Incipit Liber Tertius
IAM CANTUM ILLA, &c. — Prosa 1
By this sche hadde ended hir song, whan the swetnesse of here
dite hadde thurw-perced me, that was desyrous of herknynge, and
I astoned hadde yit streyghte myn eres (that is to
seyn, to herkne the bet what sche wolde seye). So that a litel
herafter I seide thus: "O thow that art sovereyne confort of
angwyssous corages, so thow hast remounted and norysshed me with
the weyghte of thi sentences and with delyt of thy syngynge; so
that I trowe nat nowe that I be unparygal to the strokes of
Fortune (as who seith, I dar wel now suffren alle the assautes
of Fortune and wel defende me fro hir). And tho remedies whiche
that thou seydest herbyforn that weren ryght scharpe, nat oonly
that I ne am nat agrisen of hem now, but I, desiros of herynge,
axe gretly to heren tho remedies."
Thanne seyde sche thus: "That feeled I ful wel," quod
sche, "whan that thow ententyf and stille ravysschedest my
wordes, and I abood til that thou haddest swich habite of thi
thought as thou hast now, or elles til that I myself hadde maked
to the the same habite, whiche that is a more verray thyng. And
certes the remenant of thynges that ben yet to seie ben swiche
that first whan men tasten hem they ben bytynge; but whan they
ben resceyved withynne a wyght, thanne ben thei swete. But for thou seyst that
thow art so desyrous to herkne hem, with how greet brennynge
woldestow glowen, yif thow wistest whider I wol leden the!"
"Whider is that?" quod I.
"To thilke verraye welefulnesse," quod sche, "of
whiche thyn herte dremeth; but forasmoche as thi syghte is
ocupyed and destourbed by imagynacioun of erthly thynges, thow
mayst nat yit seen thilke selve welefulnesse."
"Do," quod I, "and schewe me what is thilke verray
welefulnesse, I preie the, withoute taryinge."
"That wol I gladly do," quod sche, "for the cause
of the. But I wol first marken the by woordes, and I wol enforcen
me to enforme the, thilke false cause of blisfulnesse that thou
more knowest; so that whanne thow hast fully byhoolden thilke false
goodes and torned thin eighen to the tother syde, thow mowe knowe
the cleernesse of verray blisfulnesse.
QUI SERERE INGENUUM.
— Metrum 1
"Whoso wole sowe a feld plentevous, let hym first delyvren
it of thornes, and kerve asondir with his hook the bussches and
the feern, so that the corn may comen hevy of erys and of
greynes. Hony is the more swete, if mouthes han first tasted
savours that ben wykke. The sterres schynen more aggreablely whan
the wynd Nothus leteth his plowngy blastes; and aftir that
Lucifer, the day-sterre, hath chased awey the dirke nyght, the
day the fairere ledeth the rosene hors (of the
sonne). And ryght so thow, byhooldyng ferst the false
goodes, bygyn to withdrawe thy nekke
fro the yok (of erthely affeccions); and
afterward the verray goodes schullen entren into thy corage."
TUM DEFIXO PAULULUM.
— Prosa 2
Tho fastnede sche a litel the syghte of hir eyen, and
withdrowghe hir ryght as it were into the streyte seete of here
thought, and bygan to speke ryght thus: "Alle the cures,"
quod sche, "of mortel folk, whiche that travailen hem in many
manere studies, gon certes by diverse weyes; but natheles thei
enforcen hem alle to comyn oonly to oon ende of blisfulnesse. And
blisfulnesse is swiche a good, that whoso that hath geten it, he
ne may over that nothyng more desire. And this thyng forsothe is
the soverayn good that conteneth in hymself alle maner goodes;
to the whiche goode if ther fayled any thyng, it myghte nat ben
sovereyn good, for thanne wer ther som good
out of
thilke sovereyn good, that myghte ben desired. Now is it cleer
and certeyne thanne, that blisfulnesse is a parfyt estat by the
congregacioun of alle goodes; the whiche blisfulnesse, as I have
seyd, alle mortel folk enforcen hem to geten by diverse weyes.
Forwhy the covetise of verray good is naturely iplauntyd in the
hertes of men, but the myswandrynge errour mysledeth hem into
false goodes. Of the whiche men, some of hem wenen that sovereyn
good be to lyven withoute nede of any thyng, and travaylen hem
to ben habundaunt of rychesses. And some othere
men demen that sovereyn good be for to be ryght digne of
reverence, and enforcen hem to ben reverenced among hir
neyghbours by the honours that thei han igeten. And some folk
ther ben that holden that ryght heye power be sovereyn good, and
enforcen hem for to reignen or elles to joygnen hem to hem that
reignen. And it semeth to some other folk, that noblesse of
renoun be the sovereyn good, and hasten hem to geten hem
gloryouse name by the artz of werre or of pees. And many folk
mesuren and gessen that the sovereyne good be joye and gladnesse,
and wenen that it be ryght blisful thyng to plowngen hem in
voluptuous delyt. And ther ben folk that entrechaungen the causes
and the endes of thyse forseyde goodes, as they that desiren
rychesses to han power and delitz, or elles they desiren power
for to have moneye or for cause of renoun. In thise thynges and
in swiche other thynges is torned al the entencioun of desyrynges
and werkes of men; as thus: noblesse and favour of peple, whiche
that yyveth to men, as it semeth hem, a maner cleernesse of
renoun; and wyf and children, that men desiren for cause of delyt
and myrynesse. But forsothe freendes ne schulde nat ben rekned
among the goodes of fortune, but of vertu, for it is a ful hooly
maner thyng; alle thise othere thinges forsothe ben taken for
cause of power or elles for cause of delyt. Certes now am I redy
to referren the goodes of the body to thise forseide thynges
aboven; for it semeth that strengthe and gretnesse of body yyven
power and worthynesse, and that beaute and swyftnesse yyven
noblesse and glorie of renoun; and heele of body semeth yyven
delyt. In alle thise thynges it semeth oonly that blisfulnesse
is desyred; forwhy thilk thing that every man desireth moost over
alle thynges be demeth that it be the sovereyn good; but I have
diffyned that blisfulnesse is the sovereyn good; for whiche every
wyght demeth that thilke estat that he desireth over alle
thynges, that it be blisfulnesse.
"Now hastow thanne byforn thyne eien almest al the
purposede forme of the welefulnesse of mankynde: that is to seyn
rychesses, honours, power, glorie, and delitz. The whiche delit oonly
considered Epicurus, and juggid and establissyde that delyt is
the soverayn good, for as moche as alle othere thynges, as hym
thoughte, byrefte awey joye and myrthe from the herte. But I
retorne ayen to the studies of men, of whiche men the corage
alwey reherceth and seketh the sovereyne good, al be it so that
it be with a dyrkyd memorie; but he not by whiche path, ryght as
a dronke man not nat by whiche path he may retourne hom to his
hous. Semeth it thanne that folk foleyen and erren, that enforcen
hem to have nede of nothyng? Certes ther nys noon other thyng
that mai so wel performe blisfulnesse, as an estat plentevous of
alle godes, that ne hath nede of noon other thyng, but that it
is suffisant of hymself unto hymself. And foleyen swiche folk,
thanne, that wenen that thilk thyng that is ryght good, that it
be eek ryght worthy of honour and of reverence? Certes, nay. For
that thyng nis neither foul ne worthy to ben despysed that wel
neyghe al the entencioun of mortel folk [travayleth] for to geten
it. And power, aughte nat that ek to ben rekned amonge goodes?
What elles? For it nys nat to wene that thilke thyng that is most
worthy of alle thynges be feble and withoute strengthe. And
cleernesse of renoun, aughte that to ben despysed? Certes ther
may no man forsake, that alle thyng that is right excellent and
noble, that it ne semeth to ben ryght cleer and renomed. For
certes it nedeth nat to saie that blisfulnesse be
[n"angwyssous] ne drery, ne subgit to grevaunces ne to
sorwes; syn that in ryght litele thynges folk seken to haven and
to usen that may
delyten hem. Certes thise ben the
thinges that men wolen and desiren to geten, and for this cause
desiren they rychesses, dignytes, reignes, glorie, and delices;
for therby wenen they to han suffysaunce, honour, power, renoun,
and gladnesse. Thanne is it good that men seken thus, by so manye
diverse studies; in whiche desir it mai lyghtly be schewyd how
greet is the strengthe of nature. For how so that men han diverse
sentences and discordynge, algates men accorden alle in lovynge the eende
of good.
QUANTAS RERUM FLECTAT. — Metrum 2
"It liketh me to schewe by subtil soong, with slakke and
delytable sown of strenges, how that Nature, myghty, enclyneth
and flytteth the governementz of thynges, and by whiche lawes
sche, purveiable, kepith the grete world; and how sche, byndynge,
restreyneth alle thynges by a boond that may nat be unbownde. Al
be it so that the lyouns of the contre of Pene beren the fayre
chaynes, and taken metes of the handes of folk that yeven it hem,
and dreden hir stourdy [maistre] of whiche thei ben wont to
suffre betynges; yif that hir horrible mouthes ben bybled (that
is to seyn, of beestes devoured), hir corage of tyme passed, that
hath ben idel and rested, repeireth ayen, and thei roren
grevously, and remembren on hir nature, and slaken hir nekkes
from hir cheynes unbownde; and hir mayster fyrst, totorn with
blody tooth, assaieth the wode wratthes of hem (this to seyn,
thei freten hir maister). And the janglynge brid that syngeth on
the heghe braunches (that is to seyn, in the wode), and after is
enclosed in a streyte cage, althoughe that the pleyinge bysynes
of men yeveth [hym] honyed drynkes and large metes with swete
studye, yit natheles yif thilke bryd skippynge out of hir streyte
cage seith the agreables schadwes of the wodes, sche defouleth
with hir feet hir metes ischad, and seketh mornynge oonly the
wode, and twytereth desyrynge the wode with hir swete voys. The
yerde of a tree, that is haled adoun by myghty strengthe, boweth
redily the crop adown; but yif that the hand of hym that it bente
leet it goon ageyn, anoon the crop loketh upryght to hevene. The
sonne, Phebus, that falleth at even in the westrene wawes,
retorneth ayen eftsones his cart, by a pryve path, there as it
is wont t'aryse. Alle thynges seken ayen to hir propre cours, and
alle thynges rejoysen hem of hir retornynge ayen to hir nature.
