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Incipit Prohemium Tercii Libri. 1. O BLISFUL light, of whiche the bemes clere | |
| Adorneth al the thridde hevene faire! | |
| O sonnes leef, O Ioves doughter dere, | |
| Plesaunce of love, O goodly debonaire, | |
| In gentil hertes ay redy to repaire! | 5 |
| O verray cause of hele and of gladnesse, | |
| Y-heried be thy might and thy goodnesse! | |
| |
| 2. In hevene and helle, in erthe and salte see | |
| Is felt thy might, if that I wel descerne; | |
| As man, brid, best, fish, herbe and grene tree | 10 |
| Thee fele in tymes with vapour eterne. | |
| God loveth, and to love wol nought werne; | |
| And in this world no lyves creature, | |
| With-outen love, is worth, or may endure. | |
| |
| 3. Ye Ioves first to thilke effectes glade, | 15 |
| Thorugh which that thinges liven alle and be, | |
| Comeveden, and amorous him made | |
| On mortal thing, and as yow list, ay ye | |
| Yeve him in love ese or adversitee; | |
| And in a thousand formes doun him sente | 20 |
| For love in erthe, and whom yow liste, he hente. | |
| |
| 4. Ye fierse Mars apeysen of his ire, | |
| And, as yow list, ye maken hertes digne; | |
| Algates, hem that ye wol sette a-fyre, | |
| They dreden shame, and vices they resigne; | 25 |
| Ye do hem corteys be, fresshe and benigne, | |
| And hye or lowe, after a wight entendeth; | |
| The Ioyes that he hath, your might him sendeth. | |
| |
| 5. Ye holden regne and hous in unitee; | |
| Ye soothfast cause of frendship been also; | 30 |
| Ye knowe al thilke covered qualitee | |
| Of thinges which that folk on wondren so, | |
| Whan they can not construe how it may io, | |
| She loveth him, or why he loveth here; | |
| As why this fish, and nought that, cometh to were. | 35 |
| |
| 6. Ye folk a lawe han set in universe, | |
| And this knowe I by hem that loveres be, | |
| That who-so stryveth with yow hath the werse: | |
| Now, lady bright, for thy benignitee, | |
| At reverence of hem that serven thee, | 40 |
| Whos clerk I am, so techeth me devyse | |
| Som Ioye of that is felt in thy servyse. | |
| |
| 7. Ye in my naked herte sentement | |
| Inhelde, and do me shewe of thy swetnesse. | |
| Caliope, thy vois be now present, | 45 |
| For now is nede; sestow not my destresse, | |
| How I mot telle anon-right the gladnesse | |
| Of Troilus, to Venus heryinge? | |
To which gladnes, who nede hath, god him bringe!
Explicit prohemium Tercii Libri. | |
| |
Incipit Liber Tercius. 8. LAY al this mene whyle Troilus, | 50 |
| Recordinge his lessoun in this manere, | |
| Ma fey! thought he, thus wole I seye and thus; | |
| Thus wole I pleyne un-to my lady dere; | |
| That word is good, and this shal be my chere; | |
| This nil I not foryeten in no wyse. | 55 |
| God leve him werken as he gan devyse. | |
| |
| 9. And lord, so that his herte gan to quappe, | |
| Heringe hir come, and shorte for to syke! | |
| And Pandarus, that ladde hir by the lappe, | |
| Com ner, and gan in at the curtin pyke, | 60 |
| And seyde, god do bote on alle syke! | |
| See, who is here yow comen to visyte; | |
| Lo, here is she that is your deeth to wyte. | |
| |
| 10. Ther-with it semed as he wepte almost; | |
| A ha, quod Troilus so rewfully, | 65 |
| Wher me be wo, O mighty god, thou wost! | |
| Who is al there? I see nought trewely. | |
| Sire, quod Criseyde, it is Pandare and I. | |
| Ye, swete herte? allas, I may nought ryse | |
| To knele, and do yow honour in som wyse. | 70 |
| |
| 11. And dressede him upward, and she right tho | |
| Gan bothe here hondes softe upon him leye, | |
| O, for the love of god, do ye not so | |
| To me, quod she, ey! what is this to seye? | |
| Sire, come am I to yow for causes tweye; | 75 |
| First, yow to thonke, and of your lordshipe eke | |
| Continuaunce I wolde yow biseke. | |
| |
| 12. This Troilus, that herde his lady preye | |
| Of lordship him, wex neither quik ne deed, | |
| Ne mighte a word for shame to it seye, | 80 |
| Al-though men sholde smyten of his heed. | |
| But lord, so he wex sodeinliche reed, | |
| And sire, his lesson, that he wende conne, | |
| To preyen hir, is thurgh his wit y-ronne. | |
| |
| 13. Cryseyde al this aspyede wel y-nough, | 85 |
| For she was wys, and lovede him never-the-lasse, | |
| Al nere he malapert, or made it tough, | |
| Or was to bold, to singe a fool a masse. | |
| But whan his shame gan somwhat to passe, | |
| His resons, as I may my rymes holde, | 90 |
| I yow wol telle, as techen bokes olde. | |
| |
| 14. In chaunged vois, right for his verrey drede, | |
| Which vois eek quook, and ther-to his manere | |
| Goodly abayst, and now his hewes rede, | |
| Now pale, un-to Criseyde, his lady dere, | 95 |
| With look doun cast and humble yolden chere, | |
| Lo, the alderfirste word that him asterte | |
| Was, twyes, mercy, mercy, swete herte! | |
| |
| 15. And stinte a whyl, and whan he mighte out-bringe, | |
| The nexte word was, god wot, for I have, | 100 |
| As feythfully as I have had konninge, | |
| Ben youres, also god my sowle save; | |
| And shal, til that I, woful wight, be grave. | |
| And though I dar ne can un-to yow pleyne, | |
| Y-wis, I suffre nought the lasse peyne. | 105 |
| |
| 16. Thus muche as now, O wommanliche wyf, | |
| I may out-bringe, and if this yow displese, | |
| That shal I wreke upon myn owne lyf | |
| Right sone, I trowe, and doon your herte an ese, | |
| If with my deeth your herte I may apese. | 110 |
| But sin that ye han herd me som-what seye, | |
| Now recche I never how sone that I deye. | |
| |
| 17. Ther-with his manly sorwe to biholde, | |
| It mighte han maad an herte of stoon to rewe; | |
| And Pandare weep as he to watre wolde, | 115 |
| And poked ever his nece newe and newe, | |
| And seyde, wo bigon ben hertes trewe! | |
| For love of god, make of this thing an ende, | |
| Or slee us bothe at ones, er that ye wende. | |
| |
| 18. I? what? quod she, by god and by my trouthe, | 120 |
| I noot nought what ye wilne that I seye. | |
| I? what? quod he, that ye han on him routhe, | |
| For goddes love, and doth him nought to deye. | |
| Now thanne thus, quod she, I wolde him preye | |
| To telle me the fyn of his entente; | 125 |
| Yet wiste I never wel what that he mente. | |
| |
| 19. What that I mene, O swete herte dere? | |
| Quod Troilus, O goodly fresshe free! | |
| That, with the stremes of your eyen clere, | |
| Ye wolde som-tyme freendly on me see, | 130 |
| And thanne agreën that I may ben he, | |
| With-oute braunche of vyce in any wyse, | |
| In trouthe alwey to doon yow my servyse | |
| |
| 20. As to my lady right and chief resort, | |
| With al my wit and al my diligence, | 135 |
| And I to han, right as yow list, comfort, | |
| Under your yerde, egal to myn offence, | |
| As deeth, if that I breke your defence; | |
| And that ye deigne me so muche honoure, | |
| Me to comaunden ought in any houre. | 140 |
| |
| 21. And I to ben your verray humble trewe, | |
| Secret, and in my paynes pacient, | |
| And ever-mo desire freshly newe, | |
| To serven, and been y-lyke ay diligent, | |
| And, with good herte, al holly your talent | 145 |
| Receyven wel, how sore that me smerte, | |
| Lo, this mene I, myn owene swete herte. | |
| |
| 22. Quod Pandarus, lo, here an hard request, | |
| And resonable, a lady for to werne! | |
| Now, nece myn, by natal Ioves fest, | 150 |
| Were I a god, ye sholde sterve as yerne, | |
| That heren wel, this man wol no-thing yerne | |
| But your honour, and seen him almost sterve, | |
| And been so looth to suffren him yow serve. | |
| |
| 23. With that she gan hir eyen on him caste | 155 |
| Ful esily, and ful debonairly, | |
| Avysing hir, and hyed not to faste | |
| With never a word, but seyde him softely, | |
| Myn honour sauf, I wol wel trewely, | |
| And in swich forme as he can now devyse, | 160 |
| Receyven him fully to my servyse, | |
| |
| 24. Biseching him, for goddes love, that he | |
| Wolde, in honour of trouthe and gentilesse, | |
| As I wel mene, eek mene wel to me, | |
| And myn honour, with wit and besinesse, | 165 |
| Ay kepe; and if I may don him gladnesse, | |
| From hennes-forth, y-wis, I nil not feyne: | |
| Now beeth al hool, no lenger ye ne pleyne. | |
| |
| 25. But nathelees, this warne I yow, quod she, | |
| A kinges sone al-though ye be, y-wis, | 170 |
| Ye shul na-more have soverainetee | |
| Of me in love, than right in that cas is; | |
| Ne I nil forbere, if that ye doon a-mis, | |
| To wrathen yow; and whyl that ye me serve, | |
| Cherycen yow right after ye deserve. | 175 |
| |
| 26. And shortly, derë herte and al my knight, | |
| Beth glad, and draweth yow to lustinesse, | |
| And I shal trewely, with al my might, | |
| Your bittre tornen al in-to swetnesse; | |
| If I be she that may yow do gladnesse, | 180 |
| For every wo ye shal recovere a blisse; | |
| And him in armes took, and gan him kisse. | |
| |
| 27. Fil Pandarus on knees, and up his yën | |
| To hevene threw, and held his hondes hye, | |
| Immortal god! quod he, that mayst nought dyen, | 185 |
| Cupide I mene, of this mayst glorifye; | |
| And Venus, thou mayst make melodye; | |
| With-outen hond, me semeth that in towne, | |
| For this merveyle, I here ech belle sowne. | |
| |
| 28. But ho! no more as now of this matere, | 190 |
| For-why this folk wol comen up anoon, | |
| That han the lettre red; lo, I hem here. | |
| But I coniure thee, Criseyde, and oon, | |
| And two, thou Troilus, whan thow mayst goon, | |
| That at myn hous ye been at my warninge, | 195 |
| For I ful wel shal shape your cominge; | |
| |
| 29. And eseth ther your hertes right y-nough; | |
| And lat see which of yow shal bere the belle | |
| To speke of love a-right! ther-with he lough, | |
| For ther have ye a layser for to telle. | 200 |
| Quod Troilus, how longe shal I dwelle | |
| Er this be doon? Quod he, whan thou mayst ryse, | |
| This thing shal be right as I yow devyse. | |
| |
| 30. With that Eleyne and also Deiphebus | |
| Tho comen upward, right at the steyres ende; | 205 |
| And lord, so than gan grone Troilus, | |
| His brother and his suster for to blende. | |
| Quod Pandarus, it tyme is that we wende; | |
| Tak, nece myn, your leve at alle three, | |
| And lat hem speke, and cometh forth with me. | 210 |
| |
| 31. She took hir leve at hem ful thriftily, | |
| As she wel coude, and they hir reverence | |
| Un-to the fulle diden hardely, | |
| And speken wonder wel, in hir absence, | |
| Of hir, in preysing of hir excellence, | 215 |
| Hir governaunce, hir wit; and hir manere | |
| Commendeden, it Ioye was to here. | |
| |
| 32. Now lat hir wende un-to hir owne place, | |
| And torne we to Troilus a-yein, | |
| That gan ful lightly of the lettre passe, | 220 |
| That Deiphebus hadde in the gardin seyn. | |
| And of Eleyne and him he wolde fayn | |
| Delivered been, and seyde, that him leste | |
| To slepe, and after tales have reste. | |
| |
| 33. Eleyne him kiste, and took hir leve blyve, | 225 |
| Deiphebus eek, and hoom wente every wight; | |
| And Pandarus, as faste as he may dryve, | |
| To Troilus tho com, as lyne right; | |
