| |
Incipit Liber Quintus. 1. APROCHEN gan the fatal destinee | |
| That Ioves hath in disposicioun, | |
| And to yow, angry Parcas, sustren three, | |
| Committeth, to don execucioun; | |
| For which Criseyde moste out of the toun, | 5 |
| And Troilus shal dwelle forth in pyne | |
| Til Lachesis his threed no lenger twyne. | |
| |
| 2. THE GOLDEN-TRESSED Phebus heighe on-lofte | |
| Thryës hadde alle with his bemes shene | |
| The snowes molte, and Zephirus as ofte | 10 |
| Y-brought ayein the tendre leves grene, | |
| Sin that the sone of Ecuba the quene | |
| Bigan to love hir first, for whom his sorwe | |
| Was al, that she departe sholde a-morwe. | |
| |
| 3. Ful redy was at pryme Dyomede, | 15 |
| Criseyde un-to the Grekes ost to lede, | |
| For sorwe of which she felte hir herte blede, | |
| As she that niste what was best to rede. | |
| And trewely, as men in bokes rede, | |
| Men wiste never womman han the care, | 20 |
| Ne was so looth out of a toun to fare. | |
| |
| 4. This Troilus, with-outen reed or lore, | |
| As man that hath his Ioyes eek forlore, | |
| Was waytinge on his lady ever-more | |
| As she that was the soothfast crop and more | 25 |
| Of al his lust, or Ioyes here-tofore. | |
| But Troilus, now farewel al thy Ioye, | |
| For shaltow never seen hir eft in Troye! | |
| |
| 5. Soth is, that whyl he bood in this manere, | |
| He gan his wo ful manly for to hyde, | 30 |
| That wel unnethe it seen was in his chere; | |
| But at the yate ther she sholde oute ryde | |
| With certeyn folk, he hoved hir tabyde, | |
| So wo bigoon, al wolde he nought him pleyne, | |
| That on his hors unnethe he sat for peyne. | 35 |
| |
| 6. For ire he quook, so gan his herte gnawe, | |
| Whan Diomede on horse gan him dresse, | |
| And seyde un-to him-self this ilke sawe, | |
| Allas, quod he, thus foul a wrecchednesse | |
| Why suffre ich it, why nil ich it redresse? | 40 |
| Were it not bet at ones for to dye | |
| Than ever-more in langour thus to drye? | |
| |
| 7. Why nil I make at ones riche and pore | |
| To have y-nough to done, er that she go? | |
| Why nil I bringe al Troye upon a rore? | 45 |
| Why nil I sleen this Diomede also? | |
| Why nil I rather with a man or two | |
| Stele hir a-way? Why wol I this endure? | |
| Why nil I helpen to myn owene cure? | |
| |
| 8. But why he nolde doon so fel a dede, | 50 |
| That shal I seyn, and why him liste it spare: | |
| He hadde in herte alwey a maner drede, | |
| Lest that Criseyde, in rumour of this fare, | |
| Sholde han ben slayn; lo, this was al his care. | |
| And elles, certeyn, as I seyde yore, | 55 |
| He hadde it doon, with-outen wordes more. | |
| |
| 9. Criseyde, whan she redy was to ryde, | |
| Ful sorwfully she sighte, and seyde allas! | |
| But forth she moot, for ought that may bityde, | |
| And forth she rit ful sorwfully a pas. | 60 |
| Ther nis non other remedie in this cas. | |
| What wonder is though that hir sore smerte, | |
| Whan she forgoth hir owene swete herte? | |
| |
| 10. This Troilus, in wyse of curteisye, | |
| With hauke on hond, and with an huge route | 65 |
| Of knightes, rood and dide hir companye, | |
| Passinge al the valey fer with-oute. | |
| And ferther wolde han riden, out of doute, | |
| Ful fayn, and wo was him to goon so sone; | |
| But torne he moste, and it was eek to done. | 70 |
| |
| 11. And right with that was Antenor y-come | |
| Out of the Grekes ost, and every wight | |
| Was of it glad, and seyde he was wel-come. | |
| And Troilus, al nere his herte light, | |
| He peyned him with al his fulle might | 75 |
| Him to with-holde of wepinge at the leste, | |
| And Antenor he kiste, and made feste. | |
| |
| 12. And ther-with-al he moste his leve take, | |
| And caste his eye upon hir pitously, | |
| And neer he rood, his cause for to make, | 80 |
| To take hir by the honde al sobrely. | |
| And lord! so she gan wepen tendrely! | |
| And he ful softe and sleighly gan hir seye, | |
| Now hold your day, and dooth me not to deye. | |
| |
| 13. With that his courser torned he a-boute | 85 |
| With face pale, and un-to Diomede | |
| No word he spak, ne noon of al his route; | |
| Of which the sone of Tydeus took hede, | |
| As he that coude more than the crede | |
| In swich a craft, and by the reyne hir hente; | 90 |
| And Troilus to Troye homwarde he wente. | |
| |
| 14. This Diomede, that ladde hir by the brydel, | |
| Whan that he saw the folk of Troye aweye, | |
| Thoughte, al my labour shal not been on ydel, | |
| If that I may, for somwhat shal I seye. | 95 |
| For at the worste it may yet shorte our weye. | |
| I have herd seyd, eek tymes twyës twelve, | |
| He is a fool that wol for-yete him-selve. | |
| |
| 15. But natheles this thoughte he wel ynough, | |
| That certaynly I am aboute nought | 100 |
| If that I speke of love, or make it tough; | |
| For douteles, if she have in hir thought | |
| Him that I gesse, he may not been y-brought | |
| So sone awey; but I shal finde a mene, | |
| That she not wite as yet shal what I mene. | 105 |
| |
| 16. This Diomede, as he that coude his good, | |
| Whan this was doon, gan fallen forth in speche | |
| Of this and that, and asked why she stood | |
| In swich disese, and gan hir eek biseche, | |
| That if that he encrese mighte or eche | 110 |
| With any thing hir ese, that she sholde | |
| Comaunde it him, and seyde he doon it wolde. | |
| |
| 17. For trewely he swoor hir, as a knight, | |
| That ther nas thing with whiche he mighte hir plese, | |
| That he nolde doon his peyne and al his might | 115 |
| To doon it, for to doon hir herte an ese. | |
| And preyede hir, she wolde hir sorwe apese, | |
| And seyde, y-wis, we Grekes con have Ioye | |
| To honouren yow, as wel as folk of Troye. | |
| |
| 18. He seyde eek thus, I woot, yow thinketh straunge, | 120 |
| No wonder is, for it is to yow newe, | |
| Thaqueintaunce of these Troianes to chaunge, | |
| For folk of Grece, that ye never knewe. | |
| But wolde never god but-if as trewe | |
| A Greek ye shulde among us alle finde | 125 |
| As any Troian is, and eek as kinde. | |
| |
| 19. And by the cause I swoor yow right, lo, now, | |
| To been your freend, and helply, to my might, | |
| And for that more acqueintaunce eek of yow | |
| Have ich had than another straunger wight, | 130 |
| So fro this forth I pray yow, day and night, | |
| Comaundeth me, how sore that me smerte, | |
| To doon al that may lyke un-to your herte; | |
| |
| 20. And that ye me wolde as your brother trete, | |
| And taketh not my frendship in despyt; | 135 |
| And though your sorwes be for thinges grete, | |
| Noot I not why, but out of more respyt, | |
| Myn herte hath for to amende it greet delyt. | |
| And if I may your harmes not redresse, | |
| I am right sory for your hevinesse. | 140 |
| |
| 21. And though ye Troians with us Grekes wrothe | |
| Han many a day be, alwey yet, pardee, | |
| O god of love in sooth we serven bothe. | |
| And, for the love of god, my lady free, | |
| Whom so ye hate, as beth not wroth with me. | 145 |
| For trewely, ther can no wight yow serve, | |
| That half so looth your wraththe wolde deserve. | |
| |
| 22. And nere it that we been so neigh the tente | |
| Of Calkas, which that seen us bothe may, | |
| I wolde of this yow telle al myn entente; | 150 |
| But this enseled til another day. | |
| Yeve me your hond, I am, and shal ben ay, | |
| God help me so, whyl that my lyf may dure, | |
| Your owene aboven every creature. | |
| |
| 23. Thus seyde I never er now to womman born; | 155 |
| For god myn herte as wisly glade so, | |
| I lovede never womman here-biforn | |
| As paramours, ne never shal no mo. | |
| And, for the love of god, beth not my fo; | |
| Al can I not to yow, my lady dere, | 160 |
| Compleyne aright, for I am yet to lere. | |
| |
| 24. And wondreth not, myn owene lady bright, | |
| Though that I speke of love to you thus blyve; | |
| For I have herd or this of many a wight, | |
| Hath loved thing he never saugh his lyve. | 165 |
| Eek I am not of power for to stryve | |
| Ayens the god of love, but him obeye | |
| I wol alwey, and mercy I yow preye. | |
| |
| 25. Ther been so worthy knightes in this place | |
| And ye so fair, that everich of hem alle | 170 |
| Wol peynen him to stonden in your grace. | |
| But mighte me so fair a grace falle, | |
| That ye me for your servaunt wolde calle, | |
| So lowly ne so trewely you serve | |
| Nil noon of hem, as I shal, til I sterve. | 175 |
| |
| 26. Criseide un-to that purpos lyte answerde, | |
| As she that was with sorwe oppressed so | |
| That, in effect, she nought his tales herde, | |
| But here and there, now here a word or two. | |
| Hir thoughte hir sorwful herte brast a-two. | 180 |
| For whan she gan hir fader fer aspye, | |
| Wel neigh doun of hir hors she gan to sye. | |
| |
| 27. But natheles she thonked Diomede | |
| Of al his travaile, and his goode chere, | |
| And that him liste his friendship hir to bede; | 185 |
| And she accepteth it in good manere, | |
| And wolde do fayn that is him leef and dere; | |
| And trusten him she wolde, and wel she mighte, | |
| As seyde she, and from hir hors she alighte. | |
| |
| 28. Hir fader hath hir in his armes nome, | 190 |
| And tweynty tyme he kiste his doughter swete, | |
| And seyde, O dere doughter myn, wel-come! | |
| She seyde eek, she was fayn with him to mete, | |
| And stood forth mewet, mildë, and mansuete. | |
| But here I leve hir with hir fader dwelle, | 195 |
| And forth I wol of Troilus yow telle. | |
| |
| 29. To Troye is come this woful Troilus, | |
| In sorwe aboven alle sorwes smerte, | |
| With felon look, and face dispitous. | |
| Tho sodeinly doun from his hors he sterte, | 200 |
| And thorugh his paleys, with a swollen herte, | |
| To chambre he wente; of no-thing took he hede, | |
| Ne noon to him dar speke a word for drede. | |
| |
| 30. And there his sorwes that he spared hadde | |
| He yaf an issue large, and deeth! he cryde; | 205 |
| And in his throwes frenetyk and madde | |
| He cursed Iove, Appollo, and eek Cupyde, | |
| He cursed Ceres, Bacus, and Cipryde, | |
| His burthe, him-self, his fate, and eek nature, | |
| And, save his lady, every creature. | 210 |
| |
| 31. To bedde he goth, and weyleth there and torneth | |
| In furie, as dooth he, Ixion, in helle; | |
| And in this wyse he neigh til day soiorneth. | |
| But tho bigan his herte a lyte unswelle | |
| Thorugh teres which that gonnen up to welle; | 215 |
| And pitously he cryde up-on Criseyde, | |
| And to him-self right thus he spak, and seyde: | |
| |
| 32. Wher is myn owene lady lief and dere, | |
| Wher is hir whyte brest, wher is it, where? | |
| Wher ben hir armes and hir eyen clere, | 220 |
| That yesternight this tyme with me were? | |
| Now may I wepe allone many a tere, | |
| And graspe aboute I may, but in this place, | |
| Save a pilowe, I finde nought tenbrace. | |
| |
| 33. How shal I do? Whan shal she com ayeyn? | 225 |
| I noot, allas! why leet ich hir to go? | |
| As wolde god, ich hadde as tho be sleyn! | |
| O herte myn, Criseyde, O swete fo! | |
| O lady myn, that I love and no mo! | |
| To whom for ever-mo myn herte I dowe; | 230 |
| See how I deye, ye nil me not rescowe! | |
| |
| 34. Who seeth yow now, my righte lode-sterre? | |
| Who sit right now or stant in your presence? | |
| Who can conforten now your hertes werre? | |
| Now I am gon, whom yeve ye audience? | 235 |
| Who speketh for me right now in myn absence? | |
| Allas, no wight; and that is al my care; | |
| For wel wot I, as yvel as I ye fare. | |
| |
| 35. How shulde I thus ten dayes ful endure, | |
| Whan I the firste night have al this tene? | 240 |
| How shal she doon eek, sorwful creature? | |
| For tendernesse, how shal she this sustene, | |
| Swich wo for me? O pitous, pale, and grene | |
| Shal been your fresshe wommanliche face | |
| For langour, er ye torne un-to this place. | 245 |
| |
| 36. And whan he fil in any slomeringes, | |
| Anoon biginne he sholde for to grone, | |
