CARMINA QUI QUONDAM STUDIO FLORENTE PEREGI. —
Metrum 1
Allas! I wepynge, am constreyned to bygynnen vers of sorwful
matere, that whilom in florysschyng studie made delitable ditees.
For lo, rendynge muses of poetes enditen to me thynges to ben
writen, and drery vers of wretchidnesse weten my face with verray
teres. At the leeste, no drede ne myghte overcomen tho muses,
that thei ne were felawes, and folwyden my wey (that
is to seyn, whan I was exiled). They that weren glorie of
my youthe, whilom weleful and grene, conforten nowe the sorwful
wyerdes of me, olde man. For eelde is comyn unwarly uppon me,
hasted by the harmes that Y have, and sorwe hath comandid his age
to ben in me. Heeris hore arn schad overtymeliche upon myn heved,
and the slakke skyn trembleth of myn emptid body. Thilke deth of
men is weleful that ne comyth noght in yeeris that ben swete, but
cometh to wrecches often yclepid. Allas, allas! With how deef an
ere deth, cruwel, turneth awey fro wrecches and nayteth to closen
wepynge eien. Whil Fortune, unfeithful, favourede me with lyghte
goodes, the sorwful houre (that is to seyn, the deth) hadde almoost dreynt myn heved. But now, for Fortune
cloudy hath chaunged hir deceyvable chere to meward, myn
unpietous lif draweth along unagreable duellynges in me. O ye,
my frendes, what or wherto avaunted ye
me to be weleful? For he that hath fallen stood noght in stedefast
degre.
HEC DUM MECUM TACITUS. — Prosa 1
In the mene while that I, stille, recordede these thynges with
myself and merkid my weply compleynte with office of poyntel, I
saw, stondynge aboven the heghte of myn heved, a womman of ful
greet reverence by semblaunt, hir eien brennynge and cleer-seynge
over the comune myghte of men; with a lifly colour and with swich
vigour and strengthe that it ne myghte nat ben emptid, al were
it so that sche was ful of so greet age that men ne wolden nat
trowen in no manere that sche were of our elde. The stature of
hire was of a doutous jugement, for somtyme sche constreyned and
schronk hirselven lik to the comune mesure of men, and somtyme
it semede that sche touchede the hevene with the heghte of here
heved. And whan sche hef hir heved heyere, sche percede the selve
hevene so that the sighte of men lokynge was in ydel.
Hir clothes weren makid of right delye thredes and subtil
craft of perdurable matere; the whiche clothes sche hadde woven
with hir owene handes, as I knew wel aftir by hirselve declarynge
and schewynge to me. The beaute [of] the whiche clothes a
derknesse of a forleten and despised elde hadde duskid and
dirked, as it is wont to dirken besmokede ymages. In the
nethereste hem or bordure of thise clothes, men redden ywoven in
a Grekissch P (that signifieth the lif actif); and aboven that
lettre, in the heieste bordure, a Grekyssh T (that signifieth the
lif contemplatif). And bytwixen thise two lettres ther were seyn
degrees nobly ywrought in manere of laddres, by whiche degrees
men myghten clymben fro the nethereste lettre to the uppereste.
Natheles handes of some men hadden korve that cloth by violence
and by strengthe, and everich man of hem hadde boren awey swiche
peces as he myghte geten. And forsothe this forseide womman bar
smale bokis in hir right hand, and in hir left hand sche bar a
ceptre.
And whan she saughe thise poetical muses aprochen aboute my
bed and enditynge wordes to my wepynges, sche was a litil
amoeved, and glowede with cruel eighen. "Who," quat sche,
"hath
suffred aprochen to this sike man thise comune strompettis of
swich a place that men clepen the theatre? The whiche nat oonly
ne asswagen noght his sorwes with none remedies, but thei wolden
fedyn and noryssen hym with sweete venym. Forsothe thise ben tho
that with thornes and prikkynges of talents or affeccions, whiche
that ne bien nothyng fructifyenge nor profitable, destroyen the
corn plentyvous of fruytes of resoun. For thei holden hertes of
men in usage, but thei delyvre noght folk fro maladye. But yif
ye muses hadden withdrawen fro me with youre flateries any
unkunnynge and unprofitable man, as men ben wont to fynde comonly
among the peple, I wolde wene suffre the lasse grevosly; forwhi,
in swych an unprofitable man, myne ententes weren nothyng
endamaged. But ye withdrawen me this man, that hath ben noryssed
in the studies or scoles of Eleaticis and Achademycis in Grece.
But goth now rather awey, ye mermaydenes, whiche that ben swete
til it be at the laste, and suffreth this man to ben cured and
heeled by myne muses (that is to seyn, by noteful sciences)."
And thus this companye of muses, iblamed, casten wrothly the
chere dounward to the erthe, and, schewynge by rednesse hir
schame, thei passeden sorwfully the thresschefold. And I, of whom
the sighte, ploungid in teeres, was dirked so that Y ne myghte
noght knowen what that womman was of so imperial auctorite, I wax
al abayssched and astoned, and caste my syghte doun to the erthe,
and bygan stille for to abide what sche woolde doon aftirward.
