| |
Incipit prohemium Secundi Libri. 1. OUT of these blake wawes for to sayle, | |
| O wind, O wind, the weder ginneth clere; | |
| For in this see the boot hath swich travayle, | |
| Of my conning that unnethe I it stere: | |
| This see clepe I the tempestous matere | 5 |
| Of desespeyr that Troilus was inne: | |
| But now of hope the calendes biginne. | |
| |
| 2. O lady myn, that called art Cleo, | |
| Thou be my speed fro this forth, and my muse, | |
| To ryme wel this book, til I have do; | 10 |
| Me nedeth here noon other art to use. | |
| For-why to every lovere I me excuse, | |
| That of no sentement I this endyte, | |
| But out of Latin in my tonge it wryte. | |
| |
| 3. Wherfore I nil have neither thank ne blame | 15 |
| Of al this werk, but pray yow mekely, | |
| Disblameth me, if any word be lame, | |
| For as myn auctor seyde, so seye I. | |
| Eek though I speke of love unfelingly, | |
| No wonder is, for it no-thing of newe is; | 20 |
| A blind man can nat Iuggen wel in hewis. | |
| |
| 4. Ye knowe eek, that in forme of speche is chaunge | |
| With-inne a thousand yeer, and wordes tho | |
| That hadden prys, now wonder nyce and straunge | |
| Us thinketh hem; and yet they spake hem so, | 25 |
| And spedde as wel in love as men now do; | |
| Eek for to winne love in sondry ages, | |
| In sondry londes, sondry ben usages. | |
| |
| 5. And for-thy if it happe in any wyse, | |
| That here be any lovere in this place | 30 |
| That herkeneth, as the story wol devyse, | |
| How Troilus com to his lady grace, | |
| And thenketh, so nolde I nat love purchace, | |
| Or wondreth on his speche and his doinge, | |
| I noot; but it is me no wonderinge; | 35 |
| |
| 6. For every wight which that to Rome went, | |
| Halt nat o path, or alwey o manere; | |
| Eek in some lond were al the gamen shent, | |
| If that they ferde in love as men don here, | |
| As thus, in open doing or in chere, | 40 |
| In visitinge, in forme, or seyde hir sawes; | |
| For-thy men seyn, ech contree hath his lawes. | |
| |
| 7. Eek scarsly been ther in this place three | |
| That han in love seyd lyk and doon in al; | |
| For to thy purpos this may lyken thee, | 45 |
| And thee right nought, yet al is seyd or shal; | |
| Eek som men grave in tree, som in stoon wal, | |
| As it bitit; but sin I have begonne, | |
Myn auctor shal I folwen, if I conne.
Explicit prohemium Secundi Libri. | |
| |
Incipit Liber Secundus. 8. In May, that moder is of monthes glade, | 50 |
| That fresshe floures, blewe, and whyte, and rede, | |
| Ben quike agayn, that winter dede made, | |
| And ful of bawme is fletinge every mede; | |
| Whan Phebus doth his brighte bemes sprede | |
| Right in the whyte Bole, it so bitidde | 55 |
| As I shal singe, on Mayes day the thridde, | |
| |
| 9. That Pandarus, for al his wyse speche, | |
| Felte eek his part of loves shottes kene, | |
| That, coude he never so wel of loving preche, | |
| It made his hewe a-day ful ofte grene; | 60 |
| So shoop it, that him fil that day a tene | |
| In love, for which in wo to bedde he wente, | |
| And made, er it was day, ful many a wente. | |
| |
| 10. The swalwe Proignè, with a sorwful lay, | |
| Whan morwe com, gan make hir weymentinge, | 65 |
| Why she forshapen was; and ever lay | |
| Pandare a-bedde, half in a slomeringe, | |
| Til she so neigh him made hir chiteringe | |
| How Tereus gan forth hir suster take, | |
| That with the noyse of hir he gan a-wake; | 70 |
| |
| 11. And gan to calle, and dresse him up to ryse, | |
| Remembringe him his erand was to done | |
| From Troilus, and eek his greet empryse; | |
| And caste and knew in good plyt was the mone | |
| To doon viage, and took his wey ful sone | 75 |
| Un-to his neces paleys ther bi-syde; | |
| Now Ianus, god of entree, thou him gyde! | |
| |
| 12. Whan he was come un-to his neces place, | |
| Wher is my lady? to hir folk seyde he; | |
| And they him tolde; and he forth in gan pace, | 80 |
| And fond, two othere ladyes sete and she | |
| With-inne a paved parlour; and they three | |
| Herden a mayden reden hem the geste | |
| Of the Sege of Thebes, whyl hem leste. | |
| |
| 13. Quod Pandarus, ma dame, god yow see, | 85 |
| With al your book and al the companye! | |
| Ey, uncle myn, welcome y-wis, quod she, | |
| And up she roos, and by the hond in hye | |
| She took him faste, and seyde, this night thrye, | |
| To goode mote it turne, of yow I mette! | 90 |
| And with that word she doun on bench him sette. | |
| |
| 14. Ye, nece, ye shal fare wel the bet, | |
| If god wole, al this yeer, quod Pandarus; | |
| But I am sory that I have yow let | |
| To herknen of your book ye preysen thus; | 95 |
| For goddes love, what seith it? tel it us. | |
| Is it of love? O, som good ye me lere! | |
| Uncle, quod she, your maistresse is not here! | |
| |
| 15. With that they gonnen laughe, and tho she seyde, | |
| This romaunce is of Thebes, that we rede; | 100 |
| And we han herd how that king Laius deyde | |
| Thurgh Edippus his sone, and al that dede; | |
| And here we stenten at these lettres rede, | |
| How the bisshop, as the book can telle, | |
| Amphiorax, fil thurgh the ground to helle. | 105 |
| |
| 16. Quod Pandarus, al this knowe I my-selve, | |
| And al the assege of Thebes and the care; | |
| For her-of been ther maked bokes twelve: | |
| But lat be this, and tel me how ye fare; | |
| Do wey your barbe, and shew your face bare; | 110 |
| Do wey your book, rys up, and lat us daunce, | |
| And lat us don to May som observaunce. | |
| |
| 17. A! god forbede! quod she, be ye mad? | |
| Is that a widewes lyf, so god you save? | |
| By god, ye maken me right sore a-drad, | 115 |
| Ye ben so wilde, it semeth as ye rave! | |
| It sete me wel bet ay in a cave | |
| To bidde, and rede on holy seyntes lyves: | |
| Lat maydens gon to daunce, and yonge wyves. | |
| |
| 18. As ever thryve I, quod this Pandarus, | 120 |
| Yet coude I telle a thing to doon you pleye. | |
| Now uncle dere, quod she, tel it us | |
| For goddes love; is than the assege aweye? | |
| I am of Grekes so ferd that I deye. | |
| Nay, nay, quod he, as ever mote I thryve! | 125 |
| It is a thing wel bet than swiche fyve. | |
| |
| 19. Ye, holy god! quod she, what thing is that? | |
| What? bet than swiche fyve? ey, nay, y-wis! | |
| For al this world ne can I reden what | |
| It sholde been; som Iape, I trowe, is this; | 130 |
| And but your-selven telle us what it is, | |
| My wit is for to arede it al to lene; | |
| As help me god, I noot nat what ye mene. | |
| |
| 20. And I your borow, ne never shal, for me, | |
| This thing be told to yow, as mote I thryve! | 135 |
| And why so, uncle myn? why so? quod she. | |
| By god, quod he, that wole I telle as blyve; | |
| For prouder womman were ther noon on-lyve, | |
| And ye it wiste, in al the toun of Troye; | |
| I iape nought, as ever have I Ioye! | 140 |
| |
| 21. Tho gan she wondren more than biforn | |
| A thousand fold, and doun hir eyen caste; | |
| For never, sith the tyme that she was born, | |
| To knowe thing desired she so faste; | |
| And with a syk she seyde him at the laste, | 145 |
| Now, uncle myn, I nil yow nought displese, | |
| Nor axen more, that may do yow disese. | |
| |
| 22. So after this, with many wordes glade, | |
| And freendly tales, and with mery chere, | |
| Of this and that they pleyde, and gunnen wade | 150 |
| In many an unkouth glad and deep matere, | |
| As freendes doon, whan they ben met y-fere; | |
| Til she gan axen him how Ector ferde, | |
| That was the tounes wal and Grekes yerde. | |
| |
| 23. Ful wel, I thanke it god, quod Pandarus, | 155 |
| Save in his arm he hath a litel wounde; | |
| And eek his fresshe brother Troilus, | |
| The wyse worthy Ector the secounde, | |
| In whom that every vertu list abounde, | |
| As alle trouthe and alle gentillesse, | 160 |
| Wysdom, honour, fredom, and worthinesse. | |
| |
| 24. In good feith, eem, quod she, that lyketh me; | |
| They faren wel, god save hem bothe two! | |
| For trewely I holde it greet deyntee | |
| A kinges sone in armes wel to do, | 165 |
| And been of good condiciouns ther-to; | |
| For greet power and moral vertu here | |
| Is selde y-seye in o persone y-fere. | |
| |
| 25. In good feith, that is sooth, quod Pandarus; | |
| But, by my trouthe, the king hath sones tweye, | 170 |
| That is to mene, Ector and Troilus, | |
| That certainly, though that I sholde deye, | |
| They been as voyde of vyces, dar I seye, | |
| As any men that liveth under the sonne, | |
| Hir might is wyde y-knowe, and what they conne. | 175 |
| |
| 26. Of Ector nedeth it nought for to telle; | |
| In al this world ther nis a bettre knight | |
| Than he, that is of worthinesse welle; | |
| And he wel more vertu hath than might. | |
| This knoweth many a wys and worthy wight. | 180 |
| The same prys of Troilus I seye, | |
| God help me so, I knowe not swiche tweye. | |
| |
| 27. By god, quod she, of Ector that is sooth; | |
| Of Troilus the same thing trowe I; | |
| For dredelees, men tellen that he dooth | 185 |
| In armes day by day so worthily, | |
| And bereth him here at hoom so gentilly | |
| To every wight, that al the prys hath he | |
| Of hem that me were levest preysed be. | |
| |
| 28. Ye sey right sooth, y-wis, quod Pandarus; | 190 |
| For yesterday, who-so hadde with him been, | |
| He might have wondred up-on Troilus; | |
| For never yet so thikke a swarm of been | |
| Ne fleigh, as Grekes fro him gonne fleen; | |
| And thorugh the feld, in every wightes ere, | 195 |
| Ther nas no cry but Troilus is there! | |
| |
| 29. Now here, now there, he hunted hem so faste, | |
| Ther nas but Grekes blood; and Troilus, | |
| Now hem he hurte, and hem alle doun he caste; | |
| Ay where he wente it was arayed thus: | 200 |
| He was hir deeth, and sheld and lyf for us; | |
| That as that day ther dorste noon with-stonde, | |
| Whyl that he held his blody swerd in honde. | |
| |
| 30. Therto he is the freendlieste man | |
| Of grete estat, that ever I saw my lyve; | 205 |
| And wher him list, best felawshipe can | |
| To suche as him thinketh able for to thryve. | |
| And with that word tho Pandarus, as blyve, | |
| He took his leve, and seyde, I wol go henne: | |
| Nay, blame have I, myn uncle, quod she thenne. | 210 |
| |
| 31. What eyleth yow to be thus wery sone, | |
| And namelich of wommen? wol ye so? | |
| Nay, sitteth down; by god, I have to done | |
| With yow, to speke of wisdom er ye go. | |
| And every wight that was a-boute hem tho, | 215 |
| That herde that, gan fer a-wey to stonde, | |
| Whyl they two hadde al that hem liste in honde. | |
| |
| 32. Whan that hir tale al brought was to an ende | |
| Of hire estat and of hir governaunce, | |
| Quod Pandarus, now is it tyme I wende; | 220 |