| And on a paillet, al that glade night, | |
| By Troilus he lay, with mery chere, | 230 |
| To tale; and wel was hem they were y-fere. | |
| |
| 34. Whan every wight was voided but they two, | |
| And alle the dores were faste y-shette, | |
| To telle in short, with-oute wordes mo, | |
| This Pandarus, with-outen any lette, | 235 |
| Up roos, and on his beddes syde him sette, | |
| And gan to speken in a sobre wyse | |
| To Troilus, as I shal yow devyse. | |
| |
| 35. Myn alderlevest lord, and brother dere, | |
| God woot, and thou, that it sat me so sore, | 240 |
| When I thee saw so languisshing to-yere, | |
| For love, of which thy wo wex alwey more; | |
| That I, with al my might and al my lore, | |
| Have ever sithen doon my bisinesse | |
| To bringe thee to Ioye out of distresse; | 245 |
| |
| 36. And have it brought to swich plyt as thou wost, | |
| So that, thorugh me, thow stondest now in weye | |
| To fare wel, I seye it for no bost, | |
| And wostow why? for shame it is to seye, | |
| For thee have I bigonne a gamen pleye | 250 |
| Which that I never doon shal eft for other, | |
| Al-though he were a thousand fold my brother. | |
| |
| 37. That is to seye, for thee am I bicomen, | |
| Bitwixen game and ernest, swich a mene | |
| As maken wommen un-to men to comen; | 255 |
| Al sey I nought, thou wost wel what I mene. | |
| For thee have I my nece, of vyces clene, | |
| So fully maad thy gentilesse triste, | |
| That al shal been right as thy-selve liste. | |
| |
| 38. But god, that al wot, take I to witnesse, | 260 |
| That never I this for coveityse wroughte, | |
| But only for to abregge that distresse, | |
| For which wel nygh thou deydest, as me thoughte. | |
| But gode brother, do now as thee oughte, | |
| For goddes love, and keep hir out of blame, | 265 |
| Sin thou art wys, and save alwey hir name. | |
| |
| 39. For wel thou wost, the name as yet of here | |
| Among the peple, as who seyth, halwed is; | |
| For that man is unbore, I dar wel swere, | |
| That ever wiste that she dide amis. | 270 |
| But wo is me, that I, that cause al this, | |
| May thenken that she is my nece dere, | |
| And I hir eem, and traytor eek y-fere! | |
| |
| 40. And were it wist that I, through myn engyn, | |
| Hadde in my nece y-put this fantasye, | 275 |
| To do thy lust, and hoolly to be thyn, | |
| Why, al the world up-on it wolde crye, | |
| And seye, that I the worste trecherye | |
| Dide in this cas, that ever was bigonne, | |
| And she for-lost, and thou right nought y-wonne. | 280 |
| |
| 41. Wher-fore, er I wol ferther goon a pas, | |
| Yet eft I thee biseche and fully seye, | |
| That privetee go with us in this cas, | |
| That is to seye, that thou us never wreye; | |
| And be nought wrooth, though I thee ofte preye | 285 |
| To holden secree swich an heigh matere; | |
| For skilful is, thow wost wel, my preyere. | |
| |
| 42. And thenk what wo ther hath bitid er this, | |
| For makinge of avauntes, as men rede; | |
| And what mischaunce in this world yet ther is, | 290 |
| Fro day to day, right for that wikked dede; | |
| For which these wyse clerkes that ben dede | |
| Han ever yet proverbed to us yonge, | |
| That firste vertu is to kepe tonge. | |
| |
| 43. And, nere it that I wilne as now tabregge | 295 |
| Diffusioun of speche, I coude almost | |
| A thousand olde stories thee alegge | |
| Of wommen lost, thorugh fals and foles bost; | |
| Proverbes canst thy-self y-nowe, and wost, | |
| Ayeins that vyce, for to been a labbe, | 300 |
| Al seyde men sooth as often as they gabbe. | |
| |
| 44. O tonge, allas! so often here-biforn | |
| Hastow made many a lady bright of hewe | |
| Seyd, welawey! the day that I was born! | |
| And many a maydes sorwes for to newe; | 305 |
| And, for the more part, al is untrewe | |
| That men of yelpe, and it were brought to preve; | |
| Of kinde non avauntour is to leve. | |
| |
| 45. Avauntour and a lyere, al is on; | |
| As thus: I pose, a womman graunte me | 310 |
| Hir love, and seyth that other wol she non, | |
| And I am sworn to holden it secree, | |
| And after I go telle it two or three; | |
| Y-wis, I am avauntour at the leste, | |
| And lyere, for I breke my biheste. | 315 |
| |
| 46. Now loke thanne, if they be nought to blame, | |
| Swich maner folk; what shal I clepe hem, what, | |
| That hem avaunte of wommen, and by name, | |
| That never yet bihighte hem this ne that, | |
| Ne knewe hem more than myn olde hat? | 320 |
| No wonder is, so god me sende hele, | |
| Though wommen drede with us men to dele. | |
| |
| 47. I sey not this for no mistrust of yow, | |
| Ne for no wys man, but for foles nyce, | |
| And for the harm that in the world is now, | 325 |
| As wel for foly ofte as for malyce; | |
| For wel wot I, in wyse folk, that vyce | |
| No womman drat, if she be wel avysed; | |
| For wyse ben by foles harm chastysed. | |
| |
| 48. But now to purpos; leve brother dere, | 330 |
| Have al this thing that I have seyd in minde, | |
| And keep thee clos, and be now of good chere, | |
| For at thy day thou shalt me trewe finde. | |
| I shal thy proces sette in swich a kinde, | |
| And god to-forn, that it shall thee suffyse, | 335 |
| For it shal been right as thou wolt devyse. | |
| |
| 49. For wel I woot, thou menest wel, parde; | |
| Therfore I dar this fully undertake. | |
| Thou wost eek what thy lady graunted thee, | |
| And day is set, the chartres up to make. | 340 |
| Have now good night, I may no lenger wake; | |
| And bid for me, sin thou art now in blisse, | |
| That god me sende deeth or sone lisse. | |
| |
| 50. Who mighte telle half the Ioye or feste | |
| Which that the sowle of Troilus tho felte, | 345 |
| Heringe theffect of Pandarus biheste? | |
| His olde wo, that made his herte swelte, | |
| Gan tho for Ioye wasten and to-melte, | |
| And al the richesse of his sykes sore | |
| At ones fledde, he felte of hem no more. | 350 |
| |
| 51. But right so as these holtes and these hayes, | |
| That han in winter dede been and dreye, | |
| Revesten hem in grene, whan that May is, | |
| Whan every lusty lyketh best to pleye: | |
| Right in that selve wyse, sooth to seye, | 355 |
| Wex sodeynliche his herte ful of Ioye, | |
| That gladder was ther never man in Troye. | |
| |
| 52. And gan his look on Pandarus up caste | |
| Ful sobrely, and frendly for to see, | |
| And seyde, freend, in Aprille the laste, | 360 |
| As wel thou wost, if it remembre thee, | |
| How neigh the deeth for wo thou founde me; | |
| And how thou didest al thy bisinesse | |
| To knowe of me the cause of my distresse. | |
| |
| 53. Thou wost how longe I it for-bar to seye | 365 |
| To thee, that art the man that I best triste; | |
| And peril was it noon to thee by-wreye, | |
| That wiste I wel; but tel me, if thee liste, | |
| Sith I so looth was that thy-self it wiste, | |
| How dorste I mo tellen of this matere, | 370 |
| That quake now, and no wight may us here? | |
| |
| 54. But natheles, by that god I thee swere, | |
| That, as him list, may al this world governe, | |
| And, if I lye, Achilles with his spere | |
| Myn herte cleve, al were my lyf eterne, | 375 |
| As I am mortal, if I late or yerne | |
| Wolde it biwreye, or dorste, or sholde conne, | |
| For al the good that god made under sonne; | |
| |
| 55. That rather deye I wolde, and determyne, | |
| As thinketh me, now stokked in presoun, | 380 |
| In wrecchednesse, in filthe, and in vermyne, | |
| Caytif to cruel king Agamenoun; | |
| And this, in alle the temples of this toun, | |
| Upon the goddes alle, I wol thee swere, | |
| To-morwe day, if that thee lyketh here. | 385 |
| |
| 56. And that thou hast so muche y-doon for me, | |
| That I ne may it never-more deserve, | |
| This knowe I wel, al mighte I now for thee | |
| A thousand tymes on a morwen sterve, | |
| I can no more, but that I wol thee serve | 390 |
| Right as thy sclave, whider-so thou wende, | |
| For ever-more, un-to my lyves ende! | |
| |
| 57. But here, with al myn herte, I thee biseche, | |
| That never in me thou deme swich folye | |
| As I shal seyn; me thoughte, by thy speche, | 395 |
| That this, which thou me dost for companye, | |
| I sholde wene it were a bauderye; | |
| I am nought wood, al-if I lewed be; | |
| It is not so, that woot I wel, pardee. | |
| |
| 58. But he that goth, for gold or for richesse, | 400 |
| On swich message, calle him what thee list; | |
| And this that thou dost, calle it gentilesse, | |
| Compassioun, and felawship, and trist; | |
| Departe it so, for wyde-where is wist | |
| How that there is dyversitee requered | 405 |
| Bitwixen thinges lyke, as I have lered. | |
| |
| 59. And, that thou knowe I thenke nought ne wene | |
| That this servyse a shame be or Iape, | |
| I have my faire suster Polixene, | |
| Cassandre, Eleyne, or any of the frape; | 410 |
| Be she never so faire or wel y-shape, | |
| Tel me, which thou wilt of everichone, | |
| To han for thyn, and lat me thanne allone. | |
| |
| 60. But sin that thou hast don me this servyse, | |
| My lyf to save, and for noon hope of mede, | 415 |
| So, for the love of god, this grete empryse | |
| Parforme it out; for now is moste nede. | |
| For high and low, with-outen any drede, | |
| I wol alwey thyne hestes alle kepe; | |
| Have now good night, and lat us bothe slepe. | 420 |
| |
| 61. Thus held him ech with other wel apayed, | |
| That al the world ne mighte it bet amende; | |
| And, on the morwe, whan they were arayed, | |
| Ech to his owene nedes gan entende. | |
| But Troilus, though as the fyr he brende | 425 |
| For sharp desyr of hope and of plesaunce, | |
| He not for-gat his gode governaunce. | |
| |
| 62. But in him-self with manhod gan restreyne | |
| Ech rakel dede and ech unbrydled chere, | |
| That alle tho that liven, sooth to seyne, | 430 |
| Ne sholde han wist, by word or by manere, | |
| What that he mente, as touching this matere. | |
| From every wight as fer as is the cloude | |
| He was, so wel dissimulen he coude. | |
| |
| 63. And al the whyl which that I yow devyse, | 435 |
| This was his lyf; with al his fulle might, | |
| By day he was in Martes high servyse, | |
| This is to seyn, in armes as a knight; | |
| And for the more part, the longe night | |
| He lay, and thoughte how that he mighte serve | 440 |
| His lady best, hir thank for to deserve. | |
| |
| 64. Nil I nought swerë, al-though he lay softe, | |
| That in his thought he nas sumwhat disesed, | |
| Ne that he tornede on his pilwes ofte, | |
| And wolde of that him missed han ben sesed; | 445 |
| But in swich cas man is nought alwey plesed, | |
| For ought I wot, no more than was he; | |
| That can I deme of possibilitee. | |
| |
| 65. But certeyn is, to purpos for to go, | |
| That in this whyle, as writen is in geste, | 450 |
| He say his lady som-tyme; and also | |
| She with him spak, whan that she dorste or leste, | |
| And by hir bothe avys, as was the beste, | |
| Apoynteden ful warly in this nede, | |
| So as they dorste, how they wolde procede. | 455 |
| |
| 66. But it was spoken in so short a wyse, | |
| In swich awayt alwey, and in swich fere, | |
