| The double sorwe of Troilus to tellen, |
| That was the kyng Priamus sone of Troye, |
| In lovynge, how his aventures fellen |
| Fro wo to wele, and after out of joie, |
| 5 | My purpos is, er that I parte fro ye. |
| Thesiphone, thow help me for t' endite |
| Thise woful vers, that wepen as I write. |
| |
| To the clepe I, thow goddesse of torment, |
| Thow cruwel Furie, sorwynge evere in peyne, |
| 10 | Help me, that am the sorwful instrument, |
| That helpeth loveres, as I kan, to pleyne; |
| For wel sit it, the sothe for to seyne, |
| A woful wight to han a drery feere, |
| And to a sorwful tale, a sory chere. |
| |
| 15 | For I, that God of Loves servantz serve, |
| Ne dar to Love, for myn unliklynesse, |
| Preyen for speed, al sholde I therfore sterve, |
| So fer am I from his help in derknesse. |
| But natheles, if this may don gladnesse |
| 20 | Unto any lovere, and his cause availle, |
| Have he my thonk, and myn be this travaille! |
| |
| But ye loveres, that bathen in gladnesse, |
| If any drope of pyte in yow be, |
| Remembreth yow on passed hevynesse |
| 25 | That ye han felt, and on the adversite |
| Of othere folk, and thynketh how that ye |
| Han felt that Love dorste yow displese, |
| Or ye han wonne hym with to gret an ese. |
| |
| And preieth for hem that ben in the cas |
| 30 | Of Troilus, as ye may after here, |
| That Love hem brynge in hevene to solas; |
| And ek for me preieth to God so dere |
| That I have myght to shewe, in som manere, |
| Swich peyne and wo as Loves folk endure, |
| 35 | In Troilus unsely aventure. |
| |
| And biddeth ek for hem that ben despeired |
| In love, that nevere nyl recovered be, |
| And ek for hem that falsly ben apeired |
| Thorugh wikked tonges, be it he or she; |
| 40 | Thus biddeth God, for his benignite, |
| So graunte hem soone owt of this world to pace, |
| That ben despeired out of Loves grace. |
| |
| And biddeth ek for hem that ben at ese, |
| That God hem graunte ay good perseveraunce, |
| 45 | And sende hem myght hire ladies so to plese |
| That it to Love be worship and plesaunce. |
| For so hope I my sowle best avaunce, |
| To prey for hem that Loves servauntz be, |
| And write hire wo, and lyve in charite, |
| |
| 50 | And for to have of hem compassioun, |
| As though I were hire owne brother dere. |
| Now herkneth with a good entencioun, |
| For now wil I gon streght to my matere, |
| In which ye may the double sorwes here |
| 55 | Of Troilus in lovynge of Criseyde, |
| And how that she forsook hym er she deyde. |
| |
| Yt is wel wist how that the Grekes stronge |
| In armes with a thousand shippes wente |
| To Troiewardes, and the cite longe |
| 60 | Assegeden, neigh ten yer er they stente, |
| And in diverse wise and oon entente, |
| The ravysshyng to wreken of Eleyne, |
| By Paris don, they wroughten al hir peyne. |
| |
| Now fel it so that in the town ther was |
| 65 | Dwellynge a lord of gret auctorite, |
| A gret devyn, that clepid was Calkas, |
| That in science so expert was that he |
| Knew wel that Troie sholde destroied be, |
| By answere of his god, that highte thus: |
| 70 | Daun Phebus or Appollo Delphicus. |
| |
| So whan this Calkas knew by calkulynge, |
| And ek by answer of this Appollo, |
| That Grekes sholden swich a peple brynge, |
| Thorugh which that Troie moste ben fordo, |
| 75 | He caste anon out of the town to go; |
| For wel wiste he by sort that Troye sholde |
| Destroyed ben, ye, wolde whoso nolde. |
| |
| For which for to departen softely |
| Took purpos ful this forknowynge wise, |
| 80 | And to the Grekes oost ful pryvely |
| He stal anon; and they, in curteys wise, |
| Hym diden bothe worship and servyce, |
| In trust that he hath konnynge hem to rede |
| In every peril which that is to drede. |
| |
| 85 | Gret rumour gan, whan it was first aspied |
| Thorugh al the town, and generaly was spoken, |
| That Calkas traitour fled was and allied |
| With hem of Grece, and casten to be wroken |
| On hym that falsly hadde his feith so broken, |
| 90 | And seyden he and al his kyn at-ones |
| Ben worthi for to brennen, fel and bones. |
| |
| Now hadde Calkas left in this meschaunce, |
| Al unwist of this false and wikked dede, |
| His doughter, which that was in gret penaunce, |
| 95 | For of hire lif she was ful sore in drede, |
| As she that nyste what was best to rede; |
| For bothe a widewe was she and allone |
| Of any frend to whom she dorste hir mone. |
| |
| Criseyde was this lady name al right. |
| 100 | As to my doom, in al Troies cite |
| Nas non so fair, forpassynge every wight, |
| So aungelik was hir natif beaute, |
| That lik a thing inmortal semed she, |
| As doth an hevenyssh perfit creature, |
| 105 | That down were sent in scornynge of nature. |
| |
| This lady, which that alday herd at ere |
| Hire fadres shame, his falsnesse and tresoun, |
| Wel neigh out of hir wit for sorwe and fere, |
| In widewes habit large of samyt broun, |
| 110 | On knees she fil biforn Ector adown |
| With pitous vois, and tendrely wepynge, |
| His mercy bad, hirselven excusynge. |
| |
| Now was this Ector pitous of nature, |
| And saugh that she was sorwfully bigon, |
| 115 | And that she was so fair a creature; |
| Of his goodnesse he gladede hire anon, |
| And seyde, "Lat youre fadres treson gon |
| Forth with meschaunce, and ye youreself in joie |
| Dwelleth with us, whil yow good list, in Troie. |
| |
| 120 | "And al th' onour that men may don yow have, |
| As ferforth as youre fader dwelled here, |
| Ye shul have, and youre body shal men save, |
| As fer as I may ought enquere or here." |
| And she hym thonked with ful humble chere, |
| 125 | And ofter wolde, and it hadde ben his wille, |
| And took hire leve, and hom, and held hir stille. |
| |
| And in hire hous she abood with swich meyne |
| As til hire honour nede was to holde; |
| And whil she was dwellynge in that cite, |
| 130 | Kepte hir estat, and both of yonge and olde |
| Ful wel biloved, and wel men of hir tolde. |
| But wheither that she children hadde or noon, |
| I rede it naught, therfore I late it goon. |
| |
| The thynges fellen, as they don of werre, |
| 135 | Bitwixen hem of Troie and Grekes ofte; |
| For som day boughten they of Troie it derre, |
| And eft the Grekes founden nothing softe |
| The folk of Troie; and thus Fortune on lofte |
| And under eft gan hem to whielen bothe |
