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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Confessio Amantis, by John Gower</title>
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Confessio Amantis, by John Gower</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Confessio Amantis<br />
+  Tales of the Seven Deadly Sins, 1330–1408 A.D.</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Gower</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May, 1995 [eBook #266]<br />
+[Most recently updated: August 21, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Douglas B. Killings, Diane M. Brendan and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONFESSIO AMANTIS ***</div>
+
+<h1>CONFESSIO AMANTIS</h1>
+
+<h3>or</h3>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">TALES OF THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS</h2>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">By John Gower</h2>
+
+<h3>1330–1408 A.D.</h3>
+
+<p class="letter">
+The following electronic text is based on that edition published in THE
+WORKS OF JOHN GOWER, ed. Prof. G.C. Macauley.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0001">Prologus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0002">Liber Primus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0003">Liber Secundus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0004">Liber Tercius</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0005">Liber Quartus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0006">Liber Quintus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0007">Liber Sextus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0008">Liber Septimus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#link2H_4_0009">Liber Octavus</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0001"></a>
+Prologus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Torpor, ebes sensus, scola parua labor minimusque<br/>
+    Causant quo minimus ipse minora canam:<br/>
+Qua tamen Engisti lingua canit Insula Bruti<br/>
+    Anglica Carmente metra iuuante loquar.<br/>
+Ossibus ergo carens que conterit ossa loquelis<br/>
+    Absit, et interpres stet procul oro malus.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Of hem that writen ous tofore<br/>
+The bokes duelle, and we therfore<br/>
+Ben tawht of that was write tho:<br/>
+Forthi good is that we also<br/>
+In oure tyme among ous hiere<br/>
+Do wryte of newe som matiere,<br/>
+Essampled of these olde wyse<br/>
+So that it myhte in such a wyse,<br/>
+Whan we ben dede and elleswhere,<br/>
+Beleve to the worldes eere    10<br/>
+In tyme comende after this.<br/>
+Bot for men sein, and soth it is,<br/>
+That who that al of wisdom writ<br/>
+It dulleth ofte a mannes wit<br/>
+To him that schal it aldai rede,<br/>
+For thilke cause, if that ye rede,<br/>
+I wolde go the middel weie<br/>
+And wryte a bok betwen the tweie,<br/>
+Somwhat of lust, somewhat of lore,<br/>
+That of the lasse or of the more    20<br/>
+Som man mai lyke of that I wryte:<br/>
+And for that fewe men endite<br/>
+In oure englissh, I thenke make<br/>
+A bok for Engelondes sake,<br/>
+The yer sextenthe of kyng Richard.<br/>
+What schal befalle hierafterward<br/>
+God wot, for now upon this tyde<br/>
+Men se the world on every syde<br/>
+In sondry wyse so diversed,<br/>
+That it welnyh stant al reversed,    30<br/>
+As forto speke of tyme ago.<br/>
+The cause whi it changeth so<br/>
+It needeth nought to specifie,<br/>
+The thing so open is at ije<br/>
+That every man it mai beholde:<br/>
+And natheles be daies olde,<br/>
+Whan that the bokes weren levere,<br/>
+Wrytinge was beloved evere<br/>
+Of hem that weren vertuous;<br/>
+For hier in erthe amonges ous,    40<br/>
+If noman write hou that it stode,<br/>
+The pris of hem that weren goode<br/>
+Scholde, as who seith, a gret partie<br/>
+Be lost: so for to magnifie<br/>
+The worthi princes that tho were,<br/>
+The bokes schewen hiere and there,<br/>
+Wherof the world ensampled is;<br/>
+And tho that deden thanne amis<br/>
+Thurgh tirannie and crualte,<br/>
+Right as thei stoden in degre,    50<br/>
+So was the wrytinge of here werk.<br/>
+Thus I, which am a burel clerk,<br/>
+Purpose forto wryte a bok<br/>
+After the world that whilom tok<br/>
+Long tyme in olde daies passed:<br/>
+Bot for men sein it is now lassed,<br/>
+In worse plit than it was tho,<br/>
+I thenke forto touche also<br/>
+The world which neweth every dai,<br/>
+So as I can, so as I mai.    60<br/>
+Thogh I seknesse have upon honde<br/>
+And longe have had, yit woll I fonde<br/>
+To wryte and do my bisinesse,<br/>
+That in som part, so as I gesse,<br/>
+The wyse man mai ben avised.<br/>
+For this prologe is so assised<br/>
+That it to wisdom al belongeth:<br/>
+What wysman that it underfongeth,<br/>
+He schal drawe into remembrance<br/>
+The fortune of this worldes chance,    70<br/>
+The which noman in his persone<br/>
+Mai knowe, bot the god al one.<br/>
+Whan the prologe is so despended,<br/>
+This bok schal afterward ben ended<br/>
+Of love, which doth many a wonder<br/>
+And many a wys man hath put under.<br/>
+And in this wyse I thenke trete<br/>
+Towardes hem that now be grete,<br/>
+Betwen the vertu and the vice<br/>
+Which longeth unto this office.    80<br/>
+Bot for my wittes ben to smale<br/>
+To tellen every man his tale,<br/>
+This bok, upon amendment<br/>
+To stonde at his commandement,<br/>
+With whom myn herte is of accord,<br/>
+I sende unto myn oghne lord,<br/>
+Which of Lancastre is Henri named:<br/>
+The hyhe god him hath proclamed<br/>
+Ful of knyhthode and alle grace.<br/>
+So woll I now this werk embrace    90<br/>
+With hol trust and with hol believe;<br/>
+God grante I mot it wel achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I schal drawe in to my mynde<br/>
+The tyme passed, thanne I fynde<br/>
+The world stod thanne in al his welthe:<br/>
+Tho was the lif of man in helthe,<br/>
+Tho was plente, tho was richesse,<br/>
+Tho was the fortune of prouesse,<br/>
+Tho was knyhthode in pris be name,<br/>
+Wherof the wyde worldes fame    100<br/>
+Write in Cronique is yit withholde;<br/>
+Justice of lawe tho was holde,<br/>
+The privilege of regalie<br/>
+Was sauf, and al the baronie<br/>
+Worschiped was in his astat;<br/>
+The citees knewen no debat,<br/>
+The poeple stod in obeissance<br/>
+Under the reule of governance,<br/>
+And pes, which ryhtwisnesse keste,<br/>
+With charite tho stod in reste:    110<br/>
+Of mannes herte the corage<br/>
+Was schewed thanne in the visage;<br/>
+The word was lich to the conceite<br/>
+Withoute semblant of deceite:<br/>
+Tho was ther unenvied love,<br/>
+Tho was the vertu sett above<br/>
+And vice was put under fote.<br/>
+Now stant the crop under the rote,<br/>
+The world is changed overal,<br/>
+And therof most in special    120<br/>
+That love is falle into discord.<br/>
+And that I take to record<br/>
+Of every lond for his partie<br/>
+The comun vois, which mai noght lie;<br/>
+Noght upon on, bot upon alle<br/>
+It is that men now clepe and calle,<br/>
+And sein the regnes ben divided,<br/>
+In stede of love is hate guided,<br/>
+The werre wol no pes purchace,<br/>
+And lawe hath take hire double face,    130<br/>
+So that justice out of the weie<br/>
+With ryhtwisnesse is gon aweie:<br/>
+And thus to loke on every halve,<br/>
+Men sen the sor withoute salve,<br/>
+Which al the world hath overtake.<br/>
+Ther is no regne of alle outtake,<br/>
+For every climat hath his diel<br/>
+After the tornynge of the whiel,<br/>
+Which blinde fortune overthroweth;<br/>
+Wherof the certain noman knoweth:    140<br/>
+The hevene wot what is to done,<br/>
+Bot we that duelle under the mone<br/>
+Stonde in this world upon a weer,<br/>
+And namely bot the pouer<br/>
+Of hem that ben the worldes guides<br/>
+With good consail on alle sides<br/>
+Be kept upriht in such a wyse,<br/>
+That hate breke noght thassise<br/>
+Of love, which is al the chief<br/>
+To kepe a regne out of meschief.    150<br/>
+For alle resoun wolde this,<br/>
+That unto him which the heved is<br/>
+The membres buxom scholden bowe,<br/>
+And he scholde ek her trowthe allowe,<br/>
+With al his herte and make hem chiere,<br/>
+For good consail is good to hiere.<br/>
+Althogh a man be wys himselve,<br/>
+Yit is the wisdom more of tuelve;<br/>
+And if thei stoden bothe in on,<br/>
+To hope it were thanne anon    160<br/>
+That god his grace wolde sende<br/>
+To make of thilke werre an ende,<br/>
+Which every day now groweth newe:<br/>
+And that is gretly forto rewe<br/>
+In special for Cristes sake,<br/>
+Which wolde his oghne lif forsake<br/>
+Among the men to yeve pes.<br/>
+But now men tellen natheles<br/>
+That love is fro the world departed,<br/>
+So stant the pes unevene parted    170<br/>
+With hem that liven now adaies.<br/>
+Bot forto loke at alle assaies,<br/>
+To him that wolde resoun seche<br/>
+After the comun worldes speche<br/>
+It is to wondre of thilke werre,<br/>
+In which non wot who hath the werre;<br/>
+For every lond himself deceyveth<br/>
+And of desese his part receyveth,<br/>
+And yet ne take men no kepe.<br/>
+Bot thilke lord which al may kepe,    180<br/>
+To whom no consail may ben hid,<br/>
+Upon the world which is betid,<br/>
+Amende that wherof men pleigne<br/>
+With trewe hertes and with pleine,<br/>
+And reconcile love ayeyn,<br/>
+As he which is king sovereign<br/>
+Of al the worldes governaunce,<br/>
+And of his hyhe porveaunce<br/>
+Afferme pes betwen the londes<br/>
+And take her cause into hise hondes,    190<br/>
+So that the world may stonde apppesed<br/>
+And his godhede also be plesed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To thenke upon the daies olde,<br/>
+The lif of clerkes to beholde,<br/>
+Men sein how that thei weren tho<br/>
+Ensample and reule of alle tho<br/>
+Whiche of wisdom the vertu soughten.<br/>
+Unto the god ferst thei besoughten<br/>
+As to the substaunce of her Scole,<br/>
+That thei ne scholden noght befole    200<br/>
+Her wit upon none erthly werkes,<br/>
+Which were ayein thestat of clerkes,<br/>
+And that thei myhten fle the vice<br/>
+Which Simon hath in his office,<br/>
+Wherof he takth the gold in honde.<br/>
+For thilke tyme I understonde<br/>
+The Lumbard made non eschange<br/>
+The bisschopriches forto change,<br/>
+Ne yet a lettre for to sende<br/>
+For dignite ne for Provende,    210<br/>
+Or cured or withoute cure.<br/>
+The cherche keye in aventure<br/>
+Of armes and of brygantaille<br/>
+Stod nothing thanne upon bataille;<br/>
+To fyhte or for to make cheste<br/>
+It thoghte hem thanne noght honeste;<br/>
+Bot of simplesce and pacience<br/>
+Thei maden thanne no defence:<br/>
+The Court of worldly regalie<br/>
+To hem was thanne no baillie;    220<br/>
+The vein honour was noght desired,<br/>
+Which hath the proude herte fyred;<br/>
+Humilite was tho withholde,<br/>
+And Pride was a vice holde.<br/>
+Of holy cherche the largesse<br/>
+Yaf thanne and dede gret almesse<br/>
+To povere men that hadden nede:<br/>
+Thei were ek chaste in word and dede,<br/>
+Wherof the poeple ensample tok;<br/>
+Her lust was al upon the bok,    230<br/>
+Or forto preche or forto preie,<br/>
+To wisse men the ryhte weie<br/>
+Of suche as stode of trowthe unliered.<br/>
+Lo, thus was Petres barge stiered<br/>
+Of hem that thilke tyme were,<br/>
+And thus cam ferst to mannes Ere<br/>
+The feith of Crist and alle goode<br/>
+Thurgh hem that thanne weren goode<br/>
+And sobre and chaste and large and wyse.<br/>
+Bot now men sein is otherwise,    240<br/>
+Simon the cause hath undertake,<br/>
+The worldes swerd on honde is take;<br/>
+And that is wonder natheles,<br/>
+Whan Crist him self hath bode pes<br/>
+And set it in his testament,<br/>
+How now that holy cherche is went,<br/>
+Of that here lawe positif<br/>
+Hath set to make werre and strif<br/>
+For worldes good, which may noght laste.<br/>
+God wot the cause to the laste    250<br/>
+Of every right and wrong also;<br/>
+But whil the lawe is reuled so<br/>
+That clerkes to the werre entende,<br/>
+I not how that thei scholde amende<br/>
+The woful world in othre thinges,<br/>
+To make pes betwen the kynges<br/>
+After the lawe of charite,<br/>
+Which is the propre duete<br/>
+Belongende unto the presthode.<br/>
+Bot as it thenkth to the manhode,    260<br/>
+The hevene is ferr, the world is nyh,<br/>
+And veine gloire is ek so slyh,<br/>
+Which coveitise hath now withholde,<br/>
+That thei non other thing beholde,<br/>
+Bot only that thei myhten winne.<br/>
+And thus the werres thei beginne,<br/>
+Wherof the holi cherche is taxed,<br/>
+That in the point as it is axed<br/>
+The disme goth to the bataille,<br/>
+As thogh Crist myhte noght availe    270<br/>
+To don hem riht be other weie.<br/>
+In to the swerd the cherche keie<br/>
+Is torned, and the holy bede<br/>
+Into cursinge, and every stede<br/>
+Which scholde stonde upon the feith<br/>
+And to this cause an Ere leyth,<br/>
+Astoned is of the querele.<br/>
+That scholde be the worldes hele<br/>
+Is now, men sein, the pestilence<br/>
+Which hath exiled pacience    280<br/>
+Fro the clergie in special:<br/>
+And that is schewed overal,<br/>
+In eny thing whan thei ben grieved.<br/>
+Bot if Gregoire be believed,<br/>
+As it is in the bokes write,<br/>
+He doth ous somdel forto wite<br/>
+The cause of thilke prelacie,<br/>
+Wher god is noght of compaignie:<br/>
+For every werk as it is founded<br/>
+Schal stonde or elles be confounded;    290<br/>
+Who that only for Cristes sake<br/>
+Desireth cure forto take,<br/>
+And noght for pride of thilke astat,<br/>
+To bere a name of a prelat,<br/>
+He schal be resoun do profit<br/>
+In holy cherche upon the plit<br/>
+That he hath set his conscience;<br/>
+Bot in the worldes reverence<br/>
+Ther ben of suche manie glade,<br/>
+Whan thei to thilke astat ben made,    300<br/>
+Noght for the merite of the charge,<br/>
+Bot for thei wolde hemself descharge<br/>
+Of poverte and become grete;<br/>
+And thus for Pompe and for beyete<br/>
+The Scribe and ek the Pharisee<br/>
+Of Moises upon the See<br/>
+In the chaiere on hyh ben set;<br/>
+Wherof the feith is ofte let,<br/>
+Which is betaken hem to kepe.<br/>
+In Cristes cause alday thei slepe,    310<br/>
+Bot of the world is noght foryete;<br/>
+For wel is him that now may gete<br/>
+Office in Court to ben honoured.<br/>
+The stronge coffre hath al devoured<br/>
+Under the keye of avarice<br/>
+The tresor of the benefice,<br/>
+Wherof the povere schulden clothe<br/>
+And ete and drinke and house bothe;<br/>
+The charite goth al unknowe,<br/>
+For thei no grein of Pite sowe:    320<br/>
+And slouthe kepeth the libraire<br/>
+Which longeth to the Saintuaire;<br/>
+To studie upon the worldes lore<br/>
+Sufficeth now withoute more;<br/>
+Delicacie his swete toth<br/>
+Hath fostred so that it fordoth<br/>
+Of abstinence al that ther is.<br/>
+And forto loken over this,<br/>
+If Ethna brenne in the clergie,<br/>
+Al openly to mannes ije    330<br/>
+At Avynoun thexperience<br/>
+Therof hath yove an evidence,<br/>
+Of that men sen hem so divided.<br/>
+And yit the cause is noght decided;<br/>
+Bot it is seid and evere schal,<br/>
+Betwen tuo Stoles lyth the fal,<br/>
+Whan that men wenen best to sitte:<br/>
+In holy cherche of such a slitte<br/>
+Is for to rewe un to ous alle;<br/>
+God grante it mote wel befalle    340<br/>
+Towardes him which hath the trowthe.<br/>
+Bot ofte is sen that mochel slowthe,<br/>
+Whan men ben drunken of the cuppe,<br/>
+Doth mochel harm, whan fyr is uppe,<br/>
+Bot if somwho the flamme stanche;<br/>
+And so to speke upon this branche,<br/>
+Which proud Envie hath mad to springe,<br/>
+Of Scisme, causeth forto bringe<br/>
+This newe Secte of Lollardie,<br/>
+And also many an heresie    350<br/>
+Among the clerkes in hemselve.<br/>
+It were betre dike and delve<br/>
+And stonde upon the ryhte feith,<br/>
+Than knowe al that the bible seith<br/>
+And erre as somme clerkes do.<br/>
+Upon the hond to were a Schoo<br/>
+And sette upon the fot a Glove<br/>
+Acordeth noght to the behove<br/>
+Of resonable mannes us:<br/>
+If men behielden the vertus    360<br/>
+That Crist in Erthe taghte here,<br/>
+Thei scholden noght in such manere,<br/>
+Among hem that ben holden wise,<br/>
+The Papacie so desguise<br/>
+Upon diverse eleccioun,<br/>
+Which stant after thaffeccioun<br/>
+Of sondry londes al aboute:<br/>
+Bot whan god wole, it schal were oute,<br/>
+For trowthe mot stonde ate laste.<br/>
+Bot yet thei argumenten faste    370<br/>
+Upon the Pope and his astat,<br/>
+Wherof thei falle in gret debat;<br/>
+This clerk seith yee, that other nay,<br/>
+And thus thei dryve forth the day,<br/>
+And ech of hem himself amendeth<br/>
+Of worldes good, bot non entendeth<br/>
+To that which comun profit were.<br/>
+Thei sein that god is myhti there,<br/>
+And schal ordeine what he wile,<br/>
+Ther make thei non other skile    380<br/>
+Where is the peril of the feith,<br/>
+Bot every clerk his herte leith<br/>
+To kepe his world in special,<br/>
+And of the cause general,<br/>
+Which unto holy cherche longeth,<br/>
+Is non of hem that underfongeth<br/>
+To schapen eny resistence:<br/>
+And thus the riht hath no defence,<br/>
+Bot ther I love, ther I holde.<br/>
+Lo, thus tobroke is Cristes folde,    390<br/>
+Wherof the flock withoute guide<br/>
+Devoured is on every side,<br/>
+In lacke of hem that ben unware<br/>
+Schepherdes, whiche her wit beware<br/>
+Upon the world in other halve.<br/>
+The scharpe pricke in stede of salve<br/>
+Thei usen now, wherof the hele<br/>
+Thei hurte of that thei scholden hele;<br/>
+And what Schep that is full of wulle<br/>
+Upon his back, thei toose and pulle,    400<br/>
+Whil ther is eny thing to pile:<br/>
+And thogh ther be non other skile<br/>
+Bot only for thei wolden wynne,<br/>
+Thei leve noght, whan thei begynne,<br/>
+Upon her acte to procede,<br/>
+Which is no good schepherdes dede.<br/>
+And upon this also men sein,<br/>
+That fro the leese which is plein<br/>
+Into the breres thei forcacche<br/>
+Her Orf, for that thei wolden lacche    410<br/>
+With such duresce, and so bereve<br/>
+That schal upon the thornes leve<br/>
+Of wulle, which the brere hath tore;<br/>
+Wherof the Schep ben al totore<br/>
+Of that the hierdes make hem lese.<br/>
+Lo, how thei feignen chalk for chese,<br/>
+For though thei speke and teche wel,<br/>
+Thei don hemself therof no del:<br/>
+For if the wolf come in the weie,<br/>
+Her gostly Staf is thanne aweie,    420<br/>
+Wherof thei scholde her flock defende;<br/>
+Bot if the povere Schep offende<br/>
+In eny thing, thogh it be lyte,<br/>
+They ben al redy forto smyte;<br/>
+And thus, how evere that thei tale,<br/>
+The strokes falle upon the smale,<br/>
+And upon othre that ben grete<br/>
+Hem lacketh herte forto bete.<br/>
+So that under the clerkes lawe<br/>
+Men sen the Merel al mysdrawe,    430<br/>
+I wol noght seie in general,<br/>
+For ther ben somme in special<br/>
+In whom that alle vertu duelleth,<br/>
+And tho ben, as thapostel telleth,<br/>
+That god of his eleccioun<br/>
+Hath cleped to perfeccioun<br/>
+In the manere as Aaron was:<br/>
+Thei ben nothing in thilke cas<br/>
+Of Simon, which the foldes gate<br/>
+Hath lete, and goth in othergate,    440<br/>
+Bot thei gon in the rihte weie.<br/>
+Ther ben also somme, as men seie,<br/>
+That folwen Simon ate hieles,<br/>
+Whos carte goth upon the whieles<br/>
+Of coveitise and worldes Pride,<br/>
+And holy cherche goth beside,<br/>
+Which scheweth outward a visage<br/>
+Of that is noght in the corage.<br/>
+For if men loke in holy cherche,<br/>
+Betwen the word and that thei werche    450<br/>
+Ther is a full gret difference:<br/>
+Thei prechen ous in audience<br/>
+That noman schal his soule empeire,<br/>
+For al is bot a chirie feire<br/>
+This worldes good, so as thei telle;<br/>
+Also thei sein ther is an helle,<br/>
+Which unto mannes sinne is due,<br/>
+And bidden ous therfore eschue<br/>
+That wikkid is, and do the goode.<br/>
+Who that here wordes understode,    460<br/>
+It thenkth thei wolden do the same;<br/>
+Bot yet betwen ernest and game<br/>
+Ful ofte it torneth other wise.<br/>
+With holy tales thei devise<br/>
+How meritoire is thilke dede<br/>
+Of charite, to clothe and fede<br/>
+The povere folk and forto parte<br/>
+The worldes good, bot thei departe<br/>
+Ne thenken noght fro that thei have.<br/>
+Also thei sein, good is to save    470<br/>
+With penance and with abstinence<br/>
+Of chastite the continence;<br/>
+Bot pleinly forto speke of that,<br/>
+I not how thilke body fat,<br/>
+Which thei with deynte metes kepe<br/>
+And leyn it softe forto slepe,<br/>
+Whan it hath elles al his wille,<br/>
+With chastite schal stonde stille:<br/>
+And natheles I can noght seie,<br/>
+In aunter if that I misseye.    480<br/>
+Touchende of this, how evere it stonde,<br/>
+I here and wol noght understonde,<br/>
+For therof have I noght to done:<br/>
+Bot he that made ferst the Mone,<br/>
+The hyhe god, of his goodnesse,<br/>
+If ther be cause, he it redresce.<br/>
+Bot what as eny man accuse,<br/>
+This mai reson of trowthe excuse;<br/>
+The vice of hem that ben ungoode<br/>
+Is no reproef unto the goode:    490<br/>
+For every man hise oghne werkes<br/>
+Schal bere, and thus as of the clerkes<br/>
+The goode men ben to comende,<br/>
+And alle these othre god amende:<br/>
+For thei ben to the worldes ije<br/>
+The Mirour of ensamplerie,<br/>
+To reulen and to taken hiede<br/>
+Betwen the men and the godhiede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now forto speke of the comune,<br/>
+It is to drede of that fortune    500<br/>
+Which hath befalle in sondri londes:<br/>
+Bot often for defalte of bondes<br/>
+Al sodeinliche, er it be wist,<br/>
+A Tonne, whanne his lye arist,<br/>
+Tobrekth and renneth al aboute,<br/>
+Which elles scholde noght gon oute;<br/>
+And ek fulofte a litel Skar<br/>
+Upon a Banke, er men be war,<br/>
+Let in the Strem, which with gret peine,<br/>
+If evere man it schal restreigne.    510<br/>
+Wher lawe lacketh, errour groweth,<br/>
+He is noght wys who that ne troweth,<br/>
+For it hath proeved ofte er this;<br/>
+And thus the comun clamour is<br/>
+In every lond wher poeple dwelleth,<br/>
+And eche in his compleignte telleth<br/>
+How that the world is al miswent,<br/>
+And ther upon his jugement<br/>
+Yifth every man in sondry wise.<br/>
+Bot what man wolde himself avise,    520<br/>
+His conscience and noght misuse,<br/>
+He may wel ate ferste excuse<br/>
+His god, which evere stant in on:<br/>
+In him ther is defalte non,<br/>
+So moste it stonde upon ousselve<br/>
+Nought only upon ten ne twelve,<br/>
+Bot plenerliche upon ous alle,<br/>
+For man is cause of that schal falle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And natheles yet som men wryte<br/>
+And sein that fortune is to wyte,    530<br/>
+And som men holde oppinion<br/>
+That it is constellacion,<br/>
+Which causeth al that a man doth:<br/>
+God wot of bothe which is soth.<br/>
+The world as of his propre kynde<br/>
+Was evere untrewe, and as the blynde<br/>
+Improprelich he demeth fame,<br/>
+He blameth that is noght to blame<br/>
+And preiseth that is noght to preise:<br/>
+Thus whan he schal the thinges peise,    540<br/>
+Ther is deceipte in his balance,<br/>
+And al is that the variance<br/>
+Of ous, that scholde ous betre avise;<br/>
+For after that we falle and rise,<br/>
+The world arist and falth withal,<br/>
+So that the man is overal<br/>
+His oghne cause of wel and wo.<br/>
+That we fortune clepe so<br/>
+Out of the man himself it groweth;<br/>
+And who that other wise troweth,    550<br/>
+Behold the poeple of Irael:<br/>
+For evere whil thei deden wel,<br/>
+Fortune was hem debonaire,<br/>
+And whan thei deden the contraire,<br/>
+Fortune was contrariende.<br/>
+So that it proeveth wel at ende<br/>
+Why that the world is wonderfull<br/>
+And may no while stonde full,<br/>
+Though that it seme wel besein;<br/>
+For every worldes thing is vein,    560<br/>
+And evere goth the whiel aboute,<br/>
+And evere stant a man in doute,<br/>
+Fortune stant no while stille,<br/>
+So hath ther noman al his wille.<br/>
+Als fer as evere a man may knowe,<br/>
+Ther lasteth nothing bot a throwe;<br/>
+The world stant evere upon debat,<br/>
+So may be seker non astat,<br/>
+Now hier now ther, now to now fro,<br/>
+Now up now down, this world goth so,    570<br/>
+And evere hath don and evere schal:<br/>
+Wherof I finde in special<br/>
+A tale writen in the Bible,<br/>
+Which moste nedes be credible;<br/>
+And that as in conclusioun<br/>
+Seith that upon divisioun<br/>
+Stant, why no worldes thing mai laste,<br/>
+Til it be drive to the laste.<br/>
+And fro the ferste regne of alle<br/>
+Into this day, hou so befalle,    580<br/>
+Of that the regnes be muable<br/>
+The man himself hath be coupable,<br/>
+Which of his propre governance<br/>
+Fortuneth al the worldes chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hyhe almyhti pourveance,<br/>
+In whos eterne remembrance<br/>
+Fro ferst was every thing present,<br/>
+He hath his prophecie sent,<br/>
+In such a wise as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+To Daniel of this matiere,    590<br/>
+Hou that this world schal torne and wende,<br/>
+Till it be falle to his ende;<br/>
+Wherof the tale telle I schal,<br/>
+In which it is betokned al.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Nabugodonosor slepte,<br/>
+A swevene him tok, the which he kepte<br/>
+Til on the morwe he was arise,<br/>
+For he therof was sore agrise.<br/>
+To Daniel his drem he tolde,<br/>
+And preide him faire that he wolde    600<br/>
+Arede what it tokne may;<br/>
+And seide: “Abedde wher I lay,<br/>
+Me thoghte I syh upon a Stage<br/>
+Wher stod a wonder strange ymage.<br/>
+His hed with al the necke also<br/>
+Thei were of fin gold bothe tuo;<br/>
+His brest, his schuldres and his armes<br/>
+Were al of selver, bot the tharmes,<br/>
+The wombe and al doun to the kne,<br/>
+Of bras thei were upon to se;    610<br/>
+The legges were al mad of Stiel,<br/>
+So were his feet also somdiel,<br/>
+And somdiel part to hem was take<br/>
+Of Erthe which men Pottes make;<br/>
+The fieble meynd was with the stronge,<br/>
+So myhte it wel noght stonde longe.<br/>
+And tho me thoghte that I sih<br/>
+A gret ston from an hull on hyh<br/>
+Fel doun of sodein aventure<br/>
+Upon the feet of this figure,    620<br/>
+With which Ston al tobroke was<br/>
+Gold, Selver, Erthe, Stiel and Bras,<br/>
+That al was in to pouldre broght,<br/>
+And so forth torned into noght.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the swevene which he hadde,<br/>
+That Daniel anon aradde,<br/>
+And seide him that figure strange<br/>
+Betokneth how the world schal change<br/>
+And waxe lasse worth and lasse,<br/>
+Til it to noght al overpasse.    630<br/>
+The necke and hed, that weren golde,<br/>
+He seide how that betokne scholde<br/>
+A worthi world, a noble, a riche,<br/>
+To which non after schal be liche.<br/>
+Of Selver that was overforth<br/>
+Schal ben a world of lasse worth;<br/>
+And after that the wombe of Bras<br/>
+Tokne of a werse world it was.<br/>
+The Stiel which he syh afterward<br/>
+A world betokneth more hard:    640<br/>
+Bot yet the werste of everydel<br/>
+Is last, whan that of Erthe and Stiel<br/>
+He syh the feet departed so,<br/>
+For that betokneth mochel wo.<br/>
+Whan that the world divided is,<br/>
+It moste algate fare amis,<br/>
+For Erthe which is meynd with Stiel<br/>
+Togedre may noght laste wiel,<br/>
+Bot if that on that other waste;<br/>
+So mot it nedes faile in haste.    650<br/>
+The Ston, which fro the hully Stage<br/>
+He syh doun falle on that ymage,<br/>
+And hath it into pouldre broke,<br/>
+That swevene hath Daniel unloke,<br/>
+And seide how that is goddes myht,<br/>
+Which whan men wene most upryht<br/>
+To stonde, schal hem overcaste.<br/>
+And that is of this world the laste,<br/>
+And thanne a newe schal beginne,<br/>
+Fro which a man schal nevere twinne;    660<br/>
+Or al to peine or al to pes<br/>
+That world schal lasten endeles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus expondeth Daniel<br/>
+The kynges swevene faire and wel<br/>
+In Babiloyne the Cite,<br/>
+Wher that the wiseste of Caldee<br/>
+Ne cowthen wite what it mente;<br/>
+Bot he tolde al the hol entente,<br/>
+As in partie it is befalle.<br/>
+Of gold the ferste regne of alle    670<br/>
+Was in that kinges time tho,<br/>
+And laste manye daies so,<br/>
+Therwhiles that the Monarchie<br/>
+Of al the world in that partie<br/>
+To Babiloyne was soubgit;<br/>
+And hield him stille in such a plit,<br/>
+Til that the world began diverse:<br/>
+And that was whan the king of Perse,<br/>
+Which Cirus hyhte, ayein the pes<br/>
+Forth with his Sone Cambises    680<br/>
+Of Babiloine al that Empire,<br/>
+Ryht as thei wolde hemself desire,<br/>
+Put under in subjeccioun<br/>
+And tok it in possessioun,<br/>
+And slayn was Baltazar the king,<br/>
+Which loste his regne and al his thing.<br/>
+And thus whan thei it hadde wonne,<br/>
+The world of Selver was begonne<br/>
+And that of gold was passed oute:<br/>
+And in this wise it goth aboute    690<br/>
+In to the Regne of Darius;<br/>
+And thanne it fell to Perse thus,<br/>
+That Alisaundre put hem under,<br/>
+Which wroghte of armes many a wonder,<br/>
+So that the Monarchie lefte<br/>
+With Grecs, and here astat uplefte,<br/>
+And Persiens gon under fote,<br/>
+So soffre thei that nedes mote.<br/>
+And tho the world began of Bras,<br/>
+And that of selver ended was;    700<br/>
+Bot for the time thus it laste,<br/>
+Til it befell that ate laste<br/>
+This king, whan that his day was come,<br/>
+With strengthe of deth was overcome.<br/>
+And natheles yet er he dyde,<br/>
+He schop his Regnes to divide<br/>
+To knyhtes whiche him hadde served,<br/>
+And after that thei have deserved<br/>
+Yaf the conquestes that he wan;<br/>
+Wherof gret werre tho began    710<br/>
+Among hem that the Regnes hadde,<br/>
+Thurgh proud Envie which hem ladde,<br/>
+Til it befell ayein hem thus:<br/>
+The noble Cesar Julius,<br/>
+Which tho was king of Rome lond,<br/>
+With gret bataille and with strong hond<br/>
+Al Grece, Perse and ek Caldee<br/>
+Wan and put under, so that he<br/>
+Noght al only of thorient<br/>
+Bot al the Marche of thoccident    720<br/>
+Governeth under his empire,<br/>
+As he that was hol lord and Sire,<br/>
+And hield thurgh his chivalerie<br/>
+Of al this world the Monarchie,<br/>
+And was the ferste of that honour<br/>
+Which tok the name of Emperour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wher Rome thanne wolde assaille,<br/>
+Ther myhte nothing contrevaille,<br/>
+Bot every contre moste obeie:<br/>
+Tho goth the Regne of Bras aweie,    730<br/>
+And comen is the world of Stiel,<br/>
+And stod above upon the whiel.<br/>
+As Stiel is hardest in his kynde<br/>
+Above alle othre that men finde<br/>
+Of Metals, such was Rome tho<br/>
+The myhtieste, and laste so<br/>
+Long time amonges the Romeins<br/>
+Til thei become so vileins,<br/>
+That the fals Emperour Leo<br/>
+With Constantin his Sone also    740<br/>
+The patrimoine and the richesse,<br/>
+Which to Silvestre in pure almesse<br/>
+The ferste Constantinus lefte,<br/>
+Fro holy cherche thei berefte.<br/>
+Bot Adrian, which Pope was,<br/>
+And syh the meschief of this cas,<br/>
+Goth in to France forto pleigne,<br/>
+And preith the grete Charlemeine,<br/>
+For Cristes sake and Soule hele<br/>
+That he wol take the querele    750<br/>
+Of holy cherche in his defence.<br/>
+And Charles for the reverence<br/>
+Of god the cause hath undertake,<br/>
+And with his host the weie take<br/>
+Over the Montz of Lombardie;<br/>
+Of Rome and al the tirandie<br/>
+With blodi swerd he overcom,<br/>
+And the Cite with strengthe nom;<br/>
+In such a wise and there he wroghte,<br/>
+That holy cherche ayein he broghte    760<br/>
+Into franchise, and doth restore<br/>
+The Popes lost, and yaf him more:<br/>
+And thus whan he his god hath served,<br/>
+He tok, as he wel hath deserved,<br/>
+The Diademe and was coroned.<br/>
+Of Rome and thus was abandoned<br/>
+Thempire, which cam nevere ayein<br/>
+Into the hond of no Romein;<br/>
+Bot a long time it stod so stille<br/>
+Under the Frensche kynges wille,    770<br/>
+Til that fortune hir whiel so ladde,<br/>
+That afterward Lombardz it hadde,<br/>
+Noght be the swerd, bot be soffrance<br/>
+Of him that tho was kyng of France,<br/>
+Which Karle Calvus cleped was;<br/>
+And he resigneth in this cas<br/>
+Thempire of Rome unto Lowis<br/>
+His Cousin, which a Lombard is.<br/>
+And so hit laste into the yeer<br/>
+Of Albert and of Berenger;    780<br/>
+Bot thanne upon dissencioun<br/>
+Thei felle, and in divisioun<br/>
+Among hemself that were grete,<br/>
+So that thei loste the beyete<br/>
+Of worschipe and of worldes pes.<br/>
+Bot in proverbe natheles<br/>
+Men sein, ful selden is that welthe<br/>
+Can soffre his oghne astat in helthe;<br/>
+And that was on the Lombardz sene,<br/>
+Such comun strif was hem betwene    790<br/>
+Thurgh coveitise and thurgh Envie,<br/>
+That every man drowh his partie,<br/>
+Which myhte leden eny route,<br/>
+Withinne Burgh and ek withoute:<br/>
+The comun ryht hath no felawe,<br/>
+So that the governance of lawe<br/>
+Was lost, and for necessite,<br/>
+Of that thei stode in such degre<br/>
+Al only thurgh divisioun,<br/>
+Hem nedeth in conclusioun    800<br/>
+Of strange londes help beside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus for thei hemself divide<br/>
+And stonden out of reule unevene,<br/>
+Of Alemaine Princes sevene<br/>
+Thei chose in this condicioun,<br/>
+That upon here eleccioun<br/>
+Thempire of Rome scholde stonde.<br/>
+And thus thei lefte it out of honde<br/>
+For lacke of grace, and it forsoke,<br/>
+That Alemans upon hem toke:    810<br/>
+And to confermen here astat,<br/>
+Of that thei founden in debat<br/>
+Thei token the possessioun<br/>
+After the composicioun<br/>
+Among hemself, and therupon<br/>
+Thei made an Emperour anon,<br/>
+Whos name as the Cronique telleth<br/>
+Was Othes; and so forth it duelleth,<br/>
+Fro thilke day yit unto this<br/>
+Thempire of Rome hath ben and is    820<br/>
+To thalemans. And in this wise,<br/>
+As ye tofore have herd divise<br/>
+How Daniel the swevene expondeth<br/>
+Of that ymage, on whom he foundeth<br/>
+The world which after scholde falle,<br/>
+Come is the laste tokne of alle;<br/>
+Upon the feet of Erthe and Stiel<br/>
+So stant this world now everydiel<br/>
+Departed; which began riht tho,<br/>
+Whan Rome was divided so:    830<br/>
+And that is forto rewe sore,<br/>
+For alway siththe more and more<br/>
+The world empeireth every day.<br/>
+Wherof the sothe schewe may,<br/>
+At Rome ferst if we beginne:<br/>
+The wall and al the Cit withinne<br/>
+Stant in ruine and in decas,<br/>
+The feld is wher the Paleis was,<br/>
+The toun is wast; and overthat,<br/>
+If we beholde thilke astat    840<br/>
+Which whilom was of the Romeins,<br/>
+Of knyhthode and of Citezeins,<br/>
+To peise now with that beforn,<br/>
+The chaf is take for the corn,<br/>
+As forto speke of Romes myht:<br/>
+Unethes stant ther oght upryht<br/>
+Of worschipe or of worldes good,<br/>
+As it before tyme stod.<br/>
+And why the worschipe is aweie,<br/>
+If that a man the sothe seie,    850<br/>
+The cause hath ben divisioun,<br/>
+Which moder of confusioun<br/>
+Is wher sche cometh overal,<br/>
+Noght only of the temporal<br/>
+Bot of the spirital also.<br/>
+The dede proeveth it is so,<br/>
+And hath do many day er this,<br/>
+Thurgh venym which that medled is<br/>
+In holy cherche of erthly thing:<br/>
+For Crist himself makth knowleching    860<br/>
+That noman may togedre serve<br/>
+God and the world, bot if he swerve<br/>
+Froward that on and stonde unstable;<br/>
+And Cristes word may noght be fable.<br/>
+The thing so open is at ije,<br/>
+It nedeth noght to specefie<br/>
+Or speke oght more in this matiere;<br/>
+Bot in this wise a man mai lere<br/>
+Hou that the world is gon aboute,<br/>
+The which welnyh is wered oute,    870<br/>
+After the forme of that figure<br/>
+Which Daniel in his scripture<br/>
+Expondeth, as tofore is told.<br/>
+Of Bras, of Selver and of Gold<br/>
+The world is passed and agon,<br/>
+And now upon his olde ton<br/>
+It stant of brutel Erthe and Stiel,<br/>
+The whiche acorden nevere a diel;<br/>
+So mot it nedes swerve aside<br/>
+As thing the which men sen divide.    880
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thapostel writ unto ous alle<br/>
+And seith that upon ous is falle<br/>
+Thende of the world; so may we knowe,<br/>
+This ymage is nyh overthrowe,<br/>
+Be which this world was signified,<br/>
+That whilom was so magnefied,<br/>
+And now is old and fieble and vil,<br/>
+Full of meschief and of peril,<br/>
+And stant divided ek also<br/>
+Lich to the feet that were so,    890<br/>
+As I tolde of the Statue above.<br/>
+And this men sen, thurgh lacke of love<br/>
+Where as the lond divided is,<br/>
+It mot algate fare amis:<br/>
+And now to loke on every side,<br/>
+A man may se the world divide,<br/>
+The werres ben so general<br/>
+Among the cristene overal,<br/>
+That every man now secheth wreche,<br/>
+And yet these clerkes alday preche    900<br/>
+And sein, good dede may non be<br/>
+Which stant noght upon charite:<br/>
+I not hou charite may stonde,<br/>
+Wher dedly werre is take on honde.<br/>
+Bot al this wo is cause of man,<br/>
+The which that wit and reson can,<br/>
+And that in tokne and in witnesse<br/>
+That ilke ymage bar liknesse<br/>
+Of man and of non other beste.<br/>
+For ferst unto the mannes heste    910<br/>
+Was every creature ordeined,<br/>
+Bot afterward it was restreigned:<br/>
+Whan that he fell, thei fellen eke,<br/>
+Whan he wax sek, thei woxen seke;<br/>
+For as the man hath passioun<br/>
+Of seknesse, in comparisoun<br/>
+So soffren othre creatures.<br/>
+Lo, ferst the hevenly figures,<br/>
+The Sonne and Mone eclipsen bothe,<br/>
+And ben with mannes senne wrothe;    920<br/>
+The purest Eir for Senne alofte<br/>
+Hath ben and is corrupt fulofte,<br/>
+Right now the hyhe wyndes blowe,<br/>
+And anon after thei ben lowe,<br/>
+Now clowdy and now clier it is:<br/>
+So may it proeven wel be this,<br/>
+A mannes Senne is forto hate,<br/>
+Which makth the welkne to debate.<br/>
+And forto se the proprete<br/>
+Of every thyng in his degree,    930<br/>
+Benethe forth among ous hiere<br/>
+Al stant aliche in this matiere:<br/>
+The See now ebbeth, now it floweth,<br/>
+The lond now welketh, now it groweth,<br/>
+Now be the Trees with leves grene,<br/>
+Now thei be bare and nothing sene,<br/>
+Now be the lusti somer floures,<br/>
+Now be the stormy wynter shoures,<br/>
+Now be the daies, now the nyhtes,<br/>
+So stant ther nothing al upryhtes,    940<br/>
+Now it is lyht, now it is derk;<br/>
+And thus stant al the worldes werk<br/>
+After the disposicioun<br/>
+Of man and his condicioun.<br/>
+Forthi Gregoire in his Moral<br/>
+Seith that a man in special<br/>
+The lasse world is properly:<br/>
+And that he proeveth redely;<br/>
+For man of Soule resonable<br/>
+Is to an Angel resemblable,    950<br/>
+And lich to beste he hath fielinge,<br/>
+And lich to Trees he hath growinge;<br/>
+The Stones ben and so is he:<br/>
+Thus of his propre qualite<br/>
+The man, as telleth the clergie,<br/>
+Is as a world in his partie,<br/>
+And whan this litel world mistorneth,<br/>
+The grete world al overtorneth.<br/>
+The Lond, the See, the firmament,<br/>
+Thei axen alle jugement    960<br/>
+Ayein the man and make him werre:<br/>
+Therwhile himself stant out of herre,<br/>
+The remenant wol noght acorde:<br/>
+And in this wise, as I recorde,<br/>
+The man is cause of alle wo,<br/>
+Why this world is divided so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Division, the gospell seith,<br/>
+On hous upon another leith,<br/>
+Til that the Regne al overthrowe:<br/>
+And thus may every man wel knowe,    970<br/>
+Division aboven alle<br/>
+Is thing which makth the world to falle,<br/>
+And evere hath do sith it began.<br/>
+It may ferst proeve upon a man;<br/>
+The which, for his complexioun<br/>
+Is mad upon divisioun<br/>
+Of cold, of hot, of moist, of drye,<br/>
+He mot be verray kynde dye:<br/>
+For the contraire of his astat<br/>
+Stant evermore in such debat,    980<br/>
+Til that o part be overcome,<br/>
+Ther may no final pes be nome.<br/>
+Bot other wise, if a man were<br/>
+Mad al togedre of o matiere<br/>
+Withouten interrupcioun,<br/>
+Ther scholde no corrupcioun<br/>
+Engendre upon that unite:<br/>
+Bot for ther is diversite<br/>
+Withinne himself, he may noght laste,<br/>
+That he ne deieth ate laste.    990<br/>
+Bot in a man yit over this<br/>
+Full gret divisioun ther is,<br/>
+Thurgh which that he is evere in strif,<br/>
+Whil that him lasteth eny lif:<br/>
+The bodi and the Soule also<br/>
+Among hem ben divided so,<br/>
+That what thing that the body hateth<br/>
+The soule loveth and debateth;<br/>
+Bot natheles fulofte is sene<br/>
+Of werre which is hem betwene    1000<br/>
+The fieble hath wonne the victoire.<br/>
+And who so drawth into memoire<br/>
+What hath befalle of old and newe,<br/>
+He may that werre sore rewe,<br/>
+Which ferst began in Paradis:<br/>
+For ther was proeved what it is,<br/>
+And what desese there it wroghte;<br/>
+For thilke werre tho forth broghte<br/>
+The vice of alle dedly Sinne,<br/>
+Thurgh which division cam inne    1010<br/>
+Among the men in erthe hiere,<br/>
+And was the cause and the matiere<br/>
+Why god the grete flodes sende,<br/>
+Of al the world and made an ende<br/>
+Bot Noe with his felaschipe,<br/>
+Which only weren saulf be Schipe.<br/>
+And over that thurgh Senne it com<br/>
+That Nembrot such emprise nom,<br/>
+Whan he the Tour Babel on heihte<br/>
+Let make, as he that wolde feihte    1020<br/>
+Ayein the hihe goddes myht,<br/>
+Wherof divided anon ryht<br/>
+Was the langage in such entente,<br/>
+Ther wiste non what other mente,<br/>
+So that thei myhten noght procede.<br/>
+And thus it stant of every dede,<br/>
+Wher Senne takth the cause on honde,<br/>
+It may upriht noght longe stonde;<br/>
+For Senne of his condicioun<br/>
+Is moder of divisioun    1030<br/>
+And tokne whan the world schal faile.<br/>
+For so seith Crist withoute faile,<br/>
+That nyh upon the worldes ende<br/>
+Pes and acord awey schol wende<br/>
+And alle charite schal cesse,<br/>
+Among the men and hate encresce;<br/>
+And whan these toknes ben befalle,<br/>
+Al sodeinly the Ston schal falle,<br/>
+As Daniel it hath beknowe,<br/>
+Which al this world schal overthrowe,    1040<br/>
+And every man schal thanne arise<br/>
+To Joie or elles to Juise,<br/>
+Wher that he schal for evere dwelle,<br/>
+Or straght to hevene or straght to helle.<br/>
+In hevene is pes and al acord,<br/>
+Bot helle is full of such descord<br/>
+That ther may be no loveday:<br/>
+Forthi good is, whil a man may,<br/>
+Echon to sette pes with other<br/>
+And loven as his oghne brother;    1050<br/>
+So may he winne worldes welthe<br/>
+And afterward his soule helthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot wolde god that now were on<br/>
+An other such as Arion,<br/>
+Which hadde an harpe of such temprure,<br/>
+And therto of so good mesure<br/>
+He song, that he the bestes wilde<br/>
+Made of his note tame and milde,<br/>
+The Hinde in pes with the Leoun,<br/>
+The Wolf in pes with the Moltoun,    1060<br/>
+The Hare in pees stod with the Hound;<br/>
+And every man upon this ground<br/>
+Which Arion that time herde,<br/>
+Als wel the lord as the schepherde,<br/>
+He broghte hem alle in good acord;<br/>
+So that the comun with the lord,<br/>
+And lord with the comun also,<br/>
+He sette in love bothe tuo<br/>
+And putte awey malencolie.<br/>
+That was a lusti melodie,    1070<br/>
+Whan every man with other low;<br/>
+And if ther were such on now,<br/>
+Which cowthe harpe as he tho dede,<br/>
+He myhte availe in many a stede<br/>
+To make pes wher now is hate;<br/>
+For whan men thenken to debate,<br/>
+I not what other thing is good.<br/>
+Bot wher that wisdom waxeth wod,<br/>
+And reson torneth into rage,<br/>
+So that mesure upon oultrage    1080<br/>
+Hath set his world, it is to drede;<br/>
+For that bringth in the comun drede,<br/>
+Which stant at every mannes Dore:<br/>
+Bot whan the scharpnesse of the spore<br/>
+The horse side smit to sore,<br/>
+It grieveth ofte. And now nomore,<br/>
+As forto speke of this matiere,<br/>
+Which non bot only god may stiere.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Prologus
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0002"></a>
+Incipit Liber Primus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Naturatus amor nature legibus orbem<br/>
+    Subdit, et vnanimes concitat esse feras:<br/>
+Huius enim mundi Princeps amor esse videtur,<br/>
+    Cuius eget diues, pauper et omnis ope.<br/>
+Sunt in agone pares amor et fortuna, que cecas<br/>
+    Plebis ad insidias vertit vterque rotas.<br/>
+Est amor egra salus, vexata quies, pius error,<br/>
+    Bellica pax, vulnus dulce, suaue malum.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I may noght strecche up to the hevene<br/>
+Min hand, ne setten al in evene<br/>
+This world, which evere is in balance:<br/>
+It stant noght in my sufficance<br/>
+So grete thinges to compasse,<br/>
+Bot I mot lete it overpasse<br/>
+And treten upon othre thinges.<br/>
+Forthi the Stile of my writinges<br/>
+Fro this day forth I thenke change<br/>
+And speke of thing is noght so strange,    10<br/>
+Which every kinde hath upon honde,<br/>
+And wherupon the world mot stonde,<br/>
+And hath don sithen it began,<br/>
+And schal whil ther is any man;<br/>
+And that is love, of which I mene<br/>
+To trete, as after schal be sene.<br/>
+In which ther can noman him reule,<br/>
+For loves lawe is out of reule,<br/>
+That of tomoche or of tolite<br/>
+Welnyh is every man to wyte,    20<br/>
+And natheles ther is noman<br/>
+In al this world so wys, that can<br/>
+Of love tempre the mesure,<br/>
+Bot as it falth in aventure:<br/>
+For wit ne strengthe may noght helpe,<br/>
+And he which elles wolde him yelpe<br/>
+Is rathest throwen under fote,<br/>
+Ther can no wiht therof do bote.<br/>
+For yet was nevere such covine,<br/>
+That couthe ordeine a medicine    30<br/>
+To thing which god in lawe of kinde<br/>
+Hath set, for ther may noman finde<br/>
+The rihte salve of such a Sor.<br/>
+It hath and schal ben everemor<br/>
+That love is maister wher he wile,<br/>
+Ther can no lif make other skile;<br/>
+For wher as evere him lest to sette,<br/>
+Ther is no myht which him may lette.<br/>
+Bot what schal fallen ate laste,<br/>
+The sothe can no wisdom caste,    40<br/>
+Bot as it falleth upon chance;<br/>
+For if ther evere was balance<br/>
+Which of fortune stant governed,<br/>
+I may wel lieve as I am lerned<br/>
+That love hath that balance on honde,<br/>
+Which wol no reson understonde.<br/>
+For love is blind and may noght se,<br/>
+Forthi may no certeinete<br/>
+Be set upon his jugement,<br/>
+Bot as the whiel aboute went    50<br/>
+He yifth his graces undeserved,<br/>
+And fro that man which hath him served<br/>
+Fulofte he takth aweye his fees,<br/>
+As he that pleieth ate Dees,<br/>
+And therupon what schal befalle<br/>
+He not, til that the chance falle,<br/>
+Wher he schal lese or he schal winne.<br/>
+And thus fulofte men beginne,<br/>
+That if thei wisten what it mente,<br/>
+Thei wolde change al here entente.    60
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto proven it is so,<br/>
+I am miselven on of tho,<br/>
+Which to this Scole am underfonge.<br/>
+For it is siththe go noght longe,<br/>
+As forto speke of this matiere,<br/>
+I may you telle, if ye woll hiere,<br/>
+A wonder hap which me befell,<br/>
+That was to me bothe hard and fell,<br/>
+Touchende of love and his fortune,<br/>
+The which me liketh to comune    70<br/>
+And pleinly forto telle it oute.<br/>
+To hem that ben lovers aboute<br/>
+Fro point to point I wol declare<br/>
+And wryten of my woful care,<br/>
+Mi wofull day, my wofull chance,<br/>
+That men mowe take remembrance<br/>
+Of that thei schall hierafter rede:<br/>
+For in good feith this wolde I rede,<br/>
+That every man ensample take<br/>
+Of wisdom which him is betake,    80<br/>
+And that he wot of good aprise<br/>
+To teche it forth, for such emprise<br/>
+Is forto preise; and therfore I<br/>
+Woll wryte and schewe al openly<br/>
+How love and I togedre mette,<br/>
+Wherof the world ensample fette<br/>
+Mai after this, whan I am go,<br/>
+Of thilke unsely jolif wo,<br/>
+Whos reule stant out of the weie,<br/>
+Nou glad and nou gladnesse aweie,    90<br/>
+And yet it may noght be withstonde<br/>
+For oght that men may understonde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the point that is befalle<br/>
+Of love, in which that I am falle,<br/>
+I thenke telle my matiere:<br/>
+Now herkne, who that wol it hiere,<br/>
+Of my fortune how that it ferde.<br/>
+This enderday, as I forthferde<br/>
+To walke, as I yow telle may,&mdash;<br/>
+And that was in the Monthe of Maii,    100<br/>
+Whan every brid hath chose his make<br/>
+And thenkth his merthes forto make<br/>
+Of love that he hath achieved;<br/>
+Bot so was I nothing relieved,<br/>
+For I was further fro my love<br/>
+Than Erthe is fro the hevene above,<br/>
+As forto speke of eny sped:<br/>
+So wiste I me non other red,<br/>
+Bot as it were a man forfare<br/>
+Unto the wode I gan to fare,    110<br/>
+Noght forto singe with the briddes,<br/>
+For whanne I was the wode amiddes,<br/>
+I fond a swote grene pleine,<br/>
+And ther I gan my wo compleigne<br/>
+Wisshinge and wepinge al myn one,<br/>
+For other merthes made I none.<br/>
+So hard me was that ilke throwe,<br/>
+That ofte sithes overthrowe<br/>
+To grounde I was withoute breth;<br/>
+And evere I wisshide after deth,    120<br/>
+Whanne I out of my peine awok,<br/>
+And caste up many a pitous lok<br/>
+Unto the hevene, and seide thus:<br/>
+“O thou Cupide, O thou Venus,<br/>
+Thou god of love and thou goddesse,<br/>
+Wher is pite? wher is meknesse?<br/>
+Now doth me pleinly live or dye,<br/>
+For certes such a maladie<br/>
+As I now have and longe have hadd,<br/>
+It myhte make a wisman madd,    130<br/>
+If that it scholde longe endure.<br/>
+O Venus, queene of loves cure,<br/>
+Thou lif, thou lust, thou mannes hele,<br/>
+Behold my cause and my querele,<br/>
+And yif me som part of thi grace,<br/>
+So that I may finde in this place<br/>
+If thou be gracious or non.”<br/>
+And with that word I sawh anon<br/>
+The kyng of love and qweene bothe;<br/>
+Bot he that kyng with yhen wrothe    140<br/>
+His chiere aweiward fro me caste,<br/>
+And forth he passede ate laste.<br/>
+Bot natheles er he forth wente<br/>
+A firy Dart me thoghte he hente<br/>
+And threw it thurgh myn herte rote:<br/>
+In him fond I non other bote,<br/>
+For lenger list him noght to duelle.<br/>
+Bot sche that is the Source and Welle<br/>
+Of wel or wo, that schal betide<br/>
+To hem that loven, at that tide    150<br/>
+Abod, bot forto tellen hiere<br/>
+Sche cast on me no goodly chiere:<br/>
+Thus natheles to me sche seide,<br/>
+“What art thou, Sone?” and I abreide<br/>
+Riht as a man doth out of slep,<br/>
+And therof tok sche riht good kep<br/>
+And bad me nothing ben adrad:<br/>
+Bot for al that I was noght glad,<br/>
+For I ne sawh no cause why.<br/>
+And eft scheo asketh, what was I:    160<br/>
+I seide, “A Caitif that lith hiere:<br/>
+What wolde ye, my Ladi diere?<br/>
+Schal I ben hol or elles dye?”<br/>
+Sche seide, “Tell thi maladie:<br/>
+What is thi Sor of which thou pleignest?<br/>
+Ne hyd it noght, for if thou feignest,<br/>
+I can do the no medicine.”<br/>
+“Ma dame, I am a man of thyne,<br/>
+That in thi Court have longe served,<br/>
+And aske that I have deserved,    170<br/>
+Some wele after my longe wo.”<br/>
+And sche began to loure tho,<br/>
+And seide, “Ther is manye of yow<br/>
+Faitours, and so may be that thow<br/>
+Art riht such on, and be feintise<br/>
+Seist that thou hast me do servise.”<br/>
+And natheles sche wiste wel,<br/>
+Mi world stod on an other whiel<br/>
+Withouten eny faiterie:<br/>
+Bot algate of my maladie    180<br/>
+Sche bad me telle and seie hir trowthe.<br/>
+“Ma dame, if ye wolde have rowthe,”<br/>
+Quod I, “than wolde I telle yow.”<br/>
+“Sey forth,” quod sche, “and tell me how;<br/>
+Schew me thi seknesse everydiel.”<br/>
+“Ma dame, that can I do wel,<br/>
+Be so my lif therto wol laste.”<br/>
+With that hir lok on me sche caste,<br/>
+And seide: “In aunter if thou live,<br/>
+Mi will is ferst that thou be schrive;    190<br/>
+And natheles how that it is<br/>
+I wot miself, bot for al this<br/>
+Unto my prest, which comth anon,<br/>
+I woll thou telle it on and on,<br/>
+Bothe all thi thoght and al thi werk.<br/>
+O Genius myn oghne Clerk,<br/>
+Com forth and hier this mannes schrifte,”<br/>
+Quod Venus tho; and I uplifte<br/>
+Min hefd with that, and gan beholde<br/>
+The selve Prest, which as sche wolde    200<br/>
+Was redy there and sette him doun<br/>
+To hiere my confessioun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This worthi Prest, this holy man<br/>
+To me spekende thus began,<br/>
+And seide: “Benedicite,<br/>
+Mi Sone, of the felicite<br/>
+Of love and ek of all the wo<br/>
+Thou schalt thee schrive of bothe tuo.<br/>
+What thou er this for loves sake<br/>
+Hast felt, let nothing be forsake,    210<br/>
+Tell pleinliche as it is befalle.”<br/>
+And with that word I gan doun falle<br/>
+On knees, and with devocioun<br/>
+And with full gret contricioun<br/>
+I seide thanne: “Dominus,<br/>
+Min holi fader Genius,<br/>
+So as thou hast experience<br/>
+Of love, for whos reverence<br/>
+Thou schalt me schriven at this time,<br/>
+I prai the let me noght mistime    220<br/>
+Mi schrifte, for I am destourbed<br/>
+In al myn herte, and so contourbed,<br/>
+That I ne may my wittes gete,<br/>
+So schal I moche thing foryete:<br/>
+Bot if thou wolt my schrifte oppose<br/>
+Fro point to point, thanne I suppose,<br/>
+Ther schal nothing be left behinde.<br/>
+Bot now my wittes ben so blinde,<br/>
+That I ne can miselven teche.”<br/>
+Tho he began anon to preche,    230<br/>
+And with his wordes debonaire<br/>
+He seide tome softe and faire:<br/>
+“Thi schrifte to oppose and hiere,<br/>
+My Sone, I am assigned hiere<br/>
+Be Venus the godesse above,<br/>
+Whos Prest I am touchende of love.<br/>
+Bot natheles for certein skile<br/>
+I mot algate and nedes wile<br/>
+Noght only make my spekynges<br/>
+Of love, bot of othre thinges,    240<br/>
+That touchen to the cause of vice.<br/>
+For that belongeth to thoffice<br/>
+Of Prest, whos ordre that I bere,<br/>
+So that I wol nothing forbere,<br/>
+That I the vices on and on<br/>
+Ne schal thee schewen everychon;<br/>
+Wherof thou myht take evidence<br/>
+To reule with thi conscience.<br/>
+Bot of conclusion final<br/>
+Conclude I wol in special    250<br/>
+For love, whos servant I am,<br/>
+And why the cause is that I cam.<br/>
+So thenke I to don bothe tuo,<br/>
+Ferst that myn ordre longeth to,<br/>
+The vices forto telle arewe,<br/>
+Bot next above alle othre schewe<br/>
+Of love I wol the propretes,<br/>
+How that thei stonde be degrees<br/>
+After the disposicioun<br/>
+Of Venus, whos condicioun    260<br/>
+I moste folwe, as I am holde.<br/>
+For I with love am al withholde,<br/>
+So that the lasse I am to wyte,<br/>
+Thogh I ne conne bot a lyte<br/>
+Of othre thinges that ben wise:<br/>
+I am noght tawht in such a wise;<br/>
+For it is noght my comun us<br/>
+To speke of vices and vertus,<br/>
+Bot al of love and of his lore,<br/>
+For Venus bokes of nomore    270<br/>
+Me techen nowther text ne glose.<br/>
+Bot for als moche as I suppose<br/>
+It sit a prest to be wel thewed,<br/>
+And schame it is if he be lewed,<br/>
+Of my Presthode after the forme<br/>
+I wol thi schrifte so enforme,<br/>
+That ate leste thou schalt hiere<br/>
+The vices, and to thi matiere<br/>
+Of love I schal hem so remene,<br/>
+That thou schalt knowe what thei mene.    280<br/>
+For what a man schal axe or sein<br/>
+Touchende of schrifte, it mot be plein,<br/>
+It nedeth noght to make it queinte,<br/>
+For trowthe hise wordes wol noght peinte:<br/>
+That I wole axe of the forthi,<br/>
+My Sone, it schal be so pleinly,<br/>
+That thou schalt knowe and understonde<br/>
+The pointz of schrifte how that thei stonde.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betwen the lif and deth I herde<br/>
+This Prestes tale er I answerde,    290<br/>
+And thanne I preide him forto seie<br/>
+His will, and I it wolde obeie<br/>
+After the forme of his apprise.<br/>
+Tho spak he tome in such a wise,<br/>
+And bad me that I scholde schrive<br/>
+As touchende of my wittes fyve,<br/>
+And schape that thei were amended<br/>
+Of that I hadde hem misdispended.<br/>
+For tho be proprely the gates,<br/>
+Thurgh whiche as to the herte algates    300<br/>
+Comth alle thing unto the feire,<br/>
+Which may the mannes Soule empeire.<br/>
+And now this matiere is broght inne,<br/>
+Mi Sone, I thenke ferst beginne<br/>
+To wite how that thin yhe hath stonde,<br/>
+The which is, as I understonde,<br/>
+The moste principal of alle,<br/>
+Thurgh whom that peril mai befalle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto speke in loves kinde,<br/>
+Ful manye suche a man mai finde,    310<br/>
+Whiche evere caste aboute here yhe,<br/>
+To loke if that thei myhte aspie<br/>
+Fulofte thing which hem ne toucheth,<br/>
+Bot only that here herte soucheth<br/>
+In hindringe of an other wiht;<br/>
+And thus ful many a worthi knyht<br/>
+And many a lusti lady bothe<br/>
+Have be fulofte sythe wrothe.<br/>
+So that an yhe is as a thief<br/>
+To love, and doth ful gret meschief;    320<br/>
+And also for his oghne part<br/>
+Fulofte thilke firy Dart<br/>
+Of love, which that evere brenneth,<br/>
+Thurgh him into the herte renneth:<br/>
+And thus a mannes yhe ferst<br/>
+Himselve grieveth alther werst,<br/>
+And many a time that he knoweth<br/>
+Unto his oghne harm it groweth.<br/>
+Mi Sone, herkne now forthi<br/>
+A tale, to be war therby    330<br/>
+Thin yhe forto kepe and warde,<br/>
+So that it passe noght his warde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ovide telleth in his bok<br/>
+Ensample touchende of mislok,<br/>
+And seith hou whilom ther was on,<br/>
+A worthi lord, which Acteon<br/>
+Was hote, and he was cousin nyh<br/>
+To him that Thebes ferst on hyh<br/>
+Up sette, which king Cadme hyhte.<br/>
+This Acteon, as he wel myhte,    340<br/>
+Above alle othre caste his chiere,<br/>
+And used it fro yer to yere,<br/>
+With Houndes and with grete Hornes<br/>
+Among the wodes and the thornes<br/>
+To make his hunting and his chace:<br/>
+Where him best thoghte in every place<br/>
+To finde gamen in his weie,<br/>
+Ther rod he forto hunte and pleie.<br/>
+So him befell upon a tide<br/>
+On his hunting as he cam ride,    350<br/>
+In a Forest al one he was:<br/>
+He syh upon the grene gras<br/>
+The faire freisshe floures springe,<br/>
+He herde among the leves singe<br/>
+The Throstle with the nyhtingale:<br/>
+Thus er he wiste into a Dale<br/>
+He cam, wher was a litel plein,<br/>
+All round aboute wel besein<br/>
+With buisshes grene and Cedres hyhe;<br/>
+And ther withinne he caste his yhe.    360<br/>
+Amidd the plein he syh a welle,<br/>
+So fair ther myhte noman telle,<br/>
+In which Diana naked stod<br/>
+To bathe and pleie hire in the flod<br/>
+With many a Nimphe, which hire serveth.<br/>
+Bot he his yhe awey ne swerveth<br/>
+Fro hire, which was naked al,<br/>
+And sche was wonder wroth withal,<br/>
+And him, as sche which was godesse,<br/>
+Forschop anon, and the liknesse    370<br/>
+Sche made him taken of an Hert,<br/>
+Which was tofore hise houndes stert,<br/>
+That ronne besiliche aboute<br/>
+With many an horn and many a route,<br/>
+That maden mochel noise and cry:<br/>
+And ate laste unhappely<br/>
+This Hert his oghne houndes slowhe<br/>
+And him for vengance al todrowhe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo now, my Sone, what it is<br/>
+A man to caste his yhe amis,    380<br/>
+Which Acteon hath dere aboght;<br/>
+Be war forthi and do it noght.<br/>
+For ofte, who that hiede toke,<br/>
+Betre is to winke than to loke.<br/>
+And forto proven it is so,<br/>
+Ovide the Poete also<br/>
+A tale which to this matiere<br/>
+Acordeth seith, as thou schalt hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Metamor it telleth thus,<br/>
+How that a lord which Phorceus    390<br/>
+Was hote, hadde dowhtres thre.<br/>
+Bot upon here nativite<br/>
+Such was the constellacion,<br/>
+That out of mannes nacion<br/>
+Fro kynde thei be so miswent,<br/>
+That to the liknesse of Serpent<br/>
+Thei were bore, and so that on<br/>
+Of hem was cleped Stellibon,<br/>
+That other soster Suriale,<br/>
+The thridde, as telleth in the tale,    400<br/>
+Medusa hihte, and natheles<br/>
+Of comun name Gorgones<br/>
+In every contre ther aboute,<br/>
+As Monstres whiche that men doute,<br/>
+Men clepen hem; and bot on yhe<br/>
+Among hem thre in pourpartie<br/>
+Thei hadde, of which thei myhte se,<br/>
+Now hath it this, now hath it sche;<br/>
+After that cause and nede it ladde,<br/>
+Be throwes ech of hem it hadde.    410<br/>
+A wonder thing yet more amis<br/>
+Ther was, wherof I telle al this:<br/>
+What man on hem his chiere caste<br/>
+And hem behield, he was als faste<br/>
+Out of a man into a Ston<br/>
+Forschape, and thus ful manyon<br/>
+Deceived were, of that thei wolde<br/>
+Misloke, wher that thei ne scholde.<br/>
+Bot Perseus that worthi knyht,<br/>
+Whom Pallas of hir grete myht    420<br/>
+Halp, and tok him a Schield therto,<br/>
+And ek the god Mercurie also<br/>
+Lente him a swerd, he, as it fell,<br/>
+Beyende Athlans the hihe hell<br/>
+These Monstres soghte, and there he fond<br/>
+Diverse men of thilke lond<br/>
+Thurgh sihte of hem mistorned were,<br/>
+Stondende as Stones hiere and there.<br/>
+Bot he, which wisdom and prouesse<br/>
+Hadde of the god and the godesse,    430<br/>
+The Schield of Pallas gan enbrace,<br/>
+With which he covereth sauf his face,<br/>
+Mercuries Swerd and out he drowh,<br/>
+And so he bar him that he slowh<br/>
+These dredful Monstres alle thre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo now, my Sone, avise the,<br/>
+That thou thi sihte noght misuse:<br/>
+Cast noght thin yhe upon Meduse,<br/>
+That thou be torned into Ston:<br/>
+For so wys man was nevere non,    440<br/>
+Bot if he wel his yhe kepe<br/>
+And take of fol delit no kepe,<br/>
+That he with lust nys ofte nome,<br/>
+Thurgh strengthe of love and overcome.<br/>
+Of mislokynge how it hath ferd,<br/>
+As I have told, now hast thou herd,<br/>
+My goode Sone, and tak good hiede.<br/>
+And overthis yet I thee rede<br/>
+That thou be war of thin heringe,<br/>
+Which to the Herte the tidinge    450<br/>
+Of many a vanite hath broght,<br/>
+To tarie with a mannes thoght.<br/>
+And natheles good is to hiere<br/>
+Such thing wherof a man may lere<br/>
+That to vertu is acordant,<br/>
+And toward al the remenant<br/>
+Good is to torne his Ere fro;<br/>
+For elles, bot a man do so,<br/>
+Him may fulofte mysbefalle.<br/>
+I rede ensample amonges alle,    460<br/>
+Wherof to kepe wel an Ere<br/>
+It oghte pute a man in fere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Serpent, which that Aspidis<br/>
+Is cleped, of his kynde hath this,<br/>
+That he the Ston noblest of alle,<br/>
+The which that men Carbuncle calle,<br/>
+Berth in his hed above on heihte.<br/>
+For which whan that a man be sleyhte,<br/>
+The Ston to winne and him to daunte,<br/>
+With his carecte him wolde enchaunte,    470<br/>
+Anon as he perceiveth that,<br/>
+He leith doun his on Ere al plat<br/>
+Unto the ground, and halt it faste,<br/>
+And ek that other Ere als faste<br/>
+He stoppeth with his tail so sore,<br/>
+That he the wordes lasse or more<br/>
+Of his enchantement ne hiereth;<br/>
+And in this wise himself he skiereth,<br/>
+So that he hath the wordes weyved<br/>
+And thurgh his Ere is noght deceived.    480
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An othre thing, who that recordeth,<br/>
+Lich unto this ensample acordeth,<br/>
+Which in the tale of Troie I finde.<br/>
+Sirenes of a wonder kynde<br/>
+Ben Monstres, as the bokes tellen,<br/>
+And in the grete Se thei duellen:<br/>
+Of body bothe and of visage<br/>
+Lik unto wommen of yong age<br/>
+Up fro the Navele on hih thei be,<br/>
+And doun benethe, as men mai se,    490<br/>
+Thei bere of fisshes the figure.<br/>
+And overthis of such nature<br/>
+Thei ben, that with so swete a stevene<br/>
+Lik to the melodie of hevene<br/>
+In wommanysshe vois thei singe,<br/>
+With notes of so gret likinge,<br/>
+Of such mesure, of such musike,<br/>
+Wherof the Schipes thei beswike<br/>
+That passen be the costes there.<br/>
+For whan the Schipmen leie an Ere    500<br/>
+Unto the vois, in here avys<br/>
+Thei wene it be a Paradys,<br/>
+Which after is to hem an helle.<br/>
+For reson may noght with hem duelle,<br/>
+Whan thei tho grete lustes hiere;<br/>
+Thei conne noght here Schipes stiere,<br/>
+So besiliche upon the note<br/>
+Thei herkne, and in such wise assote,<br/>
+That thei here rihte cours and weie<br/>
+Foryete, and to here Ere obeie,    510<br/>
+And seilen til it so befalle<br/>
+That thei into the peril falle,<br/>
+Where as the Schipes be todrawe,<br/>
+And thei ben with the Monstres slawe.<br/>
+Bot fro this peril natheles<br/>
+With his wisdom king Uluxes<br/>
+Ascapeth and it overpasseth;<br/>
+For he tofor the hond compasseth<br/>
+That noman of his compaignie<br/>
+Hath pouer unto that folie    520<br/>
+His Ere for no lust to caste;<br/>
+For he hem stoppede alle faste,<br/>
+That non of hem mai hiere hem singe.<br/>
+So whan they comen forth seilinge,<br/>
+Ther was such governance on honde,<br/>
+That thei the Monstres have withstonde<br/>
+And slain of hem a gret partie.<br/>
+Thus was he sauf with his navie,<br/>
+This wise king, thurgh governance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof, my Sone, in remembrance    530<br/>
+Thou myht ensample taken hiere,<br/>
+As I have told, and what thou hiere<br/>
+Be wel war, and yif no credence,<br/>
+Bot if thou se more evidence.<br/>
+For if thou woldest take kepe<br/>
+And wisly cowthest warde and kepe<br/>
+Thin yhe and Ere, as I have spoke,<br/>
+Than haddest thou the gates stoke<br/>
+Fro such Sotie as comth to winne<br/>
+Thin hertes wit, which is withinne,    540<br/>
+Wherof that now thi love excedeth<br/>
+Mesure, and many a peine bredeth.<br/>
+Bot if thou cowthest sette in reule<br/>
+Tho tuo, the thre were eth to reule:<br/>
+Forthi as of thi wittes five<br/>
+I wole as now nomore schryve,<br/>
+Bot only of these ilke tuo.<br/>
+Tell me therfore if it be so,<br/>
+Hast thou thin yhen oght misthrowe?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, ye, I am beknowe,    550<br/>
+I have hem cast upon Meduse,<br/>
+Therof I may me noght excuse:<br/>
+Min herte is growen into Ston,<br/>
+So that my lady therupon<br/>
+Hath such a priente of love grave,<br/>
+That I can noght miselve save.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What seist thou, Sone, as of thin Ere?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I am gultyf there;<br/>
+For whanne I may my lady hiere,<br/>
+Mi wit with that hath lost his Stiere:    560<br/>
+I do noght as Uluxes dede,<br/>
+Bot falle anon upon the stede,<br/>
+Wher as I se my lady stonde;<br/>
+And there, I do yow understonde,<br/>
+I am topulled in my thoght,<br/>
+So that of reson leveth noght,<br/>
+Wherof that I me mai defende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My goode Sone, god thamende:<br/>
+For as me thenketh be thi speche<br/>
+Thi wittes ben riht feer to seche.    570<br/>
+As of thin Ere and of thin yhe<br/>
+I woll nomore specefie,<br/>
+Bot I woll axen overthis<br/>
+Of othre thing how that it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, as I thee schal enforme,<br/>
+Ther ben yet of an other forme<br/>
+Of dedly vices sevene applied,<br/>
+Wherof the herte is ofte plied<br/>
+To thing which after schal him grieve.<br/>
+The ferste of hem thou schalt believe    580<br/>
+Is Pride, which is principal,<br/>
+And hath with him in special<br/>
+Ministres five ful diverse,<br/>
+Of whiche, as I the schal reherse,<br/>
+The ferste is seid Ypocrisie.<br/>
+If thou art of his compaignie,<br/>
+Tell forth, my Sone, and schrif the clene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wot noght, fader, what ye mene:<br/>
+Bot this I wolde you beseche,<br/>
+That ye me be som weie teche    590<br/>
+What is to ben an ypocrite;<br/>
+And thanne if I be forto wyte,<br/>
+I wol beknowen, as it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, an ypocrite is this,&mdash;<br/>
+A man which feigneth conscience,<br/>
+As thogh it were al innocence,<br/>
+Withoute, and is noght so withinne;<br/>
+And doth so for he wolde winne<br/>
+Of his desir the vein astat.<br/>
+And whanne he comth anon therat,    600<br/>
+He scheweth thanne what he was,<br/>
+The corn is torned into gras,<br/>
+That was a Rose is thanne a thorn,<br/>
+And he that was a Lomb beforn<br/>
+Is thanne a Wolf, and thus malice<br/>
+Under the colour of justice<br/>
+Is hid; and as the poeple telleth,<br/>
+These ordres witen where he duelleth,<br/>
+As he that of here conseil is,<br/>
+And thilke world which thei er this    610<br/>
+Forsoken, he drawth in ayein:<br/>
+He clotheth richesse, as men sein,<br/>
+Under the simplesce of poverte,<br/>
+And doth to seme of gret decerte<br/>
+Thing which is litel worth withinne:<br/>
+He seith in open, fy! to Sinne,<br/>
+And in secre ther is no vice<br/>
+Of which that he nis a Norrice:<br/>
+And evere his chiere is sobre and softe,<br/>
+And where he goth he blesseth ofte,    620<br/>
+Wherof the blinde world he dreccheth.<br/>
+Bot yet al only he ne streccheth<br/>
+His reule upon religioun,<br/>
+Bot next to that condicioun<br/>
+In suche as clepe hem holy cherche<br/>
+It scheweth ek how he can werche<br/>
+Among tho wyde furred hodes,<br/>
+To geten hem the worldes goodes.<br/>
+And thei hemself ben thilke same<br/>
+That setten most the world in blame,    630<br/>
+Bot yet in contraire of her lore<br/>
+Ther is nothing thei loven more;<br/>
+So that semende of liht thei werke<br/>
+The dedes whiche are inward derke.<br/>
+And thus this double Ypocrisie<br/>
+With his devolte apparantie<br/>
+A viser set upon his face,<br/>
+Wherof toward this worldes grace<br/>
+He semeth to be riht wel thewed,<br/>
+And yit his herte is al beschrewed.    640<br/>
+Bot natheles he stant believed,<br/>
+And hath his pourpos ofte achieved<br/>
+Of worschipe and of worldes welthe,<br/>
+And takth it, as who seith, be stelthe<br/>
+Thurgh coverture of his fallas.<br/>
+And riht so in semblable cas<br/>
+This vice hath ek his officers<br/>
+Among these othre seculers<br/>
+Of grete men, for of the smale<br/>
+As for tacompte he set no tale,    650<br/>
+Bot thei that passen the comune<br/>
+With suche him liketh to comune,<br/>
+And where he seith he wol socoure<br/>
+The poeple, there he woll devoure;<br/>
+For now aday is manyon<br/>
+Which spekth of Peter and of John<br/>
+And thenketh Judas in his herte.<br/>
+Ther schal no worldes good asterte<br/>
+His hond, and yit he yifth almesse<br/>
+And fasteth ofte and hiereth Messe:    660<br/>
+With mea culpa, which he seith,<br/>
+Upon his brest fullofte he leith<br/>
+His hond, and cast upward his yhe,<br/>
+As thogh he Cristes face syhe;<br/>
+So that it seemeth ate syhte,<br/>
+As he al one alle othre myhte<br/>
+Rescoue with his holy bede.<br/>
+Bot yet his herte in other stede<br/>
+Among hise bedes most devoute<br/>
+Goth in the worldes cause aboute,    670<br/>
+How that he myhte his warisoun<br/>
+Encresce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+    And in comparisoun<br/>
+Ther ben lovers of such a sort,<br/>
+That feignen hem an humble port,<br/>
+And al is bot Ypocrisie,<br/>
+Which with deceipte and flaterie<br/>
+Hath many a worthi wif beguiled.<br/>
+For whanne he hath his tunge affiled,<br/>
+With softe speche and with lesinge,<br/>
+Forth with his fals pitous lokynge,    680<br/>
+He wolde make a womman wene<br/>
+To gon upon the faire grene,<br/>
+Whan that sche falleth in the Mir.<br/>
+For if he may have his desir,<br/>
+How so falle of the remenant,<br/>
+He halt no word of covenant;<br/>
+Bot er the time that he spede,<br/>
+Ther is no sleihte at thilke nede,<br/>
+Which eny loves faitour mai,<br/>
+That he ne put it in assai,    690<br/>
+As him belongeth forto done.<br/>
+The colour of the reyni Mone<br/>
+With medicine upon his face<br/>
+He set, and thanne he axeth grace,<br/>
+As he which hath sieknesse feigned.<br/>
+Whan his visage is so desteigned,<br/>
+With yhe upcast on hire he siketh,<br/>
+And many a contenance he piketh,<br/>
+To bringen hire in to believe<br/>
+Of thing which that he wolde achieve,    700<br/>
+Wherof he berth the pale hewe;<br/>
+And for he wolde seme trewe,<br/>
+He makth him siek, whan he is heil.<br/>
+Bot whanne he berth lowest the Seil,<br/>
+Thanne is he swiftest to beguile<br/>
+The womman, which that ilke while<br/>
+Set upon him feith or credence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if thou thi conscience<br/>
+Entamed hast in such a wise,<br/>
+In schrifte thou thee myht avise    710<br/>
+And telle it me, if it be so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holy fader, certes no.<br/>
+As forto feigne such sieknesse<br/>
+It nedeth noght, for this witnesse<br/>
+I take of god, that my corage<br/>
+Hath ben mor siek than my visage.<br/>
+And ek this mai I wel avowe,<br/>
+So lowe cowthe I nevere bowe<br/>
+To feigne humilite withoute,<br/>
+That me ne leste betre loute    720<br/>
+With alle the thoghtes of myn herte;<br/>
+For that thing schal me nevere asterte,<br/>
+I speke as to my lady diere,<br/>
+To make hire eny feigned chiere.<br/>
+God wot wel there I lye noght,<br/>
+Mi chiere hath be such as my thoght;<br/>
+For in good feith, this lieveth wel,<br/>
+Mi will was betre a thousendel<br/>
+Than eny chiere that I cowthe.<br/>
+Bot, Sire, if I have in my yowthe    730<br/>
+Don other wise in other place,<br/>
+I put me therof in your grace:<br/>
+For this excusen I ne schal,<br/>
+That I have elles overal<br/>
+To love and to his compaignie<br/>
+Be plein withoute Ypocrisie;<br/>
+Bot ther is on the which I serve,<br/>
+Althogh I may no thonk deserve,<br/>
+To whom yet nevere into this day<br/>
+I seide onlyche or ye or nay,    740<br/>
+Bot if it so were in my thoght.<br/>
+As touchende othre seie I noght<br/>
+That I nam somdel forto wyte<br/>
+Of that ye clepe an ypocrite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, it sit wel every wiht<br/>
+To kepe his word in trowthe upryht<br/>
+Towardes love in alle wise.<br/>
+For who that wolde him wel avise<br/>
+What hath befalle in this matiere,<br/>
+He scholde noght with feigned chiere    750<br/>
+Deceive Love in no degre.<br/>
+To love is every herte fre,<br/>
+Bot in deceipte if that thou feignest<br/>
+And therupon thi lust atteignest,<br/>
+That thow hast wonne with thi wyle,<br/>
+Thogh it thee like for a whyle,<br/>
+Thou schalt it afterward repente.<br/>
+And forto prove myn entente,<br/>
+I finde ensample in a Croniqe<br/>
+Of hem that love so beswike.    760
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It fell be olde daies thus,<br/>
+Whil themperour Tiberius<br/>
+The Monarchie of Rome ladde,<br/>
+Ther was a worthi Romein hadde<br/>
+A wif, and sche Pauline hihte,<br/>
+Which was to every mannes sihte<br/>
+Of al the Cite the faireste,<br/>
+And as men seiden, ek the beste.<br/>
+It is and hath ben evere yit,<br/>
+That so strong is no mannes wit,    770<br/>
+Which thurgh beaute ne mai be drawe<br/>
+To love, and stonde under the lawe<br/>
+Of thilke bore frele kinde,<br/>
+Which makth the hertes yhen blinde,<br/>
+Wher no reson mai be comuned:<br/>
+And in this wise stod fortuned<br/>
+This tale, of which I wolde mene;<br/>
+This wif, which in hire lustes grene<br/>
+Was fair and freissh and tendre of age,<br/>
+Sche may noght lette the corage    780<br/>
+Of him that wole on hire assote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a Duck, and he was hote<br/>
+Mundus, which hadde in his baillie<br/>
+To lede the chivalerie<br/>
+Of Rome, and was a worthi knyht;<br/>
+Bot yet he was noght of such myht<br/>
+The strengthe of love to withstonde,<br/>
+That he ne was so broght to honde,<br/>
+That malgre wher he wole or no,<br/>
+This yonge wif he loveth so,    790<br/>
+That he hath put al his assay<br/>
+To wynne thing which he ne may<br/>
+Gete of hire graunt in no manere,<br/>
+Be yifte of gold ne be preiere.<br/>
+And whanne he syh that be no mede<br/>
+Toward hir love he myhte spede,<br/>
+Be sleyhte feigned thanne he wroghte;<br/>
+And therupon he him bethoghte<br/>
+How that ther was in the Cite<br/>
+A temple of such auctorite,    800<br/>
+To which with gret Devocioun<br/>
+The noble wommen of the toun<br/>
+Most comunliche a pelrinage<br/>
+Gon forto preie thilke ymage<br/>
+Which the godesse of childinge is,<br/>
+And cleped was be name Ysis:<br/>
+And in hire temple thanne were,<br/>
+To reule and to ministre there<br/>
+After the lawe which was tho,<br/>
+Above alle othre Prestes tuo.    810<br/>
+This Duck, which thoghte his love gete,<br/>
+Upon a day hem tuo to mete<br/>
+Hath bede, and thei come at his heste;<br/>
+Wher that thei hadde a riche feste,<br/>
+And after mete in prive place<br/>
+This lord, which wolde his thonk pourchace,<br/>
+To ech of hem yaf thanne a yifte,<br/>
+And spak so that be weie of schrifte<br/>
+He drowh hem unto his covine,<br/>
+To helpe and schape how he Pauline    820<br/>
+After his lust deceive myhte.<br/>
+And thei here trowthes bothe plyhte,<br/>
+That thei be nyhte hire scholden wynne<br/>
+Into the temple, and he therinne<br/>
+Schal have of hire al his entente:<br/>
+And thus acorded forth thei wente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest thurgh which ypocrisie<br/>
+Ordeigned was the tricherie,<br/>
+Wherof this ladi was deceived.<br/>
+These Prestes hadden wel conceived    830<br/>
+That sche was of gret holinesse;<br/>
+And with a contrefet simplesse,<br/>
+Which hid was in a fals corage,<br/>
+Feignende an hevenely message<br/>
+Thei come and seide unto hir thus:<br/>
+“Pauline, the god Anubus<br/>
+Hath sent ous bothe Prestes hiere,<br/>
+And seith he woll to thee appiere<br/>
+Be nyhtes time himself alone,<br/>
+For love he hath to thi persone:    840<br/>
+And therupon he hath ous bede,<br/>
+That we in Ysis temple a stede<br/>
+Honestely for thee pourveie,<br/>
+Wher thou be nyhte, as we thee seie,<br/>
+Of him schalt take avisioun.<br/>
+For upon thi condicioun,<br/>
+The which is chaste and ful of feith,<br/>
+Such pris, as he ous tolde, he leith,<br/>
+That he wol stonde of thin acord;<br/>
+And forto bere hierof record    850<br/>
+He sende ous hider bothe tuo.”<br/>
+Glad was hire innocence tho<br/>
+Of suche wordes as sche herde,<br/>
+With humble chiere and thus answerde,<br/>
+And seide that the goddes wille<br/>
+Sche was al redy to fulfille,<br/>
+That be hire housebondes leve<br/>
+Sche wolde in Ysis temple at eve<br/>
+Upon hire goddes grace abide,<br/>
+To serven him the nyhtes tide.    860<br/>
+The Prestes tho gon hom ayein,<br/>
+And sche goth to hire sovereign,<br/>
+Of goddes wille and as it was<br/>
+Sche tolde him al the pleine cas,<br/>
+Wherof he was deceived eke,<br/>
+And bad that sche hire scholde meke<br/>
+Al hol unto the goddes heste.<br/>
+And thus sche, which was al honeste<br/>
+To godward after hire entente,<br/>
+At nyht unto the temple wente,    870<br/>
+Wher that the false Prestes were;<br/>
+And thei receiven hire there<br/>
+With such a tokne of holinesse,<br/>
+As thogh thei syhen a godesse,<br/>
+And al withinne in prive place<br/>
+A softe bedd of large space<br/>
+Thei hadde mad and encourtined,<br/>
+Wher sche was afterward engined.<br/>
+Bot sche, which al honour supposeth,<br/>
+The false Prestes thanne opposeth,    880<br/>
+And axeth be what observance<br/>
+Sche myhte most to the plesance<br/>
+Of godd that nyhtes reule kepe:<br/>
+And thei hire bidden forto slepe<br/>
+Liggende upon the bedd alofte,<br/>
+For so, thei seide, al stille and softe<br/>
+God Anubus hire wolde awake.<br/>
+The conseil in this wise take,<br/>
+The Prestes fro this lady gon;<br/>
+And sche, that wiste of guile non,    890<br/>
+In the manere as it was seid<br/>
+To slepe upon the bedd is leid,<br/>
+In hope that sche scholde achieve<br/>
+Thing which stod thanne upon bilieve,<br/>
+Fulfild of alle holinesse.<br/>
+Bot sche hath failed, as I gesse,<br/>
+For in a closet faste by<br/>
+The Duck was hid so prively<br/>
+That sche him myhte noght perceive;<br/>
+And he, that thoghte to deceive,    900<br/>
+Hath such arrai upon him nome,<br/>
+That whanne he wolde unto hir come,<br/>
+It scholde semen at hire yhe<br/>
+As thogh sche verrailiche syhe<br/>
+God Anubus, and in such wise<br/>
+This ypocrite of his queintise<br/>
+Awaiteth evere til sche slepte.<br/>
+And thanne out of his place he crepte<br/>
+So stille that sche nothing herde,<br/>
+And to the bedd stalkende he ferde,    910<br/>
+And sodeinly, er sche it wiste,<br/>
+Beclipt in armes he hire kiste:<br/>
+Wherof in wommanysshe drede<br/>
+Sche wok and nyste what to rede;<br/>
+Bot he with softe wordes milde<br/>
+Conforteth hire and seith, with childe<br/>
+He wolde hire make in such a kynde<br/>
+That al the world schal have in mynde<br/>
+The worschipe of that ilke Sone;<br/>
+For he schal with the goddes wone,    920<br/>
+And ben himself a godd also.<br/>
+With suche wordes and with mo,<br/>
+The whiche he feigneth in his speche,<br/>
+This lady wit was al to seche,<br/>
+As sche which alle trowthe weneth:<br/>
+Bot he, that alle untrowthe meneth,<br/>
+With blinde tales so hire ladde,<br/>
+That all his wille of hire he hadde.<br/>
+And whan him thoghte it was ynowh,<br/>
+Ayein the day he him withdrowh    930<br/>
+So prively that sche ne wiste<br/>
+Wher he becom, bot as him liste<br/>
+Out of the temple he goth his weie.<br/>
+And sche began to bidde and preie<br/>
+Upon the bare ground knelende,<br/>
+And after that made hire offrende,<br/>
+And to the Prestes yiftes grete<br/>
+Sche yaf, and homward be the Strete.<br/>
+The Duck hire mette and seide thus:<br/>
+“The myhti godd which Anubus    940<br/>
+Is hote, he save the, Pauline,<br/>
+For thou art of his discipline<br/>
+So holy, that no mannes myht<br/>
+Mai do that he hath do to nyht<br/>
+Of thing which thou hast evere eschuied.<br/>
+Bot I his grace have so poursuied,<br/>
+That I was mad his lieutenant:<br/>
+Forthi be weie of covenant<br/>
+Fro this day forth I am al thin,<br/>
+And if thee like to be myn,    950<br/>
+That stant upon thin oghne wille.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sche herde his tale and bar it stille,<br/>
+And hom sche wente, as it befell,<br/>
+Into hir chambre, and ther sche fell<br/>
+Upon hire bedd to wepe and crie,<br/>
+And seide: “O derke ypocrisie,<br/>
+Thurgh whos dissimilacion<br/>
+Of fals ymaginacion<br/>
+I am thus wickedly deceived!<br/>
+Bot that I have it aperceived    960<br/>
+I thonke unto the goddes alle;<br/>
+For thogh it ones be befalle,<br/>
+It schal nevere eft whil that I live,<br/>
+And thilke avou to godd I yive.”<br/>
+And thus wepende sche compleigneth,<br/>
+Hire faire face and al desteigneth<br/>
+With wofull teres of hire ije,<br/>
+So that upon this agonie<br/>
+Hire housebonde is inne come,<br/>
+And syh how sche was overcome    970<br/>
+With sorwe, and axeth what hire eileth.<br/>
+And sche with that hirself beweileth<br/>
+Welmore than sche dede afore,<br/>
+And seide, “Helas, wifhode is lore<br/>
+In me, which whilom was honeste,<br/>
+I am non other than a beste,<br/>
+Now I defouled am of tuo.”<br/>
+And as sche myhte speke tho,<br/>
+Aschamed with a pitous onde<br/>
+Sche tolde unto hir housebonde    980<br/>
+The sothe of al the hole tale,<br/>
+And in hire speche ded and pale<br/>
+Sche swouneth welnyh to the laste.<br/>
+And he hire in hise armes faste<br/>
+Uphield, and ofte swor his oth<br/>
+That he with hire is nothing wroth,<br/>
+For wel he wot sche may ther noght:<br/>
+Bot natheles withinne his thoght<br/>
+His herte stod in sori plit,<br/>
+And seide he wolde of that despit    990<br/>
+Be venged, how so evere it falle,<br/>
+And sende unto hise frendes alle.<br/>
+And whan thei weren come in fere,<br/>
+He tolde hem upon this matiere,<br/>
+And axeth hem what was to done:<br/>
+And thei avised were sone,<br/>
+And seide it thoghte hem for the beste<br/>
+To sette ferst his wif in reste,<br/>
+And after pleigne to the king<br/>
+Upon the matiere of this thing.    1000<br/>
+Tho was this wofull wif conforted<br/>
+Be alle weies and desported,<br/>
+Til that sche was somdiel amended;<br/>
+And thus a day or tuo despended,<br/>
+The thridde day sche goth to pleigne<br/>
+With many a worthi Citezeine,<br/>
+And he with many a Citezein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan themperour it herde sein,<br/>
+And knew the falshed of the vice,<br/>
+He seide he wolde do justice:    1010<br/>
+And ferst he let the Prestes take,<br/>
+And for thei scholde it noght forsake,<br/>
+He put hem into questioun;<br/>
+Bot thei of the suggestioun<br/>
+Ne couthen noght a word refuse,<br/>
+Bot for thei wolde hemself excuse,<br/>
+The blame upon the Duck thei leide.<br/>
+Bot therayein the conseil seide<br/>
+That thei be noght excused so,<br/>
+For he is on and thei ben tuo,    1020<br/>
+And tuo han more wit then on,<br/>
+So thilke excusement was non.<br/>
+And over that was seid hem eke,<br/>
+That whan men wolden vertu seke,<br/>
+Men scholde it in the Prestes finde;<br/>
+Here ordre is of so hyh a kinde,<br/>
+That thei be Duistres of the weie:<br/>
+Forthi, if eny man forsueie<br/>
+Thurgh hem, thei be noght excusable.<br/>
+And thus be lawe resonable    1030<br/>
+Among the wise jugges there<br/>
+The Prestes bothe dampned were,<br/>
+So that the prive tricherie<br/>
+Hid under fals Ipocrisie<br/>
+Was thanne al openliche schewed,<br/>
+That many a man hem hath beschrewed.<br/>
+And whan the Prestes weren dede,<br/>
+The temple of thilke horrible dede<br/>
+Thei thoghten purge, and thilke ymage,<br/>
+Whos cause was the pelrinage,    1040<br/>
+Thei drowen out and als so faste<br/>
+Fer into Tibre thei it caste,<br/>
+Wher the Rivere it hath defied:<br/>
+And thus the temple purified<br/>
+Thei have of thilke horrible Sinne,<br/>
+Which was that time do therinne.<br/>
+Of this point such was the juise,<br/>
+Bot of the Duck was other wise:<br/>
+For he with love was bestad,<br/>
+His dom was noght so harde lad;    1050<br/>
+For Love put reson aweie<br/>
+And can noght se the rihte weie.<br/>
+And be this cause he was respited,<br/>
+So that the deth him was acquited,<br/>
+Bot for al that he was exiled,<br/>
+For he his love hath so beguiled,<br/>
+That he schal nevere come ayein:<br/>
+For who that is to trowthe unplein,<br/>
+He may noght failen of vengance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek to take remembrance    1060<br/>
+Of that Ypocrisie hath wroght<br/>
+On other half, men scholde noght<br/>
+To lihtly lieve al that thei hiere,<br/>
+Bot thanne scholde a wisman stiere<br/>
+The Schip, whan suche wyndes blowe:<br/>
+For ferst thogh thei beginne lowe,<br/>
+At ende thei be noght menable,<br/>
+Bot al tobreken Mast and Cable,<br/>
+So that the Schip with sodein blast,<br/>
+Whan men lest wene, is overcast;    1070<br/>
+As now fulofte a man mai se:<br/>
+And of old time how it hath be<br/>
+I finde a gret experience,<br/>
+Wherof to take an evidence<br/>
+Good is, and to be war also<br/>
+Of the peril, er him be wo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of hem that ben so derk withinne,<br/>
+At Troie also if we beginne,<br/>
+Ipocrisie it hath betraied:<br/>
+For whan the Greks hadde al assaied,    1080<br/>
+And founde that be no bataille<br/>
+Ne be no Siege it myhte availe<br/>
+The toun to winne thurgh prouesse,<br/>
+This vice feigned of simplesce<br/>
+Thurgh sleyhte of Calcas and of Crise<br/>
+It wan be such a maner wise.<br/>
+An Hors of Bras thei let do forge<br/>
+Of such entaile, of such a forge,<br/>
+That in this world was nevere man<br/>
+That such an other werk began.    1090<br/>
+The crafti werkman Epius<br/>
+It made, and forto telle thus,<br/>
+The Greks, that thoghten to beguile<br/>
+The kyng of Troie, in thilke while<br/>
+With Anthenor and with Enee,<br/>
+That were bothe of the Cite<br/>
+And of the conseil the wiseste,<br/>
+The richeste and the myhtieste,<br/>
+In prive place so thei trete<br/>
+With fair beheste and yiftes grete    1100<br/>
+Of gold, that thei hem have engined;<br/>
+Togedre and whan thei be covined,<br/>
+Thei feignen forto make a pes,<br/>
+And under that yit natheles<br/>
+Thei schopen the destruccioun<br/>
+Bothe of the kyng and of the toun.<br/>
+And thus the false pees was take<br/>
+Of hem of Grece and undertake,<br/>
+And therupon thei founde a weie,<br/>
+Wher strengthe myhte noght aweie,    1110<br/>
+That sleihte scholde helpe thanne;<br/>
+And of an ynche a large spanne<br/>
+Be colour of the pees thei made,<br/>
+And tolden how thei weren glade<br/>
+Of that thei stoden in acord;<br/>
+And for it schal ben of record,<br/>
+Unto the kyng the Gregois seiden,<br/>
+Be weie of love and this thei preiden,<br/>
+As thei that wolde his thonk deserve,<br/>
+A Sacrifice unto Minerve,    1120<br/>
+The pes to kepe in good entente,<br/>
+Thei mosten offre er that thei wente.<br/>
+The kyng conseiled in this cas<br/>
+Be Anthenor and Eneas<br/>
+Therto hath yoven his assent:<br/>
+So was the pleine trowthe blent<br/>
+Thurgh contrefet Ipocrisie<br/>
+Of that thei scholden sacrifie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greks under the holinesse<br/>
+Anon with alle besinesse    1130<br/>
+Here Hors of Bras let faire dihte,<br/>
+Which was to sen a wonder sihte;<br/>
+For it was trapped of himselve,<br/>
+And hadde of smale whieles twelve,<br/>
+Upon the whiche men ynowe<br/>
+With craft toward the toun it drowe,<br/>
+And goth glistrende ayein the Sunne.<br/>
+Tho was ther joie ynowh begunne,<br/>
+For Troie in gret devocioun<br/>
+Cam also with processioun    1140<br/>
+Ayein this noble Sacrifise<br/>
+With gret honour, and in this wise<br/>
+Unto the gates thei it broghte.<br/>
+Bot of here entre whan thei soghte,<br/>
+The gates weren al to smale;<br/>
+And therupon was many a tale,<br/>
+Bot for the worschipe of Minerve,<br/>
+To whom thei comen forto serve,<br/>
+Thei of the toun, whiche understode<br/>
+That al this thing was do for goode,    1150<br/>
+For pes, wherof that thei ben glade,<br/>
+The gates that Neptunus made<br/>
+A thousend wynter ther tofore,<br/>
+Thei have anon tobroke and tore;<br/>
+The stronge walles doun thei bete,<br/>
+So that in to the large strete<br/>
+This Hors with gret solempnite<br/>
+Was broght withinne the Cite,<br/>
+And offred with gret reverence,<br/>
+Which was to Troie an evidence    1160<br/>
+Of love and pes for everemo.<br/>
+The Gregois token leve tho<br/>
+With al the hole felaschipe,<br/>
+And forth thei wenten into Schipe<br/>
+And crossen seil and made hem yare,<br/>
+Anon as thogh thei wolden fare:<br/>
+Bot whan the blake wynter nyht<br/>
+Withoute Mone or Sterre lyht<br/>
+Bederked hath the water Stronde,<br/>
+Al prively thei gon to londe    1170<br/>
+Ful armed out of the navie.<br/>
+Synon, which mad was here aspie<br/>
+Withinne Troie, as was conspired,<br/>
+Whan time was a tokne hath fired;<br/>
+And thei with that here weie holden,<br/>
+And comen in riht as thei wolden,<br/>
+Ther as the gate was tobroke.<br/>
+The pourpos was full take and spoke:<br/>
+Er eny man may take kepe,<br/>
+Whil that the Cite was aslepe,    1180<br/>
+Thei slowen al that was withinne,<br/>
+And token what thei myhten wynne<br/>
+Of such good as was sufficant,<br/>
+And brenden up the remenant.<br/>
+And thus cam out the tricherie,<br/>
+Which under fals Ypocrisie<br/>
+Was hid, and thei that wende pees<br/>
+Tho myhten finde no reles<br/>
+Of thilke swerd which al devoureth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fulofte and thus the swete soureth,    1190<br/>
+Whan it is knowe to the tast:<br/>
+He spilleth many a word in wast<br/>
+That schal with such a poeple trete;<br/>
+For whan he weneth most beyete,<br/>
+Thanne is he schape most to lese.<br/>
+And riht so if a womman chese<br/>
+Upon the wordes that sche hiereth<br/>
+Som man, whan he most trewe appiereth,<br/>
+Thanne is he forthest fro the trowthe:<br/>
+Bot yit fulofte, and that is rowthe,    1200<br/>
+Thei speden that ben most untrewe<br/>
+And loven every day a newe,<br/>
+Wherof the lief is after loth<br/>
+And love hath cause to be wroth.<br/>
+Bot what man that his lust desireth<br/>
+Of love, and therupon conspireth<br/>
+With wordes feigned to deceive,<br/>
+He schal noght faile to receive<br/>
+His peine, as it is ofte sene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, as I thee mene,    1210<br/>
+It sit the wel to taken hiede<br/>
+That thou eschuie of thi manhiede<br/>
+Ipocrisie and his semblant,<br/>
+That thou ne be noght deceivant,<br/>
+To make a womman to believe<br/>
+Thing which is noght in thi bilieve:<br/>
+For in such feint Ipocrisie<br/>
+Of love is al the tricherie,<br/>
+Thurgh which love is deceived ofte;<br/>
+For feigned semblant is so softe,    1220<br/>
+Unethes love may be war.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, as I wel dar,<br/>
+I charge thee to fle that vice,<br/>
+That many a womman hath mad nice;<br/>
+Bot lok thou dele noght withal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Iwiss, fader, nomor I schal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Sone, kep that thou hast swore:<br/>
+For this that thou hast herd before<br/>
+Is seid the ferste point of Pride:<br/>
+And next upon that other side,    1230<br/>
+To schryve and speken overthis<br/>
+Touchende of Pride, yit ther is<br/>
+The point seconde, I thee behote,<br/>
+Which Inobedience is hote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This vice of Inobedience<br/>
+Ayein the reule of conscience<br/>
+Al that is humble he desalloweth,<br/>
+That he toward his god ne boweth<br/>
+After the lawes of his heste.<br/>
+Noght as a man bot as a beste,    1240<br/>
+Which goth upon his lustes wilde,<br/>
+So goth this proude vice unmylde,<br/>
+That he desdeigneth alle lawe:<br/>
+He not what is to be felawe,<br/>
+And serve may he noght for pride;<br/>
+So is he badde on every side,<br/>
+And is that selve of whom men speke,<br/>
+Which wol noght bowe er that he breke.<br/>
+I not if love him myhte plie,<br/>
+For elles forto justefie    1250<br/>
+His herte, I not what mihte availe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, of such entaile<br/>
+If that thin herte be disposed,<br/>
+Tell out and let it noght be glosed:<br/>
+For if that thou unbuxom be<br/>
+To love, I not in what degree<br/>
+Thou schalt thi goode world achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, ye schul wel believe,<br/>
+The yonge whelp which is affaited<br/>
+Hath noght his Maister betre awaited,    1260<br/>
+To couche, whan he seith “Go lowe,”<br/>
+That I, anon as I may knowe<br/>
+Mi ladi will, ne bowe more.<br/>
+Bot other while I grucche sore<br/>
+Of some thinges that sche doth,<br/>
+Wherof that I woll telle soth:<br/>
+For of tuo pointz I am bethoght,<br/>
+That, thogh I wolde, I myhte noght<br/>
+Obeie unto my ladi heste;<br/>
+Bot I dar make this beheste,    1270<br/>
+Save only of that ilke tuo<br/>
+I am unbuxom of no mo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan ben tho tuo? tell on, quod he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, this is on, that sche<br/>
+Comandeth me my mowth to close,<br/>
+And that I scholde hir noght oppose<br/>
+In love, of which I ofte preche,<br/>
+Bot plenerliche of such a speche<br/>
+Forbere, and soffren hire in pes.<br/>
+Bot that ne myhte I natheles    1280<br/>
+For al this world obeie ywiss;<br/>
+For whanne I am ther as sche is,<br/>
+Though sche my tales noght alowe,<br/>
+Ayein hir will yit mot I bowe,<br/>
+To seche if that I myhte have grace:<br/>
+Bot that thing may I noght enbrace<br/>
+For ought that I can speke or do;<br/>
+And yit fulofte I speke so,<br/>
+That sche is wroth and seith, “Be stille.”<br/>
+If I that heste schal fulfille    1290<br/>
+And therto ben obedient,<br/>
+Thanne is my cause fully schent,<br/>
+For specheles may noman spede.<br/>
+So wot I noght what is to rede;<br/>
+Bot certes I may noght obeie,<br/>
+That I ne mot algate seie<br/>
+Somwhat of that I wolde mene;<br/>
+For evere it is aliche grene,<br/>
+The grete love which I have,<br/>
+Wherof I can noght bothe save    1300<br/>
+My speche and this obedience:<br/>
+And thus fulofte my silence<br/>
+I breke, and is the ferste point<br/>
+Wherof that I am out of point<br/>
+In this, and yit it is no pride.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now thanne upon that other side<br/>
+To telle my desobeissance,<br/>
+Ful sore it stant to my grevance<br/>
+And may noght sinke into my wit;<br/>
+For ofte time sche me bit    1310<br/>
+To leven hire and chese a newe,<br/>
+And seith, if I the sothe knewe<br/>
+How ferr I stonde from hir grace,<br/>
+I scholde love in other place.<br/>
+Bot therof woll I desobeie;<br/>
+For also wel sche myhte seie,<br/>
+“Go tak the Mone ther it sit,”<br/>
+As bringe that into my wit:<br/>
+For ther was nevere rooted tre,<br/>
+That stod so faste in his degre,    1320<br/>
+That I ne stonde more faste<br/>
+Upon hire love, and mai noght caste<br/>
+Min herte awey, althogh I wolde.<br/>
+For god wot, thogh I nevere scholde<br/>
+Sen hir with yhe after this day,<br/>
+Yit stant it so that I ne may<br/>
+Hir love out of my brest remue.<br/>
+This is a wonder retenue,<br/>
+That malgre wher sche wole or non<br/>
+Min herte is everemore in on,    1330<br/>
+So that I can non other chese,<br/>
+Bot whether that I winne or lese,<br/>
+I moste hire loven til I deie;<br/>
+And thus I breke as be that weie<br/>
+Hire hestes and hir comandinges,<br/>
+Bot trewliche in non othre thinges.<br/>
+Forthi, my fader, what is more<br/>
+Touchende to this ilke lore<br/>
+I you beseche, after the forme<br/>
+That ye pleinly me wolde enforme,    1340<br/>
+So that I may myn herte reule<br/>
+In loves cause after the reule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toward this vice of which we trete<br/>
+Ther ben yit tweie of thilke estrete,<br/>
+Here name is Murmur and Compleignte:<br/>
+Ther can noman here chiere peinte,<br/>
+To sette a glad semblant therinne,<br/>
+For thogh fortune make hem wynne,<br/>
+Yit grucchen thei, and if thei lese,<br/>
+Ther is no weie forto chese,    1350<br/>
+Wherof thei myhten stonde appesed.<br/>
+So ben thei comunly desesed;<br/>
+Ther may no welthe ne poverte<br/>
+Attempren hem to the decerte<br/>
+Of buxomnesse be no wise:<br/>
+For ofte time thei despise<br/>
+The goode fortune as the badde,<br/>
+As thei no mannes reson hadde,<br/>
+Thurgh pride, wherof thei be blinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ryht of such a maner kinde    1360<br/>
+Ther be lovers, that thogh thei have<br/>
+Of love al that thei wolde crave,<br/>
+Yit wol thei grucche be som weie,<br/>
+That thei wol noght to love obeie<br/>
+Upon the trowthe, as thei do scholde;<br/>
+And if hem lacketh that thei wolde,<br/>
+Anon thei falle in such a peine,<br/>
+That evere unbuxomly thei pleigne<br/>
+Upon fortune, and curse and crie,<br/>
+That thei wol noght here hertes plie    1370<br/>
+To soffre til it betre falle.<br/>
+Forthi if thou amonges alle<br/>
+Hast used this condicioun,<br/>
+Mi Sone, in thi Confessioun<br/>
+Now tell me pleinly what thou art.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I beknowe a part,<br/>
+So as ye tolden hier above<br/>
+Of Murmur and Compleignte of love,<br/>
+That for I se no sped comende,<br/>
+Ayein fortune compleignende    1380<br/>
+I am, as who seith, everemo:<br/>
+And ek fulofte tyme also,<br/>
+Whan so is that I se and hiere<br/>
+Or hevy word or hevy chiere<br/>
+Of my lady, I grucche anon;<br/>
+Bot wordes dar I speke non,<br/>
+Wherof sche myhte be desplesed,<br/>
+Bot in myn herte I am desesed:<br/>
+With many a Murmur, god it wot,<br/>
+Thus drinke I in myn oghne swot,    1390<br/>
+And thogh I make no semblant,<br/>
+Min herte is al desobeissant;<br/>
+And in this wise I me confesse<br/>
+Of that ye clepe unbuxomnesse.<br/>
+Now telleth what youre conseil is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and I thee rede this,<br/>
+What so befalle of other weie,<br/>
+That thou to loves heste obeie<br/>
+Als ferr as thou it myht suffise:<br/>
+For ofte sithe in such a wise    1400<br/>
+Obedience in love availeth,<br/>
+Wher al a mannes strengthe faileth;<br/>
+Wherof, if that the list to wite<br/>
+In a Cronique as it is write,<br/>
+A gret ensample thou myht fynde,<br/>
+Which now is come to my mynde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was whilom be daies olde<br/>
+A worthi knyht, and as men tolde<br/>
+He was Nevoeu to themperour<br/>
+And of his Court a Courteour:    1410<br/>
+Wifles he was, Florent he hihte,<br/>
+He was a man that mochel myhte,<br/>
+Of armes he was desirous,<br/>
+Chivalerous and amorous,<br/>
+And for the fame of worldes speche,<br/>
+Strange aventures forto seche,<br/>
+He rod the Marches al aboute.<br/>
+And fell a time, as he was oute,<br/>
+Fortune, which may every thred<br/>
+Tobreke and knette of mannes sped,    1420<br/>
+Schop, as this knyht rod in a pas,<br/>
+That he be strengthe take was,<br/>
+And to a Castell thei him ladde,<br/>
+Wher that he fewe frendes hadde:<br/>
+For so it fell that ilke stounde<br/>
+That he hath with a dedly wounde<br/>
+Feihtende his oghne hondes slain<br/>
+Branchus, which to the Capitain<br/>
+Was Sone and Heir, wherof ben wrothe<br/>
+The fader and the moder bothe.    1430<br/>
+That knyht Branchus was of his hond<br/>
+The worthieste of al his lond,<br/>
+And fain thei wolden do vengance<br/>
+Upon Florent, bot remembrance<br/>
+That thei toke of his worthinesse<br/>
+Of knyhthod and of gentilesse,<br/>
+And how he stod of cousinage<br/>
+To themperour, made hem assuage,<br/>
+And dorsten noght slen him for fere:<br/>
+In gret desputeisoun thei were    1440<br/>
+Among hemself, what was the beste.<br/>
+Ther was a lady, the slyheste<br/>
+Of alle that men knewe tho,<br/>
+So old sche myhte unethes go,<br/>
+And was grantdame unto the dede:<br/>
+And sche with that began to rede,<br/>
+And seide how sche wol bringe him inne,<br/>
+That sche schal him to dethe winne<br/>
+Al only of his oghne grant,<br/>
+Thurgh strengthe of verray covenant    1450<br/>
+Withoute blame of eny wiht.<br/>
+Anon sche sende for this kniht,<br/>
+And of hire Sone sche alleide<br/>
+The deth, and thus to him sche seide:<br/>
+“Florent, how so thou be to wyte<br/>
+Of Branchus deth, men schal respite<br/>
+As now to take vengement,<br/>
+Be so thou stonde in juggement<br/>
+Upon certein condicioun,<br/>
+That thou unto a questioun    1460<br/>
+Which I schal axe schalt ansuere;<br/>
+And over this thou schalt ek swere,<br/>
+That if thou of the sothe faile,<br/>
+Ther schal non other thing availe,<br/>
+That thou ne schalt thi deth receive.<br/>
+And for men schal thee noght deceive,<br/>
+That thou therof myht ben avised,<br/>
+Thou schalt have day and tyme assised<br/>
+And leve saufly forto wende,<br/>
+Be so that at thi daies ende    1470<br/>
+Thou come ayein with thin avys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This knyht, which worthi was and wys,<br/>
+This lady preith that he may wite,<br/>
+And have it under Seales write,<br/>
+What questioun it scholde be<br/>
+For which he schal in that degree<br/>
+Stonde of his lif in jeupartie.<br/>
+With that sche feigneth compaignie,<br/>
+And seith: “Florent, on love it hongeth<br/>
+Al that to myn axinge longeth:    1480<br/>
+What alle wommen most desire<br/>
+This wole I axe, and in thempire<br/>
+Wher as thou hast most knowlechinge<br/>
+Tak conseil upon this axinge.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florent this thing hath undertake,<br/>
+The day was set, the time take,<br/>
+Under his seal he wrot his oth,<br/>
+In such a wise and forth he goth<br/>
+Hom to his Emes court ayein;<br/>
+To whom his aventure plein    1490<br/>
+He tolde, of that him is befalle.<br/>
+And upon that thei weren alle<br/>
+The wiseste of the lond asent,<br/>
+Bot natheles of on assent<br/>
+Thei myhte noght acorde plat,<br/>
+On seide this, an othre that.<br/>
+After the disposicioun<br/>
+Of naturel complexioun<br/>
+To som womman it is plesance,<br/>
+That to an other is grevance;    1500<br/>
+Bot such a thing in special,<br/>
+Which to hem alle in general<br/>
+Is most plesant, and most desired<br/>
+Above alle othre and most conspired,<br/>
+Such o thing conne thei noght finde<br/>
+Be Constellacion ne kinde:<br/>
+And thus Florent withoute cure<br/>
+Mot stonde upon his aventure,<br/>
+And is al schape unto the lere,<br/>
+As in defalte of his answere.    1510<br/>
+This knyht hath levere forto dye<br/>
+Than breke his trowthe and forto lye<br/>
+In place ther as he was swore,<br/>
+And schapth him gon ayein therfore.<br/>
+Whan time cam he tok his leve,<br/>
+That lengere wolde he noght beleve,<br/>
+And preith his Em he be noght wroth,<br/>
+For that is a point of his oth,<br/>
+He seith, that noman schal him wreke,<br/>
+Thogh afterward men hiere speke    1520<br/>
+That he par aventure deie.<br/>
+And thus he wente forth his weie<br/>
+Alone as knyht aventurous,<br/>
+And in his thoght was curious<br/>
+To wite what was best to do:<br/>
+And as he rod al one so,<br/>
+And cam nyh ther he wolde be,<br/>
+In a forest under a tre<br/>
+He syh wher sat a creature,<br/>
+A lothly wommannysch figure,    1530<br/>
+That forto speke of fleisch and bon<br/>
+So foul yit syh he nevere non.<br/>
+This knyht behield hir redely,<br/>
+And as he wolde have passed by,<br/>
+Sche cleped him and bad abide;<br/>
+And he his horse heved aside<br/>
+Tho torneth, and to hire he rod,<br/>
+And there he hoveth and abod,<br/>
+To wite what sche wolde mene.<br/>
+And sche began him to bemene,    1540<br/>
+And seide: “Florent be thi name,<br/>
+Thou hast on honde such a game,<br/>
+That bot thou be the betre avised,<br/>
+Thi deth is schapen and devised,<br/>
+That al the world ne mai the save,<br/>
+Bot if that thou my conseil have.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florent, whan he this tale herde,<br/>
+Unto this olde wyht answerde<br/>
+And of hir conseil he hir preide.<br/>
+And sche ayein to him thus seide:    1550<br/>
+“Florent, if I for the so schape,<br/>
+That thou thurgh me thi deth ascape<br/>
+And take worschipe of thi dede,<br/>
+What schal I have to my mede?”<br/>
+“What thing,” quod he, “that thou wolt axe.”<br/>
+“I bidde nevere a betre taxe,”<br/>
+Quod sche, “bot ferst, er thou be sped,<br/>
+Thou schalt me leve such a wedd,<br/>
+That I wol have thi trowthe in honde<br/>
+That thou schalt be myn housebonde.”    1560<br/>
+“Nay,” seith Florent, “that may noght be.”<br/>
+“Ryd thanne forth thi wey,” quod sche,<br/>
+“And if thou go withoute red,<br/>
+Thou schalt be sekerliche ded.”<br/>
+Florent behihte hire good ynowh<br/>
+Of lond, of rente, of park, of plowh,<br/>
+Bot al that compteth sche at noght.<br/>
+Tho fell this knyht in mochel thoght,<br/>
+Now goth he forth, now comth ayein,<br/>
+He wot noght what is best to sein,    1570<br/>
+And thoghte, as he rod to and fro,<br/>
+That chese he mot on of the tuo,<br/>
+Or forto take hire to his wif<br/>
+Or elles forto lese his lif.<br/>
+And thanne he caste his avantage,<br/>
+That sche was of so gret an age,<br/>
+That sche mai live bot a while,<br/>
+And thoghte put hire in an Ile,<br/>
+Wher that noman hire scholde knowe,<br/>
+Til sche with deth were overthrowe.    1580<br/>
+And thus this yonge lusti knyht<br/>
+Unto this olde lothly wiht<br/>
+Tho seide: “If that non other chance<br/>
+Mai make my deliverance,<br/>
+Bot only thilke same speche<br/>
+Which, as thou seist, thou schalt me teche,<br/>
+Have hier myn hond, I schal thee wedde.”<br/>
+And thus his trowthe he leith to wedde.<br/>
+With that sche frounceth up the browe:<br/>
+“This covenant I wol allowe,”    1590<br/>
+Sche seith: “if eny other thing<br/>
+Bot that thou hast of my techyng<br/>
+Fro deth thi body mai respite,<br/>
+I woll thee of thi trowthe acquite,<br/>
+And elles be non other weie.<br/>
+Now herkne me what I schal seie.<br/>
+Whan thou art come into the place,<br/>
+Wher now thei maken gret manace<br/>
+And upon thi comynge abyde,<br/>
+Thei wole anon the same tide    1600<br/>
+Oppose thee of thin answere.<br/>
+I wot thou wolt nothing forbere<br/>
+Of that thou wenest be thi beste,<br/>
+And if thou myht so finde reste,<br/>
+Wel is, for thanne is ther nomore.<br/>
+And elles this schal be my lore,<br/>
+That thou schalt seie, upon this Molde<br/>
+That alle wommen lievest wolde<br/>
+Be soverein of mannes love:<br/>
+For what womman is so above,    1610<br/>
+Sche hath, as who seith, al hire wille;<br/>
+And elles may sche noght fulfille<br/>
+What thing hir were lievest have.<br/>
+With this answere thou schalt save<br/>
+Thiself, and other wise noght.<br/>
+And whan thou hast thin ende wroght,<br/>
+Com hier ayein, thou schalt me finde,<br/>
+And let nothing out of thi minde.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He goth him forth with hevy chiere,<br/>
+As he that not in what manere    1620<br/>
+He mai this worldes joie atteigne:<br/>
+For if he deie, he hath a peine,<br/>
+And if he live, he mot him binde<br/>
+To such on which of alle kinde<br/>
+Of wommen is thunsemlieste:<br/>
+Thus wot he noght what is the beste:<br/>
+Bot be him lief or be him loth,<br/>
+Unto the Castell forth he goth<br/>
+His full answere forto yive,<br/>
+Or forto deie or forto live.    1630<br/>
+Forth with his conseil cam the lord,<br/>
+The thinges stoden of record,<br/>
+He sende up for the lady sone,<br/>
+And forth sche cam, that olde Mone.<br/>
+In presence of the remenant<br/>
+The strengthe of al the covenant<br/>
+Tho was reherced openly,<br/>
+And to Florent sche bad forthi<br/>
+That he schal tellen his avis,<br/>
+As he that woot what is the pris.    1640<br/>
+Florent seith al that evere he couthe,<br/>
+Bot such word cam ther non to mowthe,<br/>
+That he for yifte or for beheste<br/>
+Mihte eny wise his deth areste.<br/>
+And thus he tarieth longe and late,<br/>
+Til that this lady bad algate<br/>
+That he schal for the dom final<br/>
+Yive his answere in special<br/>
+Of that sche hadde him ferst opposed:<br/>
+And thanne he hath trewly supposed    1650<br/>
+That he him may of nothing yelpe,<br/>
+Bot if so be tho wordes helpe,<br/>
+Whiche as the womman hath him tawht;<br/>
+Wherof he hath an hope cawht<br/>
+That he schal ben excused so,<br/>
+And tolde out plein his wille tho.<br/>
+And whan that this Matrone herde<br/>
+The manere how this knyht ansuerde,<br/>
+Sche seide: “Ha treson, wo thee be,<br/>
+That hast thus told the privite,    1660<br/>
+Which alle wommen most desire!<br/>
+I wolde that thou were afire.”<br/>
+Bot natheles in such a plit<br/>
+Florent of his answere is quit:<br/>
+And tho began his sorwe newe,<br/>
+For he mot gon, or ben untrewe,<br/>
+To hire which his trowthe hadde.<br/>
+Bot he, which alle schame dradde,<br/>
+Goth forth in stede of his penance,<br/>
+And takth the fortune of his chance,    1670<br/>
+As he that was with trowthe affaited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This olde wyht him hath awaited<br/>
+In place wher as he hire lefte:<br/>
+Florent his wofull heved uplefte<br/>
+And syh this vecke wher sche sat,<br/>
+Which was the lothlieste what<br/>
+That evere man caste on his yhe:<br/>
+Hire Nase bass, hire browes hyhe,<br/>
+Hire yhen smale and depe set,<br/>
+Hire chekes ben with teres wet,    1680<br/>
+And rivelen as an emty skyn<br/>
+Hangende doun unto the chin,<br/>
+Hire Lippes schrunken ben for age,<br/>
+Ther was no grace in the visage,<br/>
+Hir front was nargh, hir lockes hore,<br/>
+Sche loketh forth as doth a More,<br/>
+Hire Necke is schort, hir schuldres courbe,<br/>
+That myhte a mannes lust destourbe,<br/>
+Hire body gret and nothing smal,<br/>
+And schortly to descrive hire al,    1690<br/>
+Sche hath no lith withoute a lak;<br/>
+Bot lich unto the wollesak<br/>
+Sche proferth hire unto this knyht,<br/>
+And bad him, as he hath behyht,<br/>
+So as sche hath ben his warant,<br/>
+That he hire holde covenant,<br/>
+And be the bridel sche him seseth.<br/>
+Bot godd wot how that sche him pleseth<br/>
+Of suche wordes as sche spekth:<br/>
+Him thenkth welnyh his herte brekth    1700<br/>
+For sorwe that he may noght fle,<br/>
+Bot if he wolde untrewe be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Loke, how a sek man for his hele<br/>
+Takth baldemoine with Canele,<br/>
+And with the Mirre takth the Sucre,<br/>
+Ryht upon such a maner lucre<br/>
+Stant Florent, as in this diete:<br/>
+He drinkth the bitre with the swete,<br/>
+He medleth sorwe with likynge,<br/>
+And liveth, as who seith, deyinge;    1710<br/>
+His youthe schal be cast aweie<br/>
+Upon such on which as the weie<br/>
+Is old and lothly overal.<br/>
+Bot nede he mot that nede schal:<br/>
+He wolde algate his trowthe holde,<br/>
+As every knyht therto is holde,<br/>
+What happ so evere him is befalle:<br/>
+Thogh sche be the fouleste of alle,<br/>
+Yet to thonour of wommanhiede<br/>
+Him thoghte he scholde taken hiede;    1720<br/>
+So that for pure gentilesse,<br/>
+As he hire couthe best adresce,<br/>
+In ragges, as sche was totore,<br/>
+He set hire on his hors tofore<br/>
+And forth he takth his weie softe;<br/>
+No wonder thogh he siketh ofte.<br/>
+Bot as an oule fleth be nyhte<br/>
+Out of alle othre briddes syhte,<br/>
+Riht so this knyht on daies brode<br/>
+In clos him hield, and schop his rode    1730<br/>
+On nyhtes time, til the tyde<br/>
+That he cam there he wolde abide;<br/>
+And prively withoute noise<br/>
+He bringth this foule grete Coise<br/>
+To his Castell in such a wise<br/>
+That noman myhte hire schappe avise,<br/>
+Til sche into the chambre cam:<br/>
+Wher he his prive conseil nam<br/>
+Of suche men as he most troste,<br/>
+And tolde hem that he nedes moste    1740<br/>
+This beste wedde to his wif,<br/>
+For elles hadde he lost his lif.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prive wommen were asent,<br/>
+That scholden ben of his assent:<br/>
+Hire ragges thei anon of drawe,<br/>
+And, as it was that time lawe,<br/>
+She hadde bath, sche hadde reste,<br/>
+And was arraied to the beste.<br/>
+Bot with no craft of combes brode<br/>
+Thei myhte hire hore lockes schode,    1750<br/>
+And sche ne wolde noght be schore<br/>
+For no conseil, and thei therfore,<br/>
+With such atyr as tho was used,<br/>
+Ordeinen that it was excused,<br/>
+And hid so crafteliche aboute,<br/>
+That noman myhte sen hem oute.<br/>
+Bot when sche was fulliche arraied<br/>
+And hire atyr was al assaied,<br/>
+Tho was sche foulere on to se:<br/>
+Bot yit it may non other be,    1760<br/>
+Thei were wedded in the nyht;<br/>
+So wo begon was nevere knyht<br/>
+As he was thanne of mariage.<br/>
+And sche began to pleie and rage,<br/>
+As who seith, I am wel ynowh;<br/>
+Bot he therof nothing ne lowh,<br/>
+For sche tok thanne chiere on honde<br/>
+And clepeth him hire housebonde,<br/>
+And seith, “My lord, go we to bedde,<br/>
+For I to that entente wedde,    1770<br/>
+That thou schalt be my worldes blisse:”<br/>
+And profreth him with that to kisse,<br/>
+As sche a lusti Lady were.<br/>
+His body myhte wel be there,<br/>
+Bot as of thoght and of memoire<br/>
+His herte was in purgatoire.<br/>
+Bot yit for strengthe of matrimoine<br/>
+He myhte make non essoine,<br/>
+That he ne mot algates plie<br/>
+To gon to bedde of compaignie:    1780<br/>
+And whan thei were abedde naked,<br/>
+Withoute slep he was awaked;<br/>
+He torneth on that other side,<br/>
+For that he wolde hise yhen hyde<br/>
+Fro lokynge on that foule wyht.<br/>
+The chambre was al full of lyht,<br/>
+The courtins were of cendal thinne,<br/>
+This newe bryd which lay withinne,<br/>
+Thogh it be noght with his acord,<br/>
+In armes sche beclipte hire lord,    1790<br/>
+And preide, as he was torned fro,<br/>
+He wolde him torne ayeinward tho;<br/>
+“For now,” sche seith, “we ben bothe on.”<br/>
+And he lay stille as eny ston,<br/>
+Bot evere in on sche spak and preide,<br/>
+And bad him thenke on that he seide,<br/>
+Whan that he tok hire be the hond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He herde and understod the bond,<br/>
+How he was set to his penance,<br/>
+And as it were a man in trance    1800<br/>
+He torneth him al sodeinly,<br/>
+And syh a lady lay him by<br/>
+Of eyhtetiene wynter age,<br/>
+Which was the faireste of visage<br/>
+That evere in al this world he syh:<br/>
+And as he wolde have take hire nyh,<br/>
+Sche put hire hand and be his leve<br/>
+Besoghte him that he wolde leve,<br/>
+And seith that forto wynne or lese<br/>
+He mot on of tuo thinges chese,    1810<br/>
+Wher he wol have hire such on nyht,<br/>
+Or elles upon daies lyht,<br/>
+For he schal noght have bothe tuo.<br/>
+And he began to sorwe tho,<br/>
+In many a wise and caste his thoght,<br/>
+Bot for al that yit cowthe he noght<br/>
+Devise himself which was the beste.<br/>
+And sche, that wolde his hertes reste,<br/>
+Preith that he scholde chese algate,<br/>
+Til ate laste longe and late    1820<br/>
+He seide: “O ye, my lyves hele,<br/>
+Sey what you list in my querele,<br/>
+I not what ansuere I schal yive:<br/>
+Bot evere whil that I may live,<br/>
+I wol that ye be my maistresse,<br/>
+For I can noght miselve gesse<br/>
+Which is the beste unto my chois.<br/>
+Thus grante I yow myn hole vois,<br/>
+Ches for ous bothen, I you preie;<br/>
+And what as evere that ye seie,    1830<br/>
+Riht as ye wole so wol I.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mi lord,” sche seide, “grant merci,<br/>
+For of this word that ye now sein,<br/>
+That ye have mad me soverein,<br/>
+Mi destine is overpassed,<br/>
+That nevere hierafter schal be lassed<br/>
+Mi beaute, which that I now have,<br/>
+Til I be take into my grave;<br/>
+Bot nyht and day as I am now<br/>
+I schal alwey be such to yow.    1840<br/>
+The kinges dowhter of Cizile<br/>
+I am, and fell bot siththe awhile,<br/>
+As I was with my fader late,<br/>
+That my Stepmoder for an hate,<br/>
+Which toward me sche hath begonne,<br/>
+Forschop me, til I hadde wonne<br/>
+The love and sovereinete<br/>
+Of what knyht that in his degre<br/>
+Alle othre passeth of good name:<br/>
+And, as men sein, ye ben the same,    1850<br/>
+The dede proeveth it is so;<br/>
+Thus am I youres evermo.”<br/>
+Tho was plesance and joye ynowh,<br/>
+Echon with other pleide and lowh;<br/>
+Thei live longe and wel thei ferde,<br/>
+And clerkes that this chance herde<br/>
+Thei writen it in evidence,<br/>
+To teche how that obedience<br/>
+Mai wel fortune a man to love<br/>
+And sette him in his lust above,    1860<br/>
+As it befell unto this knyht.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, if thou do ryht,<br/>
+Thou schalt unto thi love obeie,<br/>
+And folwe hir will be alle weie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holy fader, so I wile:<br/>
+For ye have told me such a skile<br/>
+Of this ensample now tofore,<br/>
+That I schal evermo therfore<br/>
+Hierafterward myn observance<br/>
+To love and to his obeissance    1870<br/>
+The betre kepe: and over this<br/>
+Of pride if ther oght elles is,<br/>
+Wherof that I me schryve schal,<br/>
+What thing it is in special,<br/>
+Mi fader, axeth, I you preie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest, my Sone, and I schal seie:<br/>
+For yit ther is Surquiderie,<br/>
+Which stant with Pride of compaignie;<br/>
+Wherof that thou schalt hiere anon,<br/>
+To knowe if thou have gult or non    1880<br/>
+Upon the forme as thou schalt hiere:<br/>
+Now understond wel the matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surquiderie is thilke vice<br/>
+Of Pride, which the thridde office<br/>
+Hath in his Court, and wol noght knowe<br/>
+The trowthe til it overthrowe.<br/>
+Upon his fortune and his grace<br/>
+Comth “Hadde I wist” fulofte aplace;<br/>
+For he doth al his thing be gesse,<br/>
+And voideth alle sikernesse.    1890<br/>
+Non other conseil good him siemeth<br/>
+Bot such as he himselve diemeth;<br/>
+For in such wise as he compasseth,<br/>
+His wit al one alle othre passeth;<br/>
+And is with pride so thurghsoght,<br/>
+That he alle othre set at noght,<br/>
+And weneth of himselven so,<br/>
+That such as he ther be nomo,<br/>
+So fair, so semly, ne so wis;<br/>
+And thus he wolde bere a pris    1900<br/>
+Above alle othre, and noght forthi<br/>
+He seith noght ones “grant mercy”<br/>
+To godd, which alle grace sendeth,<br/>
+So that his wittes he despendeth<br/>
+Upon himself, as thogh ther were<br/>
+No godd which myhte availe there:<br/>
+Bot al upon his oghne witt<br/>
+He stant, til he falle in the pitt<br/>
+So ferr that he mai noght arise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht thus in the same wise    1910<br/>
+This vice upon the cause of love<br/>
+So proudly set the herte above,<br/>
+And doth him pleinly forto wene<br/>
+That he to loven eny qwene<br/>
+Hath worthinesse and sufficance;<br/>
+And so withoute pourveance<br/>
+Fulofte he heweth up so hihe,<br/>
+That chippes fallen in his yhe;<br/>
+And ek ful ofte he weneth this,<br/>
+Ther as he noght beloved is,    1920<br/>
+To be beloved alther best.<br/>
+Now, Sone, tell what so thee lest<br/>
+Of this that I have told thee hier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ha, fader, be noght in a wer:<br/>
+I trowe ther be noman lesse,<br/>
+Of eny maner worthinesse,<br/>
+That halt him lasse worth thanne I<br/>
+To be beloved; and noght forthi<br/>
+I seie in excusinge of me,<br/>
+To alle men that love is fre.    1930<br/>
+And certes that mai noman werne;<br/>
+For love is of himself so derne,<br/>
+It luteth in a mannes herte:<br/>
+Bot that ne schal me noght asterte,<br/>
+To wene forto be worthi<br/>
+To loven, bot in hir mercy.<br/>
+Bot, Sire, of that ye wolden mene,<br/>
+That I scholde otherwise wene<br/>
+To be beloved thanne I was,<br/>
+I am beknowe as in that cas.    1940
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, tell me how.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest, and I wol telle yow,<br/>
+Mi goode fader, how it is.<br/>
+Fulofte it hath befalle or this<br/>
+Thurgh hope that was noght certein,<br/>
+Mi wenynge hath be set in vein<br/>
+To triste in thing that halp me noght,<br/>
+Bot onliche of myn oughne thoght.<br/>
+For as it semeth that a belle<br/>
+Lik to the wordes that men telle    1950<br/>
+Answerth, riht so ne mor ne lesse,<br/>
+To yow, my fader, I confesse,<br/>
+Such will my wit hath overset,<br/>
+That what so hope me behet,<br/>
+Ful many a time I wene it soth,<br/>
+Bot finali no spied it doth.<br/>
+Thus may I tellen, as I can,<br/>
+Wenyng beguileth many a man;<br/>
+So hath it me, riht wel I wot:<br/>
+For if a man wole in a Bot    1960<br/>
+Which is withoute botme rowe,<br/>
+He moste nedes overthrowe.<br/>
+Riht so wenyng hath ferd be me:<br/>
+For whanne I wende next have be,<br/>
+As I be my wenynge caste,<br/>
+Thanne was I furthest ate laste,<br/>
+And as a foll my bowe unbende,<br/>
+Whan al was failed that I wende.<br/>
+Forthi, my fader, as of this,<br/>
+That my wenynge hath gon amis    1970<br/>
+Touchende to Surquiderie,<br/>
+Yif me my penance er I die.<br/>
+Bot if ye wolde in eny forme<br/>
+Of this matiere a tale enforme,<br/>
+Which were ayein this vice set,<br/>
+I scholde fare wel the bet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, in alle maner wise<br/>
+Surquiderie is to despise,<br/>
+Wherof I finde write thus.<br/>
+The proude knyht Capaneus    1980<br/>
+He was of such Surquiderie,<br/>
+That he thurgh his chivalerie<br/>
+Upon himself so mochel triste,<br/>
+That to the goddes him ne liste<br/>
+In no querele to beseche,<br/>
+Bot seide it was an ydel speche,<br/>
+Which caused was of pure drede,<br/>
+For lack of herte and for no nede.<br/>
+And upon such presumpcioun<br/>
+He hield this proude opinioun,    1990<br/>
+Til ate laste upon a dai,<br/>
+Aboute Thebes wher he lay,<br/>
+Whan it of Siege was belein,<br/>
+This knyht, as the Croniqes sein,<br/>
+In alle mennes sihte there,<br/>
+Whan he was proudest in his gere,<br/>
+And thoghte how nothing myhte him dere,<br/>
+Ful armed with his schield and spere<br/>
+As he the Cite wolde assaile,<br/>
+Godd tok himselve the bataille    2000<br/>
+Ayein his Pride, and fro the sky<br/>
+A firy thonder sodeinly<br/>
+He sende, and him to pouldre smot.<br/>
+And thus the Pride which was hot,<br/>
+Whan he most in his strengthe wende,<br/>
+Was brent and lost withouten ende:<br/>
+So that it proeveth wel therfore,<br/>
+The strengthe of man is sone lore,<br/>
+Bot if that he it wel governe.<br/>
+And over this a man mai lerne    2010<br/>
+That ek fulofte time it grieveth,<br/>
+Whan that a man himself believeth,<br/>
+As thogh it scholde him wel beseme<br/>
+That he alle othre men can deme,<br/>
+And hath foryete his oghne vice.<br/>
+A tale of hem that ben so nyce,<br/>
+And feigne hemself to be so wise,<br/>
+I schal thee telle in such a wise,<br/>
+Wherof thou schalt ensample take<br/>
+That thou no such thing undertake.    2020
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I finde upon Surquiderie,<br/>
+How that whilom of Hungarie<br/>
+Be olde daies was a King<br/>
+Wys and honeste in alle thing:<br/>
+And so befell upon a dai,<br/>
+And that was in the Monthe of Maii,<br/>
+As thilke time it was usance,<br/>
+This kyng with noble pourveance<br/>
+Hath for himself his Charr araied,<br/>
+Wher inne he wolde ride amaied    2030<br/>
+Out of the Cite forto pleie,<br/>
+With lordes and with gret nobleie<br/>
+Of lusti folk that were yonge:<br/>
+Wher some pleide and some songe,<br/>
+And some gon and some ryde,<br/>
+And some prike here hors aside<br/>
+And bridlen hem now in now oute.<br/>
+The kyng his yhe caste aboute,<br/>
+Til he was ate laste war<br/>
+And syh comende ayein his char    2040<br/>
+Two pilegrins of so gret age,<br/>
+That lich unto a dreie ymage<br/>
+Thei weren pale and fade hewed,<br/>
+And as a bussh which is besnewed,<br/>
+Here berdes weren hore and whyte;<br/>
+Ther was of kinde bot a lite,<br/>
+That thei ne semen fulli dede.<br/>
+Thei comen to the kyng and bede<br/>
+Som of his good par charite;<br/>
+And he with gret humilite    2050<br/>
+Out of his Char to grounde lepte,<br/>
+And hem in bothe hise armes kepte<br/>
+And keste hem bothe fot and hond<br/>
+Before the lordes of his lond,<br/>
+And yaf hem of his good therto:<br/>
+And whanne he hath this dede do,<br/>
+He goth into his char ayein.<br/>
+Tho was Murmur, tho was desdeign,<br/>
+Tho was compleignte on every side,<br/>
+Thei seiden of here oghne Pride    2060<br/>
+Eche until othre: “What is this?<br/>
+Oure king hath do this thing amis,<br/>
+So to abesse his realte<br/>
+That every man it myhte se,<br/>
+And humbled him in such a wise<br/>
+To hem that were of non emprise.”<br/>
+Thus was it spoken to and fro<br/>
+Of hem that were with him tho<br/>
+Al prively behinde his bak;<br/>
+Bot to himselven noman spak.    2070<br/>
+The kinges brother in presence<br/>
+Was thilke time, and gret offence<br/>
+He tok therof, and was the same<br/>
+Above alle othre which most blame<br/>
+Upon his liege lord hath leid,<br/>
+And hath unto the lordes seid,<br/>
+Anon as he mai time finde,<br/>
+Ther schal nothing be left behinde,<br/>
+That he wol speke unto the king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest what fell upon this thing.    2080<br/>
+The day was merie and fair ynowh,<br/>
+Echon with othre pleide and lowh,<br/>
+And fellen into tales newe,<br/>
+How that the freisshe floures grewe,<br/>
+And how the grene leves spronge,<br/>
+And how that love among the yonge<br/>
+Began the hertes thanne awake,<br/>
+And every bridd hath chose hire make:<br/>
+And thus the Maies day to thende<br/>
+Thei lede, and hom ayein thei wende.    2090<br/>
+The king was noght so sone come,<br/>
+That whanne he hadde his chambre nome,<br/>
+His brother ne was redi there,<br/>
+And broghte a tale unto his Ere<br/>
+Of that he dede such a schame<br/>
+In hindringe of his oghne name,<br/>
+Whan he himself so wolde drecche,<br/>
+That to so vil a povere wrecche<br/>
+Him deigneth schewe such simplesce<br/>
+Ayein thastat of his noblesce:    2100<br/>
+And seith he schal it nomor use,<br/>
+And that he mot himself excuse<br/>
+Toward hise lordes everychon.<br/>
+The king stod stille as eny ston,<br/>
+And to his tale an Ere he leide,<br/>
+And thoghte more than he seide:<br/>
+Bot natheles to that he herde<br/>
+Wel cortaisly the king answerde,<br/>
+And tolde it scholde be amended.<br/>
+And thus whan that her tale is ended,    2110<br/>
+Al redy was the bord and cloth,<br/>
+The king unto his Souper goth<br/>
+Among the lordes to the halle;<br/>
+And whan thei hadden souped alle,<br/>
+Thei token leve and forth thei go.<br/>
+The king bethoghte himselve tho<br/>
+How he his brother mai chastie,<br/>
+That he thurgh his Surquiderie<br/>
+Tok upon honde to despreise<br/>
+Humilite, which is to preise,    2120<br/>
+And therupon yaf such conseil<br/>
+Toward his king that was noght heil;<br/>
+Wherof to be the betre lered,<br/>
+He thenkth to maken him afered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It fell so that in thilke dawe<br/>
+Ther was ordeined be the lawe<br/>
+A trompe with a sterne breth,<br/>
+Which cleped was the Trompe of deth:<br/>
+And in the Court wher the king was<br/>
+A certein man this Trompe of bras    2130<br/>
+Hath in kepinge, and therof serveth,<br/>
+That whan a lord his deth deserveth,<br/>
+He schal this dredful trompe blowe<br/>
+Tofore his gate, and make it knowe<br/>
+How that the jugement is yove<br/>
+Of deth, which schal noght be foryove.<br/>
+The king, whan it was nyht, anon<br/>
+This man asente and bad him gon<br/>
+To trompen at his brother gate;<br/>
+And he, which mot so don algate,    2140<br/>
+Goth forth and doth the kynges heste.<br/>
+This lord, which herde of this tempeste<br/>
+That he tofore his gate blew,<br/>
+Tho wiste he be the lawe and knew<br/>
+That he was sikerliche ded:<br/>
+And as of help he wot no red,<br/>
+Bot sende for hise frendes alle<br/>
+And tolde hem how it is befalle.<br/>
+And thei him axe cause why;<br/>
+Bot he the sothe noght forthi    2150<br/>
+Ne wiste, and ther was sorwe tho:<br/>
+For it stod thilke tyme so,<br/>
+This trompe was of such sentence,<br/>
+That therayein no resistence<br/>
+Thei couthe ordeine be no weie,<br/>
+That he ne mot algate deie,<br/>
+Bot if so that he may pourchace<br/>
+To gete his liege lordes grace.<br/>
+Here wittes therupon thei caste,<br/>
+And ben apointed ate laste.    2160
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This lord a worthi ladi hadde<br/>
+Unto his wif, which also dradde<br/>
+Hire lordes deth, and children five<br/>
+Betwen hem two thei hadde alyve,<br/>
+That weren yonge and tendre of age,<br/>
+And of stature and of visage<br/>
+Riht faire and lusty on to se.<br/>
+Tho casten thei that he and sche<br/>
+Forth with here children on the morwe,<br/>
+As thei that were full of sorwe,    2170<br/>
+Al naked bot of smok and scherte,<br/>
+To tendre with the kynges herte,<br/>
+His grace scholden go to seche<br/>
+And pardoun of the deth beseche.<br/>
+Thus passen thei that wofull nyht,<br/>
+And erly, whan thei sihe it lyht,<br/>
+Thei gon hem forth in such a wise<br/>
+As thou tofore hast herd devise,<br/>
+Al naked bot here schortes one.<br/>
+Thei wepte and made mochel mone,    2180<br/>
+Here Her hangende aboute here Eres;<br/>
+With sobbinge and with sory teres<br/>
+This lord goth thanne an humble pas,<br/>
+That whilom proud and noble was;<br/>
+Wherof the Cite sore afflyhte,<br/>
+Of hem that sihen thilke syhte:<br/>
+And natheless al openly<br/>
+With such wepinge and with such cri<br/>
+Forth with hise children and his wif<br/>
+He goth to preie for his lif.    2190<br/>
+Unto the court whan thei be come,<br/>
+And men therinne have hiede nome,<br/>
+Ther was no wiht, if he hem syhe,<br/>
+Fro water mihte kepe his yhe<br/>
+For sorwe which thei maden tho.<br/>
+The king supposeth of this wo,<br/>
+And feigneth as he noght ne wiste;<br/>
+Bot natheles at his upriste<br/>
+Men tolden him how that it ferde:<br/>
+And whan that he this wonder herde,    2200<br/>
+In haste he goth into the halle,<br/>
+And alle at ones doun thei falle,<br/>
+If eny pite may be founde.<br/>
+The king, which seth hem go to grounde,<br/>
+Hath axed hem what is the fere,<br/>
+Why thei be so despuiled there.<br/>
+His brother seide: “Ha lord, mercy!<br/>
+I wot non other cause why,<br/>
+Bot only that this nyht ful late<br/>
+The trompe of deth was at my gate    2210<br/>
+In tokne that I scholde deie;<br/>
+Thus be we come forto preie<br/>
+That ye mi worldes deth respite.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ha fol, how thou art forto wyte,”<br/>
+The king unto his brother seith,<br/>
+“That thou art of so litel feith,<br/>
+That only for a trompes soun<br/>
+Hast gon despuiled thurgh the toun,<br/>
+Thou and thi wif in such manere<br/>
+Forth with thi children that ben here,    2220<br/>
+In sihte of alle men aboute,<br/>
+For that thou seist thou art in doute<br/>
+Of deth, which stant under the lawe<br/>
+Of man, and man it mai withdrawe,<br/>
+So that it mai par chance faile.<br/>
+Now schalt thou noght forthi mervaile<br/>
+That I doun fro my Charr alihte,<br/>
+Whanne I behield tofore my sihte<br/>
+In hem that were of so grete age<br/>
+Min oghne deth thurgh here ymage,    2230<br/>
+Which god hath set be lawe of kynde,<br/>
+Wherof I mai no bote finde:<br/>
+For wel I wot, such as thei be,<br/>
+Riht such am I in my degree,<br/>
+Of fleissh and blod, and so schal deie.<br/>
+And thus, thogh I that lawe obeie<br/>
+Of which the kinges ben put under,<br/>
+It oghte ben wel lasse wonder<br/>
+Than thou, which art withoute nede<br/>
+For lawe of londe in such a drede,    2240<br/>
+Which for tacompte is bot a jape,<br/>
+As thing which thou miht overscape.<br/>
+Forthi, mi brother, after this<br/>
+I rede, sithen that so is<br/>
+That thou canst drede a man so sore,<br/>
+Dred god with al thin herte more:<br/>
+For al schal deie and al schal passe,<br/>
+Als wel a Leoun as an asse,<br/>
+Als wel a beggere as a lord,<br/>
+Towardes deth in on acord    2250<br/>
+Thei schullen stonde.” And in this wise<br/>
+The king hath with hise wordes wise<br/>
+His brother tawht and al foryive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, if thou wolt live<br/>
+In vertu, thou most vice eschuie,<br/>
+And with low herte humblesce suie,<br/>
+So that thou be noght surquidous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I am amorous,<br/>
+Wherof I wolde you beseche<br/>
+That ye me som ensample teche,    2260<br/>
+Which mihte in loves cause stonde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+In love and othre thinges alle<br/>
+If that Surquiderie falle,<br/>
+It may to him noght wel betide<br/>
+Which useth thilke vice of Pride,<br/>
+Which torneth wisdom to wenynge<br/>
+And Sothfastnesse into lesynge<br/>
+Thurgh fol ymaginacion.<br/>
+And for thin enformacion,    2270<br/>
+That thou this vice as I the rede<br/>
+Eschuie schalt, a tale I rede,<br/>
+Which fell whilom be daies olde,<br/>
+So as the clerk Ovide tolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was whilom a lordes Sone,<br/>
+Which of his Pride a nyce wone<br/>
+Hath cawht, that worthi to his liche,<br/>
+To sechen al the worldes riche,<br/>
+Ther was no womman forto love.<br/>
+So hihe he sette himselve above    2280<br/>
+Of stature and of beaute bothe,<br/>
+That him thoghte alle wommen lothe:<br/>
+So was ther no comparisoun<br/>
+As toward his condicioun.<br/>
+This yonge lord Narcizus hihte:<br/>
+No strengthe of love bowe mihte<br/>
+His herte, which is unaffiled;<br/>
+Bot ate laste he was beguiled:<br/>
+For of the goddes pourveance<br/>
+It fell him on a dai par chance,    2290<br/>
+That he in all his proude fare<br/>
+Unto the forest gan to fare,<br/>
+Amonges othre that ther were<br/>
+To hunte and to desporte him there.<br/>
+And whanne he cam into the place<br/>
+Wher that he wolde make his chace,<br/>
+The houndes weren in a throwe<br/>
+Uncoupled and the hornes blowe:<br/>
+The grete hert anon was founde,<br/>
+Which swifte feet sette upon grounde,    2300<br/>
+And he with spore in horse side<br/>
+Him hasteth faste forto ride,<br/>
+Til alle men be left behinde.<br/>
+And as he rod, under a linde<br/>
+Beside a roche, as I thee telle,<br/>
+He syh wher sprong a lusty welle:<br/>
+The day was wonder hot withalle,<br/>
+And such a thurst was on him falle,<br/>
+That he moste owther deie or drinke;<br/>
+And doun he lihte and be the brinke    2310<br/>
+He teide his Hors unto a braunche,<br/>
+And leide him lowe forto staunche<br/>
+His thurst: and as he caste his lok<br/>
+Into the welle and hiede tok,<br/>
+He sih the like of his visage,<br/>
+And wende ther were an ymage<br/>
+Of such a Nimphe as tho was faie,<br/>
+Wherof that love his herte assaie<br/>
+Began, as it was after sene,<br/>
+Of his sotie and made him wene    2320<br/>
+It were a womman that he syh.<br/>
+The more he cam the welle nyh,<br/>
+The nerr cam sche to him ayein;<br/>
+So wiste he nevere what to sein;<br/>
+For whanne he wepte, he sih hire wepe,<br/>
+And whanne he cride, he tok good kepe,<br/>
+The same word sche cride also:<br/>
+And thus began the newe wo,<br/>
+That whilom was to him so strange;<br/>
+Tho made him love an hard eschange,    2330<br/>
+To sette his herte and to beginne<br/>
+Thing which he mihte nevere winne.<br/>
+And evere among he gan to loute,<br/>
+And preith that sche to him come oute;<br/>
+And otherwhile he goth a ferr,<br/>
+And otherwhile he draweth nerr,<br/>
+And evere he fond hire in o place.<br/>
+He wepth, he crith, he axeth grace,<br/>
+There as he mihte gete non;<br/>
+So that ayein a Roche of Ston,    2340<br/>
+As he that knew non other red,<br/>
+He smot himself til he was ded.<br/>
+Wherof the Nimphes of the welles,<br/>
+And othre that ther weren elles<br/>
+Unto the wodes belongende,<br/>
+The body, which was ded ligende,<br/>
+For pure pite that thei have<br/>
+Under the grene thei begrave.<br/>
+And thanne out of his sepulture<br/>
+Ther sprong anon par aventure    2350<br/>
+Of floures such a wonder syhte,<br/>
+That men ensample take myhte<br/>
+Upon the dedes whiche he dede,<br/>
+As tho was sene in thilke stede;<br/>
+For in the wynter freysshe and faire<br/>
+The floures ben, which is contraire<br/>
+To kynde, and so was the folie<br/>
+Which fell of his Surquiderie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus he, which love hadde in desdeign,<br/>
+Worste of all othre was besein,    2360<br/>
+And as he sette his pris most hyhe,<br/>
+He was lest worth in loves yhe<br/>
+And most bejaped in his wit:<br/>
+Wherof the remembrance is yit,<br/>
+So that thou myht ensample take,<br/>
+And ek alle othre for his sake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as touchende of me,<br/>
+This vice I thenke forto fle,<br/>
+Which of his wenynge overtroweth;<br/>
+And nameliche of thing which groweth    2370<br/>
+In loves cause or wel or wo<br/>
+Yit pryded I me nevere so.<br/>
+Bot wolde god that grace sende,<br/>
+That toward me my lady wende<br/>
+As I towardes hire wene!<br/>
+Mi love scholde so be sene,<br/>
+Ther scholde go no pride a place.<br/>
+Bot I am ferr fro thilke grace,<br/>
+As forto speke of tyme now;<br/>
+So mot I soffre, and preie yow    2380<br/>
+That ye wole axe on other side<br/>
+If ther be eny point of Pride,<br/>
+Wherof it nedeth to be schrive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, godd it thee foryive,<br/>
+If thou have eny thing misdo<br/>
+Touchende of this, bot overmo<br/>
+Ther is an other yit of Pride,<br/>
+Which nevere cowthe hise wordes hide,<br/>
+That he ne wole himself avaunte;<br/>
+Ther mai nothing his tunge daunte,    2390<br/>
+That he ne clappeth as a Belle:<br/>
+Wherof if thou wolt that I telle,<br/>
+It is behovely forto hiere,<br/>
+So that thou myht thi tunge stiere,<br/>
+Toward the world and stonde in grace,<br/>
+Which lacketh ofte in many place<br/>
+To him that can noght sitte stille,<br/>
+Which elles scholde have al his wille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vice cleped Avantance<br/>
+With Pride hath take his aqueintance,    2400<br/>
+So that his oghne pris he lasseth,<br/>
+When he such mesure overpasseth<br/>
+That he his oghne Herald is.<br/>
+That ferst was wel is thanne mis,<br/>
+That was thankworth is thanne blame,<br/>
+And thus the worschipe of his name<br/>
+Thurgh pride of his avantarie<br/>
+He torneth into vilenie.<br/>
+I rede how that this proude vice<br/>
+Hath thilke wynd in his office,    2410<br/>
+Which thurgh the blastes that he bloweth<br/>
+The mannes fame he overthroweth<br/>
+Of vertu, which scholde elles springe<br/>
+Into the worldes knowlechinge;<br/>
+Bot he fordoth it alto sore.<br/>
+And riht of such a maner lore<br/>
+Ther ben lovers: forthi if thow<br/>
+Art on of hem, tell and sei how.<br/>
+Whan thou hast taken eny thing<br/>
+Of loves yifte, or Nouche or ring,    2420<br/>
+Or tok upon thee for the cold<br/>
+Som goodly word that thee was told,<br/>
+Or frendly chiere or tokne or lettre,<br/>
+Wherof thin herte was the bettre,<br/>
+Or that sche sende the grietinge,<br/>
+Hast thou for Pride of thi likinge<br/>
+Mad thin avant wher as the liste?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wolde, fader, that ye wiste,<br/>
+Mi conscience lith noght hiere:<br/>
+Yit hadde I nevere such matiere,    2430<br/>
+Wherof min herte myhte amende,<br/>
+Noght of so mochel that sche sende<br/>
+Be mowthe and seide, “Griet him wel:”<br/>
+And thus for that ther is no diel<br/>
+Wherof to make myn avant,<br/>
+It is to reson acordant<br/>
+That I mai nevere, bot I lye,<br/>
+Of love make avanterie.<br/>
+I wot noght what I scholde have do,<br/>
+If that I hadde encheson so,    2440<br/>
+As ye have seid hier manyon;<br/>
+Bot I fond cause nevere non:<br/>
+Bot daunger, which welnyh me slowh,<br/>
+Therof I cowthe telle ynowh,<br/>
+And of non other Avantance:<br/>
+Thus nedeth me no repentance.<br/>
+Now axeth furthere of my lif,<br/>
+For hierof am I noght gultif.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I am wel paid withal;<br/>
+For wite it wel in special    2450<br/>
+That love of his verrai justice<br/>
+Above alle othre ayein this vice<br/>
+At alle times most debateth,<br/>
+With al his herte and most it hateth.<br/>
+And ek in alle maner wise<br/>
+Avantarie is to despise,<br/>
+As be ensample thou myht wite,<br/>
+Which I finde in the bokes write.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of hem that we Lombars now calle<br/>
+Albinus was the ferste of alle    2460<br/>
+Which bar corone of Lombardie,<br/>
+And was of gret chivalerie<br/>
+In werre ayein diverse kinges.<br/>
+So fell amonges othre thinges,<br/>
+That he that time a werre hadde<br/>
+With Gurmond, which the Geptes ladde,<br/>
+And was a myhti kyng also:<br/>
+Bot natheles it fell him so,<br/>
+Albinus slowh him in the feld,<br/>
+Ther halp him nowther swerd ne scheld,    2470<br/>
+That he ne smot his hed of thanne,<br/>
+Wherof he tok awey the Panne,<br/>
+Of which he seide he wolde make<br/>
+A Cuppe for Gurmoundes sake,<br/>
+To kepe and drawe into memoire<br/>
+Of his bataille the victoire.<br/>
+And thus whan he the feld hath wonne,<br/>
+The lond anon was overronne<br/>
+And sesed in his oghne hond,<br/>
+Wher he Gurmondes dowhter fond,    2480<br/>
+Which Maide Rosemounde hihte,<br/>
+And was in every mannes sihte<br/>
+A fair, a freissh, a lusti on.<br/>
+His herte fell to hire anon,<br/>
+And such a love on hire he caste,<br/>
+That he hire weddeth ate laste;<br/>
+And after that long time in reste<br/>
+With hire he duelte, and to the beste<br/>
+Thei love ech other wonder wel.<br/>
+Bot sche which kepth the blinde whel,    2490<br/>
+Venus, whan thei be most above,<br/>
+In al the hoteste of here love,<br/>
+Hire whiel sche torneth, and thei felle<br/>
+In the manere as I schal telle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king, which stod in al his welthe<br/>
+Of pes, of worschipe and of helthe,<br/>
+And felte him on no side grieved,<br/>
+As he that hath his world achieved,<br/>
+Tho thoghte he wolde a feste make;<br/>
+And that was for his wyves sake,    2500<br/>
+That sche the lordes ate feste,<br/>
+That were obeissant to his heste,<br/>
+Mai knowe: and so forth therupon<br/>
+He let ordeine, and sende anon<br/>
+Be lettres and be messagiers,<br/>
+And warnede alle hise officiers<br/>
+That every thing be wel arraied:<br/>
+The grete Stiedes were assaied<br/>
+For joustinge and for tornement,<br/>
+And many a perled garnement    2510<br/>
+Embroudred was ayein the dai.<br/>
+The lordes in here beste arrai<br/>
+Be comen ate time set,<br/>
+On jousteth wel, an other bet,<br/>
+And otherwhile thei torneie,<br/>
+And thus thei casten care aweie<br/>
+And token lustes upon honde.<br/>
+And after, thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+To mete into the kinges halle<br/>
+Thei come, as thei be beden alle:    2520<br/>
+And whan thei were set and served,<br/>
+Thanne after, as it was deserved,<br/>
+To hem that worthi knyhtes were,<br/>
+So as thei seten hiere and there,<br/>
+The pris was yove and spoken oute<br/>
+Among the heraldz al aboute.<br/>
+And thus benethe and ek above<br/>
+Al was of armes and of love,<br/>
+Wherof abouten ate bordes<br/>
+Men hadde manye sondri wordes,    2530<br/>
+That of the merthe which thei made<br/>
+The king himself began to glade<br/>
+Withinne his herte and tok a pride,<br/>
+And sih the Cuppe stonde aside,<br/>
+Which mad was of Gurmoundes hed,<br/>
+As ye have herd, whan he was ded,<br/>
+And was with gold and riche Stones<br/>
+Beset and bounde for the nones,<br/>
+And stod upon a fot on heihte<br/>
+Of burned gold, and with gret sleihte    2540<br/>
+Of werkmanschipe it was begrave<br/>
+Of such werk as it scholde have,<br/>
+And was policed ek so clene<br/>
+That no signe of the Skulle is sene,<br/>
+Bot as it were a Gripes Ey.<br/>
+The king bad bere his Cuppe awey,<br/>
+Which stod tofore him on the bord,<br/>
+And fette thilke. Upon his word<br/>
+This Skulle is fet and wyn therinne,<br/>
+Wherof he bad his wif beginne:    2550<br/>
+“Drink with thi fader, Dame,” he seide.<br/>
+And sche to his biddinge obeide,<br/>
+And tok the Skulle, and what hire liste<br/>
+Sche drank, as sche which nothing wiste<br/>
+What Cuppe it was: and thanne al oute<br/>
+The kyng in audience aboute<br/>
+Hath told it was hire fader Skulle,<br/>
+So that the lordes knowe schulle<br/>
+Of his bataille a soth witnesse,<br/>
+And made avant thurgh what prouesse    2560<br/>
+He hath his wyves love wonne,<br/>
+Which of the Skulle hath so begonne.<br/>
+Tho was ther mochel Pride alofte,<br/>
+Thei speken alle, and sche was softe,<br/>
+Thenkende on thilke unkynde Pride,<br/>
+Of that hire lord so nyh hire side<br/>
+Avanteth him that he hath slain<br/>
+And piked out hire fader brain,<br/>
+And of the Skulle had mad a Cuppe.<br/>
+Sche soffreth al til thei were uppe,    2570<br/>
+And tho sche hath seknesse feigned,<br/>
+And goth to chambre and hath compleigned<br/>
+Unto a Maide which sche triste,<br/>
+So that non other wyht it wiste.<br/>
+This Mayde Glodeside is hote,<br/>
+To whom this lady hath behote<br/>
+Of ladischipe al that sche can,<br/>
+To vengen hire upon this man,<br/>
+Which dede hire drinke in such a plit<br/>
+Among hem alle for despit    2580<br/>
+Of hire and of hire fader bothe;<br/>
+Wherof hire thoghtes ben so wrothe,<br/>
+Sche seith, that sche schal noght be glad,<br/>
+Til that sche se him so bestad<br/>
+That he nomore make avant.<br/>
+And thus thei felle in covenant,<br/>
+That thei acorden ate laste,<br/>
+With suche wiles as thei caste<br/>
+That thei wol gete of here acord<br/>
+Som orped knyht to sle this lord:    2590<br/>
+And with this sleihte thei beginne,<br/>
+How thei Helmege myhten winne,<br/>
+Which was the kinges Boteler,<br/>
+A proud a lusti Bacheler,<br/>
+And Glodeside he loveth hote.<br/>
+And sche, to make him more assote,<br/>
+Hire love granteth, and be nyhte<br/>
+Thei schape how thei togedre myhte<br/>
+Abedde meete: and don it was<br/>
+This same nyht; and in this cas    2600<br/>
+The qwene hirself the nyht secounde<br/>
+Wente in hire stede, and there hath founde<br/>
+A chambre derk withoute liht,<br/>
+And goth to bedde to this knyht.<br/>
+And he, to kepe his observance,<br/>
+To love doth his obeissance,<br/>
+And weneth it be Glodeside;<br/>
+And sche thanne after lay aside,<br/>
+And axeth him what he hath do,<br/>
+And who sche was sche tolde him tho,    2610<br/>
+And seide: “Helmege, I am thi qwene,<br/>
+Now schal thi love wel be sene<br/>
+Of that thou hast thi wille wroght:<br/>
+Or it schal sore ben aboght,<br/>
+Or thou schalt worche as I thee seie.<br/>
+And if thou wolt be such a weie<br/>
+Do my plesance and holde it stille,<br/>
+For evere I schal ben at thi wille,<br/>
+Bothe I and al myn heritage.”<br/>
+Anon the wylde loves rage,    2620<br/>
+In which noman him can governe,<br/>
+Hath mad him that he can noght werne,<br/>
+Bot fell al hol to hire assent:<br/>
+And thus the whiel is al miswent,<br/>
+The which fortune hath upon honde;<br/>
+For how that evere it after stonde,<br/>
+Thei schope among hem such a wyle,<br/>
+The king was ded withinne a whyle.<br/>
+So slihly cam it noght aboute<br/>
+That thei ne ben descoevered oute,    2630<br/>
+So that it thoghte hem for the beste<br/>
+To fle, for there was no reste:<br/>
+And thus the tresor of the king<br/>
+Thei trusse and mochel other thing,<br/>
+And with a certein felaschipe<br/>
+Thei fledde and wente awey be schipe,<br/>
+And hielde here rihte cours fro thenne,<br/>
+Til that thei come to Ravenne,<br/>
+Wher thei the Dukes helpe soghte.<br/>
+And he, so as thei him besoghte,    2640<br/>
+A place granteth forto duelle;<br/>
+Bot after, whan he herde telle<br/>
+Of the manere how thei have do,<br/>
+This Duk let schape for hem so,<br/>
+That of a puison which thei drunke<br/>
+Thei hadden that thei have beswunke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And al this made avant of Pride:<br/>
+Good is therfore a man to hide<br/>
+His oghne pris, for if he speke,<br/>
+He mai lihtliche his thonk tobreke.    2650<br/>
+In armes lith non avantance<br/>
+To him which thenkth his name avance<br/>
+And be renomed of his dede:<br/>
+And also who that thenkth to spede<br/>
+Of love, he mai him noght avaunte;<br/>
+For what man thilke vice haunte,<br/>
+His pourpos schal fulofte faile.<br/>
+In armes he that wol travaile<br/>
+Or elles loves grace atteigne,<br/>
+His lose tunge he mot restreigne,    2660<br/>
+Which berth of his honour the keie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, in alle weie<br/>
+Tak riht good hiede of this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thonke you, my fader diere,<br/>
+This scole is of a gentil lore;<br/>
+And if ther be oght elles more<br/>
+Of Pride, which I schal eschuie,<br/>
+Now axeth forth, and I wol suie<br/>
+What thing that ye me wole enforme.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, yit in other forme    2670<br/>
+Ther is a vice of Prides lore,<br/>
+Which lich an hauk whan he wol sore,<br/>
+Fleith upon heihte in his delices<br/>
+After the likynge of his vices,<br/>
+And wol no mannes resoun knowe,<br/>
+Till he doun falle and overthrowe.<br/>
+This vice veine gloire is hote,<br/>
+Wherof, my Sone, I thee behote<br/>
+To trete and speke in such a wise,<br/>
+That thou thee myht the betre avise.    2680
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The proude vice of veine gloire<br/>
+Remembreth noght of purgatoire,<br/>
+Hise worldes joyes ben so grete,<br/>
+Him thenkth of hevene no beyete;<br/>
+This lives Pompe is al his pes:<br/>
+Yit schal he deie natheles,<br/>
+And therof thenkth he bot a lite,<br/>
+For al his lust is to delite<br/>
+In newe thinges, proude and veine,<br/>
+Als ferforth as he mai atteigne.    2690<br/>
+I trowe, if that he myhte make<br/>
+His body newe, he wolde take<br/>
+A newe forme and leve his olde:<br/>
+For what thing that he mai beholde,<br/>
+The which to comun us is strange,<br/>
+Anon his olde guise change<br/>
+He wole and falle therupon,<br/>
+Lich unto the Camelion,<br/>
+Which upon every sondri hewe<br/>
+That he beholt he moste newe    2700<br/>
+His colour, and thus unavised<br/>
+Fulofte time he stant desguised.<br/>
+Mor jolif than the brid in Maii<br/>
+He makth him evere freissh and gay,<br/>
+And doth al his array desguise,<br/>
+So that of him the newe guise<br/>
+Of lusti folk alle othre take;<br/>
+And ek he can carolles make,<br/>
+Rondeal, balade and virelai.<br/>
+And with al this, if that he may    2710<br/>
+Of love gete him avantage,<br/>
+Anon he wext of his corage<br/>
+So overglad, that of his ende<br/>
+Him thenkth ther is no deth comende:<br/>
+For he hath thanne at alle tide<br/>
+Of love such a maner pride,<br/>
+Him thenkth his joie is endeles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now schrif thee, Sone, in godes pes,<br/>
+And of thi love tell me plein<br/>
+If that thi gloire hath be so vein.    2720
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as touchinge of al<br/>
+I may noght wel ne noght ne schal<br/>
+Of veine gloire excuse me,<br/>
+That I ne have for love be<br/>
+The betre adresced and arraied;<br/>
+And also I have ofte assaied<br/>
+Rondeal, balade and virelai<br/>
+For hire on whom myn herte lai<br/>
+To make, and also forto peinte<br/>
+Caroles with my wordes qweinte,    2730<br/>
+To sette my pourpos alofte;<br/>
+And thus I sang hem forth fulofte<br/>
+In halle and ek in chambre aboute,<br/>
+And made merie among the route,<br/>
+Bot yit ne ferde I noght the bet.<br/>
+Thus was my gloire in vein beset<br/>
+Of al the joie that I made;<br/>
+For whanne I wolde with hire glade,<br/>
+And of hire love songes make,<br/>
+Sche saide it was noght for hir sake,    2740<br/>
+And liste noght my songes hiere<br/>
+Ne witen what the wordes were.<br/>
+So forto speke of myn arrai,<br/>
+Yit couthe I nevere be so gay<br/>
+Ne so wel make a songe of love,<br/>
+Wherof I myhte ben above<br/>
+And have encheson to be glad;<br/>
+Bot rathere I am ofte adrad<br/>
+For sorwe that sche seith me nay.<br/>
+And natheles I wol noght say,    2750<br/>
+That I nam glad on other side;<br/>
+For fame, that can nothing hide,<br/>
+Alday wol bringe unto myn Ere<br/>
+Of that men speken hier and there,<br/>
+How that my ladi berth the pris,<br/>
+How sche is fair, how sche is wis,<br/>
+How sche is wommanlich of chiere;<br/>
+Of al this thing whanne I mai hiere,<br/>
+What wonder is thogh I be fain?<br/>
+And ek whanne I may hiere sain    2760<br/>
+Tidinges of my ladi hele,<br/>
+Althogh I may noght with hir dele,<br/>
+Yit am I wonder glad of that;<br/>
+For whanne I wot hire good astat,<br/>
+As for that time I dar wel swere,<br/>
+Non other sorwe mai me dere,<br/>
+Thus am I gladed in this wise.<br/>
+Bot, fader, of youre lores wise,<br/>
+Of whiche ye be fully tawht,<br/>
+Now tell me if yow thenketh awht    2770<br/>
+That I therof am forto wyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of that ther is I thee acquite,<br/>
+Mi sone, he seide, and for thi goode<br/>
+I wolde that thou understode:<br/>
+For I thenke upon this matiere<br/>
+To telle a tale, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+How that ayein this proude vice<br/>
+The hihe god of his justice<br/>
+Is wroth and gret vengance doth.<br/>
+Now herkne a tale that is soth:    2780<br/>
+Thogh it be noght of loves kinde,<br/>
+A gret ensample thou schalt finde<br/>
+This veine gloire forto fle,<br/>
+Which is so full of vanite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was a king that mochel myhte,<br/>
+Which Nabugodonosor hihte,<br/>
+Of whom that I spak hier tofore.<br/>
+Yit in the bible his name is bore,<br/>
+For al the world in Orient<br/>
+Was hol at his comandement:    2790<br/>
+As thanne of kinges to his liche<br/>
+Was non so myhty ne so riche;<br/>
+To his Empire and to his lawes,<br/>
+As who seith, alle in thilke dawes<br/>
+Were obeissant and tribut bere,<br/>
+As thogh he godd of Erthe were.<br/>
+With strengthe he putte kinges under,<br/>
+And wroghte of Pride many a wonder;<br/>
+He was so full of veine gloire,<br/>
+That he ne hadde no memoire    2800<br/>
+That ther was eny good bot he,<br/>
+For pride of his prosperite;<br/>
+Til that the hihe king of kinges,<br/>
+Which seth and knoweth alle thinges,<br/>
+Whos yhe mai nothing asterte,&mdash;<br/>
+The privetes of mannes herte<br/>
+Thei speke and sounen in his Ere<br/>
+As thogh thei lowde wyndes were,&mdash;<br/>
+He tok vengance upon this pride.<br/>
+Bot for he wolde awhile abide    2810<br/>
+To loke if he him wolde amende,<br/>
+To him a foretokne he sende,<br/>
+And that was in his slep be nyhte.<br/>
+This proude kyng a wonder syhte<br/>
+Hadde in his swevene, ther he lay:<br/>
+Him thoghte, upon a merie day<br/>
+As he behield the world aboute,<br/>
+A tree fulgrowe he syh theroute,<br/>
+Which stod the world amiddes evene,<br/>
+Whos heihte straghte up to the hevene;    2820<br/>
+The leves weren faire and large,<br/>
+Of fruit it bar so ripe a charge,<br/>
+That alle men it myhte fede:<br/>
+He sih also the bowes spriede<br/>
+Above al Erthe, in whiche were<br/>
+The kinde of alle briddes there;<br/>
+And eke him thoghte he syh also<br/>
+The kinde of alle bestes go<br/>
+Under this tre aboute round<br/>
+And fedden hem upon the ground.    2830<br/>
+As he this wonder stod and syh,<br/>
+Him thoghte he herde a vois on hih<br/>
+Criende, and seide aboven alle:<br/>
+“Hew doun this tree and lett it falle,<br/>
+The leves let defoule in haste<br/>
+And do the fruit destruie and waste,<br/>
+And let of schreden every braunche,<br/>
+Bot ate Rote let it staunche.<br/>
+Whan al his Pride is cast to grounde,<br/>
+The rote schal be faste bounde,    2840<br/>
+And schal no mannes herte bere,<br/>
+Bot every lust he schal forbere<br/>
+Of man, and lich an Oxe his mete<br/>
+Of gras he schal pourchace and ete,<br/>
+Til that the water of the hevene<br/>
+Have waisshen him be times sevene,<br/>
+So that he be thurghknowe ariht<br/>
+What is the heveneliche myht,<br/>
+And be mad humble to the wille<br/>
+Of him which al mai save and spille.”    2850
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king out of his swefne abreide,<br/>
+And he upon the morwe it seide<br/>
+Unto the clerkes whiche he hadde:<br/>
+Bot non of hem the sothe aradde,<br/>
+Was non his swevene cowthe undo.<br/>
+And it stod thilke time so,<br/>
+This king hadde in subjeccioun<br/>
+Judee, and of affeccioun<br/>
+Above alle othre on Daniel<br/>
+He loveth, for he cowthe wel    2860<br/>
+Divine that non other cowthe:<br/>
+To him were alle thinges cowthe,<br/>
+As he it hadde of goddes grace.<br/>
+He was before the kinges face<br/>
+Asent, and bode that he scholde<br/>
+Upon the point the king of tolde<br/>
+The fortune of his swevene expounde,<br/>
+As it scholde afterward be founde.<br/>
+Whan Daniel this swevene herde,<br/>
+He stod long time er he ansuerde,    2870<br/>
+And made a wonder hevy chiere.<br/>
+The king tok hiede of his manere,<br/>
+And bad him telle that he wiste,<br/>
+As he to whom he mochel triste,<br/>
+And seide he wolde noght be wroth.<br/>
+Bot Daniel was wonder loth,<br/>
+And seide: “Upon thi fomen alle,<br/>
+Sire king, thi swevene mote falle;<br/>
+And natheles touchende of this<br/>
+I wol the tellen how it is,    2880<br/>
+And what desese is to thee schape:<br/>
+God wot if thou it schalt ascape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hihe tree, which thou hast sein<br/>
+With lef and fruit so wel besein,<br/>
+The which stod in the world amiddes,<br/>
+So that the bestes and the briddes<br/>
+Governed were of him al one,<br/>
+Sire king, betokneth thi persone,<br/>
+Which stant above all erthli thinges.<br/>
+Thus regnen under the the kinges,    2890<br/>
+And al the poeple unto thee louteth,<br/>
+And al the world thi pouer doubteth,<br/>
+So that with vein honour deceived<br/>
+Thou hast the reverence weyved<br/>
+Fro him which is thi king above,<br/>
+That thou for drede ne for love<br/>
+Wolt nothing knowen of thi godd;<br/>
+Which now for thee hath mad a rodd,<br/>
+Thi veine gloire and thi folie<br/>
+With grete peines to chastie.    2900<br/>
+And of the vois thou herdest speke,<br/>
+Which bad the bowes forto breke<br/>
+And hewe and felle doun the tree,<br/>
+That word belongeth unto thee;<br/>
+Thi regne schal ben overthrowe,<br/>
+And thou despuiled for a throwe:<br/>
+Bot that the Rote scholde stonde,<br/>
+Be that thou schalt wel understonde,<br/>
+Ther schal abyden of thi regne<br/>
+A time ayein whan thou schalt regne.    2910<br/>
+And ek of that thou herdest seie,<br/>
+To take a mannes herte aweie<br/>
+And sette there a bestial,<br/>
+So that he lich an Oxe schal<br/>
+Pasture, and that he be bereined<br/>
+Be times sefne and sore peined,<br/>
+Til that he knowe his goddes mihtes,<br/>
+Than scholde he stonde ayein uprihtes,&mdash;<br/>
+Al this betokneth thin astat,<br/>
+Which now with god is in debat:    2920<br/>
+Thi mannes forme schal be lassed,<br/>
+Til sevene yer ben overpassed,<br/>
+And in the liknesse of a beste<br/>
+Of gras schal be thi real feste,<br/>
+The weder schal upon thee reine.<br/>
+And understond that al this peine,<br/>
+Which thou schalt soffre thilke tide,<br/>
+Is schape al only for thi pride<br/>
+Of veine gloire, and of the sinne<br/>
+Which thou hast longe stonden inne.    2930
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So upon this condicioun<br/>
+Thi swevene hath exposicioun.<br/>
+Bot er this thing befalle in dede,<br/>
+Amende thee, this wolde I rede:<br/>
+Yif and departe thin almesse,<br/>
+Do mercy forth with rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+Besech and prei the hihe grace,<br/>
+For so thou myht thi pes pourchace<br/>
+With godd, and stonde in good acord.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Pride is loth to leve his lord,    2940<br/>
+And wol noght soffre humilite<br/>
+With him to stonde in no degree;<br/>
+And whan a schip hath lost his stiere,<br/>
+Is non so wys that mai him stiere<br/>
+Ayein the wawes in a rage.<br/>
+This proude king in his corage<br/>
+Humilite hath so forlore,<br/>
+That for no swevene he sih tofore,<br/>
+Ne yit for al that Daniel<br/>
+Him hath conseiled everydel,    2950<br/>
+He let it passe out of his mynde,<br/>
+Thurgh veine gloire, and as the blinde,<br/>
+He seth no weie, er him be wo.<br/>
+And fell withinne a time so,<br/>
+As he in Babiloine wente,<br/>
+The vanite of Pride him hente;<br/>
+His herte aros of veine gloire,<br/>
+So that he drowh into memoire<br/>
+His lordschipe and his regalie<br/>
+With wordes of Surquiderie.    2960<br/>
+And whan that he him most avaunteth,<br/>
+That lord which veine gloire daunteth,<br/>
+Al sodeinliche, as who seith treis,<br/>
+Wher that he stod in his Paleis,<br/>
+He tok him fro the mennes sihte:<br/>
+Was non of hem so war that mihte<br/>
+Sette yhe wher that he becom.<br/>
+And thus was he from his kingdom<br/>
+Into the wilde Forest drawe,<br/>
+Wher that the myhti goddes lawe    2970<br/>
+Thurgh his pouer dede him transforme<br/>
+Fro man into a bestes forme;<br/>
+And lich an Oxe under the fot<br/>
+He graseth, as he nedes mot,<br/>
+To geten him his lives fode.<br/>
+Tho thoghte him colde grases goode,<br/>
+That whilom eet the hote spices,<br/>
+Thus was he torned fro delices:<br/>
+The wyn which he was wont to drinke<br/>
+He tok thanne of the welles brinke    2980<br/>
+Or of the pet or of the slowh,<br/>
+It thoghte him thanne good ynowh:<br/>
+In stede of chambres wel arraied<br/>
+He was thanne of a buissh wel paied,<br/>
+The harde ground he lay upon,<br/>
+For othre pilwes hath he non;<br/>
+The stormes and the Reines falle,<br/>
+The wyndes blowe upon him alle,<br/>
+He was tormented day and nyht,<br/>
+Such was the hihe goddes myht,    2990<br/>
+Til sevene yer an ende toke.<br/>
+Upon himself tho gan he loke;<br/>
+In stede of mete gras and stres,<br/>
+In stede of handes longe cles,<br/>
+In stede of man a bestes lyke<br/>
+He syh; and thanne he gan to syke<br/>
+For cloth of gold and for perrie,<br/>
+Which him was wont to magnefie.<br/>
+Whan he behield his Cote of heres,<br/>
+He wepte and with fulwoful teres    3000<br/>
+Up to the hevene he caste his chiere<br/>
+Wepende, and thoghte in this manere;<br/>
+Thogh he no wordes myhte winne,<br/>
+Thus seide his herte and spak withinne:<br/>
+“O mihti godd, that al hast wroght<br/>
+And al myht bringe ayein to noght,<br/>
+Now knowe I wel, bot al of thee,<br/>
+This world hath no prosperite:<br/>
+In thin aspect ben alle liche,<br/>
+The povere man and ek the riche,    3010<br/>
+Withoute thee ther mai no wight,<br/>
+And thou above alle othre miht.<br/>
+O mihti lord, toward my vice<br/>
+Thi merci medle with justice;<br/>
+And I woll make a covenant,<br/>
+That of my lif the remenant<br/>
+I schal it be thi grace amende,<br/>
+And in thi lawe so despende<br/>
+That veine gloire I schal eschuie,<br/>
+And bowe unto thin heste and suie    3020<br/>
+Humilite, and that I vowe.”<br/>
+And so thenkende he gan doun bowe,<br/>
+And thogh him lacke vois and speche,<br/>
+He gan up with his feet areche,<br/>
+And wailende in his bestly stevene<br/>
+He made his pleignte unto the hevene.<br/>
+He kneleth in his wise and braieth,<br/>
+To seche merci and assaieth<br/>
+His god, which made him nothing strange,<br/>
+Whan that he sih his pride change.    3030<br/>
+Anon as he was humble and tame,<br/>
+He fond toward his god the same,<br/>
+And in a twinklinge of a lok<br/>
+His mannes forme ayein he tok,<br/>
+And was reformed to the regne<br/>
+In which that he was wont to regne;<br/>
+So that the Pride of veine gloire<br/>
+Evere afterward out of memoire<br/>
+He let it passe. And thus is schewed<br/>
+What is to ben of Pride unthewed    3040<br/>
+Ayein the hihe goddes lawe,<br/>
+To whom noman mai be felawe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, tak good hiede<br/>
+So forto lede thi manhiede,<br/>
+That thou ne be noght lich a beste.<br/>
+Bot if thi lif schal ben honeste,<br/>
+Thou most humblesce take on honde,<br/>
+For thanne myht thou siker stonde:<br/>
+And forto speke it otherwise,<br/>
+A proud man can no love assise;    3050<br/>
+For thogh a womman wolde him plese,<br/>
+His Pride can noght ben at ese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther mai noman to mochel blame<br/>
+A vice which is forto blame;<br/>
+Forthi men scholde nothing hide<br/>
+That mihte falle in blame of Pride,<br/>
+Which is the werste vice of alle:<br/>
+Wherof, so as it was befalle,<br/>
+The tale I thenke of a Cronique<br/>
+To telle, if that it mai thee like,    3060<br/>
+So that thou myht humblesce suie<br/>
+And ek the vice of Pride eschuie,<br/>
+Wherof the gloire is fals and vein;<br/>
+Which god himself hath in desdeign,<br/>
+That thogh it mounte for a throwe,<br/>
+It schal doun falle and overthrowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A king whilom was yong and wys,<br/>
+The which sette of his wit gret pris.<br/>
+Of depe ymaginaciouns<br/>
+And strange interpretaciouns,    3070<br/>
+Problemes and demandes eke,<br/>
+His wisdom was to finde and seke;<br/>
+Wherof he wolde in sondri wise<br/>
+Opposen hem that weren wise.<br/>
+Bot non of hem it myhte bere<br/>
+Upon his word to yeve answere,<br/>
