| |
Hyd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere; |
| |
Ester, ley thou thy meknesse al a-doun; |
| |
Hyd, Ionathas, al thy frendly manere; |
| |
Penalopee, and Marcia Catoun, |
| |
Mak of your wyfhod no comparisoun; |
| |
Hyde ye your beautes, Isoude and Eleyne, |
| |
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne. |
| |
| 210 |
Thy faire body, lat hit nat appere, |
| |
Lavyne; and thou, Lucresse of Rome toun, |
| |
And Polixene, that boghte love so dere, |
| |
Eek Cleopatre, with al thy passioun, |
| |
Hyde ye your trouthe in love and your renoun; |
| |
And thou, Tisbe, that hast for love swich peyne; |
| |
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne. |
| |
| |
Herro, Dido, Laudomia, alle in-fere, |
| |
And Phyllis, hanging for thy Demophoun, |
| |
And Canace, espyed by thy chere, |
| 220 |
Ysiphile, betrayed with Jasoun, |
| |
Mak of your trouthe in love no bost ne soun; |
| |
Nor Ypermistre or Adriane, ye pleyne; |
| |
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne. |
| |
| |
Whan that this balade al y-songen was, |
| |
Upon the softe and swote grene gras |
| |
They setten hem ful softely adoun, |
| |
By ordre alle in compas, alle enveroun. |
| |
First sat the god of love, and than his quene |
| |
With the whyte coroun, clad in grene; |
| 230 |
And sithen al the remenant by and by, |
| |
As they were of degree, ful curteisly; |
| |
Ne nat a word was spoken in the place |
| |
The mountance of a furlong-wey of space. |
| |
| |
I, lening faste by under a bente, |
| |
Abood, to knowen what this peple mente, |
| |
As stille as any stoon; til at the laste, |
| |
The god of love on me his eye caste, |
| |
And seyde, "who resteth ther?" and I answerde |
| |
Un-to his axing, whan that I him herde, |
| 240 |
And seyde, "sir, hit am I"; and cam him neer, |
| |
And salued him. Quod he, "what dostow heer |
| |
In my presence, and that so boldely? |
| |
For it were better worthy, trewely, |
| |
A werm to comen in my sight than thou." |
| |
"And why, sir," quod I, "and hit lyke yow?" |
| |
"For thou," quod he, "art ther-to nothing able. |
| |
My servaunts been alle wyse and honourable. |
| |
Thou art my mortal fo, and me warreyest, |
| |
And of myne olde servaunts thou misseyest, |
| 250 |
And hindrest hem with thy translacioun, |
| |
And lettest folk to han devocioun |
| |
To serven me, and haldest hit folye |
| |
To troste on me. Thou mayest hit nat denye; |
| |
For in pleyn text, hit nedeth nat to glose, |
| |
Thou hast translated the Romauns of the Rose, |
| |
That is an heresye ageyns my lawe, |
| |
And makest wyse folk fro me withdrawe. |
| |
And thinkest in thy wit, that is ful cool |
| |
The he nis but a verray propre fool |
| 260 |
That loveth paramours, to harde and hote. |
| |
Wel wot I ther-by thou beginnest dote |
| |
As olde foles, whan hir spirit fayleth; |
| |
Than blame they folk, and wite nat what hem ayleth. |
| |
Hast thou nat mad in English eek the book |
| |
How that Crisseyde Troilus forsook, |
| |
In shewinge how that wemen han don mis? |
| |
But natheles, answere me not to this, |
| |
Why noldest thou as wel han seyd goodnesse |
| |
Of wemen, as thou hast seyd wikkednesse? |
| 270 |
Was ther no good matere in thy minde, |
| |
Ne in alle thy bokes coudest thou nat finde |
| |
Sum story of wemen that were goode and trewe? |
| |
Yis! god wot, sixty bokes olde and newe |
| |
Hast thou thy-self, alle fulle of stories grete, |
| |
That bothe Romains and eek Grekes trete |
| |
Of sundry wemen, which lyf that they ladde, |
| |
And ever an hundred gode ageyn oon badde. |
| |
This knoweth god, and alle clerkes eke, |
| |
That usen swiche materes for to seke. |
| 280 |
What seith Valerie, Titus, or Claudian? |
| |
What seith Ierome ageyns Iovinian? |
| |
How clene maydens, and how trewe wyves, |
| |
How stedfast widwes during al his lyves, |
| |
Telleth Jerome; and that nat of a fewe, |
| |
But, I dar seyn, an hundred on a rewe; |
| |
That hit is pitee for to rede, and routhe, |
| |
The wo that they enduren for hir trouthe. |
