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Here biginneth the Marchantes Tale. WHYLOM ther was dwellinge in Lumbardye | |
| A worthy knight, that born was of Pavye, | |
| In which he lived in greet prosperitee; | |
| And sixty yeer a wyflees man was he, | |
| And folwed ay his bodily delyt | 5 |
| On wommen, ther-as was his appetyt, | |
| As doon thise foles that ben seculeer. | |
| And whan that he was passed sixty yeer, | |
| Were it for holinesse or for dotage, | |
| I can nat seye, but swich a greet corage | 10 |
| Hadde this knight to been a wedded man, | |
| That day and night he dooth al that he can | |
| Tespyen where he mighte wedded be; | |
| Preyinge our lord to granten him, that he | |
| Mighte ones knowe of thilke blisful lyf | 15 |
| That is bitwixe an housbond and his wyf; | |
| And for to live under that holy bond | |
| With which that first god man and womman bond. | |
| Non other lyf, seyde he, is worth a bene; | |
| For wedlok is so esy and so clene, | 20 |
| That in this world it is a paradys. | |
| Thus seyde this olde knight, that was so wys. | |
| And certeinly, as sooth as god is king, | |
| To take a wyf, it is a glorious thing, | |
| And namely whan a man is old and hoor; | 25 |
| Thanne is a wyf the fruit of his tresor. | |
| Than sholde he take a yong wyf and a feir, | |
| On which he mighte engendren him an heir, | |
| And lede his lyf in Ioye and in solas, | |
| Wher-as thise bacheleres singe allas, | 30 |
| Whan that they finden any adversitee | |
| In love, which nis but childish vanitee. | |
| And trewely it sit wel to be so, | |
| That bacheleres have often peyne and wo; | |
| On brotel ground they builde, and brotelnesse | 35 |
| They finde, whan they wene sikernesse. | |
| They live but as a brid or as a beste, | |
| In libertee, and under non areste, | |
| Ther-as a wedded man in his estaat | |
| Liveth a lyf blisful and ordinaat, | 40 |
| Under the yok of mariage y-bounde; | |
| Wel may his herte in Ioye and blisse habounde. | |
| For who can be so buxom as a wyf? | |
| Who is so trewe, and eek so ententyf | |
| To kepe him, syk and hool, as is his make? | 45 |
| For wele or wo, she wol him nat forsake. | |
| She nis nat wery him to love and serve, | |
| Thogh that he lye bedrede til he sterve. | |
| And yet somme clerkes seyn, it nis nat so, | |
| Of whiche he, Theofraste, is oon of tho. | 50 |
| What force though Theofraste liste lye? | |
| Ne take no wyf, quod he, for housbondrye, | |
| As for to spare in houshold thy dispence; | |
| A trewe servant dooth more diligence, | |
| Thy good to kepe, than thyn owene wyf. | 55 |
| For she wol clayme half part al hir lyf; | |
| And if that thou be syk, so god me save, | |
| Thy verray frendes or a trewe knave | |
| Wol kepe thee bet than she that waiteth ay | |
| After thy good, and hath don many a day. | 60 |
| And if thou take a wyf un-to thyn hold, | |
| Ful lightly maystow been a cokewold. | |
| This sentence, and an hundred thinges worse, | |
| Wryteth this man, ther god his bones corse! | |
| But take no kepe of al swich vanitee; | 65 |
| Deffye Theofraste and herke me. | |
| A wyf is goddes yifte verraily; | |
| Alle other maner yiftes hardily, | |
| As londes, rentes, pasture, or commune, | |
| Or moebles, alle ben yiftes of fortune, | 70 |
| That passen as a shadwe upon a wal. | |
| But dredelees, if pleynly speke I shal, | |
| A wyf wol laste, and in thyn hous endure, | |
| Wel lenger than thee list, paraventure. | |
| Mariage is a ful gret sacrement; | 75 |
| He which that hath no wyf, I holde him shent; | |
| He liveth helplees and al desolat, | |
| I speke of folk in seculer estaat. | |
| And herke why, I sey nat this for noght, | |
| That womman is for mannes help y-wroght. | 80 |
| The hye god, whan he hadde Adam maked, | |
| And saugh him al allone, bely-naked, | |
| God of his grete goodnesse seyde than, | |
| Lat us now make an help un-to this man | |
| Lyk to him-self; and thanne he made him Eve. | 85 |
| Heer may ye se, and heer-by may ye preve, | |
| That wyf is mannes help and his confort, | |
| His paradys terrestre and his disport. | |
| So buxom and so vertuous is she, | |
| They moste nedes live in unitee. | 90 |
| O flesh they been, and o flesh, as I gesse, | |
| Hath but on herte, in wele and in distresse. | |
| A wyf! a! Seinte Marie, benedicite! | |
| How mighte a man han any adversitee | |
| That hath a wyf? certes, I can nat seye. | 95 |
| The blisse which that is bitwixe hem tweye | |
| Ther may no tonge telle, or herte thinke. | |
| If he be povre, she helpeth him to swinke; | |
| She kepeth his good, and wasteth never a deel; | |
| Al that hir housbonde lust, hir lyketh weel; | 100 |
| She seith not ones nay, whan he seith ye. | |
| Do this, seith he; al redy, sir, seith she. | |
| O blisful ordre of wedlok precious, | |
| Thou art so mery, and eek so vertuous, | |
| And so commended and appreved eek, | 105 |
| That every man that halt him worth a leek, | |
| Up-on his bare knees oghte al his lyf | |
| Thanken his god that him hath sent a wyf; | |
| Or elles preye to god him for to sende | |
| A wyf, to laste un-to his lyves ende. | 110 |
| For thanne his lyf is set in sikernesse; | |
| He may nat be deceyved, as I gesse, | |
| So that he werke after his wyves reed; | |
| Than may he boldly beren up his heed, | |
| They been so trewe and ther-with-al so wyse; | 115 |
| For which, if thou wolt werken as the wyse, | |
| Do alwey so as wommen wol thee rede. | |
| Lo, how that Iacob, as thise clerkes rede, | |
| By good conseil of his moder Rebekke, | |
| Bond the kides skin aboute his nekke; | 120 |
| Thurgh which his fadres benisoun he wan. | |
| Lo, Iudith, as the storie eek telle can, | |
| By wys conseil she goddes peple kepte, | |
| And slow him, Olofernus, whyl he slepte. | |
| Lo Abigayl, by good conseil how she | 125 |
| Saved hir housbond Nabal, whan that he | |
| Sholde han be slayn; and loke, Ester also | |
| By good conseil delivered out of wo | |
| The peple of god, and made him, Mardochee, | |
| Of Assuere enhaunced for to be. | 130 |
| Ther nis no-thing in gree superlatyf, | |
| As seith Senek, above an humble wyf. | |
| Suffre thy wyves tonge, as Caton bit; | |
| She shal comande, and thou shalt suffren it; | |
| And yet she wol obeye of curteisye. | 135 |
| A wyf is keper of thyn housbondrye; | |
| Wel may the syke man biwaille and wepe, | |
| Ther-as ther nis no wyf the hous to kepe. | |
| I warne thee, if wysly thou wolt wirche, | |
| Love wel thy wyf, as Crist loveth his chirche. | 140 |
| If thou lovest thy-self, thou lovest thy wyf; | |
| No man hateth his flesh, but in his lyf | |
| He fostreth it, and therfore bidde I thee, | |
| Cherisse thy wyf, or thou shalt never thee. | |
| Housbond and wyf, what so men Iape or pleye, | 145 |
| Of worldly folk holden the siker weye; | |
