| |
| Liggyng in oost, as I have seyd er this, |
| 30 | The Grekys stronge aboute Troie town, |
| Byfel that, whan that Phebus shynyng is |
| Upon the brest of Hercules lyoun, |
| That Ector, with ful many a bold baroun, |
| Caste on a day with Grekis for to fighte, |
| 35 | As he was wont, to greve hem what he myghte. |
| |
| Not I how longe or short it was bitwene |
| This purpos and that day they issen mente, |
| But on a day, wel armed, brighte, and shene, |
| Ector and many a worthi wight out wente, |
| 40 | With spere in honde and bigge bowes bente; |
| And in the berd, withouten lenger lette, |
| Hire fomen in the feld hem faste mette. |
| |
| The longe day, with speres sharpe igrounde, |
| With arwes, dartes, swerdes, maces felle, |
| 45 | They fighte and bringen hors and man to grounde, |
| And with hire axes out the braynes quelle. |
| But in the laste shour, soth for to telle, |
| The folk of Troie hemselven so mysledden |
| That with the worse at nyght homward they fledden. |
| |
| 50 | At which day was taken Antenore, |
| Maugre Polydamas or Monesteo, |
| Santippe, Sarpedoun, Polynestore, |
| Polite, or ek the Trojan daun Rupheo, |
| And other lasse folk as Phebuseo; |
| 55 | So that, for harm, that day the folk of Troie |
| Dredden to lese a gret part of hire joie. |
| |
| Of Priamus was yeve, at Grek requeste, |
| A tyme of trewe, and tho they gonnen trete |
| Hire prisoners to chaungen, meste and leste, |
| 60 | And for the surplus yeven sommes grete. |
| This thing anon was couth in every strete, |
| Bothe in th' assege, in town, and everywhere, |
| And with the firste it com to Calkas ere. |
| |
| Whan Calkas knew this tretis sholde holde, |
| 65 | In consistorie among the Grekes soone |
| He gan in thringe forth with lordes olde, |
| And sette hym there as he was wont to doone; |
| And with a chaunged face hem bad a boone, |
| For love of God, to don that reverence, |
| 70 | To stynte noyse and yeve hym audience. |
| |
| Than seyde he thus: "Lo, lordes myn, ich was |
| Troian, as it is knowen out of drede; |
| And, if that yow remembre, I am Calkas, |
| That alderfirst yaf comfort to youre nede, |
| 75 | And tolde wel how that ye shulden spede. |
| For dredeles, thorugh yow shal in a stownde |
| Ben Troie ybrend and beten down to grownde. |
| |
| "And in what forme, or in what manere wise, |
| This town to shende, and al youre lust t' acheve, |
| 80 | Ye han er this wel herd me yow devyse; |
| This knowe ye, my lordes, as I leve. |
| And for the Grekis weren me so leeve, |
| I com myself, in my propre persone, |
| To teche in this how yow was best to doone. |
| |
| 85 | "Havyng unto my tresor ne my rente |
| Right no resport, to respect of youre ese, |
| Thus al my good I lefte and to yow wente, |
| Wenyng in this yow lordes for to plese. |
| But al that los ne doth me no disese. |
| 90 | I vouchesauf, as wisly have I joie, |
| For yow to lese al that I have in Troie, |
| |
| "Save of a doughter that I lefte, allas, |
| Slepyng at hom, whanne out of Troie I sterte. |
| O sterne, O cruel fader that I was! |
| 95 | How myghte I have in that so hard an herte? |
| Allas, I ne hadde ibrought hire in hire sherte! |
| For sorwe of which I wol nought lyve to-morwe, |
| But if ye lordes rewe upon my sorwe. |
| |
| "For by that cause I say no tyme er now |
| 100 | Hire to delivere, ich holden have my pees; |
| But now or nevere, if that it like yow, |
| I may hire have right soone, douteles. |
| O help and grace amonges al this prees! |
| Rewe on this olde caytyf in destresse, |
| 105 | Syn I thorugh yow have al this hevynesse. |
| |
| "Ye have now kaught and fetered in prisoun |
| Troians ynowe, and if youre willes be, |
| My child with oon may han redempcioun; |
| Now for the love of God and of bounte, |
| 110 | Oon of so fele, allas, so yive hym me! |
| What nede were it this preiere for to werne, |
| Syn ye shul bothe han folk and town as yerne? |
| |
| "On peril of my lif, I shal nat lye; |
| Appollo hath me told it feithfully; |
| 115 | I have ek founde it be astronomye, |
| By sort, and by augurye ek, trewely, |
| And dar wel say, the tyme is faste by |
| That fire and flaumbe on al the town shal sprede, |
| And thus shal Troie torne to asshen dede. |
| |
| 120 | "For certein, Phebus and Neptunus bothe, |
| That makeden the walles of the town, |
| Ben with the folk of Troie alwey so wrothe |
| That they wol brynge it to confusioun, |
| Right in despit of kyng Lameadoun; |
| 125 | Bycause he nolde payen hem here hire, |
| The town of Troie shal ben set on-fire." |
| |
| Tellyng his tale alwey, this olde greye, |
| Humble in his speche and in his lokyng eke, |
| The salte teris from his eyen tweye |
| 130 | Ful faste ronnen down by either cheke. |
| So longe he gan of socour hem biseke |
| That, for to hele hym of his sorwes soore, |
| They yave hym Antenor, withouten moore. |
| |
| But who was glad ynough but Calkas tho? |
| 135 | And of this thyng ful soone his nedes leyde |
| On hem that sholden for the tretis go, |
| And hem for Antenor ful ofte preyde |
| To bryngen hom kyng Toas and Criseyde. |
| And whan Priam his save-garde sente, |
| 140 | Th' embassadours to Troie streight they wente. |
| |
| The cause itold of hire comyng, the olde |
| Priam, the kyng, ful soone in general |
| Let her-upon his parlement to holde, |
| Of which th' effect rehercen yow I shal. |
| 145 | Th' embassadours ben answerd for fynal; |
| Th' eschaunge of prisoners and al this nede |
| Hem liketh wel, and forth in they procede. |
| |
| This Troilus was present in the place |
| Whan axed was for Antenor Criseyde, |
| 150 | For which ful soone chaungen gan his face, |
| As he that with tho wordes wel neigh deyde. |
| But natheles he no word to it seyde, |
| Lest men sholde his affeccioun espye; |
| With mannes herte he gan his sorwes drye, |
| |
| 155 | And ful of angwissh and of grisly drede |
| Abod what lordes wolde unto it seye; |
| And if they wolde graunte -- as God forbede -- |
| Th' eschaunge of hire, than thoughte he thynges tweye: |
| First, how to save hire honour, and what weye |
| 160 | He myghte best th' eschaunge of hire withstonde. |
| Ful faste he caste how al this myghte stonde. |
| |
| Love hym made al prest to don hire byde, |
| And rather dyen than she sholde go; |
| But Resoun seyde hym, on that other syde, |
| 165 | "Withouten assent of hire ne do nat so, |
| Lest for thi werk she wolde be thy fo, |
| And seyn that thorugh thy medlynge is iblowe |
| Youre bother love, ther it was erst unknowe." |
| |
| For which he gan deliberen, for the beste, |
| 170 | That though the lordes wolde that she wente, |
| He wolde lat hem graunte what hem leste, |
| And telle his lady first what that they mente; |
| And whan that she hadde seyd hym hire entente, |
| Therafter wolde he werken also blyve, |
| 175 | Theigh al the world ayeyn it wolde stryve. |
| |
| Ector, which that wel the Grekis herde, |
| For Antenor how they wolde han Criseyde, |
| Gan it withstonde, and sobrely answerde: |
| "Syres, she nys no prisonere," he seyde; |
| 180 | "I not on yow who that this charge leyde, |
| But, on my part, ye may eftsone hem telle, |
| We usen here no wommen for to selle." |
| |
| The noyse of peple up stirte thanne at ones, |
| As breme as blase of straw iset on-fire; |
| 185 | For infortune it wolde, for the nones, |
| They sholden hire confusioun desire. |
| "Ector," quod they, "what goost may yow enspyre |
| This womman thus to shilde and don us leese |
| Daun Antenor -- a wrong wey now ye chese -- |
| |
| 190 | "That is so wys and ek so bold baroun? |
| And we han nede to folk, as men may se. |
| He is ek oon the grettest of this town. |
| O Ector, lat tho fantasies be! |
| O kyng Priam," quod they, "thus sygge we, |
| 195 | That al oure vois is to forgon Criseyde." |
| And to deliveren Antenor they preyde. |
| |
| O Juvenal, lord, trewe is thy sentence, |
| That litel wyten folk what is to yerne, |
| That they ne fynde in hire desir offence; |
| 200 | For cloude of errour let hem to discerne |
| What best is. And lo, here ensample as yerne: |
| This folk desiren now deliveraunce |
| Of Antenor, that brought hem to meschaunce, |
| |
| For he was after traitour to the town |
| 205 | Of Troye. Allas, they quytte hym out to rathe! |
| O nyce world, lo, thy discrecioun! |
| Criseyde, which that nevere dide hem scathe, |
| Shal now no lenger in hire blisse bathe; |
| But Antenor, he shal com hom to towne, |
| 210 | And she shal out; thus seyden here and howne. |
| |
| For which delibered was by parlement |
| For Antenor to yelden out Criseyde, |
| And it pronounced by the president, |
| Altheigh that Ector "nay" ful ofte preyde. |
| 215 | And fynaly, what wight that it withseyde, |
| It was for nought; it moste ben and sholde, |
| For substaunce of the parlement it wolde. |
| |
| Departed out of parlement echone, |
| This Troilus, withouten wordes mo, |
| 220 | Unto his chambre spedde hym faste allone, |
| But if it were a man of his or two |
| The which he bad out faste for to go |
| Bycause he wolde slepen, as he seyde, |
| And hastily upon his bed hym leyde. |
| |
| 225 | And as in wynter leves ben biraft, |
| Ech after other, til the tree be bare, |
| So that ther nys but bark and braunche ilaft, |
| Lith Troilus, byraft of ech welfare, |
| Ibounden in the blake bark of care, |
| 230 | Disposed wood out of his wit to breyde, |
| So sore hym sat the chaungynge of Criseyde. |
| |
| He rist hym up, and every dore he shette, |
| And wyndow ek, and tho this sorwful man |
| Upon his beddes syde adown hym sette, |
| 235 | Ful lik a ded ymage, pale and wan; |
| And in his brest the heped wo bygan |
| Out breste, and he to werken in this wise |
| In his woodnesse, as I shal yow devyse. |
