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Here biginneth the Tale of the Wyf of Bathe. IN tholde dayes of the king Arthour, | |
| Of which that Britons speken greet honour, | |
| Al was this land fulfild of fayerye. | |
| The elf-queen, with hir Ioly companye, | |
| Daunced ful ofte in many a grene mede; | 5 |
| This was the olde opinion, as I rede. | |
| I speke of manye hundred yeres ago; | |
| But now can no man see none elves mo. | |
| For now the grete charitee and prayeres | |
| Of limitours and othere holy freres, | 10 |
| That serchen every lond and every streem, | |
| As thikke as motes in the sonne-beem, | |
| Blessinge halles, chambres, kichenes, boures, | |
| Citees, burghes, castels, hye toures, | |
| Thropes, bernes, shipnes, dayeryes, | 15 |
| This maketh that ther been no fayeryes. | |
| For ther as wont to walken was an elf, | |
| Ther walketh now the limitour him-self | |
| In undermeles and in morweninges, | |
| And seyth his matins and his holy thinges | 20 |
| As he goth in his limitacioun. | |
| Wommen may go saufly up and doun, | |
| In every bush, or under every tree; | |
| Ther is noon other incubus but he, | |
| And he ne wol doon hem but dishonour. | 25 |
| And so bifel it, that this king Arthour | |
| Hadde in his hous a lusty bacheler, | |
| That on a day cam rydinge fro river; | |
| And happed that, allone as she was born, | |
| He saugh a mayde walkinge him biforn, | 30 |
| Of whiche mayde anon, maugree hir heed, | |
| By verray force he rafte hir maydenheed; | |
| For which oppressioun was swich clamour | |
| And swich pursute un-to the king Arthour, | |
| That dampned was this knight for to be deed | 35 |
| By cours of lawe, and sholde han lost his heed | |
| Paraventure, swich was the statut tho; | |
| But that the quene and othere ladies mo | |
| So longe preyeden the king of grace, | |
| Til he his lyf him graunted in the place, | 40 |
| And yaf him to the quene al at hir wille, | |
| To chese, whether she wolde him save or spille. | |
| The quene thanketh the king with al hir might, | |
| And after this thus spak she to the knight, | |
| Whan that she saugh hir tyme, up-on a day: | 45 |
| Thou standest yet, quod she, in swich array, | |
| That of thy lyf yet hastow no suretee. | |
| I grante thee lyf, if thou canst tellen me | |
| What thing is it that wommen most desyren? | |
| Be war, and keep thy nekke-boon from yren. | 50 |
| And if thou canst nat tellen it anon, | |
| Yet wol I yeve thee leve for to gon | |
| A twelf-month and a day, to seche and lere | |
| An answere suffisant in this matere. | |
| And suretee wol I han, er that thou pace, | 55 |
| Thy body for to yelden in this place. | |
| Wo was this knight and sorwefully he syketh; | |
| But what! he may nat do al as him lyketh. | |
| And at the laste, he chees him for to wende, | |
| And come agayn, right at the yeres ende, | 60 |
| With swich answere as god wolde him purveye; | |
| And taketh his leve, and wendeth forth his weye. | |
| He seketh every hous and every place, | |
| Wher-as he hopeth for to finde grace, | |
| To lerne, what thing wommen loven most; | 65 |
| But he ne coude arryven in no cost, | |
| Wher-as he mighte finde in this matere | |
| Two creatures accordinge in-fere. | |
| Somme seyde, wommen loven best richesse, | |
| Somme seyde, honour, somme seyde, Iolynesse; | 70 |
| Somme, riche array, somme seyden, lust abedde, | |
| And ofte tyme to be widwe and wedde. | |
| Somme seyde, that our hertes been most esed, | |
| Whan that we been y-flatered and y-plesed. | |
| He gooth ful ny the sothe, I wol nat lye; | 75 |
| A man shal winne us best with flaterye; | |
| And with attendance, and with bisinesse, | |
| Been we y-lymed, bothe more and lesse. | |
| And somme seyn, how that we loven best | |
| For to be free, and do right as us lest, | 80 |
| And that no man repreve us of our vyce, | |