| They been so knit, ther may noon harm bityde; | |
| And namely, up-on the wyves syde. | |
| For which this Ianuarie, of whom I tolde, | |
| Considered hath, inwith his dayes olde, | 150 |
| The lusty lyf, the vertuous quiete, | |
| That is in mariage hony-swete; | |
| And for his freendes on a day he sente, | |
| To tellen hem theffect of his entente. | |
| With face sad, his tale he hath hem told; | 155 |
| He seyde, freendes, I am hoor and old, | |
| And almost, god wot, on my pittes brinke; | |
| Up-on my soule somwhat moste I thinke. | |
| I have my body folily despended; | |
| Blessed be god, that it shal been amended! | 160 |
| For I wol be, certeyn, a wedded man, | |
| And that anoon in al the haste I can, | |
| Un-to som mayde fair and tendre of age. | |
| I prey yow, shapeth for my mariage | |
| Al sodeynly, for I wol nat abyde; | 165 |
| And I wol fonde tespyen, on my syde, | |
| To whom I may be wedded hastily. | |
| But for-as-muche as ye ben mo than I, | |
| Ye shullen rather swich a thing espyen | |
| Than I, and wher me best were to allyen. | 170 |
| But o thing warne I yow, my freendes dere, | |
| I wol non old wyf han in no manere. | |
| She shal nat passe twenty yeer, certayn; | |
| Old fish and yong flesh wolde I have ful fayn. | |
| Bet is, quod he, a pyk than a pikerel; | 175 |
| And bet than old boef is the tendre veel. | |
| I wol no womman thritty yeer of age, | |
| It is but bene-straw and greet forage. | |
| And eek thise olde widwes, god it woot, | |
| They conne so muchel craft on Wades boot, | 180 |
| So muchel broken harm, whan that hem leste, | |
| That with hem sholde I never live in reste. | |
| For sondry scoles maken sotil clerkis; | |
| Womman of manye scoles half a clerk is. | |
| But certeynly, a yong thing may men gye, | 185 |
| Right as men may warm wex with handes plye. | |
| Wherfore I sey yow pleynly, in a clause, | |
| I wol non old wyf han right for this cause. | |
| For if so were, I hadde swich mischaunce, | |
| That I in hir ne coude han no plesaunce, | 190 |
| Thanne sholde I lede my lyf in avoutrye, | |
| And go streight to the devel, whan I dye. | |
| Ne children sholde I none up-on hir geten; | |
| Yet were me lever houndes had me eten, | |
| Than that myn heritage sholde falle | 195 |
| In straunge hand, and this I tell yow alle. | |
| I dote nat, I woot the cause why | |
| Men sholde wedde, and forthermore wot I, | |
| Ther speketh many a man of mariage, | |
| That woot na-more of it than woot my page, | 200 |
| For whiche causes man sholde take a wyf. | |
| If he ne may nat liven chast his lyf, | |
| Take him a wyf with greet devocioun, | |
| By-cause of leveful procreacioun | |
| Of children, to thonour of god above, | 205 |
| And nat only for paramour or love; | |
| And for they sholde lecherye eschue, | |
| And yelde hir dettes whan that they ben due; | |
| Or for that ech of hem sholde helpen other | |
| In meschief, as a suster shal the brother; | 210 |
| And live in chastitee ful holily. | |
| But sires, by your leve, that am nat I. | |
| For god be thanked, I dar make avaunt, | |
| I fele my limes stark and suffisaunt | |
| To do al that a man bilongeth to; | 215 |
| I woot my-selven best what I may do. | |
| Though I be hoor, I fare as dooth a tree | |
| That blosmeth er that fruyt y-woxen be; | |
| A blosmy tree nis neither drye ne deed. | |
| I fele me nowher hoor but on myn heed; | 220 |
| Myn herte and alle my limes been as grene | |
| As laurer thurgh the yeer is for to sene. | |
| And sin that ye han herd al myn entente, | |
| I prey yow to my wil ye wole assente. | |
| Diverse men diversely him tolde | 225 |
| Of mariage manye ensamples olde. | |
| Somme blamed it, somme preysed it, certeyn; | |
| But atte laste, shortly for to seyn, | |
| As al day falleth altercacioun | |
| Bitwixen freendes in disputisoun, | 230 |
| Ther fil a stryf bitwixe his bretheren two, | |
| Of whiche that oon was cleped Placebo, | |
| Iustinus soothly called was that other. | |
| Placebo seyde, o Ianuarie, brother, | |
| Ful litel nede had ye, my lord so dere, | 235 |
| Conseil to axe of any that is here; | |
| But that ye been so ful of sapience, | |
| That yow ne lyketh, for your heighe prudence, | |
| To weyven fro the word of Salomon. | |
| This word seyde he un-to us everichon: | 240 |
| Wirk alle thing by conseil, thus seyde he, | |
| And thanne shaltow nat repente thee. | |
| But though that Salomon spak swich a word, | |
| Myn owene dere brother and my lord, | |
| So wisly god my soule bringe at reste, | 245 |
| I hold your owene conseil is the beste. | |
| For brother myn, of me tak this motyf, | |
| I have now been a court-man al my lyf. | |
| And god it woot, though I unworthy be, | |
| I have stonden in ful greet degree | 250 |
| Abouten lordes of ful heigh estaat; | |
| Yet hadde I never with noon of hem debaat. | |
| I never hem contraried, trewely; | |
| I woot wel that my lord can more than I. | |
| What that he seith, I holde it ferme and stable; | 255 |
| I seye the same, or elles thing semblable. | |
| A ful gret fool is any conseillour, | |
| That serveth any lord of heigh honour, | |
| That dar presume, or elles thenken it, | |
| That his conseil sholde passe his lordes wit. | 260 |
| Nay, lordes been no foles, by my fay; | |
| Ye han your-selven shewed heer to-day | |
| So heigh sentence, so holily and weel, | |
| That I consente and conferme every-deel | |
| Your wordes alle, and your opinioun. | 265 |
| By god, ther nis no man in al this toun | |
| Nin al Itaille, that coude bet han sayd; | |
| Crist halt him of this conseil wel apayd. | |
| And trewely, it is an heigh corage | |
| Of any man, that stopen is in age, | 270 |
| To take a yong wyf; by my fader kin, | |
| Your herte hangeth on a Ioly pin. | |
| Doth now in this matere right as yow leste, | |
| For finally I holde it for the beste. | |
| Iustinus, that ay stille sat and herde, | 275 |
| Right in this wyse to Placebo answerde: | |
| Now brother myn, be pacient, I preye, | |
| Sin ye han seyd, and herkneth what I seye. | |
| Senek among his othere wordes wyse | |
| Seith, that a man oghte him right wel avyse, | 280 |
| To whom he yeveth his lond or his catel. | |
| And sin I oghte avyse me right wel | |
| To whom I yeve my good awey fro me, | |
| Wel muchel more I oghte avysed be | |
| To whom I yeve my body; for alwey | 285 |
| I warne yow wel, it is no childes pley | |
| To take a wyf with-oute avysement. | |
| Men moste enquere, this is myn assent, | |
| Wher she be wys, or sobre, or dronkelewe, | |
| Or proud, or elles other-weys a shrewe; | 290 |
| A chydester, or wastour of thy good, | |
| Or riche, or poore, or elles mannish wood. | |
| Al-be-it so that no man finden shal | |
| Noon in this world that trotteth hool in al, | |
| Ne man ne beest, swich as men coude devyse; | 295 |
| But nathelees, it oghte y-nough suffise | |