| |
| Right as the wylde bole bygynneth sprynge, |
| 240 | Now her, now ther, idarted to the herte, |
| And of his deth roreth in compleynynge, |
| Right so gan he aboute the chaumbre sterte, |
| Smytyng his brest ay with his fistes smerte; |
| His hed to the wal, his body to the grounde |
| 245 | Ful ofte he swapte, hymselven to confounde. |
| |
| His eyen two, for piete of herte, |
| Out stremeden as swifte welles tweye; |
| The heighe sobbes of his sorwes smerte |
| His speche hym refte; unnethes myghte he seye, |
| 250 | "O deth, allas, why nyltow do me deye? |
| Acorsed be that day which that Nature |
| Shop me to ben a lyves creature!" |
| |
| But after, whan the furie and al the rage, |
| Which that his herte twiste and faste threste, |
| 255 | By lengthe of tyme somwhat gan aswage, |
| Upon his bed he leyde hym down to reste. |
| But tho bygonne his teeris more out breste, |
| That wonder is the body may suffise |
| To half this wo which that I yow devyse. |
| |
| 260 | Than seyde he thus: "Fortune, allas the while! |
| What have I don? What have I thus agylt? |
| How myghtestow for rowthe me bygile? |
| Is ther no grace, and shal I thus be spilt? |
| Shal thus Creiseyde awey, for that thow wilt? |
| 265 | Allas, how maistow in thyn herte fynde |
| To ben to me thus cruwel and unkynde? |
| |
| "Have I the nought honoured al my lyve, |
| As thow wel woost, above the goddes alle? |
| Whi wiltow me fro joie thus deprive? |
| 270 | O Troilus, what may men now the calle |
| But wrecche of wrecches, out of honour falle |
| Into miserie, in which I wol bewaille |
| Criseyde -- allas! -- til that the breth me faille? |
| |
| "Allas, Fortune, if that my lif in joie |
| 275 | Displesed hadde unto thi foule envye, |
| Why ne haddestow my fader, kyng of Troye, |
| Byraft the lif, or don my bretheren dye, |
| Or slayn myself, that thus compleyne and crye -- |
| I, combre-world, that may of nothyng serve, |
| 280 | But evere dye and nevere fulli sterve. |
| |
| "If that Criseyde allone were me laft, |
| Nought roughte I whiderward thow woldest me steere; |
| And hire, allas, than hastow me biraft. |
| But everemore, lo, this is thi manere, |
| 285 | To reve a wight that most is to hym deere, |
| To preve in that thi gerful violence. |
| Thus am I lost; ther helpeth no diffence. |
| |
| "O verrey lord, O Love! O god, allas! |
| That knowest best myn herte and al my thought, |
| 290 | What shal my sorwful lif don in this cas, |
| If I forgo that I so deere have bought? |
| Syn ye Criseyde and me han fully brought |
| Into youre grace, and bothe oure hertes seled, |
| How may ye suffre, allas, it be repeled? |
| |
| 295 | "What shal I don? I shal, while I may dure |
| On lyve in torment and in cruwel peyne |
| This infortune or this disaventure, |
| Allone as I was born, iwys, compleyne; |
| Ne nevere wol I seen it shyne or reyne, |
| 300 | But ende I wol, as Edippe, in derknesse |
| My sorwful lif, and dyen in distresse. |
| |
| "O wery goost, that errest to and fro, |
| Why nyltow fleen out of the wofulleste |
| Body that evere myghte on grounde go? |
| 305 | O soule, lurkynge in this wo, unneste, |
| Fle forth out of myn herte, and lat it breste, |
| And folowe alwey Criseyde, thi lady dere. |
| Thi righte place is now no lenger here. |
| |
| "O woful eyen two, syn youre disport |
| 310 | Was al to sen Criseydes eyen brighte, |
| What shal ye don but, for my discomfort, |
| Stonden for naught, and wepen out youre sighte, |
| Syn she is queynt that wont was yow to lighte? |
| In vayn fro this forth have ich eyen tweye |
| 315 | Ifourmed, syn youre vertu is aweye. |
| |
| "O my Criseyde, O lady sovereigne |
| Of thilke woful soule that thus crieth, |
| Who shal now yeven comfort to my peyne? |
| Allas, no wight. But whan myn herte dieth, |
| 320 | My spirit, which that so unto yow hieth, |
| Receyve in gree, for that shal ay yow serve; |
| Forthi no fors is, though the body sterve. |
| |
| "O ye loveris, that heigh upon the whiel |
| Ben set of Fortune, in good aventure, |
| 325 | God leve that ye fynde ay love of stiel, |
| And longe mote youre lif in joie endure! |
| But whan ye comen by my sepulture, |
| Remembreth that youre felawe resteth there; |
| For I loved ek, though ich unworthi were. |
| |
| 330 | "O oold, unholsom, and myslyved man -- |
| Calkas I mene -- allas, what eiled the |
| To ben a Grek, syn thow art born Troian? |
| O Calkas, which that wolt my bane be, |
| In corsed tyme was thow born for me! |
| 335 | As wolde blisful Jove, for his joie, |
| That I the hadde wher I wolde, in Troie!" |
| |
| A thousand sikes, hotter than the gleede, |
| Out of his brest ech after other wente, |
| Medled with pleyntes new, his wo to feede, |
| 340 | For which his woful teris nevere stente; |
| And shortly, so his peynes hym torente, |
| And wex so mat, that joie nor penaunce |
| He feleth non, but lith forth in a traunce. |
| |
| Pandare, which that in the parlement |
| 345 | Hadde herd what every lord and burgeys seyde, |
| And how ful graunted was by oon assent |
| For Antenor to yelden so Criseyde, |
| Gan wel neigh wood out of his wit to breyde, |
| So that for wo he nyste what he mente, |
| 350 | But in a rees to Troilus he wente. |
| |
| A certeyn knyght that for the tyme kepte |
| The chambre door undide it hym anon; |
| And Pandare, that ful tendreliche wepte, |
| Into the derke chambre, as stille as ston, |
| 355 | Toward the bed gan softely to gon, |
| So confus that he nyste what to seye; |
| For verray wo his wit was neigh aweye. |
| |
| And with his chiere and lokyng al totorn |
| For sorwe of this, and with his armes folden, |
| 360 | He stood this woful Troilus byforn, |
| And on his pitous face he gan byholden. |
| But Lord, so ofte gan his herte colden, |
| Seyng his frend in wo, whos hevynesse |
| His herte slough, as thoughte hym, for destresse. |
| |
| 365 | This woful wight, this Troilus, that felte |
| His frend Pandare ycomen hym to se, |
| Gan as the snow ayeyn the sonne melte; |
| For which this sorwful Pandare, of pitee, |
| Gan for to wepe as tendreliche as he; |
| 370 | And specheles thus ben thise ilke tweye, |
| That neither myghte o word for sorwe seye. |
| |
| But at the laste this woful Troilus, |
| Neigh ded for smert, gan bresten out to rore, |
| And with a sorwful noise he seyde thus, |
| 375 | Among hise sobbes and his sikes sore: |
| "Lo, Pandare, I am ded, withouten more. |
| Hastow nat herd at parlement," he seyde, |
| "For Antenor how lost is my Criseyde?" |
| |
| This Pandarus, ful ded and pale of hewe, |
| 380 | Ful pitously answerde and seyde, "Yis! |
| As wisly were it fals as it is trewe, |
| That I have herd, and woot al how it is. |
| O mercy, God, who wolde have trowed this? |
| Who wolde have wend that in so litel a throwe |
| 385 | Fortune oure joie wold han overthrowe? |
| |
| "For in this world ther is no creature, |
| As to my dom, that ever saugh ruyne |
| Straunger than this, thorugh cas or aventure. |
| But who may al eschue, or al devyne? |
| 390 | Swich is this world! Forthi I thus diffyne: |
| Ne trust no wight to fynden in Fortune |
| Ay propretee; hire yiftes ben comune. |
| |
| "But telle me this: whi thow art now so mad |
| To sorwen thus? Whi listow in this wise, |
| 395 | Syn thi desir al holly hastow had, |
| So that, by right, it oughte ynough suffise? |
| But I, that nevere felte in my servyse |
| A frendly cheere or lokyng of an eye, |
| Lat me thus wepe and wailen til I deye. |
| |
| 400 | "And over al this, as thow wel woost thiselve, |
| This town is ful of ladys al aboute; |
| And, to my doom, fairer than swiche twelve |
| As evere she was, shal I fynde in som route -- |
| Yee, on or two, withouten any doute. |
| 405 | Forthi be glad, myn owen deere brother! |
| If she be lost, we shal recovere an other. |
| |
| "What! God forbede alwey that ech plesaunce |
| In o thyng were and in non other wight! |
| If oon kan synge, an other kan wel daunce; |
| 410 | If this be goodly, she is glad and light; |
| And this is fair, and that kan good aright. |
| Ech for his vertu holden is for deere, |
| Both heroner and faucoun for ryvere. |
| |
| "And ek, as writ Zanzis, that was ful wys, |
| 415 | `The newe love out chaceth ofte the olde'; |
| And upon newe cas lith newe avys. |
| Thenk ek, thi lif to saven artow holde. |
| Swich fir, by proces, shal of kynde colde, |
| For syn it is but casuel plesaunce, |
| 420 | Som cas shal putte it out of remembraunce; |
| |
| "For also seur as day comth after nyght, |
| The newe love, labour, or oother wo, |
| Or elles selde seynge of a wight, |
| Don olde affecciouns alle over-go. |
| 425 | And, for thi part, thow shalt have oon of tho |
| T' abregge with thi bittre peynes smerte; |
| Absence of hire shal dryve hire out of herte." |
| |
| Thise wordes seyde he for the nones alle, |
| To help his frend, lest he for sorwe deyde; |
| 430 | For douteles, to don his wo to falle, |
| He roughte nought what unthrift that he seyde. |
| But Troilus, that neigh for sorwe deyde, |
| Took litel heede of al that evere he mente -- |
| Oon ere it herde, at tother out it wente -- |
| |
| 435 | But at the laste answerde, and seyde, "Frend, |
| This lechecraft, or heeled thus to be, |
| Were wel sittyng, if that I were a fend -- |
| To traysen a wight that trewe is unto me! |
| I pray God lat this conseil nevere ythe; |
| 440 | But do me rather sterve anon-right here, |
| Er I thus do as thow me woldest leere! |
| |
| "She that I serve, iwis, what so thow seye, |
| To whom myn herte enhabit is by right, |
| Shal han me holly hires til that I deye. |
| 445 | For Pandarus, syn I have trouthe hire hight, |
| I wol nat ben untrewe for no wight, |
| But as hire man I wol ay lyve and sterve, |
