slepeth, and he snoreth in his gyse 790
- Al night, un-til the sonne gan aryse.
- 791. Hl. vn-to; Pt. to; _rest_ til; _but_ vn-til (_as in_ Tyrwhitt)
- _seems better_.
- Eft were his lettres stolen everichon
- And countrefeted lettres in this wyse;
- 'The king comandeth his constable anon,
- Up peyne of hanging, and on heigh Iuÿse, 795
- That he ne sholde suffren in no wyse
- Custance in-with his regne for tabyde
- Thre dayes and a quarter of a tyde; (700)
- 795. _So_ E. Hn.; Cm. and heigh; Cp. on a heih; Pt. on an high; Hl. of
- an heigh; Ln. or an hihe. 797. regne] E. Reawme.
- But in the same ship as he hir fond,
- Hir and hir yonge sone, and al hir gere, 800
- He sholde putte, and croude hir fro the lond,
- And charge hir that she never eft come there.'
- O my Custance, wel may thy goost have fere
- And sleping in thy dreem been in penance,
- When Donegild caste al this ordinance! 805
- This messager on morwe, whan he wook,
- Un-to the castel halt the nexte wey,
- And to the constable he the lettre took; (710)
- And whan that he this pitous lettre sey,
- Ful ofte he seyde 'allas!' and 'weylawey!' 810
- 'Lord Crist,' quod he, 'how may this world endure?
- So ful of sinne is many a creature!
- O mighty god, if that it be thy wille,
- Sith thou art rightful Iuge, how may it be
- That thou wolt suffren innocents to spille, 815
- And wikked folk regne in prosperitee?
- O good Custance, allas! so wo is me
- That I mot be thy tormentour, or deye (720)
- On shames deeth; ther is noon other weye!'
- 819. shames] Hl. schamful.
- [154: T. 5240-5274.]
- Wepen bothe yonge and olde in al that place, 820
- Whan that the king this cursed lettre sente,
- And Custance, with a deedly pale face,
- The ferthe day toward hir ship she wente.
- But natheles she taketh in good entente
- The wille of Crist, and, kneling on the stronde, 825
- She seyde, 'lord! ay wel-com be thy sonde!
- 823. E. Ln. the; _rest_ hir.
- He that me kepte fro the false blame
- Whyl I was on the londe amonges yow, (730)
- He can me kepe from harme and eek fro shame
- In salte see, al-thogh I se nat how. 830
- As strong as ever he was, he is yet now.
- In him triste I, and in his moder dere,
- That is to me my seyl and eek my stere.'
- Hir litel child lay weping in hir arm,
- And kneling, pitously to him she seyde, 835
- 'Pees, litel sone, I wol do thee non harm.'
- With that hir kerchef of hir heed she breyde,
- And over his litel yën she it leyde; (740)
- And in hir arm she lulleth it ful faste,
- And in-to heven hir yën up she caste. 840
- 837. Ln. Hl. kerchef; Pt. keerchef; E. Hn. couerchief; Cm. couerchif;
- Cp. couerchef. E. Hn. Cm. ouer (_wrongly_); _rest_ of.
- 'Moder,' quod she, 'and mayde bright, Marye,
- Sooth is that thurgh wommannes eggement
- Mankind was lorn and damned ay to dye,
- For which thy child was on a croys y-rent;
- Thy blisful yën sawe al his torment; 845
- Than is ther no comparisoun bitwene
- Thy wo and any wo man may sustene.
- Thou sawe thy child y-slayn bifor thyn yën, (750)
- And yet now liveth my litel child, parfay!
- Now, lady bright, to whom alle woful cryën, 850
- Thou glorie of wommanhede, thou faire may,
- Thou haven of refut, brighte sterre of day,
- Rewe on my child, that of thy gentillesse
- Rewest on every rewful in distresse!
- 849. E. Ln. _om._ litel; _rest have it_.
- [155: T. 5275-5302.]
- O litel child, allas! what is thy gilt, 855
- That never wroughtest sinne as yet, pardee,
- Why wil thyn harde fader han thee spilt?
- O mercy, dere Constable!' quod she; (760)
- 'As lat my litel child dwelle heer with thee;
- And if thou darst not saven him, for blame, 860
- So kis him ones in his fadres name!'
- 861. E. Yet; _rest_ So.
- Ther-with she loketh bakward to the londe,
- And seyde, 'far-wel, housbond routhelees!'
- And up she rist, and walketh doun the stronde
- Toward the ship; hir folweth al the prees, 865
- And ever she preyeth hir child to holde his pees;
- And taketh hir leve, and with an holy entente
- She blesseth hir; and in-to ship she wente. (770)
- 862. E. Ln. Hl. looked; rest looketh, loketh. 868. Hn. Pt. Hl.
- blesseth; Cm. Cp. Ln. blisseth; E. blissed.
- Vitailled was the ship, it is no drede,
- Habundantly for hir, ful longe space, 870
- And other necessaries that sholde nede
- She hadde y-nogh, heried be goddes grace!
- For wind and weder almighty god purchace,
- And bringe hir hoom! I can no bettre seye;
- But in the see she dryveth forth hir weye. 875
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS TERCIA.
- Alla the king comth hoom, sone after this,
- Unto his castel of the which I tolde,
- And axeth wher his wyf and his child is. (780)
- The constable gan aboute his herte colde,
- And pleynly al the maner he him tolde 880
- As ye han herd, I can telle it no bettre,
- And sheweth the king his seel and [eek] his lettre,
- 882. _The word_ eek _seems wanted; but is not in the MSS_.
- [156: T. 5303-5337.]
- And seyde, 'lord, as ye comaunded me
- Up peyne of deeth, so have I doon, certein.'
- This messager tormented was til he 885
- Moste biknowe and tellen, plat and plein,
- Fro night to night, in what place he had leyn.
- And thus, by wit and subtil enqueringe, (790)
- Ymagined was by whom this harm gan springe.
- The hand was knowe that the lettre wroot, 890
- And al the venim of this cursed dede,
- But in what wyse, certeinly I noot.
- Theffect is this, that Alla, out of drede,
- His moder slow, that men may pleinly rede,
- For that she traitour was to hir ligeaunce. 895
- Thus endeth olde Donegild with meschaunce.
- The sorwe that this Alla, night and day,
- Maketh for his wyf and for his child also, (800)
- Ther is no tonge that it telle may.
- But now wol I un-to Custance go, 900
- That fleteth in the see, in peyne and wo,
- Fyve yeer and more, as lyked Cristes sonde,
- Er that hir ship approched un-to londe.
- 903. _So_ Hn. Cp. Pt. Hl.; E. Ln. vn-to the; Cm. to the.
- Under an hethen castel, atte laste,
- Of which the name in my text noght I finde, 905
- Custance and eek hir child the see up-caste.
- Almighty god, that saveth al mankinde,
- Have on Custance and on hir child som minde, (810)
- That fallen is in hethen land eft-sone,
- In point to spille, as I shal telle yow sone. 910
- 907. E. saued; _rest_ saueth.
- Doun from the castel comth ther many a wight
- To gauren on this ship and on Custance.
- But shortly, from the castel, on a night,
- The lordes styward--god yeve him meschaunce!--
- A theef, that had reneyed our creaunce, 915
- Com in-to ship allone, and seyde he sholde
- Hir lemman be, wher-so she wolde or nolde.
- 916. E. Cm. in-to the; _rest omit_ the.
- [157: T. 5338-5370.]
- Wo was this wrecched womman tho bigon, (820)
- Hir child cryde, and she cryde pitously;
- But blisful Marie heelp hir right anon; 920
- For with hir strugling wel and mightily
- The theef fil over bord al sodeinly,
- And in the see he dreynte for vengeance;
- And thus hath Crist unwemmed kept Custance.
- 920. E. Hn. heelp; Hl. hilp; Cm. Cp. halp; Pt. halpe; Ln. helped.
- O foule lust of luxurie! lo, thyn ende! AUCTOR.
- 925
- Nat only that thou feyntest mannes minde,
- But verraily thou wolt his body shende;
- Thende of thy werk or of thy lustes blinde (830)
- Is compleyning, how many-oon may men finde
- That noght for werk som-tyme, but for thentente 930
- To doon this sinne, ben outher sleyn or shente!
- How may this wayke womman han this strengthe
- Hir to defende agayn this renegat?
- O Golias, unmesurable of lengthe,
- How mighte David make thee so mat, 935
- So yong and of armure so desolat?
- How dorste he loke up-on thy dredful face?
- Wel may men seen, it nas but goddes grace! (840)
- 938. E. Hl. nas; Ln. is; _the rest_ was.
- Who yaf Iudith corage or hardinesse
- To sleen him, Olofernus, in his tente, 940
- And to deliveren out of wrecchednesse
- The peple of god? I seye, for this entente,
- That, right as god spirit of vigour sente
- To hem, and saved hem out of meschance,
- So sente he might and vigour to Custance. 945
- 940. E. Oloferne; Hl. Olefernes; _the rest_ Olofernus, Olefernus, _or_
- Olesphernus; _see note_.
- Forth goth hir ship thurgh-out the narwe mouth
- Of Iubaltar and Septe, dryving ay,
- Som-tyme West, som-tyme North and South, (850)
- And som-tyme Est, ful many a wery day,
- Til Cristes moder (blessed be she ay!) 950
- [158: T. 5371-5400.]
- Hath shapen, thurgh hir endelees goodnesse,
- To make an ende of al hir hevinesse.
- 947. E. alway; _rest_ ay. (_The latter is better, but recurs in_ l.
- 950.) 948. _All but_ Hl. _ins._ and _after_ West.
- Now lat us stinte of Custance but a throwe,
- And speke we of the Romain Emperour,
- That out of Surrie hath by lettres knowe 955
- The slaughtre of cristen folk, and dishonour
- Don to his doghter by a fals traitour,
- I mene the cursed wikked sowdanesse, (860)
- That at the feste leet sleen both more and lesse.
- For which this emperour hath sent anoon 960
- His senatour, with royal ordinance,
- And othere lordes, got wot, many oon,
- On Surriens to taken heigh vengeance.
- They brennen, sleen, and bringe hem to meschance
- Ful many a day; but shortly, this is thende, 965
- Homward to Rome they shapen hem to wende.
- This senatour repaireth with victorie
- To Rome-ward, sayling ful royally, (870)
- And mette the ship dryving, as seith the storie,
- In which Custance sit ful pitously. 970
- No-thing ne knew he what she was, ne why
- She was in swich array; ne she nil seye
- Of hir estaat, althogh she sholde deye.
- 971. E. Cm. _om._ ne _before_ knew; _the rest have it_. 973. Hl.
- although; Pt. though that; _rest_ thogh, though, thow.
- He bringeth hir to Rome, and to his wyf
- He yaf hir, and hir yonge sone also; 975
- And with the senatour she ladde her lyf.
- Thus can our lady bringen out of wo
- Woful Custance, and many another mo. (880)
- And longe tyme dwelled she in that place,
- In holy werkes ever, as was hir grace. 980
- [159: T. 5401-5435.]
- The senatoures wyf hir aunte was,
- But for al that she knew hir never the more;
- I wol no lenger tarien in this cas,
- But to king Alla, which I spak of yore,
- That for his wyf wepeth and syketh sore, 985
- I wol retourne, and lete I wol Custance
- Under the senatoures governance.
- 985. E. _puts_ wepeth _after_ That.
- King Alla, which that hadde his moder slayn, (890)
- Upon a day fil in swich repentance,
- That, if I shortly tellen shal and plain, 990
- To Rome he comth, to receyven his penance;
- And putte him in the popes ordinance
- In heigh and low, and Iesu Crist bisoghte
- Foryeve his wikked werkes that he wroghte.
- The fame anon thurgh Rome toun is born, 995
- How Alla king shal come in pilgrimage,
- By herbergeours that wenten him biforn;
- For which the senatour, as was usage, (900)
- Rood him ageyn, and many of his linage,
- As wel to shewen his heighe magnificence 1000
- As to don any king a reverence.
- 995. E. thurgh out the toun; _rest_ thurgh Rome toun. 996. E. Hn. Cp.
- Pt. comen. 999. E. Hn. agayns.
- Greet chere dooth this noble senatour
- To king Alla, and he to him also;
- Everich of hem doth other greet honour;
- And so bifel that, in a day or two, 1005
- This senatour is to king Alla go
- To feste, and shortly, if I shal nat lye,
- Custances sone wente in his companye. (910)
- Som men wolde seyn, at requeste of Custance,
- This senatour hath lad this child to feste; 1010
- I may nat tellen every circumstance,
- Be as be may, ther was he at the leste.
- But soth is this, that, at his modres heste,
- Biforn Alla, during the metes space,
- The child stood, loking in the kinges face. 1015
- [160: T. 5436-5470.]
- This Alla king hath of this child greet wonder,
- And to the senatour he seyde anon,
- 'Whos is that faire child that stondeth yonder?' (920)
- 'I noot,' quod he, 'by god, and by seint Iohn!
- A moder he hath, but fader hath he non 1020
- That I of woot'--but shortly, in a stounde,
- He tolde Alla how that this child was founde.
- 'But god wot,' quod this senatour also,
- 'So vertuous a livere in my lyf,
- Ne saugh I never as she, ne herde of mo 1025
- Of worldly wommen, mayden, nor of wyf;
- I dar wel seyn hir hadde lever a knyf
- Thurgh-out her breste, than been a womman wikke; (930)
- Ther is no man coude bringe hir to that prikke.'
- 1026. Hl. Cm. Ln. mayden; _rest_ mayde. Cm. nor; Hl. Ln. or; _rest_ ne.
- Now was this child as lyk un-to Custance 1030
- As possible is a creature to be.
- This Alla hath the face in remembrance
- Of dame Custance, and ther-on mused he
- If that the childes moder were aught she
- That was his wyf, and prively he sighte, 1035
- And spedde him fro the table that he mighte.
- 'Parfay,' thoghte he, 'fantome is in myn heed!
- I oghte deme, of skilful Iugement, (940)
- That in the salte see my wyf is deed.'
- And afterward he made his argument-- 1040
- 'What woot I, if that Crist have hider y-sent
- My wyf by see, as wel as he hir sente
- To my contree fro thennes that she wente?'
- 1041. E. haue; _rest_ hath. E. ysent; Cm. I-sent; _rest_ sent.
- And, after noon, hoom with the senatour
- Goth Alla, for to seen this wonder chaunce. 1045
- This senatour dooth Alla greet honour,
- And hastifly he sente after Custaunce.
- But trusteth weel, hir liste nat to daunce (950)
- Whan that she wiste wherefor was that sonde.
- Unnethe up-on hir feet she mighte stonde. 1050
- 1047. E. Pt. hastifly; _rest_ hastily, hastely.
- [161: T. 5471-5505.]
- When Alla saugh his wyf, faire he hir grette,
- And weep, that it was routhe for to see.
- For at the firste look he on hir sette
- He knew wel verraily that it was she.
- And she for sorwe as domb stant as a tree; 1055
- So was hir herte shet in hir distresse
- Whan she remembred his unkindenesse.
- Twyës she swowned in his owne sighte; (960)
- He weep, and him excuseth pitously:--
- 'Now god,' quod he, 'and alle his halwes brighte 1060
- So wisly on my soule as have mercy,
- That of your harm as giltelees am I
- As is Maurice my sone so lyk your face;
- Elles the feend me fecche out of this place!'
- 1060. Hl. alle; _which the rest omit_.
- Long was the sobbing and the bitter peyne 1065
- Er that hir woful hertes mighte cesse;
- Greet was the pitee for to here hem pleyne,
- Thurgh whiche pleintes gan hir wo encresse. (970)
- I prey yow al my labour to relesse;
- I may nat telle hir wo un-til tomorwe, 1070
- I am so wery for to speke of sorwe.
- But fynally, when that the sooth is wist
- That Alla giltelees was of hir wo,
- I trowe an hundred tymes been they kist,
- And swich a blisse is ther bitwix hem two 1075
- That, save the Ioye that lasteth evermo,
- Ther is non lyk, that any creature
- Hath seyn or shal, whyl that the world may dure. (980)
- 1074. Hl. they ben.
- Tho preyde she hir housbond mekely,
- In relief of hir longe pitous pyne, 1080
- That he wold preye hir fader specially
- That, of his magestee, he wolde enclyne
- To vouche-sauf som day with him to dyne;
- She preyde him eek, he sholde by no weye
- Un-to hir fader no word of hir seye. 1085
- 1084. E. wolde; _rest_ sholde.
- [162: T. 5506-5540.]
- Som men wold seyn, how that the child Maurice
- Doth this message un-to this emperour;
- But, as I gesse, Alla was nat so nyce (990)
- To him, that was of so sovereyn honour
- As he that is of cristen folk the flour, 1090
- Sente any child, but it is bet to deme
- He wente him-self, and so it may wel seme.
- This emperour hath graunted gentilly
- To come to diner, as he him bisoghte;
- And wel rede I, he loked bisily 1095
- Up-on this child, and on his doghter thoghte.
- Alla goth to his in, and, as him oghte,
- Arrayed for this feste in every wyse (1000)
- As ferforth as his conning may suffyse.
- The morwe cam, and Alla gan him dresse, 1100
- And eek his wyf, this emperour to mete;
- And forth they ryde in Ioye and in gladnesse.
- And whan she saugh hir fader in the strete,
- She lighte doun, and falleth him to fete.
- 'Fader,' quod she, 'your yonge child Custance 1105
- Is now ful clene out of your remembrance.
- I am your doghter Custance,' quod she,
- 'That whylom ye han sent un-to Surrye. (1010)
- It am I, fader, that in the salte see
- Was put allone and dampned for to dye. 1110
- Now, gode fader, mercy I yow crye,
- Send me namore un-to non hethenesse,
- But thonketh my lord heer of his kindenesse.'
- 1107. _So in all the MSS.; to be read as_ Cústancë (_three syllables_).
- Who can the pitous Ioye tellen al
- Bitwix hem three, sin they ben thus y-mette? 1115
- But of my tale make an ende I shal;
- The day goth faste, I wol no lenger lette.
- This glade folk to diner they hem sette; (1020)
- In Ioye and blisse at mete I lete hem dwelle
- A thousand fold wel more than I can telle. 1120
- [163: T. 5541-5573.]
- This child Maurice was sithen emperour
- Maad by the pope, and lived cristenly.
- To Cristes chirche he dide greet honour;
- But I lete al his storie passen by,
- Of Custance is my tale specially. 1125
- In olde Romayn gestes may men finde
- Maurices lyf; I bere it noght in minde.
- 1126. E. Hn. Cm. In the; _rest om._ the.
- This king Alla, whan he his tyme sey, (1030)
- With his Custance, his holy wyf so swete,
- To Engelond been they come the righte wey, 1130
- Wher-as they live in Ioye and in quiete.
- But litel whyl it lasteth, I yow hete,
- Ioye of this world, for tyme wol nat abyde;
- Fro day to night it changeth as the tyde.
- Who lived ever in swich delyt o day 1135
- That him ne moeved outher conscience,
- Or ire, or talent, or som kin affray,
- Envye, or pryde, or passion, or offence? (1040)
- I ne seye but for this ende this sentence,
- That litel whyl in Ioye or in plesance 1140
- Lasteth the blisse of Alla with Custance.
- 1137. E. som kynnes; Cm. su_m_kenys; Hl. som maner; Hn. Cp. Pt. som
- kyn; Ln. sumkin.
- For deeth, that taketh of heigh and low his rente,
- When passed was a yeer, even as I gesse,
- Out of this world this king Alla he hente,
- For whom Custance hath ful gret hevinesse. 1145
- Now lat us preyen god his soule blesse!
- And dame Custance; fynally to seye,
- Towards the toun of Rome gooth hir weye. (1050)
- 1146. E. praye to; Hl. pray that; _rest_ preyen, prayen, preien, _or_
- preyne.
- To Rome is come this holy creature,
- And fyndeth ther hir frendes hole and sounde: 1150
- Now is she scaped al hir aventure;
- And whan that she hir fader hath y-founde,
- Doun on hir kneës falleth she to grounde;
- [164: T. 5574-5582.]
- Weping for tendrenesse in herte blythe,
- She herieth god an hundred thousand sythe. 1155
- 1150. Hl. And fynt hir freendes ther bothe hool and sound. _The rest
- omit_ ther.
- In vertu and in holy almes-dede
- They liven alle, and never a-sonder wende;
- Til deeth departed hem, this lyf they lede. (1060)
- And fareth now weel, my tale is at an ende.
- Now Iesu Crist, that of his might may sende 1160
- Ioye after wo, governe us in his grace,
- And kepe us alle that ben in this place! Amen.
- HERE ENDETH THE TALE OF THE MAN OF LAWE; AND NEXT FOLWETH THE SHIPMANNES
- PROLOG.
- *** For l. 5583 _in_ Tyrwhitt's Text, _see_ Group D, l. 1.
- COLOPHON. _The latter part is from_ MS. Arch. Selden B. 14. _Many MSS.
- have_ The prolog of the squyers tale, _or_ the prolog of the Squier.
- _The_ Petworth MS. _and some others have here an ill-written and
- spurious_ Prologue to the Shipman's Tale, _which is here subjoined:_
- 'Now freendes,' seide our Hoost so dere,
- 'How lyketh you by Iohn the Pardonere?
- For he hath unbokeled wel the male;
- He hath us told right a thrifty tale
- As touching of misgovernaunce--
- I preye to God, yeve him good chaunce!--
- As ye han herd of thise riotoures three.
- Now, gentil Mariner, hertely I preye thee,
- Telle us a good tale, and that right anon.'
- 'It shall be doon, by god and by seint Iohn,'
- Seyde this Mariner, 'as wel as ever I can,'
- And right anon his tale he bigan.
- [165: T. 12903-12924.]
- * * * * *
- THE SHIPMAN'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE SHIPMANNES PROLOG.
- Our hoste up-on his stiropes stood anon,
- And seyde, 'good men, herkneth everich on;
- This was a thrifty tale for the nones! 1165
- Sir parish prest,' quod he, 'for goddes bones,
- Tel us a tale, as was thy forward yore.
- I see wel that ye lerned men in lore
- Can moche good, by goddes dignitee!'
- 1163-1190. _From_ Cp., _collated with_ Hl. Pt. Ln. Seld. Royal, _and_
- Sloane; E. Hn. Cm. _omit_. 1164. Cp. herkeneth; Hl. herkneth.
- The Persone him answerde, '_benedicite_! 1170
- What eyleth the man, so sinfully to swere?'
- Our hoste answerde, 'O Iankin, be ye there? (10)
- I smelle a loller in the wind,' quod he.
- 'How! good men,' quod our hoste, 'herkneth me;
- Abydeth, for goddes digne passioun, 1175
- For we shal han a predicacioun;
- This loller heer wil prechen us som-what.'
- 1174. Cp. herkeneth; Hl. herkneth. 1174. Hl. Now; _rest_ How
- (Howe). 1175. Hl. _omits_.
- 'Nay, by my fader soule! that shal be nat,'
- Seyde the Shipman; 'heer he shal nat preche,
- He shal no gospel glosen heer ne teche. 1180
- We leve alle in the grete god,' quod he,
- 'He wolde sowen som difficultee, (20)
- Or springen cokkel in our clene corn;
- And therfor, hoste, I warne thee biforn,
- [166: T. 12925-12930.]
- My Ioly body shal a tale telle, 1185
- And I shal clinken yow so mery a belle,
- That I shal waken al this companye;
- But it shal nat ben of philosophye,
- Ne _physices_, ne termes queinte of lawe; (27)
- Ther is but litel Latin in my mawe.' 1190
- HERE ENDETH THE SHIPMAN HIS PROLOG.
- 1179. Seld. _has_ Shipman; Roy. Slo. Cp. Pt. Ln. squier; Hl.
- sompnour. 1181. Seld. Hl. We leuen; Roy. Cp. Pt. Ln. He leueth.
- 1182. Seld. Hl. quod, _which_ Cp. Pt. Ln. Roy. Slo. _omit_. 1186-90.
- Hl. omits. 1189. Tyrwhitt _has_ of physike; _the_ MSS. _have the
- unmeaning word_ phislyas (Sloane phillyas; Ln. fisleas); _read_
- physices; see note. COLOPHON. _From_ Seld.
- [167: T. 12931-12957.]
- * * * * *
- THE SHIPMANNES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE SHIPMANNES TALE.
- A marchant whylom dwelled at Seint Denys,
- That riche was, for which men helde him wys;
- A wyf he hadde of excellent beautee,
- And compaignable and revelous was she,
- Which is a thing that causeth more dispence 1195
- Than worth is al the chere and reverence
- That men hem doon at festes and at daunces;
- Swiche salutaciouns and contenaunces
- Passen as dooth a shadwe up-on the wal.
- But wo is him that payen moot for al; 1200
- The sely housbond, algate he mot paye; (11)
- He moot us clothe, and he moot us arraye,
- Al for his owene worship richely,
- In which array we daunce Iolily.
- And if that he noght may, par-aventure, 1205
- Or elles, list no swich dispence endure,
- But thinketh it is wasted and y-lost,
- Than moot another payen for our cost,
- Or lene us gold, and that is perilous.
- 1191. Hl. hild. 1196. E. chiere. 1201. E. honsbonde. Hn. moot;
- Pt. mot; rest moste. 1205. Pt. Hl. may not. 1206. E. ellis. 1208.
- E. Thanne.
- This noble Marchant heeld a worthy hous, 1210
- For which he hadde alday so greet repair (21)
- For his largesse, and for his wyf was fair,
- That wonder is; but herkneth to my tale.
- Amonges alle his gestes, grete and smale,
- Ther was a monk, a fair man and a bold, 1215
- I trowe of thritty winter he was old,
- That ever in oon was drawing to that place.
- [168: T. 12958-12994.]
- This yonge monk, that was so fair of face,
- Aqueinted was so with the gode man,
- Sith that hir firste knoweliche bigan, 1220
- That in his hous as famulier was he (31)
- As it possible is any freend to be.
- 1214. E. Hn. hise; Hl. these; _rest_ his. 1216. E. of; Hn. Cp. Ln. a;
- _rest om._ 1217. E. comynge; rest drawyng. 1220-3. Pt. _omits._
- And for as muchel as this gode man
- And eek this monk, of which that I bigan,
- Were bothe two y-born in o village, 1225
- The monk him claimeth as for cosinage;
- And he again, he seith nat ones nay,
- But was as glad ther-of as fowel of day;
- For to his herte it was a greet plesaunce.
- Thus been they knit with eterne alliaunce, 1230
- And ech of hem gan other for tassure (41)
- Of bretherhede, whyl that hir lyf may dure.
- 1222. E. _om._ is; Hl. possibil is; _rest_ is possible. 1231. E. Hn.
- Pt. ech; Hl. ilk; _rest_ ilke. Cp. for to assure; Hl. Ln. to assure
- (_om._ for).
- Free was daun Iohn, and namely of dispence,
- As in that hous; and ful of diligence
- To doon plesaunce, and also greet costage. 1235
- He noght forgat to yeve the leeste page
- In al that hous; but, after hir degree,
- He yaf the lord, and sitthe al his meynee,
- When that he cam, som maner honest thing;
- For which they were as glad of his coming 1240
- As fowel is fayn, whan that the sonne up-ryseth. (51)
- Na more of this as now, for it suffyseth.
- 1237. E. the; _rest_ that.
- But so bifel, this marchant on a day
- Shoop him to make redy his array
- Toward the toun of Brugges for to fare, 1245
- To byën ther a porcioun of ware;
- For which he hath to Paris sent anon
- A messager, and preyed hath daun Iohn
- That he sholde come to Seint Denys to pleye
- With him and with his wyf a day or tweye, 1250
- Er he to Brugges wente, in alle wyse. (61)
- This noble monk, of which I yow devyse,
- Hath of his abbot, as him list, licence,
- By-cause he was a man of heigh prudence,
- [169: T. 12995-13031.]
- And eek an officer, out for to ryde, 1255
- To seen hir graunges and hir bernes wyde;
- And un-to Seint Denys he comth anon.
- Who was so welcome as my lord daun Iohn,
- Our dere cosin, ful of curteisye?
- With him broghte he a Iubbe of Malvesye, 1260
- And eek another, ful of fyn Vernage, (71)
- And volatyl, as ay was his usage.
- And thus I lete hem ete and drinke and pleye,
- This marchant and this monk, a day or tweye.
- 1261. Cp. Ln. good (_for_ fyn); Hl. wyn. 1262. Hl. volantyn (!)
- 1263. E. _om._ ete and.
- The thridde day, this marchant up aryseth, 1265
- And on his nedes sadly him avyseth,
- And up in-to his countour-hous goth he
- To rekene with him-self, as wel may be,
- Of thilke yeer, how that it with him stood,
- And how that he despended hadde his good; 1270
- And if that he encressed were or noon. (81)
- His bokes and his bagges many oon
- He leith biforn him on his counting-bord;
- Ful riche was his tresor and his hord,
- For which ful faste his countour-dore he shette; 1275
- And eek he nolde that no man sholde him lette
- Of his accountes, for the mene tyme;
- And thus he sit til it was passed pryme.
- 1266, 1272, 1277. E. hise. 1268. Pt. Hl. as; _rest om._
- Daun Iohn was risen in the morwe also,
- And in the gardin walketh to and fro, 1280
- And hath his thinges seyd ful curteisly. (91)
- This gode wyf cam walking prively
- In-to the gardin, ther he walketh softe,
- And him saleweth, as she hath don ofte.
- A mayde child cam in hir companye, 1285
- Which as hir list she may governe and gye,
- For yet under the yerde was the mayde.
- 'O dere cosin myn, daun Iohn,' she sayde,
- 'What eyleth yow so rathe for to ryse?'
- 'Nece,' quod he, 'it oghte y-nough suffyse 1290
- Fyve houres for to slepe up-on a night, (101)
- [170: T. 13032-13066.]
- But it were for an old appalled wight,
- As been thise wedded men, that lye and dare
- As in a forme sit a wery hare,
- Were al for-straught with houndes grete and smale. 1295
- But dere nece, why be ye so pale?
- I trowe certes that our gode man
- Hath yow laboured sith the night bigan,
- That yow were nede to resten hastily?'
- And with that word he lough ful merily, 1300
- And of his owene thought he wex al reed. (111)
- 1294. E. fourme; _rest_ forme. 1300. E. murily. 1301. E. Cp. wax.
- This faire wyf gan for to shake hir heed,
- And seyde thus, 'ye, god wot al,' quod she;
- 'Nay, cosin myn, it stant nat so with me.
- For, by that god that yaf me soule and lyf, 1305
- In al the reme of France is ther no wyf
- That lasse lust hath to that sory pley.
- For I may singe "allas" and "weylawey,
- That I was born," but to no wight,' quod she,
- 'Dar I nat telle how that it stant with me. 1310
- Wherfore I thinke out of this land to wende, (121)
- Or elles of my-self to make an ende,
- So ful am I of drede and eek of care.'
- 1304. E. _repeats_ nay. 1306. Cp. Pt. rewme; Hl. Ln. reme; E. Hn.
- Reawme; _see_ B. 4326.
- This monk bigan up-on this wyf to stare,
- And seyde, 'allas, my nece, god forbede 1315
- That ye, for any sorwe or any drede,
- Fordo your-self; but telleth me your grief;
- Paraventure I may, in your meschief,
- Conseille or helpe, and therfore telleth me
- Al your anoy, for it shal been secree; 1320
- For on my porthors here I make an ooth, (131)
- That never in my lyf, for lief ne looth,
- Ne shal I of no conseil yow biwreye.'
- 1317. Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. telleth; E. tel. E. me of; Cp. Ln.
- forth; _rest_ me. 1318. E. I yow may; _rest om._ yow. 1321. Cm.
- here; _rest_ om.
- 'The same agayn to yow,' quod she, 'I seye;
- By god and by this porthors, I yow swere, 1325
- Though men me wolde al in-to peces tere,
- [171: T. 13067-13103.]
- Ne shal I never, for to goon to helle,
- Biwreye a word of thing that ye me telle,
- Nat for no cosinage ne alliance,
- But verraily, for love and affiance.' 1330
- Thus been they sworn, and heer-upon they kiste, (141)
- And ech of hem tolde other what hem liste.
- 1326. E. pieces; _rest_ peces, peeces.
- 'Cosin,' quod she, 'if that I hadde a space,
- As I have noon, and namely in this place,
- Than wolde I telle a legende of my lyf, 1335
- What I have suffred sith I was a wyf
- With myn housbonde, al be he your cosyn.'
- 1335. E. Thanne. 1337. your cosyn] E. of youre kyn.
- 'Nay,' quod this monk, 'by god and seint Martyn,
- He is na more cosin un-to me
- Than is this leef that hangeth on the tree! 1340
- I clepe him so, by Seint Denys of Fraunce, (151)
- To have the more cause of aqueintaunce
- Of yow, which I have loved specially
- Aboven alle wommen sikerly;
- This swere I yow on my professioun. 1345
- Telleth your grief, lest that he come adoun,
- And hasteth yow, and gooth your wey anon.'
- 1338. and] E. Cp. Pt. Ln. and by. 1340. E. lief.
- 'My dere love,' quod she, 'o my daun Iohn,
- Ful lief were me this conseil for to hyde,
- But out it moot, I may namore abyde. 1350
- Myn housbond is to me the worste man (161)
- That ever was, sith that the world bigan.
- But sith I am a wyf, it sit nat me
- To tellen no wight of our privetee,
- Neither a bedde, ne in non other place; 1355
- God shilde I sholde it tellen, for his grace!
- A wyf ne shal nat seyn of hir housbonde
- But al honour, as I can understonde;
- Save un-to yow thus muche I tellen shal;
- As help me god, he is noght worth at al 1360
- In no degree the value of a flye. (171)
- But yet me greveth most his nigardye;
- And wel ye woot that wommen naturelly
- [172: T. 13104-13140.]
- Desyren thinges sixe, as wel as I.
- They wolde that hir housbondes sholde be 1365
- Hardy, and wyse, and riche, and ther-to free,
- And buxom to his wyf, and fresh a-bedde.
- But, by that ilke lord that for us bledde,
- For his honour, my-self for to arraye,
- A Sonday next, I moste nedes paye 1370
- An hundred frankes, or elles am I lorn. (181)
- Yet were me lever that I were unborn
- Than me were doon a sclaundre or vileinye;
- And if myn housbond eek it mighte espye,
- I nere but lost, and therfore I yow preye 1375
- Lene me this somme, or elles moot I deye.
- Daun Iohn, I seye, lene me thise hundred frankes;
- Pardee, I wol nat faille yow my thankes,
- If that yow list to doon that I yow praye.
- For at a certein day I wol yow paye, 1380
- And doon to yow what plesance and servyce (191)
- That I may doon, right as yow list devyse.
- And but I do, god take on me vengeance
- As foul as ever had Geniloun of France!'
- 1351. E. housbonde. 1355. Hl. _om._ 1367. to] E. Hn. Cm. unto.
- 1371, 1376. E. ellis. 1371. E. Ln. Hl. I am; _rest_ am I. 1374. E.
- housbonde. 1376-9. Hl. _omits_. 1384. E. hadde.
- This gentil monk answerde in this manere; 1385
- 'Now, trewely, myn owene lady dere,
- I have,' quod he, 'on yow so greet a routhe,
- That I yow swere and plighte yow my trouthe,
- That whan your housbond is to Flaundres fare,
- I wol delivere yow out of this care; 1390
- For I wol bringe yow an hundred frankes.' (201)
- And with that word he caughte hir by the flankes,
- And hir embraceth harde, and kiste hir ofte.
- 'Goth now your wey,' quod he, 'al stille and softe,
- And lat us dyne as sone as that ye may; 1395
- For by my chilindre it is pryme of day.
- Goth now, and beeth as trewe as I shal be.'
- 1389. E. housbonde.
- 'Now, elles god forbede, sire,' quod she,
- And forth she gooth, as Iolif as a pye,
- And bad the cokes that they sholde hem hye, 1400
- [173: T. 13141-13176.]
- So that men mighte dyne, and that anon. (211)
- Up to hir housbonde is this wyf y-gon,
- And knokketh at his countour boldely.
- '_Qui la_?' quod he. 'Peter! it am I,'
- Quod she, 'what, sire, how longe wol ye faste? 1405
- How longe tyme wol ye rekene and caste
- Your sommes, and your bokes, and your thinges?
- The devel have part of alle swiche rekeninges!
- Ye have y-nough, pardee, of goddes sonde;
- Come doun to-day, and lat your bagges stonde. 1410
- Ne be ye nat ashamed that daun Iohn (221)
- Shal fasting al this day elenge goon?
- What! lat us here a messe, and go we dyne.'
- 1404. E. Hn. Who ther (_with_ Qi la _in margin_); Hl. Qy la; Cp. Pt.
- Quy la; Ln. Que la. 1408. Hl. Cm. of; _rest_ on. 1412. E. Cm.
- alenge; _rest_ elenge. 1413. E. _om._ What.
- 'Wyf,' quod this man, 'litel canstow devyne
- The curious bisinesse that we have. 1415
- For of us chapmen, al-so god me save,
- And by that lord that cleped is Seint Yve,
- Scarsly amonges twelve ten shul thryve,
- Continuelly, lastinge un-to our age.
- We may wel make chere and good visage, 1420
- And dryve forth the world as it may be, (231)
- And kepen our estaat in privetee,
- Til we be deed, or elles that we pleye
- A pilgrimage, or goon out of the weye.
- And therfor have I greet necessitee 1425
- Up-on this queinte world tavyse me;
- For evermore we mote stonde in drede
- Of hap and fortune in our chapmanhede.
- 1417. E. clepid. 1418. E. xij. 1420. E. chiere. 1426. E. Hn. Cm.
- tauyse; _rest_ to auyse.
- To Flaundres wol I go to-morwe at day,
- And come agayn, as sone as ever I may. 1430
- For which, my dere wyf, I thee biseke, (241)
- As be to every wight buxom and meke,
- And for to kepe our good be curious,
- And honestly governe wel our hous.
- Thou hast y-nough, in every maner wyse, 1435
- That to a thrifty houshold may suffyse.
- [174: T. 13177-13214.]
- Thee lakketh noon array ne no vitaille,
- Of silver in thy purs shaltow nat faille.'
- And with that word his countour-dore he shette,
- And doun he gooth, no lenger wolde he lette, 1440
- But hastily a messe was ther seyd, (251)
- And spedily the tables were y-leyd,
- And to the diner faste they hem spedde;
- And richely this monk the chapman fedde.
- 1441. E. Hn. But; _rest_ And.
- At-after diner daun Iohn sobrely 1445
- This chapman took a-part, and prively
- He seyde him thus, 'cosyn, it standeth so,
- That wel I see to Brugges wol ye go.
- God and seint Austin spede yow and gyde!
- I prey yow, cosin, wysly that ye ryde; 1450
- Governeth yow also of your diete (261)
- Atemprely, and namely in this hete.
- Bitwix us two nedeth no strange fare;
- Fare-wel, cosyn; god shilde yow fro care.
- If any thing ther be by day or night, 1455
- If it lye in my power and my might,
- That ye me wol comande in any wyse,
- It shal be doon, right as ye wol devyse.
- 1445. E. Hn. Cm. At; _rest_ And. 1455. E. Hn. And if that any thyng
- by day or night.
- O thing, er that ye goon, if it may be,
- I wolde prey yow; for to lene me 1460
- An hundred frankes, for a wyke or tweye, (271)
- For certein beestes that I moste beye,
- To store with a place that is oures.
- God help me so, I wolde it were youres!
- I shal nat faille surely of my day, 1465
- Nat for a thousand frankes, a myle-way.
- But lat this thing be secree, I yow preye,
- For yet to-night thise beestes moot I beye;
- And fare-now wel, myn owene cosin dere,
- Graunt mercy of your cost and of your chere.' 1470
- 1465. E. at; _rest_ of.
- This noble marchant gentilly anon (281)
- Answerde, and seyde, 'o cosin myn, daun Iohn,
- Now sikerly this is a smal requeste;
- My gold is youres, whan that it yow leste.
- [175: T. 13215-13250.]
- And nat only my gold, but my chaffare; 1475
- Take what yow list, god shilde that ye spare.
- But o thing is, ye knowe it wel y-nogh,
- Of chapmen, that hir moneye is hir plogh.
- We may creaunce whyl we have a name,
- But goldlees for to be, it is no game. 1480
- Paye it agayn whan it lyth in your ese; (291)
- After my might ful fayn wolde I yow plese.'
- 1479. Cm. encrece (_for_ creaunce).
- Thise hundred frankes he fette forth anon,
- And prively he took hem to daun Iohn.
- No wight in al this world wiste of this lone, 1485
- Savinge this marchant and daun Iohn allone.
- They drinke, and speke, and rome a whyle and pleye,
- Til that daun Iohn rydeth to his abbeye.
- 1483. E. fette hyrn forth; _rest om._ hym.
- The morwe cam, and forth this marchant rydeth
- To Flaundres-ward; his prentis wel him gydeth, 1490
- Til he cam in-to Brugges merily. (301)
- Now gooth this marchant faste and bisily
- Aboute his nede, and byeth and creaunceth.
- He neither pleyeth at the dees ne daunceth;
- But as a marchant, shortly for to telle, 1495
- He let his lyf, and there I lete him dwelle.
- 1491. E. Hn. murily. 1494. E. Cm. _om._ the. 1496. E. Hn. let; Cm.
- lat; Hl. Pt. lad; Cp. leet; Ln. leteþ (let = ledeth).
- The Sonday next this Marchant was agon,
- To Seint Denys y-comen is daun Iohn,
- With crowne and berd all fresh and newe y-shave.
- In al the hous ther nas so litel a knave, 1500
- Ne no wight elles, that he nas ful fayn, (311)
- For that my lord daun Iohn was come agayn.
- And shortly to the point right for to gon,
- This faire wyf accorded with daun Iohn,
- That for thise hundred frankes he sholde al night 1505
- Have hir in his armes bolt-upright;
- And this acord parfourned was in dede.
- In mirthe al night a bisy lyf they lede
- Til it was day, that daun Iohn wente his way,
- And bad the meynee 'fare-wel, have good day!' 1510
- [176: T. 13251-13287.]
- For noon of hem, ne no wight in the toun, (321)
- Hath of daun Iohn right no suspecioun.
- And forth he rydeth hoom to his abbeye,
- Or where him list; namore of him I seye.
- 1502. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ For. 1503. E. right to the point. 1506. E.
- hise.
- This marchant, whan that ended was the faire, 1515
- To Seint Denys he gan for to repaire,
- And with his wyf he maketh feste and chere,
- And telleth hir that chaffare is so dere,
- That nedes moste he make a chevisaunce.
- For he was bounde in a reconissaunce 1520
- To paye twenty thousand sheeld anon. (331)
- For which this marchant is to Paris gon,
- To borwe of certein frendes that he hadde
- A certein frankes; and somme with him he ladde.
- And whan that he was come in-to the toun, 1525
- For greet chertee and greet affeccioun,
- Un-to daun Iohn he gooth him first, to pleye;
- Nat for to axe or borwe of him moneye,
- But for to wite and seen of his welfare,
- And for to tellen him of his chaffare, 1530
- As freendes doon whan they ben met y-fere. (341)
- Daun Iohn him maketh feste and mery chere;
- And he him tolde agayn ful specially,
- How he hadde wel y-boght and graciously,
- Thanked be god, al hool his marchandyse. 1535
- Save that he moste, in alle maner wyse,
- Maken a chevisaunce, as for his beste,
- And thanne he sholde been in Ioye and reste.
- 1517, 1532. E. feeste. 1519, 1537. E. cheuyssau_n_ce. 1520. Hl.
- bounde; _rest_ bounden. 1526. Pt. cheertee; Ln. chere; _rest_
- chiertee. 1532. E. murye.
- Daun Iohn answerde, 'certes, I am fayn
- That ye in hele ar comen hoom agayn. 1540
- And if that I were riche, as have I blisse, (351)
- Of twenty thousand sheeld shold ye nat misse,
- For ye so kindely this other day
- Lente me gold; and as I can and may,
- I thanke yow, by god and by seint Iame! 1545
- But nathelees I took un-to our dame,
- Your wyf at hoom, the same gold ageyn
- [177: T. 13288-13323.]
- Upon your bench; she woot it wel, certeyn,
- By certein tokenes that I can hir telle.
- Now, by your leve, I may no lenger dwelle, 1550
- Our abbot wol out of this toun anon; (361)
- And in his companye moot I gon.
- Grete wel our dame, myn owene nece swete,
- And fare-wel, dere cosin, til we mete!'
- 1540. ar] Cp. Pt. Ln. be. 1549. E. Hn. Cm. yow; _rest_ hir.
- This Marchant, which that was ful war and wys, 1555
- Creaunced hath, and payd eek in Parys,
- To certeyn Lumbardes, redy in hir hond,
- The somme of gold, and gat of hem his bond;
- And hoom he gooth, mery as a papeiay.
- For wel he knew he stood in swich array, 1560
- That nedes moste he winne in that viage (371)
- A thousand frankes above al his costage.
- 1558. E. hadde; Hl. took; _rest_ gat. _Over_ bond _is the
- gloss_--obligacionem. 1559. E. murie. E. papeiay; _rest_ papyniay,
- popiniay. 1562. E. Hn. Cm. Cp. abouen; _rest_ aboue.
- His wyf ful redy mette him atte gate,
- As she was wont of old usage algate,
- And al that night in mirthe they bisette; 1565
- For he was riche and cleerly out of dette.
- Whan it was day, this marchant gan embrace
- His wyf al newe, and kiste hir on hir face,
- And up he gooth and maketh it ful tough.
- 'Namore,' quod she, 'by god, ye have y-nough!' 1570
- And wantounly agayn with him she pleyde; (381)
- Til, atte laste, that this Marchant seyde,
- 'By god,' quod he, 'I am a litel wrooth
- With yow, my wyf, al-thogh it be me looth.
- And woot ye why? by god, as that I gesse, 1575
- That ye han maad a maner straungenesse
- Bitwixen me and my cosyn daun Iohn.
- Ye sholde han warned me, er I had gon,
- That he yow hadde an hundred frankes payed
- By redy tokene; and heeld him yvel apayed, 1580
- For that I to him spak of chevisaunce, (391)
- Me semed so, as by his contenaunce.
- But nathelees, by god our hevene king,
- [178: T. 13324-13359.]
- I thoghte nat to axe of him no-thing.
- I prey thee, wyf, ne do namore so; 1585
- Tel me alwey, er that I fro thee go,
- If any dettour hath in myn absence
- Y-payëd thee; lest, thurgh thy necligence,
- I mighte him axe a thing that he hath payed.'
- 1571. E. wantownely. 1572. Cp. Pt. þat; Hl. þus; _rest om._ 1574.
- E. were; _rest_ be. 1584. E. axen; _rest_ axe. E. Hl. _om._ of.
- 1585. E. as; Hl. _om._; _rest_ ne. 1586. Hn. Hl. Tel; Ln. Til; _rest_
- Telle.
- This wyf was nat afered nor affrayed, 1590
- But boldely she seyde, and that anon: (401)
- 'Marie, I defye the false monk, daun Iohn!
- I kepe nat of hise tokenes never a deel;
- He took me certein gold, that woot I weel!
- What! yvel thedom on his monkes snoute! 1595
- For, god it woot, I wende, withouten doute,
- That he had yeve it me bycause of yow,
- To doon ther-with myn honour and my prow,
- For cosinage, and eek for bele chere
- That he hath had ful ofte tymes here. 1600
- But sith I see I stonde in this disioint, (411)
- I wol answere yow shortly, to the point.
- Ye han mo slakker dettours than am I!
- For I wol paye yow wel and redily
- Fro day to day; and, if so be I faille, 1605
- I am your wyf; score it up-on my taille,
- And I shal paye, as sone as ever I may.
- For, by my trouthe, I have on myn array,
- And nat on wast, bistowed every deel.
- And for I have bistowed it so weel 1610
- For your honour, for goddes sake, I seye, (421)
- As be nat wrooth, but lat us laughe and pleye.
- Ye shal my Ioly body have to wedde;
- By god, I wol nat paye yow but a-bedde.
- Forgive it me, myn owene spouse dere; 1615
- Turne hiderward and maketh bettre chere.'
- 1592. Cm. defye; _rest_ deffie. 1595. E. Hn. Cp. thedam. 1597. E.
- hadde. 1599. E. beele; Cm. beel; _rest_ bele. 1601. E. Hn. Hl.
- this; _rest_ suche, such. 1611. E. Hn. For; _rest_ To.
- This marchant saugh ther was no remedye,
- And, for to chyde, it nere but greet folye,
- Sith that the thing may nat amended be.
- [179: T. 13360-13364.]
- 'Now, wyf,' he seyde, 'and I foryeve it thee; 1620
- But, by thy lyf, ne be namore so large; (431)
- Keep bet our good, this yeve I thee in charge.'
- Thus endeth now my tale, and god us sende
- Taling y-nough un-to our lyves ende. Amen.
- HERE ENDETH THE SHIPMANNES TALE.
- 1622. E. that; _rest_ this. 1623. E. Hn. _om._ now. 1624. Cm.
- Talynge; Hl. Talyng; E. Hn. Pt. Taillynge; Cp. Ln. Toylyng(!).
- COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn. Cp. Pt.
- [180: T. 13365-13382.]
- * * * * *
- THE PRIORESS'S PROLOGUE
- * * * * *
- BIHOLD THE MERY WORDES OF THE HOST TO THE SHIPMAN
- AND TO THE LADY PRIORESSE.
- 'Wel seyd, by _corpus dominus_,' quod our hoste, 1625
- 'Now longe moot thou sayle by the coste,
- Sir gentil maister, gentil marineer!
- God yeve this monk a thousand last quad yeer!
- A ha! felawes! beth ware of swiche a Iape!
- The monk putte in the mannes hood an ape, 1630
- And in his wyves eek, by seint Austin!
- Draweth no monkes more un-to your in.
- HEADING. _So_ E. (_with_ Bihoold, murie, Hoost); Hn. Herke the myrie
- Wordes of the Worthy Hoost; Pt. And here bygynneth the prologe of the
- priores; Ln. Incipit prologus Priorisse. 1625. E. Hn. Hoost. 1626.
- E. Hn. moote; Ln. Hl. mot; _rest_ mote. E. saille; cost. 1628. E.
- this; _rest_ the. Hn. quaad; _rest_ quade.
- But now passe over, and lat us seke aboute,
- Who shal now telle first, of al this route, (10)
- Another tale;' and with that word he sayde, 1635
- As curteisly as it had been a mayde,
- 'My lady Prioresse, by your leve,
- So that I wiste I sholde yow nat greve,
- I wolde demen that ye tellen sholde
- A tale next, if so were that ye wolde. 1640
- Now wol ye vouche-sauf, my lady dere?'
- 'Gladly,' quod she, and seyde as ye shal here. (18)
- _Explicit_.
- 1642. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. sayde in this manere.
- [181: T. 13383-13403.]
- * * * * *
- THE PRIORESSES TALE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE PRIORESSES TALE.
- _Domine, dominus noster_.
- O Lord our lord, thy name how merveillous
- Is in this large worlde y-sprad--quod she:--
- For noght only thy laude precious 1645
- Parfourned is by men of dignitee,
- But by the mouth of children thy bountee
- Parfourned is, for on the brest soukinge
- Som tyme shewen they thyn heryinge.
- HEADING. _From_ E. Hn. (Hn. proheme, _for_ prologe). Cp. _has_--Here
- begynneth the tale of Alma redemptoris, the prioresses Tale. Prolog.
- _Domine Dominus noster_.
- Wherfor in laude, as I best can or may, 1650
- Of thee, and of the whyte lily flour
- Which that thee bar, and is a mayde alway, (10)
- To telle a storie I wol do my labour;
- Not that I may encresen hir honour;
- For she hir-self is honour, and the rote 1655
- Of bountee, next hir sone, and soules bote.--
- 1651. E. _om._ whyte.
- O moder mayde! o mayde moder free!
- O bush unbrent, brenninge in Moyses sighte,
- That ravisedest doun fro the deitee,
- Thurgh thyn humblesse, the goost that in thalighte, 1660
- Of whos vertu, whan he thyn herte lighte,
- Conceived was the fadres sapience, (20)
- Help me to telle it in thy reverence!
- 1660. Hl. Cp. the alight.
- [182: T. 13404-13431.]
- Lady! thy bountee, thy magnificence,
- Thy vertu, and thy grete humilitee 1665
- Ther may no tonge expresse in no science;
- For som-tyme, lady, er men praye to thee,
- Thou goost biforn of thy benignitee,
- And getest us the light, thurgh thy preyere,
- To gyden us un-to thy sone so dere. 1670
- 1669. Hn. Slo. Ln. Hl. the] E. thurgh; Cp. Pt. to. E. Hn. of; _but
- the rest_ thurgh.
- My conning is so wayk, o blisful quene,
- For to declare thy grete worthinesse, (30)
- That I ne may the weighte nat sustene,
- But as a child of twelf monthe old, or lesse,
- That can unnethes any word expresse, 1675
- Right so fare I, and therfor I yow preye,
- Gydeth my song that I shal of yow seye.
- _Explicit_.
- 1675. Cp. Pt. Hl. vnnethes. E. Hn. vnnethe.
- HERE BIGINNETH THE PRIORESSES TALE.
- Ther was in Asie, in a greet citee,
- Amonges cristen folk, a Iewerye,
- Sustened by a lord of that contree 1680
- For foule usure and lucre of vilanye,
- Hateful to Crist and to his companye; (40)
- And thurgh the strete men mighte ryde or wende,
- For it was free, and open at either ende.
- HEADING. _From_ E. Hn. _has_--Here biggynneth the Prioresse tale of
- Alma redemptoris mater.
- A litel scole of cristen folk ther stood 1685
- Doun at the ferther ende, in which ther were
- Children an heep, y-comen of cristen blood,
- That lerned in that scole yeer by yere
- Swich maner doctrine as men used there,
- This is to seyn, to singen and to rede, 1690
- As smale children doon in hir childhede.
- [183: T. 13432-13466.]
- Among thise children was a widwes sone, (50)
- A litel clergeon, seven yeer of age,
- That day by day to scole was his wone,
- And eek also, wher-as he saugh thimage 1695
- Of Cristes moder, hadde he in usage,
- As him was taught, to knele adoun and seye
- His _Ave Marie_, as he goth by the weye.
- 1695. Cp. Pt. Ln. the ymage. 1696. E. he hadde.
- Thus hath this widwe hir litel sone y-taught
- Our blisful lady, Cristes moder dere, 1700
- To worshipe ay, and he forgat it naught,
- For sely child wol alday sone lere; (60)
- But ay, whan I remembre on this matere,
- Seint Nicholas stant ever in my presence,
- For he so yong to Crist did reverence. 1705
- 1701. E. Pt. forgate. 1702. Hn. Hl. alwey.
- This litel child, his litel book lerninge,
- As he sat in the scole at his prymer,
- He _Alma redemptoris_ herde singe,
- As children lerned hir antiphoner;
- And, as he dorste, he drough him ner and ner, 1710
- And herkned ay the wordes and the note,
- Til he the firste vers coude al by rote. (70)
- Noght wiste he what this Latin was to seye,
- For he so yong and tendre was of age;
- But on a day his felaw gan he preye 1715
- Texpounden him this song in his langage,
- Or telle him why this song was in usage;
- This preyde he him to construe and declare
- Ful ofte tyme upon his knowes bare.
- 1719. E. Hl. often.
- His felaw, which that elder was than he, 1720
- Answerde him thus: 'this song, I have herd seye,
- Was maked of our blisful lady free, (80)
- Hir to salue, and eek hir for to preye
- To been our help and socour whan we deye.
- I can no more expounde in this matere; 1725
- I lerne song, I can but smal grammere.'
- 1725. E. Hn. na.
- [184: T. 13467-13501.]
- 'And is this song maked in reverence
- Of Cristes moder?' seyde this innocent;
- 'Now certes, I wol do my diligence
- To conne it al, er Cristemasse is went; 1730
- Though that I for my prymer shal be shent,
- And shal be beten thryës in an houre, (90)
- I wol it conne, our lady for to honoure.'
- 1733. Cp. Pt. Hl. _omit_ for.
- His felaw taughte him homward prively,
- Fro day to day, til he coude it by rote, 1735
- And than he song it wel and boldely
- Fro word to word, acording with the note;
- Twyës a day it passed thurgh his throte,
- To scoleward and homward whan he wente;
- On Cristes moder set was his entente. 1740
- As I have seyd, thurgh-out the Iewerye
- This litel child, as he cam to and fro, (100)
- Ful merily than wolde he singe, and crye
- _O Alma redemptoris_ ever-mo.
- The swetnes hath his herte perced so 1745
- Of Cristes moder, that, to hir to preye,
- He can nat stinte of singing by the weye.
- 1741. E. Iuerie. 1743. Slo. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. than; E. Hn. _omit_.
- 1745. Slo. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. hath; E. Hn. _omit_.
- Our firste fo, the serpent Sathanas,
- That hath in Iewes herte his waspes nest,
- Up swal, and seide, 'o Hebraik peple, allas! 1750
- Is this to yow a thing that is honest,
- That swich a boy shal walken as him lest (110)
- In your despyt, and singe of swich sentence,
- Which is agayn your lawes reverence?'
- 1754. Hl. your; Pt. Ln. [gh]oure; E. Hn. Cm. Cp. oure.
- Fro thennes forth the Iewes han conspyred 1755
- This innocent out of this world to chace;
- An homicyde ther-to han they hyred,
- That in an aley hadde a privee place;
- And as the child gan for-by for to pace,
- This cursed Iew him hente and heeld him faste, 1760
- And kitte his throte, and in a pit him caste.
- [185: T. 13502-13536.]
- I seye that in a wardrobe they him threwe (120)
- Wher-as these Iewes purgen hir entraille.
- O cursed folk of Herodes al newe,
- What may your yvel entente yow availle? 1765
- Mordre wol out, certein, it wol nat faille,
- And namely ther thonour of god shal sprede,
- The blood out cryeth on your cursed dede.
- 1767. thonour] Cp. Pt. Ln. honour.
- 'O martir, souded to virginitee,
- Now maystou singen, folwing ever in oon 1770
- The whyte lamb celestial,' quod she,
- 'Of which the grete evangelist, seint Iohn, (130)
- In Pathmos wroot, which seith that they that goon
- Biforn this lamb, and singe a song al newe,
- That never, fleshly, wommen they ne knewe.' 1775
- This povre widwe awaiteth al that night
- After hir litel child, but he cam noght;
- For which, as sone as it was dayes light,
- With face pale of drede and bisy thoght,
- She hath at scole and elles-wher him soght, 1780
- Til finally she gan so fer espye
- That he last seyn was in the Iewerye. (140)
- With modres pitee in hir brest enclosed,
- She gooth, as she were half out of hir minde,
- To every place wher she hath supposed 1785
- By lyklihede hir litel child to finde;
- And ever on Cristes moder meke and kinde
- She cryde, and atte laste thus she wroghte,
- Among the cursed Iewes she him soghte.
- She frayneth and she preyeth pitously 1790
- To every Iew that dwelte in thilke place,
- To telle hir, if hir child wente oght for-by. (150)
- They seyde, 'nay'; but Iesu, of his grace,
- Yaf in hir thought, inwith a litel space,
- That in that place after hir sone she cryde, 1795
- Wher he was casten in a pit bisyde.
- 1794. inwith] Cm. Cp. Hl. withinne.
- [186: T. 13537-13569.]
- O grete god, that parfournest thy laude
- By mouth of innocents, lo heer thy might!
- This gemme of chastitee, this emeraude,
- And eek of martirdom the ruby bright, 1800
- Ther he with throte y-corven lay upright,
- He '_Alma redemptoris_' gan to singe (160)
- So loude, that al the place gan to ringe.
- The Cristen folk, that thurgh the strete wente,
- In coomen, for to wondre up-on this thing, 1805
- And hastily they for the provost sente;
- He cam anon with-outen tarying,
- And herieth Crist that is of heven king,
- And eek his moder, honour of mankinde,
- And after that, the Iewes leet he binde, 1810
- 1805. Cp. Pt. wondren on; Ln. wonderne of; E. Hn. wondre vpon; Hl.
- wonder vpon; Cm. wonderyn vp-on.
- This child with pitous lamentacioun
- Up-taken was, singing his song alway; (170)
- And with honour of greet processioun
- They carien him un-to the nexte abbay.
- His moder swowning by the bere lay; 1815
- Unnethe might the peple that was there
- This newe Rachel bringe fro his bere.
- 1815. E. Hn. his; _rest_ the; see l. 1817. 1817. Cm. Hl. the; _rest_
- his.
- With torment and with shamful deth echon
- This provost dooth thise Iewes for to sterve
- That of this mordre wiste, and that anon; 1820
- He nolde no swich cursednesse observe.
- Yvel shal have, that yvel wol deserve. (180)
- Therfor with wilde hors he dide hem drawe,
- And after that he heng hem by the lawe.
- 1819. E. the; _rest_ thise, these. 1822. E. Cm. shal he; Pt. he shal;
- _rest omit_ he.
- Up-on his here ay lyth this innocent 1825
- Biforn the chief auter, whyl masse laste,
- And after that, the abbot with his covent
- Han sped hem for to burien him ful faste;
- And whan they holy water on him caste,
- [187: T. 13570-13604.]
- Yet spak this child, whan spreynd was holy water, 1830
- And song--'_O Alma redemptoris mater_!'
- 1825. Hn. Hl. his; _the rest_ this. 1826. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. the masse;
- Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_ the. 1827. Hl. thabbot.
- This abbot, which that was an holy man (190)
- As monkes been, or elles oghten be,
- This yonge child to coniure he bigan,
- And seyde, 'o dere child, I halse thee, 1835
- In vertu of the holy Trinitee,
- Tel me what is thy cause for to singe,
- Sith that thy throte is cut, to my seminge?'
- 'My throte is cut un-to my nekke-boon,'
- Seyde this child, 'and, as by wey of kinde, 1840
- I sholde have deyed, ye, longe tyme agoon,
- But Iesu Crist, as ye in bokes finde, (200)
- Wil that his glorie laste and be in minde,
- And, for the worship of his moder dere,
- Yet may I singe "_O Alma_" loude and clere. 1845
- This welle of mercy, Cristes moder swete,
- I lovede alwey, as after my conninge;
- And whan that I my lyf sholde forlete,
- To me she cam, and bad me for to singe
- This antem verraily in my deyinge, 1850
- As ye han herd, and, whan that I had songe,
- Me thoughte, she leyde a greyn up-on my tonge. (210)
- 1850. Cm. Cp. Pt. anteme; Ln. antime; Hl. antym; Hn. antheme; E.
- Anthephen.
- Wherfor I singe, and singe I moot certeyn
- In honour of that blisful mayden free,
- Til fro my tonge of-taken is the greyn; 1855
- And afterward thus seyde she to me,
- "My litel child, now wol I fecche thee
- Whan that the greyn is fro thy tonge y-take;
- Be nat agast, I wol thee nat forsake."'
- This holy monk, this abbot, him mene I, 1860
- His tonge out-caughte, and took a-wey the greyn,
- And he yaf up the goost ful softely. (220)
- And whan this abbot had this wonder seyn,
- His salte teres trikled doun as reyn,
- [188: T. 13605-13620.]
- And gruf he fil al plat up-on the grounde, 1865
- And stille he lay as he had been y-bounde.
- 1864. E. Hn. Cm. trikled; Cp. Pt. stryked; Ln. strikled; Hl. striken.
- 1866. Cp. Hl. ben; Pt. Ln. bene; E. Hn. Cm. Ieyn.
- The covent eek lay on the pavement
- Weping, and herien Cristes moder dere,
- And after that they ryse, and forth ben went,
- And toke awey this martir fro his bere, 1870
- And in a tombe of marbul-stones clere
- Enclosen they his litel body swete; (230)
- Ther he is now, god leve us for to mete.
- 1869. Hl. thay went; _rest_ been, ben, bene went. 1870. E. tooken;
- Hl. took; _rest_ toke. 1871. E. temple; _rest_ tombe, toumbe. 1873.
- E. alle for; _rest omit_ alle.
- O yonge Hugh of Lincoln, slayn also
- With cursed Iewes, as it is notable, 1875
- For it nis but a litel whyle ago;
- Preye eek for us, we sinful folk unstable,
- That, of his mercy, god so merciable
- On us his grete mercy multiplye, (237)
- For reverence of his moder Marye. Amen. 1880
- HERE IS ENDED THE PRIORESSES TALE.
- 1876. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. nys; E. Hn. Cm. is. COLOPHON. _From_ E.
- [189: T. 13621-13641.]
- * * * * *
- PROLOGUE TO SIR THOPAS.
- * * * * *
- BIHOLD THE MURYE WORDES OF THE HOST TO CHAUCER.
- Whan seyd was al this miracle, every man
- As sobre was, that wonder was to se,
- Til that our hoste Iapen tho bigan,
- And than at erst he loked up-on me,
- And seyde thus, 'what man artow?' quod he; 1885
- 'Thou lokest as thou woldest finde an hare,
- For ever up-on the ground I see thee stare.
- HEADING. _From_ E. E. Bihoold; Hoost. 1883. _Only_ Hl. _inserts_ to
- _before_ Iapen. Cm. Cp. tho; E. to; Hn. he; Pt. Ln. Hl. _omit_.
- Approche neer, and loke up merily.
- Now war yow, sirs, and lat this man have place;
- He in the waast is shape as wel as I; 1890
- This were a popet in an arm tenbrace (11)
- For any womman, smal and fair of face.
- He semeth elvish by his contenaunce,
- For un-to no wight dooth he daliaunce.
- 1888. E. murily; Hl. merily.
- Sey now somwhat, sin other folk han sayd; 1895
- Tel us a tale of mirthe, and that anoon;'--
- 'Hoste,' quod I, 'ne beth nat yvel apayd,
- For other tale certes can I noon,
- But of a ryme I lerned longe agoon.'
- 'Ye, that is good,' quod he; 'now shul we here 1900
- Som deyntee thing, me thinketh by his chere.' (21)
- _Explicit._
- 1897. Cp. Ln. Oste; E. Hn. Cm. Hoost. 1900. E. ye; _rest_ we.
- [190: T. 13642-13665.]
- * * * * *
- SIR THOPAS.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH CHAUCERS TALE OF THOPAS.
- Listeth, lordes, in good entent,
- And I wol telle verrayment
- Of mirthe and of solas;
- Al of a knyght was fair and gent 1905
- In bataille and in tourneyment,
- His name was sir Thopas.
- HEADING. _From_ E. (E. Heere).
- Y-born he was in fer contree,
- In Flaundres, al biyonde the see,
- At Popering, in the place; 1910
- His fader was a man ful free, (10)
- And lord he was of that contree,
- As it was goddes grace.
- Sir Thopas wex a doghty swayn,
- Whyt was his face as payndemayn, 1915
- His lippes rede as rose;
- His rode is lyk scarlet in grayn,
- And I yow telle in good certayn,
- He hadde a semely nose.
- His heer, his berd was lyk saffroun, 1920
- That to his girdel raughte adoun; (20)
- His shoon of Cordewane.
- Of Brugges were his hosen broun,
- His robe was of ciclatoun,
- That coste many a Iane. 1925
- 1922. E. shoos; Hn. Pt. shoon; _rest_ schoon, schon, schone.
- [191: T. 13666-13695.]
- He coude hunte at wilde deer,
- And ryde an hauking for riveer,
- With grey goshauk on honde;
- Ther-to be was a good archeer,
- Of wrastling was ther noon his peer, 1930
- Ther any ram shal stonde. (30)
- 1927. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. for; Cp. by þe; Pt. Ln. for þe. 1931. E. Hn. Cm.
- Hl. shal; Cp. schulde; Pt. shulde; Ln. scholde.
- Ful many a mayde, bright in bour,
- They moorne for him, paramour,
- Whan hem were bet to slepe;
- But he was chast and no lechour, 1935
- And sweet as is the bremble-flour
- That bereth the rede hepe.
- And so bifel up-on a day,
- For sothe, as I yow telle may,
- Sir Thopas wolde out ryde; 1940
- He worth upon his stede gray, (40)
- And in his honde a launcegay,
- A long swerd by his syde.
- 1938. Hn. Hl. it fel; Cm. it fil.
- He priketh thurgh a fair forest,
- Ther-inne is many a wilde best, 1945
- Ye, bothe bukke and hare;
- And, as he priketh north and est,
- I telle it yow, him hadde almest
- Bitid a sory care.
- 1949. Cm. Hl. Bytid; _rest_ Bitidde, Betydde (!).
- Ther springen herbes grete and smale, 1950
- The lycorys and cetewale, (50)
- And many a clowe-gilofre;
- And notemuge to putte in ale,
- Whether it be moyste or stale,
- Or for to leye in cofre. 1955
- [192: T. 13696-13725.]
- The briddes singe, it is no nay,
- The sparhauk and the papeiay,
- That Ioye it was to here;
- The thrustelcok made eek his lay,
- The wodedowve upon the spray 1960
- She sang ful loude and clere. (60)
- 1959. E. hir; _rest_ his. 1960. E. a; _rest_ the.
- Sir Thopas fil in love-longinge
- Al whan he herde the thrustel singe,
- And priked as he were wood:
- His faire stede in his prikinge 1965
- So swatte that men mighte him wringe,
- His sydes were al blood.
- Sir Thopas eek so wery was
- For prikinge on the softe gras,
- So fiers was his corage, 1970
- That doun he leyde him in that plas (70)
- To make his stede som solas,
- And yaf him good forage.
- 'O seinte Marie, _benedicite!_
- What eyleth this love at me 1975
- To binde me so sore?
- Me dremed al this night, pardee,
- An elf-queen shal my lemman be,
- And slepe under my gore.
- An elf-queen wol I love, y-wis, 1980
- For in this world no womman is (80)
- Worthy to be my make [T. 13722
- In toune; [T. 13722
- Alle othere wommen I forsake, [T. 13723
- And to an elf-queen I me take 1985
- By dale and eek by doune!'
- 1980. Hn. Cm. Hl. haue; _rest_ loue.
- [193: T. 13726-13755.]
- In-to his sadel he clamb anoon,
- And priketh over style and stoon
- An elf-queen for tespye,
- Til he so longe had riden and goon 1990
- That he fond, in a privee woon, (90)
- The contree of Fairye [T. 13731
- So wilde; [T. 13734
- For in that contree was ther noon
- That to him dorste ryde or goon, 1995
- Neither wyf ne childe.
- 1989. _So_ E. Hn. Cm.; Cp. Pt. Ln. to aspie; Hl. to spye. 1995. _Not
- in the best_ MSS.; _supplied from_ MS. Reg. 17 D. 15 (Tyrwhitt).
- Til that ther cam a greet geaunt,
- His name was sir Olifaunt,
- A perilous man of dede;
- He seyde, 'child, by Termagaunt, 2000
- But-if thou prike out of myn haunt, (100)
- Anon I slee thy stede [T. 13743
- With mace. [T. 13743
- Heer is the queen of Fayërye,
- With harpe and pype and simphonye 2005
- Dwelling in this place.'
- 2000. Hl. swar; _rest_ seyde. 2004. Cp. Hl. fayerye; E. Hn. Cm.
- Fairye. 2005. Hl. lute; _rest_ pype _or_ pipe.
- The child seyde, 'al-so mote I thee,
- Tomorwe wol I mete thee
- Whan I have myn armoure;
- And yet I hope, _par ma fay_, 2010
- That thou shalt with this launcegay (110)
- Abyen it ful soure; [T. 13752
- Thy mawe [T. 13752
- Shal I percen, if I may,
- Er it be fully pryme of day, 2015
- For heer thou shalt be slawe.'
- 2008. E. Hl. meete with; _rest omit_ with. 2012. E. Hn. sowre; Cm.
- soure; _rest_ sore. 2014. E. Cm. Thyn hauberk shal I percen, if I
- may; _but the rest rightly omit_ Thyn hauberk.
- [194: T. 13756-13785.]
- Sir Thopas drow abak ful faste;
- This geaunt at him stones caste
- Out of a fel staf-slinge;
- But faire escapeth child Thopas, 2020
- And al it was thurgh goddes gras, (120)
- And thurgh his fair beringe.
- 2020. E. Cm. sire; _rest_ child.
- Yet listeth, lordes, to my tale
- Merier than the nightingale,
- For now I wol yow roune 2025
- How sir Thopas with sydes smale,
- Priking over hil and dale,
- Is come agayn to toune.
- 2025. Cp. Pt. Ln. _insert_ For now, _which the rest omit_. 2027. hil]
- Hl. hul; Cp. Pt. Ln. downe. 2028. E. Cm. comen.
- His merie men comanded he
- To make him bothe game and glee, 2030
- For nedes moste he fighte (130)
- With a geaunt with hevedes three,
- For paramour and Iolitee
- Of oon that shoon ful brighte.
- 2032. E. Hn. heuedes; Hl. heedes; Cm. hedis; Cp. Pt. Ln. hedes.
- 'Do come,' he seyde, 'my minstrales, 2035
- And gestours, for to tellen tales
- Anon in myn arminge;
- Of romances that been royales,
- Of popes and of cardinales,
- And eek of love-lykinge.' 2040
- 2038. Hn. Pt. Hl. reales.
- They fette him first the swete wyn, (140)
- And mede eek in a maselyn,
- And royal spicerye;
- Of gingebreed that was ful fyn,
- And lycorys, and eek comyn, 2045
- With sugre that is so trye.
- 2041. E. sette; _rest_ fette _or_ fet. E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ the. 2044.
- E. And; Hn. Cm. Hl. Of. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_ ll. 2042-4. 2046. E.
- _alone retains_ so.
- [195: T. 13786-13818.]
- He dide next his whyte lere
- Of clooth of lake fyn and clere
- A breech and eek a sherte;
- And next his sherte an aketoun, 2050
- And over that an habergeoun (150)
- For percinge of his herte;
- And over that a fyn hauberk,
- Was al y-wroght of Iewes werk,
- Ful strong it was of plate; 2055
- And over that his cote-armour
- As whyt as is a lily-flour,
- In which he wol debate.
- 2058. Cm. wolde; Hl. wold; _rest_ wol, wole, wil.
- His sheeld was al of gold so reed,
- And ther-in was a bores heed, 2060
- A charbocle bisyde; (160)
- And there he swoor, on ale and breed,
- How that 'the geaunt shal be deed,
- Bityde what bityde!'
- 2061. Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. by his syde; Cp. him besyde. 2063. Cm. Cp. Ln.
- schulde.
- His Iambeux were of quirboilly, 2065
- His swerdes shethe of yvory,
- His helm of laton bright;
- His sadel was of rewel-boon,
- His brydel as the sonne shoon,
- Or as the mone light. 2070
- 2068. Pt. Hl. rowel; Cp. Ln. ruel.
- His spere was of fyn ciprees, (170)
- That bodeth werre, and no-thing pees,
- The heed ful sharpe y-grounde;
- His stede was al dappel-gray,
- It gooth an ambel in the way 2075
- Ful softely and rounde [T. 13815
- In londe. [T. 13815
- Lo, lordes myne, heer is a fit!
- If ye wol any more of it,
- To telle it wol I fonde. 2080
- 2071. E. it was; _rest omit_ it.
- [196: T. 13819-13846.]
- [_The Second Fit_.]
- Now hold your mouth, _par charitee_, (180)
- Bothe knight and lady free,
- And herkneth to my spelle;
- Of bataille and of chivalry,
- And of ladyes love-drury 2085
- Anon I wol yow telle.
- 2084. E. batailles; Hn. bataille; _rest_ bataile, batail, batell.
- Men speke of romances of prys,
- Of Horn child and of Ypotys,
- Of Bevis and sir Gy,
- Of sir Libeux and Pleyn-damour; 2090
- But sir Thopas, he bereth the flour (190)
- Of royal chivalry.
- 2089. E. Pt. and of; _rest omit_ of.
- His gode stede al he bistrood,
- And forth upon his wey he glood
- As sparkle out of the bronde; 2095
- Up-on his crest he bar a tour,
- And ther-in stiked a lily-flour,
- God shilde his cors fro shonde!
- 2094. E. rood; _rest_ glood, glod, glode. 2095. Hl. Pt. spark; Cp.
- Ln. sparcles.
- And for he was a knight auntrous,
- He nolde slepen in non hous, 2100
- But liggen in his hode; (200)
- His brighte helm was his wonger,
- And by him baiteth his dextrer
- Of herbes fyne and gode.
- Him-self drank water of the wel, 2105
- As did the knight sir Percivel,
- So worthy under wede,
- Til on a day---- (207)
- HERE THE HOST STINTETH CHAUCER OF HIS TALE OF THOPAS.
- 2107. Hl. worthy; E. Hn. worly; Pt. worthely; Cm. Cp. Ln. _omit_ ll.
- 2105-8. COLOPHON. _From_ E. (E. Heere; Hoost).
- [197: T. 13847-13875.]
- * * * * *
- PROLOGUE TO MELIBEUS.
- * * * * *
- 'No more of this, for goddes dignitee,'
- Quod oure hoste, 'for thou makest me 2110
- So wery of thy verray lewednesse
- That, also wisly god my soule blesse,
- Myn eres aken of thy drasty speche;
- Now swiche a rym the devel I biteche!
- This may wel be rym dogerel,' quod he. 2115
- 'Why so?' quod I, 'why wiltow lette me
- More of my tale than another man,
- Sin that it is the beste rym I can?' (10)
- 2118. E. tale; _rest_ rym, ryme.
- 'By god,' quod he, 'for pleynly, at a word,
- Thy drasty ryming is nat worth a tord; 2120
- Thou doost nought elles but despendest tyme,
- Sir, at o word, thou shall no lenger ryme.
- Lat see wher thou canst tellen aught in geste,
- Or telle in prose somwhat at the leste
- In which ther be som mirthe or som doctryne.' 2125
- 'Gladly,' quod I, 'by goddes swete pyne,
- I wol yow telle a litel thing in prose,
- That oghte lyken yow, as I suppose, (20)
- Or elles, certes, ye been to daungerous.
- It is a moral tale vertuous, 2130
- Al be it told som-tyme in sondry wyse
- Of sondry folk, as I shal yow devyse.
- As thus; ye woot that every evangelist,
- That telleth us the peyne of Iesu Crist,
- Ne saith nat al thing as his felaw dooth, 2135
- But natheles, hir sentence is al sooth,
- And alle acorden as in hir sentence,
- [198: T. 13876-13894.]
- Al be ther in hir telling difference. (30)
- For somme of hem seyn more, and somme lesse,
- Whan they his pitous passioun expresse; 2140
- I mene of Marke, Mathew, Luk and Iohn;
- But doutelees hir sentence is al oon.
- Therfor, lordinges alle, I yow biseche,
- If that ye thinke I varie as in my speche,
- As thus, thogh that I telle som-what more 2145
- Of proverbes, than ye han herd bifore,
- Comprehended in this litel tretis here,
- To enforce with the theffect of my matere, (40)
- And thogh I nat the same wordes seye
- As ye han herd, yet to yow alle I preye, 2150
- Blameth me nat; for, as in my sentence,
- Ye shul not fynden moche difference
- Fro the sentence of this tretis lyte
- After the which this mery tale I wryte.
- And therfor herkneth what that I shal seye, 2155
- And lat me tellen al my tale, I preye.' (48)
- _Explicit_.
- 2131. E. take; _rest_ told, tolde, toold. 2139. E. Hn. Ln. somme
- seyn; _but_ Cp. Pt. Hl. _omit 2nd_ seyn. 2141. Ed. 1561, Marke; E.
- Cp. Pt. Hl. Marke (?); Hn. Ln. Mark. 2144. E. Hl. yow; _rest_ ye.
- Cp. Ln. _om._ as. 2146. Cp. prouerbis. 2152. Cm. Cp. Ln. Ye schal
- not fynden moche; E. Hn. Pt. Hl. Shul ye nowher fynden. 2154. E.
- murye; Hn. myry; Hl. litil; _rest_ mery.
- [199]
- * * * * *
- THE TALE OF MELIBEUS.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH CHAUCERS TALE OF MELIBEE.
- § 1. A yong man called Melibeus, mighty and riche, bigat up-on his wyf that
- called was Prudence, a doghter which that called was Sophie. /
- HEADING. _From_ E.
- § 2. Upon a day bifel, that he for his desport is went in-to the feeldes
- him to pleye. / His wyf and eek his doghter hath he left inwith his hous,
- of which the dores weren fast y-shette. / Thre of his olde foos han it
- espyed, and setten laddres to the walles of his hous, and by the windowes
- been entred, /2160 and betten his wyf, and wounded his doghter with fyve
- mortal woundes in fyve sondry places; / this is to seyn, in hir feet, in
- hir handes, in hir eres, in hir nose, and in hir mouth; and leften hir for
- deed, and wenten awey. /
- 2159. inwith] Ln. Cp. within. 2160. Thre] Cp. Ln. Foure. E. hise.
- E. foes; Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. foos. by the] E. Hn. _om._ the. 2162. E.
- erys.
- § 3. Whan Melibeus retourned was in-to his hous, and saugh al this
- meschief, he, lyk a mad man, rendinge his clothes, gan to wepe and crye. /
- 2163. E. Hn. Ln. rentynge; _rest_ rendyng.
- § 4. Prudence his wyf, as ferforth as she dorste, bisoghte him of his
- weping for to stinte; / but nat for-thy he gan to crye and wepen ever
- lenger the more. /2165
- § 5. This noble wyf Prudence remembered hir upon the sentence of Ovide, in
- his book that cleped is The Remedie of Love, wher-as he seith; / 'he is a
- fool that destourbeth the moder to wepen in the deeth of hir child, til she
- have wept hir fille, as for a certain tyme; / and thanne shal man doon his
- diligence with amiable wordes hir to reconforte, and preyen hir of hir
- weping for to stinte.' / For which resoun this noble wyf Prudence suffred
- hir housbond for to wepe and crye as for a certein space; / and whan she
- saugh hir tyme, she seyde him in this wyse. 'Allas, my lord,' quod she,'
- why make ye your-self for to be lyk a fool? /2170 For [200] sothe, it
- aperteneth nat to a wys man, to maken swiche a sorwe. / Your doghter, with
- the grace of god, shal warisshe and escape. / And al were it so that she
- right now were deed, ye ne oghte nat as for hir deeth your-self to
- destroye. / Senek seith: "the wise man shal nat take to greet disconfort
- for the deeth of his children, / but certes he sholde suffren it in
- pacience, as wel as he abydeth the deeth of his owene propre persone."'
- /2175
- 2172. Cp. Ln. be warisshed; Hl. warischt be. 2173. _Only_ E. Cp. Ln.
- _insert_ to _before_ destroye.
- § 6. This Melibeus answerde anon and seyde, 'What man,' quod he, 'sholde of
- his weping stinte, that hath so greet a cause for to wepe? / Iesu Crist,
- our lord, him-self wepte for the deeth of Lazarus his freend.' / Prudence
- answerde, 'Certes, wel I woot, attempree weping is no-thing defended to him
- that sorweful is, amonges folk in sorwe, but it is rather graunted him to
- wepe. / The Apostle Paul un-to the Romayns wryteth, "man shal reioyse with
- hem that maken Ioye, and wepen with swich folk as wepen." / But thogh
- attempree weping be y-graunted, outrageous weping certes is defended. /2180
- Mesure of weping sholde be considered, after the lore that techeth us
- Senek. / "Whan that thy freend is deed," quod he, "lat nat thyne eyen to
- moyste been of teres, ne to muche drye; althogh the teres come to thyne
- eyen, lat hem nat falle." / And whan thou hast for-goon thy freend, do
- diligence to gete another freend; and this is more wysdom than for to wepe
- for thy freend which that thou hast lorn; for ther-inne is no bote. / And
- therfore, if ye governe yow by sapience, put awey sorwe out of your herte.
- / Remembre yow that Iesus Syrak seith: "a man that is Ioyous and glad in
- herte, it him conserveth florisshing in his age; but soothly sorweful herte
- maketh his bones drye." /2185 He seith eek thus: "that sorwe in herte
- sleeth ful many a man." / Salomon seith: "that, right as motthes in the
- shepes flees anoyeth to the clothes, and the smale wormes to the tree,
- right so anoyeth sorwe to the herte." / Wherfore us oghte, as wel in the
- deeth of our children as in the losse of our goodes temporels, have
- pacience. /
- 2176. E. Pt. stente. 2178, 2180. E. deffended. 2182. E. teeris.
- 2185. E. florissynge. 2187. E. Hl. Motthes; Pt. Cm. mothes; Hn.
- moththes; Cp. moughtes. 2188. E. othere (_for_ our _before_ goodes);
- _rest_ oure, our.
- § 7. Remembre yow up-on the pacient Iob, whan he hadde lost his children
- and his temporel substance, and in his body [201] endured and receyved ful
- many a grevous tribulacioun; yet seyde he thus: / "our lord hath yeven it
- me, our lord hath biraft it me; right as our lord hath wold, right so it is
- doon; blessed be the name of our lord."' /2190 To thise foreseide thinges
- answerde Melibeus un-to his wyf Prudence: 'Alle thy wordes,' quod he, 'been
- sothe, and ther-to profitable; but trewely myn herte is troubled with this
- sorwe so grevously, that I noot what to done.' / 'Lat calle,' quod
- Prudence, 'thy trewe freendes alle, and thy linage whiche that been wyse;
- telleth your cas, and herkneth what they seye in conseiling, and yow
- governe after hir sentence. / Salomon seith: "werk alle thy thinges by
- conseil, and thou shalt never repente."' /
- 2189. E. temporeel. 2190. Cp. haþ [gh]oue [_read_ yeuen] it me; Ln.
- yaue it me; Hl. it sent vnto me; _rest omit_; _only_ Cp. Ln. Hl.
- _repeat_ our lord. 2191. E. therwith; _rest_ ther-to.
- § 8. Thanne, by the conseil of his wyf Prudence, this Melibeus leet callen
- a greet congregacioun of folk; / as surgiens, phisiciens, olde folk and
- yonge, and somme of hise olde enemys reconsiled as by hir semblaunt to his
- love and in-to his grace; /2195 and ther-with-al ther comen somme of hise
- neighebores that diden him reverence more for drede than for love, as it
- happeth ofte. / Ther comen also ful many subtile flatereres, and wyse
- advocats lerned in the lawe. /
- 2196, 7. E. coomen.
- § 9. And whan this folk togidre assembled weren, this Melibeus in sorweful
- wyse shewed hem his cas; / and by the manere of his speche it semed that in
- herte he bar a cruel ire, redy to doon vengeaunce up-on hise foos, and
- sodeynly desired that the werre sholde biginne; / but nathelees yet axed he
- hir conseil upon this matere. /2200 A surgien, by licence and assent of
- swiche as weren wyse, up roos and un-to Melibeus seyde as ye may here. /
- 2199. E. _only ins._ wel _after_ semed. E. baar a crueel; foes.
- 2200. E. Cm. matiere; Hl. matier. 2201. E. Hl. to (_for_ un-to).
- § 10. 'Sir,' quod he, 'as to us surgiens aperteneth, that we do to every
- wight the beste that we can, wher-as we been with-holde, and to our
- pacients that we do no damage; / wherfore it happeth, many tyme and ofte,
- that whan twey men han everich wounded other, oon same surgien heleth hem
- bothe; / wherefore un-to our art it is nat pertinent to norice werre, ne
- parties to supporte. / But certes, as to the warisshinge of your doghter,
- al-be-it so that she perilously be wounded, we shullen do so ententif
- bisinesse fro day to night, that with the grace of god she shal be hool and
- [202] sound as sone as is possible.' /2205 Almost right in the same wyse
- the phisiciens answerden, save that they seyden a fewe wordes more: /
- 'That, right as maladyes been cured by hir contraries, right so shul men
- warisshe werre by vengeaunce.' / His neighebores, ful of envye, his feyned
- freendes that semeden reconsiled, and his flatereres, / maden semblant of
- weping, and empeireden and agreggeden muchel of this matere, in preising
- greetly Melibee of might, of power, of richesse, and of freendes,
- despysinge the power of his adversaries, / and seiden outrely that he anon
- sholde wreken him on his foos and biginne werre. /2210
- 2209. E. matiere. 2210. E. foes.
- § 11. Up roos thanne an advocat that was wys, by leve and by conseil of
- othere that were wyse, and seyde: / 'Lordinges, the nede for which we been
- assembled in this place is a ful hevy thing and an heigh matere, / by-cause
- of the wrong and of the wikkednesse that hath be doon, and eek by resoun of
- the grete damages that in tyme cominge been possible to fallen for this
- same cause; / and eek by resoun of the grete richesse and power of the
- parties bothe; / for the whiche resouns it were a ful greet peril to erren
- in this matere. /2215 Wherfore, Melibeus, this is our sentence: we
- conseille yow aboven alle thing, that right anon thou do thy diligence in
- kepinge of thy propre persone, in swich a wyse that thou ne wante noon
- espye ne wacche, thy body for to save. / And after that we conseille, that
- in thyn hous thou sette suffisant garnisoun, so that they may as wel thy
- body as thyn hous defende. / But certes, for to moeve werre, or sodeynly
- for to doon vengeaunce, we may nat demen in so litel tyme that it were
- profitable. / Wherfore we axen leyser and espace to have deliberacioun in
- this cas to deme. / For the commune proverbe seith thus: "he that sone
- demeth, sone shal repente." /2220 And eek men seyn that thilke Iuge is wys,
- that sone understondeth a matere and Iuggeth by leyser. / For al-be-it so
- that alle tarying be anoyful, algates it is nat to repreve in yevynge of
- Iugement, ne in vengeance-taking, whan it is suffisant and resonable. / And
- that shewed our lord Iesu Crist by ensample; for whan that the womman that
- was taken in avoutrie was broght in his presence, to knowen what sholde be
- doon with hir persone, al-be-it so that he wiste wel him-self what that he
- [203] wolde answere, yet ne wolde he nat answere sodeynly, but he wolde
- have deliberacioun, and in the ground he wroot twyes. / And by thise causes
- we axen deliberacioun, and we shal thanne, by the grace of god, conseille
- thee thing that shal be profitable.' /
- 2212, 2215. E. matiere. 2216. E. _om. 1st._ ne. E. p_er_sone (_for_
- body). 2217. E. sufficeant; Cp. suffisaunt; Hn. Pt. suffisant.
- 2218. or] _so_ E. Pt; _rest_ ne. 2221. E. matiere. 2222. E.
- sufficeant; Cp. Pt. suffisaunt; Hn. Ln. suffisant. 2223. Cm. Pt. Hl.
- of (_for_ with).
- § 12. Up stirten thanne the yonge folk at-ones, and the moste partie of
- that companye han scorned the olde wyse men, and bigonnen to make noyse,
- and seyden: that, /2225 right so as whyl that iren is hoot, men sholden
- smyte, right so, men sholde wreken hir wronges whyle that they been fresshe
- and newe; and with loud voys they cryden, 'werre! werre!' /
- 2225. E. _om._ han.
- Up roos tho oon of thise olde wyse, and with his hand made contenaunce that
- men sholde holden hem stille and yeven him audience. / 'Lordinges,' quod
- he, 'ther is ful many a man that cryeth "werre! werre!" that woot ful litel
- what werre amounteth. / Werre at his biginning hath so greet an entree and
- so large, that every wight may entre whan him lyketh, and lightly finde
- werre. / But, certes, what ende that shal ther-of bifalle, it is nat light
- to knowe. /2230 For sothly, whan that werre is ones bigonne, ther is ful
- many a child unborn of his moder, that shal sterve yong by-cause of that
- ilke werre, or elles live in sorwe and dye in wrecchednesse. / And
- ther-fore, er that any werre biginne, men moste have greet conseil and
- greet deliberacioun.' / And whan this olde man wende to enforcen his tale
- by resons, wel ny alle at-ones bigonne they to ryse for to breken his tale,
- and beden him ful ofte his wordes for to abregge. / For soothly, he that
- precheth to hem that listen nat heren his wordes, his sermon hem anoyeth. /
- For Iesus Syrak seith: that "musik in wepinge is anoyous thing;" this is to
- seyn: as muche availleth to speken bifore folk to whiche his speche
- anoyeth, as dooth to singe biforn him that wepeth. /2235 And whan this wyse
- man saugh that him wanted audience, al shamefast he sette him doun agayn. /
- For Salomon seith: "ther-as thou ne mayst have noon audience, enforce thee
- nat to speke." / 'I see wel,' quod this wyse man, 'that the commune
- proverbe is sooth; that "good conseil wanteth whan it is most nede."' /
- 2229. Hn. entree; Cm. Pt. Hl. entre; E. Cp. Ln. entryng. 2235. Hn.
- Cm. Hl. a noyous; E. anoyous; Cp. annoyous; Pt. noyous. Cm. doth;
- _rest_ it is (_badly_). 2236. E. _om._ whan. E. and al (_for_ al).
- 2238. E. _om._ nede.
- § 13. Yet hadde this Melibeus in his conseil many folk, that [204] prively
- in his ere conseilled him certeyn thing, and conseilled him the contrarie
- in general audience. /
- Whan Melibeus hadde herd that the gretteste partie of his conseil weren
- accorded that he sholde maken werre, anoon he consented to hir conseilling,
- and fully affermed hir sentence. /2240 Thanne dame Prudence, whan that she
- saugh how that hir housbonde shoop him for to wreken him on his foos, and
- to biginne werre, she in ful humble wyse, when she saugh hir tyme, seide
- him thise wordes: / 'My lord,' quod she, 'I yow biseche as hertely as I dar
- and can, ne haste yow nat to faste, and for alle guerdons as yeveth me
- audience. / For Piers Alfonce seith: "who-so that dooth to that other good
- or harm, haste thee nat to quyten it; for in this wyse thy freend wol
- abyde, and thyn enemy shal the lenger live in drede." / The proverbe seith:
- "he hasteth wel that wysely can abyde;" and in wikked haste is no profit.'
- /
- 2241. E. foes; to him (_rest om._ to). 2242. Pt. guerdons; Cp. Ln.
- Hl. guerdouns; E. Hn. gerdons.
- § 14. This Melibee answerde un-to his wyf Prudence: 'I purpose nat,' quod
- he, 'to werke by thy conseil, for many causes and resouns. For certes every
- wight wolde holde me thanne a fool; /2245 this is to seyn, if I, for thy
- conseilling, wolde chaungen thinges that been ordeyned and affermed by so
- manye wyse. / Secoundly I seye, that alle wommen been wikke and noon good
- of hem alle. For "of a thousand men," seith Salomon, "I fond a good man:
- but certes, of alle wommen, good womman fond I never." / And also certes,
- if I governed me by thy conseil, it sholde seme that I hadde yeve to thee
- over me the maistrie; and god forbede that it so were. / For Iesus Syrak
- seith; "that if the wyf have maistrie, she is contrarious to hir
- housbonde." / And Salomon seith: "never in thy lyf, to thy wyf, ne to thy
- child, ne to thy freend, ne yeve no power over thy-self. For bettre it were
- that thy children aske of thy persone thinges that hem nedeth, than thou
- see thy-self in the handes of thy children." /2250 And also, if I wolde
- werke by thy conseilling, certes my conseilling moste som tyme be secree,
- til it were tyme that it moste be knowe; and this ne may noght be. / [For
- it is writen, that "the Ianglerie of wommen can hyden thinges that they
- witen noght." / [205] Furthermore, the philosophre seith, "in wikked
- conseil wommen venquisshe men;" and for thise resouns I ne owe nat usen thy
- conseil.'] /
- 2247. E. Hn. foond; Cm. fond. 2248. E. weere. 2250. see] E. be; Pt.
- sese. 2251. E. _om._ also. 2252, 3. _Not in the_ MSS., _but
- necessary; see_ ll. 2274, 2280, _and see_ Note.
- § 15. Whanne dame Prudence, ful debonairly and with greet pacience, hadde
- herd al that hir housbonde lyked for to seye, thanne axed she of him
- licence for to speke, and seyde in this wyse. / 'My lord,' quod she, 'as to
- your firste resoun, certes it may lightly been answered. For I seye, that
- it is no folie to chaunge conseil whan the thing is chaunged; or elles whan
- the thing semeth otherweyes than it was biforn. /2255 And more-over I seye,
- that though ye han sworn and bihight to perfourne your emprise, and
- nathelees ye weyve to perfourne thilke same emprise by Iuste cause, men
- sholde nat seyn therefore that ye were a lyer ne forsworn. / For the book
- seith, that "the wyse man maketh no lesing whan he turneth his corage to
- the bettre." / And al-be-it so that your emprise be establissed and
- ordeyned by greet multitude of folk, yet thar ye nat accomplice thilke same
- ordinaunce but yow lyke. / For the trouthe of thinges and the profit been
- rather founden in fewe folk that been wyse and ful of resoun, than by greet
- multitude of folk, ther every man cryeth and clatereth what that him
- lyketh. Soothly swich multitude is nat honeste. / As to the seconde resoun,
- where-as ye seyn that "alle wommen been wikke," save your grace, certes ye
- despysen alle wommen in this wyse; and "he that alle despyseth alle
- displeseth," as seith the book. /2260 And Senek seith that "who-so wole
- have sapience, shal no man dispreise; but he shal gladly techen the science
- that he can, with-outen presumpcioun or pryde. / And swiche thinges as he
- nought ne can, he shal nat been ashamed to lerne hem and enquere of lasse
- folk than him-self." / And sir, that ther hath been many a good womman, may
- lightly be preved. / For certes, sir, our lord Iesu Crist wolde never have
- descended to be born of a womman, if alle wommen hadden ben wikke. / And
- after that, for the grete bountee that is in wommen, our lord Iesu Crist,
- whan he was risen fro deeth to lyve, appeered rather to a womman than to
- his apostles. /2265 And though that Salomon seith, that "he ne fond never
- womman good," it folweth nat therfore that alle wommen ben wikke. / For
- though that he ne fond no good [206] womman, certes, ful many another man
- hath founden many a womman ful good and trewe. / Or elles per-aventure the
- entente of Salomon was this; that, as in sovereyn bountee, he fond no
- womman; / this is to seyn, that ther is no wight that hath sovereyn bountee
- save god allone; as he him-self recordeth in his Evaungelie. / For ther nis
- no creature so good that him ne wanteth somwhat of the perfeccioun of god,
- that is his maker. /2270 Your thridde resoun is this: ye seyn that "if ye
- governe yow by my conseil, it sholde seme that ye hadde yeve me the
- maistrie and the lordshipe over your persone." / Sir, save your grace, it
- is nat so. For if it were so, that no man sholde be conseilled but only of
- hem that hadden lordshipe and maistrie of his persone, men wolden nat be
- conseilled so ofte. / For soothly, thilke man that asketh conseil of a
- purpos, yet hath he free chois, wheither he wole werke by that conseil or
- noon. / And as to your fourthe resoun, ther ye seyn that "the Ianglerie of
- wommen hath hid thinges that they woot noght," as who seith, that "a womman
- can nat hyde that she woot;" / sir, thise wordes been understonde of wommen
- that been Iangleresses and wikked; /2275 of whiche wommen, men seyn that
- "three thinges dryven a man out of his hous; that is to seyn, smoke,
- dropping of reyn, and wikked wyves;" / and of swiche wommen seith Salomon,
- that "it were bettre dwelle in desert, than with a womman that is riotous."
- / And sir, by your leve, that am nat I; / for ye han ful ofte assayed my
- grete silence and my gret pacience; and eek how wel that I can hyde and
- hele thinges that men oghte secreely to hyde. / And soothly, as to your
- fifthe resoun, wher-as ye seyn, that "in wikked conseil wommen venquisshe
- men;" god woot, thilke resoun stant here in no stede. /2280 For understand
- now, ye asken conseil to do wikkednesse; / and if ye wole werken
- wikkednesse, and your wyf restreyneth thilke wikked purpos, and overcometh
- yow by resoun and by good conseil; / certes, your wyf oghte rather to be
- preised than y-blamed. / Thus sholde ye understonde the philosophre that
- seith, "in wikked conseil wommen venquisshen hir housbondes." / And ther-as
- ye blamen alle wommen and hir resouns, I shal shewe yow by manye ensamples
- that many a womman hath ben ful good, and yet been; and hir conseils ful
- hoolsome and profitable. /2285 Eek som men han seyd, that "the [207]
- conseillinge of wommen is outher to dere, or elles to litel of prys." / But
- al-be-it so, that ful many a womman is badde, and hir conseil vile and
- noght worth, yet han men founde ful many a good womman, and ful discrete
- and wise in conseillinge. / Lo, Iacob, by good conseil of his moder
- Rebekka, wan the benisoun of Ysaak his fader, and the lordshipe over alle
- his bretheren. / Iudith, by hir good conseil, delivered the citee of
- Bethulie, in which she dwelled, out of the handes of Olofernus, that hadde
- it biseged and wolde have al destroyed it. / Abigail delivered Nabal hir
- housbonde fro David the king, that wolde have slayn him, and apaysed the
- ire of the king by hir wit and by hir good conseilling. /2290 Hester by hir
- good conseil enhaunced greetly the peple of god in the regne of Assuerus
- the king. / And the same bountee in good conseilling of many a good womman
- may men telle. / And moreover, whan our lord hadde creat Adam our
- forme-fader, he seyde in this wyse: / "it is nat good to been a man allone;
- make we to him an help semblable to himself." / Here may ye se that, if
- that wommen were nat goode, and hir conseils goode and profitable, /2295
- our lord god of hevene wolde never han wroght hem, ne called hem help of
- man, but rather confusioun of man. / And ther seyde ones a clerk in two
- vers: "what is bettre than gold? Iaspre. What is bettre than Iaspre?
- Wisdom. / And what is bettre than wisdom? Womman. And what is bettre than a
- good womman? No-thing." / And sir, by manye of othre resons may ye seen,
- that manye wommen been goode, and hir conseils goode and profitable. / And
- therfore sir, if ye wol triste to my conseil, I shal restore yow your
- doghter hool and sound. /2300 And eek I wol do to yow so muche, that ye
- shul have honour in this cause.' /
- 2258. E. Cp. Ln. _om._ same. 2260. E. (_only_) _om._ and he that _to_
- book. 2261. E. Ln. despise; _rest_ dispreise. 2266, 7. E. Hn.
- foond; Cm. fond. 2271. E. _om._ that. 2274. E. wiste noght. 2277.
- E. Cp. Pt. _om._ of. 2291. E. (_only_) _puts_ by ... conseil after
- greetly. 2297, 8. E. wisedom.
- § 16. Whan Melibee hadde herd the wordes of his wyf Prudence, he seyde
- thus: / 'I se wel that the word of Salomon is sooth; he seith, that "wordes
- that been spoken discreetly by ordinaunce, been honycombes; for they yeven
- swetnesse to the soule, and hoolsomnesse to the body." / And wyf, by-cause
- of thy swete wordes, and eek for I have assayed and preved thy grete
- sapience and thy grete trouthe, I wol governe me by thy conseil in alle
- thing.' /
- § 17. 'Now sir,' quod dame Prudence, 'and sin ye vouche-sauf [208] to been
- governed by my conseil, I wol enforme yow how ye shul governe your-self in
- chesinge of your conseillours. /2305 Ye shul first, in alle your werkes,
- mekely biseken to the heighe god that he wol be your conseillour; / and
- shapeth yow to swich entente, that he yeve yow conseil and confort, as
- taughte Thobie his sone. / "At alle tymes thou shalt blesse god, and praye
- him to dresse thy weyes"; and looke that alle thy conseils been in him for
- evermore. / Seint Iame eek seith: "if any of yow have nede of sapience, axe
- it of god." / And afterward thanne shul ye taken conseil in your-self, and
- examine wel your thoghtes, of swich thing as yow thinketh that is best for
- your profit. /2310 And thanne shul ye dryve fro your herte three thinges
- that been contrariouse to good conseil, / that is to seyn, ire, coveitise,
- and hastifnesse. /
- 2310. in] E. of. E. _om._ self.
- § 18. First, he that axeth conseil of him-self, certes he moste been
- with-outen ire, for manye causes. / The firste is this: he that hath greet
- ire and wratthe in him-self, he weneth alwey that he may do thing that he
- may nat do. / And secoundely, he that is irous and wroth, he ne may nat wel
- deme; /2315 and he that may nat wel deme, may nat wel conseille. / The
- thridde is this; that "he that is irous and wrooth," as seith Senek, "ne
- may nat speke but he blame thinges;" / and with his viciouse wordes he
- stireth other folk to angre and to ire. / And eek sir, ye moste dryve
- coveitise out of your herte. / For the apostle seith, that "coveitise is
- rote of alle harmes." /2320 And trust wel that a coveitous man ne can noght
- deme ne thinke, but only to fulfille the ende of his coveitise; / and
- certes, that ne may never been accompliced; for ever the more habundaunce
- that he hath of richesse, the more he desyreth. / And sir, ye moste also
- dryve out of your herte hastifnesse; for certes, / ye ne may nat deme for
- the beste a sodeyn thought that falleth in youre herte, but ye moste avyse
- yow on it ful ofte. / For as ye herde biforn, the commune proverbe is this,
- that "he that sone demeth, sone repenteth." /2325
- § 19. Sir, ye ne be nat alwey in lyke disposicioun; / for certes, som thing
- that somtyme semeth to yow that it is good for to do, another tyme it
- semeth to yow the contrarie. /
- § 20. Whan ye han taken conseil in your-self, and han demed by good
- deliberacion swich thing as you semeth best, / thanne rede I yow, that ye
- kepe it secree. / Biwrey nat your conseil to no persone, [209] but-if so be
- that ye wenen sikerly that, thurgh your biwreying, your condicioun shal be
- to yow the more profitable. /2330 For Iesus Syrak seith: "neither to thy
- foo ne to thy freend discovere nat thy secree ne thy folie; / for they wol
- yeve yow audience and loking and supportacioun in thy presence, and scorne
- thee in thyn absence." / Another clerk seith, that "scarsly shaltou finden
- any persone that may kepe conseil secreely." / The book seith: "whyl that
- thou kepest thy conseil in thyn herte, thou kepest it in thy prisoun: / and
- whan thou biwreyest thy conseil to any wight, he holdeth thee in his
- snare." /2335 And therefore yow is bettre to hyde your conseil in your
- herte, than praye him, to whom ye han biwreyed your conseil, that he wole
- kepen it cloos and stille. / For Seneca seith: "if so be that thou ne mayst
- nat thyn owene conseil hyde, how darstou prayen any other wight thy conseil
- secreely to kepe?" / But nathelees, if thou wene sikerly that the biwreying
- of thy conseil to a persone wol make thy condicioun to stonden in the
- bettre plyt, thanne shaltou tellen him thy conseil in this wyse. / First,
- thou shalt make no semblant whether thee were lever pees or werre, or this
- or that, ne shewe him nat thy wille and thyn entente; / for trust wel, that
- comunly thise conseillours been flatereres, /2340 namely the conseillours
- of grete lordes; / for they enforcen hem alwey rather to speken plesante
- wordes, enclyninge to the lordes lust, than wordes that been trewe or
- profitable. / And therfore men seyn, that "the riche man hath seld good
- conseil but-if he have it of him-self." / And after that, thou shalt
- considere thy freendes and thyne enemys. / And as touchinge thy freendes,
- thou shalt considere whiche of hem been most feithful and most wyse, and
- eldest and most approved in conseilling. /2345 And of hem shalt thou aske
- thy conseil, as the caas requireth. /
- 2328. in] E. of; Ln. vnto. semeth] E. list. 2332. E. to (_after_
- loking); _rest_ and. 2333, 7. E. sikerly; _rest_ secreely. 2336. E.
- hem; _rest_ him. 2339. E. wheither. 2340. E. co_m_e_n_li. 2343.
- E. seeld. 2345. E. wiche. been] E. Hn. that been.
- § 21. I seye that first ye shul clepe to your conseil your freendes that
- been trewe. / For Salomon seith: that "right as the herte of a man delyteth
- in savour that is sote, right so the conseil of trewe freendes yeveth
- swetenesse to the soule." / He seith also: "ther may no-thing be lykned to
- the trewe freend." / For certes, gold ne silver beth nat so muche worth as
- the gode wil of a trewe freend. /2350 And eek he seith, that "a trewe
- freend is a strong deffense; who-so that it findeth, certes he findeth a
- greet tresour." / Thanne [210] shul ye eek considere, if that your trewe
- freendes been discrete and wyse. For the book seith: "axe alwey thy conseil
- of hem that been wyse." / And by this same resoun shul ye clepen to your
- conseil, of your freendes that been of age, swiche as han seyn and been
- expert in manye thinges, and been approved in conseillinges. / For the book
- seith, that "in olde men is the sapience and in longe tyme the prudence." /
- And Tullius seith: that "grete thinges ne been nat ay accompliced by
- strengthe, ne by delivernesse of body, but by good conseil, by auctoritee
- of persones, and by science; the whiche three thinges ne been nat feble by
- age, but certes they enforcen and encreesen day by day." /2355 And thanne
- shul ye kepe this for a general reule. First shul ye clepen to your conseil
- a fewe of your freendes that been especiale; / for Salomon seith: "manye
- freendes have thou; but among a thousand chese thee oon to be thy
- conseillour." / For al-be-it so that thou first ne telle thy conseil but to
- a fewe, thou mayst afterward telle it to mo folk, if it be nede. / But loke
- alwey that thy conseillours have thilke three condiciouns that I have seyd
- bifore; that is to seyn, that they be trewe, wyse, and of old experience. /
- And werke nat alwey in every nede by oon counseillour allone; for somtyme
- bihoveth it to been conseilled by manye. /2360 For Salomon seith:
- "salvacioun of thinges is wher-as ther been manye conseillours." /
- 2355. E. Hn. fieble; Cp. Pt. Hl. feble; Cm. feblid; Ln. fiebled. E.
- encreescen.
- § 22. Now sith that I have told yow of which folk ye sholde been
- counseilled, now wol I teche yow which conseil ye oghte to eschewe. / First
- ye shul eschewe the conseilling of foles; for Salomon seith: "taak no
- conseil of a fool, for he ne can noght conseille but after his owene lust
- and his affeccioun." / The book seith: that "the propretee of a fool is
- this; he troweth lightly harm of every wight, and lightly troweth alle
- bountee in him-self." / Thou shalt eek eschewe the conseilling of alle
- flatereres, swiche as enforcen hem rather to preise your persone by
- flaterye than for to telle yow the sothfastnesse of thinges. /2365
- 2362. Hn. Cm. Hl. that; Pt. what; _rest om._ 2365. E. _om._ alle.
- § 23. 'Wherfore Tullius seith: "amonges alle the pestilences that been in
- freendshipe, the gretteste is flaterye." And therfore is it more nede that
- thou eschewe and drede flatereres than any other peple. / The book seith:
- "thou shalt rather drede and flee fro the swete wordes of flateringe
- preiseres, than fro the egre [211] wordes of thy freend that seith thee thy
- sothes." / Salomon seith, that "the wordes of a flaterere is a snare to
- cacche with innocents." / He seith also, that "he that speketh to his
- freend wordes of swetnesse and of plesaunce, setteth a net biforn his feet
- to cacche him." / And therfore seith Tullius: "enclyne nat thyne eres to
- flatereres, ne taketh no conseil of wordes of flaterye." /2370 And Caton
- seith: "avyse thee wel, and eschewe the wordes of swetnesse and of
- plesaunce." / And eek thou shalt eschewe the conseilling of thyne olde
- enemys that been reconsiled. / The book seith: that "no wight retourneth
- saufly in-to the grace of his olde enemy." / And Isope seith: "ne trust nat
- to hem to whiche thou hast had som-tyme werre or enmitee, ne telle hem nat
- thy conseil." / And Seneca telleth the cause why. "It may nat be," seith
- he, "that, where greet fyr hath longe tyme endured, that ther ne dwelleth
- som vapour of warmnesse." /2375 And therfore seith Salomon: "in thyn olde
- foo trust never." / For sikerly, though thyn enemy be reconsiled and maketh
- thee chere of humilitee, and louteth to thee with his heed, ne trust him
- never. / For certes, he maketh thilke feyned humilitee more for his profit
- than for any love of thy persone; by-cause that he demeth to have victorie
- over thy persone by swich feyned contenance, the which victorie he mighte
- nat have by stryf or werre. / And Peter Alfonce seith: "make no felawshipe
- with thyne olde enemys; for if thou do hem bountee, they wol perverten it
- in-to wikkednesse." / And eek thou most eschewe the conseilling of hem that
- been thy servants, and beren thee greet reverence; for peraventure they
- seyn it more for drede than for love. /2380 And therfore seith a
- philosophre in this wyse: "ther is no wight parfitly trewe to him that he
- to sore dredeth." / And Tullius seith: "ther nis no might so greet of any
- emperour, that longe may endure, but-if he have more love of the peple than
- drede." / Thou shalt also eschewe the conseiling of folk that been
- dronkelewe; for they ne can no conseil hyde. / For Salomon seith: "ther is
- no privetee ther-as regneth dronkenesse." / Ye shul also han in suspect the
- conseilling of swich folk as conseille yow a thing prively, and conseille
- yow the contrarie openly. /2385 For [212] Cassidorie seith: that "it is a
- maner sleighte to hindre, whan he sheweth to doon a thing openly and
- werketh prively the contrarie." / Thou shalt also have in suspect the
- conseilling of wikked folk. For the book seith: "the conseilling of wikked
- folk is alwey ful of fraude:" / And David seith: "blisful is that man that
- hath nat folwed the conseilling of shrewes." / Thou shalt also eschewe the
- conseilling of yong folk; for hir conseil is nat rype. /
- 2368. E. chacche (_for_ cacche). Pt. to cacchen innocentes withe;
- _rest_ (_except_ E.) _om._ with. 2370. E. Cp. Ln. the wordes; _rest
- om._ the. 2374. E. Hn. enemytee. 2377. E. chiere. 2378. E. nat
- winne; _rest_ nat haue. 2380. E. doon; _rest_ seyn. 2382. E. for
- drede; _rest om._ for. 2383. E. _om._ ne. 2388. E. sherewes.
- § 24. Now sir, sith I have shewed yow of which folk ye shul take your
- conseil, and of which folk ye shul folwe the conseil, /2390 now wol I teche
- yow how ye shal examine your conseil, after the doctrine of Tullius. / In
- the examininge thanne of your conseillour, ye shul considere manye thinges.
- / Alderfirst thou shalt considere, that in thilke thing that thou
- purposest, and upon what thing thou wolt have conseil, that verray trouthe
- be seyd and conserved; this is to seyn, telle trewely thy tale. / For he
- that seith fals may nat wel be conseilled, in that cas of which he lyeth. /
- And after this, thou shalt considere the thinges that acorden to that thou
- purposest for to do by thy conseillours, if resoun accorde therto; /2395
- and eek, if thy might may atteine ther-to; and if the more part and the
- bettre part of thy conseillours acorde ther-to, or no. / Thanne shaltou
- considere what thing shal folwe of that conseilling; as hate, pees, werre,
- grace, profit, or damage; and manye othere thinges. / And in alle thise
- thinges thou shalt chese the beste, and weyve alle othere thinges. / Thanne
- shaltow considere of what rote is engendred the matere of thy conseil, and
- what fruit it may conceyve and engendre. / Thou shalt eek considere alle
- thise causes, fro whennes they been sprongen. /2400 And whan ye han
- examined your conseil as I have seyd, and which partie is the bettre and
- more profitable, and hast approved it by manye wyse folk and olde; / thanne
- shaltou considere, if thou mayst parfourne it and maken of it a good ende.
- / For certes, resoun wol nat that any man sholde biginne a thing, but-if he
- mighte parfourne it as him oghte. / Ne no wight sholde take up-on hym so
- hevy a charge that he mighte nat bere it. / For the proverbe seith: "he
- that to muche embraceth, distreyneth litel." /2405 And Catoun seith: "assay
- to do swich thing as thou hast power to doon, lest that the charge [213]
- oppresse thee so sore, that thee bihoveth to weyve thing that thou hast
- bigonne." / And if so be that thou be in doute, whether thou mayst
- parfourne a thing or noon, chese rather to suffre than biginne. / And Piers
- Alphonce seith: "if thou hast might to doon a thing of which thou most
- repente thee, it is bettre 'nay' than 'ye';" / this is to seyn, that thee
- is bettre holde thy tonge stille, than for to speke. / Thanne may ye
- understonde by strenger resons, that if thou hast power to parfourne a werk
- of which thou shalt repente, thanne is it bettre that thou suffre than
- biginne. /2410 Wel seyn they, that defenden every wight to assaye any thing
- of which he is in doute, whether he may parfourne it or no. / And after,
- whan ye han examined your conseil as I have seyd biforn, and knowen wel
- that ye may parfourne youre emprise, conferme it thanne sadly til it be at
- an ende. /
- 2396. or no] E. or noon; Pt. anoon. 2397. of that] E. after hir.
- 2398. E. Thanne of; _rest_ And in. 2399. E. matiere. conceyve] E.
- Hl. conserue. 2407, 2411. E. wheither. 2411. Hn. Cm. no; _rest_
- noon (non).
- § 25. Now is it resoun and tyme that I shewe yow, whanne, and wherfore,
- that ye may chaunge your conseil with-outen your repreve. / Soothly, a man
- may chaungen his purpos and his conseil if the cause cesseth, or whan a
- newe caas bitydeth. / For the lawe seith: that "upon thinges that newely
- bityden bihoveth newe conseil." /2415 And Senek seith: "if thy conseil is
- comen to the eres of thyn enemy, chaunge thy conseil." / Thou mayst also
- chaunge thy conseil if so be that thou finde that, by errour or by other
- cause, harm or damage may bityde. / Also, if thy conseil be dishonest, or
- elles cometh of dishoneste cause, chaunge thy conseil. / For the lawes
- seyn: that "alle bihestes that been dishoneste been of no value." / And
- eek, if it so be that it be inpossible, or may nat goodly be parfourned or
- kept. /2420
- 2413. Hl. conseil; _rest_ conseillors. 2416. E. eeris. 2417. finde]
- E. mayst finde. 2420. E. Cp. if; _rest_ if it.
- § 26. And take this for a general reule, that every conseil that is
- affermed so strongly that it may nat be chaunged, for no condicioun that
- may bityde, I seye that thilke conseil is wikked.' /
- § 27. This Melibeus, whanne he hadde herd the doctrine of his wyf dame
- Prudence, answerde in this wyse. / 'Dame,' quod he, 'as yet in-to this tyme
- ye han wel and covenably taught me as in general, how I shal governe me in
- the chesinge and in the withholdinge of my conseillours. / But now wolde I
- fayn that ye wolde condescende in especial, / and telle me how lyketh yow,
- [214] or what semeth yow, by our conseillours that we han chosen in our
- present nede.' /2425
- 2423. in-to] Cp. Ln. vnto. E. couenablely.
- § 28. 'My lord,' quod she, 'I biseke yow in al humblesse, that ye wol nat
- wilfully replye agayn my resouns, ne distempre your herte thogh I speke
- thing that yow displese. / For god wot that, as in myn entente, I speke it
- for your beste, for your honour and for your profite eke. / And soothly, I
- hope that your benignitee wol taken it in pacience. / Trusteth me wel,'
- quod she, 'that your conseil as in this caas ne sholde nat, as to speke
- properly, be called a conseilling, but a mocioun or a moevyng of folye; /
- in which conseil ye han erred in many a sondry wyse. /2430
- 2428. E. benyngnytee.
- § 29. First and forward, ye han erred in thassemblinge of your
- conseillours. / For ye sholde first have cleped a fewe folk to your
- conseil, and after ye mighte han shewed it to mo folk, if it hadde been
- nede. / But certes, ye han sodeynly cleped to your conseil a greet
- multitude of peple, ful chargeant and ful anoyous for to here. / Also ye
- han erred, for there-as ye sholden only have cleped to your conseil your
- trewe freendes olde and wyse, / ye han y-cleped straunge folk, and yong
- folk, false flatereres, and enemys reconsiled, and folk that doon yow
- reverence withouten love. /2435 And eek also ye have erred, for ye han
- broght with yow to your conseil ire, covetise, and hastifnesse; / the
- whiche three thinges been contrariouse to every conseil honeste and
- profitable; / the whiche three thinges ye han nat anientissed or destroyed
- hem, neither in your-self ne in your conseillours, as yow oghte. / Ye han
- erred also, for ye han shewed to your conseillours your talent, and your
- affeccioun to make werre anon and for to do vengeance; / they han espyed by
- your wordes to what thing ye been enclyned. /2440 And therfore han they
- rather conseilled yow to your talent than to your profit. / Ye han erred
- also, for it semeth that yow suffyseth to han been conseilled by thise
- conseillours only, and with litel avys; / wher-as, in so greet and so heigh
- a nede, it hadde been necessarie mo conseillours, and more deliberacioun to
- parfourne your emprise. / Ye han erred also, for ye han nat examined your
- conseil in the forseyde manere, ne in due manere as the caas requireth. /
- Ye han erred also, for ye han maked no divisioun bitwixe your conseillours;
- this is to [215] seyn, bitwixen your trewe freendes and your feyned
- conseillours; /2445 ne ye han nat knowe the wil of your trewe freendes olde
- and wyse; / but ye han cast alle hir wordes in an hochepot, and enclyned
- your herte to the more part and to the gretter nombre; and ther been ye
- condescended. / And sith ye wot wel that men shal alwey finde a gretter
- nombre of foles than of wyse men, / and therfore the conseils that been at
- congregaciouns and multitudes of folk, ther-as men take more reward to the
- nombre than to the sapience of persones, / ye see wel that in swiche
- conseillinges foles han the maistrie.' /2450 Melibeus answerde agayn, and
- seyde: 'I graunte wel that I have erred; / but ther-as thou hast told me
- heer-biforn, that he nis nat to blame that chaungeth hise conseillours in
- certein caas, and for certeine Iuste causes, / I am al redy to chaunge my
- conseillours, right as thow wolt devyse. / The proverbe seith: that "for to
- do sinne is mannish, but certes for to persevere longe in sinne is werk of
- the devel."' /
- 2438. E. _om._ thinges. Hl. _om._ hem. 2442. Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. yow;
- E. it. 2445. E. nat maked; _rest om._ nat. 2447. E. partie; _rest_
- part.
- § 30. To this sentence answerde anon dame Prudence, and seyde: /2455
- 'Examineth,' quod she, 'your conseil, and lat us see the whiche of hem han
- spoken most resonably, and taught yow best conseil. / And for-as-muche as
- that the examinacioun is necessarie, lat us biginne at the surgiens and at
- the phisiciens, that first speken in this matere. / I sey yow, that the
- surgiens and phisiciens han seyd yow in your conseil discreetly, as hem
- oughte; / and in hir speche seyden ful wysly, that to the office of hem
- aperteneth to doon to every wight honour and profit, and no wight for to
- anoye; / and, after hir craft, to doon greet diligence un-to the cure of
- hem whiche that they han in hir governaunce. /2460 And sir, right as they
- han answered wysly and discreetly, / right so rede I that they been heighly
- and sovereynly guerdoned for hir noble speche; / and eek for they sholde do
- the more ententif bisinesse in the curacioun of your doghter dere. / For
- al-be-it so that they been your freendes, therfore shal ye nat suffren that
- they serve yow for noght; / but ye oghte the rather guerdone hem and shewe
- hem your largesse. /2465 And as touchinge the proposicioun [216] which that
- the phisiciens entreteden in this caas, this is to seyn, / that, in
- maladyes, that oon contrarie is warisshed by another contrarie, / I wolde
- fayn knowe how ye understonde thilke text, and what is your sentence.' /
- 'Certes,' quod Melibeus, 'I understonde it in this wyse: / that, right as
- they han doon me a contrarie, right so sholde I doon hem another. /2470 For
- right as they han venged hem on me and doon me wrong, right so shal I venge
- me upon hem and doon hem wrong; / and thanne have I cured oon contrarie by
- another.' /
- 2455. E. answereth; _rest_ answerde (andswered). 2456. E.
- resonablely. 2457. E. matiere. 2459. E. seyd; Hn. Cm. Hl. seyden.
- 2460. E. in; _rest_ after. 2462. E. Hn. gerdoned; _rest_ guerdoned.
- 2465. E. Hn. Pt. gerdone. 2466. E. encreesceden; Hn. Ln. encresceden;
- Cp. Cm. encreseden; Pt. encresden; Hl. han schewed; ed. 1561,
- entreteden. 2468. thilke] E. this.
- § 31. 'Lo, lo!' quod dame Prudence, 'how lightly is every man enclyned to
- his owene desyr and to his owene plesaunce! / Certes,' quod she, 'the
- wordes of the phisiciens ne sholde nat han been understonden in this wyse.
- / For certes, wikkednesse is nat contrarie to wikkednesse, ne vengeaunce to
- vengeaunce, ne wrong to wrong; but they been semblable. /2475 And therfore,
- o vengeaunce is nat warisshed by another vengeaunce, ne o wrong by another
- wrong; / but everich of hem encreesceth and aggreggeth other. / But certes,
- the wordes of the phisiciens sholde been understonden in this wyse: / for
- good and wikkednesse been two contraries, and pees and werre, vengeaunce
- and suffraunce, discord and accord, and manye othere thinges. / But certes,
- wikkednesse shal be warisshed by goodnesse, discord by accord, werre by
- pees, and so forth of othere thinges. /2480 And heer-to accordeth Seint
- Paul the apostle in manye places. / He seith: "ne yeldeth nat harm for
- harm, ne wikked speche for wikked speche; / but do wel to him that dooth
- thee harm, and blesse him that seith to thee harm." / And in manye othere
- places he amonesteth pees and accord. / But now wol I speke to yow of the
- conseil which that was yeven to yow by the men of lawe and the wyse folk,
- /2485 that seyden alle by oon accord as ye han herd bifore; / that, over
- alle thynges, ye sholde doon your diligence to kepen your persone and to
- warnestore your hous. / And seyden also, that in this caas ye oghten for to
- werken ful avysely and with greet deliberacioun. / And sir, as to the
- firste point, that toucheth to the keping of your persone; / ye shul
- understonde that he that hath werre shal evermore mekely and devoutly
- preyen biforn alle thinges, /2490 that Iesus Crist of his grete [217] mercy
- wol han him in his proteccioun, and been his sovereyn helping at his nede.
- / For certes, in this world ther is no wight that may be conseilled ne kept
- suffisantly withouten the keping of our lord Iesu Crist. / To this sentence
- accordeth the prophete David, that seith: / "if god ne kepe the citee, in
- ydel waketh he that it kepeth." / Now sir, thanne shul ye committe the
- keping of your persone to your trewe freendes that been approved and
- y-knowe; /2495 and of hem shul ye axen help your persone for to kepe. For
- Catoun seith: "if thou hast nede of help, axe it of thy freendes; / for
- ther nis noon so good a phisicien as thy trewe freend." / And after this,
- thanne shul ye kepe yow fro alle straunge folk, and fro lyeres, and have
- alwey in suspect hir companye. / For Piers Alfonce seith: "ne tak no
- companye by the weye of a straunge man, but-if so be that thou have knowe
- him of a lenger tyme. / And if so be that he falle in-to thy companye
- paraventure withouten thyn assent, /2500 enquere thanne, as subtilly as
- thou mayst, of his conversacioun and of his lyf bifore, and feyne thy wey;
- seye that thou goost thider as thou wolt nat go; / and if he bereth a
- spere, hold thee on the right syde, and if he bere a swerd, hold thee on
- the lift syde." / And after this, thanne shul ye kepe yow wysely from alle
- swich manere peple as I have seyd bifore, and hem and hir conseil eschewe.
- / And after this, thanne shul ye kepe yow in swich manere, / that for any
- presumpcioun of your strengthe, that ye ne dispyse nat ne acounte nat the
- might of your adversarie so litel, that ye lete the keping of your persone
- for your presumpcioun; /2505 for every wys man dredeth his enemy. / And
- Salomon seith: "weleful is he that of alle hath drede; / for certes, he
- that thurgh the hardinesse of his herte and thurgh the hardinesse of
- him-self hath to greet presumpcioun, him shal yvel bityde." / Thanne shul
- ye evermore countrewayte embusshements and alle espiaille. / For Senek
- seith: that "the wyse man that dredeth harmes escheweth harmes; /2510 ne he
- ne falleth in-to perils, that perils escheweth." / And al-be-it so that it
- seme that thou art in siker place, yet shaltow alwey do thy diligence in
- kepinge of thy persone; / this is to seyn, ne be nat necligent to kepe thy
- persone, nat only fro [218] thy gretteste enemys but fro thy leeste enemy.
- / Senek seith: "a man that is wel avysed, he dredeth his leste enemy." /
- Ovide seith: that "the litel wesele wol slee the grete bole and the wilde
- hert." /2515 And the book seith: "a litel thorn may prikke a greet king ful
- sore; and an hound wol holde the wilde boor." / But nathelees, I sey nat
- thou shall be so coward that thou doute ther wher-as is no drede. / The
- book seith: that "somme folk han greet lust to deceyve, but yet they dreden
- hem to be deceyved." / Yet shaltou drede to been empoisoned, and kepe yow
- from the companye of scorneres. / For the book seith: "with scorneres make
- no companye, but flee hir wordes as venim." /2520
- 2488. E. Ln. Hl. yow; _rest_ ye. 2491. E grete; _rest om._ 2492. E.
- sufficeantly; Hn. suffisantly. 2495. y-knowe] E. knowe. 2499. E.
- taak; compaignye. E. straunge men; Cp. straunge man; _rest_ a
- straunge man. 2500. he] E. he be. 2502. E. his lift; _rest_ the
- lift. 2510. E. he dredeth; _rest_ that dredeth. Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl.
- escheweth harmes; _rest om._ 2513. fro] E. Hl. for. 2514. E.
- _omits_ Senek ... enemy; _the rest have it_. 2517. E. _om._ so.
- § 32. Now as to the seconde point, wher-as your wyse conseillours
- conseilled yow to warnestore your hous with gret diligence, / I wolde fayn
- knowe, how that ye understonde thilke wordes, and what is your sentence.' /
- § 33. Melibeus answerde and seyde, 'Certes I understande it in this wise;
- that I shal warnestore myn hous with toures, swiche as han castelles and
- othere manere edifices, and armure and artelleries, / by whiche thinges I
- may my persone and myn hous so kepen and defenden, that myne enemys shul
- been in drede myn hous for to approche.' /
- 2523. Cm. artelleryes; E. Hn. artelries; Hl. artilries; Cp. Ln.
- archers.
- § 34. To this sentence answerde anon Prudence; 'warnestoring,' quod she,
- 'of heighe toures and of grete edifices apperteneth som-tyme to pryde;
- /2525 and eek men make heighe toures and grete edifices with grete costages
- and with greet travaille; and whan that they been accompliced, yet be they
- nat worth a stree, but-if they be defended by trewe freendes that been olde
- and wyse. / And understond wel, that the gretteste and strongeste garnison
- that a riche man may have, as wel to kepen his persone as hise goodes, is /
- that he be biloved amonges his subgets and with hise neighebores. / For
- thus seith Tullius: that "ther is a maner garnison that no man may
- venquisse ne disconfite, and that is, / a lord to be biloved of hise
- citezeins and of his peple." /2530
- 2525, 6. E. Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. _omit_ apperteneth ... edifices; Cp. Ln.
- _have it_; _see note_.
- § 35. Now sir, as to the thridde point; wher-as your olde and wise
- conseillours seyden, that yow ne oghte nat sodeynly ne hastily proceden in
- this nede, / but that yow oghte purveyen and [219] apparaillen yow in this
- caas with greet diligence and greet deliberacioun; / trewely, I trowe that
- they seyden right wysly and right sooth. / For Tullius seith, "in every
- nede, er thou biginne it, apparaille thee with greet diligence." / Thanne
- seye I, that in vengeance-taking, in werre, in bataille, and in
- warnestoring, /2535 er thow biginne, I rede that thou apparaille thee
- ther-to, and do it with greet deliberacioun. / For Tullius seith: that
- "long apparailling biforn the bataille maketh short victorie." / And
- Cassidorus seith: "the garnison is stronger whan it is longe tyme avysed."
- /
- 2537. E. Ln. The longe; _rest_ that long.
- § 36. But now lat us speken of the conseil that was accorded by your
- neighebores, swiche as doon yow reverence withouten love, / your olde
- enemys reconsiled, your flatereres, /2540 that conseilled yow certeyne
- thinges prively, and openly conseilleden yow the contrarie; / the yonge
- folk also, that conseilleden yow to venge yow and make werre anon. / And
- certes, sir, as I have seyd biforn, ye han greetly erred to han cleped
- swich maner folk to your conseil; / which conseillours been y-nogh repreved
- by the resouns afore-seyd. / But nathelees, lat us now descende to the
- special. Ye shuln first procede after the doctrine of Tullius. /2545
- Certes, the trouthe of this matere or of this conseil nedeth nat diligently
- enquere; / for it is wel wist whiche they been that han doon to yow this
- trespas and vileinye, / and how manye trespassours, and in what manere they
- han to yow doon al this wrong and al this vileinye. / And after this,
- thanne shul ye examine the seconde condicioun, which that the same Tullius
- addeth in this matere. / For Tullius put a thing, which that he clepeth
- "consentinge," this is to seyn; /2550 who been they and how manye, and
- whiche been they, that consenteden to thy conseil, in thy wilfulnesse to
- doon hastif vengeance. / And lat us considere also who been they, and how
- manye been they, and whiche been they, that consenteden to your
- adversaries. / And certes, as to the firste poynt, it is wel knowen whiche
- folk been they that consenteden to your hastif wilfulnesse; / for trewely,
- alle tho that conseilleden yow to maken sodeyn werre ne been nat your
- freendes. / Lat us now considere whiche been they, that ye holde so greetly
- your freendes as to your persone. /2555 For al-be-it so that ye be mighty
- [220] and riche, certes ye ne been nat but allone. / For certes, ye ne han
- no child but a doghter; / ne ye ne han bretheren ne cosins germayns, ne
- noon other neigh kinrede, / wherfore that your enemys, for drede, sholde
- stinte to plede with yow or to destroye your persone. / Ye knowen also,
- that your richesses moten been dispended in diverse parties; /2560 and whan
- that every wight hath his part, they ne wollen taken but litel reward to
- venge thy deeth. / But thyne enemys been three, and they han manie
- children, bretheren, cosins, and other ny kinrede; / and, though so were
- that thou haddest slayn of hem two or three, yet dwellen ther y-nowe to
- wreken hir deeth and to slee thy persone. / And though so be that your
- kinrede be more siker and stedefast than the kin of your adversarie, / yet
- nathelees your kinrede nis but a fer kinrede; they been but litel sib to
- yow, /2565 and the kin of your enemys been ny sib to hem. And certes, as in
- that, hir condicioun is bet than youres. / Thanne lat us considere also if
- the conseilling of hem that conseilleden yow to taken sodeyn vengeaunce,
- whether it accorde to resoun? / And certes, ye knowe wel "nay." / For as by
- right and resoun, ther may no man taken vengeance on no wight, but the Iuge
- that hath the Iurisdiccioun of it, / whan it is graunted him to take thilke
- vengeance, hastily or attemprely, as the lawe requireth. /2570 And yet
- more-over, of thilke word that Tullius clepeth "consentinge," / thou shalt
- considere if thy might and thy power may consenten and suffyse to thy
- wilfulnesse and to thy conseillours. / And certes, thou mayst wel seyn that
- "nay." / For sikerly, as for to speke proprely, we may do no-thing but only
- swich thing as we may doon rightfully. / And certes, rightfully ne mowe ye
- take no vengeance as of your propre auctoritee. /2575 Thanne mowe ye seen,
- that your power ne consenteth nat ne accordeth nat with your wilfulnesse. /
- Lat us now examine the thridde point that Tullius clepeth "consequent." /
- Thou shalt understonde that the vengeance that thou purposest for to take
- is the consequent. / And ther-of folweth another vengeaunce, peril, and
- werre; and othere damages with-oute nombre, of whiche we be nat war as at
- this tyme. / And as touchinge the fourthe point, that Tullius clepeth
- "engendringe," /2580 thou shalt considere, that this wrong which that is
- doon to thee is engendred of the hate of thyne enemys; / and of the
- vengeance-takinge upon that wolde engendre another vengeance, and muchel
- sorwe and wastinge of richesses, as I seyde. /
- 2551. E. _om._ and whiche been they; _see_ 2552. Hk. consentid;
- _rest_ consenten (_for_ consenteden); _see_ 2552.