| With any wyf, if so were that she hadde | |
| Mo gode thewes than hir vyces badde; | |
| And al this axeth leyser for tenquere. | |
| For god it woot, I have wept many a tere | 300 |
| Ful prively, sin I have had a wyf. | |
| Preyse who-so wole a wedded mannes lyf, | |
| Certein, I finde in it but cost and care, | |
| And observances, of alle blisses bare. | |
| And yet, god woot, my neighebores aboute, | 305 |
| And namely of wommen many a route, | |
| Seyn that I have the moste stedefast wyf, | |
| And eek the mekeste oon that bereth lyf. | |
| But I wot best wher wringeth me my sho. | |
| Ye mowe, for me, right as yow lyketh do; | 310 |
| Avyseth yow, ye been a man of age, | |
| How that ye entren in-to mariage, | |
| And namely with a yong wyf and a fair. | |
| By him that made water, erthe, and air, | |
| The yongest man that is in al this route | 315 |
| Is bisy y-nogh to bringen it aboute | |
| To han his wyf allone, trusteth me. | |
| Ye shul nat plese hir fully yeres three, | |
| This is to seyn, to doon hir ful plesaunce. | |
| A wyf axeth ful many an observaunce. | 320 |
| I prey yow that ye be nat yvel apayd. | |
| Wel, qoud this Ianuarie, and hastow sayd? | |
| Straw for thy Senek, and for thy proverbes, | |
| I counte nat a panier ful of herbes | |
| Of scole-termes; wyser men than thow, | 325 |
| As thou hast herd, assenteden right now | |
| To my purpos; Placebo, what sey ye? | |
| I seye, it is a cursed man, quod he, | |
| That letteth matrimoine, sikerly. | |
| And with that word they rysen sodeynly, | 330 |
| And been assented fully, that he sholde | |
| Be wedded whanne him list and wher he wolde. | |
| Heigh fantasye and curious bisinesse | |
| Fro day to day gan in the soule impresse | |
| Of Ianuarie aboute his mariage. | 335 |
| Many fair shap, and many a fair visage | |
| Ther passeth thurgh his herte, night by night. | |
| As who-so toke a mirour polished bright, | |
| And sette it in a commune market-place, | |
| Than sholde he see many a figure pace | 340 |
| By his mirour; and, in the same wyse, | |
| Gan Ianuarie inwith his thoght devyse | |
| Of maydens, whiche that dwelten him bisyde. | |
| He wiste nat wher that he mighte abyde. | |
| For if that oon have beaute in hir face, | 345 |
| Another stant so in the peples grace | |
| For hir sadnesse, and hir benignitee, | |
| That of the peple grettest voys hath she. | |
| And somme were riche, and hadden badde name. | |
| But nathelees, bitwixe ernest and game, | 350 |
| He atte laste apoynted him on oon, | |
| And leet alle othere from his herte goon, | |
| And chees hir of his owene auctoritee; | |
| For love is blind al day, and may nat see. | |
| And whan that he was in his bed y-broght, | 355 |
| He purtreyed, in his herte and in his thoght, | |
| Hir fresshe beautee and hir age tendre, | |
| Hir myddel smal, hir armes longe and sclendre, | |
| Hir wyse governaunce, hir gentillesse, | |
| Hir wommanly beringe and hir sadnesse. | 360 |
| And whan that he on hir was condescended, | |
| Him thoughte his chois mighte nat ben amended. | |
| For whan that he him-self concluded hadde, | |
| Him thoughte ech other mannes wit so badde, | |
| That inpossible it were to replye | 365 |
| Agayn his chois, this was his fantasye. | |
| His freendes sente he to at his instaunce, | |
| And preyed hem to doon him that plesaunce, | |
| That hastily they wolden to him come; | |
| He wolde abregge hir labour, alle and some. | 370 |
| Nedeth na-more for him to go ne ryde, | |
| He was apoynted ther he wolde abyde. | |
| Placebo cam, and eek his freendes sone, | |
| And alderfirst he bad hem alle a bone, | |
| That noon of hem none argumentes make | 375 |
| Agayn the purpos which that he hath take; | |
| Which purpos was plesant to god, seyde he, | |
| And verray ground of his prosperitee. | |
| He seyde, ther was a mayden in the toun, | |
| Which that of beautee hadde greet renoun, | 380 |
| Al were it so she were of smal degree; | |
| Suffyseth him hir youthe and hir beautee. | |
| Which mayde, he seyde, he wolde han to his wyf, | |
| To lede in ese and holinesse his lyf. | |
| And thanked god, that he mighte han hire al, | 385 |
| That no wight of his blisse parten shal. | |
| And preyde hem to labouren in this nede, | |
| And shapen that he faille nat to spede; | |
| For thanne, he seyde, his spirit was at ese. | |
| Thanne is, quod he, no-thing may me displese, | 390 |
| Save o thing priketh in my conscience, | |
| The which I wol reherce in your presence. | |
| I have, quod he, herd seyd, ful yore ago, | |
| Ther may no man han parfite blisses two, | |
| This is to seye, in erthe and eek in hevene. | 395 |
| For though he kepe him fro the sinnes sevene, | |
| And eek from every branche of thilke tree, | |
| Yet is ther so parfit felicitee, | |
| And so greet ese and lust in mariage, | |
| That ever I am agast, now in myn age, | 400 |
| That I shal lede now so mery a lyf, | |
| So delicat, with-outen wo and stryf, | |
| That I shal have myn hevene in erthe here. | |
| For sith that verray hevene is boght so dere, | |
| With tribulacioun and greet penaunce, | 405 |
| How sholde I thanne, that live in swich plesaunce | |
| As alle wedded men don with hir wyvis, | |
| Come to the blisse ther Crist eterne on lyve is? | |
| This is my drede, and ye, my bretheren tweye, | |
| Assoilleth me this questioun, I preye. | 410 |
| Iustinus, which that hated his folye, | |
| Answerde anon, right in his Iaperye; | |
| And for he wolde his longe tale abregge, | |
| He wolde noon auctoritee allegge, | |
| But seyde, sire, so ther be noon obstacle | 415 |
| Other than this, god of his hye miracle | |
| And of his mercy may so for yow wirche, | |
| That, er ye have your right of holy chirche, | |
| Ye may repente of wedded mannes lyf, | |
| In which ye seyn ther is no wo ne stryf. | 420 |
| And elles, god forbede but he sente | |
| A wedded man him grace to repente | |
| Wel ofte rather than a sengle man! | |
| And therfore, sire, the beste reed I can, | |
| Dispeire yow noght, but have in your memorie, | 425 |
| Paraunter she may be your purgatorie! | |
| She may be goddes mene, and goddes whippe; | |
| Than shal your soule up to hevene skippe | |
| Swifter than dooth an arwe out of the bowe! | |
| I hope to god, her-after shul ye knowe, | 430 |
| That their nis no so greet felicitee | |
| In mariage, ne never-mo shal be, | |
| That yow shal lette of your savacioun, | |
| So that ye use, as skile is and resoun, | |
| The lustes of your wyf attemprely, | 435 |
| And that ye plese hir nat to amorously, | |
| And that ye kepe yow eek from other sinne. | |
| My tale is doon:for my wit is thinne. | |
| Beth nat agast her-of, my brother dere. | |
| (But lat us waden out of this matere. | 440 |
| The Wyf of Bathe, if ye han understonde, | |
| Of mariage, which we have on honde, | |
