15503 lines
587 KiB
Plaintext
15503 lines
587 KiB
Plaintext
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THE CANTERBURY TALES by GEOFFREY CHAUCER.
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This edition edited and digitized by Ted &
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Florence Daniel, NEW WAVE PUBLISHERS,
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2103 N. LIBERTY ST., PORTLAND, OR 97217.
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Posted in July 1993.
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This file is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN.
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THE CANTERBURY TALES
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by GEOFFREY CHAUCER
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GROUP A
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PROLOGUE
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Here bygynneth the Book of the tales of Caunterbury.
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Whan that Aprille, with hise shoures soote,
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The droghte of March hath perced to the roote
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And bathed every veyne in swich licour,
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Of which vertu engendred is the flour;
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Whan Zephirus eek with his swete breeth
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Inspired hath in every holt and heeth
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The tendre croppes, and the yonge sonne
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Hath in the Ram his halfe cours yronne,
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And smale foweles maken melodye,
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That slepen al the nyght with open eye-
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So priketh hem Nature in hir corages-
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Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
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And palmeres for to seken straunge strondes
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To ferne halwes, kowthe in sondry londes;
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And specially, from every shires ende
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Of Engelond, to Caunturbury they wende,
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The hooly blisful martir for the seke
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That hem hath holpen, whan that they were seeke.
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Bifil that in that seson, on a day,
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In Southwerk at the Tabard as I lay,
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Redy to wenden on my pilgrymage
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To Caunterbury, with ful devout corage,
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At nyght were come into that hostelrye
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Wel nyne and twenty in a compaignye
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Of sondry folk, by aventure yfalle
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In felaweshipe, and pilgrimes were they alle,
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That toward Caunterbury wolden ryde.
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The chambres and the stables weren wyde,
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And wel we weren esed atte beste;
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And shortly, whan the sonne was to reste,
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So hadde I spoken with hem everychon
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That I was of hir felaweshipe anon,
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And made forward erly for to ryse
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To take our wey, ther as I yow devyse.
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But nathelees, whil I have tyme and space,
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Er that I ferther in this tale pace,
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Me thynketh it acordaunt to resoun
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To telle yow al the condicioun
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Of ech of hem, so as it semed me,
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And whiche they weren, and of what degree,
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And eek in what array that they were inne;
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And at a knyght than wol I first bigynne.
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A knyght ther was, and that a worthy man,
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That fro the tyme that he first bigan
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To riden out, he loved chivalrie,
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Trouthe and honour, fredom and curteisie.
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Ful worthy was he in his lordes werre,
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And therto hadde he riden, no man ferre,
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As wel in Cristendom as in Hethenesse,
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And evere honoured for his worthynesse.
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At Alisaundre he was, whan it was wonne;
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Ful ofte tyme he hadde the bord bigonne
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Aboven alle nacions in Pruce;
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In Lettow hadde he reysed, and in Ruce,
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No cristen man so ofte of his degree.
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In Gernade at the seege eek hadde he be
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Of Algezir, and riden in Belmarye;
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At Lyeys was he, and at Satalye,
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Whan they were wonne; and in the Grete See
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At many a noble arive hadde he be.
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At mortal batailles hadde he been fiftene,
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And foughten for oure feith at Tramyssene
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In lystes thries, and ay slayn his foo.
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This ilke worthy knyght hadde been also
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Somtyme with the lord of Palatye
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Agayn another hethen in Turkye,
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And everemoore he hadde a sovereyn prys.
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And though that he were worthy, he was wys,
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And of his port as meeke as is a mayde;
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He nevere yet no vileynye ne sayde
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In al his lyf unto no maner wight;
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He was a verray parfit gentil knyght.
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But for to tellen yow of his array,
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His hors weren goode, but he was nat gay.
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Of fustian he wered a gypoun,
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Al bismotered with his habergeoun;
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For he was late ycome from his viage,
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And wente for to doon his pilgrymage.
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With hym ther was his sone, a yong Squier,
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A lovyere and a lusty bacheler,
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With lokkes crulle, as they were leyd in presse.
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Of twenty yeer of age he was, I gesse.
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Of his stature he was of evene lengthe,
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And wonderly delyvere, and of greet strengthe.
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And he hadde been somtyme in chyvachie
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In Flaundres, in Artoys, and Pycardie,
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And born hym weel, as of so litel space,
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In hope to stonden in his lady grace.
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Embrouded was he, as it were a meede,
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Al ful of fresshe floures whyte and reede;
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Syngynge he was, or floytynge, al the day,
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He was as fressh as is the monthe of May.
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Short was his gowne, with sleves longe and wyde.
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Wel koude he sitte on hors, and faire ryde,
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He koude songes make, and wel endite,
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Juste, and eek daunce, and weel purtreye and write.
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So hoote he lovede, that by nyghtertale
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He slepte namoore than dooth a nyghtyngale.
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Curteis he was, lowely, and servysable,
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And carf biforn his fader at the table.
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A Yeman hadde he, and servantz namo
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At that tyme, for hym liste ride soo;
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And he was clad in cote and hood of grene,
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A sheef of pecok arwes bright and kene
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Under his belt he bar ful thriftily-
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Wel koude he dresse his takel yemanly,
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Hise arwes drouped noght with fetheres lowe-
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And in his hand he baar a myghty bowe.
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A not -heed hadde he, with a broun visage,
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Of woodecraft wel koude he al the usage.
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Upon his arm he baar a gay bracer,
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And by his syde a swerd and a bokeler,
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And on that oother syde a gay daggere,
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Harneised wel, and sharpe as point of spere.
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A Cristophere on his brest of silver sheene,
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An horn he bar, the bawdryk was of grene.
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A Forster was he, soothly, as I gesse.
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Ther was also a Nonne, a Prioresse,
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That of hir smylyng was ful symple and coy.
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Hir gretteste ooth was but by Seinte Loy,
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And she was cleped Madame Eglentyne.
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Ful weel she soong the service dyvyne,
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Entuned in hir nose ful semely;
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And Frenssh she spak ful faire and fetisly
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After the scole of Stratford-atte-Bowe,
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For Frenssh of Parys was to hir unknowe.
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At mete wel ytaught was she withalle;
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She leet no morsel from hir lippes falle,
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Ne wette hir fyngres in hir sauce depe.
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Wel koude she carie a morsel, and wel kepe
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That no drope ne fille upon hir brist.
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In curteisie was set ful muche hir list;
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Hire over-lippe wyped she so clene,
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That in hir coppe ther was no ferthyng sene
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Of grece, whan she dronken hadde hir draughte.
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Ful semely after hir mete she raughte;
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And sikerly, she was of greet desport,
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And ful plesaunt, and amyable of port,
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And peyned hir to countrefete cheere
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Of court, and been estatlich of manere,
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And to ben holden digne of reverence.
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But for to speken of hir conscience,
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She was so charitable and so pitous,
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She wolde wepe, if that she saugh a mous
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Kaught in a trappe, if it were deed or bledde.
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Of smale houndes hadde she, that she fedde
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With rosted flessh, or milk and wastel-breed.
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But soore weep she if oon of hem were deed,
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Or if men smoot it with a yerde smerte;
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And al was conscience, and tendre herte.
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Ful semyly hir wympul pynched was,
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Hire nose tretys, hir eyen greye as glas,
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Hir mouth ful smal, and therto softe and reed;
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But sikerly, she hadde a fair forheed,
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It was almoost a spanne brood, I trowe,
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For, hardily, she was nat undergrowe.
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Ful fetys was hir cloke, as I was war;
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Of smal coral aboute hir arm she bar
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A peire of bedes, gauded al with grene,
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An theron heng a brooch of gold ful sheene,
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On which ther was first write a crowned `A,'
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And after,`Amor vincit omnia.'
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Another Nonne with hir hadde she,
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That was hire Chapeleyne, and preestes thre.
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A Monk ther was, a fair for the maistrie,
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An outridere, that lovede venerie,
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A manly man, to been an abbot able.
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Ful many a deyntee hors hadde he in stable;
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And whan he rood, men myghte his brydel heere
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Gynglen in a whistlynge wynd als cleere,
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And eek as loude, as dooth the chapel belle,
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Ther as this lord was keper of the celle.
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The reule of Seint Maure, or of Seint Beneit,
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Bycause that it was old and somdel streit-
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This ilke Monk leet olde thynges pace,
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And heeld after the newe world the space.
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He yaf nat of that text a pulled hen,
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That seith that hunters beth nat hooly men,
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Ne that a monk, whan he is recchelees,
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Is likned til a fissh that is waterlees-
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This is to seyn, a monk out of his cloystre-
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But thilke text heeld he nat worth an oystre!
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And I seyde his opinioun was good,
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What sholde he studie, and make hymselven wood,
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Upon a book in cloystre alwey to poure,
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Or swynken with his handes and laboure
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As Austyn bit? How shal the world be served?
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Lat Austyn have his swynk to him reserved;
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Therfore he was a prikasour aright,
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Grehoundes he hadde, as swift as fowel in flight;
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Of prikyng and of huntyng for the hare
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Was al his lust, for no cost wolde he spare.
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I seigh his sleves ypurfiled at the hond
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With grys, and that the fyneste of a lond;
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And for to festne his hood under his chyn
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He hadde of gold ywroght a curious pyn;
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A love-knotte in the gretter ende ther was.
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His heed was balled, that shoon as any glas,
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And eek his face, as it hadde been enoynt.
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He was a lord ful fat and in good poynt,
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Hise eyen stepe, and rollynge in his heed,
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That stemed as a forneys of a leed;
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His bootes souple, his hors in greet estaat;
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Now certeinly he was a fair prelaat!
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He was nat pale as a forpyned goost,
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A fat swan loved he best of any roost.
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His palfrey was as broun as is a berye,
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A Frere ther was, a wantowne and a merye,
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A lymytour, a ful solempne man,
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In alle the ordres foure is noon that kan
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So muchel of daliaunce and fair langage.
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He hadde maad ful many a mariage
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Of yonge wommen at his owene cost.
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Unto his ordre he was a noble post,
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And wel biloved and famulier was he
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With frankeleyns overal in his contree
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And eek with worthy wommen of the toun,
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For he hadde power of confessioun,
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As seyde hymself, moore than a curat,
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For of his ordre he was licenciat.
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Ful swetely herde he confessioun,
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And plesaunt was his a absolucioun,
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He was an esy man to yeve penaunce
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Ther as he wiste to have a good pitaunce;
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For unto a povre ordre for to yive
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Is signe that a man is wel yshryve;
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For, if he yaf, he dorste make avaunt,
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He wiste that a man was repentaunt.
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For many a man so harde is of his herte,
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He may nat wepe, al thogh hym soore smerte;
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Therfore, in stede of wepynge and preyeres,
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Men moote yeve silver to the povre freres.
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His typet was ay farsed ful of knyves
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And pynnes, for to yeven yonge wyves.
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And certeinly he hadde a murye note,
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Wel koude he synge, and pleyen on a rote,
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Of yeddynges he baar outrely the pris.
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His nekke whit was as the flour delys;
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Therto he strong was as a champioun,
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He knew the tavernes wel in every toun
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And everich hostiler and tappestere
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Bet than a lazar or a beggestere.
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For unto swich a worthy man as he
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Acorded nat, as by his facultee,
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To have with sike lazars aqueyntaunce;
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It is nat honeste, it may nat avaunce,
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For to deelen with no swich poraille,
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But al with riche and selleres of vitaille;
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And overal, ther as profit sholde arise,
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Curteis he was, and lowely of servyse.
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Ther nas no man nowher so vertuous;
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He was the beste beggere in his hous,
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(And yaf a certeyn ferme for the graunt
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Noon of his brethren cam ther in his haunt;)
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For thogh a wydwe hadde noght a sho,
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So plesaunt was his `In principio'
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Yet wolde he have a ferthyng er he wente;
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His purchas was wel bettre than his rente.
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And rage he koude, as it were right a whelpe;
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In love-dayes ther koude he muchel helpe;
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For there he was nat lyk a cloysterer,
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With a thredbare cope, as is a povre scoler,
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But he was lyk a maister or a pope;
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Of double worstede was his semycope,
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That rounded as a belle out of the presse.
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Somwhat he lipsed for his wantownesse
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To make his Englissh sweete upon his tonge,
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And in his harpyng, whan that he hadde songe,
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Hise eyen twynkled in his heed aryght
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As doon the sterres in the frosty nyght.
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This worthy lymytour was cleped Huberd.
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A Marchant was ther, with a forkek berd,
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In mottelee, and hye on horse he sat,
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Upon his heed a Flaundryssh bevere hat,
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His bootes clasped faire and fetisly.
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Hise resons he spak ful solempnely,
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Sownynge alway thencrees of his wynnyng.
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He wolde the see were kept for any thyng
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Bitwixe Middelburgh and Orewelle.
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Wel koude he in eschaunge sheeldes selle.
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This worthy man ful wel his wit bisette;
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Ther wiste no wight that he was in dette,
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So estatly was he of his governaunce,
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With his bargaynes and with his chevyssaunce.
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Forsothe, he was a worthy man with-alle,
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But, sooth to seyn, I noot how men hym calle.
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A Clerk ther was of Oxenford also,
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That unto logyk hadde longe ygo.
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As leene was his hors as is a rake,
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And he nas nat right fat, I undertake,
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But looked holwe and therto sobrely.
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Ful thredbare was his overeste courtepy,
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For he hadde geten hym yet no benefice,
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Ne was so worldly for to have office,
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For hym was levere have at his beddes heed
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Twenty bookes, clad in blak or reed,
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Of Aristotle and his plilosophie,
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Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sautrie.
|
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But al be that he was a philosophre,
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Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre;
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But al that he myghte of his freendes hente,
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On bookes and his lernynge he it spente,
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And bisily gan for the soules preye
|
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Of hem that yaf hym wherwith to scoleye.
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Of studie took he moost cure and moost heede,
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Noght o word spak he moore than was neede,
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And that was seyd in forme and reverence,
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And short and quyk, and ful of hy sentence.
|
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Sownynge in moral vertu was his speche,
|
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And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche.
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A Sergeant of the Lawe, war and wys,
|
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That often hadde been at the parvys,
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Ther was also, ful riche of excellence.
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Discreet he was, and of greet reverence,-
|
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He semed swich, hise wordes weren so wise.
|
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Justice he was ful often in assise,
|
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By patente, and by pleyn commissioun.
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For his science, and for his heigh renoun,
|
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Of fees and robes hadde he many oon.
|
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So greet a purchasour was nowher noon,
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Al was fee symple to hym in effect,
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His purchasyng myghte nat been infect.
|
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Nowher so bisy a man as he ther nas,
|
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And yet he semed bisier than he was;
|
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In termes hadde he caas and doomes alle,
|
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That from the tyme of Kyng William were falle.
|
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Therto he koude endite, and make a thyng,
|
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Ther koude no wight pynche at his writyng.
|
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And every statut koude he pleyn by rote.
|
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He rood but hoomly in a medlee cote
|
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Girt with a ceint of silk, with barres smale;-
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Of his array telle I no lenger tale.
|
||
|
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A Frankeleyn was in his compaignye;
|
||
Whit was his berd as is a dayesye.
|
||
Of his complexioun he was sangwyn.
|
||
Wel loved he by the morwe a sope in wyn,
|
||
To lyven in delit was evere his wone;
|
||
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||
For he was Epicurus owene sone,
|
||
That heeld opinioun that pleyn delit
|
||
Was verraily felicitee parfit,
|
||
An housholdere, and that a greet, was he;
|
||
Seint Julian was he in his contree.
|
||
|
||
His breed, his ale, was alweys after oon,
|
||
A bettre envyned man was nowher noon.
|
||
Withoute bake mete was nevere his hous,
|
||
Of fissh and flessh, and that so plentevous,
|
||
It snewed in his hous of mete and drynke,
|
||
|
||
Of alle deyntees that men koude thynke.
|
||
After the sondry sesons of the yeer
|
||
So chaunged he his mete and his soper.
|
||
Ful many a fat partrich hadde he in muwe,
|
||
And many a breem and many a luce in stuwe.
|
||
|
||
Wo was his cook, but if his sauce were
|
||
Poynaunt, and sharp, and redy al his geere.
|
||
His table dormant in his halle alway
|
||
Stood redy covered al the longe day.
|
||
At sessiouns ther was he lord and sire;
|
||
|
||
Ful ofte tyme he was knyght of the shire.
|
||
An anlaas and a gipser al of silk
|
||
Heeng at his girdel, whit as morne milk.
|
||
A shirreve hadde he been, and a countour,
|
||
Was nowher swich a worthy vavasour.
|
||
|
||
An Haberdasshere and a Carpenter,
|
||
A Webbe, a Dyere, and a Tapycer-
|
||
And they were clothed alle in o lyveree
|
||
Of a solempne and a greet fraternitee.
|
||
Ful fressh and newe hir geere apiked was,
|
||
|
||
Hir knyves were chaped noght with bras,
|
||
But al with silver wroght ful clene and weel,
|
||
Hir girdles and hir pouches everydeel.
|
||
Wel semed ech of hem a fair burgeys
|
||
To sitten in a yeldehalle on a deys.
|
||
|
||
Everich for the wisdom that he kan
|
||
Was shaply for to been an alderman;
|
||
For catel hadde they ynogh, and rente,
|
||
And eek hir wyves wolde it wel assente-
|
||
And eles, certeyn, were they to blame!
|
||
|
||
It is ful fair to been ycleped `ma Dame,'
|
||
And goon to vigilies al bifore,
|
||
And have a mantel roialliche ybore.
|
||
A Cook they hadde with hem for the nones,
|
||
To boille the chiknes with the marybones,
|
||
|
||
And poudre-marchant tart, and galyngale.
|
||
Wel koude he knowe a draughte of London ale;
|
||
He koude rooste, and sethe, and broille, and frye,
|
||
Maken mortreux, and wel bake a pye.
|
||
But greet harm was it, as it thoughte me,
|
||
|
||
That on his shyne a mormal hadde he!
|
||
For blankmanger, that made he with the beste.
|
||
A Shipman was ther, wonynge fer by weste;
|
||
For aught I woot, he was of Dertemouthe.
|
||
He rood upon a rouncy, as he kouthe,
|
||
|
||
In a gowne of faldyng to the knee.
|
||
A daggere hangynge on a laas hadde he
|
||
Aboute his nekke, under his arm adoun.
|
||
The hoote somer hadde maad his hewe al broun,
|
||
And certeinly he was a good felawe.
|
||
|
||
Ful many a draughte of wyn had he ydrawe
|
||
Fro Burdeuxward, whil that the chapman sleep.
|
||
Of nyce conscience took he no keep;
|
||
If that he faught, and hadde the hyer hond,
|
||
By water he sente hem hoom to every lond.
|
||
|
||
But of his craft, to rekene wel his tydes,
|
||
His stremes, and his daungers hym bisides,
|
||
His herberwe and his moone, his lodemenage,
|
||
Ther nas noon swich from Hulle to Cartage.
|
||
Hardy he was, and wys to undertake,
|
||
|
||
With many a tempest hadde his berd been shake;
|
||
He knew alle the havenes as they were
|
||
From Gootlond to the Cape of Fynystere,
|
||
And every cryke in Britaigne and in Spayne.
|
||
His barge yeleped was the Maudelayne.
|
||
|
||
With us ther was a Doctour of Phisik;
|
||
In al this world ne was ther noon hym lik,
|
||
To speke of phisik and of surgerye;
|
||
For he was grounded in astronomye.
|
||
He kepte his pacient a ful greet deel
|
||
|
||
In houres, by his magyk natureel.
|
||
Wel koude he fortunen the ascendent
|
||
Of hisc ymages for his pacient.
|
||
He knew the cause of everich maladye,
|
||
Were it of hoot or coold, or moyste, or drye,
|
||
|
||
And where they engendred, and of what humour.
|
||
He was a verray parfit praktisour;
|
||
The cause yknowe, and of his harm the roote,
|
||
Anon he yaf the sike man his boote.
|
||
Ful redy hadde he hise apothecaries
|
||
|
||
To sende him drogges and his letuaries,
|
||
For ech of hem made oother for to wynne,
|
||
Hir frendshipe nas nat newe to bigynne.
|
||
Wel knew he the olde Esculapius,
|
||
And Deyscorides and eek Rufus,
|
||
|
||
Olde Ypocras, Haly, and Galyen,
|
||
Serapioun, Razis, and Avycen,
|
||
Averrois, Damascien, and Constantyn,
|
||
Bernard, and Gatesden, and Gilbertyn.
|
||
Of his diete mesurable was he,
|
||
|
||
For it was of no superfluitee,
|
||
But of greet norissyng, and digestible.
|
||
His studie was but litel on the Bible.
|
||
In sangwyn and in pers he clad was al,
|
||
Lyned with taffata and with sendal-
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
A good wif was ther, of biside Bathe,
|
||
|
||
He was to synful man nat despitous,
|
||
Ne of his speche daungerous ne digne,
|
||
But in his techyng discreet and benygne;
|
||
To drawen folk to hevene by fairnesse,
|
||
By good ensample, this was his bisynesse.
|
||
|
||
But it were any persone obstinat,
|
||
What so he were, of heigh or lough estat,
|
||
Hym wolde he snybben sharply for the nonys.
|
||
A bettre preest, I trowe, that nowher noon ys.
|
||
He waited after no pompe and reverence,
|
||
|
||
Ne maked him a spiced conscience,
|
||
But Cristes loore, and Hise apostles twelve
|
||
He taughte, but first he folwed it hym-selve.
|
||
With hym ther was a Plowman, was his brother,
|
||
That hadde ylad of dong ful many a fother.
|
||
|
||
A trewe swybnker and a good was he,
|
||
Lyvynge in pees and parfit charitee.
|
||
God loved he best with al his hoole herte
|
||
At alle tymes, thogh him gamed or smerte,
|
||
And thanne his neighebore right as hym-selve;
|
||
|
||
He wolde thresshe, and therto dyke and delve,
|
||
For Cristes sake, for every povre wight
|
||
Withouten hire, if it lay in his myght.
|
||
Hise tithes payed he ful faire and wel,
|
||
Bothe of his propre swynk and his catel.
|
||
|
||
In a tabard he rood, upon a mere.
|
||
Ther was also a Reve and a Millere,
|
||
A Somnour and a Pardoner also,
|
||
A Maunciple, and myself, ther were namo.
|
||
The Millere was a stout carl for the nones,
|
||
|
||
Ful byg he was of brawn and eek of bones-
|
||
That proved wel, for overal ther he cam
|
||
At wrastlyng he wolde have alwey the ram.
|
||
He was short-sholdred, brood, a thikke knarre,
|
||
Ther was no dore that he nolde heve of harre,
|
||
|
||
Or breke it at a rennyng with his heed.
|
||
His berd as any sowe or fox was reed,
|
||
And therto brood, as though it were a spade.
|
||
Upon the cop right of his nose he hade
|
||
A werte, and thereon stood a toft of heres
|
||
|
||
Reed as the brustles of a sowes eres;
|
||
Hise nosethirles blake were and wyde.
|
||
A swerd and bokeler bar he by his syde.
|
||
His mouth as greet was as a greet forneys,
|
||
He was a janglere and a goliardeys,
|
||
|
||
And that was moost of synne and harlotries.
|
||
Wel koude he stelen corn, and tollen thries,
|
||
And yet he hadde a thombe of gold, pardee.
|
||
A whit cote and a blew hood wered he.
|
||
A baggepipe wel koude he blowe and sowne,
|
||
|
||
And therwithal he broghte us out of towne.
|
||
A gentil Maunciple was ther of a temple,
|
||
Of which achatours myghte take exemple
|
||
For to be wise in byynge of vitaille;
|
||
For wheither that he payde or took by taille,
|
||
|
||
Algate he wayted so in his achaat
|
||
That he was ay biforn, and in good staat.
|
||
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?
|
||
|
||
Of maistres hadde he mo than thries ten,
|
||
That weren of lawe expert and curious,
|
||
Of whiche ther weren a duszeyne in that hous
|
||
Worthy to been stywardes of rente and lond
|
||
Of any lord that is in Engelond,
|
||
|
||
To maken hym lyve by his propre good,
|
||
In honour dettelees, but if he were wood;
|
||
Or lyve as scarsly as hym list desire,
|
||
And able for to helpen al a shire
|
||
In any caas that myghte falle or happe-
|
||
|
||
And yet this manciple sette hir aller cappe!
|
||
The Reve was a sclendre colerik man;
|
||
His berd was shave as ny as ever he kan,
|
||
His heer was by his erys ful round yshorn,
|
||
His top was dokked lyk a preest biforn.
|
||
|
||
Ful longe were his legges, and ful lene,
|
||
Ylyk a staf, ther was no calf ysene.
|
||
Wel koude he kepe a gerner and a bynne,
|
||
Ther was noon auditour koude on him wynne.
|
||
Wel wiste he, by the droghte, and by the reyn,
|
||
|
||
The yeldynge of his seed and of his greyn.
|
||
His lordes sheep, his neet, his dayerye,
|
||
His swyn, his hors, his stoor, and his pultrye,
|
||
Was hooly in this reves governyng
|
||
And by his covenant yaf the rekenyng,
|
||
|
||
Syn that his lord was twenty yeer of age;
|
||
Ther koude no man brynge hym in arrerage.
|
||
Ther nas baillif, ne hierde, nor oother hyne,
|
||
That he ne knew his sleighte and his covyne,
|
||
They were adrad of hym as of the deeth.
|
||
|
||
His wonyng was ful faire upon an heeth,
|
||
With grene trees shadwed was his place.
|
||
He koude bettre than his lord purchace.
|
||
Ful riche he was astored pryvely;
|
||
His lord wel koude he plesen subtilly
|
||
|
||
To yeve and lene hym of his owene good,
|
||
And have a thank, and yet a cote and hook.
|
||
In youthe he hadde lerned a good myster,
|
||
He was a wel good wrighte, a carpenter.
|
||
This reve sat upon a ful good stot,
|
||
|
||
That was al pomely grey, and highte Scot.
|
||
A long surcote of pers upon he hade,
|
||
And by his syde he baar a rusty blade.
|
||
Of Northfolk was this reve, of which I telle,
|
||
Bisyde a toun men clepen Baldeswelle.
|
||
|
||
Tukked he was, as is a frere, aboute,
|
||
And evere he rood the hyndreste of oure route.
|
||
A Somonour was ther with us in that place,
|
||
That hadde a fyr-reed cherubynnes face,
|
||
For sawcefleem he was, with eyen narwe.
|
||
|
||
As hoot he was, and lecherous, as a sparwe,
|
||
With scalled browes blake, and piled berd,
|
||
Of his visage children were aferd.
|
||
Ther nas quyk-silver, lytarge, ne brymstoon,
|
||
Boras, ceruce, ne oille of tartre noon,
|
||
|
||
Ne oynement, that wolde clense and byte,
|
||
That hym myghte helpen of his wheldes white,
|
||
Nor of the knobbes sittynge on his chekes.
|
||
Wel loved he garleek, oynons, and eek lekes,
|
||
And for to drynken strong wyn, reed as blood;
|
||
|
||
Thanne wolde he speke and crie as he were wood.
|
||
And whan that he wel dronken hadde the wyn,
|
||
Than wolde he speke no word but Latyn.
|
||
A fewe termes hadde he, two or thre,
|
||
That he had lerned out of som decree-
|
||
|
||
No wonder is, he herde it al the day,
|
||
And eek ye knowen wel how that a jay
|
||
Kan clepen `watte' as wel as kan the Pope.
|
||
But who so koude in oother thyng hym grope,
|
||
Thanne hadde he spent al his plilosophie;
|
||
|
||
Ay `questio quid juris' wolde he crie.
|
||
He was a gentil harlot and a kynde,
|
||
A bettre felawe sholde men noght fynde;
|
||
He wolde suffre, for a quart of wyn,
|
||
A good felawe to have his concubyn
|
||
|
||
A twelf-monthe, and excuse hym atte fulle-
|
||
Ful prively a fynch eek koude he pulle.
|
||
And if he foond owher a good felawe,
|
||
He wolde techen him to have noon awe,
|
||
In swich caas, of the erchedekeness curs,
|
||
|
||
But if a mannes soule were in his purs;
|
||
For in his purs he sholde ypunysshed be,
|
||
`Purs is the erchedekenes helle,' seyde he.
|
||
But wel I woot he lyed right in dede;
|
||
Of cursyng oghte ech gilty man him drede-
|
||
|
||
For curs wol slee, right as assoillyng savith-
|
||
And also war him of a Significavit.
|
||
In daunger hadde he at his owene gise
|
||
The yonge girles of the diocise,
|
||
And knew hir conseil, and was al hir reed.
|
||
|
||
A gerland hadde he set upon his heed
|
||
As greet as it were for an ale-stake;
|
||
A bokeleer hadde he maad him of a cake.
|
||
With hym ther rood a gentil Pardoner
|
||
Of Rouncivale, his freend and his compeer,
|
||
|
||
That streight was comen fro the court of Rome.
|
||
Ful loude he soong `com hider, love, to me.'
|
||
This Somonour bar to hym a stif burdoun,
|
||
Was nevere trompe of half so greet a soun.
|
||
This Pardoner hadde heer as yelow as wex,
|
||
|
||
But smothe it heeng as dooth a strike of flex;
|
||
By ounces henge hise lokkes that he hadde,
|
||
And therwith he hise shuldres overspradde;
|
||
But thynne it lay by colpons oon and oon.
|
||
But hood, for jolitee, wered he noon,
|
||
|
||
For it was trussed up in his walet.
|
||
Hym thoughte he rood al of the newe jet,
|
||
Dischevele, save his cappe, he rood al bare.
|
||
Swiche glarynge eyen hadde he as an hare.
|
||
A vernycle hadde he sowed upon his cappe.
|
||
|
||
His walet lay biforn hym in his lappe
|
||
Bret-ful of pardoun come from Rome al hoot.
|
||
A voys he hadde as smal as hath a goot,
|
||
No berd hadde he, ne nevere sholde have,
|
||
As smothe it was as it were late shave,
|
||
|
||
I trowe he were a geldyng or a mare.
|
||
But of his craft, fro Berwyk into Ware,
|
||
Ne was ther swich another Pardoner;
|
||
For in his male he hadde a pilwe-beer,
|
||
Which that he seyde was Oure Lady veyl;
|
||
|
||
He seyde, he hadde a gobet of the seyl
|
||
That Seinte Peter hadde, whan that he wente
|
||
Upon the see, til Jesu Crist hym hente.
|
||
He hadde a croys of latoun, ful of stones,
|
||
And in a glas he hadde pigges bones;
|
||
|
||
But with thise relikes whan that he fond
|
||
A povre persoun dwellyng up-on-lond,
|
||
Upon a day he gat hym moore moneye
|
||
Than that the person gat in monthes tweye,
|
||
And thus with feyned flaterye and japes
|
||
|
||
He made the persoun and the peple his apes.
|
||
But trewely to tellen atte laste,
|
||
He was in chirche a noble ecclesiaste;
|
||
Wel koude he rede a lessoun or a storie,
|
||
But alderbest he song an offertorie,
|
||
|
||
For wel he wiste, whan that song was songe
|
||
He moste preche, and wel affile his tonge;
|
||
To wynne silver, as he ful wel koude,
|
||
Therfore he song the murierly and loude.
|
||
Now have I toold you shortly in a clause
|
||
|
||
Thestaat, tharray, the nombre, and eek the cause
|
||
Why that assembled was this compaignye
|
||
In Southwerk, at this gentil hostelrye,
|
||
That highte the Tabard, faste by the Belle.
|
||
But now is tyme to yow for to telle
|
||
|
||
How that we baren us that ilke nyght
|
||
Whan we were in that hostelrie alyght,
|
||
And after wol I telle of our viage,
|
||
And all the remenaunt of oure pilgrimage.
|
||
But first I pray yow, of youre curteisye,
|
||
|
||
That ye narette it nat my vileynye,
|
||
Thogh that I pleynly speke in this mateere
|
||
To telle yow hir wordes and hir cheere,
|
||
Ne thogh I speke hir wordes proprely.
|
||
For this ye knowen also wel as I,
|
||
|
||
Who-so shal telle a tale after a man,
|
||
He moot reherce as ny as evere he kan
|
||
Everich a word, if it be in his charge,
|
||
Al speke he never so rudeliche or large;
|
||
Or ellis he moot telle his tale untrewe,
|
||
|
||
Or feyne thyng, or fynde wordes newe.
|
||
He may nat spare, al thogh he were his brother,
|
||
He moot as wel seye o word as another.
|
||
Crist spak hym-self ful brode in Hooly Writ,
|
||
And, wel ye woot, no vileynye is it.
|
||
|
||
Eek Plato seith, who so kan hym rede,
|
||
The wordes moote be cosyn to the dede.
|
||
Also I prey yow to foryeve it me,
|
||
Al have I nat set folk in hir degree
|
||
Heere in this tale, as that they sholde stonde-
|
||
|
||
My wit is short, ye may wel understonde.
|
||
Greet chiere made oure hoost us everichon,
|
||
And to the soper sette he us'anon.
|
||
He served us with vitaille at the beste;
|
||
Strong was the wyn, and wel to drynke us lestel
|
||
|
||
A semely man oure Hooste was withalle
|
||
For to been a marchal in an halle.
|
||
A large man he was, with eyen stepe,
|
||
A fairer burgeys was ther noon in Chepe;
|
||
Boold of his speche, and wys, and well ytaught,
|
||
|
||
And of manhod hym lakkede right naught.
|
||
Eek therto he was right a myrie man;
|
||
And after soper pleyen he bigan,
|
||
And spak of myrthe amonges othere thynges,
|
||
Whan that we hadde maad our rekenynges,
|
||
|
||
And seyde thus: "Now lordynges, trewely,
|
||
Ye been to me right welcome hertely,
|
||
For by my trouthe, if that I shal nat lye,
|
||
I saugh nat this yeer so myrie a compaignye
|
||
Atones in this herberwe, as is now.
|
||
|
||
Fayn wolde I doon yow myrthe, wiste I how-
|
||
And of a myrthe I am right now bythoght
|
||
To doon yow ese, and it shal coste noght.
|
||
Ye goon to Caunterbury, God yow speede-
|
||
The blisful martir quite yow youre meede-
|
||
|
||
And wel I woot, as ye goon by the weye,
|
||
Ye shapen yow to talen and to pleye,
|
||
For trewely, confort ne myrthe is noon
|
||
To ride by the weye doumb as stoon,
|
||
And therfore wol I maken yow disport,
|
||
|
||
As I seyde erst, and doon yow som confort;
|
||
And if yow liketh alle by oon assent
|
||
For to stonden at my juggement,
|
||
And for to werken as I shal yow seye,
|
||
To-morwe, whan ye riden by the weye,
|
||
|
||
Now, by my fader soule that is deed,
|
||
But ye be myrie I wol yeve yow myn heed!
|
||
Hoold up youre hond, withouten moore speche."
|
||
Oure conseil was nat longe for to seche-
|
||
Us thoughte it was noght worth to make it wys-
|
||
|
||
And graunted hym, withouten moore avys,
|
||
And bad him seye his voirdit, as hym leste.
|
||
"Lordynges," quod he, "now herkneth for the beste,
|
||
But taak it nought, I prey yow, in desdeyn.
|
||
This is the poynt, to speken short and pleyn,
|
||
|
||
That ech of yow, to shorte with oure weye,
|
||
In this viage shal telle tales tweye,
|
||
To Caunterburyward I mene it so,
|
||
And homward he shal tellen othere two,
|
||
Of aventures that whilom han bifalle.
|
||
|
||
And which of yow that bereth hym best of alle-
|
||
That is to seyn, that telleth in this caas
|
||
Tales of best sentence and moost solaas-
|
||
Shal have a soper at oure aller cost,
|
||
Heere in this place, sittynge by this post,
|
||
|
||
Whan that we come agayn fro Caunterbury.
|
||
And for to make yow the moore mury
|
||
I wol my-selven goodly with yow ryde
|
||
Right at myn owene cost, and be youre gyde.
|
||
And who so wole my juggement withseye
|
||
|
||
Shal paye al that we spenden by the weye.
|
||
And if ye vouchesauf that it be so,
|
||
Tel me anon, withouten wordes mo,
|
||
And I wol erly shape me therfore."
|
||
This thyng was graunted, and oure othes swore
|
||
|
||
With ful gald herte, and preyden hym also
|
||
That he wolde vouchesauf for to do so,
|
||
And that he wolde been oure governour,
|
||
And of our tales juge and reportour,
|
||
And sette a soper at a certeyn pris,
|
||
|
||
And we wol reuled been at his devys
|
||
In heigh and lough; and thus by oon assent
|
||
We been acorded to his juggement;
|
||
And therupon the wyn was fet anon,
|
||
We dronken, and to reste wente echon
|
||
|
||
Withouten any lenger taryynge.
|
||
Amorwe, whan that day bigan to sprynge,
|
||
Up roos oure Hoost, and was oure aller cok,
|
||
And gadrede us to gidre, alle in a flok,
|
||
And forth we riden, a litel moore than paas,
|
||
|
||
Unto the wateryng of Seint Thomas.
|
||
And there oure Hoost bigan his hors areste,
|
||
And seyde, "Lordynges, herkneth if yow leste,
|
||
Ye woot youre foreward, and I it yow recorde;
|
||
If even-song and morwe-song accorde,
|
||
|
||
Lat se now who shal telle the firste tale.
|
||
As evere mote I drynke wyn or ale,
|
||
Whoso be rebel to my juggement
|
||
Shal paye for al that by the wey is spent.
|
||
Now draweth cut, er that we ferrer twynne,
|
||
|
||
He which that hath the shorteste shal bigynne.
|
||
Sire knyght," quod he, "my mayster and my lord,
|
||
Now draweth cut, for that is myn accord,
|
||
Cometh neer," quod he, "my lady Prioresse,
|
||
And ye, Sir Clerk, lat be your shamefastnesse,
|
||
|
||
Ne studieth noght; ley hond to, every man."
|
||
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 knyght,
|
||
|
||
Of which ful blithe and glad was every wyght.
|
||
And telle he moste his tale, as was resoun,
|
||
By foreward and by composicioun,-
|
||
As ye han herd, what nedeth wordes mo?
|
||
And whan this goode man saugh that it was so,
|
||
|
||
As he that wys was and obedient
|
||
To kepe his foreward by his free assent,
|
||
He seyde, "Syn I shal bigynne the game,
|
||
What, welcome be the cut, a Goddes name!
|
||
Now lat us ryde, and herkneth what I seye."
|
||
|
||
And with that word we ryden forth oure weye,
|
||
And he bigan with right a myrie cheere
|
||
His tale anon, and seyde in this manere.
|
||
Part 2
|
||
|
||
THE KNYGHTES TALE.
|
||
|
||
Iamque domos patrias Scithice post aspera gentis prelia
|
||
laurigero &c. Thebaid, xii, 519.
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the knyghtes tale.
|
||
|
||
Whilom, as olde stories tellen us,
|
||
Ther was a duc that highte Theseus;
|
||
Of Atthenes he was lord and governour,
|
||
That gretter was ther noon under the sonne.
|
||
Ful many a riche contree hadde he wonne,
|
||
What with his wysdom and his chivalrie;
|
||
|
||
He conquered al the regne of Femenye,
|
||
That whilom was ycleped Scithia,
|
||
And weddede the queene Ypolita,
|
||
And broghte hir hoom with hym in his contree,
|
||
With muchel glorie and greet solempnytee,
|
||
|
||
And eek hir yonge suster Emelye.
|
||
And thus with victorie and with melodye
|
||
Lete I this noble duk to Atthenes ryde,
|
||
And al his hoost, in armes hym bisyde.
|
||
And certes, if it nere to long to heere,
|
||
|
||
I wolde have toold yow fully the manere
|
||
How wonnen was the regne of Femenye
|
||
By Theseus, and by his chivalrye,
|
||
And of the grete bataille for the nones
|
||
Bitwixen Atthenes and Amazones,
|
||
|
||
And how asseged was Ypolita
|
||
The faire hardy queene of Scithia,
|
||
And of the feste that was at hir weddynge,
|
||
And of the tempest at hir hoom-comynge;
|
||
But al the thyng I moot as now forbere,
|
||
|
||
I have, God woot, a large feeld to ere,
|
||
And wayke been the oxen in my plough,
|
||
The remenant of the tale is long ynough.
|
||
I wol nat letten eek noon of this route,
|
||
Lat every felawe telle his tale aboute,
|
||
|
||
And lat se now who shal the soper wynne;-
|
||
And ther I lefte, I wol ayeyn bigynne.
|
||
This duc of whom I make mencioun,
|
||
Whan he was come almoost unto the toun,
|
||
In al his wele and in his mooste pride,
|
||
|
||
He was war, as he caste his eye aside,
|
||
Where that ther kneled in the hye weye
|
||
A compaignye of ladyes, tweye and tweye,
|
||
Ech after oother, clad in clothes blake;
|
||
But swich a cry and swich a wo they make,
|
||
|
||
That in this world nys creature lyvynge
|
||
That herde swich another waymentynge!
|
||
And of this cry they nolde nevere stenten,
|
||
Til they the reynes of his brydel henten.
|
||
"What folk been ye, that at myn hom-comynge
|
||
|
||
Perturben so my feste with criynge?"
|
||
Quod Theseus, "hav ye so greet envye
|
||
Of myn honour, that thus compleyne and crye?
|
||
Or who hath yow mysboden or offended?
|
||
And telleth me if it may been amended,
|
||
|
||
And why that ye been clothed thus in blak?"
|
||
The eldeste lady of hem alle spak-
|
||
Whan she hadde swowned with a deedly cheere,
|
||
That it was routhe for to seen and heere-
|
||
And seyde, "Lord, to whom Fortune hath yeven
|
||
|
||
Victorie, and as a conqueror to lyven,
|
||
Nat greveth us youre glorie and youre honour,
|
||
But we biseken mercy and socour.
|
||
Have mercy on oure wo and oure distresse,
|
||
Som drope of pitee thurgh thy gentillesse
|
||
|
||
Upon us wrecched wommen lat thou falle;
|
||
For certes, lord, ther is noon of us alle
|
||
That she ne hath been a duchesse or a queene.
|
||
Now be we caytyves, as it is wel seene-
|
||
Thanked be Fortune, and hir false wheel,
|
||
|
||
That noon estat assureth to be weel.
|
||
And certes, lord, to abyden youre presence,
|
||
Heere in the temple of the goddesse Clemence
|
||
We han ben waitynge al this fourtenyght;
|
||
Now help us, lord, sith it is in thy myght!
|
||
|
||
I wrecche, which that wepe and waille thus,
|
||
Was whilom wyf to kyng Cappaneus,
|
||
That starf at Thebes, cursed be that day!
|
||
And alle we that been in this array
|
||
And maken al this lamentacioun,
|
||
|
||
We losten alle oure housbondes at that toun,
|
||
Whil that the seege theraboute lay.
|
||
And yet now the olde Creon, weylaway!
|
||
That lord is now of Thebes the Citee,
|
||
Fulfild of ire and of iniquitee,
|
||
|
||
He, for despit and for his tirannye,
|
||
To do the dede bodyes vileynye,
|
||
Of alle oure lordes, whiche that been slawe,
|
||
He hath alle the bodyes on an heep ydrawe,
|
||
And wol nat suffren hem, by noon assent,
|
||
|
||
Neither to been yburyed nor ybrent,
|
||
But maketh houndes ete hem in despit."
|
||
And with that word, withouten moore respit,
|
||
They fillen gruf, and criden pitously,
|
||
"Have on us wrecched wommen som mercy
|
||
|
||
And lat oure sorwe synken in thyn herte."
|
||
This gentil duk doun from his courser sterte
|
||
With herte pitous, whan he herde hem speke;
|
||
Hym thoughte that his herte wolde breke,
|
||
Whan he saugh hem so pitous and so maat,
|
||
|
||
That whilom weren of so greet estaat.
|
||
And in his armes he hem alle up hente,
|
||
And hem conforteth in ful good entente,
|
||
And swoor his ooth, as he was trewe knyght,
|
||
He solde doon so ferforthyl his myght
|
||
|
||
Upon the tiraunt Creon hem to wreke,
|
||
That all the peple of Grece sholde speke
|
||
How Creon was of Theseus yserved,
|
||
As he that hadde his deeth ful wel deserved.
|
||
And right anoon, withouten moore abood,
|
||
|
||
His baner he desplayeth, and forth rood
|
||
To Thebesward, and al his hoost biside,
|
||
No neer Atthenes wolde he go ne ride,
|
||
Ne take his ese fully half a day,
|
||
But onward on his wey that nyght he lay-
|
||
|
||
And sente anon Ypolita the queene,
|
||
And Emelye, hir yonge suster sheene,
|
||
Unto the toun of Atthenes to dwelle-
|
||
And forth he rit; ther is namoore to telle.
|
||
The rede statue of Mars, with spere and targe,
|
||
|
||
So shyneth, in his white baner large,
|
||
That alle the feeldes gliteren up and doun,
|
||
And by his baner gorn is his penoun
|
||
Of gold ful riche, in which ther was ybete
|
||
The Mynotaur which that he slough in Crete.
|
||
|
||
Thus rit this duc, thus rit this conquerour,
|
||
And in his hoost of chivalrie the flour,
|
||
Til that he cam to Thebes, and alighte
|
||
Faire in a feeld, ther as he thoughte fighte.
|
||
But shortly for to speken of this thyng,
|
||
|
||
With Creon, which that was of Thebes kyng,
|
||
He faught, and slough hym manly as a knyght
|
||
In pleyn bataille, and putte the folk to flyght,
|
||
And by assaut he wan the citee after,
|
||
And rente adoun bothe wall, and sparre, and rafter.
|
||
|
||
And to the ladyes he sestored agayn
|
||
The bones of hir housbondes that weren slayn,
|
||
To doon obsequies as was tho the gyse.
|
||
But it were al to longe for to devyse
|
||
The grete clamour and the waymentynge
|
||
|
||
That the ladyes made at the brennynge
|
||
Of the bodies, and the grete honour
|
||
That Theseus, the noble conquerour,
|
||
Dooth to the ladyes, whan they from hym wente;
|
||
But shortly for to telle is myn entente.
|
||
|
||
Whan that his worthy duc, this Theseus,
|
||
Hath Creon slayn, and wonne Thebes thus,
|
||
Stille in that feeld he took al nyght his reste
|
||
And dide with al the contree as hym leste.
|
||
To ransake in the taas of bodyes dede,
|
||
|
||
Hem for to strepe of harneys and of wede,
|
||
The pilours diden bisynesse and cure,
|
||
After the bataille and disconfiture;
|
||
And so bifel, that in the taas they founde
|
||
Thurgh-girt with many a grevous blody wounde,
|
||
|
||
Two yonge knyghtes liggynge by and by,
|
||
Bothe in oon armes wroght ful richely,
|
||
Of whiche two Arcita highte that oon,
|
||
And that oother knyght highte Palamon.
|
||
Nat fully quyke, ne fully dede they were,
|
||
|
||
But by here cote-armures, and by hir gere,
|
||
The heraudes knewe hem best, in special,
|
||
As they that weren of the blood roial
|
||
Of Thebes, and of sustren two yborn.
|
||
Out of the taas the pilours han hem torn,
|
||
|
||
And had hem caried softe unto the tente
|
||
Of Theseus, and he ful soone hem sente
|
||
To Atthenes to dwellen in prisoun
|
||
Perpetuelly, he nolde no raunsoun.
|
||
And whan this worthy due hath thus ydon,
|
||
|
||
He took his hoost, and hoom he rood anon,
|
||
With laurer crowned, as a conquerour,
|
||
And ther he lyveth in joye and in honour
|
||
|
||
Terme of his lyve, what nedeth wordes mo?
|
||
And in a tour, in angwissh and in wo,
|
||
|
||
Dwellen this Palamon and eek Arcite
|
||
For evermoore, ther may no gold hem quite.
|
||
This passeth yeer by yeer, and day by day,
|
||
Till it fil ones, in a morwe of May,
|
||
That Emelye, that fairer was to sene
|
||
|
||
Than is the lylie upon his stalke grene,
|
||
And fressher than the May with floures newe-
|
||
For with the rose colour stroof hir hewe,
|
||
I noot which was the fairer of hem two-
|
||
Er it were day, as was hir wone to do,
|
||
|
||
She was arisen, and al redy dight-
|
||
For May wole have no slogardrie a-nyght;
|
||
The sesoun priketh every gentil herte,
|
||
And maketh hym out of his slepe to sterte,
|
||
And seith, `arys and do thyn observaunce,'
|
||
|
||
This maked Emelye have remembraunce
|
||
To doon honour to May, and for to ryse.
|
||
Yclothed was she fressh, for to devyse,
|
||
Hir yelow heer was broyded in a tresse,
|
||
Bihynde hir bak, a yerde long, I gesse,
|
||
|
||
And in the gardyn, at the sonne upriste,
|
||
She walketh up and doun, and as hir liste
|
||
She gadereth floures, party white and rede,
|
||
To make a subtil gerland for hir hede,
|
||
And as an aungel hevenysshly she soong.
|
||
|
||
The grete tour, that was so thikke and stroong,
|
||
Which of the castel was the chief dongeoun,
|
||
Ther as the knyghtes weren in prisoun,
|
||
Of whiche I tolde yow, and tellen shal,
|
||
Was evene joynant to the gardyn wal
|
||
|
||
Ther as this Emelye hadde hir pleyynge.
|
||
Bright was the sonne, and cleer that morwenynge,
|
||
And Palamoun, this woful prisoner,
|
||
As was his wone, by leve of his gayler,
|
||
Was risen, and romed in a chambre on heigh,
|
||
|
||
In which he al the noble citee seigh,
|
||
And eek the gardyn, ful of braunches grene,
|
||
Ther as this fresshe Emelye the shene
|
||
Was in hire walk, and romed up and doun.
|
||
This sorweful prisoner, this Palamoun,
|
||
|
||
Goth in the chambre romynge to and fro,
|
||
And to hym-self compleynynge of his wo.
|
||
That he was born, ful ofte he seyde, `allas!'
|
||
And so bifel, by aventure or cas,
|
||
That thurgh a wyndow, thikke of many a barre
|
||
|
||
Of iren greet, and square as any sparre,
|
||
He cast his eye upon Emelya,
|
||
|
||
And therwithal he bleynte, and cryede "A!"
|
||
As though he stongen were unto the herte.
|
||
And with that cry Arcite anon upsterte
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "Cosyn myn, what eyleth thee,
|
||
That art so pale and deedly on to see?
|
||
Why cridestow? who hath thee doon offence?
|
||
For Goddess love, taak al in pacience
|
||
Oure prisoun, for it may noon oother be;
|
||
|
||
Fortune hath yeven us this adversitee.
|
||
Som wikke aspect or disposicioun
|
||
Of Saturne by sum constellacioun
|
||
Hath yeven us this, al though we hadde it sworn.
|
||
So stood the hevene, whan that we were born.
|
||
|
||
We moste endure it, this the short and playn."
|
||
This Palamon answerde and seyde agayn,
|
||
"Cosyn, for sothe, of this opinioun
|
||
Thow hast a veyn ymaginacioun.
|
||
This prison caused me nat for to crye,
|
||
|
||
But I was hurt right now thurgh-out myn eye
|
||
Into myn herte, that wol my bane be.
|
||
The fairnesse of that lady, that I see
|
||
Yond in the gardyn romen to and fro,
|
||
Is cause of al my criyng and my wo.
|
||
|
||
I noot wher she be womman or goddesse,
|
||
But Venus is it, soothly as I gesse."
|
||
And therwithal, on knees doun he fil,
|
||
And seyde, "Venus, if it be thy wil,
|
||
Yow in this gardyn thus to transfigure
|
||
|
||
Bifore me, sorweful wrecche creature,
|
||
Out of this prisoun helpe that we may scapen!
|
||
And if so be my destynee be shapen
|
||
By eterne word to dyen in prisoun,
|
||
Of oure lynage have som compassioun,
|
||
|
||
That is so lowe ybroght by tirannye."
|
||
And with that word Arcite gan espye
|
||
Wher-as this lady romed to and fro,
|
||
And with that sighte hir beautee hurte hym so,
|
||
That if that Palamon was wounded sore,
|
||
|
||
Arcite is hurt as moche as he, or moore.
|
||
And with a sigh he seyde pitously,
|
||
"The fresshe beautee sleeth me sodeynly
|
||
Of hir, that rometh in the yonder place!
|
||
And but I have hir mercy and hir grace
|
||
|
||
That I may seen hir atte leeste weye,
|
||
I nam but deed, ther is namoore to seye."
|
||
This Palamon, whan he tho wordes herde,
|
||
Dispitously he looked and answerde,
|
||
"Wheither seistow this in ernest or in pley?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay," quod Arcite, "in ernest by my fey,
|
||
God helpe me so, me list ful yvele pleye."
|
||
This Palamon gan knytte his browes tweye;
|
||
"It nere," quod he, "to thee no greet honour
|
||
For to be fals, ne for to be traitour
|
||
|
||
To me, that am thy cosyn and thy brother,
|
||
Ysworn ful depe, and ech of us til oother,
|
||
That nevere for to dyen in the peyne,
|
||
Til that the deeth departe shal us tweyne,
|
||
Neither of us in love to hyndre other,
|
||
|
||
Ne in noon oother cas, my leeve brother,
|
||
But that thou sholdest trewely forthren me
|
||
In every cas, as I shal forthren thee.
|
||
This was thyn ooth, and myn also certeyn,
|
||
I woot right wel thou darst it nat withseyn.
|
||
|
||
Thus artow of my conseil, out of doute;
|
||
And now thou woldest falsly been aboute
|
||
To love my lady, whom I love and serve
|
||
And evere shal, til that myn herte sterve.
|
||
Nay, certes, false Arcite, thow shalt nat so!
|
||
|
||
I loved hir first, and tolde thee my wo
|
||
As to my conseil, and to my brother sworn,
|
||
To forthre me as I have toold biforn,
|
||
For which thou art ybounden as a knyght
|
||
To helpen me, if it lay in thy myght,
|
||
|
||
Or elles artow fals, I dar wel seyn."
|
||
This Arcite ful proudly spak ageyn,
|
||
"Thow shalt," quod he, "be rather fals than I.
|
||
But thou art fals, I telle thee outrely,
|
||
For paramour I loved hir first er thow.
|
||
|
||
What, wiltow seyn thou wistest nat yet now
|
||
Wheither she be a womman or goddesse?
|
||
Thyn is affeccioun of hoolynesse,
|
||
And myn is love as to a creature;
|
||
For which I tolde thee myn aventure
|
||
|
||
As to my cosyn and my brother sworn.
|
||
I pose, that thow lovedest hir biforn;
|
||
Wostow nat wel the olde clerkes sawe
|
||
That `who shal yeve a lovere any lawe?'
|
||
Love is a gretter lawe, by my pan,
|
||
|
||
Than may be yeve of any erthely man.
|
||
And therfore positif lawe and swich decree
|
||
Is broken al day for love in ech degree.
|
||
A man moot nedes love, maugree his heed,
|
||
He may nat fleen it, thogh he sholde be deed,
|
||
|
||
Al be she mayde, or wydwe, or elles wyf.
|
||
And eek it is nat likly, al thy lyf,
|
||
To stonden in hir grace, namoore shal I,
|
||
For wel thou woost thyselven, verraily,
|
||
That thou and I be dampned to prisoun
|
||
|
||
Perpetuelly, us gayneth no faunsoun.
|
||
We stryven as dide the houndes for the boon,
|
||
They foughte al day, and yet hir part was noon.
|
||
Ther cam a kyte, whil they weren so wrothe,
|
||
And baar awey the boon bitwixe hem bothe.
|
||
|
||
And therfore at the kynges court, my brother,
|
||
Ech man for hymself, ther is noon oother.
|
||
Love if thee list, for I love, and ay shal;
|
||
And soothly, leeve brother, this is al.
|
||
Heere in this prisoun moote we endure,
|
||
|
||
And everich of us take his aventure."
|
||
Greet was the strif and long bitwix hem tweye,
|
||
If that I hadde leyser for to seye-
|
||
But to theffect; it happed on a day,
|
||
To telle it yow as shortly as I may,
|
||
|
||
A worthy duc, that highte Perotheus,
|
||
That felawe was unto duc Theseus
|
||
Syn thilke day that they were children lite,
|
||
Was come to Atthenes his felawe to visite,
|
||
And for to pleye as he was wont to do-
|
||
|
||
For in this world he loved no man so,
|
||
And he loved hym als tendrely agayn.
|
||
So wel they lovede, as olde bookes sayn,
|
||
That whan that oon was deed, soothly to telle,
|
||
His felawe wente and soughte hym doun in helle.
|
||
|
||
But of that storie list me nat to write;
|
||
Duc Perotheus loved wel Arcite,
|
||
And hadde hym knowe at Thebes yeer by yere,
|
||
And finally, at requeste and preyere
|
||
Of Perotheus, withouten any raunsoun
|
||
|
||
Duc Theseus hym leet out of prisoun
|
||
Frely to goon, wher that hym liste overal,
|
||
In swich a gyse as I you tellen shal.
|
||
This was the forward, pleynly for tendite,
|
||
Bitwixen Theseus and hym Arcite,
|
||
|
||
That if so were that Arcite were yfounde
|
||
Evere in his lif, by day or nyght 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;
|
||
|
||
Ther nas noon oother remedie ne reed,
|
||
But taketh his leve and homward he him spedde;
|
||
Lat hym be war, his nekke lith to wedde!
|
||
How greet a sorwe suffreth now Arcite!
|
||
The deeth he feeleth thurgh his herte smyte,
|
||
|
||
He wepeth, wayleth, crieth pitously,
|
||
To sleen hymself he waiteth prively.
|
||
He seyde, "Allas, that day that he was born!
|
||
Now is my prisoun worse than biforn;
|
||
Now is me shape eternally to dwelle
|
||
|
||
Nat in purgatorie but in helle.
|
||
Allas, that evere knew I Perotheus!
|
||
For elles hadde I dwelled with Theseus,
|
||
Yfetered in his prisoun evermo;
|
||
Thanne hadde I been in blisse, and nat in wo.
|
||
|
||
Oonly the sighte of hire whom that I serve,
|
||
Though that I nevere hir grace may deserve,
|
||
Wolde han suffised right ynough for me.
|
||
O deere cosyn Palamon," quod he,
|
||
"Thyn is the victorie of this aventure.
|
||
|
||
Ful blisfully in prison maistow dure.-
|
||
In prisoun? certes, nay, but in Paradys!
|
||
Wel hath Fortune yturned thee the dys,
|
||
That hast the sighte of hir, and I thabsence;
|
||
For possible is, syn thou hast hir presence,
|
||
|
||
And art a knyght, a worthy and an able,
|
||
That by som cas, syn Fortune is chaungeable,
|
||
Thow maist to thy desir som tyme atteyne.
|
||
But I, that am exiled and bareyne
|
||
Of alle grace, and in so greet dispeir
|
||
|
||
That ther nys erthe, water, fir, ne eir,
|
||
Ne creature, that of hem maked is,
|
||
That may me heelp, or doon confort in this,
|
||
Wel oughte I sterve in wanhope and distresse,
|
||
Farwel, my lif, my lust, and my galdnesse!
|
||
|
||
Allas, why pleynen folk so in commune
|
||
On purveyaunce of God or of Fortune,
|
||
That yeveth hem ful ofte in many a gyse
|
||
Wel bettre than they kan hem-self devyse?
|
||
Som man desireth for to han richesse,
|
||
|
||
That cause is of his moerdre of greet siknesse.
|
||
And som man wolde out of his prisoun fayn,
|
||
That in his hous is of his meynee slayn.
|
||
Infinite harmes been in thai mateere,
|
||
We witen nat what thing we preyen here.
|
||
|
||
We faren as he that dronke is as a mous;
|
||
A dronke man woot 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;
|
||
|
||
We seken faste after felicitee,
|
||
But we goon wrong ful often trewely.
|
||
Thus may we seyen alle, and namely I,
|
||
That wende and hadde a greet opinioun
|
||
That if I myghte escapen from prisoun,
|
||
|
||
Thanne hadde I been in joye and perfit heele,
|
||
Ther now I am exiled fro my wele.
|
||
Syn that I may nat seen you, Emelye,
|
||
I nam but deed, ther nys no remedye."
|
||
Upon that oother syde, Palamon,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Whan that he wiste Arcite was agon,
|
||
Swich sorwe he maketh, that the grete tour
|
||
Resouneth of his youlyng and clamour.
|
||
The pure fettres on his shynes grete
|
||
Weren of his bittre salte teeres wete.
|
||
|
||
"Allas," quod he, "Arcite, cosyn myn!
|
||
Of al oure strif, God woot, the fruyt is thyn.
|
||
Thow walkest now in Thebes at thy large,
|
||
And of my wo thow yevest litel charge.
|
||
Thou mayst, syn thou hast wysdom and manhede,
|
||
|
||
Assemblen alle the folk of oure kynrede,
|
||
And make a werre so sharp on this citee,
|
||
That by som aventure, or som tretee,
|
||
Thow mayst have hir to lady and to wyf,
|
||
For whom that I moste nedes lese my lyf.
|
||
|
||
For as by wey of possibilitee,
|
||
Sith thou art at thy large of prisoun free,
|
||
And art a lord, greet is thyn avauntage
|
||
Moore than is myn, that sterve here in a cage.
|
||
For I moot wepe and wayle, whil I lyve,
|
||
|
||
With al the wo that prison may me yeve,
|
||
And eek with peyne that love me yeveth also,
|
||
That doubleth al my torment and my wo."
|
||
Therwith the fyr of jalousie up-sterte
|
||
Withinne his brest, and hente him by the herte
|
||
|
||
So woodly, that he lyk was to biholde
|
||
The boxtree, or the asshen dede and colde.
|
||
Thanne seyde he, "O cruel goddes, that governe
|
||
This world with byndyng of youre word eterne,
|
||
And writen in the table of atthamaunt
|
||
|
||
Youre parlement and youre eterne graunt,
|
||
What is mankynde moore unto you holde
|
||
Than is the sheep that rouketh in the folde?
|
||
For slayn is man right as another beeste,
|
||
And dwelleth eek in prison and arreeste,
|
||
|
||
And hath siknesse, and greet adversitee,
|
||
And ofte tymes giltelees, pardee!
|
||
What governance is in this prescience
|
||
That giltelees tormenteth innocence?
|
||
And yet encresseth this al my penaunce,
|
||
|
||
That man is bounden to his observaunce,
|
||
For Goddes sake, to letten of his wille,
|
||
Ther as a beest may al his lust fulfille.
|
||
And whan a beest is deed, he hath no peyne,
|
||
But man after his deeth moot wepe and pleyne,
|
||
|
||
Though in this world he have care and wo.
|
||
Withouten doute it may stonden so.
|
||
The answere of this lete I to dyvynys,
|
||
But well I woot, that in this world greet pyne ys.
|
||
Allas, I se a serpent or a theef,
|
||
|
||
That many a trewe man hath doon mescheef,
|
||
Goon at his large, and where hym list may turne!
|
||
But I moot been in prisoun thurgh Saturne,
|
||
And eek thurgh Juno, jalous and eek wood,
|
||
That hath destroyed wel ny al the blood
|
||
|
||
Of Thebes, with hise waste walles wyde.
|
||
And Venus sleeth me on that oother syde
|
||
For jalousie and fere of hym Arcite."
|
||
Now wol I stynte of Palamon a lite,
|
||
And lete hym in his prisoun stille dwelle,
|
||
|
||
And of Arcita forth I wol yow telle.
|
||
The somer passeth, and the nyghtes longe
|
||
Encressen double wise the peynes stronge
|
||
Bothe of the lovere and the prisoner;
|
||
I noot which hath the wofuller mester.
|
||
|
||
For shortly for to seyn, this Palamoun
|
||
Perpetuelly is dampned to prisoun
|
||
In cheynes and in fettres to been deed,
|
||
And Arcite is exiled upon his heed
|
||
For evere mo as out of that contree,
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere mo he shal his lady see.
|
||
Yow loveres axe I now this questioun,
|
||
Who hath the worse, Arcite or Palamoun?
|
||
That oon may seen his lady day by day,
|
||
But in prison he moot dwelle alway;
|
||
|
||
That oother wher hym list may ride or go,
|
||
But seen his lady shal he nevere mo.
|
||
Now demeth as yow liste ye that kan,
|
||
For I wol telle forth, as I bigan.
|
||
|
||
Explicit prima pars.
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars secunda.
|
||
|
||
Whan that Arcite to Thebes comen was,
|
||
Ful ofte a day he swelte and seyde `allas,'
|
||
For seen his lady shal he nevere mo;
|
||
And shortly to concluden al his wo,
|
||
So muche sorwe hadde nevere creature,
|
||
That is, or shal whil that the world may dure.
|
||
|
||
His sleep, his mete, his drynke is hym biraft,
|
||
That lene he wex and drye as is a shaft.
|
||
Hise eyen holwe and grisly to biholde,
|
||
His hewe falow and pale as asshen colde;
|
||
And solitarie he was and evere allone
|
||
|
||
And waillynge al the nyght, makynge his mone.
|
||
And if he herde song or instrument,
|
||
Thanne wolde he wepe, he myghte nat be stent.
|
||
So feble eek were hise spiritz, and so lowe,
|
||
And chaunged so, that no man koude knowe
|
||
|
||
His speche nor his voys, though men it herde.
|
||
And in his geere for al the world he ferde
|
||
Nat oonly lik the loveris maladye
|
||
Of Hereos, but rather lyk manye
|
||
Engendred of humour malencolik
|
||
|
||
Biforen in his celle fantastik,
|
||
And shortly turned was al up-so-doun
|
||
Bothe habit and eek disposicioun
|
||
Of hym, this woful lovere daun Arcite.
|
||
What sholde I al day of his wo endite?
|
||
|
||
Whan he endured hadde a yeer or two
|
||
This crueel torment, and this peyne and woo,
|
||
At Thebes in his contree, as I seyde,
|
||
Upon a nyght in sleep as he hym leyde,
|
||
Hym thoughte how that the wynged god Mercurie
|
||
|
||
Biforn hym stood, and bad hym to be murie.
|
||
His slepy yerde in hond he bar uprighte,
|
||
An hat he werede upon hise heris brighte.
|
||
Arrayed was this god, as he took keep,
|
||
As he was whan that Argus took his sleep;
|
||
|
||
And seyde hym thus, "To Atthenes shaltou wende,
|
||
Ther is thee shapen of thy wo an ende."
|
||
And with that word Arcite wook and sterte.
|
||
"Now trewely, how soore that me smerte,"
|
||
Quod he, "to Atthenes right now wol I fare,
|
||
|
||
Ne for the drede of deeth shal I nat spare
|
||
To se my lady that I love and serve,
|
||
In hir presence I recche nat to sterve."
|
||
And with that word he caughte a greet mirour,
|
||
And saugh that chaunged was al his colour,
|
||
|
||
And saugh his visage al in another kynde.
|
||
And right anon it ran hym in his mynde,
|
||
That sith his face was so disfigured
|
||
Of maladye, the which he hadde endured,
|
||
He myghte wel, if that he bar hym lowe,
|
||
|
||
Lyve in Atthenes, everemoore unknowe,
|
||
And seen his lady wel ny day by day.
|
||
And right anon he chaunged his array,
|
||
And cladde hym as a povre laborer,
|
||
And al allone, save oonly a squier
|
||
|
||
That knew his privetee and al his cas,
|
||
Which was disgised povrely, as he was,
|
||
To Atthenes is he goon, the nexte way.
|
||
And to the court he wente, upon a day,
|
||
And at the gate he profreth his servyse,
|
||
|
||
To drugge and drawe, what so men wol devyse.
|
||
And shortly of this matere for to seyn,
|
||
He fil in office with a chamberleyn,
|
||
The which that dwellynge was with Emelye,
|
||
For he was wys and koude soone espye
|
||
|
||
Of every servant which that serveth here.
|
||
Wel koude he hewen wode, and water bere,
|
||
For he was yong and myghty for the nones,
|
||
And therto he was strong and big of bones
|
||
To doon that any wight kan hym devyse.
|
||
|
||
A yeer or two he was in this servyse
|
||
Page of the chambre of Emelye the brighte;
|
||
And Philostrate he seyde that he highte.
|
||
But half so wel biloved a man as he
|
||
Ne was ther nevere in court, of his degree;
|
||
|
||
He was so gentil of condicioun
|
||
That thurghout al the court was his renoun.
|
||
They seyden, that it were a charitee,
|
||
That Theseus wolde enhaunsen his degree,
|
||
And putten hym in worshipful servyse
|
||
|
||
Ther as he myghte his vertu exercise.
|
||
And thus withinne a while his name is spronge
|
||
Bothe of hise dedes and his goode tonge,
|
||
That Theseus hath taken hym so neer
|
||
That of his chambre he made hym a Squier,
|
||
|
||
And gaf hym gold to mayntene his degree.
|
||
And eek men broghte hym out of his contree
|
||
From yeer to yeer, ful pryvely, his rente.
|
||
But honestly and slyly he it spente,
|
||
That no man wondred how that he it hadde.
|
||
|
||
And thre yeer in this wise his lif he ladde,
|
||
|
||
And bar hym so in pees, and eek ibn werre,
|
||
Ther was no man that Theseus hath derre.
|
||
And in this blisse lete I now Arcite,
|
||
And speke I wole of Palamon a lite.
|
||
|
||
In derknesse and horrible and strong prisoun
|
||
Thise seven yeer hath seten Palamoun,
|
||
Forpyned, what for wo and for distresse.
|
||
Who feeleth double soor and hevynesse
|
||
But Palamon, that love destreyneth so,
|
||
|
||
That wood out of his wit he goth for wo?
|
||
And eek therto he is a prisoner,
|
||
Perpetuelly, noght oonly for a yer.
|
||
Who koude ryme in Englyssh proprely
|
||
His martirdom? Forsothe it am nat I,
|
||
|
||
Therfore I passe as lightly as I may.
|
||
It fel that in the seventhe yer, in May,
|
||
The thridde nyght, as olde bookes seyn,
|
||
That al this storie tellen moore pleyn,
|
||
Were it by aventure or destynee-
|
||
|
||
As, whan a thyng is shapen, it shal be-
|
||
That soone after the mydnyght, Palamoun
|
||
By helpyng of a freend, brak his prisoun
|
||
And fleeth the citee faste as he may go;
|
||
For he hade yeve his gayler drynke so
|
||
|
||
Of a clarree maad of a certeyn wyn,
|
||
With nercotikes and opie of Thebes fyn,
|
||
That al that nyght, thogh that men wolde him shake,
|
||
The gayler sleep, he myghte nat awake.
|
||
And thus he fleeth as faste as evere he may;
|
||
|
||
The nyght was short and faste by the day,
|
||
That nedes-cost he moot hymselven hyde;
|
||
And til a grove, faste ther bisyde,
|
||
With dredeful foot thanne stalketh Palamoun.
|
||
For shortly this was his opinioun,
|
||
|
||
That in that grove he wolde hym hyde al day,
|
||
And in the nyght thanne wolde he take his way
|
||
To Thebesward, his freendes for to preye
|
||
On Theseus to helpe hym to werreye;
|
||
And shortly, outher he wolde lese his lif,
|
||
|
||
Or wynnen Emelye unto his wyf;
|
||
This is theffect and his entente pleyn.
|
||
Now wol I turne to Arcite ageyn,
|
||
That litel wiste how ny that was his care
|
||
Til that Fortune had broght him in the snare.
|
||
|
||
The bisy larke, messager of day,
|
||
Salueth in hir song the morwe gray,
|
||
And firy Phebus riseth up so brighte
|
||
That al the orient laugheth of the lighte,
|
||
And with hise stremes dryeth in the greves
|
||
|
||
The silver dropes hangynge on the leves;
|
||
And Arcita, that is in the court roial
|
||
With Theseus, his squier principal,
|
||
Is risen, and looketh on the myrie day.
|
||
And for to doon his observaunce ot May,
|
||
|
||
Remembrynge on the poynt of his desir
|
||
He on a courser startlynge as the fir
|
||
Is riden into the feeldes, hym to pleye,
|
||
Out of the court, were it a myle or tweye.
|
||
And to the grove of which that I yow tolde
|
||
|
||
By aventure his wey he gan to holde,
|
||
To maken hym a gerland of the greves,
|
||
Were it of wodebynde or hawethorn-leves.
|
||
And loude he song ayeyn the sonne shene,
|
||
"May, with alle thy floures and thy grene,
|
||
|
||
Welcome be thou, faire fresshe May,
|
||
In hope that I som grene gete may."
|
||
And from his courser, with a lusty herte,
|
||
Into a grove ful hastily he sterte,
|
||
And in a path he rometh up and doun
|
||
|
||
Ther as by aventure this Palamoun
|
||
Was in a bussh, that no man myghte hym se;
|
||
For soore afered of his deeth was he.
|
||
No thyng ne knew he that it was Arcite,
|
||
God woot, he wolde have trowed it ful lite!
|
||
|
||
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 hym evene,
|
||
For al day meeteth men at unset stevene.
|
||
Ful litel woot Arcite of his felawe,
|
||
|
||
That was so ny to herknen al his sawe,
|
||
For in the bussh he sitteth now ful stille.
|
||
Whan that Arcite hadde romed al his fille
|
||
And songen al the roundel lustily,
|
||
Into a studie he fil al sodeynly,
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
|
||
Right so kan geery Venus overcaste
|
||
The hertes of hir folk; right as hir day
|
||
Is gereful, right so chaungeth she array.
|
||
Selde is the Friday al the wowke ylike.
|
||
Whan that Arcite had songe, he gan to sike,
|
||
|
||
And sette hym doun withouten any moore;
|
||
"Allas," quod he, "that day that I was bore!
|
||
How longe, Juno, thurgh thy crueltee
|
||
Woltow werreyen Thebes the Citee?
|
||
Allas, ybroght is to confusioun
|
||
|
||
The blood roial of Cadme and Amphioun!
|
||
Of Cadmus, which that was the firste man
|
||
That Thebes bulte, or first the toun bigan,
|
||
And of the citee first was crouned kyng,
|
||
Of his lynage am I, and his ofspryng,
|
||
|
||
By verray ligne, as of the stok roial,
|
||
And now I am so caytyf and so thral
|
||
That he that is my mortal enemy
|
||
I serve hym as his squier povrely.
|
||
And yet dooth Juno me wel moore shame,
|
||
|
||
For I dar noght biknowe myn owene name,
|
||
But theras I was wont to highte Arcite,
|
||
Now highte I Philostrate, noght worth a myte.
|
||
Allas, thou felle Mars! allas, Juno!
|
||
Thus hath youre ire oure kynrede al fordo,
|
||
|
||
Save oonly me, and wrecched Palamoun
|
||
That Theseus martireth in prisoun.
|
||
And over al this, to sleen me outrely,
|
||
Love hath his firy dart so brennyngly
|
||
Ystiked thurgh my trewe careful herte,
|
||
|
||
That shapen was my deeth erst than my sherte.
|
||
Ye sleen me with youre eyen, Emelye,
|
||
Ye been the cause wherfore that I dye.
|
||
Of al the remenant of myn oother care
|
||
Ne sette I nat the montance of a tare,
|
||
|
||
So that I koude doon aught to youre plesaunce."
|
||
And with that word he fil doun in a traunce
|
||
A longe tyme, and after he upsterte.
|
||
This Palamoun, that thoughte that thurgh his herte
|
||
He felte a coold swerd sodeynliche glyde,
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
He stirte hym up out of the buskes thikke,
|
||
And seide, "Arcite, false traytour wikke!
|
||
|
||
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 conseil sworn,
|
||
As I ful ofte have seyd thee heer-biforn,
|
||
And hast byjaped heere duc Theseus,
|
||
|
||
And falsly chaunged hast thy name thus.
|
||
I wol be deed, or elles thou shalt dye;
|
||
Thou shalt nat love my lady Emelye,
|
||
But I wol love hire oonly, and namo,
|
||
For I am Palamon, thy mortal foo!
|
||
|
||
And though that I no wepene have in this place,
|
||
But out of prison am astert by grace,
|
||
I drede noght that outher thow shalt dye,
|
||
Or thow ne shalt nat loven Emelye.
|
||
Chees which thou wolt, for thou shalt nat asterte!"
|
||
|
||
This Arcite, with ful despitous herte,
|
||
Whan he hym knew, and hadde his tale herd,
|
||
As fiers as leoun pulled out his swerd,
|
||
And seyde thus: "By God that sit above,
|
||
Nere it that thou art sik and wood for love,
|
||
|
||
And eek that thow no wepne hast in this place,
|
||
Thou sholdest nevere out of this grove pace,
|
||
That thou ne sholdest dyen of myn hond.
|
||
For I defye the seurete and the bond
|
||
Which that thou seist that I have maad to thee.
|
||
|
||
What, verray fool, thynk wel that love is free!
|
||
And I wol love hir, maugree al thy myght!
|
||
But for as muche thou art a worthy knyght,
|
||
And wilnest to darreyne hire by bataille,
|
||
Have heer my trouthe; tomorwe I wol nat faille
|
||
|
||
Withoute wityng of any oother wight
|
||
That heere I wol be founden as a knyght,
|
||
And bryngen harneys right ynough for thee,
|
||
And chese the beste, and leve the worste for me.
|
||
And mete and drynke this nyght wol I brynge
|
||
|
||
Ynough for thee, and clothes for thy beddynge;
|
||
And if so be that thou my lady wynne,
|
||
And sle me in this wode ther I am inne,
|
||
Thow mayst wel have thy lady as for me."
|
||
This Palamon answerde, "I graunte it thee."
|
||
|
||
And thus they been departed til amorwe,
|
||
Whan ech of hem had leyd his feith to borwe.
|
||
O Cupide, out of alle charitee!
|
||
O regne, that wolt no felawe have with thee!
|
||
Ful sooth is seyd that love ne lordshipe
|
||
|
||
Wol noght, hir thankes, have no felaweshipe.
|
||
Wel fynden that Arcite and Palamoun:
|
||
Arcite is riden anon unto the toun,
|
||
And on the morwe, er it were dayes light,
|
||
Ful prively two harneys hath he dight,
|
||
|
||
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 hym biforn,
|
||
And in the grove, at tyme and place yset,
|
||
|
||
This Arcite and this Palamon ben met.
|
||
Tho chaungen gan the colour in hir face
|
||
Right as the hunters in the regne of Trace,
|
||
That stondeth at the gappe with a spere,
|
||
Whan hunted is the leoun and the bere,
|
||
|
||
And hereth hym come russhyng in the greves,
|
||
And breketh bothe bowes and the leves,
|
||
And thynketh, "Heere cometh my mortal enemy,
|
||
Withoute faille he moot be deed or I,
|
||
For outher I moot sleen hym at the gappe,
|
||
|
||
Or he moot sleen me, if that me myshappe"-
|
||
So ferden they in chaungyng of hir hewe,
|
||
As fer as everich of hem oother knewe.
|
||
Ther nas no good day ne no saluyng,
|
||
But streight withouten word or rehersyng
|
||
|
||
Everich of hem heelp for to armen oother,
|
||
As freendly as he were his owene brother.
|
||
And after that with sharpe speres stronge
|
||
They foynen ech at oother wonder longe.
|
||
Thou myghtest wene that this Palamoun
|
||
|
||
In his fightyng were a wood leoun,
|
||
And as a crueel tigre was Arcite.
|
||
As wilde bores gonne they to smyte,
|
||
That frothen white as foom for ire wood.
|
||
Up to the ancle foghte they in hir blood;
|
||
|
||
And in this wise I lete hem fightyng dwelle,
|
||
And forth I wole of Theseus yow telle.
|
||
The destinee, ministre general,
|
||
That executeth in the world overal
|
||
The purveiaunce that God hath seyn biforn,
|
||
|
||
So strong it is, that though the world had sworn
|
||
The contrarie of a thyng, by ye or nay,
|
||
Yet somtyme it shal fallen on a day
|
||
That falleth nat eft withinne a thousand yeere.
|
||
For certeinly, oure appetites heere,
|
||
|
||
Be it of werre, or pees, or hate, or love,
|
||
Al is this reuled by the sighte above.
|
||
This mene I now by myghty Theseus,
|
||
That for to hunten is so desirus
|
||
And namely at the grete hert in May,
|
||
|
||
That in his bed ther daweth hym no day
|
||
That he nys clad, and redy for to ryde
|
||
With hunte and horn, and houndes hym bisyde.
|
||
For in his huntyng hath he swich delit
|
||
That it is al his joye and appetit
|
||
|
||
To been hymself the grete hertes bane-
|
||
For after Mars he serveth now Dyane.
|
||
Cleer was the day, as I have toold er this,
|
||
And Theseus, with alle joye and blis,
|
||
With his Ypolita, the faire quene,
|
||
|
||
And Emelye, clothed al in grene,
|
||
On huntyng be they riden roially,
|
||
And to the grove, that stood ful faste by,
|
||
In which ther was an hert, as men hym tolde,
|
||
Duc Theseus the streighte wey hath holde,
|
||
|
||
And to the launde he rideth hym ful right,
|
||
For thider was the hert wont have his flight,
|
||
And over a brook, and so forth in his weye.
|
||
This duc wol han a cours at hym, or tweye,
|
||
With houndes swiche as that hym list comaunde.