- [221] § 37. Now sir, as to the point that Tullius clepeth "causes," which
- that is the laste point, / thou shall understonde that the wrong that thou
- hast receyved hath certeine causes, / whiche that clerkes clepen _Oriens_
- and _Efficiens_, and _Causa longinqua_ and _Causa propinqua_; this is to
- seyn, the fer cause and the ny cause. /2585 The fer cause is almighty god,
- that is cause of alle thinges. / The neer cause is thy three enemys. / The
- cause accidental was hate. / The cause material been the fyve woundes of
- thy doghter. / The cause formal is the manere of hir werkinge, that
- broghten laddres and cloumben in at thy windowes. /2590 The cause final was
- for to slee thy doghter; it letted nat in as muche as in hem was. / But for
- to speken of the fer cause, as to what ende they shul come, or what shal
- finally bityde of hem in this caas, ne can I nat deme but by coniectinge
- and by supposinge. / For we shul suppose that they shul come to a wikked
- ende, / by-cause that the Book of Decrees seith: "selden or with greet
- peyne been causes y-broght to good ende whanne they been baddely bigonne."
- /
- 2594. E. seelden.
- § 38. Now sir, if men wolde axe me, why that god suffred men to do yow this
- vileinye, certes, I can nat wel answere as for no sothfastnesse. /2595 For
- thapostle seith, that "the sciences and the Iuggementz of our lord god
- almighty been ful depe; / ther may no man comprehende ne serchen hem
- suffisantly." / Nathelees, by certeyne presumpcions and coniectinges, I
- holde and bileve / that god, which that is ful of Iustice and of
- rightwisnesse, hath suffred this bityde by Iuste cause resonable. /
- § 39. Thy name is Melibee, this is to seyn, "a man that drinketh hony."
- /2600 Thou hast y-dronke so muchel hony of swete temporel richesses and
- delices and honours of this world, / that thou art dronken; and hast
- forgeten Iesu Crist thy creatour; / thou ne hast nat doon to him swich
- honour and reverence as thee oughte. / Ne thou ne hast nat wel y-taken kepe
- to the wordes of Ovide, that seith: / "under the hony of the godes of the
- body is hid the venim that sleeth the soule." /2605 And Salomon seith, "if
- thou hast founden hony, ete of it that suffyseth; / for if thou ete of it
- out of mesure, thou shalt spewe," and be nedy and povre. / And peraventure
- Crist hath thee in despit, and hath turned awey fro thee his face and hise
- eres of misericorde; / and also he hath suffred that thou hast been
- punisshed in the manere that thow [222] hast y-trespassed. / Thou hast doon
- sinne agayn our lord Crist; /2610 for certes, the three enemys of mankinde,
- that is to seyn, the flessh, the feend, and the world, / thou hast suffred
- hem entre in-to thyn herte wilfully by the windowes of thy body, / and hast
- nat defended thy-self suffisantly agayns hir assautes and hir temptaciouns,
- so that they han wounded thy soule in fyve places; / this is to seyn, the
- deedly sinnes that been entred in-to thyn herte by thy fyve wittes. / And
- in the same manere our lord Crist hath wold and suffred, that thy three
- enemys been entred in-to thyn hous by the windowes, /2615 and han y-wounded
- thy doghter in the fore-seyde manere.' /
- 2601. E. sweete temporeel. 2608. E. eeris.
- § 40. 'Certes,' quod Melibee, 'I see wel that ye enforce yow muchel by
- wordes to overcome me in swich manere, that I shal nat venge me of myne
- enemys; / shewinge me the perils and the yveles that mighten falle of this
- vengeance. / But who-so wolde considere in alle vengeances the perils and
- yveles that mighte sewe of vengeance-takinge, / a man wolde never take
- vengeance, and that were harm; /2620 for by the vengeance-takinge been the
- wikked men dissevered fro the gode men. / And they that han wil to do
- wikkednesse restreyne hir wikked purpos, whan they seen the punissinge and
- chastysinge of the trespassours.' / [And to this answerde dame Prudence:
- 'Certes,' seyde she, 'I graunte wel that of vengeaunce cometh muchel yvel
- and muchel good; / but vengeaunce-taking aperteneth nat unto everichoon,
- but only unto Iuges and unto hem that han Iurisdicctioun upon the
- trespassours.] / And yet seye I more, that right as a singuler persone
- sinneth in takinge vengeance of another man, /2625 right so sinneth the
- Iuge if he do no vengeance of hem that it han deserved. / For Senek seith
- thus: "that maister," he seith, "is good that proveth shrewes." / And as
- Cassidore seith: "A man dredeth to do outrages, whan he woot and knoweth
- that it displeseth to the Iuges and sovereyns." / And another seith: "the
- Iuge that dredeth to do right, maketh men shrewes." / And Seint Paule the
- apostle seith in his epistle, whan he wryteth un-to the Romayns: that "the
- Iuges beren nat the spere with-outen cause;" /2630 but they beren it to
- punisse the shrewes and misdoeres, and for to defende the gode men. / If ye
- wol thanne take vengeance of [223] your enemys, ye shul retourne or have
- your recours to the Iuge that hath the Iurisdiccion up-on hem; / and he
- shal punisse hem as the lawe axeth and requyreth.' /
- 2623, 2624. _Not in the_ MSS. _Supplied by translating the French
- text_. 2626. E. Hn. disserued. 2629. E. _om._ And. 2631. E. Ln.
- _om._ for.
- § 41. 'A!' quod Melibee, 'this vengeance lyketh me no-thing. / I bithenke
- me now and take hede, how fortune hath norissed me fro my childhede, and
- hath holpen me to passe many a strong pas. /2635 Now wol I assayen hir,
- trowinge, with goddes help, that she shal helpe me my shame for to venge.'
- /
- § 42. 'Certes,' quod Prudence, 'if ye wol werke by my conseil, ye shul nat
- assaye fortune by no wey; / ne ye shul nat lene or bowe unto hir, after the
- word of Senek: / for "thinges that been folily doon, and that been in hope
- of fortune, shullen never come to good ende." / And as the same Senek
- seith: "the more cleer and the more shyning that fortune is, the more
- brotil and the sonner broken she is." /2640 Trusteth nat in hir, for she
- nis nat stidefast ne stable; / for whan thow trowest to be most seur or
- siker of hir help, she wol faille thee and deceyve thee. / And wher-as ye
- seyn that fortune hath norissed yow fro your childhede, / I seye, that in
- so muchel shul ye the lasse truste in hir and in hir wit. / For Senek
- seith: "what man that is norissed by fortune, she maketh him a greet fool."
- /2645 Now thanne, sin ye desyre and axe vengeance, and the vengeance that
- is doon after the lawe and bifore the Iuge ne lyketh yow nat, / and the
- vengeance that is doon in hope of fortune is perilous and uncertein, /
- thanne have ye noon other remedie but for to have your recours unto the
- sovereyn Iuge that vengeth alle vileinyes and wronges; / and he shal venge
- yow after that him-self witnesseth, wher-as he seith: / "leveth the
- vengeance to me, and I shal do it."' /2650
- 2642. E. and (_before_ siker); _rest_ or; Hl. _om._ or siker.
- § 43. Melibee answerde, 'if I ne venge me nat of the vileinye that men han
- doon to me, / I sompne or warne hem that han doon to me that vileinye and
- alle othere, to do me another vileinye. / For it is writen: "if thou take
- no vengeance of an old vileinye, thou sompnest thyne adversaries to do thee
- a newe vileinye." / And also, for my suffrance, men wolden do to me so
- muchel vileinye, that I mighte neither here it ne sustene; / and so sholde
- I been put and holden over lowe. /2655 For men seyn: "in muchel suffringe
- shul manye thinges falle un-to thee whiche thou shalt nat mowe suffre."' /
- [224] § 44. 'Certes,' quod Prudence, 'I graunte yow that over muchel
- suffraunce nis nat good; / but yet ne folweth it nat ther-of, that every
- persone to whom men doon vileinye take of it vengeance; / for that
- aperteneth and longeth al only to the Iuges, for they shul venge the
- vileinyes and iniuries. / And ther-fore tho two auctoritees that ye han
- seyd above, been only understonden in the Iuges; /2660 for whan they
- suffren over muchel the wronges and the vileinyes to be doon withouten
- punisshinge, / they sompne nat a man al only for to do newe wronges, but
- they comanden it. / Also a wys man seith: that "the Iuge that correcteth
- nat the sinnere comandeth and biddeth him do sinne." / And the Iuges and
- sovereyns mighten in hir land so muchel suffre of the shrewes and
- misdoeres, / that they sholden by swich suffrance, by proces of tyme, wexen
- of swich power and might, that they sholden putte out the Iuges and the
- sovereyns from hir places, /2665 and atte laste maken hem lesen hir
- lordshipes. /
- § 45. But lat us now putte, that ye have leve to venge yow. / I seye ye
- been nat of might and power as now to venge yow. / For if ye wole maken
- comparisoun un-to the might of your adversaries, ye shul finde in manye
- thinges, that I have shewed yow er this, that hir condicioun is bettre than
- youres. / And therfore seye I, that it is good as now that ye suffre and be
- pacient. /2670
- § 46. Forther-more, ye knowen wel that, after the comune sawe, "it is a
- woodnesse a man to stryve with a strenger or a more mighty man than he is
- him-self; / and for to stryve with a man of evene strengthe, that is to
- seyn, with as strong a man as he, it is peril; / and for to stryve with a
- weyker man, it is folie." / And therfore sholde a man flee stryvinge as
- muchel as he mighte. / For Salomon seith: "it is a greet worship to a man
- to kepen him fro noyse and stryf." /2675 And if it so bifalle or happe that
- a man of gretter might and strengthe than thou art do thee grevaunce, /
- studie and bisie thee rather to stille the same grevaunce, than for to
- venge thee. / For Senek seith: that "he putteth him in greet peril that
- stryveth with a gretter man than he is him-self." / And Catoun seith: "if a
- man of hyer estaat or degree, or more mighty than thou, do thee anoy or
- grevaunce, suffre him; / for he that ones hath greved thee may another tyme
- releve thee and helpe." /2680 Yet sette I caas, ye have bothe might and
- licence for to [225] venge yow. / I seye, that ther be ful manye thinges
- that shul restreyne yow of vengeance-takinge, / and make yow for to enclyne
- to suffre, and for to han pacience in the thinges that han been doon to
- yow. / First and foreward, if ye wole considere the defautes that been in
- your owene persone, / for whiche defautes god hath suffred yow have this
- tribulacioun, as I have seyd yow heer-biforn. /2685 For the poete seith,
- that "we oghte paciently taken the tribulacions that comen to us, whan we
- thinken and consideren that we han deserved to have hem." / And Seint
- Gregorie seith: that "whan a man considereth wel the nombre of hise
- defautes and of his sinnes, / the peynes and the tribulaciouns that he
- suffreth semen the lesse un-to hym; / and in-as-muche as him thinketh hise
- sinnes more hevy and grevous, / in-so-muche semeth his peyne the lighter
- and the esier un-to him." /2690 Also ye owen to enclyne and bowe your herte
- to take the pacience of our lord Iesu Crist, as seith seint Peter in hise
- epistles: / "Iesu Crist," he seith, "hath suffred for us, and yeven
- ensample to every man to folwe and sewe him; / for he dide never sinne, ne
- never cam ther a vileinous word out of his mouth: / whan men cursed him, he
- cursed hem noght; and whan men betten him, he manaced hem noght." / Also
- the grete pacience, which the seintes that been in paradys han had in
- tribulaciouns that they han y-suffred, with-outen hir desert or gilt, /2695
- oghte muchel stiren yow to pacience. / Forthermore, ye sholde enforce yow
- to have pacience, / consideringe that the tribulaciouns of this world but
- litel whyle endure, and sone passed been and goon. / And the Ioye that a
- man seketh to have by pacience in tribulaciouns is perdurable, after that
- the apostle seith in his epistle: / "the Ioye of god," he seith, "is
- perdurable," that is to seyn, everlastinge. /2700 Also troweth and bileveth
- stedefastly, that he nis nat wel y-norissed ne wel y-taught, that can nat
- have pacience or wol nat receyve pacience. / For Salomon seith: that "the
- doctrine and the wit of a man is knowen by pacience." / And in another
- place he seith: that "he that is pacient governeth him by greet prudence."
- / And the same Salomon seith: "the angry and wrathful man maketh noyses,
- and the pacient man atempreth hem and stilleth." / He seith also: "it is
- more worth to be pacient than for to be right strong; /2705 and he that may
- have the lordshipe of his owene herte is more to preyse, than [226] he that
- by his force or strengthe taketh grete citees." / And therfore seith seint
- Iame in his epistle: that "pacience is a greet vertu of perfeccioun."' /
- 2680. E. (_only_) _puts_ may _after_ tyme. 2686. E. Hn. Cp.
- disserued. 2698. E. Cm. goone.
- § 47. 'Certes,' quod Melibee, 'I graunte yow, dame Prudence, that pacience
- is a greet vertu of perfeccioun; / but every man may nat have the
- perfeccioun that ye seken; / ne I nam nat of the nombre of right parfite
- men, /2710 for myn herte may never been in pees un-to the tyme it be
- venged. / And al-be-it so that it was greet peril to myne enemys, to do me
- a vileinye in takinge vengeance up-on me, / yet token they noon hede of the
- peril, but fulfilleden hir wikked wil and hir corage. / And therfore, me
- thinketh men oghten nat repreve me, though I putte me in a litel peril for
- to venge me, / and though I do a greet excesse, that is to seyn, that I
- venge oon outrage by another.' /2715
- § 48. 'A!' quod dame Prudence, 'ye seyn your wil and as yow lyketh; / but
- in no caas of the world a man sholde nat doon outrage ne excesse for to
- vengen him. / For Cassidore seith: that "as yvel doth he that vengeth him
- by outrage, as he that doth the outrage." / And therfore ye shul venge yow
- after the ordre of right, that is to seyn by the lawe, and noght by excesse
- ne by outrage. / And also, if ye wol venge yow of the outrage of your
- adversaries in other maner than right comandeth, ye sinnen; /2720 and
- therfore seith Senek: that "a man shal never vengen shrewednesse by
- shrewednesse." / And if ye seye, that right axeth a man to defenden
- violence by violence, and fighting by fighting, / certes ye seye sooth,
- whan the defense is doon anon with-outen intervalle or with-outen tarying
- or delay, / for to defenden him and nat for to vengen him. / And it
- bihoveth that a man putte swich attemperance in his defence, /2725 that men
- have no cause ne matere to repreven him that defendeth him of excesse and
- outrage; for elles were it agayn resoun. / Pardee, ye knowen wel, that ye
- maken no defence as now for to defende yow, but for to venge yow; / and so
- seweth it that ye han no wil to do your dede attemprely. / And therfore, me
- thinketh that pacience is good. For Salomon seith: that "he that is nat
- pacient shal have greet harm."' /
- 2724-7. E. deffenden, deffense. 2728. E. sheweth; Hl. semeth; _rest_
- seweth.
- § 49. 'Certes,' quod Melibee, 'I graunte yow, that whan [227] a man is
- inpacient and wroth, of that that toucheth him noght and that aperteneth
- nat un-to him, though it harme him, it is no wonder. /2730 For the lawe
- seith: that "he is coupable that entremetteth or medleth with swich thyng
- as aperteneth nat un-to him." / And Salomon seith: that "he that
- entremetteth him of the noyse or stryf of another man, is lyk to him that
- taketh an hound by the eres." / For right as he that taketh a straunge
- hound by the eres is outherwhyle biten with the hound, / right in the same
- wyse is it resoun that he have harm, that by his inpacience medleth him of
- the noyse of another man, wher-as it aperteneth nat un-to him. / But ye
- knowen wel that this dede, that is to seyn, my grief and my disese,
- toucheth me right ny. /2735 And therfore, though I be wroth and inpacient,
- it is no merveille. / And savinge your grace, I can nat seen that it mighte
- greetly harme me though I toke vengeaunce; / for I am richer and more
- mighty than myne enemys been. / And wel knowen ye, that by moneye and by
- havinge grete possessions been all the thinges of this world governed. /
- And Salomon seith: that "alle thinges obeyen to moneye."' /2740
- § 50. Whan Prudence hadde herd hir housbonde avanten him of his richesse
- and of his moneye, dispreisinge the power of hise adversaries, she spak,
- and seyde in this wyse: / 'certes, dere sir, I graunte yow that ye been
- rich and mighty, / and that the richesses been goode to hem that han wel
- y-geten hem and wel conne usen hem. / For right as the body of a man may
- nat liven with-oute the soule, namore may it live with-outen temporel
- goodes. / And by richesses may a man gete him grete freendes. /2745 And
- therfore seith Pamphilles: "if a net-herdes doghter," seith he, "be riche,
- she may chesen of a thousand men which she wol take to hir housbonde; /
- for, of a thousand men, oon wol nat forsaken hir ne refusen hir." / And
- this Pamphilles seith also: "if thou be right happy, that is to seyn, if
- thou be right riche, thou shalt find a greet nombre of felawes and
- freendes. / And if thy fortune change that thou wexe povre, farewel
- freendshipe and felaweshipe; / for thou shalt be allone with-outen any
- companye, but-if it be the companye of povre folk." /2750 And yet seith
- this Pamphilles moreover: that "they that been thralle and bonde of [228]
- linage shullen been maad worthy and noble by the richesses." / And right so
- as by richesses ther comen manye goodes, right so by poverte come ther
- manye harmes and yveles. / For greet poverte constreyneth a man to do manye
- yveles. / And therfore clepeth Cassidore poverte "the moder of ruine," /
- that is to seyn, the moder of overthrowinge or fallinge doun. /2755 And
- therfore seith Piers Alfonce: "oon of the gretteste adversitees of this
- world is / whan a free man, by kinde or by burthe, is constreyned by
- poverte to eten the almesse of his enemy." / And the same seith Innocent in
- oon of hise bokes; he seith: that "sorweful and mishappy is the condicioun
- of a povre begger; / for if he axe nat his mete, he dyeth for hunger; / and
- if he axe, he dyeth for shame; and algates necessitee constreyneth him to
- axe." /2760 And therfore seith Salomon: that "bet it is to dye than for to
- have swich poverte." / And as the same Salomon seith: "bettre it is to dye
- of bitter deeth than for to liven in swich wyse." / By thise resons that I
- have seid un-to yow, and by manye othere resons that I coude seye, / I
- graunte yow that richesses been goode to hem that geten hem wel, and to hem
- that wel usen tho richesses. / And therfore wol I shewe yow how ye shul
- have yow, and how ye shul here yow in gaderinge of richesses, and in what
- manere ye shul usen hem. /2765
- 2744. E. tempered. 2745. by] E. for. 2746. _All_ Pamphilles. Hn.
- Hl. which she ... housbonde; _rest om._ 2750. E. Hn. al alloone;
- _rest omit_ al.
- § 51. First, ye shul geten hem with-outen greet desyr, by good leyser
- sokingly, and nat over hastily. / For a man that is to desyringe to gete
- richesses abaundoneth him first to thefte and to alle other yveles. / And
- therfore seith Salomon: "he that hasteth him to bisily to wexe riche shal
- be noon innocent." / He seith also: that "the richesse that hastily cometh
- to a man, sone and lightly gooth and passeth fro a man; / but that richesse
- that cometh litel and litel wexeth alwey and multiplyeth." /2770 And sir,
- ye shul geten richesses by your wit and by your travaille un-to your
- profit; / and that with-outen wrong or harm-doinge to any other persone. /
- For the lawe seith: that "ther maketh no man himselven riche, if he do harm
- to another wight;" / this is to seyn, that nature defendeth and forbedeth
- by right, that no man make him-self riche un-to the harm of another
- persone. / And Tullius seith: that "no sorwe ne no drede of deeth, ne
- no-thing that may falle un-to a man /2775 is so muchel agayns nature, as a
- man to [229] encressen his owene profit to the harm of another man. / And
- though the grete men and the mighty men geten richesses more lightly than
- thou, / yet shaltou nat been ydel ne slow to do thy profit; for thou shalt
- in alle wyse flee ydelnesse." / For Salomon seith: that "ydelnesse techeth
- a man to do manye yveles." / And the same Salomon seith: that "he that
- travailleth and bisieth him to tilien his land, shal eten breed; /2780 but
- he that is ydel and casteth him to no bisinesse ne occupacioun, shal falle
- in-to poverte, and dye for hunger." / And he that is ydel and slow can
- never finde covenable tyme for to doon his profit. / For ther is a
- versifiour seith: that "the ydel man excuseth hym in winter, by cause of
- the grete cold; and in somer, by enchesoun of the hete." / For thise causes
- seith Caton: "waketh and enclyneth nat yow over muchel for to slepe; for
- over muchel reste norisseth and causeth manye vices." / And therfore seith
- seint Ierome: "doth somme gode dedes, that the devel which is our enemy ne
- finde yow nat unoccupied." /2785 For the devel ne taketh nat lightly un-to
- his werkinge swiche as he findeth occupied in gode werkes. /
- 2766. E. Hn. sekyngly; _rest_ sokyngly. 2785. E. goodes; _rest_ goode
- dedes.
- § 52. Thanne thus, in getinge richesses, ye mosten flee ydelnesse. / And
- afterward, ye shul use the richesses, whiche ye have geten by your wit and
- by your travaille, / in swich a manere, that men holde nat yow to scars, ne
- to sparinge, ne to fool-large, that is to seyn, over-large a spender. / For
- right as men blamen an avaricious man by-cause of his scarsetee and
- chincherye, /2790 in the same wyse is he to blame that spendeth over
- largely. / And therfore seith Caton: "use," he seith, "thy richesses that
- thou hast geten / in swich a manere, that men have no matere ne cause to
- calle thee neither wrecche ne chinche; / for it is a greet shame to a man
- to have a povere herte and a riche purs." / He seith also: "the goodes that
- thou hast y-geten, use hem by mesure," that is to seyn, spende hem
- mesurably; /2795 for they that folily wasten and despenden the goodes that
- they han, / whan they han namore propre of hir owene, they shapen hem to
- take the goodes of another man. / I seye thanne, that ye shul fleen
- avarice; / usinge your richesses in swich manere, that men seye nat that
- your richesses been y-buried, / but that ye have hem in [230] your might
- and in your weeldinge. /2800 For a wys man repreveth the avaricious man,
- and seith thus, in two vers: / "wherto and why burieth a man hise goodes by
- his grete avarice, and knoweth wel that nedes moste he dye; / for deeth is
- the ende of every man as in this present lyf." / And for what cause or
- enchesoun Ioyneth he him or knitteth he him so faste un-to hise goodes, /
- that alle his wittes mowen nat disseveren him or departen him from hise
- goodes; /2805 and knoweth wel, or oghte knowe, that whan he is deed, he
- shal no-thing bere with him out of this world. / And ther-fore seith seint
- Augustin: that "the avaricious man is likned un-to helle; / that the more
- it swelweth, the more desyr it hath to swelwe and devoure." / And as wel as
- ye wolde eschewe to be called an avaricious man or chinche, / as wel sholde
- ye kepe yow and governe yow in swich a wyse that men calle yow nat
- fool-large. /2810 Therfore seith Tullius: "the goodes," he seith, "of thyn
- hous ne sholde nat been hid, ne kept so cloos but that they mighte been
- opened by pitee and debonairetee;" / that is to seyn, to yeven part to hem
- that han greet nede; / "ne thy goodes shullen nat been so opene, to been
- every mannes goodes." / Afterward, in getinge of your richesses and in
- usinge hem, ye shul alwey have three thinges in your herte; / that is to
- seyn, our lord god, conscience, and good name. /2815 First, ye shul have
- god in your herte; / and for no richesse ye shullen do nothing, which may
- in any manere displese god, that is your creatour and maker. / For after
- the word of Salomon: "it is bettre to have a litel good with the love of
- god, / than to have muchel good and tresour, and lese the love of his lord
- god." / And the prophete seith: that "bettre it is to been a good man and
- have litel good and tresour, /2820 than to been holden a shrewe and have
- grete richesses." / And yet seye I ferthermore, that ye sholde alwey doon
- your bisinesse to gete yow richesses, / so that ye gete hem with good
- conscience. / And thapostle seith: that "ther nis thing in this world, of
- which we sholden have so greet Ioye as whan our conscience bereth us good
- witnesse." / And the wyse man seith: "the substance of a man is ful good,
- whan sinne is nat in mannes conscience." /2825 Afterward, in getinge of
- your richesses, and in usinge of hem, / yow moste have greet bisinesse and
- greet diligence, that your goode name be alwey kept and conserved. / For
- Salomon seith: that "bettre it is and more it availleth a man to have a
- good name, than for to have grete richesses." / [231] And therfore he seith
- in another place: "do greet diligence," seith Salomon, "in keping of thy
- freend and of thy gode name; / for it shal lenger abide with thee than any
- tresour, be it never so precious." /2830 And certes he sholde nat be called
- a gentil man, that after god and good conscience, alle thinges left, ne
- dooth his diligence and bisinesse to kepen his good name. / And Cassidore
- seith: that "it is signe of a gentil herte, whan a man loveth and desyreth
- to han a good name." / And therfore seith seint Augustin: that "ther been
- two thinges that arn necessarie and nedefulle, / and that is good
- conscience and good loos; / that is to seyn, good conscience to thyn owene
- persone inward, and good loos for thy neighebore outward." /2835 And he
- that trusteth him so muchel in his gode conscience, / that he displeseth
- and setteth at noght his gode name or loos, and rekketh noght though he
- kepe nat his gode name, nis but a cruel cherl. /
- 2790. E. chyngerie; Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. chyncherye. 2837. E. crueel.
- § 53. Sire, now have I shewed yow how ye shul do in getinge richesses, and
- how ye shullen usen hem; / and I se wel, that for the trust that ye han in
- youre richesses, ye wole moeve werre and bataille. / I conseille yow, that
- ye biginne no werre in trust of your richesses; for they ne suffysen noght
- werres to mayntene. /2840 And therfore seith a philosophre: "that man that
- desyreth and wole algates han werre, shal never have suffisaunce; / for the
- richer that he is, the gretter despenses moste he make, if he wole have
- worship and victorie." / And Salomon seith: that "the gretter richesses
- that a man hath, the mo despendours he hath." / And dere sire, al-be-it so
- that for your richesses ye mowe have muchel folk, / yet bihoveth it nat, ne
- it is nat good, to biginne werre, where-as ye mowe in other manere have
- pees, un-to your worship and profit. /2845 For the victories of batailles
- that been in this world, lyen nat in greet nombre or multitude of the peple
- ne in the vertu of man; / but it lyth in the wil and in the hand of our
- lord god almighty. / And therfore Iudas Machabeus, which was goddes knight,
- / whan he sholde fighte agayn his adversarie that hadde a greet nombre, and
- a gretter multitude of folk and strenger than was this peple of Machabee, /
- yet he reconforted his litel companye, and seyde right in this wyse: /2850
- "als lightly," quod he, "may our lord god almighty yeve victorie to a fewe
- folk as to many folk; / for the victorie of bataile cometh nat by the grete
- [232] nombre of peple, / but it cometh from our lord god of hevene." / And
- dere sir, for as muchel as there is no man certein, if he be worthy that
- god yeve him victorie, [namore than he is certein whether he be worthy of
- the love of god] or naught, after that Salomon seith, / therfore every man
- sholde greetly drede werres to biginne. /2855 And by-cause that in
- batailles fallen manye perils, / and happeth outher-while, that as sone is
- the grete man sleyn as the litel man; / and, as it is written in the
- seconde book of Kinges, "the dedes of batailles been aventurouse and
- nothing certeyne;" / for as lightly is oon hurt with a spere as another. /
- And for ther is gret peril in werre, therfore sholde a man flee and eschewe
- werre, in as muchel as a man may goodly. /2860 For Salomon seith: "he that
- loveth peril shal falle in peril."' /
- 2852. E. Hn. a bataile; _rest om._ a. E. comth. 2853. E. come;
- _rest_ cometh. 2854. E. he be; _rest_ it be. _I supply from_ namore
- _to_ god; _see_ Note.
- § 54. After that Dame Prudence hadde spoken in this manere, Melibee
- answerde and seyde, / 'I see wel, dame Prudence, that by your faire wordes
- and by your resons that ye han shewed me, that the werre lyketh yow
- no-thing; / but I have nat yet herd your conseil, how I shal do in this
- nede.' /
- § 55. 'Certes,' quod she, 'I conseille yow that ye accorde with youre
- adversaries, and that ye haue pees with hem. /2865 For seint Iame seith in
- hise epistles: that "by concord and pees the smale richesses wexen grete, /
- and by debaat and discord the grete richesses fallen doun." / And ye knowen
- wel that oon of the gretteste and most sovereyn thing, that is in this
- world, is unitee and pees. / And therfore seyde oure lord Iesu Crist to
- hise apostles in this wyse: / "wel happy and blessed been they that loven
- and purchacen pees; for they been called children of god."' /2870 'A!' quod
- Melibee, 'now se I wel that ye loven nat myn honour ne my worshipe. / Ye
- knowen wel that myne adversaries han bigonnen this debaat and brige by hir
- outrage; / and ye see wel that they ne requeren ne preyen me nat of pees,
- ne they asken nat to be reconsiled. / Wol ye thanne that I go and meke me
- and obeye me to hem, and crye hem mercy? / For sothe, that were nat my
- worship. /2875 For right as men seyn, that "over-greet homlinesse
- engendreth dispreysinge," so fareth it by to greet humylitee or mekenesse.'
- /
- 2866. seint Iame] F. text, Seneques. 2872. E. bryge; Hn. Cm. Hl.
- brige; Cp. Pt. brigge (F. text, _brigue_).
- [233] § 56. Thanne bigan dame Prudence to maken semblant of wratthe, and
- seyde, / 'certes, sir, sauf your grace, I love your honour and your profit
- as I do myn owene, and ever have doon; / ne ye ne noon other syen never the
- contrarie. / And yit, if I hadde seyd that ye sholde han purchaced the pees
- and the reconsiliacioun, I ne hadde nat muchel mistaken me, ne seyd amis.
- /2880 For the wyse man seith: "the dissensioun biginneth by another man,
- and the reconsiling bi-ginneth by thy-self." / And the prophete seith:
- "flee shrewednesse and do goodnesse; / seke pees and folwe it, as muchel as
- in thee is." / Yet seye I nat that ye shul rather pursue to your
- adversaries for pees than they shuln to yow; / for I knowe wel that ye been
- so hard-herted, that ye wol do no-thing for me. /2885 And Salomon seith:
- "he that hath over-hard an herte, atte laste he shal mishappe and
- mistyde."' /
- § 57. Whanne Melibee hadde herd dame Prudence maken semblant of wratthe, he
- seyde in this wyse, / 'dame, I prey yow that ye be nat displesed of thinges
- that I seye; / for ye knowe wel that I am angry and wrooth, and that is no
- wonder; / and they that been wrothe witen nat wel what they doon, ne what
- they seyn. /2890 Therfore the prophete seith: that "troubled eyen han no
- cleer sighte." / But seyeth and conseileth me as yow lyketh; for I am redy
- to do right as ye wol desyre; / and if ye repreve me of my folye, I am the
- more holden to love yow and to preyse yow. / For Salomon seith: that "he
- that repreveth him that doth folye, / he shal finde gretter grace than he
- that deceyveth him by swete wordes."' /2895
- 2893. to preyse] E. _om._ to.
- § 58. Thanne seide dame Prudence, 'I make no semblant of wratthe ne anger
- but for your grete profit. / For Salomon seith: "he is more worth, that
- repreveth or chydeth a fool for his folye, shewinge him semblant of
- wratthe, / than he that supporteth him and preyseth him in his misdoinge,
- and laugheth at his folye." / And this same Salomon seith afterward: that
- "by the sorweful visage of a man," that is to seyn, by the sory and hevy
- countenaunce of a man, / "the fool correcteth and amendeth him-self."'
- /2900
- 2898. E. peyseth (_for_ preyseth).
- § 59. Thanne seyde Melibee, 'I shal nat conne answere to so manye faire
- resouns as ye putten to me and shewen. / Seyeth shortly your wil and your
- conseil, and I am al ready to fulfille and parfourne it.' /
- [234] § 60. Thanne dame Prudence discovered al hir wil to him, and seyde, /
- 'I conseille yow,' quod she, 'aboven alle thinges, that ye make pees
- bitwene god and yow; / and beth reconsiled un-to him and to his grace.
- /2905 For as I have seyd yow heer-biforn, god hath suffred yow to have this
- tribulacioun and disese for your sinnes. / And if ye do as I sey yow, god
- wol sende your adversaries un-to yow, / and maken hem fallen at your feet,
- redy to do your wil and your comandements. / For Salomon seith: "whan the
- condicioun of man is plesaunt and likinge to god, / he chaungeth the hertes
- of the mannes adversaries, and constreyneth hem to biseken him of pees and
- of grace." /2910 And I prey yow, lat me speke with your adversaries in
- privee place; / for they shul nat knowe that it be of your wil or your
- assent. / And thanne, whan I knowe hir wil and hir entente, I may conseille
- yow the more seurly.' /
- 2913. E. seurely; Hn. Cp. Hl. seurly.
- § 61. 'Dame,' quod Melibee, 'dooth your wil and your lykinge, / for I putte
- me hoolly in your disposicioun and ordinaunce.' /2915
- § 62. Thanne Dame Prudence, whan she saugh the gode wil of her housbonde,
- delibered and took avys in hir-self, / thinkinge how she mighte bringe this
- nede un-to a good conclusioun and to a good ende. / And whan she saugh hir
- tyme, she sente for thise adversaries to come un-to hir in-to a privee
- place, / and shewed wysly un-to hem the grete goodes that comen of pees, /
- and the grete harmes and perils that been in werre; /2920 and seyde to hem
- in a goodly manere, how that hem oughte have greet repentaunce / of the
- iniurie and wrong that they hadden doon to Melibee hir lord, and to hir,
- and to hir doghter. /
- 2921. Cm. oughte; Cp. Hl. aughte; _rest_ oughten.
- § 63. And whan they herden the goodliche wordes of dame Prudence, / they
- weren so surprised and ravisshed, and hadden so greet Ioye of hir, that
- wonder was to telle. / 'A! lady!' quod they, 'ye han shewed un-to us "the
- blessinge of swetnesse," after the sawe of David the prophete; /2925 for
- the reconsilinge which we been nat worthy to have in no manere, / but we
- oghte requeren it with greet contricioun and humilitee, / ye of your grete
- goodnesse have presented unto us. / Now see we wel that the science and the
- conninge of Salomon is ful trewe; / for he seith: that "swete wordes
- multiplyen and encresen freendes, and maken shrewes to be debonaire and
- meke." /2930
- 2924. Hl. surprised; Cm. suppreysed; _rest_ supprised.
- [235] § 64. 'Certes,' quod they, 'we putten our dede and al our matere and
- cause al hoolly in your goode wil; / and been redy to obeye to the speche
- and comandement of my lord Melibee. / And therfore, dere and benigne lady,
- we preyen yow and biseke yow as mekely as we conne and mowen, / that it
- lyke un-to your grete goodnesse to fulfillen in dede your goodliche wordes;
- / for we consideren and knowlichen that we han offended and greved my lord
- Melibee out of mesure; /2935 so ferforth, that we be nat of power to maken
- hise amendes. / And therfore we oblige and binden us and our freendes to
- doon al his wil and hise comandements. / But peraventure he hath swich
- hevinesse and swich wratthe to us-ward, by-cause of our offence, / that he
- wole enioyne us swich a peyne as we mowe nat here ne sustene. / And
- therfore, noble lady, we biseke to your wommanly pitee, /2940 to taken
- swich avysement in this nede, that we, ne our freendes, be nat desherited
- ne destroyed thurgh our folye.' /
- § 65. 'Certes,' quod Prudence, 'it is an hard thing and right perilous, /
- that a man putte him al outrely in the arbitracioun and Iuggement, and in
- the might and power of hise enemys. / For Salomon seith: "leveth me, and
- yeveth credence to that I shal seyn; I seye," quod he, "ye peple, folk, and
- governours of holy chirche, / to thy sone, to thy wyf, to thy freend, ne to
- thy brother /2945 ne yeve thou never might ne maistrie of thy body, whyl
- thou livest." / Now sithen he defendeth, that man shal nat yeven to his
- brother ne to his freend the might of his body, / by a strenger resoun he
- defendeth and forbedeth a man to yeven him-self to his enemy. / And
- nathelees I conseille you, that ye mistruste nat my lord. / For I wool wel
- and knowe verraily, that he is debonaire and meke, large, curteys, /2950
- and nothing desyrous ne coveitous of good ne richesse. / For ther nis
- no-thing in this world that he desyreth, save only worship and honour. /
- Forther-more I knowe wel, and am right seur, that he shal no-thing doon in
- this nede with-outen my conseil. / And I shal so werken in this cause,
- that, by grace of our lord god, ye shul been reconsiled un-to us.' /
- § 66. Thanne seyden they with o vois, 'worshipful lady, we putten us and
- our goodes al fully in your wil and disposicioun; /2955 and been redy to
- comen, what day that it lyke un-to your noblesse to limite us or assigne
- us, / for to maken our obligacioun and bond as strong as it lyketh un-to
- your goodnesse; / that we mowe fulfille the wille of yow and of my lord
- Melibee.' /
- [236] § 67. Whan dame Prudence hadde herd the answeres of thise men, she
- bad hem goon agayn prively; / and she retourned to hir lord Melibee, and
- tolde him how she fond hise adversaries ful repentant, /2960 knowlechinge
- ful lowely hir sinnes and trespas, and how they were redy to suffren al
- peyne, / requiringe and preyinge him of mercy and pitee. /
- § 68. Thanne seyde Melibee, 'he is wel worthy to have pardoun and
- foryifnesse of his sinne, that excuseth nat his sinne, / but knowlecheth it
- and repenteth him, axinge indulgence. / For Senek seith: "ther is the
- remissioun and foryifnesse, where-as confessioun is;" /2965 for confession
- is neighebore to innocence. / And he seith in another place: "he that hath
- shame for his sinne and knowlecheth it, is worthy remissioun." And therfore
- I assente and conferme me to have pees; / but it is good that we do it nat
- with-outen the assent and wil of our freendes.' /
- 2967. E. Cm. _omit from_ And he _to_ remissioun; Hn. Cp. Hl. _om. only_
- is worthy remissioun, _which occurs in_ Pt., _where_ Ln. _has_ is
- worthi haue mercy. E. corforme (_sic_); _rest_ conferme.
- § 69. Thanne was Prudence right glad and loyeful, and seyde, / 'Certes,
- sir,' quod she, 'ye han wel and goodly answered. /2970 For right as by the
- conseil, assent, and help of your freendes, ye han been stired to venge yow
- and maken werre, / right so with-outen hir conseil shul ye nat accorden
- yow, ne have pees with your adversaries. / For the lawe seith: "ther nis
- no-thing so good by wey of kinde, as a thing to been unbounde by him that
- it was y-bounde."' /
- § 70. And thanne dame Prudence, with-outen delay or taryinge, sente anon
- hir messages for hir kin, and for hir olde freendes whiche that were trewe
- and wyse, / and tolde hem by ordre, in the presence of Melibee, al this
- matere as it is aboven expressed and declared; /2975 and preyden hem that
- they wolde yeven hir avys and conseil, what best were to doon in this nede.
- / And whan Melibees freendes hadde taken hir avys and deliberacioun of the
- forseide matere, / and hadden examined it by greet bisinesse and greet
- diligence, / they yave ful conseil for to have pees and reste; / and that
- Melibee sholde receyve with good herte hise adversaries to foryifnesse and
- mercy. /2980
- 2976. E. _om._ hem.
- § 71. And whan dame Prudence hadde herd the assent of hir lord Melibee, and
- the conseil of hise freendes, / accorde with hir wille and hir entencioun,
- / she was wonderly glad in hir herte, and [237] seyde: / 'ther is an old
- proverbe,' quod she, 'seith: that "the goodnesse that thou mayst do this
- day, do it; / and abyde nat ne delaye it nat til to-morwe." /2985 And
- therfore I conseille that ye sende your messages, swiche as been discrete
- and wyse, / un-to your adversaries; tellinge hem, on your bihalve, / that
- if they wole trete of pees and of accord, / that they shape hem, with-outen
- delay or tarying, to comen un-to us.' / Which thing parfourned was in dede.
- /2990 And whanne thise trespassours and repentinge folk of hir folies, that
- is to seyn, the adversaries of Melibee, / hadden herd what thise messagers
- seyden un-to hem, / they weren right glad and Ioyeful, and answereden ful
- mekely and benignely, / yeldinge graces and thankinges to hir lord Melibee
- and to al his companye; / and shopen hem, with-outen delay, to go with the
- messagers, and obeye to the comandement of hir lord Melibee. /2995
- § 72. And right anon they token hir wey to the court of Melibee, / and
- token with hem somme of hir trewe freendes, to maken feith for hem and for
- to been hir borwes. / And whan they were comen to the presence of Melibee,
- he seyde hem thise wordes: / 'it standeth thus,' quod Melibee, 'and sooth
- it is, that ye, / causeless, and with-outen skile and resoun, /3000 han
- doon grete iniuries and wronges to me and to my wyf Prudence, and to my
- doghter also. / For ye han entred in-to myn hous by violence, / and have
- doon swich outrage, that alle men knowen wel that ye have deserved the
- deeth; / and therfore wol I knowe and wite of yow, / whether ye wol putte
- the punissement and the chastysinge and the vengeance of this outrage in
- the wil of me and of my wyf Prudence; or ye wol nat?' /3005
- 3003. E. disserued.
- § 73. Thanne the wyseste of hem three answerde for hem alle, and seyde: /
- 'sire,' quod he, 'we knowen wel, that we been unworthy to comen un-to the
- court of so greet a lord and so worthy as ye been. / For we han so greetly
- mistaken us, and han offended and agilt in swich a wyse agayn your heigh
- lordshipe, / that trewely we han deserved the deeth. / But yet, for the
- grete goodnesse and debonairetee that all the world witnesseth of your
- persone, /3010 we submitten us to the excellence and benignitee of your
- gracious lordshipe, / and been redy to obeie to alle your comandements; /
- bisekinge yow, that of your merciable pitee ye wol [238] considere our
- grete repentaunce and lowe submissioun, / and graunten us foryevenesse of
- our outrageous trespas and offence. / For wel we knowe, that your liberal
- grace and mercy strecchen hem ferther in-to goodnesse, than doon our
- outrageouse giltes and trespas in-to wikkednesse; /3015 al-be-it that
- cursedly and dampnably we han agilt agayn your heigh lordshipe.' /
- 3005. E. wheither. 3009. E. disserued. 3010. of] E. in. 3013. E.
- lough; _rest_ lowe. 3016. E. Hn. dampnablely.
- § 74. Thanne Melibee took hem up fro the ground ful benignely, / and
- receyved hir obligaciouns and hir bondes by hir othes up-on hir plegges and
- borwes, / and assigned hem a certeyn day to retourne un-to his court, / for
- to accepte and receyve the sentence and Iugement that Melibee wolde comande
- to be doon on hem by the causes afore-seyd; /3020 whiche thinges ordeyned,
- every man retourned to his hous. /
- § 75. And whan that dame Prudence saugh hir tyme, she freyned and axed hir
- lord Melibee, / what vengeance he thoughte to taken of hise adversaries? /
- § 76. To which Melibee answerde and seyde, 'certes,' quod he, 'I thinke and
- purpose me fully / to desherite hem of al that ever they han, and for to
- putte hem in exil for ever.' /3025
- § 77. 'Certes,' quod dame Prudence, 'this were a cruel sentence, and muchel
- agayn resoun. / For ye been riche y-nough, and han no nede of other mennes
- good; / and ye mighte lightly in this wyse gete yow a coveitous name, /
- which is a vicious thing, and oghte been eschewed of every good man. / For
- after the sawe of the word of the apostle: "coveitise is rote of alle
- harmes." /3030 And therfore, it were bettre for yow to lese so muchel good
- of your owene, than for to taken of hir good in this manere. / For bettre
- it is to lesen good with worshipe, than it is to winne good with vileinye
- and shame. / And every man oghte to doon his diligence and his bisinesse to
- geten him a good name. / And yet shal he nat only bisie him in kepinge of
- his good name, / but he shal also enforcen him alwey to do som-thing by
- which he may renovelle his good name; /3035 for it is writen, that "the
- olde good loos or good name of a man is sone goon and passed, whan it is
- nat newed ne renovelled." / And as touchinge that ye seyn, ye wole exile
- your adversaries, / that thinketh me muchel agayn resoun and out of mesure,
- / considered the power that they han yeve yow [239] up-on hem-self. / And
- it is writen, that "he is worthy to lesen his privilege that misuseth the
- might and the power that is yeven him." /3040 And I sette cas ye mighte
- enioyne hem that peyne by right and by lawe, / which I trowe ye mowe nat
- do, / I seye, ye mighte nat putten it to execucioun per-aventure, / and
- thanne were it lykly to retourne to the werre as it was biforn. / And
- therfore, if ye wole that men do yow obeisance, ye moste demen more
- curteisly; /3045 this is to seyn, ye moste yeven more esy sentences and
- Iugements. / For it is writen, that "he that most curteisly comandeth, to
- him men most obeyen." / And therfore, I prey yow that in this necessitee
- and in this nede, ye caste yow to overcome your herte. / For Senek seith:
- that "he that overcometh his herte, overcometh twyes." / And Tullius seith:
- "ther is nothing so comendable in a greet lord /3050 as whan he is
- debonaire and meke, and appeseth him lightly." / And I prey yow that ye
- wole forbere now to do vengeance, / in swich a manere, that your goode name
- may be kept and conserved; / and that men mowe have cause and matere to
- preyse yow of pitee and of mercy; / and that ye have no cause to repente
- yow of thing that ye doon. /3055 For Senek seith: "he overcometh in an yvel
- manere, that repenteth him of his victorie." / Wherfore I pray yow, lat
- mercy been in your minde and in your herte, / to theffect and entente that
- god almighty have mercy on yow in his laste Iugement. / For seint Iame
- seith in his epistle: "Iugement withouten mercy shal be doon to him, that
- hath no mercy of another wight."' /
- 3026. E. crueel. 3032. E. _om._ good (_twice_). 3036. or] E. and.
- 3051. E. _om._ him. 3057. E. in youre mynde and; _rest om._
- § 78. Whanne Melibee hadde herd the grete skiles and resouns of dame
- Prudence, and hir wise informaciouns and techinges, /3060 his herte gan
- enclyne to the wil of his wyf, consideringe hir trewe entente; / and
- conformed him anon, and assented fully to werken after hir conseil; / and
- thonked god, of whom procedeth al vertu and alle goodnesse, that him sente
- a wyf of so greet discrecioun. / And whan the day cam that hise adversaries
- sholde apperen in his presence, / he spak unto hem ful goodly, and seyde in
- this wyse: /3065 'al-be-it so that of your pryde and presumpcioun and
- folie, and of your necligence and unconninge, / ye have misborn yow and
- trespassed un-to me; / yet, for as much as I see and biholde your grete
- humilitee, / and that ye [240] been sory and repentant of your giltes, / it
- constreyneth me to doon yow grace and mercy. /3070 Therfore I receyve yow
- to my grace, / and foryeve yow outrely alle the offences, iniuries, and
- wronges, that ye have doon agayn me and myne; / to this effect and to this
- ende, that god of his endelees mercy / wole at the tyme of our dyinge
- foryeven us our giltes that we han trespassed to him in this wrecched
- world. / For doutelees, if we be sory and repentant of the sinnes and
- giltes whiche we han trespassed in the sighte of our lord god, /3075 he is
- so free and so merciable, / that he wole foryeven us our giltes, / and
- bringen us to his blisse that never hath ende. Amen.' /3078
- HERE IS ENDED CHAUCERS TALE OF MELIBEE AND OF DAME PRUDENCE.
- 3064 E. Hn., appieren. 3078. E. his; Hn. Pt. Hl. the; Cp. Ln.
- thilke. _After_ ende, Cp. Ln. _have this spurious couplet_:--
- To whiche blisse he us bringe
- That blood on crosse for us gan springe,
- followed by--_Qui cum patre_, &c.
- COLOPHON. _From_ E.; Hn. _has_--Here is endid Chaucers tale of Melibe;
- Hl. _has_--Here endith Chaucer his tale of Melibe.
- [241: T. 13895-13924.]
- * * * * *
- THE MONK'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE MERY WORDES OF THE HOST TO THE MONK.
- Whan ended was my tale of Melibee,
- And of Prudence and hir benignitee, 3080
- Our hoste seyde, 'as I am faithful man,
- And by the precious _corpus Madrian_,
- I hadde lever than a barel ale
- That goode lief my wyf hadde herd this tale!
- For she nis no-thing of swich pacience 3085
- As was this Melibeus wyf Prudence.
- By goddes bones! whan I bete my knaves,
- She bringth me forth the grete clobbed staves, (10)
- And cryeth, "slee the dogges everichoon,
- And brek hem, bothe bak and every boon." 3090
- And if that any neighebor of myne
- Wol nat in chirche to my wyf enclyne,
- Or be so hardy to hir to trespace,
- Whan she comth hoom, she rampeth in my face,
- And cryeth, "false coward, wreek thy wyf, 3095
- By _corpus_ bones! I wol have thy knyf,
- And thou shalt have my distaf and go spinne!"
- Fro day to night right thus she wol biginne;-- (20)
- "Allas!" she seith, "that ever I was shape
- To wedde a milksop or a coward ape, 3100
- That wol be overlad with every wight!
- Thou darst nat stonden by thy wyves right!"
- This is my lyf, but-if that I wol fighte;
- And out at dore anon I moot me dighte,
- Or elles I am but lost, but-if that I 3105
- Be lyk a wilde leoun fool-hardy.
- I woot wel she wol do me slee som day
- Som neighebor, and thanne go my wey. (30)
- [242: T. 13925-13962.]
- For I am perilous with knyf in honde,
- Al be it that I dar nat hir withstonde, 3110
- For she is big in armes, by my feith,
- That shal he finde, that hir misdooth or seith.
- But lat us passe awey fro this matere.
- HEADING. _From_ E.; Hn. Here bigynneth The Prologe of the Monkes
- tale. E. murye. 3082. the] E. Hn. that. 3085. E. Hn. _omit_
- For. 3094. Pt. hoom; Hl. hom; Cp. Ln. home; E. Hn. _omit._ 3099. E.
- Hn. euere that I. 3110. E. Cp. Ln. hire nat; Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. nat
- hire.
- My lord the Monk,' quod he, 'be mery of chere;
- For ye shul telle a tale trewely. 3115
- Lo! Rouchestre stant heer faste by!
- Ryd forth, myn owene lord, brek nat our game,
- But, by my trouthe, I knowe nat your name, (40)
- Wher shal I calle yow my lord dan Iohn,
- Or dan Thomas, or elles dan Albon? 3120
- Of what hous be ye, by your fader kin?
- I vow to god, thou, hast a ful fair skin,
- It is a gentil pasture ther thou goost;
- Thou art nat lyk a penaunt or a goost.
- Upon my feith, thou art som officer, 3125
- Som worthy sexteyn, or som celerer,
- For by my fader soule, as to my doom,
- Thou art a maister whan thou art at hoom; (50)
- No povre cloisterer, ne no novys,
- But a governour, wyly and wys. 3130
- And therwithal of brawnes and of bones
- A wel-faring persone for the nones.
- I pray to god, yeve him confusioun
- That first thee broghte un-to religioun;
- Thou woldest han been a trede-foul aright. 3135
- Haddestow as greet a leve, as thou hast might
- To parfourne al thy lust in engendrure,
- Thou haddest bigeten many a creature. (60)
- Alas! why werestow so wyd a cope?
- God yeve me sorwe! but, and I were a pope, 3140
- Not only thou, but every mighty man,
- Thogh he were shorn ful hye upon his pan,
- Sholde have a wyf; for al the world is lorn!
- Religioun hath take up al the corn
- Of treding, and we borel men ben shrimpes! 3145
- Of feble trees ther comen wrecched impes.
- [243: T. 13963-13996.]
- This maketh that our heires been so sclendre
- And feble, that they may nat wel engendre. (70)
- This maketh that our wyves wol assaye
- Religious folk, for ye may bettre paye 3150
- Of Venus payements than mowe we;
- God woot, no lussheburghes payen ye!
- But be nat wrooth, my lord, for that I pleye;
- Ful ofte in game a sooth I have herd seye.'
- 3114. E. Hn. myrie. 3119, 20. E. daun. 3129. E. Hn. Pt. Ln.
- cloistrer. 3138. E. Hn. ful many. 3147, 8. E. _om. these lines;
- from_ Hn.; Hn. Cm. sklendre; Cp. Pt. sclendre (sclender_e_). 3151. E.
- paiementz. 3152. E. Hn. lussheburgh; Cp. lussheburghes; Hl.
- lusscheburghes.
- This worthy monk took al in pacience, 3155
- And seyde, 'I wol doon al my diligence,
- As fer as souneth in-to honestee,
- To telle yow a tale, or two, or three. (80)
- And if yow list to herkne hiderward,
- I wol yow seyn the lyf of seint Edward; 3160
- Or elles first Tragedies wol I telle
- Of whiche I have an hundred in my celle.
- Tragedie is to seyn a certeyn storie,
- As olde bokes maken us memorie,
- Of him that stood in greet prosperitee 3165
- And is y-fallen out of heigh degree
- Into miserie, and endeth wrecchedly.
- And they ben versifyed comunly (90)
- Of six feet, which men clepe _exametron_.
- In prose eek been endyted many oon, 3170
- And eek in metre, in many a sondry wyse.
- Lo! this declaring oughte y-nough suffise.
- 3160. E. _omits_ yow. 3163. Cp. Pt. Ln. for to; _rest omit_ for.
- 3168. E. communely; Cm. comounly; Hn. Hl. comunly.
- Now herkneth, if yow lyketh for to here;
- But first I yow biseke in this matere,
- Though I by ordre telle nat thise thinges, 3175
- Be it of popes, emperours, or kinges,
- After hir ages, as men writen finde,
- But telle hem som bifore and som bihinde, (100)
- As it now comth un-to my remembraunce;
- Have me excused of myn ignoraunce.' 3180
- _Explicit_.
- [244: T. 13997-14016.]
- * * * * *
- THE MONKES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE MONKES TALE, DE CASIBUS VIRORUM ILLUSTRIUM.
- I wol biwayle in maner of Tragedie
- The harm of hem that stode in heigh degree,
- And fillen so that ther nas no remedie
- To bringe hem out of hir adversitee;
- For certein, whan that fortune list to flee, 3185
- Ther may no man the cours of hir withholde;
- Lat no man truste on blind prosperitee;
- Be war by thise ensamples trewe and olde.
- HEADING. _From_ E. (E. Heere). 3188. E. Pt. of; _rest_ by.
- LUCIFER.
- At Lucifer, though he an angel were,
- And nat a man, at him I wol biginne; 3190
- For, thogh fortune may non angel dere, (11)
- From heigh degree yet fel he for his sinne
- Doun in-to helle, wher he yet is inne.
- O Lucifer! brightest of angels alle,
- Now artow Sathanas, that maist nat twinne 3195
- Out of miserie, in which that thou art falle.
- 3191. E. though; Hn. thogh.
- ADAM.
- Lo Adam, in the feld of Damassene,
- With goddes owene finger wroght was he,
- And nat bigeten of mannes sperme unclene,
- And welte al Paradys, saving o tree. 3200
- [245: T. 14017-14048.]
- Had never worldly man so heigh degree (21)
- As Adam, til he for misgovernaunce
- Was drive out of his hye prosperitee
- To labour, and to helle, and to meschaunce.
- 3197. Cm. Hl. Damassene; E. Hn. Damyssene.
- SAMPSON.
- Lo Sampson, which that was annunciat 3205
- By thangel, longe er his nativitee,
- And was to god almighty consecrat,
- And stood in noblesse, whyl he mighte see.
- Was never swich another as was he,
- To speke of strengthe, and therwith hardinesse; 3210
- But to his wyves tolde he his secree, (31)
- Through which he slow him-self, for wrecchednesse.
- 3206. Hl. Cp. thangel; Hn. Pt. Ln. the aungel; E. Cm. angel.
- Sampson, this noble almighty champioun,
- Withouten wepen save his hondes tweye,
- He slow and al to-rente the leoun, 3215
- Toward his wedding walking by the weye.
- His false wyf coude him so plese and preye
- Til she his conseil knew, and she untrewe
- Un-to his foos his conseil gan biwreye,
- And him forsook, and took another newe. 3220
- Three hundred foxes took Sampson for ire, (41)
- And alle hir tayles he togider bond,
- And sette the foxes tayles alle on fire,
- For he on every tayl had knit a brond;
- And they brende alle the cornes in that lond, 3225
- And alle hir oliveres and vynes eek.
- A thousand men he slow eek with his hond,
- And had no wepen but an asses cheek.
- Whan they were slayn, so thursted him that he
- Was wel my lorn, for which he gan to preye 3230
- That god wolde on his peyne han som pitee, (51)
- And sende him drinke, or elles moste he deye;
- [246: T. 14049-14080.]
- And of this asses cheke, that was dreye,
- Out of a wang-tooth sprang anon a welle,
- Of which he drank y-nogh, shortly to seye, 3235
- Thus heelp him god, as _Iudicum_ can telle.
- 3235. E. anon; _rest_ ynogh, ynough, ynouhe, &c.
- By verray force, at Gazan, on a night,
- Maugree Philistiens of that citee,
- The gates of the toun he hath up-plight,
- And on his bak y-caried hem hath he 3240
- Hye on an hille, that men mighte hem see. (61)
- O noble almighty Sampson, leef and dere,
- Had thou nat told to wommen thy secree,
- In al this worlde ne hadde been thy pere!
- This Sampson never sicer drank ne wyn, 3245
- Ne on his heed cam rasour noon ne shere,
- By precept of the messager divyn,
- For alle his strengthes in his heres were;
- And fully twenty winter, yeer by yere,
- He hadde of Israel the governaunce. 3250
- But sone shal he wepen many a tere, (71)
- For wommen shal him bringen to meschaunce!
- 3245. E. Hn. ciser (_for_ sicer); Hl. siser; Cm. Pt. Ln. sythir; Cp.
- cyder.
- Un-to his lemman Dalida he tolde
- That in his heres al his strengthe lay,
- And falsly to his fo-men she him solde. 3255
- And sleping in hir barme up-on a day
- She made to clippe or shere his heer awey,
- And made his fo-men al his craft espyen;
- And whan that they him fonde in this array,
- They bounde him faste, and putten out his yën. 3260
- 3257. E. Hl. heres; _rest_ heer, here. 3258. E. Hn. this craft;
- _rest_ his craft.
- But er his heer were clipped or y-shave, (81)
- Ther was no bond with which men might him binde;
- But now is he in prisoun in a cave,
- Wher-as they made him at the querne grinde.
- [247: T. 14081-14112.]
- O noble Sampson, strongest of mankinde, 3265
- O whylom Iuge in glorie and in richesse,
- Now maystow wepen with thyn yën blinde,
- Sith thou fro wele art falle in wrecchednesse.
- 3261. E. were; _rest_ was; _see l._ 3328.
- Thende of this caytif was as I shal seye;
- His fo-men made a feste upon a day, 3270
- And made him as hir fool bifore hem pleye, (91)
- And this was in a temple of greet array.
- But atte laste he made a foul affray;
- For he two pilers shook, and made hem falle,
- And doun fil temple and al, and ther it lay, 3275
- And slow him-self, and eek his fo-men alle.
- 3271. E. Cm. a; _rest_ hire, here. 3274. E. the; _rest_ two.
- This is to seyn, the princes everichoon,
- And eek three thousand bodies wer ther slayn
- With falling of the grete temple of stoon.
- Of Sampson now wol I na-more seyn. 3280
- Beth war by this ensample old and playn (101)
- That no men telle hir conseil til hir wyves
- Of swich thing as they wolde han secree fayn,
- If that it touche hir limmes or hir lyves.
- HERCULES.
- Of Hercules the sovereyn conquerour 3285
- Singen his workes laude and heigh renoun;
- For in his tyme of strengthe he was the flour.
- He slow, and rafte the skin of the leoun;
- He of Centauros leyde the boost adoun;
- He Arpies slow, the cruel briddes felle; 3290
- He golden apples rafte of the dragoun; (111)
- He drow out Cerberus, the hound of helle:
- He slow the cruel tyrant Busirus,
- And made his hors to frete him, flesh and boon;
- He slow the firy serpent venimous; 3295
- Of Achelois two hornes, he brak oon;
- [248: T. 14113-14148.]
- And he slow Cacus in a cave of stoon;
- He slow the geaunt Antheus the stronge;
- He slow the grisly boor, and that anoon,
- And bar the heven on his nekke longe. 3300
- 3294. E. flessh. 3296. E. Cm. hornes two; _rest_ two hornes.
- Was never wight, sith that the world bigan, (121)
- That slow so many monstres as dide he.
- Thurgh-out this wyde world his name ran,
- What for his strengthe, and for his heigh bountee,
- And every reaume wente he for to see. 3305
- He was so strong that no man mighte him lette;
- At bothe the worldes endes, seith Trophee,
- In stede of boundes, he a piler sette.
- 3308. E. stide; pileer.
- A lemman hadde this noble champioun,
- That highte Dianira, fresh as May; 3310
- And, as thise clerkes maken mencioun, (131)
- She hath him sent a sherte fresh and gay.
- Allas! this sherte, allas and weylaway!
- Envenimed was so subtilly with-alle,
- That, er that he had wered it half a day, 3315
- It made his flesh al from his bones falle.
- 3310, 2. E. fressh. 3316. E. flessh.
- But nathelees somme clerkes hir excusen
- By oon that highte Nessus, that it maked;
- Be as be may, I wol hir noght accusen;
- But on his bak this sherte he wered al naked, 3320
- Til that his flesh was for the venim blaked. (141)
- And whan he sey noon other remedye,
- In hote coles he hath him-selven raked,
- For with no venim deyned him to dye.
- Thus starf this worthy mighty Hercules; 3325
- Lo, who may truste on fortune any throwe?
- For him that folweth al this world of prees,
- Er he be war, is ofte y-leyd ful lowe.
- Ful wys is he that can him-selven knowe.
- Beth war, for whan that fortune list to glose, 3330
- Than wayteth she hir man to overthrowe (151)
- By swich a wey as he wolde leest suppose.
- [249: T. 14149-14180.]
- NABUGODONOSOR (NEBUCHADNEZZAR).
- The mighty trone, the precious tresor,
- The glorious ceptre and royal magestee
- That hadde the king Nabugodonosor, 3335
- With tonge unnethe may discryved be.
- He twyes wan Ierusalem the citee;
- The vessel of the temple he with him ladde.
- At Babiloyne was his sovereyn see,
- In which his glorie and his delyt he hadde. 3340
- 3336. Hl. vnnethes.
- The fairest children of the blood royal (161)
- Of Israel he leet do gelde anoon,
- And maked ech of hem to been his thral.
- Amonges othere Daniel was oon,
- That was the wysest child of everichoon; 3345
- For he the dremes of the king expouned,
- Wher-as in Chaldey clerk ne was ther noon
- That wiste to what fyn his dremes souned.
- This proude king leet make a statue of golde,
- Sixty cubytes long, and seven in brede, 3350
- To which image bothe yonge and olde (171)
- Comaunded he to loute, and have in drede;
- Or in a fourneys ful of flambes rede
- He shal be brent, that wolde noght obeye.
- But never wolde assente to that dede 3355
- Daniel, ne his yonge felawes tweye.
- 3351. E. The; _rest_ To. E. Hn. Cm. he bothe; _rest omit_ he. 3352.
- E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ he.
- This king of kinges proud was and elaat,
- He wende that god, that sit in magestee,
- Ne mighte him nat bireve of his estaat:
- But sodeynly he loste his dignitee, 3360
- And lyk a beste him semed for to be, (181)
- And eet hay as an oxe, and lay ther-oute;
- In reyn with wilde bestes walked he,
- Til certein tyme was y-come aboute.
- [250: T. 14181-14212.]
- And lyk an egles fetheres wexe his heres, 3365
- His nayles lyk a briddes clawes were;
- Til god relessed him a certein yeres,
- And yaf him wit; and than with many a tere
- He thanked god, and ever his lyf in fere
- Was he to doon amis, or more trespace; 3370
- And, til that tyme he leyd was on his bere, (191)
- He knew that god was ful of might and grace.
- 3365. Wexe _is the right reading, whence_ Cm. wexsyn, _and_ Hl. Cp.
- were (_for_ wexe); E. Hn. wax; Pt. Ln. was (_for_ wax).
- BALTHASAR (BELSHAZZAR).
- His sone, which that highte Balthasar,
- That heeld the regne after his fader day,
- He by his fader coude nought be war, 3375
- For proud he was of herte and of array;
- And eek an ydolastre was he ay.
- His hye estaat assured him in pryde.
- But fortune caste him doun, and ther he lay,
- And sodeynly his regne gan divyde. 3380
- 3377. E. he was; _rest_ was he.
- A feste he made un-to his lordes alle (201)
- Up-on a tyme, and bad hem blythe be,
- And than his officeres gan he calle--
- 'Goth, bringeth forth the vessels,' [tho] quod he,
- 'Which that my fader, in his prosperitee, 3385
- Out of the temple of Ierusalem birafte,
- And to our hye goddes thanke we
- Of honour, that our eldres with us lafte.'
- 3384. _I supply_ tho. _For_ vessels, _see_ 3391, 3416, 3418.
- His wyf, his lordes, and his concubynes
- Ay dronken, whyl hir appetytes laste, 3390
- Out of thise noble vessels sundry wynes; (211)
- And on a wal this king his yën caste,
- And sey an hond armlees, that wroot ful faste,
- For fere of which he quook and syked sore.
- This hond, that Balthasar so sore agaste, 3395
- Wroot _Mane, techel, phares_, and na-more.
- [251: T. 14213-14244.]
- In al that lond magicien was noon
- That coude expoune what this lettre mente;
- But Daniel expouned it anoon,
- And seyde, 'king, god to thy fader lente 3400
- Glorie and honour, regne, tresour, rente: (221)
- And he was proud, and no-thing god ne dradde,
- And therfor god gret wreche up-on him sente,
- And him birafte the regne that he hadde.
- 3400. Hn. lente; _rest_ sente (_but see_ l. 3403).
- He was out cast of mannes companye, 3405
- With asses was his habitacioun,
- And eet hey as a beste in weet and drye,
- Til that he knew, by grace and by resoun,
- That god of heven hath dominacioun
- Over every regne and every creature; 3410
- And thanne had god of him compassioun, (231)
- And him restored his regne and his figure.
- Eek thou, that art his sone, art proud also,
- And knowest alle thise thinges verraily,
- And art rebel to god, and art his fo. 3415
- Thou drank eek of his vessels boldely;
- Thy wyf eek and thy wenches sinfully
- Dronke of the same vessels sondry wynes,
- And heriest false goddes cursedly;
- Therfor to thee y-shapen ful gret pyne is. 3420
- This hand was sent from god, that on the walle (241)
- Wroot _mane, techel, phares_, truste me;
- Thy regne is doon, thou weyest noght at alle;
- Divyded is thy regne, and it shal be
- To Medes and to Perses yeven,' quod he. 3425
- And thilke same night this king was slawe,
- And Darius occupyeth his degree,
- Thogh he therto had neither right ne lawe.
- 3422. E. Hn. Cp. Hl. truste; Pt. trest; Ln. trust; Cm. trust to. See
- B. 4214. 3425. E. _om._ yeven.
- [252: T. 14245-14276.]
- Lordinges, ensample heer-by may ye take
- How that in lordshipe is no sikernesse; 3430
- For whan fortune wol a man forsake, (251)
- She bereth awey his regne and his richesse,
- And eek his freendes, bothe more and lesse;
- For what man that hath freendes thurgh fortune,
- Mishap wol make hem enemys, I gesse: 3435
- This proverbe is ful sooth and ful commune.
- 3435. E. as I; _the rest omit_ as.
- CENOBIA (ZENOBIA).
- Cenobia, of Palimerie quene,
- As writen Persiens of hir noblesse,
- So worthy was in armes and so kene,
- That no wight passed hir in hardinesse, 3440
- Ne in linage, ne in other gentillesse. (261)
- Of kinges blode of Perse is she descended;
- I seye nat that she hadde most fairnesse,
- But of hir shape she mighte nat been amended.
- 3437. _So_ E. Hn. Cm.; _and_ Cp. _has the heading_--De Cenobia
- Palymerie regina. 3441. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. ne in; E. nor in; Hn. ne; Cm.
- nor; (ne in = n'in).
- From hir childhede I finde that she fledde 3445
- Office of wommen, and to wode she wente;
- And many a wilde hertes blood she shedde
- With arwes brode that she to hem sente.
- She was so swift that she anon hem hente,
- And whan that she was elder, she wolde kille 3450
- Leouns, lepardes, and beres al to-rente, (271)
- And in hir armes welde hem at hir wille.
- She dorste wilde beestes dennes seke,
- And rennen in the montaignes al the night,
- And slepen under a bush, and she coude eke 3455
- Wrastlen by verray force and verray might
- With any yong man, were he never so wight;
- Ther mighte no-thing in hir armes stonde.
- She kepte hir maydenhod from every wight,
- To no man deigned hir for to be bonde. 3460
- 3455. E. Hn. Cm. the; _rest_ a. E. bussh.
- [253: T. 14277-14308.]
- But atte laste hir frendes han hir maried (281)
- To Odenake, a prince of that contree,
- Al were it so that she hem longe taried;
- And ye shul understonde how that he
- Hadde swiche fantasyes as hadde she. 3465
- But nathelees, whan they were knit in-fere,
- They lived in Ioye and in felicitee;
- For ech of hem hadde other leef and dere.
- 3462. E. Hn. Cm. Onedake; Cp. Ln. Hl. Odenake; Pt. Odonak. 3468. E.
- oother lief.
- Save o thing, that she never wolde assente
- By no wey, that he sholde by hir lye 3470
- But ones, for it was hir pleyn entente (291)
- To have a child, the world to multiplye;
- And al-so sone as that she mighte espye
- That she was nat with childe with that dede,
- Than wolde she suffre him doon his fantasye 3475
- Eft-sone, and nat but ones, out of drede.
- And if she were with childe at thilke cast,
- Na-more sholde he pleyen thilke game
- Til fully fourty dayes weren past;
- Than wolde she ones suffre him do the same. 3480
- Al were this Odenake wilde or tame, (301)
- He gat na-more of hir, for thus she seyde,
- 'It was to wyves lecherye and shame
- In other cas, if that men with hem pleyde.'
- 3481. E. Hn. Cm. Onedake; _rest_ Odenake.
- Two sones by this Odenake hadde she, 3485
- The whiche she kepte in vertu and lettrure;
- But now un-to our tale turne we.
- I seye, so worshipful a creature,
- And wys therwith, and large with mesure,
- So penible in the warre, and curteis eke, 3490
- Ne more labour mighte in werre endure, (311)
- Was noon, thogh al this world men sholde seke.
- 3485. E. _om._ this. E. Hn. Cm. Onedake; _rest_ Odenake. 3492. E.
- though; Hn. thogh. E. wolde; _rest_ sholde (schulde).
- [254: T. 14309-14340.]
- Hir riche array ne mighte nat be told
- As wel in vessel as in hir clothing;
- She was al clad in perree and in gold, 3495
- And eek she lafte noght, for noon hunting,
- To have of sondry tonges ful knowing,
- Whan that she leyser hadde, and for to entende
- To lernen bokes was al hir lyking,
- How she in vertu mighte hir lyf dispende. 3500
- And, shortly of this storie for to trete, (321)
- So doughty was hir housbonde and eek she,
- That they conquered many regnes grete
- In the orient, with many a fair citee,
- Apertenaunt un-to the magestee 3505
- Of Rome, and with strong hond helde hem ful faste;
- Ne never mighte hir fo-men doon hem flee,
- Ay whyl that Odenakes dayes laste.
- 3501. E. proces; _rest_ storie. 3508. Hl. Odenakes; _rest_ Onedakes,
- Odenake.
- Hir batailes, who-so list hem for to rede,
- Agayn Sapor the king and othere mo, 3510
- And how that al this proces fil in dede, (331)
- Why she conquered and what title had therto,
- And after of hir meschief and hir wo,
- How that she was biseged and y-take,
- Let him un-to my maister Petrark go, 3515
- That writ y-nough of this, I undertake.
- 3511. E. _omits_ that. 3512. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. had; _which_ E. Hn. Cm.
- _omit._
- When Odenake was deed, she mightily
- The regnes heeld, and with hir propre honde
- Agayn hir foos she faught so cruelly,
- That ther nas king ne prince in al that londe 3520
- That he nas glad, if that he grace fonde, (341)
- That she ne wolde up-on his lond werreye;
- With hir they made alliaunce by bonde
- To been in pees, and lete hir ryde and pleye.
- 3517. _So_ Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl.; E. Hn. Cm. Onedake. 3518. E. hond_e_; Pt.
- honde; Ln. hande; _rest_ hond. 3523. _MSS._ made; _read_ maden?
- [255: T. 14341-14372.]
- The emperour of Rome, Claudius, 3525
- Ne him bifore, the Romayn Galien,
- Ne dorste never been so corageous,
- Ne noon Ermyn, ne noon Egipcien,
- Ne Surrien, ne noon Arabien,
- Within the feld that dorste with hir fighte 3530
- Lest that she wolde hem with hir hondes slen, (351)
- Or with hir meynee putten hem to flighte.
- 3530. Cp. feeld; Hl. feld; Ln. felde; Pt. feelde; E. Hn. Cm. feeldes.
- In kinges habit wente hir sones two,
- As heires of hir fadres regnes alle,
- And Hermanno, and Thymalaö 3535
- Her names were, as Persiens hem calle.
- But ay fortune hath in hir hony galle;
- This mighty quene may no whyl endure.
- Fortune out of hir regne made hir falle
- To wrecchednesse and to misaventure. 3540
- Aurelian, whan that the governaunce (361)
- Of Rome cam in-to his hondes tweye,
- He shoop up-on this queen to do vengeaunce,
- And with his legiouns he took his weye
- Toward Cenobie, and, shortly for to seye, 3545
- He made hir flee, and atte laste hir hente,
- And fettred hir, and eek hir children tweye,
- And wan the lond, and hoom to Rome he wente.
- Amonges othere thinges that he wan,
- Hir char, that was with gold wrought and perree, 3550
- This grete Romayn, this Aurelian, (371)
- Hath with him lad, for that men sholde it see.
- Biforen his triumphe walketh she
- With gilte cheynes on hir nekke hanging;
- Corouned was she, as after hir degree, 3555
- And ful of perree charged hir clothing.
- 3553. _MSS._ Biforn, Bifore (Hl. Bifore this). 3555. E. _omits_ as.
- [256: T. 14373-14708.]
- Allas, fortune! she that whylom was
- Dredful to kinges and to emperoures,
- Now gaureth al the peple on hir, allas!
- And she that helmed was in starke stoures, 3560
- And wan by force tounes stronge and toures, (381)
- Shal on hir heed now were a vitremyte;
- And she that bar the ceptre ful of floures
- Shal bere a distaf, hir cost for to quyte. [T. 14380.
- 3560. E. shoures. 3562. Hl. wyntermyte. 3564. Hn. Cm. Ln. cost; Pt.
- coste; E. Cp. costes; Hl. self.
- (NERO _follows in_ T.; _see_ p. 259.)
- DE PETRO REGE ISPANNIE.
- O noble, o worthy Petro, glorie of Spayne, [T. 14685.
- Whom fortune heeld so hy in magestee, 3566
- Wel oughten men thy pitous deeth complayne!
- Out of thy lond thy brother made thee flee;
- And after, at a sege, by subtiltee,
- Thou were bitrayed, and lad un-to his tente, 3570
- Wher-as he with his owene hond slow thee, (391)
- Succeding in thy regne and in thy rente.
- 3570. E. Hn. Cm. bitraysed.
- The feeld of snow, with thegle of blak ther-inne, [T. 14693.
- Caught with the lymrod, coloured as the glede,
- He brew this cursednes and al this sinne. 3575
- The 'wikked nest' was werker of this nede;
- Noght Charles Oliver, that ay took hede
- Of trouthe and honour, but of Armorike
- Genilon Oliver, corrupt for mede,
- Broghte this worthy king in swich a brike. 3580
- 3577. E. Hn. Cm. took ay; _rest_ ay took.
- DE PETRO REGE DE CIPRO.
- O worthy Petro, king of Cypre, also, (401)
- That Alisaundre wan by heigh maistrye,
- Ful many a hethen wroghtestow ful wo,
- Of which thyn owene liges hadde envye,
- And, for no thing but for thy chivalrye, 3585
- They in thy bedde han slayn thee by the morwe.
- Thus can fortune hir wheel governe and gye,
- And out of Ioye bringe men to sorwe. [T. 14708.
- [257: T. 14709-14740.]
- DE BARNABO DE LUMBARDIA.
- Of Melan grete Barnabo Viscounte,
- God of delyt, and scourge of Lumbardye, 3590
- Why sholde I nat thyn infortune acounte, (411)
- Sith in estaat thou clombe were so hye?
- Thy brother sone, that was thy double allye,
- For he thy nevew was, and sone-in-lawe,
- With-inne his prisoun made thee to dye; 3595
- But why, ne how, noot I that thou were slawe.
- DE HUGELINO, COMITE DE PIZE.
- Of the erl Hugelyn of Pyse the langour
- Ther may no tonge telle for pitee;
- But litel out of Pyse stant a tour,
- In whiche tour in prisoun put was he, 3600
- And with him been his litel children three. (421)
- The eldeste scarsly fyf yeer was of age.
- Allas, fortune! it was greet crueltee
- Swiche briddes for to putte in swiche a cage!
- 3597. E. Pyze; Hn. Pize; Cp. Pyse; Pt. Ln. Hl. Pise. 3599. E. Hn. Cm.
- Pize; Cp. Pyse; Pt. Ln. Hl. Pise.
- Dampned was he to deye in that prisoun, 3605
- For Roger, which that bisshop was of Pyse,
- Hadde on him maad a fals suggestioun,
- Thurgh which the peple gan upon him ryse,
- And putten him to prisoun in swich wyse
- As ye han herd, and mete and drink he hadde 3610
- So smal, that wel unnethe it may suffyse, (431)
- And therwith-al it was ful povre and badde.
- 3606. E. Hn. Pize; Cm. Pyze; Cp. Pyse; Pt. Ln. Hl. Pise. 3611. E. Pt.
- _omit_ wel.
- And on a day bifil that, in that hour,
- Whan that his mete wont was to be broght,
- The gayler shette the dores of the tour. 3615
- He herde it wel,--but he spak right noght,
- And in his herte anon ther fil a thoght,
- That they for hunger wolde doon him dyen.
- 'Allas!' quod he, 'allas! that I was wroght!'
- Therwith the teres fillen from his yën. 3620
- 3616. E. Hn. spak right; Cp. Hl. saugh it; Pt. seegh it; Ln. sawe it.
- [258: T. 14741-14772.]
- His yonge sone, that three yeer was of age, (441)
- Un-to him seyde, 'fader, why do ye wepe?
- Whan wol the gayler bringen our potage,
- Is ther no morsel breed that ye do kepe?
- I am so hungry that I may nat slepe, 3625
- Now wolde god that I mighte slepen ever!
- Than sholde nat hunger in my wombe crepe;
- Ther is no thing, save breed, that me were lever.'
- 3622. E. Hn. _repeat_ fader. 3628. Ln. Hl. saue; Cp. Pt. sauf; E. Hn.
- but.
- Thus day by day this child bigan to crye,
- Til in his fadres barme adoun it lay, 3630
- And seyde, 'far-wel, fader, I moot dye,' (451)
- And kiste his fader, and deyde the same day.
- And whan the woful fader deed it sey,
- For wo his armes two he gan to byte,
- And seyde, 'allas, fortune! and weylaway! 3635
- Thy false wheel my wo al may I wyte!'
- 3632. E. Hl. dyde; Hn. Cp. deyde; _see_ l. 3644.
- His children wende that it for hunger was
- That he his armes gnow, and nat for wo,
- And seyde, 'fader, do nat so, allas!
- But rather eet the flesh upon us two; 3640
- Our flesh thou yaf us, tak our flesh us fro (461)
- And eet y-nough:' right thus they to him seyde,
- And after that, with-in a day or two,
- They leyde hem in his lappe adoun, and deyde.
- 3640. E. flessh. 3641. E. flessh. E. Hn. _omit_ vs _after_ yaf.
- Him-self, despeired, eek for hunger starf; 3645
- Thus ended is this mighty Erl of Pyse;
- From heigh estaat fortune awey him carf.
- Of this Tragedie it oghte y-nough suffyse.
- Who-so wol here it in a lenger wyse,
- Redeth the grete poete of Itaille, 3650
- That highte Dant, for he can al devyse (471)
- Fro point to point, nat o word wol he faille. [T. 14772.
- 3646. _See note to _ l. 3597.
- [259: T. 14381-14412.] (_For_ T. 14773, _see_ p. 269; _for_ T. 14380, _see_
- p. 256.)
- NERO.
- Al-though that Nero were as vicious [T. 14381.
- As any feend that lyth ful lowe adoun,
- Yet he, as telleth us Swetonius, 3655
- This wyde world hadde in subieccioun,
- Both Est and West, South and Septemtrioun;
- Of rubies, saphires, and of perles whyte
- Were alle his clothes brouded up and doun;
- For he in gemmes greetly gan delyte. 3660
- 3653. E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ as. 3654. E. in helle; _rest_ full lowe.
- 3657. E. Hn. Cm. North (_but read_ South); Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl _omit_!
- More delicat, more pompous of array, (481)
- More proud was never emperour than he;
- That ilke cloth, that he had wered o day,
- After that tyme he nolde it never see.
- Nettes of gold-thred hadde he gret plentee 3665
- To fisshe in Tybre, whan him liste pleye.
- His lustes were al lawe in his decree,
- For fortune as his freend him wolde obeye.
- He Rome brende for his delicacye;
- The senatours he slow up-on a day. 3670
- To here how men wolde wepe and crye; (491)
- And slow his brother, and by his sister lay.
- His moder made he in pitous array;
- For he hir wombe slitte, to biholde
- Wher he conceyved was; so weilawey! 3675
- That he so litel of his moder tolde!
- 3673, 6. E. mooder.
- No tere out of his yën for that sighte
- Ne cam, but seyde, 'a fair womman was she.'
- Gret wonder is, how that he coude or mighte
- Be domesman of hir dede beautee. 3680
- The wyn to bringen him comaunded he, (501)
- And drank anon; non other wo he made.
- Whan might is Ioyned un-to crueltee,
- Allas! to depe wol the venim wade!
- 3682. E. noon oother.
- [260: T. 14413-14444.]
- In youthe a maister hadde this emperour, 3685
- To teche him letterure and curteisye,
- For of moralitee he was the flour,
- As in his tyme, but-if bokes lye;
- And whyl this maister hadde of him maistrye,
- He maked him so conning and so souple 3690
- That longe tyme it was er tirannye (511)
- Or any vyce dorste on him uncouple.
- This Seneca, of which that I devyse,
- By-cause Nero hadde of him swich drede,
- For he fro vyces wolde him ay chastyse 3695
- Discreetly as by worde and nat by dede;--
- 'Sir,' wolde he seyn, 'an emperour moot nede
- Be vertuous, and hate tirannye'--
- For which he in a bath made him to blede
- On bothe his armes, til he moste dye. 3700
- 3694. Cm. Bycause that. 3695. Hn. Cm. ay; _rest omit._ [3699.
- _Misnumbered_ 520 _in the_ Aldine Edition; _but corrected further on._]
- This Nero hadde eek of acustumaunce (521)
- In youthe ageyn his maister for to ryse,
- Which afterward him thoughte a greet grevaunce;
- Therfor he made him deyen in this wyse.
- But natheles this Seneca the wyse 3705
- Chees in a bath to deye in this manere
- Rather than han another tormentyse;
- And thus hath Nero slayn his maister dere.
- 3703. E. (_only_) _omits_ a. 3707. E. any oother.
- Now fil it so that fortune list no lenger
- The hye pryde of Nero to cheryce; 3710
- For though that he were strong, yet was she strenger; (531)
- She thoughte thus, 'by god, I am to nyce
- To sette a man that is fulfild of vyce
- In heigh degree, and emperour him calle.
- By god, out of his sete I wol him tryce; 3715
- When he leest weneth, sonest shal he falle.'
- 3711. E. Hn. was; _the rest_ were.
- [261: T. 14445-14476.]
- The peple roos up-on him on a night
- For his defaute, and whan he it espyed,
- Out of his dores anon he hath him dight
- Alone, and, ther he wende han ben allyed, 3720
- He knokked faste, and ay, the more he cryed, (541)
- The faster shette they the dores alle;
- Tho wiste he wel he hadde him-self misgyed,
- And wente his wey, no lenger dorste he calle.
- 3723. E. Hn. _wrongly repeat_ l. 3731 _here._
- The peple cryde and rombled up and doun, 3725
- That with his eres herde he how they seyde,
- 'Wher is this false tyraunt, this Neroun?'
- For fere almost out of his wit he breyde,
- And to his goddes pitously he preyde
- For socour, but it mighte nat bityde. 3730
- For drede of this, him thoughte that he deyde, (551)
- And ran in-to a gardin, him to hyde.
- And in this gardin fond he cherles tweye
- That seten by a fyr ful greet and reed,
- And to thise cherles two he gan to preye 3735
- To sleen him, and to girden of his heed,
- That to his body, whan that he were deed,
- Were no despyt y-doon, for his defame.
- Him-self he slow, he coude no better reed,
- Of which fortune lough, and hadde a game. 3740
- 3733. E. Hn. foond. 3734. E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ ful.
- DE OLOFERNO (HOLOFERNES).
- Was never capitayn under a king (561)
- That regnes mo putte in subieccioun,
- Ne strenger was in feeld of alle thing,
- As in his tyme, ne gretter of renoun,
- Ne more pompous in heigh presumpcioun 3745
- Than Oloferne, which fortune ay kiste
- So likerously, and ladde him up and doun
- Til that his heed was of, er that he wiste.
- [262: T. 14477-14508.]
- Nat only that this world hadde him in awe
- For lesinge of richesse or libertee, 3750
- But he made every man reneye his lawe. (571)
- 'Nabugodonosor was god,' seyde he,
- 'Noon other god sholde adoured be.'
- Ageyns his heste no wight dar trespace
- Save in Bethulia, a strong citee, 3755
- Wher Eliachim a prest was of that place.
- 3751. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _omit_ he. 3753. E. Hn. Cm. adoured; Cp. Pt. Ln.
- Hl. honoured. 3754. E. Hn. dorste; _rest_ dar.
- But tak kepe of the deeth of Olofern;
- Amidde his host he dronke lay a night,
- With-inne his tente, large as is a bern,
- And yit, for al his pompe and al his might, 3760
- Iudith, a womman, as he lay upright, (581)
- Sleping, his heed of smoot, and from his tente
- Ful prively she stal from every wight,
- And with his heed unto hir toun she wente.
- DE REGE ANTHIOCHO ILLUSTRI.
- What nedeth it of King Anthiochus 3765
- To telle his hye royal magestee,
- His hye pryde, his werkes venimous?
- For swich another was ther noon as he.
- Rede which that he was in Machabee,
- And rede the proude wordes that he seyde, 3770
- And why he fil fro heigh prosperitee, (591)
- And in an hil how wrechedly he deyde.
- Fortune him hadde enhaunced so in pryde
- That verraily he wende he mighte attayne
- Unto the sterres, upon every syde, 3775
- And in balance weyen ech montayne,
- And alle the flodes of the see restrayne.
- And goddes peple hadde he most in hate,
- Hem wolde he sleen in torment and in payne,
- Wening that god ne mighte his pryde abate. 3780
- 3777. Cm. flodys; _rest_ floodes. 3778. E. Hn. moost.
- [263: T. 14509-14540.]
- And for that Nichanor and Thimothee (601)
- Of Iewes weren venquisshed mightily,
- Unto the Iewes swich an hate hadde he
- That he bad greithe his char ful hastily,
- And swoor, and seyde, ful despitously, 3785
- Unto Ierusalem he wolde eft-sone,
- To wreken his ire on it ful cruelly;
- But of his purpos he was let ful sone.
- 3784. E. greithen; Hn. greithe; Cm. ordeyne. E. Hn. chaar; Cm. char.
- God for his manace him so sore smoot
- With invisible wounde, ay incurable, 3790
- That in his guttes carf it so and boot (611)
- That his peynes weren importable.
- And certeinly, the wreche was resonable,
- For many a mannes guttes dide he peyne;
- But from his purpos cursed and dampnable 3795
- For al his smert he wolde him nat restreyne;
- But bad anon apparaillen his host,
- And sodeynly, er he of it was war,
- God daunted al his pryde and al his bost.
- For he so sore fil out of his char, 3800
- That it his limes and his skin to-tar, (621)
- So that he neither mighte go ne ryde,
- But in a chayer men aboute him bar,
- Al for-brused, bothe bak and syde.
- 3797, 9. E. hoost, boost. 3801. E. lemes; Hn. Cp. Hl. lymes; Cm.
- lymys; Ln. limes.
- The wreche of god him smoot so cruelly 3805
- That thurgh his body wikked wormes crepte;
- And ther-with-al he stank so horribly,
- That noon of al his meynee that him kepte,
- Whether so he wook or elles slepte,
- Ne mighte noght for stink of him endure. 3810
- In this meschief he wayled and eek wepte, (631)
- And knew god lord of every creature.
- 3807. E. _om._ so; E. horriblely. 3809. E. Hn. Cm. so; Pt. Hl. that;
- Cp. Ln. so that. 3810. E. Hn. for; _rest_ the.
- [264: T. 14541-14572.]
- To al his host and to him-self also
- Ful wlatsom was the stink of his careyne;
- No man ne mighte him bere to ne fro. 3815
- And in this stink and this horrible peyne
- He starf ful wrecchedly in a monteyne.
- Thus hath this robbour and this homicyde,
- That many a man made to wepe and pleyne,
- Swich guerdon as bilongeth unto pryde. 3820
- DE ALEXANDRO.
- The storie of Alisaundre is so comune, (641)
- That every wight that hath discrecioun
- Hath herd somwhat or al of his fortune.
- This wyde world, as in conclusioun,
- He wan by strengthe, or for his hye renoun 3825
- They weren glad for pees un-to him sende.
- The pryde of man and beste he leyde adoun,
- Wher-so he cam, un-to the worldes ende.
- 3827. beste] Hl. bost.
- Comparisoun might never yit be maked
- Bitwixe him and another conquerour; 3830
- For al this world for drede of him hath quaked, (651)
- He was of knighthode and of fredom flour;
- Fortune him made the heir of hir honour;
- Save wyn and wommen, no-thing mighte aswage
- His hye entente in armes and labour; 3835
- So was he ful of leonyn corage.
- 3830. E. Hn. Bitwixen. 3832. E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ was. 3834. E. man:
- _rest_ thing.
- What preys were it to him, though I yow tolde
- Of Darius, and an hundred thousand mo,
- Of kinges, princes, erles, dukes bolde,
- Whiche he conquered, and broghte hem in-to wo? 3840
- I seye, as fer as man may ryde or go, (661)
- The world was his, what sholde I more devyse?
- For though I write or tolde you evermo
- Of his knighthode, it mighte nat suffyse.
- 3837. Cm. preys; E. Hn. pris: Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. pite. 3843. Hl.
- _omits._
- [265: T. 14573-14604.]
- Twelf yeer he regned, as seith Machabee; 3845
- Philippes sone of Macedoyne he was,
- That first was king in Grece the contree.
- O worthy gentil Alisaundre, allas!
- That ever sholde fallen swich a cas!
- Empoisoned of thyn owene folk thou were; 3850
- Thy _sys_ fortune hath turned into _as;_ (671)
- And yit for thee ne weep she never a tere!
- 3851. E. Hn. Cm. aas; Cp. Pt. Hl. an aas; Ln. an as. 3852. E. Hn. Cm.
- _omit_ yit; Hl. _has_ right.
- Who shal me yeven teres to compleyne
- The deeth of gentillesse and of fraunchyse,
- That al the world welded in his demeyne, 3855
- And yit him thoughte it mighte nat suffyse?
- So ful was his corage of heigh empryse.
- Allas! who shal me helpe to endyte
- False fortune, and poison to despyse,
- The whiche two of al this wo I wyte? 3860
- DE IULIO CESARE.
- By wisdom, manhede, and by greet labour (681)
- Fro humble bed to royal magestee,
- Up roos he, Iulius the conquerour,
- That wan al thoccident by lond and see,
- By strengthe of hond, or elles by tretee, 3865
- And un-to Rome made hem tributarie;
- And sitthe of Rome the emperour was he,
- Til that fortune wex his adversarie.
- 3861. E. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_ greet. 3862. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. humble bed;
- Pt. Cp. Ln. humblehede.
- O mighty Cesar, that in Thessalye
- Ageyn Pompeius, fader thyn in lawe, 3870
- That of thorient hadde al the chivalrye (691)
- As fer as that the day biginneth dawe,
- Thou thurgh thy knighthode hast hem take and slawe,
- Save fewe folk that with Pompeius fledde,
- Thurgh which thou puttest al thorient in awe. 3875
- Thanke fortune, that so wel thee spedde!
- 3870. _MSS._ Pompeus, Pompius.
- [266: T. 14605-14636.]
- But now a litel whyl I wol biwaille
- This Pompeius, this noble governour
- Of Rome, which that fleigh at this bataille;
- I seye, oon of his men, a fals traitour, 3880
- His heed of smoot, to winnen him favour (701)
- Of Iulius, and him the heed he broghte.
- Allas, Pompey, of thorient conquerour,
- That fortune unto swich a fyn thee broghte!
- [3881. _Misnumbered_ 700 _in the_ Aldine edition.]
- To Rome ageyn repaireth Iulius 3885
- With his triumphe, laureat ful hye,
- But on a tyme Brutus Cassius,
- That ever hadde of his hye estaat envye,
- Ful prively hath maad conspiracye
- Ageins this Iulius, in subtil wyse, 3890
- And cast the place, in whiche he sholde dye (711)
- With boydekins, as I shal yow devyse.
- 3887. _So in the MSS.; observe_ hath _in l._ 3889.
- This Iulius to the Capitolie wente
- Upon a day, as he was wont to goon,
- And in the Capitolie anon him hente 3895
- This false Brutus, and his othere foon,
- And stikede him with boydekins anoon
- With many a wounde, and thus they lete him lye;
- But never gronte he at no strook but oon,
- Or elles at two, but-if his storie lye. 3900
- So manly was this Iulius at herte (721)
- And so wel lovede estaatly honestee,
- That, though his deedly woundes sore smerte,
- His mantel over his hippes casteth he,
- For no man sholde seen his privitee. 3905
- And, as he lay on deying in a traunce,
- And wiste verraily that deed was he,
- Of honestee yit hadde he remembraunce.
- 3904. Cm. castyth; _rest_ caste, cast. 3906. Cm. on deyinge; Pt. on
- dyinge; Ln. in deynge; E. Hn. of dyyng.
- [267: T. 14637-14668.]
- Lucan, to thee this storie I recomende,
- And to Sweton, and to Valerie also, 3910
- That of this storie wryten word and ende, (731)
- How that to thise grete conqueroures two
- Fortune was first freend, and sithen fo.
- No man ne truste up-on hir favour longe,
- But have hir in awayt for ever-mo. 3915
- Witnesse on alle thise conqueroures stronge.
- 3910. Hl. Valirien; _rest_ Valerius; ed. 1561, Valerie. 3911. _The
- MSS. have_ word (_for_ ord); _see the note._ 3913. E. sitthe; Hl.
- siththen; Hn. Cm. siththe a.
- CRESUS.
- This riche Cresus, whylom king of Lyde,
- Of whiche Cresus Cyrus sore him dradde,
- Yit was he caught amiddes al his pryde,
- And to be brent men to the fyr him ladde. 3920
- But swich a reyn doun fro the welkne shadde (741)
- That slow the fyr, and made him to escape;
- But to be war no grace yet he hadde,
- Til fortune on the galwes made him gape.
- Whan he escaped was, he can nat stente 3925
- For to biginne a newe werre agayn.
- He wende wel, for that fortune him sente
- Swich hap, that he escaped thurgh the rayn,
- That of his foos he mighte nat be slayn;
- And eek a sweven up-on a night he mette, 3930
- Of which he was so proud and eek so fayn, (751)
- That in vengeaunce he al his herte sette.
- Up-on a tree he was, as that him thoughte,
- Ther Iuppiter him wesh, bothe bak and syde,
- And Phebus eek a fair towaille him broughte 3935
- To drye him with, and ther-for wex his pryde;
- And to his doghter, that stood him bisyde,
- Which that he knew in heigh science habounde,
- He bad hir telle him what it signifyde,
- And she his dreem bigan right thus expounde. 3940
- 3936. Cm. Pt. Ln. wex; _rest_ wax.
- [268: T. 14669-14684.]
- 'The tree,' quod she, 'the galwes is to mene, (761)
- And Iuppiter bitokneth snow and reyn,
- And Phebus, with his towaille so clene,
- Tho ben the sonne stremes for to seyn;
- Thou shalt anhanged be, fader, certeyn; 3945
- Reyn shal thee wasshe, and sonne shal thee drye;'
- Thus warned she him ful plat and ful pleyn,
- His doughter, which that called was Phanye.
- 3944. E. bemes; _rest_ stremes. 3947. Pt. Ln. Hl. she; _rest omit_.
- Anhanged was Cresus, the proude king,
- His royal trone mighte him nat availle.-- 3950
- Tragedie is noon other maner thing, (771)
- Ne can in singing crye ne biwaille,
- But for that fortune alwey wol assaille
- With unwar strook the regnes that ben proude;
- For when men trusteth hir, than wol she faille, 3955
- And covere hir brighte face with a cloude. [See p. 256.
- _Explicit Tragedia_.
- HERE STINTETH THE KNIGHT THE MONK OF HIS TALE.
- 3951. Cm. Tragedy is; _so_ Cp. Pt.; Ln. Tregedrye in; E. Hn. Tragedies;
- Hl. Tegredis(!). 3953. Cm. Hl. for; _rest omit_. [3956. _Reckoned
- as 775 in the_ Aldine edition; _but really_ 776.] _After l._ 3956, E.
- Hn. Cm. _have_ ll. 3565-3652. COLOPHON. _From_ E. Hn. Here is ended
- the Monkes tale.
- [269: T. 14773-14798.]
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGUE OF THE NONNE PRESTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGUE OF THE NONNE PREESTES TALE.
- 'Ho!' quod the knight, 'good sir, na-more of this,
- That ye han seyd is right y-nough, y-wis,
- And mochel more; for litel hevinesse
- Is right y-nough to mochel folk, I gesse. 3960
- I seye for me, it is a greet disese
- Wher-as men han ben in greet welthe and ese,
- To heren of hir sodeyn fal, allas!
- And the contrarie is Ioie and greet solas,
- As whan a man hath been in povre estaat, 3965
- And clymbeth up, and wexeth fortunat, (10)
- And ther abydeth in prosperitee,
- Swich thing is gladsom, as it thinketh me,
- And of swich thing were goodly for to telle.'
- 'Ye,' quod our hoste, 'by seint Poules belle, 3970
- Ye seye right sooth; this monk, he clappeth loude,
- He spak how "fortune covered with a cloude"
- I noot never what, and als of a "Tragedie"
- Right now ye herde, and parde! no remedie
- It is for to biwaille, ne compleyne 3975
- That that is doon, and als it is a peyne, (20)
- As ye han seyd, to here of hevinesse.
- Sir monk, na-more of this, so god yow blesse!
- Your tale anoyeth al this companye;
- Swich talking is nat worth a boterflye; 3980
- For ther-in is ther no desport ne game.
- Wherfor, sir Monk, or dan Piers by your name,
- [270: T. 14799-14826.]
- I preye yow hertely, telle us somwhat elles,
- For sikerly, nere clinking of your belles,
- That on your brydel hange on every syde, 3985
- By heven king, that for us alle dyde, (30)
- I sholde er this han fallen doun for slepe,
- Although the slough had never been so depe;
- Than had your tale al be told in vayn.
- For certeinly, as that thise clerkes seyn, 3990
- "Wher-as a man may have noon audience,
- Noght helpeth it to tellen his sentence."
- And wel I woot the substance is in me,
- If any thing shal wel reported be.
- Sir, sey somwhat of hunting, I yow preye.' 3995
- 'Nay,' quod this monk, 'I have no lust to pleye; (40)
- Now let another telle, as I have told.'
- Than spak our host, with rude speche and bold,
- And seyde un-to the Nonnes Preest anon,
- 'Com neer, thou preest, com hider, thou sir Iohn, 4000
- Tel us swich thing as may our hertes glade,
- Be blythe, though thou ryde up-on a Iade.
- What though thyn hors be bothe foule and lene,
- If he wol serve thee, rekke nat a bene;
- Look that thyn herte be mery evermo.' 4005
- 'Yis, sir,' quod he, 'yis, host, so mote I go, (50)
- But I be mery, y-wis, I wol be blamed:'--
- And right anon his tale he hath attamed,
- And thus he seyde un-to us everichon,
- This swete preest, this goodly man, sir Iohn. 4010
- _Explicit._
- 3982. Pt. or; Hn. o; _rest omit._ 4002. though] Hl. al-though.
- 4004. Pt. Hl. rek. 4005. E. Hn. murie; _rest_ mery. 4006. Cp. Ln.
- Yis, ost, quod he, so mote I ryde or go.
- [271: T. 14827-14852.]
- * * * * *
- THE NONNE PREESTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE NONNE PREESTES TALE OF THE COK
- AND HEN, CHAUNTECLEER AND PERTELOTE.
- A povre widwe, somdel stope in age,
- Was whylom dwelling in a narwe cotage,
- Bisyde a grove, stonding in a dale.
- This widwe, of which I telle yow my tale,
- Sin thilke day that she was last a wyf, 4015
- In pacience ladde a ful simple lyf,
- For litel was hir catel and hir rente;
- By housbondrye, of such as God hir sente,
- She fond hir-self, and eek hir doghtren two.
- Three large sowes hadde she, and namo, 4020
- Three kyn, and eek a sheep that highte Malle. (11)
- Ful sooty was hir bour, and eek hir halle,
- In which she eet ful many a sclendre meel.
- Of poynaunt sauce hir neded never a deel.
- No deyntee morsel passed thurgh hir throte; 4025
- Hir dyete was accordant to hir cote.
- Repleccioun ne made hir never syk;
- Attempree dyete was al hir phisyk,
- And exercyse, and hertes suffisaunce.
- The goute lette hir no-thing for to daunce, 4030
- Napoplexye shente nat hir heed; (21)
- No wyn ne drank she, neither whyt ne reed;
- Hir bord was served most with whyt and blak,
- Milk and broun breed, in which she fond no lak,
- Seynd bacoun, and somtyme an ey or tweye, 4035
- For she was as it were a maner deye.
- 4011. E. Hn. stape; Ln. stoupe; _rest_ stope. 4013. E. grene. 4021.
- E. keen; Hn. Hl. Cp. kyn. 4031. E. Hn. Napoplexie; _rest_ Ne
- poplexie.
- [272: T. 14853-14887.]
- A yerd she hadde, enclosed al aboute
- With stikkes, and a drye dich with-oute,
- In which she hadde a cok, hight Chauntecleer,
- In al the land of crowing nas his peer. 4040
- His vois was merier than the mery orgon (31)
- On messe-dayes that in the chirche gon;
- Wel sikerer was his crowing in his logge,
- Than is a clokke, or an abbey orlogge.
- By nature knew he ech ascencioun 4045
- Of equinoxial in thilke toun;
- For whan degrees fiftene were ascended,
- Thanne crew he, that it mighte nat ben amended.
- His comb was redder than the fyn coral,
- And batailed, as it were a castel-wal. 4050
- His bile was blak, and as the Ieet it shoon; (41)
- Lyk asur were his legges, and his toon;
- His nayles whytter than the lilie flour,
- And lyk the burned gold was his colour.
- This gentil cok hadde in his governaunce 4055
- Sevene hennes, for to doon al his plesaunce,
- Whiche were his sustres and his paramours,
- And wonder lyk to him, as of colours.
- Of whiche the faireste hewed on hir throte
- Was cleped faire damoysele Pertelote. 4060
- Curteys she was, discreet, and debonaire, (51)
- And compaignable, and bar hir-self so faire,
- Sin thilke day that she was seven night old,
- That trewely she hath the herte in hold
- Of Chauntecleer loken in every lith; 4065
- He loved hir so, that wel was him therwith.
- But such a Ioye was it to here hem singe,
- Whan that the brighte sonne gan to springe,
- In swete accord, 'my lief is faren in londe.'
- For thilke tyme, as I have understonde, 4070
- Bestes and briddes coude speke and singe. (61)
- 4039. E. Hn. heet; Cp. that highte; _rest_ that hight. 4041. E. Hn.
- Cm. murier. E. Cm. murie. 4045. Hl. knew he; E. Pt. he crew; _rest_
- he knew. 4046. E. Ln. _ins._ the _after_ Of. 4051. Hl. geet; Pt.
- Ln. gete. 4054. Hl. Cp. Pt. Ln. burnischt. 4062. Hl. ful (_for_
- so). 4068. E. Cm. Ln. bigan.
- [273: T. 14888-14924.]
- And so bifel, that in a daweninge,
- As Chauntecleer among his wyves alle
- Sat on his perche, that was in the halle,
- And next him sat this faire Pertelote, 4075
- This Chauntecleer gan gronen in his throte,
- As man that in his dreem is drecched sore.
- And whan that Pertelote thus herde him rore,
- She was agast, and seyde, 'O herte dere,
- What eyleth yow, to grone in this manere? 4080
- Ye been a verray sleper, fy for shame!' (71)
- And he answerde and seyde thus, 'madame,
- I pray yow, that ye take it nat a-grief:
- By god, me mette I was in swich meschief
- Right now, that yet myn herte is sore afright. 4085
- Now god,' quod he, 'my swevene recche aright,
- And keep my body out of foul prisoun!
- Me mette, how that I romed up and doun
- Withinne our yerde, wher-as I saugh a beste,
- Was lyk an hound, and wolde han maad areste 4090
- Upon my body, and wolde han had me deed. (81)
- His colour was bitwixe yelwe and reed;
- And tipped was his tail, and bothe his eres,
- With blak, unlyk the remenant of his heres;
- His snowte smal, with glowinge eyen tweye. 4095
- Yet of his look for fere almost I deye;
- This caused me my groning, doutelees.'
- 4072. a] E. Pt. the. 4079. E. o; _rest om._ 4084. mette] E.
- thoughte. 4086. E. Hn. recche; Cm. reche; _rest_ rede, reed. 4091.
- E. Hn. Cm. _om._ wolde.
- 'Avoy!' quod she, 'fy on yow, hertelees!
- Allas!' quod she, 'for, by that god above,
- Now han ye lost myn herte and al my love; 4100
- I can nat love a coward, by my feith. (91)
- For certes, what so any womman seith,
- We alle desyren, if it mighte be,
- To han housbondes hardy, wyse, and free,
- And secree, and no nigard, ne no fool, 4105
- Ne him that is agast of every tool,
- Ne noon avauntour, by that god above!
- How dorste ye seyn for shame unto your love,
- [274: T. 14925-14960.]
- That any thing mighte make yow aferd?
- Have ye no mannes herte, and han a berd? 4110
- Allas! and conne ye been agast of swevenis? (101)
- No-thing, god wot, but vanitee, in sweven is.
- Swevenes engendren of replecciouns,
- And ofte of fume, and of complecciouns,
- Whan humours been to habundant in a wight. 4115
- Certes this dreem, which ye han met to-night,
- Cometh of the grete superfluitee
- Of youre rede _colera_, pardee,
- Which causeth folk to dreden in here dremes
- Of arwes, and of fyr with rede lemes, 4120
- Of grete bestes, that they wol hem byte, (111)
- Of contek, and of whelpes grete and lyte;
- Right as the humour of malencolye
- Causeth ful many a man, in sleep, to crye,
- For fere of blake beres, or boles blake, 4125
- Or elles, blake develes wole hem take.
- Of othere humours coude I telle also,
- That werken many a man in sleep ful wo;
- But I wol passe as lightly as I can.
- 4117. E. _om._ the, _and has_ greet. 4119. E. Hn. Cm. dreden; _rest_
- dremen; _see_ 4159. 4121. E. grete; _rest_ rede. 4125. _So_ E. Hn.
- Cm.; Cp. of beres and of boles; Ln. Pt. of beres and boles; Hl. of
- beres or of boles.
- Lo Catoun, which that was so wys a man, 4130
- Seyde he nat thus, ne do no fors of dremes? (121)
- Now, sire,' quod she, 'whan we flee fro the bemes,
- For Goddes love, as tak som laxatyf;
- Up peril of my soule, and of my lyf,
- I counseille yow the beste, I wol nat lye, 4135
- That bothe of colere and of malencolye
- Ye purge yow; and for ye shul nat tarie,
- Though in this toun is noon apotecarie,
- I shal my-self to herbes techen yow,
- That shul ben for your hele, and for your prow; 4140
- And in our yerd tho herbes shal I finde, (131)
- The whiche han of hir propretee, by kinde,
- To purgen yow binethe, and eek above.
- Forget not this, for goddes owene love!
- [275: T. 14961-14996.]
- Ye been ful colerik of compleccioun. 4145
- Ware the sonne in his ascencioun
- Ne fynde yow nat repleet of humours hote;
- And if it do, I dar wel leye a grote,
- That ye shul have a fevere terciane,
- Or an agu, that may be youre bane. 4150
- A day or two ye shul have digestyves (141)
- Of wormes, er ye take your laxatyves,
- Of lauriol, centaure, and fumetere,
- Or elles of ellebor, that groweth there,
- Of catapuce, or of gaytres beryis, 4155
- Of erbe yve, growing in our yerd, that mery is;
- Pekke hem up right as they growe, and ete hem in.
- Be mery, housbond, for your fader kin!
- Dredeth no dreem; I can say yow na-more.'
- 4132. E. ye; _rest_ we. 4136, 7. Hl. _om._ 4155. Cp. Ln. gaytres;
- E. gaitrys; Hn. gaytrys; Hl. gaytre; Cm. gattris; Pt. gatys. 4156.
- Ln. that; Hn. they; _rest_ ther.
- 'Madame,' quod he, '_graunt mercy_ of your lore. 4160
- But nathelees, as touching daun Catoun, (151)
- That hath of wisdom such a greet renoun,
- Though that he bad no dremes for to drede,
- By god, men may in olde bokes rede
- Of many a man, more of auctoritee 4165
- Than ever Catoun was, so mote I thee,
- Than al the revers seyn of his sentence,
- And han wel founden by experience,
- That dremes ben significaciouns,
- As wel of Ioye as tribulaciouns 4170
- That folk enduren in this lyf present. (161)
- Ther nedeth make of this noon argument;
- The verray preve sheweth it in dede.
- 4166. Hn. Cm. Cp. mote; E. moot. 4167. his] E. Pt. this. 4170. E.
- Cm. Cp. Ln. Hl. _ins._ of _after_ as.
- Oon of the gretteste auctours that men rede
- Seith thus, that whylom two felawes wente 4175
- On pilgrimage, in a ful good entente;
- And happed so, thay come into a toun,
- Wher-as ther was swich congregacioun
- Of peple, and eek so streit of herbergage,
- That they ne founde as muche as o cotage, 4180
- [276: T. 14997-15033.]
- In which they bothe mighte y-logged be. (171)
- Wherfor thay mosten, of necessitee,
- As for that night, departen compaignye;
- And ech of hem goth to his hostelrye,
- And took his logging as it wolde falle. 4185
- That oon of hem was logged in a stalle,
- Fer in a yerd, with oxen of the plough;
- That other man was logged wel y-nough,
- As was his aventure, or his fortune,
- That us governeth alle as in commune. 4190
- 4174. Cm. autourys; Hl. auctorite; _rest_ auctour (_sic_). 4177. E.
- Hn. coomen in; Cm. comyn in. 4181. E. logged.
- And so bifel, that, longe er it were day, (181)
- This man mette in his bed, ther-as he lay,
- How that his felawe gan up-on him calle,
- And seyde, 'allas! for in an oxes stalle
- This night I shal be mordred ther I lye. 4195
- Now help me, dere brother, er I dye;
- In alle haste com to me,' he sayde.
- This man out of his sleep for fere abrayde;
- But whan that he was wakned of his sleep,
- He turned him, and took of this no keep; 4200
- Him thoughte his dreem nas but a vanitee. (191)
- Thus twyës in his sleping dremed he.
- And atte thridde tyme yet his felawe
- Cam, as him thoughte, and seide, 'I am now slawe;
- Bihold my blody woundes, depe and wyde! 4205
- Arys up erly in the morwe-tyde,
- And at the west gate of the toun,' quod he,
- 'A carte ful of donge ther shaltow see,
- In which my body is hid ful prively;
- Do thilke carte aresten boldely. 4210
- My gold caused my mordre, sooth to sayn;' (201)
- And tolde him every poynt how he was slayn,
- With a ful pitous face, pale of hewe.
- And truste wel, his dreem he fond ful trewe;
- For on the morwe, as sone as it was day, 4215
- To his felawes in he took the way;
- And whan that he cam to this oxes stalle,
- [277: T. 15034-15069.]
- After his felawe he bigan to calle.
- 4194. Hl. Cp. Ln. oxe. 4196. er] Ln. ar; E. Hn. Hl. or. 4200. E.
- it; _rest_ this. 4210. E. arresten. 4217. Hl. Cp. Ln. oxe.
- The hostiler answered him anon,
- And seyde, 'sire, your felawe is agon, 4220
- As sone as day he wente out of the toun.' (211)
- This man gan fallen in suspecioun,
- Remembring on his dremes that he mette,
- And forth he goth, no lenger wolde he lette,
- Unto the west gate of the toun, and fond 4225
- A dong-carte, as it were to donge lond,
- That was arrayed in the same wyse
- As ye han herd the dede man devyse;
- And with an hardy herte he gan to crye
- Vengeaunce and Iustice of this felonye:-- 4230
- 'My felawe mordred is this same night, (221)
- And in this carte he lyth gapinge upright.
- I crye out on the ministres,' quod he,
- 'That sholden kepe and reulen this citee;
- Harrow! allas! her lyth my felawe slayn!' 4235
- What sholde I more un-to this tale sayn?
- The peple out-sterte, and caste the cart to grounde,
- And in the middel of the dong they founde
- The dede man, that mordred was al newe.
- 4219. Cp. Hl. answered; E. Hn. answerde. 4222. Hl. _ins._ a _after_
- in; Cp. Pt. Ln. _ins._ gret (grete). 4226. Hn. Cm. Hl. wente as it
- were; Cp. Pt. Ln. as he wente. 4232. E. Hn. Cm. _ins._ heere _after_
- carte.
- O blisful god, that art so Iust and trewe! 4240
- Lo, how that thou biwreyest mordre alway! (231)
- Mordre wol out, that see we day by day.
- Mordre is so wlatsom and abhominable
- To god, that is so Iust and resonable,
- That he ne wol nat suffre it heled be; 4245
- Though it abyde a yeer, or two, or three,
- Mordre wol out, this my conclusioun.
- And right anoon, ministres of that toun
- Han hent the carter, and so sore him pyned,
- And eek the hostiler so sore engyned, 4250
- That thay biknewe hir wikkednesse anoon, (241)
- And were an-hanged by the nekke-boon.
- 4247. E. Hn. Cm. this (this is _being pronounced_ this); _rest_ this
- is. 4248. Hl. _ins._ the _after_ anoon.
- Here may men seen that dremes been to drede.
- [278: T. 15070-15105.]
- And certes, in the same book I rede,
- Right in the nexte chapitre after this, 4255
- (I gabbe nat, so have I Ioye or blis,)
- Two men that wolde han passed over see,
- For certeyn cause, in-to a fer contree,
- If that the wind ne hadde been contrarie,
- That made hem in a citee for to tarie, 4260
- That stood ful mery upon an haven-syde. (251)
- But on a day, agayn the even-tyde,
- The wind gan chaunge, and blew right as hem leste.
- Iolif and glad they wente un-to hir reste,
- And casten hem ful erly for to saille; 4265
- But to that oo man fil a greet mervaille.
- That oon of hem, in sleping as he lay,
- Him mette a wonder dreem, agayn the day;
- Him thoughte a man stood by his beddes syde,
- And him comaunded, that he sholde abyde, 4270
- And seyde him thus, 'if thou to-morwe wende, (261)
- Thou shalt be dreynt; my tale is at an ende.'
- He wook, and tolde his felawe what he mette,
- And preyde him his viage for to lette;
- As for that day, he preyde him to abyde. 4275
- His felawe, that lay by his beddes syde,
- Gan for to laughe, and scorned him ful faste.
- 'No dreem,' quod he, 'may so myn herte agaste,
- That I wol lette for to do my thinges.
- I sette not a straw by thy dreminges, 4280
- For swevenes been but vanitees and Iapes. (271)
- Men dreme al-day of owles or of apes,
- And eke of many a mase therwithal;
- Men dreme of thing that nevere was ne shal.
- But sith I see that thou wolt heer abyde, 4285
- And thus for-sleuthen wilfully thy tyde,
- God wot it reweth me; and have good day.'
- And thus he took his leve, and wente his way.
- But er that he hadde halfe his cours y-seyled,
- [279: T. 15106-15141.]
- Noot I nat why, ne what mischaunce it eyled, 4290
- But casuelly the shippes botme rente, (281)
- And ship and man under the water wente
- In sighte of othere shippes it byside,
- That with hem seyled at the same tyde.
- And therfor, faire Pertelote so dere, 4295
- By swiche ensamples olde maistow lere,
- That no man sholde been to recchelees
- Of dremes, for I sey thee, doutelees,
- That many a dreem ful sore is for to drede.
- 4256. Cp. Ln. and (_for_ or). 4266. _All ins._ herkneth (herken)
- _after_ But. 4274. E. Hn. Hl. _om._ for; _cf._ l. 4265. 4275. E.
- Hn. byde. 4282. E. Hn. or; _rest_ and. 4283. Hl. eke; _rest om._
- 4293. it] Cp. Pt. him; Ln. hem; Hl. ther. 4296. E. _ins._ yet _after_
- olde.
- Lo, in the lyf of seint Kenelm, I rede, 4300
- That was Kenulphus sone, the noble king (291)
- Of Mercenrike, how Kenelm mette a thing;
- A lyte er he was mordred, on a day,
- His mordre in his avisioun he say.
- His norice him expouned every del 4305
- His sweven, and bad him for to kepe him wel
- For traisoun; but he nas but seven yeer old,
- And therfore litel tale hath he told
- Of any dreem, so holy was his herte.
- By god, I hadde lever than my sherte 4310
- That ye had rad his legende, as have I. (301)
- Dame Pertelote, I sey yow trewely,
- Macrobeus, that writ the avisioun
- In Affrike of the worthy Cipioun,
- Affermeth dremes, and seith that they been 4315
- Warning of thinges that men after seen.
- 4309. E. is; _rest_ was. 4313. Cm. thauysioun.
- And forther-more, I pray yow loketh wel
- In the olde testament, of Daniel,
- If he held dremes any vanitee.
- Reed eek of Ioseph, and ther shul ye see 4320
- Wher dremes ben somtyme (I sey nat alle) (311)
- Warning of thinges that shul after falle.
- Loke of Egipt the king, daun Pharao,
- His bakere and his boteler also,
- Wher they ne felte noon effect in dremes. 4325
- [280: T. 15142-15177.]
- Who-so wol seken actes of sondry remes,
- May rede of dremes many a wonder thing.
- 4319. E. Hn. Cp. heeld. 4324. Cm. Ln. boteler: Pt. botelere; E. Hn.
- butiller.
- Lo Cresus, which that was of Lyde king,
- Mette he nat that he sat upon a tree,
- Which signified he sholde anhanged be? 4330
- Lo heer Andromacha, Ectores wyf, (321)
- That day that Ector sholde lese his lyf,
- She dremed on the same night biforn,
- How that the lyf of Ector sholde be lorn,
- If thilke day he wente in-to bataille; 4335
- She warned him, but it mighte nat availle;
- He wente for to fighte nathelees,
- But he was slayn anoon of Achilles.
- But thilke tale is al to long to telle,
- And eek it is ny day, I may nat dwelle. 4340
- Shortly I seye, as for conclusioun, (331)
- That I shal han of this avisioun
- Adversitee; and I seye forther-more,
- That I ne telle of laxatyves no store,
- For they ben venimous, I woot it wel; 4345
- I hem defye, I love hem never a del.
- 4331. E. Cp. Pt. Ln. Adromacha. 4338. Hn. And (_for_ But). 4345.
- Hn. Cm. venymes. it] Cp. Pt. Ln. right. 4346. E. Cp. diffye.
- Now let us speke of mirthe, and stinte al this;
- Madame Pertelote, so have I blis,
- Of o thing god hath sent me large grace;
- For whan I see the beautee of your face, 4350
- Ye ben so scarlet-reed about your yën, (341)
- It maketh al my drede for to dyen;
- For, also siker as _In principio_,
- _Mulier est hominis confusio_;
- Madame, the sentence of this Latin is-- 4355
- Womman is mannes Ioye and al his blis.
- For whan I fele a-night your softe syde,
- Al-be-it that I may nat on you ryde,
- For that our perche is maad so narwe, alas!
- I am so ful of Ioye and of solas 4360
- That I defye bothe sweven and dreem.' (351)
- [281: T. 15178-15211.]
- And with that word he fley doun fro the beem,
- For it was day, and eek his hennes alle;
- And with a chuk he gan hem for to calle,
- For he had founde a corn, lay in the yerd. 4365
- Royal he was, he was namore aferd;
- He fethered Pertelote twenty tyme,
- And trad as ofte, er that it was pryme.
- He loketh as it were a grim leoun;
- And on his toos he rometh up and doun, 4370
- Him deyned not to sette his foot to grounde. (361)
- He chukketh, whan he hath a corn y-founde,
- And to him rennen thanne his wyves alle.
- Thus royal, as a prince is in his halle,
- Leve I this Chauntecleer in his pasture; 4375
- And after wol I telle his aventure.
- 4361. E. Cp. diffye. 4362. Hn. Cm. fley; E. fly; Hl. Cp. fleigh.
- 4365. E. Hn. Cm. hadde. 4366. Cm. Ln. Royal; _rest_ Real; _but see_
- l. 4374. 4367. He] E. And. 4368. Hl. that; _rest om._ Cp. Pt. Ln.
- were. Hl. er that it was prime. 4370. Hl. toon. 4371. Cm.
- deynyth. 4374. his] E. Cm. an.
- Whan that the month in which the world bigan,
- That highte March, whan god first maked man,
- Was complet, and [y]-passed were also,
- Sin March bigan, thritty dayes and two, 4380
- Bifel that Chauntecleer, in al his pryde, (371)
- His seven wyves walking by his syde,
- Caste up his eyen to the brighte sonne,
- That in the signe of Taurus hadde y-ronne
- Twenty degrees and oon, and somwhat more; 4385
- And knew by kynde, and by noon other lore,
- That it was pryme, and crew with blisful stevene.
- 'The sonne,' he sayde, 'is clomben up on hevene
- Fourty degrees and oon, and more, y-wis.
- Madame Pertelote, my worldes blis, 4390
- Herkneth thise blisful briddes how they singe, (381)
- And see the fresshe floures how they springe;
- Ful is myn herte of revel and solas.'
- But sodeinly him fil a sorweful cas;
- For ever the latter ende of Ioye is wo. 4395
- [282: T. 15212-15248.]
- God woot that worldly Ioye is sone ago;
- And if a rethor coude faire endyte,
- He in a cronique saufly mighte it wryte,
- As for a sovereyn notabilitee.
- Now every wys man, lat him herkne me; 4400
- This storie is al-so trewe, I undertake, (391)
- As is the book of Launcelot de Lake,
- That wommen holde in ful gret reverence.
- Now wol I torne agayn to my sentence.
- 4379. _All_ passed. 4380. Hl. tway monthes and dayes tuo. 4386.
- And] Cp. Pt. Ln. He. 4398. Hl. Cp. cronique; _rest_ cronicle. 4404.
- torne] E. come.
- A col-fox, ful of sly iniquitee, 4405
- That in the grove hadde woned yeres three,
- By heigh imaginacioun forn-cast,
- The same night thurgh-out the hegges brast
- Into the yerd, ther Chauntecleer the faire
- Was wont, and eek his wyves, to repaire; 4410
- And in a bed of wortes stille he lay, (401)
- Til it was passed undern of the day,
- Wayting his tyme on Chauntecleer to falle,
- As gladly doon thise homicydes alle,
- That in awayt liggen to mordre men. 4415
- O false mordrer, lurking in thy den!
- O newe Scariot, newe Genilon!
- False dissimilour, O Greek Sinon,
- That broghtest Troye al outrely to sorwe!
- O Chauntecleer, acursed be that morwe, 4420
- That thou into that yerd flough fro the bemes! (411)
- Thou were ful wel y-warned by thy dremes,
- That thilke day was perilous to thee.
- But what that god forwoot mot nedes be,
- After the opinioun of certeyn clerkis. 4425
- Witnesse on him, that any perfit clerk is,
- That in scole is gret altercacioun
- In this matere, and greet disputisoun,
- And hath ben of an hundred thousand men.
- But I ne can not bulte it to the bren, 4430
- As can the holy doctour Augustyn, (421)
- Or Boece, or the bishop Bradwardyn,
- [283: T. 15249-15284.]
- Whether that goddes worthy forwiting
- Streyneth me nedely for to doon a thing,
- (Nedely clepe I simple necessitee); 4435
- Or elles, if free choys be graunted me
- To do that same thing, or do it noght,
- Though god forwoot it, er that it was wroght;
- Or if his witing streyneth nevere a del
- But by necessitee condicionel. 4440
- I wol not han to do of swich matere; (431)
- My tale is of a cok, as ye may here,
- That took his counseil of his wyf, with sorwe,
- To walken in the yerd upon that morwe
- That he had met the dreem, that I yow tolde. 4445
- Wommennes counseils been ful ofte colde;
- Wommannes counseil broghte us first to wo,
- And made Adam fro paradys to go,
- Ther-as he was ful mery, and wel at ese.
- But for I noot, to whom it mighte displese, 4450
- If I counseil of wommen wolde blame, (441)
- Passe over, for I seyde it in my game.
- Rede auctours, wher they trete of swich matere,
- And what thay seyn of wommen ye may here.
- Thise been the cokkes wordes, and nat myne; 4455
- I can noon harm of no womman divyne.
- 4412. E. Hn. Pt. vndren. 4421. E. Hn. flaugh; Cm. flaw; Cp.
- fley[gh]e; Hl. flough. 4433. E. Wheither. 4434. E. nedefully to
- doon. 4442. may] Hl. Cp. Pt. schal (schuln). 4445. yow] E. of.
- 4448. E. out of (_for_ fro). 4452. seyde] E. seye.
- Faire in the sond, to bathe hir merily,
- Lyth Pertelote, and alle hir sustres by,
- Agayn the sonne; and Chauntecleer so free
- Song merier than the mermayde in the see; 4460
- For Phisiologus seith sikerly, (451)
- How that they singen wel and merily.
- And so bifel that, as he caste his yë,
- Among the wortes, on a boterflye,
- He was war of this fox that lay ful lowe. 4465
- No-thing ne liste him thanne for to crowe,
- But cryde anon, 'cok, cok,' and up he sterte,
- As man that was affrayed in his herte.
- [284: T. 15285-15322.]
- For naturelly a beest desyreth flee
- Fro his contrarie, if he may it see, 4470
- Though he never erst had seyn it with his yë. (461)
- 4460. E murier. 4462. E. myrily.
- This Chauntecleer, whan he gan him espye,
- He wolde han fled, but that the fox anon
- Seyde, 'Gentil sire, allas! wher wol ye gon?
- Be ye affrayed of me that am your freend? 4475
- Now certes, I were worse than a feend,
- If I to yow wolde harm or vileinye.
- I am nat come your counseil for tespye;
- But trewely, the cause of my cominge
- Was only for to herkne how that ye singe. 4480
- For trewely ye have as mery a stevene (471)
- As eny aungel hath, that is in hevene;
- Therwith ye han in musik more felinge
- Than hadde Boece, or any that can singe.
- My lord your fader (god his soule blesse!) 4485
- And eek your moder, of hir gentilesse,
- Han in myn hous y-been, to my gret ese;
- And certes, sire, ful fayn wolde I yow plese.
- But for men speke of singing, I wol saye,
- So mote I brouke wel myn eyen tweye, 4490
- Save yow, I herde never man so singe, (48l)
- As dide your fader in the morweninge;
- Certes, it was of herte, al that he song.
- And for to make his voys the more strong,
- He wolde so peyne him, that with bothe his yën 4495
- He moste winke, so loude he wolde cryen,
- And stonden on his tiptoon ther-with-al,
- And strecche forth his nekke long and smal.
- And eek he was of swich discrecioun,
- That ther nas no man in no regioun 4500
- That him in song or wisdom mighte passe. (491)
- I have wel rad in daun Burnel the Asse,
- Among his vers, how that ther was a cok,
- For that a preestes sone yaf him a knok
- Upon his leg, whyl he was yong and nyce, 4505
- He made him for to lese his benefyce.
- [285: T. 15323-15359.]
- But certeyn, ther nis no comparisoun
- Bitwix the wisdom and discrecioun
- Of youre fader, and of his subtiltee.
- Now singeth, sire, for seinte charitee, 4510
- Let see, conne ye your fader countrefete?' (501)
- This Chauntecleer his winges gan to bete,
- As man that coude his tresoun nat espye,
- So was he ravisshed with his flaterye.
- 4482. E. _om._ hath. 4484. Hl. Pt. had. 4489. E. _ins._ yow _after_
- wol. 4491. E. herde I; yet (_for_ so). 4508. E. Cm. Cp. Bitwixe.
- Allas! ye lordes, many a fals flatour 4515
- Is in your courtes, and many a losengeour,
- That plesen yow wel more, by my feith,
- Than he that soothfastnesse unto yow seith.
- Redeth Ecclesiaste of flaterye;
- Beth war, ye lordes, of hir trecherye. 4520
- This Chauntecleer stood hye up-on his toos, (511)
- Strecching his nekke, and heeld his eyen cloos,
- And gan to crowe loude for the nones;
- And daun Russel the fox sterte up at ones,
- And by the gargat hente Chauntecleer, 4525
- And on his bak toward the wode him beer,
- For yet ne was ther no man that him sewed.
- O destinee, that mayst nat been eschewed!
- Allas, that Chauntecleer fleigh fro the bemes!
- Allas, his wyf ne roghte nat of dremes! 4530
- And on a Friday fil al this meschaunce. (521)
- O Venus, that art goddesse of plesaunce,
- Sin that thy servant was this Chauntecleer,
- And in thy service dide al his poweer,
- More for delyt, than world to multiplye, 4535
- Why woldestow suffre him on thy day to dye?
- O Gaufred, dere mayster soverayn,
- That, whan thy worthy king Richard was slayn
- With shot, compleynedest his deth so sore,
- Why ne hadde I now thy sentence and thy lore, 4540
- The Friday for to chide, as diden ye? (531)
- (For on a Friday soothly slayn was he.)
- Than wolde I shewe yow how that I coude pleyne
- [286: T. 15360-15395.]
- For Chauntecleres drede, and for his peyne.
- 4524. E. Hn. Cm. stirte. 4525. E. Hn. gargat; Cm. Hl. garget; Ln.
- gorge. 4531. E. Hn. Cm. fil; _rest_ fel.
- Certes, swich cry ne lamentacioun 4545
- Was never of ladies maad, whan Ilioun
- Was wonne, and Pirrus with his streite swerd,
- Whan he hadde hent king Priam by the berd,
- And slayn him (as saith us _Eneydos_),
- As maden alle the hennes in the clos, 4550
- Whan they had seyn of Chauntecleer the sighte. (541)
- But sovereynly dame Pertelote shrighte,
- Ful louder than dide Hasdrubales wyf,
- Whan that hir housbond hadde lost his lyf,
- And that the Romayns hadde brend Cartage; 4555
- She was so ful of torment and of rage,
- That wilfully into the fyr she sterte,
- And brende hir-selven with a stedfast herte.
- O woful hennes, right so cryden ye,
- As, whan that Nero brende the citee 4560
- Of Rome, cryden senatoures wyves, (551)
- For that hir housbondes losten alle hir lyves;
- Withouten gilt this Nero hath hem slayn.
- Now wol I torne to my tale agayn:--
- 4552. E. sodeynly (_for_ sovereynly). 4554. Hn. Cm. y-lost. 4564.
- E. Now turne I wole.
- This sely widwe, and eek hir doghtres two, 4565
- Herden thise hennes crye and maken wo,
- And out at dores sterten they anoon,
- And syen the fox toward the grove goon,
- And bar upon his bak the cok away;
- And cryden, 'Out! harrow! and weylaway! 4570
- Ha, ha, the fox!' and after him they ran, (561)
- And eek with staves many another man;
- Ran Colle our dogge, and Talbot, and Gerland,
- And Malkin, with a distaf in hir hand;
- Ran cow and calf, and eek the verray hogges 4575
- So were they fered for berking of the dogges
- And shouting of the men and wimmen eke,
- They ronne so, hem thoughte hir herte breke.
- They yelleden as feendes doon in helle;
- [287: T. 15396-15431.]
- The dokes cryden as men wolde hem quelle; 4580
- The gees for fere flowen over the trees; (571)
- Out of the hyve cam the swarm of bees;
- So hidous was the noyse, a! _benedicite_!
- Certes, he Iakke Straw, and his meynee,
- Ne made never shoutes half so shrille, 4585
- Whan that they wolden any Fleming kille,
- As thilke day was maad upon the fox.
- Of bras thay broghten bemes, and of box,
- Of horn, of boon, in whiche they blewe and pouped,
- And therwithal thay shryked and they houped; 4590
- It semed as that heven sholde falle. (581)
- Now, gode men, I pray yow herkneth alle!
