Piers Ploughman (Wright)/Passus 10

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Passus Decimus de Visione, et Secundus de Do-wel.

hanne hadde Wit a wif, 5596

Was hote dame Studie,
That lene was of lere,
And of liche bothe;
She was wonderly wroth 5600
That Wit me thus taughte;
And al starynge dame Studie
Sterneliche loked.

"Wel artow wis," quod she to Wit,
"Any wisdomes to telle
To flatereres or to fooles,
That frenetike ben of wittes."
And blamed hym and banned hym,
And bad hym be stille,
With swiche wise wordes 5610
To wissen any sottes.
And seide, "Noli mittere, man,
Margery perles
Among hogges, that han
Hawes at wille;
Thei doon but dryvele theron,
Draf were hem levere
Than al the precious perree
That in paradis wexeth.
I seye it by swiche," quod she, 5620
"That sheweth by hir werkes,
That hem were levere lond
And lordshipe on erthe,
Or richesse, or rentes,
And reste at hir wille,
Than alle the sooth sawes
That Salomon seide evere.

"Wisdom and wit now
Is noght worth a kerse,
But if it be carded with coveitise, 5630
As clotheres kemben hir wolle.
Who so can contreve deceites
And conspire wronges,
And lede forth a love-day
To lette with truthe,
He that swiche craftes can
To counseil is cleped.
Thei lede lordes with lesynges,
And bi-lieth Truthe.

"Job the gentile 5640
In his gestes witnesseth,
That wikked men thei welden
The welthe of this worlde;
And that thei ben lordes of ech a lond
That out of lawe libbeth.
Quare impii vivunt, bene est omnibus
qui prævaricantur et inique
agunt.

"The Sauter seith the same
By swiche that doon ille: 5650
Ecce ipsi peccatores abundantes in
sæculo obtinuerunt divitias.

"Lo! seith holy lettrure,
Whiche beth thise sherewes?
Thilke that God gyveth moost,
Leest good thei deleth;
And moost un-kynde to the commune
That moost catel weldeth.
Quæ perfecisti destruxerunt, justus
autem, etc. 5660

"Harlotes for hir harlotrie
May have of hir goodes,
And japeris and jogelours,
And jangleris of gestes.

"Ac he that hath holy writ
Ay in his mouthe,
And kan telle of Tobye,
And of twelve apostles,
Or prechen of the penaunce
That Pilat wikkedly wroghte 5670
To Jhesu the gentile,
That Jewes to-drowe;
Litel is he loved
That swich a lesson sheweth,
Or daunted or drawe forth,
I do it on God hymselve.

"But thoo that feynen hem foolis,
And with faityng libbeth,
Ayein the lawe of oure Lord,
And lyen on hemselve, 5680
Spitten and spuen,
And speke foule wordes,
Drynken and drevelen,
And do men fer to gape,
Likne men, and lye on hem,
That leneth hem no giftes;
Thei konne na-moore mynstralcie
Ne musik men to glade,
Than Munde the millere
Of Multa fecit Deus. 5690
Ne were hir vile harlotrye,
Have God my trouthe!
Sholde nevere kyng ne knyght,
Ne chanon of seint Poules,
Gyve hem to hir yeres-gyve
The gifte of a grote.

"Ac murthe and mynstralcie
Amonges men is nouthe
Lecherie, losengerye,
And losels tales, 5700
Glotonye and grete othes,
This murthe thei lovyeth.

"Ac if thei carpen of Crist,
Thise clerkes and thise lewed
At mete in hir murthe,
Whan mynstrals beth stille,
Thanne telleth thei of the Trinité
A tale outher tweye,
And bryngen forth a balled reson,
And taken Bernard to witnesse, 5710
And putten forth a presumpcion
To preve the sothe.
Thus thei dryvele at hir deys
The Deitee to knowe,
And gnawen God with the gorge,
Whanne hir guttes fullen.

