Lydgate's Troy Book A.D. 1412-1420. Edited from the best manuscripts with introduction, notes, and glossary by Henry Bergen |
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II. | BOOK II. |
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III. |
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Lydgate's Troy Book | ||
144
BOOK II.
The envious ordre of Fortunas meving,In worldly þing, fals and flekeryng,
Ne will not suffre vs in þis present lyf
To lyue in reste with-oute werre or striffe;
For sche is blinde, fikel, and vnstable,
And of her cours, fals & ful mutable.
Who sit hiȝest, sche can doun hym enclyne
Whan he leest weneþ bring hym to ruyne,
With awaites þat gladly ben sodeyne,
And with hir face þat partid is on tweyne
Schewen most hool, whan sche is leste to triste;
Þat wel wer hym þat hir deceytes wiste,
And hir engynes & hir trappis knewe,
Þat euery day in hir courte be newe.
Of whiche, in soth, I wel afferme dar,
No mortal man may in þis lyf be war:
For sche vn-evene peisyng in balaunce,
With conterfet and feyned contenaunce,
With lokyng pleyn & chere of flaterye,
Vnwarly can blere a mannys eye,
And hym be-gyle—þis þe verray soth—
With a face blaundissching and smoþe,
Whan sche hath hym from hiȝe degre brouȝt lowe,
Ful falsly smyle & make hym þe mowe.
And ȝit som while, most varriant of hewe,
Sche vn-to somme pretendeth to be trewe;
For sche whilom to somme is fauourable,
And to somme fals and deceyvable.
Sche can reise on, & bryng another doun,
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To somme sche ȝeueth renoun and victorie,
And doth hem floure in honour & glorie;
And somme sche can apeiren with fals fame,
And gilt[e]les put a man in blame.
To somme sche is goodly and benyngne;
And of disdeyn sche can also maligne
Ageyn anoþer, & make hym loute lowe;
And from her sees sche can kynges þrowe,
And hem avale, for al her hiȝe toures.
And sche can plonge worþi emperoures
From þe hille of hiȝe prosperite
In-to þe vale of aduersite;
Þe riche emporische, of rancour & disdeyn,
And þe pore sche can enhaunce ageyn,
Þis fals[e] goddes with hir eyen blynde,
Set on aforn, a-noþer goth be-hynde;
And doth on renne, and another halte;
And on sche can in rychesse hiȝe exalte,
And anoþer plonge in pouerte,
In whom no man may haue no sikerte.
To somme sugre and hony sche distilleth;
And of somme sche þe botel filleth
With bitter galle, myrre, and aloes.
And þus þis lady, wilful recheles,
As sche þat is froward and peruers,
Hath in hir celer drinkes ful diuers;
For sche to somme, of fraude and of fallas,
Mynystreth pyment, bawme, & ypocras:
And sodeynly, whan þe sote is past,
Sche of custom can ȝeuen hem a tast,
For to conclude falsely in þe fyn,
Of bitter eysel and of egre wyn,
And corosyues þat fret and perce depe,
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Þus sche to hem, þat hir tonne aproche,
After soote, þe bitter can abroche—
In her regne, þis quene of variaunce,
Whos Ioye fyneth alwey with meschaunce.
Who trusteþ hir, sche wil hym ouercaste,
And hym deseyue pleynly at þe laste,
Of what estat euer þat he be,
Þis double lady of mutabilite.
Sethe here example of kyng Lamedoun,
Whom sche haþ brouȝt to confusioun
For litel cause, and for a þing of nouȝt;
Hir cruelte he haþe to dere a-bouȝt.
Wherfore, I rede, euery man take hede
To gynne a quarel where as is no nede:
For litel fire vnder asches reke
So may be kyndled þat it wil oute breke
In-to swyche flawme, men may it nat apese;
Who best can suffre most schal haue his ese.
Þerfor, ȝe kynges and lordis euerychon,
Make ȝow a merour of þis Lamedoun,
And beþ wel war to do no violence
Vn-to straungers, whan þei do noon offence,
Whan þei com fer in-to ȝoure regioun:
Ne suffre hem nat, by noon oppressioun,
In ȝoure boundis for to haue no wrong;
For in ȝoure owne, þouȝe þat ȝe be strong,
And myȝty eke among ȝoure legys alle,
A-noþer day paraunter may be-falle,
Þat whan þat ȝe ful litel þenke on hit,
Of sodeyn cas þat ȝe may be quyte
And I-thanked in a-noþer place,
Of auenture ȝif ȝe happe passe.
Þerfore, whan ȝe may eny swyche espie,
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And prudently consydereth in ȝour wit,
Þat to a lorde of gentilnes hit sit,
To euery straunger goodly hym to haue:
Þer is no þing may more his honour saue,
Þan to refresche hem frely & disport.
Þan may þei after good of hym reporte;
Be whos contrarie haþ moche wo be wrouȝt
A-fore þis tyme, ȝif it be wel souȝt:
Þe first[e] Troye vtterly distroyed,
And þe peple in sorwe & wo acloied,
Lad in-to exil, fer from her cite,
Lyvyng in þraldom and captiuite;
And Exyone, as ȝe haue herde me telle,
Lad in-to Grece with Thelamoun to dwelle.
For whom [þer was], as Guydo can ȝow teche,
After take so gret vengaunce & wreche
On ouþer parte, þat in verray trouthe
For to here it is to moche routhe,
As in þis boke ȝe may after rede,
Ceryously ȝif ȝe liste take hede.
For gladly ay þe reuolucioun
Of fatal þing, by disposicioun,
Is so envious, and alwey meynt with wo,
Þat in þis world, wher-so þat we go,
We trewly may aduerten in oure þouȝt,
Þat for þe valu of a þing of nouȝt,
Mortal causes and werris first by-gonne;
Strif and debate, here vnder þe sonne,
Wer meved first of smal occasioun,
Þat caused after gret confusioun;
Þat no man can þe harmys half endite.
For, for a cause dere y-nowȝe a myte,
Eche is redy to distroien other;
A man for litel wil strive with his broþer;
Blood is vnkynde, whiche gretly is to drede.
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For olde Troye & afterward þe newe,
Þoruȝe smal enchesoun, who þe trouþe knewe,
Wer finally brouȝt to distruccioun,
As olde bokes maken mencioun;
And many worþi and many noble knyȝt
Slayn in þe feld by dures of þat fiȝt—
Kynges, princes at þe sege ded,
Whan Antropos to-brak hir lyves thred,
Þat for to telle þe meschef and þe wo,
I want[e] connynge, and I fele also
My penne quake & tremble in my hond,
List þat my lord, dredde on see and lond,
Whos worþines þoruȝ þe world doþ sprede,
My makyng rude schal beholde & rede,
Whiche of colour ful nakyd is and bare:
Þat but ȝif he of his grace spare
For to disdeyne, and list to haue pite,
For fere I tremble þat he schuld it se.
But only mercy, þat doþe his hert embrace,
Byt me preswme fully in his grace;
Seynge in hym, most vertuous and good,
Mercy anexid vn-to royal blood,
As to a prince longeþ nyȝe and ferre,
Ay to-fore ryȝt, pite to preferre.
For þoruȝe þe support of his hiȝe noblesse
Sowpowailled, I wil my stile dresse
To write forþe þe story by and by
Of newe Troye in ordre Ceriously,
As myn auctor in latyn, Guydo, writ.
Preying þe reder, wher any word myssit,
Causyng þe metre to be halte or lame,
For to correcte, to saue me fro blame:
Late hym nat wayte after coryouste,
Syth þat in ryme ynglysch hath skarsete.
149
Folwen Guydo, þat clerke, þat coryous man,
Whiche in latyn hath be rethorik
Set so his wordis, þat I can nat be lyke.
To sewe his stile in my translacioun,
Word by word, lyche þe construccioun,
After þe maner of gramariens,
Nor lyke þe stile of rethoricyens,
I toke nat on me þis story to translate;
For me to forther Clyo com to late,
Þat in swyche craft hath gret experience;
I leue þe wordis and folwe þe sentence.
And trouþ of metre I sette also a-syde,
For of þat arte I hadde as þo no guyde
Me to reducyn, whan I went a-wrong;
I toke non hede nouþer of schort nor long,
But to þe trouþe, and lefte coryouste
Boþe of makyng and of metre be,
Nat purposyng to moche for to varie,
Nor for to be dyuerse nor contrarie
Vn-to Guydo, as by discordaunce;
But me conforme fully in substaunce,
Only in menyng, to conclude al on;
Al-be þat I ne can þe wey[e] goon
To swe þe floures of his eloquence;
Nor of peyntyng I haue noon excellence
With sondry hewes noble, fresche, and gay;
So riche colours biggen I ne may;
I mote procede with sable and with blake.
And [in] enewyng wher ȝe fynde a lak,
I axe mercy or I fro ȝow twynne;
And with ȝour fauour I wil a-non begynne,
And in al haste my style furthe directe;
And where I erre, I praye ȝow to correcte.
150
Of Priamus, þe sonne of Lamedoun which, at þe destruccyoun of Troye, was at the obsydey of A Castel. And howe mony sonnes and doughters that Priamus had.
The same tyme whan þat Troye tounDestroyed was, and kyng Lamedoun
Was also slayn, þoruȝ þe cruelte
Of Hercules, vnder his cyte,
He hadde a sone, þe story telleþ vs,
Whiche was his eyr, I-called Priamus,
Wonder manly, discret, and ful prudent,
Whiche þat tyme from Troye was absent,
Whan his fader loste þus his lyf;
For he þat tyme with Eccuba his wyfe,
And with his sonys, aboute a castel lay,
And alle his knyȝtes, to gete it ȝif he may,
Þat hath on hem myȝtely werreyed:
For þei his fader han falsely disobeyed,
And vn-to hym be rebel wonder long;
Al-be Priam, with sawtis huge and strong,
Hem hadde assayled ofte & many sythe;
His strengþe on hem liche a knyȝt to kythe,
To gete in armys worschip and honour,
And hem to daunte liche a conquerour,
He caste hym fully or þat he departe.
For day by day his lyf he gan iuparte,
At her wallis for to preve his myȝt,
With many baroun and many worþi knyȝt;
For he ȝit had his ȝong[e] lusty blood,
And was of age flouryng in knyȝthod,
And at assautis & swiche maner strife,
151
To hert his men, hym list nat be behynde
For drede of deth, sothly as I fynde,
A-fore þe castel hiȝe and þikke wallyd.
And be his wyfe þat Eccuba was callyd,
Þis Priam had, ful worþi of degre,
Fyve sonys and ȝong[e] douȝtres thre,
Of whiche þe eldest Hector callid was.
Whiche also fer as Phebus in compas
A natural day goth his cercle aboute,
So fer of hym, with-outen any doute,
Reported was þe renoun and þe name,
Þe worþines, and þe noble fame.
For liche as bokis of hym specefye,
He was þe Rote and stok of cheualrie,
And of knyȝthod verray souereyn flour,
Þe sowrs and welle of worschip & honour;
And of manhod, I dar it wel expresse,
Example and merour; & of hiȝe prowesse,
Gynyng & grounde; & with al þis I-fere,
Wonder benigne & lawly of his chere,
Discret also, prudent and vertuous.
Of whom þe dedis & actis merveillous
Remembrid ben of so long a-goon;
For he allone excelled euerychon,
In olde auctours rede & ȝe may fynde,
Of his knyȝthood how ȝit þei make mynde.
Þe nexte broþer callid was Paris,
To whom Nature ȝaf at hir deuyse
Of schap & forme, bewte, and semlynes,
Þat to remembre his excellent fairnes,
In his tyme, with-outen any drede,
He passed alle þat I can of rede;
And he was eke a ful manly knyȝte;
But most he vsed, whan he schulde fiȝt,
In his hond for to bere a bowe:
152
For to seken bothe fer and nere,
Þat of schetyng myȝt[e] ben his pere,
As it was founde, whan he had ado;
And Alisaundre he callyd was also.
Þe þridde sone hiȝt[e] Dephebus,
A worþi knyȝt and a chiualrous,
And had in armys a ful gret renoun,
And was a man of hiȝe discrecioun,
And wyse of counseil, myn auctour telleþ þus.
Þe firthe brother, called Elenus,
Sadde and discret, and of hiȝe prudence,
And was also a man of greet science,
And renomed, þer-with in special,
In alle þe artis called liberal,
For he in hem was expert ariȝt.
Þe fyfte sone was a worþi knyȝte,
Fresche and lusty, and ȝongest of hem alle,
And, as seith Guydo, Troylus men hym calle:
A manly man founden in bataille,
And desyrous his fomen for tassaille;
Oon þe best in his tyme founde;
And called was Hector þe secounde
For his manhood, þoruȝ-oute Troye bok;
Whiche in þe werre ful ofte vp-on hym tok
Of his knyȝthod many hiȝe emprise,
As þe story here after schal deuyse.
And in his bok liche as writ Virgile,
Þe poete olde, by ful souereyn stile,
How þat þe kyng Priam had also
By Eccuba other sonys two;
And by record of þis Virgilius,
Þe ton was called Pollyodorus,
Whom Priamus, in his grene ȝouthe,
Whan þe comynge was of Grekis kouthe
153
With gold, tresour, and many riche stoon,
Sent hym forth besyde vn-to a kyng,
Of ful gret trust, to haue hym in kepyng
Til tyme he seye what conclusioun
Þer schulde falle, after of þe toun,
And eke what fyn þe werre wolde take,
Þat vp-on hem þe Grekis dide make.
But þilke kyng for fals[e] couetyse
Of þis tresour, þat ȝe han herde deuyse,
Whan þat he sawe Fortunys variaunce
Toward Priam, & his vnhappy chaunce,
Like a tiraunt and murderere also,
Þe childes throte made kutte a-two.
And after þat, he ful cruelly
Made his men to burye hym priuely,
Þat no man myȝt his tresoun vnderstonde,
Be-syde a see depe vnder þe stronde.
Þe toþer sone, also as I rede
In Virgile, was callyd Ganymede,
Whom Iubiter in a forest hent
Vp-on a day as he on huntyng went,
And bare hym vp aboue þe sterres clere,
And maked hym in heuene his botelere,
Eternaly with Iuno for to wone,
In stede of Hebes, hir owne dere sone.
Þe first[e] douȝter of kyng Priamus
Hiȝte Creusa, as seith Virgilius
In his Eneydos, sothly as it was;
And sche was weddid vn-to Eneas,
As seith þis story; and eke þis ilke Enee
Was wonderful in his natiuite:
Of whom þe fader, I fynde dout[e]les,
Was in his tyme callid Anchyses,
Þat hym begat on Venus þe goddes;
154
Þat neuere wyht ne kowde ȝet yse
A man þat was more passyng of bewte,
Of whom þis story, touchyng his werching,
Schal ȝow declare many wonder þing.
For it is he to whom so greet a loos
Virgile ȝaf in his Eneydos;
For he þat boke in worschip of Enee
Compiled hath, liche as ȝe may se,
Of his knyȝthod & many strong batail
Be hym achevid or he wan Ytaille,
After ful long þat þe royal toun
Of Troye was brouȝt to confusioun.
And his conquest, ȝif ȝe list take hede,
In þis poete ȝe may be ordre rede,
And þe armys wrouȝt in al his age,
And his commyng also to Cartage
Fro Troye-ward, in a litel while—
Al þis ȝe may beholde[n] in Virgile.
A-nother douȝter also, it is founde,
Kyng Priam had, of birthe þe secunde,
Callid Cassandra, of ful gret sadnes,
And was in maner a diuyneresse,
And in eche art had experience,
Of þingis future fully prescience
To telle a-forn what [þat] schal betyde;
Of whom þe fame sprang in costys wyde;
Whiche kepte hir chaste in virginite,
And ay in prayer and in honeste
Sche ladde hir lyf, and in deuocioun,
After þe ritys and religioun
Of paganysme vsed in þo dawes,
Þe obseruauncys kepyng of her lawes.
Þe þridde douȝter hyȝt[e] Polycene,
Ȝongest of al; and euer a maide clene
155
In-to þe hour þat Pirrus haþ hir slawe:
Of schap, of forme was neuer be Nature
Wrouȝt nor schape a fairer creature.
Eke as I fynde, þis noble kyng also
Hadde þritty sonys, þe boke seith, & no moo,
Hardy in armys and noble founde at al,
Þat callyd wern his sonys natural.
And þei wern alle, I excepte noon,
Worþi knyȝtes and manly men echon;
And her names who so list to knowe,
He schal fynde hem write vp-on a rowe
After þis story, eueryche after other,
Begynnygne first at the eldest brother.
Howe tydengys kame to kynge Priamus howe his Cite was distroyede, and his Fadire sclayn.
And whiles Priam at þe sege layeTo-fore þe castel, to gete it ȝif he may,
And þer aboute haþ many way[e] souȝt,
Þe woful tydyngys ben vn-to hym brouȝt,
How þe Grekis han take Troye toun,
And slawe his fader, worþi Lamedoun;
And how þe cite, of olde fundacioun,
Ful pitously was turned vp so doun;
Þe worþi lordys and gentil-men echon
Take and slawe, and I-left nat on
Of hem alyve, þoruȝe Grekis cruelte,
After þe ruyne, allas, of her cyte;
And Exyoun, his owne suster dere,
Lad in-to exile with hir eyne clere.
Wher-of þe kyng in hert is stonyed so,
For verray sorwe he nyste what to do,
His sodeyn wo gan hym so constreyne.
156
He þouȝt his hert wolde a-sondre breste,
Of hiȝe distres, for he myȝt haue no reste.
And in[-to] teris he gan hym silf distille,
Þat for to dye was fynally his wille;
And Fortune, þat can so falsly varie,
With dreri hert he be-gan to warie,
Þat sche to hym was so deseyuable,
So inly cruel and vnmerciable,
So dispitous, and so sterne of face,
So vengable and deuoyde of grace:
For of envye, with a rage thouȝt,
Sche haþ hir werst of malis on hym wrouȝt,
And felly schewed what sche myȝt[e] do;
Þat in þis world was neuer wiȝt so wo,
As I suppose, of no maner age,
To rekne al his harmes and damage.
For whiche anon, in al þat euer he may,
First he chaungeþ all his riche array,
Trist and hevy, with dedly face pale,
So astoned with þis mortal tale,
Þat his desyre was to haue ben ded;
With countenaunce enclyned and his hed,
Þis lyf he ladde, & clad hym al in blak.
And sodeynly he þe sege brak,
And wolde as þo no lenger þer abyde;
But with his folke anon he gan to ride,
Þat pytously gan with hym to morne,
And toward Troye attonys þei returne.
And whan þat he haþ þe cite founde,
Pleyn with þe soil & evene with þe grounde,
Þe hiȝe wallys, whilom þik and longe,
I-bete doun, þat wer made so strong,
And his towres and paleys principal,
Þat was in byldyng so excellent royal,
157
He fynt al turned in-to wildernesse:
His peple slayn, his suster lad a-way—
For verray wo he nyst[e] what to say,
For þe constreynt of his aduersite,
And for his harmys þat nyl recured be.
For in þat tyme he was fully sure,
Vp-on no syde þer was no recure;
Wherfore he can not but sobbe & wepe,
And from his brest, with siȝes souȝt ful depe,
Breken oute, with a ded visage.
And þus, allas, in þis furious rage,
Ful pitously al his hoste and he
With-oute respite contwne dayes thre.
Til at þe last þe myrke skyes blake
Gan of her wo in party for to slake,
And þe tempest somdel gan with-drawe,
And of her wepyng blaundische gan þe waw;
As whan þe flood of wo is ouerpassed,
Þe ebbe of Ioye folwen most in haste.
To sorwen euer, it wolde her hertis schende;
And at a terme euery wo mote ende:
For þouȝ for frendis men ay wepe & weyle,
After her deth þer may no recure vaile.
Wherfore þe kyng, after al [t]his care,
Hath souȝt a weye þe cite to repare;
And cast hym fully, ȝif it wolde be,
To make vertu of necessite;
And manfully, after al his tene,
Whan þat þe eyr gan to wexe clene
Of þe mystis of his cloudy sorwe,
And þat somdel adawe gan þe morwe,
Of heuynes after þe dirke nyȝt,
Chased aweye with a sonne bryȝt
Of new[e] Ioye: for ay þe fyn of wo
Mote be gladnes whan þat sorwe is go—
158
Whan his sorwe gan lite & lite pace,
And of wysdam in al his pitous smerte
Gan prudently to plukkyn vp his herte,
And of his eyne þe wawes gon[ne] clere,
A-noon he wrouȝt, riȝt as ȝe schal here.
Howe Kynge Priamus, aftire his sorowe was asswagede, Edefyede nowe Troye, and it set in þe same place where þe olde stode, so large & so wyde that tofore ne siche was nevere none it lyke.
The sorwe aswaged, & þe syȝes olde,By longe processe, liche as I ȝow tolde,
Þis worþi kyng, callyd Priamvs,
Is in his herte nowe so desyrous,
Vp-on þe pleyn, þat was so waste & wylde,
So strong a toun of newe for to bilde,
At his devyse a cite edefye,
Þat schal thassautys outterly defye
Of alle enmyes, and his mortal foon,
With riche tourys & wallys of hard stoon.
