| The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne, |
| Th' assay so hard, so sharp the conquerynge, |
| The dredful joye alwey that slit so yerne: |
| Al this mene I by Love, that my felynge |
| 5 | Astonyeth with his wonderful werkynge |
| So sore, iwis, that whan I on hym thynke |
| Nat wot I wel wher that I flete or synke. |
| |
| For al be that I knowe nat Love in dede, |
| Ne wot how that he quiteth folk here hyre, |
| 10 | Yit happeth me ful ofte in bokes reede |
| Of his myrakles and his crewel yre. |
| There rede I wel he wol be lord and syre; |
| I dar nat seyn, his strokes been so sore, |
| But "God save swich a lord!" -- I can na moore. |
| |
| 15 | Of usage -- what for lust and what for lore -- |
| On bokes rede I ofte, as I yow tolde. |
| But wherfore that I speke al this? Nat yoore |
| Agon it happede me for to beholde |
| Upon a bok, was write with lettres olde, |
| 20 | And therupon, a certeyn thing to lerne, |
| The longe day ful faste I redde and yerne. |
| |
| For out of olde feldes, as men seyth, |
| Cometh al this newe corn from yer to yere, |
| And out of olde bokes, in good feyth, |
| 25 | Cometh al this newe science that men lere. |
| But now to purpos as of this matere: |
| To rede forth hit gan me so delite |
| That al that day me thoughte but a lyte. |
| |
| This bok of which I make mencioun |
| 30 | Entitled was al ther, as I shal telle: |
| "Tullyus of the Drem of Scipioun." |
| Chapitres sevene it hadde, of hevene and helle |
| And erthe, and soules that therinne dwelle, |
| Of whiche, as shortly as I can it trete, |
| 35 | Of his sentence I wol yow seyn the greete. |
| |
| Fyrst telleth it, whan Scipion was come |
| In Affrike, how he meteth Massynisse, |
| That hym for joie in armes hath inome; |
| Thanne telleth [it] here speche and al the blysse |
| 40 | That was betwix hem til the day gan mysse, |
| And how his auncestre, Affrycan so deere, |
| Gan in his slep that nyght to hym apere. |
| |
| Thanne telleth it that, from a sterry place, |
| How Affrycan hath hym Cartage shewed, |
| 45 | And warnede hym beforn of al his grace, |
| And seyde hym what man, lered other lewed, |
| That lovede commune profyt, wel ithewed, |
| He shulde into a blysful place wende |
| There as joye is that last withouten ende. |
| |
| 50 | Thanne axede he if folk that here been dede |
| Han lyf and dwellynge in another place. |
| And Affrican seyde, "Ye, withouten drede," |
| And that oure present worldes lyves space |
| Nis but a maner deth, what wey we trace; |
| 55 | And rightful folk shul gon, after they dye, |
| To hevene; and shewede hym the Galaxye. |
| |
| Thanne shewede he hym the lytel erthe that here is, |
| At regard of the hevenes quantite; |
| And after shewede he hym the nyne speres; |
| 60 | And after that the melodye herde he |
| That cometh of thilke speres thryes thre, |
| That welle is of musik and melodye |
| In this world here, and cause of armonye. |
| |
| Than bad he hym, syn erthe was so lyte, |
| 65 | And dissevable and ful of harde grace, |
| That he ne shulde hym in the world delyte. |
| Thanne tolde he hym, in certeyn yeres space |
| That every sterre shulde come into his place |
| Ther it was first, and al shulde out of mynde |
| 70 | That in this world is don of al mankynde. |
| |
| Thanne preyede hym Scipion to telle hym al |
| The wey to come into that hevene blisse. |
| And he seyde, "Know thyself first immortal, |
| And loke ay besyly thow werche and wysse |
| 75 | To commune profit, and thow shalt not mysse |
| To comen swiftly to that place deere |
| That ful of blysse is and of soules cleere. |
| |
| "But brekers of the lawe, soth to seyne, |
| And likerous folk, after that they ben dede, |
| 80 | Shul whirle aboute th' erthe alwey in peyne, |
| Tyl many a world be passed, out of drede, |
| And than, foryeven al hir wikked dede, |
| Than shul they come into that blysful place, |
| To which to comen God the sende his grace." |
| |
| 85 | The day gan faylen, and the derke nyght, |
| That reveth bestes from here besynesse, |
| Berafte me my bok for lak of lyght, |