Tho com sche ner and sette her doun uppon the uttereste corner
of my bed; and sche, byholdynge my chere that was cast to the
erthe
hevy and grevous of wepynge, compleynede with
thise wordis that I schal seyn the perturbacion of my thought.
HEU QUAM PRECIPITI MERSA PROFUNDO. — Metrum
2
"Allas! How the thought of this man, dreynt in overthrowynge
depnesse, dulleth and forleteth his propre clernesse, myntynge
to gon into foreyne dirknesses as ofte as his anoyos bysynes
waxeth withoute mesure, that is dryven with werldly wyndes. This
man, that whilom was fre, to whom the hevene was opyn and knowen,
and was wont to gon in hevenliche pathes, and saughe the
lyghtnesse of the rede sonne, and saughe the sterres of the
coolde mone, and whiche sterre in hevene useth wandrynge
recourses iflyt by diverse speeris — this man, overcomere,
hadde comprehendid al this by nombre (of
acontynge in
astronomye). And, over this, he was wont to seken the causes
whennes the sounynge wyndes moeven and bysien the smothe watir
of the see; and what spirit turneth the stable hevene; and why
the sterre ariseth out of the rede est, to fallen in the westrene
wawes; and what attemprith the lusty houres of the firste somer
sesoun, that highteth and apparaileth the erthe with rosene
floures; and who maketh that plentyvous autumpne in fulle [yere]
fletith with hevy grapes. And eek this man was wont to tellen the
diverse causes of nature that weren yhidd. Allas! Now lyth he
emptid of lyght of his thoght, and his nekke is pressyd with hevy
cheynes, and bereth his chere enclyned adoun for the grete
weyghte, and is constreyned to loken on the fool erthe!"
SET MEDICINE INQUIT TEMPUS. — Prosa 2
"But tyme is now," quod sche, "of medicyne more than
of
compleynte." Forsothe thanne sche, entendynge to meward with al
the lookynge of hir eien, seyde: "Art nat thou he," quod
sche,
"that whilom, norissched with my melk and fostred with myne
metes, were escaped and comyn to corage of a parfit man? Certes
I yaf the swiche armures that, yif thou thiselve ne haddest first
cast hem awey, they schulden han defended the in sekernesse that
mai nat ben overcomyn. Knowestow me nat? Why arttow stille? Is
it for schame or for astonynge? It were me levere that it were
for schame, but it semeth me that astonynge hath oppresside
the."
And whan sche say me nat oonly stille but withouten office of
tunge and al dowmbe, sche leyde hir hand sooftly uppon my breest
and seide: "Here nys no peril," quod sche; "he is
fallen into a
litargye, whiche that is a comune seknesse to hertes that been
desceyved. He hath a litil foryeten hymselve, but certes he schal
lightly remembren hymself yif so be that he hath knowen me or
now; and that he may so doon, I will wipe a litil his eien that
ben dirked by the cloude of mortel thynges." Thise woordes
seide
sche, and with the lappe of hir garnement yplited in a frownce
sche dryede myn eien, that weren fulle of the wawes of my
wepynges.
TUNC ME DISCUSSA, &c. — Metrum 3
Thus, whan that nyght was discussed and chased awey,
dirknesses forleten me, and to myn eien repeyred ayen hir firste
strengthe. And ryght by ensaumple as the sonne is hydd whan the
sterres ben clustred (that is to seyn,
whan sterres
ben covered with cloudes) by a swyft wynd that hyghte
Chorus,
and that the firmament stant dirked with wete plowngy cloudes;
and that the sterres nat apeeren upon hevene, so that the nyght
semeth sprad upon erthe: yif thanne the wynde that hyghte
Boreas, isent out of the kaves of the cuntre of Trace, betith
this nyght (that is to seyn, chaseth it
awey)
and discovereth the closed day, thanne schyneth Phebus ischaken
with sodeyn light and smyteth with his beemes in merveylynge
eien.
HAUT ALITER TRISTICIE. — Prosa 3
Ryght so, and noon other wise, the cloudes of sorwe dissolved
and doon awey, I took hevene, and resceyved mynde to knowe the
face of my fisycien; so that [whan that] I sette myne eien on hir
and fastned my lookynge, I byholde my noryce, Philosophie, in
whoos houses I hadde conversed and hauntyd fro my youthe; and I
seide thus: "O thou maystresse of alle vertues, descended from
the sovereyne sete, whi arttow comen into this solitarie place
of myn exil? Artow comen for thou art maad coupable with me of
false blames?"
