| |
| Of Decembre the tenthe day, |
| Whan hit was nyght to slepe I lay |
| Ryght ther as I was wont to done, |
| And fil on slepe wonder sone, |
| 115 | As he that wery was forgo |
| On pilgrymage myles two |
| To the corseynt Leonard, |
| To make lythe of that was hard. |
| But as I slepte, me mette I was |
| 120 | Withyn a temple ymad of glas, |
| In which ther were moo ymages |
| Of gold, stondynge in sondry stages, |
| And moo ryche tabernacles, |
| And with perre moo pynacles, |
| 125 | And moo curiouse portreytures, |
| And queynte maner of figures |
| Of olde werk, then I saugh ever. |
| For certeynly, I nyste never |
| Wher that I was, but wel wyste I |
| 130 | Hyt was of Venus redely, |
| The temple; for in portreyture |
| I sawgh anoon-ryght hir figure |
| Naked fletynge in a see, |
| And also on hir hed, pardee, |
| 135 | Hir rose garlond whit and red, |
| And hir comb to kembe hyr hed, |
| Hir dowves, and daun Cupido |
| Hir blynde sone, and Vulcano, |
| That in his face was ful broun. |
| 140 | But as I romed up and doun, |
| I fond that on a wall ther was |
| Thus writen on a table of bras: |
| "I wol now synge, yif I kan, |
| The armes and also the man |
| 145 | That first cam, thurgh his destinee, |
| Fugityf of Troy contree, |
| In Itayle, with ful moche pyne |
| Unto the strondes of Lavyne." |
| And tho began the story anoon, |
| 150 | As I shal telle yow echon. |
| First sawgh I the destruction |
| Of Troye thurgh the Grek Synon, |
| [That] with his false forswerynge, |
| And his chere and his lesynge, |
| 155 | Made the hors broght into Troye, |
| Thorgh which Troyens loste al her joye. |
| And aftir this was grave, allas, |
| How Ilyon assayled was |
| And wonne, and kyng Priam yslayn |
| 160 | And Polytes his sone, certayn, |
| Dispitously, of daun Pirrus. |
| And next that sawgh I how Venus, |
| Whan that she sawgh the castel brende, |
| Doun fro the heven gan descende, |
| 165 | And bad hir sone Eneas flee; |
| And how he fledde, and how that he |
| Escaped was from al the pres, |
| And took his fader Anchises, |
| And bar hym on hys bak away, |
| 170 | Cryinge, "Allas, and welaway!" |
| The whiche Anchises in hys hond |
| Bar the goddes of the lond, |
| Thilke that unbrende were. |
| And I saugh next, in al thys fere, |
| 175 | How Creusa, daun Eneas wif, |
| Which that he lovede as hys lyf, |
| And hir yonge sone Iulo, |
| And eke Askanius also, |
| Fledden eke with drery chere, |
| 180 | That hyt was pitee for to here; |
| And in a forest as they wente, |
| At a turnynge of a wente, |
| How Creusa was ylost, allas, |
| That ded, not I how, she was; |
| 185 | How he hir soughte, and how hir gost |
| Bad hym to flee the Grekes host, |
| And seyde he moste unto Itayle, |
| As was hys destinee, sauns faille; |
| That hyt was pitee for to here, |
| 190 | When hir spirit gan appere, |
| The wordes that she to hym seyde, |
| And for to kepe hir sone hym preyde. |
| Ther sawgh I graven eke how he, |
| Hys fader eke, and his meynee, |
| 195 | With hys shippes gan to saylle |
| Towardes the contree of Itaylle |
| As streight as that they myghte goo. |
| Ther saugh I thee, cruel Juno, |
| That art daun Jupiteres wif, |
| 200 | That hast yhated al thy lyf |
| Al the Troianysshe blood, |
| Renne and crye as thou were wood |
| On Eolus, the god of wyndes, |
| To blowen oute, of alle kyndes, |
| 205 | So lowde that he shulde drenche |
| Lord and lady, grom and wenche, |
| Of al the Troian nacion, |
| Withoute any savacion. |
| Ther saugh I such tempeste aryse |
| 210 | That every herte myght agryse |
| To see hyt peynted on the wal. |
| Ther saugh I graven eke withal, |
| Venus, how ye, my lady dere, |
| Wepynge with ful woful chere, |
| 215 | Prayen Jupiter on hye |
| To save and kepe that navye |
| Of the Troian Eneas, |
| Syth that he hir sone was. |
| Ther saugh I Joves Venus kysse, |
| 220 | And graunted of the tempest lysse. |
| Ther saugh I how the tempest stente, |
| And how with alle pyne he wente, |
| And prively tok arryvage |
| In the contree of Cartage; |
| 225 | And on the morwe, how that he |
| And a knyght highte Achate |
| Mette with Venus that day, |
| Goynge in a queynt array |
| As she had ben an hunteresse, |
| 230 | With wynd blowynge upon hir tresse; |
| How Eneas gan hym to pleyne, |
| When that he knew hir, of his peyne; |
| And how his shippes dreynte were, |
| Or elles lost, he nyste where; |
| 235 | How she gan hym comforte thoo, |
| And bad hym to Cartage goo, |
| And ther he shulde his folk fynde, |
| That in the see were left behynde. |
| And, shortly of this thyng to pace, |
| 240 | She made Eneas so in grace |
| Of Dido, quene of that contree, |
| That, shortly for to tellen, she |
| Becam hys love and let him doo |
| Al that weddynge longeth too. |
| 245 | What shulde I speke more queynte, |
| Or peyne me my wordes peynte |
| To speke of love? Hyt wol not be; |
| I kan not of that faculte. |
| And eke to telle the manere |
| 250 | How they aqueynteden in fere, |
| Hyt were a long proces to telle, |
| And over-long for yow to dwelle. |
| Ther sawgh I grave how Eneas |
| Tolde Dido every caas |
| 255 | That hym was tyd upon the see. |
| And after grave was how shee |
| Made of hym shortly at oo word |
| Hyr lyf, hir love, hir lust, hir lord, |
| And dide hym al the reverence |
| 260 | And leyde on hym al the dispence |
| That any woman myghte do, |
| Wenynge hyt had al be so |
| As he hir swor; and herby demed |
| That he was good, for he such semed. |
| 265 | Allas! what harm doth apparence, |
| Whan hit is fals in existence! |
| For he to hir a traytour was; |
| Wherfore she slow hirself, allas! |
| Loo, how a woman doth amys |
| 270 | To love hym that unknowen ys. |
| For, be Cryste, lo, thus yt fareth. |
| "Hyt is not al gold that glareth." |
| For also browke I wel myn hed, |
| Ther may be under godlyhed |
| 275 | Kevered many a shrewed vice. |
| Therfore be no wyght so nyce |
| To take a love oonly for chere, |
| Or speche, or for frendly manere, |
| For this shal every woman fynde, |
| 280 | That som man, of his pure kynde, |
| Wol shewen outward the fayreste, |
| Tyl he have caught that what him leste; |
| And thanne wol he causes fynde |
| And swere how that she ys unkynde, |
| 285 | Or fals, or privy, or double was. |
| Al this seye I be Eneas |
| And Dido, and hir nyce lest, |
| That loved al to sone a gest; |
| Therfore I wol seye a proverbe, |
| 290 | That "he that fully knoweth th' erbe |
| May saufly leye hyt to his ye" -- |
| Withoute drede, this ys no lye. |
| But let us speke of Eneas, |
| How he betrayed hir, allas, |
| 295 | And lefte hir ful unkyndely. |
| So when she saw al utterly |
| That he wolde hir of trouthe fayle, |
| And wende fro hir to Itayle, |
| She gan to wringe hir hondes two. |
| 300 | "Allas," quod she, "what me ys woo! |
| Allas, is every man thus trewe, |
| That every yer wolde have a newe, |
| Yf hit so longe tyme dure, |
| Or elles three, peraventure? |
| 305 | As thus: of oon he wolde have fame |
| In magnyfyinge of hys name; |
| Another for frendshippe, seyth he; |
| And yet ther shal the thridde be |
| That shal be take for delyt, |
| 310 | Loo, or for synguler profit"" |
| In suche wordes gan to pleyne |
| Dydo of hir grete peyne, |
| As me mette redely -- |
| Non other auctour alegge I. |
| 315 | "Allas!" quod she, "my swete herte, |
| Have pitee on my sorwes smerte, |
| And slee mee not! Goo noght awey! |
| O woful Dido, wel-away!" |
| Quod she to hirselve thoo. |
| 320 | "O Eneas, what wol ye doo? |
| O that your love, ne your bond |
| That ye have sworn with your ryght hond, |
| Ne my crewel deth," quod she, |
| "May holde yow stille here with me! |
| 325 | O haveth of my deth pitee! |
| Iwys, my dere herte, ye |
| Knowen ful wel that never yit, |
| As ferforth as I hadde wyt, |
| Agylte [I] yow in thoght ne dede. |
| 330 | O, have ye men such godlyhede |
| In speche, and never a del of trouthe? |
| Allas, that ever hadde routhe |
| Any woman on any man! |
| Now see I wel, and telle kan, |
| 335 | We wrechched wymmen konne noon art; |
| For certeyn, for the more part, |
| Thus we be served everychone. |
| How sore that ye men konne groone, |
| Anoon as we have yow receyved, |
| 340 | Certaynly we ben deceyvyd! |
| For, though your love laste a seson, |
| Wayte upon the conclusyon, |
| And eke how that ye determynen, |
| And for the more part diffynen. |
| 345 | "O wel-awey that I was born! |
| For thorgh yow is my name lorn, |
| And alle myn actes red and songe |
| Over al thys lond, on every tonge. |
| O wikke Fame! -- for ther nys |
| 350 | Nothing so swift, lo, as she is. |
| O, soth ys, every thing ys wyst, |
| Though hit be kevered with the myst. |
| Eke, though I myghte duren ever, |
| That I have don rekever I never, |
| 355 | That I ne shal be seyd, allas, |
| Yshamed be thourgh Eneas, |
| And that I shal thus juged be: |
| `Loo, ryght as she hath don, now she |
| Wol doo eft-sones, hardely' -- |
| 360 | Thus seyth the peple prively." |
| But that is don, is not to done; |
| Al hir compleynt ne al hir moone, |
| Certeyn, avayleth hir not a stre. |
| And when she wiste sothly he |
| 365 | Was forth unto his shippes goon, |
| She into hir chambre wente anoon, |
| And called on hir suster Anne, |