"Ac the carefulle may crie
And carpen at the yate,
Bothe a-fyngred and a-furst,
And for chele quake; 5720
Is ther noon to nyme hym neer,
His anoy to amende,
But hunten hym as an hound,
And hoten hym go thennes.
Litel loveth he that Lord
That lent hym al that blisse,
That thus parteth with the povere
A percell whan hym nedeth.
Ne were mercy in meene men
Moore than in riche, 5730
Mendinauntz mete-lees
Myghte go to bedde.
God is muche in the gorge
Of thise grete maistres,
Ac amonges meene men
His mercy and hise werkes.
And so seith the Sauter,
I have seighen it ofte:
Ecce audivimus eam in Effrata, invenimus
eam in campis silvæ. 5740

"Clerkes and othere kynnes men
Carpen of God faste,
And have hym muche in the mouth;
Ac meene men in herte.

"Freres and faitours
Han founde swiche questions,
To plese with proude men,
Syn the pestilence tyme;
And prechen at seint Poules
For pure envye of clerkes; 5750
That folk is noght fermed in the feith,
Ne free of hire goodes,
Ne sory for hire synnes;
So is pride woxen,
In religion and in al the reme,
Amonges riche and povere,
That preieres have no power
The pestilence to lette.
And yet the wrecches of this world
Is noon y-war by oother; 5760
Ne for drede of the deeth
With-drawe noght hir pride;
Ne beth plentevouse to the povere,
As pure charité wolde;
But in gaynesse and in glotonye
For-glutten hir good hemselve,
And breketh noght to the beggere
As the Book techeth:
Frange esurienti panem tuum, etc.
And the moore he wynneth and welt 5770
Welthes and richesse,
And lordeth in londes,
The lasse good he deleth.

"Tobye telleth yow noght so,
Taketh hede, ye riche,
How the book Bible
Of hym bereth witnesse.
Si tibi sit copia, abundanter tribue.
Si autem exiguum, illud impertiri
stude libenter. 5780

"Who so hath muche, spende manliche,
So seith Tobye;
And who so litel weldeth,
Rule hym therafter.
For we have no lettre of oure lif,
How longe it shal dure,
Swiche lessons lordes sholde
Lovye to here,
And how he myghte moost meynee
Manliche fynde. 5790

"Nought to fare as a fithelere or a frere,
For to seke festes
Homliche at othere mennes houses,
And hatien hir owene.
Elenge is the halle
Ech day in the wike,
Ther the lord ne the lady
Liketh noght to sitte.
Now hath ech riche a rule
To eten by hymselve 5800
In a pryvee parlour,
For povere mennes sake,
Or in a chambre with a chymenee,
And leve the chief halle
That was maad for meles,
Men to eten inne,
And al to spare to spende
That spille shal another.

"I have y-herd heighe men,
Etynge at the table, 5810
Carpen, as thei clerkes were,
Of Crist, and of hise myghtes;
And leyden fautes upon the fader
That formede us alle,
And carpen ayein clerkes
Crabbede wordes,
Why wolde oure Saveour suffre
Swich a worm in his blisse,
That bigiled the womman,
And the man after, 5820
Thorugh whiche wiles and wordes
Thei wente to helle,
And al hir seed for hir synne
The same deeth suffrede.

"Here lyeth youre lore,
Thise lordes gynneth dispute,
Of that the clerkes us kenneth
Of Crist by the Gospel:
Filius non portabit iniquitatem patris,
etc. 5830

"Why sholde we that now ben,
For the werkes of Adam,
Roten and to-rende?
Reson wolde it nevere.
Unusquisque portabit onus suum, etc.

"Swiche motyves thei mene,
Thise maistres in hir glorie,
And maken men in mys-bileve
That muse muche on hire wordes,
Ymaginatif herafterwarde 5840
Shal answere to hir purpos.

"Austyn to swiche argueres
Telleth this teme:
Non plus sapere quam oportet.

"Wilneth nevere to wite
Why that God wolde
Suffre Sathan
His seed to bigile;
Ac bileveth lelly
In the loore of holy chirche, 5850
And preie hym of pardon
And penaunce in thi lyve,
And for his muche mercy
To amende yow here.
For alle that wilneth to wite
The weyes of God almyghty,
I wolde his eighe were in his ers,
And his fynger after,
That evere wilneth to wite
Why that God wolde 5860
Suffre Sathan
His seed to bigile,
Or Judas to the Jewes
Jhesu bitraye.
Al was as thow woldest,
Lord, y-worshiped be the!
And al worth as thow wolt,
What so we dispute.

