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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/29552-0.txt b/29552-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..46b3a75 --- /dev/null +++ b/29552-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2005 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Temple of Glass, by John Lydgate + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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 www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Temple of Glass + +Author: John Lydgate + +Release Date: July 30, 2009 [EBook #29552] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEMPLE OF GLASS *** + + + + +Produced by Jason Isbell and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) + + + + + +The Temple of Glass +by +John Lydgate + +Printed at Westminster +by William Caxton about the year +1477 + +Cambridge +at the University Press +1905 + + + + + +The unique book here reprinted in facsimile came to the Cambridge +University Library in a famous volume of tracts described by Mr Blades +(Biography and Typography of W. Caxton, 1882, p. 201). + +The volume had formed part of the collection of John Moore, Bishop of +Ely, which was given to the University by King George the First in 1715. + +The first leaf, which is wanting, was probably blank. + +F. JENKINSON + + * * * * * + +I certify that I have printed 250 copies only of this facsimile, that +the impressions have been rubbed off the plates and the negatives +destroyed. + +P. DUJARDIN + + + + + + + +.The temple of glas. + + +For thought constreynt & greuous heuynes +For pensifhed and higħ distres +To bed I went now this other nyght +Whan that lucina witħ hir pale light +Was Ioyned last witħ phebus in aquarye +Amyd decembre, whan of Ianuarye +Ther be kalendes of the new yere +And derk dyane horned and nothing clere +Had her beames vnder a mysty cloude +Witħ in my bed for cold I gan me shroude +Al desolate for constraynt of my woo +The long nyght walowyng to and fro +Til at laste er I began take kepe +Me dyde oppresse a sodeyn dedly slepe +Witħ in the whiche me thougħt I was +Rauysshed in spiryte in to a temple of glas +I nyste how fer in wildernes +That founded was as by liklynes +Not vpon stele, but on a craggy roche +Lyke yse y froze, and as I did approche +Agayn the sonne that shone so clere + +As ony Cristal and euer ner and ner +As I cam nyghe this grisly dredful place +I wex astonyed, the light so in my face +Be gan to smyte, so persing euer in one +On euery part wher that I gan gone +That I ne might no thing as I wolde +Aboute me considere and beholde +The wonder estres for brightnes of the sonne +Til atte last certayn skyes donne +Witħ wynde chaced han her cours y went +To fore the stremes of titan and y blent +So that I mighte witħ in and witħ oute +Wherso I wolde beholden me aboute +For to reporte the facōn and manere +Of aƚƚ this place that was circuler +In compas wyse, round by entayle wrought +And whan I had longe gone and sought +I found a wiket and entred in as fast +In to the temple and myn eyen cast +On euery syde now lowe eft alofte +And right anon as I gan walken softe +Yf I the sotħ a right reporte shal +I sawe depeynted vpon a wal + +From este to weste many a fair ymage +Of sondry louers lyke as they were of age +Y sette in ordre after they were trewe +Witħ liuely colours wonder fresh of hue +And as me thought I sawe som sitte & som stāde +And som̄e knelyng witħ billes in their hande +And som̄e witħ compleynt woful & pietous +Witħ doleful chere to putten to venus +So as she sat fleetyng in the see +Vpon her woo forto haue pitee +And first of alle I saugħ there of cartage +Dido the quene so goodly of visage +That gan compleyne hir auenture and cas +How she deceyued was of Eneas +For al his hestes and his othes sworn +And said alas that euer she was born +Whan she sawe that ded she must be +And next I sawe the compleynt of Medee +How that she falsed was of Iason +And nygħ by venus sawe I sitte atheon +And al the maner how the boor hym slougħ +For whom she wepte and had pyne ynougħ +Ther saw I also how that penolope + +For she so longe her lord ne mighte see +Was of colour bothe pale and grene +And after next was the fresh quene +I mene alcest the noble trewe wyf +And for admete hou she lost her lif +And for her troutħ yf I shal not lye +How she was torned in to a daysye +Ther was Grisildes Innocence +And al her mekenes and pacience +There was eke Isode & many other moo +And al the torment and the cruel woo +That she had for tristram al her lyue +And how that Tisbe her hert dyde ryue +Witħ thilk swerd of sir Piramus +And al the maner hou that Theseus +The mynotaure slow amyd the hous +That was forwrynked by crafte of dedalus +Whan he was in pryson shit in Crete +And how that philles felte of loues hete +The grete fyre of demephon allas +And for his falshed and for his trespas +Vpon the walles depeynt men might see +How she henge vpon a fylberd tree + +And many a story moo than I rekene can +Were in the temple, and how that paris wan +The fayr Eleyne a lusty fresh quene +And hou Achilles was for Policene +Y slayn vnwarly witħyn Troye toun +Al this sawe I walkyng vp and doun +Ther sawe I wreton eke the hole tale +How Philomene in to a nyghtyngale +Y torned was, and proigne vnto a swalowe +And how the sabyns in their maner halowe +The feste of lucresse yet in Rome toun +Ther saw I also the sorow of Palamon +That he in prison felte and al the smert +And how that he thurgħ vnto his hert +Was hurt vnwarly by castyng of an eye +On fair fresh the lusty yong Emelye +And al the stryf bytwene hym & his brother +And how that one faugħt witħ that other +Witħyn the groue, til they by Theseus +Accorded were as Chaucer telletħ vs +And furthermore as I gan beholde +I sawe hou phebus witħ an arowe of golde +Y wounded was thurgħ out his syde + +Only by enuye of the god Cupyde +And how that dyane vnto a laurer tre +Y torned was whan that she dide fle +And how that Ioue changed his cope +Only for loue of the fair Eurepe +And in to a hole, whan he did he sue +Liste of his godhed his fourme to transmue +And hou that he by transmutacion +The shap gan take of Amphitrion +For Alcumena so passing was of beaute +So was he hurt for al his deyte +Witħ louys dart, and might it not escape +Ther sawe I also how mars was take +Of vulcanus and witħ venus founde +And witħ the cheynes Inuysible bounde +Ther was also al the poesye +Of hym Mercurye and al the philogye +And how that she for her sapience +Y wedded was to the god of eloquence +And how the Muses lowly did obeye +Higħ in to heuyn this lady to conueye +And witħ her songe hou she was magnefied +Witħ Jubiter there to be stellefied + +And vppermore depeynt men might see +How witħ her ryng the goodly canace +Of euery fowle, the leydons and songe +Coude vnderstond as she walked them among +And hou her brother so often holpen was +In his myschief, by the stede of bras +And furthermore in the temple were +Ful many a thousand louers here & there +In sondry wyse redy to compleyne +Vnto the goddesse, of her woo and peyne +How they were hyndred som for enuye +And how the serpent of fals Ielousie +Ful many a louer hath put a back +And causeles on them haue leid a lack +And som̄e ther were that playned on absence +That were exiled and put out of presence +Thurgħ wicked tunges and fals suspecōn +Witħoute mercy or ony remissiōn +And other eke her seruyse spent in veyn +And of her lady were not loued ageyn +And other eke that for pouerte +Dursten in no wyse her grete aduersite +Discouere ne opene, lest they were refused + +And som̄e for wantyng also were accused +And other eke that loued secretly +And of her lady durst axe no mercy +Lest that she wolde of hym haue despyte +And som̄e also that putten right grete wite +Ou double louers that loue thinges newe +Thurgħ whos falsenes hyndred be the trewe +And som̄ there were as hit is ofte founde +That for her lady many a blody wounde +Endured hatħ in many a regyon +Whiles that an other hatħ had possession +Al of his lady and beretħ a way the fruyt +Of his labour and of aƚƚ his fuyt +And other compleyned of richesse +How he witħ tresour dotħ his besynesse +To wynne agaynst al kynde and right +Where as true louers haue force none ne might +And som ther were as maydyns yong of age +That pleynetħ so witħ pipyng & witħ rage +That were coupled agayn al nature +Witħ croked elde that may not long endure +For to perfourme the lust of loues playe +For hit ne fit not vnto fressħ maye + +For to be coupled to olde Ianuarye +They be so dyuerse that they must varye +For elde is gruoching and malencolious +Ay ful of yre and suspecious +And yongth entendetħ to Ioye & lustynes +To mirtħ and play and to al gladnes +Allas that euer hit shold falle +So swete sugre y coupled be to galle +These yonge folke cryeden oft sithe +And praid venus her power to kythe +Vpon this myschief and shape remedye +And right anone I herde other crye +Witħ sobbyng teres and pietous sowne +To fore the goddesse by lamentacion +That were constrayned in their yougthe +And in childhode as is ofte couthe +Y entrid were in to Religion +Or they had yeris of discrescōn +That al her lif can not but compleyne +In wyde Copes perfection forto feyne +Ful couertly for to coueren thair smert +And shewe the contrary of thair hert +Thus saw I wepe many a fair mayde + +That on theyr frendes al the wyte thay layde +And other next I saw ther in grete rage +That they were maried in theyr tendre age +Witħ oute fredom of fre election +Where loue hatħ selde domynacion +For loue at large and at liberte +Wolde frely chese and not witħ suche trete +And other saw I ful ofte wepe and wrynge +That they in men fonde suche varyynge +To loue a season whyle that beaulte flouritħ +And after by disdayn so vngoodly louritħ +On her that whylom he callyd his lady dere +That was to hym so playsant and entier +But lust witħ fairnes is so ouer goon +That in her herte trouthe abidetħ noon +And som̄e also I sawe in teres reyne +And pietously on god and kynde pleyne +That euer they wold on ony creature +So moche beaute passing be mesure +Sette on a woman to yeue occasion +A man, to loue to his confusion +And namely there, where he shal haue no grace +For witħ a loke fortħ by as he dotħ pace + +Ful ofte falletħ thurgħ castyng of an eye +A man is wounded that he must nedis deye +That neuer peraunter after he shal her see +Why wil god don so grete a cruelte +To ony man, or to his creature +To make hym so muche woo endure +For her, percas, whom he shal in no wyse +Reioyse neuer, but so fortħ in Iuyse +Lede his lif til that he be graue +For he ne durst of hir no mercy craue +And eke [per]aunter thougħ he durst & wolde +He can not wite where he hir fynd sholde +I sawe ther eke, and therof had I couthe +That som were hyndred by couetyse & slougthe +And som̄e also for their hastynes +And other eke for their rechelesnes +But altherlast as I walked and behelde +Beside pallas witħ her Cristal sheld +Tofore the statue of venus set on height +Ther kneled a lady in my sight +To fore the goddesse, whiche as the sonne +Passetħ the sterris, and eke the stormys donne +And lucifer to voyde the nyghtes sorowe + +In clerenes passetħ erly the morowe +And so as maye hatħ the souereynte +Of euery monetħ the fayrnes and beaute +And as the rose in swetnes and odour +Surmounted flouris, and baine of al licour +Hath the pryse, and as the rubye bright +Of al stones in beaute and in sight +As it is knowe hatħ the Regalye +Right so this ladye witħ her goodly eye +And witħ the stremys of hir loke so bright +Surmountetħ al thourgħ beaute in my sight +That for to tel her grete semelines +Her womanhed her porte and her fairnes +Hit was a meruayle, how euer that nature +Cowde in her werkes make a creature +So angelyk so goodly on to see +So femynyn or passing of beaute +Whos sonnysħ heer brighter than goldwire +Lyche phebus beames shynyng in his spyre +The goodlihed eke of her fresħ face +So replenyshed of beaute and of grace +So wel ennewed by nature and depeynt +As Rose and lilyes to gyder were meynt + +So egally by good proporcion +That as me tought by myn inspection +I gan meruaylle hou god or werk of kynde +Mighten of beaute suche a tresour fynde +To yeuen hir so passing excellence +For in good faitħ thurgħ her hye presence +The temple was ensumyned enuyron +And forto speke of her condicion +She was the beste that might be on lyue +For ther was none [that] witħ her might stryue +To speke of bounte or of gentilesse +Of womanhede or of lowlynesse +Of curtoysie or of goodlihede +Of speche of chere or of semelihede +Of poort benigne or of daliaunce +The best taught and therto of playsaunce +She was the welle eke of honeste +An Examplair and mirrour eke was she +Of secretnes of trouthe of feitħfulnes +And to alle other lady and maistres +To shewe vertu who so list to lere +And so this lady right humble of chere +Kneling I sawe, clad in grene and whyte + +To fore venus goddesse of al delyte +Enbrowded al witħ stones and perre +So richely that Ioye it was to see +Witħ sondry rolles on her garnement +For texpowne the troutħ of her entent +To shewe fully that for her humblesse +And for her vertu and her stablenesse +That she was cote of al womanly playsance +Therfore her word witħoute variance +Enbrowded was as men might see +De mieulx en mieulx witħ stones of perre +This is to sayne that she was so benygne +From better to better her hert dotħ resigne +And al her wyƚƚ to venus the goddesse +Whan that her list her harmes to redresse +For as me thought somwhat by her chere +For to compleyne she had grete desire +For in her hand she held a lityl bylle +For to declare the sum̄e of al her wylle +And to the goddesse her quarel for to shewe +Theffect of whiche was in wordes fewe + +.The copye of the supplicacion. + + + + + +O lady venus moder of cupyde +That in this world hast the gouernance +And hertes hye that hawteyn be by pryde +Enclynest mekely to thyn obeyssance +Causer of Ioye Relees of penance +And with thy stremes canst euery thing discerñ +Thurgħ heuenly fire of loue that is eterñ + +O blesful sterre persaunt and ful of light +Of beames gladsom, deuoyder of derknes +Chief recomfort after the blak nyght +To wyde woful hertes out of theyr heuynes +Take now good hede lady and goddesse +So that my bille may your grace attayne +Redresse to fynde of that I me compleyne + +For I am bounde to thing that I nolde +Frely to chese ther lack I liberte +And so I want of that myn herte wolde +The body is knyt, thougħ my thought be fre +So that I muste of necessite +My hertes lyst outward contrarye +Thougħ we be oon the dede muste varye + +My worship sauf I faylle election +Agayn al right botħ of god and kynde +Therto be knyt vnder subiection +For whens for botħ ar out of mynde +My thought gotħ furtħ my body is behynde +For I am here, and yond my remembrance +Betwene two so hange I in balance + +Deuoyde of Ioye, of woo I haue plente +What I desire, that may I not possede +For that I nolde is redy ay to me +And that I loue, for to sue I drede +To my desire contrary is my mede +And thus I stonde departed in tweyne +Of wyƚƚ and dede ylaced in a cheyne + +For thougħ I brenne witħ feruence & hete +Witħyn myn herte I mote compleyne of colde +And by excesse thougħ I swelte and swete +Me to compleyne god wote I am not bolde +Vnto no wight, ner one word vnfolde +Of al my peyne, allas the hard stounde +The hotter that I brenne, [the] colder is my wounde + +For he that hatħ myn hert feytħfully +And hool my loue in al honeste +Witħoute chaunge al be hit secretly +I haue no space witħ hym for to be +O lady venus consider now and see +Vnto theffecte and compleynt of my byƚƚ +Sitħ lyf and detħ I put aƚƚ in thy wyƚƚ + +And tho me thought the goddes did enclyne +Mekely her hede and softly gan expresse +That in short tyme her torment shold fyne +And how of hym for whom al her distresse +Contynned had and al her heuynesse +She shold haue Ioye and of her purgatorye +Be holpen sone and so lyue fortħ in glorye + +And said doughter for thy sad trouthe +Thy faitħful menyng and Innocence +That planted be witħ outen ony slouthe +In your persone deuoyed of al offence +So han they atteyned to our audience +That witħ our grace ye shal be wel releuyd +I you behete of al that hatħ you greuyd + +And for that ye be euer of one entent +Witħoute chaunge or mutabilyte +And in your paynes ben so pacient +To take lowly your aduersyte +And that so longe thurgh the cruelte +Of olde saturne my fader vnfortuned +Your woo shal now no lenger be contuned + +And thinketħ this witħ in a litil whyle +Hit shal aswage and ouer passen sone +For men by laysir passen many a myle +And ofte after a droppyng mone +The weder cleretħ, and whan [the] storme is done +The sonne shynetħ in his spyer bright +And Ioye waketħ whan woo is putto flight + +Remembre eke how neuer yet no wight +Ne cam to worship witħ out som debate +And folke reioyse also more of light +That they witħ derknes were waped & mate +No mañs chañce is allewey fortunate +Ne no wight preysetħ of sugre the swetnes +But they to fore haue tasted bitternes + +Gryssyld was asayed atte fuƚƚ +That torned after to encrese of Ioye +Penolope gan eke for sorowes dulle +For that her lord abode so long at troye +Also the torment ther coude noman accoye +Of dorygene flour of al Bretaigne +Thus euer Ioye is fyn and ende of payne + +And trustetħ this for conclusion +The ende of sorow is Ioye voyde of drede +For hoolly seyntes thurgħ her passion +Haue heuyn wonne by their souerain mede +And plente gladly folowetħ after nede +And so my doughter after your greuaunce +I you behote ye shal haue ful plesaunce + +For euer of loue the maner and the gyse +Is for to hurte his seruaunt & to wounde +And whan he hatħ taught them his empryse +He can in Ioye make them to habounde +And sitħ that ye haue in my laas be bounde +Witħ oute gruoching or rebellyon +Ye muste of night haue consolacion + +This to sayne dowtetħ neuer a deel +That ye shal haue ful possession +Of hym that ye now cherisshe so weel +In honest maner witħ oute offencion +By cause I knowe youre entencion +Is truly sette in party and in aƚƚ +To loue hym best and most in speciaƚƚ + +For he that ye haue chosen you to serue +Shal be to you suche as ye desire +Witħ oute chaunge fully til he sterue +So witħ my bronde I haue sette hym a fyre +And witħ my grace I shal hym so enspyre +That he in herte shal be right at your wylle +Wherso you liste to saue hym or to spylle + +For vnto you I shal his herte so lowe +Witħ oute spotte of ony doblenesse +That he ne shal escape from the bowe +Thaugħ that hym self by vnstedfastnesse +I mene of cupide that shal hym so distresse +Vnto your honde witħ tharowe of golde +That he ne shal escapen thaugh he wolde + +And sith ye list of pyte and of grace +In vertu only his yonghthe to cherisshe +I shal by aspectes of my benigne face +Make hym beschewe euery synne and vice +So that he shal haue no maner spice +In his corage to loue thinges newe +He shal to yow so playn be found and trewe + +And whan this goodly fair fressħ of hue +Humble and benygne of troutħ crop & rote +Conceyued had how venus gan to rewe +On her prayer plainly to do bote +To chaunge her bitter attones in to sote +She fyl on knees of higħ deuocion +And in this wyse began her orison + +Hyghest of hye quene and Emperice +Goddesse of loue, of good yet the best +That thurgħ your beaute witħoute vice +Whylom conquerd thappel atte fest +That Iubiter thurgħ his hye request +To alle the goddes aboue celestyal +Made in his palais most Imperyal + +To you my lady vpholder of my lyf +Mekely I thanke so as I may suffise +That ye list now witħ herte ententyf +So graciously for me to deuyse +That whyle I lyue witħ humble sacrefise +Vpon your auters your fest yer by yer +I shal encence casten in to the fyre + +For of your grace I am ful reconsiled +From euery troble vnto ioye and ease +That sorowes alle be from me exiled +Sitħ ye my lady list now tappease +My paynes olde and fully my disease +Vnto gladnes so sodenly to torne +Hauyng no cause from hens fortħ to morne + +For sithen ye so mekely liste to daunte +To my seruise hym that louetħ me best +And of your bounte so graciously to graunte +That he ne shal barye thougħ hym leste +Wherof myn herte is fully brought to reste +For now and euer o lady myn benigne +That hert and wiƚƚ I hooly to you resigne + +Thankyng you witħ al my ful herte +That of your grace and visitacion +So humble liste hym to conuerte +Fully to ben at my subiection +Witħ oute chaunge or transmutacion +Vnto his laste, now laude and reuerence +Be to your name and excellence + +This al and sum and chief of my request +And hool substance of my ful entente +You thankyng euer of your graunt & hest +Botħ now and euer that ye me grace sent +To conquer hym that neuer shal repent +Me for to serue and humblye for to please +As fynal tresour of my hertes ease + +And than anon venus cast a doun +In to her lappe braunches whyte and grene +Of hawthorn that wenten enuyron +Aboute her heed that ioye was to sene +And had her kepe hem honestly and clene +Whiche shold not fade ne neuer wexe olde +Yf she her biddyng kepe as she hatħ told + +And as these vowes be bothe fair and swete +Folowe theffecte that they do specifye +This is to seyne botħ in cold and hete +Be ye of one hert and of one fantasye +As ar these leues whiche may not dye +By no duresse of stormes that be kene +Nomore in wynter than in somer grene + +Right so by ensample of wele or woo +For Ioye torment or for aduersite +Whether so fortune fauoure, or be foo +For pouert riches or prosperyte +That ye your hert kepe in on degre +To loue hym best for no thing that ye fyne +Whom I haue bound so low vnder your cheyne + +And witħ [that] word the goddesse shoke her heed +And was in pees & spack as tho nomore +And therwitħ aƚƚ ful femynyn of drede +Me thought this lady sighen gan ful sore +And said agayn, lady that maist restore +Hertes in Ioye from theyr aduersite +To do your wil de mieulx en mieulx ma gree + +Thus euer slepyng dremyng as I laye +Witħyn the temple me thought I saye +Grete prees of folk witħ murmur wonderful +To croude and shoue, the temple was so ful +Euericħ ful besy, in his owne cause +That I ne may shortly in a clause +Discriuen alle the rites and the guyse +And eke I wante connyng to