| And gan hir to compleyne thanne, |
| And seyde that she cause was |
| 370 | That she first loved him, allas, |
| And thus counseylled hir thertoo. |
| But what! When this was seyd and doo, |
| She rof hirselve to the herte |
| And deyde thorgh the wounde smerte. |
| 375 | And al the maner how she deyde, |
| And alle the wordes that she seyde, |
| Whoso to knowe hit hath purpos, |
| Rede Virgile in Eneydos |
| Or the Epistle of Ovyde, |
| 380 | What that she wrot or that she dyde; |
| And nere hyt to long to endyte, |
| Be God, I wolde hyt here write. |
| But wel-away, the harm, the routhe, |
| That hath betyd for such untrouthe, |
| 385 | As men may ofte in bokes rede, |
| And al day sen hyt yet in dede, |
| That for to thynken hyt, a tene is. |
| Loo Demophon, duk of Athenys, |
| How he forswor hym ful falsly, |
| 390 | And traysed Phillis wikkidly, |
| That kynges doghtre was of Trace, |
| And falsly gan hys terme pace; |
| And when she wiste that he was fals, |
| She heng hirself ryght be the hals, |
| 395 | For he had doon hir such untrouthe. |
| Loo, was not this a woo and routhe? |
| Eke lo how fals and reccheles |
| Was to Breseyda Achilles, |
| And Paris to Oenone, |
| 400 | And Jason to Isiphile, |
| And eft Jason to Medea, |
| And Ercules to Dyanira, |
| For he left hir for Yole, |
| That made hym cache his deth, parde. |
| 405 | How fals eke was he Theseus, |
| That, as the story telleth us, |
| How he betrayed Adriane -- |
| The devel be hys soules bane! |
| For had he lawghed, had he loured, |
| 410 | He moste have ben al devoured, |
| Yf Adriane ne had ybe. |
| And for she had of hym pite, |
| She made hym fro the deth escape, |
| And he made hir a ful fals jape; |
| 415 | For aftir this, withyn a while, |
| He lefte hir slepynge in an ile |
| Desert allone, ryght in the se, |
| And stal away and let hir be, |
| And took hir suster Phedra thoo |
| 420 | With him, and gan to shippe goo. |
| And yet he had yswore to here |
| On al that ever he myghte swere |
| That, so she saved hym hys lyf, |
| He wolde have take hir to hys wif; |
| 425 | For she desired nothing ellis, |
| In certeyn, as the book us tellis. |
| But to excusen Eneas |
| Fullyche of al his grete trespas, |
| The book seyth Mercurie, sauns fayle, |
| 430 | Bad hym goo into Itayle, |
| And leve Auffrikes regioun, |
| And Dido and hir faire toun. |
| Thoo sawgh I grave how to Itayle |
| Daun Eneas is goo to sayle; |
| 435 | And how the tempest al began, |
| And how he loste hys sterisman, |
| Which that the stere, or he tok kep, |
| Smot over bord, loo, as he slep. |
| And also sawgh I how Sybile |
| 440 | And Eneas, besyde an yle, |
| To helle wente for to see |
| His fader, Anchyses the free; |
| How he ther fond Palinurus, |
| And Dido, and eke Deiphebus; |
| 445 | And every turment eke in helle |
| Saugh he, which is longe to telle; |
| Which whoso willeth for to knowe, |
| He moste rede many a rowe |
| On Virgile or on Claudian, |
| 450 | Or Daunte, that hit telle kan. |
| Tho saugh I grave al the aryvayle |
| That Eneas had in Itayle; |
| And with kyng Latyne hys tretee |
| And alle the batayles that hee |
| 455 | Was at hymself, and eke hys knyghtis, |
| Or he had al ywonne his ryghtis; |
| And how he Turnus reft his lyf, |
| And wan Lavina to his wif; |
| And alle the mervelous signals |
| 460 | Of the goddys celestials; |
| How, mawgree Juno, Eneas, |
| For al hir sleight and hir compas, |
| Acheved al his aventure, |
| For Jupiter took of hym cure |
| 465 | At the prayer of Venus -- |
| The whiche I preye alwey save us, |
| And us ay of oure sorwes lyghte! |
| When I had seen al this syghte |
| In this noble temple thus, |
| 470 | "A, Lord," thoughte I, "that madest us, |
| Yet sawgh I never such noblesse |
| Of ymages, ne such richesse, |
| As I saugh graven in this chirche; |
| But not wot I whoo did hem wirche, |
| 475 | Ne where I am, ne in what contree. |
| But now wol I goo out and see, |
| Ryght at the wiket, yf y kan |
| See owhere any stiryng man |
| That may me telle where I am." |
| 480 | When I out at the dores cam, |
| I faste aboute me beheld. |
| Then sawgh I but a large feld, |
| As fer as that I myghte see, |
| Withouten toun, or hous, or tree, |
| 485 | Or bush, or grass, or eryd lond; |
| For al the feld nas but of sond |
| As smal as man may se yet lye |
| In the desert of Lybye. |
| Ne no maner creature |
| 490 | That ys yformed be Nature |
| Ne sawgh I, me to rede or wisse. |
| "O Crist," thoughte I, "that art in blysse, |
| Fro fantome and illusion |
| Me save!" And with devocion |
| 495 | Myn eyen to the hevene I caste. |
| Thoo was I war, lo, at the laste, |
| That faste be the sonne, as hye |
| As kenne myghte I with myn ye, |
| Me thoughte I sawgh an egle sore, |
| 500 | But that hit semed moche more |
| Then I had any egle seyn. |
| But this as sooth as deth, certeyn, |
| Hyt was of gold, and shon so bryghte |
| That never sawe men such a syghte, |
| 505 | But yf the heven had ywonne |
| Al newe of gold another sonne; |
| So shone the egles fethers bryghte, |
| And somwhat dounward gan hyt lyghte. |
| |
| |
| This egle, of which I have yow told, |
| 530 | That shon with fethres as of gold, |
| Which that so hye gan to sore, |
| I gan beholde more and more |
| To se the beaute and the wonder; |
| But never was ther dynt of thonder, |
| 535 | Ne that thyng that men calle fouder, |
| That smot somtyme a tour to powder |
| And in his swifte comynge brende, |
| That so swithe gan descende |
| As this foul, when hyt beheld |
| 540 | That I a-roume was in the feld. |
| And with hys grymme pawes stronge, |
| Withyn hys sharpe nayles longe, |
| Me, fleynge, in a swap he hente, |
| And with hys sours ayen up wente, |
| 545 | Me caryinge in his clawes starke |
| As lyghtly as I were a larke, |
| How high, I can not telle yow, |
| For I cam up, y nyste how. |
| For so astonyed and asweved |
| 550 | Was every vertu in my heved, |
| What with his sours and with my drede, |
| That al my felynge gan to dede, |
| For-whi hit was to gret affray. |
| Thus I longe in hys clawes lay, |
| 555 | Til at the laste he to me spak |
| In mannes vois, and seyde, "Awak! |
| And be not agast so, for shame!" |
| And called me tho by my name, |
| And for I shulde the bet abreyde, |
| 560 | Me mette "Awak," to me he seyde |
| Ryght in the same vois and stevene |
| That useth oon I koude nevene; |
| And with that vois, soth for to seyn, |
| My mynde cam to me ageyn, |
| 565 | For hyt was goodly seyd to me, |
| So nas hyt never wont to be. |
| And here-withal I gan to stere, |
| And he me in his fet to bere, |
| Til that he felte that I had hete, |
| 570 | And felte eke tho myn herte bete. |
| And thoo gan he me to disporte, |
| And with wordes to comforte, |
| And sayde twyes, "Seynte Marye, |
| Thou art noyous for to carye! |
| 575 | And nothyng nedeth it, pardee, |
| For also wis God helpe me, |
| As thou noon harm shalt have of this; |
| And this caas that betyd the is, |
| Is for thy lore and for thy prow. |
| 580 | Let see! Darst thou yet loke now? |
| Be ful assured, boldely, |
| I am thy frend." And therwith I |
| Gan for to wondren in my mynde. |
| "O God," thoughte I, "that madest kynde, |
| 585 | Shal I noon other weyes dye? |
| Wher Joves wol me stellyfye, |
| Or what thing may this sygnifye? |
| I neyther am Ennok, ne Elye, |
| Ne Romulus, ne Ganymede, |
| 590 | That was ybore up, as men rede, |
| To hevene with daun Jupiter, |
| And mad the goddys botiller." |
| Loo, this was thoo my fantasye. |
| But he that bar me gan espye |
| 595 | That I so thoughte, and seyde this: |
| "Thow demest of thyself amys, |
| For Joves ys not theraboute -- |
| I dar wel putte the out of doute -- |
| To make of the as yet a sterre; |
| 600 | But er I bere the moche ferre, |
| I wol the telle what I am, |
| And whider thou shalt, and why I cam |
| To do thys, so that thou take |
| Good herte, and not for fere quake." |
| 605 | "Gladly," quod I. "Now wel," quod he, |
| "First, I, that in my fet have the, |
| Of which thou hast a fere and wonder, |
| Am dwellynge with the god of thonder, |
| Which that men callen Jupiter, |
| 610 | That dooth me flee ful ofte fer |
| To do al hys comaundement. |
| And for this cause he hath me sent |
| To the. Now herke, be thy trouthe: |
| Certeyn, he hath of the routhe |
| 615 | That thou so longe trewely |
| Hast served so ententyfly |
| Hys blynde nevew Cupido, |
| And faire Venus also, |
| Withoute guerdon ever yit, |
| 620 | And never-the-lesse hast set thy wit -- |
| Although that in thy hed ful lyte is -- |
| To make bookys, songes, dytees, |
| In ryme or elles in cadence, |
| As thou best canst, in reverence |
| 625 | Of Love and of hys servantes eke, |
| That have hys servyse soght, and seke; |
| And peynest the to preyse hys art, |
| Although thou haddest never part. |
| Wherfore, also God me blesse, |
| 630 | Joves halt hyt gret humblesse |
| And vertu eke, that thou wolt make |
| A-nyght ful ofte thyn hed to ake |
| In thy studye, so thou writest, |
| And ever mo of love enditest, |
| 635 | In honour of hym and in preysynges, |
| And in his folkes furtherynges, |
| And in hir matere al devisest, |
| And noght hym nor his folk dispisest, |
| Although thou maist goo in the daunce |