+Outaken on, which was a knyht;<br/>
+To him was every thing so liht,<br/>
+That also sone as he hem herde,<br/>
+The kinges wordes he answerde;    3080<br/>
+What thing the king him axe wolde,<br/>
+Therof anon the trowthe he tolde.<br/>
+The king somdiel hadde an Envie,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde his wittes plie<br/>
+To sette som conclusioun,<br/>
+Which scholde be confusioun<br/>
+Unto this knyht, so that the name<br/>
+And of wisdom the hihe fame<br/>
+Toward himself he wolde winne.<br/>
+And thus of al his wit withinne    3090<br/>
+This king began to studie and muse,<br/>
+What strange matiere he myhte use<br/>
+The knyhtes wittes to confounde;<br/>
+And ate laste he hath it founde,<br/>
+And for the knyht anon he sente,<br/>
+That he schal telle what he mente.<br/>
+Upon thre pointz stod the matiere<br/>
+Of questions, as thou schalt hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste point of alle thre<br/>
+Was this: “What thing in his degre    3100<br/>
+Of al this world hath nede lest,<br/>
+And yet men helpe it althermest?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The secounde is: “What most is worth,<br/>
+And of costage is lest put forth?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde is: “Which is of most cost,<br/>
+And lest is worth and goth to lost?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king thes thre demandes axeth,<br/>
+And to the knyht this lawe he taxeth,<br/>
+That he schal gon and come ayein<br/>
+The thridde weke, and telle him plein    3110<br/>
+To every point, what it amonteth.<br/>
+And if so be that he misconteth,<br/>
+To make in his answere a faile,<br/>
+Ther schal non other thing availe,<br/>
+The king seith, bot he schal be ded<br/>
+And lese hise goodes and his hed.<br/>
+The knyht was sori of this thing<br/>
+And wolde excuse him to the king,<br/>
+Bot he ne wolde him noght forbere,<br/>
+And thus the knyht of his ansuere    3120<br/>
+Goth hom to take avisement:<br/>
+Bot after his entendement<br/>
+The more he caste his wit aboute,<br/>
+The more he stant therof in doute.<br/>
+Tho wiste he wel the kinges herte,<br/>
+That he the deth ne scholde asterte,<br/>
+And such a sorwe hath to him take,<br/>
+That gladschipe he hath al forsake.<br/>
+He thoghte ferst upon his lif,<br/>
+And after that upon his wif,    3130<br/>
+Upon his children ek also,<br/>
+Of whiche he hadde dowhtres tuo;<br/>
+The yongest of hem hadde of age<br/>
+Fourtiene yer, and of visage<br/>
+Sche was riht fair, and of stature<br/>
+Lich to an hevenely figure,<br/>
+And of manere and goodli speche,<br/>
+Thogh men wolde alle Londes seche,<br/>
+Thei scholden noght have founde hir like.<br/>
+Sche sih hire fader sorwe and sike,    3140<br/>
+And wiste noght the cause why;<br/>
+So cam sche to him prively,<br/>
+And that was where he made his mone<br/>
+Withinne a Gardin al him one;<br/>
+Upon hire knes sche gan doun falle<br/>
+With humble herte and to him calle,<br/>
+And seide: “O goode fader diere,<br/>
+Why make ye thus hevy chiere,<br/>
+And I wot nothing how it is?<br/>
+And wel ye knowen, fader, this,    3150<br/>
+What aventure that you felle<br/>
+Ye myhte it saufly to me telle,<br/>
+For I have ofte herd you seid,<br/>
+That ye such trust have on me leid,<br/>
+That to my soster ne my brother,<br/>
+In al this world ne to non other,<br/>
+Ye dorste telle a privite<br/>
+So wel, my fader, as to me.<br/>
+Forthi, my fader, I you preie,<br/>
+Ne casteth noght that herte aweie,    3160<br/>
+For I am sche that wolde kepe<br/>
+Youre honour.” And with that to wepe<br/>
+Hire yhe mai noght be forbore,<br/>
+Sche wissheth forto ben unbore,<br/>
+Er that hire fader so mistriste<br/>
+To tellen hire of that he wiste:<br/>
+And evere among merci sche cride,<br/>
+That he ne scholde his conseil hide<br/>
+From hire that so wolde him good<br/>
+And was so nyh his fleissh and blod.    3170<br/>
+So that with wepinge ate laste<br/>
+His chiere upon his child he caste,<br/>
+And sorwfulli to that sche preide<br/>
+He tolde his tale and thus he seide:<br/>
+“The sorwe, dowhter, which I make<br/>
+Is noght al only for my sake,<br/>
+Bot for thee bothe and for you alle:<br/>
+For such a chance is me befalle,<br/>
+That I schal er this thridde day<br/>
+Lese al that evere I lese may,    3180<br/>
+Mi lif and al my good therto:<br/>
+Therfore it is I sorwe so.”<br/>
+“What is the cause, helas!” quod sche,<br/>
+“Mi fader, that ye scholden be<br/>
+Ded and destruid in such a wise?”<br/>
+And he began the pointz devise,<br/>
+Whiche as the king told him be mowthe,<br/>
+And seid hir pleinly that he cowthe<br/>
+Ansuere unto no point of this.<br/>
+And sche, that hiereth how it is,    3190<br/>
+Hire conseil yaf and seide tho:<br/>
+“Mi fader, sithen it is so,<br/>
+That ye can se non other weie,<br/>
+Bot that ye moste nedes deie,<br/>
+I wolde preie of you a thing:<br/>
+Let me go with you to the king,<br/>
+And ye schull make him understonde<br/>
+How ye, my wittes forto fonde,<br/>
+Have leid your ansuere upon me;<br/>
+And telleth him, in such degre    3200<br/>
+Upon my word ye wole abide<br/>
+To lif or deth, what so betide.<br/>
+For yit par chaunce I may pourchace<br/>
+With som good word the kinges grace,<br/>
+Your lif and ek your good to save;<br/>
+For ofte schal a womman have<br/>
+Thing which a man mai noght areche.”<br/>
+The fader herde his dowhter speche,<br/>
+And thoghte ther was resoun inne,<br/>
+And sih his oghne lif to winne    3210<br/>
+He cowthe don himself no cure;<br/>
+So betre him thoghte in aventure<br/>
+To put his lif and al his good,<br/>
+Than in the maner as it stod<br/>
+His lif in certein forto lese.<br/>
+And thus thenkende he gan to chese<br/>
+To do the conseil of this Maide,<br/>
+And tok the pourpos which sche saide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dai was come and forth thei gon,<br/>
+Unto the Court thei come anon,    3220<br/>
+Wher as the king in juggement<br/>
+Was set and hath this knyht assent.<br/>
+Arraied in hire beste wise<br/>
+This Maiden with hire wordes wise<br/>
+Hire fader ladde be the hond<br/>
+Into the place, wher he fond<br/>
+The king with othre whiche he wolde,<br/>
+And to the king knelende he tolde<br/>
+As he enformed was tofore,<br/>
+And preith the king that he therfore    3230<br/>
+His dowhtres wordes wolde take,<br/>
+And seith that he wol undertake<br/>
+Upon hire wordes forto stonde.<br/>
+Tho was ther gret merveile on honde,<br/>
+That he, which was so wys a knyht,<br/>
+His lif upon so yong a wyht<br/>
+Besette wolde in jeupartie,<br/>
+And manye it hielden for folie:<br/>
+Bot ate laste natheles<br/>
+The king comandeth ben in pes,    3240<br/>
+And to this Maide he caste his chiere,<br/>
+And seide he wolde hire tale hiere,<br/>
+He bad hire speke, and sche began:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mi liege lord, so as I can,”<br/>
+Quod sche, “the pointz of whiche I herde,<br/>
+Thei schul of reson ben ansuerde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste I understonde is this,<br/>
+What thing of al the world it is,<br/>
+Which men most helpe and hath lest nede.<br/>
+Mi liege lord, this wolde I rede:    3250<br/>
+The Erthe it is, which everemo<br/>
+With mannes labour is bego;<br/>
+Als wel in wynter as in Maii<br/>
+The mannes hond doth what he mai<br/>
+To helpe it forth and make it riche,<br/>
+And forthi men it delve and dyche<br/>
+And eren it with strengthe of plowh,<br/>
+Wher it hath of himself ynowh,<br/>
+So that his nede is ate leste.<br/>
+For every man and bridd and beste,    3260<br/>
+And flour and gras and rote and rinde,<br/>
+And every thing be weie of kynde<br/>
+Schal sterve, and Erthe it schal become;<br/>
+As it was out of Erthe nome,<br/>
+It schal to therthe torne ayein:<br/>
+And thus I mai be resoun sein<br/>
+That Erthe is the most nedeles,<br/>
+And most men helpe it natheles.<br/>
+So that, my lord, touchende of this<br/>
+I have ansuerd hou that it is.    3270
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That other point I understod,<br/>
+Which most is worth and most is good,<br/>
+And costeth lest a man to kepe:<br/>
+Mi lord, if ye woll take kepe,<br/>
+I seie it is Humilite,<br/>
+Thurgh which the hihe trinite<br/>
+As for decerte of pure love<br/>
+Unto Marie from above,<br/>
+Of that he knew hire humble entente,<br/>
+His oghne Sone adoun he sente,    3280<br/>
+Above alle othre and hire he ches<br/>
+For that vertu which bodeth pes:<br/>
+So that I may be resoun calle<br/>
+Humilite most worth of alle.<br/>
+And lest it costeth to maintiene,<br/>
+In al the world as it is sene;<br/>
+For who that hath humblesce on honde,<br/>
+He bringth no werres into londe,<br/>
+For he desireth for the beste<br/>
+To setten every man in reste.    3290<br/>
+Thus with your hihe reverence<br/>
+Me thenketh that this evidence<br/>
+As to this point is sufficant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And touchende of the remenant,<br/>
+Which is the thridde of youre axinges,<br/>
+What leste is worth of alle thinges,<br/>
+And costeth most, I telle it, Pride;<br/>
+Which mai noght in the hevene abide,<br/>
+For Lucifer with hem that felle<br/>
+Bar Pride with him into helle.    3300<br/>
+Ther was Pride of to gret a cost,<br/>
+Whan he for Pride hath hevene lost;<br/>
+And after that in Paradis<br/>
+Adam for Pride loste his pris:<br/>
+In Midelerthe and ek also<br/>
+Pride is the cause of alle wo,<br/>
+That al the world ne may suffise<br/>
+To stanche of Pride the reprise:<br/>
+Pride is the heved of alle Sinne,<br/>
+Which wasteth al and mai noght winne;    3310<br/>
+Pride is of every mis the pricke,<br/>
+Pride is the werste of alle wicke,<br/>
+And costneth most and lest is worth<br/>
+In place where he hath his forth.<br/>
+Thus have I seid that I wol seie<br/>
+Of myn answere, and to you preie,<br/>
+Mi liege lord, of youre office<br/>
+That ye such grace and such justice<br/>
+Ordeigne for mi fader hiere,<br/>
+That after this, whan men it hiere,    3320<br/>
+The world therof mai speke good.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which reson understod<br/>
+And hath al herd how sche hath said,<br/>
+Was inly glad and so wel paid<br/>
+That al his wraththe is overgo:<br/>
+And he began to loke tho<br/>
+Upon this Maiden in the face,<br/>
+In which he fond so mochel grace,<br/>
+That al his pris on hire he leide,<br/>
+In audience and thus he seide:    3330<br/>
+“Mi faire Maide, wel thee be!<br/>
+Of thin ansuere and ek of thee<br/>
+Me liketh wel, and as thou wilt,<br/>
+Foryive be thi fader gilt.<br/>
+And if thou were of such lignage,<br/>
+That thou to me were of parage,<br/>
+And that thi fader were a Pier,<br/>
+As he is now a Bachilier,<br/>
+So seker as I have a lif,<br/>
+Thou scholdest thanne be my wif.    3340<br/>
+Bot this I seie natheles,<br/>
+That I wol schape thin encress;<br/>
+What worldes good that thou wolt crave,<br/>
+Axe of my yifte and thou schalt have.”<br/>
+And sche the king with wordes wise<br/>
+Knelende thonketh in this wise:<br/>
+“Mi liege lord, god mot you quite!<br/>
+Mi fader hier hath bot a lite<br/>
+Of warison, and that he wende<br/>
+Hadde al be lost; bot now amende    3350<br/>
+He mai wel thurgh your noble grace.”<br/>
+With that the king riht in his place<br/>
+Anon forth in that freisshe hete<br/>
+An    Erldom, which thanne of eschete<br/>
+Was late falle into his hond,<br/>
+Unto this knyht with rente and lond<br/>
+Hath yove and with his chartre sesed;<br/>
+And thus was all the noise appesed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Maiden, which sat on hire knes<br/>
+Tofore the king, hise charitees    3360<br/>
+Comendeth, and seide overmore:<br/>
+“Mi liege lord, riht now tofore<br/>
+Ye seide, as it is of record,<br/>
+That if my fader were a lord<br/>
+And Pier unto these othre grete,<br/>
+Ye wolden for noght elles lete,<br/>
+That I ne scholde be your wif;<br/>
+And this wot every worthi lif,<br/>
+A kinges word it mot ben holde.<br/>
+Forthi, my lord, if that ye wolde    3370<br/>
+So gret a charite fulfille,<br/>
+God wot it were wel my wille:<br/>
+For he which was a Bacheler,<br/>
+Mi fader, is now mad a Pier;<br/>
+So whenne as evere that I cam,<br/>
+An Erles dowhter now I am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This yonge king, which peised al,<br/>
+Hire beaute and hir wit withal,<br/>
+As he that was with love hent,<br/>
+Anon therto yaf his assent.    3380<br/>
+He myhte noght the maide asterte,<br/>
+That sche nis ladi of his herte;<br/>
+So that he tok hire to his wif,<br/>
+To holde whyl that he hath lif:<br/>
+And thus the king toward his knyht<br/>
+Acordeth him, as it is riht.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And over this good is to wite,<br/>
+In the Cronique as it is write,<br/>
+This noble king of whom I tolde<br/>
+Of Spaine be tho daies olde    3390<br/>
+The kingdom hadde in governance,<br/>
+And as the bok makth remembrance,<br/>
+Alphonse was his propre name:<br/>
+The knyht also, if I schal name,<br/>
+Danz Petro hihte, and as men telle,<br/>
+His dowhter wyse Peronelle<br/>
+Was cleped, which was full of grace:<br/>
+And that was sene in thilke place,<br/>
+Wher sche hir fader out of teene<br/>
+Hath broght and mad hirself a qweene,    3400<br/>
+Of that sche hath so wel desclosed<br/>
+The pointz wherof sche was opposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo now, my Sone, as thou myht hiere,<br/>
+Of al this thing to my matiere<br/>
+Bot on I take, and that is Pride,<br/>
+To whom no grace mai betide:<br/>
+In hevene he fell out of his stede,<br/>
+And Paradis him was forbede,<br/>
+The goode men in Erthe him hate,<br/>
+So that to helle he mot algate,    3410<br/>
+Where every vertu schal be weyved<br/>
+And every vice be received.<br/>
+Bot Humblesce is al otherwise,<br/>
+Which most is worth, and no reprise<br/>
+It takth ayein, bot softe and faire,<br/>
+If eny thing stond in contraire,<br/>
+With humble speche it is redresced:<br/>
+Thus was this yonge Maiden blessed,<br/>
+The which I spak of now tofore,<br/>
+Hire fader lif sche gat therfore,    3420<br/>
+And wan with al the kinges love.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, if thou wolt love,<br/>
+It sit thee wel to leve Pride<br/>
+And take Humblesce upon thi side;<br/>
+The more of grace thou schalt gete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I woll noght foryete<br/>
+Of this that ye have told me hiere,<br/>
+And if that eny such manere<br/>
+Of humble port mai love appaie,<br/>
+Hierafterward I thenke assaie:    3430<br/>
+Bot now forth over I beseche<br/>
+That ye more of my schrifte seche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, it schal be do:<br/>
+Now herkne and ley an Ere to;<br/>
+For as touchende of Prides fare,<br/>
+Als ferforth as I can declare<br/>
+In cause of vice, in cause of love,<br/>
+That hast thou pleinly herd above,<br/>
+So that ther is nomor to seie<br/>
+Touchende of that; bot other weie    3440<br/>
+Touchende Envie I thenke telle,<br/>
+Which hath the propre kinde of helle,<br/>
+Withoute cause to misdo<br/>
+Toward himself and othre also,<br/>
+Hierafterward as understonde<br/>
+Thou schalt the spieces, as thei stonde.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Primus
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0003"></a>
+Incipit Liber Secundus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Inuidie culpa magis est attrita dolore,<br/>
+    Nam sua mens nullo tempore leta manet:<br/>
+Quo gaudent alii, dolet ille, nec vnus amicus<br/>
+    Est, cui de puro comoda velle facit.<br/>
+Proximitatis honor sua corda veretur, et omnis<br/>
+    Est sibi leticia sic aliena dolor.<br/>
+Hoc etenim vicium quam sepe repugnat amanti,<br/>
+    Non sibi, set reliquis, dum fauet ipsa Venus.<br/>
+Est amor ex proprio motu fantasticus, et que<br/>
+    Gaudia fert alius, credit obesse sibi.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Now after Pride the secounde<br/>
+Ther is, which many a woful stounde<br/>
+Towardes othre berth aboute<br/>
+Withinne himself and noght withoute;<br/>
+For in his thoght he brenneth evere,<br/>
+Whan that he wot an other levere<br/>
+Or more vertuous than he,<br/>
+Which passeth him in his degre;<br/>
+Therof he takth his maladie:<br/>
+That vice is cleped hot Envie.    10
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, if it be so<br/>
+Thou art or hast ben on of tho,<br/>
+As forto speke in loves cas,<br/>
+If evere yit thin herte was<br/>
+Sek of an other mannes hele?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So god avance my querele,<br/>
+Mi fader, ye, a thousend sithe:<br/>
+Whanne I have sen an other blithe<br/>
+Of love, and hadde a goodly chiere,<br/>
+Ethna, which brenneth yer be yere,    20<br/>
+Was thanne noght so hot as I<br/>
+Of thilke Sor which prively<br/>
+Min hertes thoght withinne brenneth.<br/>
+The Schip which on the wawes renneth,<br/>
+And is forstormed and forblowe,<br/>
+Is noght more peined for a throwe<br/>
+Than I am thanne, whanne I se<br/>
+An other which that passeth me<br/>
+In that fortune of loves yifte.<br/>
+Bot, fader, this I telle in schrifte,    30<br/>
+That is nowher bot in o place;<br/>
+For who that lese or finde grace<br/>
+In other stede, it mai noght grieve:<br/>
+Bot this ye mai riht wel believe,<br/>
+Toward mi ladi that I serve,<br/>
+Thogh that I wiste forto sterve,<br/>
+Min herte is full of such sotie,<br/>
+That I myself mai noght chastie.<br/>
+Whan I the Court se of Cupide<br/>
+Aproche unto my ladi side    40<br/>
+Of hem that lusti ben and freisshe,&mdash;<br/>
+Thogh it availe hem noght a reisshe,<br/>
+Bot only that thei ben in speche,&mdash;<br/>
+My sorwe is thanne noght to seche:<br/>
+Bot whan thei rounen in hire Ere,<br/>
+Than groweth al my moste fere,<br/>
+And namly whan thei talen longe;<br/>
+My sorwes thanne be so stronge<br/>
+Of that I se hem wel at ese,<br/>
+I can noght telle my desese.    50<br/>
+Bot, Sire, as of my ladi selve,<br/>
+Thogh sche have wowers ten or twelve,<br/>
+For no mistrust I have of hire<br/>
+Me grieveth noght, for certes, Sire,<br/>
+I trowe, in al this world to seche,<br/>
+Nis womman that in dede and speche<br/>
+Woll betre avise hire what sche doth,<br/>
+Ne betre, forto seie a soth,<br/>
+Kepe hire honour ate alle tide,<br/>
+And yit get hire a thank beside.    60<br/>
+Bot natheles I am beknowe,<br/>
+That whanne I se at eny throwe,<br/>
+Or elles if I mai it hiere,<br/>
+That sche make eny man good chiere,<br/>
+Thogh I therof have noght to done,<br/>
+Mi thought wol entermette him sone.<br/>
+For thogh I be miselve strange,<br/>
+Envie makth myn herte change,<br/>
+That I am sorghfully bestad<br/>
+Of that I se an other glad    70<br/>
+With hire; bot of other alle,<br/>
+Of love what so mai befalle,<br/>
+Or that he faile or that he spede,<br/>
+Therof take I bot litel heede.<br/>
+Now have I seid, my fader, al<br/>
+As of this point in special,<br/>
+Als ferforthli as I have wist.<br/>
+Now axeth further what you list.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, er I axe eny more,<br/>
+I thenke somdiel for thi lore    80<br/>
+Telle an ensample of this matiere<br/>
+Touchende Envie, as thou schalt hiere.<br/>
+Write in Civile this I finde:<br/>
+Thogh it be noght the houndes kinde<br/>
+To ete chaf, yit wol he werne<br/>
+An Oxe which comth to the berne,<br/>
+Therof to taken eny fode.<br/>
+And thus, who that it understode,<br/>
+It stant of love in many place:<br/>
+Who that is out of loves grace    90<br/>
+And mai himselven noght availe,<br/>
+He wolde an other scholde faile;<br/>
+And if he may put eny lette,<br/>
+He doth al that he mai to lette.<br/>
+Wherof I finde, as thou schalt wite,<br/>
+To this pourpos a tale write.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther ben of suche mo than twelve,<br/>
+That ben noght able as of hemselve<br/>
+To gete love, and for Envie<br/>
+Upon alle othre thei aspie;    100<br/>
+And for hem lacketh that thei wolde,<br/>
+Thei kepte that non other scholde<br/>
+Touchende of love his cause spede:<br/>
+Wherof a gret ensample I rede,<br/>
+Which unto this matiere acordeth,<br/>
+As Ovide in his bok recordeth,<br/>
+How Poliphemus whilom wroghte,<br/>
+Whan that he Galathee besoghte<br/>
+Of love, which he mai noght lacche.<br/>
+That made him forto waite and wacche    110<br/>
+Be alle weies how it ferde,<br/>
+Til ate laste he knew and herde<br/>
+How that an other hadde leve<br/>
+To love there as he mot leve,<br/>
+As forto speke of eny sped:<br/>
+So that he knew non other red,<br/>
+Bot forto wayten upon alle,<br/>
+Til he may se the chance falle<br/>
+That he hire love myhte grieve,<br/>
+Which he himself mai noght achieve.    120<br/>
+This Galathee, seith the Poete,<br/>
+Above alle othre was unmete<br/>
+Of beaute, that men thanne knewe,<br/>
+And hadde a lusti love and trewe,<br/>
+A Bacheler in his degree,<br/>
+Riht such an other as was sche,<br/>
+On whom sche hath hire herte set,<br/>
+So that it myhte noght be let<br/>
+For yifte ne for no beheste,<br/>
+That sche ne was al at his heste.    130<br/>
+This yonge knyht Acis was hote,<br/>
+Which hire ayeinward als so hote<br/>
+Al only loveth and nomo.<br/>
+Hierof was Poliphemus wo<br/>
+Thurgh pure Envie, and evere aspide,<br/>
+And waiteth upon every side,<br/>
+Whan he togedre myhte se<br/>
+This yonge Acis with Galathe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So longe he waiteth to and fro,<br/>
+Til ate laste he fond hem tuo,    140<br/>
+In prive place wher thei stode<br/>
+To speke and have here wordes goode.<br/>
+The place wher as he hem syh,<br/>
+It was under a banke nyh<br/>
+The grete See, and he above<br/>
+Stod and behield the lusti love<br/>
+Which ech of hem to other made<br/>
+With goodly chiere and wordes glade,<br/>
+That al his herte hath set afyre<br/>
+Of pure Envie: and as a fyre    150<br/>
+Which fleth out of a myhti bowe,<br/>
+Aweie he fledde for a throwe,<br/>
+As he that was for love wod,<br/>
+Whan that he sih how that it stod.<br/>
+This Polipheme a Geant was;<br/>
+And whan he sih the sothe cas,<br/>
+How Galathee him hath forsake<br/>
+And Acis to hire love take,<br/>
+His herte mai it noght forbere<br/>
+That he ne roreth lich a Bere;    160<br/>
+And as it were a wilde beste,<br/>
+The whom no reson mihte areste,<br/>
+He ran Ethna the hell aboute,<br/>
+Wher nevere yit the fyr was oute,<br/>
+Fulfild of sorghe and gret desese,<br/>
+That he syh Acis wel at ese.<br/>
+Til ate laste he him bethoghte,<br/>
+As he which al Envie soghte,<br/>
+And torneth to the banke ayein,<br/>
+Wher he with Galathee hath seyn    170<br/>
+Acis, whom that he thoghte grieve,<br/>
+Thogh he himself mai noght relieve.<br/>
+This Geant with his ruide myht<br/>
+Part of the banke he schof doun riht,<br/>
+The which evene upon Acis fell,<br/>
+So that with fallinge of this hell<br/>
+This Poliphemus Acis slowh,<br/>
+Wherof sche made sorwe ynowh.<br/>
+And as sche fledde fro the londe,<br/>
+Neptunus tok hire into honde    180<br/>
+And kept hire in so sauf a place<br/>
+Fro Polipheme and his manace,<br/>
+That he with al his false Envie<br/>
+Ne mihte atteigne hir compaignie.<br/>
+This Galathee of whom I speke,<br/>
+That of hirself mai noght be wreke,<br/>
+Withouten eny semblant feigned<br/>
+Sche hath hire loves deth compleigned,<br/>
+And with hire sorwe and with hire wo<br/>
+Sche hath the goddes moeved so,    190<br/>
+That thei of pite and of grace<br/>
+Have Acis in the same place,<br/>
+Ther he lai ded, into a welle<br/>
+Transformed, as the bokes telle,<br/>
+With freisshe stremes and with cliere,<br/>
+As he whilom with lusti chiere<br/>
+Was freissh his love forto qweme.<br/>
+And with this ruide Polipheme<br/>
+For his Envie and for his hate<br/>
+Thei were wrothe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus algate,    200<br/>
+Mi Sone, thou myht understonde,<br/>
+That if thou wolt in grace stonde<br/>
+With love, thou most leve Envie:<br/>
+And as thou wolt for thi partie<br/>
+Toward thi love stonde fre,<br/>
+So most thou soffre an other be,<br/>
+What so befalle upon the chaunce:<br/>
+For it is an unwys vengance,<br/>
+Which to non other man is lief,<br/>
+And is unto himselve grief.    210
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, this ensample is good;<br/>
+Bot how so evere that it stod<br/>
+With Poliphemes love as tho,<br/>
+It schal noght stonde with me so,<br/>
+To worchen eny felonie<br/>
+In love for no such Envie.<br/>
+Forthi if ther oght elles be,<br/>
+Now axeth forth, in what degre<br/>
+It is, and I me schal confesse<br/>
+With schrifte unto youre holinesse.    220
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, yit ther is<br/>
+A vice revers unto this,<br/>
+Which envious takth his gladnesse<br/>
+Of that he seth the hevinesse<br/>
+Of othre men: for his welfare<br/>
+Is whanne he wot an other care:<br/>
+Of that an other hath a fall,<br/>
+He thenkth himself arist withal.<br/>
+Such is the gladschipe of Envie<br/>
+In worldes thing, and in partie    230<br/>
+Fulofte times ek also<br/>
+In loves cause it stant riht so.<br/>
+If thou, my Sone, hast joie had,<br/>
+Whan thou an other sihe unglad,<br/>
+Schrif the therof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, yis:<br/>
+I am beknowe unto you this.<br/>
+Of these lovers that loven streyte,<br/>
+And for that point which thei coveite<br/>
+Ben poursuiantz fro yeer to yere<br/>
+In loves Court, whan I may hiere    240<br/>
+How that thei clymbe upon the whel,<br/>
+And whan thei wene al schal be wel,<br/>
+Thei ben doun throwen ate laste,<br/>
+Thanne am I fedd of that thei faste,<br/>
+And lawhe of that I se hem loure;<br/>
+And thus of that thei brewe soure<br/>
+I drinke swete, and am wel esed<br/>
+Of that I wot thei ben desesed.<br/>
+Bot this which I you telle hiere<br/>
+Is only for my lady diere;    250<br/>
+That for non other that I knowe<br/>
+Me reccheth noght who overthrowe,<br/>
+Ne who that stonde in love upriht:<br/>
+Bot be he squier, be he knyht,<br/>
+Which to my ladiward poursuieth,<br/>
+The more he lest of that he suieth,<br/>
+The mor me thenketh that I winne,<br/>
+And am the more glad withinne<br/>
+Of that I wot him sorwe endure.<br/>
+For evere upon such aventure    260<br/>
+It is a confort, as men sein,<br/>
+To him the which is wo besein<br/>
+To sen an other in his peine,<br/>
+So that thei bothe mai compleigne.<br/>
+Wher I miself mai noght availe<br/>
+To sen an other man travaile,<br/>
+I am riht glad if he be let;<br/>
+And thogh I fare noght the bet,<br/>
+His sorwe is to myn herte a game:<br/>
+Whan that I knowe it is the same    270<br/>
+Which to mi ladi stant enclined,<br/>
+And hath his love noght termined,<br/>
+I am riht joifull in my thoght.<br/>
+If such Envie grieveth oght,<br/>
+As I beknowe me coupable,<br/>
+Ye that be wys and resonable,<br/>
+Mi fader, telleth youre avis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, Envie into no pris<br/>
+Of such a forme, I understonde,<br/>
+Ne mihte be no resoun stonde    280<br/>
+For this Envie hath such a kinde,<br/>
+That he wole sette himself behinde<br/>
+To hindre with an othre wyht,<br/>
+And gladly lese his oghne riht<br/>
+To make an other lesen his.<br/>
+And forto knowe how it so is,<br/>
+A tale lich to this matiere<br/>
+I thenke telle, if thou wolt hiere,<br/>
+To schewe proprely the vice<br/>
+Of this Envie and the malice.    290
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Jupiter this finde I write,<br/>
+How whilom that he wolde wite<br/>
+Upon the pleigntes whiche he herde,<br/>
+Among the men how that it ferde,<br/>
+As of here wrong condicion<br/>
+To do justificacion:<br/>
+And for that cause doun he sente<br/>
+An Angel, which about wente,<br/>
+That he the sothe knowe mai.<br/>
+So it befell upon a dai    300<br/>
+This Angel, which him scholde enforme,<br/>
+Was clothed in a mannes forme,<br/>
+And overtok, I understonde,<br/>
+Tuo men that wenten over londe,<br/>
+Thurgh whiche he thoghte to aspie<br/>
+His cause, and goth in compaignie.<br/>
+This Angel with hise wordes wise<br/>
+Opposeth hem in sondri wise,<br/>
+Now lowde wordes and now softe,<br/>
+That mad hem to desputen ofte,    310<br/>
+And ech of hem his reson hadde.<br/>
+And thus with tales he hem ladde<br/>
+With good examinacioun,<br/>
+Til he knew the condicioun,<br/>
+What men thei were bothe tuo;<br/>
+And sih wel ate laste tho,<br/>
+That on of hem was coveitous,<br/>
+And his fela was envious.<br/>
+And thus, whan he hath knowlechinge,<br/>
+Anon he feigneth departinge,    320<br/>
+And seide he mot algate wende.<br/>
+Bot herkne now what fell at ende:<br/>
+For thanne he made hem understonde<br/>
+That he was there of goddes sonde,<br/>
+And seide hem, for the kindeschipe<br/>
+That thei have don him felaschipe,<br/>
+He wole hem do som grace ayein,<br/>
+And bad that on of hem schal sein<br/>
+What thing him is lievest to crave,<br/>
+And he it schal of yifte have;    330<br/>
+And over that ek forth withal<br/>
+He seith that other have schal<br/>
+The double of that his felaw axeth;<br/>
+And thus to hem his grace he taxeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coveitous was wonder glad,<br/>
+And to that other man he bad<br/>
+And seith that he ferst axe scholde:<br/>
+For he supposeth that he wolde<br/>
+Make his axinge of worldes good;<br/>
+For thanne he knew wel how it stod,    340<br/>
+That he himself be double weyhte<br/>
+Schal after take, and thus be sleyhte,<br/>
+Be cause that he wolde winne,<br/>
+He bad his fela ferst beginne.<br/>
+This Envious, thogh it be late,<br/>
+Whan that he syh he mot algate<br/>
+Make his axinge ferst, he thoghte,<br/>
+If he worschipe or profit soghte,<br/>
+It schal be doubled to his fiere:<br/>
+That wolde he chese in no manere.    350<br/>
+Bot thanne he scheweth what he was<br/>
+Toward Envie, and in this cas<br/>
+Unto this Angel thus he seide<br/>
+And for his yifte this he preide,<br/>
+To make him blind of his on yhe,<br/>
+So that his fela nothing syhe.<br/>
+This word was noght so sone spoke,<br/>
+That his on yhe anon was loke,<br/>
+And his felawh forthwith also<br/>
+Was blind of bothe his yhen tuo.    360<br/>
+Tho was that other glad ynowh,<br/>
+That on wepte, and that other lowh,<br/>
+He sette his on yhe at no cost,<br/>
+Wherof that other two hath lost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of thilke ensample which fell tho,<br/>
+Men tellen now fulofte so,<br/>
+The world empeireth comunly:<br/>
+And yit wot non the cause why;<br/>
+For it acordeth noght to kinde<br/>
+Min oghne harm to seche and finde    370<br/>
+Of that I schal my brother grieve;<br/>
+It myhte nevere wel achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What seist thou, Sone, of this folie?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, bot I scholde lie,<br/>
+Upon the point which ye have seid<br/>
+Yit was myn herte nevere leid,<br/>
+Bot in the wise as I you tolde.<br/>
+Bot overmore, if that ye wolde<br/>
+Oght elles to my schrifte seie<br/>
+Touchende Envie, I wolde preie.    380
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that schal wel be do:<br/>
+Now herkne and ley thin Ere to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Touchende as of Envious brod<br/>
+I wot noght on of alle good;<br/>
+Bot natheles, suche as thei be,<br/>
+Yit is ther on, and that is he<br/>
+Which cleped in Detraccioun.<br/>
+And to conferme his accioun,<br/>
+He hath withholde Malebouche,<br/>
+Whos tunge neither pyl ne crouche    390<br/>
+Mai hyre, so that he pronounce<br/>
+A plein good word withoute frounce<br/>
+Awher behinde a mannes bak.<br/>
+For thogh he preise, he fint som lak,<br/>
+Which of his tale is ay the laste,<br/>
+That al the pris schal overcaste:<br/>
+And thogh ther be no cause why,<br/>
+Yit wole he jangle noght forthi,<br/>
+As he which hath the heraldie<br/>
+Of hem that usen forto lye.    400<br/>
+For as the Netle which up renneth<br/>
+The freisshe rede Roses brenneth<br/>
+And makth hem fade and pale of hewe,<br/>
+Riht so this fals Envious hewe,<br/>
+In every place wher he duelleth,<br/>
+With false wordes whiche he telleth<br/>
+He torneth preisinge into blame<br/>
+And worschipe into worldes schame.<br/>
+Of such lesinge as he compasseth,<br/>
+Is non so good that he ne passeth    410<br/>
+Betwen his teeth and is bacbited,<br/>
+And thurgh his false tunge endited:<br/>
+Lich to the Scharnebudes kinde,<br/>
+Of whos nature this I finde,<br/>
+That in the hoteste of the dai,<br/>
+Whan comen is the merie Maii,<br/>
+He sprat his wynge and up he fleth:<br/>
+And under al aboute he seth<br/>
+The faire lusti floures springe,<br/>
+Bot therof hath he no likinge;    420<br/>
+Bot where he seth of eny beste<br/>
+The felthe, ther he makth his feste,<br/>
+And therupon he wole alyhte,<br/>
+Ther liketh him non other sihte.<br/>
+Riht so this janglere Envious,<br/>
+Thogh he a man se vertuous<br/>
+And full of good condicioun,<br/>
+Therof makth he no mencioun:<br/>
+Bot elles, be it noght so lyte,<br/>
+Wherof that he mai sette a wyte,    430<br/>
+Ther renneth he with open mouth,<br/>
+Behinde a man and makth it couth.<br/>
+Bot al the vertu which he can,<br/>
+That wole he hide of every man,<br/>
+And openly the vice telle,<br/>
+As he which of the Scole of helle<br/>
+Is tawht, and fostred with Envie<br/>
+Of houshold and of compaignie,<br/>
+Wher that he hath his propre office<br/>
+To sette on every man a vice.    440<br/>
+How so his mouth be comely,<br/>
+His word sit evermore awry<br/>
+And seith the worste that he may.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in this wise now a day<br/>
+In loves Court a man mai hiere<br/>
+Fulofte pleigne of this matiere,<br/>
+That many envious tale is stered,<br/>
+Wher that it mai noght ben ansuered;<br/>
+Bot yit fulofte it is believed,<br/>
+And many a worthi love is grieved    450<br/>
+Thurgh bacbitinge of fals Envie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If thou have mad such janglerie<br/>
+In loves Court, mi Sone, er this,<br/>
+Schrif thee therof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, yis:<br/>
+Bot wite ye how? noght openly,<br/>
+Bot otherwhile prively,<br/>
+Whan I my diere ladi mete,<br/>
+And thenke how that I am noght mete<br/>
+Unto hire hihe worthinesse,<br/>
+And ek I se the besinesse    460<br/>
+Of al this yonge lusty route,<br/>
+Whiche alday pressen hire aboute,<br/>
+And ech of hem his time awaiteth,<br/>
+And ech of hem his tale affaiteth,<br/>
+Al to deceive an innocent,<br/>
+Which woll noght ben of here assent;<br/>
+And for men sein unknowe unkest,<br/>
+Hire thombe sche holt in hire fest<br/>
+So clos withinne hire oghne hond,<br/>
+That there winneth noman lond;    470<br/>
+Sche lieveth noght al that sche hiereth,<br/>
+And thus fulofte hirself sche skiereth<br/>
+And is al war of “hadde I wist”:&mdash;<br/>
+Bot for al that myn herte arist,<br/>
+Whanne I thes comun lovers se,<br/>
+That woll noght holden hem to thre,<br/>
+Bot welnyh loven overal,<br/>
+Min herte is Envious withal,<br/>
+And evere I am adrad of guile,<br/>
+In aunter if with eny wyle    480<br/>
+Thei mihte hire innocence enchaunte.<br/>
+Forthi my wordes ofte I haunte<br/>
+Behynden hem, so as I dar,<br/>
+Wherof my ladi may be war:<br/>
+I sai what evere comth to mowthe,<br/>
+And worse I wolde, if that I cowthe;<br/>
+For whanne I come unto hir speche,<br/>
+Al that I may enquere and seche<br/>
+Of such deceipte, I telle it al,<br/>
+And ay the werste in special.    490<br/>
+So fayn I wolde that sche wiste<br/>
+How litel thei ben forto triste,<br/>
+And what thei wolde and what thei mente,<br/>
+So as thei be of double entente:<br/>
+Thus toward hem that wicke mene<br/>
+My wicked word was evere grene.<br/>
+And natheles, the soth to telle,<br/>
+In certain if it so befelle<br/>
+That althertrewest man ybore,<br/>
+To chese among a thousend score,    500<br/>
+Which were alfulli forto triste,<br/>
+Mi ladi lovede, and I it wiste,<br/>
+Yit rathere thanne he scholde spede,<br/>
+I wolde swiche tales sprede<br/>
+To my ladi, if that I myhte,<br/>
+That I scholde al his love unrihte,<br/>
+And therto wolde I do mi peine.<br/>
+For certes thogh I scholde feigne,<br/>
+And telle that was nevere thoght,<br/>
+For al this world I myhte noght    510<br/>
+To soffre an othre fully winne,<br/>
+Ther as I am yit to beginne.<br/>
+For be thei goode, or be thei badde,<br/>
+I wolde non my ladi hadde;<br/>
+And that me makth fulofte aspie<br/>
+And usen wordes of Envie,<br/>
+Al forto make hem bere a blame.<br/>
+And that is bot of thilke same,<br/>
+The whiche unto my ladi drawe,<br/>
+For evere on hem I rounge and gknawe    520<br/>
+And hindre hem al that evere I mai;<br/>
+And that is, sothly forto say,<br/>
+Bot only to my lady selve:<br/>
+I telle it noght to ten ne tuelve,<br/>
+Therof I wol me wel avise,<br/>
+To speke or jangle in eny wise<br/>
+That toucheth to my ladi name,<br/>
+The which in ernest and in game<br/>
+I wolde save into my deth;<br/>
+For me were levere lacke breth    530<br/>
+Than speken of hire name amis.<br/>
+Now have ye herd touchende of this,<br/>
+Mi fader, in confessioun:<br/>
+And therfor of Detraccioun<br/>
+In love, of that I have mispoke,<br/>
+Tel how ye wole it schal be wroke.<br/>
+I am al redy forto bere<br/>
+Mi peine, and also to forbere<br/>
+What thing that ye wol noght allowe;<br/>
+For who is bounden, he mot bowe.    540<br/>
+So wol I bowe unto youre heste,<br/>
+For I dar make this beheste,<br/>
+That I to yow have nothing hid,<br/>
+Bot told riht as it is betid;<br/>
+And otherwise of no mispeche,<br/>
+Mi conscience forto seche,<br/>
+I can noght of Envie finde,<br/>
+That I mispoke have oght behinde<br/>
+Wherof love owhte be mispaid.<br/>
+Now have ye herd and I have said;    550<br/>
+What wol ye, fader, that I do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, do nomore so,<br/>
+Bot evere kep thi tunge stille,<br/>
+Thou miht the more have of thi wille.<br/>
+For as thou saist thiselven here,<br/>
+Thi ladi is of such manere,<br/>
+So wys, so war in alle thinge,<br/>
+It nedeth of no bakbitinge<br/>
+That thou thi ladi mis enforme:<br/>
+For whan sche knoweth al the forme,    560<br/>
+How that thiself art envious,<br/>
+Thou schalt noght be so gracious<br/>
+As thou peraunter scholdest elles.<br/>
+Ther wol noman drinke of tho welles<br/>
+Whiche as he wot is puyson inne;<br/>
+And ofte swich as men beginne<br/>
+Towardes othre, swich thei finde,<br/>
+That set hem ofte fer behinde,<br/>
+Whan that thei wene be before.<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, and thou therfore    570<br/>
+Bewar and lef thi wicke speche,<br/>
+Wherof hath fallen ofte wreche<br/>
+To many a man befor this time.<br/>
+For who so wole his handes lime,<br/>
+Thei mosten be the more unclene;<br/>
+For many a mote schal be sene,<br/>
+That wolde noght cleve elles there;<br/>
+And that schold every wys man fere:<br/>
+For who so wol an other blame,<br/>
+He secheth ofte his oghne schame,    580<br/>
+Which elles myhte be riht stille.<br/>
+Forthi if that it be thi wille<br/>
+To stonde upon amendement,<br/>
+A tale of gret entendement<br/>
+I thenke telle for thi sake,<br/>
+Wherof thou miht ensample take.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A worthi kniht in Cristes lawe<br/>
+Of grete Rome, as is the sawe,<br/>
+The Sceptre hadde forto rihte;<br/>
+Tiberie Constantin he hihte,    590<br/>
+Whos wif was cleped Ytalie:<br/>
+Bot thei togedre of progenie<br/>
+No children hadde bot a Maide;<br/>
+And sche the god so wel apaide,<br/>
+That al the wide worldes fame<br/>
+Spak worschipe of hire goode name.<br/>
+Constance, as the Cronique seith,<br/>
+Sche hihte, and was so ful of feith,<br/>
+That the greteste of Barbarie,<br/>
+Of hem whiche usen marchandie,    600<br/>
+Sche hath converted, as thei come<br/>
+To hire upon a time in Rome,<br/>
+To schewen such thing as thei broghte;<br/>
+Whiche worthili of hem sche boghte,<br/>
+And over that in such a wise<br/>
+Sche hath hem with hire wordes wise<br/>
+Of Cristes feith so full enformed,<br/>
+That thei therto ben all conformed,<br/>
+So that baptesme thei receiven<br/>
+And alle here false goddes weyven.    610<br/>
+Whan thei ben of the feith certein,<br/>
+Thei gon to Barbarie ayein,<br/>
+And ther the Souldan for hem sente<br/>
+And axeth hem to what entente<br/>
+Thei have here ferste feith forsake.<br/>
+And thei, whiche hadden undertake<br/>
+The rihte feith to kepe and holde,<br/>
+The matiere of here tale tolde<br/>
+With al the hole circumstance.<br/>
+And whan the Souldan of Constance    620<br/>
+Upon the point that thei ansuerde<br/>
+The beaute and the grace herde,<br/>
+As he which thanne was to wedde,<br/>
+In alle haste his cause spedde<br/>
+To sende for the mariage.<br/>
+And furthermor with good corage<br/>
+He seith, be so he mai hire have,<br/>
+That Crist, which cam this world to save,<br/>
+He woll believe: and this recorded,<br/>
+Thei ben on either side acorded,    630<br/>
+And therupon to make an ende<br/>
+The Souldan hise hostages sende<br/>
+To Rome, of Princes Sones tuelve:<br/>
+Wherof the fader in himselve<br/>
+Was glad, and with the Pope avised<br/>
+Tuo Cardinals he hath assissed<br/>
+With othre lordes many mo,<br/>
+That with his doghter scholden go,<br/>
+To se the Souldan be converted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot that which nevere was wel herted,    640<br/>
+Envie, tho began travaile<br/>
+In destourbance of this spousaile<br/>
+So prively that non was war.<br/>
+The Moder which this Souldan bar<br/>
+Was thanne alyve, and thoghte this<br/>
+Unto hirself: “If it so is<br/>
+Mi Sone him wedde in this manere,<br/>
+Than have I lost my joies hiere,<br/>
+For myn astat schal so be lassed.”<br/>
+Thenkende thus sche hath compassed    650<br/>
+Be sleihte how that sche may beguile<br/>
+Hire Sone; and fell withinne a while,<br/>
+Betwen hem two whan that thei were,<br/>
+Sche feigneth wordes in his Ere,<br/>
+And in this wise gan to seie:<br/>
+“Mi Sone, I am be double weie<br/>
+With al myn herte glad and blithe,<br/>
+For that miself have ofte sithe<br/>
+Desired thou wolt, as men seith,<br/>
+Receive and take a newe feith,    660<br/>
+Which schal be forthringe of thi lif:<br/>
+And ek so worschipful a wif,<br/>
+The doughter of an Emperour,<br/>
+To wedde it schal be gret honour.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, I you beseche<br/>
+That I such grace mihte areche,<br/>
+Whan that my doughter come schal,<br/>
+That I mai thanne in special,<br/>
+So as me thenkth it is honeste,<br/>
+Be thilke which the ferste feste    670<br/>
+Schal make unto hire welcominge.”<br/>
+The Souldan granteth hire axinge,<br/>
+And sche therof was glad ynowh:<br/>
+For under that anon sche drowh<br/>
+With false wordes that sche spak<br/>
+Covine of deth behinde his bak.<br/>
+And therupon hire ordinance<br/>
+She made so, that whan Constance<br/>
+Was come forth with the Romeins,<br/>
+Of clerkes and of Citezeins,    680<br/>
+A riche feste sche hem made:<br/>
+And most whan that thei weren glade,<br/>
+With fals covine which sche hadde<br/>
+Hire clos Envie tho sche spradde,<br/>
+And alle tho that hadden be<br/>
+Or in apert or in prive<br/>
+Of conseil to the mariage,<br/>
+Sche slowh hem in a sodein rage<br/>
+Endlong the bord as thei be set,<br/>
+So that it myhte noght be let;    690<br/>
+Hire oghne Sone was noght quit,<br/>
+Bot deide upon the same plit.<br/>
+Bot what the hihe god wol spare<br/>
+It mai for no peril misfare:<br/>
+This worthi Maiden which was there<br/>
+Stod thanne, as who seith, ded for feere,<br/>
+To se the feste how that it stod,<br/>
+Which al was torned into blod:<br/>
+The Dissh forthwith the Coppe and al<br/>
+Bebled thei weren overal;    700<br/>
+Sche sih hem deie on every side;<br/>
+No wonder thogh sche wepte and cride<br/>
+Makende many a wofull mone.<br/>
+Whan al was slain bot sche al one,<br/>
+This olde fend, this Sarazine,<br/>
+Let take anon this Constantine<br/>
+With al the good sche thider broghte,<br/>
+And hath ordeined, as sche thoghte,<br/>
+A nakid Schip withoute stiere,<br/>
+In which the good and hire in fiere,    710<br/>
+Vitailed full for yeres fyve,<br/>
+Wher that the wynd it wolde dryve,<br/>
+Sche putte upon the wawes wilde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot he which alle thing mai schilde,<br/>
+Thre yer, til that sche cam to londe,<br/>
+Hire Schip to stiere hath take in honde,<br/>
+And in Northumberlond aryveth;<br/>
+And happeth thanne that sche dryveth<br/>
+Under a Castel with the flod,<br/>
+Which upon Humber banke stod    720<br/>
+And was the kynges oghne also,<br/>
+The which Allee was cleped tho,<br/>
+A Saxon and a worthi knyht,<br/>
+Bot he believed noght ariht.<br/>
+Of this Castell was Chastellein<br/>
+Elda the kinges Chamberlein,<br/>
+A knyhtly man after his lawe;<br/>
+And whan he sih upon the wawe<br/>
+The Schip drivende al one so,<br/>
+He bad anon men scholden go    730<br/>
+To se what it betokne mai.<br/>
+This was upon a Somer dai,<br/>
+The Schip was loked and sche founde;<br/>
+Elda withinne a litel stounde<br/>
+It wiste, and with his wif anon<br/>
+Toward this yonge ladi gon,<br/>
+Wher that thei founden gret richesse;<br/>
+Bot sche hire wolde noght confesse,<br/>
+Whan thei hire axen what sche was.<br/>
+And natheles upon the cas    740<br/>
+Out of the Schip with gret worschipe<br/>
+Thei toke hire into felaschipe,<br/>
+As thei that weren of hir glade:<br/>
+Bot sche no maner joie made,<br/>
+Bot sorweth sore of that sche fond<br/>
+No cristendom in thilke lond;<br/>
+Bot elles sche hath al hire wille,<br/>
+And thus with hem sche duelleth stille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dame Hermyngheld, which was the wif<br/>
+Of Elda, lich hire oghne lif    750<br/>
+Constance loveth; and fell so,<br/>
+Spekende alday betwen hem two,<br/>
+Thurgh grace of goddes pourveance<br/>
+This maiden tawhte the creance<br/>
+Unto this wif so parfitly,<br/>
+Upon a dai that faste by<br/>
+In presence of hire housebonde,<br/>
+Wher thei go walkende on the Stronde,<br/>
+A blind man, which cam there lad,<br/>
+Unto this wif criende he bad,    760<br/>
+With bothe hise hondes up and preide<br/>
+To hire, and in this wise he seide:<br/>
+“O Hermyngeld, which Cristes feith,<br/>
+Enformed as Constance seith,<br/>
+Received hast, yif me my sihte.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon his word hire herte afflihte<br/>
+Thenkende what was best to done,<br/>
+Bot natheles sche herde his bone<br/>
+And seide, “In trust of Cristes lawe,<br/>
+Which don was on the crois and slawe,    770<br/>
+Thou bysne man, behold and se.”<br/>
+With that to god upon his kne<br/>
+Thonkende he tok his sihte anon,<br/>
+Wherof thei merveile everychon,<br/>
+Bot Elda wondreth most of alle:<br/>
+This open thing which is befalle<br/>
+Concludeth him be such a weie,<br/>
+That he the feith mot nede obeie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest what fell upon this thing.<br/>
+This Elda forth unto the king    780<br/>
+A morwe tok his weie and rod,<br/>
+And Hermyngeld at home abod<br/>
+Forth with Constance wel at ese.<br/>
+Elda, which thoghte his king to plese,<br/>
+As he that thanne unwedded was,<br/>
+Of Constance al the pleine cas<br/>
+Als goodliche as he cowthe tolde.<br/>
+The king was glad and seide he wolde<br/>
+Come thider upon such a wise<br/>
+That he him mihte of hire avise,    790<br/>
+The time apointed forth withal.<br/>
+This Elda triste in special<br/>
+Upon a knyht, whom fro childhode<br/>
+He hadde updrawe into manhode:<br/>
+To him he tolde al that he thoghte,<br/>
+Wherof that after him forthoghte;<br/>
+And natheles at thilke tide<br/>
+Unto his wif he bad him ride<br/>
+To make redi alle thing<br/>
+Ayein the cominge of the king,    800<br/>
+And seith that he himself tofore<br/>
+Thenkth forto come, and bad therfore<br/>
+That he him kepe, and told him whanne.<br/>
+This knyht rod forth his weie thanne;<br/>
+And soth was that of time passed<br/>
+He hadde in al his wit compassed<br/>
+How he Constance myhte winne;<br/>
+Bot he sih tho no sped therinne,<br/>
+Wherof his lust began tabate,<br/>
+And that was love is thanne hate;    810<br/>
+Of hire honour he hadde Envie,<br/>
+So that upon his tricherie<br/>
+A lesinge in his herte he caste.<br/>
+Til he cam home he hieth faste,<br/>
+And doth his ladi tunderstonde<br/>
+The Message of hire housebonde:<br/>
+And therupon the longe dai<br/>
+Thei setten thinges in arrai,<br/>
+That al was as it scholde be<br/>
+Of every thing in his degree;    820<br/>
+And whan it cam into the nyht,<br/>
+This wif hire hath to bedde dyht,<br/>
+Wher that this Maiden with hire lay.<br/>
+This false knyht upon delay<br/>
+Hath taried til thei were aslepe,<br/>
+As he that wolde his time kepe<br/>
+His dedly werkes to fulfille;<br/>
+And to the bed he stalketh stille,<br/>
+Wher that he wiste was the wif,<br/>
+And in his hond a rasour knif    830<br/>
+He bar, with which hire throte he cutte,<br/>
+And prively the knif he putte<br/>
+Under that other beddes side,<br/>
+Wher that Constance lai beside.<br/>
+Elda cam hom the same nyht,<br/>
+And stille with a prive lyht,<br/>
+As he that wolde noght awake<br/>
+His wif, he hath his weie take<br/>
+Into the chambre, and ther liggende<br/>
+He fond his dede wif bledende,    840<br/>
+Wher that Constance faste by<br/>
+Was falle aslepe; and sodeinly<br/>
+He cride alowd, and sche awok,<br/>
+And forth withal sche caste a lok<br/>
+And sih this ladi blede there,<br/>
+Wherof swoundende ded for fere<br/>
+Sche was, and stille as eny Ston<br/>
+She lay, and Elda therupon<br/>
+Into the Castell clepeth oute,<br/>
+And up sterte every man aboute,    850<br/>
+Into the chambre and forth thei wente.<br/>
+Bot he, which alle untrouthe mente,<br/>
+This false knyht, among hem alle<br/>
+Upon this thing which is befalle<br/>
+Seith that Constance hath don this dede;<br/>
+And to the bed with that he yede<br/>
+After the falshed of his speche,<br/>
+And made him there forto seche,<br/>
+And fond the knif, wher he it leide,<br/>
+And thanne he cride and thanne he seide,    860<br/>
+“Lo, seth the knif al blody hiere!<br/>
+What nedeth more in this matiere<br/>
+To axe?” And thus hire innocence<br/>
+He sclaundreth there in audience<br/>
+With false wordes whiche he feigneth.<br/>
+Bot yit for al that evere he pleigneth,<br/>
+Elda no full credence tok:<br/>
+And happeth that ther lay a bok,<br/>
+Upon the which, whan he it sih,<br/>
+This knyht hath swore and seid on hih,    870<br/>
+That alle men it mihte wite,<br/>
+“Now be this bok, which hier is write,<br/>
+Constance is gultif, wel I wot.”<br/>
+With that the hond of hevene him smot<br/>
+In tokne of that he was forswore,<br/>
+That he hath bothe hise yhen lore,<br/>
+Out of his hed the same stounde<br/>
+Thei sterte, and so thei weren founde.<br/>
+A vois was herd, whan that they felle,<br/>
+Which seide, “O dampned man to helle,    880<br/>
+Lo, thus hath god the sclaundre wroke<br/>
+That thou ayein Constance hast spoke:<br/>
+Beknow the sothe er that thou dye.”<br/>
+And he told out his felonie,<br/>
+And starf forth with his tale anon.<br/>
+Into the ground, wher alle gon,<br/>
+This dede lady was begrave:<br/>
+Elda, which thoghte his honour save,<br/>
+Al that he mai restreigneth sorwe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the seconde day a morwe    890<br/>
+The king cam, as thei were acorded;<br/>
+And whan it was to him recorded<br/>
+What god hath wroght upon this chaunce,<br/>
+He tok it into remembrance<br/>
+And thoghte more than he seide.<br/>
+For al his hole herte he leide<br/>
+Upon Constance, and seide he scholde<br/>
+For love of hire, if that sche wolde,<br/>
+Baptesme take and Cristes feith<br/>
+Believe, and over that he seith    900<br/>
+He wol hire wedde, and upon this<br/>
+Asseured ech til other is.<br/>
+And forto make schorte tales,<br/>
+Ther cam a Bisschop out of Wales<br/>
+Fro Bangor, and Lucie he hihte,<br/>
+Which thurgh the grace of god almihte<br/>
+The king with many an other mo<br/>
+Hath cristned, and betwen hem tuo<br/>
+He hath fulfild the mariage.<br/>
+Bot for no lust ne for no rage    910<br/>
+Sche tolde hem nevere what sche was;<br/>
+And natheles upon the cas<br/>
+The king was glad, how so it stod,<br/>
+For wel he wiste and understod<br/>
+Sche was a noble creature.<br/>
+The hihe makere of nature<br/>
+Hire hath visited in a throwe,<br/>
+That it was openliche knowe<br/>
+Sche was with childe be the king,<br/>
+Wherof above al other thing    920<br/>
+He thonketh god and was riht glad.<br/>
+And fell that time he was bestad<br/>
+Upon a werre and moste ride;<br/>
+And whil he scholde there abide,<br/>
+He lefte at hom to kepe his wif<br/>
+Suche as he knew of holi lif,<br/>
+Elda forth with the Bisschop eke;<br/>
+And he with pouer goth to seke<br/>
+Ayein the Scottes forto fonde<br/>
+The werre which he tok on honde.    930
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The time set of kinde is come,<br/>
+This lady hath hire chambre nome,<br/>
+And of a Sone bore full,<br/>
+Wherof that sche was joiefull,<br/>
+Sche was delivered sauf and sone.<br/>
+The bisshop, as it was to done,<br/>
+Yaf him baptesme and Moris calleth;<br/>
+And therupon, as it befalleth,<br/>
+With lettres writen of record<br/>
+Thei sende unto here liege lord,    940<br/>
+That kepers weren of the qweene:<br/>
+And he that scholde go betwene,<br/>
+The Messager, to Knaresburgh,<br/>
+Which toun he scholde passe thurgh,<br/>
+Ridende cam the ferste day.<br/>
+The kinges Moder there lay,<br/>
+Whos rihte name was Domilde,<br/>
+Which after al the cause spilde:<br/>
+For he, which thonk deserve wolde,<br/>
+Unto this ladi goth and tolde    950<br/>
+Of his Message al how it ferde.<br/>
+And sche with feigned joie it herde<br/>
+And yaf him yiftes largely,<br/>
+Bot in the nyht al prively<br/>
+Sche tok the lettres whiche he hadde,<br/>
+Fro point to point and overradde,<br/>
+As sche that was thurghout untrewe,<br/>
+And let do wryten othre newe<br/>
+In stede of hem, and thus thei spieke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oure liege lord, we thee beseke    960<br/>
+That thou with ous ne be noght wroth,<br/>
+Though we such thing as is thee loth<br/>
+Upon oure trowthe certefie.<br/>
+Thi wif, which is of faierie,<br/>
+Of such a child delivered is<br/>
+Fro kinde which stant al amis:<br/>
+Bot for it scholde noght be seie,<br/>
+We have it kept out of the weie<br/>
+For drede of pure worldes schame,<br/>
+A povere child and in the name    970<br/>
+Of thilke which is so misbore<br/>
+We toke, and therto we be swore,<br/>
+That non bot only thou and we<br/>
+Schal knowen of this privete:<br/>
+Moris it hatte, and thus men wene<br/>
+That it was boren of the qweene<br/>
+And of thin oghne bodi gete.<br/>
+Bot this thing mai noght be foryete,<br/>
+That thou ne sende ous word anon<br/>
+What is thi wille therupon.”    980
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This lettre, as thou hast herd devise,<br/>
+Was contrefet in such a wise<br/>
+That noman scholde it aperceive:<br/>
+And sche, which thoghte to deceive,<br/>
+It leith wher sche that other tok.<br/>
+This Messager, whan he awok,<br/>
+And wiste nothing how it was,<br/>
+Aros and rod the grete pas<br/>
+And tok this lettre to the king.<br/>
+And whan he sih this wonder thing,    990<br/>
+He makth the Messager no chiere,<br/>
+Bot natheles in wys manere<br/>
+He wrote ayein, and yaf hem charge<br/>
+That thei ne soffre noght at large<br/>
+His wif to go, bot kepe hire stille,<br/>
+Til thei have herd mor of his wille.<br/>
+This Messager was yifteles,<br/>
+Bot with this lettre natheles,<br/>
+Or be him lief or be him loth,<br/>
+In alle haste ayein he goth    1000<br/>
+Be Knaresburgh, and as he wente,<br/>
+Unto the Moder his entente<br/>
+Of that he fond toward the king<br/>
+He tolde; and sche upon this thing<br/>
+Seith that he scholde abide al nyht<br/>
+And made him feste and chiere ariht,<br/>
+Feignende as thogh sche cowthe him thonk.<br/>
+Bot he with strong wyn which he dronk<br/>
+Forth with the travail of the day<br/>
+Was drunke, aslepe and while he lay,    1010<br/>
+Sche hath hise lettres overseie<br/>
+And formed in an other weie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was a newe lettre write,<br/>
+Which seith: “I do you forto wite,<br/>
+That thurgh the conseil of you tuo<br/>
+I stonde in point to ben undo,<br/>
+As he which is a king deposed.<br/>
+For every man it hath supposed,<br/>
+How that my wif Constance is faie;<br/>
+And if that I, thei sein, delaie    1020<br/>
+To put hire out of compaignie,<br/>
+The worschipe of my Regalie<br/>
+Is lore; and over this thei telle,<br/>
+Hire child schal noght among hem duelle,<br/>
+To cleymen eny heritage.<br/>
+So can I se non avantage,<br/>
+Bot al is lost, if sche abide:<br/>
+Forthi to loke on every side<br/>
+Toward the meschief as it is,<br/>
+I charge you and bidde this,    1030<br/>
+That ye the same Schip vitaile,<br/>
+In which that sche tok arivaile,<br/>
+Therinne and putteth bothe tuo,<br/>
+Hireself forthwith hire child also,<br/>
+And so forth broght unto the depe<br/>
+Betaketh hire the See to kepe.<br/>
+Of foure daies time I sette,<br/>
+That ye this thing no longer lette,<br/>
+So that your lif be noght forsfet.”<br/>
+And thus this lettre contrefet    1040<br/>
+The Messager, which was unwar,<br/>
+Upon the kingeshalve bar,<br/>
+And where he scholde it hath betake.<br/>
+Bot whan that thei have hiede take,<br/>
+And rad that writen is withinne,<br/>
+So gret a sorwe thei beginne,<br/>
+As thei here oghne Moder sihen<br/>
+Brent in a fyr before here yhen:<br/>
+Ther was wepinge and ther was wo,<br/>
+Bot finaly the thing is do.    1050
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the See thei have hire broght,<br/>
+Bot sche the cause wiste noght,<br/>
+And thus upon the flod thei wone,<br/>
+This ladi with hire yonge Sone:<br/>
+And thanne hire handes to the hevene<br/>
+Sche strawhte, and with a milde stevene<br/>
+Knelende upon hire bare kne<br/>
+Sche seide, “O hihe mageste,<br/>
+Which sest the point of every trowthe,<br/>
+Tak of thi wofull womman rowthe    1060<br/>
+And of this child that I schal kepe.”<br/>
+And with that word sche gan to wepe,<br/>
+Swounende as ded, and ther sche lay;<br/>
+Bot he which alle thinges may<br/>
+Conforteth hire, and ate laste<br/>
+Sche loketh and hire yhen caste<br/>
+Upon hire child and seide this:<br/>
+“Of me no maner charge it is<br/>
+What sorwe I soffre, bot of thee<br/>
+Me thenkth it is a gret pite,    1070<br/>
+For if I sterve thou schalt deie:<br/>
+So mot I nedes be that weie<br/>
+For Moderhed and for tendresse<br/>
+With al myn hole besinesse<br/>
+Ordeigne me for thilke office,<br/>
+As sche which schal be thi Norrice.”<br/>
+Thus was sche strengthed forto stonde;<br/>
+And tho sche tok hire child in honde<br/>
+And yaf it sowke, and evere among<br/>
+Sche wepte, and otherwhile song    1080<br/>
+To rocke with hire child aslepe:<br/>
+And thus hire oghne child to kepe<br/>
+Sche hath under the goddes cure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so fell upon aventure,<br/>
+Whan thilke yer hath mad his ende,<br/>
+Hire Schip, so as it moste wende<br/>
+Thurgh strengthe of wynd which god hath yive,<br/>
+Estward was into Spaigne drive<br/>
+Riht faste under a Castell wall,<br/>
+Wher that an hethen Amirall    1090<br/>
+Was lord, and he a Stieward hadde,<br/>
+Oon Thelous, which al was badde,<br/>
+A fals knyht and a renegat.<br/>
+He goth to loke in what astat<br/>
+The Schip was come, and there he fond<br/>
+Forth with a child upon hire hond<br/>
+This lady, wher sche was al one.<br/>
+He tok good hiede of the persone,<br/>
+And sih sche was a worthi wiht,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde upon the nyht    1100<br/>
+Demene hire at his oghne wille,<br/>
+And let hire be therinne stille,<br/>
+That mo men sih sche noght that dai.<br/>
+At goddes wille and thus sche lai,<br/>
+Unknowe what hire schal betide;<br/>
+And fell so that be nyhtes tide<br/>
+This knyht withoute felaschipe<br/>
+Hath take a bot and cam to Schipe,<br/>
+And thoghte of hire his lust to take,<br/>
+And swor, if sche him daunger make,    1110<br/>
+That certeinly sche scholde deie.<br/>
+Sche sih ther was non other weie,<br/>
+And seide he scholde hire wel conforte,<br/>
+That he ferst loke out ate porte,<br/>
+That noman were nyh the stede,<br/>
+Which myhte knowe what thei dede,<br/>
+And thanne he mai do what he wolde.<br/>
+He was riht glad that sche so tolde,<br/>
+And to the porte anon he ferde:<br/>
+Sche preide god, and he hire herde,    1120<br/>
+And sodeinliche he was out throwe<br/>
+And dreynt, and tho began to blowe<br/>
+A wynd menable fro the lond,<br/>
+And thus the myhti goddes hond<br/>
+Hire hath conveied and defended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And whan thre yer be full despended,<br/>
+Hire Schip was drive upon a dai,<br/>
+Wher that a gret Navye lay<br/>
+Of Schipes, al the world at ones:<br/>
+And as god wolde for the nones,    1130<br/>
+Hire Schip goth in among hem alle,<br/>
+And stinte noght, er it be falle<br/>
+And hath the vessell undergete,<br/>
+Which Maister was of al the Flete,<br/>
+Bot there it resteth and abod.<br/>
+This grete Schip on Anker rod;<br/>
+The Lord cam forth, and whan he sih<br/>
+That other ligge abord so nyh,<br/>
+He wondreth what it myhte be,<br/>
+And bad men to gon in and se.    1140<br/>
+This ladi tho was crope aside,<br/>
+As sche that wolde hireselven hide,<br/>
+For sche ne wiste what thei were:<br/>
+Thei soghte aboute and founde hir there<br/>
+And broghten up hire child and hire;<br/>
+And therupon this lord to spire<br/>
+Began, fro whenne that sche cam,<br/>
+And what sche was. Quod sche, “I am<br/>
+A womman wofully bestad.<br/>
+I hadde a lord, and thus he bad,    1150<br/>
+That I forth with my litel Sone<br/>
+Upon the wawes scholden wone,<br/>
+Bot why the cause was, I not:<br/>
+Bot he which alle thinges wot<br/>
+Yit hath, I thonke him, of his miht<br/>
+Mi child and me so kept upriht,<br/>
+That we be save bothe tuo.”<br/>
+This lord hire axeth overmo<br/>
+How sche believeth, and sche seith,<br/>
+“I lieve and triste in Cristes feith,    1160<br/>
+Which deide upon the Rode tree.”<br/>
+“What is thi name?” tho quod he.<br/>
+“Mi name is Couste,” sche him seide:<br/>
+Bot forthermor for noght he preide<br/>
+Of hire astat to knowe plein,<br/>
+Sche wolde him nothing elles sein<br/>
+Bot of hir name, which sche feigneth;<br/>
+Alle othre thinges sche restreigneth,<br/>
+That a word more sche ne tolde.<br/>
+This lord thanne axeth if sche wolde    1170<br/>
+With him abide in compaignie,<br/>
+And seide he cam fro Barbarie<br/>
+To Romeward, and hom he wente.<br/>
+Tho sche supposeth what it mente,<br/>
+And seith sche wolde with him wende<br/>
+And duelle unto hire lyves ende,<br/>
+Be so it be to his plesance.<br/>
+And thus upon here aqueintance<br/>
+He tolde hire pleinly as it stod,<br/>
+Of Rome how that the gentil blod    1180<br/>
+In Barbarie was betraied,<br/>
+And therupon he hath assaied<br/>
+Be werre, and taken such vengance,<br/>
+That non of al thilke alliance,<br/>
+Be whom the tresoun was compassed,<br/>
+Is from the swerd alyve passed;<br/>
+Bot of Constance hou it was,<br/>
+That cowthe he knowe be no cas,<br/>
+Wher sche becam, so as he seide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hire Ere unto his word sche leide,    1190<br/>
+Bot forther made sche no chiere.<br/>
+And natheles in this matiere<br/>
+It happeth thilke time so:<br/>
+This Lord, with whom sche scholde go,<br/>
+Of Rome was the Senatour,<br/>
+And of hir fader themperour<br/>
+His brother doughter hath to wyve,<br/>
+Which hath hir fader ek alyve,<br/>
+And was Salustes cleped tho;<br/>
+This wif Heleine hihte also,    1200<br/>
+To whom Constance was Cousine.<br/>
+Thus to the sike a medicine<br/>
+Hath god ordeined of his grace,<br/>
+That forthwith in the same place<br/>
+This Senatour his trowthe plihte,<br/>
+For evere, whil he live mihte,<br/>
+To kepe in worschipe and in welthe,<br/>
+Be so that god wol yive hire helthe,<br/>
+This ladi, which fortune him sende.<br/>
+And thus be Schipe forth sailende    1210<br/>
+Hire and hir child to Rome he broghte,<br/>
+And to his wif tho he besoghte<br/>
+To take hire into compaignie:<br/>
+And sche, which cowthe of courtesie<br/>
+Al that a good wif scholde konne,<br/>
+Was inly glad that sche hath wonne<br/>
+The felaschip of so good on.<br/>
+Til tuelve yeres were agon,<br/>
+This Emperoures dowhter Custe<br/>
+Forth with the dowhter of Saluste    1220<br/>
+Was kept, bot noman redily<br/>
+Knew what sche was, and noght forthi<br/>
+Thei thoghten wel sche hadde be<br/>
+In hire astat of hih degre,<br/>
+And every lif hire loveth wel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now herke how thilke unstable whel,<br/>
+Which evere torneth, wente aboute.<br/>
+The king Allee, whil he was oute,<br/>
+As thou tofore hast herd this cas,<br/>
+Deceived thurgh his Moder was:    1230<br/>
+Bot whan that he cam hom ayein,<br/>
+He axeth of his Chamberlein<br/>
+And of the Bisschop ek also,<br/>
+Wher thei the qweene hadden do.<br/>
+And thei answerde, there he bad,<br/>
+And have him thilke lettre rad,<br/>
+Which he hem sende for warant,<br/>
+And tolde him pleinli as it stant,<br/>
+And sein, it thoghte hem gret pite<br/>
+To se so worthi on as sche,    1240<br/>
+With such a child as ther was bore,<br/>
+So sodeinly to be forlore.<br/>
+He axeth hem what child that were;<br/>
+And thei him seiden, that naghere,<br/>
+In al the world thogh men it soghte,<br/>
+Was nevere womman that forth broghte<br/>
+A fairer child than it was on.<br/>
+And thanne he axede hem anon,<br/>
+Whi thei ne hadden write so:<br/>
+Thei tolden, so thei hadden do.    1250<br/>
+He seide, “Nay.” Thei seiden, “Yis.”<br/>
+The lettre schewed rad it is,<br/>
+Which thei forsoken everidel.<br/>
+Tho was it understonde wel<br/>
+That ther is tresoun in the thing:<br/>
+The Messager tofore the king<br/>
+Was broght and sodeinliche opposed;<br/>
+And he, which nothing hath supposed<br/>
+Bot alle wel, began to seie<br/>
+That he nagher upon the weie    1260<br/>
+Abod, bot only in a stede;<br/>
+And cause why that he so dede<br/>
+Was, as he wente to and fro,<br/>
+At Knaresburgh be nyhtes tuo<br/>
+The kinges Moder made him duelle.<br/>
+And whan the king it herde telle,<br/>
+Withinne his herte he wiste als faste<br/>
+The treson which his Moder caste;<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde noght abide,<br/>
+Bot forth riht in the same tide    1270<br/>
+He tok his hors and rod anon.<br/>
+With him ther riden manion,<br/>
+To Knaresburgh and forth thei wente,<br/>
+And lich the fyr which tunder hente,<br/>
+In such a rage, as seith the bok,<br/>
+His Moder sodeinliche he tok<br/>
+And seide unto hir in this wise:<br/>
+“O beste of helle, in what juise<br/>
+Hast thou deserved forto deie,<br/>
+That hast so falsly put aweie    1280<br/>
+With tresoun of thi bacbitinge<br/>
+The treweste at my knowlechinge<br/>
+Of wyves and the most honeste?<br/>
+Bot I wol make this beheste,<br/>
+I schal be venged er I go.”<br/>
+And let a fyr do make tho,<br/>
+And bad men forto caste hire inne:<br/>
+Bot ferst sche tolde out al the sinne,<br/>
+And dede hem alle forto wite<br/>
+How sche the lettres hadde write,    1290<br/>
+Fro point to point as it was wroght.<br/>
+And tho sche was to dethe broght<br/>
+And brent tofore hire Sones yhe:<br/>
+Wherof these othre, whiche it sihe<br/>
+And herden how the cause stod,<br/>
+Sein that the juggement is good,<br/>
+Of that hir Sone hire hath so served;<br/>
+For sche it hadde wel deserved<br/>
+Thurgh tresoun of hire false tunge,<br/>
+Which thurgh the lond was after sunge,    1300<br/>
+Constance and every wiht compleigneth.<br/>
+Bot he, whom alle wo distreigneth,<br/>
+This sorghfull king, was so bestad,<br/>
+That he schal nevermor be glad,<br/>
+He seith, eftsone forto wedde,<br/>
+Til that he wiste how that sche spedde,<br/>
+Which hadde ben his ferste wif:<br/>
+And thus his yonge unlusti lif<br/>
+He dryveth forth so as he mai.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Til it befell upon a dai,    1310<br/>
+Whan he hise werres hadde achieved,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde be relieved<br/>
+Of Soule hele upon the feith<br/>
+Which he hath take, thanne he seith<br/>
+That he to Rome in pelrinage<br/>
+Wol go, wher Pope was Pelage,<br/>
+To take his absolucioun.<br/>
+And upon this condicioun<br/>
+He made Edwyn his lieutenant,<br/>
+Which heir to him was apparant,    1320<br/>
+That he the lond in his absence<br/>
+Schal reule: and thus be providence<br/>
+Of alle thinges wel begon<br/>
+He tok his leve and forth is gon.<br/>
+Elda, which tho was with him there,<br/>
+Er thei fulliche at Rome were,<br/>
+Was sent tofore to pourveie;<br/>
+And he his guide upon the weie,<br/>
+In help to ben his herbergour,<br/>
+Hath axed who was Senatour,    1330<br/>
+That he his name myhte kenne.<br/>
+Of Capadoce, he seide, Arcenne<br/>
+He hihte, and was a worthi kniht.<br/>
+To him goth Elda tho forth riht<br/>
+And tolde him of his lord tidinge,<br/>
+And preide that for his comynge<br/>
+He wolde assigne him herbergage;<br/>
+And he so dede of good corage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan al is do that was to done,<br/>
+The king himself cam after sone.    1340<br/>
+This Senatour, whan that he com,<br/>
+To Couste and to his wif at hom<br/>
+Hath told how such a king Allee<br/>
+Of gret array to the Citee<br/>
+Was come, and Couste upon his tale<br/>
+With herte clos and colour pale<br/>
+Aswoune fell, and he merveileth<br/>
+So sodeinly what thing hire eyleth,<br/>
+And cawhte hire up, and whan sche wok,<br/>
+Sche syketh with a pitous lok    1350<br/>
+And feigneth seknesse of the See;<br/>
+Bot it was for the king Allee,<br/>
+For joie which fell in hire thoght<br/>
+That god him hath to toune broght.<br/>
+This king hath spoke with the Pope<br/>
+And told al that he cowthe agrope,<br/>
+What grieveth in his conscience;<br/>
+And thanne he thoghte in reverence<br/>
+Of his astat, er that he wente,<br/>
+To make a feste, and thus he sente    1360<br/>
+Unto the Senatour to come<br/>
+Upon the morwe and othre some,<br/>
+To sitte with him at the mete.<br/>
+This tale hath Couste noght foryete,<br/>
+Bot to Moris hire Sone tolde<br/>
+That he upon the morwe scholde<br/>
+In al that evere he cowthe and mihte<br/>
+Be present in the kinges sihte,<br/>
+So that the king him ofte sihe.<br/>
+Moris tofore the kinges yhe    1370<br/>
+Upon the morwe, wher he sat,<br/>
+Fulofte stod, and upon that<br/>
+The king his chiere upon him caste,<br/>
+And in his face him thoghte als faste<br/>
+He sih his oghne wif Constance;<br/>
+For nature as in resemblance<br/>
+Of face hem liketh so to clothe,<br/>
+That thei were of a suite bothe.<br/>
+The king was moeved in his thoght<br/>
+Of that he seth, and knoweth it noght;    1380<br/>
+This child he loveth kindely,<br/>
+And yit he wot no cause why.<br/>
+Bot wel he sih and understod<br/>
+That he toward Arcenne stod,<br/>
+And axeth him anon riht there,<br/>
+If that this child his Sone were.<br/>
+He seide, “Yee, so I him calle,<br/>
+And wolde it were so befalle,<br/>
+Bot it is al in other wise.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And tho began he to devise    1390<br/>
+How he the childes Moder fond<br/>
+Upon the See from every lond<br/>
+Withinne a Schip was stiereles,<br/>
+And how this ladi helpeles<br/>
+Forth with hir child he hath forthdrawe.<br/>
+The king hath understonde his sawe,<br/>
+The childes name and axeth tho,<br/>
+And what the Moder hihte also<br/>
+That he him wolde telle he preide.<br/>
+“Moris this child is hote,” he seide,    1400<br/>
+“His Moder hatte Couste, and this<br/>
+I not what maner name it is.”<br/>
+But Allee wiste wel ynowh,<br/>
+Wherof somdiel smylende he lowh;<br/>
+For Couste in Saxoun is to sein<br/>
+Constance upon the word Romein.<br/>
+Bot who that cowthe specefie<br/>
+What tho fell in his fantasie,<br/>
+And how his wit aboute renneth<br/>
+Upon the love in which he brenneth,    1410<br/>
+It were a wonder forto hiere:<br/>
+For he was nouther ther ne hiere,<br/>
+Bot clene out of himself aweie,<br/>
+That he not what to thenke or seie,<br/>
+So fain he wolde it were sche.<br/>
+Wherof his hertes privete<br/>
+Began the werre of yee and nay,<br/>
+The which in such balance lay,<br/>
+That contenance for a throwe<br/>
+He loste, til he mihte knowe    1420<br/>
+The sothe: bot in his memoire<br/>
+The man which lith in purgatoire<br/>
+Desireth noght the hevene more,<br/>
+That he ne longeth al so sore<br/>
+To wite what him schal betide.<br/>
+And whan the bordes were aside<br/>
+And every man was rise aboute,<br/>
+The king hath weyved al the route,<br/>
+And with the Senatour al one<br/>
+He spak and preide him of a bone,    1430<br/>
+To se this Couste, wher sche duelleth<br/>
+At hom with him, so as he telleth.<br/>
+The Senatour was wel appaied,<br/>
+This thing no lengere is delaied,<br/>
+To se this Couste goth the king;<br/>
+And sche was warned of the thing,<br/>
+And with Heleine forth sche cam<br/>
+Ayein the king, and he tho nam<br/>
+Good hiede, and whan he sih his wif,<br/>
+Anon with al his hertes lif    1440<br/>
+He cawhte hire in his arm and kiste.<br/>
+Was nevere wiht that sih ne wiste<br/>
+A man that more joie made,<br/>
+Wherof thei weren alle glade<br/>
+Whiche herde tellen of this chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king tho with his wif Constance,<br/>
+Which hadde a gret part of his wille,<br/>
+In Rome for a time stille<br/>
+Abod and made him wel at ese:<br/>
+Bot so yit cowthe he nevere plese    1450<br/>
+His wif, that sche him wolde sein<br/>
+Of hire astat the trowthe plein,<br/>
+Of what contre that sche was bore,<br/>
+Ne what sche was, and yit therfore<br/>
+With al his wit he hath don sieke.<br/>
+Thus as they lihe abedde and spieke,<br/>
+Sche preide him and conseileth bothe,<br/>
+That for the worschipe of hem bothe,<br/>
+So as hire thoghte it were honeste,<br/>
+He wolde an honourable feste    1460<br/>
+Make, er he wente, in the Cite,<br/>
+Wher themperour himself schal be:<br/>
+He graunteth al that sche him preide.<br/>
+Bot as men in that time seide,<br/>
+This Emperour fro thilke day<br/>
+That ferst his dowhter wente away<br/>
+He was thanne after nevere glad;<br/>
+Bot what that eny man him bad<br/>
+Of grace for his dowhter sake,<br/>
+That grace wolde he noght forsake;    1470<br/>
+And thus ful gret almesse he dede,<br/>
+Wherof sche hadde many a bede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Emperour out of the toun<br/>
+Withinne a ten mile enviroun,<br/>
+Where as it thoghte him for the beste,<br/>
+Hath sondry places forto reste;<br/>
+And as fortune wolde tho,<br/>
+He was duellende at on of tho.<br/>
+The king Allee forth with thassent<br/>
+Of Couste his wif hath thider sent    1480<br/>
+Moris his Sone, as he was taght,<br/>
+To themperour and he goth straght,<br/>
+And in his fader half besoghte,<br/>
+As he which his lordschipe soghte,<br/>
+That of his hihe worthinesse<br/>
+He wolde do so gret meknesse,<br/>
+His oghne toun to come and se,<br/>
+And yive a time in the cite,<br/>
+So that his fader mihte him gete<br/>
+That he wolde ones with him ete.    1490<br/>
+This lord hath granted his requeste;<br/>
+And whan the dai was of the feste,<br/>
+In worschipe of here Emperour<br/>
+The king and ek the Senatour<br/>
+Forth with here wyves bothe tuo,<br/>
+With many a lord and lady mo,<br/>
+On horse riden him ayein;<br/>
+Til it befell, upon a plein<br/>
+Thei sihen wher he was comende.<br/>
+With that Constance anon preiende    1500<br/>
+Spak to hir lord that he abyde,<br/>
+So that sche mai tofore ryde,<br/>
+To ben upon his bienvenue<br/>
+The ferste which schal him salue;<br/>
+And thus after hire lordes graunt<br/>
+Upon a Mule whyt amblaunt<br/>
+Forth with a fewe rod this qweene.<br/>
+Thei wondren what sche wolde mene,<br/>
+And riden after softe pas;<br/>
+Bot whan this ladi come was    1510<br/>
+To themperour, in his presence<br/>
+Sche seide alowd in audience,<br/>
+“Mi lord, mi fader, wel you be!<br/>
+And of this time that I se<br/>
+Youre honour and your goode hele,<br/>
+Which is the helpe of my querele,<br/>
+I thonke unto the goddes myht.”<br/>
+For joie his herte was affliht<br/>
+Of that sche tolde in remembrance;<br/>
+And whanne he wiste it was Constance,    1520<br/>
+Was nevere fader half so blithe.<br/>
+Wepende he keste hire ofte sithe,<br/>
+So was his herte al overcome;<br/>
+For thogh his Moder were come<br/>
+Fro deth to lyve out of the grave,<br/>
+He mihte nomor wonder have<br/>
+Than he hath whan that he hire sih.<br/>
+With that hire oghne lord cam nyh<br/>
+And is to themperour obeied;<br/>
+Bot whan the fortune is bewreied,    1530<br/>
+How that Constance is come aboute,<br/>
+So hard an herte was non oute,<br/>
+That he for pite tho ne wepte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arcennus, which hire fond and kepte,<br/>
+Was thanne glad of that is falle,<br/>
+So that with joie among hem alle<br/>
+Thei riden in at Rome gate.<br/>
+This Emperour thoghte al to late,<br/>
+Til that the Pope were come,<br/>
+And of the lordes sende some    1540<br/>
+To preie him that he wolde haste:<br/>
+And he cam forth in alle haste,<br/>
+And whan that he the tale herde,<br/>
+How wonderly this chance ferde,<br/>
+He thonketh god of his miracle,<br/>
+To whos miht mai be non obstacle:<br/>
+The king a noble feste hem made,<br/>
+And thus thei weren alle glade.<br/>
+A parlement, er that thei wente,<br/>
+Thei setten unto this entente,    1550<br/>
+To puten Rome in full espeir<br/>
+That Moris was apparant heir<br/>
+And scholde abide with hem stille,<br/>
+For such was al the londes wille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan every thing was fulli spoke,<br/>
+Of sorwe and queint was al the smoke,<br/>
+Tho tok his leve Allee the king,<br/>
+And with full many a riche thing,<br/>
+Which themperour him hadde yive,<br/>
+He goth a glad lif forto live;    1560<br/>
+For he Constance hath in his hond,<br/>
+Which was the confort of his lond.<br/>
+For whan that he cam hom ayein,<br/>
+Ther is no tunge it mihte sein<br/>
+What joie was that ilke stounde<br/>
+Of that he hath his qweene founde,<br/>
+Which ferst was sent of goddes sonde,<br/>
+Whan sche was drive upon the Stronde,<br/>
+Be whom the misbelieve of Sinne<br/>
+Was left, and Cristes feith cam inne    1570<br/>
+To hem that whilom were blinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot he which hindreth every kinde<br/>
+And for no gold mai be forboght,<br/>
+The deth comende er he be soght,<br/>
+Tok with this king such aqueintance,<br/>
+That he with al his retenance<br/>
+Ne mihte noght defende his lif;<br/>
+And thus he parteth from his wif,<br/>
+Which thanne made sorwe ynowh.<br/>
+And therupon hire herte drowh    1580<br/>
+To leven Engelond for evere<br/>
+And go wher that sche hadde levere,<br/>
+To Rome, whenne that sche cam:<br/>
+And thus of al the lond sche nam<br/>
+Hir leve, and goth to Rome ayein.<br/>
+And after that the bokes sein,<br/>
+She was noght there bot a throwe,<br/>
+Whan deth of kinde hath overthrowe<br/>
+Hir worthi fader, which men seide<br/>
+That he betwen hire armes deide.    1590<br/>
+And afterward the yer suiende<br/>
+The god hath mad of hire an ende,<br/>
+And fro this worldes faierie<br/>
+Hath take hire into compaignie.<br/>
+Moris hir Sone was corouned,<br/>
+Which so ferforth was abandouned<br/>
+To Cristes feith, that men him calle<br/>
+Moris the cristeneste of alle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the wel meninge of love<br/>
+Was ate laste set above;    1600<br/>
+And so as thou hast herd tofore,<br/>
+The false tunges weren lore,<br/>
+Whiche upon love wolden lie.<br/>
+Forthi touchende of this Envie<br/>
+Which longeth unto bacbitinge,<br/>
+Be war thou make no lesinge<br/>
+In hindringe of an other wiht:<br/>
+And if thou wolt be tawht ariht<br/>
+What meschief bakbitinge doth<br/>
+Be other weie, a tale soth    1610<br/>
+Now miht thou hiere next suiende,<br/>
+Which to this vice is acordende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique, as thou schalt wite,<br/>
+A gret ensample I finde write,<br/>
+Which I schal telle upon this thing.<br/>
+Philippe of Macedoyne kyng<br/>
+Two Sones hadde be his wif,<br/>
+Whos fame is yit in Grece rif:<br/>
+Demetrius the ferste brother<br/>
+Was hote, and Perseus that other.    1620<br/>
+Demetrius men seiden tho<br/>
+The betre knyht was of the tuo,<br/>
+To whom the lond was entendant,<br/>
+As he which heir was apparant<br/>
+To regne after his fader dai:<br/>
+Bot that thing which no water mai<br/>
+Quenche in this world, bot evere brenneth,<br/>
+Into his brother herte it renneth,<br/>
+The proude Envie of that he sih<br/>
+His brother scholde clymbe on hih,    1630<br/>
+And he to him mot thanne obeie:<br/>
+That may he soffre be no weie.<br/>
+With strengthe dorst he nothing fonde,<br/>
+So tok he lesinge upon honde,<br/>
+Whan he sih time and spak therto.<br/>
+For it befell that time so,<br/>
+His fader grete werres hadde<br/>
+With Rome, whiche he streite ladde<br/>
+Thurgh mihty hond of his manhode,<br/>
+As he which hath ynowh knihthode,    1640<br/>
+And ofte hem hadde sore grieved.<br/>
+Bot er the werre were achieved,<br/>
+As he was upon ordinance<br/>
+At hom in Grece, it fell per chance,<br/>
+Demetrius, which ofte aboute<br/>
+Ridende was, stod that time oute,<br/>
+So that this Perse in his absence,<br/>
+Which bar the tunge of pestilence,<br/>
+With false wordes whiche he feigneth<br/>
+Upon his oghne brother pleigneth    1650<br/>
+In privete behinde his bak,<br/>
+And to his fader thus he spak:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mi diere fader, I am holde<br/>
+Be weie of kinde, as resoun wolde,<br/>
+That I fro yow schal nothing hide,<br/>
+Which mihte torne in eny side<br/>
+Of youre astat into grevance:<br/>
+Forthi myn hertes obeissance<br/>
+Towardes you I thenke kepe;<br/>
+For it is good ye take kepe    1660<br/>
+Upon a thing which is me told.<br/>
+Mi brother hath ous alle sold<br/>
+To hem of Rome, and you also;<br/>
+For thanne they behote him so,<br/>
+That he with hem schal regne in pes.<br/>
+Thus hath he cast for his encress<br/>
+That youre astat schal go to noght;<br/>
+And this to proeve schal be broght<br/>
+So ferforth, that I undertake<br/>
+It schal noght wel mow be forsake.”    1670
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king upon this tale ansuerde<br/>
+And seide, if this thing which he herde<br/>
+Be soth and mai be broght to prove,<br/>
+“It schal noght be to his behove,<br/>
+Which so hath schapen ous the werste,<br/>
+For he himself schal be the ferste<br/>
+That schal be ded, if that I mai.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus afterward upon a dai,<br/>
+Whan that Demetrius was come,<br/>
+Anon his fader hath him nome,    1680<br/>
+And bad unto his brother Perse<br/>
+That he his tale schal reherse<br/>
+Of thilke tresoun which he tolde.<br/>
+And he, which al untrowthe wolde,<br/>
+Conseileth that so hih a nede<br/>
+Be treted wher as it mai spede,<br/>
+In comun place of juggement.<br/>
+The king therto yaf his assent,<br/>
+Demetrius was put in hold,<br/>
+Wherof that Perseus was bold.    1690<br/>
+Thus stod the trowthe under the charge,<br/>
+And the falshede goth at large,<br/>
+Which thurgh beheste hath overcome<br/>
+The greteste of the lordes some,<br/>
+That privelich of his acord<br/>
+Thei stonde as witnesse of record:<br/>
+The jugge was mad favorable:<br/>
+Thus was the lawe deceivable<br/>
+So ferforth that the trowthe fond<br/>
+Rescousse non, and thus the lond    1700<br/>
+Forth with the king deceived were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gulteles was dampned there<br/>
+And deide upon accusement:<br/>
+Bot such a fals conspirement,<br/>
+Thogh it be prive for a throwe,<br/>
+Godd wolde noght it were unknowe;<br/>
+And that was afterward wel proved<br/>
+In him which hath the deth controved.<br/>
+Of that his brother was so slain<br/>
+This Perseus was wonder fain,    1710<br/>
+As he that tho was apparant,<br/>
+Upon the Regne and expectant;<br/>
+Wherof he wax so proud and vein,<br/>
+That he his fader in desdeign<br/>
+Hath take and set of non acompte,<br/>
+As he which thoghte him to surmonte;<br/>
+That wher he was ferst debonaire,<br/>
+He was tho rebell and contraire,<br/>
+And noght as heir bot as a king<br/>
+He tok upon him alle thing    1720<br/>
+Of malice and of tirannie<br/>
+In contempt of the Regalie,<br/>
+Livende his fader, and so wroghte,<br/>
+That whan the fader him bethoghte<br/>
+And sih to whether side it drowh,<br/>
+Anon he wiste well ynowh<br/>
+How Perse after his false tunge<br/>
+Hath so thenvious belle runge,<br/>
+That he hath slain his oghne brother.<br/>
+Wherof as thanne he knew non other,    1730<br/>
+Bot sodeinly the jugge he nom,<br/>
+Which corrupt sat upon the dom,<br/>
+In such a wise and hath him pressed,<br/>
+That he the sothe him hath confessed<br/>
+Of al that hath be spoke and do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mor sori than the king was tho<br/>
+Was nevere man upon this Molde,<br/>
+And thoghte in certain that he wolde<br/>
+Vengance take upon this wrong.<br/>
+Bot thother parti was so strong,    1740<br/>
+That for the lawe of no statut<br/>
+Ther mai no riht ben execut;<br/>
+And upon this division<br/>
+The lond was torned up so doun:<br/>
+Wherof his herte is so distraght,<br/>
+That he for pure sorwe hath caght<br/>
+The maladie of which nature<br/>
+Is queint in every creature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And whan this king was passed thus,<br/>
+This false tunged Perseus    1750<br/>
+The regiment hath underfonge.<br/>
+Bot ther mai nothing stonde longe<br/>
+Which is noght upon trowthe grounded;<br/>
+For god, which alle thing hath bounded<br/>
+And sih the falshod of his guile,<br/>
+Hath set him bot a litel while,<br/>
+That he schal regne upon depos;<br/>
+For sodeinliche as he aros<br/>
+So sodeinliche doun he fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In thilke time it so befell,    1760<br/>
+This newe king of newe Pride<br/>
+With strengthe schop him forto ride,<br/>
+And seide he wolde Rome waste,<br/>
+Wherof he made a besi haste,<br/>
+And hath assembled him an host<br/>
+In al that evere he mihte most:<br/>
+What man that mihte wepne bere<br/>
+Of alle he wolde non forbere;<br/>
+So that it mihte noght be nombred,<br/>
+The folk which after was encombred    1770<br/>
+Thurgh him, that god wolde overthrowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anon it was at Rome knowe,<br/>
+The pompe which that Perse ladde;<br/>
+And the Romeins that time hadde<br/>
+A Consul, which was cleped thus<br/>
+Be name, Paul Emilius,<br/>
+A noble, a worthi kniht withalle;<br/>
+And he, which chief was of hem alle,<br/>
+This werre on honde hath undertake.<br/>
+And whanne he scholde his leve take    1780<br/>
+Of a yong dowhter which was his,<br/>
+Sche wepte, and he what cause it is<br/>
+Hire axeth, and sche him ansuerde<br/>
+That Perse is ded; and he it herde,<br/>
+And wondreth what sche meene wolde:<br/>
+And sche upon childhode him tolde<br/>
+That Perse hir litel hound is ded.<br/>
+With that he pulleth up his hed<br/>
+And made riht a glad visage,<br/>
+And seide how that was a presage    1790<br/>
+Touchende unto that other Perse,<br/>
+Of that fortune him scholde adverse,<br/>
+He seith, for such a prenostik<br/>
+Most of an hound was to him lik:<br/>
+For as it is an houndes kinde<br/>
+To berke upon a man behinde,<br/>
+Riht so behinde his brother bak<br/>
+With false wordes whiche he spak<br/>
+He hath do slain, and that is rowthe.<br/>
+“Bot he which hateth alle untrowthe,    1800<br/>
+The hihe god, it schal redresse;<br/>
+For so my dowhter prophetesse<br/>
+Forth with hir litel houndes deth<br/>
+Betokneth.” And thus forth he geth<br/>
+Conforted of this evidence,<br/>
+With the Romeins in his defence<br/>
+Ayein the Greks that ben comende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Perseüs, as noght seende<br/>
+This meschief which that him abod,<br/>
+With al his multitude rod,    1810<br/>
+And prided him upon the thing,<br/>
+Of that he was become a king,<br/>
+And how he hadde his regne gete;<br/>
+Bot he hath al the riht foryete<br/>
+Which longeth unto governance.<br/>
+Wherof thurgh goddes ordinance<br/>
+It fell, upon the wynter tide<br/>
+That with his host he scholde ride<br/>
+Over Danubie thilke flod,<br/>
+Which al befrose thanne stod    1820<br/>
+So harde, that he wende wel<br/>
+To passe: bot the blinde whiel,<br/>
+Which torneth ofte er men be war,<br/>
+Thilke ys which that the horsmen bar<br/>
+Tobrak, so that a gret partie<br/>
+Was dreint; of the chivalerie<br/>
+The rerewarde it tok aweie,<br/>
+Cam non of hem to londe dreie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paulus the worthi kniht Romein<br/>
+Be his aspie it herde sein,    1830<br/>
+And hasteth him al that he may,<br/>
+So that upon that other day<br/>
+He cam wher he this host beheld,<br/>
+And that was in a large feld,<br/>
+Wher the Baneres ben desplaied.<br/>
+He hath anon hise men arraied,<br/>
+And whan that he was embatailled,<br/>
+He goth and hath the feld assailed,<br/>
+And slowh and tok al that he fond;<br/>
+Wherof the Macedoyne lond,    1840<br/>
+Which thurgh king Alisandre honoured<br/>
+Long time stod, was tho devoured.<br/>
+To Perse and al that infortune<br/>
+Thei wyte, so that the comune<br/>
+Of al the lond his heir exile;<br/>
+And he despeired for the while<br/>
+Desguised in a povere wede<br/>
+To Rome goth, and ther for nede<br/>
+The craft which thilke time was,<br/>
+To worche in latoun and in bras,    1850<br/>
+He lerneth for his sustienance.<br/>
+Such was the Sones pourveance,<br/>
+And of his fader it is seid,<br/>
+In strong prisoun that he was leid<br/>
+In Albe, wher that he was ded<br/>
+For hunger and defalte of bred.<br/>
+The hound was tokne and prophecie<br/>
+That lich an hound he scholde die,<br/>
+Which lich was of condicioun,<br/>
+Whan he with his detraccioun    1860<br/>
+Bark on his brother so behinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, what profit a man mai finde,<br/>
+Which hindre wole an other wiht.<br/>
+Forthi with al thin hole miht,<br/>
+Mi Sone, eschuie thilke vice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, elles were I nyce:<br/>
+For ye therof so wel have spoke,<br/>
+That it is in myn herte loke<br/>
+And evere schal: bot of Envie,<br/>
+If ther be more in his baillie    1870<br/>
+Towardes love, sai me what.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, as guile under the hat<br/>
+With sleyhtes of a tregetour<br/>
+Is hidd, Envie of such colour<br/>
+Hath yit the ferthe deceivant,<br/>
+The which is cleped Falssemblant,<br/>
+Wherof the matiere and the forme<br/>
+Now herkne and I thee schal enforme.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Falssemblant if I schal telle,<br/>
+Above alle othre it is the welle    1880<br/>
+Out of the which deceipte floweth.<br/>
+Ther is noman so wys that knoweth<br/>
+Of thilke flod which is the tyde,<br/>
+Ne how he scholde himselven guide<br/>
+To take sauf passage there.<br/>
+And yit the wynd to mannes Ere<br/>
+Is softe, and as it semeth oute<br/>
+It makth clier weder al aboute;<br/>
+Bot thogh it seme, it is noght so.<br/>
+For Falssemblant hath everemo    1890<br/>
+Of his conseil in compaignie<br/>
+The derke untrewe Ypocrisie,<br/>
+Whos word descordeth to his thoght:<br/>
+Forthi thei ben togedre broght<br/>
+Of o covine, of on houshold,<br/>
+As it schal after this be told.<br/>
+Of Falssemblant it nedeth noght<br/>
+To telle of olde ensamples oght;<br/>
+For al dai in experience<br/>
+A man mai se thilke evidence    1900<br/>
+Of faire wordes whiche he hiereth;<br/>
+Bot yit the barge Envie stiereth<br/>
+And halt it evere fro the londe,<br/>
+Wher Falssemblant with Ore on honde<br/>
+It roweth, and wol noght arive,<br/>
+Bot let it on the wawes dryve<br/>
+In gret tempeste and gret debat,<br/>
+Wherof that love and his astat<br/>
+Empeireth. And therfore I rede,<br/>
+Mi Sone, that thou fle and drede    1910<br/>
+This vice, and what that othre sein,<br/>
+Let thi Semblant be trewe and plein.<br/>
+For Falssemblant is thilke vice,<br/>
+Which nevere was withoute office:<br/>
+Wher that Envie thenkth to guile,<br/>
+He schal be for that ilke while<br/>
+Of prive conseil Messagier.<br/>
+For whan his semblant is most clier,<br/>
+Thanne is he most derk in his thoght,<br/>
+Thogh men him se, thei knowe him noght;    1920<br/>
+Bot as it scheweth in the glas<br/>
+Thing which therinne nevere was,<br/>
+So scheweth it in his visage<br/>
+That nevere was in his corage:<br/>
+Thus doth he al his thing with sleyhte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now ley thi conscience in weyhte,<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, and schrif the hier,<br/>
+If thou were evere Custummer<br/>
+To Falssemblant in eny wise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For ought I can me yit avise,    1930<br/>
+Mi goode fader, certes no.<br/>
+If I for love have oght do so,<br/>
+Now asketh, I wol praie yow:<br/>
+For elles I wot nevere how<br/>
+Of Falssemblant that I have gilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and sithen that thou wilt<br/>
+That I schal axe, gabbe noght,<br/>
+Bot tell if evere was thi thoght<br/>
+With Falssemblant and coverture<br/>
+To wite of eny creature    1940<br/>
+How that he was with love lad;<br/>
+So were he sori, were he glad,<br/>
+Whan that thou wistest how it were,<br/>
+Al that he rounede in thin Ere<br/>
+Thou toldest forth in other place,<br/>
+To setten him fro loves grace<br/>
+Of what womman that thee beste liste,<br/>
+Ther as noman his conseil wiste<br/>
+Bot thou, be whom he was deceived<br/>
+Of love, and from his pourpos weyved;    1950<br/>
+And thoghtest that his destourbance<br/>
+Thin oghne cause scholde avance,<br/>
+As who saith, “I am so celee,<br/>
+Ther mai no mannes privete<br/>
+Be heled half so wel as myn.”<br/>
+Art thou, mi Sone, of such engin?<br/>
+Tell on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode fader, nay<br/>
+As for the more part I say;<br/>
+Bot of somdiel I am beknowe,<br/>
+That I mai stonde in thilke rowe    1960<br/>
+Amonges hem that Saundres use.<br/>
+I wol me noght therof excuse,<br/>
+That I with such colour ne steyne,<br/>
+Whan I my beste Semblant feigne<br/>
+To my felawh, til that I wot<br/>
+Al his conseil bothe cold and hot:<br/>
+For be that cause I make him chiere,<br/>
+Til I his love knowe and hiere;<br/>
+And if so be myn herte soucheth<br/>
+That oght unto my ladi toucheth    1970<br/>
+Of love that he wol me telle,<br/>
+Anon I renne unto the welle<br/>
+And caste water in the fyr,<br/>
+So that his carte amidd the Myr,<br/>
+Be that I have his conseil knowe,<br/>
+Fulofte sithe I overthrowe,<br/>
+Whan that he weneth best to stonde.<br/>
+Bot this I do you understonde,<br/>
+If that a man love elles where,<br/>
+So that my ladi be noght there,    1980<br/>
+And he me telle, I wole it hide,<br/>
+Ther schal no word ascape aside,<br/>
+For with deceipte of no semblant<br/>
+To him breke I no covenant;<br/>
+Me liketh noght in other place<br/>
+To lette noman of his grace,<br/>
+Ne forto ben inquisitif<br/>
+To knowe an other mannes lif:<br/>
+Wher that he love or love noght,<br/>
+That toucheth nothing to my thoght,    1990<br/>
+Bot al it passeth thurgh myn Ere<br/>
+Riht as a thing that nevere were,<br/>
+And is foryete and leid beside.<br/>
+Bot if it touche on eny side<br/>
+Mi ladi, as I have er spoken,<br/>
+Myn Eres ben noght thanne loken;<br/>
+For certes, whanne that betitt,<br/>
+My will, myn herte and al my witt<br/>
+Ben fully set to herkne and spire<br/>
+What eny man wol speke of hire.    2000<br/>
+Thus have I feigned compaignie<br/>
+Fulofte, for I wolde aspie<br/>
+What thing it is that eny man<br/>
+Telle of mi worthi lady can:<br/>
+And for tuo causes I do this,<br/>
+The ferste cause wherof is,&mdash;<br/>
+If that I myhte ofherkne and seke<br/>
+That eny man of hire mispeke,<br/>
+I wolde excuse hire so fully,<br/>
+That whan sche wist in inderly,    2010<br/>
+Min hope scholde be the more<br/>
+To have hir thank for everemore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That other cause, I you assure,<br/>
+Is, why that I be coverture<br/>
+Have feigned semblant ofte time<br/>
+To hem that passen alday byme<br/>
+And ben lovers als wel as I,<br/>
+For this I weene trewely,<br/>
+That ther is of hem alle non,<br/>
+That thei ne loven everich on    2020<br/>
+Mi ladi: for sothliche I lieve<br/>
+And durste setten it in prieve,<br/>
+Is non so wys that scholde asterte,<br/>
+Bot he were lustles in his herte,<br/>
+Forwhy and he my ladi sihe,<br/>
+Hir visage and hir goodlych yhe,<br/>
+Bot he hire lovede, er he wente.<br/>
+And for that such is myn entente,<br/>
+That is the cause of myn aspie,<br/>
+Why that I feigne compaignie    2030<br/>
+And make felawe overal;<br/>
+For gladly wolde I knowen al<br/>
+And holde me covert alway,<br/>
+That I fulofte ye or nay<br/>
+Ne liste ansuere in eny wise,<br/>
+Bot feigne semblant as the wise<br/>
+And herkne tales, til I knowe<br/>
+Mi ladi lovers al arowe.<br/>
+And whanne I hiere how thei have wroght,<br/>
+I fare as thogh I herde it noght    2040<br/>
+And as I no word understode;<br/>
+Bot that is nothing for here goode:<br/>
+For lieveth wel, the sothe is this,<br/>
+That whanne I knowe al how it is,<br/>
+I wol bot forthren hem a lite,<br/>
+Bot al the worste I can endite<br/>
+I telle it to my ladi plat<br/>
+In forthringe of myn oghne astat,<br/>
+And hindre hem al that evere I may.<br/>
+Bot for al that yit dar I say,    2050<br/>
+I finde unto miself no bote,<br/>
+Althogh myn herte nedes mote<br/>
+Thurgh strengthe of love al that I hiere<br/>
+Discovere unto my ladi diere:<br/>
+For in good feith I have no miht<br/>
+To hele fro that swete wiht,<br/>
+If that it touche hire eny thing.<br/>
+Bot this wot wel the hevene king,<br/>
+That sithen ferst this world began,<br/>
+Unto non other strange man    2060<br/>
+Ne feigned I semblant ne chiere,<br/>
+To wite or axe of his matiere,<br/>
+Thogh that he lovede ten or tuelve,<br/>
+Whanne it was noght my ladi selve:<br/>
+Bot if he wolde axe eny red<br/>
+Al onlich of his oghne hed,<br/>
+How he with other love ferde,<br/>
+His tales with myn Ere I herde,<br/>
+Bot to myn herte cam it noght<br/>
+Ne sank no deppere in my thoght,    2070<br/>
+Bot hield conseil, as I was bede,<br/>
+And tolde it nevere in other stede,<br/>
+Bot let it passen as it com.<br/>
+Now, fader, say what is thi dom,<br/>
+And hou thou wolt that I be peined<br/>
+For such Semblant as I have feigned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if reson be wel peised,<br/>
+Ther mai no vertu ben unpreised<br/>
+Ne vice non be set in pris.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, if thou be wys,    2080<br/>
+Do no viser upon thi face,<br/>
+Which as wol noght thin herte embrace:<br/>
+For if thou do, withinne a throwe<br/>
+To othre men it schal be knowe,<br/>
+So miht thou lihtli falle in blame<br/>
+And lese a gret part of thi name.<br/>
+And natheles in this degree<br/>
+Fulofte time thou myht se<br/>
+Of suche men that now aday<br/>
+This vice setten in a say:    2090<br/>
+I speke it for no mannes blame,<br/>
+Bot forto warne thee the same.<br/>
+Mi Sone, as I mai hiere talke<br/>
+In every place where I walke,<br/>
+I not if it be so or non,<br/>
+Bot it is manye daies gon<br/>
+That I ferst herde telle this,<br/>
+How Falssemblant hath ben and is<br/>
+Most comunly fro yer to yere<br/>
+With hem that duelle among ous here,    2100<br/>
+Of suche as we Lombardes calle.<br/>
+For thei ben the slyeste of alle,<br/>
+So as men sein in toune aboute,<br/>
+To feigne and schewe thing withoute<br/>
+Which is revers to that withinne:<br/>
+Wherof that thei fulofte winne,<br/>
+Whan thei be reson scholden lese;<br/>
+Thei ben the laste and yit thei chese,<br/>
+And we the ferste, and yit behinde<br/>
+We gon, there as we scholden finde    2110<br/>
+The profit of oure oghne lond:<br/>
+Thus gon thei fre withoute bond<br/>
+To don her profit al at large,<br/>
+And othre men bere al the charge.<br/>
+Of Lombardz unto this covine,<br/>
+Whiche alle londes conne engine,<br/>
+Mai Falssemblant in special<br/>
+Be likned, for thei overal,<br/>
+Wher as they thenken forto duelle,<br/>
+Among hemself, so as thei telle,    2120<br/>
+Ferst ben enformed forto lere<br/>
+A craft which cleped is Fa crere:<br/>
+For if Fa crere come aboute,<br/>
+Thanne afterward hem stant no doute<br/>
+To voide with a soubtil hond<br/>
+The beste goodes of the lond<br/>
+And bringe chaf and take corn.<br/>
+Where as Fa crere goth toforn,<br/>
+In all his weie he fynt no lette;<br/>
+That Dore can non huissher schette    2130<br/>
+In which him list to take entre:<br/>
+And thus the conseil most secre<br/>
+Of every thing Fa crere knoweth,<br/>
+Which into strange place he bloweth,<br/>
+Where as he wot it mai most grieve.<br/>
+And thus Fa crere makth believe,<br/>
+So that fulofte he hath deceived,<br/>
+Er that he mai ben aperceived.<br/>
+Thus is this vice forto drede;<br/>
+For who these olde bokes rede    2140<br/>
+Of suche ensamples as were ar,<br/>
+Him oghte be the more war<br/>
+Of alle tho that feigne chiere,<br/>
+Wherof thou schalt a tale hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Falssemblant which is believed<br/>
+Ful many a worthi wiht is grieved,<br/>
+And was long time er we wer bore.<br/>
+To thee, my Sone, I wol therfore<br/>
+A tale telle of Falssemblant,<br/>
+Which falseth many a covenant,    2150<br/>
+And many a fraude of fals conseil<br/>
+Ther ben hangende upon his Seil:<br/>
+And that aboghten gulteles<br/>
+Bothe Deianire and Hercules,<br/>
+The whiche in gret desese felle<br/>
+Thurgh Falssemblant, as I schal telle.<br/>
+Whan Hercules withinne a throwe<br/>
+Al only hath his herte throwe<br/>
+Upon this faire Deianire,<br/>
+It fell him on a dai desire,    2160<br/>
+Upon a Rivere as he stod,<br/>
+That passe he wolde over the flod<br/>
+Withoute bot, and with him lede<br/>
+His love, bot he was in drede<br/>
+For tendresce of that swete wiht,<br/>
+For he knew noght the forde ariht.<br/>
+Ther was a Geant thanne nyh,<br/>
+Which Nessus hihte, and whanne he sih<br/>
+This Hercules and Deianyre,<br/>
+Withinne his herte he gan conspire,    2170<br/>
+As he which thurgh his tricherie<br/>
+Hath Hercules in gret envie,<br/>
+Which he bar in his herte loke,<br/>
+And thanne he thoghte it schal be wroke.<br/>
+Bot he ne dorste natheles<br/>
+Ayein this worthi Hercules<br/>
+Falle in debat as forto feihte;<br/>
+Bot feigneth Semblant al be sleihte<br/>
+Of frendschipe and of alle goode,<br/>
+And comth where as thei bothe stode,    2180<br/>
+And makth hem al the chiere he can,<br/>
+And seith that as here oghne man<br/>
+He is al redy forto do<br/>
+What thing he mai; and it fell so<br/>
+That thei upon his Semblant triste,<br/>
+And axen him if that he wiste<br/>
+What thing hem were best to done,<br/>
+So that thei mihten sauf and sone<br/>
+The water passe, he and sche.<br/>
+And whan Nessus the privete    2190<br/>
+Knew of here herte what it mente,<br/>
+As he that was of double entente,<br/>
+He made hem riht a glad visage;<br/>
+And whanne he herde of the passage<br/>
+Of him and hire, he thoghte guile,<br/>
+And feigneth Semblant for a while<br/>
+To don hem plesance and servise,<br/>
+Bot he thoghte al an other wise.<br/>
+This Nessus with hise wordes slyhe<br/>
+Yaf such conseil tofore here yhe    2200<br/>
+Which semeth outward profitable<br/>
+And was withinne deceivable.<br/>
+He bad hem of the Stremes depe<br/>
+That thei be war and take kepe,<br/>
+So as thei knowe noght the pas;<br/>
+Bot forto helpe in such a cas,<br/>
+He seith himself that for here ese<br/>
+He wolde, if that it mihte hem plese,<br/>
+The passage of the water take,<br/>
+And for this ladi undertake    2210<br/>
+To bere unto that other stronde<br/>
+And sauf to sette hire up alonde,<br/>
+And Hercules may thanne also<br/>
+The weie knowe how he schal go:<br/>
+And herto thei acorden alle.<br/>
+Bot what as after schal befalle,<br/>
+Wel payd was Hercules of this,<br/>
+And this Geant also glad is,<br/>
+And tok this ladi up alofte<br/>
+And set hire on his schuldre softe,    2220<br/>
+And in the flod began to wade,<br/>
+As he which no grucchinge made,<br/>
+And bar hire over sauf and sound.<br/>
+Bot whanne he stod on dreie ground<br/>
+And Hercules was fer behinde,<br/>
+He sette his trowthe al out of mynde,<br/>
+Who so therof be lief or loth,<br/>
+With Deianyre and forth he goth,<br/>
+As he that thoghte to dissevere<br/>
+The compaignie of hem for evere.    2230<br/>
+Whan Hercules therof tok hiede,<br/>
+Als faste as evere he mihte him spiede<br/>
+He hyeth after in a throwe;<br/>
+And hapneth that he hadde a bowe,<br/>
+The which in alle haste he bende,<br/>
+As he that wolde an Arwe sende,<br/>
+Which he tofore hadde envenimed.<br/>
+He hath so wel his schote timed,<br/>
+That he him thurgh the bodi smette,<br/>
+And thus the false wiht he lette.    2240
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot lest now such a felonie:<br/>
+Whan Nessus wiste he scholde die,<br/>
+He tok to Deianyre his scherte,<br/>
+Which with the blod was of his herte<br/>
+Thurghout desteigned overal,<br/>
+And tolde how sche it kepe schal<br/>
+Al prively to this entente,<br/>
+That if hire lord his herte wente<br/>
+To love in eny other place,<br/>
+The scherte, he seith, hath such a grace,    2250<br/>
+That if sche mai so mochel make<br/>
+That he the scherte upon him take,<br/>
+He schal alle othre lete in vein<br/>
+And torne unto hire love ayein.<br/>
+Who was tho glad bot Deianyre?<br/>
+Hire thoghte hire herte was afyre<br/>
+Til it was in hire cofre loke,<br/>
+So that no word therof was spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The daies gon, the yeres passe,<br/>
+The hertes waxen lasse and lasse    2260<br/>
+Of hem that ben to love untrewe:<br/>
+This Hercules with herte newe<br/>
+His love hath set on Eolen,<br/>
+And therof spieken alle men.<br/>
+This Eolen, this faire maide,<br/>
+Was, as men thilke time saide,<br/>
+The kinges dowhter of Eurice;<br/>
+And sche made Hercules so nyce<br/>
+Upon hir Love and so assote,<br/>
+That he him clotheth in hire cote,    2270<br/>
+And sche in his was clothed ofte;<br/>
+And thus fieblesce is set alofte,<br/>
+And strengthe was put under fote,<br/>
+Ther can noman therof do bote.<br/>
+Whan Deianyre hath herd this speche,<br/>
+Ther was no sorwe forto seche:<br/>
+Of other helpe wot sche non,<br/>
+Bot goth unto hire cofre anon;<br/>
+With wepende yhe and woful herte<br/>
+Sche tok out thilke unhappi scherte,    2280<br/>
+As sche that wende wel to do,<br/>
+And broghte hire werk aboute so<br/>
+That Hercules this scherte on dede,<br/>
+To such entente as she was bede<br/>
+Of Nessus, so as I seide er.<br/>
+Bot therof was sche noght the ner,<br/>
+As no fortune may be weyved;<br/>
+With Falssemblant sche was deceived,<br/>
+That whan sche wende best have wonne,<br/>
+Sche lost al that sche hath begonne.    2290<br/>
+For thilke scherte unto the bon<br/>
+His body sette afyre anon,<br/>
+And cleveth so, it mai noght twinne,<br/>
+For the venym that was therinne.<br/>
+And he thanne as a wilde man<br/>
+Unto the hihe wode he ran,<br/>
+And as the Clerk Ovide telleth,<br/>
+The grete tres to grounde he felleth<br/>
+With strengthe al of his oghne myght,<br/>
+And made an huge fyr upriht,    2300<br/>
+And lepte himself therinne at ones<br/>
+And brende him bothe fleissh and bones.<br/>
+Which thing cam al thurgh Falssemblant,<br/>
+That false Nessus the Geant<br/>
+Made unto him and to his wif;<br/>
+Wherof that he hath lost his lif,<br/>
+And sche sori for everemo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, er thee be wo,<br/>
+I rede, be wel war therfore;<br/>
+For whan so gret a man was lore,    2310<br/>
+It oghte yive a gret conceipte<br/>
+To warne alle othre of such deceipte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grant mercy, fader, I am war<br/>
+So fer that I nomore dar<br/>
+Of Falssemblant take aqueintance;<br/>
+Bot rathere I wol do penance<br/>
+That I have feigned chiere er this.<br/>
+Now axeth forth, what so ther is<br/>
+Of that belongeth to my schrifte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, yit ther is the fifte    2320<br/>
+Which is conceived of Envie,<br/>
+And cleped is Supplantarie,<br/>
+Thurgh whos compassement and guile<br/>
+Ful many a man hath lost his while<br/>
+In love als wel as otherwise,<br/>
+Hierafter as I schal devise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vice of Supplantacioun<br/>
+With many a fals collacioun,<br/>
+Which he conspireth al unknowe,<br/>
+Full ofte time hath overthrowe    2330<br/>
+The worschipe of an other man.<br/>
+So wel no lif awayte can<br/>
+Ayein his sleyhte forto caste,<br/>
+That he his pourpos ate laste<br/>
+Ne hath, er that it be withset.<br/>
+Bot most of alle his herte is set<br/>
+In court upon these grete Offices<br/>
+Of dignitees and benefices:<br/>
+Thus goth he with his sleyhte aboute<br/>
+To hindre and schowve an other oute    2340<br/>
+And stonden with his slyh compas<br/>
+In stede there an other was;<br/>
+And so to sette himselven inne,<br/>
+He reccheth noght, be so he winne,<br/>
+Of that an other man schal lese,<br/>
+And thus fulofte chalk for chese<br/>
+He changeth with ful litel cost,<br/>
+Wherof an other hath the lost<br/>
+And he the profit schal receive.<br/>
+For his fortune is to deceive    2350<br/>
+And forto change upon the whel<br/>
+His wo with othre mennes wel:<br/>
+Of that an other man avaleth,<br/>
+His oghne astat thus up he haleth,<br/>
+And takth the bridd to his beyete,<br/>
+Wher othre men the buisshes bete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and in the same wise<br/>
+Ther ben lovers of such emprise,<br/>
+That schapen hem to be relieved<br/>
+Where it is wrong to ben achieved:    2360<br/>
+For it is other mannes riht,<br/>
+Which he hath taken dai and niht<br/>
+To kepe for his oghne Stor<br/>
+Toward himself for everemor,<br/>
+And is his propre be the lawe,<br/>
+Which thing that axeth no felawe,<br/>
+If love holde his covenant.<br/>
+Bot thei that worchen be supplaunt,<br/>
+Yit wolden thei a man supplaunte,<br/>
+And take a part of thilke plaunte    2370<br/>
+Which he hath for himselve set:<br/>
+And so fulofte is al unknet,<br/>
+That som man weneth be riht fast.<br/>
+For Supplant with his slyhe cast<br/>
+Fulofte happneth forto mowe<br/>
+Thing which an other man hath sowe,<br/>
+And makth comun of proprete<br/>
+With sleihte and with soubtilite,<br/>
+As men mai se fro yer to yere.<br/>
+Thus cleymeth he the bot to stiere,    2380<br/>
+Of which an other maister is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, if thou er this<br/>
+Hast ben of such professioun,<br/>
+Discovere thi confessioun:<br/>
+Hast thou supplanted eny man?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For oght that I you telle can,<br/>
+Min holi fader, as of the dede<br/>
+I am withouten eny drede<br/>
+Al gulteles; bot of my thoght<br/>
+Mi conscience excuse I noght.    2390<br/>
+For were it wrong or were it riht,<br/>
+Me lakketh nothing bote myht,<br/>
+That I ne wolde longe er this<br/>
+Of other mannes love ywiss<br/>
+Be weie of Supplantacioun<br/>
+Have mad apropriacioun<br/>
+And holde that I nevere boghte,<br/>
+Thogh it an other man forthoghte.<br/>
+And al this speke I bot of on,<br/>
+For whom I lete alle othre gon;    2400<br/>
+Bot hire I mai noght overpasse,<br/>
+That I ne mot alwey compasse,<br/>
+Me roghte noght be what queintise,<br/>
+So that I mihte in eny wise<br/>
+Fro suche that mi ladi serve<br/>
+Hire herte make forto swerve<br/>
+Withouten eny part of love.<br/>
+For be the goddes alle above<br/>
+I wolde it mihte so befalle,<br/>
+That I al one scholde hem alle    2410<br/>
+Supplante, and welde hire at mi wille.<br/>
+And that thing mai I noght fulfille,<br/>
+Bot if I scholde strengthe make;<br/>
+And that I dar noght undertake,<br/>
+Thogh I were as was Alisaundre,<br/>
+For therof mihte arise sklaundre;<br/>
+And certes that schal I do nevere,<br/>
+For in good feith yit hadde I levere<br/>
+In my simplesce forto die,<br/>
+Than worche such Supplantarie.    2420<br/>
+Of otherwise I wol noght seie<br/>
+That if I founde a seker weie,<br/>
+I wolde as for conclusioun<br/>
+Worche after Supplantacioun,<br/>
+So hihe a love forto winne.<br/>
+Now, fader, if that this be Sinne,<br/>
+I am al redy to redresce<br/>
+The gilt of which I me confesse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, as of Supplant<br/>
+Thee thar noght drede tant ne quant,    2430<br/>
+As for nothing that I have herd,<br/>
+Bot only that thou hast misferd<br/>
+Thenkende, and that me liketh noght,<br/>
+For godd beholt a mannes thoght.<br/>
+And if thou understode in soth<br/>
+In loves cause what it doth,<br/>
+A man to ben a Supplantour,<br/>
+Thou woldest for thin oghne honour<br/>
+Be double weie take kepe:<br/>
+Ferst for thin oghne astat to kepe,    2440<br/>
+To be thiself so wel bethoght<br/>
+That thou supplanted were noght,<br/>
+And ek for worschipe of thi name<br/>
+Towardes othre do the same,<br/>
+And soffren every man have his.<br/>
+Bot natheles it was and is,<br/>
+That in a wayt at alle assaies<br/>
+Supplant of love in oure daies<br/>
+The lief fulofte for the levere<br/>
+Forsakth, and so it hath don evere.    2450
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ensample I finde therupon,<br/>
+At Troie how that Agamenon<br/>
+Supplantede the worthi knyht<br/>
+Achilles of that swete wiht,<br/>
+Which named was Brexeida;<br/>
+And also of Criseida,<br/>
+Whom Troilus to love ches,<br/>
+Supplanted hath Diomedes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Geta and Amphitrion,<br/>
+That whilom weren bothe as on    2460<br/>
+Of frendschipe and of compaignie,<br/>
+I rede how that Supplantarie<br/>
+In love, as it betidde tho,<br/>
+Beguiled hath on of hem tuo.<br/>
+For this Geta that I of meene,<br/>
+To whom the lusti faire Almeene<br/>
+Assured was be weie of love,<br/>
+Whan he best wende have ben above<br/>
+And sikerest of that he hadde,<br/>
+Cupido so the cause ladde,    2470<br/>
+That whil he was out of the weie,<br/>
+Amphitrion hire love aweie<br/>
+Hath take, and in this forme he wroghte.<br/>
+Be nyhte unto the chambre he soghte,<br/>
+Wher that sche lay, and with a wyle<br/>
+He contrefeteth for the whyle<br/>
+The vois of Gete in such a wise,<br/>
+That made hire of hire bedd arise,<br/>
+Wenende that it were he,<br/>
+And let him in, and whan thei be    2480<br/>
+Togedre abedde in armes faste,<br/>
+This Geta cam thanne ate laste<br/>
+Unto the Dore and seide, “Undo.”<br/>
+And sche ansuerde and bad him go,<br/>
+And seide how that abedde al warm<br/>
+Hir lief lay naked in hir arm;<br/>
+Sche wende that it were soth.<br/>
+Lo, what Supplant of love doth:<br/>
+This Geta forth bejaped wente,<br/>
+And yit ne wiste he what it mente;    2490<br/>
+Amphitrion him hath supplanted<br/>
+With sleyhte of love and hire enchaunted:<br/>
+And thus put every man out other,<br/>
+The Schip of love hath lost his Rother,<br/>
+So that he can no reson stiere.<br/>
+And forto speke of this matiere<br/>
+Touchende love and his Supplant,<br/>
+A tale which is acordant<br/>
+Unto thin Ere I thenke enforme.<br/>
+Now herkne, for this is the forme.    2500
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of thilke Cite chief of alle<br/>
+Which men the noble Rome calle,<br/>
+Er it was set to Cristes feith,<br/>
+Ther was, as the Cronique seith,<br/>
+An Emperour, the which it ladde<br/>
+In pes, that he no werres hadde:<br/>
+Ther was nothing desobeissant<br/>
+Which was to Rome appourtenant,<br/>
+Bot al was torned into reste.<br/>
+To some it thoghte for the beste,    2510<br/>
+To some it thoghte nothing so,<br/>
+And that was only unto tho<br/>
+Whos herte stod upon knyhthode:<br/>
+Bot most of alle of his manhode<br/>
+The worthi Sone of themperour,<br/>
+Which wolde ben a werreiour,<br/>
+As he that was chivalerous<br/>
+Of worldes fame and desirous,<br/>
+Began his fadre to beseche<br/>
+That he the werres mihte seche,    2520<br/>
+In strange Marches forto ride.<br/>
+His fader seide he scholde abide,<br/>
+And wolde granten him no leve:<br/>
+Bot he, which wolde noght beleve,<br/>
+A kniht of his to whom he triste,<br/>
+So that his fader nothing wiste,<br/>
+He tok and tolde him his corage,<br/>
+That he pourposeth a viage.<br/>
+If that fortune with him stonde,<br/>
+He seide how that he wolde fonde    2530<br/>
+The grete See to passe unknowe,<br/>
+And there abyde for a throwe<br/>
+Upon the werres to travaile.<br/>
+And to this point withoute faile<br/>
+This kniht, whan he hath herd his lord,<br/>
+Is swore, and stant of his acord,<br/>
+As thei that bothe yonge were;<br/>
+So that in prive conseil there<br/>
+Thei ben assented forto wende.<br/>
+And therupon to make an ende,    2540<br/>
+Tresor ynowh with hem thei token,<br/>
+And whan the time is best thei loken,<br/>
+That sodeinliche in a Galeie<br/>
+Fro Romelond thei wente here weie<br/>
+And londe upon that other side.<br/>
+The world fell so that ilke tide,<br/>
+Which evere hise happes hath diverse,<br/>
+The grete Soldan thanne of Perse<br/>
+Ayein the Caliphe of Egipte<br/>
+A werre, which that him beclipte,    2550<br/>
+Hath in a Marche costeiant.<br/>
+And he, which was a poursuiant<br/>
+Worschipe of armes to atteigne,<br/>
+This Romein, let anon ordeigne,<br/>
+That he was redi everydel:<br/>
+And whan he was arraied wel<br/>
+Of every thing which him belongeth,<br/>
+Straght unto Kaire his weie he fongeth,<br/>
+Wher he the Soldan thanne fond,<br/>
+And axeth that withinne his lond    2560<br/>
+He mihte him for the werre serve,<br/>
+As he which wolde his thonk deserve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Soldan was riht glad with al,<br/>
+And wel the more in special<br/>
+Whan that he wiste he was Romein;<br/>
+Bot what was elles in certein,<br/>
+That mihte he wite be no weie.<br/>
+And thus the kniht of whom I seie<br/>
+Toward the Soldan is beleft,<br/>
+And in the Marches now and eft,    2570<br/>
+Wher that the dedli werres were,<br/>
+He wroghte such knihthode there,<br/>
+That every man spak of him good.<br/>
+And thilke time so it stod,<br/>
+This mihti Soldan be his wif<br/>
+A Dowhter hath, that in this lif<br/>
+Men seiden ther was non so fair.<br/>
+Sche scholde ben hir fader hair,<br/>
+And was of yeres ripe ynowh:<br/>
+Hire beaute many an herte drowh    2580<br/>
+To bowe unto that ilke lawe<br/>
+Fro which no lif mai be withdrawe,<br/>
+And that is love, whos nature<br/>
+Set lif and deth in aventure<br/>
+Of hem that knyhthode undertake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This lusti peine hath overtake<br/>
+The herte of this Romein so sore,<br/>
+That to knihthode more and more<br/>
+Prouesce avanceth his corage.<br/>
+Lich to the Leoun in his rage,    2590<br/>
+Fro whom that alle bestes fle,<br/>
+Such was the knyht in his degre:<br/>
+Wher he was armed in the feld,<br/>
+Ther dorste non abide his scheld;<br/>
+Gret pris upon the werre he hadde.<br/>
+Bot sche which al the chance ladde,<br/>
+Fortune, schop the Marches so,<br/>
+That be thassent of bothe tuo,<br/>
+The Soldan and the Caliphe eke,<br/>
+Bataille upon a dai thei seke,    2600<br/>
+Which was in such a wise set<br/>
+That lengere scholde it noght be let.<br/>
+Thei made hem stronge on every side,<br/>
+And whan it drowh toward the tide<br/>
+That the bataille scholde be,<br/>
+The Soldan in gret privete<br/>
+A goldring of his dowhter tok,<br/>
+And made hire swere upon a bok<br/>
+And ek upon the goddes alle,<br/>
+That if fortune so befalle    2610<br/>
+In the bataille that he deie,<br/>
+That sche schal thilke man obeie<br/>
+And take him to hire housebonde,<br/>
+Which thilke same Ring to honde<br/>
+Hire scholde bringe after his deth.<br/>
+This hath sche swore, and forth he geth<br/>
+With al the pouer of his lond<br/>
+Unto the Marche, where he fond<br/>
+His enemy full embatailled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Soldan hath the feld assailed:    2620<br/>
+Thei that ben hardy sone assemblen,<br/>
+Wherof the dredfull hertes tremblen:<br/>
+That on sleth, and that other sterveth,<br/>
+Bot above all his pris deserveth<br/>
+This knihtly Romein; where he rod,<br/>
+His dedly swerd noman abod,<br/>
+Ayein the which was no defence;<br/>
+Egipte fledde in his presence,<br/>
+And thei of Perse upon the chace<br/>
+Poursuien: bot I not what grace    2630<br/>
+Befell, an Arwe out of a bowe<br/>
+Al sodeinly that ilke throwe<br/>
+The Soldan smot, and ther he lay:<br/>
+The chace is left for thilke day,<br/>
+And he was bore into a tente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Soldan sih how that it wente,<br/>
+And that he scholde algate die;<br/>
+And to this knyht of Romanie,<br/>
+As unto him whom he most triste,<br/>
+His Dowhter Ring, that non it wiste,    2640<br/>
+He tok, and tolde him al the cas,<br/>
+Upon hire oth what tokne it was<br/>
+Of that sche scholde ben his wif.<br/>
+Whan this was seid, the hertes lif<br/>
+Of this Soldan departeth sone;<br/>
+And therupon, as was to done,<br/>
+The dede body wel and faire<br/>
+Thei carie til thei come at Kaire,<br/>
+Wher he was worthily begrave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lordes, whiche as wolden save    2650<br/>
+The Regne which was desolat,<br/>
+To bringe it into good astat<br/>
+A parlement thei sette anon.<br/>
+Now herkne what fell therupon:<br/>
+This yonge lord, this worthi kniht<br/>
+Of Rome, upon the same niht<br/>
+That thei amorwe trete scholde,<br/>
+Unto his Bacheler he tolde<br/>
+His conseil, and the Ring with al<br/>
+He scheweth, thurgh which that he schal,    2660<br/>
+He seith, the kinges Dowhter wedde,<br/>
+For so the Ring was leid to wedde,<br/>
+He tolde, into hir fader hond,<br/>
+That with what man that sche it fond<br/>
+Sche scholde him take to hire lord.<br/>
+And this, he seith, stant of record,<br/>
+Bot noman wot who hath this Ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Bacheler upon this thing<br/>
+His Ere and his entente leide,<br/>
+And thoghte more thanne he seide,    2670<br/>
+And feigneth with a fals visage<br/>
+That he was glad, bot his corage<br/>
+Was al set in an other wise.<br/>
+These olde Philosophres wise<br/>
+Thei writen upon thilke while,<br/>
+That he mai best a man beguile<br/>
+In whom the man hath most credence;<br/>
+And this befell in evidence<br/>
+Toward this yonge lord of Rome.<br/>
+His Bacheler, which hadde tome,    2680<br/>
+Whan that his lord be nihte slepte,<br/>
+This Ring, the which his maister kepte,<br/>
+Out of his Pours awey he dede,<br/>
+And putte an other in the stede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amorwe, whan the Court is set,<br/>
+The yonge ladi was forth fet,<br/>
+To whom the lordes don homage,<br/>
+And after that of Mariage<br/>
+Thei trete and axen of hir wille.<br/>
+Bot sche, which thoghte to fulfille    2690<br/>
+Hire fader heste in this matiere,<br/>
+Seide openly, that men mai hiere,<br/>
+The charge which hire fader bad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho was this Lord of Rome glad<br/>
+And drowh toward his Pours anon,<br/>
+Bot al for noght, it was agon:<br/>
+His Bacheler it hath forthdrawe,<br/>
+And axeth ther upon the lawe<br/>
+That sche him holde covenant.<br/>
+The tokne was so sufficant    2700<br/>
+That it ne mihte be forsake,<br/>
+And natheles his lord hath take<br/>
+Querelle ayein his oghne man;<br/>
+Bot for nothing that evere he can<br/>
+He mihte as thanne noght ben herd,<br/>
+So that his cleym is unansuerd,<br/>
+And he hath of his pourpos failed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Bacheler was tho consailed<br/>
+And wedded, and of thilke Empire<br/>
+He was coroned Lord and Sire,    2710<br/>
+And al the lond him hath received;<br/>
+Wherof his lord, which was deceived,<br/>
+A seknesse er the thridde morwe<br/>
+Conceived hath of dedly sorwe:<br/>
+And as he lay upon his deth,<br/>
+Therwhile him lasteth speche and breth,<br/>
+He sende for the worthieste<br/>
+Of al the lond and ek the beste,<br/>
+And tolde hem al the sothe tho,<br/>
+That he was Sone and Heir also    2720<br/>
+Of themperour of grete Rome,<br/>
+And how that thei togedre come,<br/>
+This kniht and he; riht as it was,<br/>
+He tolde hem al the pleine cas,<br/>
+And for that he his conseil tolde,<br/>
+That other hath al that he wolde,<br/>
+And he hath failed of his mede:<br/>
+As for the good he takth non hiede,<br/>
+He seith, bot only of the love,<br/>
+Of which he wende have ben above.    2730<br/>
+And therupon be lettre write<br/>
+He doth his fader forto wite<br/>
+Of al this matiere as it stod;<br/>
+And thanne with an hertly mod<br/>
+Unto the lordes he besoghte<br/>
+To telle his ladi how he boghte<br/>
+Hire love, of which an other gladeth;<br/>
+And with that word his hewe fadeth,<br/>
+And seide, “A dieu, my ladi swete.”<br/>
+The lif hath lost his kindly hete,    2740<br/>
+And he lay ded as eny ston;<br/>
+Wherof was sory manyon,<br/>
+Bot non of alle so as sche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This false knyht in his degree<br/>
+Arested was and put in hold:<br/>
+For openly whan it was told<br/>
+Of the tresoun which is befalle,<br/>
+Thurghout the lond thei seiden alle,<br/>
+If it be soth that men suppose,<br/>
+His oghne untrowthe him schal depose.    2750<br/>
+And forto seche an evidence,<br/>
+With honour and gret reverence,<br/>
+Wherof they mihten knowe an ende,<br/>
+To themperour anon thei sende<br/>
+The lettre which his Sone wrot.<br/>
+And whan that he the sothe wot,<br/>
+To telle his sorwe is endeles,<br/>
+Bot yit in haste natheles<br/>
+Upon the tale which he herde<br/>
+His Stieward into Perse ferde    2760<br/>
+With many a worthi Romein eke,<br/>
+His liege tretour forto seke;<br/>
+And whan thei thider come were,<br/>
+This kniht him hath confessed there<br/>
+How falsly that he hath him bore,<br/>
+Wherof his worthi lord was lore.<br/>
+Tho seiden some he scholde deie,<br/>
+Bot yit thei founden such a weie<br/>
+That he schal noght be ded in Perse;<br/>
+And thus the skiles ben diverse.    2770<br/>
+Be cause that he was coroned,<br/>
+And that the lond was abandoned<br/>
+To him, althogh it were unriht,<br/>
+Ther is no peine for him diht;<br/>
+Bot to this point and to this ende<br/>
+Thei granten wel that he schal wende<br/>
+With the Romeins to Rome ayein.<br/>
+And thus acorded ful and plein,<br/>
+The qwike body with the dede<br/>
+With leve take forth thei lede,    2780<br/>
+Wher that Supplant hath his juise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof that thou thee miht avise<br/>
+Upon this enformacioun<br/>
+Touchende of Supplantacioun,<br/>
+That thou, my Sone, do noght so:<br/>
+And forto take hiede also<br/>
+What Supplant doth in other halve,<br/>
+Ther is noman can finde a salve<br/>
+Pleinly to helen such a Sor;<br/>
+It hath and schal ben everemor,    2790<br/>
+Whan Pride is with Envie joint,<br/>
+He soffreth noman in good point,<br/>
+Wher that he mai his honour lette.<br/>
+And therupon if I schal sette<br/>
+Ensample, in holy cherche I finde<br/>
+How that Supplant is noght behinde;<br/>
+God wot if that it now be so:<br/>
+For in Cronique of time ago<br/>
+I finde a tale concordable<br/>
+Of Supplant, which that is no fable,    2800<br/>
+In the manere as I schal telle,<br/>
+So as whilom the thinges felle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Rome, as it hath ofte falle,<br/>
+The vicair general of alle<br/>
+Of hem that lieven Cristes feith<br/>
+His laste day, which non withseith,<br/>
+Hath schet as to the worldes ije,<br/>
+Whos name if I schal specefie,<br/>
+He hihte Pope Nicolas.<br/>
+And thus whan that he passed was,    2810<br/>
+The Cardinals, that wolden save<br/>
+The forme of lawe, in the conclave<br/>
+Gon forto chese a newe Pope,<br/>
+And after that thei cowthe agrope<br/>
+Hath ech of hem seid his entente:<br/>
+Til ate laste thei assente<br/>
+Upon an holy clerk reclus,<br/>
+Which full was of gostli vertus;<br/>
+His pacience and his simplesse<br/>
+Hath set him into hih noblesse.    2820<br/>
+Thus was he Pope canonized,<br/>
+With gret honour and intronized,<br/>
+And upon chance as it is falle,<br/>
+His name Celestin men calle;<br/>
+Which notefied was be bulle<br/>
+To holi cherche and to the fulle<br/>
+In alle londes magnified.<br/>
+Bot every worschipe is envied,<br/>
+And that was thilke time sene:<br/>
+For whan this Pope of whom I meene    2830<br/>
+Was chose, and othre set beside,<br/>
+A Cardinal was thilke tide<br/>
+Which the papat longe hath desired<br/>
+And therupon gretli conspired;<br/>
+Bot whan he sih fortune is failed,<br/>
+For which long time he hath travailed,<br/>
+That ilke fyr which Ethna brenneth<br/>
+Thurghout his wofull herte renneth,<br/>
+Which is resembled to Envie,<br/>
+Wherof Supplant and tricherie    2840<br/>
+Engendred is; and natheles<br/>
+He feigneth love, he feigneth pes,<br/>
+Outward he doth the reverence,<br/>
+Bot al withinne his conscience<br/>
+Thurgh fals ymaginacioun<br/>
+He thoghte Supplantacioun.<br/>
+And therupon a wonder wyle<br/>
+He wroghte: for at thilke whyle<br/>
+It fell so that of his lignage<br/>
+He hadde a clergoun of yong age,    2850<br/>
+Whom he hath in his chambre affaited.<br/>
+This Cardinal his time hath waited,<br/>
+And with his wordes slyhe and queinte,<br/>
+The whiche he cowthe wysly peinte,<br/>
+He schop this clerk of which I telle<br/>
+Toward the Pope forto duelle,<br/>
+So that withinne his chambre anyht<br/>
+He lai, and was a prive wyht<br/>
+Toward the Pope on nyhtes tide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mai noman fle that schal betide.    2860<br/>
+This Cardinal, which thoghte guile,<br/>
+Upon a day whan he hath while<br/>
+This yonge clerc unto him tok,<br/>
+And made him swere upon a bok,<br/>
+And told him what his wille was.<br/>
+And forth withal a Trompe of bras<br/>
+He hath him take, and bad him this:<br/>
+“Thou schalt,” he seide, “whan time is<br/>
+Awaite, and take riht good kepe,<br/>
+Whan that the Pope is fast aslepe    2870<br/>
+And that non other man by nyh;<br/>
+And thanne that thou be so slyh<br/>
+Thurghout the Trompe into his Ere,<br/>
+Fro hevene as thogh a vois it were,<br/>
+To soune of such prolacioun<br/>
+That he his meditacioun<br/>
+Therof mai take and understonde,<br/>
+As thogh it were of goddes sonde.<br/>
+And in this wise thou schalt seie,<br/>
+That he do thilke astat aweie    2880<br/>
+Of Pope, in which he stant honoured,<br/>
+So schal his Soule be socoured<br/>
+Of thilke worschipe ate laste<br/>
+In hevene which schal evere laste.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This clerc, whan he hath herd the forme<br/>
+How he the Pope scholde enforme,<br/>
+Tok of the Cardinal his leve,<br/>
+And goth him hom, til it was Eve,<br/>
+And prively the trompe he hedde,<br/>
+Til that the Pope was abedde.    2890<br/>
+And at the Midnyht, whan he knewh<br/>
+The Pope slepte, thanne he blewh<br/>
+Withinne his trompe thurgh the wal,<br/>
+And tolde in what manere he schal<br/>
+His Papacie leve, and take<br/>
+His ferste astat: and thus awake<br/>
+This holi Pope he made thries,<br/>
+Wherof diverse fantasies<br/>
+Upon his grete holinesse<br/>
+Withinne his herte he gan impresse.    2900<br/>
+The Pope ful of innocence<br/>
+Conceiveth in his conscience<br/>
+That it is goddes wille he cesse;<br/>
+Bot in what wise he may relesse<br/>
+His hihe astat, that wot he noght.<br/>
+And thus withinne himself bethoght,<br/>
+He bar it stille in his memoire,<br/>
+Til he cam to the Consistoire;<br/>
+And there in presence of hem alle<br/>
+He axeth, if it so befalle    2910<br/>
+That eny Pope cesse wolde,<br/>
+How that the lawe it soffre scholde.<br/>
+Thei seten alle stille and herde,<br/>
+Was non which to the point ansuerde,<br/>
+For to what pourpos that it mente<br/>
+Ther was noman knew his entente,<br/>
+Bot only he which schop the guile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Cardinal the same while<br/>
+Al openly with wordes pleine<br/>
+Seith, if the Pope wolde ordeigne    2920<br/>
+That ther be such a lawe wroght,<br/>
+Than mihte he cesse, and elles noght.<br/>
+And as he seide, don it was;<br/>
+The Pope anon upon the cas<br/>
+Of his Papal Autorite<br/>
+Hath mad and yove the decre:<br/>
+And whan that lawe was confermed<br/>
+In due forme and al affermed,<br/>
+This innocent, which was deceived,<br/>
+His Papacie anon hath weyved,    2930<br/>
+Renounced and resigned eke.<br/>
+That other was nothing to seke,<br/>
+Bot undernethe such a jape<br/>
+He hath so for himselve schape,<br/>
+That how as evere it him beseme,<br/>
+The Mitre with the Diademe<br/>
+He hath thurgh Supplantacion:<br/>
+And in his confirmacion<br/>
+Upon the fortune of his grace<br/>
+His name is cleped Boneface.    2940
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under the viser of Envie,<br/>
+Lo, thus was hid the tricherie,<br/>
+Which hath beguiled manyon.<br/>
+Bot such conseil ther mai be non,<br/>
+With treson whan it is conspired,<br/>
+That it nys lich the Sparke fyred<br/>
+Up in the Rof, which for a throwe<br/>
+Lith hidd, til whan the wyndes blowe<br/>
+It blaseth out on every side.<br/>
+This Bonefas, which can noght hyde    2950<br/>
+The tricherie of his Supplant,<br/>
+Hath openly mad his avant<br/>
+How he the Papacie hath wonne.<br/>
+Bot thing which is with wrong begonne<br/>
+Mai nevere stonde wel at ende;<br/>
+Wher Pride schal the bowe bende,<br/>
+He schet fulofte out of the weie:<br/>
+And thus the Pope of whom I seie,<br/>
+Whan that he stod on hih the whiel,<br/>
+He can noght soffre himself be wel.    2960<br/>
+Envie, which is loveles,<br/>
+And Pride, which is laweles,<br/>
+With such tempeste made him erre,<br/>
+That charite goth out of herre:<br/>
+So that upon misgovernance<br/>
+Ayein Lowyz the king of France<br/>
+He tok querelle of his oultrage,<br/>
+And seide he scholde don hommage<br/>
+Unto the cherche bodily.<br/>
+Bot he, that wiste nothing why    2970<br/>
+He scholde do so gret servise<br/>
+After the world in such a wise,<br/>
+Withstod the wrong of that demande;<br/>
+For noght the Pope mai comande<br/>
+The king wol noght the Pope obeie.<br/>
+This Pope tho be alle weie<br/>
+That he mai worche of violence<br/>
+Hath sent the bulle of his sentence<br/>
+With cursinge and with enterdit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king upon this wrongful plyt,    2980<br/>
+To kepe his regne fro servage,<br/>
+Conseiled was of his Barnage<br/>
+That miht with miht schal be withstonde.<br/>
+Thus was the cause take on honde,<br/>
+And seiden that the Papacie<br/>
+Thei wolde honoure and magnefie<br/>
+In al that evere is spirital;<br/>
+Bot thilke Pride temporal<br/>
+Of Boneface in his persone,<br/>
+Ayein that ilke wrong al one    2990<br/>
+Thei wolde stonden in debat:<br/>
+And thus the man and noght the stat<br/>
+The Frensche schopen be her miht<br/>
+To grieve. And fell ther was a kniht,<br/>
+Sire Guilliam de Langharet,<br/>
+Which was upon this cause set;<br/>
+And therupon he tok a route<br/>
+Of men of Armes and rod oute,<br/>
+So longe and in a wayt he lay,<br/>
+That he aspide upon a day    3000<br/>
+The Pope was at Avinoun,<br/>
+And scholde ryde out of the toun<br/>
+Unto Pontsorge, the which is<br/>
+A Castell in Provence of his.<br/>
+Upon the weie and as he rod,<br/>
+This kniht, which hoved and abod<br/>
+Embuisshed upon horse bak,<br/>
+Al sodeinliche upon him brak<br/>
+And hath him be the bridel sesed,<br/>
+And seide: “O thou, which hast desesed    3010<br/>
+The Court of France be thi wrong,<br/>
+Now schalt thou singe an other song:<br/>
+Thin enterdit and thi sentence<br/>
+Ayein thin oghne conscience<br/>
+Hierafter thou schalt fiele and grope.<br/>
+We pleigne noght ayein the Pope,<br/>
+For thilke name is honourable,<br/>
+Bot thou, which hast be deceivable<br/>
+And tricherous in al thi werk,<br/>
+Thou Bonefas, thou proude clerk,    3020<br/>
+Misledere of the Papacie,<br/>
+Thi false bodi schal abye<br/>
+And soffre that it hath deserved.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus the Supplantour was served;<br/>
+For thei him ladden into France<br/>
+And setten him to his penance<br/>
+Withinne a tour in harde bondes,<br/>
+Wher he for hunger bothe hise hondes<br/>
+Eet of and deide, god wot how:<br/>
+Of whom the wrytinge is yit now    3030<br/>
+Registred, as a man mai hiere,<br/>
+Which spekth and seith in this manere:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thin entre lich the fox was slyh,<br/>
+Thi regne also with pride on hih<br/>
+Was lich the Leon in his rage;<br/>
+Bot ate laste of thi passage<br/>
+Thi deth was to the houndes like.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such is the lettre of his Cronique<br/>
+Proclamed in the Court of Rome,<br/>
+Wherof the wise ensample nome.    3040<br/>
+And yit, als ferforth as I dar,<br/>
+I rede alle othre men be war,<br/>
+And that thei loke wel algate<br/>
+That non his oghne astat translate<br/>
+Of holi cherche in no degree<br/>
+Be fraude ne soubtilite:<br/>
+For thilke honour which Aaron tok<br/>
+Schal non receive, as seith the bok,<br/>
+Bot he be cleped as he was.<br/>
+What I schal thenken in this cas    3050<br/>
+Of that I hiere now aday,<br/>
+I not: bot he which can and may,<br/>
+Be reson bothe and be nature<br/>
+The help of every mannes cure,<br/>
+He kepe Simon fro the folde.<br/>
+For Joachim thilke Abbot tolde<br/>
+How suche daies scholden falle,<br/>
+That comunliche in places alle<br/>
+The Chapmen of such mercerie<br/>
+With fraude and with Supplantarie    3060<br/>
+So manye scholden beie and selle,<br/>
+That he ne may for schame telle<br/>
+So foul a Senne in mannes Ere.<br/>
+Bot god forbiede that it were<br/>
+In oure daies that he seith:<br/>
+For if the Clerc beware his feith<br/>
+In chapmanhod at such a feire,<br/>
+The remenant mot nede empeire<br/>
+Of al that to the world belongeth;<br/>
+For whan that holi cherche wrongeth,    3070<br/>
+I not what other thing schal rihte.<br/>
+And natheles at mannes sihte<br/>
+Envie forto be preferred<br/>
+Hath conscience so differred,<br/>
+That noman loketh to the vice<br/>
+Which is the Moder of malice,<br/>
+And that is thilke false Envie,<br/>
+Which causeth many a tricherie;<br/>
+For wher he may an other se<br/>
+That is mor gracious than he,    3080<br/>
+It schal noght stonden in his miht<br/>
+Bot if he hindre such a wiht:<br/>
+And that is welnyh overal,<br/>
+This vice is now so general.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Envie thilke unhapp indrowh,<br/>
+Whan Joab be deceipte slowh<br/>
+Abner, for drede he scholde be<br/>
+With king David such as was he.<br/>
+And thurgh Envie also it fell<br/>
+Of thilke false Achitofell,    3090<br/>
+For his conseil was noght achieved,<br/>
+Bot that he sih Cusy believed<br/>
+With Absolon and him forsake,<br/>
+He heng himself upon a stake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Senec witnesseth openly<br/>
+How that Envie proprely<br/>
+Is of the Court the comun wenche,<br/>
+And halt taverne forto schenche<br/>
+That drink which makth the herte brenne,<br/>
+And doth the wit aboute renne,    3100<br/>
+Be every weie to compasse<br/>
+How that he mihte alle othre passe,<br/>
+As he which thurgh unkindeschipe<br/>
+Envieth every felaschipe;<br/>
+So that thou miht wel knowe and se,<br/>
+Ther is no vice such as he,<br/>
+Ferst toward godd abhominable,<br/>
+And to mankinde unprofitable:<br/>
+And that be wordes bot a fewe<br/>
+I schal be reson prove and schewe.    3110
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Envie if that I schal descrive,<br/>
+He is noght schaply forto wyve<br/>
+In Erthe among the wommen hiere;<br/>
+For ther is in him no matiere<br/>
+Wherof he mihte do plesance.<br/>
+Ferst for his hevy continance<br/>
+Of that he semeth evere unglad,<br/>
+He is noght able to ben had;<br/>
+And ek he brenneth so withinne,<br/>
+That kinde mai no profit winne,    3120<br/>
+Wherof he scholde his love plese:<br/>
+For thilke blod which scholde have ese<br/>
+To regne among the moiste veines,<br/>
+Is drye of thilke unkendeli peines<br/>
+Thurgh whiche Envie is fyred ay.<br/>
+And thus be reson prove I may<br/>
+That toward love Envie is noght;<br/>
+And otherwise if it be soght,<br/>
+Upon what side as evere it falle,<br/>
+It is the werste vice of alle,    3130<br/>
+Which of himself hath most malice.<br/>
+For understond that every vice<br/>
+Som cause hath, wherof it groweth,<br/>
+Bot of Envie noman knoweth<br/>
+Fro whenne he cam bot out of helle.<br/>
+For thus the wise clerkes telle,<br/>
+That no spirit bot of malice<br/>
+Be weie of kinde upon a vice<br/>
+Is tempted, and be such a weie<br/>
+Envie hath kinde put aweie    3140<br/>
+And of malice hath his steringe,<br/>
+Wherof he makth his bakbitinge,<br/>
+And is himself therof desesed.<br/>
+So mai ther be no kinde plesed;<br/>
+For ay the mor that he envieth,<br/>
+The more ayein himself he plieth.<br/>
+Thus stant Envie in good espeir<br/>
+To ben himself the develes heir,<br/>
+As he which is his nexte liche<br/>
+And forthest fro the heveneriche,    3150<br/>
+For there mai he nevere wone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my goode diere Sone,<br/>
+If thou wolt finde a siker weie<br/>
+To love, put Envie aweie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holy fader, reson wolde<br/>
+That I this vice eschuie scholde:<br/>
+Bot yit to strengthe mi corage,<br/>
+If that ye wolde in avantage<br/>
+Therof sette a recoverir,<br/>
+It were tome a gret desir,    3160<br/>
+That I this vice mihte flee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou understond, my Sone, and se,<br/>
+Ther is phisique for the seke,<br/>
+And vertus for the vices eke.<br/>
+Who that the vices wolde eschuie,<br/>
+He mot be resoun thanne suie<br/>
+The vertus; for be thilke weie<br/>
+He mai the vices don aweie,<br/>
+For thei togedre mai noght duelle:<br/>
+For as the water of a welle    3170<br/>
+Of fyr abateth the malice,<br/>
+Riht so vertu fordoth the vice.<br/>
+Ayein Envie is Charite,<br/>
+Which is the Moder of Pite,<br/>
+That makth a mannes herte tendre,<br/>
+That it mai no malice engendre<br/>
+In him that is enclin therto.<br/>
+For his corage is tempred so,<br/>
+That thogh he mihte himself relieve,<br/>
+Yit wolde he noght an other grieve,    3180<br/>
+Bot rather forto do plesance<br/>
+He berth himselven the grevance,<br/>
+So fain he wolde an other ese.<br/>
+Wherof, mi Sone, for thin ese<br/>
+Now herkne a tale which I rede,<br/>
+And understond it wel, I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the bokes of latin<br/>
+I finde write of Constantin<br/>
+The worthi Emperour of Rome,<br/>
+Suche infortunes to him come,    3190<br/>
+Whan he was in his lusti age,<br/>
+The lepre cawhte in his visage<br/>
+And so forth overal aboute,<br/>
+That he ne mihte ryden oute:<br/>
+So lefte he bothe Schield and spere,<br/>
+As he that mihte him noght bestere,<br/>
+And hield him in his chambre clos.<br/>
+Thurgh al the world the fame aros,<br/>
+The grete clerkes ben asent<br/>
+And come at his comandement    3200<br/>
+To trete upon this lordes hele.<br/>
+So longe thei togedre dele,<br/>
+That thei upon this medicine<br/>
+Apointen hem, and determine<br/>
+That in the maner as it stod<br/>
+Thei wolde him bathe in childes blod<br/>
+Withinne sevene wynter age:<br/>
+For, as thei sein, that scholde assuage<br/>
+The lepre and al the violence,<br/>
+Which that thei knewe of Accidence    3210<br/>
+And noght be weie of kinde is falle.<br/>
+And therto thei acorden alle<br/>
+As for final conclusioun,<br/>
+And tolden here opinioun<br/>
+To themperour: and he anon<br/>
+His conseil tok, and therupon<br/>
+With lettres and with seales oute<br/>
+Thei sende in every lond aboute<br/>
+The yonge children forto seche,<br/>
+Whos blod, thei seiden, schal be leche    3220<br/>
+For themperoures maladie.<br/>
+Ther was ynowh to wepe and crie<br/>
+Among the Modres, whan thei herde<br/>
+Hou wofully this cause ferde,<br/>
+Bot natheles thei moten bowe;<br/>
+And thus wommen ther come ynowhe<br/>
+With children soukende on the Tete.<br/>
+Tho was ther manye teres lete,<br/>
+Bot were hem lieve or were hem lothe,<br/>
+The wommen and the children bothe    3230<br/>
+Into the Paleis forth be broght<br/>
+With many a sory hertes thoght<br/>
+Of hem whiche of here bodi bore<br/>
+The children hadde, and so forlore<br/>
+Withinne a while scholden se.<br/>
+The Modres wepe in here degre,<br/>
+And manye of hem aswoune falle,<br/>
+The yonge babes criden alle:<br/>
+This noyse aros, the lord it herde,<br/>
+And loked out, and how it ferde    3240<br/>
+He sih, and as who seith abreide<br/>
+Out of his slep, and thus he seide:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“O thou divine pourveance,<br/>
+Which every man in the balance<br/>
+Of kinde hast formed to be liche,<br/>
+The povere is bore as is the riche<br/>
+And deieth in the same wise,<br/>
+Upon the fol, upon the wise<br/>
+Siknesse and hele entrecomune;<br/>
+Mai non eschuie that fortune    3250<br/>
+Which kinde hath in hire lawe set;<br/>
+Hire strengthe and beaute ben beset<br/>
+To every man aliche fre,<br/>
+That sche preferreth no degre<br/>
+As in the disposicioun<br/>
+Of bodili complexioun:<br/>
+And ek of Soule resonable<br/>
+The povere child is bore als able<br/>
+To vertu as the kinges Sone;<br/>
+For every man his oghne wone    3260<br/>
+After the lust of his assay<br/>
+The vice or vertu chese may.<br/>
+Thus stonden alle men franchised,<br/>
+Bot in astat thei ben divised;<br/>
+To some worschipe and richesse,<br/>
+To some poverte and distresse,<br/>
+On lordeth and an other serveth;<br/>
+Bot yit as every man deserveth<br/>
+The world yifth noght his yiftes hiere.<br/>
+Bot certes he hath gret matiere    3270<br/>
+To ben of good condicioun,<br/>
+Which hath in his subjeccioun<br/>
+The men that ben of his semblance.”<br/>
+And ek he tok a remembrance<br/>
+How he that made lawe of kinde<br/>
+Wolde every man to lawe binde,<br/>
+And bad a man, such as he wolde<br/>
+Toward himself, riht such he scholde<br/>
+Toward an other don also.<br/>
+And thus this worthi lord as tho    3280<br/>
+Sette in balance his oghne astat<br/>
+And with himself stod in debat,<br/>
+And thoghte hou that it was noght good<br/>
+To se so mochel mannes blod<br/>
+Be spilt for cause of him alone.<br/>
+He sih also the grete mone,<br/>
+Of that the Modres were unglade,<br/>
+And of the wo the children made,<br/>
+Wherof that al his herte tendreth,<br/>
+And such pite withinne engendreth,    3290<br/>
+That him was levere forto chese<br/>
+His oghne bodi forto lese,<br/>
+Than se so gret a moerdre wroght<br/>
+Upon the blod which gulteth noght.<br/>
+Thus for the pite which he tok<br/>
+Alle othre leches he forsok,<br/>
+And put him out of aventure<br/>
+Al only into goddes cure;<br/>
+And seith, “Who that woll maister be,<br/>
+He mot be servant to pite.”    3300<br/>
+So ferforth he was overcome<br/>
+With charite, that he hath nome<br/>
+His conseil and hise officers,<br/>
+And bad unto hise tresorers<br/>
+That thei his tresour al aboute<br/>
+Departe among the povere route<br/>
+Of wommen and of children bothe,<br/>
+Wherof thei mihte hem fede and clothe<br/>
+And saufli tornen hom ayein<br/>
+Withoute lost of eny grein.    3310<br/>
+Thurgh charite thus he despendeth<br/>
+His good, wherof that he amendeth<br/>
+The povere poeple, and contrevaileth<br/>
+The harm, that he hem so travaileth:<br/>
+And thus the woful nyhtes sorwe<br/>
+To joie is torned on the morwe;<br/>
+Al was thonkinge, al was blessinge,<br/>
+Which erst was wepinge and cursinge;<br/>
+Thes wommen gon hom glade ynowh,<br/>
+Echon for joie on other lowh,    3320<br/>
+And preiden for this lordes hele,<br/>
+Which hath relessed the querele,<br/>
+And hath his oghne will forsake<br/>
+In charite for goddes sake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now hierafter thou schalt hiere<br/>
+What god hath wroght in this matiere,<br/>
+As he which doth al equite.<br/>
+To him that wroghte charite<br/>
+He was ayeinward charitous,<br/>
+And to pite he was pitous:    3330<br/>
+For it was nevere knowe yit<br/>
+That charite goth unaquit.<br/>
+The nyht, whan he was leid to slepe,<br/>
+The hihe god, which wolde him kepe,<br/>
+Seint Peter and seint Poul him sende,<br/>
+Be whom he wolde his lepre amende.<br/>
+Thei tuo to him slepende appiere<br/>
+Fro god, and seide in this manere:<br/>
+“O Constantin, for thou hast served<br/>
+Pite, thou hast pite deserved:    3340<br/>
+Forthi thou schalt such pite have<br/>
+That god thurgh pite woll thee save.<br/>
+So schalt thou double hele finde,<br/>
+Ferst for thi bodiliche kinde,<br/>
+And for thi wofull Soule also,<br/>
+Thou schalt ben hol of bothe tuo.<br/>
+And for thou schalt thee noght despeire,<br/>
+Thi lepre schal nomore empeire<br/>
+Til thou wolt sende therupon<br/>
+Unto the Mont of Celion,    3350<br/>
+Wher that Silvestre and his clergie<br/>
+Togedre duelle in compaignie<br/>
+For drede of thee, which many day<br/>
+Hast ben a fo to Cristes lay,<br/>
+And hast destruid to mochel schame<br/>
+The prechours of his holy name.<br/>
+Bot now thou hast somdiel appesed<br/>
+Thi god, and with good dede plesed,<br/>
+That thou thi pite hast bewared<br/>
+Upon the blod which thou hast spared.    3360<br/>
+Forthi to thi salvacion<br/>
+Thou schalt have enformacioun,<br/>
+Such as Silvestre schal the teche:<br/>
+The nedeth of non other leche.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Emperour, which al this herde,<br/>
+“Grant merci lordes,” he ansuerde,<br/>
+“I wol do so as ye me seie.<br/>
+Bot of o thing I wolde preie:<br/>
+What schal I telle unto Silvestre<br/>
+Or of youre name or of youre estre?”    3370<br/>
+And thei him tolden what thei hihte,<br/>
+And forth withal out of his sihte<br/>
+Thei passen up into the hevene.<br/>
+And he awok out of his swevene,<br/>
+And clepeth, and men come anon:<br/>
+He tolde his drem, and therupon<br/>
+In such a wise as he hem telleth<br/>
+The Mont wher that Silvestre duelleth<br/>
+Thei have in alle haste soght,<br/>
+And founde he was and with hem broght    3380<br/>
+To themperour, which to him tolde<br/>
+His swevene and elles what he wolde.<br/>
+And whan Silvestre hath herd the king,<br/>
+He was riht joiful of this thing,<br/>
+And him began with al his wit<br/>
+To techen upon holi writ<br/>
+Ferst how mankinde was forlore,<br/>
+And how the hihe god therfore<br/>
+His Sone sende from above,<br/>
+Which bore was for mannes love,    3390<br/>
+And after of his oghne chois<br/>
+He tok his deth upon the crois;<br/>
+And how in grave he was beloke,<br/>
+And how that he hath helle broke,<br/>
+And tok hem out that were him lieve;<br/>
+And forto make ous full believe<br/>
+That he was verrai goddes Sone,<br/>
+Ayein the kinde of mannes wone<br/>
+Fro dethe he ros the thridde day,<br/>
+And whanne he wolde, as he wel may,    3400<br/>
+He styh up to his fader evene<br/>
+With fleissh and blod into the hevene;<br/>
+And riht so in the same forme<br/>
+In fleissh and blod he schal reforme,<br/>
+Whan time comth, the qwike and dede<br/>
+At thilke woful dai of drede,<br/>
+Where every man schal take his dom,<br/>
+Als wel the Maister as the grom.<br/>
+The mihti kinges retenue<br/>
+That dai may stonde of no value    3410<br/>
+With worldes strengthe to defende;<br/>
+For every man mot thanne entende<br/>
+To stonde upon his oghne dedes<br/>
+And leve alle othre mennes nedes.<br/>
+That dai mai no consail availe,<br/>
+The pledour and the plee schal faile,<br/>
+The sentence of that ilke day<br/>
+Mai non appell sette in delay;<br/>
+Ther mai no gold the Jugge plie,<br/>
+That he ne schal the sothe trie    3420<br/>
+And setten every man upriht,<br/>
+Als wel the plowman as the kniht:<br/>
+The lewed man, the grete clerk<br/>
+Schal stonde upon his oghne werk,<br/>
+And such as he is founde tho,<br/>
+Such schal he be for everemo.<br/>
+Ther mai no peine be relessed,<br/>
+Ther mai no joie ben encressed,<br/>
+Bot endeles, as thei have do,<br/>
+He schal receive on of the tuo.    3430<br/>
+And thus Silvestre with his sawe<br/>
+The ground of al the newe lawe<br/>
+With gret devocion he precheth,<br/>
+Fro point to point and pleinly techeth<br/>
+Unto this hethen Emperour;<br/>
+And seith, the hihe creatour<br/>
+Hath underfonge his charite,<br/>
+Of that he wroghte such pite,<br/>
+Whan he the children hadde on honde.<br/>
+Thus whan this lord hath understonde    3440<br/>
+Of al this thing how that it ferde,<br/>
+Unto Silvestre he thanne ansuerde,<br/>
+With al his hole herte and seith<br/>
+That he is redi to the feith.<br/>
+And so the vessel which for blod<br/>
+Was mad, Silvestre, ther it stod,<br/>
+With clene water of the welle<br/>
+In alle haste he let do felle,<br/>
+And sette Constantin therinne<br/>
+Al naked up unto the chinne.    3450<br/>
+And in the while it was begunne,<br/>
+A liht, as thogh it were a Sunne,<br/>
+Fro hevene into the place com<br/>
+Wher that he tok his cristendom;<br/>
+And evere among the holi tales<br/>
+Lich as thei weren fisshes skales<br/>
+Ther fellen from him now and eft,<br/>
+Til that ther was nothing beleft<br/>
+Of al his grete maladie.<br/>
+For he that wolde him purefie,    3460<br/>
+The hihe god hath mad him clene,<br/>
+So that ther lefte nothing sene;<br/>
+He hath him clensed bothe tuo,<br/>
+The bodi and the Soule also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho knew this Emperour in dede<br/>
+That Cristes feith was forto drede,<br/>
+And sende anon hise lettres oute<br/>
+And let do crien al aboute,<br/>
+Up peine of deth that noman weyve<br/>
+That he baptesme ne receive:    3470<br/>
+After his Moder qweene Heleine<br/>
+He sende, and so betwen hem tweine<br/>
+Thei treten, that the Cite all<br/>
+Was cristned, and sche forth withall.<br/>
+This Emperour, which hele hath founde,<br/>
+Withinne Rome anon let founde<br/>
+Tuo cherches, which he dede make<br/>
+For Peter and for Poules sake,<br/>
+Of whom he hadde avisioun;<br/>
+And yaf therto possessioun    3480<br/>
+Of lordschipe and of worldes good.<br/>
+Bot how so that his will was good<br/>
+Toward the Pope and his Franchise,<br/>
+Yit hath it proved other wise,<br/>
+To se the worchinge of the dede:<br/>
+For in Cronique this I rede;<br/>
+Anon as he hath mad the yifte,<br/>
+A vois was herd on hih the lifte,<br/>
+Of which al Rome was adrad,<br/>
+And seith: “To day is venym schad    3490<br/>
+In holi cherche of temporal,<br/>
+Which medleth with the spirital.”<br/>
+And hou it stant of that degree<br/>
+Yit mai a man the sothe se:<br/>
+God mai amende it, whan he wile,<br/>
+I can ther to non other skile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot forto go ther I began,<br/>
+How charite mai helpe a man<br/>
+To bothe worldes, I have seid:<br/>
+And if thou have an Ere leid,    3500<br/>
+Mi Sone, thou miht understonde,<br/>
+If charite be take on honde,<br/>
+Ther folweth after mochel grace.<br/>
+Forthi, if that thou wolt pourchace<br/>
+How that thou miht Envie flee,<br/>
+Aqueinte thee with charite,<br/>
+Which is the vertu sovereine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I schal do my peine:<br/>
+For this ensample which ye tolde<br/>
+With al myn herte I have withholde,    3510<br/>
+So that I schal for everemore<br/>
+Eschuie Envie wel the more:<br/>
+And that I have er this misdo,<br/>
+Yif me my penance er I go.<br/>
+And over that to mi matiere<br/>
+Of schrifte, why we sitten hiere<br/>
+In privete betwen ous tweie,<br/>
+Now axeth what ther is, I preie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, and for thi lore<br/>
+I woll thee telle what is more,    3520<br/>
+So that thou schalt the vices knowe:<br/>
+For whan thei be to thee full knowe,<br/>
+Thou miht hem wel the betre eschuie.<br/>
+And for this cause I thenke suie<br/>
+The forme bothe and the matiere,<br/>
+As now suiende thou schalt hiere<br/>
+Which vice stant next after this:<br/>
+And whan thou wost how that it is,<br/>
+As thou schalt hiere me devise,<br/>
+Thow miht thiself the betre avise.    3530
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Secundus
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0004"></a>
+Incipit Liber Tercius</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Ira suis paribus est par furiis Acherontis,<br/>
+    Quo furor ad tempus nil pietatis habet.<br/>
+Ira malencolicos animos perturbat, vt equo<br/>
+    Iure sui pondus nulla statera tenet.<br/>
+Omnibus in causis grauat Ira, set inter amantes,<br/>
+    Illa magis facili sorte grauamen agit:<br/>
+Est vbi vir discors leuiterque repugnat amori,<br/>
+    Sepe loco ludi fletus ad ora venit.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+If thou the vices lest to knowe,<br/>
+Mi Sone, it hath noght ben unknowe,<br/>
+Fro ferst that men the swerdes grounde,<br/>
+That ther nis on upon this grounde,<br/>
+A vice forein fro the lawe,<br/>
+Wherof that many a good felawe<br/>
+Hath be distraght be sodein chance;<br/>
+And yit to kinde no plesance<br/>
+It doth, bot wher he most achieveth<br/>
+His pourpos, most to kinde he grieveth,    10<br/>
+As he which out of conscience<br/>
+Is enemy to pacience:<br/>
+And is be name on of the Sevene,<br/>
+Which ofte hath set this world unevene,<br/>
+And cleped is the cruel Ire,<br/>
+Whos herte is everemore on fyre<br/>
+To speke amis and to do bothe,<br/>
+For his servantz ben evere wrothe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode fader, tell me this:<br/>
+What thing is Ire? Sone, it is    20<br/>
+That in oure englissh Wrathe is hote,<br/>
+Which hath hise wordes ay so hote,<br/>
+That all a mannes pacience<br/>
+Is fyred of the violence.<br/>
+For he with him hath evere fyve<br/>
+Servantz that helpen him to stryve:<br/>
+The ferst of hem Malencolie<br/>
+Is cleped, which in compaignie<br/>
+An hundred times in an houre<br/>
+Wol as an angri beste loure,    30<br/>
+And noman wot the cause why.<br/>
+Mi Sone, schrif thee now forthi:<br/>
+Hast thou be Malencolien?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ye, fader, be seint Julien,<br/>
+Bot I untrewe wordes use,<br/>
+I mai me noght therof excuse:<br/>
+And al makth love, wel I wot,<br/>
+Of which myn herte is evere hot,<br/>
+So that I brenne as doth a glede<br/>
+For Wrathe that I mai noght spede.    40<br/>
+And thus fulofte a day for noght<br/>
+Save onlich of myn oghne thoght<br/>
+I am so with miselven wroth,<br/>
+That how so that the game goth<br/>
+With othre men, I am noght glad;<br/>
+Bot I am wel the more unglad,<br/>
+For that is othre mennes game<br/>
+It torneth me to pure grame.<br/>
+Thus am I with miself oppressed<br/>
+Of thoght, the which I have impressed,    50<br/>
+That al wakende I dreme and meete<br/>
+That I with hire al one meete<br/>
+And preie hire of som good ansuere:<br/>
+Bot for sche wol noght gladly swere,<br/>
+Sche seith me nay withouten oth;<br/>
+And thus wexe I withinne wroth,<br/>
+That outward I am al affraied,<br/>
+And so distempred and esmaied.<br/>
+A thousand times on a day<br/>
+Ther souneth in myn Eres nay,    60<br/>
+The which sche seide me tofore:<br/>
+Thus be my wittes as forlore;<br/>
+And namely whan I beginne<br/>
+To rekne with miself withinne<br/>
+How many yeres ben agon,<br/>
+Siththe I have trewly loved on<br/>
+And nevere tok of other hede,<br/>
+And evere aliche fer to spede<br/>
+I am, the more I with hir dele,<br/>
+So that myn happ and al myn hele    70<br/>
+Me thenkth is ay the leng the ferre,<br/>
+That bringth my gladschip out of herre,<br/>
+Wherof my wittes ben empeired,<br/>
+And I, as who seith, al despeired.<br/>
+For finaly, whan that I muse<br/>
+And thenke how sche me wol refuse,<br/>
+I am with anger so bestad,<br/>
+For al this world mihte I be glad:<br/>
+And for the while that it lasteth<br/>
+Al up so doun my joie it casteth,    80<br/>
+And ay the furthere that I be,<br/>
+Whan I ne may my ladi se,<br/>
+The more I am redy to wraththe,<br/>
+That for the touchinge of a laththe<br/>
+Or for the torninge of a stree<br/>
+I wode as doth the wylde Se,<br/>
+And am so malencolious,<br/>
+That ther nys servant in myn hous<br/>
+Ne non of tho that ben aboute,<br/>
+That ech of hem ne stant in doute,    90<br/>
+And wenen that I scholde rave<br/>
+For Anger that thei se me have;<br/>
+And so thei wondre more and lasse,<br/>
+Til that thei sen it overpasse.<br/>
+Bot, fader, if it so betide,<br/>
+That I aproche at eny tide<br/>
+The place wher my ladi is,<br/>
+And thanne that hire like ywiss<br/>
+To speke a goodli word untome,<br/>
+For al the gold that is in Rome    100<br/>
+Ne cowthe I after that be wroth,<br/>
+Bot al myn Anger overgoth;<br/>
+So glad I am of the presence<br/>
+Of hire, that I all offence<br/>
+Foryete, as thogh it were noght,<br/>
+So overgladed is my thoght.<br/>
+And natheles, the soth to telle,<br/>
+Ayeinward if it so befelle<br/>
+That I at thilke time sihe<br/>
+On me that sche miscaste hire yhe,    110<br/>
+Or that sche liste noght to loke,<br/>
+And I therof good hiede toke,<br/>
+Anon into my ferste astat<br/>
+I torne, and am with al so mat,<br/>
+That evere it is aliche wicke.<br/>
+And thus myn hand ayein the pricke<br/>
+I hurte and have do many day,<br/>
+And go so forth as I go may,<br/>
+Fulofte bitinge on my lippe,<br/>
+And make unto miself a whippe.    120<br/>
+With which in many a chele and hete<br/>
+Mi wofull herte is so tobete,<br/>
+That all my wittes ben unsofte<br/>
+And I am wroth, I not how ofte;<br/>
+And al it is Malencolie,<br/>
+Which groweth of the fantasie<br/>
+Of love, that me wol noght loute:<br/>
+So bere I forth an angri snoute<br/>
+Ful manye times in a yer.<br/>
+Bot, fader, now ye sitten hier    130<br/>
+In loves stede, I yow beseche,<br/>
+That som ensample ye me teche,<br/>
+Wherof I mai miself appese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, for thin hertes ese<br/>
+I schal fulfille thi preiere,<br/>
+So that thou miht the betre lere<br/>
+What mischief that this vice stereth,<br/>
+Which in his Anger noght forbereth,<br/>
+Wherof that after him forthenketh,<br/>
+Whan he is sobre and that he thenketh    140<br/>
+Upon the folie of his dede;<br/>
+And of this point a tale I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was a king which Eolus<br/>
+Was hote, and it befell him thus,<br/>
+That he tuo children hadde faire,<br/>
+The Sone cleped was Machaire,<br/>
+The dowhter ek Canace hihte.<br/>
+Be daie bothe and ek be nyhte,<br/>
+Whil thei be yonge, of comun wone<br/>
+In chambre thei togedre wone,    150<br/>
+And as thei scholden pleide hem ofte,<br/>
+Til thei be growen up alofte<br/>
+Into the youthe of lusti age,<br/>
+Whan kinde assaileth the corage<br/>
+With love and doth him forto bowe,<br/>
+That he no reson can allowe,<br/>
+Bot halt the lawes of nature:<br/>
+For whom that love hath under cure,<br/>
+As he is blind himself, riht so<br/>
+He makth his client blind also.    160<br/>
+In such manere as I you telle<br/>
+As thei al day togedre duelle,<br/>
+This brother mihte it noght asterte<br/>
+That he with al his hole herte<br/>
+His love upon his Soster caste:<br/>
+And so it fell hem ate laste,<br/>
+That this Machaire with Canace<br/>
+Whan thei were in a prive place,<br/>
+Cupide bad hem ferst to kesse,<br/>
+And after sche which is Maistresse    170<br/>
+In kinde and techeth every lif<br/>
+Withoute lawe positif,<br/>
+Of which sche takth nomaner charge,<br/>
+Bot kepth hire lawes al at large,<br/>
+Nature, tok hem into lore<br/>
+And tawht hem so, that overmore<br/>
+Sche hath hem in such wise daunted,<br/>
+That thei were, as who seith, enchaunted.<br/>
+And as the blinde an other ledeth<br/>
+And til thei falle nothing dredeth,    180<br/>
+Riht so thei hadde non insihte;<br/>
+Bot as the bridd which wole alihte<br/>
+And seth the mete and noght the net,<br/>
+Which in deceipte of him is set,<br/>
+This yonge folk no peril sihe,<br/>
+Bot that was likinge in here yhe,<br/>
+So that thei felle upon the chance<br/>
+Where witt hath lore his remembrance.<br/>
+So longe thei togedre assemble,<br/>
+The wombe aros, and sche gan tremble,    190<br/>
+And hield hire in hire chambre clos<br/>
+For drede it scholde be disclos<br/>
+And come to hire fader Ere:<br/>
+Wherof the Sone hadde also fere,<br/>
+And feigneth cause forto ryde;<br/>
+For longe dorste he noght abyde,<br/>
+In aunter if men wolde sein<br/>
+That he his Soster hath forlein:<br/>
+For yit sche hadde it noght beknowe<br/>
+Whos was the child at thilke throwe.    200<br/>
+Machaire goth, Canace abit,<br/>
+The which was noght delivered yit,<br/>
+Bot riht sone after that sche was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest and herkne a woful cas.<br/>
+The sothe, which mai noght ben hid,<br/>
+Was ate laste knowe and kid<br/>
+Unto the king, how that it stod.<br/>
+And whan that he it understod,<br/>
+Anon into Malencolie,<br/>
+As thogh it were a frenesie,    210<br/>
+He fell, as he which nothing cowthe<br/>
+How maistrefull love is in yowthe:<br/>
+And for he was to love strange,<br/>
+He wolde noght his herte change<br/>
+To be benigne and favorable<br/>
+To love, bot unmerciable<br/>
+Betwen the wawe of wod and wroth<br/>
+Into his dowhtres chambre he goth,<br/>
+And sih the child was late bore,<br/>
+Wherof he hath hise othes swore    220<br/>
+That sche it schal ful sore abye.<br/>
+And sche began merci to crie,<br/>
+Upon hire bare knes and preide,<br/>
+And to hire fader thus sche seide:<br/>
+“Ha mercy! fader, thenk I am<br/>
+Thi child, and of thi blod I cam.<br/>
+That I misdede yowthe it made,<br/>
+And in the flodes bad me wade,<br/>
+Wher that I sih no peril tho:<br/>
+Bot now it is befalle so,    230<br/>
+Merci, my fader, do no wreche!”<br/>
+And with that word sche loste speche<br/>
+And fell doun swounende at his fot,<br/>
+As sche for sorwe nedes mot.<br/>
+Bot his horrible crualte<br/>
+Ther mihte attempre no pite:<br/>
+Out of hire chambre forth he wente<br/>
+Al full of wraththe in his entente,<br/>
+And tok the conseil in his herte<br/>
+That sche schal noght the deth asterte,    240<br/>
+As he which Malencolien<br/>
+Of pacience hath no lien,<br/>
+Wherof the wraththe he mai restreigne.<br/>
+And in this wilde wode peine,<br/>
+Whanne al his resoun was untame,<br/>
+A kniht he clepeth be his name,<br/>
+And tok him as be weie of sonde<br/>
+A naked swerd to bere on honde,<br/>
+And seide him that he scholde go<br/>
+And telle unto his dowhter so    250<br/>
+In the manere as he him bad,<br/>
+How sche that scharpe swerdes blad<br/>
+Receive scholde and do withal<br/>
+So as sche wot wherto it schal.<br/>
+Forth in message goth this kniht<br/>
+Unto this wofull yonge wiht,<br/>
+This scharpe swerd to hire he tok:<br/>
+Wherof that al hire bodi qwok,<br/>
+For wel sche wiste what it mente,<br/>
+And that it was to thilke entente    260<br/>
+That sche hireselven scholde slee.<br/>
+And to the kniht sche seide: “Yee,<br/>
+Now that I wot my fadres wille,<br/>
+That I schal in this wise spille,<br/>
+I wole obeie me therto,<br/>
+And as he wole it schal be do.<br/>
+Bot now this thing mai be non other,<br/>
+I wole a lettre unto mi brother,<br/>
+So as my fieble hand may wryte,<br/>
+With al my wofull herte endite.”    270<br/>
+Sche tok a Penne on honde tho,<br/>
+Fro point to point and al the wo,<br/>
+Als ferforth as hireself it wot,<br/>