| Declared hath ful wel in litel space). | |
| Fareth now wel, god have yow in his grace. | |
| And with this word this Iustin and his brother | 445 |
| Han take hir leve, and ech of hem of other. | |
| For whan they sawe it moste nedes be, | |
| They wroghten so, by sly and wys tretee, | |
| That she, this mayden, which that Maius highte, | |
| As hastily as ever that she mighte, | 450 |
| Shal wedded be un-to this Ianuarie. | |
| I trowe it were to longe yow to tarie, | |
| If I yow tolde of every scrit and bond, | |
| By which that she was feffed in his lond; | |
| Or for to herknen of hir riche array. | 455 |
| But finally y-comen is the day | |
| That to the chirche bothe be they went | |
| For to receyve the holy sacrement. | |
| Forth comth the preest, with stole aboute his nekke, | |
| And bad hir be lyk Sarra and Rebekke, | 460 |
| In wisdom and in trouthe of mariage; | |
| And seyde his orisons, as is usage, | |
| And crouched hem, and bad god sholde hem blesse, | |
| And made al siker y-nogh with holinesse. | |
| Thus been they wedded with solempnitee, | 465 |
| And at the feste sitteth he and she | |
| With other worthy folk up-on the deys. | |
| Al ful of Ioye and blisse is the paleys, | |
| And ful of instruments and of vitaille, | |
| The moste deyntevous of al Itaille. | 470 |
| Biforn hem stoode swiche instruments of soun, | |
| That Orpheus, ne of Thebes Amphioun, | |
| Ne maden never swich a melodye. | |
| At every cours than cam loud minstraleye, | |
| That never tromped Ioab, for to here, | 475 |
| Nor he, Theodomas, yet half so clere, | |
| At Thebes, whan the citee was in doute. | |
| Bacus the wyn hem skinketh al aboute, | |
| And Venus laugheth up-on every wight. | |
| For Ianuarie was bicome hir knight, | 480 |
| And wolde bothe assayen his corage | |
| In libertee, and eek in mariage; | |
| And with hir fyrbrond in hir hand aboute | |
| Daunceth biforn the bryde and al the route. | |
| And certeinly, I dar right wel seyn this, | 485 |
| Ymenëus, that god of wedding is, | |
| Saugh never his lyf so mery a wedded man. | |
| Hold thou thy pees, thou poete Marcian, | |
| That wrytest us that ilke wedding murie | |
| Of hir, Philologye, and him, Mercurie, | 490 |
| And of the songes that the Muses songe. | |
| To smal is bothe thy penne, and eek thy tonge, | |
| For to descryven of this mariage. | |
| Whan tendre youthe hath wedded stouping age, | |
| Ther is swich mirthe that it may nat be writen; | 495 |
| Assayeth it your-self, than may ye witen | |
| If that I lye or noon in this matere. | |
| Maius, that sit with so benigne a chere, | |
| Hir to biholde it semed fayëryë; | |
| Quene Ester loked never with swich an yë | 500 |
| On Assuer, so meke a look hath she. | |
| I may yow nat devyse al hir beautee; | |
| But thus muche of hir beautee telle I may, | |
| That she was lyk the brighte morwe of May, | |
| Fulfild of alle beautee and plesaunce. | 505 |
| This Ianuarie is ravisshed in a traunce | |
| At every time he loked on hir face; | |
| But in his herte he gan hir to manace, | |
| That he that night in armes wolde hir streyne | |
| Harder than ever Paris dide Eleyne. | 510 |
| But nathelees, yet hadde he greet pitee, | |
| That thilke night offenden hir moste he; | |
| And thoughte, allas! o tendre creature! | |
| Now wolde god ye mighte wel endure | |
| Al my corage, it is so sharp and kene; | 515 |
| I am agast ye shul it nat sustene. | |
| But god forbede that I dide al my might! | |
| Now wolde god that it were woxen night, | |
| And that the night wolde lasten evermo. | |
| I wolde that al this peple were ago. | 520 |
| And finally, he doth al his labour, | |
| As he best mighte, savinge his honour, | |
| To haste hem fro the mete in subtil wyse. | |
| The tyme cam that reson was to ryse; | |
| And after that, men daunce and drinken faste, | 525 |
| And spyces al aboute the hous they caste; | |
| And ful of Ioye and blisse is every man; | |
| All but a squyer, highte Damian, | |
| Which carf biforn the knight ful many a day. | |
| He was so ravisshed on his lady May, | 530 |
| That for the verray peyne he was ny wood; | |
| Almost he swelte and swowned ther he stood. | |
| So sore hath Venus hurt him with hir brond, | |
| As that she bar it daunsinge in hir hond. | |
| And to his bed he wente him hastily; | 535 |
| Na-more of him as at this tyme speke I. | |
| But ther I lete him wepe y-nough and pleyne, | |
| Til fresshe May wol rewen on his peyne. | |
| O perilous fyr, that in the bedstraw bredeth! | |
| O famulier foo, that his servyce bedeth! | 540 |
| O servant traitour, false hoomly hewe, | |
| Lyk to the naddre in bosom sly untrewe, | |
| God shilde us alle from your aqueyntaunce! | |
| O Ianuarie, dronken in plesaunce | |
| Of mariage, see how thy Damian, | 545 |
| Thyn owene squyer and thy borne man, | |
| Entendeth for to do thee vileinye. | |
| God graunte thee thyn hoomly fo tespye. | |
| For in this world nis worse pestilence | |
| Than hoomly foo al day in thy presence. | 550 |
| Parfourned hath the sonne his ark diurne, | |
| No lenger may the body of him soiurne | |
| On thorisonte, as in that latitude. | |
| Night with his mantel, that is derk and rude, | |
| Gan oversprede the hemisperie aboute; | 555 |
| For which departed is this lusty route | |
| Fro Ianuarie, with thank on every syde. | |
| Hom to hir houses lustily they ryde, | |
| Wher-as they doon hir thinges as hem leste, | |
| And whan they sye hir tyme, goon to reste. | 560 |
| Sone after that, this hastif Ianuarie | |
| Wolde go to bedde, he wolde no lenger tarie. | |
| He drinketh ipocras, clarree, and vernage | |
| Of spyces hote, tencresen his corage; | |
| And many a letuarie hadde he ful fyn, | 565 |
| Swiche as the cursed monk dan Constantyn | |
| Hath writen in his book de Coitu; | |
| To eten hem alle, he nas no-thing eschu. | |
| And to his privee freendes thus seyde he: | |
| For goddes love, as sone as it may be, | 570 |
| Lat voyden al this hous in curteys wyse. | |
| And they han doon right as he wol devyse. | |
| Men drinken, and the travers drawe anon; | |
| The bryde was broght a-bedde as stille as stoon; | |
| And whan the bed was with the preest y-blessed, | 575 |
| Out of the chambre hath every wight him dressed. | |
| And Ianuarie hath faste in armes take | |
| His fresshe May, his paradys, his make. | |
| He lulleth hir, he kisseth hir ful ofte | |
| With thikke bristles of his berd unsofte, | 580 |
| Lyk to the skin of houndfish, sharp as brere, | |
| For he was shave al newe in his manere. | |
| He rubbeth hir aboute hir tendre face, | |
| And seyde thus, allas! I moot trespace | |
| To yow, my spouse, and yow gretly offende, | 585 |
| Er tyme come that I wil doun descende. | |
| But nathelees, considereth this, quod he, | |
| Ther nis no werkman, what-so-ever he be, | |
| That may bothe werke wel and hastily; | |