| 640 | Of hem that hym lyst not avaunce. |
| "Wherfore, as I seyde, ywys, |
| Jupiter considereth this, |
| And also, beau sir, other thynges: |
| That is, that thou hast no tydynges |
| 645 | Of Loves folk yf they be glade, |
| Ne of noght elles that God made; |
| And noght oonly fro fer contree |
| That ther no tydynge cometh to thee, |
| But of thy verray neyghebores, |
| 650 | That duellen almost at thy dores, |
| Thou herist neyther that ne this; |
| For when thy labour doon al ys, |
| And hast mad alle thy rekenynges, |
| In stede of reste and newe thynges |
| 655 | Thou goost hom to thy hous anoon, |
| And, also domb as any stoon, |
| Thou sittest at another book |
| Tyl fully daswed ys thy look; |
| And lyvest thus as an heremyte, |
| 660 | Although thyn abstynence ys lyte. |
| "And therfore Joves, thorgh hys grace, |
| Wol that I bere the to a place |
| Which that hight the Hous of Fame, |
| To do the som disport and game, |
| 665 | In som recompensacion |
| Of labour and devocion |
| That thou hast had, loo causeles, |
| To Cupido the rechcheles. |
| And thus this god, thorgh his merite, |
| 670 | Wol with som maner thing the quyte, |
| So that thou wolt be of good chere. |
| For truste wel that thou shalt here, |
| When we be come there I seye, |
| Mo wonder thynges, dar I leye, |
| 675 | And of Loves folk moo tydynges, |
| Both sothe sawes and lesinges, |
| And moo loves newe begonne, |
| And longe yserved loves wonne, |
| And moo loves casuelly |
| 680 | That ben betyd, no man wot why, |
| But as a blynd man stert an hare; |
| And more jolytee and fare |
| While that they fynde love of stel, |
| As thinketh hem, and over-al wel; |
| 685 | Mo discordes, moo jelousies, |
| Mo murmures and moo novelries, |
| And moo dissymulacions, |
| And feyned reparacions, |
| And moo berdys in two houres |
| 690 | Withoute rasour or sisoures |
| Ymad then greynes be of sondes; |
| And eke moo holdynge in hondes, |
| And also moo renovelaunces |
| Of olde forleten aqueyntaunces; |
| 695 | Mo love-dayes and acordes |
| Then on instrumentes be cordes; |
| And eke of loves moo eschaunges |
| Then ever cornes were in graunges -- |
| Unnethe maistow trowen this?" |
| 700 | Quod he. "Noo, helpe me God so wys," |
| Quod I. "Noo? why?" quod he. "For hyt |
| Were impossible, to my wit, |
| Though that Fame had alle the pies |
| In al a realme, and alle the spies, |
| 705 | How that yet she shulde here al this, |
| Or they espie hyt." "O yis, yis!" |
| Quod he to me, "that kan I preve |
| Be reson worthy for to leve, |
| So that thou yeve thyn advertence |
| 710 | To understonde my sentence. |
| "First shalt thou here where she duelleth, |
| And so thyn oune bok hyt tellith. |
| Hir paleys stant, as I shal seye, |
| Ryght even in myddes of the weye |
| 715 | Betwixen hevene and erthe and see, |
| That what so ever in al these three |
| Is spoken, either privy or apert, |
| The way therto ys so overt, |
| And stant eke in so juste a place |
| 720 | That every soun mot to hyt pace; |
| Or what so cometh from any tonge, |
| Be hyt rouned, red, or songe, |
| Or spoke in suerte or in drede, |
| Certeyn, hyt moste thider nede. |
| 725 | "Now herkene wel, for-why I wille |
| Tellen the a propre skille |
| And a worthy demonstracion |
| In myn ymagynacion. |
| "Geffrey, thou wost ryght wel this, |
| 730 | That every kyndely thyng that is |
| Hath a kyndely stede ther he |
| May best in hyt conserved be; |
| Unto which place every thyng |
| Thorgh his kyndely enclynyng |
| 735 | Moveth for to come to |
| Whan that hyt is awey therfro; |
| As thus: loo, thou maist alday se |
| That any thing that hevy be, |
| As stoon, or led, or thyng of wighte, |
| 740 | And bere hyt never so hye on highte, |
| Lat goo thyn hand, hit falleth doun. |
| Ryght so seye I be fyr or soun, |
| Or smoke or other thynges lyghte; |
| Alwey they seke upward on highte, |
| 745 | While ech of hem is at his large: |
| Lyght thing upward, and dounward charge. |
| And for this cause mayst thou see |
| That every ryver to the see |
| Enclyned ys to goo by kynde, |
| 750 | And by these skilles, as I fynde, |
| Hath fyssh duellynge in flood and see, |
| And trees eke in erthe bee. |
| Thus every thing, by thys reson, |
| Hath his propre mansyon |
| 755 | To which hit seketh to repaire, |
| Ther-as hit shulde not apaire. |
| Loo, this sentence ys knowen kouth |
| Of every philosophres mouth, |
| As Aristotle and daun Platon, |
| 760 | And other clerkys many oon; |
| And to confirme my resoun, |
| Thou wost wel this, that spech is soun, |
| Or elles no man myghte hyt here; |
| Now herke what y wol the lere. |
| 765 | "Soun ys noght but eyr ybroken; |
| And every speche that ys spoken, |
| Lowd or pryvee, foul or fair, |
| In his substaunce ys but air; |
| For as flaumbe ys but lyghted smoke, |
| 770 | Ryght soo soun ys air ybroke. |
| But this may be in many wyse, |
| Of which I wil the twoo devyse, |
| As soun that cometh of pipe or harpe. |
| For whan a pipe is blowen sharpe |
| 775 | The air ys twyst with violence |
| And rent -- loo, thys ys my sentence. |
| Eke whan men harpe-strynges smyte, |
| Whether hyt be moche or lyte, |
| Loo, with the strok the ayr tobreketh. |
| 780 | And ryght so breketh it when men speketh. |
| Thus wost thou wel what thing is speche. |
| "Now hennesforth y wol the teche |
| How every speche, or noyse, or soun, |
| Thurgh hys multiplicacioun, |
| 785 | Thogh hyt were piped of a mous, |
| Mot nede come to Fames Hous. |
| I preve hyt thus -- take hede now -- |
| Be experience; for yf that thow |
| Throwe on water now a stoon, |
| 790 | Wel wost thou hyt wol make anoon |
| A litel roundell as a sercle, |
| Paraunter brod as a covercle; |
| And ryght anoon thow shalt see wel |
| That whel wol cause another whel, |
| 795 | And that the thridde, and so forth, brother, |
| Every sercle causynge other |
| Wydder than hymselve was; |
| And thus fro roundel to compas, |
| Ech aboute other goynge |
| 800 | Causeth of othres sterynge |
| And multiplyinge ever moo, |
| Til that hyt be so fer ygoo |
| That hyt at bothe brynkes bee. |
| Although thou mowe hyt not ysee |
| 805 | Above, hyt gooth yet alway under, |
| Although thou thenke hyt a gret wonder. |
| And whoso seyth of trouthe I varye, |
| Bid hym proven the contrarye. |
| And ryght thus every word, ywys, |
| 810 | That lowd or pryvee spoken ys, |
| Moveth first an ayr aboute, |
| And of thys movynge, out of doute, |
| Another ayr anoon ys meved; |
| As I have of the watir preved, |
| 815 | That every cercle causeth other, |
| Ryght so of ayr, my leve brother: |
| Everych ayr another stereth |
| More and more, and speche up bereth, |
| Or voys, or noyse, or word, or soun, |
| 820 | Ay through multiplicacioun, |
| Til hyt be atte Hous of Fame -- |
| Take yt in ernest or in game. |
| "Now have I told, yf thou have mynde, |
| How speche or soun, of pure kynde, |
| 825 | Enclyned ys upward to meve -- |
| This mayst thou fele wel I preve -- |
| And that same place, ywys, |
| That every thyng enclyned to ys |
| Hath his kyndelyche stede: |
| 830 | That sheweth hyt, withouten drede, |
| That kyndely the mansioun |
| Of every speche, of every soun, |
| Be hyt eyther foul or fair, |
| Hath hys kynde place in ayr. |
| 835 | And syn that every thyng that is |
| Out of hys kynde place, ywys, |
| Moveth thidder for to goo, |
| Yif hyt aweye be therfroo -- |
| As I have before preved the -- |
| 840 | Hyt seweth, every soun, parde, |
| Moveth kyndely to pace |
| Al up into his kyndely place. |
| And this place of which I telle, |
| Ther as Fame lyst to duelle, |
| 845 | Ys set amyddys of these three, |
| Heven, erthe, and eke the see, |
| As most conservatyf the soun. |
| Than ys this the conclusyoun: |
| That every speche of every man, |
| 850 | As y the telle first began, |
| Moveth up on high to pace |
| Kyndely to Fames place. |
| "Telle me this now feythfully, |
| Have y not preved thus symply, |
| 855 | Withoute any subtilite |
| Of speche, or gret prolixite |
| Of termes of philosophie, |
| Of figures of poetrie, |
| Or colours of rethorike? |
| 860 | Pardee, hit oughte the to lyke, |
| For hard langage and hard matere |
| Ys encombrous for to here |
| Attones; wost thou not wel this?" |
| And y answered and seyde, "Yis." |
| 865 | "A ha," quod he, "lo, so I can |
| Lewedly to a lewed man |
| Speke, and shewe hym swyche skiles |
| That he may shake hem be the biles, |
| So palpable they shulden be. |
| 870 | But telle me this, now praye y the, |
| How thinketh the my conclusyon?" |
| [Quod he]. "A good persuasion," |
| Quod I, "hyt is, and lyk to be |
| Ryght so as thou hast preved me." |
| 875 | "Be God," quod he, "and as I leve, |
| Thou shalt have yet, or hit be eve, |
| Of every word of thys sentence |
| A preve by experience, |
| And with thyne eres heren wel, |
| 880 | Top and tayl and everydel, |
| That every word that spoken ys |
| Cometh into Fames Hous, ywys, |
| As I have seyd; what wilt thou more?" |
| And with this word upper to sore |
| 885 | He gan, and seyde, "Be Seynt Jame, |
| Now wil we speken al of game!" |
| "How farest thou?" quod he to me. |
| "Wel," quod I. "Now see," quod he, |
| "By thy trouthe, yond adoun, |
| 890 | Wher that thou knowest any toun, |
| Or hous, or any other thing. |