| And nevere other creature serve. |
| |
| "And ther thow seist thow shalt as faire fynde |
| 450 | As she, lat be; make no comparisoun |
| To creature yformed here by kynde! |
| O leve Pandare, in conclusioun, |
| I wol nat ben of thyn opynyoun |
| Touchyng al this. For which I the biseche, |
| 455 | So hold thi pees; thow sleest me with thi speche! |
| |
| "Thow biddest me I shulde love another |
| Al fresshly newe, and lat Criseyde go! |
| It lith nat in my power, leeve brother; |
| And though I myght, I wolde nat do so. |
| 460 | But kanstow playen raket, to and fro, |
| Nettle in, dok out, now this, now that, Pandare? |
| Now foule falle hire for thi wo that care! |
| |
| "Thow farest ek by me, thow Pandarus, |
| As he that, whan a wight is wo bygon, |
| 465 | He cometh to hym a paas and seith right thus: |
| `Thynk nat on smert, and thow shalt fele non.' |
| Thow moost me first transmewen in a ston, |
| And reve me my passiones alle, |
| Er thow so lightly do my wo to falle. |
| |
| 470 | "The deth may wel out of my brest departe |
| The lif, so longe may this sorwe myne, |
| But fro my soule shal Criseydes darte |
| Out nevere mo; but down with Proserpyne, |
| Whan I am ded, I wol go wone in pyne, |
| 475 | And ther I wol eternaly compleyne |
| My wo, and how that twynned be we tweyne. |
| |
| "Thow hast here made an argument for fyn, |
| How that it sholde a lasse peyne be |
| Criseyde to forgon, for she was myn |
| 480 | And lyved in ese and in felicite. |
| Whi gabbestow, that seydest unto me |
| That `hym is wors that is fro wele ythrowe, |
| Than he hadde erst noon of that wele yknowe'? |
| |
| "But tel me now, syn that the thynketh so light |
| 485 | To changen so in love ay to and fro, |
| Whi hastow nat don bisily thi myght |
| To chaungen hire that doth the al thi wo? |
| Why nyltow lete hire fro thyn herte go? |
| Whi nyltow love an other lady swete, |
| 490 | That may thyn herte setten in quiete? |
| |
| "If thou hast had in love ay yet myschaunce |
| And kanst it not out of thyn herte dryve, |
| I, that levede yn lust and in plesaunce |
| With here, as muche as creature on lyve, |
| 495 | How sholde I that foryete, and that so blyve? |
| O, where hastow ben hid so longe in muwe, |
| That kanst so wel and formely arguwe? |
| |
| "Nay, God wot, nought worth is al thi red, |
| For which, for what that evere may byfalle, |
| 500 | Withouten wordes mo, I wol be ded. |
| O deth, that endere art of sorwes alle, |
| Com now, syn I so ofte after the calle; |
| For sely is that deth, soth for to seyne, |
| That, ofte ycleped, cometh and endeth peyne. |
| |
| 505 | "Wel wot I, whil my lyf was in quyete, |
| Er thow me slowe, I wolde have yeven hire; |
| But now thi comynge is to me so swete |
| That in this world I nothing so desire. |
| O deth, syn with this sorwe I am a-fyre, |
| 510 | Thou other do me anoon yn teris drenche, |
| Or with thi colde strok myn hete quenche. |
| |
| "Syn that thou sleest so fele in sondry wyse |
| Ayens hire wil, unpreyed, day and nyght, |
| Do me at my requeste this service: |
| 515 | Delyvere now the world -- so dostow right -- |
| Of me, that am the wofulleste wyght |
| That evere was; for tyme is that I sterve, |
| Syn in this world of right nought may I serve." |
| |
| This Troylus in teris gan distille, |
| 520 | As licour out of a lambyc ful faste; |
| And Pandarus gan holde his tunge stille, |
| And to the ground his eyen doun he caste. |
| But natheles, thus thought he at the laste: |
| "What! Parde, rather than my felawe deye, |
| 525 | Yet shal I somwhat more unto hym seye." |
| |
| And seyde, "Frend, syn thow hast swych distresse, |
| And syn the list myn argumentz to blame, |
| Why nylt thiselven helpen don redresse |
| And with thy manhod letten al this grame? |
| 530 | Go ravysshe here! Ne kanstow nat, for shame? |
| And other lat here out of towne fare, |
| Or hold here stille, and leve thi nyce fare. |
| |
| "Artow in Troie, and hast non hardyment |
| To take a womman which that loveth the |
| 535 | And wolde hireselven ben of thyn assent? |
| Now is nat this a nyce vanitee? |
| Ris up anon, and lat this wepyng be, |
| And kith thow art a man; for in this houre |
| I wol ben ded, or she shal bleven oure." |
| |
| 540 | To this answerde hym Troilus ful softe, |
| And seyde, "Parde, leve brother deere, |
| Al this have I myself yet thought ful ofte, |
| And more thyng than thow devysest here. |
| But whi this thyng is laft, thow shalt wel here; |
| 545 | And whan thow me hast yeve an audience, |
| Therafter maystow telle al thi sentence. |
| |
| "First, syn thow woost this town hath al this werre |
| For ravysshyng of wommen so by myght, |
| It sholde nought be suffred me to erre, |
| 550 | As it stant now, ne don so gret unright. |
| I sholde han also blame of every wight, |
| My fadres graunt if that I so withstoode, |
| Syn she is chaunged for the townes goode. |
| |
| "I have ek thought, so it were hire assent, |
| 555 | To axe hire at my fader, of his grace; |
| Than thynke I this were hire accusement, |
| Syn wel I woot I may hire nought purchace; |
| For syn my fader, in so heigh a place |
| As parlement hath hire eschaunge enseled, |
| 560 | He nyl for me his lettre be repeled. |
| |
| "Yet drede I moost hire herte to perturbe |
| With violence, if I do swich a game; |
| For if I wolde it openly desturbe, |
| It mooste be disclaundre to hire name. |
| 565 | And me were levere ded than hire diffame -- |
| As nolde God but if I sholde have |
| Hire honour levere than my lif to save! |
| |
| "Thus am I lost, for aught that I kan see. |
| For certeyn is, syn that I am hire knyght, |
| 570 | I moste hire honour levere han than me |
| In every cas, as lovere ought of right. |
| Thus am I with desir and reson twight: |
| Desir for to destourben hire me redeth, |
| And reson nyl nat; so myn herte dredeth." |
| |
| 575 | Thus wepyng that he koude nevere cesse, |
| He seyde, "Allas, how shal I, wrecche, fare? |
| For wel fele I alwey my love encresse, |
| And hope is lasse and lasse alway, Pandare. |
| Encressen ek the causes of my care. |
| 580 | So weilaway, whi nyl myn herte breste? |
| For, as in love, ther is but litel reste." |
| |
| Pandare answerde, "Frend, thow maist, for me, |
| Don as the list; but hadde ich it so hoote, |
| And thyn estat, she sholde go with me, |
| 585 | Though al this town cride on this thyng by note. |
| I nolde sette at al that noys a grote! |
| For whan men han wel cryd, than wol they rowne; |
| Ek wonder last but nyne nyght nevere in towne. |
| |
| "Devyne not in resoun ay so depe |
| 590 | Ne preciously, but help thiself anon. |
| Bet is that othere than thiselven wepe, |
| And namely, syn ye two ben al on, |
| Ris up, for by myn hed, she shal not goon! |
| And rather be in blame a lite ifounde |
| 595 | Than sterve here as a gnat, withouten wounde. |
| |
| "It is no rape, in my dom, ne no vice, |
| Hire to witholden that ye love moost; |
| Peraunter she myghte holde the for nyce |
| To late hire go thus unto the Grekis oost. |
| 600 | Thenk ek Fortune, as wel thiselven woost, |
| Helpeth hardy man unto his enprise, |
| And weyveth wrecches for hire cowardise. |
| |
| "And though thy lady wolde a lite hire greve, |
| Thow shalt thiself thi pees hereafter make; |
| 605 | But as for me, certeyn, I kan nat leve |
| That she wolde it as now for yvel take. |
| Whi sholde thanne of ferd thyn herte quake? |
| Thenk ek how Paris hath, that is thi brother, |
| A love; and whi shaltow nat have another? |
| |
| 610 | "And Troilus, o thyng I dar the swere: |
| That if Criseyde, which that is thi lief, |
| Now loveth the as wel as thow dost here, |
| God help me so, she nyl nat take a-grief, |
| Theigh thow do boote anon in this meschief; |
| 615 | And if she wilneth fro the for to passe, |
| Thanne is she fals; so love hire wel the lasse. |
| |
| "Forthi tak herte, and thynk right as a knyght: |
| Thorugh love is broken al day every lawe. |
| Kith now somwhat thi corage and thi myght; |
| 620 | Have mercy on thiself for any awe. |
| Lat nat this wrecched wo thyn herte gnawe, |
| But manly sette the world on six and sevene; |
| And if thow deye a martyr, go to hevene! |
| |
| "I wol myself ben with the at this dede, |
| 625 | Theigh ich and al my kyn upon a stownde |
| Shulle in a strete as dogges liggen dede, |
| Thorugh-girt with many a wid and blody wownde; |
| In every cas I wol a frend be founde. |
| And if the list here sterven as a wrecche, |
| 630 | Adieu, the devel spede hym that it recche!" |
| |
| This Troilus gan with tho wordes quyken, |
| And seyde, "Frend, graunt mercy, ich assente. |
| But certeynly thow maist nat so me priken, |
| Ne peyne non ne may me so tormente, |
| 635 | That, for no cas, it is nat myn entente, |
| At shorte wordes, though I deyen sholde, |
| To ravysshe hire, but if hireself it wolde." |
| |
| "Whi, so mene I," quod Pandare, "al this day. |
| But telle me thanne, hastow hire wil assayed, |
| 640 | That sorwest thus?" And he answerde hym, "Nay." |
| "Wherof artow," quod Pandare, "thanne amayed, |
| That nost nat that she wol ben yvele appayed |
| To ravysshe hire, syn thow hast nought ben there, |
| But if that Jove told it in thyn ere? |
| |
| 645 | "Forthi ris up, as nought ne were, anon, |
| And wassh thi face, and to the kyng thow wende, |
| Or he may wondren whider thow art goon. |
| Thow most with wisdom hym and othere blende, |
| Or, upon cas, he may after the sende |
| 650 | Er thow be war; and shortly, brother deere, |
| Be glad, and lat me werke in this matere, |
| |
| "For I shal shape it so, that sikerly |
| Thow shalt this nyght som tyme, in som manere, |
| Come speken with thi lady pryvely, |
| 655 | And by hire wordes ek, and by hire cheere, |