And al aboute þe contres enviroun,
He made seke in euery regioun
For swiche werkemen as were corious,
Of wyt inventyf, of castyng merveilous;
Or swyche as coude crafte of gemetrye,
Or wer sotyle in her fantasye;
And for eueryche þat was good devysour,
Mason, hewer, or crafty quareour;
For euery wriȝt and passyng carpenter,
Þat may be founde, owþer fer or nere;
For swyche as koude graue, grope, or kerue,
Or swiche as werne able for to serue
With lym or stoon, for to reise a wal,
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Or swiche as had konyng in her hed,
Alabastre, owþer white or redde,
Or marbil graye for to pulsche it pleyn,
To make it smoþe of veynes & of greyn.
He sent also for euery ymagour,
Boþe in entaille, & euery purtreyour
Þat coude drawe, or with colour peynt
With hewes fresche, þat þe werke nat feynt;
And swiche as coude with countenaunces glade
Make an ymage þat wil neuere fade:
To counterfet in metal, tre, or stoon
Þe sotil werke of Pigmaleoun,
Or of Appollo, þe whiche as bokis telle,
In ymagerye alle oþer dide excelle;
For by his crafty werkyng corious,
Þe towmbe he made of kyng Daryus,
Whiche Alysaundre dide on heyȝt[e] reise,
Only for men schuld his fame preise,
In his conquest by Perce whan he went.
And þus Priam for euery maister sent,
For eche keruer & passynge Ioignour,
To make knottis with many corious flour,
To sette on crestis with-Inne and with-oute
Vp-on þe wal þe cite rounde aboute;
Or who þat wer excellyng in practik
Of any art callyd mekanyk,
Or hadde a name flouryng or famus,
Was after sent to come to Priamus.
For he purposeth, þis noble worþi kyng,
To make a cite most royal in byldyng,
Brod, large, & wyde, & lest it were assailled,
For werre proudly about[en] enbatailled.
And first þe grounde he made to be souȝt,
Ful depe and lowe, þat it faille nouȝt
To make sure þe fundacioun;
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Was first ybilt, he þe wallis sette;
And he of lond many myle out mette,
Aboute in compas, for to make it large,
As þe maysters [þat] toke on hem þe charge
Devysed han þe settyng and þe syyt,
For holsom eyr to be more of delyt.
And whan þe soille, defouled with ruyne
Of walles old, was made pleyn as lyne,
Þe werkmen gan þis cite for to founde,
Ful myȝtely with stonys square & rounde,
Þat in þis world was to it noon lyche
Of werkmanschip, nor of bildyng riche,
Nor of crafte of coryous masounry.
I can no termys to speke of gemetrye,
Wherfore as now I muste hem sette a-syde;
For dout[e]les I radde neuer Euclide,
Þat þe maister and þe foundour was
Of alle þat werkyn by squyre or compas,
Or kepe her mesour by leuel or by lyne;
I am to rude clerly to diffyne
Or to discrive þis werk in euery parte,
For lak of termys longyng to þat arte.
But I dar wel of trouþe affermyn here,
In al þis world ne was þer neuer pere
Vn-to þis cite, and write it for a soþe,
As in his boke my mayster Guydo doth.
And þat it myȝt in prosperite,
In hyȝe honour and felicite,
From al assaut perpetuelly contune,
It reysed was in worschip of Neptune,
And namyd Troye, as it was to-forn,
Lyche þe firste þat was þoruȝ Grekis lorn.
Þe lenthe was, schortly to conclude,
Thre day[es] Iourne, lyche þe latitude,
Þat neuer I herd make mencioun
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So huge in compas nor of swiche larges,
Nor to counte so passyng of fayrnes,
So edyfied or lusty to þe syȝt.
And, as I rede, þe walles wern on hiȝte
Two hundrid cubites, al of marbil gray,
Maskowed with-oute for sautis and assay;
And it to make more plesaunt of delyt,
A-mong þe marbil was alabaster white
Meynt in þe walles, rounde þe toun aboute,
To make it schewe with-Inne and with-oute
So fresche, so riche, and so delitable,
Þat it alone was incomperable
Of alle cites þat any mortal man
Sawe euer ȝit, sithe þe world began.
And at the corner of euery wal was set
A crowne of golde with riche stonys fret,
Þat schone ful briȝt ageyn þe sonne schene;
And euery tour bretexed was so clene
Of chose stoon, þat wer nat fer a-sondre,
Þat to beholde it was a verray wonder.
Þer-to þis cite compassed enviroun,
Hadde sexe gatis to entre in-to þe toun:
Þe first of al & strengest eke with al,
Largest also and most principal,
Of myȝty bildynge allone peer[e]les,
Was by þe kyng callyd Dardanydes;
And in story, lyche as it is fownde,
Tymbria was named þe secounde;
And þe þridde callyd Helyas;
Þe fourte gate hiȝt also Cethas;
Þe fyfte Troiana; þe syxte Anthonydes,
Strong and myȝty boþe in werre & pes,
With square toures set on euery syde.
At whos corners, of verray pompe & pride,
Þe werkmen han, with sterne & fel visages,
Of riche entaille, set vp gret ymages,
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Ful coriously enarmed for batayle.
And þoruȝ þe wal, her fomen for to lette,
At euery tour wer grete gunnys sette,
For assaut and sodeyn aventurys;
And on tourettis wer reysed vp figurys
Of wylde bestis, as beris and lyouns,
Of tigers, bores, of serpentis and dragouns
And hertis eke, with her brode hornes,
Olyfauntes and large vnicornes,
Buglis, bolys, and many grete grifoun,
Forged of brasse, of copur and latoun,
Þat cruelly by sygnes of her facys
Vp-on her foon made fel manacys.
Barbykans and bolewerkys huge,
A-fore þe toun made for hiȝe refuge,
Ȝiffe nede were, erly and eke late;
A[nd] portecolys stronge at euery gate,
Þat hem þar nat noon assailyng charge;
And þe lowkis þikke, brode, and large,
Of þe gatys al of ȝoten bras.
And with-Inne þe myȝty schittyng was
Of strong yrne barres square and rounde,
And gret barre[r]ys picched in þe grounde,
With huge cheynes forged for diffence,
Whiche nolde breke for no violence,
Þat hard it was þoruȝ hem for to wynne.
And euery hous, þat was bilt with-Inne,
Euery paleys & euery mancioun,
Of marbil werne þoruȝ[-out] al þe toun,
Of crafty bildyng & werkyng most roial.
And þe heȝt was of euery wal
Sixty cubites from þe grounde acountid;
And þer was non þat oþer haþ surmountid
In þe cite, but of on heȝt alyche,
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Þat it was harde of hiȝe estat or lowe
Hous or palys asounder for to knowe,
So egaly of tymbre and of stoon
Her housis wern reysed euerychon.
And if I schulde rehersen by and by
Þe korve knottes by crafte of masounry,
Þe fresche enbowyng, with vergis riȝt as linys,
And þe vowsyng ful of babewynes,
Þe riche koynyng, þe lusty tablementis,
Vynnettis rennynge in þe casementis—
Þouȝ þe termys in englisch wolde ryme,
To rekne hem alle I haue as now no tyme,
Ne no langage pyked for þe nonys,
Þe sotil Ioynyng to tellen of þe stonys,
Nor how þei putten in stede of morter,
In þe Ioynturys copur gilt ful clere,
To make hem Ioyne by leuel & by lyne,
Among þe marbil freschely for to schyne
Agein þe sonne, whan his schene lyȝt
Smote in þe gold, þat was bornyd briȝt,
To make þe werke gletere on euery syde.
And of þis toun þe stretis large & wyde
Wer by crafte so prudently prouided,
And by werkemen sette so and deuided,
Þat holsom eyr amyddis myȝt enspire
Erly on morwe to hem þat it desyre;
And Ȝephirus, þat is so comfortable
For to norysche þinges vegetable,
In tyme of ȝere, þoruȝ-oute euery strete,
With sugred flavour, so lusty & so swete,
Most plesantly in þe eyr gan smyte,
Þe Cyteȝeyns only to delyte;
And with his brethe hem to recomfort,
Whan þei list walke hem siluen to disport.
And þoruȝ þe toun, by crafty purviaunce,
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By compas cast, & squared out by squires,
Of pulsched marbil vp-on strong pilleris,
Deuised wern, long[e], large, and wyde,
In þe frountel of euery stretis syde,
Fresche alures with lusty hiȝe pynacles,
And moustryng outward riche tabernacles,
Vowted a-boue like reclinatories,
Þat called werne deambulatories,
Men to walke to-gydre tweine & tweyne,
To kepe hem drie whan it dide reyne,
Or hem to saue from tempest, wynde, or þonder,
Ȝif þat hem list schrowde hem silue þer-vnder.
And euery hous cured was with led;
And many gargoyl & many hidous hed
With spoutis þoruȝ, & pipes as þei ouȝt,
From þe ston-werke to þe canel rauȝt,
Voyding filþes low in-to þe grounde,
Þoruȝ gratis percid of yren percid rounde;
Þe stretis paued boþe in lengþe & brede,
In cheker wyse with stonys white & rede.
And euery craft, þat any maner man
In any lond deuise or rekene can,
Kyng Priamus, of hiȝe discrecioun,
Ordeyned hath to dwellyn in þe toun,
And in stretis, seueryd her and ȝonder,
Eueryche from oþer to be sette a-sonder,
Þat þei myȝt, for more comodite,
Eche be hym silfe werke at liberte:
Howe the goldesmythes, and aftire, every crafft ware disposyde in strete by strete by hem selff.
Gold-smythes first, & riche Iowellers,And by hem silf crafty browdereris,
Wevers also of wolne & of lyne,
Of cloth of gold, damaske, and satyn,
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And euery clothe þat men list to seke;
Smyþes also, þat koude forge wele
Swerdis, pollex, and speris scharp of stele,
Dartis, daggeris, for to mayme & wounde,
And quarel hedis scharp and square [y-]grounde.
Þer wer also crafty armoureris,
Bow[y]ers, and fast[e] by fleccheris,
And swyche as koude make schaftes pleyn,
And other eke þat dide her besy peyn
For þe werre to make [also] trappuris,
Bete baners and royal cote armvris,
And by devise, stondardis & penowns,
And for þe felde fresche & gay gytouns.
And euery crafte þat may rekned be,
To telle schortly, was in þis cite.
Howe by grete crafft ther was a Ryvere called Zanctus conveyede thorough þe Cyte.
And þoruȝ þis toun, so riche & excellent,In þe myddes a large riuer went,
Causyng to hem ful gret commodite;
Þe whiche on tweyne haþ partid þe cite,
Of cours ful swyft, with fresche stremys clere,
And hiȝt[e] Xanctus, as Guydo doþ vs lere.
And as I rede, þat vp-on þis flood,
On eche-asyde many mylle stood,
Whan nede was her grayn & corn to grinde,
Hem to sustene, in story as I fynde.
Þis riuer eke, of fysche ful plenteuous,
Devided was by werkmen corious
So craftely, þoruȝ castyng souereyne,
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For to areche, as Guydo doth coniecte,
By archis strong his cours for to reflecte
Þoruȝ condut pipis, large & wyde with-al,
By certeyn meatis artificial,
Þat it made a ful purgacioun
Of al ordure & fylþes in þe toun,
Waschyng þe stretys as þei stod a rowe,
And þe goteris in þe erþe lowe,
Þat in þe cite was no filþe sene;
For the canel skoured was so clene,
And deuoyded in so secre wyse,
Þat no man myȝt espien nor deuyse
By what engyn þe filþes, fer nor ner,
Wern born a-wey by cours of þe ryuer—
So couertly euery þing was cured.
Wher-by þe toun was outterly assured
From engenderyng of al corrupcioun,
From wikked eyr & from infeccioun,
Þat causyn ofte by her violence
Mortalite and gret pestilence.
And by example of þis flode þer was
Made Tibre at Rome, and wrouȝt by Eneas,
Þe which also departeth Rome on two,
Myn auctor seith, I not wher it be so.
Howe kynge Pryam made Citeȝens of foreyns, And [gaf] everich of hem certeyne grounde to belde vpone.
And to enhabite þis royal chef cite,Kyng Priam haþ aboute in þe contre
Made for to serche, with al his hool entent,
And in provinces þat werne adiacent,
In borwys, townys, and in smale villages,
I-gadred out of al maner ages,
And of thropis folkys ful diuers,
And swiche as wern vacaunt & dispers,
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He maked hath to entre in-to þe toun
Gret multitude, what of ȝong & olde,
It to enhabite, as ȝe han herde me tolde.
And hem þat wern afore to hym foreyns,
He hath in Troye maked cit[e]ȝeyns,
Ful discretly, liche as it is founde.
And whan þei gan with peple [to] abounde,
Kyng Priamus, of hiȝe affeccioun,
After þe bildyng of þis myȝty toun,
Haþ in his hert cauȝt a fantasye
His newe cite for to magnyfye.
And it to put þe more in remembraunce,
He cast fully to do some obseruaunce
To myȝty Mars, sterne & ferse of hewe;
And specialy with certeyn plei[e]s newe,
On horse and fote, in many sondry wyse,
To ȝeue his men in knyȝthod excersyse,
Eueryche to putten oþer at assaye
In iustis, bordis, and also in tornay,
To preve her force whan þei happe mete.
Þe whiche pleies wer fondid first in Crete;
And in þat lond, of hiȝe & lowe estat,
In Martys honour þei wer dedicate.
And in palestre, at wakys on þe nyȝt,
Wern [o]þer pleies men tassay her myȝt,
Only on fote with many sotil poynt;
And some of hem wer nakyd & anoynt;
To wynne a prys þei dide her ful entent.
And þer was founde, by clerkys ful prudent,
Of þe ches þe pleye most glorious,
Whiche is so sotil and so meruelous,
Þat it wer harde þe mater to discryue;
For þouȝe a man stodied al his lyve,
He schal ay fynde dyvers fantasyes
Of wardys makyng, & newe iuparties,
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And it was first founde in þis cite,
Duryng þe sege, liche as seyth Guydo;
But Iacobus de Vitriaco
Is contrarie of oppynioun:
For, like as he makyth mencioun,
And affermeth fully in his avys,
How Philometer, a philysofre wys,
Vn-to a kyng, to stynte his cruelte,
Fond first þis pleie & made it in Calde;
And in-to Grece from þense it was sent.
Also in Troye, by gret avysement,
Þe pleye was first founde of dees & tables,
And of castyng þe chaunces deceyvables,
Þat han be cause ofte of gret debat:
For ȝif þat on be nowe fortunat
To wynne a while be favour of his chance,
Or he be war, with sodeyn variaunce,
Vnhappely he is putte abak,
And anoþer, þat stood vp-on þe wrak,
And of losse was plounged in distresse,
Þei reysed han vn-to hyȝe ryches;
Gladnes of on is to another rage—
Adevaunte, hasard, and passage;
Ȝif on haue Ioye, anoþer suffereþ wo,
Liche as þe bonys renne to and fro;
An hundrid sythe in a day þei varie,
Now blaundisschyng, & now þei be contrarie;
No man with hem assured is in Ioye.
And first also, I rede, þat in Troye
Wer song & rad lusty fresche comedies,
And oþer dites, þat called be tragedies.
And to declare, schortly in sentence,
Of boþe two þe final difference:
A comedie hath in his gynnyng,
At prime face, a maner compleynyng,
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And it þe dedis only doth expres
Of swiche as ben in pouert plounged lowe;
But tragidie, who so list to knowe,
It begynneth in prosperite,
And endeth euer in aduersite;
And it also doth þe conquest trete
Of riche kynges and of lordys grete,
Of myȝty men and olde conquerou[ri]s,
Whiche by fraude of Fortunys schowris
Ben ouercast & whelmed from her glorie.
Of a Theatyre stondynge in þe princypale paleys of Troye, declarenge the falle of Pryncys & othere.
And whilom þus was halwed þe memorieOf tragedies, as bokis make mynde,
Whan þei wer rad or songyn, as I fynde,
In þe theatre þer was a smal auter
Amyddes set, þat was half circuler,
Whiche in-to þe Est of custom was directe;
Vp-on þe whiche a pulpet was erecte,
And þer-in stod an aw[n]cien poete,
For to reherse by rethorikes swete
Þe noble dedis, þat wer historial,
Of kynges, princes for a memorial,
And of þes olde, worþi Emperours,
Þe grete emprises eke of conquerours,
And how þei gat in Martis hiȝe honour
Þe laurer grene for fyn of her labour,
Þe palme of knyȝthod disservid by [old] date,
Or Parchas made hem passyn in-to fate.
And after þat, with chere and face pale,
With stile enclyned gan to turne his tale,
And for to synge, after al her loos,
Ful mortally þe stroke of Antropos,
And telle also, for al her worþihede,
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How pitously þei made her mortal ende
Þoruȝ fals Fortune, þat al þe world wil schende,
And howe þe fyn of al her worþines
Endid in sorwe and [in] hiȝe tristesse,
By compassyng of fraude or fals tresoun,
By sodeyn mordre or vengaunce of poysoun,
Or conspiringe of fretyng fals envye,
How vnwarly [þat] þei dide dye;
And how her renoun and her hiȝe fame
Was of hatrede sodeynly made lame;
And how her honour drowe vn-to decline;
And þe meschef of her vnhappy fyne;
And how Fortune was to hem vnswete—
Al þis was tolde and rad of þe poete.
And whil þat he in þe pulpit stood,
With dedly face al devoide of blood,
Singinge his dites, with muses al to-rent,
Amydde þe theatre schrowdid in a tent,
Þer cam out men gastful of her cheris,
Disfigurid her facis with viseris,
Pleying by signes in þe peples siȝt,
Þat þe poete songon hath on hiȝt;
So þat þer was no maner discordaunce
Atwen his dites and her contenaunce:
For lik as he aloft[e] dide expresse
Wordes of Ioye or of heuynes,
Meving & cher, byneþe of hem pleying,
From point to point was alwey answering—
Now trist, now glad, now hevy, & [now] liȝt,
And face chaunged with a sodeyn siȝt,
So craftily þei koude hem transfigure,
Conformyng hem to þe chaunt[e]plure,
Now to synge & sodeinly to wepe,
So wel þei koude her observaunces kepe;
And þis was doon in April & in May,
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And flouris fresche gynne for to springe;
And þe briddis in þe wode synge
With lust supprised of þe somer sonne,
Whan þe[se] pleies in Troye wer begonne,
And in theatre halowed and y-holde.
And þus þe ryyt [of] tragedies olde,
Priamus þe worþi kyng began.
Of þis mater no more telle I can.
Howe kenge Priam, aftire his Cite was parformede, ordeynede his paleys princypal, callyd Yllyoun.
But I wil furthe of þis story wryte,And on my maner boistusly endyte,
How Priamus was passyng dilligent,
Riȝt desyrous, and inwardly fervent,
Ȝif he myȝt, among his werkes alle,
To bilde a paleys and a riche halle,
Whiche schuld[e] ben his chose chef dongon,
His royal se and souereyn mansioun.
And whan he gan to þis werke aproche,
He made it bilde hiȝe vp-on a roche,
It for tassure in his fundacioun,
And callyd it þe noble Ylyovn.
Þe siȝt of whiche, iustly circuler,
By compas cast, rounde as any spere—
And who þat wold þe content of þe grounde
Trewly acounten of þis place rounde,
In þe theatre first he moste entre,
Takyng þe lyne þat kerueþ þoruȝ þe centre,
By gemetrie, as longeth to þat art,
And treblid it, with þe sevenþe part,
He fynde myȝt, by experience,
Þe mesour hool of þe circumference,
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Contened was with-Inne þe strong[e] wal—
Þe creste of whiche, wher it lowest was,
Hadde in hiȝt ful sixe hundred pas,
Bilt of marbil, ful royal & ful strong,
And many other riche stoon a-mong;
Whos touris wern reysed vp so hiȝe,
Þat þei raȝt almost to þe skye;
Þe werk of whiche no man myȝt amende.
And who þat list by grecis vp ascende,
He myȝt[e] seen in his inspeccioun
To þe boundis of many regioun
And provincys þat stoode rounde aboute.
And þe wallys, with-Inne and with-oute,
Endelong with knottis graue clene,
Depeynt with aȝour, gold, ȝinopre, & grene,
Þat verraily, whan þe sonne schon,
Vp-on þe gold meynt among þe stoon,
Þei ȝaf a liȝt, with-outen any were,
As Phebus doþ in his mydday spere—
Þe werke of wyndowe, and [eche] fenestral,
Wrouȝt of berel and of clere cristal.
And amyddys of þis Ylyoun,
So fresche, so riche of fundacioun,
Whiche clerkys ȝit in her bokis preyse,
Kyng Pryam made an halle for to reyse,
Excellyng alle in bewte & in strenthe
Þe latitude acordyng with þe lengthe.
And of marbil outeward was þe wal;
And þe tymbre, most nobil in special,
Was halfe of cedre, as I reherse can,
And þe remenant of þe riche eban,
Whiche most is able, as I dar specefye,
With stoon to Ioyne by craft of carpentrie;
For þei of tymbre haue þe souereynte.
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Liche in bokys sothly as I fynde,
It cometh out of Ethiope and Ynde,
Blak as is get; and it wil wexe anoon,
Whan it is korve, harde as any stoon,
And euermore last[en] and endure,
And nat corrupte with water nor moysture.
And of [t]his halle ferþer to diffyne,
With stonys square by leuel and by lyne
It pavid was, with gret diligence
Of masownry and passyng excellence.
And al aboue, reysed was a se,
Ful coriously of stonys and perre,
Þat callid was, as chefe and principal,
Of þe regne þe sete moste royal.