| And whan thou hast of ought knowyng, |
| Looke that thou warne me, |
| And y anoon shal telle the |
| 895 | How fer that thou art now therfro." |
| And y adoun gan loken thoo, |
| And beheld feldes and playnes, |
| And now hilles, and now mountaynes, |
| Now valeyes, now forestes, |
| 900 | And now unnethes grete bestes, |
| Now ryveres, now citees, |
| Now tounes, and now grete trees, |
| Now shippes seyllynge in the see. |
| But thus sone in a while he |
| 905 | Was flowen fro the ground so hye |
| That al the world, as to myn ye, |
| No more semed than a prikke; |
| Or elles was the air so thikke |
| That y ne myghte not discerne. |
| 910 | With that he spak to me as yerne, |
| And seyde, "Seest thou any [toun] |
| Or ought thou knowest yonder doun?" |
| I sayde, "Nay." "No wonder nys," |
| Quod he, "for half so high as this |
| 915 | Nas Alixandre Macedo; |
| Ne the kyng, Daun Scipio, |
| That saw in drem, at poynt devys, |
| Helle and erthe and paradys; |
| Ne eke the wrechche Dedalus, |
| 920 | Ne his child, nyce Ykarus, |
| That fleigh so highe that the hete |
| Hys wynges malt, and he fel wete |
| In myd the see, and ther he dreynte, |
| For whom was maked moch compleynte. |
| 925 | "Now turn upward," quod he, "thy face, |
| And behold this large space, |
| This eyr, but loke thou ne be |
| Adrad of hem that thou shalt se, |
| For in this region, certeyn, |
| 930 | Duelleth many a citezeyn, |
| Of which that speketh Daun Plato; |
| These ben the eyryssh bestes, lo!" |
| And so saw y all that meynee |
| Boothe goon and also flee. |
| 935 | "Now," quod he thoo, "cast up thyn ye. |
| Se yonder, loo, the Galaxie, |
| Which men clepeth the Milky Wey |
| For hit ys whit (and somme, parfey, |
| Kallen hyt Watlynge Strete), |
| 940 | That ones was ybrent with hete, |
| Whan the sonnes sone the rede, |
| That highte Pheton, wolde lede |
| Algate hys fader carte, and gye. |
| The carte-hors gonne wel espye |
| 945 | That he koude no governaunce, |
| And gonne for to lepe and launce, |
| And beren hym now up, now doun, |
| Til that he sey the Scorpioun, |
| Which that in heven a sygne is yit. |
| 950 | And he for ferde loste hys wyt |
| Of that, and let the reynes gon |
| Of his hors; and they anoon |
| Gonne up to mounte and doun descende, |
| Til bothe the eyr and erthe brende, |
| 955 | Til Jupiter, loo, atte laste, |
| Hym slow, and fro the carte caste. |
| Loo, ys it not a gret myschaunce |
| To lete a fool han governaunce |
| Of thing that he can not demeyne?" |
| 960 | And with this word, soth for to seyne, |
| He gan alway upper to sore, |
| And gladded me ay more and more, |
| So feythfully to me spak he. |
| Tho gan y loken under me |
| 965 | And beheld the ayerissh bestes, |
| Cloudes, mystes, and tempestes, |
| Snowes, hayles, reynes, wyndes, |
| And th' engendrynge in hir kyndes, |
| All the wey thrugh which I cam. |
| 970 | "O God," quod y, "that made Adam, |
| Moche ys thy myght and thy noblesse!" |
| And thoo thoughte y upon Boece, |
| That writ, "A thought may flee so hye |
| Wyth fetheres of Philosophye, |
| 975 | To passen everych element, |
| And whan he hath so fer ywent, |
| Than may be seen behynde hys bak |
| Cloude" -- and al that y of spak. |
| Thoo gan y wexen in a were, |
| 980 | And seyde, "Y wot wel y am here, |
| But wher in body or in gost |
| I not, ywys, but God, thou wost," |
| For more clere entendement |
| Nas me never yit ysent. |
| 985 | And than thoughte y on Marcian, |
| And eke on Anteclaudian, |
| That sooth was her descripsion |
| Of alle the hevenes region, |
| As fer as that y sey the preve; |
| 990 | Therfore y kan hem now beleve. |
| With that this egle gan to crye, |
| "Lat be," quod he, "thy fantasye! |
| Wilt thou lere of sterres aught?" |
| "Nay, certeynly," quod y, "ryght naught." |
| 995 | "And why?" "For y am now to old." |
| "Elles I wolde the have told," |
| Quod he, "the sterres names, lo, |
| And al the hevenes sygnes therto, |
| And which they ben." "No fors," quod y. |
| 1000 | "Yis, pardee," quod he; "wostow why? |
| For when thou redest poetrie, |
| How goddes gonne stellifye |
| Bridd, fissh, best, or him or here, |
| As the Raven or eyther Bere, |
| 1005 | Or Arionis harpe fyn, |
| Castor, Pollux, or Delphyn, |
| Or Athalantes doughtres sevene, |
| How alle these arn set in hevene; |
| For though thou have hem ofte on honde, |
| 1010 | Yet nostow not wher that they stonde." |
| "No fors," quod y, "hyt is no nede. |
| I leve as wel, so God me spede, |
| Hem that write of this matere, |
| As though I knew her places here; |
| 1015 | And eke they shynen here so bryghte, |
| Hyt shulde shenden al my syghte |
| To loke on hem." "That may wel be," |
| Quod he. And so forth bar he me |
| A while, and than he gan to crye, |
| 1020 | That never herde I thing so hye, |
| "Now up the hed, for al ys wel; |
| Seynt Julyan, loo, bon hostel! |
| Se here the Hous of Fame, lo! |
| Maistow not heren that I do?" |
| 1025 | "What?" quod I. "The grete soun," |
| Quod he, "that rumbleth up and doun |
| In Fames Hous, full of tydynges, |
| Bothe of feir speche and chidynges, |
| And of fals and soth compouned. |
| 1030 | Herke wel; hyt is not rouned. |
| Herestow not the grete swogh?" |
| "Yis, parde," quod y, "wel ynogh." |
| "And what soun is it lyk?" quod hee. |
| "Peter, lyk betynge of the see," |
| 1035 | Quod y, "ayen the roches holowe, |
| Whan tempest doth the shippes swalowe, |
| And lat a man stonde, out of doute, |
| A myle thens, and here hyt route; |
| Or elles lyk the last humblynge |
| 1040 | After the clappe of a thundringe, |
| Whan Joves hath the air ybete. |
| But yt doth me for fere swete." |
| "Nay, dred the not therof," quod he; |
| "Hyt is nothing will byten the; |
| 1045 | Thou shalt non harm have trewely." |
| And with this word both he and y |
| As nygh the place arryved were |
| As men may casten with a spere. |
| Y nyste how, but in a strete |
| 1050 | He sette me fair on my fete, |
| And seyde, "Walke forth a pas, |
| And tak thyn aventure or cas |
| That thou shalt fynde in Fames place." |
| "Now," quod I, "while we han space |
| 1055 | To speke, or that I goo fro the, |
| For the love of God, telle me -- |
| In sooth, that wil I of the lere -- |
| Yf thys noyse that I here |
| Be, as I have herd the tellen, |
| 1060 | Of folk that doun in erthe duellen, |
| And cometh here in the same wyse |
| As I the herde or this devyse; |
| And that there lives body nys |
| In al that hous that yonder ys, |
| 1065 | That maketh al this loude fare." |
| "Noo," quod he, "by Seynte Clare, |
| And also wis God rede me; |
| But o thing y will warne the, |
| Of the whiche thou wolt have wonder. |
| 1070 | Loo, to the Hous of Fame yonder, |
| Thou wost now how, cometh every speche -- |
| Hyt nedeth noght eft the to teche. |
| But understond now ryght wel this: |
| Whan any speche ycomen ys |
| 1075 | Up to the paleys, anon-ryght |
| Hyt wexeth lyk the same wight |
| Which that the word in erthe spak, |
| Be hyt clothed red or blak; |
| And hath so verray hys lyknesse |
| 1080 | That spak the word, that thou wilt gesse |
| That it the same body be, |
| Man or woman, he or she. |
| And ys not this a wonder thyng?" |
| "Yis," quod I tho, "by heven kyng!" |
| 1085 | And with this word, "Farewel," quod he, |
| "And here I wol abyden the; |
| And God of heven sende the grace |
| Some good to lernen in this place." |
| And I of him tok leve anon, |
| 1090 | And gan forth to the paleys gon. |
| |
| |
| 1110 | Whan I was fro thys egle goon, |
| I gan beholde upon this place. |
| And certein, or I ferther pace, |
| I wol yow al the shap devyse |
| Of hous and [site], and al the wyse |
| 1115 | How I gan to thys place aproche |
| That stood upon so hygh a roche, |
| Hier stant ther non in Spayne. |
| But up I clomb with alle payne, |
| And though to clymbe it greved me, |
| 1120 | Yit I ententyf was to see, |
| And for to powren wonder lowe, |
| Yf I koude any weyes knowe |
| What maner stoon this roche was. |
| For hyt was lyk alum de glas, |
| 1125 | But that hyt shoon ful more clere; |
| But of what congeled matere |
| Hyt was, I nyste redely. |
| But at the laste aspied I, |
| And found that hit was every del |
| 1130 | A roche of yse, and not of stel. |
| Thoughte I, "By Seynt Thomas of Kent, |
| This were a feble fundament |
| To bilden on a place hye. |
| He ought him lytel glorifye |
| 1135 | That hereon bilt, God so me save!" |
| Tho sawgh I al the half ygrave |
| With famous folkes names fele, |
| That had iben in mochel wele, |
| And her fames wide yblowe. |
| 1140 | But wel unnethes koude I knowe |
| Any lettres for to rede |
| Hir names by; for, out of drede, |
| They were almost ofthowed so |
| That of the lettres oon or two |
| 1145 | Was molte away of every name, |
| So unfamous was woxe hir fame. |
| But men seyn, "What may ever laste?" |
| Thoo gan I in myn herte caste |
| That they were molte awey with hete, |
| 1150 | And not awey with stormes bete. |
| For on that other syde I say |
| Of this hil, that northward lay, |
| How hit was writen ful of names |
| Of folkes that hadden grete fames |
| 1155 | Of olde tyme, and yet they were |
| As fressh as men had writen hem here |
| The selve day ryght, or that houre |
| That I upon hem gan to poure. |