| This wol be doon at leyser parfitly. | 590 |
| It is no fors how longe that we pleye; | |
| In trewe wedlok wedded be we tweye; | |
| And blessed be the yok that we been inne, | |
| For in our actes we mowe do no sinne. | |
| A man may do no sinne with his wyf, | 595 |
| Ne hurte him-selven with his owene knyf; | |
| For we han leve to pleye us by the lawe. | |
| Thus laboureth he til that the day gan dawe; | |
| And than he taketh a sop in fyn clarree, | |
| And upright in his bed than sitteth he, | 600 |
| And after that he sang ful loude and clere, | |
| And kiste his wyf, and made wantoun chere. | |
| He was al coltish, ful of ragerye, | |
| And ful of Iargon as a flekked pye. | |
| The slakke skin aboute his nekke shaketh, | 605 |
| Whyl that he sang; so chaunteth he and craketh. | |
| But god wot what that May thoughte in hir herte, | |
| Whan she him saugh up sittinge in his sherte, | |
| In his night-cappe, and with his nekke lene; | |
| She preyseth nat his pleying worth a bene. | 610 |
| Than seide he thus, my reste wol I take; | |
| Now day is come, I may no lenger wake. | |
| And doun he leyde his heed, and sleep til pryme. | |
| And afterward, whan that he saugh his tyme, | |
| Up ryseth Ianuarie; but fresshe May | 615 |
| Holdeth hir chambre un-to the fourthe day, | |
| As usage is of wyves for the beste. | |
| For every labour som-tyme moot han reste, | |
| Or elles longe may he nat endure; | |
| This is to seyn, no lyves creature, | 620 |
| Be it of fish, or brid, or beest, or man. | |
| Now wol I speke of woful Damian, | |
| That languissheth for love, as ye shul here; | |
| Therfore I speke to him in this manere: | |
| I seye, O sely Damian, allas! | 625 |
| Answere to my demaunde, as in this cas, | |
| How shaltow to thy lady fresshe May | |
| Telle thy wo? She wole alwey seye nay; | |
| Eek if thou speke, she wol thy wo biwreye; | |
| God be thyn help, I can no bettre seye. | 630 |
| This syke Damian in Venus fyr | |
| So brenneth, that he dyeth for desyr; | |
| For which he putte his lyf in aventure, | |
| No lenger mighte he in this wyse endure; | |
| But prively a penner gan he borwe, | 635 |
| And in a lettre wroot he al his sorwe, | |
| In manere of a compleynt or a lay, | |
| Un-to his faire fresshe lady May. | |
| And in a purs of silk, heng on his sherte, | |
| He hath it put, and leyde it at his herte. | 640 |
| The mone that, at noon, was, thilke day | |
| That Ianuarie hath wedded fresshe May, | |
| In two of Taur, was in-to Cancre gliden; | |
| So longe hath Maius in hir chambre biden, | |
| As custume is un-to thise nobles alle. | 645 |
| A bryde shal nat eten in the halle, | |
| Til dayes foure or three dayes atte leste | |
| Y-passed been; than lat hir go to feste. | |
| The fourthe day compleet fro noon to noon, | |
| Whan that the heighe masse was y-doon, | 650 |
| In halle sit this Ianuarie, and May | |
| As fresh as is the brighte someres day. | |
| And so bifel, how that this gode man | |
| Remembred him upon this Damian, | |
| And seyde, Seinte Marie! how may this be, | 655 |
| That Damian entendeth nat to me? | |
| Is he ay syk, or how may this bityde? | |
| His squyeres, whiche that stoden ther bisyde, | |
| Excused him by-cause of his siknesse, | |
| Which letted him to doon his bisinesse; | 660 |
| Noon other cause mighte make him tarie. | |
| That me forthinketh, quod this Ianuarie, | |
| He is a gentil squyer, by my trouthe! | |
| If that he deyde, it were harm and routhe; | |
| He is as wys, discreet, and as secree | 665 |
| As any man I woot of his degree; | |
| And ther-to manly and eek servisable, | |
| And for to been a thrifty man right able. | |
| But after mete, as sone as ever I may, | |
| I wol my-self visyte him and eek May, | 670 |
| To doon him al the confort that I can. | |
| And for that word him blessed every man, | |
| That, of his bountee and his gentillesse, | |
| He wolde so conforten in siknesse | |
| His squyer, for it was a gentil dede. | 675 |
| Dame, quod this Ianuarie, tak good hede, | |
| At-after mete ye, with your wommen alle, | |
| Whan ye han been in chambre out of this halle, | |
| That alle ye go see this Damian; | |
| Doth him disport, he is a gentil man; | 680 |
| And telleth him that I wol him visyte, | |
| Have I no-thing but rested me a lyte; | |
| And spede yow faste, for I wole abyde | |
| Til that ye slepe faste by my syde. | |
| And with that word he gan to him to calle | 685 |
| A squyer, that was marchal of his halle, | |
| And tolde him certeyn thinges, what he wolde. | |
| This fresshe May hath streight hir wey y-holde, | |
| With alle hir wommen, un-to Damian. | |
| Doun by his beddes syde sit she than, | 690 |
| Confortinge him as goodly as she may. | |
| This Damian, whan that his tyme he say, | |
| In secree wise his purs, and eek his bille, | |
| In which that he y-writen hadde his wille, | |
| Hath put in-to hir hand, with-outen more, | 695 |
| Save that he syketh wonder depe and sore, | |
| And softely to hir right thus seyde he: | |
| Mercy! and that ye nat discovere me; | |
| For I am deed, if that this thing be kid. | |
| This purs hath she inwith hir bosom hid, | 700 |
| And wente hir wey; ye gete namore of me. | |
| But un-to Ianuarie y-comen is she, | |
| That on his beddes syde sit ful softe. | |
| He taketh hir, and kisseth hir ful ofte, | |
| And leyde him doun to slepe, and that anon. | 705 |
| She feyned hir as that she moste gon | |
| Ther-as ye woot that every wight mot nede. | |
| And whan she of this bille hath taken hede, | |
| She rente it al to cloutes atte laste, | |
| And in the privee softely it caste. | 710 |
| Who studieth now but faire fresshe May? | |
| Adoun by olde Ianuarie she lay, | |
| That sleep, til that the coughe hath him awaked; | |
| Anon he preyde hir strepen hir al naked; | |
| He wolde of hir, he seyde, han som plesaunce, | 715 |
| And seyde, hir clothes dide him encombraunce, | |
| And she obeyeth, be hir lief or looth. | |
| But lest that precious folk be with me wrooth, | |
| How that he wroghte, I dar nat to yow telle; | |
| Or whether hir thoughte it paradys or helle; | 720 |
| But here I lete hem werken in hir wyse | |
| Til evensong rong, and that they moste aryse. | |
| Were it by destinee or aventure, | |
| Were it by influence or by nature, | |
| Or constellacion, that in swich estat | 725 |
| The hevene stood, that tyme fortunat | |
| Was for to putte a bille of Venus werkes | |
| (For alle thing hath tyme, as seyn thise clerkes) | |
| To any womman, for to gete hir love, | |
| I can nat seye; but grete god above, | 730 |
| That knoweth that non act is causelees, | |
| He deme of al, for I wol holde my pees. | |
| But sooth is this, how that this fresshe May | |
| Hath take swich impression that day, | |
| For pitee of this syke Damian, | 735 |
| That from hir herte she ne dryve can | |