| Lest any wyght divynen or devyse | |
| Wolde of hem two, or to it leye an ere, | |
| That al this world so leef to hem ne were | 460 |
| As that Cupido wolde hem grace sende | |
| To maken of hir speche aright an ende. | |
| |
| 67. But thilke litel that they speke or wroughte, | |
| His wyse goost took ay of al swich hede, | |
| It semed hir, he wiste what she thoughte | 465 |
| With-outen word, so that it was no nede | |
| To bidde him ought to done, or ought for-bede; | |
| For which she thoughte that love, al come it late, | |
| Of alle Ioye hadde opned hir the yate. | |
| |
| 68. And shortly of this proces for to pace, | 470 |
| So wel his werk and wordes he bisette, | |
| That he so ful stood in his lady grace, | |
| That twenty thousand tymes, or she lette, | |
| She thonked god she ever with him mette; | |
| So coude he him governe in swich servyse, | 475 |
| That al the world ne mighte it bet devyse. | |
| |
| 69. For-why she fond him so discreet in al, | |
| So secret, and of swich obëisaunce, | |
| That wel she felte he was to hir a wal | |
| Of steel, and sheld from every displesaunce; | 480 |
| That, to ben in his gode governaunce, | |
| So wys he was, she was no more afered, | |
| I mene, as fer as oughte ben requered. | |
| |
| 70. And Pandarus, to quike alwey the fyr, | |
| Was ever y-lyke prest and diligent; | 485 |
| To ese his frend was set al his desyr. | |
| He shof ay on, he to and fro was sent; | |
| He lettres bar whan Troilus was absent. | |
| That never man, as in his freendes nede, | |
| Ne bar him bet than he, with-outen drede. | 490 |
| |
| 71. But now, paraunter, som man wayten wolde | |
| That every word, or sonde, or look, or chere | |
| Of Troilus that I rehersen sholde, | |
| In al this whyle, un-to his lady dere; | |
| I trowe it were a long thing for to here; | 495 |
| Or of what wight that stant in swich disioynte, | |
| His wordes alle, or every look, to poynte. | |
| |
| 72. For sothe, I have not herd it doon er this, | |
| In storye noon, ne no man here, I wene; | |
| And though I wolde I coude not, y-wis; | 500 |
| For ther was som epistel hem bitwene, | |
| That wolde, as seyth myn auctor, wel contene | |
| Neigh half this book, of which him list not wryte; | |
| How sholde I thanne a lyne of it endyte? | |
| |
| 73. But to the grete effect: than sey I thus, | 505 |
| That stonding in concord and in quiete | |
| Thise ilke two, Criseyde and Troilus, | |
| As I have told, and in this tyme swete, | |
| Save only often mighte they not mete, | |
| Ne layser have hir speches to fulfelle, | 510 |
| That it befel right as I shal yow telle, | |
| |
| 74. That Pandarus, that ever dide his might | |
| Right for the fyn that I shal speke of here, | |
| As for to bringe to his hous som night | |
| His faire nece, and Troilus y-fere, | 515 |
| Wher-as at leyser al this heigh matere, | |
| Touching hir love, were at the fulle up-bounde, | |
| Hadde out of doute a tyme to it founde. | |
| |
| 75. For he with greet deliberacioun | |
| Hadde every thing that her-to mighte avayle | 520 |
| Forn-cast, and put in execucioun, | |
| And neither laft, for cost ne for travayle; | |
| Come if hem lest, hem sholde no-thing fayle; | |
| And for to been in ought espyed there, | |
| That, wiste he wel, an inpossible were. | 525 |
| |
| 76. Dredelees, it cleer was in the wind | |
| Of every pye and every lette-game; | |
| Now al is wel, for al the world is blind | |
| In this matere, bothe fremed and tame. | |
| This timber is al redy up to frame; | 530 |
| Us lakketh nought but that we witen wolde | |
| A certein houre, in whiche she comen sholde. | |
| |
| 77. And Troilus, that al this purveyaunce | |
| Knew at the fulle, and waytede on it ay, | |
| Hadde here-up-on eek made gret ordenaunce, | 535 |
| And founde his cause, and ther-to his aray, | |
| If that he were missed, night or day, | |
| Ther-whyle he was aboute this servyse, | |
| That he was goon to doon his sacrifyse, | |
| |
| 78. And moste at swich a temple alone wake, | 540 |
| Answered of Appollo for to be; | |
| And first, to seen the holy laurer quake, | |
| Er that Apollo spak out of the tree, | |
| To telle him next whan Grekes sholden flee, | |
| And forthy lette him no man, god forbede, | 545 |
| But preye Apollo helpen in this nede. | |
| |
| 79. Now is ther litel more for to done, | |
| But Pandare up, and shortly for to seyne, | |
| Right sone upon the chaunging of the mone, | |
| Whan lightles is the world a night or tweyne, | 550 |
| And that the welken shoop him for to reyne, | |
| He streight a-morwe un-to his nece wente; | |
| Ye han wel herd the fyn of his entente. | |
| |
| 80. Whan he was come, he gan anoon to pleye | |
| As he was wont, and of him-self to Iape; | 555 |
| And fynally, he swor and gan hir seye, | |
| By this and that, she sholde him not escape, | |
| Ne lengere doon him after hir to gape; | |
| But certeynly she moste, by hir leve, | |
| Come soupen in his hous with him at eve. | 560 |
| |
| 81. At whiche she lough, and gan hir faste excuse, | |
| And seyde, it rayneth; lo, how sholde I goon? | |
| Lat be, quod he, ne stond not thus to muse; | |
| This moot be doon, ye shal be ther anoon. | |
| So at the laste her-of they felle at oon, | 565 |
| Or elles, softe he swor hir in hir ere, | |
| He nolde never come ther she were. | |
| |
| 82. Sone after this, to him she gan to rowne, | |
| And asked him if Troilus were there? | |
| He swor hir, nay, for he was out of towne, | 570 |
| And seyde, nece, I pose that he were, | |
| Yow thurfte never have the more fere. | |
| For rather than men mighte him ther aspye, | |
| Me were lever a thousand-fold to dye. | |
| |
| 83. Nought list myn auctor fully to declare | 575 |
| What that she thoughte whan he seyde so, | |
| That Troilus was out of town y-fare, | |
| As if he seyde ther-of sooth or no; | |
| But that, with-oute awayt, with him to go, | |
| She graunted him, sith he hir that bisoughte, | 580 |
| And, as his nece, obeyed as hir oughte. | |
| |
| 84. But nathelees, yet gan she him biseche, | |
| Al-though with him to goon it was no fere, | |
| For to be war of goosish peples speche, | |
| That dremen thinges whiche that never were, | 585 |
| And wel avyse him whom he broughte there; | |
| And seyde him, eem, sin I mot on yow triste, | |
| Loke al be wel, and do now as yow liste. | |
| |
| 85. He swor hir, yis, by stokkes and by stones, | |
| And by the goddes that in hevene dwelle, | 590 |
| Or elles were him lever, soule and bones, | |
| With Pluto king as depe been in helle | |
| As Tantalus! What sholde I more telle? | |
| Whan al was wel, he roos and took his leve, | |
| And she to souper com, whan it was eve, | 595 |
| |
| 86. With a certayn of hir owene men, | |
| And with hir faire nece Antigone, | |
| And othere of hir wommen nyne or ten; | |
| But who was glad now, who, as trowe ye, | |
| But Troilus, that stood and mighte it see | 600 |
| Thurgh-out a litel windowe in a stewe, | |
| Ther he bishet, sin midnight, was in mewe, | |
| |
| 87. Unwist of every wight but of Pandare? | |
| But to the poynt; now whan she was y-come | |
| With alle Ioye, and alle frendes fare, | 605 |
| Hir eem anoon in armes hath hir nome, | |
| And after to the souper, alle and some, | |
| Whan tyme was, ful softe they hem sette; | |
| God wot, ther was no deyntee for to fette. | |
| |
| 88. And after souper gonnen they to ryse, | 610 |
| At ese wel, with hertes fresshe and glade, | |
| And wel was him that coude best devyse | |
| To lyken hir, or that hir laughen made. | |
| He song; she pleyde; he tolde tale of Wade. | |
| But at the laste, as every thing hath ende, | 615 |
| She took hir leve, and nedes wolde wende. | |
| |
| 89. But O, Fortune, executrice of wierdes, | |
| O influences of thise hevenes hye! | |
| Soth is, that, under god, ye ben our hierdes, | |
| Though to us bestes been the causes wrye. | 620 |
| This mene I now, for she gan hoomward hye, | |
| But execut was al bisyde hir leve, | |
| At the goddes wil; for which she moste bleve. | |
| |
| 90. The bente mone with hir hornes pale, | |
| Saturne, and Iove, in Cancro ioyned were, | 625 |
| That swich a rayn from hevene gan avale, | |
| That every maner womman that was there | |
| Hadde of that smoky reyn a verray fere; | |
| At which Pandare tho lough, and seyde thenne, | |
| Now were it tyme a lady to go henne! | 630 |
| |
| 91. But goode nece, if I mighte ever plese | |
| Yow any-thing, than prey I yow, quod he, | |
| To doon myn herte as now so greet an ese | |
| As for to dwelle here al this night with me, | |
| For-why this is your owene hous, pardee. | 635 |
| For, by my trouthe, I sey it nought a-game, | |
| To wende as now, it were to me a shame. | |
| |
| 92. Criseyde, whiche that coude as muche good | |
| As half a world, tok hede of his preyere; | |
| And sin it ron, and al was on a flood, | 640 |
| She thoughte, as good chep may I dwellen here, | |
| And graunte it gladly with a freendes chere, | |
| And have a thank, as grucche and thanne abyde; | |
| For hoom to goon it may nought wel bityde. | |
| |
| 93. I wol, quod she, myn uncle leef and dere, | 645 |
| Sin that yow list, it skile is to be so; | |
| I am right glad with yow to dwellen here; | |
| I seyde but a-game, I wolde go. | |
| Y-wis, graunt mercy, nece! quod he tho; | |
| Were it a game or no, soth for to telle, | 650 |
| Now am I glad, sin that yow list to dwelle. | |
| |
| 94. Thus al is wel; but tho bigan aright | |
| The newe Ioye, and al the feste agayn; | |
| But Pandarus, if goodly hadde he might, | |
| He wolde han hyed hir to bedde fayn, | 655 |
| And seyde, lord, this is an huge rayn! | |
| This were a weder for to slepen inne; | |
| And that I rede us sone to biginne. | |
| |
| 95. And nece, woot ye wher I wol yow leye, | |
| For that we shul not liggen fer asonder, | 660 |
| And for ye neither shullen, dar I seye, | |
| Heren noise of reynes nor of thondre? | |
| By god, right in my lyte closet yonder. | |
| And I wol in that outer hous allone | |
| Be wardeyn of your wommen everichone. | 665 |
| |
| 96. And in this middel chaumbre that ye see | |
| Shul youre wommen slepen wel and softe; | |
| And ther I seyde shal your-selve be; | |
| And if ye liggen wel to-night, com ofte, | |
| And careth not what weder is on-lofte. | 670 |
| The wyn anon, and whan so that yow leste, | |
| So go we slepe, I trowe it be the beste. | |
| |
| 97. Ther nis no more, but here-after sone, | |
| The voydè dronke, and travers drawe anon, | |
| Gan every wight, that hadde nought to done | 675 |
| More in that place, out of the chaumber gon. | |
| And ever-mo so sternelich it ron, | |
| And blew ther-with so wonderliche loude, | |
| That wel neigh no man heren other coude. | |
| |
| 98. Tho Pandarus, hir eem, right as him oughte, | 680 |
| With women swiche as were hir most aboute, | |
| Ful glad un-to hir beddes syde hir broughte, | |
| And toke his leve, and gan ful lowe loute, | |
| And seyde, here at this closet-dore with-oute, | |
| Right over-thwart, your wommen liggen alle, | 685 |
| That, whom yow liste of hem, ye may here calle. | |
| |