| But wel I wiste what yt made; |
| 1160 | Hyt was conserved with the shade |
| Of a castel that stood on high -- |
| Al this writynge that I sigh -- |
| And stood eke on so cold a place |
| That hete myghte hit not deface. |
| 1165 | Thoo gan I up the hil to goon, |
| And fond upon the cop a woon, |
| That al the men that ben on lyve |
| Ne han the kunnynge to descrive |
| The beaute of that ylke place, |
| 1170 | Ne coude casten no compace |
| Swich another for to make, |
| That myght of beaute ben hys make, |
| Ne so wonderlych ywrought; |
| That hit astonyeth yit my thought, |
| 1175 | And maketh al my wyt to swynke, |
| On this castel to bethynke, |
| So that the grete craft, beaute, |
| The cast, the curiosite |
| Ne kan I not to yow devyse; |
| 1180 | My wit ne may me not suffise. |
| But natheles al the substance |
| I have yit in my remembrance; |
| For whi me thoughte, be Seynt Gyle, |
| Al was of ston of beryle, |
| 1185 | Bothe the castel and the tour, |
| And eke the halle and every bour, |
| Wythouten peces or joynynges. |
| But many subtil compassinges, |
| [Babewynnes] and pynacles, |
| 1190 | Ymageries and tabernacles |
| I say; and ful eke of wyndowes |
| As flakes falle in grete snowes. |
| And eke in ech of the pynacles |
| Weren sondry habitacles, |
| 1195 | In which stoden, al withoute -- |
| Ful the castel, al aboute -- |
| Of alle maner of mynstralles |
| And gestiours that tellen tales |
| Both of wepinge and of game, |
| 1200 | Of al that longeth unto Fame. |
| Ther herde I pleyen on an harpe, |
| That sowned bothe wel and sharpe, |
| Orpheus ful craftely, |
| And on his syde, faste by, |
| 1205 | Sat the harper Orion, |
| And Eacides Chiron, |
| And other harpers many oon, |
| And the Bret Glascurion; |
| And smale harpers with her glees |
| 1210 | Sate under hem in dyvers sees, |
| And gunne on hem upward to gape, |
| And countrefete hem as an ape, |
| Or as craft countrefeteth kynde. |
| Tho saugh I stonden hem behynde, |
| 1215 | Afer fro hem, al be hemselve, |
| Many thousand tymes twelve, |
| That maden lowde mynstralcies |
| In cornemuse and shalemyes, |
| And many other maner pipe, |
| 1220 | That craftely begunne to pipe, |
| Bothe in doucet and in rede, |
| That ben at festes with the brede; |
| And many flowte and liltyng horn, |
| And pipes made of grene corn, |
| 1225 | As han thise lytel herde-gromes |
| That kepen bestis in the bromes. |
| Ther saugh I than Atiteris, |
| And of Athenes daun Pseustis, |
| And Marcia that loste her skyn, |
| 1230 | Bothe in face, body, and chyn, |
| For that she wolde envien, loo, |
| To pipen bet than Appolloo. |
| Ther saugh I famous, olde and yonge, |
| Pipers of the Duche tonge, |
| 1235 | To lerne love-daunces, sprynges, |
| Reyes, and these straunge thynges. |
| Tho saugh I in an other place |
| Stonden in a large space, |
| Of hem that maken blody soun |
| 1240 | In trumpe, beme, and claryoun; |
| For in fight and blod-shedynge |
| Ys used gladly clarionynge. |
| Ther herde I trumpen Messenus, |
| Of whom that speketh Virgilius. |
| 1245 | There herde I trumpe Joab also, |
| Theodomas, and other mo; |
| And alle that used clarion |
| In Cataloigne and Aragon, |
| That in her tyme famous were |
| 1250 | To lerne, saugh I trumpe there. |
| There saugh I sitte in other sees, |
| Pleyinge upon sondry glees, |
| Whiche that I kan not nevene, |
| Moo than sterres ben in hevene, |
| 1255 | Of whiche I nyl as now not ryme, |
| For ese of yow and los of tyme. |
| For tyme ylost, this knowen ye, |
| Be no way may recovered be. |
| Ther saugh I pleye jugelours, |
| 1260 | Magiciens, and tregetours, |
| And Phitonesses, charmeresses, |
| Olde wicches, sorceresses, |
| That use exorsisacions, |
| And eke these fumygacions; |
| 1265 | And clerkes eke, which konne wel |
| Al this magik naturel, |
| That craftely doon her ententes |
| To make, in certeyn ascendentes, |
| Ymages, lo, thrugh which magik |
| 1270 | To make a man ben hool or syk. |
| Ther saugh I the, quene Medea, |
| And Circes eke, and Calipsa; |
| Ther saugh I Hermes Ballenus, |
| Limote, and eke Symon Magus. |
| 1275 | There saugh I, and knew hem by name, |
| That by such art don men han fame. |
| Ther saugh I Colle tregetour |
| Upon a table of sycamour |
| Pleye an uncouth thyng to telle -- |
| 1280 | Y saugh him carien a wynd-melle |
| Under a walsh-note shale. |
| What shuld I make lenger tale |
| Of alle the pepil y ther say, |
| Fro hennes into domes day? |
| 1285 | Whan I had al this folk beholde, |
| And fond me lous and nought yholde, |
| And eft imused longe while |
| Upon these walles of berile, |
| That shoone ful lyghter than a glas |
| 1290 | And made wel more than hit was |
| To semen every thing, ywis, |
| As kynde thyng of Fames is, |
| I gan forth romen til I fond |
| The castel-yate on my ryght hond, |
| 1295 | Which that so wel corven was |
| That never such another nas; |
| And yit it was be aventure |
| Iwrought, as often as be cure. |
| Hyt nedeth noght yow more to tellen, |
| 1300 | To make yow to longe duellen, |
| Of this yates florisshinges, |
| Ne of compasses, ne of kervynges, |
| Ne how they hatte in masoneries, |
| As corbetz, ful of ymageries. |
| 1305 | But Lord, so fair yt was to shewe, |
| For hit was al with gold behewe. |
| But in I wente, and that anoon. |
| Ther mette I cryinge many oon, |
| "A larges, larges, hold up wel! |
| 1310 | God save the lady of thys pel, |
| Our oune gentil lady Fame, |
| And hem that wilnen to have name |
| Of us!" Thus herde y crien alle, |
| And faste comen out of halle |
| 1315 | And shoken nobles and sterlynges. |
| And somme corouned were as kynges, |
| With corounes wroght ful of losenges; |
| And many ryban and many frenges |
| Were on her clothes trewely. |
| 1320 | Thoo atte last aspyed y |
| That pursevantes and heraudes, |
| That crien ryche folkes laudes, |
| Hyt weren alle; and every man |
| Of hem, as y yow tellen can, |
| 1325 | Had on him throwen a vesture |
| Which that men clepe a cote-armure, |
| Enbrowded wonderliche ryche, |
| Although they nere nought ylyche. |
| But noght nyl I, so mote y thryve, |
| 1330 | Ben aboute to dyscryve |
| Alle these armes that ther weren, |
| That they thus on her cotes beren, |
| For hyt to me were impossible; |
| Men myghte make of hem a bible |
| 1335 | Twenty foot thykke, as y trowe. |
| For certeyn, whoso koude iknowe |
| Myghte ther alle the armes seen |
| Of famous folk that han ybeen |
| In Auffrike, Europe, and Asye, |
| 1340 | Syth first began the chevalrie. |
| Loo, how shulde I now telle al thys? |
| Ne of the halle eke what nede is |
| To tellen yow that every wal |
| Of hit, and flor, and roof, and al |
| 1345 | Was plated half a foote thikke |
| Of gold, and that nas nothyng wikke, |
| But for to prove in alle wyse, |
| As fyn as ducat in Venyse, |
| Of which to lite al in my pouche is. |
| 1350 | And they were set as thik of nouchis |
| Ful of the fynest stones faire |
| That men rede in the Lapidaire, |
| As grasses growen in a mede. |
| But hit were al to longe to rede |
| 1355 | The names, and therfore I pace. |
| But in this lusty and ryche place |
| That Fames halle called was, |
| Ful moche prees of folk ther nas, |
| Ne crowdyng for to mochil prees. |
| 1360 | But al on hye, above a dees, |
| Sitte in a see imperiall, |
| That mad was of a rubee all, |
| Which that a carbuncle ys ycalled, |
| Y saugh, perpetually ystalled, |
| 1365 | A femynyne creature, |
| That never formed by Nature |
| Nas such another thing yseye. |
| For alther-first, soth for to seye, |
| Me thoughte that she was so lyte |
| 1370 | That the lengthe of a cubite |
| Was lengere than she semed be. |
| But thus sone in a whyle she |
| Hir tho so wonderliche streighte |
| That with hir fet she erthe reighte, |
| 1375 | And with hir hed she touched hevene, |
| Ther as shynen sterres sevene, |
| And therto eke, as to my wit, |
| I saugh a gretter wonder yit, |
| Upon her eyen to beholde; |
| 1380 | But certeyn y hem never tolde, |
| For as feele eyen hadde she |
| As fetheres upon foules be, |
| Or weren on the bestes foure |
| That Goddis trone gunne honoure, |
| 1385 | As John writ in th' Apocalips. |
| Hir heer, that oundy was and crips, |
| As burned gold hyt shoon to see; |
| And soth to tellen, also she |
| Had also fele upstondyng eres |
| 1390 | And tonges, as on bestes heres; |
| And on hir fet woxen saugh Y |
| Partriches wynges redely. |
| But Lord, the perry and the richesse |
| I saugh sittyng on this godesse! |
| 1395 | And Lord, the hevenyssh melodye |
| Of songes ful of armonye |
| I herde aboute her trone ysonge, |
| That al the paleys-walles ronge. |
| So song the myghty Muse, she |
| 1400 | That cleped ys Caliope, |
| And hir eighte sustren eke, |
| That in her face semen meke; |
| And ever mo, eternally, |
| They songe of Fame, as thoo herd y: |
| 1405 | "Heryed be thou and thy name, |
| Goddesse of Renoun or of Fame!" |
| Tho was I war, loo, atte laste, |
| As I myne eyen gan up caste, |
| That thys ylke noble quene |
| 1410 | On her shuldres gan sustene |
| Bothe th' armes and the name |
| Of thoo that hadde large fame: |
| Alexander and Hercules, |
| That with a sherte hys lyf les. |
| 1415 | And thus fond y syttynge this goddesse |