- 4567. E. Hn. Cm. stirten. 4570. Pt. They. 4575. E. Hl. _om._ eek.
- 4576. Hl. were they; _rest om._ 4579. E. yolleden. 4585. E. Ln.
- shille. 4590. E. Hn. skriked.
- Lo, how fortune turneth sodeinly
- The hope and pryde eek of hir enemy!
- This cok, that lay upon the foxes bak, 4595
- In al his drede, un-to the fox he spak,
- And seyde, 'sire, if that I were as ye,
- Yet sholde I seyn (as wis god helpe me),
- Turneth agayn, ye proude cherles alle!
- A verray pestilence up-on yow falle! 4600
- Now am I come un-to this wodes syde, (591)
- Maugree your heed, the cok shal heer abyde;
- I wol him ete in feith, and that anon.'--
- The fox answerde, 'in feith, it shal be don,'--
- And as he spak that word, al sodeinly 4605
- This cok brak from his mouth deliverly,
- And heighe up-on a tree he fleigh anon.
- And whan the fox saugh that he was y-gon,
- 'Allas!' quod he, 'O Chauntecleer, allas!
- I have to yow,' quod he, 'y-doon trespas, 4610
- In-as-muche as I maked yow aferd, (601)
- Whan I yow hente, and broghte out of the yerd;
- But, sire, I dide it in no wikke entente;
- Com doun, and I shal telle yow what I mente.
- I shal seye sooth to yow, god help me so.' 4615
- [288: T. 15432-15452.]
- 'Nay than,' quod he, 'I shrewe us bothe two,
- And first I shrewe my-self, bothe blood and bones,
- If thou bigyle me ofter than ones.
- Thou shalt na-more, thurgh thy flaterye,
- Do me to singe and winke with myn yë. 4620
- For he that winketh, whan he sholde see, (611)
- Al wilfully, god lat him never thee!'
- 'Nay,' quod the fox, 'but god yeve him meschaunce,
- That is so undiscreet of governaunce,
- That Iangleth whan he sholde holde his pees.' 4625
- 4594. E. _om._ eek. 4598. E. wolde (_for_ sholde). 4601. E. the
- (_for_ this). 4608. Hl. i-goon; _rest_ gon, goon. 4612. E. Hn. into
- this (_for_ out of the). 4613. E. of (_for_ in). 4618. E. Hn. Hl.
- _ins._ any _before_ ofter.
- Lo, swich it is for to be recchelees,
- And necligent, and truste on flaterye.
- But ye that holden this tale a folye,
- As of a fox, or of a cok and hen,
- Taketh the moralitee, good men. 4630
- For seint Paul seith, that al that writen is, (621)
- To our doctryne it is y-write, y-wis.
- Taketh the fruyt, and lat the chaf be stille.
- 4630. Pt. good; _rest_ goode.
- Now, gode god, if that it be thy wille,
- As seith my lord, so make us alle good men; 4635
- And bringe us to his heighe blisse. Amen.
- HERE IS ENDED THE NONNE PREESTES TALE.
- 4635. Hl. Pt. Ln. good; _rest_ goode. COLOPHON. Cp. Nonne; E. Hn.
- Nonnes. Hl. Here endeth the tale of Chaunteclere and p_er_telote.
- [289: T. 15453-15468.]
- * * * * *
- EPILOGUE TO THE NONNE PREESTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- 'Sir Nonnes Preest,' our hoste seyde anoon,
- 'Y-blessed be thy breche, and every stoon!
- This was a mery tale of Chauntecleer.
- But, by my trouthe, if thou were seculer, 4640
- Thou woldest been a trede-foul a-right.
- For, if thou have corage as thou hast might,
- Thee were nede of hennes, as I wene,
- Ya, mo than seven tymes seventene.
- See, whiche braunes hath this gentil Preest, 4645
- So greet a nekke, and swich a large breest! (10)
- He loketh as a sperhauk with his yën;
- Him nedeth nat his colour for to dyen
- With brasil, ne with greyn of Portingale.
- Now sire, faire falle yow for youre tale!' 4650
- And after that he, with ful mery chere,
- Seide to another, as ye shullen here.
- _These genuine lines only occur in_ Dd., _in_ MS. Reg. 17 D. xv, _and
- in_ MS. Addit. 5140 (B. M.). _The text is founded on_ Dd.
- 4637. Dd. oure hoost. 4639. Dd. murie; Reg. Add. mery. 4641. Dd.
- ben. Dd. tredfoul; Reg. Add. trede foule. 4645. Dd. which; Reg.
- whiche; Add. suche. 4646. Dd. gret. 4647. Dd. sp_er_hauke; eyen.
- 4648. Dd. dyghen; Reg. Add. dyen. 4650-2. _I suspect these three
- lines to be spurious._ 4650. Reg. youre mery tale. 4652. to] _all_
- un-to. another] Add. the Nonne.
- NOTE. _Three varieties of a_ Doctour's Prologue _are given,
- respectively, by_ Tyrwhitt, Wright, _and_ Morris; _but are all
- spurious. Perhaps the best is the very short one in_ Tyrwhitt, _as
- follows:--_
- 'Ye, let that passen,' quod our Hoste, 'as now.
- Sire Doctour of Phisyk, I preye yow,
- Telle us a tale of som honest matere.'
- 'It shal be doon, if that ye wol it here,'
- Seyde this Doctour, and his tale bigan anon.
- 'Now, good men,' quod he, 'herkneth everichon.'
- [290: T. 11935-11957.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP C.
- THE PHISICIENS TALE.
- * * * * *
- *** _For a spurious_ Prologue, _see p._ 289.
- HERE FOLWETH THE PHISICIENS TALE.
- Ther was, as telleth Titus Livius,
- A knight that called was Virginius,
- Fulfild of honour and of worthinesse,
- And strong of freendes and of greet richesse.
- 2. Hn. called was; E. was called; _rest_ cleped was.
- This knight a doghter hadde by his wyf, 5
- No children hadde he mo in al his lyf.
- Fair was this mayde in excellent beautee
- Aboven every wight that man may see;
- For nature hath with sovereyn diligence
- Y-formed hir in so greet excellence, 10
- As though she wolde seyn, 'lo! I, Nature,
- Thus can I forme and peynte a creature,
- Whan that me list; who can me countrefete?
- Pigmalion noght, though he ay forge and bete,
- Or grave, or peynte; for I dar wel seyn, 15
- Apelles, Zanzis, sholde werche in veyn,
- Outher to grave or peynte or forge or bete,
- If they presumed me to countrefete.
- For he that is the former principal
- Hath maked me his vicaire general, 20
- To forme and peynten erthely creaturis
- Right as me list, and ech thing in my cure is
- Under the mone, that may wane and waxe,
- [291: T. 11958-11993.]
- And for my werk right no-thing wol I axe;
- My lord and I ben ful of oon accord; 25
- I made hir to the worship of my lord.
- So do I alle myne othere creatures,
- What colour that they han, or what figures.'--
- Thus semeth me that Nature wolde seye.
- 16. E. Hn. Apelles; Hl. Appollus; rest Apollus. E. Hn. Zanzis; rest
- zephirus (!). 25. E. Hn. ful of oon; _rest_ fully at.
- This mayde of age twelf yeer was and tweye, 30
- In which that Nature hadde swich delyt.
- For right as she can peynte a lilie whyt
- And reed a rose, right with swich peynture
- She peynted hath this noble creature
- Er she were born, up-on hir limes free, 35
- Wher-as by right swiche colours sholde be;
- And Phebus dyed hath hir tresses grete
- Lyk to the stremes of his burned hete.
- And if that excellent was hir beautee,
- A thousand-fold more vertuous was she. 40
- In hir ne lakked no condicioun,
- That is to preyse, as by discrecioun.
- As wel in goost as body chast was she;
- For which she floured in virginitee
- With alle humilitee and abstinence, 45
- With alle attemperaunce and pacience,
- With mesure eek of bering and array.
- Discreet she was in answering alway;
- Though she were wys as Pallas, dar I seyn,
- Hir facound eek ful wommanly and pleyn, 50
- No countrefeted termes hadde she
- To seme wys; but after hir degree
- She spak, and alle hir wordes more and lesse
- Souninge in vertu and in gentillesse.
- Shamfast she was in maydens shamfastnesse, 55
- Constant in herte, and ever in bisinesse
- To dryve hir out of ydel slogardye.
- Bacus hadde of hir mouth right no maistrye;
- For wyn and youthe doon Venus encrece,
- [292: T. 11994-12028.]
- As men in fyr wol casten oile or grece. 60
- And of hir owene vertu, unconstreyned,
- She hath ful ofte tyme syk hir feyned,
- For that she wolde fleen the companye
- Wher lykly was to treten of folye,
- As is at festes, revels, and at daunces, 65
- That been occasions of daliaunces.
- Swich thinges maken children for to be
- To sone rype and bold, as men may see,
- Which is ful perilous, and hath ben yore.
- For al to sone may she lerne lore 70
- Of boldnesse, whan she woxen is a wyf.
- 49. Cp. Pt. Ln. as; _rest om._ 50. E. a (_for_ and). 55. E.
- Shamefast. E. _om._ in. 59. E. Hn. dooth; _rest_ doon. E. Hn.
- encresse. 60. E. man; _rest_ men. E. wasten; _rest_ casten. E.
- oille; greesse. 67. E. Hn. thyng; _rest_ thinges. 70. E. Hn. they;
- _rest_ she.
- And ye maistresses in your olde lyf,
- That lordes doghtres han in governaunce,
- Ne taketh of my wordes no displesaunce;
- Thenketh that ye ben set in governinges 75
- Of lordes doghtres, only for two thinges;
- Outher for ye han kept your honestee,
- Or elles ye han falle in freletee,
- And knowen wel y-nough the olde daunce,
- And han forsaken fully swich meschaunce 80
- For evermo; therfore, for Cristes sake,
- To teche hem vertu loke that ye ne slake.
- A theef of venisoun, that hath forlaft
- His likerousnesse, and al his olde craft,
- Can kepe a forest best of any man. 85
- Now kepeth hem wel, for if ye wol, ye can;
- Loke wel that ye un-to no vice assente,
- Lest ye be dampned for your wikke entente;
- For who-so doth, a traitour is certeyn.
- And taketh kepe of that that I shal seyn; 90
- Of alle tresons sovereyn pestilence
- Is whan a wight bitrayseth innocence.
- 80. E. Hn. han; _rest_ conne. 82. _So_ E. Hn.; _rest_ Kepeth wel tho
- that ye undertake. 84. E. Hn. olde; _rest_ theves. 86. _Read_
- kep'th; E. Hn. _om._ hem; Hl. hir(!). E. wolde; _rest_ wole (wil).
- 92. E. Hn. bitrayseth; _rest_ betrayeth.
- Ye fadres and ye modres eek also,
- Though ye han children, be it oon or two,
- [293: T. 12029-12063.]
- Your is the charge of al hir surveyaunce, 95
- Whyl that they been under your governaunce.
- Beth war that by ensample of your livinge,
- Or by your necligence in chastisinge,
- That they ne perisse; for I dar wel seye,
- If that they doon, ye shul it dere abeye. 100
- Under a shepherde softe and necligent
- The wolf hath many a sheep and lamb to-rent.
- Suffyseth oon ensample now as here,
- For I mot turne agayn to my matere.
- 95. E. Hn. surveiaunce; _rest_ sufferaunce (suffraunce). 97. E. Hn.
- if; _rest_ that. 99. E. Hn. _om._ ne. 103, 4. E. _om. both lines; I
- follow_ Hn. _and the rest_.
- This mayde, of which I wol this tale expresse, 105
- So kepte hir-self, hir neded no maistresse;
- For in hir living maydens mighten rede,
- As in a book, every good word or dede,
- That longeth to a mayden vertuous;
- She was so prudent and so bountevous. 110
- For which the fame out-sprong on every syde
- Bothe of hir beautee and hir bountee wyde;
- That thurgh that land they preysed hir echone,
- That loved vertu, save envye allone,
- That sory is of other mennes wele, 115
- And glad is of his sorwe and his unhele;
- (The doctour maketh this descripcioun).
- This mayde up-on a day wente in the toun
- Toward a temple, with hir moder dere,
- As is of yonge maydens the manere. 120
- 105. E. Hn. I wol this; _rest_ I telle my. 119. E. Hn. a; _rest_ the.
- Now was ther thanne a Iustice in that toun,
- That governour was of that regioun.
- And so bifel, this Iuge his eyen caste
- Up-on this mayde, avysinge him ful faste,
- As she cam forby ther this Iuge stood. 125
- Anon his herte chaunged and his mood,
- So was he caught with beautee of this mayde;
- And to him-self ful prively he sayde,
- 'This mayde shal be myn, for any man.'
- 125. E. Hn. ther as; _rest om._ as.
- [294: T. 12064-12100.]
- Anon the feend in-to his herte ran, 130
- And taughte him sodeynly, that he by slighte
- The mayden to his purpos winne mighte.
- For certes, by no force, ne by no mede,
- Him thoughte, he was nat able for to spede;
- For she was strong of freendes, and eek she 135
- Confermed was in swich soverayn bountee,
- That wel he wiste he mighte hir never winne
- As for to make hir with hir body sinne.
- For which, by greet deliberacioun,
- He sente after a cherl, was in the toun, 140
- Which that he knew for subtil and for bold.
- This Iuge un-to this cherl his tale hath told
- In secree wyse, and made him to ensure,
- He sholde telle it to no creature,
- And if he dide, he sholde lese his heed. 145
- Whan that assented was this cursed reed,
- Glad was this Iuge and maked him greet chere,
- And yaf hym yiftes preciouse and dere.
- 138. E. maken; _rest_ make. 140, 142. E. Hn. cherl; _rest_ clerk.
- 147. E. Hn. this; _rest_ the.
- Whan shapen was al hir conspiracye
- Fro point to point, how that his lecherye 150
- Parfourned sholde been ful subtilly,
- As ye shul here it after openly,
- Hoom gooth the cherl, that highte Claudius.
- This false Iuge that highte Apius,
- So was his name, (for this is no fable, 155
- But knowen for historial thing notable,
- The sentence of it sooth is, out of doute),
- This false Iuge gooth now faste aboute
- To hasten his delyt al that he may.
- And so bifel sone after, on a day, 160
- This false Iuge, as telleth us the storie,
- As he was wont, sat in his consistorie,
- And yaf his domes up-on sondry cas.
- This false cherl cam forth a ful greet pas,
- And seyde, 'lord, if that it be your wille, 165
- As dooth me right up-on this pitous bille,
- [295: T. 12101-12136.]
- In which I pleyne up-on Virginius.
- And if that he wol seyn it is nat thus,
- I wol it preve, and finde good witnesse,
- That sooth is that my bille wol expresse.' 170
- 149. E. Hn. hir; _rest_ this. 153, 164. E. Hn. cherl; _rest_ clerk.
- 155. E. Hn. this; _rest_ it.
- The Iuge answerde, 'of this, in his absence,
- I may nat yeve diffinitif sentence.
- Lat do him calle, and I wol gladly here;
- Thou shall have al right, and no wrong here.'
- 172. E. diffynyue; rest diffinitif. 173, 174. E. heere, glossed
- audire; and heere, glossed hie.
- Virginius cam, to wite the Iuges wille, 175
- And right anon was rad this cursed bille;
- The sentence of it was as ye shul here.
- 'To yow, my lord, sire Apius so dere,
- Sheweth your povre servant Claudius,
- How that a knight, called Virginius, 180
- Agayns the lawe, agayn al equitee,
- Holdeth, expres agayn the wil of me,
- My servant, which that is my thral by right,
- Which fro myn hous was stole up-on a night,
- Whyl that she was ful yong; this wol I preve 185
- By witnesse, lord, so that it nat yow greve.
- She nis his doghter nat, what so he seye;
- Wherfore to yow, my lord the Iuge, I preye,
- Yeld me my thral, if that it be your wille.'
- Lo! this was al the sentence of his bille. 190
- Virginius gan up-on the cherl biholde,
- But hastily, er he his tale tolde,
- And wolde have preved it, as sholde a knight,
- And eek by witnessing of many a wight,
- That it was fals that seyde his adversarie, 195
- This cursed Iuge wolde no-thing tarie,
- Ne here a word more of Virginius,
- But yaf his Iugement, and seyde thus:--
- 191. E. Hn. Cm. cherl; rest clerk.
- 'I deme anon this cherl his servant have;
- Thou shalt no lenger in thyn hous hir save. 200
- Go bring hir forth, and put hir in our warde,
- The cherl shal have his thral, this I awarde.'
- 199, 202. E. Hn. Cm. cherl; rest clerk.
- [296: T. 12137-12173.]
- And whan this worthy knight Virginius,
- Thurgh sentence of this Iustice Apius,
- Moste by force his dere doghter yiven 205
- Un-to the Iuge, in lecherye to liven,
- He gooth him hoom, and sette him in his halle,
- And leet anon his dere doghter calle,
- And, with a face deed as asshen colde,
- Upon hir humble face he gan biholde, 210
- With fadres pitee stiking thurgh his herte,
- Al wolde he from his purpos nat converte.
- 202. E. Hn. Cm. this; rest thus. 205. Hl. Cp. yiuen; rest yeuen.
- 'Doghter,' quod he, 'Virginia, by thy name,
- Ther been two weyes, outher deeth or shame,
- That thou most suffre; allas! that I was bore! 215
- For never thou deservedest wherfore
- To dyen with a swerd or with a knyf.
- O dere doghter, ender of my lyf,
- Which I have fostred up with swich plesaunce,
- That thou were never out of my remembraunce! 220
- O doghter, which that art my laste wo,
- And in my lyf my laste Ioye also,
- O gemme of chastitee, in pacience
- Take thou thy deeth, for this is my sentence.
- For love and nat for hate, thou most be deed; 225
- My pitous hand mot smyten of thyn heed.
- Allas! that ever Apius thee say!
- Thus hath he falsly Iuged thee to-day'--
- And tolde hir al the cas, as ye bifore
- Han herd; nat nedeth for to telle it more. 230
- 223. E. o; rest of.
- 'O mercy, dere fader,' quod this mayde,
- And with that word she both hir armes layde
- About his nekke, as she was wont to do:
- The teres broste out of hir eyen two,
- And seyde, 'gode fader, shal I dye? 235
- Is ther no grace? is ther no remedye?'
- 234. E. Hn. teeris. E. bruste; Cm. broste; Pt. brosten; Hn. borste;
- Cp. Ln. barsten; Hl. brast.
- 'No, certes, dere doghter myn,' quod he.
- 'Thanne yif me leyser, fader myn,' quod she,
- 'My deeth for to compleyne a litel space;
- [297: T. 12174-12208.]
- For pardee, Iepte yaf his doghter grace 240
- For to compleyne, er he hir slow, allas!
- And god it woot, no-thing was hir trespas,
- But for she ran hir fader first to see,
- To welcome him with greet solempnitee.'
- And with that word she fil aswowne anon, 245
- And after, whan hir swowning is agon,
- She ryseth up, and to hir fader sayde,
- 'Blessed be god, that I shal dye a mayde.
- Yif me my deeth, er that I have a shame;
- Doth with your child your wil, a goddes name!' 250
- 243. E. Hn. for; _rest_ first. 248. E. Ln. Blissed; _rest_ Blessed.
- And with that word she preyed him ful ofte,
- That with his swerd he wolde smyte softe,
- And with that word aswowne doun she fil.
- Hir fader, with ful sorweful herte and wil,
- Hir heed of smoot, and by the top it hente, 255
- And to the Iuge he gan it to presente,
- As he sat yet in doom in consistorie.
- And whan the Iuge it saugh, as seith the storie,
- He bad to take him and anhange him faste.
- But right anon a thousand peple in thraste, 260
- To save the knight, for routhe and for pitee,
- For knowen was the false iniquitee.
- The peple anon hath suspect of this thing,
- By manere of the cherles chalanging,
- That it was by the assent of Apius; 265
- They wisten wel that he was lecherous.
- For which un-to this Apius they gon,
- And caste him in a prison right anon,
- Wher-as he slow him-self; and Claudius,
- That servant was un-to this Apius, 270
- Was demed for to hange upon a tree;
- But that Virginius, of his pitee,
- So preyde for him that he was exyled;
- And elles, certes, he had been bigyled.
- [298: T. 12209-12220.]
- The remenant were anhanged, more and lesse, 275
- That were consentant of this cursednesse.--
- 252. _All but_ E. Hn. _ins._ hir _before_ softe. 259. E. Hn. anhange;
- _rest_ honge. 260. E. Hn. a thousand; _rest_ al the. 263. E. of;
- _rest_ in. 264. E. Hn. the cherles; _rest_ this clerkes. 269. E.
- Hn. Ther; _rest_ Wher. 271. E. And; _rest_ Was. 275. E. Hn. Hl.
- anhanged; _rest_ honged.
- Heer men may seen how sinne hath his meryte!
- Beth war, for no man woot whom god wol smyte
- In no degree, ne in which maner wyse
- The worm of conscience may agryse 280
- Of wikked lyf, though it so privee be,
- That no man woot ther-of but god and he.
- For be he lewed man, or elles lered,
- He noot how sone that he shal been afered.
- Therfore I rede yow this conseil take, 285
- Forsaketh sinne, er sinne yow forsake.
- HERE ENDETH THE PHISICIENS TALE.
- 278. E. Hn. whom; _rest_ how. 280. E. Hn. may agryse; _rest_ wol
- (wil) arise. 283. E. ellis. Cp. Ln. Whether he be lewed man or
- lered; _so_ Pt. (_with_ Where _for_ Whether); so Hl. (_with_ Wher that
- _for_ Whether). COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn.; Sloane _has_ Here endethe the
- tale of the Mayster of phisyk; Hl. Here endeth the Doctor of phisique
- his tale.
- [299: T. 12221-12239.]
- * * * * *
- WORDS OF THE HOST.
- * * * * *
- THE WORDES OF THE HOST TO THE PHISICIEN AND THE PARDONER.
- Our Hoste gan to swere as he were wood,
- 'Harrow!' quod he, 'by nayles and by blood!.
- This was a fals cherl and a fals Iustyse!
- As shamful deeth as herte may devyse 290
- Come to thise Iuges and hir advocats!
- Algate this sely mayde is slayn, allas!
- Allas! to dere boghte she beautee!
- Wherfore I seye al day, as men may see,
- That yiftes of fortune or of nature 295
- Ben cause of deeth to many a creature. (10)
- Hir beautee was hir deeth, I dar wel sayn;
- Allas! so pitously as she was slayn!
- Of bothe yiftes that I speke of now
- Men han ful ofte more harm than prow. 300
- But trewely, myn owene mayster dere,
- This is a pitous tale for to here.
- But natheles, passe over, is no fors;
- I prey to god, so save thy gentil cors,
- And eek thyne urinals and thy Iordanes, 305
- [300: T. 12240-12262.]
- Thyn Ypocras, and eek thy Galianes, (20)
- And every boist ful of thy letuarie;
- God blesse hem, and our lady seinte Marie!
- So mot I theen, thou art a propre man,
- And lyk a prelat, by seint Ronyan! 310
- Seyde I nat wel? I can nat speke in terme;
- But wel I woot, thou doost my herte to erme,
- That I almost have caught a cardiacle.
- By corpus bones! but I have triacle,
- Or elles a draught of moyste and corny ale, 315
- Or but I here anon a mery tale, (30)
- Myn herte is lost for pitee of this mayde.
- Thou bel amy, thou Pardoner,' he seyde,
- 'Tel us som mirthe or Iapes right anon.'
- 'It shall be doon,' quod he, 'by seint Ronyon! 320
- But first,' quod he, 'heer at this ale-stake
- I wol both drinke, and eten of a cake.'
- HEADING. _So_ E. E. Hoost. 287. Ln. oste; _rest_ hoost, ost. 290.
- E. shameful. 291, 292. _So_ E. Hn. Pt.; _but_ Cp. _has_--So falle
- vpon his body and his bones The deuyl I bekenne him al at ones; _so
- also_ Ln. Hl. 291. E. (_alone_) _ins._ false _before_ Iuges. E. Hn.
- Aduocatz; Pt. aduocas. 295. E. Hn. and; _rest_ or. 296. E. Hn. to;
- _rest_ of. 297, 298. _So_ Cp. Ln. Hl.; _rest omit these lines._
- 300. E. Hn. for harm; _rest om._ for. 303. Hl. this is; _the rest
- omit_ this. 305. Ln. Iordanes; Cp. Iurdanes; E. Hn. Iurdones. 306.
- Cp. Galianes; E. Hn. Galiones. 307. Hl. boist; E. Hn. boyste; Cp. Pt.
- Ln. box. 313. E. Hn. cardynacle(!). 322. eten of] Hl. byt on.
- But right anon thise gentils gonne to crye,
- 'Nay! lat him telle us of no ribaudye;
- Tel us som moral thing, that we may lere 325
- Som wit, and thanne wol we gladly here.' (40)
- 'I graunte, y-wis,' quod he, 'but I mot thinke
- Up-on som honest thing, whyl that I drinke.
- 323. E. Hn. And; _the rest_ But. 324. E. Hn. Cp. Hl. ribaudye; Ln.
- rebaudie; Pt. rybaudrye. 327. _For ll._ 326, 327, Hl. _has_--Gladly,
- quod he, and sayde as ye schal heere: But in the cuppe wil I me
- bethinke.
- [301: T. 12263-12288.]
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGUE OF THE PARDONERS TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWETH THE PROLOGE OF THE PARDONERS TALE.
- _Radix malorum est Cupiditas: Ad Thimotheum, sexto._
- 'Lordings,' quod he, 'in chirches whan I preche,
- I peyne me to han an hauteyn speche, 330
- And ringe it out as round as gooth a belle,
- For I can al by rote that I telle.
- My theme is alwey oon, and ever was--
- "_Radix malorum est Cupiditas_."
- First I pronounce whennes that I come, 335
- And than my bulles shewe I, alle and somme.
- Our lige lordes seel on my patente,
- That shewe I first, my body to warente, (10)
- That no man be so bold, ne preest ne clerk,
- Me to destourbe of Cristes holy werk; 340
- And after that than telle I forth my tales,
- Bulles of popes and of cardinales,
- Of patriarkes, and bishoppes I shewe;
- And in Latyn I speke a wordes fewe,
- To saffron with my predicacioun, 345
- And for to stire men to devocioun.
- Than shewe I forth my longe cristal stones,
- Y-crammed ful of cloutes and of bones; (20)
- Reliks been they, as wenen they echoon.
- Than have I in latoun a sholder-boon 350
- Which that was of an holy Iewes shepe.
- "Good men," seye I, "tak of my wordes kepe;
- If that this boon be wasshe in any welle,
- If cow, or calf, or sheep, or oxe swelle
- [302: T. 12289-12324.]
- That any worm hath ete, or worm y-stonge, 355
- Tak water of that welle, and wash his tonge,
- And it is hool anon; and forthermore,
- Of pokkes and of scabbe, and every sore (30)
- Shal every sheep be hool, that of this welle
- Drinketh a draughte; tak kepe eek what I telle. 360
- If that the good-man, that the bestes oweth,
- Wol every wike, er that the cok him croweth,
- Fastinge, drinken of this welle a draughte,
- As thilke holy Iewe our eldres taughte,
- His bestes and his stoor shal multiplye. 565
- And, sirs, also it heleth Ialousye;
- For, though a man be falle in Ialous rage,
- Let maken with this water his potage, (40)
- And never shal he more his wyf mistriste,
- Though he the sooth of hir defaute wiste; 370
- Al had she taken preestes two or three.
- 346. E. Hn. Hl. hem; _rest_ men. 350. E. _omits_ I _by accident._
- 352. E. Hl. Pt. Ln. Good; E. Hn. Cp. Goode. Hn. I seye; _rest_ say I,
- saie I. 366. E. Hn. sire; _rest_ sires, sirs.
- Heer is a miteyn eek, that ye may see.
- He that his hond wol putte in this miteyn,
- He shal have multiplying of his greyn,
- Whan he hath sowen, be it whete or otes, 375
- So that he offre pens, or elles grotes.
- Good men and wommen, o thing warne I yow,
- If any wight be in this chirche now, (50)
- That hath doon sinne horrible, that he
- Dar nat, for shame, of it y-shriven be, 380
- Or any womman, be she yong or old,
- That hath y-maad hir housbond cokewold,
- Swich folk shul have no power ne no grace
- To offren to my reliks in this place.
- And who-so findeth him out of swich blame, 385
- He wol com up and offre in goddes name,
- And I assoille him by the auctoritee
- Which that by bulle y-graunted was to me." (60)
- 377. E. Hn. Goode; _rest_ And. 382. Cp. Ln. Hl. ymaad; Pt. made; E.
- Hn. ymaked. 385. E. fame; _rest_ blame. 386. Hn. He; _rest_ They.
- E. on; Hn. a; _rest_ in. 387. E. Hl. hem; _rest_ him or hym.
- By this gaude have I wonne, yeer by yeer,
- An hundred mark sith I was Pardoner. 390
- [303: T. 12325-12361.]
- I stonde lyk a clerk in my pulpet,
- And whan the lewed peple is doun y-set,
- I preche, so as ye han herd bifore,
- And telle an hundred false Iapes more.
- Than peyne I me to strecche forth the nekke, 395
- And est and west upon the peple I bekke,
- As doth a dowve sitting on a berne.
- Myn hondes and my tonge goon so yerne, (70)
- That it is Ioye to see my bisinesse.
- Of avaryce and of swich cursednesse 400
- Is al my preching, for to make hem free
- To yeve her pens, and namely un-to me.
- For my entente is nat but for to winne,
- And no-thing for correccioun of sinne.
- I rekke never, whan that they ben beried, 405
- Though that her soules goon a-blakeberied!
- For certes, many a predicacioun
- Comth ofte tyme of yvel entencioun; (80)
- Som for plesaunce of folk and flaterye,
- To been avaunced by ipocrisye, 410
- And som for veyne glorie, and som for hate.
- For, whan I dar non other weyes debate,
- Than wol I stinge him with my tonge smerte
- In preching, so that he shal nat asterte
- To been defamed falsly, if that he 415
- Hath trespased to my brethren or to me.
- For, though I telle noght his propre name,
- Men shal wel knowe that it is the same (90)
- By signes and by othere circumstances.
- Thus quyte I folk that doon us displesances; 420
- Thus spitte I out my venim under hewe
- Of holynesse, to seme holy and trewe.
- 395. the] Cm. myn; Cp. Ln. Hl. my. 405. E. Hl. _omit_ that.
- But shortly myn entente I wol devyse;
- I preche of no-thing but for coveityse.
- Therfor my theme is yet, and ever was-- 425
- "_Radix malorum est cupiditas_."
- Thus can I preche agayn that same vyce
- [304: T. 12362-12396.]
- Which that I use, and that is avaryce. (100)
- But, though my-self be gilty in that sinne,
- Yet can I maken other folk to twinne 430
- From avaryce, and sore to repente.
- But that is nat my principal entente.
- I preche no-thing but for coveityse;
- Of this matere it oughte y-nogh suffyse.
- 425. E. Hn. theme; _rest_ teme (teem).
- Than telle I hem ensamples many oon 435
- Of olde stories, longe tyme agoon:
- For lewed peple loven tales olde;
- Swich thinges can they wel reporte and holde. (110)
- What? trowe ye, the whyles I may preche,
- And winne gold and silver for I teche, 440
- That I wol live in povert wilfully?
- Nay, nay, I thoghte it never trewely!
- For I wol preche and begge in sondry londes;
- I wol not do no labour with myn hondes,
- Ne make baskettes, and live therby, 445
- Because I wol nat beggen ydelly.
- I wol non of the apostles counterfete;
- I wol have money, wolle, chese, and whete, (120)
- Al were it yeven of the povrest page,
- Or of the povrest widwe in a village, 450
- Al sholde hir children sterve for famyne.
- Nay! I wol drinke licour of the vyne,
- And have a Ioly wenche in every toun.
- But herkneth, lordings, in conclusioun;
- Your lyking is that I shal telle a tale. 455
- Now, have I dronke a draughte of corny ale,
- By god, I hope I shal yow telle a thing
- That shal, by resoun, been at your lyking. (130)
- For, though myself be a ful vicious man,
- A moral tale yet I yow telle can, 460
- Which I am wont to preche, for to winne.
- Now holde your pees, my tale I wol beginne.
- 439. E. Pt. the whiles; Cm. that whilis that; Cp. Ln. whiles that; Hl.
- whiles; Hn. that whiles. 449. Hl. prestes (_for_ povrest).
- [305: T. 12397-12422.]
- * * * * *
- THE PARDONERS TALE.
- (_Numbered in continuation of the preceding_.)
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE PARDONERS TALE.
- In Flaundres whylom was a companye
- Of yonge folk, that haunteden folye,
- As ryot, hasard, stewes, and tavernes, 465
- Wher-as, with harpes, lutes, and giternes,
- They daunce and pleye at dees bothe day and night,
- And ete also and drinken over hir might, (140)
- Thurgh which they doon the devel sacrifyse
- With-in that develes temple, in cursed wyse, 470
- By superfluitee abhominable;
- Hir othes been so grete and so dampnable,
- That it is grisly for to here hem swere;
- Our blissed lordes body they to-tere;
- Hem thoughte Iewes rente him noght y-nough; 475
- And ech of hem at otheres sinne lough.
- And right anon than comen tombesteres
- Fetys and smale, and yonge fruytesteres, (150)
- Singers with harpes, baudes, wafereres,
- Whiche been the verray develes officeres 480
- To kindle and blowe the fyr of lecherye,
- That is annexed un-to glotonye;
- The holy writ take I to my witnesse,
- That luxurie is in wyn and dronkenesse.
- HEADING; _from_ E. Hn. 465. E. Hl. stywes. 475. _So_ Cp. Ln. Hl.;
- E. Hn. Cm. that Iewes; Pt. þe Iwes. 478, 479. Hl. _omits._
- Lo, how that dronken Loth, unkindely, 485
- Lay by his doghtres two, unwitingly;
- So dronke he was, he niste what he wroghte.
- Herodes, (who-so wel the stories soghte), (160)
- [306: T. 12423-12459.]
- Whan he of wyn was replet at his feste,
- Right at his owene table he yaf his heste 490
- To sleen the Baptist Iohn ful giltelees.
- 488. E. Hn. Cm. P. Hl. _agree here_; Cp. Ln. _have two additional
- (spurious) lines; see_ note.
- Senek seith eek a good word doutelees;
- He seith, he can no difference finde
- Bitwix a man that is out of his minde
- And a man which that is dronkelewe, 495
- But that woodnesse, y-fallen in a shrewe,
- Persevereth lenger than doth dronkenesse.
- O glotonye, ful of cursednesse, (170)
- O cause first of our confusioun,
- O original of our dampnacioun, 500
- Til Crist had boght us with his blood agayn!
- Lo, how dere, shortly for to sayn,
- Aboght was thilke cursed vileinye;
- Corrupt was al this world for glotonye!
- 492. Hl. Seneca (_for_ Senek). Cp. Ln. eek; _rest omit._ 495. which
- that] Hl. the which; Cp. Pt. Ln. _om._ which. 496. E. Hl. fallen; Hn.
- Cm. y-fallen.
- Adam our fader, and his wyf also, 505
- Fro Paradys to labour and to wo
- Were driven for that vyce, it is no drede;
- For whyl that Adam fasted, as I rede, (180)
- He was in Paradys; and whan that he
- Eet of the fruyt defended on the tree, 510
- Anon he was out-cast to wo and peyne.
- O glotonye, on thee wel oghte us pleyne!
- O, wiste a man how many maladyes
- Folwen of excesse and of glotonyes,
- He wolde been the more mesurable 515
- Of his diete, sittinge at his table.
- Allas! the shorte throte, the tendre mouth,
- Maketh that, Est and West, and North and South, (190)
- In erthe, in eir, in water men to-swinke
- To gete a glotoun deyntee mete and drinke! 520
- Of this matere, o Paul, wel canstow trete,
- 'Mete un-to wombe, and wombe eek un-to mete,
- Shal god destroyen bothe,' as Paulus seith.
- Allas! a foul thing is it, by my feith,
- To seye this word, and fouler is the dede, 525
- [307: T. 12460-12496.]
- Whan man so drinketh of the whyte and rede,
- That of his throte he maketh his privee,
- Thurgh thilke cursed superfluitee. (200)
- 519. E. Hl. man; _rest_ men.
- The apostel weping seith ful pitously,
- 'Ther walken many of whiche yow told have I, 530
- I seye it now weping with pitous voys,
- That they been enemys of Cristes croys,
- Of whiche the ende is deeth, wombe is her god.'
- O wombe! O bely! O stinking cod,
- Fulfild of donge and of corrupcioun! 535
- At either ende of thee foul is the soun.
- How greet labour and cost is thee to finde!
- Thise cokes, how they stampe, and streyne, and grinde, (210)
- And turnen substaunce in-to accident,
- To fulfille al thy likerous talent! 540
- Out of the harde bones knokke they
- The mary, for they caste noght a-wey
- That may go thurgh the golet softe and swote;
- Of spicerye, of leef, and bark, and rote
- Shal been his sauce y-maked by delyt, 545
- To make him yet a newer appetyt.
- But certes, he that haunteth swich delyces
- Is deed, whyl that he liveth in tho vyces. (220)
- 532. That they _is_ Tyrwhitt's _reading_; Hl. Thay; _but the rest have_
- Ther, _probably repeated by mistake from_ l. 530. 534. Hl. o stynking
- is thi cod.
- A lecherous thing is wyn, and dronkenesse
- Is ful of stryving and of wrecchednesse. 550
- O dronke man, disfigured is thy face,
- Sour is thy breeth, foul artow to embrace,
- And thurgh thy dronke nose semeth the soun
- As though thou seydest ay 'Sampsoun, Sampsoun';
- And yet, god wot, Sampsoun drank never no wyn. 555
- Thou fallest, as it were a stiked swyn;
- Thy tonge is lost, and al thyn honest cure;
- For dronkenesse is verray sepulture (230)
- Of mannes wit and his discrecioun.
- In whom that drinke hath dominacioun, 560
- He can no conseil kepe, it is no drede.
- Now kepe yow fro the whyte and fro the rede,
- [308: T. 12497-12533.]
- And namely fro the whyte wyn of Lepe,
- That is to selle in Fish-strete or in Chepe.
- This wyn of Spayne crepeth subtilly 565
- In othere wynes, growing faste by,
- Of which ther ryseth swich fumositee,
- That whan a man hath dronken draughtes three, (240)
- And weneth that he be at hoom in Chepe,
- He is in Spayne, right at the toune of Lepe, 570
- Nat at the Rochel, ne at Burdeux toun;
- And thanne wol he seye, 'Sampsoun, Sampsoun.'
- But herkneth, lordings, o word, I yow preye,
- That alle the sovereyn actes, dar I seye,
- Of victories in the olde testament, 575
- Thurgh verray god, that is omnipotent,
- Were doon in abstinence and in preyere;
- Loketh the Bible, and ther ye may it lere. (250)
- 573. E. lordes; _rest_ lordinges, lordynges, lordyngs.
- Loke, Attila, the grete conquerour,
- Deyde in his sleep, with shame and dishonour, 580
- Bledinge ay at his nose in dronkenesse;
- A capitayn shoulde live in sobrenesse.
- And over al this, avyseth yow right wel
- What was comaunded un-to Lamuel--
- Nat Samuel, but Lamuel, seye I--- 585
- Redeth the Bible, and finde it expresly
- Of wyn-yeving to hem that han Iustyse.
- Na-more of this, for it may wel suffyse. (260)
- And now that I have spoke of glotonye,
- Now wol I yow defenden hasardrye. 590
- Hasard is verray moder of lesinges,
- And of deceite, and cursed forsweringes,
- Blaspheme of Crist, manslaughtre, and wast also
- Of catel and of tyme; and forthermo,
- It is repreve and contrarie of honour 595
- For to ben holde a commune hasardour.
- And ever the hyër he is of estaat,
- The more is he holden desolaat. (270)
- If that a prince useth hasardrye,
- [309: T. 12534-12569.]
- In alle governaunce and policye 600
- He is, as by commune opinoun,
- Y-holde the lasse in reputacioun.
- 589. E. Hl. _omit_ that. 593. E. Blasphemyng; _rest_ Blaspheme.
- Stilbon, that was a wys embassadour,
- Was sent to Corinthe, in ful greet honour,
- Fro Lacidomie, to make hir alliaunce. 605
- And whan he cam, him happede, par chaunce,
- That alle the grettest that were of that lond,
- Pleyinge atte hasard he hem fond. (280)
- For which, as sone as it mighte be,
- He stal him hoom agayn to his contree, 610
- And seyde, 'ther wol I nat lese my name;
- Ne I wol nat take on me so greet defame,
- Yow for to allye un-to none hasardours.
- Sendeth othere wyse embassadours;
- For, by my trouthe, me were lever dye, 615
- Than I yow sholde to hasardours allye.
- For ye that been so glorious in honours
- Shul nat allyen yow with hasardours (290)
- As by my wil, ne as by my tretee.'
- This wyse philosophre thus seyde he. 620
- 606. Cm. Cp. Hl. happede; _rest_ happed. 612. Hn. Ny; Cm. Nay (_both
- put for_ Ne I) _which shews the scansion._ Hl. I nyl not. 614. _So
- all_.
- Loke eek that, to the king Demetrius
- The king of Parthes, as the book seith us,
- Sente him a paire of dees of gold in scorn,
- For he hadde used hasard ther-biforn;
- For which he heeld his glorie or his renoun 625
- At no value or reputacioun.
- Lordes may finden other maner pley
- Honeste y-nough to dryve the day awey. (300)
- 621. E. Ln. Hl. _omit_ to.
- Now wol I speke of othes false and grete
- A word or two, as olde bokes trete. 630
- Gret swering is a thing abhominable,
- And false swering is yet more reprevable.
- The heighe god forbad swering at al,
- Witnesse on Mathew; but in special
- Of swering seith the holy Ieremye, 635
- [310: T. 12570-12605.]
- 'Thou shalt seye sooth thyn othes, and nat lye,
- And swere in dome, and eek in rightwisnesse;'
- But ydel swering is a cursednesse. (310)
- Bihold and see, that in the firste table
- Of heighe goddes hestes honurable, 640
- How that the seconde heste of him is this--
- 'Tak nat my name in ydel or amis.'
- Lo, rather he forbedeth swich swering
- Than homicyde or many a cursed thing;
- I seye that, as by ordre, thus it stondeth; 645
- This knowen, that his hestes understondeth,
- How that the second heste of god is that.
- And forther over, I wol thee telle al plat, (320)
- That vengeance shal nat parten from his hous,
- That of his othes is to outrageous. 650
- 'By goddes precious herte, and by his nayles,
- And by the blode of Crist, that it is in Hayles,
- Seven is my chaunce, and thyn is cink and treye;
- By goddes armes, if thou falsly pleye,
- This dagger shal thurgh-out thyn herte go'-- 655
- This fruyt cometh of the bicched bones two,
- Forswering, ire, falsnesse, homicyde.
- Now, for the love of Crist that for us dyde, (330)
- Leveth your othes, bothe grete and smale;
- But, sirs, now wol I telle forth my tale. 660
- 632. Cp. Ln. Hl. _om._ yet. 644. Hn. Cm. Hl. many a.; E. any; Cp. Pt.
- Ln. eny other. 656. Hl. bicchid; Ln. becched; Hn. Cm. bicche; Pt.
- thilk. 659. E. Hn. Lete; _rest_ Leueth.
- Thise ryotoures three, of whiche I telle,
- Longe erst er pryme rong of any belle,
- Were set hem in a taverne for to drinke;
- And as they satte, they herde a belle clinke
- Biforn a cors, was caried to his grave; 665
- That oon of hem gan callen to his knave,
- 'Go bet,' quod he, 'and axe redily,
- What cors is this that passeth heer forby; (340)
- And look that thou reporte his name wel.'
- 661. E. Hn. Pt. Hl. riotours. 663. Cp. Pt. Hl. for; _rest om._
- 'Sir,' quod this boy, 'it nedeth never-a-del. 670
- It was me told, er ye cam heer, two houres;
- [311: T. 12606-12642.]
- He was, pardee, an old felawe of youres;
- And sodeynly he was y-slayn to-night,
- For-dronke, as he sat on his bench upright;
- Ther cam a privee theef, men clepeth Deeth, 675
- That in this contree al the peple sleeth,
- And with his spere he smoot his herte a-two,
- And wente his wey with-outen wordes mo. (350)
- He hath a thousand slayn this pestilence:
- And, maister, er ye come in his presence, 680
- Me thinketh that it were necessarie
- For to be war of swich an adversarie:
- Beth redy for to mete him evermore.
- Thus taughte me my dame, I sey na-more.'
- 'By seinte Marie,' seyde this taverner, 685
- 'The child seith sooth, for he hath slayn this yeer,
- Henne over a myle, with-in a greet village,
- Both man and womman, child and hyne, and page. (360)
- I trowe his habitacioun be there;
- To been avysed greet wisdom it were, 690
- Er that he dide a man a dishonour.'
- 'Ye, goddes armes,' quod this ryotour,
- 'Is it swich peril with him for to mete?
- I shal him seke by wey and eek by strete,
- I make avow to goddes digne bones! 695
- Herkneth, felawes, we three been al ones;
- Lat ech of us holde up his hond til other, (370)
- And ech of us bicomen otheres brother,
- And we wol sleen this false traytour Deeth;
- He shal be slayn, which that so many sleeth, 700
- By goddes dignitee, er it be night.'
- Togidres han thise three her trouthes plight,
- To live and dyen ech of hem for other,
- As though he were his owene y-boren brother.
- And up they sterte al dronken, in this rage, 705
- And forth they goon towardes that village,
- Of which the taverner had spoke biforn,
- And many a grisly ooth than han they sworn, (380)
- [312: T. 12643-12680.]
- And Cristes blessed body they to-rente--
- 'Deeth shal be deed, if that they may him hente.' 710
- 704. E. yborn; Hn. ybore; Cm. bore; Pt. born; Cp. Ln. Hl. sworne.
- 705. E. Hn. stirte. Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. al; E. Cm. Pt. and. 710. they]
- Cp. Pt. Ln. we.
- Whan they han goon nat fully half a myle,
- Right as they wolde han troden over a style,
- An old man and a povre with hem mette.
- This olde man ful mekely hem grette,
- And seyde thus, 'now, lordes, god yow see!' 715
- The proudest of thise ryotoures three
- Answerde agayn, 'what? carl, with sory grace,
- Why artow al forwrapped save thy face? (390)
- Why livestow so longe in so greet age?'
- This olde man gan loke in his visage, 720
- And seyde thus, 'for I ne can nat finde
- A man, though that I walked in-to Inde,
- Neither in citee nor in no village,
- That wolde chaunge his youthe for myn age;
- And therfore moot I han myn age stille, 725
- As longe time as it is goddes wille.
- Ne deeth, allas! ne wol nat han my lyf;
- Thus walke I, lyk a restelees caityf, (400)
- And on the ground, which is my modres gate,
- I knokke with my staf, bothe erly and late, 730
- And seye, "leve moder, leet me in!
- Lo, how I vanish, flesh, and blood, and skin!
- Allas! whan shul my bones been at reste?
- Moder, with yow wolde I chaunge my cheste,
- That in my chambre longe tyme hath be, 735
- Ye! for an heyre clout to wrappe me!"
- But yet to me she wol nat do that grace,
- For which ful pale and welked is my face. (410)
- But, sirs, to yow it is no curteisye
- To speken to an old man vileinye, 740
- But he trespasse in worde, or elles in dede.
- In holy writ ye may your-self wel rede,
- "Agayns an old man, hoor upon his heed,
- Ye sholde aryse;" wherfor I yeve yow reed,
- Ne dooth un-to an old man noon harm now, 745
- Na-more than ye wolde men dide to yow
- [313: T. 12681-12718.]
- In age, if that ye so longe abyde;
- And god be with yow, wher ye go or ryde. (420)
- I moot go thider as I have to go.'
- 746. E. Hn. than that; _rest omit_ that.
- 'Nay, olde cherl, by god, thou shall nat so,' 750
- Seyde this other hasardour anon;
- 'Thou partest nat so lightly, by seint Iohn!
- Thou spak right now of thilke traitour Deeth,
- That in this contree alle our frendes sleeth.
- Have heer my trouthe, as thou art his aspye, 755
- Tel wher he is, or thou shalt it abye,
- By god, and by the holy sacrament!
- For soothly thou art oon of his assent, (430)
- To sleen us yonge folk, thou false theef!'
- 'Now, sirs,' quod he, 'if that yow be so leef 760
- To finde Deeth, turne up this croked wey,
- For in that grove I lafte him, by my fey,
- Under a tree, and ther he wol abyde;
- Nat for your boost he wol him no-thing hyde.
- See ye that ook? right ther ye shul him finde. 765
- God save yow, that boghte agayn mankinde,
- And yow amende!'--thus seyde this olde man.
- And everich of thise ryotoures ran, (440)
- Til he cam to that tree, and ther they founde
- Of florins fyne of golde y-coyned rounde 770
- Wel ny an eighte busshels, as hem thoughte.
- No lenger thanne after Deeth they soughte,
- But ech of hem so glad was of that sighte,
- For that the florins been so faire and brighte,
- That doun they sette hem by this precious hord. 775
- The worste of hem he spake the firste word.
- 760. E. Cm. ye; Hn. Hl. yow.
- 'Brethren,' quod he, 'tak kepe what I seye;
- My wit is greet, though that I bourde and pleye. (450)
- This tresor hath fortune un-to us yiven,
- In mirthe and Iolitee our lyf to liven, 780
- And lightly as it comth, so wol we spende.
- Ey! goddes precious dignitee! who wende
- To-day, that we sholde han so fair a grace?
- But mighte this gold be caried fro this place
- [314: T. 12719-12754.]
- Hoom to myn hous, or elles un-to youres-- 785
- For wel ye woot that al this gold is oures--
- Than were we in heigh felicitee.
- But trewely, by daye it may nat be; (460)
- Men wolde seyn that we were theves stronge,
- And for our owene tresor doon us honge. 790
- This tresor moste y-caried be by nighte
- As wysly and as slyly as it mighte.
- Wherfore I rede that cut among us alle
- Be drawe, and lat se wher the cut wol falle;
- And he that hath the cut with herte blythe 795
- Shal renne to the toune, and that ful swythe,
- And bringe us breed and wyn ful prively.
- And two of us shul kepen subtilly (470)
- This tresor wel; and, if he wol nat tarie,
- Whan it is night, we wol this tresor carie 800
- By oon assent, wher-as us thinketh best.'
- That oon of hem the cut broughte in his fest,
- And bad hem drawe, and loke wher it wol falle;
- And it fil on the yongeste of hem alle;
- And forth toward the toun he wente anon. 805
- And al-so sone as that he was gon,
- That oon of hem spak thus un-to that other,
- 'Thou knowest wel thou art my sworne brother, (480)
- Thy profit wol I telle thee anon.
- Thou woost wel that our felawe is agon; 810
- And heer is gold, and that ful greet plentee,
- That shal departed been among us three.
- But natheles, if I can shape it so
- That it departed were among us two,
- Hadde I nat doon a freendes torn to thee?' 815
- 779. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. yeuen. 780. E. Ioliftee. 796. Hl. Ln. the;
- _rest omit._ 803. E. hym; _rest_ hem. E. Hn. Cp. wol; Hl. wil; Cm.
- Pt. Ln. wolde. 807. E. _omits_ of hem. 808. E. Hn. Pt. sworn; Cm.
- swore: Cp. Ln. Hl. sworne.
- That other answerde, 'I noot how that may be;
- He woot how that the gold is with us tweye,
- What shal we doon, what shal we to him seye?' (490)
- 'Shal it be conseil?' seyde the firste shrewe,
- 'And I shal tellen thee, in wordes fewe, 820
- [315: T. 12755-12790.]
- What we shal doon, and bringe it wel aboute.'
- 820. Hl. the (=thee); _rest omit._ E. Hn. Cm. in a; _rest omit_ a.
- 'I graunte,' quod that other, 'out of doute,
- That, by my trouthe, I wol thee nat biwreye.'
- 823. E. shal; _rest_ wol (wil, wyl).
- 'Now,' quod the firste, 'thou woost wel we be tweye,
- And two of us shul strenger be than oon. 825
- Look whan that he is set, and right anoon
- Arys, as though thou woldest with him pleye;
- And I shal ryve him thurgh the sydes tweye (500)
- Whyl that thou strogelest with him as in game,
- And with thy dagger look thou do the same; 830
- And than shal al this gold departed be,
- My dere freend, bitwixen me and thee;
- Than may we bothe our lustes al fulfille,
- And pleye at dees right at our owene wille.'
- And thus acorded been thise shrewes tweye 835
- To sleen the thridde, as ye han herd me seye.
- 826. E. Hn. Cm. that right; Cp. and thanne; Pt. Ln. Hl. and that. _I
- take_ and _from_ Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl., _and_ right _from_ E. Hn. Cm.
- This yongest, which that wente un-to the toun,
- Ful ofte in herte he rolleth up and doun (510)
- The beautee of thise florins newe and brighte.
- 'O lord!' quod he, 'if so were that I mighte 840
- Have al this tresor to my-self allone,
- Ther is no man that liveth under the trone
- Of god, that sholde live so mery as I!'
- And atte laste the feend, our enemy,
- Putte in his thought that he shold poyson beye, 845
- With which he mighte sleen his felawes tweye;
- For-why the feend fond him in swich lyvinge,
- That he had leve him to sorwe bringe, (520)
- For this was outrely his fulle entente
- To sleen hem bothe, and never to repente. 850
- And forth he gooth, no lenger wolde he tarie,
- Into the toun, un-to a pothecarie,
- And preyed him, that he him wolde selle
- Som poyson, that he mighte his rattes quelle;
- And eek ther was a polcat in his hawe, 855
- That, as he seyde, his capouns hadde y-slawe,
- [316: T. 12791-12826.]
- And fayn he wolde wreke him, if he mighte,
- On vermin, that destroyed him by nighte. (530)
- 847. E. Hn. foond. 848. E. Cm. hem; _rest_ hym _or_ him. 853. Hn.
- preyed; Cm. preyede; _rest_ preyde.
- The pothecarie answerde, 'and thou shalt have
- A thing that, al-so god my soule save, 860
- In al this world ther nis no creature,
- That ete or dronke hath of this confiture
- Noght but the mountance of a corn of whete,
- That he ne shal his lyf anon forlete;
- Ye, sterve he shal, and that in lasse whyle 865
- Than thou wolt goon a paas nat but a myle;
- This poyson is so strong and violent.'
- 861. E. Hn. Cm. is; _rest_ nys _or_ nis.
- This cursed man hath in his hond y-hent (540)
- This poyson in a box, and sith he ran
- In-to the nexte strete, un-to a man, 870
- And borwed [of] him large botels three;
- And in the two his poyson poured he;
- The thridde he kepte clene for his drinke.
- For al the night he shoop him for to swinke
- In caryinge of the gold out of that place. 875
- And whan this ryotour, with sory grace,
- Had filled with wyn his grete botels three,
- To his felawes agayn repaireth he. (550)
- 871. _All_ omit of. 873. E. his owene; _rest omit_ owene.
- What nedeth it to sermone of it more?
- For right as they had cast his deeth bifore, 880
- Right so they han him slayn, and that anon.
- And whan that this was doon, thus spak that oon,
- 'Now lat us sitte and drinke, and make us merie,
- And afterward we wol his body berie.'
- And with that word it happed him, par cas, 885
- To take the botel ther the poyson was,
- And drank, and yaf his felawe drinke also,
- For which anon they storven bothe two. (560)
- 880. E. so as; _rest omit_ so.
- But, certes, I suppose that Avicen
- Wroot never in no canon, ne in no fen, 890
- Mo wonder signes of empoisoning
- Than hadde thise wrecches two, er hir ending.
- [317: T. 12827-12861.]
- Thus ended been thise homicydes two,
- And eek the false empoysoner also.
- 891. E. Hn. Cm. signes; Cp. Ln. Hl. sorwes; Pt. sorowes.
- O cursed sinne, ful of cursednesse! 895
- O traytours homicyde, o wikkednesse!
- O glotonye, luxurie, and hasardrye!
- Thou blasphemour of Crist with vileinye (570)
- And othes grete, of usage and of pryde!
- Allas! mankinde, how may it bityde, 900
- That to thy creatour which that thee wroghte,
- And with his precious herte-blood thee boghte,
- Thou art so fals and so unkinde, allas!
- 895. E. Hn. Cm. of alle; Cp. Ln. Hl. ful of; Pt. ful of al.
- Now, goode men, god forgeve yow your trespas,
- And ware yow fro the sinne of avaryce. 905
- Myn holy pardoun may yow alle waryce,
- So that ye offre nobles or sterlinges,
- Or elles silver broches, spones, ringes. (580)
- Boweth your heed under this holy bulle!
- Cometh up, ye wyves, offreth of your wolle! 910
- Your name I entre heer in my rolle anon;
- In-to the blisse of hevene shul ye gon;
- I yow assoile, by myn heigh power,
- Yow that wol offre, as clene and eek as cleer
- As ye were born; and, lo, sirs, thus I preche. 915
- And Iesu Crist, that is our soules leche,
- So graunte yow his pardon to receyve;
- For that is best; I wol yow nat deceyve. (590)
- 910. E. Com; _rest_ Cometh, Comyth. 911. E. Hl. names; _rest_ name.
- But sirs, o word forgat I in my tale,
- I have relikes and pardon in my male, 920
- As faire as any man in Engelond,
- Whiche were me yeven by the popes hond.
- If any of yow wol, of devocioun,
- Offren, and han myn absolucioun,
- Cometh forth anon, and kneleth heer adoun, 925
- And mekely receyveth my pardoun:
- Or elles, taketh pardon as ye wende,
- [318: T. 12862-12897.]
- Al newe and fresh, at every tounes ende, (600)
- So that ye offren alwey newe and newe
- Nobles and pens, which that be gode and trewe. 930
- It is an honour to everich that is heer,
- That ye mowe have a suffisant pardoneer
- Tassoille yow, in contree as ye ryde,
- For aventures which that may bityde.
- Peraventure ther may falle oon or two 935
- Doun of his hors, and breke his nekke atwo.
- Look which a seuretee is it to yow alle
- That I am in your felaweship y-falle, (610)
- That may assoille yow, bothe more and lasse,
- Whan that the soule shal fro the body passe, 940
- I rede that our hoste heer shal biginne,
- For he is most envoluped in sinne.
- Com forth, sir hoste, and offre first anon,
- And thou shalt kisse the reliks everichon,
- Ye, for a grote! unbokel anon thy purs.' 945
- 925. E. Hn. Com; _rest_ Cometh, Comyth. 928. E. Hn. Cm. myles; _rest_
- tounes. 930. E. Hn. or; _rest_ and. 935. E. fallen. 941. E. Cm.
- heere; _rest om._ 944. E. my; Cm. myne; _rest_ the.
- 'Nay, nay,' quod he, 'than have I Cristes curs!
- Lat be,' quod he, 'it shal nat be, so theech!
- Thou woldest make me kisse thyn old breech, (620)
- And swere it were a relik of a seint,
- Thogh it were with thy fundement depeint! 950
- But by the croys which that seint Eleyne fond,
- I wolde I hadde thy coillons in myn hond
- In stede of relikes or of seintuarie;
- Lat cutte hem of, I wol thee helpe hem carie;
- Thay shul be shryned in an hogges tord.' 955
- 947. Hn. thee ich; _rest_ theech. 954. Cp. Ln. the helpe; Pt. Hl.
- helpe; E. with thee; Cm. from the; Hn. thee.
- This pardoner answerde nat a word;
- So wrooth he was, no word ne wolde he seye.
- 'Now,' quod our host, 'I wol no lenger pleye (630)
- With thee, ne with noon other angry man.'
- But right anon the worthy knight bigan, 960
- Whan that he saugh that al the peple lough,
- 'Na-more of this, for it is right y-nough;
- Sir pardoner, be glad and mery of chere;
- [319: T. 12898-12902.]
- And ye, sir host, that been to me so dere,
- I prey yow that ye kisse the pardoner. 965
- And pardoner, I prey thee, drawe thee neer,
- And, as we diden, lat us laughe and pleye.' (639)
- Anon they kiste, and riden forth hir weye. [T. 12902.
- HERE IS ENDED THE PARDONERS TALE.
- (_For_ T. 12903, _see_ p. 165).
- COLOPHON. _From_ E. Hn.; Hl. Here endeth the pardoneres tale.
- [320: T. 5583-5602.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP D.
- THE WIFE OF BATH'S PROLOGUE.
- T. 5583 sqq.; _for_ T. 5582, _see_ p. 164.)
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE WYVES TALE OF BATHE.
- 'Experience, though noon auctoritee
- Were in this world, were right y-nough to me
- To speke of wo that is in mariage;
- For, lordinges, sith I twelf yeer was of age,
- Thonked be god that is eterne on lyve, 5
- Housbondes at chirche-dore I have had fyve;
- For I so ofte have y-wedded be;
- And alle were worthy men in hir degree.
- But me was told certeyn, nat longe agon is,
- That sith that Crist ne wente never but onis 10
- To wedding in the Cane of Galilee,
- That by the same ensample taughte he me
- That I ne sholde wedded be but ones.
- Herke eek, lo! which a sharp word for the nones
- Besyde a welle Iesus, god and man, 15
- Spak in repreve of the Samaritan:
- "Thou hast y-had fyve housbondes," quod he,
- "And thilke man, the which that hath now thee,
- Is noght thyn housbond;" thus seyde he certeyn;
- What that he mente ther-by, I can nat seyn; 20
- [321: T. 5603-5636.]
- But that I axe, why that the fifthe man
- Was noon housbond to the Samaritan?
- How manye mighte she have in mariage?
- Yet herde I never tellen in myn age
- Upon this nombre diffinicioun; 25
- Men may devyne and glosen up and doun.
- But wel I woot expres, with-oute lye,
- God bad us for to wexe and multiplye;
- That gentil text can I wel understonde.
- Eek wel I woot he seyde, myn housbonde 30
- Sholde lete fader and moder, and take me;
- But of no nombre mencioun made he,
- Of bigamye or of octogamye;
- Why sholde men speke of it vileinye?
- HEADING. _So_ E.; Hn. Here bigynneth the prologe of the tale of the Wyf
- of Bathe; Hl. Here bygynneth the prologe of the wyf of Bathe. 5. Hn.
- Pt. Ln. Thonked; E. Ythonked. 7. _So_ E.; _rest_ If (Hl. For) I so
- ofte myghte haue wedded be. 12. E. _om._ That. E. thoughte; _rest_
- taughte he. 14. E. Herkne; Hl. Herken; _rest_ Herke (Herk). E. Hl.
- _om._ lo. 18. E. And that; _rest_ And that ilke (_read_ thilke).
- 29. E. _om._ wel. 31. E. take; Hl. folwe; _rest_ take to.
- Lo, here the wyse king, dan Salomon; 35
- I trowe he hadde wyves mo than oon;
- As, wolde god, it leveful were to me
- To be refresshed half so ofte as he!
- Which yifte of god hadde he for alle his wyvis!
- No man hath swich, that in this world alyve is. 40
- God woot, this noble king, as to my wit,
- The firste night had many a mery fit
- With ech of hem, so wel was him on lyve!
- Blessed be god that I have wedded fyve!
- Welcome the sixte, whan that ever he shal. 45
- For sothe, I wol nat kepe me chast in al;
- Whan myn housbond is fro the world y-gon,
- Som Cristen man shal wedde me anon;
- For thanne thapostle seith, that I am free
- To wedde, a goddes half, wher it lyketh me. 50
- He seith that to be wedded is no sinne;
- Bet is to be wedded than to brinne.
- What rekketh me, thogh folk seye vileinye
- Of shrewed Lameth and his bigamye?
- [322: T. 5637-5672.]
- I woot wel Abraham was an holy man, 55
- And Iacob eek, as ferforth as I can;
- And ech of hem hadde wyves mo than two;
- And many another holy man also.
- Whan saugh ye ever, in any maner age,
- That hye god defended mariage 60
- By expres word? I pray you, telleth me;
- Or wher comanded he virginitee?
- I woot as wel as ye, it is no drede,
- Thapostel, whan he speketh of maydenhede;
- He seyde, that precept ther-of hadde he noon. 65
- Men may conseille a womman to been oon,
- But conseilling is no comandement;
- He putte it in our owene Iugement.
- For hadde god comanded maydenhede,
- Thanne hadde he dampned wedding with the dede; 70
- And certes, if ther were no seed y-sowe,
- Virginitee, wher-of than sholde it growe?
- Poul dorste nat comanden atte leste
- A thing of which his maister yaf noon heste.
- The dart is set up for virginitee; 75
- Cacche who so may, who renneth best lat see.
- 37. _So all but_ E., _which has_ it were leueful vn-to me. 42. E.
- myrie; Hn. murye. 44. E. Hl. Yblessed; _rest_ Blessed (Blissed).
- 46. E. chaast. 49. E. _om._ that. 50. Hl. wher so it be; _rest_
- wher it liketh me (_correctly; for_ a goddes half = a god's half).
- 51. E. _om._ that. 52. E. Hn. Hl. Bet; _rest_ Better. 54. E. Hl.
- of; _rest_ his. 58. E. _om._ holy. 59. Hl. Whan; E. Whanne; _rest_
- Where (Wher). E. _om._ any. 64. E. Whan thapostel speketh. 67. E.
- nat; _rest_ no (non). 71. E. certein. 73. E. Hl. _ins._ ne _after_
- Poul. 75. E. of; Cp. fro; Hl. on; _rest_ for.
- But this word is nat take of every wight,
- But ther as god list give it of his might.
- I woot wel, that thapostel was a mayde;
- But natheless, thogh that he wroot and sayde, 80
- He wolde that every wight were swich as he,
- Al nis but conseil to virginitee;
- And for to been a wyf, he yaf me leve
- Of indulgence; so it is no repreve
- To wedde me, if that my make dye, 85
- With-oute excepcioun of bigamye.
- Al were it good no womman for to touche,
- He mente as in his bed or in his couche;
- For peril is bothe fyr and tow tassemble;
- Ye knowe what this ensample may resemble. 90
- [323: T. 5673-5706.]
- This is al and som, he heeld virginitee
- More parfit than wedding in freletee.
- Freeltee clepe I, but-if that he and she
- Wolde leden al hir lyf in chastitee.
- 77. E. Hl. taken. 78. E. Cm. lust; Hn. Hl. list. 79. E. _om._
- that. 85. E. Cm. _om._ that. 89. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. to assemble. 91.
- E. Cm that; Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. he heeld; Hl. he holdith. 92. E. Cm.
- profiteth; _rest_ parfit. 94. Hn. Hl. leden; _rest_ lede.
- I graunte it wel, I have noon envye, 95
- Thogh maydenhede preferre bigamye;
- Hem lyketh to be clene, body and goost,
- Of myn estaat I nil nat make no boost.
- For wel ye knowe, a lord in his houshold,
- He hath nat every vessel al of gold; 100
- Somme been of tree, and doon hir lord servyse.
- God clepeth folk to him in sondry wyse,
- And everich hath of god a propre yifte,
- Som this, som that,--as him lyketh shifte.
- 104. _So all but_ Hl. Ln. _which have_ to schifte. _Perhaps read_ right
- as him.
- Virginitee is greet perfeccioun, 105
- And continence eek with devocioun.
- But Crist, that of perfeccioun is welle,
- Bad nat every wight he shold go selle
- All that he hadde, and give it to the pore,
- And in swich wyse folwe hime and his fore. 110
- He spak to hem that wolde live parfitly;
- And lordinges, by your leve, that am nat I.
- I wol bistowe the flour of al myn age
- In the actes and in fruit of mariage.
- 108. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ he. 109, 110. E poore, foore; _and_ foore _is
- glossed by_ steppes. 113. E Hl. _om._ al.
- Telle me also, to what conclusioun 115
- Were membres maad of generacioun,
- And for what profit was a wight y-wroght?
- Trusteth right wel, they wer nat maad for noght.
- Glose who-so wole, and seye bothe up and doun,
- That they were maked for purgacioun
- Of urine, and our bothe thinges smale
- Were eek to knowe a femele from a male,
- And for noone other cause: sey ye no?
- The experience woot wel it is noght so;
- [324: T. 5707-5741.]
- So that the clerkes be nat with me wrothe, 125
- I sey this, that they maked been for bothe,
- This is to seye, for office, and for ese
- Of engendrure, ther we nat god displese.
- Why sholde men elles in hir bokes sette,
- That man shal yelde to his wyf hir dette? 130
- Now wher-with sholde he make his payement,
- If he ne used his sely instrument?
- Than were they maad up-on a creature,
- To purge uryne, and eek for engendrure.
- 116 E. ymaad. 120. Cm. makyd; _rest_ maad; _see_ l. 126. 121. _So_
- Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln.; E. vryne bothe and thynges. 122. E. Cm. And; Hn. Hl.
- Was; _rest_ Were. 126. this] E. yis. E. Cm. beth maked. 130. E.
- Cm. a man. 133. E. Thanne. 134. E. Cm. _om._ eek.
- But I seye noght that every wight is holde, 135
- That hath swich harneys as I to yow tolde,
- To goon and usen hem in engendrure;
- Than sholde men take of chastitee no cure.
- Crist was a mayde, and shapen as a man,
- And many a seint, sith that the world bigan, 140
- Yet lived they ever in parfit chastitee.
- I nil envye no virginitee;
- Lat hem be breed of pured whete-seed,
- And lat us wyves hoten barly-breed;
- And yet with barly-breed, Mark telle can, 145
- Our lord Iesu refresshed many a man.
- In swich estaat as god hath cleped us
- I wol persevere, I nam nat precious.
- In wyfhode I wol use myn instrument
- As frely as my maker hath it sent. 150
- If I be daungerous, god yeve me sorwe!
- Myn housbond shal it have bothe eve and morwe,
- Whan that him list com forth and paye his dette.
- An housbonde I wol have, I nil nat lette,
- Which shal be bothe my dettour and my thral, 155
- And have his tribulacioun with-al
- Up-on his flessh, whyl that I am his wyf.
- I have the power duringe al my lyf
- Up-on his propre body, and noght he.
- [325: T. 5742-5776.]
- Right thus the apostel tolde it un-to me; 160
- And bad our housbondes for to love us weel.
- Al this sentence me lyketh every-deel'--
- 136. Hn. Hl. to yow; E. Cm. of. 138. E. Cm. They shul nat; _rest_
- Than sholde men. 140. E. Cm. _om._ that (_perhaps read_ së-int).
- 142. E. Cm. nil nat. 144. E. hoten; Hn. Cm. hote; Cp. Pt. Ln. ete(!);
- Hl. eten(!). 146. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ Iesu. 148. E. Hn. precius.
- Up sterte the Pardoner, and that anon,
- 'Now dame,' quod he, 'by god and by seint Iohn,
- Ye been a noble prechour in this cas! 165
- I was aboute to wedde a wyf; allas!
- What sholde I bye it on my flesh so dere?
- Yet hadde I lever wedde no wyf to-yere!'
- 163. E. Hn. stirte.
- 'Abyde!' quod she, 'my tale is nat bigonne;
- Nay, thou shalt drinken of another tonne 170
- Er that I go, shal savoure wors than ale.
- And whan that I have told thee forth my tale
- Of tribulacioun in mariage,
- Of which I am expert in al myn age,
- This to seyn, my-self have been the whippe;-- 175
- Than maystow chese whether thou wolt sippe
- Of thilke tonne that I shal abroche.
- Be war of it, er thou to ny approche;
- For I shal telle ensamples mo than ten.
- Who-so that nil be war by othere men, 180
- By him shul othere men corrected be.
- The same wordes wryteth Ptholomee;
- Rede in his Almageste, and take it there.'
- 172. Hn. Hl. thee; _rest om._ 173. E. Cm. that is in (_for_ in).
- 176. E. wheither. 177. E. Cm. that; _rest_ thilke. 180. Hn. nyle;
- Hl. nyl; _rest_ wol nat. 182. Ln. tholome; Pt. ptholome; Hl.
- p_ro_tholome; E. Hn. Cm. Cp. Protholome(!). 183. E. Cm. Rede it in.
- 'Dame, I wolde praye yow, if your wil it were,'
- Seyde this Pardoner, 'as ye bigan, 185
- Telle forth your tale, spareth for no man,
- And teche us yonge men of your praktike.'
- 184. E. Cm. _om._ yow.
- 'Gladly,' quod she, 'sith it may yow lyke.
- But yet I praye to al this companye,
- If that I speke after my fantasye, 190
- As taketh not a-grief of that I seye;
- For myn entente nis but for to pleye.
- 188. E. sires; Cm. sire; _rest_ quod she. 191. E. Cm. _om._ of.
- 192. Hn. nis; E. Cm. is; _rest_ is not.
- Now sires, now wol I telle forth my tale.--
- As ever mote I drinken wyn or ale,
- [326: T. 5777-5811.]
- I shal seye sooth, tho housbondes that I hadde, 195
- As three of hem were gode and two were badde.
- The three men were gode, and riche, and olde;
- Unnethe mighte they the statut holde
- In which that they were bounden un-to me.
- Ye woot wel what I mene of this, pardee! 200
- As help me god, I laughe whan I thinke
- How pitously a-night I made hem swinke;
- And by my fey, I tolde of it no stoor.
- They had me yeven hir gold and hir tresoor;
- Me neded nat do lenger diligence 205
- To winne hir love, or doon hem reverence.
- They loved me so wel, by god above,
- That I ne tolde no deyntee of hir love!
- A wys womman wol sette hir ever in oon
- To gete hir love, ther as she hath noon. 210
- But sith I hadde hem hoolly in myn hond,
- And sith they hadde me yeven all hir lond,
- What sholde I taken hede hem for to plese,
- But it were for my profit and myn ese?
- I sette hem so a-werke, by my fey, 215
- That many a night they songen "weilawey!"
- The bacoun was nat fet for hem, I trowe,
- That som men han in Essex at Dunmowe.
- I governed hem so wel, after my lawe,
- That ech of hem ful blisful was and fawe 220
- To bringe me gaye thinges fro the fayre.
- They were ful glad whan I spak to hem fayre;
- For god it woot, I chidde hem spitously.
- 193. E. Hn. Cm. sire. 195. E. of tho; Hl. Cm. of; Hn. Cp. Pt. tho;
- Ln. the. 197. Cp. Pt. Ln. men; _rest om._ 210. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. ye
- ther; _but read_ lov-ë. 215. E. Hn. a-werk; _rest_ a-werke. 220. E.
- was ful blisful; Cm. was blysful and ful.
- Now herkneth, how I bar me proprely,
- Ye wyse wyves, that can understonde. 225
- 224. E. baar.
- Thus shul ye speke and bere hem wrong on honde;
- For half so boldely can ther no man
- Swere and lyen as a womman can.
- I sey nat this by wyves that ben wyse,
- [327: T. 5812-5845.]
- But-if it be whan they hem misavyse. 230
- A wys wyf, if that she can hir good,
- Shal beren him on hond the cow is wood,
- And take witnesse of hir owene mayde
- Of hir assent; but herkneth how I sayde.
- 226. E. beren: _om._ wrong. 228. MSS. lye; _read_ lyen. Hn. Ln. a
- womman kan; Pt. womman can; _rest_ kan a womman. 231. E. Hn. Cm. A
- wys; Hl. I-wis a; _rest_ wise. _Read_ wys-e? 232. Hl. beren; _rest_
- bere. Cm. cou; Pt. Ln. cowe.
- 'Sir olde kaynard, is this thyn array? 235
- Why is my neighebores wyf so gay?
- She is honoured over-al ther she goth;
- I sitte at hoom, I have no thrifty cloth.
- What dostow at my neighebores hous?
- Is she so fair? artow so amorous? 240
- What rowne ye with our mayde? _benedicite_!
- Sir olde lechour, lat thy Iapes be!
- And if I have a gossib or a freend,
- With-outen gilt, thou chydest as a feend,
- If that I walke or pleye un-to his hous! 245
- Thou comest hoom as dronken as a mous,
- And prechest on thy bench, with yvel preef!
- Thou seist to me, it is a greet meschief
- To wedde a povre womman, for costage;
- And if that she be riche, of heigh parage, 250
- Than seistow that it is a tormentrye
- To suffre hir pryde and hir malencolye.
- And if that she be fair, thou verray knave,
- Thou seyst that every holour wol hir have;
- She may no whyle in chastitee abyde, 255
- That is assailled up-on ech a syde.
- 242. E. Pt. Hl. lecchour. 250. E. Cm. _om._ that. E. Cm. Hl. and
- of; _rest_ of. 251. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ that. 252. E. soffren.
- Thou seyst, som folk desyre us for richesse,
- Somme for our shap, and somme for our fairnesse;
- And som, for she can outher singe or daunce,
- And som, for gentillesse and daliaunce; 260
- Som, for hir handes and hir armes smale;
- Thus goth al to the devel by thy tale.
- Thou seyst, men may nat kepe a castel-wal;
- [328: T. 5846-5880.]
- It may so longe assailled been over-al.
- 257. E. Cm. that som. E. Hn. Cm. desiren. 258. E. Cm. _om._ and.
- 259. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ outher. E. Cm. Hl. and (_for_ or). 260. and]
- E. Cm. and som for; Hl. or.
- And if that she be foul, thou seist that she 265
- Coveiteth every man that she may se;
- For as a spaynel she wol on him lepe,
- Til that she finde som man hir to chepe;
- Ne noon so grey goos goth ther in the lake,
- As, seistow, that wol been with-oute make. 270
- And seyst, it is an hard thing for to welde
- A thing that no man wol, his thankes, helde.
- Thus seistow, lorel, whan thow goost to bedde;
- And that no wys man nedeth for to wedde,
- Ne no man that entendeth un-to hevene. 275
- With wilde thonder-dint and firy levene
- Mote thy welked nekke be to-broke!
- 269. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. ther; _rest om._ 270. Cp. Pt. Ln. that; _rest
- om._ 271, 272. Hn. Hl. wolde, holde. 277. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. welked;
- Cm. wekede; Cp. Hl. wicked.
- Thow seyst that dropping houses, and eek smoke,
- And chyding wyves, maken men to flee
- Out of hir owene hous; a! _benedicite_! 280
- What eyleth swich an old man for to chyde?
- 280. E. Hn. Cp. houses.
- Thow seyst, we wyves wol our vyces hyde
- Til we be fast, and than we wol hem shewe;
- Wel may that be a proverbe of a shrewe!
- 282. E. Cm. that we.
- Thou seist, that oxen, asses, hors, and houndes, 285
- They been assayed at diverse stoundes;
- Bacins, lavours, er that men hem bye,
- Spones and stoles, and al swich housbondrye,
- And so been pottes, clothes, and array;
- But folk of wyves maken noon assay 290
- Til they be wedded; olde dotard shrewe!
- And than, seistow, we wol oure vices shewe.
- 286. E. assayd; Pt. Ln. assaide; _rest_ assayed. 292. Hn. Hl.
- _supply_ And.
- Thou seist also, that it displeseth me
- But-if that thou wolt preyse my beautee,
- And but thou poure alwey up-on my face, 295
- And clepe me "faire dame" in every place;
- And but thou make a feste on thilke day
- That I was born, and make me fresh and gay,
- [329: T. 5881-5913.]
- And but thou do to my norice honour,
- And to my chamberere with-inne my bour, 300
- And to my fadres folk and his allyes;--
- Thus seistow, olde barel ful of lyes!
- 295. Hl. pore; _rest_ poure. 300. Cm. chaumberere; Hl. chamberer; E.
- Hn. chambrere.
- And yet of our apprentice Ianekyn,
- For his crisp heer, shyninge as gold so fyn,
- And for he squiereth me bothe up and doun, 305
- Yet hastow caught a fals suspecioun;
- I wol hym noght, thogh thou were deed to-morwe.
- 303. E. Ianekyn; _rest_ Iankyn.
- But tel me this, why hydestow, with sorwe,
- The keyes of thy cheste awey fro me?
- It is my good as wel as thyn, pardee. 310
- What wenestow make an idiot of our dame?
- Now by that lord, that called is seint Iame,
- Thou shalt nat bothe, thogh that thou were wood,
- Be maister of my body and of my good;
- That oon thou shalt forgo, maugree thyne yën; 315
- What nedeth thee of me to enquere or spyën?
- I trowe, thou woldest loke me in thy chiste!
- Thou sholdest seye, "wyf, go wher thee liste,
- Tak your disport, I wol nat leve no talis;
- I knowe yow for a trewe wyf, dame Alis." 320
- We love no man that taketh kepe or charge
- Wher that we goon, we wol ben at our large.
- 308. E. Cm. Hl. _om._ this. 309. thy] E. Cm. my. 311. E. Cm. to
- make; _rest om._ to. 313. Hn. Ln. that; _rest om._ 315. Hl. yen; E.
- eyen. 316. E. nedeth thee; _rest_ helpeth it. Hn. Cp. Ln. _om._
- to. Hl. tenqueren; _read_ t'enquere. 319. _All but_ Cp. Ln. _om._
- not (nat). 320. E. Pt. Alys; Ln. Ales.
- Of alle men y-blessed moot he be,
- The wyse astrologien Dan Ptholome,
- That seith this proverbe in his Almageste, 325
- "Of alle men his wisdom is the hyeste,
- That rekketh never who hath the world in honde."
- By this proverbe thou shalt understonde,
- Have thou y-nogh, what thar thee recche or care
- How merily that othere folkes fare? 330
- For certeyn, olde dotard, by your leve,
- [330: T. 5914-5949.]
- Ye shul have queynte right y-nough at eve.
- He is to greet a nigard that wol werne
- A man to lighte his candle at his lanterne;
- He shal have never the lasse light, pardee; 335
- Have thou y-nough, thee thar nat pleyne thee.
- 323. Hn. Hl. yblessed; _rest_ blessed. 324. MSS. Daun. E.
- Protholome; Hn. Cm. Hl. P_ro_tholome. 326. E. Cm. _ins._ the _before_
- hyeste; (_read_ th' hy-est-e). 328. Cp. Pt. Ln. shal wel. 330. E.
- myrily. 333. E. Cm. wolde.
- Thou seyst also, that if we make us gay
- With clothing and with precious array,
- That it is peril of our chastitee;
- And yet, with sorwe, thou most enforce thee, 340
- And seye thise wordes in the apostles name,
- "In habit, maad with chastitee and shame,
- Ye wommen shul apparaille yow," quod he,
- "And noght in tressed heer and gay perree,
- As perles, ne with gold, ne clothes riche;" 345
- After thy text, ne after thy rubriche
- I wol nat wirche as muchel as a gnat.
- Thou seydest this, that I was lyk a cat;
- For who-so wolde senge a cattes skin,
- Thanne wolde the cat wel dwellen in his in; 350
- And if the cattes skin be slyk and gay,
- She wol nat dwelle in house half a day,
- But forth she wole, er any day be dawed,
- To shewe hir skin, and goon a-caterwawed;
- This is to seye, if I be gay, sir shrewe, 355
- I wol renne out, my borel for to shewe.
- 348. Hl. thus; Cp. Pt. Ln. als; _rest_ this. 350. _All_ his.
- Sire olde fool, what eyleth thee to spyën?
- Thogh thou preye Argus, with his hundred yën,
- To be my warde-cors, as he can best,
- In feith, he shal nat kepe me but me lest; 360
- Yet coude I make his berd, so moot I thee.
- 358. Hl. yen; E. eyen. 359. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. -corps. 360. E.
- _om. 2nd_ me.
- Thou seydest eek, that ther ben thinges three,
- The whiche thinges troublen al this erthe,
- And that no wight ne may endure the ferthe;
- O leve sir shrewe, Iesu shorte thy lyf! 365
- Yet prechestow, and seyst, an hateful wyf
- Y-rekened is for oon of thise meschances.
- [331: T. 5950-5982.]
- Been ther none othere maner resemblances
- That ye may lykne your parables to,
- But-if a sely wyf be oon of tho? 370
- 364. _All but_ Pt. Ln. _om._ ne. 366. E. and (_for_ an). 368. Cp.
- Pt. Ln. maner; Cm. of these; Hl. of thy; E. _om._
- Thou lykenest wommanes love to helle,
- To bareyne lond, ther water may not dwelle.
- Thou lyknest it also to wilde fyr;
- The more it brenneth, the more it hath desyr
- To consume every thing that brent wol be. 375
- Thou seyst, that right as wormes shende a tree,
- Right so a wyf destroyeth hir housbonde;
- This knowe they that been to wyves bonde.'
- 371. Cp. Ln. Hl. likenest; Cm. likkenyst; E. Hn. Pt. liknest. E.
- wommennes. 375. E. Hn. consumen. 376. Cp. Pt. that; _rest om._
- Hn. Cp. Pt. shende; E. Pt. shendeth.
- Lordinges, right thus, as ye have understonde,
- Bar I stifly myne olde housbondes on honde, 380
- That thus they seyden in hir dronkenesse;
- And al was fals, but that I took witnesse
- On Ianekin and on my nece also.
- O lord, the peyne I dide hem and the wo,
- Ful giltelees, by goddes swete pyne! 385
- For as an hors I coude byte and whyne.
- I coude pleyne, thogh I were in the gilt,
- Or elles often tyme hadde I ben spilt.
- Who-so that first to mille comth, first grint;
- I pleyned first, so was our werre y-stint. 390
- They were ful glad to excusen hem ful blyve
- Of thing of which they never agilte hir lyve.
- 383. Hl. vpon. 385. E. Hn. giltlees. 389. _So_ Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln.; E.
- Who so comth first to mille; Hl. Who-so first cometh to the mylle.
- 391. E. Cm. _om. 2nd_ ful.
- Of wenches wolde I beren him on honde,
- Whan that for syk unnethes mighte he stonde.
- Yet tikled it his herte, for that he 395
- Wende that I hadde of him so greet chiertee.
- I swoor that al my walkinge out by nighte
- Was for tespye wenches that he dighte;
- Under that colour hadde I many a mirthe.
- For al swich wit is yeven us in our birthe; 400
- [332: T. 5983-6019.]
- Deceite, weping, spinning god hath yive
- To wommen kindely, whyl they may live.
- And thus of o thing I avaunte me,
- Atte ende I hadde the bettre in ech degree,
- By sleighte, or force, or by som maner thing, 405
- As by continuel murmur or grucching;
- Namely a bedde hadden they meschaunce,
- Ther wolde I chyde and do hem no plesaunce;
- I wolde no lenger in the bed abyde,
- If that I felte his arm over my syde, 410
- Til he had maad his raunson un-to me;
- Than wolde I suffre him do his nycetee.
- And ther-fore every man this tale I telle,
- Winne who-so may, for al is for to selle.
- With empty hand men may none haukes lure; 415
- For winning wolde I al his lust endure,
- And make me a feyned appetyt;
- And yet in bacon hadde I never delyt;
- That made me that ever I wolde hem chyde.
- For thogh the pope had seten hem biside, 420
- I wolde nat spare hem at hir owene bord.
- For by my trouthe, I quitte hem word for word.
- As help me verray god omnipotent,
- Thogh I right now sholde make my testament,
- I ne owe hem nat a word that it nis quit. 425
- I broghte it so aboute by my wit,
- That they moste yeve it up, as for the beste;
- Or elles hadde we never been in reste.
- For thogh he loked as a wood leoun,
- Yet sholde he faille of his conclusioun. 430
- 393. E. hym; _rest_ hem; _but see_ 394. 395. E. it; _rest_ I. 400.
- E. thyng was; _rest_ wit is. 401. E. yeue. 402. _All but_ Hn. Hl.
- _ins._ that _before_ they. 406. E. continueel. 428. E. rest.
- Thanne wolde I seye, 'gode lief, tak keep
- How mekely loketh Wilkin oure sheep;
- Com neer, my spouse, lat me ba thy cheke!
- Ye sholde been al pacient and meke,
- And han a swete spyced conscience, 435
- Sith ye so preche of Iobes pacience.
- Suffreth alwey, sin ye so wel can preche;
- [333: T. 6020-6056.]
- And but ye do, certain we shal yow teche
- That it is fair to have a wyf in pees.
- Oon of us two moste bowen, doutelees; 440
- And sith a man is more resonable
- Than womman is, ye moste been suffrable.
- What eyleth yow to grucche thus and grone?
- Is it for ye wolde have my queynte allone?
- Why taak it al, lo, have it every-deel; 445
- Peter! I shrewe yow but ye love it weel!
- For if I wolde selle my _bele chose,_
- I coude walke as fresh as is a rose;
- But I wol kepe it for your owene tooth.
- Ye be to blame, by god, I sey yow sooth.' 450
- 431. Cp. Pt. Hl. _ins._ now _before_ goode. 445. E. Hn. Pt. Wy.
- Swiche maner wordes hadde we on honde.
- Now wol I speken of my fourthe housbonde.
- My fourthe housbonde was a revelour,
- This is to seyn, he hadde a paramour;
- And I was yong and ful of ragerye, 455
- Stiborn and strong, and Ioly as a pye.
- Wel coude I daunce to an harpe smale,
- And singe, y-wis, as any nightingale,
- Whan I had dronke a draughte of swete wyn.
- Metellius, the foule cherl, the swyn, 460
- That with a staf birafte his wyf hir lyf,
- For she drank wyn, thogh I hadde been his wyf,
- He sholde nat han daunted me fro drinke;
- And, after wyn, on Venus moste I thinke:
- For al so siker as cold engendreth hayl, 465
- A likerous mouth moste han a likerous tayl.
- In womman vinolent is no defence,
- This knowen lechours by experience.
- 456. Cm. Cp. Ln. Styborne; Pt. Hl. Stiborn; E. Hn. Stibourne. 464.
- Cm. muste; Ln. must. 467. E. Hl. wommen.
- But, lord Crist! whan that it remembreth me
- Up-on my yowthe, and on my Iolitee, 470
- It tikleth me aboute myn herte rote.
- Unto this day it dooth myn herte bote
- That I have had my world as in my tyme.
- But age, allas! that al wol envenyme,
- [334: T. 6057-6093.]
- Hath me biraft my beautee and my pith; 475
- Lat go, fare-wel, the devel go therwith!
- The flour is goon, ther is na-more to telle,
- The bren, as I best can, now moste I selle;
- But yet to be right mery wol I fonde.
- Now wol I tellen of my fourthe housbonde. 480
- 479. E. myrie; Hn. murye.
- I seye, I hadde in herte greet despyt
- That he of any other had delyt.
- But he was quit, by god and by seint Ioce!
- I made him of the same wode a croce;
- Nat of my body in no foul manere, 485
- But certeinly, I made folk swich chere,
- That in his owene grece I made him frye
- For angre, and for verray Ialousye.
- By god, in erthe I was his purgatorie,
- For which I hope his soule be in glorie. 490
- For god it woot, he sat ful ofte and song
- Whan that his shoo ful bitterly him wrong.
- Ther was no wight, save god and he, that wiste,
- In many wyse, how sore I him twiste.
- He deyde whan I cam fro Ierusalem, 495
- And lyth y-grave under the rode-beem,
- Al is his tombe noght so curious
- As was the sepulcre of him, Darius,
- Which that Appelles wroghte subtilly;
- It nis but wast to burie him preciously. 500
- Lat him fare-wel, god yeve his soule reste,
- He is now in the grave and in his cheste.
- 486. E. c_er_tein. 497. E. Hn. curyus.
- Now of my fifthe housbond wol I telle.
- God lete his soule never come in helle!
- And yet was he to me the moste shrewe; 505
- That fele I on my ribbes al by rewe,
- And ever shal, un-to myn ending-day.
- But in our bed he was so fresh and gay,
- And ther-with-al so wel coude he me glose,
- Whan that he wolde han my _bele chose,_ 510
- That thogh he hadde me bet on every boon,
- [335: T. 6094-6129.]
- He coude winne agayn my love anoon.
- I trowe I loved him beste, for that he
- Was of his love daungerous to me.
- We wommen han, if that I shal nat lye, 515
- In this matere a queynte fantasye;
- Wayte what thing we may nat lightly have,
- Ther-after wol we crye al-day and crave.
- Forbede us thing, and that desyren we;
- Prees on us faste, and thanne wol we flee. 520
- With daunger oute we al our chaffare;
- Greet prees at market maketh dere ware,
- And to greet cheep is holde at litel prys;
- This knoweth every womman that is wys.
- 508. E. ful; _rest_ so. 511. Cp. Hl. boon; _rest_ bon. 513. Cm. Hl.
- beste; E. Hn. best; Cp. Pt. the bet; Ln. bette. 520. E. Hn. Preesse;
- Cm Presse. 521. E. Hn. Cm. oute; Cp. Ln. Hl. outen; Pt. outer.
- My fifthe housbonde, god his soule blesse! 525
- Which that I took for love and no richesse,
- He som-tyme was a clerk of Oxenford,
- And had left scole, and wente at hoom to bord
- With my gossib, dwellinge in oure toun,
- God have hir soule! hir name was Alisoun. 530
- She knew myn herte and eek my privetee
- Bet than our parisshe-preest, so moot I thee!
- To hir biwreyed I my conseil al.
- For had myn housbonde pissed on a wal,
- Or doon a thing that sholde han cost his lyf, 535
- To hir, and to another worthy wyf,
- And to my nece, which that I loved weel,
- I wolde han told his conseil every-deel.
- And so I dide ful often, god it woot,
- That made his face ful often reed and hoot 540
- For verray shame, and blamed him-self for he
- Had told to me so greet a privetee.
- 528. E. hadde; hom. 532. E. Hn. as; _rest_ so. 534. E. Hn. Cm. Cp.
- hadde.
- And so bifel that ones, in a Lente,
- (So often tymes I to my gossib wente,
- For ever yet I lovede to be gay, 545
- And for to walke, in March, Averille, and May,
- Fro hous to hous, to here sondry talis),
- [336: T. 6130-6164.]
- That Iankin clerk, and my gossib dame Alis,
- And I my-self, in-to the feldes wente.
- Myn housbond was at London al that Lente; 550
- I hadde the bettre leyser for to pleye,
- And for to see, and eek for to be seye
- Of lusty folk; what wiste I wher my grace
- Was shapen for to be, or in what place?
- Therefore I made my visitaciouns, 555
- To vigilies and to processiouns,
- To preching eek and to thise pilgrimages,
- To pleyes of miracles and mariages,
- And wered upon my gaye scarlet gytes.
- Thise wormes, ne thise motthes, ne thise mytes, 560
- Upon my peril, frete hem never a deel;
- And wostow why? for they were used weel.
- 545. Hn. Cm. louede; E. Hl. loued. 550. E. the; _rest_ that. 558.
- E. Hn. and to; Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. and of; Hl. _om._ to (_or_ of). 561.
- E. Hn. Cm. Cp. peril (_correctly_); Pt. perile; Ln. Hl. perel.
- Now wol I tellen forth what happed me.
- I seye, that in the feeldes walked we,
- Til trewely we hadde swich daliance, 565
- This clerk and I, that of my purveyance
- I spak to him, and seyde him, how that he,
- If I were widwe, sholde wedde me.
- For certeinly, I sey for no bobance,
- Yet was I never with-outen purveyance 570
- Of mariage, nof othere thinges eek.
- I holde a mouses herte nat worth a leek,
- That hath but oon hole for to sterte to,
- And if that faille, thanne is al y-do.
- 571. E. Hn. nof; Cm. and more; _rest_ ne of. 572. herte] Cp. Pt. Ln.
- witte.
- I bar him on honde, he hadde enchanted me; 575
- My dame taughte me that soutiltee.
- And eek I seyde, I mette of him al night;
- He wolde han slayn me as I lay up-right,
- And al my bed was ful of verray blood,
- But yet I hope that he shal do me good; 580
- For blood bitokeneth gold, as me was taught.
- And al was fals, I dremed of it right naught,
- [337: T. 6165-6199.]
- But as I folwed ay my dames lore,
- As wel of this as of other thinges more.
- 575-584. _All but_ E. Cm. _omit these lines;_ (Dd. _has them_). 583.
- E. Cm. _om._ as; _but it occurs in_ MSS. Camb. Dd. 4. 24, Ii. I. 36,
- &c.
- But now sir, lat me see, what I shal seyn? 585
- A! ha! by god, I have my tale ageyn.
- Whan that my fourthe housbond was on bere,
- I weep algate, and made sory chere,
- As wyves moten, for it is usage,
- And with my coverchief covered my visage; 590
- But for that I was purveyed of a make,
- I weep but smal, and that I undertake.
- 592. E. wepte; _but see_ 588.
- To chirche was myn housbond born a-morwe
- With neighebores, that for him maden sorwe;
- And Iankin oure clerk was oon of tho. 595
- As help me god, whan that I saugh him go
- After the bere, me thoughte he hadde a paire
- Of legges and of feet so clene and faire,
- That al myn herte I yaf un-to his hold.
- He was, I trowe, a twenty winter old, 600
- And I was fourty, if I shal seye sooth;
- But yet I hadde alwey a coltes tooth.
- Gat-tothed I was, and that bicam me weel;
- I hadde the prente of sëynt Venus seel.
- As help me god, I was a lusty oon, 605
- And faire and riche, and yong, and wel bigoon;
- And trewely, as myne housbondes tolde me,
- I had the beste _quoniam_ mighte be.
- For certes, I am al Venerien
- In felinge, and myn herte is Marcien. 610
- Venus me yaf my lust, my likerousnesse,
- And Mars yaf me my sturdy hardinesse.
- Myn ascendent was Taur, and Mars ther-inne.
- Allas! allas! that ever love was sinne!
- I folwed ay myn inclinacioun 615
- By vertu of my constellacioun;
- That made me I coude noght withdrawe
- [338: T. 6200-6225.]
- My chambre of Venus from a good felawe.
- Yet have I Martes mark up-on my face,
- And also in another privee place. 620
- For, god so wis be my savacioun,
- I ne loved never by no discrecioun,
- But ever folwede myn appetyt,
- Al were he short or long, or blak or whyt;
- I took no kepe, so that he lyked me, 625
- How pore he was, ne eek of what degree.
- 595. _Or_ Ianekin, _see_ 383; MSS. Iankyn. 603. Ln. Gate-toþede.
- 605-612. Hl. _omits._ 608. E. hadde. E. Hn. quonyam; Cm. Pt. Ln.
- quoniam; Cp. queynte. 609-612. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit._ 619-626. Hn.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. _omit._ 623. Cm. folwede; E. folwed. 626. Cm. pore;
- E. poore.
- What sholde I seye, but, at the monthes ende,
- This Ioly clerk Iankin, that was so hende,
- Hath wedded me with greet solempnitee,
- And to him yaf I al the lond and fee 630
- That ever was me yeven ther-bifore;
- But afterward repented me ful sore.
- He nolde suffre nothing of my list.
- By god, he smoot me ones on the list,
- For that I rente out of his book a leef, 635
- That of the strook myn ere wex al deef.
- Stiborn I was as is a leonesse,
- And of my tonge a verray Iangleresse,
- And walke I wolde, as I had doon biforn,
- From hous to hous, al-though he had it sworn. 640
- For which he often tymes wolde preche,
- And me of olde Romayn gestes teche,
- How he, Simplicius Gallus, lefte his wyf,
- And hir forsook for terme of al his lyf,
- Noght but for open-heeded he hir say 645
- Lokinge out at his dore upon a day.
- 634. E. Hn. on the lyst; (Ln. luste; Cp. Pt. lest); Hl. Cm. with his
- fist. 636. E. Hl. wax. 637. E. Hn. Stibourne. 645. E. Hn.
- -heueded; Hl. heedid.
- Another Romayn tolde he me by name,
- That, for his wyf was at a someres game
- With-oute his witing, he forsook hir eke.
- And than wolde he up-on his Bible seke 650
- That ilke proverbe of Ecclesiaste,
- Wher he comandeth and forbedeth faste,
- Man shal nat suffre his wyf go roule aboute;
- [339: T. 6226-6271.]
- Than wolde he seye right thus, with-outen doute,
- "Who-so that buildeth his hous al of salwes, 655
- And priketh his blinde hors over the falwes,
- And suffreth his wyf to go seken halwes,
- Is worthy to been hanged on the galwes!"
- But al for noght, I sette noght an hawe
- Of his proverbes nof his olde sawe, 660
- Ne I wolde nat of him corrected be.
- I hate him that my vices telleth me,
- And so do mo, god woot! of us than I.
- This made him with me wood al outrely;
- I nolde noght forbere him in no cas. 665
- 649. E. Hn. Cm. With-outen. 650. E. thanne. 654. E. Thanne. 660.
- E. Hn. nof; _rest_ ne of. E. awe; Hn. Cm. Hl. sawe; Cp. Pt. Ln. lawe.
- Now wol I seye yow sooth, by seint Thomas,
- Why that I rente out of his book a leef,
- For which he smoot me so that I was deef.
- He hadde a book that gladly, night and day,
- For his desport he wolde rede alway. 670
- He cleped it Valerie and Theofraste,
- At whiche book he lough alwey ful faste.
- And eek ther was som-tyme a clerk at Rome,
- A cardinal, that highte Seint Ierome,
- That made a book agayn Iovinian; 675
- In whiche book eek ther was Tertulan,
- Crisippus, Trotula, and Helowys,
- That was abbesse nat fer fro Parys;
- And eek the Parables of Salomon,
- Ovydes Art, and bokes many on, 680
- And alle thise wer bounden in o volume.
- And every night and day was his custume,
- Whan he had leyser and vacacioun
- From other worldly occupacioun,
- To reden on this book of wikked wyves. 685
- He knew of hem mo legendes and lyves
- Than been of gode wyves in the Bible.
- For trusteth wel, it is an impossible
- That any clerk wol speke good of wyves,
- [340: T. 6272-6305.]
- But-if it be of holy seintes lyves, 690
- Ne of noon other womman never the mo.
- Who peyntede the leoun, tel me who?
- By god, if wommen hadde writen stories,
- As clerkes han with-inne hir oratories,
- They wolde han writen of men more wikkednesse 695
- Than all the mark of Adam may redresse.
- The children of Mercurie and of Venus
- Been in hir wirking ful contrarious;
- Mercurie loveth wisdom and science,
- And Venus loveth ryot and dispence. 700
- And, for hir diverse disposicioun,
- Ech falleth in otheres exaltacioun;
- And thus, god woot! Mercurie is desolat
- In Pisces, wher Venus is exaltat;
- And Venus falleth ther Mercurie is reysed; 705
- Therfore no womman of no clerk is preysed.
- The clerk, whan he is old, and may noght do
- Of Venus werkes worth his olde sho,
- Than sit he doun, and writ in his dotage
- That wommen can nat kepe hir mariage! 710
- 676. Cm. Ln. whiche; _rest_ which. Cp. Pt. Hl. Terculan. 680. Hl.
- bourdes; _rest_ bookes (bokes). 683. E. hadde. 691. E. Ne; Hn. Nof;
- _rest_ Ne of. 692. Cm. peyntede; _rest_ peynted. 697. Cm. Hl. and
- of; _rest om._ of. 698. E. Hn. Ln. Hl. contrarius. 699. E.
- wysdam. 705. _Over_ is reysed E. _has_ i. in Virgine. 709. E.
- Thanne.
- But now to purpos, why I tolde thee
- That I was beten for a book, pardee.
- Up-on a night Iankin, that was our syre,
- Redde on his book, as he sat by the fyre,
- Of Eva first, that, for hir wikkednesse, 715
- Was al mankinde broght to wrecchednesse,
- For which that Iesu Crist him-self was slayn,
- That boghte us with his herte-blood agayn.
- Lo, here expres of womman may ye finde,
- That womman was the los of al mankinde. 720
- 717-720. Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. _omit._ 717. E. _om._ that Iesu;
- _which occurs in_ MS. Bibl. Reg. 17. D. xv. _and in_ Dd.
- Tho redde he me how Sampson loste his heres,
- Slepinge, his lemman kitte hem with hir sheres;
- Thurgh whiche tresoun loste he bothe his yën.
- 721, 723. E. hise. 722. Cm. hem; _rest_ it (_badly_). 723. Pt. Ln.
- whiche; _rest_ which (_badly_). E. eyen.
- [341: T. 6306-6340.]
- Tho redde he me, if that I shal nat lyen,
- Of Hercules and of his Dianyre, 725
- That caused him to sette himself a-fyre.
- No-thing forgat he the penaunce and wo
- That Socrates had with hise wyves two;
- How Xantippa caste pisse up-on his heed;
- This sely man sat stille, as he were deed; 730
- He wyped his heed, namore dorste he seyn
- But "er that thonder stinte, comth a reyn."
- 727. Cp. Pt. Ln. penaunce; E. Hn. sorwe; Cm. Hl. care. 728. E. hadde.
- Of Phasipha, that was the quene of Crete,
- For shrewednesse, him thoughte the tale swete;
- Fy! spek na-more--it is a grisly thing-- 735
- Of hir horrible lust and hir lyking.
- 733. E. Hn. Phasifpha; Cm. Phasippa; _rest_ Phasipha. 735. E. speke;
- Hn. Cm. Cp. Hl. spek.
- Of Clitemistra, for hir lecherye,
- That falsly made hir housbond for to dye,
- He redde it with ful good devocioun.
- 737. E. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. Clitermystra; Cm. Clitemysta; Hl. Clydemystra.
- He tolde me eek for what occasioun 740
- Amphiorax at Thebes loste his lyf;
- Myn housbond hadde a legende of his wyf,
- Eriphilem, that for an ouche of gold
- Hath prively un-to the Grekes told
- Wher that hir housbonde hidde him in a place, 745
- For which he hadde at Thebes sory grace.
- Of Lyma tolde he me, and of Lucye,
- They bothe made hir housbondes for to dye;
- That oon for love, that other was for hate;
- Lyma hir housbond, on an even late, 750
- Empoysoned hath, for that she was his fo.
- Lucya, likerous, loved hir housbond so,
- That, for he sholde alwey up-on hir thinke,
- She yaf him swich a maner love-drinke,
- That he was deed, er it were by the morwe; 755
- And thus algates housbondes han sorwe.
- 750. E. vpon; _rest_ on.
- Than tolde he me, how oon Latumius
- Compleyned to his felawe Arrius,
- [342: T. 6341-6376.]
- That in his gardin growed swich a tree,
- On which, he seyde, how that his wyves three 760
- Hanged hem-self for herte despitous.
- "O leve brother," quod this Arrius,
- "Yif me a plante of thilke blissed tree,
- And in my gardin planted shal it be!"
- 757. E. Thanne. E. Hn. how that oon. Cm. Latymyus; _rest_ Latumyus.
- 758. E. Hn. Hl. vnto; _rest_ to. 764. E. Ln. it shal; Pt. shal he;
- _rest_ shal it.
- Of latter date, of wyves hath he red, 765
- That somme han slayn hir housbondes in hir bed,
- And lete hir lechour dighte hir al the night
- Whyl that the corps lay in the floor up-right.
- And somme han drive nayles in hir brayn
- Whyl that they slepte, and thus they han hem slayn. 770
- Somme han hem yeve poysoun in hir drinke.
- He spak more harm than herte may bithinke.
- And ther-with-al, he knew of mo proverbes
- Than in this world ther growen gras or herbes.
- "Bet is," quod he, "thyn habitacioun 775
- Be with a leoun or a foul dragoun,
- Than with a womman usinge for to chyde.
- Bet is," quod he, "hye in the roof abyde
- Than with an angry wyf doun in the hous;
- They been so wikked and contrarious; 780
- They haten that hir housbondes loveth ay."
- He seyde, "a womman cast hir shame away,
- Whan she cast of hir smok;" and forther-mo,
- "A fair womman, but she be chaast also,
- Is lyk a gold ring in a sowes nose." 785
- Who wolde wenen, or who wolde suppose
- The wo that in myn herte was, and pyne?
- 767. E. lecchour. 768. Cm. Whils; Hl. Whil; _rest_ Whan; _see_ 770.
- 786. E. leeue; _rest_ wene; _but read_ wenen.
- And whan I saugh he wolde never fyne
- To reden on this cursed book al night,
- Al sodeynly three leves have I plight 790
- Out of his book, right as he radde, and eke,
- I with my fist so took him on the cheke,
- That in our fyr he fil bakward adoun.
- And he up-stirte as dooth a wood leoun,
- [343: T. 6377-6410.]
- And with his fist he smoot me on the heed, 795
- That in the floor I lay as I were deed.
- And when he saugh how stille that I lay,
- He was agast, and wolde han fled his way,
- Til atte laste out of my swogh I breyde:
- "O! hastow slayn me, false theef?" I seyde, 800
- "And for my land thus hastow mordred me?
- Er I be deed, yet wol I kisse thee."
- 792. E. Cp. fest; _rest_ fist. 795. E. Hn. Cp. fest; _rest_ fist.
- And neer he cam, and kneled faire adoun,
- And seyde, "dere suster Alisoun,
- As help me god, I shal thee never smyte; 805
- That I have doon, it is thy-self to wyte.
- Foryeve it me, and that I thee biseke"--
- And yet eft-sones I hitte him on the cheke,
- And seyde, "theef, thus muchel am I wreke;
- Now wol I dye, I may no lenger speke." 810
- But atte laste, with muchel care and wo,
- We fille acorded, by us selven two.
- He yaf me al the brydel in myn hond
- To han the governance of hous and lond,
- And of his tonge and of his hond also, 815
- And made him brenne his book anon right tho.
- And whan that I hadde geten un-to me,
- By maistrie, al the soveraynetee,
- And that he seyde, "myn owene trewe wyf,
- Do as thee lust the terme of al thy lyf, 820
- Keep thyn honour, and keep eek myn estaat"--
- After that day we hadden never debaat.
- God help me so, I was to him as kinde
- As any wyf from Denmark un-to Inde,
- And also trewe, and so was he to me. 825
- I prey to god that sit in magestee,
- So blesse his soule, for his mercy dere!
- Now wol I seye my tale, if ye wol here.'
- 812. E. Hn. Cp. Pt. vs; Cm. Ln. Hl. oure. 815. E. Hn. Pt. _om. 2nd_
- of. 820. E. to; Cm. for; Hl. in; _rest_ the (_before_ terme). 822.
- Hl. neuer had.
- [344: T. 6411-6438.]
- BIHOLDE THE WORDES BITWEEN THE SOMONOUR AND THE FRERE.
- The Frere lough, whan he hadde herd al this,
- 'Now, dame,' quod he, 'so have I Ioye or blis, 830
- This is a long preamble of a tale!'
- And whan the Somnour herde the Frere gale,
- 'Lo!' quod the Somnour, 'goddes armes two!
- A frere wol entremette him ever-mo.
- Lo, gode men, a flye and eek a frere 835
- Wol falle in every dish and eek matere.
- What spekestow of preambulacioun?
- What! amble, or trotte, or pees, or go sit doun;
- Thou lettest our disport in this manere.'
- 832. E. Somonour; Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. somnour. 836. Cp. Pt. Ln. eek;
- _rest om._
- 'Ye, woltow so, sir Somnour?' quod the Frere, 840
- 'Now, by my feith, I shal, er that I go,
- Telle of a Somnour swich a tale or two,
- That alle the folk shal laughen in this place.'
- 'Now elles, Frere, I bishrewe thy face,'
- Quod this Somnour, 'and I bishrewe me, 845
- But if I telle tales two or thre
- Of freres er I come to Sidingborne,
- That I shal make thyn herte for to morne;
- For wel I wool thy patience is goon.'
- Our hoste cryde 'pees! and that anoon!' 850
- And seyde, 'lat the womman telle hir tale.
- Ye fare as folk that dronken been of ale.
- Do, dame, tel forth your tale, and that is best.'
- 850. Cp. Hl. hoste; Ln. oste; E. Hn. hoost. 852. E. Cm. were; _rest_
- ben. 853. E. telle (_but_ tel _in_ 856).
- 'Al redy, sir,' quod she, 'right as yow lest,
- If I have licence of this worthy Frere.' 855
- 'Yis, dame,' quod he, 'tel forth, and I wol here.'
- HERE ENDETH THE WYF OF BATHE HIR PROLOGE.
- COLOPHON. Hn. Here endeth the prologe of the Wyf of Bathe. E. _adds_
- and bigynneth hir tale.
- [345: T. 6439-6463.]
- * * * * *
- THE TALE OF THE WYF OF BATHE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE TALE OF THE WYF OF BATHE.
- In tholde dayes of the king Arthour,
- Of which that Britons speken greet honour,
- All was this land fulfild of fayerye.
- The elf-queen, with hir Ioly companye, 860
- Daunced ful ofte in many a grene mede;
- This was the olde opinion, as I rede,
- I speke of manye hundred yeres ago;
- But now can no man see none elves mo.
- For now the grete charitee and prayeres 865
- Of limitours and othere holy freres, (10)
- That serchen every lond and every streem,
- As thikke as motes in the sonne-beem,
- Blessinge halles, chambres, kichenes, boures,
- Citees, burghes, castels, hye toures, 870
- Thropes, bernes, shipnes, dayeryes,
- This maketh that ther been no fayeryes.
- For ther as wont to walken was an elf,
- Ther walketh now the limitour him-self
- In undermeles and in morweninges, 875
- And seyth his matins and his holy thinges (20)
- As he goth in his limitacioun.
- Wommen may go saufly up and doun,
- In every bush, or under every tree;
- Ther is noon other incubus but he, 880
- And he ne wol doon hem but dishonour.
- HEADING. _From_ Hn. 857. E. Cm. _om._ the. 859. Cp. fayerie; _rest_
- fairye. 872. Cp. fayeries; E. Hn. fairyes. 880. Hl. incumbent
- (!). 881. Cm. non; _rest_ but. Hl. ne wol but doon hem.
- [346: T. 6464-6498.]
- And so bifel it, that this king Arthour
- Hadde in his hous a lusty bacheler,
- That on a day cam rydinge fro river;
- And happed that, allone as she was born, 885
- He saugh a mayde walkinge him biforn, (30)
- Of whiche mayde anon, maugree hir heed,
- By verray force he rafte hir maydenheed;
- For which oppressioun was swich clamour
- And swich pursute un-to the king Arthour, 890
- That dampned was this knight for to be deed
- By cours of lawe, and sholde han lost his heed
- Paraventure, swich was the statut tho;
- But that the quene and othere ladies mo
- So longe preyeden the king of grace, 895
- Til he his lyf him graunted in the place, (40)
- And yaf him to the quene al at hir wille,
- To chese, whether she wolde him save or spille.
- 882. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ it. 883. E. _om._ his. 885. E. Hn. he(!).
- 887. Cm. Ln. whiche; _rest_ which. 888. E. Cm. Hl. birafte; _rest_ he
- rafte (refte). 895. Hl. Cm. preyeden; E. Hn. preyden. 898. E.
- wheither.
- The quene thanketh the king with al hir might,
- And after this thus spak she to the knight, 900
- Whan that she saugh hir tyme, up-on a day:
- 'Thou standest yet,' quod she, 'in swich array,
- That of thy lyf yet hastow no suretee.
- I grante thee lyf, if thou canst tellen me
- What thing is it that wommen most desyren? 905
- Be war, and keep thy nekke-boon from yren. (50)
- And if thou canst nat tellen it anon,
- Yet wol I yeve thee leve for to gon
- A twelf-month and a day, to seche and lere
- An answere suffisant in this matere. 910
- And suretee wol I han, er that thou pace,
- Thy body for to yelden in this place.'
- 907. E. Hl. tellen it; Hn. tellen me; Cm. telle me; _rest_ telle it
- me. 908. E. shal (_for_ wol).
- Wo was this knight and sorwefully he syketh;
- But what! he may nat do al as him lyketh.
- And at the laste, he chees him for to wende, 915
- And come agayn, right at the yeres ende, (60)
- [347: T. 6499-6536.]
- With swich answere as god wolde him purveye;
- And taketh his leve, and wendeth forth his weye.
- 914. Cm. [gh]it (_for_ what); E. _om._
- He seketh every hous and every place,
- Wher-as he hopeth for to finde grace, 920
- To lerne, what thing wommen loven most;
- But he ne coude arryven in no cost,
- Wher-as he mighte finde in this matere
- Two creatures accordinge in-fere.
- Somme seyde, wommen loven best richesse, 925
- Somme seyde, honour, somme seyde, Iolynesse; (70)
- Somme, riche array, somme seyden, lust abedde,
- And ofte tyme to be widwe and wedde.
- Somme seyde, that our hertes been most esed,
- Whan that we been y-flatered and y-plesed. 930
- He gooth ful ny the sothe, I wol nat lye;
- A man shal winne us best with flaterye;
- And with attendance, and with bisinesse,
- Been we y-lymed, bothe more and lesse.
- And somme seyn, how that we loven best 935
- For to be free, and do right as us lest, (80)
- And that no man repreve us of our vyce,
- But seye that we be wyse, and no-thing nyce.
- For trewely, ther is noon of us alle,
- If any wight wol clawe us on the galle, 940
- That we nil kike, for he seith us sooth;
- Assay, and he shal finde it that so dooth.
- For be we never so vicious with-inne,
- We wol been holden wyse, and clene of sinne.
- 935. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _om._ how. 941. nil] E. nel; Cm. nolde.
- And somme seyn, that greet delyt han we 945
- For to ben holden stable and eek secree, (90)
- And in o purpos stedefastly to dwelle,
- And nat biwreye thing that men us telle.
- But that tale is nat worth a rake-stele;
- Pardee, we wommen conne no-thing hele; 950
- Witnesse on Myda; wol ye here the tale?
- Ovyde, amonges othere thinges smale,
- Seyde, Myda hadde, under his longe heres,
- Growinge up-on his heed two asses eres,
- [348: T. 6537-6572.]
- The which vyce he hidde, as he best mighte, 955
- Ful subtilly from every mannes sighte, (100)
- That, save his wyf, ther wiste of it na-mo.
- He loved hir most, and trusted hir also;
- He preyede hir, that to no creature
- She sholde tellen of his disfigure. 960
- 958. Hn. Cp. Hl. trusted; Cm. trostid; E. triste. 959. Cm. preyede;
- Hl. prayed; Hn. preyed; E. preyde.
- She swoor him 'nay, for al this world to winne,
- She nolde do that vileinye or sinne,
- To make hir housbond han so foul a name;
- She nolde nat telle it for hir owene shame.'
- But nathelees, hir thoughte that she dyde, 965
- That she so longe sholde a conseil hyde; (110)
- Hir thoughte it swal so sore aboute hir herte,
- That nedely som word hir moste asterte;
- And sith she dorste telle it to no man,
- Doun to a mareys faste by she ran; 970
- Til she came there, hir herte was a-fyre,
- And, as a bitore bombleth in the myre,
- She leyde hir mouth un-to the water doun:
- 'Biwreye me nat, thou water, with thy soun,'
- Quod she, 'to thee I telle it, and namo; 975
- Myn housbond hath longe asses eres two! (120)
- Now is myn herte all hool, now is it oute;
- I mighte no lenger kepe it, out of doute,'
- Heer may ye se, thogh we a tyme abyde,
- Yet out it moot, we can no conseil hyde; 980
- The remenant of the tale if ye wol here,
- Redeth Ovyde, and ther ye may it lere.
- 972. Cm. bumbith; Cp. Pt. bumlith; Hl. bumblith.
- This knight, of which my tale is specially,
- Whan that he saugh he mighte nat come therby,
- This is to seye, what wommen loven moost, 985
- With-inne his brest ful sorweful was the goost; (130)
- But hoom he gooth, he mighte nat soiourne.
- The day was come, that hoomward moste he tourne,
- And in his wey it happed him to ryde,
- In al this care, under a forest-syde, 990
- [349: T. 6573-6609.]
- Wher-as he saugh up-on a daunce go
- Of ladies foure and twenty, and yet mo;
- Toward the whiche daunce he drow ful yerne,
- In hope that som wisdom sholde he lerne.
- But certeinly, er he came fully there, 995
- Vanisshed was this daunce, he niste where. (140)
- No creature saugh he that bar lyf,
- Save on the grene he saugh sittinge a wyf;
- A fouler wight ther may no man devyse.
- Agayn the knight this olde wyf gan ryse, 1000
- And seyde, 'sir knight, heer-forth ne lyth no wey.
- Tel me, what that ye seken, by your fey?
- Paraventure it may the bettre be;
- Thise olde folk can muchel thing,' quod she.
- 985. E. loue. 990. E. Hn. this; _rest_ his. 993. Hn. whiche; E.
- which; _rest vary_.
- 'My leve mooder,' quod this knight certeyn, 1005
- 'I nam but deed, but-if that I can seyn (150)
- What thing it is that wommen most desyre;
- Coude ye me wisse, I wolde wel quyte your hyre.'
- 'Plighte me thy trouthe, heer in myn hand,' quod she,
- 'The nexte thing that I requere thee, 1010
- Thou shalt it do, if it lye in thy might;
- And I wol telle it yow er it be night.'
- 'Have heer my trouthe,' quod the knight, 'I grante.'
- 'Thanne,' quod she, 'I dar me wel avante,
- Thy lyf is sauf, for I wol stonde therby, 1015
- Up-on my lyf, the queen wol seye as I. (160)
- Lat see which is the proudeste of hem alle,
- That wereth on a coverchief or a calle,
- That dar seye nay, of that I shal thee teche;
- Lat us go forth with-outen lenger speche.' 1020
- Tho rouned she a pistel in his ere,
- And bad him to be glad, and have no fere.
- 1016. E. queene.
- Whan they be comen to the court, this knight
- Seyde, 'he had holde his day, as he hadde hight,
- And redy was his answere,' as he sayde. 1025
- Ful many a noble wyf, and many a mayde, (170)
- And many a widwe, for that they ben wyse,
- [350: T. 6610-6645.]
- The quene hir-self sittinge as a Iustyse,
- Assembled been, his answere for to here;
- And afterward this knight was bode appere. 1030
- 1028. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. _om._ a.
- To every wight comanded was silence,
- And that the knight sholde telle in audience,
- What thing that worldly wommen loven best.
- This knight ne stood nat stille as doth a best,
- But to his questioun anon answerde 1035
- With manly voys, that al the court it herde: (180)
- 'My lige lady, generally,' quod he,
- 'Wommen desyren to have sovereyntee
- As wel over hir housbond as hir love,
- And for to been in maistrie him above; 1040
- This is your moste desyr, thogh ye me kille,
- Doth as yow list, I am heer at your wille.'
- 1038. E. _om._ to. 1042. E. _om._ heer; Cm. al.
- In al the court ne was ther wyf ne mayde,
- Ne widwe, that contraried that he sayde,
- But seyden, 'he was worthy han his lyf.' 1045
- And with that word up stirte the olde wyf, (190)
- Which that the knight saugh sittinge in the grene:
- 'Mercy,' quod she, 'my sovereyn lady quene!
- Er that your court departe, do me right.
- I taughte this answere un-to the knight; 1050
- For which he plighte me his trouthe there,
- The firste thing I wolde of him requere,
- He wolde it do, if it lay in his might.
- Bifore the court than preye I thee, sir knight,'
- Quod she, 'that thou me take un-to thy wyf; 1055
- For wel thou wost that I have kept thy lyf. (200)
- If I sey fals, sey nay, up-on thy fey!'
- 1052. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _om._ of. 1054. E. thanne.
- This knight answerde, 'allas! and weylawey!
- I woot right wel that swich was my biheste.
- For goddes love, as chees a newe requeste; 1060
- Tak al my good, and lat my body go.'
- 1061. E. Hn. Taak.
- 'Nay than,' quod she, 'I shrewe us bothe two!
- For thogh that I be foul, and old, and pore,
- [351: T. 6646-6682.]
- I nolde for al the metal, ne for ore,
- That under erthe is grave, or lyth above, 1065
- But-if thy wyf I were, and eek thy love.' (210)
- 1062. E. thanne. 1063. _All but_ Cp. Pt. _om. 1st_ and. E. oold,
- poore. 1064. Hl. the oure; E. Hn. oore; Cm. Pt. ore; Cp. oure; Ln.
- oer.
- 'My love?' quod he; 'nay, my dampnacioun!
- Allas! that any of my nacioun
- Sholde ever so foule disparaged be!'
- But al for noght, the ende is this, that he 1070
- Constreyned was, he nedes moste hir wedde;
- And taketh his olde wyf, and gooth to bedde.
- 1070. E. Hn. thende.
- Now wolden som men seye, paraventure,
- That, for my necligence, I do no cure
- To tellen yow the Ioye and al tharray 1075
- That at the feste was that ilke day. (220)
- To whiche thing shortly answere I shal;
- I seye, ther nas no Ioye ne feste at al,
- Ther nas but hevinesse and muche sorwe;
- For prively he wedded hir on a morwe, 1080
- And al day after hidde him as an oule;
- So wo was him, his wyf looked so foule.
- Greet was the wo the knight hadde in his thoght,
- Whan he was with his wyf a-bedde y-broght;
- He walweth, and he turneth to and fro. 1085
- His olde wyf lay smylinge evermo, (230)
- And seyde, 'o dere housbond, _benedicite_!
- Fareth every knight thus with his wyf as ye?
- Is this the lawe of king Arthures hous?
- Is every knight of his so dangerous? 1090
- I am your owene love and eek your wyf;
- I am she, which that saved hath your lyf;
- And certes, yet dide I yow never unright;
- Why fare ye thus with me this firste night?
- Ye faren lyk a man had lost his wit; 1095
- What is my gilt? for goddes love, tel me it, (240)
- And it shal been amended, if I may.'
- 1091. Cp. Pt. Ln. eek; _rest om._ 1093. E. Hn. yet ne dide. 1096.
- Cm. Hl. me; _rest om._ (_Read_ goddes _as_ god's).
- 'Amended?' quod this knight, 'allas! nay, nay!
- It wol nat been amended never mo!
- Thou art so loothly, and so old also, 1100
- [352: T. 6683-6718.]
- And ther-to comen of so lowe a kinde,
- That litel wonder is, thogh I walwe and winde.
- So wolde god myn herte wolde breste!'
- 1101. E. lough. 1102. Pt. no (_for_ litel). _Read_ wonder's.
- 'Is this,' quod she, 'the cause of your unreste?'
- 'Ye, certainly,' quod he, 'no wonder is.' 1105
- 'Now, sire,' quod she, 'I coude amende al this, (250)
- If that me liste, er it were dayes three,
- So wel ye mighte here yow un-to me.
- But for ye speken of swich gentillesse
- As is descended out of old richesse, 1110
- That therfore sholden ye be gentil men,
- Swich arrogance is nat worth an hen.
- Loke who that is most vertuous alway,
- Privee and apert, and most entendeth ay
- To do the gentil dedes that he can, 1115
- And tak him for the grettest gentil man. (260)
- Crist wol, we clayme of him our gentillesse,
- Nat of our eldres for hir old richesse.
- For thogh they yeve us al hir heritage,
- For which we clayme to been of heigh parage, 1120
- Yet may they nat biquethe, for no-thing,
- To noon of us hir vertuous living,
- That made hem gentil men y-called be;
- And bad us folwen hem in swich degree.
- 1112. Cp. Pt. nys (_for_ is). 1116. Cp. Pt. Ln. And take; _rest om._
- And.
- Wel can the wyse poete of Florence, 1125
- That highte Dant, speken in this sentence; (270)
- Lo in swich maner rym is Dantes tale:
- "Ful selde up ryseth by his branches smale
- Prowesse of man, for god, of his goodnesse,
- Wol that of him we clayme our gentillesse;" 1130
- For of our eldres may we no-thing clayme
- But temporel thing, that man may hurte and mayme.
- 1126. Hl. of (_for_ in). Cm. declare (_for_ speken in). 1129. E.
- goodnesse; _rest_ prowesse.
- Eek every wight wot this as wel as I,
- If gentillesse were planted naturelly
- Un-to a certeyn linage, doun the lyne, 1135
- Privee ne apert, than wolde they never fyne (280)
- [353: T. 6719-6753.]
- To doon of gentillesse the faire offyce;
- They mighte do no vileinye or vyce.
- 1134. E. natureelly. 1136. E. Cm. nor; Hl. ne; _rest_ and. E. thanne.
- Tak fyr, and ber it in the derkeste hous
- Bitwix this and the mount of Caucasus, 1140
- And lat men shette the dores and go thenne;
- Yet wol the fyr as faire lye and brenne,
- As twenty thousand men mighte it biholde;
- His office naturel ay wol it holde,
- Up peril of my lyf, til that it dye. 1145
- 1139. E. Taak. 1140. E. Kaukasous. 1144. E. natureel.
- Heer may ye see wel, how that genterye (290)
- Is nat annexed to possessioun,
- Sith folk ne doon hir operacioun
- Alwey, as dooth the fyr, lo! in his kinde.
- For, god it woot, men may wel often finde 1150
- A lordes sone do shame and vileinye;
- And he that wol han prys of his gentrye
- For he was boren of a gentil hous,
- And hadde hise eldres noble and vertuous,
- And nil him-selven do no gentil dedis, 1155
- Ne folwe his gentil auncestre that deed is, (300)
- He nis nat gentil, be he duk or erl;
- For vileyns sinful dedes make a cherl.
- For gentillesse nis but renomee
- Of thyne auncestres, for hir heigh bountee, 1160
- Which is a strange thing to thy persone.
- Thy gentillesse cometh fro god allone;
- Than comth our verray gentillesse of grace,
- It was no-thing biquethe us with our place.
- 1153. Cp. Hl. boren; Cm. bore; _rest_ born. 1155. E. nel; _rest_
- nyl. 1156. E. Hn. folwen. 1162. _Read_ comth; _see_ 1163. 1163.
- E. Thanne.
- Thenketh how noble, as seith Valerius, 1165
- Was thilke Tullius Hostilius, (310)
- That out of povert roos to heigh noblesse.
- Redeth Senek, and redeth eek Boëce,
- Ther shul ye seen expres that it no drede is,
- That he is gentil that doth gentil dedis; 1170
- And therfore, leve housbond, I thus conclude,
- [354: T. 6754-6788.]
- Al were it that myne auncestres were rude,
- Yet may the hye god, and so hope I,
- Grante me grace to liven vertuously.
- Thanne am I gentil, whan that I biginne 1175
- To liven vertuously and weyve sinne. (320)
- 1166. E. Hn. Hostillius. 1167. Cm. Cp. Ln. Hl. pouert; _rest_
- pouerte. 1168. E. Reed; _rest_ Redeth. 1169. Cp. Pt. Ln. it; _rest
- om._ 1172. E. Hn. weren (_2nd_). 1176. Cm. leuyn; Pt. leuen; _rest_
- weyue (weyuen).
- And ther-as ye of povert me repreve,
- The hye god, on whom that we bileve,
- In wilful povert chees to live his lyf.
- And certes every man, mayden, or wyf, 1180
- May understonde that Iesus, hevene king,
- Ne wolde nat chese a vicious living.
- Glad povert is an honest thing, certeyn;
- This wol Senek and othere clerkes seyn.
- Who-so that halt him payd of his poverte, 1185
- I holde him riche, al hadde he nat a sherte. (330)
- He that coveyteth is a povre wight,
- For he wolde han that is nat in his might.
- But he that noght hath, ne coveyteth have,
- Is riche, al-though ye holde him but a knave. 1190
- 1177. E. Hn. pouerte; _rest_ pouert. 1179. E. Hn. Pt. pouerte; _rest_
- pouert; _so in_ 1183, 1191. 1182. E. chesen; E. _om._ a. 1183. E.
- Hn. honeste; Cm. oneste.
- Verray povert, it singeth proprely;
- Iuvenal seith of povert merily:
- "The povre man, whan he goth by the weye,
- Bifore the theves he may singe and pleye."
- Povert is hateful good, and, as I gesse, 1195
- A ful greet bringer out of bisinesse; (340)
- A greet amender eek of sapience
- To him that taketh it in pacience.
- Povert is this, al-though it seme elenge:
- Possessioun, that no wight wol chalenge. 1200
- Povert ful ofte, whan a man is lowe,
- Maketh his god and eek him-self to knowe.
- Povert a spectacle is, as thinketh me,
- Thurgh which he may his verray frendes see.
- And therfore, sire, sin that I noght yow greve, 1205
- Of my povert na-more ye me repreve. (350)
- 1191. E. Cm. it syngeth; _rest_ is sinne (!). 1192. E. Hn. Cp.
- myrily. 1195. Cp. Pt. Ln. hatel. 1199. Hn. Hl. elenge; Ln. alinge;
- _rest_ alenge. 1205. E. hise.
- [355: T. 6789-6826.]
- Now, sire, of elde ye repreve me;
- And certes, sire, thogh noon auctoritee
- Were in no book, ye gentils of honour
- Seyn that men sholde an old wight doon favour, 1210
- And clepe him fader, for your gentillesse;
- And auctours shal I finden, as I gesse.
- Now ther ye seye, that I am foul and old,
- Than drede you noght to been a cokewold;
- For filthe and elde, al-so moot I thee, 1215
- Been grete wardeyns up-on chastitee. (360)
- But nathelees, sin I knowe your delyt,
- I shal fulfille your worldly appetyt.
- Chese now,' quod she, 'oon of thise thinges tweye,
- To han me foul and old til that I deye, 1220
- And be to yow a trewe humble wyf,
- And never yow displese in al my lyf,
- Or elles ye wol han me yong and fair,
- And take your aventure of the repair
- That shal be to your hous, by-cause of me, 1225
- Or in som other place, may wel be. (370)
- Now chese your-selven, whether that yow lyketh.'
- 1227. E. wheither.
- This knight avyseth him and sore syketh,
- But atte laste he seyde in this manere,
- 'My lady and my love, and wyf so dere, 1230
- I put me in your wyse governance;
- Cheseth your-self, which may be most plesance,
- And most honour to yow and me also.
- I do no fors the whether of the two;
- For as yow lyketh, it suffiseth me.' 1235
- 'Thanne have I gete of yow maistrye,' quod she, (380)
- 'Sin I may chese, and governe as me lest?'
- 1234. E. wheither. 1236. of--maistrye] Cm. the maysterye.
- 'Ye, certes, wyf,' quod he, 'I holde it best.'
- 'Kis me,' quod she, 'we be no lenger wrothe;
- For, by my trouthe, I wol be to yow bothe, 1240
- This is to seyn, ye, bothe fair and good.
- I prey to god that I mot sterven wood,
- But I to yow be al-so good and trewe
- As ever was wyf, sin that the world was newe.
- [356: T. 6827-6846.]
- And, but I be to-morn as fair to sene 1245
- As any lady, emperyce, or quene, (390)
- That is bitwixe the est and eke the west,
- Doth with my lyf and deeth right as yow lest.
- Cast up the curtin, loke how that it is.'
- And whan the knight saugh verraily al this, 1250
- That she so fair was, and so yong ther-to,
- For Ioye he hente hir in his armes two,
- His herte bathed in a bath of blisse;
- A thousand tyme a-rewe he gan hir kisse.
- And she obeyed him in every thing 1255
- That mighte doon him plesance or lyking. (400)
- 1254. E. Hn. Ln. a rewe; Hl. on rowe; _rest_ a rowe.
- And thus they live, un-to hir lyves ende,
- In parfit Ioye; and Iesu Crist us sende
- Housbondes meke, yonge, and fresshe a-bedde,
- And grace toverbyde hem that we wedde. 1260
- And eek I preye Iesu shorte hir lyves
- That wol nat be governed by hir wyves;
- And olde and angry nigardes of dispence,
- God sende hem sone verray pestilence.