| And dremen of the dredfulleste thinges | |
| That mighte been; as, mete he were allone | |
| In place horrible, makinge ay his mone, | 250 |
| Or meten that he was amonges alle | |
| His enemys, and in hir hondes falle. | |
| |
| 37. And ther-with-al his body sholde sterte, | |
| And with the stert al sodeinliche awake, | |
| And swich a tremour fele aboute his herte, | 255 |
| That of the feer his body sholde quake; | |
| And there-with-al he sholde a noyse make, | |
| And seme as though he sholde falle depe | |
| From heighe a-lofte; and than he wolde wepe, | |
| |
| 38. And rewen on him-self so pitously, | 260 |
| That wonder was to here his fantasye. | |
| Another tyme he sholde mightily | |
| Conforte him-self, and seyn it was folye, | |
| So causeles swich drede for to drye, | |
| And eft biginne his aspre sorwes newe, | 265 |
| That every man mighte on his sorwes rewe. | |
| |
| 39. Who coude telle aright or ful discryve | |
| His wo, his pleynte, his langour, and his pyne? | |
| Nought al the men that han or been on-lyve. | |
| Thou, redere, mayst thy-self ful wel devyne | 270 |
| That swich a wo my wit can not defyne. | |
| On ydel for to wryte it sholde I swinke, | |
| Whan that my wit is wery it to thinke. | |
| |
| 40. On hevene yet the sterres were sene, | |
| Al-though ful pale y-waxen was the mone; | 275 |
| And whyten gan the orisonte shene | |
| Al estward, as it woned is to done. | |
| And Phebus with his rosy carte sone | |
| Gan after that to dresse him up to fare, | |
| Whan Troilus hath sent after Pandare. | 280 |
| |
| 41. This Pandare, that of al the day biforn | |
| Ne mighte have comen Troilus to see, | |
| Al-though he on his heed it hadde y-sworn, | |
| For with the king Pryam alday was he, | |
| So that it lay not in his libertee | 285 |
| No-wher to gon, but on the morwe he wente | |
| To Troilus, whan that he for him sente. | |
| |
| 42. For in his herte he coude wel devyne, | |
| That Troilus al night for sorwe wook; | |
| And that he wolde telle him of his pyne, | 290 |
| This knew he wel y-nough, with-oute book. | |
| For which to chaumbre streight the wey he took, | |
| And Troilus tho sobreliche he grette, | |
| And on the bed ful sone he gan him sette. | |
| |
| 43. My Pandarus, quod Troilus, the sorwe | 295 |
| Which that I drye, I may not longe endure. | |
| I trowe I shal not liven til to-morwe; | |
| For whiche I wolde alwey, on aventure, | |
| To thee devysen of my sepulture | |
| The forme, and of my moeble thou dispone | 300 |
| Right as thee semeth best is for to done. | |
| |
| 44. But of the fyr and flaumbe funeral | |
| In whiche my body brenne shal to glede, | |
| And of the feste and pleyes palestral | |
| At my vigile, I pray thee take good hede | 305 |
| That al be wel; and offre Mars my stede, | |
| My swerd, myn helm, and, leve brother dere, | |
| My sheld to Pallas yef, that shyneth clere. | |
| |
| 45. The poudre in which myn herte y-brend shal torne, | |
| That preye I thee thou take and it conserve | 310 |
| In a vessel, that men clepeth an urne, | |
| Of gold, and to my lady that I serve, | |
| For love of whom thus pitously I sterve, | |
| So yeve it hir, and do me this plesaunce, | |
| To preye hir kepe it for a remembraunce. | 315 |
| |
| 46. For wel I fele, by my maladye, | |
| And by my dremes now and yore ago, | |
| Al certeinly, that I mot nedes dye. | |
| The owle eek, which that hight Ascaphilo, | |
| Hath after me shright alle thise nightes two. | 320 |
| And, god Mercurie! of me now, woful wrecche, | |
| The soule gyde, and, whan thee list, it fecche! | |
| |
| 47. Pandare answerde, and seyde, Troilus, | |
| My dere freend, as I have told thee yore, | |
| That it is folye for to sorwen thus, | 325 |
| And causeles, for whiche I can no-more. | |
| But who-so wol not trowen reed ne lore, | |
| I can not seen in him no remedye, | |
| But lete him worthen with his fantasye. | |
| |
| 48. But Troilus, I pray thee tel me now, | 330 |
| If that thou trowe, er this, that any wight | |
| Hath loved paramours as wel as thou? | |
| Ye, god wot, and fro many a worthy knight | |
| Hath his lady goon a fourtenight, | |
| And he not yet made halvendel the fare. | 335 |
| What nede is thee to maken al this care? | |
| |
| 49. Sin day by day thou mayst thy-selven see | |
| That from his love, or elles from his wyf, | |
| A man mot twinnen of necessitee, | |
| Ye, though he love hir as his owene lyf; | 340 |
| Yet nil he with him-self thus maken stryf. | |
| For wel thow wost, my leve brother dere, | |
| That alwey freendes may nought been y-fere. | |
| |
| 50. How doon this folk that seen hir loves wedded | |
| By freendes might, as it bi-tit ful ofte, | 345 |
| And seen hem in hir spouses bed y-bedded? | |
| God woot, they take it wysly, faire and softe. | |
| For-why good hope halt up hir herte on-lofte, | |
| And for they can a tyme of sorwe endure; | |
| As tyme hem hurt, a tyme doth hem cure. | 350 |
| |
| 51. So sholdestow endure, and late slyde | |
| The tyme, and fonde to ben glad and light. | |
| Ten dayes nis so longe not tabyde. | |
| And sin she thee to comen hath bihight, | |
| She nil hir hestes breken for no wight. | 355 |
| For dred thee not that she nil finden weye | |
| To come ayein, my lyf that dorste I leye. | |
| |
| 52. Thy swevenes eek and al swich fantasye | |
| Dryf out, and lat hem faren to mischaunce; | |
| For they procede of thy malencolye, | 360 |
| That doth thee fele in sleep al this penaunce. | |
| A straw for alle swevenes signifiaunce! | |
| God helpe me so, I counte hem not a bene, | |
| Ther woot no man aright what dremes mene. | |
| |
| 53. For prestes of the temple tellen this, | 365 |
| That dremes been the revelaciouns | |
| Of goddes, and as wel they telle, y-wis, | |
| That they ben infernals illusiouns; | |
| And leches seyn, that of complexiouns | |
| Proceden they, or fast, or glotonye. | 370 |
| Who woot in sooth thus what they signifye? | |
| |
| 54. Eek othere seyn that thorugh impressiouns, | |
| As if a wight hath faste a thing in minde, | |
| That ther-of cometh swiche avisiouns; | |
| And othere seyn, as they in bokes finde, | 375 |
| That, after tymes of the yeer by kinde, | |
| Men dreme, and that theffect goth by the mone; | |
| But leve no dreem, for it is nought to done. | |
| |
| 55. Wel worth of dremes ay thise olde wyves, | |
| And treweliche eek augurie of thise foules; | 380 |
| For fere of which men wenen lese her lyves, | |
| As ravenes qualm, or shryking of thise oules. | |
| To trowen on it bothe fals and foul is. | |
| Allas, allas, so noble a creature | |
| As is a man, shal drede swich ordure! | 385 |
| |
| 56. For which with al myn herte I thee beseche, | |
| Un-to thy-self that al this thou foryive; | |
| And rys up now with-oute more speche, | |
| And lat us caste how forth may best be drive | |
| This tyme, and eek how freshly we may live | 390 |
| Whan that she cometh, the which shal be right sone; | |
| God help me so, the beste is thus to done. | |
| |
| 57. Rys, lat us speke of lusty lyf in Troye | |
| That we han lad, and forth the tyme dryve; | |
| And eek of tyme cominge us reioye, | 395 |
| That bringen shal our blisse now so blyve; | |
| And langour of these twyës dayes fyve | |
| We shal ther-with so foryete or oppresse, | |
| That wel unnethe it doon shal us duresse. | |
| |
| 58. This toun is ful of lordes al aboute, | 400 |
| And trewes lasten al this mene whyle. | |
| Go we pleye us in som lusty route | |
| To Sarpedon, not hennes but a myle. | |
| And thus thou shalt the tyme wel bigyle, | |
| And dryve it forth un-to that blisful morwe, | 405 |
| That thou hir see, that cause is of thy sorwe. | |
| |
| 59. Now rys, my dere brother Troilus; | |
| For certes, it noon honour is to thee | |
| To wepe, and in thy bed to iouken thus. | |
| For trewely, of o thing trust to me, | 410 |
| If thou thus ligge a day, or two, or three, | |
| The folk wol wene that thou, for cowardyse, | |
| Thee feynest syk, and that thou darst not ryse. | |
| |
| 60. This Troilus answerde, O brother dere, | |
| This knowen folk that han y-suffred peyne, | 415 |
| That though he wepe and make sorwful chere, | |
| That feleth harm and smert in every veyne, | |
| No wonder is; and though I ever pleyne, | |
| Or alwey wepe, I am no-thing to blame, | |
| Sin I have lost the cause of al my game. | 420 |
| |
| 61. But sin of fyne force I moot aryse, | |
| I shal aryse, as sone as ever I may; | |
| And god, to whom myn herte I sacrifyse, | |
| So sende us hastely the tenthe day! | |
| For was ther never fowl so fayn of May, | 425 |
| As I shal been, whan that she cometh in Troye, | |
| That cause is of my torment and my Ioye. | |
| |
| 62. But whider is thy reed, quod Troilus, | |
| That we may pleye us best in al this toun? | |
| By god, my conseil is, quod Pandarus, | 430 |
| To ryde and pleye us with king Sarpedoun. | |
| So longe of this they speken up and doun, | |
| Til Troilus gan at the laste assente | |
| To ryse, and forth to Sarpedoun they wente. | |
| |
| 63. This Sarpedoun, as he that honourable | 435 |
| Was ever his lyve, and ful of heigh prowesse, | |
| With al that mighte y-served been on table, | |
| That deyntee was, al coste it greet richesse, | |
| He fedde hem day by day, that swich noblesse, | |
| As seyden bothe the moste and eek the leste, | 440 |
| Was never er that day wist at any feste. | |
| |
| 64. Nor in this world ther is non instrument | |
| Delicious, through wind, or touche, or corde, | |
| As fer as any wight hath ever y-went, | |
| That tonge telle or herte may recorde, | 445 |
| That at that feste it nas wel herd acorde; | |
| Ne of ladies eek so fayr a companye | |
| On daunce, er tho, was never y-seyn with yë. | |
| |
| 65. But what avayleth this to Troilus, | |
| That for his sorwe no-thing of it roughte? | 450 |
| For ever in oon his herte piëtous | |
| Ful bisily Criseyde his lady soughte. | |
| On hir was ever al that his herte thoughte. | |
| Now this, now that, so faste imagininge, | |
| That glade, y-wis, can him no festeyinge. | 455 |
| |
| 66. These ladies eek that at this feste been, | |
| Sin that he saw his lady was a-weye, | |
| It was his sorwe upon hem for to seen, | |
| Or for to here on instrumentz so pleye. | |
| For she, that of his herte berth the keye, | 460 |
| Was absent, lo, this was his fantasye, | |
| That no wight sholde make melodye. | |
| |
| 67. Nor ther nas houre in al the day or night, | |
| Whan he was ther-as no wight mighte him here, | |
| That he ne seyde, O lufsom lady bright, | 465 |
| How have ye faren, sin that ye were here? | |
| Wel-come, y-wis, myn owene lady dere. | |
| But welaway, al this nas but a mase; | |
| Fortune his howve entended bet to glase. | |
| |
| 68. The lettres eek, that she of olde tyme | 470 |
| Hadde him y-sent, he wolde allone rede, | |
| An hundred sythe, a-twixen noon and pryme; | |
| Refiguringe hir shap, hir womanhede, | |
| With-inne his herte, and every word and dede | |
| That passed was, and thus he droof to an ende | 475 |
| The ferthe day, and seyde, he wolde wende. | |
| |
| 69. And seyde, leve brother Pandarus, | |
| Intendestow that we shul herë bleve | |
| Til Sarpedoun wol forth congeyen us? | |
| Yet were it fairer that we toke our leve. | 480 |
| For goddes love, lat us now sone at eve | |
| Our leve take, and homward lat us torne; | |
| For trewely, I nil not thus soiorne. | |
| |
| 70. Pandare answerde, be we comen hider | |
| To fecchen fyr, and rennen hoom ayeyn? | 485 |
| God helpe me so, I can not tellen whider | |
| We mighten goon, if I shal soothly seyn, | |
| Ther any wight is of us more fayn | |
| Than Sarpedoun; and if we hennes hye | |
| Thus sodeinly, I holde it vilanye, | 490 |
| |
| 71. Sin that we seyden that we wolde bleve | |
| With him a wouke; and now, thus sodeinly, | |
| The ferthe day to take of him our leve, | |
| He wolde wondren on it, trewely! | |
| Lat us holde forth our purpos fermely; | 495 |
| And sin that ye bihighten him to byde, | |