| But yet, I seye, aryseth, lat us daunce, | |
| And cast your widwes habit to mischaunce: | |
| What list yow thus your-self to disfigure, | |
| Sith yow is tid thus fair an aventure? | |
| |
| 33. A! wel bithought! for love of god, quod she, | 225 |
| Shal I not witen what ye mene of this? | |
| No, this thing axeth layser, tho quod he, | |
| And eek me wolde muche greve, y-wis, | |
| If I it tolde, and ye it toke amis. | |
| Yet were it bet my tonge for to stille | 230 |
| Than seye a sooth that were ayeins your wille. | |
| |
| 34. For, nece, by the goddesse Minerve, | |
| And Iuppiter, that maketh the thonder ringe, | |
| And by the blisful Venus that I serve, | |
| Ye been the womman in this world livinge, | 235 |
| With-oute paramours, to my witinge, | |
| That I best love, and lothest am to greve, | |
| And that ye witen wel your-self, I leve. | |
| |
| 35. Y-wis, myn uncle, quod she, grant mercy; | |
| Your freendship have I founden ever yit; | 240 |
| I am to no man holden trewely | |
| So muche as yow, and have so litel quit; | |
| And, with the grace of god, emforth my wit, | |
| As in my gilt I shal you never offende; | |
| And if I have er this, I wol amende. | 245 |
| |
| 36. But, for the love of god, I yow beseche, | |
| As ye ben he that I most love and triste, | |
| Lat be to me your fremde maner speche, | |
| And sey to me, your nece, what yow liste: | |
| And with that word hir uncle anoon hir kiste, | 250 |
| And seyde, gladly, leve nece dere, | |
| Tak it for good that I shal seye yow here. | |
| |
| 37. With that she gan hir eyen doun to caste, | |
| And Pandarus to coghe gan a lyte, | |
| And seyde, nece, alwey, lo! to the laste, | 255 |
| How-so it be that som men hem delyte | |
| With subtil art hir tales for to endyte, | |
| Yet for al that, in hir entencioun, | |
| Hir tale is al for som conclusioun. | |
| |
| 38. And sithen thende is every tales strengthe, | 260 |
| And this matere is so bihovely, | |
| What sholde I peynte or drawen it on lengthe | |
| To yow, that been my freend so feithfully? | |
| And with that word he gan right inwardly | |
| Biholden hir, and loken on hir face, | 265 |
| And seyde, on suche a mirour goode grace! | |
| |
| 39. Than thoughte he thus, if I my tale endyte | |
| Ought hard, or make a proces any whyle, | |
| She shal no savour han ther-in but lyte, | |
| And trowe I wolde hir in my wil bigyle. | 270 |
| For tendre wittes wenen al be wyle | |
| Ther-as they can nat pleynly understonde; | |
| For-thy hir wit to serven wol I fonde | |
| |
| 40. And loked on hir in a besy wyse, | |
| And she was war that he byheld hir so, | 275 |
| And seyde, lord! so faste ye me avyse! | |
| Sey ye me never er now? what sey ye, no? | |
| Yes, yes, quod he, and bet wole er I go; | |
| But, by my trouthe, I thoughte now if ye | |
| Be fortunat, for now men shal it see. | 280 |
| |
| 41. For to every wight som goodly aventure | |
| Som tyme is shape, if he it can receyven; | |
| And if that he wol take of it no cure, | |
| Whan that it cometh, but wilfully it weyven, | |
| Lo, neither cas nor fortune him deceyven, | 285 |
| But right his verray slouthe and wrecchednesse; | |
| And swich a wight is for to blame, I gesse. | |
| |
| 42. Good aventure, O bele nece, have ye | |
| Ful lightly founden, and ye conne it take; | |
| And, for the love of god, and eek of me, | 290 |
| Cacche it anoon, lest aventure slake. | |
| What sholde I lenger proces of it make? | |
| Yif me your hond, for in this world is noon, | |
| If that you list, a wight so wel begoon. | |
| |
| 43. And sith I speke of good entencioun, | 295 |
| As I to yow have told wel here-biforn, | |
| And love as wel your honour and renoun | |
| As creature in al this world y-born; | |
| By alle the othes that I have yow sworn, | |
| And ye be wrooth therfore, or wene I lye, | 300 |
| Ne shal I never seen yow eft with yë. | |
| |
| 44. Beth nought agast, ne quaketh nat; wher-to? | |
| Ne chaungeth nat for fere so your hewe; | |
| For hardely, the werste of this is do; | |
| And though my tale as now be to yow newe, | 305 |
| Yet trist alwey, ye shal me finde trewe; | |
| And were it thing that me thoughte unsittinge, | |
| To yow nolde I no swiche tales bringe. | |
| |
| 45. Now, my good eem, for goddes love, I preye, | |
| Quod she, com of, and tel me what it is; | 310 |
| For bothe I am agast what ye wol seye, | |
| And eek me longeth it to wite, y-wis. | |
| For whether it be wel or be amis, | |
| Sey on, lat me not in this fere dwelle: | |
| So wol I doon, now herkneth, I shal telle: | 315 |
| |
| 46. Now, nece myn, the kinges dere sone, | |
| The goode, wyse, worthy, fresshe, and free, | |
| Which alwey for to do wel is his wone, | |
| The noble Troilus, so loveth thee, | |
| That, bot ye helpe, it wol his bane be. | 320 |
| Lo, here is al, what sholde I more seye? | |
| Doth what yow list, to make him live or deye. | |
| |
| 47. But if ye lete him deye, I wol sterve; | |
| Have her my trouthe, nece, I nil not lyen; | |
| Al sholde I with this knyf my throte kerve | 325 |
| With that the teres braste out of his yën, | |
| And seyde, if that ye doon us bothe dyen, | |
| Thus giltelees, than have ye fisshed faire; | |
| What mende ye, though that we bothe apeyre? | |
| |
| 48. Allas! he which that is my lord so dere, | 330 |
| That trewe man, that noble gentil knight, | |
| That nought desireth but your freendly chere, | |
| I see him deye, ther he goth up-right, | |
| And hasteth him, with al his fulle might, | |
| For to be slayn, if fortune wol assente; | 335 |
| Allas! that god yow swich a beautee sente! | |
| |
| 49. If it be so that ye so cruel be, | |
| That of his deeth yow liste nought to recche, | |
| That is so trewe and worthy, as ye see, | |
| No more than of a Iapere or a wrecche, | 340 |
| If ye be swich, your beautee may not strecche | |
| To make amendes of so cruel a dede; | |
| Avysement is good bifore the nede. | |
| |
| 50. Wo worth the faire gemme vertulees! | |
| Wo worth that herbe also that dooth no bote! | 345 |
| Wo worth that beautee that is routhelees! | |
| Wo worth that wight that tret ech under fote! | |
| And ye, that been of beautee crop and rote, | |
| If therwith-al in you ther be no routhe, | |
| Than is it harm ye liven, by my trouthe! | 350 |
| |
| 51. And also thenk wel, that this is no gaude; | |
| For me were lever, thou and I and he | |
| Were hanged, than I sholde been his baude, | |
| As heyghe, as men mighte on us alle y-see: | |
| I am thyn eem, the shame were to me, | 355 |
| As wel as thee, if that I sholde assente, | |
| Thorugh myn abet, that he thyn honour shente. | |
| |
| 52. Now understond, for I yow nought requere, | |
| To binde yow to him thorugh no beheste, | |
| But only that ye make him bettre chere | 360 |
| Than ye han doon er this, and more feste, | |
| So that his lyf be saved, at the leste: | |
| This al and som, and playnly our entente; | |
| God helpe me so, I never other mente. | |
| |
| 53. Lo, this request is not but skile, y-wis, | 365 |
| Ne doute of reson, pardee, is ther noon. | |
| I sette the worste that ye dredden this, | |
| Men wolden wondren seen him come or goon: | |
| Ther-ayeins answere I thus a-noon, | |
| That every wight, but he be fool of kinde, | 370 |
| Wol deme it love of freendship in his minde. | |
| |
| 54. What? who wol deme, though he see a man | |
| To temple go, that he the images eteth? | |
| Thenk eek how wel and wysly that he can | |
| Governe him-self, that he no-thing foryeteth, | 375 |
| That, wher he cometh, he prys and thank him geteth; | |
| And eek ther-to, he shal come here so selde, | |
| What fors were it though al the toun behelde? | |
| |
| 55. Swich love of freendes regneth al this toun; | |
| And wrye yow in that mantel ever-mo; | 380 |
| And, god so wis be my savacioun, | |
| As I have seyd, your beste is to do so. | |
| But alwey, goode nece, to stinte his wo, | |
| So lat your daunger sucred ben a lyte, | |
| That of his deeth ye be nought for to wyte. | 385 |
| |
| 56. Criseyde, which that herde him in this wyse, | |
| Thoughte, I shal fele what he meneth, y-wis. | |
| Now, eem, quod she, what wolde ye devyse, | |
| What is your reed I sholde doon of this? | |
| That is wel seyd, quod he, certayn, best is | 390 |
| That ye him love ayein for his lovinge, | |
| As love for love is skilful guerdoninge. | |
| |
| 57. Thenk eek, how elde wasteth every houre | |
| In eche of yow a party of beautee; | |
| And therfore, er that age thee devoure, | 395 |
| Go love, for, olde, ther wol no wight of thee. | |
| Lat this proverbe a lore un-to yow be; | |
| To late y-war, quod Beautee, whan it paste; | |
| And elde daunteth daunger at the laste. | |
| |
| 58. The kinges fool is woned to cryen loude, | 400 |
| Whan that him thinketh a womman bereth hir hyë, | |
| So longe mote ye live, and alle proude, | |
| Til crowes feet be growe under your yë, | |
| And sende yow thanne a mirour in to pryë | |
| In whiche ye may see your face a-morwe! | 405 |
| Nece, I bidde wisshe yow no more sorwe. | |
| |
| 59. With this he stente, and caste adoun the heed, | |
| And she bigan to breste a-wepe anoon. | |
| And seyde, allas, for wo! why nere I deed? | |
| For of this world the feith is al agoon! | 410 |
| Allas! what sholden straunge to me doon, | |
| When he, that for my beste freend I wende, | |
| Ret me to love, and sholde it me defende? | |
| |
| 60. Allas! I wolde han trusted, doutelees, | |
| That if that I, thurgh my disaventure, | 415 |
| Had loved other him or Achilles, | |
| Ector, or any mannes creature, | |
| Ye nolde han had no mercy ne mesure | |
| On me, but alwey had me in repreve; | |
| This false world, allas! who may it leve? | 420 |
| |
| 61. What? is this al the Ioye and al the feste? | |
| Is this your reed, is this my blisful cas? | |
| Is this the verray mede of your beheste? | |
| Is al this peynted proces seyd, allas! | |
| Right for this fyn? O lady myn, Pallas! | 425 |
| Thou in this dredful cas for me purveye; | |
| For so astonied am I that I deye! | |
| |
| 62. With that she gan ful sorwfully to syke; | |
| A! may it be no bet? quod Pandarus; | |
| By god, I shal no-more com here this wyke, | 430 |
| And god to-forn, that am mistrusted thus; | |
| I see ful wel that ye sette lyte of us, | |
| Or of our deeth! Allas! I woful wrecche! | |
| Mighte he yet live, of me is nought to recche. | |
| |
| 63. O cruel god, O dispitouse Marte, | 435 |
| O Furies three of helle, on yow I crye! | |
| So lat me never out of this hous departe, | |
| If that I mente harm or vilanye! | |
| But sith I see my lord mot nedes dye, | |
| And I with him, here I me shryve, and seye | 440 |
| That wikkedly ye doon us bothe deye. | |
| |
| 64. But sith it lyketh yow that I be deed, | |