| 99. So whan that she was in the closet leyd, | |
| And alle hir wommen forth by ordenaunce | |
| A-bedde weren, ther as I have seyd, | |
| There was no more to skippen nor to traunce, | 690 |
| But boden go to bedde, with mischaunce, | |
| If any wight was steringe any-where, | |
| And late hem slepe that a-bedde were. | |
| |
| 100. But Pandarus, that wel coude eche a del | |
| The olde daunce, and every poynt ther-inne, | 695 |
| Whan that he sey that alle thing was wel, | |
| He thoughte he wolde up-on his werk biginne, | |
| And gan the stewe-dore al softe un-pinne, | |
| And stille as stoon, with-outen lenger lette, | |
| By Troilus a-doun right he him sette. | 700 |
| |
| 101. And, shortly to the poynt right for to gon, | |
| Of al this werk he tolde him word and ende, | |
| And seyde, make thee redy right anon, | |
| For thou shalt in-to hevene blisse wende. | |
| Now blisful Venus, thou me grace sende, | 705 |
| Quod Troilus, for never yet no nede | |
| Hadde I er now, ne halvendel the drede. | |
| |
| 102. Quod Pandarus, ne drede thee never a del, | |
| For it shal been right as thou wilt desyre; | |
| So thryve I, this night shal I make it wel, | 710 |
| Or casten al the gruwel in the fyre. | |
| Yit blisful Venus, this night thou me enspyre, | |
| Quod Troilus, as wis as I thee serve, | |
| And ever bet and bet shal, til I sterve. | |
| |
| 103. And if I hadde, O Venus ful of murthe, | 715 |
| Aspectes badde of Mars or of Saturne, | |
| Or thou combust or let were in my birthe, | |
| Thy fader prey al thilke harm disturne | |
| Of grace, and that I glad ayein may turne, | |
| For love of him thou lovedest in the shawe, | 720 |
| I mene Adoon, that with the boor was slawe. | |
| |
| 104. O Iove eek, for the love of faire Europe, | |
| The whiche in forme of bole away thou fette; | |
| Now help, O Mars, thou with thy blody cope, | |
| For love of Cipris, thou me nought ne lette; | 725 |
| O Phebus, thenk whan Dane hir-selven shette | |
| Under the bark, and laurer wex for drede, | |
| Yet for hir love, O help now at this nede! | |
| |
| 105. Mercurie, for the love of Hiersè eke, | |
| For which Pallas was with Aglauros wrooth, | 730 |
| Now help, and eek Diane, I thee biseke, | |
| That this viage be not to thee looth. | |
| O fatal sustren, which, er any clooth | |
| Me shapen was, my destenè me sponne, | |
| So helpeth to this werk that is bi-gonne! | 735 |
| |
| 106. Quod Pandarus, thou wrecched mouses herte, | |
| Art thou agast so that she wol thee byte? | |
| Why, don this furred cloke up-on thy sherte, | |
| And folowe me, for I wol han the wyte; | |
| But byd, and lat me go bifore a lyte. | 740 |
| And with that word he gan un-do a trappe, | |
| And Troilus he broughte in by the lappe. | |
| |
| 107. The sterne wind so loude gan to route | |
| That no wight other noyse mighte here; | |
| And they that layen at the dore with-oute, | 745 |
| Ful sykerly they slepten alle y-fere; | |
| And Pandarus, with a ful sobre chere, | |
| Goth to the dore anon with-outen lette, | |
| Ther-as they laye, and softely it shette. | |
| |
| 108. And as he com ayeinward prively, | 750 |
| His nece awook, and asked who goth there? | |
| My dere nece, quod he, it am I; | |
| Ne wondreth not, ne have of it no fere; | |
| And ner he com, and seyde hir in hir ere, | |
| No word, for love of god I yow biseche; | 755 |
| Lat no wight ryse and heren of our speche. | |
| |
| 109. What! which wey be ye comen, benedicite? | |
| Quod she, and how thus unwist of hem alle? | |
| Here at this secre trappe-dore, quod he. | |
| Quod tho Criseyde, lat me som wight calle. | 760 |
| Ey! god forbede that it sholde falle, | |
| Quod Pandarus, that ye swich foly wroughte! | |
| They mighte deme thing they never er thoughte! | |
| |
| 110. It is nought good a sleping hound to wake, | |
| Ne yeve a wight a cause to devyne; | 765 |
| Your wommen slepen alle, I under-take, | |
| So that, for hem, the hous men mighte myne; | |
| And slepen wolen til the sonne shyne. | |
| And whan my tale al brought is to an ende, | |
| Unwist, right as I com, so wol I wende. | 770 |
| |
| 111. Now nece myn, ye shul wel understonde, | |
| Quod he, so as ye wommen demen alle, | |
| That for to holde in love a man in honde, | |
| And him hir leef and dere herte calle, | |
| And maken him an howve above a calle, | 775 |
| I mene, as love an other in this whyle, | |
| She doth hir-self a shame, and him a gyle. | |
| |
| 112. Now wherby that I telle yow al this? | |
| Ye woot your-self, as wel as any wight, | |
| How that your love al fully graunted is | 780 |
| To Troilus, the worthieste knight, | |
| Oon of this world, and ther-to trouthe plyght, | |
| That, but it were on him along, ye nolde | |
| Him never falsen, whyl ye liven sholde. | |
| |
| 113. Now stant it thus, that sith I fro yow wente, | 785 |
| This Troilus, right platly for to seyn, | |
| Is thurgh a goter, by a privè wente, | |
| In-to my chaumbre come in al this reyn, | |
| Unwist of every maner wight, certeyn, | |
| Save of my-self, as wisly have I Ioye, | 790 |
| And by that feith I shal Pryam of Troye! | |
| |
| 114. And he is come in swich peyne and distresse | |
| That, but he be al fully wood by this, | |
| He sodeynly mot falle in-to wodnesse, | |
| But-if god helpe; and cause why this is, | 795 |
| He seyth him told is, of a freend of his, | |
| How that ye sholde love oon that hatte Horaste, | |
| For sorwe of which this night shalt been his laste. | |
| |
| 115. Criseyde, which that al this wonder herde, | |
| Gan sodeynly aboute hir herte colde, | 800 |
| And with a syk she sorwfully answerde, | |
| Allas! I wende, who-so tales tolde, | |
| My dere herte wolde me not holde | |
| So lightly fals! allas! conceytes wronge, | |
| What harm they doon, for now live I to longe! | 805 |
| |
| 116. Horaste! allas! and falsen Troilus? | |
| I knowe him not, god helpe me so, quod she; | |
| Allas! what wikked spirit tolde him thus? | |
| Now certes, eem, to-morwe, and I him see, | |
| I shal ther-of as ful excusen me | 810 |
| As ever dide womman, if him lyke; | |
| And with that word she gan ful sore syke. | |
| |
| 117. O god! quod she, so worldly selinesse, | |
| Which clerkes callen fals felicitee, | |
| Y-medled is with many a bitternesse! | 815 |
| Ful anguisshous than is, god woot, quod she, | |
| Condicioun of veyn prosperitee; | |
| For either Ioyes comen nought y-fere, | |
| Or elles no wight hath hem alwey here. | |
| |
| 118. O brotel wele of mannes Ioye unstable! | 820 |
| With what wight so thou be, or how thou pleye, | |
| Either he woot that thou, Ioye, art muable, | |
| Or woot it not, it moot ben oon of tweye; | |
| Now if he woot it not, how may he seye | |
| That he hath verray Ioye and selinesse, | 825 |
| That is of ignoraunce ay in derknesse? | |
| |
| 119. Now if he woot that Ioye is transitorie, | |
| As every Ioye of worldly thing mot flee, | |
| Than every tyme he that hath in memorie, | |
| The drede of lesing maketh him that he | 830 |
| May in no parfit selinesse be. | |
| And if to lese his Ioye he set a myte, | |
| Than semeth it that Ioye is worth ful lyte. | |
| |
| 120. Wherfore I wol deffyne in this matere, | |
| That trewely, for ought I can espye, | 835 |
| Ther is no verray wele in this world here. | |
| But O, thou wikked serpent Ialousye, | |
| Thou misbeleved and envious folye, | |
| Why hastow Troilus me mad untriste, | |
| That never yet agilte him, that I wiste? | 840 |
| |
| 121. Quod Pandarus, thus fallen is this cas. | |
| Why, uncle myn, quod she, who tolde him this? | |
| Why doth my dere herte thus, allas? | |
| Ye woot, ye nece myn, quod he, what is; | |
| I hope al shal be wel that is amis. | 845 |
| For ye may quenche al this, if that yow leste, | |
| And doth right so, for I holde it the beste. | |
| |
| 122. So shal I do to-morwe, y-wis, quod she, | |
| And god to-forn, so that it shal suffyse. | |
| To-morwe? allas, that were a fayr, quod he, | 850 |
| Nay, nay, it may not stonden in this wyse; | |
| For, nece myn, thus wryten clerkes wyse, | |
| That peril is with drecching in y-drawe; | |
| Nay, swich abodes been nought worth an hawe. | |
| |
| 123. Nece, al thing hath tyme, I dar avowe; | 855 |
| For whan a chaumber a-fyr is, or an halle, | |
| Wel more nede is, it sodeynly rescowe | |
| Than to dispute, and axe amonges alle | |
| How is this candele in the straw y-falle? | |
| A! benedicite! for al among that fare | 860 |
| The harm is doon, and fare-wel feldefare! | |
| |
| 124. And, nece myn, ne take it not a-greef, | |
| If that ye suffre him al night in this wo, | |
| God help me so, ye hadde him never leef, | |
| That dar I seyn, now there is but we two; | 865 |
| But wel I woot, that ye wol not do so; | |
| Ye been to wys to do so gret folye, | |
| To putte his lyf al night in Iupartye. | |
| |
| 125. Hadde I him never leef? By god, I wene | |
| Ye hadde never thing so leef, quod she. | 870 |
| Now by my thrift, quod he, that shal be sene; | |
| For, sin ye make this ensample of me, | |
| If I al night wolde him in sorwe see | |
| For al the tresour in the toun of Troye, | |
| I bidde god, I never mote have Ioye! | 875 |
| |
| 126. Now loke thanne, if ye, that been his love, | |
| Shul putte al night his lyf in Iupartye | |
| For thing of nought! Now, by that god above, | |
| Nought only this delay comth of folye, | |
| But of malyce, if that I shal nought lye. | 880 |
| What, platly, and ye suffre him in distresse, | |
| Ye neither bountee doon ne gentilesse! | |
| |
| 127. Quod tho Criseyde, wole ye doon o thing, | |
| And ye therwith shal stinte al his disese; | |
| Have here, and bereth him this blewe ringe, | 885 |
| For ther is no-thing mighte him bettre plese, | |
| Save I my-self, ne more his herte apese; | |
| And sey my dere herte, that his sorwe | |
| Is causeles, that shal be seen to-morwe. | |
| |
| 128. A ring? quod he, ye, hasel-wodes shaken! | 890 |
| Ye, nece myn, that ring moste han a stoon | |
| That mighte dede men alyve maken; | |
| And swich a ring, trowe I that ye have noon. | |
| Discrecioun out of your heed is goon; | |
| That fele I now, quod he, and that is routhe; | 895 |
| O tyme y-lost, wel maystow cursen slouthe! | |
| |
| 129. Wot ye not wel that noble and heigh corage | |
| Ne sorweth not, ne stinteth eek for lyte? | |
| But if a fool were in a Ialous rage, | |
| I nolde setten at his sorwe a myte, | 900 |
| But feffe him with a fewe wordes whyte | |
| Another day, whan that I mighte him finde: | |
| But this thing stont al in another kinde. | |
| |
| 130. This is so gentil and so tendre of herte, | |
| That with his deeth he wol his sorwes wreke; | 905 |
| For trusteth wel, how sore that him smerte, | |
| He wol to yow no Ialouse wordes speke. | |
| And for-thy, nece, er that his herte breke, | |
| So spek your-self to him of this matere; | |
| For with o word ye may his herte stere. | 910 |
| |
| 131. Now have I told what peril he is inne, | |
| And his coming unwist is to every wight; | |
| Ne, pardee, harm may ther be noon ne sinne; | |
| I wol my-self be with yow al this night. | |