| And to my bed I gan me for to dresse, |
| Fulfyld of thought and busy hevynesse; |
| 90 | For bothe I hadde thyng which that I nolde, |
| And ek I ne hadde that thyng that I wolde. |
| |
| But fynally my spirit at the laste, |
| For wery of my labour al the day, |
| Tok reste, that made me to slepe faste; |
| 95 | And in my slep I mette, as that I lay, |
| How Affrican, ryght in the selve aray |
| That Scipion hym say byfore that tyde, |
| Was come and stod right at my beddes syde. |
| |
| The wery huntere, slepynge in his bed, |
| 100 | To wode ayeyn his mynde goth anon; |
| The juge dremeth how his plees been sped; |
| The cartere dremeth how his cart is gon; |
| The riche, of gold; the knyght fyght with his fon; |
| The syke met he drynketh of the tonne; |
| 105 | The lovere met he hath his lady wonne. |
| |
| Can I not seyn if that the cause were |
| For I hadde red of Affrican byforn |
| That made me to mete that he stod there; |
| But thus seyde he: "Thow hast the so wel born |
| 110 | In lokynge of myn olde bok totorn, |
| Of which Macrobye roughte nat a lyte, |
| That sumdel of thy labour wolde I quyte." |
| |
| Cytherea, thow blysful lady swete, |
| That with thy fyrbrond dauntest whom the lest |
| 115 | And madest me this sweven for to mete, |
| Be thow myn helpe in this, for thow mayst best! |
| As wisly as I sey the north-north-west, |
| Whan I began my sweven for to write, |
| So yif me myght to ryme, and endyte! |
| |
| 120 | This forseyde Affrican me hente anon |
| And forth with hym unto a gate broughte, |
| Ryght of a park walled with grene ston; |
| And over the gate, with lettres large iwroughte, |
| There were vers iwriten, as me thoughte, |
| 125 | On eyther half, of ful gret difference, |
| Of which I shal yow seyn the pleyn sentence: |
| |
| "Thorgh me men gon into that blysful place |
| Of hertes hele and dedly woundes cure; |
| Thorgh me men gon unto the welle of grace, |
| 130 | There grene and lusty May shal evere endure. |
| This is the wey to al good aventure. |
| Be glad, thow redere, and thy sorwe of-caste; |
| Al open am I -- passe in, and sped thee faste!" |
| |
| "Thorgh me men gon," than spak that other side, |
| 135 | "Unto the mortal strokes of the spere |
| Of which Disdayn and Daunger is the gyde, |
| Ther nevere tre shal fruyt ne leves bere. |
| This strem yow ledeth to the sorweful were |
| There as the fish in prysoun is al drye; |
| 140 | Th' eschewing is only the remedye!" |
| |
| These vers of gold and blak iwriten were, |
| Of whiche I gan astoned to beholde. |
| For with that oon encresede ay my fere |
| And with that other gan myn herte bolde; |
| 145 | That oon me hette, that other dide me colde; |
| No wit hadde I, for errour, for to chese |
| To entre or flen, or me to save or lese. |
| |
| Right as betwixen adamauntes two |
| Of evene myght, a pece of yren set |
| 150 | Ne hath no myght to meve to ne fro -- |
| For what that oon may hale, that other let -- |
| Ferde I, that nyste whether me was bet |
| To entre or leve, til Affrycan, my gide, |
| Me hente and shof in at the gates wide, |
| |
| 155 | And seyde, "It stondeth writen in thy face, |
| Thyn errour, though thow telle it not to me; |
| But dred the not to come into this place, |
| For this writyng nys nothyng ment bi the, |
| Ne by non but he Loves servaunt be: |
| 160 | For thow of love hast lost thy tast, I gesse, |
| As sek man hath of swete and bytternesse. |
| |
| "But natheles, although that thow be dul, |
| Yit that thow canst not do, yit mayst thow se. |
| For many a man that may nat stonde a pul |
| 165 | Yet liketh hym at wrastlyng for to be, |
| And demen yit wher he do bet or he. |
| And if thow haddest connyng for t' endite, |
| I shal the shewe mater of to wryte." |
| |
| With that myn hand in his he tok anon, |
| 170 | Of which I confort caughte, and wente in faste. |
| But, Lord, so I was glad and wel begoon! |
| For overal where that I myne eyen caste |
| Were trees clad with leves that ay shal laste, |
| Ech in his kynde, of colour fresh and greene |