Ne noon ordenaunce is bytaken to thynges, but that that hath
joyned the endynge to the bygynnynge, and hath maked the cours
of itself stable (that it chaunge nat from his propre kynde).
VOS QUOQUE TERRENA ANIMALIA. — Prosa 3
"Certes also ye men, that ben erthliche beestes, dremen
alwey your bygynnynge, althoughe it be with a thynne ymaginacioun; and
by a maner thought, al be it nat clerly ne parfitely, ye loken
from afer to thilke verray fyn of blisfulnesse. And therfore
naturel entencioun ledeth yow to thilke verray good, but many
maner errours mystorneth yow therfro. Considere now yif that by
thilke thynges by whiche a man weneth to geten hym blisfulnesse,
yif that he mai comen to thilk ende that he weneth to come by
nature. For yif that moneye, or honours, or thise othere forseyde
thynges, brynge to men swiche a thyng that no good ne fayle hem
ne semeth faile, certes thanne wol I graunte that they ben maked
blisful by thilke thynges that thei han geten. But yif so be that
thilke thynges ne mowen nat performen that they byheten, and that
there be defaute of manye goodis, scheweth it nat thanne clerly
that false beute of blysfulnesse is knowen and ataynt in thilke
thynges? First and forward thow thiself, that haddest
haboundances of rychesses nat longe agoon, I aske the yif that,
in the habowndance of alle thilke rychesses, thow were nevere
angwysous ne sory in thy corage of any wrong or grevance that
bytydde the on any side?"
"Certes," quod I, "it ne remembreth me nat that
evere I was so fre of my thought that I ne was alwey in angwyse
of somwhat."
"And was nat that," quod sche, "for that the
lakkide somwhat that thow noldest nat han
lakkid, or
elles thou haddest that thow noldest nat han had?"
"Ryght so is it," quod I.
"Than desiredest thow the presence of the toon and the
absence of the tothir?"
"I graunte wel," quod I.
"Forsothe," quod sche, "thanne nedeth ther somwhat
that every man desireth?"
"Yee, ther nedeth," quod I.
"Certes," quod sche, "and he that hath lak or nede
of aught nys nat in every wey suffisant to hymself?"
"No," quod I.
"And thow," quod sche, "in al the plente of thy
richesses haddest thilke lakke of suffisaunce?"
"What elles?" quod I.
"Thanne mai nat richesses maken that a man nys nedy, ne
that he be suffisaunt to hymself; and yit that was it that thei
byhighten, as it semeth. And eek certes I trow that this be
gretly to considere, that moneye ne hath nat in his owene kynde
that it ne mai ben bynomen of hem that han it, maugre hem."
"I byknowe it wel," quod I.
"Whi sholdestow nat byknowen it," quod sche,
"whan
every day the strengere folk bynymen it fro the feblere maugre
hem? For whennes comen elles alle thise [forense] compleyntes or
quereles of pledynges but for that men axen ayen hir moneye that
hath ben bynomen hem by force or by gyle, and alwey maugre
hem?"
"Right so is it," quod I.
"Than," quod sche, "hath a man nede to seken hym
foreyne help by whiche he may defenden his moneye?"
"Who mai seie nay?" quod I.
"Certes," quod sche, "and hym nedide noon help
yif
he ne hadde no moneye that he myghte leese."
"That is douteles," quod I.
"Than is this thyng torned into the contrarie," quod
sche; "for rychesses, that men wenen scholde maken
suffisaunce, they
maken a man rather have nede of foreyne help. Whiche is the maner
or the gyse," quod sche, "that rychesse mai dryve awey
nede? Riche folk, mai they neyther han hungir ne thurst? Thise
riche men, may they fele no cold on hir lymes in wynter? But thow wolt
answeren that ryche men han inoghe wherwith thei mai staunchen
hir hungir, and slaken hir thurst, and don awey cold. In this
wise mai nede be conforted by richesses, but certes nede ne mai
nat al outrely be doon awey; for thoughe this nede that is alwey
gapynge and gredy, be fulfild with richesses, and axe any thyng,
yit duelleth thanne a nede that myghte be fulfild. I holde me
stille and telle nat how that litel thyng suffiseth to nature;
but certes to avarice inowghe ne suffiseth nothyng. For syn that
rychesse ne mai nat al doon awey nede, but richesses maken nede,
what mai it thanne be that ye wenen that richesses mowen yyven
yow suffisaunce?
QUAMVIS FLUENTE DIVES. — Metrum 3
"Al weere it so that a riche coveytous man hadde a ryver
or a goter fletynge al of gold, yit sholde it nevere staunchen
his covetise; and thoughe he hadde his nekke charged with
precyous stones of the Rede See, and thoughe he do ere his
feeldes plentevous with an hundred oxen, nevere ne schal his
bytynge bysynesse forleeten hym whil he lyveth, ne the lyghte
richesses ne schal nat beren hym companye whan he is deed.
SET DIGNITATES. — Prosa 4
"But dignytees, to whom thei ben comen, make they hym
honourable and reverent? Han thei nat so gret strengthe that thei
mai putten vertus in the hertes of folk that usen the lordschipes
of hem, or elles may they don awey the vices? Certes thei ben nat
wont to don awey wikkidnesse, but thei ben wont rather to schewen
wykkydnesse. And therof cometh it that Y have right gret disdayn
that dignytes ben yyven ofte to wikkide men. For which thyng
Catullus clepid a consul of Rome that hyghte Nonyus
""postum"" or ""boch""
(as who seith, he clepid hym a congregacioun of vices in
his brest, as a postum is ful of corrupcioun), al were this
Nonyus set in chayere of dygnite. Sestow nat thanne how grete
vylenye dignytes don to wikkide men? Certes
unworthynesse
of wikkide men schulde ben the lesse isene if thei neere renomed
of none honours. Certes thou thiself ne myghtest nat ben broght,
with as many perils as thow myghtest suffren, that thow woldest
beren the magistrat with Decorat (that is to seyn,
that for no peril that myghte byfallen the by offence of the kyng
Theodorik, thou noldest nat be felawe in governaunce with
Decorat), whan thow seye that he hadde wikkide corage of a
likerous schrewe and of an accusour. Ne I ne mai nat for swiche
honours juggen hem worthy of reverence that I deme and holde
unworthy to han thilke same honours. Now yif thow seie a man that
were fulfild of wysdom, certes thou ne myghtest nat deme that he
were unworthy to the honour or elles to the wisdom of whiche he
is fulfild?"
"No," quod I.
"Certes dignytees," quod sche, "aperteignen
properly to vertu, and vertu transporteth dignyte anoon to thilke
man to whiche sche
hirself is conjoigned. And for as moche as honours of peple ne
mai nat maken folk digne of honour, it is wel seyn cleerly that
thei ne han no propre beaute of dignyte. And yet men aughten
taken more heede in this. For yif a wykkyd wyght be in so mochel
the fowlere and the more outcast that he is despysed of moost
folk, so as dignyte ne mai nat maken schrewes worthy of no
reverence, the whiche schrewes dignyte scheweth to moche folk;
than maketh dignyte schrewes rather so much more despised than
preysed, and forsothe nat unpunyssched (that is for to seyn that
schrewes revengen hem ayenward uppon dignytes), for thei yelden
ayen to dignytees as greet gerdoun, whan they byspotten and
defoulen dignytes with hir vylenye. And for as mochel as thou now
knowe that thilke verray reverence ne mai nat comen by thise
schadwy transitorie dignytes, undirstond now thus: yif that a man
hadde used and had manye maner dignytees of consules, and weere
comen peraventure among straunge nacions, scholde thilke honour
maken hym worschipful and redouted of straunge folk? Certes yif
that honour of peple were a natureel yifte to dignytes, it ne
myghte nevere cesen nowhere amonges no maner folk to don his
office; right as fyer in every contre ne stynteth nat to
eschaufen and to ben hoot. But for as mochel as for to be holden
honurable or reverent ne cometh nat to folk of hir propre
strengthe of nature, but oonly of the false opynyoun of folk
(that is to seyn, that weenen that dignytees maken folk digne of
honour), anoon therfore, whan that thei comen there as folk ne
knowen nat thilke dignytees, hir honours vanysschen away, and
that anoon. But that is amonges straunge folk, maystow seyn. Ne
amonges hem ther thei weren born, ne duren nat thilke dignytes
alwey? Certes the dignyte of the provostrye of Rome was whilom
a greet power; now nys it no thyng but an idel name, and the
rente of the senatorie a greet charge; and yif a wyght whilom
hadde the office to taken heede to the vitayles of the peple, as
of corn and othere thynges, he was holden amonges grete; but what
thyng is now more outcast than thilke provostrye? And, as I have
seyd a litel herebyforn, that thilke thyng that hath no propre
beute of hymself resceyveth somtyme prys and schynynge, and
somtyme leeseth it, by the opinyoun of usaunces. Now yif that
dignytes thanne ne mowen nat make folk digne of reverence, and
if that dignytees waxen foule of hir wil by the filthe of
schrewes, and yif dignytees leesen hir schynynge by chaungynge
of tymes, and yif thei waxen fowle by estimacion of peple, what
is it that they han in hemself of beaute that oughte ben desired?