| Ye knowe eek how it is your owne knight, | 915 |
| And that, by right, ye moste upon him triste, | |
| And I al prest to fecche him whan yow liste. | |
| |
| 132. This accident so pitous was to here, | |
| And eek so lyk a sooth, at pryme face, | |
| And Troilus hir knight to hir so dere, | 920 |
| His privè coming, and the siker place, | |
| That, though that she dide him as thanne a grace, | |
| Considered alle thinges as they stode, | |
| No wonder is, sin she dide al for gode. | |
| |
| 133. Cryseyde answerde, as wisly god at reste | 925 |
| My sowle bringe, as me is for him wo! | |
| And eem, y-wis, fayn wolde I doon the beste, | |
| If that I hadde grace to do so. | |
| But whether that ye dwelle or for him go, | |
| I am, til god me bettre minde sende, | 930 |
| At dulcarnon, right at my wittes ende. | |
| |
| 134. Quod Pandarus, ye, nece, wol ye here? | |
| Dulcarnon called is fleminge of wrecches; | |
| It semeth hard, for wrecches wol not lere | |
| For verray slouthe or othere wilful tecches; | 935 |
| This seyd by hem that be not worth two fecches. | |
| But ye ben wys, and that we han on honde | |
| Nis neither hard, ne skilful to withstonde. | |
| |
| 135. Thanne, eem, quod she, doth her-of as yow list; | |
| But er he come I wil up first aryse; | 940 |
| And, for the love of god, sin al my trist | |
| Is on yow two, and ye ben bothe wyse, | |
| So wircheth now in so discreet a wyse, | |
| That I honour may have, and he plesaunce; | |
| For I am here al in your governaunce. | 945 |
| |
| 136. That is wel seyd, quod he, my nece dere, | |
| Ther good thrift on that wyse gentil herte! | |
| But liggeth stille, and taketh him right here, | |
| It nedeth not no ferther for him sterte; | |
| And ech of yow ese otheres sorwes smerte, | 950 |
| For love of god; and, Venus, I thee herie; | |
| For sone hope I we shulle ben alle merie. | |
| |
| 137. This Troilus ful sone on knees him sette | |
| Ful sobrely, right by hir beddes heed, | |
| And in his beste wyse his lady grette; | 955 |
| But lord, so she wex sodeynliche reed! | |
| Ne, though men sholden smyten of hir heed, | |
| She coude nought a word a-right out-bringe | |
| So sodeynly, for his sodeyn cominge. | |
| |
| 138. But Pandarus, that so wel coude fele | 960 |
| In every thing, to pleye anoon bigan, | |
| And seyde, nece, see how this lord can knele! | |
| Now, for your trouthe, seeth this gentil man! | |
| And with that word he for a quisshen ran, | |
| And seyde, kneleth now, whyl that yow leste, | 965 |
| Ther god your hertes bringe sone at reste! | |
| |
| 139. Can I not seyn, for she bad him not ryse, | |
| If sorwe it putte out of hir remembraunce, | |
| Or elles if she toke it in the wyse | |
| Of duëtee, as for his observaunce; | 970 |
| But wel finde I she dide him this plesaunce, | |
| That she him kiste, al-though she syked sore; | |
| And bad him sitte a-doun with-outen more. | |
| |
| 140. Quod Pandarus, now wol ye wel biginne; | |
| Now doth him sitte, gode nece dere, | 975 |
| Upon your beddes syde al there with-inne, | |
| That ech of yow the bet may other here. | |
| And with that word he drow him to the fere, | |
| And took a light, and fond his contenaunce | |
| As for to loke up-on an old romaunce. | 980 |
| |
| 141. Criseyde, that was Troilus lady right, | |
| And cleer stood on a ground of sikernesse, | |
| Al thoughte she, hir servaunt and hir knight | |
| Ne sholde of right non untrouthe in hir gesse, | |
| Yet nathelees, considered his distresse, | 985 |
| And that love is in cause of swich folye, | |
| Thus to him spak she of his Ielousye: | |
| |
| 142. Lo, herte myn, as wolde the excellence | |
| Of love, ayeins the which that no man may, | |
| Ne oughte eek goodly maken resistence; | 990 |
| And eek bycause I felte wel and say | |
| Your grete trouthe, and servyse every day; | |
| And that your herte al myn was, sooth to seyne, | |
| This droof me for to rewe up-on your peyne. | |
| |
| 143. And your goodnesse have I founde alwey yit, | 995 |
| Of whiche, my dere herte and al my knight, | |
| I thonke it yow, as fer as I have wit, | |
| Al can I nought as muche as it were right; | |
| And I, emforth my conninge and my might, | |
| Have and ay shal, how sore that me smerte, | 1000 |
| Ben to yow trewe and hool, with al myn herte; | |
| |
| 144. And dredelees, that shal be founde at preve. | |
| But, herte myn, what al this is to seyne | |
| Shal wel be told, so that ye noght yow greve, | |
| Though I to yow right on your-self compleyne. | 1005 |
| For ther-with mene I fynally the peyne, | |
| That halt your herte and myn in hevinesse, | |
| Fully to sleen, and every wrong redresse. | |
| |
| 145. My goode, myn, not I for-why ne how | |
| That Ialousye, allas! that wikked wivere, | 1010 |
| Thus causelees is cropen in-to yow; | |
| The harm of which I wolde fayn delivere! | |
| Allas! that he, al hool, or of him slivere, | |
| Shuld have his refut in so digne a place, | |
| Ther Iove him sone out of your herte arace! | 1015 |
| |
| 146. But O, thou Iove, O auctor of nature, | |
| Is this an honour to thy deitee, | |
| That folk ungiltif suffren here iniure, | |
| And who that giltif is, al quit goth he? | |
| O were it leful for to pleyne on thee, | 1020 |
| That undeserved suffrest Ialousye, | |
| And that I wolde up-on thee pleyne and crye! | |
| |
| 147. Eek al my wo is this, that folk now usen | |
| To seyn right thus, ye, Ialousye is love! | |
| And wolde a busshel venim al excusen, | 1025 |
| For that o greyn of love is on it shove! | |
| But that wot heighe god that sit above, | |
| If it be lyker love, or hate, or grame; | |
| And after that, it oughte bere his name. | |
| |
| 148. But certeyn is, som maner Ialousye | 1030 |
| Is excusable more than som, y-wis. | |
| As whan cause is, and som swich fantasye | |
| With pietee so wel repressed is, | |
| That it unnethe dooth or seyth amis, | |
| But goodly drinketh up al his distresse; | 1035 |
| And that excuse I, for the gentilesse. | |
| |
| 149. And som so ful of furie is and despyt, | |
| That it sourmounteth his repressioun; | |
| But herte myn, ye be not in that plyt, | |
| That thanke I god, for whiche your passioun | 1040 |
| I wol not calle it but illusioun, | |
| Of habundaunce of love and bisy cure, | |
| That dooth your herte this disese endure. | |
| |
| 150. Of which I am right sory, but not wrooth; | |
| But, for my devoir and your hertes reste, | 1045 |
| Wher-so yow list, by ordal or by ooth, | |
| By sort, or in what wyse so yow leste, | |
| For love of god, lat preve it for the beste! | |
| And if that I be giltif, do me deye, | |
| Allas! what mighte I more doon or seye? | 1050 |
| |
| 151. With that a fewe brighte teres newe | |
| Out of hir eyen fille, and thus she seyde, | |
| Now god, thou wost, in thought ne dede untrewe | |
| To Troilus was never yet Criseyde. | |
| With that hir heed doun in the bed she leyde, | 1055 |
| And with the shete it wreigh, and syghed sore, | |
| And held hir pees; not o word spak she more. | |
| |
| 152. But now help god to quenchen al this sorwe, | |
| So hope I that he shal, for he best may; | |
| For I have seyn, of a ful misty morwe | 1060 |
| Folwen ful ofte a mery someres day; | |
| And after winter folweth grene May. | |
| Men seen alday, and reden eek in stories, | |
| That after sharpe shoures been victories. | |
| |
| 153. This Troilus, whan he hir wordes herde, | 1065 |
| Have ye no care, him liste not to slepe; | |
| For it thoughte him no strokes of a yerde | |
| To here or seen Criseyde his lady wepe; | |
| But wel he felte aboute his herte crepe, | |
| For every teer which that Criseyde asterte, | 1070 |
| The crampe of deeth, to streyne him by the herte. | |
| |
| 154. And in his minde he gan the tyme acurse | |
| That he cam therë, and that he was born; | |
| For now is wikke y-turned in-to worse, | |
| And al that labour he hath doon biforn, | 1075 |
| He wende it lost, he thoughte he nas but lorn. | |
| O Pandarus, thoughte he, allas! thy wyle | |
| Serveth of nought, so weylawey the whyle! | |
| |
| 155. And therwithal he heng a-doun the heed, | |
| And fil on knees, and sorwfully he sighte; | 1080 |
| What mighte he seyn? he felte he nas but deed, | |
| For wrooth was she that shulde his sorwes lighte. | |
| But nathelees, whan that he speken mighte, | |
| Than seyde he thus, god woot, that of this game, | |
| Whan al is wist, than am I not to blame! | 1085 |
| |
| 156. Ther-with the sorwe so his herte shette, | |
| That from his eyen fil ther not a tere, | |
| And every spirit his vigour in-knette, | |
| So they astoned and oppressed were. | |
| The feling of his sorwe, or of his fere, | 1090 |
| Or of ought elles, fled was out of towne; | |
| And doun he fel al sodeynly a-swowne. | |
| |
| 157. This was no litel sorwe for to see; | |
| But al was hust, and Pandare up as faste, | |
| O nece, pees, or we be lost, quod he, | 1095 |
| Beth nought agast; but certeyn, at the laste, | |
| For this or that, he in-to bedde him caste, | |
| And seyde, O theef, is this a mannes herte? | |
| And of he rente al to his bare sherte; | |
| |
| 158. And seyde, nece, but ye helpe us now, | 1100 |
| Allas, your owne Troilus is lorn! | |
| Y-wis, so wolde I, and I wiste how, | |
| Ful fayn, quod she; allas! that I was born! | |
| Ye, nece, wol ye pullen out the thorn | |
| That stiketh in his herte? quod Pandare; | 1105 |
| Sey al foryeve, and stint is al this fare! | |
| |
| 159. Ye, that to me, quod she, ful lever were | |
| Than al the good the sonne aboute gooth; | |
| And therwith-al she swoor him in his ere, | |
| Y-wis, my dere herte, I am nought wrooth, | 1110 |
| Have here my trouthe and many another ooth; | |
| Now speek to me, for it am I, Cryseyde! | |
| But al for nought; yet mighte he not a-breyde. | |
| |
| 160. Therwith his pous and pawmes of his hondes | |
| They gan to frote, and wete his temples tweyne, | 1115 |
| And, to deliveren him from bittre bondes, | |
| She ofte him kiste; and, shortly for to seyne, | |
| Him to revoken she dide al hir peyne. | |
| And at the laste, he gan his breeth to drawe, | |
| And of his swough sone after that adawe, | 1120 |
| |
| 161. And gan bet minde and reson to him take, | |
| But wonder sore he was abayst, y-wis. | |
| And with a syk, whan he gan bet a-wake, | |
| He seyde, O mercy, god, what thing is this? | |
| Why do ye with your-selven thus amis? | 1125 |
| Quod tho Criseyde, is this a mannes game? | |
| What, Troilus! wol ye do thus, for shame? | |
| |
| 162. And therwith-al hir arm over him she leyde, | |
| And al foryaf, and ofte tyme him keste. | |
| He thonked hir, and to hir spak, and seyde | 1130 |
| As fil to purpos for his herte reste. | |
| And she to that answerde him as hir leste; | |
| And with hir goodly wordes him disporte | |
| She gan, and ofte his sorwes to comforte. | |
| |
| 163. Quod Pandarus, for ought I can espyen, | 1135 |
| This light nor I ne serven here of nought; | |
| Light is not good for syke folkes yën. | |
| But for the love of god, sin ye be brought | |
| In thus good plyt, lat now non hevy thought | |
| Ben hanginge in the hertes of yow tweye: | 1140 |