| 175 | As emeraude, that joye was to seene. |
| |
| The byldere ok, and ek the hardy asshe; |
| The piler elm, the cofre unto carayne; |
| The boxtre pipere, holm to whippes lashe; |
| The saylynge fyr; the cipresse, deth to playne; |
| 180 | The shetere ew; the asp for shaftes pleyne; |
| The olyve of pes, and eke the dronke vyne; |
| The victor palm, the laurer to devyne. |
| |
| A gardyn saw I ful of blosmy bowes |
| Upon a ryver, in a grene mede, |
| 185 | There as swetnesse everemore inow is, |
| With floures white, blewe, yelwe, and rede, |
| And colde welle-stremes, nothyng dede, |
| That swymmen ful of smale fishes lighte, |
| With fynnes rede and skales sylver bryghte. |
| |
| 190 | On every bow the bryddes herde I synge, |
| With voys of aungel in here armonye; |
| Some besyede hem here bryddes forth to brynge; |
| The litel conyes to here pley gonne hye; |
| And ferther al aboute I gan aspye |
| 195 | The dredful ro, the buk, the hert and hynde, |
| Squyrels, and bestes smale of gentil kynde. |
| |
| Of instruments of strenges in acord |
| Herde I so pleye a ravyshyng swetnesse, |
| That God, that makere is of al and lord, |
| 200 | Ne herde nevere beter, as I gesse. |
| Therwith a wynd, unnethe it myghte be lesse, |
| Made in the leves grene a noyse softe |
| Acordaunt to the foules song alofte. |
| |
| Th' air of that place so attempre was |
| 205 | That nevere was grevaunce of hot ne cold. |
| There wex ek every holsom spice and gras; |
| No man may there waxe sek ne old; |
| Yit was there joye more a thousandfold |
| Than man can telle; ne nevere wolde it nyghte, |
| 210 | But ay cler day to any mannes syghte. |
| |
| Under a tre, besyde a welle, I say |
| Cupide, oure lord, his arwes forge and file; |
| And at his fet his bowe al redy lay; |
| And Wille, his doughter, temprede al this while |
| 215 | The hevedes in the welle, and with hire wile |
| She couchede hem, after they shulde serve |
| Some for to sle, and some to wounde and kerve. |
| |
| Tho was I war of Plesaunce anon-ryght, |
| And of Aray, and Lust, and Curteysie, |
| 220 | And of the Craft that can and hath the myght |
| To don by force a wyght to don folye -- |
| Disfigurat was she, I nyl nat lye; |
| And by hymself, under an ok, I gesse, |
| Saw I Delyt, that stod with Gentilesse. |
| |
| 225 | I saw Beute withouten any atyr, |
| And Youthe, ful of game and jolyte; |
| Foolhardynesse, Flaterye, and Desyr, |
| Messagerye, and Meede, and other thre -- |
| Here names shul not here be told for me -- |
| 230 | And upon pilers greete of jasper longe |
| I saw a temple of bras ifounded stronge. |
| |
| Aboute the temple daunsedyn alwey |
| Women inowe, of whiche some ther weere |
| Fayre of hemself, and some of hem were gay; |
| 235 | In kertels, al dishevele, wente they there: |
| That was here offyce alwey, yer by yeere. |
| And on the temple, of dowves white and fayre |
| Saw I syttynge many an hundred peyre. |
| |
| Byfore the temple-dore ful soberly |
| 240 | Dame Pees sat, with a curtyn in hire hond, |
| And by hire syde, wonder discretly, |
| Dame Pacience syttynge there I fond, |
| With face pale, upon an hil of sond; |
| And aldernext, withinne and ek withoute, |
| 245 | Byheste and Art, and of here folk a route. |
| |
| Withinne the temple, of sykes hoote as fyr |
| I herde a swogh that gan aboute renne, |
| Whiche sikes were engendered with desyr, |
| That maden every auter for to brenne |
| 250 | Of newe flaume; and wel espyed I thenne |
| That al the cause of sorwes that they drye |
| Cam of the bittere goddesse Jelosye. |
| |
| The god Priapus saw I, as I wente, |
| Withinne the temple in sovereyn place stonde, |
| 255 | In swich aray as whan the asse hym shente |
| With cri by nighte, and with hys sceptre in honde. |
| Ful besyly men gonne assaye and fonde |
| Upon his hed to sette, of sondry hewe, |
| Garlondes ful of freshe floures newe. |
| |
| 260 | And in a prive corner in disport |
| Fond I Venus and hire porter Richesse, |
| That was ful noble and hautayn of hyre port -- |
| Derk was that place, but afterward lightnesse |