(As who seith noon; thanne ne mowen they yeven no
beute of dignyte to noone othere.)
QUAMVIS SE TIRIO. — Metrum 4
"Al be it so that the proude Nero, with al his wode
luxure, kembde hym and apparayled hym with faire purpres of Tyrie
and with white peerles, algates yit throf he haatful to alle folk
(this is to seyn that, al was he byhated of alle
folk, yit this wikkide Nero hadde gret lordschipe), and yaf
whilom to the reverentz senatours the unworschipful seetis of
dignytees. (Unworschipful seetes he clepeth here, for that
Nero, that was so wikkide, yaf tho dignytees.) Who
wolde thanne resonably wenen that blisfulnesse were in swiche
honours as ben yyven by vycious schrewes?
AN VERO REGNA. — Prosa 5
"But regnes, and familiarites of kynges, mai thei maken
a man to ben myghti? How elles, whan hir blisfulnesse dureth
perpetuely? But certes the olde age of tyme passed, and ek the
present tyme now, is ful of ensaumples how that kynges han
chaungyd into wrecchidnesse out of hir welefulnesse. O, a noble
thyng and a cleer thyng is power, that is nat fownden myghty to
kepe itself! And yif that power of remes be auctour and makere
of blisfulnesse, yif thilke power lakketh on any syde, amenuseth
it nat thilke blisfulnesse and bryngeth in wrecchidnesse? But
yit, al be it so that the remes of mankynde strecchen broode, yit
moot ther nede ben moche folk over whiche that every kyng ne hath
no lordschipe ne comaundement. And certes uppon thilke syde
that power fayleth, whiche that maketh folk blisful, ryght on
that same syde noun-power entreth undirnethe, that maketh hem
wrecches. In this manere thanne moten kynges han more porcioun
of wrecchidnesse than of welefulnesse. A tyraunt, that was kyng
of Sysile, that hadde assayed the peril of his estat, schewede
by simylitude the dredes of remes by gastnesse of a swerd that
heng over the heved of his familyer. What thyng is thanne this
power, that mai nat done awey the bytynges of bysynesse, ne
eschewe the prykkes of drede? And certes yit wolde thei lyven in
sykernesse, but thei may nat, and yit they glorifien hem in hir
power. Holdestow thanne that thilke man be mighty, that thow
seest that he wolde doon that he may nat done? And holdestow
thanne hym a myghti man, that hath envyrowned his sydes with men
of armes or sergeantz, and dredeth more hem that he maketh agast
thanne thei dreden hym, and that is put in the handes of hise
servauntz for he scholde seme myghty? But of familiers or
servantz of kynges, what scholde I telle the any thyng, syn that
I myself have schewyd the that rewmes hemself ben ful of greet
feblesse? The whiche famylieres, certes, the real power of
kynges, in hool estat and in estaat abated, ful ofte throweth
adoun. Nero constreynede Senek, his familyer and his mayster, to
chesen on what deeth he wolde deye. Antonyus comaundede that
knyghtes slowen with here swerdes Papynian (his
famylier) [whiche] that had ben long tyme ful myghty amonges
hem of the court. And yet certes thei wolden bothe han renounced
hir power; of whiche two Senek enforcede hym to yeven to Nero his
richesses, and also to han gon into solitarie exil. But whan the
grete weyghte (that is to seyn, of lordes power or
of fortune) draweth hem that schullen falle, neither of hem
ne myghte don that he wolde. What thyng is thanne thilke powere,
that though men han it, yit thei ben agast; and whanne thow
woldest han it, thou nart nat siker; and yif thou woldest
forleeten it, thow mayst nat eschuen it? But whethir swiche men
ben freendes at nede, as ben [consyled] by fortune and nat be
vertu? Certes swiche folk as weleful fortune maketh frendes,
contraryous fortune maketh hem enemys. And what pestilence is more myghty for
to anoye a wyght than a famylier enemy?
QUI SE VOLET ESSE POTENTEM. — Metrum 5
"Whoso wol ben myghti he moot daunten his cruel corages,
ne putte nat his nekke, overcomen, undir the foule reynes of
leccherie. For al be it so that thi lordschipe strecche so fer
that the contre of Ynde quaketh at thy comaundementz or at thi
lawes, and that the laste ile in the see that highte Tyle be
thral to the, yit yif thou maist nat putten awey thi foule dirke
desires, and dryven out fro the wrecchide compleyntes, certes it
nys no power that thow hast.
GLORIA VERO QUAM FALLAX. — Prosa 6
"But glorie, how deceyvable and how foul is it ofte! For
which thyng nat unskilfully a tragedien (that is to
seyn, a makere of dytees that highten tragedies) cride and
seide: "O glorie, glorie," quod he, "thow nart nothyng
elles to
thousandes of folk but a greet swellere of eres!" For
manye han had ful greet renoun by the false opinyoun of the
peple, and what thyng mai ben thought foulere than swiche
preysynge? For thilke folk that ben preysed falsly, they mote
nedes han schame of hire preysynges. And yif that folk han geten
hem thonk or preysynge by here dissertes, what thyng hath thilke
pris echid or encresed to the conscience of wise folk, that
mesuren hir good, nat by the rumour of the peple, but by the
sothfastnesse of conscience? And yif it seme a fair thyng a man
to han encreced and sprad his name, thanne folweth it that it is
demed to ben a foul thyng yif it ne be yspradde and encreced.
But, as I seide a litil herebyforn, that syn ther moot nedes ben
many folk to whiche folk the renoun of [o] man ne mai nat comen,
it byfalleth that he that thow wenest be glorious and renomed
semeth in the nexte partie of the erthes to ben withouten glorie
and withouten renoun. And certes amonges thise thynges I ne trowe
nat that the pris and the grace of the peple nys neyther worthi
to ben remembred, ne cometh of wys jugement, ne is ferme
perdurably.
"But now of this name of gentilesse, what man is it that
ne may wele seen how veyn and how flyttynge a thyng it es? For
yif the name of gentilesse be referred to renoun and cleernesse
of lynage, thanne is gentil name but a foreyne thyng
(that is to seyn, to hem that gloryfien hem of hir
lynage.) For it semeth that gentilesse be a maner preisynge
that cometh of the dessertes of auncestres; and yif preisynge
make gentilesse, thanne mote they nedes ben gentil that been
preysed. For whiche thing it folweth that yif thou ne have no
gentilesse of thiself (that is to seyn, prys that
cometh of thy deserte), foreyne gentilesse ne maketh the nat
gentil. But certes yif ther be ony good in gentilesse, I trowe
it be al only this, that it semeth as that a maner necessite be
imposed to gentil men for that thei ne schulde nat owtrayen or
forlynen fro the vertus of hir noble kynrede.
OMNE HOMINUM GENUS IN TERRIS. — Metrum
6
"Alle the lynage of men that ben in erthe ben of semblable
byrthe. On allone is fadir of thynges; on allone mynystreth alle
thynges. He yaf to the sonne his bemes, he yaf to the moone hir
hornes, he yaf the men to the erthe, he yaf the sterres to the
hevene. He encloseth with membres the soules that comen from his
heye sete. Thanne comen alle mortel folk of noble seed. Why
noysen ye or bosten of your eldres? For yif thow loke youre
bygynnyng, and God your auctour and yowr makere, thanne nis ther
none forlyned wyght or ongentil, but if he noryssche his corage
unto vices and forlete his propre byrthe.
QUID AUTEM DE CORPORIS. — Prosa 7
"But what schal I seye of delyces of body, of whiche
delices the desirynges ben ful of anguyssch, and the fulfillynges
of hem ben ful of penance? How grete seknesses and how grete
sorwes unsuffrable, ryght as a maner fruyt of wykkidnesse, ben
thilke delices wont to bryngen to the bodyes of folk that usen
hem! Of whiche delices I not what joie mai ben had of here moevynge,
but this woot I wel, that whosoevere wol remembren hym of hise
luxures, he schal wel undirstonden that the issues of delices ben
sorweful and sorye. And yif thilke delices mowen maken folk
blisful, thanne by the same cause moten thise beestis ben clepid
blisful, of whiche beestis al the entencioun hasteth to fulfille
here bodily jolyte. And the gladnesse of wyf and children were
an honest thyng, but it hath ben seyd that it is overmochel ayens
kynde that children han ben fownden tormentours to here fadris,
I not how manye; of whiche children how bytynge is every
condicioun, it nedeth nat to tellen it the that hast er this tyme
assayed it, and art yit now angwysshous. In this approve I the
sentence of my disciple Euripidis, that seide that he that hath
no children is weleful by infortune.
HABET HOC VOLUPTAS. — Metrum 7
"Every delit hath this, that it angwisscheth hem with
prykkes that usen it. It resembleth
to thise flyenge
flyes that we clepen ben; that, aftir that the be hath sched hise
agreable honyes, he fleeth awey, and styngeth the hertes of hem
that ben ysmyte, with bytynge overlonge holdynge.
NICHIL IGITUR DUBIUM. — Prosa 8
"Now is it no doute thanne that thise weyes ne ben a maner
mysledynges to blisfulnesse, ne that they ne mowen nat leden folk
thider as thei byheeten to leden hem. But with how grete harmes
thise forseide weyes ben enlaced, I schal schewe the shortly.