|
||
|
||
And whan this duc was come unto the launde,
|
||
Under the sonne he looketh, and anon
|
||
He was war of Arcite and Palamon,
|
||
That foughten breme, as it were bores two;
|
||
The brighte swerdes wenten to and fro
|
||
|
||
So hidously, that with the leeste strook
|
||
It semed as it wolde felle an ook;
|
||
But what they were, nothyng he ne woot.
|
||
This duc his courser with his spores smoot,
|
||
And at a stert he was bitwix hem two,
|
||
|
||
And pulled out a swerd, and cride, "Hoo!
|
||
Namoore, up peyne of lesynge of youre heed!
|
||
By myghty Mars, he shal anon be deed
|
||
That smyteth any strook, that I may seen!
|
||
But telleth me what myster men ye been,
|
||
|
||
That been so hardy for to fighten heere
|
||
Withouten juge or oother officere,
|
||
As it were in a lystes roially?"
|
||
This Palamon answerde hastily,
|
||
And seyde, "Sire, what nedeth wordes mo?
|
||
|
||
We have the deeth disserved, bothe two.
|
||
Two woful wrecches been we, two caytyves,
|
||
That been encombred of oure owene lyves,
|
||
And as thou art a fightful lord and juge,
|
||
Ne yeve us neither mercy ne refuge,
|
||
|
||
But sle me first for seinte charitee;
|
||
But sle my felawe eek as wel as me-
|
||
Or sle hym first, for, though thow knowest it lite,
|
||
This is thy mortal foo, this is Arcite,
|
||
That fro thy lond is banysshed on his heed,
|
||
|
||
For which he hath deserved to be deed.
|
||
For this is he, that cam unto thy gate,
|
||
And seyde that he highe Philostrate.
|
||
Thus hath he japed thee ful many a yer,
|
||
And thou hast maked hym thy chief Squier,
|
||
|
||
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 prisoun broken wikkedly.
|
||
|
||
I am thy mortal foo, and it am I
|
||
That loveth so hoote Emelye the grighte,
|
||
That I wol dye present in hir sighte;
|
||
Wherfore I axe deeth and my juwise-
|
||
But sle my felawe in the same wise
|
||
|
||
For bothe han we deserved to be slayn."
|
||
This worthy duc answered anon agayn,
|
||
And seyde, "This is a short conclusioun,
|
||
Youre owene mouth, by your confessioun,
|
||
Hath dampned yow, and I wol it recorde.
|
||
|
||
It nedeth noght to pyne yow with the corde,
|
||
Ye shal be deed, by myghty Mars the rede!"
|
||
The queene anon, for verray wommanhede,
|
||
Gan for to wepe, and so dide Emelye,
|
||
And alle the ladyes in the compaignye.
|
||
|
||
Greet pitee was it, as it thoughte hem alle,
|
||
That evere swich a chaunce sholde falle.
|
||
For gentilmen they were of greet estaat,
|
||
And no thyng but for love was this debaat,
|
||
And saugh hir blody woundes wyde and soore,
|
||
|
||
And alle crieden, both lasse and moore,
|
||
"Have mercy, lord, upon us wommen alle!"
|
||
And on hir bare knees adoun they falle,
|
||
And wolde have kist his feet ther as he stood;
|
||
Til at the laste aslaked was his mood,
|
||
|
||
For pitee renneth soone 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 although that his ire hir gilt accused,
|
||
|
||
Yet in his resoun he hem bothe excused.
|
||
As thus, he thoghte wel, that every man
|
||
Wol helpe hym-self in love, if that he kan,
|
||
And eek delivere hym-self out of prisoun;
|
||
And eek his herte hadde compassioun
|
||
|
||
Of wommen, for they wepen evere in oon.
|
||
And in his gentil herte he thoughte anon,
|
||
And softe unto hym-self he seyde, "Fy
|
||
Upon a lord that wol have no mercy,
|
||
But been a leoun, bothe in word and dede,
|
||
|
||
To hem that been in repentaunce and drede,
|
||
As wel as to a proud despitous man,
|
||
That wol maynteyne that he first bigan!
|
||
That lord hath litel of discrecioun
|
||
That in swich cas kan no divisioun,
|
||
|
||
But weyeth pride and humblesse after oon."
|
||
And shortly, whan his ire is thus agoon,
|
||
He gan to looken up with eyen lighte,
|
||
And spak thise same wordes al on highte:
|
||
"The God of love, A! benedicite!
|
||
|
||
How myghty and how greet a lord is he!
|
||
Ayeyns his myght ther gayneth none obstacles,
|
||
He may be cleped a god for hise myracles,
|
||
For he kan maken at his owene gyse
|
||
Of everich herte as that hym list divyse.
|
||
|
||
Lo heere, this Arcite and this Palamoun
|
||
|
||
That quitly weren out of my prisoun,
|
||
And myghte han lyved in Thebes roially,
|
||
And witen I am hir mortal enemy,
|
||
And that hir deth lith in my myght also;
|
||
|
||
And yet hath love, maugree hir eyen two,
|
||
Ybroght hem hyder bothe for to dye!
|
||
Now looketh, is nat that an heigh folye?
|
||
Who may been a fole, but if he love?
|
||
Bihoold, for Goddes sake that sit above,
|
||
|
||
Se how they blede? Be they noght wel arrayed?
|
||
Thus hath hir lord, the God of Love, ypayed
|
||
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!
|
||
|
||
But this is yet the beste game of alle,
|
||
That she, for whom they han this jolitee,
|
||
Kan hem therfore as muche thank, as me!
|
||
She woot namoore of al this hoote fare,
|
||
By God, than woot a cokkow or an hare!
|
||
|
||
But all moot ben assayed, hoot and coold;
|
||
A man moot ben a fool, or yong or oold;
|
||
I woot it by myself ful yore agon,
|
||
For in my tyme a servant was I oon.
|
||
And therfore, syn I knowe of loves peyne,
|
||
|
||
And woot how soore it kan a man distreyne,
|
||
As he that hath ben caught ofte in his laas,
|
||
I yow foryeve al hoolly this trespaas,
|
||
At requeste of the queene that kneleth heere,
|
||
And eek of Emelye, my suster deere.
|
||
|
||
And ye shul bothe anon unto me swere,
|
||
That nevere mo ye shal my contree dere,
|
||
Ne make werre upon me, nyght ne day,
|
||
But been my freendes in al that ye may,
|
||
I yow foryeve this trespas, every deel."
|
||
|
||
And they hym sworen his axyng, faire and weel,
|
||
And hym of lordship and of mercy preyde,
|
||
And he hem graunteth grace, and thus he seyde:
|
||
"To speke of roial lynage and richesse,
|
||
Though that she were a queene or a princesse,
|
||
|
||
Ech of you bothe is worthy doutelees
|
||
To wedden whan tyme is, but nathelees
|
||
I speke as for my suster Emelye,
|
||
For whom ye have this strif and jalousye:
|
||
Ye woot yourself, she may nat wedden two
|
||
|
||
Atones, though ye fighten everemo!
|
||
That oon of you, al be hym looth or lief,
|
||
He moot go pipen in an yvy-leef-
|
||
This is to seyn, she may nat now han bothe,
|
||
Al be ye never so jalouse, ne so wrothe.
|
||
|
||
And forthy, I yow putte in this degree;
|
||
That ech of yow shal have his destynee
|
||
As hym is shape, and herkneth in what wyse;
|
||
Lo, heere your ende of that I shal devyse.
|
||
My wyl is this, for plat conclusioun,
|
||
|
||
Withouten any repplicacioun,
|
||
If that you liketh, take it for the beste,
|
||
That everich of you shal goon where hym leste,
|
||
Frely, withouten raunson, or daunger,
|
||
And this day fifty wykes fer ne ner,
|
||
|
||
Everich of you shal brynge an hundred knyghtes
|
||
Armed for lystes up at alle rightes,
|
||
Al redy to darreyne hire by bataille.
|
||
And this bihote I yow withouten faille,
|
||
Upon my trouthe, and as I am a knyght,
|
||
|
||
That wheither of yow bothe that hath myght,
|
||
This is to seyn, that wheither he, or thow
|
||
May with his hundred, as I spak of now,
|
||
Sleen his contrarie, or out of lystes dryve,
|
||
Thanne shal I yeve Emelya to wyve,
|
||
|
||
To whom that Fortune yeveth so fair a grace.
|
||
Tho lystes shal I maken in this place,
|
||
And God so wisly on my soule rewe,
|
||
As I shal evene juge been, and trewe.
|
||
Ye shul noon oother ende with me maken,
|
||
|
||
That oon of yow ne shal be deed or taken.
|
||
And if yow thynketh this is weel ysayd,
|
||
Seyeth youre avys and holdeth you apayd;
|
||
This is youre ende and youre conclusioun."
|
||
Who looketh lightly now but Palamoun?
|
||
|
||
Who spryngeth up for joye but Arcite?
|
||
Who kouthe tellen, or who kouthe endite
|
||
The joye that is maked in the place,
|
||
Whan Theseus hath doon so fair a grace?
|
||
But doun on knees wente every maner wight,
|
||
|
||
And thonken hym with al hir herte and myght,
|
||
And namely the Thebans, often sithe.
|
||
And thus with good hope and with herte blithe
|
||
They taken hir leve, and homward gonne they ride
|
||
To Thebes with hise olde walles wyde.
|
||
|
||
Explicit secunda pars
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars tercia
|
||
|
||
I trowe men wolde deme it necligence,
|
||
If I foryete to tellen the dispence
|
||
Of Theseus, that gooth so bisily
|
||
To maken up the lystes roially;
|
||
That swich a noble theatre as it was,
|
||
|
||
I dar wel seyen, in this world ther nas.
|
||
The circuit a myle was aboute,
|
||
Walled of stoon, and dyched al withoute.
|
||
Round was the shap, in manere of compas,
|
||
Ful of degrees the heighte os sixty pas,
|
||
|
||
That whan a man was set on o degree,
|
||
He lette nat his felawe for to see.
|
||
Estward ther stood a gate of marbul whit,
|
||
Westward, right swich another in the opposit;
|
||
And shortly to concluden, swich a place
|
||
|
||
Was noon in erthe, as in so litel space.
|
||
For in the lond ther was no crafty man
|
||
That geometrie or ars-metrik kan,
|
||
Ne portreitour, ne kervere of ymages,
|
||
That Theseus ne yaf him mete and wages
|
||
|
||
The theatre for to maken and devyse.
|
||
And for to doon his ryte and sacrifise
|
||
He estward hath upon the gate above,
|
||
In worship of Venus, goddesse of love,
|
||
Doon make an auter and an oratorie.
|
||
|
||
And on the gate westward, in memorie
|
||
Of Mars, he maked hath right swich another,
|
||
That coste largely of gold a fother.
|
||
And northward, in a touret on the wal
|
||
Of alabastre whit, and reed coral,
|
||
|
||
An oratorie, riche for to see,
|
||
In worship of Dyane, of chastitee,
|
||
Hath Theseus doon wroght in noble wyse.
|
||
But yet hadde I foryeten to devyse
|
||
The noble kervyng and the portreitures,
|
||
|
||
The shap, the contenaunce, and the figures,
|
||
That weren in thise oratories thre.
|
||
First in the temple of Venus maystow se
|
||
Wroght on the wal, ful pitous to biholde,
|
||
The broken slepes and the sikes colde,
|
||
|
||
The sacred teeris and the waymentynge,
|
||
The firy strokes, and the desirynge
|
||
That loves servauntz in this lyf enduren;
|
||
The othes that her covenantz assuren;
|
||
Plesaunce and Hope, Desir, Foolhardynesse,
|
||
|
||
Beautee and Youthe, Bauderie, Richesse,
|
||
Charmes and Force, Lesynges, Flaterye,
|
||
Despense, Bisynesse, and Jalousye,
|
||
That wered of yelewe gooldes a gerland,
|
||
And a cokkow sittynge on hir hand;
|
||
|
||
Festes, instrumentz, caroles, daunces,
|
||
Lust and array, and alle the circumstaunces
|
||
Of love, whiche that I rekned, and rekne shal,
|
||
By ordre weren peynted on the wal,
|
||
And mo than I kan make of mencioun;
|
||
|
||
For soothly, al the mount of Citheroun,
|
||
Ther Venus hath hir principal dwellynge,
|
||
Was shewed on the wal in portreyynge,
|
||
With al the gardyn and the lustynesse.
|
||
Nat was foryeten the Porter Ydelnesse,
|
||
|
||
Ne Narcisus the faire, of yore agon,
|
||
Ne yet the folye of kyng Salamon,
|
||
And eek the grete strengthe of Ercules,
|
||
Thenchauntementz of Medea and Circes,
|
||
Ne of Turnus, with the hardy fiers corage,
|
||
|
||
The riche Cresus, kaytyf in servage;
|
||
Thus may ye seen, that wysdom ne richesse,
|
||
Beautee ne sleighte, strengthe, hardynesse,
|
||
Ne may with Venus holde champartie,
|
||
For as hir list, the world than may she gye.
|
||
|
||
Lo, alle thise folk so caught were in hir las,
|
||
Til they for wo ful ofte seyde `allas!'
|
||
Suffiseth heere ensamples oon or two-
|
||
And, though, I koude rekene a thousand mo.
|
||
The statue of Venus, glorious for to se,
|
||
|
||
Was naked, fletynge in the large see,
|
||
And fro the navele doun al covered was
|
||
With wawes grene, and brighte as any glas.
|
||
A citole in hir right hand hadde she,
|
||
And on hir heed, ful semely for to se,
|
||
|
||
A rose gerland, fressh and wel smellynge;
|
||
Above hir heed hir dowves flikerynge.
|
||
Biforn hir stood hir sone, Cupido,
|
||
Upon his shuldres wynges hadde he two,
|
||
And blynd he was, as it was often seene.
|
||
|
||
A bowe he bar, and arwes brighte and kene.
|
||
Why sholde I noght as wel eek telle yow al
|
||
The portreiture, that was upon the wal
|
||
Withinne the temple of myghty Mars the rede?
|
||
Al peynted was the wal in lengthe and brede
|
||
|
||
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 forest
|
||
|
||
In which ther dwelleth neither man ne best,
|
||
With knotty knarry bareyne trees olde,
|
||
Of stubbes sharpe and hidouse to biholde,
|
||
In which ther ran a rumbel and a swough
|
||
As though a storm sholde bresten every bough.
|
||
|
||
And dounward from an hille, under a bente,
|
||
Ther stood the temple of Mars Armypotente,
|
||
Wroght al of burned steel, of which the entree
|
||
Was long and streit, and gastly for to see,
|
||
And therout came a rage and suche a veze,
|
||
|
||
That it made al the gate for to rese.
|
||
The northren lyght in at the dores shoon,
|
||
For wyndowe on the wal ne was ther noon,
|
||
Thurgh which men myghten any light discerne.
|
||
The dore was al of adamant eterne,
|
||
|
||
Yclenched overthwart and endelong
|
||
With iren tough, and for to make it strong
|
||
Every pyler, the temple to sustene,
|
||
Was tonne-greet of iren bright and shene.
|
||
Ther saugh I first the dirke ymaginyng
|
||
|
||
Of felonye, and al the compassyng,
|
||
The crueel ire, reed as any gleede,
|
||
The pykepurs, and eek the pale drede,
|
||
The smyler with the knyfe under the cloke,
|
||
The shepne brennynge with the blake smoke,
|
||
|
||
The tresoun of the mordrynge in the bedde,
|
||
The open werre, with woundes al bibledde,
|
||
Contek, with blody knyf and sharp manace,
|
||
Al ful of chirkyng was that sory place.
|
||
The sleer of hymself yet saugh I ther,
|
||
|
||
His herte-blood hath bathed al his heer;
|
||
The nayl ydryven in the shode a nyght,
|
||
The colde deeth, with mouth gapyng upright.
|
||
Amyddes of the temple sat Meschaunce,
|
||
With Disconfort and Sory Contenaunce.
|
||
|
||
Yet saugh I Woodnesse laughynge in his rage,
|
||
Armed Compleint, Outhees, and fiers Outrage;
|
||
The careyne in the busk with throte ycorve,
|
||
A thousand slayn, and nat of qualm ystorve,
|
||
The tiraunt with the pray by force yraft,
|
||
|
||
The toun destroyed, ther was nothyng laft.
|
||
Yet saugh I brent the shippes hoppesteres,
|
||
The hunte strangled with the wilde beres,
|
||
The sowe freten the child right in the cradel,
|
||
The cook yscalded, for al his longe ladel.
|
||
|
||
Noght was foryeten by the infortune of Marte,
|
||
The cartere over-ryden with his carte,
|
||
Under the wheel ful lowe he lay adoun.
|
||
Ther were also, of Martes divisioun,
|
||
The barbour, and the bocher, and the smyth
|
||
|
||
That forgeth sharpe swerdes on his styth.
|
||
And al above, depeynted in a tour,
|
||
Saugh I Conquest sittynge in greet honour,
|
||
With the sharpe swerd over his heed
|
||
Hangynge by a soutil twyned threed.
|
||
|
||
Depeynted was the slaughtre of Julius,
|
||
Of grete Nero, and of Antonius;
|
||
Al be that thilke tyme they were unborn,
|
||
Yet was hir deth depeynted therbiforn
|
||
By manasynge of Mars, right by figure;
|
||
|
||
So was it shewed in that portreiture,
|
||
As is depeynted in the sterres above
|
||
Who shal be slayn or elles deed for love.
|
||
Suggiseth oon ensample in stories olde,
|
||
I may nat rekene hem alle though I wolde.
|
||
|
||
The statue of Mars upon a carte stood
|
||
Armed, and looked grym as he were wood,
|
||
And over his heed ther shynen two figures
|
||
Of sterres, that been cleped in scriptures
|
||
That oon Puella, that oother Rubeus.
|
||
|
||
This god of armes was arrayed thus:
|
||
A wolf ther stood biforn hym at his feet,
|
||
With eyen rede, and of a man he eet.
|
||
With soutil pencel was depeynt this storie,
|
||
In redoutynge of Mars and of his glorie.
|
||
|
||
Now to the temple of Dyane the chaste
|
||
As shortly as I kan I wol me haste,
|
||
To telle yow al the descripsioun.
|
||
Depeynted been the walles up and doun
|
||
Of huntyng and of shamefast chastitee.
|
||
|
||
Ther saugh I, how woful Calistopee
|
||
Whan that Diane agreved was with here,
|
||
Was turned from a womman til a bere,
|
||
And after was she maad the loode-sterre;-
|
||
Thus was it peynted, I kan sey yow no ferre-
|
||
|
||
Hir sone is eek a sterre, as men may see.
|
||
Ther saugh I Dane, yturned til a tree,
|
||
I mene nat the goddesse Diane,
|
||
But Penneus doughter which that highte Dane.
|
||
Ther saugh I Attheon an hert ymaked,
|
||
|
||
For vengeaunce that he saugh Diane al naked.
|
||
I saugh how that hise houndes have hym caught
|
||
And freeten hym, for that they knewe hym naught.
|
||
Yet peynted was a litel forthermoor
|
||
How Atthalante hunted the wilde boor,
|
||
|
||
And Meleagree, and many another mo,
|
||
For which Dyane wroghte hym 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,
|
||
|
||
With smale houndes al aboute hir feet;
|
||
And undernethe hir feet she hadde a moone,
|
||
Wexynge it was, and sholde wanye soone.
|
||
In gaude grene hir statue clothed was,
|
||
With bowe in honde, and arwes in a cas.
|
||
|
||
Hir eyen caste she ful lowe adoun,
|
||
Ther Pluto hath his derke regioun.
|
||
A womman travaillynge was hir biforn;
|
||
But for hir child so longe was unborn
|
||
Ful pitously Lucyna gan she calle,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "Help, for thou mayst best of alle!"
|
||
Wel koude he peynten lyfly, that it wroghte,
|
||
With many a floryn he the hewes boghte.
|
||
Now been thise listes maad, and Theseus,
|
||
That at his grete cost arrayed thus
|
||
|
||
The temples, and the theatre every deel,
|
||
Whan it was doon, hym lyked wonder weel.-
|
||
But stynte I wole of Theseus a lite,
|
||
And speke of Palamon and of Arcite.
|
||
The day approcheth of hir retournynge,
|
||
|
||
That everich sholde an hundred knyghtes brynge
|
||
The bataille to darreyne, as I yow tolde.
|
||
And til Atthenes, hir covenantz for to holde,
|
||
Hath everich of hem broght an hundred knyghtes,
|
||
Wel armed for the werre at alle rightes.
|
||
|
||
And sikerly, ther trowed many a man,
|
||
That nevere sithen that the world bigan,
|
||
As for to speke of knyghthod of hir hond,
|
||
As fer as God hath maked see or lond,
|
||
Nas of so fewe so noble a compaignye.
|
||
|
||
For every wight that lovede chivalrye,
|
||
And wolde, his thankes, han a passant name,
|
||
Hath preyed that he myghte been of that game;
|
||
And wel was hym that therto chosen was.
|
||
For if ther fille tomorwe swich a cas
|
||
|
||
Ye knowen wel, that every lusty knyght
|
||
That loveth paramours, and hath his myght,
|
||
Were it in Engelond or elles where,
|
||
They wolde, hir thankes, wilnen to be there,
|
||
To fighte for a lady, benedicitee!
|
||
|
||
It were a lusty sighte for to see.
|
||
And right so ferden they with Palamon,
|
||
With hym ther wenten knyghtes many on.
|
||
Som wol ben armed in an haubergeoun,
|
||
In a bristplate, and in a light gypoun,
|
||
|
||
And somme woln have a paire plates large,
|
||
And somme woln have a Pruce sheeld, or a targe,
|
||
Somme woln ben armed on hir legges weel,
|
||
And have an ax, and somme a mace of steel.
|
||
Ther is no newe gyse, that it nas old;
|
||
|
||
Armed were they, as I have yow told,
|
||
Everych after his opinioun.
|
||
Ther maistow seen comyng with Palamoun
|
||
Lygurge hym-self, the grete kyng of Trace.
|
||
Blak was his berd, and manly was his face,
|
||
|
||
The cercles of hise eyen in his heed,
|
||
They gloweden bitwyxen yelow and reed,
|
||
And lik a griff on looked he aboute,
|
||
With kempe heeris on hise browes stoute,
|
||
Hise lymes grete, hise brawnes harde and stronge,
|
||
|
||
Hise shuldres brode, hise armes rounde and longe;
|
||
And as the gyse was in his contree,
|
||
Ful hye upon a chaar of gold stood he,
|
||
With foure white boles in the trays.
|
||
In stede of cote-armure, over his harnays
|
||
|
||
With nayles yelewe and brighte as any gold
|
||
He hadde a beres skyn, colblak, for-old;
|
||
His longe heer was kembd bihynde his bak,
|
||
As any ravenes fethere it shoon for-blak.
|
||
A wrethe of gold arm-greet, of huge wighte,
|
||
|
||
Upon his heed, set ful of stones brighte,
|
||
Of fyne rubyes and of dyamauntz.
|
||
Aboute his chaar ther wenten white alauntz,
|
||
Twenty and mo, as grete as any steer,
|
||
To hunten at the leoun or the deer,
|
||
|
||
And folwed hym, with mosel faste ybounde,
|
||
Colored of gold, and tourettes fyled rounde.
|
||
An hundred lordes hadde he in his route,
|
||
Armed ful wel, with hertes stierne and stoute.
|
||
With Arcita, in stories as men fynde,
|
||
|
||
The grete Emetreus, the kyng of Inde,
|
||
Upon a steede bay, trapped in steel,
|
||
Covered in clooth of gold dyapred weel,
|
||
Cam ridynge lyk the god of armes, Mars.
|
||
His cote-armure was of clooth of Tars,
|
||
|
||
Couched with perles white and rounde and grete.
|
||
His sadel was of brend gold newe ybete;
|
||
A mantelet upon his shuldre hangynge
|
||
Bret-ful of rubyes rede, as fyr sparklynge.
|
||
His crispe heer lyk rynges was yronne,
|
||
|
||
And that was yelow, and glytered as the sonne.
|
||
His nose was heigh, hise eyen bright citryn,
|
||
Hise lippes rounde, his colour was sangwyn;
|
||
A fewe frakenes in his face yspreynd,
|
||
Bitwixen yelow and somdel blak ymeynd,
|
||
|
||
And as a leoun he his looking caste.
|
||
Of fyve and twenty yeer his age I caste;
|
||
His berd was wel bigonne for to sprynge,
|
||
His voys was as a trompe thonderynge.
|
||
Upon his heed he wered of laurer grene
|
||
|
||
A gerland, fressh and lusty for to sene.
|
||
Upon his hand he bar for his deduyt
|
||
An egle tame, as any lilye whyt.
|
||
An hundred lordes hadde he with hym there,
|
||
Al armed, save hir heddes, in al hir gere,
|
||
|
||
Ful richely in alle maner thynges.
|
||
For trusteth wel, that dukes, erles, kynges,
|
||
Were gadered in this noble compaignye,
|
||
For love, and for encrees of chivalrye.
|
||
Aboute this kyng ther ran on every part
|
||
|
||
Ful many a tame leoun and leopard,
|
||
And in this wise thise lordes alle and some
|
||
Been on the sonday to the citee come,
|
||
Aboute pryme, and in the toun alight.
|
||
This Theseus, this duc, this worthy knyght,
|
||
|
||
Whan he had broght hem into 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 maner wit
|
||
|
||
Of noon estaat ne koude amenden it.
|
||
The mynstralcye, the service at the feeste,
|
||
The grete yiftes to the mooste and leeste,
|
||
The riche array of Theseus paleys,
|
||
Ne who sat first ne last upon the deys,
|
||
|
||
What ladyes fairest been, or best daunsynge,
|
||
Or which of hem kan dauncen best and synge,
|
||
Ne who moost felyngly speketh of love,
|
||
What haukes sitten on the perche above,
|
||
What houndes liggen in the floor adoun-
|
||
|
||
Of al this make I now no mencioun;
|
||
But, al theffect, that thynketh me the beste,
|
||
Now cometh the point, and herkneth if yow leste.
|
||
The sonday nyght, er day bigan to sprynge,
|
||
Whan Palamon the lsrke herde synge,
|
||
|
||
Al though it nere nat day by houres two,
|
||
Yet song the larke, and Palamon also.
|
||
With hooly herte and with an heigh corage
|
||
He roos, to wenden on his pilgrymage,
|
||
Unto the blisful Citherea benigne,
|
||
|
||
I mene Venus, honurable and digne.
|
||
And in hir houre he walketh forth a pas
|
||
Unto the lystes, ther hire temple was,
|
||
And doun he kneleth, with ful humble cheer,
|
||
And herte soor, and seyde in this manere.
|
||
|
||
"Faireste of faire, O lady myn, Venus,
|
||
Doughter to Jove, and spouse of Vulcanus,
|
||
Thow glader of the Mount of Citheron,
|
||
For thilke love thow haddest to Adoon,
|
||
Have pitee of my bittre teeris smerte,
|
||
|
||
And taak myn humble preyere at thyn herte.
|
||
Allas, I ne have no langage to telle
|
||
Theffectes, ne the tormentz of myn helle!
|
||
Myn herte may myne harmes nat biwreye,
|
||
I am so confus that I kan noght seye.
|
||
|
||
But mercy, lady bright! that knowest weele
|
||
My thought, and seest what harmes that I feele.
|
||
Considere al this, and rewe upon my soore,
|
||
As wisly, as I shal for everemoore,
|
||
Emforth my myght, thy trewe servant be,
|
||
|
||
And holden werre alwey with chastitee.
|
||
That make I myn avow, so ye me helpe.
|
||
I kepe noght of armes for to yelpe,
|
||
Ne I ne axe nat tomorwe to have victorie,
|
||
Ne renoun in this cas, ne veyne glorie
|
||
|
||
Of pris of armes blowen up and doun,
|
||
But I wolde have fully possessioun
|
||
Of Emelye, and dye in thy servyse.
|
||
Fynd thow the manere how, and in what wyse-
|
||
I recche nat, but it may bettre be
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
Youre vertu is so greet in hevene above
|
||
That if yow list, I shal wel have my love.
|
||
|
||
Thy temple wol I worshipe everemo,
|
||
And on thyn auter, where I ride or go,
|
||
I wol doon sacrifice and fires beete.
|
||
And if ye wol nat so, my lady sweete,
|
||
Thanne preye I thee, tomorwe with a spere
|
||
|
||
That Arcita me thurgh the herte bere.
|
||
Thanne rekke I noght, whan I have lost my lyf,
|
||
Though that Arcita wynne hir to his wyf.
|
||
This is theffect and ende of my preyere,
|
||
Yif me my love, thow blisful lady deere!"
|
||
|
||
Whan the orison was doon of Palamon,
|
||
His sacrifice he dide, and that anon,
|
||
Ful pitously with alle circumstaunce;
|
||
Al telle I noght as now his observaunce.
|
||
But atte laste, the statue of Venus shook,
|
||
|
||
And made a signe wherby that he took
|
||
That his preyere accepted was that day.
|
||
For thogh the signe shewed a delay,
|
||
Yet wiste he wel that graunted was his boone,
|
||
And with glad herte he wente hym hoom ful soone.
|
||
|
||
The thridde houre inequal, that Palamon
|
||
Bigan to Venus temple for to gon,
|
||
Up roos the sonne, and up roos Emelye,
|
||
And to the temple of Dyane gan hye.
|
||
Hir maydens that she thider with hir ladde,
|
||
|
||
Ful redily with hem the fyr they ladde,
|
||
Thencens, the clothes, and the remenant al
|
||
That to the sacrifice longen shal.
|
||
The hornes fulle of meeth, as was the gyse,
|
||
Ther lakked noght to doon hir sacrifise,
|
||
|
||
Smokynge 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;
|
||
|
||
And yet it were a game to heeren al,
|
||
To hym that meneth wel it were no charge,
|
||
But it is good a man been at his large.-
|
||
Hir brighte heer was kempt untressed al,
|
||
A coroune of a grene ook cerial
|
||
|
||
Upon hir heed was set, ful fair and meete.
|
||
Two fyres on the suter gan she beete,
|
||
And dide hir thynges as men may biholde
|
||
In Stace of Thebes, and thise bookes olde.
|
||
Whan kyndled was the fyr, with pitous cheere
|
||
|
||
Unto Dyane she spak as ye may heere.
|
||
"O chaste goddesse of the wodes grene,
|
||
To whom bothe hevene and erthe and see is sene,
|
||
Queene of the regne of Pluto derk and lowe,
|
||
Goddesse of maydens, that myn herte hast knowe
|
||
|
||
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 ben a mayden al my lyf,
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere wol I be no love ne wyf.
|
||
I am, thow woost, yet of thy compaignye,
|
||
A mayde, and love huntynge and venerye,
|
||
And for to walken in the wodes wilde,
|
||
And noght to ben a wyf, and be with childe.
|
||
|
||
Noght wol I knowe the compaignye of man;
|
||
Now helpe me, lady, sith ye may and kan,
|
||
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,
|
||
|
||
This grace I preye thee, withoute moore,
|
||
As sende love and pees bitwixe hem two,
|
||
And fro me turne awey hir hertes so,
|
||
That al hir hoote love and hir desir,
|
||
And al hir bisy torment and hir fir,
|
||
|
||
Be queynt, or turned in another place.
|
||
And if so be thou wolt do me no grace,
|
||
And if my destynee be shapen so
|
||
That I shal nedes have oon of hem two,
|
||
As sende me hym that moost desireth me.
|
||
|
||
Bihoold, goddesse, of clene chastitee,
|
||
The bittre teeris that on my chekes falle.
|
||
Syn thou art mayde and kepere of us alle,
|
||
My maydenhede thou kepe and wel conserve,
|
||
And whil I lyve a mayde, I wol thee serve."
|
||
|
||
The fires brenne upon the auter cleere,
|
||
Whil Emelye was thus in hir preyere;
|
||
But sodeynly she saugh a sighte queynte,
|
||
For right anon oon of the fyres queynte,
|
||
And quyked agayn, and after that anon
|
||
|
||
That oother fyr was queynt and al agon.
|
||
And as it queynte, it made a whistelynge
|
||
As doon thise wete brondes in hir brennynge;
|
||
And at the brondes ende out ran anon
|
||
As it were blody dropes many oon;
|
||
|
||
For which so soore agast was Emelye
|
||
That she was wel ny mad, and gan to crye;
|
||
For she ne wiste what it signyfied.
|
||
But oonly for the feere thus hath she cried,
|
||
And weep that it was pitee for to heere;
|
||
|
||
And therwithal Dyane gan appeere,
|
||
With bowe in honde, right as an hunteresse,
|
||
And seyde, "Doghter, stynt thyn hevynesse.
|
||
Among the goddes hye it is affermed,
|
||
And by eterne word writen and confermed,
|
||
|
||
Thou shalt ben wedded unto oon of tho
|
||
That han for thee so muchel care and wo.
|
||
But unto which of hem I may nat telle,
|
||
Farwel, for I ne may no lenger dwelle.
|
||
The fires whiche that on myn auter brenne
|
||
|
||
Shule thee declaren, er that thou go henne,
|
||
Thyn aventure of love, as in this cas."
|
||
And with that word, the arwes in the caas
|
||
Of the goddesse clateren faste and rynge,
|
||
And forth she wente, and made a vanysshynge,
|
||
|
||
For which this Emelye astoned was,
|
||
And seyde, "What amounteth this, allas!
|
||
I putte me in thy proteccioun,
|
||
Dyane, and in thy disposicioun!"
|
||
And hoom she goth anon the nexte weye.
|
||
|
||
This is theffect, ther is namoore to seye.
|
||
The nexte houre of Mars folwynge this
|
||
Arcite unto the temple walked is
|
||
Of fierse Mars, to doon his sacrifise
|
||
With alle the rytes of his payen wyse.
|
||
|
||
With pitous herte and heigh devocioun
|
||
Right thus to Mars he seyde his orisoun.
|
||
"O stronge god, that in the regnes colde
|
||
Of Trace honoured art and lord yholde,
|
||
And hast in every regne and every lond
|
||
|
||
Of armes al the brydel in thyn hond,
|
||
And hem fortunest as thee lyst devyse,
|
||
Accepte of me my pitous sacrifise.
|
||
If so be that my youthe may deserve,
|
||
And that my myght be worthy for to serve
|
||
|
||
Thy godhede, that I may been oon of thyne,
|
||
Thanne preye I thee to rewe upon my pyne.
|
||
For thilke peyne, and thilke hoote fir,
|
||
In which thou whilom brendest for desir
|
||
Whan that thow usedest the greet beautee
|
||
|
||
Of faire yonge fresshe Venus free,
|
||
And haddest hir in armes at thy wille-
|
||
Al though thee ones on a tyme mysfille
|
||
Whan Vulcanus hadde caught thee in his las,
|
||
And foond thee liggynge by his wyf, allas!-
|
||
|
||
For thilke sorwe that was in thyn herte
|
||
Have routhe as wel, upon my peynes smerte!
|
||
I am yong and unkonnynge as thow woost,
|
||
And, as I trowe, with love offended moost
|
||
That evere was any lyves creature;
|
||
|
||
For she that dooth me al this wo endure,
|
||
Ne reccheth nevere wher I synke or fleete.
|
||
And wel I woot, er she me mercy heete,
|
||
I moot with strengthe wynne hir in the place.
|
||
And wel I woot, withouten help or grace
|
||
|
||
Of thee, ne may my strengthe noght availle.
|
||
Thanne help me, lord, tomorwe in my bataille
|
||
For thilke fyr that whilom brente thee,
|
||
As wel as thilke fyr now brenneth me!
|
||
And do that I tomorwe have victorie,
|
||
|
||
Myn be the travaille and thyn be the glorie.
|
||
Thy sovereyn temple wol I moost honouren
|
||
Of any place, and alwey moost labouren
|
||
In thy plesaunce, and in thy craftes stronge,
|
||
And in thy temple I wol my baner honge,
|
||
|
||
And alle the armes of my compaignye;
|
||
And evere-mo, unto that day I dye,
|
||
Eterne fir I wol biforn thee fynde.
|
||
And eek to this avow I wol me bynde;
|
||
My beerd, myn heer, that hongeth long adoun,
|
||
|
||
That nevere yet ne felte offensioun
|
||
Of rasour, nor of shere, I wol thee yeve,
|
||
And ben thy trewe servant whil I lyve.
|
||
Now lord, have routhe upon my sorwes soore;
|
||
Yif me the victorie, I aske thee namoore!"
|
||
|
||
The preyere stynt of Arcita the stronge;
|
||
The rynges on the temple dore that honge,
|
||
And eek the dores clatereden ful faste,
|
||
Of which Arcita somwhat hym agaste.
|
||
The fyres brenden upon the auter brighte,
|
||
|
||
That it gan al the temple for to lighte,
|
||
And sweete smel the ground anon upyaf,
|
||
And Arcita anon his hand uphaf,
|
||
And moore encens into the fyr he caste,
|
||
With othere rytes mo, and atte laste
|
||
|
||
The statue of Mars bigan his hauberk rynge,
|
||
And with that soun he herde a murmurynge,
|
||
Ful lowe and dym, and seyde thus, `Victorie!'
|
||
For which he yaf to Mars honour and glorie;
|
||
And thus with joye and hope wel to fare,
|
||
|
||
Arcite anon unto his in is fare,
|
||
As fayn as fowel is of the brighte sonne.
|
||
And right anon swich strif ther is bigonne
|
||
For thilke grauntyng in the hevene above
|
||
Bitwixe Venus, the Goddesse of Love,
|
||
|
||
And Mars the stierne God armypotente,
|
||
That Jupiter was bisy it to stente;
|
||
Til that the pale Saturnus the colde,
|
||
That knew so manye of aventures olde,
|
||
Foond in his olde experience an art
|
||
|
||
That he ful soone hath plesed every part.
|
||
As sooth is seyd, elde hath greet avantage;
|
||
In elde is bothe wysdom and usage;
|
||
Men may the olde atrenne, and noght atrede.
|
||
Saturne anon, to stynten strif and drede,
|
||
|
||
Al be it that it is agayn his kynde,
|
||
Of al this strif he gan remedie fynde.
|
||
"My deere doghter Venus," quod Saturne,
|
||
"My cours, that hath so wyde for to turne,
|
||
Hath moore power than woot any man.
|
||
|
||
Myn is the drenchyng in the see so wan,
|
||
Myn is the prison in the derke cote,
|
||
Myn is the stranglyng and hangyng by the throte,
|
||
The murmure, and the cherles rebellyng,
|
||
The groynynge, and the pryvee empoysonyng.
|
||
|
||
I do vengeance and pleyn correccioun,
|
||
Whil I dwelle in the signe of the leoun.
|
||
Myn is the ruyne of the hye halles,
|
||
The fallynge of the toures and of the walles
|
||
Upon the mynour, or the carpenter.
|
||
|
||
I slow Sampsoun shakynge the piler,
|
||
And myne be the maladyes colde,
|
||
The derke tresons, and the castes olde;
|
||
My lookyng is the fader of pestilence.
|
||
Now weep namoore, I shal doon diligence
|
||
|
||
That Palamon, that is thyn owene knyght,
|
||
Shal have his lady, as thou hast him hight.
|
||
Though Mars shal helpe his knyght, yet nathelees
|
||
Bitwixe yow ther moot be somtyme pees,
|
||
Al be ye noght of o compleccioun-
|
||
|
||
That causeth al day swich divisioun.
|
||
I am thyn aiel, redy at thy wille,
|
||
Weep now namoore, I wol thy lust fulfille."
|
||
Now wol I stynten of the goddes above,
|
||
Of Mars and of Venus, goddesse of Love,
|
||
|
||
And telle yow, as pleynly as I kan,
|
||
The grete effect for which that I bygan.
|
||
|
||
Explicit tercia pars.
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars quarta.
|
||
|
||
Greet was the feeste in Atthenes that day,
|
||
And eek the lusty seson of that May
|
||
Made every wight to been in such plesaunce
|
||
|
||
That al that Monday justen they and daunce,
|
||
And spenten it in Venus heigh servyse.
|
||
And by the cause that they sholde ryse
|
||
Eerly for to seen the grete fight,
|
||
Unto hir rest wenten they at nyght.
|
||
|
||
And on the morwe, whan that day gan sprynge,
|
||
Of hors and harneys, noyse and claterynge
|
||
Ther was in hostelryes al aboute.
|
||
And to the paleys rood ther many a route
|
||
Of lordes, upon steedes and palfreys.
|
||
|
||
Ther maystow seen divisynge of harneys
|
||
So unkouth and so riche, and wroght so weel,
|
||
Of goldsmythrye, of browdynge, and of steel;
|
||
The sheeldes brighte, testeres, and trappures;
|
||
Gold-hewen helmes, hauberkes, cote-armures;
|
||
|
||
Lordes in parementz on hir courseres,
|
||
Knyghtes of retenue and eek squieres,
|
||
Nailynge the speres, and helmes bokelynge,
|
||
Giggynge of sheeldes, with layneres lacynge.
|
||
There as nede is, they weren nothyng ydel.
|
||
|
||
The fomy steedes on the golden brydel
|
||
Gnawynge, and faste the armurers also
|
||
With fyle and hamer prikynge to and fro;
|
||
Yemen on foote and communes many oon,
|
||
With shorte staves thikke as they may goon,
|
||
|
||
Pypes, trompes, nakerers, clariounes,
|
||
That in the bataille blowen blody sounes;
|
||
The paleys ful of peples up and doun,
|
||
Heere thre, ther ten, holdynge hir questioun,
|
||
Dyvynynge of thise Thebane knyghtes two.
|
||
|
||
Somme seyden thus, somme seyde it shal be so,
|
||
Somme helden with hym with the blake berd,
|
||
Somme with the balled, somme with the thikke-herd,
|
||
Somme seyde he looked grymme, and he wolde fighte,
|
||
He hath a sparth of twenty pound of wighte,
|
||
|
||
Thus was the halle ful of divynynge
|
||
Longe after that the sonne gan to sprynge.
|
||
The grete Theseus, that of his sleep awaked
|
||
With mynstralcie and noyse that was maked,
|
||
Heeld yet the chambre of his paleys riche,
|
||
|
||
Til that the Thebane knyghtes, bothe yliche
|
||
Honured, were into the paleys fet.
|
||
Due Theseus was at a wyndow set,
|
||
Arrayed, right as he were a god in trone.
|
||
The peple preesseth thiderward ful soone,
|
||
|
||
Hym for to seen and doon heigh reverence.
|
||
And eek to herkne his heste and his sentence.
|
||
An heraud on a scaffold made an "Oo!"
|
||
Til al the noyse of peple was ydo,
|
||
And whan he saugh the peple of noyse al stille,
|
||
|
||
Tho shewed he the myghty dukes wille.
|
||
"The lord hath of his heigh discrecioun
|
||
Considered, that it were destruccioun
|
||
To gentil blood, to fighten in the gyse
|
||
Of mortal bataille, now in this emprise;
|
||
|
||
Wherfore, to shapen that they shal nat dye,
|
||
He wolde his firste purpos modifye.
|
||
No man therfore, up peyne of los of lyf,
|
||
No maner shot, ne polax, ne short knyf
|
||
Into the lystes sende, ne thider brynge.
|
||
|
||
Ne short swerd for to stoke, with poynt bitynge,
|
||
No man ne drawe, ne bere by his syde;
|
||
Ne no man shal unto his felawe ryde
|
||
But o cours, with a sharpe ygrounde spere.
|
||
Foyne if hym list on foote, hym-self to were;
|
||
|
||
And he that is at meschief shal be take,
|
||
And noght slayn, but be broght unto the stake
|
||
That shal ben ordeyned on either syde,
|
||
But thider he shal by force, and there abyde.
|
||
And if so be the chevetayn be take
|
||
|
||
On outher syde, or elles sleen his make,
|
||
No lenger shal the turneiynge laste.
|
||
God spede you, gooth forth, and ley on faste!
|
||
With long swerd and with maces fight youre fille;
|
||
Gooth now youre wey, this is the lordes wille."
|
||
|
||
The voys of peple touchede the hevene,
|
||
So loude cride they with murie stevene,
|
||
"God save swich a lord, that is so good
|
||
He wilneth no destruccion of blood."
|
||
Up goon the trompes and the melodye,
|
||
|
||
And to the lystes rit the compaignye,
|
||
By ordinance, thurgh-out the citee large
|
||
Hanged with clooth of gold, and nat with sarge.
|
||
Ful lik a lord this noble duc gan ryde,
|
||
Thise two Thebanes upon either syde,
|
||
|
||
And after rood the queene and Emelye,
|
||
And after that another compaignye,
|
||
Of oon and oother, after hir degre;
|
||
And thus they passen thurgh-out the citee
|
||
And to the lystes come they by tyme.
|
||
|
||
It nas nat of the day yet fully pryme
|
||
Whan set was Theseus ful riche and hye,
|
||
Ypolita the queene, and Emelye,
|
||
And othere ladys in degrees aboute.
|
||
Unto the seettes preesseth al the route,
|
||
|
||
And westward thurgh the gates under Marte,
|
||
Arcite, and eek the hondred of his parte,
|
||
With baner reed is entred right anon.
|
||
And in that selve moment Palamon
|
||
Is under Venus estward in the place,
|
||
|
||
With baner whyt, and hardy chiere and face.
|
||
In al the world to seken up and doun
|
||
So evene withouten variacioun
|
||
Ther nere swiche compaignyes tweye!
|
||
For ther was noon so wys, that koude seye
|
||
|
||
That any hadde of oother avauntage,
|
||
Of worthynesse ne of estaat ne age,
|
||
So evene were they chosen, for to gesse.
|
||
And in two renges faire they hem dresse,
|
||
Whan that hir names rad were everichon,
|
||
|
||
That in hir nombre gyle were ther noon.
|
||
Tho were the gates shet and cried was loude,
|
||
"Do now youre devoir, yonge knyghtes proude!"
|
||
The heraudes lefte hir prikyng up and doun;
|
||
Now ryngen trompes loude and clarioun.
|
||
|
||
Ther is namoore to seyn, but west and est
|
||
In goon the speres ful sadly in arrest,
|
||
In gooth the sharpe spore into the syde.
|
||
Ther seen men who kan juste, and who kan ryde,
|
||
Ther shyveren shaftes upon sheeldes thikke;
|
||
|
||
He feeleth thurgh the herte-spoon the prikke.
|
||
Up spryngen speres twenty foot on highte;
|
||
Out gooth the swerdes as the silver brighte.
|
||
The helmes they tohewen and toshrede,
|
||
Out brest the blood, with stierne stremes rede,
|
||
|
||
With myghty maces the bones they tobreste.
|
||
He thurgh the thikkeste of the throng gan threste;
|
||
Ther stomblen steedes stronge, and doun gooth al;
|
||
He rolleth under foot as dooth a bal,
|
||
He foyneth on his feet with his tronchoun,
|
||
|
||
And he hym hurtleth with his hors adoun.
|
||
He thurgh the body is hurt and sithen ytake,
|
||
Maugree his heed, and broght unto the stake,
|
||
As forward was, right there he moste abyde;
|
||
Another lad is on that oother syde.
|
||
|
||
And som tyme dooth hem Theseus to reste,
|
||
Hem to refresshe, and drynken if hem leste.
|
||
Ful ofte a day han thise Thebanes two
|
||
Togydre ymet, and wroght his felawe wo.
|
||
Unhorsed hath ech oother of hem tweye,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ther nas no tygre in the vlae of Galgopheye
|
||
Whan that hir whelp is stole, whan it is lite,
|
||
So crueel on the hunte, as is Arcite
|
||
For jelous herte upon this Palamoun;
|
||
Ne in Belmarye ther nys so fel leoun
|
||
|
||
That hunted is, or for his hunger wood,
|
||
Ne of his praye desireth so the blood,
|
||
As Palamoun to sleen his foo Arcite.
|
||
The jelous strokes on hir helmes byte,
|
||
Out renneth blood on bothe hir sydes rede.
|
||
|
||
Som tyme an ende ther is of every dede;
|
||
For er the sonne unto the reste wente,
|
||
The stronge kyng Emetreus gan hente
|
||
This Palamon, as he faught with Arcite,
|
||
And made his swerd depe in his flessh to byte.
|
||
|
||
And by the force of twenty is he take
|
||
Unyolden, and ydrawe unto the stake.
|
||
And in the rescous of this Palamoun
|
||
The stronge kyng Lygurge is born adoun,
|
||
And kyng Emetreus, for al his strengthe,
|
||
|
||
Is born out of his sadel a swerdes lengthe,
|
||
So hitte him Palamoun er he were take;
|
||
But al for noght, he was broght to the stake.
|
||
His hardy herte myghte hym helpe naught,
|
||
He moste abyde, whan that he was caught,
|
||
|
||
By force, and eek by composicioun.
|
||
Who sorweth now but woful Palamoun,
|
||
That moot namoore goon agayn to fighte?
|
||
And whan that Theseus hadde seyn this sighte
|
||
Unto the folk that foghten thus echon
|
||
|
||
He cryde, "Hoo! namoore, for it is doon.
|
||
I wol be trewe juge, and no partie;
|
||
Arcite of Thebes shal have Emelie,
|
||
That by his fortune hath hir faire ywonne!"
|
||
Anon ther is a noyse of peple bigonne
|
||
|
||
For joye of this so loude and heighe withalle
|
||
It semed that the lystes sholde falle.
|
||
What kan now faire Venus doon above?
|
||
What seith she now, what dooth this queene of Love,
|
||
But wepeth so, for wantynge of hir wille,
|
||
|
||
Til that hir teeres in the lystes fille.
|
||
She seyde, "I am ashamed, doutelees."
|
||
Saturnus seyde, "Doghter, hoold thy pees,
|
||
Mars hath his wille, his knyght hath al his boone,
|
||
And, by myn heed, thow shalt been esed soone."
|
||
|
||
The trompes with the loude mynstralcie,
|
||
The heraudes that ful loude yolle and crie,
|
||
Been in hir wele for joye of Daun Arcite.
|
||
But herkneth me, and stynteth now a lite,
|
||
Which a myracle ther bifel anon.
|
||
|
||
This fierse Arcite hath of his helm ydon,
|
||
And on a courser for to shewe his face
|
||
He priketh endelong the large place,
|
||
Lokynge upward upon this Emelye,
|
||
And she agayn hym caste a freendlich eye,
|
||
|
||
(For wommen, as to speken in commune,
|
||
They folwen al the favour of Fortune)
|
||
And she was al his chiere, as in his herte.
|
||
Out of the ground a furie infernal sterte,
|
||
From Pluto sent, at requeste of Saturne,
|
||
|
||
For which his hors for fere gan to turne,
|
||
And leep aside and foundred as he leep.
|
||
And er that Arcite may taken keep,
|
||
He pighte hym on the pomel of his heed,
|
||
That in the place he lay as he were deed,
|
||
|
||
His brest tobrosten with his sadel-bowe.
|
||
As blak he lay as any cole or crowe,
|
||
So was the blood yronnen in his face.
|
||
Anon he was yborn out of the place,
|
||
With herte soor, to Theseus paleys.
|
||
|
||
Tho was he korven out of his harneys,
|
||
And in a bed ybrought ful faire and blyve,
|
||
For he was yet in memorie and alyve,
|
||
And alwey criynge after Emelye.
|
||
Duc Theseus, with al hes compaignye,
|
||
|
||
Is comen hoom to Atthenes 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,
|
||
|
||
He shal been heeled of his maladye.
|
||
And of another thyng they weren as fayn,
|
||
That of hem alle was ther noon yslayn,
|
||
Al were they soore yhurt, and namely oon,
|
||
That with a spere was thirled his brest-boon.
|
||
|
||
To othere woundes, and to broken armes,
|
||
Somme hadden salves, and somme hadden charmes,
|
||
Fermacies of herbes and eek save
|
||
They dronken, for they wolde hir lymes have.
|
||
For which this noble duc as he wel kan,
|
||
|
||
Conforteth and honoureth every man,
|
||
And made revel al the longe nyght
|
||
Unto the straunge lordes, as was right.
|
||
Ne ther was holden no disconfitynge
|
||
But as a justes or a tourneiynge,
|
||
|
||
For soothly ther was no disconfiture-
|
||
For fallyng nys nat but an aventure-
|
||
Ne to be lad by force unto the stake
|
||
Unyolden, and with twenty knyghtes take,
|
||
O persone allone, withouten mo,
|
||
|
||
And haryed forth by arme, foot, and too,
|
||
And eke his steede dryven forth with staves,
|
||
With footmen, bothe yemen and eek knaves,
|
||
It nas aretted hym no vileynye,
|
||
Ther may no man clepen it cowardye.
|
||
|
||
For which anon duc Theseus leet crye,
|
||
To stynten alle rancour and envye,
|
||
The gree, as wel of o syde as of oother,
|
||
And eyther syde ylik as ootheres brother,
|
||
And yaf hem yiftes after hir degree,
|
||
|
||
And fully heeld a feeste dayes three,
|
||
And convoyed the kynges worthily
|
||
Out of his toun a journee, largely;
|
||
And hoom wente every man, the righte way,
|
||
Ther was namoore but `fare-wel, have good day.'
|
||
|
||
Of this bataille I wol namoore endite,
|
||
But speke of Palamoun and of Arcite.
|
||
Swelleth the brest of Arcite, and the soore
|
||
Encreesseth at his herte moore and moore.
|
||
The clothered blood for any lechecraft
|
||
|
||
Corrupteth, and is in his bouk ylaft,
|
||
That neither veyne-blood, ne ventusynge,
|
||
Ne drynke of herbes may ben his helpynge.
|
||
The vertu expulsif, or animal,
|
||
Fro thilke vertu cleped natural
|
||
|
||
Ne may the venym voyden, ne expelle.
|
||
The pipes of his longes gonne to swelle,
|
||
And every lacerte in his brest adoun
|
||
Is shent with venym and corrupcioun.
|
||
Hym gayneth neither for to gete his lif
|
||
|
||
Vomyt upward, ne dounward laxatif;
|
||
Al is tobrosten thilke regioun,
|
||
Nature hath now no dominacioun.
|
||
And certeinly, ther Nature wol nat wirche,
|
||
Fare-wel phisik, go ber the man to chirche!
|
||
|
||
This al and som, that Arcita moot dye;
|
||
For which he sendeth after Emelye
|
||
And Palamon, that was his cosyn deere.
|
||
Thanne seyde he thus, as ye shal after heere:
|
||
"Naught may the woful spirit in myn herte
|
||
|
||
Declare o point of alle my sorwes smerte
|
||
To yow, my lady, that I love moost.
|
||
But I biquethe the servyce of my goost
|
||
To yow aboven every creature.
|
||
Syn that my lyf may no lenger dure,
|
||
|
||
Allas, the wo! allas, the peynes stronge
|
||
That I for yow have suffred, and so longe!
|
||
Allas, the deeth! allas, myn Emelye!
|
||
Allas, departynge of our compaignye!
|
||
Allas, myn hertes queene! allas, my wyf!
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
Allone, withouten any compaignye.
|
||
Fare-wel, my swete foo, myn Emelye,
|
||
|
||
And softe taak me in youre armes tweye,
|
||
For love of God, and herkneth what I seye.
|
||
"I have heer with my cosyn Palamon
|
||
Had strif and rancour many a day agon,
|
||
For love of yow, and for my jalousye.
|
||
|
||
And Juppiter so wys my soule gye
|
||
To speken of a servaunt proprely,
|
||
With alle circumstances trewely,
|
||
That is to seyn, trouthe, honour, and knyghthede,
|
||
Wysdom, humblesse, estaat, and heigh kynrede,
|
||
|
||
Fredom, and al that longeth to that art,
|
||
So Juppiter 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 doon al his lyf;
|
||
|
||
And if that evere ye shul ben a wyf,
|
||
Foryet nat Palamon, the gentil man."
|
||
And with that word his speche faille gan,
|
||
And from his herte up to his brest was come
|
||
The coold of deeth, that hadde hym overcome.
|
||
|
||
And yet moreover in hise armes two
|
||
The vital strengthe is lost and al ago.
|
||
Oonly the intellect, withouten moore,
|
||
That dwelled in his herte syk and soore
|
||
Gan faillen, when the herte felte deeth.
|
||
|
||
Dusked hise eyen two, and failled breeth,
|
||
But on his lady yet caste he his eye.
|
||
His laste word was "mercy, Emelye!"
|
||
His spirit chaunged hous, and wente ther
|
||
As I cam nevere, I kan nat tellen wher,
|
||
|
||
Therfore I stynte; I nam no divinistre,
|
||
Of soules fynde I nat in this registre,
|
||
Ne me ne list thilke opinions to telle
|
||
Of hem, though that they writen wher they dwelle.
|
||
Arcite is coold, ther Mars his soule gye:
|
||
|
||
Now wol I speken forthe of Emelye.
|
||
Shrighte Emelye, and howleth Palamon,
|
||
And Theseus his suster took anon
|
||
Swownynge, and baar hir fro the corps away.
|
||
What helpeth it to tarien forth the day
|
||
|
||
To tellen how she weep bothe eve and morwe?
|
||
For in swich cas wommen have swich sorwe
|
||
Whan that hir housbond is from hem ago,
|
||
That for the moore part they sorwen so,
|
||
Or ellis fallen in swich maladye,
|
||
|
||
That at the laste certeinly they dye.
|
||
Infinite been the sorwes and the teeres
|
||
Of olde folk, and eek of tendre yeeres
|
||
In al the toun, for deeth of this Theban.
|
||
For hym ther wepeth bothe child and man;
|
||
|
||
So greet a wepyng was ther noon, certayn,
|
||
Whan Ector was ybroght al fressh yslayn
|
||
To Troye, allas, the pitee that was ther!
|
||
Cracchynge of chekes, rentynge eek of heer;
|
||
"Why soldestow be deed," thise wommen crye,
|
||
|
||
"And haddest gold ynough, and Emelye?"
|
||
No man myghte gladen Theseus,
|
||
Savynge his olde fader, Egeus,
|
||
That knew this worldes transmutacioun,
|
||
As he hadde seyn it chaungen up and doun,
|
||
|
||
Joye after wo, and wo after gladnesse,
|
||
And shewed hem ensamples and liknesse.
|
||
"Right as ther dyed nevere man," quod he,
|
||
"That he ne lyvede in erthe in som degree,
|
||
Right so ther lyvede never man," he seyde,
|
||
|
||
"In al this world that somtyme he ne deyde.
|
||
This world nys but a thurghfare ful of wo,
|
||
And we been pilgrymes passynge to and fro.
|
||
Deeth is an ende of every worldes soore."
|
||
And over al this yet seyde he muchel moore,
|
||
|
||
To this effect ful wisely to enhorte
|
||
The peple, that they sholde hem reconforte.
|
||
Duc Theseus, with al his bisy cure,
|
||
Caste now, wher that the sepulture
|
||
Of goode Arcite may best ymaked be,
|
||
|
||
And eek moost honurable in his degree.
|
||
And at the laste he took conclusioun
|
||
That ther as first Arcite and Palamoun
|
||
Hadden for love the bataille hem bitwene,
|
||
That in that selve grove swoote and grene
|
||
|
||
Ther as he hadde hise amorouse desires,
|
||
His compleynte, and for love hise hoote fires
|
||
He wolde make a fyr, in which the office
|
||
Funeral he myghte al accomplice;
|
||
And leet comande anon to hakke and hewe
|
||
|
||
The okes olde, and leye hem on a rewe
|
||
In colpons, wel arrayed for to brenne.
|
||
Hise officers with swifte feet they renne
|
||
And ryden anon at his comandement;
|
||
And after this Theseus hath ysent
|
||
|
||
After a beere, and it al over-spradde
|
||
With clooth of gold, the richeste that he hadde.
|
||
And of the same suyte he cladde Arcite,
|
||
Upon his hondes hadde he gloves white,
|
||
EEk on his heed a coroune of laurer grene,
|
||
|
||
And in his hond a swerd ful bright and kene.
|
||
He leyde hym bare the visage on the beere,
|
||
Ther-with he weep that pitee was to heere.
|
||
And for the peple sholde seen hym alle,
|
||
Whan it was day, he broghte hym to the halle,
|
||
|
||
That roreth of the criyng and the soun.
|
||
Tho cam this woful Theban, Palamoun,
|
||
With flotery berd and rugged asshy heeres,
|
||
In clothes blake, ydropped al with teeres,
|
||
And passynge othere of wepynge Emelye,
|
||
|
||
The rewefulleste of al the compaignye.
|
||
In as muche as the servyce sholde be
|
||
The moore noble and riche in his degree,
|
||
Duc Theseus leet forth thre steedes brynge
|
||
That trapped were in steel al gliterynge,
|
||
|
||
And covered with the armes of daun Arcite.
|
||
Upon thise steedes that weren grete and white
|
||
Ther sitten folk, of whiche oon baar his sheeld,
|
||
Another his spere up in his hondes heeld,
|
||
The thridde baar with hym his bowe Turkeys,
|
||
|
||
Of brend gold was the caas, and eek the harneys;
|
||
And riden forth a paas, with sorweful cheere,
|
||
Toward the grove, as ye shul after heere.
|
||
The nobleste of the Grekes that ther were
|
||
Upon hir shuldres caryeden the beere,
|
||
|
||
With slakke paas, and eyen rede and wete,
|
||
Thurghout the citee by the maister-strete,
|
||
That sprad was al with blak, and wonder hye
|
||
Right of the same is the strete ywrye.
|
||
Upon the right hond wente olde Egeus,
|
||
|
||
And on that oother syde duc Theseus,
|
||
With vessel in hir hand of gold ful fyn,
|
||
Al ful of hony, milk, and blood, and wyn.
|
||
Eek Palamon, with ful greet compaignye,
|
||
And after that cam woful Emelye,
|
||
|
||
With fyr in honde, as was that tyme the gyse,
|
||
To do the office of funeral servyse.
|
||
Heigh labour, and ful greet apparaillynge,
|
||
Was at the service and the fyr makynge,
|
||
That with his grene top the heven raughte,
|
||
|
||
And twenty fadme of brede the armes straughte;
|
||
This is to seyn, the bowes weren so brode.
|
||
Of stree first ther was leyd ful many a lode,
|
||
But how the fyr was maked upon highte,
|
||
Ne eek the names that the trees highte,
|
||
|
||
As, ook, firre, birch, aspe, alder, holm, popeler,
|
||
Wylugh, elm, plane, assh, box, chasteyn, lynde, laurer,
|
||
Mapul, thorn, bech, hasel, ew, whippeltre,
|
||
How they weren fild shal nat be toold for me,
|
||
Ne how the goddes ronnen up and doun
|
||
|
||
Disherited of hir habitacioun,
|
||
In whiche they woneden in reste and pees,
|
||
Nymphes, Fawnes, and Amadrides;
|
||
Ne how the beestes and the briddes alle
|
||
Fledden for fere, whan the wode was falle;
|
||
|
||
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 thanne with drye stokkes clovena thre,
|
||
And thanne with grene wode and spicerye,
|
||
|
||
And thanne with clooth of gold and with perrye,
|
||
And gerlandes hangynge with ful many a flour,
|
||
The mirre, thencens, with al so greet odour;
|
||
Ne how Arcite lay among al this,
|
||
Ne what richesse aboute his body is,
|
||
|
||
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 desir,
|
||
Ne what jeweles men in the fyr caste,
|
||
|
||
Whan that the fyr was greet and brente faste;
|
||
Ne how somme caste hir sheeld, and somme hir spere,
|
||
And of hire vestimentz whiche that they were,
|
||
And coppes full of wyn, and milk, and blood,
|
||
Into the fyr, that brente as it were wood,
|
||
|
||
Ne how the Grekes, with an huge route,
|
||
Thryes riden al the place aboute,
|
||
Upon the left hand with a loud shoutynge,
|
||
And thries with hir speres claterynge,
|
||
And thries how the ladyes gonne crye,
|
||
|
||
And how that lad was homward Emelye;
|
||
Ne how Arcite is brent to asshen colde,
|
||
Ne how that lychewake was yholde
|
||
Al thilke nyght, ne how the Grekes pleye
|
||
The wakepleyes ne kepe I nat to seye,
|
||
|
||
Who wrastleth best naked, with oille enoynt,
|
||
Ne who that baar hym best in no disjoynt;
|
||
I wol nat tellen eek, how that they goon
|
||
Hoom til Atthenes, whan the pley is doon;
|
||
But shortly to the point thanne wol I wende,
|
||
|
||
And maken of my longe tale an ende.
|
||
By processe, and by lengthe of certeyn yeres,
|
||
Al stynted is the moornynge and the teres
|
||
Of Grekes, by oon general assent.
|
||
Thanne semed me ther was a parlement
|
||
|
||
|
||
At Atthenes, upon certein pointz and caas,
|
||
Among the whiche pointz yspoken was
|
||
To have with certein contrees alliaunce,
|
||
And have fully of Thebans obeisaunce,
|
||
For which this noble Theseus anon
|
||
|
||
Leet senden after gentil Palamon,
|
||
Unwist of hym what was the cause and why.
|
||
But in hise blake clothes sorwefully
|
||
He cam at his comandement in hye;
|
||
Tho sente Theseus for Emelye.
|
||
|
||
Whan they were set, and hust was al the place,
|
||
And Theseus abiden hadde a space
|
||
Er any word cam fram his wise brest,
|
||
Hise eyen sette he ther as was his lest,
|
||
And with a sad visage he siked stille,
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
Greet was theffect, and heigh was his entente;
|
||
Wel wiste he, why, and what therof he mente,
|
||
|
||
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 same moevere," quod he,
|
||
"Hath stablissed in this wrecched world adoun
|
||
|
||
Certeyne dayes and duracioun
|
||
To al that is engendred in this place,
|
||
Over the whiche day they may nat pace;
|
||
Al mowe they yet tho dayes wel abregge,
|
||
Ther nedeth noght noon auctoritee allegge,
|
||
|
||
For it is preeved by experience-
|
||
But that me list declaren my sentence.
|
||
Thanne may men by this ordre wel discerne
|
||
That thilke moevere stable is and eterne.
|
||
Wel may men knowe, but it be a fool,
|
||
|
||
That every part deryveth from his hool;
|
||
For nature hath nat taken his bigynnyng
|
||
Of no partie nor cantel of a thyng,
|
||
But of a thyng that parfit is and stable,
|
||
Descendynge so til it be corrumpable;
|
||
|
||
And therfore, of his wise purveiaunce,
|
||
He hath so wel biset his ordinaunce,
|
||
That speces of thynges and progressiouns
|
||
Shullen enduren by successiouns,
|
||
And nat eterne, withouten any lye.
|
||
|
||
This maystow understonde and seen at eye.
|
||
Lo the ook, that hath so long a norisshynge
|
||
From tyme that it first bigynneth sprynge,
|
||
And hath so long a lif, as we may see,
|
||
Yet at the laste wasted is the tree.
|
||
|
||
Considereth eek, how that the harde stoon
|
||
Under oure feet, on which we trede and goon,
|
||
Yit wasteth it, as it lyth by the weye.
|
||
The brode ryver somtyme wexeth dreye,
|
||
The grete toures se we wane and wende,
|
||
|
||
Thanne may ye se that al this thyng hath ende.
|
||
Of man and womman seen we wel also,
|
||
That nedeth, in oon of thise termes two,
|
||
This is to seyn, in youthe or elles age,
|
||
He moot be deed, the kyng as shal a page.
|
||
|
||
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 thyng moot deye.
|
||
What maketh this, but Juppiter the kyng,
|
||
|
||
That is prince and cause of alle thyng
|
||
Convertyng al unto his propre welle
|
||
From which it is deryved, sooth to telle,
|
||
And heer agayns no creature on lyve
|
||
Of no degree availleth for to stryve.
|
||
|
||
Thanne is it wysdom, as it thynketh me,
|
||
To maken vertu of necessitee,
|
||
And take it weel, that we may nat eschue;
|
||
And namely, that to us alle is due.
|
||
And who so gruccheth ought, he dooth folye,
|
||
|
||
And rebel is to hym that al may gye.
|
||
And certeinly, a man hath moost honour
|
||
To dyen in his excellence and flour,
|
||
Whan he is siker of his goode name,
|
||
Thanne hath he doon his freend ne hym no shame.
|
||
|
||
And galdder oghte his freend been of his deeth,
|
||
Whan with honour upyolden in his breeth,
|
||
Than whan his name apalled is for age;
|
||
For al forgeten is his vassellage.
|
||
Thanne is it best as for a worthy fame,
|
||
|
||
To dyen whan that he is best of name.
|
||
The contrarie of al this is wilfulnesse:
|
||
Why grucchen heere his cosyn and his wyf
|
||
That goode Arcite, of chivalrie flour,
|
||
Departed is with duetee and honour
|
||
|
||
Out of this foule prisoun of this lyf?
|
||
Why grucchen heere his cosyn and his wyf
|
||
Of his welfare, that loved hem so weel?
|
||
Kan he hem thank? Nay, God woot never a deel!
|
||
That bothe his soule and eek hemself offende,
|
||
|
||
And yet they mowe hir lustes nat amende.
|
||
What may I concluden of this longe serye,
|
||
But after wo I rede us to be merye,
|
||
And thanken Juppiter of al his grace?
|
||
And er that we departen from this place
|
||
|
||
I rede that we make, of sorwes two,
|
||
O parfit joye lastyng everemo.
|
||
And looketh now, wher moost sorwe is her inne,
|
||
Ther wol we first amenden and bigynne.
|
||
"Suster," quod he, "this is my fulle assent,
|
||
|
||
With all thavys heere of my parlement,
|
||
That gentil Palamon thyn owene kynght,
|
||
That serveth yow with wille, herte, and myght,
|
||
And evere hath doon, syn that ye first hym knewe,
|
||
That ye shul of your grace upon hym rewe,
|
||
|
||
And taken hym for housbonde and for lord.
|
||
Lene me youre hond, for this is oure accord.
|
||
Lat se now of youre wommanly pitee;
|
||
He is a kynges brother sone, pardee,
|
||
And though he were a povre bacheler,
|
||
|
||
Syn he hath served yow so many a yeer,
|
||
And had for yow so greet adversitee,
|
||
It moste been considered, leeveth me,
|
||
For gentil mercy oghte to passen right."
|
||
Thanne seyde he thus to Palamon ful right:
|
||
|
||
"I trowe ther nedeth litel sermonyng
|
||
To make yow assente to this thyng.
|
||
Com neer, and taak youre lady by the hond."
|
||
Bitwixen hem was maad anon the bond
|
||
That highte matrimoigne, or mariage,
|
||
|
||
By al the conseil and the baronage.
|
||
And thus with alle blisse and melodye
|
||
Hath Palamon ywedded Emelye;
|
||
And God, that al this wyde world hath wroght,
|
||
Sende hym his love that hath it deere aboght!
|
||
|
||
For now is Palamon in alle wele,
|
||
Lyvynge in blisse, in richesse, and in heele,
|
||
And Emelye hym loveth so tendrely,
|
||
And he hir serveth al so gentilly,
|
||
That nevere was ther no word hem bitwene,
|
||
|
||
Of jalousie, or any oother teene.
|
||
Thus endeth Palamon and Emelye,
|
||
And God save al this faire compaignye!-Amen-
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the knyghtes tale.
|
||
Part 3
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE MILLERES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere folwen the wordes bitwene the Hoost and the Millere
|
||
|
||
Whan that the Knyght had thus his tale ytoold,
|
||
In al the route ne was ther yong ne oold
|
||
|
||
That he ne seyde it was a noble storie,
|
||
And worthy for to drawen to memorie;
|
||
And namely the gentils everichon.
|
||
Oure Hooste lough, and swoor, "So moot I gon,
|
||
This gooth aright, unbokeled is the male,
|
||
|
||
Lat se now who shal telle another tale,
|
||
For trewely the game is wel bigonne.
|
||
Now telleth on, sir Monk, if that ye konne
|
||
Somwhat to quite with the Knyghtes tale."
|
||
The Miller that for-dronken was al pale,
|
||
|
||
So that unnethe upon his hors he sat,
|
||
He nolde avalen neither hood ne hat,
|
||
Ne abyde no man for his curteisie,
|
||
But in Pilates voys he gan to crie,
|
||
And swoor by armes and by blood and bones,
|
||
|
||
"I kan a noble tale for the nones,
|
||
With which I wol now quite the Knyghtes tale."
|
||
Oure Hooste saugh that he was dronke of ale,
|
||
And seyde, "Abyd, Robyn, my leeve brother,
|
||
Som bettre man shal telle us first another,
|
||
|
||
Abyd, and lat us werken thriftily."
|
||
"By Goddes soule," quod he, "that wol nat I,
|
||
For I wol speke, or elles go my wey."
|
||
Oure Hoost answerde, "Tel on, a devele wey!
|
||
Thou art a fool, thy wit is overcome!
|
||
|
||
"Now herkneth," quod the Miller, "alle and some,
|
||
But first I make a protestacioun
|
||
That I am dronke, I knowe it by my soun;
|
||
And therfore, if that I mysspeke or seye,
|
||
Wyte it the ale of Southwerk I you preye.
|
||
|
||
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."
|
||
The Rev answerde and seyde, "Stynt thy clappe,
|
||
Lat be thy lewed dronken harlotrye,
|
||
|
||
It is a synne and eek a greet folye
|
||
To apeyren any man or hym defame,
|
||
And eek to bryngen wyves in swich fame;
|
||
Thou mayst ynogh of othere thynges seyn."
|
||
This dronke Miller spak ful soone ageyn,
|
||
|
||
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 goode wyves many oon,
|
||
And evere a thousand goode ayeyns oon badde;
|
||
|
||
That knowestow wel thyself, but if thou madde.
|
||
Why artow angry with my tale now?
|
||
I have a wyf, pardee, as wel as thow,
|
||
Yet nolde I for the oxen in my plogh
|
||
Take upon me moore than ynogh,
|
||
|
||
As demen of myself that I were oon;
|
||
I wol bileve wel, that I am noon.
|
||
An housbonde shal nat been inquisityf
|
||
Of Goddes pryvetee, nor of his wyf.
|
||
So he may fynde Goddes foysoun there,
|
||
|
||
Of the remenant nedeth nat enquere."
|
||
What sholde I moore seyn, but this Miller
|
||
He nolde his wordes for no man forbere,
|
||
But tolde his cherles tale in his manere;
|
||
Me thynketh that I shal reherce it heere.
|
||
|
||
And therfore every gentil wight I preye,
|
||
For Goddes love, demeth nat that I seye
|
||
Of yvel entente, but that I moot reherce
|
||
Hir tales alle, be they bettre or werse,
|
||
Or elles falsen som of my mateere.
|
||
|
||
And therfore who-so list it nat yheere,
|
||
Turne over the leef, and chese another tale;
|
||
For he shal fynde ynowe, grete and smale,
|
||
Of storial thyng that toucheth gentillesse,
|
||
And eek moralitee, and hoolynesse.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Blameth nat me if that ye chese amys;
|
||
The Miller is a cherl, ye knowe wel this,
|
||
So was the Reve, and othere manye mo,
|
||
And harlotrie they tolden bothe two.
|
||
Avyseth yow, and put me out of blame,
|
||
|
||
And eek men shal nat maken ernest of game.
|
||
|
||
THE TALE
|
||
|
||
(One John, a rich and credulous carpenter of Oxford, is
|
||
beguiled by his wife Alison, through Nicholas, a poor
|
||
scholar boarding with them. Absolon, the parish clerk, is
|
||
slighted by Alison; but wreaks vengeance on Nicholas.)
|
||
Part 4
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE REVES TALE
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Reves Tale.
|
||
|
||
Whan folk hadde laughen at this nyce cas
|
||
Of Absolon and hende Nicholas,
|
||
Diverse folk diversely they seyde,
|
||
But for the moore part they loughe and pleyde,
|
||
Ne at this tale I saugh no man hym greve,
|
||
|
||
But it were oonly Osewold the Reve;
|
||
Bycause he was of carpenteres craft,
|
||
A litel ire is in his herte ylaft;
|
||
He gan to grucche, and blamed it a lite.
|
||
"So theek," quod he, "ful wel koude I you quite,
|
||
|
||
With bleryng of a proud milleres eye,
|
||
If that me liste speke of ribaudye.
|
||
But ik am oold, me list no pley for age,
|
||
Gras-tyme is doon, my fodder is now forage,
|
||
This white top writeth myne olde yeris,
|
||
|
||
Myn herte is also mowled as myne heris,
|
||
But if I fare as dooth an openers;
|
||
That ilke fruyt is ever leng the wers,
|
||
Til it be roten in mullok or in stree.
|
||
We olde men, I drede, so fare we,
|
||
|
||
Til we be roten kan we nat be rype.
|
||
We hoppen ay whil that the world wol pype,
|
||
For in oure wyl ther stiketh evere a nayl
|
||
To have an hoor heed and a grene tayl,
|
||
As hath a leek, for thogh oure myght be goon,
|
||
|
||
Oure wyl desireth folie evere in oon.
|
||
For whan we may nat doon, than wol we speke,
|
||
Yet in oure asshen olde is fyr yreke.
|
||
Foure gleedes han we whiche I shal devyse,
|
||
Avauntyng, liyng, anger, coveitise;
|
||
|
||
Thise foure sparkles longen unto eelde.
|
||
Oure olde lemes mowe wel been unweelde,
|
||
But wyl ne shal nat faillen, that is sooth.
|
||
And yet ik have alwey a coltes tooth,
|
||
As many a yeer as it is passed henne
|
||
|
||
Syn that my tappe of lif bigan to renne.
|
||
For sikerly whan I was bore, anon
|
||
Deeth drough the tappe of lyf, and leet it gon,
|
||
And ever sithe hath so the tappe yronne,
|
||
Til that almoost al empty is the tonne.
|
||
|
||
The streem of lyf now droppeth on the chymbe;
|
||
The sely tonge may wel rynge and chymbe
|
||
Of wrecchednesse that passed is ful yoore.
|
||
With olde folk, save dotage, is namoore."
|
||
Whan that oure Hoost hadde herd this sermonyng,
|
||
|
||
He gan to speke as lordly as a kyng,
|
||
He seide, "What amounteth al this wit?
|
||
What shul we speke alday of hooly writ?
|
||
The devel made a reve for to preche,
|
||
And of a soutere, shipman, or a leche.
|
||
|
||
Sey forth thy tale, and tarie nat the tyme.
|
||
Lo Depeford, and it is half-wey pryme;
|
||
Lo, Grenewych, ther many a shrewe is inne;
|
||
It were al tyme thy tale to bigynne."
|
||
"Now sires," quod this Osewold the Reve,
|
||
|
||
"I pray yow alle, that ye nat yow greve,
|
||
Thogh I answere, and somdeel sette his howve,
|
||
For leveful is with force force of-showve.
|
||
This dronke Millere hath ytoold us heer,
|
||
How that bigyled was a Carpenteer,
|
||
|
||
Peraventure in scorn, for I am oon;
|
||
And by youre leve I shal hym quite anoon.
|
||
Right in his cherles termes wol I speke,
|
||
I pray to God his nekke mote breke!
|
||
He kan wel in myn eye seen a stalke,
|
||
|
||
But in his owene he kan nat seen a balke."
|
||
|
||
(Simkin, a rich thieving miller of Trumpington Mill, near
|
||
Cambridge, is well served by two Cambridge clerks of the
|
||
north country, who beguile his wife and daughter, recover
|
||
the stolen meal which he had hid, and leave him well beaten.)
|
||
|
||
Part 5
|
||
|
||
THE PROLOGUE TO THE COKES TALE.
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Cokes Tale.
|
||
|
||
The Cook of London, whil the Reve spak,
|
||
For joye him thoughte, he clawed him on the bak.
|
||
"Ha! ha!" quod he, "for Criste passioun,
|
||
This miller hadde a sharp conclusioun
|
||
Upon his argument of herbergage.
|
||
|
||
Wel seyde Salomon in his langage,
|
||
`Ne brynge nat every man into thyn hous,'
|
||
For herberwynge by nyghte is perilous.
|
||
Wel oghte a man avysed for to be,
|
||
Whom that be broghte into his pryvetee.
|
||
|
||
I pray to God so yeve me sorwe and care,
|
||
If evere sitthe I highte Hogge of Ware,
|
||
Herde I a millere bettre yset awerk.
|
||
He hadde a jape of malice in the derk.
|
||
But God forbede that we stynte heere,
|
||
|
||
And therfore, if ye vouche-sauf to heere
|
||
A tale of me that am a povre man,
|
||
I wol yow telle, as wel as evere I kan,
|
||
A litel jape that fil in oure citee."
|
||
Oure Hoost answerde and seide, "I graunte it thee,
|
||
|
||
Now telle on, Roger, looke that it be good,
|
||
For many a pastee hastow laten blood,
|
||
And many a Jakke of Dovere hastow soold
|
||
That hath been twies hoot and twies cold.
|
||
Of many a pilgrim hastow Cristes curs,
|
||
|
||
For of thy percely yet they fare the wors,
|
||
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 wroth for game,
|
||
|
||
A man may seye ful sooth in game and pley."
|
||
"Thou seist ful sooth," quod Roger, "by my fey;
|
||
But `sooth pley quaad pley,' as the Flemyng 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.
|
||
But nathelees I wol nat telle it yit,
|
||
But er we parte, ywis, thou shalt be quit."
|
||
And ther-with-al he lough and made cheere,
|
||
And seyde his tale, as ye shul after heere.
|
||
|
||
THE TALE (Unfinished).
|
||
|
||
(Perkin, a London apprentice, being dismissed by his
|
||
master, seeks his companions in dice, revel and disport.)
|
||
|
||
Part 6
|
||
|
||
GROUP B.
