| |
[Prohemium.] 1. BUT al to litel, weylawey the whyle, | |
| Lasteth swich Ioye, y-thonked be Fortune! | |
| That semeth trewest, whan she wol bygyle, | |
| And can to foles so hir song entune, | |
| That she hem hent and blent, traytour comune; | 5 |
| And whan a wight is from hir wheel y-throwe, | |
| Than laugheth she, and maketh him the mowe. | |
| |
| 2. From Troilus she gan hir brighte face | |
| Awey to wrythe, and took of him non hede, | |
| But caste him clene oute of his lady grace, | 10 |
| And on hir wheel she sette up Diomede; | |
| For which right now myn herte ginneth blede, | |
| And now my penne, allas! with which I wryte, | |
| Quaketh for drede of that I moot endyte. | |
| |
| 3. For how Criseyde Troilus forsook, | 15 |
| Or at the leste, how that she was unkinde, | |
| Mot hennes-forth ben matere of my book, | |
| As wryten folk thorugh which it is in minde. | |
| Allas! that they shulde ever cause finde | |
| To speke hir harm; and if they on hir lye, | 20 |
| Y-wis, hem-self sholde han the vilanye. | |
| |
| 4. O ye Herines, Nightes doughtren three, | |
| That endelees compleynen ever in pyne, | |
| Megera, Alete, and eek Thesiphone; | |
| Thou cruel Mars eek, fader to Quiryne, | 25 |
| This ilke ferthe book me helpeth fyne, | |
| So that the los of lyf and love y-fere | |
| Of Troilus be fully shewed here. | |
| |
Explicit [prohemium]. Incipit Quartus Liber. 5. LIGGINGE in ost, as I have seyd er this, | |
| The Grekes stronge, aboute Troye toun, | 30 |
| Bifel that, whan that Phebus shyning is | |
| Up-on the brest of Hercules Lyoun, | |
| That Ector, with ful many a bold baroun, | |
| Caste on a day with Grekes for to fighte, | |
| As he was wont to greve hem what he mighte. | 35 |
| |
| 6. Not I how longe or short it was bitwene | |
| This purpos and that day they fighte mente; | |
| But on a day wel armed, bright and shene, | |
| Ector, and many a worthy wight out wente, | |
| With spere in hond and bigge bowes bente; | 40 |
| And in the berd, with-oute lenger lette, | |
| Hir fomen in the feld anoon hem mette. | |
| |
| 7. The longe day, with speres sharpe y-grounde, | |
| With arwes, dartes, swerdes, maces felle, | |
| They fighte and bringen hors and man to grounde, | 45 |
| And with hir axes out the braynes quelle. | |
| But in the laste shour, sooth for to telle, | |
| The folk of Troye hem-selven so misledden, | |
| That with the worse at night homward they fledden. | |
| |
| 8. At whiche day was taken Antenor, | 50 |
| Maugre Polydamas or Monesteo, | |
| Santippe, Sarpedon, Polynestor, | |
| Polyte, or eek the Troian daun Ripheo, | |
| And othere lasse folk, as Phebuseo. | |
| So that, for harm, that day the folk of Troye | 55 |
| Dredden to lese a greet part of hir Ioye. | |
| |
| 9. Of Pryamus was yeve, at Greek requeste, | |
| A tyme of trewe, and tho they gonnen trete, | |
| Hir prisoneres to chaungen, moste and leste, | |
| And for the surplus yeven sommes grete. | 60 |
| This thing anoon was couth in every strete, | |
| Bothe in thassege, in toune, and every-where, | |
| And with the firste it cam to Calkas ere. | |
| |
| 10. Whan Calkas knew this tretis sholde holde, | |
| In consistorie, among the Grekes, sone | 65 |
| He gan in thringe forth, with lordes olde, | |
| And sette him there-as he was wont to done; | |
| And with a chaunged face hem bad a bone, | |
| For love of god, to don that reverence, | |
| To stinte noyse, and yeve him audience. | 70 |
| |
| 11. Thanne seyde he thus, lo! lordes myne, I was | |
| Troian, as it is knowen out of drede; | |
| And if that yow remembre, I am Calkas, | |
| That alderfirst yaf comfort to your nede, | |
| And tolde wel how that ye sholden spede. | 75 |
| For dredelees, thorugh yow, shal, in a stounde, | |
| Ben Troye y-brend, and beten doun to grounde. | |
| |
| 12. And in what forme, or in what maner wyse | |
| This town to shende, and al your lust to acheve, | |
| Ye han er this wel herd it me devyse; | 80 |
| This knowe ye, my lordes, as I leve. | |
| And for the Grekes weren me so leve, | |
| I com my-self in my propre persone, | |
| To teche in this how yow was best to done; | |
| |
| 13. Havinge un-to my tresour ne my rente | 85 |
| Right no resport, to respect of your ese. | |
| Thus al my good I loste and to yow wente, | |
| Wening in this you, lordes, for to plese. | |
| But al that los ne doth me no disese. | |
| I vouche-sauf, as wisly have I Ioye, | 90 |
| For you to lese al that I have in Troye, | |
| |
| 14. Save of a doughter, that I lafte, allas! | |
| Slepinge at hoom, whanne out of Troye I sterte. | |
| O sterne, O cruel fader that I was! | |
| How mighte I have in that so hard an herte? | 95 |
| Allas! I ne hadde y-brought hir in hir sherte! | |
| For sorwe of which I wol not live to morwe, | |
| But-if ye lordes rewe up-on my sorwe. | |
| |
| 15. For, by that cause I say no tyme er now | |
| Hir to delivere, I holden have my pees; | 100 |
| But now or never, if that it lyke yow, | |
| I may hir have right sone, doutelees. | |
| O help and grace! amonges al this prees, | |
| Rewe on this olde caitif in destresse, | |
| Sin I through yow have al this hevinesse! | 105 |
| |
| 16. Ye have now caught and fetered in prisoun | |
| Troians y-nowe; and if your willes be, | |
| My child with oon may have redempcioun. | |
| Now for the love of god and of bountee, | |
| Oon of so fele, allas! so yeve him me. | 110 |
| What nede were it this preyere for to werne, | |
| Sin ye shul bothe han folk and toun as yerne? | |
| |
| 17. On peril of my lyf, I shal not lye, | |
| Appollo hath me told it feithfully; | |
| I have eek founde it by astronomye, | 115 |
| By sort, and by augurie eek trewely, | |
| And dar wel seye, the tyme is faste by, | |
| That fyr and flaumbe on al the toun shal sprede; | |
| And thus shal Troye turne in asshen dede. | |
| |
| 18. For certeyn, Phebus and Neptunus bothe, | 120 |
| That makeden the walles of the toun, | |
| Ben with the folk of Troye alwey so wrothe, | |
| That thei wol bringe it to confusioun, | |
| Right in despyt of king Lameadoun. | |
| By-cause he nolde payen hem hir hyre, | 125 |
| The toun of Troye shal ben set on-fyre. | |
| |
| 19. Telling his tale alwey, this olde greye, | |
| Humble in speche, and in his lokinge eke, | |
| The salte teres from his eyën tweye | |
| Ful faste ronnen doun by eyther cheke. | 130 |
| So longe he gan of socour hem by-seke | |
| That, for to hele him of his sorwes sore, | |
| They yave him Antenor, with-oute more. | |
| |
| 20. But who was glad y-nough but Calkas tho? | |
| And of this thing ful sone his nedes leyde | 135 |
| On hem that sholden for the tretis go, | |
| And hem for Antenor ful ofte preyde | |
| To bringen hoom king Toas and Criseyde; | |
| And whan Pryam his save-garde sente, | |
| Thembassadours to Troye streyght they wente. | 140 |
| |
| 21. The cause y-told of hir cominge, the olde | |
| Pryam the king ful sone in general | |
| Let here-upon his parlement to holde, | |
| Of which the effect rehersen yow I shal. | |
| Thembassadours ben answered for fynal, | 145 |
| Theschaunge of prisoners and al this nede | |
| Hem lyketh wel, and forth in they procede. | |
| |
| 22. This Troilus was present in the place, | |
| Whan axed was for Antenor Criseyde, | |
| For which ful sone chaungen gan his face, | 150 |
| As he that with tho wordes wel neigh deyde. | |
| But nathelees, he no word to it seyde, | |
| Lest men sholde his affeccioun espye; | |
| With mannes herte he gan his sorwes drye. | |
| |
| 23. And ful of anguish and of grisly drede | 155 |
| Abood what lordes wolde un-to it seye; | |
| And if they wolde graunte, as god forbede, | |
| Theschaunge of hir, than thoughte he thinges tweye, | |
| First, how to save hir honour, and what weye | |
| He mighte best theschaunge of hir withstonde; | 160 |
| Ful faste he caste how al this mighte stonde. | |
| |
| 24. Love him made al prest to doon hir byde, | |
| And rather dye than she sholde go; | |
| But resoun seyde him, on that other syde, | |
| With-oute assent of hir ne do not so, | 165 |
| Lest for thy werk she wolde be thy fo, | |
| And seyn, that thorugh thy medling is y-blowe | |
| Your bother love, there it was erst unknowe. | |
| |
| 25. For which he gan deliberen, for the beste, | |
| That though the lordes wolde that she wente, | 170 |
| He wolde late hem graunte what hem leste, | |
| And telle his lady first what that they mente. | |
| And whan that she had seyd him hir entente, | |
| Ther-after wolde he werken also blyve, | |
| Though al the world ayein it wolde stryve. | 175 |
| |
| 26. Ector, which that wel the Grekes herde, | |
| For Antenor how they wolde han Criseyde, | |
| Gan it withstonde, and sobrely answerde: | |
| Sires, she nis no prisoner, he seyde; | |
| I noot on yow who that this charge leyde, | 180 |
| But, on my part, ye may eft-sone him telle, | |
| We usen here no wommen for to selle. | |
| |
| 27. The noyse of peple up-stirte thanne at ones, | |
| As breme as blase of straw y-set on fyre; | |
| For infortune it wolde, for the nones, | 185 |
| They sholden hir confusioun desyre. | |
| Ector, quod they, what goost may yow enspyre, | |
| This womman thus to shilde and doon us lese | |
| Daun Antenor?a wrong wey now ye chese | |
| |
| 28. That is so wys, and eek so bold baroun, | 190 |
| And we han nede of folk, as men may see; | |
| He is eek oon, the grettest of this toun; | |
| O Ector, lat tho fantasyës be! | |
| O king Pryam, quod they, thus seggen we, | |
| That al our voys is to for-gon Criseyde; | 195 |
| And to deliveren Antenor they preyde. | |
| |
| 29. O Iuvenal, lord! trewe is thy sentence, | |
| That litel witen folk what is to yerne | |
| That they ne finde in hir desyr offence; | |
| For cloud of errour lat hem not descerne | 200 |
| What best is; and lo, here ensample as yerne. | |
| This folk desiren now deliveraunce | |
| Of Antenor, that broughte hem to mischaunce! | |
| |
| 30. For he was after traytour to the toun | |
| Of Troye; allas! they quitte him out to rathe; | 205 |
| O nyce world, lo, thy discrecioun! | |
| Criseyde, which that never dide hem skathe, | |
| Shal now no lenger in hir blisse bathe; | |
| But Antenor, he shal com hoom to toune, | |
| And she shal out; thus seyden here and howne. | 210 |
| |
| 31. For which delibered was by parlement, | |
| For Antenor to yelden up Criseyde, | |