| I saw a lyte, unnethe it myghte be lesse -- |
| 265 | And on a bed of gold she lay to reste, |
| Til that the hote sonne gan to weste. |
| |
| Hyre gilte heres with a golden thred |
| Ibounden were, untressed as she lay, |
| And naked from the brest unto the hed |
| 270 | Men myghte hire sen; and, sothly for to say, |
| The remenaunt was wel kevered to my pay, |
| Ryght with a subtyl coverchef of Valence -- |
| Ther was no thikkere cloth of no defense. |
| |
| The place yaf a thousand savours sote, |
| 275 | And Bachus, god of wyn, sat hire besyde, |
| And Ceres next, that doth of hunger boote, |
| And, as I seyde, amyddes lay Cypride, |
| To whom on knees two yonge folk ther cryde |
| To ben here helpe. But thus I let hire lye, |
| 280 | And ferther in the temple I gan espie |
| |
| That, in dispit of Dyane the chaste, |
| Ful many a bowe ibroke heng on the wal |
| Of maydenes swiche as gonne here tymes waste |
| In hyre servyse; and peynted overal |
| 285 | Ful many a story, of which I touche shal |
| A fewe, as of Calyxte and Athalante, |
| And many a mayde of which the name I wante. |
| |
| Semyramis, Candace, and Hercules, |
| Biblis, Dido, Thisbe, and Piramus, |
| 290 | Tristram, Isaude, Paris, and Achilles, |
| Eleyne, Cleopatre, and Troylus, |
| Silla, and ek the moder of Romulus: |
| Alle these were peynted on that other syde, |
| And al here love, and in what plyt they dyde. |
| |
| 295 | Whan I was come ayeyn into the place |
| That I of spak, that was so sote and grene, |
| Forth welk I tho myselven to solace. |
| Tho was I war wher that ther sat a queene |
| That, as of lyght the somer sonne shene |
| 300 | Passeth the sterre, right so over mesure |
| She fayrer was than any creature. |
| |
| And in a launde, upon an hil of floures, |
| Was set this noble goddesse Nature. |
| Of braunches were here halles and here boures |
| 305 | Iwrought after here cast and here mesure; |
| Ne there nas foul that cometh of engendrure |
| That they ne were prest in here presence |
| To take hire dom and yeve hire audyence. |
| |
| For this was on Seynt Valentynes day, |
| 310 | Whan every foul cometh there to chese his make, |
| Of every kynde that men thynke may, |
| And that so huge a noyse gan they make |
| That erthe, and eyr, and tre, and every lake |
| So ful was that unethe was there space |
| 315 | For me to stonde, so ful was al the place. |
| |
| And right as Aleyn, in the Pleynt of Kynde, |
| Devyseth Nature of aray and face, |
| In swich aray men myghte hire there fynde. |
| This noble emperesse, ful of grace, |
| 320 | Bad every foul to take his owne place, |
| As they were woned alwey fro yer to yeere, |
| Seynt Valentynes day, to stonden theere. |
| |
| That is to seyn, the foules of ravyne |
| Weere hyest set, and thanne the foules smale |
| 325 | That eten, as hem Nature wolde enclyne, |
| As worm or thyng of which I telle no tale; |
| And water-foul sat lowest in the dale; |
| But foul that lyveth by sed sat on the grene, |
| And that so fele that wonder was to sene. |
| |
| 330 | There myghte men the royal egle fynde, |
| That with his sharpe lok perseth the sonne, |
| And othere egles of a lowere kynde, |
| Of whiche that clerkes wel devyse conne. |
| Ther was the tiraunt with his fetheres donne |
| 335 | And grey -- I mene the goshauk that doth pyne |
| To bryddes for his outrageous ravyne. |
| |
| The gentyl faucoun, that with his feet distrayneth |
| The kynges hand; the hardy sperhauk eke, |
| The quayles foo; the merlioun, that payneth |
| 340 | Hymself ful ofte the larke for to seke; |
| There was the douve with hire yen meke; |
| The jelous swan, ayens his deth that syngeth. |
| The oule ek, that of deth the bode bryngeth. |
| |
| The crane, the geaunt, with his trompes soun; |
| 345 | The thef, the chough; and ek the janglynge pye; |
| The skornynge jay; the eles fo, heroun; |
| The false lapwynge, ful of trecherye; |
| The stare, that the conseyl can bewrye; |
| The tame ruddok, and the coward kyte; |
| 350 | The kok, that orloge is of thorpes lyte; |
| |