deuyse +How som̄e ther were witħ blood, encence & milk +And som̄e witħ flouris sote & softe as silk +And som̄e witħ sparowes & douues whyte +That for to offren gan hem delyte +Vnto the goddesse witħ sighe and prayer +Hem to relese of that they most desire +That for the prees shortly to conclude +I wente my way for the multitude +Me for to refressħ out of the prees allone +And by my self me thought as I gan gone +Witħ in the estres and gan a whyle tarye +I sawe a man that walked al solitarye +That as me semed for heuynes and dole +Hym to compleyne, that he walked so sole +Witħ oute espyyng of ony other wight + +And yf I sħal diseryuen hym a right +Yf that he had not ben in heuynes +Me thought he was, to speke of semelines +Of shap of fourme, and also of stature +The most passing, that euer yet nature +Made in her werkes, and lyke to be a man +And ther witħ al as I reherce can +Of face and chere the most gracyous +To be biloued happy and ewrous +Bur as it semed outward by his chere +That he complayned for lack of his desire +For by hym self as he walked vp and doun +I herde hym make a lamentacion +And said alas, what thing may this be +That now am bonde that whylom was fre +And wente at large at myn election +Now am I caught vnder subiection +For to become a beray homager +To god of loue, wher er I cam here +Felt in myn herte, nought of loues peyne +But now of newe, witħin hur firy cheyne +I am embraced so that I may not stryue +To serue and loue whyle I am on lyue + +The godly freshe in the temple yonder +I sawe right now, that I had wonder +How euer god, for to rekene aƚƚ +Might make a thing so celestiaƚƚ +So angelike on erthe to appere +For witħ the stremes of her eyen clere +I am wounded euen to the hert +That fro the detħ I may not astert +And most I meruayle that so sodeinly +I was so yolde to be at hur mercy +Witħoute more, I muste her lust obeye +Whether that she liste me to lyue or deye +And take mekely my sodeyn auenture +For sitħ my lif, my detħ, and eke my cure +Is in her hand it wil not auaylle +To gruoche agayn, for of this bataylle +The palme is heris, and plainly the victorye +Yf I rebellid honour none ne glorye +I might not in ony wyse achyeue +Sitħ I am [the]olden, how shold I thenne preue +To renne a wey, I wote hit wil not be +Thougħ I be loos, at large I may not fle +O god of loue how sharp is now thyn arowe + +How mayst thou now so cruelly and so narowe +Witħ oute cause hurte me and wounde +And takest none hede my sorowes to founde +But liche a birde that fleetħ at her desire +Tyl sodeynly witħyn the pantere +She is caught thaugħ late she was at large +Anewe tempest forcastetħ now my barge +Now vp now doun, witħ wynd it is so blowe +So am I possed and almost ouerthrowe +For dryue in derknes of many sondry wawe +Alas whan shal this tempest ouerdrawe +To clere the skyes of myn aduersite +The lode sterre whan that I ne may see +Hit is so hid witħ clowdes that be blake +Alas whan wyƚƚ this torment ouerslake +I can not wyte, for who is hurt of newe +And bledetħ inward til he wex pale of hue +And hatħ his wound vnwarly fressħ & grene +And hit is not couthe vnto the harmes kene +Of myghty cupyde that can so hertes daunte +That no man may in his warre hym vaunte +To gete a pryce but only by mekenes +For ther ne hayletħ stryf ne sturdynes + +So may I sayne that witħ a loke am yolde +And haue no power to stryue thaugħ I wolde +Thus stonde I euer betwix lif and detħ +To loue and serue whyle I haue bretħ +In suche a place where I dar not pleyne +Liche hym that is in torment and in peyne +And knowetħ not to whom to discure +For ther that I haue holly set my aire +I dar not wel for drede ne for daunger +And for vnknowen tellen how the fyre +Of loues bronde is kyndlid in my breste +Thus am I murdred and slayn atte leste +So priuely witħyn my thought +O lady venus whom I haue sought +So wysse me now what me is best to doo +That am distraught witħ my self so +That I ne wote what way for to torne +Sauf by my self soleyn for to morne +Hangyng in balance betwix hope and drede +Witħ oute comfort remedye or rede +For hope biddetħ pursue and assaye +And agaynward drede answertħ naye +And now witħ hope I am set a lofte + +But drede and daunger hard & nothyng softe +Hatħ ouerthrowe my trust and put a doun +Now at my large, now fetred in prisoun +Now in torment, now in souerayn glorye +Now in paradyse and now in purgatorye +As man dispayred in a double were +Born vp witħ hope, and theñe anon daunger +Me drawetħ aback, and saitħ it shal not be +For where as I of myne aduersite +Am bolde somwhyle mercy to requyre +Thenne cometħ dispair & gynnetħ me to lere +A newe lesson to hope ful the contrary +They be so diuerse they wil do me varye +And thus I stand dismayed in a traunce +For whan that hope were likly me tauaunce +For drede I tremble & dar one word not speke +And yf hit so be, that I not out breke +To telle the harmes that greuen me so sore +But in my self encrece them more and more +And to be slayn fully me delyte +When of my detħ she is nothing to wyte +For but yf she my constreynt plainly knewe +How shold she euer, on my peynes rue + +Thus oft tyme witħ hope I am meuyd +To tel her aƚƚ, how I am greuyd +And to be hardy on me for to take +To axe mercy, but drede dotħ me theñe awake +And than wanhop answertħ me agayn +That better were than she haue disdayn +To dye attones vnknowe of ony wight +And ther witħ aƚƚ biddetħ hope anon right +Me, to be bold and prayen her of grace +And fitħ alle vertues be portreyd in her face +Hit were not sittyng, that pyte were behynde +And right anon witħyn my self I fynde +A newe plee brought on me witħ drede +That me so masetħ that I see no spede +Be cause he saitħ that stonyetħ al my blood +I am so symple and she is so good +Thus hope & drede in me wyl not sece +To plete and stryue my harmys to encrece +But at hardest yet or I be dede +Of my distresse sitħ I can no rede +But stande dom̄ styl as ony stone +To fore the goddesse I wil me haste anoñ +And compleyne witħ oute more sermoñ + +Thougħ detħ be fyn and ful conclusion +Of my request, yet I wyl assaye +And right anon me thought I saye +This woful man as I haue memorye +Ful lowly entre in to an oratorye +And knelid a doun in ful humble wyse +To fore the goddesse and gan anon deuyse +His pitous quarel witħ a doleful chere +Sayng right this as ye shaƚƚ here + +.The compleynt of the man. + + + + +Redresse of sorow O Citherea +That witħ the stremys of thy playsaunt hete +Gladest the mounte of al Cirrea +Where thou hast chosen thy paleys and sete +Whos bright beames ben wesshen and wete +In the ryuer of Elycon the welle +Haue now pyte of that I shal you telle + +And not desdayne ye of your benygnyte +My mortal woo O lady myn goddesse +Of grace and bounte & mercyful pyte +Benygnely to helpe and to redresse +And thaugħ so be I can not wel expresse +The greuous harmes that I fele in my herte +Haue neuer yet the lesse mercy of my smerte + +This is to sayne O cler heuenes light +That next the sonne sercled han your spere +Sitħ ye me hurte witħ your dredful myght +By influence of your beames clere +And that I by your seruyse now so dere +As ye me brought in to this maladye +Be ye gracyous and shape ye remedye + +For in you hoolly lietħ help of al this caas +And knowe best my sorow and al my peyne +For drede of detħ, how I ne dar allas +To aren mercy ones, ne me compleyne +Now witħ your fyre her hert so constrayne +Witħ oute more, or I deye atte leste +That she may witte what is my request + +How I no thyng in al this world desire +But for to serur fully to myn ende +That goodly freshe so womanly of chere +Witħout chaunge whyle I haue lyf & mynde +And that ye wold suche grace sende +Of my seruyse that she not disdeyne +Sithen her to serue I may not me restreyne + +And sitħ that hope me hatħ yeue hardynes +To loue her best and neuer to repente +Whylis that I lyue witħ al my besynes +To drede & serue, thaugħ daunger neuer assente +And here vpon ye knowe myn entente +How I haue vowed fully in myn mynde +To ben her man, thaugħ I no mercy fynde + +For in my hert emprynted is so sore +Her shap her forme & al her semelynes +Her porte her chere, her godenes more & more +Her womanhed and eke her gentiles +Her troutħ, her faitħ and her kyndnes +Witħ alle vertues eche set in her degre +Ther is no lack, sauyng only of pyte + +Her sad demenyng of wyl not variable +Of loke benygne, and rote of al plesance +And exemplayre to alle that wyl be stable +Discrete prudent of wisedom suffisance +Mirrour of witte ground of gouernance +A world of beaute compassed in her face +Whos persant loke doth thurgħ my hert race + +And ouer this wonder secrete and true +A wel of fredome and right bounteous +And euer encrecyng in vertu new & newe +Of speche goodly, and wonder gracyous +Deuoyd of pryde, to poure not despytous +And yf that I shortly shal not feyne +Saue vpon mercy I no thing compleyne + +What wonder thenne, thougħ I be witħ drede +Inly supprised for to axen grace +Of her that is quene of womanhede +For wel I wote in so higħ a place +Hit wil not be, therfore I ouer pace +And take lowly what wo I endure +Til she of pyte me take to her cure + +But one auowe plainly here I make +That whethir so be, she do me lyue or deye +I wil not gruoche, but humbly hit take +And thanke god and wilfully obeye +For by my troutħ my hert shal neuer reneye +For lyf ne detħ mercy ne daunger +Of wil and thought to be at her desire + +To ben as trewe as euer was antonyus +To cleopatre whyle hym lastetħ bretħ +Or vnto thesbe yong Piramus +That was faithful found, til them deptid deth +Right so shal I til Antropos me sletħ +For whele or woo her faithful man be found +Vnto my last, like as my hert is bound + +To loue as wel as did Achilles +Vnto his laste the fair Polixene +Or as the grete famous Hercules +For dyanyre that felte the shott kene +Right so shal I saye right as I mene +Whyle that I lyue, her botħ drede and serue +For lack of mercy thougħ she do me sterue + +Now lady venus to whom nothing vnknowe +Is in the world hid, ne nought may be +For ther nys thing nether hye ne lowe +May be conceyled from your pryuete +Fro whom my menyng is not now secret +But wite fully that myn entent is true +And liche my trouthe now on my peyne rue + +For more of grace than of presumpcion +I axe mercy, and no thing of dute +Of lowly humbles, witħ oute offencion +That ye enclyne of your benygnyte +Your audience vnto my humylyte +To graunte me that to you I clepe & calle +Sum day relees yet of my peynes alle + +And sitħ ye haue the guerdon and the mede +Of alle louers pleinly in your honde +Now of grace and pyte take ye hede +Of my distrees, that am vnder your bonde +So lowly bound, as ye wel vnderstonde +In that place where I toke first my wounde +Of pyte suffre ye my heltħ may be founde + +That liche as she me hurte witħ a sight +Right so with helth late me hur sustene +And as the stremes of her eyen bright +Whylom my hert witħ woundes sharp & kene +Thurgħ persed haue and yet be fresh & grene +So as she me hurte, lete her me socoure +Or ellis certayn I may not long endure + +For lack of speche I can say you no more +I haue mater but I can not pleyne +My witte is duƚƚ to tel al my sore +A mouth I haue, And yet for al my peyn +For want of wordes I may not now atteyn +To tel half, that dotħ my hert greue +Mercy abydyng, til she me list releue + +But this theffect of my mater fynal +Witħ detħ or mercy relees for to fynde +For hert body thought lyf lust and al +Witħ al my reson and al my ful mynde +And fyue wittes of on assent I bynde +To her seruyse witħ oute ony stryf +And make her pryncesse of my detħ or lyf + +And now I pray of routħ and eke pyte +O goodly planet, O lady venus bright +That ye your sone of his deyte +Cupide I mene that witħ his dredful myght +And witħ his brond that is so clere of light +Her herte so to fyre and to marke +As ye me whylem brent witħ a sparke + +That euenlicħ and with the same fyre +She may be hit, as I now brenne and melte +So that her herte be flamed witħ desire +That she may knowe by feruence hou I swelte +For of pyte plainly yf she felte +The self hete that doth myn hert enbrace +I hope of routħ she wiƚƚ do me grace + +And ther witħ al bemis as me thought +Towardes this man ful benyngely +Gan cast her eye, like as that she rought +Of his disease, and said ful goodly +Sith it is so, that thou so humbly +Witħ out gruachyng our hestes liste obeye +Toward thyn help I wil anon pourueye + +And eke my sone Cupyde that is so blynde +He shal be helpyng fully to performe +Your hool desire, that nothing be behynde +Ne shal be lefte, so we shal reforme +This pietous cōpleynt, [that] maketħ the to morne +That she for whom thau sorowest most in hert +Shal thurgħ hur mercy relece al thy smert + +Whan she scetħ tyme, thurgħ our purueaunce +Be not to hasty, but suffre althing wele +For in abydyng, thurgħ lowly obeyssaunce +Lyetħ ful redres, of al that ye now fele +And she shal be as trewe as ony stele +To you allone, by our myght and grace +Yf ye list mekely abyde a lityl space + +But vnderstande ye that al her cherising +Shal be grounded vpon honeste +That no wight shal by ony compacyng +Demen amys of hur in no degre +For neyther mercy, coutħ ner pyte +She shal not haue ne take of the non hede +Further than longetħ vnto her womanhede + +Be not astonyed of no wilfulnes +Ne not despeyred of this dissolucion +Late reson bridle lust by buxumnes +Witħout gruochyng or rebellyon +For ioye shal folowe al this passion +For who can suffre torment and endure +Ne may not faylle, but folowe shal his cure + +For to fore alle she shal the louen best +So shal I her witħoute offencion +By Influence enspire in her brest +In honest wyse witħ ful entencion +For tenclyne by clene affection +Her hert fully on the to haue routhe +Be cause I knowe that thou menest trouthe + +Go now to hir where as she stant a syde +Witħ humble chere, and put the in her grace +And al beforn lete hope be thy guyde +And thaugħ that drede wold witħ the pace +Hit sittetħ wel, but loke that thou arace +Out of thyn hert wanhop and despeire +To her presence er thou haue repeir + +And mercy first shal thy way make +And honest menyng afore do thy message +To make pyte in her herte awake +And secretnes to further thy viage +Witħ humble porte to her that is so sage +Shal menes be, and I my self also +Shal the fortune, or thy tale be do + +Go fortħ anon, and be right good of chere +For specheles nothing mayst thou spede +Be good of trust & be no thing in were +Sitħ I my self shal helpen in this nede +For atte lest of her goodly hede +She shal to the her audience enclyne +And lowe the to her til thou thy tale fyne + +For wel thou wost yf I shal not feyne +Witħoute speche thou maist no mercy haue +For who that wil of his pryue peyne +Fully be cured his lyf to helpe and saue +He must mekely out of his hert graue +Discure his wound and shewe hit his leche +Or ellis deye for defaute of speche + +For he that is in myschief reklees +To seche help I holde hym a wrecche +And she ne may thyn hert bryng in pees +But yf thy compleynt to hir hert strecche +Woldest thou be cured & wilt no salue fecche +Hit wil not be, for no wight may atteyne +To come to blys, yf he list lyue in peyne + +Therfore attones go fortħ in humble wyse +To fore thy lady and lowly knele a doun +And in al trouthe thy wordes so deuyse +That she on the haue compassion +For she that is of so hye renoun +In al vertues as quene and souerayn +Of womanhed shal rue on thy payn + +And whan the goddes this lesson had told +Aboute me so I gan behold +Rigħt so a stoned stode in a traunce +To se the maner and contenance +And al the chere of this woful man +That was of hue dedely pale and wan +Witħ drede supprised in his owne thought + +Makyng chere as thaugħ he rought nought +Of lyf ne detħ ne what so hym betyde +So moche fere he had on euery side +To put hym fortħ to tel his peyne +Vnto his lady, other to compleyne +What woo he felt torment or disese +What dedely sorow his hert dide sese +For coutħ of whiche his wo as I endite +My penne I fele quaken as I wryte +Of hym I had so grete compassion +For to reherce his weymentacion +That vnnethe, thougħ I witħ my self stryue +I want connyng his peynes to discryue +Allas to whom shal I for help calle +Not to the muses for cause they ben alle +Help of right in Ioye and not in woo +And in matiers that they delite also +Wherfore they nyl as now directe my style +Nor me enspiren Alas the hard whyle +I can no further but to the siphon +And to her suster to calle help vpon +That be goddesses of torment and peyne +Nowe lete your teris in to myn Inke reyne + +Witħ woful wordes my paper for to blotte +This woful mater not to peynt, but spotte +To tel the maner of this dredeful man +Vpon his complaynt whan he first began +To tel his lady whan he gan declare +His hid sorowis, and his euel fare +That at his herte constreyned so sore +Theffect of whiche was this witħoute more + +Pryncesse of yougtħ & flour of gentilesse +Ensample of vertu ground of curtesye +Of beaute rote quene and eke maistres +To alle women how they shal hem gye +And sotħfast mirrour texemplifye +The right way of port and of womanhede +What I shal saye, of mercy take ye hede +Besechyng first vnto your hye nobles +Witħ quakyng hert of my Inward drede +Of grace and pyte & not of right wysnes +Of verrey coutħe to help in this nede +This is to say O wel of goodlyhede +That I ne rekke thaugħ ye do me deye +So ye list first to heven what I seye + +The dredeful stroke the gret force and might +Of god cupide that noman may rebelle +So inwardly thurgħ out myn hert right +Y perced hatħ that I ne may councele +Myn hid wound ne I ne may apele +Vnto no gretter, this mighty god so faste +You to serue hatħ me bound vnto my laste + +That hert and aƚƚ witħ out stryf ar yolde +For lyf or detħ to your seruyse allone +Right as the goddesse myghty venus wolde +To for her mekely whan I made my mone +She me constrayned witħoute chaunge anone +To your seruyse and neuer for to fayne +Wherso euer ye list to do me ease or payne + +So that I can no thing but mercy crye +Of you my lady, and chaunge for no newe +That ye list godely to fore er that I dye +Of verray couthe vpon my paynes rue +For by my trouthe, and ye my peynes knewe +What is the cause of myne aduersite +On myn disese ye wolde haue pyte + +For vnto you trewe and eke secre +I wil be founde to serue as I best can +And therwitħ al as lowly in eche degre +To you be allone as euer yet was man +Vnto his lady from the tyme I began +And shal so fortħ witħouten ony sleutħ +Whylis that I lyue, by god & by my troutħ + +For leuer I had to deyen sodenly +Than you offende in any maner wyse +And suffre paynes inward priuely +Than my seruyse as now ye shold dispyse +For I right neught wil axe in no wyse +But for your seruaunt ye wold me accepte +And whan I trespace, goodly me correcte + +And for to graunte of mercy the prayer +Only of grace and womanly pyte +From day to day that I myght leve +You for to plese, and therwitħ al that ye +Whan I do mys, list for to teche me +In your seruyse hou that I may amende +From hensfortħ and neuer you offende + +For vnto me it doth ynowħ suffyse +That for your man ye wold me resseyue +Fully to ben as you lyst deuyse +And as ferforth as my wittes can conceyue +And therwith al liche as ye preue +That I be true, to guerdone me of grace +Or ellis to punysshe after my trespace + +And yf so be that I may not atteyne +Vnto your mercy, yet graunte at the leste +In your seruyse for al my wo and peyne +That I may deyen after my beheste +This is al and som the fyn of my request +Outher with mercy your seruaunt to saue +Or mercyles that I may be begraue + +And whan this benygne of her entent true +Conceyued hatħ the compleynt of this man +Right as the fresh rody Rose newe +Of her colour to wexen she began +Her blood astoned so from her herte ran +In to her face of verray femynyte +Thurgh honest drede abasshed was she + +And humbly she began her eyen caste +Towardes hym of hir benygnyte +So that no word by her lippes past +For hast nor drede mercy ne pyte +For so demened she was in honeste +That vnaduysed no thing fro her stert +So moche of reson was compassed in her hert + +Til atte last of whiche she did abreyd +Whan she is trouthe and menyng did fele +And vnto hym ful goodly spack and seyd +Of your behest and your menyng wele +And your seruyse so faitħful euerydele +Whiche vnto me so lowly now ye offre +Witħ al my herte, I thanke you of your profre + +That for so moche your entent is sette +Only in vertu y bridled vnder drede +Ye must of right nedis face the bet +Of your request, and the better spede +But as for me I may of womanhede +No further graunte to you in myn entente +Than as my lady venus wil assente + +For she wel knoweth I am not at my large +To doon right nought but by her ordynance +So am I drownd vnder her dredeful charge +Her lyste tobbeye withoute variaunce +But for my parte so hit be pleasaunce +Vnto the goddesse for troutħ in your empryse +I you accepte fully to my seruyse + +For she my herte hath in subiection +Whiche hoolly is youres & neuer shal repente +In thought ner dede in myn election +Witnes on venus that knoweth myn entent +Fully tobeye hir dome and Iugement +So as hir liste disposen and ordeyne +Right as she knoweth the troutħ of vs tweyne + +For vnto the tyme that venus list prouyde +To shape away for our hertis ease +Bothe ye and I mekely must abyde +To take at gree, and not of our disease +To grucche agayn til that she list tappease +Our hid woo so Iuly that constreynetħ +From day to day and our hertis peyneth + +For in abidyng of woo and al affraye +Who so can suffre is founden remedye +And for the beste ful ofte is made delaye +Er men be heled of their maladye +Wherfore as venus list this mater to gye +Leet vs agreen, and take al for the best +Til her liste, sette bothe our hertes in rest + +For she is that byndetħ and can constreyn +Hertes in one, this fortunate planete +And can relece louers of her peyn +To turne fully her bitter in to swete +Now blisful goddes doun fro thy sterry sete +Vs to fortune cast your stremes shene +Lyke as ye knowe, that we troutħ mene + +And ther witħ al as I myn eyen caste +For to perceyue the maner of these tweyne +To fore the goddesse mekely as they paste +Me thought I saw witħ a goldyn cheyne +Venus, anon