"O," quod sche, "my nory, schulde I forsake the
now, and
schulde I nat parten with the by comune travaile the charge that
thow hast suffred for envye of my name? Certes it nere nat
leveful ne syttynge thyng to Philosophie to leten withouten
companye the weye of hym that is innocent. Schulde I thanne
redowte my blame and agrysen as though ther were byfallen a newe
thyng? For trowestow that Philosophie be now alderferst assailed
in periles by folk of wykkide maneris? Have I noght stryven with
ful greet strif in old tyme, byfor the age of my Plato, ayens the
foolhardynesse of folye? And eek, the same Plato lyvynge, his
mayster Socrates desserved victorie of unryghtful deth in my
presence. The heritage of the whiche Socrates (the
heritage is to seyn the doctryne of the whiche Socrates in his
opinyoun of felicite, that I clepe welefulnesse) whan that
the peple of Epycuriens and Stoyciens and manye othere enforceden
hem to gon ravyssche everyche man for his part (that
is to seyn, that everych of hem wolde drawen to the deffense of
his opinyoun the wordes of Socrates), they as in partye of
hir preye todrowen me, cryinge and debatyng ther-ayens, and
korven and torente my clothes that I hadde woven with myn handes;
and with tho cloutes that thei hadden arased out of my clothes
thei wenten
awey wenynge that I hadde gon with hem every del. In whiche
Epycuriens and Stoyciens for as myche as ther semede some traces
or steppes of myn abyte, the folie of men wenynge tho Epycuryens
and Stoyciens my familiers pervertede some thurw the errour of
the wikkide or unkunnynge multitude of hem. (This
is to seyn, that for they semeden philosophres thei weren
pursuyed to the deth and slayn.)
"So yif thou ne hast noght knowen the exilynge of Anaxogore,
ne the empoisonynge of Socrates, ne the turmentz of Zeno, for
they weren straungiers, yit myghtestow han knowen the Senecciens
and the Canyos and the Soranas, of whiche folk the renoun is
neyther over-oold ne unsollempne. The whiche men nothyng elles
ne broght hem to the deeth but oonly for thei weren enformyd of
myne maneris, and semyde moost unlyk to the studies of wykkid
folk. And forthi thou oughtest noght to wondren thoughe that I,
in the byttere see of this lif, be fordryven with tempestes
blowynge aboute, in the whiche this is my moste purpoos, that is
to seyn to displesen to wikkide men. Of whiche schrewes al be the
oost nevere so greet, it es to despise; for it nys nat governyd
with no ledere (of resoun), but it es
ravyssched oonly by fleetynge errour folyly and lyghtly; and yif
they somtyme, makynge an oost ayens us, assayle us as strengere,
our ledere
draweth togidre his richesses into his tour, and they ben
ententyf aboute sarpleris or sachelis, unprofitable for to taken.
But we that ben heghe above, syker fro alle tumolte and wood
noyse, warnstoryd and enclosed in swiche a palys whider as that
chaterynge or anoyinge folye ne may nat atayne, we scorne swyche
ravyneres and henteres of fouleste thynges.
QUISQUIS COMPOSITO. — Metrum 4
"Whoso it be that is cleer of vertue, sad and wel ordynat of
lyvynge, that hath put under fote the proude wierdes, and loketh
upryght
upon either fortune, he may holden his chere
undesconfited. The rage ne the manaces of the see, commoevynge
or chasynge upward hete fro the botme, ne schal nat moeve that
man. Ne the unstable mowntaigne that highte Visevus, that
writhith out thurw his brokene chemeneyes smokynge fieres, ne the
wey of thonderleit, that is wont to smyten hye toures, ne schal
nat moeve that man. Wharto thanne, o wrecches, drede ye tirauntz
that ben wode and felenous withouten ony strengthe? Hope aftir
no thyng, ne drede nat; and so schaltow desarmen the ire of
thilke unmyghty tiraunt. But whoso that, qwakynge, dredeth or
desireth thyng that nys noght stable of his ryght, that man that
so dooth hath cast awey his scheeld, and is remoeved from his
place, and enlaceth hym in the cheyne with whiche he mai ben
drawen.
SENTISNE, INQUIT. — Prosa 4
"Felistow," quod sche, "thise thynges, and entren
thei aughte
in thy corage? Artow like an asse to the harpe? Why wepistow, why
spillestow teeris? Yif thou abidest after helpe of thi leche, the
byhoveth discovre thy wownde."
Tho I, that hadde gaderyd strengthe in my corage, answeride
and seide: "And nedeth it yit," quod I, "of rehersynge
or of
ammonicioun? And scheweth it nat ynoghe by hymselve the
scharpnesse of Fortune, that waxeth wood ayens me? Ne moeveth it
nat the to seen the face or the manere of this place? Is this the
librarye which that thou haddest chosen for a ryght certein sege
to the in myn hous, there as thow disputedest ofte with me of the
sciences of thynges touchynge dyvinyte and mankynde? Was thanne
myn habit swiche as it is now? Was my face or my chere swyche as
now whan I soghte with the the secretis of nature, whan thow
enformedest my maneris and the resoun of al my lif to the
ensaumple of the ordre of hevene? Is noght this the gerdouns that
I referre to the, to whom I have ben obeisaunt?