| And it pronounced by the president, | |
| Al-theigh that Ector nay ful ofte preyde. | |
| And fynaly, what wight that it with-seyde, | 215 |
| It was for nought, it moste been, and sholde; | |
| For substaunce of the parlement it wolde. | |
| |
| 32. Departed out of parlement echone, | |
| This Troilus, with-oute wordes mo, | |
| Un-to his chaumbre spedde him faste allone, | 220 |
| But-if it were a man of his or two, | |
| The whiche he bad out faste for to go, | |
| By-cause he wolde slepen, as he seyde, | |
| And hastely up-on his bed him leyde. | |
| |
| 33. And as in winter leves been biraft, | 225 |
| Eche after other, til the tree be bare, | |
| So that ther nis but bark and braunche y-laft, | |
| Lyth Troilus, biraft of ech wel-fare, | |
| Y-bounden in the blake bark of care, | |
| Disposed wood out of his wit to breyde, | 230 |
| So sore him sat the chaunginge of Criseyde. | |
| |
| 34. He rist him up, and every dore he shette | |
| And windowe eek, and tho this sorweful man | |
| Up-on his beddes syde a-doun him sette, | |
| Ful lyk a deed image pale and wan; | 235 |
| And in his brest the heped wo bigan | |
| Out-breste, and he to werken in this wyse | |
| In his woodnesse, as I shal yow devyse. | |
| |
| 35. Right as the wilde bole biginneth springe | |
| Now here, now there, y-darted to the herte, | 240 |
| And of his deeth roreth in compleyninge, | |
| Right so gan he aboute the chaumbre sterte, | |
| Smyting his brest ay with his festes smerte; | |
| His heed to the wal, his body to the grounde | |
| Ful ofte he swapte, him-selven to confounde. | 245 |
| |
| 36. His eyen two, for pitee of his herte, | |
| Out stremeden as swifte welles tweye; | |
| The heighe sobbes of his sorwes smerte | |
| His speche him rafte, unnethes mighte he seye, | |
| O deeth, allas! why niltow do me deye? | 250 |
| A-cursed be the day which that nature | |
| Shoop me to ben a lyves creature! | |
| |
| 37. But after, whan the furie and the rage | |
| Which that his herte twiste and faste threste, | |
| By lengthe of tyme somwhat gan asswage, | 255 |
| Up-on his bed he leyde him doun to reste; | |
| But tho bigonne his teres more out-breste, | |
| That wonder is, the body may suffyse | |
| To half this wo, which that I yow devyse. | |
| |
| 38. Than seyde he thus, Fortune! allas the whyle! | 260 |
| What have I doon, what have I thus a-gilt? | |
| How mightestow for reuthe me bigyle? | |
| Is ther no grace, and shal I thus be spilt? | |
| Shal thus Criseyde awey, for that thou wilt? | |
| Allas! how maystow in thyn herte finde | 265 |
| To been to me thus cruel and unkinde? | |
| |
| 39. Have I thee nought honoured al my lyve, | |
| As thou wel wost, above the goddes alle? | |
| Why wiltow me fro Ioye thus depryve? | |
| O Troilus, what may men now thee calle | 270 |
| But wrecche of wrecches, out of honour falle | |
| In-to miserie, in which I wol biwayle | |
| Criseyde, allas! til that the breeth me fayle? | |
| |
| 40. Allas, Fortune! if that my lyf in Ioye | |
| Displesed hadde un-to thy foule envye, | 275 |
| Why ne haddestow my fader, king of Troye, | |
| By-raft the lyf, or doon my bretheren dye, | |
| Or slayn my-self, that thus compleyne and crye, | |
| I, combre-world, that may of no-thing serve, | |
| But ever dye, and never fully sterve? | 280 |
| |
| 41. If that Criseyde allone were me laft, | |
| Nought roughte I whider thou woldest me stere; | |
| And hir, allas! than hastow me biraft. | |
| But ever-more, lo! this is thy manere, | |
| To reve a wight that most is to him dere, | 285 |
| To preve in that thy gerful violence. | |
| Thus am I lost, ther helpeth no defence! | |
| |
| 42. O verray lord of love, O god, allas! | |
| That knowest best myn herte and al my thought, | |
| What shal my sorwful lyf don in this cas | 290 |
| If I for-go that I so dere have bought? | |
| Sin ye Cryseyde and me han fully brought | |
| In-to your grace, and bothe our hertes seled, | |
| How may ye suffre, allas! it be repeled? | |
| |
| 43. What I may doon, I shal, whyl I may dure | 295 |
| On lyve in torment and in cruel peyne, | |
| This infortune or this disaventure, | |
| Allone as I was born, y-wis, compleyne; | |
| Ne never wil I seen it shyne or reyne; | |
| But ende I wil, as Edippe, in derknesse | 300 |
| My sorwful lyf, and dyen in distresse. | |
| |
| 44. O wery goost, that errest to and fro, | |
| Why niltow fleen out of the wofulleste | |
| Body, that ever mighte on grounde go? | |
| O soule, lurkinge in this wo, unneste, | 305 |
| Flee forth out of myn herte, and lat it breste, | |
| And folwe alwey Criseyde, thy lady dere; | |
| Thy righte place is now no lenger here! | |
| |
| 45. O wofulle eyen two, sin your disport | |
| Was al to seen Criseydes eyen brighte, | 310 |
| What shal ye doon but, for my discomfort, | |
| Stonden for nought, and wepen out your sighte? | |
| Sin she is queynt, that wont was yow to lighte, | |
| In veyn fro-this-forth have I eyen tweye | |
| Y-formed, sin your vertue is a-weye. | 315 |
| |
| 46. O my Criseyde, O lady sovereyne | |
| Of thilke woful soule that thus cryeth, | |
| Who shal now yeven comfort to the peyne? | |
| Allas, no wight; but when myn herte dyeth, | |
| My spirit, which that so un-to yow hyeth, | 320 |
| Receyve in gree, for that shal ay yow serve; | |
| For-thy no fors is, though the body sterve. | |
| |
| 47. O ye loveres, that heighe upon the wheel | |
| Ben set of Fortune, in good aventure, | |
| God leve that ye finde ay love of steel, | 325 |
| And longe mot your lyf in Ioye endure! | |
| But whan ye comen by my sepulture, | |
| Remembreth that your felawe resteth there; | |
| For I lovede eek, though I unworthy were. | |
| |
| 48. O olde unholsom and mislyved man, | 330 |
| Calkas I mene, allas! what eyleth thee | |
| To been a Greek, sin thou art born Troian? | |
| O Calkas, which that wilt my bane be, | |
| In cursed tyme was thou born for me! | |
| As wolde blisful Iove, for his Ioye, | 335 |
| That I thee hadde, where I wolde, in Troye! | |
| |
| 49. A thousand sykes, hottere than the glede, | |
| Out of his brest ech after other wente, | |
| Medled with pleyntes newe, his wo to fede, | |
| For which his woful teres never stente; | 340 |
| And shortly, so his peynes him to-rente, | |
| And wex so mat, that Ioye nor penaunce | |
| He feleth noon, but lyth forth in a traunce. | |
| |
| 50. Pandare, which that in the parlement | |
| Hadde herd what every lord and burgeys seyde, | 345 |
| And how ful graunted was, by oon assent, | |
| For Antenor to yelden so Criseyde, | |
| Gan wel neigh wood out of his wit to breyde, | |
| So that, for wo, he niste what he mente; | |
| But in a rees to Troilus he wente. | 350 |
| |
| 51. A certeyn knight, that for the tyme kepte | |
| The chaumbre-dore, un-dide it him anoon; | |
| And Pandare, that ful tendreliche wepte, | |
| In-to the derke chaumbre, as stille as stoon, | |
| Toward the bed gan softely to goon, | 355 |
| So confus, that he niste what to seye; | |
| For verray wo his wit was neigh aweye. | |
| |
| 52. And with his chere and loking al to-torn, | |
| For sorwe of this, and with his armes folden, | |
| He stood this woful Troilus biforn, | 360 |
| And on his pitous face he gan biholden; | |
| But lord, so often gan his herte colden, | |
| Seing his freend in wo, whos hevinesse | |
| His herte slow, as thoughte him, for distresse. | |
| |
| 53. This woful wight, this Troilus, that felte | 365 |
| His freend Pandare y-comen him to see, | |
| Gan as the snow ayein the sonne melte, | |
| For which this sorwful Pandare, of pitee, | |
| Gan for to wepe as tendreliche as he; | |
| And specheles thus been thise ilke tweye, | 370 |
| That neyther mighte o word for sorwe seye. | |
| |
| 54. But at the laste this woful Troilus, | |
| Ney deed for smert, gan bresten out to rore, | |
| And with a sorwful noyse he seyde thus, | |
| Among his sobbes and his sykes sore, | 375 |
| Lo! Pandare, I am deed, with-outen more. | |
| Hastow nought herd at parlement, he seyde, | |
| For Antenor how lost is my Criseyde? | |
| |
| 55. This Pandarus, ful deed and pale of hewe, | |
| Ful pitously answerde and seyde, yis! | 380 |
| As wisly were it fals as it is trewe, | |
| That I have herd, and wot al how it is. | |
| O mercy, god, who wolde have trowed this? | |
| Who wolde have wend that, in so litel a throwe, | |
| Fortune our Ioye wolde han over-throwe? | 385 |
| |
| 56. For in this world ther is no creature, | |
| As to my doom, that ever saw ruyne | |
| Straungere than this, thorugh cas or aventure. | |
| But who may al eschewe or al devyne? | |
| Swich is this world; for-thy I thus defyne, | 390 |
| Ne trust no wight to finden in Fortune | |
| Ay propretee; hir yeftes been comune. | |
| |
| 57. But tel me this, why thou art now so mad | |
| To sorwen thus? Why lystow in this wyse, | |
| Sin thy desyr al holly hastow had, | 395 |
| So that, by right, it oughte y-now suffyse? | |
| But I, that never felte in my servyse | |
| A frendly chere or loking of an yë, | |
| Lat me thus wepe and wayle, til I dye. | |
| |
| 58. And over al this, as thou wel wost thy-selve, | 400 |
| This town is ful of ladies al aboute; | |
| And, to my doom, fairer than swiche twelve | |
| As ever she was, shal I finde, in som route, | |
| Ye, oon or two, with-outen any doute. | |
| For-thy be glad, myn owene dere brother, | 405 |
| If she be lost, we shul recovere another. | |
| |
| 59. What, god for-bede alwey that ech plesaunce | |
| In o thing were, and in non other wight! | |
| If oon can singe, another can wel daunce; | |
| If this be goodly, she is glad and light; | 410 |
| And this is fayr, and that can good a-right. | |
| Ech for his vertu holden is for dere, | |
| Bothe heroner and faucon for rivere. | |
| |
| 60. And eek, as writ Zanzis, that was ful wys, | |
| The newe love out chaceth ofte the olde; | 415 |
| And up-on newe cas lyth newe avys. | |
| Thenk eek, thy-self to saven artow holde; | |
| Swich fyr, by proces, shal of kinde colde. | |
| For sin it is but casuel plesaunce, | |
| Som cas shal putte it out of remembraunce. | 420 |
| |
| 61. For al-so seur as day cometh after night, | |
| The newe love, labour or other wo, | |
| Or elles selde seinge of a wight, | |
| Don olde affecciouns alle over-go. | |
| And, for thy part, thou shalt have oon of tho | 425 |
| To abrigge with thy bittre peynes smerte; | |
| Absence of hir shal dryve hir out of herte. | |