| Thow shalt ful sone aperceyve and wel here |
| Al hire entente, and in this cas the beste. |
| And far now wel, for in this point I reste." |
| |
| The swifte Fame, which that false thynges |
| 660 | Egal reporteth lik the thynges trewe, |
| Was thorughout Troie yfled with preste wynges |
| Fro man to man, and made this tale al newe, |
| How Calkas doughter, with hire brighte hewe, |
| At parlement, withouten wordes more, |
| 665 | Ygraunted was in chaunge of Antenore. |
| |
| The whiche tale anon-right as Criseyde |
| Hadde herd, she, which that of hire fader roughte, |
| As in this cas, right nought, ne whan he deyde, |
| Ful bisily to Jupiter bisoughte |
| 670 | Yeve hem meschaunce that this tretis broughte; |
| But shortly, lest thise tales sothe were, |
| She dorst at no wight asken it, for fere. |
| |
| As she that hadde hire herte and al hire mynde |
| On Troilus iset so wonder faste |
| 675 | That al this world ne myghte hire love unbynde, |
| Ne Troilus out of hire herte caste, |
| She wol ben his, while that hire lif may laste. |
| And thus she brenneth both in love and drede, |
| So that she nyste what was best to reede. |
| |
| 680 | But as men seen in towne and al aboute |
| That wommen usen frendes to visite, |
| So to Criseyde of wommen com a route, |
| For pitous joie, and wenden hire delite; |
| And with hire tales, deere ynough a myte, |
| 685 | Thise wommen, which that in the cite dwelle, |
| They sette hem down and seyde as I shall telle. |
| |
| Quod first that oon, "I am glad, trewely, |
| Bycause of yow, that shal youre fader see." |
| Another seyde, "Ywis, so nam nat I, |
| 690 | For al to litel hath she with us be." |
| Quod tho the thridde, "I hope, ywis, that she |
| Shal bryngen us the pees on every syde, |
| That, whan she goth, almyghty God hire gide!" |
| |
| Tho wordes and tho wommanysshe thynges, |
| 695 | She herde hem right as though she thennes were; |
| For God it woot, hire herte on othir thyng is. |
| Although the body sat among hem there, |
| Hire advertence is alwey elleswhere, |
| For Troilus ful faste hire soule soughte; |
| 700 | Withouten word, on hym alwey she thoughte. |
| |
| Thise wommen, that thus wenden hire to plese, |
| Aboute naught gonne alle hire tales spende. |
| Swich vanyte ne kan don hire non ese, |
| As she that al this mene while brende |
| 705 | Of other passioun than that they wende, |
| So that she felte almost hire herte dye |
| For wo and wery of that compaignie. |
| |
| For which no lenger myghte she restreyne |
| Hir teeris, so they gonnen up to welle, |
| 710 | That yaven signes of the bittre peyne |
| In which hir spirit was, and moste dwelle, |
| Remembryng hir, fro heven into which helle |
| She fallen was, syn she forgoth the syghte |
| Of Troilus, and sorwfully she sighte. |
| |
| 715 | And thilke fooles sittynge hire aboute |
| Wenden that she wepte and siked sore |
| Bycause that she sholde out of that route |
| Departe, and nevere pleye with hem more. |
| And they that hadde yknowen hire of yore |
| 720 | Seigh hire so wepe and thoughte it kyndenesse, |
| And ech of hem wepte ek for hire destresse. |
| |
| And bisyly they gonnen hire comforten |
| Of thyng, God woot, on which she litel thoughte; |
| And with hire tales wenden hire disporten, |
| 725 | And to be glad they often hire bysoughte; |
| But swich an ese therwith they hire wroughte, |
| Right as a man is esed for to feele |
| For ache of hed to clawen hym on his heele! |
| |
| But after al this nyce vanyte |
| 730 | They toke hire leve, and hom they wenten alle. |
| Criseyde, ful of sorwful piete, |
| Into hire chambre up went out of the halle, |
| And on hire bed she gan for ded to falle, |
| In purpos nevere thennes for to rise; |
| 735 | And thus she wroughte, as I shal yow devyse. |
| |
| Hire ownded heer, that sonnyssh was of hewe, |
| She rente, and ek hire fyngeres longe and smale |
| She wrong ful ofte, and bad God on hire rewe, |
| And with the deth to doon boote on hire bale. |
| 740 | Hire hewe, whilom bright, that tho was pale, |
| Bar witnesse of hire wo and hire constreynte; |
| And thus she spak, sobbyng in hire compleynte: |
| |
| "Allas," quod she, "out of this regioun |
| I, woful wrecche and infortuned wight, |
| 745 | And born in corsed constellacioun, |
| Moot goon and thus departen fro my knyght! |
| Wo worth, allas, that ilke dayes light |
| On which I saugh hym first with eyen tweyne, |
| That causeth me, and ich hym, al this peyne!" |
| |
| 750 | Therwith the teris from hire eyen two |
| Down fille, as shour in Aperil ful swithe; |
| Hire white brest she bet, and for the wo |
| After the deth she cryed a thousand sithe, |
| Syn he that wont hire wo was for to lithe |
| 755 | She moot forgon; for which disaventure |
| She held hireself a forlost creature. |
| |
| She seyde, "How shal he don, and ich also? |
| How sholde I lyve if that I from hym twynne? |
| O deere herte eke, that I love so, |
| 760 | Who shal that sorwe slen that ye ben inne? |
| O Calkas, fader, thyn be al this synne! |
| O moder myn, that cleped were Argyve, |
| Wo worth that day that thow me bere on lyve! |
| |
| "To what fyn sholde I lyve and sorwen thus? |
| 765 | How sholde a fissh withouten water dure? |
| What is Criseyde worth, from Troilus? |
| How sholde a plaunte or lyves creature |
| Lyve withouten his kynde noriture? |
| For which ful ofte a by-word here I seye, |
| 770 | That `rooteles moot grene soone deye.' |
| |
| "I shal doon thus -- syn neither swerd ne darte |
| Dar I noon handle, for the crueltee -- |
| That ilke day that I from yow departe, |
| If sorwe of that nyl nat my bane be: |
| 775 | Thanne shal no mete or drynke come in me |
| Til I my soule out of my breste unshethe, |
| And thus myselven wol I don to dethe. |
| |
| "And, Troilus, my clothes everychon |
| Shul blake ben in tokenyng, herte swete, |
| 780 | That I am as out of this world agon, |
| That wont was yow to setten in quiete; |
| And of myn ordre, ay til deth me mete, |
| The observance evere, in youre absence, |
| Shal sorwe ben, compleynt, and abstinence. |
| |
| 785 | "Myn herte and ek the woful goost therinne |
| Byqueth. I with youre spirit to compleyne |
| Eternaly, for they shal nevere twynne; |
| For though in erthe ytwynned be we tweyne, |
| Yet in the feld of pite, out of peyne, |
| 790 | That highte Elisos, shal we ben yfeere, |
| As Orpheus and Erudice, his fere. |
| |
| "Thus, herte myn, for Antenor, allas, |
| I soone shal be chaunged, as I wene. |
| But how shul ye don in this sorwful cas? |
| 795 | How shal youre tendre herte this sustene? |
| But, herte myn, foryete this sorwe and tene, |
| And me also; for sothly for to seye, |
| So ye wel fare, I recche naught to deye." |
| |
| How myghte it evere yred ben or ysonge, |
| 800 | The pleynte that she made in hire destresse? |
| I not; but, as for me, my litel tonge, |
| If I discryven wolde hire hevynesse, |
| It sholde make hire sorwe seme lesse |
| Than that it was, and childisshly deface |
| 805 | Hire heigh compleynte, and therfore ich it pace. |
| |
| Pandare, which that sent from Troilus |
| Was to Criseyde -- as ye han herd devyse |
| That for the beste it was acorded thus, |
| And he ful glad to doon hym that servyse -- |
| 810 | Unto Criseyde, in a ful secree wise, |
| Ther as she lay in torment and in rage, |
| Com hire to telle al hoolly his message, |
| |
| And fond that she hireselven gan to trete |
| Ful pitously, for with hire salte teris |
| 815 | Hire brest, hire face, ybathed was ful wete; |
| The myghty tresses of hire sonnysshe heeris |
| Unbroiden hangen al aboute hire eeris, |
| Which yaf hym verray signal of martire |
| Of deth, which that hire herte gan desire. |
| |
| 820 | Whan she hym saugh, she gan for shame anon |
| Hire tery face atwixe hire armes hide; |
| For which this Pandare is so wo-bygon |
| That in the hous he myghte unnethe abyde, |
| As he that pite felt on every syde; |
| 825 | For if Criseyde hadde erst compleyned soore, |
| Tho gan she pleyne a thousand tymes more. |
| |
| And in hire aspre pleynte thus she seyde: |
| "Pandare first of joies mo than two |
| Was cause causyng unto me, Criseyde, |
| 830 | That now transmewed ben in cruel wo. |
| Wher shal I seye to yow welcom or no, |
| That alderfirst me broughte unto servyse |
| Of love -- allas! -- that endeth in swich wise? |
| |
| "Endeth than love in wo? Ye, or men lieth, |
| 835 | And alle worldly blisse, as thynketh me. |
| The ende of blisse ay sorwe it occupieth. |
| And whoso troweth nat that it so be, |
| Lat hym upon me, woful wrecche, ysee, |
| That myself hate and ay my burthe acorse, |
| 840 | Felyng alwey fro wikke I go to worse. |
| |
| "Whoso me seeth, he seeth sorwe al atonys -- |
| Peyne, torment, pleynte, wo, distresse! |
| Out of my woful body harm ther noon is, |
| As angwissh, langour, cruel bitternesse, |
| 845 | Anoy, smert, drede, fury, and ek siknesse. |
| I trowe, ywys, from hevene teeris reyne |
| For pite of myn aspre and cruel peyne." |
| |
| "And thow, my suster, ful of discomfort," |
| Quod Pandarus, "what thynkestow to do? |
| 850 | Whi ne hastow to thyselven som resport? |
| Whi wiltow thus thiself, allas, fordo? |
| Leef al this werk, and tak now heede to |
| That I shal seyn; and herkne of good entente |
| This which by me thi Troilus the sente." |
| |
| 855 | Tornede hire tho Criseyde, a wo makynge |
| So gret that it a deth was for to see. |
| "Allas," quod she, "what wordes may ye brynge? |
| What wol my deere herte seyn to me, |
| Which that I drede nevere mo to see? |
| 860 | Wol he han pleynte or teris er I wende? |
| I have ynough, if he therafter sende!" |
| |
| She was right swich to seen in hire visage |
| As is that wight that men on beere bynde; |
