| 75 | Oure sweete Lord God of hevene, that no man wole perisse but wole that |
| we comen alle to the knoweleche of hym and to the blisful lif that is perdurable, |
| amonesteth us by the prophete Jeremie, that seith in thys wyse: |
| "Stondeth upon the weyes, and seeth and axeth of olde pathes (that is to seyn, of olde sentences) which is the goode wey, |
| and walketh in that wey, and ye shal fynde refresshynge for youre soules, etc." |
| Manye been the weyes espirituels that leden folk to oure Lord Jhesu Crist and to the regne of glorie. |
| 80 | Of whiche weyes ther is a ful noble wey and a ful covenable, which may nat fayle to man ne to womman |
| that thurgh synne hath mysgoon fro the righte wey of Jerusalem celestial; |
| and this wey is cleped Penitence, of which man sholde gladly herknen and enquere with al his herte |
| to wyten what is Penitence, and whennes it is cleped Penitence, and in how manye maneres been the acciouns or werkynges of Penitence, |
| and how manye speces ther been of Penitence, and whiche thynges apertenen and bihoven to Penitence, and whiche thynges destourben Penitence. |
| Seint Ambrose seith that Penitence is the pleynynge of man for the gilt that he hath doon, |
| and namoore to do any thyng for which hym oghte to pleyne. |
| 85 | And som doctour seith, "Penitence is the waymentynge of man that sorweth for his synne and pyneth hymself for he hath mysdoon." |
| Penitence, with certeyne circumstances, is verray repentance of a man that halt hymself in sorwe and oother peyne for his giltes. |
| And for he shal be verray penitent, he shal first biwaylen the synnes that he hath doon, |
| and stidefastly purposen in his herte to have shrift of mouthe, and to doon satisfaccioun, |
| and nevere to doon thyng for which hym oghte moore to biwayle |
| or to compleyne, and to continue in goode werkes, or elles his repentance may nat availle. |
| For, as seith Seint Ysidre, |
| "He is a japere and a gabbere and no verray repentant that eftsoone dooth thyng for which hym oghte repente." |
| 90 | Wepynge, and nat for to stynte to do synne, may nat avayle. |
| But nathelees, men shal hope that every tyme that man falleth, be it never so ofte, |
| that he may arise thurgh Penitence, if he have grace; but certeinly it is greet doute. |
| For, as seith Seint Gregorie, "Unnethe ariseth he out of his synne, that is charged with the charge of yvel usage." |
| And therfore repentant folk, that stynte for to synne and forlete synne er that synne forlete hem, |
| hooly chirche holdeth hem siker of hire savacioun. |
| And he that synneth and verraily repenteth hym in his laste, hooly chirche yet hopeth his savacioun, |
| by the grete mercy of oure Lord Jhesu Crist, for his repentaunce; but taak the siker wey. |
| 95 | And now, sith I have declared yow what thyng is Penitence, now shul ye understonde that ther been three acciouns of Penitence. |
| The firste is that if a man be baptized after that he hath synned. |
| Seint Augustyn seith, "But he be penytent for his olde synful lyf, he may nat bigynne the newe clene lif." |
| For, certes, if he be baptized withouten penitence of his olde gilt, he receyveth the mark of baptesme |
| but nat the grace ne the remission of his synnes, til he have repentance verray. |
| Another defaute is this: that men doon deedly synne after that they han receyved baptesme. |
| 100 | The thridde defaute is that men fallen in venial synnes after hir baptesme fro day to day. |
| Therof seith Seint Augustyn that penitence of goode and humble folk is the penitence of every day. |
| The speces of Penitence been three. That oon of hem is solempne, another is commune, and the thridde is privee. |
| Thilke penance that is solempne is in two maneres; |
| as to be put out of hooly chirche in Lente for slaughtre of children, and swich maner thyng. |
| Another is, whan a man hath synned openly, of which synne the fame is openly spoken in the contree, |
| and thanne hooly chirche by juggement destreyneth hym for to do open penaunce. |
| 105 | Commune penaunce is that preestes enjoynen men communly in certeyn caas, as for to goon peraventure naked in pilgrimages, or barefoot. |
| Pryvee penaunce is thilke that men doon alday for privee synnes, of whiche we shryve us prively and receyve privee penaunce. |
| Now shaltow understande what is bihovely and necessarie to verray parfit Penitence. And this stant on three thynges: |
| Contricioun of Herte, Confessioun of Mouth, and Satisfaccioun. |
| For which seith Seint John Crisostom, "Penitence destreyneth a man to accepte benygnely every peyne that hym is enjoyned, |
| with contricioun of herte, and shrift of mouth, with satisfaccioun, and in werkynge of alle manere humylitee." |
| 110 | And this is fruytful penitence agayn three thynges in which we wratthe oure Lord Jhesu Crist; |
| this is to seyn, by delit in thynkynge, by reccheleesnesse in spekynge, and by wikked synful werkynge. |
| And agayns thise wikkede giltes is Penitence, that may be likned unto a tree. |
| The roote of this tree is Contricioun, that hideth hym in the herte of hym that is verray repentaunt, |
| right as the roote of a tree hydeth hym in the erthe. |
| Of the roote of Contricioun spryngeth a stalke that bereth braunches and leves of Confessioun, and fruyt of Satisfaccioun. |
| 115 | For which Crist seith in his gospel, "Dooth digne fruyt of Penitence"; for by this fruyt may men knowe this tree, |
| and nat by the roote that is hyd in the herte of man, ne by the braunches, ne by the leves of Confessioun. |
| And therfore oure Lord Jhesu Crist seith thus: "By the fruyt of hem shul ye knowen hem." |
| Of this roote eek spryngeth a seed of grace, the which seed is mooder of sikernesse, and this seed is egre and hoot. |
| The grace of this seed spryngeth of God thurgh remembrance of the day of doom and on the peynes of helle. |
| Of this matere seith Salomon that in the drede of God man forleteth his synne. |
| 120 | The heete of this seed is the love of God and the desiryng of the joye perdurable. |
| This heete draweth the herte of a man to God and dooth hym haten his synne. |
| For soothly ther is nothyng that savoureth so wel to a child as the milk of his norice, |
| ne nothyng is to hym moore abhomynable than thilke milk whan it is medled with oother mete. |
| Right so the synful man that loveth his synne, hym semeth that it is to him moost sweete of any thyng; |
| but fro that tyme that he loveth sadly oure Lord Jhesu Crist, |
| and desireth the lif perdurable, ther nys to him no thyng moore abhomynable. |
| 125 | For soothly the lawe of God is the love of God; for which David the prophete seith. |
| "I have loved thy lawe and hated wikkednesse and hate"; he that loveth God kepeth his lawe and his word. |
| This tree saugh the prophete Daniel in spirit, upon the avysioun of the kyng Nabugodonosor, whan he conseiled hym to do penitence. |
| Penaunce is the tree of lyf to hem that it receyven, |
| and he that holdeth hym in verray penitence is blessed, after the sentence of Salomon. |
| In this Penitence or Contricioun man shal understonde foure thynges; that is to seyn, what is Contricioun, |
| and whiche been the causes that moeven a man to Contricioun, and how he sholde be contrit, and what Contricioun availleth to the soule. |
| Thanne is it thus: that Contricioun is the verray sorwe that a man receyveth in his herte for his synnes, |
| with sad purpos to shryve hym, and to do penaunce, and neveremoore to do synne. |
| 130 | And this sorwe shal been in this manere, as seith Seint Bernard: |
| "It shal been hevy and grevous, and ful sharp and poynaunt in herte." |
| First, for man hath agilt his Lord and his Creatour; and moore sharp and poynaunt for he hath agilt hys Fader celestial; |
| and yet moore sharp and poynaunt for he hath wrathed and agilt hym that boghte hym, that with his precious blood hath delivered us |
| fro the bondes of synne, and fro the crueltee of the devel, and fro the peynes of helle. |
| The causes that oghte moeve a man to Contricioun been sixe. First a man shal remembre hym of his synnes; |
| but looke he that thilke remembraunce ne be to hym no delit by no wey, but greet shame and sorwe for his gilt. |
| For Job seith, "Synful men doon werkes worthy of confusioun." |
| 135 | And therfore seith Ezechie, "I wol remembre me alle the yeres of my lyf in bitternesse of myn herte." |
| And God seith in the Apocalipse, "Remembreth yow fro whennes that ye been falle"; |
| for biforn that tyme that ye synned, ye were the children of God and lymes of the regne of God; |
| but for youre synne ye been woxen thral, and foul, and membres of the feend, hate of aungels, sclaundre of hooly chirche, |
| and foode of the false serpent, perpetueel matere of the fir of helle; |
| and yet moore foul and abhomynable, for ye trespassen so ofte tyme as dooth the hound that retourneth to eten his spewyng. |
| And yet be ye fouler for youre longe continuyng in synne and youre synful usage, |
| for which ye be roten in youre synne, as a beest in his dong. |
| 140 | Swiche manere of thoghtes maken a man to have shame of his synne, and no delit, as God seith by the prophete Ezechiel, |
| "Ye shal remembre yow of youre weyes, and they shuln displese yow." Soothly synnes been the weyes that leden folk to helle. |
| The seconde cause that oghte make a man to have desdeyn of synne is this: |
| that, as seith Seint Peter, "whoso that dooth synne is thral of synne"; and synne put a man in greet thraldom. |
| And therfore seith the prophete Ezechiel: "I wente sorweful in desdayn of myself." |
| Certes, wel oghte a man have desdayn of synne and withdrawe hym from that thraldom and vileynye. |
| And lo, what seith Seneca in this matere? He seith thus: "Though I wiste that neither God ne man ne sholde nevere knowe it, |
| yet wolde I have desdayn for to do synne." |
| 145 | And the same Seneca also seith, "I am born to gretter thynges than to be thral to my body, |
| or than for to maken of my body a thral." |
| Ne a fouler thral may no man ne womman maken of his body than for to yeven his body to synne. |
| Al were it the fouleste cherl or the fouleste womman that lyveth, and leest of value, |
| yet is he thanne moore foul and moore in servitute. |
| Evere fro the hyer degree that man falleth, the moore is he thral, and moore to God and to the world vile and abhomynable. |
| O goode God, wel oghte man have desdayn of synne, sith that thurgh synne ther he was free now is he maked bonde. |
| 150 | And therfore seyth Seint Augustyn: "If thou hast desdayn of thy servant, |
| if he agilte or synne, have thou thanne desdayn that thou thyself sholdest do synne." |
| Tak reward of thy value, that thou ne be to foul to thyself. |
| Allas, wel oghten they thanne have desdayn to been servauntz and thralles to synne, and soore been ashamed of hemself |
| that God of his endelees goodnesse hath set hem in heigh estaat, or yeven hem wit, strengthe of body, heele, beautee, prosperitee, |
| and boghte hem fro the deeth with his herte-blood, |
| that they so unkyndely, agayns his gentilesse, quiten hym so vileynsly to slaughtre of hir owene soules. |
| 155 | O goode God, ye wommen that been of so greet beautee, remembreth yow of the proverbe of Salomon. He seith, |
| "Likneth a fair womman that is a fool of hire body |
| lyk to a ryng of gold that were in the groyn of a soughe." |
| For right as a soughe wroteth in everich ordure, so wroteth she hire beautee in the stynkynge ordure of synne. |
| The thridde cause that oghte moeve a man to Contricioun is drede of the day of doom and of the horrible peynes of helle. |
| For as Seint Jerome seith, "At every tyme that me remembreth of the day of doom I quake; |
| 160 | for whan I ete or drynke, or what so that I do, evere semeth me that the trompe sowneth in myn ere: |
| `Riseth up, ye that been dede, and cometh to the juggement.'" |
| O goode God, muchel oghte a man to drede swich a juggement, "ther as we shullen been alle," |
| as Seint Poul seith, "biforn the seete of oure Lord Jhesu Crist"; |
| whereas he shal make a general congregacioun, whereas no man may been absent. |
| For certes there availleth noon essoyne ne excusacioun. |
| 165 | And nat oonly that oure defautes shullen be jugged, but eek that alle oure werkes shullen openly be knowe. |
| And, as seith Seint Bernard, "Ther ne shal no pledynge availle, ne no sleighte; we shullen yeven rekenynge of everich ydel word." |
| Ther shul we han a juge that may nat been deceyved ne corrupt. And why? |
| For, certes, alle oure thoghtes been discovered as to hym, ne for preyere ne for meede he shal nat been corrupt. |
| And therfore seith Salomon, "The wratthe of God ne wol nat spare no wight, for preyere ne for yifte"; |
| and therfore, at the day of doom ther nys noon hope to escape. |
| Wherfore, as seith Seint Anselm, "Ful greet angwyssh shul the synful folk have at that tyme; |
| 170 | ther shal the stierne and wrothe juge sitte above, and under hym the horrible pit of helle open to destroyen hym |
| that moot biknowen his synnes, whiche synnes openly been shewed biforn God and biforn every creature; |
| and in the left syde mo develes than herte may bithynke, for to harye and drawe the synful soules to the peyne of helle; |
| and withinne the hertes of folk shal be the bitynge conscience, and withouteforth shal be the world al brennynge. |
| Whider shal thanne the wrecched synful man flee to hiden hym? Certes, he may nat hyden hym; he moste come forth and shewen hym." |
| For certes, as seith Seint Jerome, "the erthe shal casten hym out of hym, and the see also, |
| and the eyr also, that shal be ful of thonder-clappes and lightnynges." |
| 175 | Now soothly, whoso wel remembreth hym of thise thynges, I gesse that his synne shal nat turne hym into delit, |
| but to greet sorwe for drede of the peyne of helle. |
| And therfore seith Job to God, "Suffre, Lord, that I may a while biwaille and wepe, |
| er I go withoute returnyng to the derke lond, covered with the derknesse of deeth, |
| to the lond of mysese and of derknesse, whereas is the shadwe of deeth, |
| whereas ther is noon ordre or ordinaunce but grisly drede that evere shal laste." |
| Loo, heere may ye seen that Job preyde respit a while to biwepe and waille his trespas, |
| for soothly oo day of respit is bettre than al the tresor of this world. |
| And forasmuche as a man may acquiten hymself biforn God by penitence in this world, and nat by tresor, |
| therfore sholde he preye to God to yeve hym respit a while to biwepe and biwaillen his trespas. |
| 180 | For certes, al the sorwe that a man myghte make fro the bigynnyng of the world |
| nys but a litel thyng at regard of the sorwe of helle. |
| The cause why that Job clepeth helle the "lond of derkness.": |
| understondeth that he clepeth it "lond" or erthe, for it is stable and nevere shal faille; "derk," |
| for he that is in helle hath defaute of light material. |
| For certes, the derke light that shal come out of the fyr that evere shal brenne |
| shal turne hym al to peyne that is in helle for it sheweth him to the horrible develes that hym tormenten. |
| "Covered with the derknesse of deeth" -- that is to seyn, that |
| he that is in helle shal have defaute of the sighte of God, for certes the sighte of God is the lyf perdurable. |
| 185 | "The derknesse of deeth" been the synnes that the wrecched man hath doon, whiche that destourben hym to see the face of God, |
| right as dooth a derk clowde bitwixe us and the sonne. |
| "Lond of misese," by cause that ther been three maneres of defautes, |
| agayn three thynges that folk of this world han in this present lyf; that is to seyn, honours, delices, and richesses. |
| Agayns honour, have they in helle shame and confusioun. |
| For wel ye woot that men clepen honour the reverence that man doth to man, but in helle is noon honour ne reverence. |
| For certes, namoore reverence shal be doon there to a kyng than to a knave. |
| For which God seith by the prophete Jeremye, "Thilke folk that me despisen shul been in despit." |
| 190 | Honour is eek cleped greet lordshipe; ther shal no wight serven other, but of harm |
| and torment. Honour is eek cleped greet dignytee and heighnesse, but in helle shul they been al fortroden of develes. |
| And God seith, "The horrible develes shulle goon and comen upon the hevedes of the dampned folk." And this is for as muche as |
| the hyer that they were in this present lyf, the moore shulle they been abated and defouled in helle. |
| Agayns the richesse of this world shul they han mysese of poverte, and this poverte shal been in foure thynges: |
| In defaute of tresor, of which that David seith, "The riche folk, that embraceden and oneden al hire herte to tresor of this world, |
| shul slepe in the slepynge of deeth; and nothyng ne shal they fynden in hir handes of al hir tresor." |
| And mooreover the myseyse of helle shal been in defaute of mete and drinke. |
| 195 | For God seith thus by Moyses: "They shul been wasted with hunger, and the briddes of helle shul devouren hem with bitter deeth, |
| and the galle of the dragon shal been hire drynke, and the venym of the dragon hire morsels." |
| And forther over, hire myseyse shal been in defaute of clothyng, for they shulle be naked in body as of clothyng, |
| save the fyr in which they brenne, and othere filthes; |
| and naked shul they been of soule, as of alle manere vertues, which that is the clothyng of the soule. |
| Where been thanne the gaye robes, and the softe shetes, and the smale shertes? |
| Loo, what seith God of hem by the prophete Ysaye: that |
| "under hem shul been strawed motthes, and hire covertures shulle been of wormes of helle." |
| And forther over, hir myseyse shal been in defaute of freendes. |
| For he nys nat povre that hath goode freendes; but there is no frend, |
| 200 | for neither God ne no creature shal been freend to hem, and everich of hem shal haten oother with deedly hate. |
| "The sones and the doghtren shullen rebellen agayns fader and mooder, and kynrede agayns kynrede, and chiden |
| and despisen everich of hem oother bothe day and nyght," as God seith by the prophete Michias. |
| And the lovynge children, that whilom loveden so flesshly everich oother, wolden everich of hem eten oother if they myghte. |
| For how sholden they love hem togidre in the peyne of helle, |
| whan they hated everich of hem oother in the prosperitee of this lyf? |
| For truste wel, hir flesshly love was deedly hate, as seith the prophete David: "Whoso that loveth wikkednesse, he hateth his soule." |
| 205 | And whoso hateth his owene soule, certes, he may love noon oother wight in no manere. |
| And therfore, in helle is no solas ne no freendshipe, but evere the moore flesshly kynredes that been in helle, |