| 140 | Aftir hir course, ay whil that thei were wrothe. |
| |
| But how this town com to destruccion |
| Ne falleth naught to purpos me to telle, |
| For it were a long digression |
| Fro my matere, and yow to long to dwelle. |
| 145 | But the Troian gestes, as they felle, |
| In Omer, or in Dares, or in Dite, |
| Whoso that kan may rede hem as they write. |
| |
| But though that Grekes hem of Troie shetten, |
| And hir cite biseged al aboute, |
| 150 | Hire olde usage nolde they nat letten, |
| As for to honoure hir goddes ful devoute; |
| But aldirmost in honour, out of doute, |
| Thei hadde a relik, heet Palladion, |
| That was hire trist aboven everichon. |
| |
| 155 | And so bifel, whan comen was the tyme |
| Of Aperil, whan clothed is the mede |
| With newe grene, of lusty Veer the pryme, |
| And swote smellen floures white and rede, |
| In sondry wises shewed, as I rede, |
| 160 | The folk of Troie hire observaunces olde, |
| Palladiones feste for to holde. |
| |
| And to the temple, in al hir beste wise, |
| In general ther wente many a wight, |
| To herknen of Palladions servyce; |
| 165 | And namely, so many a lusty knyght, |
| So many a lady fressh and mayden bright, |
| Ful wel arayed, both meeste, mene, and leste, |
| Ye, bothe for the seson and the feste. |
| |
| Among thise othere folk was Criseyda, |
| 170 | In widewes habit blak; but natheles, |
| Right as oure firste lettre is now an A, |
| In beaute first so stood she, makeles. |
| Hire goodly lokyng gladed al the prees. |
| Nas nevere yet seyn thyng to ben preysed derre, |
| 175 | Nor under cloude blak so bright a sterre |
| |
| As was Criseyde, as folk seyde everichone |
| That hir behelden in hir blake wede. |
| And yet she stood ful lowe and stille allone, |
| Byhynden other folk, in litel brede, |
| 180 | And neigh the dore, ay undre shames drede, |
| Simple of atir and debonaire of chere, |
| With ful assured lokyng and manere. |
| |
| This Troilus, as he was wont to gide |
| His yonge knyghtes, lad hem up and down |
| 185 | In thilke large temple on every side, |
| Byholding ay the ladies of the town, |
| Now here, now there; for no devocioun |
| Hadde he to non, to reven hym his reste, |
| But gan to preise and lakken whom hym leste. |
| |
| 190 | And in his walk ful faste he gan to wayten |
| If knyght or squyer of his compaignie |
| Gan for to syke, or lete his eighen baiten |
| On any womman that he koude espye. |
| He wolde smyle and holden it folye, |
| 195 | And seye hym thus, "God woot, she slepeth softe |
| For love of the, whan thow turnest ful ofte! |
| |
| "I have herd told, pardieux, of youre lyvynge, |
| Ye loveres, and youre lewed observaunces, |
| And which a labour folk han in wynnynge |
| 200 | Of love, and in the kepyng which doutaunces; |
| And whan youre prey is lost, woo and penaunces. |
| O veray fooles, nyce and blynde be ye! |
| Ther nys nat oon kan war by other be." |
| |
| And with that word he gan caste up the browe, |
| 205 | Ascaunces, "Loo! is this naught wisely spoken?" |
| At which the God of Love gan loken rowe |
| Right for despit, and shop for to ben wroken. |
| He kidde anon his bowe nas naught broken; |
| For sodeynly he hitte hym atte fulle -- |
| 210 | And yet as proud a pekok kan he pulle. |
| |
| O blynde world, O blynde entencioun! |
| How often falleth al the effect contraire |
| Of surquidrie and foul presumpcioun; |
| For kaught is proud, and kaught is debonaire. |
| 215 | This Troilus is clomben on the staire, |
| And litel weneth that he moot descenden; |
| But alday faileth thing that fooles wenden. |
| |
| As proude Bayard gynneth for to skippe |
| Out of the weye, so pryketh hym his corn, |
| 220 | Til he a lasshe have of the longe whippe -- |
| Than thynketh he, "Though I praunce al byforn |
| First in the trays, ful fat and newe shorn, |
| Yet am I but an hors, and horses lawe |
| I moot endure, and with my feres drawe" -- |
| |
| 225 | So ferde it by this fierse and proude knyght: |
| Though he a worthy kynges sone were, |
| And wende nothing hadde had swich myght |
| Ayeyns his wille that shuld his herte stere, |
| Yet with a look his herte wex a-fere, |
| 230 | That he that now was moost in pride above, |
| Wax sodeynly moost subgit unto love. |
| |
| Forthy ensample taketh of this man, |
| Ye wise, proude, and worthi folkes alle, |
| To scornen Love, which that so soone kan |
| 235 | The fredom of youre hertes to hym thralle; |
| For evere it was, and evere it shal byfalle, |
| That Love is he that alle thing may bynde, |
| For may no man fordon the lawe of kynde. |
| |
| That this be soth, hath preved and doth yit. |
| 240 | For this trowe I ye knowen alle or some, |
| Men reden nat that folk han gretter wit |
| Than they that han be most with love ynome; |
| And strengest folk ben therwith overcome, |
| The worthiest and grettest of degree: |
| 245 | This was, and is, and yet men shall it see. |
| |
| And trewelich it sit wel to be so, |
| For alderwisest han therwith ben plesed; |
| And they that han ben aldermost in wo, |
| With love han ben comforted moost and esed; |
| 250 | And ofte it hath the cruel herte apesed, |
| And worthi folk maad worthier of name, |
| And causeth moost to dreden vice and shame. |
| |
| Now sith it may nat goodly ben withstonde, |
| And is a thing so vertuous in kynde, |
| 255 | Refuseth nat to Love for to ben bonde, |
| Syn, as hymselven liste, he may yow bynde; |
| The yerde is bet that bowen wole and wynde |
| Than that that brest, and therfore I yow rede |
| To folowen hym that so wel kan yow lede. |
| |
| 260 | But for to tellen forth in special |
| Of this kynges sone of which I tolde, |
| And leten other thing collateral, |
| Of hym thenke I my tale forth to holde, |
| Both of his joie and of his cares colde; |
| 265 | And al his werk, as touching this matere, |
| For I it gan, I wol therto refere. |
| |
| Withinne the temple he wente hym forth pleyinge, |
| This Troilus, of every wight aboute, |
| On this lady, and now on that, lokynge, |
| 270 | Wher so she were of town or of withoute; |
| And upon cas bifel that thorugh a route |
| His eye percede, and so depe it wente, |
| Til on Criseyde it smot, and ther it stente. |
| |
| And sodeynly he wax therwith astoned, |
| 275 | And gan hir bet biholde in thrifty wise. |
| "O mercy, God," thoughte he, "wher hastow woned, |