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE OF THE MAN OF LAWE.
|
||
|
||
The wordes of the Hoost to the compaignye.
|
||
|
||
Oure Hooste saugh wel that the brighte sonne
|
||
The ark of his artificial day hath ronne
|
||
The ferthe part, and half an houre and moore;
|
||
And though he were nat depe expert in loore,
|
||
He wiste ti was the eightetethe day
|
||
|
||
Of Aprill, that is messager to May;
|
||
And saugh wel, that the shadwe of every tree
|
||
Was as in lengthe the same quantitee
|
||
That was the body erect that caused it,
|
||
And therfore by the shadwe he took his wit
|
||
|
||
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 at the clokke, he gan conclude,
|
||
And sodeynly he plighte his hors aboute.-
|
||
|
||
"Lordynges," quod he, "I warne yow, al this route,
|
||
The fourthe party of this day is gon.
|
||
Now for the love of God and of Seint John,
|
||
Leseth no tyme, as ferforth as ye may.
|
||
Lordynges, the tyme wasteth nyght and day,
|
||
|
||
And steleth from us, what pryvely slepynge,
|
||
|
||
And what thurgh necligence in oure wakynge,
|
||
As dooth the streem, that turneth nevere agayn,
|
||
Descendyng fro the montaigne into playn.
|
||
Wel kan Senec and many a philosophre
|
||
|
||
Biwaillen tyme, moore than gold in cofre.
|
||
`for losse of catel may recovered be,
|
||
But losse of tyme shendeth us,' quod he.
|
||
It wol nat come agayn, withouten drede,
|
||
Namoore than wole Malkynes maydenhede,
|
||
|
||
Whan she hath lost it in hir wantownesse.
|
||
Lat us nat mowlen thus in ydelnesse;
|
||
Sir man of lawe," quod he, "so have ye blis,
|
||
Telle us a tale anon, as forward is.
|
||
Ye been submytted thurgh youre free assent
|
||
|
||
To stonden in this cas at my juggement.
|
||
Acquiteth yow as now of youre biheeste,
|
||
Thanne have ye do youre devoir atte leeste."
|
||
"Hooste," quod he, "Depardieux ich assente,
|
||
To breke forward is nat myn entente.
|
||
|
||
Biheste is dette, and I wole holde fayn
|
||
Al my biheste, I kan no bettre sayn.
|
||
For swich lawe as a man yeveth another wight,
|
||
He sholde hymselven usen it by right;
|
||
Thus wole oure text, but nathelees certeyn
|
||
|
||
I kan right now no thrifty tale seyn;
|
||
But Chaucer, thogh he kan but lewedly
|
||
On metres and on rymyng craftily,
|
||
Hath seyd hem in swich Englissh as he kan,
|
||
Of olde tyme, as knoweth many a man.
|
||
|
||
And if he have noght seyd hem, leve brother,
|
||
In o book, he hath seyd hem in another.
|
||
For he hath toold of loveris up and doun
|
||
Mo than Ovide made of mencioun,
|
||
In hise Episteles that been ful olde;
|
||
|
||
What sholde I tellen hem, syn they ben tolde?
|
||
In youthe he made of Ceys and Alcione,
|
||
And sitthen hath he spoken of everichone
|
||
Thise noble wyves and thise loveris eke.
|
||
Whoso that wole his large volume seke
|
||
|
||
Cleped the Seintes Legende of Cupide,
|
||
Ther may he seen the large woundes wyde
|
||
Of Lucresse, and of Babilan Tesbee,
|
||
The swerd of Dido for the false Enee,
|
||
The tree of Phillis for hir Demophon,
|
||
|
||
The pleinte of Dianire and Hermyon,
|
||
Of Adriane and of Isiphilee,
|
||
The bareyne yle stondynge in the see,
|
||
The dreynte Leandre for his Erro,
|
||
The teeris of Eleyne, and eek the wo
|
||
|
||
Of Brixseyde, and of the, Ladomea,
|
||
The crueltee of the, queene Medea,
|
||
Thy litel children hangyng by the hals
|
||
For thy Jason, that was in love so fals.
|
||
O Ypermystra, Penolopee, Alceste,
|
||
|
||
Youre wyfhede he comendeth with the beste!
|
||
But certeinly no word ne writeth he
|
||
Of thilke wikke ensample of Canacee,
|
||
That loved hir owene brother synfully-
|
||
Of swiche cursed stories I sey fy!-
|
||
|
||
Or ellis of Tyro Appollonius,
|
||
How that the cursed kyng Antiochus
|
||
Birafte his doghter of hir maydenhede,
|
||
That is so horrible a tale for to rede,
|
||
Whan he hir threw upon the pavement.
|
||
|
||
And therfore he, of ful avysement,
|
||
Nolde nevere write, in none of his sermouns,
|
||
Of swiche unkynde abhomynaciouns;
|
||
Ne I wol noon reherce, if that I may.
|
||
But of my tale how shall I doon this day?
|
||
|
||
Me were looth be likned, doutelees,
|
||
To Muses that men clepe Pierides-
|
||
Methamorphosios woot what I mene-
|
||
But nathelees, I recche noght a bene
|
||
Though I come after hym with hawebake,
|
||
|
||
I speke in prose, and lat him rymes make."
|
||
And with that word he, with a sobre cheere,
|
||
Bigan his tale, as ye shal after heere.
|
||
Part 7
|
||
|
||
THE TALE OF THE MAN OF LAWE.
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Mannes Tale of Lawe.
|
||
|
||
O hateful harm, condicion of poverte!
|
||
With thurst, with coold, with hunger so confoundid!
|
||
To asken help thee shameth in thyn herte,
|
||
If thou noon aske, so soore artow ywoundid
|
||
That verray nede unwrappeth al thy wounde hid;
|
||
Maugree thyn heed thou most for indigence
|
||
Or stele, or begge, or borwe thy despence!
|
||
|
||
Thow blamest Crist, and seist ful bitterly
|
||
He mysdeparteth richesse temporal.
|
||
Thy neighebore thou wytest synfully,
|
||
And seist thou hast to lite and he hath al.
|
||
"Parfay!" seistow, "somtyme he rekene shal,
|
||
Whan that his tayl shal brennen in the gleede,
|
||
For he noght helpeth needfulle in hir neede."
|
||
|
||
Herkne what is the sentence of the wise,
|
||
"Bet is to dyen than have indigence."
|
||
Thy selve neighebor wol thee despise,
|
||
If thou be povre, farwel thy reverence!
|
||
Yet of the wise man take this sentence,
|
||
"Alle dayes of povre men been wikke;"
|
||
Be war therfore, er thou come to that prikke.
|
||
|
||
If thou be povre, thy brother hateth thee,
|
||
And alle thy freendes fleen from thee; allas,
|
||
O riche marchauntz, ful of wele been yee!
|
||
O noble, o prudent folk, as in this cas!
|
||
Youre bagges been nat fild with ambes as,
|
||
But with sys cynk, that renneth for youre chaunce,
|
||
At Cristemasse myrie may ye daunce!
|
||
|
||
Ye seken lond and see for your wynnynges,
|
||
As wise folk ye knowen all thestaat
|
||
Of regnes; ye been fadres of tydynges
|
||
And tales, bothe of pees and of debaat.
|
||
I were right now of tales desolaat
|
||
Nere that a marchant, goon is many a yeere,
|
||
Me taughte a tale, which that ye shal heere.
|
||
|
||
Heere begynneth the Man of Lawe his Tale.
|
||
|
||
In Surrye whilom dwelte a compaignye
|
||
Of chapmen riche, and therto sadde and trewe,
|
||
That wyde-where senten hir spicerye,
|
||
Clothes of gold, and satyns riche of hewe.
|
||
Hir chaffare was so thrifty and so newe
|
||
That every wight hath deyntee to chaffare
|
||
With hem, and eek to sellen hem hir ware.
|
||
|
||
Now fil it, that the maistres of that sort
|
||
Han shapen hem to Rome for to wende;
|
||
Were it for chapmanhode, or for disport,
|
||
Noon oother message wolde they thider sende,
|
||
But comen hemself to Rome, this is the ende,
|
||
And in swich place as thoughte hem avantage
|
||
For hir entente, they take hir herbergage.
|
||
|
||
Sojourned han thise Marchantz in that toun
|
||
A certein tyme, as fil to hire plesance.
|
||
And so bifel, that thexcellent renoun
|
||
Of the Emperoures doghter, Dame Custance,
|
||
Reported was, with every circumstance
|
||
Unto thise Surryen marchantz in swich wyse
|
||
Fro day to day, as I shal yow devyse.
|
||
|
||
This was the commune voys of every man:
|
||
"Oure Emperour of Rome, God hym see,
|
||
A doghter hath, that syn the world bigan,
|
||
To rekene as wel hir goodnesse as beautee,
|
||
Nas nevere swich another as is shee.
|
||
I prey to God in honour hir sustene
|
||
And wolde she were of all Europe the queene!
|
||
|
||
In hir is heigh beautee, withoute pride,
|
||
Yowthe, withoute grenehede or folye,
|
||
To alle hir werkes vertu is hir gyde,
|
||
Humblesse hath slayn in hir al tirannye,
|
||
She is mirour of alle curteisye,
|
||
Hir herte is verray chambre of hoolynesse,
|
||
Hir hand ministre of fredam for almesse."
|
||
|
||
And al this voys was sooth, as God is trewe!
|
||
But now to purpos, lat us turne agayn;
|
||
Thise marchantz han doon fraught hir shippes newe,
|
||
And whan they han this blisful mayden sayn,
|
||
Hoom to Surrye been they went ful fayn,
|
||
And doon hir nedes as they han doon yoore,
|
||
And lyven in wele, I kan sey yow namoore.
|
||
|
||
Now fil it, that thise marchantz stode in grace
|
||
Of hym, that was the Sowdan of Surrye.
|
||
For whan they cam from any strange place,
|
||
He wolde, of his benigne curteisye,
|
||
Make hem good chiere, and bisily espye
|
||
Tidynges of sondry regnes, for to leere
|
||
The wondres that they myghte seen or heere.
|
||
|
||
Amonges othere thynges, specially
|
||
Thise marchantz han hym toold of dame Custance
|
||
So greet noblesse, in ernest ceriously,
|
||
That this Sowdan hath caught so greet plesance
|
||
To han hir figure in his remembrance,
|
||
That all his lust and al his bisy cure
|
||
Was for to love hir, while his lyf may dure.
|
||
|
||
Praventure in thilke large book,
|
||
Which that men clipe the hevene, ywriten was
|
||
With sterres, whan that he his birthe took,
|
||
That he for love sholde han his deeth, allas!
|
||
For in the sterres clerer than is glas
|
||
Is writen, God woot, whoso koude it rede,
|
||
The deeth of every man, withouten drede.
|
||
|
||
In sterres many a wynter therbiforn
|
||
Was writen the deeth of Ector, Achilles,
|
||
Of Pompei, Julius, er they were born,
|
||
The strif of Thebes, and of Ercules,
|
||
Of Sampson, Turnus, and of Socrates
|
||
The deeth, but mennes wittes ben so dulle
|
||
That no wight kan wel rede it atte fulle.
|
||
|
||
This Sowdan for his privee conseil sente,
|
||
And, shortly of this matiere for to pace,
|
||
He hath to hem declared his entente
|
||
And seyde hem, certein, but he myghte have grace
|
||
To han Custance withinne a litel space,
|
||
He nas but deed; and charged hem in hye
|
||
To shapen for his lyf som remedye.
|
||
|
||
Diverse men diverse thynges seyden;
|
||
They argumenten, casten up and doun,
|
||
Many a subtil resoun forth they leyden,
|
||
They speken of magyk and abusioun;
|
||
But finally, as in conclusioun,
|
||
They kan nat seen in that noon avantage,
|
||
Ne in noon oother wey, save mariage.
|
||
|
||
Thanne sawe they therin swich difficultee
|
||
By wey of reson, for to speke al playn
|
||
Bycause that ther was swich diversitee
|
||
Bitwene hir bothe lawes, that they sayn
|
||
They trowe that "no cristene prince wolde fayn
|
||
Wedden his child under oure lawes swete
|
||
That us were taught by Mahoun oure prophete."
|
||
|
||
And he answerde: "Rather than I lese
|
||
Custance, I wol be cristned, doutelees.
|
||
I moot been hires, I may noon oother chese;
|
||
I prey yow, hoold youre argumentz in pees.
|
||
|
||
Saveth my lyf, and beth noght recchelees
|
||
To geten hir that hath my lyf in cure,
|
||
For in this wo I may nat longe endure."
|
||
|
||
What nedeth gretter dilatacioun?
|
||
I syey, by tretys and embassadrye
|
||
And by the popes mediacioun,
|
||
And al the chirche and al the chivalrie,
|
||
That in destruccioun of Mawmettrie
|
||
And in encrees of Cristes lawe deere,
|
||
They been acorded, so as ye shal heere,
|
||
|
||
How that the Sowdan and his baronage
|
||
And alle hise liges sholde ycristned be-
|
||
And he shal han Custance in mariage,
|
||
And certein gold, I noot what quantitee,
|
||
And heerto founden suffisant suretee.
|
||
This same accord was sworn on eyther syde.
|
||
Now, faire Custance, almyghty God thee gyde!
|
||
|
||
Now wolde som men waiten, as I gesse,
|
||
That I sholde tellen al the purveiance
|
||
That themperour, of his grete noblesse,
|
||
Hath shapen for his doghter dame Custance;
|
||
Wel may men knowen that so greet ordinance
|
||
May no man tellen in alitel clause
|
||
As was arrayed for so heigh a cause.
|
||
|
||
Bisshopes been shapen with hir for to wende,
|
||
Lordes, ladies, knyghtes of renoun,
|
||
And oother folk ynogh, this is the ende,
|
||
And notified is, thurghout the toun,
|
||
That every wight with greet devocioun
|
||
Sholde preyen Crist, that he this mariage
|
||
Receyve in gree, and spede this viage.
|
||
|
||
The day is comen of hir departynge,
|
||
I seye, the woful day fatal is come,
|
||
That ther may be no lenger tariynge,
|
||
But forthward they hem dressen, alle and some.
|
||
Custance, that was with sorwe al overcome,
|
||
Ful pale arist, and dresseth hir to wende,
|
||
For wel she seeth ther is noon oother ende.
|
||
|
||
Allas, what wonder is it thogh she wepte,
|
||
That shal be sent to strange nacioun
|
||
Fro freendes that so tendrely hir kepte,
|
||
And to be bounden under subjeccioun
|
||
Of oon, she knoweth nat his condicioun?
|
||
Housbondes been alle goode, and han ben yoore,
|
||
That knowen wyves! I dar sey yow namoore.
|
||
|
||
"Fader," she seyde, "Thy wrecched child Custance,
|
||
Thy yonge doghter, fostred up so softe,
|
||
And ye my mooder, my soverayn plesance,
|
||
Over alle thyng, out-taken Crist on-lofte,
|
||
Custance, youre child, hir recomandeth ofte
|
||
Unto your grace, for I shal to Surrye
|
||
Ne shal I nevere seen yow moore with eye.
|
||
|
||
Allas! unto the barbre nacioun
|
||
I moste goon, syn that it is youre wille,
|
||
But Crist, that starf for our savacioun,
|
||
So yeve me grace hise heestes to fulfille,-
|
||
I, wrecche womman, no fors though I spille.
|
||
Wommen are born to thraldom and penance,
|
||
And to been under mannes governance."
|
||
|
||
I trowe, at Troye whan Pirrus brak the wal,
|
||
Or Ilion brende, ne at Thebes the Citee,
|
||
Ne at Rome for the harm thurgh Hanybal
|
||
|
||
That Romayns hath venquysshed tymes thre,
|
||
Nas herd swich tendre wepyng for pitee
|
||
As in the chambre was, for his departynge;
|
||
But forth she moot, wher-so she wepe or synge.
|
||
|
||
O firste moevyng crueel firmanent,
|
||
With thy diurnal sweigh, that crowdest ay
|
||
And hurlest al from Est til Occident
|
||
That naturelly wolde holde another way,
|
||
Thy crowdyng set the hevene in swich array
|
||
At the bigynnyng of this fiers viage,
|
||
That crueel Mars hath slayn this mariage.
|
||
|
||
Infortunat ascendent tortuous,
|
||
Of which the lord is helplees falle, allas!
|
||
Out of his angle into the derkeste hous.
|
||
O Mars! O Atazir! as in this cas,
|
||
O fieble Moone, unhappy been thy paas!
|
||
Thou knyttest thee, ther thou art nat receyved;
|
||
Ther thou were weel, fro thennes artow weyved.-
|
||
|
||
Imprudent Emperour of Rome, allas!
|
||
Was ther no philosophre in al thy toun?
|
||
Is no tyme bet than oother in swich cas?
|
||
Of viage is ther noon eleccioun,
|
||
Namely to folk of heigh condicioun,
|
||
Noght whan a roote is of a burthe yknowe?
|
||
Allas, we been to lewed or to slowe!
|
||
|
||
To ship is brought this woful faire mayde
|
||
Solempnely, with every circumstance,
|
||
"Now Jesu Crist be with yow alle," she seyde.
|
||
Ther nys namoore but, "Farewel faire Custance!"
|
||
She peyneth hir to make good contenance,
|
||
And forth I lete hir saille in this manere,
|
||
And turne I wole agayn to my matere.
|
||
|
||
The mooder of the Sowdan, welle of vyices,
|
||
Espied hath hir sones pleyne entente,
|
||
How he wol lete hise olde sacrifices,
|
||
And right anon she for hir conseil sente,
|
||
And they been come, to knowe what she mente,
|
||
And whan assembled was this folk in feere,
|
||
She sette hir doun, and seyde as ye shal heere.
|
||
|
||
"Lordes," quod she, "ye knowen everichon,
|
||
How that my sone in point is for to lete
|
||
The hooly lawes of oure Alkaron,
|
||
Yeven by Goddes message, Makomete.
|
||
But oon avow to grete God I heete,
|
||
The lyf shal rather out of my body sterte,
|
||
Than Makometes lawe out of myn herte!
|
||
|
||
What sholde us tyden of this newe lawe
|
||
But thraldom to our bodies, and penance,
|
||
And afterward in helle to be drawe
|
||
For we reneyed Mahoun oure creance?
|
||
But lordes, wol ye maken assurance
|
||
As I shal seyn, assentynge to my loore,
|
||
And I shal make us sauf for everemoore."
|
||
|
||
They sworen and assenten every man
|
||
To lyve with hir, and dye, and by hir stonde,
|
||
And everich in the beste wise he kan
|
||
To strengthen hir shal alle hise frendes fonde,
|
||
And she hath this emprise ytake on honde,
|
||
Which ye shal heren, that I shal devyse.
|
||
And to hem alle she spak right in this wyse:
|
||
|
||
"We shul first feyne us cristendom to take,-
|
||
Coold water shal nat greve us but a lite-
|
||
And I shal swich a feeste and revel make,
|
||
That as I trowe I shal the Sowdan quite;
|
||
For thogh his wyf be cristned never so white,
|
||
She shal have nede to wasshe awey the rede,
|
||
Thogh she a fontful water with hir lede!"
|
||
|
||
O Sowdanesse, roote of iniquitee!
|
||
Virage, thou Semyrame the secounde!
|
||
O serpent under femynyntee,
|
||
Lik to the serpent depe in helle ybounde!
|
||
O feyned womman, al that may confounde
|
||
Vertu and innocence thurgh thy malice
|
||
Is bred in thee, as nest of every vice!
|
||
|
||
O Sathan, envious syn thilke day
|
||
That thou were chaced from oure heritage,
|
||
Wel knowestow to wommen the olde way!
|
||
Thou madest Eva brynge us in servage;
|
||
Thou wolt fordoon this cristen mariage.
|
||
Thyn instrument, so weylawey the while!
|
||
Makestow of wommen, whan thou wolt bigile!
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
And seyde hym, that she wolde reneye hir lay,
|
||
And cristendom of preestes handes fonge,
|
||
Repentynge hir she hethen was so longe;
|
||
|
||
Bisechynge hym to doon hir that honour
|
||
That she moste han the cristen folk to feeste.
|
||
"To plesen hem I wol do my labour."
|
||
The Sowdan seith, "I wol doon at youre heeste,"
|
||
And knelynge thanketh hir of that requeste.
|
||
So gald he was, he nyste what to seye;
|
||
She kiste hir sone, and hoome she gooth hir weye.
|
||
|
||
Explicit prima pars.
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars secunda.
|
||
|
||
Arryved been this cristen folk to londe,
|
||
In Surrye, with a greet solempne route,
|
||
And hastifliche this Sowdan sente his sonde
|
||
First to his mooder and all the regne aboute,
|
||
And seyde his wyf was comen, oute of doute,
|
||
And preyde hir for to ryde agayn the queene,
|
||
The honour of his regne to susteene.
|
||
|
||
Greet was the prees, and riche was tharray
|
||
Of Surryens and Romayns met yfeere;
|
||
The mooder of the Sowdan, riche and gay,
|
||
Receyveth hir with also glad a cheere
|
||
As any mooder myghte hir doghter deere,
|
||
And to the nexte citee ther bisyde
|
||
A softe pass solempnely they ryde.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Noght trowe I the triumphe of Julius,
|
||
Of which that Lucan maketh swich a boost,
|
||
Was roialler, ne moore curius
|
||
Than was thassemblee of this blisful hoost.
|
||
But this scorpioun, this wikked goost,
|
||
The Sowdanesse, for all hir falterynge
|
||
Caste under this ful mortally to stynge.
|
||
|
||
The Sowdabn comth hymself soone after this
|
||
So roially, that wonder is to telle,
|
||
And welcometh hir with alle joye and blis,
|
||
And thus in murthe and joye I lete hem dwelle-
|
||
The fruyt of this matiere is that I telle.-
|
||
Whan tyme cam, men thoughte it for the beste,
|
||
The revel stynte, and men goon to hir reste.
|
||
|
||
The tyme cam, this olde Sowdanesse
|
||
Ordeyned hath this feeste of which I tolde,
|
||
And to the feeste cristen folk hem dresse
|
||
In general, ye, bothe yonge and olde.
|
||
Heere may men feeste and roialtee biholde,
|
||
And deyntees mo than I kan yow devyse;
|
||
But al to deere they boghte it er they ryse!
|
||
|
||
O sodeyn wo, that evere art successour
|
||
To worldly blisse, spreynd with bitternesse!
|
||
The ende of the joye of oure worldly labour!
|
||
Wo occupieth the fyn of oure galdnesse!
|
||
Herke this conseil for thy sikernesse,
|
||
Upon thy galde day have in thy minde
|
||
The unwar wo or harm that comth bihynde.
|
||
|
||
For shortly for to tellen at o word,
|
||
The Sowdan and the cristen everichone
|
||
Been al tohewe and stiked at the bord,
|
||
But it were oonly dame Custance allone.
|
||
This olde Sowdanesse, cursed krone,
|
||
Hath with hir freendes doon this cursed dede,
|
||
For she hirself wolde all the contree lede.
|
||
|
||
Ne was ther Surryen noon, that was converted,
|
||
That of the conseil of the Sowdan woot,
|
||
That he nas al tohewe er he asterted.
|
||
And Custance han they take anon foot-hoot
|
||
And in a ship all steerelees, God woot,
|
||
They han hir set, and biddeth hir lerne saille
|
||
Out of Surrye agaynward to Ytaille.
|
||
|
||
A certein tresor that she thider ladde,
|
||
And, sooth to seyn, vitaille greet plentee
|
||
They han hir yeven, and clothes eek she hadde,
|
||
And forth she sailleth in the salte see.
|
||
O my Custance, ful of benignytee,
|
||
O emperoures yonge doghter deere,
|
||
He that is lord of Fortune be thy steere!
|
||
|
||
She blesseth hir, and with ful pitous voys
|
||
Unto the croys of Crist thus seyde she,
|
||
"O cleere, o welful auter, hooly croys,
|
||
Reed of the lambes blood, ful of pitee,
|
||
That wesshe the world fro the olde iniquitee,
|
||
Me fro the feend and fro his clawes kepe,
|
||
That day that I shal drenchen in the depe.
|
||
|
||
Victorious tree, proteccioun of trewe,
|
||
That oonly worthy were for to bere
|
||
The kyng of hevene with his woundes newe,
|
||
The white lamb that hurt was with the spere,
|
||
Flemer of feendes out of hym and here
|
||
On which thy lymes feithfully extenden,
|
||
Me keep, and yif me myght my lyf tamenden."
|
||
|
||
Yeres and dayes fleteth this creature
|
||
Thurghout the See of Grece unto the Strayte
|
||
Of Marrok, as it was hir aventure.
|
||
On many a sory meel now may she bayte;
|
||
After hir deeth ful often may she wayte,
|
||
Er that the wilde wawes wol hire dryve
|
||
Unto the place ther she shal arryve.
|
||
|
||
Men myghten asken why she was nat slayn?
|
||
Eek at the feeste who myghte hir body save?
|
||
And I answere to that demande agayn,
|
||
Who saved Danyel in the horrible cave,
|
||
Ther every wight save he, maister and knave,
|
||
Was with the leoun frete, er he asterte?
|
||
No wight but God, that he bar in his herte.
|
||
|
||
God liste to shewe his wonderful myracle
|
||
In hir, for we sholde seen his myghty werkis.
|
||
Crist, which that is to every harm triacle,
|
||
By certeine meenes ofte, as knowen clerkis,
|
||
Dooth thyng for certein ende, that ful derk is
|
||
To mannes wit, that for oure ignorance
|
||
Ne konne noght knowe his prudent purveiance.
|
||
|
||
Now, sith she was nat at the feeste yslawe,
|
||
Who kepte hir fro the drenchyng in the see?
|
||
Who kepte Jonas in the fisshes mawe
|
||
Til he was spouted up at Nynyvee?
|
||
Wel may men knowe it was no wight but he
|
||
That kepte peple Ebrayk from hir drenchynge,
|
||
With drye feet thurghout the see passynge.
|
||
|
||
Who bad the foure spirites of tempest,
|
||
That power han tanoyen lond and see,
|
||
"Bothe north and south, and also west and est,
|
||
Anoyeth neither see, ne land, ne tree?"
|
||
Soothly, the comandour of that was he,
|
||
That fro the tempest ay this womman kepte,
|
||
As wel eek when she wook as whan she slepte.
|
||
|
||
Where myghte this womman mete and drynke have?
|
||
Thre yeer and moore how lasteth hir vitaille?
|
||
Who fedde the Egypcien Marie in the cave,
|
||
Or in desert?
|
||
no wight but Crist sanz faille.
|
||
Fyve thousand folk it was as greet mervaille
|
||
With loves fyve and fisshes two to feede;
|
||
God sente his foyson at hir grete neede.
|
||
|
||
She dryveth forth into oure occian
|
||
Thurghout oure wilde see, til atte laste
|
||
Under an hoold that nempnen I ne kan,
|
||
Fer in Northhumberlond, the wawe hir caste,
|
||
And in the sond hir ship stiked so faste
|
||
That thennes wolde it noght of al a tyde,
|
||
The wyl of Crist was that she sholde abyde.
|
||
|
||
The constable of the castel doun is fare
|
||
To seen his wrak, and al the ship he soghte,
|
||
And foond this wery womman ful of care,
|
||
He foond also the tresor that she broghte,
|
||
In hir langage mercy she bisoghte,
|
||
The lyf out of hire body for to twynne,
|
||
Hir to delivere of wo that she was inne.
|
||
|
||
A maner Latyn corrupt was hir speche,
|
||
But algates ther-by was she understonde.
|
||
The constable, whan hym lyst 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 sholde deye.
|
||
|
||
She seyde, she was so mazed in the see
|
||
That she forgat hir mynde, by hir trouthe.
|
||
The constable hath of hir so greet pitee,
|
||
And eke his wyf, that they wepen for routhe.
|
||
She was so diligent withouten slouthe
|
||
To serve and plesen everich in that place,
|
||
That alle hir loven that looken on hir face.
|
||
|
||
This constable and dame Hermengyld his wyf
|
||
Were payens, and that contree every-where;
|
||
But Hermengyld loved hir right as hir lyf,
|
||
And Custance hath so longe sojourned there
|
||
In orisons with many a bitter teere,
|
||
Til Jesu hath converted thurgh his grace
|
||
Dame Hermengyld, constablesse of that place.
|
||
|
||
In al that lond no cristen dorste route,
|
||
Alle cristen folk been fled fro that contree
|
||
Thurgh payens that conquereden al aboute
|
||
The plages of the North by land and see.
|
||
To Walys fledde the Cristyanytee
|
||
Of olde Britons, dwellynge in this Ile;
|
||
Ther was hir refut for the meene-while.
|
||
|
||
But yet nere cristene Britons so exiled
|
||
That ther nere somme that in hir privetee
|
||
Honoured Crist, and hethen folk bigiled,
|
||
And ny the castel swiche ther dwelten three;
|
||
That oon of hem was blynd, and myghte nat see,
|
||
But it were with thilke eyen of his mynde,
|
||
With whiche men seen, after that they ben blynde.
|
||
|
||
Bright was the sonne as in that someres day,
|
||
For which the constable and his wyf also
|
||
And Custance han ytake the righte way
|
||
Toward the see, a furlong wey or two,
|
||
To pleyen, and to romen, to and fro,
|
||
And in hir walk this blynde man they mette,
|
||
Croked and oold, with eyen faste yshette.
|
||
|
||
"In name of Crist," cride this olde Britoun,
|
||
"Dame Hermengyld, yif me my sighte agayn."
|
||
This lady weex affrayed of the soun,
|
||
Lest that hir housbonde, shortly for to sayn,
|
||
Wolde hir for Jesu Cristes love han slayn,
|
||
Til Custance made hir boold, and bad hir wirche
|
||
The wyl of Crist, as doghter of his chirche.
|
||
|
||
The constable weex abasshed of that sight,
|
||
And seyde, "What amounteth all this fare!"
|
||
Custance answerde, "Sire, it is Cristes myght,
|
||
That helpeth folk out of the feendes snare."
|
||
And so ferforth she gan oure lay declare,
|
||
That she the constable, er that it were eve,
|
||
Converteth, and on Crist maketh hym bileve.
|
||
|
||
This constable was no-thyng lord of this place
|
||
Of which I speke, ther he Custance fond;
|
||
But kepte it strongly many wyntres space
|
||
Under Alla, kyng of al Northhumbrelond,
|
||
That was ful wys and worthy of his hond
|
||
Agayn the Scottes, as men may wel heere;-
|
||
But turne I wole agayn to my mateere.
|
||
|
||
Sathan, that ever us waiteth to bigile,
|
||
Saugh of Custance al hir perfeccioun
|
||
And caste anon how he myghte quite hir while;
|
||
And made a yong knyght, that dwelte in that toun,
|
||
Love hir so hoote of foul affeccioun
|
||
That verraily hym thoughte he sholde spille,
|
||
But he of hir myghte ones have his wille.
|
||
|
||
He woweth hir, but it availleth noght,
|
||
She wolde do no synne, by no were;
|
||
And for despit he compassed in his thoght
|
||
To maken hir on shameful deeth to deye.
|
||
He wayteth whan the constable was aweye
|
||
And pryvely upon a nyght he crepte
|
||
In Hermengyldes chambre whil she slepte.
|
||
|
||
Wery, for-waked in hir orisouns,
|
||
Slepeth Custance, and Hermengyld also.
|
||
This knyght, thurgh Sathanas temptaciouns,
|
||
All softely is to the bed ygo,
|
||
And kitte the throte of Hermengyld atwo,
|
||
And leyde the blody knyf by dame Custance,
|
||
And wente his wey, ther God yeve hym meschance!
|
||
|
||
Soone after cometh this constable hoom agayn,
|
||
And eek Alla, that kyng was of that lond,
|
||
And saugh his wyf despitously yslayn,
|
||
For which ful ofte he weep and wroong his hond,
|
||
And in the bed the blody knyf he fond
|
||
By Dame Custance; allas, what myghte she seye?
|
||
For verray wo hir wit was al aweye!
|
||
|
||
To kyng Alla was toold al this meschance,
|
||
And eek the tyme, and where, and in what wise
|
||
That in a ship was founden dame Custance,
|
||
As heer-biforn that ye han herd devyse.
|
||
The kynges herte of pitee gan agryse,
|
||
Whan he saugh so benigne a creature
|
||
Falle in disese and in mysaventure.
|
||
|
||
For as the lomb toward his deeth is broght,
|
||
So stant this innocent bifore the kyng.
|
||
This false knyght, that hath this tresoun wroght,
|
||
Berth hir on hond that she hath doon thys thyng,
|
||
But nathelees, ther was greet moornyng
|
||
Among the peple, and seyn, they kan nat gesse
|
||
That she had doon so greet a wikkednesse;
|
||
|
||
For they han seyn hir evere so vertuous,
|
||
And lovyng Hermengyld right as hir lyf:
|
||
Of this baar witnesse everich in that hous
|
||
|
||
Save he that Hermengyld slow with his knyf.
|
||
This gentil kyng hath caught a greet motyf
|
||
Of this witnesse, and thoghte he wolde enquere
|
||
Depper in this, a trouthe for to lere.
|
||
|
||
Allas, Custance, thou hast no champioun!
|
||
Ne fighte kanstow noght, so weylaway!
|
||
But he, that starf for our redempcioun,
|
||
And boond Sathan-and yet lith ther he lay-
|
||
So be thy stronge champion this day!
|
||
For but if Crist open myracle kithe,
|
||
Withouten gilt thou shalt be slayn as swithe.
|
||
|
||
She sette hir doun on knees, and thus she sayde,
|
||
"Immortal God, that savedest Susanne
|
||
Fro false blame, and thou, merciful Mayde,
|
||
Marie I meene, doghter to Seynte Anne,
|
||
Bifore whos child angeles synge Osanne,
|
||
If I be giltlees of this felonye,
|
||
My socour be, for ellis shal I dye."
|
||
|
||
Have ye nat seyn som tyme a pale face
|
||
Among a prees, of hym that hath be lad
|
||
Toward his deeth, wher as hym gat no grace,
|
||
And swich a colour in his face hath had,
|
||
Men myghte knowe his face, that was bistad,
|
||
Amonges alle the faces in that route?
|
||
So stant Custance, and looketh hir aboute.
|
||
|
||
O queenes, lyvynge in prosperitee,
|
||
Duchesses, and ladyes everichone,
|
||
Haveth som routhe on hir adversitee;
|
||
An emperoures doghter stant allone,
|
||
She hath no wight to whom to make hir mone.
|
||
O blood roial, that stondest in this drede,
|
||
Fer been thy freendes at thy grete nede!
|
||
|
||
This Alla kyng hath swich compassioun,
|
||
As gentil herte is fulfild of pitee,
|
||
That from hise eyen ran the water doun.
|
||
"Now hastily do fecche a book," quod he,
|
||
"And if this knyght wol sweren how that she
|
||
This womman slow, yet wol we us avyse,
|
||
Whom that we wole, that shal been oure justise."
|
||
|
||
A Britoun book, written with Evaungiles,
|
||
Was fet, and on this book he swoor anoon
|
||
She gilty was, and in the meene-whiles
|
||
An hand hym smoot upon the nekke-boon,
|
||
That doun he fil atones, as a stoon;
|
||
And bothe hise eyen broste out of his face,
|
||
In sighte of every body in that place.
|
||
|
||
A voys was herd in general audience,
|
||
And seyde, "Thou hast desclaundred giltelees
|
||
The doghter of hooly chirche in heigh presence,
|
||
Thus hastou doon, and yet holde I my pees."
|
||
Of this mervaille agast was al the prees,
|
||
As mazed folk they stoden everichone
|
||
For drede of wreche, save Custance allone.
|
||
|
||
Greet was the drede and eek the repentance
|
||
Of hem that hadden wronge suspecioun
|
||
Upon this sely innocent, Custance;
|
||
And for this miracle, in conclusioun,
|
||
And by Custances mediacioun,
|
||
The kyng, and many another in that place,
|
||
Converted was, thanked be Cristes grace.
|
||
|
||
This false knyght was slayn for his untrouthe,
|
||
By juggement of Alla hastifly-
|
||
And yet Custance hadde of his deeth greet routhe-
|
||
And after this Jesus, of His mercy,
|
||
Made Alla wedden ful solempnely
|
||
This hooly mayden, that is so bright and sheene,
|
||
And thus hath Crist ymaad Custance a queene.
|
||
|
||
But who was woful, if I shal nat lye,
|
||
Of this weddyng but Donegild, and namo,
|
||
The kynges mooder, ful of tirannye?
|
||
Hir thoughte hir cursed herte brast atwo,
|
||
She wolde noght hir sone had do so,
|
||
Hir thoughte a despit, that he sholde take
|
||
So strange a creature unto his make.
|
||
|
||
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 roialtee
|
||
At mariages, or which cours goth biforn,
|
||
Who bloweth in the trumpe, or in an horn?
|
||
The fruyt of every tale is for to seye;
|
||
They ete, and drynke, and daunce, and synge, and pleye.
|
||
|
||
They goon to bedde, as it was skile and right,
|
||
For thogh that wyves be ful hooly thynges,
|
||
They moste take in pacience at nyght
|
||
Swiche manere necessaries as been plesynges
|
||
To folk that han ywedded hem with rynges,
|
||
And leye a lite hir hoolynesse aside
|
||
As for the tyme, it may no bet bitide.
|
||
|
||
On hir he gat a knave childe anon,
|
||
And to a bisshop and his constable eke
|
||
He took his wyf to kepe, whan he is gon
|
||
To Scotlondward, his foomen for to seke.
|
||
Now faire Custance, that is so humble and meke,
|
||
So longe is goon with childe, til that stille
|
||
She halt hire chambre, abidyng Cristes wille.
|
||
|
||
The tyme is come; a knave child she beer,
|
||
Mauricius at the fontstoon they hym calle.
|
||
This constable dooth forth come a messageer,
|
||
And wroot unto his kyng, that cleped was Alle,
|
||
How that this blisful tidyng is bifalle,
|
||
And othere tidynges spedeful for to seye;
|
||
He taketh the lettre, and forth he gooth his weye.
|
||
|
||
This messager, to doon his avantage,
|
||
Unto the kynges mooder rideth swithe,
|
||
And salueth hir ful faire in his langage,
|
||
"Madame," quod he, "ye may be glad and blithe,
|
||
And thanketh God an hundred thousand sithe.
|
||
My lady queene hath child, withouten doute,
|
||
To joye and blisse to al this regne aboute.
|
||
|
||
Lo, heere the lettres seled of this thyng,
|
||
That I moot bere with al the haste I may.
|
||
If ye wol aught unto youre sone, the kyng,
|
||
I am youre servant both nyght and day."
|
||
Donegild answerde, "as now at this tyme, nay,
|
||
But heere al nyght I wol thou take thy reste,
|
||
Tomorwe wol I seye thee what me leste."
|
||
|
||
This messager drank sadly ale and wyn,
|
||
And stolen wer hise lettres prively
|
||
Out of his box, whil he sleep as a swyn;
|
||
And countrefeted was ful subtilly
|
||
Another lettre wroght ful synfully,
|
||
Unto the kyng direct of this mateere
|
||
Fro his constable, as ye shal after heere.
|
||
|
||
The lettre spak, the queene delivered was
|
||
Of so horrible a feendly creature
|
||
That in the castel noon so hardy was
|
||
That any while dorste ther endure;
|
||
The mooder was an elf, by aventure,
|
||
Yeomen by charmes or by sorcerie,
|
||
And every wight hateth hir compaignye.
|
||
|
||
Wo was this kyng whan he this lettre had sayn,
|
||
But to no wight he tolde his sorwes soore,
|
||
But of his owene hand he wroot agayn:
|
||
"Welcome the sonde of Crist for everemoore
|
||
To me, that am now lerned in his loore.
|
||
Lord, welcome be thy lust and thy plesaunce,
|
||
My lust I putte al in thyn ordinaunce.
|
||
|
||
Kepeth this child, al be it foul or feire,
|
||
And eek my wyf, unto myn hoom-comynge;
|
||
Crist, whan hym list, may sende me an heir
|
||
Moore agreable than this to my likynge."
|
||
This lettre he seleth, pryvely wepynge,
|
||
Which to the messager was take soone
|
||
And forth he gooth, ther is namoore to doone.
|
||
|
||
O messager, fulfild of dronkenesse,
|
||
Strong is thy breeth, thy lymes faltren ay,
|
||
And thou biwreyest alle secreenesse.
|
||
Thy mynde is lorn, thou janglest as a jay,
|
||
Thy face is turned in a newe array;
|
||
Ther dronkenesse regneth in any route,
|
||
Ther is no conseil hyd, withouten doute.
|
||
|
||
O Donegild, I ne have noon Englissh digne
|
||
Unto thy malice and thy tirannye;
|
||
And therfore to the feend I thee resigne,
|
||
Lat hym enditen of thy traitorie!
|
||
Fy, mannysh, fy? O nay, by God, I lye!
|
||
Fy, feendlych spirit! for I dar wel telle,
|
||
Thogh thou heere walke, thy spirit is in helle.
|
||
|
||
This messager comth fro the kyng agayn,
|
||
And at the kynges moodres court he lighte
|
||
And she was of this messager ful fayn,
|
||
And plesed hym in al that ever she myghte.
|
||
He drank, and wel his girdel underpighte.
|
||
He slepeth, and he fnorteth in his gyse
|
||
Al nyght until the sonne gan aryse.
|
||
|
||
Eft were hise lettres stolen everychon
|
||
And countrefeted lettres in this wyse,
|
||
"The king comandeth his constable anon
|
||
Up peyne of hangyng and on heigh juyse
|
||
That he ne sholde suffren in no wyse
|
||
Custance inwith his reawme for tabyde,
|
||
Thre dayes and o quarter of a tyde.
|
||
|
||
But in the same ship as he hir fond,
|
||
Hir and hir yonge sone, and al hir geere,
|
||
He sholde putte, and croude hir fro the lond,
|
||
And chargen hir she never eft coome theere."
|
||
O my Custance, wel may thy goost have fere,
|
||
And slepynge in thy dreem been in penance,
|
||
Whan Donegild cast al this ordinance.
|
||
|
||
This messager, on morwe whan he wook,
|
||
Unto the Castel halt the nexte way,
|
||
And to the constable he the lettre took.
|
||
And whan that he this pitous lettre say,
|
||
Ful ofte he seyde, "Allas and weylaway!"
|
||
"Lord Crist," quod he, "how may this world endure,
|
||
So ful of synne is many a creature?
|
||
|
||
O myghty God, if that it be thy wille,
|
||
Sith thou art rightful juge, how may it be
|
||
That thou wolt suffren innocentz to spille,
|
||
And wikked folk regnen in prosperitee?
|
||
O goode Custance, allas, so wo is me,
|
||
That I moot be thy tormentour, or deye
|
||
On shames deeth! Ther is noon oother weye!"
|
||
|
||
Wepen bothe yonge and olde in al that place,
|
||
Whan that the kyng this cursed lettre sente,
|
||
And Custance, with a deedly pale face,
|
||
The ferthe day toward the ship she wente;
|
||
But nathelees she taketh in good entente
|
||
The wyl of Crist, and knelynge on the stronde,
|
||
She seyde, "Lord, ay welcome be thy sonde!
|
||
|
||
He that me kepte fro the false blame,
|
||
While I was on the lond amonges yow,
|
||
He kan me kepe from harm and eek fro shame
|
||
In salte see, al thogh I se noght how.
|
||
As strong as evere he was, he is yet now;
|
||
In hym triste I, and in his mooder deere,
|
||
That is to me myu seyl and eek my steere."
|
||
|
||
Hir litel child lay wepyng in hir arm,
|
||
And knelynge, pitously to hym she seyde,
|
||
"Pees, litel sone, I wol do thee noon harm."
|
||
With that hir coverchief on hir heed she breyde,
|
||
And over hise litel eyen she it leyde,
|
||
And in hir arm she lulleth it ful faste,
|
||
And into hevene hir eyen up she caste.
|
||
|
||
"Mooder," quod she, "and mayde bright, Marie,
|
||
Sooth is that thurgh wommanes eggement
|
||
Mankynde was lorn and damned ay to dye,
|
||
For which thy child was on a croys yrent;
|
||
Thy blisful eyen sawe al his torment;
|
||
Thanne is ther no comparison bitwene
|
||
Thy wo, and any wo man may sustene.
|
||
|
||
Thow sawe thy child yslayn bifore thyne eyen,
|
||
And yet now lyveth my litel child, parfay.
|
||
Now, lady bright, to whom alle woful cryen,
|
||
Thow glorie of wommanhede, thow faire may,
|
||
Thow haven of refut, brighte sterre of day,
|
||
Rewe on my child, that of thy gentillesse
|
||
Ruest on every reweful in distresse.
|
||
|
||
O litel child, allas, what is thy gilt,
|
||
That nevere wroghtest synne as yet, pardee!
|
||
Why wil thyn harde fader han thee spilt?
|
||
O mercy, deere Constable," quod she,
|
||
"As lat my litel child dwelle heer with thee;
|
||
And if thou darst nat saven hym for blame,
|
||
Yet kys hym ones in his fadres name."
|
||
|
||
Therwith she looketh bakward to the londe,
|
||
And seyde, "Farwel, housbonde routheless!"
|
||
And up she rist, and walketh doun the stronde,
|
||
Toward the ship. Hir folweth al the prees,
|
||
And evere she preyeth hir child to holde his pees,
|
||
And taketh hir leve, and with an hooly entente
|
||
She blisseth hir, and into ship she wente.
|
||
|
||
Vitailled was the ship, it is no drede,
|
||
Habundantly for hir ful longe space;
|
||
And othere necessaries that sholde nede
|
||
She hadde ynogh, heried be Goddes grace;
|
||
For wynd and weder almyghty God purchace,
|
||
And brynge hir hoom, I kan no bettre seye!
|
||
But in the see she dryveth forth hir weye.
|
||
|
||
Alla the kyng comth hoom, soone after this,
|
||
Unto his castel of the which I tolde,
|
||
And asketh where his wyf and his child is.
|
||
The constable gan aboute his herte colde,
|
||
And pleynly al the manere he hym tolde,
|
||
As ye han herd, I kan telle it no bettre;
|
||
And sheweth the kyng his seel and eek his lettre,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "Lord, as ye comanded me,
|
||
Up peyne of deeth, so have I doon, certein."
|
||
This messager tormented was, til he
|
||
Moste biknowe, and tellen plat and pleyn
|
||
Fro nyght to nyght in what place he had leyn,
|
||
And thus by wit and sotil enquerynge
|
||
Ymagined was, by whom this harm gan sprynge.
|
||
|
||
The hand was knowe that the lettre wroot,
|
||
And al the venym of this cursed dede,
|
||
But in what wise certeinly I noot.
|
||
Theffect is this, that Alla, out of drede,
|
||
His mooder slow, that may men pleynly rede,
|
||
For that she traitoure was to hir ligeance,
|
||
Thus endeth olde Donegild, with meschance!
|
||
|
||
The sorwe that this Alla, nyght and day,
|
||
Maketh for his wyf, and for his child also,
|
||
Ther is no tonge that it telle may-
|
||
But now wol I unto Custance go,
|
||
That fleteth in the see in peyne and wo,
|
||
Fyve yeer and moore, as liked Cristes sonde,
|
||
Er that hir ship approched unto londe.
|
||
|
||
Under an hethen castel, atte laste,
|
||
Of which the name in my text toght I fynde,
|
||
Custance and eek hir child the see upcaste.
|
||
Almyghty god that saved al mankynde,
|
||
Have on Custance and on hir child som mynde,
|
||
That fallen is in hethen hand eft-soone,
|
||
In point to spille, as I shal telle yow soone.
|
||
|
||
Doun fro the castel comth ther many a wight
|
||
To gauren on this ship and on Custance,
|
||
But shortly from the castel on a nyght
|
||
The lordes styward, God yeve hym meschance!-
|
||
A theef that hadde reneyed oure creance,
|
||
Cam into the ship allone, and seyde he sholde
|
||
Hir lemman be, wherso she wolde or nolde.
|
||
|
||
Wo was this wrecched womman tho bigon!
|
||
Hir child cride, and she cride pitously,
|
||
But blisful Marie heelp hir right anon,
|
||
For with hir struglyng wel and myghtily,
|
||
The theef fil over bord al sodeynly,
|
||
And in the see he dreynte for vengeance,
|
||
And thus hath Crist unwemmed kept Custance.
|
||
|
||
O foule lust of luxurie, lo, thyn ende!
|
||
Nat oonly that thou feyntest mannes mynde,
|
||
But verraily thou wolt his body shende.
|
||
Thende of thy werk or of thy lustes blynde
|
||
Is compleynyng; hou many oon may men fynde,
|
||
That noght for werk somtyme, but for thentente
|
||
To doon this synne, been outher slayn or shente!
|
||
|
||
How may this wayke womman han this strengthe
|
||
Hir to defende agayn this renegat?
|
||
O Golias, unmesurable of lengthe,
|
||
Hou myghte David make thee so maat,
|
||
So yong, and of armure so desolaat?
|
||
Hou dorste he looke upon thy dredful face?
|
||
Wel may men seen, it nas but Goddes grace!
|
||
|
||
Who yaf Judith corage or hardynesse
|
||
To sleen hym, Olofernus, in his tente,
|
||
And to deliveren out of wrecchednesse
|
||
The peple of God? I seyde, for this entente
|
||
That right as God spirit of vigour sente
|
||
To hem, and saved hem out of meschance,
|
||
So sente he myght and vigour to Custance.
|
||
|
||
Forth gooth hir ship thurghout the narwe mouth
|
||
Of Jubaltar and Septe, dryvynge alway,
|
||
Somtyme west, and somtyme north and south,
|
||
And somtyme est, ful many a wery day;
|
||
Til Cristes mooder-blessed be she ay!-
|
||
Hath shapen, thurgh hir endelees goodnesse,
|
||
To make an ende of al hir hevynesse.
|
||
|
||
Now lat us stynte of Custance but a throwe,
|
||
And speke we of the Romayn Emperour,
|
||
That out of Surrye hath by lettres knowe
|
||
The slaughtre of cristen folk, and dishonour
|
||
Doon to his doghter by a fals traytour,
|
||
I mene the cursed wikked Sowdanesse,
|
||
That at the feeste leet sleen both moore and lesse;
|
||
|
||
For which this emperour hath sent anon
|
||
His senatour with roial ordinance,
|
||
And othere lordes, God woot many oon,
|
||
On Surryens to taken heigh vengeance.
|
||
They brennen, sleen, and brynge hem to meschance
|
||
Ful many a day, but shortly, this is thende,
|
||
Hoomward to Rome they shapen hem to wende.
|
||
|
||
This senatour repaireth with victorie
|
||
To Romeward saillynge ful roially,
|
||
And mette the ship dryvynge, as seith the storie,
|
||
In which Custance sit ful pitously.
|
||
No thyng ne knew he what she was, ne why
|
||
She was in swich array, ne she nyl seye
|
||
Of hir estat, thogh that she sholde deye.
|
||
|
||
He bryngeth hir to Rome, and to his wyf
|
||
He yaf hir, and hir yonge sone also,
|
||
And with the senatour she ladde hir lyf.
|
||
Thus kan oure Lady bryngen out of wo
|
||
Woful Custance, and many another mo.
|
||
And longe tyme dwelled she in that place,
|
||
In hooly werkes evere, as was hir grace.
|
||
|
||
The senatoures wyf hir aunte was,
|
||
But for all that she knew hir never the moore-
|
||
I wol no lenger tarien in this cas,
|
||
But to kyng Alla, which I spake of yoore,
|
||
That wepeth for his wyf and siketh soore,
|
||
I wol retourne, and lete I wol Custance
|
||
Under the senatoures governance.
|
||
|
||
Kyng Alla, which that hadde his mooder slayn,
|
||
Upon a day fil in swich repentance
|
||
That, if I shortly tellen shal and playn,
|
||
To Rome he comth, to receyven his penance,
|
||
And putte hym in the popes ordinance
|
||
In heigh and logh, and Jesu Crist bisoghte
|
||
Foryeve hise wikked werkes that he wroghte.
|
||
|
||
The fame anon thurgh Rome toun is born
|
||
How Alla kyng shal comen on pilgrymage,
|
||
By herbergeours that wenten hym biforn,
|
||
For which the Senatour, as was usage,
|
||
Rood hym agayns, and many of his lynage,
|
||
As wel to shewen his heighe magnificence
|
||
As to doon any kyng a reverence.
|
||
|
||
Greet cheere dooth this noble Senatour
|
||
To kyng Alla, and he to hym also,
|
||
Everich of hem dooth oother greet honour;
|
||
And so bifel, that inwith a day or two
|
||
This senatour is to kyng Alla go
|
||
To feste; and shortly, if I shal nat lye,
|
||
Custances sone wente in his compaignye.
|
||
|
||
Som men wolde seyn, at requeste of Custance
|
||
This senatour hath lad this child to feeste;
|
||
I may nat tellen every circumstance,
|
||
Be as be may, ther was he at the leeste,
|
||
But sooth is this, that at his moodres heeste
|
||
Biforn Alla durynge the metes space,
|
||
The child stood lookynge in the kynges face.
|
||
|
||
This Alla kyng hath of this child greet wonder,
|
||
And to the senatour he seyde anon,
|
||
"Whos is that faire child, that stondeth yonder?"
|
||
"I noot," quod he, "by God and by Seint John!
|
||
A mooder he hath, but fader hath he noon,
|
||
That I of woot." But shortly, in a stounde,
|
||
He tolde Alla how that this child was founde.
|
||
|
||
"But God woot," quod this senatour also,
|
||
"So vertuous a lyver in my lyf
|
||
Ne saugh I nevere as she, ne herde of mo
|
||
Of worldly wommen, mayde, ne of wyf;
|
||
I dar wel seyn, hir hadde levere a knyf
|
||
Thurghout hir brest, than ben a womman wikke,
|
||
There is no man koude brynge hir to that prikke."
|
||
|
||
Now was this child as lyke unto Custance,
|
||
As possible is a creature to be.
|
||
This Alla hath the face in remembrance
|
||
Of dame Custance, and theron mused he,
|
||
If that the childes mooder were aught she
|
||
That is his wyf; and prively he sighte
|
||
And spedde hym fro the table that he myghte.
|
||
|
||
"Parfay," thoghte he, "fantome is in myn heed.
|
||
I oghte deme, of skilful juggement,
|
||
That in the salte see my wyf is deed."
|
||
And afterward he made his argument:
|
||
"What woot I, if that Crist have hyder ysent
|
||
My wyf by see, as wel as he hir sente
|
||
To my contree fro thennes that she wente?"
|
||
|
||
And, after noon, hoom with the senatour
|
||
Goth Alla, for to seen this wonder chaunce.
|
||
This senatour dooth Alla greet honour,
|
||
And hastifly he sente after Custance.
|
||
But trusteth weel, hir liste nat to daunce
|
||
Whan that she wiste wherfore was that sonde;
|
||
Unnethe upon hir feet she myghte stonde.
|
||
|
||
Whan 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 doumb stant as a tree,
|
||
So was hir herte shet in hir distresse,
|
||
Whan she remembred his unkyndenesse.
|
||
|
||
Twyes she swowned in his owene sighte.
|
||
He weep, and hym excuseth pitously.
|
||
"Now God," quod he, "and alle hise halwes brighte
|
||
So wisly on my soule as have mercy,
|
||
That of youre harm as giltelees am I
|
||
As is Maurice my sone, so lyk youre face;
|
||
Elles the feend me fecche out of this place!"
|
||
|
||
Long was the sobbyng and the bitter peyne
|
||
Er that hir woful hertes myghte cesse,
|
||
Greet was the pitee for to heere hem pleyne,
|
||
Thurgh whiche pleintes gan hir wo encresse.
|
||
I pray yow alle my labour to relesse;
|
||
I may nat telle hir wo until tomorwe,
|
||
I am so wery for to speke of sorwe.
|
||
|
||
But finally, whan that the sothe 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,
|
||
That save the joye that lasteth everemo
|
||
Ther is noon lyk that any creature
|
||
Hath seyn, or shal, whil that the world may dure.
|
||
|
||
Tho preyde she hir housbonde mekely,
|
||
In relief of hir longe pitous pyne,
|
||
That he wolde preye hir fader specially
|
||
That, of his magestee, he wolde enclyne
|
||
To vouchesauf som day with hym to dyne.
|
||
She preyde hym eek, he wolde by no weye
|
||
Unto hir fader no word of hir seye.
|
||
|
||
Som men wolde seyn, how that the child Maurice
|
||
Dooth this message unto this emperour,
|
||
But, as I gesse, Alla was nat so nyce
|
||
To hym that was of so sovereyn honour,
|
||
As he that is of cristen folk the flour,
|
||
Sente any child, but it is bet to deeme
|
||
He wente hymself, and so it may wel seeme.
|
||
|
||
This emperour hath graunted gentilly
|
||
To come to dyner, as he hym bisoughte,
|
||
And wel rede I he looked bisily
|
||
Upon this child, and on his doghter thoghte.
|
||
Alla goth to his in, and as him oghte
|
||
Arrayed for this feste in every wise
|
||
As ferforth as his konnyng may suffise.
|
||
|
||
The morwe cam, and Alla gan hym dresse
|
||
And eek his wyf, this emperour to meete,
|
||
And forth they ryde in joye and in galdnesse,
|
||
And whan she saugh hir fader in the strete,
|
||
She lighte doun and falleth hym to feete.
|
||
"Fader," quod she, "youre yonge child Custance
|
||
Is now ful clene out of youre remembrance.
|
||
|
||
I am youre doghter Custance," quod she,
|
||
"That whilom ye han sent unto Surrye.
|
||
It am I, fader, that in the salte see
|
||
Was put allone, and dampned for to dye.
|
||
Now goode fader, mercy I yow crye,
|
||
Sende me namoore unto noon hethenesse,
|
||
But thonketh my lord heere of his kyndenesse."
|
||
|
||
Who kan the pitous joye tellen al
|
||
Bitwix hem thre, syn they been thus ymette?
|
||
But of my tale make an ende I shal,
|
||
The day goth faste, I wol no lenger lette.
|
||
This glade folk to dyner they hem sette,
|
||
In joye and blisse at mete I lete hem dwelle,
|
||
A thousand foold wel moore than I kan telle.
|
||
|
||
This child Maurice was sithen emperour
|
||
Maad by the pope, and lyved cristenly.
|
||
To Cristes chirche he dide greet honour;
|
||
But I lete all his storie passen by-
|
||
Of Custance is my tale specially-
|
||
In the olde Romayn geestes may men fynde
|
||
Maurices lyf, I bere it noght in mynde.
|
||
|
||
This kyng Alla, whan he his tyme say,
|
||
With his Custance, his hooly wyf so sweete,
|
||
To Engelond been they come the righte way,
|
||
Wher as they lyve in joye and in quiete.
|
||
But litel while it lasteth, I yow heete,
|
||
Joye of this world, for tyme wol nat abyde,
|
||
Fro day to nyght it changeth as the tyde.
|
||
|
||
Who lyved evere in swich delit o day
|
||
That hym ne moeved outher conscience
|
||
Or ire, or talent, or som-kyn affray,
|
||
Envye, or pride, or passion, or offence?
|
||
I ne seye but for this ende this sentence,
|
||
That litel while in joye or in plesance
|
||
Lasteth the blisse of Alla with Custance.
|
||
|
||
For deeth, that taketh of heigh and logh his rente,
|
||
Whan passed was a yeer, evene as I gesse,
|
||
Out of this world this kyng Alla he hente,
|
||
For whom Custance hath ful greet hevynesse.
|
||
Now lat us praye God his soule blesse,
|
||
And dame Custance, finally to seye,
|
||
Toward the toun of Rome goth hir weye.
|
||
|
||
To Rome is come this hooly creature,
|
||
And fyndeth ther hir freendes hoole and sounde.
|
||
Now is she scaped al hire aventure,
|
||
And whan that she hir fader hath yfounde,
|
||
Doun on hir knees falleth she to grounde,
|
||
Wepynge for tendrenesse, in herte blithe,
|
||
She heryeth God an hundred thousande sithe.
|
||
|
||
In vertu and in hooly almus-dede
|
||
They lyven alle, and never asonder wende
|
||
Til deeth departed hem; this lyf they lede;-
|
||
And fareth now weel, my tale is at an ende.
|
||
Now Jesu Crist, that of his myght may sende
|
||
Joye after wo, governe us in his grace,
|
||
And kepe us alle that been in this place. Amen.
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the tale of the Man of Lawe.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Part 8
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE SHIPMANNES TALE
|
||
|
||
Here endith the man of lawe his tale. And next folwith
|
||
the Shipman his prolog.
|
||
|
||
Oure Ost upon his stiropes stood anoon,
|
||
And seide, "Good men, herkeneth everychoon;
|
||
This was a thrifty tale for the nonys.
|
||
|
||
Sir parisshe preste," quod he, "for Godis bonys,
|
||
Telle us a tale, as was thi forward yore;
|
||
I se wel, that ye lernede men in lore
|
||
Can meche good, bi Godis dignite."
|
||
The parson him answerde, "Benedicite,
|
||
|
||
What eyleth the man so synfully to swere?"
|
||
Oure Ost answerde, "O Jankyn, be ye there?
|
||
I smelle a Lollere in the wynde," quod he,
|
||
"Howe, goodmen," quod oure Hoste, "herkeneth me,
|
||
Abyde for Godis digne passioun,
|
||
|
||
For we shul han a predicacioun,
|
||
This Lollere here wol prechen us somwhat."
|
||
"Nay, bi Godis soule, that shal he nat,"
|
||
Seyde the Shipman, "here shal he not preche,
|
||
He shal no gospel glosen here, ne teche.
|
||
|
||
We leven alle in the grete God," quod he,
|
||
"He wolde sowen som difficulte
|
||
Or sprengen cokkel in oure clene corn.
|
||
And therfore, Ost, I warne the biforn,
|
||
My joly body shal a tale telle
|
||
|
||
And I shal clynkyn yow so mery a belle
|
||
That I shal wakyn al this companye;
|
||
But it shal not ben of Philosophie,
|
||
Ne phislyas, ne termes queynte of lawe;
|
||
Ther nis but litil Latyn in my mawe."
|
||
|
||
Here endith the Shipman his prolog. And next folwyng
|
||
he bigynneth his tale.
|
||
|
||
THE TALE.
|
||
|
||
(Daun John, a monk of Paris, beguiles the wife of a
|
||
merchant of St. Denis by money borrowed from her husband.
|
||
She saves herself, on the point of discovery, by a ready
|
||
answer.)
|
||
|
||
END-LINK
|
||
|
||
Bihoold the murie wordes of the Hoost to the Shipman
|
||
and to the lady Prioresse.
|
||
|
||
"Wel seyd, by corpus dominus," quod our Hoost,
|
||
"Now longe moote thou saille by the cost,
|
||
Sir gentil maister, gentil maryneer.
|
||
God yeve this monk a thousand last quade yeer!
|
||
A ha! felawes, beth ware of swich a jape.
|
||
|
||
The monk putte in the mannes hood an ape,
|
||
And in his wyves eek, by Seint Austyn;
|
||
Draweth no monkes moore unto your in.
|
||
But now passe over, and lat us seke aboute
|
||
Who shal now telle first of al this route
|
||
|
||
Another tale?" and with that word he sayde,
|
||
As curteisly as it had ben a mayde,
|
||
"My lady Prioresse, by youre 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.
|
||
Now wol ye vouchesauf, my lady deere?"
|
||
"Gladly," quod she, and seyde as ye shal heere.
|
||
Part 9
|
||
|
||
THE PRIORESSES TALE
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Prioresses tale.
|
||
|
||
Domine dominus noster.
|
||
|
||
O lord oure lord, thy name how merveillous
|
||
Is in this large world ysprad-quod she-
|
||
For noght oonly thy laude precious
|
||
Parfourned is by men of dignitee,
|
||
But by the mouth of children thy bountee
|
||
Parfourned is, for on the brest soukynge
|
||
Somtyme shewen they thyn heriynge.
|
||
|
||
Wherfore in laude, as I best kan or may,
|
||
Of thee, and of the whyte lylye flour
|
||
Which that the bar, and is a mayde alway,
|
||
To telle a storie I wol do my labour;
|
||
Nat that I may encreessen hir honour,
|
||
For she hirself is honour, and the roote
|
||
Of bountee, next hir sone, and soules boote.
|
||
|
||
O mooder mayde! O mayde mooder fre!
|
||
O bussh unbrent, brennynge in Moyses sighte,
|
||
That ravysedest doun fro the deitee
|
||
Thurgh thyn humblesse, the goost that in thalighte,
|
||
Of whos vertu, whan he thyn herte lighte,
|
||
Conceyved was the Fadres sapience,
|
||
Help me to telle it in thy reverence.
|
||
|
||
Lady, thy bountee, thy magnificence,
|
||
Thy vertu, and thy grete humylitee,
|
||
Ther may no tonge expresse in no science,
|
||
For somtyme, lady, er men praye to thee,
|
||
Thou goost biforn of thy benyngnytee
|
||
And getest us the lyght, thurgh thy preyere,
|
||
To gyden us unto thy sone so deere.
|
||
|
||
My konnyng is so wayk, O blisful queene,
|
||
For to declare thy grete worthynesse,
|
||
That I ne may the weighte nat susteene,
|
||
But as a child of twelf monthe oold, or lesse,
|
||
That kan unnethes any word expresse,
|
||
Right so fare I; and therfore I yow preye,
|
||
Gydeth my song that I shal of yow seye.
|
||
|
||
Heere begynneth the Prioresses Tale.
|
||
|
||
Ther was in Asye, in a greet citee,
|
||
Amonges cristene folk a Jewerye,
|
||
Sustened by a lord of that contree
|
||
For foule usure and lucre of vileynye,
|
||
Hateful to Crist and to his compaignye,
|
||
And thurgh this strete men myghte ride or wende,
|
||
For it was free and open at eyther ende.
|
||
|
||
A litel scole of cristen folk ther stood
|
||
Doun at the ferther ende, in which ther were
|
||
Children an heep, ycomen of cristen blood,
|
||
That lerned in that scole yeer by yeer
|
||
Swich manere doctrine as men used there,
|
||
This is to seyn, to syngen and to rede,
|
||
As smale children doon in hir childhede.
|
||
|
||
Among thise children was a wydwes sone,
|
||
A litel clergeoun, seven yeer of age,
|
||
That day by day to scole was his wone,
|
||
And eek also, wher as he saugh thymage
|
||
Of Cristes mooder, he hadde in usage
|
||
As hym was taught, to knele adoun, and seye
|
||
His Ave Marie, as he goth by the weye.
|
||
|
||
Thus hath this wydwe hir litel sone ytaught
|
||
Oure blisful lady, Cristes mooder deere,
|
||
To worshipe ay; and he forgate it naught,
|
||
For sely child wol alday soone leere.
|
||
But ay, whan I remembre on this mateere,
|
||
Seint Nicholas stant evere in my presence,
|
||
For he so yong to Crist dide reverence.
|
||
|
||
This litel child, his litel book lernynge,
|
||
As he sat in the scole at his prymer,
|
||
He "Alma redemptoris" herde synge
|
||
As children lerned hir anthiphoner;
|
||
And as he dorste, he drough hym ner and ner,
|
||
And herkned ay the wordes and the noote,
|
||
Til he the firste vers koude al by rote.
|
||
|
||
Noght wiste he what this Latyn was to seye,
|
||
For he so yong and tendre was of age,
|
||
But on a day his felawe gan he preye
|
||
Texpounden hym this song in his langage,
|
||
Or telle hym why this song was in usage;
|
||
This preyde he hym to construe and declare
|
||
Ful often tyme upon hise knowes bare.
|
||
|
||
His felawe, which that elder was than he,
|
||
Answerde hym thus, "This song, I have herd seye,
|
||
Was maked of oure blisful Lady free,
|
||
Hir to salue, and eek hir for to preye
|
||
To been our help, and socour whan we deye.
|
||
I kan namoore expounde in this mateere,
|
||
I lerne song, I kan but smal grammere."
|
||
|
||
"And is this song maked in reverence
|
||
Of Cristes mooder?" seyde this innocent.
|
||
"Now, certes, I wol do my diligence
|
||
To konne it al, er Cristemasse is went;
|
||
Though that I for my prymer shal be shent
|
||
And shal be beten thries in an houre,
|
||
I wol it konne, oure lady for to honoure."
|
||
|
||
His felawe taughte hym homward prively
|
||
Fro day to day, til he koude it by rote;
|
||
And thanne he song it wel and boldely
|
||
Fro word to word acordynge with the note.
|
||
Twies a day it passed thurgh his throte,
|
||
To scoleward, and homward whan he wente;
|
||
On Cristes mooder set was his entente.
|
||
|
||
As I have seyd, thurghout the Jewerie
|
||
This litel child, as he cam to and fro,
|
||
Ful murily than wolde he synge and crie
|
||
"O Alma redemptoris" evere-mo.
|
||
The swetnesse hath his herte perced so
|
||
Of Cristes mooder, that to hir to preye
|
||
He kan nat stynte of syngyng by the weye.
|
||
|
||
Oure firste foo, the serpent Sathanas,
|
||
That hath in Jewes herte his waspes nest,
|
||
Up swal, and seyde, "O Hebrayk peple, allas,
|
||
Is this to yow a thyng that is honest,
|
||
That swich a boy shal walken as hym lest
|
||
In youre despit, and synge of swich sentence,
|
||
Which is agayn oure lawes reverence?"
|
||
|
||
Fro thennes forth the Jewes han conspired
|
||
This innocent out of this world to chace.
|
||
An homycide therto han they hyred
|
||
That in an aleye hadde a privee place;
|
||
And as the child gan forby for to pace,
|
||
This cursed Jew hym hente and heeld hym faste,
|
||
And kitte his throte, and in a pit hym caste.
|
||
|
||
I seye that in a wardrobe they hym threwe,
|
||
Where as this Jewes purgen hire entraille.
|
||
O cursed folk of Herodes al newe,
|
||
What may youre yvel entente yow availle?
|
||
Mordre wol out, certeyn, it wol nat faille,
|
||
And namely ther thonour of God shal sprede,
|
||
The blood out crieth on youre cursed dede.
|
||
|
||
O matir, sowded to virginitee,
|
||
Now maystow syngen, folwynge evere in oon
|
||
The white lamb celestial-quod she-
|
||
Of which the grete Evaungelsit Seint John
|
||
In Pathmos wroot, which seith that they that goon
|
||
Biforn this lamb and synge a song al newe,
|
||
|
||
That never, fleshly, wommen they ne knewe.
|
||
|
||
This povre wydwe awaiteth al that nyght
|
||
After hir litel child, but he cam noght;
|
||
For which, as soone as it was dayes light,
|
||
With face pale of drede and bisy thoght,
|
||
She hath at scole and elles-where hym soght,
|
||
Til finally she gan so fer espie,
|
||
That he last seyn was in the Jewerie.
|
||
|
||
With moodres pitee in hir brest enclosed,
|
||
She gooth, as she were half out of hir mynde,
|
||
To every place where she hath supposed
|
||
By liklihede hir litel child to finde,
|
||
And evere on Cristes mooder, meeke and kynde
|
||
She cride, and atte laste thus she wroghte,
|
||
Among the cursed Jewes she hym soghte.
|
||
|
||
She frayneth, and she preyeth pitously
|
||
To every Jew that dwelte in thilke place,
|
||
To telle hir if hir child wente oght forby.
|
||
They seyde nay; but Jesu, of his grace,
|
||
Yaf in hir thoght, inwith a litel space,
|
||
That in that place after hir sone she cryde,
|
||
Wher he was casten in a pit bisyde.
|
||
|
||
O grete God, that parfournest thy laude
|
||
By mouth of innocentz, lo, heer thy myght!
|
||
This gemme of chastite, this emeraude,
|
||
And eek of martirdom the ruby bright,
|
||
Ther he with throte ykorven lay upright,
|
||
He "Alma redemptoris" gan to synge
|
||
So loude, that al the place gan to rynge.
|
||
|
||
The cristene folk that thurgh the strete wente
|
||
In coomen, for to wondre upon this thyng,
|
||
And hastily they for the Provost sente.
|
||
He cam anon withouten tariyng,
|
||
And herieth Crist that is of hevene kyng,
|
||
And eek his mooder, honour of mankynde;
|
||
And after that, the Jewes leet he bynde.
|
||
|
||
This child, with pitous lamentacioun,
|
||
Uptaken was, syngynge his song alway,
|
||
And with honour of greet processioun
|
||
They carien hym unto the nexte abbay;
|
||
His mooder swownynge by his beere lay,
|
||
Unnethe myghte the peple that was theere
|
||
This newe Rachel brynge fro his beere.
|
||
|
||
With torment and with shameful deeth echon
|
||
This Provost dooth the Jewes for to sterve,
|
||
That of this mordre wiste, and that anon.
|
||
He nolde no swich cursednesse observe;
|
||
Yvele shal have that yvele wol deserve.
|
||
Therfore with wilde hors he dide hem drawe,
|
||
And after that he heng hem, by the lawe.
|
||
|
||
Upon his beere ay lith this innocent
|
||
Biforn the chief auter, whil masse laste,
|
||
And after that, the abbot with his covent
|
||
Han sped hem for to burien hym ful faste,
|
||
And whan they hooly water on hym caste,
|
||
Yet spak this child, whan spreynd was hooly water,
|
||
And song "O Alma redemptoris mater."
|
||
|
||
This abbot, which that was an hooly man,
|
||
As monkes been-or elles oghte be-
|
||
This yonge child, "and, as by wey of kynde,
|
||
I sholde have dyed, ye, longe tyme agon,
|
||
But Jesu Crist, as ye in bookes fynde,
|
||
Wil that his glorie laste and be in mynde,
|
||
And for the worship of his mooder deere,
|
||
Yet may I synge "O Alma" loude and cleere.
|
||
|
||
This welle of mercy, Cristes mooder swete,
|
||
I loved alwey as after my konnynge;
|
||
And whan that I my lyf sholde forlete,
|
||
To me she cam, and bad me for to synge
|
||
This antheme, verraily, in my deyynge,
|
||
As ye han herd, and whan that I hadde songe,
|
||
Me thoughte she leyde a greyn upon my tonge.
|
||
|
||
Wherfore I synge, and synge I moot certeyn
|
||
In honour of that blisful mayden free,
|
||
Til fro my tonge oftaken is the greyn.
|
||
And afterward thus seyde she to me,
|
||
`My litel child, now wol I fecche thee,
|
||
Whan that the greyn is fro thy tonge ytake;
|
||
Be nat agast, I wol thee nat forsake.'"
|
||
|
||
This hooly monk, this Abbot, hym meene I,
|
||
His tonge out-caughte, and took awey the greyn,
|
||
And he yaf up the goost ful softely;
|
||
And whan this Abbot hadde this wonder seyn,
|
||
Hise salte teeris trikled doun as reyn,
|
||
And gruf he fil al plat upon the grounde,
|
||
And stille he lay, as he had been ybounde.
|
||
|
||
The covent eek lay on the pavement,
|
||
Wepynge, and heryen Cristes mooder deere.
|
||
And after that they ryse, and forth been went,
|
||
And tooken awey this martir from his beere,
|
||
And in a temple of marbul stones cleere
|
||
Enclosen they his litel body sweete.
|
||
Ther he is now, God leve us for to meete!
|
||
|
||
O yonge Hugh of Lyncoln, slayn also
|
||
With cursed Jewes, as it is notable,
|
||
For it nis but a litel while ago,
|
||
Preye eek for us, we synful folk unstable,
|
||
That of his mercy God so merciable
|
||
On us his grete mercy multiplie,
|
||
For reverence of his mooder Marie. Amen.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Prioresses Tale.
|
||
Part 10
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO CHAUCER'S TALE OF SIR THOPAS
|
||
|
||
Bihoold the murye wordes of the Hoost to Chaucer.
|
||
|
||
Whan seyd was al this miracle, every man
|
||
As sobre was, that wonder was to se,
|
||
Til that oure Hooste japen tho bigan,
|
||
And thanne at erst he looked upon me,
|
||
And seyde thus, "What man artow," quod he,
|
||
"Thow lookest as thou woldest fynde an hare,
|
||
For ever upon the ground I se thee stare.
|
||
|
||
Approche neer, and looke up murily;
|
||
Now war yow, sires, and lat this man have place.
|
||
He in the waast is shape as wel as I;
|
||
This were a popet in an arm tenbrace
|
||
For any womman smal, and fair of face.
|
||
He semeth elvyssh by his contenaunce,
|
||
For unto no wight dooth he daliaunce.
|
||
|
||
Sey now somwhat, syn oother folk han sayd,
|
||
Telle us a tale of myrthe, and that anon."
|
||
"Hooste," quod I, "ne beth nat yvele apayed,
|
||
For oother tale certes kan I noon
|
||
But of a ryme I lerned longe agoon."
|
||
"Ye, that is good," quod he, "now shul we heere
|
||
Som deyntee thyng, me thynketh by his cheere."
|
||
Part 11
|
||
|
||
SIR THOPAS
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth Chaucers tale of Thopas.
|
||
|
||
Listeth, lordes, in good entent,
|
||
And I wol telle verrayment
|
||
Of myrthe and of solas,
|
||
Al of a knyght was fair and gent
|
||
In bataille and in tourneyment,
|
||
His name was Sir Thopas.
|
||
|
||
Yborn he was in fer contree,
|
||
In Flaundres, al biyonde the see,
|
||
At Poperyng in the place;
|
||
His fader was a man ful free,
|
||
And lord he was of that contree,
|
||
As it was Goddes grace.
|
||
|
||
Sir Thopas wax a doghty swayn,
|
||
Whit was his face as payndemayn,
|
||
Hise 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,
|
||
That to his girdel raughte adoun;
|
||
Hise shoon of Cordewane.
|
||
Of Brugges were his hosen broun,
|
||
His robe was of syklatoun
|
||
That coste many a jane.
|
||
|
||
He koude hunte at wilde deer,
|
||
And ride an haukyng for river,
|
||
With grey goshauk on honde,
|
||
Therto he was a good archeer,
|
||
Of wrastlyng was ther noon his peer,
|
||
Ther any ram shal stonde.
|
||
|
||
Ful many a mayde, bright in bour,
|
||
They moorne for hym, paramour,
|
||
Whan hem were bet to slepe;
|
||
But he was chaast and no lechour,
|
||
And sweete as is the brembulflour
|
||
That bereth the rede hepe.
|
||
|
||
And so bifel upon a day,
|
||
Frosothe as I yow telle may,
|
||
Sir Thopas wolde out ride;
|
||
He worth upon his steede gray,
|
||
And in his hand a launcegay,
|
||
A long swerd by his side.
|
||
|
||
The priketh thurgh a fair forest,
|
||
Therinne is many a wilde best,
|
||
Ye, both bukke and hare,
|
||
And as he priketh north and est,
|
||
I telle it yow, hym hadde almest
|
||
Bitidde a sory care.
|
||
|
||
Ther spryngen herbes, grete and smale,
|
||
The lycorys and cetewale,
|
||
And many a clowe-gylofre,
|
||
And notemuge to putte in ale,
|
||
Wheither it be moyste or stale,
|
||
Or for to leye in cofre.
|
||
|
||
The briddes synge, it is no nay,
|
||
The sparhauk and the papejay
|
||
That joye it was to heere,
|
||
The thrustelcok made eek hir lay,
|
||
The wodedowve upon a spray
|
||
She sang ful loude and cleere.
|
||
|
||
Sir Thopas fil in love-longynge,
|
||
Al whan he herde the thrustel synge,
|
||
And pryked as he were wood;
|
||
His faire steede in his prikynge
|
||
So swatte that men myghte him wrynge,
|
||
His sydes were al blood.
|
||
|
||
Sir Thopas eek so wery was
|
||
For prikyng on the softe gras,
|
||
So fiers was his corage,
|
||
That doun he leyde him in that plas
|
||
To make his steede som solas,
|
||
And yaf hym good forage.
|
||
|
||
"O seinte Marie, benedicite,
|
||
What eyleth this love at me
|
||
To bynde me so soore?
|
||
Me dremed al this nyght, pardee,
|
||
An elf-queene shal my lemman be,
|
||
And slepe under my goore.
|
||
|
||
An elf-queene wol I love, ywis,
|
||
For in this world no womman is
|
||
Worthy to be my make
|
||
In towne;
|
||
Alle othere wommen I forsake,
|
||
And to an elf-queene I me take
|
||
By dale and eek by downe."
|
||
|
||
Into his sadel he clamb anon,
|
||
And priketh over stile and stoon
|
||
An elf-queene for tespye,
|
||
Til he so longe hadde riden and goon
|
||
That he foond, in a pryve woon,
|
||
The contree of Fairye
|
||
So wilde;
|
||
For in that contree was ther noon
|
||
That to him dorste ryde or goon,
|
||
Neither wyf ne childe,
|
||
|
||
Til that ther cam a greet geaunt,
|
||
His name was Sir Olifaunt,
|
||
A perilous man of dede;
|
||
He seyde "Child, by Termagaunt,
|
||
But if thou prike out of myn haunt,
|
||
Anon I sle thy steede
|
||
With mace.
|
||
Heere is the queene of Fayerye,
|
||
With harpe and pipe and symphonye,
|
||
Dwellyng in this place."
|
||
|
||
The child seyde, "Also moote I thee,
|
||
Tomorwe wol I meete with thee,
|
||
Whan I have myn armoure.
|
||
And yet I hope, par ma fay,
|
||
That thou shalt with this launcegay
|
||
Abyen it ful sowre.