+Unto hire dedly frend sche wrot,<br/>
+And tolde how that hire fader grace<br/>
+Sche mihte for nothing pourchace;<br/>
+And overthat, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Sche wrot and seide in this manere:<br/>
+“O thou my sorwe and my gladnesse,<br/>
+O thou myn hele and my siknesse,    280<br/>
+O my wanhope and al my trust,<br/>
+O my desese and al my lust,<br/>
+O thou my wele, o thou my wo,<br/>
+O thou my frend, o thou my fo,<br/>
+O thou my love, o thou myn hate,<br/>
+For thee mot I be ded algate.<br/>
+Thilke ende may I noght asterte,<br/>
+And yit with al myn hole herte,<br/>
+Whil that me lasteth eny breth,<br/>
+I wol the love into my deth.    290<br/>
+Bot of o thing I schal thee preie,<br/>
+If that my litel Sone deie,<br/>
+Let him be beried in my grave<br/>
+Beside me, so schalt thou have<br/>
+Upon ous bothe remembrance.<br/>
+For thus it stant of my grevance;<br/>
+Now at this time, as thou schalt wite,<br/>
+With teres and with enke write<br/>
+This lettre I have in cares colde:<br/>
+In my riht hond my Penne I holde,    300<br/>
+And in my left the swerd I kepe,<br/>
+And in my barm ther lith to wepe<br/>
+Thi child and myn, which sobbeth faste.<br/>
+Now am I come unto my laste:<br/>
+Fare wel, for I schal sone deie,<br/>
+And thenk how I thi love abeie.”<br/>
+The pomel of the swerd to grounde<br/>
+Sche sette, and with the point a wounde<br/>
+Thurghout hire herte anon sche made,<br/>
+And forth with that al pale and fade    310<br/>
+Sche fell doun ded fro ther sche stod.<br/>
+The child lay bathende in hire blod<br/>
+Out rolled fro the moder barm,<br/>
+And for the blod was hot and warm,<br/>
+He basketh him aboute thrinne.<br/>
+Ther was no bote forto winne,<br/>
+For he, which can no pite knowe,<br/>
+The king cam in the same throwe,<br/>
+And sih how that his dowhter dieth<br/>
+And how this Babe al blody crieth;    320<br/>
+Bot al that mihte him noght suffise,<br/>
+That he ne bad to do juise<br/>
+Upon the child, and bere him oute,<br/>
+And seche in the Forest aboute<br/>
+Som wilde place, what it were,<br/>
+To caste him out of honde there,<br/>
+So that som best him mai devoure,<br/>
+Where as noman him schal socoure.<br/>
+Al that he bad was don in dede:<br/>
+Ha, who herde evere singe or rede    330<br/>
+Of such a thing as that was do?<br/>
+Bot he which ladde his wraththe so<br/>
+Hath knowe of love bot a lite;<br/>
+Bot for al that he was to wyte,<br/>
+Thurgh his sodein Malencolie<br/>
+To do so gret a felonie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, how so it stonde,<br/>
+Be this cas thou miht understonde<br/>
+That if thou evere in cause of love<br/>
+Schalt deme, and thou be so above    340<br/>
+That thou miht lede it at thi wille,<br/>
+Let nevere thurgh thi Wraththe spille<br/>
+Which every kinde scholde save.<br/>
+For it sit every man to have<br/>
+Reward to love and to his miht,<br/>
+Ayein whos strengthe mai no wiht:<br/>
+And siththe an herte is so constreigned,<br/>
+The reddour oghte be restreigned<br/>
+To him that mai no bet aweie,<br/>
+Whan he mot to nature obeie.    350<br/>
+For it is seid thus overal,<br/>
+That nedes mot that nede schal<br/>
+Of that a lif doth after kinde,<br/>
+Wherof he mai no bote finde.<br/>
+What nature hath set in hir lawe<br/>
+Ther mai no mannes miht withdrawe,<br/>
+And who that worcheth therayein,<br/>
+Fulofte time it hath be sein,<br/>
+Ther hath befalle gret vengance,<br/>
+Wherof I finde a remembrance.    360
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ovide after the time tho<br/>
+Tolde an ensample and seide so,<br/>
+How that whilom Tiresias,<br/>
+As he walkende goth per cas,<br/>
+Upon an hih Montaine he sih<br/>
+Tuo Serpentz in his weie nyh,<br/>
+And thei, so as nature hem tawhte,<br/>
+Assembled    were, and he tho cawhte<br/>
+A yerde which he bar on honde,<br/>
+And thoghte that he wolde fonde    370<br/>
+To letten hem, and smot hem bothe:<br/>
+Wherof the goddes weren wrothe;<br/>
+And for he hath destourbed kinde<br/>
+And was so to nature unkinde,<br/>
+Unkindeliche he was transformed,<br/>
+That he which erst a man was formed<br/>
+Into a womman was forschape.<br/>
+That was to him an angri jape;<br/>
+Bot for that he with Angre wroghte,<br/>
+Hise Angres angreliche he boghte.    380
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, my Sone, Ovide hath write,<br/>
+Wherof thou miht be reson wite,<br/>
+More is a man than such a beste:<br/>
+So mihte it nevere ben honeste<br/>
+A man to wraththen him to sore<br/>
+Of that an other doth the lore<br/>
+Of kinde, in which is no malice,<br/>
+Bot only that it is a vice:<br/>
+And thogh a man be resonable,<br/>
+Yit after kinde he is menable    390<br/>
+To love, wher he wole or non.<br/>
+Thenk thou, my Sone, therupon<br/>
+And do Malencolie aweie;<br/>
+For love hath evere his lust to pleie,<br/>
+As he which wolde no lif grieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, that I mai wel lieve;<br/>
+Al that ye tellen it is skile:<br/>
+Let every man love as he wile,<br/>
+Be so it be noght my ladi,<br/>
+For I schal noght be wroth therby.    400<br/>
+Bot that I wraththe and fare amis,<br/>
+Al one upon miself it is,<br/>
+That I with bothe love and kinde<br/>
+Am so bestad, that I can finde<br/>
+No weie how I it mai asterte:<br/>
+Which stant upon myn oghne herte<br/>
+And toucheth to non other lif,<br/>
+Save only to that swete wif<br/>
+For whom, bot if it be amended,<br/>
+Mi glade daies ben despended,    410<br/>
+That I miself schal noght forbere<br/>
+The Wraththe which that I now bere,<br/>
+For therof is non other leche.<br/>
+Now axeth forth, I yow beseche,<br/>
+Of Wraththe if ther oght elles is,<br/>
+Wherof to schryve. Sone, yis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Wraththe the secounde is Cheste,<br/>
+Which hath the wyndes of tempeste<br/>
+To kepe, and many a sodein blast<br/>
+He bloweth, wherof ben agast    420<br/>
+Thei that desiren pes and reste.<br/>
+He is that ilke ungoodlieste<br/>
+Which many a lusti love hath twinned;<br/>
+For he berth evere his mowth unpinned,<br/>
+So that his lippes ben unloke<br/>
+And his corage is al tobroke,<br/>
+That every thing which he can telle,<br/>
+It springeth up as doth a welle,<br/>
+Which mai non of his stremes hyde,<br/>
+Bot renneth out on every syde.    430<br/>
+So buillen up the foule sawes<br/>
+That Cheste wot of his felawes:<br/>
+For as a Sive kepeth Ale,<br/>
+Riht so can Cheste kepe a tale;<br/>
+Al that he wot he wol desclose,<br/>
+And speke er eny man oppose.<br/>
+As a Cite withoute wal,<br/>
+Wher men mai gon out overal<br/>
+Withouten eny resistence,<br/>
+So with his croked eloquence    440<br/>
+He spekth al that he wot withinne:<br/>
+Wherof men lese mor than winne,<br/>
+For ofte time of his chidinge<br/>
+He bringth to house such tidinge,<br/>
+That makth werre ate beddeshed.<br/>
+He is the levein of the bred,<br/>
+Which soureth al the past aboute:<br/>
+Men oghte wel such on to doute,<br/>
+For evere his bowe is redi bent,<br/>
+And whom he hit I telle him schent,    450<br/>
+If he mai perce him with his tunge.<br/>
+And ek so lowde his belle is runge,<br/>
+That of the noise and of the soun<br/>
+Men feeren hem in al the toun<br/>
+Welmore than thei don of thonder.<br/>
+For that is cause of more wonder;<br/>
+For with the wyndes whiche he bloweth<br/>
+Fulofte sythe he overthroweth<br/>
+The Cites and the policie,<br/>
+That I have herd the poeple crie,    460<br/>
+And echon seide in his degre,<br/>
+“Ha wicke tunge, wo thee be!”<br/>
+For men sein that the harde bon,<br/>
+Althogh himselven have non,<br/>
+A tunge brekth it al to pieces.<br/>
+He hath so manye sondri spieces<br/>
+Of vice, that I mai noght wel<br/>
+Descrive hem be a thousendel:<br/>
+Bot whan that he to Cheste falleth,<br/>
+Ful many a wonder thing befalleth,    470<br/>
+For he ne can nothing forbere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now tell me, Sone, thin ansuere,<br/>
+If it hath evere so betidd,<br/>
+That thou at eny time hast chidd<br/>
+Toward thi love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fader, nay:<br/>
+Such Cheste yit unto this day<br/>
+Ne made I nevere, god forbede:<br/>
+For er I sunge such a crede,<br/>
+I hadde levere to be lewed;<br/>
+For thanne were I al beschrewed    480<br/>
+And worthi to be put abak<br/>
+With al the sorwe upon my bak<br/>
+That eny man ordeigne cowthe.<br/>
+Bot I spak nevere yit be mowthe<br/>
+That unto Cheste mihte touche,<br/>
+And that I durste riht wel vouche<br/>
+Upon hirself as for witnesse;<br/>
+For I wot, of hir gentilesse<br/>
+That sche me wolde wel excuse,<br/>
+That I no suche thinges use.    490<br/>
+And if it scholde so betide<br/>
+That I algates moste chide,<br/>
+It myhte noght be to my love:<br/>
+For so yit was I nevere above,<br/>
+For al this wyde world to winne<br/>
+That I dorste eny word beginne,<br/>
+Be which sche mihte have ben amoeved<br/>
+And I of Cheste also reproeved.<br/>
+Bot rathere, if it mihte hir like,<br/>
+The beste wordes wolde I pike    500<br/>
+Whiche I cowthe in myn herte chese,<br/>
+And serve hem forth in stede of chese,<br/>
+For that is helplich to defie;<br/>
+And so wolde I my wordes plie,<br/>
+That mihten Wraththe and Cheste avale<br/>
+With tellinge of my softe tale.<br/>
+Thus dar I make a foreward,<br/>
+That nevere unto my ladiward<br/>
+Yit spak I word in such a wise,<br/>
+Wherof that Cheste scholde arise.    510<br/>
+This seie I noght, that I fulofte<br/>
+Ne have, whanne I spak most softe,<br/>
+Per cas seid more thanne ynowh;<br/>
+Bot so wel halt noman the plowh<br/>
+That he ne balketh otherwhile,<br/>
+Ne so wel can noman affile<br/>
+His tunge, that som time in rape<br/>
+Him mai som liht word overscape,<br/>
+And yit ne meneth he no Cheste.<br/>
+Bot that I have ayein hir heste    520<br/>
+Fulofte spoke, I am beknowe;<br/>
+And how my will is, that ye knowe:<br/>
+For whan my time comth aboute,<br/>
+That I dar speke and seie al oute<br/>
+Mi longe love, of which sche wot<br/>
+That evere in on aliche hot<br/>
+Me grieveth, thanne al my desese<br/>
+I telle, and though it hir desplese,<br/>
+I speke it forth and noght ne leve:<br/>
+And thogh it be beside hire leve,    530<br/>
+I hope and trowe natheles<br/>
+That I do noght ayein the pes;<br/>
+For thogh I telle hire al my thoght,<br/>
+Sche wot wel that I chyde noght.<br/>
+Men mai the hihe god beseche,<br/>
+And he wol hiere a mannes speche<br/>
+And be noght wroth of that he seith;<br/>
+So yifth it me the more feith<br/>
+And makth me hardi, soth to seie,<br/>
+That I dar wel the betre preie    540<br/>
+Mi ladi, which a womman is.<br/>
+For thogh I telle hire that or this<br/>
+Of love, which me grieveth sore,<br/>
+Hire oghte noght be wroth the more,<br/>
+For I withoute noise or cri<br/>
+Mi pleignte make al buxomly<br/>
+To puten alle wraththe away.<br/>
+Thus dar I seie unto this day<br/>
+Of Cheste in ernest or in game<br/>
+Mi ladi schal me nothing blame.    550
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot ofte time it hath betidd<br/>
+That with miselven I have chidd,<br/>
+That noman couthe betre chide:<br/>
+And that hath ben at every tide,<br/>
+Whanne I cam to miself al one;<br/>
+For thanne I made a prive mone,<br/>
+And every tale by and by,<br/>
+Which as I spak to my ladi,<br/>
+I thenke and peise in my balance<br/>
+And drawe into my remembrance;    560<br/>
+And thanne, if that I finde a lak<br/>
+Of eny word that I mispak,<br/>
+Which was to moche in eny wise,<br/>
+Anon my wittes I despise<br/>
+And make a chidinge in myn herte,<br/>
+That eny word me scholde asterte<br/>
+Which as I scholde have holden inne.<br/>
+And so forth after I beginne<br/>
+And loke if ther was elles oght<br/>
+To speke, and I ne spak it noght:    570<br/>
+And thanne, if I mai seche and finde<br/>
+That eny word be left behinde,<br/>
+Which as I scholde more have spoke,<br/>
+I wolde upon miself be wroke,<br/>
+And chyde with miselven so<br/>
+That al my wit is overgo.<br/>
+For noman mai his time lore<br/>
+Recovere, and thus I am therfore<br/>
+So overwroth in al my thoght,<br/>
+That I myself chide al to noght:    580<br/>
+Thus for to moche or for to lite<br/>
+Fulofte I am miself to wyte.<br/>
+Bot al that mai me noght availe,<br/>
+With cheste thogh I me travaile:<br/>
+Bot Oule on Stock and Stock on Oule;<br/>
+The more that a man defoule,<br/>
+Men witen wel which hath the werse;<br/>
+And so to me nys worth a kerse,<br/>
+Bot torneth on myn oghne hed,<br/>
+Thogh I, til that I were ded,    590<br/>
+Wolde evere chyde in such a wise<br/>
+Of love as I to you devise.<br/>
+Bot, fader, now ye have al herd<br/>
+In this manere how I have ferd<br/>
+Of Cheste and of dissencioun,<br/>
+Yif me youre absolucioun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if that thou wistest al,<br/>
+What Cheste doth in special<br/>
+To love and to his welwillinge,<br/>
+Thou woldest flen his knowlechinge    600<br/>
+And lerne to be debonaire.<br/>
+For who that most can speke faire<br/>
+Is most acordende unto love:<br/>
+Fair speche hath ofte brought above<br/>
+Ful many a man, as it is knowe,<br/>
+Which elles scholde have be riht lowe<br/>
+And failed mochel of his wille.<br/>
+Forthi hold thou thi tunge stille<br/>
+And let thi witt thi wille areste,<br/>
+So that thou falle noght in Cheste,    610<br/>
+Which is the source of gret destance:<br/>
+And tak into thi remembrance<br/>
+If thou miht gete pacience,<br/>
+Which is the leche of alle offence,<br/>
+As tellen ous these olde wise:<br/>
+For whan noght elles mai suffise<br/>
+Be strengthe ne be mannes wit,<br/>
+Than pacience it oversit<br/>
+And overcomth it ate laste;<br/>
+Bot he mai nevere longe laste,    620<br/>
+Which wol noght bowe er that he breke.<br/>
+Tak hiede, Sone, of that I speke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, of your goodli speche<br/>
+And of the witt which ye me teche<br/>
+I thonke you with al myn herte:<br/>
+For that world schal me nevere asterte,<br/>
+That I ne schal your wordes holde,<br/>
+Of Pacience as ye me tolde,<br/>
+Als ferforth as myn herte thenketh;<br/>
+And of my wraththe it me forthenketh.    630<br/>
+Bot, fader, if ye forth withal<br/>
+Som good ensample in special<br/>
+Me wolden telle of som Cronique,<br/>
+It scholde wel myn herte like<br/>
+Of pacience forto hiere,<br/>
+So that I mihte in mi matiere<br/>
+The more unto my love obeie<br/>
+And puten mi desese aweie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, a man to beie him pes<br/>
+Behoveth soffre as Socrates    640<br/>
+Ensample lefte, which is write:<br/>
+And for thou schalt the sothe wite,<br/>
+Of this ensample what I mene,<br/>
+Althogh it be now litel sene<br/>
+Among the men thilke evidence,<br/>
+Yit he was upon pacience<br/>
+So sett, that he himself assaie<br/>
+In thing which mihte him most mispaie<br/>
+Desireth, and a wickid wif<br/>
+He weddeth, which in sorwe and strif    650<br/>
+Ayein his ese was contraire.<br/>
+Bot he spak evere softe and faire,<br/>
+Til it befell, as it is told,<br/>
+In wynter, whan the dai is cold,<br/>
+This wif was fro the welle come,<br/>
+Wher that a pot with water nome<br/>
+Sche hath, and broghte it into house,<br/>
+And sih how that hire seli spouse<br/>
+Was sett and loked on a bok<br/>
+Nyh to the fyr, as he which tok    660<br/>
+His ese for a man of age.<br/>
+And sche began the wode rage,<br/>
+And axeth him what devel he thoghte,<br/>
+And bar on hond that him ne roghte<br/>
+What labour that sche toke on honde,<br/>
+And seith that such an Housebonde<br/>
+Was to a wif noght worth a Stre.<br/>
+He seide nowther nay ne ye,<br/>
+Bot hield him stille and let hire chyde;<br/>
+And sche, which mai hirself noght hyde,    670<br/>
+Began withinne forto swelle,<br/>
+And that sche broghte in fro the welle,<br/>
+The waterpot sche hente alofte<br/>
+And bad him speke, and he al softe<br/>
+Sat stille and noght a word ansuerde;<br/>
+And sche was wroth that he so ferde,<br/>
+And axeth him if he be ded;<br/>
+And al the water on his hed<br/>
+Sche pourede oute and bad awake.<br/>
+Bot he, which wolde noght forsake    680<br/>
+His Pacience, thanne spak,<br/>
+And seide how that he fond no lak<br/>
+In nothing which sche hadde do:<br/>
+For it was wynter time tho,<br/>
+And wynter, as be weie of kinde<br/>
+Which stormy is, as men it finde,<br/>
+Ferst makth the wyndes forto blowe,<br/>
+And after that withinne a throwe<br/>
+He reyneth and the watergates<br/>
+Undoth; “and thus my wif algates,    690<br/>
+Which is with reson wel besein,<br/>
+Hath mad me bothe wynd and rein<br/>
+After the Sesoun of the yer.”<br/>
+And thanne he sette him nerr the fer,<br/>
+And as he mihte hise clothes dreide,<br/>
+That he nomore o word ne seide;<br/>
+Wherof he gat him somdel reste,<br/>
+For that him thoghte was the beste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I not if thilke ensample yit<br/>
+Acordeth with a mannes wit,    700<br/>
+To soffre as Socrates tho dede:<br/>
+And if it falle in eny stede<br/>
+A man to lese so his galle,<br/>
+Him oghte among the wommen alle<br/>
+In loves Court be juggement<br/>
+The name bere of Pacient,<br/>
+To yive ensample to the goode<br/>
+Of pacience how that it stode,<br/>
+That othre men it mihte knowe.<br/>
+And, Sone, if thou at eny throwe    710<br/>
+Be tempted ayein Pacience,<br/>
+Tak hiede upon this evidence;<br/>
+It schal per cas the lasse grieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, so as I believe,<br/>
+Of that schal be no maner nede,<br/>
+For I wol take so good hiede,<br/>
+That er I falle in such assai,<br/>
+I thenke eschuie it, if I mai.<br/>
+Bot if ther be oght elles more<br/>
+Wherof I mihte take lore,    720<br/>
+I preie you, so as I dar,<br/>
+Now telleth, that I mai be war,<br/>
+Som other tale in this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sone, it is evere good to lere,<br/>
+Wherof thou miht thi word restreigne,<br/>
+Er that thou falle in eny peine.<br/>
+For who that can no conseil hyde,<br/>
+He mai noght faile of wo beside,<br/>
+Which schal befalle er he it wite,<br/>
+As I finde in the bokes write.    730
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yit cam ther nevere good of strif,<br/>
+To seche in all a mannes lif:<br/>
+Thogh it beginne on pure game,<br/>
+Fulofte it torneth into grame<br/>
+And doth grevance upon som side.<br/>
+Wherof the grete Clerk Ovide<br/>
+After the lawe which was tho<br/>
+Of Jupiter and of Juno<br/>
+Makth in his bokes mencioun<br/>
+How thei felle at dissencioun    740<br/>
+In manere as it were a borde,<br/>
+As thei begunne forto worde<br/>
+Among hemself in privete:<br/>
+And that was upon this degree,<br/>
+Which of the tuo more amorous is,<br/>
+Or man or wif. And upon this<br/>
+Thei mihten noght acorde in on,<br/>
+And toke a jugge therupon,<br/>
+Which cleped is Tiresias,<br/>
+And bede him demen in the cas;    750<br/>
+And he withoute avisement<br/>
+Ayein Juno yaf juggement.<br/>
+This goddesse upon his ansuere<br/>
+Was wroth and wolde noght forbere,<br/>
+Bot tok awey for everemo<br/>
+The liht fro bothe hise yhen tuo.<br/>
+Whan Jupiter this harm hath sein,<br/>
+An other bienfait therayein<br/>
+He yaf, and such a grace him doth,<br/>
+That for he wiste he seide soth,    760<br/>
+A Sothseiere he was for evere:<br/>
+Bot yit that other were levere,<br/>
+Have had the lokinge of his yhe,<br/>
+Than of his word the prophecie;<br/>
+Bot how so that the sothe wente,<br/>
+Strif was the cause of that he hente<br/>
+So gret a peine bodily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, be thou war ther by,<br/>
+And hold thi tunge stille clos:<br/>
+For who that hath his word desclos    770<br/>
+Er that he wite what he mene,<br/>
+He is fulofte nyh his tene<br/>
+And lest ful many time grace,<br/>
+Wher that he wolde his thonk pourchace.<br/>
+And over this, my Sone diere,<br/>
+Of othre men, if thou miht hiere<br/>
+In privete what thei have wroght,<br/>
+Hold conseil and descoevere it noght,<br/>
+For Cheste can no conseil hele,<br/>
+Or be it wo or be it wele:    780<br/>
+And tak a tale into thi mynde,<br/>
+The which of olde ensample I finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phebus, which makth the daies lihte,<br/>
+A love he hadde, which tho hihte<br/>
+Cornide, whom aboven alle<br/>
+He pleseth: bot what schal befalle<br/>
+Of love ther is noman knoweth,<br/>
+Bot as fortune hire happes throweth.<br/>
+So it befell upon a chaunce,<br/>
+A yong kniht tok hire aqueintance    790<br/>
+And hadde of hire al that he wolde:<br/>
+Bot a fals bridd, which sche hath holde<br/>
+And kept in chambre of pure yowthe,<br/>
+Discoevereth all that evere he cowthe.<br/>
+This briddes name was as tho<br/>
+Corvus, the which was thanne also<br/>
+Welmore whyt than eny Swan,<br/>
+And he that schrewe al that he can<br/>
+Of his ladi to Phebus seide;<br/>
+And he for wraththe his swerd outbreide,    800<br/>
+With which Cornide anon he slowh.<br/>
+Bot after him was wo ynowh,<br/>
+And tok a full gret repentance,<br/>
+Wherof in tokne and remembrance<br/>
+Of hem whiche usen wicke speche,<br/>
+Upon this bridd he tok this wreche,<br/>
+That ther he was snow whyt tofore,<br/>
+Evere afterward colblak therfore<br/>
+He was transformed, as it scheweth,<br/>
+And many a man yit him beschreweth,    810<br/>
+And clepen him into this day<br/>
+A Raven, be whom yit men mai<br/>
+Take evidence, whan he crieth,<br/>
+That som mishapp it signefieth.<br/>
+Be war therfore and sei the beste,<br/>
+If thou wolt be thiself in reste,<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, as I the rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For in an other place I rede<br/>
+Of thilke Nimphe which Laar hihte:<br/>
+For sche the privete be nyhte,    820<br/>
+How Jupiter lay be Jutorne,<br/>
+Hath told, god made hire overtorne:<br/>
+Hire tunge he kutte, and into helle<br/>
+For evere he sende hir forto duelle,<br/>
+As sche that was noght worthi hiere<br/>
+To ben of love a Chamberere,<br/>
+For sche no conseil cowthe hele.<br/>
+And suche adaies be now fele<br/>
+In loves Court, as it is seid,<br/>
+That lete here tunges gon unteid.    830
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, be thou non of tho,<br/>
+To jangle and telle tales so,<br/>
+And namely that thou ne chyde,<br/>
+For Cheste can no conseil hide,<br/>
+For Wraththe seide nevere wel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, soth is everydel<br/>
+That ye me teche, and I wol holde<br/>
+The reule to which I am holde,<br/>
+To fle the Cheste, as ye me bidde,<br/>
+For wel is him that nevere chidde.    840<br/>
+Now tell me forth if ther be more<br/>
+As touchende unto Wraththes lore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Wraththe yit ther is an other,<br/>
+Which is to Cheste his oghne brother,<br/>
+And is be name cleped Hate,<br/>
+That soffreth noght withinne his gate<br/>
+That ther come owther love or pes,<br/>
+For he wol make no reles<br/>
+Of no debat which is befalle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now spek, if thou art on of alle,    850<br/>
+That with this vice hast ben withholde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As yit for oght that ye me tolde,<br/>
+Mi fader, I not what it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In good feith, Sone, I trowe yis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay, bot ye me lere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now lest, my Sone, and thou schalt here.<br/>
+Hate is a wraththe noght schewende,<br/>
+Bot of long time gaderende,<br/>
+And duelleth in the herte loken,<br/>
+Til he se time to be wroken;    860<br/>
+And thanne he scheweth his tempeste<br/>
+Mor sodein than the wilde beste,<br/>
+Which wot nothing what merci is.<br/>
+Mi Sone, art thou knowende of this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My goode fader, as I wene,<br/>
+Now wot I somdel what ye mene;<br/>
+Bot I dar saufly make an oth,<br/>
+Mi ladi was me nevere loth.<br/>
+I wol noght swere natheles<br/>
+That I of hate am gulteles;    870<br/>
+For whanne I to my ladi plie<br/>
+Fro dai to dai and merci crie,<br/>
+And sche no merci on me leith<br/>
+Bot schorte wordes to me seith,<br/>
+Thogh I my ladi love algate,<br/>
+Tho wordes moste I nedes hate;<br/>
+And wolde thei were al despent,<br/>
+Or so ferr oute of londe went<br/>
+That I nevere after scholde hem hiere;<br/>
+And yit love I my ladi diere.    880<br/>
+Thus is ther Hate, as ye mai se,<br/>
+Betwen mi ladi word and me;<br/>
+The word I hate and hire I love,<br/>
+What so me schal betide of love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot forthere mor I wol me schryve,<br/>
+That I have hated al my lyve<br/>
+These janglers, whiche of here Envie<br/>
+Ben evere redi forto lie;<br/>
+For with here fals compassement<br/>
+Fuloften thei have mad me schent    890<br/>
+And hindred me fulofte time,<br/>
+Whan thei no cause wisten bime,<br/>
+Bot onliche of here oghne thoght:<br/>
+And thus fuloften have I boght<br/>
+The lie, and drank noght of the wyn.<br/>
+I wolde here happ were such as myn:<br/>
+For how so that I be now schrive,<br/>
+To hem ne mai I noght foryive,<br/>
+Til that I se hem at debat<br/>
+With love, and thanne myn astat    900<br/>
+Thei mihten be here oghne deme,<br/>
+And loke how wel it scholde hem qweme<br/>
+To hindre a man that loveth sore.<br/>
+And thus I hate hem everemore,<br/>
+Til love on hem wol don his wreche:<br/>
+For that schal I alway beseche<br/>
+Unto the mihti Cupido,<br/>
+That he so mochel wolde do,<br/>
+So as he is of love a godd,<br/>
+To smyte hem with the same rodd    910<br/>
+With which I am of love smite;<br/>
+So that thei mihten knowe and wite<br/>
+How hindringe is a wofull peine<br/>
+To him that love wolde atteigne.<br/>
+Thus evere on hem I wayte and hope,<br/>
+Til I mai sen hem lepe a lope,<br/>
+And halten on the same Sor<br/>
+Which I do now: for overmor<br/>
+I wolde thanne do my myht<br/>
+So forto stonden in here lyht,    920<br/>
+That thei ne scholden finde a weie<br/>
+To that thei wolde, bot aweie<br/>
+I wolde hem putte out of the stede<br/>
+Fro love, riht as thei me dede<br/>
+With that thei speke of me be mowthe.<br/>
+So wolde I do, if that I cowthe,<br/>
+Of hem, and this, so god me save,<br/>
+Is al the hate that I have,<br/>
+Toward these janglers everydiel;<br/>
+I wolde alle othre ferde wel.    930<br/>
+Thus have I, fader, said mi wille;<br/>
+Say ye now forth, for I am stille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of that thou hast me said<br/>
+I holde me noght fulli paid:<br/>
+That thou wolt haten eny man,<br/>
+To that acorden I ne can,<br/>
+Thogh he have hindred thee tofore.<br/>
+Bot this I telle thee therfore,<br/>
+Thou miht upon my beneicoun<br/>
+Wel haten the condicioun    940<br/>
+Of tho janglers, as thou me toldest,<br/>
+Bot furthermor, of that thou woldest<br/>
+Hem hindre in eny other wise,<br/>
+Such Hate is evere to despise.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, I wol thee rede,<br/>
+That thou drawe in be frendlihede<br/>
+That thou ne miht noght do be hate;<br/>
+So miht thou gete love algate<br/>
+And sette thee, my Sone, in reste,<br/>
+For thou schalt finde it for the beste.    950<br/>
+And over this, so as I dar,<br/>
+I rede that thou be riht war<br/>
+Of othre mennes hate aboute,<br/>
+Which every wysman scholde doute:<br/>
+For Hate is evere upon await,<br/>
+And as the fisshere on his bait<br/>
+Sleth, whan he seth the fisshes faste,<br/>
+So, whan he seth time ate laste,<br/>
+That he mai worche an other wo,<br/>
+Schal noman tornen him therfro,    960<br/>
+That Hate nyle his felonie<br/>
+Fulfille and feigne compaignie<br/>
+Yit natheles, for fals Semblant<br/>
+Is toward him of covenant<br/>
+Withholde, so that under bothe<br/>
+The prive wraththe can him clothe,<br/>
+That he schal seme of gret believe.<br/>
+Bot war thee wel that thou ne lieve<br/>
+Al that thou sest tofore thin yhe,<br/>
+So as the Gregois whilom syhe:    970<br/>
+The bok of Troie who so rede,<br/>
+Ther mai he finde ensample in dede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sone after the destruccioun,<br/>
+Whan Troie was al bete doun<br/>
+And slain was Priamus the king,<br/>
+The Gregois, whiche of al this thing<br/>
+Ben cause, tornen hom ayein.<br/>
+Ther mai noman his happ withsein;<br/>
+It hath be sen and felt fulofte,<br/>
+The harde time after the softe:    980<br/>
+Be See as thei forth homward wente,<br/>
+A rage of gret tempeste hem hente;<br/>
+Juno let bende hire parti bowe,<br/>
+The Sky wax derk, the wynd gan blowe,<br/>
+The firy welkne gan to thondre,<br/>
+As thogh the world scholde al to sondre;<br/>
+Fro hevene out of the watergates<br/>
+The reyni Storm fell doun algates<br/>
+And al here takel made unwelde,<br/>
+That noman mihte himself bewelde.    990<br/>
+Ther mai men hiere Schipmen crie,<br/>
+That stode in aunter forto die:<br/>
+He that behinde sat to stiere<br/>
+Mai noght the forestempne hiere;<br/>
+The Schip aros ayein the wawes,<br/>
+The lodesman hath lost his lawes,<br/>
+The See bet in on every side:<br/>
+Thei nysten what fortune abide,<br/>
+Bot sette hem al in goddes wille,<br/>
+Wher he hem wolde save or spille.    1000
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it fell thilke time thus:<br/>
+Ther was a king, the which Namplus<br/>
+Was hote, and he a Sone hadde,<br/>
+At Troie which the Gregois ladde,<br/>
+As he that was mad Prince of alle,<br/>
+Til that fortune let him falle:<br/>
+His name was Palamades.<br/>
+Bot thurgh an hate natheles<br/>
+Of some of hem his deth was cast<br/>
+And he be tresoun overcast.    1010<br/>
+His fader, whan he herde it telle,<br/>
+He swor, if evere his time felle,<br/>
+He wolde him venge, if that he mihte,<br/>
+And therto his avou behihte:<br/>
+And thus this king thurgh prive hate<br/>
+Abod upon await algate,<br/>
+For he was noght of such emprise<br/>
+To vengen him in open wise.<br/>
+The fame, which goth wyde where,<br/>
+Makth knowe how that the Gregois were    1020<br/>
+Homward with al the felaschipe<br/>
+Fro Troie upon the See be Schipe.<br/>
+Namplus, whan he this understod,<br/>
+And knew the tydes of the flod,<br/>
+And sih the wynd blew to the lond,<br/>
+A gret deceipte anon he fond<br/>
+Of prive hate, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Wherof I telle al this matiere.<br/>
+This king the weder gan beholde,<br/>
+And wiste wel thei moten holde    1030<br/>
+Here cours endlong his marche riht,<br/>
+And made upon the derke nyht<br/>
+Of grete Schydes and of blockes<br/>
+Gret fyr ayein the grete rockes,<br/>
+To schewe upon the helles hihe,<br/>
+So that the Flete of Grece it sihe.<br/>
+And so it fell riht as he thoghte:<br/>
+This Flete, which an havene soghte,<br/>
+The bryghte fyres sih a ferr,<br/>
+And thei hem drowen nerr and nerr,    1040<br/>
+And wende wel and understode<br/>
+How al that fyr was made for goode,<br/>
+To schewe wher men scholde aryve,<br/>
+And thiderward thei hasten blyve.<br/>
+In Semblant, as men sein, is guile,<br/>
+And that was proved thilke while;<br/>
+The Schip, which wende his helpe acroche,<br/>
+Drof al to pieces on the roche,<br/>
+And so ther deden ten or twelve;<br/>
+Ther mihte noman helpe himselve,    1050<br/>
+For ther thei wenden deth ascape,<br/>
+Withouten help here deth was schape.<br/>
+Thus thei that comen ferst tofore<br/>
+Upon the Rockes be forlore,<br/>
+Bot thurgh the noise and thurgh the cri<br/>
+These othre were al war therby;<br/>
+And whan the dai began to rowe,<br/>
+Tho mihten thei the sothe knowe,<br/>
+That wher they wenden frendes finde,<br/>
+Thei founden frenschipe al behinde.    1060<br/>
+The lond was thanne sone weyved,<br/>
+Wher that thei hadden be deceived,<br/>
+And toke hem to the hihe See;<br/>
+Therto thei seiden alle yee,<br/>
+Fro that dai forth and war thei were<br/>
+Of that thei hadde assaied there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, hierof thou miht avise<br/>
+How fraude stant in many wise<br/>
+Amonges hem that guile thenke;<br/>
+Ther is no Scrivein with his enke    1070<br/>
+Which half the fraude wryte can<br/>
+That stant in such a maner man:<br/>
+Forthi the wise men ne demen<br/>
+The thinges after that thei semen,<br/>
+Bot after that thei knowe and finde.<br/>
+The Mirour scheweth in his kinde<br/>
+As he hadde al the world withinne,<br/>
+And is in soth nothing therinne;<br/>
+And so farth Hate for a throwe:<br/>
+Til he a man hath overthrowe,    1080<br/>
+Schal noman knowe be his chere<br/>
+Which is avant, ne which arere.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, thenke on this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, so I wole ywiss;<br/>
+And if ther more of Wraththe be,<br/>
+Now axeth forth per charite,<br/>
+As ye be youre bokes knowe,<br/>
+And I the sothe schal beknowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, thou schalt understonde<br/>
+That yit towardes Wraththe stonde    1090<br/>
+Of dedly vices othre tuo:<br/>
+And forto telle here names so,<br/>
+It is Contek and Homicide,<br/>
+That ben to drede on every side.<br/>
+Contek, so as the bokes sein,<br/>
+Folhast hath to his Chamberlein,<br/>
+Be whos conseil al unavised<br/>
+Is Pacience most despised,<br/>
+Til Homicide with hem meete.<br/>
+Fro merci thei ben al unmeete,    1100<br/>
+And thus ben thei the worste of alle<br/>
+Of hem whiche unto wraththe falle,<br/>
+In dede bothe and ek in thoght:<br/>
+For thei acompte here wraththe at noght,<br/>
+Bot if ther be schedinge of blod;<br/>
+And thus lich to a beste wod<br/>
+Thei knowe noght the god of lif.<br/>
+Be so thei have or swerd or knif<br/>
+Here dedly wraththe forto wreke,<br/>
+Of Pite list hem noght to speke;    1110<br/>
+Non other reson thei ne fonge,<br/>
+Bot that thei ben of mihtes stronge.<br/>
+Bot war hem wel in other place,<br/>
+Where every man behoveth grace,<br/>
+Bot ther I trowe it schal hem faile,<br/>
+To whom no merci mihte availe,<br/>
+Bot wroghten upon tiraundie,<br/>
+That no pite ne mihte hem plie.<br/>
+Now tell, my Sone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fader, what?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If thou hast be coupable of that.    1120
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay, Crist me forbiede:<br/>
+I speke onliche as of the dede,<br/>
+Of which I nevere was coupable<br/>
+Withoute cause resonable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot this is noght to mi matiere<br/>
+Of schrifte, why we sitten hiere;<br/>
+For we ben sett to schryve of love,<br/>
+As we begunne ferst above:<br/>
+And natheles I am beknowe<br/>
+That as touchende of loves throwe,    1130<br/>
+Whan I my wittes overwende,<br/>
+Min hertes contek hath non ende,<br/>
+Bot evere it stant upon debat<br/>
+To gret desese of myn astat<br/>
+As for the time that it lasteth.<br/>
+For whan mi fortune overcasteth<br/>
+Hire whiel and is to me so strange,<br/>
+And that I se sche wol noght change,<br/>
+Than caste I al the world aboute,<br/>
+And thenke hou I at home and oute    1140<br/>
+Have al my time in vein despended,<br/>
+And se noght how to ben amended,<br/>
+Bot rathere forto be empeired,<br/>
+As he that is welnyh despeired:<br/>
+For I ne mai no thonk deserve,<br/>
+And evere I love and evere I serve,<br/>
+And evere I am aliche nerr.<br/>
+Thus, for I stonde in such a wer,<br/>
+I am, as who seith, out of herre;<br/>
+And thus upon miself the werre    1150<br/>
+I bringe, and putte out alle pes,<br/>
+That I fulofte in such a res<br/>
+Am wery of myn oghne lif.<br/>
+So that of Contek and of strif<br/>
+I am beknowe and have ansuerd,<br/>
+As ye, my fader, now have herd.<br/>
+Min herte is wonderly begon<br/>
+With conseil, wherof witt is on,<br/>
+Which hath resoun in compaignie;<br/>
+Ayein the whiche stant partie    1160<br/>
+Will, which hath hope of his acord,<br/>
+And thus thei bringen up descord.<br/>
+Witt and resoun conseilen ofte<br/>
+That I myn herte scholde softe,<br/>
+And that I scholde will remue<br/>
+And put him out of retenue,<br/>
+Or elles holde him under fote:<br/>
+For as thei sein, if that he mote<br/>
+His oghne rewle have upon honde,<br/>
+Ther schal no witt ben understonde.    1170<br/>
+Of hope also thei tellen this,<br/>
+That overal, wher that he is,<br/>
+He set the herte in jeupartie<br/>
+With wihssinge and with fantasie,<br/>
+And is noght trewe of that he seith,<br/>
+So that in him ther is no feith:<br/>
+Thus with reson and wit avised<br/>
+Is will and hope aldai despised.<br/>
+Reson seith that I scholde leve<br/>
+To love, wher ther is no leve    1180<br/>
+To spede, and will seith therayein<br/>
+That such an herte is to vilein,<br/>
+Which dar noght love and til he spede,<br/>
+Let hope serve at such a nede:<br/>
+He seith ek, where an herte sit<br/>
+Al hol governed upon wit,<br/>
+He hath this lyves lust forlore.<br/>
+And thus myn herte is al totore<br/>
+Of such a Contek as thei make:<br/>
+Bot yit I mai noght will forsake,    1190<br/>
+That he nys Maister of my thoght,<br/>
+Or that I spede, or spede noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thou dost, my Sone, ayein the riht;<br/>
+Bot love is of so gret a miht,<br/>
+His lawe mai noman refuse,<br/>
+So miht thou thee the betre excuse.<br/>
+And natheles thou schalt be lerned<br/>
+That will scholde evere be governed<br/>
+Of reson more than of kinde,<br/>
+Wherof a tale write I finde.    1200
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Philosophre of which men tolde<br/>
+Ther was whilom be daies olde,<br/>
+And Diogenes thanne he hihte.<br/>
+So old he was that he ne mihte<br/>
+The world travaile, and for the beste<br/>
+He schop him forto take his reste,<br/>
+And duelte at hom in such a wise,<br/>
+That nyh his hous he let devise<br/>
+Endlong upon an Axeltre<br/>
+To sette a tonne in such degre,    1210<br/>
+That he it mihte torne aboute;<br/>
+Wherof on hed was taken oute,<br/>
+For he therinne sitte scholde<br/>
+And torne himself so as he wolde,<br/>
+To take their and se the hevene<br/>
+And deme of the planetes sevene,<br/>
+As he which cowthe mochel what.<br/>
+And thus fulofte there he sat<br/>
+To muse in his philosophie<br/>
+Solein withoute compaignie:    1220<br/>
+So that upon a morwetyde,<br/>
+As thing which scholde so betyde,<br/>
+Whan he was set ther as him liste<br/>
+To loke upon the Sonne ariste,<br/>
+Wherof the propretes he sih,<br/>
+It fell ther cam ridende nyh<br/>
+King Alisandre with a route;<br/>
+And as he caste his yhe aboute,<br/>
+He sih this Tonne, and what it mente<br/>
+He wolde wite, and thider sente    1230<br/>
+A knyht, be whom he mihte it knowe,<br/>
+And he himself that ilke throwe<br/>
+Abod, and hoveth there stille.<br/>
+This kniht after the kinges wille<br/>
+With spore made his hors to gon<br/>
+And to the tonne he cam anon,<br/>
+Wher that he fond a man of Age,<br/>
+And he him tolde the message,<br/>
+Such as the king him hadde bede,<br/>
+And axeth why in thilke stede    1240<br/>
+The Tonne stod, and what it was.<br/>
+And he, which understod the cas,<br/>
+Sat stille and spak no word ayein.<br/>
+The kniht bad speke and seith, “Vilein,<br/>
+Thou schalt me telle, er that I go;<br/>
+It is thi king which axeth so.”<br/>
+“Mi king,” quod he, “that were unriht.”<br/>
+“What is he thanne?” seith the kniht,<br/>
+“Is he thi man?” “That seie I noght,”<br/>
+Quod he, “bot this I am bethoght,    1250<br/>
+Mi mannes man hou that he is.”<br/>
+“Thou lyest, false cherl, ywiss,”<br/>
+The kniht him seith, and was riht wroth,<br/>
+And to the king ayein he goth<br/>
+And tolde him how this man ansuerde.<br/>
+The king, whan he this tale herde,<br/>
+Bad that thei scholden alle abyde,<br/>
+For he himself wol thider ryde.<br/>
+And whan he cam tofore the tonne,<br/>
+He hath his tale thus begonne:    1260<br/>
+“Alheil,” he seith, “what man art thou?”<br/>
+Quod he, “Such on as thou sest now.”<br/>
+The king, which hadde wordes wise,<br/>
+His age wolde noght despise,<br/>
+Bot seith, “Mi fader, I thee preie<br/>
+That thou me wolt the cause seie,<br/>
+How that I am thi mannes man.”<br/>
+“Sire king,” quod he, “and that I can,<br/>
+If that thou wolt.” “Yis,” seith the king.<br/>
+Quod he, “This is the sothe thing:    1270<br/>
+Sith I ferst resoun understod,<br/>
+And knew what thing was evel and good,<br/>
+The will which of my bodi moeveth,<br/>
+Whos werkes that the god reproeveth,<br/>
+I have restreigned everemore,<br/>
+As him which stant under the lore<br/>
+Of reson, whos soubgit he is,<br/>
+So that he mai noght don amis:<br/>
+And thus be weie of covenant<br/>
+Will is my man and my servant,    1280<br/>
+And evere hath ben and evere schal.<br/>
+And thi will is thi principal,<br/>
+And hath the lordschipe of thi witt,<br/>
+So that thou cowthest nevere yit<br/>
+Take o dai reste of thi labour;<br/>
+Bot forto ben a conquerour<br/>
+Of worldes good, which mai noght laste,<br/>
+Thou hiest evere aliche faste,<br/>
+Wher thou no reson hast to winne:<br/>
+And thus thi will is cause of Sinne,    1290<br/>
+And is thi lord, to whom thou servest,<br/>
+Wherof thou litel thonk deservest.”<br/>
+The king of that he thus answerde<br/>
+Was nothing wroth, bot whanne he herde<br/>
+The hihe wisdom which he seide,<br/>
+With goodly wordes this he preide,<br/>
+That he him wolde telle his name.<br/>
+“I am,” quod he, “that ilke same,<br/>
+The which men Diogenes calle.”<br/>
+Tho was the king riht glad withalle,    1300<br/>
+For he hadde often herd tofore<br/>
+What man he was, so that therfore<br/>
+He seide, “O wise Diogene,<br/>
+Now schal thi grete witt be sene;<br/>
+For thou schalt of my yifte have<br/>
+What worldes thing that thou wolt crave.”<br/>
+Quod he, “Thanne hove out of mi Sonne,<br/>
+And let it schyne into mi Tonne;<br/>
+For thou benymst me thilke yifte,<br/>
+Which lith noght in thi miht to schifte:    1310<br/>
+Non other good of thee me nedeth.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king, whom every contre dredeth,<br/>
+Lo, thus he was enformed there:<br/>
+Wherof, my Sone, thou miht lere<br/>
+How that thi will schal noght be lieved,<br/>
+Where it is noght of wit relieved.<br/>
+And thou hast seid thiself er this<br/>
+How that thi will thi maister is;<br/>
+Thurgh which thin hertes thoght withinne<br/>
+Is evere of Contek to beginne,    1320<br/>
+So that it is gretli to drede<br/>
+That it non homicide brede.<br/>
+For love is of a wonder kinde,<br/>
+And hath hise wittes ofte blinde,<br/>
+That thei fro mannes reson falle;<br/>
+Bot whan that it is so befalle<br/>
+That will schal the corage lede,<br/>
+In loves cause it is to drede:<br/>
+Wherof I finde ensample write,<br/>
+Which is behovely forto wite.    1330
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rede a tale, and telleth this:<br/>
+The Cite which Semiramis<br/>
+Enclosed hath with wall aboute,<br/>
+Of worthi folk with many a route<br/>
+Was enhabited here and there;<br/>
+Among the whiche tuo ther were<br/>
+Above alle othre noble and grete,<br/>
+Dwellende tho withinne a Strete<br/>
+So nyh togedre, as it was sene,<br/>
+That ther was nothing hem betwene,    1340<br/>
+Bot wow to wow and wall to wall.<br/>
+This o lord hadde in special<br/>
+A Sone, a lusti Bacheler,<br/>
+In al the toun was non his pier:<br/>
+That other hadde a dowhter eke,<br/>
+In al the lond that forto seke<br/>
+Men wisten non so faire as sche.<br/>
+And fell so, as it scholde be,<br/>
+This faire dowhter nyh this Sone<br/>
+As thei togedre thanne wone,    1350<br/>
+Cupide hath so the thinges schape,<br/>
+That thei ne mihte his hand ascape,<br/>
+That he his fyr on hem ne caste:<br/>
+Wherof her herte he overcaste<br/>
+To folwe thilke lore and suie<br/>
+Which nevere man yit miht eschuie;<br/>
+And that was love, as it is happed,<br/>
+Which hath here hertes so betrapped,<br/>
+That thei be alle weies seche<br/>
+How that thei mihten winne a speche,    1360<br/>
+Here wofull peine forto lisse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who loveth wel, it mai noght misse,<br/>
+And namely whan ther be tuo<br/>
+Of on acord, how so it go,<br/>
+Bot if that thei som weie finde;<br/>
+For love is evere of such a kinde<br/>
+And hath his folk so wel affaited,<br/>
+That howso that it be awaited,<br/>
+Ther mai noman the pourpos lette:<br/>
+And thus betwen hem tuo thei sette    1370<br/>
+And hole upon a wall to make,<br/>
+Thurgh which thei have her conseil take<br/>
+At alle times, whan thei myhte.<br/>
+This faire Maiden Tisbee hihte,<br/>
+And he whom that sche loveth hote<br/>
+Was Piramus be name hote.<br/>
+So longe here lecoun thei recorden,<br/>
+Til ate laste thei acorden<br/>
+Be nihtes time forto wende<br/>
+Al one out fro the tounes ende,    1380<br/>
+Wher was a welle under a Tree;<br/>
+And who cam ferst, or sche or he,<br/>
+He scholde stille there abide.<br/>
+So it befell the nyhtes tide<br/>
+This maiden, which desguised was,<br/>
+Al prively the softe pas<br/>
+Goth thurgh the large toun unknowe,<br/>
+Til that sche cam withinne a throwe<br/>
+Wher that sche liketh forto duelle,<br/>
+At thilke unhappi freisshe welle,    1390<br/>
+Which was also the Forest nyh.<br/>
+Wher sche comende a Leoun syh<br/>
+Into the feld to take his preie,<br/>
+In haste and sche tho fledde aweie,<br/>
+So as fortune scholde falle,<br/>
+For feere and let hire wympel falle<br/>
+Nyh to the welle upon therbage.<br/>
+This Leoun in his wilde rage<br/>
+A beste, which that he fond oute,<br/>
+Hath slain, and with his blodi snoute,    1400<br/>
+Whan he hath eten what he wolde,<br/>
+To drynke of thilke stremes colde<br/>
+Cam to the welle, where he fond<br/>
+The wympel, which out of hire hond<br/>
+Was falle, and he it hath todrawe,<br/>
+Bebled aboute and al forgnawe;<br/>
+And thanne he strawhte him forto drinke<br/>
+Upon the freisshe welles brinke,<br/>
+And after that out of the plein<br/>
+He torneth to the wode ayein.    1410<br/>
+And Tisbee dorste noght remue,<br/>
+Bot as a bridd which were in Mue<br/>
+Withinne a buissh sche kepte hire clos<br/>
+So stille that sche noght aros;<br/>
+Unto hirself and pleigneth ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And fell, whil that sche there lay,<br/>
+This Piramus cam after sone<br/>
+Unto the welle, and be the Mone<br/>
+He fond hire wimpel blodi there.<br/>
+Cam nevere yit to mannes Ere    1420<br/>
+Tidinge, ne to mannes sihte<br/>
+Merveile, which so sore aflihte<br/>
+A mannes herte, as it tho dede<br/>
+To him, which in the same stede<br/>
+With many a wofull compleignynge<br/>
+Began his handes forto wringe,<br/>
+As he which demeth sikerly<br/>
+That sche be ded: and sodeinly<br/>
+His swerd al nakid out he breide<br/>
+In his folhaste, and thus he seide:    1430<br/>
+“I am cause of this felonie,<br/>
+So it is resoun that I die,<br/>
+As sche is ded be cause of me.”<br/>
+And with that word upon his kne<br/>
+He fell, and to the goddes alle<br/>
+Up to the hevene he gan to calle,<br/>
+And preide, sithen it was so<br/>
+That he may noght his love as tho<br/>
+Have in this world, that of her grace<br/>
+He miht hire have in other place,    1440<br/>
+For hiere wolde he noght abide,<br/>
+He seith: bot as it schal betide,<br/>
+The Pomel of his swerd to grounde<br/>
+He sette, and thurgh his herte a wounde<br/>
+He made up to the bare hilte:<br/>
+And in this wise himself he spilte<br/>
+With his folhaste and deth he nam;<br/>
+For sche withinne a while cam,<br/>
+Wher he lai ded upon his knif.<br/>
+So wofull yit was nevere lif    1450<br/>
+As Tisbee was, whan sche him sih:<br/>
+Sche mihte noght o word on hih<br/>
+Speke oute, for hire herte schette,<br/>
+That of hir lif no pris sche sette,<br/>
+Bot ded swounende doun sche fell.<br/>
+Til after, whanne it so befell<br/>
+That sche out of hire traunce awok,<br/>
+With many a wofull pitous lok<br/>
+Hire yhe alwei among sche caste<br/>
+Upon hir love, and ate laste    1460<br/>
+Sche cawhte breth and seide thus:<br/>
+“O thou which cleped art Venus,<br/>
+Goddesse of love, and thou, Cupide,<br/>
+Which loves cause hast forto guide,<br/>
+I wot now wel that ye be blinde,<br/>
+Of thilke unhapp which I now finde<br/>
+Only betwen my love and me.<br/>
+This Piramus, which hiere I se<br/>
+Bledende, what hath he deserved?<br/>
+For he youre heste hath kept and served,    1470<br/>
+And was yong and I bothe also:<br/>
+Helas, why do ye with ous so?<br/>
+Ye sette oure herte bothe afyre,<br/>
+And maden ous such thing desire<br/>
+Wherof that we no skile cowthe;<br/>
+Bot thus oure freisshe lusti yowthe<br/>
+Withoute joie is al despended,<br/>
+Which thing mai nevere ben amended:<br/>
+For as of me this wol I seie,<br/>
+That me is levere forto deie    1480<br/>
+Than live after this sorghful day.”<br/>
+And with this word, where as he lay,<br/>
+Hire love in armes sche embraseth,<br/>
+Hire oghne deth and so pourchaseth<br/>
+That now sche wepte and nou sche kiste,<br/>
+Til ate laste, er sche it wiste,<br/>
+So gret a sorwe is to hire falle,<br/>
+Which overgoth hire wittes alle.<br/>
+As sche which mihte it noght asterte,<br/>
+The swerdes point ayein hire herte    1490<br/>
+Sche sette, and fell doun therupon,<br/>
+Wherof that sche was ded anon:<br/>
+And thus bothe on o swerd bledende<br/>
+Thei weren founde ded liggende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now thou, mi Sone, hast herd this tale,<br/>
+Bewar that of thin oghne bale<br/>
+Thou be noght cause in thi folhaste,<br/>
+And kep that thou thi witt ne waste<br/>
+Upon thi thoght in aventure,<br/>
+Wherof thi lyves forfeture    1500<br/>
+Mai falle: and if thou have so thoght<br/>
+Er this, tell on and hyde it noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, upon loves side<br/>
+Mi conscience I woll noght hyde,<br/>
+How that for love of pure wo<br/>
+I have ben ofte moeved so,<br/>
+That with my wisshes if I myhte,<br/>
+A thousand times, I yow plyhte,<br/>
+I hadde storven in a day;<br/>
+And therof I me schryve may,    1510<br/>
+Though love fully me ne slowh,<br/>
+Mi will to deie was ynowh,<br/>
+So am I of my will coupable:<br/>
+And yit is sche noght merciable,<br/>
+Which mai me yive lif and hele.<br/>
+Bot that hir list noght with me dele,<br/>
+I wot be whos conseil it is,<br/>
+And him wolde I long time er this,<br/>
+And yit I wolde and evere schal,<br/>
+Slen and destruie in special.    1520<br/>
+The gold of nyne kinges londes<br/>
+Ne scholde him save fro myn hondes,<br/>
+In my pouer if that he were;<br/>
+Bot yit him stant of me no fere<br/>
+For noght that evere I can manace.<br/>
+He is the hindrere of mi grace,<br/>
+Til he be ded I mai noght spede;<br/>
+So mot I nedes taken hiede<br/>
+And schape how that he were aweie,<br/>
+If I therto mai finde a weie.    1530
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, tell me now forthi,<br/>
+Which is that mortiel enemy<br/>
+That thou manacest to be ded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, it is such a qwed,<br/>
+That wher I come, he is tofore,<br/>
+And doth so, that mi cause is lore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is his name?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is Daunger,<br/>
+Which is mi ladi consailer:<br/>
+For I was nevere yit so slyh,<br/>
+To come in eny place nyh    1540<br/>
+Wher as sche was be nyht or day,<br/>
+That Danger ne was redy ay,<br/>
+With whom for speche ne for mede<br/>
+Yit mihte I nevere of love spede;<br/>
+For evere this I finde soth,<br/>
+Al that my ladi seith or doth<br/>
+To me, Daunger schal make an ende,<br/>
+And that makth al mi world miswende:<br/>
+And evere I axe his help, bot he<br/>
+Mai wel be cleped sanz pite;    1550<br/>
+For ay the more I to him bowe,<br/>
+The lasse he wol my tale alowe.<br/>
+He hath mi ladi so englued,<br/>
+Sche wol noght that he be remued;<br/>
+For evere he hangeth on hire Seil,<br/>
+And is so prive of conseil,<br/>
+That evere whanne I have oght bede,<br/>
+I finde Danger in hire stede<br/>
+And myn ansuere of him I have;<br/>
+Bot for no merci that I crave,    1560<br/>
+Of merci nevere a point I hadde.<br/>
+I finde his ansuere ay so badde,<br/>
+That werse mihte it nevere be:<br/>
+And thus betwen Danger and me<br/>
+Is evere werre til he dye.<br/>
+Bot mihte I ben of such maistrie,<br/>
+That I Danger hadde overcome,<br/>
+With that were al my joie come.<br/>
+Thus wolde I wonde for no Sinne,<br/>
+Ne yit for al this world to winne;    1570<br/>
+If that I mihte finde a sleyhte,<br/>
+To leie al myn astat in weyhte,<br/>
+I wolde him fro the Court dissevere,<br/>
+So that he come ayeinward nevere.<br/>
+Therfore I wisshe and wolde fain<br/>
+That he were in som wise slain;<br/>
+For while he stant in thilke place,<br/>
+Ne gete I noght my ladi grace.<br/>
+Thus hate I dedly thilke vice,<br/>
+And wolde he stode in non office    1580<br/>
+In place wher mi ladi is;<br/>
+For if he do, I wot wel this,<br/>
+That owther schal he deie or I<br/>
+Withinne a while; and noght forthi<br/>
+On my ladi fulofte I muse,<br/>
+How that sche mai hirself excuse,<br/>
+If that I deie in such a plit.<br/>
+Me thenkth sche mihte noght be qwyt<br/>
+That sche ne were an homicide:<br/>
+And if it scholde so betide,    1590<br/>
+As god forbiede it scholde be,<br/>
+Be double weie it is pite.<br/>
+For I, which al my will and witt<br/>
+Have yove and served evere yit,<br/>
+And thanne I scholde in such a wise<br/>
+In rewardinge of my servise<br/>
+Be ded, me thenkth it were a rowthe:<br/>
+And furthermor, to telle trowthe,<br/>
+Sche, that hath evere be wel named,<br/>
+Were worthi thanne to be blamed    1600<br/>
+And of reson to ben appeled,<br/>
+Whan with o word sche mihte have heled<br/>
+A man, and soffreth him so deie.<br/>
+Ha, who sawh evere such a weie?<br/>
+Ha, who sawh evere such destresse?<br/>
+Withoute pite gentilesse,<br/>
+Withoute mercy wommanhede,<br/>
+That wol so quyte a man his mede,<br/>
+Which evere hath be to love trewe.<br/>
+Mi goode fader, if ye rewe    1610<br/>
+Upon mi tale, tell me now,<br/>
+And I wol stinte and herkne yow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, attempre thi corage<br/>
+Fro Wraththe, and let thin herte assuage:<br/>
+For who so wole him underfonge,<br/>
+He mai his grace abide longe,<br/>
+Er he of love be received;<br/>
+And ek also, bot it be weyved,<br/>
+Ther mihte mochel thing befalle,<br/>
+That scholde make a man to falle    1620<br/>
+Fro love, that nevere afterward<br/>
+Ne durste he loke thiderward.<br/>
+In harde weies men gon softe,<br/>
+And er thei clymbe avise hem ofte:<br/>
+Men sen alday that rape reweth;<br/>
+And who so wicked Ale breweth,<br/>
+Fulofte he mot the werse drinke:<br/>
+Betre is to flete than to sincke;<br/>
+Betre is upon the bridel chiewe<br/>
+Thanne if he felle and overthrewe,    1630<br/>
+The hors and stikede in the Myr:<br/>
+To caste water in the fyr<br/>
+Betre is than brenne up al the hous:<br/>
+The man which is malicious<br/>
+And folhastif, fulofte he falleth,<br/>
+And selden is whan love him calleth.<br/>
+Forthi betre is to soffre a throwe<br/>
+Than be to wilde and overthrowe;<br/>
+Suffrance hath evere be the beste<br/>
+To wissen him that secheth reste:    1640<br/>
+And thus, if thou wolt love and spede,<br/>
+Mi Sone, soffre, as I the rede.<br/>
+What mai the Mous ayein the Cat?<br/>
+And for this cause I axe that,<br/>
+Who mai to love make a werre,<br/>
+That he ne hath himself the werre?<br/>
+Love axeth pes and evere schal,<br/>
+And who that fihteth most withal<br/>
+Schal lest conquere of his emprise:<br/>
+For this thei tellen that ben wise,    1650<br/>
+Wicke is to stryve and have the werse;<br/>
+To hasten is noght worth a kerse;<br/>
+Thing that a man mai noght achieve,<br/>
+That mai noght wel be don at Eve,<br/>
+It mot abide til the morwe.<br/>
+Ne haste noght thin oghne sorwe,<br/>
+Mi Sone, and tak this in thi witt,<br/>
+He hath noght lost that wel abitt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ensample that it falleth thus,<br/>
+Thou miht wel take of Piramus,    1660<br/>
+Whan he in haste his swerd outdrowh<br/>
+And on the point himselve slowh<br/>
+For love of Tisbee pitously,<br/>
+For he hire wympel fond blody<br/>
+And wende a beste hire hadde slain;<br/>
+Wher as him oghte have be riht fain,<br/>
+For sche was there al sauf beside:<br/>
+Bot for he wolde noght abide,<br/>
+This meschief fell. Forthi be war,<br/>
+Mi Sone, as I the warne dar,    1670<br/>
+Do thou nothing in such a res,<br/>
+For suffrance is the welle of Pes.<br/>
+Thogh thou to loves Court poursuie,<br/>
+Yit sit it wel that thou eschuie<br/>
+That thou the Court noght overhaste,<br/>
+For so miht thou thi time waste;<br/>
+Bot if thin happ therto be schape,<br/>
+It mai noght helpe forto rape.<br/>
+Therfore attempre thi corage;<br/>
+Folhaste doth non avantage,    1680<br/>
+Bot ofte it set a man behinde<br/>
+In cause of love, and that I finde<br/>
+Be olde ensample, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Touchende of love in this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Maiden whilom ther was on,<br/>
+Which Daphne hihte, and such was non<br/>
+Of beaute thanne, as it was seid.<br/>
+Phebus his love hath on hire leid,<br/>
+And therupon to hire he soghte<br/>
+In his folhaste, and so besoghte,    1690<br/>
+That sche with him no reste hadde;<br/>
+For evere upon hire love he gradde,<br/>
+And sche seide evere unto him nay.<br/>
+So it befell upon a dai,<br/>
+Cupide, which hath every chance<br/>
+Of love under his governance,<br/>
+Syh Phebus hasten him so sore:<br/>
+And for he scholde him haste more,<br/>
+And yit noght speden ate laste,<br/>
+A dart thurghout his herte he caste,    1700<br/>
+Which was of gold and al afyre,<br/>
+That made him manyfold desire<br/>
+Of love more thanne he dede.<br/>
+To Daphne ek in the same stede<br/>
+A dart of Led he caste and smot,<br/>
+Which was al cold and nothing hot.<br/>
+And thus Phebus in love brenneth,<br/>
+And in his haste aboute renneth,<br/>
+To loke if that he mihte winne;<br/>
+Bot he was evere to beginne,    1710<br/>
+For evere awei fro him sche fledde,<br/>
+So that he nevere his love spedde.<br/>
+And forto make him full believe<br/>
+That no Folhaste mihte achieve<br/>
+To gete love in such degree,<br/>
+This Daphne into a lorer tre<br/>
+Was torned, which is evere grene,<br/>
+In tokne, as yit it mai be sene,<br/>
+That sche schal duelle a maiden stille,<br/>
+And Phebus failen of his wille.    1720
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be suche ensamples, as thei stonde,<br/>
+Mi Sone, thou miht understonde,<br/>
+To hasten love is thing in vein,<br/>
+Whan that fortune is therayein.<br/>
+To take where a man hath leve<br/>
+Good is, and elles he mot leve;<br/>
+For whan a mannes happes failen,<br/>
+Ther is non haste mai availen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, grant merci of this:<br/>
+Bot while I se mi ladi is    1730<br/>
+No tre, but halt hire oghne forme,<br/>
+Ther mai me noman so enforme,<br/>
+To whether part fortune wende,<br/>
+That I unto mi lyves ende<br/>
+Ne wol hire serven everemo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, sithen it is so,<br/>
+I seie nomor; bot in this cas<br/>
+Bewar how it with Phebus was.<br/>
+Noght only upon loves chance,<br/>
+Bot upon every governance    1740<br/>
+Which falleth unto mannes dede,<br/>
+Folhaste is evere forto drede,<br/>
+And that a man good consail take,<br/>
+Er he his pourpos undertake,<br/>
+For consail put Folhaste aweie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now goode fader, I you preie,<br/>
+That forto wisse me the more,<br/>
+Som good ensample upon this lore<br/>
+Ye wolden telle of that is write,<br/>
+That I the betre mihte wite    1750<br/>
+How I Folhaste scholde eschuie,<br/>
+And the wisdom of conseil suie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that thou miht enforme<br/>
+Thi pacience upon the forme<br/>
+Of old essamples, as thei felle,<br/>
+Now understond what I schal telle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan noble Troie was belein<br/>
+And overcome, and hom ayein<br/>
+The Gregois torned fro the siege,<br/>
+The kinges founde here oghne liege    1760<br/>
+In manye places, as men seide,<br/>
+That hem forsoke and desobeide.<br/>
+Among the whiche fell this cas<br/>
+To Demephon and Athemas,<br/>
+That weren kinges bothe tuo,<br/>
+And bothe weren served so:<br/>
+Here lieges wolde hem noght receive,<br/>
+So that thei mote algates weyve<br/>
+To seche lond in other place,<br/>
+For there founde thei no grace.    1770<br/>
+Wherof they token hem to rede,<br/>
+And soghten frendes ate nede,<br/>
+And ech of hem asseureth other<br/>
+To helpe as to his oghne brother,<br/>
+To vengen hem of thilke oultrage<br/>
+And winne ayein here heritage.<br/>
+And thus thei ryde aboute faste<br/>
+To gete hem help, and ate laste<br/>
+Thei hadden pouer sufficant,<br/>
+And maden thanne a covenant,    1780<br/>
+That thei ne scholden no lif save,<br/>
+Ne prest, ne clerc, ne lord, ne knave,<br/>
+Ne wif, ne child, of that thei finde,<br/>
+Which berth visage of mannes kinde,<br/>
+So that no lif schal be socoured,<br/>
+Bot with the dedly swerd devoured:<br/>
+In such Folhaste here ordinance<br/>
+Thei schapen forto do vengance.<br/>
+Whan this pourpos was wist and knowe<br/>
+Among here host, tho was ther blowe    1790<br/>
+Of wordes many a speche aboute:<br/>
+Of yonge men the lusti route<br/>
+Were of this tale glad ynowh,<br/>
+Ther was no care for the plowh;<br/>
+As thei that weren Folhastif,<br/>
+Thei ben acorded to the strif,<br/>
+And sein it mai noght be to gret<br/>
+To vengen hem of such forfet:<br/>
+Thus seith the wilde unwise tonge<br/>
+Of hem that there weren yonge.    1800<br/>
+Bot Nestor, which was old and hor,<br/>
+The salve sih tofore the sor,<br/>
+As he that was of conseil wys:<br/>
+So that anon be his avis<br/>
+Ther was a prive conseil nome.<br/>
+The lordes ben togedre come;<br/>
+This Demephon and Athemas<br/>
+Here pourpos tolden, as it was;<br/>
+Thei sieten alle stille and herde,<br/>
+Was non bot Nestor hem ansuerde.    1810<br/>
+He bad hem, if thei wolde winne,<br/>
+They scholden se, er thei beginne,<br/>
+Here ende, and sette here ferste entente,<br/>
+That thei hem after ne repente:<br/>
+And axeth hem this questioun,<br/>
+To what final conclusioun<br/>
+Thei wolde regne Kinges there,<br/>
+If that no poeple in londe were;<br/>
+And seith, it were a wonder wierde<br/>
+To sen a king become an hierde,    1820<br/>
+Wher no lif is bot only beste<br/>
+Under the liegance of his heste;<br/>
+For who that is of man no king,<br/>
+The remenant is as no thing.<br/>
+He seith ek, if the pourpos holde<br/>
+To sle the poeple, as thei tuo wolde,<br/>
+Whan thei it mihte noght restore,<br/>
+Al Grece it scholde abegge sore,<br/>
+To se the wilde beste wone<br/>
+Wher whilom duelte a mannes Sone:    1830<br/>
+And for that cause he bad hem trete,<br/>
+And stinte of the manaces grete.<br/>
+Betre is to winne be fair speche,<br/>
+He seith, than such vengance seche;<br/>
+For whanne a man is most above,<br/>
+Him nedeth most to gete him love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Nestor hath his tale seid,<br/>
+Ayein him was no word withseid;<br/>
+It thoghte hem alle he seide wel:<br/>
+And thus fortune hire dedly whiel    1840<br/>
+Fro werre torneth into pes.<br/>
+Bot forth thei wenten natheles;<br/>
+And whan the Contres herde sein<br/>
+How that here kinges be besein<br/>
+Of such a pouer as thei ladde,<br/>
+Was non so bold that hem ne dradde,<br/>
+And forto seche pes and grith<br/>
+Thei sende and preide anon forthwith,<br/>
+So that the kinges ben appesed,<br/>
+And every mannes herte is esed;    1850<br/>
+Al was foryete and noght recorded.<br/>
+And thus thei ben togedre acorded;<br/>
+The kinges were ayein received,<br/>
+And pes was take and wraththe weived,<br/>
+And al thurgh conseil which was good<br/>
+Of him that reson understod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be this ensample, Sone, attempre<br/>
+Thin herte and let no will distempre<br/>
+Thi wit, and do nothing be myht<br/>
+Which mai be do be love and riht.    1860<br/>
+Folhaste is cause of mochel wo;<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, do noght so.<br/>
+And as touchende of Homicide<br/>
+Which toucheth unto loves side,<br/>
+Fulofte it falleth unavised<br/>
+Thurgh will, which is noght wel assised,<br/>
+Whan wit and reson ben aweie<br/>
+And that Folhaste is in the weie,<br/>
+Wherof hath falle gret vengance.<br/>
+Forthi tak into remembrance    1870<br/>
+To love in such a maner wise<br/>
+That thou deserve no juise:<br/>
+For wel I wot, thou miht noght lette,<br/>
+That thou ne schalt thin herte sette<br/>
+To love, wher thou wolt or non;<br/>
+Bot if thi wit be overgon,<br/>
+So that it torne into malice,<br/>
+Ther wot noman of thilke vice,<br/>
+What peril that ther mai befalle:<br/>
+Wherof a tale amonges alle,    1880<br/>
+Which is gret pite forto hiere,<br/>
+I thenke forto tellen hiere,<br/>
+That thou such moerdre miht withstonde,<br/>
+Whan thou the tale hast understonde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Troie at thilke noble toun,<br/>
+Whos fame stant yit of renoun<br/>
+And evere schal to mannes Ere,<br/>
+The Siege laste longe there,<br/>
+Er that the Greks it mihten winne,<br/>
+Whil Priamus was king therinne;    1890<br/>
+Bot of the Greks that lyhe aboute<br/>
+Agamenon ladde al the route.<br/>
+This thing is knowen overal,<br/>
+Bot yit I thenke in special<br/>
+To my matiere therupon<br/>
+Telle in what wise Agamenon,<br/>
+Thurgh chance which mai noght be weived,<br/>
+Of love untrewe was deceived.<br/>
+An old sawe is, “Who that is slyh<br/>
+In place where he mai be nyh,    1900<br/>
+He makth the ferre Lieve loth”:<br/>
+Of love and thus fulofte it goth.<br/>
+Ther while Agamenon batailleth<br/>
+To winne Troie, and it assailleth,<br/>
+Fro home and was long time ferr,<br/>
+Egistus drowh his qweene nerr,<br/>
+And with the leiser which he hadde<br/>
+This ladi at his wille he ladde:<br/>
+Climestre was hire rihte name,<br/>
+Sche was therof gretli to blame,    1910<br/>
+To love there it mai noght laste.<br/>
+Bot fell to meschief ate laste;<br/>
+For whan this noble worthi kniht<br/>
+Fro Troie cam, the ferste nyht<br/>
+That he at home abedde lay,<br/>
+Egistus, longe er it was day,<br/>
+As this Climestre him hadde asent,<br/>
+And weren bothe of on assent,<br/>
+Be treson slowh him in his bedd.<br/>
+Bot moerdre, which mai noght ben hedd,    1920<br/>
+Sprong out to every mannes Ere,<br/>
+Wherof the lond was full of fere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Agamenon hath be this qweene<br/>
+A Sone, and that was after sene;<br/>
+Bot yit as thanne he was of yowthe,<br/>
+A babe, which no reson cowthe,<br/>
+And as godd wolde, it fell him thus.<br/>
+A worthi kniht Taltabius<br/>
+This yonge child hath in kepinge,<br/>
+And whan he herde of this tidinge,    1930<br/>
+Of this treson, of this misdede,<br/>
+He gan withinne himself to drede,<br/>
+In aunter if this false Egiste<br/>
+Upon him come, er he it wiste,<br/>
+To take and moerdre of his malice<br/>
+This child, which he hath to norrice:<br/>
+And for that cause in alle haste<br/>
+Out of the lond he gan him haste<br/>
+And to the king of Crete he strawhte<br/>
+And him this yonge lord betawhte,    1940<br/>
+And preide him for his fader sake<br/>
+That he this child wolde undertake<br/>
+And kepe him til he be of Age,<br/>
+So as he was of his lignage;<br/>
+And tolde him over al the cas,<br/>
+How that his fadre moerdred was,<br/>
+And hou Egistus, as men seide,<br/>
+Was king, to whom the lond obeide.<br/>
+And whanne Ydomeneux the king<br/>
+Hath understondinge of this thing,    1950<br/>
+Which that this kniht him hadde told,<br/>
+He made sorwe manyfold,<br/>
+And tok this child into his warde,<br/>
+And seide he wolde him kepe and warde,<br/>
+Til that he were of such a myht<br/>
+To handle a swerd and ben a knyht,<br/>
+To venge him at his oghne wille.<br/>
+And thus Horestes duelleth stille,<br/>
+Such was the childes rihte name,<br/>
+Which after wroghte mochel schame    1960<br/>
+In vengance of his fader deth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The time of yeres overgeth,<br/>
+That he was man of brede and lengthe,<br/>
+Of wit, of manhod and of strengthe,<br/>
+A fair persone amonges alle.<br/>
+And he began to clepe and calle,<br/>
+As he which come was to manne,<br/>
+Unto the King of Crete thanne,<br/>
+Preiende that he wolde him make<br/>
+A kniht and pouer with him take,    1970<br/>
+For lengere wolde he noght beleve,<br/>
+He seith, bot preith the king of leve<br/>
+To gon and cleyme his heritage<br/>
+And vengen him of thilke oultrage<br/>
+Which was unto his fader do.<br/>
+The king assenteth wel therto,<br/>
+With gret honour and knyht him makth,<br/>
+And gret pouer to him betakth,<br/>
+And gan his journe forto caste:<br/>
+So that Horestes ate laste    1980<br/>
+His leve tok and forth he goth.<br/>
+As he that was in herte wroth,<br/>
+His ferste pleinte to bemene,<br/>
+Unto the Cite of Athene<br/>
+He goth him forth and was received,<br/>
+So there was he noght deceived.<br/>
+The Duc and tho that weren wise<br/>
+Thei profren hem to his servise;<br/>
+And he hem thonketh of here profre<br/>
+And seith himself he wol gon offre    1990<br/>
+Unto the goddes for his sped,<br/>
+As alle men him yeven red.<br/>
+So goth he to the temple forth:<br/>
+Of yiftes that be mochel worth<br/>
+His sacrifice and his offringe<br/>
+He made; and after his axinge<br/>
+He was ansuerd, if that he wolde<br/>
+His stat recovere, thanne he scholde<br/>
+Upon his Moder do vengance<br/>
+So cruel, that the remembrance    2000<br/>
+Therof mihte everemore abide,<br/>
+As sche that was an homicide<br/>
+And of hire oghne lord Moerdrice.<br/>
+Horestes, which of thilke office<br/>
+Was nothing glad, as thanne he preide<br/>
+Unto the goddes there and seide<br/>
+That thei the juggement devise,<br/>
+How sche schal take the juise.<br/>
+And therupon he hadde ansuere,<br/>
+That he hire Pappes scholde of tere    2010<br/>
+Out of hire brest his oghne hondes,<br/>
+And for ensample of alle londes<br/>
+With hors sche scholde be todrawe,<br/>
+Til houndes hadde hire bones gnawe<br/>
+Withouten eny sepulture:<br/>
+This was a wofull aventure.<br/>
+And whan Horestes hath al herd,<br/>
+How that the goddes have ansuerd,<br/>
+Forth with the strengthe which he ladde<br/>
+The Duc and his pouer he hadde,    2020<br/>
+And to a Cite forth thei gon,<br/>
+The which was cleped Cropheon,<br/>
+Where as Phoieus was lord and Sire,<br/>
+Which profreth him withouten hyre<br/>
+His help and al that he mai do,<br/>
+As he that was riht glad therto,<br/>
+To grieve his mortiel enemy:<br/>
+And tolde hem certein cause why,<br/>
+How that Egiste in Mariage<br/>
+His dowhter whilom of full Age    2030<br/>
+Forlai, and afterward forsok,<br/>
+Whan he Horestes Moder tok.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men sein, “Old Senne newe schame”:<br/>
+Thus more and more aros the blame<br/>
+Ayein Egiste on every side.<br/>
+Horestes with his host to ride<br/>
+Began, and Phoieus with hem wente;<br/>
+I trowe Egiste him schal repente.<br/>
+Thei riden forth unto Micene,<br/>
+Wher lay Climestre thilke qweene,    2040<br/>
+The which Horestes moder is:<br/>
+And whan sche herde telle of this,<br/>
+The gates weren faste schet,<br/>
+And thei were of here entre let.<br/>
+Anon this Cite was withoute<br/>
+Belein and sieged al aboute,<br/>
+And evere among thei it assaile,<br/>
+Fro day to nyht and so travaile,<br/>
+Til ate laste thei it wonne;<br/>
+Tho was ther sorwe ynowh begonne.    2050
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Horestes dede his moder calle<br/>
+Anon tofore the lordes alle<br/>
+And ek tofor the poeple also,<br/>
+To hire and tolde his tale tho,<br/>
+And seide, “O cruel beste unkinde,<br/>
+How mihtest thou thin herte finde,<br/>
+For eny lust of loves drawhte,<br/>
+That thou acordest to the slawhte<br/>
+Of him which was thin oghne lord?<br/>
+Thi treson stant of such record,    2060<br/>
+Thou miht thi werkes noght forsake;<br/>
+So mot I for mi fader sake<br/>
+Vengance upon thi bodi do,<br/>
+As I comanded am therto.<br/>
+Unkindely for thou hast wroght,<br/>
+Unkindeliche it schal be boght,<br/>
+The Sone schal the Moder sle,<br/>
+For that whilom thou seidest yee<br/>
+To that thou scholdest nay have seid.”<br/>
+And he with that his hond hath leid    2070<br/>
+Upon his Moder brest anon,<br/>
+And rente out fro the bare bon<br/>
+Hire Pappes bothe and caste aweie<br/>
+Amiddes in the carte weie,<br/>
+And after tok the dede cors<br/>
+And let it drawe awey with hors<br/>
+Unto the hound and to the raven;<br/>
+Sche was non other wise graven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egistus, which was elles where,<br/>
+Tidinges comen to his Ere    2080<br/>
+How that Micenes was belein,<br/>
+Bot what was more herd he noght sein;<br/>
+With gret manace and mochel bost<br/>
+He drowh pouer and made an host<br/>
+And cam in rescousse of the toun.<br/>
+Bot al the sleyhte of his tresoun<br/>
+Horestes wiste it be aspie,<br/>
+And of his men a gret partie<br/>
+He made in buisshement abide,<br/>
+To waite on him in such a tide    2090<br/>
+That he ne mihte here hond ascape:<br/>
+And in this wise as he hath schape<br/>
+The thing befell, so that Egiste<br/>
+Was take, er he himself it wiste,<br/>
+And was forth broght hise hondes bounde,<br/>
+As whan men han a tretour founde.<br/>
+And tho that weren with him take,<br/>
+Whiche of tresoun were overtake,<br/>
+Togedre in o sentence falle;<br/>
+Bot false Egiste above hem alle    2100<br/>
+Was demed to diverse peine,<br/>
+The worste that men cowthe ordeigne,<br/>
+And so forth after be the lawe<br/>
+He was unto the gibet drawe,<br/>
+Where he above alle othre hongeth,<br/>
+As to a tretour it belongeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho fame with hire swifte wynges<br/>
+Aboute flyh and bar tidinges,<br/>
+And made it cowth in alle londes<br/>
+How that Horestes with hise hondes    2110<br/>
+Climestre his oghne Moder slowh.<br/>
+Some sein he dede wel ynowh,<br/>
+And som men sein he dede amis,<br/>
+Diverse opinion ther is:<br/>
+That sche is ded thei speken alle,<br/>
+Bot pleinli hou it is befalle,<br/>
+The matiere in so litel throwe<br/>
+In soth ther mihte noman knowe<br/>
+Bot thei that weren ate dede:<br/>
+And comunliche in every nede    2120<br/>
+The worste speche is rathest herd<br/>
+And lieved, til it be ansuerd.<br/>
+The kinges and the lordes grete<br/>
+Begonne Horestes forto threte<br/>
+To puten him out of his regne:<br/>
+“He is noght worthi forto regne,<br/>
+The child which slowh his moder so,”<br/>
+Thei saide; and therupon also<br/>
+The lordes of comun assent<br/>
+A time sette of parlement,    2130<br/>
+And to Athenes king and lord<br/>
+Togedre come of on accord,<br/>
+To knowe hou that the sothe was:<br/>
+So that Horestes in this cas<br/>
+Thei senden after, and he com.<br/>
+King Menelay the wordes nom<br/>
+And axeth him of this matiere:<br/>
+And he, that alle it mihten hiere,<br/>
+Ansuerde and tolde his tale alarge,<br/>
+And hou the goddes in his charge    2140<br/>
+Comanded him in such a wise<br/>
+His oghne hond to do juise.<br/>
+And with this tale a Duc aros,<br/>
+Which was a worthi kniht of los,<br/>
+His name was Menesteus,<br/>
+And seide unto the lordes thus:<br/>
+“The wreeche which Horeste dede,<br/>
+It was thing of the goddes bede,<br/>
+And nothing of his crualte;<br/>
+And if ther were of mi degree    2150<br/>
+In al this place such a kniht<br/>
+That wolde sein it was no riht,<br/>
+I wole it with my bodi prove.”<br/>
+And therupon he caste his glove,<br/>
+And ek this noble Duc alleide<br/>
+Ful many an other skile, and seide<br/>
+Sche hadde wel deserved wreche,<br/>
+Ferst for the cause of Spousebreche,<br/>
+And after wroghte in such a wise<br/>
+That al the world it oghte agrise,    2160<br/>
+Whan that sche for so foul a vice<br/>
+Was of hire oghne lord moerdrice.<br/>
+Thei seten alle stille and herde,<br/>
+Bot therto was noman ansuerde,<br/>
+It thoghte hem alle he seide skile,<br/>
+Ther is noman withseie it wile;<br/>
+Whan thei upon the reson musen,<br/>
+Horestes alle thei excusen:<br/>
+So that with gret solempnete<br/>
+He was unto his dignete    2170<br/>
+Received, and coroned king.<br/>
+And tho befell a wonder thing:<br/>
+Egiona, whan sche this wiste,<br/>
+Which was the dowhter of Egiste<br/>
+And Soster on the moder side<br/>
+To this Horeste, at thilke tide,<br/>
+Whan sche herde how hir brother spedde,<br/>
+For pure sorwe, which hire ledde,<br/>
+That he ne hadde ben exiled,<br/>
+Sche hath hire oghne lif beguiled    2180<br/>
+Anon and hyng hireselve tho.<br/>
+It hath and schal ben everemo,<br/>
+To moerdre who that wole assente,<br/>
+He mai noght faille to repente:<br/>
+This false Egiona was on,<br/>
+Which forto moerdre Agamenon<br/>
+Yaf hire acord and hire assent,<br/>
+So that be goddes juggement,<br/>
+Thogh that non other man it wolde,<br/>
+Sche tok hire juise as sche scholde;    2190<br/>
+And as sche to an other wroghte,<br/>
+Vengance upon hireself sche soghte,<br/>
+And hath of hire unhappi wit<br/>
+A moerdre with a moerdre quit.<br/>
+Such is of moerdre the vengance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, in remembrance<br/>
+Of this ensample tak good hiede:<br/>
+For who that thenkth his love spiede<br/>
+With moerdre, he schal with worldes schame<br/>
+Himself and ek his love schame.    2200
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, of this aventure<br/>
+Which ye have told, I you assure<br/>
+Min herte is sory forto hiere,<br/>
+Bot only for I wolde lere<br/>
+What is to done, and what to leve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And over this now be your leve,<br/>
+That ye me wolden telle I preie,<br/>
+If ther be lieffull eny weie<br/>
+Withoute Senne a man to sle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, in sondri wise ye.    2210<br/>
+What man that is of traiterie,<br/>
+Of moerdre or elles robberie<br/>
+Atteint, the jugge schal noght lette,<br/>
+Bot he schal slen of pure dette,<br/>
+And doth gret Senne, if that he wonde.<br/>
+For who that lawe hath upon honde,<br/>
+And spareth forto do justice<br/>
+For merci, doth noght his office,<br/>
+That he his mercy so bewareth,<br/>
+Whan for o schrewe which he spareth    2220<br/>
+A thousand goode men he grieveth:<br/>
+With such merci who that believeth<br/>
+To plese god, he is deceived,<br/>
+Or elles resoun mot be weyved.<br/>
+The lawe stod er we were bore,<br/>
+How that a kinges swerd is bore<br/>
+In signe that he schal defende<br/>
+His trewe poeple and make an ende<br/>
+Of suche as wolden hem devoure.<br/>
+Lo thus, my Sone, to socoure    2230<br/>
+The lawe and comun riht to winne,<br/>
+A man mai sle withoute Sinne,<br/>
+And do therof a gret almesse,<br/>
+So forto kepe rihtwisnesse.<br/>
+And over this for his contre<br/>
+In time of werre a man is fre<br/>
+Himself, his hous and ek his lond<br/>
+Defende with his oghne hond,<br/>
+And slen, if that he mai no bet,<br/>
+After the lawe which is set.    2240
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, fader, thanne I you beseche<br/>
+Of hem that dedly werres seche<br/>
+In worldes cause and scheden blod,<br/>
+If such an homicide is good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, upon thi question<br/>
+The trowthe of myn opinion,<br/>
+Als ferforth as my wit arecheth<br/>
+And as the pleine lawe techeth,<br/>
+I woll thee telle in evidence,<br/>
+To rewle with thi conscience.    2250
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hihe god of his justice<br/>
+That ilke foule horrible vice<br/>
+Of homicide he hath forbede,<br/>
+Be Moises as it was bede.<br/>
+Whan goddes Sone also was bore,<br/>
+He sende hise anglis doun therfore,<br/>
+Whom the Schepherdes herden singe,<br/>
+Pes to the men of welwillinge<br/>
+In erthe be among ous here.<br/>
+So forto speke in this matiere    2260<br/>
+After the lawe of charite,<br/>
+Ther schal no dedly werre be:<br/>
+And ek nature it hath defended<br/>
+And in hir lawe pes comended,<br/>
+Which is the chief of mannes welthe,<br/>
+Of mannes lif, of mannes helthe.<br/>
+Bot dedly werre hath his covine<br/>
+Of pestilence and of famine,<br/>
+Of poverte and of alle wo,<br/>
+Wherof this world we blamen so,    2270<br/>
+Which now the werre hath under fote,<br/>
+Til god himself therof do bote.<br/>
+For alle thing which god hath wroght<br/>
+In Erthe, werre it bringth to noght:<br/>
+The cherche is brent, the priest is slain,<br/>
+The wif, the maide is ek forlain,<br/>
+The lawe is lore and god unserved:<br/>
+I not what mede he hath deserved<br/>
+That suche werres ledeth inne.<br/>
+If that he do it forto winne,    2280<br/>
+Ferst to acompte his grete cost<br/>
+Forth with the folk that he hath lost,<br/>
+As to the wordes rekeninge<br/>
+Ther schal he finde no winnynge;<br/>
+And if he do it to pourchace<br/>
+The hevene mede, of such a grace<br/>
+I can noght speke, and natheles<br/>
+Crist hath comanded love and pes,<br/>
+And who that worcheth the revers,<br/>
+I trowe his mede is ful divers.    2290<br/>
+And sithen thanne that we finde<br/>
+That werres in here oghne kinde<br/>
+Ben toward god of no decerte,<br/>
+And ek thei bringen in poverte<br/>
+Of worldes good, it is merveile<br/>
+Among the men what it mai eyle,<br/>
+That thei a pes ne conne sette.<br/>
+I trowe Senne be the lette,<br/>
+And every mede of Senne is deth;<br/>
+So wot I nevere hou that it geth:    2300<br/>
+Bot we that ben of o believe<br/>
+Among ousself, this wolde I lieve,<br/>
+That betre it were pes to chese,<br/>
+Than so be double weie lese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I not if that it now so stonde,<br/>
+Bot this a man mai understonde,<br/>
+Who that these olde bokes redeth,<br/>
+That coveitise is on which ledeth,<br/>
+And broghte ferst the werres inne.<br/>
+At Grece if that I schal beginne,    2310<br/>
+Ther was it proved hou it stod:<br/>
+To Perce, which was ful of good,<br/>
+Thei maden werre in special,<br/>
+And so thei deden overal,<br/>
+Wher gret richesse was in londe,<br/>
+So that thei leften nothing stonde<br/>
+Unwerred, bot onliche Archade.<br/>
+For there thei no werres made,<br/>
+Be cause it was bareigne and povere,<br/>
+Wherof thei mihten noght recovere;    2320<br/>
+And thus poverte was forbore,<br/>
+He that noght hadde noght hath lore.<br/>
+Bot yit it is a wonder thing,<br/>
+Whan that a riche worthi king,<br/>
+Or other lord, what so he be,<br/>
+Wol axe and cleyme proprete<br/>
+In thing to which he hath no riht,<br/>
+Bot onliche of his grete miht:<br/>
+For this mai every man wel wite,<br/>
+That bothe kinde and lawe write    2330<br/>
+Expressly stonden therayein.<br/>
+Bot he mot nedes somwhat sein,<br/>
+Althogh ther be no reson inne,<br/>
+Which secheth cause forto winne:<br/>
+For wit that is with will oppressed,<br/>
+Whan coveitise him hath adressed,<br/>
+And alle resoun put aweie,<br/>
+He can wel finde such a weie<br/>
+To werre, where as evere him liketh,<br/>
+Wherof that he the world entriketh,    2340<br/>
+That many a man of him compleigneth:<br/>
+Bot yit alwei som cause he feigneth,<br/>
+And of his wrongful herte he demeth<br/>
+That al is wel, what evere him semeth,<br/>
+Be so that he mai winne ynowh.<br/>
+For as the trew man to the plowh<br/>
+Only to the gaignage entendeth,<br/>
+Riht so the werreiour despendeth<br/>
+His time and hath no conscience.<br/>
+And in this point for evidence    2350<br/>
+Of hem that suche werres make,<br/>
+Thou miht a gret ensample take,<br/>
+How thei her tirannie excusen<br/>
+Of that thei wrongfull werres usen,<br/>
+And how thei stonde of on acord,<br/>
+The Souldeour forth with the lord,<br/>
+The povere man forth with the riche,<br/>
+As of corage thei ben liche,<br/>
+To make werres and to pile<br/>
+For lucre and for non other skyle:    2360<br/>
+Wherof a propre tale I rede,<br/>
+As it whilom befell in dede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of him whom al this Erthe dradde,<br/>
+Whan he the world so overladde<br/>
+Thurgh werre, as it fortuned is,<br/>
+King Alisandre, I rede this;<br/>
+How in a Marche, where he lay,<br/>
+It fell per chance upon a day<br/>
+A Rovere of the See was nome,<br/>
+Which many a man hadde overcome    2370<br/>
+And slain and take here good aweie:<br/>
+This Pilour, as the bokes seie,<br/>
+A famous man in sondri stede<br/>
+Was of the werkes whiche he dede.<br/>
+This Prisoner tofor the king<br/>
+Was broght, and there upon this thing<br/>
+In audience he was accused:<br/>
+And he his dede hath noght excused,<br/>
+Bot preith the king to don him riht,<br/>
+And seith, “Sire, if I were of miht,    2380<br/>
+I have an herte lich to thin;<br/>
+For if the pouer were myn,<br/>
+Mi will is most in special<br/>
+To rifle and geten overal<br/>
+The large worldes good aboute.<br/>
+Bot for I lede a povere route<br/>
+And am, as who seith, at meschief,<br/>
+The name of Pilour and of thief<br/>
+I bere; and thou, which routes grete<br/>
+Miht lede and take thi beyete,    2390<br/>
+And dost riht as I wolde do,<br/>
+Thi name is nothing cleped so,<br/>
+Bot thou art named Emperour.<br/>
+Oure dedes ben of o colour<br/>
+And in effect of o decerte,<br/>
+Bot thi richesse and my poverte<br/>
+Tho ben noght taken evene liche.<br/>
+And natheles he that is riche<br/>
+This dai, tomorwe he mai be povere;<br/>
+And in contraire also recovere    2400<br/>
+A povere man to gret richesse<br/>
+Men sen: forthi let rihtwisnesse<br/>
+Be peised evene in the balance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king his hardi contienance<br/>
+Behield, and herde hise wordes wise,<br/>
+And seide unto him in this wise:<br/>
+“Thin ansuere I have understonde,<br/>
+Wherof my will is, that thou stonde<br/>
+In mi service and stille abide.”<br/>
+And forth withal the same tide    2410<br/>
+He hath him terme of lif withholde,<br/>
+The mor and for he schal ben holde,<br/>
+He made him kniht and yaf him lond,<br/>
+Which afterward was of his hond<br/>
+And orped kniht in many a stede,<br/>
+And gret prouesce of armes dede,<br/>
+As the Croniqes it recorden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in this wise thei acorden,<br/>
+The whiche of o condicioun<br/>
+Be set upon destruccioun:    2420<br/>
+Such Capitein such retenue.<br/>
+Bot forto se to what issue<br/>
+The thing befalleth ate laste,<br/>
+It is gret wonder that men caste<br/>
+Here herte upon such wrong to winne,<br/>
+Wher no beyete mai ben inne,<br/>
+And doth desese on every side:<br/>
+Bot whan reson is put aside<br/>
+And will governeth the corage,<br/>
+The faucon which that fleth ramage    2430<br/>
+And soeffreth nothing in the weie,<br/>
+Wherof that he mai take his preie,<br/>
+Is noght mor set upon ravine,<br/>
+Than thilke man which his covine<br/>
+Hath set in such a maner wise:<br/>
+For al the world ne mai suffise<br/>
+To will which is noght resonable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof ensample concordable<br/>
+Lich to this point of which I meene,<br/>
+Was upon Alisandre sene,    2440<br/>
+Which hadde set al his entente,<br/>
+So as fortune with him wente,<br/>
+That reson mihte him non governe,<br/>
+Bot of his will he was so sterne,<br/>
+That al the world he overran<br/>
+And what him list he tok and wan.<br/>
+In Ynde the superiour<br/>
+Whan that he was ful conquerour,<br/>
+And hadde his wilful pourpos wonne<br/>
+Of al this Erthe under the Sonne,    2450<br/>
+This king homward to Macedoine,<br/>
+Whan that he cam to Babiloine,<br/>
+And wende most in his Empire,<br/>
+As he which was hol lord and Sire,<br/>
+In honour forto be received,<br/>
+Most sodeinliche he was deceived,<br/>
+And with strong puison envenimed.<br/>
+And as he hath the world mistimed<br/>
+Noght as he scholde with his wit,<br/>
+Noght as he wolde it was aquit.    2460
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was he slain that whilom slowh,<br/>
+And he which riche was ynowh<br/>
+This dai, tomorwe he hadde noght:<br/>
+And in such wise as he hath wroght<br/>
+In destorbance of worldes pes,<br/>
+His werre he fond thanne endeles,<br/>
+In which for evere desconfit<br/>
+He was. Lo now, for what profit<br/>
+Of werre it helpeth forto ryde,<br/>
+For coveitise and worldes pride    2470<br/>
+To sle the worldes men aboute,<br/>
+As bestes whiche gon theroute.<br/>
+For every lif which reson can<br/>
+Oghth wel to knowe that a man<br/>
+Ne scholde thurgh no tirannie<br/>
+Lich to these othre bestes die,<br/>
+Til kinde wolde for him sende.<br/>
+I not hou he it mihte amende,<br/>
+Which takth awei for everemore<br/>
+The lif that he mai noght restore.    2480
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, in alle weie<br/>
+Be wel avised, I thee preie,<br/>
+Of slawhte er that thou be coupable<br/>
+Withoute cause resonable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, understonde it is,<br/>
+That ye have seid; bot over this<br/>
+I prei you tell me nay or yee,<br/>
+To passe over the grete See<br/>
+To werre and sle the Sarazin,<br/>
+Is that the lawe?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sone myn,    2490<br/>
+To preche and soffre for the feith,<br/>
+That have I herd the gospell seith;<br/>
+Bot forto slee, that hiere I noght.<br/>
+Crist with his oghne deth hath boght<br/>
+Alle othre men, and made hem fre,<br/>
+In tokne of parfit charite;<br/>
+And after that he tawhte himselve,<br/>
+Whan he was ded, these othre tuelve<br/>
+Of hise Apostles wente aboute<br/>
+The holi feith to prechen oute,    2500<br/>
+Wherof the deth in sondri place<br/>
+Thei soffre, and so god of his grace<br/>
+The feith of Crist hath mad aryse:<br/>
+Bot if thei wolde in other wise<br/>
+Be werre have broght in the creance,<br/>
+It hadde yit stonde in balance.<br/>
+And that mai proven in the dede;<br/>
+For what man the Croniqes rede,<br/>
+Fro ferst that holi cherche hath weyved<br/>
+To preche, and hath the swerd received,    2510<br/>
+Wherof the werres ben begonne,<br/>
+A gret partie of that was wonne<br/>
+To Cristes feith stant now miswent:<br/>
+Godd do therof amendement,<br/>
+So as he wot what is the beste.<br/>
+Bot, Sone, if thou wolt live in reste<br/>
+Of conscience wel assised,<br/>
+Er that thou sle, be wel avised:<br/>
+For man, as tellen ous the clerkes,<br/>
+Hath god above alle ertheli werkes    2520<br/>
+Ordeined to be principal,<br/>
+And ek of Soule in special<br/>
+He is mad lich to the godhiede.<br/>
+So sit it wel to taken hiede<br/>
+And forto loke on every side,<br/>
+Er that thou falle in homicide,<br/>
+Which Senne is now so general,<br/>
+That it welnyh stant overal,<br/>
+In holi cherche and elles where.<br/>
+Bot al the while it stant so there,    2530<br/>
+The world mot nede fare amis:<br/>
+For whan the welle of pite is<br/>
+Thurgh coveitise of worldes good<br/>
+Defouled with schedinge of blod,<br/>
+The remenant of folk aboute<br/>
+Unethe stonden eny doute<br/>
+To werre ech other and to slee.<br/>
+So is it all noght worth a Stree,<br/>
+The charite wherof we prechen,<br/>
+For we do nothing as we techen:    2540<br/>
+And thus the blinde conscience<br/>
+Of pes hath lost thilke evidence<br/>
+Which Crist upon this Erthe tawhte.<br/>
+Now mai men se moerdre and manslawhte<br/>
+Lich as it was be daies olde,<br/>
+Whan men the Sennes boghte and solde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Grece afore Cristes feith,<br/>
+I rede, as the Cronique seith,<br/>
+Touchende of this matiere thus,<br/>
+In thilke time hou Peleüs    2550<br/>
+His oghne brother Phocus slowh;<br/>
+Bot for he hadde gold ynowh<br/>
+To yive, his Senne was despensed<br/>
+With gold, wherof it was compensed:<br/>
+Achastus, which with Venus was<br/>
+Hire Priest, assoilede in that cas,<br/>
+Al were ther no repentance.<br/>
+And as the bok makth remembrance,<br/>
+It telleth of Medee also;<br/>
+Of that sche slowh her Sones tuo,    2560<br/>
+Egeüs in the same plit<br/>
+Hath mad hire of hire Senne quit.<br/>
+The Sone ek of Amphioras,<br/>
+Whos rihte name Almeus was,<br/>
+His Moder slowh, Eriphile;<br/>
+Bot Achilo the Priest and he,<br/>
+So as the bokes it recorden,<br/>
+For certein Somme of gold acorden<br/>
+That thilke horrible sinfull dede<br/>
+Assoiled was. And thus for mede    2570<br/>
+Of worldes good it falleth ofte<br/>
+That homicide is set alofte<br/>
+Hiere in this lif;    bot after this<br/>
+Ther schal be knowe how that it is<br/>
+Of hem that suche thinges werche,<br/>
+And hou also that holi cherche<br/>
+Let suche Sennes passe quyte,<br/>
+And how thei wole hemself aquite<br/>
+Of dedly werres that thei make.<br/>
+For who that wolde ensample take,    2580<br/>
+The lawe which is naturel<br/>
+Be weie of kinde scheweth wel<br/>
+That homicide in no degree,<br/>
+Which werreth ayein charite,<br/>
+Among the men ne scholde duelle.<br/>
+For after that the bokes telle,<br/>
+To seche in al this worldesriche,<br/>
+Men schal noght finde upon his liche<br/>
+A beste forto take his preie:<br/>
+And sithen kinde hath such a weie,    2590<br/>
+Thanne is it wonder of a man,<br/>
+Which kynde hath and resoun can,<br/>
+That he wol owther more or lasse<br/>
+His kinde and resoun overpasse,<br/>
+And sle that is to him semblable.<br/>
+So is the man noght resonable<br/>
+Ne kinde, and that is noght honeste,<br/>
+Whan he is worse than a beste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the bokes whiche I finde<br/>
+Solyns spekth of a wonder kinde,    2600<br/>
+And seith of fowhles ther is on,<br/>
+Which hath a face of blod and bon<br/>
+Lich to a man in resemblance.<br/>
+And if it falle him so per chance,<br/>
+As he which is a fowhl of preie,<br/>
+That he a man finde in his weie,<br/>
+He wol him slen, if that he mai:<br/>
+Bot afterward the same dai,<br/>
+Whan he hath eten al his felle,<br/>
+And that schal be beside a welle,    2610<br/>
+In which whan he wol drinke take,<br/>
+Of his visage and seth the make<br/>
+That he hath slain, anon he thenketh<br/>
+Of his misdede, and it forthenketh<br/>
+So gretly, that for pure sorwe<br/>
+He liveth noght til on the morwe.<br/>
+Be this ensample it mai well suie<br/>
+That man schal homicide eschuie,<br/>
+For evere is merci good to take,<br/>
+Bot if the lawe it hath forsake    2620<br/>
+And that justice is therayein.<br/>
+For ofte time I have herd sein<br/>
+Amonges hem that werres hadden,<br/>
+That thei som while here cause ladden<br/>
+Be merci, whan thei mihte have slain,<br/>
+Wherof that thei were after fain:<br/>
+And, Sone, if that thou wolt recorde<br/>
+The vertu of Misericorde,<br/>
+Thou sihe nevere thilke place,<br/>
+Where it was used, lacke grace.    2630<br/>
+For every lawe and every kinde<br/>
+The mannes wit to merci binde;<br/>
+And namely the worthi knihtes,<br/>
+Whan that thei stonden most uprihtes<br/>
+And ben most mihti forto grieve,<br/>
+Thei scholden thanne most relieve<br/>
+Him whom thei mihten overthrowe,<br/>
+As be ensample a man mai knowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He mai noght failen of his mede<br/>
+That hath merci: for this I rede,    2640<br/>
+In a Cronique and finde thus.<br/>
+Whan Achilles with Telaphus<br/>
+His Sone toward Troie were,<br/>
+It fell hem, er thei comen there,<br/>
+Ayein Theucer the king of Mese<br/>
+To make werre and forto sese<br/>
+His lond, as thei that wolden regne<br/>
+And Theucer pute out of his regne.<br/>
+And thus the Marches thei assaile,<br/>
+Bot Theucer yaf to hem bataille;    2650<br/>
+Thei foghte on bothe sides faste,<br/>
+Bot so it hapneth ate laste,<br/>
+This worthi Grek, this Achilles,<br/>
+The king among alle othre ches:<br/>
+As he that was cruel and fell,<br/>
+With swerd in honde on him he fell,<br/>
+And smot him with a dethes wounde,<br/>
+That he unhorsed fell to grounde.<br/>
+Achilles upon him alyhte,<br/>
+And wolde anon, as he wel mihte,    2660<br/>
+Have slain him fullich in the place;<br/>
+Bot Thelaphus his fader grace<br/>
+For him besoghte, and for pite<br/>
+Preith that he wolde lete him be,<br/>
+And caste his Schield betwen hem tuo.<br/>
+Achilles axeth him why so,<br/>
+And Thelaphus his cause tolde,<br/>
+And seith that he is mochel holde,<br/>
+For whilom Theucer in a stede<br/>
+Gret grace and socour to him dede,    2670<br/>
+And seith that he him wolde aquite,<br/>
+And preith his fader to respite.<br/>
+Achilles tho withdrowh his hond;<br/>
+Bot al the pouer of the lond,<br/>
+Whan that thei sihe here king thus take,<br/>
+Thei fledde and han the feld forsake:<br/>
+The Grecs unto the chace falle,<br/>
+And for the moste part of alle<br/>
+Of that contre the lordes grete<br/>
+Thei toke, and wonne a gret beyete.    2680<br/>
+And anon after this victoire<br/>
+The king, which hadde good memoire,<br/>
+Upon the grete merci thoghte,<br/>
+Which Telaphus toward him wroghte,<br/>
+And in presence of al the lond<br/>
+He tok him faire be the hond,<br/>
+And in this wise he gan to seie:<br/>
+“Mi Sone, I mot be double weie<br/>
+Love and desire thin encress;<br/>
+Ferst for thi fader Achilles    2690<br/>
+Whilom ful many dai er this,<br/>
+Whan that I scholde have fare amis,<br/>
+Rescousse dede in mi querele<br/>
+And kepte al myn astat in hele:<br/>
+How so ther falle now distance<br/>
+Amonges ous, yit remembrance<br/>
+I have of merci which he dede<br/>
+As thanne: and thou now in this stede<br/>
+Of gentilesce and of franchise<br/>
+Hast do mercy the same wise.    2700<br/>
+So wol I noght that eny time<br/>
+Be lost of that thou hast do byme;<br/>
+For hou so this fortune falle,<br/>
+Yit stant mi trust aboven alle,<br/>
+For the mercy which I now finde,<br/>
+That thou wolt after this be kinde:<br/>
+And for that such is myn espeir,<br/>
+As for my Sone and for myn Eir<br/>
+I thee receive, and al my lond<br/>
+I yive and sese into thin hond.”    2710<br/>
+And in this wise thei acorde,<br/>
+The cause was Misericorde:<br/>
+The lordes dede here obeissance<br/>
+To Thelaphus, and pourveance<br/>
+Was mad so that he was coroned:<br/>
+And thus was merci reguerdoned,<br/>
+Which he to Theucer dede afore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, this ensample is mad therfore,<br/>
+That thou miht take remembrance,<br/>
+Mi Sone; and whan thou sest a chaunce,    2720<br/>
+Of other mennes passioun<br/>
+Tak pite and compassioun,<br/>
+And let nothing to thee be lief,<br/>
+Which to an other man is grief.<br/>
+And after this if thou desire<br/>
+To stonde ayein the vice of Ire,<br/>
+Consaile thee with Pacience,<br/>
+And tak into thi conscience<br/>
+Merci to be thi governour.<br/>
+So schalt thou fiele no rancour,    2730<br/>
+Wherof thin herte schal debate<br/>
+With homicide ne with hate<br/>
+For Cheste or for Malencolie:<br/>
+Thou schalt be soft in compaignie<br/>
+Withoute Contek or Folhaste:<br/>
+For elles miht thou longe waste<br/>
+Thi time, er that thou have thi wille<br/>
+Of love; for the weder stille<br/>
+Men preise, and blame the tempestes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I wol do youre hestes,    2740<br/>
+And of this point ye have me tawht,<br/>
+Toward miself the betre sawht<br/>
+I thenke be, whil that I live.<br/>
+Bot for als moche as I am schrive<br/>
+Of Wraththe and al his circumstance,<br/>
+Yif what you list to my penance,<br/>
+And asketh forthere of my lif,<br/>
+If otherwise I be gultif<br/>
+Of eny thing that toucheth Sinne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, er we departe atwinne,    2750<br/>
+I schal behinde nothing leve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode fader, be your leve<br/>
+Thanne axeth forth what so you list,<br/>
+For I have in you such a trist,<br/>
+As ye that be my Soule hele,<br/>
+That ye fro me wol nothing hele,<br/>
+For I schal telle you the trowthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, art thou coupable of Slowthe<br/>
+In eny point which to him longeth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fader, of tho pointz me longeth    2760<br/>
+To wite pleinly what thei meene,<br/>
+So that I mai me schrive cleene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now herkne, I schal the pointz devise;<br/>
+And understond wel myn aprise:<br/>
+For schrifte stant of no value<br/>
+To him that wol him noght vertue<br/>
+To leve of vice the folie:<br/>
+For word is wynd, bot the maistrie<br/>
+Is that a man himself defende<br/>
+Of thing which is noght to comende,    2770<br/>
+Wherof ben fewe now aday.<br/>
+And natheles, so as I may<br/>
+Make unto thi memoire knowe,<br/>
+The pointz of Slowthe thou schalt knowe.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Tercius
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0005"></a>
+Incipit Liber Quartus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Dicunt accidiam fore nutricem viciorum,<br/>
+    Torpet et in cunctis tarda que lenta bonis:<br/>
+Que fieri possent hodie transfert piger in cras,<br/>
+    Furatoque prius ostia claudit equo.<br/>
+Poscenti tardo negat emolumenta Cupido,<br/>
+    Set Venus in celeri ludit amore viri.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Upon the vices to procede<br/>
+After the cause of mannes dede,<br/>
+The ferste point of Slowthe I calle<br/>
+Lachesce, and is the chief of alle,<br/>
+And hath this propreliche of kinde,<br/>
+To leven alle thing behinde.<br/>
+Of that he mihte do now hier<br/>
+He tarieth al the longe yer,<br/>
+And everemore he seith, “Tomorwe”;<br/>
+And so he wol his time borwe,    10<br/>
+And wissheth after “God me sende,”<br/>
+That whan he weneth have an ende,<br/>
+Thanne is he ferthest to beginne.<br/>
+Thus bringth he many a meschief inne<br/>
+Unwar, til that he be meschieved,<br/>
+And may noght thanne be relieved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht so nowther mor ne lesse<br/>
+It stant of love and of lachesce:<br/>
+Som time he slowtheth in a day<br/>
+That he nevere after gete mai.    20<br/>
+Now, Sone, as of this ilke thing,<br/>
+If thou have eny knowleching,<br/>
+That thou to love hast don er this,<br/>
+Tell on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode fader, yis.<br/>
+As of lachesce I am beknowe<br/>
+That I mai stonde upon his rowe,<br/>
+As I that am clad of his suite:<br/>
+For whanne I thoghte mi poursuite<br/>
+To make, and therto sette a day<br/>
+To speke unto the swete May,    30<br/>
+Lachesce bad abide yit,<br/>
+And bar on hond it was no wit<br/>
+Ne time forto speke as tho.<br/>
+Thus with his tales to and fro<br/>
+Mi time in tariinge he drowh:<br/>
+Whan ther was time good ynowh,<br/>
+He seide, “An other time is bettre;<br/>
+Thou schalt mowe senden hire a lettre,<br/>
+And per cas wryte more plein<br/>
+Than thou be Mowthe durstest sein.”    40<br/>
+Thus have I lete time slyde<br/>
+For Slowthe, and kepte noght my tide,<br/>
+So that lachesce with his vice<br/>
+Fulofte hath mad my wit so nyce,<br/>
+That what I thoghte speke or do<br/>
+With tariinge he hield me so,<br/>
+Til whanne I wolde and mihte noght.<br/>
+I not what thing was in my thoght,<br/>
+Or it was drede, or it was schame;<br/>
+Bot evere in ernest and in game    50<br/>
+I wot ther is long time passed.<br/>
+Bot yit is noght the love lassed,<br/>
+Which I unto mi ladi have;<br/>
+For thogh my tunge is slowh to crave<br/>
+At alle time, as I have bede,<br/>
+Min herte stant evere in o stede<br/>
+And axeth besiliche grace,<br/>
+The which I mai noght yit embrace.<br/>
+And god wot that is malgre myn;<br/>
+For this I wot riht wel a fin,    60<br/>
+Mi grace comth so selde aboute,<br/>
+That is the Slowthe of which I doute<br/>
+Mor than of al the remenant<br/>
+Which is to love appourtenant.<br/>
+And thus as touchende of lachesce,<br/>
+As I have told, I me confesse<br/>
+To you, mi fader, and beseche<br/>
+That furthermor ye wol me teche;<br/>
+And if ther be to this matiere<br/>
+Som goodly tale forto liere    70<br/>
+How I mai do lachesce aweie,<br/>
+That ye it wolden telle I preie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To wisse thee, my Sone, and rede,<br/>
+Among the tales whiche I rede,<br/>
+An old ensample therupon<br/>
+Now herkne, and I wol tellen on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ayein Lachesce in loves cas<br/>
+I finde how whilom Eneas,<br/>
+Whom Anchises to Sone hadde,<br/>
+With gret navie, which he ladde    80<br/>
+Fro Troie, aryveth at Cartage,<br/>
+Wher for a while his herbergage<br/>
+He tok; and it betidde so,<br/>
+With hire which was qweene tho<br/>
+Of the Cite his aqueintance<br/>
+He wan, whos name in remembrance<br/>
+Is yit, and Dido sche was hote;<br/>
+Which loveth Eneas so hote<br/>
+Upon the wordes whiche he seide,<br/>
+That al hire herte on him sche leide    90<br/>
+And dede al holi what he wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot after that, as it be scholde,<br/>
+Fro thenne he goth toward Ytaile<br/>
+Be Schipe, and there his arivaile<br/>
+Hath take, and schop him forto ryde.<br/>
+Bot sche, which mai noght longe abide<br/>
+The hote peine of loves throwe,<br/>
+Anon withinne a litel throwe<br/>
+A lettre unto hir kniht hath write,<br/>
+And dede him pleinly forto wite,    100<br/>
+If he made eny tariinge,<br/>
+To drecche of his ayeincomynge,<br/>
+That sche ne mihte him fiele and se,<br/>
+Sche scholde stonde in such degre<br/>
+As whilom stod a Swan tofore,<br/>
+Of that sche hadde hire make lore;<br/>
+For sorwe a fethere into hire brain<br/>
+Sche schof and hath hireselve slain;<br/>
+As king Menander in a lay<br/>
+The sothe hath founde, wher sche lay    110<br/>
+Sprantlende with hire wynges tweie,<br/>
+As sche which scholde thanne deie<br/>
+For love of him which was hire make.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so schal I do for thi sake,”<br/>
+This qweene seide, “wel I wot.”<br/>
+Lo, to Enee thus sche wrot<br/>
+With many an other word of pleinte:<br/>
+Bot he, which hadde hise thoghtes feinte<br/>
+Towardes love and full of Slowthe,<br/>
+His time lette, and that was rowthe:    120<br/>
+For sche, which loveth him tofore,<br/>
+Desireth evere more and more,<br/>
+And whan sche sih him tarie so,<br/>
+Hire herte was so full of wo,<br/>
+That compleignende manyfold<br/>
+Sche hath hire oghne tale told,<br/>
+Unto hirself and thus sche spak:<br/>
+“Ha, who fond evere such a lak<br/>
+Of Slowthe in eny worthi kniht?<br/>
+Now wot I wel my deth is diht    130<br/>
+Thurgh him which scholde have be mi lif.”<br/>
+Bot forto stinten al this strif,<br/>
+Thus whan sche sih non other bote,<br/>
+Riht evene unto hire herte rote<br/>
+A naked swerd anon sche threste,<br/>
+And thus sche gat hireselve reste<br/>
+In remembrance of alle slowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof, my Sone, thou miht knowe<br/>
+How tariinge upon the nede<br/>
+In loves cause is forto drede;    140<br/>
+And that hath Dido sore aboght,<br/>
+Whos deth schal evere be bethoght.<br/>
+And overmore if I schal seche<br/>
+In this matiere an other spieche,<br/>
+In a Cronique I finde write<br/>
+A tale which is good to wite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Troie whan king Ulixes<br/>
+Upon the Siege among the pres<br/>
+Of hem that worthi knihtes were<br/>
+Abod long time stille there,    150<br/>
+In thilke time a man mai se<br/>
+How goodli that Penolope,<br/>
+Which was to him his trewe wif,<br/>
+Of his lachesce was pleintif;<br/>
+Wherof to Troie sche him sende<br/>
+Hire will be lettre, thus spekende:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mi worthi love and lord also,<br/>
+It is and hath ben evere so,<br/>
+That wher a womman is al one,<br/>
+It makth a man in his persone    160<br/>
+The more hardi forto wowe,<br/>
+In hope that sche wolde bowe<br/>
+To such thing as his wille were,<br/>
+Whil that hire lord were elleswhere.<br/>
+And of miself I telle this;<br/>
+For it so longe passed is,<br/>
+Sithe ferst than ye fro home wente,<br/>
+That welnyh every man his wente<br/>
+To there I am, whil ye ben oute,<br/>
+Hath mad, and ech of hem aboute,    170<br/>
+Which love can, my love secheth,<br/>
+With gret preiere and me besecheth:<br/>
+And some maken gret manace,<br/>
+That if thei mihten come in place,<br/>
+Wher that thei mihte here wille have,<br/>
+Ther is nothing me scholde save,<br/>
+That thei ne wolde werche thinges;<br/>
+And some tellen me tidynges<br/>
+That ye ben ded, and some sein<br/>
+That certeinly ye ben besein    180<br/>
+To love a newe and leve me.<br/>
+Bot hou as evere that it be,<br/>
+I thonke unto the goddes alle,<br/>
+As yit for oght that is befalle<br/>
+Mai noman do my chekes rede:<br/>
+Bot natheles it is to drede,<br/>
+That Lachesse in continuance<br/>
+Fortune mihte such a chance,<br/>
+Which noman after scholde amende.”<br/>
+Lo, thus this ladi compleignende    190<br/>
+A lettre unto hire lord hath write,<br/>
+And preyde him that he wolde wite<br/>
+And thenke hou that sche was al his,<br/>
+And that he tarie noght in this,<br/>
+Bot that he wolde his love aquite,<br/>
+To hire ayeinward and noght wryte,<br/>
+Bot come himself in alle haste,<br/>
+That he non other paper waste;<br/>
+So that he kepe and holde his trowthe<br/>
+Withoute lette of eny Slowthe.    200
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unto hire lord and love liege<br/>
+To Troie, wher the grete Siege<br/>
+Was leid, this lettre was conveied.<br/>
+And he, which wisdom hath pourveied<br/>
+Of al that to reson belongeth,<br/>
+With gentil herte it underfongeth:<br/>
+And whan he hath it overrad,<br/>
+In part he was riht inly glad,<br/>
+And ek in part he was desesed:<br/>
+Bot love his herte hath so thorghsesed    210<br/>
+With pure ymaginacioun,<br/>
+That for non occupacioun<br/>
+Which he can take on other side,<br/>
+He mai noght flitt his herte aside<br/>
+Fro that his wif him hadde enformed;<br/>
+Wherof he hath himself conformed<br/>
+With al the wille of his corage<br/>
+To schape and take the viage<br/>
+Homward, what time that he mai:<br/>
+So that him thenketh of a day    220<br/>
+A thousand yer, til he mai se<br/>
+The visage of Penolope,<br/>
+Which he desireth most of alle.<br/>
+And whan the time is so befalle<br/>
+That Troie was destruid and brent,<br/>
+He made non delaiement,<br/>
+Bot goth him home in alle hihe,<br/>
+Wher that he fond tofore his yhe<br/>
+His worthi wif in good astat:<br/>
+And thus was cessed the debat    230<br/>
+Of love, and Slowthe was excused,<br/>
+Which doth gret harm, where it is used,<br/>
+And hindreth many a cause honeste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For of the grete Clerc Grossteste<br/>
+I rede how besy that he was<br/>
+Upon clergie an Hed of bras<br/>
+To forge, and make it forto telle<br/>
+Of suche thinges as befelle.<br/>
+And sevene yeres besinesse<br/>
+He leyde, bot for the lachesse    240<br/>
+Of half a Minut of an houre,<br/>
+Fro ferst that he began laboure<br/>
+He loste all that he hadde do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And otherwhile it fareth so,<br/>
+In loves cause who is slow,<br/>
+That he withoute under the wow<br/>
+Be nyhte stant fulofte acold,<br/>
+Which mihte, if that he hadde wold<br/>
+His time kept, have be withinne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Slowthe mai no profit winne,    250<br/>
+Bot he mai singe in his karole<br/>
+How Latewar cam to the Dole,<br/>
+Wher he no good receive mihte.<br/>
+And that was proved wel be nyhte<br/>
+Whilom of the Maidenes fyve,<br/>
+Whan thilke lord cam forto wyve:<br/>
+For that here oyle was aweie<br/>
+To lihte here lampes in his weie,<br/>
+Here Slowthe broghte it so aboute,<br/>
+Fro him that thei ben schet withoute.    260
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof, my Sone, be thou war,<br/>
+Als ferforth as I telle dar.<br/>
+For love moste ben awaited:<br/>
+And if thou be noght wel affaited<br/>
+In love to eschuie Slowthe,<br/>
+Mi Sone, forto telle trowthe,<br/>
+Thou miht noght of thiself ben able<br/>
+To winne love or make it stable,<br/>
+All thogh thou mihtest love achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, that I mai wel lieve.    270<br/>
+Bot me was nevere assigned place,<br/>
+Wher yit to geten eny grace,<br/>
+Ne me was non such time apointed;<br/>
+For thanne I wolde I were unjoynted<br/>
+Of every lime that I have,<br/>
+If I ne scholde kepe and save<br/>
+Min houre bothe and ek my stede,<br/>
+If my ladi it hadde bede.<br/>
+Bot sche is otherwise avised<br/>
+Than grante such a time assised;    280<br/>
+And natheles of mi lachesse<br/>
+Ther hath be no defalte I gesse<br/>
+Of time lost, if that I mihte:<br/>
+Bot yit hire liketh noght alyhte<br/>
+Upon no lure which I caste;<br/>
+For ay the more I crie faste,<br/>
+The lasse hire liketh forto hiere.<br/>
+So forto speke of this matiere,<br/>
+I seche that I mai noght finde,<br/>
+I haste and evere I am behinde,    290<br/>
+And wot noght what it mai amounte.<br/>
+Bot, fader, upon myn acompte,<br/>
+Which ye be sett to examine<br/>
+Of Schrifte after the discipline,<br/>
+Sey what your beste conseil is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, my conseil is this:<br/>
+Hou so it stonde of time go,<br/>
+Do forth thi besinesse so,<br/>
+That no Lachesce in the be founde:<br/>
+For Slowthe is mihti to confounde    300<br/>
+The spied of every mannes werk.<br/>
+For many a vice, as seith the clerk,<br/>
+Ther hongen upon Slowthes lappe<br/>
+Of suche as make a man mishappe,<br/>
+To pleigne and telle of hadde I wist.<br/>
+And therupon if that thee list<br/>
+To knowe of Slowthes cause more,<br/>
+In special yit overmore<br/>
+Ther is a vice full grevable<br/>
+To him which is therof coupable,    310<br/>
+And stant of alle vertu bare,<br/>
+Hierafter as I schal declare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Touchende of Slowthe in his degre,<br/>
+Ther is yit Pusillamite,<br/>
+Which is to seie in this langage,<br/>
+He that hath litel of corage<br/>
+And dar no mannes werk beginne:<br/>
+So mai he noght be resoun winne;<br/>
+For who that noght dar undertake,<br/>
+Be riht he schal no profit take.    320<br/>
+Bot of this vice the nature<br/>
+Dar nothing sette in aventure,<br/>
+Him lacketh bothe word and dede,<br/>
+Wherof he scholde his cause spede:<br/>
+He woll no manhed understonde,<br/>
+For evere he hath drede upon honde:<br/>
+Al is peril that he schal seie,<br/>
+Him thenkth the wolf is in the weie,<br/>
+And of ymaginacioun<br/>
+He makth his excusacioun    330<br/>
+And feigneth cause of pure drede,<br/>
+And evere he faileth ate nede,<br/>
+Til al be spilt that he with deleth.<br/>
+He hath the sor which noman heleth,<br/>
+The which is cleped lack of herte;<br/>
+Thogh every grace aboute him sterte,<br/>
+He wol noght ones stere his fot;<br/>
+So that be resoun lese he mot,<br/>
+That wol noght auntre forto winne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so forth, Sone, if we beginne    340<br/>
+To speke of love and his servise,<br/>
+Ther ben truantz in such a wise,<br/>
+That lacken herte, whan best were<br/>
+To speke of love, and riht for fere<br/>
+Thei wexen doumb and dar noght telle,<br/>
+Withoute soun as doth the belle,<br/>
+Which hath no claper forto chyme;<br/>
+And riht so thei as for the tyme<br/>
+Ben herteles withoute speche<br/>
+Of love, and dar nothing beseche;    350<br/>
+And thus thei lese and winne noght.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, if thou art oght<br/>
+Coupable as touchende of this Slowthe,<br/>
+Schrif thee therof and tell me trowthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I am al beknowe<br/>
+That I have ben on of tho slowe,<br/>
+As forto telle in loves cas.<br/>
+Min herte is yit and evere was,<br/>
+As thogh the world scholde al tobreke,<br/>
+So ferful, that I dar noght speke    360<br/>
+Of what pourpos that I have nome,<br/>
+Whan I toward mi ladi come,<br/>
+Bot let it passe and overgo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, do nomore so:<br/>
+For after that a man poursuieth<br/>
+To love, so fortune suieth,<br/>
+Fulofte and yifth hire happi chance<br/>
+To him which makth continuance<br/>
+To preie love and to beseche;<br/>
+As be ensample I schal thee teche.    370
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I finde hou whilom ther was on,<br/>
+Whos name was Pymaleon,<br/>
+Which was a lusti man of yowthe:<br/>
+The werkes of entaile he cowthe<br/>
+Above alle othre men as tho;<br/>
+And thurgh fortune it fell him so,<br/>
+As he whom love schal travaile,<br/>
+He made an ymage of entaile<br/>
+Lich to a womman in semblance<br/>
+Of feture and of contienance,    380<br/>
+So fair yit nevere was figure.<br/>
+Riht as a lyves creature<br/>
+Sche semeth, for of yvor whyt<br/>
+He hath hire wroght of such delit,<br/>
+That sche was rody on the cheke<br/>
+And red on bothe hire lippes eke;<br/>
+Wherof that he himself beguileth.<br/>
+For with a goodly lok sche smyleth,<br/>
+So that thurgh pure impression<br/>
+Of his ymaginacion    390<br/>
+With al the herte of his corage<br/>
+His love upon this faire ymage<br/>
+He sette, and hire of love preide;<br/>
+Bot sche no word ayeinward seide.<br/>
+The longe day, what thing he dede,<br/>
+This ymage in the same stede<br/>
+Was evere bi, that ate mete<br/>
+He wolde hire serve and preide hire ete,<br/>
+And putte unto hire mowth the cuppe;<br/>
+And whan the bord was taken uppe,    400<br/>
+He hath hire into chambre nome,<br/>
+And after, whan the nyht was come,<br/>
+He leide hire in his bed al nakid.<br/>
+He was forwept, he was forwakid,<br/>
+He keste hire colde lippes ofte,<br/>
+And wissheth that thei weren softe,<br/>
+And ofte he rouneth in hire Ere,<br/>
+And ofte his arm now hier now there<br/>
+He leide, as he hir wolde embrace,<br/>
+And evere among he axeth grace,    410<br/>
+As thogh sche wiste what he mente:<br/>
+And thus himself he gan tormente<br/>
+With such desese of loves peine,<br/>
+That noman mihte him more peine.<br/>
+Bot how it were, of his penance<br/>
+He made such continuance<br/>
+Fro dai to nyht, and preith so longe,<br/>
+That his preiere is underfonge,<br/>
+Which Venus of hire grace herde;<br/>
+Be nyhte and whan that he worst ferde,    420<br/>
+And it lay in his nakede arm,<br/>
+The colde ymage he fieleth warm<br/>
+Of fleissh and bon and full of lif.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus he wan a lusti wif,<br/>
+Which obeissant was at his wille;<br/>
+And if he wolde have holde him stille<br/>
+And nothing spoke, he scholde have failed:<br/>
+Bot for he hath his word travailed<br/>
+And dorste speke, his love he spedde,<br/>
+And hadde al that he wolde abedde.    430<br/>
+For er thei wente thanne atwo,<br/>
+A knave child betwen hem two<br/>
+Thei gete, which was after hote<br/>
+Paphus, of whom yit hath the note<br/>
+A certein yle, which Paphos<br/>
+Men clepe, and of his name it ros.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be this ensample thou miht finde<br/>
+That word mai worche above kinde.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, if that thou spare<br/>
+To speke, lost is al thi fare,    440<br/>
+For Slowthe bringth in alle wo.<br/>
+And over this to loke also,<br/>
+The god of love is favorable<br/>
+To hem that ben of love stable,<br/>
+And many a wonder hath befalle:<br/>
+Wherof to speke amonges alle,<br/>
+If that thee list to taken hede,<br/>
+Therof a solein tale I rede,<br/>
+Which I schal telle in remembraunce<br/>
+Upon the sort of loves chaunce.    450
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king Ligdus upon a strif<br/>
+Spak unto Thelacuse his wif,<br/>
+Which thanne was with childe grete;<br/>
+He swor it scholde noght be lete,<br/>
+That if sche have a dowhter bore,<br/>
+That it ne scholde be forlore<br/>
+And slain, wherof sche sory was.<br/>
+So it befell upon this cas,<br/>
+Whan sche delivered scholde be,<br/>
+Isis be nyhte in privete,    460<br/>
+Which of childinge is the goddesse,<br/>
+Cam forto helpe in that destresse,<br/>
+Til that this lady was al smal,<br/>
+And hadde a dowhter forth withal;<br/>
+Which the goddesse in alle weie<br/>
+Bad kepe, and that thei scholden seie<br/>
+It were a Sone: and thus Iphis<br/>
+Thei namede him, and upon this<br/>
+The fader was mad so to wene.<br/>
+And thus in chambre with the qweene    470<br/>
+This Iphis was forthdrawe tho,<br/>
+And clothed and arraied so<br/>
+Riht as a kinges Sone scholde.<br/>
+Til after, as fortune it wolde,<br/>
+Whan it was of a ten yer age,<br/>
+Him was betake in mariage<br/>
+A Duckes dowhter forto wedde,<br/>
+Which Iante hihte, and ofte abedde<br/>
+These children leien, sche and sche,<br/>
+Whiche of on age bothe be.    480<br/>
+So that withinne time of yeeres,<br/>
+Togedre as thei ben pleiefieres,<br/>
+Liggende abedde upon a nyht,<br/>
+Nature, which doth every wiht<br/>
+Upon hire lawe forto muse,<br/>
+Constreigneth hem, so that thei use<br/>
+Thing which to hem was al unknowe;<br/>
+Wherof Cupide thilke throwe<br/>
+Tok pite for the grete love,<br/>
+And let do sette kinde above,    490<br/>
+So that hir lawe mai ben used,<br/>
+And thei upon here lust excused.<br/>
+For love hateth nothing more<br/>
+Than thing which stant ayein the lore<br/>
+Of that nature in kinde hath sett:<br/>
+Forthi Cupide hath so besett<br/>
+His grace upon this aventure,<br/>
+That he acordant to nature,<br/>
+Whan that he syh the time best,<br/>
+That ech of hem hath other kest,    500<br/>
+Transformeth Iphe into a man,<br/>
+Wherof the kinde love he wan<br/>
+Of lusti yonge Iante his wif;<br/>
+And tho thei ladde a merie lif,<br/>
+Which was to kinde non offence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus to take an evidence,<br/>
+It semeth love is welwillende<br/>
+To hem that ben continuende<br/>
+With besy herte to poursuie<br/>
+Thing which that is to love due.    510<br/>
+Wherof, my Sone, in this matiere<br/>
+Thou miht ensample taken hiere,<br/>
+That with thi grete besinesse<br/>
+Thou miht atteigne the richesse<br/>
+Of love, if that ther be no Slowthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dar wel seie be mi trowthe,<br/>
+Als fer as I my witt can seche,<br/>
+Mi fader, as for lacke of speche,<br/>
+Bot so as I me schrof tofore,<br/>
+Ther is non other time lore,    520<br/>
+Wherof ther mihte ben obstacle<br/>
+To lette love of his miracle,<br/>
+Which I beseche day and nyht.<br/>
+Bot, fader, so as it is riht<br/>
+In forme of schrifte to beknowe<br/>
+What thing belongeth to the slowe,<br/>
+Your faderhode I wolde preie,<br/>
+If ther be forthere eny weie<br/>
+Touchende unto this ilke vice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, ye, of this office    530<br/>
+Ther serveth on in special,<br/>
+Which lost hath his memorial,<br/>
+So that he can no wit withholde<br/>
+In thing which he to kepe is holde,<br/>
+Wherof fulofte himself he grieveth:<br/>
+And who that most upon him lieveth,<br/>
+Whan that hise wittes ben so weyved,<br/>
+He mai full lihtly be deceived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To serve Accidie in his office,<br/>
+Ther is of Slowthe an other vice,    540<br/>
+Which cleped is Foryetelnesse;<br/>
+That noght mai in his herte impresse<br/>
+Of vertu which reson hath sett,<br/>
+So clene his wittes he foryet.<br/>
+For in the tellinge of his tale<br/>
+Nomore his herte thanne his male<br/>
+Hath remembrance of thilke forme,<br/>
+Wherof he scholde his wit enforme<br/>
+As thanne, and yit ne wot he why.<br/>
+Thus is his pourpos noght forthi    550<br/>
+Forlore of that he wolde bidde,<br/>
+And skarsly if he seith the thridde<br/>
+To love of that he hadde ment:<br/>
+Thus many a lovere hath be schent.<br/>
+Tell on therfore, hast thou be oon<br/>
+Of hem that Slowthe hath so begon?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ye, fader, ofte it hath be so,<br/>
+That whanne I am mi ladi fro<br/>
+And thenke untoward hire drawe,<br/>
+Than cast I many a newe lawe    560<br/>
+And al the world torne up so doun,<br/>
+And so recorde I mi lecoun<br/>
+And wryte in my memorial<br/>
+What I to hire telle schal,<br/>
+Riht al the matiere of mi tale:<br/>
+Bot al nys worth a note schale;<br/>
+For whanne I come ther sche is,<br/>
+I have it al foryete ywiss;<br/>
+Of that I thoghte forto telle<br/>
+I can noght thanne unethes spelle    570<br/>
+That I wende altherbest have rad,<br/>
+So sore I am of hire adrad.<br/>
+For as a man that sodeinli<br/>
+A gost behelde, so fare I;<br/>
+So that for feere I can noght gete<br/>
+Mi witt, bot I miself foryete,<br/>
+That I wot nevere what I am,<br/>
+Ne whider I schal, ne whenne I cam,<br/>
+Bot muse as he that were amased.<br/>
+Lich to the bok in which is rased    580<br/>
+The lettre, and mai nothing be rad,<br/>
+So ben my wittes overlad,<br/>
+That what as evere I thoghte have spoken,<br/>
+It is out fro myn herte stoken,<br/>
+And stonde, as who seith, doumb and def,<br/>
+That all nys worth an yvy lef,<br/>
+Of that I wende wel have seid.<br/>
+And ate laste I make abreid,<br/>
+Caste up myn hed and loke aboute,<br/>
+Riht as a man that were in doute    590<br/>
+And wot noght wher he schal become.<br/>
+Thus am I ofte al overcome,<br/>
+Ther as I wende best to stonde:<br/>
+Bot after, whanne I understonde,<br/>
+And am in other place al one,<br/>
+I make many a wofull mone<br/>
+Unto miself, and speke so:<br/>
+“Ha fol, wher was thin herte tho,<br/>
+Whan thou thi worthi ladi syhe?<br/>
+Were thou afered of hire yhe?    600<br/>
+For of hire hand ther is no drede:<br/>
+So wel I knowe hir wommanhede,<br/>
+That in hire is nomore oultrage<br/>
+Than in a child of thre yeer age.<br/>
+Whi hast thou drede of so good on,<br/>
+Whom alle vertu hath begon,<br/>
+That in hire is no violence<br/>
+Bot goodlihiede and innocence<br/>
+Withouten spot of eny blame?<br/>
+Ha, nyce herte, fy for schame!    610<br/>
+Ha, couard herte of love unlered,<br/>
+Wherof art thou so sore afered,<br/>
+That thou thi tunge soffrest frese,<br/>
+And wolt thi goode wordes lese,<br/>
+Whan thou hast founde time and space?<br/>
+How scholdest thou deserve grace,<br/>
+Whan thou thiself darst axe non,<br/>
+Bot al thou hast foryete anon?”<br/>
+And thus despute I loves lore,<br/>
+Bot help ne finde I noght the more,    620<br/>
+Bot stomble upon myn oghne treine<br/>
+And make an ekinge of my peine.<br/>
+For evere whan I thenke among<br/>
+How al is on miself along,<br/>
+I seie, “O fol of alle foles,<br/>
+Thou farst as he betwen tuo stoles<br/>
+That wolde sitte and goth to grounde.<br/>
+It was ne nevere schal be founde,<br/>
+Betwen foryetelnesse and drede<br/>
+That man scholde any cause spede.”    630<br/>
+And thus, myn holi fader diere,<br/>
+Toward miself, as ye mai hiere,<br/>
+I pleigne of my foryetelnesse;<br/>
+Bot elles al the besinesse,<br/>
+That mai be take of mannes thoght,<br/>
+Min herte takth, and is thorghsoght<br/>
+To thenken evere upon that swete<br/>
+Withoute Slowthe, I you behete.<br/>
+For what so falle, or wel or wo,<br/>
+That thoght foryete I neveremo,    640<br/>
+Wher so I lawhe or so I loure:<br/>
+Noght half the Minut of an houre<br/>
+Ne mihte I lete out of my mende,<br/>
+Bot if I thoghte upon that hende.<br/>
+Therof me schal no Slowthe lette,<br/>
+Til deth out of this world me fette,<br/>
+Althogh I hadde on such a Ring,<br/>
+As Moises thurgh his enchanting<br/>
+Som time in Ethiope made,<br/>
+Whan that he Tharbis weddid hade.    650<br/>
+Which Ring bar of Oblivion<br/>
+The name, and that was be resoun<br/>
+That where it on a finger sat,<br/>
+Anon his love he so foryat,<br/>
+As thogh he hadde it nevere knowe:<br/>
+And so it fell that ilke throwe,<br/>
+Whan Tharbis hadde it on hire hond,<br/>
+No knowlechinge of him sche fond,<br/>
+Bot al was clene out of memoire,<br/>
+As men mai rede in his histoire;    660<br/>
+And thus he wente quit away,<br/>
+That nevere after that ilke day<br/>
+Sche thoghte that ther was such on;<br/>
+Al was foryete and overgon.<br/>
+Bot in good feith so mai noght I:<br/>
+For sche is evere faste by,<br/>
+So nyh that sche myn herte toucheth,<br/>
+That for nothing that Slowthe voucheth<br/>
+I mai foryete hire, lief ne loth;<br/>
+For overal, where as sche goth,    670<br/>
+Min herte folwith hire aboute.<br/>
+Thus mai I seie withoute doute,<br/>
+For bet, for wers, for oght, for noght,<br/>
+Sche passeth nevere fro my thoght;<br/>
+Bot whanne I am ther as sche is,<br/>
+Min herte, as I you saide er this,<br/>
+Som time of hire is sore adrad,<br/>
+And som time it is overglad,<br/>
+Al out of reule and out of space.<br/>
+For whan I se hir goodli face    680<br/>
+And thenke upon hire hihe pris,<br/>
+As thogh I were in Paradis,<br/>
+I am so ravisht of the syhte,<br/>
+That speke unto hire I ne myhte<br/>
+As for the time, thogh I wolde:<br/>
+For I ne mai my wit unfolde<br/>
+To finde o word of that I mene,<br/>
+Bot al it is foryete clene;<br/>
+And thogh I stonde there a myle,<br/>
+Al is foryete for the while,    690<br/>
+A tunge I have and wordes none.<br/>
+And thus I stonde and thenke al one<br/>
+Of thing that helpeth ofte noght;<br/>
+Bot what I hadde afore thoght<br/>
+To speke, whanne I come there,<br/>
+It is foryete, as noght ne were,<br/>
+And stonde amased and assoted,<br/>
+That of nothing which I have noted<br/>
+I can noght thanne a note singe,<br/>
+Bot al is out of knowlechinge:    700<br/>
+Thus, what for joie and what for drede,<br/>
+Al is foryeten ate nede.<br/>
+So that, mi fader, of this Slowthe<br/>
+I have you said the pleine trowthe;<br/>
+Ye mai it as you list redresce:<br/>
+For thus stant my foryetelnesse<br/>
+And ek my pusillamite.<br/>
+Sey now forth what you list to me,<br/>
+For I wol only do be you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I have wel herd how thou    710<br/>
+Hast seid, and that thou most amende:<br/>
+For love his grace wol noght sende<br/>
+To that man which dar axe non.<br/>
+For this we knowen everichon,<br/>
+A mannes thoght withoute speche<br/>
+God wot, and yit that men beseche<br/>
+His will is; for withoute bedes<br/>
+He doth his grace in fewe stedes:<br/>
+And what man that foryet himselve,<br/>
+Among a thousand be noght tuelve,    720<br/>
+That wol him take in remembraunce,<br/>
+Bot lete him falle and take his chaunce.<br/>
+Forthi pull up a besi herte,<br/>
+Mi Sone, and let nothing asterte<br/>
+Of love fro thi besinesse:<br/>
+For touchinge of foryetelnesse,<br/>
+Which many a love hath set behinde,<br/>
+A tale of gret ensample I finde,<br/>
+Wherof it is pite to wite<br/>
+In the manere as it is write.    730
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Demephon, whan he be Schipe<br/>
+To Troieward with felaschipe<br/>
+Sailende goth, upon his weie<br/>
+It hapneth him at Rodopeie,<br/>
+As Eolus him hadde blowe,<br/>
+To londe, and rested for a throwe.<br/>
+And fell that ilke time thus,<br/>
+The dowhter of Ligurgius,<br/>
+Which qweene was of the contre,<br/>
+Was sojournende in that Cite    740<br/>
+Withinne a Castell nyh the stronde,<br/>
+Wher Demephon cam up to londe.<br/>
+Phillis sche hihte, and of yong age<br/>
+And of stature and of visage<br/>
+Sche hadde al that hire best besemeth.<br/>
+Of Demephon riht wel hire qwemeth,<br/>
+Whan he was come, and made him chiere;<br/>
+And he, that was of his manere<br/>
+A lusti knyht, ne myhte asterte<br/>
+That he ne sette on hire his herte;    750<br/>
+So that withinne a day or tuo<br/>
+He thoghte, how evere that it go,<br/>
+He wolde assaie the fortune,<br/>
+And gan his herte to commune<br/>
+With goodly wordes in hire Ere;<br/>
+And forto put hire out of fere,<br/>
+He swor and hath his trowthe pliht<br/>
+To be for evere hire oghne knyht.<br/>
+And thus with hire he stille abod,<br/>
+Ther while his Schip on Anker rod,    760<br/>
+And hadde ynowh of time and space<br/>
+To speke of love and seche grace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This ladi herde al that he seide,<br/>
+And hou he swor and hou he preide,<br/>
+Which was as an enchantement<br/>
+To hire, that was innocent:<br/>
+As thogh it were trowthe and feith,<br/>
+Sche lieveth al that evere he seith,<br/>
+And as hire infortune scholde,<br/>
+Sche granteth him al that he wolde.    770<br/>
+Thus was he for the time in joie,<br/>
+Til that he scholde go to Troie;<br/>
+Bot tho sche made mochel sorwe,<br/>
+And he his trowthe leith to borwe<br/>
+To come, if that he live may,<br/>
+Ayein withinne a Monthe day,<br/>
+And therupon thei kisten bothe:<br/>
+Bot were hem lieve or were hem lothe,<br/>
+To Schipe he goth and forth he wente<br/>
+To Troie, as was his ferste entente.    780
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The daies gon, the Monthe passeth,<br/>
+Hire love encresceth and his lasseth,<br/>
+For him sche lefte slep and mete,<br/>
+And he his time hath al foryete;<br/>
+So that this wofull yonge qweene,<br/>
+Which wot noght what it mihte meene,<br/>
+A lettre sende and preide him come,<br/>
+And seith how sche is overcome<br/>
+With strengthe of love in such a wise,<br/>
+That sche noght longe mai suffise    790<br/>
+To liven out of his presence;<br/>
+And putte upon his conscience<br/>
+The trowthe which he hath behote,<br/>
+Wherof sche loveth him so hote,<br/>
+Sche seith, that if he lengere lette<br/>
+Of such a day as sche him sette,<br/>
+Sche scholde sterven in his Slowthe,<br/>
+Which were a schame unto his trowthe.<br/>
+This lettre is forth upon hire sonde,<br/>
+Wherof somdiel confort on honde    800<br/>
+Sche tok, as she that wolde abide<br/>
+And waite upon that ilke tyde<br/>
+Which sche hath in hire lettre write.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now is pite forto wite,<br/>
+As he dede erst, so he foryat<br/>
+His time eftsone and oversat.<br/>
+Bot sche, which mihte noght do so,<br/>
+The tyde awayteth everemo,<br/>
+And caste hire yhe upon the See:<br/>
+Somtime nay, somtime yee,    810<br/>
+Somtime he cam, somtime noght,<br/>
+Thus sche desputeth in hire thoght<br/>
+And wot noght what sche thenke mai;<br/>
+Bot fastende al the longe day<br/>
+Sche was into the derke nyht,<br/>
+And tho sche hath do set up lyht<br/>
+In a lanterne on hih alofte<br/>
+Upon a Tour, wher sche goth ofte,<br/>
+In hope that in his cominge<br/>
+He scholde se the liht brenninge,    820<br/>
+Wherof he mihte his weies rihte<br/>
+To come wher sche was be nyhte.<br/>
+Bot al for noght, sche was deceived,<br/>
+For Venus hath hire hope weyved,<br/>
+And schewede hire upon the Sky<br/>
+How that the day was faste by,<br/>
+So that withinne a litel throwe<br/>
+The daies lyht sche mihte knowe.<br/>
+Tho sche behield the See at large;<br/>
+And whan sche sih ther was no barge    830<br/>
+Ne Schip, als ferr as sche may kenne,<br/>
+Doun fro the Tour sche gan to renne<br/>
+Into an Herber all hire one,<br/>
+Wher many a wonder woful mone<br/>
+Sche made, that no lif it wiste,<br/>
+As sche which all hire joie miste,<br/>
+That now sche swouneth, now sche pleigneth,<br/>
+And al hire face sche desteigneth<br/>
+With teres, whiche, as of a welle<br/>
+The stremes, from hire yhen felle;    840<br/>
+So as sche mihte and evere in on<br/>
+Sche clepede upon Demephon,<br/>
+And seide, “Helas, thou slowe wiht,<br/>
+Wher was ther evere such a knyht,<br/>
+That so thurgh his ungentilesce<br/>
+Of Slowthe and of foryetelnesse<br/>
+Ayein his trowthe brak his stevene?”<br/>
+And tho hire yhe up to the hevene<br/>
+Sche caste, and seide, “O thou unkinde,<br/>
+Hier schalt thou thurgh thi Slowthe finde,    850<br/>
+If that thee list to come and se,<br/>
+A ladi ded for love of thee,<br/>
+So as I schal myselve spille;<br/>
+Whom, if it hadde be thi wille,<br/>
+Thou mihtest save wel ynowh.”<br/>
+With that upon a grene bowh<br/>
+A Ceinte of Selk, which sche ther hadde,<br/>
+Sche knette, and so hireself sche ladde,<br/>
+That sche aboute hire whyte swere<br/>
+It dede, and hyng hirselven there.    860<br/>
+Wherof the goddes were amoeved,<br/>
+And Demephon was so reproeved,<br/>
+That of the goddes providence<br/>
+Was schape such an evidence<br/>
+Evere afterward ayein the slowe,<br/>
+That Phillis in the same throwe<br/>
+Was schape into a Notetre,<br/>
+That alle men it mihte se,<br/>
+And after Phillis Philliberd<br/>
+This tre was cleped in the yerd,    870<br/>
+And yit for Demephon to schame<br/>
+Into this dai it berth the name.<br/>
+This wofull chance how that it ferde<br/>
+Anon as Demephon it herde,<br/>
+And every man it hadde in speche,<br/>
+His sorwe was noght tho to seche;<br/>
+He gan his Slowthe forto banne,<br/>
+Bot it was al to late thanne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, my Sone, miht thou wite<br/>
+Ayein this vice how it is write;    880<br/>
+For noman mai the harmes gesse,<br/>
+That fallen thurgh foryetelnesse,<br/>
+Wherof that I thi schrifte have herd.<br/>
+Bot yit of Slowthe hou it hath ferd<br/>
+In other wise I thenke oppose,<br/>
+If thou have gult, as I suppose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fulfild of Slowthes essamplaire<br/>
+Ther is yit on, his Secretaire,<br/>
+And he is cleped Negligence:<br/>
+Which wol noght loke his evidence,    890<br/>
+Wherof he mai be war tofore;<br/>
+Bot whanne he hath his cause lore,<br/>
+Thanne is he wys after the hond:<br/>
+Whanne helpe may no maner bond,<br/>
+Thanne ate ferste wolde he binde:<br/>
+Thus everemore he stant behinde.<br/>
+Whanne he the thing mai noght amende,<br/>
+Thanne is he war, and seith at ende,<br/>
+“Ha, wolde god I hadde knowe!”<br/>
+Wherof bejaped with a mowe    900<br/>
+He goth, for whan the grete Stiede<br/>
+Is stole, thanne he taketh hiede,<br/>
+And makth the stable dore fast:<br/>
+Thus evere he pleith an aftercast<br/>
+Of al that he schal seie or do.<br/>
+He hath a manere eke also,<br/>
+Him list noght lerne to be wys,<br/>
+For he set of no vertu pris<br/>
+Bot as him liketh for the while;<br/>
+So fieleth he fulofte guile,    910<br/>
+Whan that he weneth siker stonde.<br/>
+And thus thou miht wel understonde,<br/>
+Mi Sone, if thou art such in love,<br/>
+Thou miht noght come at thin above<br/>
+Of that thou woldest wel achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi holi fader, as I lieve,<br/>
+I mai wel with sauf conscience<br/>
+Excuse me of necgligence<br/>
+Towardes love in alle wise:<br/>
+For thogh I be non of the wise,    920<br/>
+I am so trewly amerous,<br/>
+That I am evere curious<br/>
+Of hem that conne best enforme<br/>
+To knowe and witen al the forme,<br/>
+What falleth unto loves craft.<br/>
+Bot yit ne fond I noght the haft,<br/>
+Which mihte unto that bladd acorde;<br/>
+For nevere herde I man recorde<br/>
+What thing it is that myhte availe<br/>
+To winne love withoute faile.    930<br/>
+Yit so fer cowthe I nevere finde<br/>
+Man that be resoun ne be kinde<br/>
+Me cowthe teche such an art,<br/>
+That he ne failede of a part;<br/>
+And as toward myn oghne wit,<br/>
+Controeve cowthe I nevere yit<br/>
+To finden eny sikernesse,<br/>
+That me myhte outher more or lesse<br/>
+Of love make forto spede:<br/>
+For lieveth wel withoute drede,    940<br/>
+If that ther were such a weie,<br/>
+As certeinliche as I schal deie<br/>
+I hadde it lerned longe ago.<br/>
+Bot I wot wel ther is non so:<br/>
+And natheles it may wel be,<br/>
+I am so rude in my degree<br/>
+And ek mi wittes ben so dulle,<br/>
+That I ne mai noght to the fulle<br/>
+Atteigne to so hih a lore.<br/>
+Bot this I dar seie overmore,    950<br/>
+Althogh mi wit ne be noght strong,<br/>
+It is noght on mi will along,<br/>
+For that is besi nyht and day<br/>
+To lerne al that he lerne may,<br/>
+How that I mihte love winne:<br/>
+Bot yit I am as to beginne<br/>
+Of that I wolde make an ende,<br/>
+And for I not how it schal wende,<br/>
+That is to me mi moste sorwe.<br/>
+Bot I dar take god to borwe,    960<br/>
+As after min entendement,<br/>
+Non other wise necgligent<br/>
+Thanne I yow seie have I noght be:<br/>
+Forthi per seinte charite<br/>
+Tell me, mi fader, what you semeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In good feith, Sone, wel me qwemeth,<br/>
+That thou thiself hast thus aquit<br/>
+Toward this vice, in which no wit<br/>
+Abide mai, for in an houre<br/>
+He lest al that he mai laboure    970<br/>
+The longe yer, so that men sein,<br/>
+What evere he doth it is in vein.<br/>
+For thurgh the Slowthe of Negligence<br/>
+Ther was yit nevere such science<br/>
+Ne vertu, which was bodely,<br/>
+That nys destruid and lost therby.<br/>
+Ensample that it hath be so<br/>
+In boke I finde write also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phebus, which is the Sonne hote,<br/>
+That schyneth upon Erthe hote    980<br/>
+And causeth every lyves helthe,<br/>
+He hadde a Sone in al his welthe,<br/>
+Which Pheton hihte, and he desireth<br/>
+And with his Moder he conspireth,<br/>
+The which was cleped Clemenee,<br/>
+For help and conseil, so that he<br/>
+His fader carte lede myhte<br/>
+Upon the faire daies brihte.<br/>
+And for this thing thei bothe preide<br/>
+Unto the fader, and he seide    990<br/>
+He wolde wel, bot forth withal<br/>
+Thre pointz he bad in special<br/>
+Unto his Sone in alle wise,<br/>
+That he him scholde wel avise<br/>
+And take it as be weie of lore.<br/>
+Ferst was, that he his hors to sore<br/>
+Ne prike, and over that he tolde<br/>
+That he the renes faste holde;<br/>
+And also that he be riht war<br/>
+In what manere he lede his charr,    1000<br/>
+That he mistake noght his gate,<br/>
+Bot up avisement algate<br/>
+He scholde bere a siker yhe,<br/>
+That he to lowe ne to hyhe<br/>
+His carte dryve at eny throwe,<br/>
+Wherof that he mihte overthrowe.<br/>
+And thus be Phebus ordinance<br/>
+Tok Pheton into governance<br/>
+The Sonnes carte, which he ladde:<br/>
+Bot he such veine gloire hadde    1010<br/>
+Of that he was set upon hyh,<br/>
+That he his oghne astat ne syh<br/>
+Thurgh negligence and tok non hiede;<br/>
+So mihte he wel noght longe spede.<br/>
+For he the hors withoute lawe<br/>
+The carte let aboute drawe<br/>
+Wher as hem liketh wantounly,<br/>
+That ate laste sodeinly,<br/>
+For he no reson wolde knowe,<br/>
+This fyri carte he drof to lowe,    1020<br/>
+And fyreth al the world aboute;<br/>
+Wherof thei weren alle in doubte,<br/>
+And to the god for helpe criden<br/>
+Of suche unhappes as betyden.<br/>
+Phebus, which syh the necgligence,<br/>
+How Pheton ayein his defence<br/>
+His charr hath drive out of the weie,<br/>
+Ordeigneth that he fell aweie<br/>
+Out of the carte into a flod<br/>
+And dreynte. Lo now, hou it stod    1030<br/>
+With him that was so necgligent,<br/>
+That fro the hyhe firmament,<br/>
+For that he wolde go to lowe,<br/>
+He was anon doun overthrowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In hih astat it is a vice<br/>
+To go to lowe, and in service<br/>
+It grieveth forto go to hye,<br/>
+Wherof a tale in poesie<br/>
+I finde, how whilom Dedalus,<br/>
+Which hadde a Sone, and Icharus    1040<br/>
+He hihte, and thogh hem thoghte lothe,<br/>
+In such prison thei weren bothe<br/>
+With Minotaurus, that aboute<br/>
+Thei mihten nawher wenden oute;<br/>
+So thei begonne forto schape<br/>
+How thei the prison mihte ascape.<br/>
+This Dedalus, which fro his yowthe<br/>
+Was tawht and manye craftes cowthe,<br/>
+Of fetheres and of othre thinges<br/>
+Hath mad to fle diverse wynges    1050<br/>
+For him and for his Sone also;<br/>
+To whom he yaf in charge tho<br/>
+And bad him thenke therupon,<br/>
+How that his wynges ben set on<br/>
+With wex, and if he toke his flyhte<br/>
+To hyhe, al sodeinliche he mihte<br/>
+Make it to melte with the Sonne.<br/>
+And thus thei have her flyht begonne<br/>
+Out of the prison faire and softe;<br/>
+And whan thei weren bothe alofte,    1060<br/>
+This Icharus began to monte,<br/>
+And of the conseil non accompte<br/>
+He sette, which his fader tawhte,<br/>
+Til that the Sonne his wynges cawhte,<br/>
+Wherof it malt, and fro the heihte<br/>
+Withouten help of eny sleihte<br/>
+He fell to his destruccion.<br/>
+And lich to that condicion<br/>
+Ther fallen ofte times fele<br/>
+For lacke of governance in wele,    1070<br/>
+Als wel in love as other weie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now goode fader, I you preie,<br/>
+If ther be more in the matiere<br/>
+Of Slowthe, that I mihte it hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and for thi diligence,<br/>
+Which every mannes conscience<br/>
+Be resoun scholde reule and kepe,<br/>
+If that thee list to taken kepe,<br/>
+I wol thee telle, aboven alle<br/>
+In whom no vertu mai befalle,    1080<br/>
+Which yifth unto the vices reste<br/>
+And is of slowe the sloweste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among these othre of Slowthes kinde,<br/>
+Which alle labour set behinde,<br/>
+And hateth alle besinesse,<br/>
+Ther is yit on, which Ydelnesse<br/>
+Is cleped, and is the Norrice<br/>
+In mannes kinde of every vice,<br/>
+Which secheth eases manyfold.<br/>
+In Wynter doth he noght for cold,    1090<br/>
+In Somer mai he noght for hete;<br/>
+So whether that he frese or swete,<br/>
+Or he be inne, or he be oute,<br/>
+He wol ben ydel al aboute,<br/>
+Bot if he pleie oght ate Dees.<br/>
+For who as evere take fees<br/>
+And thenkth worschipe to deserve,<br/>
+Ther is no lord whom he wol serve,<br/>
+As forto duelle in his servise,<br/>
+Bot if it were in such a wise,    1100<br/>
+Of that he seth per aventure<br/>
+That be lordschipe and coverture<br/>
+He mai the more stonde stille,<br/>
+And use his ydelnesse at wille.<br/>
+For he ne wol no travail take<br/>
+To ryde for his ladi sake,<br/>
+Bot liveth al upon his wisshes;<br/>
+And as a cat wolde ete fisshes<br/>
+Withoute wetinge of his cles,<br/>
+So wolde he do, bot natheles    1110<br/>
+He faileth ofte of that he wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if thou of such a molde<br/>
+Art mad, now tell me plein thi schrifte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nay, fader, god I yive a yifte.<br/>
+That toward love, as be mi wit,<br/>
+Al ydel was I nevere yit,<br/>
+Ne nevere schal, whil I mai go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Sone, tell me thanne so,<br/>
+What hast thou don of besischipe<br/>
+To love and to the ladischipe    1120<br/>
+Of hire which thi ladi is?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, evere yit er this<br/>
+In every place, in every stede,<br/>
+What so mi lady hath me bede,<br/>
+With al myn herte obedient<br/>
+I have therto be diligent.<br/>
+And if so is sche bidde noght,<br/>
+What thing that thanne into my thoght<br/>
+Comth ferst of that I mai suffise,<br/>
+I bowe and profre my servise,    1130<br/>
+Somtime in chambre, somtime in halle,<br/>
+Riht as I se the times falle.<br/>
+And whan sche goth to hiere masse,<br/>
+That time schal noght overpasse,<br/>
+That I naproche hir ladihede,<br/>
+In aunter if I mai hire lede<br/>
+Unto the chapelle and ayein.<br/>
+Thanne is noght al mi weie in vein,<br/>
+Somdiel I mai the betre fare,<br/>
+Whan I, that mai noght fiele hir bare,    1140<br/>
+Mai lede hire clothed in myn arm:<br/>
+Bot afterward it doth me harm<br/>
+Of pure ymaginacioun;<br/>
+For thanne this collacioun<br/>
+I make unto miselven ofte,<br/>
+And seie, “Ha lord, hou sche is softe,<br/>
+How sche is round, hou sche is smal!<br/>
+Now wolde god I hadde hire al<br/>
+Withoute danger at mi wille!”<br/>
+And thanne I sike and sitte stille,    1150<br/>
+Of that I se mi besi thoght<br/>
+Is torned ydel into noght.<br/>
+Bot for al that lete I ne mai,<br/>
+Whanne I se time an other dai,<br/>
+That I ne do my besinesse<br/>
+Unto mi ladi worthinesse.<br/>
+For I therto mi wit afaite<br/>
+To se the times and awaite<br/>
+What is to done and what to leve:<br/>
+And so, whan time is, be hir leve,    1160<br/>
+What thing sche bit me don, I do,<br/>
+And wher sche bidt me gon, I go,<br/>
+And whanne hir list to clepe, I come.<br/>
+Thus hath sche fulliche overcome<br/>
+Min ydelnesse til I sterve,<br/>
+So that I mot hire nedes serve,<br/>
+For as men sein, nede hath no lawe.<br/>
+Thus mot I nedly to hire drawe,<br/>
+I serve, I bowe, I loke, I loute,<br/>
+Min yhe folweth hire aboute,    1170<br/>
+What so sche wole so wol I,<br/>
+Whan sche wol sitte, I knele by,<br/>
+And whan sche stant, than wol I stonde:<br/>
+Bot whan sche takth hir werk on honde<br/>
+Of wevinge or enbrouderie,<br/>
+Than can I noght bot muse and prie<br/>
+Upon hir fingres longe and smale,<br/>
+And now I thenke, and now I tale,<br/>
+And now I singe, and now I sike,<br/>
+And thus mi contienance I pike.    1180<br/>
+And if it falle, as for a time<br/>
+Hir liketh noght abide bime,<br/>
+Bot besien hire on other thinges,<br/>
+Than make I othre tariinges<br/>
+To dreche forth the longe dai,<br/>
+For me is loth departe away.<br/>
+And thanne I am so simple of port,<br/>
+That forto feigne som desport<br/>
+I pleie with hire litel hound<br/>
+Now on the bedd, now on the ground,    1190<br/>
+Now with hir briddes in the cage;<br/>
+For ther is non so litel page,<br/>
+Ne yit so simple a chamberere,<br/>
+That I ne make hem alle chere,<br/>
+Al for thei scholde speke wel:<br/>
+Thus mow ye sen mi besi whiel,<br/>
+That goth noght ydeliche aboute.<br/>
+And if hir list to riden oute<br/>
+On pelrinage or other stede,<br/>
+I come, thogh I be noght bede,    1200<br/>
+And take hire in min arm alofte<br/>
+And sette hire in hire sadel softe,<br/>
+And so forth lede hire be the bridel,<br/>
+For that I wolde noght ben ydel.<br/>
+And if hire list to ride in Char,<br/>
+And thanne I mai therof be war,<br/>
+Anon I schape me to ryde<br/>
+Riht evene be the Chares side;<br/>
+And as I mai, I speke among,<br/>
+And otherwhile I singe a song,    1210<br/>
+Which Ovide in his bokes made,<br/>
+And seide, “O whiche sorwes glade,<br/>
+O which wofull prosperite<br/>
+Belongeth to the proprete<br/>
+Of love, who so wole him serve!<br/>
+And yit therfro mai noman swerve,<br/>
+That he ne mot his lawe obeie.”<br/>
+And thus I ryde forth mi weie,<br/>
+And am riht besi overal<br/>
+With herte and with mi body al,    1220<br/>
+As I have said you hier tofore.<br/>
+My goode fader, tell therfore,<br/>
+Of Ydelnesse if I have gilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, bot thou telle wilt<br/>
+Oght elles than I mai now hiere,<br/>
+Thou schalt have no penance hiere.<br/>
+And natheles a man mai se,<br/>
+How now adayes that ther be<br/>
+Ful manye of suche hertes slowe,<br/>
+That wol noght besien hem to knowe    1230<br/>
+What thing love is, til ate laste,<br/>
+That he with strengthe hem overcaste,<br/>
+That malgre hem thei mote obeie<br/>
+And don al ydelschipe aweie,<br/>
+To serve wel and besiliche.<br/>
+Bot, Sone, thou art non of swiche,<br/>
+For love schal the wel excuse:<br/>
+Bot otherwise, if thou refuse<br/>
+To love, thou miht so per cas<br/>
+Ben ydel, as somtime was    1240<br/>
+A kinges dowhter unavised,<br/>
+Til that Cupide hire hath chastised:<br/>
+Wherof thou schalt a tale hiere<br/>
+Acordant unto this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Armenye, I rede thus,<br/>
+Ther was a king, which Herupus<br/>
+Was hote, and he a lusti Maide<br/>
+To dowhter hadde, and as men saide<br/>
+Hire name was Rosiphelee;<br/>
+Which tho was of gret renomee,    1250<br/>
+For sche was bothe wys and fair<br/>
+And scholde ben hire fader hair.<br/>
+Bot sche hadde o defalte of Slowthe<br/>
+Towardes love, and that was rowthe;<br/>
+For so wel cowde noman seie,<br/>
+Which mihte sette hire in the weie<br/>
+Of loves occupacion<br/>
+Thurgh non ymaginacion;<br/>
+That scole wolde sche noght knowe.<br/>
+And thus sche was on of the slowe    1260<br/>
+As of such hertes besinesse,<br/>
+Til whanne Venus the goddesse,<br/>
+Which loves court hath forto reule,<br/>
+Hath broght hire into betre reule,<br/>
+Forth with Cupide and with his miht:<br/>
+For thei merveille how such a wiht,<br/>
+Which tho was in hir lusti age,<br/>
+Desireth nother Mariage<br/>
+Ne yit the love of paramours,<br/>
+Which evere hath be the comun cours    1270<br/>
+Amonges hem that lusti were.<br/>
+So was it schewed after there:<br/>
+For he that hihe hertes loweth<br/>
+With fyri Dartes whiche he throweth,<br/>
+Cupide, which of love is godd,<br/>
+In chastisinge hath mad a rodd<br/>
+To dryve awei hir wantounesse;<br/>
+So that withinne a while, I gesse,<br/>
+Sche hadde on such a chance sporned,<br/>
+That al hire mod was overtorned,    1280<br/>
+Which ferst sche hadde of slow manere:<br/>
+For thus it fell, as thou schalt hiere.<br/>
+Whan come was the Monthe of Maii,<br/>
+Sche wolde walke upon a dai,<br/>
+And that was er the Sonne Ariste;<br/>
+Of wommen bot a fewe it wiste,<br/>
+And forth sche wente prively<br/>
+Unto the Park was faste by,<br/>
+Al softe walkende on the gras,<br/>
+Til sche cam ther the Launde was,    1290<br/>
+Thurgh which ther ran a gret rivere.<br/>
+It thoghte hir fair, and seide, “Here<br/>
+I wole abide under the schawe”:<br/>
+And bad hire wommen to withdrawe,<br/>
+And ther sche stod al one stille,<br/>
+To thenke what was in hir wille.<br/>
+Sche sih the swote floures springe,<br/>
+Sche herde glade foules singe,<br/>
+Sche sih the bestes in her kinde,<br/>
+The buck, the do, the hert, the hinde,    1300<br/>
+The madle go with the femele;<br/>
+And so began ther a querele<br/>
+Betwen love and hir oghne herte,<br/>
+Fro which sche couthe noght asterte.<br/>
+And as sche caste hire yhe aboute,<br/>
+Sche syh clad in o suite a route<br/>
+Of ladis, wher thei comen ryde<br/>
+Along under the wodes syde:<br/>
+On faire amblende hors thei sete,<br/>
+That were al whyte, fatte and grete,    1310<br/>
+And everichon thei ride on side.<br/>
+The Sadles were of such a Pride,<br/>
+With Perle and gold so wel begon,<br/>
+So riche syh sche nevere non;<br/>
+In kertles and in Copes riche<br/>
+Thei weren clothed, alle liche,<br/>
+Departed evene of whyt and blew;<br/>
+With alle lustes that sche knew<br/>
+Thei were enbrouded overal.<br/>
+Here bodies weren long and smal,    1320<br/>
+The beaute faye upon her face<br/>
+Non erthly thing it may desface;<br/>
+Corones on here hed thei beere,<br/>
+As ech of hem a qweene weere,<br/>
+That al the gold of Cresus halle<br/>
+The leste coronal of alle<br/>
+Ne mihte have boght after the worth:<br/>
+Thus come thei ridende forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The kinges dowhter, which this syh,<br/>
+For pure abaissht drowh hire adryh    1330<br/>
+And hield hire clos under the bowh,<br/>
+And let hem passen stille ynowh;<br/>
+For as hire thoghte in hire avis,<br/>
+To hem that were of such a pris<br/>
+Sche was noght worthi axen there,<br/>
+Fro when they come or what thei were:<br/>
+Bot levere than this worldes good<br/>
+Sche wolde have wist hou that it stod,<br/>
+And putte hire hed alitel oute;<br/>
+And as sche lokede hire aboute,    1340<br/>
+Sche syh comende under the linde<br/>
+A womman up an hors behinde.<br/>
+The hors on which sche rod was blak,<br/>
+Al lene and galled on the back,<br/>
+And haltede, as he were encluyed,<br/>
+Wherof the womman was annuied;<br/>
+Thus was the hors in sori plit,<br/>
+Bot for al that a sterre whit<br/>
+Amiddes in the front he hadde.<br/>
+Hir Sadel ek was wonder badde,    1350<br/>
+In which the wofull womman sat,<br/>
+And natheles ther was with that<br/>
+A riche bridel for the nones<br/>
+Of gold and preciouse Stones.<br/>
+Hire cote was somdiel totore;<br/>
+Aboute hir middel twenty score<br/>
+Of horse haltres and wel mo<br/>
+Ther hyngen ate time tho.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus whan sche cam the ladi nyh,<br/>
+Than tok sche betre hiede and syh    1360<br/>
+This womman fair was of visage,<br/>
+Freyssh, lusti, yong and of tendre age;<br/>
+And so this ladi, ther sche stod,<br/>
+Bethoghte hire wel and understod<br/>
+That this, which com ridende tho,<br/>
+Tidinges couthe telle of tho,<br/>
+Which as sche sih tofore ryde,<br/>
+And putte hir forth and preide abide,<br/>
+And seide, “Ha, Suster, let me hiere,<br/>
+What ben thei, that now riden hiere,    1370<br/>
+And ben so richeliche arraied?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This womman, which com so esmaied,<br/>
+Ansuerde with ful softe speche,<br/>
+And seith, “Ma Dame, I schal you teche.<br/>
+These ar of tho that whilom were<br/>
+Servantz to love, and trowthe beere,<br/>
+Ther as thei hadde here herte set.<br/>
+Fare wel, for I mai noght be let:<br/>
+Ma Dame, I go to mi servise,<br/>
+So moste I haste in alle wise;    1380<br/>
+Forthi, ma Dame, yif me leve,<br/>
+I mai noght longe with you leve.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ha, goode Soster, yit I preie,<br/>
+Tell me whi ye ben so beseie<br/>
+And with these haltres thus begon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ma Dame, whilom I was on<br/>
+That to mi fader hadde a king;<br/>
+Bot I was slow, and for no thing<br/>
+Me liste noght to love obeie,<br/>
+And that I now ful sore abeie.    1390<br/>
+For I whilom no love hadde,<br/>
+Min hors is now so fieble and badde,<br/>
+And al totore is myn arai,<br/>
+And every yeer this freisshe Maii<br/>
+These lusti ladis ryde aboute,<br/>
+And I mot nedes suie here route<br/>
+In this manere as ye now se,<br/>
+And trusse here haltres forth with me,<br/>
+And am bot as here horse knave.<br/>
+Non other office I ne have,    1400<br/>
+Hem thenkth I am worthi nomore,<br/>
+For I was slow in loves lore,<br/>
+Whan I was able forto lere,<br/>
+And wolde noght the tales hiere<br/>
+Of hem that couthen love teche.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now tell me thanne, I you beseche,<br/>
+Wherof that riche bridel serveth.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that hire chere awei sche swerveth,<br/>
+And gan to wepe, and thus sche tolde:<br/>
+“This bridel, which ye nou beholde    1410<br/>
+So riche upon myn horse hed,&mdash;<br/>
+Ma Dame, afore, er I was ded,<br/>
+Whan I was in mi lusti lif,<br/>
+Ther fel into myn herte a strif<br/>
+Of love, which me overcom,<br/>
+So that therafter hiede I nom<br/>
+And thoghte I wolde love a kniht:<br/>
+That laste wel a fourtenyht,<br/>
+For it no lengere mihte laste,<br/>
+So nyh my lif was ate laste.    1420<br/>
+Bot now, allas, to late war<br/>
+That I ne hadde him loved ar:<br/>
+For deth cam so in haste bime,<br/>
+Er I therto hadde eny time,<br/>
+That it ne mihte ben achieved.<br/>
+Bot for al that I am relieved,<br/>
+Of that mi will was good therto,<br/>
+That love soffreth it be so<br/>
+That I schal swiche a bridel were.<br/>
+Now have ye herd al myn ansuere:    1430<br/>
+To godd, ma Dame, I you betake,<br/>
+And warneth alle for mi sake,<br/>
+Of love that thei ben noght ydel,<br/>
+And bidd hem thenke upon mi brydel.”<br/>
+And with that word al sodeinly<br/>
+Sche passeth, as it were a Sky,<br/>
+Al clene out of this ladi sihte:<br/>
+And tho for fere hire herte afflihte,<br/>
+And seide to hirself, “Helas!<br/>
+I am riht in the same cas.    1440<br/>
+Bot if I live after this day,<br/>
+I schal amende it, if I may.”<br/>
+And thus homward this lady wente,<br/>
+And changede al hire ferste entente,<br/>
+Withinne hire herte and gan to swere<br/>
+That sche none haltres wolde bere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, Sone, hier miht thou taken hiede,<br/>
+How ydelnesse is forto drede,<br/>
+Namliche of love, as I have write.<br/>
+For thou miht understonde and wite,    1450<br/>
+Among the gentil nacion<br/>
+Love is an occupacion,<br/>
+Which forto kepe hise lustes save<br/>
+Scholde every gentil herte have:<br/>
+For as the ladi was chastised,<br/>
+Riht so the knyht mai ben avised,<br/>
+Which ydel is and wol noght serve<br/>
+To love, he mai per cas deserve<br/>
+A grettere peine than sche hadde,<br/>
+Whan sche aboute with hire ladde    1460<br/>
+The horse haltres; and forthi<br/>
+Good is to be wel war therbi.<br/>
+Bot forto loke aboven alle,<br/>
+These Maidens, hou so that it falle,<br/>
+Thei scholden take ensample of this<br/>
+Which I have told, for soth it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi ladi Venus, whom I serve,<br/>
+What womman wole hire thonk deserve,<br/>
+Sche mai noght thilke love eschuie<br/>
+Of paramours, bot sche mot suie    1470<br/>
+Cupides lawe; and natheles<br/>
+Men sen such love sielde in pes,<br/>
+That it nys evere upon aspie<br/>
+Of janglinge and of fals Envie,<br/>
+Fulofte medlid with disese:<br/>
+Bot thilke love is wel at ese,<br/>
+Which set is upon mariage;<br/>
+For that dar schewen the visage<br/>
+In alle places openly.<br/>
+A gret mervaile it is forthi,    1480<br/>
+How that a Maiden wolde lette,<br/>
+That sche hir time ne besette<br/>
+To haste unto that ilke feste,<br/>
+Wherof the love is al honeste.<br/>
+Men mai recovere lost of good,<br/>
+Bot so wys man yit nevere stod,<br/>
+Which mai recovere time lore:<br/>
+So mai a Maiden wel therfore<br/>
+Ensample take, of that sche strangeth<br/>
+Hir love, and longe er that sche changeth    1490<br/>
+Hir herte upon hir lustes greene<br/>
+To mariage, as it is seene.<br/>
+For thus a yer or tuo or thre<br/>
+Sche lest, er that sche wedded be,<br/>
+Whyl sche the charge myhte bere<br/>
+Of children, whiche the world forbere<br/>
+Ne mai, bot if it scholde faile.<br/>
+Bot what Maiden hire esposaile<br/>
+Wol tarie, whan sche take mai,<br/>
+Sche schal per chance an other dai    1500<br/>
+Be let, whan that hire lievest were.<br/>
+Wherof a tale unto hire Ere,<br/>
+Which is coupable upon this dede,<br/>
+I thenke telle of that I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the Jewes, as men tolde,<br/>
+Ther was whilom be daies olde<br/>
+A noble Duck, which Jepte hihte.<br/>
+And fell, he scholde go to fyhte<br/>
+Ayein Amon the cruel king:<br/>
+And forto speke upon this thing,    1510<br/>
+Withinne his herte he made avou<br/>
+To god and seide, “Ha lord, if thou<br/>
+Wolt grante unto thi man victoire,<br/>
+I schal in tokne of thi memoire<br/>
+The ferste lif that I mai se,<br/>
+Of man or womman wher it be,<br/>
+Anon as I come hom ayein,<br/>
+To thee, which art god sovereign,<br/>
+Slen in thi name and sacrifie.”<br/>
+And thus with his chivalerie    1520<br/>
+He goth him forth, wher that he scholde,<br/>
+And wan al that he winne wolde<br/>
+And overcam his fomen alle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mai noman lette that schal falle.<br/>
+This Duc a lusti dowhter hadde,<br/>
+And fame, which the wordes spradde,<br/>
+Hath broght unto this ladi Ere<br/>
+How that hire fader hath do there.<br/>
+Sche waiteth upon his cominge<br/>
+With dansinge and with carolinge,    1530<br/>
+As sche that wolde be tofore<br/>
+Al othre, and so sche was therfore<br/>
+In Masphat at hir fader gate<br/>
+The ferste; and whan he com therate,<br/>
+And sih his douhter, he tobreide<br/>
+Hise clothes and wepende he seide:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“O mihti god among ous hiere,<br/>
+Nou wot I that in no manere<br/>
+This worldes joie mai be plein.<br/>
+I hadde al that I coude sein    1540<br/>
+Ayein mi fomen be thi grace,<br/>
+So whan I cam toward this place<br/>
+Ther was non gladdere man than I:<br/>
+But now, mi lord, al sodeinli<br/>
+Mi joie is torned into sorwe,<br/>
+For I mi dowhter schal tomorwe<br/>
+Tohewe and brenne in thi servise<br/>
+To loenge of thi sacrifise<br/>
+Thurgh min avou, so as it is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Maiden, whan sche wiste of this,    1550<br/>
+And sih the sorwe hir fader made,<br/>
+So as sche mai with wordes glade<br/>
+Conforteth him, and bad him holde<br/>
+The covenant which he is holde<br/>
+Towardes god, as he behihte.<br/>
+Bot natheles hire herte aflihte<br/>
+Of that sche sih hire deth comende;<br/>
+And thanne unto the ground knelende<br/>
+Tofore hir fader sche is falle,<br/>
+And seith, so as it is befalle    1560<br/>
+Upon this point that sche schal deie,<br/>
+Of o thing ferst sche wolde him preie,<br/>
+That fourty daies of respit<br/>
+He wolde hir grante upon this plit,<br/>
+That sche the whyle mai bewepe<br/>
+Hir maidenhod, which sche to kepe<br/>
+So longe hath had and noght beset;<br/>
+Wherof her lusti youthe is let,<br/>
+That sche no children hath forthdrawe<br/>
+In Mariage after the lawe,    1570<br/>
+So that the poeple is noght encressed.<br/>
+Bot that it mihte be relessed,<br/>
+That sche hir time hath lore so,<br/>
+Sche wolde be his leve go<br/>
+With othre Maidens to compleigne,<br/>
+And afterward unto the peine<br/>
+Of deth sche wolde come ayein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fader herde his douhter sein,<br/>
+And therupon of on assent<br/>
+The Maidens were anon asent,    1580<br/>
+That scholden with this Maiden wende.<br/>
+So forto speke unto this ende,<br/>
+Thei gon the dounes and the dales<br/>
+With wepinge and with wofull tales,<br/>
+And every wyht hire maidenhiede<br/>
+Compleigneth upon thilke nede,<br/>
+That sche no children hadde bore,<br/>
+Wherof sche hath hir youthe lore,<br/>
+Which nevere sche recovere mai:<br/>
+For so fell that hir laste dai    1590<br/>
+Was come, in which sche scholde take<br/>
+Hir deth, which sche may noght forsake.<br/>
+Lo, thus sche deiede a wofull Maide<br/>
+For thilke cause which I saide,<br/>
+As thou hast understonde above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as toward the Love<br/>
+Of Maidens forto telle trowthe,<br/>
+Ye have thilke vice of Slowthe,<br/>
+Me thenkth, riht wonder wel declared,<br/>
+That ye the wommen have noght spared    1600<br/>
+Of hem that tarien so behinde.<br/>
+Bot yit it falleth in my minde,<br/>
+Toward the men hou that ye spieke<br/>
+Of hem that wole no travail sieke<br/>
+In cause of love upon decerte:<br/>
+To speke in wordes so coverte,<br/>
+I not what travaill that ye mente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and after min entente<br/>
+I woll thee telle what I thoghte,<br/>
+Hou whilom men here loves boghte    1610<br/>
+Thurgh gret travaill in strange londes,<br/>
+Wher that thei wroghten with here hondes<br/>
+Of armes many a worthi dede,<br/>
+In sondri place as men mai rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That every love of pure kinde<br/>
+Is ferst forthdrawe, wel I finde:<br/>
+Bot natheles yit overthis<br/>
+Decerte doth so that it is<br/>
+The rather had in mani place.<br/>
+Forthi who secheth loves grace,    1620<br/>
+Wher that these worthi wommen are,<br/>
+He mai noght thanne himselve spare<br/>
+Upon his travail forto serve,<br/>
+Wherof that he mai thonk deserve,<br/>
+There as these men of Armes be,<br/>
+Somtime over the grete Se:<br/>
+So that be londe and ek be Schipe<br/>
+He mot travaile for worschipe<br/>
+And make manye hastyf rodes,<br/>
+Somtime in Prus, somtime in Rodes,    1630<br/>
+And somtime into Tartarie;<br/>
+So that these heraldz on him crie,<br/>
+“Vailant, vailant, lo, wher he goth!”<br/>
+And thanne he yifth hem gold and cloth,<br/>
+So that his fame mihte springe,<br/>
+And to his ladi Ere bringe<br/>
+Som tidinge of his worthinesse;<br/>
+So that sche mihte of his prouesce<br/>
+Of that sche herde men recorde,<br/>
+The betre unto his love acorde    1640<br/>
+And danger pute out of hire mod,<br/>
+Whanne alle men recorden good,<br/>
+And that sche wot wel, for hir sake<br/>
+That he no travail wol forsake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of this travail I meene:<br/>
+Nou schrif thee, for it schal be sene<br/>
+If thou art ydel in this cas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fader ye, and evere was:<br/>
+For as me thenketh trewely<br/>
+That every man doth mor than I    1650<br/>
+As of this point, and if so is<br/>
+That I have oght so don er this,<br/>
+It is so litel of acompte,<br/>
+As who seith, it mai noght amonte<br/>
+To winne of love his lusti yifte.<br/>
+For this I telle you in schrifte,<br/>
+That me were levere hir love winne<br/>
+Than Kaire and al that is ther inne:<br/>
+And forto slen the hethen alle,<br/>
+I not what good ther mihte falle,    1660<br/>
+So mochel blod thogh ther be schad.<br/>
+This finde I writen, hou Crist bad<br/>