Forwhy yif thou enforcest the to assemble moneye, thow must
byreven hym his moneye that hath it; and yif thow wolt schynen
with dignytees, thow must bysechen and supplyen hem that yyven
tho dignytees; and yif thow coveytest be honour to gon byfore
othere folk, thow schalt defoule thiself thurw humblesse of
axynge. Yif thou desirest power, thow schalt, be awaytes of thy
subgetis, anoyously ben cast undir by manye periles. Axestow
glorye? Thow schalt so bien distract by aspere thynges that thow
schalt forgon sykernesse. And yif thow wolt leden thi lif in
delyces, every wyght schal despysen the and forleeten the, as
thow that art thral to thyng that is right foul and brutyl (that
is to seyn, servaunt to thi body). Now is it thanne wel yseyn how
litil and how brotel possessioun thei coveyten that putten the
goodes of the body aboven hir owene resoun. For maystow
surmounten thise olifauntes in gretnesse or weighte of body? Or
maistow ben strengere than the bole? Maystow ben swyftere than
the tigre? Byhoold the spaces and the stablenesse and the swyft
cours of the hevene, and stynt somtyme to wondren on foule
thynges. The whiche hevene certes nys nat rathere for thise
thynges to ben wondryd upon, than for the resoun by whiche it
is governed. But the schynynge of thi forme (that
is to seyn, the beute of thi body), how swyftly passynge is
it, and how transitorie!
"Certes it es more flyttynge than the mutabilite of
floures of the somer sesoun. For so as Aristotle telleth, that
if that men hadden eyghen of a beeste that highte lynx, so that
the lokynge of folk myghte percen thurw the thynges that
withstonden it, whoso lokide thanne in the entrayles of the body
of Alcibiades, that was ful fair in the superfice withoute, it
schulde seme ryght foul. And forthi yif thow semest fair, thy
nature ne maketh nat that, but the deceyvaunce or the feblesse
of the eighen that loken. But preise the goodes of the body as
mochil as evere the lyst, so that thow knowe algatis that, whatso
it be (that is to seyn, of the godes of the
body) whiche that thou wondrist uppon, mai ben destroied or
dissolvid by the heete of a fevere of thre dayes. Of alle whiche
forseide thynges Y mai reducen this schortly in a somme: that
thise worldly goodes, whiche that ne mowen nat yeven that they
byheeten, ne ben nat parfite by the congregacioun of alle goodis,
that they ne ben nat weyes ne pathes that bryngen men to blisfulnesse,
ne maken men to ben blisful.
HEU QUE MISEROS TRAMITE. — Metrum 8
"Allas! Whiche folie and whiche ignorance mysledeth
wandrynge wrecchis fro the path of verray good! Certes ye ne seke
no gold in grene trees, ne ye gadere nat precyous stones in the
vynes, ne ye ne hiden nat yowre gynnes in heye mountaignes to
kacchen fyssche of whiche ye mai maken riche festes. And if yow liketh
to hunte to roos, ye ne gon nat to the foordes of the watir that
highte Tyrene. And over this, men knowen wel the krikes and the
cavernes of the see yhidde in the flodes, and knowen ek whiche
watir is moost plentevous of white peerlis, and knowen whiche
watir haboundeth moost of reed purpre (that is to seyn, of a
maner schellefyssche with whiche men deien purpre), and knowen
whiche strondes habounden most of tendre fysches, or of scharpe
fyssches that hyghten echynnys. But folk suffren hemselve to ben
so blynde, that hem ne reccheth nat to knowe where thilke goodes
ben yhud whiche that thei coveyten, but ploungen hem in erthe,
and seken there thilke good that surmounteth the hevene
that bereth the sterris. What preyere mai I make, that
be digne to the nyce thoughtes of men? But I preie that thei
coveyten rychesses and honours, so that, whanne thei han geten
tho false goodes with greet travaile, that therby they mowen
knowen the verray goodes.
HACTENUS MENDACIS FORMAM. — Prosa 9
"It suffiseth that I have schewyd hiderto the forme of
fals welefulnesse, so that yif thou loke now cleerly, the ordre
of myn entencioun requireth from hennes forth to schewe the
verray welefulnesse."
"Forsothe," quod I, "I se wel now that suffisaunce
may nat comen by rychesse, ne power by remes, ne reverence by
dignites, ne gentilesse by glorie, ne joie be delices."
"And hastow wel knowen the causes," quod sche,
"whi it es?"
"Certes me semeth," quod I, "that Y see hem
ryght
as thoughe it were thurw a litil clyfte, but me were levere
knowen hem more opynly of the."
"Certes," quod sche, "the resoun is al redy. For
thilke thyng that symply is o thyng withouten ony devysioun, the
errour and folie of mankynde departeth and divideth it, and
mysledeth it and transporteth from verray and parfit good to
godes that ben false and inparfit. But seye me this. Wenestow
that he that hath nede of power, that hym ne lakketh
nothyng?"
"Nay," quod I.
"Certes," quod sche, "thou seyst aryght; for if
so be that ther is a thyng that in ony partie be feblere of
power, certes, as in that, it moot nedes be nedy of foreyne
help."
"Ryght so is it," quod I.
"Suffisaunce and power ben thanne of o kynde?"
"So semeth it," quod I.
"And demestow," quod sche, "that a thyng that is
of this manere (that is to seyn,
suffisaunt and
myghty) oughte ben despised, or ellis that it be right digne
of reverence aboven alle thynges?"
"Certes," quod I, "it nys no doute that it nys
right worthy to ben reverenced."
"Lat us," quod sche, "adden thanne reverence to
suffisaunce and to power, so that we demen that thise thre
thynges be al o thyng."
"Certes," quod I, "lat us adden it, yif we wiln
graunten the sothe."
"What demestow thanne," quod sche, "is that a dirk
thyng and nat noble that is suffisaunt, reverent, and myghty; or
elles that it is ryght noble and ryght cleer by celebrete of
renoun? Considere thanne," quod sche, "as we han
grauntide hirbyfore that he that ne hath nede of no thyng and is
moost myghty and moost digne of honour, if hym nedeth ony
cleernesse of renoun, whiche clernesse he myght nat graunten of
hymself; so that for lak of thilke cleernesse he myghte seme the feblere
on any side, or the more outcast." (Glose. This
to seyn, nay; for whoso that is suffisaunt, myghty, and reverent, clernesse
of renoun folweth of the forseyde thynges; he hath it al redy of his
suffysaunce.)
Boece. "I mai nat," quod I, "denye it, but I moot granten, as it is,
that this thyng be ryght celebrable by clernesse of renoun and
noblesse."
"Thanne folweth it," quod sche, "that we adden
clernesse of renoun to the thre forseyde thynges, so that there
ne be amonges hem no difference."
"This a consequence," quod I.
"This thyng thanne," quod sche,"that ne hath
nede
of no foreyne thyng, and that may don alle thynges by hise
strengthis, and that is noble and honourable, nys nat that a myry
thyng and a joyful?"
Boece. "But whennes," quod I,
"that any sorwe myghte comen to this thyng that is swiche,
certes I mai nat thynke."
Philosophie. "Thanne mote we
graunten," quod sche, "that this thing be ful of
gladnesse, if the forseide thynges ben sothe; and certes also
mote we graunten that suffisaunce, power, noblesse, reverence,
and gladnesse be oonly diverse by names, but hir substaunce hath
no diversite."
Boece. "It moot
nedly ben so," quod I.
Philosophie.
"Thilke thyng thanne,"
quod sche, "that is oon and symple in his nature, the
wikkidnesse of men departeth it and divideth it; and whanne thei
enforcen hem to gete partie of a thyng that ne hath no part, thei
ne geten hem neyther thilke partie that nis noon, ne the thyng
al hool that thei ne desire
nat."
Boece. "In which manere?"
quod I.
Philosophie. "Thilke
man," quod sche, "that seketh richesse to fleen poverte,
he ne travaileth hym nat for to geten power, for he hath lever
ben dirk and vyl; and eek withdraweth from hymself manye naturel
delites, for he nolde leese the moneie that he hath assembled.
But certes in this manere he ne geteth hym nat suffisance, that
power forleteth, and that moleste prikketh, and that filthe
maketh outcaste, and that dirknesse hideth. And certes he that
desireth oonly power, he wasteth and scatereth rychesse, and
despyseth delices and eek honour that is withoute power, ne he
ne preiseth glorie nothyng. Certes thus seestow wel that manye
thynges failen to hym, for he hath som tyme defaute of manye
necessites, and manye anguysshes byten hym; and whan he ne mai
nat do tho defautes awey, he forletith to ben myghty, and that
is the thyng that he moost desireth. And ryght thus mai I make
semblable resouns of honours, and of glorie, and of delyces; for
so as every of thise forseide thinges is the same that thise
othere thynges ben (that is to seyn, al oon
thyng), whoso that evere seketh to geten the toon of thise,
and nat the tothir, he ne geteth nat that he desireth."
Boece."What seystow
thanne, yif that
a man coveyte to geten alle thise thynges togidre?"
Philosophie. "Certes," quod sche,
"I wolde seye that he wolde geten hym sovereyn blisfulnesse;
but that schal he nat fynde in tho thynges that I have schewed
that ne mowen nat yeven that thei byheeten?"
Boece. "Certes
no," quod I.
"Thanne," quod sche, "ne sholde men nat by no weye
seken blisfulnesse in siche thynges as men wenen that they ne
mowen yeven but o thyng sengly of al that men seken."
Boece. "I graunte wel," quod I,
"ne no sothere thyng ne may be seyd."
Philosophie. "Now hastow thanne,"
quod sche, "the forme and the causes of fals welefulnesse.
Now torne and flytte the eighen of thi thought, for ther shaltow
seen anoon thilke verray blisfulnesse that I have behyght
the."
Boece. "Certes," quod I, "it is
cler and opene, theyghe it were to a blynd man; and that
schewedestow me ful wel a litel herbyforn, whan thow enforcedest
the to schewe me the causes of the fals blisfulnesse. For, but
if I be begiled, thanne is thilke the verray parfit blisfulnesse
that parfitly maketh a man suffisaunt, myghty, honourable, noble,
and ful of gladnesse. And for thow schalt wel knowe that I have
wel undirstonden thise
thinges withynne myn herte, I knowe wel that thilke blisfulnesse
that may verrayly yeven on of the forseyde thynges, syn thei ben
alle oon — I knowe dowtelees that thilke thyng is the ful
blysfulnesse."