| But seye that we be wyse, and no-thing nyce. | |
| For trewely, ther is noon of us alle, | |
| If any wight wol clawe us on the galle, | |
| That we nil kike, for he seith us sooth; | 85 |
| Assay, and he shal finde it that so dooth. | |
| For be we never so vicious with-inne, | |
| We wol been holden wyse, and clene of sinne. | |
| And somme seyn, that greet delyt han we | |
| For to ben holden stable and eek secree, | 90 |
| And in o purpos stedefastly to dwelle, | |
| And nat biwreye thing that men us telle. | |
| But that tale is nat worth a rake-stele; | |
| Pardee, we wommen conne no-thing hele; | |
| Witnesse on Myda; wol ye here the tale? | 95 |
| Ovyde, amonges othere thinges smale, | |
| Seyde, Myda hadde, under his longe heres, | |
| Growinge up-on his heed two asses eres, | |
| The which vyce he hidde, as he best mighte, | |
| Ful subtilly from every mannes sighte, | 100 |
| That, save his wyf, ther wiste of it na-mo. | |
| He loved hir most, and trusted hir also; | |
| He preyede hir, that to no creature | |
| She sholde tellen of his disfigure. | |
| She swoor him nay, for al this world to winne, | 105 |
| She nolde do that vileinye or sinne, | |
| To make hir housbond han so foul a name; | |
| She nolde nat telle it for hir owene shame. | |
| But nathelees, hir thoughte that she dyde, | |
| That she so longe sholde a conseil hyde; | 110 |
| Hir thoughte it swal so sore aboute hir herte, | |
| That nedely som word hir moste asterte; | |
| And sith she dorste telle it to no man, | |
| Doun to a mareys faste by she ran; | |
| Til she came there, hir herte was a-fyre, | 115 |
| And, as a bitore bombleth in the myre, | |
| She leyde hir mouth un-to the water doun: | |
| Biwreye me nat, thou water, with thy soun, | |
| Quod she, to thee I telle it, and namo; | |
| Myn housbond hath longe asses eres two! | 120 |
| Now is myn herte all hool, now is it oute; | |
| I mighte no lenger kepe it, out of doute. | |
| Heer may ye se, thogh we a tyme abyde, | |
| Yet out it moot, we can no conseil hyde; | |
| The remenant of the tale if ye wol here, | 125 |
| Redeth Ovyde, and ther ye may it lere. | |
| This knight, of which my tale is specially, | |
| Whan that he saugh he mighte nat come therby, | |
| This is to seye, what wommen loven moost, | |
| With-inne his brest ful sorweful was the goost; | 130 |
| But hoom he gooth, he mighte nat soiourne. | |
| The day was come, that hoomward moste he tourne, | |
| And in his wey it happed him to ryde, | |
| In al this care, under a forest-syde, | |
| Wher-as he saugh up-on a daunce go | 135 |
| Of ladies foure and twenty, and yet mo; | |
| Toward the whiche daunce he drow ful yerne, | |
| In hope that som wisdom sholde he lerne. | |
| But certeinly, er he came fully there, | |
| Vanisshed was this daunce, he niste where. | 140 |
| No creature saugh he that bar lyf, | |
| Save on the grene he saugh sittinge a wyf; | |
| A fouler wight ther may no man devyse. | |
| Agayn the knight this olde wyf gan ryse, | |
| And seyde, sir knight, heer-forth ne lyth no wey. | 145 |
| Tel me, what that ye seken, by your fey? | |
| Paraventure it may the bettre be; | |
| Thise olde folk can muchel thing, quod she. | |
| My leve mooder, quod this knight certeyn, | |
| I nam but deed, but-if that I can seyn | 150 |
| What thing it is that wommen most desyre; | |
| Coude ye me wisse, I wolde wel quyte your hyre. | |
| Plighte me thy trouthe, heer in myn hand, quod she, | |
| The nexte thing that I requere thee, | |
| Thou shalt it do, if it lye in thy might; | 155 |
| And I wol telle it yow er it be night. | |
| Have heer my trouthe, quod the knight, I grante. | |
| Thanne, quod she, I dar me wel avante, | |
| Thy lyf is sauf, for I wol stonde therby, | |
| Up-on my lyf, the queen wol seye as I. | 160 |
| Lat see which is the proudeste of hem alle, | |
| That wereth on a coverchief or a calle, | |