|
||
Thy mawe
|
||
Shal I percen if I may
|
||
Er it be fully pryme of day,
|
||
For heere thow shalt be slawe."
|
||
|
||
Sir Thopas drow abak ful faste,
|
||
This geant at hym stones caste
|
||
Out of a fel staf-slynge;
|
||
But faire escapeth Child Thopas,
|
||
And al it was thurgh Goddes gras,
|
||
And thurgh his fair berynge.
|
||
|
||
Yet listeth, lordes, to my tale,
|
||
Murier than the nightyngale,
|
||
For now I wol yow rowne
|
||
How Sir Thopas, with sydes smale,
|
||
Prikyng over hill and dale
|
||
Is comen agayn to towne.
|
||
|
||
His murie men comanded he
|
||
To make hym bothe game and glee,
|
||
For nedes moste he fighte
|
||
With a geaunt with hevedes three,
|
||
For paramour and jolitee
|
||
Of oon that shoon ful brighte.
|
||
|
||
"Do come,: he seyde, "my mynstrales,
|
||
And geestours, for to tellen tales
|
||
Anon in myn armynge;
|
||
Of romances that been roiales,
|
||
Of Popes and of Cardinales,
|
||
And eek of love-likynge."
|
||
|
||
They fette hym first the sweete wyn,
|
||
And mede eek in a mazelyn,
|
||
And roial spicerye,
|
||
And gyngebreed that was ful fyn,
|
||
And lycorys, and eek comyn,
|
||
With sugre that is so trye.
|
||
|
||
He dide next his white leere
|
||
Of clooth of lake, fyn and cleere,
|
||
A breech, and eek a sherte,
|
||
And next his sherte an aketoun,
|
||
And over that an haubergeoun,
|
||
For percynge of his herte.
|
||
|
||
And over that a fyn hawberk,
|
||
Was al ywroght of Jewes werk,
|
||
Ful strong it was of plate.
|
||
And over that his cote-armour
|
||
As whit as is a lilye flour,
|
||
In which he wol debate.
|
||
|
||
His sheeld was al of gold so reed,
|
||
And therinne was a bores heed,
|
||
A charbocle bisyde;
|
||
And there he swoor on ale and breed,
|
||
How that "the geaunt shal be deed
|
||
Bityde what bityde!"
|
||
|
||
Hise jambeux were of quyrboilly,
|
||
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 moone light.
|
||
|
||
His spere it was of fyn ciprees,
|
||
That bodeth werre, and no thyng pees,
|
||
The heed ful sharpe ygrounde;
|
||
His steede was al dappull-gray,
|
||
It gooth an ambil in the way
|
||
Ful softely and rounde
|
||
In londe.
|
||
Loo, lordes myne, heere is a fit;
|
||
If ye wol any moore of it,
|
||
To telle it wol I fonde.
|
||
|
||
The Second Fit.
|
||
|
||
Now holde youre mouth, par charitee,
|
||
Bothe knyght and lady free,
|
||
And herkneth to my spelle;
|
||
Of batailles and of chivalry
|
||
And of ladyes love-drury
|
||
Anon I wol yow telle.
|
||
|
||
Men speken of romances of prys,
|
||
Of Hornchild, and of Ypotys,
|
||
Of Beves and Sir Gy,
|
||
Of Sir Lybeux and Pleyndamour,
|
||
But Sir Thopas, he bereth the flour
|
||
Of roial chivalry.
|
||
|
||
His goode steede al he bistrood,
|
||
And forth upon his wey he glood
|
||
As sparcle out of the bronde.
|
||
Upon his creest he bar a tour,
|
||
And therinne stiked a lilie-flour;
|
||
God shilde his cors fro shonde!
|
||
|
||
And for he was a knyght auntrous,
|
||
He nolde slepen in noon hous,
|
||
But liggen in his hoode.
|
||
His brighte helm was his wonger,
|
||
And by hym baiteth his dextrer
|
||
Of herbes fyne and goode.
|
||
|
||
Hym-self drank water of the well,
|
||
As dide the knyght sir Percyvell
|
||
So worly under wede,
|
||
Til on a day-----------
|
||
|
||
Heere the Hoost stynteth Chaucer of his Tale of Thopas.
|
||
|
||
"Na moore of this, for Goddes dignitee,"
|
||
Quod oure hooste, "for thou makest me
|
||
So wery of thy verray lewednesse,
|
||
That also wisly God my soule blesse,
|
||
Min eres aken of thy drasty speche.
|
||
|
||
Now swich a rym the devel I biteche!
|
||
This may wel be rym dogerel," quod he.
|
||
"Why so?" quod I, "why wiltow lette me
|
||
Moore of my tale than another man
|
||
Syn that it is the beste tale I kan?"
|
||
|
||
"By God," quod he, "for pleynly at a word
|
||
Thy drasty rymyng is nat worth a toord,
|
||
Thou doost noght elles but despendest tyme.
|
||
Sir, at o word thou shalt no lenger ryme.
|
||
Lat se wher thou kanst tellen aught in geeste,
|
||
|
||
Or telle in prose somwhat, at the leeste,
|
||
In which ther be som murthe or som doctryne."
|
||
"Gladly," quod I, "by Goddes sweete pyne,
|
||
I wol yow telle a litel thyng in prose,
|
||
That oghte liken yow as I suppose,
|
||
|
||
Or elles, certes, ye been to daungerous.
|
||
It is a moral tale vertuous,
|
||
Al be it take somtyme in sondry wyse
|
||
Of sondry folk as I shal yow devyse.
|
||
As thus; ye woot that every Evaungelist
|
||
|
||
That telleth us the peyne of Jesu Crist
|
||
Ne seith nat alle thyng as his felawe dooth,
|
||
But, nathelees, hir sentence is al sooth,
|
||
And alle acorden as in hir sentence,
|
||
Al be her in hir tellyng difference.
|
||
|
||
For somme of hem seyn moore, and somme seyn lesse,
|
||
Whan they his pitous passioun expresse;
|
||
I meene of Marke, Mathew, Luc, and John,
|
||
But doutelees hir sentence is al oon,
|
||
Therfore, lordynges alle, I yow biseche
|
||
|
||
If that yow thynke I varie as in my speche,
|
||
As thus, though that I telle somwhat moore
|
||
Of proverbes, than ye han herd bifoore,
|
||
Comprehended in this litel tretys heere,
|
||
To enforce with theffect of my mateere,
|
||
|
||
And though I nat the same wordes seye
|
||
As ye han herd, yet to yow alle I preye,
|
||
Blameth me nat; for, as in my sentence
|
||
Ye shul nat fynden moche difference
|
||
Fro the sentence of this tretys lyte
|
||
|
||
After the which this murye tale I write.
|
||
And therfore herkneth what that I shal seye,
|
||
And lat me tellen al my tale, I preye."
|
||
|
||
THE TALE (in prose).
|
||
|
||
(A young man called Melibeus, whose wife Prudence and
|
||
daughter Sophie (Wisdom) are maltreated by his foes in
|
||
his absence, is counseled with many wise sayings uttered by
|
||
his wife tending toward peace and forgiveness, instead of
|
||
revenge.)
|
||
Part 12
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE MONKES TALE
|
||
|
||
The murye wordes of the Hoost to the Monk.
|
||
|
||
Whan ended was my tale of Melibee,
|
||
And of Prudence, and hir benignytee,
|
||
Oure hooste seyde, "As I am feithful man,
|
||
And by that precious corpus Madrian,
|
||
I hadde levere than a barel ale
|
||
|
||
That goode lief my wyf hadde herd this tale!
|
||
She nys nothyng of swich pacience
|
||
As was this Melibeus wyf, Prudence.
|
||
By Goddes bones, whan I bete my knaves
|
||
She bryngeth me forth the grete clobbed staves,
|
||
|
||
And crieth, `Slee the dogges, everichoon,
|
||
And brek hem, bothe bak and every boon.'
|
||
And if that any neighebore 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 crieth, `false coward, wrek thy wyf!
|
||
By corpus bones, I wol have thy knyf,
|
||
And thou shalt have my distaf and go spynne
|
||
Fro day to nyght!' Right thus she wol bigynne.
|
||
|
||
`Allas,' she seith, `that evere I was shape
|
||
To wedden a milksop or a coward ape,
|
||
That wol been overlad with every wight;
|
||
Thou darst nat stonden by thy wyves right!'
|
||
This is my lif, 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
|
||
Be lik a wilde leoun fool-hardy.
|
||
I woot wel she wol do me slee som day
|
||
Som neighebore, and thanne go my way.
|
||
|
||
For I am perilous with knyf in honde,
|
||
Al be it that I dar hir nat withstonde.
|
||
For she is byg in armes, by my feith,
|
||
That shal he fynde that hir mysdooth or seith-
|
||
But lat us passe awey fro this mateere.
|
||
|
||
My lord the Monk," quod he, "be myrie of cheere,
|
||
For ye shul telle a tale, trewely.
|
||
Loo, Rouchestre stant heer faste by.
|
||
Ryde forth, myn owene lord, brek nat oure game.
|
||
But, by my trouthe, I knowe nat youre name;
|
||
|
||
Wher shal I calle yow my lord daun John,
|
||
Or daun Thomas, or elles daun Albon?
|
||
Of what hous be ye, by youre fader kyn?
|
||
I vowe to God, thou hast a ful fair skyn,
|
||
It is a gentil pasture ther thow goost.
|
||
|
||
Thou art nat lyk a penant or a goost.
|
||
Upon my feith, thou art som officer,
|
||
Som worthy sexteyn, or som celerer,
|
||
For by my fader soule, as to my doom,
|
||
Thou art a maister whan thou art at hoom,
|
||
|
||
No povre cloysterer, ne no novys,
|
||
But a governour, wily and wys;
|
||
And therwith-al of brawnes and of bones
|
||
A wel-farynge persone, for the nones.
|
||
I pray to God, yeve hym confusioun
|
||
|
||
That first thee broghte unto religioun.
|
||
Thou woldest han been a tredefowel aright;
|
||
Haddwstow as greet a leeve as thou hast myght
|
||
To parfourne al thy lust in engendrure,
|
||
Thou haddest bigeten ful many a creature.
|
||
|
||
Allas, why werestow so wyd a cope?
|
||
God yeve me sorwe, but, and I were a pope,
|
||
Nat oonly thou but every myghty man
|
||
Though 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 tredyng, and we borel men been shrympes.
|
||
Of fieble trees ther comen wrecched ympes.
|
||
This maketh that our heyres ben so sclendre
|
||
And feble, that they may nat wel engendre;
|
||
|
||
This maketh that oure wyves wole assaye
|
||
Religious folk, for ye mowe bettre paye
|
||
Of Venus paiementz 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."
|
||
This worthy Monk took al in pacience,
|
||
And seyde, "I wol doon al my diligence,
|
||
As fer as sowneth into honestee,
|
||
To telle yow a tale, or two, or three.
|
||
|
||
And if yow list to herkne hyderward
|
||
I wol yow seyn the lyf of seint Edward;
|
||
Or ellis first tragedies wol I telle
|
||
Of whiche I have an hundred in my celle.
|
||
Tragedie is to seyn, a certeyn storie,
|
||
|
||
As olde bookes maken us memorie,
|
||
Of hym that stood in greet prosperitee
|
||
And is yfallen out of heigh degree
|
||
Into myserie, and endeth wrecchedly,
|
||
And they ben versified communely
|
||
|
||
Of six feet, which men clepen exametron.
|
||
In prose eek been endited many oon,
|
||
And eek in meetre, in many a sondry wyse.
|
||
Lo, this declaryng oghte ynogh suffise;
|
||
Now herkneth, if yow liketh for to heere.
|
||
|
||
But first, I yow biseeke in this mateere,
|
||
Though I by ordre telle nat this thynges,
|
||
Be it of popes, emperours, or kynges,
|
||
After hir ages, as men writen fynde,
|
||
But tellen hem, som bifore and som bihynde,
|
||
|
||
As it now comth unto my remembraunce;
|
||
Have me excused of myn ignoraunce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Part 13
|
||
|
||
THE MONKES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Monkes Tale de Casibut Virorum
|
||
Illustrium.
|
||
|
||
I wol biwaille in manere of Tragedie
|
||
The harm of hem that stoode in heigh degree,
|
||
And fillen so, that ther nas no remedie
|
||
To brynge hem out of hir adversitee.
|
||
For certein, whan that Fortune list to flee,
|
||
Ther may no man the cours of hire withholde;
|
||
Lat no man truste on blynd prosperitee;
|
||
Be war of thise ensamples, trewe and olde.
|
||
|
||
Lucifer
|
||
|
||
At Lucifer, though he an aungel were,
|
||
And nat a man, at hym wol I biginne,
|
||
For though Fortune may noon aungel dere,
|
||
From heigh degree yet fel he for his synne
|
||
Doun into helle, where he yet is inne.
|
||
O Lucifer, brightest of aungels alle,
|
||
Now artow Sathanas, that mayst nat twynne
|
||
Out of miserie, in which that thou art falle.
|
||
|
||
Adam
|
||
|
||
Loo Adam, in the feeld of Damyssene,
|
||
With Goddes owene fynger wroght was he,
|
||
And nat bigeten of mannes sperme unclene,
|
||
And welte all Paradys, savynge o tree.
|
||
Hadde nevere worldly man so heigh degree
|
||
As Adam, til he, for mysgovernaunce,
|
||
Was dryven out of hys hye prosperitee
|
||
To labour, and to helle, and to meschaunce.
|
||
|
||
Sampson
|
||
|
||
Loo Sampson, which that was annunciat
|
||
By angel, longe er his nativitee,
|
||
And was to God almyghty consecrat,
|
||
And stood in noblesse whil he myghte see,
|
||
Was nevere swich another as was hee,
|
||
To speke of strengthe and therwith hardynesse;
|
||
But to hise wyves toolde he his secree,
|
||
Thurgh which he slow hymself for wrecchednesse.
|
||
|
||
Sampsoun, this noble almyghty champioun,
|
||
Withouten wepene, save his handes tweye,
|
||
He slow and al torente the leoun
|
||
Toward his weddyng walkynge by the weye.
|
||
His false wyf koude hym so plese and preye
|
||
Til she his conseil knew, and she untrewe
|
||
Unto hise foos his conseil gan biwreye,
|
||
And hym forsook, and took another newe.
|
||
|
||
Thre hundred foxes took Sampson for ire,
|
||
And alle hir tayles he togydre bond,
|
||
And sette the foxes tayles alle on fire;
|
||
For he on every tayl had knyt a brond,
|
||
And they brende alle the cornes in that lond,
|
||
And alle hir olyveres and vynes eke.
|
||
A thousand men he slow eek with his hond,
|
||
And hadde no wepene but an asses cheke.
|
||
|
||
Whan they were slayn, so thursted hym, that he
|
||
Was wel ny lorn, for which he gan to preye
|
||
That God wolde on his peyne han som pitee,
|
||
And sende hym drynke, or elles moste he deye;
|
||
And of this asses cheke, that was dreye,
|
||
Out of a wang-tooth sprang anon a welle
|
||
Of which he drank anon, shortly to seye,
|
||
Thus heelp hym God, as Judicum can telle.
|
||
|
||
By verray force at Gazan, on a nyght,
|
||
Maugree Philistiens of that citee,
|
||
The gates of the toun he hath upplyght,
|
||
And on his bak ycaryed hem hath he
|
||
Hye on an hille, that men myghte hem see.
|
||
O noble almyghty Sampson, lief and deere,
|
||
Had thou nat toold to wommen thy secree,
|
||
In all this world ne hadde been thy peere.
|
||
|
||
This Sampson nevere ciser drank, ne wyn,
|
||
Ne on his heed cam rasour noon, ne sheere,
|
||
By precept of the messager divyn,
|
||
For alle hise strengthes in hise heeres weere.
|
||
And fully twenty wynter, yeer by yeere,
|
||
He hadde of Israel the governaunce.
|
||
But soone shal he wepen many a teere,
|
||
For wommen shal hym bryngen to meschaunce!
|
||
|
||
Unto his lemman Dalida he tolde
|
||
That in hise heeres al his strengthe lay,
|
||
And falsly to hise fooman she hym solde;
|
||
And slepynge in hir barme upon a day
|
||
She made to clippe or shere hise heres away,
|
||
And made hise foomen al this craft espyn.
|
||
And whan that they hym foond in this array,
|
||
They bounde hym faste, and putten out hise eyen.
|
||
|
||
But er his heer were clipped or yshave,
|
||
Ther was no boond with which men myght him bynde,
|
||
But now is he in prison in a cave,
|
||
Where as they made hym at the queerne grynde.
|
||
O noble Sampson, strongest of mankynde,
|
||
O whilom juge in glorie and in richesse,
|
||
Now maystow wepen with thyne eyen blynde,
|
||
Sith thou fro wele art falle in wrecchednesse!
|
||
|
||
The ende of this caytyf was as I shal seye;
|
||
Hise foomen made a feeste upon a day,
|
||
And made hym as hir fool biforn hem pleye.
|
||
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,
|
||
And slow hymself, and eek his foomen alle.
|
||
|
||
This is to seyn, the prynces everichoon,
|
||
And eek thre thousand bodyes were ther slayn
|
||
With fallynge of the grete temple of stoon.
|
||
Of Sampson now wol I namoore sayn:
|
||
Beth war by this ensample oold and playn
|
||
That no men telle hir conseil til hir wyves
|
||
Of swich thyng as they solde han secree fayn,
|
||
If that it touche hir lymmes or hir lyves.
|
||
|
||
Hercules
|
||
|
||
Off Hercules the sovereyn conquerour
|
||
Syngen hise werkes laude and heigh renoun,
|
||
For in his tyme of strengthe he was the flour.
|
||
He slow and rafte the skyn of the leoun,
|
||
He of Centauros leyde the boost adoun,
|
||
He arpies slow, the crueel bryddes felle,
|
||
He golden apples refte of the dragoun,
|
||
He drow out Cerberus the hound of helle.
|
||
|
||
He slow the crueel tyrant Busirus,
|
||
And made his hors to frete hym, flessh and boon;
|
||
He slow the firy serpent venymus,
|
||
Of Acheloys two hornes, he brak oon.
|
||
And he slow Cacus in a Cave of stoon;
|
||
He slow the geaunt Antheus the stronge,
|
||
He slow the grisly boor, and that anon,
|
||
And bar the hevene on his nekke longe.
|
||
|
||
Was nevere wight, sith that this world bigan,
|
||
That slow so manye monstres as dide he.
|
||
Thurghout this wyde world his name ran,
|
||
What for his strengthe, and for his heigh bountee,
|
||
And every reawme wente he for to see.
|
||
He was so stroong that no man myghte hym lette;
|
||
At bothe the worldes endes, seith Trophee,
|
||
|
||
In stide of boundes, he a pileer sette.
|
||
|
||
A lemman hadde this noble champioun,
|
||
That highte Dianira, fressh as May,
|
||
And as thise clerkes maken mencioun,
|
||
She hath hym sent a sherte fressh and gay.
|
||
Allas, this sherte, allas, and weylaway!
|
||
Envenymed was so subtilly withalle,
|
||
That er that he had wered it half a day
|
||
It made his flessh al from hise bones falle.
|
||
|
||
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,
|
||
Til that his flessh was for the venym blaked;
|
||
And whan he saugh noon oother remedye,
|
||
In hoote coles he hath hym-selven raked,
|
||
For with no venym deigned hym to dye.
|
||
|
||
Thus starf this worthy myghty Hercules.
|
||
Lo, who may truste on Fortune any throwe?
|
||
For hym that folweth al this world of prees,
|
||
Er he be war, is ofte yleyd ful lowe.
|
||
Ful wys is he that kan hymselven knowe.
|
||
Beth war, for whan that Fortune list to glose,
|
||
Thanne wayteth she her man to overthrowe,
|
||
By swich a wey, as he wolde leest suppose.
|
||
|
||
Nabugodonosor
|
||
|
||
The myghty trone, the precious tresor
|
||
The golrious ceptre and roial magestee
|
||
That hadde the kyng Nabugodonosor,
|
||
With tonge unnethe may discryved bee.
|
||
He twyes wan Jerusalem the citee;
|
||
The vessel of the temple he with hym ladde.
|
||
At Babiloigne was his sovereyn see,
|
||
In which his glorie and his delit he hadde.
|
||
|
||
The faireste children of the blood roial
|
||
Of Israel he leet do gelde anoon,
|
||
And make ech of hem to been his thral.
|
||
Amonges othere, Daniel was oon,
|
||
That was the wiseste child of everychon;
|
||
For he the dremes of the kyng expouned
|
||
Wheras in Chaldeye clerk ne was ther noon
|
||
That wiste to what fyn hise dremes sowned.
|
||
|
||
This proude kyng leet maken a statue of gold
|
||
Sixty cubites long, and sevene in brede,
|
||
To which ymage bothe yonge and oold
|
||
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 nevere wolde assente to that dede
|
||
Daniel, ne hise yonge felawes tweye.
|
||
|
||
This kyng of kynges proud was and elaat;
|
||
He wende, that God that sit in magestee
|
||
Ne myghte hym nat bireve of his estaat;
|
||
But sodeynly he loste his dignytee,
|
||
And lyk a beest hym semed for to bee,
|
||
And eet hey as an oxe and lay theroute;
|
||
In reyn with wilde beestes walked hee
|
||
Til certein tyme was ycome aboute.
|
||
|
||
And lik an egles fetheres wex his heres,
|
||
Hise nayles lyk a briddes clawes weere,
|
||
Til God relessed hym a certeyn yeres,
|
||
And yaf hym wit, and thanne, with many a teere,
|
||
He thanked God; and evere his lyf in feere
|
||
Was he to doon amys, or moore trespace,
|
||
And til that tyme he leyd was on his beere,
|
||
He knew that God was ful of myght and grace.
|
||
|
||
Balthasar
|
||
|
||
His sone which that highte Balthasar,
|
||
That heeld the regne after his fader day,
|
||
He by his fader koude noght be war,
|
||
For proud he was of herte and of array;
|
||
And eek an ydolastre he was ay.
|
||
His hye estaat assured hym in pryde;
|
||
But Fortune caste hym doun and ther he lay,
|
||
And sodeynly his regne gan divide.
|
||
|
||
A feeste he made unto hise lordes alle
|
||
Upon a tyme, and bad hem blithe bee,
|
||
And thanne hise officeres gan he calle,
|
||
"Gooth, bryngeth forth the vesseles," quod he,
|
||
"Whiche that my fader, in his prosperitee,
|
||
Out of the temple of Jerusalem birafte,
|
||
And to oure hye goddes thanke we
|
||
Of honour, that oure eldres with us lafte."
|
||
|
||
Hys wyf, hise lordes, and hise concubynes
|
||
Ay dronken, whil hire appetites laste,
|
||
Out of thise noble vessels sondry wynes.
|
||
And on a wal this kyng hise eyen caste,
|
||
And saugh an hand armlees that wroot ful faste,
|
||
For feere of which he quook and siked soore.
|
||
This hand, that Balthasar so soore agaste,
|
||
Wroot `Mame, techel, phares,' and na moore.
|
||
|
||
In al that land magicien was noon
|
||
That koude expounde what this lettre mente.
|
||
But Daniel expowned it anon,
|
||
And seyde, "Kyng, God to thy fader lente
|
||
Glorie and honour, regne, tresour, rente;
|
||
And he was proud, and nothyng God ne dradde,
|
||
And therfore God greet wreche upon hym sente,
|
||
And hym birafte the regne that he hadde.
|
||
|
||
He was out-cast of mannes compaignye,
|
||
With asses was his habitacioun,
|
||
And eet hey as a beest in weet and drye,
|
||
Til that he knew by grace and by resoun
|
||
That God of hevene hath domynacioun
|
||
Over every regne and every creature,
|
||
And thanne hadde God of hym compassioun
|
||
And hym restored his regne and his figure.
|
||
|
||
Eek thou that art his sone art proud also,
|
||
And knowest alle thise thynges verraily,
|
||
And art rebel to God and art his foo.
|
||
Thou drank eek of hise vessels boldely,
|
||
Thy wyf eek, and thy wenches synfully
|
||
Dronke of the same vessels sondry wynys,
|
||
And heryest false goddes cursedly;
|
||
Therfore to thee yshapen ful greet pyne ys.
|
||
|
||
This hand was sent from God, that on the wal
|
||
Wroot `Mane techel phares,' truste me!
|
||
Thy regne is doon, thou weyest noght at al,
|
||
Dyvyded is thy regne, and it shal be
|
||
To Medes and to Perses yeve," quod he.
|
||
And thilke same nyght this kyng was slawe
|
||
And Darius occupyeth his degree,
|
||
Thogh he therto hadde neither right ne lawe.
|
||
|
||
Lordynges, ensample heer-by may ye take
|
||
How that in lordshipe is no sikernesse;
|
||
For whan Fortune wole a man forsake,
|
||
She bereth awey his regne and his richesse,
|
||
And eek hise freendes, bothe moore and lesse,
|
||
For what man that hath freendes thurgh Fortune
|
||
Mishap wol maken hem enemys, as I gesse;
|
||
This proverbe is ful sooth and ful commune.
|
||
|
||
Cenobia
|
||
|
||
Cenobia, of Palymerie queene,
|
||
As writen Persiens of hir noblesse,
|
||
So worthy was in armes, and so keene,
|
||
That no wight passed hir in hardynesse,
|
||
Ne in lynage, ne in oother gentillesse.
|
||
Of kynges blood of Perce is she descended.
|
||
I seye nat that she hadde moost fairnesse,
|
||
But of hire shap she myghte nat been amended.
|
||
|
||
From hir childhede I fynde that she fledde
|
||
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
|
||
Leouns, leopardes, and beres al to-rente,
|
||
And in hir armes weelde hem at hir wille.
|
||
|
||
|
||
She dorste wilde heestes dennes seke,
|
||
And rennen in the montaignes al the nyght
|
||
And slepen under the bussh, and she koude eke
|
||
Wrastlen by verray force and verray myght
|
||
With any yong man, were he never so wight;
|
||
Ther myghte nothyng in hir armes stonde.
|
||
She kepte hir maydenhod from every wight,
|
||
To no man deigned hir for to be bonde.
|
||
|
||
But atte laste hir freendes han hir maried
|
||
To Odenake, a prynce of that contree,
|
||
Al were it so that she hem longe taried,
|
||
And ye shul understonde how that he
|
||
Hadde swiche fantasies as hadde she.
|
||
But nathelees, whan they were knyt infeere,
|
||
They lyved in joye and in felicitee,
|
||
For ech of hem hadde oother lief and deere;
|
||
|
||
Save o thyng, that she wolde nevere assente
|
||
By no wey that he sholde by hir lye
|
||
But ones, for it was hir pleyn entente
|
||
To have a child the world to multiplye;
|
||
And also soone as that she myghte espye
|
||
That she was nat with childe with that dede,
|
||
Thanne wolde she suffre hym doon his fantasye
|
||
Eft-soone and nat but oones, out of drede.
|
||
|
||
And if she were with childe at thilke cast,
|
||
Namoore sholde he pleyen thilke game
|
||
Til fully fourty dayes weren past;
|
||
Thanne wolde she ones suffre hym do the same.
|
||
Al were this Odenake wilde or tame,
|
||
He gat no moore of hir, for thus she seyde,
|
||
It was to wyves lecheie and shame
|
||
In oother caas, it that men with hem pleyde.
|
||
|
||
Two sones by this Odenake hadde she,
|
||
The whiche she kepte in vertu and lettrure,
|
||
But now unto oure tale turne we;
|
||
I seye, so worshipful a creature,
|
||
And wys ther-with, and large with mesure,
|
||
So penyble in the werre, and curteis eke,
|
||
Ne moore labour myghte in werre endure,
|
||
Was noon, though al this world men wolde seke.
|
||
|
||
Hir riche array ne myghte nat be told
|
||
As wel in vessel as in hir clothyng;
|
||
She was al clad in perree and in gold,
|
||
And eek she lafte noght for noon huntyng
|
||
To have of sondry tonges ful knowyng,
|
||
Whan that she leyser hadde, and for to entende
|
||
To lerne bookes was al hire likyng,
|
||
How she in vertu myghte hir lyf dispende.
|
||
|
||
And shortly of this proces for to trete,
|
||
So doghty was hir housbonde and eek she,
|
||
That they conquered manye regnes grete
|
||
In the orient, with many a faire citee,
|
||
Apertenaunt unto the magestee
|
||
Of Rome, and with strong hond held hem ful faste,
|
||
Ne nevere myghte hir foomen doon hem flee,
|
||
Ay whil that Odenakes dayes laste.
|
||
|
||
Hir batailles, who-so list hem for to rede,
|
||
Agayn Sapor the kyng and othere mo,
|
||
And how that al this proces fil in dede,
|
||
Why she conquered, and what title had therto,
|
||
And after of hir meschief and hire wo,
|
||
How that she was biseged and ytake,
|
||
Lat hym unto my maister Petrak go,
|
||
That writ ynough of this, I undertake.
|
||
|
||
Whan Odenake was deed, she myghtily
|
||
The regnes heeld; and with hir propre hond
|
||
Agayn hir foos she faught so cruelly
|
||
That ther nas kyng ne prynce in al that lond
|
||
That he nas glad, if he that grace fond
|
||
That she ne wolde upon his lond werreye.
|
||
With hir they makded alliance by bond
|
||
To been in pees, and let hire ride and pleye.
|
||
|
||
The Emperour of Rome, Claudius,
|
||
Ne hym bifore, the Romayn Galien,
|
||
Ne dorste nevere been so corageus,
|
||
Ne noon Ermyn, ne noon Egipcien,
|
||
Ne Surrien, ne noon arabyen,
|
||
With-inne the feeldes that dorste with hir fighte,
|
||
Lest that she wolde hem with hir handes slen,
|
||
Or with hir meignee putten hem to flighte.
|
||
|
||
In kynges habit wente hir sones two
|
||
As heires of hir fadres regnes alle,
|
||
And Hermanno, and Thymalao
|
||
Hir names were, as Persiens hem calle.
|
||
But ay Fortune hath in hir hony galle;
|
||
This myghty queene may no while endure.
|
||
Fortune out of hir regne made hir falle
|
||
To wrecchednesse and to mysaventure.
|
||
|
||
Aurelian, whan that the governaunce
|
||
Of Rome cam into hise handes tweye,
|
||
He shoope upon this queene to doon vengeaunce,
|
||
And with hise legions he took his weye
|
||
Toward Cenobie, and shortly for to seye,
|
||
He made hir flee and atte last hir hente,
|
||
And fettred hir, and eek hir children tweye,
|
||
And wan the land, and hoom to Rome he wente.
|
||
|
||
Amonges othere thynges that he wan,
|
||
Hir chaar, that was with gold wroght and perree,
|
||
This grete Romayn, this Aurelian,
|
||
Hath with hym lad for that men sholde it see.
|
||
Biforen his triumphe walketh shee,
|
||
With gilte cheynes on hir nekke hangynge;
|
||
Coroned was she, after hir degree,
|
||
And ful of perree charged hir clothynge.
|
||
|
||
Allas, Fortune! she that whilom was
|
||
Dredful to kynges and to emperoures,
|
||
Now gaureth al the peple on hir, allas!
|
||
And she that helmed was in starke shoures
|
||
And wan by force townes stronge and toures
|
||
Shal on hir heed now were a vitremyte,
|
||
And she that bar the ceptre ful of floures
|
||
Shal bere a distaf, hir costes for to quyte.
|
||
|
||
De Petro Rege Ispannie
|
||
|
||
O noble, O worthy Petro, glorie of Spayne!
|
||
Whom Fortune heeld so hye in magestee,
|
||
Wel oghten men thy pitous deeth complayne;
|
||
Out of thy land thy brother made thee flee,
|
||
And after at a seege by subtiltee
|
||
Thou were bitraysed, and lad unto his tente
|
||
Where as he with his owene hand slow thee,
|
||
Succedynge in thy regne and in thy rente.
|
||
|
||
The feeld of snow, with thegle of blak therinne
|
||
Caught with the lymerod, coloured as the gleede,
|
||
He brew this cursednesse and al this synne.
|
||
The wikked nest was werker of this nede,
|
||
Noght Charles Olyvver, that took ay heede
|
||
Of trouthe and honour, but of Armorike
|
||
Genyloun Olyver, corrupt for meede,
|
||
Broghte this worthy kyng in swich a brike.
|
||
|
||
De Petro Rege de Cipro
|
||
|
||
O worthy Petro, kyng of Cipre, also,
|
||
That Alisandre wan by heigh maistrie,
|
||
Ful many an hethen wroghtestow ful wo,
|
||
Of which thyne owene liges hadde envye,
|
||
And for nothyng but for thy chivalrie,
|
||
They in thy bed han slayn thee by the morwe.
|
||
Thus kan Fortune hir wheel governe and gye,
|
||
And out of joye brynge men to sorwe.
|
||
|
||
De Barnabo de Lumbardia
|
||
|
||
Off Melan grete Barnabo Viscounte,
|
||
God of delit and scourge of Lumbardye,
|
||
Why sholde I nat thyn infortune acounte,
|
||
Sith in estaat thow cloumbe were so hye?
|
||
Thy brother sone, that was thy double allye
|
||
For he thy nevew was, and sone-in-lawe,
|
||
Withinne his prisoun made thee to dye,
|
||
But why, ne how, noot I that thou were slawe.
|
||
|
||
De Hugelino Comite de Pize
|
||
|
||
Off the Erl Hugelyn of Pyze the langour
|
||
Ther may no tonge telle for pitee.
|
||
But litel out of Pize stant a tour,
|
||
In whiche tour in prisoun put was he,
|
||
And with hym been his litel children thre,
|
||
The eldeste scarsly fyf yeer was of age.
|
||
Allas, Fortune, it was greet crueltee
|
||
Swiche briddes for to putte in swiche a cage!
|
||
|
||
Dampned was he to dyen in that prisoun,
|
||
For Roger, which that Bisshop was of Pize,
|
||
Hadde on hym maad a fals suggestioun,
|
||
Thurgh which the peple gan upon hym rise,
|
||
And putten hym to prisoun in swich wise
|
||
As ye han herd, and mete and drynke he hadde
|
||
So smal that wel unnethe it may suffise,
|
||
And therwithal it was ful povre and badde.
|
||
|
||
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;
|
||
He herde it wel, but he spak right noght-
|
||
And in his herte anon ther fil a thoght,
|
||
That they for hunger wolde doon hym dyen.
|
||
"Allas," quod he, "allas, that I was wroght!"
|
||
Therwith the teeris fillen from hise eyen.
|
||
|
||
His yonge sone, that thre yeer was of age,
|
||
Unto hym seyde, "Fader, why do ye wepe?
|
||
Whanne wol the gayler bryngen our potage?
|
||
Is ther no morsel breed that ye do kepe?
|
||
I am so hungry that I may nat slepe.
|
||
Now wolde God that I myghte slepen evere!
|
||
Thanne sholde nat hunger in my wombe crepe,
|
||
Ther is nothyng but breed that me were levere."
|
||
|
||
Thus day by day this child bigan to crye,
|
||
Til in his fadres barm adoun it lay,
|
||
And seyde, "Farewel, fader, I moot dye!"
|
||
And kiste his fader, and dyde the same day.
|
||
And whan the woful fader deed it say,
|
||
For wo hise armes two he gan to byte,
|
||
And seyde, "Allas, Fortune and weylaway!
|
||
Thy false wheel my wo al may I wyte!"
|
||
|
||
Hise 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 ete the flessh upon us two.
|
||
Oure flessh thou yaf us, take our flessh us fro,
|
||
And ete ynogh," right thus they to hym seyde;
|
||
And after that withinne a day or two
|
||
They leyde hem in his lappe adoun, and deyde.
|
||
|
||
Hymself, despeired, eek for hunger starf,
|
||
Thus ended is this myghty Erl of Pize.
|
||
From heigh estaat Fortune awey hym carf,
|
||
Of this tragedie it oghte ynough suffise.
|
||
Whoso wol here it in a lenger wise,
|
||
Redeth the grete poete of Ytaille
|
||
That highte Dant, for he kan al devyse
|
||
Fro point to point, nat o word wol he faille.
|
||
|
||
Nero
|
||
|
||
Al though that Nero were vicius
|
||
As any feend that lith in helle adoun,
|
||
Yet he, as telleth us Swetonius,
|
||
This wyde world hadde in subjeccioun,
|
||
Bothe Est and West, South and Septemtrioun;
|
||
Of rubies, saphires, and of peerles white
|
||
Were alle hise clothes brouded up and doun,
|
||
For he in gemmes greetly gan delite.
|
||
|
||
Moore delicaat, moore pompous of array,
|
||
Moore proud was nevere emperour than he.
|
||
That ilke clooth that he hadde wered o day,
|
||
After that tyme he nolde it nevere see.
|
||
Nettes of gold-threed hadde he greet plentee,
|
||
To fisshe in Tybre, whan hym liste pleye.
|
||
Hise lustes were al lawe in his decree,
|
||
For Fortune as his freend hym wolde obeye.
|
||
|
||
He Rome brende for his delicasie;
|
||
The senatours he slow upon a day,
|
||
To heere how men wolde wepe and crie;
|
||
And slow his brother, and by his suster lay.
|
||
His mooder made he in pitous array,
|
||
For he hir wombe slitte, to biholde
|
||
Wher he conceyved was, so weilaway
|
||
That he so litel of his mooder tolde!
|
||
|
||
No teere out of hise eyen for that sighte
|
||
Ne cam; but seyde, "A fair womman was she."
|
||
Greet wonder is how that he koude or myghte
|
||
Be domesman of hir dede beautee.
|
||
The wyn to bryngen hym comanded he,
|
||
And drank anon; noon oother wo he made,
|
||
Whan myght is joyned unto crueltee,
|
||
Allas, to depe wol the venym wade!
|
||
|
||
In yowthe a maister hadde this emperour
|
||
To techen hym lettrure and curteisye,
|
||
For of moralitee he was the flour,
|
||
As in his tyme, but if bookes lye.
|
||
And whil this maister hadde of hym maistrye,
|
||
He maked hym so konnyng and so sowple,
|
||
That longe tyme it was, er tirannye
|
||
Or any vice dorste on hym uncowple.
|
||
|
||
This Seneca, of which that I devyse,
|
||
By-cause Nero hadde of hym swich drede,
|
||
(For he fro vices wolde hym chastise
|
||
Discreetly as by word, and nat by dede)
|
||
"Sire," wolde he seyn, "an emperour moot nede
|
||
Be vertuous and hate tirannye."-
|
||
For which he in a bath made hym to blede
|
||
On bothe hise armes, til he moste dye.
|
||
|
||
This Nero hadde eek of acustumaunce
|
||
In youthe agayns his maister for to ryse,
|
||
Which afterward hym thoughte greet grevaunce;
|
||
Therfore he made hym dyen in this wise,
|
||
But nathelees, this Seneca the wise
|
||
Chees in a bath to dye in this manere,
|
||
Rather than han anoother tormentise,
|
||
And thus hath Nero slayn his maister deere.
|
||
|
||
Now fil it so, that Fortune liste no lenger
|
||
The hye pryde of Nero to cherice;
|
||
For though that he was strong, yet was she strenger;
|
||
She thoughte thus, "By God, I am to nyce
|
||
To sette a man that is fulfild of vice
|
||
In heigh degree, and emperour hym calle.
|
||
By God, out of his sete I wol hym trice,
|
||
Whan he leest weneth, sonnest shal he falle."
|
||
|
||
The peple roos upon hym on a nyght
|
||
For his defaute, and whan he it espied
|
||
Out of hise dores anoon he hath hym dight
|
||
Allone, and ther he wende han been allied
|
||
He knokked faste, and ay the moore he cried,
|
||
The faster shette they the dores alle.
|
||
For drede of this hym thoughte that he dyed,
|
||
And wente his wey, no lenger dorste he calle.
|
||
|
||
The peple cride, and rombled up and doun,
|
||
That with his erys herde he how they seyde,
|
||
"Where is this false tiraunt, this Neroun?"
|
||
For fere almoost out of his wit he breyde,
|
||
And to his goddes pitously he preyde
|
||
For socour, but it myghte nat bityde.
|
||
For drede of this hym thoughte that he deyde,
|
||
And ran into a gardin hym to hyde.
|
||
|
||
And in this gardyn foond he cherles tweye,
|
||
That seten by a fyr greet and reed,
|
||
And to thise cherles two he gan to preye
|
||
To sleen hym and to girden of his heed,
|
||
That to his body whan that he were deed
|
||
Were no despit ydoon, for his defame.
|
||
Hymself he slow, he koude no bettre reed,
|
||
Of which Fortune lough and hadde a game.
|
||
|
||
De Oloferno
|
||
|
||
Was nevere capitayn under a kyng
|
||
That regnes mo putte in subjeccioun,
|
||
Ne strenger was in feeld of alle thyng
|
||
As ibn his tyme, ne gretter of renoun,
|
||
Ne moore pompous in heigh presumpcioun,
|
||
Than Oloferne, which Fortune ay kiste
|
||
So likerously, and ladde hym up and doun
|
||
Til that his heed was of er that he wiste.
|
||
|
||
Nat oonly that this world hadde hym in awe
|
||
For lesynge of richesse or libertee,
|
||
But he made every man reneyen his lawe.
|
||
"Nabugodonosor was god," seyde hee,
|
||
"Noon oother god sholde adoure bee."
|
||
Agayns his heeste no wight dorste trespace,
|
||
Save in Bethulia, a strong citee,
|
||
Where Eliachim a preest was of that place.
|
||
|
||
But taak kepe of the deeth of Oloferne;
|
||
Amydde his hoost he dronke lay a nyght,
|
||
Withinne his tente, large as is a berne;
|
||
And yet for al his pompe and al his myght
|
||
Judith, a womman, as he lay upright
|
||
Slepynge, 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 kyng Anthiochus
|
||
To telle his hye roial magestee,
|
||
His hye pride, hise werkes venymous?
|
||
For swich another was ther noon as he,
|
||
Rede which that he was in Machabee,
|
||
And rede the proude wordes that he seyde,
|
||
And why he fil fro heigh prosperitee,
|
||
And in an hill how wrecchedly he deyde.
|
||
|
||
Fortune hym hadde enhaunced so in pride
|
||
That verraily he wende he myghte attayne
|
||
Unto the sterres upon every syde,
|
||
And in balance weyen ech montayne,
|
||
And alle the floodes of the see restrayne.
|
||
And Goddes peple hadde he moost in hate;
|
||
Hem wolde he sleen in torment and in payne,
|
||
Wenynge that God ne myghte his pride abate.
|
||
|
||
And for that Nichanore and Thymothee
|
||
Of Jewes weren venquysshed myghtily,
|
||
Unto the Jewes swich an hate hadde he
|
||
That he bad greithen his chaar ful hastily,
|
||
And swoor, and seyde, ful despitously,
|
||
Unto Jerusalem he wolde eft-soone,
|
||
To wreken his ire on it ful cruelly;
|
||
But of his purpos he was let ful soone.
|
||
|
||
God for his manace hym so soore smoot
|
||
With invisible wounde, ay incurable,
|
||
That in hise guttes carf it so and boot
|
||
That hise peynes weren importable.
|
||
And certeinly, the wreche was resonable,
|
||
For many a mannes guttes dide he peyne,
|
||
But from his purpos cursed and dampnable
|
||
For al his smert he wolde hym nat restreyne;
|
||
|
||
But bad anon apparaillen his hoost,
|
||
And sodeynly, er he was of it war,
|
||
God daunted al his pride and al his boost,
|
||
For he so soore fil out of his char,
|
||
That it hise lemes and his skyn totar,
|
||
So that he neyther myghte go ne ryde,
|
||
But in a chayer men aboute hym bar
|
||
Al forbrused, bothe bak and syde.
|
||
|
||
The wreche of God hym smoot so cruelly
|
||
That thurgh his body wikked wormes crepte;
|
||
And therwithal he stank so horribly
|
||
That noon of al his meynee that hym kepte
|
||
Wheither so he wook or ellis slepte,
|
||
Ne myghte noghy for stynk of hym endure.
|
||
In this meschief he wayled and eek wepte,
|
||
And knew God lord of every creature.
|
||
|
||
To all his hoost and to hymself also
|
||
Ful wlatsom was the stynk of his careyne,
|
||
No man ne myghte hym bere to ne fro,
|
||
And in this stynk and this horrible peyne
|
||
He starf ful wrecchedly in a monteyne.
|
||
Thus hath this robbour and this homycide,
|
||
That many a man made to wepe and pleyne,
|
||
Swich gerdoun as bilongeth unto pryde.
|
||
|
||
De Alexandro
|
||
|
||
The storie of Alisaundre is so commune
|
||
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
|
||
They weren glad for pees unto hym sende.
|
||
The pride of man and beest he leyde adoun
|
||
Wher-so he cam, unto the worldes ende.
|
||
|
||
Comparison myghte nevere yet been maked
|
||
Bitwixen hym and another conquerour,
|
||
For al this world for drede of hym hath quaked.
|
||
He was of knyghthod and of fredom flour,
|
||
Fortune hym made the heir of hir honour.
|
||
Save wyn and wommen nothyng myghte aswage
|
||
His hye entente in armes and labour,
|
||
So was he ful of leonyn corage.
|
||
|
||
What pris were it to hym, though I yow tolde
|
||
Of Darius, and an hundred thousand mo,
|
||
Of kynges, princes, erles, dukes bolde,
|
||
Whiche he conquered and broghte hem into wo?
|
||
I seye, as fer as man may ryde or go,
|
||
The world was his, what sholde I moore devyse?
|
||
For though I write or tolde yow everemo,
|
||
Of his knyghthode it myghte nat suffise.
|
||
|
||
Twelf yeer he regned, as seith Machabee,
|
||
Philippes sone of Macidoyne he was,
|
||
That first was kyng in Grece the contree.
|
||
O worhty gentil Alisandre, allas,
|
||
That evere sholde fallen swich a cas!
|
||
Empoysoned of thyn owene folk thou weere;
|
||
Thy sys Fortune hath turned into aas
|
||
And yet for thee ne weep she never a teere.
|
||
|
||
Who shal me yeven teeris to compleyne
|
||
The deeth of gentillesse and of franchise,
|
||
That al the world weelded in his demeyne?
|
||
And yet hym thoughte it myghte nat suffise,
|
||
So ful was his corage of heigh emprise.
|
||
Allas, who shal me helpe to endite
|
||
False Fortune, and poyson to despise,
|
||
The whiche two of al this wo I wyte?
|
||
|
||
De Julio Cesare
|
||
|
||
By wisedom, manhede, and by gret labour
|
||
From humble bed to roial magestee
|
||
Up roos he, Julius the conquerour,
|
||
That wan al thoccident by land and see
|
||
By strengthe of hand, or elles by tretee,
|
||
And unto Rome made hem tributarie;
|
||
And sitthe of Rome the emperour was he,
|
||
Til that Fortune weex his adversarie.
|
||
|
||
O myghty Cesar, that in Thessalie
|
||
Agayn Pompeus, fader thyn in lawe,
|
||
That of the Orient hadde al the chivalrye
|
||
As fer as that the day bigynneth dawe,
|
||
Thou thurgh thy knyghthod hast hem take and slawe,
|
||
Save fewe folk that with Pompeus fledde,
|
||
Thurgh which thou puttest al thorient in awe,
|
||
Thanke Fortune, that so wel thee spedde!
|
||
|
||
But now a litel while I wol biwaille
|
||
This Pompeus, this noble governour
|
||
Of Rome, which that fleigh at this bataille,
|
||
I seye, oon on hise men, a fals traitour,
|
||
His heed of-smoot to wynnen hym favour
|
||
Of Julius, and hym the heed he broghte;
|
||
Allas, Pompeye, of thorient conquerour,
|
||
That Fortune unto swich a fyn thee broghte!
|
||
|
||
To Rome agayn repaireth Julius,
|
||
With his triumphe lauriat ful hye;
|
||
But on a tyme Brutus Cassius
|
||
That evere hadde of his hye estaat envye,
|
||
Ful prively hath maad conspiracye
|
||
Agayns this Julius in subtil wise,
|
||
And caste the place in which he sholde dye
|
||
With boydekyns, as I shal yow devyse.
|
||
|
||
This Julius to the Capitolie wente
|
||
Upon a day, as he was wont to goon;
|
||
And in the Capitolie anon hym hente
|
||
This false Brutus and his othere foor,
|
||
And stiked hym with boydekyns anoon
|
||
With many a wounde; and thus they lete hym lye.
|
||
But nevere gronte he at no strook but oon,
|
||
Or elles at two, but if his sstorie lye.
|
||
|
||
So manly was this Julius of herte
|
||
And so wel lovede estaatly honestee,
|
||
That though hise deedly woundes soore smerte,
|
||
His mantel over hise hypes caste he,
|
||
For no man sholde seen his privetee.
|
||
And as he lay of diyng in a traunce,
|
||
And wiste verraily that deed was hee,
|
||
Of honestee yet hadde he remembraunce.
|
||
|
||
Lucan, to thee this storie I recomende,
|
||
And to Sweton, and to Valerie also,
|
||
That of this storie writen word and ende,
|
||
How that to thise grete conqueroures two
|
||
Fortune was first freend, and sitthe foo.
|
||
No man ne truste upon hire favour longe
|
||
But have hir in awayt for evere moo!
|
||
|
||
Witnesse on alle thise conqueroures stronge.
|
||
|
||
Cresus
|
||
|
||
This riche Cresus whilom kyng of Lyde,
|
||
Of whiche Cresus Cirus soore hym dradde,
|
||
Yet was he caught amyddes al his pryde,
|
||
And to be brent men to the fyr hym ladde.
|
||
But swich a reyn doun fro the welkne shadde
|
||
That slow the fyr, and made hym to escape;
|
||
But to be war no grace yet he hadde,
|
||
Til Fortune on the galwes made hym gape.
|
||
|
||
Whanne he escaped was, he kan nat stente
|
||
For to bigynne a newe werre agayn;
|
||
He wende wel, for that Fortune hym sente
|
||
Swich hap that he escaped thurgh the rayn,
|
||
That of hise foos he myghte nat be slayn;
|
||
And eek a swevene upon a nyght he mette,
|
||
Of which he was so proud and eek so fayn
|
||
That in vengeance he al his herte sette.
|
||
|
||
Upon a tree he was, as that hym thoughte,
|
||
Ther Jupiter hym wessh bothe bak and syde,
|
||
And Phebus eek a fair towaille hym broughte,
|
||
To dryen hym with; and therfore wax his pryde,
|
||
And to his doghter that stood hym bisyde,
|
||
Which that he knew in heigh science habounde,
|
||
He bad hir telle hym what it signyfyde,
|
||
And she his dreem bigan right thus expounde.
|
||
|
||
"The tree," quod she, "the galwes is to meene,
|
||
And Juppiter bitokneth snow and reyn,
|
||
And Phebus with his towaille so clene,
|
||
Tho been the sonne stremes for to seyn.
|
||
Thou shalt anhanged be, fader, certeyn;
|
||
Reyn shal thee wasshe, and sonne shal thee drye."
|
||
Thus warnede hym ful plat and ful pleyn,
|
||
His doghter, which that called was Phanye.
|
||
|
||
Anhanged was Cresus, the proude kyng,
|
||
His roial trone myghte hym nat availle.
|
||
Tragedie is noon oother maner thyng,
|
||
Ne kan in syngyng crye ne biwaille,
|
||
But for that Fortune alwey wole assaille
|
||
With unwar strook the regnes that been proude;
|
||
For whan me trusteth hir, thanne wol she faille,
|
||
And covere hir brighte face with a clowde.
|
||
|
||
Explicit Tragedia.
|
||
|
||
Heere stynteth the Knyght the Monk of his tale.
|
||
|
||
Part 14
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE NONNES PREESTES TALE
|
||
|
||
The Prologue of the Nonnes Preestes Tale.
|
||
|
||
"Hoo!" quod the Knyght, "good sire, namoore of this,
|
||
That ye han seyd is right ynough, ywis,
|
||
And muchel moore, for litel hevynesse
|
||
Is right ynough to muche folk, I gesse.
|
||
I seye for me, it is a greet disese
|
||
|
||
Where as men han been in greet welthe and ese,
|
||
To heeren of hir sodeyn fal, allas!
|
||
And the contrarie is joye and greet solas,
|
||
As whan a man hath been in povre estaat,
|
||
And clymbeth up, and wexeth fortunat,
|
||
|
||
And there abideth in prosperitee.
|
||
Swich thyng is galdsom, as it thynketh me,
|
||
And of swich thyng were goodly for to telle."
|
||
"Ye," quod our Hoost, "by seinte Poules belle,
|
||
Ye seye right sooth! This Monk, he clappeth lowde,
|
||
|
||
He spak, how Fortune covered with a clowde-
|
||
I noot nevere what-and also of a `Tragedie'-
|
||
Right now ye herde; and pardee, no remedie
|
||
It is for to biwaille ne compleyne
|
||
That that is doon; and als it is a peyne,
|
||
|
||
As ye han seyd, to heere of hevynesse.
|
||
Sire Monk, namoore of this, so God yow blesse!
|
||
Youre tale anoyeth al this compaignye;
|
||
Swich talkyng is nat worth a boterflye,
|
||
For ther-inne is ther no desport ne game.
|
||
|
||
Wherfore sir Monk, or daun Piers by youre name,
|
||
I pray yow hertely, telle us somwhat elles,
|
||
For sikerly, nere clynkyng of youre belles
|
||
That on your bridel hange on every syde,
|
||
By hevene kyng, that for us alle dyde,
|
||
|
||
I sholde er this han fallen doun for sleepe,
|
||
Althogh the slough had never been so deepe;
|
||
Thanne hadde your tale al be toold in veyn.
|
||
For, certeinly, as that thise clerkes seyn,
|
||
Where 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 thyng shal wel reported be.
|
||
Sir, sey somwhat of huntyng, I yow preye."
|
||
"Nay," quod this Monk, "I have no lust to pleye;
|
||
|
||
Not lat another telle as I have toold."
|
||
Thanne spak oure Hoost, with rude speche and boold,
|
||
And seyde unto the Nonnes Preest anon,
|
||
"Com neer, thou preest, com hyder, thou, sir John,
|
||
Telle us swich thyng as may oure hertes glade;
|
||
|
||
Be blithe, though thou ryde upon a jade.
|
||
What thogh thyn hors be bothe foul and lene?
|
||
If he wol serve thee, rekke nat a bene!
|
||
Looke that thyn herte be murie everemo."
|
||
"Yis sir," quod he, "yis, Hoost, so moot I go,
|
||
|
||
But I be myrie, ywis, I wol be blamed."
|
||
And right anon his tale he hath attamed,
|
||
And thus he seyde unto us everichon,
|
||
This sweete preest, this goodly man sir John.
|
||
|
||
Part 15
|
||
|
||
THE NONNES PREESTES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Nonnes Preestes tale of the Cok and
|
||
Hen, Chauntecleer and Pertelote.
|
||
|
||
A povre wydwe, somdel stape in age,
|
||
Was whilom dwellyng in a narwe cotage
|
||
Biside a greve, stondynge in a dale.
|
||
This wydwe, of which I telle yow my tale,
|
||
Syn thilke day that she was last a wyf,
|
||
|
||
In pacience ladde a ful symple lyf,
|
||
For litel was hir catel and hir rente.
|
||
By housbondrie, of swich as God hir sente,
|
||
She foond hirself and eek hire doghtren two.
|
||
Thre large sowes hadde she, and namo,
|
||
|
||
Three keen, and eek a sheep that highte Malle.
|
||
Ful sooty was hir bour and eek hire halle,
|
||
In whidh she eet ful many a sklendre meel-
|
||
Of poynaunt sauce hir neded never a deel.
|
||
No deyntee morsel passed thurgh hir throte,
|
||
|
||
Hir diete was accordant to hir cote.
|
||
Repleccioun ne made hir nevere sik,
|
||
Attempree diete was al hir phisik,
|
||
And exercise, and hertes suffisaunce.
|
||
The goute lette hir nothyng for to daunce,
|
||
|
||
Napoplexie shente nat hir heed.
|
||
No wyn ne drank she, neither whit ne reed,
|
||
Hir bord was served moost with whit and blak,
|
||
Milk and broun breed, in which she foond no lak,
|
||
Seynd bacoun, and somtyme an ey or tweye,
|
||
|
||
For she was as it were a maner deye.
|
||
A yeerd she hadde, enclosed al aboute
|
||
With stikkes, and a drye dych withoute,
|
||
In which she hadde a Cok, heet Chauntecleer,
|
||
In al the land of crowyng nas his peer.
|
||
|
||
His voys was murier than the murle orgon
|
||
On messedayes, that in the chirche gon.
|
||
Wel sikerer was his crowyng in his logge,
|
||
Than is a clokke, or an abbey orlogge.
|
||
By nature he crew eche ascencioun
|
||
|
||
Of the equynoxial in thilke toun;
|
||
For whan degrees fiftene weren ascended,
|
||
Thanne crew he, that it myghte nat been amended.
|
||
His coomb was redder than the fyn coral,
|
||
And batailled, as it were a castel wal.
|
||
|
||
His byle was blak, and as the jeet it shoon,
|
||
Lyk asure were hise legges and his toon,
|
||
Hise nayles whiter than the lylye flour,
|
||
And lyk the burned gold was his colour.
|
||
This gentil cok hadde in his governaunce
|
||
|
||
Sevene hennes, for to doon al his plesaunce,
|
||
Whiche were hise sustres and his paramours,
|
||
And wonder lyk to hym as of colours;
|
||
Of whiche the faireste hewed on hir throte
|
||
Was cleped faire damoysele Pertelote.
|
||
|
||
Curteys she was, discreet, and debonaire
|
||
And compaignable, and bar hyrself so faire
|
||
Syn thilke day that she was seven nyght oold,
|
||
That trewely she hath the herte in hoold
|
||
Of Chauntecleer loken in every lith.
|
||
|
||
He loved hir so, that wel was hym therwith.
|
||
But swiche a joye was it to here hem synge
|
||
Whan that the brighte sonne gan to sprynge,
|
||
In sweete accord, "My lief is faren in londe,"-
|
||
For thilke tyme, as I have understonde,
|
||
|
||
Beestes and briddes koude speke and synge.
|
||
And so bifel, that in the dawenynge,
|
||
As Chauntecleer, among hise wyves alle,
|
||
Sat on his perche, that was in the halle,
|
||
And next hym sat this faire Pertelote,
|
||
|
||
This Chauntecleer gan gronen in his throte
|
||
As man that in his dreem is drecched soore.
|
||
And whan that Pertelote thus herde hym roore
|
||
She was agast, and seyde, "O herte deere,
|
||
What eyleth yow, to grone in this manere?
|
||
|
||
Ye been a verray sleper, fy for shame!"
|
||
And he answerde and seyde thus, "Madame,
|
||
I pray yow that ye take it nat agrief.
|
||
By God, me thoughte I was in swich meschief
|
||
Right now, that yet myn herte is soore afright.
|
||
|
||
Now God," quod he, "my swevene recche aright,
|
||
And kepe my body out of foul prisoun.
|
||
Me mette how that I romed up and doun
|
||
Withinne our yeerd, wheer as I saugh a beest
|
||
Was lyk an hound, and wolde han maad areest
|
||
|
||
Upon my body, and han had me deed.
|
||
His colour was bitwixe yelow and reed,
|
||
And tipped was his tayl and bothe hise eeris;
|
||
With blak, unlyk the remenant of hise heeris;
|
||
His snowte smal, with glowynge eyen tweye.
|
||
|
||
Yet of his look, for feere almoost I deye!
|
||
This caused me my gronyng, doutelees."
|
||
"Avoy!" quod she, "Fly on yow hertelees!
|
||
Allas," quod she, "for by that God above
|
||
Now han ye lost myn herte and al my love!
|
||
|
||
I kan nat love a coward, by my feith,
|
||
For certes, what so any womman seith,
|
||
We alle desiren, if it myght bee,
|
||
To han housbondes hardy, wise, and free,
|
||
And secree, and no nygard, ne no fool,
|
||
|
||
Ne hym that is agast of every tool,
|
||
Ne noon avauntour; by that God above,
|
||
How dorste ye seyn for shame unto youre love
|
||
That any thyng myghte make yow aferd?
|
||
Have ye no mannes herte, and han a berd?
|
||
|
||
Allas, and konne ye been agast of swevenys?
|
||
No thyng, God woot, but vanitee in swevene is!
|
||
Swevenes engendren of replecciouns,
|
||
And ofte of fume and of complecciouns,
|
||
Whan humours been to habundant in a wight.
|
||
|
||
Certes, this dreem which ye han met tonyght
|
||
Cometh of greet superfluytee
|
||
Of youre rede colera, pardee,
|
||
Which causeth folk to dreden in hir dremes
|
||
Of arwes, and of fyre with rede lemes,
|
||
|
||
Of grete beestes, that they wol hem byte,
|
||
Of contekes, and of whelpes grete and lyte;
|
||
Right as the humour of malencolie
|
||
Causeth ful many a man in sleep to crie
|
||
For feere of blake beres, or boles blake,
|
||
|
||
Or elles blake develes wole hem take.
|
||
Of othere humours koude I telle also
|
||
That werken many a man in sleep ful wo,
|
||
But I wol passe as lightly as I kan.
|
||
Lo Catoun, which that was so wys a man,
|
||
|
||
Seyde he nat thus, `ne do no fors of dremes`?
|
||
Now sire," quod she, "whan ye flee fro the bemes,
|
||
For goddes love as taak som laxatyf!
|
||
Up peril of my soule, and of my lyf,
|
||
I conseille yow the beste, I wol nat lye,
|
||
|
||
That bothe of colere and of malencolye
|
||
Ye purge yow; and for ye shal nat tarie,
|
||
Though in this toun is noon apothecarie,
|
||
I shal myself to herbes techen yow,
|
||
That shul been for youre hele and for youre prow.
|
||
|
||
And in oure yeerd tho herbes shal I fynde,
|
||
The whiche han of hir propretee by kynde
|
||
To purge yow bynethe and eek above.
|
||
Foryet nat this, for Goddes owene love!
|
||
Ye been ful coleryk of compleccioun;
|
||
|
||
Ware the sonne in his ascencioun
|
||
Ne fynde yow nat repleet of humours hoote.
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
A day or two ye shul have digestyves
|
||
Of wormes, er ye take youre laxatyves
|
||
Of lawriol, centaure, and fumetere,
|
||
Or elles of ellebor that groweth there,
|
||
Of katapuce, or of gaitrys beryis,
|
||
|
||
Of herbe yve, growyng in oure yeerd, ther mery is!
|
||
Pekke hem up right as they growe, and ete hem yn!
|
||
Be myrie, housbonde, for youre fader kyn,
|
||
Dredeth no dreem, I kan sey yow namoore!"
|
||
"Madame," quod he, "graunt mercy of youre loore,
|
||
|
||
But nathelees, as touchyng Daun Catoun,
|
||
That hath of wysdom swich a greet renoun,
|
||
Though that he bad no dremes for to drede,
|
||
By God, men may in olde bookes rede
|
||
Of many a man moore of auctorite
|
||
|
||
Than evere Caton was, so moot I thee,
|
||
That al the revers seyn of this sentence,
|
||
And han wel founden by experience
|
||
That dremes been significaciouns
|
||
As wel of joye as of tribulaciouns
|
||
|
||
That folk enduren in this lif present.
|
||
Ther nedeth make of this noon argument,
|
||
The verray preeve sheweth it in dede.
|
||
Oon of the gretteste auctours that men rede
|
||
Seith thus, that whilom two felawes wente
|
||
|
||
On pilgrimage in a ful good entente;
|
||
And happed so, they coomen in 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
|
||
|
||
In which they bothe myghte logged bee;
|
||
Wherfore they mosten of necessitee
|
||
As for that nyght departen compaignye,
|
||
And ech of hem gooth to his hostelrye,
|
||
And took his loggyng as it wolde falle.
|
||
|
||
That oon of hem was logged in a stalle,
|
||
Fer in a yeerd, with oxen of the plough;
|
||
That oother man was logged wel ynough,
|
||
As was his aventure or his fortune,
|
||
That us governeth alle as in commune.
|
||
|
||
And so bifel, that longe er it were day
|
||
This man mette in his bed, ther as he lay,
|
||
How that his felawe gan upon hym calle
|
||
And seyde, `Allas, for in an oxes stalle
|
||
This nyght I shal be mordred, ther I lye!
|
||
|
||
Now help me, deere brother, or I dye;
|
||
In alle haste com to me!" he sayde.
|
||
This man out of his sleep for feere abrayde;
|
||
But whan that he was wakened of his sleep,
|
||
He turned hym and took of it no keep.
|
||
|
||
Hym thoughte, his dreem nas but a vanitee.
|
||
Thus twies in his slepyng dremed hee,
|
||
And atte thridde tyme yet his felawe
|
||
Cam, as hym thoughte, and seide, `I am now slawe,
|
||
Bihoold my bloody woundes depe and wyde;
|
||
|
||
Arys up erly in the morwe-tyde,
|
||
And at the west gate of the toun,' quod he,
|
||
`A carte ful of donge ther shaltow se,
|
||
In which my body is hid ful prively.
|
||
Do thilke carte arresten boldely;
|
||
|
||
My gold caused my mordre, sooth to sayn.'-
|
||
And tolde hym every point, how he was slayn,
|
||
With a ful pitous face, pale of hewe;
|
||
And truste wel, his dreem he foond ful trewe.
|
||
For on the morwe, as soone as it was day,
|
||
|
||
To his felawes in he took the way,
|
||
And whan that he cam to this oxes stalle,
|
||
After his felawe he bigan to calle.
|
||
The hostiler answerde hym anon,
|
||
And seyde, `Sire, your felawe is agon,
|
||
|
||
As soone as day he wente out of the toun.'
|
||
This man gan fallen in suspecioun,
|
||
Remembrynge on hise dremes that he mette,
|
||
And forth he gooth, no lenger wolde he lette,
|
||
Unto the westgate of the toun; and fond
|
||
|
||
A dong carte, as it were to donge lond,
|
||
That was arrayed in that same wise,
|
||
As ye han herd the dede man devyse.
|
||
And with an hardy herte he gan to crye,
|
||
`Vengeance and justice of this felonye;
|
||
|
||
My felawe mordred is this same myght,
|
||
And in this carte he lith gapyng upright.
|
||
I crye out on the ministres,' quod he,
|
||
`That sholden kepe and reulen this citee!
|
||
Harrow! allas, heere lith my felawe slayn!'
|
||
|
||
What sholde I moore unto this tale sayn?
|
||
The peple out-sterte, and caste the cart to grounde,
|
||
And in the myddel of the dong they founde
|
||
The dede man, that mordred was al newe.
|
||
O blisful God, that art so just and trewe!
|
||
|
||
Lo, howe that thou biwreyest mordre alway!
|
||
Mordre wol out, that se we, day by day.
|
||
Mordre is so wlatsom and abhomynable
|
||
To God that is so just and resonable,
|
||
That he ne wol nat suffre it heled be,
|
||
|
||
Though it abyde a yeer, or two, or thre.
|
||
Mordre wol out, this my conclusioun.
|
||
And right anon ministres of that toun
|
||
Han hent the carter, and so soore hym pyned,
|
||
And eek the hostiler so soore engyned
|
||
|
||
That they biknewe hire wikkednesse anon,
|
||
And were anhanged by the nekke bon.
|
||
Heere may men seen, that dremes been to drede!
|
||
And certes, in the same book I rede
|
||
Right in the nexte chapitre after this-
|
||
|
||
I gabbe nat, so have I joye or blis-
|
||
Two men that wolde han passed over see
|
||
For certeyn cause, into a fer contree,
|
||
If that the wynd ne hadde been contrarie,
|
||
That made hem in a citee for to tarie,
|
||
|
||
That stood ful myrie upon an haven-syde-
|
||
But on a day, agayn the even-tyde,
|
||
The wynd gan chaunge, and blew right as hem leste.
|
||
Jolif and glad they wente unto hir reste,
|
||
And casten hem ful erly for to saille,
|
||
|
||
But herkneth, to that o man fil a greet mervaille;
|
||
That oon of hem, in slepyng as he lay,
|
||
Hym mette a wonder dreem agayn the day.
|
||
Hym thoughte a man stood by his beddes syde,
|
||
And hym comanded that he sholde abyde,
|
||
|
||
And seyde hym thus, `If thou tomorwe wende
|
||
Thow shalt be dreynt; my tale is at an ende.'
|
||
He wook, and tolde his felawe what he mette,
|
||
And preyde hym his viage for to lette,
|
||
As for that day, he preyede hym to byde.
|
||
|
||
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 thynges.
|
||
I sette nat a straw by thy dremynges,
|
||
|
||
For swevenes been but vanytees and japes.
|
||
Men dreme al day of owles or of apes,
|
||
And of many a maze therwithal.
|
||
Men dreme of thyng that nevere was, ne shal;
|
||
But sith I see that thou wolt heere abyde
|
||
|
||
And thus forslewthen wilfully thy tyde,
|
||
God woot it reweth me, and have good day.'
|
||
And thus he took his leve and wente his way;
|
||
But er that he hadde half his cours yseyled,
|
||
Noot I nat why, ne what myschaunce it eyled,
|
||
|
||
But casuelly the shippes botme rente,
|
||
And ship and men under the water wente
|
||
In sighte of othere shippes it bisyde,
|
||
That with hem seyled at the same tyde.
|
||
And therfore, faire Pertelote so deere,
|
||
|
||
By swiche ensamples olde yet maistow leere,
|
||
That no man sholde been to recchelees
|
||
Of dremes, for I seye thee doutelees
|
||
That many a dreem ful soore is for to drede.
|
||
Lo, in the lyf of Seint Kenelm I rede,
|
||
|
||
That was Kenulphus sone, the noble kyng,
|
||
Of Mercenrike how Kenelm mette a thyng.
|
||
A lite er he was mordred, on a day
|
||
His mordre in his avysioun he say.
|
||
His norice hym expowned every deel
|
||
|
||
His swevene, and bad hym for to kepe hym weel
|
||
For traisoun, but he nas but seven yeer oold,
|
||
And therfore litel tale hath he toold
|
||
Of any dreem, so hooly is his herte.
|
||
By God, I hadde levere than my sherte
|
||
|
||
That ye hadde rad his legende, as have I.
|
||
Dame Pertelote, I sey yow trewely,
|
||
Macrobeus, that writ the avisioun
|
||
In Affrike of the worhty Cipioun,
|
||
Affermeth dremes, and seith that they been
|
||
|
||
Warnynge of thynges, that men after seen.
|
||
And forther-moore I pray yow looketh wel
|
||
In the olde testament of Daniel,
|
||
If he heeld dremes any vanitee!
|
||
Reed eek of Joseph, and ther shul ye see
|
||
|
||
Wher dremes be somtyme, I sey nat alle,
|
||
Warnynge of thynges that shul after falle.
|
||
Looke of Egipte the kyng, daun Pharao,
|
||
His baker and his butiller also,
|
||
Wher they ne felte noon effect in dremes!
|
||
|
||
Whoso wol seken actes of sondry remes
|
||
May rede of dremes many a wonder thyng.
|
||
Lo Cresus, which that was of Lyde kyng,
|
||
Mette he nat that he sat upon a tree,
|
||
Which signified, he sholde anhanged bee?
|
||
|
||
Lo her Adromacha, Ectores wyf,
|
||
That day that Ector sholde lese his lyf
|
||
She dremed on the same nyght biforn
|
||
How that the lyf of Ector sholde be lorn,
|
||
If thilke day he wente into bataille.
|
||
|
||
She warned hym, but it myghte nat availle;
|
||
He wente for to fighte natheles,
|
||
But he was slayn anon of Achilles.
|
||
But thilke is al to longe for to telle,
|
||
And eek it is ny day, I may nat dwelle.
|
||
|
||
Shortly I seye, as for conclusioun,
|
||
That I shal han of this avisioun
|
||
Adversitee, and I seye forthermoor
|
||
That I ne telle of laxatyves no stoor,
|
||
For they been venymes, I woot it weel,
|
||
|
||
I hem diffye, I love hem never a deel.
|
||
Now let us speke of myrthe, and stynte al this;
|
||
Madame Pertelote, so have I blis,
|
||
Of o thyng God hath sent me large grace,
|
||
For whan I se the beautee of youre face,
|
||
|
||
Ye been so scarlet reed aboute youre eyen,
|
||
It maketh al my drede for to dyen.
|
||
For, al so siker as In principio
|
||
Mulier est hominis confusio,-
|
||
Madame, the sentence of this Latyn is,
|
||
|
||
`Womman is mannes joye and al his blis.'
|
||
For whan I felle a-nyght your softe syde,
|
||
Al be it that I may nat on yow ryde,
|
||
For that oure perche is maad so narwe, allas!
|
||
I am so ful of joye and of solas,
|
||
|
||
That I diffye bothe swevene and dreem."
|
||
And with that word he fly doun fro the beem,
|
||
For it was day, and eke hise hennes alle;
|
||
And with a chuk he gan hem for to calle,
|
||
For he hadde founde a corn lay in the yerd.
|
||
|
||
Real he was, he was namoore aferd;
|
||
And fethered Pertelote twenty tyme,
|
||
And trad as ofte, er that it was pryme.
|
||
He looketh as it were a grym leoun,
|
||
And on hise toos he rometh up and doun,
|
||
|
||
Hym deigned nat to sette his foot to grounde.
|
||
He chukketh whan he hath a corn yfounde,
|
||
And to hym rennen thanne hise wyves alle.
|
||
Thus roial as a prince is in an halle,
|
||
Leve I this Chauntecleer in his pasture,
|
||
|
||
And after wol I telle his aventure.
|
||
Whan that the monthe in which the world bigan
|
||
That highte March, whan God first maked man,
|
||
Was compleet, and passed were also
|
||
Syn March bigan, thritty dayes and two,
|
||
|
||
Bifel that Chauntecleer in al his pryde,
|
||
Hise sevene wyves walkynge by his syde,
|
||
Caste up hise eyen to the brighte sonne,
|
||
That in the signe of Taurus hadde yronne
|
||
Twenty degrees and oon, and somwhat moore;
|
||
|
||
And knew by kynde, and by noon oother loore,
|
||
That it was pryme, and crew with blisful stevene.
|
||
"The sonne," he seyde, "is clomben upon hevene
|
||
Fourty degrees and oon, and moore, ywis.
|
||
Madame Pertelote, my worldes blis,
|
||
|
||
Herkneth thise blisful briddes how they synge,
|
||
And se the fresshe floures how they sprynge.
|
||
Ful is myn herte of revel and solas."
|
||
But sodeynly hym fil a sorweful cas,
|
||
For evere the latter ende of joye is wo.
|
||
|
||
God woot that worldly joye is soone ago,
|
||
And if a rethor koude faire endite,
|
||
He in a cronycle saufly myghte it write,
|
||
As for a sovereyn notabilitee.
|
||
Now every wys man, lat him herkne me:
|
||
|
||
This storie is al so trewe, I undertake,
|
||
As is the book of Launcelot de Lake,
|
||
That wommen holde in ful greet reverence.
|
||
Now wol I come agayn to my sentence.
|
||
A colfox, ful of sly iniquitee,
|
||
|
||
That in the grove hadde wonned yeres three,
|
||
By heigh ymaginacioun forn-cast,
|
||
The same nyght thurghout the hegges brast
|
||
Into the yerd, ther Chauntecleer the faire
|
||
Was wont, and eek hise wyves, to repaire;
|
||
|
||
And in a bed of wortes stille he lay,
|
||
Til it was passed undren of the day,
|
||
Waitynge his tyme on Chauntecleer to falle,
|
||
As gladly doon thise homycides alle
|
||
That in await liggen to mordre men.
|
||
|
||
O false mordrour, lurkynge in thy den!
|
||
O newe Scariot! newe Genyloun!
|
||
False dissymulour, O Greek synoun
|
||
That broghtest Troye al outrely to sorwe!
|
||
O Chauntecleer, acursed be that morwe
|
||
|
||
That thou into that yerd flaugh fro the bemes!
|
||
Thou were ful wel ywarned by thy dremes
|
||
That thilke day was perilous to thee;
|
||
But what that God forwoot moot nedes bee,
|
||
After the opinioun of certein clerkis.
|
||
|
||
Witnesse on hym, that any parfit clerk is,
|
||
That in scole is greet altercacioun
|
||
In this mateere, and greet disputisoun,
|
||
And hath been of an hundred thousand men;-
|
||
But I ne kan nat bulte it to the bren
|
||
|
||
As kan the hooly doctour Augustyn,
|
||
Or Boece or the Bisshop Bradwardyn,-
|
||
Wheither that Goddes worthy forwityng
|
||
Streyneth me nedefully to doon a thyng,
|
||
(Nedely clepe I symple necessitee)
|
||
|
||
Or elles, if free choys be graunted me
|
||
To do that same thyng, or do it noght,
|
||
Though God forwoot it, er that it was wroght;
|
||
Or if his wityng streyneth never a deel
|
||
But by necessitee condicioneel,-
|
||
|
||
I wel nat han to do of swich mateere;
|
||
My tale is of a Cok, as ye may heere,
|
||
That took his conseil of his wyf, with sorwe,
|
||
To walken in the yerd, upon that morwe
|
||
That he hadde met that dreem, that I of tolde.
|
||
|
||
Wommennes conseils been ful ofte colde;
|
||
Wommannes conseil broghte us first to wo,
|
||
And made Adam fro Paradys to go,
|
||
Ther as he was ful myrie, and wel at ese.
|
||
But for I noot to whom it myght displese,
|
||
|
||
If I conseil of wommen wolde blame,
|
||
Passe over, for I seye it in my game.
|
||
Rede auctours, wher they trete of swich mateere,
|
||
And what they seyn of wommen ye may heere.
|
||
Thise been the cokkes wordes, and nat myne,
|
||
|
||
I kan noon harm of no womman divyne.
|
||
Faire in the soond, to bathe hire myrily,
|
||
Lith Pertelote, and alle hir sustres by,
|
||
Agayn the sonne; and Chauntecleer so free
|
||
Soony murier than the mermayde in the see-
|
||
|
||
For Phisiologus seith sikerly
|
||
How that they syngen wel and myrily.
|
||
And so bifel, that as he cast his eye
|
||
Among the wortes on a boterflye,
|
||
He was war of this fox that lay ful lowe.
|
||
|
||
Nothyng ne liste hym thanne for to crowe,
|
||
But cride anon, "cok! cok!" and up he sterte,
|
||
As man that was affrayed in his herte.
|
||
For natureelly a beest desireth flee
|
||
Fro his contrarie, if he may it see,
|
||
|
||
Though he never erst hadde seyn it with his eye.
|
||
This Chauntecleer, whan he gan hym 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 youre freend?
|
||
|
||
Now certes, I were worse than a feend
|
||
If I to yow wolde harm or vileynye.
|
||
I am nat come your conseil for tespye,
|
||
But trewely, the cause of my comynge
|
||
Was oonly for to herkne how that ye synge.
|
||
|
||
For trewely, ye have as myrie a stevene
|
||
As any aungel hath that is in hevene.
|
||
Therwith ye han in musyk moore feelynge
|
||
Than hadde Boece, or any that kan synge.
|
||
My lord youre fader-God his soule blesse!-
|
||
|
||
And eek youre mooder, of hir gentillesse
|
||
Han in myn hous ybeen, to my greet ese;
|
||
And certes, sire, ful fayn wolde I yow plese.
|
||
But for men speke of syngyng, I wol seye,
|
||
So moote I brouke wel myne eyen tweye,
|
||
|
||
Save yow I herde nevere man yet synge
|
||
As dide youre fader in the morwenynge.
|
||
Certes, it was of herte al that he song!
|
||
And for to make his voys the moore strong,
|
||
He wolde so peyne hym, that with bothe hise eyen
|
||
|
||
He moste wynke, so loude he solde cryen,
|
||
And stonden on his tiptoon therwithal,
|
||
And strecche forth his nekke long and smal.
|
||
And eek he was of swich discrecioun,
|
||
That ther nas no man in no regioun,
|
||
|
||
That hym in song or wisedom myghte passe.
|
||
I have wel rad in daun Burnel the Asse
|
||
Among hise vers, how that ther was a cok,
|
||
For that a presstes sone yaf hym a knok,
|
||
Upon his leg, whil he was yong and nyce,
|
||
|
||
He made hym for to lese his benefice.
|
||
But certeyn, ther nys no comparisoun
|
||
Bitwixe the wisedom and discrecioun
|
||
Of youre fader, and of his subtiltee.
|
||
Now syngeth, sire, for seinte charitee,
|
||
|
||
Lat se konne ye youre fader countrefete!"
|
||
This Chauntecleer hise wynges gan to bete,
|
||
As man that koude his traysoun nat espie,
|
||
So was he ravysshed with his flaterie.
|
||
Allas, ye lordes! many a fals flatour
|
||
|
||
Is in youre courtes, and many a losengeour,
|
||
That plesen yow wel moore, by my feith,
|
||
Than he that soothfastnesse unto yow seith.
|
||
Redeth Ecclesiaste of Flaterye;
|
||
Beth war, ye lordes, of hir trecherye.
|
||
|
||
This Chauntecleer stood hye upon his toos,
|
||
Strecchynge his nekke, and heeld hise eyen cloos,
|
||
And gan to crowe loude for the nones,
|
||
And daun Russell the fox stirte up atones,
|
||
And by the gargat hente Chauntecleer,
|
||
|
||
And on his bak toward the wode hym beer,
|
||
For yet ne was ther no man that hym sewed.