Philosophie. "O my nory," quod sche,
"by this opynyoun I seie that thow art blisful, yif thow
putte this therto that I
schal seyn."
"What is that?" quod I.
"Trowestow that ther be any thyng in this erthly, mortel,
toumblynge thynges that may brynge this estat?"
"Certes," quod I, "Y trowe it nought; and thow
hast schewyd me wel that over thilke good ther nys no thyng more
to ben desired."
Philosophie. "Thise thynges
thanne," quod sche (that is to seyn, erthly
suffysaunce and power and swiche thynges), "outher thei
semen lyknesses of verray good, or
elles it semeth that thei yeve to mortel folk a maner of goodes
that ne be nat parfyt. But thilke good that is verray and parfyt,
that mai thei nat yeven."
Boece. "I accorde
me wel," quod I.
Philosophie. "Thanne," quod sche,
"for as moche as thou hast knowen whiche is thilke verray
blisfulnesse, and eek whiche thilke thynges ben that lyen falsly
blisfulnesse (that is to seyn, that be deceyte semen
verray goodes), now byhoveth the to knowe, whennes and where
thow mowe seke thilke verrai blisfulnesse.
"Certes," quod I, "that desire I gretly and have
abyden longe tyme to herkne it."
"But for as moche," quod sche, "as it liketh to
my disciple Plato, in his book of In Thymeo,
that in ryght litel thynges men
schulde byseche the help of God, what juggestow that be now
to done, so that we may desserve to fynde the seete of thilk
sovereyn
good?"
Boece. "Certes," quod I,
"Y deme that we schul clepe to the Fadir of alle [thyng], for
withouten hym nis ther no [begynnyng] founded aryght."
"Thow
seyst aryght," quod sche, and bygan anoon to syngen right thus:
O QUI PERPETUA. — Metrum 9
"O thow Fadir, soowere and creatour of hevene and of erthes,
that governest this world by perdurable resoun, that comaundest
the tymes to gon from syn that age hadde bygynnynge; thow that
duellest thiselve ay stedefast and stable, and yevest alle othere
thynges to ben meved, ne foreyne causes necesseden the nevere to
compoune werk of floterynge matere, but oonly the forme of
sovereyn good iset within the withoute envye, that moevede the
frely. Thow, that art althir-fayrest, berynge the faire world in
thy thought, formedest this world to the lyknesse semblable of
that faire world in thy thought. Thou drawest alle thyng of thy
sovereyn ensaumpler and comaundest that this world, parfytely
ymakid, have frely and absolut hise parfyte parties. Thow byndest
the elementis by nombres proporcionables, that the coolde thinges
mowen accorde with the hote thinges, and the drye thinges with
the moyste; that the fuyer, that is purest, ne fle nat over-heye,
ne that the hevynesse ne drawe nat adoun over-lowe the erthes
that ben ploungid in the watris. Thow knyttest togidere the mene
soule of treble kynde moevynge alle thingis, and divydest it by
membrys accordynge; and whan it es thus divyded [and] hath
assembled a moevynge into two rowndes, it gooth to torne ayen
to hymself, and envyrouneth a ful deep thought and turneth the
hevene by semblable ymage. Thow by evene+lyke causes enhauncest
the soules and the lasse lyves; and, ablynge hem heye by lyghte
waynes or cartes, thow sowest hem into hevene and into erthe. And
whan thei ben convertyd to the by thi benygne lawe, thow makest
hem retourne ayen to the by ayen+ledynge fyer. O Fadir, yyve thou
to the thought to steyen up into the streyte seete; and graunte
hym to enviroune the welle of good; and, the lyght ifounde,
graunte hym to fycchen the clere syghtes of his corage in the;
and skatere thou and tobreke the weyghtes and the cloudes of
erthly hevynesse; and schyn thou by thi bryghtnesse, for thou art
cleernesse, thow art pesible reste to debonayre folk; thow
thiself art bygynnynge, berere, ledere, path, and terme; to looke
on the, that is our ende.
QUONlAM IGITUR QUE SIT. — Prosa 10
"For as moche thanne as thow hast seyn whiche is the fourme
of good that nys nat parfit, and whiche is the forme of good that
is parfit, now trowe I that it were good to schewe in what this
perfeccioun of blisfulnesse is set. And in this thing I trowe
that we schulde first enquere for to witen, yf that any swich
maner good as thilke good that thow hast dyffinysshed a litel
herebyforn (that is to seyn, sovereyn good) may be founde
in the nature of thinges, for that veyn ymagynacioun of thought
ne desceyve us nat, and put us out of the sothfastnesse of thilke
thing that is summytted to us. But it may nat be denyed that
thilke good ne is, and that it nys ryght as a welle of alle
goodes. For alle thing that is cleped inparfyt is proevid
inparfit be the amenusynge of perfeccioun or of thing that is
parfit. And herof cometh it that in every thing general, yif that
men seen any thing that is inparfit, certes in thilke general
ther moot ben som thing that is parfit. For yif so be that
perfeccioun is don awey, men may nat thinke ne say fro whennes
thilke thing is that is cleped inparfyt. For the nature of
thinges ne took nat hir begynnynge of thinges amenused and
inparfit, but it procedith of thinges that ben alle hole and
absolut, and descendith so doun into uttereste thinges and into
thinges
empty and withouten fruyt. But, as I have
schewid a litel herebyforn that yif ther be a blisfulnesse that
be freel and veyn and inparfyt, ther may no man doute that ther
nys som blisfulnesse that is sad, stedefast, and parfyt."
Boece. "This is
concluded," quod I, "feermely and
soothfastly."
Philosophie. "But considere also," quod sche," in whom
this blissefulnes enhabiteth. The comune accordaunce and conceyt
of the corages of men proveth and graunteth that God, prince of
alle thinges, is good. For, so as nothyng mai hen thought betere
than God, it mai nat ben douted thanne that he that no thinge nys
betere, that he nys good. Certes resoun scheweth that God is so
good that it proeveth by verray force that parfyt good is in hym.
For yif God nys swyche, he ne mai nat be prince of alle thinges;
for certes somthing possessyng in itself parfyt good schulde be
more worthy than God, and it scholde semen that thilke thing were
first and eldere than God. For we han schewyd apertely that alle
thinges that ben parfyt ben first er thynges that ben inparfit;
and forthy, for as moche as that my resoun or my proces ne go nat
awey withouten an ende, we owe to graunte that the sovereyn God
is ryght ful of sovereyn parfit good. And we han establissched
that the sovereyne good is verray blisfulnesse. Thanne moot it
nedis be that verray blisfulnesse is set in sovereyn God."
Boece. "This take
I wel," quod I, "ne this ne mai nat
he withseid in no manere."
"But I preye the," quod sche, "see now how thou mayst proeven
holily and withoute corrupcioun this that I have seid, that the
sovereyn God is ryght ful of sovereyne good."
"In whiche manere?" quod I.
"Wenestow aught," quod sche, "that this prince of alle thynges
have itake thilke sovereyne good anywher out of hymself, of
whiche sovereyne good men proeveth that he is ful; ryght as thou
myghtest thenken that God, that hath blisfulnesse in hymself, and
thilke blisfulnesse that is in hym, were divers in substaunce?
For yif thow wene that God have resseyved thilke good out of
hymself, thow mayst wene that he that yaf thilke good to God be
more worth than is God. But I am beknowe and confesse, and that
ryght dignely, that God is ryght worthy aboven alle thinges. And
yif so be that this good be in hym by nature, but that it is
dyvers from hym by wenynge resoun, syn we speke of God prynce of
alle thynges, feyne who so feyne mai who was be that hath
conjoyned thise divers thynges togidre. And eek at the laste se
wel that a thing that is divers from any thing, that thilke thing
nys nat that same thing fro whiche it es undirstonden to be
diverse. Thanne folweth it that thilke thing that be his nature
is divers from sovereyn good, that that thyng nys nat sovereyn
good; but certes it were a felenous cursydnesse to thinken that
of hym that no thing nys more worth. For alwey, of alle thinges,
the nature of hem ne may nat hen betere thanne hir begynnynge.
For whiche I mai concluden by ryght verray resoun that thilke
that is begynnynge of alle thinges, thilke same thing is sovereyn
good in his substaunce."
Boece. "Thow hast
seyd ryghtfully," quod I.
Philosophie. "But we han graunted," quod sche, "that
the sovereyn good is blisfulnesse."
"That is sooth," quod I.
"Thanne," quod sche, "moten we nedes granten and
onfessen
that thilke same sovereyn good be God."
"Certes," quod I, "Y ne may nat denye ne withstonde the
resouns purposed; and I se wel that it folweth by strengthe of
the premisses."
"Loke now," quod sche, "yif this be proevid yet more fermely
thus, that there ne mowen not ben two sovereyn goodis that ben
divers among hemself. For certes the goodis that ben divers among
hemself, the toon is nat that that the tothir is; thanne ne mowen
neither of hem ben parfit, so as eyther of hem lakketh to othir.
But that that nys nat parfit, men mai seen apertely that it nys
not sovereyn. The thinges thanne that hen sovereynly gode ne mowe
by no weie be divers. But I have wel concluded that blisfulnesse
and God ben the sovereyn good; for whiche it mote nedes be that
sovereyne blisfulnesse is sovereyn devynite."
"No thing," quod I, "nys more sothfaste than this,
ne more ferme by resoun, ne a more worthy thing than God mai not
ben concluded."