| That dar seye nay, of that I shal thee teche; | |
| Lat us go forth with-outen lenger speche. | |
| Tho rouned she a pistel in his ere, | 165 |
| And bad him to be glad, and have no fere. | |
| Whan they be comen to the court, this knight | |
| Seyde, he had holde his day, as he hadde hight, | |
| And redy was his answere, as he sayde. | |
| Ful many a noble wyf, and many a mayde, | 170 |
| And many a widwe, for that they ben wyse, | |
| The quene hir-self sittinge as a Iustyse, | |
| Assembled been, his answere for to here; | |
| And afterward this knight was bode appere. | |
| To every wight comanded was silence, | 175 |
| And that the knight sholde telle in audience, | |
| What thing that worldly wommen loven best. | |
| This knight ne stood nat stille as doth a best, | |
| But to his questioun anon answerde | |
| With manly voys, that al the court it herde: | 180 |
| My lige lady, generally, quod he, | |
| Wommen desyren to have sovereyntee | |
| As wel over hir housbond as hir love, | |
| And for to been in maistrie him above; | |
| This is your moste desyr, thogh ye me kille, | 185 |
| Doth as yow list, I am heer at your wille. | |
| In al the court ne was ther wyf ne mayde, | |
| Ne widwe, that contraried that he sayde, | |
| But seyden, he was worthy han his lyf. | |
| And with that word up stirte the olde wyf, | 190 |
| Which that the knight saugh sittinge in the grene: | |
| Mercy, quod she, my sovereyn lady quene! | |
| Er that your court departe, do me right. | |
| I taughte this answere un-to the knight; | |
| For which he plighte me his trouthe there, | 195 |
| The firste thing I wolde of him requere, | |
| He wolde it do, if it lay in his might. | |
| Bifore the court than preye I thee, sir knight, | |
| Quod she, that thou me take un-to thy wyf; | |
| For wel thou wost that I have kept thy lyf. | 200 |
| If I sey fals, sey nay, up-on thy fey! | |
| This knight answerde, allas! and weylawey! | |
| I woot right wel that swich was my biheste. | |
| For goddes love, as chees a newe requeste; | |
| Tak al my good, and lat my body go. | 205 |
| Nay than, quod she, I shrewe us bothe two! | |
| For thogh that I be foul, and old, and pore, | |
| I nolde for al the metal, ne for ore, | |
| That under erthe is grave, or lyth above, | |
| But-if thy wyf I were, and eek thy love. | 210 |
| My love? quod he; nay, my dampnacioun! | |
| Allas! that any of my nacioun | |
| Sholde ever so foule disparaged be! | |
| But al for noght, the ende is this, that he | |
| Constreyned was, he nedes moste hir wedde; | 215 |
| And taketh his olde wyf, and gooth to bedde. | |
| Now wolden som men seye, paraventure, | |
| That, for my necligence, I do no cure | |
| To tellen yow the Ioye and al tharray | |
| That at the feste was that ilke day. | 220 |
| To whiche thing shortly answere I shal; | |
| I seye, ther nas no Ioye ne feste at al, | |
| Ther nas but hevinesse and muche sorwe; | |
| For prively he wedded hir on a morwe, | |
| And al day after hidde him as an oule; | 225 |
| So wo was him, his wyf looked so foule. | |
| Greet was the wo the knight hadde in his thoght, | |
| Whan he was with his wyf a-bedde y-broght; | |
| He walweth, and he turneth to and fro. | |
| His olde wyf lay smylinge evermo, | 230 |
| And seyde, o dere housbond, benedicite! | |
| Fareth every knight thus with his wyf as ye? | |
| Is this the lawe of king Arthures hous? | |
| Is every knight of his so dangerous? | |
| I am your owene love and eek your wyf; | 235 |
| I am she, which that saved hath your lyf; | |
| And certes, yet dide I yow never unright; | |
| Why fare ye thus with me this firste night? | |
| Ye faren lyk a man had lost his wit; | |
| What is my gilt? for goddes love, tel me it, | 240 |
| And it shal been amended, if I may. | |
| Amended? quod this knight, allas! nay, nay! | |
| It wol nat been amended never mo! | |