| That art so feyr and goodly to devise?" |
| Therwith his herte gan to sprede and rise, |
| And softe sighed, lest men myghte hym here, |
| 280 | And caught ayeyn his firste pleyinge chere. |
| |
| She nas nat with the leste of hire stature, |
| But alle hire lymes so wel answerynge |
| Weren to wommanhod, that creature |
| Was nevere lasse mannyssh in semynge; |
| 285 | And ek the pure wise of hire mevynge |
| Shewed wel that men myght in hire gesse |
| Honour, estat, and wommanly noblesse. |
| |
| To Troilus right wonder wel with alle |
| Gan for to like hire mevynge and hire chere, |
| 290 | Which somdel deignous was, for she let falle |
| Hire look a lite aside in swich manere, |
| Ascaunces, "What, may I nat stonden here?" |
| And after that hir lokynge gan she lighte, |
| That nevere thoughte hym seen so good a syghte. |
| |
| 295 | And of hire look in him ther gan to quyken |
| So gret desir and such affeccioun, |
| That in his herte botme gan to stiken |
| Of hir his fixe and depe impressioun. |
| And though he erst hadde poured up and down, |
| 300 | He was tho glad his hornes in to shrinke: |
| Unnethes wiste he how to loke or wynke. |
| |
| Lo, he that leet hymselven so konnynge, |
| And scorned hem that Loves peynes dryen, |
| Was ful unwar that Love hadde his dwellynge |
| 305 | Withinne the subtile stremes of hire yen; |
| That sodeynly hym thoughte he felte dyen, |
| Right with hire look, the spirit in his herte: |
| Blissed be Love, that kan thus folk converte! |
| |
| She, this in blak, likynge to Troilus |
| 310 | Over alle thing, he stood for to biholde; |
| Ne his desir, ne wherfore he stood thus, |
| He neither chere made, ne word tolde; |
| But from afer, his manere for to holde, |
| On other thing his look som tyme he caste, |
| 315 | And eft on hire, whil that servyse laste. |
| |
| And after this, nat fullich al awhaped, |
| Out of the temple al esilich he wente, |
| Repentynge hym that he hadde evere ijaped |
| Of Loves folk, lest fully the descente |
| 320 | Of scorn fille on hymself; but what he mente, |
| Lest it were wist on any manere syde, |
| His woo he gan dissimilen and hide. |
| |
| Whan he was fro the temple thus departed, |
| He streght anon unto his paleys torneth. |
| 325 | Right with hire look thorugh-shoten and thorugh-darted, |
| Al feyneth he in lust that he sojorneth, |
| And al his chere and speche also he borneth, |
| And ay of Loves servantz every while, |
| Hymself to wrye, at hem he gan to smyle, |
| |
| 330 | And seyde, "Lord, so ye lyve al in lest, |
| Ye loveres! For the konnyngeste of yow, |
| That serveth most ententiflich and best, |
| Hym tit as often harm therof as prow. |
| Youre hire is quyt ayeyn, ye, God woot how! |
| 335 | Nought wel for wel, but scorn for good servyse. |
| In feith, youre ordre is ruled in good wise! |
| |
| "In nouncerteyn ben alle youre observaunces, |
| But it a sely fewe pointes be; |
| Ne no thing asketh so gret attendaunces |
| 340 | As doth youre lay, and that knowe alle ye; |
| But that is nat the worste, as mote I the! |
| But, tolde I yow the worste point, I leve, |
| Al seyde I soth, ye wolden at me greve. |
| |
| "But take this: that ye loveres ofte eschuwe, |
| 345 | Or elles doon, of good entencioun, |
| Ful ofte thi lady wol it mysconstruwe, |
| And deme it harm in hire oppynyoun; |
| And yet if she, for other enchesoun, |
| Be wroth, than shaltow have a groyn anon. |
| 350 | Lord, wel is hym that may ben of yow oon!" |
| |
| But for al this, whan that he say his tyme, |
| He held his pees -- non other boote hym gayned -- |
| For love bigan his fetheres so to lyme |
| That wel unnethe until his folk he fayned |
| 355 | That other besy nedes hym destrayned; |
| For wo was hym, that what to doon he nyste, |
| But bad his folk to gon wher that hem liste. |
| |
| And whan that he in chambre was allone, |
| He doun upon his beddes feet hym sette, |
| 360 | And first he gan to sike, and eft to grone, |
| And thought ay on hire so, withouten lette, |
| That, as he sat and wook, his spirit mette |
| That he hire saugh a-temple, and al the wise |
| Right of hire look, and gan it newe avise. |
| |
| 365 | Thus gan he make a mirour of his mynde |
| In which he saugh al holly hire figure, |
| And that he wel koude in his herte fynde. |
| It was to hym a right good aventure |
| To love swich oon, and if he dede his cure |
| 370 | To serven hir, yet myghte he falle in grace, |
| Or ellis for oon of hire servantz pace. |
| |
| Imagenynge that travaille nor grame |
| Ne myghte for so goodly oon be lorn |
| As she, ne hym for his desir no shame, |
| 375 | Al were it wist, but in pris and up-born |
| Of alle lovers wel more than biforn, |
| Thus argumented he in his gynnynge, |
| Ful unavysed of his woo comynge. |
| |
| Thus took he purpos loves craft to suwe, |
| 380 | And thoughte he wolde werken pryvely, |
| First to hiden his desir in muwe |
| From every wight yborn, al outrely, |
| But he myghte ought recovered be therby, |
| Remembryng hym that love to wide yblowe |
| 385 | Yelt bittre fruyt, though swete seed be sowe. |
| |
| And over al this, yet muchel more he thoughte |
| What for to speke, and what to holden inne; |
| And what to arten hire to love he soughte, |
| And on a song anon-right to bygynne, |
| 390 | And gan loude on his sorwe for to wynne; |
| For with good hope he gan fully assente |
| Criseyde for to love, and nought repente. |
| |
| And of his song naught only the sentence, |
| As writ myn auctour called Lollius, |
| 395 | But pleinly, save oure tonges difference, |
| I dar wel seyn, in al, that Troilus |
| Seyde in his song, loo, every word right thus |
| As I shal seyn; and whoso list it here, |
| Loo, next this vers he may it fynden here. |
| |
| |
| |
| 400 | "If no love is, O God, what fele I so? |
| And if love is, what thing and which is he? |
| If love be good, from whennes cometh my woo? |
| If it be wikke, a wonder thynketh me, |
| When every torment and adversite |
| 405 | That cometh of hym may to me savory thinke, |
| For ay thurst I, the more that ich it drynke. |
| |
| "And if that at myn owen lust I brenne, |
| From whennes cometh my waillynge and my pleynte? |
| If harm agree me, wherto pleyne I thenne? |
| 410 | I noot, ne whi unwery that I feynte. |
| O quike deth, O swete harm so queynte, |