| Hold forward now, and after lat us ryde. | |
| |
| 72. Thus Pandarus, with alle peyne and wo, | |
| Made him to dwelle; and at the woukes ende, | |
| Of Sarpedoun they toke hir leve tho, | 500 |
| And on hir wey they spedden hem to wende. | |
| Quod Troilus, now god me grace sende, | |
| That I may finden, at myn hom-cominge, | |
| Criseyde comen! and ther-with gan he singe. | |
| |
| 73. Ye, hasel-wode! thoughte this Pandare, | 505 |
| And to him-self ful softely he seyde, | |
| God woot, refreyden may this hote fare | |
| Er Calkas sende Troilus Criseyde! | |
| But natheles, he Iaped thus, and seyde, | |
| And swor, y-wis, his herte him wel bihighte, | 510 |
| She wolde come as sone as ever she mighte. | |
| |
| 74. Whan they un-to the paleys were y-comen | |
| Of Troilus, they doun of hors alighte, | |
| And to the chambre hir wey than han they nomen. | |
| And in-to tyme that it gan to nighte, | 515 |
| They spaken of Crisëyde the brighte. | |
| And after this, whan that hem bothe leste, | |
| They spedde hem fro the soper un-to reste. | |
| |
| 75. On morwe, as sone as day bigan to clere, | |
| This Troilus gan of his sleep tabreyde, | 520 |
| And to Pandare, his owene brother dere, | |
| For love of god, ful pitously he seyde, | |
| As go we seen the paleys of Criseyde; | |
| For sin we yet may have namore feste, | |
| So lat us seen hir paleys at the leste. | 525 |
| |
| 76. And ther-with-al, his meyne for to blende, | |
| A cause he fond in toune for to go, | |
| And to Criseydes hous they gonnen wende. | |
| But lord! this sely Troilus was wo! | |
| Him thoughte his sorweful herte braste a-two. | 530 |
| For whan he saugh hir dores sperred alle, | |
| Wel neigh for sorwe a-doun he gan to falle. | |
| |
| 77. Therwith whan he was war and gan biholde | |
| How shet was every windowe of the place, | |
| As frost, him thoughte, his herte gan to colde; | 535 |
| For which with chaunged deedlich pale face, | |
| With-outen word, he forth bigan to pace; | |
| And, as god wolde, he gan so faste ryde, | |
| That no wight of his contenaunce aspyde. | |
| |
| 78. Than seyde he thus, O paleys desolat, | 540 |
| O hous, of houses whylom best y-hight, | |
| O paleys empty and disconsolat, | |
| O thou lanterne, of which queynt is the light, | |
| O paleys, whylom day, that now art night, | |
| Wel oughtestow to falle, and I to dye, | 545 |
| Sin she is went that wont was us to gye! | |
| |
| 79. O paleys, whylom croune of houses alle, | |
| Enlumined with sonne of alle blisse! | |
| O ring, fro which the ruby is out-falle, | |
| O cause of wo, that cause hast been of lisse! | 550 |
| Yet, sin I may no bet, fayn wolde I kisse | |
| Thy colde dores, dorste I for this route; | |
| And fare-wel shryne, of which the seynt is oute! | |
| |
| 80. Ther-with he caste on Pandarus his yë | |
| With chaunged face, and pitous to biholde; | 555 |
| And whan he mighte his tyme aright aspye, | |
| Ay as he rood, to Pandarus he tolde | |
| His newe sorwe, and eek his Ioyes olde, | |
| So pitously and with so dede an hewe, | |
| That every wight mighte on his sorwe rewe. | 560 |
| |
| 81. Fro thennesforth he rydeth up and doun, | |
| And every thing com him to remembraunce | |
| As he rood forth by places of the toun | |
| In whiche he whylom hadde al his plesaunce. | |
| Lo, yond saugh I myn owene lady daunce; | 565 |
| And in that temple, with hir eyen clere, | |
| Me caughte first my righte lady dere. | |
| |
| 82. And yonder have I herd ful lustily | |
| My dere herte laughe, and yonder pleye | |
| Saugh I hir ones eek ful blisfully. | 570 |
| And yonder ones to me gan she seye, | |
| Now goode swete, love me wel, I preye. | |
| And yond so goodly gan she me biholde, | |
| That to the deeth myn herte is to hir holde. | |
| |
| 83. And at that corner, in the yonder hous, | 575 |
| Herde I myn alderlevest lady dere | |
| So wommanly, with voys melodious, | |
| Singen so wel, so goodly, and so clere, | |
| That in my soule yet me thinketh I here | |
| The blisful soun; and, in that yonder place, | 580 |
| My lady first me took un-to hir grace. | |
| |
| 84. Thanne thoughte he thus, O blisful lord Cupyde, | |
| Whanne I the proces have in my memorie, | |
| How thou me hast werreyed on every syde, | |
| Men mighte a book make of it, lyk a storie. | 585 |
| What nede is thee to seke on me victorie, | |
| Sin I am thyn, and hoolly at thy wille? | |
| What Ioye hastow thyn owene folk to spille? | |
| |
| 85. Wel hastow, lord, y-wroke on me thyn ire, | |
| Thou mighty god, and dredful for to greve! | 590 |
| Now mercy, lord, thou wost wel I desire | |
| Thy grace most, of alle lustes leve. | |
| And live and deye I wol in thy bileve; | |
| For which I naxe in guerdon but a bone, | |
| That thou Criseyde ayein me sende sone. | 595 |
| |
| 86. Distreyne hir herte as faste to retorne | |
| As thou dost myn to longen hir to see; | |
| Than woot I wel, that she nil not soiorne. | |
| Now, blisful lord, so cruel thou ne be | |
| Un-to the blood of Troye, I preye thee, | 600 |
| As Iuno was un-to the blood Thebane, | |
| For which the folk of Thebes caughte hir bane. | |
| |
| 87. And after this he to the yates wente | |
| Ther-as Criseyde out-rood a ful good paas, | |
| And up and doun ther made he many a wente, | 605 |
| And to him-self ful ofte he seyde allas! | |
| From hennes rood my blisse and my solas! | |
| As wolde blisful god now, for his Ioye; | |
| I mighte hir seen ayein come in-to Troye. | |
| |
| 88. And to the yonder hille I gan hir gyde, | 610 |
| Allas! and there I took of hir my leve! | |
| And yond I saugh hir to hir fader ryde, | |
| For sorwe of which myn herte shal to-cleve. | |
| And hider hoom I com whan it was eve; | |
| And here I dwelle out-cast from alle Ioye, | 615 |
| And shal, til I may seen hir eft in Troye. | |
| |
| 89. And of him-self imagined he ofte | |
| To ben defet, and pale, and waxen lesse | |
| Than he was wont, and that men seyde softe, | |
| What may it be? who can the sothe gesse | 620 |
| Why Troilus hath al this hevinesse? | |
| And al this nas but his malencolye, | |
| That he hadde of him-self swich fantasye. | |
| |
| 90. Another tyme imaginen he wolde | |
| That every wight that wente by the weye | 625 |
| Had of him routhe, and that they seyen sholde, | |
| I am right sory Troilus wol deye. | |
| And thus he droof a day yet forth or tweye. | |
| As ye have herd, swich lyf right gan he lede, | |
| As he that stood bitwixen hope and drede. | 630 |
| |
| 91. For which him lyked in his songes shewe | |
| Thencheson of his wo, as he best mighte, | |
| And make a song of wordes but a fewe, | |
| Somwhat his woful herte for to lighte. | |
| And whan he was from every mannes sighte, | 635 |
| With softe voys he, of his lady dere, | |
| That was absent, gan singe as ye may here. | |
| |
| 92. O sterre, of which I lost have al the light, | |
| With herte soor wel oughte I to bewayle, | |
| That ever derk in torment, night by night, | 640 |
| Toward my deeth with wind in stere I sayle; | |
| For which the tenthe night if that I fayle | |
| The gyding of thy bemes brighte an houre, | |
| My ship and me Caribdis wol devoure. | |
| |
| 93. This song when he thus songen hadde, sone | 645 |
| He fil ayein in-to his sykes olde; | |
| And every night, as was his wone to done, | |
| He stood the brighte mone to beholde, | |
| And al his sorwe he to the mone tolde; | |
| And seyde, y-wis, whan thou art horned newe, | 650 |
| I shal be glad, if al the world be trewe! | |
| |
| 94. I saugh thyn hornes olde eek by the morwe, | |
| Whan hennes rood my righte lady dere, | |
| That cause is of my torment and my sorwe; | |
| For whiche, O brighte Lucina the clere, | 655 |
| For love of god, ren faste aboute thy spere! | |
| For whan thyn hornes newe ginne springe, | |
| Than shal she come, that may my blisse bringe! | |
| |
| 95. The day is more, and lenger every night, | |
| Than they be wont to be, him thoughte tho; | 660 |
| And that the sonne wente his course unright | |
| By lenger wey than it was wont to go; | |
| And seyde, y-wis, me dredeth ever-mo, | |
| The sonnes sone, Pheton, be on-lyve, | |
| And that his fadres cart amis he dryve. | 665 |
| |
| 96. Upon the walles faste eek wolde he walke, | |
| And on the Grekes ost he wolde see, | |
| And to him-self right thus he wolde talke, | |
| Lo, yonder is myn owene lady free, | |
| Or elles yonder, ther tho tentes be! | 670 |
| And thennes comth this eyr, that is so sote, | |
| That in my soule I fele it doth me bote. | |
| |
| 97. And hardely this wind, that more and more | |
| Thus stoundemele encreseth in my face, | |
| Is of my ladyes depe sykes sore. | 675 |
| I preve it thus, for in non othere place | |
| Of al this toun, save onliche in this space, | |
| Fele I no wind that souneth so lyk peyne; | |
| It seyth, allas! why twinned be we tweyne? | |
| |
| 98. This longe tyme he dryveth forth right thus, | 680 |
| Til fully passed was the nynthe night; | |
| And ay bi-syde him was this Pandarus, | |
| That bisily dide alle his fulle might | |
| Him to comforte, and make his herte light; | |
| Yevinge him hope alwey, the tenthe morwe | 685 |
| That she shal come, and stinten al his sorwe. | |
| |
| 99. Up-on that other syde eek was Criseyde, | |
| With wommen fewe, among the Grekes stronge; | |
| For which ful ofte a day allas! she seyde, | |
| That I was born! Wel may myn herte longe | 690 |
| After my deeth; for now live I to longe! | |
| Allas! and I ne may it not amende; | |
| For now is wors than ever yet I wende. | |
| |
| 100. My fader nil for no-thing do me grace | |
| To goon ayein, for nought I can him queme; | 695 |
| And if so be that I my terme passe, | |
| My Troilus shal in his herte deme | |
| That I am fals, and so it may wel seme. | |
| Thus shal I have unthank on every syde; | |
| That I was born, so weylawey the tyde! | 700 |
| |
| 101. And if that I me putte in Iupartye, | |
| To stele awey by nighte, and it bifalle | |
| That I be caught, I shal be holde a spye; | |
| Or elles, lo, this drede I most of alle, | |
| If in the hondes of som wrecche I falle, | 705 |
| I am but lost, al be myn herte trewe; | |
| Now mighty god, thou on my sorwe rewe! | |
| |
| 102. Ful pale y-waxen was hir brighte face, | |
| Hir limes lene, as she that al the day | |
| Stood whan she dorste, and loked on the place | 710 |
| Ther she was born, and ther she dwelt hadde ay. | |
| And al the night wepinge, allas! she lay. | |
| And thus despeired, out of alle cure, | |
| She ladde hir lyf, this woful creature. | |
| |
| 103. Ful ofte a day she sighte eek for destresse, | 715 |
| And in hir-self she wente ay portrayinge | |
| Of Troilus the grete worthinesse, | |
| And alle his goodly wordes recordinge | |
| Sin first that day hir love bigan to springe. | |
| And thus she sette hir woful herte a-fyre | 720 |
| Thorugh remembraunce of that she gan desyre. | |
| |
| 104. In al this world ther nis so cruel herte | |
| That hir hadde herd compleynen in hir sorwe, | |
| That nolde han wopen for hir peynes smerte, | |
| So tendrely she weep, bothe eve and morwe. | 725 |
| Hir nedede no teres for to borwe. | |
| And this was yet the worste of al hir peyne, | |
| Ther was no wight to whom she dorste hir pleyne. | |
| |
| 105. Ful rewfully she loked up-on Troye, | |
| Biheld the toures heighe and eek the halles; | 730 |
| Allas! quod she, the plesaunce and the Ioye | |
| The whiche that now al torned in-to galle is, | |
| Have I had ofte with-inne yonder walles! | |
| O Troilus, what dostow now, she seyde; | |
| Lord! whether yet thou thenke up-on Criseyde? | 735 |
| |
| 106. Allas! I ne hadde trowed on your lore, | |
| And went with yow, as ye me radde er this! | |
| Thanne hadde I now not syked half so sore. | |
| Who mighte have seyd, that I had doon a-mis | |
| To stele awey with swich on as he is? | 740 |
| But al to late cometh the letuarie, | |
| Whan men the cors un-to the grave carie. | |
| |
| 107. To late is now to speke of this matere; | |