| Hire face, lik of Paradys the ymage, |
| 865 | Was al ychaunged in another kynde. |
| The pleye, the laughter, men was wont to fynde |
| On hire, and ek hire joies everichone, |
| Ben fled; and thus lith now Criseyde allone. |
| |
| Aboute hire eyen two a purpre ryng |
| 870 | Bytrent, in sothfast tokenyng of hire peyne, |
| That to biholde it was a dedly thyng; |
| For which Pandare myghte nat restreyne |
| The teeris from his eighen for to reyne; |
| But natheles, as he best myghte, he seyde |
| 875 | From Troilus thise wordes to Criseyde: |
| |
| "Lo, nece, I trowe ye han herd al how |
| The kyng with othere lordes, for the beste, |
| Hath mad eschaunge of Antenor and yow, |
| That cause is of this sorwe and this unreste. |
| 880 | But how this cas dooth Troilus moleste, |
| That may non erthly mannes tonge seye -- |
| As he that shortly shapith hym to deye. |
| |
| "For which we han so sorwed, he and I, |
| That into litel bothe it hadde us slawe; |
| 885 | But thorugh my conseyl this day finaly |
| He somwhat is fro wepynge now withdrawe, |
| And semeth me that he desireth fawe |
| With yow to ben al nyght, for to devyse |
| Remedie in this, if ther were any wyse. |
| |
| 890 | "This, short and pleyn, th' effect of my message, |
| As ferforth as my wit kan comprehende, |
| For ye that ben of torment in swich rage |
| May to no long prologe as now entende. |
| And hereupon ye may answere hym sende; |
| 895 | And for the love of God, my nece deere, |
| So lef this wo er Troilus be here!" |
| |
| "Gret is my wo," quod she, and sighte soore |
| As she that feleth dedly sharp distresse; |
| "But yit to me his sorwe is muchel more, |
| 900 | That love hym bet than he hymself, I gesse. |
| Allas, for me hath he swich hevynesse? |
| Kan he for me so pitously compleyne? |
| Iwis, his sorwe doubleth al my peyne. |
| |
| "Grevous to me, God woot, is for to twynne," |
| 905 | Quod she, "but yet it harder is to me |
| To sen that sorwe which that he is inne; |
| For wel I woot it wol my bane be, |
| And deye I wol in certeyn," tho quod she; |
| "But bid hym come, er deth, that thus me threteth, |
| 910 | Dryve out that goost which in myn herte beteth." |
| |
| Thise wordes seyd, she on hire armes two |
| Fil gruf, and gan to wepen pitously. |
| Quod Pandarus, "Allas, whi do ye so, |
| Syn wel ye woot the tyme is faste by |
| 915 | That he shal come? Aris up hastily, |
| That he yow nat bywopen thus ne fynde, |
| But ye wole have hym wood out of his mynde. |
| |
| "For wiste he that ye ferde in this manere, |
| He wolde hymselven sle; and if I wende |
| 920 | To han this fare, he sholde nat come here |
| For al the good that Priam may dispende. |
| For to what fyn he wolde anon pretende, |
| That knowe ich wel; and forthi yet I seye: |
| So lef this sorwe, or platly he wol deye. |
| |
| 925 | "And shapeth yow his sorwe for t' abregge, |
| And nought encresse, leeve nece swete! |
| Beth rather to hym cause of flat than egge, |
| And with som wisdom ye his sorwe bete. |
| What helpeth it to wepen ful a strete, |
| 930 | Or though ye bothe in salte teeris dreynte? |
| Bet is a tyme of cure ay than of pleynte. |
| |
| "I mene thus: whan ich hym hider brynge, |
| Syn ye be wise and bothe of oon assent, |
| So shapeth how destourbe youre goynge, |
| 935 | Or come ayeyn soon after ye be went. |
| Women ben wise in short avysement; |
| And lat sen how youre wit shal now availle, |
| And that that I may helpe, it shal nat faille." |
| |
| "Go," quod Criseyde, "and uncle, trewely, |
| 940 | I shal don al my myght me to restreyne |
| From wepyng in his sighte, and bisily |
| Hym for to glade I shal don al my peyne, |
| And in myn herte seken every veyne. |
| If to his sore ther may be fonden salve, |
| 945 | It shal nat lakke, certeyn, on my halve." |
| |
| Goth Pandarus, and Troilus he soughte |
| Til in a temple he fond hym al allone, |
| As he that of his lif no lenger roughte; |
| But to the pitouse goddes everichone |
| 950 | Ful tendrely he preyde and made his mone, |
| To doon hym sone out of this world to pace, |
| For wel he thoughte ther was non other grace. |
| |
| And shortly, al the sothe for to seye, |
| He was so fallen in despeir that day, |
| 955 | That outrely he shop hym for to deye. |
| For right thus was his argument alway: |
| He seyde he nas but lorn, weylaway! |
| "For al that comth, comth by necessitee: |
| Thus to ben lorn, it is my destinee. |
| |
| 960 | "For certeynly, this wot I wel," he seyde, |
| "That forsight of divine purveyaunce |
| Hath seyn alwey me to forgon Criseyde, |
| Syn God seeth every thyng, out of doutaunce, |
| And hem disponyth, thorugh his ordinaunce, |
| 965 | In hire merites sothly for to be, |
| As they shul comen by predestyne. |
| |
| "But natheles, allas, whom shal I leeve? |
| For ther ben grete clerkes many oon |
| That destyne thorugh argumentes preve; |
| 970 | And som men seyn that nedely ther is noon, |
| But that fre chois is yeven us everychon. |
| O, welaway! So sleighe arn clerkes olde |
| That I not whos opynyoun I may holde. |
| |
| "For som men seyn, if God seth al biforn -- |
| 975 | Ne God may nat deceyved ben, parde -- |
| Than moot it fallen, theigh men hadde it sworn, |
| That purveiance hath seyn before to be. |
| Wherfore I sey, that from eterne if he |
| Hath wist byforn oure thought ek as oure dede, |
| 980 | We han no fre chois, as thise clerkes rede. |
| |
| "For other thought, nor other dede also, |
| Myghte nevere ben, but swich as purveyaunce, |
| Which may nat ben deceyved nevere mo, |
| Hath feled byforn, withouten ignoraunce. |
| 985 | For yf ther myghte ben a variaunce |
| To writhen out fro Goddis purveyinge, |
| Ther nere no prescience of thyng comynge, |
| |
| "But it were rather an opynyoun |
| Uncerteyn, and no stedfast forseynge; |
| 990 | And certes, that were an abusioun, |
| That God sholde han no parfit cler wytynge |
| More than we men that han doutous wenynge. |
| But swich an errour upon God to gesse |
| Were fals and foul, and wikked corsednesse. |
| |
| 995 | "Ek this is an opynyoun of some |
| That han hire top ful heighe and smothe yshore: |
| They seyn right thus, that thyng is nat to come |
| For that the prescience hath seyn byfore |
| That it shal come; but they seyn that therfore |
| 1000 | That it shal come, therfore the purveyaunce |
| Woot it byforn, withouten ignoraunce; |
| |
| "And in this manere this necessite |
| Retorneth in his part contrarie agayn. |
| For nedfully byhoveth it nat to bee |
| 1005 | That thilke thynges fallen in certayn |
| That ben purveyed; but nedly, as they sayn, |
| Byhoveth it that thynges whiche that falle, |
| That they in certayn ben purveyed alle. |
| |
| "I mene as though I laboured me in this |
| 1010 | To enqueren which thyng cause of which thyng be: |
| As wheither that the prescience of God is |
| The certeyn cause of the necessite |
| Of thynges that to comen ben, parde, |
| Or if necessite of thyng comynge |
| 1015 | Be cause certeyn of the purveyinge. |
| |
| "But now n' enforce I me nat in shewynge |
| How the ordre of causes stant; but wel woot I |
| That it byhoveth that the byfallynge |
| Of thynges wist byfore certeynly |
| 1020 | Be necessarie, al seme it nat therby |
| That prescience put fallynge necessaire |
| To thyng to come, al falle it foule or faire. |
| |
| "For if ther sitte a man yond on a see, |
| Than by necessite bihoveth it |
| 1025 | That, certes, thyn opynyoun sooth be |
| That wenest or conjectest that he sit. |
| And further over now ayeynward yit, |
| Lo, right so is it of the part contrarie, |
| As thus -- now herkne, for I wol nat tarie: |
| |
| 1030 | "I sey that if the opynyoun of the |
| Be soth, for that he sitte, than sey I this: |
| That he mot sitten by necessite; |
| And thus necessite in eyther is. |
| For in hym, nede of sittynge is, ywys, |
| 1035 | And in the, nede of soth; and thus, forsothe, |
| There mot necessite ben in yow bothe. |
| |
| "But thow mayst seyn, the man sit nat therfore |
| That thyn opynyoun of his sittynge soth is, |
| But rather, for the man sit ther byfore, |
| 1040 | Therfore is thyn opynyoun soth, ywis. |
| And I seye, though the cause of soth of this |
| Comth of his sittyng, yet necessite |
| Is entrechaunged, both in hym and the. |
| |
| "Thus in this same wise, out of doutaunce, |
| 1045 | I may wel maken, as it semeth me, |
| My resonyng of Goddes purveyaunce |
| And of the thynges that to comen be; |
| By which resoun men may wel yse |
| That thilke thynges that in erthe falle, |
| 1050 | That by necessite they comen alle. |
| |
| "For although that for thyng shal come, ywys, |
| Therfore is it purveyed, certeynly -- |
| Nat that it comth for it purveyed is -- |
| Yet natheles, bihoveth it nedfully |
| 1055 | That thing to come be purveyd, trewely, |
| Or elles, thynges that purveyed be, |
| That they bitiden by necessite. |
| |
| "And this suffiseth right ynough, certeyn, |
| For to destruye oure fre chois every del. |
| 1060 | But now is this abusioun, to seyn |
| That fallyng of the thynges temporel |
| Is cause of Goddes prescience eternel. |
| Now trewely, that is a fals sentence, |
| That thyng to come sholde cause his prescience. |
| |
| 1065 | "What myght I wene, and I hadde swich a thought, |
| But that God purveyeth thyng that is to come |
| For that it is to come, and ellis nought? |
| So myghte I wene that thynges alle and some |
| That whilom ben byfalle and overcome |
| 1070 | Ben cause of thilke sovereyne purveyaunce |
| That forwoot al withouten ignoraunce. |
| |
| "And over al this, yet sey I more herto: |
| That right as whan I wot ther is a thyng, |
| Iwys, that thyng moot nedfully be so; |
| 1075 | Ek right so, whan I woot a thyng comyng, |