To fore whiche was set by gret delyt
A borde of Eban and of yvor whyt,
So egaly Ioyned and so clene,
Þat in þe werk þer was no rifte sene;
And sessions wer made on euery syde,
Only þe statis by ordre to deuyde.
Eke in þe halle, as it was couenable,
On eche party was a dormant table
Of evor eke, and þis eban tre;
And euen ageyn þe kynges royal see,
In þe party þat was þer-to contrarie,
I-reised was by many crafty stayre,
Hiȝe in þe halle, in þe tother syyt,
Riȝt as lyne in þe opposyt,
Of pured metal and of stonys clere
In brede & lengthe, a ful rich auter.
On whiche þer stood, of figure & visage
Of masse gold, a wonderful ymage,
To ben honoured in þat hiȝe sete,
174
And þe statue, for al his huge weȝgte,
Fiftene cubites complet was of heiȝgte,
A crowne of gold hiȝe vp-on his hed,
With heuenly saphirs & many rube red
Fret enviroun, with other stonys of Ynde;
And among wer medled, as I fynde,
Whyte perlis massyf, large, & rounde;
And for most chefe al dirkenes to confounde,
Was a charbocle, kyng of stonys alle,
To recounfort & gladyn al þe halle,
And it tenlumyn in þe blake nyȝt
With þe freschenes of his rody liȝt.
Þe valu was þer-of in-estimable,
And þe riches pleynly incomperable;
For þis ymage, by diuisioun,
Was of schap and proporcioun
From hed to foot so maisterly entayled,
Þat, in a point, þe werkeman haþ nat failed
It to parforme by crafty excellence.
Whom Priamus, with drede and reuerence,
Honoured hath aboue þe goddys alle,
In al meschef to hym to clepe & calle;
For in hym was his hool affeccioun,
His souereyn trust and deuocioun,
His hope also, and his affyaunce,
His heile, his Ioye, and his assuraunce;
And his welfare and prosperite
He hath commytted to his deite,
Wenyng in hert wonder sekerly,
To ben assured from al meschef þer-by,
And diffended in eche aduersite,
And hold his regne in hiȝe Felicite,
And in honour continuelly to schyne,
Whil Iubiter, þoruȝ his power diuyne,
Hym and his hath in proteccioun—
175
And þus þis werke finally acheved,
Wher-of Priam, with Ioye ful releued,
Þat he his cite and noble Ylyoun
Hath fully brouȝt vn-to perfeccioun,
Liche his entent, whan þat he began.
And þus Priam, þis kyng, þis worþi man,
Ful many day in [t]his newe Troye,
With his liges lad his lyf in Ioye,
Wher I hym leue in his royal sete
Souereynly regnynge in quiete,
Procedyng forþe, ȝif ȝe liste to here,
Vn-to þe effect anoon of my matere.
Howe kynge Priamus, aftire that he had parfytlye parformede and ymade his Cyte, by þe serpente Of Envye was stirede and Inwardly mevede to bygyne A newe werre vpone the Grekes.
O hatful harm, whiche most is for to drede!Kyndled so long, o spark of old hatred,
Rote of debate, grounde of envie and Ire,
With new[e] flawme hertis for to fyre!
O grayn of malys, causer of al offence!
O rancour rustid of inpacience,
Whiche hast of new made festrid soris smerte!
Whan þou art onys rakid in a herte,
Whiche for disdeyn of mercy maist nat lete
A man no while to lyuen in quiete,
But delvist vp by malis many-fold
Debatis new, þat biried wern of olde,
And falsely quikest strives to restore—
Þenvious serpent þat was slaw of ȝore,
Whiche felly hath, þis addre envyous,
Out of his rest awakyd Priamus,
And with his venym, so persyng & so ille,
176
And mevid hym, of his iniquite,
Vp-on Grekis avenged for to be.
For wher-as he in pes held his reigne,
With his legis in Ioye souereigne,
With-oute anoy or any perturbaunce,
Þis serpent hath with new[e] remembraunce,
With-out avis, or discret arest,
So hoot a flawme kyndeled in his brest
Of old envie with fresche rancour meynt,
Þat likly is neuer to be queynte.
For Priam now in his entencioun
Cast & compaseth, revolvyng vp & dovn,
How strong he was of riches & meyne,
How noble & myȝty was also his cite,
And abundaunte, schortly to conclude,
Boþe of plente and of multitude,
Of men of armys and of chevalrye.
Whiche sterid hym to han a fantasye,
Allas þe while, to his vnhappy chaunce,
Þat to be ded he take wil vengaunce
Vp-on his foon; þe fire of hot envie
So brent hym inward by mallencolye,
Stondyng in purpos, þat no man chaunge may,
Of his damages avenged be som day,
And of Iniuries þat þei on hym han wrouȝt.
And whan þat he had a tyme souȝt
To his purpos moste conuenient,
A-noon he hath for alle his lordis sent,
And his knyȝtes callyd euerychon
To com in hast, excused was nat on,
Namly, of hem þat wern of hiȝe degre.
And þei obeying, with alle humilite,
His biddyng holly, & made no delaye,
To com echon ageyn a certeyn day;
177
Ector except, þat was þat tyme absent
In þe strong and myȝty regioun
Of Panonye, whiche in subieccioun
Kyng Priam helde, þoruȝ his worþines;
And to amende þinges and redres,
Ector was goon in-to þis Panonye,
Certeyn causys for to iustefye,
As in his resoun he þouȝt[e] for þe best,
To setten hem in quiete and in rest.
For he was ay so iust and so prudent,
So wel avised and so pacient,
And so demenyd in his gouernaunce,
Þat hym was loth for to do vengance,
Wher-as he myȝt in esy wyse trete
For to reforme þinges smale & grete;
For lothe he was, þis noble worþi knyȝt,
For any haste to execute ryȝt,
Or causeles by rigour to condempne.
And in þis while, ful worþi and solempne,
Kyng Priamus, of lordis grete and smale,
With-Inne Troye helde a courte royal,
As he þat list for no cost to spare;
And ceryously his menyng to declare,
He in his see, his lordis enviroun,
Gan þus to schewe his hertis mocioun:
Howe kynge Priamus in opyne declarethe þe harmes done to his progenye & hym by the Grekes.
“O worþi lordis, þat ben [now] here present,Feithful and trew of hert & of entent,
Is nat vnknowe to ȝour discrecioun
Þe grete damagis and oppressioun
Whiche þat Grekis han vp-on vs wrouȝt,
With-oute cause, for a þing of nouȝt,
178
Þat, as I trowe, so new is ȝit þe date,
Þat it is fresche remembrid in ȝour mynde,
Vn-to ȝour blood ȝif þat ȝe be kynde.
For I suppose, no forȝetilnes
May put a-way þe mortal hevines
Of harmys olde, whiche ay renewe ageyn
In my memorie, I seie ȝow in certeyn;
And as I trow, pleynly in ȝoure þouȝt,
Þat euer is grene, and ne dieth nouȝt,
How þei haue slayn oure progenytours
Þat whilom wern so noble werreours,
Oure cite brent and brouȝt vn-to ruyne,
And robbid it, falsely by ravyne,
And turned al in-to wyldernes,
And in-to Grece caried oure riches,
My fader slayn, þat hiȝt[e] Lamedoun,
With-out[e] cause or occasioun,
And rauȝt from hym his gold & his tresour,
Whiche me semeth is a foul errour.
We myȝt of riȝt amendis wel chalenge,
And desyren vs iustly to revenge
A-fore þe goddis of so hiȝe offence,
Only of resoun and of conscience.
And passyng alle her mortal cruelte,
Þer is o þing most inly greveth me,
Þat þei vngodly, ageyn[e]s gentilnes,
No rewarde havyng to þe worþines,
To þe birth, nor þe royal blood
Of hir þat is so fayr and eke so gode—
I mene my suster, callyd Exyoun—
Whom þei, allas, to her confusioun,
Disuse and kepe nat lik hir degre,
From day to day in dishoneste;
Wher-þoruȝ hir honour & hir name is lorn,
Considryng nat of what stook sche was born.
179
Or to aduerte þe rote of hir kynred,
Of surquidye þei be so indurat.
And sith þat sche, of so hiȝe estat,
I-tretid is, liche as ȝe may se,
I suppose other, þat ben of low degre,
Gouerned ben ful dishonestly;
For ȝe may þinke and deme trew[e]ly
How wyvis, maidenes, in þat companye,
With oþer eke þat ben of ȝour alye,
I-haunted ben and vsed at her lust;
On þe Grekis I haue no better trust,
For þei ne spare nouther blood nor age.
And þus þei lyue in torment & seruage,
With-out routhe, mercy, or pite,
Þe whiche toucheþ ȝou as wel as me;
And as me semeth, of equite and riȝt,
Ȝe ouȝt echon with al ȝour ful[le] myȝt,
Of þe wronges with whiche ȝe ben offendid,
To seke a weye it myȝt[e] ben amendid:
And þat we werke, alle be on assent,
And procede, liche to oure entent,
On her malis and cursed cruelte,
Alle attonys avengid for to be;
And þat we be in hert[e], wille, and þouȝt
Of on acorde, and ne varie nouȝt,
For þan our force is doublid & pouste.
For riȝt and resoun & good equite
Require vengaunce on hym þat doþ þe wrong,
Þouȝ it so be þat it abyde longe.
I trust also on goddis riȝtwisnes,
Þat þei schal help oure harmes to redres,
And fauour us in oure Innocence,
To chastyse hem þat wrouȝt[e] þis offence.
Also ȝe knowe howe þat oure cite
Is strong and myȝty, & of gret surte,
180
Þat also fer as schyneþ sonne or sterre,
Þer is noon lyk, for to rekne al,
Þat may in force ben þer-to perigal.
Ȝe knowe also, as it schal be founde,
With cheualrie how þat we abounde,
Expert in armys and of olde assaied,
Þat for drede neuer wer dismayed;
And we haue plente also of vitaille,
Of frendschip eke, þat ne wol not faile
With al her myȝt to don to vs socour.
Wherfor I rede, with-oute more soiour,
To sette vp-on, sithen we be able,
And tyme is now, me semeth, couenable;
For manhod bit make no delaye
To venge a wrong, hap what hap[pe] may.
For in differryng is ofte gret damage,
To werke in tyme is double avauntage;
For to oure purpos lakketh neuer adel,
And þoruȝ oure manhod we ben assured wel.
But list we ben [not] holden to hasty,
Or to rakil to werke wilfully—
And werre also stant in aventure,
For ay of Marte dotous is þe Ewre—
I rede, first to Grekis þat we sende
To wit ȝif þei our harmys wil amende,
With-out[e] strif, werre, or more debat:
Þan may we sayn þat we ben fortunat;
And ȝif þei be contrarie to resoun,
To condiscende to þis conclusioun,
To graunte oure askyng of equite & riȝt,
Þan haue we cause for to preve our myȝt.
But or þat we procede by rigour,
We schal to hem offeren al mesour,
As fer as riȝt and resoun eke require;
And of disdeyn ȝif hem list nat here,
181
I-roted is vp-on sikernes.
And ȝif þat we of her gret offence
Axe amendis first in pacience,
God and Fortune, I hope, wilne assent,
In þe ende we schal vs nat repente;
And it is bet by pes to han redresse,
Þan gynne a werre with-out avisenesse.
Þer-fore, lat vs our woful aventure
Paciently suffren and endure,
And in our port be but humble & pleyn,
Vp-on answer what þat þei wil seyn.
For þouȝ so be, in myn entencioun,
I meved am by iust occasioun
To procede of ire to vengance,
I wil al put out of remembrance,
And lete slyde be forȝetilnes
Þe wrongis don, & voide al hevines
To-ward Grekis, and of hem axe no more,
But þat þei wil Exyona restore
To vs ageyn, whiche is to me most derre,
Only to stint al debat and werre.
For þe surpluse of our mortal Ewre
We schal dissymvle, & prudently endure
Our harmys olde forþe in pacience,
Ȝif ȝe acorde [vn-]to my sentence:
Seythe her-vp-on, as ȝe ben avised;
For ȝif þis sond be of hem despised,
And þat hem list to resoun nat obeye,
Þan we may iustly seke anoþer weye
To han redres, for now þer is no more,
Saue I purpose to sendyn Anthenor,
Whiche is a man discrete and avisee,
And specialy in mater of trete,
For he is bothe wyse and eloquent,
As ȝe wel knowe, & passyngly prudent.”
182
Howe kynge Priam, by the advyce of his lordes, sente Anthenore into Grece for restitucyoun of Exioun.
And whan þe kyng had told his tale anon
To his counseyl þei consent euerychon,
Þat Anthenor þis Iourne vndirtake.
And he in hast gan hym redy make,
With-oute abode, and nolde nat denye
To take on hym þis embassetrye,
Wel avysed in his discresioun,
Toke or he went informacioun
From poynt to poynt of þis gret[e] charge;
For he hym cast to stondyn at his large,
With-oute errour, as he þat koude his gode;
For he þe effect ful pleynly vndirstode;
For euery þing he prented in his þouȝt
Or þat he went, and forgat riȝt nouȝt;
For of a word he cast hym nat to faile.
To schip he goth and began to sayle,
And in schort tyme, he & his companye,
Arived ben vp in Thesalye,
At a cite callyd Mynusyus,
Wher by fortune was kyng Pelleus
Þe same tyme; & Anthenor anoon
Vn-to þe kyng þe riȝt[e] weye is goon.
Of whom he was, as Guydo haþ conseived,
At prime face benignely receyved;
But whan he knew þe cause of his commyng,
He bad in hast, with-oute mor tariyng,
To Anthenor, with a fel visage,
Schortly to seyn þe effecte of his message.
To his counseyl þei consent euerychon,
Þat Anthenor þis Iourne vndirtake.
And he in hast gan hym redy make,
With-oute abode, and nolde nat denye
To take on hym þis embassetrye,
Wel avysed in his discresioun,
Toke or he went informacioun
From poynt to poynt of þis gret[e] charge;
For he hym cast to stondyn at his large,
With-oute errour, as he þat koude his gode;
For he þe effect ful pleynly vndirstode;
For euery þing he prented in his þouȝt
Or þat he went, and forgat riȝt nouȝt;
For of a word he cast hym nat to faile.
To schip he goth and began to sayle,
And in schort tyme, he & his companye,
Arived ben vp in Thesalye,
At a cite callyd Mynusyus,
Wher by fortune was kyng Pelleus
Þe same tyme; & Anthenor anoon
Vn-to þe kyng þe riȝt[e] weye is goon.
Of whom he was, as Guydo haþ conseived,
At prime face benignely receyved;
But whan he knew þe cause of his commyng,
He bad in hast, with-oute mor tariyng,
To Anthenor, with a fel visage,
Schortly to seyn þe effecte of his message.
This Troyan knyȝt, astonyed neuer-adel,
But ful demvr and avised wel,
Nat to hasty nor rakel for to seyn,
But abidynge with loke and face pleyn,
To Pelleus, with a manly chere,
Seide in effect riȝt þus as ȝe schal here:
“Þe worþi kyng, callid Priamus,
So wyse, so noble, so manly, and famus,
And of knyȝthod passyng excellent,
Hath first to ȝou in goodly wyse sent,
Out of Troye, his royal chefe cite,
His ful entent & message her by me,
As I schal seyn to ȝou in wordis pleyn,
Ȝif it so be þat ȝe nat disdeyne
Paciently to ȝeven audience.
Remembryng first in ȝour aduertence
Of þe harmys nat ful longe a-go,
And þe wrongis þat ȝe wrouȝt also,
Ful cruelly, with oþer eke of ȝours,
In Troye lond on his progenitours,
What Iniuries and distruccioun,
Causeles, with-oute occasyoun,
Ȝe schewed haue of verray cruelte,
And merciles distroyed his cite,
Slayn his fader, named Lamedoun,
And his cite brent and bete doun,
And nouþer left paleis, hous, nor tour,
And lad a-wey his riches and tresour,
And nouþer spared, as I reherse can,
In ȝour slauȝter womman, child, nor man,
Þer myȝt[e] non from ȝour swerd astert.
And ȝit o þing þat most he haþ at hert,
Þat his suster, called Exyoun,
Is hold and kepte of kyng Thelamoun,
Dishonestly, ageyn al genterye,
To gret dishonour & gret velenye
Of her kynred, liche as ȝe may se,
Tretid nor cheresschid lyk to hir degre!
Wherfor, sith ȝe be so wyse a knyȝt,
Ȝe ouȝt aduerte and to haue a syȝt
To swyche þinges, of iust affeccioun,
And considre in ȝour discreccioun,
Of gentilnes and of equite,
How swiche wrongis myȝt amendid be.
Wherfor Priam, of gret avisenes,
As he þat fully with al his besynes
Of hert and wille desireþ pes & rest,
Sendeth to ȝou, besechyng for þe best,
Þat ȝe wil don ȝour besy diligence,
To make to hym þis litel recompense,
Þat he may haue restitucioun,
Þoruȝ ȝour knyȝ[t]ly medyacioun,
Of his suster, with-oute lenger space;
And þe remenaunt he wil lete pace,
Strif and werre only to eschewe.
For he desyreth fully for to sewe
Pees and quiete, of hool affeccioun,
And to pursew mesour and resoun,
And finally, liche as ȝe may se,
Al occasioun of werre for to fle;
Consydereth þis, þat hold[e] ben so sage,
For þis þe fyn fully of my massage.”
Whan Pelleus hym pleynly vnderstod,
Of sodeyn Ire he wexe in hert[e] wood,
Of cher and loke fel and furious,
And of rancour riȝt melencolyous,
Þat he ne myȝt [a]tempre nor apese
Þe hasty fir þat gan his hert[e] sese;
For he anoon, in ful dispitous wyse,
Gan Priamus threten and dispise,
And of malis sette his sond at nouȝt,
With all þe menys þat Anthenor haþ souȝt,
And gan also þis Troyan knyȝt manace,
And bad in hast he schuld[e] voide his place,
Vp-on peril þat after falle myȝt.
And he anoon went out of his syȝt;
And in al hast, he and his meyne,
With-oute abood, taken han þe se,
And gan to sailen oute of Thesalye,
And in her weye so fast[e] þei hem hyȝe,
Þat in schort tyme þei arived be
Vp at Salempne, a myȝty strong cite,
Wher be fortune in þis royal toun,
Þis Anthenor fond kyng Thelamoun,
And to his palys he haþ þe wey[e] nome.
And first, I fynde, whan þat he was come,
He was accepte[d] vn-to his presence,
Benyng[e]ly with-oute[n] al offence;
For Exion was present in þat tyde,
Of auenture stondyng by his syde.
And at reuerence of hir womanhede,
Of Antenor he toke þe better hede,
Al-be of custom þat kyng Thelamoun
Had hiȝe dispit and indignacioun
Of euery Troyan þat he coude espie;
For specialy to hem he had envie,
Of rancour only, þoruȝ þe bitter rage,
Whiche in his hert myȝt[e] neuer asswage.
But for al þat, he in pacience
To Anthenor haþ ȝeven audience;
Þe whiche anoon, in ful sobre wyse
His tale gan, as I schal deuyse:
“Sir,” quod he, “with support of ȝour grace,
So ȝe me graunt opportune space,
For to declare þe cause of my commyng,
I wil reherse with-out more tarying
My mater hool, brefly in sentence,
To make it kouþe to ȝour magnificence,
Signefying, with-out[e] displesaunce,
Þat Priamus, whiche haþ [þe] gouernaunce
Of Troye toun, hath vn-to ȝow sent
Of feiþful menyng and of clene entent,
Besechyng first to ȝour goodlyhed,
Alle other wronges forȝetyn & eke ded,
Þat ȝe only, of ȝour hiȝe nobles,
Of equite, and of gentilnes,
Ȝe wil restore Exyona ageyn,
Whiche þat ȝe hold, to speke in wordis pleyn,
In verray soth, nouȝt like to hir estat.
Wherfore, he preyeth to stynten al debat,
And euery harme to put out of memorie,
Of kyngly honour for ȝour owne glorie,
To send hir hom and make deliueraunce
Goodly of hir with-outen variaunce,
Whom ȝe han holde so many long[e] daies.
Ne tarieth nat, ne setteth no delayes,
Ne lete in ȝow be founde now no slowþe;
For sothfastly it is to gret a routhe
To recorde how ȝe haue hir vsed,
It may of trouth nat goodly ben excused.
But we schal lete liȝtly ouerslyde,
So þat ȝe bening[e]ly prouide
To sende hir hom, lik as I haue seyd.
Loo, her þe charge þat was on me leide,
With-oute more abydyng in certeyn,
What godly answer ȝe wil send ageyn.”
Whan Thelamoun herkned had his tale,
Of hasty Ire he gan to wexe pale—
Þe fyry colre hath hym made so wode,
Þat from his face a valid was þe blood,
Whiche in his hert gan to frete & bite—
With lok askoyn, & tornyd vp þe white,
Of hiȝe disdeyn, with face dispitous,
With pale smylyng & lauȝtre furious,
Gan rakyn oute þe felle mortal fire
Of fretyng hate, þat brent in his desire,
And schortly made, in conclusioun,
To Anthenor þis obieccioun,
And seide, “frend, what-euer þat þou be,
I wondre gretly, & mervail is to me,
What auenture or sodeyn newe þing
Vnprudently meveth now þi kyng
Vn-to me to make swiche a sonde;
Þou wer a fole, whan þou toke on honde,
Outher vnhappy or infortunat,
To me to bryng þis embassiat;
For I with hym haue no þing a-do,
Nor he wit[h] me, and loke þou seye hym so;
For we ne ben aqueynted but a lyte,
Nor I no þing platly me delite,
At schorte wordis, ȝif þou list to here,
To don for hym, [n]or at his prayere;
For I ne haue Ioye nouþer feste
To do riȝt nouȝt, sothly, at his request.