+That noman other scholde sle.<br/>
+What scholde I winne over the Se,<br/>
+If I mi ladi loste at hom?<br/>
+Bot passe thei the salte fom,<br/>
+To whom Crist bad thei scholden preche<br/>
+To al the world and his feith teche:<br/>
+Bot now thei rucken in here nest<br/>
+And resten as hem liketh best    1670<br/>
+In all the swetnesse of delices.<br/>
+Thus thei defenden ous the vices,<br/>
+And sitte hemselven al amidde;<br/>
+To slen and feihten thei ous bidde<br/>
+Hem whom thei scholde, as the bok seith,<br/>
+Converten unto Cristes feith.<br/>
+Bot hierof have I gret mervaile,<br/>
+Hou thei wol bidde me travaile:<br/>
+A Sarazin if I sle schal,<br/>
+I sle the Soule forth withal,    1680<br/>
+And that was nevere Cristes lore.<br/>
+Bot nou ho ther, I seie nomore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot I wol speke upon mi schrifte;<br/>
+And to Cupide I make a yifte,<br/>
+That who as evere pris deserve<br/>
+Of armes, I wol love serve;<br/>
+And thogh I scholde hem bothe kepe,<br/>
+Als wel yit wolde I take kepe<br/>
+Whan it were time to abide,<br/>
+As forto travaile and to ryde:    1690<br/>
+For how as evere a man laboure,<br/>
+Cupide appointed hath his houre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For I have herd it telle also,<br/>
+Achilles lefte hise armes so<br/>
+Bothe of himself and of his men<br/>
+At Troie for Polixenen,<br/>
+Upon hire love whanne he fell,<br/>
+That for no chance that befell<br/>
+Among the Grecs or up or doun,<br/>
+He wolde noght ayein the toun    1700<br/>
+Ben armed, for the love of hire.<br/>
+And so me thenketh, lieve Sire,<br/>
+A man of armes mai him reste<br/>
+Somtime in hope for the beste,<br/>
+If he mai finde a weie nerr.<br/>
+What scholde I thanne go so ferr<br/>
+In strange londes many a mile<br/>
+To ryde, and lese at hom therwhile<br/>
+Mi love? It were a schort beyete<br/>
+To winne chaf and lese whete.    1710<br/>
+Bot if mi ladi bidde wolde,<br/>
+That I for hire love scholde<br/>
+Travaile, me thenkth trewely<br/>
+I mihte fle thurghout the Sky,<br/>
+And go thurghout the depe Se,<br/>
+For al ne sette I at a stre<br/>
+What thonk that I mihte elles gete.<br/>
+What helpeth it a man have mete,<br/>
+Wher drinke lacketh on the bord?<br/>
+What helpeth eny mannes word    1720<br/>
+To seie hou I travaile faste,<br/>
+Wher as me faileth ate laste<br/>
+That thing which I travaile fore?<br/>
+O in good time were he bore,<br/>
+That mihte atteigne such a mede.<br/>
+Bot certes if I mihte spede<br/>
+With eny maner besinesse<br/>
+Of worldes travail, thanne I gesse,<br/>
+Ther scholde me non ydelschipe<br/>
+Departen fro hir ladischipe.    1730<br/>
+Bot this I se, on daies nou<br/>
+The blinde god, I wot noght hou,<br/>
+Cupido, which of love is lord,<br/>
+He set the thinges in discord,<br/>
+That thei that lest to love entende<br/>
+Fulofte he wole hem yive and sende<br/>
+Most of his grace; and thus I finde<br/>
+That he that scholde go behinde,<br/>
+Goth many a time ferr tofore:<br/>
+So wot I noght riht wel therfore,    1740<br/>
+On whether bord that I schal seile.<br/>
+Thus can I noght miself conseile,<br/>
+Bot al I sette on aventure,<br/>
+And am, as who seith, out of cure<br/>
+For ought that I can seie or do:<br/>
+For everemore I finde it so,<br/>
+The more besinesse I leie,<br/>
+The more that I knele and preie<br/>
+With goode wordes and with softe,<br/>
+The more I am refused ofte,    1750<br/>
+With besinesse and mai noght winne.<br/>
+And in good feith that is gret Sinne;<br/>
+For I mai seie, of dede and thoght<br/>
+That ydel man have I be noght;<br/>
+For hou as evere I be deslaied,<br/>
+Yit evermore I have assaied.<br/>
+Bot thogh my besinesse laste,<br/>
+Al is bot ydel ate laste,<br/>
+For whan theffect is ydelnesse,<br/>
+I not what thing is besinesse.    1760<br/>
+Sei, what availeth al the dede,<br/>
+Which nothing helpeth ate nede?<br/>
+For the fortune of every fame<br/>
+Schal of his ende bere a name.<br/>
+And thus for oght is yit befalle,<br/>
+An ydel man I wol me calle<br/>
+As after myn entendement:<br/>
+Bot upon youre amendement,<br/>
+Min holi fader, as you semeth,<br/>
+Mi reson and my cause demeth.    1770
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I have herd thi matiere,<br/>
+Of that thou hast thee schriven hiere:<br/>
+And forto speke of ydel fare,<br/>
+Me semeth that thou tharst noght care,<br/>
+Bot only that thou miht noght spede.<br/>
+And therof, Sone, I wol thee rede,<br/>
+Abyd, and haste noght to faste;<br/>
+Thi dees ben every dai to caste,<br/>
+Thou nost what chance schal betyde.<br/>
+Betre is to wayte upon the tyde    1780<br/>
+Than rowe ayein the stremes stronge:<br/>
+For thogh so be thee thenketh longe,<br/>
+Per cas the revolucion<br/>
+Of hevene and thi condicion<br/>
+Ne be noght yit of on acord.<br/>
+Bot I dar make this record<br/>
+To Venus, whos Prest that I am,<br/>
+That sithen that I hidir cam<br/>
+To hiere, as sche me bad, thi lif,<br/>
+Wherof thou elles be gultif,    1790<br/>
+Thou miht hierof thi conscience<br/>
+Excuse, and of gret diligence,<br/>
+Which thou to love hast so despended,<br/>
+Thou oghtest wel to be comended.<br/>
+Bot if so be that ther oght faile,<br/>
+Of that thou slowthest to travaile<br/>
+In armes forto ben absent,<br/>
+And for thou makst an argument<br/>
+Of that thou seidest hiere above,<br/>
+Hou Achilles thurgh strengthe of love    1800<br/>
+Hise armes lefte for a throwe,<br/>
+Thou schalt an other tale knowe,<br/>
+Which is contraire, as thou schalt wite.<br/>
+For this a man mai finde write,<br/>
+Whan that knyhthode schal be werred,<br/>
+Lust mai noght thanne be preferred;<br/>
+The bedd mot thanne be forsake<br/>
+And Schield and spere on honde take,<br/>
+Which thing schal make hem after glade,<br/>
+Whan thei ben worthi knihtes made.    1810<br/>
+Wherof, so as it comth to honde,<br/>
+A tale thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+Hou that a kniht schal armes suie,<br/>
+And for the while his ese eschuie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon knyhthode I rede thus,<br/>
+How whilom whan the king Nauplus,<br/>
+The fader of Palamades,<br/>
+Cam forto preien Ulixes<br/>
+With othre Gregois ek also,<br/>
+That he with hem to Troie go,    1820<br/>
+Wher that the Siege scholde be,<br/>
+Anon upon Penolope<br/>
+His wif, whom that he loveth hote,<br/>
+Thenkende, wolde hem noght behote.<br/>
+Bot he schop thanne a wonder wyle,<br/>
+How that he scholde hem best beguile,<br/>
+So that he mihte duelle stille<br/>
+At home and welde his love at wille:<br/>
+Wherof erli the morwe day<br/>
+Out of his bedd, wher that he lay,    1830<br/>
+Whan he was uppe, he gan to fare<br/>
+Into the field and loke and stare,<br/>
+As he which feigneth to be wod:<br/>
+He tok a plowh, wher that it stod,<br/>
+Wherinne anon in stede of Oxes<br/>
+He let do yoken grete foxes,<br/>
+And with gret salt the lond he siew.<br/>
+But Nauplus, which the cause kniew,<br/>
+Ayein the sleihte which he feigneth<br/>
+An other sleihte anon ordeigneth.    1840<br/>
+And fell that time Ulixes hadde<br/>
+A chyld to Sone, and Nauplus radde<br/>
+How men that Sone taken scholde,<br/>
+And setten him upon the Molde,<br/>
+Wher that his fader hield the plowh,<br/>
+In thilke furgh which he tho drowh.<br/>
+For in such wise he thoghte assaie,<br/>
+Hou it Ulixes scholde paie,<br/>
+If that he were wod or non.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The knihtes for this child forthgon;    1850<br/>
+Thelamacus anon was fett,<br/>
+Tofore the plowh and evene sett,<br/>
+Wher that his fader scholde dryve.<br/>
+Bot whan he sih his child, als blyve<br/>
+He drof the plowh out of the weie,<br/>
+And Nauplus tho began to seie,<br/>
+And hath half in a jape cryd:<br/>
+“O Ulixes, thou art aspyd:<br/>
+What is al this thou woldest meene?<br/>
+For openliche it is now seene    1860<br/>
+That thou hast feigned al this thing,<br/>
+Which is gret schame to a king,<br/>
+Whan that for lust of eny slowthe<br/>
+Thou wolt in a querele of trowthe<br/>
+Of armes thilke honour forsake,<br/>
+And duelle at hom for loves sake:<br/>
+For betre it were honour to winne<br/>
+Than love, which likinge is inne.<br/>
+Forthi tak worschipe upon honde,<br/>
+And elles thou schalt understonde    1870<br/>
+These othre worthi kinges alle<br/>
+Of Grece, which unto thee calle,<br/>
+Towardes thee wol be riht wrothe,<br/>
+And grieve thee per chance bothe:<br/>
+Which schal be tothe double schame<br/>
+Most for the hindrynge of thi name,<br/>
+That thou for Slouthe of eny love<br/>
+Schalt so thi lustes sette above<br/>
+And leve of armes the knyhthode,<br/>
+Which is the pris of thi manhode    1880<br/>
+And oghte ferst to be desired.”<br/>
+Bot he, which hadde his herte fyred<br/>
+Upon his wif, whan he this herde,<br/>
+Noght o word therayein ansuerde,<br/>
+Bot torneth hom halvinge aschamed,<br/>
+And hath withinne himself so tamed<br/>
+His herte, that al the sotie<br/>
+Of love for chivalerie<br/>
+He lefte, and be him lief or loth,<br/>
+To Troie forth with hem he goth,    1890<br/>
+That he him mihte noght excuse.<br/>
+Thus stant it, if a knyht refuse<br/>
+The lust of armes to travaile,<br/>
+Ther mai no worldes ese availe,<br/>
+Bot if worschipe be with al.<br/>
+And that hath schewed overal;<br/>
+For it sit wel in alle wise<br/>
+A kniht to ben of hih emprise<br/>
+And puten alle drede aweie;<br/>
+For in this wise, I have herd seie,    1900
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The worthi king Protheselai<br/>
+On his passage wher he lai<br/>
+Towardes Troie thilke Siege,<br/>
+Sche which was al his oghne liege,<br/>
+Laodomie his lusti wif,<br/>
+Which for his love was pensif,<br/>
+As he which al hire herte hadde,<br/>
+Upon a thing wherof sche dradde<br/>
+A lettre, forto make him duelle<br/>
+Fro Troie, sende him, thus to telle,    1910<br/>
+Hou sche hath axed of the wyse<br/>
+Touchende of him in such a wise,<br/>
+That thei have don hire understonde,<br/>
+Towardes othre hou so it stonde,<br/>
+The destine it hath so schape<br/>
+That he schal noght the deth ascape<br/>
+In cas that he arryve at Troie.<br/>
+Forthi as to hir worldes joie<br/>
+With al hire herte sche him preide,<br/>
+And many an other cause alleide,    1920<br/>
+That he with hire at home abide.<br/>
+Bot he hath cast hir lettre aside,<br/>
+As he which tho no maner hiede<br/>
+Tok of hire wommannysshe drede;<br/>
+And forth he goth, as noght ne were,<br/>
+To Troie, and was the ferste there<br/>
+Which londeth, and tok arryvaile:<br/>
+For him was levere in the bataille,<br/>
+He seith, to deien as a knyht,<br/>
+Than forto lyve in al his myht    1930<br/>
+And be reproeved of his name.<br/>
+Lo, thus upon the worldes fame<br/>
+Knyhthode hath evere yit be set,<br/>
+Which with no couardie is let.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of king Saül also I finde,<br/>
+Whan Samuel out of his kinde,<br/>
+Thurgh that the Phitonesse hath lered,<br/>
+In Samarie was arered<br/>
+Long time after that he was ded,<br/>
+The king Saül him axeth red,    1940<br/>
+If that he schal go fyhte or non.<br/>
+And Samuel him seide anon,<br/>
+“The ferste day of the bataille<br/>
+Thou schalt be slain withoute faile<br/>
+And Jonathas thi Sone also.”<br/>
+Bot hou as evere it felle so,<br/>
+This worthi kniht of his corage<br/>
+Hath undertake the viage,<br/>
+And wol noght his knyhthode lette<br/>
+For no peril he couthe sette;    1950<br/>
+Wherof that bothe his Sone and he<br/>
+Upon the Montz of Gelboe<br/>
+Assemblen with here enemys:<br/>
+For thei knyhthode of such a pris<br/>
+Be olde daies thanne hielden,<br/>
+That thei non other thing behielden.<br/>
+And thus the fader for worschipe<br/>
+Forth with his Sone of felaschipe<br/>
+Thurgh lust of armes weren dede,<br/>
+As men mai in the bible rede;    1960<br/>
+The whos knyhthode is yit in mende,<br/>
+And schal be to the worldes ende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto loken overmore,<br/>
+It hath and schal ben evermore<br/>
+That of knihthode the prouesse<br/>
+Is grounded upon hardinesse<br/>
+Of him that dar wel undertake.<br/>
+And who that wolde ensample take<br/>
+Upon the forme of knyhtes lawe,<br/>
+How that Achilles was forthdrawe    1970<br/>
+With Chiro, which Centaurus hihte,<br/>
+Of many a wondre hiere he mihte.<br/>
+For it stod thilke time thus,<br/>
+That this Chiro, this Centaurus,<br/>
+Withinne a large wildernesse,<br/>
+Wher was Leon and Leonesse,<br/>
+The Lepard and the Tigre also,<br/>
+With Hert and Hynde, and buck and doo,<br/>
+Hadde his duellinge, as tho befell,<br/>
+Of Pileon upon the hel,    1980<br/>
+Wherof was thanne mochel speche.<br/>
+Ther hath Chiro this Chyld to teche,<br/>
+What time he was of tuelve yer age;<br/>
+Wher forto maken his corage<br/>
+The more hardi be other weie,<br/>
+In the forest to hunte and pleie<br/>
+Whan that Achilles walke wolde,<br/>
+Centaurus bad that he ne scholde<br/>
+After no beste make his chace,<br/>
+Which wolde flen out of his place,    1990<br/>
+As buck and doo and hert and hynde,<br/>
+With whiche he mai no werre finde;<br/>
+Bot tho that wolden him withstonde,<br/>
+Ther scholde he with his Dart on honde<br/>
+Upon the Tigre and the Leon<br/>
+Pourchace and take his veneison,<br/>
+As to a kniht is acordant.<br/>
+And therupon a covenant<br/>
+This Chiro with Achilles sette,<br/>
+That every day withoute lette    2000<br/>
+He scholde such a cruel beste<br/>
+Or slen or wounden ate leste,<br/>
+So that he mihte a tokne bringe<br/>
+Of blod upon his hom cominge.<br/>
+And thus of that Chiro him tawhte<br/>
+Achilles such an herte cawhte,<br/>
+That he nomore a Leon dradde,<br/>
+Whan he his Dart on honde hadde,<br/>
+Thanne if a Leon were an asse:<br/>
+And that hath mad him forto passe    2010<br/>
+Alle othre knihtes of his dede,<br/>
+Whan it cam to the grete nede,<br/>
+As it was afterward wel knowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus, my Sone, thou miht knowe<br/>
+That the corage of hardiesce<br/>
+Is of knyhthode the prouesce,<br/>
+Which is to love sufficant<br/>
+Aboven al the remenant<br/>
+That unto loves court poursuie.<br/>
+Bot who that wol no Slowthe eschuie,    2020<br/>
+Upon knihthode and noght travaile,<br/>
+I not what love him scholde availe;<br/>
+Bot every labour axeth why<br/>
+Of som reward, wherof that I<br/>
+Ensamples couthe telle ynowe<br/>
+Of hem that toward love drowe<br/>
+Be olde daies, as thei scholde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, therof hiere I wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, it is wel resonable,<br/>
+In place which is honorable    2030<br/>
+If that a man his herte sette,<br/>
+That thanne he for no Slowthe lette<br/>
+To do what longeth to manhede.<br/>
+For if thou wolt the bokes rede<br/>
+Of Lancelot and othre mo,<br/>
+Ther miht thou sen hou it was tho<br/>
+Of armes, for thei wolde atteigne<br/>
+To love, which withoute peine<br/>
+Mai noght be gete of ydelnesse.<br/>
+And that I take to witnesse    2040<br/>
+An old Cronique in special,<br/>
+The which into memorial<br/>
+Is write, for his loves sake<br/>
+Hou that a kniht schal undertake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was a king, which Oënes<br/>
+Was hote, and he under his pes<br/>
+Hield Calidoyne in his Empire,<br/>
+And hadde a dowhter Deianire.<br/>
+Men wiste in thilke time non<br/>
+So fair a wiht as sche was on;    2050<br/>
+And as sche was a lusti wiht,<br/>
+Riht so was thanne a noble kniht,<br/>
+To whom Mercurie fader was.<br/>
+This kniht the tuo pilers of bras,<br/>
+The whiche yit a man mai finde,<br/>
+Sette up in the desert of Ynde;<br/>
+That was the worthi Hercules,<br/>
+Whos name schal ben endeles<br/>
+For the merveilles whiche he wroghte.<br/>
+This Hercules the love soghte    2060<br/>
+Of Deianire, and of this thing<br/>
+Unto hir fader, which was king,<br/>
+He spak touchende of Mariage.<br/>
+The king knowende his hih lignage,<br/>
+And dradde also hise mihtes sterne,<br/>
+To him ne dorste his dowhter werne;<br/>
+And natheles this he him seide,<br/>
+How Achelons er he ferst preide<br/>
+To wedden hire, and in accord<br/>
+Thei stode, as it was of record:    2070<br/>
+Bot for al that this he him granteth,<br/>
+That which of hem that other daunteth<br/>
+In armes, him sche scholde take,<br/>
+And that the king hath undertake.<br/>
+This Achelons was a Geant,<br/>
+A soubtil man, a deceivant,<br/>
+Which thurgh magique and sorcerie<br/>
+Couthe al the world of tricherie:<br/>
+And whan that he this tale herde,<br/>
+Hou upon that the king ansuerde    2080<br/>
+With Hercules he moste feighte,<br/>
+He tristeth noght upon his sleighte<br/>
+Al only, whan it comth to nede,<br/>
+Bot that    which voydeth alle drede<br/>
+And every noble herte stereth,<br/>
+The love, that no lif forbereth,<br/>
+For his ladi, whom he desireth,<br/>
+With hardiesse his herte fyreth,<br/>
+And sende him word withoute faile<br/>
+That he wol take the bataille.    2090<br/>
+Thei setten day, they chosen field,<br/>
+The knihtes coevered under Schield<br/>
+Togedre come at time set,<br/>
+And echon is with other met.<br/>
+It fell thei foghten bothe afote,<br/>
+Ther was no ston, ther was no rote,<br/>
+Which mihte letten hem the weie,<br/>
+But al was voide and take aweie.<br/>
+Thei smyten strokes bot a fewe,<br/>
+For Hercules, which wolde schewe    2100<br/>
+His grete strengthe as for the nones,<br/>
+He sterte upon him al at ones<br/>
+And cawhte him in hise armes stronge.<br/>
+This Geant wot he mai noght longe<br/>
+Endure under so harde bondes,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde out of hise hondes<br/>
+Be sleyhte in som manere ascape.<br/>
+And as he couthe himself forschape,<br/>
+In liknesse of an Eddre he slipte<br/>
+Out of his hond, and forth he skipte;    2110<br/>
+And efte, as he that feighte wole,<br/>
+He torneth him into a Bole,<br/>
+And gan to belwe of such a soun,<br/>
+As thogh the world scholde al go doun:<br/>
+The ground he sporneth and he tranceth,<br/>
+Hise large hornes he avanceth<br/>
+And caste hem here and there aboute.<br/>
+Bot he, which stant of him no doute,<br/>
+Awaiteth wel whan that he cam,<br/>
+And him be bothe hornes nam    2120<br/>
+And al at ones he him caste<br/>
+Unto the ground, and hield him faste,<br/>
+That he ne mihte with no sleighte<br/>
+Out of his hond gete upon heighte,<br/>
+Til he was overcome and yolde,<br/>
+And Hercules hath what he wolde.<br/>
+The king him granteth to fulfille<br/>
+His axinge at his oghne wille,<br/>
+And sche for whom he hadde served,<br/>
+Hire thoghte he hath hire wel deserved.    2130<br/>
+And thus with gret decerte of Armes<br/>
+He wan him forto ligge in armes,<br/>
+As he which hath it dere aboght,<br/>
+For otherwise scholde he noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And overthis if thou wolt hiere<br/>
+Upon knihthode of this matiere,<br/>
+Hou love and armes ben aqueinted,<br/>
+A man mai se bothe write and peinted<br/>
+So ferforth that Pantasilee,<br/>
+Which was the queene of Feminee,    2140<br/>
+The love of Hector forto sieke<br/>
+And for thonour of armes eke,<br/>
+To Troie cam with Spere and Schield,<br/>
+And rod hirself into the field<br/>
+With Maidens armed al a route<br/>
+In rescouss of the toun aboute,<br/>
+Which with the Gregois was belein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fro Pafagoine and as men sein,<br/>
+Which stant upon the worldes ende,<br/>
+That time it likede ek to wende    2150<br/>
+To Philemenis, which was king,<br/>
+To Troie, and come upon this thing<br/>
+In helpe of thilke noble toun;<br/>
+And al was that for the renoun<br/>
+Of worschipe and of worldes fame,<br/>
+Of which he wolde bere a name:<br/>
+And so he dede, and forth withal<br/>
+He wan of love in special<br/>
+A fair tribut for everemo.<br/>
+For it fell thilke time so;    2160<br/>
+Pirrus the Sone of Achilles<br/>
+This worthi queene among the press<br/>
+With dedli swerd soghte out and fond,<br/>
+And slowh hire with his oghne hond;<br/>
+Wherof this king of Pafagoine<br/>
+Pantasilee of Amazoine,<br/>
+Wher sche was queene, with him ladde,<br/>
+With suche Maidens as sche hadde<br/>
+Of hem that were left alyve,<br/>
+Forth in his Schip, til thei aryve;    2170<br/>
+Wher that the body was begrave<br/>
+With worschipe, and the wommen save.<br/>
+And for the goodschipe of this dede<br/>
+Thei granten him a lusti mede,<br/>
+That every yeer as for truage<br/>
+To him and to his heritage<br/>
+Of Maidens faire he schal have thre.<br/>
+And in this wise spedde he,<br/>
+Which the fortune of armes soghte,<br/>
+With his travail his ese he boghte;    2180<br/>
+For otherwise he scholde have failed,<br/>
+If that he hadde noght travailed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eneas ek withinne Ytaile,<br/>
+Ne hadde he wonne the bataille<br/>
+And don his miht so besily<br/>
+Ayein king Turne his enemy,<br/>
+He hadde noght Lavine wonne;<br/>
+Bot for he hath him overronne<br/>
+And gete his pris, he gat hire love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be these ensamples here above,    2190<br/>
+Lo, now, mi Sone, as I have told,<br/>
+Thou miht wel se, who that is bold<br/>
+And dar travaile and undertake<br/>
+The cause of love, he schal be take<br/>
+The rathere unto loves grace;<br/>
+For comunliche in worthi place<br/>
+The wommen loven worthinesse<br/>
+Of manhode and of gentilesse,<br/>
+For the gentils ben most desired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, bot I were enspired    2200<br/>
+Thurgh lore of you, I wot no weie<br/>
+What gentilesce is forto seie,<br/>
+Wherof to telle I you beseche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ground, Mi Sone, forto seche<br/>
+Upon this diffinicion,<br/>
+The worldes constitucion<br/>
+Hath set the name of gentilesse<br/>
+Upon the fortune of richesse<br/>
+Which of long time is falle in age.<br/>
+Thanne is a man of hih lignage    2210<br/>
+After the forme, as thou miht hiere,<br/>
+Bot nothing after the matiere.<br/>
+For who that resoun understonde,<br/>
+Upon richesse it mai noght stonde,<br/>
+For that is thing which faileth ofte:<br/>
+For he that stant to day alofte<br/>
+And al the world hath in hise wones,<br/>
+Tomorwe he falleth al at ones<br/>
+Out of richesse into poverte,<br/>
+So that therof is no decerte,    2220<br/>
+Which gentilesce makth abide.<br/>
+And forto loke on other side<br/>
+Hou that a gentil man is bore,<br/>
+Adam, which alle was tofore<br/>
+With Eve his wif, as of hem tuo,<br/>
+Al was aliche gentil tho;<br/>
+So that of generacion<br/>
+To make declaracion,<br/>
+Ther mai no gentilesce be.<br/>
+For to the reson if we se,    2230<br/>
+Of mannes berthe the mesure,<br/>
+It is so comun to nature,<br/>
+That it yifth every man aliche,<br/>
+Als wel to povere as to the riche;<br/>
+For naked thei ben bore bothe,<br/>
+The lord nomore hath forto clothe<br/>
+As of himself that ilke throwe,<br/>
+Than hath the povereste of the rowe.<br/>
+And whan thei schulle both passe,<br/>
+I not of hem which hath the lasse    2240<br/>
+Of worldes good, bot as of charge<br/>
+The lord is more forto charge,<br/>
+Whan god schal his accompte hiere,<br/>
+For he hath had hise lustes hiere.<br/>
+Bot of the bodi, which schal deie,<br/>
+Althogh ther be diverse weie<br/>
+To deth, yit is ther bot on ende,<br/>
+To which that every man schal wende,<br/>
+Als wel the beggere as the lord,<br/>
+Of o nature, of on acord:    2250<br/>
+Sche which oure Eldemoder is,<br/>
+The Erthe, bothe that and this<br/>
+Receiveth and alich devoureth,<br/>
+That sche to nouther part favoureth.<br/>
+So wot I nothing after kinde<br/>
+Where I mai gentilesse finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For lacke of vertu lacketh grace,<br/>
+Wherof richesse in many place,<br/>
+Whan men best wene forto stonde,<br/>
+Al sodeinly goth out of honde:    2260<br/>
+Bot vertu set in the corage,<br/>
+Ther mai no world be so salvage,<br/>
+Which mihte it take and don aweie,<br/>
+Til whanne that the bodi deie;<br/>
+And thanne he schal be riched so,<br/>
+That it mai faile neveremo;<br/>
+So mai that wel be gentilesse,<br/>
+Which yifth so gret a sikernesse.<br/>
+For after the condicion<br/>
+Of resonable entencion,    2270<br/>
+The which out of the Soule groweth<br/>
+And the vertu fro vice knoweth,<br/>
+Wherof a man the vice eschuieth,<br/>
+Withoute Slowthe and vertu suieth,<br/>
+That is a verrai gentil man,<br/>
+And nothing elles which he can,<br/>
+Ne which he hath, ne which he mai.<br/>
+Bot for al that yit nou aday,<br/>
+In loves court to taken hiede,<br/>
+The povere vertu schal noght spiede,    2280<br/>
+Wher that the riche vice woweth;<br/>
+For sielde it is that love alloweth<br/>
+The gentil man withoute good,<br/>
+Thogh his condicion be good.<br/>
+Bot if a man of bothe tuo<br/>
+Be riche and vertuous also,<br/>
+Thanne is he wel the more worth:<br/>
+Bot yit to putte himselve forth<br/>
+He moste don his besinesse,<br/>
+For nowther good ne gentilesse    2290<br/>
+Mai helpen him whiche ydel be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot who that wole in his degre<br/>
+Travaile so as it belongeth,<br/>
+It happeth ofte that he fongeth<br/>
+Worschipe and ese bothe tuo.<br/>
+For evere yit it hath be so,<br/>
+That love honeste in sondri weie<br/>
+Profiteth, for it doth aweie<br/>
+The vice, and as the bokes sein,<br/>
+It makth curteis of the vilein,    2300<br/>
+And to the couard hardiesce<br/>
+It yifth, so that verrai prouesse<br/>
+Is caused upon loves reule<br/>
+To him that can manhode reule;<br/>
+And ek toward the wommanhiede,<br/>
+Who that therof wol taken hiede,<br/>
+For thei the betre affaited be<br/>
+In every thing, as men may se.<br/>
+For love hath evere hise lustes grene<br/>
+In gentil folk, as it is sene,    2310<br/>
+Which thing ther mai no kinde areste:<br/>
+I trowe that ther is no beste,<br/>
+If he with love scholde aqueinte,<br/>
+That he ne wolde make it queinte<br/>
+As for the while that it laste.<br/>
+And thus I conclude ate laste,<br/>
+That thei ben ydel, as me semeth,<br/>
+Whiche unto thing that love demeth<br/>
+Forslowthen that thei scholden do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And overthis, mi Sone, also    2320<br/>
+After the vertu moral eke<br/>
+To speke of love if I schal seke,<br/>
+Among the holi bokes wise<br/>
+I finde write in such a wise,<br/>
+“Who loveth noght is hier as ded”;<br/>
+For love above alle othre is hed,<br/>
+Which hath the vertus forto lede,<br/>
+Of al that unto mannes dede<br/>
+Belongeth: for of ydelschipe<br/>
+He hateth all the felaschipe.    2330<br/>
+For Slowthe is evere to despise,<br/>
+Which in desdeign hath al apprise,<br/>
+And that acordeth noght to man:<br/>
+For he that wit and reson kan,<br/>
+It sit him wel that he travaile<br/>
+Upon som thing which mihte availe,<br/>
+For ydelschipe is noght comended,<br/>
+Bot every lawe it hath defended.<br/>
+And in ensample therupon
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The noble wise Salomon,    2340<br/>
+Which hadde of every thing insihte,<br/>
+Seith, “As the briddes to the flihte<br/>
+Ben made, so the man is bore<br/>
+To labour,” which is noght forbore<br/>
+To hem that thenken forto thryve.<br/>
+For we, whiche are now alyve,<br/>
+Of hem that besi whylom were,<br/>
+Als wel in Scole as elleswhere,<br/>
+Mowe every day ensample take,<br/>
+That if it were now to make    2350<br/>
+Thing which that thei ferst founden oute,<br/>
+It scholde noght be broght aboute.<br/>
+Here lyves thanne were longe,<br/>
+Here wittes grete, here mihtes stronge,<br/>
+Here hertes ful of besinesse,<br/>
+Wherof the worldes redinesse<br/>
+In bodi bothe and in corage<br/>
+Stant evere upon his avantage.<br/>
+And forto drawe into memoire<br/>
+Here names bothe and here histoire,    2360<br/>
+Upon the vertu of her dede<br/>
+In sondri bokes thou miht rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of every wisdom the parfit<br/>
+The hyhe god of his spirit<br/>
+Yaf to the men in Erthe hiere<br/>
+Upon the forme and the matiere<br/>
+Of that he wolde make hem wise:<br/>
+And thus cam in the ferste apprise<br/>
+Of bokes and of alle goode<br/>
+Thurgh hem that whilom understode    2370<br/>
+The lore which to hem was yive,<br/>
+Wherof these othre, that now live,<br/>
+Ben every day to lerne newe.<br/>
+Bot er the time that men siewe,<br/>
+And that the labour forth it broghte,<br/>
+Ther was no corn, thogh men it soghte,<br/>
+In non of al the fieldes oute;<br/>
+And er the wisdom cam aboute<br/>
+Of hem that ferst the bokes write,<br/>
+This mai wel every wys man wite,    2380<br/>
+Ther was gret labour ek also.<br/>
+Thus was non ydel of the tuo,<br/>
+That on the plogh hath undertake<br/>
+With labour which the hond hath take,<br/>
+That other tok to studie and muse,<br/>
+As he which wolde noght refuse<br/>
+The labour of hise wittes alle.<br/>
+And in this wise it is befalle,<br/>
+Of labour which that thei begunne<br/>
+We be now tawht of that we kunne:    2390<br/>
+Here besinesse is yit so seene,<br/>
+That it stant evere alyche greene;<br/>
+Al be it so the bodi deie,<br/>
+The name of hem schal nevere aweie.<br/>
+In the Croniqes as I finde,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cham, whos labour is yit in minde,<br/>
+Was he which ferst the lettres fond<br/>
+And wrot in Hebreu with his hond:<br/>
+Of naturel Philosophie<br/>
+He fond ferst also the clergie.    2400
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cadmus the lettres of Gregois<br/>
+Ferst made upon his oghne chois.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theges of thing which schal befalle,<br/>
+He was the ferste Augurre of alle:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Philemon be the visage<br/>
+Fond to descrive the corage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cladyns, Esdras and Sulpices,<br/>
+Termegis, Pandulf, Frigidilles,<br/>
+Menander, Ephiloquorus,<br/>
+Solins, Pandas and Josephus    2410<br/>
+The ferste were of Enditours,<br/>
+Of old Cronique and ek auctours:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Heredot in his science<br/>
+Of metre, of rime and of cadence<br/>
+The ferste was of which men note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And of Musique also the note<br/>
+In mannes vois or softe or scharpe,<br/>
+That fond Jubal; and of the harpe<br/>
+The merie soun, which is to like,<br/>
+That fond Poulins forth with phisique.    2420
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zenzis fond ferst the pourtreture,<br/>
+And Promotheus the Sculpture;<br/>
+After what forme that hem thoghte,<br/>
+The resemblance anon thei wroghte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tubal in Iren and in Stel<br/>
+Fond ferst the forge and wroghte it wel:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Jadahel, as seith the bok,<br/>
+Ferst made Net and fisshes tok:<br/>
+Of huntynge ek he fond the chace,<br/>
+Which now is knowe in many place:    2430<br/>
+A tente of cloth with corde and stake<br/>
+He sette up ferst and dede it make.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Verconius of cokerie<br/>
+Ferst made the delicacie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The craft Minerve of wolle fond<br/>
+And made cloth hire oghne hond;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Delbora made it of lyn:<br/>
+Tho wommen were of great engyn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot thing which yifth ous mete and drinke<br/>
+And doth the labourer to swinke    2440<br/>
+To tile lond and sette vines,<br/>
+Wherof the cornes and the wynes<br/>
+Ben sustenance to mankinde,<br/>
+In olde bokes as I finde,<br/>
+Saturnus of his oghne wit<br/>
+Hath founde ferst, and more yit<br/>
+Of Chapmanhode he fond the weie,<br/>
+And ek to coigne the moneie<br/>
+Of sondri metall, as it is,<br/>
+He was the ferste man of this.    2450
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot hou that metall cam a place<br/>
+Thurgh mannes wit and goddes grace<br/>
+The route of Philosophres wise<br/>
+Controeveden be sondri wise,<br/>
+Ferst forto gete it out of Myne,<br/>
+And after forto trie and fyne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And also with gret diligence<br/>
+Thei founden thilke experience,<br/>
+Which cleped is Alconomie,<br/>
+Wherof the Selver multeplie    2460<br/>
+Thei made and ek the gold also.<br/>
+And forto telle hou it is so,<br/>
+Of bodies sevene in special<br/>
+With foure spiritz joynt withal<br/>
+Stant the substance of this matiere.<br/>
+The bodies whiche I speke of hiere<br/>
+Of the Planetes ben begonne:<br/>
+The gold is titled to the Sonne,<br/>
+The mone of Selver hath his part,<br/>
+And Iren that stant upon Mart,    2470<br/>
+The Led after Satorne groweth,<br/>
+And Jupiter the Bras bestoweth,<br/>
+The Coper set is to Venus,<br/>
+And to his part Mercurius<br/>
+Hath the quikselver, as it falleth,<br/>
+The which, after the bok it calleth,<br/>
+Is ferst of thilke fowre named<br/>
+Of Spiritz, whiche ben proclamed;<br/>
+And the spirit which is secounde<br/>
+In Sal Armoniak is founde:    2480<br/>
+The thridde spirit Sulphur is;<br/>
+The ferthe suiende after this<br/>
+Arcennicum be name is hote.<br/>
+With blowinge and with fyres hote<br/>
+In these thinges, whiche I seie,<br/>
+Thei worchen be diverse weie.<br/>
+For as the philosophre tolde<br/>
+Of gold and selver, thei ben holde<br/>
+Tuo principal extremites,<br/>
+To whiche alle othre be degres    2490<br/>
+Of the metalls ben acordant,<br/>
+And so thurgh kinde resemblant,<br/>
+That what man couthe aweie take<br/>
+The rust, of which thei waxen blake,<br/>
+And the savour and the hardnesse,<br/>
+Thei scholden take the liknesse<br/>
+Of gold or Selver parfitly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot forto worche it sikirly,<br/>
+Betwen the corps and the spirit,<br/>
+Er that the metall be parfit,    2500<br/>
+In sevene formes it is set;<br/>
+Of alle and if that on be let,<br/>
+The remenant mai noght availe,<br/>
+Bot otherwise it mai noght faile.<br/>
+For thei be whom this art was founde<br/>
+To every point a certain bounde<br/>
+Ordeignen, that a man mai finde<br/>
+This craft is wroght be weie of kinde,<br/>
+So that ther is no fallas inne.<br/>
+Bot what man that this werk beginne,    2510<br/>
+He mot awaite at every tyde,<br/>
+So that nothing be left aside,<br/>
+Ferst of the distillacion,<br/>
+Forth with the congelacion,<br/>
+Solucion, descencion,<br/>
+And kepe in his entencion<br/>
+The point of sublimacion,<br/>
+And forth with calcinacion<br/>
+Of veray approbacion<br/>
+Do that ther be fixacion    2520<br/>
+With tempred hetes of the fyr,<br/>
+Til he the parfit Elixir<br/>
+Of thilke philosophres Ston<br/>
+Mai gete, of which that many on<br/>
+Of Philosophres whilom write.<br/>
+And if thou wolt the names wite<br/>
+Of thilke Ston with othre tuo,<br/>
+Whiche as the clerkes maden tho,<br/>
+So as the bokes it recorden,<br/>
+The kinde of hem I schal recorden.    2530
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These olde Philosophres wyse<br/>
+Be weie of kinde in sondri wise<br/>
+Thre Stones maden thurgh clergie.<br/>
+The ferste, if I schal specefie,<br/>
+Was <i>lapis vegetabilis</i>,<br/>
+Of which the propre vertu is<br/>
+To mannes hele forto serve,<br/>
+As forto kepe and to preserve<br/>
+The bodi fro siknesses alle,<br/>
+Til deth of kinde upon him falle.    2540
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ston seconde I thee behote<br/>
+Is <i>lapis animalis</i> hote,<br/>
+The whos vertu is propre and cowth<br/>
+For Ere and yhe and nase and mouth,<br/>
+Wherof a man mai hiere and se<br/>
+And smelle and taste in his degre,<br/>
+And forto fiele and forto go<br/>
+It helpeth man of bothe tuo:<br/>
+The wittes fyve he underfongeth<br/>
+To kepe, as it to him belongeth.    2550
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde Ston in special<br/>
+Be name is cleped Minerall,<br/>
+Which the metalls of every Mine<br/>
+Attempreth, til that thei ben fyne,<br/>
+And pureth hem be such a weie,<br/>
+That al the vice goth aweie<br/>
+Of rust, of stink and of hardnesse:<br/>
+And whan thei ben of such clennesse,<br/>
+This Mineral, so as I finde,<br/>
+Transformeth al the ferste kynde    2560<br/>
+And makth hem able to conceive<br/>
+Thurgh his vertu, and to receive<br/>
+Bothe in substance and in figure<br/>
+Of gold and selver the nature.<br/>
+For thei tuo ben thextremetes,<br/>
+To whiche after the propretes<br/>
+Hath every metal his desir,<br/>
+With help and confort of the fyr<br/>
+Forth with this Ston, as it is seid,<br/>
+Which to the Sonne and Mone is leid;    2570<br/>
+For to the rede and to the whyte<br/>
+This Ston hath pouer to profite.<br/>
+It makth mulptiplicacioun<br/>
+Of gold, and the fixacioun<br/>
+It causeth, and of his habit<br/>
+He doth the werk to be parfit<br/>
+Of thilke Elixer which men calle<br/>
+Alconomie, as is befalle<br/>
+To hem that whilom weren wise.<br/>
+Bot now it stant al otherwise;    2580<br/>
+Thei speken faste of thilke Ston,<br/>
+Bot hou to make it, nou wot non<br/>
+After the sothe experience.<br/>
+And natheles gret diligence<br/>
+Thei setten upon thilke dede,<br/>
+And spille more than thei spede;<br/>
+For allewey thei finde a lette,<br/>
+Which bringeth in poverte and dette<br/>
+To hem that riche were afore:<br/>
+The lost is had, the lucre is lore,    2590<br/>
+To gete a pound thei spenden fyve;<br/>
+I not hou such a craft schal thryve<br/>
+In the manere as it is used:<br/>
+It were betre be refused<br/>
+Than forto worchen upon weene<br/>
+In thing which stant noght as thei weene.<br/>
+Bot noght forthi, who that it knewe,<br/>
+The science of himself is trewe<br/>
+Upon the forme as it was founded,<br/>
+Wherof the names yit ben grounded    2600<br/>
+Of hem that ferste it founden oute;<br/>
+And thus the fame goth aboute<br/>
+To suche as soghten besinesse<br/>
+Of vertu and of worthinesse.<br/>
+Of whom if I the names calle,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hermes was on the ferste of alle,<br/>
+To whom this art is most applied;<br/>
+Geber therof was magnefied,<br/>
+And Ortolan and Morien,<br/>
+Among the whiche is Avicen,    2610<br/>
+Which fond and wrot a gret partie<br/>
+The practique of Alconomie;<br/>
+Whos bokes, pleinli as thei stonde<br/>
+Upon this craft, fewe understonde;<br/>
+Bot yit to put hem in assai<br/>
+Ther ben full manye now aday,<br/>
+That knowen litel what thei meene.<br/>
+It is noght on to wite and weene;<br/>
+In forme of wordes thei it trete,<br/>
+Bot yit they failen of beyete,    2620<br/>
+For of tomoche or of tolyte<br/>
+Ther is algate founde a wyte,<br/>
+So that thei folwe noght the lyne<br/>
+Of the parfite medicine,<br/>
+Which grounded is upon nature.<br/>
+Bot thei that writen the scripture<br/>
+Of Grek, Arabe and of Caldee,<br/>
+Thei were of such Auctorite<br/>
+That thei ferst founden out the weie<br/>
+Of al that thou hast herd me seie;    2630<br/>
+Wherof the Cronique of her lore<br/>
+Schal stonde in pris for everemore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot toward oure Marches hiere,<br/>
+Of the Latins if thou wolt hiere,<br/>
+Of hem that whilom vertuous<br/>
+Were and therto laborious,<br/>
+Carmente made of hire engin<br/>
+The ferste lettres of Latin,<br/>
+Of which the tunge Romein cam,<br/>
+Wherof that Aristarchus nam    2640<br/>
+Forth with Donat and Dindimus<br/>
+The ferste reule of Scole, as thus,<br/>
+How that Latin schal be componed<br/>
+And in what wise it schal be soned,<br/>
+That every word in his degre<br/>
+Schal stonde upon congruite.<br/>
+And thilke time at Rome also<br/>
+Was Tullius with Cithero,<br/>
+That writen upon Rethorike,<br/>
+Hou that men schal the wordes pike    2650<br/>
+After the forme of eloquence,<br/>
+Which is, men sein, a gret prudence:<br/>
+And after that out of Hebreu<br/>
+Jerom, which the langage kneu,<br/>
+The Bible, in which the lawe is closed,<br/>
+Into Latin he hath transposed;<br/>
+And many an other writere ek<br/>
+Out of Caldee, Arabe and Grek<br/>
+With gret labour the bokes wise<br/>
+Translateden. And otherwise    2660<br/>
+The Latins of hemself also<br/>
+Here studie at thilke time so<br/>
+With gret travaile of Scole toke<br/>
+In sondri forme forto boke,<br/>
+That we mai take here evidences<br/>
+Upon the lore of the Sciences,<br/>
+Of craftes bothe and of clergie;<br/>
+Among the whiche in Poesie<br/>
+To the lovers Ovide wrot<br/>
+And tawhte, if love be to hot,    2670<br/>
+In what manere it scholde akiele.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, if that thou fiele<br/>
+That love wringe thee to sore,<br/>
+Behold Ovide and take his lore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fader, if thei mihte spede<br/>
+Mi love, I wolde his bokes rede;<br/>
+And if thei techen to restreigne<br/>
+Mi love, it were an ydel peine<br/>
+To lerne a thing which mai noght be.<br/>
+For lich unto the greene tree,    2680<br/>
+If that men toke his rote aweie,<br/>
+Riht so myn herte scholde deie,<br/>
+If that mi love be withdrawe.<br/>
+Wherof touchende unto this sawe<br/>
+There is bot only to poursuie<br/>
+Mi love, and ydelschipe eschuie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, soth to seie,<br/>
+If ther be siker eny weie<br/>
+To love, thou hast seid the beste:<br/>
+For who that wolde have al his reste    2690<br/>
+And do no travail at the nede,<br/>
+It is no resoun that he spede<br/>
+In loves cause forto winne;<br/>
+For he which dar nothing beginne,<br/>
+I not what thing he scholde achieve.<br/>
+Bot overthis thou schalt believe,<br/>
+So as it sit thee wel to knowe,<br/>
+That ther ben othre vices slowe,<br/>
+Whiche unto love don gret lette,<br/>
+If thou thin herte upon hem sette.    2700
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toward the Slowe progenie<br/>
+Ther is yit on of compaignie,<br/>
+And he is cleped Sompnolence,<br/>
+Which doth to Slouthe his reverence,<br/>
+As he which is his Chamberlein,<br/>
+That many an hundrid time hath lein<br/>
+To slepe, whan he scholde wake.<br/>
+He hath with love trewes take,<br/>
+That wake who so wake wile,<br/>
+If he mai couche a doun his bile,    2710<br/>
+He hath al wowed what him list;<br/>
+That ofte he goth to bedde unkist,<br/>
+And seith that for no Druerie<br/>
+He wol noght leve his sluggardie.<br/>
+For thogh noman it wole allowe,<br/>
+To slepe levere than to wowe<br/>
+Is his manere, and thus on nyhtes,<br/>
+Whan that he seth the lusti knyhtes<br/>
+Revelen, wher these wommen are,<br/>
+Awey he skulketh as an hare,    2720<br/>
+And goth to bedde and leith him softe,<br/>
+And of his Slouthe he dremeth ofte<br/>
+Hou that he stiketh in the Myr,<br/>
+And hou he sitteth be the fyr<br/>
+And claweth on his bare schanckes,<br/>
+And hou he clymbeth up the banckes<br/>
+And falleth into Slades depe.<br/>
+Bot thanne who so toke kepe,<br/>
+Whanne he is falle in such a drem,<br/>
+Riht as a Schip ayein the Strem,    2730<br/>
+He routeth with a slepi noise,<br/>
+And brustleth as a monkes froise,<br/>
+Whanne it is throwe into the Panne.<br/>
+And otherwhile sielde whanne<br/>
+That he mai dreme a lusti swevene,<br/>
+Him thenkth as thogh he were in hevene<br/>
+And as the world were holi his:<br/>
+And thanne he spekth of that and this,<br/>
+And makth his exposicion<br/>
+After the disposicion    2740<br/>
+Of that he wolde, and in such wise<br/>
+He doth to love all his service;<br/>
+I not what thonk he schal deserve.<br/>
+Bot, Sone, if thou wolt love serve,<br/>
+I rede that thou do noght so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ha, goode fader, certes no.<br/>
+I hadde levere be mi trowthe,<br/>
+Er I were set on such a slouthe<br/>
+And beere such a slepi snoute,<br/>
+Bothe yhen of myn hed were oute.    2750<br/>
+For me were betre fulli die,<br/>
+Thanne I of such a slugardie<br/>
+Hadde eny name, god me schilde;<br/>
+For whan mi moder was with childe,<br/>
+And I lay in hire wombe clos,<br/>
+I wolde rathere Atropos,<br/>
+Which is goddesse of alle deth,<br/>
+Anon as I hadde eny breth,<br/>
+Me hadde fro mi Moder cast.<br/>
+Bot now I am nothing agast,    2760<br/>
+I thonke godd; for Lachesis,<br/>
+Ne Cloto, which hire felawe is,<br/>
+Me schopen no such destine,<br/>
+Whan thei at mi nativite<br/>
+My weerdes setten as thei wolde;<br/>
+Bot thei me schopen that I scholde<br/>
+Eschuie of slep the truandise,<br/>
+So that I hope in such a wise<br/>
+To love forto ben excused,<br/>
+That I no Sompnolence have used.    2770<br/>
+For certes, fader Genius,<br/>
+Yit into nou it hath be thus,<br/>
+At alle time if it befelle<br/>
+So that I mihte come and duelle<br/>
+In place ther my ladi were,<br/>
+I was noght slow ne slepi there:<br/>
+For thanne I dar wel undertake,<br/>
+That whanne hir list on nyhtes wake<br/>
+In chambre as to carole and daunce,<br/>
+Me thenkth I mai me more avaunce,    2780<br/>
+If I mai gon upon hir hond,<br/>
+Thanne if I wonne a kinges lond.<br/>
+For whanne I mai hire hand beclippe,<br/>
+With such gladnesse I daunce and skippe,<br/>
+Me thenkth I touche noght the flor;<br/>
+The Ro, which renneth on the Mor,<br/>
+Is thanne noght so lyht as I:<br/>
+So mow ye witen wel forthi,<br/>
+That for the time slep I hate.<br/>
+And whanne it falleth othergate,    2790<br/>
+So that hire like noght to daunce,<br/>
+Bot on the Dees to caste chaunce<br/>
+Or axe of love som demande,<br/>
+Or elles that hir list comaunde<br/>
+To rede and here of Troilus,<br/>
+Riht as sche wole or so or thus,<br/>
+I am al redi to consente.<br/>
+And if so is that I mai hente<br/>
+Somtime among a good leisir,<br/>
+So as I dar of mi desir    2800<br/>
+I telle a part; bot whanne I preie,<br/>
+Anon sche bidt me go mi weie<br/>
+And seith it is ferr in the nyht;<br/>
+And I swere it is even liht.<br/>
+Bot as it falleth ate laste,<br/>
+Ther mai no worldes joie laste,<br/>
+So mot I nedes fro hire wende<br/>
+And of my wachche make an ende:<br/>
+And if sche thanne hiede toke,<br/>
+Hou pitousliche on hire I loke,    2810<br/>
+Whan that I schal my leve take,<br/>
+Hire oghte of mercy forto slake<br/>
+Hire daunger, which seith evere nay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot he seith often, “Have good day,”<br/>
+That loth is forto take his leve:<br/>
+Therfore, while I mai beleve,<br/>
+I tarie forth the nyht along,<br/>
+For it is noght on me along<br/>
+To slep that I so sone go,<br/>
+Til that I mot algate so;    2820<br/>
+And thanne I bidde godd hire se,<br/>
+And so doun knelende on mi kne<br/>
+I take leve, and if I schal,<br/>
+I kisse hire, and go forth withal.<br/>
+And otherwhile, if that I dore,<br/>
+Er I come fulli to the Dore,<br/>
+I torne ayein and feigne a thing,<br/>
+As thogh I hadde lost a Ring<br/>
+Or somwhat elles, for I wolde<br/>
+Kisse hire eftsones, if I scholde,    2830<br/>
+Bot selden is that I so spede.<br/>
+And whanne I se that I mot nede<br/>
+Departen, I departe, and thanne<br/>
+With al myn herte I curse and banne<br/>
+That evere slep was mad for yhe;<br/>
+For, as me thenkth, I mihte dryhe<br/>
+Withoute slep to waken evere,<br/>
+So that I scholde noght dissevere<br/>
+Fro hire, in whom is al my liht:<br/>
+And thanne I curse also the nyht    2840<br/>
+With al the will of mi corage,<br/>
+And seie, “Awey, thou blake ymage,<br/>
+Which of thi derke cloudy face<br/>
+Makst al the worldes lyht deface,<br/>
+And causest unto slep a weie,<br/>
+Be which I mot nou gon aweie<br/>
+Out of mi ladi compaignie.<br/>
+O slepi nyht, I thee defie,<br/>
+And wolde that thou leye in presse<br/>
+With Proserpine the goddesse    2850<br/>
+And with Pluto the helle king:<br/>
+For til I se the daies spring,<br/>
+I sette slep noght at a risshe.”<br/>
+And with that word I sike and wisshe,<br/>
+And seie, “Ha, whi ne were it day?<br/>
+For yit mi ladi thanne I may<br/>
+Beholde, thogh I do nomore.”<br/>
+And efte I thenke forthermore,<br/>
+To som man hou the niht doth ese,<br/>
+Whan he hath thing that mai him plese    2860<br/>
+The longe nyhtes be his side,<br/>
+Where as I faile and go beside.<br/>
+Bot slep, I not wherof it serveth,<br/>
+Of which noman his thonk deserveth<br/>
+To gete him love in eny place,<br/>
+Bot is an hindrere of his grace<br/>
+And makth him ded as for a throwe,<br/>
+Riht as a Stok were overthrowe.<br/>
+And so, mi fader, in this wise<br/>
+The slepi nyhtes I despise,    2870<br/>
+And evere amiddes of mi tale<br/>
+I thenke upon the nyhtingale,<br/>
+Which slepeth noght be weie of kinde<br/>
+For love, in bokes as I finde.<br/>
+Thus ate laste I go to bedde,<br/>
+And yit min herte lith to wedde<br/>
+With hire, wher as I cam fro;<br/>
+Thogh I departe, he wol noght so,<br/>
+Ther is no lock mai schette him oute,<br/>
+Him nedeth noght to gon aboute,    2880<br/>
+That perce mai the harde wall;<br/>
+Thus is he with hire overall,<br/>
+That be hire lief, or be hire loth,<br/>
+Into hire bedd myn herte goth,<br/>
+And softly takth hire in his arm<br/>
+And fieleth hou that sche is warm,<br/>
+And wissheth that his body were<br/>
+To fiele that he fieleth there.<br/>
+And thus miselven I tormente,<br/>
+Til that the dede slep me hente:    2890<br/>
+Bot thanne be a thousand score<br/>
+Welmore than I was tofore<br/>
+I am tormented in mi slep,<br/>
+Bot that I dreme is noght of schep;<br/>
+For I ne thenke noght on wulle,<br/>
+Bot I am drecched to the fulle<br/>
+Of love, that I have to kepe,<br/>
+That nou I lawhe and nou I wepe,<br/>
+And nou I lese and nou I winne,<br/>
+And nou I ende and nou beginne.    2900<br/>
+And otherwhile I dreme and mete<br/>
+That I al one with hire mete<br/>
+And that Danger is left behinde;<br/>
+And thanne in slep such joie I finde,<br/>
+That I ne bede nevere awake.<br/>
+Bot after, whanne I hiede take,<br/>
+And schal arise upon the morwe,<br/>
+Thanne is al torned into sorwe,<br/>
+Noght for the cause I schal arise,<br/>
+Bot for I mette in such a wise,    2910<br/>
+And ate laste I am bethoght<br/>
+That al is vein and helpeth noght:<br/>
+Bot yit me thenketh be my wille<br/>
+I wolde have leie and slepe stille,<br/>
+To meten evere of such a swevene,<br/>
+For thanne I hadde a slepi hevene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and for thou tellest so,<br/>
+A man mai finde of time ago<br/>
+That many a swevene hath be certein,<br/>
+Al be it so, that som men sein    2920<br/>
+That swevenes ben of no credence.<br/>
+Bot forto schewe in evidence<br/>
+That thei fulofte sothe thinges<br/>
+Betokne, I thenke in my wrytinges<br/>
+To telle a tale therupon,<br/>
+Which fell be olde daies gon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This finde I write in Poesie:<br/>
+Ceïx the king of Trocinie<br/>
+Hadde Alceone to his wif,<br/>
+Which as hire oghne hertes lif    2930<br/>
+Him loveth; and he hadde also<br/>
+A brother, which was cleped tho<br/>
+Dedalion, and he per cas<br/>
+Fro kinde of man forschape was<br/>
+Into a Goshauk of liknesse;<br/>
+Wherof the king gret hevynesse<br/>
+Hath take, and thoghte in his corage<br/>
+To gon upon a pelrinage<br/>
+Into a strange regioun,<br/>
+Wher he hath his devocioun    2940<br/>
+To don his sacrifice and preie,<br/>
+If that he mihte in eny weie<br/>
+Toward the goddes finde grace<br/>
+His brother hele to pourchace,<br/>
+So that he mihte be reformed<br/>
+Of that he hadde be transformed.<br/>
+To this pourpos and to this ende<br/>
+This king is redy forto wende,<br/>
+As he which wolde go be Schipe;<br/>
+And forto don him felaschipe    2950<br/>
+His wif unto the See him broghte,<br/>
+With al hire herte and him besoghte,<br/>
+That he the time hire wolde sein,<br/>
+Whan that he thoghte come ayein:<br/>
+“Withinne,” he seith, “tuo Monthe day.”<br/>
+And thus in al the haste he may<br/>
+He tok his leve, and forth he seileth<br/>
+Wepende, and sche hirself beweileth,<br/>
+And torneth hom, ther sche cam fro.<br/>
+Bot whan the Monthes were ago,    2960<br/>
+The whiche he sette of his comynge,<br/>
+And that sche herde no tydinge,<br/>
+Ther was no care forto seche:<br/>
+Wherof the goddes to beseche<br/>
+Tho sche began in many wise,<br/>
+And to Juno hire sacrifise<br/>
+Above alle othre most sche dede,<br/>
+And for hir lord sche hath so bede<br/>
+To wite and knowe hou that he ferde,<br/>
+That Juno the goddesse hire herde,    2970<br/>
+Anon and upon this matiere<br/>
+Sche bad Yris hir Messagere<br/>
+To Slepes hous that sche schal wende,<br/>
+And bidde him that he make an ende<br/>
+Be swevene and schewen al the cas<br/>
+Unto this ladi, hou it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Yris, fro the hihe stage<br/>
+Which undertake hath the Message,<br/>
+Hire reyny Cope dede upon,<br/>
+The which was wonderli begon    2980<br/>
+With colours of diverse hewe,<br/>
+An hundred mo than men it knewe;<br/>
+The hevene lich into a bowe<br/>
+Sche bende, and so she cam doun lowe,<br/>
+The god of Slep wher that sche fond.<br/>
+And that was in a strange lond,<br/>
+Which marcheth upon Chymerie:<br/>
+For ther, as seith the Poesie,<br/>
+The god of Slep hath mad his hous,<br/>
+Which of entaille is merveilous.    2990<br/>
+Under an hell ther is a Cave,<br/>
+Which of the Sonne mai noght have,<br/>
+So that noman mai knowe ariht<br/>
+The point betwen the dai and nyht:<br/>
+Ther is no fyr, ther is no sparke,<br/>
+Ther is no dore, which mai charke,<br/>
+Wherof an yhe scholde unschette,<br/>
+So that inward ther is no lette.<br/>
+And forto speke of that withoute,<br/>
+Ther stant no gret Tree nyh aboute    3000<br/>
+Wher on ther myhte crowe or pie<br/>
+Alihte, forto clepe or crie:<br/>
+Ther is no cok to crowe day,<br/>
+Ne beste non which noise may<br/>
+The hell, bot al aboute round<br/>
+Ther is growende upon the ground<br/>
+Popi, which berth the sed of slep,<br/>
+With othre herbes suche an hep.<br/>
+A stille water for the nones<br/>
+Rennende upon the smale stones,    3010<br/>
+Which hihte of Lethes the rivere,<br/>
+Under that hell in such manere<br/>
+Ther is, which yifth gret appetit<br/>
+To slepe. And thus full of delit<br/>
+Slep hath his hous; and of his couche<br/>
+Withinne his chambre if I schal touche,<br/>
+Of hebenus that slepi Tree<br/>
+The bordes al aboute be,<br/>
+And for he scholde slepe softe,<br/>
+Upon a fethrebed alofte    3020<br/>
+He lith with many a pilwe of doun:<br/>
+The chambre is strowed up and doun<br/>
+With swevenes many thousendfold.<br/>
+Thus cam Yris into this hold,<br/>
+And to the bedd, which is al blak,<br/>
+Sche goth, and ther with Slep sche spak,<br/>
+And in the wise as sche was bede<br/>
+The Message of Juno sche dede.<br/>
+Fulofte hir wordes sche reherceth,<br/>
+Er sche his slepi Eres perceth;    3030<br/>
+With mochel wo bot ate laste<br/>
+His slombrende yhen he upcaste<br/>
+And seide hir that it schal be do.<br/>
+Wherof among a thousend tho,<br/>
+Withinne his hous that slepi were,<br/>
+In special he ches out there<br/>
+Thre, whiche scholden do this dede:<br/>
+The ferste of hem, so as I rede,<br/>
+Was Morpheus, the whos nature<br/>
+Is forto take the figure    3040<br/>
+Of what persone that him liketh,<br/>
+Wherof that he fulofte entriketh<br/>
+The lif which slepe schal be nyhte;<br/>
+And Ithecus that other hihte,<br/>
+Which hath the vois of every soun,<br/>
+The chiere and the condicioun<br/>
+Of every lif, what so it is:<br/>
+The thridde suiende after this<br/>
+Is Panthasas, which may transforme<br/>
+Of every thing the rihte forme,    3050<br/>
+And change it in an other kinde.<br/>
+Upon hem thre, so as I finde,<br/>
+Of swevenes stant al thapparence,<br/>
+Which otherwhile is evidence<br/>
+And otherwhile bot a jape.<br/>
+Bot natheles it is so schape,<br/>
+That Morpheus be nyht al one<br/>
+Appiereth until Alceone<br/>
+In liknesse of hir housebonde<br/>
+Al naked ded upon the stronde,    3060<br/>
+And hou he dreynte in special<br/>
+These othre tuo it schewen al.<br/>
+The tempeste of the blake cloude,<br/>
+The wode See, the wyndes loude,<br/>
+Al this sche mette, and sih him dyen;<br/>
+Wherof that sche began to crien,<br/>
+Slepende abedde ther sche lay,<br/>
+And with that noise of hire affray<br/>
+Hir wommen sterten up aboute,<br/>
+Whiche of here ladi were in doute,    3070<br/>
+And axen hire hou that sche ferde;<br/>
+And sche, riht as sche syh and herde,<br/>
+Hir swevene hath told hem everydel.<br/>
+And thei it halsen alle wel<br/>
+And sein it is a tokne of goode;<br/>
+Bot til sche wiste hou that it stode,<br/>
+Sche hath no confort in hire herte,<br/>
+Upon the morwe and up sche sterte,<br/>
+And to the See, wher that sche mette<br/>
+The bodi lay, withoute lette    3080<br/>
+Sche drowh, and whan that sche cam nyh,<br/>
+Stark ded, hise harmes sprad, sche syh<br/>
+Hire lord flietende upon the wawe.<br/>
+Wherof hire wittes ben withdrawe,<br/>
+And sche, which tok of deth no kepe,<br/>
+Anon forth lepte into the depe<br/>
+And wolde have cawht him in hire arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This infortune of double harm<br/>
+The goddes fro the hevene above<br/>
+Behielde, and for the trowthe of love,    3090<br/>
+Which in this worthi ladi stod,<br/>
+Thei have upon the salte flod<br/>
+Hire dreinte lord and hire also<br/>
+Fro deth to lyve torned so,<br/>
+That thei ben schapen into briddes<br/>
+Swimmende upon the wawe amiddes.<br/>
+And whan sche sih hire lord livende<br/>
+In liknesse of a bridd swimmende,<br/>
+And sche was of the same sort,<br/>
+So as sche mihte do desport,    3100<br/>
+Upon the joie which sche hadde<br/>
+Hire wynges bothe abrod sche spradde,<br/>
+And him, so as sche mai suffise,<br/>
+Beclipte and keste in such a wise,<br/>
+As sche was whilom wont to do:<br/>
+Hire wynges for hire armes tuo<br/>
+Sche tok, and for hire lippes softe<br/>
+Hire harde bile, and so fulofte<br/>
+Sche fondeth in hire briddes forme,<br/>
+If that sche mihte hirself conforme    3110<br/>
+To do the plesance of a wif,<br/>
+As sche dede in that other lif:<br/>
+For thogh sche hadde hir pouer lore,<br/>
+Hir will stod as it was tofore,<br/>
+And serveth him so as sche mai.<br/>
+Wherof into this ilke day<br/>
+Togedre upon the See thei wone,<br/>
+Wher many a dowhter and a Sone<br/>
+Thei bringen forth of briddes kinde;<br/>
+And for men scholden take in mynde    3120<br/>
+This Alceoun the trewe queene,<br/>
+Hire briddes yit, as it is seene,<br/>
+Of Alceoun the name bere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi Sone, it mai thee stere<br/>
+Of swevenes forto take kepe,<br/>
+For ofte time a man aslepe<br/>
+Mai se what after schal betide.<br/>
+Forthi it helpeth at som tyde<br/>
+A man to slepe, as it belongeth,<br/>
+Bot slowthe no lif underfongeth    3130<br/>
+Which is to love appourtenant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, upon covenant<br/>
+I dar wel make this avou,<br/>
+Of all mi lif that into nou,<br/>
+Als fer as I can understonde,<br/>
+Yit tok I nevere Slep on honde,<br/>
+Whan it was time forto wake;<br/>
+For thogh myn yhe it wolde take,<br/>
+Min herte is evere therayein.<br/>
+Bot natheles to speke it plein,    3140<br/>
+Al this that I have seid you hiere<br/>
+Of my wakinge, as ye mai hiere,<br/>
+It toucheth to mi lady swete;<br/>
+For otherwise, I you behiete,<br/>
+In strange place whanne I go,<br/>
+Me list nothing to wake so.<br/>
+For whan the wommen listen pleie,<br/>
+And I hir se noght in the weie,<br/>
+Of whom I scholde merthe take,<br/>
+Me list noght longe forto wake,    3150<br/>
+Bot if it be for pure schame,<br/>
+Of that I wolde eschuie a name,<br/>
+That thei ne scholde have cause non<br/>
+To seie, “Ha, lo, wher goth such on,<br/>
+That hath forlore his contenaunce!”<br/>
+And thus among I singe and daunce,<br/>
+And feigne lust ther as non is.<br/>
+For ofte sithe I fiele this;<br/>
+Of thoght, which in mi herte falleth<br/>
+Whanne it is nyht, myn hed appalleth,    3160<br/>
+And that is for I se hire noght,<br/>
+Which is the wakere of mi thoght:<br/>
+And thus as tymliche as I may,<br/>
+Fulofte whanne it is brod day,<br/>
+I take of all these othre leve<br/>
+And go my weie, and thei beleve,<br/>
+That sen per cas here loves there;<br/>
+And I go forth as noght ne were<br/>
+Unto mi bedd, so that al one<br/>
+I mai ther ligge and sighe and grone    3170<br/>
+And wisshen al the longe nyht,<br/>
+Til that I se the daies lyht.<br/>
+I not if that be Sompnolence,<br/>
+Bot upon youre conscience,<br/>
+Min holi fader, demeth ye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My Sone, I am wel paid with thee,<br/>
+Of Slep that thou the Sluggardie<br/>
+Be nyhte in loves compaignie<br/>
+Eschuied hast, and do thi peine<br/>
+So that thi love thar noght pleine:    3180<br/>
+For love upon his lust wakende<br/>
+Is evere, and wolde that non ende<br/>
+Were of the longe nyhtes set.<br/>
+Wherof that thou be war the bet,<br/>
+To telle a tale I am bethoght,<br/>
+Hou love and Slep acorden noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For love who that list to wake<br/>
+Be nyhte, he mai ensample take<br/>
+Of Cephalus, whan that    he lay<br/>
+With Aurora that swete may    3190<br/>
+In armes all the longe nyht.<br/>
+Bot whanne it drogh toward the liht,<br/>
+That he withinne his herte sih<br/>
+The dai which was amorwe nyh,<br/>
+Anon unto the Sonne he preide<br/>
+For lust of love, and thus he seide:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“O Phebus, which the daies liht<br/>
+Governest, til that it be nyht,<br/>
+And gladest every creature<br/>
+After the lawe of thi nature,&mdash;    3200<br/>
+Bot natheles ther is a thing,<br/>
+Which onli to the knouleching<br/>
+Belongeth as in privete<br/>
+To love and to his duete,<br/>
+Which asketh noght to ben apert,<br/>
+Bot in cilence and in covert<br/>
+Desireth forto be beschaded:<br/>
+And thus whan that thi liht is faded<br/>
+And Vesper scheweth him alofte,<br/>
+And that the nyht is long and softe,    3210<br/>
+Under the cloudes derke and stille<br/>
+Thanne hath this thing most of his wille.<br/>
+Forthi unto thi myhtes hyhe,<br/>
+As thou which art the daies yhe,<br/>
+Of love and myht no conseil hyde,<br/>
+Upon this derke nyhtes tyde<br/>
+With al myn herte I thee beseche<br/>
+That I plesance myhte seche<br/>
+With hire which lith in min armes.<br/>
+Withdrawgh the Banere of thin Armes,    3220<br/>
+And let thi lyhtes ben unborn,<br/>
+And in the Signe of Capricorn,<br/>
+The hous appropred to Satorne,<br/>
+I preie that thou wolt sojorne,<br/>
+Wher ben the nihtes derke and longe:<br/>
+For I mi love have underfonge,<br/>
+Which lith hier be mi syde naked,<br/>
+As sche which wolde ben awaked,<br/>
+And me lest nothing forto slepe.<br/>
+So were it good to take kepe    3230<br/>
+Nou at this nede of mi preiere,<br/>
+And that the like forto stiere<br/>
+Thi fyri Carte, and so ordeigne,<br/>
+That thou thi swifte hors restreigne<br/>
+Lowe under Erthe in Occident,<br/>
+That thei towardes Orient<br/>
+Be Cercle go the longe weie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek to thee, Diane, I preie,<br/>
+Which cleped art of thi noblesse<br/>
+The nyhtes Mone and the goddesse,    3240<br/>
+That thou to me be gracious:<br/>
+And in Cancro thin oghne hous<br/>
+Ayein Phebus in opposit<br/>
+Stond al this time, and of delit<br/>
+Behold Venus with a glad yhe.<br/>
+For thanne upon Astronomie<br/>
+Of due constellacion<br/>
+Thou makst prolificacion,<br/>
+And dost that children ben begete:<br/>
+Which grace if that I mihte gete,    3250<br/>
+With al myn herte I wolde serve<br/>
+Be nyhte, and thi vigile observe.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus this lusti Cephalus<br/>
+Preide unto Phebe and to Phebus<br/>
+The nyht in lengthe forto drawe,<br/>
+So that he mihte do the lawe<br/>
+In thilke point of loves heste,<br/>
+Which cleped is the nyhtes feste,<br/>
+Withoute Slep of sluggardie;<br/>
+Which Venus out of compaignie    3260<br/>
+Hath put awey, as thilke same,<br/>
+Which lustles ferr from alle game<br/>
+In chambre doth fulofte wo<br/>
+Abedde, whanne it falleth so<br/>
+That love scholde ben awaited.<br/>
+But Slowthe, which is evele affaited,<br/>
+With Slep hath mad his retenue,<br/>
+That what thing is to love due,<br/>
+Of all his dette he paieth non:<br/>
+He wot noght how the nyht is gon    3270<br/>
+Ne hou the day is come aboute,<br/>
+Bot onli forto slepe and route<br/>
+Til hyh midday, that he arise.<br/>
+Bot Cephalus dede otherwise,<br/>
+As thou, my Sone, hast herd above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, who that hath his love<br/>
+Abedde naked be his syde,<br/>
+And wolde thanne hise yhen hyde<br/>
+With Slep, I not what man is he:<br/>
+Bot certes as touchende of me,    3280<br/>
+That fell me nevere yit er this.<br/>
+Bot otherwhile, whan so is<br/>
+That I mai cacche Slep on honde<br/>
+Liggende al one, thanne I fonde<br/>
+To dreme a merie swevene er day;<br/>
+And if so falle that I may<br/>
+Mi thought with such a swevene plese,<br/>
+Me thenkth I am somdiel in ese,<br/>
+For I non other confort have.<br/>
+So nedeth noght that I schal crave    3290<br/>
+The Sonnes Carte forto tarie,<br/>
+Ne yit the Mone, that sche carie<br/>
+Hire cours along upon the hevene,<br/>
+For I am noght the more in evene<br/>
+Towardes love in no degree:<br/>
+Bot in mi slep yit thanne I se<br/>
+Somwhat in swevene of that me liketh,<br/>
+Which afterward min herte entriketh,<br/>
+Whan that I finde it otherwise.<br/>
+So wot I noght of what servise    3300<br/>
+That Slep to mannes ese doth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, certes thou seist soth,<br/>
+Bot only that it helpeth kinde<br/>
+Somtyme, in Phisique as I finde,<br/>
+Whan it is take be mesure:<br/>
+Bot he which can no Slep mesure<br/>
+Upon the reule as it belongeth,<br/>
+Fulofte of sodein chance he fongeth<br/>
+Such infortune that him grieveth.<br/>
+Bot who these olde bokes lieveth,    3310<br/>
+Of Sompnolence hou it is write,<br/>
+Ther may a man the sothe wite,<br/>
+If that he wolde ensample take,<br/>
+That otherwhile is good to wake:<br/>
+Wherof a tale in Poesie<br/>
+I thenke forto specefie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ovide telleth in his sawes,<br/>
+How Jupiter be olde dawes<br/>
+Lay be a Mayde, which Yo<br/>
+Was cleped, wherof that Juno    3320<br/>
+His wif was wroth, and the goddesse<br/>
+Of Yo torneth the liknesse<br/>
+Into a cow, to gon theroute<br/>
+The large fieldes al aboute<br/>
+And gete hire mete upon the griene.<br/>
+And therupon this hyhe queene<br/>
+Betok hire Argus forto kepe,<br/>
+For he was selden wont to slepe,<br/>
+And yit he hadde an hundred yhen,<br/>
+And alle alyche wel thei syhen.    3330<br/>
+Now herkne hou that he was beguiled.<br/>
+Mercurie, which was al affiled<br/>
+This Cow to stele, he cam desguised,<br/>
+And hadde a Pipe wel devised<br/>
+Upon the notes of Musiqe,<br/>
+Wherof he mihte hise Eres like.<br/>
+And over that he hadde affaited<br/>
+Hise lusti tales, and awaited<br/>
+His time; and thus into the field<br/>
+He cam, where Argus he behield    3340<br/>
+With Yo, which beside him wente.<br/>
+With that his Pype on honde he hente,<br/>
+And gan to pipe in his manere<br/>
+Thing which was slepi forto hiere;<br/>
+And in his pipinge evere among<br/>
+He tolde him such a lusti song,<br/>
+That he the fol hath broght aslepe.<br/>
+Ther was non yhe mihte kepe<br/>
+His hed, the which Mercurie of smot,<br/>
+And forth withal anon fot hot    3350<br/>
+He stal the Cow which Argus kepte,<br/>
+And al this fell for that he slepte.<br/>
+Ensample it was to manye mo,<br/>
+That mochel Slep doth ofte wo,<br/>
+Whan it is time forto wake:<br/>
+For if a man this vice take,<br/>
+In Sompnolence and him delite,<br/>
+Men scholde upon his Dore wryte<br/>
+His epitaphe, as on his grave;<br/>
+For he to spille and noght to save    3360<br/>
+Is schape, as thogh he were ded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, hold up thin hed,<br/>
+And let no Slep thin yhe englue,<br/>
+Bot whanne it is to resoun due.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as touchende of this,<br/>
+Riht so as I you tolde it is,<br/>
+That ofte abedde, whanne I scholde,<br/>
+I mai noght slepe, thogh I wolde;<br/>
+For love is evere faste byme,<br/>
+Which takth no hiede of due time.    3370<br/>
+For whanne I schal myn yhen close,<br/>
+Anon min herte he wole oppose<br/>
+And holde his Scole in such a wise,<br/>
+Til it be day that I arise,<br/>
+That selde it is whan that I slepe.<br/>
+And thus fro Sompnolence I kepe<br/>
+Min yhe: and forthi if ther be<br/>
+Oght elles more in this degre,<br/>
+Now axeth forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, yis:<br/>
+For Slowthe, which as Moder is    3380<br/>
+The forthdrawere and the Norrice<br/>
+To man of many a dredful vice,<br/>
+Hath yit an other laste of alle,<br/>
+Which many a man hath mad to falle,<br/>
+Wher that he mihte nevere arise;<br/>
+Wherof for thou thee schalt avise,<br/>
+Er thou so with thiself misfare,<br/>
+What vice it is I wol declare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Slowthe hath don al that he may<br/>
+To dryve forth the longe day,    3390<br/>
+Til it be come to the nede,<br/>
+Thanne ate laste upon the dede<br/>
+He loketh hou his time is lore,<br/>
+And is so wo begon therfore,<br/>
+That he withinne his thoght conceiveth<br/>
+Tristesce, and so himself deceiveth,<br/>
+That he wanhope bringeth inne,<br/>
+Wher is no confort to beginne,<br/>
+Bot every joie him is deslaied:<br/>
+So that withinne his herte affraied    3400<br/>
+A thousend time with o breth<br/>
+Wepende he wissheth after deth,<br/>
+Whan he fortune fint adverse.<br/>
+For thanne he wole his hap reherce,<br/>
+As thogh his world were al forlore,<br/>
+And seith, “Helas, that I was bore!<br/>
+Hou schal I live? hou schal I do?<br/>
+For nou fortune is thus mi fo,<br/>
+I wot wel god me wol noght helpe.<br/>
+What scholde I thanne of joies yelpe,    3410<br/>
+Whan ther no bote is of mi care?<br/>
+So overcast is my welfare,<br/>
+That I am schapen al to strif.<br/>
+Helas, that I nere of this lif,<br/>
+Er I be fulliche overtake!”<br/>
+And thus he wol his sorwe make,<br/>
+As god him mihte noght availe:<br/>
+Bot yit ne wol he noght travaile<br/>
+To helpe himself at such a nede,<br/>
+Bot slowtheth under such a drede,    3420<br/>
+Which is affermed in his herte,<br/>
+Riht as he mihte noght asterte<br/>
+The worldes wo which he is inne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Also whan he is falle in Sinne,<br/>
+Him thenkth he is so ferr coupable,<br/>
+That god wol noght be merciable<br/>
+So gret a Sinne to foryive;<br/>
+And thus he leeveth to be schrive.<br/>
+And if a man in thilke throwe<br/>
+Wolde him consaile, he wol noght knowe    3430<br/>
+The sothe, thogh a man it finde:<br/>
+For Tristesce is of such a kinde,<br/>
+That forto meintiene his folie,<br/>
+He hath with him Obstinacie,<br/>
+Which is withinne of such a Slouthe,<br/>
+That he forsaketh alle trouthe,<br/>
+And wole unto no reson bowe;<br/>
+And yit ne can he noght avowe<br/>
+His oghne skile bot of hed:<br/>
+Thus dwyneth he, til he be ded,    3440<br/>
+In hindringe of his oghne astat.<br/>
+For where a man is obstinat,<br/>
+Wanhope folweth ate laste,<br/>
+Which mai noght after longe laste,<br/>
+Till Slouthe make of him an ende.<br/>
+Bot god wot whider he schal wende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and riht in such manere<br/>
+Ther be lovers of hevy chiere,<br/>
+That sorwen mor than it is ned,<br/>
+Whan thei be taried of here sped    3450<br/>
+And conne noght hemselven rede,<br/>
+Bot lesen hope forto spede<br/>
+And stinten love to poursewe;<br/>
+And thus thei faden hyde and hewe,<br/>
+And lustles in here hertes waxe.<br/>
+Hierof it is that I wolde axe,<br/>
+If thou, mi Sone, art on of tho.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ha, goode fader, it is so,<br/>
+Outake a point, I am beknowe;<br/>
+For elles I am overthrowe    3460<br/>
+In al that evere ye have seid.<br/>
+Mi sorwe is everemore unteid,<br/>
+And secheth overal my veines;<br/>
+Bot forto conseile of mi peines,<br/>
+I can no bote do therto;<br/>
+And thus withouten hope I go,<br/>
+So that mi wittes ben empeired,<br/>
+And I, as who seith, am despeired<br/>
+To winne love of thilke swete,<br/>
+Withoute whom, I you behiete,    3470<br/>
+Min herte, that is so bestad,<br/>
+Riht inly nevere mai be glad.<br/>
+For be my trouthe I schal noght lie,<br/>
+Of pure sorwe, which I drye<br/>
+For that sche seith sche wol me noght,<br/>
+With drecchinge of myn oghne thoght<br/>
+In such a wanhope I am falle,<br/>
+That I ne can unethes calle,<br/>
+As forto speke of eny grace,<br/>
+Mi ladi merci to pourchace.    3480<br/>
+Bot yit I seie noght for this<br/>
+That al in mi defalte it is;<br/>
+For I cam nevere yit in stede,<br/>
+Whan time was, that I my bede<br/>
+Ne seide, and as I dorste tolde:<br/>
+Bot nevere fond I that sche wolde,<br/>
+For oght sche knew of min entente,<br/>
+To speke a goodly word assente.<br/>
+And natheles this dar I seie,<br/>
+That if a sinful wolde preie    3490<br/>
+To god of his foryivenesse<br/>
+With half so gret a besinesse<br/>
+As I have do to my ladi,<br/>
+In lacke of askinge of merci<br/>
+He scholde nevere come in Helle.<br/>
+And thus I mai you sothli telle,<br/>
+Save only that I crie and bidde,<br/>
+I am in Tristesce al amidde<br/>
+And fulfild of Desesperance:<br/>
+And therof yif me mi penance,    3500<br/>
+Min holi fader, as you liketh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of that thin herte siketh<br/>
+With sorwe, miht thou noght amende,<br/>
+Til love his grace wol thee sende,<br/>
+For thou thin oghne cause empeirest<br/>
+What time as thou thiself despeirest.<br/>
+I not what other thing availeth,<br/>
+Of hope whan the herte faileth,<br/>
+For such a Sor is incurable,<br/>
+And ek the goddes ben vengable:    3510<br/>
+And that a man mai riht wel frede,<br/>
+These olde bokes who so rede,<br/>
+Of thing which hath befalle er this:<br/>
+Now hier of what ensample it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whilom be olde daies fer<br/>
+Of Mese was the king Theucer,<br/>
+Which hadde a kniht to Sone, Iphis:<br/>
+Of love and he so maistred is,<br/>
+That he hath set al his corage,<br/>
+As to reguard of his lignage,    3520<br/>
+Upon a Maide of lou astat.<br/>
+Bot thogh he were a potestat<br/>
+Of worldes good, he was soubgit<br/>
+To love, and put in such a plit,<br/>
+That he excedeth the mesure<br/>
+Of reson, that himself assure<br/>
+He can noght; for the more he preide,<br/>
+The lass love on him sche leide.<br/>
+He was with love unwys constreigned,<br/>
+And sche with resoun was restreigned:    3530<br/>
+The lustes of his herte he suieth,<br/>
+And sche for dred schame eschuieth,<br/>
+And as sche scholde, tok good hiede<br/>
+To save and kepe hir wommanhiede.<br/>
+And thus the thing stod in debat<br/>
+Betwen his lust and hire astat:<br/>
+He yaf, he sende, he spak be mouthe,<br/>
+Bot yit for oght that evere he couthe<br/>
+Unto his sped he fond no weie,<br/>
+So that he caste his hope aweie,    3540<br/>
+Withinne his herte and gan despeire<br/>
+Fro dai to dai, and so empeire,<br/>
+That he hath lost al his delit<br/>
+Of lust, of Slep, of Appetit,<br/>
+That he thurgh strengthe of love lasseth<br/>
+His wit, and resoun overpasseth.<br/>
+As he which of his lif ne rowhte,<br/>
+His deth upon himself he sowhte,<br/>
+So that be nyhte his weie he nam,<br/>
+Ther wiste non wher he becam;    3550<br/>
+The nyht was derk, ther schon no Mone,<br/>
+Tofore the gates he cam sone,<br/>
+Wher that this yonge Maiden was<br/>
+And with this wofull word, “Helas!”<br/>
+Hise dedli pleintes he began<br/>
+So stille that ther was noman<br/>
+It herde, and thanne he seide thus:<br/>
+“O thou Cupide, o thou Venus,<br/>
+Fortuned be whos ordinaunce<br/>
+Of love is every mannes chaunce,    3560<br/>
+Ye knowen al min hole herte,<br/>
+That I ne mai your hond asterte;<br/>
+On you is evere that I crie,<br/>
+And yit you deigneth noght to plie,<br/>
+Ne toward me youre Ere encline.<br/>
+Thus for I se no medicine<br/>
+To make an ende of mi querele,<br/>
+My deth schal be in stede of hele.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ha, thou mi wofull ladi diere,<br/>
+Which duellest with thi fader hiere    3570<br/>
+And slepest in thi bedd at ese,<br/>
+Thou wost nothing of my desese.<br/>
+Hou thou and I be now unmete.<br/>
+Ha lord, what swevene schalt thou mete,<br/>
+What dremes hast thou nou on honde?<br/>
+Thou slepest there, and I hier stonde.<br/>
+Thogh I no deth to the deserve,<br/>
+Hier schal I for thi love sterve,<br/>
+Hier schal a kinges Sone dye<br/>
+For love and for no felonie;    3580<br/>
+Wher thou therof have joie or sorwe,<br/>
+Hier schalt thou se me ded tomorwe.<br/>
+O herte hard aboven alle,<br/>
+This deth, which schal to me befalle<br/>
+For that thou wolt noght do me grace,<br/>
+Yit schal be told in many a place,<br/>
+Hou I am ded for love and trouthe<br/>
+In thi defalte and in thi slouthe:<br/>
+Thi Daunger schal to manye mo<br/>
+Ensample be for everemo,    3590<br/>
+Whan thei my wofull deth recorde.”<br/>
+And with that word he tok a Corde,<br/>
+With which upon the gate tre<br/>
+He hyng himself, that was pite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morwe cam, the nyht is gon,<br/>
+Men comen out and syhe anon<br/>
+Wher that this yonge lord was ded:<br/>
+Ther was an hous withoute red,<br/>
+For noman knew the cause why;<br/>
+Ther was wepinge and ther was cry.    3600<br/>
+This Maiden, whan that sche it herde,<br/>
+And sih this thing hou it misferde,<br/>
+Anon sche wiste what it mente,<br/>
+And al the cause hou it wente<br/>
+To al the world sche tolde it oute,<br/>
+And preith to hem that were aboute<br/>
+To take of hire the vengance,<br/>
+For sche was cause of thilke chaunce,<br/>
+Why that this kinges Sone is split.<br/>
+Sche takth upon hirself the gilt,    3610<br/>
+And is al redi to the peine<br/>
+Which eny man hir wole ordeigne:<br/>
+And bot if eny other wolde,<br/>
+Sche seith that sche hirselve scholde<br/>
+Do wreche with hire oghne hond,<br/>
+Thurghout the world in every lond<br/>
+That every lif therof schal speke,<br/>
+Hou sche hirself i scholde wreke.<br/>
+Sche wepth, sche crith, sche swouneth ofte,<br/>
+Sche caste hire yhen up alofte    3620<br/>
+And seide among ful pitously:<br/>
+“A godd, thou wost wel it am I,<br/>
+For whom Iphis is thus besein:<br/>
+Ordeine so, that men mai sein<br/>
+A thousend wynter after this,<br/>
+Hou such a Maiden dede amis,<br/>
+And as I dede, do to me:<br/>
+For I ne dede no pite<br/>
+To him, which for mi love is lore,<br/>
+Do no pite to me therfore.”    3630<br/>
+And with this word sche fell to grounde<br/>
+Aswoune, and ther sche lay a stounde.<br/>
+The goddes, whiche hir pleigntes herde<br/>
+And syhe hou wofully sche ferde,<br/>
+Hire lif thei toke awey anon,<br/>
+And schopen hire into a Ston<br/>
+After the forme of hire ymage<br/>
+Of bodi bothe and of visage.<br/>
+And for the merveile of this thing<br/>
+Unto the place cam the king    3640<br/>
+And ek the queene and manye mo;<br/>
+And whan thei wisten it was so,<br/>
+As I have told it heir above,<br/>
+Hou that Iphis was ded for love,<br/>
+Of that he hadde be refused,<br/>
+Thei hielden alle men excused<br/>
+And wondren upon the vengance.<br/>
+And forto kepe in remembrance,<br/>
+This faire ymage mayden liche<br/>
+With compaignie noble and riche    3650<br/>
+With torche and gret sollempnite.<br/>
+To Salamyne the Cite<br/>
+Thei lede, and carie forth withal<br/>
+The dede corps, and sein it schal<br/>
+Beside thilke ymage have<br/>
+His sepulture and be begrave:<br/>
+This corps and this ymage thus<br/>
+Into the Cite to Venus,<br/>
+Wher that goddesse hire temple hadde,<br/>
+Togedre bothe tuo thei ladde.    3660<br/>
+This ilke ymage as for miracle<br/>
+Was set upon an hyh pinacle,<br/>
+That alle men it mihte knowe,<br/>
+And under tht thei maden lowe<br/>
+A tumbe riche for the nones<br/>
+Of marbre and ek of jaspre stones,<br/>
+Wherin this Iphis was beloken,<br/>
+That evermor it schal be spoken.<br/>
+And for men schal the sothe wite,<br/>
+Thei have here epitaphe write,    3670<br/>
+As thing which scholde abide stable:<br/>
+The lettres graven in a table<br/>
+Of marbre were and seiden this:<br/>
+“Hier lith, which slowh himself, Iphis,<br/>
+For love of Araxarathen:<br/>
+And in ensample of tho wommen,<br/>
+That soffren men to deie so,<br/>
+Hire forme a man mai sen also,<br/>
+Hou it is torned fleissh and bon<br/>
+Into the figure of a Ston:    3680<br/>
+He was to neysshe and sche to hard.<br/>
+Be war forthi hierafterward;<br/>
+Ye men and wommen bothe tuo,<br/>
+Ensampleth you of that was tho:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi Sone, as I thee seie,<br/>
+It grieveth be diverse weie<br/>
+In desepeir a man to falle,<br/>
+Which is the laste branche of alle<br/>
+Of Slouthe, as thou hast herd devise.<br/>
+Wherof that thou thiself avise    3690<br/>
+Good is, er that thou be deceived,<br/>
+Wher that the grace of hope is weyved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, hou so that it stonde,<br/>
+Now have I pleinly understonde<br/>
+Of Slouthes court the proprete,<br/>
+Wherof touchende in my degre<br/>
+For evere I thenke to be war.<br/>
+Bot overthis, so as I dar,<br/>
+With al min herte I you beseche,<br/>
+That ye me wolde enforme and teche    3700<br/>
+What ther is more of youre aprise<br/>
+In love als wel as otherwise,<br/>
+So that I mai me clene schryve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, whyl thou art alyve<br/>
+And hast also thi fulle mynde,<br/>
+Among the vices whiche I finde<br/>
+Ther is yit on such of the sevene,<br/>
+Which al this world hath set unevene<br/>
+And causeth manye thinges wronge,<br/>
+Where he the cause hath underfonge:    3710<br/>
+Wherof hierafter thou schalt hiere<br/>
+The forme bothe and the matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Quartus.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0006"></a>
+Incipit Liber Quintus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Obstat auaricia nature legibus, et que<br/>
+    Largus amor poscit, striccius illa vetat.<br/>
+Omne quod est nimium viciosum dicitur aurum,<br/>
+    Vellera sicut oues, seruat auarus opes.<br/>
+Non decet vt soli seruabitur es, set amori<br/>
+    Debet homo solam solus habere suam.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Ferst whan the hyhe god began<br/>
+This world, and that the kinde of man<br/>
+Was falle into no gret encress,<br/>
+For worldes good tho was no press,<br/>
+Bot al was set to the comune.<br/>
+Thei spieken thanne of no fortune<br/>
+Or forto lese or forto winne,<br/>
+Til Avarice broghte it inne;<br/>
+And that was whan the world was woxe<br/>
+Of man, of hors, of Schep, of Oxe,    10<br/>
+And that men knewen the moneie.<br/>
+Tho wente pes out of the weie<br/>
+And werre cam on every side,<br/>
+Which alle love leide aside<br/>
+And of comun his propre made,<br/>
+So that in stede of schovele and spade<br/>
+The scharpe swerd was take on honde;<br/>
+And in this wise it cam to londe,<br/>
+Wherof men maden dyches depe<br/>
+And hyhe walles forto kepe    20<br/>
+The gold which Avarice encloseth.<br/>
+Bot al to lytel him supposeth,<br/>
+Thogh he mihte al the world pourchace;<br/>
+For what thing that he may embrace<br/>
+Of gold, of catel or of lond,<br/>
+He let it nevere out of his hond,<br/>
+Bot get him more and halt it faste,<br/>
+As thogh the world scholde evere laste.<br/>
+So is he lych unto the helle;<br/>
+For as these olde bokes telle,    30<br/>
+What comth therinne, lasse or more,<br/>
+It schal departe neveremore:<br/>
+Thus whanne he hath his cofre loken,<br/>
+It schal noght after ben unstoken,<br/>
+Bot whanne him list to have a syhte<br/>
+Of gold, hou that it schyneth brihte,<br/>
+That he ther on mai loke and muse;<br/>
+For otherwise he dar noght use<br/>
+To take his part, or lasse or more.<br/>
+So is he povere, and everemore    40<br/>
+Him lacketh that he hath ynowh:<br/>
+An Oxe draweth in the plowh,<br/>
+Of that himself hath no profit;<br/>
+A Schep riht in the same plit<br/>
+His wolle berth, bot on a day<br/>
+An other takth the flees away:<br/>
+Thus hath he, that he noght ne hath,<br/>
+For he therof his part ne tath.<br/>
+To seie hou such a man hath good,<br/>
+Who so that reson understod,    50<br/>
+It is impropreliche seid,<br/>
+For good hath him and halt him teid,<br/>
+That he ne gladeth noght withal,<br/>
+Bot is unto his good a thral,<br/>
+And as soubgit thus serveth he,<br/>
+Wher that he scholde maister be:<br/>
+Such is the kinde of thaverous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, as thou art amerous,<br/>
+Tell if thou farst of love so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as it semeth, no;    60<br/>
+That averous yit nevere I was,<br/>
+So as ye setten me the cas:<br/>
+For as ye tolden here above,<br/>
+In full possession of love<br/>
+Yit was I nevere hier tofore,<br/>
+So that me thenketh wel therfore,<br/>
+I mai excuse wel my dede.<br/>
+Bot of mi will withoute drede,<br/>
+If I that tresor mihte gete,<br/>
+It scholde nevere be foryete,    70<br/>
+That I ne wolde it faste holde,<br/>
+Til god of love himselve wolde<br/>
+That deth ous scholde part atuo.<br/>
+For lieveth wel, I love hire so,<br/>
+That evene with min oghne lif,<br/>
+If I that swete lusti wif<br/>
+Mihte ones welden at my wille,<br/>
+For evere I wolde hire holde stille:<br/>
+And in this wise, taketh kepe,<br/>
+If I hire hadde, I wolde hire kepe,    80<br/>
+And yit no friday wolde I faste,<br/>
+Thogh I hire kepte and hielde faste.<br/>
+Fy on the bagges in the kiste!<br/>
+I hadde ynogh, if I hire kiste.<br/>
+For certes, if sche were myn,<br/>
+I hadde hir levere than a Myn<br/>
+Of Gold; for al this worldesriche<br/>
+Ne mihte make me so riche<br/>
+As sche, that is so inly good.<br/>
+I sette noght of other good;    90<br/>
+For mihte I gete such a thing,<br/>
+I hadde a tresor for a king;<br/>
+And thogh I wolde it faste holde,<br/>
+I were thanne wel beholde.<br/>
+Bot I mot pipe nou with lasse,<br/>
+And suffre that it overpasse,<br/>
+Noght with mi will, for thus I wolde<br/>
+Ben averous, if that I scholde.<br/>
+Bot, fader, I you herde seie<br/>
+Hou thaverous hath yit som weie,    100<br/>
+Wherof he mai be glad; for he<br/>
+Mai whanne him list his tresor se,<br/>
+And grope and fiele it al aboute,<br/>
+Bot I fulofte am schet theroute,<br/>
+Ther as my worthi tresor is.<br/>
+So is mi lif lich unto this,<br/>
+That ye me tolden hier tofore,<br/>
+Hou that an Oxe his yock hath bore<br/>
+For thing that scholde him noght availe:<br/>
+And in this wise I me travaile;    110<br/>
+For who that evere hath the welfare,<br/>
+I wot wel that I have the care,<br/>
+For I am hadd and noght ne have,<br/>
+And am, as who seith, loves knave.<br/>
+Nou demeth in youre oghne thoght,<br/>
+If this be Avarice or noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I have of thee no wonder,<br/>
+Thogh thou to serve be put under<br/>
+With love, which to kinde acordeth:<br/>
+Bot, so as every bok recordeth,    120<br/>
+It is to kinde no plesance<br/>
+That man above his sustienance<br/>
+Unto the gold schal serve and bowe,<br/>
+For that mai no reson avowe.<br/>
+Bot Avarice natheles,<br/>
+If he mai geten his encress<br/>
+Of gold, that wole he serve and kepe,<br/>
+For he takth of noght elles kepe,<br/>
+Bot forto fille hise bagges large;<br/>
+And al is to him bot a charge,    130<br/>
+For he ne parteth noght withal,<br/>
+Bot kepth it, as a servant schal:<br/>
+And thus, thogh that he multeplie<br/>
+His gold, withoute tresorie<br/>
+He is, for man is noght amended<br/>
+With gold, bot if it be despended<br/>
+To mannes us; wherof I rede<br/>
+A tale, and tak therof good hiede,<br/>
+Of that befell be olde tyde,<br/>
+As telleth ous the clerk Ovide.    140
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bachus, which is the god of wyn,<br/>
+Acordant unto his divin<br/>
+A Prest, the which Cillenus hihte,<br/>
+He hadde, and fell so that be nyhte<br/>
+This Prest was drunke and goth astraied,<br/>
+Wherof the men were evele apaied<br/>
+In Frigelond, where as he wente.<br/>
+Bot ate laste a cherl him hente<br/>
+With strengthe of other felaschipe,<br/>
+So that upon his drunkeschipe    150<br/>
+Thei bounden him with chenes faste,<br/>
+And forth thei ladde him als so faste<br/>
+Unto the king, which hihte Myde.<br/>
+Bot he, that wolde his vice hyde,<br/>
+This courteis king, tok of him hiede,<br/>
+And bad that men him scholde lede<br/>
+Into a chambre forto kepe,<br/>
+Til he of leisir hadde slepe.<br/>
+And tho this Prest was sone unbounde,<br/>
+And up a couche fro the grounde    160<br/>
+To slepe he was leid softe ynowh;<br/>
+And whanne he wok, the king him drowh<br/>
+To his presence and dede him chiere,<br/>
+So that this Prest in such manere,<br/>
+Whil that him liketh, there he duelleth:<br/>
+And al this he to Bachus telleth,<br/>
+Whan that he cam to him ayein.<br/>
+And whan that Bachus herde sein<br/>
+How Mide hath don his courtesie,<br/>
+Him thenkth it were a vilenie,    170<br/>
+Bot he rewarde him for his dede,<br/>
+So as he mihte of his godhiede.<br/>
+Unto this king this god appiereth<br/>
+And clepeth, and that other hiereth:<br/>
+This god to Mide thonketh faire<br/>
+Of that he was so debonaire<br/>
+Toward his Prest, and bad him seie:<br/>
+What thing it were he wolde preie,<br/>
+He scholde it have, of worldes good.<br/>
+This king was glad, and stille stod,    180<br/>
+And was of his axinge in doute,<br/>
+And al the world he caste aboute,<br/>
+What thing was best for his astat,<br/>
+And with himself stod in debat<br/>
+Upon thre pointz, the whiche I finde<br/>
+Ben lievest unto mannes kinde.<br/>
+The ferste of hem it is delit,<br/>
+The tuo ben worschipe and profit.<br/>
+And thanne he thoghte, “If that I crave<br/>
+Delit, thogh I delit mai have,    190<br/>
+Delit schal passen in myn age:<br/>
+That is no siker avantage,<br/>
+For every joie bodily<br/>
+Schal ende in wo: delit forthi<br/>
+Wol I noght chese. And if worschipe<br/>
+I axe and of the world lordschipe,<br/>
+That is an occupacion<br/>
+Of proud ymaginacion,<br/>
+Which makth an herte vein withinne;<br/>
+Ther is no certain forto winne,    200<br/>
+For lord and knave al is o weie,<br/>
+Whan thei be bore and whan thei deie.<br/>
+And if I profit axe wolde,<br/>
+I not in what manere I scholde<br/>
+Of worldes good have sikernesse;<br/>
+For every thief upon richesse<br/>
+Awaiteth forto robbe and stele:<br/>
+Such good is cause of harmes fele.<br/>
+And also, thogh a man at ones<br/>
+Of al the world withinne his wones    210<br/>
+The tresor myhte have everydel,<br/>
+Yit hadde he bot o mannes del<br/>
+Toward himself, so as I thinke,<br/>
+Of clothinge and of mete and drinke,<br/>
+For more, outake vanite,<br/>
+Ther hath no lord in his degre.”<br/>
+And thus upon the pointz diverse<br/>
+Diverseliche he gan reherce<br/>
+What point him thoghte for the beste;<br/>
+Bot pleinly forto gete him reste    220<br/>
+He can so siker weie caste.<br/>
+And natheles yit ate laste<br/>
+He fell upon the coveitise<br/>
+Of gold; and thanne in sondri wise<br/>
+He thoghte, as I have seid tofore,<br/>
+Hou tresor mai be sone lore,<br/>
+And hadde an inly gret desir<br/>
+Touchende of such recoverir,<br/>
+Hou that he mihte his cause availe<br/>
+To gete him gold withoute faile.    230<br/>
+Withinne his herte and thus he preiseth<br/>
+The gold, and seith hou that it peiseth<br/>
+Above al other metall most:<br/>
+“The gold,” he seith, “may lede an host<br/>
+To make werre ayein a King;<br/>
+The gold put under alle thing,<br/>
+And set it whan him list above;<br/>
+The gold can make of hate love<br/>
+And werre of pes and ryht of wrong,<br/>
+And long to schort and schort to long;    240<br/>
+Withoute gold mai be no feste,<br/>
+Gold is the lord of man and beste,<br/>
+And mai hem bothe beie and selle;<br/>
+So that a man mai sothly telle<br/>
+That al the world to gold obeieth.”<br/>
+Forthi this king to Bachus preieth<br/>
+To grante him gold, bot he excedeth<br/>
+Mesure more than him nedeth.<br/>
+Men tellen that the maladie<br/>
+Which cleped is ydropesie    250<br/>
+Resembled is unto this vice<br/>
+Be weie of kinde of Avarice:<br/>
+The more ydropesie drinketh,<br/>
+The more him thursteth, for him thinketh<br/>
+That he mai nevere drinke his fille;<br/>
+So that ther mai nothing fulfille<br/>
+The lustes of his appetit:<br/>
+And riht in such a maner plit<br/>
+Stant Avarice and evere stod;<br/>
+The more he hath of worldes good,    260<br/>
+The more he wolde it kepe streyte,<br/>
+And evere mor and mor coveite.<br/>
+And riht in such condicioun<br/>
+Withoute good discrecioun<br/>
+This king with avarice is smite,<br/>
+That al the world it myhte wite:<br/>
+For he to Bachus thanne preide,<br/>
+That wherupon his hond he leide,<br/>
+It scholde thurgh his touche anon<br/>
+Become gold, and therupon    270<br/>
+This god him granteth as he bad.<br/>
+Tho was this king of Frige glad,<br/>
+And forto put it in assai<br/>
+With al the haste that he mai,<br/>
+He toucheth that, he toucheth this,<br/>
+And in his hond al gold it is,<br/>
+The Ston, the Tree, the Lef, the gras,<br/>
+The flour, the fruit, al gold it was.<br/>
+Thus toucheth he, whil he mai laste<br/>
+To go, bot hunger ate laste    280<br/>
+Him tok, so that he moste nede<br/>
+Be weie of kinde his hunger fede.<br/>
+The cloth was leid, the bord was set,<br/>
+And al was forth tofore him fet,<br/>
+His disch, his coppe, his drinke, his mete;<br/>
+Bot whanne he wolde or drinke or ete,<br/>
+Anon as it his mouth cam nyh,<br/>
+It was al gold, and thanne he syh<br/>
+Of Avarice the folie.<br/>
+And he with that began to crie,    290<br/>
+And preide Bachus to foryive<br/>
+His gilt, and soffre him forto live<br/>
+And be such as he was tofore,<br/>
+So that he were not forlore.<br/>
+This god, which herde of his grevance,<br/>
+Tok rowthe upon his repentance,<br/>
+And bad him go forth redily<br/>
+Unto a flod was faste by,<br/>
+Which Paceole thanne hyhte,<br/>
+In which as clene as evere he myhte    300<br/>
+He scholde him waisshen overal,<br/>
+And seide him thanne that he schal<br/>
+Recovere his ferste astat ayein.<br/>
+This king, riht as he herde sein,<br/>
+Into the flod goth fro the lond,<br/>
+And wissh him bothe fot and hond,<br/>
+And so forth al the remenant,<br/>
+As him was set in covenant:<br/>
+And thanne he syh merveilles strange,<br/>
+The flod his colour gan to change,    310<br/>
+The gravel with the smale Stones<br/>
+To gold thei torne bothe at ones,<br/>
+And he was quit of that he hadde,<br/>
+And thus fortune his chance ladde.<br/>
+And whan he sih his touche aweie,<br/>
+He goth him hom the rihte weie<br/>
+And liveth forth as he dede er,<br/>
+And putte al Avarice afer,<br/>
+And the richesse of gold despiseth,<br/>
+And seith that mete and cloth sufficeth.    320<br/>
+Thus hath this king experience<br/>
+Hou foles don the reverence<br/>
+To gold, which of his oghne kinde<br/>
+Is lasse worth than is the rinde<br/>
+To sustienance of mannes fode;<br/>
+And thanne he made lawes goode<br/>
+And al his thing sette upon skile:<br/>
+He bad his poeple forto tile<br/>
+Here lond, and live under the lawe,<br/>
+And that thei scholde also forthdrawe    330<br/>
+Bestaile, and seche non encress<br/>
+Of gold, which is the breche of pes.<br/>
+For this a man mai finde write,<br/>
+Tofor the time, er gold was smite<br/>
+In Coign, that men the florin knewe,<br/>
+Ther was welnyh noman untrewe;<br/>
+Tho was ther nouther schield ne spere<br/>
+Ne dedly wepne forto bere;<br/>
+Tho was the toun withoute wal,<br/>
+Which nou is closed overal;    340<br/>
+Tho was ther no brocage in londe,<br/>
+Which nou takth every cause on honde:<br/>
+So mai men knowe, hou the florin<br/>
+Was moder ferst of malengin<br/>
+And bringere inne of alle werre,<br/>
+Wherof this world stant out of herre<br/>
+Thurgh the conseil of Avarice,<br/>
+Which of his oghne propre vice<br/>
+Is as the helle wonderfull;<br/>
+For it mai neveremor be full,    350<br/>
+That what as evere comth therinne,<br/>
+Awey ne may it nevere winne.<br/>
+Bot Sone myn, do thou noght so,<br/>
+Let al such Avarice go,<br/>
+And tak thi part of that thou hast:<br/>
+I bidde noght that thou do wast,<br/>
+Bot hold largesce in his mesure;<br/>
+And if thou se a creature,<br/>
+Which thurgh poverte is falle in nede,<br/>
+Yif him som good, for this I rede    360<br/>
+To him that wol noght yiven here,<br/>
+What peine he schal have elleswhere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther is a peine amonges alle<br/>
+Benethe in helle, which men calle<br/>
+The wofull peine of Tantaly,<br/>
+Of which I schal thee redely<br/>
+Devise hou men therinne stonde.<br/>
+In helle, thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+Ther is a flod of thilke office,<br/>
+Which serveth al for Avarice:    370<br/>
+What man that stonde schal therinne,<br/>
+He stant up evene unto the chinne;<br/>
+Above his hed also ther hongeth<br/>
+A fruyt, which to that peine longeth,<br/>
+And that fruit toucheth evere in on<br/>
+His overlippe: and therupon<br/>
+Swich thurst and hunger him assaileth,<br/>
+That nevere his appetit ne faileth.<br/>
+Bot whanne he wolde his hunger fede,<br/>
+The fruit withdrawth him ate nede,    380<br/>
+And thogh he heve his hed on hyh,<br/>
+The fruit is evere aliche nyh,<br/>
+So is the hunger wel the more:<br/>
+And also, thogh him thurste sore<br/>
+And to the water bowe a doun,<br/>
+The flod in such condicioun<br/>
+Avaleth, that his drinke areche<br/>
+He mai noght. Lo nou, which a wreche,<br/>
+That mete and drinke is him so couth,<br/>
+And yit ther comth non in his mouth!    390<br/>
+Lich to the peines of this flod<br/>
+Stant Avarice in worldes good:<br/>
+He hath ynowh and yit him nedeth,<br/>
+For his skarsnesse it him forbiedeth,<br/>
+And evere his hunger after more<br/>
+Travaileth him aliche sore,<br/>
+So is he peined overal.<br/>
+Forthi thi goodes forth withal,<br/>
+Mi Sone, loke thou despende,<br/>
+Wherof thou myht thiself amende    400<br/>
+Bothe hier and ek in other place.<br/>
+And also if thou wolt pourchace<br/>
+To be beloved, thou most use<br/>
+Largesce, for if thou refuse<br/>
+To yive for thi loves sake,<br/>
+It is no reson that thou take<br/>
+Of love that thou woldest crave.<br/>
+Forthi, if thou wolt grace have,<br/>
+Be gracious and do largesse,<br/>
+Of Avarice and the seknesse    410<br/>
+Eschuie above alle other thing,<br/>
+And tak ensample of Mide king<br/>
+And of the flod of helle also,<br/>
+Where is ynowh of alle wo.<br/>
+And thogh ther were no matiere<br/>
+Bot only that we finden hiere,<br/>
+Men oghten Avarice eschuie;<br/>
+For what man thilke vice suie,<br/>
+He get himself bot litel reste.<br/>
+For hou so that the body reste,    420<br/>
+The herte upon the gold travaileth,<br/>
+Whom many a nyhtes drede assaileth;<br/>
+For thogh he ligge abedde naked,<br/>
+His herte is everemore awaked,<br/>
+And dremeth, as he lith to slepe,<br/>
+How besi that he is to kepe<br/>
+His tresor, that no thief it stele.<br/>
+Thus hath he bot a woful wele.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht so in the same wise,<br/>
+If thou thiself wolt wel avise,    430<br/>
+Ther be lovers of suche ynowe,<br/>
+That wole unto no reson bowe.<br/>
+If so be that thei come above,<br/>
+Whan thei ben maistres of here love,<br/>
+And that thei scholden be most glad,<br/>
+With love thei ben most bestad,<br/>
+So fain thei wolde it holden al.<br/>
+Here herte, here yhe is overal,<br/>
+And wenen every man be thief,<br/>
+To stele awey that hem is lief;    440<br/>
+Thus thurgh here oghne fantasie<br/>
+Thei fallen into Jelousie.<br/>
+Thanne hath the Schip tobroke his cable,<br/>
+With every wynd and is muable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, for that ye nou telle,<br/>
+I have herd ofte time telle<br/>
+Of Jelousie, bot what it is<br/>
+Yit understod I nevere er this:<br/>
+Wherfore I wolde you beseche,<br/>
+That ye me wolde enforme and teche    450<br/>
+What maner thing it mihte be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that is hard to me:<br/>
+Bot natheles, as I have herd,<br/>
+Now herkne and thou schalt ben ansuerd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the men lacke of manhode<br/>
+In Mariage upon wifhode<br/>
+Makth that a man himself deceiveth,<br/>
+Wherof it is that he conceiveth<br/>
+That ilke unsely maladie,<br/>
+The which is cleped Jelousie:    460<br/>
+Of which if I the proprete<br/>
+Schal telle after the nycete,<br/>
+So as it worcheth on a man,<br/>
+A Fievere it is cotidian,<br/>
+Which every day wol come aboute,<br/>
+Wher so a man be inne or oute.<br/>
+At hom if that a man wol wone,<br/>
+This Fievere is thanne of comun wone<br/>
+Most grevous in a mannes yhe:<br/>
+For thanne he makth him tote and pryhe,    470<br/>
+Wher so as evere his love go;<br/>
+Sche schal noght with hir litel too<br/>
+Misteppe, bot he se it al.<br/>
+His yhe is walkende overal;<br/>
+Wher that sche singe or that sche dance,<br/>
+He seth the leste contienance,<br/>
+If sche loke on a man aside<br/>
+Or with him roune at eny tyde,<br/>
+Or that sche lawghe, or that sche loure,<br/>
+His yhe is ther at every houre.    480<br/>
+And whanne it draweth to the nyht,<br/>
+If sche thanne is withoute lyht,<br/>
+Anon is al the game schent;<br/>
+For thanne he set his parlement<br/>
+To speke it whan he comth to bedde,<br/>
+And seith, “If I were now to wedde,<br/>
+I wolde neveremore have wif.”<br/>
+And so he torneth into strif<br/>
+The lust of loves duete,<br/>
+And al upon diversete.    490<br/>
+If sche be freissh and wel araied,<br/>
+He seith hir baner is displaied<br/>
+To clepe in gestes fro the weie:<br/>
+And if sche be noght wel beseie,<br/>
+And that hir list noght to be gladd,<br/>
+He berth an hond that sche is madd<br/>
+And loveth noght hire housebonde;<br/>
+He seith he mai wel understonde,<br/>
+That if sche wolde his compaignie,<br/>
+Sche scholde thanne afore his ije    500<br/>
+Schewe al the plesir that sche mihte.<br/>
+So that be daie ne be nyhte<br/>
+Sche not what thing is for the beste,<br/>
+Bot liveth out of alle reste;<br/>
+For what as evere him liste sein,<br/>
+Sche dar noght speke a word ayein,<br/>
+Bot wepth and holt hire lippes clos.<br/>
+Sche mai wel wryte, “Sanz repos,”<br/>
+The wif which is to such on maried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of alle wommen be he waried,    510<br/>
+For with this Fievere of Jalousie<br/>
+His echedaies fantasie<br/>
+Of sorghe is evere aliche grene,<br/>
+So that ther is no love sene,<br/>
+Whil that him list at hom abyde.<br/>
+And whan so is he wol out ryde,<br/>
+Thanne hath he redi his aspie<br/>
+Abidinge in hir compaignie,<br/>
+A janglere, an evel mouthed oon,<br/>
+That sche ne mai nowhider gon,    520<br/>
+Ne speke a word, ne ones loke,<br/>
+That he ne wol it wende and croke<br/>
+And torne after his oghne entente,<br/>
+Thogh sche nothing bot honour mente.<br/>
+Whan that the lord comth hom ayein,<br/>
+The janglere moste somwhat sein;<br/>
+So what withoute and what withinne,<br/>
+This Fievere is evere to beginne,<br/>
+For where he comth he can noght ende,<br/>
+Til deth of him have mad an ende.    530<br/>
+For thogh so be that he ne hiere<br/>
+Ne se ne wite in no manere<br/>
+Bot al honour and wommanhiede,<br/>
+Therof the Jelous takth non hiede,<br/>
+Bot as a man to love unkinde,<br/>
+He cast his staf, as doth the blinde,<br/>
+And fint defaulte where is non;<br/>
+As who so dremeth on a Ston<br/>
+Hou he is leid, and groneth ofte,<br/>
+Whan he lith on his pilwes softe.    540<br/>
+So is ther noght bot strif and cheste;<br/>
+Whan love scholde make his feste,<br/>
+It is gret thing if he hir kisse:<br/>
+Thus hath sche lost the nyhtes blisse,<br/>
+For at such time he gruccheth evere<br/>
+And berth on hond ther is a levere,<br/>
+And that sche wolde an other were<br/>
+In stede of him abedde there;<br/>
+And with tho wordes and with mo<br/>
+Of Jelousie, he torneth fro    550<br/>
+And lith upon his other side,<br/>
+And sche with that drawth hire aside,<br/>
+And ther sche wepeth al the nyht.<br/>
+Ha, to what peine sche is dyht,<br/>
+That in hire youthe hath so beset<br/>
+The bond which mai noght ben unknet!<br/>
+I wot the time is ofte cursed,<br/>
+That evere was the gold unpursed,<br/>
+The which was leid upon the bok,<br/>
+Whan that alle othre sche forsok    560<br/>
+For love of him; bot al to late<br/>
+Sche pleigneth, for as thanne algate<br/>
+Sche mot forbere and to him bowe,<br/>
+Thogh he ne wole it noght allowe.<br/>
+For man is lord of thilke feire,<br/>
+So mai the womman bot empeire,<br/>
+If sche speke oght ayein his wille;<br/>
+And thus sche berth hir peine stille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot if this Fievere a womman take,<br/>
+Sche schal be wel mor harde schake;    570<br/>
+For thogh sche bothe se and hiere,<br/>
+And finde that ther is matiere,<br/>
+Sche dar bot to hirselve pleine,<br/>
+And thus sche suffreth double peine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi Sone, as I have write,<br/>
+Thou miht of Jelousie wite<br/>
+His fievere and his condicion,<br/>
+Which is full of suspecion.<br/>
+Bot wherof that this fievere groweth,<br/>
+Who so these olde bokes troweth,    580<br/>
+Ther mai he finden hou it is:<br/>
+For thei ous teche and telle this,<br/>
+Hou that this fievere of Jelousie<br/>
+Somdel it groweth of sotie<br/>
+Of love, and somdiel of untrust.<br/>
+For as a sek man lest his lust,<br/>
+And whan he may no savour gete,<br/>
+He hateth thanne his oughne mete,<br/>
+Riht so this fieverous maladie,<br/>
+Which caused is of fantasie,    590<br/>
+Makth the Jelous in fieble plit<br/>
+To lese of love his appetit<br/>
+Thurgh feigned enformacion<br/>
+Of his ymaginacion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot finali to taken hiede,<br/>
+Men mai wel make a liklihiede<br/>
+Betwen him which is averous<br/>
+Of gold and him that is jelous<br/>
+Of love, for in on degre<br/>
+Thei stonde bothe, as semeth me.    600<br/>
+That oon wolde have his bagges stille,<br/>
+And noght departen with his wille,<br/>
+And dar noght for the thieves slepe,<br/>
+So fain he wolde his tresor kepe;<br/>
+That other mai noght wel be glad,<br/>
+For he is evere more adrad<br/>
+Of these lovers that gon aboute,<br/>
+In aunter if thei putte him oute.<br/>
+So have thei bothe litel joye<br/>
+As wel of love as of monoie.    610
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now hast thou, Sone, at my techinge<br/>
+Of Jelousie a knowlechinge,<br/>
+That thou myht understonde this,<br/>
+Fro whenne he comth and what he is,<br/>
+And ek to whom that he is lik.<br/>
+Be war forthi thou be noght sik<br/>
+Of thilke fievere as I have spoke,<br/>
+For it wol in himself be wroke.<br/>
+For love hateth nothing more,<br/>
+As men mai finde be the lore    620<br/>
+Of hem that whilom were wise,<br/>
+Hou that thei spieke in many wise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, soth is that ye sein.<br/>
+Bot forto loke therayein,<br/>
+Befor this time hou it is falle,<br/>
+Wherof ther mihte ensample falle<br/>
+To suche men as be jelous<br/>
+In what manere it is grevous,<br/>
+Riht fain I wolde ensample hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My goode Sone, at thi preiere    630<br/>
+Of suche ensamples as I finde,<br/>
+So as thei comen nou to mynde<br/>
+Upon this point, of time gon<br/>
+I thenke forto tellen on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ovide wrot of manye thinges,<br/>
+Among the whiche in his wrytinges<br/>
+He tolde a tale in Poesie,<br/>
+Which toucheth unto Jelousie,<br/>
+Upon a certein cas of love.<br/>
+Among the goddes alle above    640<br/>
+It fell at thilke time thus:<br/>
+The god of fyr, which Vulcanus<br/>
+Is hote, and hath a craft forthwith<br/>
+Assigned, forto be the Smith<br/>
+Of Jupiter, and his figure<br/>
+Bothe of visage and of stature<br/>
+Is lothly and malgracious,<br/>
+Bot yit he hath withinne his hous<br/>
+As for the likynge of his lif<br/>
+The faire Venus to his wif.    650<br/>
+Bot Mars, which of batailles is<br/>
+The god, an yhe hadde unto this:<br/>
+As he which was chivalerous,<br/>
+It fell him to ben amerous,<br/>
+And thoghte it was a gret pite<br/>
+To se so lusti on as sche<br/>
+Be coupled with so lourde a wiht:<br/>
+So that his peine day and nyht<br/>
+He dede, if he hire winne myhte;<br/>
+And sche, which hadde a good insihte    660<br/>
+Toward so noble a knyhtli lord,<br/>
+In love fell of his acord.<br/>
+Ther lacketh noght bot time and place,<br/>
+That he nys siker of hire grace:<br/>
+Bot whan tuo hertes falle in on,<br/>
+So wys await was nevere non,<br/>
+That at som time thei ne mete;<br/>
+And thus this faire lusti swete<br/>
+With Mars hath ofte compaignie.<br/>
+Bot thilke unkynde Jelousie,    670<br/>
+Which everemor the herte opposeth,<br/>
+Makth Vulcanus that he supposeth<br/>
+That it is noght wel overal,<br/>
+And to himself he seide, he schal<br/>
+Aspie betre, if that he may;<br/>
+And so it fell upon a day,<br/>
+That he this thing so slyhli ledde,<br/>
+He fond hem bothe tuo abedde<br/>
+Al warm, echon with other naked.<br/>
+And he with craft al redy maked    680<br/>
+Of stronge chenes hath hem bounde,<br/>
+As he togedre hem hadde founde,<br/>
+And lefte hem bothe ligge so,<br/>
+And gan to clepe and crie tho<br/>
+Unto the goddes al aboute;<br/>
+And thei assembled in a route<br/>
+Come alle at ones forto se.<br/>
+Bot none amendes hadde he,<br/>
+Bot was rebuked hiere and there<br/>
+Of hem that loves frendes were;    690<br/>
+And seiden that he was to blame,<br/>
+For if ther fell him eny schame,<br/>
+It was thurgh his misgovernance:<br/>
+And thus he loste contienance,<br/>
+This god, and let his cause falle;<br/>
+And thei to skorne him lowhen alle,<br/>
+And losen Mars out of hise bondes.<br/>
+Wherof these erthli housebondes<br/>
+For evere myhte ensample take,<br/>
+If such a chaunce hem overtake:    700<br/>
+For Vulcanus his wif bewreide,<br/>
+The blame upon himself he leide,<br/>
+Wherof his schame was the more;<br/>
+Which oghte forto ben a lore<br/>
+For every man that liveth hiere,<br/>
+To reulen him in this matiere.<br/>
+Thogh such an happ of love asterte,<br/>
+Yit scholde he noght apointe his herte<br/>
+With Jelousie of that is wroght,<br/>
+Bot feigne, as thogh he wiste it noght:    710<br/>
+For if he lete it overpasse,<br/>
+The sclaundre schal be wel the lasse,<br/>
+And he the more in ese stonde.<br/>
+For this thou myht wel understonde,<br/>
+That where a man schal nedes lese,<br/>
+The leste harm is forto chese.<br/>
+Bot Jelousie of his untrist<br/>
+Makth that full many an harm arist,<br/>
+Which elles scholde noght arise;<br/>
+And if a man him wolde avise    720<br/>
+Of that befell to Vulcanus,<br/>
+Him oghte of reson thenke thus,<br/>
+That sithe a god therof was schamed,<br/>
+Wel scholde an erthli man be blamed<br/>
+To take upon him such a vice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, my Sone, in thin office<br/>
+Be war that thou be noght jelous,<br/>
+Which ofte time hath schent the hous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, this ensample is hard,<br/>
+Hou such thing to the heveneward    730<br/>
+Among the goddes myhte falle:<br/>
+For ther is bot o god of alle,<br/>
+Which is the lord of hevene and helle.<br/>
+Bot if it like you to telle<br/>
+Hou suche goddes come aplace,<br/>
+Ye mihten mochel thonk pourchace,<br/>
+For I schal be wel tawht withal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, it is thus overal<br/>
+With hem that stonden misbelieved,<br/>
+That suche goddes ben believed:    740<br/>
+In sondri place sondri wise<br/>
+Amonges hem whiche are unwise<br/>
+Ther is betaken of credence;<br/>
+Wherof that I the difference<br/>
+In the manere as it is write<br/>
+Schal do the pleinly forto wite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Er Crist was bore among ous hiere,<br/>
+Of the believes that tho were<br/>
+In foure formes thus it was.<br/>
+Thei of Caldee as in this cas    750<br/>
+Hadde a believe be hemselve,<br/>
+Which stod upon the signes tuelve,<br/>
+Forth ek with the Planetes sevene,<br/>
+Whiche as thei sihe upon the hevene.<br/>
+Of sondri constellacion<br/>
+In here ymaginacion<br/>
+With sondri kerf and pourtreture<br/>
+Thei made of goddes the figure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In thelementz and ek also<br/>
+Thei hadden a believe tho;    760<br/>
+And al was that unresonable:<br/>
+For thelementz ben servicable<br/>
+To man, and ofte of Accidence,<br/>
+As men mai se thexperience,<br/>
+Thei ben corrupt be sondri weie;<br/>
+So mai no mannes reson seie<br/>
+That thei ben god in eny wise.<br/>
+And ek, if men hem wel avise,<br/>
+The Sonne and Mone eclipse bothe,<br/>
+That be hem lieve or be hem lothe,    770<br/>
+Thei soffre; and what thing is passible<br/>
+To ben a god is impossible.<br/>
+These elementz ben creatures,<br/>
+So ben these hevenly figures,<br/>
+Wherof mai wel be justefied<br/>
+That thei mai noght be deified:<br/>
+And who that takth awey thonour<br/>
+Which due is to the creatour,<br/>
+And yifth it to the creature,<br/>
+He doth to gret a forsfaiture.    780<br/>
+Bot of Caldee natheles<br/>
+Upon this feith, thogh it be les,<br/>
+Thei holde affermed the creance;<br/>
+So that of helle the penance,<br/>
+As folk which stant out of believe,<br/>
+They schull receive, as we believe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the Caldeus lo in this wise<br/>
+Stant the believe out of assisse:<br/>
+Bot in Egipte worst of alle<br/>
+The feith is fals, hou so it falle;    790<br/>
+For thei diverse bestes there<br/>
+Honoure, as thogh thei goddes were:<br/>
+And natheles yit forth withal<br/>
+Thre goddes most in special<br/>
+Thei have, forth with a goddesse,<br/>
+In whom is al here sikernesse.<br/>
+Tho goddes be yit cleped thus,<br/>
+Orus, Typhon and Isirus:<br/>
+Thei were brethren alle thre,<br/>
+And the goddesse in hir degre    800<br/>
+Here Soster was and Ysis hyhte,<br/>
+Whom Isirus forlai be nyhte<br/>
+And hield hire after as his wif.<br/>
+So it befell that upon strif<br/>
+Typhon hath Isre his brother slain,<br/>
+Which hadde a child to Sone Orayn,<br/>
+And he his fader deth to herte<br/>
+So tok, that it mai noght asterte<br/>
+That he Typhon after ne slowh,<br/>
+Whan he was ripe of age ynowh.    810<br/>
+Bot yit thegipcienes trowe<br/>
+For al this errour, which thei knowe,<br/>
+That these brethren ben of myht<br/>
+To sette and kepe Egipte upriht,<br/>
+And overthrowe, if that hem like.<br/>
+Bot Ysis, as seith the Cronique,<br/>
+Fro Grece into Egipte cam,<br/>
+And sche thanne upon honde nam<br/>
+To teche hem forto sowe and eere,<br/>
+Which noman knew tofore there.    820<br/>
+And whan thegipcienes syhe<br/>
+The fieldes fulle afore here yhe,<br/>
+And that the lond began to greine,<br/>
+Which whilom hadde be bareigne,&mdash;<br/>
+For therthe bar after the kinde<br/>
+His due charge,&mdash;this I finde,<br/>
+That sche of berthe the goddesse<br/>
+Is cleped, so that in destresse<br/>
+The wommen there upon childinge<br/>
+To hire clepe, and here offringe    830<br/>
+Thei beren, whan that thei ben lyhte.<br/>
+Lo, hou Egipte al out of syhte<br/>
+Fro resoun stant in misbelieve<br/>
+For lacke of lore, as I believe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the Greks, out of the weie<br/>
+As thei that reson putte aweie,<br/>
+Ther was, as the Cronique seith,<br/>
+Of misbelieve an other feith,<br/>
+That thei here goddes and goddesses,<br/>
+As who seith, token al to gesses    840<br/>
+Of suche as weren full of vice,<br/>
+To whom thei made here sacrifice.<br/>
+The hihe god, so as thei seide,<br/>
+To whom thei most worschipe leide,<br/>
+Saturnus hihte, and king of Crete<br/>
+He hadde be; bot of his sete<br/>
+He was put doun, as he which stod<br/>
+In frenesie, and was so wod,<br/>
+That fro his wif, which Rea hihte,<br/>
+Hise oghne children he to plihte,    850<br/>
+And eet hem of his comun wone.<br/>
+Bot Jupiter, which was his Sone<br/>
+And of full age, his fader bond<br/>
+And kutte of with his oghne hond<br/>
+Hise genitals, whiche als so faste<br/>
+Into the depe See he caste;<br/>
+Wherof the Greks afferme and seie,<br/>
+Thus whan thei were caste aweie,<br/>
+Cam Venus forth be weie of kinde.<br/>
+And of Saturne also I finde    860<br/>
+How afterward into an yle<br/>
+This Jupiter him dede exile,<br/>
+Wher that he stod in gret meschief.<br/>
+Lo, which a god thei maden chief!<br/>
+And sithen that such on was he,<br/>
+Which stod most hihe in his degre<br/>
+Among the goddes, thou miht knowe,<br/>
+These othre, that ben more lowe,<br/>
+Ben litel worth, as it is founde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Jupiter was the secounde,    870<br/>
+Which Juno hadde unto his wif;<br/>
+And yit a lechour al his lif<br/>
+He was, and in avouterie<br/>
+He wroghte many a tricherie;<br/>
+And for he was so full of vices,<br/>
+Thei cleped him god of delices:<br/>
+Of whom, if thou wolt more wite,<br/>
+Ovide the Poete hath write.<br/>
+Bot yit here Sterres bothe tuo,<br/>
+Saturne and Jupiter also,    880<br/>
+Thei have, althogh thei be to blame,<br/>
+Attitled to here oghne name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mars was an other in that lawe,<br/>
+The which in Dace was forthdrawe,<br/>
+Of whom the clerk Vegecius<br/>
+Wrot in his bok, and tolde thus,<br/>
+Hou he into Ytaile cam,<br/>
+And such fortune ther he nam<br/>
+That he a Maiden hath oppressed,<br/>
+Which in hire ordre was professed,    890<br/>
+As sche which was the Prioresse<br/>
+In Vestes temple the goddesse,<br/>
+So was sche wel the mor to blame.<br/>
+Dame Ylia this ladi name<br/>
+Men clepe, and ek sche was also<br/>
+The kinges dowhter that was tho,<br/>
+Which Mynitor be name hihte.<br/>
+So that ayein the lawes ryhte<br/>
+Mars thilke time upon hire that<br/>
+Remus and Romulus begat,    900<br/>
+Whiche after, whan thei come in Age,<br/>
+Of knihthode and of vassellage<br/>
+Ytaile al hol thei overcome<br/>
+And foundeden the grete Rome;<br/>
+In Armes and of such emprise<br/>
+Thei weren, that in thilke wise<br/>
+Here fader Mars for the mervaile<br/>
+The god was cleped of bataille.<br/>
+Thei were his children bothe tuo,<br/>
+Thurgh hem he tok his name so,    910<br/>
+Ther was non other cause why:<br/>
+And yit a Sterre upon the Sky<br/>
+He hath unto his name applied,<br/>
+In which that he is signified.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other god thei hadden eke,<br/>
+To whom for conseil thei beseke,<br/>
+The which was brother to Venus,<br/>
+Appollo men him clepe thus.<br/>
+He was an Hunte upon the helles,<br/>
+Ther was with him no vertu elles,    920<br/>
+Wherof that enye bokes karpe,<br/>
+Bot only that he couthe harpe;<br/>
+Which whanne he walked over londe,<br/>
+Fulofte time he tok on honde,<br/>
+To gete him with his sustienance,<br/>
+For lacke of other pourveance.<br/>
+And otherwhile of his falshede<br/>
+He feignede him to conne arede<br/>
+Of thing which after scholde falle;<br/>
+Wherof among hise sleyhtes alle    930<br/>
+He hath the lewed folk deceived,<br/>
+So that the betre he was received.<br/>
+Lo now, thurgh what creacion<br/>
+He hath deificacion,<br/>
+And cleped is the god of wit<br/>
+To suche as be the foles yit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other god, to whom thei soghte,<br/>
+Mercurie hihte, and him ne roghte<br/>
+What thing he stal, ne whom he slowh.<br/>
+Of Sorcerie he couthe ynowh,    940<br/>
+That whanne he wolde himself transforme,<br/>
+Fulofte time he tok the forme<br/>
+Of womman and his oghne lefte;<br/>
+So dede he wel the more thefte.<br/>
+A gret spekere in alle thinges<br/>
+He was also, and of lesinges<br/>
+An Auctour, that men wiste non<br/>
+An other such as he was on.<br/>
+And yit thei maden of this thief<br/>
+A god, which was unto hem lief,    950<br/>
+And clepede him in tho believes<br/>
+The god of Marchantz and of thieves.<br/>
+Bot yit a sterre upon the hevene<br/>
+He hath of the planetes sevene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Vulcanus, of whom I spak,<br/>
+He hadde a courbe upon the bak,<br/>
+And therto he was hepehalt:<br/>
+Of whom thou understonde schalt,<br/>
+He was a schrewe in al his youthe,<br/>
+And he non other vertu couthe    960<br/>
+Of craft to helpe himselve with,<br/>
+Bot only that he was a Smith<br/>
+With Jupiter, which in his forge<br/>
+Diverse thinges made him forge;<br/>
+So wot I noght for what desir<br/>
+Thei clepen him the god of fyr.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King of Cizile Ypolitus<br/>
+A Sone hadde, and Eolus<br/>
+He hihte, and of his fader grant<br/>
+He hield be weie of covenant    970<br/>
+The governance of every yle<br/>
+Which was longende unto Cizile,<br/>
+Of hem that fro the lond forein<br/>
+Leie open to the wynd al plein.<br/>
+And fro thilke iles to the londe<br/>
+Fulofte cam the wynd to honde:<br/>
+After the name of him forthi<br/>
+The wyndes cleped Eoli<br/>
+Tho were, and he the god of wynd.<br/>
+Lo nou, hou this believe is blynd!    980
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king of Crete Jupiter,<br/>
+The same which I spak of er,<br/>
+Unto his brother, which Neptune<br/>
+Was hote, it list him to comune<br/>
+Part of his good, so that be Schipe<br/>
+He mad him strong of the lordschipe<br/>
+Of al the See in tho parties;<br/>
+Wher that he wroghte his tyrannyes,<br/>
+And the strange yles al aboute<br/>
+He wan, that every man hath doute    990<br/>
+Upon his marche forto saile;<br/>
+For he anon hem wolde assaile<br/>
+And robbe what thing that thei ladden,<br/>
+His sauf conduit bot if thei hadden.<br/>
+Wherof the comun vois aros<br/>
+In every lond, that such a los<br/>
+He cawhte, al nere it worth a stre,<br/>
+That he was cleped of the See<br/>
+The god be name, and yit he is<br/>
+With hem that so believe amis.    1000<br/>
+This Neptune ek was thilke also,<br/>
+Which was the ferste foundour tho<br/>
+Of noble Troie, and he forthi<br/>
+Was wel the more lete by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The loresman of the Schepherdes,<br/>
+And ek of hem that ben netherdes,<br/>
+Was of Archade and hihte Pan:<br/>
+Of whom hath spoke many a man;<br/>
+For in the wode of Nonarcigne,<br/>
+Enclosed with the tres of Pigne,    1010<br/>
+And on the Mont of Parasie<br/>
+He hadde of bestes the baillie,<br/>
+And ek benethe in the valleie,<br/>
+Wher thilke rivere, as men seie,<br/>
+Which Ladon hihte, made his cours,<br/>
+He was the chief of governours<br/>
+Of hem that kepten tame bestes,<br/>
+Wherof thei maken yit the festes<br/>
+In the Cite Stinfalides.<br/>
+And forth withal yit natheles    1020<br/>
+He tawhte men the forthdrawinge<br/>
+Of bestaile, and ek the makinge<br/>
+Of Oxen, and of hors the same,<br/>
+Hou men hem scholde ryde and tame:<br/>
+Of foules ek, so as we finde,<br/>
+Ful many a soubtiel craft of kinde<br/>
+He fond, which noman knew tofore.<br/>
+Men dede him worschipe ek therfore,<br/>
+That he the ferste in thilke lond<br/>
+Was which the melodie fond    1030<br/>
+Of Riedes, whan thei weren ripe,<br/>
+With double pipes forto pipe;<br/>
+Therof he yaf the ferste lore,<br/>
+Til afterward men couthe more.<br/>
+To every craft for mannes helpe<br/>
+He hadde a redi wit to helpe<br/>
+Thurgh naturel experience:<br/>
+And thus the nyce reverence<br/>
+Of foles, whan that he was ded,<br/>
+The fot hath torned to the hed,    1040<br/>
+And clepen him god of nature,<br/>
+For so thei maden his figure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other god, so as thei fiele,<br/>
+Which Jupiter upon Samele<br/>
+Begat in his avouterie,<br/>
+Whom, forto hide his lecherie,<br/>
+That non therof schal take kepe,<br/>
+In a Montaigne forto kepe,<br/>
+Which Dyon hihte and was in Ynde,<br/>
+He sende, in bokes as I finde:    1050<br/>
+And he be name Bachus hihte,<br/>
+Which afterward, whan that he mihte,<br/>
+A wastour was, and al his rente<br/>
+In wyn and bordel he despente.<br/>
+Bot yit, al were he wonder badde,<br/>
+Among the Greks a name he hadde;<br/>
+Thei cleped him the god of wyn,<br/>
+And thus a glotoun was dyvyn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was yit Esculapius<br/>
+A godd in thilke time as thus.    1060<br/>
+His craft stod upon Surgerie,<br/>
+Bot for the lust of lecherie,<br/>
+That he to Daires dowhter drowh,<br/>
+It felle that Jupiter him slowh:<br/>
+And yit thei made him noght forthi<br/>
+A god, and was no cause why.<br/>
+In Rome he was long time also<br/>
+A god among the Romeins tho;<br/>
+For, as he seide, of his presence<br/>
+Ther was destruid a pestilence,    1070<br/>
+Whan thei to thyle of Delphos wente,<br/>
+And that Appollo with hem sente<br/>
+This Esculapius his Sone,<br/>
+Among the Romeins forto wone.<br/>
+And there he duelte for a while,<br/>
+Til afterward into that yle,<br/>
+Fro whenne he cam, ayein he torneth,<br/>
+Where al his lyf that he sojorneth<br/>
+Among the Greks, til that he deide.<br/>
+And thei upon him thanne leide    1080<br/>
+His name, and god of medicine<br/>
+He hatte after that ilke line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other god of Hercules<br/>
+Thei made, which was natheles<br/>
+A man, bot that he was so strong,<br/>
+In al this world that brod and long<br/>
+So myhti was noman as he.<br/>
+Merveiles tuelve in his degre,<br/>
+As it was couth in sondri londes,<br/>
+He dede with hise oghne hondes    1090<br/>
+Ayein geantz and Monstres bothe,<br/>
+The whiche horrible were and lothe,<br/>
+Bot he with strengthe hem overcam:<br/>
+Wherof so gret a pris he nam,<br/>
+That thei him clepe amonges alle<br/>
+The god of strengthe, and to him calle.<br/>
+And yit ther is no reson inne,<br/>
+For he a man was full of sinne,<br/>
+Which proved was upon his ende,<br/>
+For in a rage himself he brende;    1100<br/>
+And such a cruel mannes dede<br/>
+Acordeth nothing with godhede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thei hadde of goddes yit an other,<br/>
+Which Pluto hihte, and was the brother<br/>
+Of Jupiter, and he fro youthe<br/>
+With every word which cam to mouthe,<br/>
+Of eny thing whan he was wroth,<br/>
+He wolde swere his commun oth,<br/>
+Be Lethen and be Flegeton,<br/>
+Be Cochitum and Acheron,    1110<br/>
+The whiche, after the bokes telle,<br/>
+Ben the chief flodes of the helle:<br/>
+Be Segne and Stige he swor also,<br/>
+That ben the depe Pettes tuo<br/>
+Of helle the most principal.<br/>
+Pluto these othes overal<br/>
+Swor of his commun custummance,<br/>
+Til it befell upon a chance,<br/>
+That he for Jupiteres sake<br/>
+Unto the goddes let do make    1120<br/>
+A sacrifice, and for that dede<br/>
+On of the pettes for his mede<br/>
+In helle, of which I spak of er,<br/>
+Was granted him; and thus he ther<br/>
+Upon the fortune of this thing<br/>
+The name tok of helle king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, these goddes and wel mo<br/>
+Among the Greks thei hadden tho,<br/>
+And of goddesses manyon,<br/>
+Whos names thou schalt hiere anon,    1130<br/>
+And in what wise thei deceiven<br/>
+The foles whiche here feith receiven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So as Saturne is soverein<br/>
+Of false goddes, as thei sein,<br/>
+So is Sibeles of goddesses<br/>
+The Moder, whom withoute gesses<br/>
+The folk Payene honoure and serve,<br/>
+As thei the whiche hire lawe observe.<br/>
+Bot forto knowen upon this<br/>
+Fro when sche cam and what sche is,    1140<br/>
+Bethincia the contre hihte,<br/>
+Wher sche cam ferst to mannes sihte;<br/>
+And after was Saturnes wif,<br/>
+Be whom thre children in hire lif<br/>
+Sche bar, and thei were cleped tho<br/>
+Juno, Neptunus and Pluto,<br/>
+The whiche of nyce fantasie<br/>
+The poeple wolde deifie.<br/>
+And for hire children were so,<br/>
+Sibeles thanne was also    1150<br/>
+Mad a goddesse, and thei hire calle<br/>
+The moder of the goddes alle.<br/>
+So was that name bore forth,<br/>
+And yit the cause is litel worth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A vois unto Saturne tolde<br/>
+Hou that his oghne Sone him scholde<br/>
+Out of his regne putte aweie;<br/>
+And he be cause of thilke weie,<br/>
+That him was schape such a fate,<br/>
+Sibele his wif began to hate    1160<br/>
+And ek hire progenie bothe.<br/>
+And thus, whil that thei were wrothe,<br/>
+Be Philerem upon a dai<br/>
+In his avouterie he lai,<br/>
+On whom he Jupiter begat;<br/>
+And thilke child was after that<br/>
+Which wroghte al that was prophecied,<br/>
+As it tofore is specefied:<br/>
+So that whan Jupiter of Crete<br/>
+Was king, a wif unto him mete    1170<br/>
+The Dowhter of Sibele he tok,<br/>
+And that was Juno, seith the bok.<br/>
+Of his deificacion<br/>
+After the false oppinion,<br/>
+That have I told, so as thei meene;<br/>
+And for this Juno was the queene<br/>
+Of Jupiter and Soster eke,<br/>
+The foles unto hire sieke,<br/>
+And sein that sche is the goddesse<br/>
+Of Regnes bothe and of richesse:    1180<br/>
+And ek sche, as thei understonde,<br/>
+The water Nimphes hath in honde<br/>
+To leden at hire oghne heste;<br/>
+And whan hir list the Sky tempeste,<br/>
+The reinbowe is hir Messager.<br/>
+Lo, which a misbelieve is hier!<br/>
+That sche goddesse is of the Sky<br/>
+I wot non other cause why.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other goddesse is Minerve,<br/>
+To whom the Greks obeie and serve:    1190<br/>
+And sche was nyh the grete lay<br/>
+Of Triton founde, wher sche lay<br/>
+A child forcast, bot what sche was<br/>
+Ther knew noman the sothe cas.<br/>
+Bot in Aufrique sche was leid<br/>
+In the manere as I have seid,<br/>
+And caried fro that ilke place<br/>
+Into an Yle fer in Trace,<br/>
+The which Palene thanne hihte,<br/>
+Wher a Norrice hir kepte and dihte.    1200<br/>
+And after, for sche was so wys<br/>
+That sche fond ferst in hire avis<br/>
+The cloth makinge of wolle and lyn,<br/>
+Men seiden that sche was divin,<br/>
+And the goddesse of Sapience<br/>
+Thei clepen hire in that credence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the goddesse which Pallas<br/>
+Is cleped sondri speche was.<br/>
+On seith hire fader was Pallant,<br/>
+Which in his time was geant,    1210<br/>
+A cruel man, a bataillous:<br/>
+An other seith hou in his hous<br/>
+Sche was the cause why he deide.<br/>
+And of this Pallas some ek seide<br/>
+That sche was Martes wif; and so<br/>
+Among the men that weren tho<br/>
+Of misbelieve in the riote<br/>
+The goddesse of batailles hote<br/>
+She was, and yit sche berth the name.<br/>
+Now loke, hou they be forto blame.    1220
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saturnus after his exil<br/>
+Fro Crete cam in gret peril<br/>
+Into the londes of Ytaile,<br/>
+And ther he dede gret mervaile,<br/>
+Wherof his name duelleth yit.<br/>
+For he fond of his oghne wit<br/>
+The ferste craft of plowh tilinge,<br/>
+Of Eringe and of corn sowinge,<br/>
+And how men scholden sette vines<br/>
+And of the grapes make wynes;    1230<br/>
+Al this he tawhte, and it fell so,<br/>
+His wif, the which cam with him tho,<br/>
+Was cleped Cereres be name,<br/>
+And for sche tawhte also the same,<br/>
+And was his wif that ilke throwe,<br/>
+As it was to the poeple knowe,<br/>
+Thei made of Ceres a goddesse,<br/>
+In whom here tilthe yit thei blesse,<br/>
+And sein that Tricolonius<br/>
+Hire Sone goth amonges ous    1240<br/>
+And makth the corn good chep or dere,<br/>
+Riht as hire list fro yer to yeere;<br/>
+So that this wif be cause of this<br/>
+Goddesse of Cornes cleped is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Jupiter, which his likinge<br/>
+Whilom fulfelde in alle thinge,<br/>
+So priveliche aboute he ladde<br/>
+His lust, that he his wille hadde<br/>
+Of Latona, and on hire that<br/>
+Diane his dowhter he begat    1250<br/>
+Unknowen of his wif Juno.<br/>
+And afterward sche knew it so,<br/>
+That Latona for drede fledde<br/>
+Into an Ile, wher sche hedde<br/>
+Hire wombe, which of childe aros.<br/>
+Thilke yle cleped was Delos;<br/>
+In which Diana was forthbroght,<br/>
+And kept so that hire lacketh noght.<br/>
+And after, whan sche was of Age,<br/>
+Sche tok non hiede of mariage,    1260<br/>
+Bot out of mannes compaignie<br/>
+Sche tok hire al to venerie<br/>
+In forest and in wildernesse<br/>
+For ther was al hire besinesse<br/>
+Be daie and ek be nyhtes tyde<br/>
+With arwes brode under the side<br/>
+And bowe in honde, of which sche slowh<br/>
+And tok al that hir liste ynowh<br/>
+Of bestes whiche ben chacable:<br/>
+Wherof the Cronique of this fable    1270<br/>
+Seith that the gentils most of alle<br/>
+Worschipen hire and to hire calle,<br/>
+And the goddesse of hihe helles,<br/>
+Of grene trees, of freisshe welles,<br/>
+They clepen hire in that believe,<br/>
+Which that no reson mai achieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Proserpina, which dowhter was<br/>
+Of Cereres, befell this cas:<br/>
+Whil sche was duellinge in Cizile,<br/>
+Hire moder in that ilke while    1280<br/>
+Upon hire blessinge and hire heste<br/>
+Bad that sche scholde ben honeste,<br/>
+And lerne forto weve and spinne,<br/>
+And duelle at hom and kepe hire inne.<br/>
+Bot sche caste al that lore aweie,<br/>
+And as sche wente hir out to pleie,<br/>
+To gadre floures in a pleine,<br/>
+And that was under the monteine<br/>
+Of Ethna, fell the same tyde<br/>
+That Pluto cam that weie ryde,    1290<br/>
+And sodeinly, er sche was war,<br/>
+He tok hire up into his char.<br/>
+And as thei riden in the field,<br/>
+Hire grete beaute he behield,<br/>
+Which was so plesant in his ije,<br/>
+That forto holde in compainie<br/>
+He weddeth hire and hield hire so<br/>
+To ben his wif for everemo.<br/>
+And as thou hast tofore herd telle<br/>
+Hou he was cleped god of helle,    1300<br/>
+So is sche cleped the goddesse<br/>
+Be cause of him, ne mor ne lesse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus, mi Sone, as I thee tolde,<br/>
+The Greks whilom be daies olde<br/>
+Here goddes hadde in sondri wise,<br/>
+And thurgh the lore of here aprise<br/>
+The Romeins hielden ek the same.<br/>
+And in the worschipe of here name<br/>
+To every godd in special<br/>
+Thei made a temple forth withal,    1310<br/>
+And ech of hem his yeeres dai<br/>
+Attitled hadde; and of arai<br/>
+The temples weren thanne ordeigned,<br/>
+And ek the poeple was constreigned<br/>
+To come and don here sacrifice;<br/>
+The Prestes ek in here office<br/>
+Solempne maden thilke festes.<br/>
+And thus the Greks lich to the bestes<br/>
+The men in stede of god honoure,<br/>
+Whiche mihten noght hemself socoure,    1320<br/>
+Whil that thei were alyve hiere.<br/>
+And over this, as thou schalt hiere,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Greks fulfild of fantasie<br/>
+Sein ek that of the helles hihe<br/>
+The goddes ben in special,<br/>
+Bot of here name in general<br/>
+Thei hoten alle Satiri.<br/>
+Ther ben of Nimphes proprely<br/>
+In the believe of hem also:<br/>
+Oreades thei seiden tho    1330<br/>
+Attitled ben to the monteines;<br/>
+And for the wodes in demeynes<br/>
+To kepe, tho ben Driades;<br/>
+Of freisshe welles Naiades;<br/>
+And of the Nimphes of the See<br/>
+I finde a tale in proprete,<br/>
+Hou Dorus whilom king of Grece,<br/>
+Which hadde of infortune a piece,&mdash;<br/>
+His wif forth with hire dowhtres alle,<br/>
+So as the happes scholden falle,    1340<br/>
+With many a gentil womman there<br/>
+Dreint in the salte See thei were:<br/>
+Wherof the Greks that time seiden,<br/>
+And such a name upon hem leiden,<br/>
+Nereïdes that thei ben hote,<br/>
+The Nimphes whiche that thei note<br/>
+To regne upon the stremes salte.<br/>
+Lo now, if this believe halte!<br/>
+Bot of the Nimphes as thei telle,<br/>
+In every place wher thei duelle    1350<br/>
+Thei ben al redi obeissant<br/>
+As damoiselles entendant<br/>
+To the goddesses, whos servise<br/>
+Thei mote obeie in alle wise;<br/>
+Wherof the Greks to hem beseke<br/>
+With tho that ben goddesses eke,<br/>
+And have in hem a gret credence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yit withoute experience<br/>
+Salve only of illusion,<br/>
+Which was to hem dampnacion,    1360<br/>
+For men also that were dede<br/>
+Thei hadden goddes, as I rede,<br/>
+And tho be name Manes hihten,<br/>
+To whom ful gret honour thei dihten,<br/>
+So as the Grekes lawe seith,<br/>
+Which was ayein the rihte feith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus have I told a gret partie;<br/>
+Bot al the hole progenie<br/>
+Of goddes in that ilke time<br/>
+To long it were forto rime.    1370<br/>
+Bot yit of that which thou hast herd,<br/>
+Of misbelieve hou it hath ferd,<br/>
+Ther is a gret diversite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, riht so thenketh me.<br/>
+Bot yit o thing I you beseche,<br/>
+Which stant in alle mennes speche,<br/>
+The godd and the goddesse of love,<br/>
+Of whom ye nothing hier above<br/>
+Have told, ne spoken of her fare,<br/>
+That ye me wolden now declare    1380<br/>
+Hou thei ferst comen to that name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I have it left for schame,<br/>
+Be cause I am here oghne Prest;<br/>
+Bot for thei stonden nyh thi brest<br/>
+Upon the schrifte of thi matiere,<br/>
+Thou schalt of hem the sothe hiere:<br/>
+And understond nou wel the cas.<br/>
+Venus Saturnes dowhter was,<br/>
+Which alle danger putte aweie<br/>
+Of love, and fond to lust a weie;    1390<br/>
+So that of hire in sondri place<br/>
+Diverse men felle into grace,<br/>
+And such a lusti lif sche ladde,<br/>
+That sche diverse children hadde,<br/>
+Nou on be this, nou on be that.<br/>
+Of hire it was that Mars beyat<br/>
+A child, which cleped was Armene;<br/>
+Of hire also cam Andragene,<br/>
+To whom Mercurie fader was:<br/>
+Anchises begat Eneas    1400<br/>
+Of hire also, and Ericon<br/>
+Biten begat, and therupon,<br/>
+Whan that sche sih ther was non other,<br/>
+Be Jupiter hire oghne brother<br/>
+Sche lay, and he begat Cupide.<br/>
+And thilke Sone upon a tyde,<br/>
+Whan he was come unto his Age,<br/>
+He hadde a wonder fair visage,<br/>
+And fond his Moder amourous,<br/>
+And he was also lecherous:    1410<br/>
+So whan thei weren bothe al one,<br/>
+As he which yhen hadde none<br/>
+To se reson, his Moder kiste;<br/>
+And sche also, that nothing wiste<br/>
+Bot that which unto lust belongeth,<br/>
+To ben hire love him underfongeth.<br/>
+Thus was he blind, and sche unwys:<br/>
+Bot natheles this cause it is,<br/>
+Why Cupide is the god of love,<br/>
+For he his moder dorste love.    1420<br/>
+And sche, which thoghte hire lustes fonde,<br/>
+Diverse loves tok in honde,<br/>
+Wel mo thanne I the tolde hiere:<br/>
+And for sche wolde hirselve skiere,<br/>
+Sche made comun that desport,<br/>
+And sette a lawe of such a port,<br/>
+That every womman mihte take<br/>
+What man hire liste, and noght forsake<br/>
+To ben als comun as sche wolde.<br/>
+Sche was the ferste also which tolde    1430<br/>
+That wommen scholde here bodi selle;<br/>
+Semiramis, so as men telle,<br/>
+Of Venus kepte thilke aprise,<br/>
+And so dede in the same wise<br/>
+Of Rome faire Neabole,<br/>
+Which liste hire bodi to rigole;<br/>
+Sche was to every man felawe,<br/>
+And hild the lust of thilke lawe,<br/>
+Which Venus of hirself began;<br/>
+Wherof that sche the name wan,    1440<br/>
+Why men hire clepen the goddesse<br/>
+Of love and ek of gentilesse,<br/>
+Of worldes lust and of plesance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Se nou the foule mescreance<br/>
+Of Greks in thilke time tho,<br/>
+Whan Venus tok hire name so.<br/>
+Ther was no cause under the Mone<br/>
+Of which thei hadden tho to done,<br/>
+Of wel or wo wher so it was,<br/>
+That thei ne token in that cas    1450<br/>
+A god to helpe or a goddesse.<br/>
+Wherof, to take mi witnesse,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king of Bragmans Dindimus<br/>
+Wrot unto Alisandre thus:<br/>
+In blaminge of the Grekes feith<br/>
+And of the misbelieve, he seith<br/>
+How thei for every membre hadden<br/>
+A sondri god, to whom thei spradden<br/>
+Here armes, and of help besoghten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Minerve for the hed thei soghten,    1460<br/>
+For sche was wys, and of a man<br/>
+The wit and reson which he can<br/>
+Is in the celles of the brayn,<br/>
+Wherof thei made hire soverain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mercurie, which was in his dawes<br/>
+A gret spekere of false lawes,<br/>
+On him the kepinge of the tunge<br/>
+Thei leide, whan thei spieke or sunge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Bachus was a glotoun eke,<br/>
+Him for the throte thei beseke,    1470<br/>
+That he it wolde waisshen ofte<br/>
+With swote drinkes and with softe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The god of schuldres and of armes<br/>
+Was Hercules; for he in armes<br/>
+The myhtieste was to fihte,<br/>
+To him tho Limes they behihte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The god whom that thei clepen Mart<br/>
+The brest to kepe hath for his part,<br/>
+Forth with the herte, in his ymage<br/>
+That he adresce the corage.    1480
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And of the galle the goddesse,<br/>
+For sche was full of hastifesse<br/>
+Of wraththe and liht to grieve also,<br/>
+Thei made and seide it was Juno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cupide, which the brond afyre<br/>
+Bar in his hond, he was the Sire<br/>
+Of the Stomak, which builleth evere,<br/>
+Wherof the lustes ben the levere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the goddesse Cereres,<br/>
+Which of the corn yaf hire encress    1490<br/>
+Upon the feith that tho was take,<br/>
+The wombes cure was betake;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Venus thurgh the Lecherie,<br/>
+For which that thei hire deifie,<br/>
+Sche kept al doun the remenant<br/>
+To thilke office appourtenant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was dispers in sondri wise<br/>
+The misbelieve, as I devise,<br/>
+With many an ymage of entaile,<br/>
+Of suche as myhte hem noght availe;    1500<br/>
+For thei withoute lyves chiere<br/>
+Unmyhti ben to se or hiere<br/>
+Or speke or do or elles fiele;<br/>
+And yit the foles to hem knele,<br/>
+Which is here oghne handes werk.<br/>
+Ha lord, hou this believe is derk,<br/>
+And fer fro resonable wit!<br/>
+And natheles thei don it yit:<br/>
+That was to day a ragged tre,<br/>
+To morwe upon his majeste    1510<br/>
+Stant in the temple wel besein.<br/>
+How myhte a mannes resoun sein<br/>
+That such a Stock mai helpe or grieve?<br/>
+Bot thei that ben of such believe<br/>
+And unto suche goddes calle,<br/>
+It schal to hem riht so befalle,<br/>
+And failen ate moste nede.<br/>
+Bot if thee list to taken hiede<br/>
+And of the ferste ymage wite,<br/>
+Petornius therof hath write    1520<br/>
+And ek Nigargorus also;<br/>
+And thei afferme and write so,<br/>
+That Promotheus was tofore<br/>
+And fond the ferste craft therfore,<br/>
+And Cirophanes, as thei telle,<br/>
+Thurgh conseil which was take in helle,<br/>
+In remembrance of his lignage<br/>
+Let setten up the ferste ymage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Cirophanes seith the bok,<br/>
+That he for sorwe, which he tok    1530<br/>
+Of that he sih his Sone ded,<br/>
+Of confort knew non other red,<br/>
+Bot let do make in remembrance<br/>
+A faire ymage of his semblance<br/>
+And sette it in the market place,<br/>
+Which openly tofore his face<br/>
+Stod every dai to don him ese.<br/>
+And thei that thanne wolden plese<br/>
+The fader, scholden it obeie,<br/>
+Whan that they comen thilke weie.    1540
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And of Ninus king of Assire<br/>
+I rede hou that in his empire<br/>
+He was next after the secounde<br/>
+Of hem that ferst ymages founde.<br/>
+For he riht in semblable cas<br/>
+Of Belus, which his fader was<br/>
+Fro Nembroth in the rihte line,<br/>
+Let make of gold and Stones fine<br/>
+A precious ymage riche<br/>
+After his fader evene liche;    1550<br/>
+And therupon a lawe he sette,<br/>
+That every man of pure dette<br/>
+With sacrifice and with truage<br/>
+Honoure scholde thilke ymage:<br/>
+So that withinne time it fell,<br/>
+Of Belus cam the name of Bel,<br/>
+Of Bel cam Belzebub, and so<br/>
+The misbelieve wente tho.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde ymage next to this<br/>
+Was, whan the king of Grece Apis    1560<br/>
+Was ded, thei maden a figure<br/>
+In resemblance of his stature.<br/>
+Of this king Apis seith the bok<br/>
+That Serapis his name tok,<br/>
+In whom thurgh long continuance<br/>
+Of misbelieve a gret creance<br/>
+Thei hadden, and the reverence<br/>
+Of Sacrifice and of encence<br/>
+To him thei made: and as thei telle,<br/>
+Among the wondres that befelle,    1570<br/>
+Whan Alisandre fro Candace<br/>
+Cam ridende, in a wilde place<br/>
+Undur an hull a Cave he fond;<br/>
+And Candalus, which in that lond<br/>
+Was bore, and was Candaces Sone,<br/>
+Him tolde hou that of commun wone<br/>
+The goddes were in thilke cave.<br/>
+And he, that wolde assaie and have<br/>
+A knowlechinge if it be soth,<br/>
+Liht of his hors and in he goth,    1580<br/>
+And fond therinne that he soghte:<br/>
+For thurgh the fendes sleihte him thoghte,<br/>
+Amonges othre goddes mo<br/>
+That Serapis spak to him tho,<br/>
+Whom he sih there in gret arrai.<br/>
+And thus the fend fro dai to dai<br/>
+The worschipe of ydolatrie<br/>
+Drowh forth upon the fantasie<br/>
+Of hem that weren thanne blinde<br/>
+And couthen noght the trouthe finde.    1590
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus hast thou herd in what degre<br/>
+Of Grece, Egipte and of Caldee<br/>
+The misbelieves whilom stode;<br/>
+And hou so that thei be noght goode<br/>
+Ne trewe, yit thei sprungen oute,<br/>
+Wherof the wyde world aboute<br/>
+His part of misbelieve tok.<br/>
+Til so befell, as seith the bok,<br/>
+That god a poeple for himselve<br/>
+Hath chose of the lignages tuelve,    1600<br/>
+Wherof the sothe redely,<br/>
+As it is write in Genesi,<br/>
+I thenke telle in such a wise<br/>
+That it schal be to thin apprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the flod, fro which Noë<br/>
+Was sauf, the world in his degre<br/>
+Was mad, as who seith, newe ayein,<br/>
+Of flour, of fruit, of gras, of grein,<br/>
+Of beste, of bridd and of mankinde,<br/>
+Which evere hath be to god unkinde:    1610<br/>
+For noght withstondende al the fare,<br/>
+Of that this world was mad so bare<br/>
+And afterward it was restored,<br/>
+Among the men was nothing mored<br/>
+Towardes god of good lyvynge,<br/>
+Bot al was torned to likinge<br/>
+After the fleissh, so that foryete<br/>
+Was he which yaf hem lif and mete,<br/>
+Of hevene and Erthe creatour.<br/>
+And thus cam forth the grete errour,    1620<br/>
+That thei the hihe god ne knewe,<br/>
+Bot maden othre goddes newe,<br/>
+As thou hast herd me seid tofore:<br/>
+Ther was noman that time bore,<br/>
+That he ne hadde after his chois<br/>
+A god, to whom he yaf his vois.<br/>
+Wherof the misbelieve cam<br/>
+Into the time of Habraham:<br/>
+Bot he fond out the rihte weie,<br/>
+Hou only that men scholde obeie    1630<br/>
+The hihe god, which weldeth al,<br/>
+And evere hath don and evere schal,<br/>
+In hevene, in Erthe and ek in helle;<br/>
+Ther is no tunge his miht mai telle.<br/>
+This Patriarch to his lignage<br/>
+Forbad, that thei to non ymage<br/>
+Encline scholde in none wise,<br/>
+Bot here offrende and sacrifise<br/>
+With al the hole hertes love<br/>
+Unto the mihti god above    1640<br/>
+Thei scholden yive and to no mo:<br/>
+And thus in thilke time tho<br/>
+Began the Secte upon this Erthe,<br/>
+Which of believes was the ferthe.<br/>
+Of rihtwisnesse it was conceived,<br/>
+So moste it nedes be received<br/>
+Of him that alle riht is inne,<br/>
+The hihe god, which wolde winne<br/>
+A poeple unto his oghne feith.<br/>
+On Habraham the ground he leith,    1650<br/>
+And made him forto multeplie<br/>
+Into so gret a progenie,<br/>
+That thei Egipte al overspradde.<br/>
+Bot Pharao with wrong hem ladde<br/>
+In servitute ayein the pes,<br/>
+Til god let sende Moises<br/>
+To make the deliverance;<br/>
+And for his poeple gret vengance<br/>
+He tok, which is to hiere a wonder.<br/>
+The king was slain, the lond put under,    1660<br/>
+God bad the rede See divide,<br/>
+Which stod upriht on either side<br/>
+And yaf unto his poeple a weie,<br/>
+That thei on fote it passe dreie<br/>
+And gon so forth into desert:<br/>
+Wher forto kepe hem in covert,<br/>
+The daies, whan the Sonne brente,<br/>
+A large cloude hem overwente,<br/>
+And forto wissen hem be nyhte,<br/>
+A firy Piler hem alyhte.    1670<br/>
+And whan that thei for hunger pleigne,<br/>
+The myhti god began to reyne<br/>
+Manna fro hevene doun to grounde,<br/>
+Wherof that ech of hem hath founde<br/>
+His fode, such riht as him liste;<br/>
+And for thei scholde upon him triste,<br/>
+Riht as who sette a tonne abroche,<br/>
+He percede the harde roche,<br/>
+And sprong out water al at wille,<br/>
+That man and beste hath drunke his fille:    1680<br/>
+And afterward he yaf the lawe<br/>
+To Moises, that hem withdrawe<br/>
+Thei scholden noght fro that he bad.<br/>
+And in this wise thei be lad,<br/>
+Til thei toke in possession<br/>
+The londes of promission,<br/>
+Wher that Caleph and Josuë<br/>
+The Marches upon such degre<br/>
+Departen, after the lignage<br/>
+That ech of hem as Heritage    1690<br/>
+His porpartie hath underfonge.<br/>
+And thus stod this believe longe,<br/>
+Which of prophetes was governed;<br/>
+And thei hadde ek the poeple lerned<br/>
+Of gret honour that scholde hem falle;<br/>
+Bot ate moste nede of alle<br/>
+Thei faileden, whan Crist was bore.<br/>
+Bot hou that thei here feith have bore,<br/>
+It nedeth noght to tellen al,<br/>
+The matiere is so general:    1700<br/>
+Whan Lucifer was best in hevene<br/>
+And oghte moste have stonde in evene,<br/>
+Towardes god he tok debat;<br/>
+And for that he was obstinat,<br/>
+And wolde noght to trouthe encline,<br/>
+He fell for evere into ruine:<br/>
+And Adam ek in Paradis,<br/>
+Whan he stod most in al his pris<br/>
+After thastat of Innocence,<br/>
+Ayein the god brak his defence    1710<br/>
+And fell out of his place aweie:<br/>
+And riht be such a maner weie<br/>
+The Jwes in here beste plit,<br/>
+Whan that thei scholden most parfit<br/>
+Have stonde upon the prophecie,<br/>
+Tho fellen thei to most folie,<br/>
+And him which was fro hevene come,<br/>
+And of a Maide his fleissh hath nome,<br/>
+And was among hem bore and fedd,<br/>
+As men that wolden noght be spedd    1720<br/>
+Of goddes Sone, with o vois<br/>
+Thei hinge and slowhe upon the crois.<br/>
+Wherof the parfit of here lawe<br/>
+Fro thanne forth hem was withdrawe,<br/>
+So that thei stonde of no merit,<br/>
+Bot in truage as folk soubgit<br/>
+Withoute proprete of place<br/>
+Thei liven out of goddes grace,<br/>
+Dispers in alle londes oute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the feith is come aboute,    1730<br/>
+That whilom in the Jewes stod,<br/>
+Which is noght parfihtliche good.<br/>
+To speke as it is nou befalle,<br/>
+Ther is a feith aboven alle,<br/>
+In which the trouthe is comprehended,<br/>
+Wherof that we ben alle amended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hihe almyhti majeste,<br/>
+Of rihtwisnesse and of pite,<br/>
+The Sinne which that Adam wroghte,<br/>
+Whan he sih time, ayein he boghte,    1740<br/>
+And sende his Sone fro the hevene<br/>
+To sette mannes Soule in evene,<br/>
+Which thanne was so sore falle<br/>
+Upon the point which was befalle,<br/>
+That he ne mihte himself arise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gregoire seith in his aprise,<br/>
+It helpeth noght a man be bore,<br/>
+If goddes Sone were unbore;<br/>
+For thanne thurgh the ferste Sinne,<br/>
+Which Adam whilom broghte ous inne,    1750<br/>
+Ther scholden alle men be lost;<br/>
+Bot Crist restoreth thilke lost,<br/>
+And boghte it with his fleissh and blod.<br/>
+And if we thenken hou it stod<br/>
+Of thilke rancoun which he payde,<br/>
+As seint Gregoire it wrot and sayde,<br/>
+Al was behovely to the man:<br/>
+For that wherof his wo began<br/>
+Was after cause of al his welthe,<br/>
+Whan he which is the welle of helthe,    1760<br/>
+The hihe creatour of lif,<br/>
+Upon the nede of such a strif<br/>
+So wolde for his creature<br/>
+Take on himself the forsfaiture<br/>
+And soffre for the mannes sake.<br/>
+Thus mai no reson wel forsake<br/>
+That thilke Senne original<br/>
+Ne was the cause in special<br/>
+Of mannes worschipe ate laste,<br/>
+Which schal withouten ende laste.    1770<br/>
+For be that cause the godhede<br/>
+Assembled was to the manhede<br/>
+In the virgine, where he nom<br/>
+Oure fleissh and verai man becom<br/>
+Of bodely fraternite;<br/>
+Wherof the man in his degre<br/>
+Stant more worth, as I have told,<br/>
+Than he stod erst be manyfold,<br/>
+Thurgh baptesme of the newe lawe,<br/>
+Of which Crist lord is and felawe.    1780
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the hihe goddes myht,<br/>
+Which was in the virgine alyht,<br/>
+The mannes Soule hath reconsiled,<br/>
+Which hadde longe ben exiled.<br/>
+So stant the feith upon believe,<br/>
+Withoute which mai non achieve<br/>
+To gete him Paradis ayein:<br/>
+Bot this believe is so certein,<br/>
+So full of grace and of vertu,<br/>
+That what man clepeth to Jhesu    1790<br/>
+In clene lif forthwith good dede,<br/>
+He mai noght faile of hevene mede,<br/>
+Which taken hath the rihte feith;<br/>
+For elles, as the gospel seith,<br/>
+Salvacion ther mai be non.<br/>
+And forto preche therupon<br/>
+Crist bad to hise Apostles alle,<br/>
+The whos pouer as nou is falle<br/>
+On ous that ben of holi cherche,<br/>
+If we the goode dedes werche;    1800<br/>
+For feith only sufficeth noght,<br/>
+Bot if good dede also be wroght.<br/>
+Now were it good that thou forthi,<br/>
+Which thurgh baptesme proprely<br/>
+Art unto Cristes feith professed,<br/>
+Be war that thou be noght oppressed<br/>
+With Anticristes lollardie.<br/>
+For as the Jwes prophecie<br/>
+Was set of god for avantage,<br/>
+Riht so this newe tapinage    1810<br/>
+Of lollardie goth aboute<br/>
+To sette Cristes feith in doute.<br/>
+The seintz that weren ous tofore,<br/>
+Be whom the feith was ferst upbore,<br/>
+That holi cherche stod relieved,<br/>
+Thei oghten betre be believed<br/>
+Than these, whiche that men knowe<br/>
+Noght holy, thogh thei feigne and blowe<br/>
+Here lollardie in mennes Ere.<br/>
+Bot if thou wolt live out of fere,    1820<br/>
+Such newe lore, I rede, eschuie,<br/>
+And hold forth riht the weie and suie,<br/>
+As thine Ancestres dede er this:<br/>
+So schalt thou noght believe amis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crist wroghte ferst and after tawhte,<br/>
+So that the dede his word arawhte;<br/>
+He yaf ensample in his persone,<br/>
+And we the wordes have al one,<br/>
+Lich to the Tree with leves grene,<br/>
+Upon the which no fruit is sene.    1830
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Priest Thoas, which of Minerve<br/>
+The temple hadde forto serve,<br/>
+And the Palladion of Troie<br/>
+Kepte under keie, for monoie,<br/>
+Of Anthenor which he hath nome,<br/>
+Hath soffred Anthenor to come<br/>
+And the Palladion to stele,<br/>
+Wherof the worschipe and the wele<br/>
+Of the Troiens was overthrowe.<br/>
+Bot Thoas at the same throwe,    1840<br/>
+Whan Anthenor this Juel tok,<br/>
+Wynkende caste awei his lok<br/>
+For a deceipte and for a wyle:<br/>
+As he that scholde himself beguile,<br/>
+He hidde his yhen fro the sihte,<br/>
+And wende wel that he so mihte<br/>
+Excuse his false conscience.<br/>
+I wot noght if thilke evidence<br/>
+Nou at this time in here estatz<br/>
+Excuse mihte the Prelatz,    1850<br/>
+Knowende hou that the feith discresceth<br/>
+And alle moral vertu cesseth,<br/>
+Wherof that thei the keies bere,<br/>
+Bot yit hem liketh noght to stere<br/>
+Here gostliche yhe forto se<br/>
+The world in his adversite;<br/>
+Thei wol no labour undertake<br/>
+To kepe that hem is betake.<br/>
+Crist deide himselve for the feith,<br/>
+Bot nou our feerfull prelat seith,    1860<br/>
+“The lif is suete,” and that he kepeth,<br/>
+So that the feith unholpe slepeth,<br/>
+And thei unto here ese entenden<br/>
+And in here lust her lif despenden,<br/>
+And every man do what him list.<br/>
+Thus stant this world fulfild of Mist,<br/>
+That noman seth the rihte weie:<br/>
+The wardes of the cherche keie<br/>
+Thurgh mishandlinge ben myswreynt,<br/>
+The worldes wawe hath welnyh dreynt    1870<br/>
+The Schip which Peter hath to stiere,<br/>
+The forme is kept, bot the matiere<br/>
+Transformed is in other wise.<br/>
+Bot if thei weren gostli wise,<br/>
+And that the Prelatz weren goode,<br/>
+As thei be olde daies stode,<br/>
+It were thanne litel nede<br/>
+Among the men to taken hiede<br/>
+Of that thei hieren Pseudo telle,<br/>
+Which nou is come forto duelle,    1880<br/>
+To sowe cokkel with the corn,<br/>
+So that the tilthe is nyh forlorn,<br/>
+Which Crist sew ferst his oghne hond.<br/>
+Nou stant the cockel in the lond,<br/>
+Wher stod whilom the goode grein,<br/>
+For the Prelatz nou, as men sein,<br/>
+Forslowthen that thei scholden tile.<br/>
+And that I trowe be the skile,<br/>
+Whan ther is lacke in hem above,<br/>
+The poeple is stranged to the love    1890<br/>
+Of trouthe, in cause of ignorance;<br/>
+For wher ther is no pourveance<br/>
+Of liht, men erren in the derke.<br/>
+Bot if the Prelatz wolden werke<br/>
+Upon the feith which thei ous teche,<br/>
+Men scholden noght here weie seche<br/>
+Withoute liht, as now is used:<br/>
+Men se the charge aldai refused,<br/>
+Which holi cherche hath undertake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot who that wolde ensample take,    1900<br/>
+Gregoire upon his Omelie<br/>
+Ayein the Slouthe of Prelacie<br/>
+Compleigneth him, and thus he seith:<br/>
+“Whan Peter, fader of the feith,<br/>
+At domesdai schal with him bringe<br/>
+Judeam, which thurgh his prechinge<br/>
+He wan, and Andrew with Achaie<br/>
+Schal come his dette forto paie,<br/>
+And Thomas ek with his beyete<br/>
+Of Ynde, and Poul the routes grete    1910<br/>
+Of sondri londes schal presente,<br/>
+And we fulfild of lond and rente,<br/>
+Which of this world we holden hiere,<br/>
+With voide handes schul appiere,<br/>
+Touchende oure cure spirital,<br/>
+Which is our charge in special,<br/>
+I not what thing it mai amonte<br/>
+Upon thilke ende of oure accompte,<br/>
+Wher Crist himself is Auditour,<br/>
+Which takth non hiede of vein honour.”    1920<br/>
+Thoffice of the Chancellerie<br/>
+Or of the kinges Tresorie<br/>
+Ne for the writ ne for the taille<br/>
+To warant mai noght thanne availe;<br/>
+The world, which nou so wel we trowe,<br/>
+Schal make ous thanne bot a mowe:<br/>
+So passe we withoute mede,<br/>
+That we non otherwise spede,<br/>
+Bot as we rede that he spedde,<br/>
+The which his lordes besant hedde    1930<br/>
+And therupon gat non encress.<br/>
+Bot at this time natheles,<br/>
+What other man his thonk deserve,<br/>
+The world so lusti is to serve,<br/>
+That we with him ben all acorded,<br/>
+And that is wist and wel recorded<br/>
+Thurghout this Erthe in alle londes<br/>
+Let knyhtes winne with here hondes,<br/>
+For oure tunge schal be stille<br/>
+And stonde upon the fleisshes wille.    1940<br/>
+It were a travail forto preche<br/>
+The feith of Crist, as forto teche<br/>
+The folk Paiene, it wol noght be;<br/>
+Bot every Prelat holde his See<br/>
+With al such ese as he mai gete<br/>
+Of lusti drinke and lusti mete,<br/>
+Wherof the bodi fat and full<br/>
+Is unto gostli labour dull<br/>
+And slowh to handle thilke plowh.<br/>
+Bot elles we ben swifte ynowh    1950<br/>
+Toward the worldes Avarice;<br/>
+And that is as a sacrifice,<br/>
+Which, after that thapostel seith,<br/>
+Is openly ayein the feith<br/>
+Unto thidoles yove and granted:<br/>
+Bot natheles it is nou haunted,<br/>
+And vertu changed into vice,<br/>
+So that largesce is Avarice,<br/>
+In whos chapitre now we trete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, this matiere is bete    1960<br/>
+So fer, that evere whil I live<br/>
+I schal the betre hede yive<br/>
+Unto miself be many weie:<br/>
+Bot over this nou wolde I preie<br/>
+To wite what the branches are<br/>
+Of Avarice, and hou thei fare<br/>
+Als wel in love as otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, and I thee schal devise<br/>
+In such a manere as thei stonde,<br/>
+So that thou schalt hem understonde.    1970
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dame Avarice is noght soleine,<br/>
+Which is of gold the Capiteine;<br/>
+Bot of hir Court in sondri wise<br/>
+After the Scole of hire aprise<br/>
+Sche hath of Servantz manyon,<br/>
+Wherof that Covoitise is on;<br/>
+Which goth the large world aboute,<br/>
+To seche thavantages oute,<br/>
+Wher that he mai the profit winne<br/>
+To Avarice, and bringth it inne.    1980<br/>
+That on hald and that other draweth,<br/>
+Ther is no day which hem bedaweth,<br/>
+No mor the Sonne than the Mone,<br/>
+Whan ther is eny thing to done,<br/>
+And namely with Covoitise;<br/>
+For he stant out of al assisse<br/>
+Of resonable mannes fare.<br/>
+Wher he pourposeth him to fare<br/>
+Upon his lucre and his beyete,<br/>
+The smale path, the large Strete,    1990<br/>
+The furlong and the longe Mile,<br/>
+Al is bot on for thilke while:<br/>
+And for that he is such on holde,<br/>
+Dame Avarice him hath withholde,<br/>
+As he which is the principal<br/>
+Outward, for he is overal<br/>
+A pourveour and an aspie.<br/>
+For riht as of an hungri Pie<br/>
+The storve bestes ben awaited,<br/>
+Riht so is Covoitise afaited    2000<br/>
+To loke where he mai pourchace,<br/>
+For be his wille he wolde embrace<br/>
+Al that this wyde world beclippeth;<br/>
+Bot evere he somwhat overhippeth,<br/>
+That he ne mai noght al fulfille<br/>
+The lustes of his gredi wille.<br/>
+Bot where it falleth in a lond,<br/>
+That Covoitise in myhti hond<br/>
+Is set, it is ful hard to fiede;<br/>
+For thanne he takth non other hiede,    2010<br/>
+Bot that he mai pourchace and gete,<br/>
+His conscience hath al foryete,<br/>
+And not what thing it mai amonte<br/>
+That he schal afterward acompte.<br/>
+Bote as the Luce in his degre<br/>
+Of tho that lasse ben than he<br/>
+The fisshes griedeli devoureth,<br/>
+So that no water hem socoureth,<br/>
+Riht so no lawe mai rescowe<br/>
+Fro him that wol no riht allowe;    2020<br/>
+For wher that such on is of myht,<br/>
+His will schal stonde in stede of riht.<br/>
+Thus be the men destruid fulofte,<br/>
+Til that the grete god alofte<br/>
+Ayein so gret a covoitise<br/>
+Redresce it in his oghne wise:<br/>
+And in ensample of alle tho<br/>
+I finde a tale write so,<br/>
+The which, for it is good to liere,<br/>
+Hierafterward thou schalt it hiere.    2030
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Rome stod in noble plit,<br/>
+Virgile, which was tho parfit,<br/>
+A Mirour made of his clergie<br/>
+And sette it in the tounes ije<br/>
+Of marbre on a piler withoute;<br/>
+That thei be thritty Mile aboute<br/>
+Be daie and ek also be nyhte<br/>
+In that Mirour beholde myhte<br/>
+Here enemys, if eny were,<br/>
+With al here ordinance there,    2040<br/>
+Which thei ayein the Cite caste:<br/>
+So that, whil thilke Mirour laste,<br/>
+Ther was no lond which mihte achieve<br/>
+With werre Rome forto grieve;<br/>
+Wherof was gret envie tho.<br/>
+And fell that ilke time so,<br/>
+That Rome hadde werres stronge<br/>
+Ayein Cartage, and stoden longe<br/>
+The tuo Cites upon debat.<br/>
+Cartage sih the stronge astat    2050<br/>
+Of Rome in thilke Mirour stonde,<br/>
+And thoghte al prively to fonde<br/>
+To overthrowe it be som wyle.<br/>
+And Hanybal was thilke while<br/>
+The Prince and ledere of Cartage,<br/>
+Which hadde set al his corage<br/>
+Upon knihthod in such a wise,<br/>
+That he be worthi and be wise<br/>
+And be non othre was conseiled,<br/>
+Wherof the world is yit merveiled    2060<br/>
+Of the maistries that he wroghte<br/>
+Upon the marches whiche he soghte.<br/>
+And fell in thilke time also,<br/>
+The king of Puile, which was tho,<br/>
+Thoghte ayein Rome to rebelle,<br/>
+And thus was take the querele,<br/>
+Hou to destruie this Mirour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Rome tho was Emperour<br/>
+Crassus, which was so coveitous,<br/>
+That he was evere desirous    2070<br/>
+Of gold to gete the pilage;<br/>
+Wherof that Puile and ek Cartage<br/>
+With Philosophres wise and grete<br/>
+Begunne of this matiere trete,<br/>
+And ate laste in this degre<br/>
+Ther weren Philosophres thre,<br/>
+To do this thing whiche undertoke,<br/>
+And therupon thei with hem toke<br/>
+A gret tresor of gold in cophres,<br/>
+To Rome and thus these philisophres    2080<br/>
+Togedre in compainie wente,<br/>
+Bot noman wiste what thei mente.<br/>
+Whan thei to Rome come were,<br/>
+So prively thei duelte there,<br/>
+As thei that thoghten to deceive:<br/>
+Was non that mihte of hem perceive,<br/>
+Til thei in sondri stedes have<br/>
+Here gold under the ground begrave<br/>
+In tuo tresors, that to beholde<br/>
+Thei scholden seme as thei were olde.    2090<br/>
+And so forth thanne upon a day<br/>
+Al openly in good arai<br/>
+To themperour thei hem presente,<br/>
+And tolden it was here entente<br/>
+To duellen under his servise.<br/>
+And he hem axeth in what wise;<br/>
+And thei him tolde in such a plit,<br/>
+That ech of hem hadde a spirit,<br/>
+The which slepende a nyht appiereth<br/>
+And hem be sondri dremes lereth    2100<br/>
+After the world that hath betid.<br/>
+Under the ground if oght be hid<br/>
+Of old tresor at eny throwe,<br/>
+They schull it in here swevenes knowe;<br/>
+And upon this condicioun,<br/>
+Thei sein, what gold under the toun<br/>
+Of Rome is hid, thei wole it finde,<br/>
+Ther scholde noght be left behinde,<br/>
+Be so that he the halvendel<br/>
+Hem grante, and he assenteth wel;    2110<br/>
+And thus cam sleighte forto duelle<br/>
+With Covoitise, as I thee telle.<br/>
+This Emperour bad redily<br/>
+That thei be logged faste by<br/>
+Where he his oghne body lay;<br/>
+And whan it was amorwe day,<br/>
+That on of hem seith that he mette<br/>
+Wher he a goldhord scholde fette:<br/>
+Wherof this Emperour was glad,<br/>
+And therupon anon he bad    2120<br/>
+His Mynours forto go and myne,<br/>
+And he himself of that covine<br/>
+Goth forth withal, and at his hond<br/>
+The tresor redi there he fond,<br/>
+Where as thei seide it scholde be;<br/>
+And who was thanne glad bot he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon that other dai secounde<br/>
+Thei have an other goldhord founde,<br/>
+Which the seconde maister tok<br/>
+Upon his swevene and undertok.    2130<br/>
+And thus the sothe experience<br/>
+To themperour yaf such credence,<br/>
+That al his trist and al his feith<br/>
+So sikerliche on hem he leith,<br/>
+Of that he fond him so relieved,<br/>
+That thei ben parfitli believed,<br/>
+As thogh thei were goddes thre.<br/>
+Nou herkne the soutilete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde maister scholde mete,<br/>
+Which, as thei seiden, was unmete    2140<br/>
+Above hem alle, and couthe most;<br/>
+And he withoute noise or bost<br/>
+Al priveli, so as he wolde,<br/>
+Upon the morwe his swevene tolde<br/>
+To themperour riht in his Ere,<br/>
+And seide him that he wiste where<br/>
+A tresor was so plentivous<br/>
+Of gold and ek so precious<br/>
+Of jeueals and of riche stones,<br/>
+That unto alle hise hors at ones    2150<br/>