"And tho that useth thise hanylons
To blende mennes wittes, 5870
What is Do-wel fro Do-bet,
That deef mote he worthe,
Siththe he wilneth to wite
Whiche thei ben bothe,
But if he lyve in the lif
That longeth to Do-wel.
For I dar ben his bolde borgh,
That do-bet wole he nevere,
Theigh Do-best drawe on hym
Day after oother." 5880

And whan that Wit was y-war
What dame Studie tolde,
He bicom so confus,
He kouthe noght loke,
And as doumb as deeth,
And drough hym arere;
And for no carpyng I kouthe after,
Ne knelyng to the grounde,
I myghte gete no greyn
Of his grete wittes. 5890
But al laughynge he louted,
And loked upon Studie
In signe that I sholde
Bi-sechen hire of grace.

And whan I was war of his wille,
To his wif gan I loute,
And seide, "Mercy, madame,
Youre man shal I worthe
As longe as I lyve,
Bothe late and rathe, 5900
For to werche youre wille
The while my lif dureth,
With that ye kenne me kyndely
To knowe what is Do-wel."

"For thi mekenesse, man," quod she,
"And for thi mylde speche,
I shal kenne thee to my cosyn
That Clergie is hoten.
He hath wedded a wif
Withinne thise sixe monthes, 5910
Is sib to seven artz,
Scripture is hir name.
They two, as I hope,
After my techyng,
Shullen wissen thee to Do-wel,
I dar it undertake."

Thanne was I al so fayn,
As fowel of fair morwe,
And gladder than the gle-man
That gold hath to gifte; 5920
And asked hire the heighe wey
Where that Clergie dwelte,
"And tel me som tokene," quod I,
"For tyme is that I wende."

"Aske the heighe wey," quod she,
"Hennes to Suffre-
Both-wele-and-wo,
If that thow wolt lerne,
And ryd forth by Richesse,
Ac rest thow noght therinne; 5930
For if thow couplest thee therwith,
To Clergie comestow nevere.

"And also the likerouse launde
That Lecherie hatte,
Leve it on thi left half
A large myle or moore,
Til thow come to a court,
Kepe-wel-thi-tunge-
Fro-lesynges-and-lither-speche-
And-likerouse-drynkes. 5940

"Thanne shaltow se Sobretee,
And Sympletee-of-speche,
That ech wight be in wille
His wit thee to shewe;
And thus shaltow come to Clergie,
That kan manye thynges.

"Seye hym this signe,
I sette hym to scole,
And that I grete wel his wif,
For I wroot hire manye bokes, 5950
And sette hire to Sapience,
And to the Sauter glose;
Logyk I lerned hire,
And manye othere lawes,
And alle musons in musik
I made hire to knowe.

"Plato the poete
I putte first to boke,
Aristotle and othere mo
To argue I taughte. 5960

"Grammer for girles
I garte first to write,
And bette hem with a baleys,
But if thei wolde lerne,

"Of alle kynne craftes
I contreved tooles,
Of carpentrie, of kerveres,
And compased masons,
And lerned hem level and lyne,
Though I loke dymme. 5970

"Ac Theologie hath tened me
Ten score tymes;
The moore I muse therinne
The mystier it seemeth,
And the depper I devyne
The derker me it thynketh.
It is no science, for sothe,
For to sotile inne;
A ful lethi thyng it were,
If that love nere; 5980
Ac for it leteth best bi-love,
I love it the bettre.
For there that love is ledere,
Ther lakked nevere grace.
Loke thow love lelly,
If thee liketh Do-wel;
For Do-bet and Do-best
Ben of Loves kynne.

"In oother science it seith,
I seigh it in Caton: 5990
Qui simulat verbis, nec corde est fidus amicus,
Tu quoque fac simile, sic ars deluditur arte.

"Who so gloseth as gylours doon,
Go me to the same;
And so shaltow fals folk
And feith-lees bigile.
This is Catons kennyng
To clerkes that he lereth.

"Ac Theologie techeth noght so,
Who so taketh yeme; 6000
He kenneth us the contrarie,
Ayein Catons wordes.
For he biddeth us be as bretheren,
And bidde for our enemys.
And loven hem that lyen on us,
And lene hem whan hem nedeth,
And do good ayein yvel,
God hymself it hoteth.
Dum tempus habemus, operemur
bonum ad omnes, maxime autem 6010
ad domesticos fidei.
Poul preched the peple
That perfitnesse lovede,
To do good for Goddes love,
And gyven men that asked,
And namely to swiche
As suwen oure bileve,
And alle that lakketh us, or lyeth,
Oure Lord techeth us to lovye.
And noght to greven hem that greveth us, 6020
God hymself forbad it,
Mihi vindictam, et ego retribuam.