| |
For to hir love were they so trewe, |
| |
That rather than they wolde take a newe, |
| 290 |
They chosen to be dede in sundry wyse, |
| |
And deyden, as the story wol devyse; |
| |
And some were brend, and some were cut the hals, |
| |
And some dreynt, for they wolden nat be fals. |
| |
For alle keped they hir maydenhed, |
| |
Or elles wedlok, or hir widwehed. |
| |
And this thing was nat kept for holinesse, |
| |
But al for verray vertu and clennesse, |
| |
And for men shulde sette on hem no lak; |
| |
And yit they weren hethen, al the pak, |
| 300 |
That were so sore adrad of alle shame. |
| |
These olde wemen kepte so hir name, |
| |
That in this world I trow men shal nat finde |
| |
A man that coude be so trewe and kinde, |
| |
As was the leste woman in that tyde. |
| |
What seith also the epistels of Ovyde |
| |
Of trewe wyves, and of hir labour? |
| |
What Vincent, in his Storial Mirour? |
| |
Eek al the world of autours maystow here, |
| |
Cristen and hethen, trete of swich matere; |
| 310 |
It nedeth nat alday thus for tendyte. |
| |
But yit I sey, what eyleth thee to wryte |
| |
The draf of stories, and forgo the corn? |
| |
By seint Venus, of whom that I was born, |
| |
Although [that] thou reneyed hast my lay, |
| |
As othere olde foles many a day, |
| |
Thou shalt repente hit, that hit shal be sene!" |
| |
| |
Than spak Alceste, the worthieste quene, |
| |
And seyde, "god, right of your curtesye, |
| |
Ye moten herknen if he can replye |
| 320 |
Agayns these points that ye han to him meved; |
| |
A god ne sholde nat be thus agreved, |
| |
But of his deitee he shal be stable, |
| |
And therto rightful and eek merciable. |
| |
He shal nat rightfully his yre wreke |
| |
Or he have herd the tother party speke. |
| |
Al ne is nat gospel that is to yow pleyned; |
| |
The god of love herth many a tale y-feyned. |
| |
For in your court is many a losengeour, |
| |
And many a queynte totelere accusour, |
| 330 |
That tabouren in your eres many a thing, |
| |
For hat, or for Ielous imagining, |
| |
And for to han with yow som daliaunce. |
| |
Envye (I prey to god yeve his mischaunce!) |
| |
Is lavender in the grete court alway. |
| |
For she ne parteth, neither night ne day, |
| |
Out of the hous of Cesar; thus seith Dante; |
| |
Who-so that goth, alwey she moot [nat] wante. |
| |
This man to yow may wrongly been accused, |
| |
Ther as by right him oghte been excused. |
| 340 |
Or elles, sir, for that this man is nyce, |
| |
He may translate a thing in no malyce, |
| |
But for he useth bokes for to make, |
| |
And takth non heed of what matere he take; |
| |
Therfor he wroot the Rose and eek Crisseyde |
| |
Of innocence, and niste what he seyde; |
| |
Or him was boden make thilke tweye |
| |
Of som persone, and durste hit nat with-seye; |
| |
For he hath writen many a book er this. |
| |
He ne hath nat doon so grevously amis |
| 350 |
To translaten that olde clerkes wryten, |
| |
As thogh that he of malice wolde endyten |
| |
Despyt of love, and hadde him-self y-wroght. |
| |
This shulde a rightwys lord han in his thoght, |
| |
And nat be lyk tiraunts of Lumbardye, |
| |
That usen wilfulhed and tirannye. |
| |
For he that king or lord is naturel, |
| |
Him oghte nat be tiraunt ne cruel, |
| |
As is a fermour, to doon the harm he can. |
| |
He moste thinke hit is his lige man, |
| 360 |
And that him oweth, of verray duetee, |
| |
Shewen his peple pleyn benignitee, |
| |
And wel to here hir excusaciouns, |
| |
And hir compleyntes and peticiouns, |
| |
In duewe tyme, whan they shal hit profre. |
| |
This is the sentence of the philosophre: |
| |
A king to kepe his liges in Iustyce; |
| |
With-outen doute, that is his offyce. |
| |
And therto is a king ful depe y-sworn, |
| |
Ful many an hundred winter heer-biforn; |
| 370 |
And for to kepe his lordes hir degree, |
| |
As hit is right and skilful that they be |
| |
Enhaunced and honoured, and most dere -- |
| |
For they ben half-goddes in this world here -- |
| |