| Prudence, allas! oon of thyn eyen three | |
| Me lakked alwey, er that I cam here; | 745 |
| On tyme y-passed, wel remembred me; | |
| And present tyme eek coude I wel y-see. | |
| But futur tyme, er I was in the snare, | |
| Coude I not seen; that causeth now my care. | |
| |
| 108. But natheles, bityde what bityde, | 750 |
| I shal to-morwe at night, by est or weste, | |
| Out of this ost stele on som maner syde, | |
| And go with Troilus wher-as him leste. | |
| This purpos wol I holde, and this is beste. | |
| No fors of wikked tonges Ianglerye, | 755 |
| For ever on love han wrecches had envye. | |
| |
| 109. For who-so wole of every word take hede, | |
| Or rewlen him by every wightes wit, | |
| Ne shal he never thryven, out of drede. | |
| For that that som men blamen ever yit, | 760 |
| Lo, other maner folk commenden it. | |
| And as for me, for al swich variaunce, | |
| Felicitee clepe I my suffisaunce. | |
| |
| 110. For which, with-outen any wordes mo, | |
| To Troye I wol, as for conclusioun. | 765 |
| But god it wot, er fully monthes two, | |
| She was ful fer fro that entencioun. | |
| For bothe Troilus and Troye toun | |
| Shal knotteles through-out hir herte slyde; | |
| For she wol take a purpos for tabyde. | 770 |
| |
| 111. This Diomede, of whom yow telle I gan, | |
| Goth now, with-inne him-self ay arguinge | |
| With al the sleighte and al that ever he can, | |
| How he may best, with shortest taryinge, | |
| In-to his net Criseydes herte bringe. | 775 |
| To this entente he coude never fyne; | |
| To fisshen hir, he leyde out hook and lyne. | |
| |
| 112. But natheles, wel in his herte he thoughte, | |
| That she nas nat with-oute a love in Troye. | |
| For never, sithen he hir thennes broughte, | 780 |
| Ne coude he seen her laughe or make Ioye. | |
| He niste how best hir herte for tacoye. | |
| But for to assaye, he seyde, it nought ne greveth; | |
| For he that nought nassayeth, nought nacheveth. | |
| |
| 113. Yet seide he to him-self upon a night, | 785 |
| Now am I not a fool, that woot wel how | |
| Hir wo for love is of another wight, | |
| And here-up-on to goon assaye hir now? | |
| I may wel wite, it nil not been my prow. | |
| For wyse folk in bokes it expresse, | 790 |
| Men shal not wowe a wight in hevinesse. | |
| |
| 114. But who-so mighte winnen swich a flour | |
| From him, for whom she morneth night and day, | |
| He mighte seyn, he were a conquerour. | |
| And right anoon, as he that bold was ay, | 795 |
| Thoughte in his herte, happe, how happe may, | |
| Al sholde I deye, I wole hir herte seche; | |
| I shal no more lesen but my speche. | |
| |
| 115. This Diomede, as bokes us declare, | |
| Was in his nedes prest and corageous; | 800 |
| With sterne voys and mighty limes square, | |
| Hardy, testif, strong, and chevalrous | |
| Of dedes, lyk his fader Tideus. | |
| And som men seyn, he was of tunge large; | |
| And heir he was of Calidoine and Arge. | 805 |
| |
| 116. Criseyde mene was of hir stature, | |
| Ther-to of shap, of face, and eek of chere, | |
| Ther mighte been no fairer creature. | |
| And ofte tyme this was hir manere, | |
| To gon y-tressed with hir heres clere | 810 |
| Doun by hir coler at hir bak bihinde, | |
| Which with a threde of gold she wolde binde. | |
| |
| 117. And, save hir browes ioyneden y-fere, | |
| Ther nas no lak, in ought I can espyen; | |
| But for to speken of hir eyen clere, | 815 |
| Lo, trewely, they writen that hir syen, | |
| That Paradys stood formed in hir yën. | |
| And with hir riche beautee ever-more | |
| Strof love in hir, ay which of hem was more. | |
| |
| 118. She sobre was, eek simple, and wys with-al, | 820 |
| The beste y-norisshed eek that mighte be, | |
| And goodly of hir speche in general, | |
| Charitable, estatliche, lusty, and free; | |
| Ne never-mo ne lakkede hir pitee; | |
| Tendre-herted, slydinge of corage; | 825 |
| But trewely, I can not telle hir age. | |
| |
| 119. And Troilus wel waxen was in highte, | |
| And complet formed by proporcioun | |
| So wel, that kinde it not amenden mighte; | |
| Yong, fresshe, strong, and hardy as lyoun; | 830 |
| Trewe as steel in ech condicioun; | |
| On of the beste enteched creature, | |
| That is, or shal, whyl that the world may dure. | |
| |
| 120. And certainly in storie it is y-founde, | |
| That Troilus was never un-to no wight, | 835 |
| As in his tyme, in no degree secounde | |
| In durring don that longeth to a knight. | |
| Al mighte a geaunt passen him of might, | |
| His herte ay with the firste and with the beste | |
| Stod paregal, to durre don that him leste. | 840 |
| |
| 121. But for to tellen forth of Diomede: | |
| It fil that after, on the tenthe day, | |
| Sin that Criseyde out of the citee yede, | |
| This Diomede, as fresshe as braunche in May, | |
| Com to the tente ther-as Calkas lay, | 845 |
| And feyned him with Calkas han to done; | |
| But what he mente, I shal yow telle sone. | |
| |
| 122. Criseyde, at shorte wordes for to telle, | |
| Welcomed him, and doun by hir him sette; | |
| And he was ethe y-nough to maken dwelle. | 850 |
| And after this, with-outen longe lette, | |
| The spyces and the wyn men forth hem fette; | |
| And forth they speke of this and that y-fere, | |
| As freendes doon, of which som shal ye here. | |
| |
| 123. He gan first fallen of the werre in speche | 855 |
| Bitwixe hem and the folk of Troye toun; | |
| And of thassege he gan hir eek byseche, | |
| To telle him what was hir opinioun. | |
| Fro that demaunde he so descendeth doun | |
| To asken hir, if that hir straunge thoughte | 860 |
| The Grekes gyse, and werkes that they wroughte? | |
| |
| 124. And why hir fader tarieth so longe | |
| To wedden hir un-to som worthy wight? | |
| Criseyde, that was in hir peynes stronge | |
| For love of Troilus, hir owene knight, | 865 |
| As fer-forth as she conning hadde or might, | |
| Answerde him tho; but, as of his entente, | |
| It semed not she wiste what he mente. | |
| |
| 125. But natheles, this ilke Diomede | |
| Gan in him-self assure, and thus he seyde, | 870 |
| If ich aright have taken of yow hede, | |
| Me thinketh thus, O lady myn, Criseyde, | |
| That sin I first hond on your brydel leyde, | |
| Whan ye out come of Troye by the morwe, | |
| Ne coude I never seen yow but in sorwe. | 875 |
| |
| 126. Can I not seyn what may the cause be | |
| But-if for love of som Troyan it were, | |
| The which right sore wolde athinken me | |
| That ye, for any wight that dwelleth there, | |
| Sholden spille a quarter of a tere, | 880 |
| Or pitously your-selven so bigyle; | |
| For dredelees, it is nought worth the whyle. | |
| |
| 127. The folk of Troye, as who seyth, alle and some | |
| In preson been, as ye your-selven see; | |
| For thennes shal not oon on-lyve come | 885 |
| For al the gold bitwixen sonne and see. | |
| Trusteth wel, and understondeth me, | |
| Ther shal not oon to mercy goon on-lyve, | |
| Al were he lord of worldes twyës fyve! | |
| |
| 128. Swich wreche on hem, for fecching of Eleyne, | 890 |
| Ther shal be take, er that we hennes wende, | |
| That Manes, which that goddes ben of peyne, | |
| Shal been agast that Grekes wol hem shende. | |
| And men shul drede, un-to the worldes ende, | |
| From hennes-forth to ravisshe any quene, | 895 |
| So cruel shal our wreche on hem be sene. | |
| |
| 129. And but-if Calkas lede us with ambages, | |
| That is to seyn, with double wordes slye, | |
| Swich as men clepe a word with two visages, | |
| Ye shul wel knowen that I nought ne lye, | 900 |
| And al this thing right seen it with your yë, | |
| And that anoon; ye nil not trowe how sone; | |
| Now taketh heed, for it is for to done. | |
| |
| 130. What wene ye your wyse fader wolde | |
| Han yeven Antenor for yow anoon, | 905 |
| If he ne wiste that the citee sholde | |
| Destroyed been? Why, nay, so mote I goon! | |
| He knew ful wel ther shal not scapen oon | |
| That Troyan is; and for the grete fere, | |
| He dorste not, ye dwelte lenger there. | 910 |
| |
| 131. What wole ye more, lufsom lady dere? | |
| Lat Troye and Troyan fro your herte pace! | |
| Dryf out that bittre hope, and make good chere, | |
| And clepe ayein the beautee of your face, | |
| That ye with salte teres so deface. | 915 |
| For Troye is brought in swich a Iupartye, | |
| That, it to save, is now no remedye. | |
| |
| 132. And thenketh wel, ye shal in Grekes finde | |
| A more parfit love, er it be night, | |
| Than any Troyan is, and more kinde, | 920 |
| And bet to serven yow wol doon his might. | |
| And if ye vouche sauf, my lady bright, | |
| I wol ben he to serven yow my-selve, | |
| Ye, lever than be lord of Greces twelve! | |
| |
| 133. And with that word he gan to waxen reed, | 925 |
| And in his speche a litel wight he quook, | |
| And caste a-syde a litel wight his heed, | |
| And stinte a whyle; and afterward awook, | |
| And sobreliche on hir he threw his look, | |
| And seyde, I am, al be it yow no Ioye, | 930 |
| As gentil man as any wight in Troye. | |
| |
| 134. For if my fader Tydeus, he seyde, | |
| Y-lived hadde, I hadde been, er this, | |
| Of Calidoine and Arge a king, Criseyde! | |
| And so hope I that I shal yet, y-wis. | 935 |
| But he was slayn, allas! the more harm is, | |
| Unhappily at Thebes al to rathe, | |
| Polymites and many a man to scathe. | |
| |
| 135. But herte myn, sin that I am your man, | |
| And been the ferste of whom I seche grace, | 940 |
| To serven you as hertely as I can, | |
| And ever shal, whyl I to live have space, | |
| So, er that I departe out of this place, | |
| Ye wol me graunte, that I may to-morwe, | |
| At bettre leyser, telle yow my sorwe. | 945 |
| |
| 136. What shold I telle his wordes that he seyde? | |
| He spak y-now, for o day at the meste; | |
| It preveth wel, he spak so that Criseyde | |
| Graunted, on the morwe, at his requeste, | |
| For to speken with him at the leste, | 950 |
| So that he nolde speke of swich matere; | |
| And thus to him she seyde, as ye may here: | |
| |
| 137. As she that hadde hir herte on Troilus | |
| So faste, that ther may it noon arace; | |
| And straungely she spak, and seyde thus: | 955 |
| O Diomede, I love that ilke place | |
| Ther I was born; and Ioves, for his grace, | |
| Delivere it sone of al that doth it care! | |
| God, for thy might, so leve it wel to fare! | |
| |
| 138. That Grekes wolde hir wraththe on Troye wreke, | 960 |
| If that they mighte, I knowe it wel, y-wis. | |
| But it shal not bifallen as ye speke; | |
| And god to-forn, and ferther over this, | |
| I wot my fader wys and redy is; | |
| And that he me hath bought, as ye me tolde, | 965 |
| So dere, I am the more un-to him holde. | |
| |
| 139. That Grekes been of heigh condicioun, | |
| I woot eek wel; but certein, men shal finde | |
| As worthy folk with-inne Troye toun, | |
| As conning, and as parfit and as kinde, | 970 |
| As been bitwixen Orcades and Inde. | |
| And that ye coude wel your lady serve, | |
| I trowe eek wel, hir thank for to deserve. | |
| |
| 140. But as to speke of love, y-wis, she seyde, | |
| I hadde a lord, to whom I wedded was, | 975 |
| The whos myn herte al was, til that he deyde; | |
| And other love, as helpe me now Pallas, | |
| Ther in myn herte nis, ne never was. | |
| And that ye been of noble and heigh kinrede, | |
| I have wel herd it tellen, out of drede. | 980 |
| |
| 141. And that doth me to han so gret a wonder, | |
| That ye wol scornen any womman so. | |
| Eek, god wot, love and I be fer a-sonder; | |
| I am disposed bet, so mote I go, | |
| Un-to my deeth, to pleyne and maken wo. | 985 |
| What I shal after doon, I can not seye; | |
| But trewely, as yet me list not pleye. | |
| |
| 142. Myn herte is now in tribulacioun, | |
| And ye in armes bisy, day by day. | |
| Here-after, whan ye wonnen han the toun, | 990 |
| Paraunter, thanne so it happen may, | |
| That whan I see that I never er say, | |
| Than wole I werke that I never wroughte! | |