| the moore cursynges, the more chidynges, and the moore deedly hate ther is among hem. |
| And forther over, they shul have defaute of alle manere delices. |
| For certes, delices been after the appetites of the fyve wittes, as sighte, herynge, smellynge, savorynge, and touchynge. |
| But in helle hir sighte shal be ful of derknesse and of smoke, |
| and therfore ful of teeres; and hir herynge ful of waymentynge and of gryntynge of teeth, as seith Jhesu Crist. |
| Hir nose-thirles shullen be ful of stynkynge stynk; and, as seith Ysaye the prophete, "hir savoryng shal be ful of bitter galle"; |
| 210 | and touchynge of al hir body ycovered with "fir |
| that nevere shal quenche and with wormes that nevere shul dyen," |
| as God seith by the mouth of Ysaye. |
| And for as muche as they shul nat wene that they may dyen for peyne, and by hir deeth flee fro peyne, |
| that may they understonden by the word of Job, that seith, "ther as is the shadwe of deeth." |
| Certes, a shadwe hath the liknesse of the thyng of which it is shadwe, |
| but shadwe is nat the same thyng of which it is shadwe. |
| Right so fareth the peyne of helle; it is lyk deeth for the horrible angwissh, and why? |
| For it peyneth hem evere, as though they sholde dye anon; but certes, they shal nat dye. |
| For, as seith Seint Gregorie, "To wrecche caytyves shal be deeth withoute deeth, and ende withouten ende, and defaute withoute failynge. |
| 215 | For hir deeth shal alwey lyven, and hir ende shal everemo bigynne, and hir defaute shal nat faille." |
| And therfore seith Seint John the Evaungelist, "They shullen folwe deeth, |
| and they shul nat fynde hym; and they shul desiren to dye, and deeth shal flee fro hem." |
| And eek Job seith that in helle is noon ordre of rule. |
| And al be it so that God hath creat alle thynges in right ordre, and no thyng withouten ordre, |
| but alle thynges been ordeyned and nombred; yet, nathelees, they that been dampned been nothyng in ordre, ne holden noon ordre, |
| for the erthe ne shal bere hem no fruyt. |
| 220 | For, as the prophete David seith, "God shal destroie the fruyt of the erthe as fro hem; |
| ne water ne shal yeve hem no moisture, ne the eyr no refresshyng, ne fyr no light." |
| For, as seith Seint Basilie, "The brennynge of the fyr of this world shal God yeven in helle to hem that been dampned, |
| but the light and the cleernesse shal be yeven in hevene to his children," |
| right as the goode man yeveth flessh to his children and bones to his houndes. |
| And for they shullen have noon hope to escape, seith Seint Job atte laste that "ther shal horrour and grisly drede dwellen withouten ende." |
| Horrour is alwey drede of harm that is to come, and this drede shal evere dwelle in the hertes of hem that been dampned. |
| And therfore han they lorn al hire hope, for sevene causes. |
| 225 | First, for God, that is hir juge, shal be withouten mercy to hem; and they may nat plese hym ne noon of his halwes; |
| ne they ne may yeve no thyng for hir raunsoun; |
| ne they have no voys to speke to hym; ne they may nat fle fro peyne; |
| ne they have no goodnesse in hem, that they mowe shewe to delivere hem fro peyne. |
| And therfore seith Salomon: "The wikked man dyeth, and whan he is deed, he shal have noon hope to escape fro peyne." |
| Whoso thanne wolde wel understande thise peynes and bithynke hym weel that he hath deserved thilke peynes for his synnes, |
| certes, he sholde have moore talent to siken and to wepe than for to syngen and to pleye. |
| For, as that seith Salomon, "Whoso that hadde the science to knowe the peynes |
| that been establissed and ordeyned for synne, he wolde make sorwe." |
| 230 | "Thilke science," as seith Seint Augustyn, "maketh a man to waymenten in his herte." |
| The fourthe point that oghte maken a man to have contricion is the sorweful remembraunce of the good |
| that he hath left to doon heere in erthe, and eek the good that he hath lorn. |
| Soothly, the goode werkes that he hath lost, outher they been the goode werkes that he wroghte er he fel into deedly synne |
| or elles the goode werkes that he wroghte while he lay in synne. |
| Soothly, the goode werkes that he dide biforn that he fil in synne been al mortefied and astoned and dulled by the ofte synnyng. |
| The othere goode werkes, that he wroghte whil he lay in deedly synne, |
| thei been outrely dede, as to the lyf perdurable in hevene. |
| 235 | Thanne thilke goode werkes that been mortefied by ofte synnyng, |
| whiche goode werkes he dide whil he was in charitee, ne mowe nevere quyken agayn withouten verray penitence. |
| And therof seith God by the mouth of Ezechiel, that |
| "if the rightful man returne agayn from his rightwisnesse and werke wikkednesse, shal he lyve?" |
| Nay, for alle the goode werkes that he hath wroght ne shul nevere been in remembraunce, for he shal dyen in his synne. |
| And upon thilke chapitre seith Seint Gregorie thus: that "we shulle understonde this principally; |
| that whan we doon deedly synne, |
| it is for noght thanne to rehercen or drawen into memorie the goode werkes that we han wroght biforn." |
| 240 | For certes, in the werkynge of the deedly synne, ther is no trust to no good werk that we han doon biforn; |
| that is to seyn, as for to have therby the lyf perdurable in hevene. |
| But nathelees, the goode werkes quyken agayn, and comen agayn, and helpen, |
| and availlen to have the lyf perdurable in hevene, whan we han contricioun. |
| But soothly, the goode werkes that men doon whil they been in deedly synne, |
| for as muche as they were doon in deedly synne, they may nevere quyke agayn. |
| For certes, thyng that nevere hadde lyf may nevere quykene; and nathelees, al be it that they ne availle noght to han the lyf perdurable, |
| yet availlen they to abregge of the peyne of helle, or elles to geten temporal richesse, |
| or elles that God wole the rather enlumyne and lightne the herte of the synful man to have repentaunce; |
| 245 | and eek they availlen for to usen a man to doon goode werkes, that the feend have the lasse power of his soule. |
| And thus the curteis Lord Jhesu Crist ne wole that no good werk be lost, for in somwhat it shal availle. |
| But, for as muche as the goode werkes that men doon whil they been in good lyf been al mortefied by synne folwynge, |
| and eek sith that alle the goode werkes that men doon whil they been in deedly synne been outrely dede |
| as for to have the lyf perdurable, |
| wel may that man that no good werk ne dooth synge thilke newe Frenshe song, "Jay tout perdu mon temps et mon labour." |
| For certes, synne bireveth a man bothe goodnesse of nature and eek the goodnesse of grace. |
| 250 | For soothly, the grace of the Hooly Goost fareth lyk fyr, that may nat been ydel; |
| for fyr fayleth anoon as it forleteth his wirkynge, and right so grace fayleth anoon as it forleteth his werkynge. |
| Then leseth the synful man the goodnesse of glorie, that oonly is bihight to goode men that labouren and werken. |
| Wel may he be sory thanne, that oweth al his lif to God as longe as he hath lyved, and eek as longe |
| as he shal lyve, that no goodnesse ne hath to paye with his dette to God to whom he oweth al his lyf. |
| For trust wel, "He shal yeven acountes," as seith Seint Bernard, |
| "of alle the goodes that han be yeven hym in this present lyf, and how he hath hem despended, |
| [in] so muche that ther shal nat perisse an heer of his heed, ne a moment of an houre |
| ne shal nat perisse of his tyme, that he ne shal yeve of it a rekenyng." |
| 255 | The fifthe thyng that oghte moeve a man to contricioun |
| is remembrance of the passioun that oure Lord Jhesu Crist suffred for oure synnes. |
| For, as seith Seint Bernard, "Whil that I lyve I shal have remembrance of the travailles that oure Lord Crist suffred in prechyng: |
| his werynesse in travaillyng, his temptaciouns whan he fasted, his longe wakynges |
| whan he preyde, hise teeres whan that he weep for pitee of good peple, |
| the wo and the shame and the filthe that men seyden to hym, of the foule spittyng that men spitte in his face, |
| of the buffettes that men yaven hym, of the foule mowes, and of the repreves that men to hym seyden, |
| of the nayles with whiche he was nayled to the croys, |
| and of al the remenant of his passioun that he suffred for my synnes, and no thyng for his gilt." |
| 260 | And ye shul understonde that in mannes synne is every manere of ordre or ordinaunce turned up-so-doun. |
| For it is sooth that God, and resoun, and sensualitee, and the body of man been so ordeyned |
| that everich of thise foure thynges sholde have lordshipe over that oother, |
| as thus: God sholde have lordshipe over resoun, and resoun over sensualitee, and sensualitee over the body of man. |
| But soothly, whan man synneth, al this ordre or ordinaunce is turned up-so-doun. |
| And therfore thanne, for as muche as the resoun of man ne wol nat be subget ne obeisant to God, that is |
| his lord by right, therfore leseth it the lordshipe that it sholde have over sensualitee, and eek over the body of man. |
| 265 | And why? For sensualitee rebelleth thanne agayns resoun, and by that way leseth resoun the lordshipe over sensualitee and over the body. |
| For right as resoun is rebel to God, right so is bothe sensualitee rebel to resoun and the body also. |
| And certes this disordinaunce and this rebellioun oure Lord Jhesu Crist aboghte upon his precious body ful deere, and herkneth in which wise. |
| For as muche thanne as resoun is rebel to God, therfore is man worthy to have sorwe and to be deed. |
| This suffred oure Lord Jhesu Crist for man, after that he hadde be bitraysed of his disciple, and distreyned and bounde |
| so that his blood brast out at every nayl of his handes, as seith Seint Augustyn. |
| 270 | And forther over, for as muchel as resoun of man ne wol nat daunte sensualitee whan it may, |
| therfore is man worthy to have shame; and this suffred oure Lord Jhesu Crist for man, whan they spetten in his visage. |
| And forther over, for as muchel thanne as the caytyf body of man is rebel bothe to resoun and to sensualitee, |
| therfore is it worthy the deeth. |
| And this suffred oure Lord Jhesu Crist for man upon the croys, |
| where as ther was no part of his body free withouten greet peyne and bitter passioun. |
| And al this suffred Jhesu Crist, that nevere forfeted. And therfore resonably may be seyd of Jhesu in this manere: |
| "To muchel am I peyned for the thynges that I nevere deserved, and to muche defouled for shendshipe that man is worthy to have." |
| And therfore may the synful man wel seye, as seith Seint Bernard, |
| "Acursed be the bitternesse of my synne, for which ther moste be suffred so muchel bitternesse." |
| 275 | For certes, after the diverse [disordinaunces] of oure wikkednesses was the passioun of Jhesu Crist ordeyned in diverse thynges. |
| As thus: Certes, synful mannes soule is bitraysed of the devel by coveitise of temporeel prosperitee, and scorned by deceite |
| whan he cheseth flesshly delices; and yet is it tormented by inpacience of adversitee and bispet by servage and subjeccioun of synne; |
| and atte laste it is slayn fynally. |
| For this disordinaunce of synful man was Jhesu Crist first bitraysed, |
| and after that was he bounde, that cam for to unbynden us of synne and peyne. |
| Thanne was he byscorned, that oonly sholde han been honoured in alle thynges and of alle thynges. |
| Thanne was his visage, that oghte be desired to be seyn of al mankynde, in which visage aungels desiren to looke, vileynsly bispet. |
| 280 | Thanne was he scourged, that no thyng hadde agilt; and finally, thanne was he crucified and slayn. |
| Thanne was acompliced the word of Ysaye, "He was wounded for oure mysdedes and defouled for oure felonies." |
| Now sith that Jhesu Crist took upon hymself the peyne of alle oure wikkednesses, muchel oghte synful man wepen and biwayle, |
| that for his synnes Goddes sone of hevene sholde al this peyne endure. |
| The sixte thyng that oghte moeve a man to contricioun is the hope of three thynges; that is to seyn, foryifnesse of synne, |
| and the yifte of grace wel for to do, and the glorie of hevene, with which God shal gerdone man for his goode dedes. |
| And for as muche as Jhesu Crist yeveth us thise yiftes of his largesse and of his sovereyn bountee, |
| therfore is he cleped Jhesus Nazarenus rex Judeorum. |
| 285 | Jhesus is to seyn "saveour" or "salvacioun," on whom men shul hope to have foryifnesse of synnes, which that is proprely salvacioun of synnes. |
| And therfore seyde the aungel to Joseph, "Thou shalt clepen his name Jhesus, that shal saven his peple of hir synnes." |
| And heerof seith Seint Peter: "Ther is noon oother name under hevene |
| that is yeve to any man, by which a man may be saved, but oonly Jhesus." |
| Nazarenus is as muche for to seye as "florisshynge," in which a man shal hope that |
| he that yeveth hym remissioun of synnes shal yeve hym eek grace wel for to do. |
| For in the flour is hope of fruyt in tyme comynge, and in foryifnesse of synnes hope of grace wel for to do. |
| "I was atte dore of thyn herte," seith Jhesus, "and cleped for to entre. He that openeth to me shal have foryifnesse of synne. |
| 290 | I wol entre into hym by my grace and soupe with hym," by the goode werkes that he shal doon, |
| whiche werkes been the foode of God; "and he shal soupe with me" by the grete joye that I shal yeven hym. |
| Thus shal man hope, for his werkes of penaunce that God shal yeven hym his regne, as he bihooteth hym in the gospel. |
| Now shal a man understonde in which manere shal been his contricioun. I seye that it shal been universal and total. |
| This is to seyn, a man shal be verray repentaunt for alle his synnes that he hath doon |
| in delit of his thoght, for delit is ful perilous. |
| For ther been two manere of consentynges: that oon of hem is cleped consentynge of affeccioun, |
| whan a man is moeved to do synne, and deliteth hym longe for to thynke on that synne; |
| and his reson aperceyveth it wel that it is synne agayns the lawe of God, |
| and yet his resoun refreyneth nat his foul delit or talent, though he se wel apertly that it is agayns the reverence of God. |
| Although his resoun ne consente noght to doon that synne in dede, |
| 295 | yet seyn somme doctours that swich delit that dwelleth longe, it is ful perilous, al be it nevere so lite. |
| And also a man sholde sorwe namely for al that evere he hath desired agayn the lawe of God |
| with parfit consentynge of his resoun, for therof is no doute, that it is deedly synne in consentynge. |
| For certes, ther is no deedly synne that it nas first in mannes thought |
| and after that in his delit, and so forth into consentynge and into dede. |
| Wherfore I seye that many men ne repenten hem nevere of swiche thoghtes and delites, |
| ne nevere shryven hem of it, but oonly of the dede of grete synnes outward. |
| Wherfore I seye that swiche wikked delites and wikked thoghtes been subtile bigileres of hem that shullen be dampned. |
| 300 | Mooreover, man oghte to sorwe for his wikkede wordes as wel as for his wikkede dedes. |
| For certes, the repentaunce of a synguler synne, and nat repente of alle his othere synnes, |
| or elles repenten hym of alle his othere synnes and nat of a synguler synne, may nat availle. |
| For certes, God almyghty is al good, and therfore he foryeveth al or elles right noght. |
| And heerof seith Seint Augustyn, |
| "I wot certeynly that God is enemy to everich synnere." And how thanne? |
| He that observeth o synne, shal he have foryifnesse of the remenaunt of his othere synnes? Nay. |
| And forther over, contricioun sholde be wonder sorweful and angwissous; and therfore yeveth hym God pleynly his mercy; |
| and therfore, whan my soule was angwissous withinne me, I hadde remembrance of God that my preyere myghte come to hym. |
| 305 | Forther over, contricioun moste be continueel, and that man have stedefast purpos to shriven hym, and for to amenden hym of his lyf. |
| For soothly, whil contricioun lasteth, man may evere have hope of foryifnesse; |
| and of this comth hate of synne, that destroyeth synne, bothe in himself and eek in oother folk at his power. |
| For which seith David: "Ye that loven God, hateth wikkednesse." |
| For trusteth wel, to love God is for to love that he loveth, and hate that he hateth. |
| The laste thyng that men shal understonde in contricioun is this: |
| wherof avayleth contricioun. I seye that somtyme contricioun delivereth a man fro synne; |
| of which that David seith, "I seye," quod David (that is to seyn, |
| I purposed fermely) "to shryve me, and thow, Lord, relessedest my synne." |
| 310 | And right so as contricion availleth noght withouten sad purpos of shrifte, |
| if man have oportunitee, right so litel worth is shrifte or satisfaccioun withouten contricioun. |
| And mooreover contricion destroyeth the prisoun of helle, and maketh wayk and fieble alle the strengthes of the develes, |
| and restoreth the yiftes of the Hooly Goost and of alle goode vertues; |
| and it clenseth the soule of synne, and delivereth the soule fro the peyne of helle, and fro the compaignye of the devel, |
| and fro the servage of synne, and restoreth it to alle goodes espirituels, and to the compaignye and communyoun of hooly chirche. |
| And forther over, it maketh hym that whilom was sone of ire to be sone of grace; |
| and alle thise thynges been preved by hooly writ. |
| And therfore, he that wolde sette his entente to thise thynges, he were ful wys; |
| for soothly he ne sholde nat thanne in al his lyf have corage to synne, |
| but yeven his body and al his herte to the service of Jhesu Crist, and therof doon hym hommage. |
| 315 | For soothly oure sweete Lord Jhesu Crist hath spared us so debonairly in oure folies that |
| if he ne hadde pitee of mannes soule, a sory song we myghten alle synge. |
| |
| |
| The seconde partie of Penitence is Confessioun, that is signe of contricioun. |
| Now shul ye understonde what is Confessioun, |
| and wheither it oghte nedes be doon or noon, and whiche thynges been covenable to verray Confessioun. |
| First shaltow understonde that Confessioun is verray shewynge of synnes to the preest. |
| This is to seyn "verray," for he moste confessen hym of alle the condiciouns that bilongen to his synne, as ferforth as he kan. |
| 320 | Al moot be seyd, and no thyng excused ne hyd ne forwrapped, and noght avaunte thee of thy goode werkes. |
| And forther over, it is necessarie to understonde whennes that synnes spryngen, and how they encreessen, and whiche they been. |
| Of the spryngynge of synnes seith Seint Paul in this wise: that "Right as by a man synne entred first into this world, |