| By Neptunus, that god is of the see, | |
| Fro this forth shal I never eten breed | |
| Til I myn owene herte blood may see; | 445 |
| For certayn, I wole deye as sone as he | |
| And up he sterte, and on his wey he raughte, | |
| Til she agayn him by the lappe caughte. | |
| |
| 65. Criseyde, which that wel neigh starf for fere, | |
| So as she was the ferfulleste wight | 450 |
| That mighte be, and herde eek with hir ere, | |
| And saw the sorwful ernest of the knight, | |
| And in his preyere eek saw noon unright, | |
| And for the harm that mighte eek fallen more, | |
| She gan to rewe, and dradde hir wonder sore; | 455 |
| |
| 66. And thoughte thus, unhappes fallen thikke | |
| Alday for love, and in swich maner cas, | |
| As men ben cruel in hem-self and wikke; | |
| And if this man slee here him-self, allas! | |
| In my presence, it wol be no solas. | 460 |
| What men wolde of hit deme I can nat seye; | |
| It nedeth me ful sleyly for to pleye. | |
| |
| 67. And with a sorwful syk she seyde thrye, | |
| A! lord! what me is tid a sory chaunce! | |
| For myn estat now lyth in Iupartye, | 465 |
| And eek myn emes lyf lyth in balaunce; | |
| But nathelees, with goddes governaunce, | |
| I shal so doon, myn honour shal I kepe, | |
| And eek his lyf; and stinte for to wepe. | |
| |
| 68. Of harmes two, the lesse is for to chese; | 470 |
| Yet have I lever maken him good chere | |
| In honour, than myn emes lyf to lese; | |
| Ye seyn, ye no-thing elles me requere? | |
| No, wis, quod he, myn owene nece dere. | |
| Now wel, quod she, and I wol doon my peyne; | 475 |
| I shal myn herte ayeins my lust constreyne, | |
| |
| 69. But that I nil not holden him in honde, | |
| Ne love a man, ne can I not, ne may | |
| Ayeins my wil; but elles wol I fonde, | |
| Myn honour sauf, plese him fro day to day; | 480 |
| Ther-to nolde I nought ones have seyd nay, | |
| But that I dredde, as in my fantasye; | |
| But cesse cause, ay cesseth maladye. | |
| |
| 70. And here I make a protestacioun, | |
| That in this proces if ye depper go, | 485 |
| That certaynly, for no savacioun | |
| Of yow, though that ye sterve bothe two, | |
| Though al the world on o day be my fo, | |
| Ne shal I never on him han other routhe. | |
| I graunte wel, quod Pandare, by my trouthe. | 490 |
| |
| 71. But may I truste wel ther-to, quod he, | |
| That, of this thing that ye han hight me here, | |
| Ye wol it holden trewly un-to me? | |
| Ye, doutelees, quod she, myn uncle dere. | |
| Ne that I shal han cause in this matere, | 495 |
| Quod he, to pleyne, or after yow to preche? | |
| Why, no, pardee; what nedeth more speche? | |
| |
| 72. Tho fillen they in othere tales glade, | |
| Til at the laste, O good eem, quod she tho, | |
| For love of god, which that us bothe made, | 500 |
| Tel me how first ye wisten of his wo: | |
| Wot noon of hit but ye? He seyde, no. | |
| Can he wel speke of love? quod she, I preye, | |
| Tel me, for I the bet me shal purveye. | |
| |
| 73. Tho Pandarus a litel gan to smyle, | 505 |
| And seyde, by my trouthe, I shal yow telle. | |
| This other day, nought gon ful longe whyle, | |
| In-with the paleys-gardyn, by a welle, | |
| Gan he and I wel half a day to dwelle, | |
| Right for to speken of an ordenaunce, | 510 |
| How we the Grekes mighte disavaunce. | |
| |
| 74. Sone after that bigonne we to lepe, | |
| And casten with our dartes to and fro, | |
| Til at the laste he seyde, he wolde slepe, | |
| And on the gres a-doun he leyde him tho; | 515 |
| And I after gan rome to and fro | |
| Til that I herde, as that I welk allone, | |
| How he bigan ful wofully to grone. | |
| |
| 75. Tho gan I stalke him softely bihinde, | |
| And sikerly, the sothe for to seyne, | 520 |
| As I can clepe ayein now to my minde, | |
| Right thus to Love he gan him for to pleyne; | |
| He seyde, lord! have routhe up-on my peyne, | |
| Al have I been rebel in myn entente; | |
| Now, mea culpa, lord! I me repente. | 525 |
| |
| 76. O god, that at thy disposicioun | |
| Ledest the fyn, by Iuste purveyaunce, | |
| Of every wight, my lowe confessioun | |
| Accepte in gree, and send me swich penaunc | |
| As lyketh thee, but from desesperaunce, | 530 |
| That may my goost departe awey fro thee, | |
| Thou be my sheld, for thy benignitee. | |
| |
| 77. For certes, lord, so sore hath she me wounded | |
| That stod in blak, with loking of hir yën, | |
| That to myn hertes botme it is y-sounded, | 535 |
| Thorugh which I woot that I mot nedes dyen; | |
| This is the worste, I dar me not bi-wryen; | |
| And wel the hotter been the gledes rede, | |
| That men hem wryen with asshen pale and dede. | |
| |
| 78. With that he smoot his heed adoun anoon, | 540 |
| And gan to motre, I noot what, trewely. | |
| And I with that gan stille awey to goon, | |
| And leet ther-of as no-thing wist hadde I, | |
| And come ayein anoon and stood him by, | |
| And seyde, a-wake, ye slepen al to longe; | 545 |
| It semeth nat that love dooth yow longe, | |
| |
| 79. That slepen so that no man may yow wake. | |
| Who sey ever or this so dul a man? | |
| Ye, freend, quod he, do ye your hedes ake | |
| For love, and lat me liven as I can. | 550 |
| But though that he for wo was pale and wan, | |
| Yet made he tho as fresh a contenaunce, | |
| As though he shulde have led the newe daunce. | |
| |
| 80. This passed forth, til now, this other day, | |
| It fel that I com roming al allone | 555 |
| Into his chaumbre, and fond how that he lay | |
| Up-on his bed; but man so sore grone | |
| Ne herde I never, and what that was his mone, | |
| Ne wiste I nought; for, as I was cominge, | |
| Al sodeynly he lefte his compleyninge. | 560 |
| |
| 81. Of which I took somwhat suspecioun, | |
| And neer I com, and fond he wepte sore; | |
| And god so wis be my savacioun, | |
| As never of thing hadde I no routhe more. | |
| For neither with engyn, ne with no lore, | 565 |
| Unethes mighte I fro the deeth him kepe; | |
| That yet fele I myn herte for him wepe. | |
| |
| 82. And god wot, never, sith that I was born, | |
| Was I so bisy no man for to preche, | |
| Ne never was to wight so depe y-sworn, | 570 |
| Or he me tolde who mighte been his leche. | |
| But now to yow rehersen al his speche, | |
| Or alle his woful wordes for to soune, | |
| Ne bid me not, but ye wol see me swowne. | |
| |
| 83. But for to save his lyf, and elles nought, | 575 |
| And to non harm of yow, thus am I driven; | |
| And for the love of god that us hath wrought, | |
| Swich chere him dooth, that he and I may liven. | |
| Now have I plat to yow myn herte schriven; | |
| And sin ye woot that myn entente is clene, | 580 |
| Tak hede ther-of, for I non yvel mene. | |
| |
| 84. And right good thrift, I pray to god, have ye, | |
| That han swich oon y-caught with-oute net; | |
| And be ye wys, as ye ben fair to see, | |
| Wel in the ring than is the ruby set. | 585 |
| Ther were never two so wel y-met, | |
| Whan ye ben his al hool, as he is youre: | |
| Ther mighty god yet graunte us see that houre! | |
| |
| 85. Nay, therof spak I not, a, ha! quod she, | |
| As helpe me god, ye shenden every deel! | 590 |
| O mercy, dere nece, anoon quod he, | |
| What-so I spak, I mente nought but weel, | |
| By Mars the god, that helmed is of steel; | |
| Now beth nought wrooth, my blood, my nece dere. | |
| Now wel, quod she, foryeven be it here! | 595 |
| |
| 86. With this he took his leve, and hoom he wente; | |
| And lord, how he was glad and wel bigoon! | |
| Criseyde aroos, no lenger she ne stente, | |
| But straught in-to hir closet wente anoon, | |
| And sette here doun as stille as any stoon, | 600 |
| And every word gan up and doun to winde, | |
| That he hadde seyd, as it com hir to minde; | |
| |
| 87. And wex somdel astonied in hir thought, | |
| Right for the newe cas; but whan that she | |
| Was ful avysed, tho fond she right nought | 605 |
| Of peril, why she oughte afered be. | |
| For man may love, of possibilitee, | |
| A womman so, his herte may to-breste, | |
| And she nought love ayein, but-if hir leste. | |
| |
| 88. But as she sat allone and thoughte thus, | 610 |
| Thascry aroos at skarmish al with-oute, | |
| And men cryde in the strete, see, Troilus | |
| Hath right now put to flight the Grekes route! | |
| With that gan al hir meynee for to shoute, | |
| A! go we see, caste up the latis wyde; | 615 |
| For thurgh this strete he moot to palays ryde; | |
| |
| 89. For other wey is fro the yate noon | |
| Of Dardanus, ther open is the cheyne. | |
| With that com he and al his folk anoon | |
| An esy pas rydinge, in routes tweyne, | 620 |
| Right as his happy day was, sooth to seyne, | |
| For which, men say, may nought disturbed be | |
| That shal bityden of necessitee. | |
| |
| 90. This Troilus sat on his baye stede, | |
| Al armed, save his heed, ful richely, | 625 |
| And wounded was his hors, and gan to blede, | |
| On whiche he rood a pas, ful softely; | |
| But swych a knightly sighte, trewely, | |
| As was on him, was nought, with-outen faile, | |
| To loke on Mars, that god is of batayle. | 630 |
| |
| 91. So lyk a man of armes and a knight | |
| He was to seen, fulfild of heigh prowesse; | |
| For bothe he hadde a body and a might | |
| To doon that thing, as wel as hardinesse; | |
| And eek to seen him in his gere him dresse, | 635 |
| So fresh, so yong, so weldy semed he, | |
| It was an heven up-on him for to see. | |
| |
| 92. His helm to-hewen was in twenty places, | |
| That by a tissew heng, his bak bihinde, | |
| His sheld to-dasshed was with swerdes and maces, | 640 |
| In which men mighte many an arwe finde | |
| That thirled hadde horn and nerf and rinde; | |
| And ay the peple cryde, here cometh our Ioye, | |
| And, next his brother, holdere up of Troye! | |
| |
| 93. For which he wex a litel reed for shame, | 645 |
| Whan he the peple up-on him herde cryen, | |
| That to biholde it was a noble game, | |
| How sobreliche he caste doun his yën. | |
| Cryseyda gan al his chere aspyen, | |
| And leet so softe it in hir herte sinke, | 650 |
| That to hir-self she seyde, who yaf me drinke? | |
| |
| 94. For of hir owene thought she wex al reed, | |
| Remembringe hir right thus, lo, this is he | |
| Which that myn uncle swereth he moot be deed, | |
| But I on him have mercy and pitee; | 655 |
| And with that thought, for pure a-shamed, she | |
| Gan in hir heed to pulle, and that as faste, | |
| Whyl he and al the peple for-by paste, | |
| |
| 95. And gan to caste and rollen up and doun | |
| With-inne hir thought his excellent prowesse, | 660 |
| And his estat, and also his renoun, | |
| His wit, his shap, and eek his gentillesse; | |
| But most hir favour was, for his distresse | |
| Was al for hir, and thoughte it was a routhe | |
