| Thou ferse god of armes, Mars the rede, |
| That in the frosty contre called Trace, |
| Within thy grisly temple ful of drede |
| Honoured art as patroun of that place; |
| 5 | With thy Bellona, Pallas, ful of grace, |
| Be present and my song contynue and guye; |
| At my begynnyng thus to the I crye. |
| |
| For hit ful depe is sonken in my mynde, |
| With pitous hert in Englyssh to endyte |
| 10 | This olde storie, in Latyn which I fynde, |
| Of quene Anelida and fals Arcite, |
| That elde, which that al can frete and bite, |
| As hit hath freten mony a noble storie, |
| Hath nygh devoured out of oure memorie. |
| |
| 15 | Be favorable eke, thou Polymya, |
| On Parnaso that with thy sustres glade, |
| By Elycon, not fer from Cirrea, |
| Singest with vois memorial in the shade, |
| Under the laurer which that may not fade, |
| 20 | And do that I my ship to haven wynne. |
| First folowe I Stace, and after him Corynne. |
| |
| When Theseus with werres longe and grete |
| The aspre folk of Cithe had overcome, |
| With laurer corouned, in his char gold-bete, |
| 25 | Hom to his contre-houses is he come, |
| For which the peple, blisful al and somme, |
| So cryeden that to the sterres hit wente, |
| And him to honouren dide al her entente. |
| |
| Beforn this duk, in signe of victorie, |
| 30 | The trompes come, and in his baner large |
| The ymage of Mars, and in tokenyng of glorie |
| Men myghte sen of tresour many a charge, |
| Many a bright helm, and many a spere and targe, |
| Many a fresh knyght, and many a blysful route, |
| 35 | On hors, on fote, in al the feld aboute. |
| |
| Ipolita his wif, the hardy quene |
| Of Cithia, that he conquered hadde, |
| With Emelye her yonge suster shene, |
| Faire in a char of gold he with him ladde, |
| 40 | That al the ground about her char she spradde |
| With brightnesse of the beaute in her face, |
| Fulfilled of largesse and of alle grace. |
| |
| With his tryumphe and laurer-corouned thus, |
| In al the flour of Fortunes yevynge, |
| 45 | Let I this noble prince Theseus |
| Toward Athenes in his wey rydinge, |
| And founde I wol in shortly for to bringe |
| The slye wey of that I gan to write, |
| Of quene Anelida and fals Arcite. |
| |
| 50 | Mars, which that through his furious cours of ire, |
| The olde wrathe of Juno to fulfille, |
| Hath set the peples hertes bothe on fire |
| Of Thebes and Grece, everich other to kille |
| With blody speres, ne rested never stille, |
| 55 | But throng now her, now ther, among hem bothe, |
| That everych other slough, so were they wrothe. |
| |
| For when Amphiorax and Tydeus, |
| Ipomedon, Parthonope also |
| Were ded, and slayn proude Campaneus, |
| 60 | And when the wrecched Thebans, bretheren two, |
| Were slayn, and kyng Adrastus hom ago, |
| So desolat stod Thebes and so bare |
| That no wight coude remedie of his fare. |
| |
| And when the olde Creon gan espye |
| 65 | How that the blood roial was broght a-doun, |
| He held the cite by his tyrannye |
| And dyde the gentils of that regioun |
| To ben his frendes and wonnen in the toun. |
| So, what for love of him and what for awe, |
| 70 | The noble folk were to the toun idrawe. |
| |
| Among al these Anelida, the quene |
| Of Ermony, was in that toun dwellynge, |
| That fairer was then is the sonne shene. |
| Thurghout the world so gan her name springe |
| 75 | That her to seen had every wyght likynge, |
| For, as of trouthe, is ther noon her lyche |
| Of al the women in this worlde riche. |
| |
| Yong was this quene, of twenty yer of elde, |
| Of mydel stature, and of such fairenesse |
| 80 | That Nature had a joye her to behelde; |
| And for to speken of her stidfastnesse, |
| She passed hath Penelope and Lucresse; |
| And shortly, yf she shal be comprehended, |
| In her ne myghte no thing been amended. |
| |
| 85 | This Theban knyght Arcite eke, soth to seyn, |
| Was yong and therwithal a lusty knyght, |
| But he was double in love and no thing pleyn, |
| And subtil in that craft over any wyght, |
| And with his kunnyng wan this lady bryght; |
| 90 | For so ferforth he gan her trouthe assure |
| That she him trusted over any creature. |
| |
| What shuld I seyn? She loved Arcite so |
| That when that he was absent any throwe, |
| Anon her thoghte her herte brast a-two; |
| 95 | For in her sight to her he bar hym lowe, |
| So that she wende have al his hert yknowe; |
| But he was fals; hit nas but feyned chere -- |
| As nedeth not to men such craft to lere. |
| |
| But nevertheles ful mykel besynesse |
| 100 | Had he er that he myghte his lady wynne, |
| And swor he wolde dyen for distresse |
| Or from his wit he seyde he wolde twynne. |
| Alas, the while! For hit was routhe and synne |
| That she upon his sorowes wolde rewe; |
| 105 | But nothing thinketh the fals as doth the trewe. |
| |
| Her fredom fond Arcite in such manere |