| In nobley, honour, and rychesse; |
| Of which I stynte a while now, |
| Other thing to tellen yow. |
| Tho saugh I stonde on eyther syde, |
| 1420 | Streight doun to the dores wide, |
| Fro the dees, many a peler |
| Of metal that shoon not ful cler; |
| But though they nere of no rychesse, |
| Yet they were mad for gret noblesse, |
| 1425 | And in hem hy and gret sentence; |
| And folk of digne reverence, |
| Of which I wil yow telle fonde, |
| Upon the piler saugh I stonde. |
| Alderfirst, loo, ther I sigh |
| 1430 | Upon a piler stonde on high, |
| That was of led and yren fyn, |
| Hym of secte saturnyn, |
| The Ebrayk Josephus the olde, |
| That of Jewes gestes tolde; |
| 1435 | And he bar on hys shuldres hye |
| The fame up of the Jewerye. |
| And by hym stoden other sevene, |
| Wise and worthy for to nevene, |
| To helpen him bere up the charge, |
| 1440 | Hyt was so hevy and so large. |
| And for they writen of batayles, |
| As wel as other olde mervayles, |
| Therfor was, loo, thys piler |
| Of which that I yow telle her, |
| 1445 | Of led and yren bothe, ywys, |
| For yren Martes metal ys, |
| Which that god is of bataylle; |
| And the led, withouten faille, |
| Ys, loo, the metal of Saturne, |
| 1450 | That hath a ful large whel to turne. |
| Thoo stoden forth on every rowe |
| Of hem which that I koude knowe, |
| Though I hem noght be ordre telle, |
| To make yow to longe to duelle, |
| 1455 | These of whiche I gynne rede. |
| There saugh I stonden, out of drede, |
| Upon an yren piler strong |
| That peynted was al endelong |
| With tigres blod in every place, |
| 1460 | The Tholosan that highte Stace, |
| That bar of Thebes up the fame |
| Upon his shuldres, and the name |
| Also of cruel Achilles. |
| And by him stood, withouten les, |
| 1465 | Ful wonder hy on a piler |
| Of yren, he, the gret Omer; |
| And with him Dares and Tytus |
| Before, and eke he Lollius, |
| And Guydo eke de Columpnis, |
| 1470 | And Englyssh Gaufride eke, ywis; |
| And ech of these, as have I joye, |
| Was besy for to bere up Troye. |
| So hevy therof was the fame |
| That for to bere hyt was no game. |
| 1475 | But yet I gan ful wel espie, |
| Betwex hem was a litil envye. |
| Oon seyde that Omer made lyes, |
| Feynynge in hys poetries, |
| And was to Grekes favorable; |
| 1480 | Therfor held he hyt but fable. |
| Tho saugh I stonde on a piler, |
| That was of tynned yren cler, |
| The Latyn poete Virgile, |
| That bore hath up a longe while |
| 1485 | The fame of Pius Eneas. |
| And next hym on a piler was, |
| Of coper, Venus clerk Ovide, |
| That hath ysowen wonder wide |
| The grete god of Loves name. |
| 1490 | And ther he bar up wel hys fame |
| Upon this piler, also hye |
| As I myghte see hyt with myn ye; |
| For-why this halle, of which I rede, |
| Was woxen on highte, length, and brede, |
| 1495 | Wel more be a thousand del |
| Than hyt was erst, that saugh I wel. |
| Thoo saugh I on a piler by, |
| Of yren wroght ful sternely, |
| The grete poete daun Lucan, |
| 1500 | And on hys shuldres bar up than, |
| As high as that y myghte see, |
| The fame of Julius and Pompe. |
| And by him stoden alle these clerkes |
| That writen of Romes myghty werkes, |
| 1505 | That yf y wolde her names telle, |
| Al to longe most I dwelle. |
| And next him on a piler stood |
| Of soulfre, lyk as he were wood, |
| Daun Claudian, the sothe to telle, |
| 1510 | That bar up al the fame of helle, |
| Of Pluto, and of Proserpyne, |
| That quene ys of the derke pyne. |
| What shulde y more telle of this? |
| The halle was al ful, ywys, |
| 1515 | Of hem that writen olde gestes |
| As ben on trees rokes nestes; |
| But hit a ful confus matere |
| Were alle the gestes for to here |
| That they of write, or how they highte. |
| 1520 | But while that y beheld thys syghte, |
| I herde a noyse aprochen blyve, |
| That ferde as been don in an hive |
| Ayen her tyme of out-fleynge; |
| Ryght such a maner murmurynge, |
| 1525 | For al the world, hyt semed me. |
| Tho gan I loke aboute and see |
| That ther come entryng into the halle |
| A ryght gret companye withalle, |
| And that of sondry regiouns, |
| 1530 | Of alleskynnes condiciouns |
| That dwelle in erthe under the mone, |
| Pore and ryche. And also sone |
| As they were come in to the halle, |
| They gonne doun on knees falle |
| 1535 | Before this ilke noble quene, |
| And seyde, "Graunte us, lady shene, |
| Ech of us of thy grace a bone!" |
| And somme of hem she graunted sone, |
| And somme she werned wel and faire, |
| 1540 | And some she graunted the contraire |
| Of her axyng outterly. |
| But thus I seye yow, trewely, |
| What her cause was, y nyste. |
| For of this folk ful wel y wiste |
| 1545 | They hadde good fame ech deserved, |
| Although they were dyversly served; |
| Ryght as her suster, dame Fortune, |
| Ys wont to serven in comune. |
| Now herke how she gan to paye |
| 1550 | That gonne her of her grace praye; |
| And yit, lo, al this companye |
| Seyden sooth, and noght a lye. |
| "Madame," seyde they, "we be |
| Folk that here besechen the |
| 1555 | That thou graunte us now good fame, |
| And let our werkes han that name. |
| In ful recompensacioun |
| Of good werkes, yive us good renoun." |
| "I werne yow hit," quod she anon; |
| 1560 | "Ye gete of me good fame non, |
| Be God, and therfore goo your wey." |
| "Allas," quod they, "and welaway! |
| Telle us what may your cause be." |
| "For me lyst hyt noght," quod she; |
| 1565 | "No wyght shal speke of yow, ywis, |
| Good ne harm, ne that ne this." |
| And with that word she gan to calle |
| Her messager, that was in halle, |
| And bad that he shulde faste goon, |
| 1570 | Upon peyne to be blynd anon, |
| For Eolus the god of wynde -- |
| "In Trace, ther ye shal him fynde, |
| And bid him bringe his clarioun, |
| That is ful dyvers of his soun, |
| 1575 | And hyt is cleped Clere Laude, |
| With which he wont is to heraude |
| Hem that me list ypreised be. |
| And also bid him how that he |
| Brynge his other clarioun, |
| 1580 | That highte Sklaundre in every toun, |
| With which he wont is to diffame |
| Hem that me liste, and do hem shame." |
| This messager gan faste goon, |
| And found where in a cave of ston, |
| 1585 | In a contree that highte Trace, |
| This Eolus, with harde grace, |
| Held the wyndes in distresse, |
| And gan hem under him to presse, |
| That they gonne as beres rore, |
| 1590 | He bond and pressed hem so sore. |
| This messager gan faste crie, |
| "Rys up," quod he, "and faste hye, |
| Til thou at my lady be; |
| And tak thy clariouns eke with the, |
| 1595 | And sped the forth." And he anon |
| Tok to a man that highte Triton |
| Hys clarions to bere thoo, |
| And let a certeyn wynd to goo, |
| That blew so hydously and hye |
| 1600 | That hyt ne lefte not a skye |
| In alle the welken long and brod. |
| This Eolus nowhere abod |
| Til he was come to Fames fet, |
| And eke the man that Triton het; |
| 1605 | And ther he stod, as stille as stoon. |
| And her-withal ther come anoon |
| Another huge companye |
| Of goode folk, and gunne crie, |
| "Lady, graunte us now good fame, |
| 1610 | And lat oure werkes han that name |
| Now in honour of gentilesse, |
| And also God your soule blesse! |
| For we han wel deserved hyt, |
| Therfore is ryght that we ben quyt." |
| 1615 | "As thryve I," quod she, "ye shal faylle! |
| Good werkes shal yow noght availle |
| To have of me good fame as now. |
| But wite ye what? Y graunte yow |
| That ye shal have a shrewed fame, |
| 1620 | And wikkyd loos, and worse name, |
| Though ye good loos have wel deserved. |
| Now goo your wey, for ye be served. |
| And thou, dan Eolus, let see, |
| Tak forth thy trumpe anon," quod she, |
| 1625 | "That is ycleped Sklaundre lyght, |
| And blow her loos, that every wight |
| Speke of hem harm and shrewednesse |
| In stede of good and worthynesse. |
| For thou shalt trumpe alle the contrayre |
| 1630 | Of that they han don wel or fayre." |
| "Allas," thoughte I, "what aventures |
| Han these sory creatures! |
| For they, amonges al the pres, |
| Shul thus be shamed gilteles. |
| 1635 | But what, hyt moste nedes be." |
| What dide this Eolus, but he |
| Tok out hys blake trumpe of bras, |
| That fouler than the devel was, |
| And gan this trumpe for to blowe, |
| 1640 | As al the world shulde overthrowe, |
| That thrughout every regioun |
| Wente this foule trumpes soun, |
| As swifte as pelet out of gonne |
| Whan fyr is in the poudre ronne. |
| 1645 | And such a smoke gan out wende |
| Out of his foule trumpes ende, |
| Blak, bloo, grenyssh, swartish red, |
| As doth where that men melte led, |
| Loo, al on high fro the tuel. |
| 1650 | And therto oo thing saugh I wel, |
| That the ferther that hit ran, |
| The gretter wexen hit began, |
| As dooth the ryver from a welle, |
| And hyt stank as the pit of helle. |
| 1655 | Allas, thus was her shame yronge, |
| And gilteles, on every tonge! |
| Tho come the thridde companye, |
| And gunne up to the dees to hye, |
| And doun on knes they fille anon, |
| 1660 | And seyde, "We ben everychon |
| Folk that han ful trewely |
| Deserved fame ryghtfully, |
| And praye yow, hit mote be knowe |
| Ryght as hit is, and forth yblowe." |
| 1665 | "I graunte," quod she, "for me list |