| To sleen swich oon, if that he mente trouthe. | 665 |
| |
| 96. Now mighte som envyous Iangle thus, | |
| This was a sodeyn love, how mighte it be | |
| That she so lightly lovede Troilus | |
| Right for the firste sighte; ye, pardee? | |
| Now who-so seyth so, mote he never thee! | 670 |
| For every thing, a ginning hath in nede | |
| Er al be wrought, with-outen any drede. | |
| |
| 97. For I sey nought that she so sodeynly | |
| Yaf him hir love, but that she gan enclyne | |
| To lyke him first, and I have told yow why; | 675 |
| And after that, his manhod and his pyne | |
| Made love with-inne hir for to myne, | |
| For which, by proces and by good servyse, | |
| He gat hir love, and in no sodeyn wyse. | |
| |
| 98. And also blisful Venus, wel arayed, | 680 |
| Sat in hir seventhe hous of hevene tho, | |
| Disposed wel, and with aspectes payed, | |
| To helpen sely Troilus of his wo. | |
| And, sooth to seyn, she nas nat al a fo | |
| To Troilus in his nativitee; | 685 |
| God woot that wel the soner spedde he. | |
| |
| 99. Now lat us stinte of Troilus a throwe, | |
| That rydeth forth, and lat us tourne faste | |
| Un-to Criseyde, that heng hir heed ful lowe, | |
| Ther-as she sat allone, and gan to caste | 690 |
| Wher-on she wolde apoynte hir at the laste, | |
| If it so were hir eem ne wolde cesse, | |
| For Troilus, up-on hir for to presse. | |
| |
| 100. And, lord! so she gan in hir thought argue | |
| In this matere of which I have yow told, | 695 |
| And what to doon best were, and what eschue, | |
| That plyted she ful ofte in many fold. | |
| Now was hir herte warm, now was it cold, | |
| And what she thoughte somwhat shal I wryte, | |
| As to myn auctor listeth for to endyte. | 700 |
| |
| 101. She thoughte wel, that Troilus persone | |
| She knew by sighte and eek his gentillesse, | |
| And thus she seyde, al were it nought to done, | |
| To graunte him love, yet, for his worthinesse, | |
| It were honour, with pley and with gladnesse, | 705 |
| In honestee, with swich a lord to dele, | |
| For myn estat, and also for his hele. | |
| |
| 102. Eek, wel wot I my kinges sone is he; | |
| And sith he hath to see me swich delyt, | |
| If I wolde utterly his sighte flee, | 710 |
| Paraunter he mighte have me in dispyt, | |
| Thurgh which I mighte stonde in worse plyt; | |
| Now were I wys, me hate to purchace, | |
| With-outen nede, ther I may stonde in grace? | |
| |
| 103. In every thing, I woot, ther lyth mesure. | 715 |
| For though a man forbede dronkenesse, | |
| He nought for-bet that every creature | |
| Be drinkelees for alwey, as I gesse; | |
| Eek sith I woot for me is his distresse, | |
| I ne oughte not for that thing him despyse, | 720 |
| Sith it is so, he meneth in good wyse. | |
| |
| 104. And eek I knowe, of longe tyme agoon, | |
| His thewes goode, and that he is not nyce. | |
| Ne avauntour, seyth men, certein, is he noon; | |
| To wys is he to do so gret a vyce; | 725 |
| Ne als I nel him never so cheryce, | |
| That he may make avaunt, by Iuste cause; | |
| He shal me never binde in swiche a clause. | |
| |
| 105. Now set a cas, the hardest is, y-wis, | |
| Men mighten deme that he loveth me: | 730 |
| What dishonour were it un-to me, this? | |
| May I him lette of that? why nay, pardee! | |
| I knowe also, and alday here and see, | |
| Men loven wommen al this toun aboute; | |
| Be they the wers? why, nay, with-outen doute. | 735 |
| |
| 106. I thenk eek how he able is for to have | |
| Of al this noble toun the thriftieste, | |
| To been his love, so she hir honour save; | |
| For out and out he is the worthieste, | |
| Save only Ector, which that is the beste. | 740 |
| And yet his lyf al lyth now in my cure, | |
| But swich is love, and eek myn aventure. | |
| |
| 107. Ne me to love, a wonder is it nought; | |
| For wel wot I my-self, so god me spede, | |
| Al wolde I that noon wistë of this thought, | 745 |
| I am oon the fayreste, out of drede, | |
| And goodlieste, who-so taketh hede; | |
| And so men seyn in al the toun of Troye. | |
| What wonder is it though he of me have Ioye? | |
| |
| 108. I am myn owene woman, wel at ese, | 750 |
| I thank it god, as after myn estat; | |
| Right yong, and stonde unteyd in lusty lese, | |
| With-outen Ialousye or swich debat; | |
| Shal noon housbonde seyn to me chekmat! | |
| For either they ben ful of Ialousye, | 755 |
| Or maisterful, or loven novelrye. | |
| |
| 109. What shal I doon? to what fyn live I thus? | |
| Shal I nat loven, in cas if that me leste? | |
| What, par dieux! I am nought religious! | |
| And though that I myn herte sette at reste | 760 |
| Upon this knight, that is the worthieste, | |
| And kepe alwey myn honour and my name, | |
| By alle right, it may do me no shame. | |
| |
| 110. But right as whan the sonne shyneth brighte, | |
| In March, that chaungeth ofte tyme his face, | 765 |
| And that a cloud is put with wind to flighte | |
| Which over-sprat the sonne as for a space, | |
| A cloudy thought gan thorugh hir soule pace, | |
| That over-spradde hir brighte thoughtes alle, | |
| So that for fere almost she gan to falle. | 770 |
| |
| 111. That thought was this, allas! sin I am free, | |
| Sholde I now love, and putte in Iupartye | |
| My sikernesse, and thrallen libertee? | |
| Allas! how dorste I thenken that folye? | |
| May I nought wel in other folk aspye | 775 |
| Hir dredful Ioye, hir constreynt, and hir peyne? | |
| Ther loveth noon, that she nath why to pleyne. | |
| |
| 112. For love is yet the moste stormy lyf, | |
| Right of him-self, that ever was bigonne; | |
| For ever som mistrust, or nyce stryf, | 780 |
| Ther is in love, som cloud is over the sonne: | |
| Ther-to we wrecched wommen no-thing conne, | |
| Whan us is wo, but wepe and sitte and thinke; | |
| Our wreche is this, our owene wo to drinke. | |
| |
| 113. Also these wikked tonges been so prest | 785 |
| To speke us harm, eek men be so untrewe, | |
| That, right anoon as cessed is hir lest, | |
| So cesseth love, and forth to love a newe: | |
| But harm y-doon, is doon, who-so it rewe. | |
| For though these men for love hem first to-rende, | 790 |
| Ful sharp biginning breketh ofte at ende. | |
| |
| 114. How ofte tyme hath it y-knowen be, | |
| The treson, that to womman hath be do? | |
| To what fyn is swich love, I can nat see, | |
| Or wher bicomth it, whan it is ago; | 795 |
| Ther is no wight that woot, I trowe so, | |
| Wher it bycomth; lo, no wight on it sporneth; | |
| That erst was no-thing, in-to nought it torneth. | |
| |
| 115. How bisy, if I love, eek moste I be | |
| To plesen hem that Iangle of love, and demen, | 800 |
| And coye hem, that they sey non harm of me? | |
| For though ther be no cause, yet hem semen | |
| Al be for harm that folk hir freendes quemen; | |
| And who may stoppen every wikked tonge, | |
| Or soun of belles whyl that they be ronge? | 805 |
| |
| 116. And after that, hir thought bigan to clere, | |
| And seyde, he which that no-thing under-taketh, | |
| No-thing ne acheveth, be him looth or dere. | |
| And with an other thought hir herte quaketh; | |
| Than slepeth hope, and after dreed awaketh; | 810 |
| Now hoot, now cold; but thus, bi-twixen tweye, | |
| She rist hir up, and went hir for to pleye. | |
| |
| 117. Adoun the steyre anoon-right tho she wente | |
| In-to the gardin, with hir neces three, | |
| And up and doun ther made many a wente, | 815 |
| Flexippe, she, Tharbe, and Antigone, | |
| To pleyen, that it Ioye was to see; | |
| And othere of hir wommen, a gret route, | |
| Hir folwede in the gardin al aboute. | |
| |
| 118. This yerd was large, and rayled alle the aleyes, | 820 |
| And shadwed wel with blosmy bowes grene, | |
| And benched newe, and sonded alle the weyes, | |
| In which she walketh arm in arm bi-twene; | |
| Til at the laste Antigone the shene | |
| Gan on a Troian song to singe clere, | 825 |
| That it an heven was hir voys to here. | |
| |
| 119. She seyde, O love, to whom I have and shal | |
| Ben humble subgit, trewe in myn entente, | |
| As I best can, to yow, lord, yeve ich al | |
| For ever-more, myn hertes lust to rente. | 830 |
| For never yet thy grace no wight sente | |
| So blisful cause as me, my lyf to lede | |
| In alle Ioye and seurtee, out of drede. | |
| |
| 120. Ye, blisful god, han me so wel beset | |
| In love, y-wis, that al that bereth lyf | 835 |
| Imaginen ne cowde how to ben bet; | |
| For, lord, with-outen Ialousye or stryf, | |
| I love oon which that is most ententyf | |
| To serven wel, unwery or unfeyned, | |
| That ever was, and leest with harm distreyned. | 840 |
| |
| 121. As he that is the welle of worthinesse, | |
| Of trouthe ground, mirour of goodliheed, | |
| Of wit Appollo, stoon of sikernesse, | |
| Of vertu rote, of lust findere and heed, | |
| Thurgh which is alle sorwe fro me deed, | 845 |
| Y-wis, I love him best, so doth he me; | |
| Now good thrift have he, wher-so that he be! | |
| |
| 122. Whom sholde I thanke but yow, god of love, | |
| Of al this blisse, in which to bathe I ginne? | |
| And thanked be ye, lord, for that I love! | 850 |
| This is the righte lyf that I am inne, | |
| To flemen alle manere vyce and sinne: | |
| This doth me so to vertu for to entende, | |
| That day by day I in my wil amende. | |
| |
| 123. And who-so seyth that for to love is vyce, | 855 |
| Or thraldom, though he fele in it distressse, | |
| He outher is envyous, or right nyce, | |
| Or is unmighty, for his shrewednesse, | |
| To loven; for swich maner folk, I gesse, | |
| Defamen love, as no-thing of him knowe; | 860 |
| They speken, but they bente never his bowe. | |
| |
| 124. What is the sonne wers, of kinde righte, | |
| Though that a man, for feblesse of his yën, | |
| May nought endure on it to see for brighte? | |
| Or love the wers, though wrecches on it cryen? | 865 |
| No wele is worth, that may no sorwe dryen. | |
| And for-thy, who that hath an heed of verre, | |
| Fro cast of stones war him in the werre! | |
| |
| 125. But I with al myn herte and al my might, | |
| As I have seyd, wol love, un-to my laste, | 870 |
| My dere herte, and al myn owene knight, | |
| In which myn herte growen is so faste, | |
| And his in me, that it shal ever laste. | |
| Al dredde I first to love him to biginne, | |
| Now woot I wel, ther is no peril inne. | 875 |
| |
| 126. And of hir song right with that word she stente, | |
| And therwith-al, now, nece, quod Criseyde, | |
| Who made this song with so good entente? | |
| Antigone answerde anoon, and seyde, | |
| Ma dame, y-wis, the goodlieste mayde | 880 |
| Of greet estat in al the toun of Troye; | |
| And let hir lyf in most honour and Ioye. | |
| |
| 127. Forsothe, so it semeth by hir song, | |
| Quod tho Criseyde, and gan ther-with to syke, | |