+It were a charge sufficant.<br/>
+This lord upon this covenant<br/>
+Was glad, and axeth where it was.<br/>
+The maister seide, under the glas,<br/>
+And tolde him eke, as for the Myn<br/>
+He wolde ordeigne such engin,<br/>
+That thei the werk schull undersette<br/>
+With Tymber, that withoute lette<br/>
+Men mai the tresor saufli delve,<br/>
+So that the Mirour be himselve    2160<br/>
+Withoute empeirement schal stonde:<br/>
+And this the maister upon honde<br/>
+Hath undertake in alle weie.<br/>
+This lord, which hadde his wit aweie<br/>
+And was with Covoitise blent,<br/>
+Anon therto yaf his assent;<br/>
+And thus they myne forth withal,<br/>
+The timber set up overal,<br/>
+Wherof the Piler stod upriht;<br/>
+Til it befell upon a nyht    2170<br/>
+These clerkes, whan thei were war<br/>
+Hou that the timber only bar<br/>
+The Piler, wher the Mirour stod,&mdash;<br/>
+Here sleihte noman understod,&mdash;<br/>
+Thei go be nyhte unto the Myne<br/>
+With pich, with soulphre and with rosine,<br/>
+And whan the Cite was a slepe,<br/>
+A wylde fyr into the depe<br/>
+They caste among the timberwerk,<br/>
+And so forth, whil the nyht was derk,    2180<br/>
+Desguised in a povere arai<br/>
+Thei passeden the toun er dai.<br/>
+And whan thei come upon an hell,<br/>
+Thei sihen how the Mirour fell,<br/>
+Wherof thei maden joie ynowh,<br/>
+And ech of hem with other lowh,<br/>
+And seiden, “Lo, what coveitise<br/>
+Mai do with hem that be noght wise!”<br/>
+And that was proved afterward,<br/>
+For every lond, to Romeward    2190<br/>
+Which hadde be soubgit tofore,<br/>
+Whan this Mirour was so forlore<br/>
+And thei the wonder herde seie,<br/>
+Anon begunne desobeie<br/>
+With werres upon every side;<br/>
+And thus hath Rome lost his pride<br/>
+And was defouled overal.<br/>
+For this I finde of Hanybal,<br/>
+That he of Romeins in a dai,<br/>
+Whan he hem fond out of arai,    2200<br/>
+So gret a multitude slowh,<br/>
+That of goldringes, whiche he drowh<br/>
+Of gentil handes that ben dede,<br/>
+Buisshelles fulle thre, I rede,<br/>
+He felde, and made a bregge also,<br/>
+That he mihte over Tibre go<br/>
+Upon the corps that dede were<br/>
+Of the Romeins, whiche he slowh there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now to speke of the juise,<br/>
+The which after the covoitise    2210<br/>
+Was take upon this Emperour,<br/>
+For he destruide the Mirour;<br/>
+It is a wonder forto hiere.<br/>
+The Romeins maden a chaiere<br/>
+And sette here Emperour therinne,<br/>
+And seiden, for he wolde winne<br/>
+Of gold the superfluite,<br/>
+Of gold he scholde such plente<br/>
+Receive, til he seide Ho:<br/>
+And with gold, which thei hadden tho    2220<br/>
+Buillende hot withinne a panne,<br/>
+Into his Mouth thei poure thanne.<br/>
+And thus the thurst of gold was queynt,<br/>
+With gold which hadde ben atteignt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof, mi Sone, thou miht hiere,<br/>
+Whan Covoitise hath lost the stiere<br/>
+Of resonable governance,<br/>
+Ther falleth ofte gret vengance.<br/>
+For ther mai be no worse thing<br/>
+Than Covoitise aboute a king:    2230<br/>
+If it in his persone be,<br/>
+It doth the more adversite;<br/>
+And if it in his conseil stonde,<br/>
+It bringth alday meschief to honde<br/>
+Of commun harm; and if it growe<br/>
+Withinne his court, it wol be knowe,<br/>
+For thanne schal the king be piled.<br/>
+The man which hath hise londes tiled,<br/>
+Awaiteth noght more redily<br/>
+The Hervest, than thei gredily    2240<br/>
+Ne maken thanne warde and wacche,<br/>
+Wher thei the profit mihten cacche:<br/>
+And yit fulofte it falleth so,<br/>
+As men mai sen among hem tho,<br/>
+That he which most coveiteth faste<br/>
+Hath lest avantage ate laste.<br/>
+For whan fortune is therayein,<br/>
+Thogh he coveite, it is in vein;<br/>
+The happes be noght alle liche,<br/>
+On is mad povere, an other riche,    2250<br/>
+The court to some doth profit,<br/>
+And some ben evere in o plit;<br/>
+And yit thei bothe aliche sore<br/>
+Coveite, bot fortune is more<br/>
+Unto that o part favorable.<br/>
+And thogh it be noght resonable,<br/>
+This thing a man mai sen alday,<br/>
+Wherof that I thee telle may<br/>
+A fair ensample in remembrance,<br/>
+Hou every man mot take his chance    2260<br/>
+Or of richesse or of poverte.<br/>
+Hou so it stonde of the decerte,<br/>
+Hier is noght every thing aquit,<br/>
+For ofte a man mai se this yit,<br/>
+That who best doth, lest thonk schal have;<br/>
+It helpeth noght the world to crave,<br/>
+Which out of reule and of mesure<br/>
+Hath evere stonde in aventure<br/>
+Als wel in Court as elles where:<br/>
+And hou in olde daies there    2270<br/>
+It stod, so as the thinges felle,<br/>
+I thenke a tale forto telle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique this I rede.<br/>
+Aboute a king, as moste nede,<br/>
+Ther was of knyhtes and squiers<br/>
+Gret route, and ek of Officers:<br/>
+Some of long time him hadden served,<br/>
+And thoghten that thei have deserved<br/>
+Avancement, and gon withoute;<br/>
+And some also ben of the route    2280<br/>
+That comen bot a while agon,<br/>
+And thei avanced were anon.<br/>
+These olde men upon this thing,<br/>
+So as thei dorste, ayein the king<br/>
+Among hemself compleignen ofte:<br/>
+Bot ther is nothing seid so softe,<br/>
+That it ne comth out ate laste;<br/>
+The king it wiste, and als so faste,<br/>
+As he which was of hih Prudence,<br/>
+He schop therfore an evidence    2290<br/>
+Of hem that pleignen in that cas,<br/>
+To knowe in whos defalte it was.<br/>
+And al withinne his oghne entente,<br/>
+That noman wiste what it mente,<br/>
+Anon he let tuo cofres make<br/>
+Of o semblance and of o make,<br/>
+So lich that no lif thilke throwe<br/>
+That on mai fro that other knowe:<br/>
+Thei were into his chambre broght,<br/>
+Bot noman wot why thei be wroght,    2300<br/>
+And natheles the king hath bede<br/>
+That thei be set in prive stede.<br/>
+As he that was of wisdom slih,<br/>
+Whan he therto his time sih,<br/>
+Al prively, that non it wiste,<br/>
+Hise oghne hondes that o kiste<br/>
+Of fin gold and of fin perrie,<br/>
+The which out of his tresorie<br/>
+Was take, anon he felde full;<br/>
+That other cofre of straw and mull    2310<br/>
+With Stones meind he felde also.<br/>
+Thus be thei fulle bothe tuo,<br/>
+So that erliche upon a day<br/>
+He bad withinne, ther he lay,<br/>
+Ther scholde be tofore his bed<br/>
+A bord upset and faire spred;<br/>
+And thanne he let the cofres fette,<br/>
+Upon the bord and dede hem sette.<br/>
+He knew the names wel of tho,<br/>
+The whiche ayein him grucche so,    2320<br/>
+Bothe of his chambre and of his halle,<br/>
+Anon and sende for hem alle,<br/>
+And seide to hem in this wise:<br/>
+“Ther schal noman his happ despise;<br/>
+I wot wel ye have longe served,<br/>
+And god wot what ye have deserved:<br/>
+Bot if it is along on me<br/>
+Of that ye unavanced be,<br/>
+Or elles it be long on you,<br/>
+The sothe schal be proved nou,    2330<br/>
+To stoppe with youre evele word.<br/>
+Lo hier tuo cofres on the bord:<br/>
+Ches which you list of bothe tuo;<br/>
+And witeth wel that on of tho<br/>
+Is with tresor so full begon,<br/>
+That if ye happe therupon,<br/>
+Ye schull be riche men for evere.<br/>
+Now ches and tak which you is levere:<br/>
+Bot be wel war, er that ye take;<br/>
+For of that on I undertake    2340<br/>
+Ther is no maner good therinne,<br/>
+Wherof ye mihten profit winne.<br/>
+Now goth togedre of on assent<br/>
+And taketh youre avisement,<br/>
+For bot I you this dai avance,<br/>
+It stant upon youre oghne chance<br/>
+Al only in defalte of grace:<br/>
+So schal be schewed in this place<br/>
+Upon you alle wel afyn,<br/>
+That no defalte schal be myn.”    2350<br/>
+Thei knelen alle and with o vois<br/>
+The king thei thonken of this chois:<br/>
+And after that thei up arise,<br/>
+And gon aside and hem avise,<br/>
+And ate laste thei acorde;<br/>
+Wherof her tale to recorde,<br/>
+To what issue thei be falle,<br/>
+A kniht schal speke for hem alle.<br/>
+He kneleth doun unto the king,<br/>
+And seith that thei upon this thing,    2360<br/>
+Or forto winne or forto lese,<br/>
+Ben alle avised forto chese.<br/>
+Tho tok this kniht a yerde on honde,<br/>
+And goth there as the cofres stonde,<br/>
+And with assent of everichon<br/>
+He leith his yerde upon that on,<br/>
+And seith the king hou thilke same<br/>
+Thei chese in reguerdoun be name,<br/>
+And preith him that thei mote it have.<br/>
+The king, which wolde his honour save,    2370<br/>
+Whan he hath herd the commun vois,<br/>
+Hath granted hem here oghne chois<br/>
+And tok hem therupon the keie.<br/>
+Bot for he wolde it were seie<br/>
+What good thei have, as thei suppose,<br/>
+He bad anon the cofre unclose,<br/>
+Which was fulfild with straw and stones:<br/>
+Thus be thei served al at ones.<br/>
+This king thanne in the same stede<br/>
+Anon that other cofre undede,    2380<br/>
+Where as thei sihen gret richesse,<br/>
+Wel more than thei couthen gesse.<br/>
+“Lo,” seith the king, “nou mai ye se<br/>
+That ther is no defalte in me;<br/>
+Forthi miself I wole aquyte,<br/>
+And bereth ye youre oghne wyte<br/>
+Of that fortune hath you refused.”<br/>
+Thus was this wise king excused,<br/>
+And thei lefte of here evele speche<br/>
+And mercy of here king beseche.    2390
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Somdiel to this matiere lik<br/>
+I finde a tale, hou Frederik,<br/>
+Of Rome that time Emperour,<br/>
+Herde, as he wente, a gret clamour<br/>
+Of tuo beggers upon the weie.<br/>
+That on of hem began to seie,<br/>
+“Ha lord, wel mai the man be riche<br/>
+Whom that a king list forto riche.”<br/>
+That other saide nothing so,<br/>
+Bot, “He is riche and wel bego,    2400<br/>
+To whom that god wole sende wele.”<br/>
+And thus thei maden wordes fele,<br/>
+Wherof this lord hath hiede nome,<br/>
+And dede hem bothe forto come<br/>
+To the Paleis, wher he schal ete,<br/>
+And bad ordeine for here mete<br/>
+Tuo Pastes, whiche he let do make.<br/>
+A capoun in that on was bake,<br/>
+And in that other forto winne<br/>
+Of florins al that mai withinne    2410<br/>
+He let do pute a gret richesse;<br/>
+And evene aliche, as man mai gesse,<br/>
+Outward thei were bothe tuo.<br/>
+This begger was comanded tho,<br/>
+He that which hield him to the king,<br/>
+That he ferst chese upon this thing:<br/>
+He sih hem, bot he felte hem noght,<br/>
+So that upon his oghne thoght<br/>
+He ches the Capoun and forsok<br/>
+That other, which his fela tok.    2420<br/>
+Bot whanne he wiste hou that it ferde,<br/>
+He seide alowd, that men it herde,<br/>
+“Nou have I certeinly conceived<br/>
+That he mai lihtly be deceived,<br/>
+That tristeth unto mannes helpe;<br/>
+Bot wel is him whom god wol helpe,<br/>
+For he stant on the siker side,<br/>
+Which elles scholde go beside:<br/>
+I se my fela wel recovere,<br/>
+And I mot duelle stille povere.”    2430
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus spak this begger his entente,<br/>
+And povere he cam and povere he wente;<br/>
+Of that he hath richesse soght,<br/>
+His infortune it wolde noght.<br/>
+So mai it schewe in sondri wise,<br/>
+Betwen fortune and covoitise<br/>
+The chance is cast upon a Dee;<br/>
+Bot yit fulofte a man mai se<br/>
+Ynowe of suche natheles,<br/>
+Whiche evere pute hemself in press    2440<br/>
+To gete hem good, and yit thei faile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto speke of this entaile<br/>
+Touchende of love in thi matiere,<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, as thou miht hiere,<br/>
+That riht as it with tho men stod<br/>
+Of infortune of worldes good,<br/>
+As thou hast herd me telle above,<br/>
+Riht so fulofte it stant be love:<br/>
+Thogh thou coveite it everemore,<br/>
+Thou schalt noght have o diel the more,    2450<br/>
+Bot only that which thee is schape,<br/>
+The remenant is bot a jape.<br/>
+And natheles ynowe of tho<br/>
+Ther ben, that nou coveiten so,<br/>
+That where as thei a womman se,<br/>
+Ye ten or tuelve thogh ther be,<br/>
+The love is nou so unavised,<br/>
+That wher the beaute stant assised,<br/>
+The mannes herte anon is there,<br/>
+And rouneth tales in hire Ere,    2460<br/>
+And seith hou that he loveth streite,<br/>
+And thus he set him to coveite,<br/>
+An hundred thogh he sihe aday.<br/>
+So wolde he more thanne he may;<br/>
+Bot for the grete covoitise<br/>
+Of sotie and of fol emprise<br/>
+In ech of hem he fint somwhat<br/>
+That pleseth him, or this or that;<br/>
+Som on, for sche is whit of skin,<br/>
+Som on, for sche is noble of kin,    2470<br/>
+Som on, for sche hath rodi chieke,<br/>
+Som on, for that sche semeth mieke,<br/>
+Som on, for sche hath yhen greie,<br/>
+Som on, for sche can lawhe and pleie,<br/>
+Som on, for sche is long and smal,<br/>
+Som on, for sche is lyte and tall,<br/>
+Som on, for sche is pale and bleche,<br/>
+Som on, for sche is softe of speche,<br/>
+Som on, for that sche is camused,<br/>
+Som on, for sche hath noght ben used,    2480<br/>
+Som on, for sche can daunce and singe;<br/>
+So that som thing to his likinge<br/>
+He fint, and thogh nomore he fiele,<br/>
+Bot that sche hath a litel hiele,<br/>
+It is ynow that he therfore<br/>
+Hire love, and thus an hundred score,<br/>
+Whil thei be newe, he wolde he hadde;<br/>
+Whom he forsakth, sche schal be badde.<br/>
+The blinde man no colour demeth,<br/>
+But al is on, riht as him semeth;    2490<br/>
+So hath his lust no juggement,<br/>
+Whom covoitise of love blent.<br/>
+Him thenkth that to his covoitise<br/>
+Hou al the world ne mai suffise,<br/>
+For be his wille he wolde have alle,<br/>
+If that it mihte so befalle:<br/>
+Thus is he commun as the Strete,<br/>
+I sette noght of his beyete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, hast thou such covoitise?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nai, fader, such love I despise,    2500<br/>
+And whil I live schal don evere,<br/>
+For in good feith yit hadde I levere,<br/>
+Than to coveite in such a weie,<br/>
+To ben for evere til I deie<br/>
+As povere as Job, and loveles,<br/>
+Outaken on, for haveles<br/>
+His thonkes is noman alyve.<br/>
+For that a man scholde al unthryve<br/>
+Ther oghte no wisman coveite,<br/>
+The lawe was noght set so streite:    2510<br/>
+Forthi miself withal to save,<br/>
+Such on ther is I wolde have,<br/>
+And non of al these othre mo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of that thou woldest so,<br/>
+I am noght wroth, bot over this<br/>
+I wol thee tellen hou it is.<br/>
+For ther be men, whiche otherwise,<br/>
+Riht only for the covoitise<br/>
+Of that thei sen a womman riche,<br/>
+Ther wol thei al here love affiche;    2520<br/>
+Noght for the beaute of hire face,<br/>
+Ne yit for vertu ne for grace,<br/>
+Which sche hath elles riht ynowh,<br/>
+Bot for the Park and for the plowh,<br/>
+And other thing which therto longeth:<br/>
+For in non other wise hem longeth<br/>
+To love, bot thei profit finde;<br/>
+And if the profit be behinde,<br/>
+Here love is evere lesse and lesse,<br/>
+For after that sche hath richesse,    2530<br/>
+Her love is of proporcion.<br/>
+If thou hast such condicion,<br/>
+Mi Sone, tell riht as it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holi fader, nay ywiss,<br/>
+Condicion such have I non.<br/>
+For trewli, fader, I love oon<br/>
+So wel with al myn hertes thoght,<br/>
+That certes, thogh sche hadde noght,<br/>
+And were as povere as Medea,<br/>
+Which was exiled for Creusa,    2540<br/>
+I wolde hir noght the lasse love;<br/>
+Ne thogh sche were at hire above,<br/>
+As was the riche qwen Candace,<br/>
+Which to deserve love and grace<br/>
+To Alisandre, that was king,<br/>
+Yaf many a worthi riche thing,<br/>
+Or elles as Pantasilee,<br/>
+Which was the quen of Feminee,<br/>
+And gret richesse with hir nam,<br/>
+Whan sche for love of Hector cam    2550<br/>
+To Troie in rescousse of the toun,&mdash;<br/>
+I am of such condicion,<br/>
+That thogh mi ladi of hirselve<br/>
+Were also riche as suche tuelve,<br/>
+I couthe noght, thogh it wer so,<br/>
+No betre love hir than I do.<br/>
+For I love in so plein a wise,<br/>
+That forto speke of coveitise,<br/>
+As for poverte or for richesse<br/>
+Mi love is nouther mor ne lesse.    2560<br/>
+For in good feith I trowe this,<br/>
+So coveitous noman ther is,<br/>
+Forwhy and he mi ladi sihe,<br/>
+That he thurgh lokinge of his yhe<br/>
+Ne scholde have such a strok withinne,<br/>
+That for no gold he mihte winne<br/>
+He scholde noght hire love asterte,<br/>
+Bot if he lefte there his herte;<br/>
+Be so it were such a man,<br/>
+That couthe Skile of a womman.    2570<br/>
+For ther be men so ruide some,<br/>
+Whan thei among the wommen come,<br/>
+Thei gon under proteccioun,<br/>
+That love and his affeccioun<br/>
+Ne schal noght take hem be the slieve;<br/>
+For thei ben out of that believe,<br/>
+Hem lusteth of no ladi chiere,<br/>
+Bot evere thenken there and hiere<br/>
+Wher that here gold is in the cofre,<br/>
+And wol non other love profre:    2580<br/>
+Bot who so wot what love amounteth<br/>
+And be resoun trewliche acompteth,<br/>
+Than mai he knowe and taken hiede<br/>
+That al the lust of wommanhiede,<br/>
+Which mai ben in a ladi face,<br/>
+Mi ladi hath, and ek of grace<br/>
+If men schull yiven hire a pris,<br/>
+Thei mai wel seie hou sche is wys<br/>
+And sobre and simple of contenance,<br/>
+And al that to good governance    2590<br/>
+Belongeth of a worthi wiht<br/>
+Sche hath pleinli: for thilke nyht<br/>
+That sche was bore, as for the nones<br/>
+Nature sette in hire at ones<br/>
+Beaute with bounte so besein,<br/>
+That I mai wel afferme and sein,<br/>
+I sawh yit nevere creature<br/>
+Of comlihied and of feture<br/>
+In eny kinges regioun<br/>
+Be lich hire in comparisoun:    2600<br/>
+And therto, as I have you told,<br/>
+Yit hath sche more a thousendfold<br/>
+Of bounte, and schortli to telle,<br/>
+Sche is the pure hed and welle<br/>
+And Mirour and ensample of goode.<br/>
+Who so hir vertus understode,<br/>
+Me thenkth it oughte ynow suffise<br/>
+Withouten other covoitise<br/>
+To love such on and to serve,<br/>
+Which with hire chiere can deserve    2610<br/>
+To be beloved betre ywiss<br/>
+Than sche per cas that richest is<br/>
+And hath of gold a Milion.<br/>
+Such hath be myn opinion<br/>
+And evere schal: bot natheles<br/>
+I seie noght sche is haveles,<br/>
+That sche nys riche and wel at ese,<br/>
+And hath ynow wherwith to plese<br/>
+Of worldes good whom that hire liste;<br/>
+Bot o thing wolde I wel ye wiste,    2620<br/>
+That nevere for no worldes good<br/>
+Min herte untoward hire stod,<br/>
+Bot only riht for pure love;<br/>
+That wot the hihe god above.<br/>
+Nou, fader, what seie ye therto?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I seie it is wel do.<br/>
+For tak of this riht good believe,<br/>
+What man that wole himself relieve<br/>
+To love in eny other wise,<br/>
+He schal wel finde his coveitise    2630<br/>
+Schal sore grieve him ate laste,<br/>
+For such a love mai noght laste.<br/>
+Bot nou, men sein, in oure daies<br/>
+Men maken bot a fewe assaies,<br/>
+Bot if the cause be richesse;<br/>
+Forthi the love is wel the lesse.<br/>
+And who that wolde ensamples telle,<br/>
+Be olde daies as thei felle,<br/>
+Than mihte a man wel understonde<br/>
+Such love mai noght longe stonde.    2640<br/>
+Now herkne, Sone, and thou schalt hiere<br/>
+A gret ensample of this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To trete upon the cas of love,<br/>
+So as we tolden hiere above,<br/>
+I finde write a wonder thing.<br/>
+Of Puile whilom was a king,<br/>
+A man of hih complexioun<br/>
+And yong, bot his affeccioun<br/>
+After the nature of his age<br/>
+Was yit noght falle in his corage    2650<br/>
+The lust of wommen forto knowe.<br/>
+So it betidde upon a throwe<br/>
+This lord fell into gret seknesse:<br/>
+Phisique hath don the besinesse<br/>
+Of sondri cures manyon<br/>
+To make him hol; and therupon<br/>
+A worthi maister which ther was<br/>
+Yaf him conseil upon this cas,<br/>
+That if he wolde have parfit hele,<br/>
+He scholde with a womman dele,    2660<br/>
+A freissh, a yong, a lusti wiht,<br/>
+To don him compaignie a nyht:<br/>
+For thanne he seide him redily,<br/>
+That he schal be al hol therby,<br/>
+And otherwise he kneu no cure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king, which stod in aventure<br/>
+Of lif and deth, for medicine<br/>
+Assented was, and of covine<br/>
+His Steward, whom he tristeth wel,<br/>
+He tok, and tolde him everydel,    2670<br/>
+Hou that this maister hadde seid:<br/>
+And therupon he hath him preid<br/>
+And charged upon his ligance,<br/>
+That he do make porveance<br/>
+Of such on as be covenable<br/>
+For his plesance and delitable;<br/>
+And bad him, hou that evere it stod,<br/>
+That he schal spare for no good,<br/>
+For his will is riht wel to paie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Steward seide he wolde assaie:    2680<br/>
+Bot nou hierafter thou schalt wite,<br/>
+As I finde in the bokes write,<br/>
+What coveitise in love doth.<br/>
+This Steward, forto telle soth,<br/>
+Amonges al the men alyve<br/>
+A lusti ladi hath to wyve,<br/>
+Which natheles for gold he tok<br/>
+And noght for love, as seith the bok.<br/>
+A riche Marchant of the lond<br/>
+Hir fader was, and hire fond    2690<br/>
+So worthily, and such richesse<br/>
+Of worldes good and such largesse<br/>
+With hire he yaf in mariage,<br/>
+That only for thilke avantage<br/>
+Of good this Steward hath hire take,<br/>
+For lucre and noght for loves sake,<br/>
+And that was afterward wel seene;<br/>
+Nou herkne what it wolde meene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Steward in his oghne herte<br/>
+Sih that his lord mai noght asterte    2700<br/>
+His maladie, bot he have<br/>
+A lusti womman him to save,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde yive ynowh<br/>
+Of his tresor; wherof he drowh<br/>
+Gret coveitise into his mynde,<br/>
+And sette his honour fer behynde.<br/>
+Thus he, whom gold hath overset,<br/>
+Was trapped in his oghne net;<br/>
+The gold hath mad hise wittes lame,<br/>
+So that sechende his oghne schame    2710<br/>
+He rouneth in the kinges Ere,<br/>
+And seide him that he wiste where<br/>
+A gentile and a lusti on<br/>
+Tho was, and thider wolde he gon:<br/>
+Bot he mot yive yiftes grete;<br/>
+For bot it be thurgh grete beyete<br/>
+Of gold, he seith, he schal noght spede.<br/>
+The king him bad upon the nede<br/>
+That take an hundred pound he scholde,<br/>
+And yive it where that he wolde,    2720<br/>
+Be so it were in worthi place:<br/>
+And thus to stonde in loves grace<br/>
+This king his gold hath abandouned.<br/>
+And whan this tale was full rouned,<br/>
+The Steward tok the gold and wente,<br/>
+Withinne his herte and many a wente<br/>
+Of coveitise thanne he caste,<br/>
+Wherof a pourpos ate laste<br/>
+Ayein love and ayein his riht<br/>
+He tok, and seide hou thilke nyht    2730<br/>
+His wif schal ligge be the king;<br/>
+And goth thenkende upon this thing<br/>
+Toward his In, til he cam hom<br/>
+Into the chambre, and thanne he nom<br/>
+His wif, and tolde hire al the cas.<br/>
+And sche, which red for schame was,<br/>
+With bothe hire handes hath him preid<br/>
+Knelende and in this wise seid,<br/>
+That sche to reson and to skile<br/>
+In what thing that he bidde wile    2740<br/>
+Is redy forto don his heste,<br/>
+Bot this thing were noght honeste,<br/>
+That he for gold hire scholde selle.<br/>
+And he tho with hise wordes felle<br/>
+Forth with his gastly contienance<br/>
+Seith that sche schal don obeissance<br/>
+And folwe his will in every place;<br/>
+And thus thurgh strengthe of his manace<br/>
+Hir innocence is overlad,<br/>
+Wherof sche was so sore adrad    2750<br/>
+That sche his will mot nede obeie.<br/>
+And therupon was schape a weie,<br/>
+That he his oghne wif be nyhte<br/>
+Hath out of alle mennes sihte<br/>
+So prively that non it wiste<br/>
+Broght to the king, which as him liste<br/>
+Mai do with hire what he wolde.<br/>
+For whan sche was ther as sche scholde,<br/>
+With him abedde under the cloth,<br/>
+The Steward tok his leve and goth    2760<br/>
+Into a chambre faste by;<br/>
+Bot hou he slep, that wot noght I,<br/>
+For he sih cause of jelousie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot he, which hath the compainie<br/>
+Of such a lusti on as sche,<br/>
+Him thoghte that of his degre<br/>
+Ther was noman so wel at ese:<br/>
+Sche doth al that sche mai to plese,<br/>
+So that his herte al hol sche hadde;<br/>
+And thus this king his joie ladde,    2770<br/>
+Til it was nyh upon the day.<br/>
+The Steward thanne wher sche lay<br/>
+Cam to the bedd, and in his wise<br/>
+Hath bede that sche scholde arise.<br/>
+The king seith, “Nay, sche schal noght go.”<br/>
+His Steward seide ayein, “Noght so;<br/>
+For sche mot gon er it be knowe,<br/>
+And so I swor at thilke throwe,<br/>
+Whan I hire fette to you hiere.”<br/>
+The king his tale wol noght hiere,    2780<br/>
+And seith hou that he hath hire boght,<br/>
+Forthi sche schal departe noght,<br/>
+Til he the brighte dai beholde.<br/>
+And cawhte hire in hise armes folde,<br/>
+As he which liste forto pleie,<br/>
+And bad his Steward gon his weie,<br/>
+And so he dede ayein his wille.<br/>
+And thus his wif abedde stille<br/>
+Lay with the king the longe nyht,<br/>
+Til that it was hih Sonne lyht;    2790<br/>
+Bot who sche was he knew nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho cam the Steward to the king<br/>
+And preide him that withoute schame<br/>
+In savinge of hire goode name<br/>
+He myhte leden hom ayein<br/>
+This lady, and hath told him plein<br/>
+Hou that it was his oghne wif.<br/>
+The king his Ere unto this strif<br/>
+Hath leid, and whan that he it herde,<br/>
+Welnyh out of his wit he ferde,    2800<br/>
+And seide, “Ha, caitif most of alle,<br/>
+Wher was it evere er this befalle,<br/>
+That eny cokard in this wise<br/>
+Betok his wif for coveitise?<br/>
+Thou hast bothe hire and me beguiled<br/>
+And ek thin oghne astat reviled,<br/>
+Wherof that buxom unto thee<br/>
+Hierafter schal sche nevere be.<br/>
+For this avou to god I make,<br/>
+After this day if I thee take,    2810<br/>
+Thou schalt ben honged and todrawe.<br/>
+Nou loke anon thou be withdrawe,<br/>
+So that I se thee neveremore.”<br/>
+This Steward thanne dradde him sore,<br/>
+With al the haste that he mai<br/>
+And fledde awei that same dai,<br/>
+And was exiled out of londe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, there a nyce housebonde,<br/>
+Which thus hath lost his wif for evere!<br/>
+Bot natheles sche hadde a levere;    2820<br/>
+The king hire weddeth and honoureth,<br/>
+Wherof hire name sche socoureth,<br/>
+Which erst was lost thurgh coveitise<br/>
+Of him, that ladde hire other wise,<br/>
+And hath himself also forlore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, be thou war therfore,<br/>
+Wher thou schalt love in eny place,<br/>
+That thou no covoitise embrace,<br/>
+The which is noght of loves kinde.<br/>
+Bot for al that a man mai finde    2830<br/>
+Nou in this time of thilke rage<br/>
+Ful gret desese in mariage,<br/>
+Whan venym melleth with the Sucre<br/>
+And mariage is mad for lucre,<br/>
+Or for the lust or for the hele:<br/>
+What man that schal with outher dele,<br/>
+He mai noght faile to repente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, such is myn entente:<br/>
+Bot natheles good is to have,<br/>
+For good mai ofte time save    2840<br/>
+The love which scholde elles spille.<br/>
+Bot god, which wot myn hertes wille,<br/>
+I dar wel take to witnesse,<br/>
+Yit was I nevere for richesse<br/>
+Beset with mariage non;<br/>
+For al myn herte is upon on<br/>
+So frely, that in the persone<br/>
+Stant al my worldes joie al one:<br/>
+I axe nouther Park ne Plowh,<br/>
+If I hire hadde, it were ynowh,    2850<br/>
+Hir love scholde me suffise<br/>
+Withouten other coveitise.<br/>
+Lo now, mi fader, as of this,<br/>
+Touchende of me riht as it is,<br/>
+Mi schrifte I am beknowe plein;<br/>
+And if ye wole oght elles sein,<br/>
+Of covoitise if ther be more<br/>
+In love, agropeth out the sore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, thou schalt understonde<br/>
+Hou Coveitise hath yit on honde    2860<br/>
+In special tuo conseilours,<br/>
+That ben also hise procurours.<br/>
+The ferst of hem is Falswitnesse,<br/>
+Which evere is redi to witnesse<br/>
+What thing his maister wol him hote:<br/>
+Perjurie is the secounde hote,<br/>
+Which spareth noght to swere an oth,<br/>
+Thogh it be fals and god be wroth.<br/>
+That on schal falswitnesse bere,<br/>
+That other schal the thing forswere,    2870<br/>
+Whan he is charged on the bok.<br/>
+So what with hepe and what with crok<br/>
+Thei make here maister ofte winne<br/>
+And wol noght knowe what is sinne<br/>
+For coveitise, and thus, men sain,<br/>
+Thei maken many a fals bargain.<br/>
+Ther mai no trewe querele arise<br/>
+In thilke queste and thilke assise,<br/>
+Where as thei tuo the poeple enforme;<br/>
+For thei kepe evere o maner forme,    2880<br/>
+That upon gold here conscience<br/>
+Thei founde, and take here evidence;<br/>
+And thus with falswitnesse and othes<br/>
+Thei winne hem mete and drinke and clothes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Riht so ther be, who that hem knewe,<br/>
+Of thes lovers ful many untrewe:<br/>
+Nou mai a womman finde ynowe,<br/>
+That ech of hem, whan he schal wowe,<br/>
+Anon he wole his hand doun lein<br/>
+Upon a bok, and swere and sein    2890<br/>
+That he wole feith and trouthe bere;<br/>
+And thus he profreth him to swere<br/>
+To serven evere til he die,<br/>
+And al is verai tricherie.<br/>
+For whan the sothe himselven trieth,<br/>
+The more he swerth, the more he lieth;<br/>
+Whan he his feith makth althermest,<br/>
+Than mai a womman truste him lest;<br/>
+For til he mai his will achieve,<br/>
+He is no lengere forto lieve.    2900<br/>
+Thus is the trouthe of love exiled,<br/>
+And many a good womman beguiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek to speke of Falswitnesse,<br/>
+There be nou many suche, I gesse,<br/>
+That lich unto the provisours<br/>
+Thei make here prive procurours,<br/>
+To telle hou ther is such a man,<br/>
+Which is worthi to love and can<br/>
+Al that a good man scholde kunne;<br/>
+So that with lesinge is begunne    2910<br/>
+The cause in which thei wole procede,<br/>
+And also siker as the crede<br/>
+Thei make of that thei knowen fals.<br/>
+And thus fulofte aboute the hals<br/>
+Love is of false men embraced;<br/>
+Bot love which is so pourchaced<br/>
+Comth afterward to litel pris.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, if thou be wis,<br/>
+Nou thou hast herd this evidence,<br/>
+Thou miht thin oghne conscience    2920<br/>
+Oppose, if thou hast ben such on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nai, god wot, fader I am non,<br/>
+Ne nevere was; for as men seith,<br/>
+Whan that a man schal make his feith,<br/>
+His herte and tunge moste acorde;<br/>
+For if so be that thei discorde,<br/>
+Thanne is he fals and elles noght:<br/>
+And I dar seie, as of my thoght,<br/>
+In love it is noght descordable<br/>
+Unto mi word, bot acordable.    2930<br/>
+And in this wise, fader, I<br/>
+Mai riht wel swere and salvely,<br/>
+That I mi ladi love wel,<br/>
+For that acordeth everydel.<br/>
+It nedeth noght to mi sothsawe<br/>
+That I witnesse scholde drawe,<br/>
+Into this dai for nevere yit<br/>
+Ne mihte it sinke into mi wit,<br/>
+That I my conseil scholde seie<br/>
+To eny wiht, or me bewreie    2940<br/>
+To sechen help in such manere,<br/>
+Bot only of mi ladi diere.<br/>
+And thogh a thousend men it wiste,<br/>
+That I hire love, and thanne hem liste<br/>
+With me to swere and to witnesse,<br/>
+Yit were that no falswitnesse;<br/>
+For I dar on this trouthe duelle,<br/>
+I love hire mor than I can telle.<br/>
+Thus am I, fader, gulteles,<br/>
+As ye have herd, and natheles    2950<br/>
+In youre dom I put it al.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, wite in special,<br/>
+It schal noght comunliche faile,<br/>
+Al thogh it for a time availe<br/>
+That Falswitnesse his cause spede,<br/>
+Upon the point of his falshiede<br/>
+It schal wel afterward be kid;<br/>
+Wherof, so as it is betid,<br/>
+Ensample of suche thinges blinde<br/>
+In a Cronique write I finde.    2960
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Goddesse of the See Thetis,<br/>
+Sche hadde a Sone, and his name is<br/>
+Achilles, whom to kepe and warde,<br/>
+Whil he was yong, as into warde<br/>
+Sche thoghte him salfly to betake,<br/>
+As sche which dradde for his sake<br/>
+Of that was seid in prophecie,<br/>
+That he at Troie scholde die,<br/>
+Whan that the Cite was belein.<br/>
+Forthi, so as the bokes sein,    2970<br/>
+Sche caste hire wit in sondri wise,<br/>
+Hou sche him mihte so desguise<br/>
+That noman scholde his bodi knowe:<br/>
+And so befell that ilke throwe,<br/>
+Whil that sche thoghte upon this dede,<br/>
+Ther was a king, which Lichomede<br/>
+Was hote, and he was wel begon<br/>
+With faire dowhtres manyon,<br/>
+And duelte fer out in an yle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou schalt thou hiere a wonder wyle:    2980<br/>
+This queene, which the moder was<br/>
+Of Achilles, upon this cas<br/>
+Hire Sone, as he a Maiden were,<br/>
+Let clothen in the same gere<br/>
+Which longeth unto wommanhiede:<br/>
+And he was yong and tok non hiede,<br/>
+Bot soffreth al that sche him dede.<br/>
+Wherof sche hath hire wommen bede<br/>
+And charged be here othes alle,<br/>
+Hou so it afterward befalle,    2990<br/>
+That thei discovere noght this thing,<br/>
+Bot feigne and make a knowleching,<br/>
+Upon the conseil which was nome,<br/>
+In every place wher thei come<br/>
+To telle and to witnesse this,<br/>
+Hou he here ladi dowhter is.<br/>
+And riht in such a maner wise<br/>
+Sche bad thei scholde hire don servise,<br/>
+So that Achilles underfongeth<br/>
+As to a yong ladi belongeth    3000<br/>
+Honour, servise and reverence.<br/>
+For Thetis with gret diligence<br/>
+Him hath so tawht and so afaited,<br/>
+That, hou so that it were awaited,<br/>
+With sobre and goodli contenance<br/>
+He scholde his wommanhiede avance,<br/>
+That non the sothe knowe myhte,<br/>
+Bot that in every mannes syhte<br/>
+He scholde seme a pure Maide.<br/>
+And in such wise as sche him saide,    3010<br/>
+Achilles, which that ilke while<br/>
+Was yong, upon himself to smyle<br/>
+Began, whan he was so besein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus, after the bokes sein,<br/>
+With frette of Perle upon his hed,<br/>
+Al freissh betwen the whyt and red,<br/>
+As he which tho was tendre of Age,<br/>
+Stod the colour in his visage,<br/>
+That forto loke upon his cheke<br/>
+And sen his childly manere eke,    3020<br/>
+He was a womman to beholde.<br/>
+And thanne his moder to him tolde,<br/>
+That sche him hadde so begon<br/>
+Be cause that sche thoghte gon<br/>
+To Lichomede at thilke tyde,<br/>
+Wher that sche seide he scholde abyde<br/>
+Among hise dowhtres forto duelle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Achilles herde his moder telle,<br/>
+And wiste noght the cause why;<br/>
+And natheles ful buxomly    3030<br/>
+He was redy to that sche bad,<br/>
+Wherof his moder was riht glad,<br/>
+To Lichomede and forth thei wente.<br/>
+And whan the king knew hire entente,<br/>
+And sih this yonge dowhter there,<br/>
+And that it cam unto his Ere<br/>
+Of such record, of such witnesse,<br/>
+He hadde riht a gret gladnesse<br/>
+Of that he bothe syh and herde,<br/>
+As he that wot noght hou it ferde    3040<br/>
+Upon the conseil of the nede.<br/>
+Bot for al that king Lichomede<br/>
+Hath toward him this dowhter take,<br/>
+And for Thetis his moder sake<br/>
+He put hire into compainie<br/>
+To duelle with Deïdamie,<br/>
+His oghne dowhter, the eldeste,<br/>
+The faireste and the comelieste<br/>
+Of alle hise doghtres whiche he hadde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus Thetis the cause ladde,    3050<br/>
+And lefte there Achilles feigned,<br/>
+As he which hath himself restreigned<br/>
+In al that evere he mai and can<br/>
+Out of the manere of a man,<br/>
+And tok his wommannysshe chiere,<br/>
+Wherof unto his beddefere<br/>
+Deïdamie he hath be nyhte.<br/>
+Wher kinde wole himselve rihte,<br/>
+After the Philosophres sein,<br/>
+Ther mai no wiht be therayein:    3060<br/>
+And that was thilke time seene.<br/>
+The longe nyhtes hem betuene<br/>
+Nature, which mai noght forbere,<br/>
+Hath mad hem bothe forto stere:<br/>
+Thei kessen ferst, and overmore<br/>
+The hihe weie of loves lore<br/>
+Thei gon, and al was don in dede,<br/>
+Wherof lost is the maydenhede;<br/>
+And that was afterward wel knowe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For it befell that ilke throwe    3070<br/>
+At Troie, wher the Siege lay<br/>
+Upon the cause of Menelay<br/>
+And of his queene dame Heleine,<br/>
+The Gregois hadden mochel peine<br/>
+Alday to fihte and to assaile.<br/>
+Bot for thei mihten noght availe<br/>
+So noble a Cite forto winne,<br/>
+A prive conseil thei beginne,<br/>
+In sondri wise wher thei trete;<br/>
+And ate laste among the grete    3080<br/>
+Thei fellen unto this acord,<br/>
+That Protheus, of his record<br/>
+Which was an Astronomien<br/>
+And ek a gret Magicien,<br/>
+Scholde of his calculacion<br/>
+Seche after constellacion,<br/>
+Hou thei the Cite mihten gete:<br/>
+And he, which hadde noght foryete<br/>
+Of that belongeth to a clerk,<br/>
+His studie sette upon this werk.    3090<br/>
+So longe his wit aboute he caste,<br/>
+Til that he fond out ate laste,<br/>
+Bot if they hadden Achilles<br/>
+Here werre schal ben endeles.<br/>
+And over that he tolde hem plein<br/>
+In what manere he was besein,<br/>
+And in what place he schal be founde;<br/>
+So that withinne a litel stounde<br/>
+Ulixes forth with Diomede<br/>
+Upon this point to Lichomede    3100<br/>
+Agamenon togedre sente.<br/>
+Bot Ulixes, er he forth wente,<br/>
+Which was on of the moste wise,<br/>
+Ordeigned hath in such a wise,<br/>
+That he the moste riche aray,<br/>
+Wherof a womman mai be gay,<br/>
+With him hath take manyfold,<br/>
+And overmore, as it is told,<br/>
+An harneis for a lusti kniht,<br/>
+Which burned was as Selver bryht,    3110<br/>
+Of swerd, of plate and ek of maile,<br/>
+As thogh he scholde to bataille,<br/>
+He tok also with him be Schipe.<br/>
+And thus togedre in felaschipe<br/>
+Forth gon this Diomede and he<br/>
+In hope til thei mihten se<br/>
+The place where Achilles is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wynd stod thanne noght amis,<br/>
+Bot evene topseilcole it blew,<br/>
+Til Ulixes the Marche knew,    3120<br/>
+Wher Lichomede his Regne hadde.<br/>
+The Stieresman so wel hem ladde,<br/>
+That thei ben comen sauf to londe,<br/>
+Wher thei gon out upon the stronde<br/>
+Into the Burgh, wher that thei founde<br/>
+The king, and he which hath facounde,<br/>
+Ulixes, dede the message.<br/>
+Bot the conseil of his corage,<br/>
+Why that he cam, he tolde noght,<br/>
+Bot undernethe he was bethoght    3130<br/>
+In what manere he mihte aspie<br/>
+Achilles fro Deïdamie<br/>
+And fro these othre that ther were,<br/>
+Full many a lusti ladi there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thei pleide hem there a day or tuo,<br/>
+And as it was fortuned so,<br/>
+It fell that time in such a wise,<br/>
+To Bachus that a sacrifise<br/>
+Thes yonge ladys scholden make;<br/>
+And for the strange mennes sake,    3140<br/>
+That comen fro the Siege of Troie,<br/>
+Thei maden wel the more joie.<br/>
+Ther was Revel, ther was daunsinge,<br/>
+And every lif which coude singe<br/>
+Of lusti wommen in the route<br/>
+A freissh carole hath sunge aboute;<br/>
+Bot for al this yit natheles<br/>
+The Greks unknowe of Achilles<br/>
+So weren, that in no degre<br/>
+Thei couden wite which was he,    3150<br/>
+Ne be his vois, ne be his pas.<br/>
+Ulixes thanne upon this cas<br/>
+A thing of hih Prudence hath wroght:<br/>
+For thilke aray, which he hath broght<br/>
+To yive among the wommen there,<br/>
+He let do fetten al the gere<br/>
+Forth with a knihtes harneis eke,&mdash;<br/>
+In al a contre forto seke<br/>
+Men scholden noght a fairer se,&mdash;<br/>
+And every thing in his degre    3160<br/>
+Endlong upon a bord he leide.<br/>
+To Lichomede and thanne he preide<br/>
+That every ladi chese scholde<br/>
+What thing of alle that sche wolde,<br/>
+And take it as be weie of yifte;<br/>
+For thei hemself it scholde schifte,<br/>
+He seide, after here oghne wille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Achilles thanne stod noght stille:<br/>
+Whan he the bryhte helm behield,<br/>
+The swerd, the hauberk and the Schield,    3170<br/>
+His herte fell therto anon;<br/>
+Of all that othre wolde he non,<br/>
+The knihtes gere he underfongeth,<br/>
+And thilke aray which that belongeth<br/>
+Unto the wommen he forsok.<br/>
+And in this wise, as seith the bok,<br/>
+Thei knowen thanne which he was:<br/>
+For he goth forth the grete pas<br/>
+Into the chambre where he lay;<br/>
+Anon, and made no delay,    3180<br/>
+He armeth him in knyhtli wise,<br/>
+That bettre can noman devise,<br/>
+And as fortune scholde falle,<br/>
+He cam so forth tofore hem alle,<br/>
+As he which tho was glad ynowh.<br/>
+But Lichomede nothing lowh,<br/>
+Whan that he syh hou that it ferde,<br/>
+For thanne he wiste wel and herde,<br/>
+His dowhter hadde be forlein;<br/>
+Bot that he was so oversein,    3190<br/>
+The wonder overgoth his wit.<br/>
+For in Cronique is write yit<br/>
+Thing which schal nevere be foryete,<br/>
+Hou that Achilles hath begete<br/>
+Pirrus upon Deïdamie,<br/>
+Wherof cam out the tricherie<br/>
+Of Falswitnesse, whan thei saide<br/>
+Hou that Achilles was a Maide.<br/>
+Bot that was nothing sene tho,<br/>
+For he is to the Siege go    3200<br/>
+Forth with Ulixe and Diomede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus was proved in the dede<br/>
+And fulli spoke at thilke while:<br/>
+If o womman an other guile,<br/>
+Wher is ther eny sikernesse?<br/>
+Whan Thetis, which was the goddesse,<br/>
+Deïdamie hath so bejaped,<br/>
+I not hou it schal ben ascaped<br/>
+With tho wommen whos innocence<br/>
+Is nou alday thurgh such credence    3210<br/>
+Deceived ofte, as it is seene,<br/>
+With men that such untrouthe meene.<br/>
+For thei ben slyhe in such a wise,<br/>
+That thei be sleihte and be queintise<br/>
+Of Falswitnesse bringen inne<br/>
+That doth hem ofte forto winne,<br/>
+Wher thei ben noght worthi therto.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, do noght so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as of Falswitnesse<br/>
+The trouthe and the matiere expresse,    3220<br/>
+Touchende of love hou it hath ferd,<br/>
+As ye have told, I have wel herd.<br/>
+Bot for ye seiden otherwise,<br/>
+Hou thilke vice of Covoitise<br/>
+Hath yit Perjurie of his acord,<br/>
+If that you list of som record<br/>
+To telle an other tale also<br/>
+In loves cause of time ago,<br/>
+What thing it is to be forswore,<br/>
+I wolde preie you therfore,    3230<br/>
+Wherof I mihte ensample take.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, and for thi sake<br/>
+Touchende of this I schall fulfille<br/>
+Thin axinge at thin oghne wille,<br/>
+And the matiere I schal declare,<br/>
+Hou the wommen deceived are,<br/>
+Whan thei so tendre herte bere,<br/>
+Of that thei hieren men so swere;<br/>
+Bot whan it comth unto thassay,<br/>
+Thei finde it fals an other day:    3240<br/>
+As Jason dede to Medee,<br/>
+Which stant yet of Auctorite<br/>
+In tokne and in memorial;<br/>
+Wherof the tale in special<br/>
+Is in the bok of Troie write,<br/>
+Which I schal do thee forto wite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Grece whilom was a king,<br/>
+Of whom the fame and knowleching<br/>
+Beleveth yit, and Peleüs<br/>
+He hihte; bot it fell him thus,    3250<br/>
+That his fortune hir whiel so ladde<br/>
+That he no child his oghne hadde<br/>
+To regnen after his decess.<br/>
+He hadde a brother natheles,<br/>
+Whos rihte name was Eson,<br/>
+And he the worthi kniht Jason<br/>
+Begat, the which in every lond<br/>
+Alle othre passede of his hond<br/>
+In Armes, so that he the beste<br/>
+Was named and the worthieste,    3260<br/>
+He soghte worschipe overal.<br/>
+Nou herkne, and I thee telle schal<br/>
+An aventure that he soghte,<br/>
+Which afterward ful dere he boghte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was an yle, which Colchos<br/>
+Was cleped, and therof aros<br/>
+Gret speche in every lond aboute,<br/>
+That such merveile was non oute<br/>
+In al the wyde world nawhere,<br/>
+As tho was in that yle there.    3270<br/>
+Ther was a Schiep, as it was told,<br/>
+The which his flees bar al of gold,<br/>
+And so the goddes hadde it set,<br/>
+That it ne mihte awei be fet<br/>
+Be pouer of no worldes wiht:<br/>
+And yit ful many a worthi kniht<br/>
+It hadde assaied, as thei dorste,<br/>
+And evere it fell hem to the worste.<br/>
+Bot he, that wolde it noght forsake,<br/>
+Bot of his knyhthod undertake    3280<br/>
+To do what thing therto belongeth,<br/>
+This worthi Jason, sore alongeth<br/>
+To se the strange regiouns<br/>
+And knowe the condiciouns<br/>
+Of othre Marches, where he wente;<br/>
+And for that cause his hole entente<br/>
+He sette Colchos forto seche,<br/>
+And therupon he made a speche<br/>
+To Peleüs his Em the king.<br/>
+And he wel paid was of that thing;    3290<br/>
+And schop anon for his passage,<br/>
+And suche as were of his lignage,<br/>
+With othre knihtes whiche he ches,<br/>
+With him he tok, and Hercules,<br/>
+Which full was of chivalerie,<br/>
+With Jason wente in compaignie;<br/>
+And that was in the Monthe of Maii,<br/>
+Whan colde stormes were away.<br/>
+The wynd was good, the Schip was yare,<br/>
+Thei tok here leve, and forth thei fare    3300<br/>
+Toward Colchos: bot on the weie<br/>
+What hem befell is long to seie;<br/>
+Hou Lamedon the king of Troie,<br/>
+Which oghte wel have mad hem joie.<br/>
+Whan thei to reste a while him preide,<br/>
+Out of his lond he hem congeide;<br/>
+And so fell the dissencion,<br/>
+Which after was destruccion<br/>
+Of that Cite, as men mai hiere:<br/>
+Bot that is noght to mi matiere.    3310<br/>
+Bot thus this worthi folk Gregeis<br/>
+Fro that king, which was noght curteis,<br/>
+And fro his lond with Sail updrawe<br/>
+Thei wente hem forth, and many a sawe<br/>
+Thei made and many a gret manace,<br/>
+Til ate laste into that place<br/>
+Which as thei soghte thei aryve,<br/>
+And striken Sail, and forth as blyve<br/>
+Thei sente unto the king and tolden<br/>
+Who weren ther and what thei wolden.    3320<br/>
+Oëtes, which was thanne king,<br/>
+Whan that he herde this tyding<br/>
+Of Jason, which was comen there,<br/>
+And of these othre, what thei were,<br/>
+He thoghte don hem gret worschipe:<br/>
+For thei anon come out of Schipe,<br/>
+And strawht unto the king thei wente,<br/>
+And be the hond Jason he hente,<br/>
+And that was ate paleis gate,<br/>
+So fer the king cam on his gate    3330<br/>
+Toward Jason to don him chiere;<br/>
+And he, whom lacketh no manere,<br/>
+Whan he the king sih in presence,<br/>
+Yaf him ayein such reverence<br/>
+As to a kinges stat belongeth.<br/>
+And thus the king him underfongeth,<br/>
+And Jason in his arm he cawhte,<br/>
+And forth into the halle he strawhte,<br/>
+And ther they siete and spieke of thinges,<br/>
+And Jason tolde him tho tidinges,    3340<br/>
+Why he was come, and faire him preide<br/>
+To haste his time, and the kyng seide,<br/>
+“Jason, thou art a worthi kniht,<br/>
+Bot it lith in no mannes myht<br/>
+To don that thou art come fore:<br/>
+Ther hath be many a kniht forlore<br/>
+Of that thei wolden it assaie.”<br/>
+Bot Jason wolde him noght esmaie,<br/>
+And seide, “Of every worldes cure<br/>
+Fortune stant in aventure,    3350<br/>
+Per aunter wel, per aunter wo:<br/>
+Bot hou as evere that it go,<br/>
+It schal be with myn hond assaied.”<br/>
+The king tho hield him noght wel paied,<br/>
+For he the Grekes sore dredde,<br/>
+In aunter, if Jason ne spedde,<br/>
+He mihte therof bere a blame;<br/>
+For tho was al the worldes fame<br/>
+In Grece, as forto speke of Armes.<br/>
+Forthi he dredde him of his harmes,    3360<br/>
+And gan to preche him and to preie;<br/>
+Bot Jason wolde noght obeie,<br/>
+Bot seide he wolde his porpos holde<br/>
+For ought that eny man him tolde.<br/>
+The king, whan he thes wordes herde,<br/>
+And sih hou that this kniht ansuerde,<br/>
+Yit for he wolde make him glad,<br/>
+After Medea gon he bad,<br/>
+Which was his dowhter, and sche cam.<br/>
+And Jason, which good hiede nam,    3370<br/>
+Whan he hire sih, ayein hire goth;<br/>
+And sche, which was him nothing loth,<br/>
+Welcomede him into that lond,<br/>
+And softe tok him be the hond,<br/>
+And doun thei seten bothe same.<br/>
+Sche hadde herd spoke of his name<br/>
+And of his grete worthinesse;<br/>
+Forthi sche gan hir yhe impresse<br/>
+Upon his face and his stature,<br/>
+And thoghte hou nevere creature    3380<br/>
+Was so wel farende as was he.<br/>
+And Jason riht in such degre<br/>
+Ne mihte noght withholde his lok,<br/>
+Bot so good hiede on hire he tok,<br/>
+That him ne thoghte under the hevene<br/>
+Of beaute sawh he nevere hir evene,<br/>
+With al that fell to wommanhiede.<br/>
+Thus ech of other token hiede,<br/>
+Thogh ther no word was of record;<br/>
+Here hertes bothe of on acord    3390<br/>
+Ben set to love, bot as tho<br/>
+Ther mihten be no wordes mo.<br/>
+The king made him gret joie and feste,<br/>
+To alle his men he yaf an heste,<br/>
+So as thei wolde his thonk deserve,<br/>
+That thei scholde alle Jason serve,<br/>
+Whil that he wolde there duelle.<br/>
+And thus the dai, schortly to telle,<br/>
+With manye merthes thei despente,<br/>
+Til nyht was come, and tho thei wente,    3400<br/>
+Echon of other tok his leve,<br/>
+Whan thei no lengere myhten leve.<br/>
+I not hou Jason that nyht slep,<br/>
+Bot wel I wot that of the Schep,<br/>
+For which he cam into that yle,<br/>
+He thoghte bot a litel whyle;<br/>
+Al was Medea that he thoghte,<br/>
+So that in many a wise he soghte<br/>
+His witt wakende er it was day,<br/>
+Som time yee, som time nay,    3410<br/>
+Som time thus, som time so,<br/>
+As he was stered to and fro<br/>
+Of love, and ek of his conqueste<br/>
+As he was holde of his beheste.<br/>
+And thus he ros up be the morwe<br/>
+And tok himself seint John to borwe,<br/>
+And seide he wolde ferst beginne<br/>
+At love, and after forto winne<br/>
+The flees of gold, for which he com,<br/>
+And thus to him good herte he nom.    3420
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medea riht the same wise,<br/>
+Til dai cam that sche moste arise,<br/>
+Lay and bethoughte hire al the nyht,<br/>
+Hou sche that noble worthi kniht<br/>
+Be eny weie mihte wedde:<br/>
+And wel sche wiste, if he ne spedde<br/>
+Of thing which he hadde undertake,<br/>
+Sche mihte hirself no porpos take;<br/>
+For if he deide of his bataile,<br/>
+Sche moste thanne algate faile    3430<br/>
+To geten him, whan he were ded.<br/>
+Thus sche began to sette red<br/>
+And torne aboute hir wittes alle,<br/>
+To loke hou that it mihte falle<br/>
+That sche with him hadde a leisir<br/>
+To speke and telle of hir desir.<br/>
+And so it fell that same day<br/>
+That Jason with that suete may<br/>
+Togedre sete and hadden space<br/>
+To speke, and he besoughte hir grace.    3440<br/>
+And sche his tale goodli herde,<br/>
+And afterward sche him ansuerde<br/>
+And seide, “Jason, as thou wilt,<br/>
+Thou miht be sauf, thou miht be spilt;<br/>
+For wite wel that nevere man,<br/>
+Bot if he couthe that I can,<br/>
+Ne mihte that fortune achieve<br/>
+For which thou comst: bot as I lieve,<br/>
+If thou wolt holde covenant<br/>
+To love, of al the remenant    3450<br/>
+I schal thi lif and honour save,<br/>
+That thou the flees of gold schalt have.”<br/>
+He seide, “Al at youre oghne wille,<br/>
+Ma dame, I schal treuly fulfille<br/>
+Youre heste, whil mi lif mai laste.”<br/>
+Thus longe he preide, and ate laste<br/>
+Sche granteth, and behihte him this,<br/>
+That whan nyht comth and it time is,<br/>
+Sche wolde him sende certeinly<br/>
+Such on that scholde him prively    3460<br/>
+Al one into hire chambre bringe.<br/>
+He thonketh hire of that tidinge,<br/>
+For of that grace him is begonne<br/>
+Him thenkth alle othre thinges wonne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dai made ende and lost his lyht,<br/>
+And comen was the derke nyht,<br/>
+Which al the daies yhe blente.<br/>
+Jason tok leve and forth he wente,<br/>
+And whan he cam out of the pres,<br/>
+He tok to conseil Hercules,    3470<br/>
+And tolde him hou it was betid,<br/>
+And preide it scholde wel ben hid,<br/>
+And that he wolde loke aboute,<br/>
+Therwhiles that he schal ben oute.<br/>
+Thus as he stod and hiede nam,<br/>
+A Mayden fro Medea cam<br/>
+And to hir chambre Jason ledde,<br/>
+Wher that he fond redi to bedde<br/>
+The faireste and the wiseste eke;<br/>
+And sche with simple chiere and meke,    3480<br/>
+Whan sche him sih, wax al aschamed.<br/>
+Tho was here tale newe entamed;<br/>
+For sikernesse of Mariage<br/>
+Sche fette forth a riche ymage,<br/>
+Which was figure of Jupiter,<br/>
+And Jason swor and seide ther,<br/>
+That also wiss god scholde him helpe,<br/>
+That if Medea dede him helpe,<br/>
+That he his pourpos myhte winne,<br/>
+Thei scholde nevere parte atwinne,    3490<br/>
+Bot evere whil him lasteth lif,<br/>
+He wolde hire holde for his wif.<br/>
+And with that word thei kisten bothe;<br/>
+And for thei scholden hem unclothe,<br/>
+Ther cam a Maide, and in hir wise<br/>
+Sche dede hem bothe full servise,<br/>
+Til that thei were in bedde naked:<br/>
+I wot that nyht was wel bewaked,<br/>
+Thei hadden bothe what thei wolde.<br/>
+And thanne of leisir sche him tolde,    3500<br/>
+And gan fro point to point enforme<br/>
+Of his bataile and al the forme,<br/>
+Which as he scholde finde there,<br/>
+Whan he to thyle come were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sche seide, at entre of the pas<br/>
+Hou Mars, which god of Armes was,<br/>
+Hath set tuo Oxen sterne and stoute,<br/>
+That caste fyr and flamme aboute<br/>
+Bothe at the mouth and ate nase,<br/>
+So that thei setten al on blase    3510<br/>
+What thing that passeth hem betwene:<br/>
+And forthermore upon the grene<br/>
+Ther goth the flees of gold to kepe<br/>
+A Serpent, which mai nevere slepe.<br/>
+Thus who that evere scholde it winne,<br/>
+The fyr to stoppe he mot beginne,<br/>
+Which that the fierce bestes caste,<br/>
+And daunte he mot hem ate laste,<br/>
+So that he mai hem yoke and dryve;<br/>
+And therupon he mot as blyve    3520<br/>
+The Serpent with such strengthe assaile,<br/>
+That he mai slen him be bataile;<br/>
+Of which he mot the teth outdrawe,<br/>
+As it belongeth to that lawe,<br/>
+And thanne he mot tho Oxen yoke,<br/>
+Til thei have with a plowh tobroke<br/>
+A furgh of lond, in which arowe<br/>
+The teth of thaddre he moste sowe,<br/>
+And therof schule arise knihtes<br/>
+Wel armed up at alle rihtes.    3530<br/>
+Of hem is noght to taken hiede,<br/>
+For ech of hem in hastihiede<br/>
+Schal other slen with dethes wounde:<br/>
+And thus whan thei ben leid to grounde,<br/>
+Than mot he to the goddes preie,<br/>
+And go so forth and take his preie.<br/>
+Bot if he faile in eny wise<br/>
+Of that ye hiere me devise,<br/>
+Ther mai be set non other weie,<br/>
+That he ne moste algates deie.    3540<br/>
+“Nou have I told the peril al:<br/>
+I woll you tellen forth withal,”<br/>
+Quod Medea to Jason tho,<br/>
+“That ye schul knowen er ye go,<br/>
+Ayein the venym and the fyr<br/>
+What schal ben the recoverir.<br/>
+Bot, Sire, for it is nyh day,<br/>
+Ariseth up, so that I may<br/>
+Delivere you what thing I have,<br/>
+That mai youre lif and honour save.”    3550<br/>
+Thei weren bothe loth to rise,<br/>
+Bot for thei weren bothe wise,<br/>
+Up thei arisen ate laste:<br/>
+Jason his clothes on him caste<br/>
+And made him redi riht anon,<br/>
+And sche hir scherte dede upon<br/>
+And caste on hire a mantel clos,<br/>
+Withoute more and thanne aros.<br/>
+Tho tok sche forth a riche Tye<br/>
+Mad al of gold and of Perrie,    3560<br/>
+Out of the which sche nam a Ring,<br/>
+The Ston was worth al other thing.<br/>
+Sche seide, whil he wolde it were,<br/>
+Ther myhte no peril him dere,<br/>
+In water mai it noght be dreynt,<br/>
+Wher as it comth the fyr is queynt,<br/>
+It daunteth ek the cruel beste,<br/>
+Ther may no qued that man areste,<br/>
+Wher so he be on See or lond,<br/>
+Which hath that ring upon his hond:    3570<br/>
+And over that sche gan to sein,<br/>
+That if a man wol ben unsein,<br/>
+Withinne his hond hold clos the Ston,<br/>
+And he mai invisible gon.<br/>
+The Ring to Jason sche betauhte,<br/>
+And so forth after sche him tauhte<br/>
+What sacrifise he scholde make;<br/>
+And gan out of hire cofre take<br/>
+Him thoughte an hevenely figure,<br/>
+Which al be charme and be conjure    3580<br/>
+Was wroght, and ek it was thurgh write<br/>
+With names, which he scholde wite,<br/>
+As sche him tauhte tho to rede;<br/>
+And bad him, as he wolde spede,<br/>
+Withoute reste of eny while,<br/>
+Whan he were londed in that yle,<br/>
+He scholde make his sacrifise<br/>
+And rede his carecte in the wise<br/>
+As sche him tauhte, on knes doun bent,<br/>
+Thre sithes toward orient;    3590<br/>
+For so scholde he the goddes plese<br/>
+And winne himselven mochel ese.<br/>
+And whanne he hadde it thries rad,<br/>
+To opne a buiste sche him bad,<br/>
+Which sche ther tok him in present,<br/>
+And was full of such oignement,<br/>
+That ther was fyr ne venym non<br/>
+That scholde fastnen him upon,<br/>
+Whan that he were enoynt withal.<br/>
+Forthi sche tauhte him hou he schal    3600<br/>
+Enoignte his armes al aboute,<br/>
+And for he scholde nothing doute,<br/>
+Sche tok him thanne a maner glu,<br/>
+The which was of so gret vertu,<br/>
+That where a man it wolde caste,<br/>
+It scholde binde anon so faste<br/>
+That noman mihte it don aweie.<br/>
+And that sche bad be alle weie<br/>
+He scholde into the mouthes throwen<br/>
+Of tho tweie Oxen that fyr blowen,    3610<br/>
+Therof to stoppen the malice;<br/>
+The glu schal serve of that office.<br/>
+And over that hir oignement,<br/>
+Hir Ring and hir enchantement<br/>
+Ayein the Serpent scholde him were,<br/>
+Til he him sle with swerd or spere:<br/>
+And thanne he may saufliche ynowh<br/>
+His Oxen yoke into the plowh<br/>
+And the teth sowe in such a wise,<br/>
+Til he the knyhtes se arise,    3620<br/>
+And ech of other doun be leid<br/>
+In such manere as I have seid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus Medea for Jason<br/>
+Ordeigneth, and preith therupon<br/>
+That he nothing foryete scholde,<br/>
+And ek sche preith him that he wolde,<br/>
+Whan he hath alle his Armes don,<br/>
+To grounde knele and thonke anon<br/>
+The goddes, and so forth be ese<br/>
+The flees of gold he scholde sese.    3630<br/>
+And whanne he hadde it sesed so,<br/>
+That thanne he were sone ago<br/>
+Withouten eny tariynge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan this was seid, into wepinge<br/>
+Sche fell, as sche that was thurgh nome<br/>
+With love, and so fer overcome,<br/>
+That al hir world on him sche sette.<br/>
+Bot whan sche sih ther was no lette,<br/>
+That he mot nedes parte hire fro,<br/>
+Sche tok him in hire armes tuo,    3640<br/>
+An hundred time and gan him kisse,<br/>
+And seide, “O, al mi worldes blisse,<br/>
+Mi trust, mi lust, mi lif, min hele,<br/>
+To be thin helpe in this querele<br/>
+I preie unto the goddes alle.”<br/>
+And with that word sche gan doun falle<br/>
+On swoune, and he hire uppe nam,<br/>
+And forth with that the Maiden cam,<br/>
+And thei to bedde anon hir broghte,<br/>
+And thanne Jason hire besoghte,    3650<br/>
+And to hire seide in this manere:<br/>
+“Mi worthi lusti ladi dere,<br/>
+Conforteth you, for be my trouthe<br/>
+It schal noght fallen in mi slouthe<br/>
+That I ne wol thurghout fulfille<br/>
+Youre hestes at youre oghne wille.<br/>
+And yit I hope to you bringe<br/>
+Withinne a while such tidinge,<br/>
+The which schal make ous bothe game.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot for he wolde kepe hir name,    3660<br/>
+Whan that he wiste it was nyh dai,<br/>
+He seide, “A dieu, mi swete mai.”<br/>
+And forth with him he nam his gere,<br/>
+Which as sche hadde take him there,<br/>
+And strauht unto his chambre he wente,<br/>
+And goth to bedde and slep him hente,<br/>
+And lay, that noman him awok,<br/>
+For Hercules hiede of him tok,<br/>
+Til it was undren hih and more.<br/>
+And thanne he gan to sighe sore    3670<br/>
+And sodeinliche abreide of slep;<br/>
+And thei that token of him kep,<br/>
+His chamberleins, be sone there,<br/>
+And maden redi al his gere,<br/>
+And he aros and to the king<br/>
+He wente, and seide hou to that thing<br/>
+For which he cam he wolde go.<br/>
+The king therof was wonder wo,<br/>
+And for he wolde him fain withdrawe,<br/>
+He tolde him many a dredful sawe,    3680<br/>
+Bot Jason wolde it noght recorde,<br/>
+And ate laste thei acorde.<br/>
+Whan that he wolde noght abide,<br/>
+A Bot was redy ate tyde,<br/>
+In which this worthi kniht of Grece<br/>
+Ful armed up at every piece,<br/>
+To his bataile which belongeth,<br/>
+Tok ore on honde and sore him longeth,<br/>
+Til he the water passed were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan he cam to that yle there,    3690<br/>
+He set him on his knes doun strauht,<br/>
+And his carecte, as he was tawht,<br/>
+He radde, and made his sacrifise,<br/>
+And siththe enoignte him in that wise,<br/>
+As Medea him hadde bede;<br/>
+And thanne aros up fro that stede,<br/>
+And with the glu the fyr he queynte,<br/>
+And anon after he atteinte<br/>
+The grete Serpent and him slowh.<br/>
+Bot erst he hadde sorwe ynowh,    3700<br/>
+For that Serpent made him travaile<br/>
+So harde and sore of his bataile,<br/>
+That nou he stod and nou he fell:<br/>
+For longe time it so befell,<br/>
+That with his swerd ne with his spere<br/>
+He mihte noght that Serpent dere.<br/>
+He was so scherded al aboute,<br/>
+It hield all eggetol withoute,<br/>
+He was so ruide and hard of skin,<br/>
+Ther mihte nothing go therin;    3710<br/>
+Venym and fyr togedre he caste,<br/>
+That he Jason so sore ablaste,<br/>
+That if ne were his oignement,<br/>
+His Ring and his enchantement,<br/>
+Which Medea tok him tofore,<br/>
+He hadde with that worm be lore;<br/>
+Bot of vertu which therof cam<br/>
+Jason the Dragon overcam.<br/>
+And he anon the teth outdrouh,<br/>
+And sette his Oxen in a plouh,    3720<br/>
+With which he brak a piece of lond<br/>
+And sieu hem with his oghne hond.<br/>
+Tho mihte he gret merveile se:<br/>
+Of every toth in his degre<br/>
+Sprong up a kniht with spere and schield,<br/>
+Of whiche anon riht in the field<br/>
+Echon slow other; and with that<br/>
+Jason Medea noght foryat,<br/>
+On bothe his knes he gan doun falle,<br/>
+And yaf thonk to the goddes alle.    3730<br/>
+The Flees he tok and goth to Bote,<br/>
+The Sonne schyneth bryhte and hote,<br/>
+The Flees of gold schon forth withal,<br/>
+The water glistreth overal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medea wepte and sigheth ofte,<br/>
+And stod upon a Tour alofte:<br/>
+Al prively withinne hirselve,<br/>
+Ther herde it nouther ten ne tuelve,<br/>
+Sche preide, and seide, “O, god him spede,<br/>
+The kniht which hath mi maidenhiede!”    3740<br/>
+And ay sche loketh toward thyle.<br/>
+Bot whan sche sih withinne a while<br/>
+The Flees glistrende ayein the Sonne,<br/>
+Sche saide, “Ha, lord, now al is wonne,<br/>
+Mi kniht the field hath overcome:<br/>
+Nou wolde god he were come;<br/>
+Ha lord, that he ne were alonde!”<br/>
+Bot I dar take this on honde,<br/>
+If that sche hadde wynges tuo,<br/>
+Sche wolde have flowe unto him tho    3750<br/>
+Strawht ther he was into the Bot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dai was clier, the Sonne hot,<br/>
+The Gregeis weren in gret doute,<br/>
+The whyle that here lord was oute:<br/>
+Thei wisten noght what scholde tyde,<br/>
+Bot waiten evere upon the tyde,<br/>
+To se what ende scholde falle.<br/>
+Ther stoden ek the nobles alle<br/>
+Forth with the comun of the toun;<br/>
+And as thei loken up and doun,    3760<br/>
+Thei weren war withinne a throwe,<br/>
+Wher cam the bot, which thei wel knowe,<br/>
+And sihe hou Jason broghte his preie.<br/>
+And tho thei gonnen alle seie,<br/>
+And criden alle with o stevene,<br/>
+“Ha, wher was evere under the hevene<br/>
+So noble a knyht as Jason is?”<br/>
+And welnyh alle seiden this,<br/>
+That Jason was a faie kniht,<br/>
+For it was nevere of mannes miht    3770<br/>
+The Flees of gold so forto winne;<br/>
+And thus to talen thei beginne.<br/>
+With that the king com forth anon,<br/>
+And sih the Flees, hou that it schon;<br/>
+And whan Jason cam to the lond,<br/>
+The king himselve tok his hond<br/>
+And kist him, and gret joie him made.<br/>
+The Gregeis weren wonder glade,<br/>
+And of that thing riht merie hem thoghte,<br/>
+And forth with hem the Flees thei broghte,    3780<br/>
+And ech on other gan to leyhe;<br/>
+Bot wel was him that mihte neyhe,<br/>
+To se therof the proprete.<br/>
+And thus thei passen the cite<br/>
+And gon unto the Paleis straght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medea, which foryat him naght,<br/>
+Was redy there, and seide anon,<br/>
+“Welcome, O worthi kniht Jason.”<br/>
+Sche wolde have kist him wonder fayn,<br/>
+Bot schame tornede hire agayn;    3790<br/>
+It was noght the manere as tho,<br/>
+Forthi sche dorste noght do so.<br/>
+Sche tok hire leve, and Jason wente<br/>
+Into his chambre, and sche him sente<br/>
+Hire Maide to sen hou he ferde;<br/>
+The which whan that sche sih and herde,<br/>
+Hou that he hadde faren oute<br/>
+And that it stod wel al aboute,<br/>
+Sche tolde hire ladi what sche wiste,<br/>
+And sche for joie hire Maide kiste.    3800<br/>
+The bathes weren thanne araied,<br/>
+With herbes tempred and assaied,<br/>
+And Jason was unarmed sone<br/>
+And dede as it befell to done:<br/>
+Into his bath he wente anon<br/>
+And wyssh him clene as eny bon;<br/>
+He tok a sopp, and oute he cam,<br/>
+And on his beste aray he nam,<br/>
+And kempde his hed, whan he was clad,<br/>
+And goth him forth al merie and glad    3810<br/>
+Riht strawht into the kinges halle.<br/>
+The king cam with his knihtes alle<br/>
+And maden him glad welcominge;<br/>
+And he hem tolde the tidinge<br/>
+Of this and that, hou it befell,<br/>
+Whan that he wan the schepes fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medea, whan sche was asent,<br/>
+Com sone to that parlement,<br/>
+And whan sche mihte Jason se,<br/>
+Was non so glad of alle as sche.    3820<br/>
+Ther was no joie forto seche,<br/>
+Of him mad every man a speche,<br/>
+Som man seide on, som man seide other;<br/>
+Bot thogh he were goddes brother<br/>
+And mihte make fyr and thonder,<br/>
+Ther mihte be nomore wonder<br/>
+Than was of him in that cite.<br/>
+Echon tauhte other, “This is he,<br/>
+Which hath in his pouer withinne<br/>
+That al the world ne mihte winne:    3830<br/>
+Lo, hier the beste of alle goode.”<br/>
+Thus saiden thei that there stode,<br/>
+And ek that walkede up and doun,<br/>
+Bothe of the Court and of the toun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The time of Souper cam anon,<br/>
+Thei wisshen and therto thei gon,<br/>
+Medea was with Jason set:<br/>
+Tho was ther many a deynte fet<br/>
+And set tofore hem on the bord,<br/>
+Bot non so likinge as the word    3840<br/>
+Which was ther spoke among hem tuo,<br/>
+So as thei dorste speke tho.<br/>
+Bot thogh thei hadden litel space,<br/>
+Yit thei acorden in that place<br/>
+Hou Jason scholde come at nyht,<br/>
+Whan every torche and every liht<br/>
+Were oute, and thanne of other thinges<br/>
+Thei spieke aloud for supposinges<br/>
+Of hem that stoden there aboute:<br/>
+For love is everemore in doute,    3850<br/>
+If that it be wisly governed<br/>
+Of hem that ben of love lerned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan al was don, that dissh and cuppe<br/>
+And cloth and bord and al was uppe,<br/>
+Thei waken whil hem lest to wake,<br/>
+And after that thei leve take<br/>
+And gon to bedde forto reste.<br/>
+And whan him thoghte for the beste,<br/>
+That every man was faste aslepe,<br/>
+Jason, that wolde his time kepe,    3860<br/>
+Goth forth stalkende al prively<br/>
+Unto the chambre, and redely<br/>
+Ther was a Maide, which him kepte.<br/>
+Medea wok and nothing slepte,<br/>
+Bot natheles sche was abedde,<br/>
+And he with alle haste him spedde<br/>
+And made him naked and al warm.<br/>
+Anon he tok hire in his arm:<br/>
+What nede is forto speke of ese?<br/>
+Hem list ech other forto plese,    3870<br/>
+So that thei hadden joie ynow:<br/>
+And tho thei setten whanne and how<br/>
+That sche with him awey schal stele.<br/>
+With wordes suche and othre fele<br/>
+Whan al was treted to an ende,<br/>
+Jason tok leve and gan forth wende<br/>
+Unto his oughne chambre in pes;<br/>
+Ther wiste it non bot Hercules.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He slepte and ros whan it was time,<br/>
+And whanne it fell towardes prime,    3880<br/>
+He tok to him suche as he triste<br/>
+In secre, that non other wiste,<br/>
+And told hem of his conseil there,<br/>
+And seide that his wille were<br/>
+That thei to Schipe hadde alle thinge<br/>
+So priveliche in thevenynge,<br/>
+That noman mihte here dede aspie<br/>
+Bot tho that were of compaignie:<br/>
+For he woll go withoute leve,<br/>
+And lengere woll he noght beleve;    3890<br/>
+Bot he ne wolde at thilke throwe<br/>
+The king or queene scholde it knowe.<br/>
+Thei saide, “Al this schal wel be do:”<br/>
+And Jason truste wel therto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Medea in the mene while,<br/>
+Which thoghte hir fader to beguile,<br/>
+The Tresor which hir fader hadde<br/>
+With hire al priveli sche ladde,<br/>
+And with Jason at time set<br/>
+Awey sche stal and fond no let,    3900<br/>
+And straght sche goth hire unto schipe<br/>
+Of Grece with that felaschipe,<br/>
+And thei anon drowe up the Seil.<br/>
+And al that nyht this was conseil,<br/>
+Bot erly, whan the Sonne schon,<br/>
+Men syhe hou that thei were agon,<br/>
+And come unto the king and tolde:<br/>
+And he the sothe knowe wolde,<br/>
+And axeth where his dowhter was.<br/>
+Ther was no word bot Out, Allas!    3910<br/>
+Sche was ago. The moder wepte,<br/>
+The fader as a wod man lepte,<br/>
+And gan the time forto warie,<br/>
+And swor his oth he wol noght tarie,<br/>
+That with Caliphe and with galeie<br/>
+The same cours, the same weie,<br/>
+Which Jason tok, he wolde take,<br/>
+If that he mihte him overtake.<br/>
+To this thei seiden alle yee:<br/>
+Anon thei weren ate See,    3920<br/>
+And alle, as who seith, at a word<br/>
+Thei gon withinne schipes bord,<br/>
+The Sail goth up, and forth thei strauhte.<br/>
+Bot non espleit therof thei cauhte,<br/>
+And so thei tornen hom ayein,<br/>
+For al that labour was in vein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jason to Grece with his preie<br/>
+Goth thurgh the See the rihte weie:<br/>
+Whan he ther com and men it tolde,<br/>
+Thei maden joie yonge and olde.    3930<br/>
+Eson, whan that he wiste of this,<br/>
+Hou that his Sone comen is,<br/>
+And hath achieved that he soughte<br/>
+And hom with him Medea broughte,<br/>
+In al the wyde world was non<br/>
+So glad a man as he was on.<br/>
+Togedre ben these lovers tho,<br/>
+Til that thei hadden sones tuo,<br/>
+Wherof thei weren bothe glade,<br/>
+And olde Eson gret joie made    3940<br/>
+To sen thencress of his lignage;<br/>
+For he was of so gret an Age,<br/>
+That men awaiten every day,<br/>
+Whan that he scholde gon away.<br/>
+Jason, which sih his fader old,<br/>
+Upon Medea made him bold,<br/>
+Of art magique, which sche couthe,<br/>
+And preith hire that his fader youthe<br/>
+Sche wolde make ayeinward newe:<br/>
+And sche, that was toward him trewe,    3950<br/>
+Behihte him that sche wolde it do,<br/>
+Whan that sche time sawh therto.<br/>
+Bot what sche dede in that matiere<br/>
+It is a wonder thing to hiere,<br/>
+Bot yit for the novellerie<br/>
+I thenke tellen a partie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus it befell upon a nyht,<br/>
+Whan ther was noght bot sterreliht,<br/>
+Sche was vanyssht riht as hir liste,<br/>
+That no wyht bot hirself it wiste,    3960<br/>
+And that was ate mydnyht tyde.<br/>
+The world was stille on every side;<br/>
+With open hed and fot al bare,<br/>
+Hir her tosprad sche gan to fare,<br/>
+Upon hir clothes gert sche was,<br/>
+Al specheles and on the gras<br/>
+Sche glod forth as an Addre doth:<br/>
+Non otherwise sche ne goth,<br/>
+Til sche cam to the freisshe flod,<br/>
+And there a while sche withstod.    3970<br/>
+Thries sche torned hire aboute,<br/>
+And thries ek sche gan doun loute<br/>
+And in the flod sche wette hir her,<br/>
+And thries on the water ther<br/>
+Sche gaspeth with a drecchinge onde,<br/>
+And tho sche tok hir speche on honde.<br/>
+Ferst sche began to clepe and calle<br/>
+Upward unto the sterres alle,<br/>
+To Wynd, to Air, to See, to lond<br/>
+Sche preide, and ek hield up hir hond    3980<br/>
+To Echates, and gan to crie,<br/>
+Which is goddesse of Sorcerie.<br/>
+Sche seide, “Helpeth at this nede,<br/>
+And as ye maden me to spede,<br/>
+Whan Jason cam the Flees to seche,<br/>
+So help me nou, I you beseche.”<br/>
+With that sche loketh and was war,<br/>
+Doun fro the Sky ther cam a char,<br/>
+The which Dragouns aboute drowe:<br/>
+And tho sche gan hir hed doun bowe,    3990<br/>
+And up sche styh, and faire and wel<br/>
+Sche drof forth bothe char and whel<br/>
+Above in thair among the Skyes.<br/>
+The lond of Crete and tho parties<br/>
+Sche soughte, and faste gan hire hye,<br/>
+And there upon the hulles hyhe<br/>
+Of Othrin and Olimpe also,<br/>
+And ek of othre hulles mo,<br/>
+Sche fond and gadreth herbes suote,<br/>
+Sche pulleth up som be the rote,    4000<br/>
+And manye with a knyf sche scherth,<br/>
+And alle into hir char sche berth.<br/>
+Thus whan sche hath the hulles sought,<br/>
+The flodes ther foryat sche nought,<br/>
+Eridian and Amphrisos,<br/>
+Peneie and ek Spercheïdos,<br/>
+To hem sche wente and ther sche nom<br/>
+Bothe of the water and the fom,<br/>
+The sond and ek the smale stones,<br/>
+Whiche as sche ches out for the nones,    4010<br/>
+And of the rede See a part,<br/>
+That was behovelich to hire art,<br/>
+Sche tok, and after that aboute<br/>
+Sche soughte sondri sedes oute<br/>
+In feldes and in many greves,<br/>
+And ek a part sche tok of leves:<br/>
+Bot thing which mihte hire most availe<br/>
+Sche fond in Crete and in Thessaile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In daies and in nyhtes Nyne,<br/>
+With gret travaile and with gret pyne,    4020<br/>
+Sche was pourveid of every piece,<br/>
+And torneth homward into Grece.<br/>
+Before the gates of Eson<br/>
+Hir char sche let awai to gon,<br/>
+And tok out ferst that was therinne;<br/>
+For tho sche thoghte to beginne<br/>
+Such thing as semeth impossible,<br/>
+And made hirselven invisible,<br/>
+As sche that was with Air enclosed<br/>
+And mihte of noman be desclosed.    4030<br/>
+Sche tok up turves of the lond<br/>
+Withoute helpe of mannes hond,<br/>
+Al heled with the grene gras,<br/>
+Of which an Alter mad ther was<br/>
+Unto Echates the goddesse<br/>
+Of art magique and the maistresse,<br/>
+And eft an other to Juvente,<br/>
+As sche which dede hir hole entente.<br/>
+Tho tok sche fieldwode and verveyne,<br/>
+Of herbes ben noght betre tueine,    4040<br/>
+Of which anon withoute let<br/>
+These alters ben aboute set:<br/>
+Tuo sondri puttes faste by<br/>
+Sche made, and with that hastely<br/>
+A wether which was blak sche slouh,<br/>
+And out therof the blod sche drouh<br/>
+And dede into the pettes tuo;<br/>
+Warm melk sche putte also therto<br/>
+With hony meynd: and in such wise<br/>
+Sche gan to make hir sacrifice,    4050<br/>
+And cride and preide forth withal<br/>
+To Pluto the god infernal,<br/>
+And to the queene Proserpine.<br/>
+And so sche soghte out al the line<br/>
+Of hem that longen to that craft,<br/>
+Behinde was no name laft,<br/>
+And preide hem alle, as sche wel couthe,<br/>
+To grante Eson his ferste youthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This olde Eson broght forth was tho,<br/>
+Awei sche bad alle othre go    4060<br/>
+Upon peril that mihte falle;<br/>
+And with that word thei wenten alle,<br/>
+And leften there hem tuo al one.<br/>
+And tho sche gan to gaspe and gone,<br/>
+And made signes manyon,<br/>
+And seide hir wordes therupon;<br/>
+So that with spellinge of hir charmes<br/>
+Sche tok Eson in bothe hire armes,<br/>
+And made him forto slepe faste,<br/>
+And him upon hire herbes caste.    4070<br/>
+The blake wether tho sche tok,<br/>
+And hiewh the fleissh, as doth a cok;<br/>
+On either alter part sche leide,<br/>
+And with the charmes that sche seide<br/>
+A fyr doun fro the Sky alyhte<br/>
+And made it forto brenne lyhte.<br/>
+Bot whan Medea sawh it brenne,<br/>
+Anon sche gan to sterte and renne<br/>
+The fyri aulters al aboute:<br/>
+Ther was no beste which goth oute    4080<br/>
+More wylde than sche semeth ther:<br/>
+Aboute hir schuldres hyng hir her,<br/>
+As thogh sche were oute of hir mynde<br/>
+And torned in an other kynde.<br/>
+Tho lay ther certein wode cleft,<br/>
+Of which the pieces nou and eft<br/>
+Sche made hem in the pettes wete,<br/>
+And put hem in the fyri hete,<br/>
+And tok the brond with al the blase,<br/>
+And thries sche began to rase    4090<br/>
+Aboute Eson, ther as he slepte;<br/>
+And eft with water, which sche kepte,<br/>
+Sche made a cercle aboute him thries,<br/>
+And eft with fyr of sulphre twyes:<br/>
+Ful many an other thing sche dede,<br/>
+Which is noght writen in this stede.<br/>
+Bot tho sche ran so up and doun,<br/>
+Sche made many a wonder soun,<br/>
+Somtime lich unto the cock,<br/>
+Somtime unto the Laverock,    4100<br/>
+Somtime kacleth as a Hen,<br/>
+Somtime spekth as don the men:<br/>
+And riht so as hir jargoun strangeth,<br/>
+In sondri wise hir forme changeth,<br/>
+Sche semeth faie and no womman;<br/>
+For with the craftes that sche can<br/>
+Sche was, as who seith, a goddesse,<br/>
+And what hir liste, more or lesse,<br/>
+Sche dede, in bokes as we finde,<br/>
+That passeth over manneskinde.    4110<br/>
+Bot who that wole of wondres hiere,<br/>
+What thing sche wroghte in this matiere,<br/>
+To make an ende of that sche gan,<br/>
+Such merveile herde nevere man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Apointed in the newe Mone,<br/>
+Whan it was time forto done,<br/>
+Sche sette a caldron on the fyr,<br/>
+In which was al the hole atir,<br/>
+Wheron the medicine stod,<br/>
+Of jus, of water and of blod,    4120<br/>
+And let it buile in such a plit,<br/>
+Til that sche sawh the spume whyt;<br/>
+And tho sche caste in rynde and rote,<br/>
+And sed and flour that was for bote,<br/>
+With many an herbe and many a ston,<br/>
+Wherof sche hath ther many on:<br/>
+And ek Cimpheius the Serpent<br/>
+To hire hath alle his scales lent,<br/>
+Chelidre hire yaf his addres skin,<br/>
+And sche to builen caste hem in;    4130<br/>
+A part ek of the horned Oule,<br/>
+The which men hiere on nyhtes houle;<br/>
+And of a Raven, which was told<br/>
+Of nyne hundred wynter old,<br/>
+Sche tok the hed with al the bile;<br/>
+And as the medicine it wile,<br/>
+Sche tok therafter the bouele<br/>
+Of the Seewolf, and for the hele<br/>
+Of Eson, with a thousand mo<br/>
+Of thinges that sche hadde tho,    4140<br/>
+In that Caldroun togedre as blyve<br/>
+Sche putte, and tok thanne of Olyve<br/>
+A drie branche hem with to stere,<br/>
+The which anon gan floure and bere<br/>
+And waxe al freissh and grene ayein.<br/>
+Whan sche this vertu hadde sein,<br/>
+Sche let the leste drope of alle<br/>
+Upon the bare flor doun falle;<br/>
+Anon ther sprong up flour and gras,<br/>
+Where as the drope falle was,    4150<br/>
+And wox anon al medwe grene,<br/>
+So that it mihte wel be sene.<br/>
+Medea thanne knew and wiste<br/>
+Hir medicine is forto triste,<br/>
+And goth to Eson ther he lay,<br/>
+And tok a swerd was of assay,<br/>
+With which a wounde upon his side<br/>
+Sche made, that therout mai slyde<br/>
+The blod withinne, which was old<br/>
+And sek and trouble and fieble and cold.    4160<br/>
+And tho sche tok unto his us<br/>
+Of herbes al the beste jus,<br/>
+And poured it into his wounde;<br/>
+That made his veynes fulle and sounde:<br/>
+And tho sche made his wounde clos,<br/>
+And tok his hond, and up he ros;<br/>
+And tho sche yaf him drinke a drauhte,<br/>
+Of which his youthe ayein he cauhte,<br/>
+His hed, his herte and his visage<br/>
+Lich unto twenty wynter Age;    4170<br/>
+Hise hore heres were away,<br/>
+And lich unto the freisshe Maii,<br/>
+Whan passed ben the colde shoures,<br/>
+Riht so recovereth he his floures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, what mihte eny man devise,<br/>
+A womman schewe in eny wise<br/>
+Mor hertly love in every stede,<br/>
+Than Medea to Jason dede?<br/>
+Ferst sche made him the flees to winne,<br/>
+And after that fro kiththe and kinne    4180<br/>
+With gret tresor with him sche stal,<br/>
+And to his fader forth withal<br/>
+His Elde hath torned into youthe,<br/>
+Which thing non other womman couthe:<br/>
+Bot hou it was to hire aquit,<br/>
+The remembrance duelleth yit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Peleüs his Em was ded,<br/>
+Jason bar corone on his hed,<br/>
+Medea hath fulfild his wille:<br/>
+Bot whanne he scholde of riht fulfille    4190<br/>
+The trouthe, which to hire afore<br/>
+He hadde in thyle of Colchos swore,<br/>
+Tho was Medea most deceived.<br/>
+For he an other hath received,<br/>
+Which dowhter was to king Creon,<br/>
+Creusa sche hihte, and thus Jason,<br/>
+As he that was to love untrewe,<br/>
+Medea lefte and tok a newe.<br/>
+Bot that was after sone aboght:<br/>
+Medea with hire art hath wroght    4200<br/>
+Of cloth of gold a mantel riche,<br/>
+Which semeth worth a kingesriche,<br/>
+And that was unto Creusa sent<br/>
+In name of yifte and of present,<br/>
+For Sosterhode hem was betuene;<br/>
+And whan that yonge freisshe queene<br/>
+That mantel lappeth hire aboute,<br/>
+Anon therof the fyr sprong oute<br/>
+And brente hir bothe fleissh and bon.<br/>
+Tho cam Medea to Jason    4210<br/>
+With bothe his Sones on hire hond,<br/>
+And seide, “O thou of every lond<br/>
+The moste untrewe creature,<br/>
+Lo, this schal be thi forfeture.”<br/>
+With that sche bothe his Sones slouh<br/>
+Before his yhe, and he outdrouh<br/>
+His swerd and wold have slayn hir tho,<br/>
+Bot farewel, sche was ago<br/>
+Unto Pallas the Court above,<br/>
+Wher as sche pleigneth upon love,    4220<br/>
+As sche that was with that goddesse,<br/>
+And he was left in gret destresse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus miht thou se what sorwe it doth<br/>
+To swere an oth which is noght soth,<br/>
+In loves cause namely.<br/>
+Mi Sone, be wel war forthi,<br/>
+And kep that thou be noght forswore:<br/>
+For this, which I have told tofore,<br/>
+Ovide telleth everydel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I may lieve it wel,    4230<br/>
+For I have herde it ofte seie<br/>
+Hou Jason tok the flees aweie<br/>
+Fro Colchos, bot yit herde I noght<br/>
+Be whom it was ferst thider broght.<br/>
+And for it were good to hiere,<br/>
+If that you liste at mi preiere<br/>
+To telle, I wolde you beseche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, who that wole it seche,<br/>
+In bokes he mai finde it write;<br/>
+And natheles, if thou wolt wite,    4240<br/>
+In the manere as thou hast preid<br/>
+I schal the telle hou it is seid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fame of thilke schepes fell,<br/>
+Which in Colchos, as it befell,<br/>
+Was al of gold, schal nevere deie;<br/>
+Wherof I thenke for to seie<br/>
+Hou it cam ferst into that yle.<br/>
+Ther was a king in thilke whyle<br/>
+Towardes Grece, and Athemas<br/>
+The Cronique of his name was;    4250<br/>
+And hadde a wif, which Philen hihte,<br/>
+Be whom, so as fortune it dihte,<br/>
+He hadde of children yonge tuo.<br/>
+Frixus the ferste was of tho,<br/>
+A knave child, riht fair withalle;<br/>
+A dowhter ek, the which men calle<br/>
+Hellen, he hadde be this wif.<br/>
+Bot for ther mai no mannes lif<br/>
+Endure upon this Erthe hiere,<br/>
+This worthi queene, as thou miht hiere,    4260<br/>
+Er that the children were of age,<br/>
+Tok of hire ende the passage,<br/>
+With gret worschipe and was begrave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What thing it liketh god to have<br/>
+It is gret reson to ben his;<br/>
+Forthi this king, so as it is,<br/>
+With gret suffrance it underfongeth:<br/>
+And afterward, as him belongeth,<br/>
+Whan it was time forto wedde,<br/>
+A newe wif he tok to bedde,    4270<br/>
+Which Yno hihte and was a Mayde,<br/>
+And ek the dowhter, as men saide,<br/>
+Of Cadme, which a king also<br/>
+Was holde in thilke daies tho.<br/>
+Whan Yno was the kinges make,<br/>
+Sche caste hou that sche mihte make<br/>
+These children to here fader lothe,<br/>
+And schope a wyle ayein hem bothe,<br/>
+Which to the king was al unknowe.<br/>
+A yeer or tuo sche let do sowe    4280<br/>
+The lond with sode whete aboute,<br/>
+Wherof no corn mai springen oute;<br/>
+And thus be sleyhte and be covine<br/>
+Aros the derthe and the famine<br/>
+Thurghout the lond in such a wise,<br/>
+So that the king a sacrifise<br/>
+Upon the point of this destresse<br/>
+To Ceres, which is the goddesse<br/>
+Of corn, hath schape him forto yive,<br/>
+To loke if it mai be foryive,    4290<br/>
+The meschief which was in his lond.<br/>
+Bot sche, which knew tofor the hond<br/>
+The circumstance of al this thing,<br/>
+Ayein the cominge of the king<br/>
+Into the temple, hath schape so,<br/>
+Of hire acord that alle tho<br/>
+Whiche of the temple prestes were<br/>
+Have seid and full declared there<br/>
+Unto the king, bot if so be<br/>
+That he delivere the contre    4300<br/>
+Of Frixus and of Hellen bothe,<br/>
+With whom the goddes ben so wrothe,<br/>
+That whil tho children ben therinne,<br/>
+Such tilthe schal noman beginne,<br/>
+Wherof to gete him eny corn.<br/>
+Thus was it seid, thus was it sworn<br/>
+Of all the Prestes that ther are;<br/>
+And sche which causeth al this fare<br/>
+Seid ek therto what that sche wolde,<br/>
+And every man thanne after tolde    4310<br/>
+So as the queene hem hadde preid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which hath his Ere leid,<br/>
+And lieveth al that evere he herde,<br/>
+Unto here tale thus ansuerde,<br/>
+And seith that levere him is to chese<br/>
+Hise children bothe forto lese,<br/>
+Than him and al the remenant<br/>
+Of hem whiche are aportenant<br/>
+Unto the lond which he schal kepe:<br/>
+And bad his wif to take kepe    4320<br/>
+In what manere is best to done,<br/>
+That thei delivered weren sone<br/>
+Out of this world. And sche anon<br/>
+Tuo men ordeigneth forto gon;<br/>
+Bot ferst sche made hem forto swere<br/>
+That thei the children scholden bere<br/>
+Unto the See, that non it knowe,<br/>
+And hem therinne bothe throwe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The children to the See ben lad,<br/>
+Wher in the wise as Yno bad    4330<br/>
+These men be redy forto do.<br/>
+Bot the goddesse which Juno<br/>
+Is hote, appiereth in the stede,<br/>
+And hath unto the men forbede<br/>
+That thei the children noght ne sle;<br/>
+Bot bad hem loke into the See<br/>
+And taken hiede of that thei sihen.<br/>
+Ther swam a Schep tofore here yhen,<br/>
+Whos flees of burned gold was al;<br/>
+And this goddesse forth withal    4340<br/>
+Comandeth that withoute lette<br/>
+Thei scholde anon these children sette<br/>
+Above upon this Schepes bak;<br/>
+And al was do, riht as sche spak,<br/>
+Wherof the men gon hom ayein.<br/>
+And fell so, as the bokes sein,<br/>
+Hellen the yonge Mayden tho,<br/>
+Which of the See was wo bego,<br/>
+For pure drede hire herte hath lore,<br/>
+That fro the Schep, which hath hire bore,    4350<br/>
+As sche that was swounende feint,<br/>
+Sche fell, and hath hirselve dreint;<br/>
+With Frixus and this Schep forth swam,<br/>
+Til he to thyle of Colchos cam,<br/>
+Where Juno the goddesse he fond,<br/>
+Which tok the Schep unto the lond,<br/>
+And sette it there in such a wise<br/>
+As thou tofore hast herd devise,<br/>
+Wherof cam after al the wo,<br/>
+Why Jason was forswore so    4360<br/>
+Unto Medee, as it is spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, who that hath tobroke<br/>
+His trouthe, as ye have told above,<br/>
+He is noght worthi forto love<br/>
+Ne be beloved, as me semeth:<br/>
+Bot every newe love quemeth<br/>
+To him which newefongel is.<br/>
+And natheles nou after this,<br/>
+If that you list to taken hiede<br/>
+Upon mi Schrifte to procede,    4370<br/>
+In loves cause ayein the vice<br/>
+Of covoitise and Avarice<br/>
+What ther is more I wolde wite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, this I finde write,<br/>
+Ther is yit on of thilke brood,<br/>
+Which only for the worldes good,<br/>
+To make a Tresor of Moneie,<br/>
+Put alle conscience aweie:<br/>
+Wherof in thi confession<br/>
+The name and the condicion    4380<br/>
+I schal hierafterward declare,<br/>
+Which makth on riche, an other bare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the bench sittende on hih<br/>
+With Avarice Usure I sih,<br/>
+Full clothed of his oghne suite,<br/>
+Which after gold makth chace and suite<br/>
+With his brocours, that renne aboute<br/>
+Lich unto racches in a route.<br/>
+Such lucre is non above grounde,<br/>
+Which is noght of tho racches founde;    4390<br/>
+For wher thei se beyete sterte,<br/>
+That schal hem in no wise asterte,<br/>
+Bot thei it dryve into the net<br/>
+Of lucre, which Usure hath set.<br/>
+Usure with the riche duelleth,<br/>
+To al that evere he beith and selleth<br/>
+He hath ordeined of his sleyhte<br/>
+Mesure double and double weyhte:<br/>
+Outward he selleth be the lasse,<br/>
+And with the more he makth his tasse,    4400<br/>
+Wherof his hous is full withinne.<br/>
+He reccheth noght, be so he winne,<br/>
+Though that ther lese ten or tuelve:<br/>
+His love is al toward himselve<br/>
+And to non other, bot he se<br/>
+That he mai winne suche thre;<br/>
+For wher he schal oght yive or lene,<br/>
+He wol ayeinward take a bene,<br/>
+Ther he hath lent the smale pese.<br/>
+And riht so ther ben manye of these    4410<br/>
+Lovers, that thogh thei love a lyte,<br/>
+That scarsly wolde it weie a myte,<br/>
+Yit wolde thei have a pound again,<br/>
+As doth Usure in his bargain.<br/>
+Bot certes such usure unliche,<br/>
+It falleth more unto the riche,<br/>
+Als wel of love as of beyete,<br/>
+Than unto hem that be noght grete,<br/>
+And, as who seith, ben simple and povere;<br/>
+For sielden is whan thei recovere,    4420<br/>
+Bot if it be thurgh gret decerte.<br/>
+And natheles men se poverte<br/>
+With porsuite and continuance<br/>
+Fulofte make a gret chevance<br/>
+And take of love his avantage,<br/>
+Forth with the help of his brocage,<br/>
+That maken seme wher is noght.<br/>
+And thus fulofte is love boght<br/>
+For litel what, and mochel take,<br/>
+With false weyhtes that thei make.    4430
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou, Sone, of that I seide above<br/>
+Thou wost what Usure is of love:<br/>
+Tell me forthi what so thou wilt,<br/>
+If thou therof hast eny gilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay, for ought I hiere.<br/>
+For of tho pointz ye tolden hiere<br/>
+I wol you be mi trouthe assure,<br/>
+Mi weyhte of love and mi mesure<br/>
+Hath be mor large and mor certein<br/>
+Than evere I tok of love ayein:    4440<br/>
+For so yit couthe I nevere of sleyhte,<br/>
+To take ayein be double weyhte<br/>
+Of love mor than I have yive.<br/>
+For als so wiss mot I be schrive<br/>
+And have remission of Sinne,<br/>
+As so yit couthe I nevere winne,<br/>
+Ne yit so mochel, soth to sein,<br/>
+That evere I mihte have half ayein<br/>
+Of so full love as I have lent:<br/>
+And if myn happ were so wel went,    4450<br/>
+That for the hole I mihte have half,<br/>
+Me thenkth I were a goddeshalf.<br/>
+For where Usure wole have double,<br/>
+Mi conscience is noght so trouble,<br/>
+I biede nevere as to my del<br/>
+Bot of the hole an halvendel;<br/>
+That is non excess, as me thenketh.<br/>
+Bot natheles it me forthenketh;<br/>
+For wel I wot that wol noght be,<br/>
+For every day the betre I se    4460<br/>
+That hou so evere I yive or lene<br/>
+Mi love in place ther I mene,<br/>
+For oght that evere I axe or crave,<br/>
+I can nothing ayeinward have.<br/>
+Bot yit for that I wol noght lete,<br/>
+What so befalle of mi beyete,<br/>
+That I ne schal hire yive and lene<br/>
+Mi love and al mi thoght so clene,<br/>
+That toward me schal noght beleve.<br/>
+And if sche of hire goode leve    4470<br/>
+Rewarde wol me noght again,<br/>
+I wot the laste of my bargain<br/>
+Schal stonde upon so gret a lost,<br/>
+That I mai neveremor the cost<br/>
+Recovere in this world til I die.<br/>
+So that touchende of this partie<br/>
+I mai me wel excuse and schal;<br/>
+And forto speke forth withal,<br/>
+If eny brocour for me wente,<br/>
+That point cam nevere in myn entente:    4480<br/>
+So that the more me merveilleth,<br/>
+What thing it is mi ladi eilleth,<br/>
+That al myn herte and al my time<br/>
+Sche hath, and doth no betre bime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have herd seid that thoght is fre,<br/>
+And natheles in privete<br/>
+To you, mi fader, that ben hiere<br/>
+Min hole schrifte forto hiere,<br/>
+I dar min herte wel desclose.<br/>
+Touchende usure, as I suppose,    4490<br/>
+Which as ye telle in love is used,<br/>
+Mi ladi mai noght ben excused;<br/>
+That for o lokinge of hire yë<br/>
+Min hole herte til I dye<br/>
+With al that evere I may and can<br/>
+Sche hath me wonne to hire man:<br/>
+Wherof, me thenkth, good reson wolde<br/>
+That sche somdel rewarde scholde,<br/>
+And yive a part, ther sche hath al.<br/>
+I not what falle hierafter schal,    4500<br/>
+Bot into nou yit dar I sein,<br/>
+Hire liste nevere yive ayein<br/>
+A goodli word in such a wise,<br/>
+Wherof min hope mihte arise,<br/>
+Mi grete love to compense.<br/>
+I not hou sche hire conscience<br/>
+Excuse wole of this usure;<br/>
+Be large weyhte and gret mesure<br/>
+Sche hath mi love, and I have noght<br/>
+Of that which I have diere boght,    4510<br/>
+And with myn herte I have it paid;<br/>
+Bot al that is asyde laid,<br/>
+And I go loveles aboute.<br/>
+Hire oghte stonde if ful gret doute,<br/>
+Til sche redresce such a sinne,<br/>
+That sche wole al mi love winne<br/>
+And yifth me noght to live by:<br/>
+Noght als so moche as “grant mercy”<br/>
+Hir list to seie, of which I mihte<br/>
+Som of mi grete peine allyhte.    4520<br/>
+Bot of this point, lo, thus I fare<br/>
+As he that paith for his chaffare,<br/>
+And beith it diere, and yit hath non,<br/>
+So mot he nedes povere gon:<br/>
+Thus beie I diere and have no love,<br/>
+That I ne mai noght come above<br/>
+To winne of love non encress.<br/>
+Bot I me wole natheles<br/>
+Touchende usure of love aquite;<br/>
+And if mi ladi be to wyte,    4530<br/>
+I preie to god such grace hir sende<br/>
+That sche be time it mot amende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of that thou hast ansuerd<br/>
+Touchende Usure I have al herd,<br/>
+Hou thou of love hast wonne smale:<br/>
+Bot that thou tellest in thi tale<br/>
+And thi ladi therof accusest,<br/>
+Me thenkth tho wordes thou misusest.<br/>
+For be thin oghne knowlechinge<br/>
+Thou seist hou sche for o lokinge    4540<br/>
+Thin hole herte fro the tok:<br/>
+Sche mai be such, that hire o lok<br/>
+Is worth thin herte manyfold;<br/>
+So hast thou wel thin herte sold,<br/>
+Whan thou hast that is more worth.<br/>
+And ek of that thou tellest forth,<br/>
+Hou that hire weyhte of love unevene<br/>
+Is unto thin, under the hevene<br/>
+Stod nevere in evene that balance<br/>
+Which stant in loves governance.    4550<br/>
+Such is the statut of his lawe,<br/>
+That thogh thi love more drawe<br/>
+And peise in the balance more,<br/>
+Thou miht noght axe ayein therfore<br/>
+Of duete, bot al of grace.<br/>
+For love is lord in every place,<br/>
+Ther mai no lawe him justefie<br/>
+Be reddour ne be compaignie,<br/>
+That he ne wole after his wille<br/>
+Whom that him liketh spede or spille.    4560
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To love a man mai wel beginne,<br/>
+Bot whether he schal lese or winne,<br/>
+That wot noman til ate laste:<br/>
+Forthi coveite noght to faste,<br/>
+Mi Sone, bot abyd thin ende,<br/>
+Per cas al mai to goode wende.<br/>
+Bot that thou hast me told and said,<br/>
+Of o thing I am riht wel paid,<br/>
+That thou be sleyhte ne be guile<br/>
+Of no brocour hast otherwhile    4570<br/>
+Engined love, for such dede<br/>
+Is sore venged, as I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brocours of love that deceiven,<br/>
+No wonder is thogh thei receiven<br/>
+After the wrong that thei decerven;<br/>
+For whom as evere that thei serven<br/>
+And do plesance for a whyle,<br/>
+Yit ate laste here oghne guile<br/>
+Upon here oghne hed descendeth,<br/>
+Which god of his vengance sendeth,    4580<br/>
+As be ensample of time go<br/>
+A man mai finde it hath be so.<br/>
+It fell somtime, as it was sene,<br/>
+The hihe goddesse and the queene<br/>
+Juno tho hadde in compainie<br/>
+A Maiden full of tricherie;<br/>
+For sche was evere in on acord<br/>
+With Jupiter, that was hire lord,<br/>
+To gete him othre loves newe,<br/>
+Thurgh such brocage and was untrewe    4590<br/>
+Al otherwise than him nedeth.<br/>
+Bot sche, which of no schame dredeth,<br/>
+With queinte wordes and with slyhe<br/>
+Blente in such wise hir lady yhe,<br/>
+As sche to whom that Juno triste,<br/>
+So that therof sche nothing wiste.<br/>
+Bot so prive mai be nothing,<br/>
+That it ne comth to knowleching;<br/>
+Thing don upon the derke nyht<br/>
+Is after knowe on daies liht:    4600<br/>
+So it befell, that ate laste<br/>
+Al that this slyhe maiden caste<br/>
+Was overcast and overthrowe.<br/>
+For as the sothe mot be knowe,<br/>
+To Juno was don understonde<br/>
+In what manere hir housebonde<br/>
+With fals brocage hath take usure<br/>
+Of love mor than his mesure,<br/>
+Whan he tok othre than his wif,<br/>
+Wherof this mayden was gultif,    4610<br/>
+Which hadde ben of his assent.<br/>
+And thus was al the game schent;<br/>
+She soffreth him, as sche mot nede,<br/>
+Bot the brocour of his misdede,<br/>
+Sche which hir conseil yaf therto,<br/>
+On hire is the vengance do:<br/>
+For Juno with hire wordes hote,<br/>
+This Maiden, which Eccho was hote,<br/>
+Reproveth and seith in this wise:<br/>
+“O traiteresse, of which servise    4620<br/>
+Hast thou thin oghne ladi served!<br/>
+Thou hast gret peine wel deserved,<br/>
+That thou canst maken it so queinte,<br/>
+Thi slyhe wordes forto peinte<br/>
+Towardes me, that am thi queene,<br/>
+Wherof thou madest me to wene<br/>
+That myn housbonde trewe were,<br/>
+Whan that he loveth elleswhere,<br/>
+Al be it so him nedeth noght.<br/>
+Bot upon thee it schal be boght,    4630<br/>
+Which art prive to tho doinges,<br/>
+And me fulofte of thi lesinges<br/>
+Deceived hast: nou is the day<br/>
+That I thi while aquite may;<br/>
+And for thou hast to me conceled<br/>
+That my lord hath with othre deled,<br/>
+I schal thee sette in such a kende,<br/>
+That evere unto the worldes ende<br/>
+Al that thou hierest thou schalt telle,<br/>
+And clappe it out as doth a belle.”    4640<br/>
+And with that word sche was forschape,<br/>
+Ther may no vois hire mouth ascape,<br/>
+What man that in the wodes crieth,<br/>
+Withoute faile Eccho replieth,<br/>
+And what word that him list to sein,<br/>
+The same word sche seith ayein.<br/>
+Thus sche, which whilom hadde leve<br/>
+To duelle in chambre, mot beleve<br/>
+In wodes and on helles bothe,<br/>
+For such brocage as wyves lothe,    4650<br/>
+Which doth here lordes hertes change<br/>
+And love in other place strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, if evere it so befalle,<br/>
+That thou, mi Sone, amonges alle<br/>
+Be wedded man, hold that thou hast,<br/>
+For thanne al other love is wast.<br/>
+O wif schal wel to thee suffise,<br/>
+And thanne, if thou for covoitise<br/>
+Of love woldest axe more,<br/>
+Thou scholdest don ayein the lore    4660<br/>
+Of alle hem that trewe be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as in this degre<br/>
+My conscience is noght accused;<br/>
+For I no such brocage have used,<br/>
+Wherof that lust of love is wonne.<br/>
+Forthi spek forth, as ye begonne,<br/>
+Of Avarice upon mi schrifte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I schal the branches schifte<br/>
+Be ordre so as thei ben set,<br/>
+On whom no good is wel beset.    4670
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blinde Avarice of his lignage<br/>
+For conseil and for cousinage,<br/>
+To be withholde ayein largesse,<br/>
+Hath on, whos name is seid Skarsnesse,<br/>
+The which is kepere of his hous,<br/>
+And is so thurghout averous,<br/>
+That he no good let out of honde;<br/>
+Thogh god himself it wolde fonde,<br/>
+Of yifte scholde he nothing have;<br/>
+And if a man it wolde crave,    4680<br/>
+He moste thanne faile nede,<br/>
+Wher god himselve mai noght spede.<br/>
+And thus Skarsnesse in every place<br/>
+Be reson mai no thonk porchace,<br/>
+And natheles in his degree<br/>
+Above all othre most prive<br/>
+With Avarice stant he this.<br/>
+For he governeth that ther is<br/>
+In ech astat of his office<br/>
+After the reule of thilke vice;    4690<br/>
+He takth, he kepth, he halt, he bint,<br/>
+That lihtere is to fle the flint<br/>
+Than gete of him in hard or neisshe<br/>
+Only the value of a reysshe<br/>
+Of good in helpinge of an other,<br/>
+Noght thogh it were his oghne brother.<br/>
+For in the cas of yifte and lone<br/>
+Stant every man for him al one,<br/>
+Him thenkth of his unkindeschipe<br/>
+That him nedeth no felaschipe:    4700<br/>
+Be so the bagge and he acorden,<br/>
+Him reccheth noght what men recorden<br/>
+Of him, or it be evel or good.<br/>
+For al his trust is on his good,<br/>
+So that al one he falleth ofte,<br/>
+Whan he best weneth stonde alofte,<br/>
+Als wel in love as other wise;<br/>
+For love is evere of som reprise<br/>
+To him that wole his love holde.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, as thou art holde,    4710<br/>
+Touchende of this tell me thi schrifte:<br/>
+Hast thou be scars or large of yifte<br/>
+Unto thi love, whom thou servest?<br/>
+For after that thou wel deservest<br/>
+Of yifte, thou miht be the bet;<br/>
+For that good holde I wel beset,<br/>
+For why thou miht the betre fare;<br/>
+Thanne is no wisdom forto spare.<br/>
+For thus men sein, in every nede<br/>
+He was wys that ferst made mede;    4720<br/>
+For where as mede mai noght spede,<br/>
+I not what helpeth other dede:<br/>
+Fulofte he faileth of his game<br/>
+That wol with ydel hand reclame<br/>
+His hauk, as many a nyce doth.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, tell me soth<br/>
+And sei the trouthe, if thou hast be<br/>
+Unto thy love or skars or fre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, it hath stonde thus,<br/>
+That if the tresor of Cresus    4730<br/>
+And al the gold Octovien,<br/>
+Forth with the richesse Yndien<br/>
+Of Perles and of riche stones,<br/>
+Were al togedre myn at ones,<br/>
+I sette it at nomore acompte<br/>
+Than wolde a bare straw amonte,<br/>
+To yive it hire al in a day,<br/>
+Be so that to that suete may<br/>
+I myhte like or more or lesse.<br/>
+And thus be cause of my scarsnesse    4740<br/>
+Ye mai wel understonde and lieve<br/>
+That I schal noght the worse achieve<br/>
+The pourpos which is in my thoght.<br/>
+Bot yit I yaf hir nevere noght,<br/>
+Ne therto dorste a profre make;<br/>
+For wel I wot sche wol noght take,<br/>
+And yive wol sche noght also,<br/>
+Sche is eschu of bothe tuo.<br/>
+And this I trowe be the skile<br/>
+Towardes me, for sche ne wile    4750<br/>
+That I have eny cause of hope,<br/>
+Noght also mochel as a drope.<br/>
+Bot toward othre, as I mai se,<br/>
+Sche takth and yifth in such degre,<br/>
+That as be weie of frendlihiede<br/>
+Sche can so kepe hir wommanhiede,<br/>
+That every man spekth of hir wel.<br/>
+Bot sche wole take of me no del,<br/>
+And yit sche wot wel that I wolde<br/>
+Yive and do bothe what I scholde    4760<br/>
+To plesen hire in al my myht:<br/>
+Be reson this wot every wyht,<br/>
+For that mai be no weie asterte,<br/>
+Ther sche is maister of the herte,<br/>
+Sche mot be maister of the good.<br/>
+For god wot wel that al my mod<br/>
+And al min herte and al mi thoght<br/>
+And al mi good, whil I have oght,<br/>
+Als freliche as god hath it yive,<br/>
+It schal ben hires, while I live,    4770<br/>
+Riht as hir list hirself commande.<br/>
+So that it nedeth no demande,<br/>
+To axe of me if I be scars<br/>
+To love, for as to tho pars<br/>
+I wole ansuere and seie no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that is riht wel do.<br/>
+For often times of scarsnesse<br/>
+It hath be sen, that for the lesse<br/>
+Is lost the more, as thou schalt hiere<br/>
+A tale lich to this matiere.    4780
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skarsnesse and love acorden nevere,<br/>
+For every thing is wel the levere,<br/>
+Whan that a man hath boght it diere:<br/>
+And forto speke in this matiere,<br/>
+For sparinge of a litel cost<br/>
+Fulofte time a man hath lost<br/>
+The large cote for the hod.<br/>
+What man that scars is of his good<br/>
+And wol noght yive, he schal noght take:<br/>
+With yifte a man mai undertake    4790<br/>
+The hihe god to plese and queme,<br/>
+With yifte a man the world mai deme;<br/>
+For every creature bore,<br/>
+If thou him yive, is glad therfore,<br/>
+And every gladschipe, as I finde,<br/>
+Is confort unto loves kinde<br/>
+And causeth ofte a man to spede.<br/>
+So was he wys that ferst yaf mede,<br/>
+For mede kepeth love in house;<br/>
+Bot wher the men ben coveitouse    4800<br/>
+And sparen forto yive a part,<br/>
+Thei knowe noght Cupides art:<br/>
+For his fortune and his aprise<br/>
+Desdeigneth alle coveitise<br/>
+And hateth alle nygardie.<br/>
+And forto loke of this partie,<br/>
+A soth ensample, hou it is so,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I finde write of Babio;<br/>
+Which hadde a love at his menage,<br/>
+Ther was non fairere of hire age,    4810<br/>
+And hihte Viola be name;<br/>
+Which full of youthe and ful of game<br/>
+Was of hirself, and large and fre,<br/>
+Bot such an other chinche as he<br/>
+Men wisten noght in al the lond,<br/>
+And hadde affaited to his hond<br/>
+His servant, the which Spodius<br/>
+Was hote. And in this wise thus<br/>
+The worldes good of sufficance<br/>
+Was had, bot likinge and plesance,    4820<br/>
+Of that belongeth to richesse<br/>
+Of love, stod in gret destresse;<br/>
+So that this yonge lusty wyht<br/>
+Of thing which fell to loves riht<br/>
+Was evele served overal,<br/>
+That sche was wo bego withal,<br/>
+Til that Cupide and Venus eke<br/>
+A medicine for the seke<br/>
+Ordeigne wolden in this cas.<br/>
+So as fortune thanne was,    4830<br/>
+Of love upon the destine<br/>
+It fell, riht as it scholde be,<br/>
+A freissh, a fre, a frendly man<br/>
+That noght of Avarice can,<br/>
+Which Croceus be name hihte,<br/>
+Toward this swete caste his sihte,<br/>
+And ther sche was cam in presence.<br/>
+Sche sih him large of his despence,<br/>
+And amorous and glad of chiere,<br/>
+So that hir liketh wel to hiere    4840<br/>
+The goodly wordes whiche he seide;<br/>
+And therupon of love he preide,<br/>
+Of love was al that he mente,<br/>
+To love and for sche scholde assente,<br/>
+He yaf hire yiftes evere among.<br/>
+Bot for men sein that mede is strong,<br/>
+It was wel seene at thilke tyde;<br/>
+For as it scholde of ryht betyde,<br/>
+This Viola largesce hath take<br/>
+And the nygard sche hath forsake:    4850<br/>
+Of Babio sche wol no more,<br/>
+For he was grucchende everemore,<br/>
+Ther was with him non other fare<br/>
+Bot forto prinche and forto spare,<br/>
+Of worldes muk to gete encress.<br/>
+So goth the wrecche loveles,<br/>
+Bejaped for his Skarcete,<br/>
+And he that large was and fre<br/>
+And sette his herte to despende,<br/>
+This Croceus, the bowe bende,    4860<br/>
+Which Venus tok him forto holde,<br/>
+And schotte als ofte as evere he wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus departeth love his lawe,<br/>
+That what man wol noght be felawe<br/>
+To yive and spende, as I thee telle,<br/>
+He is noght worthi forto duelle<br/>
+In loves court to be relieved.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, if I be lieved,<br/>
+Thou schalt be large of thi despence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, in mi conscience    4870<br/>
+If ther be eny thing amis,<br/>
+I wol amende it after this,<br/>
+Toward mi love namely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, wel and redely<br/>
+Thou seist, so that wel paid withal<br/>
+I am, and forthere if I schal<br/>
+Unto thi schrifte specefie<br/>
+Of Avarices progenie<br/>
+What vice suieth after this,<br/>
+Thou schalt have wonder hou it is,    4880<br/>
+Among the folk in eny regne<br/>
+That such a vice myhte regne,<br/>
+Which is comun at alle assaies,<br/>
+As men mai finde nou adaies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vice lik unto the fend,<br/>
+Which nevere yit was mannes frend,<br/>
+And cleped is Unkindeschipe,<br/>
+Of covine and of felaschipe<br/>
+With Avarice he is withholde.<br/>
+Him thenkth he scholde noght ben holde    4890<br/>
+Unto the moder which him bar;<br/>
+Of him mai nevere man be war,<br/>
+He wol noght knowe the merite,<br/>
+For that he wolde it noght aquite;<br/>
+Which in this world is mochel used,<br/>
+And fewe ben therof excused.<br/>
+To telle of him is endeles,<br/>
+Bot this I seie natheles,<br/>
+Wher as this vice comth to londe,<br/>
+Ther takth noman his thonk on honde;    4900<br/>
+Thogh he with alle his myhtes serve,<br/>
+He schal of him no thonk deserve.<br/>
+He takth what eny man wol yive,<br/>
+Bot whil he hath o day to live,<br/>
+He wol nothing rewarde ayein;<br/>
+He gruccheth forto yive o grein,<br/>
+Wher he hath take a berne full.<br/>
+That makth a kinde herte dull,<br/>
+To sette his trust in such frendschipe,<br/>
+Ther as he fint no kindeschipe;    4910<br/>
+And forto speke wordes pleine,<br/>
+Thus hiere I many a man compleigne,<br/>
+That nou on daies thou schalt finde<br/>
+At nede fewe frendes kinde;<br/>
+What thou hast don for hem tofore,<br/>
+It is foryete, as it were lore.<br/>
+The bokes speken of this vice,<br/>
+And telle hou god of his justice,<br/>
+Be weie of kinde and ek nature<br/>
+And every lifissh creature,    4920<br/>
+The lawe also, who that it kan,<br/>
+Thei dampnen an unkinde man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is al on to seie unkinde<br/>
+As thing which don is ayein kinde,<br/>
+For it with kinde nevere stod<br/>
+A man to yelden evel for good.<br/>
+For who that wolde taken hede,<br/>
+A beste is glad of a good dede,<br/>
+And loveth thilke creature<br/>
+After the lawe of his nature    4930<br/>
+Which doth him ese. And forto se<br/>
+Of this matiere Auctorite,<br/>
+Fulofte time it hath befalle;<br/>
+Wherof a tale amonges alle,<br/>
+Which is of olde ensamplerie,<br/>
+I thenke forto specefie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To speke of an unkinde man,<br/>
+I finde hou whilom Adrian,<br/>
+Of Rome which a gret lord was,<br/>
+Upon a day as he per cas    4940<br/>
+To wode in his huntinge wente,<br/>
+It hapneth at a soudein wente,<br/>
+After his chace as he poursuieth,<br/>
+Thurgh happ, the which noman eschuieth,<br/>
+He fell unwar into a pet,<br/>
+Wher that it mihte noght be let.<br/>
+The pet was dep and he fell lowe,<br/>
+That of his men non myhte knowe<br/>
+Wher he becam, for non was nyh,<br/>
+Which of his fall the meschief syh.    4950<br/>
+And thus al one ther he lay<br/>
+Clepende and criende al the day<br/>
+For socour and deliverance,<br/>
+Til ayein Eve it fell per chance,<br/>
+A while er it began to nyhte,<br/>
+A povere man, which Bardus hihte,<br/>
+Cam forth walkende with his asse,<br/>
+And hadde gadred him a tasse<br/>
+Of grene stickes and of dreie<br/>
+To selle, who that wolde hem beie,    4960<br/>
+As he which hadde no liflode,<br/>
+Bot whanne he myhte such a lode<br/>
+To toune with his Asse carie.<br/>
+And as it fell him forto tarie<br/>
+That ilke time nyh the pet,<br/>
+And hath the trusse faste knet,<br/>
+He herde a vois, which cride dimme,<br/>
+And he his Ere to the brimme<br/>
+Hath leid, and herde it was a man,<br/>
+Which seide, “Ha, help hier Adrian,    4970<br/>
+And I wol yiven half mi good.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The povere man this understod,<br/>
+As he that wolde gladly winne,<br/>
+And to this lord which was withinne<br/>
+He spak and seide, “If I thee save,<br/>
+What sikernesse schal I have<br/>
+Of covenant, that afterward<br/>
+Thou wolt me yive such reward<br/>
+As thou behihtest nou tofore?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That other hath his othes swore    4980<br/>
+Be hevene and be the goddes alle,<br/>
+If that it myhte so befalle<br/>
+That he out of the pet him broghte,<br/>
+Of all the goodes whiche he oghte<br/>
+He schal have evene halvendel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Bardus seide he wolde wel;<br/>
+And with this word his Asse anon<br/>
+He let untrusse, and therupon<br/>
+Doun goth the corde into the pet,<br/>
+To which he hath at ende knet    4990<br/>
+A staf, wherby, he seide, he wolde<br/>
+That Adrian him scholde holde.<br/>
+Bot it was tho per chance falle,<br/>
+Into that pet was also falle<br/>
+An Ape, which at thilke throwe,<br/>
+Whan that the corde cam doun lowe,<br/>
+Al sodeinli therto he skipte<br/>
+And it in bothe hise armes clipte.<br/>
+And Bardus with his Asse anon<br/>
+Him hath updrawe, and he is gon.    5000<br/>
+But whan he sih it was an Ape,<br/>
+He wende al hadde ben a jape<br/>
+Of faierie, and sore him dradde:<br/>
+And Adrian eftsone gradde<br/>
+For help, and cride and preide faste,<br/>
+And he eftsone his corde caste;<br/>
+Bot whan it cam unto the grounde,<br/>
+A gret Serpent it hath bewounde,<br/>
+The which Bardus anon up drouh.<br/>
+And thanne him thoghte wel ynouh,    5010<br/>
+It was fantosme, bot yit he herde<br/>
+The vois, and he therto ansuerde,<br/>
+“What wiht art thou in goddes name?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am,” quod Adrian, “the same,<br/>
+Whos good thou schalt have evene half.”<br/>
+Quod Bardus, “Thanne a goddes half<br/>
+The thridde time assaie I schal”:<br/>
+And caste his corde forth withal<br/>
+Into the pet, and whan it cam<br/>
+To him, this lord of Rome it nam,    5020<br/>
+And therupon him hath adresced,<br/>
+And with his hand fulofte blessed,<br/>
+And thanne he bad to Bardus hale.<br/>
+And he, which understod his tale,<br/>
+Betwen him and his Asse al softe<br/>
+Hath drawe and set him up alofte<br/>
+Withouten harm al esely.<br/>
+He seith noght ones “grant merci,”<br/>
+Bot strauhte him forth to the cite,<br/>
+And let this povere Bardus be.    5030<br/>
+And natheles this simple man<br/>
+His covenant, so as he can,<br/>
+Hath axed; and that other seide,<br/>
+If so be that he him umbreide<br/>
+Of oght that hath be speke or do,<br/>
+It schal ben venged on him so,<br/>
+That him were betre to be ded.<br/>
+And he can tho non other red,<br/>
+But on his asse ayein he caste<br/>
+His trusse, and hieth homward faste:    5040<br/>
+And whan that he cam hom to bedde,<br/>
+He tolde his wif hou that he spedde.<br/>
+Bot finaly to speke oght more<br/>
+Unto this lord he dradde him sore,<br/>
+So that a word ne dorste he sein:<br/>
+And thus upon the morwe ayein,<br/>
+In the manere as I recorde,<br/>
+Forth with his Asse and with his corde<br/>
+To gadre wode, as he dede er,<br/>
+He goth; and whan that he cam ner    5050<br/>
+Unto the place where he wolde,<br/>
+He hath his Ape anon beholde,<br/>
+Which hadde gadred al aboute<br/>
+Of stickes hiere and there a route,<br/>
+And leide hem redy to his hond,<br/>
+Wherof he made his trosse and bond;<br/>
+Fro dai to dai and in this wise<br/>
+This Ape profreth his servise,<br/>
+So that he hadde of wode ynouh.<br/>
+Upon a time and as he drouh    5060<br/>
+Toward the wode, he sih besyde<br/>
+The grete gastli Serpent glyde,<br/>
+Til that sche cam in his presence,<br/>
+And in hir kinde a reverence<br/>
+Sche hath him do, and forth withal<br/>
+A Ston mor briht than a cristall<br/>
+Out of hir mouth tofore his weie<br/>
+Sche let doun falle, and wente aweie,<br/>
+For that he schal noght ben adrad.<br/>
+Tho was this povere Bardus glad,    5070<br/>
+Thonkende god, and to the Ston<br/>
+He goth an takth it up anon,<br/>
+And hath gret wonder in his wit<br/>
+Hou that the beste him hath aquit,<br/>
+Wher that the mannes Sone hath failed,<br/>
+For whom he hadde most travailed.<br/>
+Bot al he putte in goddes hond,<br/>
+And torneth hom, and what he fond<br/>
+Unto his wif he hath it schewed;<br/>
+And thei, that weren bothe lewed,    5080<br/>
+Acorden that he scholde it selle.<br/>
+And he no lengere wolde duelle,<br/>
+Bot forth anon upon the tale<br/>
+The Ston he profreth to the sale;<br/>
+And riht as he himself it sette,<br/>
+The jueler anon forth fette<br/>
+The gold and made his paiement,<br/>
+Therof was no delaiement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus whan this Ston was boght and sold,<br/>
+Homward with joie manyfold    5090<br/>
+This Bardus goth; and whan he cam<br/>
+Hom to his hous and that he nam<br/>
+His gold out of his Purs, withinne<br/>
+He fond his Ston also therinne,<br/>
+Wherof for joie his herte pleide,<br/>
+Unto his wif and thus he seide,<br/>
+“Lo, hier my gold, lo, hier mi Ston!”<br/>
+His wif hath wonder therupon,<br/>
+And axeth him hou that mai be.<br/>
+“Nou be mi trouthe I not,” quod he,    5100<br/>
+“Bot I dar swere upon a bok,<br/>
+That to my Marchant I it tok,<br/>
+And he it hadde whan I wente:<br/>
+So knowe I noght to what entente<br/>
+It is nou hier, bot it be grace.<br/>
+Forthi tomorwe in other place<br/>
+I wole it fonde forto selle,<br/>
+And if it wol noght with him duelle,<br/>
+Bot crepe into mi purs ayein,<br/>
+Than dar I saufly swere and sein,    5110<br/>
+It is the vertu of the Ston.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morwe cam, and he is gon<br/>
+To seche aboute in other stede<br/>
+His Ston to selle, and he so dede,<br/>
+And lefte it with his chapman there.<br/>
+Bot whan that he cam elleswhere,<br/>
+In presence of his wif at hom,<br/>
+Out of his Purs and that he nom<br/>
+His gold, he fond his Ston withal:<br/>
+And thus it fell him overal,    5120<br/>
+Where he it solde in sondri place,<br/>
+Such was the fortune and the grace.<br/>
+Bot so wel may nothing ben hidd,<br/>
+That it nys ate laste kidd:<br/>
+This fame goth aboute Rome<br/>
+So ferforth, that the wordes come<br/>
+To themperour Justinian;<br/>
+And he let sende for the man,<br/>
+And axede him hou that it was.<br/>
+And Bardus tolde him al the cas,    5130<br/>
+Hou that the worm and ek the beste,<br/>
+Althogh thei maden no beheste,<br/>
+His travail hadden wel aquit;<br/>
+Bot he which hadde a mannes wit,<br/>
+And made his covenant be mouthe<br/>
+And swor therto al that he couthe<br/>
+To parte and yiven half his good,<br/>
+Hath nou foryete hou that it stod,<br/>
+As he which wol no trouthe holde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Emperour al that he tolde    5140<br/>
+Hath herd, and thilke unkindenesse<br/>
+He seide he wolde himself redresse.<br/>
+And thus in court of juggement<br/>
+This Adrian was thanne assent,<br/>
+And the querele in audience<br/>
+Declared was in the presence<br/>
+Of themperour and many mo;<br/>
+Wherof was mochel speche tho<br/>
+And gret wondringe among the press.<br/>
+Bot ate laste natheles    5150<br/>
+For the partie which hath pleigned<br/>
+The lawe hath diemed and ordeigned<br/>
+Be hem that were avised wel,<br/>
+That he schal have the halvendel<br/>
+Thurghout of Adrianes good.<br/>
+And thus of thilke unkinde blod<br/>
+Stant the memoire into this day,<br/>
+Wherof that every wysman may<br/>
+Ensamplen him, and take in mynde<br/>
+What schame it is to ben unkinde;    5160<br/>
+Ayein the which reson debateth,<br/>
+And every creature it hateth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, in thin office<br/>
+I rede fle that ilke vice.<br/>
+For riht as the Cronique seith<br/>
+Of Adrian, hou he his feith<br/>
+Foryat for worldes covoitise,<br/>
+Fulofte in such a maner wise<br/>
+Of lovers nou a man mai se<br/>
+Full manye that unkinde be:    5170<br/>
+For wel behote and evele laste<br/>
+That is here lif; for ate laste,<br/>
+Whan that thei have here wille do,<br/>
+Here love is after sone ago.<br/>
+What seist thou, Sone, to this cas?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I wol seie Helas,<br/>
+That evere such a man was bore,<br/>
+Which whan he hath his trouthe suore<br/>
+And hath of love what he wolde,<br/>
+That he at eny time scholde    5180<br/>
+Evere after in his herte finde<br/>
+To falsen and to ben unkinde.<br/>
+Bot, fader, as touchende of me,<br/>
+I mai noght stonde in that degre;<br/>
+For I tok nevere of love why,<br/>
+That I ne mai wel go therby<br/>
+And do my profit elles where,<br/>
+For eny sped I finde there.<br/>
+I dar wel thenken al aboute,<br/>
+Bot I ne dar noght speke it oute;    5190<br/>
+And if I dorste, I wolde pleigne,<br/>
+That sche for whom I soffre peine<br/>
+And love hir evere aliche hote,<br/>
+That nouther yive ne behote<br/>
+In rewardinge of mi servise<br/>
+It list hire in no maner wise.<br/>
+I wol noght say that sche is kinde,<br/>
+And forto sai sche is unkinde,<br/>
+That dar I noght; bot god above,<br/>
+Which demeth every herte of love,    5200<br/>
+He wot that on myn oghne side<br/>
+Schal non unkindeschipe abide:<br/>
+If it schal with mi ladi duelle,<br/>
+Therof dar I nomore telle.<br/>
+Nou, goode fader, as it is,<br/>
+Tell me what thenketh you of this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of that unkindeschipe,<br/>
+The which toward thi ladischipe<br/>
+Thou pleignest, for sche wol thee noght,<br/>
+Thou art to blamen of that thoght.    5210<br/>
+For it mai be that thi desir,<br/>
+Thogh it brenne evere as doth the fyr,<br/>
+Per cas to hire honour missit,<br/>
+Or elles time com noght yit,<br/>
+Which standt upon thi destine:<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, I rede thee,<br/>
+Thenk wel, what evere the befalle;<br/>
+For noman hath his lustes alle.<br/>
+Bot as thou toldest me before<br/>
+That thou to love art noght forswore,    5220<br/>
+And hast don non unkindenesse,<br/>
+Thou miht therof thi grace blesse:<br/>
+And lef noght that continuance;<br/>
+For ther mai be no such grevance<br/>
+To love, as is unkindeschipe.<br/>
+Wherof to kepe thi worschipe,<br/>
+So as these olde bokes tale,<br/>
+I schal thee telle a redi tale:<br/>
+Nou herkne and be wel war therby,<br/>
+For I wol telle it openly.    5230
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mynos, as telleth the Poete,<br/>
+The which whilom was king of Crete,<br/>
+A Sone hadde and Androchee<br/>
+He hihte: and so befell that he<br/>
+Unto Athenes forto lere<br/>
+Was send, and so he bar him there,<br/>
+For that he was of hih lignage,<br/>
+Such pride he tok in his corage,<br/>
+That he foryeten hath the Scoles,<br/>
+And in riote among the foles    5240<br/>
+He dede manye thinges wronge;<br/>
+And useth thilke lif so longe,<br/>
+Til ate laste of that he wroghte<br/>
+He fond the meschief which he soghte,<br/>
+Wherof it fell that he was slain.<br/>
+His fader, which it herde sain,<br/>
+Was wroth, and al that evere he mihte,<br/>
+Of men of Armes he him dighte<br/>
+A strong pouer, and forth he wente<br/>
+Unto Athenys, where he brente    5250<br/>
+The pleine contre al aboute:<br/>
+The Cites stode of him in doute,<br/>
+As thei that no defence hadde<br/>
+Ayein the pouer which he ladde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egeüs, which was there king,<br/>
+His conseil tok upon this thing,<br/>
+For he was thanne in the Cite:<br/>
+So that of pes into tretee<br/>
+Betwen Mynos and Egeüs<br/>
+Thei felle, and ben acorded thus;    5260<br/>
+That king Mynos fro yer to yeere<br/>
+Receive schal, as thou schalt here,<br/>
+Out of Athenys for truage<br/>
+Of men that were of myhti Age<br/>
+Persones nyne, of whiche he schal<br/>
+His wille don in special<br/>
+For vengance of his Sones deth.<br/>
+Non other grace ther ne geth,<br/>
+Bot forto take the juise;<br/>
+And that was don in such a wise,    5270<br/>
+Which stod upon a wonder cas.<br/>
+For thilke time so it was,<br/>
+Wherof that men yit rede and singe,<br/>
+King Mynos hadde in his kepinge<br/>
+A cruel Monstre, as seith the geste:<br/>
+For he was half man and half beste,<br/>
+And Minotaurus he was hote,<br/>
+Which was begete in a riote<br/>
+Upon Pasiphe, his oghne wif,<br/>
+Whil he was oute upon the strif    5280<br/>
+Of thilke grete Siege at Troie.<br/>
+Bot sche, which lost hath alle joie,<br/>
+Whan that sche syh this Monstre bore,<br/>
+Bad men ordeigne anon therfore:<br/>
+And fell that ilke time thus,<br/>
+Ther was a Clerk, on Dedalus,<br/>
+Which hadde ben of hire assent<br/>
+Of that hir world was so miswent;<br/>
+And he made of his oghne wit,<br/>
+Wherof the remembrance is yit,    5290<br/>
+For Minotaure such an hous,<br/>
+Which was so strange and merveilous,<br/>
+That what man that withinne wente,<br/>
+Ther was so many a sondri wente,<br/>
+That he ne scholde noght come oute,<br/>
+But gon amased al aboute.<br/>
+And in this hous to loke and warde<br/>
+Was Minotaurus put in warde,<br/>
+That what lif that therinne cam,<br/>
+Or man or beste, he overcam    5300<br/>
+And slow, and fedde him therupon;<br/>
+And in this wise many on<br/>
+Out of Athenys for truage<br/>
+Devoured weren in that rage.<br/>
+For every yeer thei schope hem so,<br/>
+Thei of Athenys, er thei go<br/>
+Toward that ilke wofull chance,<br/>
+As it was set in ordinance,<br/>
+Upon fortune here lot thei caste;<br/>
+Til that Theseüs ate laste,    5310<br/>
+Which was the kinges Sone there,<br/>
+Amonges othre that ther were<br/>
+In thilke yeer, as it befell,<br/>
+The lot upon his chance fell.<br/>
+He was a worthi kniht withalle;<br/>
+And whan he sih this chance falle,<br/>
+He ferde as thogh he tok non hiede,<br/>
+Bot al that evere he mihte spiede,<br/>
+With him and with his felaschipe<br/>
+Forth into Crete he goth be Schipe;    5320<br/>
+Wher that the king Mynos he soghte,<br/>
+And profreth all that he him oghte<br/>
+Upon the point of here acord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This sterne king, this cruel lord<br/>
+Tok every day on of the Nyne,<br/>
+And put him to the discipline<br/>
+Of Minotaure, to be devoured;<br/>
+Bot Theseüs was so favoured,<br/>
+That he was kept til ate laste.<br/>
+And in the meene while he caste    5330<br/>
+What thing him were best to do:<br/>
+And fell that Adriagne tho,<br/>
+Which was the dowhter of Mynos,<br/>
+And hadde herd the worthi los<br/>
+Of Theseüs and of his myht,<br/>
+And syh he was a lusti kniht,<br/>
+Hire hole herte on him sche leide,<br/>
+And he also of love hir preide,<br/>
+So ferforth that thei were al on.<br/>
+And sche ordeigneth thanne anon    5340<br/>
+In what manere he scholde him save,<br/>
+And schop so that sche dede him have<br/>
+A clue of thred, of which withinne<br/>
+Ferst ate dore he schal beginne<br/>
+With him to take that on ende,<br/>
+That whan he wolde ayeinward wende,<br/>
+He mihte go the same weie.<br/>
+And over this, so as I seie,<br/>
+Of pich sche tok him a pelote,<br/>
+The which he scholde into the throte    5350<br/>
+Of Minotaure caste rihte:<br/>
+Such wepne also for him sche dighte,<br/>
+That he be reson mai noght faile<br/>
+To make an ende of his bataile;<br/>
+For sche him tawhte in sondri wise,<br/>
+Til he was knowe of thilke emprise,<br/>
+Hou he this beste schulde quelle.<br/>
+And thus, schort tale forto telle,<br/>
+So as this Maide him hadde tawht,<br/>
+Theseüs with this Monstre fawht,    5360<br/>
+Smot of his hed, the which he nam,<br/>
+And be the thred, so as he cam,<br/>
+He goth ayein, til he were oute.<br/>
+Tho was gret wonder al aboute:<br/>
+Mynos the tribut hath relessed,<br/>
+And so was al the werre cessed<br/>
+Betwen Athene and hem of Crete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now to speke of thilke suete,<br/>
+Whos beaute was withoute wane,<br/>
+This faire Maiden Adriane,    5370<br/>
+Whan that sche sih Theseüs sound,<br/>
+Was nevere yit upon the ground<br/>
+A gladder wyht that sche was tho.<br/>
+Theseüs duelte a dai or tuo<br/>
+Wher that Mynos gret chiere him dede:<br/>
+Theseüs in a prive stede<br/>
+Hath with this Maiden spoke and rouned,<br/>
+That sche to him was abandouned<br/>
+In al that evere that sche couthe,<br/>
+So that of thilke lusty youthe    5380<br/>
+Al prively betwen hem tweie<br/>
+The ferste flour he tok aweie.<br/>
+For he so faire tho behihte<br/>
+That evere, whil he live mihte,<br/>
+He scholde hire take for his wif,<br/>
+And as his oghne hertes lif<br/>
+He scholde hire love and trouthe bere;<br/>
+And sche, which mihte noght forbere,<br/>
+So sore loveth him ayein,<br/>
+That what as evere he wolde sein    5390<br/>
+With al hire herte sche believeth.<br/>
+And thus his pourpos he achieveth,<br/>
+So that assured of his trouthe<br/>
+With him sche wente, and that was routhe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fedra hire yonger Soster eke,<br/>
+A lusti Maide, a sobre, a meke,<br/>
+Fulfild of alle curtesie,<br/>
+For Sosterhode and compainie<br/>
+Of love, which was hem betuene,<br/>
+To sen hire Soster mad a queene,    5400<br/>
+Hire fader lefte and forth sche wente<br/>
+With him, which al his ferste entente<br/>
+Foryat withinne a litel throwe,<br/>
+So that it was al overthrowe,<br/>
+Whan sche best wende it scholde stonde.<br/>
+The Schip was blowe fro the londe,<br/>
+Wherin that thei seilende were;<br/>
+This Adriagne hath mochel fere<br/>
+Of that the wynd so loude bleu,<br/>
+As sche which of the See ne kneu,    5410<br/>
+And preide forto reste a whyle.<br/>
+And so fell that upon an yle,<br/>
+Which Chyo hihte, thei ben drive,<br/>
+Where he to hire his leve hath yive<br/>
+That sche schal londe and take hire reste.<br/>
+Bot that was nothing for the beste:<br/>
+For whan sche was to londe broght,<br/>
+Sche, which that time thoghte noght<br/>
+Bot alle trouthe, and tok no kepe,<br/>
+Hath leid hire softe forto slepe,    5420<br/>
+As sche which longe hath ben forwacched;<br/>
+Bot certes sche was evele macched<br/>
+And fer from alle loves kinde;<br/>
+For more than the beste unkinde<br/>
+Theseüs, which no trouthe kepte,<br/>
+Whil that this yonge ladi slepte,<br/>
+Fulfild of his unkindeschipe<br/>
+Hath al foryete the goodschipe<br/>
+Which Adriane him hadde do,<br/>
+And bad unto the Schipmen tho    5430<br/>
+Hale up the seil and noght abyde,<br/>
+And forth he goth the same tyde<br/>
+Toward Athene, and hire alonde<br/>
+He lefte, which lay nyh the stronde<br/>
+Slepende, til that sche awok.<br/>
+Bot whan that sche cast up hire lok<br/>
+Toward the stronde and sih no wyht,<br/>
+Hire herte was so sore aflyht,<br/>
+That sche ne wiste what to thinke,<br/>
+Bot drouh hire to the water brinke,    5440<br/>
+Wher sche behield the See at large.<br/>
+Sche sih no Schip, sche sih no barge<br/>
+Als ferforth as sche mihte kenne:<br/>
+“Ha lord,” sche seide, “which a Senne,<br/>
+As al the world schal after hiere,<br/>
+Upon this woful womman hiere<br/>
+This worthi kniht hath don and wroght!<br/>
+I wende I hadde his love boght,<br/>
+And so deserved ate nede,<br/>
+Whan that he stod upon his drede,    5450<br/>
+And ek the love he me behihte.<br/>
+It is gret wonder hou he mihte<br/>
+Towardes me nou ben unkinde,<br/>
+And so to lete out of his mynde<br/>
+Thing which he seide his oghne mouth.<br/>
+Bot after this whan it is couth<br/>
+And drawe into the worldes fame,<br/>
+It schal ben hindringe of his name:<br/>
+For wel he wot and so wot I,<br/>
+He yaf his trouthe bodily,    5460<br/>
+That he myn honour scholde kepe.”<br/>
+And with that word sche gan to wepe,<br/>
+And sorweth more than ynouh:<br/>
+Hire faire tresces sche todrouh,<br/>
+And with hirself tok such a strif,<br/>
+That sche betwen the deth and lif<br/>
+Swounende lay fulofte among.<br/>
+And al was this on him along,<br/>
+Which was to love unkinde so,<br/>
+Wherof the wrong schal everemo    5470<br/>
+Stonde in Cronique of remembrance.<br/>
+And ek it asketh a vengance<br/>
+To ben unkinde in loves cas,<br/>
+So as Theseüs thanne was,<br/>
+Al thogh he were a noble kniht;<br/>
+For he the lawe of loves riht<br/>
+Forfeted hath in alle weie,<br/>
+That Adriagne he putte aweie,<br/>
+Which was a gret unkinde dede:<br/>
+And after this, so as I rede,    5480<br/>
+Fedra, the which hir Soster is,<br/>
+He tok in stede of hire, and this<br/>
+Fel afterward to mochel teene.<br/>
+For thilke vice of which I meene,<br/>
+Unkindeschipe, where it falleth,<br/>
+The trouthe of mannes herte it palleth,<br/>
+That he can no good dede aquite:<br/>
+So mai he stonde of no merite<br/>
+Towardes god, and ek also<br/>
+Men clepen him the worldes fo;    5490<br/>
+For he nomore than the fend<br/>
+Unto non other man is frend,<br/>
+Bot al toward himself al one.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, in thi persone<br/>
+This vice above all othre fle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as ye techen me,<br/>
+I thenke don in this matiere.<br/>
+Bot over this nou wolde I hiere,<br/>
+Wherof I schal me schryve more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, and for thi lore,    5500<br/>
+After the reule of coveitise<br/>
+I schal the proprete devise<br/>
+Of every vice by and by.<br/>
+Nou herkne and be wel war therby.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the lignage of Avarice,<br/>
+Mi Sone, yit ther is a vice,<br/>
+His rihte name it is Ravine,<br/>
+Which hath a route of his covine.<br/>
+Ravine among the maistres duelleth,<br/>
+And with his servantz, as men telleth,    5510<br/>
+Extorcion is nou withholde:<br/>
+Ravine of othre mennes folde<br/>
+Makth his larder and paieth noght;<br/>
+For wher as evere it mai be soght,<br/>
+In his hous ther schal nothing lacke,<br/>
+And that fulofte abyth the packe<br/>
+Of povere men that duelle aboute.<br/>
+Thus stant the comun poeple in doute,<br/>
+Which can do non amendement;<br/>
+For whanne him faileth paiement,    5520<br/>
+Ravine makth non other skile,<br/>
+Bot takth be strengthe what he wile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So ben ther in the same wise<br/>
+Lovers, as I thee schal devise,<br/>
+That whan noght elles mai availe,<br/>
+Anon with strengthe thei assaile<br/>
+And gete of love the sesine,<br/>
+Whan thei se time, be Ravine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, schrif thee hier,<br/>
+If thou hast ben a Raviner    5530<br/>
+Of love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certes, fader, no:<br/>
+For I mi ladi love so,<br/>
+That thogh I were as was Pompeie,<br/>
+That al the world me wolde obeie,<br/>
+Or elles such as Alisandre,<br/>
+I wolde noght do such a sklaundre;<br/>
+It is no good man, which so doth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In good feith, Sone, thou seist soth:<br/>
+For he that wole of pourveance<br/>
+Be such a weie his lust avance,    5540<br/>
+He schal it after sore abie,<br/>
+Bot if these olde ensamples lie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou, goode fader, tell me on,<br/>
+So as ye cunne manyon,<br/>
+Touchende of love in this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou list, mi Sone, and thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+So as it hath befalle er this,<br/>
+In loves cause hou that it is<br/>
+A man to take be Ravine<br/>
+The preie which is femeline.    5550
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was a real noble king,<br/>
+And riche of alle worldes thing,<br/>
+Which of his propre enheritance<br/>
+Athenes hadde in governance,<br/>
+And who so thenke therupon,<br/>
+His name was king Pandion.<br/>
+Tuo douhtres hadde he be his wif,<br/>
+The whiche he lovede as his lif;<br/>
+The ferste douhter Progne hihte,<br/>
+And the secounde, as sche wel mihte,    5560<br/>
+Was cleped faire Philomene,<br/>
+To whom fell after mochel tene.<br/>
+The fader of his pourveance<br/>
+His doughter Progne wolde avance,<br/>
+And yaf hire unto mariage<br/>
+A worthi king of hih lignage,<br/>
+A noble kniht eke of his hond,<br/>
+So was he kid in every lond,<br/>
+Of Trace he hihte Tereüs;<br/>
+The clerk Ovide telleth thus.    5570<br/>
+This Tereüs his wif hom ladde,<br/>
+A lusti lif with hire he hadde;<br/>
+Til it befell upon a tyde,<br/>
+This Progne, as sche lay him besyde,<br/>
+Bethoughte hir hou it mihte be<br/>
+That sche hir Soster myhte se,<br/>
+And to hir lord hir will sche seide,<br/>
+With goodly wordes and him preide<br/>
+That sche to hire mihte go:<br/>
+And if it liked him noght so,    5580<br/>
+That thanne he wolde himselve wende,<br/>
+Or elles be som other sende,<br/>
+Which mihte hire diere Soster griete,<br/>
+And schape hou that thei mihten miete.<br/>
+Hir lord anon to that he herde<br/>
+Yaf his acord, and thus ansuerde:<br/>
+“I wole,” he seide, “for thi sake<br/>
+The weie after thi Soster take<br/>
+Miself, and bringe hire, if I may.”<br/>
+And sche with that, there as he lay,    5590<br/>
+Began him in hire armes clippe,<br/>
+And kist him with hir softe lippe,<br/>
+And seide, “Sire, grant mercy.”<br/>
+And he sone after was redy,<br/>
+And tok his leve forto go;<br/>
+In sori time dede he so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Tereüs goth forth to Schipe<br/>
+With him and with his felaschipe;<br/>
+Be See the rihte cours he nam,<br/>
+Into the contre til he cam,    5600<br/>
+Wher Philomene was duellinge,<br/>
+And of hir Soster the tidinge<br/>
+He tolde, and tho thei weren glade,<br/>
+And mochel joie of him thei made.<br/>
+The fader and the moder bothe<br/>
+To leve here douhter weren lothe,<br/>
+Bot if thei weren in presence;<br/>
+And natheles at reverence<br/>
+Of him, that wolde himself travaile,<br/>
+Thei wolden noght he scholde faile    5610<br/>
+Of that he preide, and yive hire leve:<br/>
+And sche, that wolde noght beleve,<br/>
+In alle haste made hire yare<br/>
+Toward hir Soster forto fare,<br/>
+With Tereüs and forth sche wente.<br/>
+And he with al his hole entente,<br/>
+Whan sche was fro hir frendes go,<br/>
+Assoteth of hire love so,<br/>
+His yhe myhte he noght withholde,<br/>
+That he ne moste on hir beholde;    5620<br/>
+And with the sihte he gan desire,<br/>
+And sette his oghne herte on fyre;<br/>
+And fyr, whan it to tow aprocheth,<br/>
+To him anon the strengthe acrocheth,<br/>
+Til with his hete it be devoured,<br/>
+The tow ne mai noght be socoured.<br/>
+And so that tirant raviner,<br/>
+Whan that sche was in his pouer,<br/>
+And he therto sawh time and place,<br/>
+As he that lost hath alle grace,    5630<br/>
+Foryat he was a wedded man,<br/>
+And in a rage on hire he ran,<br/>
+Riht as a wolf which takth his preie.<br/>
+And sche began to crie and preie,<br/>
+“O fader, o mi moder diere,<br/>
+Nou help!” Bot thei ne mihte it hiere,<br/>
+And sche was of to litel myht<br/>
+Defense ayein so ruide a knyht<br/>
+To make, whanne he was so wod<br/>
+That he no reson understod,    5640<br/>
+Bot hield hire under in such wise,<br/>
+That sche ne myhte noght arise,<br/>
+Bot lay oppressed and desesed,<br/>
+As if a goshauk hadde sesed<br/>
+A brid, which dorste noght for fere<br/>
+Remue: and thus this tirant there<br/>
+Beraft hire such thing as men sein<br/>
+Mai neveremor be yolde ayein,<br/>
+And that was the virginite:<br/>
+Of such Ravine it was pite.    5650
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot whan sche to hirselven com,<br/>
+And of hir meschief hiede nom,<br/>
+And knew hou that sche was no maide,<br/>
+With wofull herte thus sche saide,<br/>
+“O thou of alle men the worste,<br/>
+Wher was ther evere man that dorste<br/>
+Do such a dede as thou hast do?<br/>
+That dai schal falle, I hope so,<br/>
+That I schal telle out al mi fille,<br/>
+And with mi speche I schal fulfille    5660<br/>
+The wyde world in brede and lengthe.<br/>
+That thou hast do to me be strengthe,<br/>
+If I among the poeple duelle,<br/>
+Unto the poeple I schal it telle;<br/>
+And if I be withinne wall<br/>
+Of Stones closed, thanne I schal<br/>
+Unto the Stones clepe and crie,<br/>
+And tellen hem thi felonie;<br/>
+And if I to the wodes wende,<br/>
+Ther schal I tellen tale and ende,    5670<br/>
+And crie it to the briddes oute,<br/>
+That thei schul hiere it al aboute.<br/>
+For I so loude it schal reherce,<br/>
+That my vois schal the hevene perce,<br/>
+That it schal soune in goddes Ere.<br/>
+Ha, false man, where is thi fere?<br/>
+O mor cruel than eny beste,<br/>
+Hou hast thou holden thi beheste<br/>
+Which thou unto my Soster madest?<br/>
+O thou, which alle love ungladest,    5680<br/>
+And art ensample of alle untrewe,<br/>
+Nou wolde god mi Soster knewe,<br/>
+Of thin untrouthe, hou that it stod!”<br/>
+And he than as a Lyon wod<br/>
+With hise unhappi handes stronge<br/>
+Hire cauhte be the tresses longe,<br/>
+With whiche he bond ther bothe hire armes,<br/>
+That was a fieble dede of armes,<br/>
+And to the grounde anon hire caste,<br/>
+And out he clippeth also faste    5690<br/>
+Hire tunge with a peire scheres.<br/>
+So what with blod and what with teres<br/>
+Out of hire yhe and of hir mouth,<br/>
+He made hire faire face uncouth:<br/>
+Sche lay swounende unto the deth,<br/>
+Ther was unethes eny breth;<br/>
+Bot yit whan he hire tunge refte,<br/>
+A litel part therof belefte,<br/>
+Bot sche with al no word mai soune,<br/>
+Bot chitre and as a brid jargoune.    5700<br/>
+And natheles that wode hound<br/>
+Hir bodi hent up fro the ground,<br/>
+And sente hir there as be his wille<br/>
+Sche scholde abyde in prison stille<br/>
+For everemo: bot nou tak hiede<br/>
+What after fell of this misdede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whanne al this meschief was befalle,<br/>
+This Tereüs, that foule him falle,<br/>
+Unto his contre hom he tyh;<br/>
+And whan he com his paleis nyh,    5710<br/>
+His wif al redi there him kepte.<br/>
+Whan he hir sih, anon he wepte,<br/>
+And that he dede for deceite,<br/>
+For sche began to axe him streite,<br/>
+“Wher is mi Soster?” And he seide<br/>
+That sche was ded; and Progne abreide,<br/>
+As sche that was a wofull wif,<br/>
+And stod betuen hire deth and lif,<br/>
+Of that sche herde such tidinge:<br/>
+Bot for sche sih hire lord wepinge,    5720<br/>
+She wende noght bot alle trouthe,<br/>
+And hadde wel the more routhe.<br/>
+The Perles weren tho forsake<br/>
+To hire, and blake clothes take;<br/>
+As sche that was gentil and kinde,<br/>
+In worschipe of hir Sostres mynde<br/>
+Sche made a riche enterement,<br/>
+For sche fond non amendement<br/>
+To syghen or to sobbe more:<br/>
+So was ther guile under the gore.    5730
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou leve we this king and queene,<br/>
+And torne ayein to Philomene,<br/>
+As I began to tellen erst.<br/>
+Whan sche cam into prison ferst,<br/>
+It thoghte a kinges douhter strange<br/>
+To maken so soudein a change<br/>
+Fro welthe unto so grete a wo;<br/>
+And sche began to thenke tho,<br/>
+Thogh sche be mouthe nothing preide,<br/>
+Withinne hir herte thus sche seide:    5740<br/>
+“O thou, almyhty Jupiter,<br/>
+That hihe sist and lokest fer,<br/>
+Thou soffrest many a wrong doinge,<br/>
+And yit it is noght thi willinge.<br/>
+To thee ther mai nothing ben hid,<br/>
+Thou wost hou it is me betid:<br/>
+I wolde I hadde noght be bore,<br/>
+For thanne I hadde noght forlore<br/>
+Mi speche and mi virginite.<br/>
+Bot, goode lord, al is in thee,    5750<br/>
+Whan thou therof wolt do vengance<br/>
+And schape mi deliverance.”<br/>
+And evere among this ladi wepte,<br/>
+And thoghte that sche nevere kepte<br/>
+To ben a worldes womman more,<br/>
+And that sche wissheth everemore.<br/>
+Bot ofte unto hir Soster diere<br/>
+Hire herte spekth in this manere,<br/>
+And seide, “Ha, Soster, if ye knewe<br/>
+Of myn astat, ye wolde rewe,    5760<br/>
+I trowe, and my deliverance<br/>
+Ye wolde schape, and do vengance<br/>
+On him that is so fals a man:<br/>
+And natheles, so as I can,<br/>
+I wol you sende som tokninge,<br/>
+Wherof ye schul have knowlechinge<br/>
+Of thing I wot, that schal you lothe,<br/>
+The which you toucheth and me bothe.”<br/>
+And tho withinne a whyle als tyt<br/>
+Sche waf a cloth of Selk al whyt    5770<br/>
+With lettres and ymagerie,<br/>
+In which was al the felonie,<br/>
+Which Tereüs to hire hath do;<br/>
+And lappede it togedre tho<br/>
+And sette hir signet therupon<br/>
+And sende it unto Progne anon.<br/>
+The messager which forth it bar,<br/>
+What it amonteth is noght war;<br/>
+And natheles to Progne he goth<br/>
+And prively takth hire the cloth,    5780<br/>
+And wente ayein riht as he cam,<br/>
+The court of him non hiede nam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Progne of Philomene herde,<br/>
+Sche wolde knowe hou that it ferde,<br/>
+And opneth that the man hath broght,<br/>
+And wot therby what hath be wroght<br/>
+And what meschief ther is befalle.<br/>
+In swoune tho sche gan doun falle,<br/>
+And efte aros and gan to stonde,<br/>
+And eft sche takth the cloth on honde,    5790<br/>
+Behield the lettres and thymages;<br/>
+Bot ate laste, “Of suche oultrages,”<br/>
+Sche seith, “wepinge is noght the bote:”<br/>
+And swerth, if that sche live mote,<br/>
+It schal be venged otherwise.<br/>
+And with that sche gan hire avise<br/>
+Hou ferst sche mihte unto hire winne<br/>
+Hir Soster, that noman withinne,<br/>
+Bot only thei that were suore,<br/>
+It scholde knowe, and schop therfore    5800<br/>
+That Tereüs nothing it wiste;<br/>
+And yit riht as hirselven liste,<br/>
+Hir Soster was delivered sone<br/>
+Out of prison, and be the mone<br/>
+To Progne sche was broght be nyhte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan ech of other hadde a sihte,<br/>
+In chambre, ther thei were al one,<br/>
+Thei maden many a pitous mone;<br/>
+Bot Progne most of sorwe made,<br/>
+Which sihe hir Soster pale and fade    5810<br/>
+And specheles and deshonoured,<br/>
+Of that sche hadde be defloured;<br/>
+And ek upon hir lord sche thoghte,<br/>
+Of that he so untreuly wroghte<br/>
+And hadde his espousaile broke.<br/>
+Sche makth a vou it schal be wroke,<br/>
+And with that word sche kneleth doun<br/>
+Wepinge in gret devocioun:<br/>
+Unto Cupide and to Venus<br/>
+Sche preide, and seide thanne thus:    5820<br/>
+“O ye, to whom nothing asterte<br/>
+Of love mai, for every herte<br/>
+Ye knowe, as ye that ben above<br/>
+The god and the goddesse of love;<br/>
+Ye witen wel that evere yit<br/>
+With al mi will and al my wit,<br/>
+Sith ferst ye schopen me to wedde,<br/>
+That I lay with mi lord abedde,<br/>
+I have be trewe in mi degre,<br/>
+And evere thoghte forto be,    5830<br/>
+And nevere love in other place,<br/>
+Bot al only the king of Trace,<br/>
+Which is mi lord and I his wif.<br/>
+Bot nou allas this wofull strif!<br/>
+That I him thus ayeinward finde<br/>
+The most untrewe and most unkinde<br/>
+That evere in ladi armes lay.<br/>
+And wel I wot that he ne may<br/>
+Amende his wrong, it is so gret;<br/>
+For he to lytel of me let,    5840<br/>
+Whan he myn oughne Soster tok,<br/>
+And me that am his wif forsok.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus to Venus and Cupide<br/>
+Sche preide, and furthermor sche cride<br/>
+Unto Appollo the hiheste,<br/>
+And seide, “O myghti god of reste,<br/>
+Thou do vengance of this debat.<br/>
+Mi Soster and al hire astat<br/>
+Thou wost, and hou sche hath forlore<br/>
+Hir maidenhod, and I therfore    5850<br/>
+In al the world schal bere a blame<br/>
+Of that mi Soster hath a schame,<br/>
+That Tereüs to hire I sente:<br/>
+And wel thou wost that myn entente<br/>
+Was al for worschipe and for goode.<br/>
+O lord, that yifst the lives fode<br/>
+To every wyht, I prei thee hiere<br/>
+Thes wofull Sostres that ben hiere,<br/>
+And let ous noght to the ben lothe;<br/>
+We ben thin oghne wommen bothe.”    5860
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus pleigneth Progne and axeth wreche,<br/>
+And thogh hire Soster lacke speche,<br/>
+To him that alle thinges wot<br/>
+Hire sorwe is noght the lasse hot:<br/>
+Bot he that thanne had herd hem tuo,<br/>
+Him oughte have sorwed everemo<br/>
+For sorwe which was hem betuene.<br/>
+With signes pleigneth Philomene,<br/>
+And Progne seith, “It schal be wreke,<br/>
+That al the world therof schal speke.”    5870<br/>
+And Progne tho seknesse feigneth,<br/>
+Wherof unto hir lord sche pleigneth,<br/>
+And preith sche moste hire chambres kepe,<br/>
+And as hir liketh wake and slepe.<br/>
+And he hire granteth to be so;<br/>
+And thus togedre ben thei tuo,<br/>
+That wolde him bot a litel good.<br/>
+Nou herk hierafter hou it stod<br/>
+Of wofull auntres that befelle:<br/>
+Thes Sostres, that ben bothe felle,&mdash;    5880<br/>
+And that was noght on hem along,<br/>
+Bot onliche on the grete wrong<br/>
+Which Tereüs hem hadde do,&mdash;<br/>
+Thei schopen forto venge hem tho.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Tereüs be Progne his wif<br/>
+A Sone hath, which as his lif<br/>
+He loveth, and Ithis he hihte:<br/>
+His moder wiste wel sche mihte<br/>
+Do Tereüs no more grief<br/>
+Than sle this child, which was so lief.    5890<br/>
+Thus sche, that was, as who seith, mad<br/>
+Of wo, which hath hir overlad,<br/>
+Withoute insihte of moderhede<br/>
+Foryat pite and loste drede,<br/>
+And in hir chambre prively<br/>
+This child withouten noise or cry<br/>
+Sche slou, and hieu him al to pieces:<br/>
+And after with diverse spieces<br/>
+The fleissh, whan it was so toheewe,<br/>
+Sche takth, and makth therof a sewe,    5900<br/>
+With which the fader at his mete<br/>
+Was served, til he hadde him ete;<br/>
+That he ne wiste hou that it stod,<br/>
+Bot thus his oughne fleissh and blod<br/>
+Himself devoureth ayein kinde,<br/>
+As he that was tofore unkinde.<br/>
+And thanne, er that he were arise,<br/>
+For that he scholde ben agrise,<br/>
+To schewen him the child was ded,<br/>
+This Philomene tok the hed    5910<br/>
+Betwen tuo disshes, and al wrothe<br/>
+Tho comen forth the Sostres bothe,<br/>
+And setten it upon the bord.<br/>
+And Progne tho began the word,<br/>
+And seide, “O werste of alle wicke,<br/>
+Of conscience whom no pricke<br/>
+Mai stere, lo, what thou hast do!<br/>
+Lo, hier ben nou we Sostres tuo;<br/>
+O Raviner, lo hier thi preie,<br/>
+With whom so falsliche on the weie    5920<br/>
+Thou hast thi tirannye wroght.<br/>
+Lo, nou it is somdel aboght,<br/>
+And bet it schal, for of thi dede<br/>
+The world schal evere singe and rede<br/>
+In remembrance of thi defame:<br/>
+For thou to love hast do such schame,<br/>
+That it schal nevere be foryete.”<br/>
+With that he sterte up fro the mete,<br/>
+And schof the bord unto the flor,<br/>
+And cauhte a swerd anon and suor    5930<br/>
+That thei scholde of his handes dye.<br/>
+And thei unto the goddes crie<br/>
+Begunne with so loude a stevene,<br/>
+That thei were herd unto the hevene;<br/>
+And in a twinclinge of an yhe<br/>
+The goddes, that the meschief syhe,<br/>
+Here formes changen alle thre.<br/>
+Echon of hem in his degre<br/>
+Was torned into briddes kinde;<br/>
+Diverseliche, as men mai finde,    5940<br/>
+After thastat that thei were inne,<br/>
+Here formes were set atwinne.<br/>
+And as it telleth in the tale,<br/>
+The ferst into a nyhtingale<br/>
+Was schape, and that was Philomene,<br/>
+Which in the wynter is noght sene,<br/>
+For thanne ben the leves falle<br/>
+And naked ben the buisshes alle.<br/>
+For after that sche was a brid,<br/>
+Hir will was evere to ben hid,    5950<br/>
+And forto duelle in prive place,<br/>
+That noman scholde sen hir face<br/>
+For schame, which mai noght be lassed,<br/>
+Of thing that was tofore passed,<br/>
+Whan that sche loste hir maidenhiede:<br/>
+For evere upon hir wommanhiede,<br/>
+Thogh that the goddes wolde hire change,<br/>
+Sche thenkth, and is the more strange,<br/>
+And halt hir clos the wyntres day.<br/>
+Bot whan the wynter goth away,    5960<br/>
+And that Nature the goddesse<br/>
+Wole of hir oughne fre largesse<br/>
+With herbes and with floures bothe<br/>
+The feldes and the medwes clothe,<br/>
+And ek the wodes and the greves<br/>
+Ben heled al with grene leves,<br/>
+So that a brid hire hyde mai,<br/>
+Betwen Averil and March and Maii,<br/>
+Sche that the wynter hield hir clos,<br/>
+For pure schame and noght aros,    5970<br/>
+Whan that sche seth the bowes thikke,<br/>
+And that ther is no bare sticke,<br/>
+Bot al is hid with leves grene,<br/>
+To wode comth this Philomene<br/>
+And makth hir ferste yeres flyht;<br/>
+Wher as sche singeth day and nyht,<br/>
+And in hir song al openly<br/>
+Sche makth hir pleignte and seith, “O why,<br/>
+O why ne were I yit a maide?”<br/>
+For so these olde wise saide,    5980<br/>
+Which understoden what sche mente,<br/>
+Hire notes ben of such entente.<br/>
+And ek thei seide hou in hir song<br/>
+Sche makth gret joie and merthe among,<br/>
+And seith, “Ha, nou I am a brid,<br/>
+Ha, nou mi face mai ben hid:<br/>
+Thogh I have lost mi Maidenhede,<br/>
+Schal noman se my chekes rede.”<br/>
+Thus medleth sche with joie wo<br/>
+And with hir sorwe merthe also,    5990<br/>
+So that of loves maladie<br/>
+Sche makth diverse melodie,<br/>
+And seith love is a wofull blisse,<br/>
+A wisdom which can noman wisse,<br/>
+A lusti fievere, a wounde softe:<br/>
+This note sche reherceth ofte<br/>
+To hem whiche understonde hir tale.<br/>
+Nou have I of this nyhtingale,<br/>
+Which erst was cleped Philomene,<br/>
+Told al that evere I wolde mene,    6000<br/>
+Bothe of hir forme and of hir note,<br/>
+Wherof men mai the storie note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And of hir Soster Progne I finde,<br/>
+Hou sche was torned out of kinde<br/>
+Into a Swalwe swift of winge,<br/>
+Which ek in wynter lith swounynge,<br/>
+Ther as sche mai nothing be sene:<br/>
+Bot whan the world is woxe grene<br/>
+And comen is the Somertide,<br/>
+Than fleth sche forth and ginth to chide,    6010<br/>
+And chitreth out in hir langage<br/>
+What falshod is in mariage,<br/>
+And telleth in a maner speche<br/>
+Of Tereüs the Spousebreche.<br/>
+Sche wol noght in the wodes duelle,<br/>
+For sche wolde openliche telle;<br/>
+And ek for that sche was a spouse,<br/>
+Among the folk sche comth to house,<br/>
+To do thes wyves understonde<br/>
+The falshod of hire housebonde,    6020<br/>
+That thei of hem be war also,<br/>
+For ther ben manye untrewe of tho.<br/>
+Thus ben the Sostres briddes bothe,<br/>
+And ben toward the men so lothe,<br/>
+That thei ne wole of pure schame<br/>
+Unto no mannes hand be tame;<br/>
+For evere it duelleth in here mynde<br/>
+Of that thei founde a man unkinde,<br/>
+And that was false Tereüs.<br/>
+If such on be amonges ous    6030<br/>
+I not, bot his condicion<br/>
+Men sein in every region<br/>
+Withinne toune and ek withoute<br/>
+Nou regneth comunliche aboute.<br/>
+And natheles in remembrance<br/>
+I wol declare what vengance<br/>
+The goddes hadden him ordeined,<br/>
+Of that the Sostres hadden pleigned:<br/>
+For anon after he was changed<br/>
+And from his oghne kinde stranged,    6040<br/>
+A lappewincke mad he was,<br/>
+And thus he hoppeth on the gras,<br/>
+And on his hed ther stant upriht<br/>
+A creste in tokne he was a kniht;<br/>
+And yit unto this dai men seith,<br/>
+A lappewincke hath lore his feith<br/>
+And is the brid falseste of alle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bewar, mi Sone, er thee so falle;<br/>
+For if thou be of such covine,<br/>
+To gete of love be Ravine    6050<br/>
+Thi lust, it mai thee falle thus,<br/>
+As it befell of Tereüs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, goddes forebode!<br/>
+Me were levere be fortrode<br/>
+With wilde hors and be todrawe,<br/>
+Er I ayein love and his lawe<br/>
+Dede eny thing or loude or stille,<br/>
+Which were noght mi ladi wille.<br/>
+Men sein that every love hath drede;<br/>
+So folweth it that I hire drede,    6060<br/>
+For I hire love, and who so dredeth,<br/>
+To plese his love and serve him nedeth.<br/>
+Thus mai ye knowen be this skile<br/>
+That no Ravine don I wile<br/>
+Ayein hir will be such a weie;<br/>
+Bot while I live, I wol obeie<br/>
+Abidinge on hire courtesie,<br/>
+If eny merci wolde hir plie.<br/>
+Forthi, mi fader, as of this<br/>
+I wot noght I have don amis:    6070<br/>
+Bot furthermore I you beseche,<br/>
+Som other point that ye me teche,<br/>
+And axeth forth, if ther be auht,<br/>
+That I mai be the betre tauht.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Covoitise in povere astat<br/>
+Stant with himself upon debat<br/>
+Thurgh lacke of his misgovernance,<br/>
+That he unto his sustienance<br/>
+Ne can non other weie finde<br/>
+To gete him good, thanne as the blinde,    6080<br/>
+Which seth noght what schal after falle,<br/>
+That ilke vice which men calle<br/>
+Of Robberie, he takth on honde;<br/>
+Wherof be water and be londe<br/>
+Of thing which othre men beswinke<br/>
+He get him cloth and mete and drinke.<br/>
+Him reccheth noght what he beginne,<br/>
+Thurgh thefte so that he mai winne:<br/>
+Forthi to maken his pourchas<br/>
+He lith awaitende on the pas,    6090<br/>
+And what thing that he seth ther passe,<br/>
+He takth his part, or more or lasse,<br/>
+If it be worthi to be take.<br/>
+He can the packes wel ransake,<br/>
+So prively berth non aboute<br/>
+His gold, that he ne fint it oute,<br/>
+Or other juel, what it be;<br/>
+He takth it as his proprete.<br/>
+In wodes and in feldes eke<br/>
+Thus Robberie goth to seke,    6100<br/>
+Wher as he mai his pourpos finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht so in the same kinde,<br/>
+My goode Sone, as thou miht hiere,<br/>
+To speke of love in the matiere<br/>
+And make a verrai resemblance,<br/>
+Riht as a thief makth his chevance<br/>
+And robbeth mennes good aboute<br/>
+In wode and field, wher he goth oute,<br/>
+So be ther of these lovers some,<br/>
+In wylde stedes wher thei come    6110<br/>
+And finden there a womman able,<br/>
+And therto place covenable,<br/>
+Withoute leve, er that thei fare,<br/>
+Thei take a part of that chaffare:<br/>
+Yee, though sche were a Scheperdesse,<br/>
+Yit wol the lord of wantounesse<br/>
+Assaie, althogh sche be unmete,<br/>
+For other mennes good is swete.<br/>
+Bot therof wot nothing the wif<br/>
+At hom, which loveth as hir lif    6120<br/>
+Hir lord, and sitt alday wisshinge<br/>
+After hir lordes hom comynge:<br/>
+Bot whan that he comth hom at eve,<br/>
+Anon he makth his wif beleve,<br/>
+For sche noght elles scholde knowe:<br/>
+He telth hire hou his hunte hath blowe,<br/>
+And hou his houndes have wel runne,<br/>
+And hou ther schon a merye Sunne,<br/>
+And hou his haukes flowen wel;<br/>
+Bot he wol telle her nevere a diel    6130<br/>
+Hou he to love untrewe was,<br/>
+Of that he robbede in the pas,<br/>
+And tok his lust under the schawe<br/>
+Ayein love and ayein his lawe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Which thing, mi Sone, I thee forbede,<br/>
+For it is an ungoodly dede.<br/>
+For who that takth be Robberie<br/>
+His love, he mai noght justefie<br/>
+His cause, and so fulofte sithe<br/>
+For ones that he hath be blithe    6140<br/>
+He schal ben after sory thries.<br/>
+Ensample of suche Robberies<br/>
+I finde write, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Acordende unto this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rede hou whilom was a Maide,<br/>
+The faireste, as Ovide saide,<br/>
+Which was in hire time tho;<br/>
+And sche was of the chambre also<br/>
+Of Pallas, which is the goddesse<br/>
+And wif to Marte, of whom prouesse    6150<br/>
+Is yove to these worthi knihtes.<br/>
+For he is of so grete mihtes,<br/>
+That he governeth the bataille;<br/>
+Withouten him may noght availe<br/>
+The stronge hond, bot he it helpe;<br/>
+Ther mai no knyht of armes yelpe,<br/>
+Bot he feihte under his banere.<br/>
+Bot nou to speke of mi matiere,<br/>
+This faire, freisshe, lusti mai,<br/>
+Al one as sche wente on a dai    6160<br/>
+Upon the stronde forto pleie,<br/>
+Ther cam Neptunus in the weie,<br/>
+Which hath the See in governance;<br/>
+And in his herte such plesance<br/>
+He tok, whan he this Maide sih,<br/>
+That al his herte aros on hih,<br/>
+For he so sodeinliche unwar<br/>
+Behield the beaute that sche bar.<br/>
+And caste anon withinne his herte<br/>
+That sche him schal no weie asterte,    6170<br/>
+Bot if he take in avantage<br/>
+Fro thilke maide som pilage,<br/>
+Noght of the broches ne the Ringes,<br/>
+Bot of some othre smale thinges<br/>
+He thoghte parte, er that sche wente;<br/>
+And hire in bothe hise armes hente,<br/>
+And putte his hond toward the cofre,<br/>
+Wher forto robbe he made a profre,<br/>
+That lusti tresor forto stele,<br/>
+Which passeth othre goodes fele    6180<br/>
+And cleped is the maidenhede,<br/>
+Which is the flour of wommanhede.<br/>
+This Maiden, which Cornix be name<br/>
+Was hote, dredende alle schame,<br/>
+Sih that sche mihte noght debate,<br/>
+And wel sche wiste he wolde algate<br/>
+Fulfille his lust of Robberie,<br/>
+Anon began to wepe and crie,<br/>
+And seide, “O Pallas, noble queene,<br/>
+Scheu nou thi myht and let be sene,    6190<br/>
+To kepe and save myn honour:<br/>
+Help, that I lese noght mi flour,<br/>
+Which nou under thi keie is loke.”<br/>
+That word was noght so sone spoke,<br/>
+Whan Pallas schop recoverir<br/>
+After the will and the desir<br/>
+Of hire, which a Maiden was,<br/>
+And sodeinliche upon this cas<br/>
+Out of hire wommanisshe kinde<br/>
+Into a briddes like I finde    6200<br/>
+Sche was transformed forth withal,<br/>
+So that Neptunus nothing stal<br/>
+Of such thing as he wolde have stole.<br/>
+With fetheres blake as eny cole<br/>
+Out of hise armes in a throwe<br/>
+Sche flih before his yhe a Crowe;<br/>
+Which was to hire a more delit,<br/>
+To kepe hire maidenhede whit<br/>
+Under the wede of fethers blake,<br/>
+In Perles whyte than forsake    6210<br/>
+That no lif mai restore ayein.<br/>
+Bot thus Neptune his herte in vein<br/>
+Hath upon Robberie sett;<br/>
+The bridd is flowe and he was let,<br/>
+The faire Maide him hath ascaped,<br/>
+Wherof for evere he was bejaped<br/>
+And scorned of that he hath lore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, be thou war therfore<br/>
+That thou no maidenhode stele,<br/>
+Wherof men sen deseses fele    6220<br/>
+Aldai befalle in sondri wise;<br/>
+So as I schal thee yit devise<br/>
+An other tale therupon,<br/>
+Which fell be olde daies gon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Lichaon upon his wif<br/>
+A dowhter hadde, a goodly lif,<br/>
+A clene Maide of worthi fame,<br/>
+Calistona whos rihte name<br/>
+Was cleped, and of many a lord<br/>
+Sche was besoght, bot hire acord    6230<br/>
+To love myhte noman winne,<br/>
+As sche which hath no lust therinne;<br/>
+Bot swor withinne hir herte and saide<br/>
+That sche wolde evere ben a Maide.<br/>
+Wherof to kepe hireself in pes,<br/>
+With suche as Amadriades<br/>
+Were cleped, wodemaydes, tho,<br/>
+And with the Nimphes ek also<br/>
+Upon the spring of freisshe welles<br/>
+Sche schop to duelle and nagher elles.    6240<br/>
+And thus cam this Calistona<br/>
+Into the wode of Tegea,<br/>
+Wher sche virginite behihte<br/>
+Unto Diane, and therto plihte<br/>
+Her trouthe upon the bowes grene,<br/>
+To kepe hir maidenhode clene.<br/>
+Which afterward upon a day<br/>
+Was priveliche stole away;<br/>
+For Jupiter thurgh his queintise<br/>
+From hire it tok in such a wise,    6250<br/>
+That sodeinliche forth withal<br/>
+Hire wombe aros and sche toswal,<br/>
+So that it mihte noght ben hidd.<br/>
+And therupon it is betidd,<br/>
+Diane, which it herde telle,<br/>
+In prive place unto a welle<br/>
+With Nimphes al a compainie<br/>
+Was come, and in a ragerie<br/>
+Sche seide that sche bathe wolde,<br/>
+And bad that every maide scholde    6260<br/>
+With hire al naked bathe also.<br/>
+And tho began the prive wo,<br/>
+Calistona wax red for schame;<br/>
+Bot thei that knewe noght the game,<br/>
+To whom no such thing was befalle,<br/>
+Anon thei made hem naked alle,<br/>
+As thei that nothing wolden hyde:<br/>
+Bot sche withdrouh hire evere asyde,<br/>
+And natheles into the flod,<br/>
+Wher that Diane hirselve stod,    6270<br/>
+Sche thoghte come unaperceived.<br/>
+Bot therof sche was al deceived;<br/>
+For whan sche cam a litel nyh,<br/>
+And that Diane hire wombe syh,<br/>
+Sche seide, “Awey, thou foule beste,<br/>
+For thin astat is noght honeste<br/>
+This chaste water forto touche;<br/>
+For thou hast take such a touche,<br/>
+Which nevere mai ben hol ayein.”<br/>
+And thus goth sche which was forlein    6280<br/>
+With schame, and fro the Nimphes fledde,<br/>
+Til whanne that nature hire spedde,<br/>
+That of a Sone, which Archas<br/>
+Was named, sche delivered was.<br/>
+And tho Juno, which was the wif<br/>
+Of Jupiter, wroth and hastif,<br/>
+In pourpos forto do vengance<br/>
+Cam forth upon this ilke chance,<br/>
+And to Calistona sche spak,<br/>
+And sette upon hir many a lak,    6290<br/>
+And seide, “Ha, nou thou art atake,<br/>
+That thou thi werk myht noght forsake.<br/>
+Ha, thou ungoodlich ypocrite,<br/>
+Hou thou art gretly forto wyte!<br/>
+Bot nou thou schalt ful sore abie<br/>
+That ilke stelthe and micherie,<br/>
+Which thou hast bothe take and do;<br/>
+Wherof thi fader Lichao<br/>
+Schal noght be glad, whan he it wot,<br/>
+Of that his dowhter was so hot,    6300<br/>
+That sche hath broke hire chaste avou.<br/>
+Bot I thee schal chastise nou;<br/>
+Thi grete beaute schal be torned,<br/>
+Thurgh which that thou hast be mistorned,<br/>
+Thi large frount, thin yhen greie,<br/>
+I schal hem change in other weie,<br/>
+And al the feture of thi face<br/>
+In such a wise I schal deface,<br/>
+That every man thee schal forbere.”<br/>
+With that the liknesse of a bere    6310<br/>
+Sche tok and was forschape anon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Withinne a time and therupon<br/>
+Befell that with a bowe on honde,<br/>
+To hunte and gamen forto fonde,<br/>
+Into that wode goth to pleie<br/>
+Hir Sone Archas, and in his weie<br/>
+It hapneth that this bere cam.<br/>
+And whan that sche good hiede nam,<br/>
+Wher that he stod under the bowh,<br/>
+Sche kneu him wel and to him drouh;    6320<br/>
+For thogh sche hadde hire forme lore,<br/>
+The love was noght lost therfore<br/>
+Which kinde hath set under his lawe.<br/>
+Whan sche under the wodesschawe<br/>
+Hire child behield, sche was so glad,<br/>
+That sche with bothe hire armes sprad,<br/>
+As thogh sche were in wommanhiede,<br/>
+Toward him cam, and tok non hiede<br/>
+Of that he bar a bowe bent.<br/>
+And he with that an Arwe hath hent    6330<br/>
+And gan to teise it in his bowe,<br/>
+As he that can non other knowe,<br/>