|
||
O destinee, that mayst nat been eschewed!
|
||
Allas, that Chauntecleer fleigh fro the bemes!
|
||
Allas, his wyf ne roghte nat of dremes!
|
||
|
||
And on a Friday fil al this meschaunce.
|
||
O Venus, that art goddesse of plesaunce!
|
||
Syn that thy servant was this Chauntecleer,
|
||
And in thy servyce dide al his poweer,
|
||
Moore for delit, than world to multiplye,
|
||
|
||
Why woltestow suffre hym on thy day to dye?
|
||
O Gaufred, deere Maister soverayn!
|
||
That whan thy worthy kyng Richard was slayn
|
||
With shot, compleynedest his deeth so soore,
|
||
Why ne hadde I now thy sentence and thy loore,
|
||
|
||
The Friday for to chide, as diden ye?-
|
||
For on a Friday soothyl slayn was he.
|
||
Thanne wolde I shewe yow, how that I koude pleyne
|
||
For Chauntecleres drede and for his peyne.
|
||
Certes, swich cry ne lamentacioun
|
||
|
||
Was nevere of ladyes maad, whan Ylioun
|
||
Was wonne, and Pirrus with his streite swerd,
|
||
Whan he hadde hent kyng Priam by the berd,
|
||
And slayn hym, as seith us Eneydos,
|
||
As maden alle the hennes in the clos,
|
||
|
||
Whan they had seyn of Chauntecleer the sighte.
|
||
But sovereynly dame Pertelote shrighte
|
||
Ful louder than dide Hasdrubales wyf,
|
||
Whan that hir housbonde hadde lost his lyf,
|
||
And that the Romayns hadde brend Cartage;
|
||
|
||
She was so ful of torment and of rage
|
||
That wilfully into the fyr she sterte,
|
||
And brende hirselven with a stedefast herte.
|
||
O woful hennes, right so criden ye,
|
||
As whan that Nero brende the Citee
|
||
|
||
Of Rome, cryden senatoures wyves,
|
||
For that hir husbondes losten alle hir lyves,
|
||
Withouten gilt this Nero hath hem slayn.
|
||
Now I wole turne to my tale agayn.
|
||
This sely wydwe, and eek hir doghtres two,
|
||
|
||
Herden thise hennes crie, and maken wo,
|
||
And out at dores stirten they anon,
|
||
And seyn the fox toward the grove gon,
|
||
And bar upon his bak the cok away;
|
||
And cryden, "Out! harrow! and weylaway!
|
||
|
||
Ha! ha! the fox!" and after hym they ran,
|
||
And eek with staves many another man,
|
||
Ran Colle, oure dogge, and Talbot, and Gerland,
|
||
And Malkyn with a dystaf in hir hand,
|
||
Ran cow and calf, and eek the verray hogges,
|
||
|
||
So were they fered for berkying of the dogges,
|
||
And shoutyng of the men and wommen eek,
|
||
They ronne so, hem thoughte hir herte breek;
|
||
They yolleden as feends doon in helle,
|
||
The dokes cryden as men wolde hem quelle,
|
||
|
||
The gees for feere flowen over the trees,
|
||
Out of the hyve cam the swarm of bees,
|
||
So hydous was the noyse, a! benedicitee!
|
||
Certes, he Jakke Straw and his meynee
|
||
Ne made nevere shoutes half so shille,
|
||
|
||
Whan that they wolden any Flemyng kille,
|
||
As thilke day was maad upon the fox.
|
||
Of bras they broghten bemes and of box,
|
||
Of horn, of boon, in whiche they blewe and powped,
|
||
And therwithal they skriked and they howped,
|
||
|
||
It seemed as that hevene sholde falle!
|
||
Now, goode men, I pray yow, herkneth alle.
|
||
Lo, how Fortune turneth sodeynly
|
||
The hope and pryde eek of hir enemy!
|
||
This cok, that lay upon the foxes bak,
|
||
|
||
In al his drede unto the fox he spak,
|
||
And seyde, "Sire, if that I were as ye,
|
||
Yet wolde I seyn, as wys God helpe me,
|
||
`Turneth agayn, ye proude cherles alle,
|
||
A verray pestilence upon yow falle!
|
||
|
||
Now am I come unto the wodes syde,
|
||
Maugree youre heed, the cok shal heere abyde,
|
||
I wol hym ete, in feith, and that anon,'"
|
||
The fox answerde, "In feith, it shal be don."
|
||
And as he spak that word, al sodeynly
|
||
|
||
This cok brak from his mouth delyverly,
|
||
And heighe upon a tree he fleigh anon.
|
||
And whan the fox saugh that he was gon,
|
||
"Allas!" quod he, "O Chauntecleer, allas!
|
||
I have to yow," quod he, "ydoon trespas,
|
||
|
||
In as muche as I maked yow aferd,
|
||
Whan I yow hente and broght into this yerd.
|
||
But, sire, I dide it of no wikke entente,
|
||
Com doun, and I shal telle yow what I mente;
|
||
I shal seye sooth to yow, God help me so."
|
||
|
||
"Nay, thanne," quod he, "I shrewe us bothe two,
|
||
And first I shrewe myself bothe blood and bones,
|
||
If thou bigyle me ofter than ones.
|
||
Thou shalt namoore, thurgh thy flaterye,
|
||
Do me to synge and wynke with myn eye;
|
||
|
||
|
||
For he that wynketh whan he sholde see,
|
||
Al wilfully, God lat him nevere thee."
|
||
"Nay," quod the fox, "but God yeve hym meschaunce,
|
||
That is so undiscreet of governaunce,
|
||
That jangleth, whan he sholde holde his pees."
|
||
|
||
Lo, swich it si 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 moralite, goode men;
|
||
|
||
For seint Paul seith, that al that writen is,
|
||
To oure doctrine it is ywrite, ywis.
|
||
Taketh the fruyt, and lat the chaf be stille.
|
||
Now goode God, if that it be thy wille,
|
||
As seith my lord, so make us alle goode men,
|
||
And brynge us to his heighe blisse. Amen.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Nonnes Preestes tale.
|
||
Part 16
|
||
|
||
GROUP C.
|
||
|
||
THE PHISICIENS TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere folweth the Phisiciens tale.
|
||
|
||
Ther was, as telleth Titus Livius,
|
||
A knyght that called was Virginius,
|
||
Fulfild of honour and of worthynesse,
|
||
And strong of freendes, and of greet richesse.
|
||
This knyght a doghter hadde by his wyf,
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
Yformed hir in so greet excellence,
|
||
|
||
As though she wolde seyn, "Lo, I, Nature,
|
||
Thus kan I forme and peynte a creature
|
||
Whan that me list; who kan me countrefete?
|
||
Pigmalion noght, though he ay forge and bete,
|
||
Or grave, or peynte, for I dar wel seyn
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
|
||
To forme and peynten erthely creaturis
|
||
Right as me list, and ech thyng in my cure is
|
||
Under the Moone, that may wane and waxe,
|
||
And for my werk right nothyng wol I axe.
|
||
My lord and I been ful of oon accord;
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
This mayde of age twelf yeer was and tweye,
|
||
|
||
Is which that Nature hadde swich delit.
|
||
For right as she kan peynte a lilie whit,
|
||
And reed a rose, right with swich peynture
|
||
She peynted hath this noble creature,
|
||
Er she were born, upon hir lymes fre,
|
||
|
||
Where as by right swiche colours sholde be.
|
||
And Phebus dyed hath hir treses grete,
|
||
Lyk to the stremes of his burned heete;
|
||
And if that excellent was hir beautee,
|
||
A thousand foold moore vertuous was she.
|
||
|
||
In hire 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 humylitee and abstinence,
|
||
|
||
With alle attemperaunce and pacience,
|
||
With mesure eek of beryng and array.
|
||
Discreet she was in answeryng alway,
|
||
Though she were wise Pallas, dar I seyn,
|
||
Hir facound eek ful wommanly and pleyn,
|
||
|
||
No countrefeted termes hadde she
|
||
To seme wys, but after hir degree
|
||
She spak, and alle hir wordes, moore and lesse,
|
||
Sownynge in vertu and in gentillesse.
|
||
Shamefast she was in maydens shamefastnesse,
|
||
|
||
Constant in herte, and evere in bisynesse
|
||
To dryve hir out of ydel slogardye.
|
||
Bacus hadde of hire mouth right no maistrie;
|
||
For wyn and youthe dooth Venus encresse,
|
||
As man in fyr wol casten oille or greesse.
|
||
|
||
And of hir owene vertu unconstreyned,
|
||
She hath ful ofte tyme syk hir feyned,
|
||
For that she wolde fleen the compaignye
|
||
Wher likly was to treten of folye,
|
||
As is at feestes, revels, and at daunces
|
||
|
||
That been occasions of daliaunces.
|
||
Swich thynges maken children for to be
|
||
To soone rype and boold, as men may se,
|
||
Which is ful perilous, and hath been yoore;
|
||
For al to soone may they lerne loore
|
||
|
||
Of booldnesse, whan she woxen is a wyf.
|
||
And ye maistresses, in youre olde lyf,
|
||
That lordes doghtres han in governaunce,
|
||
Ne taketh of my wordes no displesaunce;
|
||
Thenketh that ye been set in governynges
|
||
|
||
Of lordes doghtres, oonly for two thynges;
|
||
Outher for ye han kept youre honestee,
|
||
Or elles ye han falle in freletee,
|
||
And knowen wel ynough the olde daunce,
|
||
And han forsaken fully swich meschaunce
|
||
|
||
For everemo; therfore for Cristes sake,
|
||
To teche hem vertu looke that ye ne slake.
|
||
A theef of venysoun, that hath forlaft
|
||
His likerousnesse, and al his olde craft,
|
||
Kan kepe a forest best of any man.
|
||
|
||
Now kepeth wel, for if ye wole, ye kan.
|
||
Looke wel that ye unto no vice assente,
|
||
Lest ye be dampned for your wikke entente.
|
||
For who so dooth, a traitour is, certeyn;
|
||
And taketh kepe of that that I shal seyn,
|
||
|
||
Of alle tresons, sovereyn pestilence
|
||
Is whan a wight bitrayseth innocence.
|
||
Ye fadres and ye moodres, eek also,
|
||
Though ye han children, be it oon or two,
|
||
Youre is the charge of al hir surveiaunce
|
||
|
||
Whil that they been under youre governaunce.
|
||
Beth war, if by ensample of youre lyvynge,
|
||
Or by youre necligence in chastisynge,
|
||
That they perisse, for I dar wel seye,
|
||
If that they doon ye shul it deere abeye;
|
||
|
||
Under a shepherde softe and necligent
|
||
The wolf hath many a sheep and lamb to-rent.
|
||
Suffyseth oon ensample now as here,
|
||
For I moot turne agayn to my mateere.
|
||
This mayde, of which I wol this tale expresse,
|
||
|
||
So kepte hirself, hir neded no maistresse.
|
||
For in hir lyvyng maydens myghten rede,
|
||
As in a book, every good word or dede
|
||
That longeth to a mayden vertuous,
|
||
She was so prudent and so bountevous.
|
||
|
||
For which the fame out-sprong on every syde
|
||
Bothe of hir beautee and hir bountee wyde,
|
||
That thurgh that land they preised hire echone
|
||
That loved vertu; save encye allone,
|
||
That sory is of oother mennes wele,
|
||
|
||
And glad is of his sorwe and his unheele-
|
||
The doctour maketh this descripcioun.
|
||
This mayde upon a day wente in the toun
|
||
Toward a temple, with hir mooder deere,
|
||
As is of yonge maydens the namere.
|
||
|
||
Now was ther thanne a justice in that toun,
|
||
That governour was of that regioun,
|
||
|
||
And so bifel this juge hise eyen caste
|
||
Upon this mayde, avysynge hym ful faste
|
||
As she cam forby, ther as this juge stood.
|
||
|
||
Anon his herte chaunged and his mood,
|
||
So was he caught with beautee of this mayde,
|
||
And to hymself ful pryvely he sayde,
|
||
"This mayde shal be myn, for any man."
|
||
Anon the feend into his herte ran,
|
||
|
||
And taughte hym sodeynly, that he by slyghte
|
||
The mayden to his purpos wynne myghte.
|
||
For certes, by no force, ne by no meede,
|
||
Hym thoughte he was nat able for to speede;
|
||
For she was strong of freends, and eek she
|
||
|
||
Confermed was in swich soverayn bountee,
|
||
That wel he wiste he myghte hir nevere wynne,
|
||
As for to maken hir with hir body synne.
|
||
For which, by greet deliberacioun,
|
||
He sente after a cherl, was in the toun,
|
||
|
||
Which that he knew for subtil and for boold.
|
||
This Juge unto this cherl his tale hath toold
|
||
In secree wise, and made hym to ensure
|
||
He sholde telle it to no creature,
|
||
And if he dide, he sholde lese his heed.
|
||
|
||
Whan that assented was this cursed reed,
|
||
Glad was this juge, and maked him greet cheere,
|
||
And yaf hym yiftes preciouse and deere.
|
||
Whan shapen was al hir conspiracie
|
||
Fro point to point, how that his lecherie
|
||
|
||
Parfourned sholde been ful subtilly,
|
||
(As ye shul heere it after openly)
|
||
Hoom gooth the cherl, that highte Claudius.
|
||
This false juge, that highte Apius,
|
||
So was his name-for this is no fable,
|
||
|
||
But knowen for historial thyng notable;
|
||
The sentence of it sooth is out of doute-
|
||
This false juge gooth now faste aboute
|
||
To hasten his delit al that he may.
|
||
And so bifel soone after on a day,
|
||
|
||
This false juge, as telleth us the storie,
|
||
As he was wont, sat in his consistorie,
|
||
And yaf his doomes upon sondry cas.
|
||
This false cherl cam forth a ful greet pas
|
||
And seyde, "Lord, if that it be youre wille,
|
||
|
||
As dooth me right upon this pitous bille
|
||
In which I pleyne upon Virginius;
|
||
And if that he wol seyn it is nat thus,
|
||
I wol it preeve, and fynde good witnesse
|
||
That sooth is, that my bille wol expresse."
|
||
|
||
The juge answerde, "Of this in his absence,
|
||
I may nat yeve diffynytyve sentence.
|
||
Lat do hym calle, and I wol gladly heere.
|
||
Thou shalt have al right and no wrong heere."
|
||
Virginius cam to wite the juges wille,
|
||
|
||
And right anon was rad this cursed bille.
|
||
The sentence of it was, as ye shul heere:
|
||
"To yow, my lord, Sire Apius so deere,
|
||
Sheweth youre povre servant Claudius,
|
||
How that a knyght called Virginius
|
||
|
||
Agayns the lawe, agayn al equitee,
|
||
Holdeth expres agayn the wyl of me
|
||
My servant, which that is my thral by right,
|
||
Which fro myn hous was stole upon a nyght,
|
||
Whil that she was ful yong; this wol I preeve
|
||
|
||
By witnesse, lord, so that it nat yow greeve.
|
||
She nys his doghter, nat what so he seye.
|
||
Wherfore to yow, my lord the Juge, I preye
|
||
Yeld me my thral, if that it be youre wille."
|
||
Lo, this was al the sentence of his bille.
|
||
|
||
Virginius gan upon the cherl biholde,
|
||
But hastily, er he his tale tolde,
|
||
And wolde have preeved it as sholde a knyght,
|
||
And eek by witnessyng of many a wight,
|
||
That it was fals, that seyde his adversarie,
|
||
|
||
This cursed juge wolde no thyng tarie,
|
||
Ne heere a word moore of Virginius,
|
||
But yaf his juggement and seyde thus:
|
||
"I deeme anon this cherl his servant have,
|
||
Thou shalt no lenger in thyn hous hir save.
|
||
|
||
Go, bryng hir forth, and put hir in our warde.
|
||
The cherl shal have his thral, this I awarde."
|
||
And whan this worthy knyght Virginius,
|
||
Thurgh sentence of this justice Apius,
|
||
Moste by force his deere doghter yeven
|
||
|
||
Unto the juge in lecherie to lyven,
|
||
He gooth hym hoom, and sette him in his halle,
|
||
And leet anon his deere doghter calle,
|
||
And with a face deed as asshen colde,
|
||
Upon hir humble face he gan biholde
|
||
|
||
With fadres pitee stikynge thurgh his herte,
|
||
Al wolde he from his purpos nat converte.
|
||
"Doghter," quod he, "Virginia, by thy name,
|
||
Ther been two weyes, outher deeth or shame
|
||
That thou most suffre, allas, that I was bore!
|
||
|
||
For nevere thou deservedest wherfore
|
||
To dyen with a swerd, or with a knyf.
|
||
O deere doghter, ender of my lyf,
|
||
Which I have fostred up with swich plesaunce,
|
||
That thou were nevere out of my remembraunce.
|
||
|
||
O doghter, which that art my laste wo,
|
||
And in my lyf my laste joye 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;
|
||
|
||
My pitous hand moot smyten of thyn heed.
|
||
Allas, that evere Apius the say!
|
||
Thus hath he falsly jugged the to day."
|
||
And tolde hir al the cas, as ye bifore
|
||
Han herd, nat nedeth for to telle it moore.
|
||
|
||
"O mercy, deere fader," quod this mayde,
|
||
And with that word she bothe hir armes layde
|
||
About his nekke, as she was wont to do.
|
||
The teeris bruste out of hir eyen two,
|
||
And seyde, "Goode fader, shal I dye?
|
||
|
||
Is ther no grace? is ther no remedye?"
|
||
"No certes, deere doghter myn," quod he.
|
||
"Thanne yif me leyser, fader myn," quod she,
|
||
"My deeth for to compleyne a litel space,
|
||
For, pardee, Jepte yaf his doghter grace
|
||
|
||
For to compleyne, er he hir slow, allas!
|
||
And God it woot, no thyng was hir trespas
|
||
But for she ran hir fader for to see
|
||
To welcome hym with greet solempnitee."
|
||
And with that word she fil aswowne anon;
|
||
|
||
And after whan hir swownyng is agon
|
||
She riseth up and to hir fader sayde,
|
||
"Blissed be God that I shal dye a mayde;
|
||
Yif me my deeth, er that I have a shame.
|
||
Dooth with youre child youre wyl, a Goddes name."
|
||
|
||
And with that word she preyed hym 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,
|
||
|
||
And to the juge he gan it to presente
|
||
As he sat yet in doom, in consistorie.
|
||
And whan the juge it saugh, as seith the storie,
|
||
He bad to take hym and anhange hym faste.
|
||
But right anon a thousand peple in thraste
|
||
|
||
To save the knyght for routhe and for pitee;
|
||
For knowen was the false iniquitee.
|
||
The peple anon hath suspect of this thyng,
|
||
By manere of the cherles chalangyng,
|
||
That it was by the assent of Apius-
|
||
|
||
They wisten wel that he was lecherus;
|
||
For which unto this Apius they gon
|
||
And caste hym in a prisoun right anon,
|
||
Ther as he slow hymself, and Claudius
|
||
That servant was unto this Apius,
|
||
|
||
Was demed for to hange upon a tree,
|
||
But that Virginius, of his pitee,
|
||
So preyde for hym, that he was exiled;
|
||
And elles, certes, he had been bigyled.
|
||
The remenant were anhanged, moore and lesse,
|
||
|
||
That were consentant of this cursednesse.
|
||
Heere men may seen, how synne hath his merite.
|
||
Beth war, for no man woot whom God wol smyte
|
||
In no degree, ne in which manere wyse
|
||
The worm of conscience may agryse
|
||
|
||
Of wikked lyf, though it so pryvee be
|
||
That no man woot therof but God and he.
|
||
For be he lewed man, or ellis lered,
|
||
He noot how soone that he shal been afered.
|
||
Therfore I rede yow this conseil take,
|
||
Forsaketh synne, er synne yow forsake.
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the Phisiciens tale.
|
||
Part 17
|
||
|
||
EPILOGUE
|
||
|
||
The wordes of the Hoost to the Phisicien and the Pardoner.
|
||
|
||
Oure Hooste gan to swere as he were wood;
|
||
"Harrow!" quod he, "by nayles and by blood!
|
||
This was a fals cherl and a fals justice!
|
||
As shameful deeth as herte may devyse
|
||
Come to thise juges and hire advocatz!
|
||
|
||
Algate this sely mayde is slayn, allas!
|
||
Allas! to deere boughte she beautee!
|
||
Wherfore I seye al day, as men may see
|
||
That yiftes of Fortune and of Nature
|
||
Been cause of deeth to many a creature.
|
||
|
||
(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 moore harm than prow.
|
||
But trewely, myn owene maister deere,
|
||
|
||
This is a pitous tale for to heere.
|
||
But nathelees, passe over is no fors;
|
||
I pray to God so save thy gentil cors,
|
||
And eek thyne urynals and thy jurdanes,
|
||
Thyn ypocras and eek thy Galianes
|
||
|
||
And every boyste ful of thy letuarie,
|
||
God blesse hem, and oure lady Seinte Marie!
|
||
So moot I theen, thou art a propre man,
|
||
And lyk a prelat, by Seint Ronyan.
|
||
Seyde I nat wel? I kan nat speke in terme;
|
||
|
||
But wel I woot thou doost myn herte to erme,
|
||
That I almoost have caught a cardyacle.
|
||
By corpus bones, but I have triacle,
|
||
Or elles a draughte of moyste and corny ale,
|
||
Or but I heere anon a myrie tale,
|
||
|
||
Myn herte is lost, for pitee of this mayde!
|
||
Thou beelamy, thou Pardoner," he sayde,
|
||
"Telle us som myrthe or japes right anon."
|
||
"It shal be doon," quod he, "by Seint Ronyon;
|
||
But first," quod he, "heere at this ale-stake,
|
||
|
||
I wol bothe drynke and eten of a cake."
|
||
And right anon the gentils gonne to crye,
|
||
"Nay, lat hym telle us of no ribaudye!
|
||
Telle us som moral thyng that we may leere
|
||
Som wit, and thanne wol we gladly heere!"
|
||
|
||
"I graunte, ywis," quod he, "but I moot thynke
|
||
Upon som honeste thyng, while that I drynke."
|
||
|
||
THE PARDONERS PROLOGUE
|
||
|
||
Heere folweth the Prologe of the Pardoners tale.
|
||
|
||
Radix malorum est Cupiditas Ad Thimotheum
|
||
|
||
Lordynges-quod he-in chirches whan I preche,
|
||
I peyne me to han an hauteyn speche,
|
||
And rynge it out as round as gooth a belle,
|
||
For I kan al by rote that I telle.
|
||
My theme is alwey oon and evere was,
|
||
|
||
"Radix malorum est Cupiditas."
|
||
First I pronounce whennes that I come,
|
||
And thanne my bulles shewe I, alle and some;
|
||
Oure lige lordes seel on my patente,
|
||
That shewe I first, my body to warente,
|
||
|
||
That no man be so boold, ne preest ne clerk,
|
||
Me to destourbe of Cristes hooly werk.
|
||
And after that thanne telle I forth my tales,
|
||
Bulles of popes and of cardynales,
|
||
Of patriarkes and bishopes I shewe,
|
||
|
||
And in Latyn I speke a wordes fewe,
|
||
To saffron with my predicacioun,
|
||
And for to stire hem to devocioun.
|
||
Thanne shewe I forth my longe cristal stones,
|
||
Yerammed ful of cloutes and of bones;
|
||
|
||
Relikes been they, as wenen they echoon.
|
||
Thanne have I in latoun a sholder-boon
|
||
Which that was of an hooly Jewes sheepe.
|
||
"Goode men," I seye, "taak of my wordes keepe:
|
||
If that this boon be wasshe in any welle,
|
||
|
||
If cow, or calf, or sheep, or oxe swelle,
|
||
That any worm hath ete, or worm ystonge,
|
||
Taak water of that welle, and wassh his tonge,
|
||
And it is hool anon; and forthermoor,
|
||
Of pokkes and of scabbe and every soor
|
||
|
||
Shal every sheepe be hool that of this welle
|
||
Drynketh a draughte; taak kepe eek what I telle,
|
||
If that the goode man that the beestes oweth,
|
||
Wol every wyke, er that the cok hym croweth,
|
||
Fastynge, drinken of this welle a draughte,
|
||
|
||
As thilke hooly Jew oure eldres taughte,
|
||
Hise beestes and his stoor shal multiplie.
|
||
And, sire, also it heeleth jalousie;
|
||
For though a man be falle in jalous rage,
|
||
Lat maken with this water his potage,
|
||
|
||
And nevere shal he moore his wyf mystriste,
|
||
Though he the soothe of hir defaute wiste,
|
||
Al had she taken preestes two or thre.
|
||
Heere is a miteyn, eek, that ye may se:
|
||
He that his hand wol putte in this mitayn,
|
||
|
||
He shal have multipliyng of his grayn
|
||
What he hath sowen, be it whete or otes,
|
||
So that he offre pens, or elles grotes.
|
||
Goode men and wommen, o thyng warne I yow,
|
||
If any wight be in this chirche now,
|
||
|
||
That hath doon synne horrible, that he
|
||
Dar nat for shame of it yshryven be,
|
||
Or any womman, be she yong or old,
|
||
That hath ymaad hir housbonde cokewold,
|
||
Swich folk shal have no power ne no grace
|
||
|
||
To offren to my relikes in this place.
|
||
And who so fyndeth hym out of swich fame,
|
||
He wol come up and offre, on Goddes name,
|
||
And I assoille him, by the auctoritee
|
||
Which that by tulle ygraunted was to me."
|
||
|
||
By this gaude have I wonne, yeer by yeer,
|
||
An hundred mark, sith I was pardoner.
|
||
I stonde lyk a clerk in my pulpet,
|
||
And whan the lewed peple is doun yset,
|
||
I preche so, as ye han heerd bifoore,
|
||
|
||
And telle an hundred false japes moore.
|
||
Thanne peyne I me to strecche forth the nekke,
|
||
And est and west upon the peple I bekke,
|
||
As dooth a dowve sittynge on a berne.
|
||
Myne handes adn my tonge goon so yerne
|
||
|
||
That it is joye to se my bisynesse.
|
||
Of avarice and of swich cursednesse
|
||
Is al my prechyng, for to make hem free
|
||
To yeven hir pens; and namely, unto me!
|
||
For myn entente is nat but for to wynne,
|
||
|
||
And no thyng for correccioun of synne.
|
||
I rekke nevere, whan that they been beryed,
|
||
Though that hir soules goon a blakeberyed,
|
||
For certes, many a predicacioun
|
||
Comth ofte tyme of yvel entencioun.
|
||
|
||
Som for plesance of folk, and flaterye,
|
||
To been avaunced by ypocrisye,
|
||
And som for veyne glorie, and som for hate.
|
||
For whan I dar noon oother weyes debate,
|
||
Thanne wol I stynge hym with my tonge smerte
|
||
|
||
In prechyng, so that he shal nat astert
|
||
To been defamed falsly, if that he
|
||
Hath trespased to my bretheren, or to me.
|
||
For though I telle noght his propre name,
|
||
Men shal wel knowe that it is the same
|
||
|
||
By signes, and by othere circumstances.
|
||
Thus quyte I folk that doon us displesances,
|
||
Thus spitte I out my venym, under hewe
|
||
Of hoolynesse, to semen hooly and trewe.
|
||
But shortly, myn entente I wol devyse;
|
||
|
||
I preche of no thyng but for coveityse.
|
||
Therfore my theme is yet, and evere was,
|
||
"Radix malorum est Cupiditas."
|
||
Thus kan I preche agayn that same vice
|
||
Which that I use, and that is avarice.
|
||
|
||
But though myself be gilty in that synne,
|
||
Yet kan I maken oother folk to twynne
|
||
From avarice, and soore to repente;
|
||
But that is nat my principal entente.
|
||
I preche no thyng but for coveitise;
|
||
|
||
Of this mateere it oghte ynogh suffise.
|
||
Thanne telle I hem ensamples many oon
|
||
Of olde stories longe tyme agoon,
|
||
For lewed peple loven tales olde;
|
||
Swiche thynges kan they wel reporte and holde.
|
||
|
||
What? trowe ye, the whiles I may preche,
|
||
And wynne gold and silver for I teche,
|
||
That I wol lyve in poverte wilfully?
|
||
Nay, nay, I thoghte it nevere, trewely.
|
||
For I wol preche and begge in sondry landes,
|
||
|
||
I wol nat do no labour with myne handes,
|
||
Ne make baskettes, and lyve therby,
|
||
By cause I wol nat beggen ydelly.
|
||
I wol noon of the apostles countrefete,
|
||
I wol have moneie, wolle, chese, and whete,
|
||
|
||
Al were it yeven of the povereste page,
|
||
Or of the povereste wydwe in a village,
|
||
Al sholde hir children sterve for famyne.
|
||
Nay, I wol drynke licour of the vyne,
|
||
And have a joly wenche in every toun.
|
||
|
||
But herkneth, lordynges, in conclusioun:
|
||
Your likyng is, that I shal telle a tale.
|
||
Now have I dronke a draughte of corny ale,
|
||
By God, I hope I shal yow telle a thyng
|
||
That shal by resoun been at youre likyng.
|
||
|
||
For though myself be a ful vicious man,
|
||
A moral tale yet I you telle kan,
|
||
Which I am wont to preche, for to wynne.
|
||
Now hoold youre pees, my tale I wol bigynne.
|
||
Part 18
|
||
|
||
THE PARDONERS TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Pardoners tale.
|
||
|
||
In Flaundres whilom was a compaignye
|
||
Of yonge folk, that haunteden folye,
|
||
As riot, hasard, stywes, and tavernes,
|
||
Wher as with harpes, lutes, and gyternes
|
||
They daunce and pleyen at dees, bothe day and nyght,
|
||
|
||
And eten also and drynken over hir myght,
|
||
Thurgh which they doon the devel sacrifise
|
||
Withinne that develes temple in cursed wise,
|
||
By superfluytee abhomynable.
|
||
Hir othes been so grete and so dampnable
|
||
|
||
That it is grisly for to heere hem swere.
|
||
Oure blissed lordes body they to-tere,
|
||
Hem thoughte that Jewes rente hym noght ynough,
|
||
And ech of hem at otheres synne lough.
|
||
And right anon thanne comen tombesteres,
|
||
|
||
Fetys and smale, and yonge frutesteres,
|
||
Syngeres with harpes, baudes, wafereres,
|
||
Whiche been the verray develes officeres
|
||
To kyndle and blowe the fyr of lecherye,
|
||
That is annexed unto glotonye.
|
||
|
||
The hooly writ take I to my witnesse,
|
||
That luxurie is in wyn and dronkenesse.
|
||
Lo, how that dronken Looth unkyndely
|
||
Lay by hise doghtres two unwityngly;
|
||
So dronke he was, he nyste what he wroghte.
|
||
|
||
Herodes, whoso wel the stories soghte,
|
||
Whan he of wyn was repleet at his feeste,
|
||
Right at his owene table he yaf his heeste
|
||
To sleen the Baptist John, ful giltelees.
|
||
Senee seith a good word, doutelees;
|
||
|
||
He seith, he kan no difference fynde
|
||
Bitwix a man that is out of his mynde,
|
||
And a man which that is dronkelewe,
|
||
But that woodnesse fallen in a shrewe
|
||
Persevereth lenger than dooth dronkenesse.
|
||
|
||
O glotonye, ful of cursednesse!
|
||
O cause first of oure confusioun!
|
||
O original of oure dampnacioun
|
||
Til Crist hadde boght us with his blood agayn!
|
||
Lo, how deere, shortly for to sayn,
|
||
|
||
Aboght was thilke cursed vileynye!
|
||
Corrupt was al this world for glotonye!
|
||
Adam oure fader, and his wyf also,
|
||
Fro Paradys to labour and to wo
|
||
Were dryven for that vice, it is no drede;
|
||
|
||
For whil that Adam fasted, as I rede,
|
||
He was in Paradys, and whan that he
|
||
Eet of the fruyt deffended on the tree,
|
||
Anon he was out-cast to wo and peyne.
|
||
O glotonye, on thee wel oghte us pleyne!
|
||
|
||
O, wiste a man how manye maladyes
|
||
Folwen of excesse and of goltonyes,
|
||
He wolde been the moore mesurable
|
||
Of his diete, sittynge at his table.
|
||
Allas, the shorte throte, the tendre mouth
|
||
|
||
Maketh that est and west and north and south
|
||
In erthe, in eir, in water, man to swynke
|
||
To gete a glotoun deyntee mete and drynke.
|
||
Of this matiere, O Paul! wel kanstow trete,
|
||
Mete unto wombe and wombe eek unto mete
|
||
|
||
Shal God destroyen bothe, as Paulus seith.
|
||
Allas, a foul thyng is it, by my feith!
|
||
To seye this word, and fouler is the dede
|
||
Whan man so drynketh of the white and rede,
|
||
That of his throte he maketh his pryvee
|
||
|
||
Thurgh thilke cursed superfluitee.
|
||
The Apostel wepying seith ful pitously,
|
||
"Ther walken manye of whiche yow toold have I,
|
||
I seye it now wepyng with pitous voys,
|
||
That they been enemys of Cristes croys,
|
||
|
||
Of whiche the ende is deeth, wombe is hir god."
|
||
O wombe! O bely! O stynkyng cod!
|
||
Fulfilled of donge and of corrupcioun,
|
||
At either ende of thee foul is the soun;
|
||
How greet labour and cost is thee to fynde,
|
||
|
||
Thise cookes, how they stampe, and streyne, and grynde,
|
||
And turnen substaunce into accident,
|
||
To fulfillen al thy likerous talent!
|
||
Out of the harde bones knokke they
|
||
The mary, for they caste noght awey,
|
||
|
||
That may go thurgh the golet softe and swoote;
|
||
Of spicerie, of leef, and bark, and roote,
|
||
Shal been his sauce ymaked by delit,
|
||
To make hym yet a newer appetit.
|
||
But certes, he that haunteth swiche delices
|
||
|
||
Is deed, whil that he lyveth in tho vices.
|
||
A lecherous thyng is wyn, and dronkenesse
|
||
Is ful of stryvyng and of wrecchednesse.
|
||
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 thow seydest ay, "Sampsoun! Sampsoun!"
|
||
And yet, God woot, Sampsoun drank nevere no wyn!
|
||
Thou fallest, as it were a styked swyn;
|
||
Thy tonge is lost, and al thyn honeste cure
|
||
|
||
For dronkenesse is verray sepulture
|
||
Of mannes wit and his discrecioun,
|
||
|
||
In whom that drynke hath dominacioun.
|
||
He kan no conseil kepe, it is no drede;
|
||
Now kepe yow fro the white and fro the rede,
|
||
|
||
And namely, fro the white wyn of Lepe,
|
||
That is to selle in fysshstrete, or in Chepe.
|
||
This wyn of Spaigne crepeth subtilly
|
||
In othere wynes, growynge faste by,
|
||
Of which ther ryseth swich fumositee,
|
||
|
||
That whan a man hath dronken draughtes thre
|
||
And weneth that he be at hoom in Chepe,
|
||
He is in Spaigne, right at the toune of Lepe,
|
||
Nat at the Rochele, ne at Bur deux toun;
|
||
And thanne wol he seye "Sampsoun, Sampsoun!"
|
||
|
||
But herkneth, lordes, o word I yow preye,
|
||
That alle the sovereyn actes, dar I seye,
|
||
Of victories in the Olde Testament,
|
||
Thurgh verray God that is omnipotent
|
||
Were doon in abstinence and in preyere.
|
||
|
||
Looketh the Bible, and ther ye may it leere.
|
||
Looke, Attilla, the grete conquerour,
|
||
Deyde in his sleepe, with shame and dishonour,
|
||
Bledynge ay at his nose in dronkenesse.
|
||
A capitayn sholde lyve in sobrenesse;
|
||
|
||
And over al this avyseth yow right wel,
|
||
What was comaunded unto Lamwel,
|
||
Nat Samuel, but Lamwel, seye I;
|
||
Redeth the Bible and fynde it expresly,
|
||
Of wyn yevyng to hem that han justise.
|
||
|
||
Namoore of this, for it may wel suffise.
|
||
And now that I have spoken of glotonye,
|
||
Now wol I yow deffenden hasardrye.
|
||
Hasard is verray mooder of lesynges,
|
||
And of dedeite and cursed forswerynges,
|
||
|
||
Blasphemyng of Crist, manslaughtre and wast also,
|
||
Of catel and of tyme, and forthermo
|
||
It is repreeve and contrarie of honour
|
||
For to ben holde a commune hasardour.
|
||
And ever the hyer he is of estaat,
|
||
|
||
The moore is he holden desolaat;
|
||
If that a prynce useth hasardrye,
|
||
In all governaunce and policye
|
||
He is as by commune opinioun
|
||
Yholde the lasse in reputacioun.
|
||
|
||
Stilboun, that was a wys embassadour,
|
||
Was sent to Corynthe in ful greet honour,
|
||
Fro Lacidomye to maken hire alliaunce.
|
||
And whan he cam hym happede par chaunce,
|
||
That alle the gretteste that were of that lond
|
||
|
||
Pleyynge atte hasard he hem fond.
|
||
For which, as soone as it myghte be,
|
||
He stal hym hoom agayn to his contree,
|
||
And seyde, "Ther wol I nat lese my name,
|
||
Ne I wol nat take on me so greet defame.
|
||
|
||
Yow for to allie unto none hasardours.
|
||
Sendeth othere wise embassadours,
|
||
For by my trouthe me were levere dye
|
||
Than I yow sholde to hasardours allye.
|
||
For ye that been so glorious in honours
|
||
|
||
Shul nat allyen yow with hasardours,
|
||
As by my wyl, ne as by my tretee,"
|
||
This wise philosophre, thus seyde hee.
|
||
Looke eek, that to the kyng Demetrius
|
||
The kyng of Parthes, as the book seith us,
|
||
|
||
Sente him a paire of dees of gold, in scorn,
|
||
For he hadde used hasard therbiforn,
|
||
For which he heeld his glorie or his renoun
|
||
At no value or reputacioun.
|
||
Lordes may fynden oother maner pley
|
||
|
||
Honeste ynough, to dryve the day awey.
|
||
Now wol I speke of othes false and grete
|
||
A word or two, as olde bookes trete.
|
||
Gret sweryng is a thyng abhominable,
|
||
And fals sweryng is yet moore reprevable.
|
||
|
||
The heighe God forbad sweryng at al,
|
||
Witnesse on Mathew; but in special
|
||
Of sweryng seith the hooly Jeremye,
|
||
"Thou shalt seye sooth thyne othes, and nat lye,
|
||
And swere in doom, and eek in rightwisnesse,"
|
||
|
||
But ydel sweryng is a cursednesse.
|
||
Bihoold and se, that in the firste table
|
||
Of heighe Goddes heestes honurable
|
||
How that the seconde heeste of hym is this:
|
||
Take nat my name in ydel or amys.
|
||
|
||
Lo, rather he forbedeth swich sweryng
|
||
Than homycide, or any cursed thyng!
|
||
I seye, that as by ordre thus it stondeth,
|
||
This knowen that hise heestes understondeth
|
||
How that the seconde heeste of God is that.
|
||
|
||
And forther-over I wol thee telle al plat,
|
||
That vengeance shal nat parten from his hous
|
||
That of hise othes is to outrageous-
|
||
"By Goddes precious herte and by his nayles,
|
||
And by the blood of Crist that is in Hayles,
|
||
|
||
Sevene is my chaunce and thyn is cynk and treye.
|
||
By Goddes armes, if thou falsly pleye,
|
||
This dagger shal thurghout thyn herte go!"
|
||
This fruyt cometh of the bicched bones two,
|
||
Forsweryng, ire, falsnesse, homycide!
|
||
|
||
Now for the love of Crist, that for us dyde,
|
||
Lete youre othes bothe grete and smale.
|
||
|
||
But, sires, now wol I telle forth my tale.
|
||
Thise riotoures thre, of whiche I telle,
|
||
Longe erst er prime rong of any belle,
|
||
|
||
Were set hem in a taverne for to drynke.
|
||
And as they sat, they herde a belle clynke
|
||
Biforn a cors, was caried to his grave.
|
||
That oon of hem gan callen to his knave,
|
||
"Go bet," quod he, "and axe redily
|
||
|
||
What cors is this, that passeth heer forby,
|
||
And looke, that thou reporte his name weel."
|
||
"Sir," quod this boy, "it nedeth neveradeel;
|
||
It was me toold, er ye cam heer two houres.
|
||
He was, pardee, an old felawe of youres,
|
||
|
||
And sodeynly he was yslayn to-nyght,
|
||
Fordronke, as he sat on his bench upright.
|
||
Ther cam a privee theef men clepeth Deeth,
|
||
That in this contree al the peple sleeth,
|
||
And with his spere he smoot his herte atwo,
|
||
|
||
And wente his wey withouten wordes mo.
|
||
He hath a thousand slayn this pestilence,
|
||
And maister, er ye come in his presence,
|
||
Me thynketh that it were necessarie
|
||
For to be war of swich an adversarie.
|
||
|
||
Beth redy for to meete hym everemoore,
|
||
Thus taughte me my dame, I sey namoore."
|
||
"By Seinte Marie,: seyde this taverner,
|
||
"The child seith sooth, for he hath slayn this yeer
|
||
Henne over a mile, withinne a greet village
|
||
|
||
Bothe man and womman, child, and hyne, and page.
|
||
I trowe his habitacioun be there.
|
||
To been avysed, greet wysdom it were,
|
||
Er that he dide a man a dishonour."
|
||
"Ye, Goddes armes," quod this riotour,
|
||
|
||
"Is it swich peril with hym for to meete?
|
||
I shal hym seke, by wey and eek by strete,
|
||
I make avow to Goddes digne bones.
|
||
Herkneth, felawes, we thre been al ones;
|
||
Lat ech of us holde up his hand til oother,
|
||
|
||
And ech of us bicomen otheres brother,
|
||
And we wol sleen this false traytour Deeth.
|
||
He shal be slayn, which that so manye sleeth,
|
||
By Goddes dignitee, er it be nyght."
|
||
Togidres han thise thre hir trouthes plight,
|
||
|
||
To lyve and dyen, ech of hem for oother,
|
||
As though he were his owene ybore brother;
|
||
And up they stirte al dronken in this rage,
|
||
And forth they goon towardes that village,
|
||
Of which the taverner hadde spoke biforn.
|
||
|
||
And many a grisly ooth thanne han they sworn,
|
||
And Cristes blessed body they to-rente,
|
||
`Deeth shal be deed, if that they may hym hente.'
|
||
Whan they han goon nat fully half a mile,
|
||
Right as they wolde han troden over a stile,
|
||
|
||
An oold man and a povre with hem mette.
|
||
This olde man ful mekely hem grette,
|
||
And seyde thus, "Now, lordes, God yow see."
|
||
The proudeste of thise riotoures three
|
||
Answerde agayn, "What, carl, with sory grace,
|
||
|
||
Why artow al forwrapped save thy face?
|
||
Why lyvestow so longe in so greet age?"
|
||
This olde man gan looke in his visage,
|
||
And seyde thus, "For I ne kan nat fynde
|
||
A man, though that I walked in to Ynde,
|
||
|
||
Neither in citee nor in no village,
|
||
That wolde chaunge his youthe for myn age.
|
||
And therfore mooth I han myn age stille
|
||
As longe tyme as it is Goddes wille.
|
||
Ne deeth, allas, ne wol nat han my lyf!
|
||
|
||
Thus walke I lyk a restelees kaityf,
|
||
And on the ground, which is my moodres gate,
|
||
I knokke with my staf bothe erly and late,
|
||
And seye, 'leeve mooder, leet me in!
|
||
Lo, how I vanysshe, flessh and blood and skyn!
|
||
|
||
Allas, whan shul my bones been at reste?
|
||
Mooder, with yow wolde I chaunge my cheste,
|
||
That in my chambre longe tyme hath be,
|
||
Ye, for an heyre-clowt to wrappe me.'
|
||
But yet to me she wol nat do that grace;
|
||
|
||
For which ful pale and welked is my face.
|
||
But, sires, to yow it is no curteisye
|
||
To speken to an old man vileynye,
|
||
But he trespasse in word, or elles in dede.
|
||
In hooly writ ye may yourself wel rede,
|
||
|
||
`Agayns an oold man, hoor upon his heed,
|
||
Ye sholde arise;' wherfore I yeve yow reed,
|
||
Ne dooth unto an oold man noon harm now,
|
||
Namoore than that ye wolde men did to yow
|
||
In age, if that ye so longe abyde,
|
||
|
||
And God be with yow where ye go or ryde.
|
||
I moote go thider, as I have to go."
|
||
"Nay, olde cherl, by God, thou shalt nat so,"
|
||
Seyde this oother hasardour anon.
|
||
"Thou partest nat so lightly, by Seint John.
|
||
|
||
Thou spak right now of thilke traytour Deeth,
|
||
That in this contree alle oure freendes sleeth.
|
||
Have heer my trouthe, as thou art his espye,
|
||
Telle where he is, or thou shalt it abye,
|
||
By God and by the hooly sacrament,
|
||
|
||
For soothly thou art oon of his assent
|
||
To sleen us yonge folk, thou false theef?"
|
||
"Now, sires," quod he, "if that ye be so leef
|
||
To fynde Deeth, turne up this croked wey,
|
||
For in that grove I lafte hym, by my fey,
|
||
|
||
Under a tree, and there he wole abyde.
|
||
Noght for your boost he wole him nothyng hyde,
|
||
Se ye that ook? right ther ye shal hym fynde,
|
||
God save yow that boghte agayn mankynde,
|
||
And yow amende." Thus seyde this olde man;
|
||
|
||
And everich of thise riotoures ran
|
||
Til he cam to that tree, and ther they founde
|
||
Of floryns fyne of gold ycoyned rounde
|
||
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 floryns been so faire and brighte,
|
||
That doun they sette hem by this precious hoord.
|
||
The worste of hem, he spak the firste word,
|
||
"Bretheren," quod he, "taak kepe what I seys;
|
||
|
||
My wit is greet, though that I bourde and pleye.
|
||
This tresor hath Fortune unto us yeven,
|
||
In myrthe and joliftee oure lyf to lyven.
|
||
And lightly as it comth, so wol we spende.
|
||
Ey, Goddes precious dignitee, who wende
|
||
|
||
Today that we sholde han so fair a grace?
|
||
But myghte this gold be caried fro this place
|
||
Hoom to myn hous or elles unto youres,
|
||
(For wel ye woot that al this gold is oures)
|
||
Thanne were we in heigh felicitee.
|
||
|
||
But trewely, by daye it may nat bee;
|
||
Men wolde seyn that we were theves stronge,
|
||
And for oure owene tresor doon us honge.
|
||
This tresor moste ycaried be by nyghte,
|
||
As wisely and as slyly as it myghte.
|
||
|
||
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 blithe
|
||
Shal renne to the towne, and that ful seithe,
|
||
And brynge us breed and wyn, ful prively;
|
||
|
||
And two of us shul kepen subtilly
|
||
This tresor wel, and if he wol nat tarie,
|
||
Whan it is nyght, we wol this tresor carie,
|
||
By oon assent, where as us thynketh best."
|
||
That oon of hem the cut broghte in his fest,
|
||
|
||
And bad hym drawe, and looke where it wol falle;
|
||
And it fil on the yongeste of hem alle,
|
||
And forth toward the toun he wente anon.
|
||
And al so soone, as that he was agon,
|
||
That oon of hem spak thus unto that oother,
|
||
|
||
"Thou knowest wel thou art my sworen brother,
|
||
Thy profit wol I telle thee anon.
|
||
Thou woost wel, that oure felawe is agon,
|
||
And heere is gold, and that ful greet plentee,
|
||
That shal departed been among us thre.
|
||
|
||
But nathelees, if I kan shape it so
|
||
That it departed were among us two,
|
||
Hadde I nat doon a freendes torn to thee?"
|
||
That oother answerde, "I noot hou that may be;
|
||
He woot how that the gold is with us tweye;
|
||
|
||
What shal we doon? what shal we to hym seye?"
|
||
"Shal it be conseil?" seyde the firste shrewe,
|
||
"And I shal tellen, in a wordes fewe,
|
||
What we shal doon, and bryngen it wel aboute."
|
||
"I graunte," quod that oother, "out of doute,
|
||
|
||
That by my trouthe I shal thee nat biwreye."
|
||
"Now," quod the firste, "thou woost wel we be tweye,
|
||
And two of us shul strenger be than oon;
|
||
Looke whan that he is set, that right anoon
|
||
Arys, as though thou woldest with hym pleye,
|
||
|
||
And I shal ryve hym thurgh the sydes tweye,
|
||
Whil that thou strogelest with hym as in game.
|
||
And with thy daggere looke thou do the same,
|
||
And thanne shal al this gold departed be,
|
||
My deere freend, bitwixen me and thee.
|
||
|
||
Thanne may we bothe oure lustes all fulfille,
|
||
And pleye at dees right at oure owene wille."
|
||
And thus acorded been thise shrewes tweye
|
||
To sleen the thridde, as ye han herd me seye.
|
||
This yongeste, which that wente unto the toun,
|
||
|
||
Ful ofte in herte he rolleth up and doun
|
||
The beautee of thise floryns newe and brighte.
|
||
"O lorde," quod he, "if so were that I myghte
|
||
Have al this tresor to my-self allone,
|
||
Ther is no man that lyveth under the trone
|
||
|
||
Of god, that sholde lyve so murye as I."
|
||
And atte laste the feend, oure enemy,
|
||
Putte in his thought that he sholde poyson beye,
|
||
With which he myghte sleen hise felawes tweye.
|
||
For why, the feend foond hym in swich lyvynge,
|
||
|
||
That he hadde leve hem to sorwe brynge;
|
||
For this was outrely his fulle entente,
|
||
To sleen hem bothe, and nevere to repente.
|
||
And forth he gooth, no lenger wolde he tarie,
|
||
Into the toun unto a pothecarie
|
||
|
||
And preyde hym that he hym wolde selle
|
||
Som poysoun, that he myghte hise rattes quelle,
|
||
And eek ther was a polcat in his hawe,
|
||
That, as he seyde, hise capouns hadde yslawe;
|
||
And fayn he wolde wreke hym, if he myghte,
|
||
|
||
On vermyn that destroyed hym by nyghte.
|
||
The pothecarie answerde, "and thou shalt have
|
||
|
||
A thyng, that al so God my soule save,
|
||
In al this world ther is no creature
|
||
That eten or dronken hath of this confiture
|
||
|
||
Noght but the montance of a corn of whete,
|
||
That he ne shal his lif anon forlete;
|
||
Ye, sterve he shal, and that in lasse while
|
||
Than thou wolt goon a paas nat but a mile,
|
||
This poysoun is so strong and violent."
|
||
|
||
This cursed man hath in his hond yhent
|
||
This poysoun in a box, and sith he ran
|
||
Into the nexte strete unto a man
|
||
And borwed hym of large botels thre;
|
||
And in the two his poyson poured he,
|
||
|
||
The thridde he kepte clene for his owene drynke,
|
||
For al the nyght he shoop hym for to swynke
|
||
In cariynge of the gold out of that place.
|
||
And whan this riotour, with sory grace,
|
||
Hadde filed with wyn his grete botels thre,
|
||
|
||
To hise felawes agayn repaireth he.
|
||
What nedeth it to sermone of it moore?
|
||
For right as they hadde cast his deeth bifoore
|
||
Right so they han him slayn, and that anon;
|
||
And whan that this was doon, thus spak that oon,
|
||
|
||
"Now lat us sitte and drynke, and make us merie,
|
||
And afterward we wol his body berie."
|
||
And with that word it happed hym, par cas,
|
||
To take the botel ther the poysoun was,
|
||
And drank, and yaf his felawe drynke also,
|
||
|
||
For which anon they storven bothe two.
|
||
But certes, I suppose that Avycen
|
||
Wroot nevere in no canoun, ne in no fen,
|
||
Mo wonder signes of empoisonyng
|
||
Than hadde thise wrecches two, er hir endyng.
|
||
|
||
Thus ended been thise homycides two,
|
||
And eek the false empoysoner also.
|
||
O cursed synne ful of cursednesse!
|
||
O traytours homycide! O wikkednesse!
|
||
O glotonye, luxurie, and hasardrye!
|
||
|
||
Thou blasphemour of Crist, with vileynye,
|
||
And othes grete, of usage and of pride,
|
||
Allas, mankynde! how may it bitide
|
||
That to thy Creatour which that the wroghte,
|
||
And with His precious herte-blood thee boghte,
|
||
|
||
Thou art so fals and so unkynde, allas!
|
||
Now, goode men, God foryeve yow youre trespas,
|
||
And ware yow fro the synne of avarice;
|
||
Myn hooly pardoun may yow alle warice,
|
||
So that ye offre nobles or sterlynges,
|
||
|
||
Or elles silver broches, spoones, rynges;
|
||
Boweth youre heed under this hooly bulle,
|
||
Com up, ye wyves, offreth of youre wolle;
|
||
Youre names I entre heer in my rolle anon,
|
||
Into the blisse of hevene shul ye gon.
|
||
|
||
I yow assoille by myn heigh power,
|
||
Yow that wol offre, as clene and eek as cleer
|
||
As ye were born-and lo, sires, thus I preche;
|
||
And Jesu Crist, that is oure soules leche,
|
||
So graunte yow his pardoun to receyve,
|
||
|
||
For that is best, I wol yow nat deceyve.
|
||
But sires, o word forgat I in my tale,
|
||
I have relikes and pardoun in my male
|
||
As faire as any man in Engelond,
|
||
Whiche were me yeven by the popes hond.
|
||
|
||
If any of yow wole of devocioun
|
||
Offren and han myn absolucioun,
|
||
Com forth anon, and kneleth heere adoun,
|
||
And mekely receyveth my pardoun,
|
||
Or elles taketh pardoun as ye wende,
|
||
|
||
Al newe and fressh at every miles ende,
|
||
So that ye offren alwey newe and newe
|
||
Nobles or pens, whiche that be goode and trewe.
|
||
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 whiche that may bityde.
|
||
Paraventure ther may fallen oon or two
|
||
Doun of his hors, and breke his nekke atwo.
|
||
Look, which a seuretee is it to yow alle
|
||
|
||
That I am in youre felaweship yfalle,
|
||
That may assoille yow, bothe moore and lasse,
|
||
Whan that the soule shal fro the body passe.
|
||
I rede that oure Hoost heere shal bigynne,
|
||
For he is moost envoluped in synne.
|
||
|
||
Com forth, sire Hoost, and offre first anon,
|
||
And thou shalt kisse my relikes everychon,
|
||
Ye, for a grote, unbokele anon thy purs.-
|
||
"Nay, nay," quod he, "thanne have I Cristes curs!"
|
||
"Lat be," quod he, "it shal nat be, so theech,
|
||
|
||
Thou woldest make me kisse thyn olde breech,
|
||
And swere it were a relyk of a seint,
|
||
Though it were with thy fundement depeint.
|
||
But by the croys which that seint Eleyne fond,
|
||
I wolde I hadde thy coillons in myn hond
|
||
|
||
In stide of relikes or of seintuarie.
|
||
Lat kutte hem of, I wol thee helpe hem carie,
|
||
They shul be shryned in an hogges toord."
|
||
This Pardoner answerde nat a word;
|
||
So wrooth he was, no word ne wolde he seye.
|
||
|
||
"Now," quod oure Hoost, "I wol no lenger pleye
|
||
With thee, ne with noon oother angry man."
|
||
But right anon the worthy knyght bigan,
|
||
Whan that he saugh that al the peple lough,
|
||
"Namoore of this, for it is right ynough.
|
||
|
||
Sir Pardoner, be glad and myrie of cheere;
|
||
And ye, sir Hoost, that been to me so deere,
|
||
I prey yow, that ye kisse the pardoner;
|
||
And Pardoner, I prey thee, drawe thee neer,
|
||
And, as we diden lat us laughe and pley."
|
||
Anon they kiste, and ryden forth hir weye.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Pardoners tale.
|
||
Part 19
|
||
|
||
GROUP D
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE OF THE WYVES TALE OF BATH
|
||
|
||
The Prologe of the Wyves tale of Bathe.
|
||
|
||
Experience, though noon auctoritee
|
||
Were in this world, were right ynogh to me
|
||
To speke of wo that is in mariage;
|
||
For, lordynges, sith I twelf yeer was of age,
|
||
Thonked be God, that is eterne on lyve,
|
||
|
||
Housbondes at chirche-dore I have had fyve-
|
||
For I so ofte have ywedded bee-
|
||
And alle were worthy men in hir degree.
|
||
But me was toold, certeyn, nat longe agoon is,
|
||
That sith that Crist ne wente nevere but onis
|
||
|
||
To weddyng in the Cane of Galilee,
|
||
That by the same ensample, taughte he me,
|
||
That I ne sholde wedded be but ones.
|
||
Herkne eek, lo, which a sharpe word for the nones,
|
||
Biside a welle Jesus, God and Man,
|
||
|
||
Spak in repreeve of the Samaritan.
|
||
"Thou hast yhad fyve housbondes," quod he,
|
||
"And thilke man the which that hath now thee
|
||
Is noght thyn housbonde;" thus seyde he, certeyn.
|
||
What that he mente ther by, I kan nat seyn;
|
||
|
||
But that I axe, why that the fifthe man
|
||
Was noon housbonde to the Samaritan?
|
||
How manye myghte she have in mariage?
|
||
Yet herde I nevere tellen in myn age
|
||
Upon this nombre diffinicioun.
|
||
|
||
Men may devyne, and glosen up and doun,
|
||
But wel I woot expres withoute lye,
|
||
God bad us for to wexe and multiplye;
|
||
That gentil text kan I wel understonde.
|
||
Eek wel I woot, he seyde, myn housbonde
|
||
|
||
Sholde lete fader and mooder, and take me;
|
||
But of no nombre mencioun made he,
|
||
Of bigamye, or of octogamye;
|
||
Why sholde men speke of it vileynye?
|
||
Lo, heere the wise kyng, daun Salomon;
|
||
|
||
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 hise wyvys?
|
||
No man hath swich that in this world alyve is.
|
||
|
||
God woot, this noble kyng, as to my wit,
|
||
The firste nyght had many a myrie fit
|
||
With ech of hem, so wel was hym on lyve!
|
||
Blessed be God, that I have wedded fyve;
|
||
Welcome the sixte, whan that evere he shal.
|
||
|
||
For sothe I wol nat kepe me chaast in al;
|
||
Whan myn housbonde is fro the world ygon
|
||
Som cristen man shal wedde me anon.
|
||
For thanne thapostle seith that I am free,
|
||
To wedde a Goddes half where it liketh me.
|
||
|
||
He seith, that to be wedded is no synne,
|
||
Bet is to be wedded than to brynne.
|
||
What rekketh me, thogh folk seye vileynye
|
||
Of shrewed Lameth and of bigamye?
|
||
I woot wel Abraham was an hooly man,
|
||
|
||
And Jacob eek, as ferforth as I kan,
|
||
And ech of hem hadde wyves mo than two,
|
||
And many another holy man also.
|
||
Whanne saugh ye evere in any manere age
|
||
That hye God defended mariage
|
||
|
||
|
||
By expres word? I pray you, telleth me,
|
||
Or where comanded he virginitee?
|
||
I woot as wel as ye it is no drede,
|
||
Thapostel, whan he speketh of maydenhede;
|
||
He seyde, that precept therof hadde he noon.
|
||
|
||
Men may conseille a womman to been oon,
|
||
But conseillyng is no comandement;
|
||
He putte it in oure owene juggement.
|
||
For hadde God comanded maydenhede,
|
||
Thanne hadde he dampned weddyng with the dede;
|
||
|
||
And certein, if ther were no seed ysowe,
|
||
Virginitee, wherof thanne sholde it growe?
|
||
Poul dorste nat comanden, atte leeste,
|
||
A thyng of which his maister yaf noon heeste.
|
||
The dart is set up of virginitee;
|
||
|
||
Cacche who so may, who renneth best lat see.
|
||
But this word is nat taken of every wight,
|
||
But ther as God lust gyve it of his myght.
|
||
I woot wel, the apostel was a mayde;
|
||
But nathelees, thogh that he wroot and sayde
|
||
|
||
He wolde that every wight were swich as he,
|
||
Al nys 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,
|
||
|
||
Withouten 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.
|
||
|
||
This is al and som, he heeld virginitee
|
||
Moore parfit than weddyng in freletee.
|
||
Freletee clepe I, but if that he and she
|
||
Wolde leden al hir lyf in chastitee.
|
||
I graunte it wel, I have noon envie,
|
||
|
||
Thogh maydenhede preferre bigamye;
|
||
Hem liketh to be clene, body and goost.
|
||
Of myn estaat I nyl nat make no boost,
|
||
For wel ye knowe, a lord in his houshold,
|
||
He nath nat every vessel al of gold;
|
||
|
||
Somme been of tree, and doon hir lord servyse.
|
||
God clepeth folk to hym in sondry wyse,
|
||
And everich hath of God a propre yifte,
|
||
Som this, som that, as hym liketh shifte.
|
||
Virginitee is greet perfeccioun,
|
||
|
||
And continence eek with devocioun.
|
||
But Crist, that of perfeccioun is welle,
|
||
Bad nat every wight he sholde go selle
|
||
Al that he hadde, and gyve it to the poore,
|
||
And in swich wise folwe hym and his foore.
|
||
|
||
He spak to hem that wolde lyve parfitly,
|
||
And lordynges, by youre leve, that am nat I.
|
||
I wol bistowe the flour of myn age
|
||
In the actes and in fruyt of mariage.
|
||
An housbonde I wol have, I nyl nat lette,
|
||
|
||
Which shal be bothe my dettour and my thral,
|
||
And have his tribulacioun withal
|
||
Upon his flessh whil that I am his wyf.
|
||
I have the power durynge al my lyf
|
||
Upon his propre body, and noght he.
|
||
|
||
Right thus the Apostel tolde it unto me,
|
||
And bad oure housbondes for to love us weel.
|
||
Al this sentence me liketh every deel,-
|
||
Up stirte the Pardoner, and that anon,
|
||
"Now, dame," quod he, "by God and by Seint John,
|
||
|
||
Ye been a noble prechour in this cas.
|
||
I was aboute to wedde a wyf, allas!
|
||
What sholde I bye it on my flessh so deere?
|
||
Yet hadde I levere wedde no wyf to-yeere!"
|
||
"Abyde," quod she, "my tale in nat bigonne.
|
||
|
||
Nay, thou shalt drynken of another tonne,
|
||
Er that I go, shal savoure wors than ale.
|
||
And whan that I have toold thee forth my tale
|
||
Of tribulacioun in mariage,
|
||
Of which I am expert in al myn age,
|
||
|
||
(This to seyn, myself have been the whippe),
|
||
Than maystow chese wheither thou wolt sippe
|
||
Of thilke tonne that I shal abroche,
|
||
For I shal telle ensamples mo than ten.
|
||
Whoso that nyl be war by othere men,
|
||
|
||
By hym shul othere men corrected be.
|
||
The same wordes writeth Ptholomee;
|
||
Rede it in his Almageste, and take it there."
|
||
"Dame, I wolde praye yow, if youre wyl it were,"
|
||
Seyde this Pardoner, "as ye bigan,
|
||
|
||
Telle forth youre tale, spareth for no man,
|
||
And teche us yonge men of your praktike."
|
||
"Gladly," quod she, "sith it may yow like.
|
||
But yet I praye to al this compaignye,
|
||
If that I speke after my fantasye,
|
||
|
||
As taketh not agrief of that I seye,
|
||
For myn entente nis but for to pleye."
|
||
-Now sire, now wol I telle forth my tale,
|
||
As evere moote I drynken wyn or ale,
|
||
I shal seye sooth, tho housbondes that I hadde,
|
||
|
||
As thre of hem were goode, and two were badde.
|
||
The thre men were goode, and riche, and olde;
|
||
Unnethe myghte they the statut holde
|
||
In which that they were bounden unto me-
|
||
Ye woot wel what I meene of this, pradee!
|
||
|
||
As help me God, I laughe whan I thynke
|
||
How pitously anyght I made hem swynke.
|
||
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
|
||
|
||
To wynne 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 hire evere in oon
|
||
To gete hire love, ther as she hath noon.
|
||
|
||
But sith I hadde hem hoolly in myn hond,
|
||
And sith they hadde me yeven all hir lond,
|
||
What sholde I taken heede hem for to plese,
|
||
But it were for my profit and myn ese?
|
||
I sette hem so a-werke, by my fey,
|
||
|
||
That many a nyght 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
|
||
|
||
To brynge me gaye thynges fro the fayre.
|
||
They were ful glad whan I spak to hem faire,
|
||
For God it woot, I chidde hem spitously.
|
||
Now herkneth hou I baar me proprely,
|
||
Ye wise wyves, that kan understonde.
|
||
|
||
Thus shul ye speke and bere hem wrong on honde;
|
||
For half so boldely kan ther no man
|
||
Swere and lyen, as a womman kan.
|
||
I sey nat this by wyves that been wyse,
|
||
But if it be whan they hem mysavyse.
|
||
|
||
A wys wyf, it that she kan hir good,
|
||
Shal beren hym on hond the cow is wood,
|
||
And take witnesse of hir owene mayde,
|
||
Of hir assent; but herkneth how I sayde.
|
||
"Sir olde kaynard, is this thyn array?
|
||
|
||
Why is my neighebores wyf so gay?
|
||
She is honoured overal ther she gooth;
|
||
I sitte at hoom, I have no thrifty clooth.
|
||
What dostow at my neighebores hous?
|
||
Is she so fair? artow so amorous?
|
||
|
||
What rowne ye with oure mayde? benedicite,
|
||
Sir olde lecchour, lat thy japes be!
|
||
And if I have a gossib or a freend
|
||
Withouten gilt, thou chidest as a feend
|
||
If that I walke or pleye unto his hous.
|
||
|
||
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 she be riche and of heigh parage,
|
||
|
||
Thanne seistow it is a tormentrie
|
||
To soffren hir pride and hir malencolie.
|
||
And if she be fair, thou verray knave,
|
||
Thou seyst that every holour wol hir have;
|
||
She may no while in chastitee abyde
|
||
|
||
That is assailled upon ech a syde.
|
||
Thou seyst, som folk desiren us for richesse,
|
||
Somme for oure shape, and somme for oure fairnesse,
|
||
And som for she kan outher synge or daunce,
|
||
And som for gentillesse and daliaunce,
|
||
|
||
Som for hir handes and hir armes smale;
|
||
Thur goth al to the devel by thy tale.
|
||
Thou seyst, men may nat kepe a castel wal,
|
||
It may so longe assailled been overal.
|
||
And if that she be foul, thou seist that she
|
||
|
||
Coveiteth every man that she may se;
|
||
For as a spaynel she wol on hym lepe
|
||
Til that she fynde som man hir to chepe;
|
||
Ne noon so grey goos gooth ther in the lake
|
||
As, seistow, wol been withoute make;
|
||
|
||
And seyst, it is an hard thyng for to welde
|
||
A thyng that no man wole, 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 unto hevene-
|
||
|
||
With wilde thonderdynt and firy levene
|
||
Moote thy welked nekke be to-broke!
|
||
Thow seyst that droppyng houses, and eek smoke,
|
||
And chidyng wyves maken men to flee
|
||
Out of hir owene hous, a benedicitee!
|
||
|
||
What eyleth swich an old man for to chide?
|
||
Thow seyst, we wyves wol oure vices hide
|
||
Til we be fast, and thanne we wol hem shewe.
|
||
Wel may that be a proverbe of a shrewe!
|
||
Thou seist, that oxen, asses, hors, and houndes,
|
||
|
||
They been assayd at diverse stoundes;
|
||
Bacyns, lavours, er that men hem bye,
|
||
Spoones and stooles, and al swich housbondrye,
|
||
And so been pottes, clothes, and array;
|
||
But folk of wyves maken noon assay
|
||
|
||
Til they be wedded, olde dotard shrewe!
|
||
Thanne, seistow, we wol oure vices shewe.
|
||
Thou seist also, that it displeseth me
|
||
But if that thou wolt preyse my beautee,
|
||
And but thou poure alwey upon my face,
|
||
|
||
And clepe me `faire dame' in every place,
|
||
And but thou make a feeste on thilke day
|
||
That I was born, and make me fressh and gay,
|
||
And but thou do to my norice honour,
|
||
And to my chamberere withinne my bour,
|
||
|
||
And to my fadres folk and hise allyes-
|
||
Thus seistow, olde barel ful of lyes!
|
||
And yet of oure apprentice Janekyn,
|
||
For his crisp heer, shynynge as gold so fyn,
|
||
And for he squiereth me bothe up and doun,
|
||
|
||
Yet hastow caught a fals suspecioun.
|
||
I wol hym noght, thogh thou were deed tomorwe.
|
||
But tel me this, why hydestow, with sorwe,
|
||
The keyes of my cheste awey fro me?
|
||
It is my good as wel as thyn, pardee;
|
||
|
||
What wenestow make an ydiot of oure dame?
|
||
Now, by that lord that called is seint Jame,
|
||
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 eyen.
|
||
|
||
What nedeth thee of me to enquere or spyen?
|
||
I trowe thou woldest loke me in thy chiste.
|
||
Thou sholdest seye, `Wyf, go wher thee liste,
|
||
Taak youre disport, I wol not leve no talys,
|
||
I knowe yow for a trewe wyf, dame Alys.'
|
||
|
||
We love no man that taketh kepe or charge
|
||
Wher that we goon, we wol ben at our large.
|
||
Of alle men yblessed moot he be,
|
||
The wise astrologien, Daun Ptholome,
|
||
That seith this proverbe in his Almageste:
|
||
|
||
`Of alle men his wysdom is the hyeste,
|
||
That rekketh nevere who hath the world in honde.'
|
||
By this proverbe thou shalt understonde,
|
||
Have thou ynogh, what thar thee recche or care
|
||
How myrily that othere folkes fare?
|
||
|
||
He is to greet a nygard, that wolde werne
|
||
A man to lighte his candle at his lanterne;
|
||
He shal have never the lasse light, pardee,
|
||
Have thou ynogh, thee thar nat pleyne thee.
|
||
Thou seyst also, that if we make us gay
|
||
|
||
With clothyng and with precious array,
|
||
That it is peril of oure chastitee;
|
||
And yet, with sorwe, thou most enforce thee,
|
||
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.'
|
||
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 whoso wolde senge a cattes skyn,
|
||
Thanne wolde the cat wel dwellen in his in.
|
||
And if the cattes skyn 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 skyn, and goon a caterwawed.
|
||
This is to seye, if I be gay, sire shrewe,
|
||
I wol renne out, my borel for to shewe.
|
||
Sire olde fool, what eyleth thee to spyen,
|
||
|
||
Thogh thou preye Argus, with hise hundred eyen,
|
||
To be my wardecors, as he kan best,
|
||
In feith he shal nat kepe me but me lest;
|
||
Yet koude I make his berd, so moot I thee.
|
||
Thou seydest eek, that ther been thynges thre,
|
||
|
||
The whiche thynges troublen al this erthe,
|
||
And that no wight ne may endure the ferthe.
|
||
O leeve sire shrewe, Jesu shorte thy lyf!
|
||
Yet prechestow, and seyst, an hateful wyf
|
||
Yrekened is for oon of thise meschances.
|
||
|
||
Been ther none othere maner resemblances
|
||
That ye may likne youre parables to,
|
||
But if a sely wyf be oon of tho?
|
||
Thou likenest wommenes love to helle,
|
||
To bareyne lond, ther water may nat dwelle.
|
||
|
||
Thou liknest it also to wilde fyr;
|
||
The moore it brenneth, the moore it hath desir
|
||
To consume every thyng that brent wole be.
|
||
Thou seyst, right as wormes shendeth a tree,
|
||
Right so a wyf destroyeth hir housbond.
|
||
|
||
This knowe they, that been to wyves bonde."
|
||
Lordynges, right thus, as ye have understonde,
|
||
Baar I stifly myne olde housbondes on honde,
|
||
That thus they seyden in hir dronkenesse,
|
||
And al was fals, but that I took witnesse
|
||
|
||
On Janekyn and on my nece also.
|
||
O lord, the pyne I dide hem, and the wo
|
||
Ful giltelees, by Goddes sweete pyne!
|
||
For as an hors I koude byte and whyne,
|
||
I koude pleyne, thogh I were in the gilt,
|
||
|
||
Or elles often tyme hadde I been spilt.
|
||
Who so that first to mille comth first grynt;
|
||
I pleyned first, so was oure werre ystynt.
|
||
They were ful glad to excuse hem ful blyve
|
||
Of thyng of which they nevere agilte hir lyve.
|
||
|
||
Of wenches wolde I beren hym on honde,
|
||
Whan that for syk unnethes myghte he stonde,
|
||
Yet tikled it his herte, for that he
|
||
Wende that I hadde of hym so greet chiertee.
|
||
I swoor that al my walkynge out by nyghte
|
||
|
||
Was for tespye wenches that he dighte.
|
||
Under that colour hadde I many a myrthe;
|
||
For al swich thyng was yeven us in oure byrthe,
|
||
Deceite, wepyng, spynnyng, God hath yeve
|
||
To wommen kyndely whil they may lyve.
|
||
|
||
And thus of o thyng I avaunte me,
|
||
Atte ende I hadde the bettre in ech degree,
|
||
By sleighte, or force, or by som maner thyng,
|
||
As by continueel murmure or grucchyng.
|
||
Namely a bedde hadden they meschaunce;
|
||
|
||
Ther wolde I chide and do hem no plesaunce,
|
||
I wolde no lenger in the bed abyde,
|
||
If that I felte his arm over my syde
|
||
Til he had maad his raunsoun unto me;
|
||
Thanne wolde I suffre hym do his nycetee.
|
||
|
||
And therfore every man this tale I telle,
|
||
Wynne who so may, for al is for to selle.
|
||
With empty hand men may none haukes lure,-
|
||
For wynnyng wolde I al his lust endure
|
||
And make me a feyned appetit;
|
||
|
||
And yet in bacoun hadde I nevere delit;
|
||
That made me that evere I wolde hem chide.
|
||
For thogh the pope hadde seten hem biside,
|
||
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,
|
||
Though I right now sholde make my testament,
|
||
I ne owe hem nat a word, that it nys quit.
|
||
I broghte it so aboute by my wit,
|
||
That they moste yeve it up as for the beste,
|
||
|
||
Or elles hadde we nevere been in reste.
|
||
For thogh he looked as a wood leoun,
|
||
Yet sholde he faille of his conclusioun.
|
||
Thanne wolde I seye, "Goode lief, taak keepe,
|
||
How mekely looketh Wilkyn oure sheepe!
|
||
|
||
Com neer, my spouse, lat me ba thy cheke,
|
||
Ye sholde been al pacient and meke,
|
||
And han a sweete spiced conscience,
|
||
Sith ye so preche of Jobes pacience.
|
||
Suffreth alwey, syn ye so wel kan preche,
|
||
|
||
And but ye do, certein we shal yow teche
|
||
That it is fair to have a wyf in pees.
|
||
Oon of us two moste bowen, doutelees,
|
||
And sith a man is moore resonable,
|
||
Than womman is, ye moste been suffrable."
|
||
|
||
Swiche maneer 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,
|
||
|
||
Stibourne and strong, and joly as a pye.
|
||
Wel koude I daunce to an harpe smale,
|
||
And synge, ywis, as any nyghtyngale,
|
||
Whan I had dronke a draughte of sweete wyn.
|
||
Metellius, the foule cherl, the swyn,
|
||
|
||
That with a staf birafte his wyf hire lyf,
|
||
For she drank wyn, thogh I hadde been his wyf,
|
||
He sholde nat han daunted me fro drynke.
|
||
And after wyn on Venus moste I thynke,
|
||
For al so siker as cold engendreth hayl,
|
||
|
||
A likerous mouth moste han a likerous tayl.
|
||
In wommen vinolent is no defence,
|
||
This knowen lecchours by experience.
|
||
But, Lord Crist! whan that it remembreth me
|
||
Upon my yowthe and on my jolitee,
|
||
|
||
It tikleth me aboute myn herte-roote.
|
||
Unto this day it dooth myn herte boote
|
||
That I have had my world, as in my tyme.
|
||
But age, allas, that al wole envenyme,
|
||
Hath me biraft my beautee and my pith!
|
||
|
||
Lat go, fare-wel, the devel go therwith!
|
||
The flour is goon, ther is namoore to telle,
|
||
The bren as I best kan, now moste I selle;
|
||
But yet to be right myrie wol I fonde.
|
||
Now wol I tellen of my fourthe housbonde.
|
||
|
||
I seye, I hadde in herte greet despit
|
||
That he of any oother had delit;
|
||
But he was quit, by God and by Seint Joce!
|
||
I made hym of the same wode a croce;
|
||
Nat of my body in no foul manere,
|
||
|
||
But certeinly, I made folk swich cheere
|
||
That in his owene grece I made hym frye
|
||
For angre and for verray jalousye.
|
||
By God, in erthe I was his purgatorie,
|
||
For which I hope his soule be in glorie,
|
||
|
||
For God it woot, he sat ful ofte and song
|
||
Whan that his shoo ful bitterly hym wrong!
|
||
Ther was no wight save God and he, that wiste
|
||
In many wise how soore I hym twiste.
|
||
He deyde whan I cam fro Jerusalem,
|
||
|
||
And lith ygrave under the roode-beem,
|
||
Al is his tombe noght so curyus
|
||
As was the sepulcre of hym Daryus,
|
||
Which that Appelles wroghte subtilly.
|
||
It nys but wast to burye hym preciously,
|
||
|
||
Lat hym fare-wel, God yeve his soule reste,
|
||
He is now in his grave, and in his cheste.
|
||
Now of my fifthe housbonde wol I telle.
|
||
God lete his soule nevere come in helle!
|
||
And yet was he to me the mooste shrewe;
|
||
|
||
That feele I on my ribbes al by rewe,
|
||
And evere shal, unto myn endyng day.
|
||
But in oure bed he was ful fressh and gay,
|
||
And therwithal so wel koude he me glose
|
||
Whan that he solde han my bele chose,
|
||
|
||
That thogh he hadde me bet on every bon
|
||
He koude wynne agayn my love anon.
|
||
I trowe I loved hym beste, for that he
|
||
Was of his love daungerous to me.
|
||
We wommen han, if that I shal nat lye,
|
||
|
||
In this matere a queynte fantasye;
|
||
Wayte what tthyng we may nat lightly have,
|
||
Ther-after wol we crie al day and crave.
|
||
Forbede us thyng, and that desiren we;
|
||
Preesse on us faste, and thanne wol we fle;
|
||
|
||
With daunger oute we al oure chaffare.
|
||
Greet prees at market maketh deere ware,
|
||
And to greet cheep is holde at litel prys;
|
||
This knoweth every womman that is wys.
|
||
My fifthe housbonde, God his soule blesse,
|
||
|
||
Which that I took for love and no richesse,
|
||
He somtyme was a clerk of Oxenford,
|
||
And hadde left scole, and wente at hom to bord
|
||
With my gossib, dwellynge in oure toun,
|
||
God have hir soule! hir name was Alisoun.
|
||
|
||
She knew myn herte and eek my privetee
|
||
Bet than oure parisshe preest, as moot I thee.
|
||
To hir biwreyed I my conseil al,
|
||
For hadde myn housbonde pissed on a wal,
|
||
Or doon a thyng that sholde han cost his lyf,
|
||
|
||
To hir, and to another worthy wyf,
|
||
And to my nece, which that I loved weel,
|
||
I wolde han toold his conseil every deel.
|
||
And so I dide ful often, God it woot!
|
||
That made his face ful often reed and hoot
|
||
|
||
For verray shame, and blamed hym-self, for he
|
||
Had toold to me so greet a pryvetee.
|
||
And so bifel that ones, in a Lente-
|
||
So often tymes I to my gossyb wente,
|
||
For evere yet I loved to be gay,
|
||
|
||
And for to walke in March, Averill, and May,
|
||
Fro hous to hous to heere sondry talys-
|
||
That Jankyn Clerk and my gossyb, dame Alys,
|
||
And I myself into the feeldes wente.
|
||
Myn housbonde was at London al that Lente;
|
||
|
||
I hadde the bettre leyser for to pleye,
|
||
And for to se, and eek for to be seye
|
||
Of lusty folk; what wiste I, wher my grace
|
||
Was shapen for to be, or in what place?
|
||
Therfore I made my visitaciouns
|
||
|
||
To vigilies and to processiouns,
|
||
To prechyng eek, and to thise pilgrimages,
|
||
To pleyes of myracles, and to mariages;
|
||
And wered upon my gaye scarlet gytes.
|
||
Thise wormes ne thise motthes, ne thise mytes,
|
||
|
||
Upon my peril, frete hem never a deel-
|
||
And wostow why? for they were used weel!
|
||
Now wol I tellen forth what happed me.
|
||
I seye, that in the feeldes walked we,
|
||
Til trewely we hadde swich daliance,
|
||
|
||
This clerk and I, that of my purveiance
|
||
I spak to hym, and seyde hym, how that he,
|
||
If I were wydwe, sholde wedde me.
|
||
For certeinly, I sey for no bobance,
|
||
Yet was I nevere withouten purveiance
|
||
|
||
Of mariage, nof othere thynges 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 ydo.
|
||
I bar hym on honde, he hadde enchanted me-
|
||
|
||
My dame taughte me that soutiltee.