| The sparwe, Venus sone; the nyghtyngale, |
| That clepeth forth the grene leves newe; |
| The swalwe, mortherere of the foules smale |
| That maken hony of floures freshe of hewe; |
| 355 | The wedded turtil, with hire herte trewe; |
| The pekok, with his aungels fetheres bryghte; |
| The fesaunt, skornere of the cok by nyghte; |
| |
| The waker goos; the cukkow ever unkynde; |
| The popynjay, ful of delicasye; |
| 360 | The drake, stroyere of his owene kynde; |
| The stork, the wrekere of avouterye; |
| The hote cormeraunt of glotenye; |
| The raven wys; the crowe with vois of care; |
| The throstil old; the frosty feldefare. |
| |
| 365 | What shulde I seyn? Of foules every kynde |
| That in this world han fetheres and stature |
| Men myghten in that place assembled fynde |
| Byfore the noble goddesse Nature, |
| And ech of hem dide his besy cure |
| 370 | Benygnely to chese or for to take, |
| By hire acord, his formel or his make. |
| |
| But to the poynt: Nature held on hire hond |
| A formel egle, of shap the gentilleste |
| That evere she among hire werkes fond, |
| 375 | The moste benygne and the goodlieste. |
| In hire was everi vertu at his reste, |
| So ferforth that Nature hireself hadde blysse |
| To loke on hire, and ofte hire bek to kysse. |
| |
| Nature, the vicaire of the almyghty Lord, |
| 380 | That hot, cold, hevy, lyght, moyst, and dreye |
| Hath knyt by evene noumbres of acord, |
| In esy voys began to speke and seye, |
| "Foules, tak hed of my sentence, I preye, |
| And for youre ese, in fortheryng of youre nede, |
| 385 | As faste as I may speke, I wol yow speede. |
| |
| "Ye knowe wel how, Seynt Valentynes day, |
| By my statut and thorgh my governaunce, |
| Ye come for to cheese -- and fle youre wey -- |
| Youre makes, as I prike yow with plesaunce; |
| 390 | But natheles, my ryghtful ordenaunce |
| May I nat lete for al this world to wynne, |
| That he that most is worthi shal begynne. |
| |
| "The tersel egle, as that ye knowe wel, |
| The foul royal, above yow in degre, |
| 395 | The wyse and worthi, secre, trewe as stel, |
| Which I have formed, as ye may wel se, |
| In every part as it best liketh me -- |
| It nedeth not his shap yow to devyse -- |
| He shal first chese and speken in his gyse. |
| |
| 400 | "And after hym by ordre shul ye chese, |
| After youre kynde, everich as yow lyketh, |
| And, as youre hap is, shul ye wynne or lese. |
| But which of yow that love most entriketh, |
| God sende hym hire that sorest for hym syketh!" |
| 405 | And therwithal the tersel gan she calle, |
| And seyde, "My sone, the choys is to the falle. |
| |
| "But natheles, in this condicioun |
| Mot be the choys of everich that is heere, |
| That she agre to his eleccioun, |
| 410 | Whoso he be that shulde be hire feere. |
| This is oure usage alwey, fro yer to yeere, |
| And whoso may at this tyme have his grace |
| In blisful tyme he cam into this place!" |
| |
| With hed enclyned and with humble cheere |
| 415 | This royal tersel spak, and tariede noght: |
| "Unto my soverayn lady, and not my fere, |
| I chese, and chese with wil, and herte, and thought, |
| The formel on youre hond, so wel iwrought, |
| Whos I am al, and evere wol hire serve, |
| 420 | Do what hire lest, to do me lyve or sterve; |
| |
| "Besekynge hire of merci and of grace, |
| As she that is my lady sovereyne; |
| Or let me deye present in this place. |
| For certes, longe may I nat lyve in payne, |
| 425 | For in myn herte is korven every veyne. |
| Havynge reward only to my trouthe, |
| My deere herte, have on my wo som routhe. |
| |
| "And if that I be founde to hyre untrewe, |
| Disobeysaunt, or wilful necligent, |
| 430 | Avauntour, or in proces love a newe, |
| I preye to yow this be my jugement: |
| That with these foules I be al torent, |
| That ilke day that evere she me fynde |
| To hir untrewe, or in my gilt unkynde. |
| |
| 435 | "And syn that non loveth hire so wel as I, |
| Al be she nevere of love me behette, |
| Thanne oughte she be myn thourgh hire mercy, |
| For other bond can I non on hire knette. |