| |
| 62. Thise wordes seyde he for the nones alle, | |
| To helpe his freend, lest he for sorwe deyde. | |
| For doutelees, to doon his wo to falle, | 430 |
| He roughte not what unthrift that he seyde. | |
| But Troilus, that neigh for sorwe deyde, | |
| Tok litel hede of al that ever he mente; | |
| Oon ere it herde, at the other out it wente: | |
| |
| 63. But at the laste answerde and seyde, freend, | 435 |
| This lechecraft, or heled thus to be, | |
| Were wel sitting, if that I were a feend, | |
| To traysen hir that trewe is unto me! | |
| I pray god, lat this consayl never y-thee; | |
| But do me rather sterve anon-right here | 440 |
| Er I thus do as thou me woldest lere. | |
| |
| 64. She that I serve, y-wis, what so thou seye, | |
| To whom myn herte enhabit is by right, | |
| Shal han me holly hires til that I deye. | |
| For, Pandarus, sin I have trouthe hir hight, | 445 |
| I wol not been untrewe for no wight; | |
| But as hir man I wol ay live and sterve, | |
| And never other creature serve. | |
| |
| 65. And ther thou seyst, thou shalt as faire finde | |
| As she, lat be, make no comparisoun | 450 |
| To creature y-formed here by kinde. | |
| O leve Pandare, in conclusioun, | |
| I wol not be of thyn opinioun, | |
| Touching al this; for whiche I thee biseche, | |
| So hold thy pees; thou sleest me with thy speche. | 455 |
| |
| 66. Thow biddest me I sholde love an-other | |
| Al freshly newe, and lat Criseyde go! | |
| It lyth not in my power, leve brother. | |
| And though I mighte, I wolde not do so. | |
| But canstow pleyen raket, to and fro, | 460 |
| Netle in, dokke out, now this, now that, Pandare? | |
| Now foule falle hir, for thy wo that care! | |
| |
| 67. Thow farest eek by me, thou Pandarus, | |
| As he, that whan a wight is wo bi-goon, | |
| He cometh to him a pas, and seyth right thus, | 465 |
| Thenk not on smert, and thou shalt fele noon. | |
| Thou most me first transmuwen in a stoon, | |
| And reve me my passiounes alle, | |
| Er thou so lightly do my wo to falle. | |
| |
| 68. The deeth may wel out of my brest departe | 470 |
| The lyf, so longe may this sorwe myne; | |
| But fro my soule shal Criseydes darte | |
| Out never-mo; but doun with Proserpyne, | |
| Whan I am deed, I wol go wone in pyne; | |
| And ther I wol eternally compleyne | 475 |
| My wo, and how that twinned be we tweyne. | |
| |
| 69. Thow hast here maad an argument, for fyn, | |
| How that it sholde lasse peyne be | |
| Criseyde to for-goon, for she was myn, | |
| And live in ese and in felicitee. | 480 |
| Why gabbestow, that seydest thus to me | |
| That him is wors that is fro wele y-throwe, | |
| Than he hadde erst non of that wele y-knowe? | |
| |
| 70. But tel me now, sin that thee thinketh so light | |
| To chaungen so in love, ay to and fro, | 485 |
| Why hastow not don bisily thy might | |
| To chaungen hir that doth thee al thy wo? | |
| Why niltow lete hir fro thyn herte go? | |
| Why niltow love an-other lady swete, | |
| That may thyn herte setten in quiete? | 490 |
| |
| 71. If thou hast had in love ay yet mischaunce, | |
| And canst it not out of thyn herte dryve, | |
| I, that livede in lust and in plesaunce | |
| With hir as muche as creature on-lyve, | |
| How sholde I that foryete, and that so blyve? | 495 |
| O where hastow ben hid so longe in muwe, | |
| That canst so wel and formely arguwe? | |
| |
| 72. Nay, nay, god wot, nought worth is al thy reed, | |
| For which, for what that ever may bifalle, | |
| With-outen wordes mo, I wol be deed. | 500 |
| O deeth, that endere art of sorwes alle, | |
| Com now, sin I so ofte after thee calle, | |
| For sely is that deeth, soth for to seyne, | |
| That, ofte y-cleped, cometh and endeth peyne. | |
| |
| 73. Wel wot I, whyl my lyf was in quiete, | 505 |
| Er thou me slowe, I wolde have yeven hyre; | |
| But now thy cominge is to me so swete, | |
| That in this world I no-thing so desyre. | |
| O deeth, sin with this sorwe I am a-fyre, | |
| Thou outher do me anoon in teres drenche, | 510 |
| Or with thy colde strook myn hete quenche! | |
| |
| 74. Sin that thou sleest so fele in sondry wyse | |
| Ayens hir wil, unpreyed, day and night, | |
| Do me, at my requeste, this servyse, | |
| Delivere now the world, so dostow right, | 515 |
| Of me, that am the wofulleste wight | |
| That ever was; for tyme is that I sterve, | |
| Sin in this world of right nought may I serve. | |
| |
| 75. This Troilus in teres gan distille, | |
| As licour out of alambyk ful faste; | 520 |
| And Pandarus gan holde his tunge stille, | |
| And to the ground his eyen doun he caste. | |
| But nathelees, thus thoughte he at the laste, | |
| What, parde, rather than my felawe deye, | |
| Yet shal I som-what more un-to him seye: | 525 |
| |
| 76. And seyde, freend, sin thou hast swich distresse, | |
| And sin thee list myn arguments to blame, | |
| Why nilt thy-selven helpen doon redresse, | |
| And with thy manhod letten al this grame? | |
| Go ravisshe hir ne canstow not for shame! | 530 |
| And outher lat hir out of toune fare, | |
| Or hold hir stille, and leve thy nyce fare. | |
| |
| 77. Artow in Troye, and hast non hardiment | |
| To take a womman which that loveth thee, | |
| And wolde hir-selven been of thyn assent? | 535 |
| Now is not this a nyce vanitee? | |
| Rys up anoon, and lat this weping be, | |
| And kyth thou art a man, for in this houre | |
| I wil be deed, or she shal bleven oure. | |
| |
| 78. To this answerde him Troilus ful softe, | 540 |
| And seyde, parde, leve brother dere, | |
| Al this have I my-self yet thought ful ofte, | |
| And more thing than thou devysest here. | |
| But why this thing is laft, thou shalt wel here; | |
| And whan thou me hast yeve an audience, | 545 |
| Ther-after mayst thou telle al thy sentence. | |
| |
| 79. First, sin thou wost this toun hath al this werre | |
| For ravisshing of wommen so by might, | |
| It sholde not be suffred me to erre, | |
| As it stant now, ne doon so gret unright. | 550 |
| I sholde han also blame of every wight, | |
| My fadres graunt if that I so withstode, | |
| Sin she is chaunged for the tounes goode. | |
| |
| 80. I have eek thought, so it were hir assent, | |
| To aske hir at my fader, of his grace; | 555 |
| Than thenke I, this were hir accusement, | |
| Sin wel I woot I may hir not purchace. | |
| For sin my fader, in so heigh a place | |
| As parlement, hath hir eschaunge enseled, | |
| He nil for me his lettre be repeled. | 560 |
| |
| 81. Yet drede I most hir herte to pertourbe | |
| With violence, if I do swich a game; | |
| For if I wolde it openly distourbe, | |
| It moste been disclaundre to hir name. | |
| And me were lever deed than hir defame, | 565 |
| As nolde god but-if I sholde have | |
| Hir honour lever than my lyf to save! | |
| |
| 82. Thus am I lost, for ought that I can see; | |
| For certeyn is, sin that I am hir knight, | |
| I moste hir honour levere han than me | 570 |
| In every cas, as lovere oughte of right. | |
| Thus am I with desyr and reson twight; | |
| Desyr for to distourben hir me redeth, | |
| And reson nil not, so myn herte dredeth. | |
| |
| 83. Thus wepinge that he coude never cesse, | 575 |
| He seyde, allas! how shal I, wrecche, fare? | |
| For wel fele I alwey my love encresse, | |
| And hope is lasse and lasse alwey, Pandare! | |
| Encressen eek the causes of my care; | |
| So wel-a-wey, why nil myn herte breste? | 580 |
| For, as in love, ther is but litel reste. | |
| |
| 84. Pandare answerde, freend, thou mayst, for me, | |
| Don as thee list; but hadde ich it so hote, | |
| And thyn estat, she sholde go with me; | |
| Though al this toun cryede on this thing by note, | 585 |
| I nolde sette at al that noyse a grote. | |
| For when men han wel cryed, than wol they roune; | |
| A wonder last but nyne night never in toune. | |
| |
| 85. Devyne not in reson ay so depe | |
| Ne curteysly, but help thy-self anoon; | 590 |
| Bet is that othere than thy-selven wepe, | |
| And namely, sin ye two been al oon. | |
| Rys up, for by myn heed, she shal not goon; | |
| And rather be in blame a lyte y-founde | |
| Than sterve here as a gnat, with-oute wounde. | 595 |
| |
| 86. It is no shame un-to yow, ne no vyce | |
| Hir to with-holden, that ye loveth most. | |
| Paraunter, she mighte holden thee for nyce | |
| To lete hir go thus to the Grekes ost. | |
| Thenk eek Fortune, as wel thy-selven wost, | 600 |
| Helpeth hardy man to his empryse, | |
| And weyveth wrecches, for hir cowardyse. | |
| |
| 87. And though thy lady wolde a litel hir greve, | |
| Thou shalt thy pees ful wel here-after make, | |
| But as for me, certayn, I can not leve | 605 |
| That she wolde it as now for yvel take. | |
| Why sholde than for ferd thyn herte quake? | |
| Thenk eek how Paris hath, that is thy brother, | |
| A love; and why shaltow not have another? | |
| |
| 88. And Troilus, o thing I dar thee swere, | 610 |
| That if Criseyde, whiche that is thy leef, | |
| Now loveth thee as wel as thou dost here, | |
| God helpe me so, she nil not take a-greef, | |
| Though thou do bote a-noon in this mischeef. | |
| And if she wilneth fro thee for to passe, | 615 |
| Thanne is she fals; so love hir wel the lasse. | |
| |
| 89. For-thy tak herte, and thenk, right as a knight, | |
| Thourgh love is broken alday every lawe. | |
| Kyth now sumwhat thy corage and thy might, | |
| Have mercy on thy-self, for any awe. | 620 |
| Lat not this wrecched wo thin herte gnawe, | |
| But manly set the world on sixe and sevene; | |
| And, if thou deye a martir, go to hevene. | |
| |
| 90. I wol my-self be with thee at this dede, | |
| Though ich and al my kin, up-on a stounde, | 625 |
| Shulle in a strete as dogges liggen dede, | |
| Thourgh-girt with many a wyd and blody wounde. | |
| In every cas I wol a freend be founde. | |
| And if thee list here sterven as a wrecche, | |
| A-dieu, the devel spede him that it recche! | 630 |
| |
| 91. This Troilus gan with tho wordes quiken, | |
| And seyde, freend, graunt mercy, ich assente; | |
| But certaynly thou mayst not me so priken, | |
| Ne peyne noon ne may me so tormente, | |
| That, for no cas, it is not myn entente, | 635 |
| At shorte wordes, though I dyen sholde, | |
| To ravisshe hir, but-if hir-self it wolde. | |
| |
| 92. Why, so mene I, quod Pandarus, al this day. | |
| But tel me than, hastow hir wel assayed, | |