| That now your goode werkes be wist, |
| And yet ye shul han better loos, |
| Right in dispit of alle your foos, |
| Than worthy is, and that anoon. |
| 1670 | Lat now," quod she, "thy trumpe goon, |
| Thou Eolus, that is so blak; |
| And out thyn other trumpe tak |
| That highte Laude, and blow yt soo |
| That thrugh the world her fame goo |
| 1675 | Al esely, and not to faste, |
| That hyt be knowen atte laste." |
| "Ful gladly, lady myn," he seyde; |
| And out hys trumpe of gold he brayde |
| Anon, and sette hyt to his mouth, |
| 1680 | And blew it est, and west, and south, |
| And north, as lowde as any thunder, |
| That every wight hath of hit wonder, |
| So brode hyt ran or than hit stente. |
| And, certes, al the breth that wente |
| 1685 | Out of his trumpes mouth it smelde |
| As men a pot of bawme helde |
| Among a basket ful of roses. |
| This favour dide he til her loses. |
| And ryght with this y gan aspye, |
| 1690 | Ther come the ferthe companye -- |
| But certeyn they were wonder fewe -- |
| And gunne stonden in a rewe, |
| And seyden, "Certes, lady bryght, |
| We han don wel with al our myght, |
| 1695 | But we ne kepen have no fame. |
| Hyde our werkes and our name, |
| For Goddys love; for certes we |
| Han certeyn doon hyt for bounte, |
| And for no maner other thing." |
| 1700 | "I graunte yow alle your askyng," |
| Quod she; "let your werkes be ded." |
| With that aboute y clew myn hed, |
| And saugh anoon the fifte route |
| That to this lady gunne loute, |
| 1705 | And doun on knes anoon to falle; |
| And to hir thoo besoughten alle |
| To hide her goode werkes ek, |
| And seyden they yeven noght a lek |
| For fame ne for such renoun; |
| 1710 | For they for contemplacioun |
| And Goddes love hadde ywrought, |
| Ne of fame wolde they nought. |
| "What?" quod she, "and be ye wood? |
| And wene ye for to doo good, |
| 1715 | And for to have of that no fame? |
| Have ye dispit to have my name? |
| Nay, ye shul lyven everychon! |
| Blow thy trumpes, and that anon," |
| Quod she, "thou Eolus, y hote, |
| 1720 | And ryng this folkes werk be note, |
| That al the world may of hyt here." |
| And he gan blowe her loos so clere |
| In his golden clarioun |
| That thrugh the world wente the soun |
| 1725 | Also kenely and eke so softe; |
| But atte last hyt was on-lofte. |
| Thoo come the sexte companye, |
| And gunne faste on Fame crie. |
| Ryght verraily in this manere |
| 1730 | They seyden: "Mercy, lady dere! |
| To tellen certeyn as hyt is, |
| We han don neither that ne this, |
| But ydel al oure lyf ybe. |
| But natheles yet preye we |
| 1735 | That we mowe han as good a fame, |
| And gret renoun and knowen name, |
| As they that han doon noble gestes, |
| And acheved alle her lestes, |
| As wel of love as other thyng. |
| 1740 | Al was us never broche ne ryng, |
| Ne elles noght, from wymmen sent, |
| Ne ones in her herte yment |
| To make us oonly frendly chere, |
| But myghten temen us upon bere; |
| 1745 | Yet lat us to the peple seme |
| Suche as the world may of us deme |
| That wommen loven us for wod. |
| Hyt shal doon us as moche good, |
| And to oure herte as moche avaylle |
| 1750 | To countrepese ese and travaylle, |
| As we had wonne hyt with labour; |
| For that is dere boght honour |
| At regard of oure grete ese. |
| And yet thou most us more plese: |
| 1755 | Let us be holden eke therto |
| Worthy, wise, and goode also, |
| And riche, and happy unto love. |
| For Goddes love, that sit above, |
| Thogh we may not the body have |
| 1760 | Of wymmen, yet, so God yow save, |
| Leet men gliwe on us the name -- |
| Sufficeth that we han the fame." |
| "I graunte," quod she, "be my trouthe! |
| Now, Eolus, withouten slouthe, |
| 1765 | Tak out thy trumpe of gold, let se, |
| And blow as they han axed me, |
| That every man wene hem at ese, |
| Though they goon in ful badde lese." |
| This Eolus gan hit so blowe |
| 1770 | That thrugh the world hyt was yknowe. |
| Thoo come the seventh route anoon, |
| And fel on knees everychoon, |
| And seyde, "Lady, graunte us sone |
| The same thing, the same bone, |
| 1775 | That [ye] this nexte folk han doon." |
| "Fy on yow," quod she, "everychon! |
| Ye masty swyn, ye ydel wrechches, |
| Ful of roten, slowe techches! |
| What? False theves! Wher ye wolde |
| 1780 | Be famous good, and nothing nolde |
| Deserve why, ne never ye roughte? |
| Men rather yow to hangen oughte! |
| For ye be lyke the sweynte cat |
| That wolde have fissh; but wostow what? |
| 1785 | He wolde nothing wete his clowes. |
| Yvel thrift come to your jowes, |
| And eke to myn, if I hit graunte, |
| Or do yow favour, yow to avaunte! |
| Thou Eolus, thou kyng of Trace, |
| 1790 | Goo blowe this folk a sory grace," |
| Quod she, "anon; and wostow how? |
| As I shal telle thee ryght now. |
| Sey: `These ben they that wolde honour |
| Have, and do noskynnes labour, |
| 1795 | Ne doo no good, and yet han lawde; |
| And that men wende that bele Isawde |
| Ne coude hem noght of love werne, |
| And yet she that grynt at a querne |
| Ys al to good to ese her herte.'" |
| 1800 | This Eolus anon up sterte, |
| And with his blake clarioun |
| He gan to blasen out a soun |
| As lowde as beloweth wynd in helle; |
| And eke therwith, soth to telle, |
| 1805 | This soun was so ful of japes, |
| As ever mowes were in apes. |
| And that wente al the world aboute, |
| That every wight gan on hem shoute |
| And for to lawghe as they were wod, |
| 1810 | Such game fonde they in her hod. |
| Tho come another companye, |
| That had ydoon the trayterye, |
| The harm, the grettest wikkednesse |
| That any herte kouth. gesse; |
| 1815 | And prayed her to han good fame, |
| And that she nolde doon hem no shame, |
| But yeve hem loos and good renoun, |
| And do hyt blowe in a clarioun. |
| "Nay, wis," quod she, "hyt were a vice. |
| 1820 | Al be ther in me no justice, |
| Me lyste not to doo hyt now, |
| Ne this nyl I not graunte yow." |
| Tho come ther lepynge in a route, |
| And gunne choppen al aboute |
| 1825 | Every man upon the crowne, |
| That al the halle gan to sowne, |
| And seyden: "Lady, leef and dere, |
| We ben suche folk as ye mowe here. |
| To tellen al the tale aryght, |
| 1830 | We ben shrewes, every wyght, |
| And han delyt in wikkednesse, |
| As goode folk han in godnesse; |
| And joye to be knowen shrewes, |
| And ful of vice and wikked thewes; |
| 1835 | Wherefore we praye yow, a-rowe, |
| That oure fame such be knowe |
| In alle thing ryght as hit ys." |
| "Y graunte hyt yow," quod she, "ywis. |
| But what art thow that seyst this tale, |
| 1840 | That werest on thy hose a pale, |
| And on thy tipet such a belle?" |
| "Madame," quod he, "soth to telle, |
| I am that ylke shrewe, ywis, |
| That brende the temple of Ysidis |
| 1845 | In Athenes, loo, that citee." |
| "And wherfor didest thou so?" quod she. |
| "By my thrift," quod he, "madame, |
| I wolde fayn han had a fame, |
| As other folk hadde in the toun, |
| 1850 | Although they were of gret renoun |
| For her vertu and for her thewes. |
| Thoughte y, as gret a fame han shrewes, |
| Though hit be for shrewednesse, |
| As goode folk han for godnesse; |
| 1855 | And sith y may not have that oon, |
| That other nyl y noght forgoon. |
| And for to gette of Fames hire, |
| The temple sette y al afire. |
| Now do our loos be blowen swithe, |
| 1860 | As wisly be thou ever blythe!" |
| "Gladly," quod she; "thow Eolus, |
| Herestow not what they prayen us?" |
| "Madame, yis, ful wel," quod he, |
| "And I wil trumpen it, parde!" |
| 1865 | And tok his blake trumpe faste, |
| And gan to puffen and to blaste, |
| Til hyt was at the worldes ende. |
| With that y gan aboute wende, |
| For oon that stood ryght at my bak, |
| 1870 | Me thoughte, goodly to me spak, |
| And seyde, "Frend, what is thy name? |
| Artow come hider to han fame?" |
| "Nay, for sothe, frend," quod y; |
| "I cam noght hyder, graunt mercy, |
| 1875 | For no such cause, by my hed! |
| Sufficeth me, as I were ded, |
| That no wight have my name in honde. |
| I wot myself best how y stonde; |
| For what I drye, or what I thynke, |
| 1880 | I wil myselven al hyt drynke, |
| Certeyn, for the more part, |
| As fer forth as I kan myn art." |
| "But what doost thou here than?" quod he. |
| Quod y, "That wyl y tellen the, |
| 1885 | The cause why y stonde here: |
| Somme newe tydynges for to lere, |
| Somme newe thinges, y not what, |
| Tydynges, other this or that, |
| Of love or suche thynges glade. |
| 1890 | For certeynly, he that me made |
| To comen hyder, seyde me, |
| Y shulde bothe here and se |
| In this place wonder thynges; |
| But these be no suche tydynges |
| 1895 | As I mene of." "Noo?" quod he. |
| And I answered, "Noo, parde! |
| For wel y wiste ever yit, |
| Sith that first y hadde wit, |
| That somme folk han desired fame |
| 1900 | Diversly, and loos, and name. |
| But certeynly, y nyste how |
| Ne where that Fame duelled, er now, |
| And eke of her descripcioun, |
| Ne also her condicioun, |
| 1905 | Ne the ordre of her dom, |
| Unto the tyme y hidder com." |
| "[Whych] than be, loo, these tydynges, |
| That thou now [thus] hider brynges, |
| That thou hast herd?" quod he to me; |
| 1910 | "But now no fors, for wel y se |