Philosophie. "Upon thise thynges thanne," quod sche,
"ryght as thise geometriens whan thei han schewed her
proposicions ben wont to bryngen yn thinges that thei clepen
porismes or declaracions of forseide thinges, right so wol I yeve
the here as a corolarie or a meede of coroune. Forwhy, for as
moche as by the getynge of blisfulnesse men ben makid blisful,
and blisfulnesse is dyvinite, than is it manifest and opene that
by the getynge of dyvinite men ben makid blisful. Right as by the
getynge of justise [men ben maked just], and be the getynge of
sapience thei ben maked wise, ryght so nedes by the semblable
resoun, whan they han geten dyvinite thei ben maked goddes.
Thanne is every blisful man God. But certes by nature ther nys
but o God; but by the participacioun of dyvinite ther ne let ne
distourbeth nothyng that ther ne ben many goddis."
"This ys," quod I, "a fair thing and a precious, clepe it as
thou wilt, be it corolarie, or porisme, or mede of coroune, or
declarynges."
"Certes," quod sche, "nothing nys fairere than is the thing
that by resoun schulde ben addide to thise forseide thinges."
"What thing?" quod I.
"So," quod sche, "as it semeth that blisfulnesse
conteneth many thinges, it weere for to witen whether that alle thise
thinges maken or conjoynen as a maner body of blisfulnesse by
diversite of parties or membres, or elles yif ony of alle thilke
thinges be swich that it acomplise by hymself the substaunce of
blisfulnesse, so that alle thise othere thynges ben referrid and
brought to blisfulnesse (that is to seyn,
as to the cheef of
hem)."
"I wolde," quod I, "that thow madest me clerly to undirstonde
what thou seist, and that thou recordidest me the forseide
thinges."
"Have I not jugged," quod sche, "that blisfulnesse is good?"
"Yys for sothe," quod I, "and that sovereyn
good."
"Adde thanne," quod sche, "thilke good that is maked
blisfulnesse to alle the forseide thinges. For thilke same
blisfulnesse [is] demed to ben sovereyn suffisaunce, thilke
selve is sovereyn power, sovereyn reverence, sovereyn clernesse
or noblesse, and sovereyn delyt. What seistow thanne of alle
thise thinges, that is to seyn, suffisaunce, power, and thise
othere thinges, — ben thei thanne as membris of blisfulnesse, or
ben they reffered and brought to sovereyne good ryght as alle
thinges [ben] brought to the cheef of hem?"
Boece. "I
undirstonde wel," quod I, "what thou
purposest to seke, but I desire for to herkne that thow schew it
me."
Philosophie. "Tak now thus the discrecioun of this
questioun," quod sche; "yif alle thise thinges," quod sche,
"weren membris to felicite, thanne weren thei dyverse that on fro
that othir. And swich is the nature of parties or of membres,
that diverse membris compounen a body."
"Certes," quod I, "it hath wel ben schewyd herebyforn that
alle thise thinges ben al o thyng."
"Thanne ben thei none membres," quod sche, "for
elles it
schulde seme that blisfulnesse were conjoyned al of o membre
allone; but that is a thing that mai not ben don."
"This thing," quod I, "nys not doutous; but I abide to herknen
the remenaunt of the question."
"This is opene and cler," quod sche, "that alle othere thinges
ben referrid and brought to good. For therfore is suffisaunce
requerid, for it is demyd to ben good; and forthy is power
requirid, for men trowen also that it be good; and this same
thing mowen we thinken and conjecten of reverence, and of
noblesse, and of delyt. Thanne is sovereyn good the somme and the
cause of al that oughte ben desired; forwhy thilke thing that
withholdeth no good in itselve, ne semblance of good, it ne mai
not wel in no manere be desired ne requerid. And the contrarie;
for thoughe that thinges by here nature ne ben not gode, algates
yif men wene that thei ben gode, yet ben thei desired as theigh
that thei were verrayliche gode; and therefore is it that men
oughte to wene by ryghte that bounte be the sovereyn fyn and the
cause of alle the thinges that ben to requiren. But certes thilke
that is cause for whiche men
requiren any thing, it
semeth that thilke same thing be moost desired. As thus: yf that
a wyght wolde ryden for cause of hele, he ne desireth not so
mochel the moevyng to ryden, as the effect of his hele. Now
thanne, syn that alle thynges ben required for the grace of good,
thei ne ben not desired of alle folk more than the same good. But
we han grauntide that blisfulnesse is that thing for whiche that
alle thise othere thinges ben desired; thanne is it thus that
certes oonly blysfulnesse is requered and desired. By whiche
thing it scheweth cleerly that of good and of blisfulnesse is al
on and the same substaunce."
I se nat," quod I, "wherfore that men myghten
discorden in
this."
"And we han schewed that God and verray blisfulnesse is al o
thing."
"That is sooth," quod I.
"Thanne mowen we concluden sykerly, that the substaunce
of God
is set in thilke same good, and in noon other place.
NUNC OMNES PARITER VENITE CAPTI. — Metrum
10
"Cometh alle to-gidre now, ye that ben ykaught and ybounde
with wikkide cheynes by the desceyvable delyt of erthly thynges
enhabitynge in yowr thought! Her schal ben the reste of your
labours, her is the havene stable in pesible quiete; this allone
is the open refut to wreches. (Glose. This to seyn, that ye
that ben combryd and disseyvid with worldly affeccions, cometh
now to this sovereyn good, that is God, that is refut to hem that
wolen come to hym.) Textus. Alle the thinges that the ryver
Tagus yyveth yow with his goldene gravelis, or elles alle the
thinges that the ryver Hermus yeveth with his rede brinke, or
that Indus yyveth, that is next the hote partie of the world,
that medleth the grene stones with the white, ne scholden not
cleren the lookynge of your thought, but hiden rather your blynde
corages withynne here derknesse. Al that liketh yow here, and
exciteth and moeveth your thoughtes, the erthe hath norysschid
it in his lowe caves. But the schynynge by whiche the hevene is
governed and whennes that it hath his strengthe, that eschueth
the derke overthrowynge of the soule; and whosoevere may knowen
thilke light (of blisfulnesse),
he schal wel seyn that the white beemes of the sonne ne ben nat cleer."
ASSENCIOR INQUAM CUNCTA. — Prosa
11
Boece. "I assente me," quod I, "for alle thise thinges
ben strongly bounden with ryght ferme resouns."
"How mychel wiltow preysen it," quod sche, "yif
that thow
knowe what thilke good is?"
"I wol preyse it," quod I, "be pris withouten
ende, yif it
schal betyde me to knowe also togidre God that is good."
"Certes," quod sche, "that schal I [undo] the be
verray
resoun, yif that tho thinges that I have concluded a litel
herebyforn duellen only in hit first grauntynge."
Boece. "Thei
dwellen graunted to the," quod I.
(This to seyn as who seith, "I
graunte thi forseide
conclusyouns.")
"Have I nat schewed the," quod sche, "that the
thinges that
ben required of many folk ne ben not verray goodis ne parfite,
for thei ben divers that on fro that othir; and so as iche of hem
is lakkynge to othir, thei ne han no power to bryngen a good that
is ful and absolut; but thanne at erste ben thei verraye good,
whan thei ben gadred togidre [als] into o forme and into oon
werkynge, so that thilke thing that is suffisaunce, thilke same
be power, and reverence, and noblesse, and myrthe; and for sothe,
but yif alle thise thinges ben alle o same thing, thei ne han not
wherby that thei mowen be put in the nombre of thinges that
oughten ben required or desired?"
Boece. "It is
schewyd," quod I, "ne herof mai ther no
man douten."
Philosophie. "The
thinges thanne," quod sche, "that
ne ben none goodis whan thei ben diverse, and whanne thei
bygynnen to ben al o thing, thanne ben thei goodes — ne
cometh it
hem nat thanne be the getynge of unyte that thei ben maked
goodes?"
Boece. "So it
semeth," quod I.
"But alle thing that is good," quod sche,
"grauntestow that
it be good by the participacioun of good, or no?"
"I graunte it," quod I.
"Thanne mustow graunten," quod sche, "by
semblable
resoun that oon and good be o same thing; for of thinges of
whiche that the effect nys nat naturely divers, nedes the
substaunce moot be oo same thing."
"I ne may nat denye it," quod I.
"Hastow nat knowen wel," quod sche, "that alle
thing that is
hath so longe his duellynge and his substaunce as longe as it es
oon, but whanne it forletith to be oon, it moot nedys deien and
corrumpen togidres?"
"In whiche manere?" quod I.
"Ryght as in beestes," quod sche, "whanne the
soule and the
body ben conjoyned in oon and dwellen togidre, it es cleped a
beeste; and whanne her unyte is destroyed be the
disseveraunce the toon fro the tothir, thanne scheweth it wel
that it is a deed thing, and that it nys no lengere no beeste.
And the body of a wyght, while it duelleth in oo fourme be
conjunccion of membris, it is wel seyn that it is a figure of
mankynde; and yif the parties of the body ben so devyded and
disseverid the ton fro the tother that thei destroyen unite, the
body forletith to ben that it was beforn. And whoso wolde renne
in the same manere be alle thinges, he scholde seen that
withouten doute every thing is in his substaunce as longe as it
is oon; and whanne it forletith to ben oon, it dyeth and
peryssheth."
Boece. "Whanne I
considere," quod I, "manye thinges,
I se noon other."
"Is ther any thing thanne," quod sche, "that, in
as moche as
it lyveth naturely, that forletith the talent or the appetyt of
his beynge and desireth to come to deth and to corrupcioun?"
"Yif I considere," quod I, "the beestes that han
any maner
nature of wyllynge and of nyllynge, I ne fynde no beeste, but if
it be constreyned fro withoute+forth, that forletith or despiseth
the entencion to lyven and to duren; or that wole, his thankes,
hasten hym to dyen. For every beest travaileth hym to defende and
kepe the savacion of his lif, and eschueth deeth and
destruccioun. But certes I doute me of herbes and of trees [and]
I am in a doute of swiche thinges [as] ne han no felyng soules
(ne no naturel werkynges servynge to
appetites as beestes
han, whether thei han appetyt to duellen and to duren).