enbrace and constreyne +Her bothe hertes in one, for to perseuere +Whilis that they lyue, and neuer to disseuere + +Seyng right thus with a benygne chere +Sith it is so, ye be vnder my myght +My wil is thus, that ye my doughter dere +Ful accepte this man as it is right +Vnto your grace anon here in my sight +That euer hath ben so lowly you to serue +Hit is good shil your thank that he deserue + +Your honour sauf and eke your womanhede +Hym to cherisshe, hit sittetħ you right wele +Sith he is bounde vnder hope and drede +Amyd my cheyne that forged is of stele +Ye must of mercy shape that he fele +In yow som grace of his long seruyse +And that in hast lik as I shal deuyse + +This is to sayn that ye taken hede +Hou he to you most faitħful is and true +Ofal your seruauntes, & nothing for his mede +Of you ne asketh, but ye on hym rue +For he vowed hath to change for no newe +For lyf ne detħ, for ioye ne for peyne +Ay to be youris, so as ye list ordeyne + +Wherfore ye muste or els it were wrong +Vnto your grace fully hym receyue +In my presence, by cause he hatħ so long +Hooly ben youris, as ye may conceyue +That from your mercy, yf ye hym weyue +I wyl my silf recorden cruelte +In your persone, and gret lack of pyte + +Late hym for his troutħ fynde than agayn +For long seruyse, guerdon hym witħ grace +And late ye pyte weye doun his payn +For tyme is now daunger to arace +Out of your hert, and mercy in to pace +And loue for loue world wel beseme +To yeue agayn and this I plainly deme + +And as for hym I wil ben his borowe +Of lowlihede and besy attendance +How he shal be bothe eue and morowe +Ful diligent to doon his obseruance +And euer awaytyng, you to do playsance +Wherfore my sone, listen and take hede +Fully tobeye, as I shal the rede + +And first of aƚƚ my wiƚƚ is that thou be +Feithful in hert and constant as a wal +True humble, meke and therwith al secre +Witħ out change in partie or in aƚƚ +And for no torment that the fallen shal +Tempest the not, but euer in stedfastnes +Rote thyn herte, and wyde doublenes + +And furthermore haue in reuerence +These women al for thy lady sake +And suffre neuer that men hem do offence +For loue of one, but euermore vndertake +Hem to defende whether they slept or wake +And ay be redy to holden them party +Ayenst aƚƚ tho that to hem haue enuye + +Be curtais ay and lowly of thy speche +To riche and poure ay fressħ & wel beseyn +And euer besy weyes for to seche +Alle true louers to relece of her peyn +Sith thou art one, & of no wight haue disdeyn +For loue hath power hertes for to daunte +And neuer for cherising, the to muche auaunte + +Be lusty eke voyd of aƚƚ tristesse +And take no thought but euer be iocound +And not to pensif for none heuynes +And witħ thy gladnes, lete sadnes ay be found +Whan woo approched, lete mirtħ most habound +As manhod ayid, and though [thou] fele smert +Late not to many knowen of thyn hert + +And alle vertues besily thou sue +Vices eschewe for the loue of one +And for no tales thyn hert not renewe +Word is but wynd that shal soon ouergoon +What euer thou here be domb as ony stoon +And to answere to sone, not the delyte +For here she standetħ that al this shal [the] quyte + +And wherther thou be absent or in presence +None others beawte lete in thy hert myne +Sitħ I haue yeue hir of beaute excellence +Aboue al other in vertu for to shyne +And thynke hou in fyre men ar wont to fyne +this pured gold to put hit in assaye +So to the proue, thou art put in delaye + +But tyme shal come thou shalt for thy suffrance +Be wel apaid and take for thy mede +Thy lyurs ioye and al thy suffisance +So that good hope alway thy bridel lede +Lete no dispeir hyndre the with drede +But ay thy trust vpon her mercy grounde +Sith none but she may thy sorowe sounde + +Eche hour and tyme. weke. day and yere +Be lich faithful and vary not for lyte +Abyde a whyle and than of thy desire +The tyme neygheth that shal the most delyte +And late no sorow in thy hert byte +For no differring, sith thou for thy mede +Shal reioyse in pees the flour of womanhede + +Thinke hou she is this worldis sonne & light +The sterre of beaute the flour eke of fairnes +Both crop and robe and eke the rubye bright +Hertes to glade, y troubled with derknes +And hou I haue made her, thin hertes Empresse +Be glad therfore to be vnder her bond +Now come ner doughter & take him by the hond + +Vnto this syn that aftir alle these shouris +Of his torment he may be glad and light +Whan by your grace ye take hym to be youris +For euermore anon here in my sight +And eke I wil also as hit is right +Without more his langour for to lysse +In my presence anon that ye hym kysse + +That ther may be of al your old smertis +A ful relees vnder ioye assured +And that one lok be of your bothe hertis +Shet with my keye of gold so wel pured +Only in signe that ye haue recured +Your hool desire here in this hooly place +Within my temple now in the yere of grace + +Eternally be bounde of assuraunce +The knot is knyt, that may not be vnbounde +That alle the goddes of this aliaunce +Satorne. Joue. and Mars as it is founde +And eke Cupyde that first did you wounde +Shal bere record, and ouermore bewreke +On whiche of yow, his troutħ first breke + +So that by aspectes of their fair lokis +Witħoute mercy shal fal the vengeance +For to be raced clene out of my bokis +On whiche of you be found of variance +Therfore attones settetħ your plesance +Fully to ben whyle ye haue lyf and mynde +Of one acorde vnto your lyues ende + +That yf the spiryte of newfanglenes +In ony wyse your hertes wold assaylle +To meue or styre to brynge in doublenes +Vpon your troutħ to gyuen a bataylle +Lete not your corage ne your force faylle +Nor none assaultes you flitten or remeue +For vnassayed no man may troutħ preue + +For whyte is whitter yf it be set by black +And swete is swetter after bitternes +And falshed euer is dryue and put a back +Where trouthe is roted witħ doblenes +Witħout preue ther may be no sekernes +Of loue or hate and therfore of you two +Shal loue be more, for hit was bought with woo + +And euery thing is had more in deynte +And more of pris whan it is dere bought +And eke loue stondeth more in sewrte +Whan it is to fore with payne woo & thought +Conquerd was first whan hit was sought +And euery conquest hath his excellence +In his poursute as it fyndeth resistence + +And so to you more sote and agreable +Shal loue be found I do you plainly assure +Witħout grucchyng that ye were suffrable +So lowe so meke paciently to endure +That al attones I shal do now my cure +For now and euer your hertis so to bynde +That nought but deth shal the knot vnbynde + +Now in this mater what shold I lenger dwelle +Come ye attones and do as I haue said +And first my doughter that ar of bounte welle +In hert and thought be glad & wel apayd +To done hym grace that shal & hath obeyd +Your lustes euer, and I wil for his sake +Of trouth to you be bounde and vndertake + +And so fortħ witħin presence as they stand +To fore the goddes this fair and wele +Her humble seruant toke goodly by the hond +As he to fore her, mekely did knele +And kyssed hym after fulfillyng eueridele +From poynt to poynt in ful thryfty wyse +As ye to forn haue venus herd deuyse + +Thus is this man to ioye and al plesance +From heuynes and from his peynes olde +Ful reconcyled, and hatħ ful suffisance +Of her that euer ment wel, and wold +That in good faitħ and I tel shold +The inward mirthes did her hertis brace +For al my lyf to telle, it were to lityl space + +For he hatħ wonne hir that he louetħ best +And she to grace hatħ take hym of pyte +And thus her hertes ben botħ set in rest +Witħoute chaunge or mutabilite +And venus hatħ of her benygnyte +Confermed al what shal I lenger tary +These tweyne in one and neuer to vary + +That for the ioye in the temple aboute +Of this acorde by grete solempnyte +Was laude and honour within & witħoute +Yeue to venus, and to the deyte +Of god cupide, so that Caliope +And al her sustren in her armonye +Soon with songes the goddes did magnifye + +And al attones with notes loud & sharp +They did her honour and her reuerence +And Orpheus among them with his harp +Gan strynges touche with his diligence +And Amphion that hath suche excellence +Of musyke ay dyde his besynes +To plese and queme venus the goddesse + +Only for cause of the affinyte +Betwix these two not lusty to disseuere +And euery louer of lowe and hye degre +Gan venus pray fro thens fortħ and euer +That hool of them the loue may [per]seuere +Witħouten ende in suche wyse as they gonne +And more encrece that hit of hard was wonne + +And the goddes heryng this request +As she that knewe the clene entencion +Of bothe them tweyne made a bihest +Perpetuelly by confirmacion +Whylis they lyue of one affection +They shal endure ther is no more to sayne +That neyther shal haue mater to complayne + +So ferfurtħ euermore in our eternal see +The goddes haue in our presence +Fully deuysed thurgħ their deyte +And hooly concluded by her Influence +That by thair myght and Iuste prudence +The loue of hem by grace and eke fortune +Witħ oute chaunge shal euermore contune + +Of whiche graunt the temple enuiron +Thurgħ hye comfort of them that were present +Anon was begun witħ a melodyous sowun +In name of tho that troutħ in loue ment +A balade newe in ful good entent +To fore the goddes witħ notis londe and clere +Syngyng right this anon as ye shal here + +Fayrest of sterres that with your [per]sant light +And with the cherysyng of your stremes clere +Causen in loue hertes to be light +Only by shynyng of your glad spere +Now lawde and pryce O venus lady dere +Be to your name that haue without synne +This man fortuned his lady for to wynne + +Willy planete O esperus so bright +That woful hertes can appese and stere +And euer ar redy by your grace & might +To helpe al tho that bye loue so dere +And haue power hertis to sette on fyre +Honour to you of al that ben here Inne +That haue this man his lady made to wynne + +O mighty goddesse day sterre after nyght +Gladyng the morowe whan ye don appere +To wyde derknes by freshnes of your sight +Only witħ twinkyng of your plesaunt chere +To you we thanke louers that ben here +That ye this man and neuer for to twynne +Fortune haue, his lady for to wynne + +And witħ the noyse an heuenly melodye +Witħ that they made in her armonye +Thurgħ out the temple for this mans sake +Out of my slepe anon I dyde awake +And for astonyed knewe as tho no rede +For sodeyn chaunge oppressed witħ drede +Me thought I was cast in a traunce +So clene away was tho my remembrance +Of alle my dreme, wherof gret thought & wo +I had in herte and nyst what was to doo +For heuynes for that I had lost the sight +Of her that I al the longe nyght +Had dremed of in myn aduision +Wherof I made grete lamentacion +Be cause I had neuer in my lyf beforn +Saw none so fair sitħ that I was born +For loue of whom so as I can endyte +I purpose here to make and to wryte +A lityl tretyse and processe make +In pryce of women only for her sake +Hem to comence as it is skyl and right +For her godenes witħ al my myght +Prayng to her that is so bounteuous + +So ful of vertu and so gracyeus +Of womanhede and mercyful pyte +This symple tretyse for to take in gre +Til I haue leyzer vnto her hye renoun +For to expound my forsaid visioun +And tel in playn the signefyaunce +As it cometh to my remembraunce +So that her after my lady may hit loke +Now go thy way thou litil rude boke +To her presence as I the comande +And first of aƚƚ thou me recomande +Vnto hir and to her excellence +And pray to hir, hit be non offence +Yf ony word in the be myssaid +Besechyng her, she be not euyl a paid +For as her list I wil the efte correcte +Whan that her liketħ ageinward the directe +I mene that benygne and goodly of face +Now go thy way and put the in her grace + +.Explicit the temple of glas. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Temple of Glass, by John Lydgate + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEMPLE OF GLASS *** + +***** 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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 www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Temple of Glass + +Author: John Lydgate + +Release Date: July 30, 2009 [EBook #29552] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEMPLE OF GLASS *** + + + + +Produced by Jason Isbell and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p class="tn">Transcriber's Note: As the characters used to display the, that and +thou are not in unicode, they were replaced with the words that they +represent. The character for per is found in unicode, but is rare, so it +was also replaced by the phrase it represents. All other abbreviations +are represented by the letters they were represented by in the +original.</p> + +<h1>The Temple of Glass</h1> +<p class="center">by</p> +<h2>John Lydgate</h2> + +<p class="center">Printed at Westminster<br/> +by William Caxton about the year<br/> +1477</p> + +<p class="center">Cambridge<br/> +at the University Press<br/> +1905</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p>The unique book here reprinted in facsimile came to the Cambridge +University Library in a famous volume of tracts described by Mr Blades +(Biography and Typography of W. Caxton, 1882, p. 201).</p> + +<p>The volume had formed part of the collection of John Moore, Bishop of +Ely, which was given to the University by King George the First in 1715.</p> + +<p>The first leaf, which is wanting, was probably blank.</p> + +<p class="right">F. JENKINSON</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>I certify that I have printed 250 copies only of this facsimile, that +the impressions have been rubbed off the plates and the negatives +destroyed.</p> + +<p class="right">P. DUJARDIN</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>.The temple of glas.</h2> + + +<p>For thought constreynt & greuous heuynes<br/> +For pensifhed and higħ distres<br/> +To bed I went now this other nyght<br/> +Whan that lucina witħ hir pale light<br/> +Was Ioyned last witħ phebus in aquarye<br/> +Amyd decembre, whan of Ianuarye<br/> +Ther be kalendes of the new yere<br/> +And derk dyane horned and nothing clere<br/> +Had her beames vnder a mysty cloude<br/> +Witħ in my bed for cold I gan me shroude<br/> +Al desolate for constraynt of my woo<br/> +The long nyght walowyng to and fro<br/> +Til at laste er I began take kepe<br/> +Me dyde oppresse a sodeyn dedly slepe<br/> +Witħ in the whiche me thougħt I was<br/> +Rauysshed in spiryte in to a temple of glas<br/> +I nyste how fer in wildernes<br/> +That founded was as by liklynes<br/> +Not vpon stele, but on a craggy roche<br/> +Lyke yse y froze, and as I did approche<br/> +Agayn the sonne that shone so clere</p> + +<p>As ony Cristal and euer ner and ner<br/> +As I cam nyghe this grisly dredful place<br/> +I wex astonyed, the light so in my face<br/> +Be gan to smyte, so persing euer in one<br/> +On euery part wher that I gan gone<br/> +That I ne might no thing as I wolde<br/> +Aboute me considere and beholde<br/> +The wonder estres for brightnes of the sonne<br/> +Til atte last certayn skyes donne<br/> +Witħ wynde chaced han her cours y went<br/> +To fore the stremes of titan and y blent<br/> +So that I mighte witħ in and witħ oute<br/> +Wherso I wolde beholden me aboute<br/> +For to reporte the facōn and manere<br/> +Of aƚƚ this place that was circuler<br/> +In compas wyse, round by entayle wrought<br/> +And whan I had longe gone and sought<br/> +I found a wiket and entred in as fast<br/> +In to the temple and myn eyen cast<br/> +On euery syde now lowe eft alofte<br/> +And right anon as I gan walken softe<br/> +Yf I the sotħ a right reporte shal<br/> +I sawe depeynted vpon a wal</p> + +<p>From este to weste many a fair ymage<br/> +Of sondry louers lyke as they were of age<br/> +Y sette in ordre after they were trewe<br/> +Witħ liuely colours wonder fresh of hue<br/> +And as me thought I sawe som sitte & som stāde<br/> +And som̄e knelyng witħ billes in their hande<br/> +And som̄e witħ compleynt woful & pietous<br/> +Witħ doleful chere to putten to venus<br/> +So as she sat fleetyng in the see<br/> +Vpon her woo forto haue pitee<br/> +And first of alle I saugħ there of cartage<br/> +Dido the quene so goodly of visage<br/> +That gan compleyne hir auenture and cas<br/> +How she deceyued was of Eneas<br/> +For al his hestes and his othes sworn<br/> +And said alas that euer she was born<br/> +Whan she sawe that ded she must be<br/> +And next I sawe the compleynt of Medee<br/> +How that she falsed was of Iason<br/> +And nygħ by venus sawe I sitte atheon<br/> +And al the maner how the boor hym slougħ<br/> +For whom she wepte and had pyne ynougħ<br/> +Ther saw I also how that penolope</p> + +<p>For she so longe her lord ne mighte see<br/> +Was of colour bothe pale and grene<br/> +And after next was the fresh quene<br/> +I mene alcest the noble trewe wyf<br/> +And for admete hou she lost her lif<br/> +And for her troutħ yf I shal not lye<br/> +How she was torned in to a daysye<br/> +Ther was Grisildes Innocence<br/> +And al her mekenes and pacience<br/> +There was eke Isode & many other moo<br/> +And al the torment and the cruel woo<br/> +That she had for tristram al her lyue<br/> +And how that Tisbe her hert dyde ryue<br/> +Witħ thilk swerd of sir Piramus<br/> +And al the maner hou that Theseus<br/> +The mynotaure slow amyd the hous<br/> +That was forwrynked by crafte of dedalus<br/> +Whan he was in pryson shit in Crete<br/> +And how that philles felte of loues hete<br/> +The grete fyre of demephon allas<br/> +And for his falshed and for his trespas<br/> +Vpon the walles depeynt men might see<br/> +How she henge vpon a fylberd tree</p> + +<p>And many a story moo than I rekene can<br/> +Were in the temple, and how that paris wan<br/> +The fayr Eleyne a lusty fresh quene<br/> +And hou Achilles was for Policene<br/> +Y slayn vnwarly witħyn Troye toun<br/> +Al this sawe I walkyng vp and doun<br/> +Ther sawe I wreton eke the hole tale<br/> +How Philomene in to a nyghtyngale<br/> +Y torned was, and proigne vnto a swalowe<br/> +And how the sabyns in their maner halowe<br/> +The feste of lucresse yet in Rome toun<br/> +Ther saw I also the sorow of Palamon<br/> +That he in prison felte and al the smert<br/> +And how that he thurgħ vnto his hert<br/> +Was hurt vnwarly by castyng of an eye<br/> +On fair fresh the lusty yong Emelye<br/> +And al the stryf bytwene hym & his brother<br/> +And how that one faugħt witħ that other<br/> +Witħyn the groue, til they by Theseus<br/> +Accorded were as Chaucer telletħ vs<br/> +And furthermore as I gan beholde<br/> +I sawe hou phebus witħ an arowe of golde<br/> +Y wounded was thurgħ out his syde</p> + +<p>Only by enuye of the god Cupyde<br/> +And how that dyane vnto a laurer tre<br/> +Y torned was whan that she dide fle<br/> +And how that Ioue changed his cope<br/> +Only for loue of the fair Eurepe<br/> +And in to a hole, whan he did he sue<br/> +Liste of his godhed his fourme to transmue<br/> +And hou that he by transmutacion<br/> +The shap gan take of Amphitrion<br/> +For Alcumena so passing was of beaute<br/> +So was he hurt for al his deyte<br/> +Witħ louys dart, and might it not escape<br/> +Ther sawe I also how mars was take<br/> +Of vulcanus and witħ venus founde<br/> +And witħ the cheynes Inuysible bounde<br/> +Ther was also al the poesye<br/> +Of hym Mercurye and al the philogye<br/> +And how that she for her sapience<br/> +Y wedded was to the god of eloquence<br/> +And how the Muses lowly did obeye<br/> +Higħ in to heuyn this lady to conueye<br/> +And witħ her songe hou she was magnefied<br/> +Witħ Jubiter there to be stellefied</p> + +<p>And vppermore depeynt men might see<br/> +How witħ her ryng the goodly canace<br/> +Of euery fowle, the leydons and songe<br/> +Coude vnderstond as she walked them among<br/> +And hou her brother so often holpen was<br/> +In his myschief, by the stede of bras<br/> +And furthermore in the temple were<br/> +Ful many a thousand louers here & there<br/> +In sondry wyse redy to compleyne<br/> +Vnto the goddesse, of her woo and peyne<br/> +How they were hyndred som for enuye<br/> +And how the serpent of fals Ielousie<br/> +Ful many a louer hath put a back<br/> +And causeles on them haue leid a lack<br/> +And som̄e ther were that playned on absence<br/> +That were exiled and put out of presence<br/> +Thurgħ wicked tunges and fals suspecōn<br/> +Witħoute mercy or ony remissiōn<br/> +And other eke her seruyse spent in veyn<br/> +And of her lady were not loued ageyn<br/> +And other eke that for pouerte<br/> +Dursten in no wyse her grete aduersite<br/> +Discouere ne opene, lest they were refused</p> + +<p>And som̄e for wantyng also were accused<br/> +And other eke that loued secretly<br/> +And of her lady durst axe no mercy<br/> +Lest that she wolde of hym haue despyte<br/> +And som̄e also that putten right grete wite<br/> +Ou double louers that loue thinges newe<br/> +Thurgħ whos falsenes hyndred be the trewe<br/> +And som̄ there were as hit is ofte founde<br/> +That for her lady many a blody wounde<br/> +Endured hatħ in many a regyon<br/> +Whiles that an other hatħ had possession<br/> +Al of his lady and beretħ a way the fruyt<br/> +Of his labour and of aƚƚ his fuyt<br/> +And other compleyned of richesse<br/> +How he witħ tresour dotħ his besynesse<br/> +To wynne agaynst al kynde and right<br/> +Where as true louers haue force none ne might<br/> +And som ther were as maydyns yong of age<br/> +That pleynetħ so witħ pipyng & witħ rage<br/> +That were coupled agayn al nature<br/> +Witħ croked elde that may not long endure<br/> +For to perfourme the lust of loues playe<br/> +For hit ne fit not vnto fressħ maye</p> + +<p>For to be coupled to olde Ianuarye<br/> +They be so dyuerse that they must varye<br/> +For elde is gruoching and malencolious<br/> +Ay ful of yre and suspecious<br/> +And yongth entendetħ to Ioye & lustynes<br/> +To mirtħ and play and to al gladnes<br/> +Allas that euer hit shold falle<br/> +So swete sugre y coupled be to galle<br/> +These yonge folke cryeden oft sithe<br/> +And praid venus her power to kythe<br/> +Vpon this myschief and shape remedye<br/> +And right anone I herde other crye<br/> +Witħ sobbyng teres and pietous sowne<br/> +To fore the goddesse