| This word to yow y-nough suffysen oughte. | |
| |
| 143. To-morwe eek wol I speke with yow fayn, | 995 |
| So that ye touchen nought of this matere. | |
| And whan yow list, ye may come here ayeyn; | |
| And, er ye gon, thus muche I seye yow here: | |
| As helpe me Pallas with hir heres clere, | |
| If that I sholde of any Greek han routhe, | 1000 |
| It sholde be your-selven, by my trouthe! | |
| |
| 144. I sey not therfore that I wol yow love, | |
| Ne I sey not nay, but in conclusioun, | |
| I mene wel, by god that sit above: | |
| And ther-with-al she caste hir eyen doun, | 1005 |
| And gan to syke, and seyde, O Troye toun, | |
| Yet bidde I god, in quiete and in reste | |
| I may yow seen, or do myn herte breste. | |
| |
| 145. But in effect, and shortly for to seye, | |
| This Diomede al freshly newe ayeyn | 1010 |
| Gan pressen on, and faste hir mercy preye; | |
| And after this, the sothe for to seyn, | |
| Hir glove he took, of which he was ful fayn. | |
| And fynally, whan it was waxen eve, | |
| And al was wel, he roos and took his leve. | 1015 |
| |
| 146. The brighte Venus folwede and ay taughte | |
| The wey, ther brode Phebus doun alighte; | |
| And Cynthea hir char-hors over-raughte | |
| To whirle out of the Lyon, if she mighte; | |
| And Signifer his candeles shewed brighte, | 1020 |
| Whan that Criseyde un-to hir bedde wente | |
| In-with hir fadres faire brighte tente. | |
| |
| 147. Retorning in hir soule ay up and doun | |
| The wordes of this sodein Diomede, | |
| His greet estat, and peril of the toun, | 1025 |
| And that she was allone and hadde nede | |
| Of freendes help; and thus bigan to brede | |
| The cause why, the sothe for to telle, | |
| That she tok fully purpos for to dwelle. | |
| |
| 148. The morwe com, and goostly for to speke, | 1030 |
| This Diomede is come un-to Criseyde, | |
| And shortly, lest that ye my tale breke, | |
| So wel he for him-selve spak and seyde, | |
| That alle hir sykes sore adoun he leyde. | |
| And fynally, the sothe for to seyne, | 1035 |
| He refte hir of the grete of al hir peyne. | |
| |
| 149. And after this the story telleth us, | |
| That she him yaf the faire baye stede, | |
| The which she ones wan of Troilus; | |
| And eek a broche (and that was litel nede) | 1040 |
| That Troilus was, she yaf this Diomede. | |
| And eek, the bet from sorwe him to releve, | |
| She made him were a pencel of hir sleve. | |
| |
| 150. I finde eek in the stories elles-where, | |
| Whan through the body hurt was Diomede | 1045 |
| Of Troilus, tho weep she many a tere, | |
| Whan that she saugh his wyde woundes blede; | |
| And that she took to kepen him good hede, | |
| And for to hele him of his sorwes smerte. | |
| Men seyn, I not, that she yaf him hir herte. | 1050 |
| |
| 151. But trewely, the story telleth us, | |
| Ther made never womman more wo | |
| Than she, whan that she falsed Troilus. | |
| She seyde, allas! for now is clene a-go | |
| My name of trouthe in love, for ever-mo! | 1055 |
| For I have falsed oon, the gentileste | |
| That ever was, and oon the worthieste! | |
| |
| 152. Allas, of me, un-to the worldes ende, | |
| Shal neither been y-writen nor y-songe | |
| No good word, for thise bokes wol me shende. | 1060 |
| O, rolled shal I been on many a tonge; | |
| Through-out the world my belle shal be ronge; | |
| And wommen most wol hate me of alle. | |
| Allas, that swich a cas me sholde falle! | |
| |
| 153. They wol seyn, in as muche as in me is, | 1065 |
| I have hem don dishonour, weylawey! | |
| Al be I not the firste that dide amis, | |
| What helpeth that to do my blame awey? | |
| But sin I see there is no bettre way, | |
| And that to late is now for me to rewe, | 1070 |
| To Diomede algate I wol be trewe. | |
| |
| 154. But Troilus, sin I no better may, | |
| And sin that thus departen ye and I, | |
| Yet preye I god, so yeve yow right good day | |
| As for the gentileste, trewely, | 1075 |
| That ever I say, to serven feithfully, | |
| And best can ay his lady honour kepe: | |
| And with that word she brast anon to wepe. | |
| |
| 155. And certes, yow ne haten shal I never, | |
| And freendes love, that shal ye han of me, | 1080 |
| And my good word, al mighte I liven ever. | |
| And, trewely, I wolde sory be | |
| For to seen yow in adversitee. | |
| And giltelees, I woot wel, I yow leve; | |
| But al shal passe; and thus take I my leve. | 1085 |
| |
| 156. But trewely, how longe it was bitwene, | |
| That she for-sook him for this Diomede, | |
| Ther is non auctor telleth it, I wene. | |
| Take every man now to his bokes hede; | |
| He shal no terme finden, out of drede. | 1090 |
| For though that he bigan to wowe hir sone, | |
| Er he hir wan, yet was ther more to done. | |
| |
| 157. Ne me ne list this sely womman chyde | |
| Ferther than the story wol devyse. | |
| Hir name, allas! is publisshed so wyde, | 1095 |
| That for hir gilt it oughte y-now suffyse. | |
| And if I mighte excuse hir any wyse, | |
| For she so sory was for hir untrouthe, | |
| Y-wis, I wolde excuse hir yet for routhe. | |
| |
| 158. This Troilus, as I biforn have told, | 1100 |
| Thus dryveth forth, as wel as he hath might. | |
| But often was his herte hoot and cold, | |
| And namely, that ilke nynthe night, | |
| Which on the morwe she hadde him byhight | |
| To come ayein: god wot, ful litel reste | 1105 |
| Hadde he that night; no-thing to slepe him leste. | |
| |
| 159. The laurer-crouned Phebus, with his hete, | |
| Gan, in his course ay upward as he wente, | |
| To warmen of the est see the wawes wete; | |
| And Nisus doughter song with fresh entente, | 1110 |
| Whan Troilus his Pandare after sente; | |
| And on the walles of the toun they pleyde, | |
| To loke if they can seen ought of Criseyde. | |
| |
| 160. Til it was noon, they stoden for to see | |
| Who that ther come; and every maner wight, | 1115 |
| That cam fro fer, they seyden it was she, | |
| Til that they coude knowen him a-right. | |
| Now was his herte dul, now was it light; | |
| And thus by-iaped stonden for to stare | |
| Aboute nought, this Troilus and Pandare. | 1120 |
| |
| 161. To Pandarus this Troilus tho seyde, | |
| For ought I wot, bi-for noon, sikerly, | |
| In-to this toun ne comth nought here Criseyde. | |
| She hath y-now to done, hardily, | |
| To winnen from hir fader, so trowe I; | 1125 |
| Hir olde fader wol yet make hir dyne | |
| Er that she go; god yeve his herte pyne! | |
| |
| 162. Pandare answerde, it may wel be, certeyn; | |
| And for-thy lat us dyne, I thee biseche; | |
| And after noon than mayst thou come ayeyn. | 1130 |
| And hoom they go, with-oute more speche; | |
| And comen ayein, but longe may they seche | |
| Er that they finde that they after cape; | |
| Fortune hem bothe thenketh for to Iape. | |
| |
| 163. Quod Troilus, I see wel now, that she | 1135 |
| Is taried with hir olde fader so, | |
| That er she come, it wol neigh even be. | |
| Com forth, I wol un-to the yate go. | |
| Thise portours been unkonninge ever-mo; | |
| And I wol doon hem holden up the yate | 1140 |
| As nought ne were, al-though she come late. | |
| |
| 164. The day goth faste, and after that comth eve, | |
| And yet com nought to Troilus Criseyde. | |
| He loketh forth by hegge, by tree, by greve, | |
| And fer his heed over the wal he leyde. | 1145 |
| And at the laste he torned him, and seyde, | |
| By god, I woot hir mening now, Pandare! | |
| Al-most, y-wis, al newe was my care. | |
| |
| 165. Now douteles, this lady can hir good; | |
| I woot, she meneth ryden prively. | 1150 |
| I comende hir wysdom, by myn hood! | |
| She wol not maken peple nycely | |
| Gaure on hir, whan she comth; but softely | |
| By nighte in-to the toun she thenketh ryde. | |
| And, dere brother, thenk not longe to abyde. | 1155 |
| |
| 166. We han nought elles for to don, y-wis. | |
| And Pandarus, now woltow trowen me? | |
| Have here my trouthe, I see hir! yond she is. | |
| Heve up thyn eyen, man! maystow not see? | |
| Pandare answerde, nay, so mote I thee! | 1160 |
| Al wrong, by god; what seystow, man, wher art? | |
| That I see yond nis but a fare-cart. | |
| |
| 167. Allas, thou seist right sooth, quod Troilus; | |
| But hardely, it is not al for nought | |
| That in myn herte I now reioyse thus. | 1165 |
| It is ayein som good I have a thought. | |
| Noot I not how, but sin that I was wrought, | |
| Ne felte I swich a confort, dar I seye; | |
| She comth to-night, my lyf, that dorste I leye! | |
| |
| 168. Pandare answerde, it may be wel, y-nough; | 1170 |
| And held with him of al that ever he seyde; | |
| But in his herte he thoughte, and softe lough, | |
| And to him-self ful sobrely he seyde: | |
| From hasel-wode, ther Ioly Robin pleyde, | |
| Shal come al that that thou abydest here; | 1175 |
| Ye, fare-wel al the snow of ferne yere! | |
| |
| 169. The wardein of the yates gan to calle | |
| The folk which that with-oute the yates were, | |
| And bad hem dryven in hir bestes alle, | |
| Or al the night they moste bleven there. | 1180 |
| And fer with-in the night, with many a tere, | |
| This Troilus gan hoomward for to ryde; | |
| For wel he seeth it helpeth nought tabyde. | |
| |
| 170. But natheles, he gladded him in this; | |
| He thoughte he misacounted hadde his day, | 1185 |
| And seyde, I understonde have al a-mis. | |
| For thilke night I last Criseyde say, | |
| She seyde, I shal ben here, if that I may, | |
| Er that the mone, O dere herte swete! | |
| The Lyon passe, out of this Ariete. | 1190 |
| |
| 171. For which she may yet holde al hir biheste. | |
| And on the morwe un-to the yate he wente, | |
| And up and down, by west and eek by este, | |
| Up-on the walles made he many a wente. | |
| But al for nought; his hope alwey him blente; | 1195 |
| For which at night, in sorwe and sykes sore | |
| He wente him hoom, with-outen any more. | |
| |
| 172. This hope al clene out of his herte fledde, | |
| He nath wher-on now lenger for to honge; | |
| But for the peyne him thoughte his herte bledde, | 1200 |
| So were his throwes sharpe and wonder stronge. | |
| For when he saugh that she abood so longe, | |
| He niste what he iuggen of it mighte, | |
| Sin she hath broken that she him bihighte. | |
| |
| 173. The thridde, ferthe, fifte, sixte day | 1205 |
| After tho dayes ten, of which I tolde, | |
| Bitwixen hope and drede his herte lay, | |
| Yet som-what trustinge on hir hestes olde. | |
| But whan he saugh she nolde hir terme holde, | |
| He can now seen non other remedye, | 1210 |
| But for to shape him sone for to dye. | |
| |
| 174. Ther-with the wikked spirit, god us blesse, | |
| Which that men clepeth wode Ialousye, | |
| Gan in him crepe, in al this hevinesse; | |
| For which, by-cause he wolde sone dye, | 1215 |
| He ne eet ne dronk, for his malencolye, | |
| And eek from every companye he fledde; | |
| This was the lyf that al the tyme he ledde. | |
| |
| 175. He so defet was, that no maner man | |
| Unnethe mighte him knowe ther he wente; | 1220 |
| So was he lene, and ther-to pale and wan, | |
| And feble, that he walketh by potente; | |
| And with his ire he thus him-selven shente. | |
| And who-so axed him wher-of him smerte, | |
| He seyde, his harm was al aboute his herte. | 1225 |
| |
| 176. Pryam ful ofte, and eek his moder dere, | |
| His bretheren and his sustren gonne him freyne | |
| Why he so sorwful was in al his chere, | |
| And what thing was the cause of al his peyne? | |
| But al for nought; he nolde his cause pleyne, | 1230 |
| But seyde, he felte a grevous maladye | |
| A-boute his herte, and fayn he wolde dye. | |
| |
| 177. So on a day he leyde him doun to slepe, | |
| And so bifel that in his sleep him thoughte, | |
| That in a forest faste he welk to wepe | 1235 |
| For love of hir that him these peynes wroughte; | |
| And up and doun as he the forest soughte, | |
| He mette he saugh a boor with tuskes grete, | |
| That sleep ayein the brighte sonnes hete. | |
| |
| 178. And by this boor, faste in his armes folde, | 1240 |