+Bot that it was a beste wylde.<br/>
+Bot Jupiter, which wolde schylde<br/>
+The Moder and the Sone also,<br/>
+Ordeineth for hem bothe so,<br/>
+That thei for evere were save.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot thus, mi Sone, thou myht have<br/>
+Ensample, hou that it is to fle<br/>
+To robbe the virginite    6340<br/>
+Of a yong innocent aweie:<br/>
+And overthis be other weie,<br/>
+In olde bokes as I rede,<br/>
+Such Robberie is forto drede,<br/>
+And nameliche of thilke good<br/>
+Which every womman that is good<br/>
+Desireth forto kepe and holde,<br/>
+As whilom was be daies olde.<br/>
+For if thou se mi tale wel<br/>
+Of that was tho, thou miht somdiel    6350<br/>
+Of old ensample taken hiede,<br/>
+Hou that the flour of maidenhiede<br/>
+Was thilke time holde in pris.<br/>
+And so it was, and so it is,<br/>
+And so it schal for evere stonde:<br/>
+And for thou schalt it understonde,<br/>
+Nou herkne a tale next suiende,<br/>
+Hou maidenhod is to commende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Rome among the gestes olde<br/>
+I finde hou that Valerie tolde    6360<br/>
+That what man tho was Emperour<br/>
+Of Rome, he scholde don honour<br/>
+To the virgine, and in the weie,<br/>
+Wher he hire mette, he scholde obeie<br/>
+In worschipe of virginite,<br/>
+Which tho was of gret dignite.<br/>
+Noght onliche of the wommen tho,<br/>
+Bot of the chaste men also<br/>
+It was commended overal:<br/>
+And forto speke in special    6370<br/>
+Touchende of men, ensample I finde,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phyryns, which was of mannes kinde<br/>
+Above alle othre the faireste<br/>
+Of Rome and ek the comelieste,<br/>
+That wel was hire which him mihte<br/>
+Beholde and have of him a sihte.<br/>
+Thus was he tempted ofte sore;<br/>
+Bot for he wolde be nomore<br/>
+Among the wommen so coveited,<br/>
+The beaute of his face streited    6380<br/>
+He hath, and threste out bothe hise yhen,<br/>
+That alle wommen whiche him syhen<br/>
+Thanne afterward, of him ne roghte:<br/>
+And thus his maidehiede he boghte.<br/>
+So mai I prove wel forthi,<br/>
+Above alle othre under the Sky,<br/>
+Who that the vertus wolde peise,<br/>
+Virginite is forto preise,<br/>
+Which, as thapocalips recordeth,<br/>
+To Crist in hevene best acordeth.    6390<br/>
+So mai it schewe wel therfore,<br/>
+As I have told it hier tofore,<br/>
+In hevene and ek in Erthe also<br/>
+It is accept to bothe tuo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And if I schal more over this<br/>
+Declare what this vertu is,<br/>
+I finde write upon this thing<br/>
+Of Valentinian the king<br/>
+And Emperour be thilke daies,<br/>
+A worthi knyht at alle assaies,    6400<br/>
+Hou he withoute Mariage<br/>
+Was of an hundred wynter Age,<br/>
+And hadde ben a worthi kniht<br/>
+Bothe of his lawe and of his myht.<br/>
+Bot whan men wolde his dedes peise<br/>
+And his knyhthode of Armes preise,<br/>
+Of that he dede with his hondes,<br/>
+Whan he the kinges and the londes<br/>
+To his subjeccion put under,<br/>
+Of al that pris hath he no wonder,    6410<br/>
+For he it sette of non acompte,<br/>
+And seide al that may noght amonte<br/>
+Ayeins o point which he hath nome,<br/>
+That he his fleissh hath overcome:<br/>
+He was a virgine, as he seide;<br/>
+On that bataille his pris he leide.<br/>
+Lo nou, my Sone, avise thee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yee, fader, al this wel mai be,<br/>
+Bot if alle othre dede so,<br/>
+The world of men were sone go:    6420<br/>
+And in the lawe a man mai finde,<br/>
+Hou god to man be weie of kinde<br/>
+Hath set the world to multeplie;<br/>
+And who that wol him justefie,<br/>
+It is ynouh to do the lawe.<br/>
+And natheles youre goode sawe<br/>
+Is good to kepe, who so may,<br/>
+I wol noght therayein seie nay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, take it as I seie;<br/>
+If maidenhod be take aweie    6430<br/>
+Withoute lawes ordinance,<br/>
+It mai noght failen of vengance.<br/>
+And if thou wolt the sothe wite,<br/>
+Behold a tale which is write,<br/>
+Hou that the King Agamenon,<br/>
+Whan he the Cite of Lesbon<br/>
+Hath wonne, a Maiden ther he fond,<br/>
+Which was the faireste of the Lond<br/>
+In thilke time that men wiste.<br/>
+He tok of hire what him liste    6440<br/>
+Of thing which was most precious,<br/>
+Wherof that sche was dangerous.<br/>
+This faire Maiden cleped is<br/>
+Criseide, douhter of Crisis,<br/>
+Which was that time in special<br/>
+Of thilke temple principal,<br/>
+Wher Phebus hadde his sacrifice,<br/>
+So was it wel the more vice.<br/>
+Agamenon was thanne in weie<br/>
+To Troieward, and tok aweie    6450<br/>
+This Maiden, which he with him ladde,<br/>
+So grete a lust in hire he hadde.<br/>
+Bot Phebus, which hath gret desdeign<br/>
+Of that his Maiden was forlein,<br/>
+Anon as he to Troie cam,<br/>
+Vengance upon this dede he nam<br/>
+And sende a comun pestilence.<br/>
+Thei soghten thanne here evidence<br/>
+And maden calculacion,<br/>
+To knowe in what condicion    6460<br/>
+This deth cam in so sodeinly;<br/>
+And ate laste redyly<br/>
+The cause and ek the man thei founde:<br/>
+And forth withal the same stounde<br/>
+Agamenon opposed was,<br/>
+Which hath beknowen al the cas<br/>
+Of the folie which he wroghte.<br/>
+And therupon mercy thei soghte<br/>
+Toward the god in sondri wise<br/>
+With preiere and with sacrifise,    6470<br/>
+The Maide and hom ayein thei sende,<br/>
+And yive hire good ynouh to spende<br/>
+For evere whil sche scholde live:<br/>
+And thus the Senne was foryive<br/>
+And al the pestilence cessed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, what it is to ben encressed<br/>
+Of love which is evele wonne.<br/>
+It were betre noght begonne<br/>
+Than take a thing withoute leve,<br/>
+Which thou most after nedes leve,    6480<br/>
+And yit have malgre forth withal.<br/>
+Forthi to robben overal<br/>
+In loves cause if thou beginne,<br/>
+I not what ese thou schalt winne.<br/>
+Mi Sone, be wel war of this,<br/>
+For thus of Robberie it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, youre ensamplerie<br/>
+In loves cause of Robberie<br/>
+I have it riht wel understonde.<br/>
+Bot overthis, hou so it stonde,    6490<br/>
+Yit wolde I wite of youre aprise<br/>
+What thing is more of Covoitise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With Covoitise yit I finde<br/>
+A Servant of the same kinde,<br/>
+Which Stelthe is hote, and Mecherie<br/>
+With him is evere in compainie.<br/>
+Of whom if I schal telle soth,<br/>
+He stalketh as a Pocok doth,<br/>
+And takth his preie so covert,<br/>
+That noman wot it in apert.    6500<br/>
+For whan he wot the lord from home,<br/>
+Than wol he stalke aboute and rome;<br/>
+And what thing he fint in his weie,<br/>
+Whan that he seth the men aweie,<br/>
+He stelth it and goth forth withal,<br/>
+That therof noman knowe schal.<br/>
+And ek fulofte he goth a nyht<br/>
+Withoute Mone or sterreliht,<br/>
+And with his craft the dore unpiketh,<br/>
+And takth therinne what him liketh:    6510<br/>
+And if the dore be so schet,<br/>
+That he be of his entre let,<br/>
+He wole in ate wyndou crepe,<br/>
+And whil the lord is faste aslepe,<br/>
+He stelth what thing as him best list,<br/>
+And goth his weie er it be wist.<br/>
+Fulofte also be lyhte of day<br/>
+Yit wole he stele and make assay;<br/>
+Under the cote his hond he put,<br/>
+Til he the mannes Purs have cut,    6520<br/>
+And rifleth that he fint therinne.<br/>
+And thus he auntreth him to winne,<br/>
+And berth an horn and noght ne bloweth,<br/>
+For noman of his conseil knoweth;<br/>
+What he mai gete of his Michinge,<br/>
+It is al bile under the winge.<br/>
+And as an hound that goth to folde<br/>
+And hath ther taken what he wolde,<br/>
+His mouth upon the gras he wypeth,<br/>
+And so with feigned chiere him slypeth,    6530<br/>
+That what as evere of schep he strangle,<br/>
+Ther is noman therof schal jangle,<br/>
+As forto knowen who it dede;<br/>
+Riht so doth Stelthe in every stede,<br/>
+Where as him list his preie take.<br/>
+He can so wel his cause make<br/>
+And so wel feigne and so wel glose,<br/>
+That ther ne schal noman suppose,<br/>
+Bot that he were an innocent,<br/>
+And thus a mannes yhe he blent:    6540<br/>
+So that this craft I mai remene<br/>
+Withouten help of eny mene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther be lovers of that degre,<br/>
+Which al here lust in privete,<br/>
+As who seith, geten al be Stelthe,<br/>
+And ofte atteignen to gret welthe<br/>
+As for the time that it lasteth.<br/>
+For love awaiteth evere and casteth<br/>
+Hou he mai stele and cacche his preie,<br/>
+Whan he therto mai finde a weie:    6550<br/>
+For be it nyht or be it day,<br/>
+He takth his part, whan that he may,<br/>
+And if he mai nomore do,<br/>
+Yit wol he stele a cuss or tuo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, what seist thou therto?<br/>
+Tell if thou dedest evere so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, hou?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, thus,&mdash;<br/>
+If thou hast stolen eny cuss<br/>
+Or other thing which therto longeth,<br/>
+For noman suche thieves hongeth:    6560<br/>
+Tell on forthi and sei the trouthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay, and that is routhe,<br/>
+For be mi will I am a thief;<br/>
+Bot sche that is to me most lief,<br/>
+Yit dorste I nevere in privete<br/>
+Noght ones take hire be the kne,<br/>
+To stele of hire or this or that,<br/>
+And if I dorste, I wot wel what:<br/>
+And natheles, bot if I lie,<br/>
+Be Stelthe ne be Robberie    6570<br/>
+Of love, which fell in mi thoght,<br/>
+To hire dede I nevere noght.<br/>
+Bot as men sein, wher herte is failed,<br/>
+Ther schal no castell ben assailed;<br/>
+Bot thogh I hadde hertes ten,<br/>
+And were als strong as alle men,<br/>
+If I be noght myn oghne man<br/>
+And dar noght usen that I can,<br/>
+I mai miselve noght recovere.<br/>
+Thogh I be nevere man so povere,    6580<br/>
+I bere an herte and hire it is,<br/>
+So that me faileth wit in this,<br/>
+Hou that I scholde of myn acord<br/>
+The servant lede ayein the lord:<br/>
+For if mi fot wolde awher go,<br/>
+Or that min hand wolde elles do,<br/>
+Whan that myn herte is therayein,<br/>
+The remenant is al in vein.<br/>
+And thus me lacketh alle wele,<br/>
+And yit ne dar I nothing stele    6590<br/>
+Of thing which longeth unto love:<br/>
+And ek it is so hyh above,<br/>
+I mai noght wel therto areche,<br/>
+Bot if so be at time of speche,<br/>
+Ful selde if thanne I stele may<br/>
+A word or tuo and go my way.<br/>
+Betwen hire hih astat and me<br/>
+Comparison ther mai non be,<br/>
+So that I fiele and wel I wot,<br/>
+Al is to hevy and to hot    6600<br/>
+To sette on hond withoute leve:<br/>
+And thus I mot algate leve<br/>
+To stele that I mai noght take,<br/>
+And in this wise I mot forsake<br/>
+To ben a thief ayein mi wille<br/>
+Of thing which I mai noght fulfille.<br/>
+For that Serpent which nevere slepte<br/>
+The flees of gold so wel ne kepte<br/>
+In Colchos, as the tale is told,<br/>
+That mi ladi a thousendfold    6610<br/>
+Nys betre yemed and bewaked,<br/>
+Wher sche be clothed or be naked.<br/>
+To kepe hir bodi nyht and day,<br/>
+Sche hath a wardein redi ay,<br/>
+Which is so wonderful a wyht,<br/>
+That him ne mai no mannes myht<br/>
+With swerd ne with no wepne daunte,<br/>
+Ne with no sleihte of charme enchaunte,<br/>
+Wherof he mihte be mad tame,<br/>
+And Danger is his rihte name;    6620<br/>
+Which under lock and under keie,<br/>
+That noman mai it stele aweie,<br/>
+Hath al the Tresor underfonge<br/>
+That unto love mai belonge.<br/>
+The leste lokinge of hire yhe<br/>
+Mai noght be stole, if he it syhe;<br/>
+And who so gruccheth for so lyte,<br/>
+He wolde sone sette a wyte<br/>
+On him that wolde stele more.<br/>
+And that me grieveth wonder sore,    6630<br/>
+For this proverbe is evere newe,<br/>
+That stronge lokes maken trewe<br/>
+Of hem that wolden stele and pyke:<br/>
+For so wel can ther noman slyke<br/>
+Be him ne be non other mene,<br/>
+To whom Danger wol yive or lene<br/>
+Of that tresor he hath to kepe.<br/>
+So thogh I wolde stalke and crepe,<br/>
+And wayte on eve and ek on morwe,<br/>
+Of Danger schal I nothing borwe,    6640<br/>
+And stele I wot wel may I noght:<br/>
+And thus I am riht wel bethoght,<br/>
+Whil Danger stant in his office,<br/>
+Of Stelthe, which ye clepe a vice,<br/>
+I schal be gultif neveremo.<br/>
+Therfore I wolde he were ago<br/>
+So fer that I nevere of him herde,<br/>
+Hou so that afterward it ferde:<br/>
+For thanne I mihte yit per cas<br/>
+Of love make som pourchas    6650<br/>
+Be Stelthe or be som other weie,<br/>
+That nou fro me stant fer aweie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot, fader, as ye tolde above,<br/>
+Hou Stelthe goth a nyht for love,<br/>
+I mai noght wel that point forsake,<br/>
+That ofte times I ne wake<br/>
+On nyhtes, whan that othre slepe;<br/>
+Bot hou, I prei you taketh kepe.<br/>
+Whan I am loged in such wise<br/>
+That I be nyhte mai arise,    6660<br/>
+At som wyndowe and loken oute<br/>
+And se the housinge al aboute,<br/>
+So that I mai the chambre knowe<br/>
+In which mi ladi, as I trowe,<br/>
+Lyth in hir bed and slepeth softe,<br/>
+Thanne is myn herte a thief fulofte:<br/>
+For there I stonde to beholde<br/>
+The longe nyhtes that ben colde,<br/>
+And thenke on hire that lyth there.<br/>
+And thanne I wisshe that I were    6670<br/>
+Als wys as was Nectanabus<br/>
+Or elles as was Protheus,<br/>
+That couthen bothe of nigromaunce<br/>
+In what liknesse, in what semblaunce,<br/>
+Riht as hem liste, hemself transforme:<br/>
+For if I were of such a forme,<br/>
+I seie thanne I wolde fle<br/>
+Into the chambre forto se<br/>
+If eny grace wolde falle,<br/>
+So that I mihte under the palle    6680<br/>
+Som thing of love pyke and stele.<br/>
+And thus I thenke thoghtes fele,<br/>
+And thogh therof nothing be soth,<br/>
+Yit ese as for a time it doth:<br/>
+Bot ate laste whanne I finde<br/>
+That I am falle into my mynde,<br/>
+And se that I have stonde longe<br/>
+And have no profit underfonge,<br/>
+Than stalke I to mi bedd withinne.<br/>
+And this is al that evere I winne    6690<br/>
+Of love, whanne I walke on nyht:<br/>
+Mi will is good, bot of mi myht<br/>
+Me lacketh bothe and of mi grace;<br/>
+For what so that mi thoght embrace,<br/>
+Yit have I noght the betre ferd.<br/>
+Mi fader, lo, nou have ye herd<br/>
+What I be Stelthe of love have do,<br/>
+And hou mi will hath be therto:<br/>
+If I be worthi to penance<br/>
+I put it on your ordinance.    6700
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of Stelthe I the behiete,<br/>
+Thogh it be for a time swete,<br/>
+At ende it doth bot litel good,<br/>
+As be ensample hou that it stod<br/>
+Whilom, I mai thee telle nou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I preie you, fader, sei me hou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, of him which goth be daie<br/>
+Be weie of Stelthe to assaie,<br/>
+In loves cause and takth his preie,<br/>
+Ovide seide as I schal seie,    6710<br/>
+And in his Methamor he tolde<br/>
+A tale, which is good to holde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Poete upon this matiere<br/>
+Of Stelthe wrot in this manere.<br/>
+Venus, which hath this lawe in honde<br/>
+Of thing which mai noght be withstonde,<br/>
+As sche which the tresor to warde<br/>
+Of love hath withinne hir warde,<br/>
+Phebum to love hath so constreigned,<br/>
+That he withoute reste is peined    6720<br/>
+With al his herte to coveite<br/>
+A Maiden, which was warded streyte<br/>
+Withinne chambre and kept so clos,<br/>
+That selden was whan sche desclos<br/>
+Goth with hir moder forto pleie.<br/>
+Leuchotoe, so as men seie,<br/>
+This Maiden hihte, and Orchamus<br/>
+Hir fader was; and befell thus.<br/>
+This doughter, that was kept so deere,<br/>
+And hadde be fro yer to yeere    6730<br/>
+Under hir moder discipline<br/>
+A clene Maide and a Virgine,<br/>
+Upon the whos nativite<br/>
+Of comelihiede and of beaute<br/>
+Nature hath set al that sche may,<br/>
+That lich unto the fresshe Maii,<br/>
+Which othre monthes of the yeer<br/>
+Surmonteth, so withoute pier<br/>
+Was of this Maiden the feture.<br/>
+Wherof Phebus out of mesure    6740<br/>
+Hire loveth, and on every syde<br/>
+Awaiteth, if so mai betyde,<br/>
+That he thurgh eny sleihte myhte<br/>
+Hire lusti maidenhod unrihte,<br/>
+The which were al his worldes welthe.<br/>
+And thus lurkende upon his stelthe<br/>
+In his await so longe he lai,<br/>
+Til it befell upon a dai,<br/>
+That he thurghout hir chambre wall<br/>
+Cam in al sodeinliche, and stall    6750<br/>
+That thing which was to him so lief.<br/>
+Bot wo the while, he was a thief!<br/>
+For Venus, which was enemie<br/>
+Of thilke loves micherie,<br/>
+Discovereth al the pleine cas<br/>
+To Clymene, which thanne was<br/>
+Toward Phebus his concubine.<br/>
+And sche to lette the covine<br/>
+Of thilke love, dedli wroth<br/>
+To pleigne upon this Maide goth,    6760<br/>
+And tolde hire fader hou it stod;<br/>
+Wherof for sorwe welnyh wod<br/>
+Unto hire moder thus he saide:<br/>
+“Lo, what it is to kepe a Maide!<br/>
+To Phebus dar I nothing speke,<br/>
+Bot upon hire I schal be wreke,<br/>
+So that these Maidens after this<br/>
+Mow take ensample, what it is<br/>
+To soffre her maidenhed be stole,<br/>
+Wherof that sche the deth schal thole.”    6770<br/>
+And bad with that do make a pet,<br/>
+Wherinne he hath his douhter set,<br/>
+As he that wol no pite have,<br/>
+So that sche was al quik begrave<br/>
+And deide anon in his presence.<br/>
+Bot Phebus, for the reverence<br/>
+Of that sche hadde be his love,<br/>
+Hath wroght thurgh his pouer above,<br/>
+That sche sprong up out of the molde<br/>
+Into a flour was named golde,    6780<br/>
+Which stant governed of the Sonne.<br/>
+And thus whan love is evele wonne,<br/>
+Fulofte it comth to repentaile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, that is no mervaile,<br/>
+Whan that the conseil is bewreid.<br/>
+Bot ofte time love hath pleid<br/>
+And stole many a prive game,<br/>
+Which nevere yit cam into blame,<br/>
+Whan that the thinges weren hidde.<br/>
+Bot in youre tale, as it betidde,    6790<br/>
+Venus discoverede al the cas,<br/>
+And ek also brod dai it was,<br/>
+Whan Phebus such a Stelthe wroghte,<br/>
+Wherof the Maide in blame he broghte,<br/>
+That afterward sche was so lore.<br/>
+Bot for ye seiden nou tofore<br/>
+Hou stelthe of love goth be nyhte,<br/>
+And doth hise thinges out of syhte,<br/>
+Therof me liste also to hiere<br/>
+A tale lich to the matiere,    6800<br/>
+Wherof I myhte ensample take.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, and for thi sake,<br/>
+So as it fell be daies olde,<br/>
+And so as the Poete it tolde,<br/>
+Upon the nyhtes micherie<br/>
+Nou herkne a tale of Poesie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The myhtieste of alle men<br/>
+Whan Hercules with Eolen,<br/>
+Which was the love of his corage,<br/>
+Togedre upon a Pelrinage    6810<br/>
+Towardes Rome scholden go,<br/>
+It fell hem be the weie so,<br/>
+That thei upon a dai a Cave<br/>
+Withinne a roche founden have,<br/>
+Which was real and glorious<br/>
+And of Entaile curious,<br/>
+Be name and Thophis it was hote.<br/>
+The Sonne schon tho wonder hote,<br/>
+As it was in the Somer tyde;<br/>
+This Hercules, which be his syde    6820<br/>
+Hath Eolen his love there,<br/>
+Whan thei at thilke cave were,<br/>
+He seide it thoghte him for the beste<br/>
+That sche hire for the hete reste<br/>
+Al thilke day and thilke nyht;<br/>
+And sche, that was a lusti wyht,<br/>
+It liketh hire al that he seide:<br/>
+And thus thei duelle there and pleide<br/>
+The longe dai. And so befell,<br/>
+This Cave was under the hell    6830<br/>
+Of Tymolus, which was begrowe<br/>
+With vines, and at thilke throwe<br/>
+Faunus with Saba the goddesse,<br/>
+Be whom the large wildernesse<br/>
+In thilke time stod governed,<br/>
+Weere in a place, as I am lerned,<br/>
+Nyh by, which Bachus wode hihte.<br/>
+This Faunus tok a gret insihte<br/>
+Of Eolen, that was so nyh;<br/>
+For whan that he hire beaute syh,    6840<br/>
+Out of his wit he was assoted,<br/>
+And in his herte it hath so noted,<br/>
+That he forsok the Nimphes alle,<br/>
+And seide he wolde, hou so it falle,<br/>
+Assaie an other forto winne;<br/>
+So that his hertes thoght withinne<br/>
+He sette and caste hou that he myhte<br/>
+Of love pyke awey be nyhte<br/>
+That he be daie in other wise<br/>
+To stele mihte noght suffise:    6850<br/>
+And therupon his time he waiteth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou tak good hiede hou love afaiteth<br/>
+Him which withal is overcome.<br/>
+Faire Eolen, whan sche was come<br/>
+With Hercules into the Cave,<br/>
+Sche seide him that sche wolde have<br/>
+Hise clothes of and hires bothe,<br/>
+That ech of hem scholde other clothe.<br/>
+And al was do riht as sche bad,<br/>
+He hath hire in hise clothes clad    6860<br/>
+And caste on hire his gulion,<br/>
+Which of the Skyn of a Leoun<br/>
+Was mad, as he upon the weie<br/>
+It slouh, and overthis to pleie<br/>
+Sche tok his grete Mace also<br/>
+And knet it at hir gerdil tho.<br/>
+So was sche lich the man arraied,<br/>
+And Hercules thanne hath assaied<br/>
+To clothen him in hire array:<br/>
+And thus thei jape forth the dai,    6870<br/>
+Til that her Souper redy were.<br/>
+And whan thei hadden souped there,<br/>
+Thei schopen hem to gon to reste;<br/>
+And as it thoghte hem for the beste,<br/>
+Thei bede, as for that ilke nyht,<br/>
+Tuo sondri beddes to be dyht,<br/>
+For thei togedre ligge nolde,<br/>
+Be cause that thei offre wolde<br/>
+Upon the morwe here sacrifice.<br/>
+The servantz deden here office    6880<br/>
+And sondri beddes made anon,<br/>
+Wherin that thei to reste gon<br/>
+Ech be himself in sondri place.<br/>
+Faire Eole hath set the Mace<br/>
+Beside hire beddes hed above,<br/>
+And with the clothes of hire love<br/>
+Sche helede al hire bed aboute;<br/>
+And he, which hadde of nothing doute,<br/>
+Hire wympel wond aboute his cheke,<br/>
+Hire kertell and hire mantel eke    6890<br/>
+Abrod upon his bed he spredde.<br/>
+And thus thei slepen bothe abedde;<br/>
+And what of travail, what of wyn,<br/>
+The servantz lich to drunke Swyn<br/>
+Begunne forto route faste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Faunus, which his Stelthe caste,<br/>
+Was thanne come to the Cave,<br/>
+And fond thei weren alle save<br/>
+Withoute noise, and in he wente.<br/>
+The derke nyht his sihte blente,    6900<br/>
+And yit it happeth him to go<br/>
+Where Eolen abedde tho<br/>
+Was leid al one for to slepe;<br/>
+Bot for he wolde take kepe<br/>
+Whos bed it was, he made assai,<br/>
+And of the Leoun, where it lay,<br/>
+The Cote he fond, and ek he fieleth<br/>
+The Mace, and thanne his herte kieleth,<br/>
+That there dorste he noght abyde,<br/>
+Bot stalketh upon every side    6910<br/>
+And soghte aboute with his hond,<br/>
+That other bedd til that he fond,<br/>
+Wher lai bewympled a visage.<br/>
+Tho was he glad in his corage,<br/>
+For he hir kertell fond also<br/>
+And ek hir mantell bothe tuo<br/>
+Bespred upon the bed alofte.<br/>
+He made him naked thanne, and softe<br/>
+Into the bedd unwar he crepte,<br/>
+Wher Hercules that time slepte,    6920<br/>
+And wende wel it were sche;<br/>
+And thus in stede of Eole<br/>
+Anon he profreth him to love.<br/>
+But he, which felte a man above,<br/>
+This Hercules, him threw to grounde<br/>
+So sore, that thei have him founde<br/>
+Liggende there upon the morwe;<br/>
+And tho was noght a litel sorwe,<br/>
+That Faunus of himselve made,<br/>
+Bot elles thei were alle glade    6930<br/>
+And lowhen him to scorne aboute:<br/>
+Saba with Nimphis al a route<br/>
+Cam doun to loke hou that he ferde,<br/>
+And whan that thei the sothe herde,<br/>
+He was bejaped overal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, be thou war withal<br/>
+To seche suche mecheries,<br/>
+Bot if thou have the betre aspies,<br/>
+In aunter if the so betyde<br/>
+As Faunus dede thilke tyde,    6940<br/>
+Wherof thou miht be schamed so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holi fader, certes no.<br/>
+Bot if I hadde riht good leve,<br/>
+Such mecherie I thenke leve:<br/>
+Mi feinte herte wol noght serve;<br/>
+For malgre wolde I noght deserve<br/>
+In thilke place wher I love.<br/>
+Bot for ye tolden hier above<br/>
+Of Covoitise and his pilage,<br/>
+If ther be more of that lignage,    6950<br/>
+Which toucheth to mi schrifte, I preie<br/>
+That ye therof me wolde seie,<br/>
+So that I mai the vice eschuie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if I be order suie<br/>
+The vices, as thei stonde arowe,<br/>
+Of Covoitise thou schalt knowe<br/>
+Ther is yit on, which is the laste;<br/>
+In whom ther mai no vertu laste,<br/>
+For he with god himself debateth,<br/>
+Wherof that al the hevene him hateth.    6960
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hihe god, which alle goode<br/>
+Pourveied hath for mannes fode<br/>
+Of clothes and of mete and drinke,<br/>
+Bad Adam that he scholde swinke<br/>
+To geten him his sustienance:<br/>
+And ek he sette an ordinance<br/>
+Upon the lawe of Moises,<br/>
+That though a man be haveles,<br/>
+Yit schal he noght be thefte stele.<br/>
+Bot nou adaies ther ben fele,    6970<br/>
+That wol no labour undertake,<br/>
+Bot what thei mai be Stelthe take<br/>
+Thei holde it sikerliche wonne.<br/>
+And thus the lawe is overronne,<br/>
+Which god hath set, and namely<br/>
+With hem that so untrewely<br/>
+The goodes robbe of holi cherche.<br/>
+The thefte which thei thanne werche<br/>
+Be name is cleped Sacrilegge,<br/>
+Ayein the whom I thenke alegge.    6980<br/>
+Of his condicion to telle,<br/>
+Which rifleth bothe bok and belle,<br/>
+So forth with al the remenant<br/>
+To goddes hous appourtenant,<br/>
+Wher that he scholde bidde his bede,<br/>
+He doth his thefte in holi stede,<br/>
+And takth what thing he fint therinne:<br/>
+For whan he seth that he mai winne,<br/>
+He wondeth for no cursednesse,<br/>
+That he ne brekth the holinesse    6990<br/>
+And doth to god no reverence;<br/>
+For he hath lost his conscience,<br/>
+That though the Prest therfore curse,<br/>
+He seith he fareth noght the wurse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto speke it otherwise,<br/>
+What man that lasseth the franchise<br/>
+And takth of holi cherche his preie,<br/>
+I not what bedes he schal preie.<br/>
+Whan he fro god, which hath yive al,<br/>
+The Pourpartie in special,    7000<br/>
+Which unto Crist himself is due,<br/>
+Benymth, he mai noght wel eschue<br/>
+The peine comende afterward;<br/>
+For he hath mad his foreward<br/>
+With Sacrilegge forto duelle,<br/>
+Which hath his heritage in helle.<br/>
+And if we rede of tholde lawe,<br/>
+I finde write, in thilke dawe<br/>
+Of Princes hou ther weren thre<br/>
+Coupable sore in this degre.    7010<br/>
+That on of hem was cleped thus,<br/>
+The proude king Antiochus;<br/>
+That other Nabuzardan hihte,<br/>
+Which of his crualte behyhte<br/>
+The temple to destruie and waste,<br/>
+And so he dede in alle haste;<br/>
+The thridde, which was after schamed,<br/>
+Was Nabugodonosor named,<br/>
+And he Jerusalem putte under,<br/>
+Of Sacrilegge and many a wonder    7020<br/>
+There in the holi temple he wroghte,<br/>
+Which Baltazar his heir aboghte,<br/>
+Whan Mane, Techel, Phares write<br/>
+Was on the wal, as thou miht wite,<br/>
+So as the bible it hath declared.<br/>
+Bot for al that it is noght spared<br/>
+Yit nou aday, that men ne pile,<br/>
+And maken argument and skile<br/>
+To Sacrilegge as it belongeth,<br/>
+For what man that ther after longeth,    7030<br/>
+He takth non hiede what he doth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht so, forto telle soth,<br/>
+In loves cause if I schal trete,<br/>
+Ther ben of suche smale and grete:<br/>
+If thei no leisir fynden elles,<br/>
+Thei wol noght wonden for the belles,<br/>
+Ne thogh thei sen the Prest at masse;<br/>
+That wol thei leten overpasse.<br/>
+If that thei finde here love there,<br/>
+Thei stonde and tellen in hire Ere,    7040<br/>
+And axe of god non other grace,<br/>
+Whyl thei ben in that holi place;<br/>
+Bot er thei gon som avantage<br/>
+Ther wol thei have, and som pilage<br/>
+Of goodli word or of beheste,<br/>
+Or elles thei take ate leste<br/>
+Out of hir hand or ring or glove,<br/>
+So nyh the weder thei wol love,<br/>
+As who seith sche schal noght foryete,<br/>
+Nou I this tokne of hire have gete:    7050<br/>
+Thus halwe thei the hihe feste.<br/>
+Such thefte mai no cherche areste,<br/>
+For al is leveful that hem liketh,<br/>
+To whom that elles it misliketh.<br/>
+And ek riht in the selve kinde<br/>
+In grete Cites men mai finde<br/>
+This lusti folk, that make it gay,<br/>
+And waite upon the haliday:<br/>
+In cherches and in Menstres eke<br/>
+Thei gon the wommen forto seke,    7060<br/>
+And wher that such on goth aboute,<br/>
+Tofore the faireste of the route,<br/>
+Wher as thei sitten alle arewe,<br/>
+Ther wol he most    his bodi schewe,<br/>
+His croket kembd and theron set<br/>
+A Nouche with a chapelet,<br/>
+Or elles on of grene leves,<br/>
+Which late com out of the greves,<br/>
+Al for he scholde seme freissh.<br/>
+And thus he loketh on the fleissh,    7070<br/>
+Riht as an hauk which hath a sihte<br/>
+Upon the foul, ther he schal lihte;<br/>
+And as he were of faierie,<br/>
+He scheweth him tofore here yhe<br/>
+In holi place wher thei sitte,<br/>
+Al forto make here hertes flitte.<br/>
+His yhe nawher wole abyde,<br/>
+Bot loke and prie on every syde<br/>
+On hire and hire, as him best lyketh:<br/>
+And otherwhile among he syketh;    7080<br/>
+Thenkth on of hem, “That was for me,”<br/>
+And so ther thenken tuo or thre,<br/>
+And yit he loveth non of alle,<br/>
+Bot wher as evere his chance falle.<br/>
+And natheles to seie a soth,<br/>
+The cause why that he so doth<br/>
+Is forto stele an herte or tuo,<br/>
+Out of the cherche er that he go:<br/>
+And as I seide it hier above,<br/>
+Al is that Sacrilege of love;    7090<br/>
+For wel mai be he stelth away<br/>
+That he nevere after yelde may.<br/>
+Tell me forthi, my Sone, anon,<br/>
+Hast thou do Sacrilege, or non,<br/>
+As I have said in this manere?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, as of this matiere<br/>
+I wole you tellen redely<br/>
+What I have do; bot trewely<br/>
+I mai excuse min entente,<br/>
+That nevere I yit to cherche wente    7100<br/>
+In such manere as ye me schryve,<br/>
+For no womman that is on lyve.<br/>
+The cause why I have it laft<br/>
+Mai be for I unto that craft<br/>
+Am nothing able so to stele,<br/>
+Thogh ther be wommen noght so fele.<br/>
+Bot yit wol I noght seie this,<br/>
+Whan I am ther mi ladi is,<br/>
+In whom lith holly mi querele,<br/>
+And sche to cherche or to chapele    7110<br/>
+Wol go to matins or to messe,&mdash;<br/>
+That time I waite wel and gesse,<br/>
+To cherche I come and there I stonde,<br/>
+And thogh I take a bok on honde,<br/>
+Mi contienance is on the bok,<br/>
+Bot toward hire is al my lok;<br/>
+And if so falle that I preie<br/>
+Unto mi god, and somwhat seie<br/>
+Of Paternoster or of Crede,<br/>
+Al is for that I wolde spede,    7120<br/>
+So that mi bede in holi cherche<br/>
+Ther mihte som miracle werche<br/>
+Mi ladi herte forto chaunge,<br/>
+Which evere hath be to me so strange.<br/>
+So that al mi devocion<br/>
+And al mi contemplacion<br/>
+With al min herte and mi corage<br/>
+Is only set on hire ymage;<br/>
+And evere I waite upon the tyde.<br/>
+If sche loke eny thing asyde,    7130<br/>
+That I me mai of hire avise,<br/>
+Anon I am with covoitise<br/>
+So smite, that me were lief<br/>
+To ben in holi cherche a thief;<br/>
+Bot noght to stele a vestement,<br/>
+For that is nothing mi talent,<br/>
+Bot I wold stele, if that I mihte,<br/>
+A glad word or a goodly syhte;<br/>
+And evere mi service I profre,<br/>
+And namly whan sche wol gon offre,    7140<br/>
+For thanne I lede hire, if I may,<br/>
+For somwhat wolde I stele away.<br/>
+Whan I beclippe hire on the wast,<br/>
+Yit ate leste I stele a tast,<br/>
+And otherwhile “grant mercy”<br/>
+Sche seith, and so winne I therby<br/>
+A lusti touch, a good word eke,<br/>
+Bot al the remenant to seke<br/>
+Is fro mi pourpos wonder ferr.<br/>
+So mai I seie, as I seide er,    7150<br/>
+In holy cherche if that I wowe,<br/>
+My conscience it wolde allowe,<br/>
+Be so that up amendement<br/>
+I mihte gete assignement<br/>
+Wher forto spede in other place:<br/>
+Such Sacrilege I holde a grace.<br/>
+And thus, mi fader, soth to seie,<br/>
+In cherche riht as in the weie,<br/>
+If I mihte oght of love take,<br/>
+Such hansell have I noght forsake.    7160<br/>
+Bot finali I me confesse,<br/>
+Ther is in me non holinesse,<br/>
+Whil I hire se in eny stede;<br/>
+And yit, for oght that evere I dede,<br/>
+No Sacrilege of hire I tok,<br/>
+Bot if it were of word or lok,<br/>
+Or elles if that I hir fredde,<br/>
+Whan I toward offringe hir ledde,<br/>
+Take therof what I take may,<br/>
+For elles bere I noght away:    7170<br/>
+For thogh I wolde oght elles have,<br/>
+Alle othre thinges ben so save<br/>
+And kept with such a privilege,<br/>
+That I mai do no Sacrilege.<br/>
+God wot mi wille natheles,<br/>
+Thogh I mot nedes kepe pes<br/>
+And malgre myn so let it passe,<br/>
+Mi will therto is noght the lasse,<br/>
+If I mihte other wise aweie.<br/>
+Forthi, mi fader, I you preie,    7180<br/>
+Tell what you thenketh therupon,<br/>
+If I therof have gult or non.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thi will, mi Sone, is forto blame,<br/>
+The remenant is bot a game,<br/>
+That I have herd the telle as yit.<br/>
+Bot tak this lore into thi wit,<br/>
+That alle thing hath time and stede,<br/>
+The cherche serveth for the bede,<br/>
+The chambre is of an other speche.<br/>
+Bot if thou wistest of the wreche,    7190<br/>
+Hou Sacrilege it hath aboght,<br/>
+Thou woldest betre ben bethoght;<br/>
+And for thou schalt the more amende,<br/>
+A tale I wole on the despende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To alle men, as who seith, knowe<br/>
+It is, and in the world thurgh blowe,<br/>
+Hou that of Troie Lamedon<br/>
+To Hercules and to Jasoun,<br/>
+Whan toward Colchos out of Grece<br/>
+Be See sailende upon a piece    7200<br/>
+Of lond of Troie reste preide,&mdash;<br/>
+Bot he hem wrathfulli congeide:<br/>
+And for thei founde him so vilein,<br/>
+Whan thei come into Grece ayein,<br/>
+With pouer that thei gete myhte<br/>
+Towardes Troie thei hem dyhte,<br/>
+And ther thei token such vengance,<br/>
+Wherof stant yit the remembrance;<br/>
+For thei destruide king and al,<br/>
+And leften bot the brente wal.    7210<br/>
+The Grecs of Troiens many slowe<br/>
+And prisoners thei toke ynowe,<br/>
+Among the whiche ther was on,<br/>
+The kinges doughter Lamedon,<br/>
+Esiona, that faire thing,<br/>
+Which unto Thelamon the king<br/>
+Be Hercules and be thassent<br/>
+Of al the hole parlement<br/>
+Was at his wille yove and granted.<br/>
+And thus hath Grece Troie danted,    7220<br/>
+And hom thei torne in such manere:<br/>
+Bot after this nou schalt thou hiere<br/>
+The cause why this tale I telle,<br/>
+Upon the chances that befelle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Lamedon, which deide thus,<br/>
+He hadde a Sone, on Priamus,<br/>
+Which was noght thilke time at hom:<br/>
+Bot whan he herde of this, he com,<br/>
+And fond hou the Cite was falle,<br/>
+Which he began anon to walle    7230<br/>
+And made ther a cite newe,<br/>
+That thei whiche othre londes knewe<br/>
+Tho seiden, that of lym and Ston<br/>
+In al the world so fair was non.<br/>
+And on that o side of the toun<br/>
+The king let maken Ylioun,<br/>
+That hihe Tour, that stronge place,<br/>
+Which was adrad of no manace<br/>
+Of quarel nor of non engin;<br/>
+And thogh men wolde make a Myn,    7240<br/>
+No mannes craft it mihte aproche,<br/>
+For it was sett upon a roche.<br/>
+The walles of the toun aboute,<br/>
+Hem stod of al the world no doute,<br/>
+And after the proporcion<br/>
+Sex gates weren of the toun<br/>
+Of such a forme, of such entaile,<br/>
+That hem to se was gret mervaile:<br/>
+The diches weren brode and depe,<br/>
+A fewe men it mihte kepe    7250<br/>
+From al the world, as semeth tho,<br/>
+Bot if the goddes weren fo.<br/>
+Gret presse unto that cite drouh,<br/>
+So that ther was of poeple ynouh,<br/>
+Of Burgeis that therinne duellen;<br/>
+Ther mai no mannes tunge tellen<br/>
+Hou that cite was riche of good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan al was mad and al wel stod,<br/>
+King Priamus tho him bethoghte<br/>
+What thei of Grece whilom wroghte,    7260<br/>
+And what was of her swerd devoured,<br/>
+And hou his Soster deshonoured<br/>
+With Thelamon awey was lad:<br/>
+And so thenkende he wax unglad,<br/>
+And sette anon a parlement,<br/>
+To which the lordes were assent.<br/>
+In many a wise ther was spoke,<br/>
+Hou that thei mihten ben awroke,<br/>
+Bot ate laste natheles<br/>
+Thei seiden alle, “Acord and pes.”    7270<br/>
+To setten either part in reste<br/>
+It thoghte hem thanne for the beste<br/>
+With resonable amendement;<br/>
+And thus was Anthenor forth sent<br/>
+To axe Esionam ayein<br/>
+And witen what thei wolden sein.<br/>
+So passeth he the See be barge<br/>
+To Grece forto seie his charge,<br/>
+The which he seide redely<br/>
+Unto the lordes by and by:    7280<br/>
+Bot where he spak in Grece aboute,<br/>
+He herde noght bot wordes stoute,<br/>
+And nameliche of Thelamon;<br/>
+The maiden wolde he noght forgon,<br/>
+He seide, for no maner thing,<br/>
+And bad him gon hom to his king,<br/>
+For there gat he non amende<br/>
+For oght he couthe do or sende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Anthenor ayein goth hom<br/>
+Unto his king, and whan he com,    7290<br/>
+He tolde in Grece of that he herde,<br/>
+And hou that Thelamon ansuerde,<br/>
+And hou thei were at here above,<br/>
+That thei wol nouther pes ne love,<br/>
+Bot every man schal don his beste.<br/>
+Bot for men sein that nyht hath reste,<br/>
+The king bethoghte him al that nyht,<br/>
+And erli, whan the dai was lyht,<br/>
+He tok conseil of this matiere;<br/>
+And thei acorde in this manere,    7300<br/>
+That he withouten eny lette<br/>
+A certein time scholde sette<br/>
+Of Parlement to ben avised:<br/>
+And in the wise it was devised,<br/>
+Of parlement he sette a day,<br/>
+And that was in the Monthe of Maii.<br/>
+This Priamus hadde in his yhte<br/>
+A wif, and Hecuba sche hyhte,<br/>
+Be whom that time ek hadde he<br/>
+Of Sones fyve, and douhtres thre    7310<br/>
+Besiden hem, and thritty mo,<br/>
+And weren knyhtes alle tho,<br/>
+Bot noght upon his wif begete,<br/>
+Bot elles where he myhte hem gete<br/>
+Of wommen whiche he hadde knowe;<br/>
+Such was the world at thilke throwe:<br/>
+So that he was of children riche,<br/>
+As therof was noman his liche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Parlement the dai was come,<br/>
+Ther ben the lordes alle and some;    7320<br/>
+Tho was pronounced and pourposed,<br/>
+And al the cause hem was desclosed,<br/>
+Hou Anthenor in Grece ferde.<br/>
+Thei seten alle stille and herde,<br/>
+And tho spak every man aboute:<br/>
+Ther was alegged many a doute,<br/>
+And many a proud word spoke also;<br/>
+Bot for the moste part as tho<br/>
+Thei wisten noght what was the beste,<br/>
+Or forto werre or forto reste.    7330<br/>
+Bot he that was withoute fere,<br/>
+Hector, among the lordes there<br/>
+His tale tolde in such a wise,<br/>
+And seide, “Lordes, ye ben wise,<br/>
+Ye knowen this als wel as I,<br/>
+Above all othre most worthi<br/>
+Stant nou in Grece the manhode<br/>
+Of worthinesse and of knihthode;<br/>
+For who so wole it wel agrope,<br/>
+To hem belongeth al Europe,    7340<br/>
+Which is the thridde parti evene<br/>
+Of al the world under the hevene;<br/>
+And we be bot of folk a fewe.<br/>
+So were it reson forto schewe<br/>
+The peril, er we falle thrinne:<br/>
+Betre is to leve, than beginne<br/>
+Thing which as mai noght ben achieved;<br/>
+He is noght wys that fint him grieved,<br/>
+And doth so that his grief be more;<br/>
+For who that loketh al tofore    7350<br/>
+And wol noght se what is behinde,<br/>
+He mai fulofte hise harmes finde:<br/>
+Wicke is to stryve and have the worse.<br/>
+We have encheson forto corse,<br/>
+This wot I wel, and forto hate<br/>
+The Greks; bot er that we debate<br/>
+With hem that ben of such a myht,<br/>
+It is ful good that every wiht<br/>
+Be of himself riht wel bethoght.<br/>
+Bot as for me this seie I noght;    7360<br/>
+For while that mi lif wol stonde,<br/>
+If that ye taken werre on honde,<br/>
+Falle it to beste or to the werste,<br/>
+I schal miselven be the ferste<br/>
+To grieven hem, what evere I may.<br/>
+I wol noght ones seie nay<br/>
+To thing which that youre conseil demeth,<br/>
+For unto me wel more it quemeth<br/>
+The werre certes than the pes;<br/>
+Bot this I seie natheles,    7370<br/>
+As me belongeth forto seie.<br/>
+Nou schape ye the beste weie.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Hector hath seid his avis,<br/>
+Next after him tho spak Paris,<br/>
+Which was his brother, and alleide<br/>
+What him best thoghte, and thus he seide:<br/>
+“Strong thing it is to soffre wrong,<br/>
+And suffre schame is more strong,<br/>
+Bot we have suffred bothe tuo;<br/>
+And for al that yit have we do    7380<br/>
+What so we mihte to reforme<br/>
+The pes, whan we in such a forme<br/>
+Sente Anthenor, as ye wel knowe.<br/>
+And thei here grete wordes blowe<br/>
+Upon her wrongful dedes eke;<br/>
+And who that wole himself noght meke<br/>
+To pes, and list no reson take,<br/>
+Men sein reson him wol forsake:<br/>
+For in the multitude of men<br/>
+Is noght the strengthe, for with ten    7390<br/>
+It hath be sen in trew querele<br/>
+Ayein an hundred false dele,<br/>
+And had the betre of goddes grace.<br/>
+This hath befalle in many place;<br/>
+And if it like unto you alle,<br/>
+I wolde assaie, hou so it falle,<br/>
+Oure enemis if I mai grieve;<br/>
+For I have cawht a gret believe<br/>
+Upon a point I wol declare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This ender day, as I gan fare    7400<br/>
+To hunte unto the grete hert,<br/>
+Which was tofore myn houndes stert,<br/>
+And every man went on his syde<br/>
+Him to poursuie, and I to ryde<br/>
+Began the chace, and soth to seie,<br/>
+Withinne a while out of mi weie<br/>
+I rod, and nyste where I was.<br/>
+And slep me cauhte, and on the gras<br/>
+Beside a welle I lay me doun<br/>
+To slepe, and in a visioun    7410<br/>
+To me the god Mercurie cam;<br/>
+Goddesses thre with him he nam,<br/>
+Minerve, Venus and Juno,<br/>
+And in his hond an Appel tho<br/>
+He hield of gold with lettres write:<br/>
+And this he dede me to wite,<br/>
+Hou that thei putt hem upon me,<br/>
+That to the faireste of hem thre<br/>
+Of gold that Appel scholde I yive.<br/>
+With ech of hem tho was I schrive,    7420<br/>
+And echon faire me behihte;<br/>
+Bot Venus seide, if that sche mihte<br/>
+That Appel of mi yifte gete,<br/>
+Sche wolde it neveremor foryete,<br/>
+And seide hou that in Grece lond<br/>
+Sche wolde bringe unto myn hond<br/>
+Of al this Erthe the faireste;<br/>
+So that me thoghte it for the beste,<br/>
+To hire and yaf that Appel tho.<br/>
+Thus hope I wel, if that I go,    7430<br/>
+That sche for me wol so ordeine,<br/>
+That thei matiere forto pleigne<br/>
+Schul have, er that I come ayein.<br/>
+Nou have ye herd that I wol sein:<br/>
+Sey ye what stant in youre avis.”<br/>
+And every man tho seide his,<br/>
+And sundri causes thei recorde,<br/>
+Bot ate laste thei acorde<br/>
+That Paris schal to Grece wende,<br/>
+And thus the parlement tok ende.    7440
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cassandra, whan sche herde of this,<br/>
+The which to Paris Soster is,<br/>
+Anon sche gan to wepe and weile,<br/>
+And seide, “Allas, what mai ous eile?<br/>
+Fortune with hire blinde whiel<br/>
+Ne wol noght lete ous stonde wel:<br/>
+For this I dar wel undertake,<br/>
+That if Paris his weie take,<br/>
+As it is seid that he schal do,<br/>
+We ben for evere thanne undo.”    7450<br/>
+This, which Cassandre thanne hihte,<br/>
+In al the world as it berth sihte,<br/>
+In bokes as men finde write,<br/>
+Is that Sibille of whom ye wite,<br/>
+That alle men yit clepen sage.<br/>
+Whan that sche wiste of this viage,<br/>
+Hou Paris schal to Grece fare,<br/>
+No womman mihte worse fare<br/>
+Ne sorwe more than sche dede;<br/>
+And riht so in the same stede    7460<br/>
+Ferde Helenus, which was hir brother,<br/>
+Of prophecie and such an other:<br/>
+And al was holde bot a jape,<br/>
+So that the pourpos which was schape,<br/>
+Or were hem lief or were hem loth,<br/>
+Was holde, and into Grece goth<br/>
+This Paris with his retenance.<br/>
+And as it fell upon his chance,<br/>
+Of Grece he londeth in an yle,<br/>
+And him was told the same whyle    7470<br/>
+Of folk which he began to freyne,<br/>
+Tho was in thyle queene Heleyne,<br/>
+And ek of contres there aboute<br/>
+Of ladis many a lusti route,<br/>
+With mochel worthi poeple also.<br/>
+And why thei comen theder tho,<br/>
+The cause stod in such a wise,&mdash;<br/>
+For worschipe and for sacrifise<br/>
+That thei to Venus wolden make,<br/>
+As thei tofore hadde undertake,    7480<br/>
+Some of good will, some of beheste,<br/>
+For thanne was hire hihe feste<br/>
+Withinne a temple which was there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Paris wiste what thei were,<br/>
+Anon he schop his ordinance<br/>
+To gon and don his obeissance<br/>
+To Venus on hire holi day,<br/>
+And dede upon his beste aray.<br/>
+With gret richesse he him behongeth,<br/>
+As it to such a lord belongeth,    7490<br/>
+He was noght armed natheles,<br/>
+Bot as it were in lond of pes,<br/>
+And thus he goth forth out of Schipe<br/>
+And takth with him his felaschipe:<br/>
+In such manere as I you seie<br/>
+Unto the temple he hield his weie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tydinge, which goth overal<br/>
+To grete and smale, forth withal<br/>
+Com to the queenes Ere and tolde<br/>
+Hou Paris com, and that he wolde    7500<br/>
+Do sacrifise to Venus:<br/>
+And whan sche herde telle thus,<br/>
+Sche thoghte, hou that it evere be,<br/>
+That sche wole him abyde and se.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forth comth Paris with glad visage<br/>
+Into the temple on pelrinage,<br/>
+Wher unto Venus the goddesse<br/>
+He yifth and offreth gret richesse,<br/>
+And preith hir that he preie wolde.<br/>
+And thanne aside he gan beholde,    7510<br/>
+And sih wher that this ladi stod;<br/>
+And he forth in his freisshe mod<br/>
+Goth ther sche was and made her chiere,<br/>
+As he wel couthe in his manere,<br/>
+That of his wordes such plesance<br/>
+Sche tok, that al hire aqueintance,<br/>
+Als ferforth as the herte lay,<br/>
+He stal er that he wente away.<br/>
+So goth he forth and tok his leve,<br/>
+And thoghte, anon as it was eve,    7520<br/>
+He wolde don his Sacrilegge,<br/>
+That many a man it scholde abegge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan he to Schipe ayein was come,<br/>
+To him he hath his conseil nome,<br/>
+And al devised the matiere<br/>
+In such a wise as thou schalt hiere.<br/>
+Withinne nyht al prively<br/>
+His men he warneth by and by,<br/>
+That thei be redy armed sone<br/>
+For certein thing which was to done:    7530<br/>
+And thei anon ben redi alle,<br/>
+And ech on other gan to calle,<br/>
+And went hem out upon the stronde<br/>
+And tok a pourpos ther alonde<br/>
+Of what thing that thei wolden do,<br/>
+Toward the temple and forth thei go.<br/>
+So fell it, of devocion<br/>
+Heleine in contemplacion<br/>
+With many an other worthi wiht<br/>
+Was in the temple and wok al nyht,    7540<br/>
+To bidde and preie unto thymage<br/>
+Of Venus, as was thanne usage;<br/>
+So that Paris riht as him liste<br/>
+Into the temple, er thei it wiste,<br/>
+Com with his men al sodeinly,<br/>
+And alle at ones sette ascry<br/>
+In hem whiche in the temple were,<br/>
+For tho was mochel poeple there;<br/>
+Bot of defense was no bote,<br/>
+So soffren thei that soffre mote.    7550
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paris unto the queene wente,<br/>
+And hire in bothe hise armes hente<br/>
+With him and with his felaschipe,<br/>
+And forth thei bere hire unto Schipe.<br/>
+Up goth the Seil and forth thei wente,<br/>
+And such a wynd fortune hem sente,<br/>
+Til thei the havene of Troie cauhte;<br/>
+Where out of Schipe anon thei strauhte<br/>
+And gon hem forth toward the toun,<br/>
+The which cam with processioun    7560<br/>
+Ayein Paris to sen his preie.<br/>
+And every man began to seie<br/>
+To Paris and his felaschipe<br/>
+Al that thei couthen of worschipe;<br/>
+Was non so litel man in Troie,<br/>
+That he ne made merthe and joie<br/>
+Of that Paris hath wonne Heleine.<br/>
+Bot al that merthe is sorwe and peine<br/>
+To Helenus and to Cassaundre;<br/>
+For thei it token schame and sklaundre    7570<br/>
+And lost of al the comun grace,<br/>
+That Paris out of holi place<br/>
+Be Stelthe hath take a mannes wif,<br/>
+Wherof that he schal lese his lif<br/>
+And many a worthi man therto,<br/>
+And al the Cite be fordo,<br/>
+Which nevere schal be mad ayein.<br/>
+And so it fell, riht as thei sein,<br/>
+The Sacrilege which he wroghte<br/>
+Was cause why the Gregois soughte    7580<br/>
+Unto the toun and it beleie,<br/>
+And wolden nevere parte aweie,<br/>
+Til what be sleihte and what be strengthe<br/>
+Thei hadde it wonne in brede and lengthe,<br/>
+And brent and slayn that was withinne.<br/>
+Now se, mi Sone, which a sinne<br/>
+Is Sacrilege in holy stede:<br/>
+Be war therfore and bidd thi bede,<br/>
+And do nothing in holy cherche,<br/>
+Bot that thou miht be reson werche.    7590
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek tak hiede of Achilles,<br/>
+Whan he unto his love ches<br/>
+Polixena, that was also<br/>
+In holi temple of Appollo,<br/>
+Which was the cause why he dyde<br/>
+And al his lust was leyd asyde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Troilus upon Criseide<br/>
+Also his ferste love leide<br/>
+In holi place, and hou it ferde,<br/>
+As who seith, al the world it herde;    7600<br/>
+Forsake he was for Diomede,<br/>
+Such was of love his laste mede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, I wolde rede,<br/>
+Be this ensample as thou myht rede,<br/>
+Sech elles, wher thou wolt, thi grace,<br/>
+And war the wel in holi place<br/>
+What thou to love do or speke,<br/>
+In aunter if it so be wreke<br/>
+As thou hast herd me told before.<br/>
+And tak good hiede also therfore    7610<br/>
+Upon what forme, of Avarice<br/>
+Mor than of eny other vice,<br/>
+I have divided in parties<br/>
+The branches, whiche of compainies<br/>
+Thurghout the world in general<br/>
+Ben nou the leders overal,<br/>
+Of Covoitise and of Perjure,<br/>
+Of fals brocage and of Usure,<br/>
+Of Skarsnesse and Unkindeschipe,<br/>
+Which nevere drouh to felaschipe,    7620<br/>
+Of Robberie and privi Stelthe,<br/>
+Which don is for the worldes welthe,<br/>
+Of Ravine and of Sacrilegge,<br/>
+Which makth the conscience agregge;<br/>
+Althogh it mai richesse atteigne,<br/>
+It floureth, bot it schal noght greine<br/>
+Unto the fruit of rihtwisnesse.<br/>
+Bot who that wolde do largesse<br/>
+Upon the reule as it is yive,<br/>
+So myhte a man in trouthe live    7630<br/>
+Toward his god, and ek also<br/>
+Toward the world, for bothe tuo<br/>
+Largesse awaiteth as belongeth,<br/>
+To neither part that he ne wrongeth;<br/>
+He kepth himself, he kepth his frendes,<br/>
+So stant he sauf to bothe hise endes,<br/>
+That he excedeth no mesure,<br/>
+So wel he can himself mesure:<br/>
+Wherof, mi Sone, thou schalt wite,<br/>
+So as the Philosophre hath write.    7640
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betwen the tuo extremites<br/>
+Of vice stant the propretes<br/>
+Of vertu, and to prove it so<br/>
+Tak Avarice and tak also<br/>
+The vice of Prodegalite;<br/>
+Betwen hem Liberalite,<br/>
+Which is the vertu of Largesse,<br/>
+Stant and governeth his noblesse.<br/>
+For tho tuo vices in discord<br/>
+Stonde evere, as I finde of record;    7650<br/>
+So that betwen here tuo debat<br/>
+Largesse reuleth his astat.<br/>
+For in such wise as Avarice,<br/>
+As I tofore have told the vice,<br/>
+Thurgh streit holdinge and thurgh skarsnesse<br/>
+Stant in contraire to Largesse,<br/>
+Riht so stant Prodegalite<br/>
+Revers, bot noght in such degre.<br/>
+For so as Avarice spareth,<br/>
+And forto kepe his tresor careth,    7660<br/>
+That other al his oghne and more<br/>
+Ayein the wise mannes lore<br/>
+Yifth and despendeth hiere and there,<br/>
+So that him reccheth nevere where.<br/>
+While he mai borwe, he wol despende,<br/>
+Til ate laste he seith, “I wende”;<br/>
+Bot that is spoken al to late,<br/>
+For thanne is poverte ate gate<br/>
+And takth him evene be the slieve,<br/>
+For erst wol he no wisdom lieve.    7670<br/>
+And riht as Avarice is Sinne,<br/>
+That wolde his tresor kepe and winne,<br/>
+Riht so is Prodegalite:<br/>
+Bot of Largesse in his degre,<br/>
+Which evene stant betwen the tuo,<br/>
+The hihe god and man also<br/>
+The vertu ech of hem commendeth.<br/>
+For he himselven ferst amendeth,<br/>
+That overal his name spredeth,<br/>
+And to alle othre, where it nedeth,    7680<br/>
+He yifth his good in such a wise,<br/>
+That he makth many a man arise,<br/>
+Which elles scholde falle lowe.<br/>
+Largesce mai noght ben unknowe;<br/>
+For what lond that he regneth inne,<br/>
+It mai noght faile forto winne<br/>
+Thurgh his decerte love and grace,<br/>
+Wher it schal faile in other place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus betwen tomoche and lyte<br/>
+Largesce, which is noght to wyte,    7690<br/>
+Halt evere forth the middel weie:<br/>
+Bot who that torne wole aweie<br/>
+Fro that to Prodegalite,<br/>
+Anon he lest the proprete<br/>
+Of vertu and goth to the vice;<br/>
+For in such wise as Avarice<br/>
+Lest for scarsnesse his goode name,<br/>
+Riht so that other is to blame,<br/>
+Which thurgh his wast mesure excedeth,<br/>
+For noman wot what harm that bredeth.    7700
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot mochel joie ther betydeth,<br/>
+Wher that largesse an herte guydeth:<br/>
+For his mesure is so governed,<br/>
+That he to bothe partz is lerned,<br/>
+To god and to the world also,<br/>
+He doth reson to bothe tuo.<br/>
+The povere folk of his almesse<br/>
+Relieved ben in the destresse<br/>
+Of thurst, of hunger and of cold;<br/>
+The yifte of him was nevere sold,    7710<br/>
+Bot frely yive, and natheles<br/>
+The myhti god of his encress<br/>
+Rewardeth him of double grace;<br/>
+The hevene he doth him to pourchace<br/>
+And yifth him ek the worldes good:<br/>
+And thus the Cote for the hod<br/>
+Largesse takth, and yit no Sinne<br/>
+He doth, hou so that evere he winne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What man hath hors men yive him hors,<br/>
+And who non hath of him no fors,    7720<br/>
+For he mai thanne on fote go;<br/>
+The world hath evere stonde so.<br/>
+Bot forto loken of the tweie,<br/>
+A man to go the siker weie,<br/>
+Betre is to yive than to take:<br/>
+With yifte a man mai frendes make,<br/>
+Bot who that takth or gret or smal,<br/>
+He takth a charge forth withal,<br/>
+And stant noght fre til it be quit.<br/>
+So forto deme in mannes wit,    7730<br/>
+It helpeth more a man to have<br/>
+His oghne good, than forto crave<br/>
+Of othre men and make him bounde,<br/>
+Wher elles he mai stonde unbounde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Senec conseileth in this wise,<br/>
+And seith, “Bot, if thi good suffise<br/>
+Unto the liking of thi wille,<br/>
+Withdrawh thi lust and hold the stille,<br/>
+And be to thi good sufficant.”<br/>
+For that thing is appourtenant    7740<br/>
+To trouthe and causeth to be fre<br/>
+After the reule of charite,<br/>
+Which ferst beginneth of himselve.<br/>
+For if thou richest othre tuelve,<br/>
+Wherof thou schalt thiself be povere,<br/>
+I not what thonk thou miht recovere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whil that a man hath good to yive,<br/>
+With grete routes he mai live<br/>
+And hath his frendes overal,<br/>
+And everich of him telle schal.    7750<br/>
+Therwhile he hath his fulle packe,<br/>
+Thei seie, “A good felawe is Jacke”;<br/>
+Bot whanne it faileth ate laste,<br/>
+Anon his pris thei overcaste,<br/>
+For thanne is ther non other lawe<br/>
+Bot, “Jacke was a good felawe.”<br/>
+Whan thei him povere and nedy se,<br/>
+Thei lete him passe and farwel he;<br/>
+Al that he wende of compainie<br/>
+Is thanne torned to folie.    7760
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot nou to speke in other kinde<br/>
+Of love, a man mai suche finde,<br/>
+That wher thei come in every route<br/>
+Thei caste and waste her love aboute,<br/>
+Til al here time is overgon,<br/>
+And thanne have thei love non:<br/>
+For who that loveth overal,<br/>
+It is no reson that he schal<br/>
+Of love have eny proprete.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, avise thee    7770<br/>
+If thou of love hast be to large,<br/>
+For such a man is noght to charge:<br/>
+And if it so be that thou hast<br/>
+Despended al thi time in wast<br/>
+And set thi love in sondri place,<br/>
+Though thou the substance of thi grace<br/>
+Lese ate laste, it is no wonder;<br/>
+For he that put himselven under,<br/>
+As who seith, comun overal,<br/>
+He lest the love special    7780<br/>
+Of eny on, if sche be wys;<br/>
+For love schal noght bere his pris<br/>
+Be reson, whanne it passeth on.<br/>
+So have I sen ful many on,<br/>
+That were of love wel at ese,<br/>
+Whiche after felle in gret desese<br/>
+Thurgh wast of love, that thei spente<br/>
+In sondri places wher thei wente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Riht so, mi Sone, I axe of thee<br/>
+If thou with Prodegalite    7790<br/>
+Hast hier and ther thi love wasted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay; bot I have tasted<br/>
+In many a place as I have go,<br/>
+And yit love I nevere on of tho,<br/>
+Bot forto drive forth the dai.<br/>
+For lieveth wel, myn herte is ay<br/>
+Withoute mo for everemore<br/>
+Al upon on, for I nomore<br/>
+Desire bot hire love al one:<br/>
+So make I many a prive mone,    7800<br/>
+For wel I fiele I have despended<br/>
+Mi longe love and noght amended<br/>
+Mi sped, for oght I finde yit.<br/>
+If this be wast to youre wit<br/>
+Of love, and Prodegalite,<br/>
+Nou, goode fader, demeth ye:<br/>
+Bot of o thing I wol me schryve,<br/>
+That I schal for no love thryve,<br/>
+Bot if hirself me wol relieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that I mai wel lieve:    7810<br/>
+And natheles me semeth so,<br/>
+For oght that thou hast yit misdo<br/>
+Of time which thou hast despended,<br/>
+It mai with grace ben amended.<br/>
+For thing which mai be worth the cost<br/>
+Per chaunce is nouther wast ne lost;<br/>
+For what thing stant on aventure,<br/>
+That can no worldes creature<br/>
+Telle in certein hou it schal wende,<br/>
+Til he therof mai sen an ende.    7820<br/>
+So that I not as yit therfore<br/>
+If thou, mi Sone, hast wonne or lore:<br/>
+For ofte time, as it is sene,<br/>
+Whan Somer hath lost al his grene<br/>
+And is with Wynter wast and bare,<br/>
+That him is left nothing to spare,<br/>
+Al is recovered in a throwe;<br/>
+The colde wyndes overblowe,<br/>
+And still be the scharpe schoures,<br/>
+And soudeinliche ayein his floures    7830<br/>
+The Somer hapneth and is riche:<br/>
+And so per cas thi graces liche,<br/>
+Mi Sone, thogh thou be nou povere<br/>
+Of love, yit thou miht recovere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, certes grant merci:<br/>
+Ye have me tawht so redeli,<br/>
+That evere whil I live schal<br/>
+The betre I mai be war withal<br/>
+Of thing which ye have seid er this.<br/>
+Bot overmore hou that it is,    7840<br/>
+Toward mi schrifte as it belongeth,<br/>
+To wite of othre pointz me longeth;<br/>
+Wherof that ye me wolden teche<br/>
+With al myn herte I you beseche.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Quintus.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0007"></a>
+Incipit Liber Sextus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Est gula, que nostrum maculavit prima parentem<br/>
+    Ex vetito pomo, quo dolet omnis homo<br/>
+Hec agit, ut corpus anime contraria spirat,<br/>
+    Quo caro fit crassa, spiritus atque macer.<br/>
+Intus et exterius si que virtutis habentur,<br/>
+    Potibus ebrietas conviciata ruit.<br/>
+Mersa sopore labis, que Bachus inebriat hospes,<br/>
+    Indignata Venus oscula raro premit.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+The grete Senne original,<br/>
+Which every man in general<br/>
+Upon his berthe hath envenymed,<br/>
+In Paradis it was mystymed:<br/>
+Whan Adam of thilke Appel bot,<br/>
+His swete morscel was to hot,<br/>
+Which dedly made the mankinde.<br/>
+And in the bokes as I finde,<br/>
+This vice, which so out of rule<br/>
+Hath sette ous alle, is cleped Gule;    10<br/>
+Of which the branches ben so grete,<br/>
+That of hem alle I wol noght trete,<br/>
+Bot only as touchende of tuo<br/>
+I thenke speke and of no mo;<br/>
+Wherof the ferste is Dronkeschipe,<br/>
+Which berth the cuppe felaschipe.<br/>
+Ful many a wonder doth this vice,<br/>
+He can make of a wisman nyce,<br/>
+And of a fool, that him schal seme<br/>
+That he can al the lawe deme,    20<br/>
+And yiven every juggement<br/>
+Which longeth to the firmament<br/>
+Bothe of the sterre and of the mone;<br/>
+And thus he makth a gret clerk sone<br/>
+Of him that is a lewed man.<br/>
+Ther is nothing which he ne can,<br/>
+Whil he hath Dronkeschipe on honde,<br/>
+He knowth the See, he knowth the stronde,<br/>
+He is a noble man of armes,<br/>
+And yit no strengthe is in his armes:    30<br/>
+Ther he was strong ynouh tofore,<br/>
+With Dronkeschipe it is forlore,<br/>
+And al is changed his astat,<br/>
+And wext anon so fieble and mat,<br/>
+That he mai nouther go ne come,<br/>
+Bot al togedre him is benome<br/>
+The pouer bothe of hond and fot,<br/>
+So that algate abide he mot.<br/>
+And alle hise wittes he foryet,<br/>
+The which is to him such a let,    40<br/>
+That he wot nevere what he doth,<br/>
+Ne which is fals, ne which is soth,<br/>
+Ne which is dai, ne which is nyht,<br/>
+And for the time he knowth no wyht,<br/>
+That he ne wot so moche as this,<br/>
+What maner thing himselven is,<br/>
+Or he be man, or he be beste.<br/>
+That holde I riht a sori feste,<br/>
+Whan he that reson understod<br/>
+So soudeinliche is woxe wod,    50<br/>
+Or elles lich the dede man,<br/>
+Which nouther go ne speke can.<br/>
+Thus ofte he is to bedde broght,<br/>
+Bot where he lith yit wot he noght,<br/>
+Til he arise upon the morwe;<br/>
+And thanne he seith, “O, which a sorwe<br/>
+It is a man be drinkeles!”<br/>
+So that halfdrunke in such a res<br/>
+With dreie mouth he sterte him uppe,<br/>
+And seith, “Nou <i>baillez ça</i> the cuppe.”    60<br/>
+That made him lese his wit at eve<br/>
+Is thanne a morwe al his beleve;<br/>
+The cuppe is al that evere him pleseth,<br/>
+And also that him most deseseth;<br/>
+It is the cuppe whom he serveth,<br/>
+Which alle cares fro him kerveth<br/>
+And alle bales to him bringeth:<br/>
+In joie he wepth, in sorwe he singeth,<br/>
+For Dronkeschipe is so divers,<br/>
+It may no whyle stonde in vers.    70<br/>
+He drinkth the wyn, bot ate laste<br/>
+The wyn drynkth him and bint him faste,<br/>
+And leith him drunke be the wal,<br/>
+As him which is his bonde thral<br/>
+And al in his subjeccion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And lich to such condicion,<br/>
+As forto speke it other wise,<br/>
+It falleth that the moste wise<br/>
+Ben otherwhile of love adoted,<br/>
+And so bewhaped and assoted,    80<br/>
+Of drunke men that nevere yit<br/>
+Was non, which half so loste his wit<br/>
+Of drinke, as thei of such thing do<br/>
+Which cleped is the jolif wo;<br/>
+And waxen of here oghne thoght<br/>
+So drunke, that thei knowe noght<br/>
+What reson is, or more or lesse.<br/>
+Such is the kinde of that sieknesse,<br/>
+And that is noght for lacke of brain,<br/>
+Bot love is of so gret a main,    90<br/>
+That where he takth an herte on honde,<br/>
+Ther mai nothing his miht withstonde:<br/>
+The wise Salomon was nome,<br/>
+And stronge Sampson overcome,<br/>
+The knihtli David him ne mihte<br/>
+Rescoue, that he with the sihte<br/>
+Of Bersabee ne was bestad,<br/>
+Virgile also was overlad,<br/>
+And Aristotle was put under.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, it is no wonder    100<br/>
+If thou be drunke of love among,<br/>
+Which is above alle othre strong:<br/>
+And if so is that thou so be,<br/>
+Tell me thi Schrifte in privite;<br/>
+It is no schame of such a thew<br/>
+A yong man to be dronkelew.<br/>
+Of such Phisique I can a part,<br/>
+And as me semeth be that art,<br/>
+Thou scholdest be Phisonomie<br/>
+Be schapen to that maladie    110<br/>
+Of lovedrunke, and that is routhe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ha, holi fader, al is trouthe<br/>
+That ye me telle: I am beknowe<br/>
+That I with love am so bethrowe,<br/>
+And al myn herte is so thurgh sunke,<br/>
+That I am verrailiche drunke,<br/>
+And yit I mai bothe speke and go.<br/>
+Bot I am overcome so,<br/>
+And torned fro miself so clene,<br/>
+That ofte I wot noght what I mene;    120<br/>
+So that excusen I ne mai<br/>
+Min herte, fro the ferste day<br/>
+That I cam to mi ladi kiththe,<br/>
+I was yit sobre nevere siththe.<br/>
+Wher I hire se or se hire noght,<br/>
+With musinge of min oghne thoght,<br/>
+Of love, which min herte assaileth,<br/>
+So drunke I am, that mi wit faileth<br/>
+And al mi brain is overtorned,<br/>
+And mi manere so mistorned,    130<br/>
+That I foryete al that I can<br/>
+And stonde lich a mased man;<br/>
+That ofte, whanne I scholde pleie,<br/>
+It makth me drawe out of the weie<br/>
+In soulein place be miselve,<br/>
+As doth a labourer to delve,<br/>
+Which can no gentil mannes chere;<br/>
+Or elles as a lewed Frere,<br/>
+Whan he is put to his penance,<br/>
+Riht so lese I mi contienance.    140<br/>
+And if it nedes to betyde,<br/>
+That I in compainie abyde,<br/>
+Wher as I moste daunce and singe<br/>
+The hovedance and carolinge,<br/>
+Or forto go the newefot,<br/>
+I mai noght wel heve up mi fot,<br/>
+If that sche be noght in the weie;<br/>
+For thanne is al mi merthe aweie,<br/>
+And waxe anon of thoght so full,<br/>
+Wherof mi limes ben so dull,    150<br/>
+I mai unethes gon the pas.<br/>
+For thus it is and evere was,<br/>
+Whanne I on suche thoghtes muse,<br/>
+The lust and merthe that men use,<br/>
+Whan I se noght mi ladi byme,<br/>
+Al is foryete for the time<br/>
+So ferforth that mi wittes changen<br/>
+And alle lustes fro me strangen,<br/>
+That thei seie alle trewely,<br/>
+And swere, that it am noght I.    160<br/>
+For as the man which ofte drinketh,<br/>
+With win that in his stomac sinketh<br/>
+Wext drunke and witles for a throwe,<br/>
+Riht so mi lust is overthrowe,<br/>
+And of myn oghne thoght so mat<br/>
+I wexe, that to myn astat<br/>
+Ther is no lime wol me serve,<br/>
+Bot as a drunke man I swerve,<br/>
+And suffre such a Passion,<br/>
+That men have gret compassion,    170<br/>
+And everich be himself merveilleth<br/>
+What thing it is that me so eilleth.<br/>
+Such is the manere of mi wo<br/>
+Which time that I am hire fro,<br/>
+Til eft ayein that I hire se.<br/>
+Bot thanne it were a nycete<br/>
+To telle you hou that I fare:<br/>
+For whanne I mai upon hire stare,<br/>
+Hire wommanhede, hire gentilesse,<br/>
+Myn herte is full of such gladnesse,    180<br/>
+That overpasseth so mi wit,<br/>
+That I wot nevere where it sit,<br/>
+Bot am so drunken of that sihte,<br/>
+Me thenkth that for the time I mihte<br/>
+Riht sterte thurgh the hole wall;<br/>
+And thanne I mai wel, if I schal,<br/>
+Bothe singe and daunce and lepe aboute,<br/>
+And holde forth the lusti route.<br/>
+Bot natheles it falleth so<br/>
+Fulofte, that I fro hire go    190<br/>
+Ne mai, bot as it were a stake,<br/>
+I stonde avisement to take<br/>
+And loke upon hire faire face;<br/>
+That for the while out of the place<br/>
+For al the world ne myhte I wende.<br/>
+Such lust comth thanne unto mi mende,<br/>
+So that withoute mete or drinke,<br/>
+Of lusti thoughtes whiche I thinke<br/>
+Me thenkth I mihte stonden evere;<br/>
+And so it were to me levere    200<br/>
+Than such a sihte forto leve,<br/>
+If that sche wolde yif me leve<br/>
+To have so mochel of mi wille.<br/>
+And thus thenkende I stonde stille<br/>
+Withoute blenchinge of myn yhe,<br/>
+Riht as me thoghte that I syhe<br/>
+Of Paradis the moste joie:<br/>
+And so therwhile I me rejoie,<br/>
+Into myn herte a gret desir,<br/>
+The which is hotere than the fyr,    210<br/>
+Al soudeinliche upon me renneth,<br/>
+That al mi thoght withinne brenneth,<br/>
+And am so ferforth overcome,<br/>
+That I not where I am become;<br/>
+So that among the hetes stronge<br/>
+In stede of drinke I underfonge<br/>
+A thoght so swete in mi corage,<br/>
+That nevere Pyment ne vernage<br/>
+Was half so swete forto drinke.<br/>
+For as I wolde, thanne I thinke    220<br/>
+As thogh I were at myn above,<br/>
+For so thurgh drunke I am of love,<br/>
+That al that mi sotye demeth<br/>
+Is soth, as thanne it to me semeth.<br/>
+And whyle I mai tho thoghtes kepe,<br/>
+Me thenkth as thogh I were aslepe<br/>
+And that I were in goddes barm;<br/>
+Bot whanne I se myn oghne harm,<br/>
+And that I soudeinliche awake<br/>
+Out of my thought, and hiede take    230<br/>
+Hou that the sothe stant in dede,<br/>
+Thanne is mi sekernesse in drede<br/>
+And joie torned into wo,<br/>
+So that the hete is al ago<br/>
+Of such sotie as I was inne.<br/>
+And thanne ayeinward I beginne<br/>
+To take of love a newe thorst,<br/>
+The which me grieveth altherworst,<br/>
+For thanne comth the blanche fievere,<br/>
+With chele and makth me so to chievere,    240<br/>
+And so it coldeth at myn herte,<br/>
+That wonder is hou I asterte,<br/>
+In such a point that I ne deie:<br/>
+For certes ther was nevere keie<br/>
+Ne frosen ys upon the wal<br/>
+More inly cold that I am al.<br/>
+And thus soffre I the hote chele,<br/>
+Which passeth othre peines fele;<br/>
+In cold I brenne and frese in hete:<br/>
+And thanne I drinke a biter swete    250<br/>
+With dreie lippe and yhen wete.<br/>
+Lo, thus I tempre mi diete,<br/>
+And take a drauhte of such reles,<br/>
+That al mi wit is herteles,<br/>
+And al myn herte, ther it sit,<br/>
+Is, as who seith, withoute wit;<br/>
+So that to prove it be reson<br/>
+In makinge of comparison<br/>
+Ther mai no difference be<br/>
+Betwen a drunke man and me.    260<br/>
+Bot al the worste of everychon<br/>
+Is evere that I thurste in on;<br/>
+The more that myn herte drinketh,<br/>
+The more I may; so that me thinketh,<br/>
+My thurst schal nevere ben aqueint.<br/>
+God schilde that I be noght dreint<br/>
+Of such a superfluite:<br/>
+For wel I fiele in mi degre<br/>
+That al mi wit is overcast,<br/>
+Wherof I am the more agast,    270<br/>
+That in defaulte of ladischipe<br/>
+Per chance in such a drunkeschipe<br/>
+I mai be ded er I be war.<br/>
+For certes, fader, this I dar<br/>
+Beknowe and in mi schrifte telle:<br/>
+Bot I a drauhte have of that welle,<br/>
+In which mi deth is and mi lif,<br/>
+Mi joie is torned into strif,<br/>
+That sobre schal I nevere worthe,<br/>
+Bot as a drunke man forworthe;    280<br/>
+So that in londe where I fare<br/>
+The lust is lore of mi welfare,<br/>
+As he that mai no bote finde.<br/>
+Bot this me thenkth a wonder kinde,<br/>
+As I am drunke of that I drinke,<br/>
+So am I ek for falte of drinke;<br/>
+Of which I finde no reles:<br/>
+Bot if I myhte natheles<br/>
+Of such a drinke as I coveite,<br/>
+So as me liste, have o receite,    290<br/>
+I scholde assobre and fare wel.<br/>
+Bot so fortune upon hire whiel<br/>
+On hih me deigneth noght to sette,<br/>
+For everemore I finde a lette:<br/>
+The boteler is noght mi frend,<br/>
+Which hath the keie be the bend;<br/>
+I mai wel wisshe and that is wast,<br/>
+For wel I wot, so freissh a tast,<br/>
+Bot if mi grace be the more,<br/>
+I schal assaie neveremore.    300<br/>
+Thus am I drunke of that I se,<br/>
+For tastinge is defended me,<br/>
+And I can noght miselven stanche:<br/>
+So that, mi fader, of this branche<br/>
+I am gultif, to telle trouthe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that me thenketh routhe;<br/>
+For lovedrunke is the meschief<br/>
+Above alle othre the most chief,<br/>
+If he no lusti thoght assaie,<br/>
+Which mai his sori thurst allaie:    310<br/>
+As for the time yit it lisseth<br/>
+To him which other joie misseth.<br/>
+Forthi, mi Sone, aboven alle<br/>
+Thenk wel, hou so it the befalle,<br/>
+And kep thi wittes that thou hast,<br/>
+And let hem noght be drunke in wast:<br/>
+Bot natheles ther is no wyht<br/>
+That mai withstonde loves miht.<br/>
+Bot why the cause is, as I finde,<br/>
+Of that ther is diverse kinde    320<br/>
+Of lovedrunke, why men pleigneth<br/>
+After the court which al ordeigneth,<br/>
+I wol the tellen the manere;<br/>
+Nou lest, mi Sone, and thou schalt hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the fortune of every chance<br/>
+After the goddes pourveance<br/>
+To man it groweth from above,<br/>
+So that the sped of every love<br/>
+Is schape there, er it befalle.<br/>
+For Jupiter aboven alle,    330<br/>
+Which is of goddes soverein,<br/>
+Hath in his celier, as men sein,<br/>
+Tuo tonnes fulle of love drinke,<br/>
+That maken many an herte sinke<br/>
+And many an herte also to flete,<br/>
+Or of the soure or of the swete.<br/>
+That on is full of such piment,<br/>
+Which passeth all entendement<br/>
+Of mannes witt, if he it taste,<br/>
+And makth a jolif herte in haste:    340<br/>
+That other biter as the galle,<br/>
+Which makth a mannes herte palle,<br/>
+Whos drunkeschipe is a sieknesse<br/>
+Thurgh fielinge of the biternesse.<br/>
+Cupide is boteler of bothe,<br/>
+Which to the lieve and to the lothe<br/>
+Yifth of the swete and of the soure,<br/>
+That some lawhe, and some loure.<br/>
+Bot for so moche as he blind is,<br/>
+Fulofte time he goth amis    350<br/>
+And takth the badde for the goode,<br/>
+Which hindreth many a mannes fode<br/>
+Withoute cause, and forthreth eke.<br/>
+So be ther some of love seke,<br/>
+Whiche oghte of reson to ben hole,<br/>
+And some comen to the dole<br/>
+In happ and as hemselve leste<br/>
+Drinke undeserved of the beste.<br/>
+And thus this blinde Boteler<br/>
+Yifth of the trouble in stede of cler    360<br/>
+And ek the cler in stede of trouble:<br/>
+Lo, hou he can the hertes trouble,<br/>
+And makth men drunke al upon chaunce<br/>
+Withoute lawe of governance.<br/>
+If he drawe of the swete tonne,<br/>
+Thanne is the sorwe al overronne<br/>
+Of lovedrunke, and schalt noght greven<br/>
+So to be drunken every even,<br/>
+For al is thanne bot a game.<br/>
+Bot whanne it is noght of the same,    370<br/>
+And he the biter tonne draweth,<br/>
+Such drunkeschipe an herte gnaweth<br/>
+And fiebleth al a mannes thoght,<br/>
+That betre him were have drunke noght<br/>
+And al his bred have eten dreie;<br/>
+For thanne he lest his lusti weie<br/>
+With drunkeschipe, and wot noght whider<br/>
+To go, the weies ben so slider,<br/>
+In which he mai per cas so falle,<br/>
+That he schal breke his wittes alle.    380<br/>
+And in this wise men be drunke<br/>
+After the drink that thei have drunke:<br/>
+Bot alle drinken noght alike,<br/>
+For som schal singe and som schal syke,<br/>
+So that it me nothing merveilleth,<br/>
+Mi Sone, of love that thee eilleth;<br/>
+For wel I knowe be thi tale,<br/>
+That thou hast drunken of the duale,<br/>
+Which biter is, til god the sende<br/>
+Such grace that thou miht amende.    390
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot, Sone, thou schalt bidde and preie<br/>
+In such a wise as I schal seie,<br/>
+That thou the lusti welle atteigne<br/>
+Thi wofull thurstes to restreigne<br/>
+Of love, and taste the swetnesse;<br/>
+As Bachus dede in his distresse,<br/>
+Whan bodiliche thurst him hente<br/>
+In strange londes where he wente.<br/>
+This Bachus Sone of Jupiter<br/>
+Was hote, and as he wente fer    400<br/>
+Be his fadres assignement<br/>
+To make a werre in Orient,<br/>
+And gret pouer with him he ladde,<br/>
+So that the heiere hond he hadde<br/>
+And victoire of his enemys,<br/>
+And torneth homward with his pris,<br/>
+In such a contre which was dreie<br/>
+A meschief fell upon the weie.<br/>
+As he rod with his compainie<br/>
+Nyh to the strondes of Lubie,    410<br/>
+Ther myhte thei no drinke finde<br/>
+Of water nor of other kinde,<br/>
+So that himself and al his host<br/>
+Were of defalte of drinke almost<br/>
+Destruid, and thanne Bachus preide<br/>
+To Jupiter, and thus he seide:<br/>
+“O hihe fader, that sest al,<br/>
+To whom is reson that I schal<br/>
+Beseche and preie in every nede,<br/>
+Behold, mi fader, and tak hiede    420<br/>
+This wofull thurst that we ben inne<br/>
+To staunche, and grante ous forto winne,<br/>
+And sauf unto the contre fare,<br/>
+Wher that oure lusti loves are<br/>
+Waitende upon oure hom cominge.”<br/>
+And with the vois of his preiynge,<br/>
+Which herd was to the goddes hihe,<br/>
+He syh anon tofore his yhe<br/>
+A wether, which the ground hath sporned;<br/>
+And wher he hath it overtorned,    430<br/>
+Ther sprang a welle freissh and cler,<br/>
+Wherof his oghne boteler<br/>
+After the lustes of his wille<br/>
+Was every man to drinke his fille.<br/>
+And for this ilke grete grace<br/>
+Bachus upon the same place<br/>
+A riche temple let arere,<br/>
+Which evere scholde stonde there<br/>
+To thursti men in remembrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi, mi Sone, after this chance    440<br/>
+It sit thee wel to taken hiede<br/>
+So forto preie upon thi nede,<br/>
+As Bachus preide for the welle;<br/>
+And thenk, as thou hast herd me telle,<br/>
+Hou grace he gradde and grace he hadde.<br/>
+He was no fol that ferst so radde,<br/>
+For selden get a domb man lond:<br/>
+Tak that proverbe, and understond<br/>
+That wordes ben of vertu grete.<br/>
+Forthi to speke thou ne lete,    450<br/>
+And axe and prei erli and late<br/>
+Thi thurst to quenche, and thenk algate,<br/>
+The boteler which berth the keie<br/>
+Is blind, as thou hast herd me seie;<br/>
+And if it mihte so betyde,<br/>
+That he upon the blinde side<br/>
+Per cas the swete tonne arauhte,<br/>
+Than schalt thou have a lusti drauhte<br/>
+And waxe of lovedrunke sobre.<br/>
+And thus I rede thou assobre    460<br/>
+Thin herte in hope of such a grace;<br/>
+For drunkeschipe in every place,<br/>
+To whether side that it torne,<br/>
+Doth harm and makth a man to sporne<br/>
+And ofte falle in such a wise,<br/>
+Wher he per cas mai noght arise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto loke in evidence<br/>
+Upon the sothe experience,<br/>
+So as it hath befalle er this,<br/>
+In every mannes mouth it is    470<br/>
+Hou Tristram was of love drunke<br/>
+With Bele Ysolde, whan thei drunke<br/>
+The drink which Brangwein hem betok,<br/>
+Er that king Marc his Eem hire tok<br/>
+To wyve, as it was after knowe.<br/>
+And ek, mi Sone, if thou wolt knowe,<br/>
+As it hath fallen overmore<br/>
+In loves cause, and what is more<br/>
+Of drunkeschipe forto drede,<br/>
+As it whilom befell in dede,    480<br/>
+Wherof thou miht the betre eschuie<br/>
+Of drunke men that thou ne suie<br/>
+The compaignie in no manere,<br/>
+A gret ensample thou schalt hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This finde I write in Poesie<br/>
+Of thilke faire Ipotacie,<br/>
+Of whos beaute ther as sche was<br/>
+Spak every man,&mdash;and fell per cas,<br/>
+That Pirotous so him spedde,<br/>
+That he to wyve hire scholde wedde,    490<br/>
+Wherof that he gret joie made.<br/>
+And for he wolde his love glade,<br/>
+Ayein the day of mariage<br/>
+Be mouthe bothe and be message<br/>
+Hise frendes to the feste he preide,<br/>
+With gret worschipe and, as men seide,<br/>
+He hath this yonge ladi spoused.<br/>
+And whan that thei were alle housed,<br/>
+And set and served ate mete,<br/>
+Ther was no wyn which mai be gete,    500<br/>
+That ther ne was plente ynouh:<br/>
+Bot Bachus thilke tonne drouh,<br/>
+Wherof be weie of drunkeschipe<br/>
+The greteste of the felaschipe<br/>
+Were oute of reson overtake;<br/>
+And Venus, which hath also take<br/>
+The cause most in special,<br/>
+Hath yove hem drinke forth withal<br/>
+Of thilke cuppe which exciteth<br/>
+The lust wherinne a man deliteth:    510<br/>
+And thus be double weie drunke,<br/>
+Of lust that ilke fyri funke<br/>
+Hath mad hem, as who seith, halfwode,<br/>
+That thei no reson understode,<br/>
+Ne to non other thing thei syhen,<br/>
+Bot hire, which tofore here yhen<br/>
+Was wedded thilke same day,<br/>
+That freisshe wif, that lusti May,<br/>
+On hire it was al that thei thoghten.<br/>
+And so ferforth here lustes soghten,    520<br/>
+That thei the whiche named were<br/>
+Centauri, ate feste there<br/>
+Of on assent, of an acord<br/>
+This yonge wif malgre hire lord<br/>
+In such a rage awei forth ladden,<br/>
+As thei whiche non insihte hadden<br/>
+Bot only to her drunke fare,<br/>
+Which many a man hath mad misfare<br/>
+In love als wel as other weie.<br/>
+Wherof, if I schal more seie    530<br/>
+Upon the nature of the vice,<br/>
+Of custume and of exercice<br/>
+The mannes grace hou it fordoth,<br/>
+A tale, which was whilom soth,<br/>
+Of fooles that so drunken were,<br/>
+I schal reherce unto thine Ere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rede in a Cronique thus<br/>
+Of Galba and of Vitellus,<br/>
+The whiche of Spaigne bothe were<br/>
+The greteste of alle othre there,    540<br/>
+And bothe of o condicion<br/>
+After the disposicion<br/>
+Of glotonie and drunkeschipe.<br/>
+That was a sori felaschipe:<br/>
+For this thou miht wel understonde,<br/>
+That man mai wel noght longe stonde<br/>
+Which is wyndrunke of comun us;<br/>
+For he hath lore the vertus,<br/>
+Wherof reson him scholde clothe;<br/>
+And that was seene upon hem bothe.    550<br/>
+Men sein ther is non evidence,<br/>
+Wherof to knowe a difference<br/>
+Betwen the drunken and the wode,<br/>
+For thei be nevere nouther goode;<br/>
+For wher that wyn doth wit aweie,<br/>
+Wisdom hath lost the rihte weie,<br/>
+That he no maner vice dredeth;<br/>
+Nomore than a blind man thredeth<br/>
+His nedle be the Sonnes lyht,<br/>
+Nomore is reson thanne of myht,    560<br/>
+Whan he with drunkeschipe is blent.<br/>
+And in this point thei weren schent,<br/>
+This Galba bothe and ek Vitelle,<br/>
+Upon the cause as I schal telle,<br/>
+Wherof good is to taken hiede.<br/>
+For thei tuo thurgh her drunkenhiede<br/>
+Of witles excitacioun<br/>
+Oppressede al the nacion<br/>
+Of Spaigne; for of fool usance,<br/>
+Which don was of continuance    570<br/>
+Of hem, whiche alday drunken were,<br/>
+Ther was no wif ne maiden there,<br/>
+What so thei were, or faire or foule,<br/>
+Whom thei ne token to defoule,<br/>
+Wherof the lond was often wo:<br/>
+And ek in othre thinges mo<br/>
+Thei wroghten many a sondri wrong.<br/>
+Bot hou so that the dai be long,<br/>
+The derke nyht comth ate laste:<br/>
+God wolde noght thei scholden laste,    580<br/>
+And schop the lawe in such a wise,<br/>
+That thei thurgh dom to the juise<br/>
+Be dampned forto be forlore.<br/>
+Bot thei, that hadden ben tofore<br/>
+Enclin to alle drunkenesse,&mdash;<br/>
+Here ende thanne bar witnesse;<br/>
+For thei in hope to assuage<br/>
+The peine of deth, upon the rage<br/>
+That thei the lasse scholden fiele,<br/>
+Of wyn let fille full a Miele,    590<br/>
+And dronken til so was befalle<br/>
+That thei her strengthes losten alle<br/>
+Withouten wit of eny brain;<br/>
+And thus thei ben halfdede slain,<br/>
+That hem ne grieveth bot a lyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if thou be forto wyte<br/>
+In eny point which I have seid,<br/>
+Wherof thi wittes ben unteid,<br/>
+I rede clepe hem hom ayein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I schal do, fader, as ye sein,    600<br/>
+Als ferforth as I mai suffise:<br/>
+Bot wel I wot that in no wise<br/>
+The drunkeschipe of love aweie<br/>
+I mai remue be no weie,<br/>
+It stant noght upon my fortune.<br/>
+Bot if you liste to comune<br/>
+Of the seconde Glotonie,<br/>
+Which cleped is Delicacie,<br/>
+Wherof ye spieken hier tofore,<br/>
+Beseche I wolde you therfore.    610
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, as of that ilke vice,<br/>
+Which of alle othre is the Norrice,<br/>
+And stant upon the retenue<br/>
+Of Venus, so as it is due,<br/>
+The proprete hou that it fareth<br/>
+The bok hierafter nou declareth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of this chapitre in which we trete<br/>
+There is yit on of such diete,<br/>
+To which no povere mai atteigne;<br/>
+For al is Past of paindemeine    620<br/>
+And sondri wyn and sondri drinke,<br/>
+Wherof that he wole ete and drinke:<br/>
+Hise cokes ben for him affaited,<br/>
+So that his body is awaited,<br/>
+That him schal lacke no delit,<br/>
+Als ferforth as his appetit<br/>
+Sufficeth to the metes hote.<br/>
+Wherof this lusti vice is hote<br/>
+Of Gule the Delicacie,<br/>
+Which al the hole progenie    630<br/>
+Of lusti folk hath undertake<br/>
+To feede, whil that he mai take<br/>
+Richesses wherof to be founde:<br/>
+Of Abstinence he wot no bounde,<br/>
+To what profit it scholde serve.<br/>
+And yit phisique of his conserve<br/>
+Makth many a restauracioun<br/>
+Unto his recreacioun,<br/>
+Which wolde be to Venus lief.<br/>
+Thus for the point of his relief    640<br/>
+The coc which schal his mete arraie,<br/>
+Bot he the betre his mouth assaie,<br/>
+His lordes thonk schal ofte lese,<br/>
+Er he be served to the chese:<br/>
+For ther mai lacke noght so lyte,<br/>
+That he ne fint anon a wyte;<br/>
+For bot his lust be fully served,<br/>
+Ther hath no wiht his thonk deserved.<br/>
+And yit for mannes sustenance,<br/>
+To kepe and holde in governance,    650<br/>
+To him that wole his hele gete<br/>
+Is non so good as comun mete:<br/>
+For who that loketh on the bokes,<br/>
+It seith, confeccion of cokes,<br/>
+A man him scholde wel avise<br/>
+Hou he it toke and in what wise.<br/>
+For who that useth that he knoweth,<br/>
+Ful selden seknesse on him groweth,<br/>
+And who that useth metes strange,<br/>
+Though his nature empeire and change    660<br/>
+It is no wonder, lieve Sone,<br/>
+Whan that he doth ayein his wone;<br/>
+For in Phisique this I finde,<br/>
+Usage is the seconde kinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And riht so changeth his astat<br/>
+He that of love is delicat:<br/>
+For though he hadde to his hond<br/>
+The beste wif of al the lond,<br/>
+Or the faireste love of alle,<br/>
+Yit wolde his herte on othre falle    670<br/>
+And thenke hem mor delicious<br/>
+Than he hath in his oghne hous:<br/>
+Men sein it is nou ofte so;<br/>
+Avise hem wel, thei that so do.<br/>
+And forto speke in other weie,<br/>
+Fulofte time I have herd seie,<br/>
+That he which hath no love achieved,<br/>
+Him thenkth that he is noght relieved,<br/>
+Thogh that his ladi make him chiere,<br/>
+So as sche mai in good manere    680<br/>
+Hir honour and hir name save,<br/>
+Bot he the surplus mihte have.<br/>
+Nothing withstondende hire astat,<br/>
+Of love more delicat<br/>
+He set hire chiere at no delit,<br/>
+Bot he have al his appetit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if it be with thee so,<br/>
+Tell me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Myn holi fader, no:<br/>
+For delicat in such a wise<br/>
+Of love, as ye to me devise,    690<br/>
+Ne was I nevere yit gultif;<br/>
+For if I hadde such a wif<br/>
+As ye speke of, what scholde I more?<br/>
+For thanne I wolde neveremore<br/>
+For lust of eny wommanhiede<br/>
+Myn herte upon non other fiede:<br/>
+And if I dede, it were a wast.<br/>
+Bot al withoute such repast<br/>
+Of lust, as ye me tolde above,<br/>
+Of wif, or yit of other love,    700<br/>
+I faste, and mai no fode gete;<br/>
+So that for lacke of deinte mete,<br/>
+Of which an herte mai be fedd,<br/>
+I go fastende to my bedd.<br/>
+Bot myhte I geten, as ye tolde,<br/>
+So mochel that mi ladi wolde<br/>
+Me fede with hir glad semblant,<br/>
+Though me lacke al the remenant,<br/>
+Yit scholde I somdel ben abeched<br/>
+And for the time wel refreched.    710<br/>
+Bot certes, fader, sche ne doth;<br/>
+For in good feith, to telle soth,<br/>
+I trowe, thogh I scholde sterve,<br/>
+Sche wolde noght hire yhe swerve,<br/>
+Min herte with o goodly lok<br/>
+To fede, and thus for such a cok<br/>
+I mai go fastinge everemo:<br/>
+Bot if so is that eny wo<br/>
+Mai fede a mannes herte wel,<br/>
+Therof I have at every meel    720<br/>
+Of plente more than ynowh;<br/>
+Bot that is of himself so towh,<br/>
+Mi stomac mai it noght defie.<br/>
+Lo, such is the delicacie<br/>
+Of love, which myn herte fedeth;<br/>
+Thus have I lacke of that me nedeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot for al this yit natheles<br/>
+I seie noght I am gylteles,<br/>
+That I somdel am delicat:<br/>
+For elles were I fulli mat,    730<br/>
+Bot if that I som lusti stounde<br/>
+Of confort and of ese founde,<br/>
+To take of love som repast;<br/>
+For thogh I with the fulle tast<br/>
+The lust of love mai noght fiele,<br/>
+Min hunger otherwise I kiele<br/>
+Of smale lustes whiche I pike,<br/>
+And for a time yit thei like;<br/>
+If that ye wisten what I mene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou, goode Sone, schrif thee clene    740<br/>
+Of suche deyntes as ben goode,<br/>
+Wherof thou takst thin hertes fode.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, I you schal reherce,<br/>
+Hou that mi fodes ben diverse,<br/>
+So as thei fallen in degre.<br/>
+O fiedinge is of that I se,<br/>
+An other is of that I here,<br/>
+The thridde, as I schal tellen here,<br/>
+It groweth of min oghne thoght:<br/>
+And elles scholde I live noght;    750<br/>
+For whom that failleth fode of herte,<br/>
+He mai noght wel the deth asterte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of sihte is al mi ferste fode,<br/>
+Thurgh which myn yhe of alle goode<br/>
+Hath that to him is acordant,<br/>
+A lusti fode sufficant.<br/>
+Whan that I go toward the place<br/>
+Wher I schal se my ladi face,<br/>
+Min yhe, which is loth to faste,<br/>
+Beginth to hungre anon so faste,    760<br/>
+That him thenkth of on houre thre,<br/>
+Til I ther come and he hire se:<br/>
+And thanne after his appetit<br/>
+He takth a fode of such delit,<br/>
+That him non other deynte nedeth.<br/>
+Of sondri sihtes he him fedeth:<br/>
+He seth hire face of such colour,<br/>
+That freisshere is than eny flour,<br/>
+He seth hire front is large and plein<br/>
+Withoute fronce of eny grein,    770<br/>
+He seth hire yhen lich an hevene,<br/>
+He seth hire nase strauht and evene,<br/>
+He seth hire rode upon the cheke,<br/>
+He seth hire rede lippes eke,<br/>
+Hire chyn acordeth to the face,<br/>
+Al that he seth is full of grace,<br/>
+He seth hire necke round and clene,<br/>
+Therinne mai no bon be sene,<br/>
+He seth hire handes faire and whyte;<br/>
+For al this thing withoute wyte    780<br/>
+He mai se naked ate leste,<br/>
+So is it wel the more feste<br/>
+And wel the mor Delicacie<br/>
+Unto the fiedinge of myn yhe.<br/>
+He seth hire schapthe forth withal,<br/>
+Hire bodi round, hire middel smal,<br/>
+So wel begon with good array,<br/>
+Which passeth al the lust of Maii,<br/>
+Whan he is most with softe schoures<br/>
+Ful clothed in his lusti floures.    790<br/>
+With suche sihtes by and by<br/>
+Min yhe is fed; bot finaly,<br/>
+Whan he the port and the manere<br/>
+Seth of hire wommanysshe chere,<br/>
+Than hath he such delice on honde,<br/>
+Him thenkth he mihte stille stonde,<br/>
+And that he hath ful sufficance<br/>
+Of liflode and of sustienance<br/>
+As to his part for everemo.<br/>
+And if it thoghte alle othre so,    800<br/>
+Fro thenne wolde he nevere wende,<br/>
+Bot there unto the worldes ende<br/>
+He wolde abyde, if that he mihte,<br/>
+And fieden him upon the syhte.<br/>
+For thogh I mihte stonden ay<br/>
+Into the time of domesday<br/>
+And loke upon hire evere in on,<br/>
+Yit whanne I scholde fro hire gon,<br/>
+Min yhe wolde, as thogh he faste,<br/>
+Ben hungerstorven al so faste,    810<br/>
+Til efte ayein that he hire syhe.<br/>
+Such is the nature of myn yhe:<br/>
+Ther is no lust so deintefull,<br/>
+Of which a man schal noght be full,<br/>
+Of that the stomac underfongeth,<br/>
+Bot evere in on myn yhe longeth:<br/>
+For loke hou that a goshauk tireth,<br/>
+Riht so doth he, whan that he pireth<br/>
+And toteth on hire wommanhiede;<br/>
+For he mai nevere fulli fiede    820<br/>
+His lust, bot evere aliche sore<br/>
+Him hungreth, so that he the more<br/>
+Desireth to be fed algate:<br/>
+And thus myn yhe is mad the gate,<br/>
+Thurgh which the deyntes of my thoght<br/>
+Of lust ben to myn herte broght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Riht as myn yhe with his lok<br/>
+Is to myn herte a lusti coc<br/>
+Of loves fode delicat,<br/>
+Riht so myn Ere in his astat,    830<br/>
+Wher as myn yhe mai noght serve,<br/>
+Can wel myn hertes thonk deserve<br/>
+And fieden him fro day to day<br/>
+With suche deyntes as he may.<br/>
+For thus it is, that overal,<br/>
+Wher as I come in special,<br/>
+I mai hiere of mi ladi pris;<br/>
+I hiere on seith that sche is wys,<br/>
+An other seith that sche is good,<br/>
+And som men sein, of worthi blod    840<br/>
+That sche is come, and is also<br/>
+So fair, that nawher is non so;<br/>
+And som men preise hire goodli chiere:<br/>
+Thus every thing that I mai hiere,<br/>
+Which souneth to mi ladi goode,<br/>
+Is to myn Ere a lusti foode.<br/>
+And ek min Ere hath over this<br/>
+A deynte feste, whan so is<br/>
+That I mai hiere hirselve speke;<br/>
+For thanne anon mi faste I breke    850<br/>
+On suche wordes as sche seith,<br/>
+That full of trouthe and full of feith<br/>
+Thei ben, and of so good desport,<br/>
+That to myn Ere gret confort<br/>
+Thei don, as thei that ben delices.<br/>
+For al the metes and the spices,<br/>
+That eny Lombard couthe make,<br/>
+Ne be so lusti forto take<br/>
+Ne so ferforth restauratif,<br/>
+I seie as for myn oghne lif,    860<br/>
+As ben the wordes of hire mouth:<br/>
+For as the wyndes of the South<br/>
+Ben most of alle debonaire,<br/>
+So whan hir list to speke faire,<br/>
+The vertu of hire goodly speche<br/>
+Is verraily myn hertes leche.<br/>
+And if it so befalle among,<br/>
+That sche carole upon a song,<br/>
+Whan I it hiere I am so fedd,<br/>
+That I am fro miself so ledd,    870<br/>
+As thogh I were in paradis;<br/>
+For certes, as to myn avis,<br/>
+Whan I here of hir vois the stevene,<br/>
+Me thenkth it is a blisse of hevene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek in other wise also<br/>
+Fulofte time it falleth so,<br/>
+Min Ere with a good pitance<br/>
+Is fedd of redinge of romance<br/>
+Of Ydoine and of Amadas,<br/>
+That whilom weren in mi cas,    880<br/>
+And eke of othre many a score,<br/>
+That loveden longe er I was bore.<br/>
+For whan I of here loves rede,<br/>
+Min Ere with the tale I fede;<br/>
+And with the lust of here histoire<br/>
+Somtime I drawe into memoire<br/>
+Hou sorwe mai noght evere laste;<br/>
+And so comth hope in ate laste,<br/>
+Whan I non other fode knowe.<br/>
+And that endureth bot a throwe,    890<br/>
+Riht as it were a cherie feste;<br/>
+Bot forto compten ate leste,<br/>
+As for the while yit it eseth<br/>
+And somdel of myn herte appeseth:<br/>
+For what thing to myn Ere spreedeth,<br/>
+Which is plesant, somdel it feedeth<br/>
+With wordes suche as he mai gete<br/>
+Mi lust, in stede of other mete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi fader, as I seie,<br/>
+Of lust the which myn yhe hath seie,    900<br/>
+And ek of that myn Ere hath herd,<br/>
+Fulofte I have the betre ferd.<br/>
+And tho tuo bringen in the thridde,<br/>
+The which hath in myn herte amidde<br/>
+His place take, to arraie<br/>
+The lusti fode, which assaie<br/>
+I mot; and nameliche on nyhtes,<br/>
+Whan that me lacketh alle sihtes,<br/>
+And that myn heringe is aweie,<br/>
+Thanne is he redy in the weie    910<br/>
+Mi reresouper forto make,<br/>
+Of which myn hertes fode I take.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This lusti cokes name is hote<br/>
+Thoght, which hath evere hise pottes hote<br/>
+Of love buillende on the fyr<br/>
+With fantasie and with desir,<br/>
+Of whiche er this fulofte he fedde<br/>
+Min herte, whanne I was abedde;<br/>
+And thanne he set upon my bord<br/>
+Bothe every syhte and every word    920<br/>
+Of lust, which I have herd or sein.<br/>
+Bot yit is noght mi feste al plein,<br/>
+Bot al of woldes and of wisshes,<br/>
+Therof have I my fulle disshes,<br/>
+Bot as of fielinge and of tast,<br/>
+Yit mihte I nevere have o repast.<br/>
+And thus, as I have seid aforn,<br/>
+I licke hony on the thorn,<br/>
+And as who seith, upon the bridel<br/>
+I chiewe, so that al is ydel    930<br/>
+As in effect the fode I have.<br/>
+Bot as a man that wolde him save,<br/>
+Whan he is seck, be medicine,<br/>
+Riht so of love the famine<br/>
+I fonde in al that evere I mai<br/>
+To fiede and dryve forth the day,<br/>
+Til I mai have the grete feste,<br/>
+Which al myn hunger myhte areste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo suche ben mi lustes thre;<br/>
+Of that I thenke and hiere and se    940<br/>
+I take of love my fiedinge<br/>
+Withoute tastinge or fielinge:<br/>
+And as the Plover doth of Eir<br/>
+I live, and am in good espeir<br/>
+That for no such delicacie<br/>
+I trowe I do no glotonie.<br/>
+And natheles to youre avis,<br/>
+Min holi fader, that be wis,<br/>
+I recomande myn astat<br/>
+Of that I have be delicat.    950
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, I understonde wel<br/>
+That thou hast told hier everydel,<br/>
+And as me thenketh be thi tale,<br/>
+It ben delices wonder smale,<br/>
+Wherof thou takst thi loves fode.<br/>
+Bot, Sone, if that thou understode<br/>
+What is to ben delicious,<br/>
+Thou woldest noght be curious<br/>
+Upon the lust of thin astat<br/>
+To ben to sore delicat,    960<br/>
+Wherof that thou reson excede:<br/>
+For in the bokes thou myht rede,<br/>
+If mannes wisdom schal be suied,<br/>
+It oghte wel to ben eschuied<br/>
+In love als wel as other weie;<br/>
+For, as these holi bokes seie,<br/>
+The bodely delices alle<br/>
+In every point, hou so thei falle,<br/>
+Unto the Soule don grievance.<br/>
+And forto take in remembrance,    970<br/>
+A tale acordant unto this,<br/>
+Which of gret understondinge is<br/>
+To mannes soule resonable,<br/>
+I thenke telle, and is no fable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Cristes word, who wole it rede,<br/>
+Hou that this vice is forto drede<br/>
+In thevangile it telleth plein,<br/>
+Which mot algate be certein,<br/>
+For Crist himself it berth witnesse.<br/>
+And thogh the clerk and the clergesse    980<br/>
+In latin tunge it rede and singe,<br/>
+Yit for the more knoulechinge<br/>
+Of trouthe, which is good to wite,<br/>
+I schal declare as it is write<br/>
+In Engleissh, for thus it began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crist seith: “Ther was a riche man,<br/>
+A mihti lord of gret astat,<br/>
+And he was ek so delicat<br/>
+Of his clothing, that everyday<br/>
+Of pourpre and bisse he made him gay,    990<br/>
+And eet and drank therto his fille<br/>
+After the lustes of his wille,<br/>
+As he which al stod in delice<br/>
+And tok non hiede of thilke vice.<br/>
+And as it scholde so betyde,<br/>
+A povere lazre upon a tyde<br/>
+Cam to the gate and axed mete:<br/>
+Bot there mihte he nothing gete<br/>
+His dedly hunger forto stanche;<br/>
+For he, which hadde his fulle panche    1000<br/>
+Of alle lustes ate bord,<br/>
+Ne deigneth noght to speke a word,<br/>
+Onliche a Crumme forto yive,<br/>
+Wherof the povere myhte live<br/>
+Upon the yifte of his almesse.<br/>
+Thus lai this povere in gret destresse<br/>
+Acold and hungred ate gate,<br/>
+Fro which he mihte go no gate,<br/>
+So was he wofulli besein.<br/>
+And as these holi bokes sein,    1010<br/>
+The houndes comen fro the halle,<br/>
+Wher that this sike man was falle,<br/>
+And as he lay ther forto die,<br/>
+The woundes of his maladie<br/>
+Thei licken forto don him ese.<br/>
+Bot he was full of such desese,<br/>
+That he mai noght the deth eschape;<br/>
+Bot as it was that time schape,<br/>
+The Soule fro the bodi passeth,<br/>
+And he whom nothing overpasseth,    1020<br/>
+The hihe god, up to the hevene<br/>
+Him tok, wher he hath set him evene<br/>
+In Habrahammes barm on hyh,<br/>
+Wher he the hevene joie syh<br/>
+And hadde al that he have wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And fell, as it befalle scholde,<br/>
+This riche man the same throwe<br/>
+With soudein deth was overthrowe,<br/>
+And forth withouten eny wente<br/>
+Into the helle straght he wente;    1030<br/>
+The fend into the fyr him drouh,<br/>
+Wher that he hadde peine ynouh<br/>
+Of flamme which that evere brenneth.<br/>
+And as his yhe aboute renneth,<br/>
+Toward the hevene he cast his lok,<br/>
+Wher that he syh and hiede tok<br/>
+Hou Lazar set was in his Se<br/>
+Als ferr as evere he mihte se<br/>
+With Habraham; and thanne he preide<br/>
+Unto the Patriarch and seide:    1040<br/>
+“Send Lazar doun fro thilke Sete,<br/>
+And do that he his finger wete<br/>
+In water, so that he mai droppe<br/>
+Upon my tunge, forto stoppe<br/>
+The grete hete in which I brenne.”<br/>
+Bot Habraham answerde thenne<br/>
+And seide to him in this wise:<br/>
+“Mi Sone, thou thee miht avise<br/>
+And take into thi remembrance,<br/>
+Hou Lazar hadde gret penance,    1050<br/>
+Whyl he was in that other lif,<br/>
+Bot thou in al thi lust jolif<br/>
+The bodily delices soghtest:<br/>
+Forthi, so as thou thanne wroghtest,<br/>
+Nou schalt thou take thi reward<br/>
+Of dedly peine hierafterward<br/>
+In helle, which schal evere laste;<br/>
+And this Lazar nou ate laste<br/>
+The worldes peine is overronne,<br/>
+In hevene and hath his lif begonne    1060<br/>
+Of joie, which is endeles.<br/>
+Bot that thou preidest natheles,<br/>
+That I schal Lazar to the sende<br/>
+With water on his finger ende,<br/>
+Thin hote tunge forto kiele,<br/>
+Thou schalt no such graces fiele;<br/>
+For to that foule place of Sinne,<br/>
+For evere in which thou schalt ben inne,<br/>
+Comth non out of this place thider,<br/>
+Ne non of you mai comen hider;    1070<br/>
+Thus be yee parted nou atuo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The riche ayeinward cride tho:<br/>
+“O Habraham, sithe it so is,<br/>
+That Lazar mai noght do me this<br/>
+Which I have axed in this place,<br/>
+I wolde preie an other grace.<br/>
+For I have yit of brethren fyve,<br/>
+That with mi fader ben alyve<br/>
+Togedre duellende in on hous;<br/>
+To whom, as thou art gracious,    1080<br/>
+I preie that thou woldest sende<br/>
+Lazar, so that he mihte wende<br/>
+To warne hem hou the world is went,<br/>
+That afterward thei be noght schent<br/>
+Of suche peines as I drye.<br/>
+Lo, this I preie and this I crie,<br/>
+Now I may noght miself amende.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Patriarch anon suiende<br/>
+To his preiere ansuerde nay;<br/>
+And seide him hou that everyday    1090<br/>
+His brethren mihten knowe and hiere<br/>
+Of Moises on Erthe hiere<br/>
+And of prophetes othre mo,<br/>
+What hem was best. And he seith no;<br/>
+Bot if ther mihte a man aryse<br/>
+Fro deth to lyve in such a wise,<br/>
+To tellen hem hou that it were,<br/>
+He seide hou thanne of pure fere<br/>
+Thei scholden wel be war therby.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quod Habraham: “Nay sikerly;    1100<br/>
+For if thei nou wol noght obeie<br/>
+To suche as techen hem the weie,<br/>
+And alday preche and alday telle<br/>
+Hou that it stant of hevene and helle,<br/>
+Thei wol noght thanne taken hiede,<br/>
+Thogh it befelle so in dede<br/>
+That eny ded man were arered,<br/>
+To ben of him no betre lered<br/>
+Than of an other man alyve.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If thou, mi Sone, canst descryve    1110<br/>
+This tale, as Crist himself it tolde,<br/>
+Thou schalt have cause to beholde,<br/>
+To se so gret an evidence,<br/>
+Wherof the sothe experience<br/>
+Hath schewed openliche at ije,<br/>
+That bodili delicacie<br/>
+Of him which yeveth non almesse<br/>
+Schal after falle in gret destresse.<br/>
+And that was sene upon the riche:<br/>
+For he ne wolde unto his liche    1120<br/>
+A Crumme yiven of his bred,<br/>
+Thanne afterward, whan he was ded,<br/>
+A drope of water him was werned.<br/>
+Thus mai a mannes wit be lerned<br/>
+Of hem that so delices taken;<br/>
+Whan thei with deth ben overtaken,<br/>
+That erst was swete is thanne sour.<br/>
+Bot he that is a governour<br/>
+Of worldes good, if he be wys,<br/>
+Withinne his herte he set no pris    1130<br/>
+Of al the world, and yit he useth<br/>
+The good, that he nothing refuseth,<br/>
+As he which lord is of the thinges.<br/>
+The Nouches and the riche ringes,<br/>
+The cloth of gold and the Perrie<br/>
+He takth, and yit delicacie<br/>
+He leveth, thogh he were al this.<br/>
+The beste mete that ther is<br/>
+He ett, and drinkth the beste drinke;<br/>
+Bot hou that evere he ete or drinke,    1140<br/>
+Delicacie he put aweie,<br/>
+As he which goth the rihte weie<br/>
+Noght only forto fiede and clothe<br/>
+His bodi, bot his soule bothe.<br/>
+Bot thei that taken otherwise<br/>
+Here lustes, ben none of the wise;<br/>
+And that whilom was schewed eke,<br/>
+If thou these olde bokes seke,<br/>
+Als wel be reson as be kinde,<br/>
+Of olde ensample as men mai finde.    1150
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What man that wolde him wel avise,<br/>
+Delicacie is to despise,<br/>
+Whan kinde acordeth noght withal;<br/>
+Wherof ensample in special<br/>
+Of Nero whilom mai be told,<br/>
+Which ayein kinde manyfold<br/>
+Hise lustes tok, til ate laste<br/>
+That god him wolde al overcaste;<br/>
+Of whom the Cronique is so plein,<br/>
+Me list nomore of him to sein.    1160<br/>
+And natheles for glotonie<br/>
+Of bodili Delicacie,<br/>
+To knowe his stomak hou it ferde,<br/>
+Of that noman tofore herde,<br/>
+Which he withinne himself bethoghte,<br/>
+A wonder soubtil thing he wroghte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thre men upon eleccioun<br/>
+Of age and of complexioun<br/>
+Lich to himself be alle weie<br/>
+He tok towardes him to pleie,    1170<br/>
+And ete and drinke als wel as he.<br/>
+Therof was no diversite;<br/>
+For every day whan that thei eete,<br/>
+Tofore his oghne bord thei seete,<br/>
+And of such mete as he was served,<br/>
+Althogh thei hadde it noght deserved,<br/>
+Thei token service of the same.<br/>
+Bot afterward al thilke game<br/>
+Was into wofull ernest torned;<br/>
+For whan thei weren thus sojorned,    1180<br/>
+Withinne a time at after mete<br/>
+Nero, which hadde noght foryete<br/>
+The lustes of his frele astat,<br/>
+As he which al was delicat,<br/>
+To knowe thilke experience,<br/>
+The men let come in his presence:<br/>
+And to that on the same tyde,<br/>
+A    courser that he scholde ryde<br/>
+Into the feld, anon he bad;<br/>
+Wherof this man was wonder glad,    1190<br/>
+And goth to prike and prance aboute.<br/>
+That other, whil that he was oute,<br/>
+He leide upon his bedd to slepe:<br/>
+The thridde, which he wolde kepe<br/>
+Withinne his chambre, faire and softe<br/>
+He goth now doun nou up fulofte,<br/>
+Walkende a pass, that he ne slepte,<br/>
+Til he which on the courser lepte<br/>
+Was come fro the field ayein.<br/>
+Nero thanne, as the bokes sein,    1200<br/>
+These men doth taken alle thre<br/>
+And slouh hem, for he wolde se<br/>
+The whos stomak was best defied:<br/>
+And whanne he hath the sothe tryed,<br/>
+He fond that he which goth the pass<br/>
+Defyed best of alle was,<br/>
+Which afterward he usede ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus what thing unto his pay<br/>
+Was most plesant, he lefte non:<br/>
+With every lust he was begon,    1210<br/>
+Wherof the bodi myhte glade,<br/>
+For he non abstinence made;<br/>
+Bot most above alle erthli thinges<br/>
+Of wommen unto the likinges<br/>
+Nero sette al his hole herte,<br/>
+For that lust scholde him noght asterte.<br/>
+Whan that the thurst of love him cawhte,<br/>
+Wher that him list he tok a drauhte,<br/>
+He spareth nouther wif ne maide,<br/>
+That such an other, as men saide,    1220<br/>
+In al this world was nevere yit.<br/>
+He was so drunke in al his wit<br/>
+Thurgh sondri lustes whiche he tok,<br/>
+That evere, whil ther is a bok,<br/>
+Of Nero men schul rede and singe<br/>
+Unto the worldes knowlechinge,<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, as thou hast herd.<br/>
+For evere yit it hath so ferd,<br/>
+Delicacie in loves cas<br/>
+Withoute reson is and was;    1230<br/>
+For wher that love his herte set,<br/>
+Him thenkth it myhte be no bet;<br/>
+And thogh it be noght fulli mete,<br/>
+The lust of love is evere swete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus togedre of felaschipe<br/>
+Delicacie and drunkeschipe,<br/>
+Wherof reson stant out of herre,<br/>
+Have mad full many a wisman erre<br/>
+In loves cause most of alle:<br/>
+For thanne hou so that evere it falle,    1240<br/>
+Wit can no reson understonde,<br/>
+Bot let the governance stonde<br/>
+To Will, which thanne wext so wylde,<br/>
+That he can noght himselve schylde<br/>
+Fro no peril, bot out of feere<br/>
+The weie he secheth hiere and there,<br/>
+Him recheth noght upon what syde:<br/>
+For oftetime he goth beside,<br/>
+And doth such thing withoute drede,<br/>
+Wherof him oghte wel to drede.    1250<br/>
+Bot whan that love assoteth sore,<br/>
+It passeth alle mennes lore;<br/>
+What lust it is that he ordeigneth,<br/>
+Ther is no mannes miht restreigneth,<br/>
+And of the godd takth he non hiede:<br/>
+Bot laweles withoute drede,<br/>
+His pourpos for he wolde achieve<br/>
+Ayeins the pointz of the believe,<br/>
+He tempteth hevene and erthe and helle,<br/>
+Hierafterward as I schall telle.    1260
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who dar do thing which love ne dar?<br/>
+To love is every lawe unwar,<br/>
+Bot to the lawes of his heste<br/>
+The fissch, the foul, the man, the beste<br/>
+Of al the worldes kinde louteth.<br/>
+For love is he which nothing douteth:<br/>
+In mannes herte where he sit,<br/>
+He compteth noght toward his wit<br/>
+The wo nomore than the wele,<br/>
+No mor the hete than the chele,    1270<br/>
+No mor the wete than the dreie,<br/>
+No mor to live than to deie,<br/>
+So that tofore ne behinde<br/>
+He seth nothing, bot as the blinde<br/>
+Withoute insyhte of his corage<br/>
+He doth merveilles in his rage.<br/>
+To what thing that he wole him drawe,<br/>
+Ther is no god, ther is no lawe,<br/>
+Of whom that he takth eny hiede;<br/>
+Bot as Baiard the blinde stede,    1280<br/>
+Til he falle in the dich amidde,<br/>
+He goth ther noman wole him bidde;<br/>
+He stant so ferforth out of reule,<br/>
+Ther is no wit that mai him reule.<br/>
+And thus to telle of him in soth,<br/>
+Ful many a wonder thing he doth,<br/>
+That were betre to be laft,<br/>
+Among the whiche is wicchecraft,<br/>
+That som men clepen Sorcerie,<br/>
+Which forto winne his druerie    1290<br/>
+With many a circumstance he useth,<br/>
+Ther is no point which he refuseth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The craft which that Saturnus fond,<br/>
+To make prickes in the Sond,<br/>
+That Geomance cleped is,<br/>
+Fulofte he useth it amis;<br/>
+And of the flod his Ydromance,<br/>
+And of the fyr the Piromance,<br/>
+With questions echon of tho<br/>
+He tempteth ofte, and ek also    1300<br/>
+Aëremance in juggement<br/>
+To love he bringth of his assent:<br/>
+For these craftes, as I finde,<br/>
+A man mai do be weie of kinde,<br/>
+Be so it be to good entente.<br/>
+Bot he goth al an other wente;<br/>
+For rathere er he scholde faile,<br/>
+With Nigromance he wole assaile<br/>
+To make his incantacioun<br/>
+With hot subfumigacioun.    1310<br/>
+Thilke art which Spatula is hote,<br/>
+And used is of comun rote<br/>
+Among Paiens, with that craft ek<br/>
+Of which is Auctor Thosz the Grek,<br/>
+He worcheth on and on be rowe:<br/>
+Razel is noght to him unknowe,<br/>
+Ne Salomones Candarie,<br/>
+His Ydeac, his Eutonye;<br/>
+The figure and the bok withal<br/>
+Of Balamuz, and of Ghenbal    1320<br/>
+The Seal, and therupon thymage<br/>
+Of Thebith, for his avantage<br/>
+He takth, and somwhat of Gibiere,<br/>
+Which helplich is to this matiere.<br/>
+Babilla with hire Sones sevene,<br/>
+Which hath renonced to the hevene,<br/>
+With Cernes bothe square and rounde,<br/>
+He traceth ofte upon the grounde,<br/>
+Makende his invocacioun;<br/>
+And for full enformacioun    1330<br/>
+The Scole which Honorius<br/>
+Wrot, he poursuieth: and lo, thus<br/>
+Magique he useth forto winne<br/>
+His love, and spareth for no Sinne.<br/>
+And over that of his Sotie,<br/>
+Riht as he secheth Sorcerie<br/>
+Of hem that ben Magiciens,<br/>
+Riht so of the Naturiens<br/>
+Upon the Sterres from above<br/>
+His weie he secheth unto love,    1340<br/>
+Als fer as he hem understondeth.<br/>
+In many a sondry wise he fondeth:<br/>
+He makth ymage, he makth sculpture,<br/>
+He makth writinge, he makth figure,<br/>
+He makth his calculacions,<br/>
+He makth his demonstracions;<br/>
+His houres of Astronomie<br/>
+He kepeth as for that partie<br/>
+Which longeth to thinspeccion<br/>
+Of love and his affeccion;    1350<br/>
+He wolde into the helle seche<br/>
+The devel himselve to beseche,<br/>
+If that he wiste forto spede,<br/>
+To gete of love his lusti mede:<br/>
+Wher that he hath his herte set,<br/>
+He bede nevere fare bet<br/>
+Ne wite of other hevene more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, if thou of such a lore<br/>
+Hast ben er this, I red thee leve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Min holi fader, be youre leve    1360<br/>
+Of al that ye have spoken hiere<br/>
+Which toucheth unto this matiere,<br/>
+To telle soth riht as I wene,<br/>
+I wot noght o word what ye mene.<br/>
+I wol noght seie, if that I couthe,<br/>
+That I nolde in mi lusti youthe<br/>
+Benethe in helle and ek above<br/>
+To winne with mi ladi love<br/>
+Don al that evere that I mihte;<br/>
+For therof have I non insihte    1370<br/>
+Wher afterward that I become,<br/>
+To that I wonne and overcome<br/>
+Hire love, which I most coveite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, that goth wonder streite:<br/>
+For this I mai wel telle soth,<br/>
+Ther is noman the which so doth,<br/>
+For al the craft that he can caste,<br/>
+That he nabeith it ate laste.<br/>
+For often he that wol beguile<br/>
+Is guiled with the same guile,    1380<br/>
+And thus the guilour is beguiled;<br/>
+As I finde in a bok compiled<br/>
+To this matiere an old histoire,<br/>
+The which comth nou to mi memoire,<br/>
+And is of gret essamplerie<br/>
+Ayein the vice of Sorcerie,<br/>
+Wherof non ende mai be good.<br/>
+Bot hou whilom therof it stod,<br/>
+A tale which is good to knowe<br/>
+To thee, mi Sone, I schal beknowe.    1390
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among hem whiche at Troie were,<br/>
+Uluxes ate Siege there<br/>
+Was on be name in special;<br/>
+Of whom yit the memorial<br/>
+Abit, for whyl ther is a mouth,<br/>
+For evere his name schal be couth.<br/>
+He was a worthi knyht and king<br/>
+And clerk knowende of every thing;<br/>
+He was a gret rethorien,<br/>
+He was a gret magicien;    1400<br/>
+Of Tullius the rethorique,<br/>
+Of king Zorastes the magique,<br/>
+Of Tholome thastronomie,<br/>
+Of Plato the Philosophie,<br/>
+Of Daniel the slepi dremes,<br/>
+Of Neptune ek the water stremes,<br/>
+Of Salomon and the proverbes,<br/>
+Of Macer al the strengthe of herbes,<br/>
+And the Phisique of Ypocras,<br/>
+And lich unto Pictagoras    1410<br/>
+Of Surgerie he knew the cures.<br/>
+Bot somwhat of his aventures,<br/>
+Which schal to mi matiere acorde,<br/>
+To thee, mi Sone, I wol recorde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king, of which thou hast herd sein,<br/>
+Fro Troie as he goth hom ayein<br/>
+Be Schipe, he fond the See divers,<br/>
+With many a wyndi storm revers.<br/>
+Bot he thurgh wisdom that he schapeth<br/>
+Ful many a gret peril ascapeth,    1420<br/>
+Of whiche I thenke tellen on,<br/>
+Hou that malgre the nedle and ston<br/>
+Wynddrive he was al soudeinly<br/>
+Upon the strondes of Cilly,<br/>
+Wher that he moste abyde a whyle.<br/>
+Tuo queenes weren in that yle<br/>
+Calipsa named and Circes;<br/>
+And whan they herde hou Uluxes<br/>
+Is londed ther upon the ryve,<br/>
+For him thei senden als so blive.    1430<br/>
+With him suche as he wolde he nam<br/>
+And to the court to hem he cam.<br/>
+Thes queenes were as tuo goddesses<br/>
+Of Art magique Sorceresses,<br/>
+That what lord comth to that rivage,<br/>
+Thei make him love in such a rage<br/>
+And upon hem assote so,<br/>
+That thei wol have, er that he go,<br/>
+Al that he hath of worldes good.<br/>
+Uluxes wel this understod,    1440<br/>
+Thei couthe moche, he couthe more;<br/>
+Thei schape and caste ayein him sore<br/>
+And wroghte many a soutil wyle,<br/>
+Bot yit thei mihte him noght beguile.<br/>
+Bot of the men of his navie<br/>
+Thei tuo forschope a gret partie,<br/>
+Mai non of hem withstonde here hestes;<br/>
+Som part thei schopen into bestes,<br/>
+Som part thei schopen into foules,<br/>
+To beres, tigres, Apes, oules,    1450<br/>
+Or elles be som other weie;<br/>
+Ther myhte hem nothing desobeie,<br/>
+Such craft thei hadde above kinde.<br/>
+Bot that Art couthe thei noght finde,<br/>
+Of which Uluxes was deceived,<br/>
+That he ne hath hem alle weyved,<br/>
+And broght hem into such a rote,<br/>
+That upon him thei bothe assote;<br/>
+And thurgh the science of his art<br/>
+He tok of hem so wel his part,    1460<br/>
+That he begat Circes with childe.<br/>
+He kepte him sobre and made hem wilde,<br/>
+He sette himselve so above,<br/>
+That with here good and with here love,<br/>
+Who that therof be lief or loth,<br/>
+Al quit into his Schip he goth.<br/>
+Circes toswolle bothe sides<br/>
+He lefte, and waiteth on the tydes,<br/>
+And straght thurghout the salte fom<br/>
+He takth his cours and comth him hom,    1470<br/>
+Where as he fond Penolope;<br/>
+A betre wif ther mai non be,<br/>
+And yit ther ben ynowhe of goode.<br/>
+Bot who hir goodschipe understode<br/>
+Fro ferst that sche wifhode tok,<br/>
+Hou many loves sche forsok<br/>
+And hou sche bar hire al aboute,<br/>
+Ther whiles that hire lord was oute,<br/>
+He mihte make a gret avant<br/>
+Amonges al the remenant    1480<br/>
+That sche was on of al the beste.<br/>
+Wel myhte he sette his herte in reste,<br/>
+This king, whan he hir fond in hele;<br/>
+For as he couthe in wisdom dele,<br/>
+So couthe sche in wommanhiede:<br/>
+And whan sche syh withoute drede<br/>
+Hire lord upon his oghne ground,<br/>
+That he was come sauf and sound,<br/>
+In al this world ne mihte be<br/>
+A gladdere womman than was sche.    1490
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fame, which mai noght ben hidd,<br/>
+Thurghout the lond is sone kidd,<br/>
+Here king is come hom ayein:<br/>
+Ther mai noman the fulle sein,<br/>
+Hou that thei weren alle glade,<br/>
+So mochel joie of him thei made.<br/>
+The presens every day be newed,<br/>
+He was with yiftes al besnewed;<br/>
+The poeple was of him so glad,<br/>
+That thogh non other man hem bad,    1500<br/>
+Taillage upon hemself thei sette,<br/>
+And as it were of pure dette<br/>
+Thei yeve here goodes to the king:<br/>
+This was a glad hom welcomyng.<br/>
+Thus hath Uluxes what he wolde,<br/>
+His wif was such as sche be scholde,<br/>
+His poeple was to him sougit,<br/>
+Him lacketh nothing of delit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot fortune is of such a sleyhte,<br/>
+That whan a man is most on heyhte,    1510<br/>
+Sche makth him rathest forto falle:<br/>
+Ther wot noman what schal befalle,<br/>
+The happes over mannes hed<br/>
+Ben honged with a tendre thred.<br/>
+That proved was on Uluxes;<br/>
+For whan he was most in his pes,<br/>
+Fortune gan to make him werre<br/>
+And sette his welthe al out of herre.<br/>
+Upon a dai as he was merie,<br/>
+As thogh ther mihte him nothing derie,    1520<br/>
+Whan nyht was come, he goth to bedde,<br/>
+With slep and bothe his yhen fedde.<br/>
+And while he slepte, he mette a swevene:<br/>
+Him thoghte he syh a stature evene,<br/>
+Which brihtere than the sonne schon;<br/>
+A man it semeth was it non,<br/>
+Bot yit it was as in figure<br/>
+Most lich to mannyssh creature,<br/>
+Bot as of beaute hevenelich<br/>
+It was most to an Angel lich:    1530<br/>
+And thus betwen angel and man<br/>
+Beholden it this king began,<br/>
+And such a lust tok of the sihte,<br/>
+That fain he wolde, if that he mihte,<br/>
+The forme of that figure embrace;<br/>
+And goth him forth toward the place,<br/>
+Wher he sih that ymage tho,<br/>
+And takth it in his Armes tuo,<br/>
+And it embraceth him ayein<br/>
+And to the king thus gan it sein:    1540<br/>
+“Uluxes, understond wel this,<br/>
+The tokne of oure aqueintance is<br/>
+Hierafterward to mochel tene:<br/>
+The love that is ous betuene,<br/>
+Of that we nou such joie make,<br/>
+That on of ous the deth schal take,<br/>
+Whan time comth of destine;<br/>
+It may non other wise be.”<br/>
+Uluxes tho began to preie<br/>
+That this figure wolde him seie    1550<br/>
+What wyht he is that seith him so.<br/>
+This wyht upon a spere tho<br/>
+A pensel which was wel begon,<br/>
+Embrouded, scheweth him anon:<br/>
+Thre fisshes alle of o colour<br/>
+In manere as it were a tour<br/>
+Upon the pensel were wroght.<br/>
+Uluxes kneu this tokne noght,<br/>
+And preith to wite in som partie<br/>
+What thing it myhte signefie,    1560<br/>
+“A signe it is,” the wyht ansuerde,<br/>
+“Of an Empire:” and forth he ferde<br/>
+Al sodeinly, whan he that seide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Uluxes out of slep abreide,<br/>
+And that was riht ayein the day,<br/>
+That lengere slepen he ne may.<br/>
+Men sein, a man hath knowleching<br/>
+Save of himself of alle thing;<br/>
+His oghne chance noman knoweth,<br/>
+Bot as fortune it on him throweth:    1570<br/>
+Was nevere yit so wys a clerk,<br/>
+Which mihte knowe al goddes werk,<br/>
+Ne the secret which god hath set<br/>
+Ayein a man mai noght be let.<br/>
+Uluxes, thogh that he be wys,<br/>
+With al his wit in his avis,<br/>
+The mor that he his swevene acompteth,<br/>
+The lasse he wot what it amonteth:<br/>
+For al his calculacion,<br/>
+He seth no demonstracion    1580<br/>
+Al pleinly forto knowe an ende;<br/>
+Bot natheles hou so it wende,<br/>
+He dradde him of his oghne Sone.<br/>
+That makth him wel the more astone,<br/>
+And schop therfore anon withal,<br/>
+So that withinne castel wall<br/>
+Thelamachum his Sone he schette,<br/>
+And upon him strong warde he sette.<br/>
+The sothe furthere he ne knew,<br/>
+Til that fortune him overthreu;    1590<br/>
+Bot natheles for sikernesse,<br/>
+Wher that he mihte wite and gesse<br/>
+A place strengest in his lond,<br/>
+Ther let he make of lym and sond<br/>
+A strengthe where he wolde duelle;<br/>
+Was nevere man yit herde telle<br/>
+Of such an other as it was.<br/>
+And forto strengthe him in that cas,<br/>
+Of al his lond the sekereste<br/>
+Of servantz and the worthieste,    1600<br/>
+To kepen him withinne warde,<br/>
+He sette his bodi forto warde;<br/>
+And made such an ordinance,<br/>
+For love ne for aqueintance,<br/>
+That were it erly, were it late,<br/>
+Thei scholde lete in ate gate<br/>
+No maner man, what so betydde,<br/>
+Bot if so were himself it bidde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot al that myhte him noght availe,<br/>
+For whom fortune wole assaile,    1610<br/>
+Ther mai be non such resistence,<br/>
+Which mihte make a man defence;<br/>
+Al that schal be mot falle algate.<br/>
+This Circes, which I spak of late,<br/>
+On whom Uluxes hath begete<br/>
+A child, thogh he it have foryete,<br/>
+Whan time com, as it was wone,<br/>
+Sche was delivered of a Sone,<br/>
+Which cleped is Thelogonus.<br/>
+This child, whan he was bore thus,    1620<br/>
+Aboute his moder to ful age,<br/>
+That he can reson and langage,<br/>
+In good astat was drawe forth:<br/>
+And whan he was so mochel worth<br/>
+To stonden in a mannes stede,<br/>
+Circes his moder hath him bede<br/>
+That he schal to his fader go,<br/>
+And tolde him al togedre tho<br/>
+What man he was that him begat.<br/>
+And whan Thelogonus of that    1630<br/>
+Was war and hath ful knowleching<br/>
+Hou that his fader was a king,<br/>
+He preith his moder faire this,<br/>
+To go wher that his fader is;<br/>
+And sche him granteth that he schal,<br/>
+And made him redi forth withal.<br/>
+It was that time such usance,<br/>
+That every man the conoiscance<br/>
+Of his contre bar in his hond,<br/>
+Whan he wente into strange lond;    1640<br/>
+And thus was every man therfore<br/>
+Wel knowe, wher that he was bore:<br/>
+For espiaile and mistrowinges<br/>
+They dede thanne suche thinges,<br/>
+That every man mai other knowe.<br/>
+So it befell that ilke throwe<br/>
+Thelogonus as in this cas;<br/>
+Of his contre the signe was<br/>
+Thre fisshes, whiche he scholde bere<br/>
+Upon the penon of a spere:    1650<br/>
+And whan that he was thus arraied<br/>
+And hath his harneis al assaied,<br/>
+That he was redy everydel,<br/>
+His moder bad him farewel,<br/>
+And seide him that he scholde swithe<br/>
+His fader griete a thousand sithe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thelogonus his moder kiste<br/>
+And tok his leve, and wher he wiste<br/>
+His fader was, the weie nam,<br/>
+Til he unto Nachaie cam,    1660<br/>
+Which of that lond the chief Cite<br/>
+Was cleped, and ther axeth he<br/>
+Wher was the king and hou he ferde.<br/>
+And whan that he the sothe herde,<br/>
+Wher that the king Uluxes was,<br/>
+Al one upon his hors gret pas<br/>
+He rod him forth, and in his hond<br/>
+He bar the signal of his lond<br/>
+With fisshes thre, as I have told;<br/>
+And thus he wente unto that hold,    1670<br/>
+Wher that his oghne fader duelleth.<br/>
+The cause why he comth he telleth<br/>
+Unto the kepers of the gate,<br/>
+And wolde have comen in therate,<br/>
+Bot schortli thei him seide nay:<br/>
+And he als faire as evere he may<br/>
+Besoghte and tolde hem ofte this,<br/>
+Hou that the king his fader is;<br/>
+Bot they with proude wordes grete<br/>
+Begunne to manace and threte,    1680<br/>
+Bot he go fro the gate faste,<br/>
+Thei wolde him take and sette faste.<br/>
+Fro wordes unto strokes thus<br/>
+Thei felle, and so Thelogonus<br/>
+Was sore hurt and welnyh ded;<br/>
+Bot with his scharpe speres hed<br/>
+He makth defence, hou so it falle,<br/>
+And wan the gate upon hem alle,<br/>
+And hath slain of the beste fyve;<br/>
+And thei ascriden als so blyve    1690<br/>
+Thurghout the castell al aboute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On every syde men come oute,<br/>
+Wherof the kinges herte afflihte,<br/>
+And he with al the haste he mihte<br/>
+A spere cauhte and out he goth,<br/>
+As he that was nyh wod for wroth.<br/>
+He sih the gates ful of blod,<br/>
+Thelogonus and wher he stod<br/>
+He sih also, bot he ne knew<br/>
+What man it was, and to him threw    1700<br/>
+His Spere, and he sterte out asyde.<br/>
+Bot destine, which schal betide,<br/>
+Befell that ilke time so,<br/>
+Thelogonus knew nothing tho<br/>
+What man it was that to him caste,<br/>
+And while his oghne spere laste,<br/>
+With al the signe therupon<br/>
+He caste unto the king anon,<br/>
+And smot him with a dedly wounde.<br/>
+Uluxes fell anon to grounde;    1710<br/>
+Tho every man, “The king! the king!”<br/>
+Began to crie, and of this thing<br/>
+Thelogonus, which sih the cas,<br/>
+On knes he fell and seide, “Helas!<br/>
+I have min oghne fader slain:<br/>
+Nou wolde I deie wonder fain,<br/>
+Nou sle me who that evere wile,<br/>
+For certes it is right good skile.”<br/>
+He crith, he wepth, he seith therfore,<br/>
+“Helas, that evere was I bore,    1720<br/>
+That this unhappi destine<br/>
+So wofulli comth in be me!”<br/>
+This king, which yit hath lif ynouh,<br/>
+His herte ayein to him he drouh,<br/>
+And to that vois an Ere he leide<br/>
+And understod al that he seide,<br/>
+And gan to speke, and seide on hih,<br/>
+“Bring me this man.” And whan he sih<br/>
+Thelogonus, his thoght he sette<br/>
+Upon the swevene which he mette,    1730<br/>
+And axeth that he myhte se<br/>
+His spere, on which the fisshes thre<br/>
+He sih upon a pensel wroght.<br/>
+Tho wiste he wel it faileth noght,<br/>
+And badd him that he telle scholde<br/>
+Fro whenne he cam and what he wolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thelogonus in sorghe and wo<br/>
+So as he mihte tolde tho<br/>
+Unto Uluxes al the cas,<br/>
+Hou that Circes his moder was,    1740<br/>
+And so forth seide him everydel,<br/>
+Hou that his moder gret him wel,<br/>
+And in what wise sche him sente.<br/>
+Tho wiste Uluxes what it mente,<br/>
+And tok him in hise Armes softe,<br/>
+And al bledende he kest him ofte,<br/>
+And seide, “Sone, whil I live,<br/>
+This infortune I thee foryive.”<br/>
+After his other Sone in haste<br/>
+He sende, and he began him haste    1750<br/>
+And cam unto his fader tyt.<br/>
+Bot whan he sih him in such plit,<br/>
+He wolde have ronne upon that other<br/>
+Anon, and slain his oghne brother,<br/>
+Ne hadde be that Uluxes<br/>
+Betwen hem made acord and pes,<br/>
+And to his heir Thelamachus<br/>
+He bad that he Thelogonus<br/>
+With al his pouer scholde kepe,<br/>
+Til he were of his woundes depe    1760<br/>
+Al hol, and thanne he scholde him yive<br/>
+Lond wher upon he mihte live.<br/>
+Thelamachus, whan he this herde,<br/>
+Unto his fader he ansuerde<br/>
+And seide he wolde don his wille.<br/>
+So duelle thei togedre stille,<br/>
+These brethren, and the fader sterveth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, wherof Sorcerie serveth.<br/>
+Thurgh Sorcerie his lust he wan,<br/>
+Thurgh Sorcerie his wo began,    1770<br/>
+Thurgh Sorcerie his love he ches,<br/>
+Thurgh Sorcerie his lif he les;<br/>
+The child was gete in Sorcerie,<br/>
+The which dede al this felonie:<br/>
+Thing which was ayein kynde wroght<br/>
+Unkindeliche it was aboght;<br/>
+The child his oghne fader slowh,<br/>
+That was unkindeschipe ynowh.<br/>
+Forthi tak hiede hou that it is,<br/>
+So forto winne love amis,    1780<br/>
+Which endeth al his joie in wo:<br/>
+For of this Art I finde also,<br/>
+That hath be do for loves sake,<br/>
+Wherof thou miht ensample take,<br/>
+A gret Cronique imperial,<br/>
+Which evere into memorial<br/>
+Among the men, hou so it wende,<br/>
+Schal duelle to the worldes ende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hihe creatour of thinges,<br/>
+Which is the king of alle kinges,    1790<br/>
+Ful many a wonder worldes chance<br/>
+Let slyden under his suffrance;<br/>
+Ther wot noman the cause why,<br/>
+Bot he the which is almyhty.<br/>
+And that was proved whilom thus,<br/>
+Whan that the king Nectanabus,<br/>
+Which hadde Egipte forto lede,&mdash;<br/>
+Bot for he sih tofor the dede<br/>
+Thurgh magique of his Sorcerie,<br/>
+Wherof he couthe a gret partie,    1800<br/>
+Hise enemys to him comende,<br/>
+Fro whom he mihte him noght defende,<br/>
+Out of his oghne lond he fledde;<br/>
+And in the wise as he him dredde<br/>
+It fell, for al his wicchecraft,<br/>
+So that Egipte him was beraft,<br/>
+And he desguised fledde aweie<br/>
+Be schipe, and hield the rihte weie<br/>
+To Macedoine, wher that he<br/>
+Aryveth ate chief Cite.    1810<br/>
+Thre yomen of his chambre there<br/>
+Al only forto serve him were,<br/>
+The whiche he trusteth wonder wel,<br/>
+For thei were trewe as eny stiel;<br/>
+And hapneth that thei with him ladde<br/>
+Part of the beste good he hadde.<br/>
+Thei take logginge in the toun<br/>
+After the disposicion<br/>
+Wher as him thoghte best to duelle:<br/>
+He axeth thanne and herde telle    1820<br/>
+Hou that the king was oute go.<br/>
+Upon a werre he hadde tho;<br/>
+But in that Cite thanne was<br/>
+The queene, which Olimpias<br/>
+Was hote, and with sollempnete<br/>
+The feste of hir nativite,<br/>
+As it befell, was thanne holde;<br/>
+And for hire list to be beholde<br/>
+And preised of the poeple aboute,<br/>
+Sche schop hir forto riden oute    1830<br/>
+At after mete al openly.<br/>
+Anon were alle men redy,<br/>
+And that was in the monthe of Maii,<br/>
+This lusti queene in good arrai<br/>
+Was set upon a Mule whyt:<br/>
+To sen it was a gret delit<br/>
+The joie that the cite made;<br/>
+With freisshe thinges and with glade<br/>
+The noble toun was al behonged,<br/>
+And every wiht was sore alonged    1840<br/>
+To se this lusti ladi ryde.<br/>
+Ther was gret merthe on alle syde;<br/>
+Wher as sche passeth be the strete,<br/>
+Ther was ful many a tymber bete<br/>
+And many a maide carolende:<br/>
+And thus thurghout the toun pleiende<br/>
+This queene unto a pleine rod,<br/>
+Wher that sche hoved and abod<br/>
+To se diverse game pleie,<br/>
+The lusti folk jouste and tourneie;    1850<br/>
+And so forth every other man,<br/>
+Which pleie couthe, his pley began,<br/>
+To plese with this noble queene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nectanabus cam to the grene<br/>
+Amonges othre and drouh him nyh.<br/>
+Bot whan that he this ladi sih<br/>
+And of hir beaute hiede tok,<br/>
+He couthe noght withdrawe his lok<br/>
+To se noght elles in the field,<br/>
+Bot stod and only hire behield.    1860<br/>
+Of his clothinge and of his gere<br/>
+He was unlich alle othre there,<br/>
+So that it hapneth ate laste,<br/>
+The queene on him hire yhe caste,<br/>
+And knew that he was strange anon:<br/>
+Bot he behield hire evere in on<br/>
+Withoute blenchinge of his chere.<br/>
+Sche tok good hiede of his manere,<br/>
+And wondreth why he dede so,<br/>
+And bad men scholde for him go.    1870<br/>
+He cam and dede hire reverence,<br/>
+And sche him axeth in cilence<br/>
+For whenne he cam and what he wolde.<br/>
+And he with sobre wordes tolde,<br/>
+And seith, “Ma dame, a clerk I am,<br/>
+To you and in message I cam,<br/>
+The which I mai noght tellen hiere;<br/>
+Bot if it liketh you to hiere,<br/>
+It mot be seid al prively,<br/>
+Wher non schal be bot ye and I.”    1880<br/>
+Thus for the time he tok his leve.<br/>
+The dai goth forth til it was eve,<br/>
+That every man mot lete his werk;<br/>
+And sche thoghte evere upon this clerk,<br/>
+What thing it is he wolde mene:<br/>
+And in this wise abod the queene,<br/>
+And passeth over thilke nyht,<br/>
+Til it was on the morwe liht.<br/>
+Sche sende for him, and he com,<br/>
+With him his Astellabre he nom,    1890<br/>
+Which was of fin gold precious<br/>
+With pointz and cercles merveilous;<br/>
+And ek the hevenely figures<br/>
+Wroght in a bok ful of peintures<br/>
+He tok this ladi forto schewe,<br/>
+And tolde of ech of hem be rewe<br/>
+The cours and the condicion.<br/>
+And sche with gret affeccion<br/>
+Sat stille and herde what he wolde:<br/>
+And thus whan he sih time, he tolde,    1900<br/>
+And feigneth with hise wordes wise<br/>
+A tale, and seith in such a wise:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ma dame, bot a while ago,<br/>
+Wher I was in Egipte tho,<br/>
+And radde in scole of this science,<br/>
+It fell into mi conscience<br/>
+That I unto the temple wente,<br/>
+And ther with al myn hole entente<br/>
+As I mi sacrifice dede,<br/>
+On of the goddes hath me bede    1910<br/>
+That I you warne prively,<br/>
+So that ye make you redy,<br/>
+And that ye be nothing agast;<br/>
+For he such love hath to you cast,<br/>
+That ye schul ben his oghne diere,<br/>
+And he schal be your beddefiere,<br/>
+Til ye conceive and be with childe.”<br/>
+And with that word sche wax al mylde,<br/>
+And somdel red becam for schame,<br/>
+And axeth him that goddes name,    1920<br/>
+Which so wol don hire compainie.<br/>
+And he seide, “Amos of Lubie.”<br/>
+And sche seith, “That mai I noght lieve,<br/>
+Bot if I sihe a betre prieve.”<br/>
+“Ma dame,” quod Nectanabus,<br/>
+“In tokne that it schal be thus,<br/>
+This nyht for enformacion<br/>
+Ye schul have an avision:<br/>
+That Amos schal to you appiere,<br/>
+To schewe and teche in what manere    1930<br/>
+The thing schal afterward befalle.<br/>
+Ye oghten wel above alle<br/>
+To make joie of such a lord;<br/>
+For whan ye ben of on acord,<br/>
+He schal a Sone of you begete,<br/>
+Which with his swerd schal winne and gete<br/>
+The wyde world in lengthe and brede;<br/>
+Alle erthli kinges schull him drede,<br/>
+And in such wise, I you behote,<br/>
+The god of erthe he schal be hote.”    1940<br/>
+“If this be soth,” tho quod the queene,<br/>
+“This nyht, thou seist, it schal be sene.<br/>
+And if it falle into mi grace,<br/>
+Of god Amos, that I pourchace<br/>
+To take of him so gret worschipe,<br/>
+I wol do thee such ladischipe,<br/>
+Wherof thou schalt for everemo<br/>
+Be riche.” And he hir thonketh tho,<br/>
+And tok his leve and forth he wente.<br/>
+Sche wiste litel what he mente,    1950<br/>
+For it was guile and Sorcerie,<br/>
+Al that sche tok for Prophecie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nectanabus thurghout the day,<br/>
+Whan he cam hom wher as he lay,<br/>
+His chambre be himselve tok,<br/>
+And overtorneth many a bok,<br/>
+And thurgh the craft of Artemage<br/>
+Of wex he forgeth an ymage.<br/>
+He loketh his equacions<br/>
+And ek the constellacions,    1960<br/>
+He loketh the conjunccions,<br/>
+He loketh the recepcions,<br/>
+His signe, his houre, his ascendent,<br/>
+And drawth fortune of his assent:<br/>
+The name of queene Olimpias<br/>
+In thilke ymage write was<br/>
+Amiddes in the front above.<br/>
+And thus to winne his lust of love<br/>
+Nectanabus this werk hath diht;<br/>
+And whan it cam withinne nyht,    1970<br/>
+That every wyht is falle aslepe,<br/>
+He thoghte he wolde his time kepe,<br/>
+As he which hath his houre apointed.<br/>
+And thanne ferst he hath enoignted<br/>
+With sondri herbes that figure,<br/>
+And therupon he gan conjure,<br/>
+So that thurgh his enchantement<br/>
+This ladi, which was innocent<br/>
+And wiste nothing of this guile,<br/>
+Mette, as sche slepte thilke while,    1980<br/>
+Hou fro the hevene cam a lyht,<br/>
+Which al hir chambre made lyht;<br/>
+And as sche loketh to and fro,<br/>
+Sche sih, hir thoghte, a dragoun tho,<br/>
+Whos scherdes schynen as the Sonne,<br/>
+And hath his softe pas begonne<br/>
+With al the chiere that he may<br/>
+Toward the bedd ther as sche lay,<br/>
+Til he cam to the beddes side.<br/>
+And sche lai stille and nothing cride,    1990<br/>
+For he dede alle his thinges faire<br/>
+And was courteis and debonaire:<br/>
+And as he stod hire fasteby,<br/>
+His forme he changeth sodeinly,<br/>
+And the figure of man he nom,<br/>
+To hire and into bedde he com,<br/>
+And such thing there of love he wroghte,<br/>
+Wherof, so as hire thanne thoghte,<br/>
+Thurgh likinge of this god Amos<br/>
+With childe anon hire wombe aros,    2000<br/>
+And sche was wonder glad withal.<br/>
+Nectanabus, which causeth al<br/>
+Of this metrede the substance,<br/>
+Whan he sih time, his nigromance<br/>
+He stinte and nothing more seide<br/>
+Of his carecte, and sche abreide<br/>
+Out of hir slep, and lieveth wel<br/>
+That it is soth thanne everydel<br/>
+Of that this clerk hire hadde told,<br/>
+And was the gladdere manyfold    2010<br/>
+In hope of such a glad metrede,<br/>
+Which after schal befalle in dede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sche longeth sore after the dai,<br/>
+That sche hir swevene telle mai<br/>
+To this guilour in privete,<br/>
+Which kneu it als so wel as sche:<br/>
+And natheles on morwe sone<br/>
+Sche lefte alle other thing to done,<br/>
+And for him sende, and al the cas<br/>
+Sche tolde him pleinly as it was,    2020<br/>
+And seide hou thanne wel sche wiste<br/>
+That sche his wordes mihte triste,<br/>
+For sche fond hire Avisioun<br/>
+Riht after the condicion<br/>
+Which he hire hadde told tofore;<br/>
+And preide him hertely therfore<br/>
+That he hire holde covenant<br/>
+So forth of al the remenant,<br/>
+That sche may thurgh his ordinance<br/>
+Toward the god do such plesance,    2030<br/>
+That sche wakende myhte him kepe<br/>
+In such wise as sche mette aslepe.<br/>
+And he, that couthe of guile ynouh,<br/>
+Whan he this herde, of joie he louh,<br/>
+And seith, “Ma dame, it schal be do.<br/>
+Bot this I warne you therto:<br/>
+This nyht, whan that he comth to pleie,<br/>
+That ther be no lif in the weie<br/>
+Bot I, that schal at his likinge<br/>
+Ordeine so for his cominge,    2040<br/>
+That ye ne schull noght of him faile.<br/>
+For this, ma dame, I you consaile,<br/>
+That ye it kepe so prive,<br/>
+That no wiht elles bot we thre<br/>
+Have knowlechinge hou that it is;<br/>
+For elles mihte it fare amis,<br/>
+If ye dede oght that scholde him grieve.”<br/>
+And thus he makth hire to believe,<br/>
+And feigneth under guile feith:<br/>
+Bot natheles al that he seith    2050<br/>
+Sche troweth; and ayein the nyht<br/>
+Sche hath withinne hire chambre dyht,<br/>
+Wher as this guilour faste by<br/>
+Upon this god schal prively<br/>
+Awaite, as he makth hire to wene:<br/>
+And thus this noble gentil queene,<br/>
+Whan sche most trusteth, was deceived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nyht com, and the chambre is weyved,<br/>
+Nectanabus hath take his place,<br/>
+And whan he sih the time and space,    2060<br/>
+Thurgh the deceipte of his magique<br/>
+He putte him out of mannes like,<br/>
+And of a dragoun tok the forme,<br/>
+As he which wolde him al conforme<br/>
+To that sche sih in swevene er this;<br/>
+And thus to chambre come he is.<br/>
+The queene lay abedde and sih,<br/>
+And hopeth evere, as he com nyh,<br/>
+That he god of Lubye were,<br/>
+So hath sche wel the lasse fere.    2070<br/>
+Bot for he wolde hire more assure,<br/>
+Yit eft he changeth his figure,<br/>
+And of a wether the liknesse<br/>
+He tok, in signe of his noblesse<br/>
+With large hornes for the nones:<br/>
+Of fin gold and of riche stones<br/>
+A corone on his hed he bar,<br/>
+And soudeinly, er sche was war,<br/>
+As he which alle guile can,<br/>
+His forme he torneth into man,    2080<br/>
+And cam to bedde, and sche lai stille,<br/>
+Wher as sche soffreth al his wille,<br/>
+As sche which wende noght misdo.<br/>
+Bot natheles it hapneth so,<br/>
+Althogh sche were in part deceived,<br/>
+Yit for al that sche hath conceived<br/>
+The worthieste of alle kiththe,<br/>
+Which evere was tofore or siththe<br/>
+Of conqueste and chivalerie;<br/>
+So that thurgh guile and Sorcerie    2090<br/>
+Ther was that noble knyht begunne,<br/>
+Which al the world hath after wunne.<br/>
+Thus fell the thing which falle scholde,<br/>
+Nectanabus hath that he wolde;<br/>
+With guile he hath his love sped,<br/>
+With guile he cam into the bed,<br/>
+With guile he goth him out ayein:<br/>
+He was a schrewed chamberlein,<br/>
+So to beguile a worthi queene,<br/>
+And that on him was after seene.    2100<br/>
+Bot natheles the thing is do;<br/>
+This false god was sone go,<br/>
+With his deceipte and hield him clos,<br/>
+Til morwe cam, that he aros.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And tho, whan time and leisir was,<br/>
+The queene tolde him al the cas,<br/>
+As sche that guile non supposeth;<br/>
+And of tuo pointz sche him opposeth.<br/>
+On was, if that this god nomore<br/>
+Wol come ayein, and overmore,    2110<br/>
+Hou sche schal stonden in acord<br/>
+With king Philippe hire oghne lord,<br/>
+Whan he comth hom and seth hire grone.<br/>
+“Ma dame,” he seith, “let me alone:<br/>
+As for the god I undertake<br/>
+That whan it liketh you to take<br/>
+His compaignie at eny throwe,<br/>
+If I a day tofore it knowe,<br/>
+He schal be with you on the nyht;<br/>
+And he is wel of such a myht    2120<br/>
+To kepe you from alle blame.<br/>
+Forthi conforte you, ma dame,<br/>
+Ther schal non other cause be.”<br/>
+Thus tok he leve and forth goth he,<br/>
+And tho began he forto muse<br/>
+Hou he the queene mihte excuse<br/>
+Toward the king of that is falle;<br/>
+And fond a craft amonges alle,<br/>
+Thurgh which he hath a See foul daunted,<br/>
+With his magique and so enchaunted,    2130<br/>
+That he flyh forth, whan it was nyht,<br/>
+Unto the kinges tente riht,<br/>
+Wher that he lay amidde his host:<br/>
+And whanne he was aslepe most,<br/>
+With that the See foul to him broghte<br/>
+And othre charmes, whiche he wroghte<br/>
+At hom withinne his chambre stille,<br/>
+The king he torneth at his wille,<br/>
+And makth him forto dreme and se<br/>
+The dragoun and the privete    2140<br/>
+Which was betuen him and the queene.<br/>
+And over that he made him wene<br/>
+In swevene, hou that the god Amos,<br/>
+Whan he up fro the queene aros,<br/>
+Tok forth a ring, wherinne a ston<br/>
+Was set, and grave therupon<br/>
+A Sonne, in which, whan he cam nyh,<br/>
+A leoun with a swerd he sih;<br/>
+And with that priente, as he tho mette,<br/>
+Upon the queenes wombe he sette    2150<br/>
+A Seal, and goth him forth his weie.<br/>
+With that the swevene wente aweie,<br/>
+And tho began the king awake<br/>
+And sigheth for his wyves sake,<br/>
+Wher as he lay withinne his tente,<br/>
+And hath gret wonder what it mente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he hasteth him to ryse<br/>
+Anon, and sende after the wise,<br/>
+Among the whiche ther was on,<br/>
+A clerc, his name is Amphion:    2160<br/>
+Whan he the kinges swevene herde,<br/>
+What it betokneth he ansuerde,<br/>
+And seith, “So siker as the lif,<br/>
+A god hath leie be thi wif,<br/>
+And gete a Sone, which schal winne<br/>
+The world and al that is withinne.<br/>
+As leon is the king of bestes,<br/>
+So schal the world obeie his hestes,<br/>
+Which with his swerd schal al be wonne,<br/>
+Als ferr as schyneth eny Sonne.”    2170
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king was doubtif of this dom;<br/>
+Bot natheles, whan that he com<br/>
+Ayein into his oghne lond,<br/>
+His wif with childe gret he fond.<br/>
+He mihte noght himselve stiere,<br/>
+That he ne made hire hevy chiere;<br/>
+Bot he which couthe of alle sorwe,<br/>
+Nectanabus, upon the morwe<br/>
+Thurgh the deceipte and nigromance<br/>
+Tok of a dragoun the semblance,    2180<br/>
+And wher the king sat in his halle,<br/>
+Com in rampende among hem alle<br/>
+With such a noise and such a rore,<br/>
+That thei agast were also sore<br/>
+As thogh thei scholde deie anon.<br/>
+And natheles he grieveth non,<br/>
+Bot goth toward the deyss on hih;<br/>
+And whan he cam the queene nyh,<br/>
+He stinte his noise, and in his wise<br/>
+To hire he profreth his servise,    2190<br/>
+And leith his hed upon hire barm;<br/>
+And sche with goodly chiere hire arm<br/>
+Aboute his necke ayeinward leide,<br/>
+And thus the queene with him pleide<br/>
+In sihte of alle men aboute.<br/>
+And ate laste he gan to loute<br/>
+And obeissance unto hire make,<br/>
+As he that wolde his leve take;<br/>
+And sodeinly his lothly forme<br/>
+Into an Egle he gan transforme,    2200<br/>
+And flyh and sette him on a raile;<br/>
+Wherof the king hath gret mervaile,<br/>
+For there he pruneth him and piketh,<br/>
+As doth an hauk whan him wel liketh,<br/>
+And after that himself he schok,<br/>
+Wherof that al the halle quok,<br/>
+As it a terremote were;<br/>
+Thei seiden alle, god was there:<br/>
+In such a res and forth he flyh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which al this wonder syh,    2210<br/>
+Whan he cam to his chambre alone,<br/>
+Unto the queene he made his mone<br/>
+And of foryivenesse hir preide;<br/>
+For thanne he knew wel, as he seide,<br/>
+Sche was with childe with a godd.<br/>
+Thus was the king withoute rodd<br/>
+Chastised, and the queene excused<br/>
+Of that sche hadde ben accused.<br/>
+And for the gretere evidence,<br/>
+Yit after that in the presence    2220<br/>
+Of king Philipp and othre mo,<br/>
+Whan thei ride in the fieldes tho,<br/>
+A Phesant cam before here yhe,<br/>
+The which anon as thei hire syhe,<br/>
+Fleende let an ey doun falle,<br/>
+And it tobrak tofore hem alle:<br/>
+And as thei token therof kepe,<br/>
+Thei syhe out of the schelle crepe<br/>
+A litel Serpent on the ground,<br/>
+Which rampeth al aboute round,    2230<br/>
+And in ayein it wolde have wonne,<br/>
+Bot for the brennynge of the Sonne<br/>
+It mihte noght, and so it deide.<br/>
+And therupon the clerkes seide,<br/>
+“As the Serpent, whan it was oute,<br/>
+Went enviroun the schelle aboute<br/>
+And mihte noght torne in ayein,<br/>
+So schal it fallen in certein:<br/>
+This child the world schal environe,<br/>
+And above alle the corone    2240<br/>
+Him schal befalle, and in yong Age<br/>
+He schal desire in his corage,<br/>
+Whan al the world is in his hond,<br/>
+To torn ayein into the lond<br/>
+Wher he was bore, and in his weie<br/>
+Homward he schal with puison deie.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which al this sih and herde,<br/>
+Fro that dai forth, hou so it ferde,<br/>
+His jalousie hath al foryete.<br/>
+Bot he which hath the child begete,    2250<br/>
+Nectanabus, in privete<br/>
+The time of his nativite<br/>
+Upon the constellacioun<br/>
+Awaiteth, and relacion<br/>
+Makth to the queene hou sche schal do,<br/>
+And every houre apointeth so,<br/>
+That no mynut therof was lore.<br/>
+So that in due time is bore<br/>
+This child, and forth with therupon<br/>
+Ther felle wondres many on    2260<br/>
+Of terremote universiel:<br/>
+The Sonne tok colour of stiel<br/>
+And loste his lyht, the wyndes blewe,<br/>
+And manye strengthes overthrewe;<br/>
+The See his propre kinde changeth,<br/>
+And al the world his forme strangeth;<br/>
+The thonder with his fyri levene<br/>
+So cruel was upon the hevene,<br/>
+That every erthli creature<br/>
+Tho thoghte his lif in aventure.    2270<br/>
+The tempeste ate laste cesseth,<br/>
+The child is kept, his age encresseth,<br/>
+And Alisandre his name is hote,<br/>
+To whom Calistre and Aristote<br/>
+To techen him Philosophie<br/>
+Entenden, and Astronomie,<br/>
+With othre thinges whiche he couthe<br/>
+Also, to teche him in his youthe<br/>
+Nectanabus tok upon honde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot every man mai understonde,    2280<br/>
+Of Sorcerie hou that it wende,<br/>
+It wole himselve prove at ende,<br/>
+And namely forto beguile<br/>
+A lady, which withoute guile<br/>
+Supposeth trouthe al that sche hiereth:<br/>
+Bot often he that evele stiereth<br/>
+His Schip is dreynt therinne amidde;<br/>
+And in this cas riht so betidde.<br/>
+Nectanabus upon a nyht,<br/>
+Whan it was fair and sterre lyht,    2290<br/>
+This yonge lord ladde up on hih<br/>
+Above a tour, wher as he sih<br/>
+Thee sterres such as he acompteth,<br/>
+And seith what ech of hem amonteth,<br/>
+As thogh he knewe of alle thing;<br/>
+Bot yit hath he no knowleching<br/>
+What schal unto himself befalle.<br/>
+Whan he hath told his wordes alle,<br/>
+This yonge lord thanne him opposeth,<br/>
+And axeth if that he supposeth    2300<br/>
+What deth he schal himselve deie.<br/>
+He seith, “Or fortune is aweie<br/>
+And every sterre hath lost his wone,<br/>
+Or elles of myn oghne Sone<br/>
+I schal be slain, I mai noght fle.”<br/>
+Thoghte Alisandre in privete,<br/>
+“Hierof this olde dotard lieth”:<br/>
+And er that other oght aspieth,<br/>
+Al sodeinliche his olde bones<br/>
+He schof over the wal at ones,    2310<br/>
+And seith him, “Ly doun there apart:<br/>
+Wherof nou serveth al thin art?<br/>
+Thou knewe alle othre mennes chance<br/>
+And of thiself hast ignorance:<br/>
+That thou hast seid amonges alle<br/>
+Of thi persone, is noght befalle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nectanabus, which hath his deth,<br/>
+Yit while him lasteth lif and breth,<br/>
+To Alisandre he spak and seide<br/>
+That he with wrong blame on him leide    2320<br/>
+Fro point to point and al the cas<br/>
+He tolde, hou he his Sone was.<br/>
+Tho he, which sory was ynowh,<br/>
+Out of the dich his fader drouh,<br/>
+And tolde his moder hou it ferde<br/>
+In conseil; and whan sche it herde<br/>
+And kneu the toknes whiche he tolde,<br/>
+Sche nyste what sche seie scholde,<br/>
+Bot stod abayssht as for the while<br/>
+Of his magique and al the guile.    2330<br/>
+Sche thoghte hou that sche was deceived,<br/>
+That sche hath of a man conceived,<br/>
+And wende a god it hadde be.<br/>
+Bot natheles in such degre,<br/>
+So as sche mihte hire honour save,<br/>
+Sche schop the body was begrave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus Nectanabus aboghte<br/>
+The Sorcerie which he wroghte:<br/>
+Thogh he upon the creatures<br/>
+Thurgh his carectes and figures    2340<br/>
+The maistrie and the pouer hadde,<br/>
+His creatour to noght him ladde,<br/>
+Ayein whos lawe his craft he useth,<br/>
+Whan he for lust his god refuseth,<br/>
+And tok him to the dieules craft.<br/>
+Lo, what profit him is belaft:<br/>
+That thing thurgh which he wende have stonde,<br/>
+Ferst him exilede out of londe<br/>
+Which was his oghne, and from a king<br/>
+Made him to ben an underling;    2350<br/>
+And siththen to deceive a queene,<br/>
+That torneth him to mochel teene;<br/>
+Thurgh lust of love he gat him hate,<br/>
+That ende couthe he noght abate.<br/>
+His olde sleyhtes whiche he caste,<br/>
+Yonge Alisaundre hem overcaste,<br/>
+His fader, which him misbegat,<br/>
+He slouh, a gret mishap was that;<br/>
+Bot for o mis an other mys<br/>
+Was yolde, and so fulofte it is;    2360<br/>
+Nectanabus his craft miswente,<br/>
+So it misfell him er he wente.<br/>
+I not what helpeth that clergie<br/>
+Which makth a man to do folie,<br/>
+And nameliche of nigromance,<br/>
+Which stant upon the mescreance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto se more evidence,<br/>
+Zorastes, which thexperience<br/>
+Of Art magique ferst forth drouh,<br/>
+Anon as he was bore, he louh,    2370<br/>
+Which tokne was of wo suinge:<br/>
+For of his oghne controvinge<br/>
+He fond magique and tauhte it forth;<br/>
+Bot al that was him litel worth,<br/>
+For of Surrie a worthi king<br/>
+Him slou, and that was his endyng.<br/>
+Bot yit thurgh him this craft is used,<br/>
+And he thurgh al the world accused,<br/>
+For it schal nevere wel achieve<br/>
+That stant noght riht with the believe:    2380<br/>
+Bot lich to wolle is evele sponne,<br/>
+Who lest himself hath litel wonne,<br/>
+An ende proveth every thing.<br/>
+Saul, which was of Juys king,<br/>
+Up peine of deth forbad this art,<br/>
+And yit he tok therof his part.<br/>
+The Phitonesse in Samarie<br/>
+Yaf him conseil be Sorcerie,<br/>
+Which after fell to mochel sorwe,<br/>
+For he was slain upon the morwe.    2390
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To conne moche thing it helpeth,<br/>
+Bot of to mochel noman yelpeth:<br/>
+So forto loke on every side,<br/>
+Magique mai noght wel betyde.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, I wolde rede<br/>
+That thou of these ensamples drede,<br/>
+That for no lust of erthli love<br/>
+Thou seche so to come above,<br/>
+Wherof as in the worldes wonder<br/>
+Thou schalt for evere be put under.    2400
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode fader, grant mercy,<br/>
+For evere I schal be war therby:<br/>
+Of love what me so befalle,<br/>
+Such Sorcerie aboven alle<br/>
+Fro this dai forth I schal eschuie,<br/>
+That so ne wol I noght poursuie<br/>
+Mi lust of love forto seche.<br/>
+Bot this I wolde you beseche,<br/>
+Beside that me stant of love,<br/>
+As I you herde speke above    2410<br/>
+Hou Alisandre was betawht<br/>
+To Aristotle, and so wel tawht<br/>
+Of al that to a king belongeth,<br/>
+Wherof min herte sore longeth<br/>
+To wite what it wolde mene.<br/>
+For be reson I wolde wene<br/>
+That if I herde of thinges strange,<br/>
+Yit for a time it scholde change<br/>
+Mi peine, and lisse me somdiel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode Sone, thou seist wel.    2420<br/>
+For wisdom, hou that evere it stonde,<br/>
+To him that can it understonde<br/>
+Doth gret profit in sondri wise;<br/>
+Bot touchende of so hih aprise,<br/>
+Which is noght unto Venus knowe,<br/>
+I mai it noght miselve knowe,<br/>
+Which of hir court am al forthdrawe<br/>
+And can nothing bot of hir lawe.<br/>
+Bot natheles to knowe more<br/>
+Als wel as thou me longeth sore;    2430<br/>
+And for it helpeth to comune,<br/>
+Al ben thei noght to me comune,<br/>
+The scoles of Philosophie,<br/>
+Yit thenke I forto specefie,<br/>
+In boke as it is comprehended,<br/>
+Wherof thou mihtest ben amended.<br/>
+For thogh I be noght al cunnynge<br/>
+Upon the forme of this wrytynge,<br/>
+Som part therof yit have I herd,<br/>
+In this matiere hou it hath ferd.    2440
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Sextus
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0008"></a>
+Incipit Liber Septimus.</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Omnibus in causis sapiens doctrina salutem<br/>
+    Consequitur, nec habet quis nisi doctus opem.<br/>
+Naturam superat doctrina, viro quod et ortus<br/>
+    Ingenii docilis non dedit, ipsa dabit.<br/>
+Non ita discretus hominum per climata regnat,<br/>
+    Quin magis ut sapiat, indiget ipse schole.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I Genius the prest of love,<br/>
+Mi Sone, as thou hast preid above<br/>
+That I the Scole schal declare<br/>
+Of Aristotle and ek the fare<br/>
+Of Alisandre, hou he was tauht,<br/>
+I am somdel therof destrauht;<br/>
+For it is noght to the matiere<br/>
+Of love, why we sitten hiere<br/>
+To schryve, so as Venus bad.<br/>
+Bot natheles, for it is glad,    10<br/>
+So as thou seist, for thin aprise<br/>
+To hiere of suche thinges wise,<br/>
+Wherof thou myht the time lisse,<br/>
+So as I can, I schal the wisse:<br/>
+For wisdom is at every throwe<br/>
+Above alle other thing to knowe<br/>
+In loves cause and elleswhere.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, unto thin Ere,<br/>
+Though it be noght in the registre<br/>
+Of Venus, yit of that Calistre    20<br/>
+And Aristotle whylom write<br/>
+To Alisandre, thou schalt wite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot for the lores ben diverse,<br/>
+I thenke ferst to the reherce<br/>
+The nature of Philosophie,<br/>
+Which Aristotle of his clergie,<br/>
+Wys and expert in the sciences,<br/>
+Declareth thilke intelligences,<br/>
+As of thre pointz in principal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherof the ferste in special    30<br/>
+Is Theorique, which is grounded<br/>
+On him which al the world hath founded,<br/>
+Which comprehendeth al the lore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto loken overmore,<br/>
+Next of sciences the seconde<br/>
+Is Rethorique, whos faconde<br/>
+Above alle othre is eloquent:<br/>
+To telle a tale in juggement<br/>
+So wel can noman speke as he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The laste science of the thre    40<br/>
+It is Practique, whos office<br/>
+The vertu tryeth fro the vice,<br/>
+And techeth upon goode thewes<br/>
+To fle the compaignie of schrewes,<br/>
+Which stant in disposicion<br/>
+Of mannes free eleccion.<br/>
+Practique enformeth ek the reule,<br/>
+Hou that a worthi king schal reule<br/>
+His Realme bothe in werre and pes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus danz Aristotiles    50<br/>
+These thre sciences hath divided<br/>
+And the nature also decided,<br/>
+Wherof that ech of hem schal serve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste, which is the conserve<br/>
+And kepere of the remnant,<br/>
+As that which is most sufficant<br/>
+And chief of the Philosophie,<br/>
+If I therof schal specefie<br/>
+So as the Philosophre tolde,<br/>
+Nou herkne, and kep that thou it holde.    60
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Theorique principal<br/>
+The Philosophre in special<br/>
+The propretees hath determined,<br/>
+As thilke which is enlumined<br/>
+Of wisdom and of hih prudence<br/>
+Above alle othre in his science:<br/>
+And stant departed upon thre,<br/>
+The ferste of which in his degre<br/>
+Is cleped in Philosophie<br/>
+The science of Theologie,    70<br/>
+That other named is Phisique,<br/>
+The thridde is seid Mathematique.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theologie is that science<br/>
+Which unto man yifth evidence<br/>
+Of thing which is noght bodely,<br/>
+Wherof men knowe redely<br/>
+The hihe almyhti Trinite,<br/>
+Which is o god in unite<br/>
+Withouten ende and beginnynge<br/>
+And creatour of alle thinge,    80<br/>
+Of hevene, of erthe and ek of helle.<br/>
+Wherof, as olde bokes telle,<br/>
+The Philosophre in his resoun<br/>
+Wrot upon this conclusioun,<br/>
+And of his wrytinge in a clause<br/>
+He clepeth god the ferste cause,<br/>
+Which of himself is thilke good,<br/>
+Withoute whom nothing is good,<br/>
+Of which that every creature<br/>
+Hath his beinge and his nature.    90<br/>
+After the beinge of the thinges<br/>
+Ther ben thre formes of beinges:<br/>
+Thing which began and ende schal,<br/>
+That thing is cleped temporal;<br/>
+Ther is also be other weie<br/>
+Thing which began and schal noght deie.<br/>
+As Soules, that ben spiritiel,<br/>
+Here beinge is perpetuel:<br/>
+Bot ther is on above the Sonne,<br/>
+Whos time nevere was begonne,    100<br/>
+And endeles schal evere be;<br/>
+That is the god, whos mageste<br/>
+Alle othre thinges schal governe,<br/>
+And his beinge is sempiterne.<br/>
+The god, to whom that al honour<br/>
+Belongeth, he is creatour,<br/>
+And othre ben hise creatures:<br/>
+The god commandeth the natures<br/>
+That thei to him obeien alle;<br/>
+Withouten him, what so befalle,    110<br/>
+Her myht is non, and he mai al:<br/>
+The god was evere and evere schal,<br/>
+And thei begonne of his assent;<br/>
+The times alle be present<br/>
+To god, to hem and alle unknowe,<br/>
+Bot what him liketh that thei knowe:<br/>
+Thus bothe an angel and a man,<br/>
+The whiche of al that god began<br/>
+Be chief, obeien goddes myht,<br/>
+And he stant endeles upriht.    120<br/>
+To this science ben prive<br/>
+The clerkes of divinite,<br/>
+The whiche unto the poeple prechen<br/>
+The feith of holi cherche and techen,<br/>
+Which in som cas upon believe<br/>
+Stant more than thei conne prieve<br/>
+Be weie of Argument sensible:<br/>
+Bot natheles it is credible,<br/>
+And doth a man gret meede have,<br/>
+To him that thenkth himself to save.    130<br/>
+Theologie in such a wise<br/>
+Of hih science and hih aprise<br/>
+Above alle othre stant unlike,<br/>
+And is the ferste of Theorique.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phisique is after the secounde,<br/>
+Thurgh which the Philosophre hath founde<br/>
+To techen sondri knowlechinges<br/>
+Upon the bodiliche thinges.<br/>
+Of man, of beste, of herbe, of ston,<br/>
+Of fissch, of foughl, of everychon    140<br/>
+That ben of bodely substance,<br/>
+The nature and the circumstance<br/>
+Thurgh this science it is ful soght,<br/>
+Which vaileth and which vaileth noght.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde point of Theorique,<br/>
+Which cleped is Mathematique,<br/>
+Devided is in sondri wise<br/>
+And stant upon diverse aprise.<br/>
+The ferste of whiche is Arsmetique,<br/>
+And the secounde is seid Musique,    150<br/>
+The thridde is ek Geometrie,<br/>
+Also the ferthe Astronomie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Arsmetique the matiere<br/>
+Is that of which a man mai liere<br/>
+What Algorisme in nombre amonteth,<br/>
+Whan that the wise man acompteth<br/>
+After the formel proprete<br/>
+Of Algorismes Abece:<br/>
+Be which multiplicacioun<br/>
+Is mad and diminucioun    160<br/>
+Of sommes be thexperience<br/>
+Of this Art and of this science.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The seconde of Mathematique,<br/>
+Which is the science of Musique,<br/>
+That techeth upon Armonie<br/>
+A man to make melodie<br/>
+Be vois and soun of instrument<br/>
+Thurgh notes of acordement,<br/>
+The whiche men pronounce alofte,<br/>
+Nou scharpe notes and nou softe,    170<br/>
+Nou hihe notes and nou lowe,<br/>
+As be the gamme a man mai knowe,<br/>
+Which techeth the prolacion<br/>
+Of note and the condicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mathematique of his science<br/>
+Hath yit the thridde intelligence<br/>
+Full of wisdom and of clergie<br/>
+And cleped is Geometrie,<br/>
+Thurgh which a man hath thilke sleyhte,<br/>
+Of lengthe, of brede, of depthe, of heyhte    180<br/>
+To knowe the proporcion<br/>
+Be verrai calculacion<br/>
+Of this science: and in this wise<br/>
+These olde Philosophres wise,<br/>
+Of al this worldes erthe round,<br/>
+Hou large, hou thikke was the ground,<br/>
+Controeveden thexperience;<br/>
+The cercle and the circumference<br/>
+Of every thing unto the hevene<br/>
+Thei setten point and mesure evene.    190
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mathematique above therthe<br/>
+Of hyh science hath yit the ferthe,<br/>
+Which spekth upon Astronomie<br/>
+And techeth of the sterres hihe,<br/>
+Beginnynge upward fro the mone.<br/>
+Bot ferst, as it was forto done,<br/>
+This Aristotle in other thing<br/>
+Unto this worthi yonge king<br/>
+The kinde of every element<br/>
+Which stant under the firmament,    200<br/>
+Hou it is mad and in what wise,<br/>
+Fro point to point he gan devise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tofore the creacion<br/>
+Of eny worldes stacion,<br/>
+Of hevene, of erthe, or eke of helle,<br/>
+So as these olde bokes telle,<br/>
+As soun tofore the song is set<br/>
+And yit thei ben togedre knet,<br/>
+Riht so the hihe pourveance<br/>
+Tho hadde under his ordinance    210<br/>
+A gret substance, a gret matiere,<br/>
+Of which he wolde in his manere<br/>
+These othre thinges make and forme.<br/>
+For yit withouten eny forme<br/>
+Was that matiere universal,<br/>
+Which hihte Ylem in special.<br/>
+Of Ylem, as I    am enformed,<br/>
+These elementz ben mad and formed,<br/>
+Of Ylem elementz they hote<br/>
+After the Scole of Aristote,    220<br/>
+Of whiche if more I schal reherce,<br/>
+Foure elementz ther ben diverse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste of hem men erthe calle,<br/>
+Which is the lowest of hem alle,<br/>
+And in his forme is schape round,<br/>
+Substancial, strong, sadd and sound,<br/>
+As that which mad is sufficant<br/>
+To bere up al the remenant.<br/>
+For as the point in a compas<br/>
+Stant evene amiddes, riht so was    230<br/>
+This erthe set and schal abyde,<br/>
+That it may swerve to no side,<br/>
+And hath his centre after the lawe<br/>
+Of kinde, and to that centre drawe<br/>
+Desireth every worldes thing,<br/>
+If ther ne were no lettyng.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Above therthe kepth his bounde<br/>
+The water, which is the secounde<br/>
+Of elementz, and al withoute<br/>
+It environeth therthe aboute.    240<br/>
+Bot as it scheweth, noght forthi<br/>
+This soubtil water myhtely,<br/>
+Thogh it be of himselve softe,<br/>
+The strengthe of therthe perceth ofte;<br/>
+For riht as veines ben of blod<br/>
+In man, riht so the water flod<br/>