| And seyde, lord, is there swich blisse among | 885 |
| These lovers, as they conne faire endyte? | |
| Ye, wis, quod fresh Antigone the whyte, | |
| For alle the folk that han or been on lyve | |
| Ne conne wel the blisse of love discryve. | |
| |
| 128. But wene ye that every wrecche woot | 890 |
| The parfit blisse of love? why, nay, y-wis; | |
| They wenen al be love, if oon be hoot; | |
| Do wey, do wey, they woot no-thing of this! | |
| Men mosten axe at seyntes if it is | |
| Aught fair in hevene; why? for they conne telle; | 895 |
| And axen fendes, is it foul in helle. | |
| |
| 129. Criseyde un-to that purpos nought answerde, | |
| But seyde, y-wis, it wol be night as faste. | |
| But every word which that she of hir herde, | |
| She gan to prenten in hir herte faste; | 900 |
| And ay gan love hir lasse for to agaste | |
| Than it dide erst, and sinken in hir herte, | |
| That she wex somwhat able to converte. | |
| |
| 130. The dayes honour, and the hevenes yë, | |
| The nightes fo, al this clepe I the sonne, | 905 |
| Gan westren faste, and dounward for to wrye, | |
| As he that hadde his dayes cours y-ronne; | |
| And whyte thinges wexen dimme and donne | |
| For lak of light, and sterres for to appere, | |
| That she and al hir folk in wente y-fere. | 910 |
| |
| 131. So whan it lyked hir to goon to reste, | |
| And voyded weren they that voyden oughte, | |
| She seyde, that to slepe wel hir leste. | |
| Hir wommen sone til hir bed hir broughte. | |
| Whan al was hust, than lay she stille, and thoughte | 915 |
| Of al this thing the manere and the wyse. | |
| Reherce it nedeth nought, for ye ben wyse. | |
| |
| 132. A nightingale, upon a cedre grene, | |
| Under the chambre-wal ther as she lay, | |
| Ful loude sang ayein the mone shene, | 920 |
| Paraunter, in his briddes wyse, a lay | |
| Of love, that made hir herte fresh and gay. | |
| That herkned she so longe in good entente, | |
| Til at the laste the dede sleep hir hente. | |
| |
| 133. And, as she sleep, anoon-right tho hir mette, | 925 |
| How that an egle, fethered whyt as boon, | |
| Under hir brest his longe clawes sette, | |
| And out hir herte he rente, and that a-noon, | |
| And dide his herte in-to hir brest to goon, | |
| Of which she nought agroos ne no-thing smerte, | 930 |
| And forth he fleigh, with herte left for herte. | |
| |
| 134. Now lat hir slepe, and we our tales holde | |
| Of Troilus, that is to paleys riden, | |
| Fro the scarmuch, of the whiche I tolde, | |
| And in his chambre sit, and hath abiden | 935 |
| Til two or three of his messages yeden | |
| For Pandarus, and soughten him ful faste, | |
| Til they him founde, and broughte him at the laste. | |
| |
| 135. This Pandarus com leping in at ones | |
| And seide thus, who hath ben wel y-bete | 940 |
| To-day with swerdes, and with slinge-stones, | |
| But Troilus, that hath caught him an hete? | |
| And gan to Iape, and seyde, lord, so ye swete! | |
| But rys, and lat us soupe and go to reste; | |
| And he answerde him, do we as thee leste. | 945 |
| |
| 136. With al the haste goodly that they mighte, | |
| They spedde hem fro the souper un-to bedde; | |
| And every wight out at the dore him dighte, | |
| And wher him list upon his wey he spedde; | |
| But Troilus, that thoughte his herte bledde | 950 |
| For wo, til that he herde som tydinge, | |
| He seyde, freend, shal I now wepe or singe? | |
| |
| 137. Quod Pandarus, ly stille, and lat me slepe, | |
| And don thyn hood, thy nedes spedde be; | |
| And chese, if thou wolt singe or daunce or lepe; | 955 |
| At shorte wordes, thow shalt trowe me. | |
| Sire, my nece wol do wel by thee, | |
| And love thee best, by god and by my trouthe, | |
| But lak of pursuit make it in thy slouthe. | |
| |
| 138. For thus ferforth I have thy work bigonne, | 960 |
| Fro day to day, til this day, by the morwe, | |
| Hir love of freendship have I to thee wonne, | |
| And also hath she leyd hir feyth to borwe. | |
| Algate a foot is hameled of thy sorwe. | |
| What sholde I lenger sermon of it holde? | 965 |
| As ye han herd bifore, al he him tolde. | |
| |
| 139. But right as floures, thorugh the colde of night | |
| Y-closed, stoupen on hir stalkes lowe, | |
| Redressen hem a-yein the sonne bright, | |
| And spreden on hir kinde cours by rowe; | 970 |
| Right so gan tho his eyen up to throwe | |
| This Troilus, and seyde, O Venus dere, | |
| Thy might, thy grace, y-heried be it here! | |
| |
| 140. And to Pandare he held up bothe his hondes, | |
| And seyde, lord, al thyn be that I have; | 975 |
| For I am hool, al brosten been my bondes; | |
| A thousand Troians who so that me yave, | |
| Eche after other, god so wis me save, | |
| Ne mighte me so gladen; lo, myn herte, | |
| It spredeth so for Ioye, it wol to-sterte! | 980 |
| |
| 141. But lord, how shal I doon, how shal I liven? | |
| Whan shal I next my dere herte see? | |
| How shal this longe tyme a-wey be driven, | |
| Til that thou be ayein at hir fro me? | |
| Thou mayst answere, a-byd, a-byd, but he | 985 |
| That hangeth by the nekke, sooth to seyne, | |
| In grete disese abydeth for the peyne. | |
| |
| 142. Al esily, now, for the love of Marte, | |
| Quod Pandarus, for every thing hath tyme; | |
| So longe abyd til that the night departe; | 990 |
| For al so siker as thow lyst here by me, | |
| And god toforn, I wol be there at pryme, | |
| And for thy werk somwhat as I shal seye, | |
| Or on som other wight this charge leye. | |
| |
| 143. For pardee, god wot, I have ever yit | 995 |
| Ben redy thee to serve, and to this night | |
| Have I nought fayned, but emforth my wit | |
| Don al thy lust, and shal with al my might. | |
| Do now as I shal seye, and fare a-right; | |
| And if thou nilt, wyte al thy-self thy care, | 1000 |
| On me is nought along thyn yvel fare. | |
| |
| 144. I woot wel that thow wyser art than I | |
| A thousand fold, but if I were as thou, | |
| God helpe me so, as I wolde outrely, | |
| Right of myn owene hond, wryte hir right now | 1005 |
| A lettre, in which I wolde hir tellen how | |
| I ferde amis, and hir beseche of routhe; | |
| Now help thy-self, and leve it not for slouthe. | |
| |
| 145. And I my-self shal ther-with to hir goon; | |
| And whan thou wost that I am with hir there, | 1010 |
| Worth thou up-on a courser right anoon, | |
| Ye, hardily, right in thy beste gere, | |
| And ryd forth by the place, as nought ne were, | |
| And thou shalt finde us, if I may, sittinge | |
| At som windowe, in-to the strete lokinge. | 1015 |
| |
| 146. And if thee list, than maystow us saluwe, | |
| And up-on me makë thy contenaunce; | |
| But, by thy lyf, be war and faste eschuwe | |
| To tarien ought, god shilde us fro mischaunce! | |
| Ryd forth thy wey, and hold thy governaunce; | 1020 |
| And we shal speke of thee som-what, I trowe, | |
| Whan thou art goon, to do thyne eres glowe! | |
| |
| 147. Touching thy lettre, thou art wys y-nough, | |
| I woot thow nilt it digneliche endyte; | |
| As make it with thise argumentes tough; | 1025 |
| Ne scrivenish or craftily thou it wryte; | |
| Beblotte it with thy teres eek a lyte; | |
| And if thou wryte a goodly word al softe, | |
| Though it be good, reherce it not to ofte. | |
| |
| 148. For though the beste harpour upon lyve | 1030 |
| Wolde on the beste souned Ioly harpe | |
| That ever was, with alle his fingres fyve, | |
| Touche ay o streng, or ay o werbul harpe, | |
| Were his nayles poynted never so sharpe, | |
| It shulde maken every wight to dulle, | 1035 |
| To here his glee, and of his strokes fulle. | |
| |
| 149. Ne Iompre eek no discordaunt thing y-fere, | |
| As thus, to usen termes of phisyk; | |
| In loves termes, hold of thy matere | |
| The forme alwey, and do that it be lyk; | 1040 |
| For if a peyntour wolde peynte a pyk | |
| With asses feet, and hede it as an ape, | |
| It cordeth nought; so nere it but a Iape. | |
| |
| 150. This counseyl lyked wel to Troilus; | |
| But, as a dreedful lover, he seyde this: | 1045 |
| Allas, my dere brother Pandarus, | |
| I am ashamed for to wryte, y-wis, | |
| Lest of myn innocence I seyde a-mis, | |
| Or that she nolde it for despyt receyve; | |
| Thanne were I deed, ther mighte it no-thing weyve. | 1050 |
| |
| 151. To that Pandare answerde, if thee lest, | |
| Do that I seye, and lat me therwith goon; | |
| For by that lord that formed est and west, | |
| I hope of it to bringe answere anoon | |
| Right of hir hond, and if that thou nilt noon, | 1055 |
| Lat be; and sory mote he been his lyve, | |
| Ayeins thy lust that helpeth thee to thryve. | |
| |
| 152. Quod Troilus, Depardieux, I assente; | |
| Sin that thee list, I will aryse and wryte; | |
| And blisful god preye ich, with good entente, | 1060 |
| The vyage, and the lettre I shal endyte, | |
| So spede it; and thou, Minerva, the whyte, | |
| Yif thou me wit my lettre to devyse: | |
| And sette him doun, and wroot right in this wyse. | |
| |
| 153. First he gan hir his righte lady calle, | 1065 |
| His hertes lyf, his lust, his sorwes leche, | |
| His blisse, and eek this othere termes alle, | |
| That in swich cas these loveres alle seche; | |
| And in ful humble wyse, as in his speche, | |
| He gan him recomaunde un-to hir grace; | 1070 |
| To telle al how, it axeth muchel space. | |
| |
| 154. And after this, ful lowly he hir prayde | |
| To be nought wrooth, though he, of his folye, | |
| So hardy was to hir to wryte, and seyde, | |
| That love it made, or elles moste he dye, | 1075 |
| And pitiously gan mercy for to crye; | |
| And after that he seyde, and ley ful loude, | |
| Him-self was litel worth, and lesse he coude; | |
| |
| 155. And that she sholde han his conning excused, | |
| That litel was, and eek he dredde hir so, | 1080 |
| And his unworthinesse he ay acused; | |
| And after that, than gan he telle his wo; | |
| But that was endeles, with-outen ho; | |
| And seyde, he wolde in trouthe alwey him holde, | |
| And radde it over, and gan the lettre folde. | 1085 |
| |
| 156. And with his salte teres gan he bathe | |
| The ruby in his signet, and it sette | |
| Upon the wex deliverliche and rathe; | |
| Ther-with a thousand tymes, er he lette, | |
| He kiste tho the lettre that he shette, | 1090 |
| And seyde, lettre, a blisful destenee | |
| Thee shapen is, my lady shal thee see. | |
| |
| 157. This Pandare took the lettre, and that by tyme | |
| A-morwe, and to his neces paleys sterte, | |
| And faste he swoor, that it was passed pryme, | 1095 |
| And gan to Iape, and seyde, y-wis, myn herte, | |
| So fresh it is, al-though it sore smerte, | |
| I may not slepe never a Mayes morwe; | |
| I have a Ioly wo, a lusty sorwe. | |
| |
| 158. Criseyde, whan that she hir uncle herde, | 1100 |
| With dreedful herte, and desirous to here | |