| Ne nevere for no wo ne shal I lette |
| 440 | To serven hire, how fer so that she wende; |
| Say what yow list, my tale is at an ende." |
| |
| Ryght as the freshe, rede rose newe |
| Ayeyn the somer sonne coloured is, |
| Ryght so for shame al wexen gan the hewe |
| 445 | Of this formel, whan she herde al this; |
| She neyther answerde wel, ne seyde amys, |
| So sore abasht was she, tyl that Nature |
| Seyde, "Doughter, drede yow nought, I yow assure." |
| |
| Another tersel egle spak anon, |
| 450 | Of lower kynde, and seyde, "That shal nat be! |
| I love hire bet than ye don, by Seint John, |
| Or at the leste I love hire as wel as ye, |
| And lenger have served hire in my degre; |
| And if she shulde have loved for long lovynge, |
| 455 | To me allone hadde be the guerdonynge. |
| |
| "I dar ek seyn, if she me fynde fals, |
| Unkynde, janglere, or rebel any wyse, |
| Or jelous, do me hangen by the hals! |
| And, but I bere me in hire servyse |
| 460 | As wel as that my wit can me suffyse, |
| From poynt in poynt, hyre honour for to save, |
| Take she my lif and al the good I have!" |
| |
| The thridde tercel egle answerde tho, |
| "Now, sires, ye seen the lytel leyser heere; |
| 465 | For every foul cryeth out to ben ago |
| Forth with his make, or with his lady deere; |
| And ek Nature hireself ne wol not heere, |
| For taryinge here, not half that I wolde seye; |
| And but I speke, I mot for sorwe deye. |
| |
| 470 | "Of long servyse avaunte I me nothing; |
| But as possible is me to deye to-day |
| For wo as he that hath ben languysshyng |
| This twenty wynter, and wel happen may; |
| A man may serven bet and more to pay |
| 475 | In half a yer, although it were no moore, |
| Than som man doth that hath served ful yoore. |
| |
| "I seye not this by me, for I ne can |
| Don no servyse that may my lady plese; |
| But I dar seyn, I am hire treweste man |
| 480 | As to my dom, and faynest wolde hire ese. |
| At shorte wordes, til that deth me sese |
| I wol ben heres, whether I wake or wynke, |
| And trewe in al that herte may bethynke." |
| |
| Of al my lyf, syn that day I was born, |
| 485 | So gentil ple in love or other thyng |
| Ne herde nevere no man me beforn -- |
| Who that hadde leyser and connyng |
| For to reherse hire chere and hire spekyng; |
| And from the morwe gan this speche laste |
| 490 | Tyl dounward went the sonne wonder faste. |
| |
| The noyse of foules for to ben delyvered |
| So loude rong, "Have don, and lat us wende!" |
| That wel wende I the wode hadde al to-shyvered. |
| "Com of!" they criede, "allas, ye wol us shende! |
| 495 | Whan shal youre cursede pletynge have an ende? |
| How sholde a juge eyther parti leve |
| For ye or nay withouten any preve?" |
| |
| The goos, the cokkow, and the doke also |
| So cryede, "Kek kek! kokkow! quek quek!" hye, |
| 500 | That thourgh myne eres the noyse wente tho. |
| The goos seyde, "Al this nys not worth a flye! |
| But I can shape herof a remedie, |
| And I wol seye my verdit fayre and swythe |
| For water-foul, whoso be wroth or blythe!" |
| |
| 505 | "And I for worm-foul," seyde the fol kokkow, |
| "For I wol of myn owene autorite, |
| For comune spede, take on the charge now, |
| For to delyvere us is gret charite." |
| "Ye may abyde a while yit, parde!" |
| 510 | Quod the turtel, "If it be youre wille |
| A wight may speke, hym were as fayr be stylle. |
| |
| "I am a sed-foul, oon the unworthieste, |
| That wot I wel, and litel of connynge. |
| But bet is that a wyghtes tonge reste |
| 515 | Than entermeten hym of such doinge, |
| Of which he neyther rede can ne synge; |
| And whoso hit doth ful foule hymself acloyeth, |
| For office uncommytted ofte anoyeth." |
| |
| Nature, which that alwey hadde an ere |
| 520 | To murmur of the lewednesse behynde, |
| With facound voys seyde, "Hold youre tonges there! |
| And I shal sone, I hope, a conseyl fynde |
| Yow to delyvere, and fro this noyse unbynde: |
| I juge, of every folk men shul oon calle |
| 525 | To seyn the verdit for yow foules alle." |
| |
| Assented were to this conclusioun |