| And bar the candele to the chimeneye. | |
| |
| 164. Sone after this, though it no nede were, | |
| Whan she swich othes as hir list devyse | |
| Hadde of him take, hir thoughte tho no fere, | |
| Ne cause eek non, to bidde him thennes ryse. | 1145 |
| Yet lesse thing than othes may suffyse | |
| In many a cas; for every wight, I gesse, | |
| That loveth wel meneth but gentilesse. | |
| |
| 165. But in effect she wolde wite anoon | |
| Of what man, and eek where, and also why | 1150 |
| He Ielous was, sin ther was cause noon; | |
| And eek the signe, that he took it by, | |
| She bad him that to telle hir bisily, | |
| Or elles, certeyn, she bar him on honde, | |
| That this was doon of malis, hir to fonde. | 1155 |
| |
| 166. With-outen more, shortly for to seyne, | |
| He moste obeye un-to his lady heste; | |
| And for the lasse harm, he moste feyne. | |
| He seyde hir, whan she was at swiche a feste | |
| She mighte on him han loked at the leste; | 1160 |
| Not I not what, al dere y-nough a risshe, | |
| As he that nedes moste a cause fisshe. | |
| |
| 167. And she answerde, swete, al were it so, | |
| What harm was that, sin I non yvel mene? | |
| For, by that god that boughte us bothe two, | 1165 |
| In alle thinge is myn entente clene. | |
| Swich arguments ne been not worth a bene; | |
| Wol ye the childish Ialous contrefete? | |
| Now were it worthy that ye were y-bete. | |
| |
| 168. Tho Troilus gan sorwfully to syke, | 1170 |
| Lest she be wrooth, him thoughte his herte deyde; | |
| And seyde, allas! upon my sorwes syke | |
| Have mercy, swete herte myn, Cryseyde! | |
| And if that, in tho wordes that I seyde, | |
| Be any wrong, I wol no more trespace; | 1175 |
| Do what yow list, I am al in your grace. | |
| |
| 169. And she answerde, of gilt misericorde! | |
| That is to seyn, that I foryeve al this; | |
| And ever-more on this night yow recorde, | |
| And beth wel war ye do no more amis. | 1180 |
| Nay, dere herte myn, quod he, y-wis. | |
| And now, quod she, that I have do yow smerte, | |
| Foryeve it me, myn owene swete herte. | |
| |
| 170. This Troilus, with blisse of that supprysed, | |
| Put al in goddes hond, as he that mente | 1185 |
| No-thing but wel; and, sodeynly avysed, | |
| He hir in armes faste to him hente. | |
| And Pandarus, with a ful good entente, | |
| Leyde him to slepe, and seyde, if ye ben wyse, | |
| Swowneth not now, lest more folk aryse. | 1190 |
| |
| 171. What mighte or may the sely larke seye, | |
| Whan that the sparhauk hath it in his foot? | |
| I can no more, but of thise ilke tweye, | |
| To whom this tale sucre be or soot, | |
| Though that I tarie a yeer, som-tyme I moot, | 1195 |
| After myn auctor, tellen hir gladnesse, | |
| As wel as I have told hir hevinesse. | |
| |
| 172. Criseyde, which that felte hir thus y-take, | |
| As writen clerkes in hir bokes olde, | |
| Right as an aspes leef she gan to quake, | 1200 |
| Whan she him felte hir in his armes folde. | |
| But Troilus, al hool of cares colde, | |
| Gan thanken tho the blisful goddes sevene; | |
| Thus sondry peynes bringen folk to hevene. | |
| |
| 173. This Troilus in armes gan hir streyne, | 1205 |
| And seyde, O swete, as ever mote I goon, | |
| Now be ye caught, now is ther but we tweyne; | |
| Now yeldeth yow, for other boot is noon. | |
| To that Criseyde answerde thus anoon, | |
| Ne hadde I er now, my swete herte dere, | 1210 |
| Ben yolde, y-wis, I were now not here! | |
| |
| 174. O! sooth is seyd, that heled for to be | |
| As of a fevre or othere greet syknesse, | |
| Men moste drinke, as men may often see, | |
| Ful bittre drink; and for to han gladnesse, | 1215 |
| Men drinken often peyne and greet distresse; | |
| I mene it here, as for this aventure, | |
| That thourgh a peyne hath founden al his cure. | |
| |
| 175. And now swetnesse semeth more sweet, | |
| That bitternesse assayed was biforn; | 1220 |
| For out of wo in blisse now they flete. | |
| Non swich they felten, sith they were born; | |
| Now is this bet, than bothe two be lorn! | |
| For love of god, take every womman hede | |
| To werken thus, if it comth to the nede. | 1225 |
| |
| 176. Criseyde, al quit from every drede and tene, | |
| As she that iuste cause hadde him to triste, | |
| Made him swich feste, it Ioye was to sene, | |
| Whan she his trouthe and clene entente wiste. | |
| And as aboute a tree, with many a twiste, | 1230 |
| Bitrent and wryth the sote wode-binde, | |
| Gan eche of hem in armes other winde. | |
| |
| 177. And as the newe abaysshed nightingale, | |
| That stinteth first whan she biginneth singe, | |
| Whan that she hereth any herde tale, | 1235 |
| Or in the hegges any wight steringe, | |
| And after siker dooth hir voys out-ringe; | |
| Right so Criseyde, whan hir drede stente, | |
| Opned hir herte, and tolde him hir entente. | |
| |
| 178. And right as he that seeth his deeth y-shapen, | 1240 |
| And deye moot, in ought that he may gesse, | |
| And sodeynly rescous doth him escapen, | |
| And from his deeth is brought in sikernesse, | |
| For al this world, in swich present gladnesse | |
| Was Troilus, and hath his lady swete; | 1245 |
| With worse hap god lat us never mete! | |
| |
| 179. Hir armes smale, hir streyghte bak and softe, | |
| Hir sydes longe, fleshly, smothe, and whyte | |
| He gan to stroke, and good thrift bad ful ofte | |
| Hir snowish throte, hir brestes rounde and lyte; | 1250 |
| Thus in this hevene he gan him to delyte, | |
| And ther-with-al a thousand tyme hir kiste; | |
| That, what to done, for Ioye unnethe he wiste. | |
| |
| 180. Than seyde he thus, O, Love, O, Charitee, | |
| Thy moder eek, Citherea the swete, | 1255 |
| After thy-self next heried be she, | |
| Venus mene I, the wel-willy planete; | |
| And next that, Imenëus, I thee grete; | |
| For never man was to yow goddes holde | |
| As I, which ye han brought fro cares colde. | 1260 |
| |
| 181. Benigne Love, thou holy bond of thinges, | |
| Who-so wol grace, and list thee nought honouren, | |
| Lo, his desyr wol flee with-outen winges. | |
| For, noldestow of bountee hem socouren | |
| That serven best and most alwey labouren, | 1265 |
| Yet were al lost, that dar I wel seyn, certes, | |
| But-if thy grace passed our desertes. | |
| |
| 182. And for thou me, that coude leest deserve | |
| Of hem that nombred been un-to thy grace, | |
| Hast holpen, ther I lykly was to sterve, | 1270 |
| And me bistowed in so heygh a place | |
| That thilke boundes may no blisse pace, | |
| I can no more, but laude and reverence | |
| Be to thy bounte and thyn excellence! | |
| |
| 183. And therwith-al Criseyde anoon he kiste, | 1275 |
| Of which, certeyn, she felte no disese. | |
| And thus seyde he, now wolde god I wiste, | |
| Myn herte swete, how I yow mighte plese! | |
| What man, quod he, was ever thus at ese | |
| As I, on whiche the faireste and the beste | 1280 |
| That ever I say, deyneth hir herte reste. | |
| |
| 184. Here may men seen that mercy passeth right; | |
| The experience of that is felt in me, | |
| That am unworthy to so swete a wight. | |
| But herte myn, of your benignitee, | 1285 |
| So thenketh, though that I unworthy be, | |
| Yet mot I nede amenden in som wyse, | |
| Right thourgh the vertu of your heyghe servyse. | |
| |
| 185. And for the love of god, my lady dere, | |
| Sin god hath wrought me for I shal yow serve, | 1290 |
| As thus I mene, that ye wol be my stere, | |
| To do me live, if that yow liste, or sterve, | |
| So techeth me how that I may deserve | |
| Your thank, so that I, thurgh myn ignoraunce, | |
| Ne do no-thing that yow be displesaunce. | 1295 |
| |
| 186. For certes, fresshe wommanliche wyf, | |
| This dar I seye, that trouthe and diligence, | |
| That shal ye finden in me al my lyf, | |
| Ne I wol not, certeyn, breken your defence; | |
| And if I do, present or in absence, | 1300 |
| For love of god, lat slee me with the dede, | |
| If that it lyke un-to your womanhede. | |
| |
| 187. Y-wis, quod she, myn owne hertes list, | |
| My ground of ese, and al myn herte dere, | |
| Graunt mercy, for on that is al my trist; | 1305 |
| But late us falle awey fro this matere; | |
| For it suffyseth, this that seyd is here. | |
| And at o word, with-outen repentaunce, | |
| Wel-come, my knight, my pees, my suffisaunce! | |
| |
| 188. Of hir delyt, or Ioyes oon the leste | 1310 |
| Were impossible to my wit to seye; | |
| But iuggeth, ye that han ben at the feste | |
| Of swich gladnesse, if that hem liste pleye! | |
| I can no more, but thus thise ilke tweye | |
| That night, be-twixen dreed and sikernesse, | 1315 |
| Felten in love the grete worthinesse. | |
| |
| 189. O blisful night, of hem so longe y-sought, | |
| How blithe un-to hem bothe two thou were! | |
| Why ne hadde I swich on with my soule y-bought, | |
| Ye, or the leeste Ioye that was there? | 1320 |
| A-wey, thou foule daunger and thou fere, | |
| And lat hem in this hevene blisse dwelle, | |
| That is so heygh, that al ne can I telle! | |
| |
| 190. But sooth is, though I can not tellen al, | |
| As can myn auctor, of his excellence, | 1325 |
| Yet have I seyd, and, god to-forn, I shal | |
| In every thing al hoolly his sentence. | |
| And if that I, at loves reverence, | |
| Have any word in eched for the beste, | |
| Doth therwith-al right as your-selven leste. | 1330 |
| |
| 191. For myne wordes, here and every part, | |
| I speke hem alle under correccioun | |
| Of yow, that feling han in loves art, | |
| And putte it al in your discrecioun | |
| To encrese or maken diminucioun | 1335 |
| Of my langage, and that I yow bi-seche; | |
| But now to purpos of my rather speche. | |
| |
| 192. Thise ilke two, that ben in armes laft, | |
| So looth to hem a-sonder goon it were, | |
| That ech from other wende been biraft, | 1340 |
| Or elles, lo, this was hir moste fere, | |
| That al this thing but nyce dremes were; | |
| For which ful ofte ech of hem seyde, O swete, | |
| Clippe ich yow thus, or elles I it mete? | |
| |
| 193. And, lord! so he gan goodly on hir see, | 1345 |
| That never his look ne bleynte from hir face, | |
| And seyde, O dere herte, may it be | |
| That it be sooth, that ye ben in this place? | |
| Ye, herte myn, god thank I of his grace! | |
| Quod tho Criseyde, and therwith-al him kiste, | 1350 |
| That where his spirit was, for Ioye he niste. | |
| |
| 194. This Troilus ful ofte hir eyen two | |
| Gan for to kisse, and seyde, O eyen clere, | |
| It were ye that wroughte me swich wo, | |
| Ye humble nettes of my lady dere! | 1355 |
| Though ther be mercy writen in your chere, | |
| God wot, the text ful hard is, sooth, to finde, | |
| How coude ye with-outen bond me binde? | |
| |
| 195. Therwith he gan hir faste in armes take, | |
| And wel an hundred tymes gan he syke, | 1360 |
| Nought swiche sorwful sykes as men make | |
| For wo, or elles whan that folk ben syke, | |
| But esy sykes, swiche as been to lyke, | |
| That shewed his affeccioun with-inne; | |
| Of swiche sykes coude he nought bilinne. | 1365 |
| |
| 196. Sone after this they speke of sondry thinges, | |