| How may of the in me swich quantite, |
| But if that I consente that it be? |
| |
| "And if that I consente, I wrongfully |
| 415 | Compleyne, iwis. Thus possed to and fro, |
| Al sterelees withinne a boot am I |
| Amydde the see, bitwixen wyndes two, |
| That in contrarie stonden evere mo. |
| Allas, what is this wondre maladie? |
| 420 | For hote of cold, for cold of hote, I dye." |
| |
| And to the God of Love thus seyde he |
| With pitous vois, "O lord, now youres is |
| My spirit, which that oughte youres be. |
| Yow thanke I, lord, that han me brought to this. |
| 425 | But wheither goddesse or womman, iwis, |
| She be, I not, which that ye do me serve; |
| But as hire man I wol ay lyve and sterve. |
| |
| "Ye stonden in hir eighen myghtily, |
| As in a place unto youre vertu digne; |
| 430 | Wherfore, lord, if my service or I |
| May liken yow, so beth to me benigne; |
| For myn estat roial I here resigne |
| Into hire hond, and with ful humble chere |
| Bicome hir man, as to my lady dere." |
| |
| 435 | In hym ne deyned spare blood roial |
| The fyr of love -- wherfro God me blesse -- |
| Ne him forbar in no degree, for al |
| His vertu or his excellent prowesse, |
| But held hym as his thral lowe in destresse, |
| 440 | And brende hym so in soundry wise ay newe, |
| That sexti tyme a day he loste his hewe. |
| |
| So muche, day by day, his owene thought, |
| For lust to hire, gan quiken and encresse, |
| That every other charge he sette at nought. |
| 445 | Forthi ful ofte, his hote fir to cesse, |
| To sen hire goodly lok he gan to presse; |
| For therby to ben esed wel he wende, |
| And ay the ner he was, the more he brende. |
| |
| For ay the ner the fir, the hotter is -- |
| 450 | This, trowe I, knoweth al this compaignye; |
| But were he fer or ner, I dar sey this: |
| By nyght or day, for wisdom or folye, |
| His herte, which that is his brestez ye, |
| Was ay on hire, that fairer was to sene |
| 455 | Than evere were Eleyne or Polixene. |
| |
| Ek of the day ther passed nought an houre |
| That to hymself a thousand tyme he seyde, |
| "Good goodly, to whom serve I and laboure |
| As I best kan, now wolde God, Criseyde, |
| 460 | Ye wolden on me rewe, er that I deyde! |
| My dere herte, allas, myn hele and hewe |
| And lif is lost, but ye wol on me rewe!" |
| |
| Alle other dredes weren from him fledde, |
| Both of th' assege and his savacioun; |
| 465 | N' yn him desir noon other fownes bredde, |
| But argumentes to his conclusioun: |
| That she of him wolde han compassioun, |
| And he to ben hire man while he may dure. |
| Lo, here his lif, and from the deth his cure! |
| |
| 470 | The sharpe shoures felle of armes preve |
| That Ector or his othere brethren diden |
| Ne made hym only therfore ones meve; |
| And yet was he, where so men wente or riden, |
| Founde oon the beste, and longest tyme abiden |
| 475 | Ther peril was, and dide ek swich travaille |
| In armes, that to thenke it was merveille. |
| |
| But for non hate he to the Grekes hadde, |
| Ne also for the rescous of the town, |
| Ne made hym thus in armes for to madde, |
| 480 | But only, lo, for this conclusioun: |
| To liken hire the bet for his renoun. |
| Fro day to day in armes so he spedde |
| That the Grekes as the deth him dredde. |
| |
| And fro this forth tho refte hym love his slep, |
| 485 | And made his mete his foo, and ek his sorwe |
| Gan multiplie, that, whoso tok kep, |
| It shewed in his hewe both eve and morwe. |
| Therfor a title he gan him for to borwe |
| Of other siknesse, lest men of hym wende |
| 490 | That the hote fir of love hym brende, |
| |
| And seyde he hadde a fevere and ferde amys. |
| But how it was, certeyn, kan I nat seye, |
| If that his lady understood nat this, |
| Or feynede hire she nyste, oon of the tweye; |
| 495 | But wel I rede that, by no manere weye, |
| Ne semed it that she of hym roughte, |
| Or of his peyne, or whatsoevere he thoughte. |
| |
| But thanne felte this Troilus swich wo |
| That he was wel neigh wood; for ay his drede |
| 500 | Was this, that she som wight hadde loved so, |
| That nevere of hym she wolde han taken hede, |
| For which hym thoughte he felte his herte blede; |
| Ne of his wo ne dorste he nat bygynne |
| To tellen hir, for al this world to wynne. |
| |
| 505 | But whan he hadde a space from his care, |
| Thus to hymself ful ofte he gan to pleyne; |
| He seyde, "O fool, now artow in the snare, |
| That whilom japedest at loves peyne. |
| Now artow hent, now gnaw thin owen cheyne! |
| 510 | Thow were ay wont ech lovere reprehende |
| Of thing fro which thou kanst the nat defende. |
| |
| "What wol now every lovere seyn of the, |
| If this be wist, but evere in thin absence |
| Laughen in scorn, and seyn, `Loo, ther goth he |
| 515 | That is the man of so gret sapience, |
| That held us loveres leest in reverence. |
| Now, thanked God, he may gon in the daunce |
| Of hem that Love list febly for to avaunce.' |
| |
| "But, O thow woful Troilus, God wolde, |
| 520 | Sith thow most loven thorugh thi destine, |
| That thow beset were on swich oon that sholde |
| Know al thi wo, al lakked hir pitee! |
| But also cold in love towardes the |
| Thi lady is as frost in wynter moone, |
| 525 | And thow fordon as snow in fire is soone. |
| |
| "God wold I were aryved in the port |
| Of deth, to which my sorwe wol me lede! |
| A, Lord, to me it were a gret comfort; |
| Than were I quyt of languisshyng in drede; |
| 530 | For, be myn hidde sorwe iblowe on brede, |
| I shal byjaped ben a thousand tyme |
| More than that fol of whos folie men ryme. |
| |
| "But now help, God, and ye, swete, for whom |
| I pleyne, ikaught, ye, nevere wight so faste! |
| 535 | O mercy, dere herte, and help me from |
| The deth, for I, whil that my lyf may laste, |
| More than myself wol love yow to my laste; |
| And with som frendly lok gladeth me, swete, |
| Though nevere more thing ye me byheete." |
| |
| 540 | Thise wordes, and ful many an other to, |
| He spak, and called evere in his compleynte |
| Hire name, for to tellen hire his wo, |
| Til neigh that he in salte teres dreynte. |
| Al was for nought: she herde nat his pleynte; |
| 545 | And whan that he bythought on that folie, |
| A thousand fold his wo gan multiplie. |
| |
| Bywayling in his chambre thus allone, |
| A frend of his that called was Pandare |