| The briddes alle; and foules of ravyne |
| Han chosen fyrst, by pleyn eleccioun, |
| The tercelet of the faucoun to diffyne |
| 530 | Al here sentence, and as him lest, termyne; |
| And to Nature hym gonne to presente, |
| And she accepteth hym with glad entente. |
| |
| The terslet seyde thanne in this manere: |
| "Ful hard were it to preve by resoun |
| 535 | Who loveth best this gentil formel heere; |
| For everych hath swich replicacioun |
| That non by skilles may be brought adoun. |
| I can not se that argumentes avayle: |
| Thanne semeth it there moste be batayle." |
| |
| 540 | "Al redy!" quod these egles tercels tho. |
| "Nay, sires," quod he, "if that I durste it seye, |
| Ye don me wrong, my tale is not ido! |
| For, sires -- ne taketh not agref I preye -- |
| It may not gon as ye wolde in this weye; |
| 545 | Oure is the voys that han the charge in honde, |
| And to the juges dom ye moten stonde. |
| |
| "And therfore pes! I seye, as to my wit, |
| Me wolde thynke how that the worthieste |
| Of knyghthod, and lengest had used it, |
| 550 | Most of estat, of blod the gentilleste, |
| Were sittyngest for hire, if that hir leste; |
| And of these thre she wot hireself, I trowe, |
| Which that he be, for it is light to knowe." |
| |
| The water-foules han here hedes leid |
| 555 | Togedere, and of a short avysement, |
| Whan everych hadde his large golee seyd, |
| They seyden sothly, al by oon assent, |
| How that the goos, with here facounde gent, |
| "That so desyreth to pronounce oure nede, |
| 560 | Shal telle oure tale," and preyede "God hire spede!" |
| |
| And for these water-foules tho began |
| The goos to speke, and in hire kakelynge |
| She seyde, "Pes! Now tak kep every man, |
| And herkeneth which a resoun I shal forth brynge! |
| 565 | My wit is sharp; I love no taryinge; |
| I seye I rede hym, though he were my brother, |
| But she wol love hym, lat hym love another!" |
| |
| "Lo, here a parfit resoun of a goos!" |
| Quod the sperhauk; "Nevere mot she thee! |
| 570 | Lo, swich it is to have a tonge loos! |
| Now parde, fol, yit were it bet for the |
| Han holde thy pes than shewed thy nycete. |
| It lyth nat in his wit, ne in his wille, |
| But soth is seyd, `a fol can not be stille.'" |
| |
| 575 | The laughter aros of gentil foules alle, |
| And right anon the sed-foul chosen hadde |
| The turtle trewe, and gonne hire to hem calle, |
| And preyeden hire to seyn the sothe sadde |
| Of this matere, and axede what she radde. |
| 580 | And she answerde that pleynly hire entente |
| She wolde shewe, and sothly what she mente. |
| |
| "Nay, God forbede a lovere shulde chaunge!" |
| The turtle seyde, and wex for shame al red, |
| "Though that his lady everemore be straunge, |
| 585 | Yit lat hym serve hire ever, til he be ded. |
| Forsothe, I preyse nat the goses red; |
| `For, though she deyede, I wolde non other make; |
| I wol ben hires, til that the deth me take.'" |
| |
| "Wel bourded," quod the doke, "by myn hat! |
| 590 | That men shulde loven alwey causeles! |
| Who can a resoun fynde or wit in that? |
| Daunseth he murye that is myrtheles? |
| Who shulde recche of that is recheles?" |
| "Ye queke," seyde the goos, "ful wel and fayre! |
| 595 | There been mo sterres, God wot, than a payre!" |
| |
| "Now fy, cherl!" quod the gentil tercelet, |
| "Out of the donghil cam that word ful right! |
| Thow canst nat seen which thyng is wel beset! |
| Thow farst by love as oules don by lyght: |
| 600 | The day hem blent, ful wel they se by nyght. |
| Thy kynde is of so low a wrechednesse |
| That what love is, thow canst nouther seen ne gesse." |
| |
| Tho gan the kokkow putte hym forth in pres |
| For foul that eteth worm, and seyde blyve: -- |
| 605 | "So I," quod he, "may have my make in pes, |
| I reche nat how longe that ye stryve. |
| Lat ech of hem be soleyn al here lyve! |
| This is my red, syn they may nat acorde; |
| This shorte lessoun nedeth nat recorde." |
| |
| 610 | "Ye, have the glotoun fild inow his paunche, |
| Thanne are we wel!" seyde the merlioun; |