| and thurgh that synne deeth, right so thilke deeth entred into alle men that synneden." |
| And this man was Adam, by whom synne entred into this world, whan he brak the comaundementz of God. |
| And therfore, he that first was so myghty that he sholde nat have dyed, bicam swich oon that he moste nedes dye, |
| wheither he wolde or noon, and al his progenye in this world, that in thilke man synneden. |
| 325 | Looke that in th' estaat of innocence, whan Adam and Eve naked weren in Paradys, and nothyng ne hadden shame of hir nakednesse, |
| how that the serpent, that was moost wily of alle othere beestes that God hadde maked, seyde to the womman, |
| "Why comaunded God to yow ye sholde nat eten of every tree in Paradys?" |
| The womman answerde: "Of the fruyt," quod she, "of the trees in Paradys we feden us, |
| but soothly, of the fruyt of the tree that is in the myddel of Paradys, God forbad us for to ete, |
| ne nat touchen it, lest per aventure we sholde dyen." |
| The serpent seyde to the womman, "Nay, nay, ye shul nat dyen of deeth; for sothe, God woot that |
| what day that ye eten therof, youre eyen shul opene and ye shul been as goddes, knowynge good and harm." |
| The womman thanne saugh that the tree was good to feedyng, and fair to the eyen, and delitable to the sighte. |
| She took of the fruyt of the tree, and eet it, and yaf to hire housbonde, |
| and he eet, and anoon the eyen of hem bothe openeden. |
| 330 | And whan that they knewe that they were naked, they sowed of fige leves a maner of breches to hiden hire membres. |
| There may ye seen that deedly synne hath, first, suggestion of the feend, as sheweth heere by the naddre; |
| and afterward, the delit of the flessh, as sheweth heere by Eve; and after that, the consentynge of resoun, as sheweth heere by Adam. |
| For trust wel, though so were that the feend tempted Eve -- that is to seyn, the flessh -- |
| and the flessh hadde delit in the beautee of the fruyt defended, yet certes, til that resoun -- that is to seyn, Adam -- |
| consented to the etynge of the fruyt, yet stood he in th' estaat of innocence. |
| Of thilke Adam tooke we thilke synne original, |
| for of hym flesshly descended be we alle, and engendred of vile and corrupt mateere. |
| And whan the soule is put in oure body, right anon is contract original synne; |
| and that that was erst but oonly peyne of concupiscence is afterward bothe peyne and synne. |
| 335 | And therfore be we alle born sones of wratthe and of dampnacioun perdurable, if it nere baptesme that we receyven, |
| which bynymeth us the culpe. But for sothe, the peyne dwelleth with us, as to temptacioun, which peyne highte concupiscence. |
| And this concupiscence, whan it is wrongfully disposed or ordeyned in man, it maketh hym coveite, by coveitise of flessh, |
| flesshly synne, by sighte of his eyen as to erthely thynges, and eek coveitise of hynesse by pride of herte. |
| Now, as for to speken of the firste coveitise, that is concupiscence, after the lawe of oure membres |
| that weren lawefulliche ymaked and by rightful juggement of God, |
| I seye, forasmuche as man is nat obeisaunt to God, that is his lord, |
| therfore is the flessh to hym disobeisaunt thurgh concupiscence, which yet is cleped norrissynge of synne and occasioun of synne. |
| Therfore, al the while that a man hath in hym the peyne of concupiscence, |
| it is impossible but he be tempted somtime and moeved in his flessh to synne. |
| 340 | And this thyng may nat faille as longe as he lyveth. |
| it may wel wexe fieble and faille by vertu of baptesme and by the grace of God thurgh penitence, |
| but fully ne shal it nevere quenche, that he ne shal som tyme be moeved in hymself, |
| but if he were al refreyded by siknesse, or by malefice of sorcerie, or colde drynkes. |
| For lo, what seith Seint Paul: "The flessh coveiteth agayn the spirit, and the spirit agayn the flessh; |
| they been so contrarie and so stryven that a man may nat alway doon as he wolde." |
| The same Seint Paul, after his grete penaunce in water and in lond -- |
| in water by nyght and by day in greet peril and in greet peyne; |
| in lond, in famyne and thurst, in coold and cloothlees, and ones stoned almoost to the deeth |
| -- yet seyde he, "Allas, I caytyf man! Who shal delivere me fro the prisoun of my caytyf body?" |
| 345 | And Seint Jerome, whan he longe tyme hadde woned in desert, where as he hadde no compaignye but of wilde beestes, |
| where as he ne hadde no mete but herbes, and water to his drynke, ne no bed but the naked erthe, |
| for which his flessh was blak as an Ethiopeen for heete, and ny destroyed for coold, |
| yet seyde he that "the brennynge of lecherie boyled in al his body." |
| Wherfore I woot wel sykerly that they been deceyved that seyn that they ne be nat tempted in hir body. |
| Witnesse on Seint Jame the Apostel, that seith that "every wight is tempted in his owene concupiscence"; that is to seyn, |
| that everich of us hath matere and occasioun to be tempted of the norissynge of synne that is in his body. |
| And therfore seith Seint John the Evaungelist, "If that we seyn that we be withoute synne, |
| we deceyve us selve, and trouthe is nat in us." |
| 350 | Now shal ye understonde in what manere that synne wexeth or encreesseth in man. |
| The firste thyng is thilke norissynge of synne of which I spak biforn, thilke flesshly concupiscence. |
| And after that comth the subjeccioun of the devel -- |
| this is to seyn, the develes bely, with which he bloweth in man the fir of flesshly concupiscence. |
| And after that, a man bithynketh hym wheither he wol doon or no thilke thing to which he is tempted. |
| And thanne, if that a man withstonde and weyve the firste entisynge of his flessh and of the feend, |
| thanne is it no synne; and if it so be that he do nat so, thanne feeleth he anoon a flambe of delit. |
| And thanne is it good to be war and kepen hym wel, |
| or elles he wol falle anon into consentynge of synne; and thanne wol he do it, if he may have tyme and place. |
| 355 | And of this matere seith Moyses by the devel in this manere: "The feend seith, |
| `I wole chace and pursue the man by wikked suggestioun, and I wole hente hym by moevynge or stirynge of synne. |
| And I wol departe my prise or my praye by deliberacioun, and my lust shal been acompliced in delit. |
| I wol drawe my swerd in consentyng.'" -- |
| for certes, right as a swerd departeth a thyng in two peces, right so consentynge departeth God fro man -- |
| "`and thanne wol I sleen hym with myn hand in dede of synne'; thus seith the feend." |
| For certes, thanne is a man al deed in soule. |
| And thus is synne acompliced by temptacioun, by delit, and by consentynge; and thanne is the synne cleped actueel. |
| For sothe, synne is in two maneres; outher it is venial or deedly synne. |
| Soothly, whan man loveth any creature moore than Jhesu Crist oure Creatour, thanne is it deedly synne. |
| And venial synne is it, if man love Jhesu Crist lasse than hym oghte. |
| For sothe, the dede of this venial synne is ful perilous, |
| for it amenuseth the love that men sholde han to God moore and moore. |
| 360 | And therfore, if a man charge hymself with manye swiche venial synnes, |
| certes, but if so be that he somtyme descharge hym of hem by shrifte, |
| they mowe ful lightly amenuse in hym al the love that he hath to Jhesu Crist; |
| and in this wise skippeth venial into deedly synne. For certes, the moore that a man chargeth his soule with venial synnes, |
| the moore is he enclyned to fallen into deedly synne. |
| And therfore lat us nat be necligent to deschargen us of venial synnes. For the proverbe seith that "Manye smale maken a greet." |
| And herkne this ensample. A greet wawe of the see comth som tyme with so greet a violence that it drencheth the ship. |
| And the same harm doon som tyme the smale dropes of water, that entren thurgh a litel crevace into the thurrok, |
| and in the botme of the ship, if men be so necligent that they ne descharge hem nat by tyme. |
| And therfore, although ther be a difference bitwixe thise two causes of drenchynge, algates the ship is dreynt. |
| 365 | Right so fareth it somtyme of deedly synne, and of anoyouse veniale synnes, |
| whan they multiplie in a man so greetly that [the love of] thilke worldly thynges that he loveth, |
| thurgh whiche he synneth venyally, is as greet in his herte as the love of God, or moore. |
| And therfore, the love of every thyng that is nat biset in God, ne doon principally for Goddes sake, |
| although that a man love it lasse than God, yet is it venial synne; |
| and deedly synne whan the love of any thyng weyeth in the herte of man as muchel as the love of God, or moore. |
| "Deedly synne," as seith Seint Augustyn, "is whan a man turneth his herte fro God, |
| which that is verray sovereyn bountee, that may nat chaunge, and yeveth his herte to thyng that may chaunge and flitte." |
| And certes, that is every thyng save God of hevene. |
| For sooth is that if a man yeve his love, the which that he oweth al to God with al his herte, unto a creature, |
| certes, as muche of his love as he yeveth to thilke creature, so muche he bireveth fro God; |
| 370 | and therfore dooth he synne. For he that is dettour to God ne yeldeth nat to God al his dette; |
| that is to seyn, al the love of his herte. |
| Now sith man understondeth generally which is venial synne, thanne is it covenable to tellen specially of synnes whiche that many |
| a man peraventure ne demeth hem nat synnes, and ne shryveth him nat of the same thynges, and yet natheless they been synnes |
| soothly, as thise clerkes writen; this is to seyn, that at every tyme that a man eteth or drynketh |
| moore than suffiseth to the sustenaunce of his body, in certein he dooth synne. |
| And eek whan he speketh moore than it nedeth, it is synne. Eke whan he herkneth nat benignely the compleint of the povre; |
| eke whan he is in heele of body and wol nat faste whan other folk faste, withouten cause resonable; |
| eke whan he slepeth moore than nedeth, or whan he comth by thilke enchesoun to late to chirche, or to othere werkes of charite; |
| 375 | eke whan he useth his wyf withouten sovereyn desir of engendrure to the honour of God |
| or for the entente to yelde to his wyf the dette of his body; |
| eke whan he wol nat visite the sike and the prisoner, if he may; |
| eke if he love wyf or child, or oother worldly thyng, moore than resoun requireth. |
| eke if he flatere or blandise moore than hym oghte for any necessitee; |
| eke if he amenuse or withdrawe the almesse of the povre; |
| eke if he apparailleth his mete moore deliciously than nede is, or ete it to hastily by likerousnesse; |
| eke if he tale vanytees at chirche or at Goddes service, or that he be a talker |
| of ydel wordes of folye or of vileynye, for he shal yelden acountes of it at the day of doom; |
| eke whan he biheteth or assureth to do thynges that he may nat parfourne; |
| eke whan that he by lightnesse or folie mysseyeth or scorneth his neighebor; |
| 380 | eke whan he hath any wikked suspecioun of thyng ther he ne woot of it no soothfastnesse: |
| thise thynges, and mo withoute nombre, been synnes, as seith Seint Augustyn. |
| Now shal men understonde that, al be it so that noon erthely man may eschue alle venial synnes, |
| yet may he refreyne hym by the brennynge love that he hath to oure Lord Jhesu Crist, |
| and by preyeres and confessioun and othere goode werkes, so that it shal but litel greve. |
| For, as seith Seint Augustyn, "If a man love God in swich manere that al that evere he dooth |
| is in the love of God and for the love of God verraily, for he brenneth in the love of God, |
| looke how muche that a drope of water that falleth in a fourneys ful of fyr anoyeth |
| or greveth, so muche anoyeth a venial synne unto a man that is parfit in the love of Jhesu Crist." |
| 385 | Men may also refreyne venial synne by receyvynge worthily of the precious body of Jhesu Crist; |
| by receyvynge eek of hooly water, by almesdede, by general confessioun of Confiteor at masse and at complyn, |
| and by blessynge of bisshopes and of preestes, and by oothere goode werkes. |
| |
| |
| 390 | And thogh so be that no man kan outrely telle the nombre of the twigges and of the harmes that cometh of Pride, |
| yet wol I shewe a partie of hem, as ye shul understonde. |
| Ther is inobedience, avauntynge, ypocrisie, despit, arrogance, inpudence, swellynge of herte, insolence, elacioun, inpacience, strif, contumacie, presumpcioun, irreverence, pertinacie, veyneglorie, |
| and many another twig that I kan nat declare. |
| Inobedient is he that disobeyeth for despit to the comandementz of God, and to his sovereyns, and to his goostly fader. |
| Avauntour is he that bosteth of the harm or of the bountee that he hath doon. |
| Ypocrite is he that hideth to shewe hym swich as he is and sheweth hym swich as he noght is. |
| 395 | Despitous is he that hath desdeyn of his neighebor -- |
| that is to seyn, of his evene-Cristene -- or hath despit to doon that hym oghte to do. |
| Arrogant is he that thynketh that he hath thilke bountees in hym that he hath noght, |
| or weneth that he sholde have hem by his desertes, or elles he demeth that he be that he nys nat. |
| Inpudent is he that for his pride hath no shame of his synnes. |
| Swellynge of herte is whan a man rejoyseth hym of harm that he hath doon. |
| Insolent is he that despiseth in his juggement alle othere folk, |
| as to regard of his value, and of his konnyng, and of his spekyng, and of his beryng. |
| 400 | Elacioun is whan he ne may neither suffre to have maister ne felawe. |
| Inpacient is he that wol nat been ytaught ne undernome of his vice, and by strif werreieth trouthe wityngly, and deffendeth his folye. |
| Contumax is he that thurgh his indignacioun is agayns everich auctoritee or power of hem that been his sovereyns. |
| Presumpcioun is whan a man undertaketh an emprise that hym oghte nat do, or elles that he may nat do; |
| and this is called surquidrie. Irreverence is whan men do nat honour there as hem oghte to doon, and waiten to be reverenced. |
| Pertinacie is whan man deffendeth his folie and trusteth to muchel to his owene wit. |
| 405 | Veyneglorie is for to have pompe and delit in his temporeel hynesse, and glorifie hym in this worldly estaat. |
| Janglynge is whan a man speketh to muche biforn folk, and clappeth as a mille, and taketh no keep what he seith. |
| And yet is ther a privee spece of Pride that waiteth first to be salewed |
| er he wole salewe, al be he lasse worth than that oother is, peraventure; |
| and eek he waiteth or desireth to sitte, or elles to goon above hym in the wey, |
| or kisse pax, or been encensed, or goon to offryng biforn his neighebor, |
| and swiche semblable thynges, agayns his duetee, peraventure, but that he hath his herte |
| and his entente in swich a proud desir to be magnified and honoured biforn the peple. |
| Now been ther two maneres of Pride: that oon of hem is withinne the herte of man, and that oother is withoute. |
| 410 | Of whiche, soothly, thise forseyde thynges, and mo than I have seyd, apertenen to Pride that is in the herte of man; |
| and that othere speces of Pride been withoute. |
| But natheles that oon of thise speces of Pride is signe of that oother, |
| right as the gaye leefsel atte taverne is signe of the wyn that is in the celer. |
| And this is in manye thynges: as in speche and contenaunce, and in outrageous array of clothyng. |
| For certes, if ther ne hadde be no synne in clothyng, |
| Crist wolde nat so soone have noted and spoken of the clothyng of thilke riche man in the gospel. |
| And, as seith Seint Gregorie, that "precious clothyng is cowpable for the derthe of it, and for his softenesse, |
| and for his strangenesse and degisynesse, and for the superfluitee, or for the inordinat scantnesse of it." |
| 415 | Allas, may man nat seen, as in oure dayes, the synful costlewe array of clothynge, |
| and namely in to muche superfluite, or elles in to desordinat scantnesse? |
| As to the first synne, that is in superfluitee of clothynge, which that maketh it so deere, to harm of the peple; |
| nat oonly the cost of embrowdynge, the degise endentynge or barrynge, owndynge, palynge, wyndynge or bendynge, and semblable wast of clooth in vanitee, |
| but ther is also costlewe furrynge in hir gownes, so muche pownsonynge of chisels to maken holes, so muche daggynge of sheres; |
| forth-with the superfluitee in lengthe of the forseide gownes, trailynge in the dong and in the mire, on horse and eek on foote, |
| as wel of man as of womman, that al thilke trailyng is verraily as in effect wasted, consumed, thredbare, and roten with donge, |
| rather than it is yeven to the povre, to greet damage of the forseyde povre folk. |
| 420 | And that in sondry wise; this is to seyn that the moore that clooth is wasted, |
| the moore moot it coste to the peple for the scarsnesse. |
| And forther over, if so be that they wolde yeven swich pownsoned and dagged clothyng to the povre folk, |
| it is nat convenient to were for hire estaat, ne suffisant to beete hire necessitee, to kepe hem fro the distemperance of the firmament. |
| Upon that oother side, to speken of the horrible disordinat scantnesse of clothyng, as been thise kutted sloppes, or haynselyns, |
| that thurgh hire shortnesse ne covere nat the shameful membres of man, to wikked entente. |
| Allas, somme of hem shewen the boce of hir shap, and the horrible swollen membres, |
| that semeth lik the maladie of hirnia, in the wrappynge of hir hoses; |
| and eek the buttokes of hem faren as it were the hyndre part of a she-ape in the fulle of the moone. |
| 425 | And mooreover, the wrecched swollen membres that they shewe thurgh disgisynge, |
| in departynge of hire hoses in whit and reed, semeth that half hir shameful privee membres weren flayne. |
| And if so be that they departen hire hoses in othere colours, |
| as is whit and blak, or whit and blew, or blak and reed, and so forth, |
| thanne semeth it, as by variaunce of colour, that half the partie of hire privee membres were corrupt |
| by the fir of Seint Antony, or by cancre, or by oother swich meschaunce. |
| Of the hyndre part of hir buttokes, it is ful horrible for to see. |
| For certes, in that partie of hir body ther as they purgen hir stynkynge ordure, |
| that foule partie shewe they to the peple prowdly in despit of honestitee, |
| which honestitee that Jhesu Crist and his freendes observede to shewen in hir lyve. |
| 430 | Now, as of the outrageous array of wommen, God woot that though the visages of somme of hem seme ful chaast and debonaire, |
| yet notifie they in hire array of atyr likerousnesse and pride. |