Þis wote I wel, þat but a while ago
I was at Troye, my silfe and other mo,
For to reforme [a] þing þat was amys,
Þoruȝ ȝour offence, schortly, þus it is;
For certeyn þing wrouȝt by Lamedoun.
And by our manhood we wan þer þe toun,
And slow þe kyng & alle þat with hym hilde,
In knyȝtly wyse hym metyng in þe felde;
And for þat I, as eueryche myȝt[e] se,
Dide entre first in-to þat cite,
It was to me graunted for memorie,
In signe only of myn hiȝe victorie,
With-outen any contradiccioun,
By alle þe Grekis to haue pocessioun
Of hir þat is to me most entere,
Exiona, whom þou cleymest here.
But be wel siker, þin askyng is in veyn;
For trust[e] wel, & be riȝt wel certeyn,
Þou gest hir nat, at o word, ȝif I may;
For þer schal first be made ful gret affray
Or I hir leue duryng al my lyve,
Who euer grucche or þer ageyn[es] striue
It wer nat sittyng me to leue hir so,
For whom I had whilom so gret ado
Or I hir gat with spendyng of my blood;
And who þat be wroþ þer-with or wood,
I wil hir kepe, as it schal be founde;
For whom I had so many mortal wounde
At Troye toun, or þat I hir wan.
And in good feith, as ferforþe as I can,
Sche schal nat liȝtly from myn hondis passe;
For sche allone stant so in my grace
For hir bewte and hir semylyhed,
For hir bounte and hir goodlyhed,
Þat ȝif I schal my resoun schortly fyne,
Sche is in sothe þe moste femy[ny]ne
Þat euer I sawe, and with-outen drede,
Of port, of konnyng, & of womanhede,
Sche haþ alone, in verray existence,
Þe souereynte and þe excellence;
Þat Priamus, for ouȝt þat þou canst seyn,
Whil þat I lyue get her not ageyn,
But he hir bye with many dedly wounde,
With scharp[e] swerdis and square speris grounde.
For þer schal first be reysed soche a strif,
Þat it schal cost many a man his lif,
Or [þat] sche ageyn restored be;
Take þis for soþ, þou gest no more of me.
Whan hym list he may wel be-gynne;
But I suppose he schal but litel wynne,
Noon oþer wyse but as I þe tolde.
And wost [þou] what a gret fool I þe holde,
The to putte so fer in iupartye,
To execute þis embassatrye,
Þe manly Grekis so boldly to offende;
Be war þer-for, þat he no more þe sende,
Vp-on þi lyf, for rancour nor for pride.
Now go þi weye; for ȝif þat þou abyde
Any lenger, sothly, in my siȝt,
Þou wost þe pris of þat I haue þe hiȝt;
Þou skapest nat, who þat be lef or lothe.”
Þanne Anthenor anoon to schip[pe] goth,
And to saille hym list nat to delaye,
Toward an yle þat callyd is Achaye;
And whan þat he taken hath þe lond,
At his ryuail of auenture he fonde
Þe worþi kynges, Pollux and Castor;
And riȝt anoon þis Troyan Anthenor
With-oute abood to þe court is fare,
Vnto hem his message to declare;
And to-gydre whan þei were present,
Ryȝt þus he seide, as in sentament:
“Þe nobil kyng of Troye þe cite
Hath vn-to ȝou sent his wille by me,
Besechyng ȝou in ful lowe maner
Þat ȝe list vn-to his prayer
Of equite for to condescende,
And goodly helpyn a certeyn wrong to amende,
Touchyng his suster, callid Exyon,
Þat he may haue restitucioun
Of hir ageyn, by ȝour discrete avyse.
For sith ȝe ben so manly and so wyse,
It likly is, in his oppinioun,
Þat by ȝour good[e] mediacioun,
Sche liȝtly may ageyn restored be,
For to cherische pes and vnite.
Wherfor he prayeþ with al his hert enter,
In goodly wyse to doon ȝour deuer,
Þat hold[e] ben so knyȝtly and so sage,
And he wil pleynly al þe surplusage
Of wrongis olde puttyn in suspence;
For he desyreth, of kyngly hiȝe prudence,
To stint[e] werre & to norische pes;
For he is nouther rakle nor rekles,
But avisee, in his werkis alle,
To cast aforn what [þat] schal [be-]falle,
And þinges future aduertyng from a-ferre,
And seth what perel þat þer is in werre,
Wil hym conforme vn-to pes & rest;
For he conseyueth þat it is þe best,
Euery man vnite to sewe,
And prudently also to eschewe
Of debatis ecche occasioun.
Lo, here þe fyn of his entencioun,
Whiche I commytte to ȝour Iugement.”
And Castor þan, of ire impacient,
For hastynes ne myȝt[e] nat abide,
His cruel hert so swolle was with pride,
Brak out anon with a dispitous face,
And seide: “frende, I knowe of no trespas
Þat Grekis dide euer vn-to þi kyng;
To axe amendis, it is a wonder þing,
Of vs þat neuer dide hym noon offence,
Saue þat we made a maner recompense
Of a wrong wrouȝt by Lamedoun,
Þe whiche first souȝt occasioun
Ageyn[es] Grekis, in vngoodly wyse;
Þat caused vs vp-on hym to ryse,
Al attonys, and manly on hym sette,
Of due riȝt for to quite oure dette.
Liche his decert we han hym [pleinly] serued,
And no þing wrouȝt, but as he haþ disseruyd.
To axe amendis he gynneþ now to late,
For we couet more his mortal hate,
His outter malis, and his enmyte,
Þan ouþer pes, acord, or vnite;
As in effect her-after he schal fele,
Ȝif it hap[pe] þat he with vs dele;
Þe bargan schal ful dere ben abouȝt;
And we his frenschip, soþly, set at nouȝt.
And ouer-more, I speke now to þe,
It likly is, as semeth vn-to me,
Þat Priamus þe louyd but a lite,
Nat þe valu, I suppose, of a myte,
Whan he þe sent vp-on þis message;
And þou of foly dedist gret outrage,
To take on þe so hiȝe a perlous þing,
Vn-to Grekis to bryng[e] swiche tydyng,
Wher-þoruȝ þi lif is putte in iupartie.
But I counsel fast[e] þat þou hiȝe
Out of my siȝt, list þat þou repente.”
And Anthenor furthe to schippe went,
And with þe wynde gan to seyle anoon
Toward an yle callid Pillyon;
And in al hast, whan he dide ariue,
He schope hym forþe to þe court as blyue,
Wher duk Nestor, in al maner þing,
His housholde held, royal as a kyng.
And Anthenor, ful sadde and avisee,
To-for Nestor sittyng in his see,
Whan þat he was amytted for to seyn,
His tale he tolde ful opinly and pleyn,
From point to point, as ȝe herd a-fore;
It wer but weyn to reherse it more,
For he alwey concluded hath in oon,
Liche as ȝe herde, touching Exyon.
But duk Nestor, with face no þing red,
But of hewe as any asche deed,
Fret with col[e]re so inwardly was he,
Þat his blood from eche extremyte
Withdrawen is, doun vn-to his hert,
Whiche for Ire so sore made hym smert,
Þat he gan quake in euery Ioint & veyne,
Þat he his hond vnneþe may refreyne,
For malenkolye avenged for to be;
Lik a lyon, so wood & wroþe was he,
Fer from hym silf he was so alienat,
And inwardly of rancour passionat,
With loke reuersed, furious of siȝt,
Þat tempre hym silf onneþis he ne myȝt;
He felt of anger so greet aduersite.
And amyddes al his cruelte,
Of sodeyn hast attonys he out brak,
And even þus to Anthenor he spak:
“O þou,” quod he, “with alle þi wordis white,
As I suppose, [þat] þou wost ful lyte
Vn-to fore whom þou hast þi tale tolde;
For I merueile how þou art so bolde
To presume myn eris to offende;
And for Priam so proudly to pretende
A maner title in þi kynges name,
Þe worþi Grekis for to putte in blame,
And vniustly, of foule hardynes,
Requere of hem [for] to han redres
Of Iniuries wrouȝt on Lamedoun,
Boldly affermyng, of fals presumpcioun,
Vp-on Grekis wrongis outragious,
Whiche in myn eris ben so odious,
So fretyng eke, so byting and so kene,
For to list þat I may nat sustene,
In myn heryng so hateful is þe soun;
Þat, nere þe honour of myn hiȝe renoun
Refreyned me, I schulde in cruel wyse
Execute ful hastely iustyse,
Þoruȝ þe rigour of my mortal lawe,
With bestys wilde first to do þe drawe,
And þer-vp-on, for þi fayned tale,
Dismembre þe al on pecis smale,
In dispite of Priamus þi kyng,
To techen oþer to bringe more tydyng,
Presumptuously, or any talis newe,
To any lord, but þei þe bet hym knewe.
Þis schulde be for þi presumpcioun
Þi last[e] mede and final guerdoun,
With-out mercy, lik as I haue behiȝt.
And in al hast, be go out of my siȝt!
For outerly it doþ to gret offence
Vn-to myn ey to haue þe in presence,
For þoru disdeyn it causeth myn vnrest.”
Þan Anthenor þouȝt[e] for þe best,
It was not holsom lenger to abide,
But cast wysly, for rancour or for pride,
Þat it was best for to bern hym feyre,
And to his schippe he gan anoon repeyre,
And in al hast by possibilite,
With-oute abood he taken haþ þe see,
And gan to seyle & homward fast[e] drawe.
But sodeynly boilen gan þe wawe,
Þe see to ryse, and þe clowdes blake
For tappere, and þe wynde a-wake;
Wonder gastful also was þe heuene
With dredful fire of þe briȝt[e] leuene;
Þe þonder smot, þe tempest gan to dryue,
Þat þe mast gan a-sonder riue.
Now aloft, nowe in poynt to drowne,
Þe fel[le] wedir gan so on hem frowne,
Þat þei awaite not but vp-on deth,
Euene at þe point of ȝeldyng vp þe breth,
For þei ne sawe noon oþer remedye.
And euer-among, þei gan clepe and crye
To her goddes, and avowes make,
And devoutly for to vndertake,
Eche of hem, liche as he was of age,
Ȝif þei eskape, to gon on pilgrymage,
Lyche þe ritys of her paynym wyse,
To þe goddis to doon her sacrifise,
So as þei werne of substaunce & of myȝt.
And sodeynly þe wedir, dirke as nyȝt,
With new[e] lyȝt by grace gan adawe;
Þe se wexe calme, & smoþe gan þe wawe,
So þat of hap, among hem euerychon,
For al þe tempest, persschid was not on;
But to-fore Troye, with-Inne a litel space,
Þei ben aryved euerychon by grace,
Eskapid safe from euery Iupartye,
Boþe Anthenor and al his companye.
And to þe temple he toke þe riȝte waye,
And in his prayer þer ful long he lay,
With many another also for his sake,
Þankyng her goddis, þat made hem so eskape
Euery perel and tempest of þe see.
And aftir þis, vn-to þe kyng goth he,
Þat with his lordis aboute hym ful royal,
In his palys and dongoun principal
Sat and abod, ful solempnely,
Trewe report of þis embas[sa]trye;
And þis knyȝt, of al þat hath hym falle,
Hath tolde þe kyng to-forne his lordis alle.
But ful demvr and avised wel,
Nat to hasty nor rakel for to seyn,
But abidynge with loke and face pleyn,
To Pelleus, with a manly chere,
183
“Þe worþi kyng, callid Priamus,
So wyse, so noble, so manly, and famus,
And of knyȝthod passyng excellent,
Hath first to ȝou in goodly wyse sent,
Out of Troye, his royal chefe cite,
His ful entent & message her by me,
As I schal seyn to ȝou in wordis pleyn,
Ȝif it so be þat ȝe nat disdeyne
Paciently to ȝeven audience.
Remembryng first in ȝour aduertence
Of þe harmys nat ful longe a-go,
And þe wrongis þat ȝe wrouȝt also,
Ful cruelly, with oþer eke of ȝours,
In Troye lond on his progenitours,
What Iniuries and distruccioun,
Causeles, with-oute occasyoun,
Ȝe schewed haue of verray cruelte,
And merciles distroyed his cite,
Slayn his fader, named Lamedoun,
And his cite brent and bete doun,
And nouþer left paleis, hous, nor tour,
And lad a-wey his riches and tresour,
And nouþer spared, as I reherse can,
In ȝour slauȝter womman, child, nor man,
Þer myȝt[e] non from ȝour swerd astert.
And ȝit o þing þat most he haþ at hert,
Þat his suster, called Exyoun,
Is hold and kepte of kyng Thelamoun,
Dishonestly, ageyn al genterye,
To gret dishonour & gret velenye
Of her kynred, liche as ȝe may se,
Tretid nor cheresschid lyk to hir degre!
Wherfor, sith ȝe be so wyse a knyȝt,
Ȝe ouȝt aduerte and to haue a syȝt
To swyche þinges, of iust affeccioun,
184
Of gentilnes and of equite,
How swiche wrongis myȝt amendid be.
Wherfor Priam, of gret avisenes,
As he þat fully with al his besynes
Of hert and wille desireþ pes & rest,
Sendeth to ȝou, besechyng for þe best,
Þat ȝe wil don ȝour besy diligence,
To make to hym þis litel recompense,
Þat he may haue restitucioun,
Þoruȝ ȝour knyȝ[t]ly medyacioun,
Of his suster, with-oute lenger space;
And þe remenaunt he wil lete pace,
Strif and werre only to eschewe.
For he desyreth fully for to sewe
Pees and quiete, of hool affeccioun,
And to pursew mesour and resoun,
And finally, liche as ȝe may se,
Al occasioun of werre for to fle;
Consydereth þis, þat hold[e] ben so sage,
For þis þe fyn fully of my massage.”
Whan Pelleus hym pleynly vnderstod,
Of sodeyn Ire he wexe in hert[e] wood,
Of cher and loke fel and furious,
And of rancour riȝt melencolyous,
Þat he ne myȝt [a]tempre nor apese
Þe hasty fir þat gan his hert[e] sese;
For he anoon, in ful dispitous wyse,
Gan Priamus threten and dispise,
And of malis sette his sond at nouȝt,
With all þe menys þat Anthenor haþ souȝt,
And gan also þis Troyan knyȝt manace,
And bad in hast he schuld[e] voide his place,
Vp-on peril þat after falle myȝt.
185
And in al hast, he and his meyne,
With-oute abood, taken han þe se,
And gan to sailen oute of Thesalye,
And in her weye so fast[e] þei hem hyȝe,
Þat in schort tyme þei arived be
Vp at Salempne, a myȝty strong cite,
Wher be fortune in þis royal toun,
Þis Anthenor fond kyng Thelamoun,
And to his palys he haþ þe wey[e] nome.
And first, I fynde, whan þat he was come,
He was accepte[d] vn-to his presence,
Benyng[e]ly with-oute[n] al offence;
For Exion was present in þat tyde,
Of auenture stondyng by his syde.
And at reuerence of hir womanhede,
Of Antenor he toke þe better hede,
Al-be of custom þat kyng Thelamoun
Had hiȝe dispit and indignacioun
Of euery Troyan þat he coude espie;
For specialy to hem he had envie,
Of rancour only, þoruȝ þe bitter rage,
Whiche in his hert myȝt[e] neuer asswage.
But for al þat, he in pacience
To Anthenor haþ ȝeven audience;
Þe whiche anoon, in ful sobre wyse
His tale gan, as I schal deuyse:
“Sir,” quod he, “with support of ȝour grace,
So ȝe me graunt opportune space,
For to declare þe cause of my commyng,
I wil reherse with-out more tarying
My mater hool, brefly in sentence,
To make it kouþe to ȝour magnificence,
Signefying, with-out[e] displesaunce,
Þat Priamus, whiche haþ [þe] gouernaunce
Of Troye toun, hath vn-to ȝow sent
186
Besechyng first to ȝour goodlyhed,
Alle other wronges forȝetyn & eke ded,
Þat ȝe only, of ȝour hiȝe nobles,
Of equite, and of gentilnes,
Ȝe wil restore Exyona ageyn,
Whiche þat ȝe hold, to speke in wordis pleyn,
In verray soth, nouȝt like to hir estat.
Wherfore, he preyeth to stynten al debat,
And euery harme to put out of memorie,
Of kyngly honour for ȝour owne glorie,
To send hir hom and make deliueraunce
Goodly of hir with-outen variaunce,
Whom ȝe han holde so many long[e] daies.
Ne tarieth nat, ne setteth no delayes,
Ne lete in ȝow be founde now no slowþe;
For sothfastly it is to gret a routhe
To recorde how ȝe haue hir vsed,
It may of trouth nat goodly ben excused.
But we schal lete liȝtly ouerslyde,
So þat ȝe bening[e]ly prouide
To sende hir hom, lik as I haue seyd.
Loo, her þe charge þat was on me leide,
With-oute more abydyng in certeyn,
What godly answer ȝe wil send ageyn.”
Whan Thelamoun herkned had his tale,
Of hasty Ire he gan to wexe pale—
Þe fyry colre hath hym made so wode,
Þat from his face a valid was þe blood,
Whiche in his hert gan to frete & bite—
With lok askoyn, & tornyd vp þe white,
Of hiȝe disdeyn, with face dispitous,
With pale smylyng & lauȝtre furious,
Gan rakyn oute þe felle mortal fire
Of fretyng hate, þat brent in his desire,
And schortly made, in conclusioun,
187
And seide, “frend, what-euer þat þou be,
I wondre gretly, & mervail is to me,
What auenture or sodeyn newe þing
Vnprudently meveth now þi kyng
Vn-to me to make swiche a sonde;
Þou wer a fole, whan þou toke on honde,
Outher vnhappy or infortunat,
To me to bryng þis embassiat;
For I with hym haue no þing a-do,
Nor he wit[h] me, and loke þou seye hym so;
For we ne ben aqueynted but a lyte,
Nor I no þing platly me delite,
At schorte wordis, ȝif þou list to here,
To don for hym, [n]or at his prayere;
For I ne haue Ioye nouþer feste
To do riȝt nouȝt, sothly, at his request.
Þis wote I wel, þat but a while ago
I was at Troye, my silfe and other mo,
For to reforme [a] þing þat was amys,
Þoruȝ ȝour offence, schortly, þus it is;
For certeyn þing wrouȝt by Lamedoun.
And by our manhood we wan þer þe toun,
And slow þe kyng & alle þat with hym hilde,
In knyȝtly wyse hym metyng in þe felde;
And for þat I, as eueryche myȝt[e] se,
Dide entre first in-to þat cite,
It was to me graunted for memorie,
In signe only of myn hiȝe victorie,
With-outen any contradiccioun,
By alle þe Grekis to haue pocessioun
Of hir þat is to me most entere,
Exiona, whom þou cleymest here.
But be wel siker, þin askyng is in veyn;
For trust[e] wel, & be riȝt wel certeyn,
Þou gest hir nat, at o word, ȝif I may;
188
Or I hir leue duryng al my lyve,
Who euer grucche or þer ageyn[es] striue
It wer nat sittyng me to leue hir so,
For whom I had whilom so gret ado
Or I hir gat with spendyng of my blood;
And who þat be wroþ þer-with or wood,
I wil hir kepe, as it schal be founde;
For whom I had so many mortal wounde
At Troye toun, or þat I hir wan.
And in good feith, as ferforþe as I can,
Sche schal nat liȝtly from myn hondis passe;
For sche allone stant so in my grace
For hir bewte and hir semylyhed,
For hir bounte and hir goodlyhed,
Þat ȝif I schal my resoun schortly fyne,
Sche is in sothe þe moste femy[ny]ne
Þat euer I sawe, and with-outen drede,
Of port, of konnyng, & of womanhede,
Sche haþ alone, in verray existence,
Þe souereynte and þe excellence;
Þat Priamus, for ouȝt þat þou canst seyn,
Whil þat I lyue get her not ageyn,
But he hir bye with many dedly wounde,
With scharp[e] swerdis and square speris grounde.
For þer schal first be reysed soche a strif,
Þat it schal cost many a man his lif,
Or [þat] sche ageyn restored be;
Take þis for soþ, þou gest no more of me.
Whan hym list he may wel be-gynne;
But I suppose he schal but litel wynne,
Noon oþer wyse but as I þe tolde.
And wost [þou] what a gret fool I þe holde,
The to putte so fer in iupartye,
To execute þis embassatrye,
Þe manly Grekis so boldly to offende;
189
Vp-on þi lyf, for rancour nor for pride.
Now go þi weye; for ȝif þat þou abyde
Any lenger, sothly, in my siȝt,
Þou wost þe pris of þat I haue þe hiȝt;
Þou skapest nat, who þat be lef or lothe.”