| "Thow mortherere of the heysoge on the braunche |
| That broughte the forth, thow reufullest glotoun! |
| Lyve thow soleyn, wormes corupcioun, |
| 615 | For no fors is of lak of thy nature! |
| Go, lewed be thow whil the world may dure!" |
| |
| "Now pes," quod Nature, "I comaunde heer! |
| For I have herd al youre opynyoun, |
| And in effect yit be we nevere the neer. |
| 620 | But fynally, this is my conclusioun, |
| That she hireself shal han hir eleccioun |
| Of whom hire lest; whoso be wroth or blythe, |
| Hym that she cheest, he shal hire han as swithe. |
| |
| "For sith it may not here discussed be |
| 625 | Who loveth hire best, as seyde the tercelet, |
| Thanne wol I don hire this favour, that she |
| Shal han right hym on whom hire herte is set, |
| And he hire that his herte hath on hire knet: |
| Thus juge I, Nature, for I may not lye; |
| 630 | To non estat I have non other ye. |
| |
| "But as for counseyl for to chese a make, |
| If I were Resoun, thanne wolde I |
| Conseyle yow the royal tercel take, |
| As seyde the tercelet ful skylfully, |
| 635 | As for the gentilleste and most worthi, |
| Which I have wrought so wel to my plesaunce |
| That to yow hit oughte to been a suffisaunce." |
| |
| With dredful vois the formel hire answerde, |
| "My rightful lady, goddesse of Nature! |
| 640 | Soth is that I am evere under youre yerde, |
| As is everich other creature, |
| And mot be youres whil my lyf may dure; |
| And therfore graunteth me my firste bone, |
| And myn entente I wol yow sey right sone." |
| |
| 645 | "I graunte it yow," quod she; and right anon |
| This formel egle spak in this degre: |
| "Almyghty queen, unto this yer be don, |
| I axe respit for to avise me, |
| And after that to have my choys al fre. |
| 650 | This al and som that I wol speke and seye; |
| Ye gete no more, although ye do me deye! |
| |
| "I wol nat serve Venus ne Cupide, |
| Forsothe as yit, by no manere weye." |
| "Now, syn it may non otherwise betyde," |
| 655 | Quod Nature, "heere is no more to seye. |
| Thanne wolde I that these foules were aweye, |
| Ech with his make, for taryinge lengere heere!" |
| And seyde hem thus, as ye shul after here. |
| |
| "To yow speke I, ye tercelets," quod Nature, |
| 660 | "Beth of good herte, and serveth alle thre. |
| A yer is nat so longe to endure, |
| And ech of yow peyne him in his degre |
| For to do wel, for, God wot, quyt is she |
| Fro yow this yer; what after so befalle, |
| 665 | This entremes is dressed for yow alle." |
| |
| And whan this werk al brought was to an ende, |
| To every foul Nature yaf his make |
| By evene acord, and on here way they wende. |
| And, Lord, the blisse and joye that they make! |
| 670 | For ech of hem gan other in wynges take, |
| And with here nekkes ech gan other wynde, |
| Thankynge alwey the noble goddesse of kynde. |
| |
| But fyrst were chosen foules for to synge, |
| As yer by yer was alwey hir usaunce |
| 675 | To synge a roundel at here departynge, |
| To don Nature honour and plesaunce. |
| The note, I trowe, imaked was in Fraunce, |
| The wordes were swiche as ye may heer fynde, |
| The nexte vers, as I now have in mynde. |
| |
| 680 | "Now welcome, somer, with thy sonne softe, |
| That hast thes wintres wedres overshake, |
| And driven away the longe nyghtes blake! |
| |
| "Saynt Valentyn, that art ful hy on-lofte, |
| Thus syngen smale foules for thy sake: |
| 685 | Now welcome, somer, with thy sonne softe, |
| That hast thes wintres wedres overshake. |
| |
| "Wel han they cause for to gladen ofte, |
| Sith ech of hem recovered hath hys make, |
| Ful blissful mowe they synge when they wake: |
| 690 | Now welcome, somer, with thy sonne softe, |
| That hast thes wintres wedres overshake, |
| And driven away the longe nyghtes blake!" |
| |
| And with the shoutyng, whan the song was do |
| That foules maden at here flyght awey, |
| 695 | I wok, and othere bokes tok me to, |
| To reede upon, and yit I rede alwey. |
| I hope, ywis, to rede so som day |
| That I shal mete som thyng for to fare |
| The bet, and thus to rede I nyl nat spare. |