| Com oones in unwar, and herde hym groone, |
| 550 | And say his frend in swich destresse and care: |
| "Allas," quod he, "who causeth al this fare? |
| O mercy, God! What unhap may this meene? |
| Han now thus soone Grekes maad yow leene? |
| |
| "Or hastow som remors of conscience, |
| 555 | And art now falle in som devocioun, |
| And wailest for thi synne and thin offence, |
| And hast for ferde caught attricioun? |
| God save hem that biseged han oure town, |
| That so kan leye oure jolite on presse, |
| 560 | And bringe oure lusty folk to holynesse!" |
| |
| Thise wordes seyde he for the nones alle, |
| That with swich thing he myght hym angry maken, |
| And with angre don his wo to falle, |
| As for the tyme, and his corage awaken. |
| 565 | But wel he wist, as fer as tonges spaken, |
| Ther nas a man of gretter hardinesse |
| Thanne he, ne more desired worthinesse. |
| |
| "What cas," quod Troilus, "or what aventure |
| Hath gided the to sen me langwisshinge, |
| 570 | That am refus of every creature? |
| But for the love of God, at my preyinge, |
| Go hennes awey; for certes my deyinge |
| Wol the disese, and I mot nedes deye; |
| Therfore go wey, ther is na more to seye. |
| |
| 575 | "But if thow wene I be thus sik for drede, |
| It is naught so, and therfore scorne nought. |
| Ther is another thing I take of hede |
| Wel more than aught the Grekes han yet wrought, |
| Which cause is of my deth, for sorowe and thought; |
| 580 | But though that I now telle it the ne leste, |
| Be thow naught wroth; I hide it for the beste." |
| |
| This Pandare, that neigh malt for wo and routhe, |
| Ful ofte seyde, "Allas, what may this be? |
| Now frend," quod he, "if evere love or trouthe |
| 585 | Hath ben, or is, bitwixen the and me, |
| Ne do thow nevere swich a crueltee |
| To hiden fro thi frend so gret a care! |
| Wostow naught wel that it am I, Pandare? |
| |
| "I wol parten with the al thi peyne, |
| 590 | If it be so I do the no comfort, |
| As it is frendes right, soth for to seyne, |
| To entreparten wo as glad desport. |
| I have, and shal, for trewe or fals report, |
| In wrong and right iloved the al my lyve: |
| 595 | Hid nat thi wo fro me, but telle it blyve." |
| |
| Than gan this sorwful Troylus to syke, |
| And seide hym thus: "God leve it be my beste |
| To telle it the; for sith it may the like, |
| Yet wol I telle it, though myn herte breste. |
| 600 | And wel woot I thow mayst do me no reste; |
| But lest thow deme I truste nat to the, |
| Now herke, frend, for thus it stant with me. |
| |
| "Love, ayeins the which whoso defendeth |
| Hymselven most, hym alderlest avaylleth, |
| 605 | With disespeyr so sorwfulli me offendeth, |
| That streight unto the deth myn herte sailleth. |
| Therto desir so brennyngly me assailleth, |
| That to ben slayn it were a gretter joie |
| To me than kyng of Grece ben and Troye. |
| |
| 610 | "Suffiseth this, my fulle frend Pandare, |
| That I have seyd, for now wostow my wo; |
| And for the love of God, my colde care, |
| So hide it wel -- I tolde it nevere to mo, |
| For harmes myghten folwen mo than two |
| 615 | If it were wist -- but be thow in gladnesse, |
| And lat me sterve, unknowe, of my destresse." |
| |
| "How hastow thus unkyndely and longe |
| Hid this fro me, thow fol?" quod Pandarus. |
| "Paraunter thow myghte after swich oon longe, |
| 620 | That myn avys anoon may helpen us." |
| "This were a wonder thing," quod Troilus; |
| "Thow koudest nevere in love thiselven wisse. |
| How devel maistow brynge me to blisse?" |
| |
| "Ye, Troilus, now herke," quod Pandare; |
| 625 | "Though I be nyce, it happeth often so, |
| That oon that excesse doth ful yvele fare |
| By good counseil kan kepe his frend therfro. |
| I have myself ek seyn a blynd man goo |
| Ther as he fel that couth. loken wide; |
| 630 | A fool may ek a wis-man ofte gide. |
| |
| "A wheston is no kervyng instrument, |
| But yet it maketh sharppe kervyng tolis; |
| And there thow woost that I have aught myswent, |
| Eschuw thow that, for swich thing to the scole is. |
| 635 | Thus often wise men ben war by foolys. |
| If thow do so, thi wit is wel bewared; |
| By his contrarie is every thyng declared. |
| |
| "For how myghte evere swetnesse han ben knowe |
| To him that nevere tasted bitternesse? |
| 640 | Ne no man may ben inly glad, I trowe, |
| That nevere was in sorwe or som destresse. |
| Eke whit by blak, by shame ek worthinesse, |
| Ech set by other, more for other semeth, |
| As men may se, and so the wyse it demeth. |
| |
| 645 | "Sith thus of two contraries is o lore, |
| I, that have in love so ofte assayed |
| Grevances, oughte konne, and wel the more, |
| Counseillen the of that thow art amayed. |
| Ek the ne aughte nat ben yvel appayed, |
| 650 | Though I desyre with the for to bere |
| Thyn hevy charge; it shal the lasse dere. |
| |
| "I woot wel that it fareth thus be me |
| As to thi brother, Paris, an herdesse |
| Which that icleped was Oenone |
| 655 | Wrot in a compleynte of hir hevynesse. |
| Yee say the lettre that she wrot, I gesse?" |
| "Nay, nevere yet, ywys," quod Troilus. |
| "Now," quod Pandare, "herkne, it was thus: |
| |
| "`Phebus, that first fond art of medicyne,' |
| 660 | Quod she, `and couth. in every wightes care |
| Remedye and reed, by herbes he knew fyne, |
| Yet to hymself his konnyng was ful bare, |
| For love hadde hym so bounden in a snare, |
| Al for the doughter of the kyng Amete, |
| 665 | That al his craft ne koude his sorwes bete.' |
| |
| "Right so fare I, unhappyly for me. |
| I love oon best, and that me smerteth sore; |
| And yet, peraunter, kan I reden the |
| And nat myself; repreve me na more. |
| 670 | I have no cause, I woot wel, for to sore |
| As doth an hauk that listeth for to pleye; |
| But to thin help yet somwhat kan I seye. |
| |
| "And of o thing right siker maistow be, |
| That certein, for to dyen in the peyne, |
| 675 | That I shal nevere mo discoveren the; |
| Ne, by my trouthe, I kepe nat restreyne |
| The fro thi love, theigh that it were Eleyne |
| That is thi brother wif, if ich it wiste: |
| Be what she be, and love hire as the liste! |
| |
| 680 | "Therfore, as frend, fullich in me assure, |
| And tel me plat what is th' enchesoun |
| And final cause of wo that ye endure; |
| For douteth nothyng, myn entencioun |
| Nis nat to yow of reprehencioun, |