by lamentacion<br/> +That were constrayned in their yougthe<br/> +And in childhode as is ofte couthe<br/> +Y entrid were in to Religion<br/> +Or they had yeris of discrescōn<br/> +That al her lif can not but compleyne<br/> +In wyde Copes perfection forto feyne<br/> +Ful couertly for to coueren thair smert<br/> +And shewe the contrary of thair hert<br/> +Thus saw I wepe many a fair mayde</p> + +<p>That on theyr frendes al the wyte thay layde<br/> +And other next I saw ther in grete rage<br/> +That they were maried in theyr tendre age<br/> +Witħ oute fredom of fre election<br/> +Where loue hatħ selde domynacion<br/> +For loue at large and at liberte<br/> +Wolde frely chese and not witħ suche trete<br/> +And other saw I ful ofte wepe and wrynge<br/> +That they in men fonde suche varyynge<br/> +To loue a season whyle that beaulte flouritħ<br/> +And after by disdayn so vngoodly louritħ<br/> +On her that whylom he callyd his lady dere<br/> +That was to hym so playsant and entier<br/> +But lust witħ fairnes is so ouer goon<br/> +That in her herte trouthe abidetħ noon<br/> +And som̄e also I sawe in teres reyne<br/> +And pietously on god and kynde pleyne<br/> +That euer they wold on ony creature<br/> +So moche beaute passing be mesure<br/> +Sette on a woman to yeue occasion<br/> +A man, to loue to his confusion<br/> +And namely there, where he shal haue no grace<br/> +For witħ a loke fortħ by as he dotħ pace</p> + +<p>Ful ofte falletħ thurgħ castyng of an eye<br/> +A man is wounded that he must nedis deye<br/> +That neuer peraunter after he shal her see<br/> +Why wil god don so grete a cruelte<br/> +To ony man, or to his creature<br/> +To make hym so muche woo endure<br/> +For her, percas, whom he shal in no wyse<br/> +Reioyse neuer, but so fortħ in Iuyse<br/> +Lede his lif til that he be graue<br/> +For he ne durst of hir no mercy craue<br/> +And eke peraunter thougħ he durst & wolde<br/> +He can not wite where he hir fynd sholde<br/> +I sawe ther eke, and therof had I couthe<br/> +That som were hyndred by couetyse & slougthe<br/> +And som̄e also for their hastynes<br/> +And other eke for their rechelesnes<br/> +But altherlast as I walked and behelde<br/> +Beside pallas witħ her Cristal sheld<br/> +Tofore the statue of venus set on height<br/> +Ther kneled a lady in my sight<br/> +To fore the goddesse, whiche as the sonne<br/> +Passetħ the sterris, and eke the stormys donne<br/> +And lucifer to voyde the nyghtes sorowe</p> + +<p>In clerenes passetħ erly the morowe<br/> +And so as maye hatħ the souereynte<br/> +Of euery monetħ the fayrnes and beaute<br/> +And as the rose in swetnes and odour<br/> +Surmounted flouris, and baine of al licour<br/> +Hath the pryse, and as the rubye bright<br/> +Of al stones in beaute and in sight<br/> +As it is knowe hatħ the Regalye<br/> +Right so this ladye witħ her goodly eye<br/> +And witħ the stremys of hir loke so bright<br/> +Surmountetħ al thourgħ beaute in my sight<br/> +That for to tel her grete semelines<br/> +Her womanhed her porte and her fairnes<br/> +Hit was a meruayle, how euer that nature<br/> +Cowde in her werkes make a creature<br/> +So angelyk so goodly on to see<br/> +So femynyn or passing of beaute<br/> +Whos sonnysħ heer brighter than goldwire<br/> +Lyche phebus beames shynyng in his spyre<br/> +The goodlihed eke of her fresħ face<br/> +So replenyshed of beaute and of grace<br/> +So wel ennewed by nature and depeynt<br/> +As Rose and lilyes to gyder were meynt</p> + +<p>So egally by good proporcion<br/> +That as me tought by myn inspection<br/> +I gan meruaylle hou god or werk of kynde<br/> +Mighten of beaute suche a tresour fynde<br/> +To yeuen hir so passing excellence<br/> +For in good faitħ thurgħ her hye presence<br/> +The temple was ensumyned enuyron<br/> +And forto speke of her condicion<br/> +She was the beste that might be on lyue<br/> +For ther was none that witħ her might stryue<br/> +To speke of bounte or of gentilesse<br/> +Of womanhede or of lowlynesse<br/> +Of curtoysie or of goodlihede<br/> +Of speche of chere or of semelihede<br/> +Of poort benigne or of daliaunce<br/> +The best taught and therto of playsaunce<br/> +She was the welle eke of honeste<br/> +An Examplair and mirrour eke was she<br/> +Of secretnes of trouthe of feitħfulnes<br/> +And to alle other lady and maistres<br/> +To shewe vertu who so list to lere<br/> +And so this lady right humble of chere<br/> +Kneling I sawe, clad in grene and whyte</p> + +<p>To fore venus goddesse of al delyte<br/> +Enbrowded al witħ stones and perre<br/> +So richely that Ioye it was to see<br/> +Witħ sondry rolles on her garnement<br/> +For texpowne the troutħ of her entent<br/> +To shewe fully that for her humblesse<br/> +And for her vertu and her stablenesse<br/> +That she was cote of al womanly playsance<br/> +Therfore her word witħoute variance<br/> +Enbrowded was as men might see<br/> +De mieulx en mieulx witħ stones of perre<br/> +This is to sayne that she was so benygne<br/> +From better to better her hert dotħ resigne<br/> +And al her wyƚƚ to venus the goddesse<br/> +Whan that her list her harmes to redresse<br/> +For as me thought somwhat by her chere<br/> +For to compleyne she had grete desire<br/> +For in her hand she held a lityl bylle<br/> +For to declare the sum̄e of al her wylle<br/> +And to the goddesse her quarel for to shewe<br/> +Theffect of whiche was in wordes fewe</p> + +<h2>.The copye of the supplicacion.</h2> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p>O lady venus moder of cupyde<br/> +That in this world hast the gouernance<br/> +And hertes hye that hawteyn be by pryde<br/> +Enclynest mekely to thyn obeyssance<br/> +Causer of Ioye Relees of penance<br/> +And with thy stremes canst euery thing discerñ<br/> +Thurgħ heuenly fire of loue that is eterñ</p> + +<p>O blesful sterre persaunt and ful of light<br/> +Of beames gladsom, deuoyder of derknes<br/> +Chief recomfort after the blak nyght<br/> +To wyde woful hertes out of theyr heuynes<br/> +Take now good hede lady and goddesse<br/> +So that my bille may your grace attayne<br/> +Redresse to fynde of that I me compleyne</p> + +<p>For I am bounde to thing that I nolde<br/> +Frely to chese ther lack I liberte<br/> +And so I want of that myn herte wolde<br/> +The body is knyt, thougħ my thought be fre<br/> +So that I muste of necessite<br/> +My hertes lyst outward contrarye<br/> +Thougħ we be oon the dede muste varye</p> + +<p>My worship sauf I faylle election<br/> +Agayn al right botħ of god and kynde<br/> +Therto be knyt vnder subiection<br/> +For whens for botħ ar out of mynde<br/> +My thought gotħ furtħ my body is behynde<br/> +For I am here, and yond my remembrance<br/> +Betwene two so hange I in balance</p> + +<p>Deuoyde of Ioye, of woo I haue plente<br/> +What I desire, that may I not possede<br/> +For that I nolde is redy ay to me<br/> +And that I loue, for to sue I drede<br/> +To my desire contrary is my mede<br/> +And thus I stonde departed in tweyne<br/> +Of wyƚƚ and dede ylaced in a cheyne</p> + +<p>For thougħ I brenne witħ feruence & hete<br/> +Witħyn myn herte I mote compleyne of colde<br/> +And by excesse thougħ I swelte and swete<br/> +Me to compleyne god wote I am not bolde<br/> +Vnto no wight, ner one word vnfolde<br/> +Of al my peyne, allas the hard stounde<br/> +The hotter that I brenne, the colder is my wounde</p> + +<p>For he that hatħ myn hert feytħfully<br/> +And hool my loue in al honeste<br/> +Witħoute chaunge al be hit secretly<br/> +I haue no space witħ hym for to be<br/> +O lady venus consider now and see<br/> +Vnto theffecte and compleynt of my byƚƚ<br/> +Sitħ lyf and detħ I put aƚƚ in thy wyƚƚ</p> + +<p>And tho me thought the goddes did enclyne<br/> +Mekely her hede and softly gan expresse<br/> +That in short tyme her torment shold fyne<br/> +And how of hym for whom al her distresse<br/> +Contynned had and al her heuynesse<br/> +She shold haue Ioye and of her purgatorye<br/> +Be holpen sone and so lyue fortħ in glorye</p> + +<p>And said doughter for thy sad trouthe<br/> +Thy faitħful menyng and Innocence<br/> +That planted be witħ outen ony slouthe<br/> +In your persone deuoyed of al offence<br/> +So han they atteyned to our audience<br/> +That witħ our grace ye shal be wel releuyd<br/> +I you behete of al that hatħ you greuyd</p> + +<p>And for that ye be euer of one entent<br/> +Witħoute chaunge or mutabilyte<br/> +And in your paynes ben so pacient<br/> +To take lowly your aduersyte<br/> +And that so longe thurgh the cruelte<br/> +Of olde saturne my fader vnfortuned<br/> +Your woo shal now no lenger be contuned</p> + +<p>And thinketħ this witħ in a litil whyle<br/> +Hit shal aswage and ouer passen sone<br/> +For men by laysir passen many a myle<br/> +And ofte after a droppyng mone<br/> +The weder cleretħ, and whan the storme is done<br/> +The sonne shynetħ in his spyer bright<br/> +And Ioye waketħ whan woo is putto flight</p> + +<p>Remembre eke how neuer yet no wight<br/> +Ne cam to worship witħ out som debate<br/> +And folke reioyse also more of light<br/> +That they witħ derknes were waped & mate<br/> +No mañs chañce is allewey fortunate<br/> +Ne no wight preysetħ of sugre the swetnes<br/> +But they to fore haue tasted bitternes</p> + +<p>Gryssyld was asayed atte fuƚƚ<br/> +That torned after to encrese of Ioye<br/> +Penolope gan eke for sorowes dulle<br/> +For that her lord abode so long at troye<br/> +Also the torment ther coude noman accoye<br/> +Of dorygene flour of al Bretaigne<br/> +Thus euer Ioye is fyn and ende of payne</p> + +<p>And trustetħ this for conclusion<br/> +The ende of sorow is Ioye voyde of drede<br/> +For hoolly seyntes thurgħ her passion<br/> +Haue heuyn wonne by their souerain mede<br/> +And plente gladly folowetħ after nede<br/> +And so my doughter after your greuaunce<br/> +I you behote ye shal haue ful plesaunce</p> + +<p>For euer of loue the maner and the gyse<br/> +Is for to hurte his seruaunt & to wounde<br/> +And whan he hatħ taught them his empryse<br/> +He can in Ioye make them to habounde<br/> +And sitħ that ye haue in my laas be bounde<br/> +Witħ oute gruoching or rebellyon<br/> +Ye muste of night haue consolacion</p> + +<p>This to sayne dowtetħ neuer a deel<br/> +That ye shal haue ful possession<br/> +Of hym that ye now cherisshe so weel<br/> +In honest maner witħ oute offencion<br/> +By cause I knowe youre entencion<br/> +Is truly sette in party and in aƚƚ<br/> +To loue hym best and most in speciaƚƚ</p> + +<p>For he that ye haue chosen you to serue<br/> +Shal be to you suche as ye desire<br/> +Witħ oute chaunge fully til he sterue<br/> +So witħ my bronde I haue sette hym a fyre<br/> +And witħ my grace I shal hym so enspyre<br/> +That he in herte shal be right at your wylle<br/> +Wherso you liste to saue hym or to spylle</p> + +<p>For vnto you I shal his herte so lowe<br/> +Witħ oute spotte of ony doblenesse<br/> +That he ne shal escape from the bowe<br/> +Thaugħ that hym self by vnstedfastnesse<br/> +I mene of cupide that shal hym so distresse<br/> +Vnto your honde witħ tharowe of golde<br/> +That he ne shal escapen thaugh he wolde</p> + +<p>And sith ye list of pyte and of grace<br/> +In vertu only his yonghthe to cherisshe<br/> +I shal by aspectes of my benigne face<br/> +Make hym beschewe euery synne and vice<br/> +So that he shal haue no maner spice<br/> +In his corage to loue thinges newe<br/> +He shal to yow so playn be found and trewe</p> + +<p>And whan this goodly fair fressħ of hue<br/> +Humble and benygne of troutħ crop & rote<br/> +Conceyued had how venus gan to rewe<br/> +On her prayer plainly to do bote<br/> +To chaunge her bitter attones in to sote<br/> +She fyl on knees of higħ deuocion<br/> +And in this wyse began her orison</p> + +<p>Hyghest of hye quene and Emperice<br/> +Goddesse of loue, of good yet the best<br/> +That thurgħ your beaute witħoute vice<br/> +Whylom conquerd thappel atte fest<br/> +That Iubiter thurgħ his hye request<br/> +To alle the goddes aboue celestyal<br/> +Made in his palais most Imperyal</p> + +<p>To you my lady vpholder of my lyf<br/> +Mekely I thanke so as I may suffise<br/> +That ye list now witħ herte ententyf<br/> +So graciously for me to deuyse<br/> +That whyle I lyue witħ humble sacrefise<br/> +Vpon your auters your fest yer by yer<br/> +I shal encence casten in to the fyre</p> + +<p>For of your grace I am ful reconsiled<br/> +From euery troble vnto ioye and ease<br/> +That sorowes alle be from me exiled<br/> +Sitħ ye my lady list now tappease<br/> +My paynes olde and fully my disease<br/> +Vnto gladnes so sodenly to torne<br/> +Hauyng no cause from hens fortħ to morne</p> + +<p>For sithen ye so mekely liste to daunte<br/> +To my seruise hym that louetħ me best<br/> +And of your bounte so graciously to graunte<br/> +That he ne shal barye thougħ hym leste<br/> +Wherof myn herte is fully brought to reste<br/> +For now and euer o lady myn benigne<br/> +That hert and wiƚƚ I hooly to you resigne</p> + +<p>Thankyng you witħ al my ful herte<br/> +That of your grace and visitacion<br/> +So humble liste hym to conuerte<br/> +Fully to ben at my subiection<br/> +Witħ oute chaunge or transmutacion<br/> +Vnto his laste, now laude and reuerence<br/> +Be to your name and excellence</p> + +<p>This al and sum and chief of my request<br/> +And hool substance of my ful entente<br/> +You thankyng euer of your graunt & hest<br/> +Botħ now and euer that ye me grace sent<br/> +To conquer hym that neuer shal repent<br/> +Me for to serue and humblye for to please<br/> +As fynal tresour of my hertes ease</p> + +<p>And than anon venus cast a doun<br/> +In to her lappe braunches whyte and grene<br/> +Of hawthorn that wenten enuyron<br/> +Aboute her heed that ioye was to sene<br/> +And had her kepe hem honestly and clene<br/> +Whiche shold not fade ne neuer wexe olde<br/> +Yf she her biddyng kepe as she hatħ told</p> + +<p>And as these vowes be bothe fair and swete<br/> +Folowe theffecte that they do specifye<br/> +This is to seyne botħ in cold and hete<br/> +Be ye of one hert and of one fantasye<br/> +As ar these leues whiche may not dye<br/> +By no duresse of stormes that be kene<br/> +Nomore in wynter than in somer grene</p> + +<p>Right so by ensample of wele or woo<br/> +For Ioye torment or for aduersite<br/> +Whether so fortune fauoure, or be foo<br/> +For pouert riches or prosperyte<br/> +That ye your hert kepe in on degre<br/> +To loue hym best for no thing that ye fyne<br/> +Whom I haue bound so low vnder your cheyne</p> + +<p>And witħ that word the goddesse shoke her heed<br/> +And was in pees & spack as tho nomore<br/> +And therwitħ aƚƚ ful femynyn of drede<br/> +Me thought this lady sighen gan ful sore<br/> +And said agayn, lady that maist restore<br/> +Hertes in Ioye from theyr aduersite<br/> +To do your wil de mieulx en mieulx ma gree</p> + +<p>Thus euer slepyng dremyng as I laye<br/> +Witħyn the temple me thought I saye<br/> +Grete prees of folk witħ murmur wonderful<br/> +To croude and shoue, the temple was so ful<br/> +Euericħ ful besy, in his owne cause<br/> +That I ne may shortly in a clause<br/> +Discriuen alle the rites and the guyse<br/> +And eke I wante connyng to deuyse<br/> +How som̄e ther were witħ blood, encence & milk<br/> +And som̄e witħ flouris sote & softe as silk<br/> +And som̄e witħ sparowes & douues whyte<br/> +That for to offren gan hem delyte<br/> +Vnto the goddesse witħ sighe and prayer<br/> +Hem to relese of that they most desire<br/> +That for the prees shortly to conclude<br/> +I wente my way for the multitude<br/> +Me for to refressħ out of the prees allone<br/> +And by my self me thought as I gan gone<br/> +Witħ in the estres and gan a whyle tarye<br/> +I sawe a man that walked al solitarye<br/> +That as me semed for heuynes and dole<br/> +Hym to compleyne, that he walked so sole<br/> +Witħ oute espyyng of ony other wight</p> + +<p>And yf I sħal diseryuen hym a right<br/> +Yf that he had not ben in heuynes<br/> +Me thought he was, to speke of semelines<br/> +Of shap of fourme, and also of stature<br/> +The most passing, that euer yet nature<br/> +Made in her werkes, and lyke to be a man<br/> +And ther witħ al as I reherce can<br/> +Of face and chere the most gracyous<br/> +To be biloued happy and ewrous<br/> +Bur as it semed outward by his chere<br/> +That he complayned for lack of his desire<br/> +For by hym self as he walked vp and doun<br/> +I herde hym make a lamentacion<br/> +And said alas, what thing may this be<br/> +That now am bonde that whylom was fre<br/> +And wente at large at myn election<br/> +Now am I caught vnder subiection<br/> +For to become a beray homager<br/> +To god of loue, wher er I cam here<br/> +Felt in myn herte, nought of loues peyne<br/> +But now of newe, witħin hur firy cheyne<br/> +I am embraced so that I may not stryue<br/> +To serue and loue whyle I am on lyue</p> + +<p>The godly freshe in the temple yonder<br/> +I sawe right now, that I had wonder<br/> +How euer god, for to rekene aƚƚ<br/> +Might make a thing so celestiaƚƚ<br/> +So angelike on erthe to appere<br/> +For witħ the stremes of her eyen clere<br/> +I am wounded euen to the hert<br/> +That fro the detħ I may not astert<br/> +And most I meruayle that so sodeinly<br/> +I was so yolde to be at hur mercy<br/> +Witħoute more, I muste her lust obeye<br/> +Whether that she liste me to lyue or deye<br/> +And take mekely my sodeyn auenture<br/> +For sitħ my lif, my detħ, and eke my cure<br/> +Is in her hand it wil not auaylle<br/> +To gruoche agayn, for of this bataylle<br/> +The palme is heris, and plainly the victorye<br/> +Yf I rebellid honour none ne glorye<br/> +I might not in ony wyse achyeue<br/> +Sitħ I am theolden, how shold I thenne preue<br/> +To renne a wey, I wote hit wil not be<br/> +Thougħ I be loos, at large I may not fle<br/> +O god of loue how sharp is now thyn arowe</p> + +<p>How mayst thou now so cruelly and so narowe<br/> +Witħ oute cause hurte me and wounde<br/> +And takest none hede my sorowes to founde<br/> +But liche a birde that fleetħ at her desire<br/> +Tyl sodeynly witħyn the pantere<br/> +She is caught thaugħ late she was at large<br/> +Anewe tempest forcastetħ now my barge<br/> +Now vp now doun, witħ wynd it is so blowe<br/> +So am I possed and almost ouerthrowe<br/> +For dryue in derknes of many sondry wawe<br/> +Alas whan shal this tempest ouerdrawe<br/> +To clere the skyes of myn aduersite<br/> +The lode sterre whan that I ne may see<br/> +Hit is so hid witħ clowdes that be blake<br/> +Alas whan wyƚƚ this torment ouerslake<br/> +I can not wyte, for who is hurt of newe<br/> +And bledetħ inward til he wex pale of hue<br/> +And hatħ his wound vnwarly fressħ & grene<br/> +And hit is not couthe vnto the harmes kene<br/> +Of myghty cupyde that can so hertes daunte<br/> +That no man may in his warre hym vaunte<br/> +To gete a pryce but only by mekenes<br/> +For ther ne hayletħ stryf ne sturdynes</p> + +<p>So may I sayne that witħ a loke am yolde<br/> +And haue no power to stryue thaugħ I wolde<br/> +Thus stonde I euer betwix lif and detħ<br/> +To loue and serue whyle I haue bretħ<br/> +In suche a place where I dar not pleyne<br/> +Liche hym that is in torment and in peyne<br/> +And knowetħ not to whom to discure<br/> +For ther that I haue holly set my aire<br/> +I dar not wel for drede ne for daunger<br/> +And for vnknowen tellen how the fyre<br/> +Of loues bronde is kyndlid in my breste<br/> +Thus am I murdred and slayn atte leste<br/> +So priuely witħyn my thought<br/> +O lady venus whom I haue sought<br/> +So wysse me now what me is best to doo<br/> +That am distraught witħ my self so<br/> +That I ne wote what way for to torne<br/> +Sauf by my self soleyn for to morne<br/> +Hangyng in balance betwix hope and drede<br/> +Witħ oute comfort remedye or rede<br/> +For hope biddetħ pursue and assaye<br/> +And agaynward drede answertħ naye<br/> +And now witħ hope I am set a lofte</p> + +<p>But drede and daunger hard & nothyng softe<br/> +Hatħ ouerthrowe my trust and put a doun<br/> +Now at my large, now fetred in prisoun<br/> +Now in torment, now in souerayn glorye<br/> +Now in paradyse and now in purgatorye<br/> +As man dispayred in a double were<br/> +Born vp witħ hope, and theñe anon daunger<br/> +Me drawetħ aback, and saitħ it shal not be<br/> +For where as I of myne aduersite<br/> +Am bolde somwhyle mercy to requyre<br/> +Thenne cometħ dispair & gynnetħ me to lere<br/> +A newe lesson to hope ful the contrary<br/> +They be so diuerse they wil do me varye<br/> +And thus I stand dismayed in a traunce<br/> +For whan that hope were likly me tauaunce<br/> +For drede I tremble & dar one word not speke<br/> +And yf hit so be, that I not out breke<br/> +To telle the harmes that greuen me so sore<br/> +But in my self encrece them more and more<br/> +And to be slayn fully me delyte<br/> +When of my detħ she is nothing to wyte<br/> +For but yf she my constreynt plainly knewe<br/> +How shold she euer, on my peynes rue</p> + +<p>Thus oft tyme witħ hope I am meuyd<br/> +To tel her aƚƚ, how I am greuyd<br/> +And to be hardy on me for to take<br/> +To axe mercy, but drede dotħ me theñe awake<br/> +And than wanhop answertħ me agayn<br/> +That better were than she haue disdayn<br/> +To dye attones vnknowe of ony wight<br/> +And ther witħ aƚƚ biddetħ hope anon right<br/> +Me, to be bold and prayen her of grace<br/> +And fitħ alle vertues be portreyd in her face<br/> +Hit were not sittyng, that pyte were behynde<br/> +And right anon witħyn my self I fynde<br/> +A newe plee brought on me witħ drede<br/> +That me so masetħ that I see no spede<br/> +Be cause he saitħ that stonyetħ al my blood<br/> +I am so symple and she is so good<br/> +Thus hope & drede in me wyl not sece<br/> +To plete and stryue my harmys to encrece<br/> +But at hardest yet or I be dede<br/> +Of my distresse sitħ I can no rede<br/> +But stande dom̄ styl as ony stone<br/> +To fore the goddesse I wil me haste anoñ<br/> +And compleyne witħ oute more sermoñ</p> + +<p>Thougħ detħ be fyn and ful conclusion<br/> +Of my request, yet I wyl assaye<br/> +And right anon me thought I saye<br/> +This woful man as I haue memorye<br/> +Ful lowly entre in to an oratorye<br/> +And knelid a doun in ful humble wyse<br/> +To fore the goddesse and gan anon deuyse<br/> +His pitous quarel witħ a doleful chere<br/> +Sayng right this as ye shaƚƚ here</p> + +<h2>.The compleynt of the man.