"For-thi loke thow lovye,
As longe as thow durest;
For is no science under sonne
So sovereyn for the soule.

"Ac astronomye is an hard thyng,
And yvel for to knowe;
Geometrie and geomesie,
So gynful of speche, 6030
Who so thynketh werche with tho two
Thryveth ful late,
For sorcerie is the sovereyn book
That to tho sciences bilongeth.

"Yet ar ther fibicches in forceres
Of fele mennes makyng,
Experimentz of alkenamye
The peple to deceyve;
If thow thynke to do-wel,
Deel therwith nevere. 6040

"Alle thise sciences I myself
Sotilede and ordeynede,
And founded hem formest
Folk to deceyve.
Tel Clergie this tokene,
And Scripture after,
To counseille thee kyndely
To knowe what is Do-wel."

I seide, "Graunt mercy, madame,"
And mekely hir grette; 6050
And wente wightly awey
Withoute moore lettyng,
And til I com to Clergie
I koude nevere stynte;
And grette the goode man,
As Studie me taughte,
And afterwardes the wif,
And worshiped hem bothe,
And tolde hem the tokenes
That me taught were. 6060
Was nevere gome upon this ground,
Sith God made the worlde,
Fairer under-fongen,
Ne frendlier at ese,
Than myself, soothly,
Soone so he wiste
Than I was of Wittes hous,
And with his wif, dame Studie.

I seide to hem soothly
That sent was I thider, 6070
Do-wel and Do-bet
And Do-best to lerne.

"It is a commune lyf," quod Clergie,
"On holy chirche to bileve,
With alle the articles of the feith
That falleth to be knowe;
And that is to bileve lelly,
Bothe lered and lewed,
On the grete God
That gynnyng hadde nevere, 6080
And on the soothfast Sone
That saved mankynde
Fro the dedly deeth
And devel's power,
Thorugh the help of the Holy Goost,
The which goost is of bothe,
Thre persones, ac noght
In plurel nombre;
For al is but oon God,
And ech is God hymselve. 6090
Deus pater, Deus filius, Deus spiritus sanctus.[1]
God the fader, God the sone,
God holy goost of bothe,
Makere of mankynde,
And of beestes bothe.

"Austyn the olde
Herof made bokes,
And hymself ordeyned
To sadde us in bileve. 6100
Who was his auctour?
Alle the foure euvangelistes,
And Crist cleped hymself so,
The euvangelistes bereth witnesse.

"Alle the clerkes under Crist
Ne koude this assoille;
But thus it bi-longeth to bileve
To lewed that willen do-wel.
For hadde nevere freke fyn wit
The feith to dispute, 6110
Ne man hadde no merite,
Myghte it ben y-preved.
Fides non habet meritum, ubi humana
ratio præbet
experimentum.

"Thanne is Do-bet to suffre
For the soules helthe,
Al that the book bit
Bi holi cherches techyng;
And that is, man, bi thy myght, 6120
For mercies sake.
Loke thow werche it in werk,
That thi word sheweth,
Swich as thow semest in sighte
Be in assay y-founde.
Appare quod es, vel esto quod appares.[1]

"And lat no body be
By thi beryng bigiled,
But be swich in thi soule 6130
As thow semest withoute.

"Thanne is Do-best to be boold
To blame the gilty,
Sythenes thow seest thiself
As in soule clene;
Ac blame thow nevere body,
And thow be blame worthy.
Si culpare velis,
Culpabilis esse cavebis;
Dogma tuum sordet, 6140
Cum te tua culpa remordet.

"God in the Gospel
Grevously repreveth
Alle that lakketh any lif,
And lakkes han hemselve.
Qui consideras festucam in oculo
fratris tui, trabem in oculo tuo, etc.[1]

"Why menestow thi mood for a mote
In thi brotheres eighe, 6150
Sithen a beem in thyn owene
A-blyndeth thiselve.
Ejice primo trabem in oculo tuo, etc.[1]
Which letteth thee to loke
Lasse outher more.