| So mot it come; and thus the bifallyng |
| Of thynges that ben wist bifore the tyde, |
| They mowe nat ben eschued on no syde." |
| |
| Thanne seyde he thus: "Almyghty Jove in trone, |
| 1080 | That woost of al thys thyng the sothfastnesse, |
| Rewe on my sorwe: or do me deyen sone, |
| Or bryng Criseyde and me fro this destresse!" |
| And whil he was in al this hevynesse, |
| Disputyng with hymself in this matere, |
| 1085 | Com Pandare in, and seyde as ye may here: |
| |
| "O myghty God," quod Pandarus, "in trone, |
| I! Who say evere a wis man faren so? |
| Whi, Troilus, what thinkestow to doone? |
| Hastow swich lust to ben thyn owen fo? |
| 1090 | What, parde, yet is nat Criseyde ago! |
| Whi list the so thiself fordoon for drede |
| That in thyn hed thyne eyen semen dede? |
| |
| "Hastow nat lyved many a yer byforn |
| Withouten hire, and ferd ful wel at ese? |
| 1095 | Artow for hire and for noon other born? |
| Hath Kynde the wrought al only hire to plese? |
| Lat be, and thynk right thus in thi disese: |
| That, in the dees right as ther fallen chaunces, |
| Right so in love ther come and gon plesaunces. |
| |
| 1100 | "And yet this is a wonder most of alle, |
| Whi thow thus sorwest, syn thow nost nat yit, |
| Touchyng hire goyng, how that it shal falle, |
| Ne yif she kan hireself destourben it. |
| Thow hast nat yet assayed al hire wit. |
| 1105 | A man may al bytyme his nekke beede |
| Whan it shal of, and sorwen at the nede. |
| |
| "Forthi tak hede of that that I shal seye: |
| I have with hire yspoke and longe ybe, |
| So as acorded was bitwixe us tweye; |
| 1110 | And evere mor me thynketh thus, that she |
| Hath somwhat in hire hertes privete |
| Wherwith she kan, if I shal right arede, |
| Destourbe al this of which thow art in drede. |
| |
| "For which my counseil is, whan it is nyght |
| 1115 | Thow to hire go and make of this an ende; |
| And blisful Juno thorugh hire grete myght |
| Shal, as I hope, hire grace unto us sende. |
| Myn herte seyth, `Certeyn, she shal nat wende.' |
| And forthi put thyn herte a while in reste, |
| 1120 | And hold this purpos, for it is the beste." |
| |
| This Troilus answerd, and sighte soore: |
| "Thow seist right wel, and I wol don right so." |
| And what hym liste, he seyde unto it more. |
| And whan that it was tyme for to go, |
| 1125 | Ful pryvely hymself, withouten mo, |
| Unto hire com, as he was wont to doone; |
| And how they wroughte, I shal yow tellen soone. |
| |
| Soth is, that whan they gonnen first to mete, |
| So gan the peyne hire hertes for to twiste |
| 1130 | That neyther of hem other myghte grete, |
| But hem in armes toke, and after kiste. |
| The lasse woful of hem bothe nyste |
| Wher that he was, ne myghte o word out brynge, |
| As I seyde erst, for wo and for sobbynge. |
| |
| 1135 | The woful teeris that they leten falle |
| As bittre weren, out of teris kynde, |
| For peyne, as is ligne aloes or galle -- |
| So bittre teeris weep nought, as I fynde, |
| The woful Mirra thorugh the bark and rynde -- |
| 1140 | That in this world ther nys so hard an herte |
| That nolde han rewed on hire peynes smerte. |
| |
| But whan hire woful weri goostes tweyne |
| Retourned ben ther as hem oughte dwelle, |
| And that somwhat to wayken gan the peyne |
| 1145 | By lengthe of pleynte, and ebben gan the welle |
| Of hire teeris, and the herte unswelle, |
| With broken vois, al hoors forshright, Criseyde |
| To Troilus thise ilke wordes seyde: |
| |
| "O Jove, I deye, and mercy I beseche! |
| 1150 | Help, Troilus!" And therwithal hire face |
| Upon his brest she leyde and loste speche -- |
| Hire woful spirit from his propre place, |
| Right with the word, alwey o poynt to pace. |
| And thus she lith with hewes pale and grene, |
| 1155 | That whilom fressh and fairest was to sene. |
| |
| This Troilus, that on hire gan biholde, |
| Clepyng hire name -- and she lay as for ded -- |
| Without answere, and felte hire lymes colde, |
| Hire eyen throwen upward to hire hed, |
| 1160 | This sorwful man kan now noon other red, |
| But ofte tyme hire colde mowth he kiste. |
| Wher hym was wo, God and hymself it wiste! |
| |
| He rist hym up, and long streght he hire leyde; |
| For signe of lif, for aught he kan or may, |
| 1165 | Kan he non fynde in nothyng on Criseyde, |
| For which his song ful ofte is "weylaway!" |
| But whan he saugh that specheles she lay, |
| With sorweful vois and herte of blisse al bare, |
| He seyde how she was fro this world yfare. |
| |
| 1170 | So after that he longe hadde hire compleyned, |
| His hondes wrong, and seyd that was to seye, |
| And with his teeris salt hire brest byreyned, |
| He gan tho teeris wypen of ful dreye, |
| And pitously gan for the soule preye, |
| 1175 | And seyde, "O Lord, that set art in thi trone, |
| Rewe ek on me, for I shal folwe hire sone!" |
| |
| She cold was, and withouten sentement |
| For aught he woot, for breth ne felte he non, |
| And this was hym a pregnant argument |
| 1180 | That she was forth out of this world agon. |
| And whan he say ther was non other woon, |
| He gan hire lymes dresse in swich manere |
| As men don hem that shal ben layd on beere. |
| |
| And after this, with sterne and cruel herte, |
| 1185 | His swerd anon out of his shethe he twighte |
| Hymself to slen, how sore that hym smerte, |
| So that his soule hire soule folwen myghte |
| Ther as the doom of Mynos wolde it dighte, |
| Syn Love and cruel Fortune it ne wolde |
| 1190 | That in this world he lenger lyven sholde. |
| |
| Than seyde he thus, fulfild of heigh desdayn: |
| "O cruel Jove, and thow, Fortune adverse, |
| This al and som: that falsly have ye slayn |
| Criseyde, and syn ye may do me no werse, |
| 1195 | Fy on youre myght and werkes so dyverse! |
| Thus cowardly ye shul me nevere wynne; |
| Ther shal no deth me fro my lady twynne. |
| |
| "For I this world, syn ye have slayn hire thus, |
| Wol lete and folwe hire spirit low or hye. |
| 1200 | Shal nevere lovere seyn that Troilus |
| Dar nat for fere with his lady dye; |
| For certeyn I wol beere hire compaignie. |
| But syn ye wol nat suffre us lyven here, |
| Yet suffreth that oure soules ben yfere. |
| |
| 1205 | "And thow, cite, which that I leve in wo, |
| And thow, Priam, and bretheren alle yfeere, |
| And thow, my moder, farwel, for I go; |
| And Atropos, make redy thow my beere; |
| And thow, Criseyde, o swete herte deere, |
| 1210 | Receyve now my spirit!" wolde he seye, |
| With swerd at herte, al redy for to deye. |
| |
| But as God wolde, of swough therwith sh' abreyde, |
| And gan to sike, and "Troilus" she cride; |
| And he answerde, "Lady myn, Criseyde, |
| 1215 | Lyve ye yet?" and leet his swerd down glide. |
| "Ye, herte myn, that thonked be Cipride!" |
| Quod she; and therwithal she soore syghte, |
| And he bigan conforte hire as he myghte, |
| |
| Took hire in armes two, and kiste hire ofte, |
| 1220 | And hire to glade he did al his entente; |
| For which hire goost, that flikered ay o-lofte, |
| Into hire woful herte ayeyn it wente. |
| But at the laste, as that hire eye glente |
| Asyde, anon she gan his swerd espie, |
| 1225 | As it lay bare, and gan for fere crye, |
| |
| And asked hym, whi he it hadde out drawe. |
| And Troilus anon the cause hire tolde, |
| And how hymself therwith he wolde han slawe; |
| For which Criseyde upon hym gan biholde, |
| 1230 | And gan hym in hire armes faste folde, |
| And seyde, "O mercy, God! Lo, which a dede! |
| Allas, how neigh we weren bothe dede! |
| |
| "Than if I nadde spoken, as grace was, |
| Ye wolde han slayn youreself anon?" quod she. |
| 1235 | "Yee, douteles"; and she answerde, "Allas, |
| For by that ilke Lord that made me, |
| I nolde a forlong wey on lyve have be |
| After youre deth, to han ben crowned queene |
| Of al that lond the sonne on shyneth sheene. |
| |
| 1240 | "But with this selve swerd, which that here is, |
| Myselve I wolde han slawe," quod she tho. |
| "But hoo, for we han right ynough of this, |
| And lat us rise, and streght to bedde go, |
| And there lat us speken of oure wo; |
| 1245 | For, by the morter which that I se brenne, |
| Knowe I ful wel that day is nat far henne." |
| |
| Whan they were in hire bed, in armes folde, |
| Naught was it lik tho nyghtes here-byforn. |
| For pitously ech other gan byholde, |
| 1250 | As they that hadden al hire blisse ylorn, |
| Bywaylinge ay the day that they were born; |
| Til at the laste this sorwful wight, Criseyde, |
| To Troilus thise ilke wordes seyde: |
| |
| "Lo, herte myn, wel woot ye this," quod she, |
| 1255 | "That if a wight alwey his wo compleyne |
| And seketh nought how holpen for to be, |
| It nys but folie and encrees of peyne; |
| And syn that here assembled be we tweyne |
| To fynde boote of wo that we ben inne, |
| 1260 | It were al tyme soone to bygynne. |
| |
| "I am a womman, as ful wel ye woot, |
| And as I am avysed sodeynly, |
| So wol I telle yow, whil it is hoot. |
| Me thynketh thus: that nouther ye nor I |
| 1265 | Ought half this wo to maken, skilfully; |
| For ther is art ynough for to redresse |
| That yet is mys, and slen this hevynesse. |
| |
| "Soth is, the wo, the which that we ben inne, |
| For aught I woot, for nothyng ellis is |
| 1270 | But for the cause that we sholden twynne. |
| Considered al, ther nys namore amys. |
| But what is thanne a remede unto this, |
| But that we shape us soone for to meete? |
| This al and som, my deere herte sweete. |
| |
| 1275 | "Now, that I shal wel bryngen it aboute |
| To come ayeyn, soone after that I go, |
| Therof am I no manere thyng in doute; |
| For, dredeles, withinne a wowke or two |
| I shal ben here; and that it may be so |
| 1280 | By alle right and in a wordes fewe, |