| Lay kissing ay his lady bright Criseyde: | |
| For sorwe of which, whan he it gan biholde, | |
| And for despyt, out of his slepe he breyde, | |
| And loude he cryde on Pandarus, and seyde, | |
| O Pandarus, now knowe I crop and rote! | 1245 |
| I nam but deed, ther nis non other bote! | |
| |
| 179. My lady bright Criseyde hath me bitrayed, | |
| In whom I trusted most of any wight, | |
| She elles-where hath now hir herte apayed; | |
| The blisful goddes, through hir grete might, | 1250 |
| Han in my dreem y-shewed it ful right. | |
| Thus in my dreem Criseyde I have biholde | |
| And al this thing to Pandarus he tolde. | |
| |
| 180. O my Criseyde, allas! what subtiltee, | |
| What newe lust, what beautee, what science, | 1255 |
| What wratthe of iuste cause have ye to me? | |
| What gilt of me, whal fel experience | |
| Hath fro me raft, allas! thyn advertence? | |
| O trust, O feyth, O depe asëuraunce, | |
| Who hath me reft Criseyde, al my plesaunce? | 1260 |
| |
| 181. Allas! why leet I you from hennes go, | |
| For which wel neigh out of my wit I breyde? | |
| Who shal now trowe on any othes mo? | |
| God wot I wende, O lady bright, Criseyde, | |
| That every word was gospel that ye seyde! | 1265 |
| But who may bet bigylen, if him liste, | |
| Than he on whom men weneth best to triste? | |
| |
| 182. What shal I doon, my Pandarus, allas! | |
| I fele now so sharpe a newe peyne, | |
| Sin that ther is no remedie in this cas, | 1270 |
| That bet were it I with myn hondes tweyne | |
| My-selven slow, than alwey thus to pleyne. | |
| For through my deeth my wo sholde han an ende, | |
| Ther every day with lyf my-self I shende. | |
| |
| 183. Pandare answerde and seyde, allas the whyle | 1275 |
| That I was born; have I not seyd er this, | |
| That dremes many a maner man bigyle? | |
| And why? for folk expounden hem a-mis. | |
| How darstow seyn that fals thy lady is, | |
| For any dreem, right for thyn owene drede? | 1280 |
| Lat be this thought, thou canst no dremes rede. | |
| |
| 184. Paraunter, ther thou dremest of this boor, | |
| It may so be that it may signifye | |
| Hir fader, which that old is and eek hoor, | |
| Ayein the sonne lyth, on poynt to dye, | 1285 |
| And she for sorwe ginneth wepe and crye, | |
| And kisseth him, ther he lyth on the grounde; | |
| Thus shuldestow thy dreem a-right expounde. | |
| |
| 185. How mighte I thanne do? quod Troilus, | |
| To knowe of this, ye, were it never so lyte? | 1290 |
| Now seystow wysly, quod this Pandarus, | |
| My reed is this, sin thou canst wel endyte, | |
| That hastely a lettre thou hir wryte, | |
| Thorugh which thou shalt wel bringen it aboute, | |
| To knowe a sooth of that thou art in doute. | 1295 |
| |
| 186. And see now why; for this I dar wel seyn, | |
| That if so is that she untrewe be, | |
| I can not trowe that she wol wryte ayeyn. | |
| And if she wryte, thou shalt ful sone see, | |
| As whether she hath any libertee | 1300 |
| To come ayein, or elles in som clause, | |
| If she be let, she wol assigne a cause. | |
| |
| 187. Thou hast not writen hir sin that she wente, | |
| Nor she to thee, and this I dorste leye, | |
| Ther may swich cause been in hir entente, | 1305 |
| That hardely thou wolt thy-selven seye, | |
| That hir a-bood the beste is for yow tweye. | |
| Now wryte hir thanne, and thou shalt fele sone | |
| A sothe of al; ther is no more to done. | |
| |
| 188. Acorded been to this conclusioun, | 1310 |
| And that anoon, these ilke lordes two; | |
| And hastely sit Troilus adoun, | |
| And rolleth in his herte to and fro, | |
| How he may best discryven hir his wo. | |
| And to Criseyde, his owene lady dere, | 1315 |
| He wroot right thus, and seyde as ye may here. | |
| |
| 189. Right fresshe flour, whos I have been and shal, | |
| With-outen part of elles-where servyse, | |
| With herte, body, lyf, lust, thought, and al; | |
| I, woful wight, in every humble wyse | 1320 |
| That tonge telle or herte may devyse, | |
| As ofte as matere occupyeth place, | |
| Me recomaunde un-to your noble grace. | |
| |
| 190. Lyketh it yow to witen, swete herte, | |
| As ye wel knowe how longe tyme agoon | 1325 |
| That ye me lafte in aspre peynes smerte, | |
| Whan that ye wente, of which yet bote noon | |
| Have I non had, but ever wers bigoon | |
| Fro day to day am I, and so mot dwelle, | |
| While it yow list, of wele and wo my welle! | 1330 |
| |
| 191. For which to yow, with dredful herte trewe, | |
| I wryte, as he that sorwe dryfth to wryte, | |
| My wo, that every houre encreseth newe, | |
| Compleyninge as I dar or can endyte. | |
| And that defaced is, that may ye wyte | 1335 |
| The teres, which that fro myn eyen reyne, | |
| That wolde speke, if that they coude, and pleyne. | |
| |
| 192. Yow first biseche I, that your eyen clere | |
| To look on this defouled ye not holde; | |
| And over al this, that ye, my lady dere, | 1340 |
| Wol vouche-sauf this lettre to biholde. | |
| And by the cause eek of my cares colde, | |
| That sleeth my wit, if ought amis me asterte, | |
| For-yeve it me, myn owene swete herte. | |
| |
| 193. If any servant dorste or oughte of right | 1345 |
| Up-on his lady pitously compleyne, | |
| Than wene I, that ich oughte be that wight, | |
| Considered this, that ye these monthes tweyne | |
| Han taried, ther ye seyden, sooth to seyne, | |
| But dayes ten ye nolde in ost soiourne, | 1350 |
| But in two monthes yet ye not retourne. | |
| |
| 194. But for-as-muche as me mot nedes lyke | |
| Al that yow list, I dar not pleyne more, | |
| But humbely with sorwful sykes syke; | |
| Yow wryte ich myn unresty sorwes sore, | 1355 |
| Fro day to day desyring ever-more | |
| To knowen fully, if your wil it were, | |
| How ye han ferd and doon, whyl ye be there. | |
| |
| 195. The whos wel-fare and hele eek god encresse | |
| In honour swich, that upward in degree | 1360 |
| It growe alwey, so that it never cesse; | |
| Right as your herte ay can, my lady free, | |
| Devyse, I prey to god so mote it be. | |
| And graunte it that ye sone up-on me rewe | |
| As wisly as in al I am yow trewe. | 1365 |
| |
| 196. And if yow lyketh knowen of the fare | |
| Of me, whos wo ther may no wight discryve, | |
| I can no more but, cheste of every care, | |
| At wrytinge of this lettre I was on-lyve, | |
| Al redy out my woful gost to dryve; | 1370 |
| Which I delaye, and holde him yet in honde, | |
| Upon the sight of matere of your sonde. | |
| |
| 197. Myn eyen two, in veyn with which I see, | |
| Of sorweful teres salte arn waxen welles; | |
| My song, in pleynte of myn adversitee; | 1375 |
| My good, in harm; myn ese eek waxen helle is. | |
| My Ioye, in wo; I can sey yow nought elles, | |
| But turned is, for which my lyf I warie, | |
| Everich Ioye or ese in his contrarie. | |
| |
| 198. Which with your cominge hoom ayein to Troye | 1380 |
| Ye may redresse, and, more a thousand sythe | |
| Than ever ich hadde, encressen in me Ioye. | |
| For was ther never herte yet so blythe | |
| To han his lyf, as I shal been as swythe | |
| As I yow see; and, though no maner routhe | 1385 |
| Commeve yow, yet thinketh on your trouthe. | |
| |
| 199. And if so be my gilt hath deeth deserved, | |
| Or if you list no more up-on me see, | |
| In guerdon yet of that I have you served, | |
| Biseche I yow, myn hertes lady free, | 1390 |
| That here-upon ye wolden wryte me, | |
| For love of god, my righte lode-sterre, | |
| Ther deeth may make an ende of al my werre. | |
| |
| 200. If other cause aught doth yow for to dwelle, | |
| That with your lettre ye me recomforte; | 1395 |
| For though to me your absence is an helle, | |
| With pacience I wol my wo comporte. | |
| And with your lettre of hope I wol desporte. | |
| Now wryteth, swete, and lat me thus not pleyne; | |
| With hope, or deeth, delivereth me fro peyne. | 1400 |
| |
| 201. Y-wis, myn owene dere herte trewe, | |
| I woot that, whan ye next up-on me see, | |
| So lost have I myn hele and eek myn hewe, | |
| Criseyde shal nought conne knowe me! | |
| Y-wis, myn hertes day, my lady free, | 1405 |
| So thursteth ay myn herte to biholde | |
| Your beautee, that my lyf unnethe I holde. | |
| |
| 202. I sey no more, al have I for to seye | |
| To you wel more than I telle may; | |
| But whether that ye do me live or deye, | 1410 |
| Yet pray I god, so yeve yow right good day. | |
| And fareth wel, goodly fayre fresshe may, | |
| As ye that lyf or deeth me may comaunde; | |
| And to your trouthe ay I me recomaunde | |
| |
| 203. With hele swich that, but ye yeven me | 1415 |
| The same hele, I shal noon hele have. | |
| In you lyth, whan yow list that it so be, | |
| The day in which me clothen shal my grave. | |
| In yow my lyf, in yow might for to save | |
| Me from disese of alle peynes smerte; | 1420 |
| And fare now wel, myn owene swete herte! Le vostre T. | |
| |
| 204. This lettre forth was sent un-to Criseyde, | |
| Of which hir answere in effect was this; | |
| Ful pitously she wroot ayein, and seyde, | |
| That al-so sone as that she might, y-wis, | 1425 |
| She wolde come, and mende al that was mis. | |
| And fynally she wroot and seyde him thanne, | |
| She wolde come, ye, but she niste whanne. | |
| |
| 205. But in hir lettre made she swich festes, | |
| That wonder was, and swereth she loveth him best, | 1430 |
| Of which he fond but botmelees bihestes. | |
| But Troilus, thou mayst now, est or west, | |
| Pype in an ivy leef, if that thee lest; | |
| Thus gooth the world; god shilde us fro mischaunce, | |
| And every wight that meneth trouthe avaunce! | 1435 |
| |
| 206. Encresen gan the wo fro day to night | |
| Of Troilus, for taryinge of Criseyde; | |
| And lessen gan his hope and eek his might, | |
| For which al doun he in his bed him leyde; | |
| He ne eet, ne dronk, ne sleep, ne word he seyde, | 1440 |
| Imagininge ay that she was unkinde; | |
| For which wel neigh he wex out of his minde. | |
| |
| 207. This dreem, of which I told have eek biforn, | |
| May never come out of his remembraunce; | |
| He thoughte ay wel he hadde his lady lorn, | 1445 |
| And that Ioves, of his purveyaunce, | |
| Him shewed hadde in sleep the signifiaunce | |
| Of hir untrouthe and his disaventure, | |
| And that the boor was shewed him in figure. | |
| |
| 208. For which he for Sibille his suster sente, | 1450 |
| That called was Cassandre eek al aboute; | |
| And al his dreem he tolde hir er he stente, | |
| And hir bisoughte assoilen him the doute | |
| Of the stronge boor, with tuskes stoute; | |
| And fynally, with-inne a litel stounde, | 1455 |
| Cassandre him gan right thus his dreem expounde. | |
| |
| 209. She gan first smyle, and seyde, O brother dere, | |
| If thou a sooth of this desyrest knowe, | |
| Thou most a fewe of olde stories here, | |
| To purpos, how that fortune over-throwe | 1460 |
| Hath lordes olde; through which, with-inne a throwe, | |
| Thou wel this boor shalt knowe, and of what kinde | |
| He comen is, as men in bokes finde. | |
| |
| 210. Diane, which that wrooth was and in ire | |
| For Grekes nolde doon hir sacrifyse, | 1465 |
| Ne encens up-on hir auter sette a-fyre, | |
| She, for that Grekes gonne hir so dispyse, | |
| Wrak hir in a wonder cruel wyse. | |
| For with a boor as greet as oxe in stalle | |
| She made up frete hir corn and vynes alle. | 1470 |
| |
| 211. To slee this boor was al the contree reysed, | |
| A-monges which ther com, this boor to see, | |
| A mayde, oon of this world the best y-preysed; | |
| And Meleagre, lord of that contree, | |
| He lovede so this fresshe mayden free | 1475 |
| That with his manhod, er he wolde stente, | |
| This boor he slow, and hir the heed he sente; | |
| |
| 212. Of which, as olde bokes tellen us, | |
| Ther roos a contek and a greet envye; | |
| And of this lord descended Tydeus | 1480 |
| By ligne, or elles olde bokes lye; | |
| But how this Meleagre gan to dye | |
| Thorugh his moder, wol I yow not telle, | |
For al to long it were for to dwelle.