| As fil to purpos of this aventure, | |
| And pleyinge entrechaungeden hir ringes, | |
| Of which I can nought tellen no scripture; | |
| But wel I woot a broche, gold and asure, | 1370 |
| In whiche a ruby set was lyk an herte, | |
| Criseyde him yaf, and stak it on his sherte. | |
| |
| 197. Lord! trowe ye, a coveitous, a wrecche, | |
| That blameth love and holt of it despyt, | |
| That, of tho pens that he can mokre and kecche, | 1375 |
| Was ever yet y-yeve him swich delyt, | |
| As is in love, in oo poynt, in som plyt? | |
| Nay, doutelees, for also god me save, | |
| So parfit Ioye may no nigard have! | |
| |
| 198. They wol sey yis, but lord! so that they lye, | 1380 |
| Tho bisy wrecches, ful of wo and drede! | |
| They callen love a woodnesse or folye, | |
| But it shal falle hem as I shal yow rede; | |
| They shul forgo the whyte and eke the rede, | |
| And live in wo, ther god yeve hem mischaunce, | 1385 |
| And every lover in his trouthe avaunce! | |
| |
| 199. As wolde god, tho wrecches, that dispyse | |
| Servyse of love, hadde eres al-so longe | |
| As hadde Myda, ful of coveityse; | |
| And ther-to dronken hadde as hoot and stronge | 1390 |
| As Crassus dide for his affectis wronge, | |
| To techen hem that they ben in the vyce, | |
| And loveres nought, al-though they holde hem nyce! | |
| |
| 200. Thise ilke two, of whom that I yow seye, | |
| Whan that hir hertes wel assured were, | 1395 |
| Tho gonne they to speken and to pleye, | |
| And eek rehercen how, and whanne, and where, | |
| They knewe hem first, and every wo and fere | |
| That passed was; but al swich hevinesse, | |
| I thanke it god, was tourned to gladnesse. | 1400 |
| |
| 201. And ever-mo, whan that hem fel to speke | |
| Of any thing of swich a tyme agoon, | |
| With kissing al that tale sholde breke, | |
| And fallen in a newe Ioye anoon, | |
| And diden al hir might, sin they were oon, | 1405 |
| For to recoveren blisse and been at ese, | |
| And passed wo with Ioye countrepeyse. | |
| |
| 202. Reson wil not that I speke of sleep, | |
| For it accordeth nought to my matere; | |
| God woot, they toke of that ful litel keep, | 1410 |
| But lest this night, that was to hem so dere, | |
| Ne sholde in veyn escape in no manere, | |
| It was biset in Ioye and bisinesse | |
| Of al that souneth in-to gentilnesse. | |
| |
| 203. But whan the cok, comune astrologer, | 1415 |
| Gan on his brest to bete, and after crowe, | |
| And Lucifer, the dayes messager, | |
| Gan for to ryse, and out hir bemes throwe; | |
| And estward roos, to him that coude it knowe, | |
| Fortuna maior, [than] anoon Criseyde, | 1420 |
| With herte sore, to Troilus thus seyde: | |
| |
| 204. Myn hertes lyf, my trist and my plesaunce, | |
| That I was born, allas! what me is wo, | |
| That day of us mot make desseveraunce! | |
| For tyme it is to ryse, and hennes go, | 1425 |
| Or elles I am lost for evermo! | |
| O night, allas! why niltow over us hove, | |
| As longe as whanne Almena lay by Iove? | |
| |
| 205. O blake night, as folk in bokes rede, | |
| That shapen art by god this world to hyde | 1430 |
| At certeyn tymes with thy derke wede, | |
| That under that men mighte in reste abyde, | |
| Wel oughte bestes pleyne, and folk thee chyde, | |
| That there-as day with labour wolde us breste, | |
| That thou thus fleest, and deynest us nought reste! | 1435 |
| |
| 206. Thou dost, allas! to shortly thyn offyce, | |
| Thou rakel night, ther god, makere of kinde, | |
| Thee, for thyn hast and thyn unkinde vyce, | |
| So faste ay to our hemi-spere binde, | |
| That never-more under the ground thou winde! | 1440 |
| For now, for thou so hyest out of Troye, | |
| Have I forgon thus hastily my Ioye! | |
| |
| 207. This Troilus, that with tho wordes felte, | |
| As thoughte him tho, for pietous distresse, | |
| The blody teres from his herte melte, | 1445 |
| As he that never yet swich hevinesse | |
| Assayed hadde, out of so greet gladnesse, | |
| Gan therwith-al Criseyde his lady dere | |
| In armes streyne, and seyde in this manere: | |
| |
| 208. O cruel day, accusour of the Ioye | 1450 |
| That night and love han stole and faste y-wryen, | |
| A-cursed be thy coming in-to Troye, | |
| For every bore hath oon of thy bright yën! | |
| Envyous day, what list thee so to spyen? | |
| What hastow lost, why sekestow this place, | 1455 |
| Ther god thy lyght so quenche, for his grace? | |
| |
| 209. Allas! what han thise loveres thee agilt, | |
| Dispitous day? thyn be the pyne of helle! | |
| For many a lovere hastow shent, and wilt; | |
| Thy pouring in wol no-wher lete hem dwelle. | 1460 |
| What proferestow thy light here for to selle? | |
| Go selle it hem that smale seles graven, | |
| We wol thee nought, us nedeth no day haven. | |
| |
| 210. And eek the sonne Tytan gan he chyde, | |
| And seyde, O fool, wel may men thee dispyse, | 1465 |
| That hast the Dawing al night by thy syde, | |
| And suffrest hir so sone up fro thee ryse, | |
| For to disesen loveres in this wyse. | |
| What! hold your bed ther, thou, and eek thy Morwe! | |
| I bidde god, so yeve yow bothe sorwe! | 1470 |
| |
| 211. Therwith ful sore he sighte, and thus he seyde, | |
| My lady right, and of my wele or wo | |
| The welle and rote, O goodly myn, Criseyde, | |
| And shal I ryse, allas! and shal I go? | |
| Now fele I that myn herte moot a-two! | 1475 |
| For how sholde I my lyf an houre save, | |
| Sin that with yow is al the lyf I have? | |
| |
| 212. What shal I doon, for certes, I not how, | |
| Ne whanne, allas! I shal the tyme see, | |
| That in this plyt I may be eft with yow; | 1480 |
| And of my lyf, god woot, how that shal be, | |
| Sin that desyr right now so byteth me, | |
| That I am deed anoon, but I retourne. | |
| How sholde I longe, allas! fro yow soiourne? | |
| |
| 213. But nathelees, myn owene lady bright, | 1485 |
| Yit were it so that I wiste outrely, | |
| That I, your humble servaunt and your knight, | |
| Were in your herte set so fermely | |
| As ye in myn, the which thing, trewely, | |
| Me lever were than thise worldes tweyne, | 1490 |
| Yet sholde I bet enduren al my peyne. | |
| |
| 214. To that Cryseyde answerde right anoon, | |
| And with a syk she seyde, O herte dere, | |
| The game, y-wis, so ferforth now is goon, | |
| That first shal Phebus falle fro his spere, | 1495 |
| And every egle been the dowves fere, | |
| And every roche out of his place sterte, | |
| Er Troilus out of Criseydes herte! | |
| |
| 215. Ye be so depe in-with myn herte grave, | |
| That, though I wolde it turne out of my thought, | 1500 |
| As wisly verray god my soule save, | |
| To dyen in the peyne, I coude nought! | |
| And, for the love of god that us hath wrought, | |
| Lat in your brayn non other fantasye | |
| So crepe, that it cause me to dye! | 1505 |
| |
| 216. And that ye me wolde han as faste in minde | |
| As I have yow, that wolde I yow bi-seche; | |
| And, if I wiste soothly that to finde, | |
| God mighte not a poynt my Ioyes eche! | |
| But, herte myn, with-oute more speche, | 1510 |
| Beth to me trewe, or elles were it routhe; | |
| For I am thyn, by god and by my trouthe! | |
| |
| 217. Beth glad for-thy, and live in sikernesse; | |
| Thus seyde I never er this, ne shal to mo; | |
| And if to yow it were a gret gladnesse | 1515 |
| To turne ayein, soone after that ye go, | |
| As fayn wolde I as ye, it were so, | |
| As wisly god myn herte bringe at reste! | |
| And him in armes took, and ofte keste. | |
| |
| 218. Agayns his wil, sin it mot nedes be, | 1520 |
| This Troilus up roos, and faste him cledde, | |
| And in his armes took his lady free | |
| An hundred tyme, and on his wey him spedde, | |
| And with swich wordes as his herte bledde, | |
| He seyde, farewel, my dere herte swete, | 1525 |
| Ther god us graunte sounde and sone to mete! | |
| |
| 219. To which no word for sorwe she answerde, | |
| So sore gan his parting hir destreyne; | |
| And Troilus un-to his palays ferde, | |
| As woo bigon as she was, sooth to seyne; | 1530 |
| So hard him wrong of sharp desyr the peyne | |
| For to ben eft there he was in plesaunce, | |
| That it may never out of his remembraunce. | |
| |
| 220. Retorned to his real palais, sone | |
| He softe in-to his bed gan for to slinke, | 1535 |
| To slepe longe, as he was wont to done, | |
| But al for nought; he may wel ligge and winke, | |
| But sleep ne may ther in his herte sinke; | |
| Thenkinge how she, for whom desyr him brende, | |
| A thousand-fold was worth more than he wende. | 1540 |
| |
| 221. And in his thought gan up and doun to winde | |
| Hir wordes alle, and every contenaunce, | |
| And fermely impressen in his minde | |
| The leste poynt that to him was plesaunce; | |
| And verrayliche, of thilke remembraunce, | 1545 |
| Desyr al newe him brende, and lust to brede | |
| Gan more than erst, and yet took he non hede. | |
| |
| 222. Criseyde also, right in the same wyse, | |
| Of Troilus gan in hir herte shette | |
| His worthinesse, his lust, his dedes wyse, | 1550 |
| His gentilesse, and how she with him mette, | |
| Thonkinge love he so wel hir bisette; | |
| Desyring eft to have hir herte dere | |
| In swich a plyt, she dorste make him chere. | |
| |
| 223. Pandare, a-morwe which that comen was | 1555 |
| Un-to his nece, and gan hir fayre grete, | |
| Seyde, al this night so reyned it, allas! | |
| That al my drede is that ye, nece swete, | |
| Han litel layser had to slepe and mete; | |
| Al night, quod he, hath reyn so do me wake, | 1560 |
| That som of us, I trowe, hir hedes ake. | |
| |
| 224. And ner he com, and seyde, how stont it now | |
| This mery morwe, nece, how can ye fare? | |
| Criseyde answerde, never the bet for yow, | |
| Fox that ye been, god yeve your herte care! | 1565 |
| God helpe me so, ye caused al this fare, | |
| Trow I, quod she, for alle your wordes whyte; | |
| O! who-so seeth yow knoweth yow ful lyte! | |
| |
| 225. With that she gan hir face for to wrye | |
| With the shete, and wex for shame al reed; | 1570 |
| And Pandarus gan under for to prye, | |
| And seyde, nece, if that I shal ben deed, | |
| Have here a swerd, and smyteth of myn heed. | |
| With that his arm al sodeynly he thriste | |
| Under hir nekke, and at the laste hir kiste. | 1575 |
| |
| 226. I passe al that which chargeth nought to seye, | |
| What! God foryaf his deeth, and she al-so | |
| Foryaf, and with hir uncle gan to pleye, | |
| For other cause was ther noon than so. | |
| But of this thing right to the effect to go, | 1580 |
| Whan tyme was, hom til hir hous she wente, | |
| And Pandarus hath fully his entente. | |
| |
| 227. Now torne we ayein to Troilus, | |
| That resteles ful longe a-bedde lay, | |
| And prevely sente after Pandarus, | 1585 |
| To him to come in al the haste he may. | |
| He com anoon, nought ones seyde he nay, | |
| And Troilus ful sobrely he grette, | |
| And doun upon his beddes syde him sette. | |
| |
| 228. This Troilus, with al the affeccioun | 1590 |
| Of frendes love that herte may devyse, | |
| To Pandarus on kneës fil adoun, | |
| And er that he wolde of the place aryse, | |