| I sey nat that honestitee in clothynge of man or womman is uncovenable, but certes the superfluitee or disordinat scantitee of clothynge is reprevable. |
| Also the synne of aornement or of apparaille is in thynges that apertenen to ridynge, |
| as in to manye delicat horses that been hoolden for delit, that been so faire, fatte, and costlewe; |
| and also in many a vicious knave that is sustened by cause of hem; and in to curious harneys, |
| as in sadeles, in crouperes, peytrels, and bridles covered with precious clothyng, and riche barres and plates of gold and of silver. |
| For which God seith by Zakarie the prophete, "I wol confounde the rideres of swiche horses." |
| 435 | This folk taken litel reward of the ridynge of Goddes sone of hevene, and of his harneys whan he rood upon the asse, |
| and ne hadde noon oother harneys but the povre clothes of his disciples; |
| ne we ne rede nat that evere he rood on oother beest. |
| I speke this for the synne of superfluitee, and nat for resonable honestitee, whan reson it requireth. |
| And forther over, certes, pride is greetly notified in holdynge of greet meynee, whan they be of litel profit or of right no profit, |
| and namely whan that meynee is felonous and damageous to the peple by hardynesse of heigh lordshipe or by wey of offices. |
| For certes, swiche lordes sellen thanne hir lordshipe to the devel of helle, whanne they sustenen the wikkednesse of hir meynee. |
| 440 | Or elles, whan this folk of lowe degree, as thilke that holden hostelries, sustenen the thefte of hire hostilers, |
| and that is in many manere of deceites. |
| Thilke manere of folk been the flyes that folwen the hony, |
| or elles the houndes that folwen the careyne. Swich forseyde folk stranglen spiritually hir lordshipes; |
| for which thus seith David the prophete: |
| "Wikked deeth moote come upon thilke lordshipes, and God yeve that they moote descenden into helle al doun, |
| for in hire houses been iniquitees and shrewednesses and nat God of hevene." |
| And certes, but if they doon amendement, right as God yaf his benysoun to [Laban] by the service of Jacob, |
| and to [Pharao] by the service of Joseph, right so God wol yeve his malisoun |
| to swiche lordshipes as sustenen the wikkednesse of hir servauntz, but they come to amendement. |
| Pride of the table appeereth eek ful ofte; for certes, riche men been cleped to festes, and povre folk been put awey and rebuked. |
| 445 | Also in excesse of diverse metes and drynkes, and namely swich manere bake-metes and dissh-metes, brennynge of wilde fir |
| and peynted and castelled with papir, and semblable wast, so that it is abusioun for to thynke. |
| And eek in to greet preciousnesse of vessel and curiositee of mynstralcie, by whiche a man is stired the moore to delices of luxurie, |
| if so be that he sette his herte the lasse upon oure Lord Jhesu Crist, certeyn it is a synne; |
| and certeinly the delices myghte been so grete in this caas that man myghte lightly falle by hem into deedly synne. |
| The especes that sourden of Pride, soothly whan they sourden of malice ymagined, avised, and forncast, |
| or elles of usage, been deedly synnes, it is no doute. |
| And whan they sourden by freletee unavysed, and sodeynly withdrawen |
| ayeyn, al been they grevouse synnes, I gesse that they ne been nat deedly. |
| 450 | Now myghte men axe wherof that Pride sourdeth and spryngeth, and I seye, |
| somtyme it spryngeth of the goodes of nature, and somtyme of the goodes of fortune, and somtyme of the goodes of grace. |
| Certes, the goodes of nature stonden outher in goodes of body or in goodes of soule. |
| Certes, goodes of body been heele of body, strengthe, delivernesse, beautee, gentrice, franchise. |
| Goodes of nature of the soule been good wit, sharp understondynge, subtil engyn, vertu natureel, good memorie. |
| Goodes of fortune been richesse, hyghe degrees of lordshipes, preisynges of the peple. |
| 455 | Goodes of grace been science, power to suffre spiritueel travaille, benignitee, vertuous contemplacioun, withstondynge of temptacioun, and semblable thynges. |
| Of whiche forseyde goodes, certes it is a ful greet folye a man to priden hym in any of hem alle. |
| Now as for to speken of goodes of nature, |
| God woot that somtyme we han hem in nature as muche to oure damage as to oure profit. |
| As for to speken of heele of body, certes it passeth ful lightly, |
| and eek it is ful ofte enchesoun of the siknesse of oure soule. |
| For, God woot, the flessh is a ful greet enemy to the soule, |
| and therfore, the moore that the body is hool, the moore be we in peril to falle. |
| Eke for to pride hym in his strengthe of body, it is an heigh folye. |
| For certes, the flessh coveiteth agayn the spirit, and ay the moore strong that the flessh is, the sorier may the soule be. |
| 460 | And over al this, strengthe of body and worldly hardynesse causeth ful ofte many a man to peril and meschaunce. |
| Eek for to pride hym of his gentrie is ful greet folie; for |
| ofte tyme the gentrie of the body binymeth the gentrie of the soule; |
| and eek we ben alle of o fader and of o mooder; |
| and alle we been of o nature, roten and corrupt, bothe riche and povre. |
| For sothe, o manere gentrie is for to preise, that apparailleth mannes corage with vertues and moralitees, and maketh hym Cristes child. |
| For truste wel that over what man that synne hath maistrie, he is a verray cherl to synne. |
| Now been ther generale signes of gentillesse, as eschewynge of vice and ribaudye and servage of synne, in word, in werk, and contenaunce, |
| 465 | and usynge vertu, curteisye, and clennesse, and to be liberal -- |
| that is to seyn, large by mesure, for thilke that passeth mesure is folie and synne. |
| Another is to remembre hym of bountee that he of oother folk hath receyved. |
| Another is to be benigne to his goode subgetis; wherfore seith Senek, |
| "Ther is no thing moore covenable to a man of heigh estaat than debonairetee and pitee. |
| And therfore thise flyes that men clepen bees, whan they maken hir kyng, |
| they chesen oon that hath no prikke wherwith he may stynge." |
| Another is, a man to have a noble herte and a diligent to attayne to heighe vertuouse thynges. |
| 470 | Now certes, a man to pride hym in the goodes of grace is eek an outrageous folie, for thilke |
| yifte of grace that sholde have turned hym to goodnesse and to medicine, turneth hym to venym and to confusioun, as seith Seint Gregorie. |
| Certes also, whoso prideth hym in the goodes of fortune, he is a ful greet fool; |
| for somtyme is a man a greet lord by the morwe, that is a caytyf and a wrecche er it be nyght; |
| and somtyme the richesse of a man is cause of his deth; |
| somtyme the delices of a man ben cause of the grevous maladye thurgh which he dyeth. |
| Certes, the commendacioun of the peple is somtyme ful fals and ful brotel for to triste; this day they preyse, tomorwe they blame. |
| God woot, desir to have commendacioun eek of the peple hath caused deeth to many a bisy man. |
| |
| |
| After Envye wol I discryven the synne of Ire. For soothly, whoso hath envye upon his neighebor, |
| anon he wole comunly fynde hym a matere of wratthe, in word or in dede, agayns hym to whom he hath envye. |
| And as wel comth Ire of Pride as of Envye, for soothly he that is proud or envyous is lightly wrooth. |
| 535 | This synne of Ire, after the discryvyng of Seint Augustyn, is wikked wil to been avenged by word or by dede. |
| Ire, after the Philosophre, is the fervent blood of man yquyked in his herte, |
| thurgh which he wole harm to hym that he hateth. |
| For certes, the herte of man, by eschawfynge and moevynge of his blood, wexeth |
| so trouble that he is out of alle juggement of resoun. |
| But ye shal understonde that Ire is in two maneres; that oon of hem is good, and that oother is wikked. |
| The goode Ire is by jalousie of goodnesse, |
| thurgh which a man is wrooth with wikkednesse and agayns wikkednesse; and therfore seith a wys man that Ire is bet than pley. |
| 540 | This Ire is with debonairetee, and it is wrooth withouten bitternesse; nat wrooth agayns the man, |
| but wrooth with the mysdede of the man, as seith the prophete David, "Irascimini et nolite peccare." |
| Now understondeth that wikked Ire is in two maneres; |
| that is to seyn, sodeyn Ire or hastif Ire, withouten avisement and consentynge of resoun. |
| The menyng and the sens of this is that the resoun of a man ne consente nat to thilke sodeyn Ire, |
| and thanne is it venial. |
| Another Ire is ful wikked, that comth of felonie of herte avysed and cast biforn, with wikked wil to do vengeance, |
| and therto his resoun consenteth. and soothly this is deedly synne. |
| This Ire is so displesant to God that it troubleth his hous and chaceth the Hooly Goost out of mannes soule, |
| and wasteth and destroyeth the liknesse of God -- that is to seyn, the vertu that is in mannes soule -- |
| 545 | and put in hym the liknesse of the devel, and bynymeth the man fro God, that is his rightful lord. |
| This Ire is a ful greet plesaunce to the devel, |
| for it is the develes fourneys, that is eschawfed with the fir of helle. |
| For certes, right so as fir is moore mighty to destroyen erthely thynges than any oother element, |
| right so Ire is myghty to destroyen alle spiritueel thynges. |
| Looke how that fir of smale gleedes that been almost dede under asshen wollen quike agayn whan they been touched with brymstoon; |
| right so Ire wol everemo quyken agayn whan it is touched by the pride that is covered in mannes herte. |
| For certes, fir ne may nat comen out of no thyng, but if it were first in the same thyng natureelly, |
| as fir is drawen out of flyntes with steel. |
| 550 | And right so as pride is ofte tyme matere of Ire, right so is rancour norice and kepere of Ire. |
| Ther is a maner tree, as seith Seint Ysidre, that whan men maken fir of thilke tree |
| and covere the coles of it with asshen, soothly the fir of it wol lasten al a yeer or moore. |
| And right so fareth it of rancour; whan it is ones conceyved in the hertes of som men, |
| certein, it wol lasten peraventure from oon Estre day unto another Estre day, and moore. |
| But certes, thilke man is ful fer fro the mercy of God al thilke while. |
| In this forseyde develes fourneys ther forgen three shrewes: Pride, that ay bloweth and encreesseth the fir by chidynge and wikked wordes; |
| 555 | thanne stant Envye and holdeth the hoote iren upon the herte of man with a peire of longe toonges of long rancour; |
| and thanne stant the synne of Contumelie, or strif and cheeste, and batereth and forgeth by vileyns reprevynges. |
| Certes, this cursed synne anoyeth bothe to the man hymself and eek to his neighebor. |
| For soothly, almoost al the harm that any man dooth to his neighebor comth of wratthe. |
| For certes, outrageous wratthe dooth al that evere the devel hym comaundeth, for he ne spareth neither Crist ne his sweete Mooder. |
| And in his outrageous anger and ire -- allas, allas! -- |
| ful many oon at that tyme feeleth in his herte ful wikkedly, bothe of Crist and eek of alle his halwes. |
| 560 | Is nat this a cursed vice? Yis, certes. Allas! It bynymeth from man his wit and his resoun, |
| and al his debonaire lif espiritueel that sholde kepen his soule. |
| Certes, it bynymeth eek Goddes due lordshipe, and that is mannes soule and the love of his neighebores. |
| It stryveth eek alday agayn trouthe. It reveth hym the quiete of his herte and subverteth his soule. |
| Of Ire comen thise stynkynge engendrures: First, hate, that is oold wratthe; |
| discord, thurgh which a man forsaketh his olde freend that he hath loved ful longe; |
| and thanne cometh werre and every manere of wrong that man dooth to his neighebor, in body or in catel. |
| Of this cursed synne of Ire cometh eek manslaughtre. And understonde wel that homycide, that is manslaughtre, is in diverse wise. |
| Som manere of homycide is spiritueel, and som is bodily. |
| 565 | Spiritueel manslaughtre is in sixe thynges. First by hate, as seith Seint John: "He that hateth his brother is an homycide." |
| Homycide is eek by bakbitynge, of whiche bakbiteres seith Salomon that "they han two swerdes with whiche they sleen hire neighebores." |
| For soothly, as wikke is to bynyme his good name as his lyf. |
| Homycide is eek in yevynge of wikked conseil by fraude, as for to yeven conseil to areysen wrongful custumes and taillages. |
| Of whiche seith Salomon, "Leon rorynge and bere hongry been like to the cruel lordshipes" in withholdynge or abreggynge of the shepe |
| (or the hyre), or of the wages of servauntz, or elles in usure, or in withdrawynge of the almesse of povre folk. |
| For which the wise man seith, "Fedeth hym that almoost dyeth for honger"; for soothly, but if thow feede hym, thou sleest hym; |
| and alle thise been deedly synnes. |
| 570 | Bodily manslaughtre is, whan thow sleest him with thy tonge in oother manere, |
| as whan thou comandest to sleen a man or elles yevest hym conseil to sleen a man. |
| Manslaughtre in dede is in foure maneres. |
| That oon is by lawe, right as a justice dampneth hym that is coupable to the deeth. |
| But lat the justice be war that he do it rightfully, and |
| that he do it nat for delit to spille blood but for kepynge of rightwisnesse. |
| Another homycide is that is doon for necessitee, as whan o man sleeth another in his defendaunt |
| and that he ne may noon ootherwise escape from his owene deeth. |
| But certeinly if he may escape withouten slaughtre of his adversarie, and sleeth hym, |
| he dooth synne and he shal bere penance as for deedly synne. |
| Eek if a man, by caas or aventure, shete an arwe, |
| or caste a stoon with which he sleeth a man, he is homycide. |
| 575 | Eek if a womman by necligence overlyeth hire child in hir slepyng, it is homycide and deedly synne. |
| Eek whan man destourbeth concepcioun of a child, and maketh a womman outher bareyne |
| by drynkynge venenouse herbes thurgh which she may nat conceyve, |
| or sleeth a child by drynkes wilfully, or elles putteth certeine material thynges in hire secree places to slee the child, |
| or elles dooth unkyndely synne, by which man or womman shedeth hire nature in manere or in place |
| ther as a child may nat be conceived, or elles if a woman have conceyved, |
| and hurt hirself and sleeth the child, yet is it homycide. |
| What seye we eek of wommen that mordren hir children for drede of worldly shame? Certes, an horrible homicide. |
| Homycide is eek if a man approcheth to a womman by desir of lecherie, thurgh which the child is perissed, |
| or elles smyteth a womman wityngly, thurgh which she leseth hir child. Alle thise been homycides and horrible deedly synnes. |
| 580 | Yet comen ther of Ire manye mo synnes, as wel in word as in thoght and in dede; |
| as he that arretteth upon God, or blameth God of thyng of which he is hymself gilty, |
| or despiseth God and alle his halwes, as doon thise cursede hasardours in diverse contrees. |
| This cursed synne doon they, whan they feelen in hir herte ful wikkedly of God and of his halwes. |
| Also whan they treten unreverently the sacrement of the auter, thilke synne is so greet that unnethe may it been releessed, |
| but that the mercy of God passeth alle his werkes; it is so greet, and he so benigne. |
| Thanne comth of Ire attry angre. Whan a man is sharply amonested in his shrifte to forleten his synne, |
| thanne wole he be angry, and answeren hokerly and angrily, and deffenden or excusen his synne by unstedefastnesse of his flessh; |
| or elles he dide it for to holde compaignye with his felawes; or elles, he seith, the feend enticed hym; |
| 585 | or elles he dide it for his youthe; or elles his compleccioun is so corageous that he may nat forbere; |
| or elles it is his destinee, as he seith, unto a certein |
| age; or elles, he seith, it cometh hym of gentillesse of his auncestres; and semblable thynges. |
| Alle thise manere of folk so wrappen hem in hir synnes that they ne wol nat delivere hemself. |
| For soothly, no wight that excuseth hym wilfully of his synne |
| may nat been delivered of his synne til that he mekely biknoweth his synne. |
| After this, thanne cometh sweryng, that is expres agayn the comandement of God; and this bifalleth ofte of anger and of Ire. |
| God seith, "Thow shalt nat take the name of thy Lord God in veyn or in ydel." |
| Also oure Lord Jhesu Crist seith, by the word of Seint Mathew, |
| "Ne wol ye nat swere in alle manere; neither by hevene, for it is Goddes trone; |
| ne by erthe, for it is the bench of his feet; ne by Jerusalem, for it is the citee of a greet kyng; |
| ne by thyn heed, for thou mayst nat make an heer whit ne blak. |
| 590 | But seyeth by youre word `ye, ye,' and `nay, nay'; and what that is moore, it is of yvel" -- thus seith Crist. |
| For Cristes sake, ne swereth nat so synfully in dismembrynge of Crist by soule, herte, bones, and body. |
| For certes, it semeth that ye thynke that the cursede Jewes ne dismembred nat ynough the preciouse persone of Crist, |
| but ye dismembre hym moore. |
| And if so be that the lawe compelle yow to swere, thanne rule yow after the lawe of God in youre swerying, |
| as seith Jeremye, quarto capitulo: Thou shalt kepe three condicions: thou shalt swere "in trouthe, in doom, and in rightwisnesse." |
| This is to seyn, thou shalt swere sooth, for every lesynge is agayns Crist; |
| for Crist is verray trouthe. And thynk wel this: that "every greet swerere, nat compelled lawefully to |
| swere, the wounde shal nat departe from his hous" whil he useth swich unleveful swerying. |
| Thou shalt sweren eek in doom, whan thou art constreyned by thy domesman to witnessen the trouthe. |
| 595 | Eek thow shalt nat swere for envye, ne for favour, ne for meede, but for rightwisnesse, for declaracioun of it, |
| to the worshipe of God and helpyng of thyne evene-Cristene. |
| And therfore every man that taketh Goddes name in ydel, or falsly swereth with his mouth, |
| or elles taketh on hym the name of Crist, to be called a Cristen man |
| and lyveth agayns Cristes lyvynge and his techynge, alle they taken Goddes name in ydel. |
| Looke eek what Seint Peter seith, Actuum quarto, Non est aliud nomen sub celo, etc., "Ther nys noon oother name," seith Seint Peter, |
| "under hevene yeven to men, in which they mowe be saved"; that is to seyn, but the name of Jhesu Crist. |
| Take kep eek how precious is the name of Crist, as seith Seint Paul, ad Philipenses secundo, In nomine Jhesu, etc., |
| "That in the name of Jhesu every knee of hevenely creatures, or erthely, or of helle sholde |
| bowe," for it is so heigh and so worshipful that the cursede feend in helle sholde tremblen to heeren it ynempned. |
| Thanne semeth it that men that sweren so horribly by his blessed name, |