Þanne Anthenor anoon to schip[pe] goth,
And to saille hym list nat to delaye,
Toward an yle þat callyd is Achaye;
And whan þat he taken hath þe lond,
At his ryuail of auenture he fonde
Þe worþi kynges, Pollux and Castor;
And riȝt anoon þis Troyan Anthenor
With-oute abood to þe court is fare,
Vnto hem his message to declare;
And to-gydre whan þei were present,
Ryȝt þus he seide, as in sentament:
“Þe nobil kyng of Troye þe cite
Hath vn-to ȝou sent his wille by me,
Besechyng ȝou in ful lowe maner
Þat ȝe list vn-to his prayer
Of equite for to condescende,
And goodly helpyn a certeyn wrong to amende,
Touchyng his suster, callid Exyon,
Þat he may haue restitucioun
Of hir ageyn, by ȝour discrete avyse.
For sith ȝe ben so manly and so wyse,
It likly is, in his oppinioun,
Þat by ȝour good[e] mediacioun,
Sche liȝtly may ageyn restored be,
For to cherische pes and vnite.
Wherfor he prayeþ with al his hert enter,
In goodly wyse to doon ȝour deuer,
Þat hold[e] ben so knyȝtly and so sage,
And he wil pleynly al þe surplusage
Of wrongis olde puttyn in suspence;
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To stint[e] werre & to norische pes;
For he is nouther rakle nor rekles,
But avisee, in his werkis alle,
To cast aforn what [þat] schal [be-]falle,
And þinges future aduertyng from a-ferre,
And seth what perel þat þer is in werre,
Wil hym conforme vn-to pes & rest;
For he conseyueth þat it is þe best,
Euery man vnite to sewe,
And prudently also to eschewe
Of debatis ecche occasioun.
Lo, here þe fyn of his entencioun,
Whiche I commytte to ȝour Iugement.”
And Castor þan, of ire impacient,
For hastynes ne myȝt[e] nat abide,
His cruel hert so swolle was with pride,
Brak out anon with a dispitous face,
And seide: “frende, I knowe of no trespas
Þat Grekis dide euer vn-to þi kyng;
To axe amendis, it is a wonder þing,
Of vs þat neuer dide hym noon offence,
Saue þat we made a maner recompense
Of a wrong wrouȝt by Lamedoun,
Þe whiche first souȝt occasioun
Ageyn[es] Grekis, in vngoodly wyse;
Þat caused vs vp-on hym to ryse,
Al attonys, and manly on hym sette,
Of due riȝt for to quite oure dette.
Liche his decert we han hym [pleinly] serued,
And no þing wrouȝt, but as he haþ disseruyd.
To axe amendis he gynneþ now to late,
For we couet more his mortal hate,
His outter malis, and his enmyte,
Þan ouþer pes, acord, or vnite;
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Ȝif it hap[pe] þat he with vs dele;
Þe bargan schal ful dere ben abouȝt;
And we his frenschip, soþly, set at nouȝt.
And ouer-more, I speke now to þe,
It likly is, as semeth vn-to me,
Þat Priamus þe louyd but a lite,
Nat þe valu, I suppose, of a myte,
Whan he þe sent vp-on þis message;
And þou of foly dedist gret outrage,
To take on þe so hiȝe a perlous þing,
Vn-to Grekis to bryng[e] swiche tydyng,
Wher-þoruȝ þi lif is putte in iupartie.
But I counsel fast[e] þat þou hiȝe
Out of my siȝt, list þat þou repente.”
And Anthenor furthe to schippe went,
And with þe wynde gan to seyle anoon
Toward an yle callid Pillyon;
And in al hast, whan he dide ariue,
He schope hym forþe to þe court as blyue,
Wher duk Nestor, in al maner þing,
His housholde held, royal as a kyng.
And Anthenor, ful sadde and avisee,
To-for Nestor sittyng in his see,
Whan þat he was amytted for to seyn,
His tale he tolde ful opinly and pleyn,
From point to point, as ȝe herd a-fore;
It wer but weyn to reherse it more,
For he alwey concluded hath in oon,
Liche as ȝe herde, touching Exyon.
But duk Nestor, with face no þing red,
But of hewe as any asche deed,
Fret with col[e]re so inwardly was he,
Þat his blood from eche extremyte
Withdrawen is, doun vn-to his hert,
Whiche for Ire so sore made hym smert,
Þat he gan quake in euery Ioint & veyne,
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For malenkolye avenged for to be;
Lik a lyon, so wood & wroþe was he,
Fer from hym silf he was so alienat,
And inwardly of rancour passionat,
With loke reuersed, furious of siȝt,
Þat tempre hym silf onneþis he ne myȝt;
He felt of anger so greet aduersite.
And amyddes al his cruelte,
Of sodeyn hast attonys he out brak,
And even þus to Anthenor he spak:
“O þou,” quod he, “with alle þi wordis white,
As I suppose, [þat] þou wost ful lyte
Vn-to fore whom þou hast þi tale tolde;
For I merueile how þou art so bolde
To presume myn eris to offende;
And for Priam so proudly to pretende
A maner title in þi kynges name,
Þe worþi Grekis for to putte in blame,
And vniustly, of foule hardynes,
Requere of hem [for] to han redres
Of Iniuries wrouȝt on Lamedoun,
Boldly affermyng, of fals presumpcioun,
Vp-on Grekis wrongis outragious,
Whiche in myn eris ben so odious,
So fretyng eke, so byting and so kene,
For to list þat I may nat sustene,
In myn heryng so hateful is þe soun;
Þat, nere þe honour of myn hiȝe renoun
Refreyned me, I schulde in cruel wyse
Execute ful hastely iustyse,
Þoruȝ þe rigour of my mortal lawe,
With bestys wilde first to do þe drawe,
And þer-vp-on, for þi fayned tale,
Dismembre þe al on pecis smale,
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To techen oþer to bringe more tydyng,
Presumptuously, or any talis newe,
To any lord, but þei þe bet hym knewe.
Þis schulde be for þi presumpcioun
Þi last[e] mede and final guerdoun,
With-out mercy, lik as I haue behiȝt.
And in al hast, be go out of my siȝt!
For outerly it doþ to gret offence
Vn-to myn ey to haue þe in presence,
For þoru disdeyn it causeth myn vnrest.”
Þan Anthenor þouȝt[e] for þe best,
It was not holsom lenger to abide,
But cast wysly, for rancour or for pride,
Þat it was best for to bern hym feyre,
And to his schippe he gan anoon repeyre,
And in al hast by possibilite,
With-oute abood he taken haþ þe see,
And gan to seyle & homward fast[e] drawe.
But sodeynly boilen gan þe wawe,
Þe see to ryse, and þe clowdes blake
For tappere, and þe wynde a-wake;
Wonder gastful also was þe heuene
With dredful fire of þe briȝt[e] leuene;
Þe þonder smot, þe tempest gan to dryue,
Þat þe mast gan a-sonder riue.
Now aloft, nowe in poynt to drowne,
Þe fel[le] wedir gan so on hem frowne,
Þat þei awaite not but vp-on deth,
Euene at þe point of ȝeldyng vp þe breth,
For þei ne sawe noon oþer remedye.
And euer-among, þei gan clepe and crye
To her goddes, and avowes make,
And devoutly for to vndertake,
Eche of hem, liche as he was of age,
Ȝif þei eskape, to gon on pilgrymage,
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To þe goddis to doon her sacrifise,
So as þei werne of substaunce & of myȝt.
And sodeynly þe wedir, dirke as nyȝt,
With new[e] lyȝt by grace gan adawe;
Þe se wexe calme, & smoþe gan þe wawe,
So þat of hap, among hem euerychon,
For al þe tempest, persschid was not on;
But to-fore Troye, with-Inne a litel space,
Þei ben aryved euerychon by grace,
Eskapid safe from euery Iupartye,
Boþe Anthenor and al his companye.
And to þe temple he toke þe riȝte waye,
And in his prayer þer ful long he lay,
With many another also for his sake,
Þankyng her goddis, þat made hem so eskape
Euery perel and tempest of þe see.
And aftir þis, vn-to þe kyng goth he,
Þat with his lordis aboute hym ful royal,
In his palys and dongoun principal
Sat and abod, ful solempnely,
Trewe report of þis embas[sa]trye;
And þis knyȝt, of al þat hath hym falle,
Hath tolde þe kyng to-forne his lordis alle.
Howe Kynge Priamus, aftire that Athenore had declarede to-fore hym and his lordes the contraryous answere of the Grekes, lete set his parlament, to wit what was to be done.
This Anthenor haþ first made mencioun,To-fore þe kyng by iust relacioun,
Of his expleyt, by ordre by and by,
And in what wyse & how vncurtesly,
He was receyued of kyng Pelleus,
Of þe thretis and wordis dispitous,
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Beying as fers as a wood lyoun;
And afterward, he gan also compleyne
Of [þe] dispit of þe brethre tweyne,
Of his rebuke and his gret[e] drede,
And at Nestor howe he dide spede,
Þat with his lif he myȝt vnneþes skape:
Al þis he told, & gan an ende make
Of his Iourne and eke of his repaire.
And þan Priam was fully in despayre,
Outher by sorte or [by] auenture,
Euere ageyn his suster to recure;
For he conseyueth in his aduertence,
By clere report of expert evidence,
Þat ay þe more he was to hem benigne,
Þe more vngoodly ageyn hym þei malygne;
And wher he most him schewith debonaire,
Þer he fynt hem ageynward most contraire,
So frowardly euer þei hem quyte,
Schewyng by signes þat þei sette lyte
By his frendschip, for auȝt he coude aduerte.
Wherof he was pure sory in his hert,
Þat he constreyned, [riȝt] of verray nede,
Compelled was iustly to procede
To han redres only by rigour;
For profre of pes myȝt haue no fauour
To be admytted, be title of riȝtwisnes,
Þoruȝ hiȝe dispit of hasty wilfulnes;
For euery mene of mesour was in veyn,
Saue only werre engendred by disdeyn,
Be-gonne & caused al of old hatrede.
Whiche gan anon swiche a brond to brede
Of new envie in þe kynges breste,
Þat Priamus, with-oute more areste,
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And with disdeyn so sore grounde & whet,
Þat wher so be, þat he lese or wynne,
Vp-on Grekis he wil a werre be-gynne,
And Iupart, manly as a knyȝt,
His lyf, his deth, by-cause he had[de] riȝt.
And cast hym first a naue for to sende
In-to Grece his fomen for toffende;
And liche a knyȝt his force for to hante,
In knyȝtly wyse he cast hym for to daunte
Þe pompe of Grekis and þe sturdines,
And finaly her pride to oppres.
But seye, Priam, what infelicite,
What new[e] trouble, what hap, what destyne,
Or from a-boue what hateful influence
Descendid is, by vnwar violence,
To meue the, þou canst not lyue in pes!
What sodeyn sort, what fortune graceles,
What chaunce vnhappy, with-oute avisenes,
What wilful lust, what fonnyd hardynes,
Han putte þi soule out of tranquillite,
To make þe wery of þi prosperite!
Whi hast þou sauour in bitter more þan swete,
Þat canst nat lyue in pes nor in quyete?
Þou art travailed with wilful mocions,
Ouermaystred with þi passiouns,
For lak of resoun and of hiȝe prudence,
Dirked & blind from al prouidence,
And ful bareyn to cast a-forne and see
Þe harmys foloyng of þin aduersite!
Þou wer to slow, wisely to consydre;
For want of siȝt made þe [to] slydre,
Þoruȝ myst of errour falsely to forveye
By pathis wrong from þe riȝt[e] weye,
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Wher was þi guyde, wher was þi maistres,
Discrecioun, so prudent and so sad,
Avisely þat schulde þe haue lad
From þe tracis of sensualite;
Þouȝ it ful selde in mannys power be,
By suffraunce hym siluen to restreyne,
Whan sodeyn Ire doth his hert[e] streyne.
Þou schust a-forn bet ha cast þi chaunce,
Wrouȝt by counseil & nat put in balaunce
Þi sikernes—allas! whi distow so?—
And haue symuled somdel of þi wo,
And cast þi chaunce wel a-fore þe prime,
To haue forgoten wrongis of old tyme,
And þouȝt a-forn in þin aduertence,
Þat ofte falleth in experience,
Þat whyles men do most besynes
Vengably her wrongis to redres,
With double harme, or þat þei ar ware,
Þei falle ageyn in a new[e] snare;
And damages þat wer forȝete clene,
By fals report of rumour fresche & grene
Renewed ben, þoruȝ þe swifte fame,
Þat fleth so fer to hindre a lordis name;
Namly, whan þei to a purpos wende
Only of hed, and se nat to þe ende:
For of pride and of sodeyn hete,
Þei voide hem silf out of al quiete,
Aduerting nat to wirke avisely,
Nor þe prouerbe þat techeth commounly,
“He þat stant sure, enhast hym not to meve”;
For ȝif he do, it schal hym after greue;
And he þat walkyth surly on þe pleyn,
Ȝif he stumble, his wit is but in veyn;
But if so be, he list of his foly
Be necligent to putte hym wilfully
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Teschewen perel, I hold he be a wreche.
For sothly, Priam, þou wer to rek[e]les,
For to comytte þi quiete and þi pes,
So dredfully, duryng by no date,
To cruel Fortune or to fikel fate;
Whos maner is, of costom comounly,
Þat whan a man trusteth most souereynly
On þis goddesse, blind & ful vnstable,
Þan sche to hym is most deceyueable,
Hym to abate from his royal stalle,
And sodeynly to make hym doun to falle,
And with a trip, þrowe hym on þe bake,
Who þat geynstryueth schal haue litel tak.
Sche is so sleiȝty with hir gynny snare,
Þat sche can make a man from his welfare,
With hir panter, þat is with fraude englued,
Whan he lest weneth for to be remewed.
Þerfor, no man haue noon affyance
In Fortune, nor in hir variaunce;
Ne late no wiȝt his ese more Iupart—
List þat þe pleye wil afterward departe—
To turne his chaunce ouþer to wel or wo:
For selde in oon sche doth þe gamen go,
As ȝe may se be example of Priamus,
Þat of foly is so desyrous
To wirke of hede & folwe his oune wille,
To trouble, allas, þe calm of his tranquille—
As in [t]his boke here-after schal be founde—
Hym and his cite platly to confounde,
And outterly to his confusioun;
Þat afterward, by long successioun,
It schal be rad in story and in fable,
And remembrid, with dites delytable,
To do plesaunce to hem þat schal it here:
Þat be example þei may be war & lere,
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To gynne a þing which in noun-sur[e]te
Dependeth ay, as strif, werre, and debate;
For in swiche pley vnwarly comeþ chek-mate;
And harme y-done to late is to amende,
Whos fyn is ofte other þan þei wende—
In þis story as ȝe schal after seen.
And late Priam alwey ȝour merour ben,
Hasty errour be tymes to correcte.
For I anoon my poyntel wil directe,
After þe maner of his tracis rude,
Of þis story þe remnaunte to conclude.
Howe Kenge Priam, in opyne parlement toforne his lordes, schewede the answers that Anthenor brought.
This worþi kyng, euer of o sentence,Ay more & more fired with feruence,
Hath his breues and his letters sent
For his lordis to holde a parlement,
And hem commaundid, in al [þe] hast þei may,
To com anon at her assigned day
From euery ward and party of þe toun,
For to assemble in noble Ilyoun,
Chef of his regne; & whan þei were echon
With hym present, þis noble kyng anon,
To-forn hem alle, as schortly as he can,
His wille declareþ, & þus he be-gan:
“Sirs,” quod he, “be-cause ȝe ben wyse,
It nedeth not long proces to deuyse,
For to reherse of ȝour comyng cause;
But for to telle, schortly in a clause
What I mene, and make no delay,
Ȝe wote how I, now þis oþer day,
Sent in-to Grece, by conseil of ȝow alle,
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To haue recured Exyona ageyn.
Whos message was [nat] but in veyn;
For of Grekis ful vncurteisly
He was resseyued, and dispitously
Þrat & rebuked, in poynt to haue ben ded:
Vnneþe he myȝt eskapyn with his hed,
Þei put on hym swiche offence & blame,
Þat reboundeþ to oure alder schame.
And day be day it mot encresen more,
But we ordeyn sum remedie þer-fore;
For þer as we al mesour han hem offerid,
Þei haue to vs werre & strif [I-]proferid,
Of heyȝ dispit, of rancour, & of hete,
And of malis cruelly vs threte.
And, wher-as we wold[e] pes purchace,
For wrongis don, þei felly vs manace;
And for þe harmys þat þei han vs wrouȝt,
Þei nat purpos, pleynly in her þouȝt,
Other redres nor amendis make,
But outerly with werre vs to awake,
Whos Ioye is fully encres of our greuaunce.
So wold[e] God, þei wer with repentaunce
Contrit in hert to stynten al meschef,
Þat lykly is to fallyn, & þe gref
On outher part, þat it myȝt ouer-slide;
But þei, allas, with rancour & with pride
Ar swolle of newe to þreytyn more & more.
But God diffende, haluendel þe sore
By infortune euere scholde falle
As þei purpose on eny of vs alle.
But syth þei han schapin þus for vs,
We mote resisten her wille malicious,
Þoruȝ myȝt of God, of necessite,
In oure defence—it wil noon oþer be;
And best I holde vn-to oure entent
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So we oure purpos sonest schal acheue.
Wher is discorde, þer may no querel preue;
For on þat part wher hertis be nat oon,
Victorie may in no wyse goon;
Chef of conquest is pes and vnite,
Riȝt as discorde is of aduersite;
On hed of hertis makeþ rewmys sure,
Diuisioun causeth discounfeture.
Wherfore, I rede, of o wille and hert
Lete vs set on to do þe Grekis smerte;
For sothfastly, ȝif ȝe list to se,
I dar afferme þat we strenger be
Þan þe Grekis vp-on euery part,
And han of armys parfitly þe art,
And ben acounted of knyȝthod crop & rote,
And plente han of men on hors & fote,
Arrayed wel, eueryche in his degre;
And þer-with-al, so strong is oure syte,
For to with-stond our fomen euerychon—
Ȝow counseilyng to ordeyn anon,
First tassemble holy oure navye,
And stuf hem strongly with oure chevalrie,
And in-to Grece hastily hem sende,
Þe proude Grekis manly to offende;
And of iust cause & be title of riȝt,
Hem werreyn with al oure ful[le] myȝt,
Her townes brenne, & her feldes waste—
With herte vnfeyned also vs enhast
To quiten hem as þei deserued haue.
For be my red, we schal noon of hem saue,
But cruely take on hem vengaunce.
Ne hath no fer, ne lat be no grevance,
Þouȝ þei a-forn by fortune wer victours,
To sleen our auncetris and progenitours;
For he þat was of vnhap first put doun,
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By þe chaunge and þe variance
Of werre & strif, þat euer is in balance.
For he þat is þis day assurid wel,
To-morwe he is caste doun of þe whe[l];
Þe victor ofte putte in auenture,
And venquysched by discomfeture
Of hym þat he hadde aforne victorie.
Now vp, now doun, in armys stant þe glorie;
In Martys chaunce no man hym assure,
But as it cometh lat hym take his vre;
For gery Mars, by his influence,
Can ȝeue a man whilom excellence
To wynne a pris, liche a conquerour,
And sodeynly, as a somer flour,
He can his honour maken for to fade.
For, whan þat he his aspectis glade
Fro a man listeth for to writhe,
His renoun old goth a-weye as blyve;
After a flowe, an ebbe folweth ay;
As men disserue, preise hem for a day.
For þouȝ Phebus þis day merie schyne,
To-morwe he may his bemys doun decline
Þoruȝ þe þiknes of þe mystis trouble;
Riȝt so of Mars arne þe chances double—
Now vp, now doun, now lowe, now olofte—
As Fortune, whiche þat chaungeth ofte,
List on hir whele make a man ascende,
And vnwarly doun ageyn descende,
Stoundemel his honour to avaunce,
And with a swyȝe þrow hym to meschaunce;
Now with favour sette hym vp ful hiȝe,
Efte avale hym, with twynklyng of an eye.
Hir pley vnstable turneþ as a bal,
While on goth vp, an-other hath a fal;
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For euery man, whan it cometh aboute,
Mote take his turne, as hir pleye requereþ.
Who is expert and hir fraudes lereth,
Schal with hir sugre finde galle meynt,
And hir hony ay with bitter spreynt—
In pes and werre, in honour & in fame,
In dignetes, in resoun, and in schame,
At hir likyng, as hir list to graunte;
Þerfor no man his hap to moche avaunte.
For þouȝ Grekis whilom wern a-lofte,
It may her-after hem hap ful vnsofte.
Wherfore, echon schewe ȝoure worþines,
Þat so ar named of strenþe & hardynes,
And to Fortune pleinly ȝow committe,
And late no fere ȝoure manly hertis flitte,
But stondeth hool & beth in menyng pleyn,
And here-vp-on, lat se what ȝe wil seyn.”
And attonys her voys þei gonne reise,
And his sentence hiȝly for to preyse,
And of on hert, manly gon expresse,
Þei wil dispende goodys & richesse,
And her bodies put in iupardye—
Þer was nat on þat wolde it þo denye.
And of þis graunt he þanketh hem echon,
And ȝaf hem leue wher hem list to gon;
For he dissolued hath his parlement.
And euery man on his weye is went,
And repeired to his mansioun,
The kyng allone lefte in Ylyoun,
Sool by hym silf inwardly mvsyng,
How his purpos he myȝt aboute bryng;
For he in soth on no þing ellys þouȝt,
And þer-vppon euene þus he wrouȝt.