| What thou desirest for to here. |
| Com forth and stond no lenger here, |
| And y wil thee, withouten drede, |
| In such another place lede |
| 1915 | Ther thou shalt here many oon." |
| Tho gan I forth with hym to goon |
| Out of the castel, soth to seye. |
| Tho saugh y stonde in a valeye, |
| Under the castel, faste by, |
| 1920 | An hous, that Domus Dedaly, |
| That Laboryntus cleped ys, |
| Nas mad so wonderlych, ywis, |
| Ne half so queyntelych ywrought. |
| And ever mo, as swyft as thought, |
| 1925 | This queynte hous aboute wente, |
| That never mo hyt stille stente. |
| And therout com so gret a noyse |
| That, had hyt stonden upon Oyse, |
| Men myghte hyt han herd esely |
| 1930 | To Rome, y trowe sikerly. |
| And the noyse which that I herde, |
| For al the world ryght so hyt ferde |
| As dooth the rowtynge of the ston |
| That from th' engyn ys leten gon. |
| 1935 | And al thys hous of which y rede |
| Was mad of twigges, falwe, rede, |
| And grene eke, and somme weren white, |
| Swiche as men to these cages thwite, |
| Or maken of these panyers, |
| 1940 | Or elles [hottes] or dossers; |
| That, for the swough and for the twygges, |
| This hous was also ful of gygges, |
| And also ful eke of chirkynges, |
| And of many other werkynges; |
| 1945 | And eke this hous hath of entrees |
| As fele as of leves ben in trees |
| In somer, whan they grene been; |
| And on the roof men may yet seen |
| A thousand holes, and wel moo, |
| 1950 | To leten wel the soun out goo. |
| And be day, in every tyde, |
| Been al the dores opened wide, |
| And be nyght echon unshette; |
| Ne porter ther is noon to lette |
| 1955 | No maner tydynges in to pace. |
| Ne never rest is in that place |
| That hit nys fild ful of tydynges, |
| Other loude or of whisprynges; |
| And over alle the houses angles |
| 1960 | Ys ful of rounynges and of jangles |
| Of werres, of pes, of mariages, |
| Of reste, of labour, of viages, |
| Of abood, of deeth, of lyf, |
| Of love, of hate, acord, of stryf, |
| 1965 | Of loos, of lore, and of wynnynges, |
| Of hele, of seknesse, of bildynges, |
| Of faire wyndes, and of tempestes, |
| Of qwalm of folk, and eke of bestes; |
| Of dyvers transmutacions |
| 1970 | Of estats, and eke of regions; |
| Of trust, of drede, of jelousye, |
| Of wit, of wynnynge, of folye; |
| Of plente, and of gret famyne, |
| Of chepe, of derthe, and of ruyne; |
| 1975 | Of good or mys governement, |
| Of fyr, and of dyvers accident. |
| And loo, thys hous, of which I write, |
| Syker be ye, hit nas not lyte, |
| For hyt was sixty myle of lengthe. |
| 1980 | Al was the tymber of no strengthe, |
| Yet hit is founded to endure |
| While that hit lyst to Aventure, |
| That is the moder of tydynges, |
| As the see of welles and of sprynges; |
| 1985 | And hyt was shapen lyk a cage. |
| "Certys," quod y, "in al myn age, |
| Ne saugh y such an hous as this." |
| And as y wondred me, ywys, |
| Upon this hous, tho war was y |
| 1990 | How that myn egle faste by |
| Was perched hye upon a stoon; |
| And I gan streghte to hym gon, |
| And seyde thus: "Y preye the |
| That thou a while abide me, |
| 1995 | For Goddis love, and lete me seen |
| What wondres in this place been; |
| For yit, paraunter, y may lere |
| Som good theron, or sumwhat here |
| That leef me were, or that y wente." |
| 2000 | "Petre, that is myn entente," |
| Quod he to me; "therfore y duelle. |
| But certeyn, oon thyng I the telle, |
| That but I bringe the therinne, |
| Ne shalt thou never kunne gynne |
| 2005 | To come into hyt, out of doute, |
| So faste hit whirleth, lo, aboute. |
| But sith that Joves, of his grace, |
| As I have seyd, wol the solace |
| Fynally with these thinges, |
| 2010 | Unkouthe syghtes and tydynges, |
| To passe with thyn hevynesse, |
| Such routhe hath he of thy distresse, |
| That thou suffrest debonairly -- |
| And wost thyselven outtirly |
| 2015 | Disesperat of alle blys, |
| Syth that Fortune hath mad amys |
| The [fruit] of al thyn hertys reste |
| Languisshe and eke in poynt to breste -- |
| That he, thrugh hys myghty merite, |
| 2020 | Wol do the an ese, al be hyt lyte, |
| And yaf in expres commaundement, |
| To which I am obedient, |
| To further the with al my myght, |
| And wisse and teche the aryght |
| 2025 | Where thou maist most tidynges here. |
| Shaltow here anoon many oon lere." |
| With this word he ryght anoon |
| Hente me up bytweene hys toon, |
| And at a wyndowe yn me broghte, |
| 2030 | That in this hous was, as me thoghte -- |
| And therwithalle, me thoughte hit stente, |
| And nothing hyt aboute wente -- |
| And me sette in the flor adoun. |
| But which a congregacioun |
| 2035 | Of folk, as I saugh rome aboute, |
| Some wythin and some wythoute, |
| Nas never seen, ne shal ben eft; |
| That, certys, in the world nys left |
| So many formed be Nature, |
| 2040 | Ne ded so many a creature; |
| That wel unnethe in that place |
| Hadde y a fote-brede of space. |
| And every wight that I saugh there |
| Rouned everych in others ere |
| 2045 | A newe tydynge prively, |
| Or elles tolde al openly |
| Ryght thus, and seyde: "Nost not thou |
| That ys betyd, lo, late or now?" |
| "No," quod he, "telle me what." |
| 2050 | And than he tolde hym this and that, |
| And swor therto that hit was soth -- |
| "Thus hath he sayd," and "Thus he doth," |
| "Thus shal hit be," "Thus herde y seye," |
| "That shal be founde," "That dar I leye" -- |
| 2055 | That al the folk that ys alyve |
| Ne han the kunnynge to discryve |
| The thinges that I herde there, |
| What aloude, and what in ere. |
| But al the wondermost was this: |
| 2060 | Whan oon had herd a thing, ywis, |
| He com forth ryght to another wight, |
| And gan him tellen anon-ryght |
| The same that to him was told, |
| Or hyt a forlong way was old, |
| 2065 | But gan somwhat for to eche |
| To this tydynge in this speche |
| More than hit ever was. |
| And nat so sone departed nas |
| Tho fro him, that he ne mette |
| 2070 | With the thridde; and or he lette |
| Any stounde, he told him als; |
| Were the tydynge soth or fals, |
| Yit wolde he telle hyt natheles, |
| And evermo with more encres |
| 2075 | Than yt was erst. Thus north and south |
| Wente every tydyng fro mouth to mouth, |
| And that encresing ever moo, |
| As fyr ys wont to quyke and goo |
| From a sparke spronge amys, |
| 2080 | Til al a citee brent up ys. |
| And whan that was ful yspronge, |
| And woxen more on every tonge |
| Than ever hit was, [hit] wente anoon |
| Up to a wyndowe out to goon; |
| 2085 | Or, but hit myghte out there pace, |
| Hyt gan out crepe at som crevace, |
| And flygh forth faste for the nones. |
| And somtyme saugh I thoo at ones |
| A lesyng and a sad soth sawe, |
| 2090 | That gonne of aventure drawe |
| Out at a wyndowe for to pace; |
| And, when they metten in that place, |
| They were achekked bothe two, |
| And neyther of hem moste out goo |
| 2095 | For other, so they gonne crowde, |
| Til ech of hem gan crien lowde, |
| "Lat me go first!" "Nay, but let me! |
| And here I wol ensuren the, |
| Wyth the nones that thou wolt do so, |
| 2100 | That I shal never fro the go, |
| But be thyn owne sworen brother! |
| We wil medle us ech with other, |
| That no man, be they never so wrothe, |
| Shal han on [of us] two, but bothe |
| 2105 | At ones, al besyde his leve, |
| Come we a-morwe or on eve, |
| Be we cried or stille yrouned." |
| Thus saugh I fals and soth compouned |
| Togeder fle for oo tydynge. |
| 2110 | Thus out at holes gunne wringe |
| Every tydynge streght to Fame, |
| And she gan yeven ech hys name, |
| After hir disposicioun, |
| And yaf hem eke duracioun, |
| 2115 | Somme to wexe and wane sone, |
| As doth the faire white mone, |
| And let hem goon. Ther myghte y seen |
| Wynged wondres faste fleen, |
| Twenty thousand in a route, |
| 2120 | As Eolus hem blew aboute. |
| And, Lord, this hous in alle tymes |
| Was ful of shipmen and pilgrimes, |
| With scrippes bret-ful of lesinges, |
| Entremedled with tydynges, |
| 2125 | And eek allone be hemselve. |
| O, many a thousand tymes twelve |
| Saugh I eke of these pardoners, |
| Currours, and eke messagers, |
| With boystes crammed ful of lyes |
| 2130 | As ever vessel was with lyes. |
| And as I alther-fastest wente |
| About, and dide al myn entente |
| Me for to pleyen and for to lere, |
| And eke a tydynge for to here, |
| 2135 | That I had herd of som contre |
| That shal not now be told for me -- |
| For hit no nede is, redely; |
| Folk kan synge hit bet than I; |
| For al mot out, other late or rathe, |
| 2140 | Alle the sheves in the lathe -- |
| I herde a gret noyse withalle |
| In a corner of the halle, |
| Ther men of love-tydynges tolde, |
| And I gan thiderward beholde; |
| 2145 | For I saugh rennynge every wight |
| As faste as that they hadden myght, |
| And everych cried, "What thing is that?" |
| And somme sayde, "I not never what." |
| And whan they were alle on an hepe, |
| 2150 | Tho behynde begunne up lepe, |
| And clamben up on other faste, |
| And up the nose and yen kaste, |
| And troden fast on others heles, |
| And stampen, as men doon aftir eles. |
| 2155 | Atte laste y saugh a man, |
| Which that y [nevene] nat ne kan; |
| But he semed for to be |
| A man of gret auctorite. . . . |