| 685 | To speke as now, for no wight may byreve |
| A man to love, tyl that hym list to leve. |
| |
| "And witteth wel that bothe two ben vices: |
| Mistrusten alle, or elles alle leve. |
| But wel I woot, the mene of it no vice is, |
| 690 | For to trusten som wight is a preve |
| Of trouth; and forthi wolde I fayn remeve |
| Thi wrong conseyte, and do the som wyght triste |
| Thi wo to telle; and tel me, if the liste. |
| |
| "The wise seith, `Wo hym that is allone, |
| 695 | For, and he falle, he hath non helpe to ryse'; |
| And sith thow hast a felawe, tel thi mone; |
| For this nys naught, certein, the nexte wyse |
| To wynnen love -- as techen us the wyse -- |
| To walwe and wepe as Nyobe the queene, |
| 700 | Whos teres yet in marble ben yseene. |
| |
| "Lat be thy wepyng and thi drerynesse, |
| And lat us lissen wo with oother speche; |
| So may thy woful tyme seme lesse. |
| Delyte nat in wo thi wo to seche, |
| 705 | As don thise foles that hire sorwes eche |
| With sorwe, whan thei han mysaventure, |
| And listen naught to seche hem other cure. |
| |
| "Men seyn, `to wrecche is consolacioun |
| To have another felawe in hys peyne.' |
| 710 | That owghte wel ben oure opynyoun, |
| For bothe thow and I of love we pleyne. |
| So ful of sorwe am I, soth for to seyne, |
| That certeinly namore harde grace |
| May sitte on me, for-why ther is no space. |
| |
| 715 | "If God wol, thow art nat agast of me, |
| Lest I wolde of thi lady the bygyle! |
| Thow woost thyself whom that I love, parde, |
| As I best kan, gon sithen longe while. |
| And sith thow woost I do it for no wyle, |
| 720 | And sith I am he that thow trustest moost, |
| Tel me somwhat, syn al my wo thow woost." |
| |
| Yet Troilus for al this no word seyde, |
| But longe he ley as stylle as he ded were; |
| And after this with sikynge he abreyde, |
| 725 | And to Pandarus vois he lente his ere, |
| And up his eighen caste he, that in feere |
| Was Pandarus, lest that in frenesie |
| He sholde falle, or elles soone dye; |
| |
| And cryde "Awake!" ful wonderlich and sharpe; |
| 730 | "What! Slombrestow as in a litargie? |
| Or artow lik an asse to the harpe, |
| That hereth sown whan men the strynges plye, |
| But in his mynde of that no melodie |
| May sinken hym to gladen, for that he |
| 735 | So dul ys of his bestialite?" |
| |
| And with that, Pandare of his wordes stente; |
| And Troilus yet hym nothyng answerde, |
| For-why to tellen nas nat his entente |
| To nevere no man, for whom that he so ferde; |
| 740 | For it is seyd, "Men maketh ofte a yerde |
| With which the maker is hymself ybeten |
| In sondry manere," as thise wyse treten, |
| |
| And namelich in his counseil tellynge |
| That toucheth love that oughte ben secree; |
| 745 | For of himself it wol ynough out sprynge, |
| But if that it the bet governed be. |
| Ek som tyme it is a craft to seme fle |
| Fro thyng whych in effect men hunte faste; |
| Al this gan Troilus in his herte caste. |
| |
| 750 | But natheles, whan he hadde herd hym crye |
| "Awake!" he gan to syken wonder soore, |
| And seyde, "Frend, though that I stylle lye, |
| I am nat deef. Now pees, and crye namore, |
| For I have herd thi wordes and thi lore; |
| 755 | But suffre me my meschief to bywaille, |
| For thy proverbes may me naught availle. |
| |
| "Nor other cure kanstow non for me; |
| Ek I nyl nat ben cured; I wol deye. |
| What knowe I of the queene Nyobe? |
| 760 | Lat be thyne olde ensaumples, I the preye." |
| "No," quod Pandarus, "therfore I seye, |
| Swych is delit of foles to bywepe |
| Hire wo, but seken bote they ne kepe. |
| |
| "Now knowe I that ther reson in the failleth. |
| 765 | But tel me, if I wiste what she were |
| For whom that the al this mysaunter ailleth, |
| Dorstestow that I tolde in hire ere |
| Thi wo, sith thow darst naught thiself for feere, |
| And hire bysoughte on the to han som routhe?" |
| 770 | "Why, nay," quod he, "by God and by my trouthe!" |
| |
| "What, nat as bisyly," quod Pandarus, |
| "As though myn owene lyf lay on this nede?" |
| "No, certes, brother," quod this Troilus, |
| "And whi? For that thow scholdest nevere spede." |
| 775 | "Wostow that wel?" -- "Ye, that is out of drede," |
| Quod Troilus; "for al that evere ye konne, |
| She nyl to noon swich wrecche as I ben wonne." |
| |
| Quod Pandarus, "Allas! What may this be, |
| That thow dispeired art thus causeles? |
| 780 | What! lyveth nat thi lady, bendiste? |
| How wostow so that thow art graceles? |
| Swich yvel is nat alwey booteles. |
| Why, put nat impossible thus thi cure, |
| Syn thyng to come is oft in aventure. |
| |
| 785 | "I graunte wel that thow endurest wo |
| As sharp as doth he Ticius in helle, |
| Whos stomak foughles tiren evere moo |
| That hightyn volturis, as bokes telle; |
| But I may nat endure that thow dwelle |
| 790 | In so unskilful an oppynyoun |
| That of thi wo is no curacioun. |
| |
| "But oones nyltow, for thy coward herte, |
| And for thyn ire and folissh wilfulnesse, |
| For wantrust, tellen of thy sorwes smerte, |
| 795 | Ne to thyn owen help don bysynesse |
| As muche as speke a resoun moore or lesse, |
| But list as he that lest of nothyng recche. |
| What womman koude loven swich a wrecche? |
| |
| "What may she demen oother of thy deeth, |
| 800 | If thow thus deye, and she not why it is, |
| But that for feere is yolden up thy breth, |
| For Grekes han biseged us, iwys? |
| Lord, which a thonk than shaltow han of this! |
| Thus wol she seyn, and al the town attones, |
| 805 | `The wrecche is ded, the devel have his bones!' |
| |
| "Thow mayst allone here wepe and crye and knele -- |
| But love a womman that she woot it nought, |
| And she wol quyte it that thow shalt nat fele; |
| Unknowe, unkist, and lost that is unsought. |
| 810 | What, many a man hath love ful deere ybought |
| Twenty wynter that his lady wiste, |
| That nevere yet his lady mouth he kiste. |
| |
| "What sholde he therfore fallen in dispayr, |
| Or be recreant for his owne tene, |
| 815 | Or slen hymself, al be his lady fair? |
| Nay, nay, but evere in oon be fressh and grene |
| To serve and love his deere hertes queene, |
| And thynk it is a guerdon hire to serve, |
| A thousand fold moore than he kan deserve." |
| |
| 820 | Of that word took hede Troilus, |
| And thoughte anon what folie he was inne, |