"Certes thou confermedest by the mouth of Plato this
sentence,
that is to seyn that comune thynges or comunalites weren blisful
yif they that hadden studied al fully to wysdom governeden thilke
thynges; or elles yif it so befille that the governours of
comunalites studieden to geten wysdom. Thou seidest eek by the
mouth of the same Plato that it was a necessarie cause wise men
to taken and desire the governance of comune thynges, for that
the governementz of cites, ilefte in the handes of felonous
turmentours citezeens, ne schulde noght bryngen in pestilence
ande destruccioun to good folk. And therfore I, folwynge thilke
auctorite, desired to putten forth in execucion and in acte of
comune administracioun thilk thynges that I hadde lernyd of the
among my secre restyng-whiles.
"Thow and God, that putte the in the thoughtes of wise
folk,
ben knowynge with me that nothyng ne brought me to maistrie or
dignyte but the comune studie of alle goodnesse. And therof
cometh it that bytwixen wikkid folk and me han ben grevous
discordes, that ne myghte nat ben relessed by preyeris; for this
liberte hath the fredom of conscience, that the wraththe of more
myghty folk hath alwey ben despised of me for savacioun of right.
How ofte have I resisted and withstonden thilke man that highte
Connigaste, that made alwey assawtes ayens the propre fortunes
of pore feble folk! How ofte eek have I put of or cast out hym
Trygwille, provoste of the kyngis hous, bothe of the wronges that
he hadde bygunne to doon, and ek fully performed! How ofte have
I covered and defended by the auctorite of me put ayens perils
(that is to seyn, put myn auctorite in
peril
for) the wrecche pore folk, that the covetise of straungiers
unpunyschid tormentyde alwey with myseses and grevances out of
nombre! Nevere
man ne drow me yit fro right to wrong. Whan I say the fortunes
and the richesses of the peple of the provinces ben harmed or
amenuced outher be pryve ravynes or by comune tributz or
cariages, as sory was I as they that suffriden the harm.
Glosa. Whan that
Theodoric, the kyng
of Gothes, in a dere yeer, hadde his gerneeris ful of corn, and
comaundede that no man schulde byen no coorn til his corn were
soold, and that at a grevous dere prys, Boece withstood that
ordenaunce and overcome it, knowynge al this the kyng hymselve.
Coempcioun is to seyn comune achat or beyinge togidre,
that were establissed upon the peple by swich a manere
imposicioun, as whoso boughte a busschel corn, he most yyve the
kyng the fyfte part.) Textus. Whan it was in the sowre
hungry tyme, ther was establissed or cryed grevous and unplitable
coempcioun, that men sayen wel it schulde gretly tormenten and
endamagen al the provynce of Campayne, I took stryf ayens the
provost of the pretorie for comune profit; and, the kyng knowynge
of it, Y overcom it, so that the coempcioun ne was nat axid ne
took effect. Paulyn, a conseiller of Rome, the richesses of the
whiche Paulyn the howndes of the paleys (that is to
seyn, the officeres) wolden han devoured by hope and
covetyse, yit drowe I hym out of the jowes of hem that gapeden.
And for as moche as the peyne of the accusacioun ajugid byforn
ne schulde noght sodeynli henten ne punyssche wrongfully Albyn,
a conseiller of Rome, I putte me ayens the hates and indignacions
of the accusour Cyprian. Is it nat thanne inoghe isene that I
have purchaced grete discordes ayens myself? But I oughte be the
more asseured ayens alle othere folk, that for the love of
rightwisnesse I ne reservede nevere nothyng to myselve to hemward
of the kyngis halle, by whiche I were the more syker. But thurw
tho same accusours accusynge I am condempned.
"Of the nombre of whiche accusours, oon Basilius, that whilom
was chased out of the kyngis servyse, is now compelled in
accusynge of my name for nede of foreyne moneye. Also Opilion and
Gaudencius han accused me, al be it so that the justise regal
hadde whilom demed hem bothe to gon into exil for hir trecheries
and frawdes withouten nombre, to whiche juggement they nolden nat
obeye, but defendeden hem by the sikernesse of holi houses
that is to seyn, fledden into seyntewarie); and
whan this was aperceyved to the kyng, he comandide that, but they
voydide the cite of Ravenne by certeyn day assigned, that men
scholde marken hem on the forheved with an hoot iren and chasen
hem out of towne. Now what thyng semyth myghte ben likned to this
cruelte? For certes thilke same day was resceyved the accusynge
of myn name by thilke same accusours. What may ben seyd herto?
Hath my studie and my kunnynge disserved thus? Or elles the
forseyde dampnacioun of me — made that hem ryghtfulle
accusours or no? Was noght Fortune aschamed of this? Certes, al hadde noght
Fortune ben aschamed that innocence was accused, yit oughte sche
han hadde schame of the fylthe of myn accusours.
"But axestow in somme of what gylt I am accused? Men
seyn that I wolde saven the companye of the senatours. And desirestow to
heren in what manere? I am accused that I schulde han disturbed
the accusour to beren lettres, by whiche he scholde han maked the
senatours gylty ayens the kynges real majeste. O Maystresse, what
demestow of this? Schal I forsake this blame, that Y ne be no
schame to the? Certes I have wolde it (that is to
seyn, the savacioun of the senat), ne I schal nevere letten
to wilne it. And that I confesse and am aknowe; but the entente
of the accusour to ben distorbed schal cese. For schal I clepe
it thanne a felonye or a synne that I have desired the savacioun
of the ordre of the senat? And certes yit hadde thilke same senat
don by me thurw hir decretz and hir jugementz as thoughe it were
a synne and a felonye (that is to seyn, to wilne the
savacioun of hem). But folye, that lyeth alwey to hymselve,
may noght
chaunge the merite of thynges, ne I trowe nat by the jugement of
Socrates that it were leveful to me to hide the sothe ne assente
to lesynges.