| that they despise it moore booldely than dide the cursede Jewes or elles the devel, that trembleth whan he heereth his name. |
| 600 | Now certes, sith that sweryng, but if it be lawefully doon, is so heighly deffended, muche worse is forsweryng falsly, and yet nedelees. |
| What seye we eek of hem that deliten hem in sweryng, |
| and holden it a gentrie or a manly dede to swere grete othes? |
| And what of hem that of verray usage ne cesse nat to swere grete othes, al be the cause nat worth a straw? |
| Certes, this is horrible synne. |
| Swerynge sodeynly withoute avysement is eek a synne. |
| But lat us go now to thilke horrible sweryng of adjuracioun and conjuracioun, |
| as doon thise false enchauntours or nigromanciens in bacyns ful of water, |
| or in a bright swerd, in a cercle, or in a fir, or in a shulder-boon of a sheep. |
| I kan nat seye but that they doon cursedly and dampnably agayns Crist and al the feith of hooly chirche. |
| 605 | What seye we of hem that bileeven on divynailes, as by flight or by noyse of briddes, or of beestes, |
| or by sort, by nigromancie, by dremes, by chirkynge of dores or crakkynge of houses, by gnawynge of rattes, and swich manere wrecchednesse? |
| Certes, al this thyng is deffended by God and by hooly chirche. |
| For which they been acursed, til they come to amendement, that on swich filthe setten hire bileeve. |
| Charmes for woundes or maladie of men or of beestes, if they taken any effect, |
| it may be peraventure that God suffreth it, for folk sholden yeve the moore feith and reverence to his name. |
| Now wol I speken of lesynges, which generally is fals signyficaunce of word, in entente to deceyven his evene-Cristene. |
| Som lesynge is of which ther comth noon avantage to no wight; |
| and som lesynge turneth to the ese and profit of o man, and to disese and damage of another man. |
| 610 | Another lesynge is for to saven his lyf or his catel. Another |
| lesynge comth of delit for to lye, in which delit they wol forge a long tale |
| and peynten it with alle circumstaunces, where al the ground of the tale is fals. |
| Som lesynge comth for he wole sustene his word; and som lesynge comth of reccheleesnesse withouten avisement; and semblable thynges. |
| Lat us now touche the vice of flaterynge, which ne comth nat gladly but for drede or for coveitise. |
| Flaterye is generally wrongful preisynge. Flatereres been the develes norices, that norissen his children with milk of losengerie. |
| For sothe, Salomon seith that "Flaterie is wors than detraccioun." For somtyme detraccion maketh an hauteyn man be the moore humble, |
| for he dredeth detraccion; but certes flaterye, that maketh a man to enhauncen his herte and his contenaunce. |
| 615 | Flatereres been the develes enchauntours; for they make a man to wene of hymself be lyk that he nys nat lyk. |
| They been lyk to Judas that bitraysen a man to sellen hym to his enemy; that is to the devel. |
| Flatereres been the develes chapelleyns, that syngen evere Placebo. |
| I rekene flaterie in the vices of Ire, |
| for ofte tyme if o man be wrooth with another, thanne wole he flatere som wight to sustene hym in his querele. |
| Speke we now of swich cursynge as comth of irous herte. Malisoun generally may be seyd every maner power of harm. |
| Swich cursynge bireveth man fro the regne of God, as seith Seint Paul. |
| 620 | And ofte tyme swich cursynge wrongfully retorneth agayn to hym that curseth, as a bryd that retorneth agayn to his owene nest. |
| And over alle thyng men oghten eschewe to cursen hire children, and yeven to the devel hire engendrure, |
| as ferforth as in hem is. Certes, it is greet peril and greet synne. |
| Lat us thanne speken of chidynge and reproche, whiche been ful grete woundes in mannes herte, |
| for they unsowen the semes of freendshipe in mannes herte. |
| For certes, unnethes may a man pleynly been accorded with hym that hath hym openly revyled and repreved and disclaundred. |
| This is a ful grisly synne, as Crist seith in the gospel. |
| And taak kep now, that he that repreveth his neighebor, outher he repreveth hym by som harm of peyne |
| that he hath on his body, as "mesel," "croked harlot," or by som synne that he dooth. |
| 625 | Now if he repreve hym by harm of peyne, thanne turneth the repreve to Jhesu Crist, |
| for peyne is sent by the rightwys sonde of God, and by his suffrance, be it meselrie, or maheym, or maladie. |
| And if he repreve hym uncharitably of synne, as "thou holour," "thou dronkelewe harlot," and so forth, |
| thanne aperteneth that to the rejoysynge of the devel, that evere hath joye that men doon synne. |
| And certes, chidynge may nat come but out of a vileyns herte. |
| For after the habundance of the herte speketh the mouth ful ofte. |
| And ye shul understonde that looke, by any wey, |
| whan any man shal chastise another, that he be war from chidynge or reprevynge. |
| For trewely, but he be war, he may ful lightly quyken the fir of angre and of wratthe, |
| which that he sholde quenche, and peraventure sleeth hym which that he myghte chastise with benignitee. |
| For as seith Salomon, "The amyable tonge is the tree of lyf" -- that is to seyn, of lyf espiritueel -- |
| and soothly, a deslavee tonge sleeth the spirites of hym that repreveth and eek of hym that is repreved. |
| 630 | Loo, what seith Seint Augustyn: "Ther is nothyng so lyk the develes child as he that ofte chideth." |
| Seint Paul seith eek, "The servant of God bihoveth nat to chide." |
| And how that chidynge be a vileyns thyng bitwixe alle manere folk, |
| yet is it certes moost uncovenable bitwixe a man and his wyf, |
| for there is nevere reste. And therfore seith Salomon, "An |
| hous that is uncovered and droppynge and a chidynge wyf been lyke." |
| A man that is in a droppynge hous in manye places, |
| though he eschewe the droppynge in o place, it droppeth on hym in another place. |
| So fareth it by a chydynge wyf; but she chide hym in o place, she wol chide hym in another. |
| And therfore, "Bettre is a morsel of breed with joye than an hous ful of delices with chidynge," seith Salomon. |
| Seint Paul seith, "O ye wommen, be ye subgetes to youre housbondes as bihoveth in God, |
| and ye men loveth youre wyves." Ad Colossenses tertio. |
| 635 | Afterward speke we of scornynge, which is a wikked synne, and namely whan he scorneth a man for his goode werkes. |
| For certes, swiche scorneres faren lyk the foule |
| tode, that may nat endure to smelle the soote savour of the vyne whanne it florissheth. |
| Thise scorneres been partyng felawes with the devel; for they han joye whan the devel wynneth and sorwe whan he leseth. |
| They been adversaries of Jhesu Crist, for they haten that he loveth -- that is to seyn, salvacioun of soule. |
| Speke we now of wikked conseil, for he that wikked conseil yeveth is a traytour. |
| For he deceyveth hym that trusteth in hym, ut Achitofel ad Absolonem. But nathelees, yet is his wikked conseil first agayn hymself. |
| 640 | For, as seith the wise man, "Every fals lyvynge hath this propertee in hymself, that |
| he that wole anoye another man, he anoyeth first hymself." |
| And men shul understonde that man shal nat taken his conseil of fals folk, ne of angry folk, or grevous folk, |
| ne of folk that loven specially to muchel hir owene profit, ne to muche worldly folk, namely in conseilynge of soules. |
| Now comth the synne of hem that sowen and maken discord amonges folk, which is a synne that Crist hateth outrely. |
| And no wonder is, for he deyde for to make concord. |
| And moore shame do they to Crist than dide they that hym crucifiede, |
| for God loveth bettre that freendshipe be amonges folk, than he dide his owene body, |
| the which that he yaf for unitee. Therfore been they likned to the devel, that evere is aboute to maken discord. |
| Now comth the synne of double tonge, swiche as speken faire byforn folk and wikkedly bihynde, or elles they maken semblant |
| as though they speeke of good entencioun, or elles in game and pley, and yet they speke of wikked entente. |
| 645 | Now comth biwreying of conseil, thurgh which a man is defamed; certes, unnethe may he restoore the damage. |
| Now comth manace, that is an open folye, for he that ofte manaceth, he threteth moore than he may parfourne ful ofte tyme. |
| Now cometh ydel wordes, that is withouten profit of hym that speketh tho wordes, |
| and eek of hym that herkneth tho wordes. Or elles ydel wordes been tho that been nedelees or withouten entente of natureel profit. |
| And al be it that ydel wordes been somtyme venial synne, |
| yet sholde men douten hem, for we shul yeve rekenynge of hem bifore God. |
| Now comth janglynge, that may nat been withoute synne. And, as seith Salomon, "It is a sygne of apert folye." |
| 650 | And therfore a philosophre seyde, whan men axed hym how that men sholde plese the peple, |
| and he answerde, "Do manye goode werkes, and spek fewe jangles." |
| After this comth the synne of japeres, that been the develes apes, |
| for they maken folk to laughe at hire japerie as folk doon at the gawdes of an ape. |
| Swiche japeres deffendeth Seint Paul. |
| Looke how that vertuouse wordes and hooly conforten hem that travaillen in the service of Crist, |
| right so conforten the vileyns wordes and knakkes of japeris hem that travaillen in the service of the devel. |
| Thise been the synnes that comen of the tonge, that comen of Ire and of othere synnes mo. |
| |
| |
| After the synne of Envye and of Ire, now wol I speken of the synne of Accidie. |
| For Envye blyndeth the herte of a man, and Ire troubleth a man, and Accidie maketh hym hevy, thoghtful, and wraw. |
| Envye and Ire maken bitternesse in herte, which bitternesse is mooder of Accidie, and bynymeth hym the love of alle goodnesse. |
| Thanne is Accidie the angwissh of troubled herte; and Seint Augustyn seith, "It is anoy of goodnesse and joye of harm." |
| Certes, this is a dampnable synne, for it dooth wrong to Jhesu Crist, |
| in as muche as it bynymeth the service that men oghte doon to Crist with alle diligence, as seith Salomon. |
| 680 | But Accidie dooth no swich diligence. He dooth alle thyng with anoy, and with wrawnesse, slaknesse, and excusacioun, and with ydelnesse, and unlust; |
| for which the book seith, "Acursed be he that dooth the service of God necligently." |
| Thanne is Accidie enemy to everich estaat of man, for certes the estaat of man is in three maneres. |
| Outher it is th' estaat of innocence, as was th' estaat of Adam biforn that he fil into synne, |
| in which estaat he was holden to wirche as in heriynge and adowrynge of God. |
| Another estaat is the estaat of synful men, in which estaat men been holden to laboure in preiynge to God |
| for amendement of hire synnes, and that he wole graunte hem to arysen out of hir synnes. |
| Another estaat is th' estaat of grace, in which estaat he is holden to werkes of penitence. |
| And certes, to alle thise thynges is Accidie enemy and contrarie, for he loveth no bisynesse at al. |
| 685 | Now certes this foule synne Accidie is eek a ful greet enemy to the liflode of the body, |
| for it ne hath no purveaunce agayn temporeel necessitee, for it forsleweth and forsluggeth and destroyeth alle goodes temporeles by reccheleesnesse. |
| The fourthe thyng is that Accidie is lyk hem that been in the peyne of helle, by cause of hir slouthe |
| and of hire hevynesse, for they that been dampned been so bounde that they ne may neither wel do ne wel thynke. |
| Of Accidie comth first that a man is anoyed and encombred for to doon any goodnesse, |
| and maketh that God hath abhomynacion of swich Accidie, as seith Seint John. |
| Now comth Slouthe, that wol nat suffre noon hardnesse ne no penaunce. For soothly, Slouthe is so tendre and so delicaat, |
| as seith Salomon, that he wol nat suffre noon hardnesse ne penaunce, and therfore he shendeth al that he dooth. |
| Agayns this roten-herted synne of Accidie and Slouthe sholde men exercise hemself to doon goode werkes, and manly |
| and vertuously cacchen corage wel to doon, thynkynge that oure Lord Jhesu Crist quiteth every good dede, be it never so lite. |
| 690 | Usage of labour is a greet thyng, for it maketh, as seith Seint Bernard, the laborer to have stronge armes and harde synwes; |
| and slouthe maketh hem feble and tendre. |
| Thanne comth drede to bigynne to werke anye goode werkes. For certes, he that is enclyned to synne, |
| hym thynketh it is so greet an emprise for to undertake to doon werkes of goodnesse, |
| and casteth in his herte that the circumstaunces of goodnesse been so grevouse |
| and so chargeaunt for to suffre, that he dar nat undertake to do werkes of goodnesse, as seith Seint Gregorie. |
| Now comth wanhope, that is despeir of the mercy of God, that comth somtyme of to muche outrageous sorwe, |
| and somtyme of to muche drede, ymaginynge that he hath doon so muche synne that it wol nat availlen hym, |
| though he wolde repenten hym and forsake synne, |
| thurgh which despeir or drede he abaundoneth al his herte to every maner synne, as seith Seint Augustin. |
| 695 | Which dampnable synne, if that it continue unto his ende, it is cleped synnyng in the Hooly Goost. |
| This horrible synne is so perilous that he that is despeired, |
| ther nys no felonye ne no synne that he douteth for to do, as shewed wel by Judas. |
| Certes, aboven alle synnes thanne is this synne moost displesant to Crist, and moost adversarie. |
| Soothly, he that despeireth hym is lyk the coward champioun recreant, that seith "creant" withoute nede. |
| Allas, allas, nedeles is he recreant and nedelees despeired. |
| Certes, the mercy of God is evere redy to the penitent, and is aboven alle his werkes. |
| 700 | Allas, kan a man nat bithynke hym on the gospel of Seint Luc, 15, |
| where as Crist seith that "as wel shal ther be joye in hevene upon a synful man that dooth penitence, |
| as upon nynty and nyne rightful men that neden no penitence." |
| Looke forther, in the same gospel, the joye and the feeste of the goode man that hadde lost his sone, |
| whan his sone with repentaunce was retourned to his fader. |
| Kan they nat remembren hem eek that, as seith Seint Luc, 23, how that the theef that was hanged bisyde Jhesu Crist seyde, |
| "Lord, remembre of me, whan thow comest into thy regn."? |
| "For sothe," seyde Crist, "I seye to thee, to-day shaltow been with me in paradys." |
| Certes, ther is noon so horrible synne of man |
| that it ne may in his lyf be destroyed by penitence, thurgh vertu of the passion and of the deeth of Crist. |
| 705 | Allas, what nedeth man thanne to been despeired, sith that his mercy so redy is and large? Axe and have. |
| Thanne cometh sompnolence, that is sloggy slombrynge, which maketh a man be hevy and dul in body and in soule, |
| and this synne comth of Slouthe. |
| And certes, the tyme that, by wey of resoun, men sholde nat slepe, that is by the morwe, |
| but if ther were cause resonable. |
| For soothly, the morwe tyde is moost covenable a man to seye his preyeres, and for to thynken on God, |
| and for to honoure God, and to yeven almesse to the povre that first cometh in the name of Crist. |
| Lo, what seith Salomon: "Whoso wolde by the morwe awaken and seke me, he shal fynde." |
| 710 | Thanne cometh necligence, or reccheleesnesse, that rekketh of no thyng. |
| And how that ignoraunce be mooder of alle harm, certes, necligence is the norice. |
| Necligence ne dooth no fors, whan he shal doon a thyng, wheither he do it weel or baddely. |
| Of the remedie of thise two synnes, as seith the wise man, |
| that "He that dredeth God, he spareth nat to doon that him oghte doon." |
| And he that loveth God, he wol doon diligence to plese God by his werkes |
| and abaundone hymself, with al his myght, wel for to doon. |
| Thanne comth ydelnesse, that is the yate of alle harmes. An ydel man is lyk to a place that hath no walles; |
| the develes may entre on every syde, or sheten at hym at discovert, by temptacion on every syde. |
| 715 | This ydelnesse is the thurrok of alle wikked and vileyns thoghtes, and of alle jangles, trufles, and of alle ordure. |
| Certes, the hevene is yeven to hem that wol labouren, and nat to ydel folk. Eek David seith that |
| "they ne been nat in the labour of men, ne they shul nat been whipped with men" |
| -- that is to seyn, in purgatorie. |
| Certes, thanne semeth it they shul be tormented with the devel in helle, but if they doon penitence. |
| Thanne comth the synne that men clepen tarditas, as whan a man is to laterede or tariynge er he wole turne to God, |
| and certes that is a greet folie. He is lyk to hym that falleth in the dych and wol nat arise. |
| And this vice comth of a fals hope, that he thynketh that he shal lyve longe; but that hope faileth ful ofte. |
| 720 | Thanne comth lachesse; that is he that whan he biginneth any good werk |
| anon he shal forleten it and stynten, as doon they that han any wight to governe |
| and ne taken of hym namoore kep anon as they fynden any contrarie or any anoy. |
| Thise been the newe sheepherdes that leten hir sheep wityngly go renne |
| to the wolf that is in the breres, or do no fors of hir owene governaunce. |
| Of this comth poverte and destruccioun, bothe of spiritueel and temporeel thynges. |
| Thanne comth a manere cooldnesse, that freseth al the herte of a man. |
| Thanne comth undevocioun, thurgh which a man is so blent, as seith Seint Bernard, |
| and hath swich langour in soule that he may neither rede ne singe in hooly chirche, ne heere ne thynke of no devocioun, |
| ne travaille with his handes in no good werk, that it nys hym unsavory and al apalled. |
| Thanne wexeth he slough and slombry, and soone wol be wrooth, and soone is enclyned to hate and to envye. |
| 725 | Thanne comth the synne of worldly sorwe, swich as is cleped tristicia, that sleeth man, as seith Seint Paul. |
| For certes, swich sorwe werketh to the deeth of the soule and of the body also; |
| for therof comth that a man is anoyed of his owene lif. |
| Wherfore swich sorwe shorteth ful ofte the lif of man, er that his tyme be come by wey of kynde. |
| |
| |
| After Accidie wol I speke of Avarice and of Coveitise, of which synne seith |
| Seint Paul that "the roote of alle harmes is Coveitise." Ad Thimotheum Sexto. |
| 740 | For soothly, whan the herte of a man is confounded in itself and troubled, and that |
| the soule hath lost the confort of God, thanne seketh he an ydel solas of worldly thynges. |
| Avarice, after the descripcioun of Seint Augustyn, is a likerousnesse in herte to have erthely thynges. |
| Som oother folk seyn that Avarice is for to purchacen manye erthely thynges and no thyng yeve to hem that han nede. |