|
||
And eek I seyde, I mette of hym al nyght,
|
||
He wolde han slayn me as I lay upright,
|
||
And al my bed was ful of verray blood;
|
||
But yet I hope that he shal do me good,
|
||
|
||
For blood bitokeneth gold, as me was taught-
|
||
And al was fals, I dremed of it right naught,
|
||
But as I folwed ay my dames loore
|
||
As wel of this, as of othere thynges moore.
|
||
But now sir, lat me se, what I shal seyn?
|
||
|
||
A ha, by God! I have my tale ageyn.
|
||
Whan that my fourthe housbonde was on beere,
|
||
I weep algate, and made sory cheere,
|
||
As wyves mooten-for it is usage-
|
||
And with my coverchief covered my visage;
|
||
|
||
But for that I was purveyed of a make,
|
||
I wepte but smal, and that I undertake.
|
||
To chirche was myn housbonde born amorwe
|
||
With neighebores that for hym maden sorwe;
|
||
And Janekyn oure clerk was oon of tho.
|
||
|
||
As help me God, whan that I saugh hym go
|
||
After the beere, me thoughte he hadde a paire
|
||
Of legges and of feet so clene and faire,
|
||
That al myn herte I yaf unto his hoold.
|
||
He was, I trowe, a twenty wynter oold,
|
||
|
||
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 Seinte Venus seel.
|
||
As help me God, I was a lusty oon,
|
||
|
||
And faire, and riche, and yong, and wel bigon,
|
||
And trewely, as myne housbondes tolde me,
|
||
I hadde the beste quonyam myghte be.
|
||
For certes, I am al Venerien
|
||
In feelynge, and myn herte is Marcien.
|
||
|
||
Venus me yaf my lust, my likerousnesse,
|
||
And Mars yaf me my sturdy hardynesse.
|
||
Myn ascendent was Taur, and Mars therinne,
|
||
Allas, allas, that evere love was synne!
|
||
I folwed ay myn inclinacioun
|
||
|
||
By vertu of my constellacioun;
|
||
That made me I koude noght withdrawe
|
||
My chambre of Venus from a good felawe.
|
||
Yet have I Martes mark upon my face,
|
||
And also in another privee place.
|
||
|
||
For God so wys be my savacioun,
|
||
I ne loved nevere by no discrecioun,
|
||
But evere folwede myn appetit,
|
||
Al were he short, or long, or blak, or whit.
|
||
I took no kepe, so that he liked me,
|
||
|
||
How poore he was, ne eek of what degree.
|
||
What sholde I seye, but at the monthes ende
|
||
This joly clerk Jankyn, that was so hende,
|
||
Hath wedded me with greet solempnytee,
|
||
And to hym yaf I al the lond and fee
|
||
|
||
That evere was me yeven therbifoore;
|
||
But afterward repented me ful soore,
|
||
He nolde suffre nothyng of my list.
|
||
By God, he smoot me ones on the lyst
|
||
For that I rente out of his book a leef,
|
||
|
||
That of the strook myn ere wax al deef.
|
||
Stibourne I was as is a leonesse,
|
||
And of my tonge a verray jangleresse,
|
||
And walke I wolde, as I had doon biforn,
|
||
From hous to hous, although he had it sworn,
|
||
|
||
For which he often-tymes wolde preche,
|
||
And me of olde Romayn geestes teche,
|
||
How he Symplicius Gallus lefte his wyf,
|
||
And hir forsook for terme of al his lyf,
|
||
Noght but for open-heveded he hir say,
|
||
|
||
Lookynge out at his dore, upon a day.
|
||
Another Romayn tolde he me by name,
|
||
That for his wyf was at a someres game
|
||
Withoute his wityng, he forsook hir eke.
|
||
And thanne wolde he upon his Bible seke
|
||
|
||
That like proverbe of Ecclesiaste,
|
||
Where he comandeth, and forbedeth faste,
|
||
Man shal nat suffre his wyf go roule aboute,
|
||
Thanne wolde he seye right thus, withouten doute:
|
||
"Who so that buyldeth his hous al of salwes,
|
||
|
||
And priketh his blynde 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 lawe,
|
||
|
||
Ne I wolde nat of hym corrected be.
|
||
I hate hym that my vices telleth me;
|
||
And so doo mo, God woot, of us than I!
|
||
This made hym with me wood al outrely,
|
||
I nolde noght forbere hym in no cas.
|
||
|
||
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, nyght and day,
|
||
For his desport he wolde rede alway.
|
||
|
||
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 Jerome,
|
||
That made a book agayn Jovinian,
|
||
|
||
In whiche book eek ther was Tertulan,
|
||
Crisippus, Trotula, and Helowys,
|
||
That was abbesse nat fer fro Parys,
|
||
And eek the Parables of Salomon,
|
||
Ovides Art, and bookes many on,
|
||
|
||
And alle thise were bounden in o volume,
|
||
And every nyght and day was his custume
|
||
Whan he hadde leyser and vacacioun
|
||
From oother worldly occupacioun
|
||
To reden on this book of wikked wyves.
|
||
|
||
He knew of hem mo legendes and lyves
|
||
Than been of goode wyves in the Bible.
|
||
For trusteth wel, it is an inpossible
|
||
That any clerk wol speke good of wyves,
|
||
But if it be of hooly seintes lyves,
|
||
|
||
Ne noon oother womman never the mo.
|
||
Who peyntede the leoun, tel me, who?
|
||
By God, if wommen hadde writen stories,
|
||
As clerkes han withinne hire oratories,
|
||
They wolde han writen of men moore wikkednesse
|
||
|
||
Than all the mark of Adam may redresse.
|
||
The children of Mercurie and Venus
|
||
Been in hir wirkyng ful contrarius,
|
||
Mercurie loveth wysdam and science,
|
||
And Venus loveth ryot and dispence.
|
||
|
||
And for hire 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.
|
||
|
||
Therfore no womman of no clerk is preysed.
|
||
The clerk, whan he is oold and may noght do
|
||
Of Venus werkes worth his olde sho,
|
||
Thanne sit he doun, and writ in his dotage
|
||
That wommen kan nat kepe hir mariage.
|
||
|
||
But now to purpos, why I tolde thee
|
||
That I was beten for a book, pardee.
|
||
Upon a nyght Jankyn, that was oure sire,
|
||
Redde on his book as he sat by the fire
|
||
Of Eva first, that for hir wikkednesse
|
||
|
||
Was al mankynde broght to wrecchednesse,
|
||
For which that Jesu Crist hymself was slayn,
|
||
That boghte us with his herte-blood agayn.
|
||
Lo, heere expres of womman may ye fynde,
|
||
That womman was the los of al mankynde.
|
||
|
||
Tho redde he me how Sampson loste hise heres,
|
||
Slepynge, his lemman kitte it with hir sheres,
|
||
Thurgh whiche tresoun loste he bothe hise eyen.
|
||
Tho redde he me, if that I shal nat lyen,
|
||
Of Hercules and of his Dianyre,
|
||
|
||
That caused hym to sette hymself afyre.
|
||
No thyng forgat he the penaunce and wo
|
||
That Socrates hadde with hise wyves two,
|
||
How Xantippa caste pisse up-on his heed.
|
||
This sely man sat stille as he were deed;
|
||
|
||
He wiped his heed, namoore dorste he seyn
|
||
But, "er that thonder stynte, comth a reyn."
|
||
Of Phasifpha, that was the queene of Crete,
|
||
For shrewednesse hym thoughte the tale swete-
|
||
Fy, speke namoore! it is a grisly thyng
|
||
|
||
Of hir horrible lust and hir likyng.
|
||
Of Clitermystra for hire lecherye,
|
||
That falsly made hir housbonde for to dye,
|
||
He redde it with ful good devocioun.
|
||
He tolde me eek for what occasioun
|
||
|
||
Amphiorax at Thebes loste his lyf.
|
||
Myn housbonde hadde a legende of his wyf
|
||
Eriphilem, that for an ouche of gold
|
||
Hath prively unto the Grekes told
|
||
Wher that hir housbonde hidde hym in a place,
|
||
|
||
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 oother was for hate.
|
||
Lyma hir housbonde, on an even late,
|
||
|
||
Empoysoned hath, for that she was his fo.
|
||
Lucia likerous loved hir housbonde so,
|
||
That for he sholde alwey upon hire thynke,
|
||
She yaf hym swich a manere love-drynke
|
||
That he was deed, er it were by the morwe.
|
||
|
||
And thus algates housbondes han sorw.
|
||
Thanne tolde he me, how that Latumyus
|
||
Compleyned unto his felawe Arrius,
|
||
That in his gardyn growed swich a tree,
|
||
On which he seyde how that hise wyves thre
|
||
|
||
Hanged hemself, for herte despitus.
|
||
"O leeve brother," quod this Arrius,
|
||
"Yif me a plante of thilke blissed tree,
|
||
And in my gardyn planted it shal bee."
|
||
Of latter date of wyves hath he red,
|
||
|
||
That somme han slayn hir housbondes in hir bed,
|
||
And lete hir lecchour dighte hir al the nyght,
|
||
Whan that the corps lay in the floor upright.
|
||
And somme han dryve nayles in hir brayn
|
||
Whil that they slepte, and thus they han hem slayn.
|
||
|
||
Somme han hem yeve poysoun in hir drynke.
|
||
He spak moore harm than herte may bithynke,
|
||
And therwithal he knew of mo proverbes
|
||
Than in this world ther growen gras or herbes.
|
||
"Bet is," quod he, "Thyn habitacioun
|
||
|
||
Be with a leoun, or a foul dragoun,
|
||
Than with a womman usynge 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.
|
||
|
||
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 goldryng in a sowes nose."
|
||
|
||
Who wolde leeve, or who wolde suppose
|
||
The wo that in myn herte was, and pyne?
|
||
And whan I saugh he wolde nevere fyne
|
||
To reden on this cursed book al nyght,
|
||
Al sodeynly thre leves have I plyght
|
||
|
||
Out of his book, right as he radde, and eke
|
||
I with my fest so took hym on the cheke,
|
||
That in oure fyr he ril bakward adoun.
|
||
And he up-stirte as dootha wood leoun,
|
||
And with his fest he smoot me on the heed
|
||
|
||
That in the floor I lay, as I were deed.
|
||
And whan 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,
|
||
|
||
"And for my land thus hastow mordred me?
|
||
Er I be deed, yet wol I kisse thee."
|
||
And neer he cam and kneled faire adoun,
|
||
And seyde, "deere suster Alisoun,
|
||
As help me God, I shal thee nevere smyte.
|
||
|
||
That I have doon, it is thyself to wyte,
|
||
Foryeve it me, and that I thee biseke."
|
||
And yet eftsoones I hitte hym on the cheke,
|
||
And seyde, "theef, thus muchel am I wreke;
|
||
Now wol I dye, I may no lenger speke."
|
||
|
||
But atte laste, with muchel care and wo,
|
||
We fille acorded by us selven two.
|
||
He yaf me al the bridel in myn hond,
|
||
To han the governance of hous and lond,
|
||
And of his tonge, and of his hond also,
|
||
|
||
And made hym brenne his book anon right tho.
|
||
And whan that I hadde geten unto me
|
||
By maistrie, al the soveraynetee,
|
||
And that he seyde, "myn owene trewe wyf,
|
||
Do as thee lust the terme of al thy lyf,
|
||
|
||
Keepe thyn honour, and keep eek myn estaat,"
|
||
After that day we hadden never debaat.
|
||
God help me so, I was to hym as kynde
|
||
As any wyf from Denmark unto Ynde,
|
||
And also trewe, and so was he to me.
|
||
|
||
I prey to God, that sit in magestee,
|
||
So blesse his soule for his mercy deere.
|
||
Now wol I seye my tale, if ye wol heere.
|
||
|
||
Biholde the wordes bitwene the Somonour and the Frere.
|
||
|
||
The Frere lough whan he hadde herd al this.-
|
||
"Now dame," quod he, "so have I joye or blis,
|
||
This is a long preamble of a tale."
|
||
And whan the Somonour herde the Frere gale,
|
||
"Lo," quod the Somonour, "Goddes armes two,
|
||
|
||
A frere wol entremette hym evere-mo.
|
||
Lo goode men, a flye and eek a frere
|
||
Wol falle in every dyssh and eek mateere.
|
||
What spekestow of preambulacioun?
|
||
What, amble, or trotte, or pees, or go sit doun,
|
||
|
||
Thou lettest oure disport in this manere."
|
||
"Ye, woltow so, sire Somonour?" quod the frere,
|
||
"Now by my feith, I shal er that I go
|
||
Telle of a Somonour swich a tale or two
|
||
That alle the folk shal laughen in this place."
|
||
|
||
"Now elles, frere, I bishrewe thy face,"
|
||
Quod this Somonour, "and I bishrewe me,
|
||
But if I telle tales two or thre
|
||
Of freres, er I come to Sidyngborne,
|
||
That I shal make thyn herte for to morne,
|
||
|
||
For wel I woot thy pacience in gon."
|
||
Oure Hooste cride, "Pees, and that anon!"
|
||
And seyde, "lat the womman telle hire tale,
|
||
Ye fare as folk that dronken were of ale.
|
||
Do, dame, telle forth youre tale, and that is best."
|
||
|
||
"Al redy, sire," quod she, "right as yow lest,
|
||
If I have licence of this worthy frere."
|
||
"Yis, dame," quod he, "tel forth, and I wol heere."
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the Wyf of Bathe hir Prologe.
|
||
|
||
Part 20
|
||
|
||
THE TALE OF THE WYF OF BATH
|
||
|
||
Here bigynneth the Tale of the Wyf of Bathe.
|
||
|
||
In tholde dayes of the Kyng Arthour,
|
||
Of which that Britons speken greet honour,
|
||
All was this land fulfild of Fayerye.
|
||
The elf-queene, with hir joly compaignye,
|
||
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 kan no man se none elves mo,
|
||
For now the grete charitee and prayeres
|
||
Of lymytours, and othere hooly freres,
|
||
|
||
That serchen every lond and every streem
|
||
As thikke as motes in the sonne-beem,
|
||
Blessynge halles, chambres, kichenes, boures,
|
||
Citees, burghes, castels, hye toures,
|
||
Thropes, bernes, shipnes, dayeryes,
|
||
|
||
This maketh that ther been no Fayeryes.
|
||
For ther as wont to walken was an elf,
|
||
Ther walketh now the lymytour hymself
|
||
In undermeles and in morwenynges,
|
||
And seyth his matyns and his hooly thynges
|
||
|
||
As he gooth in his lymytacioun.
|
||
Wommen may go saufly up and doun;
|
||
In every bussh or under every tree
|
||
Ther is noon oother incubus but he,
|
||
And he ne wol doon hem but dishonour.
|
||
|
||
And so bifel it that this kyng Arthour
|
||
Hadde in his hous a lusty bachelor,
|
||
That on a day cam ridynge fro ryver;
|
||
And happed that, allone as she was born,
|
||
He saugh a mayde walkynge hym biforn,
|
||
|
||
Of whiche mayde anon, maugree hir heed,
|
||
By verray force he rafte hir maydenhed;
|
||
For which oppressioun was swich clamour
|
||
And swich pursute unto the kyng Arthour,
|
||
That dampned was this knyght for to be deed
|
||
|
||
By cours of lawe, and sholde han lost his heed,
|
||
Paraventure, swich was the statut tho,
|
||
But that the queene and othere ladyes mo
|
||
So longe preyeden the kyng of grace,
|
||
Til he his lyf hym graunted in the place,
|
||
|
||
And yaf hym to the queene al at hir wille,
|
||
To chese, wheither she wolde hym save or spille.
|
||
The queene thanketh the kyng with al hir myght,
|
||
And after this thus spak she to the knyght,
|
||
Whan that she saugh hir tyme, upon a day,
|
||
|
||
"Thou standest yet," quod she, "in swich array
|
||
That of thy lyf yet hastow no suretee.
|
||
I grante thee lyf, if thou kanst tellen me
|
||
What thyng is it that wommen moost desiren.
|
||
Be war and keep thy nekke-boon from iren,
|
||
|
||
And if thou kanst nat tellen it anon,
|
||
Yet shal I yeve thee leve for to gon
|
||
A twelf-month and a day to seche and leere
|
||
An answere suffisant in this mateere;
|
||
And suretee wol I han, er that thou pace,
|
||
|
||
Thy body for to yelden in this place."
|
||
Wo was this knyght, and sorwefully he siketh,
|
||
But what! he may nat do al as hym liketh;
|
||
And at the laste he chees hym for to wende,
|
||
And come agayn right at the yeres ende,
|
||
|
||
With swich answere as God wolde hym purveye;
|
||
And taketh his leve, and wendeth forth his weye.
|
||
He seketh every hous and every place,
|
||
Where as he hopeth for to fynde grace
|
||
To lerne what thyng wommen loven moost;
|
||
|
||
But he ne koude arryven in no coost
|
||
Wher as he myghte fynde in this mateere
|
||
Two creatures accordynge in feere.
|
||
Somme seyde, wommen loven best richesse,
|
||
Somme seyde honour, somme seyde jolynesse,
|
||
|
||
Somme riche array, somme seyden lust abedde,
|
||
And oftetyme to be wydwe and wedde.
|
||
Somme seyde, that oure hertes been moost esed
|
||
Whan that we been yflatered and yplesed-
|
||
He gooth ful ny the sothe, I wol nat lye,
|
||
|
||
A man shal wynne us best with flaterye;
|
||
And with attendance and with bisynesse
|
||
Been we ylymed, bothe moore and lesse.-
|
||
And somme seyn, how that we loven best
|
||
For to be free, and do right as us lest,
|
||
|
||
And that no man repreve us of oure vice,
|
||
But seye that we be wise, and nothyng nyce.
|
||
For trewely, ther is noon of us alle,
|
||
If any wight wol clawe us on the galle,
|
||
That we nel kike; for he seith us sooth;
|
||
|
||
Assay, and he shal fynde it that so dooth.
|
||
For be we never so vicious withinne,
|
||
We sol been holden wise, and clene of synne.
|
||
And somme seyn, that greet delit han we
|
||
For to been holden stable and eke secree,
|
||
|
||
And in o purpos stedefastly to dwelle,
|
||
And nat biwerye thyng that men us telle.
|
||
But that tale is nat worth a rake-stele,
|
||
Pardee, we wommen konne no thyng hele.
|
||
Witnesse on Myda-wol ye heere the tale?
|
||
|
||
Ovyde, amonges othere thynges smale,
|
||
Seyde, Myda hadde under his longe heres
|
||
Growynge upon his heed two asses eres,
|
||
The whiche vice he hydde, as he best myghte,
|
||
Ful subtilly from every mannes sighte;
|
||
|
||
That, save his wyf, ther wiste of it namo,
|
||
He loved hir moost and trusted hir also.
|
||
He preyede hir, that to no creature
|
||
She sholde tellen of his disfigure.
|
||
She swoor him nay, for al this world to wynne,
|
||
|
||
She nolde do that vileynye or synne,
|
||
To make hir housbonde han so foul a name,
|
||
She nolde nat telle it for hir owene shame!
|
||
|
||
But nathelees, hir thoughte that she dyde,
|
||
That she so longe sholde a conseil hyde,
|
||
|
||
Hir thoughte it swal so soore 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,
|
||
Til she came there, hir herte was afyre,
|
||
|
||
And as a bitore bombleth in the myre,
|
||
She leyde hir mouth unto the water doun;-
|
||
"Biwreye me nat, thou water, with thy soun,"
|
||
Quod she, "to thee I telle it and namo,
|
||
Myn housbonde hath longe asses erys two!
|
||
|
||
Now is myn herte al hool, now is it oute,
|
||
I myghte no lenger kepe it, out of doute."
|
||
Heere may ye se, thogh we a tyme abyde,
|
||
Yet out it moot, we kan no conseil hyde.-
|
||
The remenant of the tale, if ye wol heere,
|
||
|
||
Redeth Ovyde, and ther ye may it leere.-
|
||
This knyght, of which my tale is specially,
|
||
Whan that he saugh he myghte nat come therby,
|
||
This is to seye, what wommen love moost,
|
||
Withinne his brest ful sorweful was the goost.
|
||
|
||
But hoom he gooth, he myghte nat sojourne;
|
||
The day was come that homward moste he tourne,
|
||
And in his wey it happed hym to ryde
|
||
In al this care under a forest syde,
|
||
Wher as he saugh upon a daunce go
|
||
|
||
Of ladyes foure and twenty, and yet mo;
|
||
Toward the whiche daunce he drow ful yerne,
|
||
In hope that som wysdom sholde he lerne.
|
||
But certeinly, er he came fully there,
|
||
Vanysshed was this daunce, he nyste where;
|
||
|
||
No creature saugh he that bar lyf,
|
||
Save on the grene he saugh sittynge a wyf,
|
||
A fouler wight ther may no man devyse.
|
||
Agayn the knyght this olde wyf gan ryse,
|
||
And seyde, "Sire knyght, heer-forth ne lith no wey;
|
||
|
||
Tel me what that ye seken, by your fey.
|
||
Paraventure it may the bettre be,
|
||
Thise olde folk kan muchel thyng," quod she.
|
||
"My leeve mooder," quod this knyght, "certeyn,
|
||
I nam but deed, but if that I kan seyn
|
||
|
||
What thyng it is, that wommen moost desire.
|
||
Koude ye me wisse, I wolde wel quite youre hire."
|
||
"Plight me thy trouthe, heere in myn hand," quod she,
|
||
"The nexte thyng that I requere thee,
|
||
Thou shalt it do, if it lye in thy myght,
|
||
|
||
And I wol telle it yow, er it be nyght."
|
||
"Have heer my trouthe," quod the knyght, "I grante."
|
||
"Thanne," quod she, "I dar me wel avante,
|
||
Thy lyf is sauf, for I wol stonde therby
|
||
Upon my lyf, the queene wol seye as I.
|
||
|
||
Lat se 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 withouten lenger speche."
|
||
Tho rowned she a pistel in his ere,
|
||
|
||
And bad hym to be glad and have no fere.
|
||
Whan they be comen to the court, this knyght
|
||
Seyde he had holde his day, as he hadde hight,
|
||
And redy was his answere, as he sayde.
|
||
Ful many a noble wyf, and many a mayde,
|
||
|
||
And many a wydwe, for that they been wise,
|
||
The wueene hirself sittynge as a justise,
|
||
Assembled been, his answere for to heere;
|
||
And afterward this knyght was bode appeere.
|
||
To every wight comanded was silence,
|
||
|
||
And that the knyght sholde telle in audience
|
||
What thyng that worldly wommen loven best.
|
||
This knyght ne stood nat stille, as doth a best,
|
||
But ot his questioun anon answerde
|
||
With manly voys, that al the court it herde:
|
||
|
||
"My lige lady, generally," quod he,
|
||
"Wommen desiren to have sovereynetee
|
||
As wel over hir housbond as hir love,
|
||
And for to been in maistrie hym above.
|
||
This is youre mooste desir, thogh ye me kille,
|
||
|
||
Dooth as yow list, I am heer at youre wille."
|
||
In al the court ne was ther wyf ne mayde
|
||
Ne wydwe that contraried that he sayde,
|
||
But seyden he was worthy han his lyf.
|
||
And with that word up stirte the olde wyf,
|
||
|
||
Which that the knyght saugh sittynge in the grene.
|
||
"Mercy," quod she, "my sovereyn lady queene,
|
||
Er that youre court departe, do me right.
|
||
I taughte this answere unto the knyght,
|
||
For which he plighte me his trouthe there,
|
||
|
||
The firste thyng I wolde of hym requere,
|
||
He wolde it do, if it lay in his myght.
|
||
Bifor the court thanne preye I thee, sir knyght,"
|
||
Quod she, "that thou me take unto thy wyf,
|
||
For wel thou woost that I have kept thy lyf.
|
||
|
||
If I seye fals, sey nay, upon thy fey!"
|
||
This knyght answerde, "Allas and weylawey!
|
||
I woot right wel that swich was my biheste!
|
||
For Goddes love, as chees a newe requeste,
|
||
Taak al my good, and lat my body go!"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, thanne," quod she, "I shrewe us bothe two,
|
||
For thogh that I be foul, and oold, and poore,
|
||
I nolde for al the metal, ne for oore,
|
||
That under erthe is grave, or lith above,
|
||
But if thy wyf I were, and eek thy love."
|
||
|
||
"My love?" quod he, "nay, my dampnacioun!
|
||
Allas, that any of my nacioun
|
||
Sholde evere so foule disparaged be!"
|
||
But al for noght, the ende is this, that he
|
||
Constreyned was, he nedes moste hir wedde,
|
||
|
||
And taketh his olde wyf, and gooth to bedde.
|
||
Now wolden som men seye, paraventure,
|
||
That for my necligence I do no cure
|
||
To tellen yow the joye and al tharray,
|
||
That at the feeste was that ilke day;
|
||
|
||
To whiche thyng shortly answere I shal.
|
||
I seye, ther nas no joye ne feeste at al,
|
||
Ther nas but hevynesse and muche sorwe,
|
||
For prively he wedde hir on a morwe,
|
||
And al day after hidde hym as an owle,
|
||
|
||
So wo was hym, his wyf looked so foule.
|
||
Greet was the wo the knyght hadde in his thoght,
|
||
Whan he was with his wyf abedde ybroght,
|
||
He walweth and he turneth to and fro.
|
||
His olde wyf lay smylynge everemo,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "O deere housbonde, benedicitee,
|
||
Fareth every knyght thus with his wyf, as ye?
|
||
Is this the lawe of Kyng Arthures hous?
|
||
Is every knyght of his so dangerous?
|
||
I am youre owene love, and eek your wyf;
|
||
|
||
I am she which that saved hath youre lyf.
|
||
And certes, yet dide I yow nevere unright;
|
||
Why fare ye thus with me this firste nyght?
|
||
Ye faren lyk a man had lost his wit.
|
||
What is my gilt? for Goddes love, tel it,
|
||
|
||
And it shal been amended, if I may."
|
||
"Amended," quod this knyght, "allas! nay! nay!
|
||
It wol nat been amended nevere mo;
|
||
Thou art so loothly and so oold also
|
||
And therto comen of so lough a kynde,
|
||
|
||
That litel wonder is thogh I walwe and wynde.
|
||
So wolde God, myn herte wolde breste!"
|
||
"Is this," quod she, "the cause of youre unreste?"
|
||
"Ye certeinly," quod he, "no wonder is!"
|
||
"Now, sire," quod she, "I koude amende al this,
|
||
|
||
If that me liste, er it were dayes thre,
|
||
So wel ye myghte bere yow unto me.
|
||
But for ye speken of swich gentillesse
|
||
As is descended out of old richesse,
|
||
That therfore sholden ye be gentil men,
|
||
|
||
Swich arrogance nis nat worth an hen.
|
||
Looke who that is moost vertuous alway,
|
||
Pryvee and apert, and moost entendeth ay
|
||
To do the gentil dedes that he kan,
|
||
Taak hym for the grettest gentil-man.
|
||
|
||
Crist wole, we clayme of hym oure gentillesse,
|
||
Nat of oure eldres for hire old richesse.
|
||
For thogh they yeve us al hir heritage,
|
||
For which we clayme to been of heigh parage,
|
||
Yet may they nat biquethe for no thyng
|
||
|
||
To noon of us hir vertuous lyvyng,
|
||
That made hem gentil men ycalled be,
|
||
And bad us folwen hem in swich degree.
|
||
Wel kan the wise poete of Florence,
|
||
That highte Dant, speken in this sentence.
|
||
|
||
Lo in swich maner rym is Dantes tale:
|
||
`Ful selde upriseth by his branches smale
|
||
Prowesse of man, for God of his goodnesse
|
||
Wole, that of hym we clayme oure gentillesse.'
|
||
For of oure eldres may we no thyng clayme
|
||
|
||
But temporel thyng, that man may hurte and mayme.
|
||
Eek every wight woot this as wel as I,
|
||
If gentillesse were planted natureelly
|
||
Unto a certeyn lynage doun the lyne,
|
||
Pryvee nor apert, thanne wolde they nevere fyne
|
||
|
||
To doon of gentillesse the faire office,
|
||
They myghte do no vileynye or vice.
|
||
Taak fyr, and ber it in the derkeste hous
|
||
Bitwix this and the mount of Kaukasous,
|
||
And lat men shette the dores and go thenne,
|
||
|
||
Yet wole the fyr as faire lye and brenne
|
||
As twenty thousand men myghte it biholde;
|
||
His office natureel ay wol it holde,
|
||
Up peril of my lyf, til that it dye.
|
||
Heere may ye se wel, how that genterye
|
||
|
||
Is nat annexed to possessioun,
|
||
Sith folk ne doon hir operacioun
|
||
Alwey, as dooth the fyr, lo, in his kynde.
|
||
For God it woot, men may wel often fynde
|
||
A lordes sone do shame and vileynye,
|
||
|
||
And he that wole han pris of his gentrye,
|
||
For he was boren of a gentil hous,
|
||
And hadde hise eldres noble and vertuous,
|
||
And nel hym-selven do no gentil dedis,
|
||
Ne folwen his gentil auncestre that deed is,
|
||
|
||
He nys nat gentil, be he duc or erl;
|
||
For vileyns synful dedes make a cherl.
|
||
For gentillesse nys but renomee
|
||
Of thyne auncestres for hire heigh bountee,
|
||
Which is a strange thyng to thy persone.
|
||
|
||
Thy gentillesse cometh fro God allone,
|
||
Thanne comth oure verray gentillesse of grace,
|
||
It was no thyng biquethe us with oure place.
|
||
Thenketh hou noble, as seith Valerius,
|
||
Was thilke Tullius Hostillius,
|
||
|
||
That out of poverte roos to heigh noblesse.
|
||
Reedeth Senek, and redeth eek Boece,
|
||
Ther shul ye seen expres that it no drede is,
|
||
That he is gentil that dooth gentil dedis.
|
||
And therfore, leeve housbonde, I thus conclude,
|
||
|
||
Al were it that myne auncestres weren rude,
|
||
Yet may the hye God-and so hope I,-
|
||
Grante me grace to lyven vertuously.
|
||
Thanne am I gentil whan that I bigynne
|
||
To lyven vertuously, and weyve synne.
|
||
|
||
And ther as ye of poverte me repreeve,
|
||
The hye God, on whom that we bileeve
|
||
In wilful poverte chees to lyve his lyf.
|
||
And certes every man, mayden or wyf,
|
||
May understonde that Jesus, hevene kyng,
|
||
|
||
Ne wolde nat chesen vicious lyvyng.
|
||
Glad poverte is an honeste thyng, certeyn,
|
||
This wole Senec and othere clerkes seyn.
|
||
Who so that halt hym payd of his poverte,
|
||
I holde hym riche, al hadde he nat a sherte;
|
||
|
||
He that coveiteth is a povre wight,
|
||
For he wolde han that is nat in his myght,
|
||
But he that noght hath, ne coveiteth have,
|
||
Is riche, although ye holde hym but a knave.
|
||
Verray poverte, it syngeth proprely.
|
||
|
||
Juvenal seith of poverte myrily,
|
||
`The povre man, whan he goth by the weye,
|
||
Bifore the theves he may synge and pleye.'
|
||
Poverte is hateful good, and, as I gesse,
|
||
A ful greet bryngere out of bisynesse;
|
||
|
||
A greet amender eek of sapience
|
||
To hym that taketh it in pacience.
|
||
Poverte is this, although it seme elenge;
|
||
Possessioun, that no wight wol chalenge.
|
||
Poverte ful ofte, whan a man is lowe,
|
||
|
||
Maketh his God and eek hymself to knowe;
|
||
Poverte a spectacle is, as thynketh me,
|
||
Thurgh which he may hise verray freendes see.
|
||
And therfore, sire, syn that I noght yow greve,
|
||
Of my poverte namoore ye me repreve.
|
||
|
||
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 oold wight doon favour,
|
||
And clepe hym fader for youre gentillesse,
|
||
|
||
And auctours shal I fynden, as I gesse.
|
||
Now, ther ye seye that I am foul and old,
|
||
Than drede you noght to been a cokewold;
|
||
For filthe and eelde, al so moot I thee,
|
||
Been grete wardeyns upon chastitee;
|
||
|
||
But nathelees, syn I knowe youre delit,
|
||
I shal fulfille youre worldly appetit."
|
||
"Chese now," quod she, "oon of thise thynges tweye:
|
||
To han me foul and old til that I deye,
|
||
And be to yow a trewe humble wyf,
|
||
|
||
And nevere yow displese in al my lyf;
|
||
Or elles ye wol han me yong and fair,
|
||
And take youre aventure of the repair
|
||
That shal be to youre hous, by cause of me,
|
||
Or in som oother place may wel be.
|
||
|
||
Now chese yourselven wheither that yow liketh."
|
||
This knyght avyseth hym and sore siketh,
|
||
But atte laste, he seyde in this manere:
|
||
"My lady and my love, and wyf so deere,
|
||
I put me in youre wise governance.
|
||
|
||
Cheseth yourself, which may be moost plesance
|
||
And moost honour to yow and me also.
|
||
I do no fors the wheither of the two,
|
||
For, as yow liketh, it suffiseth me."
|
||
"Thanne have I gete of yow maistrie," quod she,
|
||
|
||
"Syn I may chese and governe as me lest?"
|
||
"Ye, certes, wyf," quod he, "I holde it best."
|
||
"Kys me," quod she, "we be no lenger wrothe,
|
||
For, by my trouthe, I wol be to yow bothe!
|
||
This is to seyn, ye, bothe fair and good.
|
||
|
||
I prey to God that I moote sterven wood
|
||
But I to yow be al so good and trewe
|
||
As evere was wyf, syn that the world was newe.
|
||
And but I be tomorn as fair to seene
|
||
As any lady, emperice or queene,
|
||
|
||
That is bitwixe the est and eke the west,
|
||
Dooth with my lyf and deth right as yow lest.
|
||
Cast up the curtyn, looke how that it is."
|
||
And whan the knyght saugh verraily al this,
|
||
That she so fair was, and so yong therto,
|
||
|
||
For joye he hente hire in hise armes two.
|
||
His herte bathed in a bath of blisse,
|
||
A thousand tyme arewe he gan hir kisse,
|
||
And she obeyed hym in every thyng
|
||
That myghte doon hym plesance or likyng.
|
||
|
||
And thus they lyve unto hir lyves ende
|
||
In parfit joye;-and Jesu Crist us sende
|
||
Housbondes meeke, yonge, fressh abedde,
|
||
And grace toverbyde hem that we wedde.
|
||
And eek I praye Jesu shorte hir lyves,
|
||
|
||
That nat wol be governed by hir wyves;
|
||
And olde and angry nygardes of dispence,
|
||
God sende hem soone verray pestilence!
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the Wyves tale of Bathe.
|
||
Part 21
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE FRERES TALE
|
||
|
||
The Prologe of the Freres Tale.
|
||
|
||
This worthy lymytour, this noble frere,
|
||
He made alwey a maner louryng chiere
|
||
Upon the Somonour, but for honestee
|
||
No vileyns word as yet to hym spak he.
|
||
But atte laste he seyde unto the wyf,
|
||
|
||
"Dame," quod he, "God yeve yow right good lyf!
|
||
Ye han heer touched, also moot I thee,
|
||
In scole-matere greet difficultee.
|
||
Ye han seyd muche thyng right wel, I seye.
|
||
But dame, heere as we ryde by the weye
|
||
|
||
Us nedeth nat to speken but of game,
|
||
And lete auctoritees, on Goddes name,
|
||
To prechyng and to scole eek of clergye.
|
||
But if it lyke to this compaignye,
|
||
I wol yow of a somonour telle a game.
|
||
|
||
Pardee, ye may wel knowe bby the name
|
||
That of a somonour may no good be sayd;
|
||
I praye that noon of you be yvele apayd.
|
||
A somonour is a renner up and doun
|
||
With mandementz for fornicacioun,
|
||
|
||
And is ybet at every townes ende."
|
||
Oure Hoost tho spak, "A sire, ye sholde be hende
|
||
And curteys, as a man of youre estaat.
|
||
In compaignye we wol have no debaat.
|
||
Telleth youre tale, and lat the Somonour be."
|
||
|
||
"Nay," quod the Somonour, "lat hym seye to me
|
||
What so hym list. Whan it comth to my lot,
|
||
By God I shal hym quiten every grot.
|
||
I shal hym tellen which a greet honour
|
||
It is to be a flaterynge lymytour,
|
||
|
||
And his office I shal hym teele, ywis."
|
||
Oure Hoost answerde, "Pees, namoore of this!"
|
||
And after this he seyde unto the Frere,
|
||
"Tel forth youre tale, leeve maister deere."
|
||
|
||
THE TALE
|
||
|
||
(How a Summoner, meeting a devil dressed as a yeoman,
|
||
agrees to share gifts with him as a friend; and is himself
|
||
consigned to the devil by a poor old woman. Then follow
|
||
the Summoner's Prologue and Tale of an insult put by a
|
||
goodman upon a greedy friar.)
|
||
Part 22
|
||
|
||
GROUP E.
|
||
|
||
THE CLERKES TALE-PROLOGUE
|
||
|
||
Heere folweth the Prologe of the clerkes tale of Oxenford.
|
||
|
||
"Sire clerk of Oxenford," oure Hooste sayde,
|
||
"Ye ryde as coy and stille as dooth a mayde,
|
||
Were newe spoused, sittynge at the bord.
|
||
This day ne herde I of youre tonge a word.
|
||
I trowe ye studie about som sophyme;
|
||
|
||
But Salomon seith, `every thyng hath tyme.'
|
||
For Goddes sake, as beth of bettre cheere;
|
||
It is no tyme for to studien heere,
|
||
Telle us som myrie tale, by youre fey.
|
||
For what man that is entred in a pley,
|
||
|
||
He nedes moot unto the pley assente;
|
||
But precheth nat as freres doon in Lente,
|
||
To make us for oure olde synnes wepe,
|
||
Ne that thy tale make us nat to slepe.
|
||
Telle us som murie thyng of aventures;
|
||
|
||
Youre termes, youre colours, and youre figures,
|
||
Keep hem in stoor, til so be that ye endite
|
||
Heigh style, as whan that men to kynges write.
|
||
Speketh so pleyn at this tyme, we yow preye,
|
||
That we may understonde what ye seye."
|
||
|
||
This worthy clerk benignely answerde,
|
||
"Hooste," quod he, "I am under youre yerde.
|
||
Ye han of us as now the governance;
|
||
And therfore wol I do yow obeisance
|
||
As fer as resoun axeth, hardily.
|
||
|
||
I wol yow telle a tale, which that I
|
||
Lerned at Padwe 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.
|
||
|
||
Fraunceys Petrark, the lauriat poete,
|
||
Highte this clerk, whos rethorike sweete
|
||
Enlumyned al Ytaille of poetrie,
|
||
As Lynyan dide of philosophie,
|
||
Or lawe, or oother art particuler.
|
||
|
||
But deeth, that wol nat suffre us dwellen heer
|
||
But as it were a twynklyng of an eye,
|
||
Hem bothe hath slayn, and alle shul we dye.
|
||
But forth to tellen of this worthy man,
|
||
That taughte me this tale as I bigan,
|
||
|
||
I seye, that first with heigh stile he enditeth
|
||
Er he the body of his tale writeth,
|
||
A prohemye in the which discryveth he
|
||
Pemond, and of Saluces the contree,
|
||
And speketh of Apennyn, the hilles hye,
|
||
|
||
That been the boundes of Westlumbardye;
|
||
And of Mount Vesulus in special,
|
||
Where as the Poo out of a welle smal
|
||
Taketh his firste spryngyng and his sours,
|
||
That estward ay encresseth in his cours
|
||
|
||
To Emeleward, to Ferrare, and Venyse;
|
||
The which a long thyng were to devyse.
|
||
And trewely, as to my juggement,
|
||
Me thynketh it a thyng impertinent,
|
||
Save that he wole convoyen his mateere;
|
||
But this his tale, which that ye may heere."
|
||
|
||
Part 23
|
||
|
||
THE CLERKES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the tale of the Clerk of Oxenford.
|
||
|
||
Ther is, at the west syde of Ytaille,
|
||
Doun at the roote of Vesulus the colde,
|
||
A lusty playne, habundant of vitaille,
|
||
Where many a tour and toun thou mayst biholde
|
||
That founded were in tyme of fadres olde,
|
||
And many another delitable sighte,
|
||
And Saluces this noble contree highte.
|
||
|
||
A markys whilom lord was of that lond,
|
||
As were hise worthy eldres hym bifore,
|
||
And obeisant and redy to his hond
|
||
Were alle hise liges, bothe lasse and moore.
|
||
Thus in delit he lyveth, and hath doon yoore,
|
||
Biloved and drad thurgh favour of Fortune,
|
||
Bothe of hise lordes and of his commune.
|
||
|
||
Therwith he was, to speke as of lynage,
|
||
The gentilleste yborn of Lumbardye;
|
||
A fair persone, and strong, and yong of age,
|
||
And ful of honour and of curteisye,
|
||
Discreet ynogh his contree for to gye,
|
||
Save that in somme thynges that he was to blame,
|
||
And Walter was this yonge lordes name.
|
||
|
||
I blame hym thus, that he considereth noght
|
||
In tyme comynge what hym myghte bityde,
|
||
But in his lust present was al his thoght,
|
||
As for to hauke and hunte on every syde.
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
Oonly that point his peple bar so soore,
|
||
That flokmeele on a day they to hym wente,
|
||
And oon of hem, that wisest was of loore,
|
||
Or elles that the lord best wolde assente,
|
||
That he sholde telle hym what his peple mente,
|
||
Or elles koude he shewe wel swich mateere,
|
||
He to the markys seyde as ye shul heere:
|
||
|
||
"O noble Markys, youre humanitee
|
||
Asseureth us, and yeveth us hardinesse,
|
||
As ofte as tyme is of necessitee
|
||
That we to yow mowe telle oure hevynesse.
|
||
Accepteth, lord, now for youre gentillesse
|
||
That we with pitous herte unto yow pleyne,
|
||
And lat youre eres nat my voys desdeyne,
|
||
|
||
Al have I noght to doone in this mateere
|
||
Moore than another man hath in this place;
|
||
Yet for as muche as ye, my lord so deere,
|
||
Han alwey shewed me favour and grace,
|
||
I dar the bettre aske of yow a space
|
||
Of audience to shewen oure requeste,
|
||
And ye, my lord, to doon right as yow leste.
|
||
|
||
For certes, lord, so wel us liketh yow
|
||
And al youre werk, and evere han doon that we
|
||
Ne koude nat us-self devysen how
|
||
We myghte lyven in moore felicitee,
|
||
Save o thyng, lord, if it youre wille be,
|
||
That for to been a wedded man yow leste,
|
||
Thanne were youre peple in sovereyn hertes reste.
|
||
|
||
Boweth youre nekke under that blisful yok
|
||
Of soveraynetee, noght of servyse,
|
||
Which that men clepeth spousaille or wedlock;
|
||
And thenketh, lord, among youre thoghtes wyse
|
||
How that oure dayes passe in sondry wyse,
|
||
For thogh we slepe, or wake, or rome, or ryde,
|
||
Ay fleeth the tyme, it nyl no man abyde.
|
||
|
||
And thogh youre grene youthe floure as yit,
|
||
In crepeth age alwey, as stille as stoon,
|
||
And deeth manaceth every age, and smyt
|
||
In ech estaat, for ther escapeth noon;
|
||
And al so certein as we knowe echoon
|
||
That we shul deye, as uncerteyn we alle
|
||
Been of that day, whan deeth shal on us falle.
|
||
|
||
Accepteth thanne of us the trewe entente
|
||
That nevere yet refuseden thyn heeste;
|
||
And we wol, lord, if that ye wole assente,
|
||
Chese yow a wyf in short tyme atte leeste,
|
||
Born of the gentilleste and of the meeste
|
||
Of al this land, so that it oghte seme
|
||
Honour to God, and yow, as we kan deeme.
|
||
|
||
Delivere us out of al this bisy drede,
|
||
And taak a wyf for hye Goddes sake,
|
||
For if it so bifelle, as God forbede,
|
||
That thurgh your deeth your lyne sholde slake,
|
||
And that a straunge successour sholde take
|
||
Youre heritage, o wo were us alyve!
|
||
Wherfore we pray you hastily to wyve."
|
||
|
||
Hir meeke preyere and hir pitous cheere
|
||
Made the markys herte han pitee.
|
||
"Ye wol," quod he, "myn owene peple deere,
|
||
To that I nevere erst thoughte, streyne me.
|
||
I me rejoysed of my liberte,
|
||
That seelde tyme is founde in mariage.
|
||
Ther I was free, I moot been in servage.
|
||
|
||
But nathelees I se youre trewe entente,
|
||
And truste upon youre wit, and have doon at;
|
||
Wherfore of my free wyl I wole assente
|
||
To wedde me, as soone as evere I may.
|
||
But ther as ye han profred me this day
|
||
To chese me a wyf, I yow relesse
|
||
That choys, and prey yow of that profre cesse.
|
||
|
||
For God it woot, that children ofte been
|
||
Unlyk hir worthy eldres hem bifore.
|
||
Bountee comth al of God, nat of the streen,
|
||
Of which they been engendred and ybore.
|
||
I truste in Goddes bontee; and therfore
|
||
My mariage, and myn estaat and reste,
|
||
I hym bitake, he may doon as hym leste.
|
||
|
||
Lat me allone in chesynge of my wyf,
|
||
That charge upon my bak I wole endure;
|
||
But I yow preye, and charge upon youre lyf
|
||
That what wyf that I take, ye me assure
|
||
To worshipe hir, whil that hir lyf may dure,
|
||
In word and werk, bothe heere and everywheere,
|
||
As she an emperoures doghter weere.
|
||
|
||
And forthermoore, this shal ye swere, that ye
|
||
Agayn my choys shul neither grucche ne stryve,
|
||
For sith I shal forgoon my libertee
|
||
At youre requeste, as evere moot I thryve,
|
||
Ther as myn herte is set, ther wol I wyve!
|
||
And but ye wole assente in this manere,
|
||
I prey yow, speketh namoore of this matere."
|
||
|
||
With hertely wyl they sworen and assenten
|
||
To al this thyng, ther seyde no wight nay,
|
||
Bisekynge hym of grace er that they wenten,
|
||
That he wolde graunten hem a certein day
|
||
Of his spousaille, as soone as evere he may,
|
||
For yet alwey the peple somwhat dredde
|
||
Lest that this markys no wyf wolde wedde.
|
||
|
||
He graunted hem a day, swich as hym leste,
|
||
On which he wolde be wedded sikerly,
|
||
And seyde he dide al this at hir requeste;
|
||
And they with humble entente, buxomly,
|
||
Knelynge upon hir knees ful reverently
|
||
Hym thonken alle, and thus they han an ende
|
||
Of hir entente, and hoom agayn they wende.
|
||
|
||
And heerupon he to hise officeres
|
||
Comaundeth for the feste to purveye,
|
||
And to hise privee knyghtes and squieres
|
||
Swich charge yaf, as hym liste on hem leye.
|
||
And they to his comandement obeye,
|
||
And ech of hem dooth al his diligence
|
||
To doon unto the feeste reverence:
|
||
|
||
Explicit prima pars.
|
||
|
||
Incipit secunda pars.
|
||
|
||
Noght fer fro thilke paleys honurable
|
||
Ther as this markys shoop his mariage,
|
||
Ther stood a throop, of site delitable,
|
||
|
||
In which that povre folk of that village
|
||
Hadden hir beestes and hir herbergage,
|
||
And of hir lobour tooke hir sustenance,
|
||
After that the erthe yaf hem habundance.
|
||
|
||
Amonges thise povre folk ther dwelte a man
|
||
Which that was holden povrest of hem alle;
|
||
(But hye God somtyme senden kan
|
||
His grace into a litel oxes stalle)
|
||
Janicula men of that throop hym calle.
|
||
A doghter hadde he, fair ynogh to sighte,
|
||
And Grisildis this yonge mayden highte.
|
||
|
||
But for to speke of vertuous beautee,
|
||
Thanne was she oon the faireste under sonne,
|
||
For povreliche yfostred up was she,
|
||
No likerous lust was thurgh hir herte yronne.
|
||
Wel ofter of the welle than of the tonne
|
||
She drank, and for she wolde vertu plese
|
||
She knew wel labour but noon ydel ese.
|
||
|
||
But thogh this mayde tendre were of age,
|
||
Yet in the brest of hire virginitee
|
||
Ther was enclosed rype and sad corage;
|
||
And in greet reverence and charitee
|
||
Hir olde povre fader fostred shee.
|
||
A fewe sheepe, spynnynge on feeld she kepte,
|
||
-She wolde noght been ydel, til she slepte.
|
||
|
||
And whan she homward cam, she wolde brynge
|
||
Wortes, or othere herbes tymes ofte,
|
||
The whiche she shredde and seeth for hir lyvynge,
|
||
And made hir bed ful harde and no thyng softe;
|
||
And ay she kepte hir fadres lyf on lofte
|
||
With everich obeisaunce and diligence
|
||
That child may doon to fadres reverence.
|
||
|
||
Upon Grisilde, this povre creature,
|
||
Ful ofte sithe this markys caste his eye,
|
||
As he on huntyng rood paraventure.
|
||
And whan it fil that he myghte hire espye,
|
||
He noght with wantowne lookyng of folye
|
||
Hise eyen caste on hir, but in sad wyse,
|
||
Upon hir chiere he wolde hym ofte avyse,
|
||
|
||
Commendynge in his herte hir wommanhede
|
||
And eek hir vertu, passynge any wight
|
||
Of so yong age, as wel in chiere as dede.
|
||
For thogh the peple hadde no greet insight
|
||
In vertu, he considered ful right
|
||
Hir bountee, and disposed that he wolde
|
||
Wedde hir oonly, if evere he wedde sholde.
|
||
|
||
The day of weddyng cam, but no wight kan
|
||
Telle what womman that it sholde be,
|
||
For which merveille wondred many a man,
|
||
And seyden, whan that they were in privetee,
|
||
"Wol nat oure lord yet leve his vanytee?
|
||
Wol he nat wedde? allas, allas, the while!
|
||
Why wole he thus hymself and us bigile?"
|
||
|
||
But nathelees this markys hath doon make
|
||
Of gemmes set in gold and in asure
|
||
Brooches and rynges, for Grisildis sake,
|
||
And of hir clothyng took he the mesure,
|
||
By a mayde lyk to hir stature,
|
||
And eek of othere ornementes alle
|
||
That unto swich a weddyng sholde falle.
|
||
|
||
The time of undren of the same day
|
||
Approcheth, that this weddyng 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,
|
||
That may be founde as fer as last Ytaille.
|
||
|
||
This roial markys, richely arrayed,
|
||
Lordes and ladyes in his compaignye,
|
||
The whiche that to the feeste weren yprayed,
|
||
And of his retenue the bachelrye,
|
||
With many a soun of sondry melodye
|
||
Unto the village, of the which I tolde,
|
||
In this array the righte wey han holde.
|
||
|
||
Grisilde (of this, God woot, ful innocent,
|
||
That for hir shapen was al this array)
|
||
To fecchen water at a welle is went,
|
||
And cometh hoom as soone as ever she may;
|
||
For wel she hadde herd seyd, that thilke day
|
||
The markys sholde wedde, and if she myghte,
|
||
She wolde fayn han seyn som of that sighte.
|
||
|
||
She thoghte, "I wole with othere maydens stonde,
|
||
That been my felawes, in oure dore, and se
|
||
The markysesse, and therfore wol I fonde
|
||
To doon at hoom as soone as it may be
|
||
The labour, which that longeth unto me,
|
||
And thanne I may at leyser hir biholde,
|
||
If she this wey unto the castel holde."
|
||
|
||
And as she wolde over hir thresshfold gon
|
||
The markys cam and gan hire for to calle,
|
||
And she set doun hir water pot anon
|
||
Biside the thresshfold in an oxes stalle,
|
||
And doun up-on hir knes she gan to falle,
|
||
And with sad contenance kneleth stille,
|
||
Til she had herd what was the lordes will.
|
||
|
||
This thoghtful markys spak unto this mayde
|
||
Ful sobrely, and seyde in this manere,
|
||
"Where is youre fader, O Grisildis?" he sayde,
|
||
And she with reverence in humble cheere
|
||
Answerde, "Lord, he is al redy heere."
|
||
And in she gooth, withouten lenger lette,
|
||
And to the markys she hir fader fette.
|
||
|
||
He by the hand thanne took this olde man,
|
||
And seyde thus, whan he hym hadde asyde,
|
||
"Janicula, I neither may ne kan
|
||
Lenger the plesance of myn herte hyde;
|
||
If that thou vouchsauf, what so bityde,
|
||
Thy doghter wol I take, er that I wende,
|
||
As for my wyf unto hir lyves ende.
|
||
|
||
Thou lovest me, I woot it wel certeyn,
|
||
And art my feithful lige man ybore,
|
||
And all that liketh me, I dar wel seyn,
|
||
It liketh thee; and specially therfore
|
||
Tel me that poynt that I have seyd bifore,
|
||
If that thou wolt unto that purpos drawe,
|
||
To take me as for thy sone-in-lawe."
|
||
|
||
This sodeyn cas this man astonyed so,
|
||
That reed he wax abayst and al quakyng
|
||
He stood, unnethes seyde he wordes mo,
|
||
But oonly thus, "Lord," quod he, "my willynge
|
||
Is as ye wole, ne ayeyns youre likynge
|
||
I wol no thyng, ye be my lord so deere;
|
||
Right as yow lust governeth this mateere."
|
||
|
||
"Yet wol I," quod this markys softely,
|
||
"That in thy chambre I and thou and she
|
||
Have a collacioun, and wostow why?
|
||
For I wol axe, if it hir wille be
|
||
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 whil they were aboute
|
||
Hir tretys which as ye shal after heere,
|
||
The peple cam unto the hous withoute,
|
||
And wondred hem in how honeste manere
|
||
And tentifly she kepte hir fader deere.
|
||
But outrely Grisildis wondre myghte
|
||
For nevere erst ne saugh she swich a sighte.
|
||
|
||
No wonder is thogh that she were astoned
|
||
To seen so greet a grest come in that place;
|
||
She nevere was to swiche gestes woned,
|
||
For which she looked with ful pale face-
|
||
But shortly forth this tale for to chace,
|
||
Thise arn the wordes that the markys sayde
|
||
To this benigne verray feithful mayde.
|
||
|
||
"Grisilde," he seyde, "ye shal wel understonde
|
||
It liketh to youre fader and to me
|
||
That I yow wedde, and eek it may so stonde,
|
||
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?
|
||
|
||
I seye this, be ye redy with good herte
|
||
To al my lust, and that I frely may,
|
||
As me best thynketh, do yow laughe or smerte,
|
||
And nevere ye to grucche it nyght ne day,
|
||
And eek whan I sey ye, ne sey nat nay,
|
||
Neither by word, ne frownyng contenance?
|
||
Swere this, and heere I swere yow alliance."
|
||
|
||
Wondrynge upon this word, quakynge for drede,
|
||
She seyde, "Lord, undigne and unworthy
|
||
Am I to thilke honour, that ye me beede,
|
||
But as ye wole yourself, right so wol I.
|
||
And heere I swere, that nevere willyngly
|
||
In werk ne thoght I nyl yow disobeye,
|
||
For to be deed, though me were looth to deye."
|
||
|
||
"This is ynogh, Grisilde myn," quod he,
|
||
And forth he gooth with a ful sobre cheere
|
||
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 heere;
|
||
Honoureth hir, and loveth hir, I preye,
|
||
Whoso me loveth; ther is namoore to seye."
|
||
|
||
And for that nothyng of hir olde geere
|
||
She sholde brynge into his hous, he bad
|
||
That wommen sholde dispoillen hir right theere;-
|
||
Of which thise ladyes were nat right glad
|
||
To handle hir clothes, wherinne she was clad-
|
||
But nathelees, this mayde bright of hewe
|
||
Fro foot to heed they clothed han al newe.
|
||
|
||
Hir heris han they kembd, that lay untressed
|
||
Ful rudely, and with hir fyngres smale
|
||
A corone on hir heed they han ydressed,
|
||
And sette hir ful of nowches grete and smale.
|
||
Of hir array what sholde I make a tale?
|
||
Unnethe the peple hire knew for hir fairnesse
|
||
Whan she translated was in swich richesse.
|
||
|
||
This markys hath hir spoused with a ryng
|
||
Broght for the same cause, and thanne hir sette
|
||
Upon an hors, snow-whit and wel amblyng,
|
||
And to his paleys, er he lenger lette,
|
||
With joyful peple that hir ladde and mette
|
||
Convoyed 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 markysesse
|
||
God hath swich favour sent hir of his grace,
|
||
That it ne semed nat by liklynesse
|
||
That she was born and fed in rudenesse
|
||
As in a cote or in an oxe-stalle,
|
||
But norissed in an emperoures halle.
|
||
|
||
To every wight she woxen is so deere
|
||
And worshipful, that folk ther she was bore
|
||
And from hir birthe knewe hir yeer by yeere,
|
||
Unnethe trowed they, but dorste han swore
|
||
That she to Janicle, of which I spak bifore,
|
||
She doghter nere, for as by conjecture,
|
||
Hem thoughte she was another creature.
|
||
|
||
For though that evere vertuous was she,
|
||
She was encressed in swich excellence,
|
||
Of thewes goode, yset in heigh bountee,
|
||
And so discreet and fair of eloquence,
|
||
So benigne, and so digne of reverence,
|
||
And koude so the peples herte embrace,
|
||
That ech hir lovede, that looked on hir face.
|
||
|
||
Noght oonly of Saluces in the toun
|
||
Publiced was the bountee of hir name,
|
||
But eek biside in many a regioun,
|
||
If oon seide wel, another seyde the same;
|
||
So spradde of hir heighe bountee the fame
|
||
That men and wommen, as wel yonge as olde,
|
||
Goon to Saluce upon hir to biholde.
|
||
|
||
Thus Walter lowely, nay! but roially
|
||
Wedded with fortunat honestetee,
|
||
In Goddes pees lyveth ful esily
|
||
At hoom, and outward grace ynogh had he,
|
||
And for he saugh that under low degree
|
||
Was ofte vertu hid, the peple hym heelde
|
||
A prudent man, and that is seyn ful seelde.
|
||
|
||
Nat oonly this Grisildis thurgh hir wit
|
||
Koude al the feet of wyfly humblenesse,
|
||
But eek, whan that the cas required it,
|
||
The commune profit koude she redresse.
|
||
Ther nas discord, rancour, ne hevynesse
|
||
In al that land, that she ne koude apese,
|
||
And wisely brynge hem alle in reste and ese.
|
||
|
||
Though that hir housbonde absent were anon
|
||
If gentil men, or othere of hir contree
|
||
Were wrothe, she wolde bryngen hem aton.
|
||
So wise and rype wordes hadde she,
|
||
And juggementz of so greet equitee,
|
||
That she from hevene sent was, as men wende,
|
||
Peple to save and every wrong tamende.
|
||
|
||
Nat longe tyme after that this Grisild
|
||
Was wedded, she a doghter hath ybore-
|
||
Al had hir levere have born a man child;
|
||
Glad was this markys and the folk therfore,
|
||
For though a mayde child coome al bifore,
|
||
She may unto a knave child atteyne
|
||
By liklihede, syn she nys nat bareyne.
|
||
|
||
Explicit secunda pars.
|
||
|
||
Incipit tercia pars.
|
||
|
||
Ther fil, as it bifalleth tymes mo,
|
||
Whan that this child had souked but a throwe,
|
||
This markys in his herte longeth so
|
||
To tempte his wyf, hir sadnesse for to knowe,
|
||
That he ne myghte out of his herte throwe
|
||
This merveillous desir his wyf tassaye.
|
||
Nedelees, God woot, he thoghte hir for taffraye.
|
||
|
||
He hadde assayed hir ynogh bifore,
|
||
And foond hir evere good; what neded it
|
||
Hir for to tempte and alwey moore and moore?
|
||
Though som men preise it for a subtil wit,
|
||
But as for me, I seye that yvele it sit
|
||
To assaye a wyf, whan that it is no nede,
|
||
And putten hir in angwyssh and in drede.
|
||
|
||
For which this markys wroghte in this manere;
|
||
He cam allone a nyght, ther as she lay,
|
||
With stierne face and with ful trouble cheere,
|
||
And seyde thus, "Grisilde," quod he, "that day
|
||
That I yow took out of your povere array,
|
||
And putte yow in estaat of heigh noblesse,
|
||
Ye have nat that forgeten, as I gesse.
|
||
|
||
I seye, Grisilde, this present dignitee
|
||
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 youreselven knowe.
|
||
Taak heede of every word that y yow seye,
|
||
Ther is no wight that hereth it but we tweye.
|
||
|
||
Ye woot yourself wel how that ye cam heere
|
||
Into this hous, it is nat longe ago.
|
||
And though to me that ye be lief and deere,
|
||
Unto my gentils ye be no thyng so.
|
||
They seyn, to hem it is greet shame and wo
|
||
For to be subgetz, and to been in servage,
|
||
To thee that born art of a smal village.
|
||
|
||
And namely, sith thy doghter was ybore,
|
||
Thise wordes han they spoken, doutelees;
|
||
But I desire, as I have doon bifore,
|
||
To lyve my lyf with hem in reste and pees.
|
||
I may nat in this caas be recchelees,
|
||
I moot doon with thy doghter for the beste,
|
||
Nat as I wolde, but as my peple leste.
|
||
|
||
And yet God woot, this is ful looth to me!
|
||
But nathelees, withoute youre wityng
|
||
I wol nat doon, but this wol I," quod he,
|
||
"That ye to me assente as in this thyng.
|
||
Shewe now youre pacience in youre werkyng,
|
||
That ye me highte and swore in youre village,
|
||
That day that maked was oure mariage."
|
||
|
||
Whan she had herd al this, she noght ameved
|
||
Neither in word, or chiere, or countenaunce;
|
||
For as it semed she was nat agreved.
|
||
She seyde, "Lord, al lyth in youre plesaunce,
|
||
My child, and I, with hertely obeisaunce
|
||
Been youres al, and ye mowe save and spille
|
||
Your owene thyng, werketh after youre wille.
|
||
|
||
Ther may no thyng, God so my soule save,
|
||
Liken to yow, that may displese me,
|
||
Ne I ne desire no thyng for to have,
|
||
Ne drede for to leese save oonly yee;
|
||
This wyl is in myn herte, and ay shal be;
|
||
No lengthe of tyme or deeth may this deface,
|
||
Ne chaunge my corage to another place."
|
||
|
||
Glad was this markys of hir answeryng,
|
||
But yet he feyned as he were nat so.
|
||
Al drery was his cheere and his lookyng,
|
||
Whan that he sholde out of the chambre go.
|
||
Soone after this, a furlong wey or two,
|
||
He prively hath toold al his entente
|
||
Unto a man, and to his wyf hym sente.
|
||
|
||
A maner sergeant was this privee man,
|
||
The which that feithful ofte he founden hadde
|
||
In thynges grete, and eek swich folk wel kan
|
||
Doon execucioun on thynges badde.
|
||
The lord knew wel that he hym loved and dradde;-
|
||
And whan this sergeant wiste the lordes wille,
|
||
Into the chambre he stalked hym ful stille.
|
||
|
||
"Madame," he seyde, "ye moote foryeve it me
|
||
Though I do thyng to which I am constreyned,
|
||
Ye been so wys, that ful wel knowe ye
|
||
That lordes heestes mowe nat been yfeyned,
|
||
They mowe wel been biwailled and compleyned,
|
||
But men moote nede unto hir lust obeye;
|
||
And so wol I, ther is namoore to seye.
|
||
|
||
This child I am comanded for to take."
|
||
And spak namoore, but out the child he hente
|
||
Despitously, and gan a cheere make
|
||
As though he wolde han slayn it er he wente.
|
||
Grisildis moot al suffren and consente,
|
||
And as a lamb she sitteth meke and stille,
|
||
And leet this crueel sergeant doon his wille.
|
||
|
||
Suspecious was the diffame of this man,
|
||
Suspect his face, suspect his word also,
|
||
Suspect the tyme in which he this bigan.
|
||
Allas, hir doghter that she loved so!
|
||
She wende he wolde han slawen it right tho;
|
||
But nathelees she neither weep ne syked,
|
||
Consentynge hir to that the markys lyked.
|
||
|
||
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 hire child, er that it deyde,
|
||
And in hir barm this litel child she leyde,
|
||
With ful sad face, and gan the child to kisse,
|
||
And lulled it, and after gan it blisse.
|
||
|
||
And thus she seyde in hir benigne voys,
|
||
"Fareweel, my child, I shal thee nevere see,
|
||
But sith I thee have marked with the croys
|
||
Of thilke fader blessed moote thou be,
|
||
That for us deyde upon a croys of tree.
|
||
Thy soule, litel child, I hym bitake,
|
||
For this nyght shaltow dyen for my sake."
|
||
|
||
I trowe, that to a norice in this cas
|
||
It had been hard this reuthe for to se;
|
||
Wel myghte a mooder thanne han cryd `allas!'
|
||
But nathelees so sad and stidefast was she,
|
||
That she endured al adversitee,
|
||
And to the sergeant mekely she sayde,
|
||
"Have heer agayn your litel yonge mayde."
|
||
|
||
"Gooth now," quod she, "and dooth my lordes heeste;
|
||
But o thyng wol I prey yow of youre grace,
|
||
That, but my lord forbad yow atte leeste,
|
||
Burieth this litel body in son place
|
||
That beestes ne no briddes it torace."
|
||
But he no word wol to that purpos seye,
|
||
But took the child, and wente upon his weye.
|
||
|
||
This sergeant cam unto his lord ageyn,
|
||
And of Grisildis wordes and hir cheere
|
||
He tolde hym point for point, in short and pleyn,
|
||
And hym presenteth with his doghter deere.
|
||
Somwhat this lord hath routhe in his manere,
|
||
But nathelees his purpos heeld he stille,
|
||
As lordes doon whan they wol han hir wille;
|
||
|
||
And bad his sergeant, that he pryvely
|
||
Sholde this child ful softe wynde and wrappe,
|
||
With alle circumstances tendrely,
|
||
And carie it in a cofre or in a lappe,
|
||
But upon peyne his heed of for to swappe
|
||
That no man sholde knowe of his entente,
|
||
Ne whenne he cam, ne whider that he wente.
|
||
|
||
But at Boloigne to his suster deere,
|
||
That thilke tyme of Panik was Countesse,
|
||
He sholde it take, and shewe hir this mateere,
|
||
Bisekynge hir to doon hir bisynesse
|
||
This child to fostre in alle gentillesse,
|
||
And whos child that it was, he bad hire hyde
|
||
From every wight, for oght that may bityde.
|
||
|
||
The sergeant gooth, and hath fulfild this thyng,
|
||
But to this markys now retourne we,
|
||
For now gooth he ful faste ymaginyng,
|
||
If by his wyves cheere he myghte se
|
||
Or by hir word aperceyve that she
|
||
Were chaunged, but he nevere hir koude fynde,
|
||
But evere in oon ylike sad and kynde.
|
||
|
||
As glad, as humble, as bisy in servyse,
|
||
And eek in love, as she was wont to be,
|
||
Was she to hym in every maner wyse,
|
||
Ne of hir doghter noght a word spak she.
|
||
Noon accident for noon adversitee
|
||
Was seyn in hir, ne nevere 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
|
||
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 oonly he, but al his contree, merye
|
||
Was for this child, and God they thanke and herye.
|
||
|
||
Whan it was two yeer old, and fro the brest
|
||
Departed of his norice, on a day
|
||
This markys caughte yet another lest
|
||
To tempte his wyf yet ofter if he may.
|
||
O, nedelees was she tempted in assay!
|
||
But wedded men ne knowe no mesure,
|
||
Whan that they fynde a pacient creature.
|
||
|
||
"Wyf," quod this markys, "ye han herd er this
|
||
My peple sikly berth oure mariage;
|
||
And namely sith my sone yboren is,
|
||
Now is it worse than evere in al oure age.
|
||
The murmure sleeth myn herte and my corage,
|
||
For to myne eres comth the voys so smeerte,
|
||
That it wel ny destroyed hath myn herte.
|
||
|
||
Now sey they thus, `whan Walter is agon,
|
||
Thanne shal the blood of Janicle succede,
|
||
And been oure lord, for oother have we noon.'
|
||
Swiche wordes seith my peple, out of drede,
|
||
Wel oughte I of swich murmur taken heede,
|
||
For certeinly I drede swich sentence,
|
||
Though they nat pleyn speke in myn audience.
|
||
|
||
I wolde lyve in pees, if that I myghte;
|
||
Wherfore I am disposed outrely
|
||
As I his suster servede by nyghte,
|
||
Right so thenke I to serve hym pryvely.
|
||
This warne I yow, that ye nat sodeynly
|
||
Out of yourself for no wo sholde outreye.
|
||
Beth pacient, and therof I yow preye."
|
||
|
||
"I have," quod she, "seyd thus, and evere shal,
|
||
I wol no thyng, ne nyl no thyng, certayn,
|
||
But as yow list, naught greveth me at al
|
||
Though that my doughter and my sone be slayn-
|
||
At youre comandement, this is to sayn-
|
||
I have noght had no part of children tweyne
|
||
But first siknesse, and after wo and peyne.
|
||
|
||
Ye been oure lord, dooth with your owene thyng
|
||
Right as yow list, axeth no reed at me;
|
||
For as I lefte at hoom al my clothyng,
|
||
Whan I first cam to yow, right so," quod she,
|
||
"Lefte I my wyl and al my libertee,
|
||
And took youre clothyng, wherfore I yow preye,
|
||
Dooth youre plesaunce; I wol youre lust obeye.
|
||
|
||
And certes, if I hadde prescience
|
||
Youre wyl to knowe, er ye youre lust me tolde,
|
||
I wolde it doon withouten necligence.
|
||
But now I woot your lust and what ye wolde,
|
||
Al your plesance ferme and stable I holde,
|
||
For wiste I that my deeth wolde do yow ese,
|
||
Right gladly wolde I dyen yow to plese.
|
||
|
||
Deth may noght make no comparisoun
|
||
Unto youre love!" and whan this markys say
|
||
The constance of his wyf, he caste adoun
|
||
Hise eyen two, and wondreth that she may
|
||
In pacience suffre al this array;
|
||
And forth he goth with drery contenance,
|
||
But ot his herte it was ful greet plesance.
|
||
|
||
This ugly sergeant, in the same wyse
|
||
That he hir doghter caughte, right so he
|
||
Or worse, if men worse kan devyse,
|
||
Hath hent hir sone, that ful was of beautee,
|
||
And evere in oon so pacient was she,
|
||
That she no chiere maade of hevynesse,
|
||
But kiste hir sone, and after gan it blesse.
|
||
|
||
Save this, she preyde hym, that if he myghte,
|
||
Hir litel sone he wolde in erthe grave
|
||
His tendre lymes, delicaat to sighte,
|
||
Fro foweles and fro beestes for to save.
|
||
But she noon answere of hym myghte have,
|
||
He wente his wey, as hym nothyng ne roghte,
|
||
But to Boloigne he tendrely it broghte.
|
||
|
||
This markys wondred evere lenger the moore
|
||
Upon hir pacience, and if that he
|
||
Ne hadde soothly knowen therbifoore
|
||
That parfitly hir children loved she,
|
||
He wolde have wend that of som subtiltee,
|
||
And of malice, or for crueel corage,
|
||
That she hadde suffred this with sad visage.
|
||
|
||
But wel he knew that next hymself, certayn,
|
||
She loved hir children best in every wyse;
|
||
But now of wommen wolde I axen fayn,
|
||
If thise assayes myghte nat suffise,
|
||
What koude a sturdy housbonde moore devyse
|
||
To preeve hire wyfhod or hir stedefastnesse,
|
||
And he continuynge evere in sturdinesse?
|
||
|
||
But ther been folk of swich condicioun,
|
||
That whan they have a certein purpos take
|
||
They kan nat stynte of hir entencioun,
|
||
But right as they were bounden to that stake
|
||
They wol nat of that firste purpos slake.
|
||
Right so this markys fulliche hath purposed
|
||
To tempte his wyf, as he was first disposed.
|
||
|
||
He waiteth, if by word or contenance
|
||
That she to hym was changed of corage;
|
||
But nevere koude he fynde variance,
|
||
She was ay oon in herte and in visage.
|
||
And ay the forther that she was in age,
|
||
The moore trewe-if that it were possible-
|
||
She was to hym in love, and moore penyble.
|
||
|
||
For which it semed thus, that of hem two
|
||
Ther nas but o wyl; for, as Walter leste,
|
||
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 hirself no thing ne sholde
|
||
|
||
Wille in effect, but as hir housbonde wolde.
|
||
|
||
The sclaundre of Walter ofte and wyde spradde,
|
||
That of a crueel herte he wikkedly,
|
||
For he a povre womman wedded hadde,
|
||
Hath mordred bothe his children prively.-
|
||
Swich murmure was among hem comunly;
|
||
No wonder is, for to the peples ere
|
||
Ther cam no word, but that they mordred were.
|
||
|
||
For which, wher as his peple therbifore
|
||
Hadde loved hym wel, the sclaundre of his diffame
|
||
Made hem, that they hym hatede therfore.
|
||
To been a mordrere is an hateful name;
|
||
But nathelees, for ernest ne for game
|
||
He of his crueel purpos nolde stente:
|
||
To tempte his wyf was set al his entente.
|
||
|
||
Whan that his doghter twelf yeer was of age,
|
||
He to the court of Rome in subtil wyse
|
||
Enformed of his wyl sente his message,
|
||
Comaundynge hem swiche bulles to devyse
|
||
As to his crueel purpos may suffyse,
|
||
How that the pope as for his peples reste
|
||
Bad hym to wedde another, if hym leste.
|
||
|
||
I seye, he bad they sholde countrefete
|
||
The popes bulles, makynge mencioun
|
||
That he hath leve his firste wyf to lete
|
||
As by the popes dispensacioun,
|
||
To stynte rancour and dissencioun
|
||
Bitwixe his peple and hym, thus seyde the bulle,
|
||
The which they han publiced atte fulle.
|
||
|
||
The rude peple, as it no wonder is,
|
||
Wenden ful wel that it hadde be right so;
|
||
But whan thise tidynges cam to Grisildis,
|
||
I deeme that hir herte was ful wo.
|
||
But she, ylike sad for everemo,
|
||
Disposed was, this humble creature,
|
||
The adversitee of Fortune al tendure,
|
||
|
||
Abidynge evere his lust and his plesance
|
||
To whom that she was yeven, herte and al,
|
||
As to hir verray worldly suffisance.
|
||
But shortly, if this storie I tellen shal,
|
||
This markys writen hath in special
|
||
A lettre, in which he sheweth his entente,
|
||
And secreely he to Boloigne it sente;
|
||
|
||
To the Erl of Panyk, which that hadde tho
|
||
Wedded his suster, preyde he specially
|
||
To bryngen hoom agayn hise children two,
|
||
In honurable estaat al openly;
|
||
But o thyng he hym preyede outrely,
|
||
That he to no wight, though men wolde enquere,
|
||
Sholde nat telle whos children that they were,
|
||
|
||
But seye, the mayden sholde ywedded be
|
||
Unto the Markys 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,
|
||
In riche array this mayden for to gyde,
|
||
Hir yonge brother ridynge hir bisyde.
|
||
|
||
Arrayed was toward hir mariage
|
||
This fresshe mayde, ful of gemmes cleere;
|
||
Hir brother, which that seven yeer was of age,
|
||
Arrayed eek ful fressh in his manere.
|
||
And thus in greet noblesse, and with glad cheere,
|
||
Toward Saluces shapynge hir journey,
|
||
Fro day to day they ryden in hir wey.
|
||
|
||
Explicit quarta pars.
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars quinta.
|
||
|
||
Among al this, after his wikke usage,
|
||
This markys yet his wyf to tempte moore
|
||
To the outtreste preeve of hir corage,
|
||
Fully to han experience and loore,
|
||
If that she were as stidefast as bifoore,
|
||
He on a day in open audience
|
||
Ful boistously hath seyd hir this sentence.
|
||
|
||
"Certes, Grisilde, I hadde ynogh plesance,
|
||
To han yow to my wyf for your goodnesse,
|
||
As for youre trouthe, and for your obeisance-
|
||
Noght for youre lynage, ne for youre richesse;
|
||
But now knowe I, in verray soothfastnesse,
|
||
That in greet lordshipe, if I wel avyse,
|
||
Ther is greet servitute in sondry wyse.
|
||
|
||
I may nat doon as every plowman may;
|
||
My peple me constreyneth for to take
|
||
Another wyf, and crien 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 comynge by the weye.
|
||
|
||
Be strong of herte, and voyde anon hir place,
|
||
And thilke dower that ye broghten me
|
||
Taak it agayn, I graunte it of my grace.
|
||
Retourneth to youre fadres hous," quod he;
|
||
"No man may alwey han prosperitee.
|
||
With evene herte I rede yow tendure
|
||
This strook of Fortune or of aventure."
|
||
|
||
And she answerde agayn in pacience,
|
||
"My lord," quod she, "I woot and wiste alway
|
||
How that bitwixen youre magnificence
|
||
And my poverte, no wight kan ne may
|
||
Maken comparisoun, it is no nay.
|
||
I ne heeld me nevere digne in no manere
|
||
To be your wyf, no, ne youre chamberere.
|
||
|
||
And in this hous ther ye me lady maade,
|
||
The heighe God take I for my witnesse,
|
||
And also wysly he my soule glaade,
|
||
I nevere heeld me lady ne maistresse,
|
||
But humble servant to youre worthynesse,
|
||
And evere shal whil that my lyf may dure
|
||
Aboven every worldly creature.
|
||
|
||
That ye so longe of youre benignitee
|
||
Han holden me in honour and nobleye,
|
||
Wher as I was noght worthy for to bee,
|
||
That thonke I God and yow, to whom I preye
|
||
Foryelde it yow; ther is namoore to seye.
|
||
Unto my fader gladly wol I wende,
|
||
And with hym dwelle unto my lyves ende.
|
||
|
||
Ther I was fostred of a child ful smal,
|
||
Til I be deed, my lyf ther wol I lede,
|
||
A wydwe clene in body, herte, and al,
|
||
For sith I yaf to yow my maydenhede
|
||
And am youre trewe wyf, it is no drede,
|
||
God shilde swich a lordes wyf to take
|
||
Another man, to housbonde or to make.
|
||
|
||
And of youre 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 bee.
|
||
For sith it liketh yow my lord," quod shee,
|
||
"That whilom weren al myn hertes reste,
|
||
That I shal goon, I wol goon whan yow leste.
|
||
|
||
But ther as ye me profre swich dowaire
|
||
As I first broghte, it is wel in my mynde
|
||
It were my wrecched clothes, no thyng faire,
|
||
The whiche to me were hard now for to fynde.
|
||
O goode God! how gentil and how kynde
|
||
Ye semed by youre speche and youre visage
|
||
The day that maked was oure mariage!
|
||
|
||
But sooth is seyd, algate I fynde it trewe,
|
||
(For in effect it preeved is on me)
|
||
Love is noght oold, as whan that it is newe,
|
||
But certes, lord, for noon adversitee,
|
||
To dyen in the cas it shal nat bee
|
||
That evere in word or werk I shal repente
|
||
That I yow yaf myn herte in hool entente.
|
||
|
||
My lord, ye woot that in my fadres place
|
||
Ye dide me streepe out of my povre weede,
|
||
And richely me cladden of youre grace.
|
||
To yow broghte I noght elles, out of drede,
|
||
But feith, and nakednesse, and maydenhede.
|
||
And heere agayn my clothyng I restoore,
|
||
And eek my weddyng ryng for everemo.
|
||
|
||
The remenant of youre jueles redy be
|
||
In-with youre chambre, dar I saufly sayn.
|
||
Naked out of my fadres hous," quod she,
|
||
"I cam, and naked moot I turne agayn.
|
||
Al your plesance wol I folwen fayn,
|
||
But yet I hope it be nat your entente
|
||
That I smoklees out of your paleys wente.
|
||
|
||
Ye koude nat doon so dishoneste a thyng,
|
||
That thilke wombe in which your children leye,
|
||
Sholde biforn the peple in my walkyng
|
||
Be seyn al bare; wherfore I yow preye,
|
||
Lat me nat lyk a worm go by the weye!
|
||
Remembre yow, myn owene lord so deere,
|
||
I was your wyf, though I unworthy weere.
|
||
|
||
Wherfore, in gerdoun of my maydenhede
|
||
Which that I broghte, and noght agayn I bere,
|
||
As voucheth sauf to yeve me to my meede
|
||
But swich a smok as I was wont to were,
|
||
That I therwith may wrye the wombe of here
|
||
That was your wyf, and heer take I my leeve
|
||
Of yow, myn owene lord, lest I yow greve."
|
||
|
||
"The smok," quod he, "that thou hast on thy bak,
|
||
Lat it be stille, and bere it forth with thee."
|
||
But wel unnethes thilke word he spak,
|
||
But wente his wey for routhe and for pitee.
|
||
Biforn the folk hirselven strepeth she,
|
||
And in hir smok, with heed and foot al bare,
|
||
Toward hir fader hous forth is she fare.
|
||
|
||
The folk hir folwe, wepynge in hir weye,
|
||
And Fortune ay they cursen, as they goon.
|
||
But she fro wepyng kepte hir eyen dreye,
|
||
Ne in this tyme word ne spak she noon.
|
||
Hir fader, that this tidynge herde anoon,
|
||
Curseth the day and tyme that nature
|
||
Shoop hym to been a lyves creature.
|
||
|
||
For out of doute this olde povre man
|
||
Was evere in suspect of hir mariage,
|
||
For evere he demed, sith that it bigan,
|
||
That whan the lord fulfild hadde his corage,
|
||
Hym wolde thynke it were a disparage
|
||
To his estaat, so lowe for talighte,
|
||
And voyden hir as soone as ever he myghte.
|
||
|
||
Agayns his doghter hastiliche goth he,
|
||
For he by noyse of folk knew hir comynge,
|
||
And with hir olde coote, as it myghte be,
|
||
He covered hir, ful sorwefully wepynge,
|
||
But on hir body myghte he it nat brynge.
|
||
For rude was the clooth, and moore of age
|
||
By dayes fele, than at hir mariage.
|
||
|
||
Thus with hir fader for a certeyn space
|
||
Dwelleth this flour of wyfly pacience,
|
||
That neither by hir wordes ne hir face,
|
||
Biforn the folk ne eek in hir absence,
|
||
Ne shewed she that hir was doon offence,
|
||
Ne of hir heighe estaat no remembraunce
|
||
Ne hadde she, as by hir contenaunce.
|
||
|
||
No wonder is, for in hir grete estaat
|
||
Hir goost was evere in pleyn humylitee.
|
||
No tendre mouth, noon herte delicaat,
|
||
No pompe, no semblant of roialtee,
|
||
But ful of pacient benyngnytee,
|
||
Discreet and pridelees, ay honurable,
|
||
And to hir housbonde evere meke and stable.
|
||
|
||
Men speke of Job, and moost for his humblesse,
|
||
As clerkes whan hem list konne wel endite,
|
||
Namely of men; but as in soothfastnesse,
|
||
Though clerkes preise wommen but a lite,
|
||
Ther kan no man in humblesse hym acquite,
|
||
As womman kan, ne kan been half so trewe
|
||
As wommen been, but it be falle of newe.
|
||
|
||
(Pars sexta.)
|
||
|
||
Fro Boloigne is this Erl of Panyk come,
|
||
Of which the fame up sprang to moore and lesse,
|
||
And in the peples eres, alle and some,
|
||
Was kouth eek that a newe markysesse
|
||
He with hym broghte, in swich pompe and richesse,
|
||
That nevere was ther seyn with mannes eye
|
||
So noble array in al Westlumbardye.
|
||
|
||
The markys, which that shoop and knew al this,
|
||
Er that thise 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 hire corage
|
||
Cam at his heste, and on hir knees hire sette,
|
||
And reverently and wysely she hym grette.
|
||
|
||
"Grisilde," quod he, "my wyl is outrely
|
||
This mayden, that shal wedded been to me,
|
||
Received be to morwe as roially
|
||
As it possible is in myn hous to be;
|
||
And eek that every wight in his degree
|
||
Have hsi estaat in sittyng and servyse
|
||
And heigh plesaunce, as I kan best devyse.
|
||
|
||
I have no wommen, suffisaunt, certayn,
|
||
The chambres for tarraye in ordinaunce
|
||
After my lust, and therfore wolde I fayn
|
||
That thyn were al swich manere governaunce;
|
||
Thou knowest eek of olde al my plesaunce,
|
||
Thogh thyn array be badde and yvel biseye,
|
||
Do thou thy devoir at the leeste weye."
|
||
|
||
"Nat oonly lord, that I am glad," quod she,
|
||
"To doon your lust, but I desire also
|
||
Yow for to serve and plese in my degree
|
||
Withouten feyntyng, and shal everemo.
|
||
Ne nevere, for no wele ne no wo,
|
||
Ne shal the goost withinne 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,
|
||
And peyned hir to doon al that she myghte,
|
||
Preyynge the chambereres for Goddes sake
|
||
To hasten hem, and faste swepe and shake,
|
||
And she, the mooste servysable of alle,
|
||
Hath every chambre arrayed, and his halle.
|
||
|
||
Abouten undren gan this Erl alighte,
|
||
That with hym broghte thise noble children tweye,
|
||
For which the peple ran to seen the sighte
|
||
Of hir array, so richely biseye;
|
||
And thanne at erst amonges hem they seye,
|
||
That Walter was no fool, thogh that hym leste
|
||
To chaunge his wyf, for it was for the beste.
|
||
|
||
"For she is fairer," as they deemen alle,
|
||
"Than is Grisilde, and moore tendre of age,
|
||
And fairer fruyt bitwene hem sholde falle,
|
||
And moore plesant for hir heigh lynage."
|
||
Hir brother eek so faire was of visage,
|
||
That hem to seen the peple hath caught plesaunce,
|
||
Commendynge now the markys governaunce.
|
||
|
||
O stormy peple, unsad and evere untrewe!
|
||
Ay undiscreet and chaungynge as a vane,
|
||
Delitynge evere in rumbul that is newe;
|
||
For lyk the moone ay wexe ye and wane,
|
||
Ay ful of clappyng, deere ynogh a jane,
|
||
Youre doom is fals, youre constance yvele preeveth,
|
||
A ful greet fool is he that on yow leeveth!