| The remembraunce for to doon him ese. | |
| Certeyn, thoghte she, whom that this thing displese, | |
| I rekke noght, for here I him assure, | |
| To love him best of any creature, | 740 |
| Though he na-more hadde than his sherte. | |
| Lo, pitee renneth sone in gentil herte. | |
| Heer may ye se how excellent franchyse | |
| In wommen is, whan they hem narwe avyse. | |
| Som tyrant is, as ther be many oon, | 745 |
| That hath an herte as hard as any stoon, | |
| Which wolde han lete him sterven in the place | |
| Wel rather than han graunted him hir grace; | |
| And hem reioysen in hir cruel pryde, | |
| And rekke nat to been an homicyde. | 750 |
| This gentil May, fulfilled of pitee, | |
| Right of hir hande a lettre made she, | |
| In which she graunteth him hir verray grace; | |
| Ther lakketh noght but only day and place, | |
| Wher that she mighte un-to his lust suffyse: | 755 |
| For it shal be right as he wol devyse. | |
| And whan she saugh hir time, up-on a day, | |
| To visite this Damian goth May, | |
| And sotilly this lettre doun she threste | |
| Under his pilwe, rede it if him leste. | 760 |
| She taketh him by the hand, and harde him twiste | |
| So secrely, that no wight of it wiste, | |
| And bad him been al hool, and forth she wente | |
| To Ianuarie, whan that he for hir sente. | |
| Up ryseth Damian the nexte morwe, | 765 |
| Al passed was his siknesse and his sorwe. | |
| He kembeth him, he proyneth him and pyketh, | |
| He dooth al that his lady lust and lyketh; | |
| And eek to Ianuarie he gooth as lowe | |
| As ever dide a dogge for the bowe. | 770 |
| He is so plesant un-to every man, | |
| (For craft is al, who-so that do it can) | |
| That every wight is fayn to speke him good; | |
| And fully in his lady grace he stood. | |
| Thus lete I Damian aboute his nede, | 775 |
| And in my tale forth I wol procede. | |
| Somme clerkes holden that felicitee | |
| Stant in delyt, and therefor certeyn he, | |
| This noble Ianuarie, with al his might, | |
| In honest wyse, as longeth to a knight, | 780 |
| Shoop him to live ful deliciously. | |
| His housinge, his array, as honestly | |
| To his degree was maked as a kinges. | |
| Amonges othere of his honest thinges, | |
| He made a gardin, walled al with stoon; | 785 |
| So fair a gardin woot I nowher noon. | |
| For out of doute, I verraily suppose, | |
| That he that wroot the Romance of the Rose | |
| Ne coude of it the beautee wel devyse; | |
| Ne Priapus ne mighte nat suffyse, | 790 |
| Though he be god of gardins, for to telle | |
| The beautee of the gardin and the welle, | |
| That stood under a laurer alwey grene. | |
| Ful ofte tyme he, Pluto, and his quene, | |
| Proserpina, and al hir fayërye | 795 |
| Disporten hem and maken melodye | |
| Aboute that welle, and daunced, as men tolde. | |
| This noble knight, this Ianuarie the olde, | |
| Swich deintee hath in it to walke and pleye, | |
| That he wol no wight suffren bere the keye | 800 |
| Save he him-self; for of the smale wiket | |
| He bar alwey of silver a smal cliket, | |
| With which, whan that him leste, he it unshette. | |
| And whan he wolde paye his wyf hir dette | |
| In somer seson, thider wolde he go, | 805 |
| And May his wyf, and no wight but they two; | |
| And thinges whiche that were nat doon a-bedde, | |
| He in the gardin parfourned hem and spedde. | |
| And in this wyse, many a mery day, | |
| Lived this Ianuarie and fresshe May. | 810 |
| But worldly Ioye may nat alwey dure | |
| To Ianuarie, ne to no creature. | |
| O sodeyn hap, o thou fortune instable, | |
| Lyk to the scorpioun so deceivable, | |
| That flaterest with thyn heed when thou wolt stinge; | 815 |
| Thy tayl is deeth, thurgh thyn enveniminge. | |
| O brotil Ioye! o swete venim queynte! | |
| O monstre, that so subtilly canst peynte | |
| Thy yiftes, under hewe of stedfastnesse, | |
| That thou deceyvest bothe more and lesse! | 820 |
| Why hastow Ianuari thus deceyved, | |
| That haddest him for thy ful frend receyved? | |
| And now thou hast biraft him bothe hise yën, | |
| For sorwe of which desyreth he to dyen. | |
| Allas! this noble Ianuarie free, | 825 |
| Amidde his lust and his prosperitee, | |
| Is woxen blind, and that al sodeynly. | |
| He wepeth and he wayleth pitously; | |
| And ther-with-al the fyr of Ialousye, | |
| Lest that his wyf sholde falle in som folye, | 830 |
| So brente his herte, that he wolde fayn | |
| That som man bothe him and hir had slayn. | |
| For neither after his deeth, nor in his lyf, | |
| Ne wolde he that she were love ne wyf, | |
| But ever live as widwe in clothes blake, | 835 |
| Soul as the turtle that lost hath hir make. | |
| But atte laste, after a monthe or tweye, | |
| His sorwe gan aswage, sooth to seye; | |
| For whan he wiste it may noon other be, | |
| He paciently took his adversitee; | 840 |
| Save, out of doute, he may nat forgoon | |
| That he nas Ialous evermore in oon; | |
| Which Ialousye it was so outrageous, | |
| That neither in halle, nin noon other hous, | |
| Ne in noon other place, never-the-mo, | 845 |
| He nolde suffre hir for to ryde or go, | |
| But-if that he had hand on hir alway; | |
| For which ful ofte wepeth fresshe May, | |
| That loveth Damian so benignely, | |
| That she mot outher dyen sodeynly, | 850 |
| Or elles she mot han him as hir leste; | |
| She wayteth whan hir herte wolde breste. | |
| Up-on that other syde Damian | |
| Bicomen is the sorwefulleste man | |
| That ever was; for neither night ne day | 855 |
| Ne mighte he speke a word to fresshe May, | |
| As to his purpos, of no swich matere, | |
| But-if that Ianuarie moste it here, | |
| That hadde an hand up-on hir evermo. | |
| But nathelees, by wryting to and fro | 860 |
| And privee signes, wiste he what she mente; | |
| And she knew eek the fyn of his entente. | |
| O Ianuarie, what mighte it thee availle, | |
| Thou mightest see as fer as shippes saille? | |
| For also good is blind deceyved be, | 865 |
| As be deceyved whan a man may se. | |
| Lo, Argus, which that hadde an hondred yën, | |
| For al that ever he coude poure or pryen, | |
| Yet was he blent; and, god wot, so ben mo, | |
| That wenen wisly that it be nat so. | 870 |
| Passe over is an ese, I sey na-more. | |
| This fresshe May, that I spak of so yore, | |
| In warme wex hath emprented the cliket, | |
| That Ianuarie bar of the smale wiket, | |
| By which in-to his gardin ofte he wente. | 875 |
| And Damian, that knew al hir entente, | |
| The cliket countrefeted prively; | |
| Ther nis na-more to seye, but hastily | |
| Som wonder by this cliket shal bityde, | |
| Which ye shul heren, if ye wole abyde. | 880 |
| O noble Ovyde, ful sooth seystou, god woot! | |
| What sleighte is it, thogh it be long and hoot, | |
| That he nil finde it out in som manere? | |
| By Piramus and Tesbee may men lere; | |