| And understoond that Avarice ne stant nat oonly in lond ne catel, |
| but somtyme in science and in glorie, and in every manere of outrageous thyng is Avarice and Coveitise. |
| And the difference bitwixe Avarice and Coveitise is this: Coveitise is for to coveite swiche thynges as thou hast nat; |
| and Avarice is for to withholde and kepe swiche thynges as thou hast, withoute rightful nede. |
| 745 | Soothly, this Avarice is a synne that is ful dampnable, for al hooly writ curseth it and speketh agayns that vice, |
| for it dooth wrong to Jhesu Crist. |
| For it bireveth hym the love that men to hym owen, and turneth it bakward agayns alle resoun, |
| and maketh that the avaricious man hath moore hope in his catel than in Jhesu Crist, |
| and dooth moore observance in kepynge of his tresor than he dooth to the service of Jhesu Crist. |
| And therfore seith Seint Paul Ad Ephesios quinto, that an avaricious man is the thraldom of ydolatrie. |
| What difference is bitwixe an ydolastre and an avaricious man, but that an ydolastre, per aventure, ne hath but o mawmet or two, |
| and the avaricious man hath manye? For certes, every floryn in his cofre is his mawmet. |
| 750 | And certes, the synne of mawmettrie is the firste thyng |
| that God deffended in the ten comaundementz, as bereth witnesse in Exodi capitulo vicesimo: |
| "Thou shalt have no false goddes bifore me, ne thou shalt make to thee no grave thyng." |
| Thus is an avaricious man, that loveth his tresor biforn God, an ydolastre, |
| thurgh this cursed synne of avarice. Of Coveitise comen thise harde lordshipes, |
| thurgh whiche men been distreyned by taylages, custumes, and cariages, moore than hire duetee or resoun is. |
| And eek taken they of hire bonde-men amercimentz, whiche myghten moore resonably ben cleped extorcions than amercimentz. |
| Of whiche amercimentz and raunsonynge of boonde-men somme lordes stywardes seyn that it is rightful, |
| for as muche as a cherl hath no temporeel thyng that it ne is his lordes, as they seyn. |
| But certes, thise lord-shipes doon wrong |
| that bireven hire bonde-folk thynges that they nevere yave hem. Augustinus, De Civitate libro nono. |
| 755 | "Sooth is that the condicioun of thraldom and the firste cause of thraldom is for synne. Genesis nono. |
| Thus may ye seen that the gilt disserveth thraldom, but nat nature." |
| Wherfore thise lordes ne sholde nat muche glorifien hem in hir lordshipes, |
| sith that by natureel condicion they been nat lordes over thralles, but that thraldom comth first by the desert of synne. |
| And forther over, ther as the lawe seith that temporeel goodes of boonde-folk been the goodes of hir lordshipes, ye, |
| that is for to understonde, the goodes of the emperour, to deffenden hem in hir right, |
| but nat for to robben hem ne reven hem. |
| And therfore seith Seneca, "Thy prudence sholde lyve benignely with thy thralles." |
| 760 | Thilke that thou clepest thy thralles been Goddes peple, for humble folk been Cristes freendes; they been contubernyal with the Lord. |
| Thynk eek that of swich seed as cherles spryngen, of swich seed spryngen lordes. |
| As wel may the cherl be saved as the lord. |
| The same deeth that taketh the cherl, swich deeth taketh the lord. |
| Wherfore I rede, do right so with thy cherl, as thou woldest that thy lord dide with thee, |
| if thou were in his plit. |
| Every synful man is a cherl to synne. I rede thee, certes, that thou, lord, |
| werke in swich wise with thy cherles that they rather love thee than drede. |
| I woot wel ther is degree above degree, as reson is, |
| and skile is that men do hir devoir ther as it is due, |
| but certes, extorcions and despit of youre underlynges is dampnable. |
| 765 | And forther over, understoond wel that thise conquerours or tirauntz maken ful ofte thralles |
| of hem that been born of as roial blood as been they that hem conqueren. |
| This name of thraldom was nevere erst kowth til |
| that Noe seyde that his sone Canaan sholde be thral to his bretheren for his synne. |
| What seye we thanne of hem that pilen and doon extorcions to hooly chirche? |
| Certes, the swerd that men yeven first to a knyght, whan he is newe dubbed, signifieth that he sholde deffenden hooly chirche, |
| and nat robben it ne pilen it; and whoso dooth is traitour to Crist. |
| And, as seith Seint Augustyn, "They been the develes wolves that stranglen the sheep of Jhesu Crist," and doon worse than wolves. |
| For soothly, whan the wolf hath ful his wombe, he stynteth to strangle sheep. |
| But soothly, the pilours and destroyours of the godes of hooly chirche ne do nat so, for they ne stynte nevere to pile. |
| 770 | Now as I have seyd, sith so is that synne was first cause of thraldom, thanne is it thus: |
| that thilke tyme that al this world was in synne, thanne was al this world in thraldom and subjeccioun. |
| But certes, sith the time of grace cam, God ordeyned that som folk sholde be moore heigh in estaat and in degree, |
| and som folk moore lough, and that everich sholde be served in his estaat and in his degree. |
| And therfore in somme contrees, ther they byen thralles, whan they han turned hem to the feith, |
| they maken hire thralles free out of thraldom. And therfore, |
| certes, the lord oweth to his man that the man oweth to his lord. |
| The Pope calleth hymself servant of the servantz of God; but |
| for as muche as the estaat of hooly chirche ne myghte nat han be, ne the commune profit myghte nat han be kept, |
| ne pees and rest in erthe, but if God hadde ordeyned that som men hadde hyer degree and som men lower, |
| therfore was sovereyntee ordeyned, to kepe and mayntene and deffenden hire underlynges or hire subgetz in resoun, |
| as ferforth as it lith in hire power, and nat to destroyen hem ne confounde. |
| 775 | Wherfore I seye that thilke lordes that been lyk wolves, |
| that devouren the possessiouns or the catel of povre folk wrongfully, withouten mercy or mesure, |
| they shul receyven by the same mesure that they han mesured to povre folk the |
| mercy of Jhesu Crist, but if it be amended. |
| Now comth deceite bitwixe marchaunt and marchant. And thow shalt understonde that marchandise is in manye maneres; |
| that oon is bodily, and that oother is goostly; that oon is honest and leveful, and that oother is deshonest and unleveful. |
| Of thilke bodily marchandise that is leveful and honest is this: |
| that, there as God hath ordeyned that a regne or a contree is suffisaunt to hymself, |
| thanne is it honest and leveful that of habundaunce of this contree, that men helpe another contree that is moore nedy. |
| And therfore ther moote been marchantz to bryngen fro that o contree to that oother hire marchandises. |
| 780 | That oother marchandise, that men haunten with fraude and trecherie and deceite, with lesynges and false othes, is cursed and dampnable. |
| Espiritueel marchandise is proprely symonye, that is ententif desir to byen thyng espiritueel; |
| that is, thyng that aperteneth to the seintuarie of God and to cure of the soule. |
| This desir, if so be that a man do his diligence to parfournen it, |
| al be it that his desir ne take noon effect, yet is it to hym a deedly synne; |
| and if he be ordred, he is irreguleer. |
| Certes symonye is cleped of Simon Magus, that wolde han boght for temporeel catel |
| the yifte that God hadde yeven by the Hooly Goost to Seint Peter and to the apostles. |
| And therfore understoond that bothe he that selleth and he that beyeth thynges espirituels been cleped symonyals, |
| be it by catel, be it by procurynge, or by flesshly preyere of his freendes, flesshly freendes or espiritueel freendes: |
| 785 | Flesshly in two maneres; as by kynrede, or othere freendes. Soothly, if they praye for hym that is nat worthy and able, |
| it is symonye, if he take the benefice; and if he be worthy and able, ther nys noon. |
| That oother manere is whan men or wommen preyen for folk to avauncen hem, |
| oonly for wikked flesshly affeccioun that they han unto the persone, and that is foul symonye. |
| But certes, in service, for which men yeven thynges espirituels unto hir servantz, it moot been understonde that |
| the service moot been honest and elles nat; and eek that it be withouten bargaynynge, and that the persone be able. |
| For, as seith Seint Damasie, "Alle the synnes of the world, at regard of this synne, arn as thyng of noght." |
| For it is the gretteste synne that may be, after the synne of Lucifer and Antecrist. |
| For by this synne God forleseth the chirche and the soule that he boghte with his precious blood, |
| by hem that yeven chirches to hem that been nat digne. |
| 790 | For they putten in theves that stelen the soules of Jhesu Crist and destroyen his patrimoyne. |
| By swiche undigne preestes and curates han lewed men the lasse reverence of the sacramentz of hooly chirche, |
| and swiche yeveres of chirches putten out the children of Crist and putten into the chirche the develes owene sone. |
| They sellen the soules that lambes sholde kepen to the wolf that strangleth hem. |
| And therfore shul they nevere han part of the pasture of lambes, that is the blisse of hevene. |
| Now comth hasardrie with his apurtenaunces, as tables and rafles, of which comth deceite, false othes, chidynges, and alle ravynes, |
| blasphemynge and reneiynge of God, and hate of his neighebores, wast of goodes, mysspendynge of tyme, and somtyme manslaughtre. |
| Certes, hasardours ne mowe nat been withouten greet synne whiles they haunte that craft. |
| 795 | Of Avarice comen eek lesynges, thefte, fals witnesse, and false othes. |
| And ye shul understonde that thise been grete synnes and expres agayn the comaundementz of God, as I have seyd. |
| Fals witnesse is in word and eek in dede. In word, as for to bireve thy neighebores goode name by thy fals witnessyng, |
| or bireven hym his catel or his heritage by thy fals witnessyng, whan thou for ire, or for meede, |
| or for envye, berest fals witnesse, or accusest hym or excusest hym by thy fals witnesse, or elles excusest thyself falsly. |
| Ware yow, questemongeres and notaries! Certes, for fals witnessyng was Susanna in ful gret sorwe and peyne, and many another mo. |
| The synne of thefte is eek expres agayns Goddes heeste, and that in two maneres, corporeel or spiritueel. |
| Corporeel, as for to take thy neighebores catel agayn his wyl, |
| be it by force or by sleighte, be it by met or by mesure; |
| 800 | by stelyng eek of false enditementz upon hym, and in borwynge of thy neighebores catel, |
| in entente nevere to payen it agayn, and semblable thynges. |
| Espiritueel thefte is sacrilege; that is to seyn, hurtynge of hooly thynges, or of thynges sacred to Crist, in two maneres: |
| by reson of the hooly place, as chirches or chirche-hawes, |
| for which every vileyns synne that men doon in swiche places may be cleped sacrilege, or every violence in the semblable places; |
| also, they that withdrawen falsly the rightes that longen to hooly chirche. |
| And pleynly and generally, sacrilege is to reven hooly thyng fro hooly place, |
| or unhooly thyng out of hooly place, or hooly thing out of unhooly place. |
| |
| |
| After Glotonye thanne comth Lecherie, for thise two synnes been so ny cosyns that ofte tyme they wol nat departe. |
| God woot, this synne is ful displesaunt thyng to God, for he seyde hymself, |
| "Do no lecherie." And therfore he putte grete peynes agayns this synne in the olde lawe. |
| If womman thral were taken in this synne, she sholde be beten with staves to the deeth; |
| and if she were a gentil womman, she sholde be slayn with |
| stones; and if she were a bisshoppes doghter, she sholde been brent, by Goddes comandement. |
| Forther over, by the synne of lecherie God dreynte al the world at the diluge. |
| And after that he brente fyve citees with thonder-leyt, and sank hem into helle. |
| 840 | Now lat us speke thanne of thilke stynkynge synne of Lecherie that men clepe avowtrie of wedded folk; |
| that is to seyn, if that oon of hem be wedded, or elles bothe. |
| Seint John seith that avowtiers shullen been in helle, in a stank brennynge of fyr and of brymston |
| -- in fyr for hire lecherye, in brymston for the stynk of hire ordure. |
| Certes, the brekynge of this sacrement is an horrible thyng. |
| It was maked of God hymself in paradys, and confermed by Jhesu Crist, as witnesseth Seint Mathew in the gospel: |
| "A man shal lete fader and mooder and taken hym to his wif, and they shullen be two in o flessh." |
| This sacrement bitokneth the knyttynge togidre of Crist and of hooly chirche. |
| And nat oonly that God forbad avowtrie in dede, but eek he comanded that thou sholdest nat coveite thy neighebores wyf. |
| 845 | "In this heeste," seith Seint Augustyn, "is forboden alle manere coveitise to doon lecherie." Lo, what seith Seint Mathew in the gospel, that |
| "whoso seeth a womman to coveitise of his lust, he hath doon lecherie with hire in his herte." |
| Heere may ye seen that nat oonly the dede of this synne is forboden, but eek the desir to doon that synne. |
| This cursed synne anoyeth grevousliche hem that it haunten. And first to hire soule, |
| for he obligeth it to synne and to peyne of deeth that is perdurable. |
| Unto the body anoyeth it grevously also, for it dreyeth hym, and wasteth him, and shent hym, and of his blood |
| he maketh sacrifice to the feend of helle. It wasteth eek his catel and his substaunce. |
| And certes, if it be a foul thyng a man to waste his catel on wommen, |
| yet is it a fouler thyng whan that, for swich ordure, wommen dispenden upon men hir catel and substaunce. |
| 850 | This synne, as seith the prophete, bireveth man and womman hir goode fame and al hire honour, |
| and it is ful plesaunt to the devel, for therby wynneth he the mooste partie of this world. |
| And right as a marchant deliteth hym moost in chaffare that he hath moost avantage of, |
| right so deliteth the fend in this ordure. |
| This is that oother hand of the devel with fyve fyngres to cacche the peple to his vileynye. |
| The firste fynger is the fool lookynge of the fool womman and of the fool man; that sleeth, right |
| as the basilicok sleeth folk by the venym of his sighte, for the coveitise of eyen folweth the coveitise of the herte. |
| The seconde fynger is the vileyns touchynge in wikkede manere. |
| And therfore seith Salomon that "whoso toucheth and handleth a womman, he fareth lyk |
| hym that handleth the scorpioun that styngeth and sodeynly sleeth thurgh his envenymynge"; as whoso toucheth warm pych, it shent his fyngres. |
| 855 | The thridde is foule wordes, that fareth lyk fyr, that right anon brenneth the herte. |
| The fourthe fynger is the kissynge; and trewely he were a greet fool |
| that wolde kisse the mouth of a brennynge oven or of a fourneys. |
| And moore fooles been they that kissen in vileynye, for that mouth is the mouth of helle; |
| and namely thise olde dotardes holours, yet wol they kisse, though they may nat do, and smatre hem. |
| Certes, they been lyk to houndes; for an hound, whan he comth by the roser or by othere [bushes], |
| though he may nat pisse, yet wole he heve up his leg and make a contenaunce to pisse. |
| And for that many man weneth that he may nat synne for no likerousnesse that he dooth with his wyf, |
| certes, that opinion is fals. God woot, a man may sleen hymself with his owene knyf, |
| and make hymselve dronken of his owene tonne. |
| 860 | Certes, be it wyf, be it child, |
| or any worldly thyng that he loveth biforn God, it is his mawmet, and he is an ydolastre. |
| Man sholde loven hys wyf by discrecioun, paciently and atemprely, and thanne is she as though it were his suster. |
| The fifthe fynger of the develes hand is the stynkynge dede of Leccherie. |
| Certes, the fyve fyngres of Glotonie the feend put in the wombe of a man, |
| and with his fyve fingres of Lecherie he gripeth hym by the reynes for to throwen hym into the fourneys of helle, |
| ther as they shul han the fyr and the wormes that evere shul lasten, and wepynge and wailynge, sharp hunger and thurst, |
| [and] grymnesse of develes, that shullen al totrede hem withouten respit and withouten ende. |
| 865 | Of Leccherie, as I seyde, sourden diverse speces, as fornicacioun, that is bitwixe man and womman that been nat maried, |
| and this is deedly synne and agayns nature. |
| Al that is enemy and destruccioun to nature is agayns nature. |
| Parfay, the resoun of a man telleth eek hym wel that it is deedly synne, for as muche as God forbad leccherie. |
| And Seint Paul yeveth hem the regne that nys dewe to no wight but to hem that doon deedly synne. |
| Another synne of Leccherie is to bireve a mayden of hir maydenhede, for he that so dooth, |
| certes, he casteth a mayden out of the hyeste degree that is in this present lif |
| and bireveth hire thilke precious fruyt that the book clepeth the hundred fruyt. |
| I ne kan seye it noon ootherweyes in Englissh, but in Latyn it highte Centesimus fructus. |
| 870 | Certes, he that so dooth is cause of manye damages and vileynyes, mo than any man kan rekene; |
| right as he somtyme is cause of alle damages that beestes don in the feeld, that breketh the hegge or the closure, |
| thurgh which he destroyeth that may nat been restoored. |
| For certes, namoore may maydenhede be restoored than an arm that is smyten fro the body may retourne agayn to wexe. |
| She may have mercy, this woot I wel, if she do penitence; but nevere shal it be that she nas corrupt. |
| And al be it so that I have spoken somwhat of avowtrie, |
| it is good to shewen mo perils that longen to avowtrie, for to eschue that foule synne. |
| Avowtrie in Latyn is for to seyn approchynge of oother mannes bed, |
| thurgh which tho that whilom weren o flessh abawndone hir bodyes to othere persones. |
| 875 | Of this synne, as seith the wise man, folwen manye harmes. |
| First, brekynge of feith, and certes in feith is the keye of Cristendom. |
| And whan that feith is broken and lorn, soothly Cristendom stant veyn and withouten fruyt. |
| This synne is eek a thefte, for thefte generally is for to reve a wight his thyng agayns his wille. |
| Certes, this is the fouleste thefte that may be, whan a womman steleth hir body from hir housbonde |
| and yeveth it to hire holour to defoulen hire, and steleth hir soule fro Crist and yeveth it to the devel. |
| This is a fouler thefte than for to breke a chirche and stele the chalice, |
| for thise avowtiers breken the temple of God spiritually, and stelen the vessel of grace, that is the body and the soule, |
| for which Crist shal destroyen hem, as seith Seint Paul. |
| 880 | Soothly, of this thefte douted gretly Joseph, whan that his lordes wyf preyed hym of vileynye, whan he seyde, |