"I rede ech a blynd bosarde
Do boote to hymselve,
For abbotes and for priours,
And for alle manere prelates, 6160
As persons and parisshes preestes
That preche sholde and teche
Alle maner men to amenden
Bi hire myghtes.

"This text was told yow,
To ben y-war, er ye taughte,
That ye were swiche as ye seye,
So salve with othere;
For Goddes word wolde noght be lost,
For that wercheth evere; 6170
If it availled noght the commune,
It myghte availle yowselve.

"Ac it semeth now soothly
To the worldes sighte,
That Goddes word wercheth noght
On lered ne on lewed,
But in swich a manere
As Marc meneth in the gospel:
Dum cæcus ducit cæcum, ambo in
foveam cadunt. 6180

"Lewed men may likne yow thus,
That the beem lith in youre eighen;
And the festu is fallen
For youre defaute,
In alle maner men,
Thorugh mansede preestes.
The Bible bereth witnesse
That the folk of Israel
Bittre a-boughte the giltes
Of two badde preestes, 6190
Offyn and Fynes,
For hir coveitise,
Archa Dei mys-happed,
And Ely brak his nekke.

"For-thi ye corectours claweth heron.
And corecteth first yowselve
And thanne mowe ye safly seye,
As David made in the Sauter,
Existimasti inique quod ero tui
similis, arguam te, et statuam 6200
contra faciem tuam.

"And thanne shul burel clerkes ben abasshed
To blame yow or to greve,
And carpen noght as thei carpe now,
Ne calle yow doumbe houndes.
Canes non valentes latrare.
And drede to wrathe yow in any word,
Youre werkmanshipe to lette,
And be prester at youre preiere,
Than for a pound of nobles. 6210
And al for youre holynesse,
Have ye this in herte.

"In scole there is scorn,
But if a clerk wol lerne,
And gret love and likyng,
For ech of hem loveth oother.

"Ac now is Religion a rydere,
A romere aboute,
A ledere of love-dayes,
And a lond-buggere, 6220
A prikere on a palfrey
Fro manere to manere,
An heepe of houndes at his ers
As he a lord were.
And but if his knave knele
That shal his coppe brynge,
He loureth on hym, and asketh hym
Who taughte hym curteisie.

"Litel hadde lordes to doon,
To gyve lond from hire heires 6230
To religiouse, that han no routhe,
Though it reyne on hir auters.

"In many places ther thei ben persons,
By hemself at ese
Of the povere have thei no pité;
And that is hir charité.
Ac thei leten hem as lordes
Hire londes lyen so brode.

"Ac ther shal come a kyng,
And confesse yow religiouses, 6240
And bete yow as the Bible telleth
For brekynge of youre rule;
And amende monyals,
Monkes and chanons,
And puten to hir penaunce
Ad pristinum statum ire;
And barons with erles beten hem,
Thorugh Beatus-virres techyng,
That hir barnes claymen
And blame yow foule. 6250
Hi in curribus et hi in equis ipsi
obligati sunt, etc.

"And thanne freres in hir fraytour
Shul fynden a keye
Of Costantyns cofres,
In which is the catel
That Gregories god-children
Han yvele despended.

"And thanne shal the abbot of Abyngdone[1]
And al his issue for evere, 6261
Have a knok of a kyng,
And incurable the wounde.

"That this worth sooth, seke ye
That ofte over-se the Bible:
Quomodo cessavit exactor, quievit
tributum, contrivit Dominus
baculum impiorum et virgam
dominantium cædentium plaga
insanabili. 6270

"Ac er that kyng come,
Caym shal awake.
But Do-wel shal dyngen hym adoun,
And destruye his myghte."

"Thanne is Do-wel and Do-bet," quod I,
"Dominus and knyghthode."

"I nel noght scorne," quod Scripture,
"But if scryveynes lye;
Kynghod ne knyghthod,
By noght I kan a-wayte, 6280
Helpeth noght to hevene-ward
Oone heris ende;
Ne richesse right noght,
Ne reautee of lordes.
Poul preveth it impossible
Riche men to have hevene.
Salomon seith also
That silver is worst to lovye:
Nihil iniquius quam amare
pecuniam. 6290
And Caton kenneth us to coveiten it
Naught but as nede techeth,
Dilige denarium, sed parce dilige formam.[1]
And patriarkes and prophetes,
And poetes bothe,
Writen to wissen us
To wilne no richesse,
And preiseden poverte with pacience;
The apostles bereth witnesse 6300
That thei han eritage in hevene,
And by trewe righte;
Ther riche men no right may cleyme,
But of ruthe and grace."