- HERE ENDETH THE WYVES TALE OF BATHE.
- 1259. E. _om._ and Ln. fresshe; E. fressh. 1260. E. Hn. touerbyde;
- Cm. Hl. to ouerbyde; Cp. Pt. Ln. to ouerlede (!). 1261. Cm. preye;
- Hn. praye; E. pray. 1262. E. Hn. nat wol; _rest transpose_.
- COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn.
- [357: T. 6847-6868.]
- * * * * *
- THE FRIAR'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE FRERES TALE.
- This worthy limitour, this noble Frere, 1265
- He made alwey a maner louring chere
- Upon the Somnour, but for honestee
- No vileyns word as yet to him spak he.
- But atte laste he seyde un-to the Wyf,
- 'Dame,' quod he, 'god yeve yow right good lyf! 1270
- Ye han heer touched, al-so moot I thee,
- In scole-matere greet difficultee;
- Ye han seyd muchel thing right wel, I seye;
- But dame, here as we ryden by the weye, (10)
- Us nedeth nat to speken but of game, 1275
- And lete auctoritees, on goddes name,
- To preching and to scole eek of clergye.
- But if it lyke to this companye,
- I wol yow of a somnour telle a game.
- Pardee, ye may wel knowe by the name, 1280
- That of a somnour may no good be sayd;
- I praye that noon of you be yvel apayd.
- A somnour is a renner up and doun
- With mandements for fornicacioun, (20)
- And is y-bet at every tounes ende.' 1285
- HEADING. _So_ E. Hn. 1266. E. chiere. 1267. E. Somonour; Hn.
- Somnour. 1273. E. Hn. muche; Ln. muchel; _rest_ mochel. 1274. E.
- ryde; _rest_ ryden. 1277. Hl. scoles. E. Hn. Hl. _om._ eek. 1278.
- K. And; _rest_ But. 1284. E. Hn. mandementz.
- Our host tho spak, 'a! sire, ye sholde be hende
- [358: T. 6869-6882.]
- And curteys, as a man of your estaat;
- In companye we wol have no debaat.
- Telleth your tale, and lat the Somnour be.'
- 1286. Hl. oste (_om._ tho).
- 'Nay,' quod the Somnour, 'lat him seye to me 1290
- What so him list; whan it comth to my lot,
- By god, I shal him quyten every grot.
- I shal him tellen which a greet honour (29)
- It is to be a flateringe limitour; [T. 6876
- And his offyce I shal him telle, y-wis.' [T. 6879
- _After_ l. 1294 _all but_ Hl. _wrongly insert_ ll. 1307 _and_ 1308;
- _which see_. Tyrwhitt _also inserts them._
- Our host answerde, 'pees, na-more of this.' 1296
- And after this he seyde un-to the Frere,
- 'Tel forth your tale, leve maister deere.'
- HERE ENDETH THE PROLOGE OF THE FRERE.
- 1298. E. Hn. leeue; Hl. my; Cp. Ln. my leue; Pt. my owen. COLOPHON.
- _From_ Hn.; _so_ Pt.(_with_ Thus _for_ Here).
- [359: T. 6883-6902.]
- * * * * *
- THE FRERES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE FRERES TALE.
- Whilom ther was dwellinge in my contree
- An erchedeken, a man of heigh degree, 1300
- That boldely dide execucioun
- In punisshinge of fornicacioun,
- Of wicchecraft, and eek of bauderye,
- Of diffamacioun, and avoutrye,
- Of chirche-reves, and of testaments, 1305
- Of contractes, and of lakke of sacraments,
- And eek of many another maner cryme [T. _om._
- Which nedeth nat rehercen at this tyme; [T. _om._
- Of usure, and of symonye also. (11)
- But certes, lechours dide he grettest wo; 1310
- They sholde singen, if that they were hent;
- And smale tytheres weren foule y-shent.
- If any persone wolde up-on hem pleyne,
- Ther mighte asterte him no pecunial peyne.
- For smale tythes and for smal offringe, 1315
- He made the peple pitously to singe.
- For er the bisshop caughte hem with his hook,
- They weren in the erchedeknes book. (20)
- Thanne hadde he, thurgh his Iurisdiccioun,
- Power to doon on hem correccioun. 1320
- [360: T. 6903-6937.]
- He hadde a Somnour redy to his hond,
- A slyer boy was noon in Engelond;
- For subtilly he hadde his espiaille,
- That taughte him, wher that him mighte availle.
- He coude spare of lechours oon or two, 1325
- To techen him to foure and twenty mo.
- For thogh this Somnour wood were as an hare,
- To telle his harlotrye I wol nat spare; (30)
- For we been out of his correccioun;
- They han of us no Iurisdiccioun, 1330
- Ne never shullen, terme of alle hir lyves.
- HEADING. _So_ E. Pt. 1306. E. Hn. and eek; _rest_ and. 1307, 1308.
- _Wrongly inserted after_ l. 1294 _in all but_ Hl. 1307. E. Hn. Ln.
- _om._ eek. 1308. E. Hn. for; _rest_ at. 1310. Ln. lychoures; _rest_
- lecchours. 1315. Hn. Hl. for; Cp. eek for; Pt. Ln. eek; E. _om._
- 1317. E. Hl. him. 1318. Cp. Pt. Hl. weren; _rest_ were. 1319. Hl.
- And; _rest_ And thanne; _read_ Thanne. 1321. E. Somonour; Hl.
- Sompnour; _rest_ Somnour. 1322. E. Pt. Ln. boye. 1324. _Read_
- taughten(?), _or_ taught-e. Cp. Pt. that; _rest om._ 1325. E.
- lecchours. 1327. E. was; _rest_ were. 1331. E. Hn. _om._ alle.
- 'Peter! so been the wommen of the styves,'
- Quod the Somnour, 'y-put out of my cure!'
- 1332. E. Cm. _om. 1st_ the.
- 'Pees, with mischance and with misaventure,'
- Thus seyde our host, 'and lat him telle his tale. 1335
- Now telleth forth, thogh that the Somnour gale,
- Ne spareth nat, myn owene maister dere.'
- This false theef, this Somnour, quod the Frere, (40)
- Hadde alwey baudes redy to his hond,
- As any hauk to lure in Engelond, 1340
- That tolde him al the secree that they knewe;
- For hir acqueyntance was nat come of-newe.
- They weren hise approwours prively;
- He took him-self a greet profit therby;
- His maister knew nat alwey what he wan. 1345
- With-outen mandement, a lewed man
- He coude somne, on peyne of Cristes curs,
- And they were gladde for to fille his purs, (50)
- And make him grete festes atte nale.
- And right as Iudas hadde purses smale, 1350
- And was a theef, right swich a theef was he;
- His maister hadde but half his duëtee.
- He was, if I shal yeven him his laude,
- A theef, and eek a Somnour, and a baude.
- He hadde eek wenches at his retenue, 1355
- [361: T. 6938-6971.]
- That, whether that sir Robert or sir Huwe,
- Or Iakke, or Rauf, or who-so that it were,
- That lay by hem, they tolde it in his ere; (60)
- Thus was the wenche and he of oon assent.
- And he wolde fecche a feyned mandement, 1360
- And somne hem to the chapitre bothe two,
- And pile the man, and lete the wenche go.
- Thanne wolde he seye, 'frend, I shal for thy sake
- Do stryken hir out of our lettres blake;
- Thee thar na-more as in this cas travaille; 1365
- I am thy freend, ther I thee may availle.'
- Certeyn he knew of bryberyes mo
- Than possible is to telle in yeres two. (70)
- For in this world nis dogge for the bowe,
- That can an hurt deer from an hool y-knowe, 1370
- Bet than this Somnour knew a sly lechour,
- Or an avouter, or a paramour.
- And, for that was the fruit of al his rente,
- Therfore on it he sette al his entente.
- 1343. Ln. approwers; Cm. apprououris; Pt. aprouers; _rest_
- approuwours. 1348. Cp. gladde; E. Hn. glade. 1349. Cm. at the nale;
- (atte nale = atten ale). 1352. Hl. not (_for_ but). Cp. dewete.
- 1356. E. wheither. 1364. E. Hn. hir; _rest_ þe. 1367. E.
- bribryes. 1370. Hl. y-knowe; _rest_ knowe [_perhaps read_ hole
- knowe). 1371. Cm. lechour; E. Hn. lecchour. 1372. Hn. Cp. Pt.
- auouter; E. Hl. auowtier.
- And so bifel, that ones on a day 1375
- This Somnour, ever waiting on his pray,
- Rood for to somne a widwe, an old ribybe,
- Feynynge a cause, for he wolde brybe. (80)
- And happed that he saugh bifore him ryde
- A gay yeman, under a forest-syde. 1380
- A bowe he bar, and arwes brighte and kene;
- He hadde up-on a courtepy of grene;
- An hat up-on his heed with frenges blake.
- 1377. Hl. Rod; Cp. Pt. Ln. Rode; Cm. Wente; E. Hn. _om._ Cm. a wedewe
- an old; Hl. a widew and(!) old; E. Hn. an old wydwe a. 1379. E.
- Hn._om._ And
- 'Sir,' quod this Somnour, 'hayl! and wel a-take!'
- 'Wel-come,' quod he, 'and every good felawe! 1385
- Wher rydestow under this grene shawe?'
- Seyde this yeman, 'wiltow fer to day?'
- 1386. E. Cm. Pt. Ln. grene wode shawe (_too long_).
- This Somnour him answerde, and seyde, 'nay; (90)
- Heer faste by,' quod he, 'is myn entente
- [362: T. 6972-7007.]
- To ryden, for to reysen up a rente 1390
- That longeth to my lordes duëtee.
- 1391. Cp. dewete.
- 'Artow thanne a bailly?' 'Ye!' quod he.
- He dorste nat, for verray filthe and shame,
- Seye that he was a somnour, for the name.
- '_Depardieux_,' quod this yeman, 'dere brother, 1395
- Thou art a bailly, and I am another.
- I am unknowen as in this contree;
- Of thyn aqueyntance I wolde praye thee, (100)
- And eek of brotherhede, if that yow leste.
- I have gold and silver in my cheste; 1400
- If that thee happe to comen in our shyre,
- Al shal be thyn, right as thou wolt desyre.'
- 1395. Cm. leue; Hl. lieue; _rest_ dere (deere). 1399. Cm.
- brotherhode; Hl. brotherheed; _rest_ brether-.
- 'Grantmercy,' quod this Somnour, 'by my feith!'
- Everich in otheres hand his trouthe leith,
- For to be sworne bretheren til they deye. 1405
- In daliance they ryden forth hir weye.
- 1405. Hl. sworne; E. Hn. sworn; _rest_ swore.
- This Somnour, which that was as ful of Iangles,
- As ful of venim been thise wariangles, (no)
- And ever enquering up-on every thing,
- 'Brother,' quod he, 'where is now your dwelling, 1410
- Another day if that I sholde yow seche?'
- 1407. E. Cm. _om._ which.
- This yeman him answerde in softe speche,
- 'Brother,' quod he, 'fer in the north contree,
- Wher, as I hope, som-tyme I shal thee see.
- Er we departe, I shal thee so wel wisse, 1415
- That of myn hous ne shaltow never misse.'
- 'Now, brother,' quod this Somnour, 'I yow preye,
- Teche me, whyl that we ryden by the weye, (120)
- Sin that ye been a baillif as am I,
- Som subtiltee, and tel me feithfully 1420
- In myn offyce how I may most winne;
- And spareth nat for conscience ne sinne,
- But as my brother tel me, how do ye?'
- 1421. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. how that I.
- 'Now, by my trouthe, brother dere,' seyde he,
- 'As I shal tellen thee a feithful tale, 1425
- [363: T. 7008-7043.]
- My wages been ful streite and ful smale.
- My lord is hard to me and daungerous,
- And myn offyce is ful laborous; (130)
- And therfore by extorcions I live.
- For sothe, I take al that men wol me yive; 1430
- Algate, by sleyghte or by violence,
- Fro yeer to yeer I winne al my dispence.
- I can no bettre telle feithfully.'
- 1426. Hl. and eek (_but read_ streit-e). 1428. Cp. laborious; _rest_
- laborous. 1430. E. yeue.
- 'Now, certes,' quod this Somnour, 'so fare I;
- I spare nat to taken, god it woot, 1435
- But if it be to hevy or to hoot.
- What I may gete in conseil prively,
- No maner conscience of that have I; (140)
- Nere myn extorcioun, I mighte nat liven,
- Ne of swiche Iapes wol I nat be shriven. 1440
- Stomak ne conscience ne knowe I noon;
- I shrewe thise shrifte-fadres everichoon.
- Wel be we met, by god and by seint Iame!
- But, leve brother, tel me than thy name,'
- Quod this Somnour; and in this mene-whyle, 1445
- This yeman gan a litel for to smyle.
- 1440. E. Nor; Hn. Cm. Hl. Ne. 1444. E. thanne. 1445. Cm. and; _rest
- om._
- 'Brother,' quod he, 'wiltow that I thee telle?
- I am a feend, my dwelling is in helle. (150)
- And here I ryde about my purchasing,
- To wite wher men wolde yeve me any thing. 1450
- My purchas is theffect of al my rente.
- Loke how thou rydest for the same entente,
- To winne good, thou rekkest never how;
- Right so fare I, for ryde wolde I now
- Un-to the worldes ende for a preye.' 1455
- 1450. E. me yeuen; _rest_ yeue (yiue) me. 1454. E. I wolde right; Hl.
- I wolde; _rest_ wolde I.
- 'A,' quod this Somnour, '_benedicite_, what sey ye?
- I wende ye were a yeman trewely.
- Ye han a mannes shap as wel as I; (160)
- Han ye figure than determinat
- In helle, ther ye been in your estat?' 1460
- 1459. E. thanne.
- 'Nay, certeinly,' quod he, 'ther have we noon;
- [364: T. 7044-7080.]
- But whan us lyketh, we can take us oon,
- Or elles make yow seme we ben shape
- Som-tyme lyk a man, or lyk an ape;
- Or lyk an angel can I ryde or go. 1465
- It is no wonder thing thogh it be so;
- A lousy Iogelour can deceyve thee,
- And pardee, yet can I more craft than he.' (170)
- 'Why,' quod the Somnour, 'ryde ye thanne or goon
- In sondry shap, and nat alwey in oon?' 1470
- 'For we,' quod he, 'wol us swich formes make
- As most able is our preyes for to take.'
- 1471. E. Hn. swiche; Cm. Cp. swich.
- 'What maketh yow to han al this labour?'
- 'Ful many a cause, leve sir Somnour,'
- Seyde this feend, 'but alle thing hath tyme. 1475
- The day is short, and it is passed pryme,
- And yet ne wan I no-thing in this day.
- I wol entende to winnen, if I may, (180)
- And nat entende our wittes to declare.
- For, brother myn, thy wit is al to bare 1480
- To understonde, al-thogh I tolde hem thee.
- But, for thou axest why labouren we;
- For, som-tyme, we ben goddes instruments,
- And menes to don his comandements,
- Whan that him list, up-on his creatures, 1485
- In divers art and in divers figures.
- With-outen him we have no might, certayn,
- If that him list to stonden ther-agayn. (190)
- And som-tyme, at our prayere, han we leve
- Only the body and nat the soule greve; 1490
- Witnesse on Iob, whom that we diden wo.
- And som-tyme han we might of bothe two,
- This is to seyn, of soule and body eke.
- And somtyme be we suffred for to seke
- Up-on a man, and doon his soule unreste, 1495
- And nat his body, and al is for the beste.
- Whan he withstandeth our temptacioun,
- It is a cause of his savacioun; (200)
- [365: T. 7081-7118.]
- Al-be-it that it was nat our entente
- He sholde be sauf, but that we wolde him hente. 1500
- And som-tyme be we servant un-to man,
- As to the erchebisshop Seint Dunstan,
- And to the apostles servant eek was I.'
- 1479. E. hir; _rest_ oure. Cm. wordis; Hl. thinges; _rest_ wittes.
- 1486. E. Hn. Cm. diuerse (_2nd time_). 1496. body] E. soule(!).
- 1498. E. _om._ a; Cm. the. 1502. E. bisshop(!).
- 'Yet tel me,' quod the Somnour, 'feithfully,
- Make ye yow newe bodies thus alway 1505
- Of elements?' the feend answerde, 'nay;
- Som-tyme we feyne, and som-tyme we aryse
- With dede bodies in ful sondry wyse, (210)
- And speke as renably and faire and wel
- As to the Phitonissa dide Samuel. 1510
- And yet wol som men seye it was nat he;
- I do no fors of your divinitee.
- But o thing warne I thee, I wol nat Iape,
- Thou wolt algates wite how we ben shape;
- Thou shalt her-afterward, my brother dere, 1515
- Com ther thee nedeth nat of me to lere.
- For thou shalt by thyn owene experience
- Conne in a chayer rede of this sentence (220)
- Bet than Virgyle, whyl he was on lyve,
- Or Dant also; now lat us ryde blyve. 1520
- For I wol holde companye with thee
- Til it be so, that thou forsake me.'
- 1515. E Hn. -wardes; _rest_ -ward.
- 'Nay,' quod this Somnour, 'that shal nat bityde;
- I am a yeman, knowen is ful wyde;
- My trouthe wol I holde as in this cas. 1525
- For though thou were the devel Sathanas,
- My trouthe wol I holde to my brother,
- As I am sworn, and ech of us til other (230)
- For to be trewe brother in this cas;
- And bothe we goon abouten our purchas. 1530
- Tak thou thy part, what that men wol thee yive,
- And I shal myn; thus may we bothe live.
- And if that any of us have more than other,
- Lat him be trewe, and parte it with his brother.'
- 1528, 1533. E. oother. 1531. E. Taak; yeue.
- 'I graunte,' quod the devel, 'by my fey.' 1535
- And with that word they ryden forth hir wey.
- [366: T. 7119-7153.]
- And right at the entring of the tounes ende,
- To which this Somnour shoop him for to wende, (240)
- They saugh a cart, that charged was with hey,
- Which that a carter droof forth in his wey. 1540
- Deep was the wey, for which the carte stood.
- The carter smoot, and cryde, as he were wood,
- 'Hayt, Brok! hayt, Scot! what spare ye for the stones?
- The feend,' quod he, 'yow fecche body and bones,
- As ferforthly as ever were ye foled! 1545
- So muche wo as I have with yow tholed!
- The devel have al, bothe hors and cart and hey!'
- This Somnour seyde, 'heer shal we have a pley;' (250)
- And neer the feend he drough, as noght ne were,
- Ful prively, and rouned in his ere: 1550
- 'Herkne, my brother, herkne, by thy feith;
- Herestow nat how that the carter seith?
- Hent it anon, for he hath yeve it thee,
- Bothe hey and cart, and eek hise caples three.'
- 'Nay,' quod the devel, 'god wot, never a deel; 1555
- It is nat his entente, trust me weel.
- Axe him thy-self, if thou nat trowest me,
- Or elles stint a while, and thou shall see.' (260)
- 1556. E. Hn. trust thou; _rest om._ thou.
- This carter thakketh his hors upon the croupe,
- And they bigonne drawen and to-stoupe; 1560
- 'Heyt, now!' quod he, 'ther Iesu Crist yow blesse,
- And al his handwerk, bothe more and lesse!
- That was wel twight, myn owene lyard boy!
- I pray god save thee and sëynt Loy!
- Now is my cart out of the slow, pardee!' 1565
- 1559. Cm. thakkyth; Hl. thakketh; Ln. thakkes; Cp. Pt. thakked; E. Hn.
- taketh. Hn. Cm. Hl. upon; _rest om._ 1562. Cp. hondywerk; Hn.
- handes werk. 1564. E. to god; _rest om._ to. 1565. Cp. slough; Pt.
- schlough; Ln. slouhe; Hl. sloo.
- 'Lo! brother,' quod the feend, 'what tolde I thee?
- Heer may ye see, myn owene dere brother,
- The carl spak oo thing, but he thoghte another. (270)
- Lat us go forth abouten our viage;
- Heer winne I no-thing up-on cariage.' 1570
- 1568. E. Hl. oon; Cm. on; _rest_ o (oo). E. _om._ thing.
- Whan that they comen som-what out of toune,
- [367: T. 7154-7187.]
- This Somnour to his brother gan to roune,
- 'Brother,' quod he, 'heer woneth an old rebekke,
- That hadde almost as lief to lese hir nekke
- As for to yeve a peny of hir good. 1575
- I wol han twelf pens, though that she be wood,
- Or I wol sompne hir un-to our offyce;
- And yet, god woot, of hir knowe I no vyce. (280)
- But for thou canst nat, as in this contree,
- Winne thy cost, tak heer ensample of me.' 1580
- 1571. E. coomen.
- This Somnour clappeth at the widwes gate.
- 'Com out,' quod he, 'thou olde viritrate!
- I trowe thou hast som frere or preest with thee!'
- 1582. Hn. Cp. Hl. viritrate; E. virytrate; Cm. verye crate; Pt.
- viritate; Ln. veritate.
- 'Who clappeth?' seyde this widwe, '_benedicite_!
- God save you, sire, what is your swete wille?' 1585
- 1584. Cm. widew; Hl. widow; _rest_ wyf (_but read_ ben'cite).
- 'I have,' quod he, 'of somonce here a bille;
- Up peyne of cursing, loke that thou be
- To-morn bifore the erchedeknes knee (290)
- Tanswere to the court of certeyn thinges.'
- 1586. Cp. Pt. Ln. here; _rest om._ 1587. E. Vp-on; _rest_ Vp. 1589.
- E. Hn. Tanswere; _rest_ To answere (answer).
- 'Now, lord,' quod she, 'Crist Iesu, king of kinges, 1590
- So wisly helpe me, as I ne may.
- I have been syk, and that ful many a day.
- I may nat go so fer,' quod she, 'ne ryde,
- But I be deed, so priketh it in my syde.
- May I nat axe a libel, sir Somnour, 1595
- And answere there, by my procutour,
- To swich thing as men wol opposen me?'
- 1596. Hl. ther; Ln. the; _rest_ there. Hl. procuratour; Cm. Ln.
- procatour; _rest_ procutour.
- 'Yis,' quod this Somnour, 'pay anon, lat se, (300)
- Twelf pens to me, and I wol thee acquyte.
- I shall no profit han ther-by but lyte; 1600
- My maister hath the profit, and nat I.
- Com of, and lat me ryden hastily;
- Yif me twelf pens, I may no lenger tarie.'
- 'Twelf pens,' quod she, 'now lady Seinte Marie
- So wisly help me out of care and sinne, 1605
- [368: T. 7188-7225.]
- This wyde world thogh that I sholde winne,
- Ne have I nat twelf pens with-inne myn hold.
- Ye knowen wel that I am povre and old; (310)
- Kythe your almesse on me povre wrecche.'
- 1605. E. Hn. me god; _rest om._ god.
- 'Nay than,' quod he, 'the foule feend me fecche 1610
- If I thexcuse, though them shul be spilt!'
- 1610. E. thanne.
- 'Alas,' quod she, 'god woot, I have no gilt.'
- 'Pay me,' quod he, 'or by the swete seinte Anne,
- As I wol bere awey thy newe panne
- For dette, which that thou owest me of old, 1615
- Whan that thou madest thyn housbond cokewold,
- I payde at hoom for thy correccioun.'
- 'Thou lixt,' quod she, 'by my savacioun! (320)
- Ne was I never er now, widwe ne wyf,
- Somoned un-to your court in al my lyf; 1620
- Ne never I nas but of my body trewe!
- Un-to the devel blak and rough of hewe
- Yeve I thy body and my panne also!'
- And whan the devel herde hir cursen so
- Up-on hir knees, he seyde in this manere, 1625
- 'Now Mabely, myn owene moder dere,
- Is this your wil in ernest, that ye seye?'
- 1626. Cm. Mabelyn.
- 'The devel,' quod she, 'so fecche him er he deye, (330)
- And panne and al, but he wol him repente!'
- 'Nay, olde stot, that is nat myn entente,' 1630
- Quod this Somnour, 'for to repente me,
- For any thing that I have had of thee;
- I wolde I hadde thy smok and every clooth!'
- 'Now, brother,' quod the devel, 'be nat wrooth;
- Thy body and this panne ben myne by right. 1635
- Thou shalt with me to helle yet to-night,
- Where thou shalt knowen of our privetee
- More than a maister of divinitee:' (340)
- And with that word this foule feend him hente;
- Body and soule, he with the devel wente 1640
- Wher-as that somnours han hir heritage.
- And god, that maked after his image
- Mankinde, save and gyde us alle and some;
- [369: T. 7226-7246.]
- And leve this Somnour good man to bicome!
- 1642. Hl. maked; _rest_ made. 1644. E. Hn. this Somonours goode men
- bicome.
- Lordinges, I coude han told yow, quod this Frere, 1645
- Hadde I had leyser for this Somnour here,
- After the text of Crist [and] Poul and Iohn
- And of our othere doctours many oon, (350)
- Swiche peynes, that your hertes mighte agryse,
- Al-be-it so, no tonge may devyse, 1650
- Thogh that I mighte a thousand winter telle,
- The peyne of thilke cursed hous of helle.
- But, for to kepe us fro that cursed place,
- Waketh, and preyeth Iesu for his grace
- So kepe us fro the temptour Sathanas. 1655
- Herketh this word, beth war as in this cas;
- The leoun sit in his await alway
- To slee the innocent, if that he may. (360)
- Disposeth ay your hertes to withstonde
- The feend, that yow wolde make thral and bonde. 1660
- He may nat tempten yow over your might;
- For Crist wol be your champion and knight.
- And prayeth that thise Somnours hem repente
- Of hir misdedes, er that the feend hem hente.
- HERE ENDETH THE FRERES TALE.
- 1647. _I supply_ and. 1649. E. Ln. Hl. herte (_see_ l. 1659). 1650.
- E. Hn. may it; _rest om._ it. 1652. E. Hn. Pt. peynes; _rest_
- peyne. 1661. E. Hn. Hl. tempte; _rest_ tempten. 1663. _So_ E. Hn.;
- Cp. Pt. Ln. this somnour him; Hl. oure sompnour him. 1664. _So_ E.
- Hn.; _rest_ his mysdede ... him. Cm. _om._ that (_perhaps
- rightly_). COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn. Cm.; Cp. Hl. Her endeth the Frere
- his tale.
- [370: T. 7247-7270.]
- * * * * *
- THE SOMNOUR'S PROLOGUE
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE SOMNOURS TALE.
- This Somnour in his stiropes hye stood; 1665
- Up-on this Frere his herte was so wood,
- That lyk an aspen leef he quook for yre.
- HEADING. _So_ E. Hn.; E. Somonours. 1665. E. Somonour; Hl. sompnour;
- _rest_ Somnour.
- 'Lordinges,' quod he, 'but o thing I desyre;
- I yow biseke that, of your curteisye,
- Sin ye han herd this false Frere lye, 1670
- As suffereth me I may my tale telle!
- This Frere bosteth that he knoweth helle,
- And god it woot, that it is litel wonder;
- Freres and feendes been but lyte a-sonder. (10)
- For pardee, ye han ofte tyme herd telle, 1675
- How that a frere ravisshed was to helle
- In spirit ones by a visioun;
- And as an angel ladde him up and doun,
- To shewen him the peynes that ther were,
- In al the place saugh he nat a frere; 1680
- Of other folk he saugh y-nowe in wo.
- Un-to this angel spak the frere tho:
- 1676. E. vanysshed(!); _rest_ rauysshed.
- "Now, sir," quod he, "han freres swich a grace
- That noon of hem shal come to this place?" (20)
- "Yis," quod this angel, "many a millioun!" 1685
- And un-to Sathanas he ladde him doun.
- "And now hath Sathanas," seith he, "a tayl
- Brodder than of a carrik is the sayl.
- [371: T. 7271-7290.]
- Hold up thy tayl, thou Sathanas!" quod he,
- "Shewe forth thyn ers, and lat the frere see 1690
- Wher is the nest of freres in this place!"
- And, er that half a furlong-wey of space,
- Right so as bees out swarmen from an hyve,
- Out of the develes ers ther gonne dryve (30)
- Twenty thousand freres in a route, 1695
- And thurgh-out helle swarmeden aboute;
- And comen agayn, as faste as they may gon,
- And in his ers they crepten everichon.
- He clapte his tayl agayn, and lay ful stille.
- This frere, whan he loked hadde his fille 1700
- Upon the torments of this sory place,
- His spirit god restored of his grace
- Un-to his body agayn, and he awook;
- But natheles, for fere yet he quook, (40)
- So was the develes ers ay in his minde, 1705
- That is his heritage of verray kinde.
- God save yow alle, save this cursed Frere;
- My prologe wol I ende in this manere.'
- HERE ENDETH THE PROLOGE OF THE SOMNOURS TALE.
- 1692. Pt. Hl. than; _rest_ that. 1693. E. Hn. swarmeden; Hl. swarmed
- al. 1700. Cp. Hn. loked hadde; Pt. Ln. Hl. loked had; E. hadde looke
- al (_sic_). COLOPHON. _From_ Hn.
- [372: T. 7291-7314.]
- * * * * *
- THE SOMNOURS TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE SOMONOUR HIS TALE.
- Lordinges, ther is in Yorkshire, as I gesse,
- A mersshy contree called Holdernesse, 1710
- In which ther wente a limitour aboute,
- To preche, and eek to begge, it is no doute.
- And so bifel, that on a day this frere
- Had preched at a chirche in his manere,
- And specially, aboven every thing, 1715
- Excited he the peple in his preching,
- To trentals, and to yeve, for goddes sake,
- Wher-with men mighten holy houses make, (10)
- Ther as divyne service is honoured,
- Nat ther as it is wasted and devoured, 1720
- Ne ther it nedeth nat for to be yive,
- As to possessioners, that mowen live,
- Thanked be god, in wele and habundaunce.
- 'Trentals,' seyde he, 'deliveren fro penaunce
- Hir freendes soules, as wel olde as yonge, 1725
- Ye, whan that they been hastily y-songe;
- Nat for to holde a preest Ioly and gay,
- He singeth nat but o masse in a day; (20)
- Delivereth out,' quod he, 'anon the soules;
- Ful hard it is with fleshhook or with oules 1730
- To been y-clawed, or to brenne or bake;
- Now spede yow hastily, for Cristes sake.'
- [373: T. 7315-7349.]
- And whan this frere had seyd al his entente,
- With _qui cum patre_ forth his wey he wente.
- HEADING. _So_ E.; Hn. Somnours (_for_ Somonour his). 1710. Cp. Pt.
- Ln. mersshy; Hl. mersschly; E. Hn. merssh. 1718. Cp. Hl. mighten; E.
- Hn. myghte. 1721. Cp. Hl. yiue; _rest_ yeue.
- Whan folk in chirche had yeve him what hem leste, 1735
- He wente his wey, no lenger wolde he reste,
- With scrippe and tipped staf, y-tukked hye;
- In every hous he gan to poure and prye, (30)
- And beggeth mele, and chese, or elles corn.
- His felawe hadde a staf tipped with horn, 1740
- A peyre of tables al of yvory,
- And a poyntel polisshed fetisly,
- And wroot the names alwey, as he stood,
- Of alle folk that yaf him any good,
- Ascaunces that he wolde for hem preye. 1745
- 'Yeve us a busshel whete, malt, or reye,
- A goddes kechil, or a trip of chese,
- Or elles what yow list, we may nat chese; (40)
- A goddes halfpeny or a masse-peny,
- Or yeve us of your brawn, if ye have eny; 1750
- A dagon of your blanket, leve dame,
- Our suster dere, lo! here I write your name;
- Bacon or beef, or swich thing as ye finde.'
- 1735. E. lest. 1736. E. Pt. Ln. Hl. went. 1738. E. Hn. Ln. poure;
- _rest_ pore. 1743. E. wroote. 1745. Hn. Ascaunces; E. Asaunces; Hl.
- Pt. Ln. Ascaunce; Cp. Ascance. E. prey. 1746. Ln. Yeue; Cp. Yiue;
- _rest_ Yif (_see_ 1750). E. him; _rest_ vs. 1747. Ln. kechel; Hl.
- kichil. Cp. Pt. trippe; Ln. trep. 1750. E. Hn. Hl. yif; _rest_ yeue
- (yiue). 1751. Cm. Cp. Hl. dagoun.
- A sturdy harlot wente ay hem bihinde,
- That was hir hostes man, and bar a sak, 1755
- And what men yaf hem, leyde it on his bak.
- And whan that he was out at dore anon,
- He planed awey the names everichon (50)
- That he biforn had writen in his tables;
- He served hem with nyfles and with fables. 1760
- 'Nay, ther thou lixt, thou Somnour,' quod the Frere.
- 'Pees,' quod our Host, 'for Cristes moder dere;
- Tel forth thy tale and spare it nat at al.'
- So thryve I, quod this Somnour, so I shal.--
- So longe he wente hous by hous, til he 1765
- Cam til an hous ther he was wont to be
- Refresshed more than in an hundred placis.
- [374: T. 7350-7385.]
- Sik lay the gode man, whos that the place is; (60)
- Bedrede up-on a couche lowe he lay.
- '_Deus hic_,' quod he, 'O Thomas, freend, good day,' 1770
- Seyde this frere curteisly and softe.
- 'Thomas,' quod he, 'god yelde yow! ful ofte
- Have I up-on this bench faren ful weel.
- Here have I eten many a mery meel';
- And fro the bench he droof awey the cat, 1775
- And leyde adoun his potente and his hat,
- And eek his scrippe, and sette him softe adoun.
- His felawe was go walked in-to toun, (70)
- Forth with his knave, in-to that hostelrye
- Wher-as he shoop him thilke night to lye. 1780
- 1768. Hl. that; _rest om._ 1769. Pt. Hl. Bedred. 1772. Hl. yeld
- it. 1774. E. myrie; Hn. Cm. murye; _rest_ mery.
- 'O dere maister,' quod this syke man,
- 'How han ye fare sith that March bigan?
- I saugh yow noght this fourtenight or more.'
- 'God woot,' quod he, 'laboured have I ful sore;
- And specially, for thy savacioun 1785
- Have I seyd many a precious orisoun,
- And for our othere frendes, god hem blesse!
- I have to-day been at your chirche at messe, (80)
- And seyd a sermon after my simple wit,
- Nat al after the text of holy writ; 1790
- For it is hard to yow, as I suppose,
- And therfore wol I teche yow al the glose.
- Glosinge is a glorious thing, certeyn,
- For lettre sleeth, so as we clerkes seyn.
- Ther have I taught hem to be charitable, 1795
- And spende hir good ther it is resonable,
- And ther I saugh our dame; a! wher is she?'
- 1783. E. Hn. fourtnyght; _rest_ fourtenight. 1784. E. Hn. I haue;
- _rest_ haue I. 1792. Hl. ay (_for_ al). 1793. Hl. a ful glorious.
- 1794. E. thise; Hn. Cm. Pt. Hl. we.
- 'Yond in the yerd I trowe that she be,' (90)
- Seyde this man, 'and she wol come anon.'
- 'Ey, maister! wel-come be ye, by seint Iohn!' 1800
- Seyde this wyf, 'how fare ye hertely?'
- The frere aryseth up ful curteisly,
- And hir embraceth in his armes narwe,
- [375: T. 7386-7422.]
- And kiste hir swete, and chirketh as a sparwe
- With his lippes: 'dame,' quod he, 'right weel, 1805
- As he that is your servant every deel.
- Thanked be god, that yow yaf soule and lyf,
- Yet saugh I nat this day so fair a wyf (100)
- In al the chirche, god so save me!'
- 1804. E. Hn. chirteth.
- 'Ye, god amende defautes, sir,' quod she, 1810
- 'Algates wel-come be ye, by my fey!'
- 'Graunt mercy, dame, this have I founde alwey.
- But of your grete goodnesse, by your leve,
- I wolde prey yow that ye nat yow greve,
- I wol with Thomas speke a litel throwe. 1815
- Thise curats been ful necligent and slowe
- To grope tendrely a conscience.
- In shrift, in preching is my diligence, (110)
- And studie in Petres wordes, and in Poules.
- I walke, and fisshe Cristen mennes soules, 1820
- To yelden Iesu Crist his propre rente;
- To sprede his word is set al myn entente.'
- 'Now, by your leve, o dere sir,' quod she,
- 'Chydeth him weel, for seinte Trinitee.
- He is as angry as a pissemyre, 1825
- Though that he have al that he can desyre.
- Though I him wrye a-night and make him warm,
- And on hym leye my leg outher myn arm, (120)
- He groneth lyk our boor, lyth in our sty.
- Other desport right noon of him have I; 1830
- I may nat plese him in no maner cas.'
- 1830. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. of him right non.
- 'O Thomas! _Ie vous dy_, Thomas! Thomas!
- This maketh the feend, this moste ben amended.
- Ire is a thing that hye god defended,
- And ther-of wol I speke a word or two.' 1835
- 1832. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. _Ieo_.
- 'Now maister,' quod the wyf, 'er that I go,
- What wol ye dyne? I wol go ther-aboute.'
- 'Now dame,' quod he, '_Ie vous dy sanz doute_, (130)
- Have I nat of a capon but the livere,
- And of your softe breed nat but a shivere, 1840
- [376: T. 7423-7459.]
- And after that a rosted pigges heed,
- (But that I nolde no beest for me were deed),
- Thanne hadde I with yow hoomly suffisaunce.
- I am a man of litel sustenaunce.
- My spirit hath his fostring in the Bible. 1845
- The body is ay so redy and penyble
- To wake, that my stomak is destroyed.
- I prey yow, dame, ye be nat anoyed, (140)
- Though I so freendly yow my conseil shewe;
- By god, I wolde nat telle it but a fewe.' 1850
- 1838. Cp. Pt. Hl. _Ieo_.
- 'Now, sir,' quod she, 'but o word er I go;
- My child is deed with-inne thise wykes two,
- Sone after that ye wente out of this toun.'
- 'His deeth saugh I by revelacioun,'
- Seith this frere, 'at hoom in our dortour. 1855
- I dar wel seyn that, er that half an hour
- After his deeth, I saugh him born to blisse
- In myn avisioun, so god me wisse! (150)
- So dide our sexteyn and our fermerer,
- That han been trewe freres fifty yeer; 1860
- They may now, god be thanked of his lone,
- Maken hir Iubilee and walke allone.
- And up I roos, and al our covent eke,
- With many a tere trikling on my cheke,
- Withouten noyse or clateringe of belles; 1865
- _Te deum_ was our song and no-thing elles,
- Save that to Crist I seyde an orisoun,
- Thankinge him of his revelacioun. (160)
- For sir and dame, trusteth me right weel,
- Our orisons been more effectueel, 1870
- And more we seen of Cristes secree thinges
- Than burel folk, al-though they weren kinges.
- We live in povert and in abstinence,
- And burel folk in richesse and despence
- Of mete and drinke, and in hir foul delyt. 1875
- We han this worldes lust al in despyt.
- Lazar and Dives liveden diversly,
- [377: T. 7460-7496.]
- And diverse guerdon hadden they ther-by. (170)
- Who-so wol preye, he moot faste and be clene,
- And fatte his soule and make his body lene. 1880
- We fare as seith thapostle; cloth and fode
- Suffysen us, though they be nat ful gode.
- The clennesse and the fastinge of us freres
- Maketh that Crist accepteth our preyeres.
- 1856. Ln. than; _rest_ that. 1870. E. Hn. wel moore; _rest om._
- wel. 1872. Hl. borel. 1873. Cm. Hl. pouert; _rest_ pouerte. 1874.
- Hl. borel. 1878. E. Hn. gerdon; Cm. gerdoun; Pt. guardon.
- Lo, Moyses fourty dayes and fourty night 1885
- Fasted, er that the heighe god of might
- Spak with him in the mountain of Sinay.
- With empty wombe, fastinge many a day, (180)
- Receyved he the lawe that was writen
- With goddes finger; and Elie, wel ye witen, 1890
- In mount Oreb, er he hadde any speche
- With hye god, that is our lyves leche,
- He fasted longe and was in contemplaunce.
- 1887. Hn. mountayne; Ln. Dd. mounte; _rest_ mount.
- Aaron, that hadde the temple in governaunce,
- And eek the othere preestes everichon, 1895
- In-to the temple whan they sholde gon
- To preye for the peple, and do servyse,
- They nolden drinken, in no maner wyse, (190)
- No drinke, which that mighte hem dronke make,
- But there in abstinence preye and wake, 1900
- Lest that they deyden; tak heed what I seye.
- But they be sobre that for the peple preye,
- War that I seye,--namore! for it suffyseth.
- Our lord Iesu, as holy writ devyseth,
- Yaf us ensample of fastinge and preyeres. 1905
- Therfor we mendinants, we sely freres,
- Been wedded to poverte and continence,
- To charitee, humblesse, and abstinence, (200)
- To persecucion for rightwisnesse,
- To wepinge, misericorde, and clennesse. 1910
- And therfor may ye see that our preyeres--
- I speke of us, we mendinants, we freres--
- Ben to the hye god more acceptable
- Than youres, with your festes at the table.
- [378: T. 7497-7530.]
- Fro Paradys first, if I shal nat lye, 1915
- Was man out chaced for his glotonye;
- And chaast was man in Paradys, certeyn.
- 1895. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. that; Cm. Hl. Pt. the. 1901. E. taak heede.
- 1906, 12. E. mendynantz.
- But herkne now, Thomas, what I shal seyn. (210)
- I ne have no text of it, as I suppose,
- But I shall finde it in a maner glose, 1930
- That specially our swete lord Iesus
- Spak this by freres, whan he seyde thus:
- "Blessed be they that povre in spirit been."
- And so forth al the gospel may ye seen,
- Wher it be lyker our professioun, 1925
- Or hirs that swimmen in possessioun.
- Fy on hir pompe and on hir glotonye!
- And for hir lewednesse I hem diffye. (220)
- 1918. Cm. Pt. Hl. now; _rest om._ 1923. E. pouere; Hn. poure; Ln. Hl.
- pouer; Cm. poore; Cp. pore. 1925. E. Hn. likker; Cm. lykere. 1927.
- E. Hn. _om. 2nd_ on.
- Me thinketh they ben lyk Iovinian,
- Fat as a whale, and walkinge as a swan; 1930
- Al vinolent as botel in the spence.
- Hir preyer is of ful gret reverence;
- Whan they for soules seye the psalm of Davit,
- Lo, "buf!" they seye, "_cor meum eructavit_!"
- Who folweth Cristes gospel and his fore, 1935
- But we that humble been and chast and pore,
- Werkers of goddes word, not auditours?
- Therfore, right as an hauk up, at a sours, (230)
- Up springeth in-to their, right so prayeres
- Of charitable and chaste bisy freres 1940
- Maken hir sours to goddes eres two.
- Thomas! Thomas! so mote I ryde or go,
- And by that lord that clepid is seint Yve,
- Nere thou our brother, sholdestou nat thryve!
- In our chapitre praye we day and night 1945
- To Crist, that he thee sende hele and might,
- Thy body for to welden hastily.'
- 1934. buf] E. but; Hl. boef. 1935. E. Hn. foore; Cm. Hl. fore; _rest_
- lore. 1937. E. Cm. Werkeris. 1938. up at] Hl. vpon. 1939. Hl.
- thaer; Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. the eyre (ayre). 1947. E. weelden.
- 'God woot,' quod he, 'no-thing ther-of fele I; (240)
- [379: T. 7531-7565.]
- As help me Crist, as I, in fewe yeres,
- Han spended, up-on dyvers maner freres, 1950
- Ful many a pound; yet fare I never the bet.
- Certeyn, my good have I almost biset.
- Farwel, my gold! for it is al ago!'
- 1949. Hn. Hl. I in; E. Cm. in a; Pt. I haue in. 1950. Hn. Hl. Haue
- spended; E. I han spent. 1952. E. I haue.
- The frere answerde, 'O Thomas, dostow so?
- What nedeth yow diverse freres seche? 1955
- What nedeth him that hath a parfit leche
- To sechen othere leches in the toun?
- Your inconstance is your confusioun. (250)
- Holde ye than me, or elles our covent,
- To praye for yow ben insufficient? 1960
- Thomas, that Iape nis nat worth a myte;
- Your maladye is for we han to lyte.
- "A! yif that covent half a quarter otes!"
- "A! yif that covent four and twenty grotes!"
- "A! yif that frere a peny, and lat him go!" 1965
- Nay, nay, Thomas! it may no-thing be so.
- What is a ferthing worth parted in twelve?
- Lo, ech thing that is oned in him-selve (260)
- Is more strong than whan it is to-scatered.
- Thomas, of me thou shalt nat been y-flatered; 1970
- Thou woldest han our labour al for noght.
- The hye god, that al this world hath wroght,
- Seith that the werkman worthy is his hyre.
- Thomas! noght of your tresor I desyre
- As for my-self, but that al our covent 1975
- To preye for yow is ay so diligent,
- And for to builden Cristes owene chirche.
- Thomas! if ye wol lernen for to wirche, (270)
- Of buildinge up of chirches may ye finde
- If it be good, in Thomas lyf of Inde. 1980
- Ye lye heer, ful of anger and of yre,
- With which the devel set your herte a-fyre,
- And chyden heer this sely innocent,
- [380: T. 7566-7597.]
- Your wyf, that is so meke and pacient.
- And therfor, Thomas, trowe me if thee leste, 1985
- Ne stryve nat with thy wyf, as for thy beste;
- And ber this word awey now, by thy feith,
- Touchinge this thing, lo, what the wyse seith: (280)
- "With-in thyn hous ne be thou no leoun;
- To thy subgits do noon oppressioun; 1990
- Ne make thyne aqueyntances nat to flee."
- And Thomas, yet eft-sones I charge thee,
- Be war from hir that in thy bosom slepeth;
- War fro the serpent that so slyly crepeth
- Under the gras, and stingeth subtilly. 1995
- Be war, my sone, and herkne paciently,
- That twenty thousand men han lost hir lyves,
- For stryving with hir lemmans and hir wyves. (290)
- Now sith ye han so holy and meke a wyf,
- What nedeth yow, Thomas, to maken stryf? 2000
- Ther nis, y-wis, no serpent so cruel,
- Whan man tret on his tayl, ne half so fel,
- As womman is, whan she hath caught an ire;
- Vengeance is thanne al that they desyre.
- Ire is a sinne, oon of the grete of sevene, 2005
- Abhominable un-to the god of hevene;
- And to him-self it is destruccion.
- This every lewed viker or person (300)
- Can seye, how Ire engendreth homicyde.
- Ire is, in sooth, executour of pryde. 2010
- I coude of Ire seye so muche sorwe,
- My tale sholde laste til to-morwe.
- And therfor preye I god bothe day and night,
- An irous man, god sende him litel might!
- It is greet harm and, certes, gret pitee, 2015
- [381: T. 7598-7632.]
- To sette an irous man in heigh degree.
- 1959. E. thanne. 1968. E. it-; _rest_ him-. 1977. E. Hn. Hl.
- buylden; Cm. bildyn; Cp. bulden; Pt. beelden; Ln. bilden. 1981. E.
- _om._ and. 1983. E. Hn. Hl. the; _rest_ this. 1988. E. this; _rest_
- swich (such). 1989. _All_ With-inne. 1991. E. Hn. Cm. aqueyntances;
- Hl. acqueyntis; _rest_ aqueintance. Cm. not to; Pt. for to; Hl. fro
- thee; _rest_ nat for to. 1993. Pt. yre (_for_ hir). 1994. Hn. War
- fro; Hl. War for; Pt. Ware the for; Cm. By-war from; E. Be war fro; Cp.
- Ln. Be war of. 1999. Hl. and meke; Cp. Ln. and so meke; _rest_
- meke. 2002. E. What (_for_ Whan). E. Hn. man tret; Cm. man trat;
- _rest_ men trede. After 2004 Hl. _ins. 2 spurious lines_: Schortly
- may no man by rym and vers Tellen her thoughtes, thay ben so diuers.
- _After_ 2012 Hl. _ins. 2 spurious lines_: Ire is the grate of synne as
- saith the wise To fle ther-fro ech man schuld him deuyse. 2015. Hn.
- Cp. Ln. certes; Hl. also; _rest_ eke (eek).
- Whilom ther was an irous potestat,
- As seith Senek, that, duringe his estaat, (310)
- Up-on a day out riden knightes two,
- And as fortune wolde that it were so, 2020
- That oon of hem cam hoom, that other noght.
- Anon the knight bifore the Iuge is broght,
- That seyde thus, 'thou hast thy felawe slayn,
- For which I deme thee to the deeth, certayn.'
- And to another knight comanded he, 2025
- 'Go lede him to the deeth, I charge thee.'
- And happed, as they wente by the weye
- Toward the place ther he sholde deye, (320)
- The knight cam, which men wenden had be deed.
- Thanne thoughte they, it was the beste reed, 2030
- To lede hem bothe to the Iuge agayn.
- They seiden, 'lord, the knight ne hath nat slayn
- His felawe; here he standeth hool alyve.'
- 'Ye shul be deed,' quod he, 'so moot I thryve!
- That is to seyn, bothe oon, and two, and three!' 2035
- And to the firste knight right thus spak he,
- 'I dampned thee, thou most algate be deed.
- And thou also most nedes lese thyn heed, (330)
- For thou art cause why thy felawe deyth.'
- And to the thridde knight right thus he seyth, 2040
- 'Thou hast nat doon that I comanded thee.'
- And thus he dide don sleen hem alle three.
- 2037. _Here_ Hl. _adds two spurious lines_: Than thoughte thay it were
- the beste rede To lede him forth into a fair mede.
- Irous Cambyses was eek dronkelewe,
- And ay delyted him to been a shrewe.
- And so bifel, a lord of his meynee, 2045
- That lovede vertuous moralitee,
- Seyde on a day bitwix hem two right thus:
- 'A lord is lost, if he be vicious; (340)
- And dronkenesse is eek a foul record
- Of any man, and namely in a lord. 2050
- [382: T. 7633-7669.]
- Ther is ful many an eye and many an ere
- Awaiting on a lord, and he noot where.
- For goddes love, drink more attemprely;
- Wyn maketh man to lesen wrecchedly
- His minde, and eek his limes everichon.' 2055
- 2046. Hn. Cm. louede (= lov'de); E. loued. 2047. E. bitwene. 2048.
- _Here_ Hl. _adds two spurious lines_: An irous man is lik a frentik
- best In which ther is of wisdom noon arrest. 2048. E. Pt. vicius.
- 2050. Hl. of (_for_ in). 2055. Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. eek; _rest om._
- 'The revers shaltou se,' quod he, 'anon;
- And preve it, by thyn owene experience,
- That wyn ne dooth to folk no swich offence. (350)
- Ther is no wyn bireveth me my might
- Of hand ne foot, ne of myn eyen sight'-- 2060
- And, for despyt, he drank ful muchel more
- An hondred part than he had doon bifore;
- And right anon, this irous cursed wrecche
- Leet this knightes sone bifore him fecche,
- Comandinge him he sholde bifore him stonde. 2065
- And sodeynly he took his bowe in honde,
- And up the streng he pulled to his ere,
- And with an arwe he slow the child right there: (360)
- 'Now whether have I a siker hand or noon?'
- Quod he, 'is al my might and minde agoon? 2070
- Hath wyn bireved me myn eyen sight?'
- 2062. E. _om._ doon. 2064. Hl. sone anoon; _rest_ sone. 2069. E.
- wheither. 2071. E. bireft; _rest_ byreued.
- What sholde I telle thanswere of the knight?
- His sone was slayn, ther is na-more to seye.
- Beth war therfor with lordes how ye pleye.
- Singeth _Placebo_, and I shal, if I can, 2075
- But if it be un-to a povre man.
- To a povre man men sholde hise vyces telle,
- But nat to a lord, thogh he sholde go to helle. (370)
- Lo irous Cirus, thilke Percien,
- How he destroyed the river of Gysen, 2080
- For that an hors of his was dreynt ther-inne,
- Whan that he wente Babiloigne to winne.
- He made that the river was so smal,
- That wommen mighte wade it over al.
- Lo, what seyde he, that so wel teche can? 2085
- "Ne be no felawe to an irous man,
- Ne with no wood man walke by the weye,
- [383: T. 7670-7704.]
- Lest thee repente;" ther is na-more to seye. (380)
- Now Thomas, leve brother, lef thyn ire;
- Thou shall me finde as Iust as is a squire. 2090
- Hold nat the develes knyf ay at thyn herte;
- Thyn angre dooth thee al to sore smerte;
- But shewe to me al thy confessioun.'
- 2091, 2. Hl. _transposes these lines._
- 'Nay,' quod the syke man, 'by Seint Simoun!
- I have be shriven this day at my curat; 2095
- I have him told al hoolly myn estat;
- Nedeth na-more to speke of it,' seith he,
- 'But if me list of myn humilitee.' (390)
- 2095. Hl. of (_for_ at). 2096. E. Hn. Hl. hoolly al; _rest_ al holly
- (holy). 2097. E. Hl. speken.
- 'Yif me thanne of thy gold, to make our cloistre,'
- Quod he, 'for many a muscle and many an oistre, 2100
- Whan other men han ben ful wel at eyse,
- Hath been our fode, our cloistre for to reyse.
- And yet, god woot, unnethe the fundement
- Parfourned is, ne of our pavement
- Nis nat a tyle yet with-inne our wones; 2105
- By god, we owen fourty pound for stones!
- Now help, Thomas, for him that harwed helle!
- For elles moste we our bokes selle. (400)
- And if ye lakke our predicacioun,
- Than gooth the world al to destruccioun. 2110
- For who-so wolde us fro this world bireve,
- So god me save, Thomas, by your leve,
- He wolde bireve out of this world the sonne.
- For who can teche and werchen as we conne?
- And that is nat of litel tyme,' quod he; 2115
- 'But sith that Elie was, or Elisee,
- Han freres been, that finde I of record,
- In charitee, y-thanked be our lord. (410)
- Now Thomas, help, for seinte charitee!'
- And doun anon he sette him on his knee. 2120
- 2101, 2. Hl. _transposes these lines_. 2105. E. Cm. tyl; _rest_
- tyle. 2110. E. Thanne. 2116. Hl. siththen; Cp. Ln. sethyns; Cm.
- sithe that; E. syn; Hn. Ln. sith. E. Ennok; _rest_ Elie (Elye).
- This syke man wex wel ny wood for ire;
- He wolde that the frere had been on-fire
- [384: T. 7705-7738.]
- With his false dissimulacioun.
- 'Swich thing as is in my possessioun,'
- Quod he, 'that may I yeven, and non other. 2125
- Ye sey me thus, how that I am your brother?'
- 2121. E. wax; Hn. weex; _rest_ wex. 2125. Hl. yeue yow; _rest om._
- yow. 2126. E. Cp. Ln. _om._ how.
- 'Ye, certes,' quod the frere, 'trusteth weel;
- I took our dame our lettre with our seel.' (420)
- 2128. Hn. Cm. Cp. Ln. with; E. and; Pt. of; Hl. vnder.
- 'Now wel,' quod he, 'and som-what shal I yive
- Un-to your holy covent whyl I live, 2130
- And in thyn hand thou shalt it have anoon;
- On this condicioun, and other noon,
- That thou departe it so, my dere brother,
- That every frere have also muche as other.
- This shaltou swere on thy professioun, 2135
- With-outen fraude or cavillacioun.'
- 2129. Cp. Hl. yiue; _rest_ yeue. 2133. E. leeue; _rest_ dere (deere).
- 'I swere it,' quod this frere, 'upon my feith!'
- And ther-with-al his hand in his he leith: (430)
- 'Lo, heer my feith! in me shal be no lak.'
- 2137. E. Pt. by; _rest_ vpon.
- 'Now thanne, put thyn hand doun by my bak,' 2140
- Seyde this man, 'and grope wel bihinde;
- Bynethe my buttok ther shaltow finde
- A thing that I have hid in privetee.'
- 2140. E. Now thanne put in; Hn. Hl. Now thanne put; Pt. Now than put;
- Cp. Ln. Than putte (put).
- 'A!' thoghte this frere, 'this shal go with me!'
- And doun his hand he launcheth to the clifte, 2145
- In hope for to finde ther a yifte.
- And whan this syke man felte this frere
- Aboute his tuwel grope there and here, (440)
- Amidde his hand he leet the frere a fart.
- Ther nis no capul, drawinge in a cart, 2150
- That mighte have lete a fart of swich a soun.
- 2145. Hl. launched; Cp. Pt. Ln. launceth. 2148. Cm. tewel; Hl. tuel;
- Ln. touele.
- 'The frere up stirte as doth a wood leoun:
- 'A! false cherl,' quod he, 'for goddes bones,
- This hastow for despyt doon, for the nones!
- Thou shalt abye this fart, if that I may!' 2155
- 2153. E. Pt. Ln. fals.
- His meynee, whiche that herden this affray,
- [385: T. 7739-7773.]
- Cam lepinge in, and chaced out the frere;
- And forth he gooth, with a ful angry chere, (450)
- And fette his felawe, ther-as lay his stoor.
- He looked as it were a wilde boor; 2160
- He grinte with his teeth, so was he wrooth.
- A sturdy pas doun to the court he gooth,
- Wher-as ther woned a man of greet honour,
- To whom that he was alwey confessour;
- This worthy man was lord of that village. 2165
- This frere cam, as he were in a rage,
- Wher-as this lord sat eting at his bord.
- Unnethes mighte the frere speke a word, (460)
- Til atte laste he seyde: 'god yow see!'
- 2161. Hn. Cm. Pt. grynt; Cp. grynded; Ln. grenteth. 2162. E. Hn. Cp.
- Hl. paas. E. lordes court; _rest om._ lordes. 2163. E. _om._ ther.
- This lord gan loke, and seide, '_benedicite!_ 2170
- What, frere Iohn, what maner world is this?
- I see wel that som thing ther is amis.
- Ye loken as the wode were ful of thevis,
- Sit doun anon, and tel me what your greef is,
- And it shal been amended, if I may.' 2175
- 2170. E. bigan to; Cm. gan to; _rest_ gan. 2172. _So_ Hn. Cm.; E. I
- trowe som manerthing. 2174. Cp. greef; Cm. Hl. gref; E. Hn. grief.
- 2175. E. Cp. Ln. Hl. if that; _rest om._ that.
- 'I have,' quod he, 'had a despyt this day,
- God yelde yow! adoun in your village,
- That in this world is noon so povre a page, (470)
- That he nolde have abhominacioun
- Of that I have receyved in your toun. 2180
- And yet ne greveth me no-thing so sore,
- As that this olde cherl, with lokkes hore,
- Blasphemed hath our holy covent eke.'
- 2181. E. Cp. Ln. _om._ ne.
- 'Now, maister,' quod this lord, 'I yow biseke.'
- 'No maister, sire,' quod he, 'but servitour, 2185
- Thogh I have had in scole swich honour.
- God lyketh nat that "Raby" men us calle,
- Neither in market ne in your large halle.' (480)
- 2185. E. Cp. Pt. Ln. _om._ sire. 2186. E. swich; Hl. such; _rest_
- that.
- 'No fors,' quod he, 'but tel me al your grief.'
- 'Sire,' quod this frere, 'an odious meschief 2190
- This day bitid is to myn ordre and me,
- [386: T. 7774-7808.]
- And so _per consequens_ to ech degree
- Of holy chirche, god amende it sone!'
- 2190. E. he (_for_ this frere). 2192. E. Pt. in; _rest_ to.
- 'Sir,' quod the lord, 'ye woot what is to done.
- Distempre yow noght, ye be my confessour; 2195
- Ye been the salt of the erthe and the savour.
- For goddes love your pacience ye holde;
- Tel me your grief:' and he anon him tolde, (490)
- As ye han herd biforn, ye woot wel what.
- The lady of the hous ay stille sat, 2200
- Til she had herd al what the frere sayde:
- 'Ey, goddes moder,' quod she, 'blisful mayde!
- Is ther oght elles? telle me faithfully.'
- 2200. E. al; _rest_ ay. 2201. MS. Add. 5140. all; _rest om._
- 'Madame,' quod he, 'how thinketh yow her-by?'
- 2204. Hn. thynketh yow; Cp. thenke you; Hl. Ln. thynke yow; E. thynke
- ye. Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl. ther-by.
- 'How that me thinketh?' quod she; 'so god me speede,
- I seye, a cherl hath doon a cherles dede.
- What shold I seye? god lat him never thee!
- His syke heed is ful of vanitee, (500)
- I hold him in a maner frenesye.'
- 2205. thinketh = think'th.
- 'Madame,' quod he, 'by god I shal nat lye; 2210
- But I on other weyes may be wreke,
- I shal diffame him over-al ther I speke,
- This false blasphemour, that charged me
- To parte that wol nat departed be,
- To every man y-liche, with meschaunce!' 2215
- 2211. E. _ins._ hym _after_ on (_wrongly_). E. _om._ may. 2212. Hn.
- Cp. diffame; Cm. Hl. defame; E. disclaundre.
- The lord sat stille as he were in a traunce,
- And in his herte he rolled up and doun,
- 'How hadde this cherl imaginacioun (510)
- To shewe swich a probleme to the frere?
- Never erst er now herde I of swich matere; 2220
- I trowe the devel putte it in his minde.
- In ars-metryke shal ther no man finde,
- Biforn this day, of swich a questioun.
- Who sholde make a demonstracioun,
- That every man sholde have y-liche his part 2225
- As of the soun or savour of a fart?
- [387: T. 7809-7843.]
- O nyce proude cherl, I shrewe his face!
- Lo, sires,' quod the lord, with harde grace, (520)
- 'Who ever herde of swich a thing er now?
- To every man y-lyke? tel me how? 2230
- It is an inpossible, it may nat be!
- Ey, nyce cherl, god lete him never thee!
- The rumblinge of a fart, and every soun,
- Nis but of eir reverberacioun,
- And ever it wasteth lyte and lyte awey. 2235
- Ther is no man can demen, by my fey,
- If that it were departed equally.
- What, lo, my cherl, lo, yet how shrewedly (530)
- Un-to my confessour to-day he spak!
- I holde him certeyn a demoniak! 2240
- Now ete your mete, and lat the cherl go pleye,
- Lat him go honge himself a devel weye!'
- 2218. E. the (_for_ this). E. Cm. _insert_ this _after_ cherl.
- 2222. Ln. metrike; _rest_ metrik. 2224. _So the rest_; E. Certes it
- was a shrewed conclusion. 2227. E. vile; _rest_ nyce. 2229. E.
- herd; _rest_ herde. E. Cm. Cp. herd euere. 2232. him] E. thee.
- 2235. E. Cp. Pt. Hl. litel and litel.
- Now stood the lordes squyer at the bord,
- That carf his mete, and herde, word by word,
- Of alle thinges of which I have yow sayd. 2245
- 'My lord,' quod he, 'be ye nat yvel apayd;
- I coude telle, for a goune-clooth,
- To yow, sir frere, so ye be nat wrooth, (540)
- How that this fart sholde even deled be
- Among your covent, if it lyked me.' 2250
- 2245. _So_ Hn. Cp. Ln.; E. which that I haue. 2246. E. Cp. beth; Ln.
- be; _rest_ be ye. 2249. E. euene delt shal; Hl. euen departed schuld;
- _rest as above_.
- 'Tel,' quod the lord, 'and thou shall have anon
- A goune-cloth, by god and by Seint Iohn!'
- 'My lord,' quod he, 'whan that the weder is fair,
- With-outen wind or perturbinge of air,
- Lat bringe a cartwheel here in-to this halle, 2255
- But loke that it have his spokes alle.
- Twelf spokes hath a cartwheel comunly.
- And bring me than twelf freres, woot ye why? (550)
- For thrittene is a covent, as I gesse.
- The confessour heer, for his worthinesse, 2260
- Shal parfourne up the nombre of his covent.
- [388: T. 7844-7876.]
- Than shal they knele doun, by oon assent,
- And to every spokes ende, in this manere,
- Ful sadly leye his nose shal a frere.
- Your noble confessour, ther god him save, 2265
- Shal holde his nose upright, under the nave.
- Than shal this cherl, with bely stif and toght
- As any tabour, hider been y-broght; (560)
- And sette him on the wheel right of this cart,
- Upon the nave, and make him lete a fart. 2270
- And ye shul seen, up peril of my lyf,
- By preve which that is demonstratif,
- That equally the soun of it wol wende,
- And eek the stink, un-to the spokes ende;
- Save that this worthy man, your confessour, 2275
- By-cause he is a man of greet honour,
- Shal have the firste fruit, as reson is;
- The noble usage of freres yet is this, (570)
- The worthy men of hem shul first be served;
- And certeinly, he hath it weel deserved. 2280
- He hath to-day taught us so muchel good
- With preching in the pulpit ther he stood,
- That I may vouche-sauf, I sey for me,
- He hadde the firste smel of fartes three,
- And so wolde al his covent hardily; 2285
- He bereth him so faire and holily.'
- 2255. E. Hl. _om._ here. Hl. a large wheel. 2257. Hn. Hl. Twelf; E.
- Cm. Twelue. 2258. E. thanne. xij. 2259. E. Ln. twelue (_for_
- thrittene). 2262, 7. E. Thanne. 2268. E. Cm. been hyder. 2272.
- Hl. By verray proef. 2274. E. eke; Hn. eek. 2278. _So_ Hn. Cp. Ln.;
- Pt. it (_for_ yet); Hl. _om._ yet; E. As yet the noble vsage of freres
- is. 2280. E. Hn. Cp. disserued. 2281. Hn. muchel; Hl. Cp. mochil;
- E. Ln. muche. 2285. E. the (_for_ his).
- The lord, the lady, and ech man, save the frere,
- Seyde that Iankin spak, in this matere, (580)
- As wel as Euclide or [as] Ptholomee.
- Touchinge this cherl, they seyde, subtiltee 2290
- And heigh wit made him speken as he spak;
- He nis no fool, ne no demoniak.
- And Iankin hath y-wonne a newe goune.--
- My tale is doon; we been almost at toune. 2294
- HERE ENDETH THE SOMNOURS TALE.
- 2287. E. alle men. 2289. E. Euclude. _I supply 2nd_ as (Hl.
- _supplies_ elles); Ln. _has_ ptholome; E. Hn. Protholomee; Cp. Hl.
- p_ro_tholome. 2291. Hl. speken; _rest_ speke. COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn.
- Cp. Hl.; E. Somonours.
- [389: T. 7877-7898.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP E
- THE CLERK'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWETH THE PROLOGE OF THE CLERKES TALE OF OXENFORD.
- 'Sir clerk of Oxenford,' our hoste sayde,
- 'Ye ryde as coy and stille as dooth a mayde,
- Were newe spoused, sitting at the bord;
- This day ne herde I of your tonge a word.
- I trowe ye studie aboute som sophyme, 5
- But Salomon seith, "every thing hath tyme."
- 1. Hl. hoste; Cp. Ln. oste; E. Hn. hoost.
- For goddes sake, as beth of bettre chere,
- It is no tyme for to studien here.
- Telle us som mery tale, by your fey;
- For what man that is entred in a pley, 10
- He nedes moot unto the pley assente.
- But precheth nat, as freres doon in Lente,
- To make us for our olde sinnes wepe,
- Ne that thy tale make us nat to slepe.
- Telle us som mery thing of aventures;-- 15
- Your termes, your colours, and your figures,
- Kepe hem in stoor til so be ye endyte
- Heigh style, as whan that men to kinges wryte.
- Speketh so pleyn at this tyme, I yow preye,
- That we may understonde what ye seye.' 20
- 17. E. Hl. that ye; _rest omit_ that. 19. E. Hn. we; _rest_ I.
- This worthy clerk benignely answerde,
- 'Hoste,' quod he, 'I am under your yerde;
- [390: T. 7899-7932.]
- Ye han of us as now the governaunce,
- And therfor wol I do yow obeisaunce,
- As fer as reson axeth, hardily. 25
- I wol yow telle a tale which that I
- Lerned at Padowe of a worthy clerk,
- As preved by his wordes and his werk.
- He is now deed and nayled in his cheste,
- I prey to god so yeve his soule reste! 30
- 22. Ln. Oste; E. Hn. Pt. Hoost; Hl. Sir host.
- Fraunceys Petrark, the laureat poete,
- Highte this clerk, whos rethoryke sweete
- Enlumined al Itaille of poetrye,
- As Linian dide of philosophye
- Or lawe, or other art particuler; 35
- But deeth, that wol nat suffre us dwellen heer
- But as it were a twinkling of an yë,
- Hem bothe hath slayn, and alle shul we dyë.
- 32. Hl. rethorique; Cp. retorique; Pt. retorike; E. Hn. Ln. rethorik.
- 36. E. _omits_ suffre us.
- But forth to tellen of this worthy man,
- That taughte me this tale, as I bigan, 40
- I seye that first with heigh style he endyteth,
- Er he the body of his tale wryteth,
- A proheme, in the which discryveth he
- Pemond, and of Saluces the contree,
- And speketh of Apennyn, the hilles hye, 45
- That been the boundes of West Lumbardye,
- And of Mount Vesulus in special,
- Where as the Poo, out of a welle smal,
- Taketh his firste springing and his sours,
- That estward ay encresseth in his cours 50
- To Emelward, to Ferrare, and Venyse:
- The which a long thing were to devyse.
- And trewely, as to my Iugement,
- Me thinketh it a thing impertinent,
- Save that he wol convey en his matere: 55
- But this his tale, which that ye may here.'
- 51. E. Hn. Emele; Hl. Emyl; Cp. Pt. Ln. Emel. 55. E. Hn. conuoyen;
- _rest_ conueyen (-eye). 56. E. Hn. this his tale (_where_ this _is a
- contraction for_ this is; _cf. mod._ E. 'tis); Hl. Pt. this is the
- tale; Ln. this is tale.
- [391: T. 7933-7957.]
- * * * * *
- THE CLERKES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE TALE OF THE CLERK OF OXENFORD.
- Ther is, at the west syde of Itaille,
- Doun at the rote of Vesulus the colde,
- A lusty playne, habundant of vitaille,
- Wher many a tour and toun thou mayst biholde, 60
- That founded were in tyme of fadres olde,
- And many another delitable sighte,
- And Saluces this noble contree highte.
- A markis whylom lord was of that londe,
- As were his worthy eldres him bifore; 65
- And obeisant and redy to his honde (10)
- Were alle his liges, bothe lasse and more.
- Thus in delyt he liveth, and hath don yore,
- Biloved and drad, thurgh favour of fortune,
- Bothe of his lordes and of his commune. 70
- Therwith he was, to speke as of linage,
- The gentilleste y-born of Lumbardye,
- A fair persone, and strong, and yong of age,
- And ful of honour and of curteisye;
- Discreet y-nogh his contree for to gye, 75
- Save in somme thinges that he was to blame, (20)
- And Walter was this yonge lordes name.
- 76. E. Saue that; _rest omit_ that.
- I blame him thus, that he considereth noght
- In tyme cominge what mighte him bityde,
- But on his lust present was al his thoght, 80
- As for to hauke and hunte on every syde;
- [392: T. 7958-7988.]
- Wel ny alle othere cures leet he slyde,
- And eek he nolde, and that was worst of alle,
- Wedde no wyf, for noght that may bifalle.
- 79. _So_ Hn. Ln.; E. hym myghte; Pt. my[gh]t; Hl. mighte. 84. Pt. Ln.
- ou[gh]t; E. Hn. noght; Hl. no thing.
- Only that point his peple bar so sore, 85
- That flokmele on a day they to him wente, (30)
- And oon of hem, that wysest was of lore,
- Or elles that the lord best wolde assente
- That he sholde telle him what his peple mente,
- Or elles coude he shewe wel swich matere, 90
- He to the markis seyde as ye shul here.
- 'O noble markis, your humanitee
- Assureth us and yeveth us hardinesse,
- As ofte as tyme is of necessitee
- That we to yow mowe telle our hevinesse; 95
- Accepteth, lord, now for your gentillesse, (40)
- That we with pitous herte un-to yow pleyne,
- And lete your eres nat my voys disdeyne.
- 93. Hn. Pt. and yeueth; Hl. and yiueth; E. to yeue; Ln. and whisse.
- Al have I noght to done in this matere
- More than another man hath in this place, 100
- Yet for as muche as ye, my lord so dere,
- Han alwey shewed me favour and grace,
- I dar the better aske of yow a space
- Of audience, to shewen our requeste,
- And ye, my lord, to doon right as yow leste. 105
- 103. E. Hn. bettre; _rest_ better.
- For certes, lord, so wel us lyketh yow (50)
- And al your werk and ever han doon, that we
- Ne coude nat us self devysen how
- We mighte liven in more felicitee,
- Save o thing, lord, if it your wille be, 110
- That for to been a wedded man yow leste,
- Than were your peple in sovereyn hertes reste.
- 108. Pt. Ln. oure; E. Hn. Cp. vs. 110. E. Ln. _omit_ it.
- [393: T. 7989-8023.]
- Boweth your nekke under that blisful yok
- Of soveraynetee, noght of servyse,
- Which that men clepeth spousaille or wedlok; 115
- And thenketh, lord, among your thoghtes wyse, (60)
- How that our dayes passe in sondry wyse;
- For though we slepe or wake, or rome, or ryde,
- Ay fleeth the tyme, it nil no man abyde.
- And though your grene youthe floure as yit, 120
- In crepeth age alwey, as stille as stoon,
- And deeth manaceth every age, and smit
- In ech estaat, for ther escapeth noon:
- And al so certein as we knowe echoon
- That we shul deye, as uncerteyn we alle 125
- Been of that day whan deeth shal on us falle. (70)
- Accepteth than of us the trewe entente,
- That never yet refuseden your heste,
- And we wol, lord, if that ye wol assente,
- Chese yow a wyf in short tyme, atte leste, 130
- Born of the gentilleste and of the meste
- Of al this lond, so that it oghte seme
- Honour to god and yow, as we can deme.
- 128. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. your; E. Hn. Cm. thyn. 128, 130, 131. E. heeste,
- leeste, meeste; Cm. heste, leste, meste.
- Deliver us out of al this bisy drede,
- And tak a wyf, for hye goddes sake; 135
- For if it so bifelle, as god forbede, (80)
- That thurgh your deeth your linage sholde slake,
- And that a straunge successour sholde take
- Your heritage, o! wo were us alyve!
- Wherfor we pray you hastily to wyve.' 140
- 137. Cp. Pt. lynage; Ln. Hl. lignage; E. lyne; Hn. ligne; Cm. lyf.
- Hir meke preyere and hir pitous chere
- Made the markis herte han pitee.
- 'Ye wol,' quod he, 'myn owene peple dere,
- To that I never erst thoghte streyne me.
- I me reioysed of my libertee, 145
- That selde tyme is founde in mariage; (90)
- Ther I was free, I moot been in servage.
- 144. E. thoughte; Hn. thoghte.
- [394: T. 8024-8058.]
- But nathelees I see your trewe entente,
- And truste upon your wit, and have don ay;
- Wherfor of my free wil I wol assente 150
- To wedde me, as sone as ever I may.
- But ther-as ye han profred me to-day
- To chese me a wyf, I yow relesse
- That choys, and prey yow of that profre cesse.
- 152. to-] E. this. 154. E. (_only_) _omits_ yow.
- For god it woot, that children ofte been 155
- Unlyk her worthy eldres hem bifore; (100)
- Bountee comth al of god, nat of the streen
- Of which they been engendred and y-bore;
- I truste in goddes bountee, and therfore
- My mariage and myn estaat and reste 160
- I him bitake; he may don as him leste.
- Lat me alone in chesinge of my wyf,
- That charge up-on my bak I wol endure;
- But I yow preye, and charge up-on your lyf,
- That what wyf that I take, ye me assure 165
- To worshipe hir, whyl that hir lyf may dure, (110)
- In word and werk, bothe here and everywhere,
- As she an emperoures doghter were.
- 165. So Hn. Cp. Ln.; E. Cm. _omit_ That; Pt. _om._ what.
- And forthermore, this shal ye swere, that ye
- Agayn my choys shul neither grucche ne stryve; 170
- For sith I shal forgoon my libertee
- At your requeste, as ever moot I thryve,
- Ther as myn herte is set, ther wol I wyve;
- And but ye wole assente in swich manere,
- I prey yow, speketh na-more of this matere.' 175
- 174. E. this; _rest_ swich, such.
- With hertly wil they sworen, and assenten (120)
- To al this thing, ther seyde no wight nay;
- Bisekinge him of grace, er that they wenten,
- That he wolde graunten hem a certein day
- Of his spousaille, as sone as ever he may; 180
- For yet alwey the peple som-what dredde
- Lest that this markis no wyf wolde wedde.
- [395: T. 8059-8089.]
- He graunted hem a day, swich as him leste,
- On which he wolde be wedded sikerly,
- And seyde, he dide al this at hir requeste; 185
- And they, with humble entente, buxomly, (130)
- Knelinge up-on her knees ful reverently
- Him thanken alle, and thus they han an ende
- Of hir entente, and hoom agayn they wende.
- And heer-up-on he to his officeres 190
- Comaundeth for the feste to purveye,
- And to his privee knightes and squyeres
- Swich charge yaf, as him liste on hem leye;
- And they to his comandement obeye,
- And ech of hem doth al his diligence 195
- To doon un-to the feste reverence. (140)
- EXPLICIT PRIMA PARS. INCIPIT SECUNDA PARS.
- Noght fer fro thilke paleys honurable
- Ther-as this markis shoop his mariage,
- Ther stood a throp, of site delitable,
- In which that povre folk of that village 200
- Hadden hir bestes and hir herbergage,
- And of hir labour took hir sustenance
- After that the erthe yaf hem habundance.
- 199. Hl. throp; E. Hn. Cp. throop.
- Amonges thise povre folk ther dwelte a man
- Which that was holden povrest of hem alle; 205
- But hye god som tyme senden can (150)
- His grace in-to a litel oxes stalle:
- Ianicula men of that throp him calle.
- A doghter hadde he, fair y-nogh to sighte,
- And Grisildis this yonge mayden highte. 210
- 208. Pt. throp; E. Hn. Cp. throop; Cm. thorp; Ln. thorpe.
- But for to speke of vertuous beautee,
- Than was she oon the faireste under sonne;
- For povreliche y-fostred up was she,
- [396: T. 8090-8121.]
- No likerous lust was thurgh hir herte y-ronne;
- Wel ofter of the welle than of the tonne 215
- She drank, and for she wolde vertu plese, (160)
- She knew wel labour, but non ydel ese.
- 211. E. bountee; _rest_ beautee, beute.
- But thogh this mayde tendre were of age,
- Yet in the brest of hir virginitee
- Ther was enclosed rype and sad corage; 220
- And in greet reverence and charitee
- Hir olde povre fader fostred she;
- A fewe sheep spinning on feeld she kepte,
- She wolde noght been ydel til she slepte.
- And whan she hoomward cam, she wolde bringe 225
- Wortes or othere herbes tymes ofte, (170)
- The whiche she shredde and seeth for hir livinge,
- And made hir bed ful harde and no-thing softe;
- And ay she kepte hir fadres lyf on-lofte
- With everich obeisaunce and diligence 230
- That child may doon to fadres reverence.
- Up-on Grisilde, this povre creature,
- Ful ofte sythe this markis sette his yë
- As he on hunting rood paraventure;
- And whan it fil that he mighte hir espye, 235
- He noght with wantoun loking of folye (180)
- His yën caste on hir, but in sad wyse
- Up-on hir chere he wolde him ofte avyse,
- 233. E. caste; _rest_ sette (set). 235. E. that it; _rest omit_
- that. 238. E. gan; _rest_ wolde. 238. E. chiere.
- Commending in his herte hir wommanhede,
- And eek hir vertu, passing any wight 240
- Of so yong age, as wel in chere as dede.
- For thogh the peple have no greet insight
- In vertu, he considered ful right
- Hir bountee, and disposed that he wolde
- Wedde hir only, if ever he wedde sholde. 245
- 241. E. chiere. 242. E. hadde; Hn. Cm. hath; Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. haue.
- [397: T. 8122-8156.]
- The day of wedding cam, but no wight can (190)
- Telle what womman that it sholde be;
- For which merveille wondred many a man,
- And seyden, whan they were in privetee,
- 'Wol nat our lord yet leve his vanitee? 250
- Wol he nat wedde? allas, allas the whyle!
- Why wol he thus him-self and us bigyle?'
- 249. E. Cm. that they; _rest omit_ that.
- But natheles this markis hath don make
- Of gemmes, set in gold and in asure,
- Broches and ringes, for Grisildis sake, 255
- And of hir clothing took he the mesure (200)
- By a mayde, lyk to hir stature,
- And eek of othere ornamentes alle
- That un-to swich a wedding sholde falle.
- 257. Hl. y-lik to hir of stature.
- The tyme of undern of the same day 360
- Approcheth, that this wedding sholde be;
- And al the paleys put was in array,
- Bothe halle and chambres, ech in his degree;
- Houses of office stuffed with plentee
- Ther maystow seen of deyntevous vitaille, 265
- That may be founde, as fer as last Itaille. (210)
- This royal markis, richely arrayed,
- Lordes and ladyes in his companye,
- The whiche unto the feste were y-prayed,
- And of his retenue the bachelrye, 270
- With many a soun of sondry melodye,
- Un-to the village, of the which I tolde,
- In this array the righte wey han holde.
- 269. Cp. Ln. Hl. vnto; Cm. Pt. to; E. Hn. that to. E. weren.
- Grisilde of this, god woot, ful innocent,
- That for hir shapen was al this array, 275
- To fecchen water at a welle is went, (220)
- And cometh hoom as sone as ever she may.
- For wel she hadde herd seyd, that thilke day
- The markis sholde wedde, and, if she mighte,
- She wolde fayn han seyn som of that sighte. 280
- [398: T. 8157-8191.]
- She thoghte, 'I wol with othere maydens stonde,
- That been my felawes, in our dore, and see
- The markisesse, and therfor wol I fonde
- To doon at hoom, as sone as it may be,
- The labour which that longeth un-to me; 285
- And than I may at leyser hir biholde, (230)
- If she this wey un-to the castel holde.'
- And as she wolde over hir threshfold goon,
- The markis cam and gan hir for to calle;
- And she sette doun hir water-pot anoon 290
- Bisyde the threshfold, in an oxes stalle,
- And doun up-on hir knees she gan to falle,
- And with sad contenance kneleth stille
- Til she had herd what was the lordes wille.
- This thoghtful markis spak un-to this mayde 295
- Ful sobrely, and seyde in this manere, (240)
- 'Wher is your fader, Grisildis?' he sayde,
- And she with reverence, in humble chere,
- Answerde, 'lord, he is al redy here.'
- And in she gooth with-outen lenger lette, 300
- And to the markis she hir fader fette.
- 297. E. Hn. Cm. _insert_ o _after_ fader.
- He by the hond than took this olde man,
- And seyde thus, whan he him hadde asyde,
- 'Ianicula, I neither may ne can
- Lenger the plesance of myn herte hyde. 305
- If that thou vouche-sauf, what-so bityde, (250)
- Thy doghter wol I take, er that I wende,
- As for my wyf, un-to hir lyves ende.
- 302. E. thanne; Hn, than.
- Thou lovest me, I woot it wel, certeyn,
- And art my feithful lige man y-bore; 310
- And al that lyketh me, I dar wel seyn
- It lyketh thee, and specially therfore
- Tel me that poynt that I have seyd bifore,
- If that thou wolt un-to that purpos drawe,
- To take me as for thy sone-in-lawe?' 315
- [399: T. 8192-8226.]
- This sodeyn cas this man astoned so, (260)
- That reed he wex, abayst, and al quaking
- He stood unnethes seyde he wordes mo,
- But only thus: 'lord,' quod he, 'my willing
- Is as ye wole, ne ayeines your lyking 320
- I wol no-thing; ye be my lord so dere;
- Right as yow lust governeth this matere.'
- 317. E. Cp. Hl. wax; Hn. weex; _rest_ wex. 320. E. ayeins; Ln.
- a-yeines; see l. 2325 _below_ (Group E).
- 'Yet wol I,' quod this markis softely,
- 'That in thy chambre I and thou and she
- Have a collacion, and wostow why? 325
- For I wol axe if it hir wille be (270)
- To be my wyf, and reule hir after me;
- And al this shal be doon in thy presence,
- I wol noght speke out of thyn audience.'
- And in the chambre whyl they were aboute 330
- Hir tretis, which as ye shal after here,
- The peple cam un-to the hous with-oute,
- And wondred hem in how honest manere
- And tentifly she kepte hir fader dere.
- But outerly Grisildis wondre mighte, 335
- For never erst ne saugh she swich a sighte. (280)
- No wonder is thogh that she were astoned
- To seen so greet a gest come in that place;
- She never was to swiche gestes woned,
- For which she loked with ful pale face. 340
- But shortly forth this tale for to chace,
- Thise arn the wordes that the markis sayde
- To this benigne verray feithful mayde.
- 337. E. Pt. _omit_ that.
- 'Grisilde,' he seyde, 'ye shul wel understonde
- It lyketh to your fader and to me 345
- That I yow wedde, and eek it may so stonde, (290)
- As I suppose, ye wol that it so be.
- But thise demandes axe I first,' quod he,
- 'That, sith it shal be doon in hastif wyse,
- Wol ye assente, or elles yow avyse? 350
- [400: T. 8227-8261.]
- I seye this, be ye redy with good herte
- To al my lust, and that I frely may,
- As me best thinketh, do yow laughe or smerte,
- And never ye to grucche it, night ne day?
- And eek whan I sey "ye," ne sey nat "nay," 355
- Neither by word ne frowning contenance; (300)
- Swer this, and here I swere our alliance.'
- 357. E. yow; _rest_ oure.
- Wondring upon this word, quaking for drede,
- She seyde, 'lord, undigne and unworthy
- Am I to thilke honour that ye me bede; 360
- But as ye wol your-self, right so wol I.
- And heer I swere that never willingly
- In werk ne thoght I nil yow disobeye,
- For to be deed, though me were looth to deye.'
- 'This is y-nogh, Grisilde myn!' quod he. 365
- And forth he gooth with a ful sobre chere (310)
- Out at the dore, and after that cam she,
- And to the peple he seyde in this manere,
- 'This is my wyf,' quod he, 'that standeth here.
- Honoureth hir, and loveth hir, I preye, 370
- Who-so me loveth; ther is na-more to seye.'
- And for that no-thing of hir olde gere
- She sholde bringe in-to his hous, he bad
- That wommen sholde dispoilen hir right there;
- Of which thise ladyes were nat right glad 375
- To handle hir clothes wher-in she was clad. (320)
- But natheles this mayde bright of hewe
- Fro foot to heed they clothed han al newe.
- Hir heres han they kembd, that lay untressed
- Ful rudely, and with hir fingres smale 380
- A corone on hir heed they han y-dressed,
- And sette hir ful of nowches grete and smale;
- Of hir array what sholde I make a tale?
- Unnethe the peple hir knew for hir fairnesse,
- Whan she translated was in swich richesse. 385
- 385. translated] Cp. transmewed; Pt. transformed.
- [401: T. 8262-8296.]
- This markis hath hir spoused with a ring (330)
- Broght for the same cause, and than hir sette
- Up-on an hors, snow-whyt and wel ambling,
- And to his paleys, er he lenger lette,
- With Ioyful peple that hir ladde and mette, 390
- Conveyed hir, and thus the day they spende
- In revel, til the sonne gan descende.
- And shortly forth this tale for to chace,
- I seye that to this newe markisesse
- God hath swich favour sent hir of his grace, 395
- That it ne semed nat by lyklinesse (340)
- That she was born and fed in rudenesse,
- As in a cote or in an oxe-stalle,
- But norished in an emperoures halle.
- To every wight she woxen is so dere 400
- And worshipful, that folk ther she was bore
- And from hir birthe knewe hir yeer by yere,
- Unnethe trowed they, but dorste han swore
- That to Ianicle, of which I spak bifore,
- She doghter nas, for, as by coniecture, 405
- Hem thoughte she was another creature. (350)
- 404. E. That she; _rest omit_ she. 405. Cp. Ln. nas; E. Hn. Cm. Hl.
- were; Pt. ne were.
- For thogh that ever vertuous was she,
- She was encressed in swich excellence
- Of thewes gode, y-set in heigh bountee,
- And so discreet and fair of eloquence, 410
- So benigne and so digne of reverence,
- And coude so the peples herte embrace,
- That ech hir lovede that loked on hir face.
- Noght only of Saluces in the toun
- Publiced was the bountee of hir name, 415
- But eek bisyde in many a regioun, (360)
- If oon seyde wel, another seyde the same;
- So spradde of hir heigh bountee the fame,
- That men and wommen, as wel yonge as olde,
- Gon to Saluce, upon hir to biholde. 420
- 415. E. Publiced; Pt. Publisshed; Hn. Publissed. E. beautee; _rest_
- bountee. 418. E. heighe. E. name; _rest_ fame.
- [402: T. 8297-8324.]
- Thus Walter lowly, nay but royally,
- Wedded with fortunat honestetee,
- In goddes pees liveth ful esily
- At hoom, and outward grace y-nogh had he;
- And for he saugh that under low degree 425
- Was ofte vertu hid, the peple him helde (370)
- A prudent man, and that is seyn ful selde.
- 425. E. saugh; _see_ B. 810. E. heigh; _the rest_ lowe, low. 426. E
- _omits_ ofte.
- Nat only this Grisildis thurgh hir wit
- Coude al the feet of wyfly hoomlinesse,
- But eek, whan that the cas requyred it, 430
- The commune profit coude she redresse.
- Ther nas discord, rancour, ne hevinesse
- In al that lond, that she ne coude apese,
- And wysly bringe hem alle in reste and ese.
- 429. _So_ Cp. Ln.; Hl. humblesse; _rest_ humblenesse.
- Though that hir housbonde absent were anoon, 435
- If gentil men, or othere of hir contree (380)
- Were wrothe, she wolde bringen hem atoon;
- So wyse and rype wordes hadde she,
- And Iugements of so greet equitee,
- That she from heven sent was, as men wende, 440
- Peple to save and every wrong tamende.
- 439. E. Iuggementz.
- Nat longe tyme after that this Grisild
- Was wedded, she a doughter hath y-bore,
- Al had hir lever have born a knave child.
- Glad was this markis and the folk therfore; 445
- For though a mayde child come al bifore, (390)
- She may unto a knave child atteyne
- By lyklihed, sin she nis nat bareyne.
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS. INCIPIT TERCIA PARS.
- 444. E. man; _rest_ knaue. 447. E. man; _the rest_ knaue. 448. Cm.
- liklyhed; E. Hn. liklihede.
- [403: T. 8325-8359.]
- Ther fil, as it bifalleth tymes mo,
- Whan that this child had souked but a throwe, 450
- This markis in his herte longeth so
- To tempte his wyf, hir sadnesse for to knowe,
- That he ne mighte out of his herte throwe
- This merveillous desyr, his wyf tassaye,
- Needless, god woot, he thoughte hir for taffraye. 455
- He hadde assayed hir y-nogh bifore, (400)
- And fond hir ever good; what neded it
- Hir for to tempte and alwey more and more?
- Though som men preise it for a subtil wit,
- But as for me, I seye that yvel it sit 460
- Tassaye a wyf whan that it is no nede,
- And putten her in anguish and in drede.
- 457. E. foond; Hn. Cm. fond.
- For which this markis wroghte in this manere;
- He cam alone a-night, ther as she lay,
- With sterne face and with ful trouble chere, 465
- And seyde thus, 'Grisild,' quod he, 'that day (410)
- That I yow took out of your povre array,
- And putte yow in estaat of heigh noblesse,
- Ye have nat that forgeten, as I gesse.
- 465. Cm. sterne; E. stierne. 466, 470. Hl. Grisild; E. Hn. Cm.
- Grisilde.
- I seye, Grisild, this present dignitee, 470
- In which that I have put yow, as I trowe,
- Maketh yow nat foryetful for to be
- That I yow took in povre estaat ful lowe
- For any wele ye moot your-selven knowe.
- Tak hede of every word that I yow seye, 475
- Ther is no wight that hereth it but we tweye. (420)
- Ye woot your-self wel, how that ye cam here
- In-to this hous, it is nat longe ago,
- And though to me that ye be lief and dere,
- Un-to my gentils ye be no-thing so; 480
- They seyn, to hem it is greet shame and wo
- For to be subgets and ben in servage
- To thee, that born art of a smal village.
- 477. E. Hn. Cm. cam; Cp. Pt. come; Ln. com; Hl. comen. 482. E.
- subgetz and to; _rest omit_ to.
- [404: T. 8360-8394.]
- And namely, sith thy doghter was y-bore,
- Thise wordes han they spoken doutelees; 485
- But I desyre, as I have doon bifore, (430)
- To live my lyf with hem in reste and pees;
- I may nat in this caas be recchelees.
- I moot don with thy doghter for the beste,
- Nat as I wolde, but as my peple leste. 490
- And yet, god wot, this is ful looth to me;
- But nathelees with-oute your witing
- I wol nat doon, but this wol I,' quod he,
- 'That ye to me assente as in this thing.
- Shewe now your pacience in your werking 495
- That ye me highte and swore in your village (440)
- That day that maked was our mariage.'
- Whan she had herd al this, she noght ameved
- Neither in word, or chere, or countenaunce;
- For, as it semed, she was nat agreved: 500
- She seyde, 'lord, al lyth in your plesaunce,
- My child and I with hertly obeisaunce
- Ben youres al, and ye mowe save or spille
- Your owene thing; werketh after your wille.
- 499. E. chiere. 503. E. Cp. Pt. Ln. and; _rest_ or.
- Ther may no-thing, god so my soule save, 505
- Lyken to yow that may displese me; (450)
- Ne I desyre no-thing for to have,
- Ne drede for to lese, save only ye;
- This wil is in myn herte and ay shal be.
- No lengthe of tyme or deeth may this deface, 510
- Ne chaunge my corage to another place.'
- 507. E. Hn. Ne I ne; _rest omit_ ne. 508. E. Hn. thee _vel_ yee; Pt.
- Hl. [gh]e; Cm. Cp. Ln. thee.
- Glad was this markis of hir answering,
- But yet he feyned as he were nat so;
- Al drery was his chere and his loking
- Whan that he sholde out of the chambre go. 515
- Sone after this, a furlong wey or two, (460)
- He prively hath told al his entente
- Un-to a man, and to his wyf him sente.
- [405: T. 8395-8429.]
- A maner sergeant was this privee man,
- The which that feithful ofte he founden hadde 520
- In thinges grete, and eek swich folk wel can
- Don execucioun on thinges badde.
- The lord knew wel that he him loved and dradde;
- And whan this sergeant wiste his lordes wille,
- In-to the chambre he stalked him ful stille. 525
- 524. his] E. the; Cm. this.
- 'Madame,' he seyde, 'ye mote foryeve it me, (470)
- Thogh I do thing to which I am constreyned;
- Ye ben so wys that ful wel knowe ye
- That lordes hestes mowe nat been y-feyned;
- They mowe wel been biwailled or compleyned, 530
- But men mot nede un-to her lust obeye,
- And so wol I; ther is na-more to seye.
- 530. E. Cm. and; _rest_ or.
- This child I am comanded for to take'--
- And spak na-more, but out the child he hente
- Despitously, and gan a chere make 535
- As though he wolde han slayn it er he wente. (480)
- Grisildis mot al suffren and consente;
- And as a lamb she sitteth meke and stille,
- And leet this cruel sergeant doon his wille.
- Suspecious was the diffame of this man, 540
- Suspect his face, suspect his word also;
- Suspect the tyme in which he this bigan.
- Allas! hir doghter that she lovede so
- She wende he wolde han slawen it right tho.
- But natheles she neither weep ne syked, 545
- Consenting hir to that the markis lyked. (490)
- But atte laste speken she bigan,
- And mekely she to the sergeant preyde,
- So as he was a worthy gentil man,
- That she moste kisse hir child er that it deyde; 550
- And in her barm this litel child she leyde
- With ful sad face, and gan the child to kisse
- And lulled it, and after gan it blisse.
- 547. E. to speken; _rest omit_ to. 552, 3. E. kisse, blisse; _rest_
- blisse, kisse; _see_ 678.
- [406: T. 8430-8462.]
- And thus she seyde in hir benigne voys,
- 'Far weel, my child; I shal thee never see; 555
- But, sith I thee have marked with the croys, (500)
- Of thilke fader blessed mote thou be,
- That for us deyde up-on a croys of tree.
- Thy soule, litel child, I him bitake,
- For this night shaltow dyen for my sake.' 560
- 557. E. Hn. Cm. he; _rest_ thou.
- I trowe that to a norice in this cas
- It had ben hard this rewthe for to se;
- Wel mighte a mooder than han cryed 'allas!'
- But nathelees so sad stedfast was she,
- That she endured all adversitee, 565
- And to the sergeant mekely she sayde, (510)
- 'Have heer agayn your litel yonge mayde.
- 564. E. Cm. Pt. sad and; _rest omit_ and. E. stide-; Pt. Ln. sted-;
- _rest_ stede-.
- Goth now,' quod she, 'and dooth my lordes heste,
- But o thing wol I preye yow of your grace,
- That, but my lord forbad yow, atte leste 570
- Burieth this litel body in som place
- That bestes ne no briddes it to-race.'
- But he no word wol to that purpos seye,
- But took the child and wente upon his weye.
- 569. E. Pt. And; _rest_ But.
- This sergeant cam un-to his lord ageyn, 575
- And of Grisildis wordes and hir chere (520)
- He tolde him point for point, in short and playn,
- And him presenteth with his doghter dere.
- Somwhat this lord hath rewthe in his manere;
- But nathelees his purpos heeld he stille, 580
- As lordes doon, whan they wol han hir wille;
- And bad his sergeant that he prively
- Sholde this child ful softe winde and wrappe
- With alle circumstances tendrely,
- And carie it in a cofre or in a lappe; 585
- But, up-on peyne his heed of for to swappe, (530)
- [407: T. 8463-8492.]
- That no man sholde knowe of his entente,
- Ne whenne he cam, ne whider that he wente;
- 583. Cp. Pt. Ln. ful; _rest omit._ 588. Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. Hl. he cam
- (com); E. Ln. _omit._
- But at Boloigne to his suster dere,
- That thilke tyme of Panik was countesse, 590
- He sholde it take, and shewe hir this matere,
- Bisekinge hir to don hir bisinesse
- This child to fostre in alle gentilesse;
- And whos child that it was he bad hir hyde
- From every wight, for oght that may bityde. 595
- 590. Hl. panik; Cp. Panyke; _rest_ Pavik, Pauyk, Pavie. 594. E. him;
- _rest_ hire, hir.
- The sergeant gooth, and hath fulfild this thing; (540)
- But to this markis now retourne we;
- For now goth he ful faste imagining
- If by his wyves chere he mighte see,
- Or by hir word aperceyve that she 600
- Were chaunged; but he never hir coude finde
- But ever in oon y-lyke sad and kinde.
- As glad, as humble, as bisy in servyse,
- And eek in love as she was wont to be,
- Was she to him in every maner wyse; 605
- Ne of hir doghter noght a word spak she. (550)
- Non accident for noon adversitee
- Was seyn in hir, ne never hir doghter name
- Ne nempned she, in ernest nor in game.
- EXPLICIT TERCIA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS QUARTA.
- In this estaat ther passed been foure yeer 610
- Er she with childe was; but, as god wolde,
- A knave child she bar by this Walter,
- Ful gracious and fair for to biholde.
- And whan that folk it to his fader tolde,
- Nat only he, but al his contree, merie 615
- Was for this child, and god they thanke and herie. (560)
- 612. E. man; _rest_ knaue.
- [408: T. 8493-8527.]
- Whan it was two yeer old, and fro the brest
- Departed of his norice, on a day
- This markis caughte yet another lest
- To tempte his wyf yet ofter, if he may. 620
- O needles was she tempted in assay!
- But wedded men ne knowe no mesure,
- Whan that they finde a pacient creature.
- 'Wyf,' quod this markis, 'ye han herd er this,
- My peple sikly berth our mariage, 625
- And namely, sith my sone y-boren is, (570)
- Now is it worse than ever in al our age.
- The murmur sleeth myn herte and my corage;
- For to myne eres comth the voys so smerte,
- That it wel ny destroyed hath myn herte. 630
- 626. Hl. y-boren; E. Hn. Cm. yborn.
- Now sey they thus, "whan Walter is agoon,
- Then shal the blood of Ianicle succede
- And been our lord, for other have we noon;"
- Swiche wordes seith my peple, out of drede.
- Wel oughte I of swich murmur taken hede; 635
- For certeinly I drede swich sentence, (580)
- Though they nat pleyn speke in myn audience.
- I wolde live in pees, if that I mighte;
- Wherfor I am disposed outerly,
- As I his suster servede by nighte, 640
- Right so thenke I to serve him prively;
- This warne I yow, that ye nat sodeynly
- Out of your-self for no wo sholde outraye;
- Beth pacient, and ther-of I yow preye.'
- 640. Cm. Cp. Hl. seruede; _rest_ serued. 643. E. outreye.
- 'I have,' quod she, 'seyd thus, and ever shal, 645
- I wol no thing, ne nil no thing, certayn, (590)
- But as yow list; noght greveth me at al,
- Thogh that my doghter and my sone be slayn,
- At your comandement, this is to sayn.
- I have noght had no part of children tweyne 650
- But first siknesse, and after wo and peyne.
- [409: T. 8528-8562.]
- Ye been our lord, doth with your owene thing
- Right as yow list; axeth no reed at me.
- For, as I lefte at hoom al my clothing,
- Whan I first cam to yow, right so,' quod she, 655
- 'Left I my wil and al my libertee, (600)
- And took your clothing; wherfor I yow preye,
- Doth your plesaunce, I wol your lust obeye.
- And certes, if I hadde prescience
- Your wil to knowe er ye your lust me tolde, 660
- I wolde it doon with-outen necligence;
- But now I woot your lust and what ye wolde,
- Al your plesaunce ferme and stable I holde;
- For wiste I that my deeth wolde do yow ese,
- Right gladly wolde I dyen, yow to plese. 665
- Deth may noght make no comparisoun (610)
- Un-to your love:' and, whan this markis sey
- The constance of his wyf, he caste adoun
- His yën two, and wondreth that she may
- In pacience suffre al this array. 670
- And forth he gooth with drery contenaunce,
- But to his herte it was ful greet plesaunce.
- 667. MSS. say.
- This ugly sergeant, in the same wyse
- That he hir doghter caughte, right so he,
- Or worse, if men worse can devyse, 675
- Hath hent hir sone, that ful was of beautee. (620)
- And ever in oon so pacient was she,
- That she no chere made of hevinesse,
- But kiste hir sone, and after gan it blesse;
- Save this; she preyed him that, if he mighte, 680
- Hir litel sone he wolde in erthe grave,
- His tendre limes, delicat to sighte,
- Fro foules and fro bestes for to save.
- But she non answer of him mighte have.
- He wente his wey, as him no-thing ne roghte; 685
- But to Boloigne he tendrely it broghte. (630)
- 680. Cm. preyede; Hl. prayed; E. Hn. preyde.
- [410: T. 8563-8597.]
- This markis wondreth ever lenger the more
- Up-on hir pacience, and if that he
- Ne hadde soothly knowen ther-bifore,
- That parfitly hir children lovede she, 690
- He wolde have wend that of som subtiltee,
- And of malice or for cruel corage,
- That she had suffred this with sad visage.
- 687. E. wondred; _rest_ wondreth. 692. E. crueel.
- But wel he knew that next him-self, certayn,
- She loved hir children best in every wyse. 695
- But now of wommen wolde I axen fayn, (640)
- If thise assayes mighte nat suffyse?
- What coude a sturdy housbond more devyse
- To preve hir wyfhod and hir stedfastnesse,
- And he continuing ever in sturdinesse? 700
- 699. E. or; _rest_ and. E. stede-.
- But ther ben folk of swich condicioun,
- That, whan they have a certein purpos take,
- They can nat stinte of hir entencioun,
- But, right as they were bounden to a stake,
- They wol nat of that firste purpos slake. 705
- Right so this markis fulliche hath purposed (650)
- To tempte his wyf, as he was first disposed.
- 704. E. Hn. Cm. that; _the rest_ a.
- He waiteth, if by word or contenance
- That she to him was changed of corage;
- But never coude he finde variance; 710
- She was ay oon in herte and in visage;
- And ay the forther that she was in age,
- The more trewe, if that it were possible,
- She was to him in love, and more penible.
- For which it semed thus, that of hem two 715
- Ther nas but o wil; for, as Walter leste, (660)
- The same lust was hir plesance also,
- And, god be thanked, al fil for the beste.
- She shewed wel, for no worldly unreste
- A wyf, as of hir-self, no-thing ne sholde 720
- Wille in effect, but as hir housbond wolde.
- [411: T. 8598-8630.]
- The sclaundre of Walter ofte and wyde spradde,
- That of a cruel herte he wikkedly,
- For he a povre womman wedded hadde,
- Hath mordred bothe his children prively. 725
- Swich murmur was among hem comunly. (670)
- No wonder is, for to the peples ere
- Ther cam no word but that they mordred were.
- For which, wher-as his peple ther-bifore
- Had loved him wel, the sclaundre of his diffame 730
- Made hem that they him hatede therfore;
- To been a mordrer is an hateful name.
- But natheles, for ernest ne for game
- He of his cruel purpos nolde stente;
- To tempte his wyf was set al his entente. 735
- 731. Cp. Hl. hatede; _rest_ hated. 734. E. crueel.
- Whan that his doghter twelf yeer was of age, (680)
- He to the court of Rome, in subtil wyse
- Enformed of his wil, sente his message,
- Comaunding hem swiche bulles to devyse
- As to his cruel purpos may suffyse, 740
- How that the pope, as for his peples reste,
- Bad him to wedde another, if him leste.
- 740. E. crueel.
- I seye, he bad they sholde countrefete
- The popes bulles, making mencioun
- That he hath leve his firste wyf to lete, 745
- As by the popes dispensacioun, (690)
- To stinte rancour and dissencioun
- Bitwixe his peple and him; thus seyde the bulle,
- The which they han publiced atte fulle.
- 749. E. publiced; Cp. publisshed; Hn. publissed.
- The rude peple, as it no wonder is, 750
- Wenden ful wel that it had been right so;
- But whan thise tydinges cam to Grisildis,
- I deme that hir herte was ful wo.
- But she, y-lyke sad for evermo,
- [412: T. 8631-8660.]
- Disposed was, this humble creature, 755
- Thadversitee of fortune al tendure. (700)
- 751. Cm. been; Hn. ben; _rest_ be.
- Abyding ever his lust and his plesaunce,
- To whom that she was yeven, herte and al,
- As to hir verray worldly suffisaunce;
- But shortly if this storie I tellen shal, 760
- This markis writen hath in special
- A lettre in which he sheweth his entente,
- And secrely he to Boloigne it sente.
- To the erl of Panik, which that hadde tho
- Wedded his suster, preyde he specially 765
- To bringen boom agayn his children two (710)
- In honurable estaat al openly.
- But o thing he him preyede outerly,
- That he to no wight, though men wolde enquere,
- Sholde nat telle, whos children that they were, 770
- 764. Hl. panyk; Cp. Panyke; _rest_ Pavyk, Pauyke, Pavie. 770. E. Hn.
- Cp. Ln. that they; _the rest omit_ that.
- But seye, the mayden sholde y-wedded be
- Un-to the markis of Saluce anon.
- And as this erl was preyed, so dide he;
- For at day set he on his wey is goon
- Toward Saluce, and lordes many oon, 775
- In riche array, this mayden for to gyde; (720)
- Hir yonge brother ryding hir bisyde.
- 773. Cp. Cm. preyed; E. preyd; Hn. Hl. prayd.
- Arrayed was toward hir mariage
- This fresshe mayde, ful of gemmes clere;
- Hir brother, which that seven yeer was of age, 780
- Arrayed eek ful fresh in his manere.
- And thus in greet noblesse and with glad chere,
- Toward Saluces shaping hir Iourney,
- Fro day to day they ryden in hir wey.
- EXPLICIT QUARTA PARS. SEQUITUR QUINTA PARS.
- [413: T. 8661-8695.]
- Among al this, after his wikke usage, 785
- This markis, yet his wyf to tempte more (730)
- To the uttereste preve of hir corage,
- Fully to han experience and lore
- If that she were as stedfast as bifore,
- He on a day in open audience 790
- Ful boistously hath seyd hir this sentence:
- 787. Cm. vttyreste; E. outtreste. 789. E. Cp. stide-; Pt. Ln. sted-;
- _rest_ stede-.
- 'Certes, Grisilde, I hadde y-nough plesaunce
- To han yow to my wyf for your goodnesse,
- As for your trouthe and for your obeisaunce,
- Nought for your linage ne for your richesse; 795
- But now knowe I in verray soothfastnesse (740)
- That in gret lordshipe, if I wel avyse,
- Ther is gret servitute in sondry wyse.
- I may nat don as every plowman may;
- My peple me constreyneth for to take 800
- Another wyf, and cryen day by day;
- And eek the pope, rancour for to slake,
- Consenteth it, that dar I undertake;
- And treweliche thus muche I wol yow seye,
- My newe wyf is coming by the weye. 805
- Be strong of herte, and voyde anon hir place, (750)
- And thilke dower that ye broghten me
- Tak it agayn, I graunte it of my grace;
- Retourneth to your fadres hous,' quod he;
- 'No man may alwey han prosperitee; 810
- With evene herte I rede yow tendure
- The strook of fortune or of aventure.'
- 812. E. This; _the rest_ The.
- And she answerde agayn in pacience,
- 'My lord,' quod she, 'I woot, and wiste alway
- How that bitwixen your magnificence 815
- And my poverte no wight can ne may (760)
- Maken comparison; it is no nay.
- I ne heeld me never digne in no manere
- To be your wyf, no, ne your chamberere.
- [414: T. 8696-8730.]
- And in this hous, ther ye me lady made-- 820
- The heighe god take I for my witnesse,
- And also wisly he my soule glade--
- I never heeld me lady ne maistresse,
- But humble servant to your worthinesse,
- And ever shal, whyl that my lyf may dure, 825
- Aboven every worldly creature. (770)
- That ye so longe of your benignitee
- Han holden me in honour and nobleye,
- Wher-as I was noght worthy for to be,
- That thonke I god and yow, to whom I preye 830
- Foryelde it yow; there is na-more to seye.
- Un-to my fader gladly wol I wende,
- And with him dwelle un-to my lyves ende.
- 829. E. _omits_ for to.
- Ther I was fostred of a child ful smal,
- Til I be deed, my lyf ther wol I lede 835
- A widwe clene, in body, herte, and al. (780)
- For sith I yaf to yow my maydenhede,
- And am your trewe wyf, it is no drede,
- God shilde swich a lordes wyf to take
- Another man to housbonde or to make. 840
- And of your newe wyf, god of his grace
- So graunte yow wele and prosperitee:
- For I wol gladly yelden hir my place,
- In which that I was blisful wont to be,
- For sith it lyketh yow, my lord,' quod she, 845
- 'That whylom weren al myn hertes reste, (790)
- That I shal goon, I wol gon whan yow leste.
- But ther-as ye me profre swich dowaire
- As I first broghte, it is wel in my minde
- It were my wrecched clothes, no-thing faire, 850
- The which to me were hard now for to finde.
- O gode god! how gentil and how kinde
- Ye semed by your speche and your visage
- The day that maked was our mariage!
- [415: T. 8731-8765.]
- But sooth is seyd, algate I finde it trewe-- 855
- For in effect it preved is on me-- (800)
- Love is noght old as whan that it is newe.
- But certes, lord, for noon adversitee,
- To dyen in the cas, it shal nat be
- That ever in word or werk I shal repente 860
- That I yow yaf myn herte in hool entente.
- My lord, ye woot that, in my fadres place,
- Ye dede me strepe out of my povre wede,
- And richely me cladden, of your grace.
- To yow broghte I noght elles, out of drede, 865
- But feyth and nakednesse and maydenhede. (810)
- And here agayn my clothing I restore,
- And eek my wedding-ring, for evermore.
- 867, 868. my] Cp. Pt. Ln. your.
- The remenant of your Iewels redy be
- In-with your chambre, dar I saufly sayn; 870
- Naked out of my fadres hous,' quod she,
- 'I cam, and naked moot I turne agayn.
- Al your plesaunce wol I folwen fayn;
- But yet I hope it be nat your entente
- That I smoklees out of your paleys wente. 875
- 869. Hn. Hl. Ln. Iewels; E. Iueles.
- Ye coude nat doon so dishoneste a thing, (820)
- That thilke wombe in which your children leye
- Sholde, biforn the peple, in my walking,
- Be seyn al bare; wherfor I yow preye,
- Lat me nat lyk a worm go by the weye. 880
- Remembre yow, myn owene lord so dere,
- I was your wyf, thogh I unworthy were.
- Wherfor, in guerdon of my maydenhede,
- Which that I broghte, and noght agayn I bere,
- As voucheth sauf to yeve me, to my mede, 885
- But swich a smok as I was wont to were, (830)
- That I therwith may wrye the wombe of here
- That was your wyf; and heer take I my leve
- Of yow, myn owene lord, lest I yow greve.'
- 883. E. Hn. gerdon; _rest_ guerdon, guerdo_u_n.
- [416: T. 8766-8798.]
- 'The smok,' quod he, 'that thou hast on thy bak, 890
- Lat it be stille, and ber it forth with thee.'
- But wel unnethes thilke word he spak,
- But wente his wey for rewthe and for pitee.
- Biforn the folk hir-selven strepeth she,
- And in hir smok, with heed and foot al bare, 895
- Toward hir fader hous forth is she fare. (840)
- The folk hir folwe wepinge in hir weye,
- And fortune ay they cursen as they goon;
- But she fro weping kepte hir yën dreye,
- Ne in this tyme word ne spak she noon. 900
- Hir fader, that this tyding herde anoon,
- Curseth the day and tyme that nature
- Shoop him to been a lyves creature.
- For out of doute this olde povre man
- Was ever in suspect of hir mariage; 905
- For ever he demed, sith that it bigan, (850)
- That whan the lord fulfild had his corage,
- Him wolde thinke it were a disparage
- To his estaat so lowe for talighte,
- And voyden hir as sone as ever he mighte. 910
- Agayns his doghter hastilich goth he,
- For he by noyse of folk knew hir cominge,
- And with hir olde cote, as it mighte be,
- He covered hir, ful sorwefully wepinge;
- But on hir body mighte he it nat bringe. 915
- For rude was the cloth, and more of age (860)
- By dayes fele than at hir mariage.
- 916. E. Hn. Cm. and she moore; _rest omit_ she.
- Thus with hir fader, for a certeyn space,
- Dwelleth this flour of wyfly pacience,
- That neither by hir wordes ne hir face 920
- Biforn the folk, ne eek in hir absence,
- Ne shewed she that hir was doon offence;
- [417: T. 8799-8828.]
- Ne of hir heigh estaat no remembraunce
- Ne hadde she, as by hir countenaunce.
- No wonder is, for in hir grete estaat 925
- Hir goost was ever in pleyn humylitee; (870)
- No tendre mouth, non herte delicaat,
- No pompe, no semblant of royaltee,
- But ful of pacient benignitee,
- Discreet and prydeles, ay honurable, 930
- And to hir housbonde ever meke and stable.
- Men speke of Iob and most for his humblesse,
- As clerkes, whan hem list, can wel endyte,
- Namely of men, but as in soothfastnesse,
- Thogh clerkes preyse wommen but a lyte, 935
- Ther can no man in humblesse him acquyte (880)
- As womman can, ne can ben half so trewe
- As wommen been, but it be falle of-newe.
- 933. E. Hn. conne; _rest_ can. 937. Hn. kan; Cp. Ln. Hl. can; _rest
- omit (2nd time)_.
- [_Pars Sexta._]
- Fro Boloigne is this erl of Panik come,
- Of which the fame up-sprang to more and lesse, 940
- And in the peples eres alle and some
- Was couth eek, that a newe markisesse
- He with him broghte, in swich pompe and richesse,
- That never was ther seyn with mannes yë
- So noble array in al West Lumbardye. 945
- 939. Hl. panik; Cp. Panyke; Pt. Pavie; _rest_ Pavyk, Pauyk. 944. Hl.
- ye; _rest_ eye.
- The markis, which that shoop and knew al this, (890)
- Er that this erl was come, sente his message
- For thilke sely povre Grisildis;
- And she with humble herte and glad visage,
- Nat with no swollen thoght in hir corage, 950
- Cam at his heste, and on hir knees hir sette,
- And reverently and wysly she him grette.
- [418: T. 8829-8863.]
- 'Grisild,' quod he, 'my wille is outerly,
- This mayden, that shal wedded been to me,
- Receyved be to-morwe as royally 955
- As it possible is in myn hous to be. (900)
- And eek that every wight in his degree
- Have his estaat in sitting and servyse
- And heigh plesaunce, as I can best devyse.
- 953. Cp. Pt. wille; _rest_ wil.
- I have no wommen suffisaunt certayn 960
- The chambres for tarraye in ordinaunce
- After my lust, and therfor wolde I fayn
- That thyn were al swich maner governaunce;
- Thou knowest eek of old al my plesaunce;
- Though thyn array be badde and yvel biseye, 965
- Do thou thy devoir at the leeste weye.' (910)
- 'Nat only, lord, that I am glad,' quod she,
- 'To doon your lust, but I desyre also
- Yow for to serve and plese in my degree
- With-outen feynting, and shal evermo. 970
- Ne never, for no wele ne no wo,
- Ne shal the gost with-in myn herte stente
- To love yow best with al my trewe entente.'
- And with that word she gan the hous to dighte,
- And tables for to sette and beddes make; 975
- And peyned hir to doon al that she mighte, (920)
- Preying the chambereres, for goddes sake,
- To hasten hem, and faste swepe and shake;
- And she, the moste servisable of alle,
- Hath every chambre arrayed and his halle. 980
- 977. Cp. Hl. Cm. chambereres; E. Hn. Pt. Ln. chambreres.
- Abouten undern gan this erl alighte,
- That with him broghte thise noble children tweye,
- For which the peple ran to seen the sighte
- Of hir array, so richely biseye;
- And than at erst amonges hem they seye, 985
- That Walter was no fool, thogh that him leste (930)
- To chaunge his wyf, for it was for the beste.
- 981. Hl. Pt. Ln. vndern; E. Hn. Cp. vndren; Cm. vndryn.
- [419: T. 8864-8898.]
- For she is fairer, as they demen alle,
- Than is Grisild, and more tendre of age,
- And fairer fruit bitwene hem sholde falle, 990
- And more plesant, for hir heigh linage;
- Hir brother eek so fair was of visage,
- That hem to seen the peple hath caught plesaunce,
- Commending now the markis gouernaunce.--
- _Auctor_. 'O stormy peple! unsad and ever untrewe! 995
- Ay undiscreet and chaunging as a vane, (940)
- Delyting ever in rumbel that is newe,
- For lyk the mone ay wexe ye and wane;
- Ay ful of clapping, dere y-nogh a Iane;
- Your doom is fals, your constance yvel preveth, 1000
- A ful greet fool is he that on yow leveth!'
- 997. E. Cm. rumbul; Hn. rumbel; Hl. rombel. 1000. Hl. yuel; Cm. euel;
- E. Hn. yuele.
- Thus seyden sadde folk in that citee,
- Whan that the peple gazed up and doun,
- For they were glad, right for the noveltee,
- To han a newe lady of hir toun. 1005
- Na-more of this make I now mencioun; (950)
- But to Grisilde agayn wol I me dresse,
- And telle hir constance and hir bisinesse.--
- Ful bisy was Grisilde in every thing
- That to the feste was apertinent; 1010
- Right noght was she abayst of hir clothing,
- Though it were rude and somdel eek to-rent.
- But with glad chere to the yate is went,
- With other folk, to grete the markisesse,
- And after that doth forth hir bisinesse. 1015
- 1013. E. Hn. Hl. is she; _rest omit_ she. E. Hn. Ln. chiere; Hl.
- chier.
- With so glad chere his gestes she receyveth, (960)
- And conningly, everich in his degree,
- That no defaute no man aperceyveth;
- But ay they wondren what she mighte be
- That in so povre array was for to see, 1020
- And coude swich honour and reverence;
- And worthily they preisen hir prudence.
- 1017. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. And so; Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_ so.
- [420: T. 8899-8933.]
- In al this mene whyle she ne stente
- This mayde and eek hir brother to commende
- With al hir herte, in ful benigne entente, 1025
- So wel, that no man coude hir prys amende. (970)
- But atte laste, whan that thise lordes wende
- To sitten doun to mete, he gan to calle
- Grisilde, as she was bisy in his halle.
- 'Grisilde,' quod he, as it were in his pley, 1030
- 'How lyketh thee my wyf and hir beautee?'
- 'Right wel,' quod she, 'my lord; for, in good fey,
- A fairer say I never noon than she.
- I prey to god yeve hir prosperitee;
- And so hope I that he wol to yow sende 1035
- Plesance y-nogh un-to your lyves ende. (980)
- 1033. E. saugh; see l. 1114.
- O thing biseke I yow and warne also,
- That ye ne prikke with no tormentinge
- This tendre mayden, as ye han don mo;
- For she is fostred in hir norishinge 1040
- More tendrely, and, to my supposinge,
- She coude nat adversitee endure
- As coude a povre fostred creature.'
- 1040. E. Hn. norissynge.
- And whan this Walter say hir pacience,
- Hir glade chere and no malice at al, 1045
- And he so ofte had doon to hir offence, (990)
- And she ay sad and constant as a wal,
- Continuing ever hir innocence overal,
- This sturdy markis gan his herte dresse
- To rewen up-on hir wyfly stedfastnesse. 1050
- 1044. E. saugh; see l. 1114. 1045. E. Ln. chiere.
- 'This is y-nogh, Grisilde myn,' quod he,
- 'Be now na-more agast ne yvel apayed;
- I have thy feith and thy benignitee,
- As wel as ever womman was, assayed,
- In greet estaat, and povreliche arrayed. 1055
- Now knowe I, dere wyf, thy stedfastnesse,'-- (1000)
- And hir in armes took and gan hir kesse.
- 1056. E. goode; _rest_ dere.
- [421: T. 8934-8968.]
- And she for wonder took of it no keep;
- She herde nat what thing he to hir seyde;
- She ferde as she had stert out of a sleep, 1060
- Til she out of hir masednesse abreyde.
- 'Grisilde,' quod he, 'by god that for us deyde,
- Thou art my wyf, ne noon other I have,
- Ne never hadde, as god my soule save!
- 1063. Cm. Cp. Ln. Hl. ne; Pt. and; E. Hn. _omit_ ne.
- This is thy doghter which thou hast supposed 1065
- To be my wyf; that other feithfully (1010)
- Shal be myn heir, as I have ay purposed;
- Thou bare him in thy body trewely.
- At Boloigne have I kept hem prively;
- Tak hem agayn, for now maystow nat seye 1070
- That thou hast lorn non of thy children tweye.
- 1067. Cp. Ln. Hl. purposed; E. Hn. Cm. supposed (_wrongly_); Pt.
- disposed. 1070. E. Taak.
- And folk that otherweyes han seyd of me,
- I warne hem wel that I have doon this dede
- For no malice ne for no crueltee,
- But for tassaye in thee thy wommanhede, 1075
- And nat to sleen my children, god forbede! (1020)
- But for to kepe hem prively and stille,
- Til I thy purpos knewe and al thy wille.'
- Whan she this herde, aswowne doun she falleth
- For pitous Ioye, and after hir swowninge 1080
- She bothe hir yonge children un-to hir calleth,
- And in hir armes, pitously wepinge,
- Embraceth hem, and tendrely kissinge
- Ful lyk a mooder, with hir salte teres
- She batheth bothe hir visage and hir heres. 1085
- O, which a pitous thing it was to see (1030)
- Hir swowning, and hir humble voys to here!
- 'Grauntmercy, lord, that thanke I yow,' quod she,
- 'That ye han saved me my children dere!
- Now rekke I never to ben deed right here; 1090
- Sith I stonde in your love and in your grace,
- No fors of deeth, ne whan my spirit pace!
- [422: T. 8969-9003.]
- O tendre, o dere, o yonge children myne,
- Your woful mooder wende stedfastly
- That cruel houndes or som foul vermyne 1095
- Hadde eten yow; but god, of his mercy, (1040)
- And your benigne fader tendrely
- Hath doon yow kept;' and in that same stounde
- Al sodeynly she swapte adoun to grounde.
- 1095. E. crueel.
- And in her swough so sadly holdeth she 1100
- Hir children two, whan she gan hem tembrace,
- That with greet sleighte and greet difficultee
- The children from hir arm they gonne arace.
- O many a teer on many a pitous face
- Doun ran of hem that stoden hir bisyde; 1105
- Unnethe abouten hir mighte they abyde. (1050)
- Walter hir gladeth, and hir sorwe slaketh;
- She ryseth up, abaysed, from hir traunce,
- And every wight hir Ioye and feste maketh,
- Til she hath caught agayn hir contenaunce. 1110
- Walter hir dooth so feithfully plesaunce,
- That it was deyntee for to seen the chere
- Bitwixe hem two, now they ben met y-fere.
- Thise ladyes, whan that they hir tyme say,
- Han taken hir, and in-to chambre goon, 1115
- And strepen hir out of hir rude array, (1060)
- And in a cloth of gold that brighte shoon,
- With a coroune of many a riche stoon
- Up-on hir heed, they in-to halle hir broghte,
- And ther she was honoured as hir oghte. 1120
- 1117. Cm. cloth; E. Hn. clooth.
- Thus hath this pitous day a blisful ende,
- For every man and womman dooth his might
- This day in murthe and revel to dispende
- Til on the welkne shoon the sterres light.
- For more solempne in every mannes sight 1125
- This feste was, and gretter of costage, (1070)
- Than was the revel of hir mariage.
- [423: T. 9004-9036.]
- Ful many a yeer in heigh prosperitee
- Liven thise two in concord and in reste,
- And richely his doghter maried he 1130
- Un-to a lord, oon of the worthieste
- Of al Itaille; and than in pees and reste
- His wyves fader in his court he kepeth,
- Til that the soule out of his body crepeth.
- His sone succedeth in his heritage 1135
- In reste and pees, after his fader day; (1080)
- And fortunat was eek in mariage,
- Al putte he nat his wyf in greet assay.
- This world is nat so strong, it is no nay,
- As it hath been in olde tymes yore, 1140
- And herkneth what this auctour seith therfore.
- 1140. in] E. of.
- This storie is seyd, nat for that wyves sholde
- Folwen Grisilde as in humilitee,
- For it were importable, though they wolde;
- But for that every wight, in his degree, 1145
- Sholde be constant in adversitee (1090)
- As was Grisilde; therfor Petrark wryteth
- This storie, which with heigh style he endyteth.
- 1147. Cm. this Petrak; _rest omit_ this. Hl. Petrark; E. Hn. Cm.
- Petrak.
- For, sith a womman was so pacient
- Un-to a mortal man, wel more us oghte 1150
- Receyven al in gree that god us sent;
- For greet skile is, he preve that he wroghte.
- But he ne tempteth no man that he boghte,
- As seith seint Iame, if ye his pistel rede;
- He preveth folk al day, it is no drede, 1155
- And suffreth us, as for our excercyse, (1100)
- With sharpe scourges of adversitee
- Ful ofte to be bete in sondry wyse;
- Nat for to knowe our wil, for certes he,
- Er we were bom, knew al our freletee; 1160
- [424: T. 9037-9055.]
- And for our beste is al his governaunce;
- Lat us than live in vertuous suffraunce.
- 1160. E. _omits_ al; _the rest have it_.
- * * * * *
- _It seems to have been Chaucer's intention, in the first instance, to
- end this_ Tale _here. Hence, we find, in_ MSS. E. Hn. Cm. Dd., _the
- following genuine, but rejected stanza, suitable for insertion at this
- point_:--
- BIHOLD THE MERYE WORDES OF THE HOSTE.
- This worthy Clerk, whan ended was his tale,
- Our hoste seyde, and swoor by goddes bones,
- 'Me were lever than a barel ale
- My wyf at hoom had herd this legende ones;
- This is a gentil tale for the nones, 5
- As to my purpos, wiste ye my wille;
- But thing that wol nat be, lat it be stille.'
- HERE ENDETH THE TALE OF THE CLERK OF OXENFORD.
- HEADING. E. Bihoold; murye; Hoost. 2. E. Oure hoost. 3. E. leuere.
- Dd. barel of ale. 5. E. Hn. Dd. is; Cm. was. 6. E. Hn. wiste; Dd.
- wyst; Cm. woste. N.B. _With_ 1. 3, _compare_ B. 3083.
- * * * * *
- But o word, lordinges, herkneth er I go:--
- It were ful hard to finde now a dayes
- In al a toun Grisildes three or two; 1165
- For, if that they were put to swiche assayes, (1110)
- The gold of hem hath now so badde alayes
- With bras, that thogh the coyne be fair at yë,
- It wolde rather breste a-two than plye.
- For which heer, for the wyves love of Bathe, 1170
- Whos lyf and al hir secte god mayntene
- In heigh maistrye, and elles were it scathe,
- I wol with lusty herte fresshe and grene
- Seyn yow a song to glade yow, I wene,
- And lat us stinte of ernestful matere:-- 1175
- Herkneth my song, that seith in this manere. (1120)
- LENVOY DE CHAUCER.
- Grisilde is deed, and eek hir pacience,
- And bothe atones buried in Itaille;
- For which I crye in open audience,
- [425: T. 9056-9088.]
- No wedded man so hardy be tassaille 1180
- His wyves pacience, in hope to finde
- Grisildes, for in certein he shall faille!
- O noble wyves, ful of heigh prudence,
- Lat noon humilitee your tonge naille,
- Ne lat no clerk have cause or diligence 1185
- To wryte of yow a storie of swich mervaille (1130)
- As of Grisildis pacient and kinde;
- Lest Chichevache yow swelwe in hir entraille!
- Folweth Ekko, that holdeth no silence,
- But evere answereth at the countretaille; 1190
- Beth nat bidaffed for your innocence,
- But sharply tak on yow the governaille.
- Emprinteth wel this lesson in your minde
- For commune profit, sith it may availle.
- Ye archewyves, stondeth at defence, 1195
- Sin ye be stronge as is a greet camaille; (1140)
- Ne suffreth nat that men yow doon offence.
- And sclendre wyves, feble as in bataille,
- Beth egre as is a tygre yond in Inde;
- Ay clappeth as a mille, I yow consaille. 1200
- Ne dreed hem nat, do hem no reverence;
- For though thyn housbonde armed be in maille,
- The arwes of thy crabbed eloquence
- Shal perce his brest, and eek his aventaille;
- In Ialousye I rede eek thou him binde, 1205
- And thou shalt make him couche as dooth a quaille.
- 1201. Cm. Ln. Hl. do; rest doth.
- If thou be fair, ther folk ben in presence
- Shew thou thy visage and thyn apparaille;
- If thou be foul, be free of thy dispence,
- To gete thee freendes ay do thy travaille; 1210
- Be ay of chere as light as leef on linde,
- And lat him care, and wepe, and wringe, and waille!
- HERE ENDETH THE CLERK OF OXONFORD HIS TALE.
- 1211. E. chiere; Hn. cheere. COLOPHON. _From_ Cp.
- [426: T. 9089-9120.]
- * * * * *
- THE MERCHANT'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE MARCHANTES TALE.
- 'Weping and wayling, care, and other sorwe
- I know y-nogh, on even and a-morwe,'
- Quod the Marchaunt, 'and so don othere mo 1215
- That wedded been, I trowe that it be so.
- For, wel I woot, it fareth so with me.
- I have a wyf, the worste that may be;
- For thogh the feend to hir y-coupled were,
- She wolde him overmacche, I dar wel swere. 1220
- What sholde I yow reherce in special
- Hir hye malice? she is a shrewe at al. (10)
- Ther is a long and large difference
- Bitwix Grisildis grete pacience
- And of my wyf the passing crueltee. 1225
- Were I unbounden, al-so moot I thee!
- I wolde never eft comen in the snare.
- We wedded men live in sorwe and care;
- Assaye who-so wol, and he shal finde
- I seye sooth, by seint Thomas of Inde, 1230
- As for the more part, I sey nat alle.
- God shilde that it sholde so bifalle! (20)
- A! good sir hoost! I have y-wedded be
- Thise monthes two, and more nat, pardee;
- And yet, I trowe, he that all his lyve 1235
- Wyflees hath been, though that men wolde him ryve
- Un-to the herte, ne coude in no manere
- Tellen so muchel sorwe, as I now here
- Coude tellen of my wyves cursednesse!'
- 'Now,' quod our hoost, 'Marchaunt, so god yow blesse, 1240
- Sin ye so muchel knowen of that art,
- Ful hertely I pray yow telle us part.' (30)
- 'Gladly,' quod he, 'but of myn owene sore,
- For sory herte, I telle may na-more.'
- [427: T. 9121-9147.]
- * * * * *
- THE MARCHANTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE MARCHANTES TALE.
- Whylom ther was dwellinge in Lumbardye 1245
- A worthy knight, that born was of Pavye,
- In which he lived in greet prosperitee;
- And sixty yeer a wyflees man was he,
- And folwed ay his bodily delyt
- On wommen, ther-as was his appetyt, 1250
- As doon thise foles that ben seculeer.
- And whan that he was passed sixty yeer,
- Were it for holinesse or for dotage,
- I can nat seye, but swich a greet corage (10)
- Hadde this knight to been a wedded man, 1255
- That day and night he dooth al that he can
- Tespyen where he mighte wedded be;
- Preyinge our lord to granten him, that he
- Mighte ones knowe of thilke blisful lyf
- That is bitwixe an housbond and his wyf; 1260
- And for to live under that holy bond
- With which that first god man and womman bond,
- 'Non other lyf,' seyde he, 'is worth a bene;
- For wedlok is so esy and so clene, (20)
- That in this world it is a paradys.' 1265
- Thus seyde this olde knight, that was so wys.
- HEADING. _So_ E. Hn. Pt. 1246. Pt. at; Ln. in (_for_ of).
- And certeinly, as sooth as god is king,
- To take a wyf, it is a glorious thing,
- And namely whan a man is old and hoor;
- Thanne is a wyf the fruit of his tresor. 1270
- Than sholde he take a yong wyf and a feir,
- [428: T. 9148-9180.]
- On which he mighte engendren him an heir,
- And lede his lyf in Ioye and in solas,
- Wher-as thise bacheleres singe 'allas,' (30)
- Whan that they finden any adversitee 1275
- In love, which nis but childish vanitee.
- And trewely it sit wel to be so,
- That bacheleres have often peyne and wo;
- On brotel ground they builde, and brotelnesse
- They finde, whan they wene sikernesse. 1280
- They live but as a brid or as a beste,
- In libertee, and under non areste,
- Ther-as a wedded man in his estaat
- Liveth a lyf blisful and ordinaat, (40)
- Under the yok of mariage y-bounde; 1285
- Wel may his herte in Ioye and blisse habounde.
- For who can be so buxom as a wyf?
- Who is so trewe, and eek so ententyf
- To kepe him, syk and hool, as is his make?
- For wele or wo, she wol him nat forsake. 1290
- She nis nat wery him to love and serve,
- Thogh that he lye bedrede til he sterve.