"But certes, how so evere it be of this, I putte it to gessen
or prisen to the jugement of the and of wys folk. Of whiche thyng
al the ordenaunce and the sothe, for as moche as folk that been
to comen aftir our dayes schullen knowen it, I have
put it in scripture and in remembraunce. For touchynge
the lettres falsly maked, by whiche lettres I am accused to han
hoped the fredom of Rome, what aperteneth me to speken therof?
Of whiche lettres the fraude hadde ben schewed apertely, yif I
hadde had liberte for to han used and ben at the confessioun of
myn accusours, the whiche thyng in alle nedes hath greet
strengthe. For what other fredom mai men hopen? Certes I wolde
that som other fredom myghte ben hoped; I wolde thanne han
answeryd by the wordys of a man that hyghte Canyus. For whan he
was accused by Gaius Cesar, Germaynes sone, that he was knowynge
and consentynge of a conjuracioun ymaked ayens hym, this Canyus
answeride thus: 'Yif I hadde wyst it, thou haddest noght wyst
it.'
"In whiche thyng sorwe hath noght so dullid my wyt that
I
pleyne oonly that schrewed folk apparailen felonyes ayens vertu;
but I wondre gretly how that thei may performe thynges that thei
han hoped for to doon. Forwhy to wylne schrewydnesse — that
cometh
peraventure of our defaute; but it is lyk a monstre and a
merveyle how that, in the presente sight of God, may ben acheved
and performed swiche thynges as every felonous man hath conceyved
in his thoght ayens innocentz. For whiche thynge oon of thy
familiers noght unskilfully axed thus: 'Yif God is, whennes
comen wikkide thyngis? And yif God ne is, whennes comen gode
thynges?' But al hadde it ben leveful that felonous folk, that
now desiren the blood and the deeth of alle gode men and ek of
al the senat, han wilned to gon destroyen me, whom they han seyn
alwey bataylen and defenden gode men and eek al the senat, yit
hadde I nought disservyd of the faderes (that is to seyn, of the
senatours) that they schulden wilne my destruccioun.
"Thow remembrest wel, as I gesse, that whan I wolde doon
or
seyn any thyng, thow thiselve alwey present reuledest me. [And
wel thow remembrest] at the cite of Verone, whan that the kyng,
gredy of comune slaughtre, caste hym to transporten upon al the
ordre of the senat the gilt of his real majeste, of the whiche
gilt that Albyn was accused, with how gret sykernesse of peril
to me defended I al the senat! Thow woost wel that I sey sooth,
ne I n'avawntede me nevere in preysynge of myselve. For alwey
whan any wyght resceyveth precious renoun in avauntynge hymselve
of his werkes, he amenuseth the secre of his conscience. But now
thow mayst wel seen to what eende I am comen for myn innocence;
I resceyve peyne of fals felonye for guerdoun of verrai vertue.
And what opene confessioun of felonye hadde evere juges so
accordaunt in cruelte (that is to seyn,
as myn
accusynge
hath) that either errour of mannys wit, or elles condicion
of fortune, that is uncerteyn to alle mortel folk, ne submyttede
some of hem (that is to seyn, that it ne
enclynede
som juge to have pite or compassioun)? For althoughe I hadde
ben accused that I wolde brenne holi houses and straungle
preestis with wykkid sweerd, or that I hadde greythed deth to
alle gode men, algates the sentence scholde han punysshed me
present, confessed or convict. But now I am remuwed fro the cite
of Rome almest fyve hundred thowsand paas, I am withoute deffense
dampnyd to proscripcion and to the deth for the studie and
bountes that I have doon to the senat. But, O, wel ben thei
wurthy of meryte (as who seith,
nay), ther
myghte nevere yit noon of hem ben convicte of swiche a blame as
myn is! Of whiche trespas myne accusours sayen ful wel the
dignete; the whiche dignyte, for thei
wolden derken it with medlynge of some felonye, they bare me on
hande and lieden that I hadde pollut and defouled my conscience
with sacrilegie for covetise of dignyte. And certes thou
thiselve, that art plaunted in me, chacedest out of the sege of
my corage alle covetise of mortel thynges, ne sacrilege ne hadde
no leve to han a place in me byforn thyne eien. For thow
droppiddest every day in myn eris and in my thought thilke
comaundement of Pictagoras, that is to seyn, men schal serven to
God and noght to goddes. Ne it was noght convenient ne no nede
to taken help of the fouleste spiritz — I,
that thow
hast ordeyned and set in swiche excellence, that thou makedest
me lyk to God. And over this, the right clene secre chaumbre of
myn hous (that is to seyn, my
wif), and the
companye of myne honeste freendes, and my wyves fadir, as wel
holi as worthy to ben reverenced thurw his owene dedes, defenden
me fro alle suspecioun of swiche blame. But O malice! For they
that accusen me taken of the, Philosophie, feith of so greet
blame, for they trowen that I have had affinyte to malefice or
enchauntement, bycause that I am replenysshid and fulfild with
thy techynges, and enformed of thi maneris. And thus it suffiseth
nat oonly that thi reverence ne avayle me nat, but yif that thow
of thy free wil rather be blemessched with myne offencioun.