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
Namoore of this make I now mencioun,
|
||
But to Grisilde agayn wol I me dresse,
|
||
And telle hir constance and hir bisynesse.
|
||
|
||
Ful bisy was Grisilde in every thyng
|
||
That to the feeste was apertinent.
|
||
Right noght was she abayst of hir clothyng,
|
||
Thogh it were rude and somdeel eek torent,
|
||
But with glad cheere to the yate is went
|
||
With oother folk to greete the markysesse,
|
||
And after that dooth forth hir bisynesse.
|
||
|
||
With so glad chiere hise gestes she receyveth,
|
||
And konnyngly everich in his degree,
|
||
That no defaute no man aperceyveth,
|
||
But ay they wondren what she myghte bee
|
||
That in so povre array was for to see,
|
||
And koude swich honour and reverence;
|
||
And worhtily they preisen hire prudence.
|
||
|
||
In al this meenewhile she ne stente
|
||
This mayde and eek hir brother to commende
|
||
With al hir herte, in ful benyngne entente,
|
||
So wel that no man koude hir pris amende
|
||
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,
|
||
"How liketh thee my wyf and hir beautee?"
|
||
"Right wel," quod she, "my lord, for in good fey
|
||
A fairer saugh I nevere noon than she.
|
||
I prey to God yeve hir prosperitee,
|
||
And so hope I that he wol to yow sende
|
||
Plesance ynogh unto youre lyves ende.
|
||
|
||
O thyng biseke I yow, and warne also
|
||
That ye ne prikke with no tormentynge
|
||
This tendre mayden, as ye han doon mo;
|
||
For she is fostred in hir norissynge
|
||
Moore tendrely, and to my supposynge
|
||
She koude nat adversitee endure,
|
||
As koude a povre fostred creature."
|
||
|
||
And whan this Walter saugh hir pacience,
|
||
Hir glade chiere, and no malice at al,
|
||
And he so ofte had doon to hir offence
|
||
And she ay sad and constant as a wal,
|
||
Continuynge evere hir innocence overal,
|
||
This sturdy markys gan his herte dresse
|
||
To rewen upon hir wyfly stedfastnesse.
|
||
|
||
"This is ynogh Grisilde myn," quod he,
|
||
"Be now namoore agast, ne yvele apayed.
|
||
I have thy feith and thy benyngnytee
|
||
As wel as evere womman was, assayed
|
||
In greet estaat, and povreliche arrayed;
|
||
Now knowe I, goode wyf, thy stedfastnesse!"
|
||
And hir in armes took, and gan hir kesse.
|
||
|
||
And she for wonder took of it no keep.
|
||
She herde nat, what thyng he to hir seyde.
|
||
She ferde as she had stert out of a sleep,
|
||
Til she out of hire mazednesse abreyde.
|
||
"Grisilde," quod he, "by God that for us deyde,
|
||
Thou art my wyf, ne noon oother I have,
|
||
Ne nevere hadde, as God my soule save.
|
||
|
||
|
||
This is thy doghter which thou hast supposed
|
||
To be my wyf; that oother feithfully
|
||
Shal be myn heir, as I have ay purposed;
|
||
Thou bare hym in thy body trewely.
|
||
At Boloigne have I kept hem prively.
|
||
Taak hem agayn, for now maystow nat seye
|
||
That thou hast lorn noon of thy children tweye.
|
||
|
||
And folk that ootherweys han seyd of me,
|
||
I warne hem wel that I have doon this deede
|
||
For no malice, ne for no crueltee,
|
||
But for tassaye in thee thy wommanheede,
|
||
And not to sleen my clildren, God forbeede!
|
||
But for to kepe hem pryvely and stille,
|
||
Til I thy purpos knewe and al thy wille."
|
||
|
||
Whan she this herde, aswowne doun she falleth
|
||
For pitous joye, and after hir swownynge
|
||
She bothe hir yonge children unto hir calleth,
|
||
And in hir armes pitously wepynge
|
||
Embraceth hem, and tendrely kissynge
|
||
Ful lyk a mooder, with hir salte teeres
|
||
She bathed bothe hir visage and hir heeres.
|
||
|
||
O, which a pitous thyng it was to se
|
||
Hir swownyng, and hir humble voys to heere!
|
||
"Grauntmercy, lord, that thanke I yow," quod she,
|
||
"That ye han saved me my children deere.
|
||
Now rekke I nevere to been deed right heere.
|
||
Sith I stonde in your love and in your grace,
|
||
No fors of deeth, ne whan my spirit pace!
|
||
|
||
O tendre, O deere, O yonge children myne!
|
||
Your woful mooder wende stedfastly
|
||
That crueel houndes, or som foul vermyne
|
||
Hadde eten yow; but God of his mercy
|
||
And youre benyngne fader tendrely
|
||
Hath doon yow kept," and in that same stounde
|
||
Al sodeynly she swapte adoun to grounde.
|
||
|
||
And in hir swough so sadly holdeth she
|
||
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 teere on many a pitous face
|
||
Doun ran, of hem that stooden hir bisyde;
|
||
Unnethe abouten hir myghte they abyde.
|
||
|
||
Walter hir gladeth, and hir sorwe slaketh,
|
||
She riseth up abaysed from hir traunce,
|
||
And every wight hir joye and feeste maketh,
|
||
Til she hath caught agayn hir contenaunce.
|
||
Walter hir dooth so feithfully plesaunce,
|
||
That it was deyntee for to seen the cheere.
|
||
Bitwixe hem two, now they been met yfeere.
|
||
|
||
Thise ladyes, whan that they hir tyme say,
|
||
Han taken hir and into chambre gon,
|
||
And strepen hir out of hir rude array
|
||
And in a clooth of gold that brighte shoon,
|
||
With a coroune of many a riche stoon
|
||
Upon hir heed, they into halle hir broghte,
|
||
And ther she was honured as hir oghte.
|
||
|
||
Thus hath this pitous day a blisful ende,
|
||
For every man and womman dooth his myght
|
||
This day in murthe and revel to dispende,
|
||
Til on the welkne shoon the sterres lyght.
|
||
|
||
For moore solempne in every mannes syght
|
||
This feste was, and gretter of costage,
|
||
Than was the revel of hire mariage.
|
||
|
||
Ful many a yeer in heigh prosperitee
|
||
Lyven thise two in concord and in reste.
|
||
And richely his doghter maryed he
|
||
Unto a lord, oon of the worthieste
|
||
Of al Ytaille, and thanne 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
|
||
In reste and pees, after his fader day,
|
||
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 of olde tymes yoore.
|
||
And herkneth what this auctour seith therfore.
|
||
|
||
This storie is seyd, nat for that wyves sholde
|
||
Folwen Grisilde as in humylitee,
|
||
For it were inportable though they wolde,
|
||
But for that every wight in his degree
|
||
Sholde be constant in adversitee
|
||
As was Grisilde. Therfore Petrark writeth
|
||
This storie, which with heigh stile he enditeth.
|
||
|
||
For sith a womman was so pacient
|
||
Unto a mortal man, wel moore us oghte
|
||
Receyven al in gree that God us sent.
|
||
For greet skile is, he preeve that he wroghte.
|
||
But he ne tempteth no man that he boghte,
|
||
As seith Seint Jame, if ye his pistel rede;
|
||
He preeveth folk al day, it is no drede,
|
||
|
||
And suffreth us, as for oure excercise,
|
||
With sharpe scourges of adversitee
|
||
Ful ofte to be bete in sondry wise,
|
||
Nat for to knowe oure wyl, for certes he
|
||
Er we were born knew al oure freletee,
|
||
And for oure beste is al his governaunce.
|
||
Lat us thanne lyve in vertuous suffraunce.
|
||
|
||
But o word, lordynges, herkneth er I go,
|
||
It were ful hard to fynde nowadayes
|
||
In al a toun Grisildis thre or two,
|
||
For it that they were put to swiche assayes,
|
||
The gold of hem hath now so badde alayes
|
||
With bras, that thogh the coyne be fair at eye,
|
||
It wolde rather breste atwo than plye.
|
||
|
||
For which, heere for the Wyves love of Bathe,
|
||
Whos lyf and al hir seete God mayntene
|
||
In heigh maistrie, and elles were it scathe,
|
||
I wol with lusty herte fressh and grene
|
||
Seyn yow a song, to glade yow, I wene,
|
||
And lat us stynte of ernestful matere.
|
||
Herkneth my song, that seith in this manere.
|
||
|
||
Lenvoy de Chaucer.
|
||
|
||
Grisilde is deed, and eek hir pacience,
|
||
And bothe atones buryed in Ytaille,
|
||
For which I crie in open audience
|
||
No wedded man so hardy be tassaille
|
||
His wyves pacience, in hope to fynde
|
||
Grisildis, for in certein he shal faille.
|
||
|
||
O noble wyves, ful of heigh prudence,
|
||
Lat noon humylitee youre tonge naille,
|
||
Ne lat no clerk have cause or diligence
|
||
To write of yow a storie of swich mervaille
|
||
As of Grisildis, pacient and kynde,
|
||
Lest Chichivache yow swelwe in hire entraille.
|
||
|
||
Folweth Ekko, that holdeth no silence,
|
||
But evere answereth at the countretaille;
|
||
Beth nat bidaffed for youre innocence,
|
||
But sharply taak on yow the governaille.
|
||
Emprenteth wel this lessoun in youre mynde
|
||
For commune profit, sith it may availle.
|
||
|
||
Ye archiwyves, stondeth at defense,
|
||
Syn ye be strong as is a greet camaille.
|
||
Ne suffreth nat that men yow doon offense,
|
||
And sklendre wyves, fieble as in bataille,
|
||
Beth egre as is a tygre yond in Ynde,
|
||
Ay clappeth as a mille, I yow consaille.
|
||
|
||
Ne dreed hem nat, doth 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 jalousie I rede eek thou hym bynde,
|
||
And thou shalt make hym couche as doth a quaille.
|
||
|
||
If thou be fair, ther folk been in presence
|
||
Shewe thou thy visage and thyn apparaille;
|
||
If thou be foul, be fre of thy dispence,
|
||
To gete thee freendes ay do thy travaille,
|
||
Be ay of chiere as light as leef on lynde,
|
||
And lat hym care, and wepe, and wryng, and waille.
|
||
|
||
Here endeth the Clerk of Oxenford his Tale.
|
||
|
||
Bihoold the murye wordes of the Hoost.
|
||
|
||
This worthy clerk, whan ended was his tale,
|
||
Oure hoost seyde, and swoor by goddes bones,
|
||
"Me wyf at hoom had herd this legende ones;
|
||
This is a gentil tale for the nones,
|
||
As to my purpos, wiste ye my wille,-
|
||
But thyng that wol nat be, lat it be stille."
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the tale of the Clerk of Oxenford.
|
||
|
||
(This stanza, perhaps made up by a scribe from other lines
|
||
in Chaucer, is inserted in Ellesmere MS. and elsewhere as a
|
||
link between the Clerk's Tale and the Envoy, ascribed to
|
||
Chaucer. The Envoy, however, belongs to the Clerk, and the
|
||
stanza seems both spurious and unnecessary.)
|
||
|
||
Part 24
|
||
|
||
THE PROLOGUE OF THE MARCHANTES TALE
|
||
|
||
The Prologe of the Marchantes tale.
|
||
|
||
"Wepyng and waylyng, care and oother sorwe,
|
||
I knowe ynogh, on even and a morwe,"
|
||
Quod the Marchant, "and so doon othere mo
|
||
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 hire ycoupled were,
|
||
She wolde hym overmacche, I dar wel swere.
|
||
What sholde I yow reherce in special
|
||
Hir hye malice? She is a shrewe at al!
|
||
|
||
Ther is a long and large difference
|
||
Bitwix Grisildis grete pacience
|
||
And of my wyf the passyng crueltee.
|
||
Were I unbounden, al so moot I thee,
|
||
I wolde nevere eft comen in the snare.
|
||
|
||
We wedded men lyve in sorwe and care;
|
||
Assaye who so wole, and he shal fynde
|
||
I seye sooth, by Seint Thomas of Ynde-
|
||
As for the moore part, I seye nat alle;
|
||
God shilde, that it sholde so bifalle!
|
||
|
||
Ay, goode Sir Hoost, I have ywedded bee
|
||
Thise monthes two, and moore nat, pardee;
|
||
And yet I trowe, he that al his lyve
|
||
Wyflees hath been, though that men wolde him ryve
|
||
Unto the herte, ne koude in no manere
|
||
|
||
Tellen so muchel sorwe as I now heere
|
||
Koude tellen of my wyves cursednesse!"
|
||
Now quod our hoost, "Marchant, so God yow blesse,
|
||
Syn ye so muchel knowen of that art,
|
||
Ful hertely I pray yow telle us part."
|
||
|
||
"Gladly," quod he, "but of myn owene soore,
|
||
For soory herte I telle may namoore."
|
||
|
||
THE TALE.
|
||
|
||
(January, a rich old dotard, who has married May, in spite
|
||
of his friends' objections to the inequality of their ages, is
|
||
deceived by her and his young squire Damian, although Pluto in
|
||
pity restores his lost sight.)
|
||
Part 25
|
||
|
||
EPILOGUE
|
||
|
||
The Prologe of the Squieres tale.
|
||
|
||
"Ey, Goddes mercy!" seyde oure Hooste tho,
|
||
"Now swich a wyf I pray God kepe me fro!
|
||
Lo, whiche sleightes and subtilitees
|
||
In wommen been, for ay as bisy as bees
|
||
Been they us sely men for to deceyve;
|
||
And from a sooth evere wol they weyve,
|
||
By this Marchantes tale it preveth weel.
|
||
But doutelees, as trewe as any steel,
|
||
I have a wyf, though that she povre be,
|
||
But of hir tonge a labbyng shrewe is she.
|
||
And yet she hath an heep of vices mo-
|
||
Ther-of no fors, lat alle swiche thynges go.
|
||
But wyte ye what, in conseil be it seyd,
|
||
Me reweth soore I am unto hire teyd;
|
||
For and I sholde rekenen every vice,
|
||
Which that she hath, ywis, I were to nyce.
|
||
And cause why? it sholde reported be,
|
||
And toold to hir of somme of this meynee;
|
||
Of whom, it nedeth nat for to declare,
|
||
Syn wommen konnen outen swich chaffare.
|
||
And eek my with suffiseth nat therto,
|
||
To tellen al, wherfore my tale is do."
|
||
|
||
GROUP F.
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE SQUIERES TALE
|
||
|
||
Squier, come neer, if it your wille be,
|
||
And sey somwhat of love, for certes, ye
|
||
Konnen theron as muche as any man."
|
||
"Nay sir," quod he, "but I wol seye as I kan,
|
||
With hertly wyl, for I wol nat rebelle
|
||
Agayn your lust. A tale wol I telle,
|
||
Have me excused if I speke amys;
|
||
My wyl is good, and lo, my tale is this."
|
||
|
||
THE SQUIERES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Squieres Tale.
|
||
|
||
At Sarray, in the land of Tartarye,
|
||
Ther dwelte a kyng, that werreyed Russye,
|
||
Thurgh which ther dyde many a doughty man.
|
||
This noble kyng was cleped Cambynskan,
|
||
Which in his tyme was of so greet renoun,
|
||
|
||
That ther was nowher in no regioun
|
||
So excellent a lord in alle thyng.
|
||
Hym lakked noght that longeth to a kyng;
|
||
And of the secte, of which that he was born,
|
||
He kepte his lay, to which that he was sworn;
|
||
|
||
And therto he was hardy, wys, and riche,
|
||
Pitous, and just, and everemoore yliche,
|
||
Sooth of his word, benigne, and honurable,
|
||
Of his corage as any centre stable,
|
||
Yong, fressh, strong, and in armes desirous
|
||
|
||
As any bacheler of al his hous.
|
||
A fair persone he was, and fortunat,
|
||
And kepte alwey so wel roial estat
|
||
That ther was nowher swich another man.
|
||
This noble kyng, this Tarte Cambynskan,
|
||
|
||
Hadde two sones on Elpheta his wyf,
|
||
Of whiche the eldeste highte Algarsyf,
|
||
That oother sone was cleped Cambalo.
|
||
A doghter hadde this worthy kyng also,
|
||
That yongest was, and highte Canacee.
|
||
|
||
But for to telle yow al hir beautee,
|
||
It lyth nat in my tonge nyn my konnyng.
|
||
I dar nat undertake so heigh a thyng;
|
||
Myn Englissh eek is insufficient.
|
||
|
||
I moste been a rethor excellent,
|
||
|
||
That koude hise colours longynge for that art,
|
||
If he sholde hir discryven every part.
|
||
I am noon swich; I moot speke as I kan.
|
||
And so bifel, that whan this Cambynskan
|
||
Hath twenty wynter born his diademe,
|
||
|
||
As he was wont fro yeer to yeer, I deme,
|
||
He leet the feeste of his nativitee
|
||
Doon cryen thurghout Sarray his citee,
|
||
The last Idus of March after the yeer.
|
||
Phebus the sonne ful joly was and cleer,
|
||
|
||
For he was neigh his exaltacioun
|
||
In Martes face, and in his mansioun
|
||
In Aries, the colerik hoote signe.
|
||
Ful lusty was the weder, and benigne,
|
||
For which the foweles agayn the sonne sheene,
|
||
|
||
What for the sesoun and the yonge grene,
|
||
Ful loude songen hir affecciouns;
|
||
Hem semed han geten hem protecciouns
|
||
Agayn the swerd of wynter, keene and coold.
|
||
This Cambynskan, of which I have yow toold,
|
||
|
||
In roial vestiment sit on his deys,
|
||
With diademe, ful heighe in his paleys,
|
||
And halt his feeste so solempne and so ryche,
|
||
That in this world ne was ther noon it lyche.
|
||
Of which, if I shal tellen al tharray,
|
||
|
||
Thanne wolde it occupie a someres day,
|
||
And eek it nedeth nat for to devyse,
|
||
At every cours, the ordre of hire servyse.
|
||
I wol nat tellen of hir strange sewes,
|
||
Ne of hir swannes, nor of hire heronsewes;
|
||
|
||
Eek in that lond, as tellen knyghtes olde,
|
||
Ther is som mete that is ful deynte holde,
|
||
That in this lond men recche of it but smal-
|
||
Ther nys no man that may reporten al.
|
||
I wol nat taryen yow, for it is pryme,
|
||
|
||
And for it is no fruyt but los of tyme.
|
||
Unto my firste I wole have my recours.
|
||
And so bifel, that after the thridde cours
|
||
Whil that htis kyng sit thus in his nobleye,
|
||
Herknynge hise mynstrals hir thynges pleye
|
||
|
||
Biforn hym at the bord deliciously,
|
||
In at the halle dore al sodeynly
|
||
Ther cam a knyght, upon a steede of bras,
|
||
And in his hand a brood mirour of glas,
|
||
Upon his thombe he hadde of gold a ryng,
|
||
|
||
And by his syde a naked swerd hangyng.
|
||
And up he rideth to the heighe bord.
|
||
In al the hall ne was ther spoken a word
|
||
For merveille of this knyght; hym to biholde
|
||
Ful bisily ther wayten yonge and olde.
|
||
|
||
This strange knyght, that cam thus sodeynly
|
||
Al armed, save his heed, ful richely,
|
||
Saleweth kyng, and queene, and lordes alle,
|
||
By ordre, as they seten in the halle,
|
||
With so heigh reverence and obeisaunce,
|
||
|
||
As wel in speche as in contenaunce,
|
||
That Gawayn, with his olde curteisye,
|
||
Though he were comen ayeyn out of Fairye,
|
||
Ne koude hym nat amende with a word.
|
||
And after this, biforn the heighe bord
|
||
|
||
He with a manly voys seith his message,
|
||
After the forme used in his langage,
|
||
Withouten vice of silable or of lettre.
|
||
And for his tale sholde seme the bettre,
|
||
Accordant to hise wordes was his cheere,
|
||
|
||
As techeth art of speche hem that it leere.
|
||
Al be it that I kan nat sowne his stile,
|
||
Ne kan nat clymben over so heigh a style,
|
||
Yet seye I this, as to commune entente,
|
||
Thus muche amounteth al that evere he mente,
|
||
|
||
If it so be that I have it in mynde.
|
||
He seyde, "The kyng of Arabe and of Inde,
|
||
My lige lord, on this solempne day
|
||
Saleweth yow, as he best kan and may;
|
||
And sendeth yow, in honour of your feeste,
|
||
|
||
By me, that am al redy at your heeste,
|
||
This steede of bras, that esily and weel
|
||
Kan in the space of o dday natureel,
|
||
This is to seyn, in foure and twenty houres,
|
||
Wherso yow lyst, in droghte or elles shoures,
|
||
|
||
Beren youre body into every place
|
||
To which youre herte wilneth for to pace,
|
||
Withouten wem of yow, thurgh foul or fair.
|
||
Or if yow lyst to fleen as hye in the air
|
||
As dooth an egle, whan that hym list to soore,
|
||
|
||
|
||
This same steede shal bere yow evere moore
|
||
Withouten harm, til ye be ther yow leste,
|
||
Though that ye slepen on his bak or reste;
|
||
And turne ayeyn, with writhyng of a pyn.
|
||
He that it wroghte, koude ful many a gyn;
|
||
|
||
He wayted many a constellacioun
|
||
Er he had doon this operacioun;
|
||
And knew ful many a seel, and many a bond.
|
||
This mirrour eek, that I have in myn hond,
|
||
Hath swich a myght, that men may in it see
|
||
|
||
Whan ther shal fallen any adversitee
|
||
Unto your regne, or to yourself also,
|
||
And openly who is your freend, or foo.
|
||
And over al this, if any lady bright
|
||
Hath set hir herte in any maner wight,
|
||
|
||
If he be fals, she shal his tresoun see,
|
||
His newe love, and al his subtiltee
|
||
So openly, that ther shal no thyng hyde.
|
||
Wherfore, ageyn this lusty someres tyde,
|
||
This mirrour and this ryng that ye may see,
|
||
|
||
He hath sent unto my lady Canacee,
|
||
Your excellente doghter that is heere.
|
||
The vertu of the ryng, if ye wol heere,
|
||
Is this, that if hir lust it for to were
|
||
Upon hir thombe, or in hir purs it bere,
|
||
|
||
Ther is no fowel that fleeth under the hevene
|
||
That she ne shal wel understonde his stevene,
|
||
And knowe his menyng openly and pleyn,
|
||
And answere hym in his langage ageyn.
|
||
And every gras that groweth upon roote,
|
||
|
||
She shal eek knowe, and whom it wol do boote,
|
||
Al be hise woundes never so depe and wyde.
|
||
This naked swerd, that hangeth by my syde
|
||
Swich vertu hath, that what man so ye smyte
|
||
Thurghout his armure it wole hym kerve and byte,
|
||
|
||
Were it as thikke as is a branched ook.
|
||
And what man that is wounded with a strook
|
||
Shal never be hool, til that yow list of grace
|
||
To stroke hym with the plate in thilke place
|
||
Ther he is hurt; this is as muche to seyn,
|
||
|
||
Ye moote with the plate swerd ageyn
|
||
Strike hym in the wounde, and it wol close.
|
||
This is a verray sooth withouten glose.
|
||
It faileth nat, whils it is in youre hoold."
|
||
And whan this knyght hath thus his tale toold,
|
||
|
||
He rideth out of halle, and doun he lighte.
|
||
His steede, which that shoon as sonne brighte,
|
||
Stant in the court, as stille as any stoon.
|
||
This knyght is to his chambre lad anoon,
|
||
And is unarmed and unto mete yset.
|
||
|
||
The presentes been ful roially yfet,
|
||
This is to seyn, the swerd and the mirrour,
|
||
And born anon into the heighe tour
|
||
With certeine officers ordeyned therfore.
|
||
And unto Canacee this ryng was bore,
|
||
|
||
Solempnely, ther she sit at the table.
|
||
But sikerly, withouten any fable,
|
||
The hors of bras, that may nat be remewed,
|
||
It stant as it were to the ground yglewed.
|
||
Ther may no man out of the place it dryve,
|
||
|
||
For noon engyn of wyndas ne polyve;
|
||
And cause why, for they kan nat the craft,
|
||
And therfore in the place they han it laft,
|
||
Til that the knyght hath taught hem the manere
|
||
To voyden hym, as ye shal after heere.
|
||
|
||
Greety was the prees that swarmeth to and fro
|
||
To gauren on this hors, that stondeth so.
|
||
For it so heigh was, and so brood, and long,
|
||
So wel proporcioned for to been strong,
|
||
Right as it were a steede of Lumbardye;
|
||
|
||
Therwith so horsly and so quyk of eye,
|
||
As it a gentil Poilleys courser were.
|
||
For certes, fro his tayl unto his ere,
|
||
Nature ne art ne koude hym nat amende
|
||
In no degree, as al the peple wende.
|
||
|
||
But everemoore hir mooste wonder was
|
||
How that it koude go, and was of bras.
|
||
It was a fairye, as al the peple semed.
|
||
Diverse folk diversely they demed;
|
||
As many heddes, as manye wittes ther been.
|
||
|
||
They murmureden as dooth a swarm of been,
|
||
And maden skiles after hir fantasies,
|
||
Rehersynge of thise olde poetries,
|
||
And seyde that it was lyk the Pegasee,
|
||
The hors that hadde wynges for to flee;
|
||
|
||
Or elles, it was the Grekes hors Synoun,
|
||
That broghte Troie to destruccioun,
|
||
As men in thise olde geestes rede.
|
||
"Myn herte," quod oon, "is everemoore in drede.
|
||
I trowe som men of armes been therinne,
|
||
|
||
That shapen hem this citee for to wynne.
|
||
It were right good that al swich thyng were knowe."
|
||
Another rowned to his felawe lowe,
|
||
And seyde, "He lyeth; it is rather lyk
|
||
An apparence ymaad by som magyk,
|
||
|
||
As jogelours pleyen at thise feestes grete."
|
||
Of sondry doutes thus they jangle and trete,
|
||
As lewed peple demeth comunly
|
||
Of thynges that been maad moore subtilly
|
||
Than they kan in hir lewednesse comprehende;
|
||
|
||
They demen gladly to the badder ende.
|
||
And somme of hem wondred on the mirrour
|
||
That born was up into the maister tour-
|
||
How men myghte in it swiche thynges se.
|
||
Another answerde, and seyde, "It myghte wel be
|
||
|
||
Naturelly by composiciouns
|
||
Of anglis and of slye reflexiouns;"
|
||
And seyden, that in Rome was swich oon.
|
||
They speken of Alocen and Vitulon,
|
||
And Aristotle, that writen in hir lyves
|
||
|
||
Of queynte mirrours and of perspectives,
|
||
As knowen they that han hir bookes herd.
|
||
And oother folk han wondred on the swerd,
|
||
That wolde percen thurgh out every thyng;
|
||
And fille in speche of Thelophus the kyng
|
||
|
||
And of Achilles with his queynte spere,
|
||
For he koude with it bothe heele and dere,
|
||
Right in swich wise as men may with the swerd,
|
||
Of which right now ye han yourselven herd.
|
||
They speken of sondry hardyng of metal,
|
||
|
||
And speke of medicynes therwithal,
|
||
And how and whanne it sholde yharded be,
|
||
Which is unknowe, algates unto me.
|
||
Tho speeke they of Canacees ryng,
|
||
And seyden alle, that swich a wonder thyng
|
||
|
||
Of craft of rynges herde they nevere noon;
|
||
Save that he Moyses, and kyng Salomon
|
||
Hadde a name of konnyng in swich art.
|
||
Thus seyn the peple, and drawen hem apart.
|
||
But nathelees, somme seiden that it was
|
||
|
||
Wonder to maken of fern asshen glas,
|
||
And yet nys glas nat lyk asshen of fern;
|
||
But for they han knowen it so fern,
|
||
Therfore cesseth hir janglyng and hir wonder.
|
||
As soore wondren somme on cause of thonder,
|
||
|
||
On ebbe, on flood, on gossomer, and on myst,
|
||
And alle thyng, til that the cause is wyst.
|
||
Thus jangle they, and demen, and devyse,
|
||
Til that the knyg gan fro the bord aryse.
|
||
Phebus hath laft the angle meridional,
|
||
|
||
And yet ascendynge was the beest roial,
|
||
The gentil Leoun, with his Aldrian,
|
||
Whan that this Tartre kyng, this Cambynskan
|
||
Roos fro his bord, ther that he sat ful hye.
|
||
Toforn hym gooth the loude mynstralcye
|
||
|
||
Til he cam to his chambre of parementz,
|
||
Ther as they sownen diverse intrumentz
|
||
That it is lyk an hevene for to heere.
|
||
Now dauncen lusty Venus children deere,
|
||
For in the Fyssh hir lady sat ful hye,
|
||
|
||
And looketh on hem with a freendly eye.
|
||
This noble kyng is set up in his trone;
|
||
This strange knyght is fet to hym ful soone,
|
||
And on the daunce he gooth with Canacee.
|
||
Heere is the revel and the jolitee
|
||
|
||
That is nat able a dul man to devyse;
|
||
He moste han knowen love and his servyse,
|
||
And been a feestlych man as fressh as May,
|
||
That sholde yow devysen swich array.
|
||
Who koude telle yow the forme of daunces,
|
||
|
||
So unkouthe and so fresshe contenaunces,
|
||
Swich subtil lookyng and dissymulynges,
|
||
For drede of jalouse mennes aperceyvynges?
|
||
No man but Launcelet, and he is deed.
|
||
Therfore I passe of al this lustiheed;
|
||
|
||
I sey namoore, but in this jolynesse
|
||
I lete hem, til men to the soper dresse.
|
||
The styward bit the spices for to hye,
|
||
And eek the wyn, in al this melodye;
|
||
The usshers and the squiers been ygoon,
|
||
|
||
The spices and the wyn is come anoon,
|
||
They ete and drynke, and whan this hadde an ende,
|
||
Unto the temple, as reson was, they wende.
|
||
The service doon, they soupen al by day;
|
||
What nedeth me rehercen hir array?
|
||
|
||
Ech man woot wel, that at a kynges feeste
|
||
Hath plentee, to the mooste and to the leeste,
|
||
And deyntees mo than been in my knowyng.
|
||
At after soper gooth this noble kyng,
|
||
To seen this hors of bras, with al the route
|
||
|
||
Of lordes, and of ladyes hym aboute.
|
||
Swich wondryng was ther on this hors of bras,
|
||
That syn the grete sege of Troie was,
|
||
Ther as men wondreden on an hors also,
|
||
Ne was ther swich a wondryng as was tho.
|
||
|
||
But fynally, the kyng axeth this knyght
|
||
The vertu of this courser, and the myght;
|
||
And preyde hym to telle his governaunce.
|
||
This hors anoon bigan to trippe and daunce,
|
||
Whan that this knyght leyde hand upon his reyne,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "Sire, ther is namoore to seyne,
|
||
But whan yow list to ryden any where,
|
||
Ye mooten trille a pyn, stant in his ere,
|
||
Which I shal telle yow bitwix us two.
|
||
Ye moote nempne hym to what place also,
|
||
|
||
Or to what contree, that yow list to ryde,
|
||
And whan ye com ther as yow list abyde,
|
||
Bidde hym descende, and trille another pyn,
|
||
(For therin lith theffect of al the gyn)
|
||
And he wol doun descende, and doon youre wille.
|
||
|
||
And in that place he wol stonde stille,
|
||
Though al the world the contrarie hadde yswore;
|
||
He shal nat thennes been ydrawe ne ybore.
|
||
Or, if yow liste, bidde hym thennes goon,
|
||
Trille this pyn, and he wol vanysshe anoon
|
||
|
||
Out of the sighte of every maner wight,
|
||
And com agayn, be it day or nyght,
|
||
Whan that yow list to clepen hym ageyn,
|
||
In swich a gyse as I shal to yow seyn,
|
||
Bitwixe yow and me, and that ful soone.
|
||
|
||
Ride whan yow list; ther is namoore to doone."
|
||
Enformed whan the kyng was of that knyght,
|
||
And hath conceyved in his wit aright
|
||
The manere and the forme of al this thyng,
|
||
Thus glad and blithe this noble doughty kyng
|
||
|
||
Repeireth to his revel as biforn,
|
||
The brydel is unto the tour yborn,
|
||
And kept among hise jueles, leeve and deere.
|
||
The hors vanysshed, I noot in what manere,
|
||
Out of hir sighte; ye gete namoore of me.
|
||
|
||
But thus I lete in lust and jolitee
|
||
This Cambynskan, hise lordes festeiynge,
|
||
Til wel ny the day bigan to sprynge.
|
||
|
||
Explicit prima pars.
|
||
|
||
Sequitur pars secunda.
|
||
|
||
The norice of digestioun, the sleepe,
|
||
Gan on hem wynke, and bad hem taken keepe,
|
||
That muchel drynke and labour wolde han reste;
|
||
And with a galpyng mouth hem alle he keste,
|
||
And seyde, "It was tyme to lye adoun,
|
||
|
||
For blood was in his domynacioun.
|
||
Cherisseth blood, natures freend," quod he.
|
||
They thanken hym, galpynge, by two, by thre,
|
||
And every wight gan drawe hym to his reste,
|
||
As sleep hem bad; they tooke it for the beste.
|
||
|
||
Hir dremes shul nat been ytoold for me;
|
||
Ful were hir heddes of fumositee,
|
||
That causeth dreem, of which ther nys no charge.
|
||
They slepen til that it was pryme large,
|
||
The mooste part, but it were Canacee;
|
||
|
||
She was ful mesurable, as wommen be.
|
||
For of hir fader hadde she take leve
|
||
To goon to reste, soone after it was eve.
|
||
Hir liste nat appalled for to be,
|
||
Ne on the morwe unfeestlich for to se:
|
||
|
||
And slepte hir firste sleepe, and thanne awook;
|
||
For swich a joye she in hir herte took,
|
||
Bothe of hir queynte ryng and hire mirrour,
|
||
That twenty tyme she changed hir colour,
|
||
And in hir sleep right for impressioun
|
||
|
||
Of hir mirrour 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.
|
||
Thise olde wommen that been gladly wyse,
|
||
|
||
As hir maistresse answerde hir anon,
|
||
And seyde, "Madame, whider wil ye goon
|
||
Thus erly, for the folk been alle on reste?"
|
||
"I wol," quod she, "arise, for me leste
|
||
No lenger for to slepe; and walke aboute."
|
||
|
||
Hir maistresse clepeth wommen a greet route,
|
||
And up they rysen wel an ten or twelve.
|
||
Up riseth fresshe Canacee hirselve,
|
||
As rody and bright as dooth the yonge sonne,
|
||
That in the Ram is foure degrees upronne,
|
||
|
||
Noon hyer was he, whan she redy was;
|
||
And forth she walketh esily a pas,
|
||
Arrayed after the lusty sesoun soote,
|
||
Lightly for to pleye and walke on foote,
|
||
Nat but with fyve or sixe of hir meynee;
|
||
|
||
And in a trench forth in the park gooth she.
|
||
The vapour, which that fro the erthe glood,
|
||
Made the sonne to seme rody and brood;
|
||
But natheless, it was so fair a sighte
|
||
That it made alle hir hertes for to lighte,
|
||
|
||
What for the sesoun and the morwenynge,
|
||
And for the foweles that she herde synge;
|
||
For right anon she wiste what they mente
|
||
Right by hir song, and knew al hir entente.
|
||
The knotte, why that every tale is toold,
|
||
|
||
If it be taried til that lust be coold
|
||
Of hem that han it after herkned yoore,
|
||
The savour passeth ever lenger the moore,
|
||
For fulsomnesse of his prolixitee;
|
||
And by the same resoun thynketh me,
|
||
|
||
I sholde to the knotte condescende,
|
||
And maken of hir walkyng soone an ende.
|
||
Amydde a tree fordryed, as whit as chalk,
|
||
As Canacee was pleyyng in hir walk,
|
||
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.
|
||
Ybeten hath she hirself so pitously
|
||
With bothe hir wynges, til the rede blood
|
||
Ran endelong the tree ther as she stood,
|
||
|
||
And evere in oon she cryde alwey and shrighte,
|
||
And with hir beek hirselven so she prighte,
|
||
That ther nys tygre, ne noon so crueel beest
|
||
That dwelleth outher in wode or in forest
|
||
That nolde han wept, if that he wepe koude
|
||
|
||
For sorwe of hir, she shrighte alwey so loude.
|
||
For ther nas nevere yet no man on lyve
|
||
(If that I koude a faucon wel discryve),
|
||
That herde of swich another of fairnesse,
|
||
As wel of plumage as of gentillesse
|
||
|
||
Of shape and al that myghte yrekened be.
|
||
A faucon peregryn thanne semed she
|
||
Of fremde land, and everemoore as she stood
|
||
She swowneth now and now for lakke of blood,
|
||
Til wel neigh is she fallen fro the tree.
|
||
|
||
This faire kynges doghter Canacee,
|
||
That on hir fynger baar the queynte ryng,
|
||
Thurgh which she understood wel every thyng
|
||
That any fowel may in his leden seyn,
|
||
And koude answeren hym in his ledene ageyn,
|
||
|
||
Hath understonde what this faucoun seyde,
|
||
And wel neigh for the routhe almoost she deyde.
|
||
And to the tree she gooth ful hastily,
|
||
And on this faucoun looketh pitously,
|
||
And heeld hir lappe abrood, for wel she wiste
|
||
|
||
The faucoun moste fallen fro the twiste,
|
||
Whan that it swowned next, for lakke of blood.
|
||
A longe while to wayten hir she stood,
|
||
Til atte laste she spak in this manere
|
||
Unto the hauk, as ye shal after heere.
|
||
|
||
"what is the cause, if it be for to telle,
|
||
That ye be in this furial pyne of helle?'
|
||
Quod Canacee unto the hauk above,
|
||
"Is this for sorwe of deeth, or los of love?
|
||
For, as I trowe, thise been causes two
|
||
|
||
That causeth moost a gentil herte wo.
|
||
Of oother harm it nedeth nat to speke,
|
||
For ye yourself upon yourself yow wreke,
|
||
Which proveth wel, that oother love or drede
|
||
Moot been enchesoun of your cruel dede,
|
||
|
||
Syn that I see noon oother wight yow chace.
|
||
For love of God as dooth yourselven grace.
|
||
Or what may been your helpe? for west nor est
|
||
Ne saugh I nevere er now no bryd ne beest
|
||
That ferde with hymself so pitously.
|
||
|
||
Ye sle me with your sorwe, verraily,
|
||
I have of yow so greet compassioun.
|
||
For Goddes love com fro the tree adoun,
|
||
And as I am a kynges doghter trewe,
|
||
If that I verraily the cause knewe
|
||
|
||
Of your disese, if it lay in my myght
|
||
I wolde amenden it er that it were nyght,
|
||
As wisly helpe me, grete god of kynde!
|
||
And herbes shal I right ynowe yfynde,
|
||
To heele with youre hurtes hastily."
|
||
|
||
Tho shrighte this faucoun moore yet pitously
|
||
Than ever she dide, and fil to grounde anon
|
||
And lith aswowne, deed, and lyk a stoon,
|
||
Til Canacee hath in hir lappe hir take
|
||
Unto the tyme she gan of swough awake.
|
||
|
||
And after that she of hir swough gan breyde,
|
||
Right ibn hir hsukes ledene thus she seyde:
|
||
"That pitee renneth soone in gentil herte,
|
||
Fellynge his similitude in peynes smerte,
|
||
Is preved al day, as men may it see,
|
||
|
||
As wel by werk as by auctoritee.
|
||
For gentil herte kitheth gentillesse.
|
||
I se wel, that ye han of my distresse
|
||
Compassioun, my faire Canacee,
|
||
Of verray wommanly benignytee
|
||
|
||
That nature in youre principles hath set.
|
||
But for noon hope for to fare the bet,
|
||
But for to obeye unto youre herte free,
|
||
And for to maken othere be war by me,
|
||
As by the whelp chasted is the leoun,
|
||
|
||
Right for that cause and that condlusioun
|
||
Whil that I have a leyser and a space,
|
||
Myn harm I wol confessen, er I pace."
|
||
And evere whil that oon hir sorwe tolde,
|
||
That oother weep, as she to water wolde,
|
||
|
||
Til that the faucoun bad hire to be stille;
|
||
And with a syk right thus she seyde hir wille.
|
||
"Ther I was bred, allas, that harde day!
|
||
And fostred in a roche of marbul gray
|
||
So tendrely, that no thyng eyled me;
|
||
|
||
I nyste nat what was adversitee,
|
||
Til I koude flee ful hye under the sky.
|
||
Tho dwelte a tercelet me faste by
|
||
That semed welle of alle gentillesse,
|
||
Al were he ful of tresoun and falsnesse;
|
||
|
||
It was so wrapped under humble cheere,
|
||
And under hewe of trouthe in swich manere,
|
||
Under plesance, and under bisy peyne,
|
||
That I ne koude han wend he koude feyne,
|
||
So depe in greyn he dyed his colours.
|
||
|
||
Right as a serpent hit hym under floures
|
||
Til he may seen his tyme for to byte,
|
||
Right so this god of love, this ypocryte,
|
||
Dooth so hise cerymonyes and obeisaunces,
|
||
And kepeth in semblant alle hise observaunces
|
||
|
||
That sowneth into gentillesse of love.
|
||
As in a toumbe is al the faire above,
|
||
And under is the corps swich as ye woot,
|
||
Swich was this ypocrite, bothe coold and hoot;
|
||
And in this wise he served his entente,
|
||
|
||
That-save the feend-noon wiste what he mente;
|
||
Til he so longe hadde wopen and compleyned,
|
||
And many a yeer his service to me feyned,
|
||
Til that myn herte, to pitous and to nyce,
|
||
Al innocent of his corouned malice,
|
||
|
||
For-fered of his deeth, as thoughte me,
|
||
Upon hise othes and his seuretee,
|
||
Graunted hym love up this condicioun
|
||
That everemoore myn honour and renoun
|
||
Were saved, bothe privee and apert.
|
||
|
||
This is to seyn, that after his desert
|
||
I yaf hym al myn herte and al my thoght-
|
||
God woot and he, that ootherwise noght!-
|
||
And took his herte in chaunge for myn for ay.
|
||
But sooth is seyd, goon sithen many a day,
|
||
|
||
`A trewe wight and a theef thenken nat oon.'
|
||
And whan he saugh the thyng so fer ygoon,
|
||
That I hadde graunted hym fully my love,
|
||
In swich a gyse as I have seyd above,
|
||
And yeven hym my trewe herte, as free
|
||
|
||
As he swoor he his herte yaf to me,
|
||
Anon this tigre ful of doublenesse
|
||
Fil on hise knees, with so devout humblesse,
|
||
With so heigh reverence, and as by his cheere
|
||
So lyk a gentil lovere of manere,
|
||
|
||
So ravysshed, as it semed, for the joye,
|
||
That nevere Jason, ne Parys of Troye,
|
||
Jason? certes, ne noon oother man
|
||
Syn Lameth was, that alderfirst bigan
|
||
To loven two, as writen folk biforn,
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere syn the firste man was born,
|
||
Ne koude man, by twenty thousand part,
|
||
Countrefete the sophymes fo his art;
|
||
Ne were worhty unbokelen his galoche,
|
||
Ther doublenesse or feynyng sholde approche,
|
||
|
||
Ne so koude thonke a wight as he dide me.
|
||
His manere was an hevene for to see
|
||
Til any womman, were she never so wys;
|
||
So peynted he and kembde at point-devys
|
||
As wel hise wordes as his contenaunce
|
||
|
||
And I so loved hym for his oveisaunce
|
||
And for the trouthe I demed in his herte,
|
||
That if so were that any thyng hym smerte,
|
||
Al were it nevere so lite, and I it wiste,
|
||
Me thoughte I felte deeth myn herte twiste.
|
||
|
||
And shortly so ferforth this thyng is went,
|
||
That my wyl was his willes instrument;
|
||
This is to seyn, my wyl obeyed his wyl
|
||
In alle thyng as fer as resoun fil,
|
||
Kepynge the boundes of my worship evere.
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere hadde I thyng so lief, ne levere,
|
||
As hym, God woot! ne nevere shal namo.
|
||
This lasteth lenger than a yeer or two,
|
||
That I supposed of hym noght but good.
|
||
But finally, thus atte laste it stood,
|
||
|
||
That Fortune wolde that he moste twynne
|
||
Out of that place, which that I was inne.
|
||
Wher me was wo that is no questioun;
|
||
I kan nat make of it discripcioun.
|
||
For o thyng dare I tellen boldely,
|
||
|
||
I knowe what is the peyne of deeth therby.
|
||
Swich harme I felte, for he ne myghte bileve;
|
||
So on a day of me he took his leve
|
||
So sosrwefully eek, that I wende verraily,
|
||
That he had felt as muche harm as I,
|
||
|
||
Whan that I herde hym speke, and saugh his hewe.
|
||
But nathelees, I thoughte he was so trewe,
|
||
And eek that he repaire sholde ageyn
|
||
Withinne a litel while, sooth to seyn,
|
||
And resoun wolde eek that he moste go
|
||
|
||
For his honour, as ofte it happeth so,
|
||
That I made vertu of necessitee,
|
||
And took it wel, syn that it moste be.
|
||
As I best myghte, I hidde fro hym my sorwe,
|
||
And took hym by the hond, seint John to borwe,
|
||
|
||
And seyde hym thus, `Lo I am youres al.
|
||
Beth swich as I to yow have been, and shal.'
|
||
What he answerde, it nedeth noght reherce,
|
||
Who kan sey bet than he? who kan do werse?
|
||
Whan he hath al wel seyd, thanne hath he doon;
|
||
|
||
`Therfore bihoveth hire 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 hym leste.
|
||
Whan it cam hym to purpos for to reste,
|
||
|
||
I trowe he hadde thilke text in mynde
|
||
That `alle thyng repeirynge to his kynde
|
||
Gladeth hymself;' thus seyn men, as I gesse.
|
||
Men loven of propre kynde newefangelnesse,
|
||
As briddes doon, that men in cages fede,
|
||
|
||
For though thou nyght 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,
|
||
He with his feet wol spurne adoun his cuppe,
|
||
|
||
And to the wode he wole and wormes ete;
|
||
So newefangel been they of hir mete,
|
||
And loven novelrie of propre kynde.
|
||
No gentillesse of blood ne may hem bynde.
|
||
So ferde this tercelet, allas, the day!
|
||
|
||
Though he were gentil born, and fressh, and gay,
|
||
And goodlich for to seen, humble and free,
|
||
He saugh upon a tyme a kyte flee,
|
||
And sodeynly he loved this kyte so
|
||
That al his love is clene fro me ago,
|
||
|
||
And hath his trouthe falsed in this wyse.
|
||
Thus hath the kyte my love in hire servyse,
|
||
And I am lorn withouten remedie."
|
||
And with that word this faucoun gan to crie,
|
||
And swowned eft in Canacees barm.
|
||
|
||
Greet was the sorwe for the haukes harm
|
||
That Canacee and alle hir wommen made.
|
||
They nyste hou they myghte the faucoun glade;
|
||
But Canacee hom bereth hir in hir lappe,
|
||
And softely in plastres gan hir wrappe,
|
||
|
||
Ther as she with hir beek hadde hurt hirselve.
|
||
Now kan nat Canacee but herbes delve
|
||
Out of the ground, and make saves newe
|
||
Of herbes preciouse and fyne of hewe,
|
||
To heelen with this hauk; fro day to nyght
|
||
|
||
She dooth hir bisynesse and al hir myght.
|
||
And by hir beddes heed she made a mewe,
|
||
And covered it with veluettes blewe,
|
||
In signe of trouthe that is in wommen sene.
|
||
And al withoute, the mewe is peynted grene,
|
||
|
||
In which were ypeynted alle thise false fowles,
|
||
As beth thise tidyves, tercelettes, and owles,
|
||
Right for despit were peynted hem bisyde,
|
||
And pyes on hem for to crie and chyde.
|
||
Thus lete I Canacee hir hauk kepyng;
|
||
|
||
I wol namoore as now speke of hir ryng,
|
||
Til it come eft to purpos for to seyn
|
||
How that this faucoun gat hire love ageyn
|
||
Repentant, as the storie telleth us,
|
||
By mediacioun of Cambalus,
|
||
|
||
The kynges sone, of which that I yow tolde.
|
||
But hennesforth I wol my proces holde
|
||
To speken of aventures and of batailles,
|
||
That nevere yet was herd so grete mervailles.
|
||
First wol I telle yow of Cambynskan,
|
||
|
||
That in his tyme many a citee wan;
|
||
And after wol I speke of Algarsif,
|
||
How that he wan Theodora to his wif,
|
||
For whom ful ofte in greet peril he was,
|
||
Ne hadde he be holpen by the steede of bras;
|
||
|
||
And after wol I speke of Cambalo
|
||
That faught in lystes with the bretheren two
|
||
For Canacee, er that he myghte hir wynne.
|
||
And ther I lefte, I wol ayeyn bigynne.
|
||
|
||
Explicit secunda pars.
|
||
|
||
Incipit pars tercia.
|
||
|
||
Appollo whirleth up his chaar so hye
|
||
Til that the god Mercurius hous, the slye-
|
||
|
||
(Unfinished.)
|
||
Part 26
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE FRANKELEYNS TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere folwen the wordes of the Frankelyn to the Squier,
|
||
and the wordes of the hoost to the Frankelyn.
|
||
|
||
"In feith, Squier, thow hast thee wel yquit,
|
||
And gentilly I preise wel thy wit,"
|
||
Quod the Frankeleyn, "considerynge thy yowthe,
|
||
So feelyngly thou spekest, sire, I allow the;
|
||
As to my doom, ther is noon that is heere
|
||
|
||
Of eloquence that shal be thy peere,
|
||
If that thou lyve-God yeve thee good chaunce,
|
||
And in vertu sende thee continuance!
|
||
For of thy speche I hace greet deyntee;
|
||
I have a sone, and, by the Trinitee,
|
||
|
||
I hadde levere than twenty pound worth lond,
|
||
Though it right now were fallen in myn hond,
|
||
He were a man of swich discrecioun
|
||
As that ye been; fy on possessioun
|
||
But if a man be vertuous withal!
|
||
|
||
I have my sone snybbed, and yet shal,
|
||
For he to vertu listneth nat entende,
|
||
But for to pleye at dees, and to despende
|
||
And lese al that he hath, is his usage.
|
||
And he hath levere talken with a page
|
||
|
||
Than to comune with any gentil wight
|
||
There he myghte lerne gentillesse aright."
|
||
"Straw for youre gentillesse," quod our Hoost,
|
||
"What, Frankeleyn, pardee! sire, wel thou woost
|
||
That ech of yow moot tellen atte leste
|
||
|
||
A tale or two, or breken his biheste."
|
||
"That knowe I wel, sire," quod the Frankeleyn,
|
||
"I prey yow, haveth me nat in desdeyn
|
||
Though to this man I speke a word or two."
|
||
"Telle on thy tale, withouten wordes mo."
|
||
|
||
"Gladly, sire Hoost," quod he, "I wole obeye
|
||
Unto your wyl; now herkneth what I seye.
|
||
I wol yow nat contrarien in no wyse
|
||
As fer as that my wittes wol suffyse;
|
||
I prey to God that it may plesen yow,
|
||
Thanne woot I wel that it is good ynow."
|
||
|
||
THE FRANKELEYNS TALE
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Frankeleyns tale.
|
||
|
||
Thise olde gentil Britouns in hir dayes
|
||
Of diverse aventures maden layes,
|
||
Rymeyed in hir firste Briton tonge;
|
||
Whiche layes with hir instrumentz they songe,
|
||
Or elles redden hem, for hir plesaunce.
|
||
|
||
And oon of hem have I in remembraunce,
|
||
Which I shal seyn, with good-wyl, as I kan.
|
||
But sires, by cause I am a burel man,
|
||
At my bigynnyng first I yow biseche,
|
||
Have me excused of my rude speche.
|
||
|
||
I lerned nevere rethorik, certeyn;
|
||
Thyng that I speke, it moot be bare and pleyn.
|
||
I sleep nevere on the Mount of Parnaso,
|
||
Ne lerned Marcus Tullius Scithero.
|
||
Colours ne knowe I none, withouten drede,
|
||
|
||
But swiche colours as growen in the mede,
|
||
Or elles swiche, as men dye or peynte.
|
||
Colours of rethoryk been me to queynte,
|
||
My spirit feeleth noght of swich mateere;
|
||
But if yow list, my tale shul ye heere.
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Frankeleyns tale.
|
||
|
||
In Armorik, that called is Britayne,
|
||
Ther was a knyght that loved and dide his payne
|
||
To serve a lady in his beste wise;
|
||
And many a labour, many a greet emprise,
|
||
He for his lady wroghte, er she were wonne.
|
||
|
||
For she was oon the faireste under sonne,
|
||
And eek therto comen of so heigh kynrede
|
||
That wel unnethes dorste this knyght for drede
|
||
Telle hir his wo, his peyne, and his distresse.
|
||
But atte laste, she for his worthynesse,
|
||
|
||
And namely for his meke obeysaunce,
|
||
Hath swiche a pitee caught of his penaunce,
|
||
That pryvely she fil of his accord
|
||
To take hym for hir housbonde and hir lord-
|
||
Of swich lordshipe as men han over hir wyves-
|
||
|
||
And for to lede the moore in blisse hir lyves,
|
||
Of his free wyl he swoor hir as a knyght,
|
||
That nevere in al his lyf he, day ne nyght,
|
||
Ne sholde upon hym take no maistrie
|
||
Agayn hir wyl, ne kithe hir jalousie,
|
||
|
||
But hir obeye and folwe hir wyl in al
|
||
As any lovere to his lady shal;
|
||
Save that the name of soveraynetee,
|
||
That wolde he have, for shame of his degree.
|
||
She thanked hym, and with ful greet humblesse
|
||
|
||
She seyde, "Sire, sith of youre gentillesse
|
||
Ye profre me to have so large a reyne,
|
||
Ne wolde nevere God bitwixe us tweyne,
|
||
As in my gilt, were outher werre or stryf.
|
||
Sir, I wol be youre humble trewe wyf,
|
||
|
||
Have heer my trouthe til that myn herte breste."
|
||
Thus been they bothe in quiete and in reste.
|
||
For o thyng, sires, saufly dar I seye,
|
||
That freendes everych oother moot obeye,
|
||
If they wol longe holden compaignye.
|
||
|
||
Love wol nat been constreyned by maistrye;
|
||
Whan maistrie comth, the God of Love anon
|
||
Beteth hise wynges, and farewel, he is gon!
|
||
Love is a thyng as any spirit free.
|
||
Wommen of kynde desiren libertee,
|
||
|
||
And nat to been constreyned as a thral-
|
||
And so doon men, if I sooth seyen shal.
|
||
Looke who that is moost pacient in love,
|
||
He is at his avantage al above.
|
||
Pacience is an heigh vertu, certeyn,
|
||
|
||
For it venquysseth, as thise clerkes seyn,
|
||
Thynges that rigour sholde nevere atteyne.
|
||
For every word men may nat chide or pleyne,
|
||
Lerneth to suffre, or elles, so moot I goon,
|
||
Ye shul it lerne, wherso ye wole or noon.
|
||
|
||
For in this world, certein, ther no wight is
|
||
That he ne dooth or seith som tyme amys.
|
||
Ire, siknesse, or constellacioun
|
||
Wyn, wo, or chaungynge of complexioun
|
||
Causeth ful ofte to doon amys or speken.
|
||
|
||
On every wrong a man may nat be wreken;
|
||
After the tyme moste be temperaunce
|
||
To every wight that kan on governaunce.
|
||
And therfore hath this wise worthy knyght,
|
||
To lyve in ese, suffrance hir bihight,
|
||
|
||
And she to hym ful wisly gan to swere
|
||
That nevere sholde ther be defaute in here.
|
||
Heere may men seen an humble wys accord!
|
||
Thus hath she take hir servant and hir lord,
|
||
Servant in love, and lord in mariage;
|
||
|
||
Thanne was he bothe in lordship and servage-
|
||
Servage? nay but in lordshipe above,
|
||
Sith he hath bothe his lady and his love-
|
||
His lady, certes, and his wyf also,
|
||
The which that lawe of love acordeth to.
|
||
|
||
And whan he was in this prosperitee,
|
||
Hoom with his wyf he gooth to his contree,
|
||
Nat fer fro Pedmark, ther his dwellyng was,
|
||
Where as he lyveth in blisse and in solas.
|
||
Who koude telle, but he hadde wedded be,
|
||
|
||
The joye, the ese, and the prosperitee
|
||
That is bitwixe an housbonde and his wyf?
|
||
A yeer and moore lasted this blisful lyg,
|
||
Til that the knyght of which I speke of thus,
|
||
That of Kayrrud was cleped Arveragus,
|
||
|
||
Shoop hym to goon, and dwelle a yeer or tweyne,
|
||
In Engelond, that cleped was eek Briteyne,
|
||
To seke in armes worship and honour-
|
||
For al his lust he sette in swich labour-
|
||
And dwelled there two yeer, the book seith thus.
|
||
|
||
Now wol I stynten of this Arveragus
|
||
And speken I wole of Dorigene his wyf,
|
||
That loveth hir housbonde as hir hertes lyf.
|
||
For his absence wepeth she and siketh,
|
||
As doon thise noble wyves whan hem liketh.
|
||
|
||
She moorneth, waketh, wayleth, fasteth, pleyneth,
|
||
Desir of his presence hir so destreyneth,
|
||
That al this wyde world she sette at noght,
|
||
Hir freendes whiche that knewe hir hevy thoght,
|
||
Conforten hir in al that ever they may.
|
||
|
||
They prechen hir, they telle hir nyght and day
|
||
That causelees she sleeth hirself, allas!
|
||
And every confort possible in this cas
|
||
They doon to hir, with all hir bisynesse,
|
||
Al for to make hir leve hir hevynesse.
|
||
|
||
By proces, as ye knowen everichoon,
|
||
Men may so longe graven in a stoon,
|
||
Til som figure therinne emprented be.
|
||
So longe han they conforted hir, til she
|
||
Receyved hath by hope and by resoun
|
||
|
||
The emprentyng of hir consolacioun,
|
||
Thurgh which hir grete sorwe gan aswage;
|
||
She may nat alwey duren in swich rage.
|
||
And eek Arveragus, in al this care,
|
||
Hath sent hir lettres hoom of his welfare,
|
||
|
||
And that he wol com hastily agayn,
|
||
Or elles hadde this sorwe hir herte slayn.
|
||
Hir freendes sawe hir sorwe gan to slake,
|
||
And preyden hir on knees, for Goddes sake,
|
||
To com and romen hir in compaignye,
|
||
|
||
Awey to dryve hir derke fantasye.
|
||
And finally she graunted that requeste,
|
||
For wel she saugh that it was for the beste.
|
||
Now stood hir castel faste by the see;
|
||
And often with hir freendes walketh she
|
||
|
||
Hir to disporte, upon the bank an heigh,
|
||
Where as she many a ship and barge seigh
|
||
Seillynge hir cours, where as hem liste go.
|
||
But thanne was that a parcel of hir wo,
|
||
For to hirself ful ofte "allas," seith she,
|
||
|
||
"Is ther no ship of so many as I se
|
||
Wol bryngen hoom my lord? thanne were myn herte
|
||
Al warisshed of hisse bittre peynes smerte."
|
||
Another tyme ther wolde she sitte and thynke
|
||
And caste hir eyen dounward fro the brynke;
|
||
|
||
But whan she saugh the reisly rokkes blake,
|
||
For verray feere, so wolde hir herte quake
|
||
That on hir feet she myghte hir noght sustene.
|
||
Thanne wolde she sitte adoun upon the grene,
|
||
And pitously into the see biholde,
|
||
|
||
And seyn right thus, with sorweful sikes colde:
|
||
"Eterne God, that thurgh thy purveiaunce
|
||
Ledest the world by certein governaunce,
|
||
In ydel, as men seyn, ye no thyng make.
|
||
But, lord, thise grisly feendly rokkes blake,
|
||
|
||
That semen rather a foul confusioun
|
||
Of werk, than any fair creacioun
|
||
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 nys yfostred man, ne bryd, ne beest.
|
||
It dooth no good, to my wit, but anoyeth,
|
||
Se ye nat, lord, how mankynde it destroyeth?
|
||
An hundred thousand bodyes of mankynde
|
||
Han rokkes slayn, al be they nat in mynde;
|
||
|
||
Which mankynde is so fair part of thy werk
|
||
That thou it madest lyk to thyn owene merk.
|
||
Thanne semed it ye hadde a greet chiertee
|
||
Toward mankynde; but how thanne may it bee
|
||
That ye swiche meenes make it to destroyen,
|
||
|
||
Whiche meenes do no good, but evere anoyen?
|
||
I woot wel clerkes wol seyn, as hem leste,
|
||
By argumentz, that al is for the beste,
|
||
Though I ne kan the causes nat yknowe,
|
||
But thilke God, that made wynd to blowe,
|
||
|
||
As kepe my lord; this my conclusioun.
|
||
To clerkes lete I al this disputisoun-
|
||
But wolde God, that alle thise rokkes blake,
|
||
Were sonken into helle for his sake!
|
||
Thise rokkes sleen myn herte for the feere!"
|
||
|
||
Thus wolde she seyn, with many a pitous teere.
|
||
Hir freendes sawe that ti was no disport
|
||
To romen by the see, but disconfort,
|
||
And shopen for to pleyen somwher elles;
|
||
They leden hir by ryveres and by welles,
|
||
|
||
And eek in othere places delitables,
|
||
They dauncen, and they pleyen at ches and tables.
|
||
So on a day, right in the morwe tyde,
|
||
Unto a gardyn that was ther bisyde,
|
||
In which that they hadde maad hir ordinaunce
|
||
|
||
Of vitaille and of oother purveiaunce,
|
||
They goon and pleye hem al the longe day.
|
||
And this was in the sixte morwe of May,
|
||
Which May hadde peynted with his softe shoures
|
||
This gardyn ful of leves and of floures,
|
||
|
||
And craft of mannes hand so curiously
|
||
Arrayed hadde this gardyn trewely,
|
||
That nevere was ther gardyn of swich prys
|
||
But if it were the verray Paradys.
|
||
The odour of floures and the fresshe sighte
|
||
|
||
Wolde han maked any herte lighte
|
||
That evere was born, but if to greet siknesse
|
||
Or to greet sorwe helde it in distresse;
|
||
So ful it was of beautee with plesaunce.
|
||
At after dyner gonne they to daunce
|
||
|
||
And synge also, save Dorigen allone,
|
||
Which made alwey hir compleint and hir moone
|
||
For she ne saugh hym 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.
|
||
Upon this daunce, amonges othere men,
|
||
Daunced a squier biforn Dorigen
|
||
That fressher was, and jolyer of array,
|
||
As to my doom, than is the monthe of May.
|
||
|
||
He syngeth, daunceth, passynge any man
|
||
That is or was, sith that the world bigan.
|
||
Therwith he was, if men sholde hym discryve,
|
||
Oon of the beste farynge man of lyve;
|
||
Yong, strong, right vertuous, and riche, and wys,
|
||
|
||
And wel biloved, and holden in greet prys.
|
||
And shortly, if the sothe I tellen shal,
|
||
Unwityng of this Dorigen at al,
|
||
This lusty squier, servant to Venus,
|
||
Which that ycleped was Aurelius,
|
||
|
||
Hadde loved hir best of any creature
|
||
Two yeer and moore, as was his aventure;
|
||
But nevere dorste he tellen hir his grevaunce,
|
||
Withouten coppe he drank al his penaunce.
|
||
He was despeyred, no thyng dorste he seye
|
||
|
||
Save in his songes somwhat wolde he wreye
|
||
His wo, as in a general compleynyng.
|
||
He seyde he lovede, and was biloved no thyng,
|
||
Of swich matere made he manye layes,
|
||
Songes, compleintes, roundels, virelayes,
|
||
|
||
How that he dorste nat his sorwe telle,
|
||
But langwissheth, as a furye dooth in helle,
|
||
And dye he moste, he seyde, as dide Ekko
|
||
For Narcisus, that dorste nat telle hir wo,
|
||
In oother manere than ye heere me seye,
|
||
|
||
Ne dorste he nat to hir his wo biwreye,
|
||
Save that paraventure som tyme at daunces,
|
||
Ther yonge folk kepen hir observaunces,
|
||
It may wel be he looked on hir face,
|
||
In swich a wise as man that asketh grace;
|
||
|
||
But no thyng wiste she of his entente.
|
||
Nathelees it happed, er they thennes wente,
|
||
By cause that he was hir neighebour,
|
||
And was a man of worship and honour,
|
||
And hadde yknowen hym of tyme yoore,
|
||
|
||
They fille in speche, and forthe moore and moore
|
||
Unto this purpos drough Aurelius.
|
||
And whan he saugh his tyme, he seyde thus:
|
||
"Madame," quod he, "by God that this world made,
|
||
So that I wiste it myghte your herte glade,
|
||
|
||
I wolde that day that youre Arveragus
|
||
Wente over the see, that I, Aurelius,
|
||
Hadde went ther nevere I sholde have come agayn.
|
||
For wel I woot my servyce is in vayn,
|
||
My gerdoun is but brestyng of myn herte.
|
||
|
||
Madame, reweth upon my peynes smerte,
|
||
For with a word ye may me sleen or save.
|
||
Heere at your feet, God wolde that I were grave,
|
||
I ne have as now no leyser moore to seye,
|
||
Have mercy, sweete, or ye wol do me deye."
|
||
|
||
She gan to looke upon Aurelius:
|
||
"Is this youre wyl!" quod she, "and sey ye thus?
|
||
"Nevere erst," quod she, "ne wiste I what ye mente.
|
||
But now, Aurelie, I knowe youre entente.
|
||
By thilke God, that yaf me soule and lyf,
|
||
|
||
Ne shal I nevere been untrewe wyf,
|
||
In word ne werk, as fer as I have wit.
|
||
I wol been his to whom that I am knyt.
|
||
Taak this for fynal answere as of me."
|
||
But after that, in pley thus seyde she,
|
||
|
||
"Aurelie," quod she, "by heighe God above,
|
||
Yet wolde I graunte yow to been youre love,
|
||
Syn I yow se so pitously complayne.
|
||
Looke, what day that endelong Britayne
|
||
Ye remoeve alle the rokkes, stoon by stoon,
|
||
|
||
That they ne lette shipe ne boot to goon,
|
||
I seye, whan ye han maad the coost so clene
|
||
Of rokkes that ther nys no stoon ysene,
|
||
Thanne wol I love yow best of any man!
|
||
Have heer my trouthe in al that evere I kan."
|
||
|
||
"Is ther noon oother grace in yow?" quod he.
|
||
"No, by that lord," quod she, "that maked me;
|
||
For wel I woot that it shal nevere 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 hym liketh?"
|
||
Aurelius ful ofte soore siketh,
|
||
Wo was Aurelie, whan that he this herde,
|
||
And with a sorweful herte he thus answered.
|
||
|
||
"Madame," quod he, "this were an inpossible;
|
||
Thanne moot I dye of sodeyn deth horrible."
|
||
And with that word he turned hym anon.
|
||
Tho coome hir othere freendes many oon,
|
||
And in the aleyes romeden up and doun,
|
||
|
||
And no thyng wiste of this conclusioun,
|
||
But sodeynly bigonne revel newe,
|
||
Til that the brighte sonne loste his hewe,
|
||
For thorisonte hath reft the sonne his lyght-
|
||
This is as muche to seye as, ti was nyght-
|
||
|
||
And hoom they goon in joye and in solas,
|
||
Save oonly wrecche Aurelius, allas!
|
||
He to his hous is goon with sorweful herte;
|
||
He seeth he may nat fro his deeth asterte;
|
||
Hym semed that he felte his herte colde;
|
||
|
||
Up to the hevene hise handes he gan holde,
|
||
And on hise knowes bare he sette hym doun,
|
||
And in his ravyng seyde his orisoun.
|
||
For verray wo out of his wit he breyde;
|
||
He nyste what he spak, but thus he seyde:
|
||
|
||
With pitous herte his pleynt hath he bigonne
|
||
Unto the goddes, and first unto the sonne
|
||
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 heighe,
|
||
Lord Phebus, cast thy mericiable eighe
|
||
On wrecche Aurelie, which that am but lorn.
|
||
Lo, lord, my lady hath my deeth ysworn
|
||
|
||
Withoute gilt, but thy benignytee
|
||
Upon my dedly herte have som pitee.
|
||
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 holpen and in what wyse.
|
||
Your blisful suster, Lucina the sheene,
|
||
That of the see is chief goddesse and queene,
|
||
(Though Neptunus have deitee in the see,
|
||
Yet emperisse aboven hym is she)
|
||
|
||
Ye knowen wel, lord, that right as hir desir
|
||
Is to be quyked and lightned of youre fir,
|
||
For which she folweth yow ful bisily,
|
||
Right so the see desireth naturelly
|
||
To folwen hir, as she that is goddesse
|
||
|
||
Bothe in the see and ryveres moore and lesse.
|
||
Wherfore, lord Phebus, this is my requeste;
|
||
Do this miracle, or do myn herte breste,
|
||
That now next at this opposicioun
|
||
Which in the signe shal be of the Leoun,
|
||
|
||
As preieth hir, so greet a flood to brynge
|
||
That fyve fadme at the leeste it oversprynge
|
||
The hyeste rokke in Armorik Briteyne,
|
||
And lat this flood endure yeres tweyne.
|
||
Thanne, certes, to my lady may I seye
|
||
|
||
`Holdeth youre heste, the rokkes been aweye.'
|
||
Lord Phebus, dooth this miracle for me,
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
Thanne shal she been evene atte fulle alway;
|
||
And spryng flood laste bothe nyght and day;
|
||
And but she vouche sauf in swich manere
|
||
To graunte me my sovereyn lady deere,
|
||
Prey hir to synken every rok adoun
|
||
|
||
Into hir owene dirke regioun
|
||
Under the ground ther Pluto dwelleth inne,
|
||
Or nevere mo shal I my lady wynne.
|
||
Thy temple in Delphos wol I barefoot seke,
|
||
Lord Phebus; se the teeris on my cheke,
|
||
|
||
And of my peyne have som compassioun!"
|
||
And with that word in swowne he fil adoun,
|
||
And longe tyme he lay forth in a traunce.
|
||
His brother, which that knew of his penaunce,
|
||
Up caughte hym, and to bedde he hath hym broght.
|
||
|
||
Dispeyred in this torment and this thoght
|
||
Lete I this woful creature lye;
|
||
Chese he for me wheither he wol lyve or dye.
|
||
Arveragus with heele and greet honour,
|
||
As he that was of chivalrie the flour,
|
||
|
||
Is comen hoom, and othere worthy men.
|
||
O blisful artow now, thou Dorigen!
|
||
That hast thy lusty housbonde in thyne armes,
|
||
The fresshe knyght, the worthy man or armes,
|
||
That loveth thee, as his owene hertes lyf.
|
||
|
||
No thyng list hym to been ymaginatyf
|
||
If any wight hadde spoke, whil he was oute,
|
||
To hire of love; he hadde of it no doute,
|
||
He noght entendeth to no swich mateere,
|
||
But daunceth, justeth, maketh hir good cheere,
|
||
|
||
And thus in joye and blisse I lete hem dwelle,
|
||
And of the sike Aurelius I wol telle.
|
||
In langour and in torment furyes
|
||
Two yeer and moore lay wrecche Aurelyus,
|
||
Eer any foot he myghte on erthe gon;
|
||
|
||
Ne confort in this tyme hadde he noon,
|
||
Save of his brother, which that was a clerk.
|
||
He knew of al this wo and al this werk;
|
||
For to noon oother creature, certeyn,
|
||
Of this matere he dorste no word seyn.
|
||
|
||
Under his brest he baar it moore secree
|
||
Than evere dide Pamphilus for Galathee.
|
||
His brest was hool withoute 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 myghte touche the arwe, or come therby.
|
||
His brother weep and wayled pryvely,
|
||
Til atte laste hym fil in remembraunce
|
||
That whiles he was at Orliens in Fraunce,
|
||
|
||
As yonge clerkes, that been lykerous
|
||
To reden artes that been curious,
|
||
Seken in every halke and every herne
|
||
Particular sciences for to lerne,
|
||
He hym remembred, that upon a day
|
||
|
||
At Orliens in studie a book he say
|
||
Of magyk natureel, which his felawe,
|
||
That was that tyme a bacheler of lawe-
|
||
Al were he ther to lerne another craft-
|
||
Hadde prively upon his desk ylaft;
|
||
|
||
Which book spak muchel of the operaciouns,
|
||
Touchynge the eighte and twenty mansiouns
|
||
That longen to the moone, and swich folye
|
||
As in oure dayes is nat worth a flye.
|
||
For hooly chirches feith in oure bileve
|
||
|
||
Ne suffreth noon illusioun us to greve.
|
||
And whan this book was in his remembraunce,
|
||
Anon for joye his herte gan to daunce,
|
||
And to hymself he seyde pryvely,
|
||
"My brother shal be warisshed hastily;
|
||
|
||
For I am siker that ther be sciences
|
||
By whiche men make diverse apparences
|
||
Swiche as thise subtile tregetoures pleye;
|
||
For ofte at feestes have I wel herd seye
|
||
That tregetours withinne an halle large
|
||
|
||
Have maad come in a water and a barge,
|
||
And in the halle rowen up and doun.
|
||
Somtyme hath semed come a grym leoun;
|
||
And somtyme floures sprynge as in a mede,
|
||
Somtyme a vyne, and grapes white and rede,
|
||
|
||
Somtyme a castel al of lym and stoon;
|
||
And whan hem lyked, voyded it anoon,
|
||
Thus semed it to every mannes sighte.
|
||
Now thanne conclude I thus, that if I myghte
|
||
|
||
At Orliens som oold felawe yfynde
|
||
|
||
That hadde this moones mansions in mynde,
|
||
Or oother magyk natureel above,
|
||
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
|
||
|
||
Of Britaigne weren yvoyded everichon,
|
||
But looketh now for no necligence or slouthe
|
||
Ye tarie us heere, no lenger than to-morwe."
|
||
"Nay," quod this clerk, "have heer my feith to borwe."
|
||
To bedde is goon Aurelius whan hym leste,
|
||
|
||
And wel ny al that nyght he hadde his reste;
|
||
What for his labour and his hope of blisse,
|
||
His woful hrete of penaunce hadde a lisse.
|
||
Upon the morwe, whan that it was day,
|
||
To Britaigne tooke they the righte way,
|
||
|
||
Aurelie and this magicien bisyde,
|
||
And been descended ther they wolde abyde.
|
||
And this was, as thise bookes me remembre,
|
||
The colde frosty sesoun of Decembre.
|
||
Phebus wax old, and hewed lyk latoun,
|
||
|
||
That in this hoote declynacioun
|
||
Shoon as the burned gold, and stremes brighte;
|
||
But now in Capricorn adoun he lighte,
|
||
Where as he shoon ful pale, I dar wel seyn.
|
||
The bittre frostes, with the sleet and reyn,
|
||
|
||
Destroyed hath the grene in every yerd;
|
||
Janus sit by the fyr, with double berd,
|
||
And drynketh of his bugle horn the wyn.
|
||
Biforn hym stant brawen of the tusked swyn,
|
||
|
||
And `Nowel' crieth every lusty man.
|
||
Aurelius, in al that evere he kan,
|
||
Dooth to his master chiere and reverence,
|
||
And preyeth hym to doon his diligence
|
||
To bryngen hym out of his peynes smerte,
|
||
|
||
Or with a swerd that he wolde slitte his herte.
|
||
This subtil clerk swich routhe had of this man,
|
||
That nyght and day he spedde hym that he kan
|
||
To wayten a tyme of his conclusioun,
|
||
This is to seye, to maken illusioun
|
||
|
||
By swich an apparence or jogelrye-
|
||
I ne kan no termes of astrologye-
|
||
That she and every wight sholde wene and seye
|
||
That of Britaigne the rokkes were aweye,
|
||
Or ellis they were sonken under grounde.
|
||
|
||
So atte laste he hath his tyme yfounde
|
||
To maken hise japes and his wrecchednesse
|
||
Of swich a supersticious cursednesse.
|
||
Hise tables Tolletanes forth he brought,
|
||
Ful wel corrected, ne ther lakked nought,
|
||
|
||
Neither his collect ne hise expans yeeris,
|
||
Ne hise rootes, ne hise othere geeris,
|
||
As been his centris and hise argumentz,
|
||
And hise proporcioneles convenientz
|
||
For hise equacions in every thyng.