| | [Argument of the 12 Books of Statius Thebais.] |
| |
| Associat profugum Tideo primus Polimitem; |
| Tidea legatum docet insidiasque secundus; |
| Tercius Hemoniden canit et vates latitantes; |
| Quartus habet reges ineuntes prelia septem; |
| Mox furie Lenne quinto narratur et anguis; |
| Archimori bustum sexto ludique leguntur; |
| Dat Graios Thebes et vatem septimus vmbris; |
| Octauo cecidit Tideus, spes, vita Pelasgis; |
| Ypomedon nono moritur cum Parthonopeo; |
| Fulmine percussus, decimo Capaneus superatur; |
| Vndecimo sese perimunt per vulnera fratres; |
| Argiuam flentem narrat duodenus et ignem. |
| |
| |
| 213. She toldë eek how Tydeus, er she stente, | 1485 |
| Un-to the stronge citee of Thebes, | |
| To cleyme kingdom of the citee, wente, | |
| For his felawe, daun Polymites, | |
| Of which the brother, daun Ethyocles, | |
| Ful wrongfully of Thebes held the strengthe; | 1490 |
| This tolde she by proces, al by lengthe. | |
| |
| 214. She tolde eek how Hemonides asterte, | |
| Whan Tydeus slough fifty knightes stoute. | |
| She told eek al the prophesyes by herte, | |
| And how that sevene kinges, with hir route, | 1495 |
| Bisegeden the citee al aboute; | |
| And of the holy serpent, and the welle, | |
| And of the furies, al she gan him telle. | |
| |
| 215. Of Archimoris buryinge and the pleyes, | |
| And how Amphiorax fil through the grounde, | 1500 |
| How Tydeus was slayn, lord of Argeyes, | |
| And how Ypomedoun in litel stounde | |
| Was dreynt, and deed Parthonope of wounde; | |
| And also how Cappanëus the proude | |
| With thonder-dint was slayn, that cryde loude. | 1505 |
| |
| 216. She gan eek telle him how that either brother, | |
| Ethyocles and Polimyte also, | |
| At a scarmyche, eche of hem slough other, | |
| And of Argyves wepinge and hir wo; | |
| And how the town was brent she tolde eek tho. | 1510 |
| And so descendeth doun from gestes olde | |
| To Diomede, and thus she spak and tolde. | |
| |
| 217. This ilke boor bitokneth Diomede, | |
| Tydeus sone, that doun descended is | |
| Fro Meleagre, that made the boor to blede. | 1515 |
| And thy lady, wher-so she be, y-wis, | |
| This Diomede hir herte hath, and she his. | |
| Weep if thou wolt, or leef; for, out of doute, | |
| This Diomede is inne, and thou art oute. | |
| |
| 218. Thou seyst nat sooth, quod he, thou sorceresse, | 1520 |
| With al thy false goost of prophesye! | |
| Thou wenest been a greet devyneresse; | |
| Now seestow not this fool of fantasye | |
| Peyneth hir on ladyes for to lye? | |
| Awey, quod he, ther Ioves yeve thee sorwe! | 1525 |
| Thou shalt be fals, paraunter, yet to-morwe! | |
| |
| 219. As wel thou mightest lyen on Alceste, | |
| That was of creatures, but men lye, | |
| That ever weren, kindest and the beste. | |
| For whanne hir housbonde was in Iupartye | 1530 |
| To dye him-self, but-if she wolde dye, | |
| She chees for him to dye and go to helle, | |
| And starf anoon, as us the bokes telle. | |
| |
| 220. Cassandre goth, and he with cruel herte | |
| For-yat his wo, for angre of hir speche; | 1535 |
| And from his bed al sodeinly he sterte, | |
| As though al hool him hadde y-mad a leche. | |
| And day by day he gan enquere and seche | |
| A sooth of this, with al his fulle cure; | |
| And thus he dryeth forth his aventure. | 1540 |
| |
| 221. Fortune, whiche that permutacioun | |
| Of thinges hath, as it is hir committed | |
| Through purveyaunce and disposicioun | |
| Of heighe Iove, as regnes shal ben flitted | |
| Fro folk in folk, or whan they shal ben smitted, | 1545 |
| Gan pulle awey the fetheres brighte of Troye | |
| Fro day to day, til they ben bare of Ioye. | |
| |
| 222. Among al this, the fyn of the parodie | |
| Of Ector gan approchen wonder blyve; | |
| The fate wolde his soule sholde unbodie, | 1550 |
| And shapen hadde a mene it out to dryve; | |
| Ayeins which fate him helpeth not to stryve; | |
| But on a day to fighten gan he wende, | |
| At which, allas! he caughte his lyves ende. | |
| |
| 223. For which me thinketh every maner wight | 1555 |
| That haunteth armes oughte to biwayle | |
| The deeth of him that was so noble a knight; | |
| For as he drough a king by thaventayle, | |
| Unwar of this, Achilles through the mayle | |
| And through the body gan him for to ryve; | 1560 |
| And thus this worthy knight was brought of lyve. | |
| |
| 224. For whom, as olde bokes tellen us, | |
| Was mad swich wo, that tonge it may not telle; | |
| And namely, the sorwe of Troilus, | |
| That next him was of worthinesse welle. | 1565 |
| And in this wo gan Troilus to dwelle, | |
| That, what for sorwe, and love, and for unreste, | |
| Ful ofte a day he bad his herte breste. | |
| |
| 225. But natheles, though he gan him dispeyre, | |
| And dradde ay that his lady was untrewe, | 1570 |
| Yet ay on hir his herte gan repeyre. | |
| And as these loveres doon, he soughte ay newe | |
| To gete ayein Criseyde, bright of hewe. | |
| And in his herte he wente hir excusinge, | |
| That Calkas causede al hir taryinge. | 1575 |
| |
| 226. And ofte tyme he was in purpos grete | |
| Him-selven lyk a pilgrim to disgyse, | |
| To seen hir; but he may not contrefete | |
| To been unknowen of folk that weren wyse, | |
| Ne finde excuse aright that may suffyse, | 1580 |
| If he among the Grekes knowen were; | |
| For which he weep ful ofte many a tere. | |
| |
| 227. To hir he wroot yet ofte tyme al newe | |
| Ful pitously, he lefte it nought for slouthe, | |
| Biseching hir that, sin that he was trewe, | 1585 |
| She wolde come ayein and holde hir trouthe. | |
| For which Criseyde up-on a day, for routhe, | |
| I take it so, touchinge al this matere, | |
| Wrot him ayein, and seyde as ye may here. | |
| |
| 228. Cupydes sone, ensample of goodlihede, | 1590 |
| O swerd of knighthod, sours of gentilesse! | |
| How mighte a wight in torment and in drede | |
| And helelees, yow sende as yet gladnesse? | |
| I hertelees, I syke, I in distresse; | |
| Sin ye with me, nor I with yow may dele, | 1595 |
| Yow neither sende ich herte may nor hele. | |
| |
| 229. Your lettres ful, the papir al y-pleynted, | |
| Conseyved hath myn hertes piëtee; | |
| I have eek seyn with teres al depeynted | |
| Your lettre, and how that ye requeren me | 1600 |
| To come ayein, which yet ne may not be. | |
| But why, lest that this lettre founden were, | |
| No mencioun ne make I now, for fere. | |
| |
| 230. Grevous to me, god woot, is your unreste, | |
| Your haste, and that, the goddes ordenaunce, | 1605 |
| It semeth not ye take it for the beste. | |
| Nor other thing nis in your remembraunce, | |
| As thinketh me, but only your plesaunce. | |
| But beth not wrooth, and that I yow biseche; | |
| For that I tarie, is al for wikked speche. | 1610 |
| |
| 231. For I have herd wel more than I wende, | |
| Touchinge us two, how thinges han y-stonde; | |
| Which I shal with dissimulinge amende. | |
| And beth nought wrooth, I have eek understonde, | |
| How ye ne doon but holden me in honde. | 1615 |
| But now no fors, I can not in yow gesse | |
| But alle trouthe and alle gentilesse. | |
| |
| 232. Comen I wol, but yet in swich disioynte | |
| I stonde as now, that what yeer or what day | |
| That this shal be, that can I not apoynte. | 1620 |
| But in effect, I prey yow, as I may, | |
| Of your good word and of your frendship ay. | |
| For trewely, whyl that my lyf may dure, | |
| As for a freend, ye may in me assure. | |
| |
| 233. Yet preye I yow on yvel ye ne take, | 1625 |
| That it is short which that I to yow wryte; | |
| I dar not, ther I am, wel lettres make, | |
| Ne never yet ne coude I wel endyte. | |
| Eek greet effect men wryte in place lyte. | |
| Thentente is al, and nought the lettres space; | 1630 |
| And fareth now wel, god have you in his grace! Le vostre C. | |
| |
| 234. This Troilus this lettre thoughte al straunge, | |
| Whan he it saugh, and sorwefully he sighte; | |
| Him thoughte it lyk a kalendes of chaunge; | |
| But fynally, he ful ne trowen mighte | 1635 |
| That she ne wolde him holden that she highte; | |
| For with ful yvel wil list him to leve | |
| That loveth wel, in swich cas, though him greve. | |
| |
| 235. But natheles, men seyn that, at the laste, | |
| For any thing, men shal the sothe see; | 1640 |
| And swich a cas bitidde, and that as faste, | |
| That Troilus wel understood that she | |
| Nas not so kinde as that hir oughte be. | |
| And fynally, he woot now, out of doute, | |
| That al is lost that he hath been aboute. | 1645 |
| |
| 236. Stood on a day in his malencolye | |
| This Troilus, and in suspecioun | |
| Of hir for whom he wende for to dye. | |
| And so bifel, that through-out Troye toun, | |
| As was the gyse, y-bore was up and doun | 1650 |
| A maner cote-armure, as seyth the storie, | |
| Biforn Deiphebe, in signe of his victorie, | |
| |
| 237. The whiche cote, as telleth Lollius, | |
| Deiphebe it hadde y-rent from Diomede | |
| The same day; and whan this Troilus | 1655 |
| It saugh, he gan to taken of it hede, | |
| Avysing of the lengthe and of the brede, | |
| And al the werk; but as he gan biholde, | |
| Ful sodeinly his herte gan to colde, | |
| |
| 238. As he that on the coler fond with-inne | 1660 |
| A broche, that he Criseyde yaf that morwe | |
| That she from Troye moste nedes twinne, | |
| In remembraunce of him and of his sorwe; | |
| And she him leyde ayein hir feyth to borwe | |
| To kepe it ay; but now, ful wel he wiste, | 1665 |
| His lady nas no lenger on to triste. | |
| |
| 239. He gooth him hoom, and gan ful sone sende | |
| For Pandarus; and al this newe chaunce, | |
| And of this broche, he tolde him word and ende, | |
| Compleyninge of hir hertes variaunce, | 1670 |