This shal he doon, bothe to pore [and] riche, |
| |
Al be that here stat be nat a-liche, |
| |
And han of pore folk compassioun, |
| |
For lo, the gentil kind of the lioun! |
| |
For whan a flye offendeth him or byteth, |
| |
He with his tayl awey the flye smyteth |
| 380 |
Al esily; for, of his genterye, |
| |
Him deyneth nat to wreke him on a flye, |
| |
As doth a curre or elles another beste. |
| |
In noble corage oghte been areste, |
| |
And weyen every thing by equitee, |
| |
And ever han reward to his owen degree. |
| |
For, sir, hit is no maystrie for a lord |
| |
To dampne a man with-oute answere or word; |
| |
And, for a lord, that is ful foul to use. |
| |
And if so be he may him nat excuse, |
| 390 |
[But] axeth mercy with a sorweful herte, |
| |
And profreth him, right in his bare sherte, |
| |
To been right at your owne Iugement, |
| |
Than oghte a god, by short avysement, |
| |
Considre his owne honour and his trespas. |
| |
For sith no cause of deeth lyth in his cas, |
| |
Yow oghte been the lighter merciable; |
| |
Leteth your yre, and beth somwhat tretable! |
| |
The man hath served yow of his conning, |
| |
And forthered your lawe with his making. |
| 400 |
Whyl he was yong, he kepte your estat; |
| |
I not wher he be now a renegat. |
| |
But wel I wot, with that he can endyte, |
| |
He hath maked lewed folk delyte |
| |
To serve you, in preysing of your name. |
| |
He made of the book that hight the Hous of Fame, |
| |
And eek the Deeth of Blaunche the Duchesse, |
| |
And the Parlement of Foules, and I gesse, |
| |
And al the love of Palamon and Arcyte |
| |
Of Thebes, thogh the story is knowen lyte; |
| 410 |
And many an ympne for your halydayes, |
| |
That highten Balades, Roundels, Virelayes; |
| |
And, for to speke of other besinesse, |
| |
He hath in prose translated Boece; |
| |
And of the Wreched Engendering of Mankinde, |
| |
As man may in pope Innocent y-finde; |
| |
And mad the Lyf also of seynt Cecyle; |
| |
He made also, goon sithen a greet whyl, |
| |
Origenes upon the Maudeleyne; |
| |
Him oghte now to have the lesse peyne; |
| 420 |
He hath mad many a lay and many a thing. |
| |
| |
"Now as ye been a god, and eek a king, |
| |
I, your Alceste, whylom quene of Trace, |
| |
I axe yow this man, right of your grace, |
| |
That ye him never hurte in al his lyve; |
| |
And he shal sweren yow, and that as blyve, |
| |
He shal no more agilten in this wyse; |
| |
But he shal maken, as ye wil devyse, |
| |
Of wemmen trewe in lovinge al hir lyve, |
| |
Wher-so ye wil, of maiden or of wyve, |
| 430 |
And forthren yow, as muche as he misseyde |
| |
Or in the Rose or elles in Crisseyde." |
| |
| |
The god of love answerde hir thus anoon, |
| |
"Madame," quod he, "hit is so long agoon |
| |
That I yow knew so charitable and trewe, |
| |
That never yit, sith that the world was newe, |
| |
To me ne fond I better noon than ye. |
| |
That, if that I wol save my degree, |
| |
I may ne wol nat warne your requeste; |
| |
Al lyth in yow, doth with him as yow leste |
| 440 |
And al foryeve, with-outen lenger space; |
| |
For who-so yeveth a yift, or doth a grace, |
| |
Do hit by tyme, his thank is wel the more; |
| |
And demeth ye what he shal do therfore. |
| |
Go thanke now my lady heer," quod he. |
| |
| |
I roos, and doun I sette me on my knee, |
| |
And seyde thus: "madame, the god above |
| |
Foryelde yow, that ye the god of love |
| |
Han maked me his wrathe to foryive; |
| |
And yeve me grace so long for to live, |
| 450 |
That I may knowe soothly what ye be |
| |
That han me holpen, and put in swich degree. |
| |
But trewely I wende, as in this cas, |
| |
Naught have agilt, ne doon to love trespas. |
| |
Forwhy a trewe man, with-outen drede, |
| |
Hath nat to parten with a theves dede; |
| |
Ne a trewe lover oghte me nat blame, |
| |
Thogh that I speke a fals lover som shame. |
| |
They oghte rather with me for to holde, |
| |
For that I of Creseyde wroot or tolde, |
| 460 |
Or of the Rose; what-so myn auctour mente, |
| |
Algate, god wot, hit was myn entente |