| And how that soth hym seyde Pandarus, |
| That for to slen hymself myght he nat wynne, |
| But bothe don unmanhod and a synne, |
| 825 | And of his deth his lady naught to wite; |
| For of his wo, God woot, she knew ful lite. |
| |
| And with that thought he gan ful sore syke, |
| And seyde, "Allas! What is me best to do?" |
| To whom Pandare answered, "If the like, |
| 830 | The beste is that thow telle me al thi wo; |
| And have my trouthe, but thow it fynde so |
| I be thi boote, er that it be ful longe, |
| To pieces do me drawe and sithen honge!" |
| |
| "Ye, so thow seyst," quod Troilus tho, "allas! |
| 835 | But, God woot, it is naught the rather so. |
| Ful hard were it to helpen in this cas, |
| For wel fynde I that Fortune is my fo; |
| Ne al the men that riden konne or go |
| May of hire cruel whiel the harm withstonde; |
| 840 | For as hire list she pleyeth with free and bonde." |
| |
| Quod Pandarus, "Than blamestow Fortune |
| For thow art wroth; ye, now at erst I see. |
| Woost thow nat wel that Fortune is comune |
| To everi manere wight in som degree? |
| 845 | And yet thow hast this comfort, lo, parde, |
| That, as hire joies moten overgon, |
| So mote hire sorwes passen everechon. |
| |
| "For if hire whiel stynte any thyng to torne, |
| Than cessed she Fortune anon to be. |
| 850 | Now, sith hire whiel by no way may sojourne, |
| What woostow if hire mutabilite |
| Right as thyselven list wol don by the, |
| Or that she be naught fer fro thyn helpynge? |
| Paraunter thow hast cause for to synge. |
| |
| 855 | "And therfore wostow what I the biseche? |
| Lat be thy wo and tornyng to the grounde; |
| For whoso list have helyng of his leche, |
| To hym byhoveth first unwre his wownde. |
| To Cerberus yn helle ay be I bounde, |
| 860 | Were it for my suster, al thy sorwe, |
| By my wil she sholde al be thyn to-morwe. |
| |
| "Look up, I seye, and telle me what she is |
| Anon, that I may gon about thy nede. |
| Knowe ich hire aught? For my love, telle me this. |
| 865 | Thanne wolde I hopen rather for to spede." |
| Tho gan the veyne of Troilus to blede, |
| For he was hit, and wax al reed for shame. |
| "A ha!" quod Pandare; "Here bygynneth game." |
| |
| And with that word he gan hym for to shake, |
| 870 | And seyde, "Thef, thow shalt hyre name telle." |
| But tho gan sely Troilus for to quake |
| As though men sholde han led hym into helle, |
| And seyde, "Allas, of al my wo the welle, |
| Thanne is my swete fo called Criseyde!" |
| 875 | And wel neigh with the word for feere he deide. |
| |
| And whan that Pandare herde hire name nevene, |
| Lord, he was glad, and seyde, "Frend so deere, |
| Now far aright, for Joves name in hevene. |
| Love hath byset the wel; be of good cheere! |
| 880 | For of good name and wisdom and manere |
| She hath ynough, and ek of gentilesse. |
| If she be fayr, thow woost thyself, I gesse, |
| |
| "Ne nevere saugh a more bountevous |
| Of hire estat, n' a gladder, ne of speche |
| 885 | A frendlyer, n' a more gracious |
| For to do wel, ne lasse hadde nede to seche |
| What for to don; and al this bet to eche, |
| In honour, to as fer as she may strecche, |
| A kynges herte semeth by hyrs a wrecche. |
| |
| 890 | "And forthi loke of good comfort thow be; |
| For certeinly, the ferste poynt is this |
| Of noble corage and wel ordeyne, |
| A man to have pees with hymself, ywis. |
| So oghtist thow, for noht but good it is |
| 895 | To love wel, and in a worthy place; |
| The oghte not to clepe it hap, but grace. |
| |
| "And also thynk, and therwith glade the, |
| That sith thy lady vertuous is al, |
| So foloweth it that there is some pitee |
| 900 | Amonges alle thise other in general; |
| And forthi se that thow, in special, |
| Requere naught that is ayeyns hyre name; |
| For vertu streccheth naught hymself to shame. |
| |
| "But wel is me that evere that I was born, |
| 905 | That thow biset art in so good a place; |
| For by my trouthe, in love I dorste have sworn |
| The sholde nevere han tid thus fayr a grace. |
| And wostow why? For thow were wont to chace |
| At Love in scorn, and for despit him calle |
| 910 | `Seynt Idiot, lord of thise foles alle.' |
| |
| "How often hastow maad thi nyce japes, |
| And seyd that Loves servantz everichone |
| Of nycete ben verray Goddes apes; |
| And some wolde mucche hire mete allone, |
| 915 | Liggyng abedde, and make hem for to grone; |
| And som, thow seydest, hadde a blaunche fevere, |
| And preydest God he sholde nevere kevere. |
| |
| "And som of hem took on hym, for the cold, |
| More than ynough, so seydestow ful ofte. |
| 920 | And som han feyned ofte tyme, and told |
| How that they waken, whan thei slepen softe; |
| And thus they wolde han brought hemself alofte, |
| And natheles were under at the laste. |
| Thus seydestow, and japedest ful faste. |
| |
| 925 | "Yet seydestow that for the moore part |
| Thise loveres wolden speke in general, |
| And thoughten that it was a siker art, |
| For faylyng, for t' assaien overal. |
| Now may I jape of the, if that I shal; |
| 930 | But natheles, though that I sholde deye, |
| That thow art non of tho, I dorste saye. |
| |
| "Now bet thi brest, and sey to God of Love, |
| `Thy grace, lord, for now I me repente, |
| If I mysspak, for now myself I love.' |
| 935 | Thus sey with al thyn herte in good entente." |
| Quod Troilus, "A, lord! I me consente, |
| And preye to the my japes thow foryive, |
| And I shal nevere more whyle I live." |
| |
| "Thow seist wel," quod Pandare, "and now I hope |
| 940 | That thow the goddes wrathe hast al apesed; |
| And sithen thow hast wopen many a drope, |
| And seyd swych thyng wherwith thi god is plesed, |
| Now wolde nevere god but thow were esed! |
| And thynk wel, she of whom rist al thi wo |
| 945 | Hereafter may thy comfort be also. |
| |
| "For thilke grownd that bereth the wedes wikke |
| Bereth ek thise holsom herbes, as ful ofte |
| Next the foule netle, rough and thikke, |
| The rose waxeth swoote and smothe and softe; |
| 950 | And next the valeye is the hil o-lofte; |
| And next the derke nyght the glade morwe; |
| And also joie is next the fyn of sorwe. |
| |
| "Now loke that atempre be thi bridel, |
| And for the beste ay suffre to the tyde, |
| 955 | Or elles al oure labour is on ydel: |
| He hasteth wel that wisely kan abyde. |
| Be diligent and trewe, and ay wel hide; |