| Thou art so loothly, and so old also, | |
| And ther-to comen of so lowe a kinde, | 245 |
| That litel wonder is, thogh I walwe and winde. | |
| So wolde god myn herte wolde breste! | |
| Is this, quod she, the cause of your unreste? | |
| Ye, certainly, quod he, no wonder is. | |
| Now, sire, quod she, I coude amende al this, | 250 |
| If that me liste, er it were dayes three, | |
| So wel ye mighte bere yow un-to me. | |
| But for ye speken of swich gentillesse | |
| As is descended out of old richesse, | |
| That therfore sholden ye be gentil men, | 255 |
| Swich arrogance is nat worth an hen. | |
| Loke who that is most vertuous alway, | |
| Privee and apert, and most entendeth ay | |
| To do the gentil dedes that he can, | |
| And tak him for the grettest gentil man. | 260 |
| Crist wol, we clayme of him our gentillesse, | |
| Nat of our eldres for hir old richesse. | |
| For thogh they yeve us al hir heritage, | |
| For which we clayme to been of heigh parage, | |
| Yet may they nat biquethe, for no-thing, | 265 |
| To noon of us hir vertuous living, | |
| That made hem gentil men y-called be; | |
| And bad us folwen hem in swich degree. | |
| Wel can the wyse poete of Florence, | |
| That highte Dant, speken in this sentence; | 270 |
| Lo in swich maner rym is Dantes tale: | |
| Ful selde up ryseth by his branches smale | |
| Prowesse of man, for god, of his goodnesse, | |
| Wol that of him we clayme our gentillesse; | |
| For of our eldres may we no-thing clayme | 275 |
| But temporel thing, that man may hurte and mayme. | |
| Eek every wight wot this as wel as I, | |
| If gentillesse were planted naturelly | |
| Un-to a certeyn linage, doun the lyne, | |
| Privee ne apert, than wolde they never fyne | 280 |
| To doon of gentillesse the faire offyce; | |
| They mighte do no vileinye or vyce. | |
| Tak fyr, and ber it in the derkeste hous | |
| Bitwix this and the mount of Caucasus, | |
| And lat men shette the dores and go thenne; | 285 |
| Yet wol the fyr as faire lye and brenne, | |
| As twenty thousand men mighte it biholde; | |
| His office naturel ay wol it holde, | |
| Up peril of my lyf, til that it dye. | |
| Heer may ye see wel, how that genterye | 290 |
| Is nat annexed to possessioun, | |
| Sith folk ne doon hir operacioun | |
| Alwey, as dooth the fyr, lo! in his kinde. | |
| For, god it woot, men may wel often finde | |
| A lordes sone do shame and vileinye; | 295 |
| And he that wol han prys of his gentrye | |
| For he was boren of a gentil hous, | |
| And hadde hise eldres noble and vertuous, | |
| And nil him-selven do no gentil dedis, | |
| Ne folwe his gentil auncestre that deed is, | 300 |
| He nis nat gentil, be he duk or erl; | |
| For vileyns sinful dedes make a cherl. | |
| For gentillesse nis but renomee | |
| Of thyne auncestres, for hir heigh bountee, | |
| Which is a strange thing to thy persone. | 305 |
| Thy gentillesse cometh fro god allone; | |
| Than comth our verray gentillesse of grace, | |
| It was no-thing biquethe us with our place. | |
| Thenketh how noble, as seith Valerius, | |
| Was thilke Tullius Hostilius, | 310 |
| That out of povert roos to heigh noblesse. | |
| Redeth Senek, and redeth eek Boëce, | |
| Ther shul ye seen expres that it no drede is, | |
| That he is gentil that doth gentil dedis; | |
| And therfore, leve housbond, I thus conclude, | 315 |
| Al were it that myne auncestres were rude, | |
| Yet may the hye god, and so hope I, | |
| Grante me grace to liven vertuously. | |
| Thanne am I gentil, whan that I biginne | |
| To liven vertuously and weyve sinne. | 320 |
| And ther-as ye of povert me repreve, | |
| The hye god, on whom that we bileve, | |
| In wilful povert chees to live his lyf. | |
| And certes every man, mayden, or wyf, | |
| May understonde that Iesus, hevene king, | 325 |
| Ne wolde nat chese a vicious living. | |
| Glad povert is an honest thing, certeyn; | |