| Thogh they were kept ful longe streite overal, | 885 |
| They been accorded, rouninge thurgh a wal, | |
| Ther no wight coude han founde out swich a sleighte. | |
| But now to purpos; er that dayes eighte | |
| Were passed, er the monthe of Iuil, bifil | |
| That Ianuarie hath caught so greet a wil, | 890 |
| Thurgh egging of his wyf, him for to pleye | |
| In his gardin, and no wight but they tweye, | |
| That in a morwe un-to this May seith he: | |
| Rys up, my wyf, my love, my lady free; | |
| The turtles vois is herd, my douve swete; | 895 |
| The winter is goon, with alle his reynes wete; | |
| Com forth now, with thyn eyën columbyn! | |
| How fairer been thy brestes than is wyn! | |
| The gardin is enclosed al aboute; | |
| Com forth, my whyte spouse; out of doute, | 900 |
| Thou hast me wounded in myn herte, o wyf! | |
| No spot of thee ne knew I al my lyf. | |
| Com forth, and lat us taken our disport; | |
| I chees thee for my wyf and my confort. | |
| Swiche olde lewed wordes used he; | 905 |
| On Damian a signe made she, | |
| That he sholde go biforen with his cliket: | |
| This Damian thanne hath opened the wiket, | |
| And in he stirte, and that in swich manere, | |
| That no wight mighte it see neither y-here; | 910 |
| And stille he sit under a bush anoon. | |
| This Ianuarie, as blind as is a stoon, | |
| With Maius in his hand, and no wight mo, | |
| In-to his fresshe gardin is ago, | |
| And clapte to the wiket sodeynly. | 915 |
| Now, wyf, quod he, heer nis but thou and I, | |
| That art the creature that I best love. | |
| For, by that lord that sit in heven above, | |
| Lever ich hadde dyen on a knyf, | |
| Than thee offende, trewe dere wyf! | 920 |
| For goddes sake, thenk how I thee chees, | |
| Noght for no coveityse, doutelees, | |
| But only for the love I had to thee. | |
| And though that I be old, and may nat see, | |
| Beth to me trewe, and I shal telle yow why. | 925 |
| Three thinges, certes, shul ye winne ther-by; | |
| First, love of Crist, and to your-self honour, | |
| And al myn heritage, toun and tour; | |
| I yeve it yow, maketh chartres as yow leste; | |
| This shal be doon to-morwe er sonne reste. | 930 |
| So wisly god my soule bringe in blisse, | |
| I prey yow first, in covenant ye me kisse. | |
| And thogh that I be Ialous, wyte me noght. | |
| Ye been so depe enprented in my thoght, | |
| That, whan that I considere your beautee, | 935 |
| And ther-with-al the unlykly elde of me, | |
| I may nat, certes, thogh I sholde dye, | |
| Forbere to been out of your companye | |
| For verray love; this is with-outen doute. | |
| Now kis me, wyf, and lat us rome aboute. | 940 |
| This fresshe May, whan she thise wordes herde, | |
| Benignely to Ianuarie answerde, | |
| But first and forward she bigan to wepe, | |
| I have, quod she, a soule for to kepe | |
| As wel as ye, and also myn honour, | 945 |
| And of my wyfhod thilke tendre flour, | |
| Which that I have assured in your hond, | |
| Whan that the preest to yow my body bond; | |
| Wherfore I wole answere in this manere | |
| By the leve of yow, my lord so dere: | 950 |
| I prey to god, that never dawe the day | |
| That I ne sterve, as foule as womman may, | |
| If ever I do un-to my kin that shame, | |
| Or elles I empeyre so my name, | |
| That I be fals; and if I do that lakke, | 955 |
| Do strepe me and put me in a sakke, | |
| And in the nexte river do me drenche. | |
| I am a gentil womman and no wenche. | |
| Why speke ye thus? but men ben ever untrewe, | |
| And wommen have repreve of yow ay newe. | 960 |
| Ye han non other contenance, I leve, | |
| But speke to us of untrust and repreve. | |
| And with that word she saugh wher Damian | |
| Sat in the bush, and coughen she bigan, | |
| And with hir finger signes made she, | 965 |
| That Damian sholde climbe up-on a tree, | |
| That charged was with fruit, and up he wente; | |
| For verraily he knew al hir entente, | |
| And every signe that she coude make | |
| Wel bet than Ianuarie, hir owene make. | 970 |
| For in a lettre she had told him al | |
| Of this matere, how he werchen shal. | |
| And thus I lete him sitte up-on the pyrie, | |
| And Ianuarie and May rominge myrie. | |
| Bright was the day, and blew the firmament, | 975 |
| Phebus of gold his stremes doun hath sent, | |
| To gladen every flour with his warmnesse. | |
| He was that tyme in Geminis, as I gesse, | |
| But litel fro his declinacioun | |
| Of Cancer, Iovis exaltacioun. | 980 |
| And so bifel, that brighte morwe-tyde, | |
| That in that gardin, in the ferther syde, | |
| Pluto, that is the king of fayërye, | |
| And many a lady in his companye, | |
| Folwinge his wyf, the quene Proserpyne, | 985 |
| Ech after other, right as any lyne | |
| Whil that she gadered floures in the mede, | |
| In Claudian ye may the story rede, | |
| How in his grisly carte he hir fette: | |
| This king of fairye thanne adoun him sette | 990 |
| Up-on a bench of turves, fresh and grene, | |
| And right anon thus seyde he to his quene. | |
| My wyf, quod he, ther may no wight sey nay; | |
| Thexperience so preveth every day | |
| The treson whiche that wommen doon to man. | 995 |
| Ten hondred thousand [stories] telle I can | |
| Notable of your untrouthe and brotilnesse. | |
| O Salomon, wys, richest of richesse, | |
| Fulfild of sapience and of worldly glorie, | |
| Ful worthy been thy wordes to memorie | 1000 |
| To every wight that wit and reson can. | |
| Thus preiseth he yet the bountee of man: | |
| Amonges a thousand men yet fond I oon, | |
| But of wommen alle fond I noon. | |
| Thus seith the king that knoweth your wikkednesse; | 1005 |
| And Iesus filius Syrak, as I gesse, | |
| Ne speketh of yow but selde reverence. | |
| A wilde fyr and corrupt pestilence | |
| So falle up-on your bodies yet to-night! | |
| Ne see ye nat this honurable knight, | 1010 |
| By-cause, allas! that he is blind and old, | |
| His owene man shal make him cokewold; | |
| Lo heer he sit, the lechour, in the tree. | |
| Now wol I graunten, of my magestee, | |
| Un-to this olde blinde worthy knight | 1015 |
| That he shal have ayeyn his eyen sight, | |
| Whan that his wyf wold doon him vileinye; | |
| Than shal he knowen al hir harlotrye | |
| Both in repreve of hir and othere mo. | |
| Ye shal, quod Proserpyne, wol ye so; | 1020 |
| Now, by my modres sires soule I swere, | |
| That I shal yeven hir suffisant answere, | |
| And alle wommen after, for hir sake; | |
| That, though they be in any gilt y-take, | |
| With face bold they shulle hem-self excuse, | 1025 |
| And bere hem doun that wolden hem accuse. | |
| For lakke of answer, noon of hem shal dyen. | |
| Al hadde man seyn a thing with bothe his yën, | |
| Yit shul we wommen visage it hardily, | |
| And wepe, and swere, and chyde subtilly, | 1030 |
| So that ye men shul been as lewed as gees. | |