- And yet somme clerkes seyn, it nis nat so,
- Of whiche he, Theofraste, is oon of tho. (50)
- What force though Theofraste liste lye? 1295
- 'Ne take no wyf,' quod he, 'for housbondrye,
- As for to spare in houshold thy dispence;
- A trewe servant dooth more diligence,
- Thy good to kepe, than thyn owene wyf.
- For she wol clayme half part al hir lyf; 1300
- And if that thou be syk, so god me save,
- Thy verray frendes or a trewe knave
- Wol kepe thee bet than she that waiteth ay
- After thy good, and hath don many a day. (60)
- And if thou take a wyf un-to thyn hold, [T. _om._
- Ful lightly maystow been a cokewold.' [T. _om._
- [429: T. 9181-9216.]
- This sentence, and an hundred thinges worse,
- Wryteth this man, ther god his bones corse!
- But take no kepe of al swich vanitee;
- Deffye Theofraste and herke me. 1310
- 1271. E. Thanne. 1274, 1278. E. bacheleris. 1281, 2. E. Pt. beest,
- arreest; Cm. Ln. beste, areste. 1285. E. Hn. this; _rest_ the.
- 1293. E. Cp. nis; _rest_ is. 1301. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ that. 1305, 6.
- _Not in_ Cp. Ln.; _in a spurious form in _Hn. Pt. Hl. 1310. Cp. Hl.
- herkne; Pt. Ln. herkeneth.
- A wyf is goddes yifte verraily;
- Alle other maner yiftes hardily,
- As londes, rentes, pasture, or commune,
- Or moebles, alle ben yiftes of fortune, (70)
- That passen as a shadwe upon a wal. 1315
- But dredelees, if pleynly speke I shal,
- A wyf wol laste, and in thyn hous endure,
- Wel lenger than thee list, paraventure.
- 1316. Cm. dredles; Hn. Hl. dreed nat; Cp. Ln. drede nought; Pt. drede
- it nou[gh]t.
- Mariage is a ful gret sacrement;
- He which that hath no wyf, I holde him shent; 1320
- He liveth helplees and al desolat,
- I speke of folk in seculer estaat.
- And herke why, I sey nat this for noght,
- That womman is for mannes help y-wroght. (80)
- The hye god, whan he hadde Adam maked, 1325
- And saugh him al allone, bely-naked,
- God of his grete goodnesse seyde than,
- 'Lat us now make an help un-to this man
- Lyk to him-self;' and thanne he made him Eve.
- Heer may ye se, and heer-by may ye preve, 1330
- That wyf is mannes help and his confort,
- His paradys terrestre and his disport.
- So buxom and so vertuous is she,
- They moste nedes live in unitee. (90)
- O flesh they been, and o flesh, as I gesse, 1335
- Hath but on herte, in wele and in distresse.
- 1323. Cp. herkne; Pt. Ln. Hl. herken.
- A wyf! a! Seinte Marie, _benedicite!_
- How mighte a man han any adversitee
- That hath a wyf? certes, I can nat seye.
- The blisse which that is bitwixe hem tweye 1340
- Ther may no tonge telle, or herte thinke.
- If he be povre, she helpeth him to swinke;
- [430: T. 9217-9252.]
- She kepeth his good, and wasteth never a deel;
- Al that hir housbonde lust, hir lyketh weel; (100)
- She seith not ones 'nay,' whan he seith 'ye.' 1345
- 'Do this,' seith he; 'al redy, sir,' seith she.
- O blisful ordre of wedlok precious,
- Thou art so mery, and eek so vertuous,
- And so commended and appreved eek,
- That every man that halt him worth a leek, 1350
- Up-on his bare knees oghte al his lyf
- Thanken his god that him hath sent a wyf;
- Or elles preye to god him for to sende
- A wyf, to laste un-to his lyves ende. (110)
- For thanne his lyf is set in sikernesse; 1355
- He may nat be deceyved, as I gesse,
- So that he werke after his wyves reed;
- Than may he boldly beren up his heed,
- They been so trewe and ther-with-al so wyse;
- For which, if thou wolt werken as the wyse, 1360
- Do alwey so as wommen wol thee rede.
- 1340. Hl. ioye (_for_ blisse). 1348. E. Hn. murye. 1350. Hl. holt;
- Ln. holdeth. 1351. E. oughte; Hn. Cm. oghte. 1357. E. reede; Hn.
- Cm. Cp. reed. _The scribe of_ E. _misses 1358-61, by confusing this_
- reed _with_ rede (1361). 1358-61. _From_ Hn.; _so_ Cm.; _so the rest
- (nearly)_. 1358. Hn. kepen; _rest_ beren, bere.
- Lo, how that Iacob, as thise clerkes rede,
- By good conseil of his moder Rebekke,
- Bond the kides skin aboute his nekke; (120)
- Thurgh which his fadres benisoun he wan. 1365
- Lo, Iudith, as the storie eek telle can,
- By wys conseil she goddes peple kepte,
- And slow him, Olofernus, whyl he slepte.
- Lo Abigayl, by good conseil how she
- Saved hir housbond Nabal, whan that he 1370
- Sholde han be slayn; and loke, Ester also
- By good conseil delivered out of wo
- The peple of god, and made him, Mardochee,
- Of Assuere enhaunced for to be. (130)
- Ther nis no-thing in gree superlatyf, 1375
- As seith Senek, above an humble wyf.
- Suffre thy wyves tonge, as Caton bit;
- She shal comande, and thou shalt suffren it;
- [431: T. 9253-9289.]
- And yet she wol obeye of curteisye.
- A wyf is keper of thyn housbondrye; 1380
- Wel may the syke man biwaille and wepe,
- Ther-as ther nis no wyf the hous to kepe.
- I warne thee, if wysly thou wolt wirche,
- Love wel thy wyf, as Crist loveth his chirche. (140)
- If thou lovest thy-self, thou lovest thy wyf; 1385
- No man hateth his flesh, but in his lyf
- He fostreth it, and therfore bidde I thee,
- Cherisse thy wyf, or thou shalt never thee.
- Housbond and wyf, what so men Iape or pleye,
- Of worldly folk holden the siker weye; 1390
- They been so knit, ther may noon harm bityde;
- And namely, up-on the wyves syde.
- For which this Ianuarie, of whom I tolde,
- Considered hath, in with his dayes olde, (150)
- The lusty lyf, the vertuous quiete, 1395
- That is in mariage hony-swete;
- And for his freendes on a day he sente,
- To tellen hem theffect of his entente.
- 1384. E. Hn. loued; Cm. louede; Cp. Pt. Ln. loueth; Hl. doth.
- With face sad, his tale he hath hem told;
- He seyde, 'freendes, I am hoor and old, 1400
- And almost, god wot, on my pittes brinke;
- Up-on my soule somwhat moste I thinke.
- I have my body folily despended;
- Blessed be god, that it shal been amended! (160)
- For I wol be, certeyn, a wedded man, 1405
- And that anoon in al the haste I can,
- Un-to som mayde fair and tendre of age.
- I prey yow, shapeth for my mariage
- Al sodeynly, for I wol nat abyde;
- And I wol fonde tespyen, on my syde, 1410
- To whom I may be wedded hastily.
- But for-as-muche as ye ben mo than I,
- Ye shullen rather swich a thing espyen
- Than I, and wher me best were to allyen. (170)
- 1402. E. Cm. the; _rest_ my. 1410. Cp. Ln. aspye.
- But o thing warne I yow, my freendes dere, 1415
- [432: T. 9290-9324.]
- I wol non old wyf han in no manere.
- She shal nat passe twenty yeer, certayn;
- Old fish and yong flesh wolde I have ful fayn.
- Bet is,' quod he, 'a pyk than a pikerel;
- And bet than old boef is the tendre veel. 1420
- I wol no womman thritty yeer of age,
- It is but bene-straw and greet forage.
- And eek thise olde widwes, god it woot,
- They conne so muchel craft on Wades boot, (180)
- So muchel broken harm, whan that hem leste, 1425
- That with hem sholde I never live in reste.
- For sondry scoles maken sotil clerkis;
- Womman of manye scoles half a clerk is.
- But certeynly, a yong thing may men gye,
- Right as men may warm wex with handes plye. 1430
- Wherfore I sey yow pleynly, in a clause,
- I wol non old wyf han right for this cause.
- For if so were, I hadde swich mischaunce,
- That I in hir ne coude han no plesaunce, (190)
- Thanne sholde I lede my lyf in avoutrye, 1435
- And go streight to the devel, whan I dye.
- Ne children sholde I none up-on hir geten;
- Yet were me lever houndes had me eten,
- Than that myn heritage sholde falle
- In straunge hand, and this I tell yow alle. 1440
- I dote nat, I woot the cause why
- Men sholde wedde, and forthermore wot I,
- Ther speketh many a man of mariage,
- That woot na-more of it than woot my page, (200)
- For whiche causes man sholde take a wyf. 1445
- If he ne may nat liven chast his lyf,
- Take him a wyf with greet devocioun,
- By-cause of leveful procreacioun
- Of children, to thonour of god above,
- And nat only for paramour or love; 1450
- [433: T. 9325-9360.]
- And for they sholde lecherye eschue,
- And yelde hir dettes whan that they ben due;
- Or for that ech of hem sholde helpen other
- In meschief, as a suster shal the brother; (210)
- And live in chastitee ful holily. 1455
- But sires, by your leve, that am nat I.
- For god be thanked, I dar make avaunt,
- I fele my limes stark and suffisaunt
- To do al that a man bilongeth to;
- I woot my-selven best what I may do. 1460
- Though I be hoor, I fare as dooth a tree
- That blosmeth er that fruyt y-woxen be;
- A blosmy tree nis neither drye ne deed.
- I fele me nowher hoor but on myn heed; (220)
- Myn herte and alle my limes been as grene 1465
- As laurer thurgh the yeer is for to sene.
- And sin that ye han herd al myn entente,
- I prey yow to my wil ye wole assente.'
- 1418. E. Hn. Pt. _om._ ful. 1420. Cm. bef; Cp. Pt. beef. Hl. Ln.
- _om._ the. 1427. E. sotile. 1432. E. Cm. Cp. Ln. _om._ right.
- 1433. E. were that I. 1436. Hl. Hn. go; Cp. Pt. Ln. so; E. Cm.
- _om._ E. vnto (_for_ to). 1438. E. Pt. leuere that houndes. 1446.
- E. Siththe; Cm. Sith (_for_ If). Hn. Cm. Hl. ne; _rest om._ 1451.
- E. Hl. Cp. Pt. leccherye. 1456. Cm. siris. 1462. E. Cp. that; Ln.
- Hl. that the; Cm. than; Hn. Pt. the. 1463. E. Hn. And; Pt. That;
- _rest_ A.
- Diverse men diversely him tolde
- Of mariage manye ensamples olde. 1470
- Somme blamed it, somme preysed it, certeyn;
- But atte laste, shortly for to seyn,
- As al day falleth altercacioun
- Bitwixen freendes in disputisoun, (230)
- Ther fil a stryf bitwixe his bretheren two, 1475
- Of whiche that oon was cleped Placebo,
- Iustinus soothly called was that other.
- Placebo seyde, 'o Ianuarie, brother,
- Ful litel nede had ye, my lord so dere,
- Conseil to axe of any that is here; 1480
- But that ye been so ful of sapience,
- That yow ne lyketh, for your heighe prudence,
- To weyven fro the word of Salomon.
- This word seyde he un-to us everichon: (240)
- "Wirk alle thing by conseil," thus seyde he, 1485
- "And thanne shaltow nat repente thee."
- [434: T. 9361-9394.]
- But though that Salomon spak swich a word,
- Myn owene dere brother and my lord,
- So wisly god my soule bringe at reste,
- I hold your owene conseil is the beste. 1490
- For brother myn, of me tak this motyf,
- I have now been a court-man al my lyf.
- And god it woot, though I unworthy be,
- I have stonden in ful greet degree (250)
- Abouten lordes of ful heigh estaat; 1495
- Yet hadde I never with noon of hem debaat.
- I never hem contraried, trewely;
- I woot wel that my lord can more than I.
- What that he seith, I holde it ferme and stable;
- I seye the same, or elles thing semblable. 1500
- A ful gret fool is any conseillour,
- That serveth any lord of heigh honour,
- That dar presume, or elles thenken it,
- That his conseil sholde passe his lordes wit. (260)
- Nay, lordes been no foles, by my fay; 1505
- Ye han your-selven shewed heer to-day
- So heigh sentence, so holily and weel,
- That I consente and conferme every-deel
- Your wordes alle, and your opinioun.
- By god, ther nis no man in al this toun 1510
- Nin al Itaille, that coude bet han sayd;
- Crist halt him of this conseil wel apayd.
- And trewely, it is an heigh corage
- Of any man, that stopen is in age, (270)
- To take a yong wyf; by my fader kin, 1515
- Your herte hangeth on a Ioly pin.
- Doth now in this matere right as yow leste,
- For finally I holde it for the beste.'
- 1479. E. hadde. 1490. MSS. holde. 1491. E. taak. 1503. E. Hn. Cm.
- elles; _rest_ ones. 1506. Hn. Cm. shewed; E. seyd; Hl. y-spoken;
- _rest_ spoken. 1511. E. Nyn; _rest_ Ne in. Cm. al; _rest om._
- 1512. E. Hn. _ins._ ful (Cm. wol) _before_ wel; _rest_ Crist holdeth
- him of this ful wel apayd. 1514. Cp. Hl. stopen; Ln. stoupin; E. Hn.
- stapen; Cm. schapyn. 1517. E. matiere.
- Iustinus, that ay stille sat and herde,
- Right in this wyse to Placebo answerde: 1520
- [435: T. 9395-9430.]
- 'Now brother myn, be pacient, I preye,
- Sin ye han seyd, and herkneth what I seye.
- Senek among his othere wordes wyse
- Seith, that a man oghte him right wel avyse, (280)
- To whom he yeveth his lond or his catel. 1525
- And sin I oghte avyse me right wel
- To whom I yeve my good awey fro me,
- Wel muchel more I oghte avysed be
- To whom I yeve my body; for alwey
- I warne yow wel, it is no childes pley 1530
- To take a wyf with-oute avysement.
- Men moste enquere, this is myn assent,
- Wher she be wys, or sobre, or dronkelewe,
- Or proud, or elles other-weys a shrewe; (290)
- A chydester, or wastour of thy good, 1535
- Or riche, or poore, or elles mannish wood.
- Al-be-it so that no man finden shal
- Noon in this world that trotteth hool in al,
- Ne man ne beest, swich as men coude devyse;
- But nathelees, it oghte y-nough suffise 1540
- With any wyf, if so were that she hadde
- Mo gode thewes than hir vyces badde;
- And al this axeth leyser for tenquere.
- For god it woot, I have wept many a tere (300)
- Ful prively, sin I have had a wyf. 1545
- Preyse who-so wole a wedded mannes lyf,
- Certein, I finde in it but cost and care,
- And observances, of alle blisses bare.
- And yet, god woot, my neighebores aboute,
- And namely of wommen many a route, 1550
- Seyn that I have the moste stedefast wyf,
- And eek the mekeste oon that bereth lyf.
- But I wot best wher wringeth me my sho.
- Ye mowe, for me, right as yow lyketh do; (300)
- Avyseth yow, ye been a man of age, 1555
- How that ye entren in-to mariage,
- [436: T. 9431-9465.]
- And namely with a yong wyf and a fair.
- By him that made water, erthe, and air,
- The yongest man that is in al this route
- Is bisy y-nogh to bringen it aboute 1560
- To han his wyf allone, trusteth me.
- Ye shul nat plese hir fully yeres three,
- This is to seyn, to doon hir ful plesaunce.
- A wyf axeth ful many an observaunce. (320)
- I prey yow that ye be nat yvel apayd.' 1565
- 1520. _All but_ Cm. _insert_ he _before_ Right, _or_ to, _or_
- answerde. 1531. E. Hn. Ln. withouten. 1539. E. Cm. which. Hl. man
- can; Cp. Pt. men conne; E. Hn. Cm. men koude. 1543. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl.
- to enquere. 1545. Hn. Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. sin that I hadde. 1551. Ln.
- stedfast. 1559. E. yongeste. 1560. E. ynough; Cm. I-nogh. 1562.
- Cm. Hl. plese; _rest_ plesen.
- 'Wel,' quod this Ianuarie, 'and hastow sayd?
- Straw for thy Senek, and for thy proverbes,
- I counte nat a panier ful of herbes
- Of scole-termes; wyser men than thow,
- As thou hast herd, assenteden right now 1570
- To my purpos; Placebo, what sey ye?'
- 1566. E. Hn. ysayd; Cm. Hl. sayd; Cp. Pt. Ln. al said.
- 'I seye, it is a cursed man,' quod he,
- 'That letteth matrimoine, sikerly.'
- And with that word they rysen sodeynly, (330)
- And been assented fully, that he sholde 1575
- Be wedded whanne him list and wher he wolde.
- 1573. E. Hn. Hl. matrimoigne; Pt. matrimoyne; _rest_ matrimonye.
- Heigh fantasye and curious bisinesse
- Fro day to day gan in the soule impresse
- Of Ianuarie aboute his mariage.
- Many fair shap, and many a fair visage 1580
- Ther passeth thurgh his herte, night by night.
- As who-so toke a mirour polished bright,
- And sette it in a commune market-place,
- Than sholde he see many a figure pace (340)
- By his mirour; and, in the same wyse, 1585
- Gan Ianuarie inwith his thoght devyse
- Of maydens, whiche that dwelten him bisyde.
- He wiste nat wher that he mighte abyde.
- For if that oon have beaute in hir face,
- Another stant so in the peples grace 1590
- For hir sadnesse, and hir benignitee,
- [437: T. 9466-9503.]
- That of the peple grettest voys hath she.
- And somme were riche, and hadden badde name.
- But nathelees, bitwixe ernest and game, (350)
- He atte laste apoynted him on oon, 1595
- And leet alle othere from his herte goon,
- And chees hir of his owene auctoritee;
- For love is blind al day, and may nat see.
- And whan that he was in his bed y-broght,
- He purtreyed, in his herte and in his thoght, 1600
- Hir fresshe beautee and hir age tendre,
- Hir myddel smal, hir armes longe and sclendre,
- Hir wyse governaunce, hir gentillesse,
- Hir wommanly beringe and hir sadnesse. (360)
- And whan that he on hir was condescended, 1605
- Him thoughte his chois mighte nat ben amended.
- For whan that he him-self concluded hadde,
- Him thoughte ech other mannes wit so badde,
- That inpossible it were to replye
- Agayn his chois, this was his fantasye. 1610
- His freendes sente he to at his instaunce,
- And preyed hem to doon him that plesaunce,
- That hastily they wolden to him come;
- He wolde abregge hir labour, alle and some. (370)
- Nedeth na-more for him to go ne ryde, 1615
- He was apoynted ther he wolde abyde.
- 1582. E. And; _rest_ As. E. polisshed. 1584. E. Thanne. E. Hn. se
- ful many. 1587. E. Cm. Pt. dwellen. 1591. E. Cm. benyngnytee.
- 1602. E. sklendre. 1609. E. repplye. 1611. E. Cm. Hise. 1615. Ln.
- hem.
- Placebo cam, and eek his freendes sone,
- And alderfirst he bad hem alle a bone,
- That noon of hem none argumentes make
- Agayn the purpos which that he hath take; 1620
- 'Which purpos was plesant to god,' seyde he,
- 'And verray ground of his prosperitee.'
- 1617. E. Cm. Hise.
- He seyde, ther was a mayden in the toun,
- Which that of beautee hadde greet renoun, (380)
- Al were it so she were of smal degree; 1625
- Suffyseth him hir youthe and hir beautee.
- Which mayde, he seyde, he wolde han to his wyf,
- To lede in ese and holinesse his lyf.
- And thanked god, that he mighte han hire al,
- [438: T. 9504-9539.]
- That no wight of his blisse parten shal. 1630
- And preyde hem to labouren in this nede,
- And shapen that he faille nat to spede;
- For thanne, he seyde, his spirit was at ese.
- 'Thanne is,' quod he, 'no-thing may me displese, (390)
- Saue o thing priketh in my conscience, 1635
- The which I wol reherce in your presence.
- 1630. Cm. of; Cp. Ln. with; _rest om._ 1631. Hn. labouren; _rest_
- laboure.
- I have,' quod he, 'herd seyd, ful yore ago,
- Ther may no man han parfite blisses two,
- This is to seye, in erthe and eek in hevene.
- For though he kepe him fro the sinnes sevene, 1640
- And eek from every branche of thilke tree,
- Yet is ther so parfit felicitee,
- And so greet ese and lust in mariage,
- That ever I am agast, now in myn age, (400)
- That I shal lede now so mery a lyf, 1645
- So delicat, with-outen wo and stryf,
- That I shal have myn hevene in erthe here.
- For sith that verray hevene is boght so dere,
- With tribulacioun and greet penaunce,
- How sholde I thanne, that live in swich plesaunce 1650
- As alle wedded men don with hir wyvis,
- Come to the blisse ther Crist eterne on lyve is?
- This is my drede, and ye, my bretheren tweye,
- Assoilleth me this questioun, I preye.' (410)
- 1645. E. myrie; Hn. murye.
- Iustinus, which that hated his folye, 1655
- Answerde anon, right in his Iaperye;
- And for he wolde his longe tale abregge,
- He wolde noon auctoritee allegge,
- But seyde, 'sire, so ther be noon obstacle
- Other than this, god of his hye miracle 1660
- And of his mercy may so for yow wirche,
- That, er ye have your right of holy chirche,
- Ye may repente of wedded mannes lyf,
- In which ye seyn ther is no wo ne stryf. (420)
- And elles, god forbede but he sente 1665
- [439: T. 9540-9576.]
- A wedded man him grace to repente
- Wel ofte rather than a sengle man!
- And therfore, sire, the beste reed I can,
- Dispeire yow noght, but have in your memorie,
- Paraunter she may be your purgatorie! 1670
- She may be goddes mene, and goddes whippe;
- Than shal your soule up to hevene skippe
- Swifter than dooth an arwe out of the bowe!
- I hope to god, her-after shul ye knowe, (430)
- That their nis no so greet felicitee 1675
- In mariage, ne never-mo shal be,
- That yow shal lette of your savacioun,
- So that ye use, as skile is and resoun,
- The lustes of your wyf attemprely,
- And that ye plese hir nat to amorously, 1680
- And that ye kepe yow eek from other sinne.
- My tale is doon:--for my wit is thinne.
- Beth nat agast her-of, my brother dere.'--
- (But lat us waden out of this matere. (440)
- The Wyf of Bathe, if ye han understonde, 1685
- Of mariage, which we have on honde,
- Declared hath ful wel in litel space).--
- 'Fareth now wel, god have yow in his grace.'
- 1660. Hn. Pt. hye; E. hygh. 1661. E. his hygh mercy; _rest om._
- hygh. 1665. Cp. Pt. Ln. but if. 1672. E. Thanne. 1682.
- _Incomplete_. 1686. Hn. we; _rest_ ye.
- And with this word this Justin and his brother
- Han take hir leve, and ech of hem of other. 1690
- For whan they sawe it moste nedes be,
- They wroghten so, by sly and wys tretee,
- That she, this mayden, which that Maius highte,
- As hastily as ever that she mighte, (450)
- Shal wedded be un-to this Ianuarie. 1695
- I trowe it were to longe yow to tarie,
- If I yow tolde of every scrit and bond,
- By which that she was feffed in his lond;
- Or for to herknen of hir riche array.
- But finally y-comen is the day 1700
- That to the chirche bothe be they went
- For to receyve the holy sacrement.
- [440: T. 9577-9612.]
- Forth comth the preest, with stole aboute his nekke,
- And bad hir be lyk Sarra and Rebekke, (460)
- In wisdom and in trouthe of mariage; 1705
- And seyde his orisons, as is usage,
- And crouched hem, and bad god sholde hem blesse,
- And made al siker y-nogh with holinesse.
- 1691. Hn. Cp. sawe; E. Hl. saugh. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _ins._ that _bef_.
- it. E. _om._ nedes. 1692. sly] Hl. sleighte. 1693. MSS. Mayus.
- 1698. Hl. feoffed. 1704. E. lyk to; _rest om._ to. 1706. his] E.
- hir. 1707. E. Hn. Cm. croucheth.
- Thus been they wedded with solempnitee,
- And at the feste sitteth he and she 1710
- With other worthy folk up-on the deys.
- Al ful of Ioye and blisse is the paleys,
- And ful of instruments and of vitaille,
- The moste deyntevous of al Itaille. (470)
- Biforn hem stoode swiche instruments of soun, 1715
- That Orpheus, ne of Thebes Amphioun,
- Ne maden never swich a melodye.
- 1715. _So_ Cm. Hl.; E. _puts_ swich _before_ soun; Hn. _repeats_ swich
- _before_ soun.
- At every cours than cam loud minstraleye,
- That never tromped Ioab, for to here,
- Nor he, Theodomas, yet half so clere, 1720
- At Thebes, whan the citee was in doute.
- Bacus the wyn hem skinketh al aboute,
- And Venus laugheth up-on every wight.
- For Ianuarie was bicome hir knight, (480)
- And wolde bothe assayen his corage 1725
- In libertee, and eek in mariage;
- And with hir fyrbrond in hir hand aboute
- Daunceth biforn the bryde and al the route.
- And certeinly, I dar right wel seyn this,
- Ymenëus, that god of wedding is, 1730
- Saugh never his lyf so mery a wedded man.
- Hold thou thy pees, thou poete Marcian,
- That wrytest us that ilke wedding murie
- Of hir, Philologye, and him, Mercurie (490)
- And of the songes that the Muses songe. 1735
- To smal is bothe thy penne, and eek thy tonge,
- For to descryven of this mariage.
- Whan tendre youthe hath wedded stouping age,
- [441: T. 9613-9648.]
- Ther is swich mirthe that it may nat be writen;
- Assayeth it your-self, than may ye witen 1740
- If that I lye or noon in this matere.
- 1718. E. Hn. thanne; Hl. ther. 1731. E. myrie; Hn. murye. 1740. E.
- thanne. 1741. E. matiere.
- Maius, that sit with so benigne a chere,
- Hir to biholde it semed fayëryë;
- Quene Ester loked never with swich an yë (500)
- On Assuer, so meke a look hath she. 1745
- I may yow nat devyse al hir beautee;
- But thus muche of hir beautee telle I may,
- That she was lyk the brighte morwe of May,
- Fulfild of alle beautee and plesaunce.
- 1742. E. benyngne; chiere. 1743. Cp. Pt. Hl. fayerye: _rest_
- fairye. 1744. Pt. Hl. ye; Cp. yhe; _rest_ eye.
- This Ianuarie is ravisshed in a traunce 1750
- At every time he loked on hir face;
- But in his herte he gan hir to manace,
- That he that night in armes wolde hir streyne
- Harder than ever Paris dide Eleyne. (510)
- But nathelees, yet hadde he greet pitee, 1755
- That thilke night offenden hir moste he;
- And thoughte, 'allas! o tendre creature!
- Now wolde god ye mighte wel endure
- Al my corage, it is so sharp and kene;
- I am agast ye shul it nat sustene. 1760
- But god forbede that I dide al my might!
- Now wolde god that it were woxen night,
- And that the night wolde lasten evermo.
- I wolde that al this peple were ago.' (520)
- And finally, he doth al his labour, 1765
- As he best mighte, savinge his honour,
- To haste hem fro the mete in subtil wyse.
- 1751. Hl. lokith.
- The tyme cam that reson was to ryse;
- And after that, men daunce and drinken faste,
- And spyces al aboute the hous they caste; 1770
- And ful of Ioye and blisse is every man;
- All but a squyer, highte Damian,
- Which carf biforn the knight ful many a day.
- He was so ravisshed on his lady May, (530)
- [442: T. 9649-9683.]
- That for the verray peyne he was ny wood; 1775
- Almost he swelte and swowned ther he stood.
- So sore hath Venus hurt him with hir brond,
- As that she bar it daunsinge in hir hond.
- And to his bed he wente him hastily;
- Na-more of him as at this tyme speke I. 1780
- But ther I lete him wepe y-nough and pleyne,
- Til fresshe May wol rewen on his peyne.
- 1772. E. Hn. Cm. highte; _rest_ that highte (hight). 1780. Hl. as;
- _rest om._ E. _om._ I.
- O perilous fyr, that in the bedstraw bredeth! AUCTOR.
- O famulier foo, that his servyce bedeth! (540)
- O servant traitour, false hoomly hewe, 1785
- Lyk to the naddre in bosom sly untrewe,
- God shilde us alle from your aqueyntaunce!
- O Ianuarie, dronken in plesaunce
- Of mariage, see how thy Damian,
- Thyn owene squyer and thy borne man, 1790
- Entendeth for to do thee vileinye.
- God graunte thee thyn hoomly fo tespye.
- For in this world nis worse pestilence
- Than hoomly foo al day in thy presence. (550)
- 1784. Cp. Hl. famuler; Pt. famulere; Ln. famylere. 1786. Hn. Cp.
- neddre; Cm. neddere; Hl. nedder; Pt. adder. 1789. Pt. Hl. Of; Cp. Ln.
- O(!); _rest_ In. 1790. Cm. bore; Cp. Ln. Hl. borne; _rest_ born.
- 1792. Cp. Ln. to espye; Hn. Hl. espye.
- Parfourned hath the sonne his ark diurne, 1795
- No lenger may the body of him soiurne
- On thorisonte, as in that latitude.
- Night with his mantel, that is derk and rude,
- Gan oversprede the hemisperie aboute;
- For which departed is this lusty route 1800
- Fro Ianuarie, with thank on every syde.
- Hom to hir houses lustily they ryde,
- Wher-as they doon hir thinges as hem leste,
- And whan they sye hir tyme, goon to reste. (560)
- Sone after that, this hastif Ianuarie 1805
- Wolde go to bedde, he wolde no lenger tarie.
- He drinketh ipocras, clarree, and vernage
- Of spyces hote, tencresen his corage;
- And many a letuarie hadde he ful fyn,
- [443: T. 9684-9719.]
- Swiche as the cursed monk dan Constantyn 1810
- Hath writen in his book _de Coitu_;
- To eten hem alle, he nas no-thing eschu.
- And to his privee freendes thus seyde he:
- 'For goddes love, as sone as it may be, (570)
- Lat voyden al this hous in curteys wyse.' 1815
- And they han doon right as he wol devyse.
- Men drinken, and the travers drawe anon;
- The bryde was broght a-bedde as stille as stoon;
- And whan the bed was with the preest y-blessed,
- Out of the chambre hath every wight him dressed. 1820
- And Ianuarie hath faste in armes take
- His fresshe May, his paradys, his make.
- He lulleth hir, he kisseth hir ful ofte
- With thikke bristles of his berd unsofte, (580)
- Lyk to the skin of houndfish, sharp as brere, 1825
- For he was shave al newe in his manere.
- He rubbeth hir aboute hir tendre face,
- And seyde thus, 'allas! I moot trespace
- To yow, my spouse, and yow gretly offende,
- Er tyme come that I wil doun descende. 1830
- But nathelees, considereth this,' quod he,
- 'Ther nis no werkman, what-so-ever he be,
- That may bothe werke wel and hastily;
- This wol be doon at leyser parfitly. (590)
- It is no fors how longe that we pleye; 1835
- In trewe wedlok wedded be we tweye;
- And blessed be the yok that we been inne,
- For in our actes we mowe do no sinne.
- A man may do no sinne with his wyf,
- Ne hurte him-selven with his owene knyf; 1840
- For we han leve to pleye us by the lawe.'
- Thus laboureth he til that the day gan dawe;
- And than he taketh a sop in fyn clarree,
- And upright in his bed than sitteth he, (600)
- And after that he sang ful loude and clere, 1845
- [444: T. 9720-9755.]
- And kiste his wyf, and made wantoun chere.
- He was al coltish, ful of ragerye,
- And ful of Iargon as a flekked pye.
- The slakke skin aboute his nekke shaketh,
- Whyl that he sang; so chaunteth he and craketh. 1850
- But god wot what that May thoughte in hir herte,
- Whan she him saugh up sittinge in his sherte,
- In his night-cappe, and with his nekke lene;
- She preyseth nat his pleying worth a bene. (610)
- Than seide he thus, 'my reste wol I take; 1855
- Now day is come, I may no lenger wake.'
- And doun he leyde his heed, and sleep til pryme.
- And afterward, whan that he saugh his tyme,
- Up ryseth Ianuarie; but fresshe May
- Holdeth hir chambre un-to the fourthe day, 1860
- As usage is of wyves for the beste.
- For every labour som-tyme moot han reste,
- Or elles longe may he nat endure;
- This is to seyn, no lyves creature, (620)
- Be it of fish, or brid, or beest, or man. 1865
- 1802. E. Hl. hous; _rest_ houses. 1808. Cp. Pt. Hl. to encresen.
- 1809. E. hath. 1810. E. _om._ cursed. 1812. Cm. Ln. was; _rest_
- nas. 1824. Cp. HL. thikke; _rest_ thilke (_with_ lk = kk). E. Cm.
- brustles. 1838. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ our. 1843. E. thanne; fyne.
- 1844. E. thanne. 1846. E. wantowne. 1847. E. coltissh. 1848. Cp.
- Pt. Girgoun; Ln. Girgun. 1851. Hn. thoghte. 1855. E. Thanne.
- 1860. Pt. Ln. Hl. Holdeth; Cp. Holt; E. Hn. Heeld; Cm. Held.
- Now wol I speke of woful Damian,
- That languissheth for love, as ye shul here;
- Therfore I speke to him in this manere:
- I seye, 'O sely Damian, allas!
- Answere to my demaunde, as in this cas, 1870
- How shaltow to thy lady fresshe May
- Telle thy wo? She wole alwey seye "nay";
- Eek if thou speke, she wol thy wo biwreye;
- God be thyn help, I can no bettre seye.' (630)
- 1867. Cp. langureth; Pt. languowreth; Ln. longurith. 1870. E.
- Andswere.
- This syke Damian in Venus fyr 1875
- So brenneth, that he dyeth for desyr;
- For which he putte his lyf in aventure,
- No lenger mighte he in this wyse endure;
- But prively a penner gan he borwe,
- And in a lettre wroot he al his sorwe, 1880
- In manere of a compleynt or a lay,
- [445: T. 9756-9792.]
- Un-to his faire fresshe lady May.
- And in a purs of silk, heng on his sherte,
- He hath it put, and leyde it at his herte. (640)
- The mone that, at noon, was, thilke day 1885
- That Ianuarie hath wedded fresshe May,
- In two of Taur, was in-to Cancre gliden;
- So longe hath Maius in hir chambre biden,
- As custume is un-to thise nobles alle.
- A bryde shal nat eten in the halle, 1890
- Til dayes foure or three dayes atte leste
- Y-passed been; than lat hir go to feste.
- The fourthe day compleet fro noon to noon,
- Whan that the heighe masse was y-doon, (650)
- In halle sit this Ianuarie, and May 1895
- As fresh as is the brighte someres day.
- And so bifel, how that this gode man
- Remembred him upon this Damian,
- And seyde, 'Seinte Marie! how may this be,
- That Damian entendeth nat to me? 1900
- Is he ay syk, or how may this bityde?'
- His squyeres, whiche that stoden ther bisyde,
- Excused him by-cause of his siknesse,
- Which letted him to doon his bisinesse; (660)
- Noon other cause mighte make him tarie. 1905
- 1888. Hl. Hn. Cp. abiden. 1892. E. thanne. 1896. E. fressh. 1902.
- E. Hise.
- 'That me forthinketh,' quod this Ianuarie,
- 'He is a gentil squyer, by my trouthe!
- If that he deyde, it were harm and routhe;
- He is as wys, discreet, and as secree
- As any man I woot of his degree; 1910
- And ther-to manly and eek servisable,
- And for to been a thrifty man right able.
- But after mete, as sone as ever I may,
- I wol my-self visyte him and eek May, (670)
- To doon him al the confort that I can.' 1915
- And for that word him blessed every man,
- That, of his bountee and his gentillesse,
- He wolde so conforten in siknesse
- [446: T. 9793-9830.]
- His squyer, for it was a gentil dede.
- 'Dame,' quod this Ianuarie, 'tak good hede, 1920
- At-after mete ye, with your wommen alle,
- Whan ye han been in chambre out of this halle,
- That alle ye go see this Damian;
- Doth him disport, he is a gentil man; (680)
- And telleth him that I wol him visyte, 1925
- Have I no-thing but rested me a lyte;
- And spede yow faste, for I wole abyde
- Til that ye slepe faste by my syde.'
- And with that word he gan to him to calle
- A squyer, that was marchal of his halle, 1930
- And tolde him certeyn thinges, what he wolde.
- 1920. E. taak. 1921. E. noon; _rest_ mete.
- This fresshe May hath streight hir wey y-holde,
- With alle hir wommen, un-to Damian.
- Doun by his beddes syde sit she than, (690)
- Confortinge him as goodly as she may. 1935
- This Damian, whan that his tyme he say,
- In secree wise his purs, and eek his bille,
- In which that he y-writen hadde his wille,
- Hath put in-to hir hand, with-outen more,
- Save that he syketh wonder depe and sore, 1940
- And softely to hir right thus seyde he:
- 'Mercy! and that ye nat discovere me;
- For I am deed, if that this thing be kid.'
- This purs hath she inwith hir bosom hid, (700)
- And wente hir wey; ye gete namore of me. 1945
- But un-to Ianuarie y-comen is she,
- That on his beddes syde sit ful softe.
- He taketh hir, and kisseth hir ful ofte,
- And leyde him doun to slepe, and that anon.
- She feyned hir as that she moste gon 1950
- Ther-as ye woot that every wight mot nede.
- And whan she of this bille hath taken hede,
- She rente it al to cloutes atte laste,
- And in the privee softely it caste. (710)
- Who studieth now but faire fresshe May? 1955
- Adoun by olde Ianuarie she lay,
- [447: T. 9831-9866.]
- That sleep, til that the coughe hath him awaked;
- Anon he preyde hir strepen hir al naked;
- He wolde of hir, he seyde, han som plesaunce,
- And seyde, hir clothes dide him encombraunce, 1960
- And she obeyeth, be hir lief or looth.
- But lest that precious folk be with me wrooth,
- How that he wroghte, I dar nat to yow telle;
- Or whether hir thoughte it paradys or helle; (720)
- But here I lete hem werken in hir wyse 1965
- Til evensong rong, and that they moste aryse.
- 1957. Hn. Cm. coghe; Ln. couhe. 1962. E. ye; Cm. the; _rest_ that.
- 1964. E. wheither that; Hn. Cm. Hl. _om._ that. 1966. Cp. Ln.
- euesong.
- Were it by destinee or aventure,
- Were it by influence or by nature,
- Or constellacion, that in swich estat
- The hevene stood, that tyme fortunat 1970
- Was for to putte a bille of Venus werkes
- (For alle thing hath tyme, as seyn thise clerkes)
- To any womman, for to gete hir love,
- I can nat seye; but grete god above, (730)
- That knoweth that non act is causelees, 1975
- He deme of al, for I wol holde my pees.
- But sooth is this, how that this fresshe May
- Hath take swich impression that day,
- For pitee of this syke Damian,
- That from hir herte she ne dryve can 1980
- The remembraunce for to doon him ese.
- 'Certeyn,' thoghte she, 'whom that this thing displese,
- I rekke noght, for here I him assure,
- To love him best of any creature, (740)
- Though he na-more hadde than his sherte.' 1985
- Lo, pitee renneth sone in gentil herte.
- 1967. _All but_ Ln. Hl. _ins._ by _after_ or. 1969, 70. E. estaat,
- fortunaat. 1971. Hn. Hl. As; E. Cp. Pt. Ln. Was.
- Heer may ye se how excellent franchyse
- In wommen is, whan they hem narwe avyse.
- Som tyrant is, as ther be many oon,
- That hath an herte as hard as any stoon, 1990
- Which wolde han lete him sterven in the place
- Wel rather than han graunted him hir grace;
- [448: T. 9867-9902.]
- And hem reioysen in hir cruel pryde,
- And rekke nat to been an homicyde. (750)
- 1991. E. Cm. lat. E. storuen. 1993. E. crueel.
- This gentil May, fulfilled of pitee, 1995
- Right of hir hande a lettre made she,
- In which she graunteth him hir verray grace;
- Ther lakketh noght but only day and place,
- Wher that she mighte un-to his lust suffyse:
- For it shal be right as he wol devyse. 2000
- And whan she saugh hir time, up-on a day,
- To visite this Damian goth May,
- And sotilly this lettre doun she threste
- Under his pilwe, rede it if him leste. (760)
- She taketh him by the hand, and harde him twiste 2005
- So secrely, that no wight of it wiste,
- And bad him been al hool, and forth she wente
- To Ianuarie, whan that he for hir sente.
- 1996. Hn. Hl. maked; Cm. makede. 1998. Cm. Hl. but only; _rest_ only
- but. 2002. _All_ visite; _perhaps read_ visiten. 2007. she] E.
- he. 2008. hir] E. him.
- Up ryseth Damian the nexte morwe,
- Al passed was his siknesse and his sorwe. 2010
- He kembeth him, he proyneth him and pyketh,
- He dooth al that his lady lust and lyketh;
- And eek to Ianuarie he gooth as lowe
- As ever dide a dogge for the bowe. (770)
- He is so plesant un-to every man, 2015
- (For craft is al, who-so that do it can)
- That every wight is fayn to speke him good;
- And fully in his lady grace he stood.
- Thus lete I Damian aboute his nede,
- And in my tale forth I wol procede. 2020
- 2011. E. preyneth; Hn. prayneth; Hl. pruneth. 2018. Hn. Cm. ladyes;
- _rest_ lady.
- Somme clerkes holden that felicitee
- Stant in delyt, and therefor certeyn he,
- This noble Ianuarie, with al his might,
- In honest wyse, as longeth to a knight, (780)
- Shoop him to live ful deliciously. 2025
- His housinge, his array, as honestly
- To his degree was maked as a kinges.
- Amonges othere of his honest thinges,
- [449: T. 9903-9938.]
- He made a gardin, walled al with stoon;
- So fair a gardin woot I nowher noon. 2030
- For out of doute, I verraily suppose,
- That he that wroot the Romance of the Rose
- Ne coude of it the beautee wel devyse;
- Ne Priapus ne mighte nat suffyse, (790)
- Though he be god of gardins, for to telle 2035
- The beautee of the gardin and the welle,
- That stood under a laurer alwey grene.
- Ful ofte tyme he, Pluto, and his quene,
- Proserpina, and al hir fayërye
- Disporten hem and maken melodye
- Aboute that welle, and daunced, as men tolde.
- 2024, 2028. E. Hn. Cm. Cp. honeste. 2032. Cm. Hl. romanus; Ln.
- romans. 2039. Cp. Hl. fayerie; _rest_ fairye.
- This noble knight, this Ianuarie the olde,
- Swich deintee hath in it to walke and pleye,
- That he wol no wight suffren bere the keye (800)
- Save he him-self; for of the smale wiket 2045
- He bar alwey of silver a smal cliket,
- With which, whan that him leste, he it unshette.
- And whan he wolde paye his wyf hir dette
- In somer seson, thider wolde he go,
- And May his wyf, and no wight but they two;
- And thinges whiche that were nat doon a-bedde,
- He in the gardin parfourned hem and spedde.
- And in this wyse, many a mery day,
- Lived this Ianuarie and fresshe May. (810)
- But worldly Ioye may nat alwey dure 2055
- To Ianuarie, ne to no creature.
- 2046. E. baar. Hl. smal; _rest om._ 2053. E. Hn. murye.
- O sodeyn hap, o thou fortune instable, AUCTOR.
- Lyk to the scorpion so deceivable,
- That flaterest with thyn heed when thou wolt stinge;
- Thy tayl is deeth, thurgh thyn enveniminge. 2060
- O brotil Ioye! o swete venim queynte!
- O monstre, that so subtilly canst peynte
- Thy yiftes, under hewe of stedfastnesse,
- That thou deceyvest bothe more and lesse! (820)
- [450: T. 9939-9974.]
- Why hastow Ianuarie thus deceyved, 2065
- That haddest him for thy ful frend receyved?
- And now thou hast biraft him bothe hise yën,
- For sorwe of which desyreth he to dyen.
- 2059. E. synge; _rest_ stinge. 2061. venim] Cp. Pt. Ln. poyson.
- 2063. E. stidefastnesse. 2067. Hl. yen; Cm. Iyen; _rest_ eyen.
- Allas! this noble Ianuarie free,
- Amidde his lust and his prosperitee, 2070
- Is woxen blind, and that al sodeynly.
- He wepeth and he wayleth pitously;
- And ther-with-al the fyr of Ialousye,
- Lest that his wyf sholde falle in som folye, (830)
- So brente his herte, that he wolde fayn 2075
- That som man bothe him and hir had slayn.
- For neither after his deeth, nor in his lyf,
- Ne wolde he that she were love ne wyf,
- But ever live as widwe in clothes blake,
- Soul as the turtle that lost hath hir make. 2080
- But atte laste, after a monthe or tweye,
- His sorwe gan aswage, sooth to seye;
- For whan he wiste it may noon other be,
- He paciently took his adversitee; (840)
- Save, out of doute, he may nat forgoon 2085
- That he nas Ialous evermore in oon;
- Which Ialousye it was so outrageous,
- That neither in halle, nin noon other hous,
- Ne in noon other place, never-the-mo,
- He nolde suffre hir for to ryde or go, 2090
- But-if that he had hand on hir alway;
- For which ful ofte wepeth fresshe May,
- That loveth Damian so benignely,
- That she mot outher dyen sodeynly, (850)
- Or elles she mot han him as hir leste; 2095
- She wayteth whan hir herte wolde breste.
- 2074. E. swich; _rest_ som (sum). 2080. Cp. Ln. Soule; Pt. Sool;
- _rest_ Soul. 2089. E. Nyn; _rest_ Ne in. 2091. E. hond (_but_ hand
- _in_ l. 2103). 2093. E. benyngnely.
- Up-on that other syde Damian
- Bicomen is the sorwefulleste man
- That ever was; for neither night ne day
- Ne mighte he speke a word to fresshe May, 2100
- [451: T. 9975-10010.]
- As to his purpos, of no swich matere,
- But-if that Ianuarie moste it here,
- That hadde an hand up-on hir evermo.
- But nathelees, by wryting to and fro (860)
- And privee signes, wiste he what she mente; 2105
- And she knew eek the fyn of his entente.
- O Ianuarie, what mighte it thee availle, AUCTOR.
- Thou mightest see as fer as shippes saille?
- For also good is blind deceyved be,
- As be deceyved whan a man may se. 2110
- Lo, Argus, which that hadde an hondred yën,
- For al that ever he coude poure or pryen,
- Yet was he blent; and, god wot, so ben mo,
- That wenen wisly that it be nat so. (870)
- Passe over is an ese, I sey na-more. 2115
- 2108. E. Ln. Thogh thou; Hl. If thou; _rest_ Thou. 2109. Cm. Ln.
- also; _rest_ as. 2110. _All_ As to be. 2111. Ln. yene; _rest_ eyen.
- This fresshe May, that I spak of so yore,
- In warme wex hath emprented the cliket,
- That Ianuarie bar of the smale wiket,
- By which in-to his gardin ofte he wente.
- And Damian, that knew al hir entente, 2120
- The cliket countrefeted prively;
- Ther nis na-more to seye, but hastily
- Som wonder by this cliket shal bityde,
- Which ye shul heren, if ye wole abyde. (880)
- 2117. Pt. Ln. warme; _rest_ warm. _Perhaps read_ emprented hath.
- 2118. Pt. smal; _rest_ smale.
- O noble Ovyde, ful sooth seystou, god woot! AUCTOR.
- What sleighte is it, thogh it be long and hoot, 2126
- That he nil finde it out in som manere?
- By Piramus and Tesbee may men lere;
- Thogh they were kept ful longe streite overal,
- They been accorded, rouninge thurgh a wal, 2130
- Ther no wight coude han founde out swich a sleighte.
- But now to purpos; er that dayes eighte
- Were passed, er the monthe of Iuil, bifil
- That Ianuarie hath caught so greet a wil, (890)
- Thurgh egging of his wyf, him for to pleye 2135
- In his gardin, and no wight but they tweye,
- [452: T. 10011-10046.]
- That in a morwe un-to this May seith he:
- 'Rys up, my wyf, my love, my lady free;
- The turtles vois is herd, my douve swete;
- The winter is goon, with alle his reynes wete; 2140
- Com forth now, with thyn eyën columbyn!
- How fairer been thy brestes than is wyn!
- The gardin is enclosed al aboute;
- Com forth, my whyte spouse; out of doute, (900)
- Thou hast me wounded in myn herte, o wyf! 2145
- No spot of thee ne knew I al my lyf.
- Com forth, and lat us taken our disport;
- I chees thee for my wyf and my confort.'
- 2133, 4. Cm. befel, wyl; _rest_ bifille, wille; _see note._ 2139. E.
- turtle. 2140. Cp. Pt. Ln. alle (al); _rest om._ 2146. Cp. Pt. Ln.
- in (_for_ of). 2147. E. som; _rest_ our (oure).
- Swiche olde lewed wordes used he;
- On Damian a signe made she, 2150
- That he sholde go biforen with his cliket:
- This Damian thanne hath opened the wiket,
- And in he stirte, and that in swich manere,
- That no wight mighte it see neither y-here; (910)
- And stille he sit under a bush anoon. 2155
- 2151. Ln. beforne; _rest_ biforn; _read_ biforen.
- This Ianuarie, as blind as is a stoon,
- With Maius in his hand, and no wight mo,
- In-to his fresshe gardin is ago,
- And clapte to the wiket sodeynly.
- 'Now, wyf,' quod he, 'heer nis but thou and I, 2160
- That art the creature that I best love.
- For, by that lord that sit in heven above,
- Lever ich hadde dyen on a knyf,
- Than thee offende, trewe dere wyf! (920)
- For goddes sake, thenk how I thee chees, 2165
- Noght for no coveityse, doutelees,
- But only for the love I had to thee.
- And though that I be old, and may nat see,
- Beth to me trewe, and I shal telle yow why.
- Three thinges, certes, shul ye winne ther-by; 2170
- First, love of Crist, and to your-self honour,
- And al myn heritage, toun and tour;
- [453: T. 10047-10082.]
- I yeve it yow, maketh chartres as yow leste;
- This shal be doon to-morwe er sonne reste. (930)
- So wisly god my soule bringe in blisse, 2175
- I prey yow first, in covenant ye me kisse.
- And thogh that I be Ialous, wyte me noght.
- Ye been so depe enprented in my thoght,
- That, whan that I considere your beautee,
- And ther-with-al the unlykly elde of me, 2180
- I may nat, certes, thogh I sholde dye,
- Forbere to been out of your companye
- For verray love; this is with-outen doute.
- Now kis me, wyf, and lat us rome aboute.' (940)
- 2163. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. to dyen; Cp. Pt. Ln. _om._ to. 2170. E. Hn.
- shal; Pt. Cm. Hl. shul. 2177, 2181. E. though. 2179. E. Pt. _om._
- that.
- This fresshe May, whan she thise wordes herde, 2185
- Benignely to Ianuarie answerde,
- But first and forward she bigan to wepe,
- 'I have,' quod she, 'a soule for to kepe
- As wel as ye, and also myn honour,
- And of my wyfhod thilke tendre flour, 2190
- Which that I have assured in your hond,
- Whan that the preest to yow my body bond;
- Wherfore I wole answere in this manere
- By the leve of yow, my lord so dere: (950)
- I prey to god, that never dawe the day 2195
- That I ne sterve, as foule as womman may,
- If ever I do un-to my kin that shame,
- Or elles I empeyre so my name,
- That I be fals; and if I do that lakke,
- Do strepe me and put me in a sakke, 2200
- And in the nexte river do me drenche.
- I am a gentil womman and no wenche.
- Why speke ye thus? but men ben ever untrewe,
- And wommen have repreve of yow ay newe. (960)
- Ye han non other contenance, I leve, 2205
- But speke to us of untrust and repreve.'
- 2186. E. Benyngnely. 2194. Cp. Pt. Ln. With (_for_ By). 2205. Cm.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. can (_for_ han).
- And with that word she saugh wher Damian
- Sat in the bush, and coughen she bigan,
- [454: T. 10083-10114.]
- And with hir finger signes made she,
- That Damian sholde climbe up-on a tree, 2210
- That charged was with fruit, and up he wente;
- For verraily he knew al hir entente,
- And every signe that she coude make
- Wel bet than Ianuarie, hir owene make. (970)
- For in a lettre she had told him al 2215
- Of this matere, how he werchen shal.
- And thus I lete him sitte up-on the pyrie,
- And Ianuarie and May rominge myrie.
- 2208. E. Hl. coughen; Hn. coghen; Cm. coghe. 2215. E. hadde toold.
- 2217. Pt. pirry; Hn. purye; _rest_ pyrie (pirie, pyry). 2218. Hn.
- murye; Cp. myry; Hl. mirye; Cm. Pt. Ln. merie (mery).
- Bright was the day, and blew the firmament,
- Phebus of gold his stremes doun hath sent, 2220
- To gladen every flour with his warmnesse.
- He was that tyme _in Geminis_, as I gesse,
- But litel fro his declinacioun
- Of Cancer, Iovis exaltacioun. (980)
- And so bifel, that brighte morwe-tyde, 2225
- That in that gardin, in the ferther syde,
- Pluto, that is the king of fayërye,
- And many a lady in his companye,
- Folwinge his wyf, the quene Proserpyne,
- Ech after other, right as any lyne-- 2230
- Whil that she gadered floures in the mede,
- In Claudian ye may the story rede,
- How in his grisly carte he hir fette:--
- This king of fairye thanne adoun him sette (990)
- Up-on a bench of turves, fresh and grene, 2235
- And right anon thus seyde he to his quene.
- 2220. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _put_ hath _before_ of gold; Cp. Pt. Ln. doun hath
- his stremes sent. E. Hn. Hl. ysent; _rest_ sent. 2227. Cp. Pt. Ln.
- the; _rest_ on. Cp. Hl. fayerye; _rest_ fairye. 2230. Cm. ony; E. Hl.
- a (_for_ any). Cp. Pt. Ln. _have_ Which that he rauysshed out of
- Proserpyna(!). 2232. Hl. story; _rest_ stories. 2233. E. And;
- _rest_ How. E. grisely. E. Hn. Cm. sette; _rest_ fette. 2234. Cp.
- Pt. Ln. _om._ thanne.
- 'My wyf,' quod he, 'ther may no wight sey nay;
- Thexperience so preveth every day
- The treson whiche that wommen doon to man.
- Ten hondred thousand [stories] telle I can 2240
- [455: T. 10115-10149.]
- Notable of your untrouthe and brotilnesse.
- O Salomon, wys, richest of richesse,
- Fulfild of sapience and of worldly glorie,
- Ful worthy been thy wordes to memorie (1000)
- To every wight that wit and reson can. 2245
- Thus preiseth he yet the bountee of man:
- "Amonges a thousand men yet fond I oon,
- But of wommen alle fond I noon."
- 2237. E. seye. 2239. E. tresons. 2240. _I supply_ stories. Pt.
- Ln. telle; _rest_ tellen. 2242. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. wys and; Cp. Pt. Ln.
- _om. both_ wys _and_ and. 2247, 8. E. foond.
- Thus seith the king that knoweth your wikkednesse;
- And Iesus _filius Syrak_, as I gesse, 2250
- Ne speketh of yow but selde reverence.
- A wilde fyr and corrupt pestilence
- So falle up-on your bodies yet to-night!
- Ne see ye nat this honurable knight, (1010)
- By-cause, allas! that he is blind and old, 2255
- His owene man shal make him cokewold;
- Lo heer he sit, the lechour, in the tree.
- Now wol I graunten, of my magestee,
- Un-to this olde blinde worthy knight
- That he shal have ayeyn his eyen sight, 2260
- Whan that his wyf wold doon him vileinye;
- Than shal he knowen al hir harlotrye
- Both in repreve of hir and othere mo.'
- 2262. E. Thanne.
- 'Ye shal,' quod Proserpyne, 'wol ye so; (1020)
- Now, by my modres sires soule I swere, 2265
- That I shal yeven hir suffisant answere,
- And alle wommen after, for hir sake;
- That, though they be in any gilt y-take,
- With face bold they shulle hem-self excuse,
- And bere hem doun that wolden hem accuse. 2270
- For lakke of answer, noon of hem shal dyen.
- Al hadde man seyn a thing with bothe his yën,
- Yit shul we wommen visage it hardily,
- And wepe, and swere, and chyde subtilly, (1030)
- So that ye men shul been as lewed as gees.
- [456: T. 10150-10184.]
- What rekketh me of your auctoritees?
- 2264. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. and wol (_for_ wol). 2272. Pt. Hl. yen; _rest_
- eyen (ey[gh]en). 2273. Cp. Pt. Ln. so (_for_ wommen). 2274. E.
- visage it (_for_ chyde, _by mistake_).
- I woot wel that this Iew, this Salomon,
- Fond of us wommen foles many oon.
- But though that he ne fond no good womman,
- Yet hath ther founde many another man 2280
- Wommen ful trewe, ful gode, and vertuous.
- Witnesse on hem that dwelle in Cristes hous,
- With martirdom they preved hir constance.
- The Romayn gestes maken remembrance (1040)
- Of many a verray trewe wyf also. 2285
- But sire, ne be nat wrooth, al-be-it so,
- Though that he seyde he fond no good womman,
- I prey yow take the sentence of the man;
- He mente thus, that in sovereyn bontee
- Nis noon but god, that sit in Trinitee. 2290
- 2278. E. Foond; fooles. 2279. E. foond. 2284. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. eek
- maken; _rest om._ eek. 2287. E. foond. 2290. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. but
- neither he ne she (_for_ that ... Trinitee).
- Ey! for verray god, that nis but oon,
- What make ye so muche of Salomon?
- What though he made a temple, goddes hous?
- What though he were riche and glorious? (1050)
- So made he eek a temple of false goddis, 2295
- How mighte he do a thing that more forbode is?
- Pardee, as faire as ye his name emplastre,
- He was a lechour and an ydolastre;
- And in his elde he verray god forsook.
- And if that god ne hadde, as seith the book, 2300
- Y-spared him for his fadres sake, he sholde
- Have lost his regne rather than he wolde.
- I sette noght of al the vileinye,
- That ye of wommen wryte, a boterflye. (1060)
- I am a womman, nedes moot I speke, 2305
- Or elles swelle til myn herte breke.
- For sithen he seyde that we ben Iangleresses,
- As ever hool I mote brouke my tresses,
- I shal nat spare, for no curteisye,
- To speke him harm that wolde us vileinye.' 2310
- [457: T. 10185-10221.]
- 'Dame,' quod this Pluto, 'be no lenger wrooth;
- I yeve it up; but sith I swoor myn ooth
- That I wolde graunten him his sighte ageyn,
- My word shal stonde, I warne yow, certeyn. (1070)
- I am a king, it sit me noght to lye.' 2315
- 2291. _So all_. 2298. E. lecchour. 2300. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. _om._
- that. 2301. E. Cm. _om._ him. 2303. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. sette right
- noght.
- 'And I,' quod she, 'a queene of fayërye.
- Hir answere shal she have, I undertake;
- Lat us na-more wordes heer-of make.
- For sothe, I wol no lenger yow contrarie.'
- 2316. Cp. Hl. fayerye; _rest_ fairye (fayre).
- Now lat us turne agayn to Ianuarie, 2320
- That in the gardin with his faire May
- Singeth, ful merier than the papeiay,
- 'Yow love I best, and shal, and other noon.'
- So longe aboute the aleyes is he goon, (1080)
- Til he was come agaynes thilke pyrie, 2325
- Wher-as this Damian sitteth fill myrie
- An heigh, among the fresshe leves grene.
- 2322. E. Hn. Cm. murier. 2325. Hl. agaynes; _rest_ agayns. 2327.
- Pt. Ln. Hl. On (_for_ An).
- This fresshe May, that is so bright and shene,
- Gan for to syke, and seyde, 'allas, my syde!
- Now sir,' quod she, 'for aught that may bityde, 2330
- I moste han of the peres that I see,
- Or I mot dye, so sore longeth me
- To eten of the smale peres grene.
- Help, for hir love that is of hevene quene! (1090)
- I telle yow wel, a womman in my plyt 2335
- May han to fruit so greet an appetyt,
- That she may dyen, but she of it have.'
- 'Allas!' quod he, 'that I ne had heer a knave
- That coude climbe; allas! allas!' quod he,
- 'That I am blind.' 'Ye, sir, no fors,' quod she: 2340
- 'But wolde ye vouche-sauf, for goddes sake,
- The pyrie inwith your armes for to take,
- (For wel I woot that ye mistruste me)
- Thanne sholde I climbe wel y-nogh,' quod she, (1100)
- 'So I my foot mighte sette upon your bak.' 2345
- 'Certes,' quod he, 'ther-on shal be no lak,
- Mighte I yow helpen with myn herte blood.'
- [458: T. 10222-10257.]
- He stoupeth doun, and on his bak she stood,
- And caughte hir by a twiste, and up she gooth.
- Ladies, I prey yow that ye be nat wrooth; 2350
- I can nat glose, I am a rude man.
- And sodeynly anon this Damian
- Gan pullen up the smok, and in he throng.
- And whan that Pluto saugh this grete wrong, (1110)
- To Ianuarie he gaf agayn his sighte, 2355
- And made him see, as wel as ever he mighte.
- And whan that he hadde caught his sighte agayn,
- Ne was ther never man of thing so fayn.
- But on his wyf his thoght was evermo;
- Up to the tree he caste his eyen two, 2360
- And saugh that Damian his wyf had dressed
- In swich manere, it may nat ben expressed
- But if I wolde speke uncurteisly:
- And up he yaf a roring and a cry (1120)
- As doth the moder whan the child shal dye: 2365
- 'Out! help! allas! harrow!' he gan to crye,
- 'O stronge lady store, what dostow?'
- 2355. Pt. Ln. Hl. his sight ageyn (_and miss_ ll. 2356, 2357, _by
- confusion with_ agayn _in_ 2357). 2367. E. Hn. Cm. stoore; Pt. stoor;
- Cp. Ln. Hl. stoure.
- And she answerde, 'sir, what eyleth yow?
- Have pacience, and reson in your minde,
- I have yow holpe on bothe your eyen blinde. 2370
- Up peril of my soule, I shal nat lyen,
- As me was taught, to hele with your yën,
- Was no-thing bet to make yow to see
- Than strugle with a man up-on a tree. (1130)
- God woot, I dide it in ful good entente.' 2375
- 2372. Ln. Hl. yen; _rest_ eyen (ey[gh]en).
- 'Strugle!' quod he, 'ye, algate in it wente!
- God yeve yow bothe on shames deeth to dyen!
- He swyved thee, I saugh it with myne yën,
- And elles be I hanged by the hals!'
- 2378. Ln. Hl. yen; _rest_ eyen (ey[gh]en).
- 'Thanne is,' quod she, 'my medicyne al fals; 2380
- For certeinly, if that ye mighte see,
- Ye wolde nat seyn thise wordes un-to me;
- Ye han som glimsing and no parfit sighte.'
- 2380. E. Pt. Ln. Hl. _om._ al.
- [459: T. 10258-10292.]
- 'I see,' quod he, 'as wel as ever I mighte, (1140)
- Thonked be god! with bothe myne eyen two, 2385
- And by my trouthe, me thoughte he dide thee so.'
- 'Ye maze, maze, gode sire,' quod she,
- 'This thank have I for I have maad yow see;
- Allas!' quod she, 'that ever I was so kinde!'
- 'Now, dame,' quod he, 'lat al passe out of minde. 2390
- Com doun, my lief, and if I have missayd,
- God help me so, as I am yvel apayd.
- But, by my fader soule, I wende han seyn,
- How that this Damian had by thee leyn, (1150)
- And that thy smok had leyn up-on his brest.' 2395
- 2394, 5. E. hadde.
- 'Ye, sire,' quod she, 'ye may wene as yow lest;
- But, sire, a man that waketh out of his sleep,
- He may nat sodeynly wel taken keep
- Up-on a thing, ne seen it parfitly,
- Til that he be adawed verraily; 2400
- Right so a man, that longe hath blind y-be,
- Ne may nat sodeynly so wel y-see,
- First whan his sighte is newe come ageyn,
- As he that hath a day or two y-seyn. (1160)
- Til that your sighte y-satled be a whyle, 2405
- Ther may ful many a sighte yow bigyle.
- Beth war, I prey yow; for, by hevene king,
- Ful many a man weneth to seen a thing,
- And it is al another than it semeth.
- He that misconceyveth, he misdemeth.' 2410
- And with that word she leep doun fro the tree.
- 2397. Cm. Pt. _om._ his. 2405. Cp. Pt. Hl. I-stabled; Ln. stablid.
- This Ianuarie, who is glad but he?
- He kisseth hir, and clippeth hir ful ofte,
- And on hir wombe he stroketh hir ful softe, (1170)
- And to his palays hoom he hath hir lad. 2415
- Now, gode men, I pray yow to be glad.
- Thus endeth heer my tale of Ianuarie;
- God bless us and his moder Seinte Marie!
- HERE IS ENDED THE MARCHANTES TALE OF IANUARIE.
- 2416. E. _om._ to. 2418. Hn. Hl. _add_ Amen. COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn.;
- Hl. Here endith the marchauntes tale.
- [460: T. 10293-10314.]
- * * * * *
- EPILOGUE TO THE MARCHANTES TALE.
- * * * * *
- 'Ey! goddes mercy!' seyde our Hoste tho,
- 'Now swich a wyf I pray god kepe me fro! 2420
- Lo, whiche sleightes and subtilitees
- In wommen been! for ay as bisy as bees
- Ben they, us sely men for to deceyve,
- And from a sothe ever wol they weyve;
- By this Marchauntes Tale it preveth weel. 2425
- But doutelees, as trewe as any steel
- I have a wyf, though that she povre be;
- But of hir tonge a labbing shrewe is she, (10)
- And yet she hath an heep of vyces mo;
- Ther-of no fors, lat alle swiche thinges go. 2430
- But, wite ye what? in conseil be it seyd,
- Me reweth sore I am un-to hir teyd.
- For, and I sholde rekenen every vyce
- Which that she hath, y-wis, I were to nyce,
- And cause why; it sholde reported be 2435
- And told to hir of somme of this meynee;
- Of whom, it nedeth nat for to declare,
- Sin wommen connen outen swich chaffare; (20)
- And eek my wit suffyseth nat ther-to
- To tellen al; wherfor my tale is do.' 2440
- HEADING. E. The Prologe of the Squieres Tale; Hn. Here folwen the
- Wordes of the Worthy Hoost to the Frankeleyn; Pt. The prologe of the
- Fraunkeleyn. 2419. E. oure Hoost; Hl. our hoste. 2421. Hl.
- subtilitees; E. Hn. subtiltees. 2424. E. Hn. sooth; Pt. Hl. soth
- (_not_ sothe); _see_ G. 167, 662.
- [461: T. 10315-10334.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP F.
- THE SQUIERES TALE.
- * * * * *
- [THE SQUIRE'S PROLOGUE.]
- 'Squier, com neer, if it your wille be,
- And sey somwhat of love; for, certes, ye
- Connen ther-on as muche as any man.'
- 'Nay, sir,' quod he, 'but I wol seye as I can
- With hertly wille; for I wol nat rebelle 5
- Agayn your lust; a tale wol I telle.
- Have me excused if I speke amis,
- My wil is good; and lo, my tale is this.
- HERE BIGINNETH THE SQUIERES TALE.
- At Sarray, in the land of Tartarye, (1)
- Ther dwelte a king, that werreyed Russye, 10
- Thurgh which ther deyde many a doughty man.
- This noble king was cleped Cambinskan,
- Which in his tyme was of so greet renoun
- That ther nas no-wher in no regioun
- So excellent a lord in alle thing; 15
- Him lakked noght that longeth to a king.
- As of the secte of which that he was born
- He kepte his lay, to which that he was sworn; (10)
- And ther-to be was hardy, wys, and riche,
- Pitous and Iust, and ever-more y-liche 20
- [462: T. 10335-10371.]
- Sooth of his word, benigne and honurable,
- Of his corage as any centre stable;
- Yong, fresh, and strong, in armes desirous
- As any bacheler of al his hous.
- A fair persone he was and fortunat, 25
- And kepte alwey so wel royal estat,
- That ther was nowher swich another man.
- This noble king, this Tartre Cambinskan (20)
- Hadde two sones on Elpheta his wyf,
- Of whiche the eldeste highte Algarsyf, 30
- That other sone was cleped Cambalo.
- A doghter hadde this worthy king also,
- That yongest was, and highte Canacee.
- But for to telle yow al hir beautee,
- It lyth nat in my tonge, nin my conning; 35
- I dar nat undertake so heigh a thing.
- Myn English eek is insufficient;
- It moste been a rethor excellent, (30)
- That coude his colours longing for that art,
- If he sholde hir discryven every part. 40
- I am non swich, I moot speke as I can.
- HEADING (_after_ l. 8). _So_ E. Hn. Pt. Hl. 20. Hn. Pietous and Iust
- and euere moore yliche; E. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. And pitous and Iust alwey
- yliche (_with first syllable deficient_). 23. and strong] E. strong
- and. 35. nin] Cp. Pt. Ln. ne in; Hl. ne. 38. E. I moste,
- _miswritten_; Hl. He moste; _rest_ It moste.
- And so bifel that, whan this Cambinskan
- Hath twenty winter born his diademe,
- As he was wont fro yeer to yeer, I deme,
- He leet the feste of his nativitee 45
- Don cryen thurghout Sarray his citee,
- The last Idus of March, after the yeer.
- Phebus the sonne ful Iory was and cleer; (40)
- For he was neigh his exaltacioun
- In Martes face, and in his mansioun 50
- In Aries, the colerik hote signe.
- Ful lusty was the weder and benigne,
- For which the foules, agayn the sonne shene,
- What for the seson and the yonge grene,
- Ful loude songen hir affecciouns; 55
- Him semed han geten hem protecciouns
- Agayn the swerd of winter kene and cold.
- 46. Hn. thurghout; _rest_ thurgh. 53. E. Hn. foweles.
- [463: T. 10372-10408.]
- This Cambinskan, of which I have yow told, (50)
- In royal vestiment sit on his deys,
- With diademe, ful heighe in his paleys, 60
- And halt his feste, so solempne and so riche
- That in this world ne was ther noon it liche.
- Of which if I shal tellen al tharray,
- Than wolde it occupye a someres day;
- And eek it nedeth nat for to devyse 65
- At every cours the ordre of hir servyse.
- I wol nat tellen of hir strange sewes,
- Ne of hir swannes, ne of hir heronsewes. (60)
- Eek in that lond, as tellen knightes olde,
- Ther is som mete that is ful deyntee holde, 70
- That in this lond men recche of it but smal;
- Ther nis no man that may reporten al.
- I wol nat tarien yow, for it is pryme,
- And for it is no fruit but los of tyme;
- Un-to my firste I wol have my recours. 75
- 62. E. Hl. _om._ ne. 68. E. nor; _rest_ ne.
- And so bifel that, after the thridde cours,
- Whyl that this king sit thus in his nobleye,
- Herkninge his minstralles hir thinges pleye (70)
- Biforn him at the bord deliciously,
- In at the halle-dore al sodeynly 80
- Ther cam a knight up-on a stede of bras,
- And in his hand a brood mirour of glas.
- Upon his thombe he hadde of gold a ring,
- And by his syde a naked swerd hanging;
- And up he rydeth to the heighe bord. 85
- In al the halle ne was ther spoke a word
- For merveille of this knight; him to biholde
- Ful bisily ther wayten yonge and olde. (80)
- 78. E. Hn. mynstrals. 86. E. spoken; Cm. spokyn; _rest_ spoke.
- This strange knight, that cam thus sodeynly,
- Al armed save his heed ful richely, 90
- Saluëth king and queen, and lordes alle,
- By ordre, as they seten in the halle,
- With so heigh reverence and obeisaunce
- As wel in speche as in contenaunce,
- [464: T. 10409-10444.]
- That Gawain, with his olde curteisye, 95
- Though he were come ageyn out of Fairye,
- Ne coude him nat amende with a word.
- And after this, biforn the heighe bord, (90)
- He with a manly voys seith his message,
- After the forme used in his langage, 100
- With-outen vyce of sillable or of lettre;
- And, for his tale sholde seme the bettre,
- Accordant to his wordes was his chere,
- As techeth art of speche hem that it lere;
- Al-be-it that I can nat soune his style, 105
- Ne can nat climben over so heigh a style,
- Yet seye I this, as to commune entente,
- Thus muche amounteth al that ever he mente, (100)
- If it so be that I have it in minde.
- 91. E. Saleweth; Hn. Cm. Salueth; _rest_ salued. 96. E. Cm. comen.
- 105. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. it; E. Hn. Cm. _omit_.
- He seyde, 'the king of Arabie and of Inde, 110
- My lige lord, on this solempne day
- Saluëth yow as he best can and may,
- And sendeth yow, in honour of your feste,
- By me, that am al redy at your heste,
- This stede of bras, that esily and wel 115
- Can, in the space of o day naturel,
- This is to seyn, in foure and twenty houres,
- Wher-so yow list, in droghte or elles shoures, (110)
- Beren your body in-to every place
- To which your herte wilneth for to pace 120
- With-outen wem of yow, thurgh foul or fair;
- Or, if yow list to fleen as hye in the air
- As doth an egle, whan him list to sore,
- This same stede shal bere yow ever-more
- With-outen harm, til ye be ther yow leste, 125
- Though that ye slepen on his bak or reste;
- And turne ayeyn, with wrything of a pin.
- He that it wroghte coude ful many a gin; (120)
- He wayted many a constellacioun
- Er he had doon this operacioun; 130
- [465: T. 10445-10480.]
- And knew ful many a seel and many a bond.
- 110. E. Hn. Arabe. 113, 114. E. feeste, heeste. 115. E. Hn. weel.
- 116. E. natureel. 123. E. whan þat; _rest omit_ þat.
- This mirour eek, that I have in myn hond,
- Hath swich a might, that men may in it see
- Whan ther shal fallen any adversitee
- Un-to your regne or to your-self also; 135
- And openly who is your freend or foo.
- And over al this, if any lady bright
- Hath set hir herte on any maner wight, (130)
- If he be fals, she shal his treson see,
- His newe love and al his subtiltee 140
- So openly, that ther shal no-thing hyde.
- Wherfor, ageyn this lusty someres tyde,
- This mirour and this ring, that ye may see,
- He hath sent to my lady Canacee,
- Your excellente doghter that is here. 145
- 138. E. Pt. in; _rest_ on. 144. E. vn-to; Cm. on-to; _rest_ to.
- The vertu of the ring, if ye wol here,
- Is this; that, if hir lust it for to were
- Up-on hir thombe, or in hir purs it bere, (140)
- Ther is no foul that fleeth under the hevene
- That she ne shal wel understonde his stevene, 150
- And knowe his mening openly and pleyn,
- And answere him in his langage ageyn.
- And every gras that groweth up-on rote
- She shal eek knowe, and whom it wol do bote,
- Al be his woundes never so depe and wyde. 155
- This naked swerd, that hangeth by my syde,
- Swich vertu hath, that what man so ye smyte,
- Thurgh-out his armure it wol kerve and byte, (150)
- Were it as thikke as is a branched ook;
- And what man that is wounded with the strook 160
- Shal never be hool til that yow list, of grace,
- To stroke him with the platte in thilke place
- Ther he is hurt: this is as muche to seyn,
- Ye mote with the platte swerd ageyn
- Stroke him in the wounde, and it wol close; 165
- This is a verray sooth, with-outen glose,
- [466: T. 10481-10516.]
- It failleth nat whyl it is in your hold.'
- 158. E. wol hym; _rest omit_ hym. 160. E. a; Cm. that; _rest_ the.
- 162. Hn. platte; _rest_ plat (see 164). E. Cm. that; _rest_ thilke.
- 164. E. Cm. Pt. plat; _rest_ platte. 165. E. Cm. Strike; _rest_
- Stroke.
- And whan this knight hath thus his tale told, (160)
- He rydeth out of halle, and doun he lighte.
- His stede, which that shoon as sonne brighte, 170
- Stant in the court, as stille as any stoon.
- This knight is to his chambre lad anon,
- And is unarmed and to mete y-set.
- 171. Hl. as stille; _rest om._ as. 173. E. vn-to; _the rest_ to.
- The presentes ben ful royally y-fet,
- This is to seyn, the swerd and the mirour, 175
- And born anon in-to the heighe tour
- With certeine officers ordeyned therfore;
- And un-to Canacee this ring was bore (170)
- Solempnely, ther she sit at the table.
- But sikerly, with-outen any fable, 180
- The hors of bras, that may nat be remewed,
- It stant as it were to the ground y-glewed.
- Ther may no man out of the place it dryve
- For noon engyn of windas or polyve;
- And cause why, for they can nat the craft. 185
- And therefore in the place they han it laft
- Til that the knight hath taught hem the manere
- To voyden him, as ye shal after here. (180)
- 178. E. Cm. this; _rest_ the. 184. E. ne; _rest_ or.
- Greet was the prees, that swarmeth to and fro,
- To gauren on this hors that stondeth so; 190
- For it so heigh was, and so brood and long,
- So wel proporcioned for to ben strong,
- Right as it were a stede of Lumbardye;
- Ther-with so horsly, and so quik of yë
- As it a gentil Poileys courser were. 195
- For certes, fro his tayl un-to his ere,
- Nature ne art ne coude him nat amende
- In no degree, as al the peple wende. (190)
- But evermore hir moste wonder was,
- How that it coude goon, and was of bras; 200
- It was of Fairye, as the peple semed.
- Diverse folk diversely they demed;
- [467: T. 10517-10552.]
- As many hedes, as many wittes ther been.
- They murmureden as dooth a swarm of been,
- And maden skiles after hir fantasyes, 205
- Rehersinge of thise olde poetryes,
- And seyden, it was lyk the Pegasee,
- The hors that hadde winges for to flee; (200)
- Or elles it was the Grekes hors Synon,
- That broghte Troye to destruccion, 210
- As men may in thise olde gestes rede,
- 'Myn herte,' quod oon, 'is evermore in drede;
- I trowe som men of armes been ther-inne,
- That shapen hem this citee for to winne.
- It were right good that al swich thing were knowe.' 215
- Another rowned to his felawe lowe,
- And seyde, 'he lyeth, it is rather lyk
- An apparence y-maad by som magyk, (210)
- As Iogelours pleyen at thise festes grete.'
- Of sondry doutes thus they Iangle and trete, 220
- As lewed peple demeth comunly
- Of thinges that ben maad more subtilly
- Than they can in her lewednes comprehende;
- They demen gladly to the badder ende.
- 189. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. swarmed. 195. E. Poilleys. 200. E. go. 201.
- E. Hn. a; Cm. as; _rest_ of. E. Cm. al the; _rest omit_ al. 202.
- they] Hn. Cp. Pt. han; Ln. haue. 203. E. heddes; Hn. heuedes; Cp.
- heedes; _rest_ hedes (hedis). Hl. _om._ ther. 206. thise] Cp. Pt.
- Ln. Hl. the. 207. E. that it; _rest omit_ that. 211. Hl. may; _rest
- omit_. 217. E. Cm. it; _rest_ for it. 223. E. lewednesse; Hl.
- lewednes.
- And somme of hem wondred on the mirour, 225
- That born was up in-to the maister-tour,
- How men mighte in it swiche thinges see.
- Another answerde, and seyde it mighte wel be (220)
- Naturelly, by composiciouns
- Of angles and of slye reflexiouns, 230
- And seyden, that in Rome was swich oon.
- They speken of Alocen and Vitulon,
- And Aristotle, that writen in hir lyves
- Of queynte mirours and of prospectyves,
- As knowen they that han hir bokes herd. 235
- 226. E. hye; Cm. hyghe; _rest_ maister.
- And othere folk han wondred on the swerd
- That wolde percen thurgh-out every-thing;
- And fille in speche of Thelophus the king, (230)
- [468: T. 10553-10587.]
- And of Achilles with his queynte spere,
- For he coude with it bothe hele and dere, 240
- Right in swich wyse as men may with the swerd
- Of which right now ye han your-selven herd.
- They speken of sondry harding of metal,
- And speke of medicynes ther-with-al,
- And how, and whanne, it sholde y-harded be; 245
- Which is unknowe algates unto me.
- 239. E. Cm. with; _rest_ for.
- Tho speke they of Canaceës ring,
- And seyden alle, that swich a wonder thing (240)
- Of craft of ringes herde they never non,
- Save that he, Moyses, and king Salomon 250
- Hadde a name of konning in swich art.
- Thus seyn the peple, and drawen hem apart.
- But nathelees, somme seyden that it was
- Wonder to maken of fern-asshen glas,
- And yet nis glas nat lyk asshen of fern; 255
- But for they han y-knowen it so fern,
- Therfore cesseth her Iangling and her wonder.
- As sore wondren somme on cause of thonder, (250)
- On ebbe, on flood, on gossomer, and on mist,
- And alle thing, til that the cause is wist. 260
- Thus Iangle they and demen and devyse,
- Til that the king gan fro the bord aryse.
- 251. _All_ Hadde (Had). 256. Hl. i-knowen; _rest_ knowen. 260. E.
- Hl. on alle; _rest om._ on. 262. E. Hn. the bord; _rest_ his bord.
- Phebus hath laft the angle meridional,
- And yet ascending was the beest royal,
- The gentil Leon, with his Aldiran, 265
- Whan that this Tartre king, this Cambynskan,
- Roos fro his bord, ther that he sat ful hye.
- Toforn him gooth the loude minstralcye, (260)
- Til he cam to his chambre of parements,
- Ther as they sownen diverse instruments, 270
- That it is lyk an heven for to here.
- Now dauncen lusty Venus children dere,
- For in the Fish hir lady sat ful hye,
- [469: T. 10588-10623.]
- And loketh on hem with a freendly yë.
- 265. Hn. Aldiran; Hl. adryan; _rest_ Aldrian. 266. Hl. _repeats_
- this; _rest omit 2nd_ this. 269, 270. E. parementz, Instrumentz.
- 271. Hl. Ln. heuen; _rest_ heuene.
- This noble king is set up in his trone. 275
- This strange knight is fet to him ful sone,
- And on the daunce he gooth with Canacee.
- Heer is the revel and the Iolitee (270)
- That is nat able a dul man to devyse.
- He moste han knowen love and his servyse, 280
- And been a festlich man as fresh as May,
- That sholde yow devysen swich array.
- 275. E. Cm. vp in; _rest_ vp on.
- Who coude telle yow the forme of daunces,
- So uncouthe and so fresshe contenaunces,
- Swich subtil loking and dissimulinges 285
- For drede of Ialouse mennes aperceyvinges?
- No man but Launcelot, and he is deed.
- Therefor I passe of al this lustiheed; (280)
- I seye na-more, but in this Iolynesse
- I lete hem, til men to the soper dresse. 290
- 288. E. Hn. of; _rest_ ouer.
- The styward bit the spyces for to hye,
- And eek the wyn, in al this melodye.
- The usshers and the squyers ben y-goon;
- The spyces and the wyn is come anoon.
- They ete and drinke; and whan this hadde an ende, 295
- Un-to the temple, as reson was, they wende.
- 291. Hl. the; _rest omit._
- The service doon, they soupen al by day.
- What nedeth yow rehercen hir array? (290)
- Ech man wot wel, that at a kinges feeste
- Hath plentee, to the moste and to the leeste, 300
- And deyntees mo than been in my knowing.
- At-after soper gooth this noble king
- To seen this hors of bras, with al the route
- Of lordes and of ladyes him aboute.
- 298. E. me; _the rest_ yow. 299. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. that at; E. Cm. Hl.
- _om._ at. 300. Hath (_so; for_ Is; _cf. French _il y a.) 303. E.
- Cm. the; Hl. his; _rest_ a.
- Swich wondring was ther on this hors of bras 305
- That, sin the grete sege of Troye was,
- Ther-as men wondreden on an hors also,
- Ne was ther swich a wondring as was tho. (300)
- But fynally the king axeth this knight
- [470: T. 10624-10657.]
- The vertu of this courser and the might, 310
- And preyede him to telle his governaunce.
- 311. Cm. preyede; Hn. preyed; E. preyde.
- This hors anoon bigan to trippe and daunce,
- Whan that this knight leyde hand up-on his reyne,
- And seyde, 'sir, ther is na-more to seyne,
- But, whan yow list to ryden any-where, 315
- Ye moten trille a pin, stant in his ere,
- Which I shall telle yow bitwix vs two.
- Ye mote nempne him to what place also (310)
- Or to what contree that yow list to ryde.
- And whan ye come ther as yow list abyde, 320
- Bidde him descende, and trille another pin,
- For ther-in lyth the effect of al the gin,
- And he wol doun descende and doon your wille;
- And in that place he wol abyde stille,
- Though al the world the contrarie hadde y-swore; 325
- He shal nat thennes ben y-drawe ne y-bore.
- Or, if yow liste bidde him thennes goon,
- Trille this pin, and he wol vanishe anoon (320)
- Out of the sighte of every maner wight,
- And come agayn, be it by day or night, 330
- When that yow list to clepen him ageyn
- In swich a gyse as I shal to yow seyn
- Bitwixe yow and me, and that ful sone.
- Ryde whan yow list, ther is na-more to done.'
- 317. E. Hn. Cm. yow telle; _rest_ telle yow. 322. E. ther; Cm.
- theere; _rest_ ther-inne, ther-in. 324. Cp. Hl. abyde; Hn. abiden;
- Pt. Ln. abide; E. Cm. stonde; _see l._ 320. 326. E. Hn. nor; _the
- rest_ ne. 327. Cp. liste; Ln. luste; Hl. lust to; Cm. wit; E. Hn. Pt.
- list. 330. Hl. by; _rest omit._
- Enformed whan the king was of that knight, 335
- And hath conceyved in his wit aright
- The maner and the forme of al this thing,
- Thus glad and blythe, this noble doughty king (330)
- Repeireth to his revel as biforn.
- The brydel is un-to the tour y-born, 340
- And kept among his Iewels leve and dere.
- The hors vanisshed, I noot in what manere,
- Out of hir sighte; ye gete na-more of me.
- [471: T. 10658-10692.]
- But thus I lete in lust and Iolitee
- This Cambynskan his lordes festeyinge, 345
- Til wel ny the day bigan to springe.
- 338. E. Cm. Thus; _rest_ Ful. E. Cm. _omit_ doughty. 341. E.
- Iueles.
- EXPLICIT PRIMA PARS. SEQUITUR PARS SECUNDA.
- The norice of digestioun, the slepe,
- Gan on hem winke, and bad hem taken kepe, (340)
- That muchel drink and labour wolde han reste;
- And with a galping mouth hem alle he keste, 350
- And seyde, 'it was tyme to lye adoun,
- For blood was in his dominacioun;
- Cherissheth blood, natures freend,' quod he.
- They thanken him galpinge, by two, by three,
- And every wight gan drawe him to his reste, 355
- As slepe hem bad; they toke it for the beste.
- Hir dremes shul nat been y-told for me;
- Ful were hir hedes of fumositee, (350)
- That causeth dreem, of which ther nis no charge.
- They slepen til that it was pryme large, 360
- The moste part, but it were Canacee;
- She was ful mesurable, as wommen be.
- For of hir fader hadde she take leve
- To gon to reste, sone after it was eve;
- Hir liste nat appalled for to be, 365
- Nor on the morwe unfestlich for to see;
- And slepte hir firste sleep, and thanne awook.
- For swich a Ioye she in hir herte took (360)
- Both of hir queynte ring and hir mirour,
- That twenty tyme she changed hir colour; 370
- And in hir slepe, right for impressioun
- Of hir mirour, she hadde a visioun.
- Wherfore, er that the sonne gan up glyde,
- She cleped on hir maistresse hir bisyde,
- And seyde, that hir liste for to ryse. 375
- 358. E. heddes; Cm. heedys. 366. Hn. Cm. Nor; E. Hl. Ne; Cp. Pt. Ln.
- For [_for_ Nor]. 372. E. Avisioun; _rest_ a visioun.
- Thise olde wommen that been gladly wyse,
- As is hir maistresse, answerde hir anoon,
- And seyde, 'madame, whider wil ye goon (370)
- [472: T. 10693-10728.]
- Thus erly? for the folk ben alle on reste.'
- 'I wol,' quod she, 'aryse, for me leste 380
- No lenger for to slepe, and walke aboute.'
- 377. E. _omits_ is. 379. E. Hn. on; Cm. at; _rest_ in.
- Hir maistresse clepeth wommen a gret route,
- And up they rysen, wel a ten or twelve;
- Up ryseth fresshe Canacee hir-selve,
- As rody and bright as dooth the yonge sonne, 385
- That in the Ram is four degrees up-ronne;
- Noon hyer was he, whan she redy was;
- And forth she walketh esily a pas, (380)
- Arrayed after the lusty seson sote
- Lightly, for to pleye and walke on fote; 390
- Nat but with fyve or six of hir meynee;
- And in a trench, forth in the park, goth she.
- The vapour, which that fro the erthe glood,
- Made the sonne to seme rody and brood;
- But nathelees, it was so fair a sighte 395
- That it made alle hir hertes for to lighte,
- What for the seson and the morweninge,
- And for the foules that she herde singe; (390)
- For right anon she wiste what they mente
- Right by hir song, and knew al hir entente. 400
- 382. E. Hn. an; Cm. Hl. a. 386. E. Cm. foure (_rightly_); Hn. 4;
- _rest_ ten.
- The knotte, why that every tale is told,
- If it be taried til that lust be cold
- Of hem that han it after herkned yore,
- The savour passeth ever lenger the more,
- For fulsomnesse of his prolixitee. 405
- And by the same reson thinketh me,
- I sholde to the knotte condescende,
- And maken of hir walking sone an ende. (400)
- Amidde a tree fordrye, as whyt as chalk,
- As Canacee was pleying in hir walk, 410
- Ther sat a faucon over hir heed ful hye,
- That with a pitous voys so gan to crye
- That all the wode resouned of hir cry.
- Y-beten hath she hir-self so pitously
- [473: T. 10729-10763.]
- With bothe hir winges, til the rede blood 415
- Ran endelong the tree ther-as she stood.
- And ever in oon she cryde alwey and shrighte,
- And with hir beek hir-selven so she prighte, (410)
- That ther nis tygre, ne noon so cruel beste,
- That dwelleth either in wode or in foreste 420
- That nolde han wept, if that he wepe coude,
- For sorwe of hir, she shrighte alwey so loude.
- For ther nas never yet no man on lyve--
- If that I coude a faucon wel discryve--
- That herde of swich another of fairnesse, 425
- As wel of plumage as of gentillesse
- Of shap, and al that mighte y-rekened be.
- A faucon peregryn than semed she (420)
- Of fremde land; and evermore, as she stood,
- She swowneth now and now for lakke of blood, 430
- Til wel neigh is she fallen fro the tree.
- 409. E. fordryed; Cm. fordreyed; _but_ Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. for-drye; Hl.
- for-druye. 414. E. Cm. hath; _rest_ hadde (had). 416. E. Cm. omit
- as. 419, 420. E. Hn. Pt. beest, forest; rest beste, foreste. 420.
- E. Hn. outher; rest eyther. 421. E. Pt. she; the rest he. 423. So
- Cp. Hl.; E. Hn. Cm. neuere man yet; Pt. Ln. neuere yit man.
- This faire kinges doghter, Canacee,
- That on hir finger bar the queynte ring,
- Thurgh which she understood wel every thing
- That any foul may in his ledene seyn, 435
- And coude answere him in his ledene ageyn,
- Hath understonde what this faucon seyde,
- And wel neigh for the rewthe almost she deyde. (430)
- And to the tree she gooth ful hastily,
- And on this faucon loketh pitously, 440
- And heeld hir lappe abrood, for wel she wiste
- The faucon moste fallen fro the twiste,
- When that it swowned next, for lakke of blood.
- A longe while to wayten hir she stood
- Till atte laste she spak in this manere 445
- Un-to the hauk, as ye shul after here.
- 433. E. Hn. baar. 435. E. fowel. 438. Hl. rewthe; Ln. reuthe; rest
- routhe.
- 'What is the cause, if it be for to telle,
- That ye be in this furial pyne of helle?' (440)
- Quod Canacee un-to this hauk above.
- [474: T. 10764-10798.]
- 'Is this for sorwe of deeth or los of love? 450
- For, as I trowe, thise ben causes two
- That causen moost a gentil herte wo;
- Of other harm it nedeth nat to speke.
- For ye your-self upon your-self yow wreke,
- Which proveth wel, that either love or drede 455
- Mot been encheson of your cruel dede,
- Sin that I see non other wight yow chace.
- For love of god, as dooth your-selven grace (450)
- Or what may ben your help; for west nor eest
- Ne sey I never er now no brid ne beest 460
- That ferde with him-self so pitously.
- Ye sle me with your sorwe, verraily;
- I have of yow so gret compassioun.
- For goddes love, com fro the tree adoun;
- And, as I am a kinges doghter trewe, 465
- If that I verraily the cause knewe
- Of your disese, if it lay in my might,
- I wolde amende it, er that it were night, (460)
- As wisly helpe me gret god of kinde!
- And herbes shal I right y-nowe y-finde 470
- To hele with your hurtes hastily.'
- 448. E. Hn. pyne; rest peyne. 449. E. the; rest this. 452. E.
- causeth; _rest_ causen. 455. E. Hn. outher; _rest_ either. 459,
- 460. E. Hn. Est, beest; Cp. est, best; Cm. est, beste; _rest_ este,
- beste. 463. E. passioun; _rest_ compassioun. 469. E. the grete;
- _rest omit_ the.
- Tho shrighte this faucon more pitously
- Than ever she dide, and fil to grounde anoon,
- And lyth aswowne, deed, and lyk a stoon,
- Til Canacee hath in hir lappe hir take 475
- Un-to the tyme she gan of swough awake.
- And, after that she of hir swough gan breyde,
- Right in hir haukes ledene thus she seyde:-- (470)
- 'That pitee renneth sone in gentil herte,
- Feling his similitude in peynes smerte, 480
- Is preved al-day, as men may it see,
- As wel by werk as by auctoritee;
- For gentil herte kytheth gentillesse.
- I see wel, that ye han of my distresse
- [475: T. 10799-10833.]
- Compassioun, my faire Canacee, 485
- Of verray wommanly benignitee
- That nature in your principles hath set.
- But for non hope for to fare the bet, (480)
- But for to obeye un-to your herte free,
- And for to maken other be war by me, 490
- As by the whelp chasted is the leoun,
- Right for that cause and that conclusioun,
- Whyl that I have a leyser and a space,
- Myn harm I wol confessen, er I pace.'
- And ever, whyl that oon hir sorwe tolde, 495
- That other weep, as she to water wolde,
- Til that the faucon bad hir to be stille;
- And, with a syk, right thus she seyde hir wille. (490)
- 472. Hn. Cp. Pt. yet moore; E. Cm. moore yet; Hl. Ln. more. 477. Cm.
- swow a-breyde. 481. E. Hl. _omit_ it. 484. E. Cm. _omit_ that.
- 487. E. yset; Cm. I-set; the _rest_ set, sette. 489. E. _omits_ to.
- 491. E. Hn. chasted; _rest_ chastysed; _I should propose to read_ is
- chasted; _but authority is lacking._ 492. _So_ Hl.; _rest_ and for
- that. 498. E. Hn. wille; _rest_ tille (!)
- 'Ther I was bred (allas! that harde day!)
- And fostred in a roche of marbul gray 500
- So tendrely, that nothing eyled me,
- I niste nat what was adversitee,
- Til I coude flee ful hye under the sky.
- Tho dwelte a tercelet me faste by,
- That semed welle of alle gentillesse; 505
- Al were he ful of treson and falsnesse,
- It was so wrapped under humble chere,
- And under hewe of trouthe in swich manere, (500)
- Under plesance, and under bisy peyne,
- That no wight coude han wend he coude feyne, 510
- So depe in greyn he dyed his coloures.
- Right as a serpent hit him under floures
- Til he may seen his tyme for to byte,
- Right so this god of love, this ypocryte,
- Doth so his cerimonies and obeisaunces, 515
- And kepeth in semblant alle his observances
- That sowneth in-to gentillesse of love.
- As in a toumbe is al the faire above, (510)
- And under is the corps, swich as ye woot,
- [476: T. 10834-10868.]
- Swich was this ypocryte, bothe cold and hoot, 520
- And in this wyse he served his entente,
- That (save the feend) non wiste what he mente.
- Til he so longe had wopen and compleyned,
- And many a yeer his service to me feyned,
- Til that myn herte, to pitous and to nyce, 525
- Al innocent of his crouned malice,
- For-fered of his deeth, as thoughte me,
- Upon his othes and his seuretee, (520)
- Graunted him love, on this condicioun,
- That evermore myn honour and renoun 530
- Were saved, bothe privee and apert;
- This is to seyn, that, after his desert,
- I yaf him al myn herte and al my thoght--
- God woot and he, that otherwyse noght--
- And took his herte in chaunge for myn for ay. 535
- But sooth is seyd, gon sithen many a day,
- "A trew wight and a theef thenken nat oon."
- And, whan he saugh the thing so fer y-goon, (530)
- That I had graunted him fully my love,
- In swich a gyse as I have seyd above, 540
- And yeven him my trewe herte, as free
- As he swoor he his herte yaf to me;
- Anon this tygre, ful of doublenesse,
- Fil on his knees with so devout humblesse,
- With so heigh reverence, and, as by his chere, 545
- So lyk a gentil lovere of manere,
- So ravisshed, as it semed, for the Ioye,
- That never Iason, ne Parys of Troye, (540)
- Iason? certes, ne non other man,
- Sin Lameth was, that alderfirst bigan 550
- To loven two, as writen folk biforn,
- Ne never, sin the firste man was born,
- Ne coude man, by twenty thousand part,
- Countrefete the sophimes of his art;
- [477: T. 10869-10905.]
- Ne were worthy unbokele his galoche, 555
- Ther doublenesse or feyning sholde approche,
- Ne so coude thanke a wight as he did me!
- His maner was an heven for to see (550)
- Til any womman, were she never so wys;
- So peynted he and kembde at point-devys 560
- As wel his wordes as his contenaunce.
- And I so lovede him for his obeisaunce,
- And for the trouthe I demed in his herte,
- That, if so were that any thing him smerte,
- Al were it never so lyte, and I it wiste, 565
- Me thoughte, I felte deeth myn herte twiste.
- And shortly, so ferforth this thing is went,
- That my wil was his willes instrument; (560)
- This is to seyn, my wil obeyed his wil
- In alle thing, as fer as reson fil, 570
- Keping the boundes of my worship ever.
- Ne never hadde I thing so leef, ne lever,
- As him, god woot! ne never shal na-mo.
- 499. E. Cm. That; _rest_ Ther. 508. MSS. trouthe, trowthe. 510. E.
- I ne; Cm. I not; _rest_ no wight. 511. E. Hn. Cp. Hl. colours. 512.
- hit] Hl. hut; Ln. hideth. 516. _Pronounced_ kep'th. 520. E. the;
- _the rest_ this. 526. Hl. crouned; Hn. Cp. Pt. crowned; E.
- coronned. 529. MSS. vp-on (_for_ on). 533. Cm. Ln. Hl. and al;
- _rest omit_ al. 535. E. for myn; _rest_ of myn. 537. Hl. Pt. trew;
- _rest_ trewe. 542. _All_ yaf his herte. 545. _Only_ Cm. _om._
- and. 548. E. Cm. Troilus; _rest_ Iason. 551. Cm. wrytyn; _rest_
- writen. 555. E. vnbokelen. 557. E. Cp. dide; Cm. dede; _rest_
- did. 562. E. Cm. _omit_ so. 572. E. Hn. lief; Ln. lefe; _rest_
- leef.
- This lasteth lenger than a yeer or two,
- That I supposed of him noght but good. 575
- But fynally, thus atte laste it stood,
- That fortune wolde that he moste twinne
- Out of that place which that I was inne. (570)
- Wher me was wo, that is no questioun;
- I can nat make of it discripcioun; 580
- For o thing dar I tellen boldely,
- I knowe what is the peyne of deth ther-by;
- Swich harm I felte for he ne mighte bileve.
- So on a day of me he took his leve,
- So sorwefully eek, that I wende verraily 585
- That he had felt as muche harm as I,
- Whan that I herde him speke, and saugh his hewe.
- But nathelees, I thoughte he was so trewe, (580)
- And eek that he repaire sholde ageyn
- With-inne a litel whyle, sooth to seyn; 590
- And reson wolde eek that he moste go
- [478: T. 10906-10940.]
- For his honour, as ofte it happeth so,
- That I made vertu of necessitee,
- And took it wel, sin that it moste be.
- As I best mighte, I hidde fro him my sorwe, 595
- And took him by the hond, seint Iohn to borwe,
- And seyde him thus: "lo, I am youres al;
- Beth swich as I to yow have been, and shal." (590)
- What he answerde, it nedeth noght reherce,
- Who can sey bet than he, who can do werse? 600
- Whan he hath al wel seyd, thanne hath he doon.
- "Therfor bihoveth him a ful long spoon
- That shal ete with a feend," thus herde I seye.
- So atte laste he moste forth his weye,
- And forth he fleeth, til he cam ther him leste. 605
- Whan it cam him to purpos for to reste,
- I trowe he hadde thilke text in minde,
- That "alle thing, repairing to his kinde, (600)
- Gladeth him-self"; thus seyn men, as I gesse;
- Men loven of propre kinde newfangelnesse, 610
- As briddes doon that men in cages fede.
- For though thou night and day take of hem hede,
- And strawe hir cage faire and softe as silk,
- And yeve hem sugre, hony, breed and milk,
- Yet right anon, as that his dore is uppe, 615
- He with his feet wol spurne adoun his cuppe,
- And to the wode he wol and wormes ete;
- So newefangel been they of hir mete, (610)
- And loven novelryes of propre kinde;
- No gentillesse of blood [ne] may hem binde. 620
- So ferde this tercelet, allas the day!
- Though he were gentil born, and fresh and gay,
- And goodly for to seen, and humble and free,
- He saugh up-on a tyme a kyte flee,
- And sodeynly he loved this kyte so, 625
- That al his love is clene fro me ago,
- [479: T. 10941-10974.]
- And hath his trouthe falsed in this wyse;
- Thus hath the kyte my love in hir servyse, (620)
- And I am lorn with-outen remedye!'
- And with that word this faucon gan to crye, 630
- And swowned eft in Canaceës barme.
- 585. Cp. _om._ that. 601. Hn. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. wel seyd; Cm. I-seyd;
- E. seyd. 602. E. Hn. Cm. hire; _rest_ him. 616. Hl. _has here lost
- 8 leaves, to_ 1. 1223. 619. E. nouelrie; _the rest have the plural,
- except_ Ln. none leueres, _a corruption of_ nouelries. 620. _I
- supply_ ne. 622. Hn. and fressh; _rest omit_ and. 623. E. Hn.
- goodlich; _rest_ goodly. E. Pt. _om._ and _before_ humble.
- Greet was the sorwe, for the haukes harme,
- That Canacee and alle hir wommen made;
- They niste how they mighte the faucon glade.
- But Canacee hom bereth hir in hir lappe, 635
- And softely in plastres gan hir wrappe,
- Ther as she with hir beek had hurt hir-selve.
- Now can nat Canacee but herbes delve (630)
- Out of the grounde, and make salves newe
- Of herbes precious, and fyne of hewe, 640
- To helen with this hauk; fro day to night
- She dooth hir bisinesse and al hir might.
- And by hir beddes heed she made a mewe,
- And covered it with veluëttes blewe,
- In signe of trouthe that is in wommen sene. 645
- And al with-oute, the mewe is peynted grene,
- In which were peynted alle thise false foules,
- As beth thise tidifs, tercelets, and oules, (640)
- Right for despyt were peynted hem bisyde,
- And pyes, on hem for to crye and chyde. 650
- 632, 633. E. Hn. Cp. barm, harm; _rest_ barme, harme. 639. E. Hn.
- saues; _the rest_ salues. 642. E. hire fulle; _the rest_ al hir.
- 644. Slo. velowetys. 647. E. ther were ypeynted; _rest_ were
- peynted. 648. E. Hn. tidyues; Ln. tideues; _rest_ tidifs. 649, 650.
- _Transposed by_ Tyrwhitt. 650. And] Cp. Pt. Ln. _om._
- Thus lete I Canacee hir hauk keping;
- I wol na-more as now speke of hir ring,
- Til it come eft to purpos for to seyn
- How that this faucon gat hir love ageyn
- Repentant, as the storie telleth us, 655
- By mediacioun of Cambalus,
- The kinges sone, of whiche I yow tolde.
- But hennes-forth I wol my proces holde (650)
- To speke of aventures and of batailles,
- That never yet was herd so grete mervailles. 660
- 657. Slo. Ln. whiche; _rest_ which. Hn. of which I to yow tolde.
- [480: T. 10975-10998.]
- First wol I telle yow of Cambynskan,
- That in his tyme many a citee wan;
- And after wol I speke of Algarsyf,
- How that he wan Theodora to his wyf,
- For whom ful ofte in greet peril he was, 665
- Ne hadde he ben holpen by the stede of bras;
- And after wol I speke of Cambalo,
- That faught in listes with the bretheren two (660)
- For Canacee, er that he mighte hir winne.
- And ther I lefte I wol ageyn biginne. 670
- 664. E. Theodera.
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS. INCIPIT PARS TERCIA.
- Appollo whirleth up his char so hye, [T. _om._
- Til that the god Mercurius hous the slye-- [T. _om._
- . . . . . .
- 672. _Here the_ MSS. _fail_. Ln. _has 8 spurious lines in place of_ ll.
- 671, 672.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWEN THE WORDES OF THE FRANKELIN TO THE SQUIER,
- AND THE WORDES OF THE HOST TO THE FRANKELIN.
- 'In feith, Squier, thou hast thee wel y-quit,
- And gentilly I preise wel thy wit,'
- Quod the Frankeleyn, 'considering thy youthe, 675
- So feelingly thou spekest, sir, I allow the!
- As to my doom, there is non that is here
- Of eloquence that shal be thy pere,
- If that thou live; god yeve thee good chaunce,
- And in vertu sende thee continuaunce! 680
- For of thy speche I have greet deyntee.
- I have a sone, and, by the Trinitee, (10)
- I hadde lever than twenty pound worth lond,
- Though it right now were fallen in myn hond,
- He were a man of swich discrecioun 685
- As that ye been! fy on possessioun
- [481: T. 10999-11020.]
- But-if a man be vertuous with-al.
- I have my sone snibbed, and yet shal,
- For he to vertu listeth nat entende;
- But for to pleye at dees, and to despende, 690
- And lese al that he hath, is his usage.
- And he hath lever talken with a page (20)
- Than to comune with any gentil wight
- Ther he mighte lerne gentillesse aright.'--
- HEADING. _So_ E.; Hn. The prologe of the Marchauntes tale. 676. E.
- allowethe; Hn. allowthe. 689. E. listneth; _rest_ listeth, lusteth.
- 'Straw for your gentillesse,' quod our host; 695
- 'What, frankeleyn? pardee, sir, wel thou wost
- That eche of yow mot tellen atte leste
- A tale or two, or breken his biheste.'
- 695, 696. Laud 600 _has_ host, wost; E. Hn. Pt. hoost, woost.
- 'That knowe I wel, sir,' quod the frankeleyn;
- 'I prey yow, haveth me nat in desdeyn 700
- Though to this man I speke a word or two.'
- 'Telle on thy tale with-outen wordes mo.' (30)
- 'Gladly, sir host,' quod he, 'I wol obeye
- Un-to your wil; now herkneth what I seye.
- I wol yow nat contrarien in no wyse 705
- As fer as that my wittes wol suffyse;
- I prey to god that it may plesen yow,
- Than woot I wel that it is good y-now.'
- [_The_ Frankleyn's Prologue _follows immediately; see_ p. 482.]
- [482: T. 11021-11040.]
- * * * * *
- THE FRANKLIN'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE FRANKELEYNS TALE.
- [_This_ Prologue _follows immediately after the_ Words _on_ p. 481.]
- Thise olde gentil Britons in hir dayes
- Of diverse aventures maden layes, 710
- Rymeyed in hir firste Briton tonge;
- Which layes with hir instruments they songe, (40)
- Or elles redden hem for hir plesaunce;
- And oon of hem have I in remembraunce,
- Which I shal seyn with good wil as I can. 715
- HEADING. _So_ E.; Ln. Incipit prologus de le Frankeleyne; Hn. Pt. Here
- bigynneth the Frankeleyns tale. Hl. _omits_ ll. 709-1223. 712. E.
- whiche.
- But, sires, by-cause I am a burel man,
- At my biginning first I yow biseche
- Have me excused of my rude speche;
- I lerned never rethoryk certeyn;
- Thing that I speke, it moot be bare and pleyn. 720
- I sleep never on the mount of Pernaso,
- Ne lerned Marcus Tullius Cithero. (50)
- Colours ne knowe I none, with-outen drede,
- But swiche colours as growen in the mede,
- Or elles swiche as men dye or peynte. 725
- Colours of rethoryk ben me to queynte;
- My spirit feleth noght of swich matere.
- But if yow list, my tale shul ye here.
- 722. E. Hn. Scithero. 726. Cp. Ln. ben me to; Pt. bene to me; Hn.
- they ben to; E. been to.
- [483: T. 11041-11068.]
- * * * * *
- THE FRANKELEYNS TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE FRANKELEYNS TALE.
- In Armorik, that called is Britayne,
- Ther was a knight that loved and dide his payne 730
- To serve a lady in his beste wyse;
- And many a labour, many a greet empryse
- He for his lady wroghte, er she were wonne.
- For she was oon, the faireste under sonne,
- And eek therto come of so heigh kinrede, 735
- That wel unnethes dorste this knight, for drede,
- Telle hir his wo, his peyne, and his distresse.
- But atte laste, she, for his worthinesse, (10)
- And namely for his meke obeysaunce,
- Hath swich a pitee caught of his penaunce, 740
- That prively she fil of his accord
- To take him for hir housbonde and hir lord,
- Of swich lordshipe as men han over hir wyves;
- And for to lede the more in blisse hir lyves,
- Of his free wil he swoor hir as a knight, 745
- That never in al his lyf he, day ne night,
- Ne sholde up-on him take no maistrye
- Agayn hir wil, ne kythe hir Ialousye, (20)
- But hir obeye, and folwe hir wil in al
- As any lovere to his lady shal; 750
- Save that the name of soveraynetee,
- That wolde he have for shame of his degree.
- She thanked him, and with ful greet humblesse
- She seyde, 'sire, sith of your gentillesse
- Ye profre me to have so large a reyne, 755
- Ne wolde never god bitwixe us tweyne,
- [484: T. 11069-11106.]
- As in my gilt, were outher werre or stryf.
- Sir, I wol be your humble trewe wyf, (30)
- Have heer my trouthe, til that myn herte breste.'
- Thus been they bothe in quiete and in reste. 760
- For o thing, sires, saufly dar I seye,
- That frendes everich other moot obeye,
- If they wol longe holden companye.
- Love wol nat ben constreyned by maistrye;
- Whan maistrie comth, the god of love anon 765
- Beteth hise winges, and farewel! he is gon!
- Love is a thing as any spirit free;
- Wommen of kinde desiren libertee, (40)
- And nat to ben constreyned as a thral;
- And so don men, if I soth seyen shal. 770
- Loke who that is most pacient in love,
- He is at his avantage al above.
- Pacience is an heigh vertu certeyn;
- For it venquisseth, as thise clerkes seyn,
- Thinges that rigour sholde never atteyne. 775
- For every word men may nat chyde or pleyne.
- Lerneth to suffre, or elles, so moot I goon,
- Ye shul it lerne, wher-so ye wole or noon. (50)
- For in this world, certein, ther no wight is,
- That he ne dooth or seith som-tyme amis. 780
- Ire, siknesse, or constellacioun,
- Wyn, wo, or chaunginge of complexioun
- Causeth ful ofte to doon amis or speken.
- On every wrong a man may nat be wreken;
- After the tyme, moste be temperaunce 785
- To every wight that can on governaunce.
- And therfore hath this wyse worthy knight,
- To live in ese, suffrance hir bihight, (60)
- And she to him ful wisly gan to swere
- That never sholde ther be defaute in here. 790
- 772. E. auantate (_sic_).
- Heer may men seen an humble wys accord;
- Thus hath she take hir servant and hir lord,
- Servant in love, and lord in mariage;
- Than was he bothe in lordship and servage;
- [485: T. 11107-11144.]
- Servage? nay, but in lordshipe above, 795
- Sith he hath bothe his lady and his love;
- His lady, certes, and his wyf also,
- The which that lawe of love acordeth to. (70)
- And whan he was in this prosperitee,
- Hoom with his wyf he gooth to his contree, 800
- Nat fer fro Penmark, ther his dwelling was,
- Wher-as he liveth in blisse and in solas.
- 791. E. Heere. 794. E. Thanne. 801. Ln. penmarke; _rest_ Pedmark.
- Who coude telle, but he had wedded be,
- The Ioye, the ese, and the prosperitee
- That is bitwixe an housbonde and his wyf? 805
- A yeer and more lasted this blisful lyf,
- Til that the knight of which I speke of thus,
- That of Kayrrud was cleped Arveragus, (80)
- Shoop him to goon, and dwelle a yeer or tweyne
- In Engelond, that cleped was eek Briteyne, 810
- To seke in armes worship and honour;
- For al his lust he sette in swich labour;
- And dwelled ther two yeer, the book seith thus.
- 803. Pt. Ln. had; _rest_ hadde. 810. Cm. er (_for_ eek); Pt. _om._
- Now wol I stinte of this Arveragus,
- And speken I wole of Dorigene his wyf, 815
- That loveth hir housbonde as hir hertes lyf.
- For his absence wepeth she and syketh,
- As doon thise noble wyves whan hem lyketh. (90)
- She moorneth, waketh, wayleth, fasteth, pleyneth;
- Desyr of his presence hir so distreyneth, 820
- That al this wyde world she sette at noght.
- Hir frendes, whiche that knewe hir hevy thoght,
- Conforten hir in al that ever they may;
- They prechen hir, they telle hir night and day,
- That causelees she sleeth hir-self, allas! 825
- And every confort possible in this cas
- They doon to hir with al hir bisinesse,
- Al for to make hir leve hir hevinesse. (100)
- 814. E. stynten.
- By proces, as ye knowen everichoon,
- Men may so longe graven in a stoon, 830
- Til som figure ther-inne emprented be.
- So longe han they conforted hir, til she
- [486: T. 11145-11181.]
- Receyved hath, by hope and by resoun,
- The emprenting of hir consolacioun,
- Thurgh which hir grete sorwe gan aswage; 835
- She may nat alwey duren in swich rage.
- And eek Arveragus, in al this care,
- Hath sent hir lettres hoom of his welfare, (110)
- And that he wol come hastily agayn;
- Or elles hadde this sorwe hir herte slayn. 840
- Hir freendes sawe hir sorwe gan to slake,
- And preyede hir on knees, for goddes sake,
- To come and romen hir in companye,
- Awey to dryve hir derke fantasye.
- And finally, she graunted that requeste; 845
- For wel she saugh that it was for the beste.
- 842. Cm. preyede; Cp. preyed; E. Hn. preyde; Pt. preiden.
- Now stood hir castel faste by the see,
- And often with hir freendes walketh she (120)
- Hir to disporte up-on the bank an heigh,
- Wher-as she many a ship and barge seigh 850
- Seilinge hir cours, wher-as hem liste go;
- But than was that a parcel of hir wo.
- For to hir-self ful ofte 'allas!' seith she,
- 'Is ther no ship, of so manye as I see,
- Wol bringen hom my lord? than were myn herte 855
- Al warisshed of his bittre peynes smerte.'
- 851. E. Hn. Seillynge. 852. E. thanne. 855. E. thanne.
- Another tyme ther wolde she sitte and thinke,
- And caste hir eyen dounward fro the brinke. (130)
- But whan she saugh the grisly rokkes blake,
- For verray fere so wolde hir herte quake, 860
- That on hir feet she mighte hir noght sustene.
- Than wolde she sitte adoun upon the grene,
- And pitously in-to the see biholde,
- And seyn right thus, with sorweful sykes colde:
- 862. E. Thanne.
- 'Eterne god, that thurgh thy purveyaunce 865
- Ledest the world by certein governaunce,
- In ydel, as men seyn, ye no-thing make;
- But, lord, thise grisly feendly rokkes blake, (140)
- That semen rather a foul confusioun
- [487: T. 11182-11217.]
- Of werk than any fair creacioun 870
- Of swich a parfit wys god and a stable,
- Why han ye wroght this werk unresonable?
- For by this werk, south, north, ne west, ne eest,
- Ther nis y-fostred man, ne brid, ne beest;
- It dooth no good, to my wit, but anoyeth. 875
- See ye nat, lord, how mankinde it destroyeth?
- An hundred thousand bodies of mankinde
- Han rokkes slayn, al be they nat in minde, (150)
- Which mankinde is so fair part of thy werk
- That thou it madest lyk to thyn owene merk. 880
- Than semed it ye hadde a greet chiertee
- Toward mankinde; but how than may it be
- That ye swiche menes make it to destroyen,
- Whiche menes do no good, but ever anoyen?
- I wool wel clerkes wol seyn, as hem leste, 885
- By arguments, that al is for the beste,
- Though I ne can the causes nat y-knowe.
- But thilke god, that made wind to blowe, (160)
- As kepe my lord! this my conclusioun;
- To clerkes lete I al disputisoun. 890
- But wolde god that alle thise rokkes blake
- Were sonken in-to helle for his sake!
- Thise rokkes sleen myn herte for the fere.'
- Thus wolde she seyn, with many a pitous tere.
- 873. MSS. eest, est. 874. MSS. beest, best. 881. E. Thanne. Pt.
- cheerte. 882. E. thanne. 887. E. _om._ ne. 889. Cm. Cp. Pt. this
- is (this = this is). 890. E. al this: _rest om._ this.
- Hir freendes sawe that it was no disport 895
- To romen by the see, but disconfort;
- And shopen for to pleyen somwher elles.
- They leden hir by riveres and by welles, (170)
- And eek in othere places delitables;
- They dauncen, and they pleyen at ches and tables. 900
- So on a day, right in the morwe-tyde,
- Un-to a gardin that was ther bisyde,
- In which that they had maad hir ordinaunce
- Of vitaille and of other purveyaunce,
- They goon and pleye hem al the longe day. 905
- [488: T. 11218-11253.]
- And this was on the sixte morwe of May,
- Which May had peynted with his softe shoures
- This gardin ful of leves and of floures; (180)
- And craft of mannes hand so curiously
- Arrayed hadde this gardin, trewely, 910
- That never was ther gardin of swich prys,
- But-if it were the verray paradys.
- The odour of floures and the fresshe sighte
- Wolde han maad any herte for to lighte
- That ever was born, but-if to gret siknesse, 915
- Or to gret sorwe helde it in distresse;
- So ful it was of beautee with plesaunce.
- At-after diner gonne they to daunce, (190)
- And singe also, save Dorigen allone,
- Which made alwey hir compleint and hir mone; 920
- For she ne saugh him on the daunce go,
- That was hir housbonde and hir love also.
- But nathelees she moste a tyme abyde,
- And with good hope lete hir sorwe slyde.
- 903. E. hadde. 906. E. in; _rest_ on. 907. E. hadde. 914. _So_
- Cm. (_see_ Group F, l. 396); E. Hn. maked, _and om._ for to; Cp. Pt.
- Wold han made ony pensif herte light.
- Up-on this daunce, amonges othere men, 925
- Daunced a squyer biforen Dorigen,
- That fressher was and Iolyer of array,
- As to my doom, than is the monthe of May. (200)
- He singeth, daunceth, passinge any man
- That is, or was, sith that the world bigan. 930
- Ther-with he was, if men sholde him discryve,
- Oon of the beste faringe man on-lyve;
- Yong, strong, right vertuous, and riche and wys,
- And wel biloved, and holden in gret prys.
- And shortly, if the sothe I tellen shal, 935
- Unwiting of this Dorigen at al,
- This lusty squyer, servant to Venus,
- Which that y-cleped was Aurelius, (210)
- Had loved hir best of any creature
- Two yeer and more, as was his aventure, 940
- But never dorste he telle hir his grevaunce;
- [489: T. 11254-11290.]
- With-outen coppe he drank al his penaunce.
- He was despeyred, no-thing dorste he seye,
- Save in his songes somwhat wolde he wreye
- His wo, as in a general compleyning; 945
- He seyde he lovede, and was biloved no-thing.
- Of swich matere made he manye layes,
- Songes, compleintes, roundels, virelayes, (220)
- How that he dorste nat his sorwe telle,
- But languissheth, as a furie dooth in helle; 950
- And dye he moste, he seyde, as dide Ekko
- For Narcisus, that dorste nat telle hir wo.
- In other manere than ye here me seye,
- Ne dorste he nat to hir his wo biwreye;
- Save that, paraventure, som-tyme at daunces, 955
- Ther yonge folk kepen hir observaunces,
- It may wel be he loked on hir face
- In swich a wyse, as man that asketh grace; (230)
- But no-thing wiste she of his entente.
- Nathelees, it happed, er they thennes wente, 960
- By-cause that he was hir neighebour,
- And was a man of worship and honour,
- And hadde y-knowen him of tyme yore,
- They fille in speche; and forth more and more
- Un-to his purpos drough Aurelius, 965
- And whan he saugh his tyme, he seyde thus:
- 926. Cp. biforen; Hn. Cm. bifore; E. biforn. 939. E. hadde. 941. E.
- Hn. tellen. 950. E. Cm. a furye; Hn. Pt. a fuyre; Cp. fuyre; Ln.
- fire. 956. E. Hn. yong. 965. E. Hn. this; _rest_ his.
- 'Madame,' quod he, 'by god that this world made,
- So that I wiste it mighte your herte glade, (240)
- I wolde, that day that your Arveragus
- Wente over the see, that I, Aurelius, 970
- Had went ther never I sholde have come agayn;
- For wel I woot my service is in vayn.
- My guerdon is but bresting of myn herte;
- Madame, reweth upon my peynes smerte;
- For with a word ye may me sleen or save, 975
- Heer at your feet god wolde that I were grave!
- I ne have as now no leyser more to seye;
- Have mercy, swete, or ye wol do me deye!' (250)
- [490: T. 11291-11327.]
- She gan to loke up-on Aurelius:
- 'Is this your wil,' quod she, 'and sey ye thus? 980
- Never erst,' quod she, 'ne wiste I what ye mente.
- But now, Aurelie, I knowe your entente,
- By thilke god that yaf me soule and lyf,
- Ne shal I never been untrewe wyf
- In word ne werk, as fer as I have wit: 985
- I wol ben his to whom that I am knit;
- Tak this for fynal answer as of me.'
- But after that in pley thus seyde she: (260)
- 971. E. Hn. Cm. Ln. Hadde. 973. E. Hn. gerdon. 987. E. Hn. Taak.
- 'Aurelie,' quod she, 'by heighe god above,
- Yet wolde I graunte yow to been your love, 990
- Sin I yow see so pitously complayne;
- Loke what day that, endelong Britayne,
- Ye remoeve alle the rokkes, stoon by stoon,
- That they ne lette ship ne boot to goon--
- I seye, whan ye han maad the coost so clene 995
- Of rokkes, that ther nis no stoon y-sene,
- Than wol I love yow best of any man;
- Have heer my trouthe in al that ever I can.' (270)
- 993. Cm. remoue; Cp. Ln. remewe; Pt. remeue. 997. E. Thanne.
- 'Is ther non other grace in yow,' quod he.
- 'No, by that lord,' quod she, 'that maked me! 1000
- For wel I woot that it shal never bityde.
- Lat swiche folies out of your herte slyde.
- What deyntee sholde a man han in his lyf
- For to go love another mannes wyf,
- That hath hir body whan so that him lyketh?' 1005
- Aurelius ful ofte sore syketh;
- Wo was Aurelie, whan that he this herde,
- And with a sorweful herte he thus answerde: (280)
- 'Madame,' quod he, 'this were an inpossible!
- Than moot I dye of sodein deth horrible.' 1010
- And with that word he turned him anoon.
- Tho come hir othere freendes many oon,
- And in the aleyes romeden up and doun,
- And no-thing wiste of this conclusioun,
- But sodeinly bigonne revel newe 1015
- [491: T. 11328-11362.]
- Til that the brighte sonne loste his hewe;
- For thorisonte hath reft the sonne his light;
- This is as muche to seye as it was night. (290)
- And hoom they goon in Ioye and in solas,
- Save only wrecche Aurelius, allas! 1020
- He to his hous is goon with sorweful herte;
- He seeth he may nat fro his deeth asterte.
- Him semed that he felte his herte colde;
- Up to the hevene his handes he gan holde,
- And on his knowes bare he sette him doun, 1025
- And in his raving seyde his orisoun.
- For verray wo out of his wit he breyde.
- He niste what he spak, but thus he seyde; (300)
- With pitous herte his pleynt hath he bigonne
- Un-to the goddes, and first un-to the sonne: 1030
- 1010. E. Thanne. 1011. MSS. anon, anone. 1012. E. Hn. coome.
- 1017. Ln. the orizonte; 1025. Cm. kneis; Cp. Pt. knees.
- He seyde, 'Appollo, god and governour
- Of every plaunte, herbe, tree and flour,
- That yevest, after thy declinacioun,
- To ech of hem his tyme and his sesoun,
- As thyn herberwe chaungeth lowe or hye, 1035
- Lord Phebus, cast thy merciable yë
- On wrecche Aurelie, which that am but lorn.
- Lo, lord! my lady hath my deeth y-sworn (310)
- With-oute gilt, but thy benignitee
- Upon my dedly herte have som pitee! 1040
- For wel I woot, lord Phebus, if yow lest,
- Ye may me helpen, save my lady, best.
- Now voucheth sauf that I may yow devyse
- How that I may been holpe and in what wyse.
- 1035. E. Hn. or; _rest_ and. Pt. hie; E. Hn. Cp. heighe; Cm. hyghe;
- Ln. hihe. 1036. Pt. ye; Cm. lye; E. Hn. Cp. eighe; Ln. eyhe. 1037.
- E._om._ that. 1044. E. holpen.
- Your blisful suster, Lucina the shene, 1045
- That of the see is chief goddesse and quene,
- Though Neptunus have deitee in the see,
- Yet emperesse aboven him is she: (320)
- Ye knowen wel, lord, that right as hir desyr
- Is to be quiked and lightned of your fyr, 1050
- [492: T. 11363-11400.]
- For which she folweth yow ful bisily,
- Right so the see desyreth naturelly
- To folwen hir, as she that is goddesse
- Bothe in the see and riveres more and lesse.
- Wherfore, lord Phebus, this is my requeste-- 1055
- Do this miracle, or do myn herte breste--
- That now, next at this opposicioun,
- Which in the signe shal be of the Leoun, (330)
- As preyeth hir so greet a flood to bringe,
- That fyve fadme at the leeste it overspringe 1060
- The hyeste rokke in Armorik Briteyne;
- And lat this flood endure yeres tweyne;
- Than certes to my lady may I seye:
- "Holdeth your heste, the rokkes been aweye."
- 1045. E. Lucina, _glossed_ i. luna. 1048. E. Emperisse. 1050. Hn.
- lighted; Cm. lyghtenyd. 1063. E. Hn. Cm. Cp. Thanne.
- Lord Phebus, dooth this miracle for me; 1065
- Preye hir she go no faster cours than ye;
- I seye, preyeth your suster that she go
- No faster cours than ye thise yeres two. (340)
- Than shal she been evene atte fulle alway,
- And spring-flood laste bothe night and day. 1070
- And, but she vouche-sauf in swiche manere
- To graunte me my sovereyn lady dere,
- Prey hir to sinken every rok adoun
- In-to hir owene derke regioun
- Under the ground, ther Pluto dwelleth inne, 1075
- Or never-mo shal I my lady winne.
- Thy temple in Delphos wol I barefoot seke;
- Lord Phebus, see the teres on my cheke, (350)
- And of my peyne have som compassioun.'
- And with that word in swowne he fil adoun, 1080
- And longe tyme he lay forth in a traunce.
- 1069. E. Hn. Cm. Cp. Thanne. 1074. E. Hn. dirke. 1078. E. teeris.
- His brother, which that knew of his penaunce,
- Up caughte him and to bedde he hath him broght.
- Dispeyred in this torment and this thoght
- Lete I this woful creature lye; 1085
- Chese he, for me, whether he wol live or dye.
- 1086. E. wheither.
- Arveragus, with hele and greet honour,
- As he that was of chivalrye the flour, (360)
- [493: T. 11401-11436.]
- Is comen hoom, and othere worthy men.
- O blisful artow now, thou Dorigen, 1090
- That hast thy lusty housbonde in thyne armes,
- The fresshe knight, the worthy man of armes,
- That loveth thee, as his owene hertes lyf.
- No-thing list him to been imaginatyf
- If any wight had spoke, whyl he was oute, 1095
- To hire of love; he hadde of it no doute.
- He noght entendeth to no swich matere,
- But daunceth, Iusteth, maketh hir good chere; (370)
- And thus in Ioye and blisse I lete hem dwelle,
- And of the syke Aurelius wol I telle. 1100
- 1096. Cp. Pt. Ln. ther-of (_for_ of it). 1100. E. Cm. I wol (wele)
- yow; _rest_ wol (wil) I.
- In langour and in torment furious
- Two yeer and more lay wrecche Aurelius,
- Er any foot he mighte on erthe goon;
- Ne confort in this tyme hadde he noon,
- Save of his brother, which that was a clerk; 1105
- He knew of al this wo and al this werk.
- For to non other creature certeyn
- Of this matere he dorste no word seyn. (380)
- Under his brest he bar it more secree
- Than ever dide Pamphilus for Galathee. 1110
- His brest was hool, with-oute for to sene,
- But in his herte ay was the arwe kene.
- And wel ye knowe that of a sursanure
- In surgerye is perilous the cure,
- But men mighte touche the arwe, or come therby. 1115
- His brother weep and wayled prively,
- Til atte laste him fil in remembraunce,
- That whyl he was at Orliens in Fraunce, (390)
- As yonge clerkes, that been likerous
- To reden artes that been curious, 1120
- Seken in every halke and every herne
- Particuler sciences for to lerne,
- He him remembred that, upon a day,
- At Orliens in studie a book he say
- [494: T. 11437-11471.]
- Of magik natural, which his felawe, 1125
- That was that tyme a bacheler of lawe,
- Al were he ther to lerne another craft,
- Had prively upon his desk y-laft; (400)
- Which book spak muchel of the operaciouns,
- Touchinge the eighte and twenty mansiouns 1130
- That longen to the mone, and swich folye,
- As in our dayes is nat worth a flye;
- For holy chirches feith in our bileve
- Ne suffreth noon illusion us to greve.
- And whan this book was in his remembraunce, 1135
- Anon for Ioye his herte gan to daunce,
- And to him-self he seyde prively:
- 'My brother shal be warisshed hastily; (410)
- For I am siker that ther be sciences,
- By whiche men make diverse apparences 1140
- Swiche as thise subtile tregetoures pleye.
- For ofte at festes have I wel herd seye,
- That tregetours, with-inne an halle large,
- Have maad come in a water and a barge,
- And in the halle rowen up and doun. 1145
- Somtyme hath semed come a grim leoun;
- And somtyme floures springe as in a mede;
- Somtyme a vyne, and grapes whyte and rede; (420)
- Somtyme a castel, al of lym and stoon;
- And whan hem lyked, voyded it anoon. 1150
- Thus semed it to every mannes sighte.
- 1101. E. Hn. Cm. furyus. 1109. E. Hn. baar. 1118. Cm. whil; _rest_
- whiles. Ln. Cp. Pt. Orliaunce. 1125. E. natureel. 1129. Pt. _om._
- the (_which seems better_). 1140. E. whee(!); _for_ whiche. 1141.
- Cm tregettourys; Cp. tregetoures; _rest_ tregetours. 1147, 8. Cp. Pt.
- Ln. _omit these two lines_. 1150. E. Cm. Ln. hym; _rest_ hem.
- Now than conclude I thus, that if I mighte
- At Orliens som old felawe y-finde,
- That hadde this mones mansions in minde,
- Or other magik naturel above, 1155
- He sholde wel make my brother han his love.
- For with an apparence a clerk may make
- To mannes sighte, that alle the rokkes blake (430)
- Of Britaigne weren y-voyded everichon,
- [495: T. 11472-11507.]
- And shippes by the brinke comen and gon, 1160
- And in swich forme endure a day or two;
- Than were my brother warisshed of his wo.
- Than moste she nedes holden hir biheste,
- Or elles he shal shame hir atte leste.'
- 1152. E. thanne. 1155. E. natureel. 1161. E. Hn. Pt. enduren. Hn.
- Cm. day; E. wowke; Cp. Pt. Ln. yeer. 1162, 3. E. Thanne.
- What sholde I make a lenger tale of this? 1165
- Un-to his brotheres bed he comen is,
- And swich confort he yaf him for to gon
- To Orliens, that he up stirte anon, (440)
- And on his wey forthward thanne is he fare,
- In hope for to ben lissed of his care. 1170
- Whan they were come almost to that citee,
- But-if it were a two furlong or three,
- A yong clerk rominge by him-self they mette,
- Which that in Latin thriftily hem grette,
- And after that he seyde a wonder thing: 1175
- 'I knowe,' quod he, 'the cause of your coming';
- And er they ferther any fote wente,
- He tolde hem al that was in hir entente. (450)
- This Briton clerk him asked of felawes
- The whiche that he had knowe in olde dawes; 1180
- And he answerde him that they dede were,
- For which he weep ful ofte many a tere.
- Doun of his hors Aurelius lighte anon,
- And forth with this magicien is he gon
- Hoom to his hous, and made hem wel at ese. 1185
- Hem lakked no vitaille that mighte hem plese;
- So wel arrayed hous as ther was oon
- Aurelius in his lyf saugh never noon. (460)
- 1184. E. Hn. Cm. _put_ forth _before_ is. 1185. E. Hn. maden.
- He shewed him, er he wente to sopeer,
- Forestes, parkes ful of wilde deer; 1190
- Ther saugh he hertes with hir homes hye,
- The gretteste that ever were seyn with yë.
- He saugh of hem an hondred slayn with houndes,
- And somme with arwes blede of bittre woundes.
- He saugh, whan voided were thise wilde deer, 1195
- [496: T. 11508-11543.]
- Thise fauconers upon a fair river,
- That with hir haukes han the heron slayn.
- 1191-1196. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit six lines._ 1192. Cm. Iye; E. Hn. eye.
- Tho saugh he knightes Iusting in a playn; (470)
- And after this, he dide him swich plesaunce,
- That he him shewed his lady on a daunce 1200
- On which him-self he daunced, as him thoughte.
- And whan this maister, that this magik wroughte,
- Saugh it was tyme, he clapte his handes two,
- And farewel! al our revel was ago.