| That sorwest thus? And he answerde, nay. | 640 |
| Wher-of artow, quod Pandare, than a-mayed, | |
| That nost not that she wol ben yvel apayed | |
| To ravisshe hir, sin thou hast not ben there, | |
| But-if that Iove tolde it in thyn ere? | |
| |
| 93. For-thy rys up, as nought ne were, anoon, | 645 |
| And wash thy face, and to the king thou wende, | |
| Or he may wondren whider thou art goon. | |
| Thou most with wisdom him and othere blende; | |
| Or, up-on cas, he may after thee sende | |
| Er thou be war; and shortly, brother dere, | 650 |
| Be glad, and lat me werke in this matere. | |
| |
| 94. For I shal shape it so, that sikerly | |
| Thou shalt this night som tyme, in som manere, | |
| Com speke with thy lady prevely, | |
| And by hir wordes eek, and by hir chere, | 655 |
| Thou shalt ful sone aparceyve and wel here | |
| Al hir entente, and in this cas the beste; | |
| And fare now wel, for in this point I reste. | |
| |
| 95. The swifte Fame, whiche that false thinges | |
| Egal reporteth lyk the thinges trewe, | 660 |
| Was thorugh-out Troye y-fled with preste winges | |
| Fro man to man, and made this tale al newe, | |
| How Calkas doughter, with hir brighte hewe, | |
| At parlement, with-oute wordes more, | |
| I-graunted was in chaunge of Antenore. | 665 |
| |
| 96. The whiche tale anoon-right as Criseyde | |
| Had herd, she which that of hir fader roughte, | |
| As in this cas, right nought, ne whanne he deyde, | |
| Ful bisily to Iuppiter bisoughte | |
| Yeve him mischaunce that this tretis broughte. | 670 |
| But shortly, lest thise tales sothe were, | |
| She dorste at no wight asken it, for fere. | |
| |
| 97. As she that hadde hir herte and al hir minde | |
| On Troilus y-set so wonder faste, | |
| That al this world ne mighte hir love unbinde, | 675 |
| Ne Troilus out of hir herte caste; | |
| She wol ben his, whyl that hir lyf may laste. | |
| And thus she brenneth bothe in love and drede, | |
| So that she niste what was best to rede. | |
| |
| 98. But as men seen in toune, and al aboute, | 680 |
| That wommen usen frendes to visyte, | |
| So to Criseyde of wommen com a route | |
| For pitous Ioye, and wenden hir delyte; | |
| And with hir tales, dere y-nough a myte, | |
| These wommen, whiche that in the cite dwelle, | 685 |
| They sette hem doun, and seyde as I shal telle. | |
| |
| 99. Quod first that oon, I am glad, trewely, | |
| By-cause of yow, that shal your fader see. | |
| A-nother seyde, y-wis, so nam not I; | |
| For al to litel hath she with us be. | 690 |
| Quod tho the thridde, I hope, y-wis, that she | |
| Shal bringen us the pees on every syde, | |
| That, whan she gooth, almighty god hir gyde! | |
| |
| 100. Tho wordes and tho wommannisshe thinges, | |
| She herde hem right as though she thennes were; | 695 |
| For, god it wot, hir herte on other thing is, | |
| Although the body sat among hem there. | |
| Hir advertence is alwey elles-where; | |
| For Troilus ful faste hir soule soughte; | |
| With-outen word, alwey on him she thoughte. | 700 |
| |
| 101. Thise wommen, that thus wenden hir to plese, | |
| Aboute nought gonne alle hir tales spende; | |
| Swich vanitee ne can don hir non ese, | |
| As she that, al this mene whyle, brende | |
| Of other passioun than that they wende, | 705 |
| So that she felte almost hir herte deye | |
| For wo, and wery of that companye. | |
| |
| 102. For which no lenger mighte she restreyne | |
| Hir teres, so they gonnen up to welle, | |
| That yeven signes of the bitter peyne | 710 |
| In whiche hir spirit was, and moste dwelle; | |
| Remembring hir, fro heven unto which helle | |
| She fallen was, sith she forgoth the sighte | |
| Of Troilus, and sorowfully she sighte. | |
| |
| 103. And thilke foles sittinge hir aboute | 715 |
| Wenden, that she wepte and syked sore | |
| By-cause that she sholde out of that route | |
| Departe, and never pleye with hem more. | |
| And they that hadde y-knowen hir of yore | |
| Seye hir so wepe, and thoughte it kindenesse, | 720 |
| And eche of hem wepte eek for hir distresse; | |
| |
| 104. And bisily they gonnen hir conforten | |
| Of thing, god wot, on which she litel thoughte; | |
| And with hir tales wenden hir disporten, | |
| And to be glad they often hir bisoughte. | 725 |
| But swich an ese ther-with they hir wroughte | |
| Right as a man is esed for to fele, | |
| For ache of heed, to clawen him on his hele! | |
| |
| 105. But after al this nyce vanitee | |
| They took hir leve, and hoom they wenten alle. | 730 |
| Criseyde, ful of sorweful pitee, | |
| In-to hir chaumbre up wente out of the halle, | |
| And on hir bed she gan for deed to falle, | |
| In purpos never thennes for to ryse; | |
| And thus she wroughte, as I shal yow devyse. | 735 |
| |
| 106. Hir ounded heer, that sonnish was of hewe, | |
| She rente, and eek hir fingres longe and smale | |
| She wrong ful ofte, and bad god on hir rewe, | |
| And with the deeth to doon bote on hir bale. | |
| Hir hewe, whylom bright, that tho was pale, | 740 |
| Bar witnes of hir wo and hir constreynte; | |
| And thus she spak, sobbinge, in hir compleynte: | |
| |
| 107. Alas! quod she, out of this regioun | |
| I, woful wrecche and infortuned wight, | |
| And born in corsed constellacioun, | 745 |
| Mot goon, and thus departen fro my knight; | |
| Wo worth, allas! that ilke dayes light | |
| On which I saw him first with eyen tweyne, | |
| That causeth me, and I him, al this peyne! | |
| |
| 108. Therwith the teres from hir eyen two | 750 |
| Doun fille, as shour in Aperill, ful swythe; | |
| Hir whyte brest she bet, and for the wo | |
| After the deeth she cryed a thousand sythe, | |
| Sin he that wont hir wo was for to lythe, | |
| She mot for-goon; for which disaventure | 755 |
| She held hir-self a forlost creature. | |
| |
| 109. She seyde, how shal he doon, and I also? | |
| How sholde I live, if that I from him twinne? | |
| O dere herte eek, that I love so, | |
| Who shal that sorwe sleen that ye ben inne? | 760 |
| O Calkas, fader, thyn be al this sinne! | |
| O moder myn, that cleped were Argyve, | |
| Wo worth that day that thou me bere on lyve! | |
| |
| 110. To what fyn sholde I live and sorwen thus? | |
| How sholde a fish with-oute water dure? | 765 |
| What is Criseyde worth, from Troilus? | |
| How sholde a plaunte or lyves creature | |
| Live, with-oute his kinde noriture? | |
| For which ful oft a by-word here I seye, | |
| That, rotelees, mot grene sone deye. | 770 |
| |
| 111. I shal don thus, sin neither swerd ne darte | |
| Dar I non handle, for the crueltee, | |
| That ilke day that I from yow departe, | |
| If sorwe of that nil not my bane be, | |
| Than shal no mete or drinke come in me | 775 |
| Til I my soule out of my breste unshethe; | |
| And thus my-selven wol I do to dethe. | |
| |
| 112. And, Troilus, my clothes everichoon | |
| Shul blake been, in tokeninge, herte swete, | |
| That I am as out of this world agoon, | 780 |
| That wont was yow to setten in quiete; | |
| And of myn ordre, ay til deeth me mete, | |
| The observaunce ever, in your absence, | |
| Shal sorwe been, compleynte, and abstinence. | |
| |
| 113. Myn herte and eek the woful goost ther-inne | 785 |
| Biquethe I, with your spirit to compleyne | |
| Eternally, for they shul never twinne. | |
| For though in erthe y-twinned be we tweyne, | |
| Yet in the feld of pitee, out of peyne, | |
| That hight Elysos, shul we been y-fere, | 790 |
| As Orpheus and Erudice his fere. | |
| |
| 114. Thus herte myn, for Antenor, allas! | |
| I sone shal be chaunged, as I wene. | |
| But how shul ye don in this sorwful cas, | |
| How shal your tendre herte this sustene? | 795 |
| But herte myn, for-yet this sorwe and tene, | |
| And me also; for, soothly for to seye, | |
| So ye wel fare, I recche not to deye. | |
| |
| 115. How mighte it ever y-red ben or y-songe, | |
| The pleynte that she made in hir distresse? | 800 |
| I noot; but, as for me, my litel tonge, | |
| If I discreven wolde hir hevinesse, | |
| It sholde make hir sorwe seme lesse | |
| Than that it was, and childishly deface | |
| Hir heigh compleynte, and therfore I it pace. | 805 |
| |
| 116. Pandare, which that sent from Troilus | |
| Was to Criseyde, as ye han herd devyse, | |
| That for the beste it was accorded thus, | |
| And he ful glad to doon him that servyse, | |
| Un-to Criseyde, in a ful secree wyse, | 810 |
| Ther-as she lay in torment and in rage, | |
| Com hir to telle al hoolly his message. | |
| |
| 117. And fond that she hir-selven gan to trete | |
| Ful pitously; for with hir salte teres | |
| Hir brest, hir face y-bathed was ful wete; | 815 |
| The mighty tresses of hir sonnish heres, | |
| Unbroyden, hangen al aboute hir eres; | |
| Which yaf him verray signal of martyre | |
| Of deeth, which that hir herte gan desyre. | |
| |
| 118. Whan she him saw, she gan for sorwe anoon | 820 |
| Hir tery face a-twixe hir armes hyde, | |
| For which this Pandare is so wo bi-goon, | |
| That in the hous he mighte unnethe abyde, | |
| As he that pitee felte on every syde. | |
| For if Criseyde hadde erst compleyned sore, | 825 |
| Tho gan she pleyne a thousand tymes more. | |
| |
| 119. And in hir aspre pleynte than she seyde, | |
| Pandare first of Ioyes mo than two | |
| Was cause causinge un-to me, Criseyde, | |
| That now transmuwed been in cruel wo. | 830 |
| Wher shal I seye to yow wel come or no, | |
| That alderfirst me broughte in-to servyse | |
| Of love, allas! that endeth in swich wyse? | |
| |
| 120. Endeth than love in wo? Ye, or men lyeth! | |
| And alle worldly blisse, as thinketh me, | 835 |
| The ende of blisse ay sorwe it occupyeth; | |
| And who-so troweth not that it so be, | |
| Lat him upon me, woful wrecche, y-see, | |
| That my-self hate, and ay my birthe acorse, | |
| Felinge alwey, fro wikke I go to worse. | 840 |
| |
| 121. Who-so me seeth, he seeth sorwe al at ones, | |
| Peyne, torment, pleynte, wo, distresse. | |
| Out of my woful body harm ther noon is, | |
| As anguish, langour, cruel bitternesse, | |
| A-noy, smert, drede, fury, and eek siknesse. | 845 |
| I trowe, y-wis, from hevene teres reyne, | |
| For pitee of myn aspre and cruel peyne! | |
| |
| 122. And thou, my suster, ful of discomfort, | |
| Quod Pandarus, what thenkestow to do? | |
| Why ne hastow to thy-selven som resport, | 850 |