+Therthe of his cours makth ful of veines,<br/>
+Als wel the helles as the pleines.<br/>
+And that a man may sen at ije,<br/>
+For wher the hulles ben most hyhe,    250<br/>
+Ther mai men welle stremes finde:<br/>
+So proveth it be weie of kinde<br/>
+The water heyher than the lond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And over this nou understond,<br/>
+Air is the thridde of elementz,<br/>
+Of whos kinde his aspirementz<br/>
+Takth every lifissh creature,<br/>
+The which schal upon erthe endure:<br/>
+For as the fissh, if it be dreie,<br/>
+Mot in defaute of water deie,    260<br/>
+Riht so withouten Air on lyve<br/>
+No man ne beste myhte thryve,<br/>
+The which is mad of fleissh and bon;<br/>
+There is outake of alle non.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Air in Periferies thre<br/>
+Divided is of such degre,<br/>
+Benethe is on and on amidde,<br/>
+To whiche above is set the thridde:<br/>
+And upon the divisions<br/>
+There ben diverse impressions    270<br/>
+Of moist and ek of drye also,<br/>
+Whiche of the Sonne bothe tuo<br/>
+Ben drawe and haled upon hy,<br/>
+And maken cloudes in the Sky,<br/>
+As schewed is at mannes sihte;<br/>
+Wherof be day and ek be nyhte<br/>
+After the times of the yer<br/>
+Among ous upon Erthe her<br/>
+In sondri wise thinges falle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste Periferie of alle    280<br/>
+Engendreth Myst and overmore<br/>
+The dewes and the Frostes hore,<br/>
+After thilke intersticion<br/>
+In which thei take impression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fro the seconde, as bokes sein,<br/>
+The moiste dropes of the reyn<br/>
+Descenden into Middilerthe,<br/>
+And tempreth it to sed and Erthe,<br/>
+And doth to springe grass and flour.<br/>
+And ofte also the grete schour    290<br/>
+Out of such place it mai be take,<br/>
+That it the forme schal forsake<br/>
+Of reyn, and into snow be torned;<br/>
+And ek it mai be so sojorned<br/>
+In sondri places up alofte,<br/>
+That into hail it torneth ofte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde of thair after the lawe<br/>
+Thurgh such matiere as up is drawe<br/>
+Of dreie thing, as it is ofte,<br/>
+Among the cloudes upon lofte,    300<br/>
+And is so clos, it may noght oute,&mdash;<br/>
+Thanne is it chased sore aboute,<br/>
+Til it to fyr and leyt be falle,<br/>
+And thanne it brekth the cloudes alle,<br/>
+The whiche of so gret noyse craken,<br/>
+That thei the feerful thonder maken.<br/>
+The thonderstrok smit er it leyte,<br/>
+And yit men sen the fyr and leyte,<br/>
+The thonderstrok er that men hiere:<br/>
+So mai it wel be proeved hiere    310<br/>
+In thing which schewed is fro feer,<br/>
+A mannes yhe is there nerr<br/>
+Thanne is the soun to mannes Ere.<br/>
+And natheles it is gret feere<br/>
+Bothe of the strok and of the fyr,<br/>
+Of which is no recoverir<br/>
+In place wher that thei descende,<br/>
+Bot if god wolde his grace sende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto speken over this,<br/>
+In this partie of thair it is    320<br/>
+That men fulofte sen be nyhte<br/>
+The fyr in sondri forme alyhte.<br/>
+Somtime the fyrdrake it semeth,<br/>
+And so the lewed poeple it demeth;<br/>
+Somtime it semeth as it were<br/>
+A Sterre, which that glydeth there:<br/>
+Bot it is nouther of the tuo,<br/>
+The Philosophre telleth so,<br/>
+And seith that of impressions<br/>
+Thurgh diverse exalacions    330<br/>
+Upon the cause and the matiere<br/>
+Men sen diverse forme appiere<br/>
+Of fyr, the which hath sondri name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Assub, he seith, is thilke same,<br/>
+The which in sondry place is founde,<br/>
+Whanne it is falle doun to grounde,<br/>
+So as the fyr it hath aneled,<br/>
+Lich unto slym which is congeled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of exalacion I finde<br/>
+Fyr kinled of the fame kinde,    340<br/>
+Bot it is of an other forme;<br/>
+Wherof, if that I schal conforme<br/>
+The figure unto that it is,<br/>
+These olde clerkes tellen this,<br/>
+That it is lik a Got skippende,<br/>
+And for that it is such semende,<br/>
+It hatte Capra saliens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ek these Astronomiens<br/>
+An other fyr also, be nyhte<br/>
+Which scheweth him to mannes syhte,    350<br/>
+Thei clepen Eges, the which brenneth<br/>
+Lik to the corrant fyr that renneth<br/>
+Upon a corde, as thou hast sein,<br/>
+Whan it with poudre is so besein<br/>
+Of Sulphre and othre thinges mo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther is an other fyr also,<br/>
+Which semeth to a mannes yhe<br/>
+Be nyhtes time as thogh ther flyhe<br/>
+A dragon brennende in the Sky,<br/>
+And that is cleped proprely    360<br/>
+Daaly, wherof men sein fulofte,<br/>
+“Lo, wher the fyri drake alofte<br/>
+Fleth up in thair!” and so thei demen.<br/>
+Bot why the fyres suche semen<br/>
+Of sondri formes to beholde,<br/>
+The wise Philosophre tolde,<br/>
+So as tofore it hath ben herd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, my Sone, hou it hath ferd:<br/>
+Of Air the due proprete<br/>
+In sondri wise thou myht se,    370<br/>
+And hou under the firmament<br/>
+It is ek the thridde element,<br/>
+Which environeth bothe tuo,<br/>
+The water and the lond also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto tellen overthis<br/>
+Of elementz which the ferthe is,<br/>
+That is the fyr in his degre,<br/>
+Which environeth thother thre<br/>
+And is withoute moist al drye.<br/>
+Bot lest nou what seith the clergie;    380<br/>
+For upon hem that I have seid<br/>
+The creatour hath set and leid<br/>
+The kinde and the complexion<br/>
+Of alle mennes nacion.<br/>
+Foure elementz sondri ther be,<br/>
+Lich unto whiche of that degre<br/>
+Among the men ther ben also<br/>
+Complexions foure and nomo,<br/>
+Wherof the Philosophre treteth,<br/>
+That he nothing behinde leteth,    390<br/>
+And seith hou that thei ben diverse,<br/>
+So as I schal to thee reherse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He which natureth every kinde,<br/>
+The myhti god, so as I finde,<br/>
+Of    man, which is his creature,<br/>
+Hath so devided the nature,<br/>
+That non til other wel acordeth:<br/>
+And be the cause it so discordeth,<br/>
+The lif which fieleth the seknesse<br/>
+Mai stonde upon no sekernesse.    400
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of therthe, which is cold and drye,<br/>
+The kinde of man Malencolie<br/>
+Is cleped, and that is the ferste,<br/>
+The most ungoodlich and the werste;<br/>
+For unto loves werk on nyht<br/>
+Him lacketh bothe will and myht:<br/>
+No wonder is, in lusty place<br/>
+Of love though he lese grace.<br/>
+What man hath that complexion,<br/>
+Full of ymaginacion    410<br/>
+Of dredes and of wrathful thoghtes,<br/>
+He fret himselven al to noghtes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The water, which is moyste and cold,<br/>
+Makth fleume, which is manyfold<br/>
+Foryetel, slou and wery sone<br/>
+Of every thing which is to done:<br/>
+He is of kinde sufficant<br/>
+To holde love his covenant,<br/>
+Bot that him lacketh appetit,<br/>
+Which longeth unto such delit.    420
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What man that takth his kinde of thair,<br/>
+He schal be lyht, he schal be fair,<br/>
+For his complexion is blood.<br/>
+Of alle ther is non so good,<br/>
+For he hath bothe will and myht<br/>
+To plese and paie love his riht:<br/>
+Wher as he hath love undertake,<br/>
+Wrong is if that he be forsake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fyr of his condicion<br/>
+Appropreth the complexion    430<br/>
+Which in a man is Colre hote,<br/>
+Whos propretes ben dreie and hote:<br/>
+It makth a man ben enginous<br/>
+And swift of fote and ek irous;<br/>
+Of contek and folhastifnesse<br/>
+He hath a riht gret besinesse,<br/>
+To thenke of love and litel may:<br/>
+Though he behote wel a day,<br/>
+On nyht whan that he wole assaie,<br/>
+He may ful evele his dette paie.    440
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the kinde of thelement,<br/>
+Thus stant a mannes kinde went,<br/>
+As touchende his complexion,<br/>
+Upon sondri division<br/>
+Of dreie, of moiste, of chele, of hete,<br/>
+And ech of hem his oghne sete<br/>
+Appropred hath withinne a man.<br/>
+And ferst to telle as I began,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Splen is to Malencolie<br/>
+Assigned for herbergerie:    450
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moiste fleume with his cold<br/>
+Hath in the lunges for his hold<br/>
+Ordeined him a propre stede,<br/>
+To duelle ther as he is bede:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the Sanguin complexion<br/>
+Nature of hire inspeccion<br/>
+A propre hous hath in the livere<br/>
+For his duellinge mad delivere:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dreie Colre with his hete<br/>
+Be weie of kinde his propre sete    460<br/>
+Hath in the galle, wher he duelleth,<br/>
+So as the Philosophre telleth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou over this is forto wite,<br/>
+As it is in Phisique write<br/>
+Of livere, of lunge, of galle, of splen,<br/>
+Thei alle unto the herte ben<br/>
+Servantz, and ech in his office<br/>
+Entendeth to don him service,<br/>
+As he which is chief lord above.<br/>
+The livere makth him forto love,    470<br/>
+The lunge yifth him weie of speche,<br/>
+The galle serveth to do wreche,<br/>
+The Splen doth him to lawhe and pleie,<br/>
+Whan al unclennesse is aweie:<br/>
+Lo, thus hath ech of hem his dede.<br/>
+And to sustienen hem and fede<br/>
+In time of recreacion,<br/>
+Nature hath in creacion<br/>
+The Stomach for a comun Coc<br/>
+Ordeined, so as seith the boc.    480<br/>
+The Stomach coc is for the halle,<br/>
+And builleth mete for hem alle,<br/>
+To make hem myghty forto serve<br/>
+The herte, that he schal noght sterve:<br/>
+For as a king in his Empire<br/>
+Above alle othre is lord and Sire,<br/>
+So is the herte principal,<br/>
+To whom reson in special<br/>
+Is yove as for the governance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus nature his pourveance    490<br/>
+Hath mad for man to liven hiere;<br/>
+Bot god, which hath the Soule diere,<br/>
+Hath formed it in other wise.<br/>
+That can noman pleinli devise;<br/>
+Bot as the clerkes ous enforme,<br/>
+That lich to god it hath a forme,<br/>
+Thurgh which figure and which liknesse<br/>
+The Soule hath many an hyh noblesse<br/>
+Appropred to his oghne kinde.<br/>
+Bot ofte hir wittes be mad blinde    500<br/>
+Al onliche of this ilke point,<br/>
+That hir abydinge is conjoint<br/>
+Forth with the bodi forto duelle:<br/>
+That on desireth toward helle,<br/>
+That other upward to the hevene;<br/>
+So schul thei nevere stonde in evene,<br/>
+Bot if the fleissh be overcome<br/>
+And that the Soule have holi nome<br/>
+The governance, and that is selde,<br/>
+Whil that the fleissh him mai bewelde.    510<br/>
+Al erthli thing which god began<br/>
+Was only mad to serve man;<br/>
+Bot he the Soule al only made<br/>
+Himselven forto serve and glade.<br/>
+Alle othre bestes that men finde<br/>
+Thei serve unto here oghne kinde,<br/>
+Bot to reson the Soule serveth;<br/>
+Wherof the man his thonk deserveth<br/>
+And get him with hise werkes goode<br/>
+The perdurable lyves foode.    520
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of what matiere it schal be told,<br/>
+A tale lyketh manyfold<br/>
+The betre, if it be spoke plein:<br/>
+Thus thinke I forto torne ayein<br/>
+And telle plenerly therfore<br/>
+Of therthe, wherof nou tofore<br/>
+I spak, and of the water eke,<br/>
+So as these olde clerkes spieke,<br/>
+And sette proprely the bounde<br/>
+After the forme of Mappemounde,    530<br/>
+Thurgh which the ground be pourparties<br/>
+Departed is in thre parties,<br/>
+That is Asie, Aufrique, Europe,<br/>
+The whiche under the hevene cope,<br/>
+Als ferr as streccheth eny ground,<br/>
+Begripeth al this Erthe round.<br/>
+Bot after that the hihe wrieche<br/>
+The water weies let out seche<br/>
+And overgo the helles hye,<br/>
+Which every kinde made dye    540<br/>
+That upon Middelerthe stod,<br/>
+Outake Noë and his blod,<br/>
+His Sones and his doughtres thre,<br/>
+Thei were sauf and so was he;&mdash;<br/>
+Here names who that rede rihte,<br/>
+Sem, Cam, Japhet the brethren hihte;&mdash;<br/>
+And whanne thilke almyhty hond<br/>
+Withdrouh the water fro the lond,<br/>
+And al the rage was aweie,<br/>
+And Erthe was the mannes weie,    550<br/>
+The Sones thre, of whiche I tolde,<br/>
+Riht after that hemselve wolde,<br/>
+This world departe thei begonne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asie, which lay to the Sonne<br/>
+Upon the Marche of orient,<br/>
+Was graunted be comun assent<br/>
+To Sem, which was the Sone eldeste;<br/>
+For that partie was the beste<br/>
+And double as moche as othre tuo.<br/>
+And was that time bounded so;    560<br/>
+Wher as the flod which men Nil calleth<br/>
+Departeth fro his cours and falleth<br/>
+Into the See Alexandrine,<br/>
+Ther takth Asie ferst seisine<br/>
+Toward the West, and over this<br/>
+Of Canahim wher the flod is<br/>
+Into the grete See rennende,<br/>
+Fro that into the worldes ende<br/>
+Estward, Asie it is algates,<br/>
+Til that men come unto the gates    570<br/>
+Of Paradis, and there ho.<br/>
+And schortly for to speke it so,<br/>
+Of Orient in general<br/>
+Withinne his bounde Asie hath al.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thanne upon that other syde<br/>
+Westward, as it fell thilke tyde,<br/>
+The brother which was hote Cham<br/>
+Upon his part Aufrique nam.<br/>
+Japhet Europe tho tok he,<br/>
+Thus parten thei the world on thre.    580<br/>
+Bot yit ther ben of londes fele<br/>
+In occident as for the chele,<br/>
+In orient as for the hete,<br/>
+Which of the poeple be forlete<br/>
+As lond desert that is unable,<br/>
+For it mai noght ben habitable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The water eke hath sondri bounde,<br/>
+After the lond wher it is founde,<br/>
+And takth his name of thilke londes<br/>
+Wher that it renneth on the strondes:    590<br/>
+Bot thilke See which hath no wane<br/>
+Is cleped the gret Occeane,<br/>
+Out of the which arise and come<br/>
+The hyhe flodes alle and some;<br/>
+Is non so litel welle spring,<br/>
+Which ther ne takth his beginnyng,<br/>
+And lich a man that haleth breth<br/>
+Be weie of kinde, so it geth<br/>
+Out of the See and in ayein,<br/>
+The water, as the bokes sein.    600
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Elementz the propretes<br/>
+Hou that they stonden be degres,<br/>
+As I have told, nou myht thou hiere,<br/>
+Mi goode Sone, al the matiere<br/>
+Of Erthe, of water, Air and fyr.<br/>
+And for thou saist that thi desir<br/>
+Is forto witen overmore<br/>
+The forme of Aristotles lore,<br/>
+He seith in his entendement,<br/>
+That yit ther is an Element    610<br/>
+Above the foure, and is the fifte,<br/>
+Set of the hihe goddes yifte,<br/>
+The which that Orbis cleped is.<br/>
+And therupon he telleth this,<br/>
+That as the schelle hol and sound<br/>
+Encloseth al aboute round<br/>
+What thing withinne an Ey belongeth,<br/>
+Riht so this Orbis underfongeth<br/>
+These elementz alle everychon,<br/>
+Which I have spoke of on and on.    620
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot overthis nou tak good hiede,<br/>
+Mi Sone, for I wol procede<br/>
+To speke upon Mathematique,<br/>
+Which grounded is on Theorique.<br/>
+The science of Astronomie<br/>
+I thinke forto specefie,<br/>
+Withoute which, to telle plein,<br/>
+Alle othre science is in vein<br/>
+Toward the scole of erthli thinges:<br/>
+For as an Egle with his winges    630<br/>
+Fleth above alle that men finde,<br/>
+So doth this science in his kinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benethe upon this Erthe hiere<br/>
+Of alle thinges the matiere,<br/>
+As tellen ous thei that ben lerned,<br/>
+Of thing above it stant governed,<br/>
+That is to sein of the Planetes.<br/>
+The cheles bothe and ek the hetes,<br/>
+The chances of the world also,<br/>
+That we fortune clepen so,    640<br/>
+Among the mennes nacion<br/>
+Al is thurgh constellacion,<br/>
+Wherof that som man hath the wele,<br/>
+And som man hath deseses fele<br/>
+In love als wel as othre thinges;<br/>
+The stat of realmes and of kinges<br/>
+In time of pes, in time of werre<br/>
+It is conceived of the Sterre:<br/>
+And thus seith the naturien<br/>
+Which is an Astronomien.    650<br/>
+Bot the divin seith otherwise,<br/>
+That if men weren goode and wise<br/>
+And plesant unto the godhede,<br/>
+Thei scholden noght the sterres drede;<br/>
+For o man, if him wel befalle,<br/>
+Is more worth than ben thei alle<br/>
+Towardes him that weldeth al.<br/>
+Bot yit the lawe original,<br/>
+Which he hath set in the natures,<br/>
+Mot worchen in the creatures,    660<br/>
+That therof mai be non obstacle,<br/>
+Bot if it stonde upon miracle<br/>
+Thurgh preiere of som holy man.<br/>
+And forthi, so as I began<br/>
+To speke upon Astronomie,<br/>
+As it is write in the clergie,<br/>
+To telle hou the planetes fare,<br/>
+Som part I thenke to declare,<br/>
+Mi Sone, unto thin Audience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Astronomie is the science    670<br/>
+Of wisdom and of hih connynge,<br/>
+Which makth a man have knowlechinge<br/>
+Of Sterres in the firmament,<br/>
+Figure, cercle and moevement<br/>
+Of ech of hem in sondri place,<br/>
+And what betwen hem is of space,<br/>
+Hou so thei moeve or stonde faste,<br/>
+Al this it telleth to the laste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Assembled with Astronomie<br/>
+Is ek that ilke Astrologie    680<br/>
+The which in juggementz acompteth<br/>
+Theffect, what every sterre amonteth,<br/>
+And hou thei causen many a wonder<br/>
+To tho climatz that stonde hem under.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto telle it more plein,<br/>
+These olde philosphres sein<br/>
+That Orbis, which I spak of err,<br/>
+Is that which we fro therthe a ferr<br/>
+Beholde, and firmament it calle,<br/>
+In which the sterres stonden alle,    690<br/>
+Among the whiche in special<br/>
+Planetes sefne principal<br/>
+Ther ben, that mannes sihte demeth,<br/>
+Bot thorizonte, as to ous semeth.<br/>
+And also ther ben signes tuelve,<br/>
+Whiche have her cercles be hemselve<br/>
+Compassed in the zodiaque,<br/>
+In which thei have here places take.<br/>
+And as thei stonden in degre,<br/>
+Here cercles more or lasse be,    700<br/>
+Mad after the proporcion<br/>
+Of therthe, whos condicion<br/>
+Is set to be the foundement<br/>
+To sustiene up the firmament.<br/>
+And be this skile a man mai knowe,<br/>
+The more that thei stonden lowe,<br/>
+The more ben the cercles lasse;<br/>
+That causeth why that some passe<br/>
+Here due cours tofore an other.<br/>
+Bot nou, mi lieve dere brother,    710<br/>
+As thou desirest forto wite<br/>
+What I finde in the bokes write,<br/>
+To telle of the planetes sevene,<br/>
+Hou that thei stonde upon the hevene<br/>
+And in what point that thei ben inne,<br/>
+Tak hiede, for I wol beginne,<br/>
+So as the Philosophre tauhte<br/>
+To Alisandre and it betauhte,<br/>
+Wherof that he was fulli tawht<br/>
+Of wisdom, which was him betawht.    720
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benethe alle othre stant the Mone,<br/>
+The which hath with the See to done:<br/>
+Of flodes hihe and ebbes lowe<br/>
+Upon his change it schal be knowe;<br/>
+And every fissh which hath a schelle<br/>
+Mot in his governance duelle,<br/>
+To wexe and wane in his degre,<br/>
+As be the Mone a man mai se;<br/>
+And al that stant upon the grounde<br/>
+Of his moisture it mot be founde.    730<br/>
+Alle othre sterres, as men finde,<br/>
+Be schynende of here oghne kinde<br/>
+Outake only the monelyht,<br/>
+Which is noght of himselve bright,<br/>
+Bot as he takth it of the Sonne.<br/>
+And yit he hath noght al fulwonne<br/>
+His lyht, that he nys somdiel derk;<br/>
+Bot what the lette is of that werk<br/>
+In Almageste it telleth this:<br/>
+The Mones cercle so lowe is,    740<br/>
+Wherof the Sonne out of his stage<br/>
+Ne seth him noght with full visage,<br/>
+For he is with the ground beschaded,<br/>
+So that the Mone is somdiel faded<br/>
+And may noght fully schyne cler.<br/>
+Bot what man under his pouer<br/>
+Is bore, he schal his places change<br/>
+And seche manye londes strange:<br/>
+And as of this condicion<br/>
+The Mones disposicion    750<br/>
+Upon the lond of Alemaigne<br/>
+Is set, and ek upon Bretaigne,<br/>
+Which nou is cleped Engelond;<br/>
+For thei travaile in every lond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the Planetes the secounde<br/>
+Above the Mone hath take his bounde,<br/>
+Mercurie, and his nature is this,<br/>
+That under him who that bore is,<br/>
+In boke he schal be studious<br/>
+And in wrytinge curious,    760<br/>
+And slouh and lustles to travaile<br/>
+In thing which elles myhte availe:<br/>
+He loveth ese, he loveth reste,<br/>
+So is he noght the worthieste;<br/>
+Bot yit with somdiel besinesse<br/>
+His herte is set upon richesse.<br/>
+And as in this condicion,<br/>
+Theffect and disposicion<br/>
+Of this Planete and of his chance<br/>
+Is most in Burgoigne and in France.    770
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next to Mercurie, as wol befalle,<br/>
+Stant that Planete which men calle<br/>
+Venus, whos constellacion<br/>
+Governeth al the nacion<br/>
+Of lovers, wher thei spiede or non,<br/>
+Of whiche I trowe thou be on:<br/>
+Bot whiderward thin happes wende,<br/>
+Schal this planete schewe at ende,<br/>
+As it hath do to many mo,<br/>
+To some wel, to some wo.    780<br/>
+And natheles of this Planete<br/>
+The moste part is softe and swete;<br/>
+For who that therof takth his berthe,<br/>
+He schal desire joie and merthe,<br/>
+Gentil, courteis and debonaire,<br/>
+To speke his wordes softe and faire,<br/>
+Such schal he be be weie of kinde,<br/>
+And overal wher he may finde<br/>
+Plesance of love, his herte boweth<br/>
+With al his myht and there he woweth.    790<br/>
+He is so ferforth Amourous,<br/>
+He not what thing is vicious<br/>
+Touchende love, for that lawe<br/>
+Ther mai no maner man withdrawe,<br/>
+The which venerien is bore<br/>
+Be weie of kinde, and therefore<br/>
+Venus of love the goddesse<br/>
+Is cleped: bot of wantounesse<br/>
+The climat of hir lecherie<br/>
+Is most commun in Lombardie.    800
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next unto this Planete of love<br/>
+The brighte Sonne stant above,<br/>
+Which is the hindrere of the nyht<br/>
+And forthrere of the daies lyht,<br/>
+As he which is the worldes ije,<br/>
+Thurgh whom the lusti compaignie<br/>
+Of foules be the morwe singe,<br/>
+The freisshe floures sprede and springe,<br/>
+The hihe tre the ground beschadeth,<br/>
+And every mannes herte gladeth.    810<br/>
+And for it is the hed Planete,<br/>
+Hou that he sitteth in his sete,<br/>
+Of what richesse, of what nobleie,<br/>
+These bokes telle, and thus thei seie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of gold glistrende Spoke and whiel<br/>
+The Sonne his carte hath faire and wiel,<br/>
+In which he sitt, and is coroned<br/>
+With brighte stones environed;<br/>
+Of whiche if that I speke schal,<br/>
+Ther be tofore in special    820<br/>
+Set in the front of his corone<br/>
+Thre Stones, whiche no persone<br/>
+Hath upon Erthe, and the ferste is<br/>
+Be name cleped Licuchis;<br/>
+That othre tuo be cleped thus,<br/>
+Astrices and Ceramius.<br/>
+In his corone also behinde,<br/>
+Be olde bokes as I finde,<br/>
+Ther ben of worthi Stones thre<br/>
+Set ech of hem in his degre:    830<br/>
+Wherof a Cristall is that on,<br/>
+Which that corone is set upon;<br/>
+The seconde is an Adamant;<br/>
+The thridde is noble and avenant,<br/>
+Which cleped is Ydriades.<br/>
+And over this yit natheles<br/>
+Upon the sydes of the werk,<br/>
+After the wrytinge of the clerk,<br/>
+Ther sitten fyve Stones mo:<br/>
+The smaragdine is on of tho,    840<br/>
+Jaspis and Elitropius<br/>
+And Dendides and Jacinctus.<br/>
+Lo, thus the corone is beset,<br/>
+Wherof it schyneth wel the bet;<br/>
+And in such wise his liht to sprede<br/>
+Sit with his Diademe on hede<br/>
+The Sonne schynende in his carte.<br/>
+And forto lede him swithe and smarte<br/>
+After the bryhte daies lawe,<br/>
+Ther ben ordeined forto drawe    850<br/>
+Foure hors his Char and him withal,<br/>
+Wherof the names telle I schal:<br/>
+Eritheüs the ferste is hote,<br/>
+The which is red and schyneth hote,<br/>
+The seconde Acteos the bryhte,<br/>
+Lampes the thridde coursier hihte,<br/>
+And Philogeus is the ferthe,<br/>
+That bringen lyht unto this erthe,<br/>
+And gon so swift upon the hevene,<br/>
+In foure and twenty houres evene    860<br/>
+The carte with the bryhte Sonne<br/>
+Thei drawe, so that overronne<br/>
+Thei have under the cercles hihe<br/>
+Al Middelerthe in such an hye.<br/>
+And thus the Sonne is overal<br/>
+The chief Planete imperial,<br/>
+Above him and benethe him thre:<br/>
+And thus betwen hem regneth he,<br/>
+As he that hath the middel place<br/>
+Among the Sevene, and of his face    870<br/>
+Be glade alle erthly creatures,<br/>
+And taken after the natures<br/>
+Here ese and recreacion.<br/>
+And in his constellacion<br/>
+Who that is bore in special,<br/>
+Of good will and of liberal<br/>
+He schal be founde in alle place,<br/>
+And also stonde in mochel grace<br/>
+Toward the lordes forto serve<br/>
+And gret profit and thonk deserve.    880<br/>
+And over that it causeth yit<br/>
+A man to be soubtil of wit<br/>
+To worche in gold, and to be wys<br/>
+In every thing which is of pris.<br/>
+Bot forto speken in what cost<br/>
+Of al this erthe he regneth most<br/>
+As for wisdom, it is in Grece,<br/>
+Wher is apropred thilke spiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mars the Planete bataillous<br/>
+Next to the Sonne glorious    890<br/>
+Above stant, and doth mervailes<br/>
+Upon the fortune of batailes.<br/>
+The conquerours be daies olde<br/>
+Were unto this planete holde:<br/>
+Bot who that his nativite<br/>
+Hath take upon the proprete<br/>
+Of Martes disposicioun<br/>
+Be weie of constellacioun,<br/>
+He schal be fiers and folhastif<br/>
+And desirous of werre and strif.    900<br/>
+Bot forto telle redely<br/>
+In what climat most comunly<br/>
+That this planete hath his effect,<br/>
+Seid is that he hath his aspect<br/>
+Upon the holi lond so cast,<br/>
+That there is no pes stedefast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Above Mars upon the hevene,<br/>
+The sexte Planete of the sevene,<br/>
+Stant Jupiter the delicat,<br/>
+Which causeth pes and no debat.    910<br/>
+For he is cleped that Planete<br/>
+Which of his kinde softe and swete<br/>
+Attempreth al that to him longeth;<br/>
+And whom this planete underfongeth<br/>
+To stonde upon his regiment,<br/>
+He schal be meke and pacient<br/>
+And fortunat to Marchandie<br/>
+And lusti to delicacie<br/>
+In every thing which he schal do.<br/>
+This Jupiter is cause also    920<br/>
+Of the science of lyhte werkes,<br/>
+And in this wise tellen clerkes<br/>
+He is the Planete of delices.<br/>
+Bot in Egipte of his offices<br/>
+He regneth most in special:<br/>
+For ther be lustes overal<br/>
+Of al that to this lif befalleth;<br/>
+For ther no stormy weder falleth,<br/>
+Which myhte grieve man or beste,<br/>
+And ek the lond is so honeste    930<br/>
+That it is plentevous and plein,<br/>
+Ther is non ydel ground in vein;<br/>
+And upon such felicite<br/>
+Stant Jupiter in his degre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heyeste and aboven alle<br/>
+Stant that planete which men calle<br/>
+Saturnus, whos complexion<br/>
+Is cold, and his condicion<br/>
+Causeth malice and crualte<br/>
+To him the whos nativite    940<br/>
+Is set under his governance.<br/>
+For alle hise werkes ben grevance<br/>
+And enemy to mannes hele,<br/>
+In what degre that he schal dele.<br/>
+His climat is in Orient,<br/>
+Wher that he is most violent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the Planetes by and by,<br/>
+Hou that thei stonde upon the Sky,<br/>
+Fro point to point as thou myht hiere,<br/>
+Was Alisandre mad to liere.    950<br/>
+Bot overthis touchende his lore,<br/>
+Of thing that thei him tawhte more<br/>
+Upon the scoles of clergie<br/>
+Now herkne the Philosophie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He which departeth dai fro nyht,<br/>
+That on derk and that other lyht,<br/>
+Of sevene daies made a weke,<br/>
+A Monthe of foure wekes eke<br/>
+He hath ordeigned in his lawe,<br/>
+Of Monthes tuelve and ek forthdrawe    960<br/>
+He hath also the longe yeer.<br/>
+And as he sette of his pouer<br/>
+Acordant to the daies sevene<br/>
+Planetes Sevene upon the hevene,<br/>
+As thou tofore hast herd devise,<br/>
+To speke riht in such a wise,<br/>
+To every Monthe be himselve<br/>
+Upon the hevene of Signes tuelve<br/>
+He hath after his Ordinal<br/>
+Assigned on in special,    970<br/>
+Wherof, so as I schal rehersen,<br/>
+The tydes of the yer diversen.<br/>
+Bot pleinly forto make it knowe<br/>
+Hou that the Signes sitte arowe,<br/>
+Ech after other be degre<br/>
+In substance and in proprete<br/>
+The zodiaque comprehendeth<br/>
+Withinne his cercle, as it appendeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste of whiche natheles<br/>
+Be name is cleped Aries,    980<br/>
+Which lich a wether of stature<br/>
+Resembled is in his figure.<br/>
+And as it seith in Almageste,<br/>
+Of Sterres tuelve upon this beste<br/>
+Ben set, wherof in his degre<br/>
+The wombe hath tuo, the heved hath thre,<br/>
+The Tail hath sevene, and in this wise,<br/>
+As thou myht hiere me divise,<br/>
+Stant Aries, which hot and drye<br/>
+Is of himself, and in partie    990<br/>
+He is the receipte and the hous<br/>
+Of myhty Mars the bataillous.<br/>
+And overmore ek, as I finde,<br/>
+The creatour of alle kinde<br/>
+Upon this Signe ferst began<br/>
+The world, whan that he made man.<br/>
+And of this constellacioun<br/>
+The verray operacioun<br/>
+Availeth, if a man therinne<br/>
+The pourpos of his werk beginne;    1000<br/>
+For thanne he hath of proprete<br/>
+Good sped and gret felicite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tuelve Monthes of the yeer<br/>
+Attitled under the pouer<br/>
+Of these tuelve Signes stonde;<br/>
+Wherof that thou schalt understonde<br/>
+This Aries on of the tuelve<br/>
+Hath March attitled for himselve,<br/>
+Whan every bridd schal chese his make,<br/>
+And every neddre and every Snake    1010<br/>
+And every Reptil which mai moeve,<br/>
+His myht assaieth forto proeve,<br/>
+To crepen out ayein the Sonne,<br/>
+Whan Ver his Seson hath begonne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taurus the seconde after this<br/>
+Of Signes, which figured is<br/>
+Unto a Bole, is dreie and cold;<br/>
+And as it is in bokes told,<br/>
+He is the hous appourtienant<br/>
+To Venus, somdiel descordant.    1020<br/>
+This Bole is ek with sterres set,<br/>
+Thurgh whiche he hath hise hornes knet<br/>
+Unto the tail of Aries,<br/>
+So is he noght ther sterreles.<br/>
+Upon his brest ek eyhtetiene<br/>
+He hath, and ek, as it is sene,<br/>
+Upon his tail stonde othre tuo.<br/>
+His Monthe assigned ek also<br/>
+Is Averil, which of his schoures<br/>
+Ministreth weie unto the floures.    1030
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde signe is Gemini,<br/>
+Which is figured redely<br/>
+Lich to tuo twinnes of mankinde,<br/>
+That naked stonde; and as I finde,<br/>
+Thei be with Sterres wel bego:<br/>
+The heved hath part of thilke tuo<br/>
+That schyne upon the boles tail,<br/>
+So be thei bothe of o parail;<br/>
+But on the wombe of Gemini<br/>
+Ben fyve sterres noght forthi,    1040<br/>
+And ek upon the feet be tweie,<br/>
+So as these olde bokes seie,<br/>
+That wise Tholomeus wrot.<br/>
+His propre Monthe wel I wot<br/>
+Assigned is the lusti Maii,<br/>
+Whanne every brid upon his lay<br/>
+Among the griene leves singeth,<br/>
+And love of his pointure stingeth<br/>
+After the lawes of nature<br/>
+The youthe of every creature.    1050
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cancer after the reule and space<br/>
+Of Signes halt the ferthe place.<br/>
+Like to the crabbe he hath semblance,<br/>
+And hath unto his retienance<br/>
+Sextiene sterres, wherof ten,<br/>
+So as these olde wise men<br/>
+Descrive, he berth on him tofore,<br/>
+And in the middel tuo be bore,<br/>
+And foure he hath upon his ende.<br/>
+Thus goth he sterred in his kende,    1060<br/>
+And of himself is moiste and cold,<br/>
+And is the propre hous and hold<br/>
+Which appartieneth to the Mone,<br/>
+And doth what longeth him to done.<br/>
+The Monthe of Juin unto this Signe<br/>
+Thou schalt after the reule assigne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fifte Signe is Leo hote,<br/>
+Whos kinde is schape dreie and hote,<br/>
+In whom the Sonne hath herbergage.<br/>
+And the semblance of his ymage    1070<br/>
+Is a leoun, which in baillie<br/>
+Of sterres hath his pourpartie:<br/>
+The foure, which as Cancer hath<br/>
+Upon his ende, Leo tath<br/>
+Upon his heved, and thanne nest<br/>
+He hath ek foure upon his brest,<br/>
+And on upon his tail behinde,<br/>
+In olde bokes as we finde.<br/>
+His propre Monthe is Juyl be name,<br/>
+In which men pleien many a game.    1080
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After Leo Virgo the nexte<br/>
+Of Signes cleped is the sexte,<br/>
+Wherof the figure is a Maide;<br/>
+And as the Philosophre saide,<br/>
+Sche is the welthe and the risinge,<br/>
+The lust, the joie and the likinge<br/>
+Unto Mercurie: and soth to seie<br/>
+Sche is with sterres wel beseie,<br/>
+Wherof Leo hath lent hire on,<br/>
+Which sit on hih hir heved upon,    1090<br/>
+Hire wombe hath fyve, hir feet also<br/>
+Have other fyve: and overmo<br/>
+Touchende as of complexion,<br/>
+Be kindly disposicion<br/>
+Of dreie and cold this Maiden is.<br/>
+And forto tellen over this<br/>
+Hir Monthe, thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+Whan every feld hath corn in honde<br/>
+And many a man his bak hath plied,<br/>
+Unto this Signe is Augst applied.    1100
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After Virgo to reknen evene<br/>
+Libra sit in the nombre of sevene,<br/>
+Which hath figure and resemblance<br/>
+Unto a man which a balance<br/>
+Berth in his hond as forto weie:<br/>
+In boke and as it mai be seie,<br/>
+Diverse sterres to him longeth,<br/>
+Wherof on hevede he underfongeth<br/>
+Ferst thre, and ek his wombe hath tuo,<br/>
+And doun benethe eighte othre mo.    1110<br/>
+This Signe is hot and moiste bothe,<br/>
+The whiche thinges be noght lothe<br/>
+Unto Venus, so that alofte<br/>
+Sche resteth in his hous fulofte,<br/>
+And ek Saturnus often hyed<br/>
+Is in this Signe and magnefied.<br/>
+His propre Monthe is seid Septembre,<br/>
+Which yifth men cause to remembre,<br/>
+If eny Sor be left behinde<br/>
+Of thing which grieve mai to kinde.    1120
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the Signes upon heighte<br/>
+The Signe which is nombred eighte<br/>
+Is Scorpio, which as feloun<br/>
+Figured is a Scorpioun.<br/>
+Bot for al that yit natheles<br/>
+Is Scorpio noght sterreles;<br/>
+For Libra granteth him his ende<br/>
+Of eighte sterres, wher he wende,<br/>
+The whiche upon his heved assised<br/>
+He berth, and ek ther ben divised    1130<br/>
+Upon his wombe sterres thre,<br/>
+And eighte upon his tail hath he.<br/>
+Which of his kinde is moiste and cold<br/>
+And unbehovely manyfold;<br/>
+He harmeth Venus and empeireth,<br/>
+Bot Mars unto his hous repeireth,<br/>
+Bot war whan thei togedre duellen.<br/>
+His propre Monthe is, as men tellen,<br/>
+Octobre, which bringth the kalende<br/>
+Of wynter, that comth next suiende.    1140
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nynthe Signe in nombre also,<br/>
+Which folweth after Scorpio,<br/>
+Is cleped Sagittarius,<br/>
+The whos figure is marked thus,<br/>
+A Monstre with a bowe on honde:<br/>
+On whom that sondri sterres stonde,<br/>
+Thilke eighte of whiche I spak tofore,<br/>
+The whiche upon the tail ben bore<br/>
+Of Scorpio, the heved al faire<br/>
+Bespreden of the Sagittaire;    1150<br/>
+And eighte of othre stonden evene<br/>
+Upon his wombe, and othre sevene<br/>
+Ther stonde upon his tail behinde.<br/>
+And he is hot and dreie of kinde:<br/>
+To Jupiter his hous is fre,<br/>
+Bot to Mercurie in his degre,<br/>
+For thei ben noght of on assent,<br/>
+He worcheth gret empeirement.<br/>
+This Signe hath of his proprete<br/>
+A Monthe, which of duete    1160<br/>
+After the sesoun that befalleth<br/>
+The Plowed Oxe in wynter stalleth;<br/>
+And fyr into the halle he bringeth,<br/>
+And thilke drinke of which men singeth,<br/>
+He torneth must into the wyn;<br/>
+Thanne is the larder of the swyn;<br/>
+That is Novembre which I meene,<br/>
+Whan that the lef hath lost his greene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tenthe Signe dreie and cold,<br/>
+The which is Capricornus told,    1170<br/>
+Unto a Got hath resemblance:<br/>
+For whos love and whos aqueintance<br/>
+Withinne hise houses to sojorne<br/>
+It liketh wel unto Satorne,<br/>
+Bot to the Mone it liketh noght,<br/>
+For no profit is there wroght.<br/>
+This Signe as of his proprete<br/>
+Upon his heved hath sterres thre,<br/>
+And ek upon his wombe tuo,<br/>
+And tweie upon his tail also.    1180<br/>
+Decembre after the yeeres forme,<br/>
+So as the bokes ous enforme,<br/>
+With daies schorte and nyhtes longe<br/>
+This ilke Signe hath underfonge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of tho that sitte upon the hevene<br/>
+Of Signes in the nombre ellevene<br/>
+Aquarius hath take his place,<br/>
+And stant wel in Satornes grace,<br/>
+Which duelleth in his herbergage,<br/>
+Bot to the Sonne he doth oultrage.    1190<br/>
+This Signe is verraily resembled<br/>
+Lich to a man which halt assembled<br/>
+In eyther hand a water spoute,<br/>
+Wherof the stremes rennen oute.<br/>
+He is of kinde moiste and hot,<br/>
+And he that of the sterres wot<br/>
+Seith that he hath of sterres tuo<br/>
+Upon his heved, and ben of tho<br/>
+That Capricorn hath on his ende;<br/>
+And as the bokes maken mende,    1200<br/>
+That Tholomeus made himselve,<br/>
+He hath ek on his wombe tuelve,<br/>
+And tweie upon his ende stonde.<br/>
+Thou schalt also this understonde,<br/>
+The frosti colde Janever,<br/>
+Whan comen is the newe yeer,<br/>
+That Janus with his double face<br/>
+In his chaiere hath take his place<br/>
+And loketh upon bothe sides,<br/>
+Somdiel toward the wynter tydes,    1210<br/>
+Somdiel toward the yeer suiende,<br/>
+That is the Monthe belongende<br/>
+Unto this Signe, and of his dole<br/>
+He yifth the ferste Primerole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tuelfthe, which is last of alle<br/>
+Of Signes, Piscis men it calle,<br/>
+The which, as telleth the scripture,<br/>
+Berth of tuo fisshes the figure.<br/>
+So is he cold and moiste of kinde,<br/>
+And ek with sterres, as I finde,    1220<br/>
+Beset in sondri wise, as thus:<br/>
+Tuo of his ende Aquarius<br/>
+Hath lent unto his heved, and tuo<br/>
+This Signe hath of his oghne also<br/>
+Upon his wombe, and over this<br/>
+Upon his ende also ther is<br/>
+A nombre of twenty sterres bryghte,<br/>
+Which is to sen a wonder sighte.<br/>
+Toward this Signe into his hous<br/>
+Comth Jupiter the glorious,    1230<br/>
+And Venus ek with him acordeth<br/>
+To duellen, as the bok recordeth.<br/>
+The Monthe unto this Signe ordeined<br/>
+Is Februer, which is bereined,<br/>
+And with londflodes in his rage<br/>
+At Fordes letteth the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou hast thou herd the proprete<br/>
+Of Signes, bot in his degre<br/>
+Albumazar yit over this<br/>
+Seith, so as therthe parted is    1240<br/>
+In foure, riht so ben divised<br/>
+The Signes tuelve and stonde assised,<br/>
+That ech of hem for his partie<br/>
+Hath his climat to justefie.<br/>
+Wherof the ferste regiment<br/>
+Toward the part of Orient<br/>
+From Antioche and that contre<br/>
+Governed is of Signes thre,<br/>
+That is Cancer, Virgo, Leo:<br/>
+And toward Occident also    1250<br/>
+From Armenie, as I am lerned,<br/>
+Of Capricorn it stant governed,<br/>
+Of Pisces and Aquarius:<br/>
+And after hem I finde thus,<br/>
+Southward from Alisandre forth<br/>
+Tho Signes whiche most ben worth<br/>
+In governance of that doaire,<br/>
+Libra thei ben and Sagittaire<br/>
+With Scorpio, which is conjoint<br/>
+With hem to stonde upon that point:    1260<br/>
+Constantinople the Cite,<br/>
+So as the bokes tellen me,<br/>
+The laste of this division<br/>
+Stant untoward Septemtrion,<br/>
+Wher as be weie of pourveance<br/>
+Hath Aries the governance<br/>
+Forth with Taurus and Gemini.<br/>
+Thus ben the Signes propreli<br/>
+Divided, as it is reherced,<br/>
+Wherof the londes ben diversed.    1270
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi Sone, as thou myht hiere,<br/>
+Was Alisandre mad to liere<br/>
+Of hem that weren for his lore.<br/>
+But nou to loken overmore,<br/>
+Of othre sterres hou thei fare<br/>
+I thenke hierafter to declare,<br/>
+So as king Alisandre in youthe<br/>
+Of him that suche thinges couthe<br/>
+Enformed was tofore his yhe<br/>
+Be nyhte upon the sterres hihe.    1280
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon sondri creacion<br/>
+Stant sondri operacion,<br/>
+Som worcheth this, som worcheth that;<br/>
+The fyr is hot in his astat<br/>
+And brenneth what he mai atteigne,<br/>
+The water mai the fyr restreigne,<br/>
+The which is cold and moist also.<br/>
+Of other thing it farth riht so<br/>
+Upon this erthe among ous here;<br/>
+And forto speke in this manere,    1290<br/>
+Upon the hevene, as men mai finde,<br/>
+The sterres ben of sondri kinde<br/>
+And worchen manye sondri thinges<br/>
+To ous, that ben here underlinges.<br/>
+Among the whiche forth withal<br/>
+Nectanabus in special,<br/>
+Which was an Astronomien<br/>
+And ek a gret Magicien,<br/>
+And undertake hath thilke emprise<br/>
+To Alisandre in his aprise    1300<br/>
+As of Magique naturel<br/>
+To knowe, enformeth him somdel<br/>
+Of certein sterres what thei mene;<br/>
+Of whiche, he seith, ther ben fiftene,<br/>
+And sondrily to everich on<br/>
+A gras belongeth and a Ston,<br/>
+Wherof men worchen many a wonder<br/>
+To sette thing bothe up and under.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To telle riht as he began,<br/>
+The ferste sterre Aldeboran,    1310<br/>
+The cliereste and the moste of alle,<br/>
+Be rihte name men it calle;<br/>
+Which lich is of condicion<br/>
+To Mars, and of complexion<br/>
+To Venus, and hath therupon<br/>
+Carbunculum his propre Ston:<br/>
+His herbe is Anabulla named,<br/>
+Which is of gret vertu proclamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The seconde is noght vertules;<br/>
+Clota or elles Pliades    1320<br/>
+It hatte, and of the mones kinde<br/>
+He is, and also this I finde,<br/>
+He takth of Mars complexion:<br/>
+And lich to such condicion<br/>
+His Ston appropred is Cristall,<br/>
+And ek his herbe in special<br/>
+The vertuous Fenele it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde, which comth after this,<br/>
+Is hote Algol the clere rede,<br/>
+Which of Satorne, as I may rede,    1330<br/>
+His kinde takth, and ek of Jove<br/>
+Complexion to his behove.<br/>
+His propre Ston is Dyamant,<br/>
+Which is to him most acordant;<br/>
+His herbe, which is him betake,<br/>
+Is hote Eleborum the blake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So as it falleth upon lot,<br/>
+The ferthe sterre is Alhaiot,<br/>
+Which in the wise as I seide er<br/>
+Of Satorne and of Jupiter    1340<br/>
+Hath take his kinde; and therupon<br/>
+The Saphir is his propre Ston,<br/>
+Marrubium his herbe also,<br/>
+The whiche acorden bothe tuo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Canis maior in his like<br/>
+The fifte sterre is of Magique,<br/>
+The whos kinde is venerien,<br/>
+As seith this Astronomien.<br/>
+His propre Ston is seid Berille,<br/>
+Bot forto worche and to fulfille    1350<br/>
+Thing which to this science falleth,<br/>
+Ther is an herbe which men calleth<br/>
+Saveine, and that behoveth nede<br/>
+To him that wole his pourpos spede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sexte suiende after this<br/>
+Be name Canis minor is;<br/>
+The which sterre is Mercurial<br/>
+Be weie of kinde, and forth withal,<br/>
+As it is writen in the carte,<br/>
+Complexion he takth of Marte.    1360<br/>
+His Ston and herbe, as seith the Scole,<br/>
+Ben Achates and Primerole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sefnthe sterre in special<br/>
+Of this science is Arial,<br/>
+Which sondri nature underfongeth.<br/>
+The Ston which propre unto him longeth,<br/>
+Gorgonza proprely it hihte:<br/>
+His herbe also, which he schal rihte<br/>
+Upon the worchinge as I mene,<br/>
+Is Celidoine freissh and grene.    1370
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sterre Ala Corvi upon heihte<br/>
+Hath take his place in nombre of eighte,<br/>
+Which of his kinde mot parforne<br/>
+The will of Marte and of Satorne:<br/>
+To whom Lapacia the grete<br/>
+Is herbe, bot of no beyete;<br/>
+His Ston is Honochinus hote,<br/>
+Thurgh which men worchen gret riote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nynthe sterre faire and wel<br/>
+Be name is hote Alaezel,    1380<br/>
+Which takth his propre kinde thus<br/>
+Bothe of Mercurie and of Venus.<br/>
+His Ston is the grene Amyraude,<br/>
+To whom is yoven many a laude:<br/>
+Salge is his herbe appourtenant<br/>
+Aboven al the rememant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tenthe sterre is Almareth,<br/>
+Which upon lif and upon deth<br/>
+Thurgh kinde of Jupiter and Mart<br/>
+He doth what longeth to his part.    1390<br/>
+His Ston is Jaspe, and of Planteine<br/>
+He hath his herbe sovereine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sterre ellefthe is Venenas,<br/>
+The whos nature is as it was<br/>
+Take of Venus and of the Mone,<br/>
+In thing which he hath forto done.<br/>
+Of Adamant is that perrie<br/>
+In which he worcheth his maistrie;<br/>
+Thilke herbe also which him befalleth,<br/>
+Cicorea the bok it calleth.    1400
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alpheta in the nombre sit,<br/>
+And is the twelfthe sterre yit;<br/>
+Of Scorpio which is governed,<br/>
+And takth his kinde, as I am lerned;<br/>
+And hath his vertu in the Ston<br/>
+Which cleped is Topazion:<br/>
+His herbe propre is Rosmarine,<br/>
+Which schapen is for his covine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of these sterres, whiche I mene,<br/>
+Cor Scorpionis is thritiene;    1410<br/>
+The whos nature Mart and Jove<br/>
+Have yoven unto his behove.<br/>
+His herbe is Aristologie,<br/>
+Which folweth his Astronomie:<br/>
+The Ston which that this sterre alloweth,<br/>
+Is Sardis, which unto him boweth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sterre which stant next the laste,<br/>
+Nature on him this name caste<br/>
+And clepeth him Botercadent;<br/>
+Which of his kinde obedient    1420<br/>
+Is to Mercurie and to Venus.<br/>
+His Ston is seid Crisolitus,<br/>
+His herbe is cleped Satureie,<br/>
+So as these olde bokes seie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot nou the laste sterre of alle<br/>
+The tail of Scorpio men calle,<br/>
+Which to Mercurie and to Satorne<br/>
+Be weie of kinde mot retorne<br/>
+After the preparacion<br/>
+Of due constellacion.    1430<br/>
+The Calcedoine unto him longeth,<br/>
+Which for his Ston he underfongeth;<br/>
+Of Majorane his herbe is grounded.<br/>
+Thus have I seid hou thei be founded,<br/>
+Of every sterre in special,<br/>
+Which hath his herbe and Ston withal,<br/>
+As Hermes in his bokes olde<br/>
+Witnesse berth of that I tolde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The science of Astronomie,<br/>
+Which principal is of clergie    1440<br/>
+To dieme betwen wo and wel<br/>
+In thinges that be naturel,<br/>
+Thei hadde a gret travail on honde<br/>
+That made it ferst ben understonde;<br/>
+And thei also which overmore<br/>
+Here studie sette upon this lore,<br/>
+Thei weren gracious and wys<br/>
+And worthi forto bere a pris.<br/>
+And whom it liketh forto wite<br/>
+Of hem that this science write,    1450<br/>
+On of the ferste which it wrot<br/>
+After Noë, it was Nembrot,<br/>
+To his disciple Ychonithon<br/>
+And made a bok forth therupon<br/>
+The which Megaster cleped was.<br/>
+An other Auctor in this cas<br/>
+Is Arachel, the which men note;<br/>
+His bok is Abbategnyh hote.<br/>
+Danz Tholome is noght the leste,<br/>
+Which makth the bok of Almageste;    1460<br/>
+And Alfraganus doth the same,<br/>
+Whos bok is Chatemuz be name.<br/>
+Gebuz and Alpetragus eke<br/>
+Of Planisperie, which men seke,<br/>
+The bokes made: and over this<br/>
+Ful many a worthi clerc ther is,<br/>
+That writen upon this clergie<br/>
+The bokes of Altemetrie,<br/>
+Planemetrie and ek also,<br/>
+Whiche as belongen bothe tuo,    1470<br/>
+So as thei ben naturiens,<br/>
+Unto these Astronomiens.<br/>
+Men sein that Habraham was on;<br/>
+Bot whether that he wrot or non,<br/>
+That finde I noght; and Moises<br/>
+Ek was an other: bot Hermes<br/>
+Above alle othre in this science<br/>
+He hadde a gret experience;<br/>
+Thurgh him was many a sterre assised,<br/>
+Whos bokes yit ben auctorized.    1480<br/>
+I mai noght knowen alle tho<br/>
+That writen in the time tho<br/>
+Of this science; bot I finde,<br/>
+Of jugement be weie of kinde<br/>
+That in o point thei alle acorden:<br/>
+Of sterres whiche thei recorden<br/>
+That men mai sen upon the hevene,<br/>
+Ther ben a thousend sterres evene<br/>
+And tuo and twenty, to the syhte<br/>
+Whiche aren of hemself so bryhte,    1490<br/>
+That men mai dieme what thei be,<br/>
+The nature and the proprete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou hast thou herd, in which a wise<br/>
+These noble Philosophres wise<br/>
+Enformeden this yonge king,<br/>
+And made him have a knowleching<br/>
+Of thing which ferst to the partie<br/>
+Belongeth of Philosophie,<br/>
+Which Theorique cleped is,<br/>
+As thou tofore hast herd er this.    1500<br/>
+Bot nou to speke of the secounde,<br/>
+Which Aristotle hath also founde,<br/>
+And techeth hou to speke faire,<br/>
+Which is a thing full necessaire<br/>
+To contrepeise the balance,<br/>
+Wher lacketh other sufficance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Above alle erthli creatures<br/>
+The hihe makere of natures<br/>
+The word to man hath yove alone,<br/>
+So that the speche of his persone,    1510<br/>
+Or forto lese or forto winne,<br/>
+The hertes thoght which is withinne<br/>
+Mai schewe, what it wolde mene;<br/>
+And that is noghwhere elles sene<br/>
+Of kinde with non other beste.<br/>
+So scholde he be the more honeste,<br/>
+To whom god yaf so gret a yifte,<br/>
+And loke wel that he ne schifte<br/>
+Hise wordes to no wicked us;<br/>
+For word the techer of vertus    1520<br/>
+Is cleped in Philosophie.<br/>
+Wherof touchende this partie,<br/>
+Is Rethorique the science<br/>
+Appropred to the reverence<br/>
+Of wordes that ben resonable:<br/>
+And for this art schal be vailable<br/>
+With goodli wordes forto like,<br/>
+It hath Gramaire, it hath Logiqe,<br/>
+That serven bothe unto the speche.<br/>
+Gramaire ferste hath forto teche    1530<br/>
+To speke upon congruite:<br/>
+Logique hath eke in his degre<br/>
+Betwen the trouthe and the falshode<br/>
+The pleine wordes forto schode,<br/>
+So that nothing schal go beside,<br/>
+That he the riht ne schal decide.<br/>
+Wherof full many a gret debat<br/>
+Reformed is to good astat,<br/>
+And pes sustiened up alofte<br/>
+With esy wordes and with softe,    1540<br/>
+Wher strengthe scholde lete it falle.<br/>
+The Philosophre amonges alle<br/>
+Forthi commendeth this science,<br/>
+Which hath the reule of eloquence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Ston and gras vertu ther is,<br/>
+Bot yit the bokes tellen this,<br/>
+That word above alle erthli thinges<br/>
+Is vertuous in his doinges,<br/>
+Wher so it be to evele or goode.<br/>
+For if the wordes semen goode    1550<br/>
+And ben wel spoke at mannes Ere,<br/>
+Whan that ther is no trouthe there,<br/>
+Thei don fulofte gret deceipte;<br/>
+For whan the word to the conceipte<br/>
+Descordeth in so double a wise,<br/>
+Such Rethorique is to despise<br/>
+In every place, and forto drede.<br/>
+For of Uluxes thus I rede,<br/>
+As in the bok of Troie is founde,<br/>
+His eloquence and his facounde    1560<br/>
+Of goodly wordes whiche he tolde,<br/>
+Hath mad that Anthenor him solde<br/>
+The toun, which he with tresoun wan.<br/>
+Word hath beguiled many a man;<br/>
+With word the wilde beste is daunted,<br/>
+With word the Serpent is enchaunted,<br/>
+Of word among the men of Armes<br/>
+Ben woundes heeled with the charmes,<br/>
+Wher lacketh other medicine;<br/>
+Word hath under his discipline    1570<br/>
+Of Sorcerie the karectes.<br/>
+The wordes ben of sondri sectes,<br/>
+Of evele and eke of goode also;<br/>
+The wordes maken frend of fo,<br/>
+And fo of frend, and pes of werre,<br/>
+And werre of pes, and out of herre<br/>
+The word this worldes cause entriketh,<br/>
+And reconsileth whan him liketh.<br/>
+The word under the coupe of hevene<br/>
+Set every thing or odde or evene;    1580<br/>
+With word the hihe god is plesed,<br/>
+With word the wordes ben appesed,<br/>
+The softe word the loude stilleth;<br/>
+Wher lacketh good, the word fulfilleth,<br/>
+To make amendes for the wrong;<br/>
+Whan wordes medlen with the song,<br/>
+It doth plesance wel the more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot forto loke upon the lore<br/>
+Hou Tullius his Rethorique<br/>
+Componeth, ther a man mai pike    1590<br/>
+Hou that he schal hise wordes sette,<br/>
+Hou he schal lose, hou he schal knette,<br/>
+And in what wise he schal pronounce<br/>
+His tale plein withoute frounce.<br/>
+Wherof ensample if thou wolt seche,<br/>
+Tak hiede and red whilom the speche<br/>
+Of Julius and Cithero,<br/>
+Which consul was of Rome tho,<br/>
+Of Catoun eke and of Cillene,<br/>
+Behold the wordes hem betwene,    1600<br/>
+Whan the tresoun of Cateline<br/>
+Descoevered was, and the covine<br/>
+Of hem that were of his assent<br/>
+Was knowe and spoke in parlement,<br/>
+And axed hou and in what wise<br/>
+Men scholde don hem to juise.<br/>
+Cillenus ferst his tale tolde,<br/>
+To trouthe and as he was beholde,<br/>
+The comun profit forto save,<br/>
+He seide hou tresoun scholde have    1610<br/>
+A cruel deth; and thus thei spieke,<br/>
+The Consul bothe and Catoun eke,<br/>
+And seiden that for such a wrong<br/>
+Ther mai no peine be to strong.<br/>
+Bot Julius with wordes wise<br/>
+His tale tolde al otherwise,<br/>
+As he which wolde her deth respite,<br/>
+And fondeth hou he mihte excite<br/>
+The jugges thurgh his eloquence<br/>
+Fro deth to torne the sentence    1620<br/>
+And sette here hertes to pite.<br/>
+Nou tolden thei, nou tolde he;<br/>
+Thei spieken plein after the lawe,<br/>
+Bot he the wordes of his sawe<br/>
+Coloureth in an other weie<br/>
+Spekende, and thus betwen the tweie,<br/>
+To trete upon this juggement,<br/>
+Made ech of hem his Argument.<br/>
+Wherof the tales forto hiere,<br/>
+Ther mai a man the Scole liere    1630<br/>
+Of Rethoriqes eloquences,<br/>
+Which is the secounde of sciences<br/>
+Touchende to Philosophie;<br/>
+Wherof a man schal justifie<br/>
+Hise wordes in disputeisoun,<br/>
+And knette upon conclusioun<br/>
+His Argument in such a forme,<br/>
+Which mai the pleine trouthe enforme<br/>
+And the soubtil cautele abate,<br/>
+Which every trewman schal debate.    1640
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferste, which is Theorique,<br/>
+And the secounde Rethorique,<br/>
+Sciences of Philosophie,<br/>
+I have hem told as in partie,<br/>
+So as the Philosophre it tolde<br/>
+To Alisandre: and nou I wolde<br/>
+Telle of the thridde what it is,<br/>
+The which Practique cleped is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Practique stant upon thre thinges<br/>
+Toward the governance of kinges;    1650<br/>
+Wherof the ferst Etique is named,<br/>
+The whos science stant proclamed<br/>
+To teche of vertu thilke reule,<br/>
+Hou that a king himself schal reule<br/>
+Of his moral condicion<br/>
+With worthi disposicion<br/>
+Of good livinge in his persone,<br/>
+Which is the chief of his corone.<br/>
+It makth a king also to lerne<br/>
+Hou he his bodi schal governe,    1660<br/>
+Hou he schal wake, hou he schal slepe,<br/>
+Hou that he schal his hele kepe<br/>
+In mete, in drinke, in clothinge eke:<br/>
+Ther is no wisdom forto seke<br/>
+As for the reule of his persone,<br/>
+The which that this science al one<br/>
+Ne techeth as be weie of kinde,<br/>
+That ther is nothing left behinde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That other point which to Practique<br/>
+Belongeth is Iconomique,    1670<br/>
+Which techeth thilke honestete<br/>
+Thurgh which a king in his degre<br/>
+His wif and child schal reule and guie,<br/>
+So forth with al the companie<br/>
+Which in his houshold schal abyde,<br/>
+And his astat on every syde<br/>
+In such manere forto lede,<br/>
+That he his houshold ne mislede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Practique hath yit the thridde aprise,<br/>
+Which techeth hou and in what wise    1680<br/>
+Thurgh hih pourveied ordinance<br/>
+A king schal sette in governance<br/>
+His Realme, and that is Policie,<br/>
+Which longeth unto Regalie<br/>
+In time of werre, in time of pes,<br/>
+To worschipe and to good encress<br/>
+Of clerk, of kniht and of Marchant,<br/>
+And so forth of the remenant<br/>
+Of al the comun poeple aboute,<br/>
+Withinne Burgh and ek withoute,    1690<br/>
+Of hem that ben Artificiers,<br/>
+Whiche usen craftes and mestiers,<br/>
+Whos Art is cleped Mechanique.<br/>
+And though thei ben noght alle like,<br/>
+Yit natheles, hou so it falle,<br/>
+O lawe mot governe hem alle,<br/>
+Or that thei lese or that thei winne,<br/>
+After thastat that thei ben inne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus this worthi yonge king<br/>
+Was fulli tauht of every thing,    1700<br/>
+Which mihte yive entendement<br/>
+Of good reule and good regiment<br/>
+To such a worthi Prince as he.<br/>
+Bot of verray necessite<br/>
+The Philosophre him hath betake<br/>
+Fyf pointz, whiche he hath undertake<br/>
+To kepe and holde in observance,<br/>
+As for the worthi governance<br/>
+Which longeth to his Regalie,<br/>
+After the reule of Policie.    1710
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To every man behoveth lore,<br/>
+Bot to noman belongeth more<br/>
+Than to a king, which hath to lede<br/>
+The poeple; for of his kinghede<br/>
+He mai hem bothe save and spille.<br/>
+And for it stant upon his wille,<br/>
+It sit him wel to ben avised,<br/>
+And the vertus whiche are assissed<br/>
+Unto a kinges Regiment,<br/>
+To take in his entendement:    1720<br/>
+Wherof to tellen, as thei stonde,<br/>
+Hierafterward nou woll I fonde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the vertus on is chief,<br/>
+And that is trouthe, which is lief<br/>
+To god and ek to man also.<br/>
+And for it hath ben evere so,<br/>
+Tawhte Aristotle, as he wel couthe,<br/>
+To Alisandre, hou in his youthe<br/>
+He scholde of trouthe thilke grace<br/>
+With al his hole herte embrace,    1730<br/>
+So that his word be trewe and plein,<br/>
+Toward the world and so certein<br/>
+That in him be no double speche:<br/>
+For if men scholde trouthe seche<br/>
+And founde it noght withinne a king,<br/>
+It were an unsittende thing.<br/>
+The word is tokne of that withinne,<br/>
+Ther schal a worthi king beginne<br/>
+To kepe his tunge and to be trewe,<br/>
+So schal his pris ben evere newe.    1740<br/>
+Avise him every man tofore,<br/>
+And be wel war, er he be swore,<br/>
+For afterward it is to late,<br/>
+If that he wole his word debate.<br/>
+For as a king in special<br/>
+Above alle othre is principal<br/>
+Of his pouer, so scholde he be<br/>
+Most vertuous in his degre;<br/>
+And that mai wel be signefied<br/>
+Be his corone and specified.    1750
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gold betokneth excellence,<br/>
+That men schull don him reverence<br/>
+As to here liege soverein.<br/>
+The Stones, as the bokes sein,<br/>
+Commended ben in treble wise:<br/>
+Ferst thei ben harde, and thilke assisse<br/>
+Betokneth in a king Constance,<br/>
+So that ther schal no variance<br/>
+Be founde in his condicion;<br/>
+And also be descripcion    1760<br/>
+The vertu which is in the stones<br/>
+A verrai Signe is for the nones<br/>
+Of that a king schal ben honeste<br/>
+And holde trewly his beheste<br/>
+Of thing which longeth to kinghede:<br/>
+The bryhte colour, as I rede,<br/>
+Which in the stones is schynende,<br/>
+Is in figure betoknende<br/>
+The Cronique of this worldes fame,<br/>
+Which stant upon his goode name.    1770<br/>
+The cercle which is round aboute<br/>
+Is tokne of al the lond withoute,<br/>
+Which stant under his Gerarchie,<br/>
+That he it schal wel kepe and guye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And for that trouthe, hou so it falle,<br/>
+Is the vertu soverein of alle,<br/>
+That longeth unto regiment,<br/>
+A tale, which is evident<br/>
+Of trouthe in comendacioun,<br/>
+Toward thin enformacion,    1780<br/>
+Mi Sone, hierafter thou schalt hiere<br/>
+Of a Cronique in this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the Cronique it doth reherce,<br/>
+A Soldan whilom was of Perce,<br/>
+Which Daires hihte, and Ytaspis<br/>
+His fader was; and soth it is<br/>
+That thurgh wisdom and hih prudence<br/>
+Mor than for eny reverence<br/>
+Of his lignage as be descente<br/>
+The regne of thilke empire he hente:    1790<br/>
+And as he was himselve wys,<br/>
+The wisemen he hield in pris<br/>
+And soghte hem oute on every side,<br/>
+That toward him thei scholde abide.<br/>
+Among the whiche thre ther were<br/>
+That most service unto him bere,<br/>
+As thei which in his chambre lyhen<br/>
+And al his conseil herde and syhen.<br/>
+Here names ben of strange note,<br/>
+Arpaghes was the ferste hote,    1800<br/>
+And Manachaz was the secounde,<br/>
+Zorobabel, as it is founde<br/>
+In the Cronique, was the thridde.<br/>
+This Soldan, what so him betidde,<br/>
+To hem he triste most of alle,<br/>
+Wherof the cas is so befalle:<br/>
+This lord, which hath conceiptes depe,<br/>
+Upon a nyht whan he hath slepe,<br/>
+As he which hath his wit desposed,<br/>
+Touchende a point hem hath opposed.    1810
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The kinges question was this;<br/>
+Of thinges thre which strengest is,<br/>
+The wyn, the womman or the king:<br/>
+And that thei scholde upon this thing<br/>
+Of here ansuere avised be,<br/>
+He yaf hem fulli daies thre,<br/>
+And hath behote hem be his feith<br/>
+That who the beste reson seith,<br/>
+He schal receive a worthi mede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this thing thei token hiede    1820<br/>
+And stoden in desputeison,<br/>
+That be diverse opinion<br/>
+Of Argumentz that thei have holde<br/>
+Arpaghes ferst his tale tolde,<br/>
+And seide hou that the strengthe of kinges<br/>
+Is myhtiest of alle thinges.<br/>
+For king hath pouer over man,<br/>
+And man is he which reson can,<br/>
+As he which is of his nature<br/>
+The moste noble creature    1830<br/>
+Of alle tho that god hath wroght:<br/>
+And be that skile it semeth noght,<br/>
+He seith, that eny erthly thing<br/>
+Mai be so myhty as a king.<br/>
+A king mai spille, a king mai save,<br/>
+A king mai make of lord a knave<br/>
+And of a knave a lord also:<br/>
+The pouer of a king stant so,<br/>
+That he the lawes overpasseth;<br/>
+What he wol make lasse, he lasseth,    1840<br/>
+What he wol make more, he moreth;<br/>
+And as the gentil faucon soreth,<br/>
+He fleth, that noman him reclameth;<br/>
+Bot he al one alle othre tameth,<br/>
+And stant himself of lawe fre.<br/>
+Lo, thus a kinges myht, seith he,<br/>
+So as his reson can argue,<br/>
+Is strengest and of most value.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Manachaz seide otherwise,<br/>
+That wyn is of the more emprise;    1850<br/>
+And that he scheweth be this weie.<br/>
+The wyn fulofte takth aweie<br/>
+The reson fro the mannes herte;<br/>
+The wyn can make a krepel sterte,<br/>
+And a delivere man unwelde;<br/>
+It makth a blind man to behelde,<br/>
+And a bryht yhed seme derk;<br/>
+It makth a lewed man a clerk,<br/>
+And fro the clerkes the clergie<br/>
+It takth aweie, and couardie    1860<br/>
+It torneth into hardiesse;<br/>
+Of Avarice it makth largesse.<br/>
+The wyn makth ek the goode blod,<br/>
+In which the Soule which is good<br/>
+Hath chosen hire a resting place,<br/>
+Whil that the lif hir wole embrace.<br/>
+And be this skile Manachas<br/>
+Ansuered hath upon this cas,<br/>
+And seith that wyn be weie of kinde<br/>
+Is thing which mai the hertes binde    1870<br/>
+Wel more than the regalie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Zorobabel for his partie<br/>
+Seide, as him thoghte for the beste,<br/>
+That wommen ben the myhtieste.<br/>
+The king and the vinour also<br/>
+Of wommen comen bothe tuo;<br/>
+And ek he seide hou that manhede<br/>
+Thurgh strengthe unto the wommanhede<br/>
+Of love, wher he wole or non,<br/>
+Obeie schal; and therupon,    1880<br/>
+To schewe of wommen the maistrie,<br/>
+A tale which he syh with yhe<br/>
+As for ensample he tolde this,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hou Apemen, of Besazis<br/>
+Which dowhter was, in the paleis<br/>
+Sittende upon his hihe deis,<br/>
+Whan he was hotest in his ire<br/>
+Toward the grete of his empire,<br/>
+Cirus the king tirant sche tok,<br/>
+And only with hire goodly lok    1890<br/>
+Sche made him debonaire and meke,<br/>
+And be the chyn and be the cheke<br/>
+Sche luggeth him riht as hir liste,<br/>
+That nou sche japeth, nou sche kiste,<br/>
+And doth with him what evere hir liketh;<br/>
+Whan that sche loureth, thanne he siketh,<br/>
+And whan sche gladeth, he is glad:<br/>
+And thus this king was overlad<br/>
+With hire which his lemman was.<br/>
+Among the men is no solas,    1900<br/>
+If that ther be no womman there;<br/>
+For bot if that the wommen were,<br/>
+This worldes joie were aweie:<br/>
+Thurgh hem men finden out the weie<br/>
+To knihthode and to worldes fame;<br/>
+Thei make a man to drede schame,<br/>
+And honour forto be desired:<br/>
+Thurgh the beaute of hem is fyred<br/>
+The Dart of which Cupide throweth,<br/>
+Wherof the jolif peine groweth,    1910<br/>
+Which al the world hath under fote.<br/>
+A womman is the mannes bote,<br/>
+His lif, his deth, his wo, his wel;<br/>
+And this thing mai be schewed wel,<br/>
+Hou that wommen ben goode and kinde,<br/>
+For in ensample this I finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan that the duk Ametus lay<br/>
+Sek in his bedd, that every day<br/>
+Men waiten whan he scholde deie,<br/>
+Alceste his wif goth forto preie,    1920<br/>
+As sche which wolde thonk deserve,<br/>
+With Sacrifice unto Minerve,<br/>
+To wite ansuere of the goddesse<br/>
+Hou that hir lord of his seknesse,<br/>
+Wherof he was so wo besein,<br/>
+Recovere myhte his hele ayein.<br/>
+Lo, thus sche cride and thus sche preide,<br/>
+Til ate laste a vois hir seide,<br/>
+That if sche wolde for his sake<br/>
+The maladie soffre and take,    1930<br/>
+And deie hirself, he scholde live.<br/>
+Of this ansuere Alceste hath yive<br/>
+Unto Minerve gret thonkinge,<br/>
+So that hir deth and his livinge<br/>
+Sche ches with al hire hole entente,<br/>
+And thus acorded hom sche wente.<br/>
+Into the chambre and whan sche cam,<br/>
+Hire housebonde anon sche nam<br/>
+In bothe hire Armes and him kiste,<br/>
+And spak unto him what hire liste;    1940<br/>
+And therupon withinne a throwe<br/>
+This goode wif was overthrowe<br/>
+And deide, and he was hool in haste.<br/>
+So mai a man be reson taste,<br/>
+Hou next after the god above<br/>
+The trouthe of wommen and the love,<br/>
+In whom that alle grace is founde,<br/>
+Is myhtiest upon this grounde<br/>
+And most behovely manyfold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus Zorobabel hath told    1950<br/>
+The tale of his opinion:<br/>
+Bot for final conclusion<br/>
+What strengest is of erthli thinges,<br/>
+The wyn, the wommen or the kinges,<br/>
+He seith that trouthe above hem alle<br/>
+Is myhtiest, hou evere it falle.<br/>
+The trouthe, hou so it evere come,<br/>
+Mai for nothing ben overcome;<br/>
+It mai wel soffre for a throwe,<br/>
+Bot ate laste it schal be knowe.    1960<br/>
+The proverbe is, who that is trewe,<br/>
+Him schal his while nevere rewe:<br/>
+For hou so that the cause wende,<br/>
+The trouthe is schameles ate ende,<br/>
+Bot what thing that is troutheles,<br/>
+It mai noght wel be schameles,<br/>
+And schame hindreth every wyht:<br/>
+So proveth it, ther is no myht<br/>
+Withoute trouthe in no degre.<br/>
+And thus for trouthe of his decre    1970<br/>
+Zorobabel was most commended,<br/>
+Wherof the question was ended,<br/>
+And he resceived hath his mede<br/>
+For trouthe, which to mannes nede<br/>
+Is most behoveliche overal.<br/>
+Forthi was trouthe in special<br/>
+The ferste point in observance<br/>
+Betake unto the governance<br/>
+Of Alisandre, as it is seid:<br/>
+For therupon the ground is leid    1980<br/>
+Of every kinges regiment,<br/>
+As thing which most convenient<br/>
+Is forto sette a king in evene<br/>
+Bothe in this world and ek in hevene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next after trouthe the secounde,<br/>
+In Policie as it is founde,<br/>
+Which serveth to the worldes fame<br/>
+In worschipe of a kinges name,<br/>
+Largesse it is, whos privilegge<br/>
+Ther mai non Avarice abregge.    1990<br/>
+The worldes good was ferst comune,<br/>
+Bot afterward upon fortune<br/>
+Was thilke comun profit cessed:<br/>
+For whan the poeple stod encresced<br/>
+And the lignages woxen grete,<br/>
+Anon for singulier beyete<br/>
+Drouh every man to his partie;<br/>
+Wherof cam in the ferste envie<br/>
+With gret debat and werres stronge,<br/>
+And laste among the men so longe,    2000<br/>
+Til noman wiste who was who,<br/>
+Ne which was frend ne which was fo.<br/>
+Til ate laste in every lond<br/>
+Withinne hemself the poeple fond<br/>
+That it was good to make a king,<br/>
+Which mihte appesen al this thing<br/>
+And yive riht to the lignages<br/>
+In partinge of here heritages<br/>
+And ek of al here other good;<br/>
+And thus above hem alle stod    2010<br/>
+The king upon his Regalie,<br/>
+As he which hath to justifie<br/>
+The worldes good fro covoitise.<br/>
+So sit it wel in alle wise<br/>
+A king betwen the more and lesse<br/>
+To sette his herte upon largesse<br/>
+Toward himself and ek also<br/>
+Toward his poeple; and if noght so,<br/>
+That is to sein, if that he be<br/>
+Toward himselven large and fre    2020<br/>
+And of his poeple take and pile,<br/>
+Largesse be no weie of skile<br/>
+It mai be seid, bot Avarice,<br/>
+Which in a king is a gret vice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A king behoveth ek to fle<br/>
+The vice of Prodegalite,<br/>
+That he mesure in his expence<br/>
+So kepe, that of indigence<br/>
+He mai be sauf: for who that nedeth,<br/>
+In al his werk the worse he spedeth.    2030<br/>
+As Aristotle upon Chaldee<br/>
+Ensample of gret Auctorite<br/>
+Unto king Alisandre tauhte<br/>
+Of thilke folk that were unsauhte<br/>
+Toward here king for his pilage:<br/>
+Wherof he bad, in his corage<br/>
+That he unto thre pointz entende,<br/>
+Wher that he wolde his good despende.<br/>
+Ferst scholde he loke, hou that it stod,<br/>
+That al were of his oghne good    2040<br/>
+The yiftes whiche he wolde yive;<br/>
+So myhte he wel the betre live:<br/>
+And ek he moste taken hiede<br/>
+If ther be cause of eny nede,<br/>
+Which oghte forto be defended,<br/>
+Er that his goodes be despended:<br/>
+He mot ek, as it is befalle,<br/>
+Amonges othre thinges alle<br/>
+Se the decertes of his men;<br/>
+And after that thei ben of ken    2050<br/>
+And of astat and of merite,<br/>
+He schal hem largeliche aquite,<br/>
+Or for the werre, or for the pes,<br/>
+That non honour falle in descres,<br/>
+Which mihte torne into defame,<br/>
+Bot that he kepe his goode name,<br/>
+So that he be noght holde unkinde.<br/>
+For in Cronique a tale I finde,<br/>
+Which spekth somdiel of this matiere,<br/>
+Hierafterward as thou schalt hiere.    2060
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Rome, to poursuie his riht,<br/>
+Ther was a worthi povere kniht,<br/>
+Which cam al one forto sein<br/>
+His cause, when the court was plein,<br/>
+Wher Julius was in presence.<br/>
+And for him lacketh of despence,<br/>
+Ther was with him non advocat<br/>
+To make ple for his astat.<br/>
+Bot thogh him lacke forto plede,<br/>
+Him lacketh nothing of manhede;    2070<br/>
+He wiste wel his pours was povere,<br/>
+Bot yit he thoghte his riht recovere,<br/>
+And openly poverte alleide,<br/>
+To themperour and thus he seide:<br/>
+“O Julius, lord of the lawe,<br/>
+Behold, mi conseil is withdrawe<br/>
+For lacke of gold: do thin office<br/>
+After the lawes of justice:<br/>
+Help that I hadde conseil hiere<br/>
+Upon the trouthe of mi matiere.”    2080<br/>
+And Julius with that anon<br/>
+Assigned him a worthi on,<br/>
+Bot he himself no word ne spak.<br/>
+This kniht was wroth and fond a lak<br/>
+In themperour, and seide thus:<br/>
+“O thou unkinde Julius,<br/>
+Whan thou in thi bataille were<br/>
+Up in Aufrique, and I was there,<br/>
+Mi myht for thi rescousse I dede<br/>
+And putte noman in my stede,    2090<br/>
+Thou wost what woundes ther I hadde:<br/>
+Bot hier I finde thee so badde,<br/>
+That thee ne liste speke o word<br/>
+Thin oghne mouth, nor of thin hord<br/>
+To yive a florin me to helpe.<br/>
+Hou scholde I thanne me beyelpe<br/>
+Fro this dai forth of thi largesse,<br/>
+Whan such a gret unkindenesse<br/>
+Is founde in such a lord as thou?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Julius knew wel ynou    2100<br/>
+That al was soth which he him tolde;<br/>
+And for he wolde noght ben holde<br/>
+Unkinde, he tok his cause on honde,<br/>
+And as it were of goddes sonde,<br/>
+He yaf him good ynouh to spende<br/>
+For evere into his lives ende.<br/>
+And thus scholde every worthi king<br/>
+Take of his knihtes knowleching,<br/>
+Whan that he syh thei hadden nede,<br/>
+For every service axeth mede:    2110<br/>
+Bot othre, which have noght deserved<br/>
+Thurgh vertu, bot of japes served,<br/>
+A king schal noght deserve grace,<br/>
+Thogh he be large in such a place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It sit wel every king to have<br/>
+Discrecion, whan men him crave,<br/>
+So that he mai his yifte wite:<br/>
+Wherof I finde a tale write,<br/>
+Hou Cinichus a povere kniht<br/>
+A Somme which was over myht    2120<br/>
+Preide of his king Antigonus.<br/>
+The king ansuerde to him thus,<br/>
+And seide hou such a yifte passeth<br/>
+His povere astat: and thanne he lasseth,<br/>
+And axeth bot a litel peny,<br/>
+If that the king wol yive him eny.<br/>
+The king ansuerde, it was to smal<br/>
+For him, which was a lord real;<br/>
+To yive a man so litel thing<br/>
+It were unworschipe in a king.    2130
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Be this ensample a king mai lere<br/>
+That forto yive is in manere:<br/>
+For if a king his tresor lasseth<br/>
+Withoute honour and thonkles passeth,<br/>
+Whan he himself wol so beguile,<br/>
+I not who schal compleigne his while,<br/>
+Ne who be rihte him schal relieve.<br/>
+Bot natheles this I believe,<br/>
+To helpe with his oghne lond<br/>
+Behoveth every man his hond    2140<br/>
+To sette upon necessite;<br/>
+And ek his kinges realte<br/>
+Mot every liege man conforte,<br/>
+With good and bodi to supporte,<br/>
+Whan thei se cause resonable:<br/>
+For who that is noght entendable<br/>
+To holde upriht his kinges name,<br/>
+Him oghte forto be to blame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Policie and overmore<br/>
+To speke in this matiere more,    2150<br/>
+So as the Philosophre tolde,<br/>
+A king after the reule is holde<br/>
+To modifie and to adresce<br/>
+Hise yiftes upon such largesce<br/>
+That he mesure noght excede:<br/>
+For if a king falle into nede,<br/>
+It causeth ofte sondri thinges<br/>
+Whiche are ungoodly to the kinges.<br/>
+What man wol noght himself mesure,<br/>
+Men sen fulofte that mesure    2160<br/>
+Him hath forsake: and so doth he<br/>
+That useth Prodegalite,<br/>
+Which is the moder of poverte,<br/>
+Wherof the londes ben deserte;<br/>
+And namely whan thilke vice<br/>
+Aboute a king stant in office<br/>
+And hath withholde of his partie<br/>
+The covoitouse flaterie,<br/>
+Which many a worthi king deceiveth,<br/>
+Er he the fallas aperceiveth    2170<br/>
+Of hem that serven to the glose.<br/>
+For thei that cunnen plese and glose,<br/>
+Ben, as men tellen, the norrices<br/>
+Unto the fostringe of the vices,<br/>
+Wherof fulofte natheles<br/>
+A king is blamed gulteles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Philosophre, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Spak to a king of this matiere,<br/>
+And seide him wel hou that flatours<br/>
+Coupable were of thre errours.    2180<br/>
+On was toward the goddes hihe,<br/>
+That weren wrothe of that thei sihe<br/>
+The meschief which befalle scholde<br/>
+Of that the false flatour tolde.<br/>
+Toward the king an other was,<br/>
+Whan thei be sleihte and be fallas<br/>
+Of feigned wordes make him wene<br/>
+That blak is whyt and blew is grene<br/>
+Touchende of his condicion:<br/>
+For whanne he doth extorcion    2190<br/>
+With manye an other vice mo,<br/>
+Men schal noght finden on of tho<br/>
+To groucche or speke therayein,<br/>
+Bot holden up his oil and sein<br/>
+That al is wel, what evere he doth;<br/>
+And thus of fals thei maken soth,<br/>
+So that here kinges yhe is blent<br/>
+And wot not hou the world is went.<br/>
+The thridde errour is harm comune,<br/>
+With which the poeple mot commune    2200<br/>
+Of wronges that thei bringen inne:<br/>
+And thus thei worchen treble sinne,<br/>
+That ben flatours aboute a king.<br/>
+Ther myhte be no worse thing<br/>
+Aboute a kinges regalie,<br/>
+Thanne is the vice of flaterie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And natheles it hath ben used,<br/>
+That it was nevere yit refused<br/>
+As forto speke in court real;<br/>
+For there it is most special,    2210<br/>
+And mai noght longe be forbore.<br/>
+Bot whan this vice of hem is bore,<br/>
+That scholden the vertus forthbringe,<br/>
+And trouthe is torned to lesinge,<br/>
+It is, as who seith, ayein kinde,<br/>
+Wherof an old ensample I finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among these othre tales wise<br/>
+Of Philosophres, in this wise<br/>
+I rede, how whilom tuo ther were,<br/>
+And to the Scole forto lere    2220<br/>
+Unto Athenes fro Cartage<br/>
+Here frendes, whan thei were of Age,<br/>
+Hem sende; and ther thei stoden longe,<br/>
+Til thei such lore have underfonge,<br/>
+That in here time thei surmonte<br/>
+Alle othre men, that to acompte<br/>
+Of hem was tho the grete fame.<br/>
+The ferste of hem his rihte name<br/>
+Was Diogenes thanne hote,<br/>
+In whom was founde no riote:    2230<br/>
+His felaw Arisippus hyhte,<br/>
+Which mochel couthe and mochel myhte.<br/>
+Bot ate laste, soth to sein,<br/>
+Thei bothe tornen hom ayein<br/>
+Unto Cartage and scole lete.<br/>
+This Diogenes no beyete<br/>
+Of worldes good or lasse or more<br/>
+Ne soghte for his longe lore,<br/>
+Bot tok him only forto duelle<br/>
+At hom; and as the bokes telle,    2240<br/>
+His hous was nyh to the rivere<br/>
+Besyde a bregge, as thou schalt hiere.<br/>
+Ther duelleth he to take his reste,<br/>
+So as it thoghte him for the beste,<br/>
+To studie in his Philosophie,<br/>
+As he which wolde so defie<br/>
+The worldes pompe on every syde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Arisippe his bok aside<br/>
+Hath leid, and to the court he wente,<br/>
+Wher many a wyle and many a wente    2250<br/>
+With flaterie and wordes softe<br/>
+He caste, and hath compassed ofte<br/>
+Hou he his Prince myhte plese;<br/>
+And in this wise he gat him ese<br/>
+Of vein honour and worldes good.<br/>
+The londes reule upon him stod,<br/>
+The king of him was wonder glad,<br/>
+And all was do, what thing he bad,<br/>
+Bothe in the court and ek withoute.<br/>
+With flaterie he broghte aboute    2260<br/>
+His pourpos of the worldes werk,<br/>
+Which was ayein the stat of clerk,<br/>
+So that Philosophie he lefte<br/>
+And to richesse himself uplefte:<br/>
+Lo, thus hadde Arisippe his wille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Diogenes duelte stille<br/>
+A home and loked on his bok:<br/>
+He soghte noght the worldes crok<br/>
+For vein honour ne for richesse,<br/>
+Bot all his hertes besinesse    2270<br/>
+He sette to be vertuous;<br/>
+And thus withinne his oghne hous<br/>
+He liveth to the sufficance<br/>
+Of his havinge. And fell per chance,<br/>
+This Diogene upon a day,<br/>
+And that was in the Monthe of May,<br/>
+Whan that these herbes ben holsome,<br/>
+He walketh forto gadre some<br/>
+In his gardin, of whiche his joutes<br/>
+He thoghte have, and thus aboutes    2280<br/>
+Whanne he hath gadred what him liketh,<br/>
+He satte him thanne doun and pyketh,<br/>
+And wyssh his herbes in the flod<br/>
+Upon the which his gardin stod,<br/>
+Nyh to the bregge, as I tolde er.<br/>
+And hapneth, whil he sitteth ther,<br/>
+Cam Arisippes be the strete<br/>
+With manye hors and routes grete,<br/>
+And straght unto the bregge he rod.<br/>
+Wher that he hoved and abod;    2290<br/>
+For as he caste his yhe nyh,<br/>
+His felaw Diogene he syh,<br/>
+And what he dede he syh also,<br/>
+Wherof he seide to him so:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“O Diogene, god thee spede.<br/>
+It were certes litel nede<br/>
+To sitte there and wortes pyke,<br/>
+If thou thi Prince couthest lyke,<br/>
+So as I can in my degre.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“O Arisippe,” ayein quod he,    2300<br/>
+“If that thou couthist, so as I,<br/>
+Thi wortes pyke, trewely<br/>
+It were als litel nede or lasse,<br/>
+That thou so worldly wolt compasse<br/>
+With flaterie forto serve,<br/>
+Wherof thou thenkest to deserve<br/>
+Thi princes thonk, and to pourchace<br/>
+Hou thou myht stonden in his grace,<br/>
+For getinge of a litel good.<br/>
+If thou wolt take into thi mod    2310<br/>
+Reson, thou myht be reson deeme<br/>
+That so thi prince forto queeme<br/>
+Is noght to reson acordant,<br/>
+Bot it is gretly descordant<br/>
+Unto the Scoles of Athene.”<br/>
+Lo, thus ansuerde Diogene<br/>
+Ayein the clerkes flaterie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot yit men sen thessamplerie<br/>
+Of Arisippe is wel received,<br/>
+And thilke of Diogene is weyved.    2320<br/>
+Office in court and gold in cofre<br/>
+Is nou, men sein, the philosophre<br/>
+Which hath the worschipe in the halle;<br/>
+Bot flaterie passeth alle<br/>
+In chambre, whom the court avanceth;<br/>
+For upon thilke lot it chanceth<br/>
+To be beloved nou aday.<br/>
+I not if it be ye or nay,<br/>
+Bot as the comun vois it telleth;<br/>
+Bot wher that flaterie duelleth    2330<br/>
+In eny lond under the Sonne,<br/>
+Ther is ful many a thing begonne<br/>
+Which were betre to be left;<br/>
+That hath be schewed nou and eft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot if a Prince wolde him reule<br/>
+Of the Romeins after the reule,<br/>
+In thilke time as it was used,<br/>
+This vice scholde be refused,<br/>
+Wherof the Princes ben assoted.<br/>
+Bot wher the pleine trouthe is noted,    2340<br/>
+Ther may a Prince wel conceive,<br/>
+That he schal noght himself deceive,<br/>
+Of that he hiereth wordes pleine;<br/>
+For him thar noght be reson pleigne,<br/>
+That warned is er him be wo.<br/>
+And that was fully proeved tho,<br/>
+Whan Rome was the worldes chief,<br/>
+The Sothseiere tho was lief,<br/>
+Which wolde noght the trouthe spare,<br/>
+Bot with hise wordes pleine and bare    2350<br/>
+To Themperour hise sothes tolde,<br/>
+As in Cronique is yit withholde,<br/>
+Hierafterward as thou schalt hiere<br/>
+Acordende unto this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To se this olde ensamplerie,<br/>
+That whilom was no flaterie<br/>
+Toward the Princes wel I finde;<br/>
+Wherof so as it comth to mynde,<br/>
+Mi Sone, a tale unto thin Ere,<br/>
+Whil that the worthi princes were    2360<br/>
+At Rome, I thenke forto tellen.<br/>
+For whan the chances so befellen<br/>
+That eny Emperour as tho<br/>
+Victoire hadde upon his fo,<br/>
+And so forth cam to Rome ayein,<br/>
+Of treble honour he was certein,<br/>
+Wherof that he was magnefied.<br/>
+The ferste, as it is specefied,<br/>
+Was, whan he cam at thilke tyde,<br/>
+The Charr in which he scholde ryde    2370<br/>
+Foure whyte Stiedes scholden drawe;<br/>
+Of Jupiter be thilke lawe<br/>
+The Cote he scholde were also;<br/>
+Hise prisoners ek scholden go<br/>
+Endlong the Charr on eyther hond,<br/>
+And alle the nobles of the lond<br/>
+Tofore and after with him come<br/>
+Ridende and broghten him to Rome,<br/>
+In thonk of his chivalerie<br/>
+And for non other flaterie.    2380<br/>
+And that was schewed forth withal;<br/>
+Wher he sat in his Charr real,<br/>
+Beside him was a Ribald set,<br/>
+Which hadde hise wordes so beset,<br/>
+To themperour in al his gloire<br/>
+He seide, “Tak into memoire,<br/>
+For al this pompe and al this pride<br/>
+Let no justice gon aside,<br/>
+Bot know thiself, what so befalle.<br/>
+For men sen ofte time falle    2390<br/>
+Thing which men wende siker stonde:<br/>
+Thogh thou victoire have nou on honde,<br/>
+Fortune mai noght stonde alway;<br/>
+The whiel per chance an other day<br/>
+Mai torne, and thou myht overthrowe;<br/>
+Ther lasteth nothing bot a throwe.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With these wordes and with mo<br/>
+This Ribald, which sat with him tho,<br/>
+To Themperour his tale tolde:<br/>
+And overmor what evere he wolde,    2400<br/>
+Or were it evel or were it good,<br/>
+So pleinly as the trouthe stod,<br/>
+He spareth noght, bot spekth it oute;<br/>
+And so myhte every man aboute<br/>
+The day of that solempnete<br/>
+His tale telle als wel as he<br/>
+To Themperour al openly.<br/>
+And al was this the cause why;<br/>
+That whil he stod in that noblesse,<br/>
+He scholde his vanite represse    2410<br/>
+With suche wordes as he herde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo nou, hou thilke time it ferde<br/>
+Toward so hih a worthi lord:<br/>
+For this I finde ek of record,<br/>
+Which the Cronique hath auctorized.<br/>
+What Emperour was entronized,<br/>
+The ferste day of his corone,<br/>
+Wher he was in his real Throne<br/>
+And hield his feste in the paleis<br/>
+Sittende upon his hihe deis    2420<br/>
+With al the lust that mai be gete,<br/>
+Whan he was gladdest at his mete,<br/>
+And every menstral hadde pleid,<br/>
+And every Disour hadde seid<br/>
+What most was plesant to his Ere,<br/>
+Than ate laste comen there<br/>
+Hise Macons, for thei scholden crave<br/>
+Wher that he wolde be begrave,<br/>
+And of what Ston his sepulture<br/>
+Thei scholden make, and what sculpture    2430<br/>
+He wolde ordeine therupon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho was ther flaterie non<br/>
+The worthi princes to bejape;<br/>
+The thing was other wise schape<br/>
+With good conseil; and otherwise<br/>
+Thei were hemselven thanne wise,<br/>
+And understoden wel and knewen.<br/>
+Whan suche softe wyndes blewen<br/>
+Of flaterie into here Ere,<br/>
+Thei setten noght here hertes there;    2440<br/>
+Bot whan thei herden wordes feigned,<br/>
+The pleine trouthe it hath desdeigned<br/>
+Of hem that weren so discrete.<br/>
+So tok the flatour no beyete<br/>
+Of him that was his prince tho:<br/>
+And forto proven it is so,<br/>
+A tale which befell in dede<br/>
+In a Cronique of Rome I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cesar upon his real throne<br/>
+Wher that he sat in his persone    2450<br/>
+And was hyest in al his pris,<br/>
+A man, which wolde make him wys,<br/>
+Fell doun knelende in his presence,<br/>
+And dede him such a reverence,<br/>
+As thogh the hihe god it were:<br/>
+Men hadden gret mervaille there<br/>
+Of the worschipe which he dede.<br/>
+This man aros fro thilke stede,<br/>
+And forth with al the same tyde<br/>
+He goth him up and be his side    2460<br/>
+He set him doun as pier and pier,<br/>
+And seide, “If thou that sittest hier<br/>
+Art god, which alle thinges myht,<br/>
+Thanne have I do worshipe ariht<br/>
+As to the god; and other wise,<br/>
+If thou be noght of thilke assisse,<br/>
+Bot art a man such as am I,<br/>
+Than mai I sitte faste by,<br/>
+For we be bothen of o kinde.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cesar ansuerde and seide, “O blinde,    2470<br/>
+Thou art a fol, it is wel sene<br/>
+Upon thiself: for if thou wene<br/>
+I be a god, thou dost amys<br/>
+To sitte wher thou sest god is;<br/>
+And if I be a man, also<br/>
+Thou hast a gret folie do,<br/>
+Whan thou to such on as schal deie<br/>
+The worschipe of thi god aweie<br/>
+Hast yoven so unworthely.<br/>
+Thus mai I prove redely,    2480<br/>
+Thou art noght wys.”    And thei that herde<br/>
+Hou wysly that the king ansuerde,<br/>
+It was to hem a newe lore;<br/>
+Wherof thei dradden him the more,<br/>
+And broghten nothing to his Ere,<br/>
+Bot if it trouthe and reson were.<br/>
+So be ther manye, in such a wise<br/>
+That feignen wordes to be wise,<br/>
+And al is verray flaterie<br/>
+To him which can it wel aspie.    2490
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The kinde flatour can noght love<br/>
+Bot forto bringe himself above;<br/>
+For hou that evere his maister fare,<br/>
+So that himself stonde out of care,<br/>
+Him reccheth noght: and thus fulofte<br/>
+Deceived ben with wordes softe<br/>
+The kinges that ben innocent.<br/>
+Wherof as for chastiement<br/>
+The wise Philosophre seide,<br/>
+What king that so his tresor leide    2500<br/>
+Upon such folk, he hath the lesse,<br/>
+And yit ne doth he no largesse,<br/>
+Bot harmeth with his oghne hond<br/>
+Himself and ek his oghne lond,<br/>
+And that be many a sondri weie.<br/>
+Wherof if that a man schal seie,<br/>
+As forto speke in general,<br/>
+Wher such thing falleth overal<br/>
+That eny king himself misreule,<br/>
+The Philosophre upon his reule    2510<br/>
+In special a cause sette,<br/>
+Which is and evere hath be the lette<br/>
+In governance aboute a king<br/>
+Upon the meschief of the thing,<br/>
+And that, he seith, is Flaterie.<br/>
+Wherof tofore as in partie<br/>
+What vice it is I have declared;<br/>
+For who that hath his wit bewared<br/>
+Upon a flatour to believe,<br/>
+Whan that he weneth best achieve    2520<br/>
+His goode world, it is most fro.<br/>
+And forto proeven it is so<br/>
+Ensamples ther ben manyon,<br/>
+Of whiche if thou wolt knowen on,<br/>
+It is behovely forto hiere<br/>
+What whilom fell in this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the kinges in the bible<br/>
+I finde a tale, and is credible,<br/>
+Of him that whilom Achab hihte,<br/>
+Which hadde al Irahel to rihte;    2530<br/>
+Bot who that couthe glose softe<br/>
+And flatre, suche he sette alofte<br/>
+In gret astat and made hem riche;<br/>
+Bot thei that spieken wordes liche<br/>
+To trouthe and wolde it noght forbere,<br/>
+For hem was non astat to bere,<br/>
+The court of suche tok non hiede.<br/>
+Til ate laste upon a nede,<br/>
+That Benedab king of Surie<br/>
+Of Irahel a gret partie,    2540<br/>
+Which Ramoth Galaath was hote,<br/>
+Hath sesed; and of that riote<br/>
+He tok conseil in sondri wise,<br/>
+Bot noght of hem that weren wise.<br/>
+And natheles upon this cas<br/>
+To strengthen him, for Josaphas,<br/>
+Which thanne was king of Judee,<br/>
+He sende forto come, as he<br/>
+Which thurgh frendschipe and alliance<br/>
+Was next to him of aqueintance;    2550<br/>
+For Joram Sone of Josaphath<br/>
+Achabbes dowhter wedded hath,<br/>
+Which hihte faire Godelie.<br/>
+And thus cam into Samarie<br/>
+King Josaphat, and he fond there<br/>
+The king Achab: and whan thei were<br/>
+Togedre spekende of this thing,<br/>
+This Josaphat seith to the king,<br/>
+Hou that he wolde gladly hiere<br/>
+Som trew prophete in this matiere,    2560<br/>
+That he his conseil myhte yive<br/>
+To what point that it schal be drive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in that time so befell,<br/>
+Ther was such on in Irahel,<br/>
+Which sette him al to flaterie,<br/>
+And he was cleped Sedechie;<br/>
+And after him Achab hath sent:<br/>
+And he at his comandement<br/>
+Tofore him cam, and be a sleyhte<br/>
+He hath upon his heved on heyhte    2570<br/>
+Tuo large hornes set of bras,<br/>
+As he which al a flatour was,<br/>
+And goth rampende as a leoun<br/>
+And caste hise hornes up and doun,<br/>
+And bad men ben of good espeir,<br/>
+For as the hornes percen their,<br/>
+He seith, withoute resistence,<br/>
+So wiste he wel of his science<br/>
+That Benedab is desconfit.<br/>
+Whan Sedechie upon this plit    2580<br/>
+Hath told this tale to his lord,<br/>
+Anon ther were of his acord<br/>
+Prophetes false manye mo<br/>
+To bere up oil, and alle tho<br/>
+Affermen that which he hath told,<br/>
+Wherof the king Achab was bold<br/>
+And yaf hem yiftes al aboute.<br/>
+But Josaphat was in gret doute,<br/>
+And hield fantosme al that he herde,<br/>
+Preiende Achab, hou so it ferde,    2590<br/>
+If ther were eny other man,<br/>
+The which of prophecie can,<br/>
+To hiere him speke er that thei gon.<br/>
+Quod Achab thanne, “Ther is on,<br/>
+A brothell, which Micheas hihte;<br/>
+Bot he ne comth noght in my sihte,<br/>
+For he hath longe in prison lein.<br/>
+Him liketh nevere yit to sein<br/>
+A goodly word to mi plesance;<br/>
+And natheles at thin instance    2600<br/>
+He schal come oute, and thanne he may<br/>
+Seie as he seide many day;<br/>
+For yit he seide nevere wel.”<br/>
+Tho Josaphat began somdel<br/>
+To gladen him in hope of trouthe,<br/>
+And bad withouten eny slouthe<br/>
+That men him scholden fette anon.<br/>
+And thei that weren for him gon,<br/>
+Whan that thei comen wher he was,<br/>
+Thei tolden unto Micheas    2610<br/>
+The manere hou that Sedechie<br/>
+Declared hath his prophecie;<br/>
+And therupon thei preie him faire<br/>
+That he wol seie no contraire,<br/>
+Wherof the king mai be desplesed,<br/>
+For so schal every man ben esed,<br/>
+And he mai helpe himselve also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Micheas upon trouthe tho<br/>
+His herte sette, and to hem seith,<br/>
+Al that belongeth to his feith    2620<br/>
+And of non other feigned thing,<br/>
+That wol he telle unto his king,<br/>
+Als fer as god hath yove him grace.<br/>
+Thus cam this prophete into place<br/>
+Wher he the kinges wille herde;<br/>
+And he therto anon ansuerde,<br/>
+And seide unto him in this wise:<br/>
+“Mi liege lord, for mi servise,<br/>
+Which trewe hath stonden evere yit,<br/>
+Thou hast me with prisone aquit;    2630<br/>
+Bot for al that I schal noght glose<br/>
+Of trouthe als fer as I suppose;<br/>
+And as touchende of this bataille,<br/>
+Thou schalt noght of the sothe faile.<br/>
+For if it like thee to hiere,<br/>
+As I am tauht in that matiere,<br/>
+Thou miht it understonde sone;<br/>
+Bot what is afterward to done<br/>
+Avise thee, for this I sih.<br/>
+I was tofor the throne on hih,    2640<br/>
+Wher al the world me thoghte stod,<br/>
+And there I herde and understod<br/>
+The vois of god with wordes cliere<br/>
+Axende, and seide in this manere:<br/>
+“In what thing mai I best beguile<br/>
+The king Achab?” And for a while<br/>
+Upon this point thei spieken faste.<br/>
+Tho seide a spirit ate laste,<br/>
+“I undertake this emprise.”<br/>
+And god him axeth in what wise.    2650<br/>
+“I schal,” quod he, “deceive and lye<br/>
+With flaterende prophecie<br/>
+In suche mouthes as he lieveth.”<br/>
+And he which alle thing achieveth<br/>
+Bad him go forth and don riht so.<br/>
+And over this I sih also<br/>
+The noble peple of Irahel<br/>
+Dispers as Schep upon an hell,<br/>
+Withoute a kepere unarraied:<br/>
+And as thei wente aboute astraied,    2660<br/>
+I herde a vois unto hem sein,<br/>
+“Goth hom into your hous ayein,<br/>
+Til I for you have betre ordeigned.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quod Sedechie, “Thou hast feigned<br/>
+This tale in angringe of the king.”<br/>
+And in a wraththe upon this thing<br/>
+He smot Michee upon the cheke;<br/>
+The king him hath rebuked eke,<br/>
+And every man upon him cride:<br/>
+Thus was he schent on every side,    2670<br/>
+Ayein and into prison lad,<br/>
+For so the king himselve bad.<br/>
+The trouthe myhte noght ben herd;<br/>
+Bot afterward as it hath ferd,<br/>
+The dede proveth his entente:<br/>
+Achab to the bataille wente,<br/>
+Wher Benedab for al his Scheld<br/>
+Him slouh, so that upon the feld<br/>
+His poeple goth aboute astray.<br/>
+Bot god, which alle thinges may,    2680<br/>
+So doth that thei no meschief have;<br/>
+Here king was ded and thei ben save,<br/>
+And hom ayein in goddes pes<br/>
+Thei wente, and al was founde les<br/>
+That Sedechie hath seid tofore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So sit it wel a king therfore<br/>
+To loven hem that trouthe mene;<br/>
+For ate laste it wol be sene<br/>
+That flaterie is nothing worth.<br/>
+Bot nou to mi matiere forth,    2690<br/>
+As forto speken overmore<br/>
+After the Philosophres lore,<br/>
+The thridde point of Policie<br/>
+I thenke forto specifie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is a lond wher men ben none?<br/>
+What ben the men whiche are al one<br/>
+Withoute a kinges governance?<br/>
+What is a king in his ligance,<br/>
+Wher that ther is no lawe in londe?<br/>
+What is to take lawe on honde,    2700<br/>
+Bot if the jugges weren trewe?<br/>
+These olde worldes with the newe<br/>
+Who that wol take in evidence,<br/>
+Ther mai he se thexperience,<br/>
+What thing it is to kepe lawe,<br/>
+Thurgh which the wronges ben withdrawe<br/>
+And rihtwisnesse stant commended,<br/>
+Wherof the regnes ben amended.<br/>
+For wher the lawe mai comune<br/>
+The lordes forth with the commune,    2710<br/>
+Ech hath his propre duete;<br/>
+And ek the kinges realte<br/>
+Of bothe his worschipe underfongeth,<br/>
+To his astat as it belongeth,<br/>
+Which of his hihe worthinesse<br/>
+Hath to governe rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+As he which schal the lawe guide.<br/>
+And natheles upon som side<br/>
+His pouer stant above the lawe,<br/>
+To yive bothe and to withdrawe    2720<br/>
+The forfet of a mannes lif;<br/>
+But thinges whiche are excessif<br/>
+Ayein the lawe, he schal noght do<br/>
+For love ne for hate also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The myhtes of a king ben grete,<br/>
+Bot yit a worthi king schal lete<br/>
+Of wrong to don, al that he myhte;<br/>
+For he which schal the poeple ryhte,<br/>
+It sit wel to his regalie<br/>
+That he himself ferst justefie    2730<br/>
+Towardes god in his degre:<br/>
+For his astat is elles fre<br/>
+Toward alle othre in his persone,<br/>
+Save only to the god al one,<br/>
+Which wol himself a king chastise,<br/>
+Wher that non other mai suffise.<br/>
+So were it good to taken hiede<br/>
+That ferst a king his oghne dede<br/>
+Betwen the vertu and the vice<br/>
+Redresce, and thanne of his justice    2740<br/>
+So sette in evene the balance<br/>
+Towardes othre in governance,<br/>
+That to the povere and to the riche<br/>
+Hise lawes myhten stonde liche,<br/>
+He schal excepte no persone.<br/>
+Bot for he mai noght al him one<br/>
+In sondri places do justice,<br/>
+He schal of his real office<br/>
+With wys consideracion<br/>
+Ordeigne his deputacion    2750<br/>
+Of suche jugges as ben lerned,<br/>
+So that his poeple be governed<br/>
+Be hem that trewe ben and wise.<br/>
+For if the lawe of covoitise<br/>
+Be set upon a jugges hond,<br/>
+Wo is the poeple of thilke lond,<br/>
+For wrong mai noght himselven hyde:<br/>
+Bot elles on that other side,<br/>
+If lawe stonde with the riht,<br/>
+The poeple is glad and stant upriht.    2760<br/>
+Wher as the lawe is resonable,<br/>
+The comun poeple stant menable,<br/>
+And if the lawe torne amis,<br/>
+The poeple also mistorned is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in ensample of this matiere<br/>
+Of Maximin a man mai hiere,<br/>
+Of Rome which was Emperour,<br/>
+That whanne he made a governour<br/>
+Be weie of substitucion<br/>
+Of Province or of region,    2770<br/>
+He wolde ferst enquere his name,<br/>
+And let it openly proclame<br/>
+What man he were, or evel or good.<br/>
+And upon that his name stod<br/>
+Enclin to vertu or to vice,<br/>
+So wolde he sette him in office,<br/>
+Or elles putte him al aweie.<br/>
+Thus hield the lawe his rihte weie,<br/>
+Which fond no let of covoitise:<br/>
+The world stod than upon the wise,    2780<br/>
+As be ensample thou myht rede;<br/>
+And hold it in thi mynde, I rede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique I finde thus,<br/>
+Hou that Gayus Fabricius,<br/>
+Which whilom was Consul of Rome,<br/>
+Be whom the lawes yede and come,<br/>
+Whan the Sampnites to him broghte<br/>
+A somme of gold, and him besoghte<br/>
+To don hem favour in the lawe,<br/>
+Toward the gold he gan him drawe,    2790<br/>
+Wherof in alle mennes lok<br/>
+A part up in his hond he tok,<br/>
+Which to his mouth in alle haste<br/>
+He putte, it forto smelle and taste,<br/>
+And to his yhe and to his Ere,<br/>
+Bot he ne fond no confort there:<br/>
+And thanne he gan it to despise,<br/>
+And tolde unto hem in this wise:<br/>
+“I not what is with gold to thryve,<br/>
+Whan non of all my wittes fyve    2800<br/>
+Fynt savour ne delit therinne.<br/>
+So is it bot a nyce Sinne<br/>
+Of gold to ben to covoitous;<br/>
+Bot he is riche and glorious,<br/>
+Which hath in his subjeccion<br/>
+Tho men whiche in possession<br/>
+Ben riche of gold, and be this skile;<br/>
+For he mai aldai whan he wile,<br/>
+Or be hem lieve or be hem lothe,<br/>
+Justice don upon hem bothe.”    2810<br/>
+Lo, thus he seide, and with that word<br/>
+He threw tofore hem on the bord<br/>
+The gold out of his hond anon,<br/>
+And seide hem that he wolde non:<br/>
+So that he kepte his liberte<br/>
+To do justice and equite,<br/>
+Withoute lucre of such richesse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther be nou fewe of suche, I gesse;<br/>
+For it was thilke times used,<br/>
+That every jugge was refused    2820<br/>
+Which was noght frend to comun riht;<br/>
+Bot thei that wolden stonde upriht<br/>
+For trouthe only to do justice<br/>
+Preferred were in thilke office<br/>
+To deme and jugge commun lawe:<br/>
+Which nou, men sein, is al withdrawe.<br/>
+To sette a lawe and kepe it noght<br/>
+Ther is no comun profit soght;<br/>
+Bot above alle natheles<br/>
+The lawe, which is mad for pes,    2830<br/>
+Is good to kepe for the beste,<br/>
+For that set alle men in reste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rihtful Emperour Conrade<br/>
+To kepe pes such lawe made,<br/>
+That non withinne the cite<br/>
+In destorbance of unite<br/>
+Dorste ones moeven a matiere.<br/>
+For in his time, as thou myht hiere,<br/>
+What point that was for lawe set<br/>
+It scholde for no gold be let,    2840<br/>
+To what persone that it were.<br/>
+And this broghte in the comun fere,<br/>
+Why every man the lawe dradde,<br/>
+For ther was non which favour hadde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So as these olde bokes sein,<br/>
+I finde write hou a Romein,<br/>
+Which Consul was of the Pretoire,<br/>
+Whos name was Carmidotoire,<br/>
+He sette a lawe for the pes,<br/>
+That non, bot he be wepneles,    2850<br/>
+Schal come into the conseil hous,<br/>
+And elles as malicious<br/>
+He schal ben of the lawe ded.<br/>
+To that statut and to that red<br/>
+Acorden alle it schal be so,<br/>
+For certein cause which was tho:<br/>
+Nou lest what fell therafter sone.<br/>
+This Consul hadde forto done,<br/>
+And was into the feldes ride;<br/>
+And thei him hadden longe abide,    2860<br/>
+That lordes of the conseil were,<br/>
+And for him sende, and he cam there<br/>
+With swerd begert, and hath foryete,<br/>
+Til he was in the conseil sete.<br/>
+Was non of hem that made speche,<br/>
+Til he himself it wolde seche,<br/>
+And fond out the defalte himselve;<br/>
+And thanne he seide unto the tuelve,<br/>
+Whiche of the Senat weren wise,<br/>
+“I have deserved the juise,    2870<br/>
+In haste that it were do.”<br/>
+And thei him seiden alle no;<br/>
+For wel thei wiste it was no vice,<br/>
+Whan he ne thoghte no malice,<br/>
+Bot onliche of a litel slouthe:<br/>
+And thus thei leften as for routhe<br/>
+To do justice upon his gilt,<br/>
+For that he scholde noght be spilt.<br/>
+And whanne he sih the maner hou<br/>
+Thei wolde him save, he made avou    2880<br/>
+With manfull herte, and thus he seide,<br/>
+That Rome scholde nevere abreide<br/>
+His heires, whan he were of dawe,<br/>
+That here Ancestre brak the lawe.<br/>
+Forthi, er that thei weren war,<br/>
+Forth with the same swerd he bar<br/>
+The statut of his lawe he kepte,<br/>
+So that al Rome his deth bewepte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In other place also I rede,<br/>
+Wher that a jugge his oghne dede    2890<br/>
+Ne wol noght venge of lawe broke,<br/>
+The king it hath himselven wroke.<br/>
+The grete king which Cambises<br/>
+Was hote, a jugge laweles<br/>
+He fond, and into remembrance<br/>
+He dede upon him such vengance:<br/>
+Out of his skyn he was beflain<br/>
+Al quyk, and in that wise slain,<br/>
+So that his skyn was schape al meete,<br/>
+And nayled on the same seete    2900<br/>
+Wher that his Sone scholde sitte.<br/>
+Avise him, if he wolde flitte<br/>
+The lawe for the coveitise,<br/>
+Ther sih he redi his juise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus in defalte of other jugge<br/>
+The king mot otherwhile jugge,<br/>
+To holden up the rihte lawe.<br/>
+And forto speke of tholde dawe,<br/>
+To take ensample of that was tho,<br/>
+I finde a tale write also,    2910<br/>
+Hou that a worthi prince is holde<br/>
+The lawes of his lond to holde,<br/>
+Ferst for the hihe goddes sake,<br/>
+And ek for that him is betake<br/>
+The poeple forto guide and lede,<br/>
+Which is the charge of his kinghede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique I rede thus<br/>
+Of the rihtful Ligurgius,<br/>
+Which of Athenis Prince was,<br/>
+Hou he the lawe in every cas,    2920<br/>
+Wherof he scholde his poeple reule,<br/>
+Hath set upon so good a reule,<br/>
+In al this world that cite non<br/>
+Of lawe was so wel begon<br/>
+Forth with the trouthe of governance.<br/>
+Ther was among hem no distance,<br/>
+Bot every man hath his encress;<br/>
+Ther was withoute werre pes,<br/>
+Withoute envie love stod;<br/>
+Richesse upon the comun good    2930<br/>
+And noght upon the singuler<br/>
+Ordeigned was, and the pouer<br/>
+Of hem that weren in astat<br/>
+Was sauf: wherof upon debat<br/>
+Ther stod nothing, so that in reste<br/>
+Mihte every man his herte reste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And whan this noble rihtful king<br/>
+Sih hou it ferde of al this thing,<br/>
+Wherof the poeple stod in ese,<br/>
+He, which for evere wolde plese    2940<br/>
+The hihe god, whos thonk he soghte,<br/>
+A wonder thing thanne him bethoghte,<br/>
+And schop if that it myhte be,<br/>
+Hou that his lawe in the cite<br/>
+Mihte afterward for evere laste.<br/>
+And therupon his wit he caste<br/>
+What thing him were best to feigne,<br/>
+That he his pourpos myhte atteigne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Parlement and thus he sette,<br/>
+His wisdom wher that he besette    2950<br/>
+In audience of grete and smale,<br/>
+And in this wise he tolde his tale:<br/>
+“God wot, and so ye witen alle,<br/>
+Hierafterward hou so it falle,<br/>
+Yit into now my will hath be<br/>
+To do justice and equite<br/>
+In forthringe of comun profit;<br/>
+Such hath ben evere my delit.<br/>
+Bot of o thing I am beknowe,<br/>
+The which mi will is that ye knowe:    2960<br/>
+The lawe which I tok on honde,<br/>
+Was altogedre of goddes sonde<br/>
+And nothing of myn oghne wit;<br/>
+So mot it nede endure yit,<br/>
+And schal do lengere, if ye wile.<br/>
+For I wol telle you the skile;<br/>
+The god Mercurius and no man<br/>
+He hath me tawht al that I can<br/>
+Of suche lawes as I made,<br/>
+Wherof that ye ben alle glade;    2970<br/>
+It was the god and nothing I,<br/>
+Which dede al this, and nou forthi<br/>
+He hath comanded of his grace<br/>
+That I schal come into a place<br/>
+Which is forein out in an yle,<br/>
+Wher I mot tarie for a while,<br/>
+With him to speke, as he hath bede.<br/>
+For as he seith, in thilke stede<br/>
+He schal me suche thinges telle,<br/>
+That evere, whyl the world schal duelle,    2980<br/>
+Athenis schal the betre fare.<br/>
+Bot ferst, er that I thider fare,<br/>
+For that I wolde that mi lawe<br/>
+Amonges you ne be withdrawe<br/>
+Ther whyles that I schal ben oute,<br/>
+Forthi to setten out of doute<br/>
+Bothe you and me, this wol I preie,<br/>
+That ye me wolde assure and seie<br/>
+With such an oth as I wol take,<br/>
+That ech of you schal undertake    2990<br/>
+Mi lawes forto kepe and holde.”<br/>
+Thei seiden alle that thei wolde,<br/>
+And therupon thei swore here oth,<br/>
+That fro the time that he goth,<br/>
+Til he to hem be come ayein,<br/>
+Thei scholde hise lawes wel and plein<br/>
+In every point kepe and fulfille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus hath Ligurgius his wille,<br/>
+And tok his leve and forth he wente.<br/>
+Bot lest nou wel to what entente    3000<br/>
+Of rihtwisnesse he dede so:<br/>
+For after that he was ago,<br/>
+He schop him nevere to be founde;<br/>
+So that Athenis, which was bounde,<br/>
+Nevere after scholde be relessed,<br/>
+Ne thilke goode lawe cessed,<br/>
+Which was for comun profit set.<br/>
+And in this wise he hath it knet;<br/>
+He, which the comun profit soghte,<br/>
+The king, his oghne astat ne roghte;    3010<br/>
+To do profit to the comune,<br/>
+He tok of exil the fortune,<br/>
+And lefte of Prince thilke office<br/>
+Only for love and for justice,<br/>
+Thurgh which he thoghte, if that he myhte,<br/>
+For evere after his deth to rihte<br/>
+The cite which was him betake.<br/>
+Wherof men oghte ensample take<br/>
+The goode lawes to avance<br/>
+With hem which under governance    3020<br/>
+The lawes have forto kepe;<br/>
+For who that wolde take kepe<br/>
+Of hem that ferst the lawes founde,<br/>
+Als fer as lasteth eny bounde<br/>
+Of lond, here names yit ben knowe:<br/>
+And if it like thee to knowe<br/>
+Some of here names hou thei stonde,<br/>
+Nou herkne and thou schalt understonde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of every bienfet the merite<br/>
+The god himself it wol aquite;    3030<br/>
+And ek fulofte it falleth so,<br/>
+The world it wole aquite also,<br/>
+Bot that mai noght ben evene liche:<br/>
+The god he yifth the heveneriche,<br/>
+The world yifth only bot a name,<br/>
+Which stant upon the goode fame<br/>
+Of hem that don the goode dede.<br/>
+And in this wise double mede<br/>
+Resceiven thei that don wel hiere;<br/>
+Wherof if that thee list to hiere    3040<br/>
+After the fame as it is blowe,<br/>
+Ther myht thou wel the sothe knowe,<br/>
+Hou thilke honeste besinesse<br/>
+Of hem that ferst for rihtwisnesse<br/>
+Among the men the lawes made,<br/>
+Mai nevere upon this erthe fade.<br/>
+For evere, whil ther is a tunge,<br/>
+Here name schal be rad and sunge<br/>
+And holde in the Cronique write;<br/>
+So that the men it scholden wite,    3050<br/>
+To speke good, as thei wel oghten,<br/>
+Of hem that ferst the lawes soghten<br/>
+In forthringe of the worldes pes.<br/>
+Unto thebreus was Moises<br/>
+The ferste, and to thegipciens<br/>
+Mercurius, and to Troiens<br/>
+Ferst was Neuma Pompilius,<br/>
+To Athenes Ligurgius<br/>
+Yaf ferst the lawe, and to Gregois<br/>
+Foroneus hath thilke vois,    3060<br/>
+And Romulus to the Romeins.<br/>
+For suche men that ben vileins<br/>
+The lawe in such a wise ordeigneth,<br/>
+That what man to the lawe pleigneth,<br/>
+Be so the jugge stonde upriht,<br/>
+He schal be served of his riht.<br/>
+And so ferforth it is befalle<br/>
+That lawe is come among ous alle:<br/>
+God lieve it mote wel ben holde,<br/>
+As every king therto is holde;    3070<br/>
+For thing which is of kinges set,<br/>
+With kinges oghte it noght be let.<br/>
+What king of lawe takth no kepe,<br/>
+Be lawe he mai no regne kepe.<br/>
+Do lawe awey, what is a king?<br/>
+Wher is the riht of eny thing,<br/>
+If that ther be no lawe in londe?<br/>
+This oghte a king wel understonde,<br/>
+As he which is to lawe swore,<br/>
+That if the lawe be forbore    3080<br/>
+Withouten execucioun,<br/>
+If makth a lond torne up so doun,<br/>
+Which is unto the king a sclandre.<br/>
+Forthi unto king Alisandre<br/>
+The wise Philosophre bad,<br/>
+That he himselve ferst be lad<br/>
+Of lawe, and forth thanne overal<br/>
+So do justice in general,<br/>
+That al the wyde lond aboute<br/>
+The justice of his lawe doute,    3090<br/>
+And thanne schal he stonde in reste.<br/>
+For therto lawe is on the beste<br/>
+Above alle other erthly thing,<br/>
+To make a liege drede his king.<br/>
+Bot hou a king schal gete him love<br/>
+Toward the hihe god above,<br/>
+And ek among the men in erthe,<br/>
+This nexte point, which is the ferthe<br/>
+Of Aristotles lore, it techeth:<br/>
+Wherof who that the Scole secheth,    3100<br/>
+What Policie that it is<br/>
+The bok reherceth after this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It nedeth noght that I delate<br/>
+The pris which preised is algate,<br/>
+And hath ben evere and evere schal,<br/>
+Wherof to speke in special,<br/>
+It is the vertu of Pite,<br/>
+Thurgh which the hihe mageste<br/>
+Was stered, whan his Sone alyhte,<br/>
+And in pite the world to rihte    3110<br/>
+Tok of the Maide fleissh and blod.<br/>
+Pite was cause of thilke good,<br/>
+Wherof that we ben alle save:<br/>
+Wel oghte a man Pite to have<br/>
+And the vertu to sette in pris,<br/>
+Whan he himself which is al wys<br/>
+Hath schewed why it schal be preised.<br/>
+Pite may noght be conterpeised<br/>
+Of tirannie with no peis;<br/>
+For Pite makth a king courteis    3120<br/>
+Bothe in his word and in his dede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It sit wel every liege drede<br/>
+His king and to his heste obeie,<br/>
+And riht so be the same weie<br/>
+It sit a king to be pitous<br/>
+Toward his poeple and gracious<br/>
+Upon the reule of governance,<br/>
+So that he worche no vengance,<br/>
+Which mai be cleped crualte.<br/>
+Justice which doth equite    3130<br/>
+Is dredfull, for he noman spareth;<br/>
+Bot in the lond wher Pite fareth<br/>
+The king mai nevere faile of love,<br/>
+For Pite thurgh the grace above,<br/>
+So as the Philosphre affermeth,<br/>
+His regne in good astat confermeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus seide whilom Constantin:<br/>
+“What Emperour that is enclin<br/>
+To Pite forto be servant,<br/>
+Of al the worldes remenant    3140<br/>
+He is worthi to ben a lord.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In olde bokes of record<br/>
+This finde I write of essamplaire:<br/>
+Troian the worthi debonaire,<br/>
+Be whom that Rome stod governed,<br/>
+Upon a time as he was lerned<br/>
+Of that he was to familier,<br/>
+He seide unto that conseiller,<br/>
+That forto ben an Emperour<br/>
+His will was noght for vein honour,    3150<br/>
+Ne yit for reddour of justice;<br/>
+Bot if he myhte in his office<br/>
+Hise lordes and his poeple plese,<br/>
+Him thoghte it were a grettere ese<br/>
+With love here hertes to him drawe,<br/>
+Than with the drede of eny lawe.<br/>
+For whan a thing is do for doute,<br/>
+Fulofte it comth the worse aboute;<br/>
+Bot wher a king is Pietous,<br/>
+He is the more gracious,    3160<br/>
+That mochel thrift him schal betyde,<br/>
+Which elles scholde torne aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Pite forto speke plein,<br/>
+Which is with mercy wel besein,<br/>
+Fulofte he wole himselve peine<br/>
+To kepe an other fro the peine:<br/>
+For Charite the moder is<br/>
+Of Pite, which nothing amis<br/>
+Can soffre, if he it mai amende.<br/>
+It sit to every man livende    3170<br/>
+To be Pitous, bot non so wel<br/>
+As to a king, which on the whiel<br/>
+Fortune hath set aboven alle:<br/>
+For in a king, if so befalle<br/>
+That his Pite be ferme and stable,<br/>
+To al the lond it is vailable<br/>
+Only thurgh grace of his persone;<br/>
+For the Pite of him al one<br/>
+Mai al the large realme save.<br/>
+So sit it wel a king to have    3180<br/>
+Pite; for this Valeire tolde,<br/>
+And seide hou that be daies olde<br/>
+Codrus, which was in his degre<br/>
+King of Athenis the cite,<br/>
+A werre he hadde ayein Dorrence:<br/>
+And forto take his evidence<br/>
+What schal befalle of the bataille,<br/>
+He thoghte he wolde him ferst consaille<br/>
+With Appollo, in whom he triste;<br/>
+Thurgh whos ansuere this he wiste,    3190<br/>
+Of tuo pointz that he myhte chese,<br/>
+Or that he wolde his body lese<br/>
+And in bataille himselve deie,<br/>
+Or elles the seconde weie,<br/>
+To sen his poeple desconfit.<br/>
+Bot he, which Pite hath parfit<br/>
+Upon the point of his believe,<br/>
+The poeple thoghte to relieve,<br/>
+And ches himselve to be ded.<br/>
+Wher is nou such an other hed,    3200<br/>
+Which wolde for the lemes dye?<br/>
+And natheles in som partie<br/>
+It oghte a kinges herte stere,<br/>
+That he hise liege men forbere.<br/>
+And ek toward hise enemis<br/>
+Fulofte he may deserve pris,<br/>
+To take of Pite remembrance,<br/>
+Wher that he myhte do vengance:<br/>
+For whanne a king hath the victoire,<br/>
+And thanne he drawe into memoire    3210<br/>
+To do Pite in stede of wreche,<br/>
+He mai noght faile of thilke speche<br/>
+Wherof arist the worldes fame,<br/>
+To yive a Prince a worthi name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rede hou whilom that Pompeie,<br/>
+To whom that Rome moste obeie,<br/>
+A werre hadde in jeupartie<br/>
+Ayein the king of Ermenie,<br/>
+Which of long time him hadde grieved.<br/>
+Bot ate laste it was achieved    3220<br/>
+That he this king desconfit hadde,<br/>
+And forth with him to Rome ladde<br/>
+As Prisoner, wher many a day<br/>
+In sori plit and povere he lay,<br/>
+The corone of his heved deposed,<br/>
+Withinne walles faste enclosed;<br/>
+And with ful gret humilite<br/>
+He soffreth his adversite.<br/>
+Pompeie sih his pacience<br/>
+And tok pite with conscience,    3230<br/>
+So that upon his hihe deis<br/>
+Tofore al Rome in his Paleis,<br/>
+As he that wolde upon him rewe,<br/>
+Let yive him his corone newe<br/>
+And his astat al full and plein<br/>
+Restoreth of his regne ayein,<br/>
+And seide it was more goodly thing<br/>
+To make than undon a king,<br/>
+To him which pouer hadde of bothe.<br/>
+Thus thei, that weren longe wrothe,    3240<br/>
+Acorden hem to final pes;<br/>
+And yit justice natheles<br/>
+Was kept and in nothing offended;<br/>
+Wherof Pompeie was comended.<br/>
+Ther mai no king himself excuse,<br/>
+Bot if justice he kepe and use,<br/>
+Which for teschuie crualte<br/>
+He mot attempre with Pite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of crualte the felonie<br/>
+Engendred is of tirannie,    3250<br/>
+Ayein the whos condicion<br/>
+God is himself the champion,<br/>
+Whos strengthe mai noman withstonde.<br/>
+For evere yit it hath so stonde,<br/>
+That god a tirant overladde;<br/>
+Bot wher Pite the regne ladde,<br/>
+Ther mihte no fortune laste<br/>
+Which was grevous, bot ate laste<br/>
+The god himself it hath redresced.<br/>
+Pite is thilke vertu blessed    3260<br/>
+Which nevere let his Maister falle;<br/>
+Bot crualte, thogh it so falle<br/>
+That it mai regne for a throwe,<br/>
+God wole it schal ben overthrowe:<br/>
+Wherof ensamples ben ynowhe<br/>
+Of hem that thilke merel drowhe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of crualte I rede thus:<br/>
+Whan the tirant Leoncius<br/>
+Was to thempire of Rome arrived,<br/>
+Fro which he hath with strengthe prived    3270<br/>
+The pietous Justinian,<br/>
+As he which was a cruel man,<br/>
+His nase of and his lippes bothe<br/>
+He kutte, for he wolde him lothe<br/>
+Unto the poeple and make unable.<br/>
+Bot he which is al merciable,<br/>
+The hihe god, ordeigneth so,<br/>
+That he withinne a time also,<br/>
+Whan he was strengest in his ire,<br/>
+Was schoven out of his empire.    3280<br/>
+Tiberius the pouer hadde,<br/>
+And Rome after his will he ladde,<br/>
+And for Leonce in such a wise<br/>
+Ordeigneth, that he tok juise<br/>
+Of nase and lippes bothe tuo,<br/>
+For that he dede an other so,<br/>
+Which more worthi was than he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, which a fall hath crualte,<br/>
+And Pite was set up ayein:<br/>
+For after that the bokes sein,    3290<br/>
+Therbellis king of Bulgarie<br/>
+With helpe of his chivalerie<br/>
+Justinian hath unprisoned<br/>
+And to thempire ayein coroned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique I finde also<br/>
+Of Siculus, which was ek so<br/>
+A cruel king lich the tempeste,<br/>
+The whom no Pite myhte areste,&mdash;<br/>
+He was the ferste, as bokes seie,<br/>
+Upon the See which fond Galeie    3300<br/>
+And let hem make for the werre,&mdash;<br/>
+As he which al was out of herre<br/>
+Fro Pite and misericorde;<br/>
+For therto couthe he noght acorde,<br/>
+Bot whom he myhte slen, he slouh,<br/>
+And therof was he glad ynouh.<br/>
+He hadde of conseil manyon,<br/>
+Among the whiche ther was on,<br/>
+Be name which Berillus hihte;<br/>
+And he bethoghte him hou he myhte    3310<br/>
+Unto the tirant do likinge,<br/>
+And of his oghne ymaginynge<br/>
+Let forge and make a Bole of bras,<br/>
+And on the side cast ther was<br/>
+A Dore, wher a man mai inne,<br/>
+Whan he his peine schal beginne<br/>
+Thurgh fyr, which that men putten under.<br/>
+And al this dede he for a wonder,<br/>
+That whanne a man for peine cride,<br/>
+The Bole of bras, which gapeth wyde,    3320<br/>
+It scholde seme as thogh it were<br/>
+A belwinge in a mannes Ere,<br/>
+And noght the criinge of a man.<br/>
+Bot he which alle sleihtes can,<br/>
+The devel, that lith in helle fast,<br/>
+Him that this caste hath overcast,<br/>
+That for a trespas which he dede<br/>
+He was putt in the same stede,<br/>
+And was himself the ferste of alle<br/>
+Which was into that peine falle    3330<br/>
+That he for othre men ordeigneth;<br/>
+Ther was noman which him compleigneth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of tirannie and crualte<br/>
+Be this ensample a king mai se,<br/>
+Himself and ek his conseil bothe,<br/>
+Hou thei ben to mankinde lothe<br/>
+And to the god abhominable.<br/>
+Ensamples that ben concordable<br/>
+I finde of othre Princes mo,<br/>
+As thou schalt hiere, of time go.    3340<br/>
+The grete tirant Dionys,<br/>
+Which mannes lif sette of no pris,<br/>
+Unto his hors fulofte he yaf<br/>
+The men in stede of corn and chaf,<br/>
+So that the hors of thilke stod<br/>
+Devoureden the mennes blod;<br/>
+Til fortune ate laste cam,<br/>
+That Hercules him overcam,<br/>
+And he riht in the same wise<br/>
+Of this tirant tok the juise:    3350<br/>
+As he til othre men hath do,<br/>
+The same deth he deide also,<br/>
+That no Pite him hath socoured,<br/>
+Til he was of hise hors devoured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Lichaon also I finde<br/>
+Hou he ayein the lawe of kinde<br/>
+Hise hostes slouh, and into mete<br/>
+He made her bodies to ben ete<br/>
+With othre men withinne his hous.<br/>
+Bot Jupiter the glorious,    3360<br/>
+Which was commoeved of this thing,<br/>
+Vengance upon this cruel king<br/>
+So tok, that he fro mannes forme<br/>
+Into a wolf him let transforme:<br/>
+And thus the crualte was kidd,<br/>
+Which of long time he hadde hidd;<br/>
+A wolf he was thanne openly,<br/>
+The whos nature prively<br/>
+He hadde in his condicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And unto this conclusioun,    3370<br/>
+That tirannie is to despise,<br/>
+I finde ensample in sondri wise,<br/>
+And nameliche of hem fulofte,<br/>
+The whom fortune hath set alofte<br/>
+Upon the werres forto winne.<br/>
+Bot hou so that the wrong beginne<br/>
+Of tirannie, it mai noght laste,<br/>
+Bot such as thei don ate laste<br/>
+To othre men, such on hem falleth;<br/>
+For ayein suche Pite calleth    3380<br/>
+Vengance to the god above.<br/>
+For who that hath no tender love<br/>
+In savinge of a mannes lif,<br/>
+He schal be founde so gultif,<br/>
+That whanne he wolde mercy crave<br/>
+In time of nede, he schal non have.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the natures this I finde,<br/>
+The fierce Leon in his kinde,<br/>
+Which goth rampende after his preie,<br/>
+If he a man finde in his weie,    3390<br/>
+He wole him slen, if he withstonde.<br/>
+Bot if the man coude understonde<br/>
+To falle anon before his face<br/>
+In signe of mercy and of grace,<br/>
+The Leon schal of his nature<br/>
+Restreigne his ire in such mesure,<br/>
+As thogh it were a beste tamed,<br/>
+And torne awey halfvinge aschamed,<br/>
+That he the man schal nothing grieve.<br/>
+Hou scholde than a Prince achieve    3400<br/>
+The worldes grace, if that he wolde<br/>
+Destruie a man whanne he is yolde<br/>
+And stant upon his mercy al?<br/>
+Bot forto speke in special,<br/>
+Ther have be suche and yit ther be<br/>
+Tirantz, whos hertes no pite<br/>
+Mai to no point of mercy plie,<br/>
+That thei upon her tirannie<br/>
+Ne gladen hem the men to sle;<br/>
+And as the rages of the See    3410<br/>
+Ben unpitous in the tempeste,<br/>
+Riht so mai no Pite areste<br/>
+Of crualte the gret oultrage,<br/>
+Which the tirant in his corage<br/>
+Engendred hath: wherof I finde<br/>
+A tale, which comth nou to mynde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rede in olde bokes thus:<br/>
+Ther was a Duk, which Spertachus<br/>
+Men clepe, and was a werreiour,<br/>
+A cruel man, a conquerour    3420<br/>
+With strong pouer the which he ladde.<br/>
+For this condicion he hadde,<br/>
+That where him hapneth the victoire,<br/>
+His lust and al his moste gloire<br/>
+Was forto sle and noght to save:<br/>
+Of rancoun wolde he no good have<br/>
+For savinge of a mannes lif,<br/>
+Bot al goth to the swerd and knyf,<br/>
+So lief him was the mannes blod.<br/>
+And natheles yit thus it stod,    3430<br/>
+So as fortune aboute wente,<br/>
+He fell riht heir as be descente<br/>
+To Perse, and was coroned king.<br/>
+And whan the worschipe of this thing<br/>
+Was falle, and he was king of Perse,<br/>
+If that thei weren ferst diverse,<br/>
+The tirannies whiche he wroghte,<br/>
+A thousendfold welmore he soghte<br/>
+Thanne afterward to do malice.<br/>
+The god vengance ayein the vice    3440<br/>
+Hath schape: for upon a tyde,<br/>
+Whan he was heihest in his Pride,<br/>
+In his rancour and in his hete<br/>
+Ayein the queene of Marsagete,<br/>
+Which Thameris that time hihte,<br/>
+He made werre al that he myhte:<br/>
+And sche, which wolde hir lond defende,<br/>
+Hir oghne Sone ayein him sende,<br/>
+Which the defence hath undertake.<br/>
+Bot he desconfit was and take;    3450<br/>
+And whan this king him hadde in honde,<br/>
+He wol no mercy understonde,<br/>
+Bot dede him slen in his presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tidinge of this violence<br/>
+Whan it cam to the moder Ere,<br/>
+Sche sende anon ay wydewhere<br/>
+To suche frendes as sche hadde,<br/>
+A gret pouer til that sche ladde.<br/>
+In sondri wise and tho sche caste<br/>
+Hou sche this king mai overcaste;    3460<br/>
+And ate laste acorded was,<br/>
+That in the danger of a pass,<br/>
+Thurgh which this tirant scholde passe,<br/>
+Sche schop his pouer to compasse<br/>
+With strengthe of men be such a weie<br/>
+That he schal noght eschape aweie.<br/>
+And whan sche hadde thus ordeigned,<br/>
+Sche hath hir oghne bodi feigned,<br/>
+For feere as thogh sche wolde flee<br/>
+Out of hir lond: and whan that he    3470<br/>
+Hath herd hou that this ladi fledde,<br/>
+So faste after the chace he spedde,<br/>
+That he was founde out of array.<br/>
+For it betidde upon a day,<br/>
+Into the pas whanne he was falle,<br/>
+Thembuisschementz tobrieken alle<br/>
+And him beclipte on every side,<br/>
+That fle ne myhte he noght aside:<br/>
+So that ther weren dede and take<br/>
+Tuo hundred thousend for his sake,    3480<br/>
+That weren with him of his host.<br/>
+And thus was leid the grete bost<br/>
+Of him and of his tirannie:<br/>
+It halp no mercy forto crie<br/>
+To him which whilom dede non;<br/>
+For he unto the queene anon<br/>
+Was broght, and whan that sche him sih,<br/>
+This word sche spak and seide on hih:<br/>
+“O man, which out of mannes kinde<br/>
+Reson of man hast left behinde    3490<br/>
+And lived worse than a beste,<br/>
+Whom Pite myhte noght areste,<br/>
+The mannes blod to schede and spille<br/>
+Thou haddest nevere yit thi fille.<br/>
+Bot nou the laste time is come,<br/>
+That thi malice is overcome:<br/>
+As thou til othre men hast do,<br/>
+Nou schal be do to thee riht so.”<br/>
+Tho bad this ladi that men scholde<br/>
+A vessel bringe, in which sche wolde    3500<br/>
+Se the vengance of his juise,<br/>
+Which sche began anon devise;<br/>
+And tok the Princes whiche he ladde,<br/>
+Be whom his chief conseil he hadde,<br/>
+And whil hem lasteth eny breth,<br/>
+Sche made hem blede to the deth<br/>
+Into the vessel wher it stod:<br/>
+And whan it was fulfild of blod,<br/>
+Sche caste this tirant therinne,<br/>
+And seide him, “Lo, thus myht thou wynne    3510<br/>
+The lustes of thin appetit.<br/>
+In blod was whilom thi delit,<br/>
+Nou schalt thou drinken al thi fille.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus onliche of goddes wille,<br/>
+He which that wolde himselve strange<br/>
+To Pite, fond mercy so strange,<br/>
+That he withoute grace is lore.<br/>
+So may it schewe wel therfore<br/>
+That crualte hath no good ende;<br/>
+Bot Pite, hou so that it wende,    3520<br/>
+Makth that the god is merciable,<br/>
+If ther be cause resonable<br/>
+Why that a king schal be pitous.<br/>
+Bot elles, if he be doubtous<br/>
+To slen in cause of rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+It mai be said no Pitousnesse,<br/>
+Bot it is Pusillamite,<br/>
+Which every Prince scholde flee.<br/>
+For if Pite mesure excede,<br/>
+Kinghode may noght wel procede    3530<br/>
+To do justice upon the riht:<br/>
+For it belongeth to a knyht<br/>
+Als gladly forto fihte as reste,<br/>
+To sette his liege poeple in reste,<br/>
+Whan that the werre upon hem falleth;<br/>
+For thanne he mote, as it befalleth,<br/>
+Of his knyhthode as a Leon<br/>
+Be to the poeple a champioun<br/>
+Withouten eny Pite feigned.<br/>
+For if manhode be restreigned,    3540<br/>
+Or be it pes or be it werre,<br/>
+Justice goth al out of herre,<br/>
+So that knyhthode is set behinde.<br/>
+Of Aristotles lore I finde,<br/>
+A king schal make good visage,<br/>
+That noman knowe of his corage<br/>
+Bot al honour and worthinesse:<br/>
+For if a king schal upon gesse<br/>
+Withoute verrai cause drede,<br/>
+He mai be lich to that I rede;    3550<br/>
+And thogh that it be lich a fable,<br/>
+Thensample is good and resonable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it be olde daies fell,<br/>
+I rede whilom that an hell<br/>
+Up in the londes of Archade<br/>
+A wonder dredful noise made;<br/>
+For so it fell that ilke day,<br/>
+This hell on his childinge lay,<br/>
+And whan the throwes on him come,<br/>
+His noise lich the day of dome    3560<br/>
+Was ferfull in a mannes thoght<br/>
+Of thing which that thei sihe noght,<br/>
+Bot wel thei herden al aboute<br/>
+The noise, of which thei were in doute,<br/>
+As thei that wenden to be lore<br/>
+Of thing which thanne was unbore.<br/>
+The nerr this hell was upon chance<br/>
+To taken his deliverance,<br/>
+The more unbuxomliche he cride;<br/>
+And every man was fledd aside,    3570<br/>
+For drede and lefte his oghne hous:<br/>
+And ate laste it was a Mous,<br/>
+The which was bore and to norrice<br/>
+Betake; and tho thei hield hem nyce,<br/>
+For thei withoute cause dradde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus if a king his herte ladde<br/>
+With every thing that he schal hiere,<br/>
+Fulofte he scholde change his chiere<br/>
+And upon fantasie drede,<br/>
+Whan that ther is no cause of drede.    3580
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Orace to his Prince tolde,<br/>
+That him were levere that he wolde<br/>
+Upon knihthode Achillem suie<br/>
+In time of werre, thanne eschuie,<br/>
+So as Tersites dede at Troie.<br/>
+Achilles al his hole joie<br/>
+Sette upon Armes forto fihte;<br/>
+Tersites soghte al that he myhte<br/>
+Unarmed forto stonde in reste:<br/>
+Bot of the tuo it was the beste    3590<br/>
+That Achilles upon the nede<br/>
+Hath do, wherof his knyhtlihiede<br/>
+Is yit comended overal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+King Salomon in special<br/>
+Seith, as ther is a time of pes,<br/>
+So is a time natheles<br/>
+Of werre, in which a Prince algate<br/>
+Schal for the comun riht debate<br/>
+And for his oghne worschipe eke.<br/>
+Bot it behoveth noght to seke    3600<br/>
+Only the werre for worschipe,<br/>
+Bot to the riht of his lordschipe,<br/>
+Which he is holde to defende,<br/>
+Mote every worthi Prince entende.<br/>
+Betwen the simplesce of Pite<br/>
+And the folhaste of crualte,<br/>
+Wher stant the verray hardiesce,<br/>
+Ther mote a king his herte adresce,<br/>
+Whanne it is time to forsake,<br/>
+And whan time is also to take    3610<br/>
+The dedly werres upon honde,<br/>
+That he schal for no drede wonde,<br/>
+If rihtwisnesse be withal.<br/>
+For god is myhty overal<br/>
+To forthren every mannes trowthe,<br/>
+Bot it be thurgh his oghne slowthe;<br/>
+And namely the kinges nede<br/>
+It mai noght faile forto spede,<br/>
+For he stant one for hem alle;<br/>
+So mote it wel the betre falle    3620<br/>
+And wel the more god favoureth,<br/>
+Whan he the comun riht socoureth.<br/>
+And forto se the sothe in dede,<br/>
+Behold the bible and thou myht rede<br/>
+Of grete ensamples manyon,<br/>
+Wherof that I wol tellen on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon a time as it befell,<br/>
+Ayein Judee and Irahel<br/>
+Whan sondri kinges come were<br/>
+In pourpos to destruie there    3630<br/>
+The poeple which god kepte tho,&mdash;<br/>
+And stod in thilke daies so,<br/>
+That Gedeon, which scholde lede<br/>
+The goddes folk, tok him to rede,<br/>
+And sende in al the lond aboute,<br/>
+Til he assembled hath a route<br/>
+With thritti thousend of defence,<br/>
+To fihte and make resistence<br/>
+Ayein the whiche hem wolde assaille:<br/>
+And natheles that o bataille    3640<br/>
+Of thre that weren enemys<br/>
+Was double mor than was al his;<br/>
+Wherof that Gedeon him dradde,<br/>
+That he so litel poeple hadde.<br/>
+Bot he which alle thing mai helpe,<br/>
+Wher that ther lacketh mannes helpe,<br/>
+To Gedeon his Angel sente,<br/>
+And bad, er that he forther wente,<br/>
+Al openly that he do crie<br/>
+That every man in his partie    3650<br/>
+Which wolde after his oghne wille<br/>
+In his delice abide stille<br/>
+At hom in eny maner wise,<br/>
+For pourchas or for covoitise,<br/>
+For lust of love or lacke of herte,<br/>
+He scholde noght aboute sterte,<br/>
+Bot holde him stille at hom in pes:<br/>
+Wherof upon the morwe he les<br/>
+Wel twenty thousend men and mo,<br/>
+The whiche after the cri ben go.    3660<br/>
+Thus was with him bot only left<br/>
+The thridde part, and yit god eft<br/>
+His Angel sende and seide this<br/>
+To Gedeon: “If it so is<br/>
+That I thin help schal undertake,<br/>
+Thou schalt yit lasse poeple take,<br/>
+Be whom mi will is that thou spede.<br/>
+Forthi tomorwe tak good hiede,<br/>
+Unto the flod whan ye be come,<br/>
+What man that hath the water nome    3670<br/>
+Up in his hond and lapeth so,<br/>
+To thi part ches out alle tho;<br/>
+And him which wery is to swinke,<br/>
+Upon his wombe and lith to drinke,<br/>
+Forsak and put hem alle aweie.<br/>
+For I am myhti alle weie,<br/>
+Wher as me list myn help to schewe<br/>
+In goode men, thogh thei ben fewe.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Gedeon awaiteth wel,<br/>
+Upon the morwe and everydel,    3680<br/>
+As god him bad, riht so he dede.<br/>
+And thus ther leften in that stede<br/>
+With him thre hundred and nomo,<br/>
+The remenant was al ago:<br/>
+Wherof that Gedeon merveileth,<br/>
+And therupon with god conseileth,<br/>
+Pleignende as ferforth as he dar.<br/>
+And god, which wolde he were war<br/>
+That he schal spede upon his riht,<br/>
+Hath bede him go the same nyht    3690<br/>
+And take a man with him, to hiere<br/>
+What schal be spoke in his matere<br/>
+Among the hethen enemis;<br/>
+So mai he be the more wys,<br/>
+What afterward him schal befalle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Gedeon amonges alle<br/>
+Phara, to whom he triste most,<br/>
+Be nyhte tok toward thilke host,<br/>
+Which logged was in a valleie,<br/>
+To hiere what thei wolden seie;    3700<br/>
+Upon his fot and as he ferde,<br/>
+Tuo Sarazins spekende he herde.<br/>
+Quod on, “Ared mi swevene ariht,<br/>
+Which I mette in mi slep to nyht.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me thoghte I sih a barli cake,<br/>
+Which fro the Hull his weie hath take,<br/>
+And cam rollende doun at ones;<br/>
+And as it were for the nones,<br/>
+Forth in his cours so as it ran,<br/>
+The kinges tente of Madian,    3710<br/>
+Of Amalech, of Amoreie,<br/>
+Of Amon and of Jebuseie,<br/>
+And many an other tente mo<br/>
+With gret noise, as me thoghte tho,<br/>
+It threw to grounde and overcaste,<br/>
+And al this host so sore agaste<br/>
+That I awok for pure drede.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This swevene can I wel arede,”<br/>
+Quod thother Sarazin anon:<br/>
+“The barli cake is Gedeon,    3720<br/>
+Which fro the hell doun sodeinly<br/>
+Schal come and sette such ascry<br/>
+Upon the kinges and ous bothe,<br/>
+That it schal to ous alle lothe:<br/>
+For in such drede he schal ous bringe,<br/>
+That if we hadden flyht of wynge,<br/>
+The weie on fote in desespeir<br/>
+We scholden leve and flen in their,<br/>
+For ther schal nothing him withstonde.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Gedeon hath understonde    3730<br/>
+This tale, he thonketh god of al,<br/>
+And priveliche ayein he stal,<br/>
+So that no lif him hath perceived.<br/>
+And thanne he hath fulli conceived<br/>
+That he schal spede; and therupon<br/>
+The nyht suiende he schop to gon<br/>
+This multitude to assaile.<br/>
+Nou schalt thou hiere a gret mervaile,<br/>
+With what voisdie that he wroghte.<br/>
+The litel poeple which he broghte,    3740<br/>
+Was non of hem that he ne hath<br/>
+A pot of erthe, in which he tath<br/>
+A lyht brennende in a kressette,<br/>
+And ech of hem ek a trompette<br/>
+Bar in his other hond beside;<br/>
+And thus upon the nyhtes tyde<br/>
+Duk Gedeon, whan it was derk,<br/>
+Ordeineth him unto his werk,<br/>
+And parteth thanne his folk in thre,<br/>
+And chargeth hem that thei ne fle,    3750<br/>
+And tawhte hem hou they scholde ascrie<br/>
+Alle in o vois per compaignie,<br/>
+And what word ek thei scholden speke,<br/>
+And hou thei scholde here pottes breke<br/>
+Echon with other, whan thei herde<br/>
+That he himselve ferst so ferde;<br/>
+For whan thei come into the stede,<br/>
+He bad hem do riht as he dede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus stalkende forth a pas<br/>
+This noble Duk, whan time was,    3760<br/>
+His pot tobrak and loude ascride,<br/>
+And tho thei breke on every side.<br/>
+The trompe was noght forto seke;<br/>
+He blew, and so thei blewen eke<br/>
+With such a noise among hem alle,<br/>
+As thogh the hevene scholde falle.<br/>
+The hull unto here vois ansuerde,<br/>
+This host in the valleie it herde,<br/>
+And sih hou that the hell alyhte;<br/>
+So what of hieringe and of sihte,    3770<br/>
+Thei cawhten such a sodein feere,<br/>
+That non of hem belefte there:<br/>
+The tentes hole thei forsoke,<br/>
+That thei non other good ne toke,<br/>
+Bot only with here bodi bare<br/>
+Thei fledde, as doth the wylde Hare.<br/>
+And evere upon the hull thei blewe,<br/>
+Til that thei sihe time, and knewe<br/>
+That thei be fled upon the rage;<br/>
+And whan thei wiste here avantage,    3780<br/>
+Thei felle anon unto the chace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus myht thou sen hou goddes grace<br/>
+Unto the goode men availeth;<br/>
+But elles ofte time it faileth<br/>
+To suche as be noght wel disposed.<br/>
+This tale nedeth noght be glosed,<br/>
+For it is openliche schewed<br/>
+That god to hem that ben wel thewed<br/>
+Hath yove and granted the victoire:<br/>
+So that thensample of this histoire    3790<br/>
+Is good for every king to holde;<br/>
+Ferst in himself that he beholde<br/>
+If he be good of his livinge,<br/>
+And that the folk which he schal bringe<br/>
+Be good also, for thanne he may<br/>
+Be glad of many a merie day,<br/>
+In what as evere he hath to done.<br/>
+For he which sit above the Mone<br/>
+And alle thing mai spille and spede,<br/>
+In every cause, in every nede    3800<br/>
+His goode king so wel adresceth,<br/>
+That alle his fomen he represseth,<br/>
+So that ther mai noman him dere;<br/>
+And als so wel he can forbere,<br/>
+And soffre a wickid king to falle<br/>
+In hondes of his fomen alle.<br/></p>
+
+<p>
+
+Nou forthermore if I schal sein<br/>
+Of my matiere, and torne ayein<br/>
+To speke of justice and Pite<br/>
+After the reule of realte,    3810<br/>
+This mai a king wel understonde,<br/>
+Knihthode mot ben take on honde,<br/>
+Whan that it stant upon the nede:<br/>
+He schal no rihtful cause drede,<br/>
+Nomore of werre thanne of pes,<br/>
+If he wol stonde blameles;<br/>
+For such a cause a king mai have<br/>
+That betre him is to sle than save,<br/>
+Wherof thou myht ensample finde.<br/>
+The hihe makere of mankinde    3820<br/>
+Be Samuel to Saul bad,<br/>
+That he schal nothing ben adrad<br/>
+Ayein king Agag forto fihte;<br/>
+For this the godhede him behihte,<br/>
+That Agag schal ben overcome:<br/>
+And whan it is so ferforth come,<br/>
+That Saul hath him desconfit,<br/>
+The god bad make no respit,<br/>
+That he ne scholde him slen anon.<br/>
+Bot Saul let it overgon    3830<br/>
+And dede noght the goddes heste:<br/>
+For Agag made gret beheste<br/>
+Of rancoun which he wolde yive,<br/>
+King Saul soffreth him to live<br/>
+And feigneth pite forth withal.<br/>
+Bot he which seth and knoweth al,<br/>
+The hihe god, of that he feigneth<br/>
+To Samuel upon him pleigneth,<br/>
+And sende him word, for that he lefte<br/>
+Of Agag that he ne berefte    3840<br/>
+The lif, he schal noght only dye<br/>
+Himself, bot fro his regalie<br/>
+He schal be put for everemo,<br/>
+Noght he, bot ek his heir also,<br/>
+That it schal nevere come ayein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus myht thou se the sothe plein,<br/>
+That of tomoche and of tolyte<br/>
+Upon the Princes stant the wyte.<br/>
+Bot evere it was a kinges riht<br/>
+To do the dedes of a knyht;    3850<br/>
+For in the handes of a king<br/>
+The deth and lif is al o thing<br/>
+After the lawes of justice.<br/>
+To slen it is a dedly vice,<br/>
+Bot if a man the deth deserve;<br/>
+And if a king the lif preserve<br/>
+Of him which oghte forto dye,<br/>
+He suieth noght thensamplerie<br/>
+Which in the bible is evident:<br/>
+Hou David in his testament,    3860<br/>
+Whan he no lengere myhte live,<br/>
+Unto his Sone in charge hath yive<br/>
+That he Joab schal slen algate;<br/>
+And whan David was gon his gate,<br/>
+The yonge wise Salomon<br/>
+His fader heste dede anon,<br/>
+And slouh Joab in such a wise,<br/>
+That thei that herden the juise<br/>
+Evere after dradden him the more,<br/>
+And god was ek wel paid therfore,    3870<br/>
+That he so wolde his herte plye<br/>
+The lawes forto justefie.<br/>
+And yit he kepte forth withal<br/>
+Pite, so as a Prince schal,<br/>
+That he no tirannie wroghte;<br/>
+He fond the wisdom which he soghte,<br/>
+And was so rihtful natheles,<br/>
+That al his lif he stod in pes,<br/>
+That he no dedly werres hadde,<br/>
+For every man his wisdom dradde.    3880<br/>
+And as he was himselve wys,<br/>
+Riht so the worthi men of pris<br/>
+He hath of his conseil withholde;<br/>
+For that is every Prince holde,<br/>
+To make of suche his retenue<br/>
+Whiche wise ben, and to remue<br/>
+The foles: for ther is nothing<br/>
+Which mai be betre aboute a king,<br/>
+Than conseil, which is the substance<br/>
+Of all a kinges governance.    3890
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Salomon a man mai see<br/>
+What thing of most necessite<br/>
+Unto a worthi king belongeth.<br/>
+Whan he his kingdom underfongeth,<br/>
+God bad him chese what he wolde,<br/>
+And seide him that he have scholde<br/>
+What he wolde axe, as of o thing.<br/>
+And he, which was a newe king,<br/>
+Forth therupon his bone preide<br/>
+To god, and in this wise he seide:    3900<br/>
+“O king, be whom that I schal regne,<br/>
+Yif me wisdom, that I my regne,<br/>
+Forth with thi poeple which I have,<br/>
+To thin honour mai kepe and save.”<br/>
+Whan Salomon his bone hath taxed,<br/>
+The god of that which he hath axed<br/>
+Was riht wel paid, and granteth sone<br/>
+Noght al only that he his bone<br/>
+Schal have of that, bot of richesse,<br/>
+Of hele, of pes, of hih noblesse,    3910<br/>
+Forth with wisdom at his axinges,<br/>
+Which stant above alle othre thinges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot what king wole his regne save,<br/>
+Ferst him behoveth forto have<br/>
+After the god and his believe<br/>
+Such conseil which is to believe,<br/>
+Fulfild of trouthe and rihtwisnesse:<br/>
+Bot above alle in his noblesse<br/>
+Betwen the reddour and pite<br/>
+A king schal do such equite    3920<br/>
+And sette the balance in evene,<br/>
+So that the hihe god in hevene<br/>
+And al the poeple of his nobleie<br/>
+Loange unto his name seie.<br/>
+For most above all erthli good,<br/>
+Wher that a king himself is good<br/>
+It helpeth, for in other weie<br/>
+If so be that a king forsueie,<br/>
+Fulofte er this it hath be sein,<br/>
+The comun poeple is overlein    3930<br/>
+And hath the kinges Senne aboght,<br/>
+Al thogh the poeple agulte noght.<br/>
+Of that the king his god misserveth,<br/>
+The poeple takth that he descerveth<br/>
+Hier in this world, bot elleswhere<br/>
+I not hou it schal stonde there.<br/>
+Forthi good is a king to triste<br/>
+Ferst to himself, as he ne wiste<br/>
+Non other help bot god alone;<br/>
+So schal the reule of his persone    3940<br/>
+Withinne himself thurgh providence<br/>
+Ben of the betre conscience.<br/>
+And forto finde ensample of this,<br/>
+A tale I rede, and soth it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a Cronique it telleth thus:<br/>
+The king of Rome Lucius<br/>
+Withinne his chambre upon a nyht<br/>
+The Steward of his hous, a knyht,<br/>
+Forth with his Chamberlein also,<br/>
+To conseil hadde bothe tuo,    3950<br/>
+And stoden be the Chiminee<br/>
+Togedre spekende alle thre.<br/>
+And happeth that the kinges fol<br/>
+Sat be the fyr upon a stol,<br/>
+As he that with his babil pleide,<br/>
+Bot yit he herde al that thei seide,<br/>
+And therof token thei non hiede.<br/>
+The king hem axeth what to rede<br/>
+Of such matiere as cam to mouthe,<br/>
+And thei him tolden as thei couthe.    3960<br/>
+Whan al was spoke of that thei mente,<br/>
+The king with al his hole entente<br/>
+Thanne ate laste hem axeth this,<br/>
+What king men tellen that he is:<br/>
+Among the folk touchende his name,<br/>
+Or be it pris, or be it blame,<br/>
+Riht after that thei herden sein,<br/>
+He bad hem forto telle it plein,<br/>
+That thei no point of soth forbere,<br/>
+Be thilke feith that thei him bere.    3970
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Steward ferst upon this thing<br/>
+Yaf his ansuere unto the king<br/>
+And thoghte glose in this matiere,<br/>
+And seide, als fer as he can hiere,<br/>
+His name is good and honourable:<br/>
+Thus was the Stieward favorable,<br/>
+That he the trouthe plein ne tolde.<br/>
+The king thanne axeth, as he scholde,<br/>
+The Chamberlein of his avis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he, that was soubtil and wys,    3980<br/>
+And somdiel thoghte upon his feith,<br/>
+Him tolde hou al the poeple seith<br/>
+That if his conseil were trewe,<br/>
+Thei wiste thanne wel and knewe<br/>
+That of himself he scholde be<br/>
+A worthi king in his degre:<br/>
+And thus the conseil he accuseth<br/>
+In partie, and the king excuseth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fol, which herde of al the cas<br/>
+That time, as goddes wille was,    3990<br/>
+Sih that thei seiden noght ynowh,<br/>
+And hem to skorne bothe lowh,<br/>
+And to the king he seide tho:<br/>
+“Sire king, if that it were so,<br/>
+Of wisdom in thin oghne mod<br/>
+That thou thiselven were good,<br/>
+Thi conseil scholde noght be badde.”<br/>
+The king therof merveille hadde,<br/>
+Whan that a fol so wisly spak,<br/>
+And of himself fond out the lack    4000<br/>
+Withinne his oghne conscience:<br/>
+And thus the foles evidence,<br/>
+Which was of goddes grace enspired,<br/>
+Makth that good conseil was desired.<br/>
+He putte awey the vicious<br/>
+And tok to him the vertuous;<br/>
+The wrongful lawes ben amended,<br/>
+The londes good is wel despended,<br/>
+The poeple was nomore oppressed,<br/>
+And thus stod every thing redressed.    4010<br/>
+For where a king is propre wys,<br/>
+And hath suche as himselven is<br/>
+Of his conseil, it mai noght faile<br/>
+That every thing ne schal availe:<br/>
+The vices thanne gon aweie,<br/>
+And every vertu holt his weie;<br/>
+Wherof the hihe god is plesed,<br/>
+And al the londes folk is esed.<br/>
+For if the comun poeple crie,<br/>
+And thanne a king list noght to plie    4020<br/>
+To hiere what the clamour wolde,<br/>
+And otherwise thanne he scholde<br/>
+Desdeigneth forto don hem grace,<br/>
+It hath be sen in many place,<br/>
+Ther hath befalle gret contraire;<br/>
+And that I finde of ensamplaire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the deth of Salomon,<br/>
+Whan thilke wise king was gon,<br/>
+And Roboas in his persone<br/>
+Receive scholde the corone,    4030<br/>
+The poeple upon a Parlement<br/>
+Avised were of on assent,<br/>
+And alle unto the king thei preiden,<br/>
+With comun vois and thus thei seiden:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oure liege lord, we thee beseche<br/>
+That thou receive oure humble speche<br/>
+And grante ous that which reson wile,<br/>
+Or of thi grace or of thi skile.<br/>
+Thi fader, whil he was alyve<br/>
+And myhte bothe grante and pryve,    4040<br/>
+Upon the werkes whiche he hadde<br/>
+The comun poeple streite ladde:<br/>
+Whan he the temple made newe,<br/>
+Thing which men nevere afore knewe<br/>
+He broghte up thanne of his taillage,<br/>
+And al was under the visage<br/>
+Of werkes whiche he made tho.<br/>
+Bot nou it is befalle so,<br/>
+That al is mad, riht as he seide,<br/>
+And he was riche whan he deide;    4050<br/>
+So that it is no maner nede,<br/>
+If thou therof wolt taken hiede,<br/>
+To pilen of the poeple more,<br/>
+Which long time hath be grieved sore.<br/>
+And in this wise as we thee seie,<br/>
+With tendre herte we thee preie<br/>
+That thou relesse thilke dette,<br/>
+Which upon ous thi fader sette.<br/>
+And if thee like to don so,<br/>
+We ben thi men for everemo,    4060<br/>
+To gon and comen at thin heste.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which herde this requeste,<br/>
+Seith that he wole ben avised,<br/>
+And hath therof a time assised;<br/>
+And in the while as he him thoghte<br/>
+Upon this thing, conseil he soghte.<br/>
+And ferst the wise knyhtes olde,<br/>
+To whom that he his tale tolde,<br/>
+Conseilen him in this manere;<br/>
+That he with love and with glad chiere    4070<br/>
+Foryive and grante al that is axed<br/>
+Of that his fader hadde taxed;<br/>
+For so he mai his regne achieve<br/>
+With thing which schal him litel grieve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king hem herde and overpasseth,<br/>
+And with these othre his wit compasseth,<br/>
+That yonge were and nothing wise.<br/>
+And thei these olde men despise,<br/>
+And seiden: “Sire, it schal be schame<br/>
+For evere unto thi worthi name,    4080<br/>
+If thou ne kepe noght the riht,<br/>
+Whil thou art in thi yonge myht,<br/>
+Which that thin olde fader gat.<br/>
+Bot seie unto the poeple plat,<br/>
+That whil thou livest in thi lond,<br/>
+The leste finger of thin hond<br/>
+It schal be strengere overal<br/>
+Than was thi fadres bodi al.<br/>
+And this also schal be thi tale,<br/>
+If he hem smot with roddes smale,    4090<br/>
+With Scorpions thou schalt hem smyte;<br/>
+And wher thi fader tok a lyte,<br/>
+Thou thenkst to take mochel more.<br/>
+Thus schalt thou make hem drede sore<br/>
+The grete herte of thi corage,<br/>
+So forto holde hem in servage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This yonge king him hath conformed<br/>
+To don as he was last enformed,<br/>
+Which was to him his undoinge:<br/>
+For whan it cam to the spekinge,    4100<br/>
+He hath the yonge conseil holde,<br/>
+That he the same wordes tolde<br/>
+Of al the poeple in audience;<br/>
+And whan thei herden the sentence<br/>
+Of his malice and the manace,<br/>
+Anon tofore his oghne face<br/>
+Thei have him oultreli refused<br/>
+And with ful gret reproef accused.<br/>
+So thei begunne forto rave,<br/>
+That he was fain himself to save;    4110<br/>
+For as the wilde wode rage<br/>
+Of wyndes makth the See salvage,<br/>
+And that was calm bringth into wawe,<br/>
+So for defalte of grace and lawe<br/>
+This poeple is stered al at ones<br/>
+And forth thei gon out of hise wones;<br/>
+So that of the lignages tuelve<br/>
+Tuo tribes only be hemselve<br/>
+With him abiden and nomo:<br/>
+So were thei for everemo    4120<br/>
+Of no retorn withoute espeir<br/>
+Departed fro the rihtfull heir.<br/>
+Al Irahel with comun vois<br/>
+A king upon here oghne chois<br/>
+Among hemself anon thei make,<br/>
+And have here yonge lord forsake;<br/>
+A povere knyht Jeroboas<br/>
+Thei toke, and lefte Roboas,<br/>
+Which rihtfull heir was be descente.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus the yonge cause wente:    4130<br/>
+For that the conseil was noght good,<br/>
+The regne fro the rihtfull blod<br/>
+Evere afterward divided was.<br/>
+So mai it proven be this cas<br/>
+That yong conseil, which is to warm,<br/>
+Er men be war doth ofte harm.<br/>
+Old age for the conseil serveth,<br/>
+And lusti youthe his thonk deserveth<br/>
+Upon the travail which he doth;<br/>
+And bothe, forto seie a soth,    4140<br/>
+Be sondri cause forto have,<br/>
+If that he wole his regne save,<br/>
+A king behoveth every day.<br/>
+That on can and that other mai,<br/>
+Be so the king hem bothe reule,<br/>
+For elles al goth out of reule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And upon this matiere also<br/>
+A question betwen the tuo<br/>
+Thus writen in a bok I fond;<br/>
+Wher it be betre for the lond    4150<br/>
+A king himselve to be wys,<br/>
+And so to bere his oghne pris,<br/>
+And that his consail be noght good,<br/>
+Or other wise if it so stod,<br/>
+A king if he be vicious<br/>
+And his conseil be vertuous.<br/>
+It is ansuerd in such a wise,<br/>
+That betre it is that thei be wise<br/>
+Be whom that the conseil schal gon,<br/>
+For thei be manye, and he is on;    4160<br/>
+And rathere schal an one man<br/>
+With fals conseil, for oght he can,<br/>
+From his wisdom be mad to falle,<br/>
+Thanne he al one scholde hem alle<br/>
+Fro vices into vertu change,<br/>
+For that is wel the more strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi the lond mai wel be glad,<br/>
+Whos king with good conseil is lad,<br/>
+Which set him unto rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+So that his hihe worthinesse    4170<br/>
+Betwen the reddour and Pite<br/>
+Doth mercy forth with equite.<br/>
+A king is holden overal<br/>
+To Pite, bot in special<br/>
+To hem wher he is most beholde;<br/>
+Thei scholde his Pite most beholde<br/>
+That ben the Lieges of his lond,<br/>
+For thei ben evere under his hond<br/>
+After the goddes ordinaunce<br/>
+To stonde upon his governance.    4180
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of themperour Anthonius<br/>
+I finde hou that he seide thus,<br/>
+That levere him were forto save<br/>
+Oon of his lieges than to have<br/>
+Of enemis a thousend dede.<br/>
+And this he lernede, as I rede,<br/>
+Of Cipio, which hadde be<br/>
+Consul of Rome. And thus to se<br/>
+Diverse ensamples hou thei stonde,<br/>
+A king which hath the charge on honde    4190<br/>
+The comun poeple to governe,<br/>
+If that he wole, he mai wel lerne.<br/>
+Is non so good to the plesance<br/>
+Of god, as is good governance;<br/>
+And every governance is due<br/>
+To Pite: thus I mai argue<br/>
+That Pite is the foundement<br/>
+Of every kinges regiment,<br/>
+If it be medled with justice.<br/>
+Thei tuo remuen alle vice,    4200<br/>
+And ben of vertu most vailable<br/>
+To make a kinges regne stable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, thus the foure pointz tofore,<br/>
+In governance as thei ben bore,<br/>
+Of trouthe ferst and of largesse,<br/>
+Of Pite forth with rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+I have hem told; and over this<br/>
+The fifte point, so as it is<br/>
+Set of the reule of Policie,<br/>
+Wherof a king schal modefie    4210<br/>
+The fleisschly lustes of nature,<br/>
+Nou thenk I telle of such mesure,<br/>
+That bothe kinde schal be served<br/>
+And ek the lawe of god observed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Madle is mad for the the femele,<br/>
+Bot where as on desireth fele,<br/>
+That nedeth noght be weie of kinde:<br/>
+For whan a man mai redy finde<br/>
+His oghne wif, what scholde he seche<br/>
+In strange places to beseche    4220<br/>
+To borwe an other mannes plouh,<br/>
+Whan he hath geere good ynouh<br/>
+Affaited at his oghne heste,<br/>
+And is to him wel more honeste<br/>
+Than other thing which is unknowe?<br/>
+Forthi scholde every good man knowe<br/>
+And thenke, hou that in mariage<br/>
+His trouthe pliht lith in morgage,<br/>
+Which if he breke, it is falshode,<br/>
+And that descordeth to manhode,    4230<br/>
+And namely toward the grete,<br/>
+Wherof the bokes alle trete;<br/>
+So as the Philosophre techeth<br/>
+To Alisandre, and him betecheth<br/>
+The lore hou that he schal mesure<br/>
+His bodi, so that no mesure<br/>
+Of fleisshly lust he scholde excede.<br/>
+And thus forth if I schal procede,<br/>
+The fifte point, as I seide er,<br/>
+Is chastete, which sielde wher    4240<br/>
+Comth nou adaies into place;<br/>
+And natheles, bot it be grace<br/>
+Above alle othre in special,<br/>
+Is non that chaste mai ben all.<br/>
+Bot yit a kinges hihe astat,<br/>
+Which of his ordre as a prelat<br/>
+Schal ben enoignt and seintefied,<br/>
+He mot be more magnefied<br/>
+For dignete of his corone,<br/>
+Than scholde an other low persone,    4250<br/>
+Which is noght of so hih emprise.<br/>
+Therfore a Prince him scholde avise,<br/>
+Er that he felle in such riote,<br/>
+And namely that he nassote<br/>
+To change for the wommanhede<br/>
+The worthinesse of his manhede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Aristotle I have wel rad,<br/>
+Hou he to Alisandre bad,<br/>
+That forto gladen his corage<br/>
+He schal beholde the visage    4260<br/>
+Of wommen, whan that thei ben faire.<br/>
+Bot yit he set an essamplaire,<br/>
+His bodi so to guide and reule,<br/>
+That he ne passe noght the reule,<br/>
+Wherof that he himself beguile.<br/>
+For in the womman is no guile<br/>
+Of that a man himself bewhapeth;<br/>
+Whan he his oghne wit bejapeth,<br/>
+I can the wommen wel excuse:<br/>
+Bot what man wole upon hem muse    4270<br/>
+After the fool impression<br/>
+Of his ymaginacioun,<br/>
+Withinne himself the fyr he bloweth,<br/>
+Wherof the womman nothing knoweth,<br/>
+So mai sche nothing be to wyte.<br/>
+For if a man himself excite<br/>
+To drenche, and wol it noght forbere,<br/>
+The water schal no blame bere.<br/>
+What mai the gold, thogh men coveite?<br/>
+If that a man wol love streite,    4280<br/>
+The womman hath him nothing bounde;<br/>
+If he his oghne herte wounde,<br/>
+Sche mai noght lette the folie;<br/>
+And thogh so felle of compainie<br/>
+That he myht eny thing pourchace,<br/>
+Yit makth a man the ferste chace,<br/>
+The womman fleth and he poursuieth:<br/>
+So that be weie of skile it suieth,<br/>
+The man is cause, hou so befalle,<br/>
+That he fulofte sithe is falle    4290<br/>
+Wher that he mai noght wel aryse.<br/>
+And natheles ful manye wise<br/>
+Befoled have hemself er this,<br/>
+As nou adaies yit it is<br/>
+Among the men and evere was,<br/>
+The stronge is fieblest in this cas.<br/>
+It sit a man be weie of kinde<br/>
+To love, bot it is noght kinde<br/>
+A man for love his wit to lese:<br/>
+For if the Monthe of Juil schal frese    4300<br/>
+And that Decembre schal ben hot,<br/>
+The yeer mistorneth, wel I wot.<br/>
+To sen a man fro his astat<br/>
+Thurgh his sotie effeminat,<br/>
+And leve that a man schal do,<br/>
+It is as Hose above the Scho,<br/>
+To man which oghte noght ben used.<br/>
+Bot yit the world hath ofte accused<br/>
+Ful grete Princes of this dede,<br/>
+Hou thei for love hemself mislede,    4310<br/>
+Wherof manhode stod behinde,<br/>
+Of olde ensamples as I finde.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These olde gestes tellen thus,<br/>
+That whilom Sardana Pallus,<br/>
+Which hield al hol in his empire<br/>
+The grete kingdom of Assire,<br/>
+Was thurgh the slouthe of his corage<br/>
+Falle into thilke fyri rage<br/>
+Of love, which the men assoteth,<br/>
+Wherof himself he so rioteth,    4320<br/>
+And wax so ferforth wommannyssh,<br/>
+That ayein kinde, as if a fissh<br/>
+Abide wolde upon the lond,<br/>
+In wommen such a lust he fond,<br/>
+That he duelte evere in chambre stille,<br/>
+And only wroghte after the wille<br/>
+Of wommen, so as he was bede,<br/>
+That selden whanne in other stede<br/>
+If that he wolde wenden oute,<br/>
+To sen hou that it stod aboute.    4330<br/>
+Bot ther he keste and there he pleide,<br/>
+Thei tawhten him a Las to breide,<br/>
+And weve a Pours, and to enfile<br/>
+A Perle: and fell that ilke while,<br/>
+On Barbarus the Prince of Mede<br/>
+Sih hou this king in wommanhede<br/>
+Was falle fro chivalerie,<br/>
+And gat him help and compaignie,<br/>
+And wroghte so, that ate laste<br/>
+This king out of his regne he caste,    4340<br/>
+Which was undon for everemo:<br/>
+And yit men speken of him so,<br/>
+That it is schame forto hiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi to love is in manere.<br/>
+King David hadde many a love,<br/>
+Bot natheles alwey above<br/>
+Knyhthode he kepte in such a wise,<br/>
+That for no fleisshli covoitise<br/>
+Of lust to ligge in ladi armes<br/>
+He lefte noght the lust of armes.    4350<br/>
+For where a Prince hise lustes suieth,<br/>
+That he the werre noght poursuieth,<br/>
+Whan it is time to ben armed,<br/>
+His contre stant fulofte harmed,<br/>
+Whan thenemis ben woxe bolde,<br/>
+That thei defence non beholde.<br/>
+Ful many a lond hath so be lore,<br/>
+As men mai rede of time afore<br/>
+Of hem that so here eses soghten,<br/>
+Which after thei full diere aboghten.    4360
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To mochel ese is nothing worth,<br/>
+For that set every vice forth<br/>
+And every vertu put abak,<br/>
+Wherof priss torneth into lak,<br/>
+As in Cronique I mai reherse:<br/>
+Which telleth hou the king of Perse,<br/>
+That Cirus hihte, a werre hadde<br/>
+Ayein a poeple which he dradde,<br/>
+Of a contre which Liddos hihte;<br/>
+Bot yit for oght that he do mihte    4370<br/>
+As in bataille upon the werre,<br/>
+He hadde of hem alwey the werre.<br/>
+And whan he sih and wiste it wel,<br/>
+That he be strengthe wan no del,<br/>
+Thanne ate laste he caste a wyle<br/>
+This worthi poeple to beguile,<br/>
+And tok with hem a feigned pes,<br/>
+Which scholde lasten endeles,<br/>
+So as he seide in wordes wise,<br/>
+Bot he thoghte al in other wise.    4380<br/>
+For it betidd upon the cas,<br/>
+Whan that this poeple in reste was,<br/>
+Thei token eses manyfold;<br/>
+And worldes ese, as it is told,<br/>
+Be weie of kinde is the norrice<br/>
+Of every lust which toucheth vice.<br/>
+Thus whan thei were in lustes falle,<br/>
+The werres ben foryeten alle;<br/>
+Was non which wolde the worschipe<br/>
+Of Armes, bot in idelschipe    4390<br/>
+Thei putten besinesse aweie<br/>
+And token hem to daunce and pleie;<br/>
+Bot most above alle othre thinges<br/>
+Thei token hem to the likinges<br/>
+Of fleysshly lust, that chastete<br/>
+Received was in no degre,<br/>
+Bot every man doth what him liste.<br/>
+And whan the king of Perse it wiste,<br/>
+That thei unto folie entenden,<br/>
+With his pouer, whan thei lest wenden,    4400<br/>
+Mor sodeinly than doth the thunder<br/>
+He cam, for evere and put hem under.<br/>
+And thus hath lecherie lore<br/>
+The lond, which hadde be tofore<br/>
+The beste of hem that were tho.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in the bible I finde also<br/>
+A tale lich unto this thing,<br/>
+Hou Amalech the paien king,<br/>
+Whan that he myhte be no weie<br/>
+Defende his lond and putte aweie    4410<br/>
+The worthi poeple of Irael,<br/>
+This Sarazin, as it befell,<br/>
+Thurgh the conseil of Balaam<br/>
+A route of faire wommen nam,<br/>
+That lusti were and yonge of Age,<br/>
+And bad hem gon to the lignage<br/>
+Of these Hebreus: and forth thei wente<br/>
+With yhen greye and browes bente<br/>
+And wel arraied everych on;<br/>
+And whan thei come were anon    4420<br/>
+Among thebreus, was non insihte,<br/>
+Bot cacche who that cacche myhte,<br/>
+And ech of hem hise lustes soghte,<br/>
+Whiche after thei full diere boghte.<br/>
+For grace anon began to faile,<br/>
+That whan thei comen to bataille<br/>
+Thanne afterward, in sori plit<br/>
+Thei were take and disconfit,<br/>
+So that withinne a litel throwe<br/>
+The myht of hem was overthrowe,    4430<br/>
+That whilom were wont to stonde.<br/>
+Til Phinees the cause on honde<br/>
+Hath take, this vengance laste,<br/>
+Bot thanne it cessede ate laste,<br/>
+For god was paid of that he dede:<br/>
+For wher he fond upon a stede<br/>
+A couple which misferde so,<br/>
+Thurghout he smot hem bothe tuo,<br/>
+And let hem ligge in mennes yhe;<br/>
+Wherof alle othre whiche hem sihe    4440<br/>
+Ensamplede hem upon the dede,<br/>
+And preiden unto the godhiede<br/>
+Here olde Sennes to amende:<br/>
+And he, which wolde his mercy sende,<br/>
+Restorede hem to newe grace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus mai it schewe in sondri place,<br/>
+Of chastete hou the clennesse<br/>
+Acordeth to the worthinesse<br/>
+Of men of Armes overal;<br/>
+Bot most of alle in special    4450<br/>