"But certes, to the harmes that I have, ther bytideth
yit this
encrees of harm, that the gessynge and the jugement of moche folk
ne loken nothyng to the desertes of thynges, but oonly to the
aventure of fortune; and jugen that oonly swiche thynges ben
purveied of God, whiche that temporel welefulnesse commendeth.
(Glose. As thus: that yif a wyght have
prosperite,
he is a good man and worthy to han that prosperite; and whoso
hath adversite, he is a wikkid man, and God hath forsake hym, and
he is worthy to han that adversite. This is the opinyoun of some
folk.) Textus. And therof cometh that good gessynge, first
of alle thynge, forsaketh wrecches. Certes it greveth me to
thynke ryght now the diverse sentences that the peple seith of
me. And thus moche I seie, that the laste charge of contrarious
fortune is this: that whan eny blame is leid upon a caytif, men
wenen that he hath desservyd that he suffireth. And I, that am
put awey fro gode men, and despoyled of dignytes, and defouled
of myn name by gessynge, have suffride torment for my gode dedes.
Certes me semyth that I se the felonous covynes of wykkid men
habounden in joye and in gladnesse; and I se that every lorel
schapeth hym to fynde out newe fraudes for to accuse good folk;
and I se that goode men [lien] overthrowen for drede of my peril,
and every luxurious turmentour dar doon alle felonye
unpunysschyd, and ben excited therto by yiftes; and innocentz ne
ben noght oonly despoiled of sikernesse, but of defense; and
therfore me lyst to crie to God in this manere:
O STELLIFERI CONDITOR ORBIS. — Metrum
5
"O thow makere of the wheel that bereth the sterres, whiche
that art festnyd to thi perdurable chayer, and turnest the hevene
with a ravysschynge sweighe, and constreynest the sterres to
suffren thi lawe; so that the moone somtyme, schynynge with hir
fulle hornes metynge with alle the beemes of the sonne hir
brothir, hideth the sterres that ben lasse; and somtyme, whan the
moone pale with hir derke hornes aprocheth the sonne, leeseth hir
lyghtes; and that the eve sterre, Hesperus, whiche that in the
first tyme of the nyght bryngeth forth hir colde arysynges,
cometh eft ayen hir used cours, and is pale by the morwe at
rysynge of the sonne, and is thanne clepid Lucyfer! Thow
restreynest the day by schortere duellynge in the tyme of coold
wynter that maketh the leeves falle. Thow devydest the swyfte
tydes of the nyght, whan the hote somer is comen. Thy myghte
attempreth the variauntz sesouns of the yer, so that Zephirus,
the debonere wynd, bryngeth ayen in the first somer sesoun the
leeves that the wynd that hyghte Boreas hath reft awey in
autumpne (that is to seie, in the laste
ende of
somer); and the seedes that the sterre that highte Arcturus
saugh ben waxen heye cornes whan the sterre Syrius eschaufeth
hem. Ther
nys no thyng unbounde from his olde lawe, ne forleteth the werk
of his propre estat.
"O thou governour, governynge alle thynges by certein
ende,
whi refusestow oonly to governe the werkes of men by duwe manere?
Why suffrestow that slydynge Fortune turneth so grete
enterchaungynges of thynges? So that anoyous peyne, that scholde
duweliche punysche felons, punysscheth innocentz; and folk of
wikkide maneres sitten in heie chayeres; and anoyinge folk
treden, and that
unrightfully, on the nekkes of holi
men; and vertu, cleer and schynynge naturely, is hidde in derke
derknesses; and the rightful man bereth the blame and the peyne
of the feloun; ne the forswerynge ne the fraude covered and kembd
with a false colour, ne anoieth nat to schrewes? The whiche
schrewes, whan hem list to usen hir strengthe, they rejoyssen hem
to putten undir hem the sovereyne kynges, whiche that peple
withouten nombre dreden. O thou, what so evere thou be that
knyttest alle boondes of thynges, loke on thise wrecchide erthes.
We men, that ben noght a foul partie, but a fair partie of so
greet a werk, we ben turmented in this see of fortune. Thow
governour, withdraughe and restreyne the ravysschynge flodes, and
fastne and ferme thise erthes stable with thilke boond by whiche
thou governest the hevene that is so large."