| What rekketh me of your auctoritees? | |
| I woot wel that this Iew, this Salomon, | |
| Fond of us wommen foles many oon. | |
| But though that he ne fond no good womman, | 1035 |
| Yet hath ther founde many another man | |
| Wommen ful trewe, ful gode, and vertuous. | |
| Witnesse on hem that dwelle in Cristes hous, | |
| With martirdom they preved hir constance. | |
| The Romayn gestes maken remembrance | 1040 |
| Of many a verray trewe wyf also. | |
| But sire, ne be nat wrooth, al-be-it so, | |
| Though that he seyde he fond no good womman, | |
| I prey yow take the sentence of the man; | |
| He mente thus, that in sovereyn bontee | 1045 |
| Nis noon but god, that sit in Trinitee. | |
| Ey! for verray god, that nis but oon, | |
| What make ye so muche of Salomon? | |
| What though he made a temple, goddes hous? | |
| What though he were riche and glorious? | 1050 |
| So made he eek a temple of false goddis, | |
| How mighte he do a thing that more forbode is? | |
| Pardee, as faire as ye his name emplastre, | |
| He was a lechour and an ydolastre; | |
| And in his elde he verray god forsook. | 1055 |
| And if that god ne hadde, as seith the book, | |
| Y-spared him for his fadres sake, he sholde | |
| Have lost his regne rather than he wolde. | |
| I sette noght of al the vileinye, | |
| That ye of wommen wryte, a boterflye. | 1060 |
| I am a womman, nedes moot I speke, | |
| Or elles swelle til myn herte breke. | |
| For sithen he seyde that we ben Iangleresses, | |
| As ever hool I mote brouke my tresses, | |
| I shal nat spare, for no curteisye, | 1065 |
| To speke him harm that wolde us vileinye. | |
| Dame, quod this Pluto, be no lenger wrooth; | |
| I yeve it up; but sith I swoor myn ooth | |
| That I wolde graunten him his sighte ageyn, | |
| My word shal stonde, I warne yow, certeyn. | 1070 |
| I am a king, it sit me noght to lye. | |
| And I, quod she, a queene of fayërye. | |
| Hir answere shal she have, I undertake; | |
| Lat us na-more wordes heer-of make. | |
| For sothe, I wol no lenger yow contrarie. | 1075 |
| Now lat us turne agayn to Ianuarie, | |
| That in the gardin with his faire May | |
| Singeth, ful merier than the papeiay, | |
| Yow love I best, and shal, and other noon. | |
| So longe aboute the aleyes is he goon, | 1080 |
| Til he was come agaynes thilke pyrie, | |
| Wher-as this Damian sitteth ful myrie | |
| An heigh, among the fresshe leves grene. | |
| This fresshe May, that is so bright and shene, | |
| Gan for to syke, and seyde, allas, my syde! | 1085 |
| Now sir, quod she, for aught that may bityde, | |
| I moste han of the peres that I see, | |
| Or I mot dye, so sore longeth me | |
| To eten of the smale peres grene. | |
| Help, for hir love that is of hevene quene! | 1090 |
| I telle yow wel, a womman in my plyt | |
| May han to fruit so greet an appetyt, | |
| That she may dyen, but she of it have. | |
| Allas! quod he, that I ne had heer a knave | |
| That coude climbe; allas! allas! quod he, | 1095 |
| That I am blind. Ye, sir, no fors, quod she: | |
| But wolde ye vouche-sauf, for goddes sake, | |
| The pyrie inwith your armes for to take, | |
| (For wel I woot that ye mistruste me) | |
| Thanne sholde I climbe wel y-nogh, quod she, | 1100 |
| So I my foot mighte sette upon your bak. | |
| Certes, quod he, ther-on shal be no lak, | |
| Mighte I yow helpen with myn herte blood. | |
| He stoupeth doun, and on his bak she stood, | |
| And caughte hir by a twiste, and up she gooth. | 1105 |
| Ladies, I prey yow that ye be nat wrooth; | |
| I can nat glose, I am a rude man. | |
| And sodeynly anon this Damian | |
| Gan pullen up the smok, and in he throng. | |
| And whan that Pluto saugh this grete wrong, | 1110 |
| To Ianuarie he gaf agayn his sighte, | |
| And made him see, as wel as ever he mighte. | |
| And whan that he hadde caught his sighte agayn, | |
| Ne was ther never man of thing so fayn. | |
| But on his wyf his thoght was evermo; | 1115 |
| Up to the tree he caste his eyen two, | |
| And saugh that Damian his wyf had dressed | |
| In swich manere, it may nat ben expressed | |
| But if I wolde speke uncurteisly: | |
| And up he yaf a roring and a cry | 1120 |
| As doth the moder whan the child shal dye: | |
| Out! help! allas! harrow! he gan to crye, | |
| O stronge lady store, what dostow? | |
| And she answerde, sir, what eyleth yow? | |
| Have pacience, and reson in your minde, | 1125 |
| I have yow holpe on bothe your eyen blinde. | |
| Up peril of my soule, I shal nat lyen, | |
| As me was taught, to hele with your yën, | |
| Was no-thing bet to make yow to see | |
| Than strugle with a man up-on a tree. | 1130 |
| God woot, I dide it in ful good entente. | |
| Strugle! quod he, ye, algate in it wente! | |
| God yeve yow bothe on shames deeth to dyen! | |
| He swyved thee, I saugh it with myne yën, | |
| And elles be I hanged by the hals! | 1135 |
| Thanne is, quod she, my medicyne al fals; | |
| For certeinly, if that ye mighte see, | |
| Ye wolde nat seyn thise wordes un-to me; | |
| Ye han som glimsing and no parfit sighte. | |
| I see, quod he, as wel as ever I mighte, | 1140 |
| Thonked be god! with bothe myne eyen two, | |
| And by my trouthe, me thoughte he dide thee so. | |
| Ye maze, maze, gode sire, quod she, | |
| This thank have I for I have maad yow see; | |
| Allas! quod she, that ever I was so kinde! | 1145 |
| Now, dame, quod he, lat al passe out of minde. | |
| Com doun, my lief, and if I have missayd, | |
| God help me so, as I am yvel apayd. | |
| But, by my fader soule, I wende han seyn, | |
| How that this Damian had by thee leyn, | 1150 |
| And that thy smok had leyn up-on his brest. | |
| Ye, sire, quod she, ye may wene as yow lest; | |
| But, sire, a man that waketh out of his sleep, | |
| He may nat sodeynly wel taken keep | |
| Up-on a thing, ne seen it parfitly, | 1155 |
| Til that he be adawed verraily; | |
| Right so a man, that longe hath blind y-be, | |
| Ne may nat sodeynly so wel y-see, | |
| First whan his sighte is newe come ageyn, | |
| As he that hath a day or two y-seyn. | 1160 |
| Til that your sighte y-satled be a whyle, | |
| Ther may ful many a sighte yow bigyle. | |
| Beth war, I prey yow; for, by hevene king, | |
| Ful many a man weneth to seen a thing, | |
| And it is al another than it semeth. | 1165 |
| He that misconceyveth, he misdemeth. | |
| And with that word she leep doun fro the tree. | |
| This Ianuarie, who is glad but he? | |
| He kisseth hir, and clippeth hir ful ofte, | |
| And on hir wombe he stroketh hir ful softe, | 1170 |
| And to his palays hoom he hath hir lad. | |
| Now, gode men, I pray yow to be glad. | |
| Thus endeth heer my tale of Ianuarie; | |
God blesse us and his moder Seinte Marie!
Here is ended the Marchantes Tale of Ianuarie. | |
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