"Certes," quod sche, "ne therof thar the nat
doute. Now looke
upon thise herbes and thise trees. They wexen first in suche
places as ben covenable to hem, in whiche places thei mowen nat
sone deye ne dryen, as longe as hir nature mai defenden hem. For
some of hem waxen in feeldis, and some in mountaynes, and othere
waxen in mareys, and othre cleven on roches, and some wexen
plentyvous in soondes; and yif any wyght enforce hym to bere hem
into other places, thei wexen drye. For nature yeveth to every
thing that that is convenient to hym, and travailleth that they
ne deie nat, as longe as thei han power to duellen and to lyven.
What wiltow seyn of this, that thei drawen alle here
norysschynges by here rootes, ryght as thei hadden here mouthes
yplounged withynne the erthes, and sheden be hir maryes hir wode
and hir bark? And what wyltow seyn of this, that thilke thing
that is ryght softe, as the marie is, that it is alwey hyd in the
seete al withinne, and that it is defended fro withoute by the
stedfastnesse of wode, and that the outreste bark is put ayens
the distemperaunce of the hevene as a deffendour myghty to
suffren harm? And thus certes maistow wel seen how greet is the
diligence of nature; for alle thinges renovelen and publysschen
hem with seed ymultiplied, ne ther nys no man that ne woot wel
that they ne ben ryght as a foundement and edifice for to duren,
noght oonly for a tyme, but ryght as for to dure perdurably by
generacion.
"And the thinges eek that men wenen ne haven none
soules, ne
desire thei nat, iche of hem, by semblable resoun to kepyn that
that is hirs (that is to seyn, that is
accordynge to hir
nature in conservacioun of hir beynge and endurynge)? For
wherfore ellis bereth lightnesse the flaumbes up, and the weyghte
presseth the erthe adoun, but for as moche as thilke places and
thilke moevynges ben covenable to everyche of hem? And forsothe
every thing kepeth thilke that is accordynge and propre to hym,
ryght as thinges that ben contrarious and enemys corrumpen hem.
And yet the harde thinges, as stones,
clyven and
holden here parties togidere ryght faste and harde, and defenden
hem in withstondynge that thei ne departe nat lyghtly atwynne.
And the thinges that ben softe and fletynge, as is watir and eyr,
thei departen lyghtly and yeven place to hem that breken or
divyden hem; but natheles they retorne sone ageyn into the same
thinges fro whennes thei ben arraced; but fyer fleeth and
refuseth alle dyvisioun.
"Ne I ne trete not here now of willeful moevynges of the
soule
that is knowyng, but of the naturel entencioun of thinges, as
thus: ryght as we swolwen the mete that we resseyven and ne
thinke nat on it, and as we drawen our breeth in slepynge that
we witen it nat while we slepyn. For certes in the beestis the
love of hire lyvynges ne of hire beynges ne cometh not of the
wilnynges of the soule, but of the bygynnynges of nature. For
certes, thurw constreynynge causes, wil desireth and embraceth
ful ofte tyme the deeth that nature dredeth. (That is to seyn
as thus: that a man may be constreyned so, by som cause, that his
wille desireth and taketh the deeth whiche that nature hateth and
dredeth ful sore.) And somtyme we seen the contrarye, as
thus: that the wil of a wyght distourbeth and constreyneth that
that nature desireth and requirith alwey, that is to seyn the
werk of generacioun, by whiche generacioun only duelleth and is
susteyned the longe durablete of mortel thinges. And thus this
charite and this love, that every thing hath to hymself, ne
cometh not of the moevynge of the soule, but of the entencioun
of nature. For the purveaunce of God hath yeven to thinges that
ben creat of hym this, that is a ful grete cause to lyven and to
duren, for whiche they desiren naturely here lif as longe as
evere thei mowen. For which thou mayst not drede be no manere
that alle the thinges that ben anywhere, that thei ne requiren
naturely the ferme stablenesse of perdurable duellynge, and eek
the eschuynge of destruccioun."
Boece. "Now
confesse I wel," quod I, "that Y see wel
now certeynly withouten doutes the thinges that whilom semeden
uncerteyn to me."
Philosophie.
"But," quod sche, "thilke thing that
desireth to be and to duelle perdurably, he desireth to ben oon.
For yif that oon weren destroyed, certes, beynge schulde ther
noon duellen to no wyght."
"That is sooth," quod I.
"Thanne," quod sche, "desiren alle thinges
oon."
"I assente," quod I.
"And I have schewed," quod sche, "that thilke
same oon is
thilke that is good."
Boece. "Ye,
forsothe," quod I.
"Alle thinges thanne," quod sche, "requiren
good; and thilke
good thow mayst descryven ryght thus: good is thilk thing that
every wyght desireth."
"Ther ne may be thought," quod I, "no more
verraye thing. For
eyther alle thinges ben referrid and brought to noght, and
floteren withouten governour, despoyled of oon as of hire propre
heved; or elles, yif ther be any thing to whiche that alle
thinges tenden and hyen to, that thing muste ben the sovereyn
good of alle goodes."
Philosophie. Thanne
seide sche thus: "O my nory," quod
sche, "I have greet gladnesse of the, for thow hast fycched in
thyn herte the [marke of the] myddel sothfastnesse, (that is
to seyn, the prykke). But [in] this thing hath ben
discoveryd
to the [that] thow seydest that thow wistest not a litel
herbyforn."
"What was that?" quod I.
"That thou ne wistest noght," quod sche, "whiche
was the ende
of thinges. And certes that is the thyng that every wyght
desireth; and for as mochel as we han gadrid and comprehendid
that good is thilke thing that is desired of alle, thanne mote
we nedys confessen that good is the fyn of alle thinges.
QUISQUIS PROFUNDA.
— Metrum 11
"Whoso that seketh sooth by a deep
thought, and coveyteth not
to ben disseyvid by no mysweyes, lat hym rollen and trenden
withynne hymself the lyght of his ynwarde sighte; and let hym
gaderyn ayein, enclynynge into a compas, the longe moevynges of
his thoughtes; and let hym techyn his corage that he hath
enclosid
and hid in his tresors al that he compasseth
or secheth fro withoute. And thanne thilke thing that the blake
cloude of errour whilom hadde ycovered schal lighte more clerly
than Phebus hymself ne schyneth. (Glosa.
Whoso wol seke the
depe ground of soth in his thought, and wil nat ben disseyvid by
false proposiciouns that goon amys fro the trouthe, lat hym wel
examine and rolle withynne hymself the nature and the propretes
of the thing; and let hym yet eftsones examinen and rollen his
thoughtes by good deliberacioun or that he deme, and lat hym
techyn his soule that it hath, by naturel principles kyndeliche
yhud withynne itself, al the trouthe the whiche he ymagineth to
ben in thinges withoute. And thanne al the derknesse of his
mysknowynge shall [schewen] more evydently to the sighte of his
undirstondynge then the sonne ne semeth to the sighte
withoute+forth.) For certes the body, bryngynge the weighte
of foryetynge, ne hath nat chased out of your thought al the
cleernesse of your knowyng; for certeynli the seed of soth
haldeth and clyveth within yowr corage, and it is awaked and
excited by the wynde and by the blastes of doctrine. For wherfore
elles demen ye of your owene wil the ryghtes, whan ye ben axid,
but if so were that the norysschynges of resoun ne lyvede
yplounged in the depe of your herte? (This to seyn, how
schulde men deme the sothe of any thing that were axid, yif ther
nere a rote of sothfastnesse that were yploungid and hyd in the
naturel principles, the whiche sothfastnesse lyvede within the
depnesse of the thought?) And if so be that the Muse and the
doctrine of Plato syngeth soth, al that every wyght leerneth, he
ne doth no thing elles thanne but recordeth, as men recorden
thinges that ben foryeten."
TUNC EGO PLATONI INQUAM. — Prosa 12
Thanne seide I thus: "I accorde me gretly to Plato, for thou
recordist and remembrist me thise thinges yet the seconde tyme;
that is to seye, first whan I loste my memorie be the contagious
conjunccioun of the body with the soule, and eftsones aftirward,
whan Y lost it confounded by the charge and be the burdene
of my sorwe."
And thanne seide sche thus: "Yif thow loke," quod
sche, "first
the thynges that thou hast graunted, it ne schal nat ben ryght
fer that thow ne schalt remembren thilke thing that thou seidest
that thou nystist nat."
"What thing?" quod I.
"By whiche governement," quod sche, "that this
world is
governed."
"Me remembreth it wel," quod I; "and I confesse
wel that I ne
wyste it nat. But al be it so that I see now from afer what thou
purposist, algates I desire yit to herknen it of the more
pleynly."
"Thou ne wendest nat," quod sche, "a litel
herebyforn, that
men schulde doute that this world nys governed by God."
"Certes," quod I, "ne yet ne doute I it naught,
ne I nyl
nevere wene that it were to doute" (as who seith, "but I woot
wel that God governeth this world"); "and I schal
schortly
answeren the be what resouns I am brought to this. This world,"
quod I, "of so manye diverse and contraryous parties, ne myghte
nevere han ben assembled in o forme, but yif ther ne were oon
that conjoyned so manye diverse thinges; and the same diversite
of here natures, that so discorden the ton fro that other, most
departen and unjoynen the thinges that ben conjoynid, yif ther
ne were oon that contenyde that he hath conjoynid and ybounden.
Ne the certein ordre of nature ne schulde not brynge forth so
ordene moevynges by places, by tymes, by doynges, by spaces, by
qualites, yif ther ne were on, that were ay stedfaste duellynge,
that ordeynide and disponyde thise diversites of moevynges. And
thilke thing, whatsoevere it be, by whiche that alle things ben
ymaked and ilad, Y clepe hym 'God,' that is a word that is
used
to alle folk."