| |
To forthren trouthe in love and hit cheryce; |
| |
And to be war fro falsnesse and fro vyce |
| |
By swich ensample; this was my meninge." |
| |
| |
And she answerde, "lat be thyn arguinge; |
| |
For Love ne wol nat countrepleted be |
| |
In right ne wrong; and lerne this at me! |
| |
Thou hast thy grace, and hold thee right ther-to. |
| |
Now wol I seyn what penance thou shalt do |
| 470 |
For thy trespas, and understond hit here: |
| |
Thou shalt, whyl that thou livest, yeer by yere, |
| |
The moste party of thy lyve spende |
| |
In making of a glorious Legende |
| |
Of Gode Wemen, maidenes and wyves, |
| |
That were trewe in lovinge al hir lyves; |
| |
And telle of false men that hem bitrayen, |
| |
That al hir lyf ne doon nat but assayen |
| |
How many wemen they may doon a shame; |
| |
For in your world that is now holden game. |
| 480 |
And thogh thee lesteth nat a lover be, |
| |
Spek wel of love; this penance yeve I thee. |
| |
And to the god of love I shal so preye, |
| |
That he shal charge his servants, by any weye, |
| |
To forthren thee, and wel thy labour quyte; |
| |
Go now thy wey, thy penance is but lyte." |
| |
| |
The god of love gan smyle, and than he seyde, |
| |
"Wostow," quod he, "wher this be wyf or mayde, |
| |
Or quene, or countesse, or of what degree, |
| |
That hath so litel penance yeven thee, |
| 490 |
That hast deserved sorer for to smerte? |
| |
But pitee renneth sone in gentil herte; |
| |
That mayst thou seen, she kytheth what she is." |
| |
And I answerde, "nay, sir, so have I blis, |
| |
No more but that I see wel she is good." |
| |
| |
"That is a trewe tale, by myn hood," |
| |
Quod Love, "and that thou knowest wel, pardee, |
| |
If hit be so that thou avyse thee. |
| |
Hastow nat in a book, lyth in thy cheste, |
| |
The grete goodnesse of the quene Alceste, |
| 500 |
That turned was into a dayesye: |
| |
She that for hir husbande chees to dye, |
| |
And eek to goon to helle, rather than he, |
| |
And Ercules rescued hir, pardee, |
| |
And broghte hir out of helle agayn to blis?" |
| |
| |
"And I answerde ageyn, and seyde, "yis, |
| |
Now knowe I hir! And is this good Alceste, |
| |
The dayesye, and myn owne hertes reste? |
| |
Now fele I wel the goodnesse of this wyf, |
| |
That bothe after hir deeth, and in hir lyf, |
| 510 |
Hir grete bountee doubleth hir renoun! |
| |
Wel hath she quit me myn affeccioun |
| |
That I have to hir flour, the dayesye! |
| |
No wonder is thogh Iove hir stellifye, |
| |
As telleth Agaton, for hir goodnesse! |
| |
Hir whyte coroun berth of hit witnesse; |
| |
For also many vertues hadde she, |
| |
As smale floures in hir coroun be. |
| |
In remembraunce of hir and in honour, |
| |
Cibella made the dayesy and the flour |
| 520 |
Y-coroned al with whyt, as men may see; |
| |
And Mars yaf to hir coroun reed, pardee, |
| |
In stede of rubies, set among the whyte." |
| |
| |
Therwith this quene wex reed for shame a lyte, |
| |
Whan she was preysed so in hir presence. |
| |
Than seyde Love, "a ful gret negligence |
| |
Was hit to thee, to write unstedfastnesse |
| |
Of women, sith thou knowest hir goodnesse |
| |
By preef, and eek by stories heer-biforn; |
| |
Let be the chaf, and wryt wel of the corn. |
| 530 |
Why noldest thou han writen of Alceste, |
| |
And leten Criseide been a-slepe and reste? |
| |
For of Alceste shuld thy wryting be, |
| |
Sin that thou wost that kalender is she |
| |
Of goodnesse, for she taughte of fyn lovinge, |
| |
And namely of wyfhood the livinge, |
| |
And alle the boundes that she oghte kepe; |
| |
Thy litel wit was thilke tyme a-slepe. |
| |
But now I charge thee, upon thy lyf, |
| |
That in thy Legend thou make of this wyf, |
| 540 |
Whan thou hast other smale mad before; |
| |
And fare now wel, I charge thee no more. |
| |
| |
"At Cleopatre I wol that thou beginne; |
| |
And so forth; and my love so shalt thou winne." |
| |
| |
And with that word of sleep I gan a-awake, |
| |
And right thus on my Legend gan I make. |
| |
| |
Explicit prohemium |