| "Lo, my lady, how my lord hath take to me under my warde al that he hath in this world, |
| ne no thyng of his thynges is out of my power, but oonly ye, that been his wyf. |
| And how sholde I thanne do this wikkednesse, and synne so horribly agayns God and agayns my lord? |
| God it forbeede!" Allas, al to litel is swich trouthe now yfounde. |
| The thridde harm is the filthe thurgh which they breken the comandement of God, and defoulen the auctour of matrimoyne, that is Crist. |
| For certes, in so muche as the sacrement of mariage is so noble and so digne, so muche is it gretter synne |
| for to breken it, for God made mariage in paradys, in the estaat of innocence, to multiplye mankynde to the service of God. |
| And therfore is the brekynge therof the moore grevous; of which brekynge comen false heires ofte tyme, that wrongfully ocupien folkes heritages. |
| And therfore wol Crist putte hem out of the regne of hevene, that is heritage to goode folk. |
| 885 | Of this brekynge comth eek ofte tyme that folk unwar wedden or synnen with hire owene kynrede, and namely thilke harlotes that haunten |
| bordels of thise fool wommen, that mowe be likned to a commune gong, where as men purgen hire ordure. |
| What seye we eek of putours that lyven by the horrible synne of putrie, and constreyne wommen to yelden hem a certeyn rente |
| of hire bodily puterie, ye, somtyme of his owene wyf or his child, as doon thise bawdes? Certes, thise been cursede synnes. |
| Understoond eek that Avowtrie is set gladly in the ten comandementz bitwixe thefte and manslaughtre; |
| for it is the gretteste thefte that may be, for it is thefte of body and of soule. |
| And it is lyk to homycide, for it kerveth atwo and breketh atwo hem that first were maked o flessh. |
| And therfore, by the olde lawe of God, they sholde be slayn. |
| But nathelees, by the lawe of Jhesu Crist, that is lawe of pitee, whan he seyde to the womman |
| that was founden in avowtrie, and sholde han been slayn with stones, after the wyl of the Jewes, as was hir lawe, |
| "Go," quod Jhesu Crist, "and have namoore wyl to synne," or, "wille namoore to do synne." |
| 890 | Soothly the vengeaunce of Avowtrie is awarded to the peynes of helle, but if so be that it be destourbed by penitence. |
| Yet been ther mo speces of this cursed synne; as whan that oon of hem is religious, or elles bothe; |
| or of folk that been entred into ordre, as subdekne, or dekne, or preest, or hospitaliers. |
| And evere the hyer that he is in ordre, the gretter is the synne. |
| The thynges that gretly agreggen hire synne is the brekynge of hire avow of chastitee, whan they receyved the ordre. |
| And forther over, sooth is that hooly ordre is chief of al the tresorie of God |
| and his especial signe and mark of chastitee to shewe that they been joyned to chastitee, |
| which that is the moost precious lyf that is. |
| And thise ordred folk been specially titled to God, and of the special meignee of God, |
| for which, whan they doon deedly synne, they been the special traytours of God and of his peple; |
| for they lyven of the peple, to preye for the peple, |
| and while they ben suche traitours, here preyer avayleth nat to the peple. |
| 895 | Preestes been aungels, as by the dignitee of hir mysterye; |
| but for sothe, Seint Paul seith that Sathanas transformeth hym in an aungel of light. |
| Soothly, the preest that haunteth deedly synne, he may be likned to the aungel of derknesse transformed in the aungel of light. |
| He semeth aungel of light, but for sothe he is aungel of derknesse. |
| Swiche preestes been the sones of Helie, |
| as sheweth in the Book of Kynges, that they weren the sones of Belial -- that is, the devel. |
| Belial is to seyn, "withouten juge." And so faren they; hem thynketh they been free and han no juge, |
| namoore than hath a free bole that taketh which cow that hym liketh in the town. |
| So faren they by wommen. For right as a free bole is ynough for al a toun, |
| right so is a wikked preest corrupcioun ynough for al a parisshe, or for al a contree. |
| 900 | Thise preestes, as seith the book, ne konne nat the mysterie of preesthod to the peple, ne God ne knowe they nat. |
| They ne helde hem nat apayd, as seith the book, of soden flessh that was to hem offred, |
| but they tooke by force the flessh that is rawe. |
| Certes, so thise shrewes ne holden hem nat apayed of roosted flessh and sode flessh, |
| with which the peple feden hem in greet reverence, but they wole have raw flessh of folkes wyves and hir doghtres. |
| And certes, thise wommen that consenten to hire harlotrie doon greet wrong to Crist, |
| and to hooly chirche, and alle halwes, and to alle soules; |
| for they bireven alle thise hym that sholde worshipe Crist and hooly chirche and preye for Cristene soules. |
| And therfore han swiche preestes, and hire lemmanes eek that consenten to hir leccherie, |
| the malisoun of al the court Cristien, til they come to amendement. |
| The thridde spece of avowtrie is somtyme bitwixe a man and his wyf, and that is |
| whan they take no reward in hire assemblynge but oonly to hire flesshly delit, as seith Seint Jerome, |
| 905 | and ne rekken of nothyng but that they been assembled; |
| by cause that they been maried, al is good ynough, as thynketh to hem. |
| But in swich folk hath the devel power, as seyde the aungel Raphael to Thobie, |
| for in hire assemblynge they putten Jhesu Crist out of hire herte and yeven hemself to alle ordure. |
| The fourthe spece is the assemblee of hem that been of hire kynrede, or of hem that been of oon affynytee, |
| or elles with hem with whiche hir fadres or hir kynrede han deled in the synne of lecherie. |
| This synne maketh hem lyk to houndes, that taken no kep to kynrede. |
| And certes, parentele is in two maneres, outher goostly or flesshly; goostly, as for to deelen with his godsibbes. |
| For right so as he that engendreth a child is his flesshly fader, right so is his godfader his fader espiritueel. |
| For which a womman may in no lasse synne assemblen with hire godsib than with hire owene flesshly brother. |
| 910 | The fifthe spece is thilke abhomynable synne, of which that no man unnethe oghte speke ne write; |
| nathelees it is openly reherced in holy writ. |
| This cursednesse doon men and wommen in diverse entente and in diverse manere; but though that hooly writ speke of horrible synne, |
| certes hooly writ may nat been defouled, namoore than the sonne that shyneth on the mixne. |
| Another synne aperteneth to leccherie, that comth in slepynge, and this synne cometh ofte to hem that been maydenes, |
| and eek to hem that been corrupt; and this synne men clepen polucioun, that comth in foure maneres. |
| Somtyme of langwissynge of body, for the humours been to ranke and to habundaunt in the body of man; |
| somtyme of infermetee, for the fieblesse of the vertu retentif, as phisik maketh mencion; somtyme for surfeet of mete and drynke; |
| and somtyme of vileyns thoghtes that been enclosed in mannes mynde whan he gooth to slepe, which may nat been withoute synne; |
| for which men moste kepen hem wisely, or elles may men synnen ful grevously. |
| |
| |
| 915 | Now comth the remedie agayns Leccherie, and that is generally chastitee and continence, |
| that restreyneth alle the desordeynee moevynges that comen of flesshly talentes. |
| And evere the gretter merite shal he han that moost restreyneth the wikkede eschawfynges of the [ardour] of this synne. |
| And this is in two maneres -- that is to seyn, chastitee in mariage, and chastitee of widwehod. |
| Now shaltow understonde that matrimoyne is leefful assemblynge of man and of womman that receyven by vertu of the sacrement the boond |
| thurgh which they may nat be departed in al hir lyf -- that is to seyn, whil that they lyven bothe. |
| This, as seith the book, is a ful greet sacrement. |
| God maked it, as I have seyd, in paradys, and wolde hymself be born in mariage. |
| And for to halwen mariage he was at a weddynge, where as he turned water into wyn, |
| which was the firste miracle that he wroghte in erthe biforn his disciples. |
| 920 | Trewe effect of mariage clenseth fornicacioun and replenysseth hooly chirche of good lynage, for that is the ende of mariage; |
| and it chaungeth deedly synne into venial synne bitwixe hem that been ywedded, |
| and maketh the hertes al oon of hem that been ywedded, as wel as the bodies. |
| This is verray mariage, that was establissed by God, er that synne bigan, whan natureel lawe was in his right poynt in paradys; |
| and it was ordeyned that o man sholde have but o womman, and o womman but o man, |
| as seith Seint Augustyn, by manye resouns. |
| First, for mariage is figured bitwixe Crist and holy chirche. And that oother is for a man is heved of a womman; |
| algate, by ordinaunce it sholde be so. |
| For if a womman hadde mo men than oon, thanne sholde she have moo hevedes than oon, and |
| that were an horrible thyng biforn God; and eek a womman ne myghte nat plese to many folk at oones. |
| And also ther ne sholde nevere be pees ne reste amonges hem, for everich wolde axen his owene thyng. |
| And forther over, no man ne sholde knowe his owene engendrure, ne who sholde have his heritage; |
| and the womman sholde been the lasse biloved fro the tyme that she were conjoynt to many men. |
| 925 | Now comth how that a man sholde bere hym with his wif, and namely in two thynges; |
| that is to seyn, in suffraunce and reverence, as shewed Crist whan he made first womman. |
| For he ne made hire nat of the heved of Adam, for she sholde nat clayme to greet lordshipe. |
| For ther as the womman hath the maistrie, she maketh to muche desray. |
| Ther neden none ensamples of this; the experience of day by day oghte suffise. |
| Also, certes, God ne made nat womman of the foot of Adam, for she ne sholde nat been holden to lowe; |
| for she kan nat paciently suffre. But God made womman of the ryb of Adam, for womman sholde be felawe unto man. |
| Man sholde bere hym to his wyf in feith, in trouthe, and in love, |
| as seith Seint Paul, that a man sholde loven his wyf as Crist loved hooly chirche, |
| that loved it so wel that he deyde for it. So sholde a man for his wyf, if it were nede. |
| 930 | Now how that a womman sholde be subget to hire housbonde, that telleth Seint Peter. First, in obedience. |
| And eek, as seith the decree, a womman that is wyf, as longe as she is a wyf, |
| she hath noon auctoritee to swere ne to bere witnesse withoute leve of hir housbonde, |
| that is hire lord; algate, he sholde be so by resoun. |
| She sholde eek serven hym in alle honestee, and been attempree of hire array. |
| I woot wel that they sholde setten hire entente to plesen hir housbondes, but nat by hire queyntise of array. |
| Seint Jerome seith that "wyves that been apparailled in silk and in precious purpre ne mowe nat clothen hem in Jhesu Crist." |
| Loke what seith Seint John eek in thys matere? |
| Seint Gregorie eek seith that "No wight seketh precious array but oonly for veyne glorie, to been honoured the moore biforn the peple." |
| 935 | It is a greet folye, a womman to have a fair array outward and in hirself be foul inward. |
| A wyf sholde eek be mesurable in lookynge and in berynge and in lawghynge, and discreet in alle hire wordes and hire dedes. |
| And aboven alle worldly thyng she sholde loven hire housbonde with al hire herte, and to hym be trewe of hir body. |
| So sholde an housbonde eek be to his wyf. For sith that al the body is the housbondes, |
| so sholde hire herte been, or elles ther is bitwixe hem two, as in that, no parfit mariage. |
| Thanne shal men understonde that for thre thynges a man and his wyf flesshly mowen assemble. |
| The firste is in entente of engendrure of children to the service of God, for certes that is the cause final of matrimoyne. |
| 940 | Another cause is to yelden everich of hem to oother the dette of hire bodies, |
| for neither of hem hath power of his owene body. The thridde is for to eschewe leccherye and vileynye. |
| The ferthe is for sothe deedly synne. |
| As to the firste, it is meritorie; the seconde also, for, as seith the decree, that |
| she hath merite of chastitee that yeldeth to hire housbonde the dette of hir body, |
| ye, though it be agayn hir likynge and the lust of hire herte. |
| The thridde manere is venyal synne; and, trewely, scarsly may ther any of thise be withoute venial synne, |
| for the corrupcion and for the delit. |
| The fourthe manere is for to understonde, as if they assemble oonly for amorous love and for noon of the foreseyde causes, |
| but for to accomplice thilke brennynge delit, they rekke nevere how ofte. |
| Soothly it is deedly synne; and yet, with sorwe, somme folk wol peynen hem moore to doon than to hire appetit suffiseth. |
| The seconde manere of chastitee is for to been a clene wydewe, |
| and eschue the embracynges of man, and desiren the embracynge of Jhesu Crist. |
| 945 | Thise been tho that han been wyves and han forgoon hire housbondes, |
| and eek wommen that han doon leccherie and been releeved by penitence. |
| And certes, if that a wyf koude kepen hire al chaast by licence of hir housbonde, |
| so that she yeve nevere noon occasion that he agilte, it were to hire a greet merite. |
| Thise manere wommen that observen chastitee moste be clene in herte as wel as in body and in thought, |
| and mesurable in clothynge and in contenaunce, and been abstinent in etynge and drynkynge, in spekynge, and in dede. |
| They been the vessel or the boyste of the blissed Magdelene, that fulfilleth hooly chirche of good odour. |
| The thridde manere of chastitee is virginitee, and it bihoveth that she be hooly in herte and clene of body. |
| Thanne is she spouse to Jhesu Crist, and she is the lyf of angeles. |
| She is the preisynge of this world, and she is as thise martirs in egalitee; |
| she hath in hire that tonge may nat telle ne herte thynke. |
| 950 | Virginitee baar oure Lord Jhesu Crist, and virgine was hymselve. |
| Another remedie agayns Leccherie is specially to withdrawen swiche thynges as yeve occasion to thilke vileynye, as ese, etynge, and drynkynge. |
| For certes, whan the pot boyleth strongly, the beste remedie is to withdrawe the fyr. |
| Slepynge longe in greet quiete is eek a greet norice to Leccherie. |
| Another remedie agayns Leccherie is that a man or a womman eschue the compaignye of hem |
| by whiche he douteth to be tempted, for al be it so that the dede be withstonden, yet is ther greet temptacioun. |
| Soothly, a whit wal, although it ne brenne noght fully by stikynge of a candele, yet is the wal blak of the leyt. |
| 955 | Ful ofte tyme I rede that no man truste in his owene perfeccioun, |
| but he be stronger than Sampson, and hoolier than David, and wiser than Salomon. |
| Now after that I have declared yow, as I kan, the sevene deedly synnes, |
| and somme of hire braunches and hire remedies, soothly, if I koude, I wolde telle yow the ten comandementz. |
| But so heigh a doctrine I lete to divines. Nathelees, I hope to God, |
| they been touched in this tretice, everich of hem alle. |
| |
| |
| Now for as muche as the seconde partie of Penitence stant in confessioun of mouth, |
| as I bigan in the firste chapitre, I seye, Seint Augustyn seith, |
| "Synne is every word and every dede, and al that men coveiten, agayn the lawe of Jhesu Crist; |
| and this is for to synne in herte, in mouth, and in dede, by thy fyve wittes, |
| that been sighte, herynge, smellynge, tastynge or savourynge, and feelynge." |
| 960 | Now is it good to understonde the circumstances that agreggen muchel every synne. |
| Thou shalt considere what thow art that doost the synne, |
| wheither thou be male or femele, yong or oold, gentil or thral, |
| free or servant, hool or syk, wedded or sengle, ordred or unordred, wys or fool, clerk or seculeer; |
| if she be of thy kynrede, bodily or goostly, or noon; |
| if any of thy kynrede have synned with hire, or noon; and manye mo thinges. |
| Another circumstaunce is this: wheither it be doon in fornicacioun or in avowtrie or noon, incest or noon, mayden or noon, |
| in manere of homicide or noon, horrible grete synnes or smale, and how longe thou hast continued in synne. |
| The thridde circumstaunce is the place ther thou hast do synne, wheither in oother mennes hous or in thyn owene, |
| in feeld or in chirche or in chirchehawe, in chirche dedicaat or noon. |
| 965 | For if the chirche be halwed, and man or womman |
| spille his kynde inwith that place by wey of synne or by wikked temptacioun, |
| the chirche is entredited til it be reconsiled by the bysshop. |
| And the preest sholde be enterdited that dide swich a vileynye; to terme of al his lif he sholde namoore synge masse, |
| and if he dide, he sholde doon deedly synne at every time that he so songe masse. |
| The fourthe circumstaunce is by whiche mediatours, or by whiche messagers, as for enticement, or for consentement to bere compaignye with felaweshipe; |
| for many a wrecche, for to bere compaignye, wol go to the devel of helle. |
| Wherfore they that eggen or consenten to the synne been parteners of the synne, and of the dampnacioun of the synnere. |
| The fifthe circumstaunce is how manye tymes that he hath synned, |
| if it be in his mynde, and how ofte that he hath falle. |
| 970 | For he that ofte falleth in synne, he despiseth the mercy of God, and encreesseth hys synne, and is unkynde to Crist; |
| and he wexeth the moore fieble to withstonde synne, and synneth the moore lightly, |
| and the latter ariseth, and is the moore eschew for to shryven hym, and namely, to hym that is his confessour. |
| For which that folk, whan they falle agayn in hir olde folies, outher they forleten hir olde confessours al outrely |
| or elles they departen hir shrift in diverse places; but soothly, swich departed shrift deserveth no mercy of God of his synnes. |
| The sixte circumstaunce is why that a man synneth, as by which temptacioun, and if hymself procure thilke temptacioun, |
| or by the excitynge of oother folk; or if he synne with a womman by force, or by hire owene assent; |
| or if the womman, maugree hir hed, hath been afforced, or noon. This shal she telle: |
| for coveitise, or for poverte, and if it was hire procurynge, or noon; and swich manere harneys. |
| 975 | The seventhe circumstaunce is in what manere he hath doon his synne, |
| or how that she hath suffred that folk han doon to hire. |
| And the same shal the man telle pleynly with alle circumstaunces; and wheither he hath synned with comune bordel wommen or noon, |
| or doon his synne in hooly tymes or noon, in fastyng tymes or noon, or biforn his shrifte, or after his latter shrifte, |