| Why woltow thus thy-selve, allas, for-do? | |
| Leef al this werk and tak now hede to | |
| That I shal seyn, and herkne, of good entente, | |
| This, which by me thy Troilus thee sente. | |
| |
| 123. Torned hir tho Criseyde, a wo makinge | 855 |
| So greet that it a deeth was for to see: | |
| Allas! quod she, what wordes may ye bringe? | |
| What wol my dere herte seyn to me, | |
| Which that I drede never-mo to see? | |
| Wol he have pleynte or teres, er I wende? | 860 |
| I have y-nowe, if he ther-after sende! | |
| |
| 124. She was right swich to seen in hir visage | |
| As is that wight that men on bere binde; | |
| Hir face, lyk of Paradys the image, | |
| Was al y-chaunged in another kinde. | 865 |
| The pleye, the laughtre men was wont to finde | |
| In hir, and eek hir Ioyes everychone, | |
| Ben fled, and thus lyth now Criseyde allone. | |
| |
| 125. Aboute hir eyen two a purpre ring | |
| Bi-trent, in sothfast tokninge of hir peyne, | 870 |
| That to biholde it was a dedly thing, | |
| For which Pandare mighte not restreyne | |
| The teres from his eyen for to reyne. | |
| But nathelees, as he best mighte, he seyde | |
| From Troilus thise wordes to Criseyde. | 875 |
| |
| 126. Lo, nece, I trowe ye han herd al how | |
| The king, with othere lordes, for the beste, | |
| Hath mad eschaunge of Antenor and yow, | |
| That cause is of this sorwe and this unreste. | |
| But how this cas doth Troilus moleste, | 880 |
| That may non erthely mannes tonge seye; | |
| For verray wo his wit is al aweye. | |
| |
| 127. For which we han so sorwed, he and I, | |
| That in-to litel bothe it hadde us slawe; | |
| But thurgh my conseil this day, fynally, | 885 |
| He somwhat is fro weping now with-drawe. | |
| And semeth me that he desyreth fawe | |
| With yow to been al night, for to devyse | |
| Remede in this, if ther were any wyse. | |
| |
| 128. This, short and pleyne, theffect of my message, | 890 |
| As ferforth as my wit can comprehende. | |
| For ye, that been of torment in swich rage, | |
| May to no long prologe as now entende; | |
| And her-upon ye may answere him sende. | |
| And, for the love of god, my nece dere, | 895 |
| So leef this wo er Troilus be here. | |
| |
| 129. Gret is my wo, quod she, and sighte sore, | |
| As she that feleth dedly sharp distresse; | |
| But yet to me his sorwe is muchel more, | |
| That love him bet than he him-self, I gesse. | 900 |
| Allas! for me hath he swich hevinesse? | |
| Can he for me so pitously compleyne? | |
| Y-wis, this sorwe doubleth al my peyne. | |
| |
| 130. Grevous to me, god wot, is for to twinne, | |
| Quod she, but yet it hardere is to me | 905 |
| To seen that sorwe which that he is inne; | |
| For wel wot I, it wol my bane be; | |
| And deye I wol in certayn, tho quod she; | |
| But bidde him come, er deeth, that thus me threteth, | |
| Dryve out that goost, which in myn herte beteth. | 910 |
| |
| 131. Thise wordes seyd, she on hir armes two | |
| Fil gruf, and gan to wepe pitously. | |
| Quod Pandarus, allas! why do ye so, | |
| Syn wel ye wot the tyme is faste by, | |
| That he shal come? Arys up hastely, | 915 |
| That he yow nat biwopen thus ne finde, | |
| But ye wol han him wood out of his minde! | |
| |
| 132. For wiste he that ye ferde in this manere, | |
| He wolde him-selve slee; and if I wende | |
| To han this fare, he sholde not come here | 920 |
| For al the good that Pryam may despende. | |
| For to what fyn he wolde anoon pretende, | |
| That knowe I wel; and for-thy yet I seye, | |
| So leef this sorwe, or platly he wol deye. | |
| |
| 133. And shapeth yow his sorwe for to abregge, | 925 |
| And nought encresse, leve nece swete; | |
| Beth rather to him cause of flat than egge, | |
| And with som wysdom ye his sorwes bete. | |
| What helpeth it to wepen ful a strete, | |
| Or though ye bothe in salte teres dreynte? | 930 |
| Bet is a tyme of cure ay than of pleynte. | |
| |
| 134. I mene thus; whan I him hider bringe, | |
| Sin ye ben wyse, and bothe of oon assent, | |
| So shapeth how distourbe your goinge, | |
| Or come ayen, sone after ye be went. | 935 |
| Wommen ben wyse in short avysement; | |
| And lat sen how your wit shal now avayle; | |
| And what that I may helpe, it shal not fayle. | |
| |
| 135. Go, quod Criseyde, and uncle, trewely, | |
| I shal don al my might, me to restreyne | 940 |
| From weping in his sight, and bisily, | |
| Him for to glade, I shal don al my peyne, | |
| And in myn herte seken every veyne; | |
| If to this soor ther may be founden salve, | |
| It shal not lakken, certain, on myn halve. | 945 |
| |
| 136. Goth Pandarus, and Troilus he soughte, | |
| Til in a temple he fond him allone, | |
| As he that of his lyf no lenger roughte; | |
| But to the pitouse goddes everichone | |
| Ful tendrely he preyde, and made his mone, | 950 |
| To doon him sone out of this world to pace; | |
| For wel he thoughte ther was non other grace. | |
| |
| 137. And shortly, al the sothe for to seye, | |
| He was so fallen in despeyr that day, | |
| That outrely he shoop him for to deye. | 955 |
| For right thus was his argument alwey: | |
| He seyde, he nas but loren, waylawey! | |
| For al that comth, comth by necessitee; | |
| Thus to be lorn, it is my destinee. | |
| |
| 138. For certaynly, this wot I wel, he seyde, | 960 |
| That for-sight of divyne purveyaunce | |
| Hath seyn alwey me to for-gon Criseyde, | |
| Sin god seeth every thing, out of doutaunce, | |
| And hem desponeth, thourgh his ordenaunce, | |
| In hir merytes sothly for to be, | 965 |
| As they shul comen by predestinee. | |
| |
| 139. But nathelees, allas! whom shal I leve? | |
| For ther ben grete clerkes many oon, | |
| That destinee thorugh argumentes preve; | |
| And som men seyn that nedely ther is noon; | 970 |
| But that free chois is yeven us everichoon. | |
| O, welaway! so sleye arn clerkes olde, | |
| That I not whos opinion I may holde. | |
| |
| 140. For som men seyn, if god seth al biforn, | |
| Ne god may not deceyved ben, pardee, | 975 |
| Than moot it fallen, though men hadde it sworn, | |
| That purveyaunce hath seyn bifore to be. | |
| Wherfor I seye, that from eterne if he | |
| Hath wist biforn our thought eek as our dede, | |
| We have no free chois, as these clerkes rede. | 980 |
| |
| 141. For other thought nor other dede also | |
| Might never be, but swich as purveyaunce, | |
| Which may not ben deceyved never-mo, | |
| Hath feled biforn, with-outen ignoraunce. | |
| For if ther mighte been a variaunce | 985 |
| To wrythen out fro goddes purveyinge, | |
| Ther nere no prescience of thing cominge; | |
| |
| 142. But it were rather an opinioun | |
| Uncerteyn, and no stedfast forseinge; | |
| And certes, that were an abusioun, | 990 |
| That god shuld han no parfit cleer witinge | |
| More than we men that han doutous weninge. | |
| But swich an errour up-on god to gesse | |
| Were fals and foul, and wikked corsednesse. | |
| |
| 143. Eek this is an opinioun of somme | 995 |
| That han hir top ful heighe and smothe y-shore; | |
| They seyn right thus, that thing is not to come | |
| For that the prescience hath seyn bifore | |
| That it shal come; but they seyn, that therfore | |
| That it shal come, therfore the purveyaunce | 1000 |
| Wot it biforn with-outen ignoraunce; | |
| |
| 144. And in this manere this necessitee | |
| Retorneth in his part contrarie agayn. | |
| For needfully bihoveth it not to be | |
| That thilke thinges fallen in certayn | 1005 |
| That ben purveyed; but nedely, as they seyn, | |
| Bihoveth it that thinges, whiche that falle, | |
| That they in certayn ben purveyed alle. | |
| |
| 145. I mene as though I laboured me in this, | |
| To enqueren which thing cause of which thing be; | 1010 |
| As whether that the prescience of god is | |
| The certayn cause of the necessitee | |
| Of thinges that to comen been, pardee; | |
| Or if necessitee of thing cominge | |
| Be cause certeyn of the purveyinge. | 1015 |
| |
| 146. But now ne enforce I me nat in shewinge | |
| How the ordre of causes stant; but wel wot I, | |
| That it bihoveth that the bifallinge | |
| Of thinges wist biforen certeynly | |
| Be necessarie, al seme it not ther-by | 1020 |
| That prescience put falling necessaire | |
| To thing to come, al falle it foule or faire. | |
| |
| 147. For if ther sit a man yond on a see, | |
| Than by necessitee bihoveth it | |
| That, certes, thyn opinioun soth be, | 1025 |
| That wenest or coniectest that he sit; | |
| And ferther-over now ayenward yit, | |
| Lo, right so it is of the part contrarie, | |
| As thus; (now herkne, for I wol not tarie): | |
| |
| 148. I seye, that if the opinioun of thee | 1030 |
| Be sooth, for that he sit, than seye I this, | |
| That he mot sitten by necessitee; | |
| And thus necessitee in either is. | |
| For in him nede of sitting is, y-wis, | |
| And in thee nede of sooth; and thus, forsothe, | 1035 |
| Ther moot necessitee ben in yow bothe. | |
| |
| 149. But thou mayst seyn, the man sit not therfore, | |
| That thyn opinion of sitting soth is; | |
| But rather, for the man sit ther bifore, | |
| Therfore is thyn opinion sooth, y-wis. | 1040 |
| And I seye, though the cause of sooth of this | |
| Comth of his sitting, yet necessitee | |
| Is entrechaunged, bothe in him and thee. | |
| |
| 150. Thus on this same wyse, out of doutaunce, | |
| I may wel maken, as it semeth me, | 1045 |
| My resoninge of goddes purveyaunce, | |
| And of the thinges that to comen be; | |
| By whiche reson men may wel y-see, | |
| That thilke thinges that in erthe falle, | |
| That by necessitee they comen alle. | 1050 |
| |
| 151. For al-though that, for thing shal come, y-wis, | |
| Therfore is it purveyed, certaynly, | |
| Nat that it comth for it purveyed is: | |
| Yet nathelees, bihoveth it nedfully, | |
| That thing to come be purveyed, trewely; | 1055 |
| Or elles, thinges that purveyed be, | |
| That they bityden by necessitee. | |
| |
| 152. And this suffyseth right y-now, certeyn, | |
| For to destroye our free chois every del. | |
| But now is this abusion to seyn, | 1060 |
| That fallinge of the thinges temporel | |
| Is cause of goddes prescience eternel. | |
| Now trewely, that is a fals sentence, | |
| That thing to come sholde cause his prescience. | |
| |
| 153. What mighte I wene, and I hadde swich a thought, | 1065 |
| But that god purveyth thing that is to come | |