|
||
|
||
And by his eighte speere in his wirkyng
|
||
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 kalkuled al this.
|
||
|
||
Whan he hadde founde his firste mansioun,
|
||
He knew the remenaunt by proporcioun,
|
||
And knew the arisyng of his moone weel,
|
||
And in whos face and terme, and everydeel;
|
||
And knew ful weel the moones mansioun
|
||
|
||
Acordaunt to his operacioun,
|
||
And knew also hise othere observaunces
|
||
For swiche illusiouns and swiche meschaunces
|
||
As hethen folk useden in thilke dayes;-
|
||
For which no lenger maked he delayes,
|
||
|
||
But thurgh his magik, for a wyke or tweye,
|
||
It semed that alle the rokkes were aweye.
|
||
Aurelius, which that yet despeired is,
|
||
Wher he shal han his love, or fare amys,
|
||
Awaiteth nyght and day on this myracle.
|
||
|
||
And whan he knew that ther was noon obstacle,
|
||
That voyded were thise rokkes everychon,
|
||
Doun to hise 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."
|
||
And to the temple his wey forth hath he holde
|
||
Where as he knew he sholde his lady see,
|
||
And whan he saugh his tyme, anon right hee
|
||
With dredful herte and with ful humble cheere
|
||
|
||
Salewed hath his sovereyn lady deere.
|
||
"My righte lady," quod this woful man,
|
||
"Whom I moost drede and love as I best kan,
|
||
And lothest were of al this world displese,
|
||
Nere it that I for yow have swich disese
|
||
|
||
That I moste dyen heere at youre foot anon,
|
||
Noght wolde I telle how me is wo bigon;
|
||
But, certes, outher moste I dye or pleyne,
|
||
Ye sle me giltelees for verray peyne.
|
||
But of my deeth thogh that ye have no routhe,
|
||
|
||
Avyseth yow er that ye breke youre trouthe.
|
||
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 thyng of right
|
||
|
||
Of yow, my sovereyn lady, but youre grace;
|
||
But in a gardyn yond at swich a place
|
||
Ye woot right wel what ye bihighten me,
|
||
And in myn hand youre trouthe plighten ye
|
||
To love me best, God woot ye seyde so,
|
||
|
||
Al be that I unworthy be therto.
|
||
Madame, I speke it for the honour of yow,
|
||
Moore than to save myn hertes lyf right now.
|
||
I have do so as ye comanded me,
|
||
And if ye vouchesauf, ye may go see.
|
||
|
||
Dooth as yow list, have youre biheste in mynde,
|
||
For, quyk or deed, right there ye shal me fynde.
|
||
In yow lith al, to do me lyve of deye,
|
||
But wel I woot the rokkes been aweye!"
|
||
He taketh his leve, and she astonied stood,
|
||
|
||
In al hir face nas a drope of blood.
|
||
She wende nevere han come in swich a trappe.
|
||
"Allas," quod she, "that evere this sholde happe.
|
||
For wende I nevere, by possibilitee,
|
||
That swich a monstre or merveille myghte be.
|
||
|
||
It is agayns the proces of nature."
|
||
And hoom she goth a sorweful creature,
|
||
For verray feere unnethe may she go.
|
||
She wepeth, wailleth, al a day or two,
|
||
And swowneth that it routhe was to see;
|
||
|
||
But why it was, to no wight tolde shee,
|
||
For out of towne was goon Arveragus.
|
||
But to hirself she spak, and seyde thus,
|
||
With face pale and with ful sorweful cheere,
|
||
In hire compleynt, as ye shal after heere.
|
||
|
||
"Allas!" quod she, "on thee, Fortune, I pleyne,
|
||
That unwar wrapped hast me in thy cheyne;
|
||
For which tescape woot I no socour
|
||
Save oonly deeth or elles dishonour;
|
||
Oon of thise two bihoveth me to chese.
|
||
|
||
But nathelees, yet have I levere to lese
|
||
My lyf, thanne of my body have a shame,
|
||
Or knowe myselven fals or lese my name,
|
||
And with my deth I may be quyt, ywis;
|
||
Hath ther nat many a noble wyf er this
|
||
|
||
And many a mayde yslayn hirself, allas,
|
||
Rather than with hir body doon trespas?
|
||
Yis, certes, lo, thise stories beren witnesse,
|
||
Whan thritty tirauntz, ful of cursednesse,
|
||
Hadde slayn Phidoun in Atthenes, at feste,
|
||
|
||
They comanded hise doghtres for tareste,
|
||
And bryngen hem biforn hem in despit,
|
||
Al naked, to fulfille hir foul delit,
|
||
And in hir fadres blood they made hem daunce
|
||
Upon the pavement, God yeve hem myschaunce;
|
||
|
||
For which thise woful maydens ful of drede,
|
||
Rather than they wolde lese hir maydenhede,
|
||
They prively been stirt into a welle
|
||
And dreynte hemselven, as the bookes telle.
|
||
They of Mecene leete enquere and seke
|
||
|
||
Of Lacedomye fifty maydens eke,
|
||
On whiche they wolden doon hir lecherye;
|
||
But was ther noon of al that compaignye
|
||
That she nas slayn, and with a good entente
|
||
Chees rather for to dye than assente
|
||
|
||
To been oppressed of hir maydenhede.
|
||
Why sholde I thanne to dye been in drede?
|
||
Lo, eek the tiraunt Aristoclides,
|
||
That loved a mayden heet Stymphalides,
|
||
Whan that hir fader slayn was on a nyght,
|
||
|
||
Unto Dianes temple goth she right,
|
||
And hente the ymage in hir handes two;
|
||
Fro which ymage wolde she nevere go,
|
||
No wight ne myghte hir handes of it arace,
|
||
Til she was slayn right in the selve place.
|
||
|
||
Now sith that maydens hadden swich despit,
|
||
To been defouled with mannes foul delit,
|
||
Wel oghte a wyf rather hirselven slee,
|
||
Than be defouled, as it thynketh me.
|
||
What shal I seyn of Hasdrubales wyf
|
||
|
||
That at Cartage birafte hirself hir lyf?
|
||
For whan she saugh that Romayns wan the toun,
|
||
She took hir children alle and skipte adoun
|
||
Into the fyr, and chees rather to dye
|
||
Than any Romayn dide hir vileynye.
|
||
|
||
Hath nat Lucresse yslayn hirself, allas,
|
||
At Rome whan that she oppressed was
|
||
Of Tarquyn, for hir thoughte it was a shame
|
||
To lyven whan she hadde lost hir name?
|
||
The sevene maydens of Melesie also
|
||
|
||
Han slayn hemself, for verray drede and wo
|
||
Rather than folk of Gawle hem sholde oppresse.
|
||
Mo than a thousand stories, as I gesse,
|
||
Koude I now telle as touchynge this mateere.
|
||
Whan Habradate was slayn, his wyf so deere
|
||
|
||
Hirselven slow, and leet hir blood to glyde
|
||
In Habradates woundes depe and wyde;
|
||
And seyde, "My body at the leeste way
|
||
Ther shal no wight defoulen, if I may."
|
||
What sholde I mo ensamples heer of sayn?
|
||
|
||
Sith that so manye han hemselven slayn,
|
||
Wel rather than they wolde defouled be,
|
||
I wol conclude that it is bet for me
|
||
To sleen myself, than been defouled thus.
|
||
I wol be trewe unto Arveragus,
|
||
|
||
Or rather sleen myself in som manere,
|
||
As dide Demociones doghter deere,
|
||
By cause that she wolde nat defouled be.
|
||
O Cedasus, it is ful greet pitee
|
||
To reden how thy doghtren deyde, allas,
|
||
|
||
That slowe hemself, for swich manere cas!
|
||
As greet a pitee was it, or wel moore,
|
||
The Theban mayden, that for Nichanore
|
||
Hirselven slow right for swich manere wo.
|
||
Another Theban mayden dide right so;
|
||
|
||
For oon of Macidonye hadde hire oppressed,
|
||
She with hire deeth hir maydenhede redressed.
|
||
What shal I seye of Nicerates wyf,
|
||
That for swich cas birafte hirself hir lyf?
|
||
How trewe eek was to Alcebiades
|
||
|
||
His love that rather for to dyen chees
|
||
Than for to suffre his body unburyed be.
|
||
"Lo, which a wyf was Alceste," quod she,
|
||
"What seith Omer of goode Penalopee?
|
||
Al Grece knoweth of hire chastitee.
|
||
|
||
Pardee of Lacedomya is writen thus,
|
||
That whan at Troie was slayn Protheselaus,
|
||
No lenger wolde she lyve after his day.
|
||
The same of noble Porcia telle I may,
|
||
Withoute Brutus koude she nat lyve,
|
||
|
||
To whom she hadde al hool hir herte yeve.
|
||
The parfit wyfhod of Arthemesie
|
||
Honured is thurgh al the Barbarie.
|
||
O Teuta queene, thy wyfly chastitee
|
||
To alle wyves may a mirrour bee!
|
||
|
||
The same thyng I seye of Bilyea,
|
||
Of Rodogone, and eek Valeria."
|
||
Thus pleyned Dorigene a day or tweye,
|
||
Purposynge evere that she wolde deye.
|
||
But nathelees, upon the thridde nyght
|
||
|
||
Hoom cam Arveragus, this worthy knyght,
|
||
And asked hir why that she weep so soore.
|
||
And she gan wepen ever lenger the moore.
|
||
"Allas!" quod she, "that evere I was born.
|
||
Thus have I seyd," quod she, "thus have I sworn;"
|
||
|
||
And toold hym al as ye han herd bifore,
|
||
It nedeth nat reherce it yow namoore.
|
||
This housbonde with glad chiere in freendly wyse
|
||
Answerde and seyde, as I shal yow devyse,
|
||
"Is ther oght elles, Dorigen, but this?"
|
||
|
||
"Nay, nay," quod she, "God helpe me so, as wys,
|
||
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 youre trouthe holden, by my fay.
|
||
|
||
For God so wisly have mercy upon me,
|
||
I hadde wel levere ystiked for to be
|
||
For verray love which that I to yow have,
|
||
But if ye sholde your trouthe kepe and save.
|
||
Trouthe is the hyeste thyng that man may kepe."
|
||
|
||
But with that word he brast anon to wepe
|
||
And seyde, "I yow forbede, up peyne of deeth,
|
||
That nevere whil thee lasteth lyf ne breeth,
|
||
To no wight telle thou of this aventure;
|
||
As I may best, I wol my wo endure.
|
||
|
||
Ne make no contenance of hevynesse,
|
||
That folk of yow may demen harm or gesse."
|
||
And forth he cleped a squier and a mayde;
|
||
"Gooth forth anon with Dorigen," he sayde,
|
||
"And bryngeth hir to swich a place anon,"
|
||
|
||
They take hir leve, and on hir wey they gon,
|
||
But they ne weste why she thider wente,
|
||
He nolde no wight tellen his entente.
|
||
Paraventure, an heep of yow, ywis,
|
||
Wol holden hym a lewed man in this,
|
||
|
||
That he wol putte his wyf in jupartie.
|
||
Herkneth the tale er ye upon hire crie;
|
||
She may have bettre fortune than yow semeth,
|
||
And whan that ye han herd the tale, demeth.
|
||
This squier, which that highte Aurelius,
|
||
|
||
On Dorigen that was so amorus,
|
||
Of aventure happed hir to meete
|
||
Amydde the toun, right in the quykkest strete,
|
||
As she was bown to goon the wey forth-right
|
||
Toward the gardyn, ther as she had hight.
|
||
|
||
And he was to the gardynward also,
|
||
For wel he spyed whan she wolde go
|
||
Out of hir hous to any maner place.
|
||
But thus they mette, of aventure or grace
|
||
And he saleweth hir with glad entente,
|
||
|
||
And asked of hir whiderward she wente.
|
||
And she answerde, half as she were mad,
|
||
"Unto the gardyn as myn housbonde bad,
|
||
My trouthe for to holde, allas! allas!"
|
||
Aurelius gan wondren on this cas,
|
||
|
||
And in his herte hadde greet compassioun
|
||
Of hir and of hir lamentacioun,
|
||
And of Arveragus, the worthy knyght,
|
||
That bad hire holden al that she had hight,
|
||
So looth hym was his wyf sholde breke hir trouthe;
|
||
|
||
And in his herte he caughte of this greet routhe,
|
||
Considerynge the beste on every syde
|
||
That fro his lust yet were hym levere abyde
|
||
Than doon so heigh a cherlyssh wrecchednesse
|
||
Agayns franchise and alle gentillesse.-
|
||
|
||
For which in fewe wordes seyde he thus:
|
||
"Madame, seyeth to your lord Arveragus,
|
||
That sith I se his grete gentillesse
|
||
To yow, and eek I se wel youre distresse,
|
||
That him were levere han shame-and that were routhe-
|
||
|
||
Than ye to me sholde breke thus youre trouthe,
|
||
I have wel levere evere to suffre wo
|
||
Than I departe the love bitwix yow two.
|
||
I yow relesse, madame, into youre hond
|
||
Quyt every surement and every bond,
|
||
|
||
That ye han maad to me as heer biforn,
|
||
Sith thilke tyme which that ye were born.
|
||
My trouthe I plighte, I shal yow never repreve
|
||
Of no biheste, and heere I take my leve,
|
||
As of the treweste and the beste wyf
|
||
|
||
That evere yet I knew in al my lyf.
|
||
But every wyf be war of hir biheeste,
|
||
On Dorigene remembreth atte leeste!
|
||
Thus kan a squier doon a gentil dede
|
||
As wel as kan a knyght, with outen drede."
|
||
|
||
She thonketh hym upon hir knees al bare,
|
||
And hoom unto hir housbonde is she fare,
|
||
And tolde hym al, as ye han herd me sayd;
|
||
And be ye siker, he was so weel apayd
|
||
That it were inpossible me to wryte.
|
||
|
||
What sholde I lenger of this cas endyte?
|
||
Arveragus and Dorigene his wyf
|
||
In sovereyn blisse leden forth hir lyf,
|
||
Nevere eft ne was ther angre hem bitwene.
|
||
He cherisseth hir as though she were a queene,
|
||
|
||
And she was to hym trewe for everemoore.-
|
||
Of thise two folk ye gete of me namoore.
|
||
Aurelius, that his cost hath al forlorn
|
||
Curseth the tyme that evere he was born.
|
||
"Allas," quod he, "allas, that I bihighte
|
||
Of pured gold a thousand pound of wighte
|
||
Unto this philosophre! how shal I do?
|
||
I se namoore but that I am fordo;
|
||
Myn heritage moot I nedes selle
|
||
And been a beggere; heere may I nat dwelle,
|
||
|
||
And shamen al my kynrede in this place,
|
||
But I of hym may gete bettre grace.
|
||
But nathelees I wole of hym assaye
|
||
At certeyn dayes yeer by yeer to paye,
|
||
And thanke hym of his grete curteisye;
|
||
|
||
My trouthe wol I kepe, I wol nat lye."
|
||
With herte soor he gooth unto his cofre,
|
||
And broghte gold unto this philosophre
|
||
The value of fyve hundred pound, I gesse,
|
||
And hym bisecheth of his gentillesse
|
||
|
||
To graunte hym dayes of the remenaunte,
|
||
And seyde, "Maister, I dar wel make avaunt,
|
||
I failled nevere of my trouthe as yit.
|
||
For sikerly my dette shal be quyt
|
||
Towareds yow, how evere that I fare,
|
||
|
||
To goon a begged in my kirtle bare!
|
||
But wolde ye vouche sauf upon seuretee
|
||
Two yeer or thre, for to respiten me,
|
||
Thanne were I wel, for elles moot I selle
|
||
Myn heritage, ther is namoore to telle."
|
||
|
||
This philosophre sobrely answerde,
|
||
And seyde thus, whan he thise wordes herde,
|
||
"Have I nat holden covenant unto thee?"
|
||
"Yes, certes, wel and trewely," quod he.
|
||
"Hastow nat had thy lady, as thee liketh?"
|
||
|
||
"No, no," quod he, and sorwefully he siketh.
|
||
"What was the cause, tel me if thou kan?"
|
||
Aurelius his tale anon bigan,
|
||
And tolde hym al, as ye han herd bifoore,
|
||
It nedeth nat to yow reherce it moore.
|
||
|
||
He seide, Arveragus of gentillesse
|
||
Hadde levere dye in sorwe and in distresse
|
||
Than that his wyf were of hir trouthe fals;
|
||
The sorwe of Dorigen he tolde hym als,
|
||
How looth hir was to been a wikked wyf,
|
||
|
||
And that she levere had lost that day hir lyf,
|
||
And that hir trouthe she swoor, thurgh innocence,
|
||
She nevere erst hadde herd 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 hym ageyn.
|
||
This al and som, ther is namoore to seyn."
|
||
This philosophre answerde, "Leeve brother,
|
||
Everich of yow dide gentilly til oother.
|
||
Thou art a squier, and he is a knyght;
|
||
|
||
But God forbede, for his blisful myght,
|
||
But if a clerk koude doon a gentil dede
|
||
As wel as any of yow, it is no drede.
|
||
Sire, I releesse thee thy thousand pound,
|
||
As thou right now were cropen out of the ground,
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere er now ne haddest knowen me;
|
||
For, sire, I wol nat taken a peny of thee
|
||
For al my craft, ne noght for my travaille.
|
||
Thou hast ypayed wel for my vitaille,
|
||
It is ynogh, and farewel, have good day."
|
||
|
||
And took his hors, and forth he goth his way.
|
||
Lordynges, this questioun wolde I aske now,
|
||
Which was the mooste fre, as thynketh yow?
|
||
Now telleth me, er that ye ferther wende,
|
||
I kan namoore, my tale is at an ende.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Frankeleyns tale.
|
||
|
||
Part 27
|
||
|
||
GROUP G.
|
||
|
||
THE SECONDE NONNES TALE
|
||
|
||
The Prologe of the Seconde Nonnes Tale.
|
||
|
||
The ministre and the norice unto vices,
|
||
Which that men clepe in Englissh ydelnesse,
|
||
That porter of the gate is of delices,
|
||
To eschue, and by hir contrarie hir oppresse,
|
||
(That is to seyn by leveful bisynesse),
|
||
Wel oghten we to doon al oure entente,
|
||
Lest that the feend thurgh ydelnesse us shente.
|
||
|
||
For he, that with hise thousand cordes slye
|
||
Continuelly us waiteth to biclappe,
|
||
Whan he may man in ydelnesse espye,
|
||
He kan so lightly cacche hym in his trappe,
|
||
Til that a man be hent right by the lappe,
|
||
He nys nat war the feend hath hym in honde.
|
||
Wel oghte us werche, and ydelnesse withstonde.
|
||
|
||
And though men dradden nevere for to dye,
|
||
Yet seen men wel by resoun, doutelees,
|
||
That ydelnesse is roten slogardye,
|
||
Of which ther nevere comth no good encrees;
|
||
And seen that slouthe hir holdeth in a lees,
|
||
Oonly to slepe, and for to ete and drynke,
|
||
And to devouren al that othere swynke.
|
||
|
||
And for to putte us fro swich ydelnesse,
|
||
That cause is of so greet confusioun,
|
||
I have heer doon my feithful bisynesse,
|
||
After the legende, in translacioun
|
||
Right of thy glorious lyf and passioun,
|
||
Thou with thy gerland wroght with rose and lilie,
|
||
Thee meene I, mayde and martir, seint Cecilie.
|
||
|
||
Invocacio ad Mariam.
|
||
|
||
And thow that flour of virgines art alle,
|
||
Of whom that Bernard list so wel to write,
|
||
To thee at my bigynnyng first I calle,
|
||
Thou confort of us wrecches, do me endite
|
||
Thy maydens deeth, that wan thurgh hir merite
|
||
|
||
The eterneel lyf, and of the feend victorie,
|
||
As man may after reden in hir storie.
|
||
|
||
Thow mayde and mooder, doghter of thy sone,
|
||
Thow welle of mercy, synful soules cure,
|
||
In whom that God for bountee chees to wone,
|
||
Thow humble and heigh, over every creature
|
||
Thow nobledest so ferforth oure nature,
|
||
That no desdeyn the makere hadde of kynde,
|
||
His sone in blood and flessh to clothe and wynde,
|
||
|
||
Withinne the cloistre blisful of thy sydis
|
||
Took mannes shape the eterneel love and pees,
|
||
That of the tryne compas lord and gyde is,
|
||
Whom erthe and see and hevene out of relees
|
||
Ay heryen, and thou, virgine wemmelees,
|
||
Baar of thy body, and dweltest mayden pure,
|
||
The creatour of every creature.
|
||
|
||
Assembled is in thee magnificence
|
||
With mercy, goodnesse, and with swich pitee
|
||
That thou, that art the sonne of excellence,
|
||
Nat oonly helpest hem that preyen thee,
|
||
But oftentyme, of thy benygnytee,
|
||
Ful frely, er that men thyn help biseche,
|
||
Thou goost biforn, and art hir lyves leche.
|
||
|
||
Now help, thow meeke and blisful faire mayde,
|
||
Me, flemed wrecche in this desert of galle;
|
||
Thynk on the womman Cananee, that sayde
|
||
That whelpes eten somme of the crommes alle,
|
||
That from hir lordes table been yfalle,
|
||
And though that I, unworthy sone of Eve,
|
||
Be synful, yet accepte my bileve.
|
||
|
||
And for that feith is deed withouten werkis,
|
||
So for to werken yif me wit and space,
|
||
That I be quit fro thennes that moost derk is.
|
||
O thou, that art so fair and ful of grace,
|
||
Be myn advocat in that heighe place
|
||
Ther as withouten ende is songe Osanne,
|
||
Thow Cristes mooder, doghter deere of Anne!
|
||
|
||
And of thy light my soule in prison lighte,
|
||
That troubled is by the contagioun
|
||
Of my body, and also by the wighte
|
||
Of erthely lust and fals affeccioun,
|
||
O havene of refut, O salvacioune
|
||
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 write,
|
||
Foryeve me, that I do no diligence
|
||
This ilke storie subtilly to endite,
|
||
For bothe have I the wordes and sentence
|
||
Of hym that at the seintes reverence
|
||
The storie wroot, and folwe hir legende.
|
||
I pray yow, that ye wole my werk amende.
|
||
|
||
First wolde I yow the name of seinte Cecile
|
||
Expowne, as men may in hir storie see.
|
||
It is to seye in Englissh, `hevenes lilie'
|
||
For pure chaastnesse of virginitee,
|
||
Or for she whitnesse hadde of honestee
|
||
And grene of conscience, and of good fame
|
||
The soote savour, lilie was hir name.
|
||
|
||
Or Cecilie is to seye, `the wey to blynde,'
|
||
For she ensample was by good techynge;
|
||
Or elles, Cecile, as I writen fynde
|
||
Is joyned by a manere conjoynynge
|
||
Of `hevene' and `lia,' and heere in figurynge
|
||
The `hevene' is set for thoght of hoolynesse,
|
||
And `lia' for hir lastynge bisynesse.
|
||
|
||
Cecile may eek be seyd, in this manere,
|
||
`Wantynge of blyndnesse,' for hir grete light
|
||
Of sapience, and for hire thewes cleere
|
||
Or elles, loo, this maydens name bright
|
||
Of `hevene' and `leos' comth, for which by right
|
||
Men myghte hir wel `the hevene of peple' calle,
|
||
Ensample of goode and wise werkes alle.
|
||
|
||
For `leos' `peple' in Englissh is to seye,
|
||
And right as men may in the hevene see
|
||
The sonne and moone and sterres every weye,
|
||
Right so men goostly, in this mayden free,
|
||
Syen of feith the magnanymytee,
|
||
And eek the cleernesse hool of sapience,
|
||
And sondry werkes, brighte of excellence.
|
||
|
||
And right so as thise philosophres write
|
||
That hevene is swift and round and eek brennynge,
|
||
Right so was faire Cecilie the white
|
||
Ful swift and bisy evere in good werkynge,
|
||
And round and hool in good perseverynge,
|
||
And brennynge evere in charite ful brighte.
|
||
Now have I yow declared what she highte.
|
||
|
||
Here bigynneth the Seconde Nonnes tale of the lyf of Seinte Cecile.
|
||
|
||
This mayden, bright Cecilie, as hir lyf seith,
|
||
Was comen of Romayns, and of noble kynde,
|
||
And from hir cradel up fostred in the feith
|
||
Of Crist, and bar his gospel in hir mynde.
|
||
She nevere cessed, as I writen fynde,
|
||
Of hir preyere, and God to love and drede,
|
||
Bisekynge hym to kepe hir maydenhede.
|
||
|
||
And whan this mayden sholde unto a man
|
||
Ywedded be, that was ful yong of age,
|
||
Which that ycleped was Valerian,
|
||
And day was comen of hir mariage,
|
||
She, ful devout and humble in hir corage,
|
||
Under hir robe of gold, that sat ful faire,
|
||
Hadde next hir flessh yclad hir in an haire.
|
||
|
||
And whil the orgnes maden melodie,
|
||
To God allone in herte thus sang she:
|
||
"O Lord, my soule and eek my body gye
|
||
Unwemmed, lest that I confounded be."
|
||
And for his love that dyde upon a tree,
|
||
Every seconde and thridde day she faste,
|
||
Ay biddynge in hir orisons ful faste.
|
||
|
||
The nyght cam, and to bedde moste she gon
|
||
With hir housbonde, as ofte is the manere,
|
||
And pryvely to hym she seyde anon,
|
||
"O sweete and wel biloved spouse deere,
|
||
Ther is a conseil, and ye wolde it heere,
|
||
Which that right fayn I wolde unto yow seye,
|
||
So that ye swere ye shul me nat biwreye."
|
||
|
||
Valerian gan faste unto hire swere
|
||
That for no cas, ne thyng that myghte be,
|
||
He sholde nevere mo biwreyen here,
|
||
And thanne at erst to hym thus seyde she,
|
||
"I have an Aungel which that loveth me,
|
||
That with greet love, wher so I wake or sleepe,
|
||
Is redy ay my body for to kepe.
|
||
|
||
And if that he may feelen out of drede
|
||
That ye me touche, or love in vileynye,
|
||
He right anon wol sle yow with the dede,
|
||
And in youre yowthe thus ye sholden dye.
|
||
And if that ye in clene love me gye,
|
||
He wol yow loven as me for youre clennesse,
|
||
And shewen yow his joye and his brightnesse."
|
||
|
||
Valerian, corrected as God wolde,
|
||
Answerde agayn, "If I shal trusten thee,
|
||
Lat me that aungel se, and hym biholde,
|
||
And if that it a verray aungel bee,
|
||
Thanne wol I doon as thou hast prayed me;
|
||
And if thou love another man, forsothe
|
||
Right with this swerd thanne wol I sle yow bothe."
|
||
|
||
Cecile answerde anon right in this wise,
|
||
"If that yow list, the aungel shul ye see,
|
||
So that ye trowe in Crist, and yow baptize.
|
||
Gooth forth to Via Apia," quod she,
|
||
"That fro this toun ne stant but miles thre;
|
||
And to the povre folkes that ther dwelle
|
||
Sey hem right thus as that I shal yow telle.
|
||
|
||
Telle hem, that I Cecile yow to hem sente,
|
||
To shewen yow the goode Urban the olde,
|
||
For secree thynges and for good entente;
|
||
And whan that ye Seint Urban han biholde,
|
||
Telle hym the wordes whiche that I to yow tolde,
|
||
And whan that he hath purged yow fro synne,
|
||
Thanne shul ye se that aungel er ye twynne."
|
||
|
||
Valerian is to the place ygon,
|
||
And right as hym was taught by his lernynge,
|
||
He foond this hooly olde Urban anon
|
||
Among the seintes buryeles lotynge.
|
||
And he anon, withouten tariynge,
|
||
Dide his message, and whan that he it tolde,
|
||
Urban for joye his handes gan up holde.
|
||
|
||
The teeris from hise eyen leet he falle.
|
||
"Almyghty lord, O Jesu Crist," quod he,
|
||
"Sower of chaast conseil, hierde of us alle,
|
||
The fruyt of thilke seed of chastitee
|
||
That thou hast sowe in Cecile, taak to thee.
|
||
Lo, lyk a bisy bee, withouten gile,
|
||
Thee serveth ay thyn owene thral Cecile!
|
||
|
||
For thilke spouse that she took but now
|
||
Ful lyk a fiers leoun, she sendeth heere
|
||
As meke as evere was any lomb, to yow."
|
||
And with that word anon ther gan appeere
|
||
An oold man clad in white clothes cleere,
|
||
That hadde a book with lettre of gold in honde,
|
||
And gan bifore Valerian to stonde.
|
||
|
||
Valerian as deed fil doun for drede
|
||
Whan he hym saugh, and he up hente hym tho,
|
||
And on his book right thus he gan to rede,
|
||
"O lord, o feith, o god, withouten mo,
|
||
O Cristendom, and fader of alle also,
|
||
Aboven alle, and over alle, everywhere.-"
|
||
Thise wordes al with gold ywriten were.
|
||
|
||
Whan this was rad, thanne seyde this olde man,
|
||
"Leevestow this thyng or no? sey ye or nay?"
|
||
"I leeve al this thyng," quod Valerian,
|
||
"For oother thyng than this, I dar wel say,
|
||
Under the hevene no wight thynke may."
|
||
Tho vanysshed this olde man, he nyste where;
|
||
And Pope Urban hym cristned right there.
|
||
|
||
Valerian gooth hoom, and fynt Cecile
|
||
Withinne his chambre with an aungel stonde.
|
||
This aungel hadde of roses and of lilie
|
||
Corones two, the whiche he bar in honde;
|
||
And first to Cecile, as I understonde,
|
||
He yaf that oon, and after gan he take
|
||
That oother to Valerian hir make.
|
||
|
||
"With body clene and with unwemmed thoght
|
||
Kepeth ay wel thise corones," quod he,
|
||
"Fro Paradys to yow have I hem broght,
|
||
Ne nevere mo ne shal they roten bee,
|
||
Ne lese hir soote savour, trusteth me,
|
||
Ne nevere wight shal seen hem with his eye
|
||
But he be chaast and hate vileynye.
|
||
|
||
And thow Valerian, for thow so soone
|
||
Assentedest to good conseil also,
|
||
Sey what thee list, and thou shalt han thy boone."
|
||
"I have a brother," quod Valerian tho,
|
||
"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."
|
||
|
||
|
||
The aungel seyde, "God liketh thy requeste,
|
||
And bothe with the palm of martirdom
|
||
Ye shullen com unto his blisful feste."
|
||
And with that word Tiburce his brother coom;
|
||
And whan that he the savour undernoom,
|
||
Which that the roses and the lilies caste,
|
||
Withinne his herte he gan to wondre faste,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "I wondre, this tyme of the yeer,
|
||
Whennes that soote savour cometh so
|
||
Of rose and lilies that I smelle heer.
|
||
For though I hadde hem in myne handes two,
|
||
The savour myghte in me no depper go,
|
||
The sweete smel that in myn herte I fynde
|
||
Hath chaunged me al in another kynde."
|
||
|
||
Valerian seyde, "Two corones han we,
|
||
Snow-white and rose-reed that shynen cleere,
|
||
Whiche that thyne eyen han no myght to see,
|
||
And as thou smellest hem thurgh my preyere,
|
||
So shaltow seen hem, leeve brother deere,
|
||
If it so be thou wolt, withouten slouthe,
|
||
Bileve aright and knowen verray trouthe."
|
||
|
||
Tiburce answerde, "Seistow this to me?
|
||
In soothnesse or in dreem I herkne this?"
|
||
"In dremes," quod Valerian, "han we be
|
||
Unto this tyme, brother myn, ywes;
|
||
But now at erst in trouthe oure dwellyng is."
|
||
"How woostow this," quod Tiburce, "in what wyse?"
|
||
Quod Valerian, "That shal I thee devyse.
|
||
|
||
The aungel of God hath me the trouthe ytaught
|
||
Which thou shalt seen, if that thou wolt reneye
|
||
The ydoles and be clene, and elles naught."
|
||
And of the myracle of thise corones tweye
|
||
Seint Ambrose in his preface list to seye.
|
||
Solempnely this noble doctour deere
|
||
Commendeth it, and seith in this manere;
|
||
|
||
The palm of martirdom for to receyve
|
||
Seinte Cecile, fulfild of Goddes yifte,
|
||
The world and eek hire chambre gan she weyve,
|
||
Witnesse Tyburces and Valerians shrifte,
|
||
To whiche God of his bountee wolde shifte
|
||
Corones two, of floures wel smellynge,
|
||
And made his aungel hem the corones brynge.
|
||
|
||
The mayde hath broght thise men to blisse above;
|
||
The world hath wist what it is worth, certeyn,
|
||
Devocioun of chastitee to love. . . .
|
||
Tho shewed hym Cecile, al open and pleyn,
|
||
That alle ydoles nys but a thyng in veyn,
|
||
For they been dombe and therto they been deve,
|
||
And charged hym hise ydoles for to leve.
|
||
|
||
"Whoso that troweth, nat this, a beest he is,"
|
||
Quod tho Tiburce, "if that I shal nat lye."
|
||
And she gan kisse his brest, that herde this,
|
||
And was ful glad he koude trouthe espye.
|
||
"This day I take thee for myn allye,"
|
||
Seyde this blisful faire mayde deere,
|
||
And after that she seyde as ye may heere.
|
||
|
||
"Lo, right so as the love of Crist," quod she,
|
||
"Made me thy brotheres wyf, right in that wise
|
||
Anon for myn allyee heer take I thee,
|
||
|
||
Syn that thou wolt thyne ydoles despise.
|
||
Go with thy brother now, and thee baptise,
|
||
And make thee clene, so that thou mowe biholde
|
||
The aungels face of which thy brother tolde."
|
||
|
||
Tiburce answerde and seyde, "Brother deere,
|
||
First tel me whider I shal, and to what man?"
|
||
"To whom?" quod he, "com forth with right good cheere,
|
||
I wol thee lede unto the Pope Urban."
|
||
"Til Urban? brother myn Valerian,"
|
||
Quod tho Tiburce, "woltow me thider lede?
|
||
Me thynketh that it were a wonder dede."
|
||
|
||
"Ne menestow nat Urban," quod he tho,
|
||
"That is so ofte dampned to be deed,
|
||
And woneth in halkes alwey to and fro,
|
||
And dar nat ones putte forth his heed;
|
||
Men sholde hym brennen in a fyr so reed,
|
||
If he were founde, or that men myghte hym spye;
|
||
And we also, to bere hym compaignye,
|
||
|
||
And whil we seken thilke divinitee,
|
||
That is yhid in hevene pryvely,
|
||
Algate ybrend in this world shul we be!"
|
||
To whom Cecile answerde boldely,
|
||
"Men myghten dreden wel and skilfully
|
||
This lyf to lese, myn owene deere brother,
|
||
If this were lyvynge oonly and noon oother.
|
||
|
||
But ther is bettre lyf in oother place,
|
||
That nevere shal be lost, ne drede thee noght,
|
||
Which Goddes sone us tolde thurgh his grace.
|
||
That fadres sone hath alle thyng ywroght,
|
||
And al that wroght is with a skilful thoght,
|
||
The goost, that fro the fader gan procede,
|
||
Hath sowled hem, withouten any drede.
|
||
|
||
By word and by myracel Goddes Sone,
|
||
Whan he was in this world, declared heere
|
||
That ther was oother lyf ther men may wone."
|
||
To whom answerde Tiburce, "O suster deere,
|
||
Ne seydestow right now in this manere,
|
||
Ther nys but o God, lord in soothfastnesse,
|
||
And now of thre how maystow bere witnesse?"
|
||
|
||
"That shal I telle," quod she, "er I go.
|
||
Right as a man hath sapiences thre,
|
||
Memorie, engyn, and intellect also,
|
||
So, in o beynge of divinitee
|
||
Thre persones may ther right wel bee."
|
||
Tho gan she hym ful bisily to preche
|
||
Of Cristes come, and of hise peynes teche,
|
||
|
||
And many pointes of his passioun;
|
||
How Goddes sone in this world was withholde
|
||
To doon mankynde pleyn remissioun,
|
||
That was ybounde in synne and cares colde . . .
|
||
Al this thyng she unto Tiburce tolde;
|
||
And after this, Tiburce in good entente
|
||
With Valerian to Pope Urban he wente;
|
||
|
||
That thanked God, and with glad herte and light
|
||
He cristned hym, and made hym in that place
|
||
Parfit in his lernynge, Goddes knyght.
|
||
And after this Tiburce gat swich grace
|
||
That every day he saugh in tyme and space
|
||
The aungel of God, and every maner boone
|
||
That he God axed, it was sped ful soone.
|
||
|
||
It were ful hard by ordre for to seyn
|
||
How manye wondres Jesu for hem wroghte.
|
||
But atte laste, to tellen short and pleyn,
|
||
The sergeantz of the toun of Rome hem soghte,
|
||
And hem biforn Almache the Prefect broghte,
|
||
Which hem opposed, and knew al hire entente,
|
||
And to the ymage of Juppiter hem sente,
|
||
|
||
And seyde, "Whoso wol nat sacrifise,
|
||
Swap of his heed, this my sentence heer."
|
||
Anon thise martirs that I yow devyse,
|
||
Oon Maximus, that was an officer
|
||
Of the prefectes, and his corniculer,
|
||
Hem hente, and whan he forth the seintes ladde,
|
||
Hymself he weepe, for pitee that he hadde.
|
||
|
||
Whan Maximus had herd the seintes loore,
|
||
He gat hym of the tormentoures leve,
|
||
And ladde hem to his hous withoute moore.
|
||
And with hir prechyng, er that it were eve,
|
||
They gonnen fro the tormentours to reve,
|
||
And fro Maxime, and fro his folk echone
|
||
The fals feith, to trowe in God allone.
|
||
|
||
Cecile cam whan it was woxen nyght,
|
||
With preestes that hem cristned alle yfeere,
|
||
And afterward, whan day was woxen light,
|
||
Cecile hem seyde, with a ful stedefast cheere,
|
||
"Now Cristes owene knyghtes, leeve and deere,
|
||
Cast alle awey the werkes of derkness
|
||
And armeth yow in armure of brightnesse.
|
||
|
||
Ye han forsothe ydoon a greet bataille,
|
||
Youre cours is doon, youre feith han ye conserved,
|
||
Gooth to the corone of lyf that may nat faille.
|
||
The rightful juge which that ye han served
|
||
Shal yeve it yow as ye han it deserved."
|
||
And whan this thyng was seyd as I devyse,
|
||
Men ledde hem forth to doon the sacrifise.
|
||
|
||
But whan they weren to the place broght,
|
||
To tellen shortly the conclusioun,
|
||
They nolde encense ne sacrifise right noght,
|
||
But on hir knees they setten hem adoun
|
||
With humble herte and sad devocioun,
|
||
And losten bothe hir hevedes in the place.
|
||
Her soules wenten to the kyng of grace.
|
||
|
||
This Maximus that saugh this thyng bityde,
|
||
With pitous teeris tolde it anon-right,
|
||
That he hir soules saugh to hevene glyde,
|
||
With aungels ful of cleernesse and of light;
|
||
And with this word converted many a wight.
|
||
For which Almachius dide hym so bete
|
||
With whippe of leed, til he the lyf gan lete.
|
||
|
||
Cecile hym took, and buryed hym anon
|
||
By Tiburce and Valerian softely,
|
||
Withinne hir buriyng place under the stoon,
|
||
And after this Almachius hastily
|
||
Bad hise ministres fecchen openly
|
||
Cecile, so that she myghte in his presence
|
||
Doon sacrifice, and Juppiter encense.
|
||
|
||
But they, converted at hir wise loore,
|
||
Wepten ful soore, and yaven ful credence
|
||
Unto hire word, and cryden moore and moore,
|
||
"Crist, Goddes sone, withouten difference,
|
||
Is verray God, this is al oure sentence,
|
||
That hath so good a servant hym to serve
|
||
This with o voys we trowen, thogh we sterve."
|
||
|
||
Almachius, that herde of this doynge,
|
||
Bad fecchen Cecile, that he myghte hir see,
|
||
And alderfirst, lo, this was his axynge:
|
||
"What maner womman artow?" tho quod he.
|
||
"I am a gentil womman born," quod she.
|
||
"I axe thee," quod he, "though it thee greeve,
|
||
Of thy religioun and of thy bileeve."
|
||
|
||
"Ye han bigonne youre question folily,"
|
||
Quod she, "that wolden two answeres conclude
|
||
In o demande; ye axed lewedly."
|
||
Almache answerde unto that similitude,
|
||
"Of whennes comth thyn answeryng so rude?'
|
||
"Of whennes?" quod she, whan that she was freyned,
|
||
"Of conscience and of good feith unfeyned."
|
||
|
||
Almachius seyde, "Ne takestow noon heede
|
||
Of my power?" and she answerde hym,
|
||
"Youre myght," quod she, "ful litel is to dreede,
|
||
For every mortal mannes power nys
|
||
But lyke a bladdre ful of wynd, ywys;
|
||
For with a nedles poynt, whan it is blowe,
|
||
May al the boost of it be leyd ful lowe."
|
||
|
||
"Ful wrongfully bigonne thow," quod he,
|
||
"And yet in wrong is thy perseveraunce;
|
||
Wostow nat how oure myghty princes free
|
||
Han thus comanded and maad ordinaunce
|
||
That every cristen wight shal han penaunce,
|
||
But if that he his cristendom withseye-
|
||
And goon al quit, if he wole it reneye?"
|
||
|
||
"Youre princes erren, as youre nobleye dooth,"
|
||
Quod tho Cecile, "and with a wood sentence
|
||
Ye make us gilty, and it is nat sooth,
|
||
For ye, that knowen wel oure 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.
|
||
|
||
But we that knowen thilke name so
|
||
For vertuous, we may it nat withseye."
|
||
Almache answerde, "Chees oon of thise two,
|
||
Do sacrifise, or cristendom reneye,
|
||
That thou mowe now escapen by that weye."
|
||
At which the hooly blisful faire mayde
|
||
Gan for to laughe, and to the juge sayde,
|
||
|
||
"O Juge, confus in thy nycetee,
|
||
Woltow that I reneye innocence,
|
||
To make me a wikked wight," quod shee;
|
||
"Lo, he dissymuleth heere in audience,
|
||
He stareth, and woodeth in his advertence."
|
||
To whom Almachius, "Unsely wrecche,
|
||
Ne woostow nat how far my myght may strecche?
|
||
|
||
Han noght oure myghty princes to me yeven
|
||
Ye, bothe power and auctoritee
|
||
To maken folk to dyen or to lyven?
|
||
Why spekestow so proudly thanne to me?"
|
||
"I speke noght but stedfastly," quod she,
|
||
"Nat proudly, for I speke as for my syde,
|
||
We haten deedly thilke vice of pryde.
|
||
|
||
And if thou drede nat a sooth to heere,
|
||
Thanne wol I shewe al openly by right
|
||
That thou hast maad a ful grete lesyng heere,
|
||
Thou seyst, thy princes han thee yeven myght
|
||
Bothe for to sleen, and for to quyken a wight.
|
||
Thou that ne mayst but oonly lyf bireve,
|
||
Thou hast noon oother power, ne no leve!
|
||
|
||
But thou mayst seyn thy princes han thee maked
|
||
Ministre of deeth, for if thou speke of mo,
|
||
Thou lyest, for thy power is ful naked.'
|
||
"Do wey thy booldnesse," seyde Almachius tho,
|
||
"And sacrifise to oure goddes er thou go.
|
||
I recche na twhat wrong that thou me profre,
|
||
For I can suffre it as a philosophre.
|
||
|
||
But thilke wronges may I nat endure
|
||
That thou spekest of oure goddes heere," quod he.
|
||
Cecile answerde, "O nyce creature,
|
||
Thou seydest no word, syn thou spak to me,
|
||
That I ne knew therwith thy nycetee,
|
||
And that thou were in every maner wise
|
||
A lewed officer and a veyn justise.
|
||
|
||
Ther lakketh no thyng to thyne outter eyen
|
||
That thou nart blynd, for thyng that we seen alle
|
||
That it is stoon, that men may wel espyen,
|
||
That ilke stoon a god thow wolt it calle.
|
||
I rede thee lat thyn hand upon it falle,
|
||
And taste it wel, and stoon thou shalt it fynde,
|
||
|
||
Syn that thou seest nat with thyne eyen blynde.
|
||
|
||
It is a shame that the peple shal
|
||
So scorne thee, and laughe at thy folye,
|
||
For communly men woot it wel overal
|
||
That myghty God is in hise hevenes hye,
|
||
And thise ymages, wel thou mayst espye,
|
||
To thee ne to hemself mowen noght profite,
|
||
For in effect they been nat worth a myte."
|
||
|
||
Thise wordes and swiche othere seyde she,
|
||
And he weex wrooth, and bad men sholde hir lede
|
||
Hom til hir hous, and "in hire hous," quod he,
|
||
"Brenne hire right in a bath of flambes rede."
|
||
And as he bad, right so was doon in dede,
|
||
For in a bath they gonne hire faste shetten,
|
||
And nyght and day greet fyre they underbetten.
|
||
|
||
The longe nyght and eek a day also
|
||
For al the fyr and eek the bathes heete
|
||
She sat al coold, and feelede no wo;
|
||
It made hir nat a drope for to sweete.
|
||
But in that bath hir lyf she moste lete,
|
||
For he Almachius, with a ful wikke entente,
|
||
To sleen hir in the bath his sonde sente.
|
||
|
||
Thre strokes in the nekke he smoot hir tho,
|
||
The tormentour, but for no maner chaunce
|
||
He myghte noght smyte al hir nekke atwo.
|
||
And for ther was that tyme an ordinaunce
|
||
That no man sholde doon men swich penaunce
|
||
The ferthe strook to smyten, softe or soore,
|
||
This tormentour ne dorste do namoore.
|
||
|
||
But half deed, with hir nekke ycorven there,
|
||
He lefte hir lye, and on his wey is went.
|
||
The cristen folk, which that aboute hir were,
|
||
With sheetes han the blood ful faire yhent.
|
||
Thre dayes lyved she in this torment,
|
||
And nevere cessed hem the feith to teche;
|
||
That she hadde fostred, hem she gan to preche.
|
||
|
||
And hem she yaf hir moebles, and hir thyng,
|
||
And to the Pope Urban bitook hem tho,
|
||
And seyde, "I axed this at hevene kyng
|
||
To han respit thre dayes, and namo,
|
||
To recomende to yow er that I go
|
||
Thise soules, lo, and that I myghte do werche
|
||
Heere of myn hous perpetuelly a chirche."
|
||
|
||
Seint Urban with hise deknes prively
|
||
This body fette, and buryed it by nyghte,
|
||
Among hise othere seintes, honestly.
|
||
Hir hous the chirche of seinte Cecilie highte;
|
||
Seint Urban halwed it, as he wel myghte,
|
||
In which, into this day, in noble wyse
|
||
Men doon to Crist and to his seinte servyse.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Seconde Nonnes tale.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Part 28
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE CHANOUNS YEMANNES TALE
|
||
|
||
The prologe of the Chanouns yemannes tale.
|
||
|
||
Whan ended was the lyf of seinte Cecile,
|
||
Er we hadde riden fully fyve mile,
|
||
At Boghtoun under Blee us gan atake
|
||
A man, that clothed was in clothes blake,
|
||
And undernethe he wered a whyt surplys.
|
||
|
||
His hakeney, which that was al pomely grys,
|
||
So swatte, that it wonder was to see,
|
||
It wemed as he had priked miles thre.
|
||
The hors eek that his yeman rood upon
|
||
So swatte, that unnethe myghte it gon.
|
||
|
||
Aboute the peytrel stood the foom ful hye,
|
||
He was of fome al flekked as a pye.
|
||
A male tweyfoold upon his croper lay,
|
||
It semed that he caried lite array.
|
||
Al light for somer rood this worthy man,
|
||
|
||
And in myn herte wondren I bigan
|
||
What that he was, til that I understood
|
||
How that his cloke was sowed to his hood;
|
||
For which, whan I hadde longe avysed me,
|
||
I demed hym som Chanoun for to be.
|
||
|
||
His hat heeng at his bak doun by a laas,
|
||
For he hadde riden moore than trot or paas;
|
||
He hadde ay priked lik as he were wood.
|
||
A clote-leef he hadde under his hood
|
||
For swoot, and for to kepe his heed from heete.
|
||
|
||
But it was joye for to seen hym swete!
|
||
His forheed dropped as a stillatorie
|
||
Were ful of plantayne and of paritorie.
|
||
And whan that he was come, he gan to crye,
|
||
"God save," quod he, "this joly compaignye!
|
||
|
||
Faste have I priked," quod he, "for youre sake,
|
||
By cause that I wolde yow atake,
|
||
To riden in this myrie compaignye."
|
||
His Yeman eek was ful of curteisye,
|
||
And seyde, "Sires, now in the morwe tyde
|
||
|
||
Out of youre hostelrie I saugh yow ryde,
|
||
And warned heer my lord and my soverayn
|
||
Which that to ryden with yow is ful fayn
|
||
For his desport; he loveth daliaunce."
|
||
"Freend, for thy warnyng God yeve thee good chaunce,"
|
||
|
||
Thanne seyde oure Hoost, "for certein, it wolde seme
|
||
Thy lord were wys, and so I may wel deme.
|
||
He is ful jocunde also, dar I leye.
|
||
Can he oght telle a myrie tale or tweye
|
||
With which he glade may this compaignye?"
|
||
|
||
"Who, sire, my lord? ye, ye, with-outen lye!
|
||
He kan of murthe and eek of jolitee
|
||
Nat but ynough, also, sire, trusteth me.
|
||
And ye hym knewen as wel as do I,
|
||
Ye wolde wondre how wel and craftily
|
||
|
||
He koude werke, and that in sondry wise.
|
||
He hath take on hym many a greet emprise,
|
||
Which were ful hard for any that is heere
|
||
To brynge aboute, but they of hym it leere.
|
||
As hoomly as he rit amonges yow,
|
||
|
||
If ye hym knewe, it wolde be for youre prow,
|
||
Ye wolde nat forgoon his aqueyntaunce
|
||
For muchel good, I dar leye in balaunce
|
||
Al that I have in my possessioun.
|
||
He is a man of heigh discrecioun,
|
||
|
||
I warne yow wel, he is a passyng man."
|
||
"Wel," quod oure Hoost, "I pray thee, tel em than,
|
||
Is he a clerk, or noon? telle what he is?"
|
||
"Nay, he is gretter than a clerk, ywis,"
|
||
Seyde this Yeman, "and in wordes fewe,
|
||
|
||
Hoost, of his craft somwhat I wol yow shewe.
|
||
I seye my lord kan swich subtilitee-
|
||
But al his craft ye may nat wite for me,
|
||
And somwhat helpe I yet to his wirkyng-
|
||
That al this ground on which we been rydyng
|
||
|
||
Til that we come to Caunterbury toun,
|
||
He koude al clene turne it up so doun
|
||
And pave ti al of silver and of gold."
|
||
And whan this Yeman hadde this tale ytold
|
||
Unto oure Hoost, he seyde, "Benedicitee,
|
||
|
||
This thyng is wonder merveillous to me,
|
||
Syn that thy lord is of so heigh prudence,
|
||
By cause of which men sholde hym reverence,
|
||
That of his worship rekketh he so lite.
|
||
His overslope nys nat worth a myte
|
||
|
||
As in effect to hym, so moot I go.
|
||
It is al baudy and to-tore also,
|
||
Why is thy lord so sluttissh, I the preye,
|
||
And is of power bettre clooth to beye,
|
||
If that his dede accorde with thy speche?
|
||
|
||
Telle me that, and that I thee biseche."
|
||
"Why," quod this Yeman, "wherto axe ye me?
|
||
God help me so, for he shal nevere thee!
|
||
But I wol nat avowe that I seye,
|
||
And therfore keepe it secree, I yow preye;
|
||
|
||
He is to wys, in feith, as I bileeve!
|
||
That that is overdoon, it wol nat preeve
|
||
Aright; as clerkes seyn, it is a vice.
|
||
Wherfore in that I holde hym lewed and nyce;
|
||
For whan a man hath over-greet a wit,
|
||
|
||
Ful oft hym happeth to mysusen it.
|
||
So dooth my lord, and that me greveth soore.
|
||
God it amende, I kan sey yow namoore."
|
||
"Therof no fors, good Yeman," quod oure Hoost,
|
||
"Syn of the konnyng of thy lord thow woost,
|
||
|
||
Telle how he dooth, I pray thee hertely,
|
||
Syn that he is so crafty and so sly.
|
||
Wher dwelle ye, if it to telle be?"
|
||
"In the suburbes of a toun," quod he,
|
||
"Lurkynge in hernes and in lanes blynde,
|
||
|
||
Where as thise robbours and thise theves by kynde
|
||
Holden hir pryvee fereful residence,
|
||
As they that dar nat shewen hir presence.
|
||
So faren we if I shal seye the sothe."
|
||
"Now," quod oure Hoost, "yit lat me talke to the,
|
||
|
||
Why artow so discoloured of thy face?"
|
||
"Peter," quod he, "God yeve it harde grace,
|
||
I am so used in the fyr to blowe,
|
||
That it hath chaunged my colour, I trowe.
|
||
I am nat wont in no mirrour to prie,
|
||
|
||
But swynke soore, and lerne multiplie.
|
||
We blondren evere, and pouren in the fir,
|
||
And, for al that, we faille of oure desir.
|
||
For evere we lakke of oure conclusioun;
|
||
To muchel folk we doon illusioun,
|
||
|
||
And borwe gold, be it a pound or two,
|
||
Or ten, or twelve, or manye sommes mo,
|
||
And make hem wenen at the leeste weye
|
||
That of a pound we koude 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,
|
||
We mowen nat, although we hadden sworn,
|
||
It over-take, it slit awey so faste.
|
||
It wole us maken beggars atte laste."
|
||
|
||
Whil this yeman was thus in his talkyng,
|
||
This Chanoun drough hym neer, and herde al thyng
|
||
Which this Yeman spak, for suspecioun
|
||
Of mennes speche evere hadde this Chanoun.
|
||
For Catoun seith, that he that gilty is
|
||
|
||
Demeth alle thyng be spoke of hym, ywis.
|
||
That was the cause he gan so ny hym drawe
|
||
To his yeman, to herknen al his sawe.
|
||
And thus he seyde unto his yeman tho,
|
||
"Hoold thou thy pees, and spek no wordes mo,
|
||
|
||
For it thou do, thou shalt it deere abye.
|
||
Thou sclaundrest me heere in this compaignye,
|
||
And eek discoverest that thou sholdest hyde."
|
||
"Ye," quod oure Hoost, "telle on, what so bityde,
|
||
Of al his thretyng rekke nat a myte."
|
||
|
||
"In feith," quod he, "namoore I do but lyte."
|
||
And whan this Chanoun saugh it wolde nat bee,
|
||
But his Yeman wolde telle his pryvetee,
|
||
He fledde awey for verray sorwe and shame.
|
||
"A!" quod the Yeman, "heere shal arise game.
|
||
|
||
Al that I kan, anon now wol I telle,
|
||
Syn he is goon, the foule feend hym quelle!
|
||
For nevere heer after wol I with hym meete,
|
||
For peny ne for pound, I yow biheete.
|
||
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,
|
||
That feele I wel, what so any man seith.
|
||
And yet, for al my smert and al my grief,
|
||
For al my sorwe, labour, and meschief,
|
||
|
||
I koude never leve it in no wise.
|
||
Now wolde God, my wit myghte suffise
|
||
To tellen al that longeth to that art,
|
||
And nathelees yow wol I tellen part.
|
||
Syn that my lord is goon, I wol nat spare,
|
||
Swich thyng as that I knowe, I wol declare.
|
||
|
||
Heere endeth the prologe of the Chanouns yemannes tale.
|
||
|
||
(After a lengthy account of the practice of alchemy by
|
||
his master, the yeoman tells how a priest is beguiled of
|
||
his money by a certain canon through trickery of a hollow
|
||
rod.)
|
||
Part 29
|
||
|
||
GROUP H.
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE MAUNCIPLES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere folweth the Prologe of the Maunciples tale.
|
||
|
||
Woot ye nat where ther stant a litel toun,
|
||
Which that ycleped is Bobbe-up-and-doun
|
||
Under the Blee, in Caunterbury weye?
|
||
Ther gan oure Hooste for to jape and pleye,
|
||
And seyde, "Sires, what, Dun is in the Myre!
|
||
|
||
Is ther no man for preyere ne for hyre,
|
||
That wole awake oure felawe al bihynde?
|
||
A theef myghte hym ful lightly robbe and bynde.
|
||
See how he nappeth, see how for Cokkes bones,
|
||
That he wol falle fro his hors atones.
|
||
|
||
Is that a Cook of London, with meschaunce?
|
||
Do hym com forth, he knoweth his penaunce,
|
||
For he shal telle a tale, by my fey,
|
||
Although 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 nyght, or artow dronke?
|
||
Or hastow with som quene al nyght yswonke
|
||
So that thow mayst nat holden up thyn heed?"
|
||
This Cook that was ful pale, and no thyng reed,
|
||
|
||
Seyde to oure Hoost, "So God my soule blesse,
|
||
As ther is falle on me swich hevynesse,
|
||
Noot I nat why, that me were levere slepe
|
||
Than the beste galon wyn in Chepe."
|
||
"Wel," quod the Maunciple, "if it may doon ese
|
||
|
||
To thee, Sire Cook, and to no wight displese
|
||
Which that heere rideth in this compaignye,
|
||
And that oure Hoost wole of his curteisye,
|
||
I wol as now excuse thee of thy tale,
|
||
For, in good feith, thy visage is ful pale.
|
||
|
||
Thyne eyen daswen eek, as that me thynketh,
|
||
And wel I woot, thy breeth ful soure stynketh.
|
||
That sheweth wel thou art nat wel disposed,
|
||
Of me, certeyn, thou shalt nat been yglosed.
|
||
See how he ganeth, lo, this dronken wight!
|
||
|
||
As though he wolde swolwe us anonright.
|
||
Hoold cloos thy mouth, man, by thy fader kyn,
|
||
The devel of helle sette his foot therin.
|
||
Thy cursed breeth infecte wole us alle,
|
||
Fy, stynkyng swyn! fy, foule moothe thou falle!
|
||
|
||
A, taketh heede, sires, of this lusty man!
|
||
Now, sweete sire, wol ye justen atte fan?
|
||
Therto me thynketh ye been wel yshape,
|
||
I trowe that ye dronken han wyn-ape,
|
||
And that is, whan men pleyen with a straw."
|
||
|
||
And with this speche the Cook wax wrooth and wraw,
|
||
And on the Manciple he gan nodde faste,
|
||
For lakke of speche, and doun the hors hym caste,
|
||
Where as he lay til that men up hym took;
|
||
This was a fair chyvachee of a Cook!
|
||
|
||
Allas, he nadde holde hym by his ladel!
|
||
And er that he agayn were in his sadel
|
||
Ther was greet showvyng bothe to and fro,
|
||
To lifte hym up, and muchel care and wo,
|
||
So unweeldy was this sory palled goost.
|
||
|
||
And to the Manciple thanne spak oure hoost,
|
||
"By cause drynke hath dominacioun,
|
||
Upon this man, by my savacioun,
|
||
I trowe he lewedly wolde telle his tale.
|
||
For were it wyn, or oold or moysty ale,
|
||
|
||
That he hath dronke, he speketh in his nose,
|
||
And fneseth faste, and eek he hath the pose.
|
||
He hath also to do moore than ynough
|
||
To kepen hym and his capul out of slough,
|
||
And if he falle from his capul eftsoone,
|
||
|
||
Thanne shal we alle have ynogh to doone
|
||
In liftyng up his hevy dronken cors.
|
||
Telle on thy tale, of hym make I no fors;
|
||
But yet, Manciple, in feith thou art to nyce,
|
||
Thus openly repreve hym of his vice.
|
||
|
||
Another day he wole peraventure
|
||
Reclayme thee and brynge thee to lure.
|
||
I meene he speke wole of smale thynges,
|
||
As for to pynchen at thy rekenynges,
|
||
That were nat honeste, if it cam to preef."
|
||
|
||
"No," quod the Manciple, "that were a greet mescheef,
|
||
So myghte he lightly brynge me in the snare;
|
||
Yet hadde I levere payen for the mare,
|
||
Which that he rit on, than he sholde with me stryve
|
||
I wol nat wratthen hym, al so moot I thryve;
|
||
|
||
That that I speke, I seyde it in my bourde.
|
||
And wite ye what, I have heer in a gourde
|
||
A draghte of wyn, ye, of a ripe grape,
|
||
And right anon ye shul seen a good jape.
|
||
This Cook shal drynke therof if that I may,
|
||
|
||
Up peyne of deeth, he wol nat seye me nat."
|
||
And certeynly, to tellen as it was,
|
||
Of this vessel the Cook drank faste; allas,
|
||
What neded hym? he drank ynough biforn!
|
||
And whan he hadde pouped in this horn,
|
||
|
||
To the Manciple he took the gourde agayn,
|
||
And of that drynke the Cook was wonder fayn,
|
||
And thanked hym in swich wise as he koude.
|
||
Thanne gan oure Hoost to laughen wonder loude,
|
||
And seyde, "I se wel it is necessarie
|
||
|
||
Where that we goon, that drynke we with us carie.
|
||
For that wol turne rancour and disese
|
||
Tacord and love and many a wrong apese.
|
||
O thou Bacus, yblessed be thy name,
|
||
That so kanst turnen ernest into game!
|
||
|
||
Worship and thank be to thy deitee!
|
||
Of that mateere ye gete namoore of me,
|
||
Telle on thy tale, Manciple, I thee preye."
|
||
"Wel, sire," quod he, "now herkneth what I seye."
|
||
|
||
THE MAUNCIPLES TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere bigynneth the Maunciples tale of the Crowe.
|
||
|
||
Whan Phebus dwelled heere in this world adoun,
|
||
As olde bookes maken mencioun,
|
||
He was the mooste lusty bachiler
|
||
In al this world, and eek the beste archer.
|
||
He slow Phitoun the serpent, as he lay
|
||
|
||
Slepynge agayn the sonne upon a day;
|
||
And many another noble worthy dede
|
||
He with his bowe wroghte, as men may rede.
|
||
Pleyen he koude on every mynstralcie,
|
||
And syngen, that it was a melodie
|
||
|
||
To heeren of his cleere voys the soun.
|
||
Certes, the kyng of Thebes, Amphioun,
|
||
That with his syngyng walled that citee,
|
||
Koude nevere syngen half so wel as hee.
|
||
Therto he was the semelieste man,
|
||
|
||
That is or was sith that the world bigan.
|
||
What nedeth it hise fetures to discryve?
|
||
For in this world was noon so fair on lyve.
|
||
He was therwith fulfild of gentillesse,
|
||
Of honour, and of parfit worthynesse.
|
||
|
||
This Phebus that was flour of bachilrie,
|
||
As wel in fredom as in chivalrie,
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
Now hadde this Phebus in his hous a crowe,
|
||
Which in a cage he fostred many a day,
|
||
And taughte it speken as men teche a jay.
|
||
Whit was this crowe, as is a snow-whit swan,
|
||
And countrefete the speche of every man
|
||
|
||
He koude, whan he sholde telle a tale.
|
||
Therwith in al this world no nyghtngale
|
||
Ne koude, by an hondred thousand deel,
|
||
Syngen so wonder myrily and weel.
|
||
Now hadde this Phebus in his hous a wyf
|
||
|
||
Which that he lovede moore than his lyf;
|
||
And nyght and day dide evere his diligence
|
||
Hir for to plese and doon hire reverence.
|
||
Save oonly, if the sothe that I shal sayn,
|
||
Jalous he was, and wolde have kept hire fayn,
|
||
|
||
For hym were looth byjaped for to be-
|
||
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 awayt, certayn.
|
||
|
||
And trewely the labour is in vayn
|
||
To kepe a shrewe, for it wol nat bee.
|
||
This holde I for a verray nycetee,
|
||
To spille labour for to kepe wyves,
|
||
Thus writen olde clerkes in hir lyves.
|
||
|
||
But now to purpos, as I first bigan:
|
||
This worthy Phebus dooth al that he kan
|
||
To plesen hir, wenynge that swich plesaunce,
|
||
And for his manhede and his governaunce,
|
||
That no man sholde han put hym from hire grace.
|
||
|
||
But God it woot, ther may no man embrace
|
||
As to destreyne a thyng, which that nature
|
||
Hath natureelly set in a creature.
|
||
Taak any bryd, and put it in a cage,
|
||
And do al thyn entente and thy corage
|
||
|
||
To fostre it tendrely with mete and drynke,
|
||
Of alle deyntees that thou kanst bithynke;
|
||
And keepe it al so clenly as thou may,
|
||
Al though his cage of gold be nevere so gay,
|
||
Yet hath this bryd, by twenty thousand foold,
|
||
|
||
Levere in a forest that is rude and coold
|
||
Goon ete wormes, and swich wrecchednesse;
|
||
For evere this bryd wol doon his bisynesse
|
||
To escape out of his cage, whan he may.
|
||
His libertee this bryd desireth ay.
|
||
|
||
Lat take a cat, and fostre hym wel with milk,
|
||
And tendre flessh, and make his couche of silk,
|
||
And lat hym seen a mous go by the wal,
|
||
Anon he weyveth milk and flessh and al,
|
||
And every deyntee that is in that hous,
|
||
|
||
Swich appetit he hath to ete a mous.
|
||
Lo, heere hath lust his dominacioun,
|
||
And appetit fleemeth discrecioun.
|
||
A she wolf hath also a vileyns kynde,
|
||
The lewedeste wolf that she may fynde,
|
||
|
||
Or leest of reputacioun wol she take,
|
||
In tyme whan hir lust to han a make.
|
||
Alle thise ensamples speke I by thise men,
|
||
That been untrewe, and no thyng by wommen,
|
||
For men han evere a likerous appetit
|
||
|
||
On lower thyng to parfourne hire delit,
|
||
Than on hire wyves, be they nevere so faire,
|
||
Ne nevere so trewe, ne so debonaire.
|
||
Flessh is so newefangel, with meschaunce,
|
||
That we ne konne in no thyng han plesaunce
|
||
|
||
That sowneth into vertu any while.
|
||
This Phebus, which that thoghte upon no gile,
|
||
Deceyved was, for al his jolitee;
|
||
For under hym another hadde shee,
|
||
A man of litel reputacioun,
|
||
|
||
Nat worth to Phebus in comparisoun.
|
||
The moore harm is, it happeth ofte so,
|
||
Of which ther cometh muchel harm and wo.
|
||
And so bifel, whan Phebus was absent,
|
||
His wyf anon hath for hir lemman sent;
|
||
|
||
Hir lemman? certes, this is a knavyssh speche,
|
||
Foryeveth it me, and that I yow biseche.
|
||
The wise Plato seith, as ye may rede,
|
||
"The word moot nede accorde with the dede."
|
||
If men shal telle proprely a thyng,
|
||
|
||
The word moot cosyn be to the werkyng.
|
||
I am a boystous man, right thus seye I.
|
||
Ther nys no difference trewely
|
||
Bitwixe a wyf that is of heigh degree-
|
||
If of hire body dishoneste she bee-
|
||
|
||
And a povre wenche, oother than this,
|
||
If it so be they werke bothe amys,
|
||
But that the gentile in hire estaat above,
|
||
She shal be cleped his lady as in love,
|
||
And for that oother is a povre womman,
|
||
|
||
She shal be cleped his wenche, or his lemman;
|
||
And God it woot, myn owene deere brother,
|
||
Men leyn that oon as lowe as lith that oother.
|
||
Right so bitwixe a titlelees tiraunt
|
||
And an outlawe, or a theef erraunt,
|
||
|
||
The same I seye, ther is no difference.
|
||
To Alisaundre was toold this sentence,
|
||
That for the tiraunt is of gretter myght,
|
||
By force of meynee for to sleen dounright,
|
||
And brennen hous and hoom, and make al playn,
|
||
|
||
Lo, therfore is he cleped a capitayn!
|
||
And for the outlawe hath but smal meynee,
|
||
And may nat doon so greet an harm as he,
|
||
Ne brynge a contree to so greet mescheef,
|
||
Men clepen hym an outlawe or a theef.
|
||
|
||
But for I am a man noght textueel,
|
||
I wol noght telle of textes nevere a deel;
|
||
I wol go to my tale as I bigan.
|
||
Whan Phebus wyf had sente for hir lemman,
|
||
Anon they wroghten al hir lust volage.
|
||
|
||
The white crowe that heeng ay in the cage
|
||
Biheeld hire werk, and seyde nevere a word,
|
||
And whan that hoom was com Phebus the lord,
|
||
This crowe sang, "Cokkow! Cokkow! Cokkow!"
|
||
"What bryd!" quod Phebus, "what song syngestow?
|
||
|
||
Ne were thow wont so myrily to synge
|
||
That to myn herte it was a rejoysynge
|
||
To heere thy voys? allas, what song is this?"
|
||
"By God," quod he, "I synge nat amys.
|
||
Phebus," quod he, "for al thy worthynesse,
|
||
|
||
For al thy beautee and thy gentillesse,
|
||
For al thy song and al thy mynstralcye,
|
||
For al thy waityng, blered is thyn eye
|
||
With oon of litel reputacioun
|
||
Noght worth to thee, as in comparisoun
|
||
|
||
The montance of a gnat, so moote I thryve,
|
||
For on thy bed thy wyf I saugh hym swyve."
|
||
What wol ye moore? the crowe anon hym tolde,
|
||
By sadde tokenes and by wordes bolde,
|
||
How that his wyf han doon hire lecherye,
|
||
|
||
Hym to greet shame and to greet vileynye,
|
||
And tolde hym ofte, he asugh it with hise eyen.
|
||
This Phebus gan aweyward for to wryen,
|
||
And thoughte his sorweful herte brast atwo,
|
||
His bowe he bente and sette ther inne a flo,
|
||
|
||
And in his ire his wyf thanne hath he slayn.
|
||
This is theffect, ther is namoore to sayn,
|
||
For sorwe of which he brak his mynstralcie,
|
||
Bothe harpe, and lute, and gyterne, and sautrie,
|
||
And eek he brak hise arwes and his bowe,
|
||
|
||
And after that thus spak he to the crowe.
|
||
"Traitour," quod he, "with tonge of scorpioun,
|
||
Thou hast me broght to my confusioun,
|
||
Allas, that I was wroght! why nere I deed?
|
||
O deere wyf, O gemme of lustiheed,
|
||
|
||
That were to me so sad and eek so trewe,
|
||
Now listow deed with face pale of hewe,
|
||
Ful giltelees, that dorste I swere, ywys.
|
||
O rakel hand, to doon so foule amys!
|
||
O trouble wit, O ire recchelees!
|
||
|
||
That unavysed smyteth gilteles.
|
||
O wantrust, ful of fals suspecioun,
|
||
Where was thy wit and thy discrecioun?
|
||
O, every man, be war of rakelnesse,
|
||
Ne trowe no thyng withouten strong witnesse.
|
||
|
||
Smyt nat to soone, er that ye witen why,
|
||
And beeth avysed wel and sobrely,
|
||
Er ye doon any execucioun
|
||
Upon youre ire for suspecioun.
|
||
Allas, a thousand folk hath rakel ire
|
||
|
||
Fully fordoon, and broght hem in the mire!
|
||
Allas, for sorwe I wol myselven slee!"
|
||
And to the crowe, "O false theef," seyde he,
|
||
"I wol thee quite anon thy false tale;
|
||
Thou songe whilom lyk a nyghtngale,
|
||
|
||
Now shaltow, false theef, thy song forgon,
|
||
And eek thy white fetheres everichon.
|
||
Ne nevere in al thy lyf ne shaltou speke,
|
||
Thus shal men on a traytour been awreke.
|
||
Thou and thyn ofspryng evere shul be blake,
|
||
|
||
Ne nevere sweete noyse shul ye make,
|
||
But evere crie agayn tempest and rayn,
|
||
In tokenynge that thurgh thee my wyf is slayn."
|
||
And to the crowe he stirte, and that anon,
|
||
And pulled hise white fetheres everychon,
|
||
|
||
And made hym blak, and refte hym al his song,
|
||
And eek his speche, and out at dore hym slong,
|
||
Unto the devel-which I hym bitake!-
|
||
And for this caas been alle Crowes blake.
|
||
Lordynges, by this ensample I yow preye,
|
||
|
||
Beth war and taketh kepe what I seye:
|
||
Ne telleth nevere no man in youre lyf
|
||
How that another man hath dight his wyf;
|
||
He wol yow haten mortally, certeyn.
|
||
Daun Salomon, as wise clerkes seyn,
|
||
|
||
Techeth a man to kepen his tonge weel.
|
||
But as I seyde, I am noght textueel;
|
||
But nathelees, thus taughte me my dame;
|
||
"My sone, thenk on the crowe, on Goddes name.
|
||
My sone, keepe wel thy tonge and keepe thy freend,
|
||
|
||
A wikked tonge is worse than a feend.
|
||
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 hym avyse what he speeke.
|
||
|
||
My sone, ful ofte for to muche speche
|
||
Hath many a man been spilt, as clerkes teche.
|
||
But for litel speche, avysely,
|
||
Is no man shent, to speke generally.
|
||
My sone, thy tonge sholdestow restreyne
|
||
|
||
At alle tymes, but whan thou doost thy peyne
|
||
To speke of God in honour and in preyere;
|
||
The firste vertu sone, if thou wolt leere,
|
||
Is to restreyne and kepe wel thy tonge.
|
||
Thus lerne children, whan that they been yonge,
|
||
|
||
My sone, of muchel spekyng yvele avysed,
|
||
Ther lasse spekyng hadde ynough suffised,
|
||
Comth muchel harm-thus was me toold and taught.-
|
||
In muchel speche synne wanteth naught.
|
||
Wostow wherof a rakel tonge serveth?
|
||
|
||
Right as a swerd forkutteth and forkerveth
|
||
An arme atwo, my deere sone, right so
|
||
A tonge kutteth freendshipe al atwo.
|
||
A jangler is to God abhomynable;
|
||
Reed Salomon, so wys and honurable,
|
||
|
||
Reed David in hise psalmes, reed Senekke!
|
||
My sone, spek nat, but with thyn heed thou bekke;
|
||
Dissimule as thou were deef, it that thou heere
|
||
A jangler speke of perilous mateere.
|
||
The Flemyng seith, and lerne it if thee leste,
|
||
|
||
That litel janglyng causeth muchel reste.
|
||
My sone, if thou no wikked word hast seyd,
|
||
Thee thar nat drede for to be biwreyd;
|
||
But he that hath mysseyd, I dar wel sayn,
|
||
He may by no wey clepe his word agayn.
|
||
|
||
Thyng that is seyd is seyd, and forth it gooth;
|
||
Though hym repente, or be hym leef or looth,
|
||
He is his thral to whom that he hath sayd
|
||
A tale, of which he is now yvele apayd.
|
||
My sone, be war, and be noon auctour newe
|
||
|
||
|
||
Of tidynyges, wheither they been false or trewe,
|
||
Wherso thou com, amonges hye or lowe,
|
||
Kepe wel thy tonge, and thenk upon the Crowe."
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the Maunciples tale of the Crowe.
|
||
Part 30
|
||
|
||
GROUP I.
|
||
|
||
PROLOGUE TO THE PERSOUNS TALE
|
||
|
||
Heere folweth the Prologe of the Persouns 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
|
||
Degrees nyne and twenty as in highte.
|
||
Ten of the clokke it was tho, as I gesse,
|
||
|
||
For ellevene foot, or litel moore or lesse,
|
||
My shadwe was at thilke tyme as there,
|
||
Of swiche feet as my lengthe parted were
|
||
In sixe feet equal of proporcioun.
|
||
Therwith the moones exaltacioun,
|
||
|
||
I meene Libra, alwey gan ascende,
|
||
As we were entryng at a thropes ende.
|
||
For which our Hoost, as he was wont to gye,
|
||
As in this caas, oure joly compaignye,
|
||
Seyde in this wise, "Lordynges everichoon,
|
||
|
||
Now lakketh us no tales mo than oon,
|
||
Fulfilled is my sentence and my decree;
|
||
I trowe that we han herd of ech degree.
|
||
Almoost fulfild is al myn ordinaunce,
|
||
I pray to God, so yeve hym right good chaunce
|
||
|
||
That telleth this tale to us lustily!
|
||
"Sire preest," quod he, "artow a vicary,
|
||
Or arte a person? sey sooth by thy fey.
|
||
Be what thou be, ne breke thou nat oure pley;
|
||
For every man save thou hath toold his tale.
|
||
|
||
Unbokele and shewe us what is in thy male,
|
||
For trewely, me thynketh by thy cheere
|
||
Thou sholdest knytte up wel a greet mateere.
|
||
Telle us a fable anon, for Cokkes bones."
|
||
This Persoun him answerede, al atones,
|
||
|
||
"Thou getest fable noon ytoold for me,
|
||
For Paul, that writeth unto Thymothee,
|
||
Repreveth hem that weyveth soothfastnesse,
|
||
And tellen fables, and swich wrecchednesse.
|
||
Why sholde I sowen draf out of my fest
|
||
|
||
Whan I may sowen whete, if that me lest?
|
||
For which I seye, if that yow list to heere,
|
||
Moralitee and vertuous mateere;
|
||
And thanne that ye wol yeve me audience,
|
||
I wol ful fayn, at Cristes reverence,
|
||
|
||
Do yow plesaunce leefful, as I kan.
|
||
But trusteth wel I am a southren man,
|
||
I kan nat geeste Rum, Ram, Ruf by lettre,
|
||
Ne, God woot, rym holde I but litel bettre,
|
||
And therfore if yow list, I wol nat glose,
|
||
|
||
I wol yow telle a myrie tale in prose
|
||
To knytte up al this feeste, and make an ende,
|
||
And Jesu, for his grace, wit me sende
|
||
To shewe yow the wey, in this viage,
|
||
Of thilke parfit glorious pilgrymage
|
||
|
||
That highte Jerusalem celestial.
|
||
And if ye vouchesauf, anon I shal
|
||
Bigynne upon my tale, for which I preye,
|
||
Telle youre avys, I kan no bettre seye.
|
||
But nathelees, this meditacioun
|
||
|
||
I putte it ay under correccioun
|
||
Of clerkes, for I am nat textueel;
|
||
I take but sentence, trusteth weel.
|
||
Therfore I make a protestacioun
|
||
That I wol stonde to correccioun."
|
||
|
||
Upon this word we han assented soone;
|
||
For, as us semed, it was for to doone
|
||
To enden in som vertuous sentence,
|
||
And for to yeve hym space and audience;
|
||
Adn bede oure Hoost he sholde to hym seye
|
||
|
||
That alle we to telle his tale hym preye.
|
||
Oure Hoost hadde the wordes for us alle:
|
||
"Sire preest," quod he, "now faire yow bifalle,
|
||
Sey what yow list, and we wol gladly heere."
|
||
And with that word he seyde in this manere,
|
||
|
||
"Telleth," quod he, "youre meditacioun;
|
||
But hasteth yow, the sonne wole adoun.
|
||
Beth fructuous, and that in litel space,
|
||
And to do wel God sende yow his grace."
|
||
|
||
(Then follows the Persones Tale, concerning penitence,
|
||
vices and virtues, and holy living. At the end appears the
|
||
retractation, so-called, of Chaucer.)
|
||
|
||
Heere taketh the makere of this book his leve.
|
||
|
||
Now preye I to hem alle that herkne thai litel tretys or
|
||
rede, that if ther be any thyng in it that liketh hem, that
|
||
therof they thanken oure Lord Jesu Crist, of whom procedeth
|
||
al wit and al goodnesse. And if ther be any thyng that
|
||
displese hem, I preye hem also that they arrette it to the
|
||
defaute of myn unkonnynge, and nat to my wyl, that wolde ful
|
||
fayn have seyd bettre, if I hadde had konnynge. 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 translaciouns
|
||
and enditynges of worldly vanitees, the whiche I revoke in my
|
||
retracciouns;
|
||
|
||
As is the book of Troilus, the book also of Fame, the book of
|
||
the .XXV. Ladies, the book of the Duchesse, the book of Seint
|
||
Valentynes day of the Parlement of Briddes, the tales of Caunterbury
|
||
(thilke that sownen into synne), the book of the Leoun, and many
|
||
another book, if they were in my remembrance; and many a song and
|
||
many a leccherous lay, that Crist for his grete mercy foryeve
|
||
me the synne. But of the translacioun of Boece de Consolacione,
|
||
and othere bookes of Legendes of Seintes and omelies, and moralitee,
|
||
and devocioun; that thanke I oure Lord Jesu Crist, and his blisful
|
||
mooder, and alle the seintes of hevene; bisekynge hem that they
|
||
from hennesforth unto my lyves ende sende me grace to biwayle my
|
||
giltes, and to studie to the salvacioun of my soule; and graunte
|
||
me grtace of verray penitence, confessioun, and satisfaccioun to
|
||
doon in this present lyf, thurgh the benigne grace of Hym, that
|
||
is kyng of kynges, 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 doome that shulle be saved. Qui cum patre,
|
||
&cetera.
|
||
|
||
Heere is ended the book of the tales of Caunterbury compiled by
|
||
Geffrey Chaucer of whos soule Jesu Crist have mercy. Amen.
|
||
|
||
[End.]
|
||
.
|