| I shal yow wel an heep of weyes shewe. |
| |
| "For which I wol nat make long sermoun -- |
| For tyme ylost may nought recovered be -- |
| But I wol gon to my conclusioun, |
| 1285 | And to the beste, in aught that I kan see. |
| And for the love of God, foryeve it me |
| If I speke aught ayeyns youre hertes reste; |
| For trewely, I speke it for the beste, |
| |
| "Makyng alwey a protestacioun |
| 1290 | That now thise wordes which that I shal seye |
| Nis but to shewen yow my mocioun |
| To fynde unto oure help the beste weye; |
| And taketh it non other wise, I preye, |
| For in effect, what so ye me comaunde, |
| 1295 | That wol I don, for that is no demaunde. |
| |
| "Now herkneth this: ye han wel understonde |
| My goyng graunted is by parlement |
| So ferforth that it may nat be withstonde |
| For al this world, as by my jugement. |
| 1300 | And syn ther helpeth non avisement |
| To letten it, lat it passe out of mynde, |
| And lat us shape a bettre wey to fynde. |
| |
| "The soth is this: the twynnyng of us tweyne |
| Wol us disese and cruelich anoye, |
| 1305 | But hym byhoveth somtyme han a peyne |
| That serveth Love, if that he wol have joye. |
| And syn I shal no ferther out of Troie |
| Than I may ride ayeyn on half a morwe, |
| It oughte lesse causen us to sorwe; |
| |
| 1310 | "So as I shal not so ben hid in muwe, |
| That day by day, myn owne herte deere -- |
| Syn wel ye woot that it is now a trewe -- |
| Ye shal ful wel al myn estat yheere. |
| And er that trewe is doon, I shal ben heere; |
| 1315 | And thanne have ye both Antenore ywonne |
| And me also. Beth glad now, if ye konne, |
| |
| "And thenk right thus: `Criseyde is now agon. |
| But what, she shal come hastiliche ayeyn!' |
| And whanne, allas? By God, lo, right anon, |
| 1320 | Er dayes ten, this dar I saufly seyn. |
| And than at erste shal we be so feyn, |
| So as we shal togideres evere dwelle, |
| That al this world ne myghte oure blisse telle. |
| |
| "I se that oft-tyme, there as we ben now, |
| 1325 | That for the beste, oure counseyl for to hide, |
| Ye speke nat with me, nor I with yow |
| In fourtenyght, ne se yow go ne ride. |
| May ye naught ten dayes thanne abide, |
| For myn honour, in swich an aventure? |
| 1330 | Iwys, ye mowen ellis lite endure! |
| |
| "Ye knowe ek how that al my kyn is heere, |
| But if that onliche it my fader be, |
| And ek myn othere thynges alle yfeere, |
| And nameliche, my deere herte, ye, |
| 1335 | Whom that I nolde leven for to se |
| For al this world, as wyd as it hath space, |
| Or ellis se ich nevere Joves face! |
| |
| "Whi trowe ye my fader in this wise |
| Coveyteth so to se me, but for drede |
| 1340 | Lest in this town that folkes me despise |
| Because of hym, for his unhappy dede? |
| What woot my fader what lif that I lede? |
| For if he wiste in Troie how wel I fare, |
| Us neded for my wendyng nought to care. |
| |
| 1345 | "Ye sen that every day ek, more and more, |
| Men trete of pees, and it supposid is |
| That men the queene Eleyne shal restore, |
| And Grekis us restoren that is mys; |
| So, though ther nere comfort non but this, |
| 1350 | That men purposen pees on every syde, |
| Ye may the bettre at ese of herte abyde. |
| |
| "For if that it be pees, myn herte deere, |
| The nature of the pees moot nedes dryve |
| That men moost entrecomunen yfeere, |
| 1355 | And to and fro ek ride and gon as blyve |
| Alday as thikke as been fleen from an hyve, |
| And every wight han liberte to bleve |
| Whereas hym liste the bet, withouten leve. |
| |
| "And though so be that pees ther may be non, |
| 1360 | Yet hider, though ther nevere pees ne were, |
| I moste come; for whider sholde I gon, |
| Or how, meschaunce, sholde I dwelle there |
| Among tho men of armes evere in feere? |
| For which, as wisly God my soule rede, |
| 1365 | I kan nat sen wherof ye sholden drede. |
| |
| "Have here another wey, if it so be |
| That al this thyng ne may yow nat suffise: |
| My fader, as ye knowen wel, parde, |
| Is old, and elde is ful of coveytise, |
| 1370 | And I right now have founden al the gise, |
| Withouten net, wherwith I shal hym hente. |
| And herkeneth how, if that ye wol assente: |
| |
| "Lo, Troilus, men seyn that hard it is |
| The wolf ful and the wether hool to have; |
| 1375 | This is to seyn, that men ful ofte, iwys, |
| Mote spenden part the remenant for to save; |
| For ay with gold men may the herte grave |
| Of hym that set is upon coveytise; |
| And how I mene, I shal it yow devyse: |
| |
| 1380 | "The moeble which that I have in this town |
| Unto my fader shal I take, and seye |
| That right for trust and for savacioun |
| It sent is from a frend of his or tweye, |
| The whiche frendes ferventliche hym preye |
| 1385 | To senden after more, and that in hie, |
| Whil that this town stant thus in jupartie. |
| |
| "And that shal ben an huge quantite -- |
| Thus shal I seyn -- but lest it folk espide, |
| This may be sent by no wyght but by me. |
| 1390 | I shal ek shewen hym, yf pees bytyde, |
| What frendes that ich have on every syde |
| Toward the court, to don the wrathe pace |
| Of Priamus and don hym stonde in grace. |
| |
| "So what for o thyng and for other, swete, |
| 1395 | I shal hym so enchaunten with my sawes |
| That right in hevene his sowle is, shal he mete; |
| For al Appollo, or his clerkes lawes, |
| Or calkullynge, avayleth nought thre hawes; |
| Desir of gold shal so his soule blende |
| 1400 | That, as me lyst, I shal wel make an ende. |
| |
| "And yf he wolde ought by hys sort it preve |
| If that I lye, in certayn I shal fonde |
| Distorben hym and plukke hym by the sleve, |
| Makynge his sort, and beren hym on honde |
| 1405 | He hath not wel the goddes understonde; |
| For goddes speken in amphibologies, |
| And for o soth they tellen twenty lyes. |
| |
| "Ek, `Drede fond first goddes, I suppose' -- |
| Thus shal I seyn -- and that his coward herte |
| 1410 | Made hym amys the goddes text to glose, |
| Whan he for fered out of Delphos sterte. |
| And but I make hym soone to converte |
| And don my red withinne a day or tweye, |
| I wol to yow oblige me to deye." |
| |
| 1415 | And treweliche, as writen wel I fynde |
| That al this thyng was seyd of good entente, |
| And that hire herte trewe was and kynde |
| Towardes hym, and spak right as she mente, |
| And that she starf for wo neigh whan she wente, |
| 1420 | And was in purpos evere to be trewe: |
| Thus writen they that of hire werkes knewe. |
| |
| This Troilus, with herte and erys spradde, |
| Herde al this thyng devysen to and fro, |
| And verrayliche him semed that he hadde |
| 1425 | The selve wit; but yet to late hire go |
| His herte mysforyaf hym evere mo; |
| But fynaly, he gan his herte wreste |
| To trusten hire, and took it for the beste. |
| |
| For which the grete furie of his penaunce |
| 1430 | Was queynt with hope, and therwith hem bitwene |
| Bigan for joie th' amorouse daunce; |
| And as the briddes, whanne the sonne is shene, |
| Deliten in hire song in leves grene, |
| Right so the wordes that they spake yfeere |
| 1435 | Delited hem, and made hire hertes clere. |
| |
| But natheles, the wendyng of Criseyde, |
| For al this world, may nat out of his mynde, |
| For which ful ofte he pitously hire preyde |
| That of hire heste he myghte hire trewe fynde, |
| 1440 | And seyde hire, "Certes, if ye be unkynde, |
| And but ye come at day set into Troye, |
| Ne shal I nevere have hele, honour, ne joye. |
| |
| "For also soth as sonne uprist o-morwe -- |
| And God so wisly thow me, woful wrecche, |
| 1445 | To reste brynge out of this cruel sorwe! -- |
| I wol myselven sle if that ye drecche. |
| But of my deeth though litel be to recche, |
| Yet, er that ye me causen so to smerte, |
| Dwelle rather here, myn owen swete herte. |
| |
| 1450 | "For trewely, myn owne lady deere, |
| Tho sleghtes yet that I have herd yow stere |
| Ful shaply ben to faylen alle yfeere. |
| For thus men seyth `That on thenketh the beere, |
| But al another thenketh his ledere.' |
| 1455 | Youre syre is wys; and seyd is, out of drede, |
| `Men may the wise atrenne, and naught atrede.' |
| |
| "It is ful hard to halten unespied |
| Byfore a crepel, for he kan the craft; |
| Youre fader is in sleght as Argus eyed; |
| 1460 | For al be that his moeble is hym biraft, |
| His olde sleighte is yet so with hym laft |
| Ye shal nat blende hym for youre wommanhede, |
| Ne feyne aright; and that is al my drede. |
| |
| "I not if pees shal evere mo bitide; |
| 1465 | But pees or no, for ernest ne for game, |
| I woot, syn Calkas on the Grekis syde |
| Hath ones ben and lost so foule his name, |
| He dar nomore come here ayeyn for shame; |
| For which that wey, for aught I kan espie, |
| 1470 | To trusten on nys but a fantasie. |
| |
| "Ye shal ek sen, youre fader shal yow glose |
| To ben a wif; and as he kan wel preche, |
| He shal som Grek so preyse and wel alose |
| That ravysshen he shal yow with his speche, |
| 1475 | Or do yow don by force as he shal teche; |
| And Troilus, of whom ye nyl han routhe, |
| Shal causeles so sterven in his trouthe! |
| |
| "And over al this, youre fader shal despise |
| Us alle, and seyn this cite nys but lorn, |
| 1480 | And that th' assege nevere shal aryse, |
| For-whi the Grekis han it alle sworn, |
| Til we be slayn and down oure walles torn. |
| And thus he shal yow with his wordes fere, |
| That ay drede I that ye wol bleven there. |
| |
| 1485 | "Ye shal ek seen so many a lusty knyght |
| Among the Grekis, ful of worthynesse, |
| And ech of hem with herte, wit, and myght |
| To plesen yow don al his bisynesse, |
| That ye shul dullen of the rudenesse |
| 1490 | Of us sely Troians, but if routhe |
| Remorde yow, or vertu of youre trouthe. |