| That al was his that she hath, moche or lyte; |
| Ne to no creature made she chere |
| Ferther then that hit lyked to Arcite. |
| 110 | Ther nas no lak with which he myghte her wite; |
| She was so ferforth yeven hym to plese |
| That al that lyked hym hit dyde her ese. |
| |
| Ther nas to her no maner lettre sent |
| That touched love, from any maner wyght, |
| 115 | That she ne shewed hit him er hit was brent; |
| So pleyn she was and dide her fulle myght |
| That she nyl hiden nothing from her knyght, |
| Lest he of any untrouthe her upbreyde. |
| Withoute bode his heste she obeyde. |
| |
| 120 | And eke he made him jelous over here, |
| That what that any man had to her seyd |
| Anoon he wolde preyen her to swere |
| What was that word or make him evel apaid. |
| Then wende she out of her wyt have breyd; |
| 125 | But al this nas but sleght and flaterie; |
| Withoute love he feyned jelousye. |
| |
| And al this tok she so debonerly |
| That al his wil her thoghte hit skilful thing, |
| And ever the lenger she loved him tendirly |
| 130 | And dide him honour as he were a kyng. |
| Her herte was to him wedded with a ring; |
| So ferforth upon trouthe is her entente |
| That wher he gooth her herte with him wente. |
| |
| When she shal ete, on him is so her thoght |
| 135 | That wel unnethe of mete tok she kep; |
| And when that she was to her reste broght, |
| On him she thoghte alwey til that she slep; |
| When he was absent, prevely she wep: |
| Thus lyveth feire Anelida the quene |
| 140 | For fals Arcite, that dide her al this tene. |
| |
| This fals Arcite, of his newfanglenesse, |
| For she to him so lowly was and trewe, |
| Tok lesse deynte of her stidfastnesse |
| And saw another lady, proud and newe, |
| 145 | And ryght anon he cladde him in her hewe -- |
| Wot I not whethir in white, rede, or grene -- |
| And falsed fair Anelida the quene. |
| |
| But neverthelesse, gret wonder was hit noon |
| Thogh he were fals, for hit is kynde of man |
| 150 | Sith Lamek was, that is so longe agoon, |
| To ben in love as fals as evere he can; |
| He was the firste fader that began |
| To loven two, and was in bigamye, |
| And he found tentes first, but yf men lye. |
| |
| 155 | This fals Arcite, sumwhat moste he feyne, |
| When he wex fals, to covere his traitorie, |
| Ryght as an hors that can both bite and pleyne, |
| For he bar her on honde of trecherie, |
| And swor he coude her doublenesse espie, |
| 160 | And al was falsnes that she to him mente. |
| Thus swor this thef, and forth his way he wente. |
| |
| Alas, what herte myght enduren hit, |
| For routhe and wo, her sorwe for to telle? |
| Or what man hath the cunnyng or the wit? |
| 165 | Or what man mighte within the chambre dwelle, |
| Yf I to him rehersen sholde the helle |
| That suffreth fair Anelida the quene |
| For fals Arcite, that dide her al this tene. |
| |
| She wepith, waileth, swowneth pitously; |
| 170 | To grounde ded she falleth as a ston; |
| Craumpyssheth her lymes crokedly; |
| She speketh as her wit were al agon; |
| Other colour then asshen hath she noon; |
| Non other word speketh she, moche or lyte, |
| 175 | But `Merci, cruel herte myn, Arcite!' |
| |
| And thus endureth til that she was so mat |
| That she ne hath foot on which she may sustene, |
| But forth languisshing evere in this estat, |
| Of which Arcite hath nouther routhe ne tene. |
| 180 | His herte was elleswhere, newe and grene, |
| That on her wo ne deyneth him not to thinke; |
| Him rekketh never wher she flete or synke. |
| |
| His newe lady holdeth him so narowe |
| Up by the bridil, at the staves ende, |
| 185 | That every word he dredeth as an arowe; |
| Her daunger made him bothe bowe and bende, |
| And as her liste, made him turne or wende, |
| For she ne graunted him in her lyvynge |
| No grace whi that he hath lust to singe, |
| |
| 190 | But drof hym forth. Unnethe liste her knowe |
| That he was servaunt unto her ladishippe; |
| But lest that he were proud, she held him lowe. |
| Thus serveth he withoute fee or shipe; |
| She sent him now to londe, now to shippe; |
| 195 | And for she yaf him daunger al his fille, |
| Therfor she hadde him at her owne wille. |
| |
| Ensample of this, ye thrifty wymmen alle, |
| Take her of Anelida and Arcite, |
| That for her liste him `dere herte' calle |
| 200 | And was so meke, therfor he loved her lyte. |
| The kynde of mannes herte is to delyte |
| In thing that straunge is, also God me save! |
| For what he may not gete, that wolde he have. |
| |
| Now turne we to Anelida ageyn, |
| 205 | That pyneth day be day in langwisshinge, |
| But when she saw that her ne gat no geyn, |
| Upon a day, ful sorowfully wepinge, |
| She caste her for to make a compleynynge, |
| And of her owne hond she gan hit write, |
| 210 | And sente hit to her Theban knyght, Arcite. |
| |