| This wol Senek and othere clerkes seyn. | |
| Who-so that halt him payd of his poverte, | |
| I holde him riche, al hadde he nat sherte. | 330 |
| He that coveyteth is a povre wight, | |
| For he wolde han that is nat in his might. | |
| But he that noght hath, ne coveyteth have, | |
| Is riche, al-though ye holde him but a knave. | |
| Verray povert, it singeth proprely; | 335 |
| Iuvenal seith of povert merily: | |
| The povre man, whan he goth by the weye, | |
| Bifore the theves he may singe and pleye. | |
| Povert is hateful good, and, as I gesse, | |
| A ful greet bringer out of bisinesse; | 340 |
| A greet amender eek of sapience | |
| To him that taketh it in pacience. | |
| Povert is this, al-though it seme elenge: | |
| Possessioun, that no wight wol chalenge. | |
| Povert ful ofte, whan a man is lowe, | 345 |
| Maketh his god and eek him-self to knowe. | |
| Povert a spectacle is, as thinketh me, | |
| Thurgh which he may his verray frendes see. | |
| And therfore, sire, sin that I noght yow greve, | |
| Of my povert na-more ye me repreve. | 350 |
| Now, sire, of elde ye repreve me; | |
| And certes, sire, thogh noon auctoritee | |
| Were in no book, ye gentils of honour | |
| Seyn that men sholde an old wight doon favour, | |
| And clepe him fader, for your gentillesse; | 355 |
| And auctours shal I finden, as I gesse. | |
| Now ther ye seye, that I am foul and old, | |
| Than drede you noght to been a cokewold; | |
| For filthe and elde, al-so moot I thee, | |
| Been grete wardeyns up-on chastitee. | 360 |
| But nathelees, sin I knowe your delyt, | |
| I shal fulfille your worldly appetyt. | |
| Chees now, quod she, oon of thise thinges tweye, | |
| To han me foul and old til that I deye, | |
| And be to yow a trewe humble wyf, | 365 |
| And never yow displese in al my lyf, | |
| Or elles ye wol han me yong and fair, | |
| And take your aventure of the repair | |
| That shal be to your hous, by-cause of me, | |
| Or in som other place, may wel be. | 370 |
| Now chees your-selven, whether that yow lyketh. | |
| This knight avyseth him and sore syketh, | |
| But atte laste he seyde in this manere, | |
| My lady and my love, and wyf so dere, | |
| I put me in your wyse governance; | 375 |
| Cheseth your-self, which may be most plesance, | |
| And most honour to yow and me also. | |
| I do no fors the whether of the two; | |
| For as yow lyketh, it suffiseth me. | |
| Thanne have I gete of yow maistrye, quod she, | 380 |
| Sin I may chese, and governe as me lest? | |
| Ye, certes, wyf, quod he, I holde it best. | |
| Kis me, quod she, we be no lenger wrothe; | |
| For, by my trouthe, I wol be to yow bothe, | |
| This is to seyn, ye, bothe fair and good. | 385 |
| I prey to god that I mot sterven wood, | |
| But I to yow be al-so good and trewe | |
| As ever was wyf, sin that the world was newe. | |
| And, but I be to-morn as fair to sene | |
| As any lady, emperyce, or quene, | 390 |
| That is bitwixe the est and eke the west, | |
| Doth with my lyf and deeth right as yow lest. | |
| Cast up the curtin, loke how that it is. | |
| And whan the knight saugh verraily al this, | |
| That she so fair was, and so yong ther-to, | 395 |
| For Ioye he hente hir in his armes two, | |
| His herte bathed in a bath of blisse; | |
| A thousand tyme a-rewe he gan hir kisse. | |
| And she obeyed him in every thing | |
| That mighte doon him plesance or lyking. | 400 |
| And thus they live, un-to hir lyves ende, | |
| In parfit Ioye; and Iesu Crist us sende | |
| Housbondes meke, yonge, and fresshe a-bedde, | |
| And grace toverbyde hem that we wedde. | |
| And eek I preye Iesu shorte hir lyves | 405 |
| That wol nat be governed by hir wyves; | |
| And olde and angry nigardes of dispence, | |
God sende hem sone verray pestilence.
Here endeth the Wyves Tale of Bathe. | |
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