"Contra," quod I, "by Crist!
That kan I repreve,
And preven it by Peter,
And by Poul bothe,
That is baptized beth saaf,
Be he riche or povere." 6310

"That is in extremis," quod Scripture,
"Amonges Sarzens and Jewes,
They mowen be saved so,
And that is oure bileve,
That an un-cristene in that caas
May cristen an hethen;
And for his lele bileve,
Whan he the lif tyneth,
Have the heritage of hevene
As any man cristene. 6320

"Ac cristene men withoute moore
Maye noght come to hevene;
For that Crist for cristene men
Deide and confermed the lawe,
That who so wolde and wilneth
With Crist to arise,
Si cum Christo surexistis, etc.
He sholde lovye and leve,
And the lawe fulfille.
That is, love thi lord God 6330
Levest aboven alle;
And after, alle cristene creatures
In commune, ech man oother;
And thus bi-longeth to lovye,
That leveth be saved.
And but we do thus in dede,
At the day of dome
It shal bi-sitten us ful soure
The silver that we kepen;
And oure bakkes that mothe-eten be, 6340
And seen beggeris go naked;
Or delit in wyn and wilde fowel,
And wite any in defaute.
For every cristene creature
Sholde be kynde til oother,
And sithen hethen to helpe,
In hope of amendement.

"God hoteth heighe and lowe
That no man hurte oother;
And seith, 'Slee noght that semblable is 6350
To myn owene liknesse,
But if I sende thee som tokene;'
And seith 'Non mœchaberis.
Is slee noght, but suffre,
And al for the beste;
For I shal punysshe hem in purgatorie
Or in the put of helle,
Ech man for hise mysdedes,
But mercy it lette.'"

"
This is a long lesson," quod I, 6360

"And litel am I the wiser;
Where Do-wel is or Do-bet,
Derkliche ye shewen.
Manye tales ye tellen
That Theologie lerneth;
And that I man maad was,
And my name y-entred
In the legende of lif
Longe er I were,
Or ellis un-writen for som wikkednesse, 6370
As Holy Writ witnesseth:
Nemo ascendit ad cœlum, nisi qui
de cœlo descendit.

"I leve it wel," quod I, "by oure Lord!
And on no lettrure bettre.
For Salomon the sage,
That Sapience taughte,
God gat hym grace of wit,
And alle hise goodes after;
He demed wel and wisely, 6380
As Holy Writ telleth.
Aristotle and he,
Who wissed men bettre?
Maistres that of Goddes mercy
Techen men and prechen,
Of hir wordes thei wissen us
For wisest as in hir tyme,
And al holy chirche
Holdeth hem bothe y-dampned.

"And if I sholde werche by hir werkes 6390
To wynne me hevene,
That for hir werkes and wit
Now wonyeth in pyne,
Thanne wroughe I un-wisly,
What so evere ye preche.

"Ac of fele witty, in feith,
Litel ferly I have,
Though hir goost be un-gracious
God for to plese.
For many men on this moolde 6400
Moore setten hir hertes
In good than in God;
For-thi hem grace failleth
At hir mooste meschief,
Whan thei shal lif lete.
As Salomon dide, and swiche othere
That shewed grete wittes;
Ac hir werkes, as holy writ seith,
Were evere the contrarie.
For-thi wise witted men, 6410
And wel y-lettrede clerkes,
As thei seyen hemself,
Selde doon therafter.
Super cathedra Moysi, etc.

"Ac I wene it worth of manye,
As was in Noes tyme,
Tho he shoop that shipe
Of shides and of bordes;
Was nevere wrighte saved that wroghte theron,[1]
Ne oothir werkman ellis, 6421
But briddes, and beestes,
And the blissed Noe,
And his wif with hise sones,
And also hire wyves;
Of wightes that it wroghte
Was noon of hem y-saved.