| |
| "And this to me so grevous is to thynke |
| That fro my brest it wol my soule rende; |
| Ne dredeles, in me ther may nat synke |
| 1495 | A good opynyoun, if that ye wende, |
| For whi youre fadres sleghte wol us shende. |
| And if ye gon, as I have told yow yore, |
| So thenk I n' am but ded, withoute more. |
| |
| "For which, with humble, trewe, and pitous herte, |
| 1500 | A thousand tymes mercy I yow preye; |
| So rueth on myn aspre peynes smerte, |
| And doth somwhat as that I shal yow seye, |
| And lat us stele awey bitwixe us tweye; |
| And thynk that folie is, whan man may chese, |
| 1505 | For accident his substaunce ay to lese. |
| |
| "I mene thus: that syn we mowe er day |
| Wel stele awey and ben togidere so, |
| What wit were it to putten in assay, |
| In cas ye sholden to youre fader go, |
| 1510 | If that ye myghten come ayeyn or no? |
| Thus mene I: that it were a gret folie |
| To putte that sikernesse in jupertie. |
| |
| "And vulgarly to speken of substaunce |
| Of tresour, may we bothe with us lede |
| 1515 | Inough to lyve in honour and plesaunce |
| Til into tyme that we shal ben dede; |
| And thus we may eschuen al this drede. |
| For everich other wey ye kan recorde, |
| Myn herte, ywys, may therwith naught acorde. |
| |
| 1520 | "And hardily, ne dredeth no poverte, |
| For I have kyn and frendes elleswhere |
| That, though we comen in oure bare sherte, |
| Us sholde neyther lakken gold ne gere, |
| But ben honured while we dwelten there. |
| 1525 | And go we anon; for as in myn entente, |
| This is the beste, if that ye wole assente." |
| |
| Criseyde, with a sik, right in this wise |
| Answerde, "Ywys, my deere herte trewe, |
| We may wel stele awey, as ye devyse, |
| 1530 | And fynden swich unthrifty weyes newe, |
| But afterward ful soore it wol us rewe. |
| And helpe me God so at my mooste nede, |
| As causeles ye suffren al this drede! |
| |
| "For thilke day that I for cherisynge |
| 1535 | Or drede of fader, or for other wight, |
| Or for estat, delit, or for weddynge, |
| Be fals to yow, my Troilus, my knyght, |
| Saturnes doughter, Juno, thorugh hire myght, |
| As wood as Athamante do me dwelle |
| 1540 | Eternalich in Stix, the put of helle! |
| |
| "And this on every god celestial |
| I swere it yow, and ek on ech goddesse, |
| On every nymphe and deite infernal, |
| On satiry and fawny more and lesse, |
| 1545 | That halve goddes ben of wildernesse; |
| And Attropos my thred of lif tobreste |
| If I be fals! Now trowe me if yow leste! |
| |
| "And thow, Symois, that as an arwe clere |
| Thorugh Troie rennest downward to the se, |
| 1550 | Ber witnesse of this word that seyd is here: |
| That thilke day that ich untrewe be |
| To Troilus, myn owene herte fre, |
| That thow retourne bakward to thi welle, |
| And I with body and soule synke in helle! |
| |
| 1555 | "But that ye speke, awey thus for to go |
| And leten alle youre frendes, God forbede |
| For any womman that ye sholden so, |
| And namely syn Troie hath now swich nede |
| Of help. And ek of o thyng taketh hede: |
| 1560 | If this were wist, my lif lay in balaunce, |
| And youre honour; God shilde us fro meschaunce! |
| |
| "And if so be that pees heere-after take, |
| As alday happeth after anger game, |
| Whi, Lord, the sorwe and wo ye wolden make, |
| 1565 | That ye ne dorste come ayeyn for shame! |
| And er that ye juparten so youre name, |
| Beth naught to hastif in this hoote fare, |
| For hastif man ne wanteth nevere care. |
| |
| "What trowe ye the peple ek al aboute |
| 1570 | Wolde of it seye? It is ful light t' arede. |
| They wolden seye, and swere it out of doute, |
| That love ne drof yow naught to don this dede, |
| But lust voluptuous and coward drede. |
| Thus were al lost, ywys, myn herte deere, |
| 1575 | Youre honour, which that now shyneth so clere. |
| |
| "And also thynketh on myn honeste, |
| That floureth yet, how foule I sholde it shende, |
| And with what filthe it spotted sholde be, |
| If in this forme I sholde with yow wende. |
| 1580 | Ne though I lyved unto the werldes ende, |
| My name sholde I nevere ayeynward wynne; |
| Thus were I lost, and that were routhe and synne. |
| |
| "And forthi sle with resoun al this hete! |
| Men seyn, `The suffrant overcomith,' parde; |
| 1585 | Ek `Whoso wol han lief, he lief moot lete.' |
| Thus maketh vertu of necessite |
| By pacience, and thynk that lord is he |
| Of Fortune ay that naught wole of hire recche, |
| And she ne daunteth no wight but a wrecche. |
| |
| 1590 | "And trusteth this: that certes, herte swete, |
| Er Phebus suster, Lucina the sheene, |
| The Leoun passe out of this Ariete, |
| I wol ben here, withouten any wene. |
| I mene, as helpe me Juno, hevenes quene, |
| 1595 | The tenthe day, but if that deth m' assaile, |
| I wol yow sen withouten any faille." |
| |
| "And now, so this be soth," quod Troilus, |
| "I shal wel suffre unto the tenthe day, |
| Syn that I se that nede it mot be thus. |
| 1600 | But for the love of God, if it be may, |
| So late us stelen priveliche away; |
| For evere in oon, as for to lyve in reste, |
| Myn herte seyth that it wol be the beste." |
| |
| "O mercy, God, what lif is this?" quod she. |
| 1605 | "Allas, ye sle me thus for verray tene! |
| I se wel now that ye mystrusten me, |
| For by youre wordes it is wel yseene. |
| Now for the love of Cinthia the sheene, |
| Mistrust me nought thus causeles, for routhe, |
| 1610 | Syn to be trewe I have yow plight my trouthe. |
| |
| "And thynketh wel that somtyme it is wit |
| To spende a tyme, a tyme for to wynne; |
| Ne, parde, lorn am I naught fro yow yit, |
| Though that we ben a day or two atwynne. |
| 1615 | Drif out the fantasies yow withinne, |
| And trusteth me, and leveth ek youre sorwe, |
| Or here my trouthe: I wol naught lyve tyl morwe. |
| |
| "For if ye wiste how soore it doth me smerte, |
| Ye wolde cesse of this; for, God, thow wost, |
| 1620 | The pure spirit wepeth in myn herte |
| To se yow wepen that I love most, |
| And that I mot gon to the Grekis oost. |
| Ye, nere it that I wiste remedie |
| To come ayeyn, right here I wolde dye! |
| |
| 1625 | "But certes, I am naught so nyce a wight |
| That I ne kan ymaginen a wey |
| To come ayeyn that day that I have hight. |
| For who may holde a thing that wol awey? |
| My fader naught, for al his queynte pley! |
| 1630 | And by my thrift, my wendyng out of Troie |
| Another day shal torne us alle to joie. |
| |
| "Forthi with al myn herte I yow biseke, |
| If that yow list don ought for my preyere, |
| And for that love which that I love yow eke, |
| 1635 | That er that I departe fro yow here, |
| That of so good a confort and a cheere |
| I may yow sen that ye may brynge at reste |
| Myn herte, which that is o poynt to breste. |
| |
| "And over al this I prey yow," quod she tho, |
| 1640 | "Myn owene hertes sothfast suffisaunce, |
| Syn I am thyn al hol, withouten mo, |
| That whil that I am absent, no plesaunce |
| Of oother do me fro youre remembraunce; |
| For I am evere agast, forwhy men rede |
| 1645 | That love is thyng ay ful of bisy drede. |
| |
| "For in this world ther lyveth lady non, |
| If that ye were untrewe -- as God defende! -- |
| That so bitraised were or wo-bigon |
| As I, that alle trouthe in yow entende. |
| 1650 | And douteles, if that ich other wende, |
| I ner but ded; and er ye cause fynde, |
| For Goddes love, so beth me naught unkynde!" |
| |
| To this answerde Troilus and seyde, |
| "Now God, to whom ther nys no cause ywrye, |
| 1655 | Me glade, as wys I nevere unto Criseyde, |
| Syn thilke day I saugh hire first with ye, |
| Was fals, ne nevere shal til that I dye. |
| At shorte wordes, wel ye may me leve. |
| I kan na more; it shal be founde at preve." |
| |
| 1660 | "Grant mercy, goode myn, iwys!" quod she, |
| "And blisful Venus lat me nevere sterve |
| Er I may stonde of plesaunce in degree |
| To quyte hym wel that so wel kan deserve; |
| And while that God my wit wol me conserve, |
| 1665 | I shal so don, so trewe I have yow founde, |
| That ay honour to me-ward shal rebounde. |
| |
| "For trusteth wel that youre estat roial, |
| Ne veyn delit, nor only worthinesse |
| Of yow in werre or torney marcial, |
| 1670 | Ne pompe, array, nobleye, or ek richesse |
| Ne made me to rewe on youre destresse, |
| But moral vertu, grounded upon trouthe -- |
| That was the cause I first hadde on yow routhe! |
| |
| "Eke gentil herte and manhod that ye hadde, |
| 1675 | And that ye hadde, as me thoughte, in despit |
| Every thyng that souned into badde, |
| As rudenesse and poeplissh appetit, |
| And that youre resoun bridlede youre delit, |
| This made, aboven every creature, |
| 1680 | That I was youre, and shal while I may dure. |
| |
| "And this may lengthe of yeres naught fordo, |
| Ne remuable Fortune deface. |
| But Juppiter, that of his myght may do |
| The sorwful to be glad, so yeve us grace |
| 1685 | Or nyghtes ten to meten in this place, |
| So that it may youre herte and myn suffise! |
| And fareth now wel, for tyme is that ye rise." |
| |
| And after that they longe ypleyned hadde, |
| And ofte ykist, and streite in armes folde, |
| 1690 | The day gan rise, and Troilus hym cladde, |
| And rewfullich his lady gan byholde, |
| As he that felte dethes cares colde, |
| And to hire grace he gan hym recomaunde. |
| Wher hym was wo, this holde I no demaunde. |
| |
| 1695 | For mannes hed ymagynen ne kan, |
| N' entendement considere, ne tonge telle |
| The cruele peynes of this sorwful man, |
| That passen every torment down in helle. |
| For whan he saugh that she ne myghte dwelle, |
| 1700 | Which that his soule out of his herte rente, |
| Withouten more out of the chaumbre he wente. |