HEC UBI CONTINUATO DOLORE DELATRAUI. — Prosa
5
Whan I hadde with a contynuel sorwe sobbyd or borken out thise
thynges, sche, with hir cheere pesible and nothyng amoeved with
my compleyntes, seide thus: "Whan I saugh the," quod sche,
"sorwful and wepynge, I wiste anoon that thow were a wrecche
and
exiled; but I wyste nevere how fer thyn exil was yif thy tale ne
hadde schewid it me. But certes, al be thow fer fro thy cuntre,
thou n'art nat put out of it, but thow hast fayled of thi weye
and gon amys. And yif thou hast levere for to wene that thow be
put out of thy cuntre, thanne hastow put out thyselve rather than
ony other wyght hath. For no wyght but thyselve ne myghte nevere
han doon that to the. For yif thow remembre of what cuntre thow
art born, it nys nat governed by emperoures, ne by governement
of multitude, as weren the cuntrees of hem of Atthenes; but o
lord and o kyng, and that is God, that is lord of thi cuntre,
whiche that rejoisseth hym of the duellynge of his citezeens, and
nat for to putten hem in exil; of the whiche lord it is a
sovereyn fredom to ben governed by the brydel of hym and obeye
to his justice. Hastow foryeten thilke ryghte oolde lawe of thi
citee, in the whiche cite it es ordeyned and establysschid that
what wyght that hath levere founden therin his sete or his hous
than elleswhere, he may nat ben exiled by no ryght fro that
place? For whoso that is contened inwith the palys and the clos
of thilke cite, ther nys no drede that he mai deserve to ben
exiled; but who that leteth the wil for to enhabyten there, he
forleteth also to deserve to ben citezen of thilke cite. So that
I seie that the face of this place ne moeveth me noght so mochel
as thyn owene face, ne I ne axe nat rather the walles of thy
librarye, apparayled and wrought with yvory and with glas, than
after the sete of thi thought, in whiche I put noght whilom
bookes, but I putte that that maketh bokes wurthy of prys or
precyous, that is to seyn the sentence of my bookes.
"And certeynly of thy dessertes bystowed in comune good
thow
hast seyd soth, but after the multitude of thy gode dedes thou
hast seyd fewe. And of the honestete or of the falsnesse of
thynges that ben opposed ayens the, thow hast remembred thynges
that ben knowen to alle folk. And of the felonyes and fraudes of
thyn accusours, it semeth the have touched it for sothe
ryghtfully and schortly, al myghten tho same thynges betere and
more plentevously ben couth in the mouth of the peple that
knoweth al this. Thow hast eek blamed gretly and compleyned of
the wrongdede of the senat, and thow hast sorwyd for my blame,
and thow hast wepen for the damage of thi renoun that is apayred;
and thi laste sorwe eschaufede ayens Fortune, and compleyndest
that guerdouns ne ben nat eveneliche yolden to the dessertes of
folk; And in the lattre eende of thy wode muse, thow preydest
that thilke pees that governeth the hevene schulde governe the
erthe.
"But for that many [turbacions] of affeccions han
assailed
the, and sorwe and ire and wepynge todrawen the diversely, as
thou art now feble of thought, myghtyere remedies ne schullen
noght yit touchen the. For wyche we wol usen somdel lyghtere
medicynes,
so that thilke passiouns that ben waxen
hard in swellynge by perturbacions flowynge into thy thought,
mowen waxen esy and softe to resceyven the strengthe of a more
myghty and more egre medicyne, by an esyere touchynge.
CUM PHEBI RADIIS GRAVE CANCRI SIDUS INESTUAT.
— Metrum 6
"Whan that the hevy sterre of the Cancre eschaufeth by the
bemes of Phebus (that is to seyn, whan that Phebus the sonne is
in the sygne of the Cancre), whoso yeveth thanne largely his
seedes to the feeldes that refusen to resceyven hem, lat hym gon,
begiled of trust that he hadde to his corn, to accornes of okes.
Yif thow wolt gadere vyolettes, ne go thow nat to the purpre wode
whan the feeld, chirkynge, agryseth of cold by the felnesse of
the wynd that hyghte Aquilon. Yif thou desirest or wolt usen
grapes, ne seek thou nat with a glotonos hand to streyne and
presse the stalkes of the vyne in the first somer sesoun; for
Bachus, the god of wyn, hath rather yyven his yiftes to autumpne
(the lattere ende of somer). God
tokneth and
assigneth the tymes, ablynge hem to hir propre offices, ne he ne
suffreth nat the stowndes whiche that hymself hath devyded and
constreyned to ben imedled togidre. And forthy he that forleteth
certein ordenaunce of doynge by overthrowynge wey, he hath no
glad issue or ende of his werkes.
PRIMUM IGITUR PATERISNE ME PAUCULIS ROGACIONIBUS.
— Prosa 6
"First wiltow suffre me to touche and assaye th'estaat of
thi
thought by a fewe demaundes, so that I may understande what be
the manere of thi curacioun?"
"Axe me," quod I, "at thi wille what thou wolt,
and I schal
answere." Tho seyde sche thus: "Whethir wenestow," quod
sche,
"that this world be governed by foolyssche happes and
fortunows,
or elles wenestow that ther be inne it ony governement of
resoun?"