| Be lusty, fre; persevere in thy servyse, |
| And al is wel, if thow werke in this wyse. |
| |
| 960 | "But he that departed is in everi place |
| Is nowher hol, as writen clerkes wyse. |
| What wonder is, though swich oon have no grace? |
| Ek wostow how it fareth of som servise, |
| As plaunte a tree or herbe, in sondry wyse, |
| 965 | And on the morwe pulle it up as blyve! |
| No wonder is, though it may nevere thryve. |
| |
| "And sith that God of Love hath the bistowed |
| In place digne unto thi worthinesse, |
| Stond faste, for to good port hastow rowed; |
| 970 | And of thiself, for any hevynesse, |
| Hope alwey wel; for, but if drerinesse |
| Or over-haste oure bothe labour shende, |
| I hope of this to maken a good ende. |
| |
| "And wostow why I am the lasse afered |
| 975 | Of this matere with my nece trete? |
| For this have I herd seyd of wyse lered, |
| Was nevere man or womman yet bigete |
| That was unapt to suffren loves hete, |
| Celestial, or elles love of kynde; |
| 980 | Forthy som grace I hope in hire to fynde. |
| |
| "And for to speke of hire in specyal, |
| Hire beaute to bithynken and hire youthe, |
| It sit hire naught to ben celestial |
| As yet, though that hire liste bothe and kowthe; |
| 985 | But trewely, it sate hire wel right nowthe |
| A worthi knyght to loven and cherice, |
| And but she do, I holde it for a vice. |
| |
| "Wherfore I am, and wol ben, ay redy |
| To peyne me to do yow this servyse; |
| 990 | For bothe yow to plese thus hope I |
| Herafterward; for ye ben bothe wyse, |
| And konne it counseil kepe in swych a wyse |
| That no man shal the wiser of it be; |
| And so we may ben gladed alle thre. |
| |
| 995 | "And, by my trouthe, I have right now of the |
| A good conceyte in my wit, as I gesse, |
| And what it is, I wol now that thow se. |
| I thenke, sith that Love, of his goodnesse, |
| Hath the converted out of wikkednesse, |
| 1000 | That thow shalt ben the beste post, I leve, |
| Of al his lay, and moost his foos to greve. |
| |
| "Ensample why, se now thise wise clerkes, |
| That erren aldermost ayeyn a lawe, |
| And ben converted from hire wikked werkes |
| 1005 | Thorugh grace of God that list hem to hym drawe, |
| Thanne arn thise folk that han moost God in awe, |
| And strengest feythed ben, I undirstonde, |
| And konne an errowr alderbest withstonde." |
| |
| Whan Troilus hadde herd Pandare assented |
| 1010 | To ben his help in lovyng of Cryseyde, |
| Weex of his wo, as who seith, untormented, |
| But hotter weex his love, and thus he seyde, |
| With sobre chere, although his herte pleyde: |
| "Now blisful Venus helpe, er that I sterve, |
| 1015 | Of the, Pandare, I mowe som thank deserve. |
| |
| "But, deere frend, how shal my wo be lesse |
| Til this be doon? And good, ek telle me this: |
| How wiltow seyn of me and my destresse, |
| Lest she be wroth -- this drede I moost, ywys -- |
| 1020 | Or nyl nat here or trowen how it is. |
| Al this drede I, and ek for the manere |
| Of the, hire em, she nyl no swich thyng here." |
| |
| Quod Pandarus, "Thow hast a ful gret care |
| Lest that the cherl may falle out of the moone! |
| 1025 | Whi, Lord! I hate of the thi nyce fare! |
| Whi, entremete of that thow hast to doone! |
| For Goddes love, I bidde the a boone: |
| So lat m' alone, and it shal be thi beste." |
| "Whi, frend," quod he, "now do right as the leste. |
| |
| 1030 | "But herke, Pandare, o word, for I nolde |
| That thow in me wendest so gret folie, |
| That to my lady I desiren sholde |
| That toucheth harm or any vilenye; |
| For dredeles me were levere dye |
| 1035 | Than she of me aught elles understode |
| But that that myghte sownen into goode." |
| |
| Tho lough this Pandare, and anon answerde, |
| "And I thi borugh? Fy! No wight doth but so. |
| I roughte naught though that she stood and herde |
| 1040 | How that thow seist! but farewel, I wol go. |
| Adieu! Be glad! God spede us bothe two! |
| Yef me this labour and this bisynesse, |
| And of my spede be thyn al that swetnesse." |
| |
| Tho Troilus gan doun on knees to falle, |
| 1045 | And Pandare in his armes hente faste, |
| And seyde, "Now, fy on the Grekes alle! |
| Yet, parde, God shal helpe us atte laste. |
| And dredelees, if that my lyf may laste, |
| And God toforn, lo, som of hem shal smerte; |
| 1050 | And yet m' athenketh that this avant m' asterte! |
| |
| "Now, Pandare, I kan na more seye, |
| But, thow wis, thow woost, thow maist, thow art al! |
| My lif, my deth, hol in thyn hond I leye. |
| Help now!" Quod he, "Yis, by mi trowthe, I shal." |
| 1055 | "God yelde the, frend, and this in special," |
| Quod Troilus, "that thow me recomande |
| To hire that to the deth me may comande." |
| |
| This Pandarus, tho desirous to serve |
| His fulle frend, than seyde in this manere: |
| 1060 | "Farwell, and thenk I wol thi thank deserve! |
| Have here my trowthe, and that thow shalt wel here." |
| And went his wey, thenkyng on this matere, |
| And how he best myghte hire biseche of grace, |
| And fynde a tyme therto, and a place. |
| |
| 1065 | For everi wight that hath an hous to founde |
| Ne renneth naught the werk for to bygynne |
| With rakel hond, but he wol bide a stounde, |
| And sende his hertes line out fro withinne |
| Aldirfirst his purpos for to wynne. |
| 1070 | Al this Pandare in his herte thoughte, |
| And caste his werk ful wisely or he wroughte. |
| |
| But Troilus lay tho no lenger down, |
| But up anon upon his stede bay, |
| And in the feld he pleyde tho leoun; |
| 1075 | Wo was that Grek that with hym mette a-day! |
| And in the town his manere tho forth ay |
| So goodly was, and gat hym so in grace, |
| That ecch hym loved that loked on his face. |
| |
| For he bicom the frendlieste wight, |
| 1080 | The gentilest, and ek the mooste fre, |
| The thriftiest, and oon the beste knyght |
| That in his tyme was or myghte be; |
| Dede were his japes and his cruelte, |
| His heighe port and his manere estraunge, |
| 1085 | And ecch of tho gan for a vertu chaunge. |
| |
| Now lat us stynte of Troilus a stounde, |
| That fareth lik a man that hurt is soore, |
| And is somdeel of akyngge of his wownde |
| Ylissed wel, but heeled no deel moore, |
| 1090 | And, as an esy pacyent, the loore |
| Abit of hym that gooth aboute his cure; |
| And thus he dryeth forth his aventure. |