- And yet remoeved they never out of the hous, 1205
- Whyl they saugh al this sighte merveillous,
- But in his studie, ther-as his bookes be,
- They seten stille, and no wight but they three. (480)
- To him this maister called his squyer,
- And seyde him thus: 'is redy our soper? 1210
- Almost an houre it is, I undertake,
- Sith I yow bad our soper for to make,
- Whan that thise worthy men wenten with me
- In-to my studie, ther-as my bookes be.'
- 'Sire,' quod this squyer, 'whan it lyketh yow, 1215
- It is al redy, though ye wol right now.'
- 'Go we than soupe,' quod he, 'as for the beste;
- This amorous folk som-tyme mote han reste.' (490)
- 1216. E. though; Hn. thogh. 1217. E. Hn. Cm. thanne. 1218. E. Hn.
- hir reste; _rest om._ hir.
- At-after soper fille they in tretee,
- What somme sholde this maistres guerdon be, 1220
- To remoeven alle the rokkes of Britayne,
- And eek from Gerounde to the mouth of Sayne.
- 1220. E. Hn. Cm. gerdou_n_. 1221. Cm. remeuy_n_; Cp. remewe; Ln.
- remoue].
- He made it straunge, and swoor, so god him save,
- Lasse than a thousand pound he wolde nat have,
- Ne gladly for that somme he wolde nat goon. 1225
- 1224. _Here Hl. begins again._
- Aurelius, with blisful herte anoon,
- Answerde thus, 'fy on a thousand pound!
- This wyde world, which that men seye is round, (500)
- I wolde it yeve, if I were lord of it.
- This bargayn is ful drive, for we ben knit. 1230
- Ye shal be payed trewely, by my trouthe!
- [497: T. 11544-11578.]
- But loketh now, for no necligence or slouthe,
- Ye tarie us heer no lenger than to-morwe.'
- 'Nay,' quod this clerk, 'have heer my feith to borwe.'
- To bedde is goon Aurelius whan him leste, 1235
- And wel ny al that night he hadde his reste;
- What for his labour and his hope of blisse,
- His woful herte of penaunce hadde a lisse. (510)
- Upon the morwe, whan that it was day,
- To Britaigne toke they the righte way, 1240
- Aurelius, and this magicien bisyde,
- And been descended ther they wolde abyde;
- And this was, as the bokes me remembre,
- The colde frosty seson of Decembre.
- 1241. _So all; see_ 1184. 1243. E. Hn. thise; Hl. these; _rest_ the.
- Phebus wex old, and hewed lyk latoun, 1245
- That in his hote declinacioun
- Shoon as the burned gold with stremes brighte;
- But now in Capricorn adoun he lighte, (520)
- Wher-as he shoon ful pale, I dar wel seyn.
- The bittre frostes, with the sleet and reyn, 1250
- Destroyed hath the grene in every yerd.
- Ianus sit by the fyr, with double berd,
- And drinketh of his bugle-horn the wyn.
- Biforn him stant braun of the tusked swyn,
- And "Nowel" cryeth every lusty man. 1255
- 1245. Cm. Pt. wex; E. Hn. Hl. Cp. wax. 1254. Hl. Cm. Cp. braun; Pt.
- brawne; E. Hn. brawen.
- Aurelius, in al that ever he can,
- Doth to his maister chere and reverence,
- And preyeth him to doon his diligence (530)
- To bringen him out of his peynes smerte,
- Or with a swerd that he wolde slitte his herte. 1260
- 1257. E. chiere; Cm. Ln. Hl. chier.
- This subtil clerk swich routhe had of this man,
- That night and day he spedde him that he can,
- To wayte a tyme of his conclusioun;
- This is to seye, to make illusioun,
- By swich an apparence or Iogelrye, 1265
- I ne can no termes of astrologye,
- [498: T. 11579-11611.]
- That she and every wight sholde wene and seye,
- That of Britaigne the rokkes were aweye, (540)
- Or elles they were sonken under grounde.
- So atte laste he hath his tyme y-founde 1270
- To maken his Iapes and his wrecchednesse
- Of swich a superstitious cursednesse.
- His tables Toletanes forth he broght,
- Ful wel corrected, ne ther lakked noght,
- Neither his collect ne his expans yeres, 1275
- Ne his rotes ne his othere geres,
- As been his centres and his arguments,
- And his proporcionels convenients (550)
- For his equacions in every thing.
- And, by his eighte spere in his wirking, 1280
- He knew ful wel how fer Alnath was shove
- Fro the heed of thilke fixe Aries above
- That in the ninthe speere considered is;
- Ful subtilly he calculed al this.
- 1263. E. Hn. Cm. wayten. 1264. E. Cm. maken. 1265. E. a (_for_
- an). 1269. E. ellis. 1273. E. Hn. tolletanes; Hl. tollitanes;
- _rest_ colletanes(!). E. brought; Hn. broght. 1274. E. nought; Hn.
- noght. 1275. E. yeeris. 1276. _So all_: (E. hise, rootes, geris).
- 1277. Ln. centres; _rest_ centris. 1278. Hn. Hl. proporcionels; E.
- -cioneles; Cm. -ciounnys; Cp. Pt. -cions. 1280. E. speere. 1283.
- Cm. nynte; Hl. fourthe(!); _rest_ 9. 1284. E. he hadde kalkuled;
- _rest om._ hadde.
- Whan he had founde his firste mansioun, 1285
- He knew the remenant by proporcioun;
- And knew the arysing of his mone weel,
- And in whos face, and terme, and every-deel; (560)
- And knew ful weel the mones mansioun
- Acordaunt to his operacioun, 1290
- And knew also his othere observaunces
- For swiche illusiouns and swiche meschaunces
- As hethen folk used in thilke dayes;
- For which no lenger maked he delayes,
- But thurgh his magik, for a wyke or tweye, 1295
- It semed that alle the rokkes were aweye.
- 1285. E. hadde. 1293. Cp. Pt. Hl. vsed; E. Hn. vseden. 1295. E. Hn.
- Cm. wyke; Hl. Cp. wike; Pt. Ln. weke. 1296. Hl. _om._ alle.
- Aurelius, which that yet despeired is
- Wher he shal han his love or fare amis, (570)
- Awaiteth night and day on this miracle;
- [499: T. 11612-11648.]
- And whan he knew that ther was noon obstacle, 1300
- That voided were thise rokkes everichon,
- Doun to his maistres feet he fil anon,
- And seyde, 'I woful wrecche, Aurelius,
- Thanke yow, lord, and lady myn Venus,
- That me han holpen fro my cares colde:' 1305
- And to the temple his wey forth hath he holde,
- Wher-as he knew he sholde his lady see.
- And whan he saugh his tyme, anon-right he, (580)
- With dredful herte and with ful humble chere,
- Salewed hath his sovereyn lady dere: 1310
- 1302. E. Cm. hise.
- 'My righte lady,' quod this woful man,
- 'Whom I most drede and love as I best can,
- And lothest were of al this world displese,
- Nere it that I for yow have swich disese,
- That I moste dyen heer at your foot anon, 1315
- Noght wolde I telle how me is wo bigon;
- But certes outher moste I dye or pleyne;
- Ye slee me giltelees for verray peyne. (590)
- But of my deeth, thogh that ye have no routhe,
- Avyseth yow, er that ye breke your trouthe. 1320
- Repenteth yow, for thilke god above,
- Er ye me sleen by-cause that I yow love.
- For, madame, wel ye woot what ye han hight;
- Nat that I chalange any thing of right
- Of yow my sovereyn lady, but your grace; 1325
- But in a gardin yond, at swich a place,
- Ye woot right wel what ye bihighten me;
- And in myn hand your trouthe plighten ye (600)
- To love me best, god woot, ye seyde so,
- Al be that I unworthy be therto. 1330
- Madame, I speke it for the honour of yow,
- More than to save myn hertes lyf right now;
- I have do so as ye comanded me;
- And if ye vouche-sauf, ye may go see.
- Doth as yow list, have your biheste in minde, 1335
- For quik or deed, right ther ye shul me finde;
- [500: T. 11649-11683.]
- In yow lyth al, to do me live or deye;--
- But wel I woot the rokkes been aweye!' (610)
- 1318. Pt. Cp. giltelees; Hl. gulteles; _rest_ giltless (-les). 1333.
- E. Hn. Hl. do; _rest_ don. 1336. E. Hn. shal; Ln. schal.
- He taketh his leve, and she astonied stood,
- In al hir face nas a drope of blood; 1340
- She wende never han come in swich a trappe:
- 'Allas!' quod she, 'that ever this sholde happe!
- For wende I never, by possibilitee,
- That swich a monstre or merveille mighte be!
- It is agayns the proces of nature': 1345
- And hoom she gooth a sorweful creature.
- For verray fere unnethe may she go,
- She wepeth, wailleth, al a day or two, (620)
- And swowneth, that it routhe was to see;
- But why it was, to no wight tolde she; 1350
- For out of toune was goon Arveragus.
- But to hir-self she spak, and seyde thus,
- With face pale and with ful sorweful chere,
- In hir compleynt, as ye shul after here:
- 1340. Hl. oon; Pt. on (_for_ a). 1354. E. Hn. Cm. shal.
- 'Allas,' quod she, 'on thee, Fortune, I pleyne, 1355
- That unwar wrapped hast me in thy cheyne;
- For which, tescape, woot I no socour
- Save only deeth or elles dishonour; (630)
- Oon of thise two bihoveth me to chese.
- But nathelees, yet have I lever to lese 1360
- My lyf than of my body have a shame,
- Or knowe my-selven fals, or lese my name,
- And with my deth I may be quit, y-wis.
- Hath ther nat many a noble wyf, er this,
- And many a mayde y-slayn hir-self, allas! 1365
- Rather than with hir body doon trespas?
- 1357. Hl. Fro; _rest_ For. 1358. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. _om._ elles. 1360.
- Pt. Hl. _om._ to.
- Yis, certes, lo, thise stories beren witnesse;
- Whan thretty tyraunts, ful of cursednesse, (640)
- Had slayn Phidoun in Athenes, atte feste,
- They comanded his doghtres for tareste, 1370
- And bringen hem biforn hem in despyt
- [501: T. 11684-11719.]
- Al naked, to fulfille hir foul delyt,
- And in hir fadres blood they made hem daunce
- Upon the pavement, god yeve hem mischaunce!
- For which thise woful maydens, ful of drede, 1375
- Rather than they wolde lese hir maydenhede,
- They prively ben stirt in-to a welle,
- And dreynte hem-selven, as the bokes telle. (650)
- 1367. Cm. bere. 1368. Cm. thretty; Hl. thritty; _rest_ xxx. 1369.
- E. Hadde. E. Hn. Cm. Atthenes. E. at; _rest_ atte, at the. 1374.
- Cp. Ln. pament.
- They of Messene lete enquere and seke
- Of Lacedomie fifty maydens eke, 1380
- On whiche they wolden doon hir lecherye;
- But was ther noon of al that companye
- That she nas slayn, and with a good entente
- Chees rather for to dye than assente
- To been oppressed of hir maydenhede. 1385
- Why sholde I thanne to dye been in drede?
- 1379. Cm. Messene; E. Hn. Hl. Mecene.
- Lo, eek, the tiraunt Aristoclides
- That loved a mayden, heet Stimphalides, (660)
- Whan that hir fader slayn was on a night,
- Un-to Dianes temple goth she right, 1390
- And hente the image in hir handes two,
- Fro which image wolde she never go.
- No wight ne mighte hir handes of it arace,
- Til she was slayn right in the selve place.
- Now sith that maydens hadden swich despyt 1395
- To been defouled with mannes foul delyt,
- Wel oghte a wyf rather hir-selven slee
- Than be defouled, as it thinketh me. (670)
- 1388. E. Hl. heet; Hn. Cm. highte; Cp. Ln. that hight (hiht); Pt. which
- hi[gh]t.
- What shal I seyn of Hasdrubales wyf,
- That at Cartage birafte hir-self hir lyf? 1400
- For whan she saugh that Romayns wan the toun,
- She took hir children alle, and skipte adoun
- In-to the fyr, and chees rather to dye
- Than any Romayn dide hir vileinye.
- Hath nat Lucresse y-slayn hir-self, allas! 1405
- At Rome, whanne she oppressed was
- Of Tarquin, for hir thoughte it was a shame
- [502: T. 11720-11753.]
- To liven whan she hadde lost hir name? (680)
- 1406. Hl. whanne; E. Hn. Cm. whan; Cp. Pt. there; Ln. thare. 1408.
- Hn. Cm. Hl. hadde; _rest_ had.
- The sevene maydens of Milesie also
- Han slayn hem-self, for verray drede and wo, 1410
- Rather than folk of Gaule hem sholde oppresse.
- Mo than a thousand stories, as I gesse,
- Coude I now telle as touchinge this matere.
- 1409. Hn. Cp. Ln. Milesie; E. Cm. Melesie. 1410. Hn. Cm. Hl. verray;
- _rest om._
- Whan Habradate was slayn, his wyf so dere
- Hirselven slow, and leet hir blood to glyde 1415
- In Habradates woundes depe and wyde,
- And seyde, "my body, at the leeste way,
- Ther shal no wight defoulen, if I may." (690)
- 1414. Hn. Hl. habradace; Cp. Pt. habradas; Ln. Abradas.
- What sholde I mo ensamples heer-of sayn,
- Sith that so manye han hem-selven slayn 1420
- Wel rather than they wolde defouled be?
- I wol conclude, that it is bet for me
- To sleen my-self, than been defouled thus.
- I wol be trewe un-to Arveragus,
- Or rather sleen my-self in som manere, 1425
- As dide Demociones doghter dere,
- By-cause that she wolde nat defouled be.
- O Cedasus! it is ful greet pitee, (700)
- To reden how thy doghtren deyde, allas!
- That slowe hem-selven for swich maner cas. 1430
- 1430. _All_ hem-self; _see_ l. 1420.
- As greet a pitee was it, or wel more,
- The Theban mayden, that for Nichanore
- Hir-selven slow, right for swich maner wo.
- Another Theban mayden dide right so;
- For oon of Macedoine hadde hir oppressed, 1435
- She with hir deeth hir maydenhede redressed.
- 1435. Cm. Massedoyne; Ln. Macedoyne; Cp. Macedoigne; Pt. Masidoigne;
- Hl. Macidone; E. Hn. Macidonye.
- What shal I seye of Nicerates wyf,
- That for swich cas birafte hir-self hir lyf? (710)
- 1437. Hn. Hl. Niceratis; Cm. Nycherates.
- How trewe eek was to Alcebiades
- His love, that rather for to dyen chees 1440
- Than for to suffre his body unburied be!
- [503: T. 11754-11785.]
- Lo which a wyf was Alceste,' quod she.
- 1440. Cm. al (_for_ that); E. _om._ 1442. Cp. Ln. Alcestem; Pt.
- Alcesteyn; _rest_ Alceste.
- 'What seith Omer of gode Penalopee?
- Al Grece knoweth of hir chastitee.
- 1443. E. Penalopee; _rest_ Penolopee (-pe).
- Pardee, of Laodomya is writen thus, 1445
- That whan at Troye was slayn Protheselaus,
- No lenger wolde she live after his day.
- 1445. Hn. Hl. Laodomya; E. Cm. Lacedomya; _rest_ Leodamya.
- The same of noble Porcia telle I may; (720)
- With-oute Brutus coude she nat live,
- To whom she hadde al hool hir herte yive. 1450
- 1450. Cp. Cm. Hl. yiue; E. Hn. Pt. yeue.
- The parfit wyfhod of Arthemesye
- Honoured is thurgh al the Barbarye,
- 1452. E. Honured.
- O Teuta, queen! thy wyfly chastitee
- To alle wyves may a mirour be.
- The same thing I seye of Bilia, [T. _om._
- Of Rodogone, and eek Valeria.' [T. _om._
- 1453. Cm. Cp. Hl. queen; _rest_ queene (quene). 1455, 1456. _These
- two lines are in_ E. _and_ edd. _only_. E. Bilyea (_edd._ Bilia; _see
- note_).
- Thus pleyned Dorigene a day or tweye,
- Purposinge ever that she wolde deye. (730)
- 1457. E. pleyne; _rest_ pleyned.
- But nathelees, upon the thridde night,
- Hom cam Arveragus, this worthy knight, 1460
- And asked hir, why that she weep so sore?
- And she gan wepen ever lenger the more.
- 'Allas!' quod she, 'that ever was I born!
- Thus have I seyd,' quod she, 'thus have I sworn'--
- And told him al as ye han herd bifore; 1465
- It nedeth nat reherce it yow na-more.
- 1463. E. I was; _rest_ was I.
- This housbond with glad chere, in freendly wyse,
- Answerde and seyde as I shal yow devyse: (740)
- 'Is ther oght elles, Dorigen, but this?'
- 1467. E. Hl. chiere.
- 'Nay, nay,' quod she, 'god help me so, as wis; 1470
- This is to muche, and it were goddes wille.'
- 'Ye, wyf,' quod he, 'lat slepen that is stille;
- It may be wel, paraventure, yet to-day.
- Ye shul your trouthe holden, by my fay!
- For god so wisly have mercy on me, 1475
- [504: T. 11786-11816.]
- I hadde wel lever y-stiked for to be,
- For verray love which that I to yow have,
- But-if ye sholde your trouthe kepe and save. (750)
- Trouthe is the hyeste thing that man may kepe':--
- But with that word he brast anon to wepe, 1480
- And seyde, 'I yow forbede, up peyne of deeth,
- That never, whyl thee lasteth lyf ne breeth,
- To no wight tel thou of this aventure.
- As I may best, I wol my wo endure,
- Ne make no contenance of hevinesse, 1485
- That folk of yow may demen harm or gesse.'
- 1475. Hl. on; E. Hn. Cm. vp on. 1481. E. _om._ of. 1483. Hn. tel;
- _rest_ telle; _see_ l. 1591.
- And forth he cleped a squyer and a mayde:
- 'Goth forth anon with Dorigen,' he sayde, (760)
- 'And bringeth hir to swich a place anon.'
- They take hir leve, and on hir wey they gon; 1490
- But they ne wiste why she thider wente.
- He nolde no wight tellen his entente. (764)
- Paraventure an heep of yow, y-wis, [T. _om._
- Wol holden him a lewed man in this, [T. _om._
- That he wol putte his wyf in Iupartye; [T. _om._
- Herkneth the tale, er ye up-on hir crye. [T. _om._
- She may have bettre fortune than yow semeth; [T. _om._
- And whan that ye han herd the tale, demeth. [T. _om._
- 1493-98. _found in_ E. _only_.
- This squyer, which that highte Aurelius, (771)
- On Dorigen that was so amorous, 1500
- Of aventure happed hir to mete
- Amidde the toun, right in the quikkest strete,
- As she was boun to goon the wey forth-right
- Toward the gardin ther-as she had hight.
- And he was to the gardinward also; 1505
- For wel he spyed, whan she wolde go
- Out of hir hous to any maner place.
- But thus they mette, of aventure or grace; (780)
- And he saleweth hir with glad entente,
- And asked of hir whiderward she wente?
- 1500. E. Hn. Cm. amorus. 1503. E. bown; _rest_ boun.
- And she answerde, half as she were mad,
- 'Un-to the gardin, as myn housbond bad,
- [505: T. 11817-11854.]
- My trouthe for to holde, allas! allas!'
- Aurelius gan wondren on this cas,
- And in his herte had greet compassioun 1515
- Of hir and of hir lamentacioun,
- And of Arveragus, the worthy knight,
- That bad hir holden al that she had hight, (790)
- So looth him was his wyf sholde breke hir trouthe;
- And in his herte he caughte of this greet routhe, 1520
- Consideringe the beste on every syde,
- That fro his lust yet were him lever abyde
- Than doon so heigh a cherlish wrecchednesse
- Agayns franchyse and alle gentillesse;
- For which in fewe wordes seyde he thus: 1525
- 1515. E. Hn. Cm. hadde.
- 'Madame, seyth to your lord Arveragus,
- That sith I see his grete gentillesse (800)
- To yow, and eek I see wel your distresse,
- That him were lever han shame (and that were routhe)
- Than ye to me sholde breke thus your trouthe, 1530
- I have wel lever ever to suffre wo
- Than I departe the love bitwix yow two.
- I yow relesse, madame, in-to your hond
- Quit every surement and every bond,
- That ye han maad to me as heer-biforn, 1535
- Sith thilke tyme which that ye were born.
- My trouthe I plighte, I shal yow never repreve
- Of no biheste, and here I take my leve, (810)
- As of the treweste and the beste wyf
- That ever yet I knew in al my lyf. 1540
- But every wyf be-war of hir biheste,
- On Dorigene remembreth atte leste.
- Thus can a squyer doon a gentil dede,
- As well as can a knight, with-outen drede.'
- 1527. E. Hn. seyeth. 1534. Hn. serement; Hl. seurement.
- She thonketh him up-on hir knees al bare, 1545
- And hoom un-to hir housbond is she fare,
- And tolde him al as ye han herd me sayd;
- And be ye siker, he was so weel apayd, (820)
- That it were inpossible me to wryte;
- What sholde I lenger of this cas endyte? 1550
- [506: T. 11855-11889.]
- Arveragus and Dorigene his wyf
- In sovereyn blisse leden forth hir lyf.
- Never eft ne was ther angre hem bitwene;
- He cherisseth hir as though she were a quene;
- And she was to him trewe for evermore. 1555
- Of thise two folk ye gete of me na-more.
- 1556. E. _om._ two.
- Aurelius, that his cost hath al forlorn,
- Curseth the tyme that ever he was born: (830)
- 'Allas,' quod he, 'allas! that I bihighte
- Of pured gold a thousand pound of wighte 1560
- Un-to this philosophre! how shal I do?
- I see na-more but that I am fordo.
- Myn heritage moot I nedes selle,
- And been a begger; heer may I nat dwelle,
- And shamen al my kinrede in this place, 1565
- But I of him may gete bettre grace.
- But nathelees, I wol of him assaye,
- At certeyn dayes, yeer by yeer, to paye, (840)
- And thanke him of his grete curteisye;
- My trouthe wol I kepe, I wol nat lye.' 1570
- With herte soor he gooth un-to his cofre,
- And broghte gold un-to this philosophre,
- The value of fyve hundred pound, I gesse,
- And him bisecheth, of his gentillesse,
- To graunte him dayes of the remenaunt, 1575
- And seyde, 'maister, I dar wel make avaunt,
- I failled never of my trouthe as yit;
- For sikerly my dette shal be quit (850)
- Towardes yow, how-ever that I fare
- To goon a-begged in my kirtle bare. 1580
- But wolde ye vouche-sauf, up-on seurtee,
- Two yeer or three for to respyten me,
- Than were I wel; for elles moot I selle
- Myn heritage; ther is na-more to telle.'
- 1580. E. Hn. Cp. a-begged; Ln. abigged; Hl. a begge; Cm. Pt. a
- beggere. 1581. Cm. Cp. Hl. seurte; Pt. swerte; E. Hn. seuretee.
- 1583. E. Thanne.
- This philosophre sobrely answerde, 1585
- [507: T. 11890-11924.]
- And seyde thus, whan he thise wordes herde:
- 'Have I nat holden covenant un-to thee?'
- 'Yes, certes, wel and trewely,' quod he. (860)
- 'Hastow nat had thy lady as thee lyketh?'
- 'No, no,' quod he, and sorwefully he syketh. 1590
- 'What was the cause? tel me if thou can.'
- Aurelius his tale anon bigan,
- And tolde him al, as ye han herd bifore;
- It nedeth nat to yow reherce it more.
- He seide, 'Arveragus, of gentillesse, 1595
- Had lever dye in sorwe and in distresse
- Than that his wyf were of hir trouthe fals.'
- The sorwe of Dorigen he tolde him als, (870)
- How looth hir was to been a wikked wyf,
- And that she lever had lost that day hir lyf, 1600
- And that hir trouthe she swoor, thurgh innocence:
- 'She never erst herde speke of apparence;
- That made me han of hir so greet pitee.
- And right as frely as he sente hir me,
- As frely sente I hir to him ageyn. 1605
- This al and som, ther is na-more to seyn.'
- 1596. E. Hn. Hadde. 1602. E. Hn. Hl. hadde herd; _rest_ herde
- (herd). 1606. E. Hn. This; _rest_ This is.
- This philosophre answerde, 'leve brother,
- Everich of yow dide gentilly til other. (880)
- Thou art a squyer, and he is a knight;
- But god forbede, for his blisful might, 1610
- But-if a clerk coude doon a gentil dede
- As wel as any of yow, it is no drede!
- Sire, I relesse thee thy thousand pound,
- As thou right now were cropen out of the ground,
- Ne never er now ne haddest knowen me. 1615
- For sire, I wol nat take a peny of thee
- For al my craft, ne noght for my travaille.
- Thou hast y-payed wel for my vitaille; (890)
- It is y-nogh, and farewel, have good day:'
- And took his hors, and forth he gooth his way. 1620
- 1613. E. releesse. 1614. Cp. Hl. crope; Ln. crepe. Cm. _om._ the.
- 1616. E. Cm. Cp. taken.
- [508: T. 11925-11928.]
- Lordinges, this question wolde I aske now, 1621
- Which was the moste free, as thinketh yow?
- Now telleth me, er that ye ferther wende.
- I can na-more, my tale is at an ende. (896)
- HERE IS ENDED THE FRANKELEYNS TALE.
- 1621. E. Hn. Cp. Ln. _ins._ thanne _before_ wolde. COLOPHON. _From_
- E.; Hn. Here endeth, &c.; Pt. Thus endeth the Frankleyn his tale.
- *** For ll. 11929-34 _in_ Tyrwhitt's text, _see_ Note _at the foot of_
- p. 289; _for_ ll. 11935-12902, _see_ pp. 290-319; _for_ ll.
- 12903-15468, _see_ pp. 165-289.
- [509: T. 15469-15489.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP G.
- THE SECONDE NONNES TALE.
- ***In Tyrwhitt's text, ll. 15469 sqq.; see p. 508.
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE SECONDE NONNES TALE.
- The ministre and the norice un-to vyces,
- Which that men clepe in English ydelnesse,
- That porter of the gate is of delyces,
- To eschue, and by hir contrarie hir oppresse,
- That is to seyn, by leveful bisinesse, 5
- Wel oghten we to doon al our entente,
- Lest that the feend thurgh ydelnesse us hente.
- 7. Hn. Hl. hente; E. shente, Pt. shent, Ln. schent, _wrongly._
- For he, that with his thousand cordes slye
- Continuelly us waiteth to biclappe,
- Whan he may man in ydelnesse espye, 10
- He can so lightly cacche him in his trappe,
- Til that a man be hent right by the lappe,
- He nis nat war the feend hath him in honde;
- Wel oughte us werche, and ydelnes withstonde.
- And though men dradden never for to dye, 15
- Yet seen men wel by reson doutelees,
- That ydelnesse is roten slogardye,
- Of which ther never comth no good encrees;
- And seen, that slouthe hir holdeth in a lees
- Only to slepe, and for to ete and drinke, 20
- And to devouren al that othere swinke.
- 17. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. Hl. roten; Cm. rote. 18. E. Hn. no good nencrees;
- Pt. Ln. non encrese; Hl. good encres; Cm. encrees. 19. Cm. hire; Pt.
- hure; Hn. Ln. hir; E. it; Hl. her.
- [510: T. 15490-15520.]
- And for to putte us fro swich ydelnesse,
- That cause is of so greet confusioun,
- I have heer doon my feithful bisinesse,
- After the legende, in translacioun 25
- Right of thy glorious lyf and passioun,
- Thou with thy gerland wroght of rose and lilie;
- Thee mene I, mayde and martir, seint Cecilie!
- 27. Hn. Pt. of; E. Cm. Ln. Hl. with. 28. Hn. Cm. Pt. Ln. martir
- seinte (seint); Hl. martir; E. mooder.
- _Inuocacio ad Mariam._
- And thou that flour of virgines art alle,
- Of whom that Bernard list so wel to wryte, 30
- To thee at my biginning first I calle;
- Thou comfort of us wrecches, do me endyte
- Thy maydens deeth, that wan thurgh hir meryte
- The eternal lyf, and of the feend victorie,
- As man may after reden in hir storie. 35
- 32. Hn. mendite (_shewing the scansion_). 34. E. eterneel; Hn. Cm.
- eternal.
- Thou mayde and mooder, doghter of thy sone,
- Thou welle of mercy, sinful soules cure,
- In whom that god, for bountee, chees to wone,
- Thou humble, and heigh over every creature,
- Thou nobledest so ferforth our nature, 40
- That no desdeyn the maker hadde of kinde,
- His sone in blode and flesh to clothe and winde.
- Withinne the cloistre blisful of thy sydes
- Took mannes shap the eternal love and pees,
- That of the tryne compas lord and gyde is, 45
- Whom erthe and see and heven, out of relees,
- Ay herien; and thou, virgin wemmelees,
- Bar of thy body, and dweltest mayden pure,
- The creatour of every creature.
- 43. E. Hn. Cm. Pt. sydis. 44. E. eterneel; Hn. Cm. eternal.
- Assembled is in thee magnificence 50
- With mercy, goodnesse, and with swich pitee
- That thou, that art the sonne of excellence,
- [511: T. 15521-15552.]
- Nat only helpest hem that preyen thee,
- But ofte tyme, of thy benignitee,
- Ful frely, er that men thyn help biseche, 55
- Thou goost biforn, and art hir lyves leche.
- 54. E. often; Hn. Cm. ofte.
- Now help, thou meke and blisful fayre mayde,
- Me, flemed wrecche, in this desert of galle;
- Think on the womman Cananee, that sayde
- That whelpes eten somme of the crommes alle 60
- That from hir lordes table been y-falle;
- And though that I, unworthy sone of Eve,
- Be sinful, yet accepte my bileve.
- And, for that feith is deed with-outen werkes,
- So for to werken yif me wit and space, 65
- That I be quit fro thennes that most derk is!
- O thou, that art so fayr and ful of grace,
- Be myn advocat in that heighe place
- Ther-as withouten ende is songe 'Osanne,'
- Thou Cristes mooder, doghter dere of Anne! 70
- And of thy light my soule in prison lighte,
- That troubled is by the contagioun
- Of my body, and also by the wighte
- Of erthly luste and fals affeccioun;
- O haven of refut, o salvacioun 75
- Of hem that been in sorwe and in distresse,
- Now help, for to my werk I wol me dresse.
- Yet preye I yow that reden that I wryte,
- Foryeve me, that I do no diligence
- This ilke storie subtilly to endyte; 80
- For both have I the wordes and sentence
- Of him that at the seintes reverence
- The storie wroot, and folwe hir legende,
- And prey yow, that ye wol my werk amende.
- 80. Hn. Cm. tendite (_shewing the scansion_). 82. E. Hn. Cm. Hl. him;
- _but_ Cp. Pt. Ln. hem. 83. Cm. folwe; E. Hn. Hl. folwen; Cp. Pt. Ln.
- folowen. 84. E. I pray; Cp. And pray I; _rest_ And pray (_or_ prei,
- _or_ preye).
- [512: T. 15552-15580.]
- _Interpretado nominis Cecilie, quam ponit frater Iacobus_
- _Ianuensis in Legenda Aurea._
- First wolde I yow the name of seint Cecilie 85
- Expoune, as men may in hir storie see,
- It is to seye in English 'hevenes lilie,'
- For pure chastnesse of virginitee;
- Or, for she whytnesse hadde of honestee,
- And grene of conscience, and of good fame 90
- The sole savour, 'lilie' was hir name.
- HEADING. _In margin of _E. Hn. (E. om. _Aurea_). 85. E. _omits_
- yow. 91. E. favour; _rest_ savour; _see_ l. 229.
- Or Cecile is to seye 'the wey to blinde,'
- For she ensample was by good techinge;
- Or elles Cecile, as I writen finde,
- Is ioyned, by a maner conioininge 95
- Of 'hevene' and 'Lia'; and heer, in figuringe,
- The 'heven' is set for thoght of holinesse,
- And 'Lia' for hir lasting bisinesse.
- 95. E. manere.
- Cecile may eek be seyd in this manere,
- 'Wanting of blindnesse,' for hir grete light 100
- Of sapience, and for hir thewes clere;
- Or elles, lo! this maydens name bright
- Of 'hevene' and 'leos' comth, for which by right
- Men mighte hir wel 'the heven of peple' calle,
- Ensample of gode and wyse werkes alle. 105
- For 'leos' 'peple' in English is to seye,
- And right as men may in the hevene see
- The sonne and mone and sterres every weye,
- Right so men gostly, in this mayden free,
- Seyen of feith the magnanimitee, 110
- And eek the cleernesse hool of sapience,
- And sondry werkes, brighte of excellence.
- 110. E. Syen; Cp. Ln. Seyen; Hn. Sayen.
- [513: T. 15581-15608.]
- And right so as thise philosophres wryte
- That heven is swift and round and eek brenninge,
- Right so was fayre Cecilie the whyte 115
- Ful swift and bisy ever in good werkinge,
- And round and hool in good perseveringe,
- And brenning ever in charitee ful brighte;
- Now have I yow declared what she highte.
- _Explicit_.
- HERE BIGINNETH THE SECONDE NONNES TALE, OF THE LYF OF SEINTE CECILE.
- This mayden bright Cecilie, as hir lyf seith, 120
- Was comen of Romayns, and of noble kinde,
- And from hir cradel up fostred in the feith
- Of Crist, and bar his gospel in hir minde;
- She never cessed, as I writen finde,
- Of hir preyere, and god to love and drede, 125
- Biseking him to kepe hir maydenhede.
- And when this mayden sholde unto a man
- Y-wedded be, that was ful yong of age,
- Which that y-cleped was Valerian,
- And day was comen of hir mariage, 130
- She, ful devout and humble in hir corage,
- Under hir robe of gold, that sat ful fayre,
- Had next hir flesh y-clad hir in an heyre.
- And whyl the organs maden melodye,
- To god alone in herte thus sang she; 135
- 'O lord, my soule and eek my body gye
- Unwemmed, lest that I confounded be:'
- And, for his love that deyde upon a tree,
- Every seconde or thridde day she faste,
- Ay biddinge in hir orisons ful faste. 140
- 134. Hl. Hn. organs; Ln. orgens; E. Orgues; Cp. Orgles; Pt. Orgels.
- 137. E. it; _rest_ I. 138. Hn. Cm. Cp. Hl. deyde; E. dyde. 139. E.
- Hn. and; _rest_ or.
- [514: T. 15609-15643.]
- The night cam, and to bedde moste she gon
- With hir housbonde, as ofte is the manere,
- And prively to him she seyde anon,
- 'O swete and wel biloved spouse dere,
- Ther is a conseil, and ye wolde it here, 145
- Which that right fain I wolde unto yow seye,
- So that ye swere ye shul me nat biwreye.'
- 147. E. me; _rest_ it; _see_ l. 150.
- Valerian gan faste unto hir swere,
- That for no cas, ne thing that mighte be,
- He sholde never-mo biwreyen here; 150
- And thanne at erst to him thus seyde she,
- 'I have an angel which that loveth me,
- That with greet love, wher-so I wake or slepe,
- Is redy ay my body for to kepe.
- 152. E. aungel.
- And if that he may felen, out of drede, 155
- That ye me touche or love in vileinye,
- He right anon wol slee yow with the dede,
- And in your yowthe thus ye shulden dye;
- And if that ye in clene love me gye,
- He wol yow loven as me, for your clennesse, 160
- And shewen yow his Ioye and his brightnesse.'
- Valerian, corrected as god wolde,
- Answerde agayn, 'if I shal trusten thee,
- Lat me that angel se, and him biholde;
- And if that it a verray angel be, 165
- Than wol I doon as thou hast preyed me;
- And if thou love another man, for sothe
- Right with this swerd than wol I slee yow bothe.'
- 164. E. aungel; _but_ angel _in_ 165, 170.
- Cecile answerde anon right in this wyse,
- 'If that yow list, the angel shul ye see, 170
- So that ye trowe on Crist and yow baptyse.
- Goth forth to Via Apia,' quod she,
- 'That fro this toun ne stant but myles three,
- And, to the povre folkes that ther dwelle,
- Sey hem right thus, as that I shal yow telle. 175
- 171. on] E. in.
- [515: T. 15644-15674.]
- Telle hem that I, Cecile, yow to hem sente,
- To shewen yow the gode Urban the olde,
- For secree nedes and for good entente.
- And whan that ye seint Urban han biholde,
- Telle him the wordes whiche I to yow tolde; 180
- And whan that he hath purged yow fro sinne,
- Thanne shul ye see that angel, er ye twinne.'
- 178. E. thynges; _rest_ nedes, nedis, needes. 180. E. Cp. Ln. Hl.
- whiche þat I; _but_ Hn. Cm. Pt. _omit_ that.
- Valerian is to the place y-gon,
- And right as him was taught by his lerninge,
- He fond this holy olde Urban anon 185
- Among the seintes buriels lotinge.
- And he anon, with-outen taryinge,
- Dide his message; and whan that he it tolde,
- Urban for Ioye his hondes gan up holde.
- The teres from his yën leet he falle-- 190
- 'Almighty lord, o Iesu Crist,' quod he,
- 'Sower of chast conseil, herde of us alle,
- The fruit of thilke seed of chastitee
- That thou hast sowe in Cecile, tak to thee!
- Lo, lyk a bisy bee, with-outen gyle, 195
- Thee serveth ay thyn owene thral Cecile!
- 190. Ln. yen; _rest_ eyen, eyhen. 192. E. Hn. hierde.
- For thilke spouse, that she took but now
- Ful lyk a fiers leoun, she sendeth here,
- As meke as ever was any lamb, to yow!'
- And with that worde, anon ther gan appere 200
- An old man, clad in whyte clothes clere,
- That hadde a book with lettre of golde in honde,
- And gan biforn Valerian to stonde.
- 197. E. Hl. right; _rest_ but. 203. E. bifore; Hl. to-forn; _rest_
- biforn, biforne, beforne.
- Valerian as deed fil doun for drede
- Whan he him saugh, and he up hente him tho, 205
- And on his book right thus he gan to rede--
- [516: T. 15675-15706.]
- 'Oo Lord, oo feith, oo god with-outen mo,
- Oo Cristendom, and fader of alle also,
- Aboven alle and over al everywhere'--
- Thise wordes al with gold y-writen were. 210
- 208. E. Hn. Cm. O; Hl. On; Cp. Pt. Ln. Of. 209. E. _omits_ and.
- Whan this was rad, than seyde this olde man,
- 'Levestow this thing or no? sey ye or nay.'
- 'I leve al this thing,' quod Valerian,
- 'For sother thing than this, I dar wel say,
- Under the hevene no wight thinke may.' 215
- Tho vanisshed the olde man, he niste where,
- And pope Urban him cristened right there.
- 210-216. Hl. _omits_. 214. E. oother; _rest_ sother. 216. E. Hn.
- Cm. this; Pt. that; Cp. Ln. the. 217. Hl. Pt. cristened; Cm.
- cristenede; E. Hn. Cp. cristned.
- Valerian goth hoom, and fint Cecilie
- With-inne his chambre with an angel stonde;
- This angel hadde of roses and of lilie 220
- Corones two, the which he bar in honde;
- And first to Cecile, as I understonde,
- He yaf that oon, and after gan he take
- That other to Valerian, hir make.
- 'With body clene and with unwemmed thoght 225
- Kepeth ay wel thise corones,' quod he;
- 'Fro Paradys to yow have I hem broght,
- Ne never-mo ne shal they roten be,
- Ne lese her sote savour, trusteth me;
- Ne never wight shal seen hem with his yë, 230
- But he be chaast and hate vileinyë.
- 226. E. three; Hl. thre; _rest_ quod he.
- And thou, Valerian, for thou so sone
- Assentedest to good conseil also,
- Sey what thee list, and thou shalt han thy bone.'
- 'I have a brother,' quod Valerian tho, 235
- 'That in this world I love no man so.
- I pray yow that my brother may han grace
- To knowe the trouthe, as I do in this place.'
- [517: T. 15707-15737.]
- The angel seyde, 'god lyketh thy requeste,
- And bothe, with the palm of martirdom, 240
- Ye shullen come unto his blisful feste.'
- And with that word Tiburce his brother com.
- And whan that he the savour undernom
- Which that the roses and the lilies caste,
- With-inne his herte he gan to wondre faste, 245
- And seyde, 'I wondre, this tyme of the yeer,
- Whennes that sote savour cometh so
- Of rose and lilies that I smelle heer.
- For though I hadde hem in myn hondes two,
- The savour mighte in me no depper go. 250
- The sote smel that in myn herte I finde
- Hath chaunged me al in another kinde.'
- 251. _The MSS. have_ swete _here; but in_ l. 247 _we find only _sote,
- soote, swote, suote, _except_ swete _in_ Pt.; _in_ l. 229, E. Hl.
- soote; Hn. swote; Cm. sote; Cp. Pt. Ln. swete.
- Valerian seyde, 'two corones han we,
- Snow-whyte and rose-reed, that shynen clere,
- Whiche that thyn yën han no might to see; 255
- And as thou smellest hem thurgh my preyere,
- So shaltow seen hem, leve brother dere,
- If it so be thou wolt, withouten slouthe,
- Bileve aright and knowen verray trouthe.'
- Tiburce answerde, 'seistow this to me 260
- In soothnesse, or in dreem I herkne this?'
- 'In dremes,' quod Valerian, 'han we be
- Unto this tyme, brother myn, y-wis.
- But now at erst in trouthe our dwelling is.'
- 'How woostow this,' quod Tiburce, 'in what wyse?' 265
- Quod Valerian, 'that shal I thee devyse.
- The angel of god hath me the trouthe y-taught
- Which thou shalt seen, if that thou wolt reneye
- The ydoles and be clene, and elles naught.'--
- [518: T. 15738-15769.]
- And of the miracle of thise corones tweye 270
- Seint Ambrose in his preface list to seye;
- Solempnely this noble doctour dere
- Commendeth it, and seith in this manere:
- 267. E. Ln. Hl. _omit_ the. 273. E. hym; _rest_ it.
- The palm of martirdom for to receyve,
- Seinte Cecile, fulfild of goddes yifte, 275
- The world and eek hir chambre gan she weyve;
- Witnes Tyburces and Valerians shrifte,
- To whiche god of his bountee wolde shifte
- Corones two of floures wel smellinge,
- And made his angel hem the corones bringe: 280
- 277. _The MSS. have_ Cecilies, _wrongly_ (for Valerians); Lat.
- _text_--Ualeriani; cf. l. 281.
- The mayde hath broght thise men to blisse above;
- The world hath wist what it is worth, certeyn,
- Devocioun of chastitee to love.--
- Tho shewede him Cecile al open and pleyn
- That alle ydoles nis but a thing in veyn; 285
- For they been dombe, and therto they been deve,
- And charged him his ydoles for to leve.
- 281. E. Hn. _omit_ thise; _the rest retain it, except_ Cm., _which has_
- brought hem to blysse. 284. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_ al.
- 'Who so that troweth nat this, a beste he is,'
- Quod tho Tiburce, 'if that I shal nat lye.'
- And she gan kisse his brest, that herde this, 290
- And was ful glad he coude trouthe espye.
- 'This day I take thee for myn allye,'
- Seyde this blisful fayre mayde dere;
- And after that she seyde as ye may here:
- 288. E. Hn. Pt. beest; Hl. best; Cm. Cp. Ln. beste.
- 'Lo, right so as the love of Crist,' quod she, 295
- 'Made me thy brotheres wyf, right in that wyse
- Anon for myn allye heer take I thee,
- Sin that thou wolt thyn ydoles despyse.
- Go with thy brother now, and thee baptyse,
- And make thee clene; so that thou mowe biholde 300
- The angels face of which thy brother tolde.'
- [519: T. 15770-15804.]
- Tiburce answerde and seyde, 'brother dere,
- First tel me whider I shal, and to what man?'
- 'To whom?' quod he, 'com forth with right good chere,
- I wol thee lede unto the pope Urban.' 305
- 'Til Urban? brother myn Valerian,'
- Quod tho Tiburce, 'woltow me thider lede?
- Me thinketh that it were a wonder dede.
- 303. E. Hn. Cm. that I; _rest omit_ that. 304. Hl. _om._ right.
- Ne menestow nat Urban,' quod he tho,
- 'That is so ofte dampned to be deed, 310
- And woneth in halkes alwey to and fro,
- And dar nat ones putte forth his heed?
- Men sholde him brennen in a fyr so reed
- If he were founde, or that men mighte him spye;
- And we also, to bere him companye-- 315
- And whyl we seken thilke divinitee
- That is y-hid in hevene prively,
- Algate y-brend in this world shul we be!'
- To whom Cecile answerde boldely,
- 'Men mighten dreden wel and skilfully 320
- This lyf to lese, myn owene dere brother,
- If this were livinge only and non other.
- But ther is better lyf in other place,
- That never shal be lost, ne drede thee noght,
- Which goddes sone us tolde thurgh his grace; 325
- That fadres sone hath alle thinges wroght;
- And al that wroght is with a skilful thoght,
- The goost, that fro the fader gan precede,
- Hath sowled hem, withouten any drede.
- 323. Ln. Hl. Pt. better; E. Hn. bettre. 326. E. thyng ywroght; Hn.
- Cm. thynges wroght. 326-337. Cp. Pt. Ln. _omit_.
- By word and by miracle goddes sone, 330
- Whan he was in this world, declared here
- That ther was other lyf ther men may wone.'
- To whom answerde Tiburce, 'o suster dere,
- Ne seydestow right now in this manere,
- Ther nis but o god, lord in soothfastnesse; 335
- And now of three how maystow bere witnesse?'
- [520: T. 15805-15839.]
- 'That shal I telle,' quod she, 'er I go.
- Right as a man hath sapiences three,
- Memorie, engyn, and intellect also,
- So, in o being of divinitee, 340
- Three persones may ther right wel be.'
- Tho gan she him ful bisily to preche
- Of Cristes come and of his peynes teche,
- 340. E. _omits_ o.
- And many pointes of his passioun;
- How goddes sone in this world was withholde, 345
- To doon mankinde pleyn remissioun,
- That was y-bounde in sinne and cares colde:
- Al this thing she unto Tiburce tolde.
- And after this Tiburce, in good entente,
- With Valerian to pope Urban he wente, 350
- That thanked god; and with glad herte and light
- He cristned him, and made him in that place
- Parfit in his lerninge, goddes knight.
- And after this Tiburce gat swich grace,
- That every day he saugh, in tyme and space, 355
- The angel of god; and every maner bone
- That he god axed, it was sped ful sone.
- 355. E. saugh; Hl. say.
- It were ful hard by ordre for to seyn
- How many wondres Iesus for hem wroghte;
- But atte laste, to tellen short and pleyn, 360
- The sergeants of the toun of Rome hem soghte,
- And hem biforn Almache the prefect broghte,
- Which hem apposed, and knew al hir entente,
- And to the image of Iupiter hem sente,
- 363. Hl. apposed; _the rest _opposed, _wrongly._
- And seyde, 'who so wol nat sacrifyse, 365
- Swap of his heed, this is my sentence here.'
- Anon thise martirs that I yow devyse,
- Oon Maximus, that was an officere
- Of the prefectes and his corniculere,
- Hem hente; and whan he forth the seintes ladde, 370
- Him-self he weep, for pitee that he hadde.
- 366. E. Cm. Hl. _omit_ is.
- [521: T. 15840-15872.]
- Whan Maximus had herd the seintes lore,
- He gat him of the tormentoures leve,
- And ladde hem to his hous withoute more;
- And with hir preching, er that it were eve, 375
- They gonnen fro the tormentours to reve,
- And fro Maxime, and fro his folk echone
- The false feith, to trowe in god allone.
- 373. E. Hn. Pt. Ln. tormentours.
- Cecilie cam, whan it was woxen night,
- With preestes that hem cristned alle y-fere; 380
- And afterward, whan day was woxen light,
- Cecile hem seyde with a ful sobre chere,
- 'Now, Cristes owene knightes leve and dere,
- Caste alle awey the werkes of derknesse,
- And armeth yow in armure of brightnesse. 385
- 382. E. Hn. Hl. ful stedefast; Cm. ful sobere; Cp. Pt. Ln. sobre.
- 384. Cp. Pt. Casteth; _rest_ Cast.
- Ye han for sothe y-doon a greet bataille,
- Your cours is doon, your feith han ye conserved,
- Goth to the corone of lyf that may nat faille;
- The rightful Iuge, which that ye han served,
- Shall yeve it yow, as ye han it deserved.' 390
- And whan this thing was seyd as I devyse,
- Men ladde hem forth to doon the sacrifyse.
- 392. E. Hn. Cm. ledde.
- But whan they weren to the place broght,
- To tellen shortly the conclusioun,
- They nolde encense ne sacrifice right noght, 395
- But on hir knees they setten hem adoun
- With humble herte and sad devocioun,
- And losten bothe hir hedes in the place.
- Hir soules wenten to the king of grace.
- 398. E. Hn. Cm. heuedes; _rest_ hedes.
- This Maximus, that saugh this thing bityde, 400
- With pitous teres tolde it anon-right,
- That he hir soules saugh to heven glyde
- With angels ful of cleernesse and of light,
- And with his word converted many a wight;
- [522: T. 15873-15905.]
- For which Almachius dide him so to-bete 405
- With whippe of leed, til he his lyf gan lete.
- 400. E. saugh; Hn. Cp. Hl. say. 404. E. this; _rest_ his. 405. E.
- Hn. Cm. Hl. so bete; Cp. Pt. Ln. so to-bete. 406. E. the; _rest_ his.
- Cecile him took and buried him anoon
- By Tiburce and Valerian softely,
- Withinne hir burying-place, under the stoon.
- And after this Almachius hastily 410
- Bad his ministres fecchen openly
- Cecile, so that she mighte in his presence
- Doon sacrifyce, and Iupiter encense.
- But they, converted at hir wyse lore,
- Wepten ful sore, and yaven ful credence 415
- Unto hir word, and cryden more and more,
- 'Crist, goddes sone withouten difference,
- Is verray god, this is al our sentence,
- That hath so good a servant him to serve;
- This with o voys we trowen, thogh we sterve!' 420
- 418. E. _omits_ al.
- Almachius, that herde of this doinge,
- Bad fecchen Cecile, that he might hir see,
- And alderfirst, lo! this was his axinge,
- 'What maner womman artow?' tho quod he.
- 'I am a gentil womman born,' quod she. 425
- 'I axe thee,' quod he, 'thogh it thee greve,
- Of thy religioun and of thy bileve.'
- 424. Cp. Pt. Ln. tho; _rest omit._
- 'Ye han bigonne your question folily,'
- Quod she, 'that wolden two answeres conclude
- In oo demande; ye axed lewedly.' 430
- Almache answerde unto that similitude,
- 'Of whennes comth thyn answering so rude?'
- 'Of whennes?' quod she, whan that she was freyned,
- 'Of conscience and of good feith unfeyned.'
- Almachius seyde, 'ne takestow non hede 435
- Of my power?' and she answerde him this--
- 'Your might,' quod she, 'ful litel is to drede;
- [523: T. 15906-15937.]
- For every mortal mannes power nis
- But lyk a bladdre, ful of wind, y-wis.
- For with a nedles poynt, whan it is blowe, 440
- May al the boost of it be leyd ful lowe.'
- 436. Hn. Hl. this; Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. thus; E. _omits._
- 'Ful wrongfully bigonne thou,' quod he,
- 'And yet in wrong is thy perseveraunce;
- Wostow nat how our mighty princes free
- Han thus comanded and maad ordinaunce, 445
- That every cristen wight shal han penaunce
- But-if that he his cristendom withseye,
- And goon al quit, if he wol it reneye?'
- 'Your princes erren, as your nobley dooth,'
- Quod tho Cecile, 'and with a wood sentence 450
- Ye make us gilty, and it is nat sooth;
- For ye, that knowen wel our innocence,
- For as muche as we doon a reverence
- To Crist, and for we bere a cristen name,
- Ye putte on us a cryme, and eek a blame. 455
- 451. E. Hn. Cm. _omit_ it.
- But we that knowen thilke name so
- For vertuous, we may it nat withseye.'
- Almache answerde, 'chees oon of thise two,
- Do sacrifyce, or cristendom reneye,
- That thou mowe now escapen by that weye.' 460
- At which the holy blisful fayre mayde
- Gan for to laughe, and to the Iuge seyde,
- 'O Iuge, confus in thy nycetee,
- Woltow that I reneye innocence,
- To make me a wikked wight?' quod she; 465
- 'Lo! he dissimuleth here in audience,
- He stareth and woodeth in his advertence!'
- To whom Almachius, 'unsely wrecche,
- Ne woostow nat how far my might may strecche?
- 467. E. and he; _rest omit_ he.
- [524: T. 15938-15972.]
- Han noght our mighty princes to me yeven, 470
- Ye, bothe power and auctoritee
- To maken folk to dyen or to liven?
- Why spekestow so proudly than to me?'
- 'I speke noght but stedfastly,' quod she,
- 'Nat proudly, for I seye, as for my syde, 475
- We haten deedly thilke vyce of pryde.
- 475. E. speke; _rest_ seye.
- And if thou drede nat a sooth to here,
- Than wol I shewe al openly, by right,
- That thou hast maad a ful gret lesing here.
- Thou seyst, thy princes han thee yeven might 480
- Bothe for to sleen and for to quiken a wight;
- Thou, that ne mayst but only lyf bireve,
- Thou hast non other power ne no leve!
- But thou mayst seyn, thy princes han thee maked
- Ministre of deeth; for if thou speke of mo, 485
- Thou lyest, for thy power is ful naked.'
- 'Do wey thy boldnes,' seyde Almachius tho,
- 'And sacrifyce to our goddes, er thou go;
- I recche nat what wrong that thou me profre,
- For I can suffre it as a philosophre; 490
- 487. Hl. lewednes; _rest_ boldnesse.
- But thilke wronges may I nat endure
- That thou spekest of our goddes here,' quod he.
- Cecile answerede, 'o nyce creature,
- Thou seydest no word sin thou spak to me
- That I ne knew therwith thy nycetee; 495
- And that thou were, in every maner wyse,
- A lewed officer and a veyn Iustyse.
- Ther lakketh no-thing to thyn utter yën
- That thou nart blind, for thing that we seen alle
- That it is stoon, that men may wel espyen, 500
- That ilke stoon a god thou wolt it calle.
- I rede thee, lat thyn hand upon it falle,
- And taste it wel, and stoon thou shalt it finde,
- Sin that thou seest nat with thyn yën blinde.
- [525: T. 15973-16005.]
- It is a shame that the peple shal 505
- So scorne thee, and laughe at thy folye;
- For comunly men woot it wel overal,
- That mighty god is in his hevenes hye,
- And thise images, wel thou mayst espye,
- To thee ne to hem-self mowe nought profyte, 510
- For in effect they been nat worth a myte.'
- 510. E. Ln. _insert_ ne _before_ mowe; E. mowen; Hn. mowe.
- Thise wordes and swiche othere seyde she,
- And he weex wroth, and bad men sholde hir lede
- Hom til hir hous, 'and in hir hous,' quod he,
- 'Brenne hir right in a bath of flambes rede.' 515
- And as he bad, right so was doon in dede;
- For in a bath they gonne hir faste shetten,
- And night and day greet fyr they under betten.
- 518. E. fyre; Hn. Cm. fyr.
- The longe night and eek a day also,
- For al the fyr and eek the bathes hete, 520
- She sat al cold, and felede no wo,
- It made hir nat a drope for to swete.
- But in that bath hir lyf she moste lete;
- For he, Almachius, with ful wikke entente
- To sleen hir in the bath his sonde sente. 525
- 521. Cm. felede; E. Hn. feled; Cp. Pt. Ln. felt of it. 524. E. Hn. a
- ful; Cm. a; _rest_ ful.
- Three strokes in the nekke he smoot hir tho,
- The tormentour, but for no maner chaunce
- He mighte noght smyte al hir nekke a-two;
- And for ther was that tyme an ordinaunce,
- That no man sholde doon man swich penaunce 530
- The ferthe strook to smyten, softe or sore,
- This tormentour ne dorste do na-more.
- 528. Cp. Pt. smyten; _rest_ smyte. 530. man (2)] E. men.
- But half-deed, with hir nekke y-corven there,
- He lefte hir lye, and on his wey is went.
- The cristen folk, which that aboute hir were, 535
- With shetes han the blood ful faire y-hent.
- Thre dayes lived she in this torment,
- [526: T. 16006-16021.]
- And never cessed hem the feith to teche;
- That she hadde fostred, hem she gan to preche;
- 534. Cm. is went; _rest_ he wente (_or_ he went) _against the rime._
- And hem she yaf hir moebles and hir thing, 540
- And to the pope Urban bitook hem tho,
- And seyde, 'I axed this at hevene king,
- To han respyt three dayes and na-mo,
- To recomende to yow, er that I go,
- Thise soules, lo! and that I mighte do werche 545
- Here of myn hous perpetuelly a cherche.'
- 542. E. at; _rest_ of; _see_ G 621.
- Seint Urban, with his deknes, prively
- The body fette, and buried it by nighte
- Among his othere seintes honestly.
- Hir hous the chirche of seint Cecilie highte; 550
- Seint Urban halwed it, as he wel mighte;
- In which, into this day, in noble wyse,
- Men doon to Crist and to his seint servyse.
- HERE IS ENDED THE SECONDE NONNES TALE.
- 548. E. This; _rest_ The. 550. E. Hn. Ln. seinte. 553. E. Hn. Pt.
- seinte; Cp. seintz; Pt. seintes. COLOPHON. _From_ E. Hn.; Hl. Here
- endeth the secounde Nonne hir tale of the lif of seint Cecilie.
- [527: T. 16022-16043.]
- * * * * *
- THE CANON'S YEOMAN'S PROLOGUE
- * * * * *
- THE PROLOGE OF THE CHANONS YEMANNES TALE.
- Whan ended was the lyf of seint Cecyle,
- Er we had riden fully fyve myle, 555
- At Boghton under Blee us gan atake
- A man, that clothed was in clothes blake,
- And undernethe he hadde a whyt surplys.
- His hakeney, that was al pomely grys,
- So swatte, that it wonder was to see; 560
- It semed he had priked myles three.
- The hors eek that his yeman rood upon
- So swatte, that unnethe mighte it gon. (10)
- Aboute the peytrel stood the foom ful hye,
- He was of fome al flekked as a pye. 565
- A male tweyfold on his croper lay,
- It semed that he caried lyte array.
- Al light for somer rood this worthy man,
- And in myn herte wondren I bigan
- What that he was, til that I understood 570
- How that his cloke was sowed to his hood;
- For which, when I had longe avysed me,
- I demed him som chanon for to be. (20)
- His hat heng at his bak doun by a laas,
- For he had riden more than trot or paas; 575
- [528: T. 16044-16079.]
- He had ay priked lyk as he were wood.
- A clote-leef he hadde under his hood
- For swoot, and for to kepe his heed from hete.
- But it was Ioye for to seen him swete!
- His forheed dropped as a stillatorie, 580
- Were ful of plantain and of paritorie.
- And whan that he was come, he gan to crye,
- 'God save,' quod he, 'this Ioly companye! (30)
- Faste have I priked,' quod he, 'for your sake,
- By-cause that I wolde yow atake, 585
- To ryden in this mery companye.'
- His yeman eek was ful of curteisye,
- And seyde, 'sires, now in the morwe-tyde
- Out of your hostelrye I saugh you ryde,
- And warned heer my lord and my soverayn, 590
- Which that to ryden with yow is ful fayn,
- For his desport; he loveth daliaunce.'
- 554. E. toold was al; Cm. told was; _rest_ ended was. E. Pt.
- seinte. 558. So E.; _rest_ And vnder that he hadde a whit surplys.
- 559. E. which þat; _rest omit_ which. 561. E. as he; Cm. that he;
- _rest_ he. 562. E. hakeney; _rest_ hors. 564. E. _omits_ ll. 564,
- 565. 566. E. Hn. vpon; _rest_ on. 569. E. to wondren; _rest omit_
- to. 574. E. Hn. heeng; Hl. heng; Cm. Cp. hyng. 586. E. som; _rest_
- this. 589. E. Hn. sangh; Pt. segh. 591. E. _omits_ that.
- 'Freend, for thy warning god yeve thee good chaunce,'
- Than seyde our host, 'for certes, it wolde seme (41)
- Thy lord were wys, and so I may wel deme; 595
- He is ful Iocund also, dar I leye.
- Can he oght telle a mery tale or tweye,
- With which he glade may this companye?'
- 593. E. _omits_ good. 594. E. certain; _rest_ certes.
- 'Who, sire? my lord? ye, ye, withouten lye,
- He can of murthe, and eek of Iolitee 600
- Nat but ynough; also sir, trusteth me,
- And ye him knewe as wel as do I,
- Ye wolde wondre how wel and craftily (50)
- He coude werke, and that in sondry wyse.
- He hath take on him many a greet empryse, 605
- Which were ful hard for any that is here
- To bringe aboute, but they of him it lere.
- As homely as he rit amonges yow,
- If ye him knewe, it wolde be for your prow;
- Ye wolde nat forgoon his aqueyntaunce 610
- For mochel good, I dar leye in balaunce
- [529: T. 16080-16117.]
- Al that I have in my possessioun.
- He is a man of heigh discrecioun, (60)
- I warne you wel, he is a passing man.'
- 603. E. Cm. craftily; _rest_ thriftily.
- ''Wel,' quod our host, 'I pray thee, tel me than, 615
- Is he a clerk, or noon? tel what he is.'
- 'Nay, he is gretter than a clerk, y-wis,'
- Seyde this yeman, 'and in wordes fewe,
- Host, of his craft som-what I wol yow shewe.
- I seye, my lord can swich subtilitee-- 620
- (But al his craft ye may nat wite at me;
- And som-what helpe I yet to his werking)--
- That al this ground on which we been ryding, (70)
- Til that we come to Caunterbury toun,
- He coude al clene turne it up-so-doun, 625
- And pave it al of silver and of gold.'
- 621. E. for; Hl. of; _rest_ at.
- And whan this yeman hadde thus y-told
- Unto our host, he seyde, '_benedicite!_
- This thing is wonder merveillous to me,
- Sin that thy lord is of so heigh prudence, 630
- By-cause of which men sholde him reverence,
- That of his worship rekketh he so lyte;
- His oversloppe nis nat worth a myte, (80)
- As in effect, to him, so mote I go!
- It is al baudy and to-tore also. 635
- Why is thy lord so sluttish, I thee preye,
- And is of power better cloth to beye,
- If that his dede accorde with thy speche?
- Telle me that, and that I thee biseche.'
- 627. E. this tale; Cm. this; _rest_ thus.
- 'Why?' quod this yeman, 'wherto axe ye me? 640
- God help me so, for he shal never thee!
- (But I wol nat avowe that I seye,
- And therfor kepe it secree, I yow preye). (90)
- He is to wys, in feith, as I bileve;
- That that is overdoon, it wol nat preve 645
- Aright, as clerkes seyn, it is a vyce.
- Wherfor in that I holde him lewed and nyce.
- For whan a man hath over-greet a wit,
- Ful oft him happeth to misusen it;
- [530: T. 16118-16154.]
- So dooth my lord, and that me greveth sore. 650
- God it amende, I can sey yow na-more.'
- 'Ther-of no fors, good yeman,' quod our host;
- 'Sin of the conning of thy lord thou wost, (100)
- Tel how he dooth, I pray thee hertely,
- Sin that he is so crafty and so sly. 655
- Wher dwellen ye, if it to telle be?'
- 'In the suburbes of a toun,' quod he,
- 'Lurkinge in hernes and in lanes blinde,
- Wher-as thise robbours and thise theves by kinde
- Holden hir privee fereful residence, 660
- As they that dar nat shewen hir presence;
- So faren we, if I shal seye the sothe.'
- 'Now,' quod our host, 'yit lat me talke to the; (110)
- Why artow so discoloured of thy face?'
- 663. Cm. Hl. yit; _rest omit_. E. telle; Cm. speke; _rest_ talke.
- 'Peter!' quod he, 'god yeve it harde grace, 665
- I am so used in the fyr to blowe,
- That it hath chaunged my colour, I trowe.
- I am nat wont in no mirour to prye,
- But swinke sore and lerne multiplye.
- We blondren ever and pouren in the fyr, 670
- And for al that we fayle of our desyr,
- For ever we lakken our conclusioun.
- To mochel folk we doon illusioun, (120)
- And borwe gold, be it a pound or two,
- Or ten, or twelve, or many sommes mo, 675
- And make hem wenen, at the leeste weye,
- That of a pound we coude make tweye!
- Yet is it fals, but ay we han good hope
- It for to doon, and after it we grope.
- But that science is so fer us biforn, 680
- We mowen nat, al-though we hadde it sworn,
- It overtake, it slit awey so faste;
- It wol us maken beggers atte laste.' (130)
- 672. E. Cm. lakke; _rest_ lakken. E. of oure; _rest omit_ of. 681.
- E. _omits_ it.
- Whyl this yeman was thus in his talking,
- This chanoun drough him neer, and herde al thing 685
- Which this yeman spak, for suspecioun
- [531: T. 16155-16187.]
- Of mennes speche ever hadde this chanoun.
- For Catoun seith, that he that gilty is
- Demeth al thing be spoke of him, y-wis.
- That was the cause he gan so ny him drawe 690
- To his yeman, to herknen al his sawe.
- And thus he seyde un-to his yeman tho,
- 'Hold thou thy pees, and spek no wordes mo, (140)
- For if thou do, thou shalt it dere abye;
- Thou sclaundrest me heer in this companye, 695
- And eek discoverest that thou sholdest hyde.'
- 686. E. Cm. Which this; _rest_ Which that this; cf. ll. 684, 691, 701
- (yemán).
- 'Ye,' quod our host, 'telle on, what so bityde;
- Of al his threting rekke nat a myte!'
- 698. E. his; _rest_ this. E. Cm. rekke; Cp. recche I; Hl. Pt. Ln.
- recche the.
- 'In feith,' quod he, 'namore I do but lyte.'
- And whan this chanon saugh it wolde nat be, 700
- But his yeman wolde telle his privetee,
- He fledde awey for verray sorwe and shame.
- 'A!' quod the yeman, 'heer shal aryse game, (150)
- Al that I can anon now wol I telle.
- Sin he is goon, the foule feend him quelle! 705
- For never her-after wol I with him mete
- For peny ne for pound, I yow bihete!
- He that me broghte first unto that game,
- Er that he dye, sorwe have he and shame!
- For it is ernest to me, by my feith; 710
- That fele I wel, what so any man seith.
- And yet, for al my smert and al my grief,
- For al my sorwe, labour, and meschief, (160)
- I coude never leve it in no wyse.
- Now wolde god my wit mighte suffyse 715
- To tellen al that longeth to that art!
- But natheles yow wol I tellen part;
- Sin that my lord is gon, I wol nat spare;
- Swich thing as that I knowe, I wol declare.-- 719
- HERE ENDETH THE PROLOGE OF THE CHANOUNS YEMANNES TALE.
- 706. _So_ Hl. Cp. Pt. Ln.; E. _omits_ after, _having_ heer _only_.
- 711. E. that; _rest_ so. 717. E. And; _rest_ But.
- [532: T. 16188-16211.]
- * * * * *
- THE CHANOUNS YEMANNES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE CHANOUNS YEMAN HIS TALE.
- [_Prima pars_.]
- With this chanoun I dwelt have seven yeer, 720
- And of his science am I never the neer.
- Al that I hadde, I have y-lost ther-by;
- And god wot, so hath many mo than I. (170)
- Ther I was wont to be right fresh and gay
- Of clothing and of other good array, 725
- Now may I were an hose upon myn heed;
- And wher my colour was bothe fresh and reed,
- Now is it wan and of a leden hewe;
- Who-so it useth, sore shal he rewe.
- And of my swink yet blered is myn yë, 730
- Lo! which avantage is to multiplye!
- That slyding science hath me maad so bare,
- That I have no good, wher that ever I fare; (180)
- And yet I am endetted so ther-by
- Of gold that I have borwed, trewely, 735
- That whyl I live, I shal it quyte never.
- Lat every man be war by me for ever!
- What maner man that casteth him ther-to,
- If he continue, I holde his thrift y-do.
- So helpe me god, ther-by shal he nat winne, 740
- But empte his purs, and make his wittes thinne.
- And whan he, thurgh his madnes and folye,
- Hath lost his owene good thurgh Iupartye, (190)
- [533: T. 16212-16246.]
- Thanne he excyteth other folk ther-to,
- To lese hir good as he him-self hath do. 745
- For unto shrewes Ioye it is and ese
- To have hir felawes in peyne and disese;
- Thus was I ones lerned of a clerk.
- Of that no charge, I wol speke of our werk.
- 728. E. _omits_ a. 740. E. Pt. Ln. Hl. For so; _but_ Cp. _omits_ For.
- Whan we been ther as we shul exercyse 750
- Our elvish craft, we semen wonder wyse,
- Our termes been so clergial and so queynte.
- I blowe the fyr til that myn herte feynte. (200)
- What sholde I tellen ech proporcioun
- Of thinges whiche that we werche upon, 755
- As on fyve or sixe ounces, may wel be,
- Of silver or som other quantite,
- And bisie me to telle yow the names
- Of orpiment, brent bones, yren squames,
- That into poudre grounden been ful smal? 760
- And in an erthen potte how put is al,
- And salt y-put in, and also papeer,
- Biforn thise poudres that I speke of heer, (210)
- And wel y-covered with a lampe of glas,
- And mochel other thing which that ther was? 765
- And of the pot and glasses enluting,
- That of the eyre mighte passe out no-thing?
- And of the esy fyr and smart also,
- Which that was maad, and of the care and wo
- That we hadde in our matires sublyming, 770
- And in amalgaming and calcening
- Of quik-silver, y-clept Mercurie crude?
- For alle our sleightes we can nat conclude. (220)
- Our orpiment and sublymed Mercurie,
- Our grounden litarge eek on the porphurie, 775
- Of ech of thise of ounces a certeyn
- Nought helpeth us, our labour is in veyn.
- Ne eek our spirites ascencioun,
- [534: T. 16247-16281.]
- Ne our materes that lyen al fixe adoun,
- Mowe in our werking no-thing us avayle. 780
- For lost is al our labour and travayle,
- And al the cost, a twenty devel weye,
- Is lost also, which we upon it leye. (230)
- 761. E. _omits_ how. 762. E. Cm. papeer; Ln. papere; Lich. papire;
- Cp. Pt. Hl. paupere. (Tyrwhitt _reads_ pepere.) 764. _The MSS. have_
- lampe, laumpe, lamp. 767. Lich. Pt. eyre; Ln. eyere; E. eyr; Cm. ayr;
- Cp. Hl. aier. 775. E. in; Cm. &; _rest_ on. 776. E. And; _rest_
- Of. 782. E. Cm. a; Ln. in; _rest_ on. 782, 3. Cm. Pt. Ln. weye,
- leye; _rest_ way, lay.
- Ther is also ful many another thing
- That is unto our craft apertening; 785
- Though I by ordre hem nat reherce can,
- By-cause that I am a lewed man,
- Yet wol I telle hem as they come to minde,
- Though I ne can nat sette hem in hir kinde;
- As bole armoniak, verdegrees, boras, 790
- And sondry vessels maad of erthe and glas,
- Our urinales and our descensories,
- Violes, croslets, and sublymatories, (240)
- Cucurbites, and alembykes eek,
- And othere swiche, dere y-nough a leek. 795
- Nat nedeth it for to reherce hem alle,
- Watres rubifying and boles galle,
- Arsenik, sal armoniak, and brimstoon;
- And herbes coude I telle eek many oon,
- As egremoine, valerian, and lunarie, 800
- And othere swiche, if that me liste tarie.
- Our lampes brenning bothe night and day,
- To bringe aboute our craft, if that we may. (250)
- Our fourneys eek of calcinacioun,
- And of watres albificacioun, 805
- Unslekked lym, chalk, and gleyre of an ey,
- Poudres diverse, asshes, dong, pisse, and cley,
- Cered pokets, sal peter, vitriole;
- And divers fyres maad of wode and cole;
- Sal tartre, alkaly, and sal preparat, 810
- And combust materes and coagulat,
- Cley maad with hors or mannes heer, and oile
- Of tartre, alum, glas, berm, wort, and argoile, (260)
- [535: T. 16282-16317.]
- Resalgar, and our materes enbibing;
- And eek of our materes encorporing, 815
- And of our silver citrinacioun,
- Our cementing and fermentacioun,
- Our ingottes, testes, and many mo.
- 790. E. vertgrees; Li. Cm. Cp. Hl. verdegres; Pt. verdegrees. 792. E.
- Li. Hl. vrinals; Cm. vrynallis; Cp. Pt. vrinales. 803. E. purpos if;
- _rest_ craft if that. 806. _The MSS. all retain_ an. 808.
- _Miswritten_ pottes in E.; Hl. poketts. 812. E. and; _rest_ or.
- 813. _Accent_ alum _on the_ u. 817. E. And of oure; _rest omit_ And
- of.
- I wol yow telle, as was me taught also,
- The foure spirites and the bodies sevene, 820
- By ordre, as ofte I herde my lord hem nevene.
- The firste spirit quik-silver called is,
- The second orpiment, the thridde, y-wis, (270)
- Sal armoniak, and the ferthe brimstoon.
- The bodies sevene eek, lo! hem heer anoon: 825
- Sol gold is, and Luna silver we threpe,
- Mars yren, Mercurie quik-silver we clepe,
- Saturnus leed, and Iupiter is tin,
- And Venus coper, by my fader kin!
- 820. E. seuene; _rest_ foure.
- This cursed craft who-so wol exercyse, 830
- He shal no good han that him may suffyse;
- For al the good he spendeth ther-aboute,
- He lese shal, ther-of have I no doute. (280)
- Who-so that listeth outen his folye,
- Lat him come forth, and lerne multiplye; 835
- And every man that oght hath in his cofre,
- Lat him appere, and wexe a philosofre.
- Ascaunce that craft is so light to lere?
- Nay, nay, god woot, al be he monk or frere,
- Preest or chanoun, or any other wight, 840
- Though he sitte at his book bothe day and night,
- In lernyng of this elvish nyce lore,
- Al is in veyn, and parde, mochel more! (290)
- To lerne a lewed man this subtiltee,
- Fy! spek nat ther-of, for it wol nat be; 845
- Al conne he letterure, or conne he noon,
- As in effect, he shal finde it al oon.
- For bothe two, by my savacioun,
- Concluden, in multiplicacioun,
- [536: T. 16318-16352.]
- Y-lyke wel, whan they han al y-do; 850
- This is to seyn, they faylen bothe two.
- 834. E. _omits_ so. 836. E. oght hath; _rest_ hath oght (ought).
- 838. E. Cm. Hl. Askauns; Ln. Ascance; _rest_ Ascaunce. 846. E. Cm.
- And; _rest_ Al.
- Yet forgat I to maken rehersaille
- Of watres corosif and of limaille, (300)
- And of bodyes mollificacioun,
- And also of hir induracioun, 855
- Oiles, ablucions, and metal fusible,
- To tellen al wolde passen any bible
- That o-wher is; wherfor, as for the beste,
- Of alle thise names now wol I me reste.
- For, as I trowe, I have yow told y-nowe 860
- To reyse a feend, al loke he never so rowe.
- 860, 861. E. Pt. Hl. ynowe, rowe; Li. ynogh, rogh; Cm. I-nogh, rogh;
- Cp. ynough, rough.
- A! nay! lat be; the philosophres stoon,
- Elixir clept, we sechen faste echoon; (310)
- For hadde we him, than were we siker y-now.
- But, unto god of heven I make avow, 865
- For al our craft, whan we han al y-do,
- And al our sleighte, he wol nat come us to.
- He hath y-maad us spenden mochel good,
- For sorwe of which almost we wexen wood,
- But that good hope crepeth in our herte, 870
- Supposinge ever, though we sore smerte,
- To be releved by him afterward;
- Swich supposing and hope is sharp and hard; (320)
- I warne yow wel, it is to seken ever;
- That futur temps hath maad men to dissever, 875
- In trust ther-of, from al that ever they hadde.
- Yet of that art they can nat wexen sadde,
- For unto hem it is a bitter swete;
- So semeth it; for nadde they but a shete
- Which that they mighte wrappe hem inne a-night, 880
- And a bak to walken inne by day-light,
- They wolde hem selle and spenden on this craft;
- They can nat stinte til no-thing be laft. (330)
- And evermore, wher that ever they goon,
- [537: T. 16353-16387.]
- Men may hem knowe by smel of brimstoon; 885
- For al the world, they stinken as a goot;
- Her savour is so rammish and so hoot,
- That, though a man from hem a myle be,
- The savour wol infecte him, trusteth me;
- Lo, thus by smelling and threedbare array, 890
- If that men liste, this folk they knowe may.
- And if a man wol aske hem prively,
- Why they been clothed so unthriftily, (340)
- They right anon wol rownen in his ere,
- And seyn, that if that they espyed were, 895
- Men wolde hem slee, by-cause of hir science;
- Lo, thus this folk bitrayen innocence!
- 864. we (2)] E. it. 867. E. With; _rest_ And. 868. Cm. I-mad vs;
- Hl. I-made vs; E. maad vs; _rest_ vs made. 871. E. _omits_ euer.
- 875. Cm. to; _rest omit_. 880. E. Inne at; _rest_ in a. 881. E.
- brat; _rest_ bak. 882. E. Li. the; _rest_ this. 888. E. a Mile from
- hem; _rest_ from hem a myle. 889. E. truste; _rest_ trusteth. 890.
- E. And; _rest_ Lo. E. smel; _rest_ smellyng.
- Passe over this; I go my tale un-to.
- Er than the pot be on the fyr y-do,
- Of metals with a certein quantite, 900
- My lord hem tempreth, and no man but he--
- Now he is goon, I dar seyn boldely--
- For, as men seyn, he can don craftily; (350)
- Algate I wool wel he hath swich a name,
- And yet ful ofte he renneth in a blame; 905
- And wite ye how? ful ofte it happeth so,
- The pot to-breketh, and farewel! al is go!
- Thise metals been of so greet violence,
- Our walles mowe nat make hem resistence,
- But if they weren wroght of lym and stoon; 910
- They percen so, and thurgh the wal they goon,
- And somme of hem sinken in-to the ground--
- Thus han we lost by tymes many a pound-- (360)
- And somme are scatered al the floor aboute,
- Somme lepe in-to the roof; with-outen doute, 915
- Though that the feend noght in our sighte him shewe,
- I trowe he with us be, that ilke shrewe!
- In helle wher that he is lord and sire,
- Nis ther more wo, ne more rancour ne ire.
- [538: T. 16388-16423.]
- Whan that our pot is broke, as I have sayd, 920
- Every man chit, and halt him yvel apayd.
- 899. E. Ln. Lich. that; _rest_ than. 902. dar] E. Ln. dare. 905. E.
- oft. 912. E. Cm. synke; _rest_ sinken. 915. E. lepte; _rest_ lepe,
- lepen. 918. E. lord is; _rest_ is lord. 919. _So_ E. Cm.; _rest_
- Nis ther no more wo ne anger ne ire.
- Som seyde, it was long on the fyr-making,
- Som seyde, nay! it was on the blowing; (370)
- (Than was I fered, for that was myn office);
- 'Straw!' quod the thridde, 'ye been lewed and nyce, 925
- It was nat tempred as it oghte be.'
- 'Nay!' quod the ferthe, 'stint, and herkne me;
- By-cause our fyr ne was nat maad of beech,
- That is the cause, and other noon, so theech!'
- I can nat telle wher-on it was long, 930
- But wel I wot greet stryf is us among.
- 922. E. Cm. along; _rest_ long. 927. E. fourthe; _see_ l. 824. 930.
- Cm. Hl. long; _rest_ along; see l. 922. 931. E. vs is; _rest_ is vs.
- 'What!' quod my lord, 'ther is na-more to done,
- Of thise perils I wol be war eft-sone; (380)
- I am right siker that the pot was crased.
- Be as be may, be ye no-thing amased; 935
- As usage is, lat swepe the floor as swythe,
- Plukke up your hertes, and beth gladde and blythe.'
- The mullok on an hepe y-sweped was,
- And on the floor y-cast a canevas,
- And al this mullok in a sive y-throwe, 940
- And sifted, and y-piked many a throwe.
- 938. Cm. I-swepid; Ln. yswepped; E. sweped; Cp. Pt. Hl. yswoped.
- 'Pardee,' quod oon, 'somwhat of our metal
- Yet is ther heer, though that we han nat al. (390)
- Al-though this thing mishapped have as now,
- Another tyme it may be wel y-now, 945
- Us moste putte our good in aventure;
- A marchant, parde! may nat ay endure,
- Trusteth me wel, in his prosperitee;
- Somtyme his good is drenched in the see,
- And somtym comth it sauf un-to the londe.' 950
- 'Pees!' quod my lord, 'the next tyme I wol fonde
- To bringe our craft al in another plyte;
- And but I do, sirs, lat me han the wyte; (400)
- Ther was defaute in som-what, wel I woot.'
- 951. E. shal; _rest_ wol, wil, wele. 952. E. bryngen; _rest_
- bringe. 953. E. _omits_ sirs.
- Another seyde, the fyr was over hoot:-- 955
- [539: T. 16424-16454.]
- But, be it hoot or cold, I dar seye this,
- That we concluden evermore amis.
- We fayle of that which that we wolden have,
- And in our madnesse evermore we rave.
- And whan we been togidres everichoon, 960
- Every man semeth a Salomon.
- But al thing which that shyneth as the gold
- Nis nat gold, as that I have herd it told; (410)
- Ne every appel that is fair at yë
- Ne is nat good, what-so men clappe or crye. 965
- Right so, lo! fareth it amonges us;
- He that semeth the wysest, by Iesus!
- Is most fool, whan it cometh to the preef;
- And he that semeth trewest is a theef;
- That shul ye knowe, er that I fro yow wende, 970
- By that I of my tale have maad an ende.
- _Explicit prima pars. Et sequitur pars secunda_.
- 956. E. And; _rest_ But. 962. E. eu_er_y; _rest_ al, alle. Cm.
- schynyth; Ln. schyneth; Hl. schineth; E. seineth; Cp. semeth. 963.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. it; E. Cm. Hl. _omit_ it. 964. E. to; _rest_ at. 965.
- E. Nis; _rest_ Ne is. 966. E. _omits_ lo. 967. E. Cm. wiseste;
- _rest_ wisest. 972. E. was; _rest_ is. Cf. l. 987.
- Ther is a chanoun of religioun
- Amonges us, wolde infecte al a toun, (420)
- Though it as greet were as was Ninivee,
- Rome, Alisaundre, Troye, and othere three. 975
- His sleightes and his infinit falsnesse
- Ther coude no man wryten, as I gesse,
- Thogh that he mighte liven a thousand yeer.
- In al this world of falshede nis his peer;
- For in his termes so he wolde him winde, 980
- And speke his wordes in so sly a kinde,
- Whan he commune shal with any wight,
- That he wol make him doten anon right, (430)
- But it a feend be, as him-selven is.
- Ful many a man hath he bigyled er this, 985
- And wol, if that he live may a whyle;
- [540: T. 16455-16488.]
- And yet men ryde and goon ful many a myle
- Him for to seke and have his aqueyntaunce,
- Noght knowinge of his false governaunce.
- And if yow list to yeve me audience, 990
- I wol it tellen heer in your presence.
- 976. E. sleighte; Hl. sleight; _rest_ sleightes. 978. E. lyne myghte;
- _rest_ myghte lyuen. 979. E. nas; Ln. ne is; _rest_ nis, nys. 991.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. tellen; _rest_ telle.
- But worshipful chanouns religious,
- Ne demeth nat that I sclaundre your hous, (440)
- Al-though my tale of a chanoun be.
- Of every ordre som shrewe is, parde, 995
- And god forbede that al a companye
- Sholde rewe a singuler mannes folye.
- To sclaundre yow is no-thing myn entente,
- But to correcten that is mis I mente.
- This tale was nat only told for yow, 1000
- But eek for othere mo; ye woot wel how
- That, among Cristes apostelles twelve,
- Ther nas no traytour but Iudas him-selve. (450)
- Than why sholde al the remenant have blame
- That giltlees were? by yow I seye the same. 1005
- Save only this, if ye wol herkne me,
- If any Iudas in your covent be,
- Remeveth him bitymes, I yow rede,
- If shame or los may causen any drede.
- And beth no-thing displesed, I yow preye, 1010
- But in this cas herkneth what I shal seye.
- 993. E. desclaundre; _rest_ sclaundre; see l. 998. 994. E. Al-though
- that; _rest omit_ that. 997. E. o; _rest_ a. 1002. Cm. apostellis;
- Li. aposteles; E. apostles. 1004. E. Hl. a blame; _rest omit_ a.
- 1008. Cm. Remeuyth; E. Remoeueth. 1011. E. herketh.
- In London was a preest, an annueleer,
- That therin dwelled hadde many a yeer, (460)
- Which was so plesaunt and so servisable
- Unto the wyf, wher-as he was at table, 1015
- That she wolde suffre him no-thing for to paye
- For bord ne clothing, wente he never so gaye;
- And spending-silver hadde he right y-now.
- Therof no fors; I wol precede as now,
- And telle forth my tale of the chanoun, 1020
- [541: T. 16489-16524.]
- That broghte this preest to confusioun.
- 1012. E. _omits_ an. 1013. E. had dwelled; _rest_ dwelled hadde (or
- had).
- This false chanoun cam up-on a day
- Unto this preestes chambre, wher he lay, (470)
- Biseching him to lene him a certeyn
- Of gold, and he wolde quyte it him ageyn. 1025
- 'Lene me a mark,' quod he, 'but dayes three,
- And at my day I wol it quyten thee.
- And if so be that thou me finde fals,
- Another day do hange me by the hals!'
- This preest him took a mark, and that as swythe, 1030
- And this chanoun him thanked ofte sythe,
- And took his leve, and wente forth his weye,
- And at the thridde day broghte his moneye, (480)
- And to the preest he took his gold agayn,
- Wherof this preest was wonder glad and fayn. 1035
- 'Certes,' quod he, 'no-thing anoyeth me
- To lene a man a noble, or two or three,
- Or what thing were in my possessioun,
- Whan he so trewe is of condicioun,
- That in no wyse he breke wol his day; 1040
- To swich a man I can never seye nay.'
- 'What!' quod this chanoun, 'sholde I be untrewe?
- Nay, that were thing y-fallen al of-newe. (490)
- Trouthe is a thing that I wol ever kepe
- Un-to that day in which that I shal crepe 1045
- In-to my grave, and elles god forbede;
- Bileveth this as siker as is your crede.
- God thanke I, and in good tyme be it sayd,
- That ther was never man yet yvel apayd
- For gold ne silver that he to me lente, 1050
- Ne never falshede in myn herte I mente.
- And sir,' quod he, 'now of my privetee,
- Sin ye so goodlich han been un-to me, (500)
- And kythed to me so greet gentillesse,
- Somwhat to quyte with your kindenesse, 1055
- I wol yow shewe, and, if yow list to lere,
- [542: T. 16525-16559.]
- I wol yow teche pleynly the manere,
- How I can werken in philosophye.
- Taketh good heed, ye shul wel seen at yë,
- That I wol doon a maistrie er I go.' 1060
- 1043. E. Cm. a thyng; _rest omit_ a. 1045. E. Ln. In-to; _rest_
- Vn-to. 1046. E. or; _rest_ and. 1047. E. the; Hl. your; _rest_ is
- your. 1056. E. if that; _rest_ and if (_or_ yif.) 1059. Cp. Hl.
- heed; E. Li. heede.
- 'Ye,' quod the preest, 'ye, sir, and wol ye so?
- Marie! ther-of I pray yow hertely!'
- 1061. _After_ sir, E. _wrongly inserts_ quod he.
- 'At your comandement, sir, trewely,' (510)
- Quod the chanoun, 'and elles god forbede!'
- Lo, how this theef coude his servyse bede! 1065
- Ful sooth it is, that swich profred servyse
- Stinketh, as witnessen thise olde wyse;
- And that ful sone I wol it verifye
- In this chanoun, rote of al trecherye,
- That ever-more delyt hath and gladnesse-- 1070
- Swich feendly thoughtes in his herte impresse--
- How Cristes peple he may to meschief bringe;
- God kepe us from his fals dissimulinge! (520)
- 1073. E. Cm. false; _rest_ fals.
- Noght wiste this preest with whom that he delte,
- Ne of his harm cominge he no-thing felte. 1075
- O sely preest! o sely innocent!
- With coveityse anon thou shall be blent!
- O gracelees, ful blind is thy conceit,
- No-thing ne artow war of the deceit
- Which that this fox y-shapen hath to thee! 1080
- His wyly wrenches thou ne mayst nat flee.
- Wherfor, to go to the conclusioun
- That refereth to thy confusioun, (530)
- Unhappy man! anon I wol me hye
- To tellen thyn unwit and thy folye, 1085
- And eek the falsnesse of that other wrecche,
- As ferforth as that my conning may strecche.
- 1078, 1079. Hn. Hl. conceyt, deceyt; E. conceite, deceite. 1080. E.
- for; _rest_ to. 1085. E. his; Cm. heigh; _rest_ thy. 1087. Cm.
- that, _which seems required; rest omit_.
- This chanoun was my lord, ye wolden wene?
- Sir host, in feith, and by the hevenes quene,
- It was another chanoun, and nat he, 1090
- That can an hundred fold more subtiltee!
- [543: T. 16560-16594.]
- He hath bitrayed folkes many tyme;
- Of his falshede it dulleth me to ryme. (540)
- Ever whan that I speke of his falshede,
- For shame of him my chekes wexen rede; 1095
- Algates, they biginnen for to glowe,
- For reednesse have I noon, right wel I knowe,
- In my visage; for fumes dyverse
- Of metals, which ye han herd me reherce,
- Consumed and wasted han my reednesse. 1100
- Now tak heed of this chanouns cursednesse!
- 1101. E. heede; Hl. heed; Cm. hed.
- 'Sir,' quod he to the preest, 'lat your man gon
- For quik-silver, that we it hadde anon; (550)
- And lat him bringen ounces two or three;
- And whan he comth, as faste shul ye see 1105
- A wonder thing, which ye saugh never er this.'
- 1103. E. Cm. hadde it; _rest_ it hadde. 1106. Cm. Cp. say; E. saugh.
- 'Sir,' quod the preest, 'it shall be doon, y-wis.'
- He bad his servant fecchen him this thing,
- And he al redy was at his bidding,
- And wente him forth, and cam anon agayn 1110
- With this quik-silver, soothly for to sayn,
- And took thise ounces three to the chanoun;
- And he hem leyde fayre and wel adoun, (560)
- And bad the servant coles for to bringe,
- That he anon mighte go to his werkinge. 1115
- 1111. E. Cm. soothly; _rest_ schortly. 1112. Hl. took; E. toke.
- 1113. E. Cm. hem; _rest_ it.
- The coles right anon weren y-fet,
- And this chanoun took out a crosselet
- Of his bosom, and shewed it the preest.
- 'This instrument,' quod he, 'which that thou seest,
- Tak in thyn hand, and put thy-self ther-inne 1120
- Of this quik-silver an ounce, and heer biginne,
- In the name of Crist, to wexe a philosofre.
- Ther been ful fewe, whiche that I wolde profre (570)
- To shewen hem thus muche of my science.
- For ye shul seen heer, by experience, 1125
- That this quik-silver wol I mortifye
- [544: T. 16595-16627.]
- Right in your sighte anon, withouten lye,
- And make it as good silver and as fyn
- As ther is any in your purs or myn,
- Or elleswher, and make it malliable; 1130
- And elles, holdeth me fals and unable
- Amonges folk for ever to appere!
- I have a poudre heer, that coste me dere, (580)
- Shal make al good, for it is cause of al
- My conning, which that I yow shewen shal. 1135
- Voydeth your man, and lat him be ther-oute,
- And shet the dore, whyls we been aboute
- Our privetee, that no man us espye
- Whyls that we werke in this philosophye.'
- Al as he bad, fulfilled was in dede, 1140
- This ilke servant anon-right out yede,
- And his maister shette the dore anon,
- And to hir labour speedily they gon. (590)
- 1118. E. to the; _rest_ omit to. 1120. Hl. Cp. Tak; E. Taake. 1123.
- E. to whiche; Cm. to whiche that; _rest_ whiche that. 1127. E. I wol
- nat; Hl. with-outen; Cm. w_i_t_h_-outyn; _the rest_ withoute (_or_
- without.) 1128. E. _omits_ it. 1135. E. to yow; _rest omit_ to.
- 1137. Hl. Cp. Pt. schitte.
- This preest, at this cursed chanouns bidding,
- Up-on the fyr anon sette this thing, 1145
- And blew the fyr, and bisied him ful faste;
- And this chanoun in-to the croslet caste
- A poudre, noot I wher-of that it was
- Y-maad, other of chalk, other of glas,
- Or som-what elles, was nat worth a flye, 1150
- To blynde with the preest; and bad him hye
- The coles for to couchen al above
- The croslet, 'for, in tokening I thee love,' (600)
- Quod this chanoun, 'thyn owene hondes two
- Shul werche al thing which that shal heer be do.' 1155
- 1147. Cm. Hl. croslet; E. Li. crosselet. _So in_ 1153. 1149. other
- (2)] E. Li. or: Pt. or ellis. 1155. Cm. Hl. that; E. _om._; _rest_
- as. E. Cm. heer; _rest om._
- 'Graunt mercy,' quod the preest, and was ful glad,
- And couched coles as the chanoun bad.
- And whyle he bisy was, this feendly wrecche,
- This fals chanoun, the foule feend him fecche!
- [545: T. 16628-16659.]
- Out of his bosom took a bechen cole, 1160
- In which ful subtilly was maad an hole,
- And ther-in put was of silver lymaille
- An ounce, and stopped was, with-outen fayle, (610)
- The hole with wex, to kepe the lymail in.
- And understondeth, that this false gin 1165
- Was nat maad ther, but it was maad bifore;
- And othere thinges I shal telle more
- Herafterward, which that he with him broghte;
- Er he cam ther, him to bigyle he thoghte,
- And so he dide, er that they wente a-twinne; 1170
- Til he had torned him, coude he not blinne.
- It dulleth me whan that I of him speke,
- On his falshede fayn wolde I me wreke, (620)
- If I wiste how; but he is heer and ther:
- He is so variaunt, he abit no-wher. 1175
- 1157. E. Cm. cole; _rest_ coles. E. that; Cm. that the; _rest_ the.
- 1159. Li. Pt. Ln. fals; _rest_ false. 1160. E. he took; _rest omit_
- he. 1162, 1164. E. lemaille; _but_ Cm. lymayle, lymayl; _see_ l.
- 853. 1171. E. terned; Cm. ternede; _rest_ torned, turned. E. he
- coude. 1175. E. Cp. that he; _rest omit_ that.
- But taketh heed now, sirs, for goddes love!
- He took his cole of which I spak above,
- And in his hond he baar it prively.
- And whyls the preest couchede busily
- The coles, as I tolde yow er this, 1180
- This chanoun seyde, 'freend, ye doon amis;
- This is nat couched as it oghte be;
- But sone I shal amenden it,' quod he. (630)
- 'Now lat me medle therwith but a whyle,
- For of yow have I pitee, by seint Gyle! 1185
- Ye been right hoot, I see wel how ye swete,
- Have heer a cloth, and wype awey the wete.'
- And whyles that the preest wyped his face,
- This chanoun took his cole with harde grace,
- And leyde it above, up-on the middeward 1190
- Of the croslet, and blew wel afterward,
- [546: T. 16660-16695.]
- Til that the coles gonne faste brenne.
- 1177. E. this; _rest_ his; _see_ l. 1189. 1179. Cm. couchede; Cp.
- couchide; _rest_ couched. 1188. Cm. Pt. whilis; Hl. Lichf. whiles; E.
- whils. 1189. _So_ E.; Cm. with sory grace (_see_ l. 665). _Most MSS.
- have_. I shrewe his face, _and make_ l. 1188 _end with_ him wyped
- has. 1190. E. _has_ aboue vp on; Cm. _the same, but omitting_ it; Hl.
- abouen on; _the rest_ vpon abouen. 1191. Cm. Hl. croslet; E. Cp.
- crosselet.
- 'Now yeve us drinke,' quod the chanoun thenne, (640)
- 'As swythe al shal be wel, I undertake;
- Sitte we doun, and lat us mery make.' 1195
- And whan that this chanounes bechen cole
- Was brent, al the lymaille, out of the hole,
- Into the croslet fil anon adoun;
- And so it moste nedes, by resoun,
- Sin it so even aboven couched was; 1200
- But ther-of wiste the preest no-thing, alas!
- He demed alle the coles y-liche good,
- For of the sleighte he no-thing understood. (650)
- And whan this alkamistre saugh his tyme,
- 'Rys up,' quod he, 'sir preest, and stondeth by me; 1205
- And for I woot wel ingot have ye noon,
- Goth, walketh forth, and bring us a chalk-stoon;
- For I wol make oon of the same shap
- That is an ingot, if I may han hap.
- And bringeth eek with yow a bolle or a panne, 1210
- Ful of water, and ye shul see wel thanne
- How that our bisinesse shal thryve and preve.
- And yet, for ye shul han no misbileve (660)
- Ne wrong conceit of me in your absence,
- I ne wol nat been out of your presence, 1215
- But go with yow, and come with yow ageyn.'
- The chambre-dore, shortly for to seyn,
- They opened and shette, and wente hir weye.
- And forth with hem they carieden the keye,
- And come agayn with-outen any delay. 1220
- What sholde I tarien al the longe day?
- He took the chalk, and shoop it in the wyse
- Of an ingot, as I shal yow devyse. (670)
- 1195. E. myrie; Cm. Cp. merye; _rest_ mery. 1200. E. abouen it;
- _rest_ aboue. 1203. the] E. that. 1205. Lichf. Cp. Pt. stondeth;
- Ln. Hl. stonde; Cm. stand; E. sit. 1206. ye] E. I. 1214. E.
- conceite.
- I seye, he took out of his owene sleve,
- A teyne of silver (yvele mote he cheve!) 1225
- Which that ne was nat but an ounce of weighte;
- And taketh heed now of his cursed sleighte!
- 1226. Cm. ne; _rest omit_. 1227. E. taak; _rest_ taketh. 1228. E.
- eek; _rest omit_.
- [547: T. 16696-16730.]
- He shoop his ingot, in lengthe and eek in brede,
- Of this teyne, with-outen any drede,
- So slyly, that the preest it nat espyde; 1230
- And in his sleve agayn he gan it hyde;
- And fro the fyr he took up his matere,
- And in thingot putte it with mery chere, (680)
- And in the water-vessel he it caste
- Whan that him luste, and bad the preest as faste, 1235
- 'Look what ther is, put in thyn hand and grope,
- Thow finde shalt ther silver, as I hope;
- What, devel of helle! sholde it elles be?
- Shaving of silver silver is, pardee!'
- He putte his hond in, and took up a teyne 1240
- Of silver fyn, and glad in every veyne
- Was this preest, whan he saugh that it was so.
- 'Goddes blessing, and his modres also, (690)
- And alle halwes have ye, sir chanoun,'
- Seyde this preest, 'and I hir malisoun, 1245
- But, and ye vouche-sauf to techen me
- This noble craft and this subtilitee,
- I wol be youre, in al that ever I may!'
- 1229. Tyrwhitt _reads_ Of thilke; _I propose_--As of this teyne.
- 1236. E. What that heer is; _rest_ Look what ther is. 1239. E.
- _omits_ ll. 1238, 1239. _From_ Lichf. 1242. E. Hl. _omit_ that;
- _found in_ Cm. Cp. Pt. Ln. 1247. Hl. subtilite; Cm. sotylete; E.
- subtiltee; _rest_ sotilte, sotiltie; _see_ l. 620.
- Quod the chanoun, 'yet wol I make assay
- The second tyme, that ye may taken hede 1250
- And been expert of this, and in your nede
- Another day assaye in myn absence
- This disciplyne and this crafty science. (700)
- Lat take another ounce,' quod he tho,
- 'Of quik-silver, with-outen wordes mo, 1255
- And do ther-with as ye han doon er this
- With that other, which that now silver is.'
- 1249. E. preest; _rest_ chanoun.
- This preest him bisieth in al that he can
- To doon as this chanoun, this cursed man,
- Comanded him, and faste he blew the fyr, 1260
- For to come to theffect of his desyr.
- And this chanoun, right in the mene whyle,
- [548: T. 16731-16763.]
- Al redy was, the preest eft to bigyle, (710)
- And, for a countenance, in his hande he bar
- An holwe stikke (tak keep and be war!) 1265
- In the ende of which an ounce, and na-more,
- Of silver lymail put was, as bifore
- Was in his cole, and stopped with wex weel
- For to kepe in his lymail every deel.
- And whyl this preest was in his bisinesse, 1270
- This chanoun with his stikke gan him dresse
- To him anon, and his pouder caste in
- As he did er; (the devel out of his skin (720)
- Him torne, I pray to god, for his falshede;
- For he was ever fals in thoght and dede); 1275
- And with this stikke, above the croslet,
- That was ordeyned with that false get,
- He stired the coles, til relente gan
- The wex agayn the fyr, as every man,
- But it a fool be, woot wel it mot nede, 1280
- And al that in the stikke was out yede,
- And in the croslet hastily it fel.
- 1260. E. he; _rest om._ 1265. Hl. keep; E. kepe; Cm. keepe; _rest_
- hede. 1268. E. _omits_ Was. 1272. Lichf. Ln. pouder; Cm. poudere;
- E. Cp. poudre. 1274. E. terve; Cm. Pt. turne; _rest_ torne. 1277.
- E. Cm. Iet ( = jet); Hl. get; Ln. gett; Cp. Pt. gette.
- Now gode sirs, what wol ye bet than wel? (730)
- Whan that this preest thus was bigyled ageyn,
- Supposing noght but trouthe, soth to seyn, 1285
- He was so glad, that I can nat expresse
- In no manere his mirthe and his gladnesse;
- And to the chanoun he profred eftsone
- Body and good; 'ye,' quod the chanoun sone,
- 'Though povre I be, crafty thou shalt me finde; 1290
- I warne thee, yet is ther more bihinde.
- Is ther any coper her-inne?' seyde he.
- 'Ye,' quod the preest, 'sir, I trowe wel ther be.' (740)
- 'Elles go by us som, and that as swythe,
- Now, gode sir, go forth thy wey and hy the.' 1295
- 1283. Cm. goode: E. good; see l. 1295. Cp. Pt. Ln. The preest
- supposede nothing but wel. 1284. Cp. Pt. Ln. But busyed him faste,
- and was wonder fayn. 1286. E. ne kan; _rest omit_ ne. 1292. _So
- all_. 1295. Cm. Hl. goode; E. good; _rest omit_.
- [549: T. 16764-16799.]
- He wente his wey, and with the coper cam,
- And this chanoun it in his handes nam,
- And of that coper weyed out but an ounce.
- Al to simple is my tonge to pronounce,
- As ministre of my wit, the doublenesse 1300
- Of this chanoun, rote of al cursednesse.
- He semed freendly to hem that knewe him noght,
- But he was feendly bothe in herte and thoght. (750)
- It werieth me to telle of his falsnesse,
- And nathelees yet wol I it expresse, 1305
- To thentente that men may be war therby,
- And for noon other cause, trewely.
- 1301. E. Cm. alle; _rest omit; read_ al.
- He putte his ounce of coper in the croslet,
- And on the fyr as swythe he hath it set,
- And caste in poudre, and made the preest to blowe, 1310
- And in his werking for to stoupe lowe,
- As he dide er, and al nas but a Iape;
- Right as him liste, the preest he made his ape; (760)
- And afterward in the ingot he it caste,
- And in the panne putte it at the laste 1315
- Of water, and in he putte his owene hond.
- And in his sleve (as ye biforn-hond
- Herde me telle) he hadde a silver teyne.
- He slyly took it out, this cursed heyne--
- Unwiting this preest of his false craft-- 1320
- And in the pannes botme he hath it laft;
- And in the water rombled to and fro,
- And wonder prively took up also (770)
- The coper teyne, noght knowing this preest,
- And hidde it, and him hente by the breest, 1325
- And to him spak, and thus seyde in his game,
- 'Stoupeth adoun, by god, ye be to blame,
- Helpeth me now, as I dide yow whyl-er,
- Putte in your hand, and loketh what is ther.'
- 1308. Cm. his; E. the; _rest_ this. 1316. E. the water; _rest_ water
- and. 1318. E. _omits_ he. 1319. Cp. Hl. took; Cm. tok; E. tooke.
- 1328. E. a; _rest_ I.
- This preest took up this silver teyne anon, 1330
- And thanne seyde the chanoun, 'lat us gon
- [550: T. 16800-16836.]
- With thise three teynes, which that we han wroght,
- To som goldsmith, and wite if they been oght. (780)
- For, by my feith, I nolde, for myn hood,
- But-if that they were silver, fyn and good, 1335
- And that as swythe preved shal it be.'
- 1336. E. it shal; Ln. schal he; _rest_ shal it.
- Un-to the goldsmith with thise teynes three
- They wente, and putte thise teynes in assay
- To fyr and hamer; mighte no man sey nay,
- But that they weren as hem oghte be. 1340
- 1339. E. seye; Cm. sey.
- This sotted preest, who was gladder than he?
- Was never brid gladder agayn the day,
- Ne nightingale, in the sesoun of May, (790)
- Nas never noon that luste bet to singe;
- Ne lady lustier in carolinge 1345
- Or for to speke of love and wommanhede,
- Ne knight in armes to doon an hardy dede
- To stonde in grace of his lady dere,
- Than had this preest this sory craft to lere;
- And to the chanoun thus he spak and seyde, 1350
- 'For love of god, that for us alle deyde,
- And as I may deserve it un-to yow,
- What shal this receit coste? telleth now!' (800)
- 1344. E. man; _rest_ noon (non). 1353. E. receite; Lichf. Cp. Hl.
- receyt.
- 'By our lady,' quod this chanoun, 'it is dere,
- I warne yow wel; for, save I and a frere, 1355
- In Engelond ther can no man it make.'
- 'No fors,' quod he, 'now, sir, for goddes sake,
- What shal I paye? telleth me, I preye.'
- 'Y-wis,' quod he, 'it is ful dere, I seye;
- Sir, at o word, if that thee list it have, 1360
- Ye shul paye fourty pound, so god me save!
- And, nere the freendship that ye dide er this
- To me, ye sholde paye more, y-wis.' (810)
- This preest the somme of fourty pound anon
- Of nobles fette, and took hem everichon 1365
- To this chanoun, for this ilke receit;
- Al his werking nas but fraude and deceit.
- 'Sir preest,' he seyde, 'I kepe han no loos
- [551: T. 16837-16871.]
- Of my craft, for I wolde it kept were cloos;
- And as ye love me, kepeth it secree; 1370
- For, and men knewe al my subtilitee,
- By god, they wolden han so greet envye
- To me, by-cause of my philosophye, (820)
- I sholde be deed, ther were non other weye.'
- 1371. E. Cp. knewen; Cm. knewyn; _rest_ knewe. Ln. subtilite; Cm.
- subtilete; E. soutiltee; _see_ ll. 620, 1247.
- 'God it forbede!' quod the preest, 'what sey ye?' 1375
- Yet hadde I lever spenden al the good
- Which that I have (and elles wexe I wood!)
- Than that ye sholden falle in swich mescheef.'
- 1377. E. or; _rest_ and.
- 'For your good wil, sir, have ye right good preef,'
- Quod the chanoun, 'and far-wel, grant mercy!' 1380
- He wente his wey and never the preest him sy
- After that day; and whan that this preest sholde
- Maken assay, at swich tyme as he wolde, (830)
- Of this receit, far-wel! it wolde nat be!
- Lo, thus byiaped and bigyled was he! 1385
- Thus maketh he his introduccioun
- To bringe folk to hir destruccioun.--
- 1387. E. Cm. _omit_ hir.
- Considereth, sirs, how that, in ech estaat,
- Bitwixe men and gold ther is debaat
- So ferforth, that unnethes is ther noon. 1390
- This multiplying blent so many oon,
- That in good feith I trowe that it be
- The cause grettest of swich scarsetee. (840)
- Philosophres speken so mistily
- In this craft, that men can nat come therby, 1395
- For any wit that men han now a-dayes.
- They mowe wel chiteren, as doon thise Iayes,
- And in her termes sette hir lust and peyne,
- But to hir purpos shul they never atteyne.
- A man may lightly lerne, if he have aught, 1400
- To multiplye, and bringe his good to naught!
- 1390. E. Hl. vnnethe; _rest_ vnnethes. 1397. E. as that doon; Cm. as
- don; _rest_ as doon thise.
- Lo! swich a lucre is in this lusty game,
- A mannes mirthe it wol torne un-to grame, (850)
- [552: T. 16872-16907.]
- And empten also grete and hevy purses,
- And maken folk for to purchasen curses 1405
- Of hem, that han hir good therto y-lent.
- O! fy! for shame! they that han been brent,
- Allas! can they nat flee the fyres hete?
- Ye that it use, I rede ye it lete,
- Lest ye lese al; for bet than never is late. 1410
- Never to thryve were to long a date.
- Though ye prolle ay, ye shul it never finde;
- Ye been as bolde as is Bayard the blinde, (860)
- That blundreth forth, and peril casteth noon;
- He is as bold to renne agayn a stoon 1415
- As for to goon besydes in the weye.
- So faren ye that multiplye, I seye.
- If that your yën can nat seen aright,
- Loke that your minde lakke nought his sight.
- For, though ye loke never so brode, and stare, 1420
- Ye shul nat winne a myte on that chaffare,
- But wasten al that ye may rape and renne.
- Withdrawe the fyr, lest it to faste brenne; (870)
- Medleth na-more with that art, I mene,
- For, if ye doon, your thrift is goon ful clene. 1425
- And right as swythe I wol yow tellen here,
- What philosophres seyn in this matere.
- 1404. E. Cp. heuye; _rest_ hevy. 1407. E. _omits_ O. 1414. E.
- blondreth. 1421. E. Cm. no thyng wynne; Hl. nought Wynne (upon);
- _rest_ nat wynne a myte. 1427. Cm. What that [gh]e; _rest_ What that
- the (_badly_). 1434. E. fader first was; _rest omit_ first.
- Lo, thus seith Arnold of the Newe Toun,
- As his Rosarie maketh mencioun;
- He seith right thus, with-outen any lye, 1430
- 'Ther may no man Mercurie mortifye,
- But it be with his brother knowleching.
- How that he, which that first seyde this thing, (880)
- Of philosophres fader was, Hermes;
- He seith, how that the dragoun, doutelees, 1435
- Ne deyeth nat, but-if that he be slayn
- With his brother; and that is for to sayn,
- By the dragoun, Mercurie and noon other
- He understood; and brimstoon by his brother,
- [553: T. 16908-16942.]
- That out of _sol_ and _luna_ were y-drawe. 1440
- And therfor,' seyde he, 'tak heed to my sawe,
- Let no man bisy him this art for to seche,
- But-if that he thentencioun and speche (890)
- Of philosophres understonde can;
- And if he do, he is a lewed man. 1445
- For this science and this conning,' quod he,
- 'Is of the secree of secrees, parde.'
- 1441. Cm. Cp. Hl. heed; _rest_ heede, hede. 1447. E. Cm. of the
- secretes; Cp. Pt. of secrees; Hl. of secretz; Ln. of secretees.
- Also ther was a disciple of Plato,
- That on a tyme seyde his maister to,
- As his book Senior wol bere witnesse, 1450
- And this was his demande in soothfastnesse:
- 'Tel me the name of the privy stoon?'
- And Plato answerde unto him anoon, (900)
- 'Tak the stoon that Titanos men name.'
- 'Which is that?' quod he. 'Magnesia is the same,' 1455
- Seyde Plato. 'Ye, sir, and is it thus?
- This is _ignotum per ignotius_.
- What is Magnesia, good sir, I yow preye?'
- 1455, 8. Lichf. Ln. magnesia; _rest_ magnasia.
- 'It is a water that is maad, I seye,
- Of elementes foure,' quod Plato. 1460
- 'Tel me the rote, good sir,' quod he tho,
- 'Of that water, if that it be your wille?'
- 1461. E. roote; _rest_ roche, rooche, roches. 1462. Cm. that it;
- _rest omit_ that.
- 'Nay, nay,' quod Plato, 'certein, that I nille. (910)
- The philosophres sworn were everichoon,
- That they sholden discovere it un-to noon, 1465
- Ne in no book it wryte in no manere;
- For un-to Crist it is so leef and dere
- That he wol nat that it discovered be,
- But wher it lyketh to his deitee
- Man for tenspyre, and eek for to defende 1470
- Whom that him lyketh; lo, this is the ende.'
- 1467. E. lief; Lichf. Cp. Pt. Hl. leef; Cm. lef.
- Thanne conclude I thus; sith god of hevene
- Ne wol nat that the philosophres nevene (920)
- How that a man shal come un-to this stoon,
- [554: T. 16943-9.]
- I rede, as for the beste, lete it goon. 1475
- For who-so maketh god his adversarie,
- As for to werken any thing in contrarie
- Of his wil, certes, never shal he thryve,
- Thogh that he multiplye terme of his lyve.
- And ther a poynt; for ended is my tale; 1480
- God sende every trewe man bote of his bale!--Amen. (928)
- HERE IS ENDED THE CHANOUNS YEMANNES TALE.
- 1472. Hl. syn; Lichf. Cm. syn that; E. sith that; Cp. Pt. sithens that;
- _rest_ sith that, sithens that. 1475. E. _vs_; _the rest_ as. 1477.
- E. werken; Cm. werkyn; Hl. werke; _rest_ worche. 1479. E. Cm. _omit_
- his. COLOPHON. _So in_ E. Cm.; Hl. has--Here endeth the chanouns
- yeman his tale.
- [555: T. 16950-16968.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP H
- THE MANCIPLE'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWETH THE PROLOGE OF THE MAUNCIPLES TALE.
- Wite ye nat wher ther stant a litel toun
- Which that y-cleped is Bob-up-and-doun,
- Under the Blee, in Caunterbury weye?
- Ther gan our hoste for to Iape and pleye,
- And seyde, 'sirs, what! Dun is in the myre!
- Is ther no man, for preyere ne for hyre,
- That wol awake our felawe heer bihinde?
- A theef mighte him ful lightly robbe and binde.
- See how he nappeth! see, for cokkes bones,
- As he wol falle from his hors at ones.
- Is that a cook of Londoun, with meschaunce?
- Do him come forth, he knoweth his penaunce,
- For he shal telle a tale, by my fey!
- Al-though it be nat worth a botel hey.
- Awake, thou cook,' quod he, 'god yeve thee sorwe,
- What eyleth thee to slepe by the morwe?
- Hastow had fleen al night, or artow dronke,
- Or hastow with som quene al night y-swonke,
- So that thou mayst nat holden up thyn heed?'
- HEADING: _from_ E. Cp.; Cm. _has_--Heryth the merye wordys of the Host
- to the cok of Lundene. 1. E. Hn. Woot; Cp. Hl. Wot; Cm. Wote; Pt. Ln.
- Wete; Wite _is better, as in_ l. 82. 7. Cm. here; E. Hn. Hl. al;
- _rest omit_. 9. _So_ Cp. Hl.; E. see how for; Hn. se how for; Cm. so
- how for.
- [556: T. 16969-17003.]
- This cook, that was ful pale and no-thing reed, 20
- Seyde to our host, 'so god my soule blesse,
- As ther is falle on me swich hevinesse,
- Noot I nat why, that me were lever slepe
- Than the beste galoun wyn in Chepe.'
- 'Wel,' quod the maunciple, 'if it may doon ese 25
- To thee, sir cook, and to no wight displese
- Which that heer rydeth in this companye,
- And that our host wol, of his curteisye,
- I wol as now excuse thee of thy tale;
- For, in good feith, thy visage is ful pale, 30
- Thyn yën daswen eek, as that me thinketh,
- And wel I woot, thy breeth ful soure stinketh,
- That sheweth wel thou art not wel disposed;
- Of me, certein, thou shalt nat been y-glosed.
- Se how he ganeth, lo, this dronken wight, 35
- As though he wolde us swolwe anon-right.
- Hold cloos thy mouth, man, by thy fader kin!
- The devel of helle sette his foot ther-in!
- Thy cursed breeth infecte wol us alle;
- Fy, stinking swyn, fy! foule moot thee falle! 40
- A! taketh heed, sirs, of this lusty man.
- Now, swete sir, wol ye Iusten atte fan?
- Ther-to me thinketh ye been wel y-shape!
- I trowe that ye dronken han wyn ape,
- And that is whan men pleyen with a straw.' 45
- And with this speche the cook wex wrooth and wraw,
- And on the maunciple he gan nodde faste
- For lakke of speche, and doun the hors him caste,
- Wher as he lay, til that men up him took;
- This was a fayr chivachee of a cook! 50
- Allas! he nadde holde him by his ladel!
- And, er that he agayn were in his sadel,
- Ther was greet showving bothe to and fro,
- To lifte him up, and muchel care and wo,
- [557: T. 17004-17038.]
- So unweldy was this sory palled gost. 55
- And to the maunciple thanne spak our host,
- 'By-cause drink hath dominacioun
- Upon this man, by my savacioun
- I trowe he lewedly wolde telle his tale.
- For, were it wyn, or old or moysty ale, 60
- That he hath dronke, he speketh in his nose,
- And fneseth faste, and eek he hath the pose.
- He hath also to do more than y-nough
- To kepe him and his capel out of slough;
- And, if he falle from his capel eft-sone, 65
- Than shul we alle have y-nough to done,
- In lifting up his hevy dronken cors.
- Telle on thy tale, of him make I no fors.
- 29. E. _omits_ as. 31. E. Hn. Hl. daswen; Cm. daswe; Cp. dasewen; Pt.
- dasen; Ln. dasoweþe. 36. Cp. Ln. vs swolwe; _rest_ swolwe vs. 40.
- E. thou; _rest_ thee _or_ the. 46. Cm. Pt, Ln. wex; _rest_ wax. 49.
- E. Hn. vp hym; _rest_ him vp. 55. E. vnweeldy. 59. E. Cm. Ln. _put_
- lewedly _before_ he. 62. _So_ E. Hn. Cp. Ln. Hl.; Cm. sneseth; Pt.
- galpeth. 64. E. of; _rest_ of the.
- But yet, maunciple, in feith thou art to nyce,
- Thus openly repreve him of his vyce. 70
- Another day he wol, peraventure,
- Reclayme thee, and bringe thee to lure;
- I mene, he speke wol of smale thinges,
- As for to pinchen at thy rekeninges,
- That wer not honeste, if it cam to preef.' 75
- 'No,' quod the maunciple, 'that were a greet mescheef!
- So mighte he lightly bringe me in the snare.
- Yet hadde I lever payen for the mare
- Which he rit on, than he sholde with me stryve;
- I wol nat wratthe him, al-so mote I thryve! 80
- That that I spak, I seyde it in my bourde;
- And wite ye what? I have heer, in a gourde,
- A draught of wyn, ye, of a rype grape,
- And right anon ye shul seen a good Iape.
- This cook shal drinke ther-of, if I may; 85
- Up peyne of deeth, he wol nat seye me nay!'
- 76. _All the 7 MSS. retain_ a: Hl. _omits_ No. 79. E. Which that;
- _rest omit_ that. 81. E. speke; _rest_ spak. 85. E. Pt. if that;
- _rest omit_ that.
- And certeinly, to tellen as it was,
- Of this vessel the cook drank faste, allas!
- What neded him? he drank y-nough biforn.
- [558: T. 17039-17053.]
- And whan he hadde pouped in this horn, 90
- To the maunciple he took the gourde agayn;
- And of that drinke the cook was wonder fayn,
- And thanked him in swich wyse as he coude.
- 89. So E.; Cm. nedith hym; Hn. Hl. neded it; _rest_ needeth it. 90.
- E. Hn. Cm. this; _rest_ his.
- Than gan our host to laughen wonder loude,
- And seyde, 'I see wel, it is necessarie, 95
- Wher that we goon, good drink we with us carie;
- For that wol turne rancour and disese
- Tacord and love, and many a wrong apese.
- 96. E. that; _rest_ good. 98. _So_ E. Hn.; Cm. Cp. Ln. Hl. To acord;
- Pt. To pees.
- O thou Bachus, y-blessed be thy name,
- That so canst turnen ernest in-to game! 100
- Worship and thank be to thy deitee!
- Of that matere ye gete na-more of me.
- Tel on thy tale, maunciple, I thee preye.'
- 99. Hl. thou; _rest omit_. Cp. Pt. Ln. Bachus; _rest_ Bacus.
- 'Wel, sir,' quod he, 'now herkneth what I seye.'
- THUS ENDETH THE PROLOGE OF THE MANCIPLE.
- COLOPHON. _From_ Pt.
- [559: T. 17054-17079.]
- * * * * *
- THE MAUNCIPLES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE MAUNCIPLES TALE OF THE CROWE.
- Whan Phebus dwelled here in this erthe adoun, 105
- As olde bokes maken mencioun,
- He was the moste lusty bachiler
- In al this world, and eek the beste archer;
- He slow Phitoun, the serpent, as he lay
- Slepinge agayn the sonne upon a day; 110
- And many another noble worthy dede
- He with his bowe wroghte, as men may rede.
- 105. E. world; _rest_ erthe. 108. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. Of (_for In_).
- Pleyen he coude on every minstralcye,
- And singen, that it was a melodye, (10)
- To heren of his clere vois the soun. 115
- Certes the king of Thebes, Amphioun,
- That with his singing walled that citee,
- Coude never singen half so wel as he.
- Therto he was the semelieste man
- That is or was, sith that the world bigan. 120
- What nedeth it his fetures to discryve?
- For in this world was noon so fair on lyve.
- He was ther-with fulfild of gentillesse,
- Of honour, and of parfit worthinesse. (20)
- This Phebus, that was flour of bachelrye, 125
- As wel in fredom as in chivalrye,
- For his desport, in signe eek of victorie
- Of Phitoun, so as telleth us the storie,
- Was wont to beren in his hand a bowe.
- 125. Hn. Cp. bachelrye; E. Bachilrie.
- Now had this Phebus in his hous a crowe, 130
- [560: T. 17080-17114.]
- Which in a cage he fostred many a day,
- And taughte it speken, as men teche a Iay.
- Whyt was this crowe, as is a snow-whyt swan,
- And countrefete the speche of every man (30)
- He coude, whan he sholde telle a tale. 135
- Ther-with in al this world no nightingale
- Ne coude, by an hondred thousand deel,
- Singen so wonder merily and weel.
- 130. E. hadde. 132. Hl. speken; _rest_ speke. 133. E. _om._ is.
- 138. E. Hn. myrily.
- Now had this Phebus in his hous a wyf,
- Which that he lovede more than his lyf, 140
- And night and day dide ever his diligence
- Hir for to plese, and doon hir reverence,
- Save only, if the sothe that I shal sayn,
- Ialous he was, and wolde have hept hir fayn; (40)
- For him were looth by-iaped for to be. 145
- And so is every wight in swich degree;
- But al in ydel, for it availleth noght.
- A good wyf, that is clene of werk and thoght,
- Sholde nat been kept in noon await, certayn;
- And trewely, the labour is in vayn 150
- To kepe a shrewe, for it wol nat be.
- This holde I for a verray nycetee,
- To spille labour, for to kepe wyves;
- Thus writen olde clerkes in hir lyves. (50)
- 139. E. hadde. 143. E. Cm. _om._ if; Hn. that. that] Hn. if. 147.
- E. Cm. in ydel; _rest_ for naught.
- But now to purpos, as I first bigan: 155
- This worthy Phebus dooth all that he can
- To plesen hir, weninge by swich plesaunce,
- And for his manhede and his governaunce,
- That no man sholde han put him from hir grace.
- But god it woot, ther may no man embrace 160
- As to destreyne a thing, which that nature
- Hath naturelly set in a creature.
- 157. E. Cm. that; Hn. for; _rest_ by (be). 162. E. natureelly.
- Tak any brid, and put it in a cage,
- And do al thyn entente and thy corage (60)
- To fostre it tendrely with mete and drinke, 165
- [561: T. 17115-17149.]
- Of alle deyntees that thou canst bithinke,
- And keep it al-so clenly as thou may;
- Al-though his cage of gold be never so gay,
- Yet hath this brid, by twenty thousand fold,
- Lever in a forest, that is rude and cold, 170
- Gon ete wormes and swich wrecchednesse.
- For ever this brid wol doon his bisinesse
- To escape out of his cage, if he may;
- His libertee this brid desireth ay. (70)
- 163. E. Taak. 170. Cp. Pt. Ln. wilde (_for_ rude); Hl. wyd. 173.
- Cp. when; Ln. Hl. whan; _rest_ if. 174. E. Hn. Cm. this; _rest_ the.
- Lat take a cat, and fostre him wel with milk, 175
- And tendre flesh, and make his couche of silk,
- And lat him seen a mous go by the wal;
- Anon he weyveth milk, and flesh, and al,
- And every deyntee that is in that hous,
- Swich appetyt hath he to ete a mous. 180
- Lo, here hath lust his dominacioun,
- And appetyt flemeth discrecioun.
- 180. E. he hath; Cp. hath sche; _rest_ hath he.
- A she-wolf hath also a vileins kinde;
- The lewedeste wolf that she may finde, (80)
- Or leest of reputacion wol she take, 185
- In tyme whan hir lust to han a make.
- 185. Hl. _ins._ him, _and the rest_ that, _before_ wol (_badly_).
- Alle thise ensamples speke I by thise men
- That been untrewe, and no-thing by wommen.
- For men han ever a likerous appetyt
- On lower thing to parfourne hir delyt 190
- Than on hir wyves, be they never so faire,
- Ne never so trewe, ne so debonaire.
- Flesh is so newefangel, with meschaunce,
- That we ne conne in no-thing han plesaunce (90)
- That souneth in-to vertu any whyle. 195
- 195. Hl. Cm. souneth; _rest_ sowneth.
- This Phebus, which that thoghte upon no gyle,
- Deceyved was, for al his Iolitee;
- For under him another hadde she,
- A man of litel reputacioun,
- Noght worth to Phebus in comparisoun. 200
- [562: T. 17150-17184.]
- The more harm is; it happeth ofte so,
- Of which ther cometh muchel harm and wo.
- 200. Cp. Hl. Nought; E. Hn. Nat; _rest_ Not; _see_ l. 254.
- And so bifel, whan Phebus was absent,
- His wyf anon hath for hir lemman sent, (100)
- Hir lemman? certes, this is a knavish speche! 205
- Foryeveth it me, and that I yow biseche.
- The wyse Plato seith, as ye may rede,
- The word mot nede accorde with the dede.
- If men shal telle proprely a thing,
- The word mot cosin be to the werking. 210
- I am a boistous man, right thus seye I,
- Ther nis no difference, trewely,
- Bitwixe a wyf that is of heigh degree,
- If of hir body dishonest she be, (110)
- And a povre wenche, other than this-- 215
- If it so be, they werke bothe amis--
- But that the gentile, in estaat above,
- She shal be cleped his lady, as in love;
- And for that other is a povre womman,
- She shal be cleped his wenche, or his lemman. 220
- And, god it wool, myn owene dere brother,
- Men leyn that oon as lowe as lyth that other.
- 214. E. Cp. dishoneste; Hn. deshoneste. 215. _For_ a, Tyrwhitt
- _reads_ any. 217. E. Cm. hir estaat (stat); _rest om._ hir.
- Right so, bitwixe a titlelees tiraunt
- And an outlawe, or a theef erraunt, (120)
- The same I seye, ther is no difference. 225
- To Alisaundre told was this sentence;
- That, for the tyrant is of gretter might,
- By force of meynee for to sleen doun-right,
- And brennen hous and hoom, and make al plain,
- Lo! therfor is he cleped a capitain; 230
- And, for the outlawe hath but smal meynee,
- And may nat doon so greet an harm as he,
- Ne bringe a contree to so greet mescheef,
- Men clepen him an outlawe or a theef. (130)
- But, for I am a man noght textuel, 235
- [563: T. 17185-17219.]
- I wol noght telle of textes never a del;
- I wol go to my tale, as I bigan.
- Whan Phebus wyf had sent for hir lemman,
- Anon they wroghten al hir lust volage.
- 223. In Hn., titlelees _is glossed by_ sine titulo. 226. Hl. told
- was; _rest_ was told. 235, 236. E. textueel, deel.
- The whyte crowe, that heng ay in the cage, 240
- Biheld hir werk, and seyde never a word.
- And whan that hoom was come Phebus, the lord,
- This crowe sang 'cokkow! cokkow! cokkow!'
- 240. E. they (_for_ that). E. heeng; Ln. honge; _rest_ heng. 241.
- E. Biheeld.
- 'What, brid?' quod Phebus, 'what song singestow? (140)
- Ne were thow wont so merily to singe 245
- That to myn herte it was a reioisinge
- To here thy vois? allas! what song is this?'
- 245. E. Hn. myrily.
- 'By god,' quod he, 'I singe nat amis;
- Phebus,' quod he, 'for al thy worthinesse,
- For al thy beautee and thy gentilesse, 250
- For al thy song and al thy minstralcye,
- For al thy waiting, blered is thyn yë
- With oon of litel reputacioun,
- Noght worth to thee, as in comparisoun, (150)
- The mountance of a gnat; so mote I thryve! 255
- For on thy bed thy wyf I saugh him swyve.'
- 251. E. Cm. Hl. _om. 2nd_ al. 254. E. Hn. Cm. _om._ as. 255. E. Hn.
- montance.
- What wol ye more? the crowe anon him tolde,
- By sadde tokenes and by wordes bolde,
- How that his wyf had doon hir lecherye,
- Him to gret shame and to gret vileinye; 260
- And tolde him ofte, he saugh it with his yën.
- This Phebus gan aweyward for to wryen,
- Him thoughte his sorweful herte brast a-two;
- His bowe he bente, and sette ther-inne a flo, (160)
- And in his ire his wyf thanne hath he slayn. 265
- This is theffect, ther is na-more to sayn;
- For sorwe of which he brak his minstralcye,
- Bothe harpe, and lute, and giterne, and sautrye;
- And eek he brak his arwes and his bowe.
- And after that, thus spak he to the crowe: 270
- 261. Cm. Hl. yen; Ln. ey[gh]en; _rest_ eyen. 263. E. Hn. Cm. And;
- _rest_ Him.
- [564: T. 17220-17254.]
- 'Traitour,' quod he, 'with tonge of scorpioun,
- Thou hast me broght to my confusioun!
- Allas! that I was wroght! why nere I deed?
- O dere wyf, o gemme of lustiheed, (170)
- That were to me so sad and eek so trewe, 275
- Now lystow deed, with face pale of hewe,
- Ful giltelees, that dorste I swere, y-wis!
- O rakel hand, to doon so foule amis!
- O trouble wit, o ire recchelees,
- That unavysed smytest giltelees! 280
- O wantrust, ful of fals suspecioun,
- Where was thy wit and thy discrecioun?
- O every man, be-war of rakelnesse,
- Ne trowe no-thing with-outen strong witnesse; (180)
- Smyt nat to sone, er that ye witen why, 285
- And beeth avysed wel and sobrely
- Er ye doon any execucioun,
- Up-on your ire, for suspecioun.
- Allas! a thousand folk hath rakel ire
- Fully fordoon, and broght hem in the mire. 290
- Allas! for sorwe I wol my-selven slee!'
- 276. Cm. Hl. lyst thow; Pt. Ln. liest thou; Cp. lyes thou. 277. Cm.
- gylteles; Cp. Hl. gulteles; E. Hn. giltlees; _rest_ giltles. 278. Cm.
- troubele; _rest_ trouble. 280. E. smyteth; _rest_ smytest. Cm.
- gilteles; Cp. Hl. gulteles; E. giltles.
- And to the crowe, 'o false theef!' seyde he,
- 'I wol thee quyte anon thy false tale!
- Thou songe whylom lyk a nightingale; (190)
- Now shaltow, false theef, thy song forgon, 295
- And eek thy whyte fetheres everichon,
- Ne never in al thy lyf ne shaltou speke.
- Thus shal men on a traitour been awreke;
- Thou and thyn of-spring ever shul be blake,
- Ne never swete noise shul ye make, 300
- But ever crye agayn tempest and rayn,
- In tokeninge that thurgh thee my wyf is slayn.'
- And to the crowe he stirte, and that anon,
- And pulled his whyte fetheres everichon, (200)
- And made him blak, and refte him al his song, 305
- [565: T. 17255-17289.]
- And eek his speche, and out at dore him slong
- Un-to the devel, which I him bitake;
- And for this caas ben alle crowes blake.--
- 300. E. voys (_for_ noyse). 302. is] Cp. Hl. was. 308. E. Cp. caas;
- Hn. Cm. Ln. cas; Pt. caus; Hl. cause.
- Lordings, by this ensample I yow preye,
- Beth war, and taketh kepe what I seye: 310
- Ne telleth never no man in your lyf
- How that another man hath dight his wyf;
- He wol yow haten mortally, certeyn.
- Daun Salomon, as wyse clerkes seyn, (210)
- Techeth a man to kepe his tonge wel; 315
- But as I seyde, I am noght textuel.
- But nathelees, thus taughte me my dame:
- 'My sone, thenk on the crowe, a goddes name;
- My sone, keep wel thy tonge and keep thy freend.
- A wikked tonge is worse than a feend. 320
- My sone, from a feend men may hem blesse;
- My sone, god of his endelees goodnesse
- Walled a tonge with teeth and lippes eke,
- For man sholde him avyse what he speke. (220)
- My sone, ful ofte, for to muche speche, 325
- Hath many a man ben spilt, as clerkes teche;
- But for a litel speche avysely
- Is no men shent, to speke generally.
- My sone, thy tonge sholdestow restreyne
- At alle tyme, but whan thou doost thy peyne 330
- To speke of god, in honour and preyere.
- The firste vertu, sone, if thou wolt lere,
- Is to restreyne and kepe wel thy tonge.--
- Thus lerne children whan that they ben yonge.-- (230)
- My sone, of muchel speking yvel-avysed, 335
- Ther lasse speking hadde y-nough suffysed,
- Comth muchel harm, thus was me told and taught.
- In muchel speche sinne wanteth naught.
- Wostow wher-of a rakel tonge serveth?
- Right as a swerd forcutteth and forkerveth 340
- [566: T. 17290-17311.]
- An arm a-two, my dere sone, right so
- A tonge cutteth frendship al a-two.
- A Iangler is to god abhominable;
- Reed Salomon, so wys and honurable; (240)
- Reed David in his psalmes, reed Senekke. 345
- My sone, spek nat, but with thyn heed thou bekke.
- Dissimule as thou were deef, if that thou here
- A Iangler speke of perilous matere.
- The Fleming seith, and lerne it, if thee leste,
- That litel Iangling causeth muchel reste. 350
- My sone, if thou no wikked word hast seyd,
- Thee thar nat drede for to be biwreyd;
- But he that hath misseyd, I dar wel sayn,
- He may by no wey clepe his word agayn. (250)
- Thing that is seyd, is seyd; and forth it gooth, 355
- Though him repente, or be him leef or looth.
- He is his thral to whom that he hath sayd
- A tale, of which he is now yvel apayd.