204
Howe Kynge Priamus callede his sonnes to his presence, and in secrete wyse lamentabyly opynyd and declarede his intollerabyle sorowes, askenge þer avyce in avengeinge his cause.
Kyng Priamus, makyng þus his mone,As I ȝou told, in a chambre alone,
Many weyes castyng vp and doun,
For to parforme his conclusioun,
And to fulfille þe fyn of his entent;
He first of alle prudently hath sent
For his sonys to com to hym in hast,
As wel for hem þat wer borne in bast,
As þe toþer, for tassemble y-fere
For a purpos, liche as ȝe schal here,
To haue a counseil for nedful puruyaunce,
Ageyn[e]s Grekis to maken ordynaunce,
First by hem silf allone priuely.
And whan þei were in ordre by & by,
Eueryche of hem sette in his due see,
Liche as þei werne of age & of degre,
And Hector first, flour of cheualrie,
Repeired hom oute of Panonye,
Moste acceptable in euery wyȝtes grace,
Nexst his fader taken hath his place;
And whan Priam his leiser dide espie,
With syȝes sore, castyng vp his eye,
To hem echon sittyng enviroun,
Gan to declare his hertis mocioun.
But first, or he myȝt his wil expowne,
In-to teris he gan hym silf[e] drowne;
His hertly wo was so outragous,
Þat for wepyng & sobbyng furious,
Vnneþe he myȝt with any word out-breke,
Nor vn-to hem, for distresse, speke,
Nor openly his inward menyng schewe,
Til at þe laste he in wordis fewe
205
Euene þus his menyng to declare:
“My dere sonys, so lovyng & so kynde,
As I suppose, þat ȝe haue in mynde,
And remembre discretly, and aduerte,
And enprente ful freschely in ȝour hert,
How þe Grekis, ageyn al riȝt and lawe,
With cruel swerde mordrid han & slawe
Our worþi auncetris, of ful hiȝe renoun,
And distroyed, brent, & bete doun
Þe first[e] Troye, with his wallis olde;
And how vngodly also þat þei holde
Myn oune suster, callid Exyoun,
To ful gret schame and confusioun,
And hiȝe repref to ȝour worþines,
Þat, me semeth, of verray kyndenes,
And of nature ȝe ouȝt to ben agreued,
And inwardly in hert[e] sore ameved,
To suffren hir, in hyndring of hir name,
So to be tretid, for ȝour alder schame.
Allas! why nyl ȝe do ȝour besynes,
Þis hiȝe dispit knyȝtly to redresse,
Ȝow for to avenge vp-on her cruelte,
Recure to fynde of her iniquite,
Sith þat ȝe be so myȝty and so strong!
Certis, me semeth, ȝe byden al to long,
Fro daye to day þat ȝe so differre,
In knyȝtly wyse to gynne on hem a werre,
Ȝour force & myȝt manly to assaye.
I am pure sory þat ȝe list delaye
Ȝow to conferme vn-to my desyre—
Þat in her hate brenne as hoot as fyr—
Vp-on hem, lyche as ȝe may se,
Of fretyng Ire avenged for to be,
Liche her desert to quiten hem her mede.
206
Whil ȝour renoun doth so freschly schyne,
Vn-to my lust ȝour hertis to encline;
Consyderyng, liche as it is kouthe,
How I haue fro ȝour grene ȝouthe
I-fostred ȝow & brouȝt ȝou forth echon,
Fro þilke day þat ȝe koude goon,
As tenderly as I koude or myȝte.
To whiche þing, in ȝour inward siȝt,
Ȝe schulde aduerte alweye new & new,
And of nature on my soores rewe,
To remedien myn aduersite,
Whiche toucheþ ȝou al so wel as me,
Sith [þat] ȝe wot how sore it doth me greue,
Ȝe schuld[e] schap myn harmys to releue.”
And sodeynly, as he þus gan morne,
Toward Hector he gan his face torne,
And seid, “Hector, my trust & al my Ioye,
Myn eyr also, likly to regne in Troye
After my day, and be my successour,
And named art þe verray souereyn flour
Of worþines, and of manhod welle,
And alle þi brethre in knyȝthod dost excelle,
And in armys, liche a conquerour,
Callid þe stok of worschip and honour,
I hertly praye, þouȝ þou sitte stille,
Be willy now my purpos to fulfille,
To execute þat I desyre so;
For fynally, in þe and in no mo
Is ful my feith to bryng[e] þis aboute.
Now take on þe, & be no þing in doute,
To be chef prince & also gouernour
Of þis purpos, and outerly socour;
In-to þin hond þis Iourne I committe,
Hooly of hert, so þat þou ne flitte,
Þe to conferme, by good avisement,
207
For of resoun, best to þe it sitte,
Whiche art so prudent & so ful of witte,
Strong & delyuer, flouryng eke in ȝouthe,
Of whom þe fame þoruȝ þe worlde is kouth,
Ȝong of ȝeris, old of discrecioun,
Ewrous to love, passyng of renoun,
Vn-to whos wille þi breþre schal obeie,
And stond with þe, boþe to lyue & deye!
Now condescende tacomplische my request,
And what þou felist, answere at the best.”
And whan þe kyng haþ schewed his sentence,
Demvre of chere, humble of reuerence,
Þis worþi Hector, example of gent[e]rie,
With softe speche, as techeþ curtesye,
His answere ȝaf, with sobre countenans,
Þeffect of whiche was þis in substauns:
[T]he answere of Ector [t]o his faders demannde.
“Myn owne lord, and my fader dere,Benignely ȝif ȝe list [to] here,
After þe force and þe grete myȝt,
And þe somme of naturis riȝt,
Whiche euery þing by kynde doth constreyne
In þe boundis of hir large cheyne,
It fittyng is, as sche doth enspire,
And acordyng þat euery man desyre
Of wrongis don to han amendement,
And to hir law riȝt conuenient;
Namly to swiche þat with nobilite
Kynd hath endewed, & set in hiȝe degre;
For to swiche, gret repref is and schame,
Whan any wrong be do vn-to her name;
For eche trespas mote consydered be,
Iustly mesurid after þe qualite
208
After þe persone by whom þe wrong is do;
Be it in werre, in contek, or debate:
For gretter gref is to hiȝe estate
To suffre an harme, of cas or auenture,
Or any wrong vniustly to endure,
Or Iniuries compassed of malys,
Is more offence, by discret avys,
To hem þat ben famous in manhod,
Renomed, & born of gentyl blood,
Þan to swiche on þat holde is but a wreche.
Wherfore, we most [gretly] charge and reche,
Only of knyȝthod oure worschip for to eke,
Of wrongis don amendis for to seke,
Oure staat consydered & oure hiȝe noblesse,
And in what plyte we stonde of worþines,
Whan þat bestis, of resoun rude and blinde,
Desire þe same by instynt of kynde.
And for my part, trusteþ in certeyn,
Ȝe haue no sone þat wolde halfe so feyn
Vp-on Grekis avenged ben as I:
For here my trouth, I seye ȝow feithfully,
For Ire of hem I brenne as doþ þe glede;
I thurst her blood more þan other mede;
For riȝt as I eldest am of age
Among ȝour sonys, so am I most with rage
I-fret with-Inne, iustly of knyȝthood,
With my riȝt hond to schede þe Grekys blod,
As þei schal fynd, paraunter or þei wene,
Whan tyme cometh, þe soþe schal be sene.
But first I rede, wysely in ȝour mynde
To cast aforn and leue nat be-hynde,
Or ȝe be-gynne, discretly to aduerte
And prudently consyderen in ȝour herte
Al, only nat þe gynnyng but þe ende,
209
And to what fyn Fortune wil hem lede—
Ȝif ȝe þus don, amys ȝe may nat spede.
For þat counseil, in myn oppinioun,
Is worþi litel, by discrecioun,
To haue a pris, þat cast nat by and by
Þe course of þinges by ordre ceryously,
What weye þei trace to wo or to delite;
For þouȝ a gynnyng haue his appetite,
Ȝet in þe ende, pleynly þis no fable,
Þer may þing folwe, whiche is nat commendable.
For what is worþe a gynnyng fortunat,
Þat causeth after strif and gret debat?
Wherfor, in soþe, principles are to drede,
But men wel knowe what fyn schal succede;
For a gynnyng with grace is wel fortunyd,
Whan ende and myddes aliche ben contunyd.
But whan þat it in wele ne may contene,
It is wel bet by-tymes to abstene
Þan put in doute þat stant in surete;
For who-so doth hath ofte aduersite.
But humblely to ȝour estat royal,
Of hert I praye, lat nat offende at al,
Þat I am bolde to seie my mocioun;
For in good feith, of noon entencioun,
I no þing mene ȝow to don offence;
But only þis, þat ȝour magnificence
Procede nat of hede wilfully,
Ne þat no spirit ȝou meue folyly
To gynne þing þat after wil ȝou schende,
For lak þat ȝe se nat to þe ende,
Nor taken hede in ȝoure aduertence,
To consydere by good prouidence,
How Grekis han in her subieccioun
Europ & Aufrik, with many regioun,
Ful large & wyde, of knyȝthod most famus,
210
Riȝt renomed also of worþines.
With ȝour support þat I dar wel expresse,
Ful perlous is displese hem or disturbe;
For ȝif þat we oure quiete now pertourbe,
Whiche stant in pes, gretly is to drede;
For þouȝ al Asye help vs in our nede,
Ȝif it be lokid on euery part ariȝt,
Þei be nat egal vn-to Grekis myȝt;
And þouȝ also myn aunte Exioun
Ageyn al riȝt be holde of Thelamoun,
It is nat good for hir redempcioun,
To putte vs alle to destruccioun.
I rede nat to bien hir half so dere;
For many of vs, in hap þat sitten here,
And oþer mo, myȝten for hir sake
Deth vnderfonge, & an ende make;
Whiche were no wisdam, liche as semeþ me.
And it may happen also how þat sche
In schort tyme hir fatal cours schal fyne,
Whan Antropos þe þrede a-two schal twyne.
What had we wonne þanne & sche wer go,
But enmyte, þouȝt, sorow, & wo,
Slauȝter of oure men, deth & confusioun!
Wherfore I rede, by dissymulacioun,
With-oute more þat we oure wo endure—
And nat to putte oure silf in auenture—
Þis hold I best—& wirkyn as þe wyse.
But dout[e]les, for no cowardyse
I seie nat þis in ȝoure hiȝe presence,
But for cause I hold it no prudence,
To Fortune, ful of doubilnes—
Sith we be sure—to putte oure sikernes:
Þis al & som, þeffect of al my wille.”
And with þat worde Hector held hym stille.
211
Aftire that Ector had shewede his entente, Paris declaryde his dreme of þe golden Appyle.
And whan Hector, by ful hiȝe prudence,Concluded haþ þe fyn of his sentence,
Ful demurly he kepte his lippis cloos.
And þer-with-al Parys vp a-roos,
And gan his tale þus a-fore þe kyng:
“My lord,” quod he, “so it be lykyng
To ȝoure hiȝnes for to taken hede,
As me semeth, we schuld litel drede
In knyȝtly wyse for to vndirtake
Vp-on Grekis a werre for to make,
Al attonys her pride to confounde;
Sith þat we passyngly habounde
Of chiualrie, here with-Inne our toun,
And haue plente and pocessioun
Of eche þing þat may to werre a-veile,
Stuf in our silf and ryal appareile
Of al þat longeth to assautis marcial,
And with al þis, more in special,
Help & socour of many regioun,
With vs to werke to her destruccioun,
Þe pompe & pride manly to abate,
And of Grekis þe malis for to mate;
For al þat þei of hert[e] ben so stoute,
Me semeth schortly þat we dar nat doute,
Nor on no part for to be dismaied.
Wherfor I rede, lat nat be delaied
Our schippes first redy for to make,
And I my silf wil fully vndirtake,
So it to ȝou be lykyng and plesance,
Of þis emprise hoolly þe gouernaunce,
And ȝow assuren & putte in certeyn
Exyona to recure ageyn.
And in what forme þat it schal be wrouȝt,
I haue a weye founden in my þouȝt,
212
Whiche vn-to ȝow I wil declare anoon:
First, I haue cast, with strong & myȝty hond
For to rauysche som lady of þat lond,
Of heyȝe estat, and make no tarying,
And myȝttyly in-to Troye hir bring,
Maugre her myȝt, for þis conclusioun,
Þat ȝe may haue restitucioun
Be eschange of hir þat ȝe desyre so.
And here-vp-on schal be no long a-do,
I ȝou behete, for al þe Grekis strong.
And for þat I schal ȝow nat prolonge,
I wil ȝow seyn, excludyng euery dout,
How þis avis schal be brouȝt aboute:
First, how þat I schal þis purpos fyn,
Þe goddis han þoruȝ her power devyne
Schewed to me be reuelacioun;
For þer-vppon I had a visioun
But late agoon, as I ley and slepe,
Vn-to whiche ȝif ȝe taken kepe,
Ȝe may not faile nor be in no dispeire
To han recur of hir þat is so faire,
For whom ȝe haue now so moche care.
And þe maner hol I wil declare
Of þis drem to ȝour magnificence,
Ȝif it so be ȝe ȝeue wil credence
To my tale, for I schal not dwelle
Ceriously in ordre for to telle
Þe trouþ[e] pleyn, & no fable feyn,
To ȝow þat ben my lord most souereyn.
Howe the god Marcurye brought with hym the thre ladys, Iuno, Venus, and Pallas, to-for Paris lyenge in the wod aslepe; and of the thre gyfftis that they promysed hym for þe apple.
213
Þis oþer day, whan I was last in Ynde,
By ȝour avis & commaundement,
For a mater whiche in ȝour entent
Was specialy had in cher[i]te,
As it is kouþe atwixe ȝou and me,
Of whiche I toke [vp-]on me þe charge
In þe boundis of þat lond ful large,
Þe same tyme ȝour desyre to spede—
Whan þat Tytan, with his bemys rede,
From Gemmyny drof his chare of gold
Toward þe Crabbe for to take his holde,
Whiche named is þe paleys of Dyane,
Þe bente mone þat wexe can & wane;
Whanne halwed is þe sonnys stacioun,
Niȝe þe myddes of þe moneþ of Ivn—
At whiche sesoun, erly on a morwe,
Whan þat Phebus, to voide nyȝtes sorwe,
Doth Pirrous hys wayn ageyn vp drawe,
And Aurora estward doth a-dawe,
And with þe water of hir teris rounde
Þe siluer dewe causeth to abounde
Vp-on herbis and on floures soote,
For kyndely norissyng boþe of crop & rote,
Vp I roos [out] of my bedde anoon,
Ful desyrous on huntyng for to goon,
Priked in hert with lusty fresche plesance
To do to Loue some due observaunce,
And Lucyna þat day to magnifie,
Which callid is lady of venarye,
And duely oure rytis to obserue,
Cithera and hir[e] for to serue,
I and my feris, oure hertis to releue,
Cast vs fully til it drowe to eve,
In þe forest to pley vs and disport,
And pleasauntly vs to recomfort,
214
For þilke day to Venus þe goddes
I-sacrid was, by ful gret excellence,
With gret honour & due reuerence
Doon vn-to hir, boþe of on and alle;
And on a Fryday þis auenture is falle,
Whan we gan hast vs to þe wodis grene
In hope þat day som gam[e] for to sene,
With gret labour rydyng to and fro,
Til we hadde ful many buk & do
By strengþe slaw, as we myȝt hem fynde,
Þe hert I-chasid with houndis & þe hynde
Þoruȝ þe downys & þe dalys lowe,
Til briȝt[e] Phebus of his daies bowe
Amyd þe arke was of meridyen,
Whan his bemys ful hote wern & schene,
And we most besy wern vp-on þe chas,
Þan me byfil a wonder diuers cas.
For of fortune it happed sodeynly,
Whil I was seuery[d] fro my company,
Sool be my silf among þe holtis hore,
To fynde game desyrous, euermore,
Or I was war, þoruȝ þikke & [þoruȝ] þinne,
A ful gret hert I sawe a-fore me renne,
Dovn by þe launde and þe walys grene,
Þat I in soth myȝt[e] nat sustene,
He was so swyft, for to niȝe hym ner,
Al-be þat I priked my courser
Niȝe to þe deþ, þoruȝ many sondri schaw,
Out of my siȝt so fer he gan with-drawe,
For al þat euer [þat] I sewen myȝt,
Þat I anoon lost of hym þe siȝte
In a wode þat Ida bare þe name.
And I so feynt gan wexen of þat game,
And myn hors on whiche I dide ryde,
Fomyng ful whit [vp-]on euery syde,
And his flankis al with blood disteyned,
215
With my sporis, scharp and dyed rede,
After þe hert so priked I my stede,
Now vp, now doun, with a ful besy þouȝt;
But my labour availed me riȝt nouȝt,
Til at þe last, among þe bowes glade,
Of auenture I cauȝt a plesaunt slade,
Ful smoþe & pleyn, & lusty for to sene,
And soft as velwet was þe ȝonge grene—
Wher fro myn hors I [a]liȝt as faste,
And on a bowe I his reyne cast,
So feynt & maat of werynes I was,
Þat I me laide doun vp-on þe gras,
Vp-on a brink, schortly for to telle,
Be-syde a riuer and a cristal welle.
And þe water, as I reherse can,
Like quik-siluer in his stremys ran,
Of whiche þe grauel & þe briȝt[e] stoon
As any gold ageyn þe sonne schon.
Wher riȝt anon, for verray werynes,
A sodeyn slep gan me so oppresse,
Þat fro tyme þat I first was born,
I neuer was a-slepe[d] so to-forn;
And as I ley I hadde a wonder sweuene:
For me-þouȝt hiȝe doun fro heuene,
Þe wynged god, wonderful of cher,
Mercuryus, to me dide appere,
Of whom I was somdel first a-ferde;
For he was girt with his crokyd swerde,
And with hym brouȝt, also in his honde,
His slepy ȝerde, plyaunt as a wonde,
With a serpent goyng enviroun.
And at his fete, also lowe a-doun,
Me sempte also þat þer stood a cok,
216
And to þe mouthe of þis god Mercurie,
Wer pipes sette, þat songe wonder merye;
Of whiche þe soote sugred armonye
Made in myn eris swiche a melodye,
Þat me sempte þo in myn avis,
I was ravisched in-to paradys.
And þus þis god, diuers of liknes,
More wonderful þan I can expresse,
Schewed hym silf in his apparence,
Liche as he is discriued in Fulgence,
In þe book of his methologies,
Wher be rehersed many poysyes
And many liknes, liche as ȝe may se.
And for to take þe moralite:—
His longe ȝerde, riȝt as is a lyne,
Whiche on no syde wrongly may decline,
Signefieth þe prudent gouernaunce
Of discret folke, þat þoruȝ her puruiaunce
Cast a perel or þat it be-falle;
And his pipes, loude as any schalle,
Þat þoruȝ musik ben entvned trewe,
Betokeneþ eke, with many lusty hewe,
Þe sugred dites, by gret excellence,
Of rethorik and of eloquence,
Of whiche þis god is souereyn & patroun;
And of þis cok þe soote lusty sovn,
Þat iustly kepeþ þe houris of þe niȝt,
Is outerly þavise inward siȝt
Of swiche as voide by waker dilligence
Oute of her court, slouþe & necligence;
And his swerd, whiche crokeþ so ageyn,
Þat is nat forged nor [y-]made in weyn,
Is to reuoke to þe riȝt[e] weye
Swiche as wrongly fro trouþe do forveye;
217
Whiche wrinkled is, as ȝe may beholde,
Vp-on þe ȝerde and aboute goth,
Signefieth þat falshede wood & wroth
Lith in a-weyt by many sleiȝty weye,
With his gynnes trouþe to werreye.
And þis god, of elloquence kyng,
Brouȝt with hym, eke in his commyng,
Cithera, whom louer[e]s serue,
Iuno, and Pallas, þat callid is Minerue.
And þis Venus, her legis to delite,
Aboute hir hed hadde dowes white,
With loke benigne and eyen deboneyre,
Ay flikeryng with snowy wyngys fayre,
For to declare, sothly in sentence,
By þe dowes verray Innocence
Of hem in loue þat but trouþe mene,
And þat her grounde schulde honest be & clene,
I-tokenyd is, clerly be witnes,
With-out soillyng or any vnclennes;
And þe fresshnesse of þe roses rede,
Þat in somer so lustyly do sprede,
And in wynter of her colour fade,
Signyfieth þe hertly þouȝtis glade
Of ȝonge folkis þat ben amerous,
Feruent in hope, & inly desyrous,
Whan loue gynneþ in her hertis flour,
Til longe proces makeþ hem to lour
With þe wynter of vnweldy age,
Þat lust is pallid & dullid with þe rage
Of febilnes whan somer is a-goon,
As folkys knowe, I trowe mo þan on;
And þerfor Venus fleteth in a se,
To schewe þe trowble and aduersite
Þat is in Loue, and his stormy lawe,
218
Now calm, now rowe, who-so takeþ hede,
And hope assailled ay with sodeyn drede.
And next Venus, Pallas I be-helde,
With hir spere and hir cristal schelde,
And a raynbowe rounde aboute hir hed,
Þat of colour was grene, blew, and red;
And a-forn hir, as I can discryue,
Sche growyng had a grene fresche olyue;
And þer-vppon, with his browes fowle,
In þe brawnchis I sawe sitte an owle.