"Certes," quod I, "I ne trowe nat in no manere
that so certeyn
thynges schulden be moeved by fortunows [folie]; but I woot wel
that God, makere and maister, is governour of his werk, ne nevere
nas yit day that myghte putte me out of the sothnesse of that
sentence."
"So it is," quod sche, "for the same thyng songe
thow a litil
herebyforn, and bywayledest and byweptest, that oonly men weren
put out of the cure of God; for of alle othere thynges thou ne
doutedest the nat that they nere governed by resoun. But owgh!
I wondre gretly, certes, whi that thou art sik, syn that thow art
put in so holsome a sentence. But lat us seken deppere; I
conjecte that ther lakketh Y not what. But sey me this: syn that
thow ne doutest noght that this world be governed by God, with
whiche governayles takestow heede that it is governed?"
"Unnethes," quod I, "knowe I the sentence of thy
questioun,
so that I ne may nat yit answeren to thy demandes."
"I nas nat desseyved," quod sche, "that ther ne
faileth
somwhat, by whiche the maladye of perturbacion is crept into thi
thought, so as [by] the strengthe of the palys chynynge [and]
open. But sey me this: remembrestow what is the ende of thynges,
and whider that the entencion of alle kende tendeth?"
"I have herd tolde it somtyme," quod I, but
drerynesse hath
dulled my memorie."
"Certes," quod sche, "thou wost wel whennes that
alle thynges
bien comen and proceded?"
"I woot wel," quod I, and answerede that God is
bygynnynge of
al.
"And how may this be," quod sche, "that, syn
thow knowest the
bygynnynge of thynges, that thow ne knowest nat what is the eende
of thynges? But swiche ben the customes of perturbaciouns, and
this power they han, that they mai moeve a man from his place
(that is to seyn, fro the stabelnesse and
perfeccion
of his knowynge); but certes, thei mai nat al arrace hym,
ne aliene hym in al. But I wolde that thou woldest answere to
this: Remembrestow that thow art a man?"
Boece. "Whi schulde I
nat remembren that?"
quod I.
Philosophie. "Maystow
noght
telle me thanne," quod sche,"what thyng is a man?"
"Axestow me nat," quod I, "whethir that I [woot
wel that I]
be a resonable mortel beste? I woot wel, and I confesse wel that
I am it."
"Wystestow nevere yit that thow were ony othir
thyng?" quod
sche.
"No," quod I.
"Now woot I," quod sche, "other cause of thi
maladye, and that
ryght gree thow hast left for to knowen thyselve what thou art.
Thurw whiche I have pleynly fownde the cause of thi maladye, or
elles the entree of recoverynge of thyn hele. For-why, for thow
art confunded with foryetynge of thiself, forthi sorwestow that
thow art exiled [and despoyled] of thy propre goodes; and for
thow ne woost what is the eende of thynges, forthy demestow that
felonus and wikkide men ben myghty and weleful; and for thow hast
foryeten by whiche governementz the werld is governed, forthy
weenestow that thise mutacions of fortunes fleten withouten
governour. Thise ben grete causes, noght oonly to maladye, but
certes gret causes to deth. But I thanke the auctour and the
makere of hele, that nature hath nat al forleten the. I have gret
noryssynges of thyn hele, and that is, the sothe sentence of
governance of the werld, that thou bylevest that the governynge
of it nis nat subgit ne underput to the folye of thise happes
aventurous, but to the resoun of God. And therfore doute the
nothing, for of this litel spark thine heet of liif schal shine.
"But for as moche as it is nat tyme yet of fastere
remedies,
and the nature of thoughtes desceyved is this, that, as ofte as
they casten awey sothe opynyouns, they clothen hem in false
opynyouns, of the whiche false opynyouns the derknesse of
perturbacion waxeth up, that confowndeth the verray insyghte
— [that] derknesse schal I assaie somwhat to maken thynne and
wayk
by lyghte and meneliche remedies; so that, aftir that the
derknesse of desceyvynge desyrynges is doon away, thow mowe knowe
the schynynge of verraye light.
NUBIBUS ATRIS CONDITA. — Metrum 7
"The sterres, covred with blake cloudes, ne mowen yeten
adoun
no lyght. Yif the truble wynd that hyghte Auster, turnynge and
walwynge the see, medleth the heete (that
is to
seyn, the boylynge up fro the botme), the wawes, that whilom
weren clere as glas and lyk to the fayre bryghte dayes,
withstande
anon the syghtes of men by the filthe and ordure that is
resolved. And the fleetynge streem, that royleth doun diversely
fro heye montaygnes, is areestid and resisted ofte tyme by the
encountrynge of a stoon that is departed and fallen fro some
roche. And forthy, yif thou wolt loken and demen soth with cleer
lyght, and hoolden the weye with a ryght path, weyve thow joie,
dryf fro the drede, fleme thow hope, ne lat no sorwe aproche
(that is to seyn, lat non of thise foure
passiouns
overcomen the or blenden the). For cloudy and derk is thilke
thoght, and bownde with bridelis, where as thise thynges
reignen."
Explicit Liber Primus