</h2> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p>Redresse of sorow O Citherea<br/> +That witħ the stremys of thy playsaunt hete<br/> +Gladest the mounte of al Cirrea<br/> +Where thou hast chosen thy paleys and sete<br/> +Whos bright beames ben wesshen and wete<br/> +In the ryuer of Elycon the welle<br/> +Haue now pyte of that I shal you telle</p> + +<p>And not desdayne ye of your benygnyte<br/> +My mortal woo O lady myn goddesse<br/> +Of grace and bounte & mercyful pyte<br/> +Benygnely to helpe and to redresse<br/> +And thaugħ so be I can not wel expresse<br/> +The greuous harmes that I fele in my herte<br/> +Haue neuer yet the lesse mercy of my smerte</p> + +<p>This is to sayne O cler heuenes light<br/> +That next the sonne sercled han your spere<br/> +Sitħ ye me hurte witħ your dredful myght<br/> +By influence of your beames clere<br/> +And that I by your seruyse now so dere<br/> +As ye me brought in to this maladye<br/> +Be ye gracyous and shape ye remedye</p> + +<p>For in you hoolly lietħ help of al this caas<br/> +And knowe best my sorow and al my peyne<br/> +For drede of detħ, how I ne dar allas<br/> +To aren mercy ones, ne me compleyne<br/> +Now witħ your fyre her hert so constrayne<br/> +Witħ oute more, or I deye atte leste<br/> +That she may witte what is my request</p> + +<p>How I no thyng in al this world desire<br/> +But for to serur fully to myn ende<br/> +That goodly freshe so womanly of chere<br/> +Witħout chaunge whyle I haue lyf & mynde<br/> +And that ye wold suche grace sende<br/> +Of my seruyse that she not disdeyne<br/> +Sithen her to serue I may not me restreyne</p> + +<p>And sitħ that hope me hatħ yeue hardynes<br/> +To loue her best and neuer to repente<br/> +Whylis that I lyue witħ al my besynes<br/> +To drede & serue, thaugħ daunger neuer assente<br/> +And here vpon ye knowe myn entente<br/> +How I haue vowed fully in myn mynde<br/> +To ben her man, thaugħ I no mercy fynde</p> + +<p>For in my hert emprynted is so sore<br/> +Her shap her forme & al her semelynes<br/> +Her porte her chere, her godenes more & more<br/> +Her womanhed and eke her gentiles<br/> +Her troutħ, her faitħ and her kyndnes<br/> +Witħ alle vertues eche set in her degre<br/> +Ther is no lack, sauyng only of pyte</p> + +<p>Her sad demenyng of wyl not variable<br/> +Of loke benygne, and rote of al plesance<br/> +And exemplayre to alle that wyl be stable<br/> +Discrete prudent of wisedom suffisance<br/> +Mirrour of witte ground of gouernance<br/> +A world of beaute compassed in her face<br/> +Whos persant loke doth thurgħ my hert race</p> + +<p>And ouer this wonder secrete and true<br/> +A wel of fredome and right bounteous<br/> +And euer encrecyng in vertu new & newe<br/> +Of speche goodly, and wonder gracyous<br/> +Deuoyd of pryde, to poure not despytous<br/> +And yf that I shortly shal not feyne<br/> +Saue vpon mercy I no thing compleyne</p> + +<p>What wonder thenne, thougħ I be witħ drede<br/> +Inly supprised for to axen grace<br/> +Of her that is quene of womanhede<br/> +For wel I wote in so higħ a place<br/> +Hit wil not be, therfore I ouer pace<br/> +And take lowly what wo I endure<br/> +Til she of pyte me take to her cure</p> + +<p>But one auowe plainly here I make<br/> +That whethir so be, she do me lyue or deye<br/> +I wil not gruoche, but humbly hit take<br/> +And thanke god and wilfully obeye<br/> +For by my troutħ my hert shal neuer reneye<br/> +For lyf ne detħ mercy ne daunger<br/> +Of wil and thought to be at her desire</p> + +<p>To ben as trewe as euer was antonyus<br/> +To cleopatre whyle hym lastetħ bretħ<br/> +Or vnto thesbe yong Piramus<br/> +That was faithful found, til them deptid deth<br/> +Right so shal I til Antropos me sletħ<br/> +For whele or woo her faithful man be found<br/> +Vnto my last, like as my hert is bound</p> + +<p>To loue as wel as did Achilles<br/> +Vnto his laste the fair Polixene<br/> +Or as the grete famous Hercules<br/> +For dyanyre that felte the shott kene<br/> +Right so shal I saye right as I mene<br/> +Whyle that I lyue, her botħ drede and serue<br/> +For lack of mercy thougħ she do me sterue</p> + +<p>Now lady venus to whom nothing vnknowe<br/> +Is in the world hid, ne nought may be<br/> +For ther nys thing nether hye ne lowe<br/> +May be conceyled from your pryuete<br/> +Fro whom my menyng is not now secret<br/> +But wite fully that myn entent is true<br/> +And liche my trouthe now on my peyne rue</p> + +<p>For more of grace than of presumpcion<br/> +I axe mercy, and no thing of dute<br/> +Of lowly humbles, witħ oute offencion<br/> +That ye enclyne of your benygnyte<br/> +Your audience vnto my humylyte<br/> +To graunte me that to you I clepe & calle<br/> +Sum day relees yet of my peynes alle</p> + +<p>And sitħ ye haue the guerdon and the mede<br/> +Of alle louers pleinly in your honde<br/> +Now of grace and pyte take ye hede<br/> +Of my distrees, that am vnder your bonde<br/> +So lowly bound, as ye wel vnderstonde<br/> +In that place where I toke first my wounde<br/> +Of pyte suffre ye my heltħ may be founde</p> + +<p>That liche as she me hurte witħ a sight<br/> +Right so with helth late me hur sustene<br/> +And as the stremes of her eyen bright<br/> +Whylom my hert witħ woundes sharp & kene<br/> +Thurgħ persed haue and yet be fresh & grene<br/> +So as she me hurte, lete her me socoure<br/> +Or ellis certayn I may not long endure</p> + +<p>For lack of speche I can say you no more<br/> +I haue mater but I can not pleyne<br/> +My witte is duƚƚ to tel al my sore<br/> +A mouth I haue, And yet for al my peyn<br/> +For want of wordes I may not now atteyn<br/> +To tel half, that dotħ my hert greue<br/> +Mercy abydyng, til she me list releue</p> + +<p>But this theffect of my mater fynal<br/> +Witħ detħ or mercy relees for to fynde<br/> +For hert body thought lyf lust and al<br/> +Witħ al my reson and al my ful mynde<br/> +And fyue wittes of on assent I bynde<br/> +To her seruyse witħ oute ony stryf<br/> +And make her pryncesse of my detħ or lyf</p> + +<p>And now I pray of routħ and eke pyte<br/> +O goodly planet, O lady venus bright<br/> +That ye your sone of his deyte<br/> +Cupide I mene that witħ his dredful myght<br/> +And witħ his brond that is so clere of light<br/> +Her herte so to fyre and to marke<br/> +As ye me whylem brent witħ a sparke</p> + +<p>That euenlicħ and with the same fyre<br/> +She may be hit, as I now brenne and melte<br/> +So that her herte be flamed witħ desire<br/> +That she may knowe by feruence hou I swelte<br/> +For of pyte plainly yf she felte<br/> +The self hete that doth myn hert enbrace<br/> +I hope of routħ she wiƚƚ do me grace</p> + +<p>And ther witħ al bemis as me thought<br/> +Towardes this man ful benyngely<br/> +Gan cast her eye, like as that she rought<br/> +Of his disease, and said ful goodly<br/> +Sith it is so, that thou so humbly<br/> +Witħ out gruachyng our hestes liste obeye<br/> +Toward thyn help I wil anon pourueye</p> + +<p>And eke my sone Cupyde that is so blynde<br/> +He shal be helpyng fully to performe<br/> +Your hool desire, that nothing be behynde<br/> +Ne shal be lefte, so we shal reforme<br/> +This pietous cōpleynt, that maketħ the to morne<br/> +That she for whom thau sorowest most in hert<br/> +Shal thurgħ hur mercy relece al thy smert</p> + +<p>Whan she scetħ tyme, thurgħ our purueaunce<br/> +Be not to hasty, but suffre althing wele<br/> +For in abydyng, thurgħ lowly obeyssaunce<br/> +Lyetħ ful redres, of al that ye now fele<br/> +And she shal be as trewe as ony stele<br/> +To you allone, by our myght and grace<br/> +Yf ye list mekely abyde a lityl space</p> + +<p>But vnderstande ye that al her cherising<br/> +Shal be grounded vpon honeste<br/> +That no wight shal by ony compacyng<br/> +Demen amys of hur in no degre<br/> +For neyther mercy, coutħ ner pyte<br/> +She shal not haue ne take of the non hede<br/> +Further than longetħ vnto her womanhede</p> + +<p>Be not astonyed of no wilfulnes<br/> +Ne not despeyred of this dissolucion<br/> +Late reson bridle lust by buxumnes<br/> +Witħout gruochyng or rebellyon<br/> +For ioye shal folowe al this passion<br/> +For who can suffre torment and endure<br/> +Ne may not faylle, but folowe shal his cure</p> + +<p>For to fore alle she shal the louen best<br/> +So shal I her witħoute offencion<br/> +By Influence enspire in her brest<br/> +In honest wyse witħ ful entencion<br/> +For tenclyne by clene affection<br/> +Her hert fully on the to haue routhe<br/> +Be cause I knowe that thou menest trouthe</p> + +<p>Go now to hir where as she stant a syde<br/> +Witħ humble chere, and put the in her grace<br/> +And al beforn lete hope be thy guyde<br/> +And thaugħ that drede wold witħ the pace<br/> +Hit sittetħ wel, but loke that thou arace<br/> +Out of thyn hert wanhop and despeire<br/> +To her presence er thou haue repeir</p> + +<p>And mercy first shal thy way make<br/> +And honest menyng afore do thy message<br/> +To make pyte in her herte awake<br/> +And secretnes to further thy viage<br/> +Witħ humble porte to her that is so sage<br/> +Shal menes be, and I my self also<br/> +Shal the fortune, or thy tale be do</p> + +<p>Go fortħ anon, and be right good of chere<br/> +For specheles nothing mayst thou spede<br/> +Be good of trust & be no thing in were<br/> +Sitħ I my self shal helpen in this nede<br/> +For atte lest of her goodly hede<br/> +She shal to the her audience enclyne<br/> +And lowe the to her til thou thy tale fyne</p> + +<p>For wel thou wost yf I shal not feyne<br/> +Witħoute speche thou maist no mercy haue<br/> +For who that wil of his pryue peyne<br/> +Fully be cured his lyf to helpe and saue<br/> +He must mekely out of his hert graue<br/> +Discure his wound and shewe hit his leche<br/> +Or ellis deye for defaute of speche</p> + +<p>For he that is in myschief reklees<br/> +To seche help I holde hym a wrecche<br/> +And she ne may thyn hert bryng in pees<br/> +But yf thy compleynt to hir hert strecche<br/> +Woldest thou be cured & wilt no salue fecche<br/> +Hit wil not be, for no wight may atteyne<br/> +To come to blys, yf he list lyue in peyne</p> + +<p>Therfore attones go fortħ in humble wyse<br/> +To fore thy lady and lowly knele a doun<br/> +And in al trouthe thy wordes so deuyse<br/> +That she on the haue compassion<br/> +For she that is of so hye renoun<br/> +In al vertues as quene and souerayn<br/> +Of womanhed shal rue on thy payn</p> + +<p>And whan the goddes this lesson had told<br/> +Aboute me so I gan behold<br/> +Rigħt so a stoned stode in a traunce<br/> +To se the maner and contenance<br/> +And al the chere of this woful man<br/> +That was of hue dedely pale and wan<br/> +Witħ drede supprised in his owne thought</p> + +<p>Makyng chere as thaugħ he rought nought<br/> +Of lyf ne detħ ne what so hym betyde<br/> +So moche fere he had on euery side<br/> +To put hym fortħ to tel his peyne<br/> +Vnto his lady, other to compleyne<br/> +What woo he felt torment or disese<br/> +What dedely sorow his hert dide sese<br/> +For coutħ of whiche his wo as I endite<br/> +My penne I fele quaken as I wryte<br/> +Of hym I had so grete compassion<br/> +For to reherce his weymentacion<br/> +That vnnethe, thougħ I witħ my self stryue<br/> +I want connyng his peynes to discryue<br/> +Allas to whom shal I for help calle<br/> +Not to the muses for cause they ben alle<br/> +Help of right in Ioye and not in woo<br/> +And in matiers that they delite also<br/> +Wherfore they nyl as now directe my style<br/> +Nor me enspiren Alas the hard whyle<br/> +I can no further but to the siphon<br/> +And to her suster to calle help vpon<br/> +That be goddesses of torment and peyne<br/> +Nowe lete your teris in to myn Inke reyne</p> + +<p>Witħ woful wordes my paper for to blotte<br/> +This woful mater not to peynt, but spotte<br/> +To tel the maner of this dredeful man<br/> +Vpon his complaynt whan he first began<br/> +To tel his lady whan he gan declare<br/> +His hid sorowis, and his euel fare<br/> +That at his herte constreyned so sore<br/> +Theffect of whiche was this witħoute more</p> + +<p>Pryncesse of yougtħ & flour of gentilesse<br/> +Ensample of vertu ground of curtesye<br/> +Of beaute rote quene and eke maistres<br/> +To alle women how they shal hem gye<br/> +And sotħfast mirrour texemplifye<br/> +The right way of port and of womanhede<br/> +What I shal saye, of mercy take ye hede<br/> +Besechyng first vnto your hye nobles<br/> +Witħ quakyng hert of my Inward drede<br/> +Of grace and pyte & not of right wysnes<br/> +Of verrey coutħe to help in this nede<br/> +This is to say O wel of goodlyhede<br/> +That I ne rekke thaugħ ye do me deye<br/> +So ye list first to heven what I seye</p> + +<p>The dredeful stroke the gret force and might<br/> +Of god cupide that noman may rebelle<br/> +So inwardly thurgħ out myn hert right<br/> +Y perced hatħ that I ne may councele<br/> +Myn hid wound ne I ne may apele<br/> +Vnto no gretter, this mighty god so faste<br/> +You to serue hatħ me bound vnto my laste</p> + +<p>That hert and aƚƚ witħ out stryf ar yolde<br/> +For lyf or detħ to your seruyse allone<br/> +Right as the goddesse myghty venus wolde<br/> +To for her mekely whan I made my mone<br/> +She me constrayned witħoute chaunge anone<br/> +To your seruyse and neuer for to fayne<br/> +Wherso euer ye list to do me ease or payne</p> + +<p>So that I can no thing but mercy crye<br/> +Of you my lady, and chaunge for no newe<br/> +That ye list godely to fore er that I dye<br/> +Of verray couthe vpon my paynes rue<br/> +For by my trouthe, and ye my peynes knewe<br/> +What is the cause of myne aduersite<br/> +On myn disese ye wolde haue pyte</p> + +<p>For vnto you trewe and eke secre<br/> +I wil be founde to serue as I best can<br/> +And therwitħ al as lowly in eche degre<br/> +To you be allone as euer yet was man<br/> +Vnto his lady from the tyme I began<br/> +And shal so fortħ witħouten ony sleutħ<br/> +Whylis that I lyue, by god & by my troutħ</p> + +<p>For leuer I had to deyen sodenly<br/> +Than you offende in any maner wyse<br/> +And suffre paynes inward priuely<br/> +Than my seruyse as now ye shold dispyse<br/> +For I right neught wil axe in no wyse<br/> +But for your seruaunt ye wold me accepte<br/> +And whan I trespace, goodly me correcte</p> + +<p>And for to graunte of mercy the prayer<br/> +Only of grace and womanly pyte<br/> +From day to day that I myght leve<br/> +You for to plese, and therwitħ al that ye<br/> +Whan I do mys, list for to teche me<br/> +In your seruyse hou that I may amende<br/> +From hensfortħ and neuer you offende</p> + +<p>For vnto me it doth ynowħ suffyse<br/> +That for your man ye wold me resseyue<br/> +Fully to ben as you lyst deuyse<br/> +And as ferforth as my wittes can conceyue<br/> +And therwith al liche as ye preue<br/> +That I be true, to guerdone me of grace<br/> +Or ellis to punysshe after my trespace</p> + +<p>And yf so be that I may not atteyne<br/> +Vnto your mercy, yet graunte at the leste<br/> +In your seruyse for al my wo and peyne<br/> +That I may deyen after my beheste<br/> +This is al and som the fyn of my request<br/> +Outher with mercy your seruaunt to saue<br/> +Or mercyles that I may be begraue</p> + +<p>And whan this benygne of her entent true<br/> +Conceyued hatħ the compleynt of this man<br/> +Right as the fresh rody Rose newe<br/> +Of her colour to wexen she began<br/> +Her blood astoned so from her herte ran<br/> +In to her face of verray femynyte<br/> +Thurgh honest drede abasshed was she</p> + +<p>And humbly she began her eyen caste<br/> +Towardes hym of hir benygnyte<br/> +So that no word by her lippes past<br/> +For hast nor drede mercy ne pyte<br/> +For so demened she was in honeste<br/> +That vnaduysed no thing fro her stert<br/> +So moche of reson was compassed in her hert</p> + +<p>Til atte last of whiche she did abreyd<br/> +Whan she is trouthe and menyng did fele<br/> +And vnto hym ful goodly spack and seyd<br/> +Of your behest and your menyng wele<br/> +And your seruyse so faitħful euerydele<br/> +Whiche vnto me so lowly now ye offre<br/> +Witħ al my herte, I thanke you of your profre</p> + +<p>That for so moche your entent is sette<br/> +Only in vertu y bridled vnder drede<br/> +Ye must of right nedis face the bet<br/> +Of your request, and the better spede<br/> +But as for me I may of womanhede<br/> +No further graunte to you in myn entente<br/> +Than as my lady venus wil assente</p> + +<p>For she wel knoweth I am not at my large<br/> +To doon right nought but by her ordynance<br/> +So am I drownd vnder her dredeful charge<br/> +Her lyste tobbeye withoute variaunce<br/> +But for my parte so hit be pleasaunce<br/> +Vnto the goddesse for troutħ in your empryse<br/> +I you accepte fully to my seruyse</p> + +<p>For she my herte hath in subiection<br/> +Whiche hoolly is youres & neuer shal repente<br/> +In thought ner dede in myn election<br/> +Witnes on venus that knoweth myn entent<br/> +Fully tobeye hir dome and Iugement<br/> +So as hir liste disposen and ordeyne<br/> +Right as she knoweth the troutħ of vs tweyne</p> + +<p>For vnto the tyme that venus list prouyde<br/> +To shape away for our hertis ease<br/> +Bothe ye and I mekely must abyde<br/> +To take at gree, and not of our disease<br/> +To grucche agayn til that she list tappease<br/> +Our hid woo so Iuly that constreynetħ<br/> +From day to day and our hertis peyneth</p> + +<p>For in abidyng of woo and al affraye<br/> +Who so can suffre is founden remedye<br/> +And for the beste ful ofte is made delaye<br/> +Er men be heled of their maladye<br/> +Wherfore as venus list this mater to gye<br/> +Leet vs agreen, and take al for the best<br/> +Til her liste, sette bothe our hertes in rest</p> + +<p>For she is that byndetħ and can constreyn<br/> +Hertes in one, this fortunate planete<br/> +And can relece louers of her peyn<br/> +To turne fully her bitter in to swete<br/> +Now blisful goddes doun fro thy sterry sete<br/> +Vs to fortune cast your stremes shene<br/> +Lyke as ye knowe, that we troutħ mene</p> + +<p>And ther witħ al as I myn eyen caste<br/> +For to perceyue the maner of these tweyne<br/> +To fore the goddesse mekely as they paste<br/> +Me thought I saw witħ a goldyn cheyne<br/> +Venus, anon enbrace and constreyne<br/> +Her bothe hertes in one, for to perseuere<br/> +Whilis that they lyue, and neuer to disseuere</p> + +<p>Seyng right thus with a benygne chere<br/> +Sith it is so, ye be vnder my myght<br/> +My wil is thus, that ye my doughter dere<br/> +Ful accepte this man as it is right<br/> +Vnto your grace anon here in my sight<br/> +That euer hath ben so lowly you to serue<br/> +Hit is good shil your thank that he deserue</p> + +<p>Your honour sauf and eke your womanhede<br/> +Hym to cherisshe, hit sittetħ you right wele<br/> +Sith he is bounde vnder hope and drede<br/> +Amyd my cheyne that forged is of stele<br/> +Ye must of mercy shape that he fele<br/> +In yow som grace of his long seruyse<br/> +And that in hast lik as I shal deuyse</p> + +<p>This is to sayn that ye taken hede<br/> +Hou he to you most faitħful is and true<br/> +Ofal your seruauntes, & nothing for his mede<br/> +Of you ne asketh, but ye on hym rue<br/> +For he vowed hath to change for no newe<br/> +For lyf ne detħ, for ioye ne for peyne<br/> +Ay to be youris, so as ye list ordeyne</p> + +<p>Wherfore ye muste or els it were wrong<br/> +Vnto your grace fully hym receyue<br/> +In my presence, by cause he hatħ so long<br/> +Hooly ben youris, as ye may conceyue<br/> +That from your mercy, yf ye hym weyue<br/> +I wyl my silf recorden cruelte<br/> +In your persone, and gret lack of pyte</p> + +<p>Late hym for his troutħ fynde than agayn<br/> +For long seruyse, guerdon hym witħ grace<br/> +And late ye pyte weye doun his payn<br/> +For tyme is now daunger to arace<br/> +Out of your hert, and mercy in to pace<br/> +And loue for loue world wel beseme<br/> +To yeue agayn and this I plainly deme</p> + +<p>And as for hym I wil ben his borowe<br/> +Of lowlihede and besy attendance<br/> +How he shal be bothe eue and morowe<br/> +Ful diligent to doon his obseruance<br/> +And euer awaytyng, you to do playsance<br/> +Wherfore my sone, listen and take hede<br/> +Fully tobeye, as I shal the rede</p> + +<p>And first of aƚƚ my wiƚƚ is that thou be<br/> +Feithful in hert and constant as a wal<br/> +True humble, meke and therwith al secre<br/> +Witħ out change in partie or in aƚƚ<br/> +And for no torment that the fallen shal<br/> +Tempest the not, but euer in stedfastnes<br/> +Rote thyn herte, and wyde doublenes</p> + +<p>And furthermore haue in reuerence<br/> +These women al for thy lady sake<br/> +And suffre neuer that men hem do offence<br/> +For loue of one, but euermore vndertake<br/> +Hem to defende whether they slept or wake<br/> +And ay be redy to holden them party<br/> +Ayenst aƚƚ tho that to hem haue enuye</p> + +<p>Be curtais ay and lowly of thy speche<br/> +To riche and poure ay fressħ & wel beseyn<br/> +And euer besy weyes for to seche<br/> +Alle true louers to relece of her peyn<br/> +Sith thou art one, & of no wight haue disdeyn<br/> +For loue hath power hertes for to daunte<br/> +And neuer for cherising, the to muche auaunte</p> + +<p>Be lusty eke voyd of aƚƚ tristesse<br/> +And take no thought but euer be iocound<br/> +And not to pensif for none heuynes<br/> +And witħ thy gladnes, lete sadnes ay be found<br/> +Whan woo approched, lete mirtħ most habound<br/> +As manhod ayid, and though thou fele smert<br/> +Late not to many knowen of thyn hert</p> + +<p>And alle vertues besily thou sue<br/> +Vices eschewe for the loue of one<br/> +And for no tales thyn hert not renewe<br/> +Word is but wynd that shal soon ouergoon<br/> +What euer thou here be domb as ony stoon<br/> +And to answere to sone, not the delyte<br/> +For here she standetħ that al this shal the quyte</p> + +<p>And wherther thou be absent or in presence<br/> +None others beawte lete in thy hert myne<br/> +Sitħ I haue yeue hir of beaute excellence<br/> +Aboue al other in vertu for to shyne<br/> +And thynke hou in fyre men ar wont to fyne<br/> +This pured gold to put hit in assaye<br/> +So to the proue, thou art put in delaye</p> + +<p>But tyme shal come thou shalt for thy suffrance<br/> +Be wel apaid and take for thy mede<br/> +Thy lyurs ioye and al thy suffisance<br/> +So that good hope alway thy bridel lede<br/> +Lete no dispeir hyndre the with drede<br/> +But ay thy trust vpon her mercy