| For that it is to come, and elles nought? | |
| So mighte I wene that thinges alle and some, | |
| That whylom been bifalle and over-come, | |
| Ben cause of thilke sovereyn purveyaunce, | 1070 |
| That for-wot al with-outen ignoraunce. | |
| |
| 154. And over al this, yet seye I more herto, | |
| That right as whan I woot ther is a thing, | |
| Y-wis, that thing mot nedefully be so; | |
| Eek right so, whan I woot a thing coming, | 1075 |
| So mot it come; and thus the bifalling | |
| Of thinges that ben wist bifore the tyde, | |
| They mowe not been eschewed on no syde. | |
| |
| 155. Than seyde he thus, almighty Iove in trone, | |
| That wost of al this thing the soothfastnesse, | 1080 |
| Rewe on my sorwe, or do me deye sone, | |
| Or bring Criseyde and me fro this distresse. | |
| And whyl he was in al this hevinesse, | |
| Disputinge with him-self in this matere, | |
| Com Pandare in, and seyde as ye may here. | 1085 |
| |
| 156. O mighty god, quod Pandarus, in trone, | |
| Ey! who seigh ever a wys man faren so? | |
| Why, Troilus, what thenkestow to done? | |
| Hastow swich lust to been thyn owene fo? | |
| What, parde, yet is not Criseyde a-go! | 1090 |
| Why lust thee so thy-self for-doon for drede, | |
| That in thyn heed thyn eyen semen dede? | |
| |
| 157. Hastow not lived many a yeer biforn | |
| With-outen hir, and ferd ful wel at ese? | |
| Artow for hir and for non other born? | 1095 |
| Hath kinde thee wroughte al-only hir to plese? | |
| Lat be, and thenk right thus in thy disese. | |
| That, in the dees right as ther fallen chaunces, | |
| Right so in love, ther come and goon plesaunces. | |
| |
| 158. And yet this is a wonder most of alle, | 1100 |
| Why thou thus sorwest, sin thou nost not yit, | |
| Touching hir goinge, how that it shal falle, | |
| Ne if she can hir-self distorben it. | |
| Thou hast not yet assayed al hir wit. | |
| A man may al by tyme his nekke bede | 1105 |
| Whan it shal of, and sorwen at the nede. | |
| |
| 159. For-thy take hede of that that I shal seye; | |
| I have with hir y-spoke and longe y-be, | |
| So as accorded was bitwixe us tweye. | |
| And ever-mo me thinketh thus, that she | 1110 |
| Hath som-what in hir hertes prevetee, | |
| Wher-with she can, if I shal right arede, | |
| Distorbe al this, of which thou art in drede. | |
| |
| 160. For which my counseil is, whan it is night, | |
| Thou to hir go, and make of this an ende; | 1115 |
| And blisful Iuno, thourgh hir grete mighte, | |
| Shal, as I hope, hir grace un-to us sende. | |
| Myn herte seyth, certeyn, she shal not wende; | |
| And for-thy put thyn herte a whyle in reste; | |
| And hold this purpos, for it is the beste. | 1120 |
| |
| 161. This Troilus answerde, and sighte sore, | |
| Thou seyst right wel, and I wil do right so; | |
| And what him liste, he seyde un-to it more. | |
| And whan that it was tyme for to go, | |
| Ful prevely him-self, with-outen mo, | 1125 |
| Un-to hir com, as he was wont to done; | |
| And how they wroughte, I shal yow telle sone. | |
| |
| 162. Soth is, that whan they gonne first to mete, | |
| So gan the peyne hir hertes for to twiste, | |
| That neither of hem other mighte grete, | 1130 |
| But hem in armes toke and after kiste. | |
| The lasse wofulle of hem bothe niste | |
| Wher that he was, ne mighte o word out-bringe, | |
| As I seyde erst, for wo and for sobbinge. | |
| |
| 163. Tho woful teres that they leten falle | 1135 |
| As bittre weren, out of teres kinde, | |
| For peyne, as is ligne aloës or galle. | |
| So bittre teres weep nought, as I finde, | |
| The woful Myrra through the bark and rinde. | |
| That in this world ther nis so hard an herte, | 1140 |
| That nolde han rewed on hir peynes smerte. | |
| |
| 164. But whan hir woful wery gostes tweyne | |
| Retorned been ther-as hem oughte dwelle, | |
| And that som-what to wayken gan the peyne | |
| By lengthe of pleynte, and ebben gan the welle | 1145 |
| Of hire teres, and the herte unswelle, | |
| With broken voys, al hoors for-shright, Criseyde | |
| To Troilus thise ilke wordes seyde: | |
| |
| 165. O Iove, I deye, and mercy I beseche! | |
| Help, Troilus! and ther-with-al hir face | 1150 |
| Upon his brest she leyde, and loste speche; | |
| Hir woful spirit from his propre place, | |
| Right with the word, alwey up poynt to pace. | |
| And thus she lyth with hewes pale and grene, | |
| That whylom fresh and fairest was to sene. | 1155 |
| |
| 166. This Troilus, that on hir gan biholde, | |
| Clepinge hir name, (and she lay as for deed, | |
| With-oute answere, and felte hir limes colde, | |
| Hir eyen throwen upward to hir heed), | |
| This sorwful man can now noon other reed, | 1160 |
| But ofte tyme hir colde mouth he kiste; | |
| Wher him was wo, god and him-self it wiste! | |
| |
| 167. He rist him up, and long streight he hir leyde; | |
| For signe of lyf, for ought he can or may, | |
| Can he noon finde in no-thing on Criseyde, | 1165 |
| For which his song ful ofte is weylaway! | |
| But whan he saugh that specheles she lay, | |
| With sorwful voys, and herte of blisse al bare, | |
| He seyde how she was fro this world y-fare! | |
| |
| 168. So after that he longe hadde hir compleyned, | 1170 |
| His hondes wrong, and seyde that was to seye, | |
| And with his teres salte hir brest bireyned, | |
| He gan tho teris wypen of ful dreye, | |
| And pitously gan for the soule preye, | |
| And seyde, O lord, that set art in thy trone, | 1175 |
| Rewe eek on me, for I shal folwe hir sone! | |
| |
| 169. She cold was and with-outen sentement, | |
| For aught he woot, for breeth ne felte he noon; | |
| And this was him a preignant argument | |
| That she was forth out of this world agoon; | 1180 |
| And whan he seigh ther was non other woon, | |
| He gan hir limes dresse in swich manere | |
| As men don hem that shul be leyd on bere. | |
| |
| 170. And after this, with sterne and cruel herte, | |
| His swerd a-noon out of his shethe he twighte, | 1185 |
| Him-self to sleen, how sore that him smerte, | |
| So that his sowle hir sowle folwen mighte, | |
| Ther-as the doom of Mynos wolde it dighte; | |
| Sin love and cruel Fortune it ne wolde, | |
| That in this world he lenger liven sholde. | 1190 |
| |
| 171. Thanne seyde he thus, fulfild of heigh desdayn, | |
| O cruel Iove, and thou, Fortune adverse, | |
| This al and som, that falsly have ye slayn | |
| Criseyde, and sin ye may do me no werse, | |
| Fy on your might and werkes so diverse! | 1195 |
| Thus cowardly ye shul me never winne; | |
| Ther shal no deeth me fro my lady twinne. | |
| |
| 172. For I this world, sin ye han slayn hir thus, | |
| Wol lete, and folowe hir spirit lowe or hye; | |
| Shal never lover seyn that Troilus | 1200 |
| Dar not, for fere, with his lady dye; | |
| For certeyn, I wol bere hir companye. | |
| But sin ye wol not suffre us liven here, | |
| Yet suffreth that our soules ben y-fere. | |
| |
| 173. And thou, citee, whiche that I leve in wo, | 1205 |
| And thou, Pryam, and bretheren al y-fere, | |
| And thou, my moder, farewel! for I go; | |
| And Attropos, make redy thou my bere! | |
| And thou, Criseyde, o swete herte dere, | |
| Receyve now my spirit! wolde he seye, | 1210 |
| With swerd at herte, al redy for to deye. | |
| |
| 174. But as god wolde, of swough ther-with she abreyde, | |
| And gan to syke, and Troilus she cryde; | |
| And he answerde, lady myn Criseyde, | |
| Live ye yet? and leet his swerd doun glyde. | 1215 |
| Ye, herte myn, that thanked be Cupyde! | |
| Quod she, and ther-with-al she sore sighte; | |
| And he bigan to glade hir as he mighte; | |
| |
| 175. Took hir in armes two, and kiste hir ofte, | |
| And hir to glade he dide al his entente; | 1220 |
| For which hir goost, that flikered ay on-lofte, | |
| In-to hir woful herte ayein it wente. | |
| But at the laste, as that hir eyen glente | |
| A-syde, anoon she gan his swerd aspye, | |
| As it lay bare, and gan for fere crye, | 1225 |
| |
| 176. And asked him, why he it hadde out-drawe? | |
| And Troilus anoon the cause hir tolde, | |
| And how himself ther-with he wolde have slawe. | |
| For which Criseyde up-on him gan biholde, | |
| And gan him in hir armes faste folde, | 1230 |
| And seyde, O mercy, god, lo, which a dede! | |
| Allas! how neigh we were bothe dede! | |
| |
| 177. Thanne if I ne hadde spoken, as grace was, | |
| Ye wolde han slayn your-self anoon? quod she. | |
| Ye, douteless; and she answerde, allas! | 1235 |
| For, by that ilke lord that made me, | |
| I nolde a forlong wey on-lyve han be, | |
| After your deeth, to han be crowned quene | |
| Of al the lond the sonne on shyneth shene. | |
| |
| 178. But with this selve swerd, which that here is, | 1240 |
| My-selve I wolde have slayn!quod she tho; | |
| But ho, for we han right y-now of this, | |
| And late us ryse and streight to bedde go, | |
| And therë lat vs speken of our wo. | |
| For, by the morter which that I see brenne, | 1245 |
| Knowe I ful wel that day is not fer henne. | |
| |
| 179. Whan they were in hir bedde, in armes folde, | |
| Nought was it lyk tho nightes here-biforn; | |
| For pitously ech other gan biholde, | |
| As they that hadden al hir blisse y-lorn, | 1250 |
| Biwaylinge ay the day that they were born. | |
| Til at the last this sorwful wight Criseyde | |
| To Troilus these ilke wordes seyde: | |
| |
| 180. Lo, herte myn, wel wot ye this, quod she, | |
| That if a wight alwey his wo compleyne, | 1255 |
| And seketh nought how holpen for to be, | |
| It nis but folye and encrees of peyne; | |
| And sin that here assembled be we tweyne | |
| To finde bote of wo that we ben inne, | |
| It were al tyme sone to biginne. | 1260 |
| |
| 181. I am a womman, as ful wel ye woot, | |
| And as I am avysed sodeynly, | |
| So wol I telle yow, whyl it is hoot. | |
| Me thinketh thus, that neither ye nor I | |
| Oughte half this wo to make skilfully. | 1265 |
| For there is art y-now for to redresse | |
| That yet is mis, and sleen this hevinesse. | |
| |
| 182. Sooth is, the wo, the whiche that we ben inne, | |
| For ought I woot, for no-thing elles is | |
| But for the cause that we sholden twinne. | 1270 |
| Considered al, ther nis no-more amis. | |
| But what is thanne a remede un-to this, | |
| But that we shape us sone for to mete? | |
| This al and som, my dere herte swete. | |
| |
| 183. Now that I shal wel bringen it aboute | 1275 |