| The cause of his cominge, thus answerde, | |
| Now by your feyth, myn uncle, quod she, dere, | |
| What maner windes gydeth yow now here? | |
| Tel us your Ioly wo and your penaunce, | 1105 |
| How ferforth be ye put in loves daunce. | |
| |
| 159. By god, quod he, I hoppe alwey bihinde! | |
| And she to-laugh, it thoughte hir herte breste. | |
| Quod Pandarus, loke alwey that ye finde | |
| Game in myn hood, but herkneth, if yow leste; | 1110 |
| Ther is right now come in-to toune a geste, | |
| A Greek espye, and telleth newe thinges, | |
| For which come I to telle yow tydinges. | |
| |
| 160. Into the gardin go we, and we shal here, | |
| Al prevely, of this a long sermoun. | 1115 |
| With that they wenten arm in arm y-fere | |
| In-to the gardin from the chaumbre doun. | |
| And whan that he so fer was that the soun | |
| Of that he speke, no man here mighte, | |
| He seyde hir thus, and out the lettre plighte, | 1120 |
| |
| 161. Lo, he that is al hoolly youres free | |
| Him recomaundeth lowly to your grace, | |
| And sent to you this lettre here by me; | |
| Avyseth you on it, whan ye han space, | |
| And of som goodly answere yow purchace; | 1125 |
| Or, helpe me god, so pleynly for to seyne, | |
| He may not longe liven for his peyne. | |
| |
| 162. Ful dredfully tho gan she stonde stille, | |
| And took it nought, but al hir humble chere | |
| Gan for to chaunge, and seyde, scrit ne bille, | 1130 |
| For love of god, that toucheth swich matere, | |
| Ne bring me noon; and also, uncle dere, | |
| To myn estat have more reward, I preye, | |
| Than to his lust; what sholde I more seye? | |
| |
| 163. And loketh now if this be resonable, | 1135 |
| And letteth nought, for favour ne for slouthe, | |
| To seyn a sooth; now were it covenable | |
| To myn estat, by god, and by your trouthe, | |
| To taken it, or to han of him routhe, | |
| In harming of my-self or in repreve? | 1140 |
| Ber it a-yein, for him that ye on leve! | |
| |
| 164. This Pandarus gan on hir for to stare, | |
| And seyde, now is this the grettest wonder | |
| That ever I sey! lat be this nyce fare! | |
| To deethe mote I smiten be with thonder, | 1145 |
| If, for the citee which that stondeth yonder, | |
| Wolde I a lettre un-to yow bringe or take | |
| To harm of yow; what list yow thus it make? | |
| |
| 165. But thus ye faren, wel neigh alle and some, | |
| That he that most desireth yow to serve, | 1150 |
| Of him ye recche leest wher he bicome, | |
| And whether that he live or elles sterve. | |
| But for al that that ever I may deserve, | |
| Refuse it nought, quod he, and hente hir faste, | |
| And in hir bosom the lettre doun he thraste, | 1155 |
| |
| 166. And seyde hir, now cast it away anoon, | |
| That folk may seen and gauren on us tweye. | |
| Quod she, I can abyde til they be goon, | |
| And gan to smyle, and seyde him, eem, I preye, | |
| Swich answere as yow list your-self purveye, | 1160 |
| For trewely I nil no lettre wryte. | |
| No? than wol I, quod he, so ye endyte. | |
| |
| 167. Therwith she lough, and seyde, go we dyne. | |
| And he gan at him-self to iape faste, | |
| And seyde, nece, I have so greet a pyne | 1165 |
| For love, that every other day I faste | |
| And gan his beste Iapes forth to caste; | |
| And made hir so to laughe at his folye, | |
| That she for laughter wende for to dye. | |
| |
| 168. And whan that she was comen in-to halle, | 1170 |
| Now, eem, quod she, we wol go dyne anoon; | |
| And gan some of hir women to hir calle, | |
| And streyght in-to hir chaumbre gan she goon; | |
| But of hir besinesses, this was oon | |
| A-monges othere thinges, out of drede, | 1175 |
| Ful prively this lettre for to rede; | |
| |
| 169. Avysed word by word in every lyne, | |
| And fond no lak, she thoughte he coude good; | |
| And up it putte, and went hir in to dyne. | |
| And Pandarus, that in a study stood, | 1180 |
| Er he was war, she took him by the hood, | |
| And seyde, ye were caught er that ye wiste; | |
| I vouche sauf, quod he, do what yow liste. | |
| |
| 170. Tho wesshen they, and sette hem doun and ete; | |
| And after noon ful sleyly Pandarus | 1185 |
| Gan drawe him to the window next the strete, | |
| And seyde, nece, who hath arayed thus | |
| The yonder hous, that stant afor-yeyn us? | |
| Which hous? quod she, and gan for to biholde, | |
| And knew it wel, and whos it was him tolde, | 1190 |
| |
| 171. And fillen forth in speche of thinges smale, | |
| And seten in the window bothe tweye. | |
| Whan Pandarus saw tyme un-to his tale, | |
| And saw wel that hir folk were alle aweye, | |
| Now, nece myn, tel on, quod he, I seye, | 1195 |
| How lyketh yow the lettre that ye woot? | |
| Can he ther-on? for, by my trouthe, I noot. | |
| |
| 172. Therwith al rosy hewed tho wex she, | |
| And gan to humme, and seyde, so I trowe. | |
| Aquyte him wel, for goddes love, quod he; | 1200 |
| My-self to medes wol the lettre sowe, | |
| And held his hondes up, and sat on knowe, | |
| Now, goode nece, be it never so lyte, | |
| Yif me the labour, it to sowe and plyte. | |
| |
| 173. Ye, for I can so wryte, quod she tho; | 1205 |
| And eek I noot what I sholde to him seye. | |
| Nay, nece, quod Pandare, sey not so; | |
| Yet at the leste thanketh him, I preye, | |
| Of his good wil, and doth him not to deye. | |
| Now for the love of me, my nece dere, | 1210 |
| Refuseth not at this tyme my preyere. | |
| |
| 174. Depar-dieux, quod she, god leve al be wel! | |
| God helpe me so, this is the firste lettre | |
| That ever I wroot, ye, al or any del. | |
| And in-to a closet, for to avyse hir bettre, | 1215 |
| She wente allone, and gan hir herte unfettre | |
| Out of disdaynes prison but a lyte; | |
| And sette hir doun, and gan a lettre wryte, | |
| |
| 175. Of which to telle in short is myn entente | |
| Theffect, as fer as I can understonde: | 1220 |
| She thonked him of al that he wel mente | |
| Towardes hir, but holden him in honde | |
| She nolde nought, ne make hir-selven bonde | |
| In love, but as his suster, him to plese, | |
| She wolde fayn, to doon his herte an ese. | 1225 |
| |
| 176. She shette it, and to Pandarus gan goon, | |
| There as he sat and loked in-to strete, | |
| And doun she sette hir by him on a stoon | |
| Of Iaspre, up-on a quisshin gold y-bete, | |
| And seyde, as wisly helpe me god the grete, | 1230 |
| I never dide a thing with more peyne | |
| Than wryte this, to which ye me constreyne; | |
| |
| 177. And took it him: he thonked hir and seyde, | |
| God woot, of thing ful ofte looth bigonne | |
| Cometh ende good; and nece myn, Criseyde, | 1235 |
| That ye to him of hard now ben y-wonne | |
| Oughte he be glad, by god and yonder sonne! | |
| For-why men seyth, impressiounes lighte | |
| Ful lightly been ay redy to the flighte. | |
| |
| 178. But ye han pleyed tyraunt neigh to longe, | 1240 |
| And hard was it your herte for to grave; | |
| Now stint, that ye no longer on it honge, | |
| Al wolde ye the forme of daunger save. | |
| But hasteth yow to doon him Ioye have; | |
| For trusteth wel, to longe y-doon hardnesse | 1245 |
| Causeth despyt ful often, for distresse. | |
| |
| 179. And right as they declamed this matere, | |
| Lo, Troilus, right at the stretes ende, | |
| Com ryding with his tenthe some y-fere, | |
| Al softely, and thiderward gan bende | 1250 |
| Ther-as they sete, as was his wey to wende | |
| To paleys-ward; and Pandare him aspyde, | |
| And seyde, nece, y-see who cometh here ryde! | |
| |
| 180. O flee not in, he seeth us, I suppose; | |
| Lest he may thinke that ye him eschuwe. | 1255 |
| Nay, nay, quod she, and wex as reed as rose. | |
| With that he gan hir humbly to saluwe, | |
| With dreedful chere, and ofte his hewes muwe; | |
| And up his look debonairly he caste, | |
| And bekked on Pandare, and forth he paste. | 1260 |
| |
| 181. God woot if he sat on his hors a-right, | |
| Or goodly was beseyn, that ilke day! | |
| God woot wher he was lyk a manly knight! | |
| What sholde I drecche, or telle of his aray? | |
| Criseyde, which that alle these thinges say, | 1265 |
| To telle in short, hir lyked al y-fere, | |
| His persone, his aray, his look, his chere, | |
| |
| 182. His goodly manere and his gentillesse, | |
| So wel, that never, sith that she was born, | |
| Ne hadde she swich routhe of his distresse; | 1270 |
| And how-so she hath hard ben her-biforn, | |
| To god hope I, she hath now caught a thorn. | |
| She shal not pulle it out this nexte wyke; | |
| God sende mo swich thornes on to pyke! | |
| |
| 183. Pandare, which that stood hir faste by, | 1275 |
| Felte iren hoot, and he bigan to smyte, | |
| And seyde, nece, I pray yow hertely, | |
| Tel me that I shal axen yow a lyte. | |
| A womman, that were of his deeth to wyte, | |
| With-outen his gilt, but for hir lakked routhe, | 1280 |
| Were it wel doon? Quod she, nay, by my trouthe! | |
| |
| 184. God helpe me so, quod he, ye sey me sooth. | |
| Ye felen wel your-self that I not lye; | |
| Lo, yond he rit! Quod she, ye, so he dooth. | |
| Wel, quod Pandare, as I have told yow thrye, | 1285 |
| Lat be your nyce shame and your folye, | |
| And spek with him in esing of his herte; | |
| Lat nycetee not do yow bothe smerte. | |
| |
| 185. But ther-on was to heven and to done; | |
| Considered al thing, it may not be; | 1290 |
| And why, for shame; and it were eek to sone | |
| To graunten him so greet a libertee. | |
| For playnly hir entente, as seyde she, | |
| Was for to love him unwist, if she mighte, | |
| And guerdon him with no-thing but with sighte. | 1295 |
| |
| 186. But Pandarus thoughte, it shal not be so, | |
| If that I may; this nyce opinioun | |
| Shal not be holden fully yeres two. | |
| What sholde I make of this a long sermoun? | |
| He moste assente on that conclusioun | 1300 |
| As for the tyme; and whan that it was eve, | |
| And al was wel, he roos and took his leve. | |
| |
| 187. And on his wey ful faste homward he spedde, | |
| And right for Ioye he felte his herte daunce; | |
| And Troilus he fond alone a-bedde, | 1305 |
| That lay as dooth these loveres, in a traunce, | |
| Bitwixen hope and derk desesperaunce. | |
| But Pandarus, right at his in-cominge, | |
| He song, as who seyth, lo! sumwhat I bringe. | |
| |
| 188. And seyde, who is in his bed so sone | 1310 |
| Y-buried thus? It am I, freend, quod he. | |
| Who, Troilus? nay helpe me so the mone, | |
| Quod Pandarus, thou shalt aryse and see | |
| A charme that was sent right now to thee, | |
| The which can helen thee of thyn accesse, | 1315 |
| If thou do forth-with al thy besinesse. | |
| |
| 189. Ye, through the might of god! quod Troilus. | |
| And Pandarus gan him the lettre take, | |
| And seyde, pardee, god hath holpen us; | |