+This vertu to a king belongeth,<br/>
+For upon his fortune it hongeth<br/>
+Of that his lond schal spede or spille.<br/>
+Forthi bot if a king his wille<br/>
+Fro lustes of his fleissh restreigne,<br/>
+Ayein himself he makth a treigne,<br/>
+Into the which if that he slyde,<br/>
+Him were betre go besyde.<br/>
+For every man mai understonde,<br/>
+Hou for a time that it stonde,    4460<br/>
+It is a sori lust to lyke,<br/>
+Whos ende makth a man to syke<br/>
+And torneth joies into sorwe.<br/>
+The brihte Sonne be the morwe<br/>
+Beschyneth noght the derke nyht,<br/>
+The lusti youthe of mannes myht,<br/>
+In Age bot it stonde wel,<br/>
+Mistorneth al the laste whiel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That every worthi Prince is holde<br/>
+Withinne himself himself beholde,    4470<br/>
+To se the stat of his persone,<br/>
+And thenke hou ther be joies none<br/>
+Upon this Erthe mad to laste,<br/>
+And hou the fleissh schal ate laste<br/>
+The lustes of this lif forsake,<br/>
+Him oghte a gret ensample take<br/>
+Of Salomon, whos appetit<br/>
+Was holy set upon delit,<br/>
+To take of wommen the plesance:<br/>
+So that upon his ignorance    4480<br/>
+The wyde world merveileth yit,<br/>
+That he, which alle mennes wit<br/>
+In thilke time hath overpassed,<br/>
+With fleisshly lustes was so tassed,<br/>
+That he which ladde under the lawe<br/>
+The poeple of god, himself withdrawe<br/>
+He hath fro god in such a wise,<br/>
+That he worschipe and sacrifise<br/>
+For sondri love in sondri stede<br/>
+Unto the false goddes dede.    4490<br/>
+This was the wise ecclesiaste,<br/>
+The fame of whom schal evere laste,<br/>
+That he the myhti god forsok,<br/>
+Ayein the lawe whanne he tok<br/>
+His wyves and his concubines<br/>
+Of hem that weren Sarazines,<br/>
+For whiche he dede ydolatrie.<br/>
+For this I rede of his sotie:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sche of Sidoyne so him ladde,<br/>
+That he knelende his armes spradde    4500<br/>
+To Astrathen with gret humblesse,<br/>
+Which of hire lond was the goddesse:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And sche that was a Moabite<br/>
+So ferforth made him to delite<br/>
+Thurgh lust, which al his wit devoureth,<br/>
+That he Chamos hire god honoureth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An other Amonyte also<br/>
+With love him hath assoted so,<br/>
+Hire god Moloch that with encense<br/>
+He sacreth, and doth reverence    4510<br/>
+In such a wise as sche him bad.<br/>
+Thus was the wiseste overlad<br/>
+With blinde lustes whiche he soghte;<br/>
+Bot he it afterward aboghte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Achias Selonites,<br/>
+Which was prophete, er his decess,<br/>
+Whil he was in hise lustes alle,<br/>
+Betokneth what schal after falle.<br/>
+For on a day, whan that he mette<br/>
+Jeroboam the knyht, he grette    4520<br/>
+And bad him that he scholde abyde,<br/>
+To hiere what him schal betyde.<br/>
+And forth withal Achias caste<br/>
+His mantell of, and also faste<br/>
+He kut it into pieces twelve,<br/>
+Wherof tuo partz toward himselve<br/>
+He kepte, and al the remenant,<br/>
+As god hath set his covenant,<br/>
+He tok unto Jeroboas,<br/>
+Of Nabal which the Sone was,    4530<br/>
+And of the kinges court a knyht:<br/>
+And seide him, “Such is goddes myht,<br/>
+As thou hast sen departed hiere<br/>
+Mi mantell, riht in such manere<br/>
+After the deth of Salomon<br/>
+God hath ordeigned therupon,<br/>
+This regne thanne he schal divide:<br/>
+Which time thou schalt ek abide,<br/>
+And upon that division<br/>
+The regne as in proporcion    4540<br/>
+As thou hast of mi mantell take,<br/>
+Thou schalt receive, I undertake.<br/>
+And thus the Sone schal abie<br/>
+The lustes and the lecherie<br/>
+Of him which nou his fader is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So forto taken hiede of this,<br/>
+It sit a king wel to be chaste,<br/>
+For elles he mai lihtly waste<br/>
+Himself and ek his regne bothe,<br/>
+And that oghte every king to lothe.    4550<br/>
+O, which a Senne violent,<br/>
+Wherof so wys a king was schent,<br/>
+That the vengance in his persone<br/>
+Was noght ynouh to take al one,<br/>
+Bot afterward, whan he was passed,<br/>
+It hath his heritage lassed,<br/>
+As I more openli tofore<br/>
+The tale tolde. And thus therfore<br/>
+The Philosophre upon this thing<br/>
+Writ and conseileth to a king,    4560<br/>
+That he the surfet of luxure<br/>
+Schal tempre and reule of such mesure,<br/>
+Which be to kinde sufficant<br/>
+And ek to reson acordant,<br/>
+So that the lustes ignorance<br/>
+Be cause of no misgovernance,<br/>
+Thurgh which that he be overthrowe,<br/>
+As he that wol no reson knowe.<br/>
+For bot a mannes wit be swerved,<br/>
+Whan kinde is dueliche served,    4570<br/>
+It oghte of reson to suffise;<br/>
+For if it falle him otherwise,<br/>
+He mai tho lustes sore drede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For of Anthonie thus I rede,<br/>
+Which of Severus was the Sone,<br/>
+That he his lif of comun wone<br/>
+Yaf holy unto thilke vice,<br/>
+And ofte time he was so nyce,<br/>
+Wherof nature hire hath compleigned<br/>
+Unto the god, which hath desdeigned    4580<br/>
+The werkes whiche Antonie wroghte<br/>
+Of lust, whiche he ful sore aboghte:<br/>
+For god his forfet hath so wroke<br/>
+That in Cronique it is yit spoke.<br/>
+Bot forto take remembrance<br/>
+Of special misgovernance<br/>
+Thurgh covoitise and injustice<br/>
+Forth with the remenant of vice,<br/>
+And nameliche of lecherie,<br/>
+I finde write a gret partie    4590<br/>
+Withinne a tale, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+Which is thensample of this matiere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So as these olde gestes sein,<br/>
+The proude tirannyssh Romein<br/>
+Tarquinus, which was thanne king<br/>
+And wroghte many a wrongful thing,<br/>
+Of Sones hadde manyon,<br/>
+Among the whiche Arrons was on,<br/>
+Lich to his fader of maneres;<br/>
+So that withinne a fewe yeres    4600<br/>
+With tresoun and with tirannie<br/>
+Thei wonne of lond a gret partie,<br/>
+And token hiede of no justice,<br/>
+Which due was to here office<br/>
+Upon the reule of governance;<br/>
+Bot al that evere was plesance<br/>
+Unto the fleisshes lust thei toke.<br/>
+And fell so, that thei undertoke<br/>
+A werre, which was noght achieved,<br/>
+Bot ofte time it hadde hem grieved,    4610<br/>
+Ayein a folk which thanne hihte<br/>
+The Gabiens: and al be nyhte<br/>
+This Arrons, whan he was at hom<br/>
+In Rome, a prive place he nom<br/>
+Withinne a chambre, and bet himselve<br/>
+And made him woundes ten or tuelve<br/>
+Upon the bak, as it was sene;<br/>
+And so forth with hise hurtes grene<br/>
+In al the haste that he may<br/>
+He rod, and cam that other day    4620<br/>
+Unto Gabie the Cite,<br/>
+And in he wente: and whan that he<br/>
+Was knowe, anon the gates schette,<br/>
+The lordes alle upon him sette<br/>
+With drawe swerdes upon honde.<br/>
+This Arrons wolde hem noght withstonde,<br/>
+Bot seide, “I am hier at your wille,<br/>
+Als lief it is that ye me spille,<br/>
+As if myn oghne fader dede.”<br/>
+And forthwith in the same stede    4630<br/>
+He preide hem that thei wolde se,<br/>
+And schewede hem in what degre<br/>
+His fader and hise brethren bothe,<br/>
+Whiche, as he seide, weren wrothe,<br/>
+Him hadde beten and reviled,<br/>
+For evere and out of Rome exiled.<br/>
+And thus he made hem to believe,<br/>
+And seide, if that he myhte achieve<br/>
+His pourpos, it schal wel be yolde,<br/>
+Be so that thei him helpe wolde.    4640
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan that the lordes hadde sein<br/>
+Hou wofully he was besein,<br/>
+Thei token Pite of his grief;<br/>
+Bot yit it was hem wonder lief<br/>
+That Rome him hadde exiled so.<br/>
+These Gabiens be conseil tho<br/>
+Upon the goddes made him swere,<br/>
+That he to hem schal trouthe bere<br/>
+And strengthen hem with al his myht;<br/>
+And thei also him have behiht    4650<br/>
+To helpen him in his querele.<br/>
+Thei schopen thanne for his hele<br/>
+That he was bathed and enoignt,<br/>
+Til that he was in lusti point;<br/>
+And what he wolde thanne he hadde,<br/>
+That he al hol the cite ladde<br/>
+Riht as he wolde himself divise.<br/>
+And thanne he thoghte him in what wise<br/>
+He myhte his tirannie schewe;<br/>
+And to his conseil tok a schrewe,    4660<br/>
+Whom to his fader forth he sente<br/>
+In his message, and he tho wente,<br/>
+And preide his fader forto seie<br/>
+Be his avis, and finde a weie,<br/>
+Hou they the cite myhten winne,<br/>
+Whil that he stod so wel therinne.<br/>
+And whan the messager was come<br/>
+To Rome, and hath in conseil nome<br/>
+The king, it fell per chance so<br/>
+That thei were in a gardin tho,    4670<br/>
+This messager forth with the king.<br/>
+And whanne he hadde told the thing<br/>
+In what manere that it stod,<br/>
+And that Tarquinus understod<br/>
+Be the message hou that it ferde,<br/>
+Anon he tok in honde a yerde,<br/>
+And in the gardin as thei gon,<br/>
+The lilie croppes on and on,<br/>
+Wher that thei weren sprongen oute,<br/>
+He smot of, as thei stode aboute,    4680<br/>
+And seide unto the messager:<br/>
+“Lo, this thing, which I do nou hier,<br/>
+Schal ben in stede of thin ansuere;<br/>
+And in this wise as I me bere,<br/>
+Thou schalt unto mi Sone telle.”<br/>
+And he no lengere wolde duelle,<br/>
+Bot tok his leve and goth withal<br/>
+Unto his lord, and told him al,<br/>
+Hou that his fader hadde do.<br/>
+Whan Arrons herde him telle so,    4690<br/>
+Anon he wiste what it mente,<br/>
+And therto sette al his entente,<br/>
+Til he thurgh fraude and tricherie<br/>
+The Princes hefdes of Gabie<br/>
+Hath smiten of, and al was wonne:<br/>
+His fader cam tofore the Sonne<br/>
+Into the toun with the Romeins,<br/>
+And tok and slowh the citezeins<br/>
+Withoute reson or pite,<br/>
+That he ne spareth no degre.    4700<br/>
+And for the sped of this conqueste<br/>
+He let do make a riche feste<br/>
+With a sollempne Sacrifise<br/>
+In Phebus temple; and in this wise<br/>
+Whan the Romeins assembled were,<br/>
+In presence of hem alle there,<br/>
+Upon thalter whan al was diht<br/>
+And that the fyres were alyht,<br/>
+From under thalter sodeinly<br/>
+An hidous Serpent openly    4710<br/>
+Cam out and hath devoured al<br/>
+The Sacrifice, and ek withal<br/>
+The fyres queynt, and forth anon,<br/>
+So as he cam, so is he gon<br/>
+Into the depe ground ayein.<br/>
+And every man began to sein,<br/>
+“Ha lord, what mai this signefie?”<br/>
+And therupon thei preie and crie<br/>
+To Phebus, that thei mihten knowe<br/>
+The cause: and he the same throwe    4720<br/>
+With gastly vois, that alle it herde,<br/>
+The Romeins in this wise ansuerde,<br/>
+And seide hou for the wikkidnesse<br/>
+Of Pride and of unrihtwisnesse,<br/>
+That Tarquin and his Sone hath do,<br/>
+The Sacrifice is wasted so,<br/>
+Which myhte noght ben acceptable<br/>
+Upon such Senne abhominable.<br/>
+And over that yit he hem wisseth,<br/>
+And seith that which of hem ferst kisseth    4730<br/>
+His moder, he schal take wrieche<br/>
+Upon the wrong: and of that speche<br/>
+Thei ben withinne here hertes glade,<br/>
+Thogh thei outward no semblant made.<br/>
+Ther was a knyht which Brutus hihte,<br/>
+And he with al the haste he myhte<br/>
+To grounde fell and therthe kiste,<br/>
+Bot non of hem the cause wiste,<br/>
+Bot wenden that he hadde sporned<br/>
+Per chance, and so was overtorned.    4740<br/>
+Bot Brutus al an other mente;<br/>
+For he knew wel in his entente<br/>
+Hou therthe of every mannes kinde<br/>
+Is Moder: bot thei weren blinde,<br/>
+And sihen noght so fer as he.<br/>
+Bot whan thei leften the Cite<br/>
+And comen hom to Rome ayein,<br/>
+Thanne every man which was Romein<br/>
+And moder hath, to hire he bende<br/>
+And keste, and ech of hem thus wende    4750<br/>
+To be the ferste upon the chance,<br/>
+Of Tarquin forto do vengance,<br/>
+So as thei herden Phebus sein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot every time hath his certein,<br/>
+So moste it nedes thanne abide,<br/>
+Til afterward upon a tyde<br/>
+Tarquinus made unskilfully<br/>
+A werre, which was fasteby<br/>
+Ayein a toun with walles stronge<br/>
+Which Ardea was cleped longe,    4760<br/>
+And caste a Siege theraboute,<br/>
+That ther mai noman passen oute.<br/>
+So it befell upon a nyht,<br/>
+Arrons, which hadde his souper diht,<br/>
+A part of the chivalerie<br/>
+With him to soupe in compaignie<br/>
+Hath bede: and whan thei comen were<br/>
+And seten at the souper there,<br/>
+Among here othre wordes glade<br/>
+Arrons a gret spekinge made,    4770<br/>
+Who hadde tho the beste wif<br/>
+Of Rome: and ther began a strif,<br/>
+For Arrons seith he hath the beste.<br/>
+So jangle thei withoute reste,<br/>
+Til ate laste on Collatin,<br/>
+A worthi knyht, and was cousin<br/>
+To Arrons, seide him in this wise:<br/>
+“It is,” quod he, “of non emprise<br/>
+To speke a word, bot of the dede,<br/>
+Therof it is to taken hiede.    4780<br/>
+Anon forthi this same tyde<br/>
+Lep on thin hors and let ous ryde:<br/>
+So mai we knowe bothe tuo<br/>
+Unwarli what oure wyves do,<br/>
+And that schal be a trewe assay.”<br/>
+This Arrons seith noght ones nay:<br/>
+On horse bak anon thei lepte<br/>
+In such manere, and nothing slepte,<br/>
+Ridende forth til that thei come<br/>
+Al prively withinne Rome;    4790<br/>
+In strange place and doun thei lihte,<br/>
+And take a chambre, and out of sihte<br/>
+Thei be desguised for a throwe,<br/>
+So that no lif hem scholde knowe.<br/>
+And to the paleis ferst thei soghte,<br/>
+To se what thing this ladi wroghte<br/>
+Of which Arrons made his avant:<br/>
+And thei hire sihe of glad semblant,<br/>
+Al full of merthes and of bordes;<br/>
+Bot among alle hire othre wordes    4800<br/>
+Sche spak noght of hire housebonde.<br/>
+And whan thei hadde al understonde<br/>
+Of thilke place what hem liste,<br/>
+Thei gon hem forth, that non it wiste,<br/>
+Beside thilke gate of bras,<br/>
+Collacea which cleped was,<br/>
+Wher Collatin hath his duellinge.<br/>
+Ther founden thei at hom sittinge<br/>
+Lucrece his wif, al environed<br/>
+With wommen, whiche are abandoned    4810<br/>
+To werche, and sche wroghte ek withal,<br/>
+And bad hem haste, and seith, “It schal<br/>
+Be for mi housebondes were,<br/>
+Which with his swerd and with his spere<br/>
+Lith at the Siege in gret desese.<br/>
+And if it scholde him noght displese,<br/>
+Nou wolde god I hadde him hiere;<br/>
+For certes til that I mai hiere<br/>
+Som good tidinge of his astat,<br/>
+Min herte is evere upon debat.    4820<br/>
+For so as alle men witnesse,<br/>
+He is of such an hardiesse,<br/>
+That he can noght himselve spare,<br/>
+And that is al my moste care,<br/>
+Whan thei the walles schulle assaile.<br/>
+Bot if mi wisshes myhte availe,<br/>
+I wolde it were a groundles pet,<br/>
+Be so the Siege were unknet,<br/>
+And I myn housebonde sihe.”<br/>
+With that the water in hire yhe    4830<br/>
+Aros, that sche ne myhte it stoppe,<br/>
+And as men sen the dew bedroppe<br/>
+The leves and the floures eke,<br/>
+Riht so upon hire whyte cheke<br/>
+The wofull salte teres felle.<br/>
+Whan Collatin hath herd hire telle<br/>
+The menynge of hire trewe herte,<br/>
+Anon with that to hire he sterte,<br/>
+And seide, “Lo, mi goode diere,<br/>
+Nou is he come to you hiere,    4840<br/>
+That ye most loven, as ye sein.”<br/>
+And sche with goodly chiere ayein<br/>
+Beclipte him in hire armes smale,<br/>
+And the colour, which erst was pale,<br/>
+To Beaute thanne was restored,<br/>
+So that it myhte noght be mored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The kinges Sone, which was nyh,<br/>
+And of this lady herde and syh<br/>
+The thinges as thei ben befalle,<br/>
+The resoun of hise wittes alle    4850<br/>
+Hath lost; for love upon his part<br/>
+Cam thanne, and of his fyri dart<br/>
+With such a wounde him hath thurghsmite,<br/>
+That he mot nedes fiele and wite<br/>
+Of thilke blinde maladie,<br/>
+To which no cure of Surgerie<br/>
+Can helpe. Bot yit natheles<br/>
+At thilke time he hield his pes,<br/>
+That he no contienance made,<br/>
+Bot openly with wordes glade,    4860<br/>
+So as he couthe in his manere,<br/>
+He spak and made frendly chiere,<br/>
+Til it was time forto go.<br/>
+And Collatin with him also<br/>
+His leve tok, so that be nyhte<br/>
+With al the haste that thei myhte<br/>
+Thei riden to the Siege ayein.<br/>
+Bot Arrons was so wo besein<br/>
+With thoghtes whiche upon him runne,<br/>
+That he al be the brode Sunne    4870<br/>
+To bedde goth, noght forto reste,<br/>
+Bot forto thenke upon the beste<br/>
+And the faireste forth withal,<br/>
+That evere he syh or evere schal,<br/>
+So as him thoghte in his corage,<br/>
+Where he pourtreieth hire ymage:<br/>
+Ferst the fetures of hir face,<br/>
+In which nature hadde alle grace<br/>
+Of wommanly beaute beset,<br/>
+So that it myhte noght be bet;    4880<br/>
+And hou hir yelwe her was tresced<br/>
+And hire atir so wel adresced,<br/>
+And hou sche spak, and hou sche wroghte,<br/>
+And hou sche wepte, al this he thoghte,<br/>
+That he foryeten hath no del,<br/>
+Bot al it liketh him so wel,<br/>
+That in the word nor in the dede<br/>
+Hire lacketh noght of wommanhiede.<br/>
+And thus this tirannysshe knyht<br/>
+Was soupled, bot noght half ariht,    4890<br/>
+For he non other hiede tok,<br/>
+Bot that he myhte be som crok,<br/>
+Althogh it were ayein hire wille,<br/>
+The lustes of his fleissh fulfille;<br/>
+Which love was noght resonable,<br/>
+For where honour is remuable,<br/>
+It oghte wel to ben avised.<br/>
+Bot he, which hath his lust assised<br/>
+With melled love and tirannie,<br/>
+Hath founde upon his tricherie    4900<br/>
+A weie which he thenkth to holde,<br/>
+And seith, “Fortune unto the bolde<br/>
+Is favorable forto helpe.”<br/>
+And thus withinne himself to yelpe,<br/>
+As he which was a wylde man,<br/>
+Upon his treson he began:<br/>
+And up he sterte, and forth he wente<br/>
+On horsebak, bot his entente<br/>
+Ther knew no wiht, and thus he nam<br/>
+The nexte weie, til he cam    4910<br/>
+Unto Collacea the gate<br/>
+Of Rome, and it was somdiel late,<br/>
+Riht evene upon the Sonne set,<br/>
+As he which hadde schape his net<br/>
+Hire innocence to betrappe.<br/>
+And as it scholde tho mishappe,<br/>
+Als priveliche as evere he myhte<br/>
+He rod, and of his hors alyhte<br/>
+Tofore Collatines In,<br/>
+And al frendliche he goth him in,    4920<br/>
+As he that was cousin of house.<br/>
+And sche, which is the goode spouse,<br/>
+Lucrece, whan that sche him sih,<br/>
+With goodli chiere drowh him nyh,<br/>
+As sche which al honour supposeth,<br/>
+And him, so as sche dar, opposeth<br/>
+Hou it stod of hire housebonde.<br/>
+And he tho dede hire understonde<br/>
+With tales feigned in his wise,<br/>
+Riht as he wolde himself devise,    4930<br/>
+Wherof he myhte hire herte glade,<br/>
+That sche the betre chiere made,<br/>
+Whan sche the glade wordes herde,<br/>
+Hou that hire housebonde ferde.<br/>
+And thus the trouthe was deceived<br/>
+With slih tresoun, which was received<br/>
+To hire which mente alle goode;<br/>
+For as the festes thanne stode,<br/>
+His Souper was ryht wel arraied.<br/>
+Bot yit he hath no word assaied    4940<br/>
+To speke of love in no degre;<br/>
+Bot with covert subtilite<br/>
+His frendly speches he affaiteth,<br/>
+And as the Tigre his time awaiteth<br/>
+In hope forto cacche his preie.<br/>
+Whan that the bordes were aweie<br/>
+And thei have souped in the halle,<br/>
+He seith that slep is on him falle,<br/>
+And preith he moste go to bedde;<br/>
+And sche with alle haste spedde,    4950<br/>
+So as hire thoghte it was to done,<br/>
+That every thing was redi sone.<br/>
+Sche broghte him to his chambre tho<br/>
+And tok hire leve, and forth is go<br/>
+Into hire oghne chambre by,<br/>
+As sche that wende certeinly<br/>
+Have had a frend, and hadde a fo,<br/>
+Wherof fell after mochel wo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This tirant, thogh he lyhe softe,<br/>
+Out of his bed aros fulofte,    4960<br/>
+And goth aboute, and leide his Ere<br/>
+To herkne, til that alle were<br/>
+To bedde gon and slepten faste.<br/>
+And thanne upon himself he caste<br/>
+A mantell, and his swerd al naked<br/>
+He tok in honde; and sche unwaked<br/>
+Abedde lay, but what sche mette,<br/>
+God wot; for he the Dore unschette<br/>
+So prively that non it herde,<br/>
+The softe pas and forth he ferde    4970<br/>
+Unto the bed wher that sche slepte,<br/>
+Al sodeinliche and in he crepte,<br/>
+And hire in bothe his Armes tok.<br/>
+With that this worthi wif awok,<br/>
+Which thurgh tendresce of wommanhiede<br/>
+Hire vois hath lost for pure drede,<br/>
+That o word speke sche ne dar:<br/>
+And ek he bad hir to be war,<br/>
+For if sche made noise or cry,<br/>
+He seide, his swerd lay faste by    4980<br/>
+To slen hire and hire folk aboute.<br/>
+And thus he broghte hire herte in doute,<br/>
+That lich a Lomb whanne it is sesed<br/>
+In wolves mouth, so was desesed<br/>
+Lucrece, which he naked fond:<br/>
+Wherof sche swounede in his hond,<br/>
+And, as who seith, lay ded oppressed.<br/>
+And he, which al him hadde adresced<br/>
+To lust, tok thanne what him liste,<br/>
+And goth his wey, that non it wiste,    4990<br/>
+Into his oghne chambre ayein,<br/>
+And clepede up his chamberlein,<br/>
+And made him redi forto ryde.<br/>
+And thus this lecherouse pride<br/>
+To horse lepte and forth he rod;<br/>
+And sche, which in hire bed abod,<br/>
+Whan that sche wiste he was agon,<br/>
+Sche clepede after liht anon<br/>
+And up aros long er the day,<br/>
+And caste awey hire freissh aray,    5000<br/>
+As sche which hath the world forsake,<br/>
+And tok upon the clothes blake:<br/>
+And evere upon continuinge,<br/>
+Riht as men sen a welle springe,<br/>
+With yhen fulle of wofull teres,<br/>
+Hire her hangende aboute hire Eres,<br/>
+Sche wepte, and noman wiste why.<br/>
+Bot yit among full pitously<br/>
+Sche preide that thei nolden drecche<br/>
+Hire housebonde forto fecche    5010<br/>
+Forth with hire fader ek also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus be thei comen bothe tuo,<br/>
+And Brutus cam with Collatin,<br/>
+Which to Lucrece was cousin,<br/>
+And in thei wenten alle thre<br/>
+To chambre, wher thei myhten se<br/>
+The wofulleste upon this Molde,<br/>
+Which wepte as sche to water scholde.<br/>
+The chambre Dore anon was stoke,<br/>
+Er thei have oght unto hire spoke;    5020<br/>
+Thei sihe hire clothes al desguised,<br/>
+And hou sche hath hirself despised,<br/>
+Hire her hangende unkemd aboute,<br/>
+Bot natheles sche gan to loute<br/>
+And knele unto hire housebonde;<br/>
+And he, which fain wolde understonde<br/>
+The cause why sche ferde so,<br/>
+With softe wordes axeth tho,<br/>
+“What mai you be, mi goode swete?”<br/>
+And sche, which thoghte hirself unmete    5030<br/>
+And the lest worth of wommen alle,<br/>
+Hire wofull chiere let doun falle<br/>
+For schame and couthe unnethes loke.<br/>
+And thei therof good hiede toke,<br/>
+And preiden hire in alle weie<br/>
+That sche ne spare forto seie<br/>
+Unto hir frendes what hire eileth,<br/>
+Why sche so sore hirself beweileth,<br/>
+And what the sothe wolde mene.<br/>
+And sche, which hath hire sorwes grene,    5040<br/>
+Hire wo to telle thanne assaieth,<br/>
+Bot tendre schame hire word delaieth,<br/>
+That sondri times as sche minte<br/>
+To speke, upon the point sche stinte.<br/>
+And thei hire bidden evere in on<br/>
+To telle forth, and therupon,<br/>
+Whan that sche sih sche moste nede,<br/>
+Hire tale betwen schame and drede<br/>
+Sche tolde, noght withoute peine.<br/>
+And he, which wolde hire wo restreigne,    5050<br/>
+Hire housebonde, a sory man,<br/>
+Conforteth hire al that he can,<br/>
+And swor, and ek hire fader bothe,<br/>
+That thei with hire be noght wrothe<br/>
+Of that is don ayein hire wille;<br/>
+And preiden hire to be stille,<br/>
+For thei to hire have al foryive.<br/>
+Bot sche, which thoghte noght to live,<br/>
+Of hem wol no foryivenesse,<br/>
+And seide, of thilke wickednesse    5060<br/>
+Which was unto hire bodi wroght,<br/>
+Al were it so sche myhte it noght,<br/>
+Nevere afterward the world ne schal<br/>
+Reproeven hire; and forth withal,<br/>
+Er eny man therof be war,<br/>
+A naked swerd, the which sche bar<br/>
+Withinne hire Mantel priveli,<br/>
+Betwen hire hondes sodeinly<br/>
+Sche tok, and thurgh hire herte it throng,<br/>
+And fell to grounde, and evere among,    5070<br/>
+Whan that sche fell, so as sche myhte,<br/>
+Hire clothes with hire hand sche rihte,<br/>
+That noman dounward fro the kne<br/>
+Scholde eny thing of hire se:<br/>
+Thus lay this wif honestely,<br/>
+Althogh sche deide wofully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho was no sorwe forto seke:<br/>
+Hire housebonde, hire fader eke<br/>
+Aswoune upon the bodi felle;<br/>
+Ther mai no mannes tunge telle    5080<br/>
+In which anguisshe that thei were.<br/>
+Bot Brutus, which was with hem there,<br/>
+Toward himself his herte kepte,<br/>
+And to Lucrece anon he lepte,<br/>
+The blodi swerd and pulleth oute,<br/>
+And swor the goddes al aboute<br/>
+That he therof schal do vengance.<br/>
+And sche tho made a contienance,<br/>
+Hire dedlich yhe and ate laste<br/>
+In thonkinge as it were up caste,    5090<br/>
+And so behield him in the wise,<br/>
+Whil sche to loke mai suffise.<br/>
+And Brutus with a manlich herte<br/>
+Hire housebonde hath mad up sterte<br/>
+Forth with hire fader ek also<br/>
+In alle haste, and seide hem tho<br/>
+That thei anon withoute lette<br/>
+A Beere for the body fette;<br/>
+Lucrece and therupon bledende<br/>
+He leide, and so forth out criende    5100<br/>
+He goth into the Market place<br/>
+Of Rome: and in a litel space<br/>
+Thurgh cry the cite was assembled,<br/>
+And every mannes herte is trembled,<br/>
+Whan thei the sothe herde of the cas.<br/>
+And therupon the conseil was<br/>
+Take of the grete and of the smale,<br/>
+And Brutus tolde hem al the tale;<br/>
+And thus cam into remembrance<br/>
+Of Senne the continuance,    5110<br/>
+Which Arrons hadde do tofore,<br/>
+And ek, long time er he was bore,<br/>
+Of that his fadre hadde do<br/>
+The wrong cam into place tho;<br/>
+So that the comun clamour tolde<br/>
+The newe schame of Sennes olde.<br/>
+And al the toun began to crie,<br/>
+“Awey, awey the tirannie<br/>
+Of lecherie and covoitise!”<br/>
+And ate laste in such a wise    5120<br/>
+The fader in the same while<br/>
+Forth with his Sone thei exile,<br/>
+And taken betre governance.<br/>
+Bot yit an other remembrance<br/>
+That rihtwisnesse and lecherie<br/>
+Acorden noght in compaignie<br/>
+With him that hath the lawe on honde,<br/>
+That mai a man wel understonde,<br/>
+As be a tale thou shalt wite,<br/>
+Of olde ensample as it is write.    5130
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Rome whan that Apius,<br/>
+Whos other name is Claudius,<br/>
+Was governour of the cite,<br/>
+Ther fell a wonder thing to se<br/>
+Touchende a gentil Maide, as thus,<br/>
+Whom Livius Virginius<br/>
+Begeten hadde upon his wif:<br/>
+Men seiden that so fair a lif<br/>
+As sche was noght in al the toun.<br/>
+This fame, which goth up and doun,    5140<br/>
+To Claudius cam in his Ere,<br/>
+Wherof his thoght anon was there,<br/>
+Which al his herte hath set afyre,<br/>
+That he began the flour desire<br/>
+Which longeth unto maydenhede,<br/>
+And sende, if that he myhte spede<br/>
+The blinde lustes of his wille.<br/>
+Bot that thing mai he noght fulfille,<br/>
+For sche stod upon Mariage;<br/>
+A worthi kniht of gret lignage,    5150<br/>
+Ilicius which thanne hihte,<br/>
+Acorded in hire fader sihte<br/>
+Was, that he scholde his douhter wedde.<br/>
+Bot er the cause fully spedde,<br/>
+Hire fader, which in Romanie<br/>
+The ledinge of chivalerie<br/>
+In governance hath undertake,<br/>
+Upon a werre which was take<br/>
+Goth out with al the strengthe he hadde<br/>
+Of men of Armes whiche he ladde:    5160<br/>
+So was the mariage left,<br/>
+And stod upon acord til eft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which herde telle of this,<br/>
+Hou that this Maide ordeigned is<br/>
+To Mariage, thoghte an other.<br/>
+And hadde thilke time a brother,<br/>
+Which Marchus Claudius was hote,<br/>
+And was a man of such riote<br/>
+Riht as the king himselve was:<br/>
+Thei tuo togedre upon this cas    5170<br/>
+In conseil founden out this weie,<br/>
+That Marchus Claudius schal seie<br/>
+Hou sche be weie of covenant<br/>
+To his service appourtenant<br/>
+Was hol, and to non other man;<br/>
+And therupon he seith he can<br/>
+In every point witnesse take,<br/>
+So that sche schal it noght forsake.<br/>
+Whan that thei hadden schape so,<br/>
+After the lawe which was tho,    5180<br/>
+Whil that hir fader was absent,<br/>
+Sche was somouned and assent<br/>
+To come in presence of the king<br/>
+And stonde in ansuere of this thing.<br/>
+Hire frendes wisten alle wel<br/>
+That it was falshed everydel,<br/>
+And comen to the king and seiden,<br/>
+Upon the comun lawe and preiden,<br/>
+So as this noble worthi knyht<br/>
+Hir fader for the comun riht    5190<br/>
+In thilke time, as was befalle,<br/>
+Lai for the profit of hem alle<br/>
+Upon the wylde feldes armed,<br/>
+That he ne scholde noght ben harmed<br/>
+Ne schamed, whil that he were oute;<br/>
+And thus thei preiden al aboute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For al the clamour that he herde,<br/>
+The king upon his lust ansuerde,<br/>
+And yaf hem only daies tuo<br/>
+Of respit; for he wende tho,    5200<br/>
+That in so schorte a time appiere<br/>
+Hire fader mihte in no manere.<br/>
+Bot as therof he was deceived;<br/>
+For Livius hadde al conceived<br/>
+The pourpos of the king tofore,<br/>
+So that to Rome ayein therfore<br/>
+In alle haste he cam ridende,<br/>
+And lefte upon the field liggende<br/>
+His host, til that he come ayein.<br/>
+And thus this worthi capitein    5210<br/>
+Appiereth redi at his day,<br/>
+Wher al that evere reson may<br/>
+Be lawe in audience he doth,<br/>
+So that his dowhter upon soth<br/>
+Of that Marchus hire hadde accused<br/>
+He hath tofore the court excused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which sih his pourpos faile,<br/>
+And that no sleihte mihte availe,<br/>
+Encombred of his lustes blinde<br/>
+The lawe torneth out of kinde,    5220<br/>
+And half in wraththe as thogh it were,<br/>
+In presence of hem alle there<br/>
+Deceived of concupiscence<br/>
+Yaf for his brother the sentence,<br/>
+And bad him that he scholde sese<br/>
+This Maide and make him wel at ese;<br/>
+Bot al withinne his oghne entente<br/>
+He wiste hou that the cause wente,<br/>
+Of that his brother hath the wyte<br/>
+He was himselven forto wyte.    5230<br/>
+Bot thus this maiden hadde wrong,<br/>
+Which was upon the king along,<br/>
+Bot ayein him was non Appel,<br/>
+And that the fader wiste wel:<br/>
+Wherof upon the tirannie,<br/>
+That for the lust of Lecherie<br/>
+His douhter scholde be deceived,<br/>
+And that Ilicius was weyved<br/>
+Untrewly fro the Mariage,<br/>
+Riht as a Leon in his rage,    5240<br/>
+Which of no drede set acompte<br/>
+And not what pite scholde amounte,<br/>
+A naked swerd he pulleth oute,<br/>
+The which amonges al the route<br/>
+He threste thurgh his dowhter side,<br/>
+And al alowd this word he cride:<br/>
+“Lo, take hire ther, thou wrongfull king,<br/>
+For me is levere upon this thing<br/>
+To be the fader of a Maide,<br/>
+Thogh sche be ded, that if men saide    5250<br/>
+That in hir lif sche were schamed<br/>
+And I therof were evele named.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho bad the king men scholde areste<br/>
+His bodi, bot of thilke heste,<br/>
+Lich to the chaced wylde bor,<br/>
+The houndes whan he fieleth sor,<br/>
+Tothroweth and goth forth his weie,<br/>
+In such a wise forto seie<br/>
+This worthi kniht with swerd on honde<br/>
+His weie made, and thei him wonde,    5260<br/>
+That non of hem his strokes kepte;<br/>
+And thus upon his hors he lepte,<br/>
+And with his swerd droppende of blod,<br/>
+The which withinne his douhter stod,<br/>
+He cam ther as the pouer was<br/>
+Of Rome, and tolde hem al the cas,<br/>
+And seide hem that thei myhten liere<br/>
+Upon the wrong of his matiere,<br/>
+That betre it were to redresce<br/>
+At hom the grete unrihtwisnesse,    5270<br/>
+Than forto werre in strange place<br/>
+And lese at hom here oghne grace.<br/>
+For thus stant every mannes lif<br/>
+In jeupartie for his wif<br/>
+Or for his dowhter, if thei be<br/>
+Passende an other of beaute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of this merveile which thei sihe<br/>
+So apparant tofore here yhe,<br/>
+Of that the king him hath misbore,<br/>
+Here othes thei have alle swore    5280<br/>
+That thei wol stonde be the riht.<br/>
+And thus of on acord upriht<br/>
+To Rome at ones hom ayein<br/>
+Thei torne, and schortly forto sein,<br/>
+This tirannye cam to mouthe,<br/>
+And every man seith what he couthe,<br/>
+So that the prive tricherie,<br/>
+Which set was upon lecherie,<br/>
+Cam openly to mannes Ere;<br/>
+And that broghte in the comun feere,    5290<br/>
+That every man the peril dradde<br/>
+Of him that so hem overladde.<br/>
+Forthi, er that it worse falle,<br/>
+Thurgh comun conseil of hem alle<br/>
+Thei have here wrongfull king deposed,<br/>
+And hem in whom it was supposed<br/>
+The conseil stod of his ledinge<br/>
+Be lawe unto the dom thei bringe,<br/>
+Wher thei receiven the penance<br/>
+That longeth to such governance.    5300<br/>
+And thus thunchaste was chastised,<br/>
+Wherof thei myhte ben avised<br/>
+That scholden afterward governe,<br/>
+And be this evidence lerne,<br/>
+Hou it is good a king eschuie<br/>
+The lust of vice and vertu suie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To make an ende in this partie,<br/>
+Which toucheth to the Policie<br/>
+Of Chastite in special,<br/>
+As for conclusion final    5310<br/>
+That every lust is to eschue<br/>
+Be gret ensample I mai argue:<br/>
+Hou in Rages a toun of Mede<br/>
+Ther was a Mayde, and as I rede,<br/>
+Sarra sche hihte, and Raguel<br/>
+Hir fader was; and so befell,<br/>
+Of bodi bothe and of visage<br/>
+Was non so fair of the lignage,<br/>
+To seche among hem alle, as sche;<br/>
+Wherof the riche of the cite,    5320<br/>
+Of lusti folk that couden love,<br/>
+Assoted were upon hire love,<br/>
+And asken hire forto wedde.<br/>
+On was which ate laste spedde,<br/>
+Bot that was more for likinge,<br/>
+To have his lust, than for weddinge,<br/>
+As he withinne his herte caste,<br/>
+Which him repenteth ate laste.<br/>
+For so it fell the ferste nyht,<br/>
+That whanne he was to bedde dyht,    5330<br/>
+As he which nothing god besecheth<br/>
+Bot al only hise lustes secheth,<br/>
+Abedde er he was fully warm<br/>
+And wolde have take hire in his Arm,<br/>
+Asmod, which was a fend of helle,<br/>
+And serveth, as the bokes telle,<br/>
+To tempte a man of such a wise,<br/>
+Was redy there, and thilke emprise,<br/>
+Which he hath set upon delit,<br/>
+He vengeth thanne in such a plit,    5340<br/>
+That he his necke hathe writhe atuo.<br/>
+This yonge wif was sory tho,<br/>
+Which wiste nothing what it mente;<br/>
+And natheles yit thus it wente<br/>
+Noght only of this ferste man,<br/>
+Bot after, riht as he began,<br/>
+Sexe othre of hire housebondes<br/>
+Asmod hath take into hise bondes,<br/>
+So that thei alle abedde deiden,<br/>
+Whan thei her hand toward hir leiden,    5350<br/>
+Noght for the lawe of Mariage,<br/>
+Bot for that ilke fyri rage<br/>
+In which that thei the lawe excede:<br/>
+For who that wolde taken hiede<br/>
+What after fell in this matiere,<br/>
+Ther mihte he wel the sothe hiere.<br/>
+Whan sche was wedded to Thobie,<br/>
+And Raphael in compainie<br/>
+Hath tawht him hou to ben honeste,<br/>
+Asmod wan noght at thilke feste,    5360<br/>
+And yit Thobie his wille hadde;<br/>
+For he his lust so goodly ladde,<br/>
+That bothe lawe and kinde is served,<br/>
+Wherof he hath himself preserved,<br/>
+That he fell noght in the sentence.<br/>
+O which an open evidence<br/>
+Of this ensample a man mai se,<br/>
+That whan likinge in the degre<br/>
+Of Mariage mai forsueie,<br/>
+Wel oghte him thanne in other weie    5370<br/>
+Of lust to be the betre avised.<br/>
+For god the lawes hath assissed<br/>
+Als wel to reson as to kinde,<br/>
+Bot he the bestes wolde binde<br/>
+Only to lawes of nature,<br/>
+Bot to the mannes creature<br/>
+God yaf him reson forth withal,<br/>
+Wherof that he nature schal<br/>
+Upon the causes modefie,<br/>
+That he schal do no lecherie,    5380<br/>
+And yit he schal hise lustes have.<br/>
+So ben the lawes bothe save<br/>
+And every thing put out of sclandre;<br/>
+As whilom to king Alisandre<br/>
+The wise Philosophre tawhte,<br/>
+Whan he his ferste lore cawhte,<br/>
+Noght only upon chastete,<br/>
+Bot upon alle honestete;<br/>
+Wherof a king himself mai taste,<br/>
+Hou trewe, hou large, hou joust, hou chaste    5390<br/>
+Him oghte of reson forto be,<br/>
+Forth with the vertu of Pite,<br/>
+Thurgh which he mai gret thonk deserve<br/>
+Toward his godd, that he preserve<br/>
+Him and his poeple in alle welthe<br/>
+Of pes, richesse, honour and helthe<br/>
+Hier in this world and elles eke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, as we tofore spieke<br/>
+In schrifte, so as thou me seidest,<br/>
+And for thin ese, as thou me preidest,    5400<br/>
+Thi love throghes forto lisse,<br/>
+That I thee wolde telle and wisse<br/>
+The forme of Aristotles lore,<br/>
+I have it seid, and somdiel more<br/>
+Of othre ensamples, to assaie<br/>
+If I thi peines myhte allaie<br/>
+Thurgh eny thing that I can seie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Do wey, mi fader, I you preie:<br/>
+Of that ye have unto me told<br/>
+I thonke you a thousendfold.    5410<br/>
+The tales sounen in myn Ere,<br/>
+Bot yit min herte is elleswhere,<br/>
+I mai miselve noght restreigne,<br/>
+That I nam evere in loves peine:<br/>
+Such lore couthe I nevere gete,<br/>
+Which myhte make me foryete<br/>
+O point, bot if so were I slepte,<br/>
+That I my tydes ay ne kepte<br/>
+To thenke of love and of his lawe;<br/>
+That herte can I noght withdrawe.    5420<br/>
+Forthi, my goode fader diere,<br/>
+Lef al and speke of my matiere<br/>
+Touchende of love, as we begonne:<br/>
+If that ther be oght overronne<br/>
+Or oght foryete or left behinde<br/>
+Which falleth unto loves kinde,<br/>
+Wherof it nedeth to be schrive,<br/>
+Nou axeth, so that whil I live<br/>
+I myhte amende that is mys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi goode diere Sone, yis.    5430<br/>
+Thi schrifte forto make plein,<br/>
+Ther is yit more forto sein<br/>
+Of love which is unavised.<br/>
+Bot for thou schalt be wel avised<br/>
+Unto thi schrifte as it belongeth,<br/>
+A point which upon love hongeth<br/>
+And is the laste of alle tho,<br/>
+I wol thee telle, and thanne ho.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Explicit Liber Septimus.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="link2H_4_0009"></a>
+Incipit Liber Octavus</h2>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<i>Que favet ad vicium vetus hec modo regula confert,<br/>
+    Nec novus e contra qui docet ordo placet.<br/>
+Cecus amor dudum nondum sua lumina cepit,<br/>
+    Quo Venus impositum devia fallit iter.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+The myhti god, which unbegunne<br/>
+Stant of himself and hath begunne<br/>
+Alle othre thinges at his wille,<br/>
+The hevene him liste to fulfille<br/>
+Of alle joie, where as he<br/>
+Sit inthronized in his See,<br/>
+And hath hise Angles him to serve,<br/>
+Suche as him liketh to preserve,<br/>
+So that thei mowe noght forsueie:<br/>
+Bot Lucifer he putte aweie,    10<br/>
+With al the route apostazied<br/>
+Of hem that ben to him allied,<br/>
+Whiche out of hevene into the helle<br/>
+From Angles into fendes felle;<br/>
+Wher that ther is no joie of lyht,<br/>
+Bot more derk than eny nyht<br/>
+The peine schal ben endeles;<br/>
+And yit of fyres natheles<br/>
+Ther is plente, bot thei ben blake,<br/>
+Wherof no syhte mai be take.    20<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus whan the thinges ben befalle,<br/>
+That Luciferes court was falle<br/>
+Wher dedly Pride hem hath conveied,<br/>
+Anon forthwith it was pourveied<br/>
+Thurgh him which alle thinges may;<br/>
+He made Adam the sexte day<br/>
+In Paradis, and to his make<br/>
+Him liketh Eve also to make,<br/>
+And bad hem cresce and multiplie.<br/>
+For of the mannes Progenie,    30<br/>
+Which of the womman schal be bore,<br/>
+The nombre of Angles which was lore,<br/>
+Whan thei out fro the blisse felle,<br/>
+He thoghte to restore, and felle<br/>
+In hevene thilke holy place<br/>
+Which stod tho voide upon his grace.<br/>
+Bot as it is wel wiste and knowe,<br/>
+Adam and Eve bot a throwe,<br/>
+So as it scholde of hem betyde,<br/>
+In Paradis at thilke tyde    40<br/>
+Ne duelten, and the cause why,<br/>
+Write in the bok of Genesi,<br/>
+As who seith, alle men have herd,<br/>
+Hou Raphael the fyri swerd<br/>
+In honde tok and drof hem oute,<br/>
+To gete here lyves fode aboute<br/>
+Upon this wofull Erthe hiere.<br/>
+Metodre seith to this matiere,<br/>
+As he be revelacion<br/>
+It hadde upon avision,    50<br/>
+Hou that Adam and Eve also<br/>
+Virgines comen bothe tuo<br/>
+Into the world and were aschamed,<br/>
+Til that nature hem hath reclamed<br/>
+To love, and tauht hem thilke lore,<br/>
+That ferst thei keste, and overmore<br/>
+Thei don that is to kinde due,<br/>
+Wherof thei hadden fair issue.<br/>
+A Sone was the ferste of alle,<br/>
+And Chain be name thei him calle;    60<br/>
+Abel was after the secounde,<br/>
+And in the geste as it is founde,<br/>
+Nature so the cause ladde,<br/>
+Tuo douhtres ek Dame Eve hadde,<br/>
+The ferste cleped Calmana<br/>
+Was, and that other Delbora.<br/>
+Thus was mankinde to beginne;<br/>
+Forthi that time it was no Sinne<br/>
+The Soster forto take hire brother,<br/>
+Whan that ther was of chois non other:    70<br/>
+To Chain was Calmana betake,<br/>
+And Delboram hath Abel take,<br/>
+In whom was gete natheles<br/>
+Of worldes folk the ferste encres.<br/>
+Men sein that nede hath no lawe,<br/>
+And so it was be thilke dawe<br/>
+And laste into the Secounde Age,<br/>
+Til that the grete water rage,<br/>
+Of Noeh which was seid the flod,<br/>
+The world, which thanne in Senne stod,    80<br/>
+Hath dreint, outake lyves Eyhte.<br/>
+Tho was mankinde of litel weyhte;<br/>
+Sem, Cham, Japhet, of these thre,<br/>
+That ben the Sones of Noë,<br/>
+The world of mannes nacion<br/>
+Into multiplicacion<br/>
+Was tho restored newe ayein<br/>
+So ferforth, as the bokes sein,<br/>
+That of hem thre and here issue<br/>
+Ther was so large a retenue,    90<br/>
+Of naciouns seventy and tuo;<br/>
+In sondri place ech on of tho<br/>
+The wyde world have enhabited.<br/>
+Bot as nature hem hath excited,<br/>
+Thei token thanne litel hiede,<br/>
+The brother of the Sosterhiede<br/>
+To wedde wyves, til it cam<br/>
+Into the time of Habraham.<br/>
+Whan the thridde Age was begunne,<br/>
+The nede tho was overrunne,    100<br/>
+For ther was poeple ynouh in londe:<br/>
+Thanne ate ferste it cam to honde,<br/>
+That Sosterhode of mariage<br/>
+Was torned into cousinage,<br/>
+So that after the rihte lyne<br/>
+The Cousin weddeth the cousine.<br/>
+For Habraham, er that he deide,<br/>
+This charge upon his servant leide,<br/>
+To him and in this wise spak,<br/>
+That he his Sone Isaäc    110<br/>
+Do wedde for no worldes good,<br/>
+Bot only to his oghne blod:<br/>
+Wherof this Servant, as he bad,<br/>
+Whan he was ded, his Sone hath lad<br/>
+To Bathuel, wher he Rebecke<br/>
+Hath wedded with the whyte necke;<br/>
+For sche, he wiste wel and syh,<br/>
+Was to the child cousine nyh.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus as Habraham hath tawht,<br/>
+Whan Isaäc was god betawht,    120<br/>
+His Sone Jacob dede also,<br/>
+And of Laban the dowhtres tuo,<br/>
+Which was his Em, he tok to wyve,<br/>
+And gat upon hem in his lyve,<br/>
+Of hire ferst which hihte Lie,<br/>
+Sex Sones of his Progenie,<br/>
+And of Rachel tuo Sones eke:<br/>
+The remenant was forto seke,<br/>
+That is to sein of foure mo,<br/>
+Wherof he gat on Bala tuo,    130<br/>
+And of Zelpha he hadde ek tweie.<br/>
+And these tuelve, as I thee seie,<br/>
+Thurgh providence of god himselve<br/>
+Ben seid the Patriarkes tuelve;<br/>
+Of whom, as afterward befell,<br/>
+The tribes tuelve of Irahel<br/>
+Engendred were, and ben the same<br/>
+That of Hebreus tho hadden name,<br/>
+Which of Sibrede in alliance<br/>
+For evere kepten thilke usance    140<br/>
+Most comunly, til Crist was bore.<br/>
+Bot afterward it was forbore<br/>
+Amonges ous that ben baptized;<br/>
+For of the lawe canonized<br/>
+The Pope hath bede to the men,<br/>
+That non schal wedden of his ken<br/>
+Ne the seconde ne the thridde.<br/>
+Bot thogh that holy cherche it bidde,<br/>
+So to restreigne Mariage,<br/>
+Ther ben yit upon loves Rage    150<br/>
+Full manye of suche nou aday<br/>
+That taken wher thei take may.<br/>
+For love, which is unbesein<br/>
+Of alle reson, as men sein,<br/>
+Thurgh sotie and thurgh nycete,<br/>
+Of his voluptuosite<br/>
+He spareth no condicion<br/>
+Of ken ne yit religion,<br/>
+Bot as a cock among the Hennes,<br/>
+Or as a Stalon in the Fennes,    160<br/>
+Which goth amonges al the Stod,<br/>
+Riht so can he nomore good,<br/>
+Bot takth what thing comth next to honde.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, thou schalt understonde,<br/>
+That such delit is forto blame.<br/>
+Forthi if thou hast be the same<br/>
+To love in eny such manere,<br/>
+Tell forth therof and schrif thee hiere.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, nay, god wot the sothe,<br/>
+Mi feire is noght of such a bothe,    170<br/>
+So wylde a man yit was I nevere,<br/>
+That of mi ken or lief or levere<br/>
+Me liste love in such a wise:<br/>
+And ek I not for what emprise<br/>
+I scholde assote upon a Nonne,<br/>
+For thogh I hadde hir love wonne,<br/>
+It myhte into no pris amonte,<br/>
+So therof sette I non acompte.<br/>
+Ye mai wel axe of this and that,<br/>
+Bot sothli forto telle plat,    180<br/>
+In al this world ther is bot on<br/>
+The which myn herte hath overgon;<br/>
+I am toward alle othre fre.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full wel, mi Sone, nou I see<br/>
+Thi word stant evere upon o place,<br/>
+Bot yit therof thou hast a grace,<br/>
+That thou thee myht so wel excuse<br/>
+Of love such as som men use,<br/>
+So as I spak of now tofore.<br/>
+For al such time of love is lore,    190<br/>
+And lich unto the bitterswete;<br/>
+For thogh it thenke a man ferst swete,<br/>
+He schal wel fielen ate laste<br/>
+That it is sour and may noght laste.<br/>
+For as a morsell envenimed,<br/>
+So hath such love his lust mistimed,<br/>
+And grete ensamples manyon<br/>
+A man mai finde therupon.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Rome ferst if we beginne,<br/>
+Ther schal I finde hou of this sinne    200<br/>
+An Emperour was forto blame,<br/>
+Gayus Caligula be name,<br/>
+Which of his oghne Sostres thre<br/>
+Berefte the virginite:<br/>
+And whanne he hadde hem so forlein,<br/>
+As he the which was al vilein,<br/>
+He dede hem out of londe exile.<br/>
+Bot afterward withinne a while<br/>
+God hath beraft him in his ire<br/>
+His lif and ek his large empire:    210<br/>
+And thus for likinge of a throwe<br/>
+For evere his lust was overthrowe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of this sotie also I finde,<br/>
+Amon his Soster ayein kinde,<br/>
+Which hihte Thamar, he forlay;<br/>
+Bot he that lust an other day<br/>
+Aboghte, whan that Absolon<br/>
+His oghne brother therupon,<br/>
+Of that he hadde his Soster schent,<br/>
+Tok of that Senne vengement    220<br/>
+And slowh him with his oghne hond:<br/>
+And thus thunkinde unkinde fond.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto se more of this thing,<br/>
+The bible makth a knowleching,<br/>
+Wherof thou miht take evidence<br/>
+Upon the sothe experience.<br/>
+Whan Lothes wif was overgon<br/>
+And schape into the salte Ston,<br/>
+As it is spoke into this day,<br/>
+Be bothe hise dowhtres thanne he lay,    230<br/>
+With childe and made hem bothe grete,<br/>
+Til that nature hem wolde lete,<br/>
+And so the cause aboute ladde<br/>
+That ech of hem a Sone hadde,<br/>
+Moab the ferste, and the seconde<br/>
+Amon, of whiche, as it is founde,<br/>
+Cam afterward to gret encres<br/>
+Tuo nacions: and natheles,<br/>
+For that the stockes were ungoode,<br/>
+The branches mihten noght be goode;    240<br/>
+For of the false Moabites<br/>
+Forth with the strengthe of Amonites,<br/>
+Of that thei weren ferst misgete,<br/>
+The poeple of god was ofte upsete<br/>
+In Irahel and in Judee,<br/>
+As in the bible a man mai se.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, my Sone, as I thee seie,<br/>
+Thou miht thiselve be beseie<br/>
+Of that thou hast of othre herd:<br/>
+For evere yit it hath so ferd,    250<br/>
+Of loves lust if so befalle<br/>
+That it in other place falle<br/>
+Than it is of the lawe set,<br/>
+He which his love hath so beset<br/>
+Mote afterward repente him sore.<br/>
+And every man is othres lore;<br/>
+Of that befell in time er this<br/>
+The present time which now is<br/>
+May ben enformed hou it stod,<br/>
+And take that him thenketh good,    260<br/>
+And leve that which is noght so.<br/>
+Bot forto loke of time go,<br/>
+Hou lust of love excedeth lawe,<br/>
+It oghte forto be withdrawe;<br/>
+For every man it scholde drede,<br/>
+And nameliche in his Sibrede,<br/>
+Which torneth ofte to vengance:<br/>
+Wherof a tale in remembrance,<br/>
+Which is a long process to hiere,<br/>
+I thenke forto tellen hiere.    270<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of a Cronique in daies gon,<br/>
+The which is cleped Pantheon,<br/>
+In loves cause I rede thus,<br/>
+Hou that the grete Antiochus,<br/>
+Of whom that Antioche tok<br/>
+His ferste name, as seith the bok,<br/>
+Was coupled to a noble queene,<br/>
+And hadde a dowhter hem betwene:<br/>
+Bot such fortune cam to honde,<br/>
+That deth, which no king mai withstonde,    280<br/>
+Bot every lif it mote obeie,<br/>
+This worthi queene tok aweie.<br/>
+The king, which made mochel mone,<br/>
+Tho stod, as who seith, al him one<br/>
+Withoute wif, bot natheles<br/>
+His doghter, which was piereles<br/>
+Of beaute, duelte aboute him stille.<br/>
+Bot whanne a man hath welthe at wille,<br/>
+The fleissh is frele and falleth ofte,<br/>
+And that this maide tendre and softe,    290<br/>
+Which in hire fadres chambres duelte,<br/>
+Withinne a time wiste and felte:<br/>
+For likinge and concupiscence<br/>
+Withoute insihte of conscience<br/>
+The fader so with lustes blente,<br/>
+That he caste al his hole entente<br/>
+His oghne doghter forto spille.<br/>
+This king hath leisir at his wille<br/>
+With strengthe, and whanne he time sih,<br/>
+This yonge maiden he forlih:    300<br/>
+And sche was tendre and full of drede,<br/>
+Sche couthe noght hir Maidenhede<br/>
+Defende, and thus sche hath forlore<br/>
+The flour which she hath longe bore.<br/>
+It helpeth noght althogh sche wepe,<br/>
+For thei that scholde hir bodi kepe<br/>
+Of wommen were absent as thanne;<br/>
+And thus this maiden goth to manne,<br/>
+The wylde fader thus devoureth<br/>
+His oghne fleissh, which non socoureth,    310<br/>
+And that was cause of mochel care.<br/>
+Bot after this unkinde fare<br/>
+Out of the chambre goth the king,<br/>
+And sche lay stille, and of this thing,<br/>
+Withinne hirself such sorghe made,<br/>
+Ther was no wiht that mihte hir glade,<br/>
+For feere of thilke horrible vice.<br/>
+With that cam inne the Norrice<br/>
+Which fro childhode hire hadde kept,<br/>
+And axeth if sche hadde slept,    320<br/>
+And why hire chiere was unglad.<br/>
+Bot sche, which hath ben overlad<br/>
+Of that sche myhte noght be wreke,<br/>
+For schame couthe unethes speke;<br/>
+And natheles mercy sche preide<br/>
+With wepende yhe and thus sche seide:<br/>
+“Helas, mi Soster, waileway,<br/>
+That evere I sih this ilke day!<br/>
+Thing which mi bodi ferst begat<br/>
+Into this world, onliche that    330<br/>
+Mi worldes worschipe hath bereft.”<br/>
+With that sche swouneth now and eft,<br/>
+And evere wissheth after deth,<br/>
+So that welnyh hire lacketh breth.<br/>
+That other, which hire wordes herde,<br/>
+In confortinge of hire ansuerde,<br/>
+To lette hire fadres fol desir<br/>
+Sche wiste no recoverir:<br/>
+Whan thing is do, ther is no bote,<br/>
+So suffren thei that suffre mote;    340<br/>
+Ther was non other which it wiste.<br/>
+Thus hath this king al that him liste<br/>
+Of his likinge and his plesance,<br/>
+And laste in such continuance,<br/>
+And such delit he tok therinne,<br/>
+Him thoghte that it was no Sinne;<br/>
+And sche dorste him nothing withseie.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot fame, which goth every weie,<br/>
+To sondry regnes al aboute<br/>
+The grete beaute telleth oute    350<br/>
+Of such a maide of hih parage:<br/>
+So that for love of mariage<br/>
+The worthi Princes come and sende,<br/>
+As thei the whiche al honour wende,<br/>
+And knewe nothing hou it stod.<br/>
+The fader, whanne he understod,<br/>
+That thei his dowhter thus besoghte,<br/>
+With al his wit he caste and thoghte<br/>
+Hou that he myhte finde a lette;<br/>
+And such a Statut thanne he sette,    360<br/>
+And in this wise his lawe he taxeth,<br/>
+That what man that his doghter axeth,<br/>
+Bot if he couthe his question<br/>
+Assoile upon suggestion<br/>
+Of certein thinges that befelle,<br/>
+The whiche he wolde unto him telle,<br/>
+He scholde in certein lese his hed.<br/>
+And thus ther weren manye ded,<br/>
+Here hevedes stondende on the gate,<br/>
+Till ate laste longe and late,    370<br/>
+For lacke of ansuere in the wise,<br/>
+The remenant that weren wise<br/>
+Eschuieden to make assay.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Til it befell upon a day<br/>
+Appolinus the Prince of Tyr,<br/>
+Which hath to love a gret desir,<br/>
+As he which in his hihe mod<br/>
+Was likende of his hote blod,<br/>
+A yong, a freissh, a lusti knyht,<br/>
+As he lai musende on a nyht    380<br/>
+Of the tidinges whiche he herde,<br/>
+He thoghte assaie hou that it ferde.<br/>
+He was with worthi compainie<br/>
+Arraied, and with good navie<br/>
+To schipe he goth, the wynd him dryveth,<br/>
+And seileth, til that he arryveth:<br/>
+Sauf in the port of Antioche<br/>
+He londeth, and goth to aproche<br/>
+The kinges Court and his presence.<br/>
+Of every naturel science,    390<br/>
+Which eny clerk him couthe teche,<br/>
+He couthe ynowh, and in his speche<br/>
+Of wordes he was eloquent;<br/>
+And whanne he sih the king present,<br/>
+He preith he moste his dowhter have.<br/>
+The king ayein began to crave,<br/>
+And tolde him the condicion,<br/>
+Hou ferst unto his question<br/>
+He mote ansuere and faile noght,<br/>
+Or with his heved it schal be boght:    400<br/>
+And he him axeth what it was.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king declareth him the cas<br/>
+With sturne lok and sturdi chiere,<br/>
+To him and seide in this manere:<br/>
+“With felonie I am upbore,<br/>
+I ete and have it noght forbore<br/>
+Mi modres fleissh, whos housebonde<br/>
+Mi fader forto seche I fonde,<br/>
+Which is the Sone ek of my wif.<br/>
+Hierof I am inquisitif;    410<br/>
+And who that can mi tale save,<br/>
+Al quyt he schal my doghter have;<br/>
+Of his ansuere and if he faile,<br/>
+He schal be ded withoute faile.<br/>
+Forthi my Sone,” quod the king,<br/>
+“Be wel avised of this thing,<br/>
+Which hath thi lif in jeupartie.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Appolinus for his partie,<br/>
+Whan he this question hath herd,<br/>
+Unto the king he hath ansuerd    420<br/>
+And hath rehersed on and on<br/>
+The pointz, and seide therupon:<br/>
+“The question which thou hast spoke,<br/>
+If thou wolt that it be unloke,<br/>
+It toucheth al the privete<br/>
+Betwen thin oghne child and thee,<br/>
+And stant al hol upon you tuo.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king was wonder sory tho,<br/>
+And thoghte, if that he seide it oute,<br/>
+Than were he schamed al aboute.    430<br/>
+With slihe wordes and with felle<br/>
+He seith, “Mi Sone, I schal thee telle,<br/>
+Though that thou be of litel wit,<br/>
+It is no gret merveile as yit,<br/>
+Thin age mai it noght suffise:<br/>
+Bot loke wel thou noght despise<br/>
+Thin oghne lif, for of my grace<br/>
+Of thretty daies fulle a space<br/>
+I grante thee, to ben avised.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus with leve and time assised    440<br/>
+This yonge Prince forth he wente,<br/>
+And understod wel what it mente,<br/>
+Withinne his herte as he was lered,<br/>
+That forto maken him afered<br/>
+The king his time hath so deslaied.<br/>
+Wherof he dradde and was esmaied,<br/>
+Of treson that he deie scholde,<br/>
+For he the king his sothe tolde;<br/>
+And sodeinly the nyhtes tyde,<br/>
+That more wolde he noght abide,    450<br/>
+Al prively his barge he hente<br/>
+And hom ayein to Tyr he wente:<br/>
+And in his oghne wit he seide<br/>
+For drede, if he the king bewreide,<br/>
+He knew so wel the kinges herte,<br/>
+That deth ne scholde he noght asterte,<br/>
+The king him wolde so poursuie.<br/>
+Bot he, that wolde his deth eschuie,<br/>
+And knew al this tofor the hond,<br/>
+Forsake he thoghte his oghne lond,    460<br/>
+That there wolde he noght abyde;<br/>
+For wel he knew that on som syde<br/>
+This tirant of his felonie<br/>
+Be som manere of tricherie<br/>
+To grieve his bodi wol noght leve.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthi withoute take leve,<br/>
+Als priveliche as evere he myhte,<br/>
+He goth him to the See be nyhte<br/>
+In Schipes that be whete laden:<br/>
+Here takel redy tho thei maden    470<br/>
+And hale up Seil and forth thei fare.<br/>
+Bot forto tellen of the care<br/>
+That thei of Tyr begonne tho,<br/>
+Whan that thei wiste he was ago,<br/>
+It is a Pite forto hiere.<br/>
+They losten lust, they losten chiere,<br/>
+Thei toke upon hem such penaunce,<br/>
+Ther was no song, ther was no daunce,<br/>
+Bot every merthe and melodie<br/>
+To hem was thanne a maladie;    480<br/>
+For unlust of that aventure<br/>
+Ther was noman which tok tonsure,<br/>
+In doelful clothes thei hem clothe,<br/>
+The bathes and the Stwes bothe<br/>
+Thei schetten in be every weie;<br/>
+There was no lif which leste pleie<br/>
+Ne take of eny joie kepe,<br/>
+Bot for here liege lord to wepe;<br/>
+And every wyht seide as he couthe,<br/>
+“Helas, the lusti flour of youthe,    490<br/>
+Our Prince, oure heved, our governour,<br/>
+Thurgh whom we stoden in honour,<br/>
+Withoute the comun assent<br/>
+Thus sodeinliche is fro ous went!”<br/>
+Such was the clamour of hem alle.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot se we now what is befalle<br/>
+Upon the ferste tale plein,<br/>
+And torne we therto ayein.<br/>
+Antiochus the grete Sire,<br/>
+Which full of rancour and of ire    500<br/>
+His herte berth, so as ye herde,<br/>
+Of that this Prince of Tyr ansuerde,<br/>
+He hadde a feloun bacheler,<br/>
+Which was his prive consailer,<br/>
+And Taliart be name he hihte:<br/>
+The king a strong puison him dihte<br/>
+Withinne a buiste and gold therto,<br/>
+In alle haste and bad him go<br/>
+Strawht unto Tyr, and for no cost<br/>
+Ne spare he, til he hadde lost    510<br/>
+The Prince which he wolde spille.<br/>
+And whan the king hath seid his wille,<br/>
+This Taliart in a Galeie<br/>
+With alle haste he tok his weie:<br/>
+The wynd was good, he saileth blyve,<br/>
+Til he tok lond upon the ryve<br/>
+Of Tyr, and forth with al anon<br/>
+Into the Burgh he gan to gon,<br/>
+And tok his In and bod a throwe.<br/>
+Bot for he wolde noght be knowe,    520<br/>
+Desguised thanne he goth him oute;<br/>
+He sih the wepinge al aboute,<br/>
+And axeth what the cause was,<br/>
+And thei him tolden al the cas,<br/>
+How sodeinli the Prince is go.<br/>
+And whan he sih that it was so,<br/>
+And that his labour was in vein,<br/>
+Anon he torneth hom ayein,<br/>
+And to the king, whan he cam nyh,<br/>
+He tolde of that he herde and syh,    530<br/>
+Hou that the Prince of Tyr is fled,<br/>
+So was he come ayein unsped.<br/>
+The king was sori for a while,<br/>
+Bot whan he sih that with no wyle<br/>
+He myhte achieve his crualte,<br/>
+He stinte his wraththe and let him be.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot over this now forto telle<br/>
+Of aventures that befelle<br/>
+Unto this Prince of whom I tolde,<br/>
+He hath his rihte cours forth holde    540<br/>
+Be Ston and nedle, til he cam<br/>
+To Tharse, and there his lond he nam.<br/>
+A Burgeis riche of gold and fee<br/>
+Was thilke time in that cite,<br/>
+Which cleped was Strangulio,<br/>
+His wif was Dionise also:<br/>
+This yonge Prince, as seith the bok,<br/>
+With hem his herbergage tok;<br/>
+And it befell that Cite so<br/>
+Before time and thanne also,    550<br/>
+Thurgh strong famyne which hem ladde<br/>
+Was non that eny whete hadde.<br/>
+Appolinus, whan that he herde<br/>
+The meschief, hou the cite ferde,<br/>
+Al freliche of his oghne yifte<br/>
+His whete, among hem forto schifte,<br/>
+The which be Schipe he hadde broght,<br/>
+He yaf, and tok of hem riht noght.<br/>
+Bot sithen ferst this world began,<br/>
+Was nevere yit to such a man    560<br/>
+Mor joie mad than thei him made:<br/>
+For thei were alle of him so glade,<br/>
+That thei for evere in remembrance<br/>
+Made a figure in resemblance<br/>
+Of him, and in the comun place<br/>
+Thei sette him up, so that his face<br/>
+Mihte every maner man beholde,<br/>
+So as the cite was beholde;<br/>
+It was of latoun overgilt:<br/>
+Thus hath he noght his yifte spilt.    570<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon a time with his route<br/>
+This lord to pleie goth him oute,<br/>
+And in his weie of Tyr he mette<br/>
+A man, the which on knees him grette,<br/>
+And Hellican be name he hihte,<br/>
+Which preide his lord to have insihte<br/>
+Upon himself, and seide him thus,<br/>
+Hou that the grete Antiochus<br/>
+Awaiteth if he mihte him spille.<br/>
+That other thoghte and hield him stille,    580<br/>
+And thonked him of his warnynge,<br/>
+And bad him telle no tidinge,<br/>
+Whan he to Tyr cam hom ayein,<br/>
+That he in Tharse him hadde sein.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortune hath evere be muable<br/>
+And mai no while stonde stable:<br/>
+For now it hiheth, now it loweth,<br/>
+Now stant upriht, now overthroweth,<br/>
+Now full of blisse and now of bale,<br/>
+As in the tellinge of mi tale    590<br/>
+Hierafterward a man mai liere,<br/>
+Which is gret routhe forto hiere.<br/>
+This lord, which wolde don his beste,<br/>
+Withinne himself hath litel reste,<br/>
+And thoghte he wolde his place change<br/>
+And seche a contre more strange.<br/>
+Of Tharsiens his leve anon<br/>
+He tok, and is to Schipe gon:<br/>
+His cours he nam with Seil updrawe,<br/>
+Where as fortune doth the lawe,    600<br/>
+And scheweth, as I schal reherse,<br/>
+How sche was to this lord diverse,<br/>
+The which upon the See sche ferketh.<br/>
+The wynd aros, the weder derketh,<br/>
+It blew and made such tempeste,<br/>
+Non ancher mai the schip areste,<br/>
+Which hath tobroken al his gere;<br/>
+The Schipmen stode in such a feere,<br/>
+Was non that myhte himself bestere,<br/>
+Bot evere awaite upon the lere,    610<br/>
+Whan that thei scholde drenche at ones.<br/>
+Ther was ynowh withinne wones<br/>
+Of wepinge and of sorghe tho;<br/>
+This yonge king makth mochel wo<br/>
+So forto se the Schip travaile:<br/>
+Bot al that myhte him noght availe;<br/>
+The mast tobrak, the Seil torof,<br/>
+The Schip upon the wawes drof,<br/>
+Til that thei sihe a londes cooste.<br/>
+Tho made avou the leste and moste,    620<br/>
+Be so thei myhten come alonde;<br/>
+Bot he which hath the See on honde,<br/>
+Neptunus, wolde noght acorde,<br/>
+Bot altobroke cable and corde,<br/>
+Er thei to londe myhte aproche,<br/>
+The Schip toclef upon a roche,<br/>
+And al goth doun into the depe.<br/>
+Bot he that alle thing mai kepe<br/>
+Unto this lord was merciable,<br/>
+And broghte him sauf upon a table,    630<br/>
+Which to the lond him hath upbore;<br/>
+The remenant was al forlore,<br/>
+Wherof he made mochel mone.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was this yonge lord him one,<br/>
+Al naked in a povere plit:<br/>
+His colour, which whilom was whyt,<br/>
+Was thanne of water fade and pale,<br/>
+And ek he was so sore acale<br/>
+That he wiste of himself no bote,<br/>
+It halp him nothing forto mote    640<br/>
+To gete ayein that he hath lore.<br/>
+Bot sche which hath his deth forbore,<br/>
+Fortune, thogh sche wol noght yelpe,<br/>
+Al sodeinly hath sent him helpe,<br/>
+Whanne him thoghte alle grace aweie;<br/>
+Ther cam a Fisshere in the weie,<br/>
+And sih a man ther naked stonde,<br/>
+And whan that he hath understonde<br/>
+The cause, he hath of him gret routhe,<br/>
+And onliche of his povere trouthe    650<br/>
+Of suche clothes as he hadde<br/>
+With gret Pite this lord he cladde.<br/>
+And he him thonketh as he scholde,<br/>
+And seith him that it schal be yolde,<br/>
+If evere he gete his stat ayein,<br/>
+And preide that he wolde him sein<br/>
+If nyh were eny toun for him.<br/>
+He seide, “Yee, Pentapolim,<br/>
+Wher bothe king and queene duellen.”<br/>
+Whanne he this tale herde tellen,    660<br/>
+He gladeth him and gan beseche<br/>
+That he the weie him wolde teche:<br/>
+And he him taghte; and forth he wente<br/>
+And preide god with good entente<br/>
+To sende him joie after his sorwe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was noght passed yit Midmorwe,<br/>
+Whan thiderward his weie he nam,<br/>
+Wher sone upon the Non he cam.<br/>
+He eet such as he myhte gete,<br/>
+And forth anon, whan he hadde ete,    670<br/>
+He goth to se the toun aboute,<br/>
+And cam ther as he fond a route<br/>
+Of yonge lusti men withalle;<br/>
+And as it scholde tho befalle,<br/>
+That day was set of such assisse,<br/>
+That thei scholde in the londes guise,<br/>
+As he herde of the poeple seie,<br/>
+Here comun game thanne pleie;<br/>
+And crid was that thei scholden come<br/>
+Unto the gamen alle and some    680<br/>
+Of hem that ben delivere and wyhte,<br/>
+To do such maistrie as thei myhte.<br/>
+Thei made hem naked as thei scholde,<br/>
+For so that ilke game wolde,<br/>
+As it was tho custume and us,<br/>
+Amonges hem was no refus:<br/>
+The flour of al the toun was there<br/>
+And of the court also ther were,<br/>
+And that was in a large place<br/>
+Riht evene afore the kinges face,    690<br/>
+Which Artestrathes thanne hihte.<br/>
+The pley was pleid riht in his sihte,<br/>
+And who most worthi was of dede<br/>
+Receive he scholde a certein mede<br/>
+And in the cite bere a pris.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Appolinus, which war and wys<br/>
+Of every game couthe an ende,<br/>
+He thoghte assaie, hou so it wende,<br/>
+And fell among hem into game:<br/>
+And there he wan him such a name,    700<br/>
+So as the king himself acompteth<br/>
+That he alle othre men surmonteth,<br/>
+And bar the pris above hem alle.<br/>
+The king bad that into his halle<br/>
+At Souper time he schal be broght;<br/>
+And he cam thanne and lefte it noght,<br/>
+Withoute compaignie al one:<br/>
+Was non so semlich of persone,<br/>
+Of visage and of limes bothe,<br/>
+If that he hadde what to clothe.    710<br/>
+At Soupertime natheles<br/>
+The king amiddes al the pres<br/>
+Let clepe him up among hem alle,<br/>
+And bad his Mareschall of halle<br/>
+To setten him in such degre<br/>
+That he upon him myhte se.<br/>
+The king was sone set and served,<br/>
+And he, which hath his pris deserved<br/>
+After the kinges oghne word,<br/>
+Was mad beginne a Middel bord,    720<br/>
+That bothe king and queene him sihe.<br/>
+He sat and caste aboute his yhe<br/>
+And sih the lordes in astat,<br/>
+And with himself wax in debat<br/>
+Thenkende what he hadde lore,<br/>
+And such a sorwe he tok therfore,<br/>
+That he sat evere stille and thoghte,<br/>
+As he which of no mete roghte.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king behield his hevynesse,<br/>
+And of his grete gentillesse    730<br/>
+His doghter, which was fair and good<br/>
+And ate bord before him stod,<br/>
+As it was thilke time usage,<br/>
+He bad to gon on his message<br/>
+And fonde forto make him glad.<br/>
+And sche dede as hire fader bad,<br/>
+And goth to him the softe pas<br/>
+And axeth whenne and what he was,<br/>
+And preith he scholde his thoghtes leve.<br/>
+He seith, “Ma Dame, be your leve    740<br/>
+Mi name is hote Appolinus,<br/>
+And of mi richesse it is thus,<br/>
+Upon the See I have it lore.<br/>
+The contre wher as I was bore,<br/>
+Wher that my lond is and mi rente,<br/>
+I lefte at Tyr, whan that I wente:<br/>
+The worschipe of this worldes aghte,<br/>
+Unto the god ther I betaghte.”<br/>
+And thus togedre as thei tuo speeke,<br/>
+The teres runne be his cheeke.    750<br/>
+The king, which therof tok good kepe,<br/>
+Hath gret Pite to sen him wepe,<br/>
+And for his doghter sende ayein,<br/>
+And preide hir faire and gan to sein<br/>
+That sche no lengere wolde drecche,<br/>
+Bot that sche wolde anon forth fecche<br/>
+Hire harpe and don al that sche can<br/>
+To glade with that sory man.<br/>
+And sche to don hir fader heste<br/>
+Hir harpe fette, and in the feste    760<br/>
+Upon a Chaier which thei fette<br/>
+Hirself next to this man sche sette:<br/>
+With harpe bothe and ek with mouthe<br/>
+To him sche dede al that sche couthe<br/>
+To make him chiere, and evere he siketh,<br/>
+And sche him axeth hou him liketh.<br/>
+“Ma dame, certes wel,” he seide,<br/>
+“Bot if ye the mesure pleide<br/>
+Which, if you list, I schal you liere,<br/>
+It were a glad thing forto hiere.”    770<br/>
+“Ha, lieve sire,” tho quod sche,<br/>
+“Now tak the harpe and let me se<br/>
+Of what mesure that ye mene.”<br/>
+Tho preith the king, tho preith the queene,<br/>
+Forth with the lordes alle arewe,<br/>
+That he som merthe wolde schewe;<br/>
+He takth the Harpe and in his wise<br/>
+He tempreth, and of such assise<br/>
+Singende he harpeth forth withal,<br/>
+That as a vois celestial    780<br/>
+Hem thoghte it souneth in here Ere,<br/>
+As thogh that he an Angel were.<br/>
+Thei gladen of his melodie,<br/>
+Bot most of alle the compainie<br/>
+The kinges doghter, which it herde,<br/>
+And thoghte ek hou that he ansuerde,<br/>
+Whan that he was of hire opposed,<br/>
+Withinne hir herte hath wel supposed<br/>
+That he is of gret gentilesse.<br/>
+Hise dedes ben therof witnesse    790<br/>
+Forth with the wisdom of his lore;<br/>
+It nedeth noght to seche more,<br/>
+He myhte noght have such manere,<br/>
+Of gentil blod bot if he were.<br/>
+Whanne he hath harped al his fille,<br/>
+The kinges heste to fulfille,<br/>
+Awey goth dissh, awey goth cuppe,<br/>
+Doun goth the bord, the cloth was uppe,<br/>
+Thei risen and gon out of halle.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king his chamberlein let calle,    800<br/>
+And bad that he be alle weie<br/>
+A chambre for this man pourveie,<br/>
+Which nyh his oghne chambre be.<br/>
+“It schal be do, mi lord,” quod he.<br/>
+Appolinus of whom I mene<br/>
+Tho tok his leve of king and queene<br/>
+And of the worthi Maide also,<br/>
+Which preide unto hir fader tho,<br/>
+That sche myhte of that yonge man<br/>
+Of tho sciences whiche he can    810<br/>
+His lore have; and in this wise<br/>
+The king hir granteth his aprise,<br/>
+So that himself therto assente.<br/>
+Thus was acorded er thei wente,<br/>
+That he with al that evere he may<br/>
+This yonge faire freisshe May<br/>
+Of that he couthe scholde enforme;<br/>
+And full assented in this forme<br/>
+Thei token leve as for that nyht.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And whanne it was amorwe lyht,    820<br/>
+Unto this yonge man of Tyr<br/>
+Of clothes and of good atir<br/>
+With gold and Selver to despende<br/>
+This worthi yonge lady sende:<br/>
+And thus sche made him wel at ese,<br/>
+And he with al that he can plese<br/>
+Hire serveth wel and faire ayein.<br/>
+He tawhte hir til sche was certein<br/>
+Of Harpe, of Citole and of Rote,<br/>
+With many a tun and many a note    830<br/>
+Upon Musique, upon mesure,<br/>
+And of hire Harpe the temprure<br/>
+He tawhte hire ek, as he wel couthe.<br/>
+Bot as men sein that frele is youthe,<br/>
+With leisir and continuance<br/>
+This Mayde fell upon a chance,<br/>
+That love hath mad him a querele<br/>
+Ayein hire youthe freissh and frele,<br/>
+That malgre wher sche wole or noght,<br/>
+Sche mot with al hire hertes thoght    840<br/>
+To love and to his lawe obeie;<br/>
+And that sche schal ful sore abeie.<br/>
+For sche wot nevere what it is,<br/>
+Bot evere among sche fieleth this:<br/>
+Thenkende upon this man of Tyr,<br/>
+Hire herte is hot as eny fyr,<br/>
+And otherwhile it is acale;<br/>
+Now is sche red, nou is sche pale<br/>
+Riht after the condicion<br/>
+Of hire ymaginacion;    850<br/>
+Bot evere among hire thoghtes alle,<br/>
+Sche thoghte, what so mai befalle,<br/>
+Or that sche lawhe, or that sche wepe,<br/>
+Sche wolde hire goode name kepe<br/>
+For feere of wommanysshe schame.<br/>
+Bot what in ernest and in game,<br/>
+Sche stant for love in such a plit,<br/>
+That sche hath lost al appetit<br/>
+Of mete, of drinke, of nyhtes reste,<br/>
+As sche that not what is the beste;    860<br/>
+Bot forto thenken al hir fille<br/>
+Sche hield hire ofte times stille<br/>
+Withinne hir chambre, and goth noght oute:<br/>
+The king was of hire lif in doute,<br/>
+Which wiste nothing what it mente.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot fell a time, as he out wente<br/>
+To walke, of Princes Sones thre<br/>
+Ther come and felle to his kne;<br/>
+And ech of hem in sondri wise<br/>
+Besoghte and profreth his servise,    870<br/>
+So that he myhte his doghter have.<br/>
+The king, which wolde his honour save,<br/>
+Seith sche is siek, and of that speche<br/>
+Tho was no time to beseche;<br/>
+Bot ech of hem do make a bille<br/>
+He bad, and wryte his oghne wille,<br/>
+His name, his fader and his good;<br/>
+And whan sche wiste hou that it stod,<br/>
+And hadde here billes oversein,<br/>
+Thei scholden have ansuere ayein.    880<br/>
+Of this conseil thei weren glad,<br/>
+And writen as the king hem bad,<br/>
+And every man his oghne bok<br/>
+Into the kinges hond betok,<br/>
+And he it to his dowhter sende,<br/>
+And preide hir forto make an ende<br/>
+And wryte ayein hire oghne hond,<br/>
+Riht as sche in hire herte fond.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The billes weren wel received,<br/>
+Bot sche hath alle here loves weyved,    890<br/>
+And thoghte tho was time and space<br/>
+To put hire in hir fader grace,<br/>
+And wrot ayein and thus sche saide:<br/>
+“The schame which is in a Maide<br/>
+With speche dar noght ben unloke,<br/>
+Bot in writinge it mai be spoke;<br/>
+So wryte I to you, fader, thus:<br/>
+Bot if I have Appolinus,<br/>
+Of al this world, what so betyde,<br/>
+I wol non other man abide.    900<br/>
+And certes if I of him faile,<br/>
+I wot riht wel withoute faile<br/>
+Ye schull for me be dowhterles.”<br/>
+This lettre cam, and ther was press<br/>
+Tofore the king, ther as he stod;<br/>
+And whan that he it understod,<br/>
+He yaf hem ansuer by and by,<br/>
+Bot that was do so prively,<br/>
+That non of othres conseil wiste.<br/>
+Thei toke her leve, and wher hem liste    910<br/>
+Thei wente forth upon here weie.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king ne wolde noght bewreie<br/>
+The conseil for no maner hihe,<br/>
+Bot soffreth til he time sihe:<br/>
+And whan that he to chambre is come,<br/>
+He hath unto his conseil nome<br/>
+This man of Tyr, and let him se<br/>
+The lettre and al the privete,<br/>
+The which his dowhter to him sente:<br/>
+And he his kne to grounde bente    920<br/>
+And thonketh him and hire also,<br/>
+And er thei wenten thanne atuo,<br/>
+With good herte and with good corage<br/>
+Of full Love and full mariage<br/>
+The king and he ben hol acorded.<br/>
+And after, whanne it was recorded<br/>
+Unto the dowhter hou it stod,<br/>
+The yifte of al this worldes good<br/>
+Ne scholde have mad hir half so blythe:<br/>
+And forth withal the king als swithe,    930<br/>
+For he wol have hire good assent,<br/>
+Hath for the queene hir moder sent.<br/>
+The queene is come, and whan sche herde<br/>
+Of this matiere hou that it ferde,<br/>
+Sche syh debat, sche syh desese,<br/>
+Bot if sche wolde hir dowhter plese,<br/>
+And is therto assented full.<br/>
+Which is a dede wonderfull,<br/>
+For noman knew the sothe cas<br/>
+Bot he himself, what man he was;    940<br/>
+And natheles, so as hem thoghte,<br/>
+Hise dedes to the sothe wroghte<br/>
+That he was come of gentil blod:<br/>
+Him lacketh noght bot worldes good,<br/>
+And as therof is no despeir,<br/>
+For sche schal ben hire fader heir,<br/>
+And he was able to governe.<br/>
+Thus wol thei noght the love werne<br/>
+Of him and hire in none wise,<br/>
+Bot ther acorded thei divise    950<br/>
+The day and time of Mariage.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wher love is lord of the corage,<br/>
+Him thenketh longe er that he spede;<br/>
+Bot ate laste unto the dede<br/>
+The time is come, and in her wise<br/>
+With gret offrende and sacrifise<br/>
+Thei wedde and make a riche feste,<br/>
+And every thing which was honeste<br/>
+Withinnen house and ek withoute<br/>
+It was so don, that al aboute    960<br/>
+Of gret worschipe, of gret noblesse<br/>
+Ther cride many a man largesse<br/>
+Unto the lordes hihe and loude;<br/>
+The knyhtes that ben yonge and proude,<br/>
+Thei jouste ferst and after daunce.<br/>
+The day is go, the nyhtes chaunce<br/>
+Hath derked al the bryhte Sonne;<br/>
+This lord, which hath his love wonne,<br/>
+Is go to bedde with his wif,<br/>
+Wher as thei ladde a lusti lif,    970<br/>
+And that was after somdel sene,<br/>
+For as thei pleiden hem betwene,<br/>
+Thei gete a child betwen hem tuo,<br/>
+To whom fell after mochel wo.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now have I told of the spousailes.<br/>
+Bot forto speke of the mervailes<br/>
+Whiche afterward to hem befelle,<br/>
+It is a wonder forto telle.<br/>
+It fell adai thei riden oute,<br/>
+The king and queene and al the route,    980<br/>
+To pleien hem upon the stronde,<br/>
+Wher as thei sen toward the londe<br/>
+A Schip sailende of gret array.<br/>
+To knowe what it mene may,<br/>
+Til it be come thei abide;<br/>
+Than sen thei stonde on every side,<br/>
+Endlong the schipes bord to schewe,<br/>
+Of Penonceals a riche rewe.<br/>
+Thei axen when the ship is come:<br/>
+Fro Tyr, anon ansuerde some,    990<br/>
+And over this thei seiden more<br/>
+The cause why thei comen fore<br/>
+Was forto seche and forto finde<br/>
+Appolinus, which was of kinde<br/>
+Her liege lord: and he appiereth,<br/>
+And of the tale which he hiereth<br/>
+He was riht glad; for thei him tolde,<br/>
+That for vengance, as god it wolde,<br/>
+Antiochus, as men mai wite,<br/>
+With thondre and lyhthnynge is forsmite;    1000<br/>
+His doghter hath the same chaunce,<br/>
+So be thei bothe in o balance.<br/>
+“Forthi, oure liege lord, we seie<br/>
+In name of al the lond, and preie,<br/>
+That left al other thing to done,<br/>
+It like you to come sone<br/>
+And se youre oghne liege men<br/>
+With othre that ben of youre ken,<br/>
+That live in longinge and desir<br/>
+Til ye be come ayein to Tyr.”    1010<br/>
+This tale after the king it hadde<br/>
+Pentapolim al overspradde,<br/>
+Ther was no joie forto seche;<br/>
+For every man it hadde in speche<br/>
+And seiden alle of on acord,<br/>
+“A worthi king schal ben oure lord:<br/>
+That thoghte ous ferst an hevinesse<br/>
+Is schape ous now to gret gladnesse.”<br/>
+Thus goth the tidinge overal.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot nede he mot, that nede schal:    1020<br/>
+Appolinus his leve tok,<br/>
+To god and al the lond betok<br/>
+With al the poeple long and brod,<br/>
+That he no lenger there abod.<br/>
+The king and queene sorwe made,<br/>
+Bot yit somdiel thei weren glade<br/>
+Of such thing as thei herden tho:<br/>
+And thus betwen the wel and wo<br/>
+To schip he goth, his wif with childe,<br/>
+The which was evere meke and mylde    1030<br/>
+And wolde noght departe him fro,<br/>
+Such love was betwen hem tuo.<br/>
+Lichorida for hire office<br/>
+Was take, which was a Norrice,<br/>
+To wende with this yonge wif,<br/>
+To whom was schape a woful lif.<br/>
+Withinne a time, as it betidde,<br/>
+Whan thei were in the See amidde,<br/>
+Out of the North they sihe a cloude;<br/>
+The storm aros, the wyndes loude    1040<br/>
+Thei blewen many a dredful blast,<br/>
+The welkne was al overcast,<br/>
+The derke nyht the Sonne hath under,<br/>
+Ther was a gret tempeste of thunder:<br/>
+The Mone and ek the Sterres bothe<br/>
+In blake cloudes thei hem clothe,<br/>
+Wherof here brihte lok thei hyde.<br/>
+This yonge ladi wepte and cride,<br/>
+To whom no confort myhte availe;<br/>
+Of childe sche began travaile,    1050<br/>
+Wher sche lay in a Caban clos:<br/>
+Hire woful lord fro hire aros,<br/>
+And that was longe er eny morwe,<br/>
+So that in anguisse and in sorwe<br/>
+Sche was delivered al be nyhte<br/>
+And ded in every mannes syhte;<br/>
+Bot natheles for al this wo<br/>
+A maide child was bore tho.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Appolinus whan he this knew,<br/>
+For sorwe a swoune he overthrew,    1060<br/>
+That noman wiste in him no lif.<br/>
+And whanne he wok, he seide, “Ha, wif,<br/>
+Mi lust, mi joie, my desir,<br/>
+Mi welthe and my recoverir,<br/>
+Why schal I live, and thou schalt dye?<br/>
+Ha, thou fortune, I thee deffie,<br/>
+Nou hast thou do to me thi werste.<br/>
+Ha, herte, why ne wolt thou berste,<br/>
+That forth with hire I myhte passe?<br/>
+Mi peines weren wel the lasse.”    1070<br/>
+In such wepinge and in such cry<br/>
+His dede wif, which lay him by,<br/>
+A thousend sithes he hire kiste;<br/>
+Was nevere man that sih ne wiste<br/>
+A sorwe unto his sorwe lich;<br/>
+For evere among upon the lich<br/>
+He fell swounende, as he that soghte<br/>
+His oghne deth, which he besoghte<br/>
+Unto the goddes alle above<br/>
+With many a pitous word of love;    1080<br/>
+Bot suche wordes as tho were<br/>
+Yit herde nevere mannes Ere,<br/>
+Bot only thilke whiche he seide.<br/>
+The Maister Schipman cam and preide<br/>
+With othre suche as be therinne,<br/>
+And sein that he mai nothing winne<br/>
+Ayein the deth, bot thei him rede,<br/>
+He be wel war and tak hiede,<br/>
+The See be weie of his nature<br/>
+Receive mai no creature    1090<br/>
+Withinne himself as forto holde,<br/>
+The which is ded: forthi thei wolde,<br/>
+As thei conseilen al aboute,<br/>
+The dede body casten oute.<br/>
+For betre it is, thei seiden alle,<br/>
+That it of hire so befalle,<br/>
+Than if thei scholden alle spille.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, which understod here wille<br/>
+And knew here conseil that was trewe,<br/>
+Began ayein his sorwe newe    1100<br/>
+With pitous herte, and thus to seie:<br/>
+“It is al reson that ye preie.<br/>
+I am,” quod he, “bot on al one,<br/>
+So wolde I noght for mi persone<br/>
+Ther felle such adversite.<br/>
+Bot whan it mai no betre be,<br/>
+Doth thanne thus upon my word,<br/>
+Let make a cofre strong of bord,<br/>
+That it be ferm with led and pich.”<br/>
+Anon was mad a cofre sich,    1110<br/>
+Al redy broght unto his hond;<br/>
+And whanne he sih and redy fond<br/>
+This cofre mad and wel enclowed,<br/>
+The dede bodi was besowed<br/>
+In cloth of gold and leid therinne.<br/>
+And for he wolde unto hire winne<br/>
+Upon som cooste a Sepulture,<br/>
+Under hire heved in aventure<br/>
+Of gold he leide Sommes grete<br/>
+And of jeueals a strong beyete    1120<br/>
+Forth with a lettre, and seide thus:<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I, king of Tyr Appollinus,<br/>
+Do alle maner men to wite,<br/>
+That hiere and se this lettre write,<br/>
+That helpeles withoute red<br/>
+Hier lith a kinges doghter ded:<br/>
+And who that happeth hir to finde,<br/>
+For charite tak in his mynde,<br/>
+And do so that sche be begrave<br/>
+With this tresor, which he schal have.”    1130<br/>
+Thus whan the lettre was full spoke,<br/>
+Thei haue anon the cofre stoke,<br/>
+And bounden it with yren faste,<br/>
+That it may with the wawes laste,<br/>
+And stoppen it be such a weie,<br/>
+That it schal be withinne dreie,<br/>
+So that no water myhte it grieve.<br/>
+And thus in hope and good believe<br/>
+Of that the corps schal wel aryve,<br/>
+Thei caste it over bord als blyve.    1140<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Schip forth on the wawes wente;<br/>
+The prince hath changed his entente,<br/>
+And seith he wol noght come at Tyr<br/>
+As thanne, bot al his desir<br/>
+Is ferst to seilen unto Tharse.<br/>
+The wyndy Storm began to skarse,<br/>
+The Sonne arist, the weder cliereth,<br/>
+The Schipman which behinde stiereth,<br/>
+Whan that he sih the wyndes saghte,<br/>
+Towardes Tharse his cours he straghte.    1150<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now to mi matiere ayein,<br/>
+To telle as olde bokes sein,<br/>
+This dede corps of which ye knowe<br/>
+With wynd and water was forthrowe<br/>
+Now hier, now ther, til ate laste<br/>
+At Ephesim the See upcaste<br/>
+The cofre and al that was therinne.<br/>
+Of gret merveile now beginne<br/>
+Mai hiere who that sitteth stille;<br/>
+That god wol save mai noght spille.    1160<br/>
+Riht as the corps was throwe alonde,<br/>
+Ther cam walkende upon the stronde<br/>
+A worthi clerc, a Surgien,<br/>
+And ek a gret Phisicien,<br/>
+Of al that lond the wisest on,<br/>
+Which hihte Maister Cerymon;<br/>
+Ther were of his disciples some.<br/>
+This Maister to the Cofre is come,<br/>
+He peiseth ther was somwhat in,<br/>
+And bad hem bere it to his In,    1170<br/>
+And goth himselve forth withal.<br/>
+Al that schal falle, falle schal;<br/>
+Thei comen hom and tarie noght;<br/>
+This Cofre is into chambre broght,<br/>
+Which that thei finde faste stoke,<br/>
+Bot thei with craft it have unloke.<br/>
+Thei loken in, where as thei founde<br/>
+A bodi ded, which was bewounde<br/>
+In cloth of gold, as I seide er,<br/>
+The tresor ek thei founden ther    1180<br/>
+Forth with the lettre, which thei rede.<br/>
+And tho thei token betre hiede;<br/>
+Unsowed was the bodi sone,<br/>
+And he, which knew what is to done,<br/>
+This noble clerk, with alle haste<br/>
+Began the veines forto taste,<br/>
+And sih hire Age was of youthe,<br/>
+And with the craftes whiche he couthe<br/>
+He soghte and fond a signe of lif.<br/>
+With that this worthi kinges wif    1190<br/>
+Honestely thei token oute,<br/>
+And maden fyres al aboute;<br/>
+Thei leide hire on a couche softe,<br/>
+And with a scheete warmed ofte<br/>
+Hire colde brest began to hete,<br/>
+Hire herte also to flacke and bete.<br/>
+This Maister hath hire every joignt<br/>
+With certein oile and balsme enoignt,<br/>
+And putte a liquour in hire mouth,<br/>
+Which is to fewe clerkes couth,    1200<br/>
+So that sche coevereth ate laste;<br/>
+And ferst hire yhen up sche caste,<br/>
+And whan sche more of strengthe cawhte,<br/>
+Hire Armes bothe forth sche strawhte,<br/>
+Hield up hire hond and pitously<br/>
+Sche spak and seide, “Ha, wher am I?<br/>
+Where is my lord, what world is this?”<br/>
+As sche that wot noght hou it is.<br/>
+Bot Cerymon the worthi leche<br/>
+Ansuerde anon upon hire speche    1210<br/>
+And seith, “Ma dame, yee ben hiere,<br/>
+Where yee be sauf, as yee schal hiere<br/>
+Hierafterward; forthi as nou<br/>
+Mi conseil is, conforteth you:<br/>
+For trusteth wel withoute faile,<br/>
+Ther is nothing which schal you faile,<br/>
+That oghte of reson to be do.”<br/>
+Thus passen thei a day or tuo;<br/>
+Thei speke of noght as for an ende,<br/>
+Til sche began somdiel amende,    1220<br/>
+And wiste hireselven what sche mente.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho forto knowe hire hol entente,<br/>
+This Maister axeth al the cas,<br/>
+Hou sche cam there and what sche was.<br/>
+“Hou I cam hiere wot I noght,”<br/>
+Quod sche, “bot wel I am bethoght<br/>
+Of othre thinges al aboute”:<br/>
+Fro point to point and tolde him oute<br/>
+Als ferforthli as sche it wiste.<br/>
+And he hire tolde hou in a kiste    1230<br/>
+The See hire threw upon the lond,<br/>
+And what tresor with hire he fond,<br/>
+Which was al redy at hire wille,<br/>
+As he that schop him to fulfille<br/>
+With al his myht what thing he scholde.<br/>
+Sche thonketh him that he so wolde,<br/>
+And al hire herte sche discloseth,<br/>
+And seith him wel that sche supposeth<br/>
+Hire lord be dreint, hir child also;<br/>
+So sih sche noght bot alle wo.    1240<br/>
+Wherof as to the world nomore<br/>
+Ne wol sche torne, and preith therfore<br/>
+That in som temple of the Cite,<br/>
+To kepe and holde hir chastete,<br/>
+Sche mihte among the wommen duelle.<br/>
+Whan he this tale hir herde telle,<br/>
+He was riht glad, and made hire knowen<br/>
+That he a dowhter of his owen<br/>
+Hath, which he wol unto hir yive<br/>
+To serve, whil thei bothe live,    1250<br/>
+In stede of that which sche hath lost;<br/>
+Al only at his oghne cost<br/>
+Sche schal be rendred forth with hire.<br/>
+She seith, “Grant mercy, lieve sire,<br/>
+God quite it you, ther I ne may.”<br/>
+And thus thei drive forth the day,<br/>
+Til time com that sche was hol;<br/>
+And tho thei take her conseil hol,<br/>
+To schape upon good ordinance<br/>
+And make a worthi pourveance    1260<br/>
+Ayein the day whan thei be veiled.<br/>
+And thus, whan that thei be conseiled,<br/>
+In blake clothes thei hem clothe,<br/>
+This lady and the dowhter bothe,<br/>
+And yolde hem to religion.<br/>
+The feste and the profession<br/>
+After the reule of that degre<br/>
+Was mad with gret solempnete,<br/>
+Where as Diane is seintefied;<br/>
+Thus stant this lady justefied    1270<br/>
+In ordre wher sche thenkth to duelle.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot now ayeinward forto telle<br/>
+In what plit that hire lord stod inne:<br/>
+He seileth, til that he may winne<br/>
+The havene of Tharse, as I seide er;<br/>
+And whanne he was aryved ther,<br/>
+And it was thurgh the Cite knowe,<br/>
+Men myhte se withinne a throwe,<br/>
+As who seith, al the toun at ones,<br/>
+That come ayein him for the nones,    1280<br/>
+To yiven him the reverence,<br/>
+So glad thei were of his presence:<br/>
+And thogh he were in his corage<br/>
+Desesed, yit with glad visage<br/>
+He made hem chiere, and to his In,<br/>
+Wher he whilom sojourned in,<br/>
+He goth him straght and was resceived.<br/>
+And whan the presse of poeple is weived,<br/>
+He takth his hoste unto him tho,<br/>
+And seith, “Mi frend Strangulio,    1290<br/>
+Lo, thus and thus it is befalle,<br/>
+And thou thiself art on of alle,<br/>
+Forth with thi wif, whiche I most triste.<br/>
+Forthi, if it you bothe liste,<br/>
+My doghter Thaise be youre leve<br/>
+I thenke schal with you beleve<br/>
+As for a time; and thus I preie,<br/>
+That sche be kept be alle weie,<br/>
+And whan sche hath of age more,<br/>
+That sche be set to bokes lore.    1300<br/>
+And this avou to god I make,<br/>
+That I schal nevere for hir sake<br/>
+Mi berd for no likinge schave,<br/>
+Til it befalle that I have<br/>
+In covenable time of age<br/>
+Beset hire unto mariage.”<br/>
+Thus thei acorde, and al is wel,<br/>
+And forto resten him somdel,<br/>
+As for a while he ther sojorneth,<br/>
+And thanne he takth his leve and torneth    1310<br/>
+To Schipe, and goth him hom to Tyr,<br/>
+Wher every man with gret desir<br/>
+Awaiteth upon his comynge.<br/>
+Bot whan the Schip com in seilinge,<br/>
+And thei perceiven it is he,<br/>
+Was nevere yit in no cite<br/>
+Such joie mad as thei tho made;<br/>
+His herte also began to glade<br/>
+Of that he sih the poeple glad.<br/>
+Lo, thus fortune his hap hath lad;    1320<br/>
+In sondri wise he was travailed,<br/>
+Bot hou so evere he be assailed,<br/>
+His latere ende schal be good.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto speke hou that it stod<br/>
+Of Thaise his doghter, wher sche duelleth,<br/>
+In Tharse, as the Cronique telleth,<br/>
+Sche was wel kept, sche was wel loked,<br/>
+Sche was wel tawht, sche was wel boked,<br/>
+So wel sche spedde hir in hire youthe<br/>
+That sche of every wisdom couthe,    1330<br/>
+That forto seche in every lond<br/>
+So wys an other noman fond,<br/>
+Ne so wel tawht at mannes yhe.<br/>
+Bot wo worthe evere fals envie!<br/>
+For it befell that time so,<br/>
+A dowhter hath Strangulio,<br/>
+The which was cleped Philotenne:<br/>
+Bot fame, which wole evere renne,<br/>
+Cam al day to hir moder Ere,<br/>
+And seith, wher evere hir doghter were    1340<br/>
+With Thayse set in eny place,<br/>
+The comun vois, the comun grace<br/>
+Was al upon that other Maide,<br/>
+And of hir doghter noman saide.<br/>
+Who wroth but Dionise thanne?<br/>
+Hire thoghte a thousend yer til whanne<br/>
+Sche myhte ben of Thaise wreke<br/>
+Of that sche herde folk so speke.<br/>
+And fell that ilke same tyde,<br/>
+That ded was trewe Lychoride,    1350<br/>
+Which hadde be servant to Thaise,<br/>
+So that sche was the worse at aise,<br/>
+For sche hath thanne no servise<br/>
+Bot only thurgh this Dionise,<br/>
+Which was hire dedlich Anemie<br/>
+Thurgh pure treson and envie.<br/>
+Sche, that of alle sorwe can,<br/>
+Tho spak unto hire bondeman,<br/>
+Which cleped was Theophilus,<br/>
+And made him swere in conseil thus,    1360<br/>
+That he such time as sche him sette<br/>
+Schal come Thaise forto fette,<br/>
+And lede hire oute of alle sihte,<br/>
+Wher as noman hire helpe myhte,<br/>
+Upon the Stronde nyh the See,<br/>
+And there he schal this maiden sle.<br/>
+This cherles herte is in a traunce,<br/>
+As he which drad him of vengance<br/>
+Whan time comth an other day;<br/>
+Bot yit dorste he noght seie nay,    1370<br/>
+Bot swor and seide he schal fulfille<br/>
+Hire hestes at hire oghne wille.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The treson and the time is schape,<br/>
+So fell it that this cherles knape<br/>
+Hath lad this maiden ther he wolde<br/>
+Upon the Stronde, and what sche scholde<br/>
+Sche was adrad; and he out breide<br/>
+A rusti swerd and to hir seide,<br/>
+“Thou schalt be ded.” “Helas!” quod sche,<br/>
+“Why schal I so?” “Lo thus,” quod he,    1380<br/>
+“Mi ladi Dionise hath bede,<br/>
+Thou schalt be moerdred in this stede.”<br/>
+This Maiden tho for feere schryhte,<br/>
+And for the love of god almyhte<br/>
+Sche preith that for a litel stounde<br/>
+Sche myhte knele upon the grounde,<br/>
+Toward the hevene forto crave,<br/>
+Hire wofull Soule if sche mai save:<br/>
+And with this noise and with this cry,<br/>
+Out of a barge faste by,    1390<br/>
+Which hidd was ther on Scomerfare,<br/>
+Men sterten out and weren ware<br/>
+Of this feloun, and he to go,<br/>
+And sche began to crie tho,<br/>
+“Ha, mercy, help for goddes sake!<br/>
+Into the barge thei hire take,<br/>
+As thieves scholde, and forth thei wente.<br/>
+Upon the See the wynd hem hente,<br/>
+And malgre wher thei wolde or non,<br/>
+Tofor the weder forth thei gon,    1400<br/>
+Ther halp no Seil, ther halp non Ore,<br/>
+Forstormed and forblowen sore<br/>
+In gret peril so forth thei dryve,<br/>
+Til ate laste thei aryve<br/>
+At Mitelene the Cite.<br/>
+In havene sauf and whan thei be,<br/>
+The Maister Schipman made him boun,<br/>
+And goth him out into the toun,<br/>
+And profreth Thaise forto selle.<br/>
+On Leonin it herde telle,    1410<br/>
+Which Maister of the bordel was,<br/>
+And bad him gon a redy pas<br/>
+To fetten hire, and forth he wente,<br/>
+And Thaise out of his barge he hente,<br/>
+And to this bordeller hir solde.<br/>
+And he, that be hire body wolde<br/>
+Take avantage, let do crye,<br/>
+That what man wolde his lecherie<br/>
+Attempte upon hire maidenhede,<br/>
+Lei doun the gold and he schal spede.    1420<br/>
+And thus whan he hath crid it oute<br/>
+In syhte of al the poeple aboute,<br/>
+He ladde hire to the bordel tho.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No wonder is thogh sche be wo:<br/>
+Clos in a chambre be hireselve,<br/>
+Ech after other ten or tuelve<br/>
+Of yonge men to hire in wente;<br/>
+Bot such a grace god hire sente,<br/>
+That for the sorwe which sche made<br/>
+Was non of hem which pouer hade    1430<br/>
+To don hire eny vileinie.<br/>
+This Leonin let evere aspie,<br/>
+And waiteth after gret beyete;<br/>
+Bot al for noght, sche was forlete,<br/>
+That mo men wolde ther noght come.<br/>
+Whan he therof hath hiede nome,<br/>
+And knew that sche was yit a maide,<br/>
+Unto his oghne man he saide,<br/>
+That he with strengthe ayein hire leve<br/>
+Tho scholde hir maidenhod bereve.    1440<br/>
+This man goth in, bot so it ferde,<br/>
+Whan he hire wofull pleintes herde<br/>
+And he therof hath take kepe,<br/>
+Him liste betre forto wepe<br/>
+Than don oght elles to the game.<br/>
+And thus sche kepte hirself fro schame,<br/>
+And kneleth doun to therthe and preide<br/>
+Unto this man, and thus sche seide:<br/>
+“If so be that thi maister wolde<br/>
+That I his gold encresce scholde,    1450<br/>
+It mai noght falle be this weie:<br/>
+Bot soffre me to go mi weie<br/>
+Out of this hous wher I am inne,<br/>
+And I schal make him forto winne<br/>
+In som place elles of the toun,<br/>
+Be so it be religioun,<br/>
+Wher that honeste wommen duelle.<br/>
+And thus thou myht thi maister telle,<br/>
+That whanne I have a chambre there,<br/>
+Let him do crie ay wyde where,    1460<br/>
+What lord that hath his doghter diere,<br/>
+And is in will that sche schal liere<br/>
+Of such a Scole that is trewe,<br/>
+I schal hire teche of thinges newe,<br/>
+Which as non other womman can<br/>
+In al this lond.” And tho this man<br/>
+Hire tale hath herd, he goth ayein,<br/>
+And tolde unto his maister plein<br/>
+That sche hath seid; and therupon,<br/>
+Whan than he sih beyete non    1470<br/>
+At the bordel be cause of hire,<br/>
+He bad his man to gon and spire<br/>
+A place wher sche myhte abyde,<br/>
+That he mai winne upon som side<br/>
+Be that sche can: bot ate leste<br/>
+Thus was sche sauf fro this tempeste.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hath hire fro the bordel take,<br/>
+Bot that was noght for goddes sake,<br/>
+Bot for the lucre, as sche him tolde.<br/>
+Now comen tho that comen wolde    1480<br/>
+Of wommen in her lusty youthe,<br/>
+To hiere and se what thing sche couthe:<br/>
+Sche can the wisdom of a clerk,<br/>
+Sche can of every lusti werk<br/>
+Which to a gentil womman longeth,<br/>
+And some of hem sche underfongeth<br/>
+To the Citole and to the Harpe,<br/>
+And whom it liketh forto carpe<br/>
+Proverbes and demandes slyhe,<br/>
+An other such thei nevere syhe,    1490<br/>
+Which that science so wel tawhte:<br/>
+Wherof sche grete yiftes cawhte,<br/>
+That sche to Leonin hath wonne;<br/>
+And thus hire name is so begonne<br/>
+Of sondri thinges that sche techeth,<br/>
+That al the lond unto hir secheth<br/>
+Of yonge wommen forto liere.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nou lete we this maiden hiere,<br/>
+And speke of Dionise ayein<br/>
+And of Theophile the vilein,    1500<br/>
+Of whiche I spak of nou tofore.<br/>
+Whan Thaise scholde have be forlore,<br/>
+This false cherl to his lady<br/>
+Whan he cam hom, al prively<br/>
+He seith, “Ma Dame, slain I have<br/>
+This maide Thaise, and is begrave<br/>
+In prive place, as ye me biede.<br/>
+Forthi, ma dame, taketh hiede<br/>
+And kep conseil, hou so it stonde.”<br/>
+This fend, which this hath understonde,    1510<br/>
+Was glad, and weneth it be soth:<br/>
+Now herkne, hierafter hou sche doth.<br/>
+Sche wepth, sche sorweth, sche compleigneth,<br/>
+And of sieknesse which sche feigneth<br/>
+Sche seith that Taise sodeinly<br/>
+Be nyhte is ded, “as sche and I<br/>
+Togedre lyhen nyh my lord.”<br/>
+Sche was a womman of record,<br/>
+And al is lieved that sche seith;<br/>
+And forto yive a more feith,    1520<br/>
+Hire housebonde and ek sche bothe<br/>
+In blake clothes thei hem clothe,<br/>
+And made a gret enterrement;<br/>
+And for the poeple schal be blent,<br/>
+Of Thaise as for the remembrance,<br/>
+After the real olde usance<br/>
+A tumbe of latoun noble and riche<br/>
+With an ymage unto hir liche<br/>
+Liggende above therupon<br/>
+Thei made and sette it up anon.    1530<br/>
+Hire Epitaffe of good assisse<br/>
+Was write aboute, and in this wise<br/>
+It spak: “O yee that this beholde,<br/>
+Lo, hier lith sche, the which was holde<br/>
+The faireste and the flour of alle,<br/>
+Whos name Thaïsis men calle.<br/>
+The king of Tyr Appolinus<br/>
+Hire fader was: now lith sche thus.<br/>
+Fourtiene yer sche was of Age,<br/>
+Whan deth hir tok to his viage.”    1540<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was this false treson hidd,<br/>
+Which afterward was wyde kidd,<br/>
+As be the tale a man schal hiere.<br/>
+Bot forto clare mi matiere,<br/>
+To Tyr I thenke torne ayein,<br/>
+And telle as the Croniqes sein.<br/>
+Whan that the king was comen hom,<br/>
+And hath left in the salte fom<br/>
+His wif, which he mai noght foryete,<br/>
+For he som confort wolde gete,    1550<br/>
+He let somoune a parlement,<br/>
+To which the lordes were asent;<br/>
+And of the time he hath ben oute,<br/>
+He seth the thinges al aboute,<br/>
+And told hem ek hou he hath fare,<br/>
+Whil he was out of londe fare;<br/>
+And preide hem alle to abyde,<br/>
+For he wolde at the same tyde<br/>
+Do schape for his wyves mynde,<br/>
+As he that wol noght ben unkinde.    1560<br/>
+Solempne was that ilke office,<br/>
+And riche was the sacrifice,<br/>
+The feste reali was holde:<br/>
+And therto was he wel beholde;<br/>
+For such a wif as he hadde on<br/>
+In thilke daies was ther non.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan this was do, thanne he him thoghte<br/>
+Upon his doghter, and besoghte<br/>
+Suche of his lordes as he wolde,<br/>
+That thei with him to Tharse scholde,    1570<br/>
+To fette his doghter Taise there:<br/>
+And thei anon al redy were,<br/>
+To schip they gon and forth thei wente,<br/>
+Til thei the havene of Tharse hente.<br/>
+They londe and faile of that thei seche<br/>
+Be coverture and sleyhte of speche:<br/>
+This false man Strangulio,<br/>
+And Dionise his wif also,<br/>
+That he the betre trowe myhte,<br/>
+Thei ladden him to have a sihte    1580<br/>
+Wher that hir tombe was arraied.<br/>
+The lasse yit he was mispaied,<br/>
+And natheles, so as he dorste,<br/>
+He curseth and seith al the worste<br/>
+Unto fortune, as to the blinde,<br/>
+Which can no seker weie finde;<br/>
+For sche him neweth evere among,<br/>
+And medleth sorwe with his song.<br/>
+Bot sithe it mai no betre be,<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thonketh god and forth goth he    1590<br/>
+Seilende toward Tyr ayein.<br/>
+Bot sodeinly the wynd and reyn<br/>
+Begonne upon the See debate,<br/>
+So that he soffre mot algate<br/>
+The lawe which Neptune ordeigneth;<br/>
+Wherof fulofte time he pleigneth,<br/>
+And hield him wel the more esmaied<br/>
+Of that he hath tofore assaied.<br/>
+So that for pure sorwe and care,<br/>
+Of that he seth his world so fare,    1600<br/>
+The reste he lefte of his Caban,<br/>
+That for the conseil of noman<br/>
+Ayein therinne he nolde come,<br/>
+Bot hath benethe his place nome,<br/>
+Wher he wepende al one lay,<br/>
+Ther as he sih no lyht of day.<br/>
+And thus tofor the wynd thei dryve,<br/>
+Til longe and late thei aryve<br/>
+With gret distresce, as it was sene,<br/>
+Upon this toun of Mitelene,    1610<br/>
+Which was a noble cite tho.<br/>
+And hapneth thilke time so,<br/>
+The lordes bothe and the comune<br/>
+The hihe festes of Neptune<br/>
+Upon the stronde at the rivage,<br/>
+As it was custumme and usage,<br/>
+Sollempneliche thei besihe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan thei this strange vessel syhe<br/>
+Come in, and hath his Seil avaled,<br/>
+The toun therof hath spoke and taled.    1620<br/>
+The lord which of the cite was,<br/>
+Whos name is Athenagoras,<br/>
+Was there, and seide he wolde se<br/>
+What Schip it is, and who thei be<br/>
+That ben therinne: and after sone,<br/>
+Whan that he sih it was to done,<br/>
+His barge was for him arraied,<br/>
+And he goth forth and hath assaied.<br/>
+He fond the Schip of gret Array,<br/>
+Bot what thing it amonte may,    1630<br/>
+He seth thei maden hevy chiere,<br/>
+Bot wel him thenkth be the manere<br/>
+That thei be worthi men of blod,<br/>
+And axeth of hem hou it stod;<br/>
+And thei him tellen al the cas,<br/>
+Hou that here lord fordrive was,<br/>
+And what a sorwe that he made,<br/>
+Of which ther mai noman him glade.<br/>
+He preith that he here lord mai se,<br/>
+Bot thei him tolde it mai noght be,    1640<br/>
+For he lith in so derk a place,<br/>
+That ther may no wiht sen his face:<br/>
+Bot for al that, thogh hem be loth,<br/>
+He fond the ladre and doun he goth,<br/>
+And to him spak, bot non ansuere<br/>
+Ayein of him ne mihte he bere<br/>
+For oght that he can don or sein;<br/>
+And thus he goth him up ayein.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tho was ther spoke in many wise<br/>
+Amonges hem that weren wise,    1650<br/>
+Now this, now that, bot ate laste<br/>
+The wisdom of the toun this caste,<br/>
+That yonge Taise were asent.<br/>
+For if ther be amendement<br/>
+To glade with this woful king,<br/>
+Sche can so moche of every thing,<br/>
+That sche schal gladen him anon.<br/>
+A Messager for hire is gon,<br/>
+And sche cam with hire Harpe on honde,<br/>
+And seide hem that sche wolde fonde    1660<br/>
+Be alle weies that sche can,<br/>
+To glade with this sory man.<br/>
+Bot what he was sche wiste noght,<br/>
+Bot al the Schip hire hath besoght<br/>
+That sche hire wit on him despende,<br/>
+In aunter if he myhte amende,<br/>
+And sein it schal be wel aquit.<br/>
+Whan sche hath understonden it,<br/>
+Sche goth hir doun, ther as he lay,<br/>
+Wher that sche harpeth many a lay    1670<br/>
+And lich an Angel sang withal;<br/>
+Bot he nomore than the wal<br/>
+Tok hiede of eny thing he herde.<br/>
+And whan sche sih that he so ferde,<br/>
+Sche falleth with him into wordes,<br/>
+And telleth him of sondri bordes,<br/>
+And axeth him demandes strange,<br/>
+Wherof sche made his herte change,<br/>
+And to hire speche his Ere he leide<br/>
+And hath merveile of that sche seide.    1680<br/>
+For in proverbe and in probleme<br/>
+Sche spak, and bad he scholde deme<br/>
+In many soubtil question:<br/>
+Bot he for no suggestioun<br/>
+Which toward him sche couthe stere,<br/>
+He wolde noght o word ansuere,<br/>
+Bot as a madd man ate laste<br/>
+His heved wepende awey he caste,<br/>
+And half in wraththe he bad hire go.<br/>
+Bot yit sche wolde noght do so,    1690<br/>
+And in the derke forth sche goth,<br/>
+Til sche him toucheth, and he wroth,<br/>
+And after hire with his hond<br/>
+He smot: and thus whan sche him fond<br/>
+Desesed, courtaisly sche saide,<br/>
+“Avoi, mi lord, I am a Maide;<br/>
+And if ye wiste what I am,<br/>
+And out of what lignage I cam,<br/>
+Ye wolde noght be so salvage.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he sobreth his corage    1700<br/>
+And put awey his hevy chiere.<br/>
+Bot of hem tuo a man mai liere<br/>
+What is to be so sibb of blod:<br/>
+Non wiste of other hou it stod,<br/>
+And yit the fader ate laste<br/>
+His herte upon this maide caste,<br/>
+That he hire loveth kindely,<br/>
+And yit he wiste nevere why.<br/>
+Bot al was knowe er that thei wente;<br/>
+For god, which wot here hol entente,    1710<br/>
+Here hertes bothe anon descloseth.<br/>
+This king unto this maide opposeth,<br/>
+And axeth ferst what was hire name,<br/>
+And wher sche lerned al this game,<br/>
+And of what ken that sche was come.<br/>
+And sche, that hath hise wordes nome,<br/>
+Ansuerth and seith, “My name is Thaise,<br/>
+That was som time wel at aise:<br/>
+In Tharse I was forthdrawe and fed,<br/>
+Ther lerned I, til I was sped,    1720<br/>
+Of that I can. Mi fader eke<br/>
+I not wher that I scholde him seke;<br/>
+He was a king, men tolde me:<br/>
+Mi Moder dreint was in the See.”<br/>
+Fro point to point al sche him tolde,<br/>
+That sche hath longe in herte holde,<br/>
+And nevere dorste make hir mone<br/>
+Bot only to this lord al one,<br/>
+To whom hire herte can noght hele,<br/>
+Torne it to wo, torne it to wele,    1730<br/>
+Torne it to good, torne it to harm.<br/>
+And he tho toke hire in his arm,<br/>
+Bot such a joie as he tho made<br/>
+Was nevere sen; thus be thei glade,<br/>
+That sory hadden be toforn.<br/>
+Fro this day forth fortune hath sworn<br/>
+To sette him upward on the whiel;<br/>
+So goth the world, now wo, now wel:<br/>
+This king hath founde newe grace,<br/>
+So that out of his derke place    1740<br/>
+He goth him up into the liht,<br/>
+And with him cam that swete wiht,<br/>
+His doghter Thaise, and forth anon<br/>
+Thei bothe into the Caban gon<br/>
+Which was ordeigned for the king,<br/>
+And ther he dede of al his thing,<br/>
+And was arraied realy.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And out he cam al openly,<br/>
+Wher Athenagoras he fond,<br/>
+The which was lord of al the lond:    1750<br/>
+He preith the king to come and se<br/>
+His castell bothe and his cite,<br/>
+And thus thei gon forth alle in fiere,<br/>
+This king, this lord, this maiden diere.<br/>
+This lord tho made hem riche feste<br/>
+With every thing which was honeste,<br/>
+To plese with this worthi king,<br/>
+Ther lacketh him no maner thing:<br/>
+Bot yit for al his noble array<br/>
+Wifles he was into that day,    1760<br/>
+As he that yit was of yong Age;<br/>
+So fell ther into his corage<br/>
+The lusti wo, the glade peine<br/>
+Of love, which noman restreigne<br/>
+Yit nevere myhte as nou tofore.<br/>
+This lord thenkth al his world forlore,<br/>
+Bot if the king wol don him grace;<br/>
+He waiteth time, he waiteth place,<br/>
+Him thoghte his herte wol tobreke,<br/>
+Til he mai to this maide speke    1770<br/>
+And to hir fader ek also<br/>
+For mariage: and it fell so,<br/>
+That al was do riht as he thoghte,<br/>
+His pourpos to an ende he broghte,<br/>
+Sche weddeth him as for hire lord;<br/>
+Thus be thei alle of on acord.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan al was do riht as thei wolde,<br/>
+The king unto his Sone tolde<br/>
+Of Tharse thilke traiterie,<br/>
+And seide hou in his compaignie    1780<br/>
+His doghter and himselven eke<br/>
+Schull go vengance forto seke.<br/>
+The Schipes were redy sone,<br/>
+And whan thei sihe it was to done,<br/>
+Withoute lette of eny wente<br/>
+With Seil updrawe forth thei wente<br/>
+Towardes Tharse upon the tyde.<br/>
+Bot he that wot what schal betide,<br/>
+The hihe god, which wolde him kepe,<br/>
+Whan that this king was faste aslepe,    1790<br/>
+Be nyhtes time he hath him bede<br/>
+To seile into an other stede:<br/>
+To Ephesim he bad him drawe,<br/>
+And as it was that time lawe,<br/>
+He schal do there his sacrifise;<br/>
+And ek he bad in alle wise<br/>
+That in the temple amonges alle<br/>
+His fortune, as it is befalle,<br/>
+Touchende his doghter and his wif<br/>
+He schal beknowe upon his lif.    1800<br/>
+The king of this Avisioun<br/>
+Hath gret ymaginacioun,<br/>
+What thing it signefie may;<br/>
+And natheles, whan it was day,<br/>
+He bad caste Ancher and abod;<br/>
+And whil that he on Ancher rod,<br/>
+The wynd, which was tofore strange,<br/>
+Upon the point began to change,<br/>
+And torneth thider as it scholde.<br/>
+Tho knew he wel that god it wolde,    1810<br/>
+And bad the Maister make him yare,<br/>
+Tofor the wynd for he wol fare<br/>
+To Ephesim, and so he dede.<br/>
+And whanne he cam unto the stede<br/>
+Where as he scholde londe, he londeth<br/>
+With al the haste he may, and fondeth<br/>
+To schapen him be such a wise,<br/>
+That he may be the morwe arise<br/>
+And don after the mandement<br/>
+Of him which hath him thider sent.    1820<br/>
+And in the wise that he thoghte,<br/>
+Upon the morwe so he wroghte;<br/>
+His doghter and his Sone he nom,<br/>
+And forth unto the temple he com<br/>
+With a gret route in compaignie,<br/>
+Hise yiftes forto sacrifie.<br/>
+The citezeins tho herden seie<br/>
+Of such a king that cam to preie<br/>
+Unto Diane the godesse,<br/>
+And left al other besinesse,    1830<br/>
+Thei comen thider forto se<br/>
+The king and the solempnete.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With worthi knyhtes environed<br/>
+The king himself hath abandoned<br/>
+Into the temple in good entente.<br/>
+The dore is up, and he in wente,<br/>
+Wher as with gret devocioun<br/>
+Of holi contemplacioun<br/>
+Withinne his herte he made his schrifte;<br/>
+And after that a riche yifte    1840<br/>
+He offreth with gret reverence,<br/>
+And there in open Audience<br/>
+Of hem that stoden thanne aboute,<br/>
+He tolde hem and declareth oute<br/>
+His hap, such as him is befalle,<br/>
+Ther was nothing foryete of alle.<br/>
+His wif, as it was goddes grace,<br/>
+Which was professed in the place,<br/>
+As sche that was Abbesse there,<br/>
+Unto his tale hath leid hire Ere:    1850<br/>
+Sche knew the vois and the visage,<br/>
+For pure joie as in a rage<br/>
+Sche strawhte unto him al at ones,<br/>
+And fell aswoune upon the stones,<br/>
+Wherof the temple flor was paved.<br/>
+Sche was anon with water laved,<br/>
+Til sche cam to hirself ayein,<br/>
+And thanne sche began to sein:<br/>
+“Ha, blessed be the hihe sonde,<br/>
+That I mai se myn housebonde,    1860<br/>
+That whilom he and I were on!”<br/>
+The king with that knew hire anon,<br/>
+And tok hire in his Arm and kiste;<br/>
+And al the toun thus sone it wiste.<br/>
+Tho was ther joie manyfold,<br/>
+For every man this tale hath told<br/>
+As for miracle, and were glade,<br/>
+Bot nevere man such joie made<br/>
+As doth the king, which hath his wif.<br/>
+And whan men herde hou that hir lif    1870<br/>
+Was saved, and be whom it was,<br/>
+Thei wondren alle of such a cas:<br/>
+Thurgh al the Lond aros the speche<br/>
+Of Maister Cerymon the leche<br/>
+And of the cure which he dede.<br/>
+The king himself tho hath him bede,<br/>
+And ek this queene forth with him,<br/>
+That he the toun of Ephesim<br/>
+Wol leve and go wher as thei be,<br/>
+For nevere man of his degre    1880<br/>
+Hath do to hem so mochel good;<br/>
+And he his profit understod,<br/>
+And granteth with hem forto wende.<br/>
+And thus thei maden there an ende,<br/>
+And token leve and gon to Schipe<br/>
+With al the hole felaschipe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This king, which nou hath his desir,<br/>
+Seith he wol holde his cours to Tyr.<br/>
+Thei hadden wynd at wille tho,<br/>
+With topseilcole and forth they go,    1890<br/>
+And striken nevere, til thei come<br/>
+To Tyr, where as thei havene nome,<br/>
+And londen hem with mochel blisse.<br/>
+Tho was ther many a mowth to kisse,<br/>
+Echon welcometh other hom,<br/>
+Bot whan the queen to londe com,<br/>
+And Thaise hir doghter be hir side,<br/>
+The joie which was thilke tyde<br/>
+Ther mai no mannes tunge telle:<br/>
+Thei seiden alle, “Hier comth the welle    1900<br/>
+Of alle wommannysshe grace.”<br/>
+The king hath take his real place,<br/>
+The queene is into chambre go:<br/>
+Ther was gret feste arraied tho;<br/>
+Whan time was, thei gon to mete,<br/>
+Alle olde sorwes ben foryete,<br/>
+And gladen hem with joies newe:<br/>
+The descoloured pale hewe<br/>
+Is now become a rody cheke,<br/>
+Ther was no merthe forto seke,    1910<br/>
+Bot every man hath that he wolde.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king, as he wel couthe and scholde,<br/>
+Makth to his poeple riht good chiere;<br/>
+And after sone, as thou schalt hiere,<br/>
+A parlement he hath sommoned,<br/>
+Wher he his doghter hath coroned<br/>
+Forth with the lord of Mitelene,<br/>
+That on is king, that other queene:<br/>
+And thus the fadres ordinance<br/>
+This lond hath set in governance,    1920<br/>
+And seide thanne he wolde wende<br/>
+To Tharse, forto make an ende<br/>
+Of that his doghter was betraied.<br/>
+Therof were alle men wel paied,<br/>
+And seide hou it was forto done:<br/>
+The Schipes weren redi sone,<br/>
+And strong pouer with him he tok;<br/>
+Up to the Sky he caste his lok,<br/>
+And syh the wynd was covenable.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thei hale up Ancher with the cable,    1930<br/>
+The Seil on hih, the Stiere in honde,<br/>
+And seilen, til thei come alonde<br/>
+At Tharse nyh to the cite;<br/>
+And whan thei wisten it was he,<br/>
+The toun hath don him reverence.<br/>
+He telleth hem the violence,<br/>
+Which the tretour Strangulio<br/>
+And Dionise him hadde do<br/>
+Touchende his dowhter, as yee herde;<br/>
+And whan thei wiste hou that it ferde,    1940<br/>
+As he which pes and love soghte,<br/>
+Unto the toun this he besoghte,<br/>
+To don him riht in juggement.<br/>
+Anon thei were bothe asent<br/>
+With strengthe of men, and comen sone,<br/>
+And as hem thoghte it was to done,<br/>
+Atteint thei were be the lawe<br/>
+And diemed forto honge and drawe,<br/>
+And brent and with the wynd toblowe,<br/>
+That al the world it myhte knowe:    1950<br/>
+And upon this condicion<br/>
+The dom in execucion<br/>
+Was put anon withoute faile.<br/>
+And every man hath gret mervaile,<br/>
+Which herde tellen of this chance,<br/>
+And thonketh goddes pourveance,<br/>
+Which doth mercy forth with justice.<br/>
+Slain is the moerdrer and moerdrice<br/>
+Thurgh verray trowthe of rihtwisnesse,<br/>
+And thurgh mercy sauf is simplesse    1960<br/>
+Of hire whom mercy preserveth;<br/>
+Thus hath he wel that wel deserveth.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan al this thing is don and ended,<br/>
+This king, which loved was and frended,<br/>
+A lettre hath, which cam to him<br/>
+Be Schipe fro Pentapolim,<br/>
+Be which the lond hath to him write,<br/>
+That he wolde understonde and wite<br/>
+Hou in good mynde and in good pes<br/>
+Ded is the king Artestrates,    1970<br/>
+Wherof thei alle of on acord<br/>
+Him preiden, as here liege lord,<br/>
+That he the lettre wel conceive<br/>
+And come his regne to receive,<br/>
+Which god hath yove him and fortune;<br/>
+And thus besoghte the commune<br/>
+Forth with the grete lordes alle.<br/>
+This king sih how it was befalle,<br/>
+Fro Tharse and in prosperite<br/>
+He tok his leve of that Cite    1980<br/>
+And goth him into Schipe ayein:<br/>
+The wynd was good, the See was plein,<br/>
+Hem nedeth noght a Riff to slake,<br/>
+Til thei Pentapolim have take.<br/>
+The lond, which herde of that tidinge,<br/>
+Was wonder glad of his cominge;<br/>
+He resteth him a day or tuo<br/>
+And tok his conseil to him tho,<br/>
+And sette a time of Parlement,<br/>
+Wher al the lond of on assent    1990<br/>
+Forth with his wif hath him corouned,<br/>
+Wher alle goode him was fuisouned.<br/>
+Lo, what it is to be wel grounded:<br/>
+For he hath ferst his love founded<br/>
+Honesteliche as forto wedde,<br/>
+Honesteliche his love he spedde<br/>
+And hadde children with his wif,<br/>
+And as him liste he ladde his lif;<br/>
+And in ensample his lif was write,<br/>
+That alle lovers myhten wite    2000<br/>
+How ate laste it schal be sene<br/>
+Of love what thei wolden mene.<br/>
+For se now on that other side,<br/>
+Antiochus with al his Pride,<br/>
+Which sette his love unkindely,<br/>
+His ende he hadde al sodeinly,<br/>
+Set ayein kinde upon vengance,<br/>
+And for his lust hath his penance.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo thus, mi Sone, myht thou liere<br/>
+What is to love in good manere,    2010<br/>
+And what to love in other wise:<br/>
+The mede arist of the servise;<br/>
+Fortune, thogh sche be noght stable,<br/>
+Yit at som time is favorable<br/>
+To hem that ben of love trewe.<br/>
+Bot certes it is forto rewe<br/>
+To se love ayein kinde falle,<br/>
+For that makth sore a man to falle,<br/>
+As thou myht of tofore rede.<br/>
+Forthi, my Sone, I wolde rede    2020<br/>
+To lete al other love aweie,<br/>
+Bot if it be thurgh such a weie<br/>
+As love and reson wolde acorde.<br/>
+For elles, if that thou descorde,<br/>
+And take lust as doth a beste,<br/>
+Thi love mai noght ben honeste;<br/>
+For be no skile that I finde<br/>
+Such lust is noght of loves kinde.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, hou so that it stonde,<br/>
+Youre tale is herd and understonde,    2030<br/>
+As thing which worthi is to hiere,<br/>
+Of gret ensample and gret matiere,<br/>
+Wherof, my fader, god you quyte.<br/>
+Bot in this point miself aquite<br/>
+I mai riht wel, that nevere yit<br/>
+I was assoted in my wit,<br/>
+Bot only in that worthi place<br/>
+Wher alle lust and alle grace<br/>
+Is set, if that danger ne were.<br/>
+Bot that is al my moste fere:    2040<br/>
+I not what ye fortune acompte,<br/>
+Bot what thing danger mai amonte<br/>
+I wot wel, for I have assaied;<br/>
+For whan myn herte is best arraied<br/>
+And I have al my wit thurghsoght<br/>
+Of love to beseche hire oght,<br/>
+For al that evere I skile may,<br/>
+I am concluded with a nay:<br/>
+That o sillable hath overthrowe<br/>
+A thousend wordes on a rowe    2050<br/>
+Of suche as I best speke can;<br/>
+Thus am I bot a lewed man.<br/>
+Bot, fader, for ye ben a clerk<br/>
+Of love, and this matiere is derk,<br/>
+And I can evere leng the lasse,<br/>
+Bot yit I mai noght let it passe,<br/>
+Youre hole conseil I beseche,<br/>
+That ye me be som weie teche<br/>
+What is my beste, as for an ende.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi Sone, unto the trouthe wende    2060<br/>
+Now wol I for the love of thee,<br/>
+And lete alle othre truffles be.<br/>
+The more that the nede is hyh,<br/>
+The more it nedeth to be slyh<br/>
+To him which hath the nede on honde.<br/>
+I have wel herd and understonde,<br/>
+Mi Sone, al that thou hast me seid,<br/>
+And ek of that thou hast me preid,<br/>
+Nou at this time that I schal<br/>
+As for conclusioun final    2070<br/>
+Conseile upon thi nede sette:<br/>
+So thenke I finaly to knette<br/>
+This cause, where it is tobroke,<br/>
+And make an ende of that is spoke.<br/>
+For I behihte thee that yifte<br/>
+Ferst whan thou come under my schrifte,<br/>
+That thogh I toward Venus were,<br/>
+Yit spak I suche wordes there,<br/>
+That for the Presthod which I have,<br/>
+Min ordre and min astat to save,    2080<br/>
+I seide I wolde of myn office<br/>
+To vertu more than to vice<br/>
+Encline, and teche thee mi lore.<br/>
+Forthi to speken overmore<br/>
+Of love, which thee mai availe,<br/>
+Tak love where it mai noght faile:<br/>
+For as of this which thou art inne,<br/>
+Be that thou seist it is a Sinne,<br/>
+And Sinne mai no pris deserve,<br/>
+Withoute pris and who schal serve,    2090<br/>
+I not what profit myhte availe.<br/>
+Thus folweth it, if thou travaile,<br/>
+Wher thou no profit hast ne pris,<br/>
+Thou art toward thiself unwis:<br/>
+And sett thou myhtest lust atteigne,<br/>
+Of every lust thende is a peine,<br/>
+And every peine is good to fle;<br/>
+So it is wonder thing to se,<br/>
+Why such a thing schal be desired.<br/>
+The more that a Stock is fyred,    2100<br/>
+The rathere into Aisshe it torneth;<br/>
+The fot which in the weie sporneth<br/>
+Fulofte his heved hath overthrowe;<br/>
+Thus love is blind and can noght knowe<br/>
+Wher that he goth, til he be falle:<br/>
+Forthi, bot if it so befalle<br/>
+With good conseil that he be lad,<br/>
+Him oghte forto ben adrad.<br/>
+For conseil passeth alle thing<br/>
+To him which thenkth to ben a king;    2110<br/>
+And every man for his partie<br/>
+A kingdom hath to justefie,<br/>
+That is to sein his oghne dom.<br/>
+If he misreule that kingdom,<br/>
+He lest himself, and that is more<br/>
+Than if he loste Schip and Ore<br/>
+And al the worldes good withal:<br/>
+For what man that in special<br/>
+Hath noght himself, he hath noght elles,<br/>
+Nomor the perles than the schelles;    2120<br/>
+Al is to him of o value:<br/>
+Thogh he hadde at his retenue<br/>
+The wyde world ryht as he wolde,<br/>
+Whan he his herte hath noght withholde<br/>
+Toward himself, al is in vein.<br/>
+And thus, my Sone, I wolde sein,<br/>
+As I seide er, that thou aryse,<br/>
+Er that thou falle in such a wise<br/>
+That thou ne myht thiself rekevere;<br/>
+For love, which that blind was evere,    2130<br/>
+Makth alle his servantz blinde also.<br/>
+My Sone, and if thou have be so,<br/>
+Yit is it time to withdrawe,<br/>
+And set thin herte under that lawe,<br/>
+The which of reson is governed<br/>
+And noght of will. And to be lerned,<br/>
+Ensamples thou hast many on<br/>
+Of now and ek of time gon,<br/>
+That every lust is bot a while;<br/>
+And who that wole himself beguile,    2140<br/>
+He may the rathere be deceived.<br/>
+Mi Sone, now thou hast conceived<br/>
+Somwhat of that I wolde mene;<br/>
+Hierafterward it schal be sene<br/>
+If that thou lieve upon mi lore;<br/>
+For I can do to thee nomore<br/>
+Bot teche thee the rihte weie:<br/>
+Now ches if thou wolt live or deie.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mi fader, so as I have herd<br/>
+Your tale, bot it were ansuerd,    2150<br/>
+I were mochel forto blame.<br/>
+Mi wo to you is bot a game,<br/>
+That fielen noght of that I fiele;<br/>
+The fielinge of a mannes Hiele<br/>
+Mai noght be likned to the Herte:<br/>
+I mai noght, thogh I wolde, asterte,<br/>
+And ye be fre from al the peine<br/>
+Of love, wherof I me pleigne.<br/>
+It is riht esi to comaunde;<br/>
+The hert which fre goth on the launde    2160<br/>
+Not of an Oxe what him eileth;<br/>
+It falleth ofte a man merveileth<br/>
+Of that he seth an other fare,<br/>
+Bot if he knewe himself the fare,<br/>
+And felt it as it is in soth,<br/>
+He scholde don riht as he doth,<br/>
+Or elles werse in his degre:<br/>
+For wel I wot, and so do ye,<br/>
+That love hath evere yit ben used,<br/>
+So mot I nedes ben excused.    2170<br/>
+Bot, fader, if ye wolde thus<br/>
+Unto Cupide and to Venus<br/>
+Be frendlich toward mi querele,<br/>
+So that myn herte were in hele<br/>
+Of love which is in mi briest,<br/>
+I wot wel thanne a betre Prest<br/>
+Was nevere mad to my behove.<br/>
+Bot al the whiles that I hove<br/>
+In noncertein betwen the tuo,<br/>
+And not if I to wel or wo    2180<br/>
+Schal torne, that is al my drede,<br/>
+So that I not what is to rede.<br/>
+Bot for final conclusion<br/>
+I thenke a Supplicacion<br/>
+With pleine wordes and expresse<br/>
+Wryte unto Venus the goddesse,<br/>
+The which I preie you to bere<br/>
+And bringe ayein a good ansuere.<br/>
+Tho was betwen mi Prest and me<br/>
+Debat and gret perplexete:    2190<br/>
+Mi resoun understod him wel,<br/>
+And knew it was sothe everydel<br/>
+That he hath seid, bot noght forthi<br/>
+Mi will hath nothing set therby.<br/>
+For techinge of so wis a port<br/>
+Is unto love of no desport;<br/>
+Yit myhte nevere man beholde<br/>
+Reson, wher love was withholde,<br/>
+Thei be noght of o governance.<br/>
+And thus we fellen in distance,    2200<br/>
+Mi Prest and I, bot I spak faire,<br/>
+And thurgh mi wordes debonaire<br/>
+Thanne ate laste we acorden,<br/>
+So that he seith he wol recorden<br/>
+To speke and stonde upon mi syde<br/>
+To Venus bothe and to Cupide;<br/>
+And bad me wryte what I wolde,<br/>
+And seith me trewly that he scholde<br/>
+Mi lettre bere unto the queene.<br/>
+And I sat doun upon the grene    2210<br/>
+Fulfilt of loves fantasie,<br/>
+And with the teres of myn ije<br/>
+In stede of enke I gan to wryte<br/>
+The wordes whiche I wolde endite<br/>
+Unto Cupide and to Venus,<br/>
+And in mi lettre I seide thus.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wofull peine of loves maladie,<br/>
+Ayein the which mai no phisique availe,<br/>
+Min herte hath so bewhaped with sotie,<br/>
+That wher so that I reste or I travaile,    2220<br/>
+I finde it evere redy to assaile<br/>
+Mi resoun, which that can him noght defende:<br/>
+Thus seche I help, wherof I mihte amende.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Ferst to Nature if that I me compleigne,<br/>
+Ther finde I hou that every creature<br/>
+Som time ayer hath love in his demeine,<br/>
+So that the litel wrenne in his mesure<br/>
+Hath yit of kinde a love under his cure;<br/>
+And I bot on desire, of which I misse:<br/>
+And thus, bot I, hath every kinde his blisse.    2230<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+The resoun of my wit it overpasseth,<br/>
+Of that Nature techeth me the weie<br/>
+To love, and yit no certein sche compasseth<br/>
+Hou I schal spede, and thus betwen the tweie<br/>
+I stonde, and not if I schal live or deie.<br/>
+For thogh reson ayein my will debate,<br/>
+I mai noght fle, that I ne love algate.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Upon miself is thilke tale come,<br/>
+Hou whilom Pan, which is the god of kinde,<br/>
+With love wrastlede and was overcome:    2240<br/>
+For evere I wrastle and evere I am behinde,<br/>
+That I no strengthe in al min herte finde,<br/>
+Wherof that I mai stonden eny throwe;<br/>
+So fer mi wit with love is overthrowe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Whom nedeth help, he mot his helpe crave,<br/>
+Or helpeles he schal his nede spille:<br/>
+Pleinly thurghsoght my wittes alle I have,<br/>
+Bot non of hem can helpe after mi wille;<br/>
+And als so wel I mihte sitte stille,<br/>
+As preie unto mi lady eny helpe:    2250<br/>
+Thus wot I noght wherof miself to helpe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Unto the grete Jove and if I bidde,<br/>
+To do me grace of thilke swete tunne,<br/>
+Which under keie in his celier amidde<br/>
+Lith couched, that fortune is overrunne,<br/>
+Bot of the bitter cuppe I have begunne,<br/>
+I not hou ofte, and thus finde I no game;<br/>
+For evere I axe and evere it is the same.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I se the world stonde evere upon eschange,<br/>
+Nou wyndes loude, and nou the weder softe;    2260<br/>
+I mai sen ek the grete mone change,<br/>
+And thing which nou is lowe is eft alofte;<br/>
+The dredfull werres into pes fulofte<br/>
+Thei torne; and evere is Danger in o place,<br/>
+Which wol noght change his will to do me grace.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Bot upon this the grete clerc Ovide,<br/>
+Of love whan he makth his remembrance,<br/>
+He seith ther is the blinde god Cupide,<br/>
+The which hath love under his governance,<br/>
+And in his hond with many a fyri lance    2270<br/>
+He woundeth ofte, ther he wol noght hele;<br/>
+And that somdiel is cause of mi querele.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Ovide ek seith that love to parforne<br/>
+Stant in the hond of Venus the goddesse,<br/>
+Bot whan sche takth hir conseil with Satorne,<br/>
+Ther is no grace, and in that time, I gesse,<br/>
+Began mi love, of which myn hevynesse<br/>
+Is now and evere schal, bot if I spede:<br/>
+So wot I noght miself what is to rede.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Forthi to you, Cupide and Venus bothe,    2280<br/>
+With al myn hertes obeissance I preie,<br/>
+If ye were ate ferste time wrothe,<br/>
+Whan I began to love, as I you seie,<br/>
+Nou stynt, and do thilke infortune aweie,<br/>
+So that Danger, which stant of retenue<br/>
+With my ladi, his place mai remue.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+O thou Cupide, god of loves lawe,<br/>
+That with thi Dart brennende hast set afyre<br/>
+Min herte, do that wounde be withdrawe,<br/>
+Or yif me Salve such as I desire:    2290<br/>
+For Service in thi Court withouten hyre<br/>
+To me, which evere yit have kept thin heste,<br/>
+Mai nevere be to loves lawe honeste.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+O thou, gentile Venus, loves queene,<br/>
+Withoute gult thou dost on me thi wreche;<br/>
+Thou wost my peine is evere aliche grene<br/>
+For love, and yit I mai it noght areche:<br/>
+This wold I for my laste word beseche,<br/>
+That thou mi love aquite as I deserve,<br/>
+Or elles do me pleinly forto sterve.    2300<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whanne I this Supplicacioun<br/>
+With good deliberacioun,<br/>
+In such a wise as ye nou wite,<br/>
+Hadde after min entente write<br/>
+Unto Cupide and to Venus,<br/>
+This Prest which hihte Genius<br/>
+It tok on honde to presente,<br/>
+On my message and forth he wente<br/>
+To Venus, forto wite hire wille.<br/>
+And I bod in the place stille,    2310<br/>
+And was there bot a litel while,<br/>
+Noght full the montance of a Mile,<br/>
+Whan I behield and sodeinly<br/>
+I sih wher Venus stod me by.<br/>
+So as I myhte, under a tre<br/>
+To grounde I fell upon mi kne,<br/>
+And preide hire forto do me grace:<br/>
+Sche caste hire chiere upon mi face,<br/>
+And as it were halvinge a game<br/>
+Sche axeth me what is mi name.    2320<br/>
+“Ma dame,” I seide, “John Gower.”<br/>
+“Now John,” quod sche, “in my pouer<br/>
+Thou most as of thi love stonde;<br/>
+For I thi bille have understonde,<br/>
+In which to Cupide and to me<br/>
+Somdiel thou hast compleigned thee,<br/>
+And somdiel to Nature also.<br/>
+Bot that schal stonde among you tuo,<br/>
+For therof have I noght to done;<br/>
+For Nature is under the Mone    2330<br/>
+Maistresse of every lives kinde,<br/>
+Bot if so be that sche mai finde<br/>
+Som holy man that wol withdrawe<br/>
+His kindly lust ayein hir lawe;<br/>
+Bot sielde whanne it falleth so,<br/>
+For fewe men ther ben of tho,<br/>
+Bot of these othre ynowe be,<br/>
+Whiche of here oghne nycete<br/>
+Ayein Nature and hire office<br/>
+Deliten hem in sondri vice,    2340<br/>
+Wherof that sche fulofte hath pleigned,<br/>
+And ek my Court it hath desdeigned<br/>
+And evere schal; for it receiveth<br/>
+Non such that kinde so deceiveth.<br/>
+For al onliche of gentil love<br/>
+Mi court stant alle courtz above<br/>
+And takth noght into retenue<br/>
+Bot thing which is to kinde due,<br/>
+For elles it schal be refused.<br/>
+Wherof I holde thee excused,    2350<br/>
+For it is manye daies gon,<br/>
+That thou amonges hem were on<br/>
+Which of my court hast ben withholde;<br/>
+So that the more I am beholde<br/>
+Of thi desese to commune,<br/>
+And to remue that fortune,<br/>
+Which manye daies hath the grieved.<br/>
+Bot if my conseil mai be lieved,<br/>
+Thou schalt ben esed er thou go<br/>
+Of thilke unsely jolif wo,    2360<br/>
+Wherof thou seist thin herte is fyred:<br/>
+Bot as of that thou hast desired<br/>
+After the sentence of thi bille,<br/>
+Thou most therof don at my wille,<br/>
+And I therof me wole avise.<br/>
+For be thou hol, it schal suffise:<br/>
+Mi medicine is noght to sieke<br/>
+For thee and for suche olde sieke,<br/>
+Noght al per chance as ye it wolden,<br/>
+Bot so as ye be reson scholden,    2370<br/>
+Acordant unto loves kinde.<br/>
+For in the plit which I thee finde,<br/>
+So as mi court it hath awarded,<br/>
+Thou schalt be duely rewarded;<br/>
+And if thou woldest more crave,<br/>
+It is no riht that thou it have.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Venus, which stant withoute lawe<br/>
+In noncertein, bot as men drawe<br/>
+Of Rageman upon the chance,<br/>
+Sche leith no peis in the balance,    2380<br/>
+Bot as hir lyketh forto weie;<br/>
+The trewe man fulofte aweie<br/>
+Sche put, which hath hir grace bede,<br/>
+And set an untrewe in his stede.<br/>
+Lo, thus blindly the world sche diemeth<br/>
+In loves cause, as tome siemeth:<br/>
+I not what othre men wol sein,<br/>
+Bot I algate am so besein,<br/>
+And stonde as on amonges alle<br/>
+Which am out of hir grace falle:    2390<br/>
+It nedeth take no witnesse,<br/>
+For sche which seid is the goddesse,<br/>
+To whether part of love it wende,<br/>
+Hath sett me for a final ende<br/>
+The point wherto that I schal holde.<br/>
+For whan sche hath me wel beholde,<br/>
+Halvynge of scorn, sche seide thus:<br/>
+“Thou wost wel that I am Venus,<br/>
+Which al only my lustes seche;<br/>
+And wel I wot, thogh thou beseche    2400<br/>
+Mi love, lustes ben ther none,<br/>
+Whiche I mai take in thi persone;<br/>
+For loves lust and lockes hore<br/>
+In chambre acorden neveremore,<br/>
+And thogh thou feigne a yong corage,<br/>
+It scheweth wel be the visage<br/>
+That olde grisel is no fole:<br/>
+There ben fulmanye yeres stole<br/>
+With thee and with suche othre mo,<br/>
+That outward feignen youthe so    2410<br/>
+And ben withinne of pore assay.<br/>
+Min herte wolde and I ne may<br/>
+Is noght beloved nou adayes;<br/>
+Er thou make eny suche assaies<br/>
+To love, and faile upon the fet,<br/>
+Betre is to make a beau retret;<br/>
+For thogh thou myhtest love atteigne,<br/>
+Yit were it bot an ydel peine,<br/>
+Whan that thou art noght sufficant<br/>
+To holde love his covenant.    2420<br/>
+Forthi tak hom thin herte ayein,<br/>
+That thou travaile noght in vein,<br/>
+Wherof my Court may be deceived.<br/>
+I wot and have it wel conceived,<br/>
+Hou that thi will is good ynowh;<br/>
+Bot mor behoveth to the plowh,<br/>
+Wherof the lacketh, as I trowe:<br/>
+So sitte it wel that thou beknowe<br/>
+Thi fieble astat, er thou beginne<br/>
+Thing wher thou miht non ende winne.    2430<br/>
+What bargain scholde a man assaie,<br/>
+Whan that him lacketh forto paie?<br/>
+Mi Sone, if thou be wel bethoght,<br/>
+This toucheth thee; foryet it noght:<br/>
+The thing is torned into was;<br/>
+That which was whilom grene gras,<br/>
+Is welked hey at time now.<br/>
+Forthi mi conseil is that thou<br/>
+Remembre wel hou thou art old.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whan Venus hath hir tale told,    2440<br/>
+And I bethoght was al aboute,<br/>
+Tho wiste I wel withoute doute,<br/>
+That ther was no recoverir;<br/>
+And as a man the blase of fyr<br/>
+With water quencheth, so ferd I;<br/>
+A cold me cawhte sodeinly,<br/>
+For sorwe that myn herte made<br/>
+Mi dedly face pale and fade<br/>
+Becam, and swoune I fell to grounde.<br/>
+And as I lay the same stounde,    2450<br/>
+Ne fully quik ne fully ded,<br/>
+Me thoghte I sih tofor myn hed<br/>
+Cupide with his bowe bent,<br/>
+And lich unto a Parlement,<br/>
+Which were ordeigned for the nones,<br/>
+With him cam al the world at ones<br/>
+Of gentil folk that whilom were<br/>
+Lovers, I sih hem alle there<br/>
+Forth with Cupide in sondri routes.<br/>
+Min yhe and as I caste aboutes,    2460<br/>
+To knowe among hem who was who,<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sih wher lusty Youthe tho,<br/>
+As he which was a Capitein,<br/>
+Tofore alle othre upon the plein<br/>
+Stod with his route wel begon,<br/>
+Here hevedes kempt, and therupon<br/>
+Garlandes noght of o colour,<br/>
+Some of the lef, some of the flour,<br/>
+And some of grete Perles were;<br/>
+The newe guise of Beawme there,    2470<br/>
+With sondri thinges wel devised,<br/>
+I sih, wherof thei ben queintised.<br/>
+It was al lust that thei with ferde,<br/>
+Ther was no song that I ne herde,<br/>
+Which unto love was touchende;<br/>
+Of Pan and al that was likende<br/>
+As in Pipinge of melodie<br/>
+Was herd in thilke compaignie<br/>
+So lowde, that on every side<br/>
+It thoghte as al the hevene cride    2480<br/>
+In such acord and such a soun<br/>
+Of bombard and of clarion<br/>
+With Cornemuse and Schallemele,<br/>
+That it was half a mannes hele<br/>
+So glad a noise forto hiere.<br/>
+And as me thoghte, in this manere<br/>
+Al freissh I syh hem springe and dance,<br/>
+And do to love her entendance<br/>
+After the lust of youthes heste.<br/>
+Ther was ynowh of joie and feste,    2490<br/>
+For evere among thei laghe and pleie,<br/>
+And putten care out of the weie,<br/>
+That he with hem ne sat ne stod.<br/>
+And overthis I understod,<br/>
+So as myn Ere it myhte areche,<br/>
+The moste matiere of her speche<br/>
+Was al of knyhthod and of Armes,<br/>
+And what it is to ligge in armes<br/>
+With love, whanne it is achieved.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ther was Tristram, which was believed    2500<br/>
+With bele Ysolde, and Lancelot<br/>
+Stod with Gunnore, and Galahot<br/>
+With his ladi, and as me thoghte,<br/>
+I syh wher Jason with him broghte<br/>
+His love, which that Creusa hihte,<br/>
+And Hercules, which mochel myhte,<br/>
+Was ther berende his grete Mace,<br/>
+And most of alle in thilke place<br/>
+He peyneth him to make chiere<br/>
+With Eolen, which was him diere.    2510<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theseüs, thogh he were untrewe<br/>
+To love, as alle wommen knewe,<br/>
+Yit was he there natheles<br/>
+With Phedra, whom to love he ches:<br/>
+Of Grece ek ther was Thelamon,<br/>
+Which fro the king Lamenedon<br/>
+At Troie his doghter refte aweie,<br/>
+Eseonen, as for his preie,<br/>
+Which take was whan Jason cam<br/>
+Fro Colchos, and the Cite nam    2520<br/>
+In vengance of the ferste hate;<br/>
+That made hem after to debate,<br/>
+Whan Priamus the newe toun<br/>
+Hath mad. And in avisioun<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me thoghte that I sih also<br/>
+Ector forth with his brethren tuo;<br/>
+Himself stod with Pantaselee,<br/>
+And next to him I myhte se,<br/>
+Wher Paris stod with faire Eleine,<br/>
+Which was his joie sovereine;    2530<br/>
+And Troilus stod with Criseide,<br/>
+Bot evere among, althogh he pleide,<br/>
+Be semblant he was hevy chiered,<br/>
+For Diomede, as him was liered,<br/>
+Cleymeth to ben his parconner.<br/>
+And thus full many a bacheler,<br/>
+A thousend mo than I can sein,<br/>
+With Yowthe I sih ther wel besein<br/>
+Forth with here loves glade and blithe.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And some I sih whiche ofte sithe    2540<br/>
+Compleignen hem in other wise;<br/>
+Among the whiche I syh Narcise<br/>
+And Piramus, that sory were.<br/>
+The worthy Grek also was there,<br/>
+Achilles, which for love deide:<br/>
+Agamenon ek, as men seide,<br/>
+And Menelay the king also<br/>
+I syh, with many an other mo,<br/>
+Which hadden be fortuned sore<br/>
+In loves cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And overmore    2550<br/>
+Of wommen in the same cas,<br/>
+With hem I sih wher Dido was,<br/>
+Forsake which was with Enee;<br/>
+And Phillis ek I myhte see,<br/>
+Whom Demephon deceived hadde;<br/>
+And Adriagne hir sorwe ladde,<br/>
+For Theseüs hir Soster tok<br/>
+And hire unkindely forsok.<br/>
+I sih ther ek among the press<br/>
+Compleignende upon Hercules    2560<br/>
+His ferste love Deyanire,<br/>
+Which sette him afterward afyre:<br/>
+Medea was there ek and pleigneth<br/>
+Upon Jason, for that he feigneth,<br/>
+Withoute cause and tok a newe;<br/>
+Sche seide, “Fy on alle untrewe!”<br/>
+I sih there ek Deijdamie,<br/>
+Which hadde lost the compaignie<br/>
+Of Achilles, whan Diomede<br/>
+To Troie him fette upon the nede.    2570<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among these othre upon the grene<br/>
+I syh also the wofull queene<br/>
+Cleopatras, which in a Cave<br/>
+With Serpentz hath hirself begrave<br/>
+Alquik, and so sche was totore,<br/>
+For sorwe of that sche hadde lore<br/>
+Antonye, which hir love hath be:<br/>
+And forth with hire I sih Tisbee,<br/>
+Which on the scharpe swerdes point<br/>
+For love deide in sory point;    2580<br/>
+And as myn Ere it myhte knowe,<br/>
+Sche seide, “Wo worthe alle slowe!”<br/>
+The pleignte of Progne and Philomene<br/>
+Ther herde I what it wolde mene,<br/>
+How Tereüs of his untrouthe<br/>
+Undede hem bothe, and that was routhe;<br/>
+And next to hem I sih Canace,<br/>
+Which for Machaire hir fader grace<br/>
+Hath lost, and deide in wofull plit.<br/>
+And as I sih in my spirit,    2590<br/>
+Me thoghte amonges othre thus<br/>
+The doghter of king Priamus,<br/>
+Polixena, whom Pirrus slowh,<br/>
+Was there and made sorwe ynowh,<br/>
+As sche which deide gulteles<br/>
+For love, and yit was loveles.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto take the desport,<br/>
+I sih there some of other port,<br/>
+And that was Circes and Calipse,<br/>
+That cowthen do the Mone eclipse,    2600<br/>
+Of men and change the liknesses,<br/>
+Of Artmagique Sorceresses;<br/>
+Thei hielde in honde manyon,<br/>
+To love wher thei wolde or non.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot above alle that ther were<br/>
+Of wommen I sih foure there,<br/>
+Whos name I herde most comended:<br/>
+Be hem the Court stod al amended;<br/>
+For wher thei comen in presence,<br/>
+Men deden hem the reverence,    2610<br/>
+As thogh they hadden be goddesses,<br/>
+Of al this world or Emperesses.<br/>
+And as me thoghte, an Ere I leide,<br/>
+And herde hou that these othre seide,<br/>
+“Lo, these ben the foure wyves,<br/>
+Whos feith was proeved in her lyves:<br/>
+For in essample of alle goode<br/>
+With Mariage so thei stode,<br/>
+That fame, which no gret thing hydeth,<br/>
+Yit in Cronique of hem abydeth.”    2620<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Penolope that on was hote,<br/>
+Whom many a knyht hath loved hote,<br/>
+Whil that hire lord Ulixes lay<br/>
+Full many a yer and many a day<br/>
+Upon the grete Siege of Troie:<br/>
+Bot sche, which hath no worldes joie<br/>
+Bot only of hire housebonde,<br/>
+Whil that hir lord was out of londe,<br/>
+So wel hath kept hir wommanhiede,<br/>
+That al the world therof tok hiede,    2630<br/>
+And nameliche of hem in Grece.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That other womman was Lucrece,<br/>
+Wif to the Romain Collatin;<br/>
+And sche constreigned of Tarquin<br/>
+To thing which was ayein hir wille,<br/>
+Sche wolde noght hirselven stille,<br/>
+Bot deide only for drede of schame<br/>
+In keping of hire goode name,<br/>
+As sche which was on of the beste.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thridde wif was hote Alceste,    2640<br/>
+Which whanne Ametus scholde dye<br/>
+Upon his grete maladye,<br/>
+Sche preide unto the goddes so,<br/>
+That sche receyveth al the wo<br/>
+And deide hirself to yive him lif:<br/>
+Lo, if this were a noble wif.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ferthe wif which I ther sih,<br/>
+I herde of hem that were nyh<br/>
+Hou sche was cleped Alcione,<br/>
+Which to Seyix hir lord al one    2650<br/>
+And to nomo hire body kepte;<br/>
+And whan sche sih him dreynt, sche lepte<br/>
+Into the wawes where he swam,<br/>
+And there a Sefoul sche becam,<br/>
+And with hire wenges him bespradde<br/>
+For love which to him sche hadde.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo, these foure were tho<br/>
+Whiche I sih, as me thoghte tho,<br/>
+Among the grete compaignie<br/>
+Which Love hadde forto guye:    2660<br/>
+Bot Youthe, which in special<br/>
+Of Loves Court was Mareschal,<br/>
+So besy was upon his lay,<br/>
+That he non hiede where I lay<br/>
+Hath take. And thanne, as I behield,<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me thoghte I sih upon the field,<br/>
+Where Elde cam a softe pas<br/>
+Toward Venus, ther as sche was.<br/>
+With him gret compaignie he ladde,<br/>
+Bot noght so manye as Youthe hadde:    2670<br/>
+The moste part were of gret Age,<br/>
+And that was sene in the visage,<br/>
+And noght forthi, so as thei myhte,<br/>
+Thei made hem yongly to the sihte:<br/>
+Bot yit herde I no pipe there<br/>
+To make noise in mannes Ere,<br/>
+Bot the Musette I myhte knowe,<br/>
+For olde men which souneth lowe,<br/>
+With Harpe and Lute and with Citole.<br/>
+The hovedance and the Carole,    2680<br/>
+In such a wise as love hath bede,<br/>
+A softe pas thei dance and trede;<br/>
+And with the wommen otherwhile<br/>
+With sobre chier among thei smyle,<br/>
+For laghtre was ther non on hyh.<br/>
+And natheles full wel I syh<br/>
+That thei the more queinte it made<br/>
+For love, in whom thei weren glade.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there me thoghte I myhte se<br/>
+The king David with Bersabee,    2690<br/>
+And Salomon was noght withoute;<br/>
+Passende an hundred on a route<br/>
+Of wyves and of Concubines,<br/>
+Juesses bothe and Sarazines,<br/>
+To him I sih alle entendant:<br/>
+I not if he was sufficant,<br/>
+Bot natheles for al his wit<br/>
+He was attached with that writ<br/>
+Which love with his hond enseleth,<br/>
+Fro whom non erthly man appeleth.    2700<br/>
+And overthis, as for a wonder,<br/>
+With his leon which he put under,<br/>
+With Dalida Sampson I knew,<br/>
+Whos love his strengthe al overthrew.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I syh there Aristotle also,<br/>
+Whom that the queene of Grece so<br/>
+Hath bridled, that in thilke time<br/>
+Sche made him such a Silogime,<br/>
+That he foryat al his logique;<br/>
+Ther was non art of his Practique,    2710<br/>
+Thurgh which it mihte ben excluded<br/>
+That he ne was fully concluded<br/>
+To love, and dede his obeissance.<br/>
+And ek Virgile of aqueintance<br/>
+I sih, wher he the Maiden preide,<br/>
+Which was the doghter, as men seide,<br/>
+Of themperour whilom of Rome;<br/>
+Sortes and Plato with him come,<br/>
+So dede Ovide the Poete.<br/>
+I thoghte thanne how love is swete,    2720<br/>
+Which hath so wise men reclamed,<br/>
+And was miself the lasse aschamed,<br/>
+Or forto lese or forto winne<br/>
+In the meschief that I was inne:<br/>
+And thus I lay in hope of grace.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And whan thei comen to the place<br/>
+Wher Venus stod and I was falle,<br/>
+These olde men with o vois alle<br/>
+To Venus preiden for my sake.<br/>
+And sche, that myhte noght forsake    2730<br/>
+So gret a clamour as was there,<br/>
+Let Pite come into hire Ere;<br/>
+And forth withal unto Cupide<br/>
+Sche preith that he upon his side<br/>
+Me wolde thurgh his grace sende<br/>
+Som confort, that I myhte amende,<br/>
+Upon the cas which is befalle.<br/>
+And thus for me thei preiden alle<br/>
+Of hem that weren olde aboute,<br/>
+And ek some of the yonge route,    2740<br/>
+Of gentilesse and pure trouthe<br/>
+I herde hem telle it was gret routhe,<br/>
+That I withouten help so ferde.<br/>
+And thus me thoghte I lay and herde.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cupido, which may hurte and hele<br/>
+In loves cause, as for myn hele<br/>
+Upon the point which him was preid<br/>
+Cam with Venus, wher I was leid<br/>
+Swounende upon the grene gras.<br/>
+And, as me thoghte, anon ther was    2750<br/>
+On every side so gret presse,<br/>
+That every lif began to presse,<br/>
+I wot noght wel hou many score,<br/>
+Suche as I spak of now tofore,<br/>
+Lovers, that comen to beholde,<br/>
+Bot most of hem that weren olde:<br/>
+Thei stoden there at thilke tyde,<br/>
+To se what ende schal betyde<br/>
+Upon the cure of my sotie.<br/>
+Tho myhte I hiere gret partie    2760<br/>
+Spekende, and ech his oghne avis<br/>
+Hath told, on that, an other this:<br/>
+Bot among alle this I herde,<br/>
+Thei weren wo that I so ferde,<br/>
+And seiden that for no riote<br/>
+An old man scholde noght assote;<br/>
+For as thei tolden redely,<br/>
+Ther is in him no cause why,<br/>
+Bot if he wolde himself benyce;<br/>
+So were he wel the more nyce.    2770<br/>
+And thus desputen some of tho,<br/>
+And some seiden nothing so,<br/>
+Bot that the wylde loves rage<br/>
+In mannes lif forberth non Age;<br/>
+Whil ther is oyle forto fyre,<br/>
+The lampe is lyhtly set afyre,<br/>
+And is fulhard er it be queynt,<br/>
+Bot only if it be som seint,<br/>
+Which god preserveth of his grace.<br/>
+And thus me thoghte, in sondri place    2780<br/>
+Of hem that walken up and doun<br/>
+Ther was diverse opinioun:<br/>
+And for a while so it laste,<br/>
+Til that Cupide to the laste,<br/>
+Forth with his moder full avised,<br/>
+Hath determined and devised<br/>
+Unto what point he wol descende.<br/>
+And al this time I was liggende<br/>
+Upon the ground tofore his yhen,<br/>
+And thei that my desese syhen    2790<br/>
+Supposen noght I scholde live;<br/>
+Bot he, which wolde thanne yive<br/>
+His grace, so as it mai be,<br/>
+This blinde god which mai noght se,<br/>
+Hath groped til that he me fond;<br/>
+And as he pitte forth his hond<br/>
+Upon my body, wher I lay,<br/>
+Me thoghte a fyri Lancegay,<br/>
+Which whilom thurgh myn herte he caste,<br/>
+He pulleth oute, and also faste    2800<br/>
+As this was do, Cupide nam<br/>
+His weie, I not where he becam,<br/>
+And so dede al the remenant<br/>
+Which unto him was entendant,<br/>
+Of hem that in Avision<br/>
+I hadde a revelacion,<br/>
+So as I tolde now tofore.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot Venus wente noght therfore,<br/>
+Ne Genius, whiche thilke time<br/>
+Abiden bothe faste byme.    2810<br/>
+And sche which mai the hertes bynde<br/>
+In loves cause and ek unbinde,<br/>
+Er I out of mi trance aros,<br/>
+Venus, which hield a boiste clos,<br/>
+And wolde noght I scholde deie,<br/>
+Tok out mor cold than eny keie<br/>
+An oignement, and in such point<br/>
+Sche hath my wounded herte enoignt,<br/>
+My temples and my Reins also.<br/>
+And forth withal sche tok me tho    2820<br/>
+A wonder Mirour forto holde,<br/>
+In which sche bad me to beholde<br/>
+And taken hiede of that I syhe;<br/>
+Wherinne anon myn hertes yhe<br/>
+I caste, and sih my colour fade,<br/>
+Myn yhen dymme and al unglade,<br/>
+Mi chiekes thinne, and al my face<br/>
+With Elde I myhte se deface,<br/>
+So riveled and so wo besein,<br/>
+That ther was nothing full ne plein,    2830<br/>
+I syh also myn heres hore.<br/>
+Mi will was tho to se nomore<br/>
+Outwith, for ther was no plesance;<br/>
+And thanne into my remembrance<br/>
+I drowh myn olde daies passed,<br/>
+And as reson it hath compassed,<br/>
+I made a liknesse of miselve<br/>
+Unto the sondri Monthes twelve,<br/>
+Wherof the yeer in his astat<br/>
+Is mad, and stant upon debat,    2840<br/>
+That lich til other non acordeth.<br/>
+For who the times wel recordeth,<br/>
+And thanne at Marche if he beginne,<br/>
+Whan that the lusti yeer comth inne,<br/>
+Til Augst be passed and Septembre,<br/>
+The myhty youthe he may remembre<br/>
+In which the yeer hath his deduit<br/>
+Of gras, of lef, of flour, of fruit,<br/>
+Of corn and of the wyny grape.<br/>
+And afterward the time is schape    2850<br/>
+To frost, to Snow, to Wind, to Rein,<br/>
+Til eft that Mars be come ayein:<br/>
+The Wynter wol no Somer knowe,<br/>
+The grene lef is overthrowe,<br/>
+The clothed erthe is thanne bare,<br/>
+Despuiled is the Somerfare,<br/>
+That erst was hete is thanne chele.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus thenkende thoghtes fele,<br/>
+I was out of mi swoune affraied,<br/>
+Wherof I sih my wittes straied,    2860<br/>
+And gan to clepe hem hom ayein.<br/>
+And whan Resoun it herde sein<br/>
+That loves rage was aweie,<br/>
+He cam to me the rihte weie,<br/>
+And hath remued the sotie<br/>
+Of thilke unwise fantasie,<br/>
+Wherof that I was wont to pleigne,<br/>
+So that of thilke fyri peine<br/>
+I was mad sobre and hol ynowh.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Venus behield me than and lowh,    2870<br/>
+And axeth, as it were in game,<br/>
+What love was. And I for schame<br/>
+Ne wiste what I scholde ansuere;<br/>
+And natheles I gan to swere<br/>
+That be my trouthe I knew him noght;<br/>
+So ferr it was out of mi thoght,<br/>
+Riht as it hadde nevere be.<br/>
+“Mi goode Sone,” tho quod sche,<br/>
+“Now at this time I lieve it wel,<br/>
+So goth the fortune of my whiel;    2880<br/>
+Forthi mi conseil is thou leve.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ma dame,” I seide, “be your leve,<br/>
+Ye witen wel, and so wot I,<br/>
+That I am unbehovely<br/>
+Your Court fro this day forth to serve:<br/>
+And for I may no thonk deserve,<br/>
+And also for I am refused,<br/>
+I preie you to ben excused.<br/>
+And natheles as for the laste,<br/>
+Whil that my wittes with me laste,    2890<br/>
+Touchende mi confession<br/>
+I axe an absolucion<br/>
+Of Genius, er that I go.”<br/>
+The Prest anon was redy tho,<br/>
+And seide, “Sone, as of thi schrifte<br/>
+Thou hast ful pardoun and foryifte;<br/>
+Foryet it thou, and so wol I.”<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Min holi fader, grant mercy,”<br/>
+Quod I to him, and to the queene<br/>
+I fell on knes upon the grene,    2900<br/>
+And tok my leve forto wende.<br/>
+Bot sche, that wolde make an ende,<br/>
+As therto which I was most able,<br/>
+A Peire of Bedes blak as Sable<br/>
+Sche tok and heng my necke aboute;<br/>
+Upon the gaudes al withoute<br/>
+Was write of gold, Por reposer.<br/>
+“Lo,” thus sche seide, “John Gower,<br/>
+Now thou art ate laste cast,<br/>
+This have I for thin ese cast,    2910<br/>
+That thou nomore of love sieche.<br/>
+Bot my will is that thou besieche<br/>
+And preie hierafter for the pes,<br/>
+And that thou make a plein reles<br/>
+To love, which takth litel hiede<br/>
+Of olde men upon the nede,<br/>
+Whan that the lustes ben aweie:<br/>
+Forthi to thee nys bot o weie,<br/>
+In which let reson be thi guide;<br/>
+For he may sone himself misguide,    2920<br/>
+That seth noght the peril tofore.<br/>
+Mi Sone, be wel war therfore,<br/>
+And kep the sentence of my lore<br/>
+And tarie thou mi Court nomore,<br/>
+Bot go ther vertu moral duelleth,<br/>
+Wher ben thi bokes, as men telleth,<br/>
+Whiche of long time thou hast write.<br/>
+For this I do thee wel to wite,<br/>
+If thou thin hele wolt pourchace,<br/>
+Thou miht noght make suite and chace,    2930<br/>
+Wher that the game is nought pernable;<br/>
+It were a thing unresonable,<br/>
+A man to be so overseie.<br/>
+Forthi tak hiede of that I seie;<br/>
+For in the lawe of my comune<br/>
+We be noght schape to comune,<br/>
+Thiself and I, nevere after this.<br/>
+Now have y seid al that ther is<br/>
+Of love as for thi final ende:<br/>
+Adieu, for y mot fro the wende.”    2940<br/>
+And with that word al sodeinly,<br/>
+Enclosid in a sterred sky,<br/>
+Venus, which is the qweene of love,<br/>
+Was take in to hire place above,<br/>
+More wiste y nought wher sche becam.<br/>
+And thus my leve of hire y nam,<br/>
+And forth with al the same tide<br/>
+Hire prest, which wolde nought abide,<br/>
+Or be me lief or be me loth,<br/>
+Out of my sighte forth he goth,    2950<br/>
+And y was left with outen helpe.<br/>
+So wiste I nought wher of to yelpe,<br/>
+Bot only that y hadde lore<br/>
+My time, and was sori ther fore.<br/>
+And thus bewhapid in my thought,<br/>
+Whan al was turnyd in to nought,<br/>
+I stod amasid for a while,<br/>
+And in my self y gan to smyle<br/>
+Thenkende uppon the bedis blake,<br/>
+And how they weren me betake,    2960<br/>
+For that y schulde bidde and preie.<br/>
+And whanne y sigh non othre weie<br/>
+Bot only that y was refusid,<br/>
+Unto the lif which y hadde usid<br/>
+I thoughte nevere torne ayein:<br/>
+And in this wise, soth to seyn,<br/>
+Homward a softe pas y wente,<br/>
+Wher that with al myn hol entente<br/>
+Uppon the point that y am schryve<br/>
+I thenke bidde whil y live.    2970<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He which withinne daies sevene<br/>
+This large world forth with the hevene<br/>
+Of his eternal providence<br/>
+Hath mad, and thilke intelligence<br/>
+In mannys soule resonable<br/>
+Hath schape to be perdurable,<br/>
+Wherof the man of his feture<br/>
+Above alle erthli creature<br/>
+Aftir the soule is immortal,<br/>
+To thilke lord in special,    2980<br/>
+As he which is of alle thinges<br/>
+The creatour, and of the kynges<br/>
+Hath the fortunes uppon honde,<br/>
+His grace and mercy forto fonde<br/>
+Uppon my bare knes y preie,<br/>
+That he this lond in siker weie<br/>
+Wol sette uppon good governance.<br/>
+For if men takyn remembrance<br/>
+What is to live in unite,<br/>
+Ther ys no staat in his degree    2990<br/>
+That noughte to desire pes,<br/>
+With outen which, it is no les,<br/>
+To seche and loke in to the laste,<br/>
+Ther may no worldes joye laste.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ferst forto loke the Clergie,<br/>
+Hem oughte wel to justefie<br/>
+Thing which belongith to here cure,<br/>
+As forto praie and to procure<br/>
+Oure pes toward the hevene above,<br/>
+And ek to sette reste and love    3000<br/>
+Among ous on this erthe hiere.<br/>
+For if they wroughte in this manere<br/>
+Aftir the reule of charite,<br/>
+I hope that men schuldyn se<br/>
+This lond amende.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ovyr this,<br/>
+To seche and loke how that it is<br/>
+Touchende of the chevalerie,<br/>
+Which forto loke, in som partie<br/>
+Is worthi forto be comendid,<br/>
+And in som part to ben amendid,    3010<br/>
+That of here large retenue<br/>
+The lond is ful of maintenue,<br/>
+Which causith that the comune right<br/>
+In fewe contrees stant upright.<br/>
+Extorcioun, contekt, ravine<br/>
+Withholde ben of that covyne,<br/>
+Aldai men hierin gret compleignte<br/>
+Of the desease, of the constreignte,<br/>
+Wher of the poeple is sore oppressid:<br/>
+God graunte it mote be redressid.    3020<br/>
+For of knyghthode thordre wolde<br/>
+That thei defende and kepe scholde<br/>
+The comun right and the fraunchise<br/>
+Of holy cherche in alle wise,<br/>
+So that no wikke man it dere,<br/>
+And ther fore servith scheld and spere:<br/>
+Bot for it goth now other weie,<br/>
+Oure grace goth the more aweie.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And forto lokyn ovyrmore,<br/>
+Wher of the poeple pleigneth sore,    3030<br/>
+Toward the lawis of oure lond,<br/>
+Men sein that trouthe hath broke his bond<br/>
+And with brocage is goon aweie,<br/>
+So that no man can se the weie<br/>
+Wher forto fynde rightwisnesse.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And if men sechin sikernesse<br/>
+Uppon the lucre of marchandie,<br/>
+Compassement and tricherie<br/>
+Of singuler profit to wynne,<br/>
+Men seyn, is cause of mochil synne,    3040<br/>
+And namely of divisioun,<br/>
+Which many a noble worthi toun<br/>
+Fro welthe and fro prosperite<br/>
+Hath brought to gret adversite.<br/>
+So were it good to ben al on,<br/>
+For mechil grace ther uppon<br/>
+Unto the Citees schulde falle,<br/>
+Which myghte availle to ous alle,<br/>
+If these astatz amendid were,<br/>
+So that the vertus stodyn there    3050<br/>
+And that the vices were aweie:<br/>
+Me thenkth y dorste thanne seie,<br/>
+This londis grace schulde arise.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bot yit to loke in othre wise,<br/>
+Ther is a stat, as ye schul hiere,<br/>
+Above alle othre on erthe hiere,<br/>
+Which hath the lond in his balance:<br/>
+To him belongith the leiance<br/>
+Of Clerk, of knyght, of man of lawe;<br/>
+Undir his hond al is forth drawe    3060<br/>
+The marchant and the laborer;<br/>
+So stant it al in his power<br/>
+Or forto spille or forto save.<br/>
+Bot though that he such power have,<br/>
+And that his myghtes ben so large,<br/>
+He hath hem nought withouten charge,<br/>
+To which that every kyng ys swore:<br/>
+So were it good that he ther fore<br/>
+First un to rightwisnesse entende,<br/>
+Wherof that he hym self amende    3070<br/>
+Toward his god and leve vice,<br/>
+Which is the chief of his office;<br/>
+And aftir al the remenant<br/>
+He schal uppon his covenant<br/>
+Governe and lede in such a wise,<br/>
+So that ther be no tirandise,<br/>
+Wherof that he his poeple grieve,<br/>
+Or ellis may he nought achieve<br/>
+That longith to his regalie.<br/>
+For if a kyng wol justifie    3080<br/>
+His lond and hem that beth withynne,<br/>
+First at hym self he mot begynne,<br/>
+To kepe and reule his owne astat,<br/>
+That in hym self be no debat<br/>
+Toward his god: for othre wise<br/>
+Ther may non erthly kyng suffise<br/>
+Of his kyngdom the folk to lede,<br/>
+Bot he the kyng of hevene drede.<br/>
+For what kyng sett hym uppon pride<br/>
+And takth his lust on every side    3090<br/>
+And wil nought go the righte weie,<br/>
+Though god his grace caste aweie<br/>
+No wondir is, for ate laste<br/>
+He schal wel wite it mai nought laste,<br/>
+The pompe which he secheth here.<br/>
+Bot what kyng that with humble chere<br/>
+Aftir the lawe of god eschuieth<br/>
+The vices, and the vertus suieth,<br/>
+His grace schal be suffisant<br/>
+To governe al the remenant    3100<br/>
+Which longith to his duite;<br/>
+So that in his prosperite<br/>
+The poeple schal nought ben oppressid,<br/>
+Wherof his name schal be blessid,<br/>
+For evere and be memorial.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now to speke as in final,<br/>
+Touchende that y undirtok<br/>
+In englesch forto make a book<br/>
+Which stant betwene ernest and game,<br/>
+I have it maad as thilke same    3110<br/>
+Which axe forto ben excusid,<br/>
+And that my bok be nought refusid<br/>
+Of lered men, whan thei it se,<br/>
+For lak of curiosite:<br/>
+For thilke scole of eloquence<br/>
+Belongith nought to my science,<br/>
+Uppon the forme of rethoriqe<br/>
+My wordis forto peinte and pike,<br/>
+As Tullius som tyme wrot.<br/>
+Bot this y knowe and this y wot,    3120<br/>
+That y have do my trewe peyne<br/>
+With rude wordis and with pleyne,<br/>
+In al that evere y couthe and myghte,<br/>
+This bok to write as y behighte,<br/>
+So as siknesse it soffre wolde;<br/>
+And also for my daies olde,<br/>
+That y am feble and impotent,<br/>
+I wot nought how the world ys went.<br/>
+So preye y to my lordis alle<br/>
+Now in myn age, how so befalle,    3130<br/>
+That y mot stonden in here grace:<br/>
+For though me lacke to purchace<br/>
+Here worthi thonk as by decerte,<br/>
+Yit the symplesse of my poverte<br/>
+Desireth forto do plesance<br/>
+To hem undir whos governance<br/>
+I hope siker to abide.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now uppon my laste tide<br/>
+That y this book have maad and write,<br/>
+My muse doth me forto wite,    3140<br/>
+And seith it schal be for my beste<br/>
+Fro this day forth to take reste,<br/>
+That y nomore of love make,<br/>
+Which many an herte hath overtake,<br/>
+And ovyrturnyd as the blynde<br/>
+Fro reson in to lawe of kynde;<br/>
+Wher as the wisdom goth aweie<br/>
+And can nought se the ryhte weie<br/>
+How to governe his oghne estat,<br/>
+Bot everydai stant in debat    3150<br/>
+Withinne him self, and can nought leve.<br/>
+And thus forthy my final leve<br/>
+I take now for evere more,<br/>
+Withoute makynge any more,<br/>
+Of love and of his dedly hele,<br/>
+Which no phisicien can hele.<br/>
+For his nature is so divers,<br/>
+That it hath evere som travers<br/>
+Or of to moche or of to lite,<br/>
+That pleinly mai noman delite,    3160<br/>
+Bot if him faile or that or this.<br/>
+Bot thilke love which that is<br/>
+Withinne a mannes herte affermed,<br/>
+And stant of charite confermed,<br/>
+Such love is goodly forto have,<br/>
+Such love mai the bodi save,<br/>
+Such love mai the soule amende,<br/>
+The hyhe god such love ous sende<br/>
+Forthwith the remenant of grace;<br/>
+So that above in thilke place    3170<br/>
+Wher resteth love and alle pes,<br/>
+Oure joie mai ben endeles.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+<i>Explicit iste liber, qui transeat, obsecro liber,<br/>
+Vt sine liuore vigeat lectoris in ore.<br/>
+Qui sedet in scannis celi det vt ista lohannis<br/>
+Perpetuis annis stet pagina grata Britannis,<br/>
+Derbeie Comiti, recolunt quem laude periti,<br/>
+Vade liber purus, sub eo requiesce futurus.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+[End of CONFESSIO AMANTIS]
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONFESSIO AMANTIS ***</div>
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