| To come ayein, sone after that I go, | |
| Ther-of am I no maner thing in doute. | |
| For dredeles, with-inne a wouke or two, | |
| I shal ben here; and, that it may be so | |
| By alle right, and in a wordes fewe, | 1280 |
| I shal yow wel an heep of weyes shewe. | |
| |
| 184. For which I wol not make long sermoun, | |
| For tyme y-lost may not recovered be; | |
| But I wol gon to my conclusioun, | |
| And to the beste, in ought that I can see. | 1285 |
| And, for the love of god, for-yeve it me | |
| If I speke ought ayein your hertes reste; | |
| For trewely, I speke it for the beste; | |
| |
| 185. Makinge alwey a protestacioun, | |
| That now these wordes, whiche that I shal seye, | 1290 |
| Nis but to shewe yow my mocioun, | |
| To finde un-to our helpe the beste weye; | |
| And taketh it non other wyse, I preye. | |
| For in effect what-so ye me comaunde, | |
| That wol I doon, for that is no demaunde. | 1295 |
| |
| 186. Now herkeneth this, ye han wel understonde | |
| My goinge graunted is by parlement | |
| So ferforth, that it may not be with-stonde | |
| For al this world, as by my Iugement. | |
| And sin ther helpeth noon avysement | 1300 |
| To letten it, lat it passe out of minde; | |
| And lat us shape a bettre wey to finde. | |
| |
| 187. The sothe is, that the twinninge of us tweyne | |
| Wol us disese and cruelliche anoye. | |
| But him bihoveth som-tyme han a peyne | 1305 |
| That serveth love, if that he wol have Ioye. | |
| And sin I shal no ferthere out of Troye | |
| Than I may ryde ayein on half a morwe, | |
| It oughte lasse causen us to sorwe. | |
| |
| 188. So as I shal not so ben hid in muwe, | 1310 |
| That day by day, myn owene herte dere, | |
| Sin wel ye woot that it is now a truwe, | |
| Ye shul ful wel al myn estat y-here. | |
| And er that truwe is doon, I shal ben here, | |
| And thanne have ye bothe Antenor y-wonne | 1315 |
| And me also; beth glad now, if ye conne; | |
| |
| 189. And thenk right thus, Criseyde is now agoon, | |
| But what! she shal come hastely ayeyn; | |
| And whanne, allas? by god, lo, right anoon, | |
| Er dayes ten, this dar I saufly seyn. | 1320 |
| And thanne at erste shul we been so fayn, | |
| So as we shulle to-gederes ever dwelle, | |
| Thal al this world ne mighte our blisse telle. | |
| |
| 190. I see that ofte, ther-as we ben now, | |
| That for the beste, our conseil for to hyde, | 1325 |
| Ye speke not with me, nor I with yow | |
| In fourtenight; ne see yow go ne ryde. | |
| May ye not ten dayes thanne abyde, | |
| For myn honour, in swich an aventure? | |
| Y-wis, ye mowen elles lite endure! | 1330 |
| |
| 191. Ye knowe eek how that al my kin is here, | |
| But-if that onliche it my fader be; | |
| And eek myn othere thinges alle y-fere, | |
| And nameliche, my dere herte, ye, | |
| Whom that I nolde leven for to see | 1335 |
| For al this world, as wyd as it hath space; | |
| Or elles, see ich never Ioves face! | |
| |
| 192. Why trowe ye my fader in this wyse | |
| Coveiteth so to see me, but for drede | |
| Lest in this toun that folkes me dispyse | 1340 |
| By-cause of him, for his unhappy dede? | |
| What woot my fader what lyf that I lede? | |
| For if he wiste in Troye how wel I fare, | |
| Us neded for my wending nought to care. | |
| |
| 193. Ye seen that every day eek, more and more, | 1345 |
| Men trete of pees; and it supposed is, | |
| That men the quene Eleyne shal restore, | |
| And Grekes us restore that is mis. | |
| So though ther nere comfort noon but this, | |
| That men purposen pees on every syde, | 1350 |
| Ye may the bettre at ese of herte abyde. | |
| |
| 194. For if that it be pees, myn herte dere, | |
| The nature of the pees mot nedes dryve | |
| That men moste entrecomunen y-fere, | |
| And to and fro eek ryde and gon as blyve | 1355 |
| Alday as thikke as been flen from an hyve; | |
| And every wight han libertee to bleve | |
| Wher-as him list the bet, with-outen leve. | |
| |
| 195. And though so be that pees ther may be noon, | |
| Yet hider, though ther never pees ne were, | 1360 |
| I moste come; for whider sholde I goon, | |
| Or how mischaunce sholde I dwelle there | |
| Among tho men of armes ever in fere? | |
| For which, as wisly god my soule rede, | |
| I can not seen wher-of ye sholden drede. | 1365 |
| |
| 196. Have here another wey, if it so be | |
| That al this thing ne may yow not suffyse. | |
| My fader, as ye knowen wel, pardee, | |
| Is old, and elde is ful of coveityse. | |
| And I right now have founden al the gyse, | 1370 |
| With-oute net, wher-with I shal him hente; | |
| And herkeneth how, if that ye wole assente. | |
| |
| 197. Lo, Troilus, men seyn that hard it is | |
| The wolf ful, and the wether hool to have; | |
| This is to seyn, that men ful ofte, y-wis, | 1375 |
| Mot spenden part, the remenaunt for to save. | |
| For ay with gold men may the herte grave | |
| Of him that set is up-on coveityse; | |
| And how I mene, I shal it yow devyse. | |
| |
| 198. The moeble which that I have in this toun | 1380 |
| Un-to my fader shal I take, and seye, | |
| That right for trust and for savacioun | |
| It sent is from a freend of his or tweye, | |
| The whiche freendes ferventliche him preye | |
| To senden after more, and that in hye, | 1385 |
| Whyl that this toun stant thus in Iupartye. | |
| |
| 199. And that shal been an huge quantitee, | |
| Thus shal I seyn, but, lest it folk aspyde, | |
| This may be sent by no wight but by me; | |
| I shal eek shewen him, if pees bityde, | 1390 |
| What frendes that ich have on every syde | |
| Toward the court, to doon the wrathe pace | |
| Of Priamus, and doon him stonde in grace. | |
| |
| 200. So, what for o thing and for other, swete, | |
| I shal him so enchaunten with my sawes, | 1395 |
| That right in hevene his sowle is, shal he mete! | |
| For al Appollo, or his clerkes lawes, | |
| Or calculinge avayleth nought three hawes; | |
| Desyr of gold shal so his sowle blende, | |
| That, as me lyst, I shal wel make an ende. | 1400 |
| |
| 201. And if he wolde ought by his sort it preve | |
| If that I lye, in certayn I shal fonde | |
| Distorben him, and plukke him by the sleve, | |
| Makinge his sort, and beren him on honde, | |
| He hath not wel the goddes understonde. | 1405 |
| For goddes speken in amphibologyes, | |
| And, for a sooth, they tellen twenty lyes. | |
| |
| 202. Eek drede fond first goddes, I suppose, | |
| Thus shal I seyn, and that his cowarde herte | |
| Made him amis the goddes text to glose, | 1410 |
| Whan he for ferde out of his Delphos sterte. | |
| And but I make him sone to converte, | |
| And doon my reed with-inne a day or tweye, | |
| I wol to yow oblige me to deye. | |
| |
| 203. And treweliche, as writen wel I finde, | 1415 |
| That al this thing was seyd of good entente; | |
| And that hir herte trewe was and kinde | |
| Towardes him, and spak right as she mente, | |
| And that she starf for wo neigh, whan she wente, | |
| And was in purpos ever to be trewe; | 1420 |
| Thus writen they that of hir werkes knewe. | |
| |
| 204. This Troilus, with herte and eres spradde, | |
| Herde al this thing devysen to and fro; | |
| And verraylich him semed that he hadde | |
| The selve wit; but yet to lete hir go | 1425 |
| His herte misforyaf him ever-mo. | |
| But fynally, he gan his herte wreste | |
| To trusten hir, and took it for the beste. | |
| |
| 205. For which the grete furie of his penaunce | |
| Was queynt with hope, and ther-with hem bitwene | 1430 |
| Bigan for Ioye the amorouse daunce. | |
| And as the briddes, whan the sonne is shene, | |
| Delyten in hir song in leves grene, | |
| Right so the wordes that they spake y-fere | |
| Delyted hem, and made hir hertes clere. | 1435 |
| |
| 206. But natheles, the wending of Criseyde, | |
| For al this world, may nought out of his minde; | |
| For which ful ofte he pitously hir preyde, | |
| That of hir heste he might hir trewe finde. | |
| And seyde hir, certes, if ye be unkinde, | 1440 |
| And but ye come at day set in-to Troye, | |
| Ne shal I never have hele, honour, ne Ioye. | |
| |
| 207. For al-so sooth as sonne up-rist on morwe, | |
| And, god! so wisly thou me, woful wrecche, | |
| To reste bringe out of this cruel sorwe, | 1445 |
| I wol my-selven slee if that ye drecche. | |
| But of my deeth though litel be to recche, | |
| Yet, er that ye me cause so to smerte, | |
| Dwel rather here, myn owene swete herte! | |
| |
| 208. For trewely, myn owene lady dere, | 1450 |
| Tho sleightes yet that I have herd yow stere | |
| Ful shaply been to failen alle y-fere. | |
| For thus men seyn, that oon thenketh the bere, | |
| But al another thenketh his ledere. | |
| Your sire is wys, and seyd is, out of drede, | 1455 |
| Men may the wyse at-renne, and not at-rede. | |
| |
| 209. It is ful hard to halten unespyed | |
| Bifore a crepul, for he can the craft; | |
| Your fader is in sleighte as Argus yëd; | |
| For al be that his moeble is him biraft, | 1460 |
| His olde sleighte is yet so with him laft, | |
| Ye shal not blende him for your womanhede, | |
| Ne feyne a-right, and that is al my drede. | |
| |
| 210. I noot if pees shal ever-mo bityde; | |
| But, pees or no, for ernest ne for game, | 1465 |
| I woot, sin Calkas on the Grekes syde | |
| Hath ones been, and lost so foule his name, | |
| He dar no more come here ayein for shame; | |
| For which that weye, for ought I can espye, | |
| To trusten on, nis but a fantasye. | 1470 |
| |
| 211. Ye shal eek seen, your fader shal yow glose | |
| To been a wyf, and as he can wel preche, | |
| He shal som Grek so preyse and wel alose, | |
| That ravisshen he shal yow with his speche, | |
| Or do yow doon by force as he shal teche. | 1475 |
| And Troilus, of whom ye nil han routhe, | |
| Shal causeles so sterven in his trouthe! | |
| |
| 212. And over al this, your fader shal despyse | |
| Us alle, and seyn this citee nis but lorn; | |
| And that thassege never shal aryse, | 1480 |
| For-why the Grekes han it alle sworn | |
| Til we be slayn, and doun our walles torn. | |
| And thus he shal you with his wordes fere, | |
| That ay drede I, that ye wol bleve there. | |
| |
| 213. Ye shul eek seen so many a lusty knight | 1485 |
| A-mong the Grekes, ful of worthinesse, | |
| And eche of hem with herte, wit, and might | |
| To plesen yow don al his besinesse, | |