| and hath peraventure broken therfore his penance enjoyned, by whos help and whos conseil, by sorcerie or craft; al moste be toold. |
| Alle thise thynges, after that they been grete or smale, engreggen the conscience of man. |
| And eek the preest, that is thy juge, may the bettre been avysed of his juggement |
| in yevynge of thy penaunce, and that is after thy contricioun. |
| 980 | For understond wel that after tyme that a man hath defouled his baptesme by synne, |
| if he wole come to salvacioun, ther is noon other wey but by penitence and shrifte and satisfaccioun, |
| and namely by the two, if ther be a confessour to which he may shriven hym, |
| and the thridde, if he have lyf to parfournen it. |
| Thanne shal man looke and considere that if he wole maken a trewe and a profitable confessioun, ther moste be foure condiciouns. |
| First, it moot been in sorweful bitternesse of herte, as seyde the kyng Ezechias to God, |
| "I wol remembre me alle the yeres of my lif in bitternesse of myn herte." |
| This condicioun of bitternesse hath fyve signes. The firste is that confessioun moste be shamefast, nat for to covere ne hyden his synne, |
| for he hath agilt his God and defouled his soule. |
| 985 | And herof seith Seint Augustyn, "The herte travailleth for shame of his synne"; |
| and for he hath greet shamefastnesse, he is digne to have greet mercy of God. |
| Swich was the confessioun of the publican that wolde nat heven up his eyen to hevene, |
| for he hadde offended God of hevene; for which shamefastnesse he hadde anon the mercy of God. |
| And therof seith Seint Augustyn that swich shamefast folk been next foryevenesse and remissioun. |
| Another signe is humylitee in confessioun, of which seith Seint Peter, |
| "Humbleth yow under the myght of God." The hond of God is myghty in confessioun, for |
| therby God foryeveth thee thy synnes, for he allone hath the power. |
| And this humylitee shal been in herte and in signe outward, for right as he hath humylitee to God in his herte, |
| right so sholde he humble his body outward to the preest, that sit in Goddes place. |
| 990 | For which in no manere, sith that Crist is sovereyn, and the preest meene and mediatour bitwixe Crist and the synnere, |
| and the synnere is the laste by wey of resoun, |
| thanne sholde nat the synnere sitte as heighe as his confessour, but knele biforn hym or at his feet, |
| but if maladie destourbe it. For he shal nat taken kep who sit there, but in whos place that he sitteth. |
| A man that hath trespased to a lord, and comth for to axe mercy and maken his accord, |
| and set him doun anon by the lord, |
| men wolde holden hym outrageous, and nat worthy so soone for to have remissioun ne mercy. |
| The thridde signe is how that thy shrift sholde be ful of teeris, if man may, |
| and if man may nat wepe with his bodily eyen, lat hym wepe in herte. |
| Swich was the confession of Seint Peter, for after that he hadde forsake Jhesu Crist, he wente out and weep ful bitterly. |
| 995 | The fourthe signe is that he ne lette nat for shame to shewen his confessioun. |
| Swich was the confessioun of the Magdalene, that ne spared for no shame of hem |
| that weren atte feeste, for to go to oure Lord Jhesu Crist and biknowe to hym hire synne. |
| The fifthe signe is that a man or a womman be obeisant to receyven the penaunce that hym is enjoyned for his synnes, |
| for certes, Jhesu Crist, for the giltes of o man, was obedient to the deeth. |
| The seconde condicion of verray confession is that it be hastily doon. |
| For certes, if a man hadde a deedly wounde, evere the lenger that he taried to warisshe hymself, |
| the moore wolde it corrupte and haste hym to his deeth, and eek the wounde wolde be the wors for to heele. |
| And right so fareth synne that longe tyme is in a man unshewed. |
| 1000 | Certes, a man oghte hastily shewen his synnes for manye causes; as for drede of deeth, that cometh ofte sodeynly, |
| and no certeyn what tyme it shal be, ne in what place; and eek the drecchynge of o synne draweth in another; |
| and eek the lenger that he tarieth, the ferther he is fro Crist. And if he abide to his laste day, scarsly |
| may he shryven hym or remembre hym of his synnes or repenten hym, for the grevous maladie of his deeth. |
| And for as muche as he ne hath nat in his lyf herkned Jhesu Crist |
| whanne he hath spoken, he shal crie to Jhesu Crist at his laste day, and scarsly wol he herkne hym. |
| And understond that this condicioun moste han foure thynges. Thi shrift moste be purveyed bifore and avysed; |
| for wikked haste dooth no profit; and that a man konne shryve hym of his synnes, |
| be it of pride, or of envye, and so forth with the speces and circumstances; |
| and that he have comprehended in hys mynde the nombre and the greetnesse of his synnes, |
| and how longe that he hath leyn in synne; |
| 1005 | and eek that he be contrit of his synnes, and in stidefast purpos, |
| by the grace of God, nevere eft to falle in synne; |
| and eek that he drede and countrewaite hymself, that he fle the occasiouns of synne to whiche he is enclyned. |
| Also thou shalt shryve thee of alle thy synnes to o man, and nat a parcel to o man and a parcel to another; |
| that is to understonde, in entente to departe thy confessioun, as for shame or drede, for it nys but stranglynge of thy soule. |
| For certes Jhesu Crist is entierly al good; in hym nys noon imperfeccioun, |
| and therfore outher he foryeveth al parfitly or elles never a deel. |
| I seye nat that if thow be assigned to the penitauncer for certein synne, |
| that thow art bounde to shewen hym al the remenaunt of thy synnes, of whiche thow hast be shryven of thy curaat, |
| but if it like to thee of thyn humylitee; this is no departynge of shrifte. |
| Ne I seye nat, ther as I speke of divisioun of confessioun, that if thou have licence |
| for to shryve thee to a discreet and an honest preest, where thee liketh, and by licence of thy curaat, |
| that thow ne mayst wel shryve thee to him of alle thy synnes. |
| 1010 | But lat no blotte be bihynde; lat no synne been untoold, as fer as thow hast remembraunce. |
| And whan thou shalt be shryven to thy curaat, telle hym eek alle the synnes that thow hast doon |
| syn thou were last yshryven; this is no wikked entente of divisioun of shrifte. |
| Also the verray shrifte axeth certeine condiciouns. First, that thow shryve thee by thy free wil, |
| noght constreyned, ne for shame of folk, ne for maladie, ne swiche thynges. |
| For it is resoun that he that trespaseth by his free wyl, that by his free wyl he confesse his trespas, |
| and that noon oother man telle his synne but he hymself; |
| ne he shal nat nayte ne denye his synne, ne wratthe hym agayn the preest for his amonestynge to lete synne. |
| The seconde condicioun is that thy shrift be laweful; that is to seyn, that |
| thow that shryvest thee and eek the preest that hereth thy confessioun been verraily in the feith of hooly chirche, |
| 1015 | and that a man ne be nat despeired of the mercy of Jhesu Crist, as Caym or Judas. |
| And eek a man moot accusen hymself of his owene trespas, and nat another; |
| but he shal blame and wyten hymself and his owene malice of his synne, and noon oother. |
| But nathelees, if that another man be occasioun or enticere of his synne, |
| or the estaat of a persone be swich thurgh which his synne is agregged, or elles that he may nat pleynly shryven |
| hym but he telle the persone with which he hath synned, thanne may he telle it, |
| so that his entente ne be nat to bakbite the persone, but oonly to declaren his confessioun. |
| Thou ne shalt nat eek make no lesynges in thy confessioun, for humylitee, |
| peraventure, to seyn that thou hast doon synnes of whiche thow were nevere gilty. |
| 1020 | For Seint Augustyn seith, "If thou, by cause of thyn humylitee, makest lesynges on thyself, |
| though thow ne were nat in synne biforn, yet artow thanne in synne thurgh thy lesynges." |
| Thou most eek shewe thy synne by thyn owene propre mouth, but thow be woxe dowmb, and nat by no lettre; |
| for thow that hast doon the synne, thou shalt have the shame therfore. |
| Thow shalt nat eek peynte thy confessioun by faire subtile wordes, to covere the moore thy synne; |
| for thanne bigilestow thyself, and nat the preest. Thow most tellen it platly, be it nevere so foul ne so horrible. |
| Thow shalt eek shryve thee to a preest that is discreet to conseille |
| thee; and eek thou shalt nat shryve thee for veyne glorie, ne for ypocrisye, ne for no cause |
| but oonly for the doute of Jhesu Crist and the heele of thy soule. |
| Thow shalt nat eek renne to the preest sodeynly to tellen hym lightly thy synne, |
| as whoso telleth a jape or a tale, but avysely and with greet devocioun. |
| 1025 | And generally, shryve thee ofte. If thou ofte falle, ofte thou arise by confessioun. |
| And though thou shryve thee ofter than ones of synne of which thou hast be shryven, it is the moore merite. |
| And, as seith Seint Augustyn, thow shalt have the moore lightly relessyng and grace of God, bothe of synne and of peyne. |
| And certes, oones a yeere atte leeste wey it is laweful for to been housled, for certes, oones a yeere alle thynges renovellen. |
| Now have I toold yow of verray Confessioun, that is the seconde partie of Penitence. |
| |
| |
| The thridde partie of Penitence is Satisfaccioun, and that stant moost generally in almesse and in bodily peyne. |
| 1030 | Now been ther thre manere of almesse: contricion of herte, where a man offreth hymself to God; |
| another is to han pitee of defaute of his neighebores; and the thridde is |
| in yevynge of good conseil and comfort, goostly and bodily, where men han nede, and namely in sustenaunce of mannes foode. |
| And tak kep that a man hath nede of thise thinges generally: he hath nede of foode, he hath nede of clothyng and herberwe, |
| he hath nede of charitable conseil and visitynge in prisone and in maladie, and sepulture of his dede body. |
| And if thow mayst nat visite the nedeful with thy persone, visite hym by thy message and by thy yiftes. |
| Thise been general almesses or werkes of charitee |
| of hem that han temporeel richesses or discrecioun in conseilynge. Of thise werkes shaltow heren at the day of doom. |
| Thise almesses shaltow doon of thyne owene propre thynges, and hastily and prively, if thow mayst. |
| 1035 | But nathelees, if thow mayst nat doon it prively, thow shalt nat forbere to doon almesse though men seen it, |
| so that it be nat doon for thank of the world, but oonly for thank of Jhesu Crist. |
| For, as witnesseth Seint Mathew, capitulo quinto, "A citee may nat been hyd that is set on a montayne, |
| ne men lighte nat a lanterne and put it under a busshel, |
| but men sette it on a candle-stikke to yeve light to the men in the hous. |
| Right so shal youre light lighten bifore men, that they may seen youre goode werkes, and glorifie youre fader that is in hevene." |
| Now as to speken of bodily peyne, it stant in preyeres, in wakynges, in fastynges, in vertuouse techynges of orisouns. |
| And ye shul understonde that orisouns or preyeres is for to seyn a pitous wyl of herte, |
| that redresseth it in God and expresseth it by word outward, to remoeven harmes and to han thynges espiritueel and durable, |
| and somtyme temporele thynges; of whiche orisouns, certes, in the orison of the Pater noster hath Jhesu Crist enclosed moost thynges. |
| 1040 | Certes, it is privyleged of thre thynges in his dignytee, |
| for which it is moore digne than any oother preyere, for that Jhesu Crist hymself maked it; |
| and it is short, for it sholde be koud the moore lightly, and |
| for to withholden it the moore esily in herte, and helpen hymself the ofter with the orisoun, |
| and for a man sholde be the lasse wery to seyen it, and for a man may nat excusen hym to lerne it, |
| it is so short and so esy, and for it comprehendeth in it self alle goode preyeres. |
| The exposicioun of this hooly preyere, that is so excellent and digne, I bitake to thise maistres of theologie, |
| save thus muchel wol I seyn; that whan thow prayest that God sholde foryeve thee thy giltes as |
| thou foryevest hem that agilten to thee, be ful wel war that thow ne be nat out of charitee. |
| This hooly orison amenuseth eek venyal synne, and therfore it aperteneth specially to penitence. |
| 1045 | This preyere moste be trewely seyd, and in verray feith, and that men preye to God ordinatly and discreetly and devoutly; |
| and alwey a man shal putten his wyl to be subget to the wille of God. |
| This orisoun moste eek been seyd with greet humblesse and ful pure, honestly and nat to the anoyaunce of any man or womman. |
| It moste eek been continued with the werkes of charitee. |
| It avayleth eek agayn the vices of the soule, for, as seith Seint Jerome, |
| "By fastynge been saved the vices of the flessh, and by preyere the vices of the soule." |
| After this, thou shalt understonde that bodily peyne stant in wakynge, for Jhesu Crist seith, |
| "Waketh and preyeth, that ye ne entre in wikked temptacioun." |
| Ye shul understanden also that fastynge stant in thre thynges: in forberynge of bodily mete and drynke, and in forberynge of worldly jolitee, |
| and in forberynge of deedly synne; this is to seyn, that a man shal kepen hym fro deedly synne with al his myght. |
| 1050 | And thou shalt understanden eek that God ordeyned fastynge, and to fastynge appertenen foure thinges: |
| largenesse to povre folk, gladnesse of herte espiritueel, nat to been angry ne anoyed, ne grucche for he fasteth, |
| and also resonable houre for to ete; ete by mesure; that is for to seyn, |
| a man shal nat ete in untyme, ne sitte the lenger at his table to ete for he fasteth. |
| Thanne shaltow understonde that bodily peyne stant in disciplyne or techynge, by word, or by writynge, or in ensample; |
| also in werynge of heyres, or of stamyn, or of haubergeons on hire naked flessh, for Cristes sake, and swiche manere penances. |
| But war thee wel that swiche manere penaunces on thy flessh ne make nat thyn herte bitter or angry or anoyed of thyself, |
| for bettre is to caste awey thyn heyre, than for to caste awey the swetenesse of Jhesu Crist. |
| And therfore seith Seint Paul, "Clothe yow, as they that been chosen of God, in herte of misericorde, debonairetee, suffraunce, |
| and swich manere of clothynge," of whiche Jhesu Crist is moore apayed than of heyres, or haubergeouns, or hauberkes. |
| 1055 | Thanne is discipline eek in knokkynge of thy brest, in scourgynge with yerdes, in knelynges, in tribulacions, |
| in suffrynge paciently wronges that been doon to thee, |
| and eek in pacient suffraunce of maladies, or lesynge of worldly catel, or of wyf, or of child, or othere freendes. |
| Thanne shaltow understonde whiche thynges destourben penaunce; and this is in foure maneres: |
| that is, drede, shame, hope, and wanhope, that is desperacion. |
| And for to speke first of drede, for which he weneth that he may suffre no penaunce; |
| ther-agayns is remedie for to thynke that bodily penaunce is but short and litel at regard of the peyne of helle, |
| that is so crueel and so long that it lasteth withouten ende. |
| 1060 | Now again the shame that a man hath to shryven hym, |
| and namely thise ypocrites that wolden been holden so parfite that they han no nede to shryven hem; |
| agayns that shame sholde a man thynke that, by wey of resoun, that he that hath nat been shamed to doon foule thinges, |
| certes hym oghte nat been ashamed to do faire thynges, and that is confessiouns. |
| A man sholde eek thynke that God seeth and woot alle his thoghtes and alle his werkes, |
| to hym may no thyng been hyd ne covered. |
| Men sholden eek remembren hem of the shame that is to come at the day of doom |
| to hem that been nat penitent and shryven in this present lyf. |
| For alle the creatures in hevene, in erthe, and in helle shullen seen apertly al that they hyden in this world. |
| 1065 | Now for to speken of the hope of hem that been necligent and slowe to shryven hem, that stant in two maneres. |
| That oon is that he hopeth for to lyve longe and for to purchacen muche richesse for his delit, |
| and thanne he wol shryven hym; and, as he seith, hym semeth thanne tymely ynough to come to shrifte. |
| Another is of surquidrie that he hath in Cristes mercy. |
| Agayns the firste vice, he shal thynke that oure lif is in no sikernesse, |
| and eek that alle the richesses in this world ben in aventure and passen as a shadwe on the wal; |
| and, as seith Seint Gregorie, that it aperteneth to the grete rightwisnesse of God that |
| nevere shal the peyne stynte of hem that nevere wolde withdrawen hem fro synne, hir thankes, |
| but ay continue in synne; for thilke perpetueel wil to do synne shul they han perpetueel peyne. |
| 1070 | Wanhope is in two maneres: the firste wanhope is in the mercy of Crist; |
| that oother is that they thynken that they ne myghte nat longe persevere in goodnesse. |
| The firste wanhope comth of that he demeth that he hath synned so greetly and so ofte, |
| and so longe leyn in synne, that he shal nat be saved. |
| Certes, agayns that cursed wanhope sholde he thynke that |
| the passion of Jhesu Crist is moore strong for to unbynde than synne is strong for to bynde. |
| Agayns the seconde wanhope he shal thynke that as ofte as he falleth he may arise agayn by penitence. |
| And though he never so longe have leyn in synne, the mercy of Crist is alwey redy to receiven hym to mercy. |
| Agayns the wanhope that he demeth that he sholde nat longe persevere in goodnesse, |
| he shal thynke that the feblesse of the devel may nothyng doon, but if men wol suffren hym; |
| 1075 | and eek he shal han strengthe of the help of God, |
| and of al hooly chirche, and of the proteccioun of aungels, if hym list. |
| Thanne shal men understonde what is the fruyt of penaunce; and, after the word of Jhesu Crist, |
| it is the endelees blisse of hevene, |
| ther joye hath no contrarioustee of wo ne grevaunce; ther alle harmes been passed of this present lyf; |
| ther as is the sikernesse fro the peyne of helle; ther as is the blisful compaignye |
| that rejoysen hem everemo, everich of otheres joye; |
| ther as the body of man, that whilom was foul and derk, is moore cleer than the sonne; |
| ther as the body, that whilom was syk, freele, and fieble, and mortal, is inmortal, |
| and so strong and so hool that ther may no thyng apeyren it; |
| ther as ne is neither hunger, thurst, ne coold, but every soule replenyssed with the sighte of the parfit knowynge of God. |
| 1080 | This blisful regne may men purchace by poverte espiritueel, and the glorie by lowenesse, the plentee of joye |
| by hunger and thurst, and the reste by travaille, and the lyf by deeth and mortificacion of synne. |