"God leve it fare noght so bi folk
That the feith techeth
Of holi chirche, that herberwe is, 6430
And Goddes hous to save,
And shilden us from shame therinne,
As Noes ship dide beestes;
And men that maden it
A-mydde the flood a-dreynten.
The culorum of this clause
Curatours is to mene,
That ben carpenters holy kirk to make
For Cristes owene beestes:
Homines et jumenta salvabis, Domine, etc.[1]

"On Good Friday I fynde 6442
A felon was y-saved,
That hadde lyved al his lif
With lesynges and with thefte;
And for he beknede to the cros,
And to Crist shrof him,
He was sonner y-saved
Than seint Johan the Baptist;
And or Adam or Ysaye, 6450
Or any of the prophetes,
That hadde y-leyen with Lucifer
Many longe yeres,
A robbere was y-raunsoned
Rather than thei alle,
Withouten any penaunce of purgatorie,
To perpetuel blisse.

"Than Marie Maudeleyne
What womman dide werse?
Or who worse than David, 6460
That Uries deeth conspired?
Or Poul the apostle,
That no pité hadde
Muche cristene kynde
To kille to dethe?
And now ben thise as sovereyns
With seintes in hevene,
Tho that wroughte wikkedlokest
In world tho thei were.
And tho that wisely wordeden, 6470
And writen manye bokes
Of wit and of wisedom,
With dampned soules wonye.
That Salomon seith, I trowe be sooth
And certein of us alle:
Sunt justi atque sapientes et opera
eorum in manu Dei sunt, etc.

"Ther are witty and wel libbynge,
Ac hire werkes ben y-hudde
In the hondes of almyghty God, 6480
And he woot the sothe,
Wherfore a man worth allowed there,
And hise lele werkes,
Or ellis for his yvel wille,
And for envye of herte,
And be allowed as he lyved so;
For by the luthere men knoweth the goode.

"And wherby wiste men which were whit,
If alle thyng blak were?
And who were a good man, 6490
But if ther were som sherewe?
For-thi lyve we forth with othere men,
I leve fewe ben goode;
For quant oportet vient en place,
Il n'y ad que pati.
And he that may al amende,
Have mercy on us alle!
For sothest word that ever God seide
Was tho he seide Nemo bonus.

"Clergie tho of Cristes mouth 6500
Comended was it litel;
For he seide to seint Peter,
And to swiche as he lovede,
Cum steteritis ante reges et præsides, etc.[1]
Though ye come bifore kynges
And clerkes of the lawe,
Beth noght abasshed,
For I shal be in youre mouthes,
And gyve yow wit and wille, 6510
And konnyng to conclude
Hem alle that ayeins yow
Of Cristendom disputen.

"David maketh mencion,
He spak amonges kynges,
And myghte no kyng over-comen hym
As by konnynge of speche,
But wit and wisedom
Wan nevere the maistrie,
Whan man was at meschief, 6520
Withoute the moore grace.

"The doughtieste doctour
And devinour of the Trinitee
Was Austyn the olde,
And heighest of the foure,
Seide thus in a sermon,
I seigh it writen ones:
Ecce ipsi idiotæ vi rapiunt cœlum, ubi
nos sapientes in inferno
mergimur. 6530

"And is to mene to men,
Moore ne lesse,
Arn none rather y-ravysshed
Fro the righte bileve,
Than are thise konnynge clerkes
That konne manye bokes.

"Ne none sonner saved,
Ne sadder of bileve,
Than plowmen and pastours,
And othere commune laborers; 6540
Souteres and shepherdes,
And othere lewed juttes,
Percen with a pater-noster
The paleys of hevene,
And passen purgatorie penaunce-lees
At her hennes partyng
Into the blisse of paradis,
For hir pure bileve,
That imparfitly here knewe,
And ek lyvede. 6550

"Ye men knowe clerkes,
That han corsed the tyme
That evere thei kouthe or knewe moore
Than Credo in Deum patrem;
And principally hir pater-noster
Many a persone hath wisshed.

"I se ensamples myself,
And so may manye othere,
That servauntz that serven lordes
Selde fallen in arerage, 6560
And tho that kepen the lordes catel,
Clerkes and reves.

"Right so lewed men,
And of litel knowyng,
Selden falle thei so foule
And so fer in synne,
As clerkes of holy chirche
That kepen Cristes tresor,
The which is mannes soule to save,
As God seith in the Gospel:
Ite vos in vineam meam." 6571


  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 In Wright's edition each of these lines was printed and counted as two lines