| Have here a light, and loke on al this blake. | 1320 |
| But ofte gan the herte glade and quake | |
| Of Troilus, whyl that he gan it rede, | |
| So as the wordes yave him hope or drede. | |
| |
| 190. But fynally, he took al for the beste | |
| That she him wroot, for sumwhat he biheld | 1325 |
| On which, him thoughte, he mighte his herte reste, | |
| Al covered she the wordes under sheld. | |
| Thus to the more worthy part he held, | |
| That, what for hope and Pandarus biheste, | |
| His grete wo for-yede he at the leste. | 1330 |
| |
| 191. But as we may alday our-selven see, | |
| Through more wode or col, the more fyr; | |
| Right so encrees of hope, of what it be, | |
| Therwith ful ofte encreseth eek desyr; | |
| Or, as an ook cometh of a litel spyr, | 1335 |
| So through this lettre, which that she him sente, | |
| Encresen gan desyr, of which he brente. | |
| |
| 192. Wherfore I seye alwey, that day and night | |
| This Troilus gan to desiren more | |
| Than he dide erst, thurgh hope, and dide his might | 1340 |
| To pressen on, as by Pandarus lore, | |
| And wryten to hir of his sorwes sore | |
| Fro day to day; he leet it not refreyde, | |
| That by Pandare he wroot somwhat or seyde; | |
| |
| 193. And dide also his othere observaunces | 1345 |
| That to a lovere longeth in this cas; | |
| And, after that these dees turnede on chaunces, | |
| So was he outher glad or seyde allas! | |
| And held after his gestes ay his pas; | |
| And aftir swiche answeres as he hadde, | 1350 |
| So were his dayes sory outher gladde. | |
| |
| 194. But to Pandare alwey was his recours, | |
| And pitously gan ay til him to pleyne, | |
| And him bisoughte of rede and som socours; | |
| And Pandarus, that sey his wode peyne, | 1355 |
| Wex wel neigh deed for routhe, sooth to seyne, | |
| And bisily with al his herte caste | |
| Som of his wo to sleen, and that as faste; | |
| |
| 195. And seyde, lord, and freend, and brother dere, | |
| God woot that thy disese dooth me wo. | 1360 |
| But woltow stinten al this woful chere, | |
| And, by my trouthe, or it be dayes two, | |
| And god to-forn, yet shal I shape it so, | |
| That thou shalt come in-to a certayn place, | |
| Ther-as thou mayst thy-self hir preye of grace. | 1365 |
| |
| 196. And certainly, I noot if thou it wost, | |
| But tho that been expert in love it seye, | |
| It is oon of the thinges that furthereth most, | |
| A man to have a leyser for to preye, | |
| And siker place his wo for to biwreye; | 1370 |
| For in good herte it moot som routhe impresse, | |
| To here and see the giltles in distresse. | |
| |
| 197. Paraunter thenkestow: though it be so | |
| That kinde wolde doon hir to biginne | |
| To han a maner routhe up-on my wo, | 1375 |
| Seyth Daunger, Nay, thou shalt me never winne; | |
| So reuleth hir hir hertes goost with-inne, | |
| That, though she bende, yet she stant on rote; | |
| What in effect is this un-to my bote? | |
| |
| 198. Thenk here-ayeins, whan that the sturdy ook, | 1380 |
| On which men hakketh ofte, for the nones, | |
| Receyved hath the happy falling strook, | |
| The grete sweigh doth it come al at ones, | |
| As doon these rokkes or these milne-stones. | |
| For swifter cours cometh thing that is of wighte, | 1385 |
| Whan it descendeth, than don thinges lighte. | |
| |
| 199. And reed that boweth doun for every blast, | |
| Ful lightly, cesse wind, it wol aryse; | |
| But so nil not an ook whan it is cast; | |
| It nedeth me nought thee longe to forbyse. | 1390 |
| Men shal reioysen of a greet empryse | |
| Acheved wel, and stant with-outen doute, | |
| Al han men been the lenger ther-aboute. | |
| |
| 200. But, Troilus, yet tel me, if thee lest, | |
| A thing now which that I shal axen thee; | 1395 |
| Which is thy brother that thou lovest best | |
| As in thy verray hertes privetee? | |
| Y-wis, my brother Deiphebus, quod he. | |
| Now, quod Pandare, er houres twyes twelve, | |
| He shal thee ese, unwist of it him-selve. | 1400 |
| |
| 201. Now lat me allone, and werken as I may, | |
| Quod he; and to Deiphebus wente he tho | |
| Which hadde his lord and grete freend ben ay; | |
| Save Troilus, no man he lovede so. | |
| To telle in short, with-outen wordes mo, | 1405 |
| Quod Pandarus, I pray yow that ye be | |
| Freend to a cause which that toucheth me. | |
| |
| 202. Yis, pardee, quod Deiphebus, wel thow wost, | |
| In al that ever I may, and god to-fore, | |
| Al nere it but for man I love most, | 1410 |
| My brother Troilus; but sey wherfore | |
| It is; for sith that day that I was bore, | |
| I nas, ne never-mo to been I thinke, | |
| Ayeins a thing that mighte thee for-thinke. | |
| |
| 203. Pandare gan him thonke, and to him seyde, | 1415 |
| Lo, sire, I have a lady in this toun, | |
| That is my nece, and called is Criseyde, | |
| Which som men wolden doon oppressioun, | |
| And wrongfully have hir possessioun: | |
| Wherfor I of your lordship yow biseche | 1420 |
| To been our freend, with-oute more speche. | |
| |
| 204. Deiphebus him answerde, O, is not this, | |
| That thow spekest of to me thus straungely, | |
| Crisëyda, my freend? He seyde, Yis. | |
| Than nedeth, quod Deiphebus hardely, | 1425 |
| Na-more to speke, for trusteth wel, that I | |
| Wol be hir champioun with spore and yerde; | |
| I roughte nought though alle hir foos it herde. | |
| |
| 205. But tel me, thou that woost al this matere, | |
| How I might best avaylen? now lat see. | 1430 |
| Quod Pandarus, if ye, my lord so dere, | |
| Wolden as now don this honour to me, | |
| To prayen hir to-morwe, lo, that she | |
| Com un-to yow hir pleyntes to devyse, | |
| Hir adversaries wolde of hit agryse. | 1435 |
| |
| 206. And if I more dorste preye as now, | |
| And chargen yow to have so greet travayle, | |
| To han som of your bretheren here with yow, | |
| That mighten to hir cause bet avayle, | |
| Than, woot I wel, she mighte never fayle | 1440 |
| For to be holpen, what at your instaunce, | |
| What with hir othere freendes governaunce. | |
| |
| 207. Deiphebus, which that comen was, of kinde, | |
| To al honour and bountee to consente, | |
| Answerde, it shal be doon; and I can finde | 1445 |
| Yet gretter help to this in myn entente. | |
| What wolt thow seyn, if I for Eleyne sente | |
| To speke of this? I trowe it be the beste; | |
| For she may leden Paris as hir leste. | |
| |
| 208. Of Ector, which that is my lord, my brother, | 1450 |
| It nedeth nought to preye him freend to be; | |
| For I have herd him, o tyme and eek other, | |
| Speke of Criseyde swich honour, that he | |
| May seyn no bet, swich hap to him hath she. | |
| It nedeth nought his helpes for to crave; | 1455 |
| He shal be swich, right as we wole him have. | |
| |
| 209. Spek thou thy-self also to Troilus | |
| On my bihalve, and pray him with us dyne. | |
| Sire, al this shal be doon, quod Pandarus; | |
| And took his leve, and never gan to fyne, | 1460 |
| But to his neces hous, as streyt as lyne, | |
| He com; and fond hir fro the mete aryse; | |
| And sette him doun, and spak right in this wyse. | |
| |
| 210. He seyde, O veray god, so have I ronne! | |
| Lo, nece myn, see ye nought how I swete? | 1465 |
| I noot whether ye the more thank me conne. | |
| Be ye nought war how that fals Poliphete | |
| Is now aboute eft-sones for to plete, | |
| And bringe on yow advocacyës newe? | |
| I? no, quod she, and chaunged al hir hewe. | 1470 |
| |
| 211. What is he more aboute, me to drecche | |
| And doon me wrong? what shal I do, allas? | |
| Yet of him-self no-thing ne wolde I recche, | |
| Nere it for Antenor and Eneas, | |
| That been his freendes in swich maner cas; | 1475 |
| But, for the love of god, myn uncle dere, | |
| No fors of that, lat him have al y-fere; | |
| |
| 212. With-outen that, I have ynough for us. | |
| Nay, quod Pandare, it shal no-thing be so. | |
| For I have been right now at Deiphebus, | 1480 |
| And Ector, and myne othere lordes mo, | |
| And shortly maked eche of hem his fo; | |
| That, by my thrift, he shal it never winne | |
| For ought he can, whan that so he biginne. | |
| |
| 213. And as they casten what was best to done, | 1485 |
| Deiphebus, of his owene curtasye, | |
| Com hir to preye, in his propre persone, | |
| To holde him on the morwe companye | |
| At diner, which she nolde not denye, | |
| But goodly gan to his preyere obeye. | 1490 |
| He thonked hir, and wente up-on his weye. | |
| |
| 214. Whanne this was doon, this Pandare up a-noon, | |
| To telle in short, and forth gan for to wende | |
| To Troilus, as stille as any stoon, | |
| And al this thing he tolde him, word and ende; | 1495 |
| And how that he Deiphebus gan to blende; | |
| And seyde him, now is tyme, if that thou conne, | |
| To bere thee wel to-morwe, and al is wonne. | |
| |
| 215. Now spek, now prey, now pitously compleyne; | |
| Lat not for nyce shame, or drede, or slouthe; | 1500 |
| Som-tyme a man mot telle his owene peyne; | |
| Bileve it, and she shal han on thee routhe; | |
| Thou shalt be saved by thy feyth, in trouthe. | |
| But wel wot I, thou art now in a drede; | |
| And what it is, I leye, I can arede. | 1505 |
| |
| 216. Thow thinkest now, how sholde I doon al this? | |
| For by my cheres mosten folk aspye, | |
| That for hir love is that I fare a-mis; | |
| Yet hadde I lever unwist for sorwe dye. | |
| Now thenk not so, for thou dost greet folye. | 1510 |
| For right now have I founden o manere | |
| Of sleighte, for to coveren al thy chere. | |
| |
| 217. Thow shalt gon over night, and that as blyve, | |
| Un-to Deiphebus hous, as thee to pleye, | |
| Thy maladye a-wey the bet to dryve, | 1515 |
| For-why thou semest syk, soth for to seye. | |
| Sone after that, doun in thy bed thee leye, | |
| And sey, thow mayst no lenger up endure, | |
| And lye right there, and byde thyn aventure. | |
| |
| 218. Sey that thy fever is wont thee for to take | 1520 |
| The same tyme, and lasten til a-morwe; | |
| And lat see now how wel thou canst it make, | |
| For, par-dee, syk is he that is in sorwe. | |
| Go now, farewel! and, Venus here to borwe, | |
| I hope, and thou this purpos holde ferme, | 1525 |
| Thy grace she shal fully ther conferme. | |
| |
| 219. Quod Troilus, y-wis, thou nedelees | |
| Counseylest me, that sykliche I me feyne! | |
| For I am syk in ernest, doutelees, | |
| So that wel neigh I sterve for the peyne. | 1530 |
| Quod Pandarus, thou shalt the bettre pleyne, | |
| And hast the lasse nede to countrefete; | |
| For him men demen hoot that men seen swete. | |
| |
| 220. Lo, holde thee at thy triste cloos, and I | |
| Shal wel the deer un-to thy bowe dryve. | 1535 |
| Therwith he took his leve al softely, | |
| And Troilus to paleys wente blyve. | |
| So glad ne was he never in al his lyve; | |