And first þe scheld of Pallas, þe goddes,
Signified, as I can expresse,
In vertu force, by manly hiȝe diffence
Ageyns vices to maken resistence;
And hir spere, scharp & kene grounde,
By iust rygour was forged to confounde
Hem þat be false, and to putte a-bake;
And for þat mercy schal medle with þe wrak,
Þe schaft, in soth, schaue was ful pleyn,
List merciles þat riȝt ne wrouȝt in veyn;
And after werre to make a ful reles,
Þer was þe olyve þat betokneth pes;
Þe owle also, so odyous at al,
Þat songis singeth at festis funeral,
Declareth pleynly, þe fyn of euery glorie
Is only deth, who hath it in memorie;
And þe raynbow grene, red, and pers,
Signifieth þe changis ful diuers
Þat ofte falle in werre and bataille,
Now to wynne and sodeynly to faille,
Now stable as blew, chaunging now as grene,
For Pallas play is alwey meynt with tene.
And alderlast, as I haue in mynde,
With hir nymphes, Iuno cam be-hynde,
Whiche of custom, as Fulgens[e] tellis,
219
And þis Iuno, as poetis seyn,
A mayden is, and of frute bareyn;
And þe pecok to þis fresche quene
I-sacrid is, with his feþeris schene,
Splayed a-brod as a large sail,
With Argus eyen enprented in his tail.
Þe water rennyng in riuer and in flood,
Is þe labour þat men haue for good,
Þe gret[e] trouble and þe besynes
Þat day & nyȝt þei suffre for ryches;
Þat who þat euer in þis flodis rowe,
Lat hym be war, for ay after þe flowe,
Of nature, riȝt as it is dewe,
Folwyng þe mone þe[r] mote an ebbe sewe;
Þe most[e] drede is ay vppon þe fulle,
List Fortune þe fresche feþeris pulle
Of riche folke þat schyne in gold so schene,
Sith sche of chaunge lady is and quene.
And Argus eyen, þat ar sette be-hynde,
In nygard hertis be oft[e] sythes blynde,
Whiche nat aduerte of goodis to þe ende,
Þat liche an ebbe sodeynly wil wende,
Whyche þei no þing consydren in her siȝt;
For as þe faire lusty fetheris briȝt
Of a pecok vnwarly falle a-wey,
Riȝt so riches, schortly at a day,
Wiln her maister sodeynly forsake,
Seyn a-dieu, and her leue take.
And as Iuno bareyn is of frute,
Riȝt so nakid, bare, and destitute
Ar þes gredy hertis couetous,
Whiche to gadre ben so desyrous,
Þat in no þing can haue sufficiaunce,
Þe fret of drede hem putte in swiche meschaunce,
Ymagenyng þat þe world wil faille;
220
Til [al] attonys þei mote go þer-fro.
And þus of good ay þe fyn is wo,
Namly of hem þat so pynche & spare:
For þis no drede, as clerkis can declare,
Þe frute of good is to spende large;
And who is manful, set but litel charge
To parte frely his tresour in comovne,
Whan he discretly seth tyme oportune.
He hath no Ioye to put his good in mwe;
For an hert þat fredam list to sewe,
Of gentilnes takeþ noon hed þer-to.
And in þis wyse, Pallas and Iuno,
With fresche Venus, ben a-doun descended,
Liche as I haue schortly comprehended,
Vnder þe guying of Mercurivs,
Whiche vn-to me gan his tale þus:
Howe Parys yaf þe golden appele to Venus, and howe sche promysed hym to rekyvere Heleyne.
‘Parys,’ quod he, ‘lifte vp þin eye and se!Loo, þis goddesses here in noumbre thre,
Whiche fro heuene with her eyen clere
So diuersly vn-to the appere,
Wern at a fest, as I þe tellyn schal,
With alle þe goddis aboue celestial,
Þat Iubiter held at his owne borde.
Was non absent only saue Discord;
And for dispit sche was not þer present,
To be avenged sche sette al hir entent,
And in hir wittes many weyes souȝt,
Til at þe last, euene þus sche wrouȝt,
Of poetis liche as it is tolde:
Sche toke an appil rounde of purid gold,
With greke lettris grauen vp & doun,
221
With-oute strife þat it were ȝove anon
To the fairest of hem euerychon.
And of Discord þis lady & goddes,
As sche þat is of debat maistres,
Hath þis appil, passyng of delit,
Brouȝt to þis fest, of malis and despit,
And cast it doun among hem at þe bord
With deynious chere, spekyng not a word;
But on hir weye fast[e] gan hir hiȝe.
And sodeynly so prive gret envie
In-to þe court þis appil hath in brouȝt,
So gret a werre & swiche a contek wrouȝt
In þe hertis of þis ilke thre,
Þat after long may not staunched be;
Among hem silf so þei gan disdeyn
Whiche in bewte was most souereyn,
And whiche of hem haþ best title of riȝt
For to conquere þis bornyd appil briȝt.
And first þei gan þus for bewte striue,
Þat of rancour her hertis almost ryue,
To wit of riȝt who schuld it first possede—
Loo, ȝit envye regneth in womanhede,
Þat on is fayrer þan anoþer holde;
For eche woman of hir kynde wolde
Haue on som part pris a-boue anoþer,
In eche estat, in soth it is noon other.
And eche of hem, in her owne avis,
Hath Ioye in bewte for to han a pris;
For non so foule doth in a myrour prye,
Þat sche is feir in hir owne eye.
But liche a fool he hym silf doth quite,
Þat awmber ȝelwe cheseþ for þe white.
A gowndy eye is deceyued sone,
Þat any colour cheseþ by þe mone;
For som colour is with fir made fyn,
222
With oynementis and confeccions;
And on nyȝt, by false illusiouns,
Somme appere wonder fresche and faire,
Þat loke dirke a day-liȝt in þe eyre.
Þer is no pref but erly by þe morwe,
Of swiche as nede no bewte [for] to borwe,
But as Nature hath hir silf disposed.
Þerfore fastyng, or boystis ben vnclosyd,
Make þi choyse, liche as bit Ovide,
Whan euery drogge & pot is set a-syde,
List þat þou be, after his sentence,
Deceyvid liȝtly by fals apparence,
For now-a-dayes swiche craft is ful rife.
And in þis wyse þus be-gan þe stryf
Be-twixe Iuno, Venus, and Pallas,
Þat be descendid for þis sodeyn caas,
By on assent, towching her bewte,
Þe dom þer-of comitted vn-to þe.
I speke to þe, þat callid art Parys,
And holdyn art riȝt prudent & riȝt wys,
Be avysed how þi dom schal fyne;
For þei ne may to nor fro declyne,
But obeie, alle, by oon assent,
With-oute strif to þi Iugement.
But herk[e], frist, or þat þou procede,
Of eche of hem what schal be þi mede,
Considere ariȝt, & take good hede þer-to:
Ȝif þou þe appil graunte vn-to Iuno,
Sche schal þe ȝef plente of riches,
Hiȝe renoun, of fame eke worþines,
With habundaunce of gold & of tresour,
And do þe reise to so hiȝe honour,
Þat þou allone alle oþer schalt excelle,
For þi guerdoun, liche as I þe telle.
And ȝif to Pallas, goddesse of prudence,
223
Þat sche may lady of þe appil be,
For þi mede sche schal assure þe,
Þat of witte and of sapience
Þou schalt hooly han þe excellence,
And of wisdam and discrecioun,
To discerne by clernes of resoun;
Also fer as Phebus cast his liȝt,
Þer schal nat be a more prudent knyȝt,
Nor in þis world, sith þat it began,
Of iust report a manlier man,
Nor to þi name noon equipolente.
And ȝif to Venus, of trew & clene entent,
Þe list to graunt, in conclusioun,
Of þe appil to haue pocessioun,
Þe fresche goddes, þat sit so hiȝe aboue,
Schal þe ensure to haue [vn-]to þi loue
Þe fairest lady þat is or was to-fore,
Or in þis world euer schal be bore;
And in Grece þou schalt hir knyȝtly wynne.
Now be avised or þat þou be-gynne,
Iustly to deme, and for no þing spare.’
And I anoon gan loken vp and stare,
Gretly astoned what me was best to do,
Til at þe last I spake Mercurye to,
And seide, certeyn, þat I ne wolde there
Ȝeuen no dom, but þei naked were,
So þat I myȝt haue ful[ly] liberte
Eueryche of hem avisely to se,
And consyderen euery circumstaunce
Who fairest wer vn-to my plesaunce,
And goodliest, to speke of womonhede,
And after þat to my doom procede.
And þei anoon, as ȝe haue herde me seie,
To my desyre mekely gan obeie,
In al hast to don her besy cure
224
Liche as þe statut of my dom hem bonde:
In a poynt, þei nolde it not withstonde,
Þat I myȝt haue ful inspeccioun
Of forme & schap & eche proporcioun,
For to discerne, as I can remembre,
Avisely by ordre euery membre,
And þanne at erst to iugen after riȝt.
But whanne þat I of eche had a siȝt,
I ȝaf to Venus þe appil riȝt anoon,
Be-cause sche was fairest of echon,
And most excellyng, sothly, of bewte,
Most womanly & goodly on to se,
As I dempte pleynly in my siȝt.
For þe stremys of hir eyen briȝt,
I-liche glade and egal euene of liȝt
Wern to þat sterre þat schewith toward nyȝt,
Whiche callid is Esperus so schene,
Venus hir silf, þe fresche lusty quene.
Þe whiche anon, þis heuenly Emperesse,
After my doom, of hertly hiȝe gladnesse,
Þat of þe appil sche hooly haþ þe glorie,
And wonyn hit iustly by victorie,
Reioysched hir more þan I can telle,
Þat sche hir feris in bewte dide excelle.
And sche in hast, of trewe affeccioun,
Concluded haþ, fully for my guerdoun,
Ful demurly, lowe and nat a-lofte,
To Mercurye with sobre wordis softe,
Devoide boþe of doubilnes & slouthe,
Liche hir behest holde wil hir trouth.
And sodeynly, with-out[e] more Iniurye,
Þei disapered, and þe god Mercurie
Streȝt to heuene þe riȝt[e] weye toke;
And I anon out of my slepe awoke.
225
Ȝif ȝe aduerte and wysly taken hede,
Þat þis behest, affermyd in certeyn,
Was vn-to me assured nat in veyn
Of goodly Venus, liche as I haue tolde.
Wherfore, I rede ȝe ben of hert[e] bolde,
Me for to sende with strong & myȝty hond,
With-oute abood, in-to Grekis lond,
After þe forme þat I haue ȝow seyde.
And, I hope, ȝe schal be wel apayde,
Whan I haue sped, as Venus haþ be-hiȝt,
And hom retourned with my lady briȝt:
So schal ȝe best, me list nat speke in veyn,
Beschaunge of hir ȝour suster wynne ageyn,
Whom Thelamoun with-holden haþ so ȝore.
Lo, þis is al; I can seye ȝou no more
Towching theffect hooly of myn avis.”
And after þat, stille sat Parys,
As he þat haþ fully hym silf aquyt.
But seye, Priam, allas! where was þi witte,
Of necligence for to take kepe,
Þi trust to sette on dremys or on slepe!
Ful þinne was þi discrecioun,
To take a grounde of fals illusioun,
For to procede liche þi fantasye
Vp-on a sweuene meynt with flaterye!
Allas! resoun was no þing þi guyde!
For Pallas was wrongly sette a-syde,
Nat receyued with dew reuerence;
And Iuno eke, with al hir sapience,
For al hir good & lokyng debonayre,
With hir tresour & hir hestis faire,
Refusid was, allas, of wilfulnes.
And sche þat is of loue þe goddes,
And eke also of Wlcanus þe wyf,
226
Preferrid was þe appil to possede,
Ageyn [al] riȝt, for Paris toke noon hede
Saue vn-to lust, & sette a-syde trouþe.
Wher-þoruȝ, allas,—& þat was ful gret routhe—
Þe myȝty, riche, And þe noble toun
Of Troye was brouȝt to confusioun:
Only for he knyȝthod hath forsake,
Prudence and gold, & in his choyse y-take
Only a womman, and holden hym þer-to,
Þat after was rote of al her wo,
As þis story ceryously schal telle.
But I in dremys wil no lenger dwelle,
But write furth how þat Dephebus,
Þe þridde sonne of kyng Priamus,
His tale gan in opyn audience,
And to þe kyng, schortly in sentence,
As he þat list a trouþe nat to spare,
Euene þus his conceyt to declare:
“My lord,” quod he, “ȝif þat euery wiȝt
Aduerten schuld & castyn in his siȝt
Of future þing þe pereil & þe doute,
And cerchyn it with-Innen & with-oute,
From poynt to poynt, alwey in his resoun
To cast[e] doutes & turnen vp-so-doun,
Þanne no wyȝt schulde to no purpos wende
In any mater for to make an ende,
Or dar presvme by manhod in his þouȝt.
Who cast perilles acheveþ litel or nouȝt:
For ȝif þe plowman alwey cast a-forne,
How many graynes in his feld of corne
Schal be devourid of foulis rauynous,
Þat he doth sowe in feldys plenteuous,
Þanne schulde he neuer, in vale nor in pleyn,
For cowardyse þrowe abrod his greyne.
Lat al swyche drede now be leyde a-syde;
227
But þat Parys, my brother, make him strong,
With his schippis for to venge our wrong
Vp-on Grekis, with al his peyne & myȝt,
To preue schortly þat he is a knyȝt.
For of resoun ȝe consydere may,
How þat no man iustly may sey[e] nay,
But þat Paris hath counsailled wele;
For be my trouþe, as fer as I can fele,
It wer errour his purpos to contrarie.
Wherfor, lat hym now no lenger tarie,
But holde his wey with a strong navie,
For to avenge þe grete villenye,
Þat Grekis han, ȝif ȝe taken hede,
Don her-to-forn to vs and oure kynred;
And, for fynal execucioun
Of þe recure touchyng Exyoun,
Whom þei trete in dishonest wyse,
Ageyn al riȝt and title of iustice,
Þat to þink, it ȝewith myn hert a wounde,
Þe schame of whiche so new[e] doth rebounde
Vp-on alle þat ben of hir allye.
Wherfor, þe best þat I can espie,
Is þat Parys take þis viage,
With swiche as ben of fresche & lusti age,
Many to wende in-to Grekes lond;
And by force of her myȝti honde,
Maugre þe Grekis, proude & most ellat,
Ravische þer som lady of estat;
And þanne ȝe may, be knyȝthod of my broþer,
Ȝif ȝe list, chaunge hir for þe toþer.
Þis most redy & schort conclusioun
Þat I can sen for restitucioun
Of Exyoun, ȝif [þat] Parys wende;
And of my conseil schortly þis þe ende.”
And þanne as fast, ful discrete & sage,
228
Ros from his cete with gret reuerence,
Praying his fader graunte hym audience,
Þat he may seyn in presens of hem alle,
Openly what þat schal be-falle,
As he þat most of secre þinges can.
And soburly þus his tale he gan,
With clene entent and trew affeccioun:
Howe Elenus, þe fourte sone of Priame, tolde & seid þat Troye shuld be subuerted, and Parys went into Grece.
“My lord,” quod he, “with supportaciounOf ȝour grace, wher-in is most my trust,
Lat non offence ben vn-to ȝour lust,
Nor ȝou displese, þouȝ I sey my conceyt,
Sith ȝe knowe I mene no disceyt;
For neuer ȝet failed no sentence,
But þat it fil in experience,
Liche as I tolde, in party and in al,
In pryue trete & in general,
With-out menyng of any doubilnes,
Þat it folwede as I dide expresse;
Remembre ȝou, and ȝe schal fynd it trewe.
And ȝif God wil, I schal not now of newe
Spare for to seyn, liche as I conceyue,
Nor, to be ded, with fraude ȝou deceyue,
Declaryng first of trewe entencioun,
As it schal folwe in conclusion,
Þat ȝif Paris in-to Grece wende,
Trusteþ me wel, it wil vs alle schende.
Þe goddis han, by reuelacioun,
Made vn-to me demonstracioun;
And eke I knowe it by astronomye;
For neuer ȝet in my prophesye
Nas I deceyued of þat schuld[e] falle,
Nor noon þat list me to counseil calle,
229
Wherfor, I praye, for rancour nor for pride,
Nor for envie of [noon] old hatered,
To take vengaunce þat ȝe nat procede
In ȝour avis, liche as ȝe purpose;
I seye ȝou pleynly, for me list nat glose,
Ȝe schal repente ȝif ȝe Parys sende
In-to Grece, þe whiche God defende!
Wyteth þis wel, for þe conclusioun
Schal fully turne to oure destruccioun,
And fynally in-to oure ruyne,
Liche as to ȝow I can a-forn devyne.
For þis þe fyn þat þer folwe schal:
Subuersioun, bothe of tour and wal,
Of paleys, house, here in oure cite,
Al goth to nouȝt; ȝe gete no more of me;
For me semeth, it ouȝte I-now suffyse,
Þat I haue seid, sith þat ȝe be wyse:
For ȝif þat ȝe aduerte to my sawe,
I doute not, þat ȝe wil withdrawe
Ȝoure hand be-tyme, or þat more damage
Assaile ȝou by constreynt of þis rage.
For bet it is be-tymes to abstene
From þis purpos, whiche is ȝet but grene,
Þan of hede hastily assente
To þing for whiche we schal echon repente;
For plenerly þer schal no þing socoure,
Þat þer schal folwe of ȝou & alle ȝoure
Despitful deth, with-oute excepcioun,
Of on and alle abydyng in þis toun.
First on ȝour silf, pleynly to endyte,
Schal þe vengaunce of þe Grekis byte,
Þoruȝ þe furie of her mortal tene;
And ȝoure wyfe, Eccuba þe quene,
Schal lede hir lyf, þoruȝ Grekis cruelte,
In sorwe & wo and in captiuite;
230
Of cruel deth, with-outen any grace;
And Innocentis mercyles schal blede,
In ȝour avis ȝif þat ȝe procede
Of wilfulnes a werre for to make,
And folily for to vndirtake
For to perturbe ȝour quiete and ȝour reste,
Whiche schal turne no þing for þe best,
But to ruyne of ȝow & of vs alle.
I can no more; but or þat meschef falle,
Mi conseil is a-forn for to prouyde,
And wilfulnes for to sette a-syde;
Specialy, whan deth, as I ȝow tolde,
Mote be þe fyn, ȝif ȝe ȝour purpos holde.
Loo, here is al, with-oute wordis mo,
In-to Grece ȝif þat Parys goo!”
And in þis wyse, whan þat Elenus
Had pleinly seid, as Guydo telleth vs,
Trist and hevy, with a pale face,
Ageyn resorteth to his sittyng place,
Of whos sentence astonyd euerychon
Sat in silence, stille as any stoon,
Powerles her hertis to reswme.
To speke a word no man dar preswme
Of alle þe pres, but kept her lippes clos,
Til at þe laste, Troylus up a-ros,
Ȝong, fresche, and lusty, & coraious also,
And ay desyrous for to haue a-do
In armys manly, as longeth to a knyȝt.
And when þat he, of chere ful glad & liȝt,
Sawe his fader and breþeren euerychon
So inly trowblid, þus he spak anon:
“O noble & worþi, sittyng enviroun,
Of hiȝe prudence & gret discrecioun,
Manful also, and of hiȝe corage,
What sodeyn fere haþ brouȝt ȝou in þis rage?
What new[e] trouble is cropen in ȝour brest,
231
Sith þei echon, as ȝe schal euer fynde,
Desyre more, verrayly, of kynde,
To lyue in lust & voide awey traueyle,
And dedly hate to heren of bataille;
For þei her wit fynally applye
To swe her lust & lyue in glotonye,
To fille her stomak & restore her mawe,
To rest & ese euer for to drawe,
And to swe her inward appetite,
Þis her Ioye and þis is her delyte,
In etyng, drinkyng, and in couetyse
Is her studie, and fully to deuyse
How þei may folwe her lust, with-out[e] more,
Of riȝt nouȝt ellis sette þei no store.
Allas, for schame! whi be ȝe so dismaied,
And sitte mwet, astonyed & affrayed
For þe wordis of þis Elenus,
Ferful for drede as a litel mows,
Þat he quaketh to here speke of fiȝt;
And, more-our, ageyn al skil & riȝt,
In preiudise of þe goddis alle,
He takeþ on hym to seyn what schal be-falle,
Of þing futur for to specyfie,
As he had a spirit of profecye
Grauntid to hym allone in special,
As þauȝe he were in konyng perigal
To þe goddis, hauyng prescience
To schew a-forn, þoruȝ his sapience,
What schal be-tide, ouþer euel or good.
Lat be, lat be! for no wiȝt is so wood,
Þat haþ his witte, to ȝeue þer-to credence,
Þat any man by crafte or by science,
Þat mortal is, haþ konyng to devine
Fortunys cours, or fatys to termyne.
Swyche causis hid, conselid in secre,
Reserued ben to goddis priuete;
232
To taken hede; for þei don but lye.
Wherfor, I rede, as in þis mater,
Boþe on and alle, & ȝou my lord so dere,
Texclude al drede & al þat may disturbe
Out of ȝour hert, and lat no þing perturbe
Ȝour hiȝe corages, þat Elenus haþ tolde;
And ȝif þat he of hert[e] be nat bolde,
As manhod wold, to help[e] venge our wronge,
Lat hym go hyde hym in þe temple strong,
And kepe hym clos in contemplacioun,
To wake and praye by deuocioun
With-oute socour, a-dayes and a-nyȝtes,
And suffreþ swiche as be lusty knyȝtes
To hante her ȝouþe & grene lustynes,
Manly in armys to preue her hardynes,
Þat þei may haue þe better acquaintaunce
In tyme comyng, for to do vengance
On her enmyes and her cruel foon.