| He gan him thonken in his beste wyse; | |
| A hondred sythe he gan the tyme blesse, | 1595 |
| That he was born to bringe him fro distresse. | |
| |
| 229. He seyde, O frend, of frendes the alderbeste | |
| That ever was, the sothe for to telle, | |
| Thou hast in hevene y-brought my soule at reste | |
| Fro Flegiton, the fery flood of helle; | 1600 |
| That, though I mighte a thousand tymes selle, | |
| Upon a day, my lyf in thy servyse, | |
| It mighte nought a mote in that suffyse. | |
| |
| 230. The sonne, which that al the world may see, | |
| Saw never yet, my lyf, that dar I leye, | 1605 |
| So inly fair and goodly as is she, | |
| Whos I am al, and shal, til that I deye; | |
| And, that I thus am hires, dar I seye, | |
| That thanked be the heighe worthinesse | |
| Of love, and eek thy kinde bisinesse. | 1610 |
| |
| 231. Thus hastow me no litel thing y-yive, | |
| Fo which to thee obliged be for ay | |
| My lyf, and why? for thorugh thyn help I live; | |
| For elles deed hadde I be many a day. | |
| And with that word doun in his bed he lay, | 1615 |
| And Pandarus ful sobrely him herde | |
| Til al was seyd, and thanne he him answerde: | |
| |
| 232. My dere frend, if I have doon for thee | |
| In any cas, god wot, it is me leef; | |
| And am as glad as man may of it be, | 1620 |
| God help me so; but tak now not a-greef | |
| That I shal seyn, be war of this myscheef, | |
| That, there-as thou now brought art in-to blisse, | |
| That thou thy-self ne cause it nought to misse. | |
| |
| 233. For of fortunes sharp adversitee | 1625 |
| The worst kinde of infortune is this, | |
| A man to have ben in prosperitee, | |
| And it remembren, whan it passed is. | |
| Thou art wys y-nough, for-thy do nought amis; | |
| Be not to rakel, though thou sitte warme, | 1630 |
| For if thou be, certeyn, it wol thee harme. | |
| |
| 234. Thou art at ese, and holde thee wel ther-inne. | |
| For also seur as reed is every fyr, | |
| As greet a craft is kepe wel as winne; | |
| Brydle alwey wel thy speche and thy desyr. | 1635 |
| For worldly Ioye halt not but by a wyr; | |
| That preveth wel, it brest alday so ofte; | |
| For-thy nede is to werke with it softe. | |
| |
| 235. Quod Troilus, I hope, and god to-forn, | |
| My dere frend, that I shal so me bere, | 1640 |
| That in my gilt ther shal no thing be lorn, | |
| Ne I nil not rakle as for to greven here; | |
| It nedeth not this matere ofte tere; | |
| For wistestow myn herte wel, Pandare, | |
| God woot, of this thou woldest litel care. | 1645 |
| |
| 236. Tho gan he telle him of his glade night. | |
| And wher-of first his herte dredde, and how, | |
| And seyde, freend, as I am trewe knight, | |
| And by that feyth I shal to god and yow, | |
| I hadde it never half so hote as now; | 1650 |
| And ay the more that desyr me byteth | |
| To love hir best, the more it me delyteth. | |
| |
| 237. I noot my-self not wisly what it is; | |
| But now I fele a newe qualitee, | |
| Ye, al another than I dide er this. | 1655 |
| Pandare answerde, and seyde thus, that he | |
| That ones may in hevene blisse be, | |
| He feleth other weyes, dar I leye, | |
| Than thilke tyme he first herde of it seye. | |
| |
| 238. This is o word for al; this Troilus | 1660 |
| Was never ful, to speke of this matere, | |
| And for to preysen un-to Pandarus | |
| The bountee of his righte lady dere, | |
| And Pandarus to thanke and maken chere. | |
| This tale ay was span-newe to biginne | 1665 |
| Til that the night departed hem a-twinne. | |
| |
| 239. Sone after this, for that fortune it wolde, | |
| I-comen was the blisful tyme swete, | |
| That Troilus was warned that he sholde, | |
| Ther he was erst, Criseyde his lady mete; | 1670 |
| For which he felte his herte in Ioye flete; | |
| And feythfully gan alle the goddes herie; | |
| And lat see now if that he can be merie. | |
| |
| 240. And holden was the forme and al the wyse, | |
| Of hir cominge, and eek of his also, | 1675 |
| As it was erst, which nedeth nought devyse. | |
| But playnly to the effect right for to go, | |
| In Ioye and seurte Pandarus hem two | |
| A-bedde broughte, whan hem bothe leste, | |
| And thus they ben in quiete and in reste. | 1680 |
| |
| 241. Nought nedeth it to yow, sin they ben met, | |
| To aske at me if that they blythe were; | |
| For if it erst was wel, tho was it bet | |
| A thousand-fold, this nedeth not enquere. | |
| A-gon was every sorwe and every fere; | 1685 |
| And bothe, y-wis, they hadde, and so they wende, | |
| As muche Ioye as herte may comprende. | |
| |
| 242. This is no litel thing of for to seye, | |
| This passeth every wit for to devyse; | |
| For eche of hem gan otheres lust obeye; | 1690 |
| Felicitee, which that thise clerkes wyse | |
| Commenden so, ne may not here suffyse. | |
| This Ioye may not writen been with inke, | |
| This passeth al that herte may bithinke. | |
| |
| 243. But cruel day, so wel-awey the stounde! | 1695 |
| Gan for to aproche, as they by signes knewe, | |
| For whiche hem thoughte felen dethes wounde; | |
| So wo was hem, that changen gan hir hewe, | |
| And day they gonnen to dispyse al newe, | |
| Calling it traytour, envyous, and worse, | 1700 |
| And bitterly the dayes light they curse. | |
| |
| 244. Quod Troilus, allas! now am I war | |
| That Pirous and tho swifte stedes three, | |
| Whiche that drawen forth the sonnes char, | |
| Han goon som by-path in despyt of me; | 1705 |
| That maketh it so sone day to be; | |
| And, for the sonne him hasteth thus to ryse, | |
| Ne shal I never doon him sacrifyse! | |
| |
| 245. But nedes day departe moste hem sone, | |
| And whanne hir speche doon was and hir chere, | 1710 |
| They twinne anoon as they were wont to done, | |
| And setten tyme of meting eft y-fere; | |
| And many a night they wroughte in this manere. | |
| And thus Fortune a tyme ladde in Ioye | |
| Criseyde, and eek this kinges sone of Troye. | 1715 |
| |
| 246. In suffisaunce, in blisse, and in singinges, | |
| This Troilus gan al his lyf to lede; | |
| He spendeth, Iusteth, maketh festeyinges; | |
| He yeveth frely ofte, and chaungeth wede, | |
| And held aboute him alwey, out of drede, | 1720 |
| A world of folk, as cam him wel of kinde, | |
| The fressheste and the beste he coude fynde; | |
| |
| 247. That swich a voys was of hym and a stevene | |
| Thorugh-out the world, of honour and largesse, | |
| That it up rong un-to the yate of hevene. | 1725 |
| And, as in love, he was in swich gladnesse, | |
| That in his herte he demede, as I gesse, | |
| That there nis lovere in this world at ese | |
| So wel as he, and thus gan love him plese. | |
| |
| 248. The godlihede or beautee which that kinde | 1730 |
| In any other lady hadde y-set | |
| Can not the mountaunce of a knot unbinde, | |
| A-boute his herte, of al Criseydes net. | |
| He was so narwe y-masked and y-knet, | |
| That it undon on any manere syde, | 1735 |
| That nil not been, for ought that may betyde. | |
| |
| 249. And by the hond ful ofte he wolde take | |
| This Pandarus, and in-to gardin lede, | |
| And swich a feste and swich a proces make | |
| Him of Criseyde, and of hir womanhede, | 1740 |
| And of hir beautee, that, with-outen drede, | |
| It was an hevene his wordes for to here; | |
| And thanne he wolde singe in this manere. | |
| |
| 250. Love, that of erthe and see hath governaunce, | |
| Love, that his hestes hath in hevene hye, | 1745 |
| Love, that with an holsom alliaunce | |
| Halt peples ioyned, as him list hem gye, | |
| Love, that knetteth lawe of companye, | |
| And couples doth in vertu for to dwelle, | |
| Bind this acord, that I have told and telle; | 1750 |
| |
| 251. That that the world with feyth, which that is stable, | |
| Dyverseth so his stoundes concordinge, | |
| That elements that been so discordable | |
| Holden a bond perpetuely duringe, | |
| That Phebus mote his rosy day forth bringe, | 1755 |
| And that the mone hath lordship over the nightes, | |
| Al this doth Love; ay heried be his mightes! | |
| |
| 252. That that the see, that gredy is to flowen, | |
| Constreyneth to a certeyn ende so | |
| His flodes, that so fersly they ne growen | 1760 |
| To drenchen erthe and al for ever-mo; | |
| And if that Love ought lete his brydel go, | |
| Al that now loveth a-sonder sholde lepe, | |
| And lost were al, that Love halt now to-hepe. | |
| |
| 253. So wolde god, that auctor is of kinde, | 1765 |
| That, with his bond, Love of his vertu liste | |
| To cerclen hertes alle, and faste binde, | |
| That from his bond no wight the wey out wiste. | |
| And hertes colde, hem wolde I that he twiste | |
| To make hem love, and that hem leste ay rewe | 1770 |
| On hertes sore, and kepe hem that ben trewe. | |
| |
| 254. In alle nedes, for the tounes werre, | |
| He was, and ay the firste in armes dight; | |
| And certeynly, but-if that bokes erre, | |
| Save Ector, most y-drad of any wight; | 1775 |
| And this encrees of hardinesse and might | |
| Cam him of love, his ladies thank to winne, | |
| That altered his spirit so with-inne. | |
| |
| 255. In tyme of trewe, on haukinge wolde he ryde, | |
| Or elles hunten boor, bere, or lyoun; | 1780 |
| The smale bestes leet he gon bi-syde. | |
| And whan that he com rydinge in-to toun, | |
| Ful ofte his lady, from hir window doun, | |
| As fresh as faucon comen out of muwe, | |
| Ful redy was, him goodly to saluwe. | 1785 |
| |
| 256. And most of love and vertu was his speche, | |
| And in despyt hadde alle wrecchednesse; | |
| And doutelees, no nede was him biseche | |
| To honouren hem that hadde worthinesse, | |
| And esen hem that weren in distresse. | 1790 |
| And glad was he if any wight wel ferde, | |
| That lover was, whan he it wiste or herde. | |
| |
| 257. For sooth to seyn, he lost held every wight | |
| But-if he were in loves heigh servyse, | |
| I mene folk that oughte it been of right. | 1795 |
| And over al this, so wel coude he devyse | |
| Of sentement, and in so unkouth wyse | |
| Al his array, that every lover thoughte, | |
| That al was wel, what-so he seyde or wroughte. | |
| |
| 258. And though that he be come of blood royal, | 1800 |
| Him liste of pryde at no wight for to chase; | |
| Benigne he was to ech in general, | |
| For which he gat him thank in every place. | |
| Thus wolde Love, y-heried be his grace, | |
| That Pryde, Envye, Ire, and Avaryce | 1805 |
| He gan to flee, and every other vyce. | |
| |
| 259. Thou lady bright, the doughter to Dione, | |
| Thy blinde and winged sone eek, daun Cupyde; | |
| Ye sustren nyne eek, that by Elicone | |
| In hil Parnaso listen for to abyde, | 1810 |
| That ye thus fer han deyned me to gyde, | |
| I can no more, but sin that ye wol wende, | |
| Ye heried been for ay, with-outen ende! | |
| |
| 260. Thourgh yow have I seyd fully in my song | |
| Theffect and Ioye of Troilus servyse, | 1815 |
| Al be that ther was som disese among, | |
| As to myn auctor listeth to devyse. | |
| My thridde book now ende ich in this wyse; | |
| And Troilus in luste and in quiete | |
Is with Criseyde, his owne herte swete.
Explicit Liber Tercius. | 1820 |
| |