grounde<br/> +Sith none but she may thy sorowe sounde</p> + +<p>Eche hour and tyme. weke. day and yere<br/> +Be lich faithful and vary not for lyte<br/> +Abyde a whyle and than of thy desire<br/> +The tyme neygheth that shal the most delyte<br/> +And late no sorow in thy hert byte<br/> +For no differring, sith thou for thy mede<br/> +Shal reioyse in pees the flour of womanhede</p> + +<p>Thinke hou she is this worldis sonne & light<br/> +The sterre of beaute the flour eke of fairnes<br/> +Both crop and robe and eke the rubye bright<br/> +Hertes to glade, y troubled with derknes<br/> +And hou I haue made her, thin hertes Empresse<br/> +Be glad therfore to be vnder her bond<br/> +Now come ner doughter & take him by the hond</p> + +<p>Vnto this syn that aftir alle these shouris<br/> +Of his torment he may be glad and light<br/> +Whan by your grace ye take hym to be youris<br/> +For euermore anon here in my sight<br/> +And eke I wil also as hit is right<br/> +Without more his langour for to lysse<br/> +In my presence anon that ye hym kysse</p> + +<p>That ther may be of al your old smertis<br/> +A ful relees vnder ioye assured<br/> +And that one lok be of your bothe hertis<br/> +Shet with my keye of gold so wel pured<br/> +Only in signe that ye haue recured<br/> +Your hool desire here in this hooly place<br/> +Within my temple now in the yere of grace</p> + +<p>Eternally be bounde of assuraunce<br/> +The knot is knyt, that may not be vnbounde<br/> +That alle the goddes of this aliaunce<br/> +Satorne. Joue. and Mars as it is founde<br/> +And eke Cupyde that first did you wounde<br/> +Shal bere record, and ouermore bewreke<br/> +On whiche of yow, his troutħ first breke</p> + +<p>So that by aspectes of their fair lokis<br/> +Witħoute mercy shal fal the vengeance<br/> +For to be raced clene out of my bokis<br/> +On whiche of you be found of variance<br/> +Therfore attones settetħ your plesance<br/> +Fully to ben whyle ye haue lyf and mynde<br/> +Of one acorde vnto your lyues ende</p> + +<p>That yf the spiryte of newfanglenes<br/> +In ony wyse your hertes wold assaylle<br/> +To meue or styre to brynge in doublenes<br/> +Vpon your troutħ to gyuen a bataylle<br/> +Lete not your corage ne your force faylle<br/> +Nor none assaultes you flitten or remeue<br/> +For vnassayed no man may troutħ preue</p> + +<p>For whyte is whitter yf it be set by black<br/> +And swete is swetter after bitternes<br/> +And falshed euer is dryue and put a back<br/> +Where trouthe is roted witħ doblenes<br/> +Witħout preue ther may be no sekernes<br/> +Of loue or hate and therfore of you two<br/> +Shal loue be more, for hit was bought with woo</p> + +<p>And euery thing is had more in deynte<br/> +And more of pris whan it is dere bought<br/> +And eke loue stondeth more in sewrte<br/> +Whan it is to fore with payne woo & thought<br/> +Conquerd was first whan hit was sought<br/> +And euery conquest hath his excellence<br/> +In his poursute as it fyndeth resistence</p> + +<p>And so to you more sote and agreable<br/> +Shal loue be found I do you plainly assure<br/> +Witħout grucchyng that ye were suffrable<br/> +So lowe so meke paciently to endure<br/> +That al attones I shal do now my cure<br/> +For now and euer your hertis so to bynde<br/> +That nought but deth shal the knot vnbynde</p> + +<p>Now in this mater what shold I lenger dwelle<br/> +Come ye attones and do as I haue said<br/> +And first my doughter that ar of bounte welle<br/> +In hert and thought be glad & wel apayd<br/> +To done hym grace that shal & hath obeyd<br/> +Your lustes euer, and I wil for his sake<br/> +Of trouth to you be bounde and vndertake</p> + +<p>And so fortħ witħin presence as they stand<br/> +To fore the goddes this fair and wele<br/> +Her humble seruant toke goodly by the hond<br/> +As he to fore her, mekely did knele<br/> +And kyssed hym after fulfillyng eueridele<br/> +From poynt to poynt in ful thryfty wyse<br/> +As ye to forn haue venus herd deuyse</p> + +<p>Thus is this man to ioye and al plesance<br/> +From heuynes and from his peynes olde<br/> +Ful reconcyled, and hatħ ful suffisance<br/> +Of her that euer ment wel, and wold<br/> +That in good faitħ and I tel shold<br/> +The inward mirthes did her hertis brace<br/> +For al my lyf to telle, it were to lityl space</p> + +<p>For he hatħ wonne hir that he louetħ best<br/> +And she to grace hatħ take hym of pyte<br/> +And thus her hertes ben botħ set in rest<br/> +Witħoute chaunge or mutabilite<br/> +And venus hatħ of her benygnyte<br/> +Confermed al what shal I lenger tary<br/> +These tweyne in one and neuer to vary</p> + +<p>That for the ioye in the temple aboute<br/> +Of this acorde by grete solempnyte<br/> +Was laude and honour within & witħoute<br/> +Yeue to venus, and to the deyte<br/> +Of god cupide, so that Caliope<br/> +And al her sustren in her armonye<br/> +Soon with songes the goddes did magnifye</p> + +<p>And al attones with notes loud & sharp<br/> +They did her honour and her reuerence<br/> +And Orpheus among them with his harp<br/> +Gan strynges touche with his diligence<br/> +And Amphion that hath suche excellence<br/> +Of musyke ay dyde his besynes<br/> +To plese and queme venus the goddesse</p> + +<p>Only for cause of the affinyte<br/> +Betwix these two not lusty to disseuere<br/> +And euery louer of lowe and hye degre<br/> +Gan venus pray fro thens fortħ and euer<br/> +That hool of them the loue may perseuere<br/> +Witħouten ende in suche wyse as they gonne<br/> +And more encrece that hit of hard was wonne</p> + +<p>And the goddes heryng this request<br/> +As she that knewe the clene entencion<br/> +Of bothe them tweyne made a bihest<br/> +Perpetuelly by confirmacion<br/> +Whylis they lyue of one affection<br/> +They shal endure ther is no more to sayne<br/> +That neyther shal haue mater to complayne</p> + +<p>So ferfurtħ euermore in our eternal see<br/> +The goddes haue in our presence<br/> +Fully deuysed thurgħ their deyte<br/> +And hooly concluded by her Influence<br/> +That by thair myght and Iuste prudence<br/> +The loue of hem by grace and eke fortune<br/> +Witħ oute chaunge shal euermore contune</p> + +<p>Of whiche graunt the temple enuiron<br/> +Thurgħ hye comfort of them that were present<br/> +Anon was begun witħ a melodyous sowun<br/> +In name of tho that troutħ in loue ment<br/> +A balade newe in ful good entent<br/> +To fore the goddes witħ notis londe and clere<br/> +Syngyng right this anon as ye shal here</p> + +<p>Fayrest of sterres that with your persant light<br/> +And with the cherysyng of your stremes clere<br/> +Causen in loue hertes to be light<br/> +Only by shynyng of your glad spere<br/> +Now lawde and pryce O venus lady dere<br/> +Be to your name that haue without synne<br/> +This man fortuned his lady for to wynne</p> + +<p>Willy planete O esperus so bright<br/> +That woful hertes can appese and stere<br/> +And euer ar redy by your grace & might<br/> +To helpe al tho that bye loue so dere<br/> +And haue power hertis to sette on fyre<br/> +Honour to you of al that ben here Inne<br/> +That haue this man his lady made to wynne</p> + +<p>O mighty goddesse day sterre after nyght<br/> +Gladyng the morowe whan ye don appere<br/> +To wyde derknes by freshnes of your sight<br/> +Only witħ twinkyng of your plesaunt chere<br/> +To you we thanke louers that ben here<br/> +That ye this man and neuer for to twynne<br/> +Fortune haue, his lady for to wynne</p> + +<p>And witħ the noyse an heuenly melodye<br/> +Witħ that they made in her armonye<br/> +Thurgħ out the temple for this mans sake<br/> +Out of my slepe anon I dyde awake<br/> +And for astonyed knewe as tho no rede<br/> +For sodeyn chaunge oppressed witħ drede<br/> +Me thought I was cast in a traunce<br/> +So clene away was tho my remembrance<br/> +Of alle my dreme, wherof gret thought & wo<br/> +I had in herte and nyst what was to doo<br/> +For heuynes for that I had lost the sight<br/> +Of her that I al the longe nyght<br/> +Had dremed of in myn aduision<br/> +Wherof I made grete lamentacion<br/> +Be cause I had neuer in my lyf beforn<br/> +Saw none so fair sitħ that I was born<br/> +For loue of whom so as I can endyte<br/> +I purpose here to make and to wryte<br/> +A lityl tretyse and processe make<br/> +In pryce of women only for her sake<br/> +Hem to comence as it is skyl and right<br/> +For her godenes witħ al my myght<br/> +Prayng to her that is so bounteuous</p> + +<p>So ful of vertu and so gracyeus<br/> +Of womanhede and mercyful pyte<br/> +This symple tretyse for to take in gre<br/> +Til I haue leyzer vnto her hye renoun<br/> +For to expound my forsaid visioun<br/> +And tel in playn the signefyaunce<br/> +As it cometh to my remembraunce<br/> +So that her after my lady may hit loke<br/> +Now go thy way thou litil rude boke<br/> +To her presence as I the comande<br/> +And first of aƚƚ thou me recomande<br/> +Vnto hir and to her excellence<br/> +And pray to hir, hit be non offence<br/> +Yf ony word in the be myssaid<br/> +Besechyng her, she be not euyl a paid<br/> +For as her list I wil the efte correcte<br/> +Whan that her liketħ ageinward the directe<br/> +I mene that benygne and goodly of face<br/> +Now go thy way and put the in her grace</p> + +<h2>.Explicit the temple of glas.</h2> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Temple of Glass, by John Lydgate + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEMPLE OF GLASS *** + +***** This file should be named 29552-h.htm or 29552-h.zip ***** 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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 www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Temple of Glass + +Author: John Lydgate + +Release Date: July 30, 2009 [EBook #29552] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TEMPLE OF GLASS *** + + + + +Produced by Jason Isbell and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) + + + + + +The Temple of Glass +by +John Lydgate + +Printed at Westminster +by William Caxton about the year +1477 + +Cambridge +at the University Press +1905 + + + + + +The unique book here reprinted in facsimile came to the Cambridge +University Library in a famous volume of tracts described by Mr Blades +(Biography and Typography of W. Caxton, 1882, p. 201). + +The volume had formed part of the collection of John Moore, Bishop of +Ely, which was given to the University by King George the First in 1715. + +The first leaf, which is wanting, was probably blank. + +F. JENKINSON + + * * * * * + +I certify that I have printed 250 copies only of this facsimile, that +the impressions have been rubbed off the plates and the negatives +destroyed. + +P. DUJARDIN + + + + + + + +.The temple of glas. + + +For thought constreynt & greuous heuynes +For pensifhed and hig[=h] distres +To bed I went now this other nyght +Whan that lucina wit[=h] hir pale light +Was Ioyned last wit[=h] phebus in aquarye +Amyd decembre, whan of Ianuarye +Ther be kalendes of the new yere +And derk dyane horned and nothing clere +Had her beames vnder a mysty cloude +Wit[=h] in my bed for cold I gan me shroude +Al desolate for constraynt of my woo +The long nyght walowyng to and fro +Til at laste er I began take kepe +Me dyde oppresse a sodeyn dedly slepe +Wit[=h] in the whiche me thoug[=h]t I was +Rauysshed in spiryte in to a temple of glas +I nyste how fer in wildernes +That founded was as by liklynes +Not vpon stele, but on a craggy roche +Lyke yse y froze, and as I did approche +Agayn the sonne that shone so clere + +As ony Cristal and euer ner and ner +As I cam nyghe this grisly dredful place +I wex astonyed, the light so in my face +Be gan to smyte, so persing euer in one +On euery part wher that I gan gone +That I ne might no thing as I wolde +Aboute me considere and beholde +The wonder estres for brightnes of the sonne +Til atte last certayn skyes donne +Wit[=h] wynde chaced han her cours y went +To fore the stremes of titan and y blent +So that I mighte wit[=h] in and wit[=h] oute +Wherso I wolde beholden me aboute +For to reporte the fac[=o]n and manere +Of a[=ll] this place that was circuler +In compas wyse, round by entayle wrought +And whan I had longe gone and sought +I found a wiket and entred in as fast +In to the temple and myn eyen cast +On euery syde now lowe eft alofte +And right anon as I gan walken softe +Yf I the sot[=h] a right reporte shal +I sawe depeynted vpon a wal + +From este to weste many a fair ymage +Of sondry louers lyke as they were of age +Y sette in ordre after they were trewe +Wit[=h] liuely colours wonder fresh of hue +And as me thought I sawe som sitte & som st[=a]de +And so[=m]e knelyng wit[=h] billes in their hande +And so[=m]e wit[=h] compleynt woful & pietous +Wit[=h] doleful chere to putten to venus +So as she sat fleetyng in the see +Vpon her woo forto haue pitee +And first of alle I saug[=h] there of cartage +Dido the quene so goodly of visage +That gan compleyne hir auenture and cas +How she deceyued was of Eneas +For al his hestes and his othes sworn +And said alas that euer she was born +Whan she sawe that ded she must be +And next I sawe the compleynt of Medee +How that she falsed was of Iason +And nyg[=h] by venus sawe I sitte atheon +And al the maner how the boor hym sloug[=h] +For whom she wepte and had pyne ynoug[=h] +Ther saw I also how that penolope + +For she so longe her lord ne mighte see +Was of colour bothe pale and grene +And after next was the fresh quene +I mene alcest the noble trewe wyf +And for admete hou she lost her lif +And for her trout[=h] yf I shal not lye +How she was torned in to a daysye +Ther was Grisildes Innocence +And al her mekenes and pacience +There was eke Isode & many other moo +And al the torment and the cruel woo +That she had for tristram al her lyue +And how that Tisbe her hert dyde ryue +Wit[=h] thilk swerd of sir Piramus +And al the maner hou that Theseus +The mynotaure slow amyd the hous +That was forwrynked by crafte of dedalus +Whan he was in pryson shit in Crete +And how that philles felte of loues hete +The grete fyre of demephon allas +And for his falshed and for his trespas +Vpon the walles depeynt men might see +How she henge vpon a fylberd tree + +And many a story moo than I rekene can +Were in the temple, and how that paris wan +The fayr Eleyne a lusty fresh quene +And hou Achilles was for Policene +Y slayn vnwarly wit[=h]yn Troye toun +Al this sawe I walkyng vp and doun +Ther sawe I wreton eke the hole tale +How Philomene in to a nyghtyngale +Y torned was, and proigne vnto a swalowe +And how the sabyns in their maner halowe +The feste of lucresse yet in Rome toun +Ther saw I also the sorow of Palamon +That he in prison felte and al the smert +And how that he thurg[=h] vnto his hert +Was hurt vnwarly by castyng of an eye +On fair fresh the lusty yong Emelye +And al the stryf bytwene hym & his brother +And how that one faug[=h]t wit[=h] that other +Wit[=h]yn the groue, til they by Theseus +Accorded were as Chaucer tellet[=h] vs +And furthermore as I gan beholde +I sawe hou phebus wit[=h] an arowe of golde +Y wounded was thurg[=h] out his syde + +Only by enuye of the god Cupyde +And how that dyane vnto a laurer tre +Y torned was whan that she dide fle +And how that Ioue changed his cope +Only for loue of the fair Eurepe +And in to a hole, whan he did he sue +Liste of his godhed his fourme to transmue +And hou that he by transmutacion +The shap gan take of Amphitrion +For Alcumena so passing was of beaute +So was he hurt for al his deyte +Wit[=h] louys dart, and might it not escape +Ther sawe I also how mars was take +Of vulcanus and wit[=h] venus founde +And wit[=h] the cheynes Inuysible bounde +Ther was also al the poesye +Of hym Mercurye and al the philogye +And how that she for her sapience +Y wedded was to the god of eloquence +And how the Muses lowly did obeye +Hig[=h] in to heuyn this lady to conueye +And wit[=h] her songe hou she was magnefied +Wit[=h] Jubiter there to be stellefied + +And vppermore depeynt men might see +How wit[=h] her ryng the goodly canace +Of euery fowle, the leydons and songe +Coude vnderstond as she walked them among +And hou her brother so often holpen was +In his myschief, by the stede of bras +And furthermore in the temple were +Ful many a thousand louers here & there +In sondry wyse redy to compleyne +Vnto the goddesse, of her woo and peyne +How they were hyndred som for enuye +And how the serpent of fals Ielousie +Ful many a louer hath put a back +And causeles on them haue leid a lack +And so[=m]e ther were that playned on absence +That were exiled and put out of presence +Thurg[=h] wicked tunges and fals suspec[=o]n +Wit[=h]oute mercy or ony remissi[=o]n +And other eke her seruyse spent in veyn +And of her lady were not loued ageyn +And other eke that for pouerte +Dursten in no wyse her grete aduersite +Discouere ne opene, lest they were refused + +And so[=m]e for wantyng also were accused +And other eke that loued secretly +And of her lady durst axe no mercy +Lest that she wolde of hym haue despyte +And so[=m]e also that putten right grete wite +Ou double louers that loue thinges newe +Thurg[=h] whos falsenes hyndred be the trewe +And so[=m] there were as hit is ofte founde +That for her lady many a blody wounde +Endured hat[=h] in many a regyon +Whiles that an other hat[=h] had possession +Al of his lady and beret[=h] a way the fruyt +Of his labour and of a[=ll] his fuyt +And other compleyned of richesse +How he wit[=h] tresour dot[=h] his besynesse +To wynne agaynst al kynde and right +Where as true louers haue force none ne might +And som ther were as maydyns yong of age +That pleynet[=h] so wit[=h] pipyng & wit[=h] rage +That were coupled agayn al nature +Wit[=h] croked elde that may not long endure +For to perfourme the lust of loues playe +For hit ne fit not vnto fress[=h] maye + +For to be coupled to olde Ianuarye +They be so dyuerse that they must varye +For elde is gruoching and malencolious +Ay ful of yre and suspecious +And yongth entendet[=h] to Ioye & lustynes +To mirt[=h] and play and to al gladnes +Allas that euer hit shold falle +So swete sugre y coupled be to galle +These yonge folke cryeden oft sithe +And praid venus her power to kythe +Vpon this myschief and shape remedye +And right anone I herde other crye +Wit[=h] sobbyng teres and pietous sowne +To fore the goddesse by lamentacion +That were constrayned in their yougthe +And in childhode as is ofte couthe +Y entrid were in to Religion +Or they had yeris of discresc[=o]n +That al her lif can not but compleyne +In wyde Copes perfection forto feyne +Ful couertly for to coueren thair smert +And shewe the contrary of thair hert +Thus saw I wepe many a fair mayde + +That on theyr frendes al the wyte thay layde +And other next I saw ther in grete rage +That they were maried in theyr tendre age +Wit[=h] oute fredom of fre election +Where loue hat[=h] selde domynacion +For loue at large and at liberte +Wolde frely chese and not wit[=h] suche trete +And other saw I ful ofte wepe and wrynge +That they in men fonde suche varyynge +To loue a season whyle that beaulte flourit[=h] +And after by disdayn so vngoodly lourit[=h] +On her that whylom he callyd his lady dere +That was to hym so playsant and entier +But lust wit[=h] fairnes is so ouer goon +That in her herte trouthe abidet[=h] noon +And so[=m]e also I sawe in teres reyne +And pietously on god and kynde pleyne +That euer they wold on ony creature +So moche beaute passing be mesure +Sette on a woman to yeue occasion +A man, to loue to his confusion +And namely there, where he shal haue no grace +For wit[=h] a loke fort[=h] by as he dot[=h] pace + +Ful ofte fallet[=h] thurg[=h] castyng of an eye +A man is wounded that he must nedis deye +That neuer peraunter after he shal her see +Why wil god don so grete a cruelte +To ony man, or to his creature +To make hym so muche woo endure +For her, percas, whom he shal in no wyse +Reioyse neuer, but so fort[=h] in Iuyse +Lede his lif til that he be graue +For he ne durst of hir no mercy craue +And eke [per]aunter thoug[=h] he durst & wolde +He can not wite where he hir fynd sholde +I sawe ther eke, and therof had I couthe +That som were hyndred by couetyse & slougthe +And so[=m]e also for their hastynes +And other eke for their rechelesnes +But altherlast as I walked and behelde +Beside pallas wit[=h] her Cristal sheld +Tofore the statue of venus set on height +Ther kneled a lady in my sight +To fore the goddesse, whiche as the sonne +Passet[=h] the sterris, and eke the stormys donne +And lucifer to voyde the nyghtes sorowe + +In clerenes passet[=h] erly the morowe +And so as maye hat[=h] the souereynte +Of euery monet[=h] the fayrnes and beaute +And as the rose in swetnes and odour +Surmounted flouris, and baine of al licour +Hath the pryse, and as the rubye bright +Of al stones in beaute and in sight +As it is knowe hat[=h] the Regalye +Right so this ladye wit[=h] her goodly eye +And wit[=h] the stremys of hir loke so bright +Surmountet[=h] al thourg[=h] beaute in my sight +That for to tel her grete semelines +Her womanhed her porte and her fairnes +Hit was a meruayle, how euer that nature +Cowde in her werkes make a creature +So angelyk so goodly on to see +So femynyn or passing of beaute +Whos sonnys[=h] heer brighter than goldwire +Lyche phebus beames shynyng in his spyre +The goodlihed eke of her fres[=h] face +So replenyshed of beaute and of grace +So wel ennewed by nature and depeynt +As Rose and lilyes to gyder were meynt + +So egally by good proporcion +That as me tought by myn inspection +I gan meruaylle hou god or werk of kynde +Mighten of beaute suche a tresour fynde +To yeuen hir so passing excellence +For in good fait[=h] thurg[=h] her hye presence +The temple was ensumyned enuyron +And forto speke of her condicion +She was the beste that might be on lyue +For ther was none [that] wit[=h] her might stryue +To speke of bounte or of gentilesse +Of womanhede or of lowlynesse +Of curtoysie or of goodlihede +Of speche of chere or of semelihede +Of poort benigne or of daliaunce +The best taught and therto of playsaunce +She was the welle eke of honeste +An Examplair and mirrour eke was she +Of secretnes of trouthe of feit[=h]fulnes +And to alle other lady and maistres +To shewe vertu who so list to lere +And so this lady right humble of chere +Kneling I sawe, clad in grene and whyte + +To