| And to Pandarus reed gan al assente, | |
| And to Deiphebus hous at night he wente. | 1540 |
| |
| 221. What nedeth yow to tellen al the chere | |
| That Deiphebus un-to his brother made, | |
| Or his accesse, or his syklych manere, | |
| How men gan him with clothes for to lade, | |
| Whan he was leyd, and how men wolde him glade? | 1545 |
| But al for nought, he held forth ay the wyse | |
| That ye han herd Pandare er this devyse. | |
| |
| 222. But certeyn is, er Troilus him leyde, | |
| Deiphebus had him prayed, over night, | |
| To been a freend and helping to Criseyde. | 1550 |
| God woot, that he it grauntede anon-right, | |
| To been hir fulle freend with al his might. | |
| But swich a nede was to preye him thenne, | |
| As for to bidde a wood man for to renne. | |
| |
| 223. The morwen com, and neighen gan the tyme | 1555 |
| Of meel-tyd, that the faire quene Eleyne | |
| Shoop hir to been, an houre after the pryme, | |
| With Deiphebus, to whom she nolde feyne; | |
| But as his suster, hoomly, sooth to seyne, | |
| She com to diner in hir playn entente. | 1560 |
| But god and Pandare wiste al what this mente. | |
| |
| 224. Come eek Criseyde, al innocent of this, | |
| Antigone, hir sister Tarbe also; | |
| But flee we now prolixitee best is, | |
| For love of god, and lat us faste go | 1565 |
| Right to the effect, with-oute tales mo, | |
| Why al this folk assembled in this place; | |
| And lat us of hir saluinges pace. | |
| |
| 225. Gret honour dide hem Deiphebus, certeyn, | |
| And fedde hem wel with al that mighte lyke. | 1570 |
| But ever-more, allas! was his refreyn, | |
| My goode brother Troilus, the syke, | |
| Lyth yetand therwith-al he gan to syke; | |
| And after that, he peyned him to glade | |
| Hem as he mighte, and chere good he made. | 1575 |
| |
| 226. Compleyned eek Eleyne of his syknesse | |
| So feithfully, that pitee was to here, | |
| And every wight gan waxen for accesse | |
| A leche anoon, and seyde, in this manere | |
| Men curen folk; this charme I wol yow lere. | 1580 |
| But there sat oon, al list hir nought to teche, | |
| That thoughte, best coude I yet been his leche. | |
| |
| 227. After compleynt, him gonnen they to preyse, | |
| As folk don yet, whan som wight hath bigonne | |
| To preyse a man, and up with prys him reyse | 1585 |
| A thousand fold yet hyer than the sonne: | |
| He is, he can, that fewe lordes conne. | |
| And Pandarus, of that they wolde afferme, | |
| He not for-gat hir preysing to conferme. | |
| |
| 228. Herde al this thing Criseyde wel y-nough, | 1590 |
| And every word gan for to notifye; | |
| For which with sobre chere hir herte lough; | |
| For who is that ne wolde hir glorifye, | |
| To mowen swich a knight don live or dye? | |
| But al passe I, lest ye to longe dwelle; | 1595 |
| For for o fyn is al that ever I telle. | |
| |
| 229. The tyme com, fro diner for to ryse, | |
| And, as hem oughte, arisen everychoon, | |
| And gonne a while of this and that devyse. | |
| But Pandarus brak al this speche anoon, | 1600 |
| And seyde to Deiphebus, wole ye goon, | |
| If yourë wille be, as I yow preyde, | |
| To speke here of the nedes of Criseyde? | |
| |
| 230. Eleyne, which that by the hond hir held, | |
| Took first the tale, and seyde, go we blyve; | 1605 |
| And goodly on Criseyde she biheld, | |
| And seyde, Ioves lat him never thryve, | |
| That dooth yow harm, and bringe him sone of lyve | |
| And yeve me sorwe, but he shal it rewe, | |
| If that I may, and alle folk be trewe. | 1610 |
| |
| 231. Tel thou thy neces cas, quod Deiphebus | |
| To Pandarus, for thou canst best it telle. | |
| My lordes and my ladyes, it stant thus; | |
| What sholde I lenger, quod he, do yow dwelle? | |
| He rong hem out a proces lyk a belle, | 1615 |
| Up-on hir fo, that highte Poliphete, | |
| So hëynous, that men mighte on it spete. | |
| |
| 232. Answerde of this ech worse of hem than other, | |
| And Poliphete they gonnen thus to warien, | |
| An-honged be swich oon, were he my brother; | 1620 |
| And so he shal, for it ne may not varien. | |
| What sholde I lenger in this tale tarien? | |
| Pleynly, alle at ones, they hir highten, | |
| To been hir helpe in al that ever they mighten. | |
| |
| 233. Spak than Eleyne, and seyde, Pandarus, | 1625 |
| Woot ought my lord, my brother, this matere, | |
| I mene, Ector? or woot it Troilus? | |
| He seyde, ye, but wole ye now me here? | |
| Me thinketh this, sith Troilus is here, | |
| It were good, if that ye wolde assente, | 1630 |
| She tolde hir-self him al this, er she wente. | |
| |
| 234. For he wole have the more hir grief at herte, | |
| By cause, lo, that she a lady is; | |
| And, by your leve, I wol but right in sterte, | |
| And do yow wite, and that anoon, y-wis, | 1635 |
| If that he slepe, or wole ought here of this. | |
| And in he lepte, and seyde him in his ere, | |
| God have thy soule, y-brought have I thy bere! | |
| |
| 235. To smylen of this gan tho Troilus, | |
| And Pandarus, with-oute rekeninge, | 1640 |
| Out wente anoon to Eleyne and Deiphebus, | |
| And seyde hem, so there be no taryinge, | |
| Ne more pres, he wol wel that ye bringe | |
| Crisëyda, my lady, that is here; | |
| And as he may enduren, he wole here. | 1645 |
| |
| 236. But wel ye woot, the chaumbre is but lyte, | |
| And fewe folk may lightly make it warm; | |
| Now loketh ye, (for I wol have no wyte, | |
| To bringe in prees that mighte doon him harm | |
| Or him disesen, for my bettre arm), | 1650 |
| Wher it be bet she byde til eft-sones; | |
| Now loketh ye, that knowen what to doon is. | |
| |
| 237. I sey for me, best is, as I can knowe, | |
| That no wight in ne wente but ye tweye, | |
| But it were I, for I can, in a throwe, | 1655 |
| Reherce hir cas, unlyk that she can seye; | |
| And after this, she may him ones preye | |
| To ben good lord, in short, and take hir leve; | |
| This may not muchel of his ese him reve. | |
| |
| 238. And eek, for she is straunge, he wol forbere | 1660 |
| His ese, which that him thar nought for yow; | |
| Eek other thing, that toucheth not to here, | |
| He wol me telle, I woot it wel right now, | |
| That secret is, and for the tounes prow. | |
| And they, that no-thing knewe of this entente, | 1665 |
| With-oute more, to Troilus in they wente. | |
| |
| 239. Eleyne in al hir goodly softe wyse, | |
| Gan him saluwe, and womanly to pleye, | |
| And seyde, ywis, ye moste alweyes aryse! | |
| Now fayre brother, beth al hool, I preye! | 1670 |
| And gan hir arm right over his sholder leye, | |
| And him with al hir wit to recomforte; | |
| As she best coude, she gan him to disporte. | |
| |
| 240. So after this quod she, we yow biseke, | |
| My dere brother, Deiphebus, and I, | 1675 |
| For love of god, and so doth Pandare eke, | |
| To been good lord and freend, right hertely, | |
| Un-to Criseyde, which that certeinly | |
| Receyveth wrong, as woot wel here Pandare, | |
| That can hir cas wel bet than I declare. | 1680 |
| |
| 241. This Pandarus gan newe his tunge affyle, | |
| And al hir cas reherce, and that anoon; | |
| Whan it was seyd, sone after, in a whyle, | |
| Quod Troilus, as sone as I may goon, | |
| I wol right fayn with al my might ben oon, | 1685 |
| Have god my trouthe, hir cause to sustene. | |
| Good thrift have ye, quod Eleyne the quene. | |
| |
| 242. Quod Pandarus, and it your wille be, | |
| That she may take hir leve, er that she go? | |
| Or elles god for-bede, tho quod he, | 1690 |
| If that she vouche sauf for to do so. | |
| And with that word quod Troilus, ye two, | |
| Deiphebus, and my suster leef and dere, | |
| To yow have I to speke of o matere, | |
| |
| 243. To been avysed by your reed the bettre: | 1695 |
| And fond, as hap was, at his beddes heed, | |
| The copie of a tretis and a lettre, | |
| That Ector hadde him sent to axen reed, | |
| If swich a man was worthy to ben deed, | |
| Woot I nought who; but in a grisly wyse | 1700 |
| He preyede hem anoon on it avyse. | |
| |
| 244. Deiphebus gan this lettre to unfolde | |
| In ernest greet; so dide Eleyne the quene; | |
| And rominge outward, fast it gan biholde, | |
| Downward a steyre, in-to an herber grene. | 1705 |
| This ilke thing they redden hem bi-twene; | |
| And largely, the mountaunce of an houre, | |
| They gonne on it to reden and to poure. | |
| |
| 245. Now lat hem rede, and turne we anoon | |
| To Pandarus, that gan ful faste prye | 1710 |
| That al was wel, and out he gan to goon | |
| In-to the grete chambre, and that in hye, | |
| And seyde, god save al this companye! | |
| Com, nece myn; my lady quene Eleyne | |
| Abydeth yow, and eek my lordes tweyne. | 1715 |
| |
| 246. Rys, take with yow your nece Antigone, | |
| Or whom yow list, or no fors, hardily; | |
| The lasse prees, the bet; com forth with me, | |
| And loke that ye thonke humblely | |
| Hem alle three, and, whan ye may goodly | 1720 |
| Your tyme y-see, taketh of hem your leve, | |
| Lest we to longe his restes him bireve. | |
| |
| 247. Al innocent of Pandarus entente, | |
| Quod tho Criseyde, go we, uncle dere; | |
| And arm in arm inward with him she wente, | 1725 |
| Avysed wel hir wordes and hir chere; | |
| And Pandarus, in ernestful manere, | |
| Seyde, alle folk, for goddes love, I preye, | |
| Stinteth right here, and softely yow pleye. | |
| |
| 248. Aviseth yow what folk ben here with-inne, | 1730 |
| And in what plyt oon is, god him amende! | |
| And inward thus ful softely biginne; | |
| Nece, I coniure and heighly yow defende, | |
| On his half, which that sowle us alle sende, | |
| And in the vertue of corounes tweyne, | 1735 |
| Slee nought this man, that hath for yow this peyne! | |
| |
| 249. Fy on the devel! thenk which oon he is, | |
| And in what plyt he lyth; com of anoon; | |
| Thenk al swich taried tyd, but lost it nis! | |
| That wol ye bothe seyn, whan ye ben oon. | 1740 |
| Secoundelich, ther yet devyneth noon | |
| Up-on yow two; com of now, if ye conne; | |
| Whyl folk is blent, lo, al the tyme is wonne! | |
| |
| 250. In titering, and pursuite, and delayes, | |
| The folk devyne at wagginge of a stree; | 1745 |
| And though ye wolde han after merye dayes, | |
| Than dar ye nought, and why? for she, and she | |
| Spak swich a word; thus loked he, and he; | |
| Lest tyme I loste, I dar not with yow dele; | |
| Com of therfore, and bringeth him to hele. | 1750 |
| |
| 251. But now to yow, ye lovers that ben here, | |
| Was Troilus nought in a cankedort, | |
| That lay, and mighte whispringe of hem here, | |
| And thoughte, O lord, right now renneth my sort | |
| Fully to dye, or han anoon comfort; | 1755 |
| And was the firste tyme he shulde hir preye | |
Of love; O mighty god, what shal he seye?
Explicit Secundus Liber. | |
| |