- My sone, be war, and be non auctour newe
- Of tydinges, whether they ben false or trewe. 360
- Wher-so thou come, amonges hye or lowe,
- Kepe wel thy tonge, and thenk up-on the crowe.
- HERE IS ENDED THE MAUNCIPLES TALE OF THE CROWE.
- 310. E. Hn. Cm. I; Hl. ye; _rest_ that ye. 315. E. Hn. kepen; _rest_
- kepe. E. Cm. weel. 316. E. textueel; Hl. tixted wel. 318. a] E.
- on; Hl. in. 319, 320. E. Hn. freend, feend. 327. Hl. a; _rest
- om._ 330. E. Hn. Cm. tymes. 356. leef or] Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. neuer
- so. 360. E. wheither. COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn.
- [567: T. 17312-17330.]
- * * * * *
- GROUP I.
- THE PARSON'S PROLOGUE.
- * * * * *
- HERE FOLWETH THE PROLOGE OF THE PERSONES TALE.
- By that the maunciple hadde his tale al ended,
- The sonne fro the south lyne was descended
- So lowe, that he nas nat, to my sighte,
- Degreës nyne and twenty as in highte.
- Foure of the clokke it was tho, as I gesse; 5
- For eleven foot, or litel more or lesse,
- My shadwe was at thilke tyme, as there,
- Of swich feet as my lengthe parted were
- In six feet equal of proporcioun.
- Ther-with the mones exaltacioun, 10
- I mene Libra, alwey gan ascende,
- As we were entringe at a thropes ende;
- For which our host, as he was wont to gye,
- As in this caas, our Ioly companye,
- Seyde in this wyse, 'lordings everichoon, 15
- Now lakketh us no tales mo than oon.
- Fulfild is my sentence and my decree;
- I trowe that we han herd of ech degree.
- Almost fulfild is al myn ordinaunce;
- [568: T. 17331-17366.]
- I prey to god, so yeve him right good chaunce, 20
- That telleth this tale to us lustily.
- Sir preest,' quod he, 'artow a vicary?
- Or art a person? sey sooth, by thy fey!
- Be what thou be, ne breke thou nat our pley;
- For every man, save thou, hath told his tale, 25
- Unbokel, and shewe us what is in thy male;
- For trewely, me thinketh, by thy chere,
- Thou sholdest knitte up wel a greet matere.
- Tel us a tale anon, for cokkes bones!'
- 1. E. Hn. al; _rest om._ 2. E. Cm. was; _rest_ is. 3. E. ne nas;
- Cm. ne was; Cp. Pt. Ln. was. 5. _The MSS. have_ Ten; _but see the
- note._ 8. Hn. swich; E. swiche. 10. _Perhaps for_ the mones _we
- should read_ Saturnes; _see the note._ 11. _So all but_ Hl., _which
- has_ In mena. 12. thropes] Hl. townes. 17. E. Fulfilled; Hn. Cp.
- Fulfild; _see_ l. 19. 23. Cm. art; E. Hn. arte; Hl. artow; _rest_ art
- thou.
- This Persone him answerde, al at ones, 30
- 'Thou getest fable noon y-told for me;
- For Paul, that wryteth unto Timothee,
- Repreveth hem that weyven soothfastnesse,
- And tellen fables and swich wrecchednesse.
- Why sholde I sowen draf out of my fest, 35
- Whan I may sowen whete, if that me lest?
- For which I seye, if that yow list to here
- Moralitee and vertuous matere,
- And thanne that ye wol yeve me audience,
- I wol ful fayn, at Cristes reverence, 40
- Do yow plesaunce leefful, as I can.
- But trusteth wel, I am a Southren man,
- I can nat geste--rum, ram, ruf--by lettre,
- Ne, god wot, rym holde I but litel bettre;
- And therfor, if yow list, I wol nat glose. 45
- I wol yow telle a mery tale in prose
- To knitte up al this feeste, and make an ende.
- And Iesu, for his grace, wit me sende
- To shewe yow the wey, in this viage,
- Of thilke parfit glorious pilgrimage 50
- That highte Ierusalem celestial.
- And, if ye vouche-sauf, anon I shal
- Biginne upon my tale, for whiche I preye
- Telle your avys, I can no bettre seye.
- But nathelees, this meditacioun 55
- [569: T. 17367-17385.]
- I putte it ay under correccioun
- Of clerkes, for I am nat textual;
- I take but the sentens, trusteth wel.
- Therfor I make protestacioun
- That I wol stonde to correccioun.' 60
- 30. _I supply_ him _from_ ed. 1550. 32. E. Hn. Thymothee. 33. E.
- Hl. weyueth. 40. E. _omits_ ful. 41. E. leefful; Hn. leueful; Pt.
- leefull; Cp. Ln. lefful. 43. E. geeste. rum] Hn. Cp. Ln. rom. 46.
- E. Hn. myrie. 57, 58. E. textueel, weel. 58. E. _omits_ the. Hl.
- sentens; _rest_ sentence. 59. E. make a; _rest omit_ a.
- Up-on this word we han assented sone,
- For, as us semed, it was for to done,
- To enden in som vertuous sentence,
- And for to yeve him space and audience;
- And bede our host he sholde to him seye, 65
- That alle we to telle his tale him preye.
- 62. E. vs; _rest_ it, _which is inferior._
- Our host hadde the wordes for us alle:--
- 'Sir preest,' quod he, 'now fayre yow bifalle!
- Sey what yow list, and we wol gladly here'--
- And with that word he seyde in this manere-- 70
- 'Telleth,' quod he, 'your meditacioun.
- But hasteth yow, the sonne wol adoun;
- Beth fructuous, and that in litel space,
- And to do wel god sende yow his grace!'
- EXPLICIT PROHEMIUM.
- COLOPHON. _So_ E. Hn. Ln.; Pt.--Thus endeth the prolog of the persons
- tale.
- [570]
- * * * * *
- THE PERSONES TALE.
- * * * * *
- HERE BIGINNETH THE PERSONES TALE.
- _Ier._ 6º. _State super vias et videte et interrogate de viis antiquis, que
- sit via bona; et ambulate in ea, et inuenietis refrigerium animabus
- vestris, &c._
- § 1. Our swete lord god of hevene, that no man wole perisse, but wole that
- we comen alle to the knoweleche of him, and to the blisful lyf that is
- perdurable, /75 amonesteth us by the prophete Ieremie, that seith in this
- wyse: / 'stondeth upon the weyes, and seeth and axeth of olde pathes (that
- is to seyn, of olde sentences) which is the goode wey; / and walketh in
- that wey, and ye shul finde refresshinge for your soules,' &c. / Manye been
- the weyes espirituels that leden folk to oure Lord Iesu Crist, and to the
- regne of glorie. / Of whiche weyes, ther is a ful noble wey and a ful
- covenable, which may nat faile to man ne to womman, that thurgh sinne hath
- misgoon fro the righte wey of Ierusalem celestial; /80 and this wey is
- cleped Penitence, of which man sholde gladly herknen and enquere with al
- his herte; / to witen what is Penitence, and whennes it is cleped
- Penitence, and in how manye maneres been the accions or werkinges of
- Penitence, / and how manye spyces ther been of Penitence, and whiche
- thinges apertenen and bihoven to Penitence, and whiche thinges destourben
- Penitence. /
- HEADING. _From_ E. (E. Heere; Persouns). 75. E. _om. 2nd _to. 76.
- E. and seith; _rest _that seith. 78. E. Hn. Ln. shal; Pt. shul. 79.
- Pt. espiritual; Ln. spirituele. 80. E. _om. 2nd _ful. E. to no man;
- _rest om._ no. 82. Ln. penance (_for 2nd and 3rd _Penitence). 83.
- E. speces; Hl. spieces; _rest _spices.
- § 2. Seint Ambrose seith, that 'Penitence is the pleyninge of man for the
- gilt that he hath doon, and na-more to do any thing for which him oghte to
- pleyne.' / And som doctour seith: 'Penitence is the waymentinge of man,
- that sorweth for his sinne [571] and pyneth him-self for he hath misdoon.'
- /85 Penitence, with certeyne circumstances, is verray repentance of a man
- that halt him-self in sorwe and other peyne for hise giltes. / And for he
- shal be verray penitent, he shal first biwailen the sinnes that he hath
- doon, and stidefastly purposen in his herte to have shrift of mouthe, and
- to doon satisfaccioun, / and never to doon thing for which him oghte more
- to biwayle or to compleyne, and to continue in goode werkes: or elles his
- repentance may nat availle. / For as seith seint Isidre: 'he is a Iaper and
- a gabber, and no verray repentant, that eftsoone dooth thing, for which him
- oghte repente.' / Wepinge, and nat for to stinte to doon sinne, may nat
- avaylle. /90 But nathelees, men shal hope that every tyme that man falleth,
- be it never so ofte, that he may arise thurgh Penitence, if he have grace:
- but certeinly it is greet doute. / For as seith Seint Gregorie: 'unnethe
- aryseth he out of sinne, that is charged with the charge of yvel usage.' /
- And therfore repentant folk, that stinte for to sinne, and forlete sinne er
- that sinne forlete hem, holy chirche holdeth hem siker of hir savacioun. /
- And he that sinneth, and verraily repenteth him in his laste ende, holy
- chirche yet hopeth his savacioun, by the grete mercy of oure lord Iesu
- Crist, for his repentaunce; but tak the siker wey. /
- 84. E. _om._ the _before _gilt. 85. Ln. Hl. peyneth. 86. Hl.
- holt. 88. E. _om._ to _bef_. biwayle _and_ continue. 90. Hl. doon;
- E. _om._; _rest_ do. 94. Hl. Ln. ende; E. Hn. Pt. _om._ E. taak
- (_glossed_ tene); siker (_glossed_ certum). Cm. sikerer. _After_
- wey, Cm. _adds_--& the more certeyn.
- § 3. And now, sith I have declared yow what thing is Penitence, now shul ye
- understonde that ther been three accions of Penitence. /95 The firste
- accion of Penitence is, that a man be baptized after that he hath sinned. /
- Seint Augustin seith: 'but he be penitent for his olde sinful lyf, he may
- nat biginne the newe clene lif.' / For certes, if he be baptized withouten
- penitence of his olde gilt, he receiveth the mark of baptisme, but nat the
- grace ne the remission of his sinnes, til he have repentance verray. /
- Another defaute is this, that men doon deedly sinne after that they han
- received baptisme. / The thridde defaute is, that men fallen in venial
- sinnes after hir baptisme, fro day to day. /100 Ther-of seith Seint
- Augustin, that 'penitence of goode and humble folk is the penitence of
- every day.' /
- 96. _All but_ E. _om._ accion of Penitence. 97. Hl. but if. 98-100.
- E. Hn. baptesme. 100. Hl. in-to venial synne.
- [572] § 4. The spyces of Penitence been three. That oon of hem is solempne,
- another is commune, and the thridde is privee. / Thilke penance that is
- solempne, is in two maneres; as to be put out of holy chirche in lente, for
- slaughtre of children, and swich maner thing. / Another is, whan a man hath
- sinned openly, of which sinne the fame is openly spoken in the contree; and
- thanne holy chirche by Iugement destreineth him for to do open penaunce. /
- Commune penaunce is that preestes enioinen men comunly in certeyn caas; as
- for to goon, peraventure, naked in pilgrimages, or bare-foot. /105 Privee
- penaunce is thilke that men doon alday for privee sinnes, of whiche we
- shryve us prively and receyve privee penaunce. /
- 102. E. Hn. speces (_glossed_ species); _rest_ spices. 103. E. Hn. As
- to; _rest_ as is to. 104. E. Another thyng is; _rest om._ thyng.
- Hl. streyneth. 105. E. Cm. _om._ comunly. 106. E. they shryue hem.
- § 5. Now shaltow understande what is bihovely and necessarie to verray
- parfit Penitence. And this stant on three thinges; / Contricioun of herte,
- Confessioun of Mouth, and Satisfaccioun. / For which seith Seint Iohn
- Crisostom: 'Penitence destreyneth a man to accepte benignely every peyne
- that him is enioyned, with contricion of herte, and shrift of mouth, with
- satisfaccion; and in werkinge of alle maner humilitee.' / And this is
- fruitful Penitence agayn three thinges in whiche we wratthe oure lord Iesu
- Crist: /110 this is to seyn, by delyt in thinkinge, by recchelesnesse in
- spekinge, and by wikked sinful werkinge. / And agayns thise wikkede giltes
- is Penitence, that may be lykned un-to a tree. /
- 107. E. is bihouely; Cm. is behofly; _rest_ bihoueth (behoueth). Hl.
- stondith. 109. Hl. humblete. 112. Hl. these thre wickid.
- § 6. The rote of this tree is Contricion, that hydeth him in the herte of
- him that is verray repentant, right as the rote of a tree hydeth him in the
- erthe. / Of the rote of Contricion springeth a stalke, that bereth
- braunches and leves of Confession, and fruit of Satisfaccion. / For which
- Crist seith in his gospel: 'dooth digne fruit of Penitence'; for by this
- fruit may men knowe this tree, and nat by the rote that is hid in the herte
- of man, ne by the braunches ne by the leves of Confession. /115 And
- therefore oure Lord Iesu Crist seith thus: 'by the fruit of hem ye shul
- knowen hem.' / Of this rote eek springeth a seed of grace, the which seed
- is moder of sikernesse, and this seed is egre and [573] hoot. / The grace
- of this seed springeth of god, thurgh remembrance of the day of dome and on
- the peynes of helle. / Of this matere seith Salomon, that 'in the drede of
- god man forleteth his sinne.' / The hete of this seed is the love of god,
- and the desiring of the Ioye perdurable. /120 This hete draweth the herte
- of a man to god, and dooth him haten his sinne. / For soothly, ther is
- no-thing that savoureth so wel to a child as the milk of his norice, ne
- no-thing is to him more abhominable than thilke milk whan it is medled with
- other mete. / Right so the sinful man that loveth his sinne, him semeth
- that it is to him most swete of any-thing; / but fro that tyme that he
- loveth sadly our lord Iesu Crist, and desireth the lif perdurable, ther nis
- to him no-thing more abhominable. / For soothly, the lawe of god is the
- love of god; for which David the prophete seith: 'I have loved thy lawe and
- hated wikkednesse and hate'; he that loveth god kepeth his lawe and his
- word. /125 This tree saugh the prophete Daniel in spirit, up-on the avision
- of the king Nabugodonosor, whan he conseiled him to do penitence. /
- Penaunce is the tree of lyf to hem that it receiven, and he that holdeth
- him in verray penitence is blessed; after the sentence of Salomon. /
- 117. E. a grace (_for_ of grace). 122. E. _om._ is to him. 125. E.
- loued god; _rest_ loueth god. 126. E. _om._ in spirit. up-on] E.
- in.
- § 7. In this Penitence or Contricion man shal understonde foure thinges,
- that is to seyn, what is Contricion: and whiche been the causes that moeven
- a man to Contricion: and how he sholde be contrit: and what Contricion
- availleth to the soule. / Thanne is it thus: that Contricion is the verray
- sorwe that a man receiveth in his herte for his sinnes, with sad purpos to
- shryve him, and to do penaunce, and nevermore to do sinne. / And this sorwe
- shal been in this manere, as seith seint Bernard: 'it shal been hevy and
- grevous, and ful sharpe and poinant in herte.' /130 First, for man hath
- agilt his lord and his creatour; and more sharpe and poinant, for he hath
- agilt his fader celestial; / and yet more sharpe and poinant, for he hath
- wrathed and agilt him that boghte him; which with his precious blood hath
- delivered us fro the bondes of sinne, and fro the crueltee of the devel and
- fro the peynes of helle. /
- 131. Cp. agult; Hl. agiltid.
- § 8. The causes that oghte moeve a man to Contricion been six. First, a man
- shal remembre him of hise sinnes; / but loke [574] he that thilke
- remembrance ne be to him no delyt by no wey, but greet shame and sorwe for
- his gilt. For Iob seith: 'sinful men doon werkes worthy of Confession.' /
- And therfore seith Ezechie: 'I wol remembre me alle the yeres of my lyf, in
- bitternesse of myn herte.' /135 And god seith in the Apocalips: remembreth
- yow fro whennes that ye been falle'; for biforn that tyme that ye sinned,
- ye were the children of god, and limes of the regne of god; / but for your
- sinne ye been woxen thral and foul, and membres of the feend, hate of
- aungels, sclaundre of holy chirche, and fode of the false serpent;
- perpetuel matere of the fyr of helle. / And yet more foul and abhominable,
- for ye trespassen so ofte tyme, as doth the hound that retourneth to eten
- his spewing. / And yet be ye fouler for your longe continuing in sinne and
- your sinful usage, for which ye be roten in your sinne, as a beest in his
- dong. / Swiche manere of thoghtes maken a man to have shame of his sinne,
- and no delyt, as god seith by the prophete Ezechiel: /140 'ye shal remembre
- yow of youre weyes, and they shuln displese yow.' Sothly, sinnes been the
- weyes that leden folk to helle. /
- 134. E. looke he; _rest om._ he. 135. Hl. Ln. Ezechiel. 137. E.
- p_er_petueel.
- § 9. The seconde cause that oghte make a man to have desdeyn of sinne is
- this: that, as seith seint Peter, 'who-so that doth sinne is thral of
- sinne'; and sinne put a man in greet thraldom. / And therfore seith the
- prophete Ezechiel: 'I wente sorweful in desdayn of my-self.' And certes,
- wel oghte a man have desdayn of sinne, and withdrawe him from that thraldom
- and vileinye. / And lo, what seith Seneca in this matere. He seith thus:
- 'though I wiste that neither god ne man ne sholde nevere knowe it, yet
- wolde I have desdayn for to do sinne.' / And the same Seneca also seith: 'I
- am born to gretter thinges than to be thral to my body, or than for to
- maken of my body a thral.' /145 Ne a fouler thral may no man ne womman
- maken of his body, than for to yeven his body to sinne. / Al were it the
- fouleste cherl, or the fouleste womman that liveth, and leest of value, yet
- is he thanne more foule and more in servitute. / Evere fro the hyer degree
- that man falleth, the more is he thral, and more to god and to the world
- vile and abhominable. / O gode god, wel oghte [575] man have desdayn of
- sinne; sith that, thurgh sinne, ther he was free, now is he maked bonde. /
- And therfore seyth Seint Augustin: 'if thou hast desdayn of thy servant, if
- he agilte or sinne, have thou thanne desdayn that thou thy-self sholdest do
- sinne.' /150 Take reward of thy value, that thou ne be to foul to thy-self.
- / Allas! wel oghten they thanne have desdayn to been servauntz and thralles
- to sinne, and sore been ashamed of hem-self, / that god of his endelees
- goodnesse hath set hem in heigh estaat, or yeven hem wit, strengthe of
- body, hele, beautee, prosperitee, / and boghte hem fro the deeth with his
- herte blood, that they so unkindely, agayns his gentilesse, quyten him so
- vileinsly, to slaughtre of hir owene soules. / O gode god, ye wommen that
- been of so greet beautee, remembreth yow of the proverbe of Salomon, that
- seith: /155 'he lykneth a fair womman, that is a fool of hir body, lyk to a
- ring of gold that were in the groyn of a sowe.' / For right as a sowe
- wroteth in everich ordure, so wroteth she hir beautee in the stinkinge
- ordure of sinne. /
- 143. E. And certes; _rest om._ And. 144. E. Hn. _wrongly ins_, god
- _after_ that. 147. _All_ seruitute. 148. E. _om._ vile and. 150.
- Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. Austyn. 152. Hl. men (_for_ they). 154. Cm.
- vileynly. 155, 6. _So_ Hl.; E. Hn. he seith likneth; Cp. he seith he
- likeneth; Cm. he seith & likkenyth; Pt. He likneth. E. soughe;
- _rest_ sowe. 157. E. soughe; _om._ she.
- § 10. The thridde cause that oghte moeve a man to Contricion, is drede of
- the day of dome, and of the horrible peynes of helle. / For as seint Ierome
- seith: 'at every tyme that me remembreth of the day of dome, I quake; / for
- whan I ete or drinke, or what-so that I do, evere semeth me that the trompe
- sowneth in myn ere: /160 riseth up, ye that been dede, and cometh to the
- Iugement.' / O gode god, muchel oghte a man to drede swich a Iugement,
- 'ther-as we shullen been alle,' as seint Poul seith, 'biforn the sete of
- oure lord Iesu Crist'; / wher-as he shal make a general congregacion,
- wher-as no man may been absent. / For certes, there availleth noon essoyne
- ne excusacion. / And nat only that oure defautes shullen be iuged, but eek
- that alle oure werkes shullen openly be knowe. /165 And as seith Seint
- Bernard: 'ther ne shal no pledinge availle, ne no sleighte; we shullen
- yeven rekeninge of everich ydel word.' / Ther shul we han a Iuge that may
- nat been deceived ne corrupt. And why? For, certes, alle our thoghtes been
- discovered as to him; ne for preyere ne for mede he shal nat been corrupt.
- / And therfore [576] seith Salomon: 'the wratthe of god ne wol nat spare no
- wight, for preyere ne for yifte'; and therfore, at the day of doom, ther
- nis noon hope to escape. / Wherfore, as seith Seint Anselm: 'ful greet
- angwissh shul the sinful folk have at that tyme; / ther shal the sterne and
- wrothe Iuge sitte above, and under him the horrible put of helle open to
- destroyen him that moot biknowen hise sinnes, whiche sinnes openly been
- shewed biforn god and biforn every creature. /170 And on the left syde, mo
- develes than herte may bithinke, for to harie and drawe the sinful soules
- to the pyne of helle. / And with-inne the hertes of folk shal be the
- bytinge conscience, and with-oute-forth shal be the world al brenninge. /
- Whider shal thanne the wrecched sinful man flee to hyden him? Certes, he
- may nat hyden him; he moste come forth and shewen him.' / For certes, as
- seith seint Ierome: 'the erthe shal casten him out of him, and the see
- also; and the eyr also, that shal be ful of thonder-clappes and
- lightninges.' / Now sothly, who-so wel remembreth him of thise thinges, I
- gesse that his sinne shal nat turne him in-to delyt, but to greet sorwe,
- for drede of the peyne of helle. /175 And therfore seith Iob to god:
- 'suffre, lord, that I may a whyle biwaille and wepe, er I go with-oute
- returning to the derke lond, covered with the derknesse of deeth; / to the
- lond of misese and of derknesse, where-as is the shadwe of deeth; where-as
- ther is noon ordre or ordinance, but grisly drede that evere shal laste.' /
- Lo, here may ye seen that Iob preyde respyt a whyle, to biwepe and waille
- his trespas; for soothly oon day of respyt is bettre than al the tresor of
- the world. / And for-as-muche as a man may acquiten him-self biforn god by
- penitence in this world, and nat by tresor, therfore sholde he preye to god
- to yeve him respyt a whyle, to biwepe and biwaillen his trespas. / For
- certes, al the sorwe that a man mighte make fro the beginning of the world,
- nis but a litel thing at regard of the sorwe of helle. /180 The cause why
- that Iob clepeth helle 'the lond of derknesse'; / under-stondeth that he
- clepeth it 'londe' or erthe, for it is stable, and nevere shal faille;
- 'derk,' for he that is in helle hath defaute of light material. / For
- certes, [577] the derke light, that shal come out of the fyr that evere
- shal brenne, shal turne him al to peyne that is in helle; for it sheweth
- him to the horrible develes that him tormenten. / 'Covered with the
- derknesse of deeth': that is to seyn, that he that is in helle shal have
- defaute of the sighte of god; for certes, the sighte of god is the lyf
- perdurable. / 'The derknesse of deeth' been the sinnes that the wrecched
- man hath doon, whiche that destourben him to see the face of god; right as
- doth a derk cloude bitwixe us and the sonne. /185 'Lond of misese':
- by-cause that ther been three maneres of defautes, agayn three thinges that
- folk of this world han in this present lyf, that is to seyn, honours,
- delyces, and richesses. / Agayns honour, have they in helle shame and
- confusion. / For wel ye woot that men clepen 'honour' the reverence that
- man doth to man; but in helle is noon honour ne reverence. For certes,
- na-more reverence shal be doon there to a king than to a knave. / For which
- god seith by the prophete Ieremye: 'thilke folk that me despysen shul been
- in despyt.' / 'Honour' is eek cleped greet lordshipe; ther shal no man
- serven other but of harm and torment. 'Honour' is eek cleped greet dignitee
- and heighnesse; but in helle shul they been al fortroden of develes. /190
- And god seith: 'the horrible develes shulle goon and comen up-on the
- hevedes of the dampned folk.' And this is for-as-muche as, the hyer that
- they were in this present lyf, the more shulle they been abated and
- defouled in helle. / Agayns the richesses of this world, shul they han
- misese of poverte; and this poverte shal been in foure thinges: / in
- defaute of tresor, of which that David seith; 'the riche folk, that
- embraceden and oneden al hir herte to tresor of this world, shul slepe in
- the slepinge of deeth; and no-thing ne shul they finden in hir handes of al
- hir tresor.' / And more-over, the miseise of helle shal been in defaute of
- mete and drinke. / For god seith thus by Moyses; 'they shul been wasted
- with hunger, and the briddes of helle shul devouren hem with bitter deeth,
- and the galle of the dragon shal been hir drinke, and the venim of the
- dragon hir morsels.' /195 And forther-over, hir miseise shal been in
- defaute of clothing: for they shulle be naked in body as of clothing, save
- the fyr in which they brenne and othere filthes; / and naked shul they been
- of [578] soule, of alle manere vertues, which that is the clothing of the
- soule. Where been thanne the gaye robes and the softe shetes and the smale
- shertes? / Lo, what seith god of hem by the prophete Isaye: 'that under hem
- shul been strawed motthes, and hir covertures shulle been of wormes of
- helle.' / And forther-over, hir miseise shal been in defaute of freendes;
- for he nis nat povre that hath goode freendes, but there is no freend; /
- for neither god ne no creature shal been freend to hem, and everich of hem
- shal haten other with deedly hate. /200 'The sones and the doghtren shullen
- rebellen agayns fader and mooder, and kinrede agayns kinrede, and chyden
- and despysen everich of hem other,' bothe day and night, as god seith by
- the prophete Michias. / And the lovinge children, that whylom loveden so
- fleshly everich other, wolden everich of hem eten other if they mighte. /
- For how sholden they love hem togidre in the peyne of helle, whan they
- hated ech of hem other in the prosperitee of this lyf? / For truste wel,
- hir fleshly love was deedly hate; as seith the prophete David: 'who-so that
- loveth wikkednesse he hateth his soule.' / And who-so hateth his owene
- soule, certes, he may love noon other wight in no manere. /205 And
- therefore, in helle is no solas ne no frendshipe, but evere the more
- fleshly kinredes that been in helle, the more cursinges, the more
- chydinges, and the more deedly hate ther is among hem. / And forther-over,
- they shul have defaute of alle manere delyces; for certes, delyces been
- after the appetytes of the fyve wittes, as sighte, heringe, smellinge,
- savoringe, and touchinge. / But in helle hir sighte shal be ful of
- derknesse and of smoke, and therfore ful of teres; and hir heringe, ful of
- waymentinge and of grintinge of teeth, as seith Iesu Crist; / hir
- nosethirles shullen be ful of stinkinge stink. And as seith Isaye the
- prophete: 'hir savoring shal be ful of bitter galle.' / And touchinge of al
- hir body, y-covered with 'fyr that nevere shal quenche, and with wormes
- that nevere shul dyen,' as god seith by the mouth of Isaye. /210 And
- for-as-muche as they shul nat wene that they may dyen for peyne, and by hir
- deeth flee fro peyne, that may they understonden by the word of Iob, that
- seith: 'ther-as is the [579] shadwe of deeth.' / Certes, a shadwe hath the
- lyknesse of the thing of which it is shadwe, but shadwe is nat the same
- thing of which it is shadwe. / Right so fareth the peyne of helle; it is
- lyk deeth for the horrible anguissh, and why? For it peyneth hem evere, as
- though they sholde dye anon; but certes they shal nat dye. / For as seith
- Seint Gregorie: 'to wrecche caytives shal be deeth with-oute deeth, and
- ende with-outen ende, and defaute with-oute failinge. / For hir deeth shal
- alwey liven, and hir ende shal everemo biginne, and hir defaute shal nat
- faille.' /215 And therfore seith Seint Iohn the Evangelist: 'they shullen
- folwe deeth, and they shul nat finde him; and they shul desyren to dye, and
- deeth shal flee fro hem.' / And eek Iob seith: that 'in helle is noon ordre
- of rule.' / And al-be-it so that god hath creat alle thinges in right
- ordre, and no-thing with-outen ordre, but alle thinges been ordeyned and
- nombred; yet nathelees they that been dampned been no-thing in ordre, ne
- holden noon ordre. / For the erthe ne shal bere hem no fruit. / For, as the
- prophete David seith: 'god shal destroie the fruit of the erthe as fro
- hem;' ne water ne shal yeve hem no moisture; ne the eyr no refresshing, ne
- fyr no light. /220 For as seith seint Basilie: 'the brenninge of the fyr of
- this world shal god yeven in helle to hem that been dampned; / but the
- light and the cleernesse shal be yeven in hevene to hise children'; right
- as the gode man yeveth flesh to hise children, and bones to his houndes. /
- And for they shullen have noon hope to escape, seith seint Iob atte laste:
- that 'ther shal horrour and grisly drede dwellen with-outen ende.' /
- Horrour is alwey drede of harm that is to come, and this drede shal evere
- dwelle in the hertes of hem that been dampned. And therefore han they lorn
- al hir hope, for sevene causes. / First, for god that is hir Iuge shal be
- with-outen mercy to hem; ne they may nat plese him, ne noon of hise halwes;
- ne they ne may yeve no-thing for hir raunson; /225 ne they have no vois to
- speke to him; ne they may nat flee fro peyne; ne they have no goodnesse in
- hem, that they mowe shewe to delivere hem fro peyne. / And therfore seith
- Salomon: 'the wikked man dyeth; and whan he is deed, he shal have noon hope
- to escape fro peyne.' / Who-so thanne wolde wel understande these peynes,
- [580] and bithinke him weel that he hath deserved thilke peynes for his
- sinnes, certes, he sholde have more talent to syken and to wepe than for to
- singen and to pleye. / For as that seith Salomon: 'who-so that hadde the
- science to knowe the peynes that been establissed and ordeyned for sinne,
- he wolde make sorwe.' / 'Thilke science,' as seith seint Augustin, 'maketh
- a man to waymenten in his herte.' /230
- 166. E. _om. 2nd_ no. 168. Cp. Pt. Ln. repeat (after god) wol nought
- ben corrupte and therefore saith Salamon. 170. E. Hn. stierne.
- moot] E. noot. 171. on] E. in. E. Ln. peyne; Cm. pit; _rest_
- pyne. 175. E. Hn. in; Hl. to; _rest_ in-to. 178. Hl. oon; Cm. on;
- E. a; _rest_ oo (o). 182. or] E. Cp. Ln. of. E. Hn. dirk. 188. E.
- Hn. woot; Cm. wote; Hl. witen; Cp. wite; Ln. weten. 189. Hl.
- displesen (_for_ despysen). 190. E. _om. from_ ther shal _to 2nd_
- greet. 195. E. with the bitter; _rest om._ the. Hl. teeth (_for_
- deeth). 197. E. as of alle; _rest om._ as. E. (_only_) smale shetes
- and the softe shertes. 203. E. _om._ hem _after_ love. 206. E. _om.
- 1st_ in helle. 207. Cp. Pt. Ln. Hl. _om._ after. 208. Cp. Hl. Ln.
- gruntynge; Cm. grochynge; Pt. gnaistynge. 214. Hl. shal be yiue
- deth. 218. E. in the ordre. 221. E. Cm. Basilie; _rest_ Basile.
- 225. E. Cm. and they (_1st time_). 228. E. the (_for_ these).
- § 11. The fourthe point, that oghte maken a man to have contricion, is the
- sorweful remembrance of the good that he hath left to doon here in erthe;
- and eek the good that he hath lorn. / Soothly, the gode werkes that he hath
- left, outher they been the gode werkes that he wroghte er he fel in-to
- deedly sinne, or elles the gode werkes that he wroghte while he lay in
- sinne. / Soothly, the gode werkes, that he dide biforn that he fil in
- sinne, been al mortified and astoned and dulled by the ofte sinning. / The
- othere gode werkes, that he wroghte whyl he lay in deedly sinne, they been
- outrely dede as to the lyf perdurable in hevene. / Thanne thilke gode
- werkes that been mortified by ofte sinning, whiche gode werkes he dide whyl
- he was in charitee, ne mowe nevere quiken agayn with-outen verray
- penitence. /235 And ther-of seith god, by the mouth of Ezechiel: that, 'if
- the rightful man returne agayn from his rightwisnesse and werke
- wikkednesse, shal he live?' / Nay; for alle the gode werkes that he hath
- wroght ne shul nevere been in remembrance; for he shal dyen in his sinne. /
- And up-on thilke chapitre seith seint Gregorie thus: 'that we shulle
- understonde this principally; / that whan we doon deedly sinne, it is for
- noght thanne to rehercen or drawen in-to memorie the gode werkes that we
- han wroght biforn.' / For certes, in the werkinge of the deedly sinne, ther
- is no trust to no good werk that we han doon biforn; that is to seyn, as
- for to have therby the lyf perdurable in hevene. /240 But nathelees, the
- gode werkes quiken agayn, and comen agayn, and helpen, and availlen to have
- the lyf perdurable in hevene, whan we han contricion. / But soothly, the
- gode werkes that men doon whyl they been in deedly sinne, for-as-muche as
- they were doon in deedly sinne, they may nevere quiken agayn. / For certes,
- thing that nevere hadde lyf may nevere quikene; and nathelees, al-be-it
- that [581] they ne availle noght to han the lyf perdurable, yet availlen
- they to abregge of the peyne of helle, or elles to geten temporal richesse,
- / or elles that god wole the rather enlumine and lightne the herte of the
- sinful man to have repentance; / and eek they availlen for to usen a man to
- doon gode werkes, that the feend have the lasse power of his soule. /245
- And thus the curteis lord Iesu Crist wole that no good werk be lost; for in
- somwhat it shal availle. / But for-as-muche as the gode werkes that men
- doon whyl they been in good lyf, been al mortified by sinne folwinge; and
- eek, sith that alle the gode werkes that men doon whyl they been in deedly
- synne, been outrely dede as for to have the lyf perdurable; / wel may that
- man, that no good werke ne dooth, singe thilke newe Frenshe song: "_Iay
- tout perdu mon temps et mon labour_." / For certes, sinne bireveth a man
- bothe goodnesse of nature and eek the goodnesse of grace. / For soothly,
- the grace of the holy goost fareth lyk fyr, that may nat been ydel; for fyr
- faileth anoon as it forleteth his wirkinge, and right so grace fayleth
- anoon as it forleteth his werkinge. /250 Than leseth the sinful man the
- goodnesse of glorie, that only is bihight to gode men that labouren and
- werken. / Wel may he be sory thanne, that oweth al his lif to god as longe
- as he hath lived, and eek as longe as he shal live, that no goodnesse ne
- hath to paye with his dette to god, to whom he oweth al his lyf. / For
- trust wel, 'he shal yeven acountes,' as seith seint Bernard, 'of alle the
- godes that han be yeven him in this present lyf, and how he hath hem
- despended; / in so muche that ther shal nat perisse an heer of his heed, ne
- a moment of an houre ne shal nat perisse of his tyme, that he ne shal yeve
- of it a rekening.' /
- 232. E. Pt. Ln. that he hath wroght (_1st time_). 233. Ln. mortified;
- Hl. amortised; _rest_ mortefied. Cp. Pt. astonyed; Hl. astoneyed.
- 235. Ln. Hl. mortified; _rest_ mortefied. 240. E. is for to seyn.
- 242. E. quyke. 247. Ln. mortified; Hn. Hl. amortised; _rest_
- mortefied. 254. _All_ noght (nat) _so_; ed. 1550, in so (_better_).
- § 12. The fifthe thing that oghte moeve a man to contricion, is remembrance
- of the passion that oure lord Iesu Crist suffred for our sinnes. /255 For,
- as seith seint Bernard: 'whyl that I live, I shal have remembrance of the
- travailles that oure lord Crist suffred in preching; / his werinesse in
- travailling, hise temptacions whan he fasted, hise longe wakinges whan he
- preyde, hise teres whan that he weep for pitee of good peple; / the wo and
- the shame and the filthe that men seyden to him; of the foule spitting that
- men spitte in his face, of the buffettes that men yaven [582] him, of the
- foule mowes, and of the repreves that men to him seyden; / of the nayles
- with whiche he was nailed to the croys, and of al the remenant of his
- passion that he suffred for my sinnes, and no-thing for his gilt.' / And ye
- shul understonde, that in mannes sinne is every manere of ordre or
- ordinance turned up-so-doun. /260 For it is sooth, that god, and reson, and
- sensualitee, and the body of man been so ordeyned, that everich of thise
- foure thinges sholde have lordshipe over that other; / as thus: god sholde
- have lordshipe over reson, and reson over sensualitee, and sensualitee over
- the body of man. / But sothly, whan man sinneth, al this ordre or ordinance
- is turned up-so-doun. / And therfore thanne, for-as-muche as the reson of
- man ne wol nat be subget ne obeisant to god, that is his lord by right,
- therfore leseth it the lordshipe that it sholde have over sensualitee, and
- eek over the body of man. / And why? For sensualitee rebelleth thanne
- agayns reson; and by that wey leseth reson the lordshipe over sensualitee
- and over the body. /265 For right as reson is rebel to god, right so is
- bothe sensualitee rebel to reson and the body also. / And certes, this
- disordinance and this rebellion oure lord Iesu Crist aboghte up-on his
- precious body ful dere, and herkneth in which wyse. / For-as-muche thanne
- as reson is rebel to god, therfore is man worthy to have sorwe and to be
- deed. / This suffred oure lord Iesu Crist for man, after that he hadde be
- bitraysed of his disciple, and distreyned and bounde, 'so that his blood
- brast out at every nail of hise handes,' as seith seint Augustin. / And
- forther-over, for-as-muchel as reson of man ne wol nat daunte sensualitee
- whan it may, therfore is man worthy to have shame; and this suffred oure
- lord Iesu Crist for man, whan they spetten in his visage. /270 And
- forther-over, for-as-muchel thanne as the caitif body of man is rebel bothe
- to reson and to sensualitee, therfore is it worthy the deeth. / And this
- suffred oure lord Iesu Crist for man up-on the croys, where-as ther was no
- part of his body free, withouten greet peyne and bitter passion. / And al
- this suffred Iesu Crist, that nevere forfeted. And therfore resonably may
- be seyd of Iesu in this manere: 'to muchel am I peyned for the thinges that
- I nevere deserved, and to muche defouled for shend-shipe that man is worthy
- to have.' / And therfore may the sinful [583] man wel seye, as seith seint
- Bernard: 'acursed be the bitternesse of my sinne, for which ther moste be
- suffred so muchel bitternesse.' / For certes, after the diverse
- discordances of oure wikkednesses, was the passion of Iesu Crist ordeyned
- in diverse thinges, /275 as thus. Certes, sinful mannes soule is bitraysed
- of the devel by coveitise of temporel prosperitee, and scorned by deceite
- whan he cheseth fleshly delyces; and yet is it tormented by inpacience of
- adversitee, and bispet by servage and subieccion of sinne; and atte laste
- it is slayn fynally. / For this disordinaunce of sinful man was Iesu Crist
- first bitraysed, and after that was he bounde, that cam for to unbynden us
- of sinne and peyne. / Thanne was he biscorned, that only sholde han been
- honoured in alle thinges and of alle thinges. / Thanne was his visage, that
- oghte be desired to be seyn of al man-kinde, in which visage aungels
- desyren to looke, vileynsly bispet. / Thanne was he scourged that no-thing
- hadde agilt; and fynally, thanne was he crucified and slayn. /280 Thanne
- was acompliced the word of Isaye: 'he was wounded for oure misdedes, and
- defouled for oure felonies.' / Now sith that Iesu Crist took up-on him-self
- the peyne of alle oure wikkednesses, muchel oghte sinful man wepen and
- biwayle, that for hise sinnes goddes sone of hevene sholde al this peyne
- endure. /
- 255. Hl. for vs and for our synnes. 261. E. Cm. _om._ so. 269. E.
- Cm. his blood; _rest_ the blood. 270. Hl. face (_for_ visage). 273.
- Cm. (_and_ ed. 1550) And therfore ... manere; _rest om._ 275. E.
- disconcordances. 276. E. temporeel. bispet] E. dispeir (!). 277.
- E. _om._ first. 281. E. Ysaye that seith that he; _rest om._ that
- seith that.
- § 13. The sixte thing that oghte moeve a man to contricion, is the hope of
- three thynges; that is to seyn, foryifnesse of sinne, and the yifte of
- grace wel for to do, and the glorie of hevene, with which god shal guerdone
- a man for hise gode dedes. / And for-as-muche as Iesu Crist yeveth us thise
- yiftes of his largesse and of his sovereyn bountee, therfore is he cleped
- _Iesus Nazarenus rex Iudeorum._ / Iesus is to seyn 'saveour' or
- 'salvacion,' on whom men shul hope to have foryifnesse of sinnes, which
- that is proprely salvacion of sinnes. /285 And therfore seyde the aungel to
- Ioseph: 'thou shall clepen his name Iesus, that shal saven his peple of hir
- sinnes.' / And heer-of seith seint Peter: 'ther is noon other name under
- hevene that is yeve to any man, by which a man may be saved, but only
- Iesus.' / _Nazarenus_ is as muche for to seye as 'florisshinge,' in which a
- man shal hope, that he that yeveth him remission of sinnes shal yeve him
- eek grace wel [584] for to do. For in the flour is hope of fruit in tyme
- cominge; and in foryifnesse of sinnes hope of grace wel for to do. / 'I was
- atte dore of thyn herte,' seith Iesus, 'and cleped for to entre; he that
- openeth to me shal have foryifnesse of sinne. / I wol entre in-to him by my
- grace, and soupe with him,' by the goode werkes that he shal doon; whiche
- werkes been the foode of god; 'and he shal soupe with me,' by the grete
- Ioye that I shal yeven him. /290 Thus shal man hope, for hise werkes of
- penaunce, that god shall yeven him his regne; as he bihoteth him in the
- gospel. /
- 283. E. Hn. gerdone; Cm. gerdounnyn. 285. E. _om._ is _after_ that.
- 291. Hn. Cm. Hl. byheteth.
- § 14. Now shal a man understonde, in which manere shal been his contricion.
- I seye, that it shal been universal and total; this is to seyn, a man shal
- be verray repentant for alle hise sinnes that he hath doon in delyt of his
- thoght; for delyt is ful perilous. / For ther been two manere of
- consentinges; that oon of hem is cleped consentinge of affeccion, when a
- man is moeved to do sinne, and delyteth him longe for to thinke on that
- sinne; / and his reson aperceyveth it wel, that it is sinne agayns the lawe
- of god, and yet his reson refreyneth nat his foul delyt or talent, though
- he se wel apertly that it is agayns the reverence of god; al-though his
- reson ne consente noght to doon that sinne in dede, / yet seyn somme
- doctours that swich delyt that dwelleth longe, it is ful perilous, al be it
- nevere so lite. /295 And also a man sholde sorwe, namely, for al that evere
- he hath desired agayn the lawe of god with perfit consentinge of his reson;
- for ther-of is no doute, that it is deedly sinne in consentinge. / For
- certes, ther is no deedly sinne, that it nas first in mannes thought, and
- after that in his delyt; and so forth in-to consentinge and in-to dede. /
- Wherfore I seye, that many men ne repenten hem nevere of swiche thoghtes
- and delytes, ne nevere shryven hem of it, but only of the dede of grete
- sinnes outward. / Wherfore I seye, that swiche wikked delytes and wikked
- thoghtes been subtile bigyleres of hem that shullen be dampned. /
- More-over, man oghte to sorwe for hise wikkede wordes as wel as for hise
- wikkede dedes; for certes, the repentance of a singuler sinne, and nat
- repente of alle hise othere sinnes, or elles repenten him of alle hise
- othere sinnes, and nat of a singuler sinne, may nat availle. /300 For
- certes, god almighty is al good; and ther-fore he foryeveth al, [585] or
- elles right noght. / And heer-of seith seint Augustin: 'I woot certainly /
- that god is enemy to everich sinnere'; and how thanne? He that observeth o
- sinne, shal he have foryifnesse of the remenaunt of hise othere sinnes?
- Nay. / And forther-over, contricion sholde be wonder sorweful and
- anguissous, and therfore yeveth him god pleynly his mercy; and therfore,
- whan my soule was anguissous with-inne me, I hadde remembrance of god that
- my preyere mighte come to him. / Forther-over, contricion moste be
- continuel, and that man have stedefast purpos to shryven him, and for to
- amenden him of his lyf. /305 For soothly, whyl contricion lasteth, man may
- evere have hope of foryifnesse; and of this comth hate of sinne, that
- destroyeth sinne bothe in himself, and eek in other folk, at his power. /
- For which seith David: 'ye that loven god hateth wikkednesse.' For trusteth
- wel, to love god is for to love that he loveth, and hate that he hateth. /
- 303. E. _om._ I woot certeinly. 305. E. continueel.
- § 15. The laste thing that man shal understonde in contricion is this;
- wher-of avayleth contricion. I seye, that som tyme contricion delivereth a
- man fro sinne; / of which that David seith: 'I seye,' quod David, that is
- to seyn, 'I purposed fermely to shryve me; and thow, Lord, relesedest my
- sinne.' / And right so as contricion availleth noght, with-outen sad purpos
- of shrifte, if man have oportunitee, right so litel worth is shrifte or
- satisfaccion with-outen contricion. /310 And more-over, contricion
- destroyeth the prison of helle, and maketh wayk and feble alle the
- strengthes of the develes, and restoreth the yiftes of the holy goost and
- of alle gode vertues; / and it clenseth the soule of sinne, and delivereth
- the soule fro the peyne of helle, and fro the companye of the devel, and
- fro the servage of sinne, and restoreth it to alle godes espirituels, and
- to the companye and communion of holy chirche. / And forther-over, it
- maketh him that whylom was sone of ire to be sone of grace; and alle thise
- thinges been preved by holy writ. / And therfore, he that wolde sette his
- entente to thise thinges, he were ful wys; for soothly, he ne sholde nat
- thanne in al his lyf have corage to sinne, but yeven his body and al his
- herte to the service of Iesu Crist, and ther-of doon him hommage. / For
- soothly, oure swete lord Iesu Crist hath spared [586] us so debonairly in
- our folies, that if he ne hadde pitee of mannes soule, a sory song we
- mighten alle singe. /315
- 308. E. Ln. a man fro; _rest om._ a. 311. E. fieble. 313. Hl. Pt.
- Ln. thinges he prouith by. 314. Hl. herte (_for_ entente).
- EXPLICIT PRIMA PARS PENITENTIE; ET SEQUITUR SECUNDA PARS EIUSDEM.
- § 16. The seconde partie of Penitence is Confession, that is signe of
- contricion. / Now shul ye understonde what is Confession, and whether it
- oghte nedes be doon or noon, and whiche thinges been covenable to verray
- Confession. /
- 317. E. wheither.
- § 17. First shaltow understonde that Confession is verray shewinge of
- sinnes to the preest; / this is to seyn 'verray,' for he moste confessen
- him of alle the condiciouns that bilongen to his sinne, as ferforth as he
- can. / Al moot be seyd, and no thing excused ne hid ne forwrapped, and
- noght avaunte him of his gode werkes. /320 And forther over, it is
- necessarie to understonde whennes that sinnes springen, and how they
- encresen, and whiche they been. /
- 320. him of his] E. Cm. thee of thy. 321. E. encreessen.
- § 18. Of the springinge of sinnes seith seint Paul in this wise: that
- 'right as by a man sinne entred first in-to this world, and thurgh that
- sinne deeth, right so thilke deeth entred in-to alle men that sinneden.' /
- And this man was Adam, by whom sinne entred in-to this world whan he brak
- the comaundement of god. / And therfore, he that first was so mighty that
- he sholde not have dyed, bicam swich oon that he moste nedes dye, whether
- he wolde or noon; and all his progenie in this world that in thilke man
- sinneden. / Loke that in thestaat of innocence, when Adam and Eve naked
- weren in paradys, and no-thing ne hadden shame of hir nakednesse, /325 how
- that the serpent, that was most wyly of alle othere bestes that god hadde
- maked, seyde to the womman: 'why comaunded god to yow, ye sholde nat eten
- of every tree in paradys?' / The womman answerde: 'of the fruit,' quod she,
- 'of the trees in paradys we feden us; but soothly, of the fruit of the tree
- that is in the middel of paradys, god forbad us for to ete, ne nat touchen
- it, lest per-aventure we should dyen.' / The serpent seyde to the womman:
- 'nay, nay, ye shul nat dyen of deeth; for sothe, god woot, that what day
- that ye eten ther-of, youre eyen shul opene, and ye shul been as goddes,
- knowinge [587] good and harm.' / The womman thanne saugh that the tree was
- good to feding, and fair to the eyen, and delytable to the sighte; she tok
- of the fruit of the tree, and eet it, and yaf to hir housbonde, and he eet;
- and anoon the eyen of hem bothe openeden. / And whan that they knewe that
- they were naked, they sowed of fige-leves a manere of breches to hiden hir
- membres. /330 There may ye seen that deedly sinne hath first suggestion of
- the feend, as sheweth here by the naddre; and afterward, the delyt of the
- flesh, as sheweth here by Eve; and after that, the consentinge of resoun,
- as sheweth here by Adam. / For trust wel, thogh so were that the feend
- tempted Eve, that is to seyn the flesh, and the flesh hadde delyt in the
- beautee of the fruit defended, yet certes, til that resoun, that is to
- seyn, Adam, consented to the etinge of the fruit, yet stood he in thestaat
- of innocence. / Of thilke Adam toke we thilke sinne original; for of him
- fleshly descended be we alle, and engendred of vile and corrupt matere. /
- And whan the soule is put in our body, right anon is contract original
- sinne; and that, that was erst but only peyne of concupiscence, is
- afterward bothe peyne and sinne. / And therfore be we alle born sones of
- wratthe and of dampnacion perdurable, if it nere baptesme that we receyven,
- which binimeth us the culpe; but for sothe, the peyne dwelleth with us, as
- to temptacion, which peyne highte concupiscence. /335 Whan it is wrongfully
- disposed or ordeyned in man, it maketh him coveite, by coveitise of flesh,
- fleshly sinne, by sighte of hise eyen as to erthely thinges. and coveitise
- of hynesse by pryde of herte. /
- 323. E. Hn. comaundementz; _rest_ comaundement. 324. E. wheither.
- 325. Pt. þe astate; Ln. þe state; Cm. stat. 327. ne] E. and. 328.
- E. _om._ ye _before_ shul. 330. E. Cm. a manere; _rest_ in manere.
- 335. E. bynyneth; Hn. Pt. Hl. bynymeth.
- § 19. Now as for to speken of the firste coveitise, that is, concupiscence
- after the lawe of oure membres, that weren lawe-fulliche y-maked and by
- rightful Iugement of god; / I seye, for-as-muche as man is nat obeisaunt to
- god, that is his lord, therfore is the flesh to him disobeisaunt thurgh
- concupiscence, which yet is cleped norissinge of sinne and occasion of
- sinne. / Therfore, al the whyle that a man hath in him the peyne of
- concupiscence, it is impossible but he be tempted somtyme, and moeved in
- his flesh to sinne. And this thing may nat faille as longe as he liveth; it
- may wel wexe feble and faille, by vertu of baptesme and by the grace of god
- thurgh penitence; /340 but fully [588] ne shal it nevere quenche, that he
- ne shal som tyme be moeved in him-self, but-if he were al refreyded by
- siknesse, or by malefice of sorcerie or colde drinkes. / For lo, what seith
- seint Paul: 'the flesh coveiteth agayn the spirit, and the spirit agayn the
- flesh; they been so contrarie and so stryven, that a man may nat alwey doon
- as he wolde.' / The same seint Paul, after his grete penaunce in water and
- in lond (in water by night and by day, in greet peril and in greet peyne,
- in lond, in famine, in thurst, in cold and clothlees, and ones stoned
- almost to the deeth) / yet seyde he: 'allas! I, caytif man, who shal
- delivere me fro the prisoun of my caytif body?' / And seint Ierome, whan he
- longe tyme hadde woned in desert, where-as he hadde no companye but of
- wilde bestes, where-as he ne hadde no mete but herbes and water to his
- drinke, ne no bed but the naked erthe, for which his flesh was blak as an
- Ethiopen for hete and ny destroyed for cold, /345 yet seyde he: that 'the
- brenninge of lecherie boiled in al his body.' / Wherfore I woot wel
- sikerly, that they been deceyved that seyn, that they ne be nat tempted in
- hir body. / Witnesse on Seint Iame the Apostel, that seith: that 'every
- wight is tempted in his owen concupiscence': that is to seyn, that everich
- of us hath matere and occasion to be tempted of the norissinge of sinne
- that is in his body. / And therfore seith Seint Iohn the Evaungelist: 'if
- that we seyn that we beth with-oute sinne, we deceyve us-selve, and trouthe
- is nat in us.' /
- 338. E. norrissynge. 340. E. fieble; _rest_ feble. 345. E.
- Ethiopeen; _rest_ -pen.
- § 20. Now shal ye understonde in what manere that sinne wexeth or encreseth
- in man. The firste thing is thilke norissinge of sinne, of which I spak
- biforn, thilke fleshly concupiscence. /350 And after that comth the
- subieccion of the devel, this is to seyn, the develes bely, with which he
- bloweth in man the fyr of fleshly concupiscence. / And after that, a man
- bithinketh him whether he wol doon, or no, thilke thing to which he is
- tempted. / And thanne, if that a man withstonde and weyve the firste
- entysinge of his flesh and of the feend, thanne is it no sinne; and if it
- so be that he do nat so, thanne feleth he anon a flambe of delyt. / And
- thanne is it good to be war, and kepen him wel, or elles he wol falle anon
- in-to consentinge of sinne; and thanne wol he do it, if he may have tyme
- and place. / And of this matere seith Moyses by the devel in this manere:
- 'the feend seith, I wole [589] chace and pursue the man by wikked
- suggestion, and I wole hente him by moevynge or stiringe of sinne. I wol
- departe my pryse or my praye by deliberacion, and my lust shal been
- accompliced in delyt; I wol drawe my swerd in consentinge:' /355 for
- certes, right as a swerd departeth a thing in two peces, right so
- consentinge departeth god fro man: 'and thanne wol I sleen him with myn
- hand in dede of sinne'; thus seith the feend. / For certes, thanne is a man
- al deed in soule. And thus is sinne accompliced by temptacion, by delyt,
- and by consentinge; and thanne is the sin cleped actuel. /
- 350. E. encreesseth. 352. E. wheither. 357. E. Actueel.
- § 21. For sothe, sinne is in two maneres; outher it is venial, or deedly
- sinne. Soothly, whan man loveth any creature more than Iesu Crist oure
- creatour, thanne is it deedly sinne. And venial synne is it, if man love
- Iesu Crist lasse than him oghte. / For sothe, the dede of this venial sinne
- is ful perilous; for it amenuseth the love that men sholde han to god more
- and more. / And therfore, if a man charge him-self with manye swiche venial
- sinnes, certes, but-if so be that he som tyme descharge him of hem by
- shrifte, they mowe ful lightly amenuse in him al the love that he hath to
- Iesu Crist; /360 and in this wise skippeth venial in-to deedly sinne. For
- certes, the more that a man chargeth his soule with venial sinnes, the more
- is he enclyned to fallen in-to deedly sinne. / And therfore, lat us nat be
- necligent to deschargen us of venial sinnes. For the proverbe seith: that
- manye smale maken a greet. / And herkne this ensample. A greet wawe of the
- see comth som-tyme with so greet a violence that it drencheth the ship. And
- the same harm doth som-tyme the smale dropes of water, that entren thurgh a
- litel crevace in-to the thurrok, and in-to the botme of the ship, if men be
- so necligent that they ne descharge hem nat by tyme. / And therfore,
- al-thogh ther be a difference bitwixe thise two causes of drenchinge,
- algates the ship is dreynt. / Right so fareth it somtyme of deedly sinne,
- and of anoyouse veniale sinnes, whan they multiplye in a man so greetly,
- that thilke worldly thinges that he loveth, thurgh whiche he sinneth
- venially, is as greet in his herte as the love of god, or more. /365 And
- therfore, the love of every thing, that is nat biset in god ne doon
- principally for goddes sake, al-though that a man love [590] it lasse than
- god, yet is it venial sinne; / and deedly sinne, whan the love of any thing
- weyeth in the herte of man as muchel as the love of god, or more. / 'Deedly
- sinne,' as seith seint Augustin, 'is, whan a man turneth his herte fro god,
- which that is verray sovereyn bountee, that may nat chaunge, and yeveth his
- herte to thing that may chaunge and flitte'; / and certes, that is every
- thing, save god of hevene. For sooth is, that if a man yeve his love, the
- which that he oweth al to god with al his herte, un-to a creature, certes,
- as muche of his love as he yeveth to thilke creature, so muche he bireveth
- fro god; / and therfore doth he sinne. For he, that is dettour to god, ne
- yeldeth nat to god al his dette, that is to seyn, al the love of his herte.
- /370
- 358. E. _om._ oghte. 361. sinnes] E. sinne. 363. E. Hn. Cm. in the
- botme. 367. E. wexeth (_for_ weyeth). 369. E. as he yeueth of his
- loue.
- § 22. Now sith man understondeth generally, which is venial sinne, thanne
- is it covenable to tellen specially of sinnes whiche that many a man
- per-aventure ne demeth hem nat sinnes, and ne shryveth him nat of the same
- thinges; and yet nathelees they been sinnes. / Soothly, as thise clerkes
- wryten, this is to seyn, that at every tyme that a man eteth or drinketh
- more than suffyseth to the sustenaunce of his body, in certein he dooth
- sinne. / And eek whan he speketh more than nedeth, it is sinne. Eke whan he
- herkneth nat benignely the compleint of the povre. / Eke whan he is in hele
- of body and wol nat faste, whan othere folk faste, withouten cause
- resonable. Eke whan he slepeth more than nedeth, or whan he comth by thilke
- enchesoun to late to chirche, or to othere werkes of charite. / Eke whan he
- useth his wyf, withouten sovereyn desyr of engendrure, to the honour of
- god, or for the entente to yelde to his wyf the dette of his body. /375 Eke
- whan he wol nat visite the sike and the prisoner, if he may. Eke if he love
- wyf or child, or other worldly thing, more than resoun requyreth. Eke if he
- flatere or blandishe more than him oghte for any necessitee. / Eke if he
- amenuse or withdrawe the almesse of the povre. Eke if he apparailleth his
- mete more deliciously than nede is, or ete it to hastily by likerousnesse.
- / Eke if he tale vanitees at chirche or at goddes service, or that he be a
- talker ot ydel wordes of folye or of vileinye; for he shal yelden acountes
- of it at the day of dome. / Eke whan he biheteth or assureth to do [591]
- thinges that he may nat perfourne. Eke whan that he, by lightnesse or
- folie, misseyeth or scorneth his neighebore. / Eke whan he hath any wikked
- suspecion of thing, ther he ne woot of it no soothfastnesse. /380 Thise
- thinges and mo with-oute nombre been sinnes, as seith seint Augustin. /
- 371. E. Cp. Pt. Ln. hem (_for_ him). 374. E. hym oghte (_for_ othere
- folk). 376. E. Hn. blandise. 377. Hl. body (_for_ mete). E. Cm.
- _om._ it. 378. Hl. talke of (_for_ tale). 379. Hn. Hl. acounte.
- Now shal men understonde, that al-be-it so that noon erthely man may eschue
- alle venial sinnes, yet may he refreyne him by the brenninge love that he
- hath to oure lord Iesu Crist, and by preyeres and confession and othere
- gode werkes, so that it shal but litel greve. / For, as seith seint
- Augustin: 'if a man love god in swiche manere, that al that evere he doth
- is in the love of god, and for the love of god verraily, for he brenneth in
- the love of god: / loke, how muche that a drope of water that falleth in a
- fourneys ful of fyr anoyeth or greveth, so muche anoyeth a venial sinne
- un-to a man that is parfit in the love of Iesu Crist.' / Men may also
- refreyne venial sinne by receyvinge worthily of the precious body of Iesu
- Crist; /385 by receyving eek of holy water; by almesdede; by general
- confession of _Confiteor_ at masse and at complin; and by blessinge of
- bisshopes and of preestes, and by othere gode werkes. /
- 382. E. restreyne (_for_ refreyne); _see_ 385. 386. E. _om._ by
- _before_ othere.
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS PENITENTIE.
- SEQUITUR DE SEPTEM PECCATIS MORTALIBUS ET EORUM DEPENDENCIIS CIRCUMSTANCIIS
- ET SPECIEBUS.
- § 23. Now is it bihovely thing to telle whiche been the deedly sinnes, this
- is to seyn, chieftaines of sinnes; alle they renne in o lees, but in
- diverse maneres. Now been they cleped chieftaines for-as-muche as they been
- chief, and springers of alle othere sinnes. / Of the roote of thise sevene
- sinnes thanne is Pryde, the general rote of alle harmes; for of this rote
- springen certein braunches, as Ire, Envye, Accidie or Slewthe, Avarice or
- Coveitise (to commune understondinge), Glotonye, and Lecherye. / And
- everich of thise chief sinnes hath hise braunches and hise twigges, as shal
- be declared in hir chapitres folwinge. /
- HEADING. _So in_ E.; _but_ E. _adds_ De Superbia, _which should come at
- the head of_ § 24, _as in_ Hn. 387. Hl. springers; Hn. sprynge; E.
- Pt. Ln. spryngen.
- DE SUPERBIA.
- § 24. And thogh so be that no man can outrely telle the [592] nombre of the
- twigges and of the harmes that cometh of Pryde, yet wol I shewe a partie of
- hem, as ye shul understonde. /390 Ther is Inobedience, Avauntinge,
- Ipocrisie, Despyt, Arrogance, Impudence, Swellinge of herte, Insolence,
- Elacion, Impacience, Strif, Contumacie, Presumpcion, Irreverence,
- Pertinacie, Veyne Glorie; and many another twig that I can nat declare. /
- Inobedient, is he that disobeyeth for despyt to the comandements of god and
- to hise sovereyns, and to his goostly fader. / Avauntour, is he that
- bosteth of the harm or of the bountee that he hath doon. / Ipocrite, is he
- that hydeth to shewe him swiche as he is, and sheweth him swiche as he
- noght is. / Despitous, is he that hath desdeyn of his neighebore, that is
- to seyn, of his evene-cristene, or hath despyt to doon that him oghte to
- do. /395 Arrogant, is he that thinketh that he hath thilke bountees in him
- that he hath noght, or weneth that he sholde have hem by hise desertes; or
- elles he demeth that he be that he nis nat. / Impudent, is he that for his
- pride hath no shame of hise sinnes. / Swellinge of herte, is whan a man
- reioyseth him of harm that he hath doon. / Insolent, is he that despyseth
- in his Iugement alle othere folk as to regard of his value, and of his
- conning, and of his speking, and of his bering. / Elacion, is whan he ne
- may neither suffre to have maister ne felawe. /400 Impacient, is he that
- wol nat been y-taught ne undernome of his vyce, and by stryf werreieth
- trouthe witingly, and deffendeth his folye. / _Contumax_, is he that thurgh
- his indignacion is agayns everich auctoritee or power of hem that been hise
- sovereyns. / Presumpcion, is whan a man undertaketh an empryse that him
- oghte nat do, or elles that he may nat do; and that is called Surquidrie.
- Irreverence, is whan men do nat honour thereas hem oghte to doon, and
- waiten to be reverenced. / Pertinacie, is whan man deffendeth his folye,
- and trusteth to muchel in his owene wit. / Veyne glorie, is for to have
- pompe and delyt in his temporel hynesse, and glorifie him in this worldly
- estaat. /405 Ianglinge, is whan men speken to muche biforn folk, and
- clappen as a mille, and taken no kepe what they seye. /
- 390. E. Hn. _om. 2nd_ the. 391. Pt. Hl. Imprudence; E. Hn. Inpudence.
- E. Hn. Pt. Inpatience; _rest imperfect here._ 395. E. _om. 2nd_
- his. 401. Ln. Hl. Impacient; _rest_ Inpatient (_or imperfect_). Pt.
- Hl. vices. 403. E. and this is. E. Hn. surquidie. 404. E. hise
- folies. 405. E. temporeel.
- § 25. And yet is ther a privee spece of Pryde, that waiteth first to be
- salewed er he wole salewe, al be he lasse worth than that [593] other is,
- per-aventure; and eek he waiteth or desyreth to sitte, or elles to goon
- above him in the wey, or kisse pax, or been encensed, or goon to offring
- biforn his neighebore, / and swiche semblable thinges; agayns his duetee,
- per-aventure, but that he hath his herte and his entente in swich a proud
- desyr to be magnifyed and honoured biforn the peple. /
- § 26. Now been ther two maneres of Pryde; that oon of hem is with-inne the
- herte of man, and that other is with-oute. / Of whiche soothly thise
- forseyde thinges, and mo than I have seyd, apertenen to pryde that is in
- the herte of man; and that othere speces of pryde been with-oute. /410 But
- natheles that oon of thise speces of pryde is signe of that other, right as
- the gaye leefsel atte taverne is signe of the wyn that is in the celer. /
- And this is in manye thinges: as in speche and contenaunce, and in
- outrageous array of clothing; / for certes, if ther ne hadde be no sinne in
- clothing, Crist wolde nat have noted and spoken of the clothing of thilke
- riche man in the gospel. / And, as seith Seint Gregorie, that precious
- clothing is coupable for the derthe of it, and for his softenesse, and for
- his strangenesse and degysinesse, and for the superfluitee, or for the
- inordinat scantnesse of it. / Allas! may men nat seen, as in oure dayes,
- the sinful costlewe array of clothinge, and namely in to muche
- superfluitee, or elles in to desordinat scantnesse? /415
- 410. _So_ E. Hn. Hl.; _perhaps read_ and that other spece of pryde is;
- Pt. Ln. and ther-to other spices of pride bene. 411. Pt. Ln. Hl.
- spices. Hn. leuesel; Hl. leuesselle; Pt. leeuesell; Ln. leuesal.
- 414. Pt. disgisenesse; Ln. Hl. disgisinesse. or] E. and.
- § 27. As to the firste sinne, that is in superfluitee of clothinge, which
- that maketh it so dere, to harm of the peple; / nat only the cost of
- embroudinge, the degyse endentinge or barringe, oundinge, palinge,
- windinge, or bendinge, and semblable wast of clooth in vanitee; / but ther
- is also costlewe furringe in hir gounes, so muche pounsoninge of chisels to
- maken holes, so muche dagginge of sheres; / forth-with the superfluitee in
- lengthe of the forseide gounes, trailinge in the dong and in the myre, on
- horse and eek on fote, as wel of man as of womman, that al thilke trailing
- is verraily as in effect wasted, consumed, thredbare, and roten with donge,
- rather than it is yeven to the povre; to greet [594] damage of the forseyde
- povre folk. / And that in sondry wyse: this is to seyn, that the more that
- clooth is wasted, the more it costeth to the peple for the scantnesse; /420
- and forther-over, if so be that they wolde yeven swich pounsoned and dagged
- clothing to the povre folk, it is nat convenient to were for hir estaat, ne
- suffisant to bete hir necessitee, to kepe hem fro the distemperance of the
- firmament. / Upon that other syde, to speken of the horrible disordinat
- scantnesse of clothing, as been thise cutted sloppes or hainselins, that
- thurgh hir shortnesse ne covere nat the shameful membres of man, to wikked
- entente. / Allas! somme of hem shewen the boce of hir shap, and the
- horrible swollen membres, that semeth lyk the maladie of hirnia, in the
- wrappinge of hir hoses; / and eek the buttokes of hem faren as it were the
- hindre part of a she-ape in the fulle of the mone. / And more-over, the
- wrecched swollen membres that they shewe thurgh the degysinge, in
- departinge of hir hoses in whyt and reed, semeth that half hir shameful
- privee membres weren flayn. /425 And if so be that they departen hire hoses
- in othere colours, as is whyt and blak, or whyt and blew, or blak and reed,
- and so forth; / thanne semeth it, as by variance of colour, that half the
- partie of hir privee membres were corrupt by the fyr of seint Antony, or by
- cancre, or by other swich meschaunce. / Of the hindre part of hir buttokes,
- it is ful horrible for to see. For certes, in that partie of hir body
- ther-as they purgen hir stinkinge ordure, / that foule partie shewe they to
- the peple proudly in despyt of honestetee, the which honestetee that Iesu
- Crist and hise freendes observede to shewen in hir lyve. / Now as of the
- outrageous array of wommen, god woot, that though the visages of somme of
- hem seme ful chaast and debonaire, yet notifie they in hir array of atyr
- likerousnesse and pryde. /430 I sey nat that honestetee in clothinge of man
- or womman is uncovenable, but certes the superfluitee or disordinat
- scantitee of clothinge is reprevable. / Also the sinne of aornement or of
- apparaille is in thinges that apertenen to rydinge, as in to manye delicat
- horses that been holden for delyt, that been so faire, fatte, and costlewe;
- / and also to many a vicious knave that is sustened [595] by cause of hem;
- in to curious harneys, as in sadeles, in crouperes, peytrels, and brydles
- covered with precious clothing and riche, barres and plates of gold and of
- silver. / For which god seith by Zakarie the prophete, 'I wol confounde the
- ryderes of swiche horses.' / This folk taken litel reward of the rydinge of
- goddes sone of hevene, and of his harneys whan he rood up-on the asse, and
- ne hadde noon other harneys but the povre clothes of hise disciples; ne we
- ne rede nat that evere he rood on other beest. /435 I speke this for the
- sinne of superfluitee, and nat for reasonable honestetee, whan reson it
- requyreth. / And forther, certes pryde is greetly notified in holdinge of
- greet meinee, whan they be of litel profit or of right no profit. / And
- namely, whan that meinee is felonous and damageous to the peple, by
- hardinesse of heigh lordshipe or by wey of offices. / For certes, swiche
- lordes sellen thanne hir lordshipe to the devel of helle, whanne they
- sustenen the wikkednesse of hir meinee. / Or elles whan this folk of lowe
- degree, as thilke that holden hostelries, sustenen the thefte of hir
- hostilers, and that is in many manere of deceites. /440 Thilke manere of
- folk been the flyes that folwen the hony, or elles the houndes that folwen
- the careyne. Swiche forseyde folk stranglen spiritually hir lordshipes; /
- for which thus seith David the prophete, 'wikked deeth mote come up-on
- thilke lordshipes, and god yeve that they mote descenden in-to helle al
- doun; for in hir houses been iniquitees and shrewednesses,' and nat god of
- hevene. / And certes, but-if they doon amendement, right as god yaf his
- benison to Laban by the service of Iacob, and to Pharao by the service of
- Joseph, right so god wol yeve his malison to swiche lordshipes as sustenen
- the wikkednesse of hir servaunts, but-if they come to amendement. / Pryde
- of the table appereth eek ful ofte; for certes, riche men been cleped to
- festes, and povre folk been put awey and rebuked. / Also in excesse of
- diverse metes and drinkes; and namely, swiche manere bake metes and
- dish-metes, brenninge of wilde fyr, and peynted and castelled with papir,
- and semblable wast; so that it is abusion for to thinke. /445 And eek in to
- greet preciousnesse of vessel and curiositee of minstralcie, by whiche a
- man is stired the more to delyces of luxurie, / [596] if so be that he
- sette his herte the lasse up-on oure lord Iesu Crist, certein it is a
- sinne; and certeinly the delyces mighte been so grete in this caas, that
- man mighte lightly falle by hem in-to deedly sinne. / The especes that
- sourden of pryde, soothly whan they sourden of malice ymagined, avysed, and
- forncast, or elles of usage, been deedly synnes, it is no doute. / And whan
- they sourden by freletee unavysed sodeinly, and sodeinly withdrawen ayein,
- al been they grevouse sinnes, I gesse that they ne been nat deedly. / Now
- mighte men axe wher-of that Pryde sourdeth and springeth, and I seye:
- somtyme it springeth of the goodes of nature, and som-tyme of the goodes of
- fortune, and som-tyme of the goodes of grace. /450 Certes, the goodes of
- nature stonden outher in goodes of body or in goodes of soule. / Certes,
- goodes of body been hele of body, as strengthe, delivernesse, beautee,
- gentrye, franchise. / Goodes of nature of the soule been good wit, sharp
- understondynge, subtil engin, vertu naturel, good memorie. / Goodes of
- fortune been richesses, highe degrees of lordshipes, preisinges of the
- peple. / Goodes of grace been science, power to suffre spirituel travaille,
- benignitee, vertuous contemplacion, withstondinge of temptacion, and
- semblable thinges. /455 Of whiche forseyde goodes, certes it is a ful greet
- folye a man to pryden him in any of hem alle. / Now as for to speken of
- goodes of nature, god woot that som-tyme we han hem in nature as muche to
- oure damage as to oure profit. / As, for to speken of hele of body; certes
- it passeth ful lightly, and eek it is ful ofte encheson of the siknesse of
- oure soule; for god woot, the flesh is a ful greet enemy to the soule: and
- therfore, the more that the body is hool, the more be we in peril to falle.
- / Eke for to pryde him in his strengthe of body, it is an heigh folye; for
- certes, the flesh coveiteth agayn the spirit, and ay the more strong that
- the flesh is, the sorier may the soule be: / and, over al this, strengthe
- of body and worldly hardinesse causeth ful ofte many a man to peril and
- meschaunce. /460 Eek for to pryde him of his gentrye is ful greet folye;
- for ofte tyme the gentrye of the body binimeth the gentrye of the soule;
- and eek we ben alle of o fader and of o moder; and alle we been of o nature
- roten and corrupt, both riche and povre. / [597] For sothe, o manere
- gentrye is for to preise, that apparailleth mannes corage with vertues and
- moralitees, and maketh him Cristes child. / For truste wel, that over what
- man sinne hath maistrie, he is a verray cherl to sinne. /
- 416. E. _om._ that is. 417. Hn. Pt. enbrawdynge. E. _om._ or _bef._
- barringe. E. owndynge. 418. E. powsonynge; Hn. pownsonynge; Ln.
- pounseinge; Hl. pounsyng. Pt. chisels; E. Hn. chisel; _rest_
- chiseles (cheseles). 419. E. men; wo_m_men. 421. E. powsoned; Hn.
- pownsonyd; Pt. pounsoned; Ln. Hl. pounsed. 422. E. haynselyns; Hn.
- hanselyns; Ln. hanslynes; Pt. hanselynes; Hl. anslets; Harl. 1758,
- haunseleynys. 425. _All but_ E. _om._ the _bef._ degysinge. E.
- flayne. 429. E. honestitee (_twice_); Hn. honestetee; _rest_ honeste;
- _so in_ 431, 436. 430. E. _om._ as. 432. Pt. anornement; Hl. here
- ornament. 440. E. sustenynge; Hn. sustenen; Cm. Hl. susteyne. 442.
- E. vp; Hn. vp on; Hl. vpon; Pt. Ln. on. E. al doun (_twice_); Hn.
- adown (_twice_); Cm. al doun (_once_). 443. _All_ MSS. _transpose_
- Laban _and_ Pharao. E. seruauntz. 448. Pt. Ln. Hl. espices. 449.
- E. _om. 1st_ sodeinly. 452. E. gentries; Hl. Pt. gentrie; _rest_
- genterye; _see_ 461. 453. E. natureel. 454. E. Ln. richesse. 455.
- E. spiritueel. 460. _So in all_.
- § 28. Now been ther generale signes of gentilesse; as eschewinge of vyce
- and ribaudye and servage of sinne, in word, in werk, and contenance; / and
- usinge vertu, curteisye, and clennesse, and to be liberal, that is to seyn,
- large by mesure; for thilke that passeth mesure is folye and sinne. /465
- Another is, to remembre him of bountee that he of other folk hath receyved.
- / Another is, to be benigne to hise goode subgetis; wherfore, as seith
- Senek, 'ther is no-thing more covenable to a man of heigh estaat than
- debonairetee and pitee. / And therfore thise flyes that men clepeth bees,
- whan they maken hir king, they chesen oon that hath no prikke wherwith he
- may stinge.' / Another is, a man to have a noble herte and a diligent, to
- attayne to heighe vertuouse thinges. / Now certes, a man to pryde him in
- the goodes of grace is eek an outrageous folye; for thilke yiftes of grace
- that sholde have turned him to goodnesse and to medicine, turneth him to
- venim and to confusion, as seith seint Gregorie. /470 Certes also, who-so
- prydeth him in the goodes of fortune, he is a ful greet fool; for som-tyme
- is a man a greet lord by the morwe, that is a caitif and a wrecche er it be
- night: / and somtyme the richesse of a man is cause of his deeth; somtyme
- the delyces of a man is cause of the grevous maladye thurgh which he dyeth.
- / Certes, the commendacion of the peple is somtyme ful fals and ful brotel
- for to triste; this day they preyse, tomorwe they blame. / God woot, desyr
- to have commendacion of the peple hath caused deeth to many a bisy man. /
- 467. E. Cm. _om._ as. 469. E. man; _rest_ a man. 470. E. yifte;
- _rest_ yiftes. N.B. Section 470 _follows_ 474 _in_ Hn. Pt.; _see
- note_.
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM SUPERBIE.
- § 29. Now sith that so is, that ye han understonde what is pryde, and
- whiche been the speces of it, and whennes pride sourdeth and springeth;
- /475 now shul ye understonde which is the remedie agayns the sinne of
- pryde, and that is, humilitee or mekenesse. / That is a vertu, thurgh which
- a man hath verray knoweleche of him-self, and holdeth of him-self no prys
- ne deyntee as in regard of hise desertes, consideringe evere his freletee.
- / Now [598] been ther three maneres of humilitee; as humilitee in herte,
- and another humilitee in his mouth; the thridde in hise werkes. / The
- humilitee in herte is in foure maneres: that oon is, whan a man holdeth
- him-self as noght worth biforn god of hevene. Another is, whan he ne
- despyseth noon other man. / The thridde is, whan he rekketh nat thogh men
- holde him noght worth. The ferthe is, whan he nis nat sory of his
- humiliacion. /480 Also, the humilitee of mouth is in foure thinges: in
- attempree speche, and in humblesse of speche, and whan he biknoweth with
- his owene mouth that he is swich as him thinketh that he is in his herte.
- Another is, whan he preiseth the bountee of another man, and nothing
- ther-of amenuseth. / Humilitee eek in werkes is in foure maneres: the
- firste is, whan he putteth othere men biforn him. The seconde is, to chese
- the loweste place over-al. The thridde is, gladly to assente to good
- conseil. / The ferthe is, to stonde gladly to the award of hise sovereyns,
- or of him that is in hyer degree; certein, this is a greet werk of
- humilitee. /
- 482. E. _om._ good.
- SEQUITUR DE INUIDIA.
- § 30. After Pryde wol I speken of the foule sinne of Envye, which is, as by
- the word of the philosophre, sorwe of other mannes prosperitee; and after
- the word of seint Augustin, it is sorwe of other mannes wele, and Ioye of
- othere mennes harm. / This foule sinne is platly agayns the holy goost.
- Al-be-it so that every sinne is agayns the holy goost, yet nathelees, for
- as muche as bountee aperteneth proprely to the holy goost, and Envye comth
- proprely of malice, therfore it is proprely agayn the bountee of the holy
- goost. /485 Now hath malice two speces, that is to seyn, hardnesse of herte
- in wikkednesse, or elles the flesh of man is so blind, that he considereth
- nat that he is in sinne, or rekketh nat that he is in sinne; which is the
- hardnesse of the devel. / That other spece of malice is, whan a man
- werreyeth trouthe, whan he woot that it is trouthe. And eek, whan he
- werreyeth the grace that god hath yeve to his neighebore; and al this is by
- Envye. / Certes, thanne is Envye the worste sinne that is. For soothly,
- alle othere sinnes been som-tyme only agayns o special vertu; / but certes,
- Envye is agayns alle vertues and agayns alle goodnesses; for it is [599]
- sory of alle the bountees of his neighebore; and in this manere it is
- divers from alle othere sinnes. / For wel unnethe is ther any sinne that it
- ne hath som delyt in itself, save only Envye, that evere hath in itself
- anguish and sorwe. /490 The speces of Envye been thise: ther is first,
- sorwe of other mannes goodnesse and of his prosperitee; and prosperitee is
- kindely matere of Ioye; thanne is Envye a sinne agayns kinde. / The seconde
- spece of Envye is Ioye of other mannes harm; and that is proprely lyk to
- the devel, that evere reioyseth him of mannes harm. / Of thise two speces
- comth bakbyting; and this sinne of bakbyting or detraccion hath certeine
- speces, as thus. Som man preiseth his neighebore by a wikke entente; / for
- he maketh alwey a wikked knotte atte laste ende. Alwey he maketh a 'but'
- atte laste ende, that is digne of more blame, than worth is al the
- preisinge. / The seconde spece is, that if a man be good and dooth or seith
- a thing to good entente, the bakbyter wol turne all thilke goodnesse
- up-so-doun to his shrewed entente. /495 The thridde is, to amenuse the
- bountee of his neighebore. / The fourthe spece of bakbyting is this; that
- if men speke goodnesse of a man, thanne wol the bakbyter seyn, 'parfey,
- swich a man is yet bet than he'; in dispreisinge of him that men preise. /
- The fifte spece is this; for to consente gladly and herkne gladly to the
- harm that men speke of other folk. This sinne is ful greet, and ay
- encreseth after the wikked entente of the bakbyter. / After bakbyting
- cometh grucching or murmuracion; and somtyme it springeth of inpacience
- agayns god, and somtyme agayns man. / Agayns god it is, whan a man
- gruccheth agayn the peynes of helle, or agayns poverte, or los of catel, or
- agayn reyn or tempest; or elles gruccheth that shrewes han prosperitee, or
- elles for that goode men han adversitee. /500 And alle thise thinges sholde
- men suffre paciently, for they comen by the rightful Iugement and ordinance
- of god. / Som-tyme comth grucching of avarice; as Iudas grucched agayns the
- Magdaleyne, whan she enoynte the heved of oure lord Iesu Crist with hir
- precious oynement. / This maner murmure is swich as whan man gruccheth of
- goodnesse that him-self dooth, or that other folk doon of hir owene catel.
- / Som-tyme comth murmure of pryde; as whan Simon the Pharisee grucched
- agayn the Magdaleyne, whan she approched to Iesu Crist, and weep at his
- feet for hir sinnes. / [600] And somtyme grucching sourdeth of Envye; whan
- men discovereth a mannes harm that was privee, or bereth him on hond thing
- that is fals. /505 Murmure eek is ofte amonges servaunts, that grucchen
- whan hir sovereyns bidden hem doon leveful thinges; / and, for-as-muche as
- they dar nat openly withseye the comaundements of hir sovereyns, yet wol
- they seyn harm, and grucche, and murmure prively for verray despyt; /
- whiche wordes men clepen the develes _Pater-noster_, though so be that the
- devel ne hadde nevere _Pater-noster_, but that lewed folk yeven it swich a
- name. / Som tyme grucching comth of ire or prive hate, that norisseth
- rancour in herte, as afterward I shal declare. / Thanne cometh eek
- bitternesse of herte; thurgh which bitternesse every good dede of his
- neighebor semeth to him bitter and unsavory. /510 Thanne cometh discord,
- that unbindeth alle manere of frendshipe. Thanne comth scorninge, as whan a
- man seketh occasioun to anoyen his neighebor, al do he never so weel. /
- Thanne comth accusinge, as whan man seketh occasion to anoyen his
- neighebor, which that is lyk to the craft of the devel, that waiteth bothe
- night and day to accusen us alle. / Thanne comth malignitee, thurgh which a
- man anoyeth his neighebor prively if he may; / and if he noght may, algate
- his wikked wil ne shal nat wante, as for to brennen his hous prively, or
- empoysone or sleen hise bestes, and semblable thinges. /
- 485. E. _om._ foule. E. _om. 1st and 3rd_ goost. 486. Cm.
- hardynesse (_twice_). 487. E. speche (_for_ spece); Hn. spece; _rest_
- spice. E. malice (_and so_ Selden MS., _rightly_); _rest_ enuye.
- 497. parfey] E. pardee. 500. E. _om._ or _after_ catel. 502. E. Hn.
- enoynte; Cm. Hl. anoynted; Pt. ennoynted. 506. E. seruauntz. Cm.
- lefful; Pt. Hl. leeful. 507. E. comaundementz. 511. Cm. scornynge
- as whanne a man sekyth occasioun to anoyen his; _rest_ scornynge of his
- (_merely_).
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM INUIDIE.
- § 31. Now wol I speke of the remedie agayns this foule sinne of Envye.
- First, is the love of god principal, and loving of his neighebor as
- him-self; for soothly, that oon ne may nat been withoute that other. /515
- And truste wel, that in the name of thy neighebore thou shalt understonde
- the name of thy brother; for certes alle we have o fader fleshly, and o
- moder, that is to seyn, Adam and Eve; and eek o fader espirituel, and that
- is god of hevene. / Thy neighebore artow holden for to love, and wilne him
- alle goodnesse; and therfore seith god, 'love thy neighebore as thyselve,'
- that is to seyn, to salvacion bothe of lyf and of soule. / And more-over,
- thou shalt love him in word, and in benigne amonestinge, and chastysinge;
- and conforten him in hise anoyes, and preye [601] for him with al thyn
- herte. / And in dede thou shall love him in swich wyse, that thou shalt
- doon to him in charitee as thou woldest that it were doon to thyn owene
- persone. / And therfore, thou ne shalt doon him no damage in wikked word,
- ne harm in his body, ne in his catel, ne in his soule, by entysing of
- wikked ensample. /520 Thou shalt nat desyren his wyf, ne none of hise
- thinges. Understond eek, that in the name of neighebor is comprehended his
- enemy. / Certes man shal loven his enemy by the comandement of god; and
- soothly thy frend shaltow love in God. / I seye, thyn enemy shaltow love
- for goddes sake, by his comandement. For if it were reson that a man sholde
- haten his enemy, for sothe god nolde nat receiven us to his love that been
- hise enemys. / Agayns three manere of wronges that his enemy dooth to hym,
- he shal doon three thinges, as thus. / Agayns hate and rancour of herte, he
- shal love him in herte. Agayns chyding and wikkede wordes, he shal preye
- for his enemy. And agayn the wikked dede of his enemy, he shal doon him
- bountee. /525 For Crist seith, 'loveth youre enemys, and preyeth for hem
- that speke yow harm; and eek for hem that yow chacen and pursewen, and doth
- bountee to hem that yow haten.' Lo, thus comaundeth us oure lord Iesu
- Crist, to do to oure enemys. / For soothly, nature dryveth us to loven oure
- freendes, and parfey, oure enemys han more nede to love than oure freendes;
- and they that more nede have, certes, to hem shal men doon goodnesse; / and
- certes, in thilke dede have we remembrance of the love of Iesu Crist, that
- deyde for hise enemys. / And in-as-muche as thilke love is the more grevous
- to perfourne, in-so-muche is the more gretter the merite; and therfore the
- lovinge of oure enemy hath confounded the venim of the devel. / For right
- as the devel is disconfited by humilitee, right so is he wounded to the
- deeth by love of oure enemy. /530 Certes, thanne is love the medicine that
- casteth out the venim of Envye fro mannes herte. / The speces of this pas
- shullen be more largely in hir chapitres folwinge declared. /
- 515. this] E. the. love] E. louynge. 516. E. espiritueel. 517. E.
- _om._ bothe. 520. E. entissyng. 521. E. Hn. Vnderstoond. 524.
- wronges] E. thinges. 525. E. _om._ the. 529. Ln. Hl. parforme; Pt.
- perfourme. 532. E. paas; Hl. pa_r_t; _rest_ pas.
- SEQUITUR DE IRA.
- § 32. After Envye wol I discryven the sinne of Ire. For soothly, who-so
- hath envye upon his neighebor, anon he wole comunly [602] finde him a
- matere of wratthe, in word or in dede, agayns him to whom he hath envye. /
- And as wel comth Ire of Pryde, as of Envye; for soothly, he that is proude
- or envious is lightly wrooth. /
- 533. Hn. Pt. Ln. _om._ a _bef._ matere.
- § 33. This sinne of Ire, after the discryving of seint Augustin, is wikked
- wil to been avenged by word or by dede. /535 Ire, after the philosophre, is
- the fervent blood of man y-quiked in his herte, thurgh which he wole harm
- to him that he hateth. / For certes the herte of man, by eschaufinge and
- moevinge of his blood, wexeth so trouble, that he is out of alle Iugement
- of resoun. / But ye shal understonde that Ire is in two maneres; that oon
- of hem is good, and that other is wikked. / The gode Ire is by Ialousye of
- goodnesse, thurgh which a man is wrooth with wikkednesse and agayns
- wikkednesse; and therfore seith a wys man, that 'Ire is bet than pley.' /
- This Ire is with debonairetee, and it is wrooth withouten bitternesse; nat
- wrooth agayns the man, but wrooth with the misdede of the man; as seith the
- prophete David, _Irascimini et nolite peccare_. /540 Now understondeth,
- that wikked Ire is in two maneres, that is to seyn, sodeyn Ire or hastif
- Ire, withouten avisement and consentinge of resoun. / The mening and the
- sens of this is, that the resoun of man ne consente nat to thilke sodeyn
- Ire; and thanne it is venial. / Another Ire is ful wikked, that comth of
- felonye of herte avysed and cast biforn; with wikked wil to do vengeance,
- and therto his resoun consenteth; and soothly this is deedly sinne. / This
- Ire is so displesant to god, that it troubleth his hous and chaceth the
- holy goost out of mannes soule, and wasteth and destroyeth the lyknesse of
- god, that is to seyn, the vertu that is in mannes soule; / and put in him
- the lyknesse of the devel, and binimeth the man fro god that is his
- rightful lord. /545 This Ire is a ful greet plesaunce to the devel; for it
- is the develes fourneys, that is eschaufed with the fyr of helle. / For
- certes, right so as fyr is more mighty to destroyen erthely thinges than
- any other element, right so Ire is mighty to destroyen alle spirituel
- thinges. / Loke how that fyr of smale gledes, that been almost dede under
- asshen, wollen quike agayn whan they been touched with brimstoon; right so
- Ire wol everemo quiken agayn, whan it is touched by the pryde that is
- covered in mannes herte. / For certes fyr ne may nat comen out of no-thing,
- but-if it were first in the same thing naturelly; as fyr is drawen out of
- flintes [603] with steel. / And right so as pryde is ofte tyme matere of
- Ire, right so is rancour norice and keper of Ire. /550 Ther is a maner
- tree, as seith seint Isidre, that whan men maken fyr of thilke tree, and
- covere the coles of it with asshen, soothly the fyr of it wol lasten al a
- yeer or more. / And right so fareth it of rancour; whan it is ones
- conceyved in the hertes of som men, certein, it wol lasten peraventure from
- oon Estre-day unto another Estre-day, and more. / But certes, thilke man is
- ful fer fro the mercy of god al thilke while. /
- 547. E. spiritueel. 549. E. natureelly. 551. E. fire. 553. E. in
- (_for_ al).
- § 34. In this forseyde develes fourneys ther forgen three shrewes: Pryde,
- that ay bloweth and encreseth the fyr by chydinge and wikked wordes. /
- Thanne stant Envye, and holdeth the hote iren upon the herte of man with a
- peire of longe tonges of long rancour. /555 And thanne stant the sinne of
- contumelie or stryf and cheeste, and batereth and forgeth by vileyns
- reprevinges. / Certes, this cursed sinne anoyeth bothe to the man him-self
- and eek to his neighebor. For soothly, almost al the harm that any man
- dooth to his neighebore comth of wratthe. / For certes, outrageous wratthe
- doth al that evere the devel him comaundeth; for he ne spareth neither
- Crist, ne his swete mooder. / And in his outrageous anger and Ire, allas!
- allas! ful many oon at that tyme feleth in his herte ful wikkedly, bothe of
- Crist and of alle hise halwes. / Is nat this a cursed vice? Yis, certes.
- Allas! it binimeth from man his wit and his resoun, and al his debonaire
- lyf espirituel that sholde kepen his soule. /560 Certes, it binimeth eek
- goddes due lordshipe, and that is mannes soule, and the love of hise
- neighebores. It stryveth eek alday agayn trouthe. It reveth him the quiete
- of his herte, and subverteth his soule. /
- 554. E. encreesseth. 555. E. toonges. 558. Hl. _om._ swete. 560.
- E. espiritueel.
- § 35. Of Ire comen thise stinkinge engendrures: first hate, that is old
- wratthe; discord, thurgh which a man forsaketh his olde freend that he hath
- loved ful longe. / And thanne cometh werre, and every manere of wrong that
- man dooth to his neighebore, in body or in catel. / Of this cursed sinne of
- Ire cometh eek manslaughtre. And understonde wel, that homicyde, that is
- manslaughtre, is in dyverse wyse. Som manere of homicyde is spirituel, and
- som is bodily. / Spirituel manslaughtre is in six [604] thinges. First, by
- hate; as seint Iohn seith, 'he that hateth his brother is homicyde.' /565
- Homicyde is eek by bakbytinge; of whiche bakbyteres seith Salomon, that
- 'they han two swerdes with whiche they sleen hir neighebores.' For soothly,
- as wikke is to binime his good name as his lyf. / Homicyde is eek, in
- yevinge of wikked conseil by fraude; as for to yeven conseil to areysen
- wrongful custumes and taillages. / Of whiche seith Salomon, 'Leon rorynge
- and bere hongry been lyke to the cruel lordshipes,' in withholdinge or
- abregginge of the shepe (or the hyre), or of the wages of servaunts, or
- elles in usure or in withdrawinge of the almesse of povre folk. / For which
- the wyse man seith, 'fedeth him that almost dyeth for honger'; for soothly,
- but-if thou fede him, thou sleest him; and alle thise been deadly sinnes. /
- Bodily manslaughtre is, whan thow sleest him with thy tonge in other
- manere; as whan thou comandest to sleen a man, or elles yevest him conseil
- to sleen a man. /570 Manslaughtre in dede is in foure maneres. That oon is
- by lawe; right as a Iustice dampneth him that is coupable to the deeth. But
- lat the Iustice be war that he do it rightfully, and that he do it nat for
- delyt to spille blood, but for kepinge of rightwisenesse. / Another
- homicyde is, that is doon for necessitee, as whan o man sleeth another in
- his defendaunt, and that he ne may noon otherwise escape from his owene
- deeth. / But certeinly, if he may escape withouten manslaughtre of his
- adversarie, and sleeth him, he doth sinne, and he shal bere penance as for
- deedly sinne. / Eek if a man, by caas or aventure, shete an arwe or caste a
- stoon with which he sleeth a man, he is homicyde. / Eek if a womman by
- necligence overlyeth hir child in hir sleping, it is homicyde and deedly
- sinne. /575 Eek whan man destourbeth concepcion of a child, and maketh a
- womman outher bareyne by drinkinge venemouse herbes, thurgh which she may
- nat conceyve, or sleeth a child by drinkes wilfully, or elles putteth
- certeine material thinges in hir secree places to slee the child; / or
- elles doth unkindely sinne, by which man or womman shedeth hir nature in
- manere or in place ther-as a child may nat be conceived; or elles, if a
- womman have conceyved and hurt hir-self, [605] and sleeth the child, yet is
- it homicyde. / What seye we eek of wommen that mordren hir children for
- drede of worldly shame? Certes, an horrible homicyde. / Homicyde is eek if
- a man approcheth to a womman by desir of lecherye, thurgh which the child
- is perissed, or elles smyteth a womman witingly, thurgh which she leseth
- hir child. Alle thise been homicydes and horrible deedly sinnes. / Yet
- comen ther of Ire manye mo sinnes, as wel in word as in thoght and in dede;
- as he that arretteth upon god, or blameth god, of thing of which he is
- him-self gilty; or despyseth god and alle hise halwes, as doon thise
- cursede hasardours in diverse contrees. /580 This cursed sinne doon they,
- whan they felen in hir hertes ful wikkedly of god and of hise halwes. /
- Also, whan they treten unreverently the sacrement of the auter, thilke
- sinne is so greet, that unnethe may it been relesed, but that the mercy of
- god passeth alle hise werkes; it is so greet and he so benigne. / Thanne
- comth of Ire attry angre; whan a man is sharply amonested in his shrifte to
- forleten his sinne, / than wole he be angry and answeren hokerly and
- angrily, and deffenden or excusen his sinne by unstedefastnesse of his
- flesh; or elles he dide it for to holde companye with hise felawes, or
- elles, he seith, the fend entyced him; / or elles he dide it for his
- youthe, or elles his complexioun is so corageous, that he may nat forbere;
- or elles it is his destinee, as he seith, unto a certein age; or elles, he
- seith, it cometh him of gentillesse of hise auncestres; and semblable
- thinges. /585 Alle this manere of folk so wrappen hem in hir sinnes, that
- they ne wol nat delivere hem-self. For soothly, no wight that excuseth him
- wilfully of his sinne may nat been delivered of his sinne, til that he
- mekely biknoweth his sinne. / After this, thanne cometh swering, that is
- expres agayn the comandement of god; and this bifalleth ofte of anger and
- of Ire. / God seith: 'thou shalt nat take the name of thy lord god in veyn
- or in ydel.' Also oure lord Iesu Crist seith by the word of seint Mathew:
- '_Nolite iurare omnino_: / ne wol ye nat swere in alle manere; neither by
- hevene, for it is goddes trone; ne by erthe, for it is the bench of his
- feet; ne by Ierusalem, for it is the citee of a greet king; ne by thyn
- heed, for thou mayst nat make an heer whyt ne blak. / But seyeth by youre
- word, "ye, ye," and "nay, nay"; and what [606] that is more, it is of
- yvel,' seith Crist. /590 For Cristes sake, ne swereth nat so sinfully, in
- dismembringe of Crist by soule, herte, bones, and body. For certes, it
- semeth that ye thinke that the cursede Iewes ne dismembred nat y-nough the
- preciouse persone of Crist, but ye dismembre him more. / And if so be that
- the lawe compelle yow to swere, thanne rule yow after the lawe of god in
- youre swering, as seith Ieremye _quarto capitulo_, '_Iurabis in veritate,
- in iudido et in iustida_: thou shalt kepe three condicions; thou shalt
- swere in trouthe, in doom, and in rightwisnesse.' / This is to seyn, thou
- shalt swere sooth; for every lesinge is agayns Crist. For Crist is verray
- trouthe. And think wel this, that every greet swerere, nat compelled
- lawefully to swere, the wounde shal nat departe from his hous whyl he useth
- swich unleveful swering. / Thou shalt sweren eek in doom, whan thou art
- constreyned by thy domesman to witnessen the trouthe. / Eek thou shalt nat
- swere for envye ne for favour, ne for mede, but for rightwisnesse; for
- declaracioun of it to the worship of god and helping of thyne
- evene-cristene. /595 And therfore, every man that taketh goddes name in
- ydel, or falsly swereth with his mouth, or elles taketh on him the name of
- Crist, to be called a Cristene man, and liveth agayns Cristes livinge and
- his techinge, alle they taken goddes name in ydel. / Loke eek what seint
- Peter seith, _Actuum quarto capitulo_, '_Non est aliud nomen sub celo_,'
- &c. 'Ther nis noon other name,' seith seint Peter, 'under hevene, yeven to
- men, in which they mowe be saved;' that is to seyn, but the name of Iesu
- Crist. / Take kepe eek how that the precious name of Crist, as seith seint
- Paul _ad Philipenses secundo_, '_In nomine Iesu_, &c.: that in the name of
- Iesu every knee of hevenely creatures, or erthely, or of helle sholden
- bowe'; for it is so heigh and so worshipful, that the cursede feend in
- helle sholde tremblen to heren it y-nempned. / Thanne semeth it, that men
- that sweren so horribly by his blessed name, that they despyse him more
- boldely than dide the cursede Iewes, or elles the devel, that trembleth
- whan he hereth his name. /
- 562. E. _om._ that he hath loved. 564, 565. E. spiritueel. 565. Pt.
- Hl. an homicide. 566. E. the (_for 2nd_ they). 568. E. crueel.
- Hl. Ln. schipe. E. vsures. 570. Hl. _om._ him _before_ conseil.
- 572. Hl. him (_for_ in his). 576. E. Cm. venenouse; Hl. venenous.
- Hl. place. 577. -self] E. child. 577. is it] E. it is. 582. E.
- releessed. 585. E. conplecciou_n_. 588. Christchurch MS.
- _Nolite--omnino_; _and in margin of_ E.; _rest om._ 589. Ln.
- throne. 592. E. (_in margin_) _Iurabis--iusticia_; Chr. (_in text_);
- _rest om._ 593. Hl. wonder (_for_ wounde!). 595. E. and for
- declaracioun; Chr. for declaracioun; Cm. Pt. Ln. Hl. for declarynge.
- 597. Cm. cº; Hl. caº (i.e. _capitulo_); _rest om._ 599. E.
- horriblely.
- § 36. Now certes, sith that swering, but-if it be lawefully doon, [607] is
- so heighly deffended, muche worse is forswering falsly, and yet nedelees.
- /600
- § 37. What seye we eek of hem that delyten hem in swering, and holden it a
- gentrie or a manly dede to swere grete othes? And what of hem that, of
- verray usage, ne cesse nat to swere grete othes, al be the cause nat worth
- a straw? Certes, this is horrible sinne. / Sweringe sodeynly with-oute
- avysement is eek a sinne. / But lat us go now to thilke horrible swering of
- adiuracioun and coniuracioun, as doon thise false enchauntours or
- nigromanciens in bacins ful of water, or in a bright swerd, in a cercle, or
- in a fyr, or in a shulder-boon of a sheep. / I can nat seye but that they
- doon cursedly and damnably, agayns Crist and al the feith of holy chirche.
- /
- 601. E. it (_for_ this). 603. E. Nigromanens. 604. E. damnablely.
- § 38. What seye we of hem that bileven in divynailes, as by flight or by
- noyse of briddes, or of bestes, or by sort, by geomancie, by dremes, by
- chirkinge of dores, or crakkinge of houses, by gnawynge of rattes, and
- swich manere wrecchednesse? /605 Certes, al this thing is deffended by god
- and by al holy chirche. For which they been acursed, til they come to
- amendement, that on swich filthe setten hir bileve. / Charmes for woundes
- or maladye of men, or of bestes, if they taken any effect, it may be
- peraventure that god suffreth it, for folk sholden yeve the more feith and
- reverence to his name. /
- 605. Cm. Pt. dyuynalis. Hl. crakking; Ln. crakkeynge; E. Cm. Cp. Pt.
- crakynge. 607. E. Pt. _om._ may.
- § 39. Now wol I speken of lesinges, which generally is fals significacioun
- of word, in entente to deceyven his evene-cristene. / Som lesinge is of
- which ther comth noon avantage to no wight: and som lesinge turneth to the
- ese or profit of o man, and to disese and damage of another man. / Another
- lesinge is for to saven his lyf or his catel. Another lesinge comth of
- delyt for to lye, in which delyt they wol forge a long tale, and peynten it
- with alle circumstaunces, where al the ground of the tale is fals. /610 Som
- lesinge comth, for he wole sustene his word; and som lesinge comth of
- recchelesnesse, with-outen avysement; and semblable thinges. /
- 609. E. and (_for_ or); Pt. either. 610. Selden, Pt. lesinge is;
- _rest om._ is. _All but_ Selden, Pt. Ln. _om. 2nd_ Another lesinge.
- § 40. Lat us now touche the vyce of flateringe, which ne comth nat gladly
- but for drede or for coveitise. / Flaterye is generally wrongful preisinge.
- Flatereres been the develes norices, that [608] norissen hise children with
- milk of losengerie. / For sothe, Salomon seith, that 'flaterie is wors than
- detraccioun.' For som-tyme detraccion maketh an hautein man be the more
- humble, for he dredeth detraccion; but certes flaterye, that maketh a man
- to enhauncen his herte and his contenaunce. / Flatereres been the develes
- enchauntours; for they make a man to wene of him-self be lyk that he nis
- nat lyk. /615 They been lyk to Iudas that bitraysed [god; and thise
- flatereres bitraysen] a man to sellen him to his enemy, that is, to the
- devel. / Flatereres been the develes chapelleyns, that singen evere
- _Placebo_. / I rekene flaterye in the vyces of Ire; for ofte tyme, if o man
- be wrooth with another, thanne wol he flatere som wight to sustene him in
- his querele. /
- 615. E. the (_for_ they). 616. _All 7_ MSS. _om._ god ...
- bitraysen. E. hise. 618. E. flarie (_for_ flaterye).
- § 41. Speke we now of swich cursinge as comth of irous herte. Malisoun
- generally may be seyd every maner power or harm. Swich cursinge bireveth
- man fro the regne of god, as seith seint Paul. / And ofte tyme swich
- cursinge wrongfully retorneth agayn to him that curseth, as a brid that
- retorneth agayn to his owene nest. /620 And over alle thing men oghten
- eschewe to cursen hir children, and yeven to the devel hir engendrure, as
- ferforth as in hem is; certes, it is greet peril and greet sinne. /
- § 42. Lat us thanne speken of chydinge and reproche, whiche been ful grete
- woundes in mannes herte; for they unsowen the semes of frendshipe in mannes
- herte. / For certes, unnethes may a man pleynly been accorded with him that
- hath him openly revyled and repreved in disclaundre. This is a ful grisly
- sinne, as Crist seith in the gospel. / And tak kepe now, that he that
- repreveth his neighebor, outher he repreveth him by som harm of peyne that
- he hath on his body, as 'mesel,' 'croked harlot,' or by som sinne that he
- dooth. / Now if he repreve him by harm of peyne, thanne turneth the repreve
- to Iesu Crist; for peyne is sent by the rightwys sonde of god, and by his
- suffrance, be it meselrie, or maheym, or maladye. /625 And if he repreve
- him uncharitably of sinne, as, 'thou holour,' 'thou dronkelewe harlot,' and
- so forth; thanne aperteneth that to the reioysinge of the devel, that evere
- hath Ioye that men doon sinne. / And certes, chydinge may nat come but out
- of a vileyns herte. For after the habundance of the herte speketh the mouth
- ful ofte. / And ye shul understonde [609] that loke, by any wey, whan any
- man shal chastyse another, that he be war from chydinge or reprevinge. For
- trewely, but he be war, he may ful lightly quiken the fyr of angre and of
- wratthe, which that he sholde quenche, and per-aventure sleeth him which
- that he mighte chastyse with benignitee. / For as seith Salomon, 'the
- amiable tonge is the tree of lyf,' that is to seyn, of lyf espirituel: and
- sothly, a deslavee tonge sleeth the spirites of him that repreveth, and eek
- of him that is repreved. / Lo, what seith seint Augustin: 'ther is no-thing
- so lyk the develes child as he that ofte chydeth.' Seint Paul seith eek:
- 'I, servant of god, bihove nat to chyde.' /630 And how that chydinge be a
- vileyns thing bitwixe alle manere folk, yet it is certes most uncovenable
- bitwixe a man and his wyf; for there is nevere reste. And therfore seith
- Salomon, 'an hous that is uncovered and droppinge, and a chydinge wyf, been
- lyke.' / A man that is in a droppinge hous in many places, though he
- eschewe the droppinge in o place, it droppeth on him in another place; so
- fareth it by a chydinge wyf. But she chyde him in o place, she wol chyde
- him in another. / And therfore, 'bettre is a morsel of breed with Ioye than
- an hous ful of delyces, with chydinge,' seith Salomon. / Seint Paul seith:
- 'O ye wommen, be ye subgetes to youre housbondes as bihoveth in god; and ye
- men, loveth youre wyves.' _Ad Colossenses, tertio_. /
- 623. E. in disclaundre; _rest_ and desclaundered. 624. E. taak.
- 625. Ln. mayme; Cm. Pt. maym. 626. E. _om._ thou holour. 628. or]
- E. and. 629. E. espiritueel. Hn. deslaue; Cm. Ln. Hl. dislaue; Pt.
- disselaue. 630. Cm. Selden, behoue; _rest_ byhoueth (!). 632. E.
- manye. 634. E. _om._ as ... god. E. _Colonienses_; Cm.
- _Colonienes_; Hn. Pt. _Colonisenses_; Ln. _Clonicenses_; Hl.
- _Colocenses_.
- § 43. Afterward speke we of scorninge, which is a wikked sinne; and namely,
- whan he scorneth a man for hise gode werkes. /635 For certes, swiche
- scorneres faren lyk the foule tode, that may nat endure to smelle the sote
- savour of the vyne whanne it florissheth. / Thise scorneres been parting
- felawes with the devel; for they han Ioye whan the devel winneth, and sorwe
- whan he leseth. / They been adversaries of Iesu Crist; for they haten that
- he loveth, that is to seyn, salvacion of soule. /
- § 44. Speke we now of wikked conseil; for he that wikked conseil yeveth is
- a traytour. For he deceyveth him that trusteth in him, _ut Achitofel ad
- Absolonem_. But natheless, yet is his wikked conseil first agayn him-self.
- / For, as seith the wyse man, [610] every fals livinge hath this propertee
- in him-self, that he that wole anoye another man, he anoyeth first
- him-self. /640 And men shul understonde, that man shal nat taken his
- conseil of fals folk, ne of angry folk, or grevous folk, ne of folk that
- loven specially to muchel hir owene profit, ne to muche worldly folk,
- namely, in conseilinge of soules. /
- 639. E. _om. 2nd_ for. 640. _All_ lyuynge (levyng, leueyng); _after
- which_ Selden (_alone_) _adds_ man. Selden, Ln. Hl. this; _rest_
- his. 641. E. Hn. _om._ ne of folk.
- § 45. Now comth the sinne of hem that sowen and maken discord amonges folk,
- which is a sinne that Crist hateth outrely; and no wonder is. For he deyde
- for to make concord. / And more shame do they to Crist, than dide they that
- him crucifyede; for god loveth bettre, that frendshipe be amonges folk,
- than he dide his owene body, the which that he yaf for unitee. Therfore
- been they lykned to the devel, that evere been aboute to maken discord. /
- 643. E. been; Hl. ben (_before_ aboute); _rest_ is.
- § 46. Now comth the sinne of double tonge; swiche as speken faire biforn
- folk, and wikkedly bihinde; or elles they maken semblant as though they
- speke of good entencioun, or elles in game and pley, and yet they speke of
- wikked entente. /
- 644. E. speeke (_1st time_); Hn. Hl. speke; Cm. spoke; Pt. speken; Ln.
- spake.
- § 47. Now comth biwreying of conseil, thurgh which a man is defamed;
- certes, unnethe may he restore the damage. /645
- Now comth manace, that is an open folye; for he that ofte manaceth, he
- threteth more than he may perfourne ful ofte tyme. /
- Now cometh ydel wordes, that is with-outen profit of him that speketh tho
- wordes, and eek of him that herkneth tho wordes. Or elles ydel wordes been
- tho that been nedelees, or with-outen entente of naturel profit. / And
- al-be-it that ydel wordes been som tyme venial sinne, yet sholde men douten
- hem; for we shul yeve rekeninge of hem bifore god. /
- 647. E. natureel.
- Now comth Ianglinge, that may nat been withoute sinne. And, as seith
- Salomon, 'it is a sinne of apert folye.' / And therfore a philosophre
- seyde, whan men axed him how that men sholde plese the peple; and he
- answerde, 'do many gode werkes, and spek fewe Iangles.' /650
- After this comth the sinne of Iaperes, that been the develes apes; for they
- maken folk to laughe at hir Iaperie, as folk doon at [611] the gaudes of an
- ape. Swiche Iaperes deffendeth seint Paul. / Loke how that vertuouse wordes
- and holy conforten hem that travaillen in the service of Crist; right so
- conforten the vileyns wordes and knakkes of Iaperis hem that travaillen in
- the service of the devel. / Thise been the sinnes that comen of the tonge,
- that comen of Ire and of othere sinnes mo. /
- 651. Hl. Pt. Ln. Suche iapes. 652. E. _adds_ woordes (_after_ holy).
- SEQUITUR REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM IRE.
- § 48. The remedye agayns Ire is a vertu that men clepen Mansuetude, that is
- Debonairetee; and eek another vertu, that men callen Pacience or Suffrance.
- /
- 654. Cm. (_only_) that Ihon de Bonania clepith debonayretee.
- § 49. Debonairetee withdraweth and refreyneth the stiringes and the
- moevynges of mannes corage in his herte, in swich manere that they ne
- skippe nat out by angre ne by Ire. /655 Suffrance suffreth swetely alle the
- anoyaunces and the wronges that men doon to man outward. / Seint Ierome
- seith thus of debonairetee, that 'it doth noon harm to no wight, ne seith;
- ne for noon harm that men doon or seyn, he ne eschaufeth nat agayns, his
- resoun.' / This vertu som-tyme comth of nature; for, as seith the
- philosophre, 'a man is a quik thing, by nature debonaire and tretable to
- goodnesse; but whan debonairetee is enformed of grace, thanne is it the
- more worth.' /
- § 50. Pacience, that is another remedye agayns Ire, is a vertu that
- suffreth swetely every mannes goodnesse, and is nat wrooth for noon harm
- that is doon to him. / The philosophre seith, that 'pacience is thilke
- vertu that suffreth debonairely alle the outrages of adversitee and every
- wikked word.' /660 This vertu maketh a man lyk to god, and maketh him
- goddes owene dere child, as seith Crist. This vertu disconfiteth thyn
- enemy. And therfore seith the wyse man, 'if thou wolt venquisse thyn enemy,
- lerne to suffre.' / And thou shalt understonde, that man suffreth foure
- manere of grevances in outward thinges, agayns the whiche foure he moot
- have foure manere of paciences. /
- 659. E. Ln. it is a; _rest_ is a.
- § 51. The firste grevance is of wikkede wordes; thilke suffrede Iesu Crist
- with-outen grucching, ful paciently, whan the Iewes despysed and repreved
- him ful ofte. / Suffre thou therfore paciently; for the wyse man seith: 'if
- thou stryve with a [612] fool, though the fool be wrooth or though he
- laughe, algate thou shalt have no reste.' / That other grevance outward is
- to have damage of thy catel. Ther-agayns suffred Crist ful paciently, whan
- he was despoyled of al that he hadde in this lyf, and that nas but hise
- clothes. /665 The thridde grevance is a man to have harm in his body. That
- suffred Crist ful paciently in al his passioun. / The fourthe grevance is
- in outrageous labour in werkes. Wherfore I seye, that folk that maken hir
- servants to travaillen to grevously, or out of tyme, as on halydayes,
- soothly they do greet sinne. / Heer-agayns suffred Crist ful paciently, and
- taughte us pacience, whan he bar up-on his blissed shulder the croys, up-on
- which he sholde suffren despitous deeth. / Heer may men lerne to be
- pacient; for certes, noght only Cristen men been pacient for love of Iesu
- Crist, and for guerdoun of the blisful lyf that is perdurable; but certes,
- the olde payens, that nevere were Cristene, commendeden and useden the
- vertu of pacience. /
- 668. E. baar. Cm. Ln. cros. 669. Hl. Pt. Ln. guerdoun; E. Cm.
- gerdoun; Hn. gerdon. E. p_er_durale.
- § 52. A philosophre up-on a tyme, that wolde have beten his disciple for
- his grete trespas, for which he was greetly amoeved, and broghte a yerde to
- scourge the child; /670 and whan this child saugh the yerde, he seyde to
- his maister, 'what thenke ye to do?' 'I wol bete thee,' quod the maister,
- 'for thy correccion.' / 'For sothe,' quod the child, 'ye oghten first
- correcte youre-self, that han lost al youre pacience for the gilt of a
- child.' / 'For sothe,' quod the maister al wepinge, 'thou seyst sooth; have
- thou the yerde, my dere sone, and correcte me for myn inpacience.' / Of
- Pacience comth Obedience, thurgh which a man is obedient to Crist and to
- alle hem to whiche he oghte to been obedient in Crist. / And understond wel
- that obedience is perfit, whan that a man doth gladly and hastily, with
- good herte entierly, al that he sholde do. /675 Obedience generally, is to
- perfourne the doctrine of god and of his sovereyns, to whiche him oghte to
- ben obeisaunt in alle rightwysnesse. /
- 670. Hn. scourge; E. scoure with; _rest_ scoure(!). 671. Cm. Hl. to
- do; E. do. Pt. Ln. what wil ye do.
- SEQUITUR DE ACCIDIA.
- § 53. After the sinnes of Envie and of Ire, now wol I speken of the sinne
- of Accidie. For Envye blindeth the herte of a man, [613] and Ire troubleth
- a man; and Accidie maketh him hevy, thoghtful, and wrawe. / Envye and Ire
- maken bitternesse in herte; which bitternesse is moder of Accidie, and
- binimeth him the love of alle goodnesse. Thanne is Accidie the anguissh of
- a trouble herte; and seint Augustin seith: 'it is anoy of goodnesse and
- Ioye of harm.' / Certes, this is a dampnable sinne; for it doth wrong to
- Iesu Crist, in-as-muche as it binimeth the service that men oghte doon to
- Crist with alle diligence, as seith Salomon. / But Accidie dooth no swich
- diligence; he dooth alle thing with anoy, and with wrawnesse, slaknesse,
- and excusacioun, and with ydelnesse and unlust; for which the book seith:
- 'acursed be he that doth the service of god necligently.' /680 Thanne is
- Accidie enemy to everich estaat of man; for certes, the estaat of man is in
- three maneres. / Outher it is thestaat of innocence, as was thestaat of
- Adam biforn that he fil into sinne; in which estaat he was holden to
- wirche, as in heryinge and adouringe of god. / Another estaat is the estaat
- of sinful men, in which estaat men been holden to laboure in preyinge to
- god for amendement of hir sinnes, and that he wole graunte hem to arysen
- out of hir sinnes. / Another estaat is thestaat of grace, in which estaat
- he is holden to werkes of penitence; and certes, to alle thise thinges is
- Accidie enemy and contrarie. For he loveth no bisinesse at al. / Now
- certes, this foule sinne Accidie is eek a ful greet enemy to the lyflode of
- the body; for it ne hath no purveaunce agayn temporel necessitee; for it
- forsleweth and forsluggeth, and destroyeth alle goodes tem-poreles by
- reccheleesnesse. /685
- 677. Selden, Pt. Ln. sinnes; _rest_ synne. E. _om._ a _after_ herte
- of. E. wrawful; Pt. wrowe; _rest_ wrawe. 678. E. Hl. _om._ a. E.
- troubled. 683. E. _om._ the. 685. sinne] E. swyn. E. temporeel
- (for temporel).
- § 54. The fourthe thinge is, that Accidie is lyk to hem that been in the
- peyne of helle, by-cause of hir slouthe and of hir hevinesse; for they that
- been dampned been so bounde, that they ne may neither wel do ne wel thinke.
- / Of Accidie comth first, that a man is anoyed and encombred for to doon
- any goodnesse, and maketh that god hath abhominacion of swich Accidie, as
- seith seint Iohan. /
- 687. E. _om._ as ... Iohan.
- § 55. Now comth Slouthe, that wol nat suffre noon hardnesse ne no penaunce.
- For soothly, Slouthe is so tendre, and so delicat, as seith Salomon, that
- he wol nat suffre noon hardnesse ne penaunce, and therfore he shendeth al
- that he dooth. / Agayns [614] this roten-herted sinne of Accidie and
- Slouthe sholde men exercise hem-self to doon gode werkes, and manly and
- vertuously cacchen corage wel to doon; thinkinge that oure lord Iesu Crist
- quyteth every good dede, be it never so lyte. / Usage of labour is a greet
- thing; for it maketh, as seith seint Bernard, the laborer to have stronge
- armes and harde sinwes; and Slouthe maketh hem feble and tendre. /690
- Thanne comth drede to biginne to werke any gode werkes; for certes, he that
- is enclyned to sinne, him thinketh it is so greet an empryse for to
- undertake to doon werkes of goodnesse, / and casteth in his herte that the
- circumstaunces of goodnesse been so grevouse and so chargeaunt for to
- suffre, that he dar nat undertake to do werkes of goodnesse, as seith seint
- Gregorie. /
- 688. E. delicaat. 691. E. anye.
- § 56. Now comth wanhope, that is despeir of the mercy of god, that comth
- somtyme of to muche outrageous sorwe, and somtyme of to muche drede;
- imagininge that he hath doon so muche sinne, that it wol nat availlen him,
- though he wolde repenten him and forsake sinne: / thurgh which despeir or
- drede he abaundoneth al his herte to every maner sinne, as seith seint
- Augustin. / Which dampnable sinne, if that it continue un-to his ende, it
- is cleped sinning in the holy gost. /695 This horrible sinne is so
- perilous, that he that is despeired, ther nis no felonye ne no sinne that
- he douteth for to do; as shewed wel by Iudas. / Certes, aboven alle sinnes
- thanne is this sinne most displesant to Crist, and most adversarie. /
- Soothly, he that despeireth him is lyk the coward champioun recreant, that
- seith creant withoute nede. Allas! allas! nedeles is he recreant and
- nedeles despeired. / Certes, the mercy of god is evere redy to every
- penitent, and is aboven alle hise werkes. / Allas! can nat a man bithinke
- him on the gospel of seint Luk, 15., where-as Crist seith that 'as wel shal
- ther be Ioye in hevene upon a sinful man that doth penitence, as up-on
- nynety and nyne rightful men that neden no penitence?' /700 Loke forther,
- in the same gospel, the Ioye and the feste of the gode man that hadde lost
- his sone, whan his sone with repentaunce was retourned to his fader. / Can
- they nat remembren hem eek, that, as seith seint Luk _xxiii_º _capitulo_,
- how that the theef that was hanged [615] bisyde Iesu Crist, seyde: 'Lord,
- remembre of me, whan thou comest in-to thy regne?' / 'For sothe,' seyde
- Crist, 'I seye to thee, to-day shaltow been with me in Paradys.' / Certes,
- ther is noon so horrible sinne of man, that it ne may, in his lyf, be
- destroyed by penitence, thurgh vertu of the passion and of the deeth of
- Crist. / Allas! what nedeth man thanne to been despeired, sith that his
- mercy so redy is and large? Axe and have. /705 Thanne cometh Sompnolence,
- that is, sluggy slombringe, which maketh a man be hevy and dul, in body and
- in soule; and this sinne comth of Slouthe. / And certes, the tyme that, by
- wey of resoun, men sholde nat slepe, that is by the morwe; but-if ther were
- cause resonable. / For soothly, the morwe-tyde is most covenable, a man to
- seye his preyeres, and for to thinken on god, and for to honoure god, and
- to yeven almesse to the povre, that first cometh in the name of Crist. /
- Lo! what seith Salomon: 'who-so wolde by the morwe awaken and seke me, he
- shal finde.' / Thanne cometh Necligence, or recchelesnesse, that rekketh of
- no-thing. And how that ignoraunce be moder of alle harm, certes, Necligence
- is the norice. /710 Necligence ne doth no fors, whan he shal doon a thing,
- whether he do it weel or baddely. /
- 696. E. sheweth. 698. E. _om._ that seith ... recreant. Hl.
- recreaunt (_for_ creant). 700. E. a man nat; Pt. a man not. Hl. as
- vp-on; _rest_ than vp-on. Hl. Selden, nynety and nyne; _rest_ 90 and
- 19(!). 702. _All but_ Seld. Ln. _om._ capitulo. Seld. Pt. Ln. on
- me. 706. E. Seld. sloggy; Ln. slogge. 707. E. _om._ the morwe.
- 711. E. wheither.
- § 57. Of the remedie of thise two sinnes, as seith the wyse man, that 'he
- that dredeth god, he spareth nat to doon that him oghte doon.' / And he
- that loveth god, he wol doon diligence to plese god by his werkes, and
- abaundone him-self, with al his might, wel for to doon. / Thanne comth
- ydelnesse, that is the yate of alle harmes. An ydel man is lyk to a place
- that hath no walles; the develes may entre on every syde and sheten at him
- at discovert, by temptacion on every syde. / This ydelnesse is the thurrok
- of alle wikked and vileyns thoghtes, and of alle Iangles, trufles, and of
- alle ordure. /715 Certes, the hevene is yeven to hem that wol labouren, and
- nat to ydel folk. Eek David seith: that 'they ne been nat in the labour of
- men, ne they shul nat been whipped with men,' that is to seyn, in
- purgatorie. / Certes, thanne semeth it, they shul be tormented with the
- devel in helle, but-if they doon penitence. /
- 715. Hl. tryfles; Seld. triflis.
- § 58. Thanne comth the sinne that men clepen _Tarditas_, as whan a man is
- to latrede or taryinge, er he wole turne to god; and [616] certes, that is
- a greet folye. He is lyk to him that falleth in the dich, and wol nat
- aryse. / And this vyce comth of a fals hope, that he thinketh that he shal
- live longe; but that hope faileth ful ofte. /
- 718. Cm. Pt. Ln. Hl. so (_for_ to). E. Cm. laterede; Hl. Seld.
- latrede; Pt. lattred; Ln. latred.
- § 59. Thanne comth Lachesse; that is he, that whan he biginneth any good
- werk, anon he shal forleten it and stinten; as doon they that han any wight
- to governe, and ne taken of him na-more kepe, anon as they finden any
- contrarie or any anoy. /720 Thise been the newe shepherdes, that leten hir
- sheep witingly go renne to the wolf that is in the breres, or do no fors of
- hir owene governaunce. / Of this comth poverte and destruccioun, bothe of
- spirituel and temporel thinges. Thanne comth a manere coldnesse, that
- freseth al the herte of man. / Thanne comth undevocioun, thurgh which a man
- is so blent, as seith Seint Bernard, and hath swiche langour in soule, that
- he may neither rede ne singe in holy chirche, ne here ne thinke of no
- devocioun, ne travaille with hise handes in no good werk, that it nis him
- unsavory and al apalled. / Thanne wexeth he slow and slombry, and sone wol
- be wrooth, and sone is enclyned to hate and to envye. / Thanne comth the
- sinne of worldly sorwe, swich as is cleped _tristicia_, that sleeth man, as
- seint Paul seith. /725 For certes, swich sorwe werketh to the deeth of the
- soule and of the body also; for ther-of comth, that a man is anoyed of his
- owene lyf. / Wherfore swich sorwe shorteth ful ofte the lyf of a man, er
- that his tyme be come by wey of kinde. /
- 722. E. spiritueel; temporeel. E. Pt. of a man. 723. E. _om._ so.
- blent] Ln. blonte; Hl. blunt. 724. E. slough (for slow). 725. Cm.
- swich as; Hl. such as; E. which as.
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM ACCIDIE.
- § 60. Agayns this horrible sinne of Accidie, and the branches of the same,
- ther is a vertu that is called _Fortitudo_ or Strengthe; that is, an
- affeccioun thurgh which a man despyseth anoyous thinges. / This vertu is so
- mighty and so vigorous, that it dar withstonde mightily and wysely kepen
- him-self fro perils that been wikked, and wrastle agayn the assautes of the
- devel. / For it enhaunceth and enforceth the soule, right as Accidie
- abateth it and maketh it feble. For this _Fortitudo_ may endure by long
- suffraunce the travailles that been covenable. /730
- 727. E. Cm. of man; Seld. of men; _rest_ of a man. 728. E. anoyouse;
- Cm. noyouse; _rest_ noyous. 729. E. Cm. vigerous. 730. E. fieble.
- Hl. conuenables.
- [617]
- § 61. This vertu hath manye speces; and the firste is cleped Magnanimitee,
- that is to seyn, greet corage. For certes, ther bihoveth greet corage
- agains Accidie, lest that it ne swolwe the soule by the sinne of sorwe, or
- destroye it by wanhope. / This vertu maketh folk to undertake harde thinges
- and grevouse thinges, by hir owene wil, wysely and resonably. / And for as
- muchel as the devel fighteth agayns a man more by queyntise and by sleighte
- than by strengthe, therfore men shal withstonden him by wit and by resoun
- and by discrecioun. / Thanne arn ther the vertues of feith, and hope in god
- and in hise seintes, to acheve and acomplice the gode werkes in the whiche
- he purposeth fermely to continue. / Thanne comth seuretee or sikernesse;
- and that is, whan a man ne douteth no travaille in tyme cominge of the gode
- werkes that a man hath bigonne. /735 Thanne comth Magnificence, that is to
- seyn, whan a man dooth and perfourneth grete werkes of goodnesse that he
- hath bigonne; and that is the ende why that men sholde do gode werkes; for
- in the acomplissinge of grete goode werkes lyth the grete guerdoun. /
- Thanne is ther Constaunce, that is, stablenesse of corage; and this sholde
- been in herte by stedefast feith, and in mouth, and in beringe, and in
- chere and in dede. / Eke ther been mo speciale remedies agains Accidie, in
- diverse werkes, and in consideracioun of the peynes of helle, and of the
- Ioyes of hevene, and in trust of the grace of the holy goost, that wole
- yeve him might to perfourne his gode entente. /
- 731. E. Magnificence (_by error; with_ Of Magnanimitee _in the
- margin_). 732. E. wesely (_for_ wysely). 736. E. _om._ that he hath
- bigonne. E. gerdo_u_n. 737. E. chiere.
- SEQUITUR DE AUARICIA.
- § 62. After Accidie wol I speke of Avarice and of Coveitise, of which sinne
- seith seint Paule, that 'the rote of alle harmes is Coveitise': _Ad
- Timotheum, sexto capitulo_. / For soothly, whan the herte of a man is
- confounded in it-self and troubled, and that the soule hath lost the
- confort of god, thanne seketh he an ydel solas of worldly thinges. /740
- 739. Pt. _Capitulo_; _rest om._
- § 63. Avarice, after the descripcion of seint Augustin, is likerousnesse in
- herte to have erthely thinges. / Som other folk seyn, that Avarice is, for
- to purchacen manye erthely thinges, and nothing yeve to hem that han nede.
- / And understond, that Avarice ne stant nat only in lond ne catel, but
- somtyme in science [618] and in glorie, and in every manere of outrageous
- thing is Avarice and Coveitise. / And the difference bitwixe Avarice and
- Coveitise is this. Coveitise is for to coveite swiche thinges as thou hast
- nat; and Avarice is for to withholde and kepe swiche thinges as thou hast,
- with-oute rightful nede. / Soothly, this Avarice is a sinne that is ful
- dampnable; for al holy writ curseth it, and speketh agayns that vyce; for
- it dooth wrong to Iesu Crist. /745 For it bireveth him the love that men to
- him owen, and turneth it bakward agayns alle resoun; / and maketh that the
- avaricious man hath more hope in his catel than in Iesu Crist, and dooth
- more observance in kepinge of his tresor than he dooth to service of Iesu
- Crist. / And therfore seith seint Paul _ad Ephesios, quinto_, that 'an
- avaricious man is in the thraldom of ydolatrie.' /
- 743. E. vnderstoond. 748. E. Hl. _om._ in _after_ is; Pt. hath more
- hope in his thraldome; Ln. is thral. _No_ MS. _has the precise reading
- given; but it is clear that_ in _has been dropped_.
- § 64. What difference is bitwixe an ydolastre and an avaricious man, but
- that an ydolastre, per aventure, ne hath but o mawmet or two, and the
- avaricious man hath manye? For certes, every florin in his cofre is his
- mawmet. / And certes, the sinne of Mawmetrye is the firste thing that God
- deffended in the ten comaundments, as bereth witnesse _Exodi, capitulo
- xx_º: /750 'Thou shall have no false goddes bifore me, ne thou shall make
- to thee no grave thing.' Thus is an avaricious man, that loveth his tresor
- biforn god, an ydolastre, / thurgh this cursed sinne of Avarice. Of
- Coveitise comen thise harde lordshipes, thurgh whiche men been distreyned
- by tailages, custumes, and cariages, more than hir duetee or resoun is. And
- eek they taken of hir bonde-men amerciments, whiche mighten more resonably
- ben cleped extorcions than amerciments. / Of whiche amerciments and
- raunsoninge of bondemen, somme lordes stywardes seyn, that it is rightful;
- for-as-muche as a cherl hath no temporel thing that it ne is his lordes, as
- they seyn. / But certes, thise lordshipes doon wrong, that bireven hir
- bonde-folk thinges that they nevere yave hem: _Augustinus de Civitate,
- libro nono_. / Sooth is, that the condicioun of thraldom and the firste
- cause of thraldom is for sinne; _Genesis, quinto_. /755
- 752. E. Am_er_cimentz (_twice_); whice (_sic_). 753. E. temporeel.
- § 65. Thus may ye seen that the gilt disserveth thraldom, but nat nature. /
- Wherfore thise lordes ne sholde nat muche glorifyen hem in hir lordshipes,
- sith that by naturel condicion they been nat [619] lordes of thralles; but
- for that thraldom comth first by the desert of sinne. / And forther-over,
- ther-as the lawe seith, that temporel godes of bonde-folk been the godes of
- hir lordshipes, ye, that is for to understonde, the godes of the emperour,
- to deffenden hem in hir right, but nat for to robben hem ne reven hem. /
- And therfore seith Seneca: 'thy prudence sholde live benignely with thy
- thralles.' / Thilke that thou clepest thy thralles been goddes peple; for
- humble folk been Cristes freendes; they been contubernial with the lord.
- /760
- 757. E. natureel; _om._ for. 758. E. temporeel.
- § 66. Think eek, that of swich seed as cherles springeth, of swich seed
- springen lordes. As wel may the cherl be saved as the lord. / The same
- deeth that taketh the cherl, swich deeth taketh the lord. Wherfore I rede,
- do right so with thy cherl, as thou woldest that thy lord dide with thee,
- if thou were in his plyt. / Every sinful man is a cherl to sinne. I rede
- thee, certes, that thou, lord, werke in swiche wyse with thy cherles, that
- they rather love thee than drede. / I woot wel ther is degree above degree,
- as reson is; and skile it is, that men do hir devoir ther-as it is due; but
- certes, extorcions and despit of youre underlinges is dampnable. /
- § 67. And forther-over understand wel, that thise conquerours or tiraunts
- maken ful ofte thralles of hem, that been born of as royal blood as been
- they that hem conqueren. /765 This name of thraldom was nevere erst couth,
- til that Noe seyde, that his sone Canaan sholde be thral to hise bretheren
- for his sinne. / What seye we thanne of hem that pilen and doon extorcions
- to holy chirche? Certes, the swerd, that men yeven first to a knight whan
- he is newe dubbed, signifyeth that he sholde deffenden holy chirche, and
- nat robben it ne pilen it; and who so dooth, is traitour to Crist. / And,
- as seith seint Augustin, 'they been the develes wolves, that stranglen the
- sheep of Iesu Crist'; and doon worse than wolves. / For soothly, whan the
- wolf hath ful his wombe, he stinteth to strangle sheep. But soothly, the
- pilours and destroyours of goddes holy chirche ne do nat so; for they ne
- stinte nevere to pile. / Now, as I have seyd, sith so is that sinne was
- first cause of thraldom, thanne is it thus; that thilke tyme that al this
- world was in sinne, thanne was al this world in thraldom and subieccioun.