| His longe love, his trouthe, and his penaunce; | |
| And after deeth, with-outen wordes more, | |
| Ful faste he cryde, his reste him to restore. | |
| |
| 240. Than spak he thus, O lady myn Criseyde, | |
| Wher is your feyth, and wher is your biheste? | 1675 |
| Wher is your love, wher is your trouthe, he seyde; | |
| Of Diomede have ye now al this feste! | |
| Allas, I wolde have trowed at the leste, | |
| That, sin ye nolde in trouthe to me stonde, | |
| That ye thus nolde han holden me in honde! | 1680 |
| |
| 241. Who shal now trowe on any othes mo? | |
| Allas, I never wolde han wend, er this, | |
| That ye, Criseyde, coude han chaunged so; | |
| Ne, but I hadde a-gilt and doon amis, | |
| So cruel wende I not your herte, y-wis, | 1685 |
| To slee me thus; allas, your name of trouthe | |
| Is now for-doon, and that is al my routhe. | |
| |
| 242. Was ther non other broche yow liste lete | |
| To feffe with your newe love, quod he, | |
| But thilke broche that I, with teres wete, | 1690 |
| Yow yaf, as for a remembraunce of me? | |
| Non other cause, allas, ne hadde ye | |
| But for despyt, and eek for that ye mente | |
| Al-outrely to shewen your entente! | |
| |
| 243. Through which I see that clene out of your minde | 1695 |
| Ye han me cast, and I ne can nor may, | |
| For al this world, with-in myn herte finde | |
| To unloven yow a quarter of a day! | |
| In cursed tyme I born was, weylaway! | |
| That ye, that doon me al this wo endure, | 1700 |
| Yet love I best of any creature. | |
| |
| 244. Now god, quod he, me sende yet the grace | |
| That I may meten with this Diomede! | |
| And trewely, if I have might and space, | |
| Yet shal I make, I hope, his sydes blede. | 1705 |
| O god, quod he, that oughtest taken hede | |
| To fortheren trouthe, and wronges to punyce, | |
| Why niltow doon a vengeaunce on this vyce? | |
| |
| 245. O Pandare, that in dremes for to triste | |
| Me blamed hast, and wont art ofte up-breyde, | 1710 |
| Now maystow see thy-selve, if that thee liste, | |
| How trewe is now thy nece, bright Criseyde! | |
| In sondry formes, god it woot, he seyde, | |
| The goddes shewen bothe Ioye and tene | |
| In slepe, and by my dreme it is now sene. | 1715 |
| |
| 246. And certaynly, with-oute more speche, | |
| From hennes-forth, as ferforth as I may, | |
| Myn owene deeth in armes wol I seche; | |
| I recche not how sone be the day! | |
| But trewely, Criseyde, swete may, | 1720 |
| Whom I have ay with al my might y-served, | |
| That ye thus doon, I have it nought deserved. | |
| |
| 247. This Pandarus, that alle these thinges herde, | |
| And wiste wel he seyde a sooth of this, | |
| He nought a word ayein to him answerde; | 1725 |
| For sory of his frendes sorwe he is, | |
| And shamed, for his nece hath doon a-mis; | |
| And stant, astoned of these causes tweye, | |
| As stille as stoon; a word ne coude he seye. | |
| |
| 248. But at the laste thus he spak, and seyde, | 1730 |
| My brother dere, I may thee do no-more. | |
| What shulde I seyn? I hate, y-wis, Criseyde! | |
| And god wot, I wol hate hir evermore! | |
| And that thou me bisoughtest doon of yore, | |
| Havinge un-to myn honour ne my reste | 1735 |
| Right no reward, I dide al that thee leste. | |
| |
| 249. If I dide ought that mighte lyken thee, | |
| It is me leef; and of this treson now, | |
| God woot, that it a sorwe is un-to me! | |
| And dredelees, for hertes ese of yow, | 1740 |
| Right fayn wolde I amende it, wiste I how. | |
| And fro this world, almighty god I preye, | |
| Delivere hir sone; I can no-more seye. | |
| |
| 250. Gret was the sorwe and pleynt of Troilus; | |
| But forth hir cours fortune ay gan to holde. | 1745 |
| Criseyde loveth the sone of Tydeus, | |
| And Troilus mot wepe in cares colde. | |
| Swich is this world; who-so it can biholde, | |
| In eche estat is litel hertes reste; | |
| God leve us for to take it for the beste! | 1750 |
| |
| 251. In many cruel batayle, out of drede, | |
| Of Troilus, this ilke noble knight, | |
| As men may in these olde bokes rede, | |
| Was sene his knighthod and his grete might. | |
| And dredelees, his ire, day and night, | 1755 |
| Ful cruelly the Grekes ay aboughte; | |
| And alwey most this Diomede he soughte. | |
| |
| 252. And ofte tyme, I finde that they mette | |
| With blody strokes and with wordes grete, | |
| Assayinge how hir speres weren whette; | 1760 |
| And god it woot, with many a cruel hete | |
| Gan Troilus upon his helm to-bete. | |
| But natheles, fortune it nought ne wolde, | |
| Of otheres hond that either deyen sholde. | |
| |
| 253. And if I hadde y-taken for to wryte | 1765 |
| The armes of this ilke worthy man, | |
| Than wolde I of his batailles endyte. | |
| But for that I to wryte first bigan | |
| Of his love, I have seyd as that I can. | |
| His worthy dedes, who-so list hem here, | 1770 |
| Reed Dares, he can telle hem alle y-fere. | |
| |
| 254. Bisechinge every lady bright of hewe, | |
| And every gentil womman, what she be, | |
| That al be that Criseyde was untrewe, | |
| That for that gilt she be not wrooth with me. | 1775 |
| Ye may hir gilt in othere bokes see; | |
| And gladlier I wol wryten, if yow leste, | |
| Penelopeës trouthe and good Alceste. | |
| |
| 255. Ne I sey not this al-only for these men, | |
| But most for wommen that bitraysed be | 1780 |
| Through false folk; god yeve hem sorwe, amen! | |
| That with hir grete wit and subtiltee | |
| Bitrayse yow! and this commeveth me | |
| To speke, and in effect yow alle I preye, | |
| Beth war of men, and herkeneth what I seye! | 1785 |
| |
| 256. Go, litel book, go litel myn tregedie, | |
| Ther god thy maker yet, er that he dye, | |
| So sende might to make in som comedie! | |
| But litel book, no making thou nenvye, | |
| But subgit be to alle poesye; | 1790 |
| And kis the steppes, wher-as thou seest pace | |
| Virgile, Ovyde, Omer, Lucan, and Stace. | |
| |
| 257. And for ther is so greet diversitee | |
| In English and in wryting of our tonge, | |
| So preye I god that noon miswryte thee, | 1795 |
| Ne thee mismetre for defaute of tonge. | |
| And red wher-so thou be, or elles songe, | |
| That thou be understonde I god beseche! | |
| But yet to purpos of my rather speche. | |
| |
| 258. The wraththe, as I began yow for to seye, | 1800 |
| Of Troilus, the Grekes boughten dere; | |
| For thousandes his hondes maden deye, | |
| As he that was with-outen any pere, | |
| Save Ector, in his tyme, as I can here. | |
| But weylaway, save only goddes wille, | 1805 |
| Dispitously him slough the fiers Achille. | |
| |
| 259. And whan that he was slayn in this manere, | |
| His lighte goost ful blisfully is went | |
| Up to the holownesse of the seventh spere, | |
| In convers letinge every element; | 1810 |
| And ther he saugh, with ful avysement, | |
| The erratik sterres, herkeninge armonye | |
| With sownes fulle of hevenish melodye. | |
| |
| 260. And doun from thennes faste he gan avyse | |
| This litel spot of erthe, that with the see | 1815 |
| Enbraced is, and fully gan despyse | |
| This wrecched world, and held al vanitee | |
| To respect of the pleyn felicitee | |
| That is in hevene above; and at the laste, | |
| Ther he was slayn, his loking doun he caste; | 1820 |
| |
| 261. And in him-self he lough right at the wo | |
| Of hem that wepten for his deeth so faste; | |
| And dampned al our werk that folweth so | |
| The blinde lust, the which that may not laste, | |
| And sholden al our herte on hevene caste. | 1825 |
| And forth he wente, shortly for to telle, | |
| Ther as Mercurie sorted him to dwelle. | |
| |
| 262. Swich fyn hath, lo, this Troilus for love, | |
| Swich fyn hath al his grete worthinesse; | |
| Swich fyn hath his estat real above, | 1830 |
| Swich fyn his lust, swich fyn hath his noblesse; | |
| Swich fyn hath false worldes brotelnesse. | |
| And thus bigan his lovinge of Criseyde, | |
| As I have told, and in this wyse he deyde. | |
| |
| 263. O yonge fresshe folkes, he or she, | 1835 |
| In which that love up groweth with your age, | |
| Repeyreth hoom from worldly vanitee, | |
| And of your herte up-casteth the visage | |
| To thilke god that after his image | |
| Yow made, and thinketh al nis but a fayre | 1840 |
| This world, that passeth sone as floures fayre. | |
| |
| 264. And loveth him, the which that right for love | |
| Upon a cros, our soules for to beye, | |
| First starf, and roos, and sit in hevene a-bove; | |
| For he nil falsen no wight, dar I seye, | 1845 |
| That wol his herte al hoolly on him leye. | |
| And sin he best to love is, and most meke, | |
| What nedeth feyned loves for to seke? | |
| |
| 265. Lo here, of Payens corsed olde rytes, | |
| Lo here, what alle hir goddes may availle; | 1850 |
| Lo here, these wrecched worldes appetytes; | |
| Lo here, the fyn and guerdon for travaille | |
| Of Iove, Appollo, of Mars, of swich rascaille! | |
| Lo here, the forme of olde clerkes speche | |
| In poetrye, if ye hir bokes seche. | 1855 |
| |
| 266. O moral Gower, this book I directe | |
| To thee, and to the philosophical Strode, | |
| To vouchen sauf, ther nede is, to corecte, | |
| Of your benignitees and zeles gode. | |
| And to that sothfast Crist, that starf on rode, | 1860 |
| With al myn herte of mercy ever I preye; | |
| And to the lord right thus I speke and seye: | |
| |
| 267. Thou oon, and two, and three, eterne on-lyve, | |
| That regnest ay in three and two and oon, | |
| Uncircumscript, and al mayst circumscryve, | 1865 |
| Us from visible and invisible foon | |
| Defende; and to thy mercy, everichoon, | |
| So make us, Iesus, for thy grace digne, | |
For love of mayde and moder thyn benigne! Amen.
Explicit Liber Troili et Criseydis. | |
| |