| That ye shul dullen of the rudenesse | |
| Of us sely Troianes, but-if routhe | 1490 |
| Remorde yow, or vertue of your trouthe. | |
| |
| 214. And this to me so grevous is to thinke, | |
| That fro my brest it wol my soule rende; | |
| Ne dredeles, in me ther may not sinke | |
| A good opinioun, if that ye wende; | 1495 |
| For-why your faderes sleighte wol us shende. | |
| And if ye goon, as I have told yow yore, | |
| So thenk I nam but deed, with-oute more. | |
| |
| 215. For which, with humble, trewe, and pitous herte, | |
| A thousand tymes mercy I yow preye; | 1500 |
| So reweth on myn aspre peynes smerte, | |
| And doth somwhat, as that I shal yow seye, | |
| And lat us stele away bitwixe us tweye; | |
| And thenk that folye is, whan man may chese, | |
| For accident his substaunce ay to lese. | 1505 |
| |
| 216. I mene this, that sin we mowe er day | |
| Wel stele away, and been to-gider so, | |
| What wit were it to putten in assay, | |
| In cas ye sholden to your fader go, | |
| If that ye mighte come ayein or no? | 1510 |
| Thus mene I, that it were a gret folye | |
| To putte that sikernesse in Iupartye. | |
| |
| 217. And vulgarly to speken of substaunce | |
| Of tresour, may we bothe with us lede | |
| Y-nough to live in honour and plesaunce, | 1515 |
| Til in-to tyme that we shul ben dede; | |
| And thus we may eschewen al this drede. | |
| For everich other wey ye can recorde, | |
| Myn herte, y-wis, may not ther-with acorde. | |
| |
| 218. And hardily, ne dredeth no poverte, | 1520 |
| For I have kin and freendes elles-where | |
| That, though we comen in our bare sherte, | |
| Us sholde neither lakke gold ne gere, | |
| But been honoured whyl we dwelten there. | |
| And go we anoon, for, as in myn entente, | 1525 |
| This is the beste, if that ye wole assente. | |
| |
| 219. Criseyde, with a syk, right in this wyse | |
| Answerde, y-wis, my dere herte trewe, | |
| We may wel stele away, as ye devyse, | |
| And finde swiche unthrifty weyes newe; | 1530 |
| But afterward, ful sore it wol us rewe. | |
| And help me god so at my moste nede | |
| As causeles ye suffren al this drede! | |
| |
| 220. For thilke day that I for cherisshinge | |
| Or drede of fader, or of other wight, | 1535 |
| Or for estat, delyt, or for weddinge | |
| Be fals to yow, my Troilus, my knight, | |
| Saturnes doughter, Iuno, thorugh hir might, | |
| As wood as Athamante do me dwelle | |
| Eternaly in Stix, the put of helle! | 1540 |
| |
| 221. And this on every god celestial | |
| I swere it yow, and eek on eche goddesse, | |
| On every Nymphe and deite infernal, | |
| On Satiry and Fauny more and lesse, | |
| That halve goddes been of wildernesse; | 1545 |
| And Attropos my threed of lyf to-breste | |
| If I be fals; now trowe me if thow leste! | |
| |
| 222. And thou, Simoys, that as an arwe clere | |
| Thorugh Troye rennest ay downward to the see, | |
| Ber witnesse of this word that seyd is here, | 1550 |
| That thilke day that ich untrewe be | |
| To Troilus, myn owene herte free, | |
| That thou retorne bakwarde to thy welle, | |
| And I with body and soule sinke in helle! | |
| |
| 223. But that ye speke, awey thus for to go | 1555 |
| And leten alle your freendes, god for-bede, | |
| For any womman, that ye sholden so, | |
| And namely, sin Troye hath now swich nede | |
| Of help; and eek of o thing taketh hede, | |
| If this were wist, my lif laye in balaunce, | 1560 |
| And your honour; god shilde us fro mischaunce! | |
| |
| 224. And if so be that pees her-after take, | |
| As alday happeth, after anger, game, | |
| Why, lord! the sorwe and wo ye wolden make, | |
| That ye ne dorste come ayein for shame! | 1565 |
| And er that ye Iuparten so your name, | |
| Beth nought to hasty in this hote fare; | |
| For hasty man ne wanteth never care. | |
| |
| 225. What trowe ye the peple eek al aboute | |
| Wolde of it seye? It is ful light to arede. | 1570 |
| They wolden seye, and swere it, out of doute, | |
| That love ne droof yow nought to doon this dede, | |
| But lust voluptuous and coward drede. | |
| Thus were al lost, y-wis, myn herte dere, | |
| Your honour, which that now shyneth so clere. | 1575 |
| |
| 226. And also thenketh on myn honestee, | |
| That floureth yet, how foule I sholde it shende, | |
| And with what filthe it spotted sholde be, | |
| If in this forme I sholde with yow wende. | |
| Ne though I livede un-to the worldes ende, | 1580 |
| My name sholde I never ayeinward winne; | |
| Thus were I lost, and that were routhe and sinne. | |
| |
| 227. And for-thy slee with reson al this hete; | |
| Men seyn, the suffraunt overcometh, pardee; | |
| Eek who-so wol han leef, he leef mot lete; | 1585 |
| Thus maketh vertue of necessitee | |
| By pacience, and thenk that lord is he | |
| Of fortune ay, that nought wol of hir recche; | |
| And she ne daunteth no wight but a wrecche. | |
| |
| 228. And trusteth this, that certes, herte swete, | 1590 |
| Er Phebus suster, Lucina the shene, | |
| The Leoun passe out of this Ariete, | |
| I wol ben here, with-outen any wene. | |
| I mene, as helpe me Iuno, hevenes quene, | |
| The tenthe day, but-if that deeth me assayle, | 1595 |
| I wol yow seen, with-outen any fayle. | |
| |
| 229. And now, so this be sooth, quod Troilus, | |
| I shal wel suffre un-to the tenthe day, | |
| Sin that I see that nede it moot be thus. | |
| But, for the love of god, if it be may, | 1600 |
| So lat us stele prively away; | |
| For ever in oon, as for to live in reste, | |
| Myn herte seyth that it wol been the beste. | |
| |
| 230. O mercy, god, what lyf is this? quod she; | |
| Allas, ye slee me thus for verray tene! | 1605 |
| I see wel now that ye mistrusten me; | |
| For by your wordes it is wel y-sene. | |
| Now, for the love of Cynthia the shene, | |
| Mistrust me not thus causeles, for routhe; | |
| Sin to be trewe I have yow plight my trouthe. | 1610 |
| |
| 231. And thenketh wel, that som tyme it is wit | |
| To spende a tyme, a tyme for to winne; | |
| Ne, pardee, lorn am I nought fro yow yit, | |
| Though that we been a day or two a-twinne. | |
| Dryf out the fantasyes yow with-inne; | 1615 |
| And trusteth me, and leveth eek your sorwe, | |
| Or here my trouthe, I wol not live til morwe. | |
| |
| 232. For if ye wiste how sore it doth me smerte, | |
| Ye wolde cesse of this; for god, thou wost, | |
| The pure spirit wepeth in myn herte, | 1620 |
| To see yow wepen that I love most, | |
| And that I moot gon to the Grekes ost. | |
| Ye, nere it that I wiste remedye | |
| To come ayein, right here I wolde dye! | |
| |
| 233. But certes, I am not so nyce a wight | 1625 |
| That I ne can imaginen a way | |
| To come ayein that day that I have hight. | |
| For who may holde thing that wol a-way? | |
| My fader nought, for al his queynte pley. | |
| And by my thrift, my wending out of Troye | 1630 |
| Another day shal torne us alle to Ioye. | |
| |
| 234. For-thy, with al myn herte I yow beseke, | |
| If that yow list don ought for my preyere, | |
| And for the love which that I love yow eke, | |
| That er that I departe fro yow here, | 1635 |
| That of so good a comfort and a chere | |
| I may you seen, that ye may bringe at reste | |
| Myn herte, which that is at point to breste. | |
| |
| 235. And over al this, I pray yow, quod she tho, | |
| Myn owene hertes soothfast suffisaunce, | 1640 |
| Sin I am thyn al hool, with-outen mo, | |
| That whyl that I am absent, no plesaunce | |
| Of othere do me fro your remembraunce. | |
| For I am ever a-gast, for-why men rede, | |
| That love is thing ay ful of bisy drede. | 1645 |
| |
| 236. For in this world ther liveth lady noon, | |
| If that ye were untrewe, as god defende! | |
| That so bitraysed were or wo bigoon | |
| As I, that alle trouthe in yow entende. | |
| And douteles, if that ich other wende, | 1650 |
| I nere but deed; and er ye cause finde, | |
| For goddes love, so beth me not unkinde. | |
| |
| 237. To this answerde Troilus and seyde, | |
| Now god, to whom ther nis no cause y-wrye, | |
| Me glade, as wis I never un-to Criseyde, | 1655 |
| Sin thilke day I saw hir first with yë, | |
| Was fals, ne never shal til that I dye. | |
| At shorte wordes, wel ye may me leve; | |
| I can no more, it shal be founde at preve. | |
| |
| 238. Graunt mercy, goode myn, y-wis, quod she, | 1660 |
| And blisful Venus lat me never sterve | |
| Er I may stonde of plesaunce in degree | |
| To quyte him wel, that so wel can deserve; | |
| And whyl that god my wit wol me conserve, | |
| I shal so doon, so trewe I have yow founde, | 1665 |
| That ay honour to me-ward shal rebounde. | |
| |
| 239. For trusteth wel, that your estat royal | |
| Ne veyn delyt, nor only worthinesse | |
| Of yow in werre, or torney marcial, | |
| Ne pompe, array, nobley, or eek richesse, | 1670 |
| Ne made me to rewe on your distresse; | |
| But moral vertue, grounded upon trouthe, | |
| That was the cause I first hadde on yow routhe! | |
| |
| 240. Eek gentil herte and manhod that ye hadde, | |
| And that ye hadde, as me thoughte, in despyt | 1675 |
| Every thing that souned in-to badde, | |
| As rudenesse and poeplish appetyt; | |
| And that your reson brydled your delyt, | |
| This made, aboven every creature, | |
| That I was your, and shal, whyl I may dure. | 1680 |
| |
| 241. And this may lengthe of yeres not for-do, | |
| Ne remuable fortune deface; | |
| But Iuppiter, that of his might may do | |
| The sorwful to be glad, so yeve us grace, | |
| Er nightes ten, to meten in this place, | 1685 |
| So that it may your herte and myn suffyse; | |
| And fareth now wel, for tyme is that ye ryse. | |
| |
| 242. And after that they longe y-pleyned hadde, | |
| And ofte y-kist and streite in armes folde, | |
| The day gan ryse, and Troilus him cladde, | 1690 |
| And rewfulliche his lady gan biholde, | |
| As he that felte dethes cares colde. | |
| And to hir grace he gan him recomaunde; | |
| Wher him was wo, this holde I no demaunde. | |
| |
| 243. For mannes heed imaginen ne can, | 1695 |
| Ne entendement considere, ne tonge telle | |
| The cruel peynes of this sorwful man, | |
| That passen every torment doun in helle. | |
| For whan he saugh that she ne mighte dwelle, | |
| Which that his soule out of his herte rente, | 1700 |
With-outen more, out of the chaumbre he wente.
Explicit Liber Quartus. | |
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