fore venus goddesse of al delyte +Enbrowded al wit[=h] stones and perre +So richely that Ioye it was to see +Wit[=h] sondry rolles on her garnement +For texpowne the trout[=h] of her entent +To shewe fully that for her humblesse +And for her vertu and her stablenesse +That she was cote of al womanly playsance +Therfore her word wit[=h]oute variance +Enbrowded was as men might see +De mieulx en mieulx wit[=h] stones of perre +This is to sayne that she was so benygne +From better to better her hert dot[=h] resigne +And al her wy[=ll] to venus the goddesse +Whan that her list her harmes to redresse +For as me thought somwhat by her chere +For to compleyne she had grete desire +For in her hand she held a lityl bylle +For to declare the su[=m]e of al her wylle +And to the goddesse her quarel for to shewe +Theffect of whiche was in wordes fewe + +.The copye of the supplicacion. + + + + + +O lady venus moder of cupyde +That in this world hast the gouernance +And hertes hye that hawteyn be by pryde +Enclynest mekely to thyn obeyssance +Causer of Ioye Relees of penance +And with thy stremes canst euery thing discer[=n] +Thurg[=h] heuenly fire of loue that is eter[=n] + +O blesful sterre persaunt and ful of light +Of beames gladsom, deuoyder of derknes +Chief recomfort after the blak nyght +To wyde woful hertes out of theyr heuynes +Take now good hede lady and goddesse +So that my bille may your grace attayne +Redresse to fynde of that I me compleyne + +For I am bounde to thing that I nolde +Frely to chese ther lack I liberte +And so I want of that myn herte wolde +The body is knyt, thoug[=h] my thought be fre +So that I muste of necessite +My hertes lyst outward contrarye +Thoug[=h] we be oon the dede muste varye + +My worship sauf I faylle election +Agayn al right bot[=h] of god and kynde +Therto be knyt vnder subiection +For whens for bot[=h] ar out of mynde +My thought got[=h] furt[=h] my body is behynde +For I am here, and yond my remembrance +Betwene two so hange I in balance + +Deuoyde of Ioye, of woo I haue plente +What I desire, that may I not possede +For that I nolde is redy ay to me +And that I loue, for to sue I drede +To my desire contrary is my mede +And thus I stonde departed in tweyne +Of wy[=ll] and dede ylaced in a cheyne + +For thoug[=h] I brenne wit[=h] feruence & hete +Wit[=h]yn myn herte I mote compleyne of colde +And by excesse thoug[=h] I swelte and swete +Me to compleyne god wote I am not bolde +Vnto no wight, ner one word vnfolde +Of al my peyne, allas the hard stounde +The hotter that I brenne, [the] colder is my wounde + +For he that hat[=h] myn hert feyt[=h]fully +And hool my loue in al honeste +Wit[=h]oute chaunge al be hit secretly +I haue no space wit[=h] hym for to be +O lady venus consider now and see +Vnto theffecte and compleynt of my by[=ll] +Sit[=h] lyf and det[=h] I put a[=ll] in thy wy[=ll] + +And tho me thought the goddes did enclyne +Mekely her hede and softly gan expresse +That in short tyme her torment shold fyne +And how of hym for whom al her distresse +Contynned had and al her heuynesse +She shold haue Ioye and of her purgatorye +Be holpen sone and so lyue fort[=h] in glorye + +And said doughter for thy sad trouthe +Thy fait[=h]ful menyng and Innocence +That planted be wit[=h] outen ony slouthe +In your persone deuoyed of al offence +So han they atteyned to our audience +That wit[=h] our grace ye shal be wel releuyd +I you behete of al that hat[=h] you greuyd + +And for that ye be euer of one entent +Wit[=h]oute chaunge or mutabilyte +And in your paynes ben so pacient +To take lowly your aduersyte +And that so longe thurgh the cruelte +Of olde saturne my fader vnfortuned +Your woo shal now no lenger be contuned + +And thinket[=h] this wit[=h] in a litil whyle +Hit shal aswage and ouer passen sone +For men by laysir passen many a myle +And ofte after a droppyng mone +The weder cleret[=h], and whan [the] storme is done +The sonne shynet[=h] in his spyer bright +And Ioye waket[=h] whan woo is putto flight + +Remembre eke how neuer yet no wight +Ne cam to worship wit[=h] out som debate +And folke reioyse also more of light +That they wit[=h] derknes were waped & mate +No ma[=n]s cha[=n]ce is allewey fortunate +Ne no wight preyset[=h] of sugre the swetnes +But they to fore haue tasted bitternes + +Gryssyld was asayed atte fu[=ll] +That torned after to encrese of Ioye +Penolope gan eke for sorowes dulle +For that her lord abode so long at troye +Also the torment ther coude noman accoye +Of dorygene flour of al Bretaigne +Thus euer Ioye is fyn and ende of payne + +And trustet[=h] this for conclusion +The ende of sorow is Ioye voyde of drede +For hoolly seyntes thurg[=h] her passion +Haue heuyn wonne by their souerain mede +And plente gladly folowet[=h] after nede +And so my doughter after your greuaunce +I you behote ye shal haue ful plesaunce + +For euer of loue the maner and the gyse +Is for to hurte his seruaunt & to wounde +And whan he hat[=h] taught them his empryse +He can in Ioye make them to habounde +And sit[=h] that ye haue in my laas be bounde +Wit[=h] oute gruoching or rebellyon +Ye muste of night haue consolacion + +This to sayne dowtet[=h] neuer a deel +That ye shal haue ful possession +Of hym that ye now cherisshe so weel +In honest maner wit[=h] oute offencion +By cause I knowe youre entencion +Is truly sette in party and in a[=ll] +To loue hym best and most in specia[=ll] + +For he that ye haue chosen you to serue +Shal be to you suche as ye desire +Wit[=h] oute chaunge fully til he sterue +So wit[=h] my bronde I haue sette hym a fyre +And wit[=h] my grace I shal hym so enspyre +That he in herte shal be right at your wylle +Wherso you liste to saue hym or to spylle + +For vnto you I shal his herte so lowe +Wit[=h] oute spotte of ony doblenesse +That he ne shal escape from the bowe +Thaug[=h] that hym self by vnstedfastnesse +I mene of cupide that shal hym so distresse +Vnto your honde wit[=h] tharowe of golde +That he ne shal escapen thaugh he wolde + +And sith ye list of pyte and of grace +In vertu only his yonghthe to cherisshe +I shal by aspectes of my benigne face +Make hym beschewe euery synne and vice +So that he shal haue no maner spice +In his corage to loue thinges newe +He shal to yow so playn be found and trewe + +And whan this goodly fair fress[=h] of hue +Humble and benygne of trout[=h] crop & rote +Conceyued had how venus gan to rewe +On her prayer plainly to do bote +To chaunge her bitter attones in to sote +She fyl on knees of hig[=h] deuocion +And in this wyse began her orison + +Hyghest of hye quene and Emperice +Goddesse of loue, of good yet the best +That thurg[=h] your beaute wit[=h]oute vice +Whylom conquerd thappel atte fest +That Iubiter thurg[=h] his hye request +To alle the goddes aboue celestyal +Made in his palais most Imperyal + +To you my lady vpholder of my lyf +Mekely I thanke so as I may suffise +That ye list now wit[=h] herte ententyf +So graciously for me to deuyse +That whyle I lyue wit[=h] humble sacrefise +Vpon your auters your fest yer by yer +I shal encence casten in to the fyre + +For of your grace I am ful reconsiled +From euery troble vnto ioye and ease +That sorowes alle be from me exiled +Sit[=h] ye my lady list now tappease +My paynes olde and fully my disease +Vnto gladnes so sodenly to torne +Hauyng no cause from hens fort[=h] to morne + +For sithen ye so mekely liste to daunte +To my seruise hym that louet[=h] me best +And of your bounte so graciously to graunte +That he ne shal barye thoug[=h] hym leste +Wherof myn herte is fully brought to reste +For now and euer o lady myn benigne +That hert and wi[=ll] I hooly to you resigne + +Thankyng you wit[=h] al my ful herte +That of your grace and visitacion +So humble liste hym to conuerte +Fully to ben at my subiection +Wit[=h] oute chaunge or transmutacion +Vnto his laste, now laude and reuerence +Be to your name and excellence + +This al and sum and chief of my request +And hool substance of my ful entente +You thankyng euer of your graunt & hest +Bot[=h] now and euer that ye me grace sent +To conquer hym that neuer shal repent +Me for to serue and humblye for to please +As fynal tresour of my hertes ease + +And than anon venus cast a doun +In to her lappe braunches whyte and grene +Of hawthorn that wenten enuyron +Aboute her heed that ioye was to sene +And had her kepe hem honestly and clene +Whiche shold not fade ne neuer wexe olde +Yf she her biddyng kepe as she hat[=h] told + +And as these vowes be bothe fair and swete +Folowe theffecte that they do specifye +This is to seyne bot[=h] in cold and hete +Be ye of one hert and of one fantasye +As ar these leues whiche may not dye +By no duresse of stormes that be kene +Nomore in wynter than in somer grene + +Right so by ensample of wele or woo +For Ioye torment or for aduersite +Whether so fortune fauoure, or be foo +For pouert riches or prosperyte +That ye your hert kepe in on degre +To loue hym best for no thing that ye fyne +Whom I haue bound so low vnder your cheyne + +And wit[=h] [that] word the goddesse shoke her heed +And was in pees & spack as tho nomore +And therwit[=h] a[=ll] ful femynyn of drede +Me thought this lady sighen gan ful sore +And said agayn, lady that maist restore +Hertes in Ioye from theyr aduersite +To do your wil de mieulx en mieulx ma gree + +Thus euer slepyng dremyng as I laye +Wit[=h]yn the temple me thought I saye +Grete prees of folk wit[=h] murmur wonderful +To croude and shoue, the temple was so ful +Eueric[=h] ful besy, in his owne cause +That I ne may shortly in a clause +Discriuen alle the rites and the guyse +And eke I wante connyng to deuyse +How so[=m]e ther were wit[=h] blood, encence & milk +And so[=m]e wit[=h] flouris sote & softe as silk +And so[=m]e wit[=h] sparowes & douues whyte +That for to offren gan hem delyte +Vnto the goddesse wit[=h] sighe and prayer +Hem to relese of that they most desire +That for the prees shortly to conclude +I wente my way for the multitude +Me for to refress[=h] out of the prees allone +And by my self me thought as I gan gone +Wit[=h] in the estres and gan a whyle tarye +I sawe a man that walked al solitarye +That as me semed for heuynes and dole +Hym to compleyne, that he walked so sole +Wit[=h] oute espyyng of ony other wight + +And yf I s[=h]al diseryuen hym a right +Yf that he had not ben in heuynes +Me thought he was, to speke of semelines +Of shap of fourme, and also of stature +The most passing, that euer yet nature +Made in her werkes, and lyke to be a man +And ther wit[=h] al as I reherce can +Of face and chere the most gracyous +To be biloued happy and ewrous +Bur as it semed outward by his chere +That he complayned for lack of his desire +For by hym self as he walked vp and doun +I herde hym make a lamentacion +And said alas, what thing may this be +That now am bonde that whylom was fre +And wente at large at myn election +Now am I caught vnder subiection +For to become a beray homager +To god of loue, wher er I cam here +Felt in myn herte, nought of loues peyne +But now of newe, wit[=h]in hur firy cheyne +I am embraced so that I may not stryue +To serue and loue whyle I am on lyue + +The godly freshe in the temple yonder +I sawe right now, that I had wonder +How euer god, for to rekene a[=ll] +Might make a thing so celestia[=ll] +So angelike on erthe to appere +For wit[=h] the stremes of her eyen clere +I am wounded euen to the hert +That fro the det[=h] I may not astert +And most I meruayle that so sodeinly +I was so yolde to be at hur mercy +Wit[=h]oute more, I muste her lust obeye +Whether that she liste me to lyue or deye +And take mekely my sodeyn auenture +For sit[=h] my lif, my det[=h], and eke my cure +Is in her hand it wil not auaylle +To gruoche agayn, for of this bataylle +The palme is heris, and plainly the victorye +Yf I rebellid honour none ne glorye +I might not in ony wyse achyeue +Sit[=h] I am [the]olden, how shold I thenne preue +To renne a wey, I wote hit wil not be +Thoug[=h] I be loos, at large I may not fle +O god of loue how sharp is now thyn arowe + +How mayst thou now so cruelly and so narowe +Wit[=h] oute cause hurte me and wounde +And takest none hede my sorowes to founde +But liche a birde that fleet[=h] at her desire +Tyl sodeynly wit[=h]yn the pantere +She is caught thaug[=h] late she was at large +Anewe tempest forcastet[=h] now my barge +Now vp now doun, wit[=h] wynd it is so blowe +So am I possed and almost ouerthrowe +For dryue in derknes of many sondry wawe +Alas whan shal this tempest ouerdrawe +To clere the skyes of myn aduersite +The lode sterre whan that I ne may see +Hit is so hid wit[=h] clowdes that be blake +Alas whan wy[=ll] this torment ouerslake +I can not wyte, for who is hurt of newe +And bledet[=h] inward til he wex pale of hue +And hat[=h] his wound vnwarly fress[=h] & grene +And hit is not couthe vnto the harmes kene +Of myghty cupyde that can so hertes daunte +That no man may in his warre hym vaunte +To gete a pryce but only by mekenes +For ther ne haylet[=h] stryf ne sturdynes + +So may I sayne that wit[=h] a loke am yolde +And haue no power to stryue thaug[=h] I wolde +Thus stonde I euer betwix lif and det[=h] +To loue and serue whyle I haue bret[=h] +In suche a place where I dar not pleyne +Liche hym that is in torment and in peyne +And knowet[=h] not to whom to discure +For ther that I haue holly set my aire +I dar not wel for drede ne for daunger +And for vnknowen tellen how the fyre +Of loues bronde is kyndlid in my breste +Thus am I murdred and slayn atte leste +So priuely wit[=h]yn my thought +O lady venus whom I haue sought +So wysse me now what me is best to doo +That am distraught wit[=h] my self so +That I ne wote what way for to torne +Sauf by my self soleyn for to morne +Hangyng in balance betwix hope and drede +Wit[=h] oute comfort remedye or rede +For hope biddet[=h] pursue and assaye +And agaynward drede answert[=h] naye +And now wit[=h] hope I am set a lofte + +But drede and daunger hard & nothyng softe +Hat[=h] ouerthrowe my trust and put a doun +Now at my large, now fetred in prisoun +Now in torment, now in souerayn glorye +Now in paradyse and now in purgatorye +As man dispayred in a double were +Born vp wit[=h] hope, and the[=n]e anon daunger +Me drawet[=h] aback, and sait[=h] it shal not be +For where as I of myne aduersite +Am bolde somwhyle mercy to requyre +Thenne comet[=h] dispair & gynnet[=h] me to lere +A newe lesson to hope ful the contrary +They be so diuerse they wil do me varye +And thus I stand dismayed in a traunce +For whan that hope were likly me tauaunce +For drede I tremble & dar one word not speke +And yf hit so be, that I not out breke +To telle the harmes that greuen me so sore +But in my self encrece them more and more +And to be slayn fully me delyte +When of my det[=h] she is nothing to wyte +For but yf she my constreynt plainly knewe +How shold she euer, on my peynes rue + +Thus oft tyme wit[=h] hope I am meuyd +To tel her a[=ll], how I am greuyd +And to be hardy on me for to take +To axe mercy, but drede dot[=h] me the[=n]e awake +And than wanhop answert[=h] me agayn +That better were than she haue disdayn +To dye attones vnknowe of ony wight +And ther wit[=h] a[=ll] biddet[=h] hope anon right +Me, to be bold and prayen her of grace +And fit[=h] alle vertues be portreyd in her face +Hit were not sittyng, that pyte were behynde +And right anon wit[=h]yn my self I fynde +A newe plee brought on me wit[=h] drede +That me so maset[=h] that I see no spede +Be cause he sait[=h] that stonyet[=h] al my blood +I am so symple and she is so good +Thus hope & drede in me wyl not sece +To plete and stryue my harmys to encrece +But at hardest yet or I be dede +Of my distresse sit[=h] I can no rede +But stande do[=m] styl as ony stone +To fore the goddesse I wil me haste ano[=n] +And compleyne wit[=h] oute more sermo[=n] + +Thoug[=h] det[=h] be fyn and ful conclusion +Of my request, yet I wyl assaye +And right anon me thought I saye +This woful man as I haue memorye +Ful lowly entre in to an oratorye +And knelid a doun in ful humble wyse +To fore the goddesse and gan anon deuyse +His pitous quarel wit[=h] a doleful chere +Sayng right this as ye sha[=ll] here + +.The compleynt of the man. + + + + +Redresse of sorow O Citherea +That wit[=h] the stremys of thy playsaunt hete +Gladest the mounte of al Cirrea +Where thou hast chosen thy paleys and sete +Whos bright beames ben wesshen and wete +In the ryuer of Elycon the welle +Haue now pyte of that I shal you telle + +And not desdayne ye of your benygnyte +My mortal woo O lady myn goddesse +Of grace and bounte & mercyful pyte +Benygnely to helpe and to redresse +And thaug[=h] so be I can not wel expresse +The greuous harmes that I fele in my herte +Haue neuer yet the lesse mercy of my smerte + +This is to sayne O cler heuenes light +That next the sonne sercled han your spere +Sit[=h] ye me hurte wit[=h] your dredful myght +By influence of your beames clere +And that I by your seruyse now so dere +As ye me brought in to this maladye +Be ye gracyous and shape ye remedye + +For in you hoolly liet[=h] help of al this caas +And knowe best my sorow and al my peyne +For drede of det[=h], how I ne dar allas +To aren mercy ones, ne me compleyne +Now wit[=h] your fyre her hert so constrayne +Wit[=h] oute more, or I deye atte leste +That she may witte what is my request + +How I no thyng in al this world desire +But for to serur fully to myn ende +That goodly freshe so womanly of chere +Wit[=h]out chaunge whyle I haue lyf & mynde +And that ye wold suche grace sende +Of my seruyse that she not disdeyne +Sithen her to serue I may not me restreyne + +And sit[=h] that hope me hat[=h] yeue hardynes +To loue her best and neuer to repente +Whylis that I lyue wit[=h] al my besynes +To drede & serue, thaug[=h] daunger neuer assente +And here vpon ye knowe myn entente +How I haue vowed fully in myn mynde +To ben her man, thaug[=h] I no mercy fynde + +For in my hert emprynted is so sore +Her shap her forme & al her semelynes +Her porte her chere, her godenes more & more +Her womanhed and eke her gentiles +Her trout[=h], her fait[=h] and her kyndnes +Wit[=h] alle vertues eche set in her degre +Ther is no lack, sauyng only of pyte + +Her sad demenyng of wyl not variable +Of loke benygne, and rote of al plesance +And exemplayre to alle that wyl be stable +Discrete prudent of wisedom suffisance +Mirrour of witte ground of gouernance +A world of beaute compassed in her face +Whos persant loke doth thurg[=h] my hert race + +And ouer this wonder secrete and true +A wel of fredome and right bounteous +And euer encrecyng in vertu new & newe +Of speche goodly, and wonder gracyous +Deuoyd of pryde, to poure not despytous +And yf that I shortly shal not feyne +Saue vpon mercy I no thing compleyne + +What wonder thenne, thoug[=h] I be wit[=h] drede +Inly supprised for to axen grace +Of her that is quene of womanhede +For wel I wote in so hig[=h] a place +Hit wil not be, therfore I ouer pace +And take lowly what wo I endure +Til she of pyte me take to her cure + +But one auowe plainly here I make +That whethir so be, she do me lyue or deye +I wil not gruoche, but humbly hit take +And thanke god and wilfully obeye +For by my trout[=h] my hert shal neuer reneye +For lyf ne det[=h] mercy ne daunger +Of wil and thought to be at her desire + +To ben as trewe as euer was antonyus +To cleopatre whyle hym lastet[=h] bret[=h] +Or vnto thesbe yong Piramus +That was faithful found, til them deptid deth +Right so shal I til Antropos me slet[=h] +For whele or woo her faithful man be found +Vnto my last, like as my hert is bound + +To loue as wel as did Achilles +Vnto his laste the fair Polixene +Or as the grete famous Hercules +For dyanyre that felte the shott kene +Right so shal I saye right as I mene +Whyle that I lyue, her bot[=h] drede and serue +For lack of mercy thoug[=h] she do me sterue + +Now lady venus to whom nothing vnknowe +Is in the world hid, ne nought may be +For ther nys thing nether hye ne lowe +May be conceyled from your pryuete +Fro whom my menyng is not now secret +But wite fully that myn entent is true +And liche my trouthe now on my peyne rue + +For more of grace than of presumpcion +I axe mercy, and no thing of dute +Of lowly humbles, wit[=h] oute offencion +That ye enclyne of your benygnyte +Your audience vnto my humylyte +To graunte me that to you I clepe & calle +Sum day relees yet of my peynes alle + +And sit[=h] ye haue the guerdon and the mede +Of alle louers pleinly in your honde +Now of grace and pyte take ye hede +Of my distrees, that am vnder your bonde +So lowly bound, as ye wel vnderstonde +In that place where I toke first my wounde +Of pyte suffre ye my helt[=h] may be founde + +That liche as she me hurte wit[=h] a sight +Right so with helth late me hur sustene +And as the stremes of her eyen bright +Whylom my hert wit[=h] woundes sharp & kene +Thurg[=h] persed haue and yet be fresh & grene +So as she me hurte, lete her me socoure +Or ellis certayn I may not long endure + +For lack of speche I can say you no more +I haue mater but I can not pleyne +My witte is du[=ll] to tel al my sore +A mouth I haue, And yet for al my peyn +For want of wordes I may not now atteyn +To tel half, that dot[=h] my hert greue +Mercy abydyng, til she me list releue + +But this theffect of my mater fynal +Wit[=h] det[=h] or mercy relees for to fynde +For hert body thought lyf lust and al +Wit[=h] al my reson and al my ful mynde +And fyue wittes of on assent I bynde +To her seruyse wit[=h] oute ony stryf +And make her pryncesse of my det[=h] or lyf + +And now I pray of rout[=h] and eke pyte +O goodly planet, O lady venus bright +That ye your sone of his deyte +Cupide I mene that wit[=h] his dredful myght +And wit[=h] his brond that is so clere of light +Her herte so to fyre and to marke +As ye me whylem brent wit[=h] a sparke + +That euenlic[=h] and with the same fyre +She may be hit, as I now brenne and melte +So that her herte be flamed wit[=h] desire +That she may knowe by feruence hou I swelte +For of pyte plainly yf she felte +The self hete that doth myn hert enbrace +I hope of rout[=h] she wi[=ll] do me grace + +And ther wit[=h] al bemis as me thought +Towardes this man ful benyngely +Gan cast her eye, like as that she rought +Of his disease, and said ful goodly +Sith it is so, that thou so humbly +Wit[=h] out gruachyng our hestes liste obeye +Toward thyn help I wil anon pourueye + +And eke my sone Cupyde that is so blynde +He shal be helpyng fully to performe +Your hool desire, that nothing be behynde +Ne shal be lefte, so we shal reforme +This pietous c[=o]pleynt, [that] maket[=h] the to morne +That she for whom thau sorowest most in hert +Shal thurg[=h] hur mercy relece al thy smert + +Whan she scet[=h] tyme, thurg[=h] our purueaunce +Be not to hasty, but suffre althing wele +For in abydyng, thurg[=h] lowly obeyssaunce +Lyet[=h] ful redres, of al that ye now fele +And she shal be as trewe as ony stele +To you allone, by our myght and grace +Yf ye list mekely abyde a lityl space + +But vnderstande ye that al her cherising +Shal be grounded vpon honeste +That no wight shal by ony compacyng +Demen amys of hur in no degre +For neyther mercy, cout[=h] ner pyte +She shal not haue ne take of the non hede +Further than longet[=h] vnto her womanhede + +Be not astonyed of no wilfulnes +Ne not despeyred of this dissolucion +Late reson bridle lust by buxumnes +Wit[=h]out gruochyng or rebellyon +For ioye shal folowe al this passion +For who can suffre torment and endure +Ne may not faylle, but folowe shal his cure + +For to fore alle she shal the louen best +So shal I her wit[=h]oute offencion +By Influence enspire in her brest +In honest wyse wit[=h] ful entencion +For tenclyne by clene affection +Her hert fully on the to haue routhe +Be cause I knowe that thou menest trouthe + +Go now to hir where as she stant a syde +Wit[=h] humble chere, and put the in her grace +And al beforn lete hope be thy guyde +And thaug[=h] that drede wold wit[=h] the pace +Hit sittet[=h] wel, but loke that thou arace +Out of thyn hert wanhop and despeire +To her presence er thou haue repeir + +And mercy first shal thy way make +And honest menyng afore do thy message +To make pyte in her herte awake +And secretnes to further thy viage +Wit[=h] humble porte to her that is so sage +Shal menes be, and I my self also +Shal the fortune, or thy tale be do + +Go fort[=h] anon, and be right good of chere +For specheles nothing mayst thou spede +Be good of trust & be no thing in were +Sit[=h] I my self shal helpen in this nede +For atte lest of her goodly hede +She shal to the her audience enclyne +And lowe the to her til thou thy tale fyne + +For wel thou wost yf I shal not feyne +Wit[=h]oute speche thou maist no mercy haue +For who that wil of his pryue peyne +Fully be cured his lyf to helpe and saue +He must mekely out of his hert graue +Discure his wound and shewe hit his leche +Or ellis deye for defaute of speche + +For he that is in myschief reklees +To seche help I holde hym a wrecche +And she ne may thyn hert bryng in pees +But yf thy compleynt to hir hert strecche +Woldest thou be cured & wilt no salue fecche +Hit wil not be, for no wight may atteyne +To come to blys, yf he list lyue in peyne + +Therfore attones go fort[=h] in humble wyse +To fore thy lady and lowly knele a doun +And in al trouthe thy wordes so deuyse +That she on the haue compassion +For she that is of so hye renoun +In al vertues as quene and souerayn +Of womanhed shal rue on thy payn + +And whan the goddes this lesson had told +Aboute me so I gan behold +Rig[=h]t so a stoned stode in a traunce +To se the maner and contenance +And al the chere of this woful man +That was of hue dedely pale and wan +Wit[=h] drede supprised in his owne thought + +Makyng chere as thaug[=h] he rought nought +Of lyf ne det[=h] ne what so hym betyde +So moche fere he had on euery side +To put hym fort[=h] to tel his peyne +Vnto his lady, other to compleyne +What woo he felt torment or disese +What dedely sorow his hert dide sese +For cout[=h] of whiche his wo as I endite +My penne I fele quaken as I wryte +Of hym I had so grete compassion +For to reherce his weymentacion +That vnnethe, thoug[=h] I wit[=h] my self stryue +I want connyng his peynes to discryue +Allas to whom shal I for help calle +Not to the muses for cause they ben alle +Help of right in Ioye and not in woo +And in matiers that they delite also +Wherfore they nyl as now directe my style +Nor me enspiren Alas the hard whyle +I can no further but to the siphon +And to her suster to calle help vpon +That be goddesses of torment and peyne +Nowe lete your teris in to myn Inke reyne + +Wit[=h] woful wordes my paper for to blotte +This woful mater not to peynt, but spotte +To tel the maner of this dredeful man +Vpon his complaynt whan he first began +To tel his lady whan he gan declare +His hid sorowis, and his euel fare +That at his herte constreyned so sore +Theffect of whiche was this wit[=h]oute more + +Pryncesse of yougt[=h] & flour of gentilesse +Ensample of vertu ground of curtesye +Of beaute rote quene and eke maistres +To alle women how they shal hem gye +And sot[=h]fast mirrour texemplifye +The right way of port and of womanhede +What I shal saye, of mercy take ye hede +Besechyng first vnto your hye nobles +Wit[=h] quakyng hert of my Inward drede +Of grace and pyte & not of right wysnes +Of verrey cout[=h]e to help in this nede +This is to say O wel of goodlyhede +That I ne rekke thaug[=h] ye do me deye +So ye list first to heven what I seye + +The dredeful stroke the gret force and might +Of god cupide that noman may rebelle +So inwardly thurg[=h] out myn hert right +Y perced hat[=h] that I ne may councele +Myn hid wound ne I ne may apele +Vnto no gretter, this mighty god so faste +You to serue hat[=h] me bound vnto my laste + +That hert and a[=ll] wit[=h] out stryf ar yolde +For lyf or det[=h] to your seruyse allone +Right as the goddesse myghty venus wolde +To for her mekely whan I made my mone +She me constrayned wit[=h]oute chaunge anone +To your seruyse and neuer for to fayne +Wherso euer ye list to do me ease or payne + +So that I can no thing but mercy crye +Of you my lady, and chaunge for no newe +That ye list godely to fore er that I dye +Of verray couthe vpon my paynes rue +For by my trouthe, and ye my peynes knewe +What is the cause of myne aduersite +On myn disese ye wolde haue pyte + +For vnto you trewe and eke secre +I wil be founde to serue as I best can +And therwit[=h] al as lowly in eche degre +To you be allone as euer yet was man +Vnto his lady from the tyme I began +And shal so fort[=h] wit[=h]outen ony sleut[=h] +Whylis that I lyue, by god & by my trout[=h] + +For leuer I had to deyen sodenly +Than you offende in any maner wyse +And suffre paynes inward priuely +Than my seruyse as now ye shold dispyse +For I right neught wil axe in no wyse +But for your seruaunt ye wold me accepte +And whan I trespace, goodly me correcte + +And for to graunte of mercy the prayer +Only of grace and womanly pyte +From day to day that I myght leve +You for to plese, and therwit[=h] al that ye +Whan I do mys, list for to teche me +In your seruyse hou that I may amende +From hensfort[=h] and neuer you offende + +For vnto me it doth ynow[=h] suffyse +That for your man ye wold me resseyue +Fully to ben as you lyst deuyse +And as ferforth as my wittes can conceyue +And therwith al liche as ye preue +That I be true, to guerdone me of grace +Or ellis to punysshe after my trespace + +And yf so be that I may not atteyne +Vnto your mercy, yet graunte at the leste +In your seruyse for al my wo and peyne +That I may deyen after my beheste +This is al and som the fyn of my request +Outher with mercy your seruaunt to saue +Or mercyles that I may be begraue + +And whan this benygne of her entent true +Conceyued hat[=h] the compleynt of this man +Right as the fresh rody Rose newe +Of her colour to wexen she began +Her blood astoned so from her herte ran +In to her face of verray femynyte +Thurgh honest drede abasshed was she + +And humbly she began her eyen caste +Towardes hym of hir benygnyte +So that no word by her lippes past +For hast nor drede mercy ne pyte +For so demened she was in honeste +That vnaduysed no thing fro her stert +So moche of reson was compassed in her hert + +Til atte last of whiche she did abreyd +Whan she is trouthe and menyng did fele +And vnto hym ful goodly spack and seyd +Of your behest and your menyng wele +And your seruyse so fait[=h]ful euerydele +Whiche vnto me so lowly now ye offre +Wit[=h] al my herte, I thanke you of your profre + +That for so moche your entent is sette +Only in vertu y bridled vnder drede +Ye must of right nedis face the bet +Of your request, and the better spede +But as for me I may of womanhede +No further graunte to you in myn entente +Than as my lady venus wil assente + +For she wel knoweth I am not at my large +To doon right nought but by her ordynance +So am I drownd vnder her dredeful charge +Her lyste tobbeye withoute variaunce +But for my parte so hit be pleasaunce +Vnto the goddesse for trout[=h] in your empryse +I you accepte fully to my seruyse + +For she my herte hath in subiection +Whiche hoolly is youres & neuer shal repente +In thought ner dede in myn election +Witnes on venus that knoweth myn entent +Fully tobeye hir dome and Iugement +So as hir liste disposen and ordeyne +Right as she knoweth the trout[=h] of vs tweyne + +For vnto the tyme that venus list prouyde +To shape away for our hertis ease +Bothe ye and I mekely must abyde +To take at gree, and not of our disease +To grucche agayn til that she list tappease +Our hid woo so Iuly that constreynet[=h] +From day to day and our hertis peyneth + +For in abidyng of woo and al affraye +Who so can suffre is founden remedye +And for the beste ful ofte is made delaye +Er men be heled of their maladye +Wherfore as venus list this mater to gye +Leet vs agreen, and take al for the best +Til her liste, sette bothe our hertes in rest + +For she is that byndet[=h] and can constreyn +Hertes in one, this fortunate planete +And can relece louers of her peyn +To turne fully her bitter in to swete +Now blisful goddes doun fro thy sterry sete +Vs to fortune cast your stremes shene +Lyke as ye knowe, that we trout[=h] mene + +And ther wit[=h] al as I myn eyen caste +For to perceyue the maner of these tweyne +To fore the goddesse mekely as they paste +Me thought I saw wit[=h] a goldyn cheyne +Venus, anon enbrace and constreyne +Her bothe hertes in one, for to perseuere +Whilis that they lyue, and neuer to disseuere + +Seyng right thus with a benygne chere +Sith it is so, ye be vnder my myght +My wil is thus, that ye my doughter dere +Ful accepte this man as it is right +Vnto your grace anon here in my sight +That euer hath ben so lowly you to serue +Hit is good shil your thank that he deserue + +Your honour sauf and eke your womanhede +Hym to cherisshe, hit sittet[=h] you right wele +Sith he is bounde vnder hope and drede +Amyd my cheyne that forged is of stele +Ye must of mercy shape that he fele +In yow som grace of his long seruyse +And that in hast lik as I shal deuyse + +This is to sayn that ye taken hede +Hou he to you most fait[=h]ful is and true +Ofal your seruauntes, & nothing for his mede +Of you ne asketh, but ye on hym rue +For he vowed hath to change for no newe +For lyf ne det[=h], for ioye ne for peyne +Ay to be youris, so as ye list ordeyne + +Wherfore ye muste or els it were wrong +Vnto your grace fully hym receyue +In my presence, by cause he hat[=h] so long +Hooly ben youris, as ye may conceyue +That from your mercy, yf ye hym weyue +I wyl my silf recorden cruelte +In your persone, and gret lack of pyte + +Late hym for his trout[=h] fynde than agayn +For long seruyse, guerdon hym wit[=h] grace +And late ye pyte weye doun his payn +For tyme is now daunger to arace +Out of your hert, and mercy in to pace +And loue for loue world wel beseme +To yeue agayn and this I plainly deme + +And as for hym I wil ben his borowe +Of lowlihede and besy attendance +How he shal be bothe eue and morowe +Ful diligent to doon his obseruance +And euer awaytyng, you to do playsance +Wherfore my sone, listen and take hede +Fully tobeye, as I shal the rede + +And first of a[=ll] my wi[=ll] is that thou be +Feithful in hert and constant as a wal +True humble, meke and therwith al secre +Wit[=h] out change in partie or in a[=ll] +And for no torment that the fallen shal +Tempest the not, but euer in stedfastnes +Rote thyn herte, and wyde doublenes + +And furthermore haue in reuerence +These women al for thy lady sake +And suffre neuer that men hem do offence +For loue of one, but euermore vndertake +Hem to defende whether they slept or wake +And ay be redy to holden them party +Ayenst a[=ll] tho that to hem haue enuye + +Be curtais ay and lowly of thy speche +To riche and poure ay fress[=h] & wel beseyn +And euer besy weyes for to seche +Alle true louers to relece of her peyn +Sith thou art one, & of no wight haue disdeyn +For loue hath power hertes for to daunte +And neuer for cherising, the to muche auaunte + +Be lusty eke voyd of a[=ll] tristesse +And take no thought but euer be iocound +And not to pensif for none heuynes +And wit[=h] thy gladnes, lete sadnes ay be found +Whan woo approched, lete mirt[=h] most habound +As manhod ayid, and though [thou] fele smert +Late not to many knowen of thyn hert + +And alle vertues besily thou sue +Vices eschewe for the loue of one +And for no tales thyn hert not renewe +Word is but wynd that shal soon ouergoon +What euer thou here be domb as ony stoon +And to answere to sone, not the delyte +For here she standet[=h] that al this shal [the] quyte + +And wherther thou be absent or in presence +None others beawte lete in thy hert myne +Sit[=h] I haue yeue hir of beaute excellence +Aboue al other in vertu for to shyne +And thynke hou in fyre men ar wont to fyne +this pured gold to put hit in assaye +So to the proue, thou art put in delaye + +But tyme shal come thou shalt for thy suffrance +Be wel apaid and take for thy mede +Thy lyurs ioye and al thy suffisance +So that good hope alway thy bridel lede +Lete no dispeir hyndre the with drede +But ay thy trust vpon her mercy grounde +Sith none but she may thy sorowe sounde + +Eche hour and tyme. weke. day and yere +Be lich faithful and vary not for lyte +Abyde a whyle and than of thy desire +The tyme neygheth that shal the most delyte +And late no sorow in thy hert byte +For no differring, sith thou for thy mede +Shal reioyse in pees the flour of womanhede + +Thinke hou she is this worldis sonne & light +The sterre of beaute the flour eke of fairnes +Both crop and robe and eke the rubye bright +Hertes to glade, y troubled with derknes +And hou I haue made her, thin hertes Empresse +Be glad therfore to be vnder her bond +Now come ner doughter & take him by the hond + +Vnto this syn that aftir alle these shouris +Of his torment he may be glad and light +Whan by your grace ye take hym to be youris +For euermore anon here in my sight +And eke I wil also as hit is right +Without more his langour for to lysse +In my presence anon that ye hym kysse + +That ther may be of al your old smertis +A ful relees vnder ioye assured +And that one lok be of your bothe hertis +Shet with my keye of gold so wel pured +Only in signe that ye haue recured +Your hool desire here in this hooly place +Within my temple now in the yere of grace + +Eternally be bounde of assuraunce +The knot is knyt, that may not be vnbounde +That alle the goddes of this aliaunce +Satorne. Joue. and Mars as it is founde +And eke Cupyde that first did you wounde +Shal bere record, and ouermore bewreke +On whiche of yow, his trout[=h] first breke + +So that by aspectes of their fair lokis +Wit[=h]oute mercy shal fal the vengeance +For to be raced clene out of my bokis +On whiche of you be found of variance +Therfore attones settet[=h] your plesance +Fully to ben whyle ye haue lyf and mynde +Of one acorde vnto your lyues ende + +That yf the spiryte of newfanglenes +In ony wyse your hertes wold assaylle +To meue or styre to brynge in doublenes +Vpon your trout[=h] to gyuen a bataylle +Lete not your corage ne your force faylle +Nor none assaultes you flitten or remeue +For vnassayed no man may trout[=h] preue + +For whyte is whitter yf it be set by black +And swete is swetter after bitternes +And falshed euer is dryue and put a back +Where trouthe is roted wit[=h] doblenes +Wit[=h]out preue ther may be no sekernes +Of loue or hate and therfore of you two +Shal loue be more, for hit was bought with woo + +And euery thing is had more in deynte +And more of pris whan it is dere bought +And eke loue stondeth more in sewrte +Whan it is to fore with payne woo & thought +Conquerd was first whan hit was sought +And euery conquest hath his excellence +In his poursute as it fyndeth resistence + +And so to you more sote and agreable +Shal loue be found I do you plainly assure +Wit[=h]out grucchyng that ye were suffrable +So lowe so meke paciently to endure +That al attones I shal do now my cure +For now and euer your hertis so to bynde +That nought but deth shal the knot vnbynde + +Now in this mater what shold I lenger dwelle +Come ye attones and do as I haue said +And first my doughter that ar of bounte welle +In hert and thought be glad & wel apayd +To done hym grace that shal & hath obeyd +Your lustes euer, and I wil for his sake +Of trouth to you be bounde and vndertake + +And so fort[=h] wit[=h]in presence as they stand +To fore the goddes this fair and wele +Her humble seruant toke goodly by the hond +As he to fore her, mekely did knele +And kyssed hym after fulfillyng eueridele +From poynt to poynt in ful thryfty wyse +As ye to forn haue venus herd deuyse + +Thus is this man to ioye and al plesance +From heuynes and from his peynes olde +Ful reconcyled, and hat[=h] ful suffisance +Of her that euer ment wel, and wold +That in good fait[=h] and I tel shold +The inward mirthes did her hertis brace +For al my lyf to telle, it were to lityl space + +For he hat[=h] wonne hir that he louet[=h] best +And she to grace hat[=h] take hym of pyte +And thus her hertes ben bot[=h] set in rest +Wit[=h]oute chaunge or mutabilite +And venus hat[=h] of her benygnyte +Confermed al what shal I lenger tary +These tweyne in one and neuer to vary + +That for the ioye in the temple aboute +Of this acorde by grete solempnyte +Was laude and honour within & wit[=h]oute +Yeue to venus, and to the deyte +Of god cupide, so that Caliope +And al her sustren in her armonye +Soon with songes the goddes did magnifye + +And al attones with notes loud & sharp +They did her honour and her reuerence +And Orpheus among them with his harp +Gan strynges touche with his diligence +And Amphion that hath suche excellence +Of musyke ay dyde his besynes +To plese and queme venus the goddesse + +Only for cause of the affinyte +Betwix these two not lusty to disseuere +And euery louer of lowe and hye degre +Gan venus pray fro thens fort[=h] and euer +That hool of them the loue may [per]seuere +Wit[=h]outen ende in suche wyse as they gonne +And more encrece that hit of hard was wonne + +And the goddes heryng this request +As she that knewe the clene entencion +Of bothe them tweyne made a bihest +Perpetuelly by confirmacion +Whylis they lyue of one affection +They shal endure ther is no more to sayne +That neyther shal haue mater to complayne + +So ferfurt[=h] euermore in our eternal see +The goddes haue in our presence +Fully deuysed thurg[=h] their deyte +And hooly concluded by her Influence +That by thair myght and Iuste prudence +The loue of hem by grace and eke fortune +Wit[=h] oute chaunge shal euermore contune + +Of whiche graunt the temple enuiron +Thurg[=h] hye comfort of them that were present +Anon was begun wit[=h] a melodyous sowun +In name of tho that trout[=h] in loue ment +A balade newe in ful good entent +To fore the goddes wit[=h] notis londe and clere +Syngyng right this anon as ye shal here + +Fayrest of sterres that with your [per]sant light +And with the cherysyng of your stremes clere +Causen in loue hertes to be light +Only by shynyng of your glad spere +Now lawde and pryce O venus lady dere +Be to your name that haue without synne +This man fortuned his lady for to wynne + +Willy planete O esperus so bright +That woful hertes can appese and stere +And euer ar redy by your grace & might +To helpe al tho that bye loue so dere +And haue power hertis to sette on fyre +Honour to you of al that ben here Inne +That haue this man his lady made to wynne + +O mighty goddesse day sterre after nyght +Gladyng the morowe whan ye don appere +To wyde derknes by freshnes of your sight +Only wit[=h] twinkyng of your plesaunt chere +To you we thanke louers that ben here +That ye this man and neuer for to twynne +Fortune haue, his lady for to wynne + +And wit[=h] the noyse an heuenly melodye +Wit[=h] that they made in her armonye +Thurg[=h] out the temple for this mans sake +Out of my slepe anon I dyde awake +And for astonyed knewe as tho no rede +For sodeyn chaunge oppressed wit[=h] drede +Me thought I was cast in a traunce +So clene away was tho my remembrance +Of alle my dreme, wherof gret thought & wo +I had in herte and nyst what was to doo +For heuynes for that I had lost the sight +Of her that I al the longe nyght +Had dremed of in myn aduision +Wherof I made grete lamentacion +Be cause I had neuer in my lyf beforn +Saw none so fair sit[=h] that I was born +For loue of whom so as I can endyte +I purpose here to make and to wryte +A lityl tretyse and processe make +In pryce of women only for her sake +Hem to comence as it is skyl and right +For her godenes wit[=h] al my myght +Prayng to her that is so bounteuous + +So ful of vertu and so gracyeus +Of womanhede and mercyful pyte +This symple tretyse for to take in gre +Til I haue leyzer vnto her hye renoun +For to expound my forsaid visioun +And tel in playn the signefyaunce +As it cometh to my remembraunce +So that her after my lady may hit loke +Now go thy way thou litil rude boke +To her presence as I the comande +And first of a[=ll] thou me recomande +Vnto hir and to her excellence +And pray to hir, hit be non offence +Yf ony word in the be myssaid +Besechyng her, she be not euyl a paid +For as her list I wil the efte correcte +Whan that her liket[=h] ageinward the directe +I mene that benygne and goodly of face +Now go thy way and put the in her grace + +.Explicit the temple of glas. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The 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