Thanne seide sche: "Syn thou feelist thus thise
thinges," quod
sche, "I trowe that I have litel more to done that thou, myghty
of welefulnesse, hool and sound, ne see eftsones thi contre. But
let us loken the thinges that we han purposed herebyforn. Have
I nat nombrid and seid," quod sche, "that suiffsaunce
is in blisfulnesse, and we han accorded that God is thilke same
blisfulnesse?"
"Yis, forsothe," quod I.
"And that to governen this world," quod sche,
"ne
schal he nevere han nede of noon help fro withoute? For elles,
yif he hadde nede of any help, he ne schulde nat have no ful
suffisaunce?"
"Yys, thus it moot nedes be," quod I.
"Thanne ordeyneth he be hymself alone alle thinges?"
quod
sche.
"That may noght ben denyed," quod I.
"And I have schewyd that God is the same good?"
"It remembreth me wel," quod I.
"Thanne ordeigneth he alle thinges by thilke good,"
quod sche,
"syn he, whiche that we han accordid to ben good, governeth
alle thinges by hymself; and he is as a keye and a styere, by
whiche that the edifice of this world is kept stable and
withouten corrumpynge."
"I accorde me greetly," quod I. "And I
aperceyvede a litil
herebyforn that thow woldest seyn thus, al be it so that it were
by a thynne suspecioun."
"I trowe it wel," quod sche; "for, as I trowe,
thou ledist now
more ententyfliche thyn eyen to loken the verray goodes. But
natheles the thing that I schal telle the yet ne scheweth not
lesse to loken."
"What is that?" quod I.
"So as men trowen," quod sche, "and that
ryghtfully, that God
governeth alle thinges by the keye of his goodnesse, and alle
thise same thinges, as I have taught the, hasten hem by naturel
entencioun to come to good, ther may no man douten that thei ne
ben governed voluntariely, and that they ne converten hem of here
owene wil to the wil of here ordeynour, as thei that ben
accordynge and enclynynge to here governour and here kyng."
"It moot nedes be so," quod I, "for the reume ne
schulde nat
seme blisful yif ther were a yok of mysdrawynges in diverse
parties, ne the savynge of obedient thynges ne scholde nat be."
"Thanne is ther nothyng," quod sche, "that
kepith his nature,
that enforceth hym to gon ayen God."
"No," quod I.
"And yif that any thing enforcede hym to withstonde God,
myghte it avayle at the laste ayens hym that we han graunted to
ben almyghty by the ryght of blisfulnesse?"
"Certes," quod I, "al outrely it ne myghte nat
avaylen hym."
"Thanne is ther nothing," quod she, "that either
mai or wole
withstonden to this sovereyn good."
"I trowe nat," quod I.
"Thanne is thilke the sovereyn good," quod sche,
"that alle
thinges governeth strongly and ordeyneth hem softly?"
Thanne seide I thus: "I delite me," quod I, "nat
oonly in the
eendes or in the somme of the resouns that thou hast concluded
and proved, but thilke woordes that thou usest deliten me moche
more. So that, at the laste, foolis that somtyme reenden grete
thinges oughten ben asschamid of hemself (that is to seyn,
that we foolis that reprehenden wikkidly the thinges that touchen
Godis governaunce, we aughten ben asschamid of ourself), as
I, that seide that God refuseth oonly the werkis of men and ne
entremettith nat of it."
Philosophie. "Thow hast
wel herd," quod sche, "the
fables of the poetis, how the geauntis assaileden hevene with the
goddis, but forsothe the debonayre force of God disposide hem as
it was worthy (that is to sey, destroyed the geauntes, as it was
worthy). But wiltow that we joynen togidres thilke same resouns,
for paraventure of swiche conjunccioun may sterten up som fair
sparcle of soth?"
"Do," quod I, "as the list."
"Wenestow," quod sche, "that God ne be almyghty?
No man is in
doute of it."
"Certes," quod I, "no wyght ne douteth it, yif
be he in his
mynde."
"But he," quod sche, "that is almyghti, ther nys
no thyng that
he ne may?"
"That is sooth," quod I.
"May God don evel?" quod sche.
"Nay, forsothe," quod I.
"Thanne is evel nothing," quod sche, "syn that
he ne may not
don evel, that mai doon alle thinges."
"Scornestow me," quod I, "or elles, pleyestow or
disseyvistow
me, that hast so woven
me with thi resouns the hous
of Didalus, so entrelaced that it is unable to ben unlaced, thow
that otherwhile entrist ther thow issist, and other while issist
ther thow entrest? Ne fooldist thou nat togidre by replicacioun
of wordes a manere wondirful sercle or envirounynge of the
simplicite devyne? For certes a litel herebyforne, whanne thou
bygunne at blisfulnesse, thou seidest that it is sovereyn good,
and seidest that it is set in sovereyn God; and seidest that God
hymself is sovereyn good, and that God is the ful blisfulnesse;
for whiche thou yave me as a covenable yifte, that is to seyn,
that no wyght nis blisful, but yif he be God also therwith. And
seidest eke that the forme of good is the substaunce of God and
of blisfulnesse; and seidest that thilke same oon is thilke same
good that is required and desired of al the kynde of thinges. And
thou provedest in disputynge that God governeth alle the thinges
of the world by the governementis of bounte, and seidest that
alle thinges wolen obeyen to hym, and seidest that the nature of
yvel nys no thing. And thise thinges ne schewedest thou naught
with noone resouns ytaken fro withouten, but by proeves in
cercles and homliche knowen, the whiche proeves drawen to hemself
heer feyth and here accord everiche of hem of othir."
Thanne seide sche thus: "I ne scorne the nat, ne pleie,
ne
disceyve the; but I have schewed the the thing that is grettest
over alle thinges, by the yifte of God that we whelome prayeden.
For this is the forme of the devyne substaunce, that is swiche
that it ne slideth nat into uttreste foreyne thinges, ne ne
resceyveth noone straunge thinges in hym; but ryght as Parmanydes
seide in Grees of thilke devyne substaunce — he seide thus:
that
thilke devyne substaunce tornith the world and the moevable
sercle of thinges, while thilke devyne substaunce kepith itself
withouten moevynge (that is to seyn, that
it ne moeveth
nevere mo, and yet it moeveth alle othere thinges). But
natheles, yif I have styred resouns that ne ben nat taken from
withouten the compas of the thing of whiche we treten, but
resouns that ben bystowyd withinne that compas, ther nys nat why
that thou schuldest merveillen, sith thow hast lernyd by the
sentence of Plato that nedes the wordis moot be cosynes
to the thinges of whiche thei speken.
FELIX QUI POTUIT. — Metrum
12
"Blisful is that man that may seen the clere welle
of good!
Blisful is he that mai unbynden hym fro the boondes of the hevy
erthe! The poete of Trace, Orpheus, that whilome hadde ryght
greet sorwe for the deth of his wyf, aftir that he hadde makid
by his weeply songes the wodes moevable to renne, and hadde makid
the ryveris to stonden stille, and hadde maked the hertes and the
hyndes to joynen dreedles here sydes to cruel lyouns for to
herknen his song, and hadde maked that the hare was nat agast of
the hound, whiche was plesed by his song; so, whanne the moste
ardaunt love of his wif brende the entrayles of his breest, ne
the songes that hadden overcomen alle thinges ne mighten nat
asswagen hir lord Orpheus, he pleynid hym of the hevene goddis
that weren cruel to hym.
He wente hym to the houses of helle, and ther he tempride
his
blaundysschinge songes by resounynge strenges, and spak and song
in wepynge al that evere he hadde resceyved and lavyd out of the
noble welles of his modir Callyope the goddesse. And he sang with
as mochel as he myghte of wepynge, and with as moche as love that
doublide his sorwe myghte yeve hym and teche hym, and he
commoevde the helle, and requyred and bysoughte by swete preyere
the lordes of soules in helle of relessynge, that is to seyn, to
yelden hym his wyf. Cerberus, the porter of helle, with hise thre
hevedes, was caught and al abasschid of the newe song. And the
thre goddesses, furiis and vengeresses of felonyes, that
tormenten and agasten the soules by anoy, woxen sorweful and
sory, and wepyn teeris for pite. Tho was nat the heved of Yxion
ytormented by the overthrowynge wheel. And Tantalus, that
was destroied by the woodnesse of long thurst, despyseth
the floodes to drynken. The foul that highte voltor, that etith
the stomak or the gyser of Tycius, is so fulfild of his song that
it nil eten ne tiren no more. At the laste the lord and juge of
soules was moevid to misericordes, and cryede: 'We ben
overcomen,' quod he; 'yyve we to Orpheus his wif to beren
hym
compaignye; he hath wel ybought hire by his faire song and his
ditee. But we wolen putten a lawe in this and covenaunt in the
yifte; that is to seyn that, til he be out of belle, yif he loke
byhynde hym, that his wyf schal comen ageyn unto us.' But what
is he that may yeven a lawe to loverys? Love is a grettere lawe
and a strengere to hymself thanne any lawe that men mai yyven.
Allas! Whanne Orpheus and his wif weren almest at the termes of
the nyght (that is to seyn, at the laste
boundes of
helle), Orpheus lokede abakward on Erudyce his wif, and lost
hire, and was deed.
This fable apertenith to yow alle, whosoevere desireth or
seketh to lede his thought into the sovereyn day, that is to
seyn, to cleernesse of sovereyn good. For whoso that evere be so
overcomen that he ficche his eien into the put of helle, that is
to seyn, whoso sette his thoughtes in erthly thinges, al that
evere he hath drawen of the noble good celestial he lesith it,
whanne be looketh the helles, that is to seyn, into lowe thinges
of the erthe."
Explicit Liber Tercius