- /770 But certes, sith the tyme of grace cam, god ordeyned that som folk
- sholde be more heigh [620] in estaat and in degree, and som folk more lowe,
- and that everich sholde be served in his estaat and in his degree. / And
- therfore, in somme contrees ther they byen thralles, whan they han turned
- hem to the feith, they maken hir thralles free out of thraldom. And
- therfore, certes, the lord oweth to his man that the man oweth to his lord.
- / The Pope calleth him-self servant of the servaunts of god; but
- for-as-muche as the estaat of holy chirche ne mighte nat han be, ne the
- commune profit mighte nat han be kept, ne pees and reste in erthe, but-if
- god hadde ordeyned that som men hadde hyer degree and som men lower: /
- therfore was sovereyntee ordeyned to kepe and mayntene and deffenden hir
- underlinges or hir subgets in resoun, as ferforth as it lyth in hir power;
- and nat to destroyen hem ne confounde. / Wherfore I seye, that thilke
- lordes that been lyk wolves, that devouren the possessiouns or the catel of
- povre folk wrongfully, with-outen mercy or mesure, /775 they shul receyven,
- by the same mesure that they han mesured to povre folk, the mercy of Iesu
- Crist, but-if it be amended. / Now comth deceite bitwixe marchant and
- marchant. And thow shalt understonde, that marchandyse is in two maneres;
- that oon is bodily, and that other is goostly. That oon is honeste and
- leveful, and that other is deshoneste and unleveful. / Of thilke bodily
- marchandyse, that is leveful and honeste, is this; that, there-as god hath
- ordeyned that a regne or a contree is suffisaunt to him-self, thanne is it
- honeste and leveful, that of habundaunce of this contree, that men helpe
- another contree that is more nedy. / And therfore, ther mote been marchants
- to bringen fro that o contree to that other hire marchandyses. / That other
- marchandise, that men haunten with fraude and trecherie and deceite, with
- lesinges and false othes, is cursed and dampnable. /780 Espirituel
- marchandyse is proprely Symonye, that is, ententif desyr to byen thing
- espirituel, that is, thing that aperteneth to the seintuarie of god and to
- cure of the soule. / This desyr, if so be that a man do his diligence to
- parfournen it, al-be-it that his desyr ne take noon effect, yet is it to
- him a deedly sinne; and if he be ordred, he is irreguler. / Certes, Symonye
- is cleped of Symon Magus, that wolde han boght, for temporel catel, the
- yifte that god hadde yeven, by the holy goost, to seint Peter and to [621]
- the apostles. / And therfore understond, that bothe he that selleth and he
- that byeth thinges espirituels, been cleped Symonials; be it by catel, be
- it by procuringe, or by fleshly preyere of hise freendes, fleshly freendes,
- or espirituel freendes. / Fleshly, in two maneres; as by kinrede or othere
- freendes. Soothly, if they praye for him that is nat worthy and able, it is
- Symonye if he take the benefice; and if he be worthy and able, ther nis
- noon. /785 That other manere is, whan a man or womman preyen for folk to
- avauncen hem, only for wikked fleshly affeccioun that they have un-to the
- persone; and that is foul Symonye. / But certes, in service, for which men
- yeven thinges espirituels un-to hir servants, it moot been understonde that
- the service moot been honeste, and elles nat; and eek that it be with-outen
- bargayninge, and that the persone be able. / For, as seith Seint Damasie,
- 'alle the sinnes of the world, at regard of this sinne, am as thing of
- noght'; for it is the gretteste sinne that may be, after the sinne of
- Lucifer and Antecrist. / For, by this sinne, god forleseth the chirche, and
- the soule that he boghte with his precious blood, by hem that yeven
- chirches to hem that been nat digne. / For they putten in theves, that
- stelen the soules of Iesu Christ and destroyen his patrimoine. /790 By
- swiche undigne preestes and curates han lewed men the lasse reverence of
- the sacraments of holy chirche; and swiche yeveres of chirches putten out
- the children of Crist, and putten in-to the chirche the develes owene sone.
- / They sellen the soules that lambes sholde kepen to the wolf that
- strangleth hem. And therfore shul they nevere han part of the pasture of
- lambes, that is, the blisse of hevene. / Now comth hasardrye with hise
- apurtenaunces, as tables and rafles; of which comth deceite, false othes,
- chydinges, and alle ravines, blaspheminge and reneyinge of god, and hate of
- hise neighebores, wast of godes, misspendinge of tyme, and somtyme
- manslaughtre. / Certes, hasardours ne mowe nat been with-outen greet sinne
- whyles they haunte that craft. / Of avarice comen eek lesinges, thefte,
- fals witnesse, and false othes. And ye shul understonde that thise been
- grete sinnes, and expres agayn the comaundements of god, as I have seyd.
- /795 Fals witnesse is in word and eek in dede. In word, as for to bireve
- thy neighebores goode name by thy fals witnessing, or [622] bireven him his
- catel or his heritage by thy fals witnessing; whan thou, for ire or for
- mede, or for envye, berest fals witnesse, or accusest him or excusest him
- by thy fals witnesse, or elles excusest thy-self falsly. / Ware yow,
- questemongeres and notaries! Certes, for fals witnessing was Susanna in ful
- gret sorwe and peyne, and many another mo. / The sinne of thefte is eek
- expres agayns goddes heste, and that in two maneres, corporel and
- espirituel. / Corporel, as for to take thy neighebores catel agayn his wil,
- be it by force or by sleighte, be it by met or by mesure. / By steling eek
- of false enditements upon him, and in borwinge of thy neighebores catel, in
- entente nevere to payen it agayn, and semblable thinges. /800 Espirituel
- thefte is Sacrilege, that is to seyn, hurtinge of holy thinges, or of
- thinges sacred to Crist, in two maneres; by reson of the holy place, as
- chirches or chirche-hawes, / for which every vileyns sinne that men doon in
- swiche places may be cleped sacrilege, or every violence in the semblable
- places. Also, they that withdrawen falsly the rightes that longen to holy
- chirche. / And pleynly and generally, sacrilege is to reven holy thing fro
- holy place, or unholy thing out of holy place, or holy thing out of unholy
- place. /
- 765. E. vnderstoond; tirauntz. 767. to (1)] E. in. 771. E. lough;
- _om._ and in his degree. 774. E. subgetz. 777. Ed. 1550, two;
- _MSS._ manye. 781. E. Espiritueel (_twice_). 782. E. irreguleer.
- 783. E. temporeel. 784. E. vnderstoond; beyeth; espiritueel. 791.
- E. sacramentz. 793. Hl. raueynes; Pt. ravanys; Cm. rauynesse; Ln.
- rauynges. 794. E. Cm. _om._ whyles ... craft. 798. E. heeste; _om._
- that; corporeel. Hl. Pt. Ln. and; _rest_ or. E. espiritueel. 799.
- Hl. Corporel; _rest om._ 801. E. Espiritueel.
- RELEVACIO CONTRA PECCATUM AVARICIE.
- § 68. Now shul ye understonde, that the relevinge of Avarice is
- misericorde, and pitee largely taken. And men mighten axe, why that
- misericorde and pitee is relevinge of Avarice? / Certes, the avaricious man
- sheweth no pitee ne misericorde to the nedeful man; for he delyteth him in
- the kepinge of his tresor, and nat in the rescowinge ne relevinge of his
- evene-cristene. And therfore fore speke I first of misericorde. /805 Thanne
- is misericorde, as seith the philosophre, a vertu, by which the corage of
- man is stired by the misese of him that is misesed. / Up-on which
- misericorde folweth pitee, in parfourninge of charitable werkes of
- misericorde. / And certes, thise thinges moeven a man to misericorde of
- Iesu Crist, that he yaf him-self for oure gilt, and suffred deeth for
- misericorde, and forgaf us oure originale sinnes; / and therby relessed us
- fro the peynes of helle, and amenused the peynes of purgatorie by
- penitence, and yeveth grace wel to do, and atte laste [623] the blisse of
- hevene. / The speces of misericorde been, as for to lene and for to yeve
- and to foryeven and relesse, and for to han pitee in herte, and compassioun
- of the meschief of his evene-cristene, and eek to chastyse there as nede
- is. /810 Another manere of remedie agayns Avarice is resonable largesse;
- but soothly, here bihoveth the consideracioun of the grace of Iesu Crist,
- and of hise temporel goodes, and eek of the godes perdurables that Crist
- yaf to us; / and to han remembrance of the deeth that he shal receyve, he
- noot whanne, where, ne how; and eek that he shal forgon al that he hath,
- save only that he hath despended in gode werkes. /
- TITLE. Hl. Remedium (_for_ Releuacio). 806. Cm. Ln. sterid. 811. E.
- temporeel.
- § 69. But for-as-muche as som folk been unmesurable, men oghten eschue
- fool-largesse, that men clepen wast. / Certes, he that is fool-large ne
- yeveth nat his catel, but he leseth his catel. Soothly, what thing that he
- yeveth for veyne glorie, as to minstrals and to folk, for to beren his
- renoun in the world, he hath sinne ther-of and noon almesse. / Certes, he
- leseth foule his good, that ne seketh with the yifte of his good no-thing
- but sinne. /815 He is lyk to an hors that seketh rather to drinken drovy or
- trouble water than for to drinken water of the clere welle. / And
- for-as-muchel as they yeven ther as they sholde nat yeven, to hem
- aperteneth thilke malisoun that Crist shal yeven at the day of dome to hem
- that shullen been dampned. /
- 813. E. oughten. 816. Seld. droupy (_for_ drovy).
- SEQUITUR DE GULA.
- § 70. After Avarice comth Glotonye, which is expres eek agayn the
- comandement of god. Glotonye is unmesurable appetyt to ete or to drinke, or
- elles to doon y-nogh to the unmesurable appetyt and desordeynce coveityse
- to eten or to drinke. / This sinne corrumped al this world, as is wel
- shewed in the sinne of Adam and of Eve. Loke eek, what seith seint Paul of
- Glotonye. / 'Manye,' seith seint Paul, 'goon, of whiche I have ofte seyd to
- yow, and now I seye it wepinge, that they been the enemys of the croys of
- Crist; of whiche the ende is deeth, and of whiche hir wombe is hir god, and
- hir glorie in confusioun of hem that so saveren erthely thinges.' /820 He
- that is usaunt to this sinne of Glotonye, he ne may no sinne withstonde. He
- moot been in servage of alle vyces, for it is the develes hord ther he
- hydeth him and resteth. / This [624] sinne hath manye speces. The firste is
- dronkenesse, that is the horrible sepulture of mannes resoun; and therfore,
- whan a man is dronken, he hath lost his resoun; and this is deedly sinne. /
- But soothly, whan that a man is nat wont to strong drinke, and peraventure
- ne knoweth nat the strengthe of the drinke, or hath feblesse in his heed,
- or hath travailed, thurgh which he drinketh the more, al be he sodeynly
- caught with drinke, it is no deedly sinne, but venial. / The seconde spece
- of Glotonye is, that the spirit of a man wexeth al trouble; for dronkenesse
- bireveth him the discrecioun of his wit. / The thridde spece of Glotonye
- is, whan a man devoureth his mete, and hath no rightful manere of etinge.
- /825 The fourthe is whan, thurgh the grete habundaunce of his mete, the
- humours in his body been destempred. / The fifthe is, foryetelnesse by to
- muchel drinkinge; for which somtyme a man foryeteth er the morwe what he
- dide at even or on the night biforn. /
- 820. Pt. Ln. thei; _rest om._ Hl. Pt. Ln. saueren; _rest_ deuouren.
- 821. E. hoord. 823. Cm. woned. 827. Cm. for[gh]etefulnesse.
- § 71. In other manere been distinct the speces of Glotonye, after seint
- Gregorie. The firste is, for to ete biforn tyme to ete. The seconde is,
- whan a man get him to delicat mete or drinke. / The thridde is, whan men
- taken to muche over mesure. The fourthe is curiositee, with greet entente
- to maken and apparaillen his mete. The fifthe is, for to eten to gredily. /
- Thise been the fyve fingres of the develes hand, by whiche he draweth folk
- to sinne. /830
- 828. E. delicaat.
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM GULE.
- § 72. Agayns Glotonye is the remedie Abstinence, as seith Galien; but that
- holde I nat meritorie, if he do it only for the hele of his body. Seint
- Augustin wole, that Abstinence be doon for vertu and with pacience. /
- Abstinence, he seith, is litel worth, but if a man have good wil ther-to,
- and but it be enforced by pacience and by charitee, and that men doon it
- for godes sake, and in hope to have the blisse of hevene. /
- § 73. The felawes of Abstinence been Attemperaunce, that holdeth the mene
- in alle thinges: eek Shame, that eschueth alle deshonestee: Suffisance,
- that seketh no riche metes ne drinkes, ne dooth no fors of to outrageous
- apparailinge of mete. / Mesure also, that restreyneth by resoun the
- deslavee appetyt of etinge: [625] Sobrenesse also, that restreyneth the
- outrage of drinke: / Sparinge also, that restreyneth the delicat ese to
- sitte longe at his mete and softely; wherfore som folk stonden of hir owene
- wil, to eten at the lasse leyser. /835
- 835. E. delicaat.
- SEQUITUR DE LUXURIA.
- § 74. After Glotonye, thanne comth Lecherie; for thise two sinnes been so
- ny cosins, that ofte tyme they wol nat departe. / God woot, this sinne is
- ful displesaunt thing to god; for he seyde himself, 'do no lecherie.' And
- therfore he putte grete peynes agayns this sinne in the olde lawe. / If
- womman thral were taken in this sinne, she sholde be beten with staves to
- the deeth. And if she were a gentil womman, she sholde be slayn with
- stones. And if she were a bisshoppes doghter, she sholde been brent, by
- goddes comandement. / Forther over, by the sinne of Lecherie, god dreynte
- al the world at the diluge. And after that, he brente fyve citees with
- thonder-leyt, and sank hem in-to helle. /
- 838. Cm. stonys; Ln. stones; Hl. stoones (_for_ staues). 839. Pt. Ln.
- diluve; Hl. diluue (_for_ diluge). E. thonder-leyt; Hl. -layt; _rest_
- -light.
- § 75. Now lat us speke thanne of thilke stinkinge sinne of Lecherie that
- men clepe Avoutrie of wedded folk, that is to seyn, if that oon of hem be
- wedded, or elles bothe. /840 Seint Iohn seith, that avoutiers shullen been
- in helle in a stank brenninge of fyr and of brimston; in fyr, for the
- lecherie; in brimston, for the stink of hir ordure. / Certes, the brekinge
- of this sacrement is an horrible thing; it was maked of god him-self in
- paradys, and confermed by Iesu Crist, as witnesseth seint Mathew in the
- gospel: 'A man shal lete fader and moder, and taken him to his wyf, and
- they shullen be two in o flesh.' / This sacrement bitokneth the knittinge
- togidre of Crist and of holy chirche. / And nat only that god forbad
- avoutrie in dede, but eek he comanded that thou sholdest nat coveite thy
- neighebores wyf. / In this heeste, seith seint Augustin, is forboden alle
- manere coveitise to doon lecherie. Lo what seith seint Mathew in the
- gospel: that 'who-so seeth a womman to coveitise of his lust, he hath doon
- lecherie with hir in his herte.' /845 Here may ye seen that nat only the
- dede of this sinne is forboden, but eek the desyr to doon that sinne. /
- This cursed sinne anoyeth grevousliche [626] hem that it haunten. And
- first, to hir soule; for he oblygeth it to sinne and to peyne of deeth that
- is perdurable. / Un-to the body anoyeth it grevously also, for it dreyeth
- him, and wasteth, and shent him, and of his blood he maketh sacrifyce to
- the feend of helle; it wasteth his catel and his substaunce. / And certes,
- if it be a foul thing, a man to waste his catel on wommen, yet is it a
- fouler thing whan that, for swich ordure, wommen dispenden up-on men hir
- catel and substaunce. / This sinne, as seith the prophete, bireveth man and
- womman hir gode fame, and al hir honour; and it is ful pleasaunt to the
- devel; for ther-by winneth he the moste partie of this world. /850 And
- right as a marchant delyteth him most in chaffare that he hath most
- avantage of, right so delyteth the feend in this ordure. /
- 841. Pt. in fuyre for lechery in bremstone; Hl. In fuyr for the
- leccherie in brimston; Ln. for licherye in brimstone (_om._ in fyr); E.
- Cm. _omit_. 848. Pt. Ln. drieth.
- § 76. This is that other hand of the devel, with fyve fingres, to cacche
- the peple to his vileinye. / The firste finger is the fool lookinge of the
- fool womman and of the fool man, that sleeth, right as the basilicok sleeth
- folk by the venim of his sighte; for the coveitise of eyen folweth the
- coveitise of the herte. / The seconde finger is the vileyns touchinge in
- wikkede manere; and ther-fore seith Salomon, that who-so toucheth and
- handleth a womman, he fareth lyk him that handleth the scorpioun that
- stingeth and sodeynly sleeth thurgh his enveniminge; as who-so toucheth
- warm pich, it shent hise fingres. / The thridde, is foule wordes, that
- fareth lyk fyr, that right anon brenneth the herte. /855 The fourthe finger
- is the kissinge; and trewely he were a greet fool that wolde kisse the
- mouth of a brenninge ovene or of a fourneys. / And more fooles been they
- that kissen in vileinye; for that mouth is the mouth of helle: and namely,
- thise olde dotardes holours, yet wol they kisse, though they may nat do,
- and smatre hem. / Certes, they been lyk to houndes; for an hound, whan he
- comth by the roser or by othere [busshes], though he may nat pisse, yet
- wole he heve up his leg and make a contenaunce to pisse. / And for that
- many man weneth that he may nat sinne, for no likerousnesse that he doth
- with his wyf; certes, that opinion is fals. God woot, a man may sleen
- him-self with his owene knyf, and make him-selven dronken of his owene
- tonne. / Certes, be it wyf, be it child, or any worldly thing that he
- loveth [627] biforn god, it is his maumet, and he is an ydolastre. /860 Man
- sholde loven his wyf by discrecioun, paciently and atemprely; and thanne is
- she as though it were his suster. / The fifthe finger of the develes hand
- is the stinkinge dede of Lecherie. / Certes, the fyve fingres of Glotonie
- the feend put in the wombe of a man, and with hise fyve fyngres of Lecherie
- he gripeth him by the reynes, for to throwen him in-to the fourneys of
- helle; / ther-as they shul han the fyr and the wormes that evere shul
- lasten, and wepinge and wailinge, sharp hunger and thurst, and grimnesse of
- develes that shullen al to-trede hem, with-outen respit and withouten ende.
- / Of Lecherie, as I seyde, sourden diverse speces; as fornicacioun, that is
- bitwixe man and womman that been nat maried; and this is deedly sinne and
- agayns nature. /865 Al that is enemy and destruccioun to nature is agayns
- nature. / Parfay, the resoun of a man telleth eek him wel that it is deedly
- sinne, for-as-muche as god forbad Lecherie. And seint Paul yeveth hem the
- regne, that nis dewe to no wight but to hem that doon deedly sinne. /
- Another sinne of Lecherie is to bireve a mayden of hir maydenhede; for he
- that so dooth, certes, he casteth a mayden out of the hyeste degree that is
- in this present lyf, / and bireveth hir thilke precious fruit that the book
- clepeth 'the hundred fruit.' I ne can seye it noon other weyes in English,
- but in Latin it highte _Centesimus fructus_. / Certes, he that so dooth is
- cause of manye damages and vileinyes, mo than any man can rekene; right as
- he som-tyme is cause of alle damages that bestes don in the feeld, that
- breketh the hegge or the closure; thurgh which he destroyeth that may nat
- been restored. /870 For certes, na-more may maydenhede be restored than an
- arm that is smiten fro the body may retourne agayn to wexe. / She may have
- mercy, this woot I wel, if she do penitence; but nevere shal it be that she
- nas corrupt. / And al-be-it so that I have spoken somwhat of Avoutrie, it
- is good to shewen mo perils that longen to Avoutrie, for to eschue that
- foule sinne. / Avoutrie in Latin is for to seyn, approchinge of other
- mannes bed, thurgh which tho that whylom weren o flessh abaundone hir
- bodyes to othere persones. / Of this sinne, as seith the wyse man, folwen
- manye harmes. First, brekinge of feith; and certes, in feith is the keye of
- Cristendom. /875 And whan that feith is broken and lorn, soothly Cristendom
- stant [628] veyn and with-outen fruit. / This sinne is eek a thefte; for
- thefte generally is for to reve a wight his thing agayns his wille. /
- Certes, this is the fouleste thefte that may be, whan a womman steleth hir
- body from hir housbonde and yeveth it to hire holour to defoulen hir; and
- steleth hir soule fro Crist, and yeveth it to the devel. / This is a fouler
- thefte, than for to breke a chirche and stele the chalice; for thise
- Avoutiers breken the temple of god spiritually, and stelen the vessel of
- grace, that is, the body and the soule, for which Crist shal destroyen hem,
- as seith Seint Paul. / Soothly of this thefte douted gretly Joseph, whan
- that his lordes wyf preyed him of vileinye, whan he seyde, 'lo, my lady,
- how my lord hath take to me under my warde al that he hath in this world;
- ne no-thing of hise thinges is out of my power, but only ye that been his
- wyf. /880 And how sholde I thanne do this wikkednesse, and sinne so
- horribly agayns god, and agayns my lord? God it forbede.' Allas! al to
- litel is swich trouthe now y-founde! / The thridde harm is the filthe
- thurgh which they breken the comandement of god, and defoulen the auctour
- of matrimoine, that is Crist. / For certes, in-so-muche as the sacrement of
- mariage is so noble and so digne, so muche is it gretter sinne for to
- breken it; for god made mariage in paradys, in the estaat of Innocence, to
- multiplye man-kinde to the service of god. / And therfore is the brekinge
- ther-of more grevous. Of which brekinge comen false heires ofte tyme, that
- wrongfully occupyen folkes heritages. And therfore wol Crist putte hem out
- of the regne of hevene, that is heritage to gode folk. / Of this brekinge
- comth eek ofte tyme, that folk unwar wedden or sinnen with hir owene
- kinrede; and namely thilke harlottes that haunten bordels of thise fool
- wommen, that mowe be lykned to a commune gonge, where-as men purgen hir
- ordure. /885 What seye we eek of putours that liven by the horrible sinne
- of putrie, and constreyne wommen to yelden to hem a certeyn rente of hir
- bodily puterie, ye, somtyme of his owene wyf or his child; as doon this
- baudes? Certes, thise been cursede sinnes. / Understond eek, that avoutrie
- is set gladly in the ten comandements bitwixe thefte and manslaughtre; for
- it is the gretteste thefte that may be; for it is thefte of body and of
- soule. / And it is lyk to homicyde; for it kerveth a-two and [629] breketh
- a-two hem that first were maked o flesh, and therfore, by the olde lawe of
- god, they sholde be slayn. / But nathelees, by the lawe of Iesu Crist, that
- is lawe of pitee, whan he seyde to the womman that was founden in avoutrie,
- and sholde han been slayn with stones, after the wil of the Iewes, as was
- hir lawe: 'Go,' quod Iesu Crist, 'and have na-more wil to sinne'; or,
- 'wille na-more to do sinne.' / Soothly, the vengeaunce of avoutrie is
- awarded to the peynes of helle, but-if so be that it be destourbed by
- penitence. /890 Yet been ther mo speces of this cursed sinne; as whan that
- oon of hem is religious, or elles bothe; or of folk that been entred in-to
- ordre, as subdekne or dekne, or preest, or hospitaliers. And evere the hyer
- that he is in ordre, the gretter is the sinne. / The thinges that gretly
- agreggen hir sinne is the brekinge of hir avow of chastitee, whan they
- receyved the ordre. / And forther-over, sooth is, that holy ordre is chief
- of al the tresorie of god, and his especial signe and mark of chastitee; to
- shewe that they been ioyned to chastitee, which that is most precious lyf
- that is. / And thise ordred folk been specially tytled to god, and of the
- special meynee of god; for which, whan they doon deedly sinne, they been
- the special traytours of god and of his peple; for they liven of the peple,
- to preye for the peple, and whyle they been suche traitours, hir preyers
- availen nat to the peple. / Preestes been aungeles, as by the dignitee of
- hir misterye; but for sothe, seint Paul seith, that 'Sathanas transformeth
- him in an aungel of light.' /895 Soothly, the preest that haunteth deedly
- sinne, he may be lykned to the aungel of derknesse transformed in the
- aungel of light; he semeth aungel of light, but for sothe he is aungel of
- derknesse. / Swiche preestes been the sones of Helie, as sheweth in the
- book of Kinges, that they weren the sones of Belial, that is, the devel. /
- Belial is to seyn 'with-outen Iuge'; and so faren they; hem thinketh they
- been free, and han no Iuge, na-more than hath a free bole that taketh which
- cow that him lyketh in the toun. / So faren they by wommen. For right as a
- free bole is y-nough for al a toun, right so is a wikked preest corrupcioun
- y-nough for al a parisshe, or for al a contree. / Thise preestes, as seith
- the book, ne conne nat the misterie of preesthode to the peple, ne god ne
- knowe they nat; they ne helde hem nat apayd, as seith the book, [630] of
- soden flesh that was to hem offred, but they toke by force the flesh that
- is rawe. /900 Certes, so thise shrewes ne holden hem nat apayed of rosted
- flesh and sode flesh, with which the peple fedden hem in greet reverence,
- but they wole have raw flesh of folkes wyves and hir doghtres. / And
- certes, thise wommen that consenten to hir harlotrie doon greet wrong to
- Crist and to holy chirche and alle halwes, and to alle soules; for they
- bireven alle thise him that sholde worshipe Crist and holy chirche, and
- preye for cristene soules. / And therfore han swiche preestes, and hir
- lemmanes eek that consenten to hir lecherie, the malisoun of al the court
- cristen, till they come to amendement. / The thridde spece of avoutrie is
- som-tyme bitwixe a man and his wyf; and that is whan they take no reward in
- hir assemblinge, but only to hire fleshly delyt, as seith seint Ierome; /
- and ne rekken of nothing but that they been assembled; by-cause that they
- been maried, al is good y-nough, as thinketh to hem. /905 But in swich folk
- hath the devel power, as seyde the aungel Raphael to Thobie; for in hir
- assemblinge they putten Iesu Crist out of hir herte, and yeven hem-self to
- alle ordure. / The fourthe spece is, the assemblee of hem that been of hire
- kinrede, or of hem that been of oon affinitee, or elles with hem with
- whiche hir fadres or hir kinrede han deled in the sinne of lecherie; this
- sinne maketh hem lyk to houndes, that taken no kepe to kinrede. / And
- certes, parentele is in two maneres, outher goostly or fleshly; goostly, as
- for to delen with hise godsibbes. / For right so as he that engendreth a
- child is his fleshly fader, right so is his godfader his fader espirituel.
- For which a womman may in no lasse sinne assemblen with hir godsib than
- with hir owene fleshly brother. / The fifthe spece is thilke abhominable
- sinne, of which that no man unnethe oghte speke ne wryte, nathelees it is
- openly reherced in holy writ. /910 This cursednesse doon men and wommen in
- diverse entente and in diverse manere; but though that holy writ speke of
- horrible sinne, certes, holy writ may nat been defouled, na-more than the
- sonne that shyneth on the mixen. / Another sinne aperteneth to lecherie,
- that comth in slepinge; and this sinne cometh ofte to hem that been
- maydenes, and eek to hem that been corrupt; and this sinne men clepen
- pollucioun, that [631] comth in foure maneres. / Somtyme, of languissinge
- of body; for the humours been to ranke and habundaunt in the body of man.
- Somtyme of infermetee; for the feblesse of the vertu retentif, as phisik
- maketh mencioun. Som-tyme, for surfeet of mete and drinke. / And somtyme of
- vileyns thoghtes, that been enclosed in mannes minde whan he goth to slepe;
- which may nat been with-oute sinne. For which men moste kepen hem wysely,
- or elles may men sinnen ful grevously. /
- 853. Hl. as a basiliskoc. 857. Hl. dotard fooles holours. C m. and
- smatere hem thow they may nat doon. 858. Tyrwhitt _has_ bushes; E.
- Seld. Ln. beauteis; Cm. beauteis; Hl. beautes; Pt. bewtees. 869.
- After _fructus_, Hl. _adds_ secundum Ieronimum contra Iouinianum.
- 881. Hl. Pt. horribly; E. Cm. horrible. 882. E. Actour (_error for_
- Auctour). 884. E. Hl. _om._ ther-of. E. ocupien. 887. E.
- Vnderstoond. E. Pt. Ln. Hl. Seld. gladly; Cm. _om._ E.
- comandementz. 891. Pt. Hl. or deken; Ln. & deken; Cm. dekene; E.
- _om._ 894. E. meignee; Ln. Hl. meyne. E. Cm. _om._ to preye ... to
- the peple; _the clause occurs in_ Pt. Ln. Selden, _and partly in_ Hl.
- 897. Seld. Pt. Ln. Hl. Belye (_for_ Helye); Cm. Belyal. 900. Cm.
- helde; _rest_ holde. 903. E. cristiene; Hl. cristian; Cm. cristene;
- _rest_ cristen. 908. Pt. Ln. Parentela; Hl. parenteal. 909. E.
- espiritueel. 911. Pt. myxen; Cm. myxene; E. Mixne; Seld. Ln. mexen;
- Hl. dongehul. 912. E. Poluciou_n_. 912. E. Cm. iij; _rest_ iiij.
- 913. Pt. feblesse; E. fieblesse; Cm. febillesse; Ln. Hl. feblenesse.
- 914. Cm. muste (_for_ moste). E. greously (!).
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM LUXURIE.
- § 77. Now comth the remedie agayns Lecherie, and that is, generally,
- Chastitee and Continence, that restreyneth alle the desordeynee moevinges
- that comen of fleshly talentes. /915 And evere the gretter merite shal he
- han, that most restreyneth the wikkede eschaufinges of the ordure of this
- sinne. And this is in two maneres, that is to seyn, chastitee in mariage,
- and chastitee of widwehode. / Now shaltow understonde, that matrimoine is
- leefful assemblinge of man and of womman, that receyven by vertu of the
- sacrement the bond, thurgh which they may nat be departed in al hir lyf,
- that is to seyn, whyl that they liven bothe. / This, as seith the book, is
- a ful greet sacrement. God maked it, as I have seyd, in paradys, and wolde
- him-self be born in mariage. / And for to halwen mariage, he was at a
- weddinge, where-as he turned water in-to wyn; which was the firste miracle
- that he wroghte in erthe biforn hise disciples. / Trewe effect of mariage
- clenseth fornicacioun and replenisseth holy chirche of good linage; for
- that is the ende of mariage; and it chaungeth deedly sinne in-to venial
- sinne bitwise hem that been y-wedded, and maketh the hertes al oon of hem
- that been y-wedded, as wel as the bodies. /920 This is verray mariage, that
- was establissed by god er that sinne bigan, whan naturel lawe was in his
- right point in paradys; and it was ordeyned that o man sholde have but o
- womman, and o womman but o man, as seith Seint Augustin, by manye resouns.
- /
- 917. E. boond. 921. E. Cm. _om._ This is. E. natureel.
- § 78. First, for mariage is figured bitwixe Crist and holy chirche. And
- that other is, for a man is heved of a womman; algate, by ordinaunce it
- sholde be so. / For if a womman had mo men [632] than oon, thanne sholde
- she have mo hevedes than oon, and that were an horrible thing biforn god;
- and eek a womman ne mighte nat plese to many folk at ones. And also ther ne
- sholde nevere be pees ne reste amonges hem; for everich wolde axen his
- owene thing. / And forther-over, no man ne sholde knowe his owene
- engendrure, ne who sholde have his heritage; and the womman sholde been the
- lasse biloved, fro the time that she were conioynt to many men. /
- 923. E. no (_for_ mo) _before_ men.
- § 79. Now comth, how that a man sholde bere him with his wyf; and namely,
- in two thinges, that is to seyn in suffraunce and reverence, as shewed
- Crist whan he made first womman. /925 For he ne made hir nat of the heved
- of Adam, for she sholde nat clayme to greet lordshipe. / For ther-as the
- womman hath the maistrie, she maketh to muche desray; ther neden none
- ensamples of this. The experience of day by day oghte suffyse. / Also
- certes, god ne made nat womman of the foot of Adam, for she ne sholde nat
- been holden to lowe; for she can nat paciently suffre: but god made womman
- of the rib of Adam, for womman sholde be felawe un-to man. / Man sholde
- bere him to his wyf in feith, in trouthe, and in love, as seith seint Paul:
- that 'a man sholde loven his wyf as Crist loved holy chirche, that loved it
- so wel that he deyde for it.' So sholde a man for his wyf, if it were nede.
- /
- 927. Hl. disaray; Pt. Ln. disaraye.
- § 80. Now how that a womman sholde be subget to hir housbonde, that telleth
- seint Peter. First, in obedience. /930 And eek, as seith the decree, a
- womman that is a wyf, as longe as she is a wyf, she hath noon auctoritee to
- swere ne bere witnesse with-oute leve of hir housbonde, that is hir lord;
- algate, he sholde be so by resoun. / She sholde eek serven him in alle
- honestee, and been attempree of hir array. I wot wel that they sholde
- setten hir entente to plesen hir housbondes, but nat by hir queyntise of
- array. / Seint Ierome seith, that wyves that been apparailled in silk and
- in precious purpre ne mowe nat clothen hem in Iesu Crist. What seith seint
- Iohn eek in this matere? / Seint Gregorie eek seith, that no wight seketh
- precious array but only for veyne glorie, to been honoured the more biforn
- the peple. / It is a greet folye, a womman to have a fair array outward and
- in hir-self be foul inward. /935 [633] A wyf sholde eek be mesurable in
- lokinge and in beringe and in laughinge, and discreet in alle hir wordes
- and hir dedes. / And aboven alle worldly thing she sholde loven hir
- housbonde with al hir herte, and to him be trewe of hir body / so sholde an
- housbonde eek be to his wyf. For sith that al the body is the housbondes,
- so sholde hir herte been, or elles ther is bitwixe hem two, as in that, no
- parfit mariage. / Thanne shal men understonde that for three thinges a man
- and his wyf fleshly mowen assemble. The firste is in entente of engendrure
- of children to the service of god, for certes that is the cause fynal of
- matrimoine. / Another cause is, to yelden everich of hem to other the dette
- of hir bodies, for neither of hem hath power over his owene body. The
- thridde is, for to eschewe lecherye and vileinye. The ferthe is for sothe
- deadly sinne. /940 As to the firste, it is meritorie; the seconde also;
- for, as seith the decree, that she hath merite of chastitee that yeldeth to
- hir housbonde the dette of hir body, ye, though it be agayn hir lykinge and
- the lust of hir herte. / The thridde manere is venial sinne, and trewely
- scarsly may ther any of thise be with-oute venial sinne, for the corrupcion
- and for the delyt. / The fourthe manere is for to understonde, if they
- assemble only for amorous love and for noon of the forseyde causes, but for
- to accomplice thilke brenninge delyt, they rekke nevere how ofte, sothly it
- is deedly sinne; and yet, with sorwe, somme folk wol peynen hem more to
- doon than to hir appetyt suffyseth. /
- 931. E. Cm. that is wyf; Hl. that is a wif. 935. Cm. Pt. be; Hl. to
- ben; Ln. bue; E. _om._ 941. E. _om._ merite of chastitee. 942. E.
- _om._ of.
- § 81. The seconde manere of chastitee is for to been a clene widewe, and
- eschue the embracinges of man, and desyren the embracinge of Iesu Crist. /
- Thise been tho that han been wyves and han forgoon hir housbondes, and eek
- wommen that han doon lecherie and been releeved by Penitence. /945 And
- certes, if that a wyf coude kepen hir al chaast by licence of hir
- housbonde, so that she yeve nevere noon occasion that he agilte, it were to
- hire a greet merite. / Thise manere wommen that observen chastitee moste be
- clene in herte as well as in body and in thoght, and mesurable in clothinge
- and in contenaunce; and been abstinent in etinge and drinkinge, in
- spekinge, and in dede. They been the vessel or the boyste of the blissed
- Magdelene, that fulfilleth holy chirche of good odour. / The thridde manere
- of chastitee is [634] virginitee, and it bihoveth that she be holy in herte
- and clene of body; thanne is she spouse to Iesu Crist, and she is the lyf
- of angeles. / She is the preisinge of this world, and she is as thise
- martirs in egalitee; she hath in hir that tonge may nat telle ne herte
- thinke. / Virginitee baar oure lord Iesu Crist, and virgin was him-selve.
- /950
- 947. E. _om._ moste be ... mesurable.
- § 82. Another remedie agayns Lecherie is, specially to withdrawen swiche
- thinges as yeve occasion to thilke vileinye; as ese, etinge and drinkinge;
- for certes, whan the pot boyleth strongly, the beste remedie is to
- withdrawe the fyr. Slepinge longe in greet quiete is eek a greet norice to
- Lecherie. /
- § 83. Another remedie agayns Lecherie is, that a man or a womman eschue the
- companye of hem by whiche he douteth to be tempted; for al-be-it so that
- the dede is withstonden, yet is ther greet temptacioun. / Soothly a whyt
- wal, al-though it ne brenne noght fully by stikinge of a candele, yet is
- the wal blak of the leyt. / Ful ofte tyme I rede, that no man truste in his
- owene perfeccioun, but he be stronger than Sampson, and holier than Daniel,
- and wyser than Salomon. /955
- 954. E. leyt; Pt. Ln. leyte; Cm. lyght.
- § 84. Now after that I have declared yow, as I can, the sevene deedly
- sinnes, and somme of hir braunches and hir remedies, soothly, if I coude, I
- wolde telle yow the ten comandements. / But so heigh a doctrine I lete to
- divines. Nathelees, I hope to god they been touched in this tretice,
- everich of hem alle. /
- DE CONFESSIONE.
- § 85. Now for-as-muche as the second partie of Penitence stant in
- Confessioun of mouth, as I bigan in the firste chapitre, I seye, seint
- Augustin seith: / sinne is every word and every dede, and al that men
- coveiten agayn the lawe of Iesu Crist; and this is for to sinne in herte,
- in mouth, and in dede, by thy fyve wittes, that been sighte, heringe,
- smellinge, tastinge or savouringe, and felinge. / Now is it good to
- understonde that that agreggeth muchel every sinne. /960 Thou shall
- considere what thou art that doost the sinne, whether thou be male or
- femele, yong or old, gentil or thral, free or servant, hool or syk, wedded
- or sengle, ordred or unordred, wys or fool, clerk or seculer; / if she be
- of [635] thy kinrede, bodily or goostly, or noon; if any of thy kinrede
- have sinned with hir or noon, and manye mo thinges. /
- 960. Pt. Hl. the circumstances that; Ln. the circumstance that (_for_
- that that). 961. E. seculeer.
- § 86. Another circumstaunce is this; whether it be doon in fornicacioun, or
- in avoutrie, or noon; incest, or noon; mayden, or noon; in manere of
- homicyde, or noon; horrible grete sinnes, or smale; and how longe thou hast
- continued in sinne. / The thridde circumstaunce is the place ther thou hast
- do sinne; whether in other mennes hous or in thyn owene; in feeld or in
- chirche, or in chirche-hawe; in chirche dedicat, or noon. / For if the
- chirche be halwed, and man or womman spille his kinde inwith that place by
- wey of sinne, or by wikked temptacion, the chirche is entredited til it be
- reconciled by the bishop; /965 and the preest that dide swich a vileinye,
- to terme of al his lyf, he sholde na-more singe masse; and if he dide, he
- sholde doon deedly sinne at every tyme that he so songe masse. / The
- fourthe circumstaunce is, by whiche mediatours or by whiche messagers, as
- for entycement, or for consentement to bere companye with felaweshipe; for
- many a wrecche, for to bere companye, wil go to the devel of helle. /
- Wher-fore they that eggen or consenten to the sinne been parteners of the
- sinne, and of the dampnacioun of the sinner. / The fifthe circumstaunce is,
- how manye tymes that he hath sinned, if it be in his minde, and how ofte
- that he hath falle. / For he that ofte falleth in sinne, he despiseth the
- mercy of god, and encreesseth his sinne, and is unkinde to Crist; and he
- wexeth the more feble to withstonde sinne, and sinneth the more lightly,
- /970 and the latter aryseth, and is the more eschew for to shryven him,
- namely, to him that is his confessour. / For which that folk, whan they
- falle agayn in hir olde folies, outher they forleten hir olde confessours
- al outrely, or elles they departen hir shrift in diverse places; but
- soothly, swich departed shrift deserveth no mercy of god of hise sinnes. /
- The sixte circumstaunce is, why that a man sinneth, as by whiche
- temptacioun; and if him-self procure thilke temptacioun, or by the
- excytinge of other folk; or if he sinne with a womman by force, or by hir
- owene assent; / or if the womman, maugree hir heed, hath been afforced, or
- noon; this shal she telle; for coveitise, or for poverte, and if it was hir
- procuringe or noon; and swiche manere harneys. / The seventhe [636]
- circumstaunce is, in what manere he hath doon his sinne, or how that she
- hath suffred that folk han doon to hir. /975 And the same shal the man
- telle pleynly, with alle circumstaunces; and whether he hath sinned with
- comune bordel-wommen, or noon; / or doon his sinne in holy tymes, or noon;
- in fasting-tymes, or noon; or biforn his shrifte, or after his latter
- shrifte; / and hath, per-aventure, broken ther-fore his penance enioyned;
- by whos help and whos conseil; by sorcerie or craft; al moste be told. /
- Alle thise thinges, after that they been grete or smale, engreggen the
- conscience of man. And eek the preest that is thy Iuge, may the bettre been
- avysed of his Iugement in yevinge of thy penaunce, and that is after thy
- contricioun. / For understond wel, that after tyme that a man hath defouled
- his baptesme by sinne, if he wole come to salvacioun, ther is noon other
- wey but by penitence and shrifte and satisfaccioun; /980 and namely by the
- two, if ther be a confessour to which he may shryven him; and the thridde,
- if he have lyf to parfournen it. /
- 964. E. dedicaat. 965. E. Cm. _om._ til ... bishop. 967. wil] E.
- shal. 968. dampnacioun] E. Cm. temptacioun. 970. E. fieble. 973.
- Pt. Ln. H. whiche; _rest om._
- § 87. Thanne shal man looke and considere, that if he wole maken a trewe
- and a profitable confessioun, ther moste be foure condiciouns. / First, it
- moot been in sorweful bitternesse of herte, as seyde the king Ezekias to
- god: 'I wol remembre me alle the yeres of my lyf in bitternesse of myn
- herte.' / This condicioun of bitternesse hath fyve signes. The firste is,
- that confessioun moste be shamefast, nat for to covere ne hyden his sinne,
- for he hath agilt his god and defouled his soule. / And her-of seith seint
- Augustin: 'the herte travailleth for shame of his sinne'; and for he hath
- greet shamefastnesse, he is digne to have greet mercy of god. /985 Swich
- was the confession of the publican, that wolde nat heven up hise eyen to
- hevene, for he hadde offended god of hevene; for which shamefastnesse he
- hadde anon the mercy of god. / And ther-of seith seint Augustin, that swich
- shamefast folk been next foryevenesse and remissioun. / Another signe is
- humilitee in confessioun; of which seith seint Peter, 'Humbleth yow under
- the might of god.' The hond of god is mighty in confession, for ther-by god
- foryeveth thee thy sinnes; for he allone hath the power. / And this
- humilitee shal been in herte, and in signe outward; for right as he hath
- humilitee to god [637] in his herte, right so sholde he humble his body
- outward to the preest that sit in goddes place. / For which in no manere,
- sith that Crist is sovereyn and the preest mene and mediatour bitwixe Crist
- and the sinnere, and the sinnere is the laste by wey of resoun, /990 thanne
- sholde nat the sinnere sitte as heighe as his confessour, but knele biforn
- him or at his feet, but-if maladie destourbe it. For he shal nat taken kepe
- who sit there, but in whos place that he sitteth. / A man that hath
- trespased to a lord, and comth for to axe mercy and maken his accord, and
- set him doun anon by the lord, men wolde holden him outrageous, and nat
- worthy so sone for to have remissioun ne mercy. / The thridde signe is, how
- that thy shrift sholde be ful of teres, if man may; and if man may nat wepe
- with hise bodily eyen, lat him wepe in herte. / Swich was the confession of
- seint Peter; for after that he hadde forsake Iesu Crist, he wente out and
- weep ful bitterly. / The fourthe signe is, that he ne lette nat for shame
- to shewen his confessioun. /995 Swich was the confessioun of the Magdelene,
- that ne spared, for no shame of hem that weren atte feste, for to go to
- oure lord Iesu Crist and biknowe to him hir sinnes. / The fifthe signe is,
- that a man or a womman be obeisant to receyven the penaunce that him is
- enioyned for hise sinnes; for certes Iesu Crist, for the giltes of a man,
- was obedient to the deeth. /
- 983. _All_ Ezekiel; _read_ Ezekias (Isaiah xxxviii. 15). 985. E.
- ther-of; _rest_ her-of. 986. E. Ln. puplican. 993. E. teeris.
- § 88. The seconde condicion of verray confession is, that it be hastily
- doon; for certes, if a man hadde a deedly wounde, evere the lenger that he
- taried to warisshe him-self, the more wolde it corrupte and haste him to
- his deeth; and eek the wounde wolde be the wors for to hele. / And right so
- fareth sinne, that longe tyme is in a man unshewed. / Certes, a man oghte
- hastily shewen hise sinnes for manye causes; as for drede of deeth, that
- cometh ofte sodenly, and is in no certeyn what tyme it shal be, ne in what
- place; and eek the drecchinge of o synne draweth in another; /1000 and eek
- the lenger that he tarieth, the ferther he is fro Crist. And if he abyde to
- his laste day, scarsly may he shryven him or remembre him of hise sinnes,
- or repenten him, for the grevous maladie of his deeth. / And for-as-muche
- as he ne hath nat in his lyf herkned Iesu Crist, whanne he hath spoken, he
- shal crye to Iesu Crist at his laste day, and scarsly wol he herkne him. /
- And understond that this condicioun moste han foure thinges. [638] Thy
- shrift moste be purveyed bifore and avysed; for wikked haste doth no
- profit; and that a man conne shryve him of hise sinnes be it of pryde, or
- of envye, and so forth of the speces and circumstances; / and that he have
- comprehended in his minde the nombre and the greetnesse of hise sinnes, and
- how longe that he hath leyn in sinne; / and eek that he be contrit of hise
- sinnes, and in stedefast purpos, by the grace of god, nevere eft to falle
- in sinne; and eek that he drede and countrewaite him-self, that he flee the
- occasiouns of sinne to whiche he is enclyned. /1005 Also thou shalt shryve
- thee of alle thy sinnes to o man, and nat a parcel to o man and a parcel to
- another; that is to understonde, in entente to departe thy confessioun as
- for shame or drede; for it nis but stranglinge of thy soule. / For certes,
- Iesu Crist is entierly al good; in him nis noon inperfeccioun; and therfore
- outher he foryeveth al parfitly or never a deel. / I seye nat that if thou
- be assigned to the penitauncer for certein sinne, that thou art bounde to
- shewen him al the remenaunt of thy sinnes, of whiche thou hast be shriven
- to thy curat, but-if it lyke to thee of thyn humilitee; this is no
- departinge of shrifte. / Ne I seye nat, ther-as I speke of divisioun of
- confessioun, that if thou have lycence for to shryve thee to a discreet and
- an honeste preest, where thee lyketh, and by lycence of thy curat, that
- thou ne mayst wel shryve thee to him of alle thy sinnes. / But lat no
- blotte be bihinde; lat no sinne been untold, as fer as thou hast
- remembraunce. /1010 And whan thou shalt be shriven to thy curat, telle him
- eek alle the sinnes that thou hast doon sin thou were last y-shriven; this
- is no wikked entente of divisioun of shrifte. /
- 1000. Pt. Ln. Seld. is in; _rest om._ 1005. E. stidefast; Cm. Hl.
- stedefast. 1008, 1009, 1011. E. curaat.
- § 89. Also the verray shrifte axeth certeine condiciouns. First, that thou
- shryve thee by thy free wil, noght constreyned, ne for shame of folk, ne
- for maladie, ne swiche thinges; for it is resoun that he that trespasseth
- by his free wil, that by his free wil he confesse his trespas; / and that
- noon other man telle his sinne but he him-self, ne he shal nat nayte ne
- denye his sinne, ne wratthe him agayn the preest for his amonestinge to
- leve sinne. / The seconde condicioun is, that thy shrift be laweful; that
- is to seyn, that thou that shryvest thee, and eek the preest that hereth
- thy confessioun, been verraily in the feith of holy chirche; / and that a
- man ne be nat despeired of the mercy of Iesu Crist, as [639] Caym or Iudas.
- /1015 And eek a man moot accusen him-self of his owene trespas, and nat
- another; but he shal blame and wyten him-self and his owene malice of his
- sinne, and noon other; / but nathelees, if that another man be occasioun or
- entycer of his sinne, or the estaat of a persone be swich thurgh which his
- sinne is agregged, or elles that he may nat pleynly shryven him but he
- telle the persone with which he hath sinned; thanne may he telle; / so that
- his entente ne be nat to bakbyte the persone, but only to declaren his
- confessioun. /
- § 90. Thou ne shall nat eek make no lesinges in thy confessioun; for
- humilitee, per-aventure, to seyn that thou hast doon sinnes of whiche that
- thou were nevere gilty. / For Seint Augustin seith: if thou, by cause of
- thyn humilitee, makest lesinges on thy-self, though thou ne were nat in
- sinne biforn, yet artow thanne in sinne thurgh thy lesinges. /1020 Thou
- most eek shewe thy sinne by thyn owene propre mouth, but thou be wexe
- doumb, and nat by no lettre; for thou that hast doon the sinne, thou shalt
- have the shame therfore. / Thou shalt nat eek peynte thy confessioun by
- faire subtile wordes, to covere the more thy sinne; for thanne bigylestow
- thy-self and nat the preest; thou most tellen it pleynly, be it nevere so
- foul ne so horrible. / Thou shalt eek shryve thee to a preest that is
- discreet to conseille thee, and eek thou shalt nat shryve thee for veyne
- glorie, ne for ypocrisye, ne for no cause, but only for the doute of Iesu
- Crist and the hele of thy soule. / Thou shalt nat eek renne to the preest
- sodeynly, to tellen him lightly thy sinne, as who-so telleth a Iape or a
- tale, but avysely and with greet devocioun. / And generally, shryve thee
- ofte. If thou ofte falle, ofte thou aryse by confessioun. /1025 And thogh
- thou shryve thee ofter than ones of sinne, of which thou hast be shriven,
- it is the more merite. And, as seith seint Augustin, thou shalt have the
- more lightly relesing and grace of god, bothe of sinne and of peyne. / And
- certes, ones a yere atte leeste wey it is laweful for to been housled; for
- certes ones a yere alle thinges renovellen. /
- 1021. Cm. Pt. wexe; E. Hl. woxe. 1023. E. _om. 2nd_ thee.
- EXPLICIT SECUNDA PARS PENITENCIE; ET SEQUITUR TERCIA PARS EIUSDEM, DE
- SATISFACCIONE.
- § 91. Now have I told you of verray Confessioun, that is the seconde partie
- of Penitence. /
- 1028. E. toolde.
- [640] The thridde partie of Penitence is Satisfaccioun; and that stant most
- generally in almesse and in bodily peyne. / Now been ther three manere of
- almesses; contricion of herte, where a man offreth himself to god; another
- is, to han pitee of defaute of hise neighebores; and the thridde is, in
- yevinge of good conseil goostly and bodily, where men han nede, and namely
- in sustenaunce of mannes fode. /1030 And tak keep, that a man hath need of
- thise thinges generally; he hath need of fode, he hath nede of clothing,
- and herberwe, he hath nede of charitable conseil, and visitinge in prisone
- and in maladie, and sepulture of his dede body. / And if thou mayst nat
- visite the nedeful with thy persone, visite him by thy message and by thy
- yiftes. / Thise been generally almesses or werkes of charitee of hem that
- han temporel richesses or discrecioun in conseilinge. Of thise werkes
- shaltow heren at the day of dome. /
- 1031. Hl. keep; Pt. Ln. kepe; E. Cm. _om._ 1033. E. temporeel.
- § 92. Thise almesses shaltow doon of thyne owene propre thinges, and
- hastily, and prively if thou mayst; / but nathelees, if thou mayst nat doon
- it prively, thou shalt nat forbere to doon almesse though men seen it; so
- that it be nat doon for thank of the world, but only for thank of Iesu
- Crist. /1035 For as witnesseth Seint Mathew, _capitulo quinto_, 'A citee
- may nat been hid that is set on a montayne; ne men lighte nat a lanterne
- and put it under a busshel; but men sette it on a candle-stikke, to yeve
- light to the men in the hous. / Right so shal youre light lighten bifore
- men, that they may seen youre gode werkes, and glorifie youre fader that is
- in hevene.' /
- § 93. Now as to speken of bodily peyne, it stant in preyeres, in wakinges,
- in fastinges, in vertuouse techinges of orisouns. / And ye shul
- understonde, that orisouns or preyeres is for to seyn a pilous wil of
- herte, that redresseth it in god and expresseth it by word outward, to
- remoeven harmes and to han thinges espirituel and durable, and somtyme
- temporel thinges; of whiche orisouns, certes, in the orisoun of the
- _Pater-noster_, hath Iesu Crist enclosed most thinges. / Certes, it is
- privileged of three thinges in his dignitee, for which it is more digne
- than any other preyere; for that Iesu Crist him-self maked it; /1040 and it
- is short, for it sholde be coud the more lightly, and for to withholden it
- the more esily in herte, and helpen him-self the ofter with the orisoun; /
- [641] and for a man sholde be the lasse wery to seyen it, and for a man may
- nat excusen him to lerne it, it is so short and so esy; and for it
- comprehendeth in it-self alle gode preyeres. / The exposicioun of this holy
- preyere, that is so excellent and digne, I bitake to thise maistres of
- theologie; save thus muchel wol I seyn: that, whan thou prayest that god
- sholde foryeve thee thy giltes as thou foryevest hem that agilten to thee,
- be ful wel war that thou be nat out of charitee. / This holy orisoun
- amenuseth eek venial sinne; and therfore it aperteneth specially to
- penitence. /
- 1039. E. espiritueel; temporele.
- § 94. This preyere moste be trewely seyd and in verray feith, and that men
- preye to god ordinatly and discreetly and devoutly; and alwey a man shal
- putten his wil to be subget to the wille of god. /1045 This orisoun moste
- eek been seyd with greet humblesse and ful pure; honestly, and nat to the
- anoyaunce of any man or womman. It moste eek been continued with the werkes
- of charitee. / It avayleth eek agayn the vyces of the soule; for, as seith
- seint Ierome, 'By fastinge been saved the vyces of the flesh, and by
- preyere the vyces of the soule.' /
- 1047. vyces (3)] E. vertues; Cm. vertu.
- § 95. After this, thou shalt understonde, that bodily peyne stant in
- wakinge; for Iesu Crist seith, 'waketh, and preyeth that ye ne entre in
- wikked temptacioun.' / Ye shul understanden also, that fastinge stant in
- three thinges; in forberinge of bodily mete and drinke, and in forberinge
- of worldly Iolitee, and in forberinge of deedly sinne; this is to seyn,
- that a man shal kepen him fro deedly sinne with al his might. /
- § 96. And thou shalt understanden eek, that god ordeyned fastinge; and to
- fastinge appertenen foure thinges. /1050 Largenesse to povre folk,
- gladnesse of herte espirituel, nat to been angry ne anoyed, ne grucche for
- he fasteth; and also resonable houre for to ete by mesure; that is for to
- seyn, a man shal nat ete in untyme, ne sitte the lenger at his table to ete
- for he fasteth. /
- 1051. E. espiritueel.
- § 97. Thanne shaltow understonde, that bodily peyne stant in disciplyne or
- techinge, by word or by wrytinge, or in ensample. Also in weringe of heyres
- or of stamin, or of haubergeons on hir naked flesh, for Cristes sake, and
- swiche manere penances. / But war thee wel that swiche manere penances on
- thy flesh ne make nat thyn herte bitter or angry or anoyed of thy-self; for
- bettre is to caste [642] awey thyn heyre, than for to caste away the
- sikernesse of Iesu Crist. / And therfore seith seint Paul: 'Clothe yow, as
- they that been chosen of god, in herte of misericorde, debonairetee,
- suffraunce, and swich manere of clothinge'; of whiche Iesu Crist is more
- apayed than of heyres, or haubergeons, or hauberkes. /
- 1052. or by] E. and by. 1053. nat ... bitter] E. Cm. thee nat.
- 1053. sikernesse] Pt. Ln. Hl. swetnesse.
- § 98. Thanne is disciplyne eek in knokkinge of thy brest, in scourginge
- with yerdes, in knelinges, in tribulacions; /1055 in suffringe paciently
- wronges that been doon to thee, and eek in pacient suffraunce of maladies,
- or lesinge of worldly catel, or of wyf, or of child, or othere freendes. /
- § 99. Thanne shaltow understonde, whiche thinges destourben penaunce; and
- this is in foure maneres, that is, drede, shame, hope, and wanhope, that
- is, desperacion. / And for to speke first of drede; for which he weneth
- that he may suffre no penaunce; / ther-agayns is remedie for to thinke,
- that bodily penaunce is but short and litel at regard of the peyne of
- helle, that is so cruel and so long, that it lasteth with-outen ende. /
- 1058. weneth] E. demeth. 1059. E. crueel; peynes.
- § 100. Now again the shame that a man hath to shryven him, and namely,
- thise ypocrites that wolden been holden so parfite that they han no nede to
- shryven hem; /1060 agayns that shame, sholde a man thinke that, by wey of
- resoun, that he that hath nat been ashamed to doon foule thinges, certes
- him oghte nat been ashamed to do faire thinges, and that is confessiouns. /
- A man sholde eek thinke, that god seeth and wool alle hise thoghtes and
- alle hise werkes; to him may no thing been hid ne covered. / Men sholden
- eek remembren hem of the shame that is to come at the day of dome, to hem
- that been nat penitent and shriven in this present lyf. / For alle the
- creatures in erthe and in helle shullen seen apertly al that they hyden in
- this world. /
- 1061. ashamed (1)] E. shamed.
- § 101. Now for to speken of the hope of hem that been necligent and slowe
- to shryven hem, that stant in two maneres. /1065 That oon is, that he
- hopeth for to live longe and for to purchacen muche richesse for his delyt,
- and thanne he wol shryven him; and, as he seith, him semeth thanne tymely
- y-nough to come to shrifte. Another is, surquidrie that he hath in Cristes
- mercy. / Agayns the firste vyce, he shal thinke, that oure lyf is in no
- sikernesse; and eek that alle the richesses in this world ben in aventure,
- and passen as a shadwe on the wal. / And, as seith seint Gregorie, [643]
- that it aperteneth to the grete rightwisnesse of god, that nevere shal the
- peyne stinte of hem that nevere wolde withdrawen hem fro sinne, hir
- thankes, but ay continue in sinne; for thilke perpetuel wil to do sinne
- shul they han perpetuel peyne. /
- 1065. E. _om._ the. 1069. E. perpetueel (_twice_).
- § 102. Wanhope is in two maneres: the firste wanhope is in the mercy of
- Crist; that other is that they thinken, that they ne mighte nat longe
- persevere in goodnesse. /1070 The firste wanhope comth of that he demeth
- that he hath sinned so greetly and so ofte, and so longe leyn in sinne,
- that he shal nat be saved. / Certes, agayns that cursed wanhope sholde he
- thinke, that the passion of Iesu Crist is more strong for to unbinde than
- sinne is strong for to binde. / Agayns the seconde wanhope, he shal thinke,
- that as ofte as he falleth he may aryse agayn by penitence. And thogh he
- never so longe have leyn in sinne, the mercy of Crist is alwey redy to
- receiven him to mercy. / Agayns the wanhope, that he demeth that he sholde
- nat longe persevere in goodnesse, he shal thinke, that the feblesse of the
- devel may no-thing doon but-if men wol suffren him; / and eek he shal han
- strengthe of the help of god, and of al holy chirche, and of the
- proteccioun of aungels, if him list. /1075
- § 103. Thanne shal men understonde what is the fruit of penaunce; and,
- after the word of Iesu Crist, it is the endelees blisse of hevene, / ther
- Ioye hath no contrarioustee of wo ne grevaunce, ther alle harmes been
- passed of this present lyf; ther-as is the sikernesse fro the peyne of
- helle; ther-as is the blisful companye that reioysen hem everemo, everich
- of otheres Ioye; / ther-as the body of man, that whylom was foul and derk,
- is more cleer than the sonne; ther-as the body, that whylom was syk,
- freele, and feble, and mortal, is inmortal, and so strong and so hool that
- ther may no-thing apeyren it; / ther-as ne is neither hunger, thurst, ne
- cold, but every soule replenissed with the sighte of the parfit knowinge of
- god. / This blisful regne may men purchace by poverte espirituel, and the
- glorie by lowenesse; the plentee of Ioye by hunger and thurst, and the
- reste by travaille; and the lyf by deeth and mortificacion of sinne. /1080
- 1078. E. fieble. 1080. E. espiritueel; _om._ deeth and.
- [644] HERE TAKETH THE MAKERE OF THIS BOOK HIS LEVE.
- § 104. Now preye I to hem alle that herkne this litel tretis or rede, that
- if ther be any thing in it that lyketh hem, that ther-of they thanken oure
- lord Iesu Crist, of whom procedeth al wit and al goodnesse. / And if ther
- be any thing that displese hem, I preye hem also that they arrette it to
- the defaute of myn unconninge, and nat to my wil, that wolde ful fayn have
- seyd bettre if I hadde had conninge. / For oure boke seith, 'al that is
- writen is writen for oure doctrine'; and that is myn entente. / Wherfore I
- biseke yow mekely for the mercy of god, that ye preye for me, that Crist
- have mercy on me and foryeve me my giltes: / --and namely, of my
- translacions and endytinges of worldly vanitees, the whiche I revoke in my
- retracciouns: /1085 as is the book of Troilus; The book also of Fame; The
- book of the nynetene Ladies; The book of the Duchesse; The book of seint
- Valentynes day of the Parlement of Briddes; The tales of Caunterbury,
- thilke that sounen in-to sinne; / The book of the Leoun; and many another
- book, if they were in my remembrance; and many a song and many a lecherous
- lay; that Crist for his grete mercy foryeve me the sinne. / But of the
- translacion of Boece de Consolacione, and othere bokes of Legendes of
- seintes, and omelies, and moralitee, and devocioun, / that thanke I oure
- lord Iesu Crist and his blisful moder, and alle the seintes of hevene; /
- bisekinge hem that they from hennes-forth, un-to my lyves ende, sende me
- grace to biwayle my giltes, and to studie to the salvacioun of my
- soule:--and graunte me grace of verray penitence, confessioun and
- satisfaccioun to doon in this present lyf; /1090 thurgh the benigne grace
- of him that is king of kinges and preest over alle preestes, that boghte us
- with the precious blood of his herte; / so that I may been oon of hem at
- the day of dome that shulle be saved: _Qui cum patre, &c._ /1092
- 1086. E. Pt. xxv; Ln. xv; Hl. 29; _read_ nynetene.
- HERE IS ENDED THE BOOK OF THE TALES OF CAUNTERBURY, COMPILED BY GEFFREY
- CHAUCER, OF WHOS SOULE IESU CRIST HAVE MERCY. AMEN.
- [645]
- * * * * *
- APPENDIX TO GROUP A.
- THE TALE OF GAMELYN.
- * * * * *
- Litheth, and lesteneth · and herkeneth aright,
- And ye schulle heere a talking · of a doughty knight;
- Sire Iohan of Boundys · was his righte name,
- He cowde of norture y-nough · and mochil of game.
- Thre sones the knight hadde · that with his body he wan; 5
- The eldest was a moche schrewe · and sone he bigan.
- His bretheren loved wel here fader · and of him were agast,
- The eldest deserved his fadres curs · and had it at the last.
- The goode knight his fader · livede so yore,
- That deth was comen him to · and handled him ful sore. 10
- The goode knight cared sore · syk ther he lay,
- How his children scholde · liven after his day.
- He hadde ben wyde-wher · but non housbond he was,
- Al the lond that he hadde · it was verrey purchas.
- Fayn he wolde it were · dressed among hem alle, 15
- That ech of hem hadde his part · as it mighte falle.
- Tho sente he in-to cuntre · after wyse knightes,
- To helpe delen his londes · and dressen hem to-rightes.
- He sente hem word by lettres · they schulden hye blyve,
- If they wolde speke with him · whyl he was on lyve. 20
- N.B.--Hl.=Harleian MS. no. 7334 (_taken as the foundation of the
- text_); Harl.=Harleian MS. no. 1758; Cp.=MS. Corp. Chr. Coll. Oxford;
- Ln.=Lansdowne MS. no. 851; Pt.=Petworth MS.; Rl.=MS. Royal 18 c.ii;
- Sl.= MS. Sloane, no. 1685. _Note that_ Cp. _and_ Ln. _are next in value
- to_ Hl., _and often agree with it as against the rest._
- 1. Cp. lesteneth; Sl. Ln. listeneth; Hl. lestneth. Cp. herkeneth; Rl.
- Sl. herkenyth; Hl. herkneth. 2. Cp. schulle; Ln. schullen; Hl.
- schul. Hl. a talkyng; _rest om._ 3. Hl. right; _rest om._; _read_
- righte. 4. Hl. ynough; _rest om._ 5. Cp. hadde; Rl. Sl. Pt. Ln.
- had; Hl. _om._ 14. Cp. Rl. hadde; Hl. had (_and in l._ 16). 15. Cp.
- Ln. wolde; Hl. wold. Hl. amonges; _rest_ among; _see l._ 36. 16.
- Hl. might. 17. Cp. Sl. Rl. Pt. Ln. sente; Hl. sent. _So in l._ 19,
- _where the MSS. wrongly have_ sent.
- Tho the knightes herden · syk that he lay,
- Hadde they no reste · nother night ne day,
- Til they comen to him · ther he lay stille
- On his deth-bedde · to abyde goddes wille.
- Than seyde the goode knight · syk ther he lay, 25
- 'Lordes, I you warne · for soth, withoute nay,
- I may no lenger liven · heer in this stounde;
- [646]
- For thurgh goddes wille · deth draweth me to grounde.'
- Ther nas non of hem alle · that herde him aright,
- That they ne hadden reuthe · of that ilke knight, 30
- And seyde, 'sir, for goddes love · ne dismay you nought;
- God may do bote of bale · that is now y-wrought.'
- 21. Hl. ther; _rest_ that. 27. Hl. Cp. lengere; Ln, longer; _rest_
- lenger. 29. Sl. Cp. Ln. herde; Hl. herd. 30. Harl. Pt. ne; _rest
- om._
- Than spak the goode knight · syk ther he lay,
- 'Boote of bale god may sende · I wot it is no nay;
- But I byseke you, knightes · for the love of me, 35
- Goth and dresseth my lond · among my sones three.
- And sires, for the love of god · deleth hem nat amis,
- And forgetith nat Gamelyn · my yonge sone that is.
- Taketh heed to that on · as wel as to that other;
- Selde ye see ony eyr · helpen his brother.' 40
- 36. Hl. thre. 37. Hl. And sires; _rest om._ sires.
- Tho leete they the knight lyen · that was nought in hele,
- And wenten in-to counsel · his londes for to dele;
- For to delen hem alle · to oon, that was her thought,
- And for Gamelyn was yongest · he schulde have nought.
- Al the lond that ther was · they dalten it in two, 45
- And leeten Gamelyn the yonge · withoute londe go,
- And ech of hem seyde · to other ful lowde,
- His bretheren mighte yeve him lond · whan he good cowde.
- Whan they hadde deled · the lond at here wille,
- They comen ayein to the knight · ther he lay ful stille, 50
- And tolden him anon-right · how they hadden wrought;
- And the knight ther he lay · lyked it right nought.
- Than seyde the knight · 'by seynt Martyn,
- For al that ye have y-doon · yit is the lond myn;
- For goddes love, neyhebours · stondeth alle stille, 55
- And I wil dele my lond · right after my wille.
- Iohan, myn eldeste sone · schal have plowes fyve,
- That was my fadres heritage · whyl he was on lyve;
- And my middeleste sone · fyve plowes of lond,
- That I halp for to gete · with my righte hond; 60
- And al myn other purchas · of londes and leedes,
- That I biquethe Gamelyn · and alle my goode steedes.
- And I biseke yow, goode men · that lawe conne of londe,
- For Gamelynes love · that my queste stonde.'
- Thus dalte the knight · his lond by his day, 65
- Right on his deth-bedde · syk ther he lay;
- And sone aftirward · he lay stoon-stille,
- And deyde whan tyme com · as it was Cristes wille.
- [647]
- And anon as he was deed · and under gras y-grave,
- Sone the elder brother · gyled the yonge knave; 70
- He took into his hond · his lond and his leede,
- And Gamelyn himselfe · to clothen and to feede.
- He clothed him and fedde him · yvel and eek wrothe,
- And leet his londes for-fare · and his houses bothe,
- His parkes and his woodes · and dede nothing wel; 75
- And seththen he it aboughte · on his faire fel.
- So longe was Gamelyn · in his brotheres halle,
- For the strengest, of good wil · they doutiden him alle;
- Ther was non ther-inne · nowther yong ne old,
- That wolde wraththe Gamelyn · were he never so bold. 80
- Gamelyn stood on a day · in his brotheres yerde,
- And bigan with his hond · to handlen his berde;
- He thoughte on his londes · that layen unsawe,
- And his faire okes · that down were y-drawe;
- His parkes were y-broken · and his deer bireved; 85
- Of alle his goode steedes · noon was him bileved;
- His howses were unhiled · and ful yvel dight;
- Tho thoughte Gamelyn · it wente nought aright.
- Afterward cam his brother · walkinge thare,
- And seyde to Gamelyn · 'is our mete yare?' 90
- Tho wraththed him Gamelyn · and swor by goddes book,
- 'Thou schalt go bake thy-self · I wil nought be thy cook!'
- 'How? brother Gamelyn · how answerest thou now?
- Thou spake never such a word · as thou dost now.'
- 'By my faith,' seyde Gamelyn · 'now me thinketh neede, 95
- Of alle the harmes that I have · I tok never ar heede.
- My parkes ben to-broken · and my deer bireved,
- Of myn armure and my steedes · nought is me bileved;
- Al that my fader me biquath · al goth to schame,
- And therfor have thou goddes curs · brother by thy name!' 100
- Than bispak his brother · that rape was of rees,
- 'Stond stille, gadeling · and hold right thy pees;
- Thou schalt be fayn for to have · thy mete and thy wede;
- What spekest thou, Gamelyn · of lond other of leede?'
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · the child that was ying, 105
- 'Cristes curs mot he have · that clepeth me gadeling!
- I am no worse gadeling · ne no worse wight,
- But born of a lady · and geten of a knight.'
- Ne durste he nat to Gamelyn · ner a-foote go,
- But clepide to him his men · and seyde to hem tho, 110
- [648]
- 'Goth and beteth this boy · and reveth him his wit,
- And lat him lerne another tyme · to answere me bet.'
- Thanne seyde the child · yonge Gamelyn,
- 'Cristes curs mot thou have · brother art thou myn!
- And if I schal algate · be beten anon, 115
- Cristes curs mot thou have · but thou be that oon!'
- And anon his brother · in that grete hete
- Made his men to fette staves · Gamelyn to bete.
- Whan that everich of hem · a staf hadde y-nome,
- Gamelyn was war anon · tho he seigh hem come; 120
- Tho Gamelyn seigh hem come · he loked over-al,
- And was war of a pestel · stood under a wal;
- Gamelyn was light of foot · and thider gan he lepe,
- And drof alle his brotheres men · right on an hepe.
- He loked as a wilde lyoun · and leyde on good woon; 125
- Tho his brother say that · he bigan to goon;
- He fley up in-til a loft · and schette the dore fast;
- Thus Gamelyn with the pestel · made hem alle agast.
- Some for Gamelynes love · and some for his eye,
- Alle they drowe by halves · tho he gan to pleye. 130
- 'What! how now?' seyde Gamelyn · 'evel mot ye thee!
- Wil ye biginne contek · and so sone flee?'
- Gamelyn soughte his brother · whider he was flowe,
- And saugh wher he loked · out at a windowe.
- 'Brother,' sayde Gamelyn · 'com a litel ner, 135
- And I wil teche thee a play · atte bokeler.'
- His brother him answerde · and swor by seynt Richer,
- 'Whyl the pestel is in thin hond · I wil come no neer:
- Brother, I wil make thy pees · I swere by Cristes ore;
- Cast away the pestel · and wraththe thee no-more.' 140
- 'I mot neede,' sayde Gamelyn · 'wraththe me at oones,
- For thou wolde make thy men · to breke myne boones,
- Ne hadde I had mayn · and might in myn armes,
- To have y-put hem fro me · they wolde have do me harmes.'
- 'Gamelyn,' sayde his brother · 'be thou nought wroth, 145
- For to seen thee have harm · it were me right loth;
- I ne dide it nought, brother · but for a fonding,
- For to loken if thou were strong · and art so ying.'
- 'Com a-doun than to me · and graunte me my bone
- Of thing I wil thee aske · and we schul saughte sone.' 150
- Doun than cam his brother · that fikil was and fel,
- [649]
- And was swithe sore · agast of the pestel.
- He seyde, 'brother Gamelyn · aske me thy boone,
- And loke thou me blame · but I graunte sone.'
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · 'brother, y-wis, 155
- And we schulle ben at oon · thou most me graunte this:
- Al that my fader me biquath · whyl he was on lyve,
- Thou most do me it have · yif we schul nat stryve.'
- 'That schalt thou have, Gamelyn · I swere by Cristes ore!
- Al that thy fader thee biquath · though thou woldest have more; 160
- Thy lond, that lyth laye · ful wel it schal be sowe,
- And thyn howses reysed up · that ben leyd so lowe.'
- Thus seyde the knight · to Gamelyn with mowthe,
- And thoughte eek of falsnes · as he wel couthe.
- The knight thoughte on tresoun · and Gamelyn on noon, 165
- And wente and kiste his brother · and, whan they were at oon,
- Allas! yonge Gamelyn · nothing he ne wiste
- With which a false tresoun · his brother him kiste!
- 44. Hl. schuld; Cp. scholde. 46. Pt. londe; Ln. lande; _rest_ lond.
- 48. Hl. might; _read_ mighte. 50. Hl. come a[gh]ein; _rest omit_
- a[gh]ein, _and read_ comen, camen, co_m_men. 51. Hl. anon right;
- _rest_ anon, anoon. 56. Hl. Pt. _om._ right. 59. Hl. fyf; _rest_
- fyue; _see l._ 57. 60. _Read_ righte; _MSS_. right. 61. Ln. and of
- ledes. 64. Cp. bequeste. 66. Hl. bed; Cp. bedde; _see l_. 24. 69.
- Hl. And anon; _rest om._ And. 71. Hl. as his (_for_ and his). 73.
- Hl. fed; _rest_ fedde. 76. Cp. aboughte; Ln. abouhte; _rest_ abought,
- abowght. 79, 80. Rl. Sl. old, bold; _rest_ olde, bolde. 83. Ln.
- þouhte; _rest om. the final_ e; _see l_. 88. 85. Hl. byreeued; _rest
- om._ by-. 103. Rl. Sl. Pt. Harl. _om._ for. 109. Hl. durst; Cp.
- durste; Ln. dorste. 112. Cp. lere; Hl. Ln. leren; _rest_ lerne.
- 119. Hl. a staf had; _rest_ hadde (had) a staf. 120. Hl. anon; _rest
- om._ 121. Hl. seyh. 123. Hl. of foot; _rest om._ 124. Hl. Ln. on;
- _rest_ sone on. 128. Hl. the; _rest_ his. 129, 130. Hl. ey[gh]e,
- pley[gh]e; _rest_ eye, pleye. 131. Hl. how; _rest om._ 133. MSS.
- _omit final_ e _in_ soughte. 137. Hl. Rycher. 138. Hl. Whil. 140,
- 146, 150, &c. Hl. the. 143. Cp. hadde I had; Hl. had I hadde. 144.
- Hl. he; _rest_ thei. 148. Harl. Ln. if; Pt. wher; _rest_ or. 150.
- Hl. Cp. Ln. Of; Harl. Of oo; Rl. Of a; Sl. Of o; Pt. Of oon. 151,
- 152. Ln. fel, pestel; _rest_ felle, pestelle. 154. Hl. I; _rest_ I
- it. 157. Hl. whil. 161. Hl. Cp. laye; Rl. leie; Sl. leye; Pt. Ln.
- ley. 164. Cp. þoughte; _rest om. final_ e. Hl. eek; _rest om._
- Hl. Cp. Ln. of; _rest_ on. 165. _For_ knight, Hl. _wrongly has_
- king. MSS. _omit_ e _in_ thoughte. 166. Pt. Harl. wente; _rest_
- went. Hl. kist; _rest_ kissed; _see l._ 168.
- Litheth, and lesteneth · and holdeth your tonge,
- And ye schul heere talking · of Gamelyn the yonge. 170
- Ther was ther bisyden · cryed a wrastling,
- And therfor ther was set up · a ram and a ring;
- And Gamelyn was in good wil · to wende therto,
- For to preven his might · what he cowthe do.
- 'Brother,' seyde Gamelyn · 'by seynt Richer, 175
- Thou most lene me to-night · a litel courser
- That is freisch to the spore · on for to ryde;
- I most on an erande · a litel her bisyde.'
- 'By god!' seyde his brother · 'of steedes in my stalle
- Go and chese thee the best · and spare non of alle 180
- Of steedes or of coursers · that stonden hem bisyde;
- And tel me, goode brother · whider thou wolt ryde.'
- 169. Rl. lysteneth; Cp. lesteneth; Pt. listeneth; Hl. lestneth. 171.
- Hl. wrastlyng; Cp. wrasteling; Rl. wrastelynge; Pt. wrastelinge. 172.
- Hl. sette (_wrongly_); _see l._ 184. 173. Hl. good wil; Ln. wil;
- _rest_ wille. 177. Hl. Pt. spore; _rest_ spores. 178. Hl. byside;
- _so in_ 183. 179. Hl. seyd; _rest have final_ e. 180. Hl. the
- the. 181. _For_ coursers, Hl. _wrongly has_ course.
- 'Her bisyde, brother · is cryed a wrastling,
- And therfor schal be set up · a ram and a ring;
- Moche worschip it were · brother, to us alle, 185
- Might I the ram and the ring · bring home to this halle.'
- A steede ther was sadeled · smertely and skeet;
- Gamelyn did a paire spores · fast on his feet.
- He sette his foot in the styrop · the steede he bistrood,
- [650]
- And toward the wrasteling · the yonge child rood. 190
- Tho Gamelyn the yonge · was ride out at the gat,
- The false knight his brother · lokked it after that,
- And bisoughte Iesu Crist · that is heven king,
- He mighte breke his nekke · in that wrasteling.
- As sone as Gamelyn com · ther the place was, 195
- He lighte doun of his steede · and stood on the gras,
- And ther he herd a frankeleyn · wayloway singe,
- And bigan bitterly · his hondes for to wringe.
- 'Goode man,' seyde Gamelyn · 'why makestow this fare?
- Is ther no man that may · you helpe out of this care?' 200
- 'Allas!' seyde this frankeleyn · 'that ever was I bore!
- For tweye stalworthe sones · I wene that I have lore;
- A champioun is in the place · that hath y-wrought me sorwe,
- For he hath slayn my two sones · but-if god hem borwe.
- I wold yeve ten pound · by Iesu Crist! and more, 205
- With the nones I fand a man · to handelen him sore.'
- 'Goode man,' sayde Gamelyn · 'wilt thou wel doon,
- Hold myn hors, whyl my man · draweth of my schoon,
- And help my man to kepe · my clothes and my steede,
- And I wil into place go · to loke if I may speede.' 210
- 'By god!' sayde the frankeleyn · 'anon it schal be doon;
- I wil my-self be thy man · and drawen of thy schoon,
- And wende thou into the place · Iesu Crist thee speede,
- And drede not of thy clothes · nor of thy goode steede.'
- 183. Pt. wrasteling; Ln. warsteling; _rest_ wrastlyng, wrastlynge.
- 184. Hl. vp; _rest om._ 189. Hl. set; Ln. sete; _rest_ sette. Hl.
- _om. 1st_ the. 191. Hl. ride; _rest_ riden, reden. Hl. Ln. at the;
- Cp. Pt. atte; _rest_ at. _All_ gate (_wrongly_); _and_ thate (_for_
- that) _in next line_. 192. Cp. Ln. false: _rest_ fals. 194. Pt.
- wrestelinge; _rest_ wrastlyng, wrastlinge, wrestlinge. 197, 198. Hl.
- syng, wryng. 206. Cp. handelen; Hl. handil. 211. Hl. anon; _rest
- om._ 213. Hl. Cp. Ln. the place; _rest om._ the. Hl. the.
- Barfoot and ungert · Gamelyn in cam, 215
- Alle that weren in the place · heede of him they nam,
- How he durste auntre him · of him to doon his might
- That was so doughty champioun · in wrastling and in fight.
- Up sterte the champioun · rapely and anoon,
- Toward yonge Gamelyn · he bigan to goon, 220
- And sayde, 'who is thy fader · and who is thy sire?
- For sothe thou art a gret fool · that thou come hire!'
- Gamelyn answerde · the champioun tho,
- 'Thou knewe wel my fader · whyl he couthe go,
- Whyles he was on lyve · by seint Martyn! 225
- Sir Iohan of Boundys was his name · and I Gamelyn.'
- 'Felaw,' seyde the champioun · 'al-so mot I thryve,
- I knew wel thy fader · whyl he was on lyve;
- And thyself, Gamelyn · I wil that thou it heere,
- [651]
- Whyl thou were a yong boy · a moche schrewe thou were.' 230
- Than seyde Gamelyn · and swor by Cristes ore,
- 'Now I am older woxe · thou schalt me finde a more!'
- 'By god!' sayde the champioun · 'welcome mote thou be!
- Come thou ones in myn hond · schalt thou never thee.'
- It was wel withinne the night · and the moone schon, 235
- Whan Gamelyn and the champioun · togider gonne goon.
- The champioun caste tornes · to Gamelyn that was prest,
- And Gamelyn stood stille · and bad him doon his best.
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · to the champioun,
- 'Thou art faste aboute · to bringe me adoun; 240
- Now I have y-proved · many tornes of thyne,
- Thow most,' he seyde, 'proven · on or two of myne.'
- Gamelyn to the champioun · yede smertely anon,
- Of all the tornes that he cowthe · he schewed him but oon,
- And caste him on the lefte syde · that three ribbes to-brak, 245
- And ther-to his oon arm · that yaf a gret crak.
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · smertely anoon,
- 'Schal it be holde for a cast · or elles for noon?'
- 'By god!' seyde the champioun · 'whether that it be,
- He that cometh ones in thin hand · schal he never thee!' 250
- Than seyde the frankeleyn · that had his sones there,
- 'Blessed be thou, Gamelyn · that ever thou bore were!'
- The frankeleyn seyde to the champioun · of him stood him noon eye,
- 'This is yonge Gamelyn · that taughte thee this pleye.'
- Agein answerd the champioun · that lyked nothing wel, 255
- 'He is a lither mayster · and his pley is right fel;
- Sith I wrastled first · it is y-go ful yore,
- But I was nevere in my lyf · handeled so sore.'
- Gamelyn stood in the place · allone withoute serk,
- And seyde, 'if ther be eny mo · lat hem come to werk; 260
- The champioun that peyned him · to werke so sore,
- It semeth by his continaunce · that he wil no-more.'
- Gamelyn in the place · stood as stille as stoon,
- For to abyde wrasteling · but ther com noon;
- Ther was noon with Gamelyn · wolde wrastle more, 265
- For he handled the champioun · so wonderly sore.
- Two gentil-men ther were · that yemede the place,
- Comen to Gamelyn · (god yeve him goode grace!)
- And sayde to him, 'do on · thyn hosen and thy schoon,
- [652]
- For sothe at this tyme · this feire is y-doon.' 270
- And than seyde Gamelyn · 'so mot I wel fare,
- I have nought yet halven-del · sold up my ware.'
- Tho seyde the champioun · 'so brouke I my sweere,
- He is a fool that ther-of byeth · thou sellest it so deere.'
- Tho sayde the frankeleyn · that was in moche care, 275
- 'Felaw,' he seyde · 'why lakkest thou his ware?
- By seynt Iame in Galys · that many man hath sought,
- Yet it is to good cheep · that thou hast y-bought.'
- Tho that wardeynes were · of that wrasteling
- Come and broughte Gamelyn · the ram and the ring, 280
- And seyden, 'have, Gamelyn · the ring and the ram,
- For the beste wrasteler · that ever here cam.'
- Thus wan Gamelyn · the ram and the ring,
- And wente with moche Ioye · home in the morning.
- His brother seih wher he cam · with the grete rowte, 285
- And bad schitte the gate · and holde him withoute.
- The porter of his lord · was ful sore agast,
- And sterte anon to the gate · and lokked it fast.
- 217. Hl. Pt. durst; _rest_ durste, dorste. 218. _All but_ Hl. _ins._
- a _bef_. champioun. 219. Hl. raply and; _rest_ rapely (_omitting_
- and). 222. Rl. Harl. Sl. here. 224, 225. Hl. whil, Whiles. 227.
- Hl. al; _rest om._ 232. Hl. fynd; _rest_ fynde, finde. 234. Hl.
- the. 236. Hl. gon to; Cp. Ln. gonne; _rest_ gon. 242. Hl. tuo.
- 243. Hl. Ln. smartly; Rl. Pt. smertely; _see l._ 187. 245. _All_ kast
- _or_ kest. _All_ left, lift; _read_ lefte. Hl. thre. 247. Hl.
- smertly; _see l._ 243. 249, 253, 260. Hl. seyd; _rest have final_
- e. 250. Hl. Ln. comes; _rest_ cometh; _read it as_ comth. 254. Hl.
- the. 255. Hl. welle. 256. Hl. a lither; Cp. oure alther; _rest_
- alther. _For_ fel, _all have_ felle _or_ felle. 258. Hl. Cp. Ln.
- my; _rest_ in my. Rl. Pt. Ln. handeled; Hl. Sl. Cp. handled. 260.
- Hl. eny; _rest om._ 267. ther were that] Pt. that; _rest om._ 273.
- H. brouk; Cp. Ln. brouke; Pt. broke. 274. Hl. beyeth; _rest_ byeth,
- bieth. 279. Pt. wrasteling; Ln. warstelinge; Rl. wrastlinge; _rest_
- wrastlyng. 282. Cp. beste; Hl. Ln. best; _rest om. ll._ 281, 282.
- 287. Hl. ful; _rest om._ 288. Rl. Harl. sterte; _rest_ stert.
- Now litheth, and lesteneth · bothe yonge and olde,
- And ye schul heere gamen · of Gamelyn the bolde. 290
- Gamelyn come ther-to · for to have comen in,
- And thanne was it y-schet · faste with a pin;
- Than seyde Gamelyn · 'porter, undo the yat,
- For many good mannes sone · stondeth ther-at.'
- Than answerd the porter · and swor by goddes berde, 295
- 'Thow ne schalt, Gamelyn · come into this yerde.'
- 'Thow lixt,' sayde Gamelyn · 'so browke I my chin!'
- He smot the wiket with his foot · and brak awey the pin.
- The porter seyh tho · it might no better be,
- He sette foot on erthe · and bigan to flee. 300
- 'By my faith,' seyde Gamelyn · 'that travail is y-lore,
- For I am of foot as light as thou · though thou haddest swore.'
- Gamelyn overtook the porter · and his teene wrak,
- And gerte him in the nekke · that the bon to-brak,
- And took him by that oon arm · and threw him in a welle, 305
- Seven fadmen it was deep · as I have herd telle.
- Whan Gamelyn the yonge · thus hadde pleyd his play,
- Alle that in the yerde were · drewen hem away;
- They dredden him ful sore · for werkes that he wroughte,
- And for the faire company · that he thider broughte. 310
- [653]
- Gamelyn yede to the gate · and leet it up wyde;
- He leet in alle maner men · that gon in wolde or ryde,
- And seyde, 'ye be welcome · withouten eny greeve,
- For we wiln be maistres heer · and aske no man leve.
- Yestirday I lefte' · seyde yonge Gamelyn, 315
- 'In my brother seller · fyve tonne of wyn;
- I wil not that this compaignye · parten a-twinne,
- And ye wil doon after me · whyl eny sope is thrinne,
- And if my brother grucche · or make foul cheere,
- Other for spense of mete or drink · that we spenden heere, 320
- I am oure catour · and bere oure aller purs,
- He schal have for his grucching · seint Maries curs.
- My brother is a niggoun · I swer by Cristes ore,
- And we wil spende largely · that he hath spared yore;
- And who that maketh grucching · that we here dwelle, 325
- He schal to the porter · into the draw-welle.'
- Seven dayes and seven night · Gamelyn held his feste,
- With moche mirth and solas · that was ther, and no cheste;
- In a little toret · his brother lay y-steke,
- And sey hem wasten his good · but durste he not speke. 330
- Erly on a morning · on the eighte day,
- The gestes come to Gamelyn · and wolde gon here way.
- 'Lordes,' seyde Gamelyn · 'wil ye so hyë?
- Al the wyn is not yet dronke · so brouke I myn yë.'
- Gamelyn in his herte · was he ful wo, 335
- Whan his gestes took her leve · from him for to go;
- He wolde they had lenger abide · and they seyde 'nay,'
- But bitaughte Gamelyn · god, and good day.
- Thus made Gamelyn his feest · and broughte it wel to ende,
- And after his gestes · toke leve to wende. 340
- 289. Hl. lestneth; Pt. listneþ; _rest_ lesteneth, listenythe,
- listeneth, lysteneyth. Pt. Ln. [gh]onge; _rest_ yong, [gh]ong.
- 293. _All_ yate, gate; _and in the next line_ ther-ate. 295. Hl.
- berd. 300. and] Hl. Cp. he. 304. Hl. Cp. gert; _rest_ girt. 306.
- Hl. Cp. fadmen; Pt. fadme; Rl. Sl. fadame; Ln. faþem; Harl. fadome.
- 312. Hl. maner men; _rest om._ Hl. _has 2nd_ in; _rest om._ Hl. Rl.
- Pt. wold; Cp. Ln. wolde. 317. Hl. that; _rest om._ 318. Hl. while.
- Hl. thrynne; Cp. thrinne; Sl. Pt. þ_er_-inne; Ln. þ_e_re-inne. 323.
- Hl. nyggou_n_; Rl. Sl. nygon; Pt. nigon; Cp. Ln. negon. 328. Hl.
- myrth and; _rest om._ Hl. that was; _rest om._ that (_as being
- understood_). 330. Hl. Cp. durst; _rest_ dorst. 334. Hl. y-dronke;
- _rest omit_ y-. Pt. Ln. brouke; Rl. browke; Hl. brouk. 335. Hl. he;
- _rest om._ 337. Hl. wold. Hl. lenger abide; _rest_ dwelled
- lenger. 339. Pt. feest; Hl. fest. MSS. brought, broght. 340. Hl.
- gestys; _see l._ 336. Hl. took; Ln. had take; Cp. tok_e_; Sl. to
- (_sic_); _rest_ toke.
- Litheth, and lesteneth · and holdeth youre tonge,
- And ye schul heere gamen · of Gamelyn the yonge;
- Herkeneth, lordinges · and lesteneth aright,
- Whan alle gestes were goon · how Gamelyn was dight.
- Al the whyl that Gamelyn · heeld his mangerye, 345
- His brother thoughte on him be wreke · with his treccherye.
- Tho Gamelyns gestes · were riden and y-goon,
- Gamelyn stood allone · frendes had he noon;
- Tho after ful soone · withinne a litel stounde,
- [654]
- Gamelyn was y-taken · and ful harde y-bounde. 350
- Forth com the false knight · out of the soleer,
- To Gamelyn his brother · he yede ful neer,
- And sayde to Gamelyn · 'who made thee so bold
- For to stroye my stoor · of myn houshold?'
- 'Brother,' seyde Gamelyn · 'wraththe thee right nought, 355
- For it is many day y-gon · siththen it was bought;
- For, brother, thou hast y-had · by seynt Richer,
- Of fiftene plowes of lond · this sixtene yer,
- And of alle the beestes · thou hast forth bred,
- That my fader me biquath · on his deth-bed; 360
- Of al this sixtene yeer · I yeve thee the prow,
- For the mete and the drink · that we have spended now.'
- Thanne seyde the false knight · (evel mot he thee!)
- 'Herkne, brother Gamelyn · what I wol yeve thee;
- For of my body, brother · heir geten have I noon, 365
- I wil make thee myn heir · I swere by seint Iohan.'
- '_Par ma foy!_' sayde Gamelyn · 'and if it so be,
- And thou thenke as thou seyst · god yelde it thee!'
- Nothing wiste Gamelyn · of his brotheres gyle;
- Therfore he him bigyled · in a litel whyle. 370
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde he · 'o thing I thee telle;
- Tho thou threwe my porter · in the draw-welle,
- I swor in that wraththe · and in that grete moot,
- That thou schuldest be bounde · bothe hand and foot;
- Therfore I thee biseche · brother Gamelyn, 375
- Lat me nought be forsworen · brother art thou myn;
- Lat me binde thee now · bothe hand and feet,
- For to holde myn avow · as I thee biheet.'
- 'Brother,' sayde Gamelyn · 'al-so mot I thee!
- Thou schalt not be forsworen · for the love of me.' 380
- Tho made they Gamelyn to sitte · mighte he nat stonde,
- Til they hadde him bounde · bothe foot and honde.
- The false knight his brother · of Gamelyn was agast,
- And sente aftir feteres · to feteren him fast.
- His brother made lesinges · on him ther he stood, 385
- And tolde hem that comen in · that Gamelyn was wood.
- Gamelyn stood to a post · bounden in the halle,
- Tho that comen in ther · lokede on him alle.
- Ever stood Gamelyn · even upright;
- [655]
- But mete ne drink had he non · neither day ne night. 390
- Than seyde Gamelyn · 'brother, by myn hals,
- Now I have aspyed · thou art a party fals;
- Had I wist that tresoun · that thou haddest y-founde,
- I wolde have yeve thee strokes · or I had be bounde!'
- Gamelyn stood bounden · stille as eny stoon; 395
- Two dayes and two nightes · mete had he noon.
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · that stood y-bounde stronge,
- 'Adam spenser · me thinkth I faste to longe;
- Adam spenser · now I byseche thee,
- For the mochel love · my fader loved thee, 400
- If thou may come to the keyes · lese me out of bond,
- And I wil parte with thee · of my free lond.'
- Thanne seyde Adam · that was the spencer,
- 'I have served thy brother · this sixtene yeer,
- If I leete thee goon · out of his bour, 405
- He wolde say afterward · I were a traytour.'
- 'Adam,' sayde Gamelyn · 'so brouke I myn hals!
- Thou schalt finde my brother · atte laste fals;
- Therfor, brother Adam · louse me out of bond,
- And I wil parte with thee · of my free lond.' 410
- 'Up swich a forward' · seyde Adam, 'y-wis,
- I wil do therto · al that in me is.'
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'al-so mot I thee,
- I wol holde thee covenant · and thou wil me.'
- Anon as Adames lord · to bedde was y-goon, 415
- Adam took the keyes, and leet · Gamelyn out anoon;
- He unlokked Gamelyn · bothe handes and feet,
- In hope of avauncement · that he him biheet.
- Than seyde Gamelyn · 'thanked be goddes sonde!
- Now I am loosed · bothe foot and honde; 420
- Had I now eten · and dronken aright,
- Ther is noon in this hous · schulde binde me this night.'
- Adam took Gamelyn · as stille as ony stoon,
- And ladde him in-to spence · rapely and anon,
- And sette him to soper · right in a privee stede, 425
- He bad him do gladly · and Gamelyn so dede.
- Anon as Gamelyn hadde · eten wel and fyn,
- And therto y-dronke wel · of the rede wyn,
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'what is now thy reed?
- Wher I go to my brother · and girde of his heed?' 430
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde Adam · 'it schal not be so.
- I can teche thee a reed · that is worth the two.
- [656]
- I wot wel for sothe · that this is no nay,
- We schul have a mangery · right on Soneday;
- Abbotes and priours · many heer schal be, 435
- And other men of holy chirche · as I telle thee;
- Thow schalt stonde up by the post · as thou were hond-fast,
- And I schal leve hem unloke · awey thou may hem cast.
- Whan that they have eten · and wasschen here hondes,
- Thou schalt biseke hem alle · to bring thee out of bondes; 440
- And if they wille borwe thee · that were good game,
- Then were thou out of prisoun · and I out of blame;
- And if everich of hem · say unto us 'nay,'
- I schal do an other · I swere by this day!
- Thou schalt have a good staf · and I wil have another, 445
- And Cristes curs have that oon · that faileth that other!'
- 'Ye, for gode!' sayde Gamelyn · 'I say it for me,
- If I fayle on my syde · yvel mot I thee!
- If we schul algate · assoile hem of here sinne,
- Warne me, brother Adam · whan I schal biginne.' 450
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde Adam · 'by seynte Charite,
- I wil warne thee biforn · whan that it schal be;
- Whan I twinke on thee · loke for to goon,
- And cast awey the feteres · and com to me anoon.'
- 'Adam,' seide Gamelyn · 'blessed be thy bones! 455
- That is a good counseil · yeven for the nones;
- If they werne me thanne · to bringe me out of bendes,
- I wol sette goode strokes · right on here lendes.'
- 341. Hl. lestneth; Pt. listen; _rest_ lesteneth, listenyth. 343. Hl.
- herkneth; _rest_ Herkeneth, Herkenyth, Harkeneth. 346. MSS.
- thought. 350. Hl. I-take; _rest_ taken. Cp. Ln. harde; _rest_
- hard. 351. Cp. Rl. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. Hl. selleer; Cp.
- sellere; Ln. selere; _rest_ solere (_rightly; cf._ toret _in l_.
- 329). 360. Pt. dethes; _rest_ deth; _see l_. 24. 363. Rl. Sl. Cp.
- Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 365. Hl. Cp. Ln. geten heir (heer, here);
- _rest_ heir (heire, here) geten. 367. Hl. sayd; _rest have final_
- e. 376. Hl. forsworn; _but see l._ 380. 381. Hl. might; _read_
- mighte; _rest vary_. 382. Sl. Ln. hadde; Cp. hadden; _rest_ had,
- hadd. 383. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 384. Cp. sente; Sl. sende;
- _rest_ sent. 386. Hl. Rl. told; Ln. tolden; _rest_ tolde. 388. Hl.
- ther; _rest om._ Cp. lokeden; _rest_ loked; _read_ lokede. 394. Hl.
- the; _rest om._ 400, 405, 432. _All_ the (_for_ thee). 407. Hl.
- brouk; Cp. Pt. Ln. brouke. 414. Hl. Sl. hold; _rest_ holde, halde.
- _After_ wil Cp. _ins._ lose, _and_ Harl. helpe. 417. Hl. hand; Cp.
- handes; _rest_ hondes. 424. Hl. Cp. rapely and; _rest om._ and.
- 430. Hl. Wher; Ln. Where; Cp. For; _rest_ Or. 434. Ln. sonondaye; Hl.
- _and rest_ sonday; _read_ sonnenday _or_ soneday. 437. Pt. Ln. Harl.
- bound fast; _rest_ hond-fast (_rightly_). 438. _All but_ Hl. _ins._
- that _bef_. awey. 439. Hl. waisschen; _rest_ wasschen, wasshen.
- 443. Hl. vnto; _rest_ to. 450. Hl. I; _rest_ we. 453. Ln. twynke;
- Hl. Cp. twynk; _rest_ wynke, winke, wynk. 456. Hl. [gh]euyng; Cp.
- yeuyng; _rest_ yeuen, [gh]euen, or [gh]iuen. 457. Hl. thanne; _rest
- om._
- Tho the Sonday was y-come · and folk to the feste,
- Faire they were welcomed · both leste and meste; 460
- And ever atte halle-dore · as they comen in,
- They caste their eye · on yonge Gamelyn.
- The false knight his brother · ful of trechery,
- Alle the gestes that ther were · atte mangery,
- Of Gamelyn his brother · he tolde hem with mouthe 465
- Al the harm and the schame · that he telle couthe.
- Tho they were served · of messes two or three,
- Than seyde Gamelyn · 'how serve ye me?
- It is nought wel served · by god that al made!
- That I sitte fasting · and other men make glade.' 470
- The false knight his brother · ther that he stood,
- Tolde alle his gestes · that Gamelyn was wood;
- [657]
- And Gamelyn stood stille · and answerde nought,
- But Adames wordes · he held in his thought.
- Tho Gamelyn gan speke · dolfully with-alle 475
- To the grete lordes · that saten in the halle:
- 'Lordes,' he seyde · 'for Cristes passioun,
- Helpeth bringe Gamelyn · out of prisoun.'
- Than seyde an abbot · sorwe on his cheeke!
- 'He schal have Cristes curs · and seynte Maries eeke, 480
- That thee out of prisoun · beggeth other borwe,
- But ever worthe hem wel · that doth thee moche sorwe.'
- After that abbot · than spak another,
- 'I wold thin heed were of · though thou were my brother!
- Alle that thee borwe · foule mot hem falle!' 485
- Thus they seyden alle · that weren in the halle.
- Than seyde a priour · yvel mot he thryve!
- 'It is moche scathe, boy · that thou art on lyve.'
- 'Ow!' seyde Gamelyn · 'so brouke I my bon!
- Now I have aspyed · that freendes have I non. 490
- Cursed mot he worthe · bothe fleisch and blood,
- That ever do priour · or abbot ony good!'
- Adam the spencer · took up the cloth,
- And loked on Gamelyn · and say that he was wroth;
- Adam on the pantrye · litel he thoughte, 495
- But two goode staves · to halle-dore he broughte,
- Adam loked on Gamelyn · and he was war anoon,
- And caste awey the feteres · and he bigan to goon:
- Tho he com to Adam · he took that oo staf,
- And bigan to worche · and goode strokes yaf. 500
- Gamelyn cam in-to the halle · and the spencer bothe,
- And loked hem aboute · as they had be wrothe;
- Gamelyn sprengeth holy-water · with an oken spire,
- That some that stoode upright · fellen in the fire.
- There was no lewed man · that in the halle stood, 505
- That wolde do Gamelyn · eny thing but good,
- But stood bisyden · and leet hem bothe werche,
- For they hadde no rewthe · of men of holy cherche;
- Abbot or priour · monk or chanoun,
- That Gamelyn overtok · anon they yeeden doun. 510
- Ther was non of hem alle · that with his staf mette,
- That he ne made him overthrowe · and quitte him his dette.
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde Adam · 'for seynte Charite,
- Pay large liverey · for the love of me,
- [658]
- And I wil kepe the dore · so ever here I masse! 515
- Er they ben assoyled · there shal noon passe.'
- 'Dowt thee nought,' seyde Gamelyn · 'whyl we ben in-feere,
- Kep thou wel the dore · and I wol werche heere;
- Stere thee, good Adam · and lat ther noon flee,
- And we schul telle largely · how many that ther be.' 520
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde Adam · 'do hem but good;
- They ben men of holy chirche · draw of hem no blood,
- Save wel the croune · and do hem non harmes,
- But brek bothe her legges · and siththen here armes.'
- Thus Gamelyn and Adam · wroughte right fast, 525
- And pleyden with the monkes · and made hem agast.
- Thider they come ryding · Iolily with swaynes,
- And hom ayen they were y-lad · in cartes and in waynes.
- Tho they hadden al y-don · than seyde a gray frere,
- 'Allas! sire abbot · what dide we now heere? 530
- Tho that we comen hider · it was a cold reed,
- Us hadde ben better at home · with water and with breed.'
- Whyl Gamelyn made ordres · of monkes and frere,
- Ever stood his brother · and made foul chere;
- Gamelyn up with his staf · that he wel knew, 535
- And gerte him in the nekke · that he overthrew;
- A litel above the girdel · the rigge-bon to-barst;
- And sette him in the feteres · ther he sat arst.
- 'Sitte ther, brother' · sayde Gamelyn,
- 'For to colen thy blood · as I dide myn.' 540
- As swithe as they hadde · y-wroken hem on here foon,
- They askeden watir · and wisschen anoon,
- What some for here love · and some for here awe,
- Alle the servants served hem · of the beste lawe.
- The scherreve was thennes · but a fyve myle, 545
- And al was y-told him · in a litel whyle,
- How Gamelyn and Adam · had doon a sory rees,
- Bounden and y-wounded men · ayein the kinges pees;
- Tho bigan sone · stryf for to wake,
- And the scherref was aboute · Gamelyn for to take. 550
- 460. Hl. lest; Cp. leste. 461. _This is_ Zupitza's _emendation_; MSS.
- as they atte halle dore comen in. 463. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals.
- 464. Hl. wer; _rest_ were. 467. or] Hl. other. 471. Ln. false;
- _rest_ fals. 478. _All but_ Hl. _ins._ to _bef._ bringe. 486. Hl.
- seyde; Pt. Ln. Harl. seiden. Hl. were; Cp. Ln. weren. 488. _All
- but_ Hl. _ins._ sorwe and _bef._ scathe. 489. Hl. brouk; _rest_
- brouke, browke, broke. 495, 496. MSS. thought, brought; _against
- grammar_. 498. Ln. keste; _rest_ cast. 504. Ln. fellen; _rest_
- felle, fell. 505. Hl. lewede; Pt. Ln. lewe; _rest_ lewed, lewid.
- 507. Hl. besyde; Rl. by-siden; Sl. bisiden; Cp. besyden. 512. Pt. Ln.
- ne; _rest_ om. Hl. him; _rest_ hem (_twice_). Sl. Cp. quitte; Hl.
- quyt. 516. Hl. schan; _rest_ shal, schal. 520. Hl. Cp. Ln. _om._
- that. 531. Hl. _om._ we. 532. Hl. Pt. Ln. _omit second_ with.
- 536. Cp. gerte; _rest_ gert, girt, gerd. 540. Hl. colyn; Cp. coole;
- Ln. coly; _rest_ colen 543. Rl. Sl. Pt. Harl. _insert_ her (here)
- _before_ awe; Hl. Cp. Ln. _omit_. 545. Hl. a; _rest om._ 550. _I
- supply_ was; _the two_ Cambridge MSS. _have_ come; _which the rest
- omit; see ll._ 240, 785.
- Now lytheth and lesteneth · so god yif you good fyn!
- And ye schul heere good game · of yonge Gamelyn.
- Four and twenty yonge men · that heelden hem ful bolde,
- Come to the schirref · and seyde that they wolde
- Gamelyn and Adam · fetten, by her fay; 555
- The scherref yaf hem leve · soth as I you say;
- [659]
- They hyeden faste · wold they nought bilinne,
- Til they come to the gate · ther Gamelyn was inne.
- They knokked on the gate · the porter was ny,
- And loked out at an hol · as man that was sly. 560
- The porter hadde biholde · hem a litel whyle,
- He loved wel Gamelyn · and was adrad of gyle,
- And leet the wicket stonden · y-steke ful stille,
- And asked hem withoute · what was here wille.
- For al the grete company · thanne spak but oon, 565
- 'Undo the gate, porter · and lat us in goon.'
- Than seyde the porter · 'so brouke I my chin,
- Ye schul sey your erand · er ye comen in.'
- 'Sey to Gamelyn and Adam · if here wille be,
- We wil speke with hem · wordes two or thre.' 570
- 'Felaw,' seyde the porter · 'stond there stille,
- And I wil wende to Gamelyn · to witen his wille.'
- In wente the porter · to Gamelyn anoon,
- And seyde, 'Sir, I warne you · her ben come your foon;
- The scherreves meyne · ben atte gate, 575
- For to take you bothe · schulle ye nat scape.'
- 'Porter,' seyde Gamelyn · 'so moot I wel thee!
- I wil allowe thee thy wordes · whan I my tyme see;
- Go agayn to the yate · and dwel with hem a whyle,
- And thou schalt see right sone · porter, a gyle. 580
- Adam,' sayde Gamelyn · 'looke thee to goon;
- We have foo-men atte gate · and frendes never oon;
- It ben the schirrefes men · that hider ben y-come,
- They ben swore to-gidere · that we schul be nome.'
- 'Gamelyn,' seyde Adam · 'hye thee right blyve, 585
- And if I faile thee this day · evel mot I thryve!
- And we schul so welcome · the scherreves men,
- That some of hem schul make · here beddes in the fen.'
- Atte posterne-gate · Gamelyn out wente,
- And a good cart-staf · in his hand he hente; 590
- Adam hente sone · another gret staf
- For to helpe Gamelyn · and goode strokes yaf.
- Adam felde tweyne · and Gamelyn felde three,
- The other setten feet on erthe · and bigonne flee.
- 'What?' seyde Adam · 'so ever here I masse! 595
- I have a draught of good wyn! · drink er ye passe!'
- 'Nay, by god!' sayde thay · 'thy drink is not good,
- It wolde make mannes brayn · to lyen in his hood.'
- Gamelyn stood stille · and loked him aboute,
- [660]
- And seih the scherreve come · with a gret route. 600
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'what be now thy reedes?
- Here cometh the scherreve · and wil have cure heedes.'
- Adam sayde, 'Gamelyn · my reed is now this,
- Abyde we no lenger · lest we fare amis:
- I rede that we to wode goon · ar that we be founde, 605
- Better is us ther loos · than in town y-bounde.'
- Adam took by the hond · yonge Gamelyn;
- And everich of hem two · drank a draught of wyn,
- And after took her cours · and wenten her way;
- Tho fond the scherreve · nest, but non ay. 610
- The scherreve lighte adoun · and went in-to the halle,
- And fond the lord y-fetered · faste with-alle.
- The scherreve unfetered him · sone, and that anoon,
- And sente after a leche · to hele his rigge-boon.
- 551. Hl. lestneth; Cp. lesteneth. Hl. goode. 555. Rl. Sl. Pt. Harl.
- by her (here) fay; Cp. be way; Hl. Ln. away. 563. Hl. y-steke; _rest
- om._ 573. Cp. Ln. Harl. wente; _rest_ went. 576. Cp. schulle; Hl.
- schul. Hl. na (_for_ nat); _rest_ not, nouht. 588. Hl. den; Pt.
- fenne; _rest_ fen. 589. Cp. Ln. wente; _rest_ went. 594. Hl. fle;
- _rest_ to fle (flee). 602. Hl. comth; _rest_ cometh. 603. _So_ Hl.;
- _rest_ sayde to. 606. Hl. vs; _rest_ om. 608. Hl. tuo; _rest_ om.
- 609. Hl. coursers; _but see l._ 617. 611. Hl. adoun; _rest_ doun.
- 614. Hl. sent; Cp. Sl. sente.
- Lete we now this false knight · lyen in his care, 615
- And talke we of Gamelyn · and loke how he fare.
- Gamelyn in-to the woode · stalkede stille,
- And Adam the spenser · lykede ful ille;
- Adam swor to Gamelyn · by seynt Richer,
- 'Now I see it is mery · to be a spencer, 620
- That lever me were · keyes for to bere,
- Than walken in this wilde woode · my clothes to tere.'
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'dismaye thee right nought;
- Many good mannes child · in care is y-brought.'
- And as they stoode talking · bothen in-feere, 625
- Adam herd talking of men · and neyh, him thought, they were.
- Tho Gamelyn under the woode · lokede aright,
- Sevene score of yonge men · he saugh wel a-dight;
- Alle satte atte mete · in compas aboute.
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'now have we no doute, 630
- After bale cometh boote · thurgh grace of god almight;
- Me thinketh of mete and drink · that I have a sight.'
- Adam lokede tho · under woode-bowgh,
- And whan he seyh mete · he was glad y-nough;
- For he hopede to god · for to have his deel, 635
- And he was sore alonged · after a good meel.
- As he seyde that word · the mayster outlawe
- Saugh Gamelyn and Adam · under woode-schawe.
- 'Yonge men,' seyde the maister · 'by the goode roode,
- I am war of gestes · god sende us non but goode; 640
- [661]
- Yonder ben two yonge men · wonder wel a-dight,
- And paraventure ther ben mo · who-so lokede aright.
- Ariseth up, ye yonge men · and fetteth hem to me;
- It is good that we witen · what men they be.'
- Up ther sterten sevene · fro the diner, 645
- And metten with Gamelyn · and Adam spenser.
- Whan they were neyh hem · than seyde that oon,
- 'Yeldeth up, yonge men · your bowes and your floon.'
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · that yong was of elde,
- 'Moche sorwe mot he have · that to you hem yelde! 650
- I curse non other · but right my-selve;
- They ye fette to yow fyve · thanne ye be twelve!'
- Tho they herde by his word · that might was in his arm,
- Ther was non of hem alle · that wolde do him harm,
- But sayde unto Gamelyn · mildely and stille, 655
- 'Com afore our maister · and sey to him thy wille.'
- 'Yonge men,' sayde Gamelyn · 'by your lewte,
- What man is your maister · that ye with be?'
- Alle they answerde · withoute lesing,
- 'Oure maister is y-crouned · of outlawes king.' 660
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'go-we in Cristes name;
- He may neyther mete nor drink · werne us, for schame.
- If that he be hende · and come of gentil blood,
- He wol yeve us mete and drink · and doon us som good.'
- 'By seynt Iame!' seyde Adam · 'what harm that I gete, 665
- I wil auntre to the dore · that I hadde mete.'
- Gamelyn and Adam · wente forth in-feere,
- And they grette the maister · that they founde there.
- Than seide the maister · king of outlawes,
- 'What seeke ye, yonge men · under woode-schawes?' 670
- Gamelyn answerde · the king with his croune,
- 'He moste needes walke in woode · that may not walke in towne.
- Sire, we walke not heer · noon harm for to do,
- But-if we meete with a deer · to scheete ther-to,
- As men that ben hungry · and mow no mete finde, 675
- And ben harde bistad · under woode-linde.'
- Of Gamelynes wordes · the maister hadde routhe,
- And seyde, 'ye schal have y-nough · have god my trouthe!'
- He bad hem sitte ther adoun · for to take reste;
- And bad hem ete and drinke · and that of the beste. 680
- As they sete and eeten · and dronke wel and fyn,
- [662]
- Than seyde that oon to that other · 'this is Gamelyn.'
- Tho was the maister outlawe · in-to counseil nome,
- And told how it was Gamelyn · that thider was y-come.
- Anon as he herde · how it was bifalle, 685
- He made him maister under him · over hem alle.
- Within the thridde wyke · him com tyding,
- To the maister outlawe · that tho was her king,
- That he schulde come hom · his pees was y-mad;
- And of that goode tyding · he was tho ful glad. 690
- Tho seyde he to his yonge men · 'soth for to telle,
- Me ben comen tydinges · I may no lenger dwelle.'
- Tho was Gamelyn anon · withoute tarying,
- Maad maister outlawe · and crouned here king.
- 615. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 618. Cp. likede; Ln. loked; _rest_
- liked. 621. Hl. for; _rest om._ 625. Hl. And; _rest om._ 627,
- 642. Hl. loked. 627. Hl. the; _rest om._ 640. Cp. Pt. Harl. sende;
- _rest_ send. Hl. non but; _rest om._ 643. Hl. [gh]e; _rest om._
- 652. Hl. Cp. They; Rl. Thei; Sl. Ln. Though. 654. Hl. alle; _rest
- om._ 655. Hl. sayd; _rest add_ e. Hl. vnto; _rest_ to. 663. Hl.
- heende; Cp. kynde; _rest_ hende. 664. Hl. an (_for 1st_ and). 665.
- Hl. seyd; Ln. seid; _rest add_ e. 666. Hl. auntre; _rest_ auenture
- me. Hl. Cp. Ln. to the dore; _rest om._ 673. Hl. for; _rest om._
- 674. Hl. with; _rest om._ 679. Hl. ther; _rest om._ Hl. adoun;
- _rest_ doun. 681. Hl. sete and; _rest om._ 682. Hl. seyd; _rest
- add_ e. Hl. Pt. Ln. that oon ... other; _rest_ on to an other. 688,
- 690. Hl. tho; _rest om._ 689. Hl. I-made; Cp. Sl. maad; _rest_
- made. 694. Cp. Maad; _rest_ Made (_badly_). Cp. Ln. here; _rest_
- her.
- Tho was Gamelyn crouned · king of outlawes, 695
- And walked a whyle · under woode-schawes.
- The false knight his brother · was scherreve and sire,
- And leet his brother endite · for hate and for ire.
- Tho were his bonde-men · sory and nothing glad,
- When Gamelyn her lord · 'wolves-heed' was cryed and maad;
- And sente out of his men · wher they might him finde, 701
- For to seke Gamelyn · under woode-linde,
- To telle him tydinges · how the wind was went,
- And al his good reved · and his men schent.
- 697. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 699. Rl. Sl. glad; _rest_ glade,
- gladde. 700. Sl. Cp. maad; _rest_ made, maade. 703. Hl. how; _rest
- om._ 704. _So_ Hl. Cp. Ln.; _rest_ and alle his.
- Whan they had him founde · on knees they hem sette, 705
- And a-doun with here hood · and here lord grette;
- 'Sire, wraththe you nought · for the goode roode,
- For we have brought you tydinges · but they be nat goode.
- Now is thy brother scherreve · and hath the baillye,
- And he hath endited thee · and 'wolves-heed' doth thee crye.' 710
- 'Allas!' seyde Gamelyn · 'that ever I was so slak
- That I ne hadde broke his nekke · tho I his rigge brak!
- Goth, greteth hem wel · myn housbondes and wyf,
- I wol ben atte nexte schire · have god my lyf!'
- Gamelyn com wel redy · to the nexte schire, 715
- And ther was his brother · bothe lord and sire.
- Gamelyn com boldelich · in-to the moot-halle,
- And putte a-doun his hood · among the lordes alle;
- 'God save you alle, lordinges · that now here be!
- But broke-bak scherreve · evel mot thou thee! 720
- Why hast thou do me · that schame and vilonye,
- For to late endite me · and 'wolves-heed' me crye?'
- [663]
- Tho thoughte the false knight · for to ben awreke,
- And leet take Gamelyn · moste he no more speke;
- Might ther be no more grace · but Gamelyn atte laste 725
- Was cast in-to prisoun · and fetered ful faste.
- 712. Hl. _om. 2nd_ I. 713. Hl. hem; rest _om._ Harl. boþe housbonde;
- _rest_ myn housbondes. 715. Hl. came; _see_ l. 717. 718. Rl. Sl.
- Cp. putte; _rest_ put. 719. Hl. alle; rest _om._ 722. Hl. me;
- _rest_ do me. 723. Cp. thoughte the false; _rest_ thought the fals.
- 724. MSS. most, _the_ e _being elided_. 725, 726. Rl. Sl. Cp. laste,
- faste; _rest_ last, fast.
- Gamelyn hath a brother · that highte sir Ote,
- As good a knight and hende · as mighte gon on foote.
- Anon ther yede a messager · to that goode knight,
- And tolde him al-togidere · how Gamelyn was dight. 730
- Anon as sire Ote herde · how Gamelyn was a-dight,
- He was wonder sory · was he no-thing light,
- And leet sadle a steede · and the way he nam,
- And to his tweyne bretheren · anon-right he cam.
- 'Sire,' seyde sire Ote · to the scherreve tho, 735
- 'We ben but three bretheren · schul we never be mo;
- And thou hast y-prisoned · the beste of us alle;
- Swich another brother · yvel mot him bifalle!'
- 'Sire Ote,' seide the false knight · 'lat be thy curs;
- By god, for thy wordes · he schal fare the wurs; 740
- To the kinges prisoun · anon he is y-nome,
- And ther he schal abyde · til the Iustice come.'
- 'Parde!' seyde sir Ote · 'better it schal be;
- I bidde him to maynpris · that thou graunte him me
- Til the nexte sitting · of deliveraunce, 745
- And thanne lat Gamelyn · stande to his chaunce.'
- 'Brother, in swich a forward · I take him to thee;
- And by thy fader soule · that thee bigat and me,
- But-if he be redy · whan the Iustice sitte,
- Thou schalt bere the Iuggement · for al thy grete witte.' 750
- 'I graunte wel,' seide sir Ote · 'that it so be.
- Let deliver him anon · and tak him to me.'
- Tho was Gamelyn delivered · to sire Ote his brother,
- And that night dwellede · that on with that other.
- On the morn seyde Gamelyn · to sire Ote the hende, 755
- 'Brother,' he seide, 'I moot · for sothe, from thee wende,
- To loke how my yonge men · leden here lyf,
- Whether they liven in Ioye · or elles in stryf.'
- 'By god!' seyde sire Ote · 'that is a cold reed,
- Now I see that al the cark · schal fallen on myn heed; 760
- For when the Iustice sitte · and thou be nought y-founde,
- [664]
- I schal anon be take · and in thy stede y-bounde.'
- 'Brother,' sayde Gamelyn · 'dismaye thee nought,
- For by seint Iame in Gales · that many man hath sought,
- If that god almighty · holde my lyf and wit, 765
- I wil be ther redy · whan the Iustice sit.'
- Than seide sir Ote to Gamelyn · 'god schilde thee fro schame;
- Com whan thou seest tyme · and bring us out of blame.'
- 728. Hl. Cp. heende; _rest_ hende. 729. Hl. ther; _rest om._ 730.
- Hl. Cp. told; _rest_ tolde. 734. Hl. anon right; Ln. ful sone; _rest_
- right sone. 737. Rl. Cp. beste; _rest_ best. 739. Pt. Ln. false;
- _rest_ fals. 741. Hl. anon; _rest om._ 744. Hl. Cp. maymp_ri_s.
- Hl. Sl. Ln. graunt; _rest_ graunte. Hl. him; Cp. Ln. to; _rest on_.
- 747. Hl. forthward; _rest_ forward. 749. Hl. if; rest om. 754. Hl.
- Cp. dwelleden; Ln. dwelden; _rest_ dwellide, dwellid, dwelled. 755.
- Hl. Cp. heende: Rl. hynde; _rest_ hende. 761, 766. MSS. sitte,
- _except_ Hl. sitt _in l._ 766. _Here_ sitte _is subj_.; _but in_ l. 766
- sit = sitteth. 765. Hl. hold; Rl. hold me; _rest_ holde me. 765,
- 766. Hl. witt, sitt.
- Litheth, and lesteneth · and holdeth you stille,
- And ye schul here how Gamelyn · hadde al his wille. 770
- Gamelyn wente ayein · under woode-rys,
- And fond there pleying · yonge men of prys.
- Tho was yong Gamelyn · glad and blithe y-nough,
- Whan he fond his mery men · under woode-bough.
- Gamelyn and his men · talkeden in-feere, 775
- And they hadde good game · here maister to heere;
- They tolden him of aventures · that they hadde founde,
- And Gamelyn hem tolde ayein · how he was fast y-bounde.
- Whyl Gamelyn was outlawed · hadde he no cors;
- There was no man that for him · ferde the wors, 780
- But abbotes and priours · monk and chanoun;
- On hem left he no-thing · whan he mighte hem nom.
- Whyl Gamelyn and his men · made merthes ryve,
- The false knight his brother · yvel mot he thryve!
- For he was fast aboute · bothe day and other, 785
- For to hyre the quest · to hangen his brother.
- Gamelyn stood on a day · and, as he biheeld
- The woodes and the schawes · in the wilde feeld,
- He thoughte on his brother · how he him beheet
- That he wolde be redy · whan the Iustice seet; 790
- He thoughte wel that he wolde · withoute delay,
- Come afore the Iustice · to kepen his day,
- And seide to his yonge men · 'dighteth you yare,
- For whan the Iustice sitte · we moote be thare,
- For I am under borwe · til that I come, 795
- And my brother for me · to prisoun schal be nome.'
- 'By seint Iame!' seyde his yonge men · 'and thou rede therto,
- Ordeyne how it schal be · and it schal be do.'
- Whyl Gamelyn was coming · ther the Iustice sat,
- The false knight his brother · foryat he nat that, 800
- To huyre the men on his quest · to hangen his brother;
- Though he hadde nought that oon · he wolde have that other.
- [665]
- Tho cam Gamelyn · fro under woode-rys,
- And broughte with him · his yonge men of prys.
- 769. Hl. lestneth; Cp. lesteneth; Rl. Pt. listeneth. 770. Rl. Sl. Cp.
- hadde; _rest_ had. Hl. Pt. al; _rest om._. 771. Hl. a[gh]ein; _rest
- om._. 773. Hl. Cp. Ln. [gh]onge; _rest_ [gh]ong. 774. Hl. mery;
- _rest om._. 775. Hl. talked; Rl. Pt. talkeden; Sl. talkiden. 779.
- Sl. Cp. Ln. hadde; Rl. hade; _rest_ had. 782. MSS. might; _the_ e
- _being elided._ 784. Cp. false; _rest_ fals. 789. Hl. thought; _see
- l._ 791. 794. Hl. sitt. 800. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 804. Hl.
- his; _rest om._
- 'I see wel,' seyde Gamelyn · 'the Iustice is set; 805
- Go aforn, Adam · and loke how it spet.'
- Adam wente into the halle · and loked al aboute,
- He seyh there stonde · lordes grete and stoute,
- And sir Ote his brother · fetered wel fast;
- Tho went Adam out of halle · as he were agast. 810
- Adam said to Gamelyn · and to his felawes alle,
- 'Sir Ote stant y-fetered · in the moot-halle.'
- 'Yonge men,' seide Gamelyn · 'this ye heeren alle;
- Sire Ote stant y-fetered · in the moot-halle.
- If god yif us grace · wel for to doo, 815
- He schal it abegge · that broughte him ther-too.'
- Thanne sayde Adam · that lokkes hadde hore,
- 'Cristes curs mote he have · that him bond so sore!
- And thou wilt, Gamelyn · do after my reed,
- Ther is noon in the halle · schal bere awey his heed.' 820
- 'Adam,' seyde Gamelyn · 'we wiln nought don so,
- We wil slee the giltif · and lat the other go.
- I wil into the halle · and with the Iustice speke;
- On hem that ben gultif · I wil ben awreke.
- Lat non scape at the dore · take, yonge men, yeme; 825
- For I wil be Iustice this day · domes for to deme.
- God spede me this day · at my newe werk!
- Adam, com on with me · for thou schalt be my clerk.'
- His men answereden him · and bade him doon his best,
- 'And if thou to us have neede · thou schalt finde us prest; 830
- We wiln stande with thee · whyl that we may dure,
- And but we werke manly · pay us non hure.'
- 'Yonge men,' seyde Gamelyn · 'so mot I wel thee!
- As trusty a maister · ye schal finde of me.'
- Right there the Iustice · sat in the halle, 835
- In wente Gamelyn · amonges hem alle.
- 805, 806. MSS. sette, spette (_wrongly_). 807. Cp. wente; _rest_
- went. 808. Hl. gret; _rest_ grete. 811. Hl. felaws; _rest_ felawes,
- felowes. 816. Ln brouht it; Hl. _om._ it; _rest_ it broughte; but
- read broughte him. 818. Rl. Sl, Pt. mote; Ln. mot; Hl. Cp. most.
- 819. Cp. reed; Hl. red; _rest_ rede. 822. Hl. Pt. lat; _rest_ late
- 826. for to _in_ MS. Camb. Mm. 2. 5; _rest om._ for. 828. Hl. on;
- _rest om._ 829. Rl. bade; _rest_ bad.
- Gamelyn leet unfetere · his brother out of bende.
- Thanne seyde sire Ote · his brother that was hende,
- 'Thou haddest almost, Gamelyn · dwelled to longe,
- For the quest is oute on me · that I schulde honge.' 840
- 'Brother,' seyde Gamelyn · 'so god yif me good rest!
- This day they schuln ben hanged · that ben on thy quest;
- And the Iustice bothe · that is the Iugge-man,
- [666]
- And the scherreve bothe · thurgh him it bigan.'
- Thanne seyde Gamelyn · to the Iustise, 845
- Now is thy power y-don · thou most nedes arise;
- Thow hast yeven domes · that ben yvel dight,
- I wil sitten in thy sete · and dressen hem aright.'
- The Iustice sat stille · and roos nought anoon;
- And Gamelyn clevede · [a-two] his cheeke-boon; 850
- Gamelyn took him in his arm · and no more spak,
- But threw him over the barre · and his arm to-brak.
- Durste non to Gamelyn · seye but good,
- For ferd of the company · that withoute stood.
- Gamelyn sette him doun · in the Iustices seet, 855
- And sire Ote his brother by him · and Adam at his feet.
- Whan Gamelyn was y-set · in the Iustices stede,
- Herkneth of a bourde · that Gamelyn dede.
- He leet fetre the Iustice · and his false brother,
- And dede hem come to the barre · that oon with that other. 860
- Tho Gamelyn hadde thus y-doon · hadde he no reste,
- Til he had enquered · who was on the queste
- For to deme his brother · sir Ote, for to honge;
- Er he wiste which they were · him thoughte ful longe.
- But as sone as Gamelyn · wiste wher they were, 865
- He dede hem everichone · feteren in-feere,
- And bringen hem to the barre · and sette hem in rewe;
- 'By my faith!' seyde the Iustice · 'the scherreve is a schrewe!'
- Than seyde Gamelyn · to the Iustise,
- 'Thou hast y-yeve domes · of the wors assise; 870
- And the twelve sisours · that weren of the queste,
- They schul ben hanged this day · so have I good reste!'
- Thanne seide the scherreve · to yonge Gamelyn,
- 'Lord, I crye the mercy · brother art thou myn.'
- 'Therfore,' seyde Gamelyn · 'have thou Cristes curs, 875
- For, and thou were maister · yit I schulde have wors.'
- For to make short tale · and nought to tarie longe,
- He ordeyned him a queste · of his men so stronge;
- The Iustice and the scherreve · bothe honged hye,
- To weyven with the ropes · and with the winde drye; 880
- And the twelve sisours · (sorwe have that rekke!)
- Alle they were hanged · faste by the nekke.
- Thus ended the false knight · with his treccherye,
- [667]
- That ever hadde y-lad his lyf · in falsnes and folye.
- He was hanged by the nekke · and nought by the purs; 885
- That was the meede that he hadde · for his fadres curs.
- 837. Hl. beende; Cp. Pt. Ln. bende. 838. Hl. Cp. heende; _rest_
- hende. 843. Hl. _om._ the. Hl. Iugges; _rest_ Iugge, Iuge. 845.
- Cp. Thanne; _rest_ Than. 850. _I supply_ a-two. 851. Hl. arm;
- _rest_ armes. 854. Rl. Harl. ferd; Pt. feerd; Hl. Cp. fered; Ln.
- ferde. 855. MSS. sete. 857. stede] Hl. Rl. Cp. sete (_wrongly_).
- 859. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 861. Cp. hadde; Rl. hade; Hl. had
- (_2nd time_). 861, 862. Hl. rest, quest; _see ll._ 871, 872. 864.
- Hl. Cp. Ln. he; Rl. Pt. him; Harl. (1758) hym. 866. Cp. feteren; Hl.
- fetere. 872. Hl. _om._ good. 877. Hl. tarie; _rest om._ 878. Rl.
- Pt. Harl. quest; _rest_ queste. 879. Cp. beþ; _rest_ bothe, both.
- 880. Hl. _om._ the _before_ ropes. Hl. Rl. Cp. wynd; _rest_ wynde,
- winde. 883. Cp. Ln. false; _rest_ fals. 884. Cp. hadde; Ln. hade;
- _rest_ had. 885. Hl. Pt. nek; _rest_ necke, nekke. 886. Rl. Cp.
- hadde; _rest_ had.
- Sire Ote was eldest · and Gamelyn was ying,
- They wenten with here frendes · even to the king;
- They made pees with the king · of the best assise.
- The king loved wel sir Ote · and made him Iustise. 890
- And after, the king made Gamelyn · bothe in est and west,
- Chief Iustice · of al his free forest;
- Alle his wighte yonge men · the king foryaf here gilt,
- And sitthen in good office · the king hem hath y-pilt.
- Thus wan Gamelyn · his lond and his leede, 895
- And wrak him of his enemys · and quitte hem here meede;
- And sire Ote his brother · made him his heir,
- And siththen wedded Gamelyn · a wyf bothe good and feyr;
- They liveden to-gidere · whyl that Crist wolde,
- And sithen was Gamelyn · graven under molde. 900
- And so schal we alle · may ther no man flee:
- God bringe us to the Ioye · that ever schal be!
- 888. Hl. They; _rest om._ Hl. freendes. Hl. euen to; Rl. Harl. and
- passeden to; Pt. and passed to; Cp. and passed with; Ln. and pesed
- with. 892. Hl. al; _rest om._ 896. Cp. Pt. quitte; Hl. quyt. 902.
- Ln. bringe; _rest_ bryng, bring.
- * * * * *
- END OF VOL. IV.
- NOTES
- [1] Not the same MS. as that called 'Harl.' in the foot-notes to Gamelyn.
- [2] It only contains the clerk's Tale; see Reliquiae, ii. 68. The Longleat
- MS. no. 25, belonging to the Marquis of Bath, contains both the Knight's
- Tale and the Clerk's Tale.
- [3] i.e. the gen. case of _physice_; 'Magister Artium et Physices' occurs
- in Longfellow's Golden Legend, § vi.
- [4] Tyrwhitt counts 252_b_ and 252_c_ as 253 and 254; but omits 3155, 3156;
- hence, in 3157-3720, the numbering is alike in the Six-text and T. He then
- omits 3721, 3722, making a difference of _two_ lines. Wright follows
- Tyrwhitt's numbering in Group A, and in B 1-1162.
- [5] T. counts B 1982, 1983 as one line; so also B 2002, 2003, and B 2012,
- 2013, and B 2076, 2077, making a difference of _four_ lines; but, on the
- other hand, he expands B 1993 into _three_ lines; hence, on the whole, a
- difference of _two_ lines in this portion. See pp. 192, 193, and note to B
- 1993 in vol. v.
- [6] Wright counts the lines as I do, but his numbering is in one place
- incorrect; after the line which he calls 15260, he counts the next thirteen
- lines as ten.
- [7] As in the Six-text, I call each clause of Melibeus between the sloping
- marks _a line_, and so number it. So also in the Parson's Tale.
- [8] T. cuts up the Tale into paragraphs. So also in the Parson's Tale
- (Group I). I have _numbered_ these, for convenience; see head-lines, pp.
- 199-240.
- [9] Sixteen lines short in Wright, because the Epilogue to the Nonne
- Prestes Tale (see p. 289) is relegated to a footnote.
- [10] Twelve lines short; T. omits E 1305-6, F 671-2, 1455-6, 1493-8. Wright
- keeps E 1305-6, but does not count them, and omits the other ten.
- [11] The dash (--) shews where the Groups end or are interrupted.
- [12] The order of the divisions of this tale is different. The 'modern
- instances,' viz. Peter of Spain, Peter of Cyrus, Barnabo of Lombardy, and
- Ugolino of Pisa are placed at the end instead of coming in the middle.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Chaucer's Works, Volume 4 (of 7) --
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