And commaundeth þat Parys may forþe gon
To execute þe fyn of ȝour entent,
Aforn purposed in ȝour parlament,
Vp-on Grekis for her offencioun,
To parforme vp þe peyne of talioun
For wrongis old, of whiche ȝit þe fame
Rehersid is vn-to our alder schame
Þoruȝ-oute þe world, ȝe wot þis is no les.”
And þer-with-al Troylus held his pes.
And sodeynly alle þat were present
Be-gan attonys, al be on assent,
Troilus counseil gretly for to preyse,
And his manhod to þe heuene areyse,
His fresche corage and his hiȝe prowes,
His feruent ȝel and his hardines,
And of on hert gretly hym comende;
And riȝt anoon þer þei made an ende.
233
Vp-on þe tyme of þe hour of noon,
To mete goth with-Inne Illyoun,
Alle his sonys sittyng enviroun.
And after mete he called haþ Parys
And Dephebus also, þat was ful wyse,
And secrely bad þei schuld[e] go
Þe same day with oþer lordis mo
To Panonye, in al þe hast þei may,
To make hem redy, aȝens a certeyn day,
With al þe array of worþi chyualry
Þat þei may gete in her company,
Toward[es] Grece to seylen hastyly.
And after þat, þe kyng al sodeynly
Þe next[e] day made his counseil calle;
And euene þus he seyde a-forn hem alle:
“O noble liges, beyng now present,
My purpos is to sey ȝow myn entent,
With-oute abood, to here it ȝef ȝe list.
As I suppose, to ȝow is nat vn-wist
How þe Grekis, of pride and tyrannye,
Of malis old compasid by envie,
In many wyse han ageyn vs wrouȝt,
Whiche is so grene þat I for-ȝete nouȝt.
For day by day, encresyng euer mo
By remembraunce, renewed is my wo,
Whan I record & cast[e] vp and doun
Oure greuys alle, & how þat Exyoun
In seruitute among hem doth soiourne.
Whiche oft a day causeth me to mourne,
And myn hert almost asondre ryue,
For to considre & seen it be my lyue;
Whos cruelte we han to dere abouȝt,
Nat-with-stondyng þat I haue menys souȝt
234
Whan in-to Grece I sent Anthenor,
Peysibly my suster to recure,
And þe surplus paciently tendure.
But al for nouȝt; þei toke of it non hede,
For al þat I offered of goodlyhede;
It was nat herd, for lak of gentilnes,
Record of whiche doubleth my distres.
Wherfor, we most, as techeth sorgerye,
With scharp yrens sechyn remedye,
To kut awey, by þe rote rounde,
Þe prowde flesche þat growith in þe grounde,
Whiche wil not voide with oynementis softe,
Al-be þat þei be leid þer-to ful ofte.
Riȝt so be ensample, we most be duresse
Getyn recur, whan þat with fairnesse
We may noon haue: wherfor, be ȝour avys,
My purpos is to send[e] forþe Parys
In-to Grece, som lady þer to wynne,
And bring hir hom; & we schal her with-Inne
Kepe hir strong, maugre who seyth nay,
Til we sen som agreable day,
Þat þei be fayn, liche myn oppinioun,
To haue exchaunge for hir of Exyoun,
My dere suster, whom I loue so.
We may nat faile þat it schal be do,
So þe goddis be to vs fauourable,
And þis counseil be also acceptable
To ȝou echon, as it is to me;
For whan a þing toucheþ a commvnte—
Of wyse men as it is affermed—
Of alle þe comoun it ouȝte be confermed;
Þing touchyng al schuld[e] ben aprevid
Of alle echon, or it wer a-cheuyd:
Wherfor, I cast, be avis of ȝou echon,
Pleinly to werke.” & with þat word anoon
Þis noble Priam was sodeynly in pes.
235
Whan al was hust, in her alder siȝt,
A knyȝt vp ros, and Pentheus he hiȝt,
Þat son[e] was of Euforbius—
De transformatis, as seith Ovidius—
In-to whom he feyneth þat þer was
Whilom þe sowle of Pyctagoras
Holy transmewed, so as writ Ovide:
As touchyng þat, I wil no lenger byde,
But telle forþe of þis Pentheus,
A-fore þe kyng whiche gan his tale þus:
“My lige lord, vn-to ȝour hiȝe noblesse
Displese it nat, nor to ȝour worþines,
In presence of ȝour maieste
Þat I schal seyn, for taquite me
Towardis ȝow of my feith & trouþe;
For sothfastly in me may be no slouþe
Touchyng ȝoure honour, þat with-oute drede,
With ȝel of feith I brenne as doth þe glede,
Of alle harmys to bidden ȝow be war.
For dout[e]les afferme wel I dar,
Ȝif ȝe stond in ȝour first avis,
As ȝe purpos, to sende forþe Parys,
I dout[e] nat þat it schal ȝou rewe;
For God wel wot, of old & nat of newe,
I had a fader callid Euforbius,
Discret & wis, and riȝt vertuous,
And knowyng had a-forn of euery þing
By prescience and by for-wetyng,
To telle pleinly þoruȝ his philosophie,
So clere he saw with his hertis eye,
Þat þer ne was no þing so secre
Hid from his knowyng, nor no preuite
Þat he hit knewe; he was of witte so sage.
And at þe last, wan he was of age
An hundrid ȝere, with lokkis grey & hore,
236
And wepe also of pite tenderly,
Fully affermyng, ȝif Paris outterly
Went in-to Grece to ravische hym a wyf,
Þer schuld[e] folwe swiche a mortal stryf
Vp-on vs alle, þat sothly þis cite
Schuld in-to asches & cyndres turned be;
And þat þer schuld no þing vs socour;
Þat Grekis swerd schal cruelly deuour
Boþe hiȝe & lowe, & pleynly spare noon.
Wherfor, I praye, among ȝou euerychon,
Of þat I telle haueþ no dispit;
Ȝour wrong to venge putteth in respit;
And rancour old, I rede þat ȝe lete;
And þe tranquille now of ȝour quiete,
Of hastynes, þat ȝe [nat] submitte
To Fortune þat can so falsly flitte;
Perturbeth nat, for non olde enmyte,
With new[e] steryng ȝoure felicite:
For ȝif þat ȝe to þis iourne assent,
Ȝe euerychon ful sore schal repente;
And ȝif ȝe wiln algatis þedir sende,
In Paris stede lat som oþer wende,
List his viage be to ȝou no spede;
Þis my counceil, & þis is [ful] my rede,
Seide vnder support only of ȝour grace.”
And sodeinly þei gan echon to chace
At Pentheus, & lowde ageyn hym crie,
Reprevyng hym and þe prophesye
Of his fader to her confusioun.
But, o allas! þe reuolucioun
Of Ioye or wo, [or] of felicite!
For þing ordeyned nedes moste be;
Þe ordre of þinges with fate is so englued,
For þat schal falle may nat be eschewed;
Whiche caused hem for to assent in on,
237
Vnhappyly with hap þei were envoluyd;
And þus concludyng, her counseil is dissoluyd.
But casuely, it by-fil riȝt þan,
Þat þis avis vn-to þe eris ran
Of Cassandra, and sche with gret affray
Of sodeyn wo gan crye “weyllaway:”
“Allas!” quod sche, “allas! what wil ȝe don?
What! schal Parys now in-to Grece gon?”
And with þat word, sche barst oute to wepe
Ful pitously with inward syȝes depe;
Sche gan to waile & swone for þe peyne,
And furiously with noyse to compleyne;
With woful rage & many pitous sown
Sche made a mortal lamentacioun:
For to be ded, sche myȝt hir nat with-holde;
With here to-torn, and with fistes folde,
Sche seyde “allas” more þan an hundrid sythe—
“O stormy Fortune, why listow to kythe
Þi cruel force to oure aduersite,
Vp-on vs alle & vp-on þis cite,
Of mortal Ire and gery violence,
With swerde of vengaunce wers þan pestilence?
O Troye, Troye, what is þi gilt, allas!
What hastow don, what is þi trespas,
To ben euersed & turned in-to nouȝt
With wilde fyre? þi synne is dere [a]bouȝt!
A! Priam kyng! vncely is þi chance!
What hastow gilt, ouþer do greuaunce
To þi goddis, or wraþþid þoruȝ vnryȝt
Hem to prouoke to schewe her cruel myȝt
Vp-on þi blod? allas, what hastow do!
O moder myn! o Eccuba also!
What maner cryme or importable offence
Hastow wrouȝt to han swiche recompense
Þe day to abyde, o noble, worþi quene,
238
O woful deth, cruel and horrible!
Allas! whi ar ȝe now no more credible
To my conseil swiche harmys to eschewe,
Ȝour mortal purpos fully to remewe,
Þat he go nat, as it is ordeyned;
For þouȝt of whiche I am so constreyned,
Þat vnneþe I may þe wo endure!”
And to hir fader þis woful creature
Halt streyȝt hir way, & falliþ plat to grounde,
And of hir wepyng al in water wounde—
By hir chekis so þe teris reyne—
And as sche myȝt, for constreint of hir peyne,
Vp-on hym sche gan to clepe & crye,
Besechyng hym to schape remedye,
With pitous vois, as sche þat knew ful wel
In þis mater pleynly euerydel,
What schal [be-]falle, & had it ful in mynde,
Þe sodeyn harmys þat swe schal be-hynde.
But al hir clamour was [nat] but in veyn;
For þat schal falle, as somme clerkis seyn,
Ne may nat wel of men eschewed be;
And eke Fortune, by gret aduersite,
Of hasty Ire furious and wood,
And vnkynde to þe Troyan blood,
Causeles ageyn[e]s hem a-grevid,
And of rancour sodeynly amevid
With blynde a-waites to cache hem in a traunce,
Be violence of hir vnhappy chaunce,
Hath with a swyȝe turned hir whele vnstable,
As sche þat is envious and mutable,
To haste Troyans to her confusioun,
Of wilfulnes and vndiscresioun
Ageyns Grekis a quarel for to make.
And þer-vppon han her conseil take,
And acheuyd, as ȝe han herd deuyse,
239
For ȝif þei had þe dissuasioun
Of Hector herde, concluded in resoun,
In þis mater, and of Elenus
The counseil take, and to Pentheus
Aduertid wysely, and to his sentence
With-oute feynyng ȝoue ful credence,
And of Cassandra, þat neuer koude lye,
Prudently herde þe prophesye,
Fro point to point for to cast a-forn,
In swiche meschef þei had nat be lorn,
But floured ȝit in her felicite,
With-oute damage and aduersite.
But Fortune wil haue hir cours alwey,
Whos purpos holt, who seyth ȝe or nay;
For sche it was þat made þis viage,
With forhed pleyn and [a] false visage,
With sugre out-schad, and venym in þe rote,
Bitter of tast, and in schewyng soote,
Wrinkled double, like an hornyd snail,
Feyth in hir face & fraude ay in þe tail,
To hast Troyans acorden in-to oon,
Þat Paris schuld in-to Grece goon,
As ȝe han herde: þer is no more to seyn;
For her-vppon þei cast hem & ordeyn.
Howe Parys toke þe See with a grete navye towarde þe londe of Grece; and howe of chance he met with Kenge Menelay, Heleyns husbonde, not knowynge what he was.
The tyme aprocheþ whan þe sonne scheneHis golden wayn whirlid vp a-twene
Þe clere sterris of Iades so red,
Whiche han her siȝt in þe Crabbis hed,
And Pliades, þe seuene sterris briȝt,
Of whiche sixe apperen to oure siȝt;
For þe seuenþe drawith hir asyde,
240
Whilom for sche dide a gret offence,
Þat vn-to vs causeth hir absence.
For sche dar nat schewe hir stremys clere,
Nor with hir sustren openly apere,
Whilom for sche with a god mortal
Dide a synne þat was crimynal,
Whiche noised was & kouþe þoruȝ þe heuene,
Þat sche allone among þe susters seuene
Schroudeth to vs schamfastly hir chere.
And whan Tytan in þe ȝodyak spere
Atwen þis sterris had[de] take his se,
Of þe Bole in þe sixtene degre,
Vp-on þe tyme of Ioly grene May,
Whan þat Flora with hir hewes gay
Hath euery playn, medwe, hil, & vale
With hir flouris, quik and no þing pale,
Over-sprad & cladde in lyuere newe,
And braunchis blosme with many lusty hewe,
And bit vs fully to be glad & liȝ—
For by assuraunce þei haue her frute be-hiȝt
Ageyn autumpne, who so list hem shake,
Whan on vynes ripeth euery grape—
And þus þis sesoun, most lusty of disport,
Enbrasiþ hertis with new recounfort,
Only of hope by kynde as it is dew,
Þat holsom frute schal þe blosmys swe,
Whan tyme cometh by reuolucioun.
And þus in May, þe lusty fresche sesoun,
Whan briddes syngen in her armonye,
The same tyme out of Panonye
Repeyred ben Dephebus and Paris,
And with hem brouȝt, chosen by devis,
Þre þousand knyȝtes redy for to goon
With hem to Grece, & schippis many on,
Ful vitailled of al þat may hem nede.
241
Was two & twenty, liche as writ Guydo.
And after þis, with-oute more a-do,
Þe kyng commaundeth vn-to Eneas,
To Anthenor and to Polydamas,
In al hast þat þei hem redy make
With Parys knyȝtly for to vndirtake,
As ȝe han herde, þis Iourne for tacheue.
And on þe tyme whan þei toke her leue,
Priamus, with schort conclusioun,
Scheweþ þeffect of his entencioun,
And specialy þat þei her dever don
For to recure his suster Exioun,
As ȝe han herd her-to-fore me telle:
What schulde I more in þis mater dwelle?
Whan þei wer redy, with-oute more soiour,
Þis Parys first, as lord and gouernour
Of þis viage made by Priamus,
And his broþer, callid Dephebus,
Her leue toke with wepyng tenderly;
And after þat to schippe manfully,
With-oute abode þei be-gan hem dresse,
And in þe name of Venus, þe goddes,
And myȝty Iove, þei token her Iourne.
Þei hale vp ankir, and by þe large se
Þei gan to seile, and haue þe wynde at wille,
Þe water calme, blaundischyng, and stille,
With-oute trouble of any boystous wawe.
And to þe costis þei gan fast[e] draw
Of Grekis lond, for no þing hem lette;
And of fortune in her cours þei mette
A Grekysche schip, myn auctor telleþ vs,
In whiche þer was þe kyng Menelaus,
Toward Pyram, a famus strong cite,
For to visite a duke of hiȝe degre
242
Was broþer eke vn-to þe kyng famus,
Þe wyse, worþi, grete Agamenoun,
Most of name and reputacioun
Amongis Grekis for his worþines.
And Menelay, þis story beriþ witnes,
Husbond was to þe quene Eleyne,
Þat was suster to þe breþer tweyne,
Castor & Pollux, whiche, as I ȝou tolde,
Wer of her hond so worþi knyȝtes holde.
And in þat tyme, liche to her degre,
In Strynestar, her most chef cite,
Þei held an housholde solempne & ryal.
Þe loue of whom was so special,
Of wille & hert acordyng with þe dede,
Atwixe hem two, of verray breþerhede,
Þat noon from other koude lyue alone.
With [w]hom was eke þe maiden Hermyone,
Þe ȝong[e] douȝter of þe quene Eleyne,
Of fairnes most inly souereyne,
Most passyngly excellyng in bewte.
And þus Troyans, sailyng by þe se
Toward Grece, among þe wawis wete,
Of auenture happed[e] to mete
Kyng Menelay, seilyng by her syde;
And non of [hem] list, of verray pride,
For to enquere what þat oþer was,
But passe furþe a ful huge pas,
For non of hem oþer koude knowe.
And ey þe wynde pesybly gan blowe,
Þe Troyan flete causyng in a while
For taproche to the noble Ile
Þat callid is Cithera þis day;
And in þe hauene, in al hast þei may,
Þei cast hanker, & bond her schippis strong;
243
To take þe lond, ful many lusty man,
Arraying hem as freschely as þei can.
Now, in þis Ile of passyng excellence,
Þer was a temple of gret reuerence,
Þat bilded was of olde fundacioun,
And most honoured in þat regioun,
Þoruȝ-oute þe lond, boþe fer & ner—
The fest[e] day, ay from ȝer to ȝer,
Liche as it fil by reuolucioun,
Repeyryng þeder of gret deuocioun,
In honour only of Venus, þe goddes,
Whom þe Grekis with al her besynes
Honoured most of euery maner age,
With ȝiftes bringyng and with pilgrimage,
With gret offeryng and with sacrifyse,
And vsid was in her paynym wyse.
For in þis phane, as þei knele & wake
With contrit hert, & her prayer make,
Þe statue ȝaf of euery questyoun
Pleyn answer and ful solucioun,
With cerymonyes to Venus as þei loute;
Of euery þing þat þei hadde doute,
Þei hadde ful declaracioun.
And þus þe Grekis vp-on Cytheroun
Halwyn þis fest with riche & gret array,
With rytis due, as ferforþe as þei may,
In hope fully þe better for to þrive.
And of fortune, whan he dide aryue
Vp-on þe lond, by auenture or cas,
Þe same tyme þis fest[e] halwed was
Of many Greke, commyng to and fro
From euery cost, þat to þe temple go
On pilgrimage her vowes to acquyte,
Of þe place þe reliques to vesyte.
244
Howe Parys enterde þe Ille of Citherea, wher he met with the fayre Quene Heleyne.
And whan Paris dide þis espie,He gadred out of his companye
Þe worþiest þat he chesen may;
And to þe temple he took þe riȝt[e] waye,
Ful wel be-seyn, & in knyȝtly wyse,
And dide his honour & his sacrifyse
Ful humblely to þe Grekis liche,
With many nowche & many Iouwel riche,
With gold & siluer, stonys and perre
He spendeþ þer, liche to his degre,
And quit hym manly in his oblacioun[s];
And deuoutly in his orisouns
He hym demeneþ, þat Ioy[e] was to se.
Now was Parys of passyng gret bewte
Among[es] alle þat euer werne alyve:
For þer was non þat myȝt with hym striue,
Troyan nor Greke, to speke of semlyhede,
Wonder fresche and lusty, as I rede,
And in his port ful lik a gentil knyȝt.
Of whos persone for to han a siȝt,
Þei gan to prese, boþe nyȝe and fere,
So ryally he had hym in his gere,
And coueyte, of hiȝe estat and lowe,
What he was, gretly for to knowe;
And of his men þei aske besely,
Fro when he cam, & þe cause why,
Of his comyng enqueryng on by on.
But prudently þei kepte hem euerychon,
Þat no þing was openly espyed
In her answere, so þei han hem guyed,
Þat euery þing kepid was secre,
Eueryche of hem was so avisee;
Al-be þat somme oppenly declare
245
But tolde pleynly þe cause of his commyng,
And how Priam, þe strong[e] myȝty kyng,
His fader was, most royal of renoun,
And how he cam also for Exyoun.
Þus eche of hem gan with other rowne,
At pryme face, whan he cam to towne,
And þer-vp-on wer ymagynatyf,
Sore mvsyng and inquisytif,
Eche with other be suspecioun
Demyng þer-of liche her oppinioun,
And raþest þei þat no þing ne knewe,
As folkis don of þinges þat be newe.
And whiles þei of þis mater trete
In sondry wyse amonge her wordes grete,
Þe fame of hem gan anoon atteyne
To þe eris of þe quene Eleyne,
Niȝe besyde in þat regioun.
And whan sche herd be relacioun,
And by report of hem þat cam by-twene,
Þis faire Eleyne, þis fresche, lusty quene,
Anon as sche þe soþe vndirstood,
With-oute tarying or any more abood,
Sche hasteþ hir to þis solempnite,
Þe fresche folke of Frigye for to se—
Wel mor, God wot, in hir entencioun
To se Parys, þan for deuocioun.
Vnder colour of holy pilgrymage,
To þe temple sche takeþ hir viage,
With gret meyne & ryal apparaille,
Parys to sen for sche wil nat faille.
But, o allas! what lusty new[e] fyre
Haþ hir hert enflawmyd be desyre,
To go to vigiles ouþer to spectaclis!
Noon holynes to heryn of myraclis
Hath mevid hir, þat þer schal be-falle;
But as þe maner is of women alle
246
Where as þei be sure þat multitude
Gadrid is, at liberte to se,
Wher þei may finde opportunyte
To her desyre, ful narwe þei awaite,
Now couertly her eyne for to baite
In place wher as set is her plesaunce,
Now priuely to haue her daliaunce
Be som sygne or castyng of an eye,
Or toknes schewyng in hert[e] what þei drye,
With touche of hondis [stole] among þe pres,
With arm or foot to cache vp in her les
Whom þat hem list, al-be he fre or bonde,
Of nature þei can hym holde on honde—
Ageyn whos sleiȝt availeþ wit nor myȝt:
For what hem list, be it wrong or riȝt,
Þei ay acheue, who seyth ȝe or nay,
Ageyn whos lust diffende him no man may.
Þus Guydo ay, of cursid fals delit,
To speke hem harme haþ kauȝt an appetit,
Þoruȝ-oute his boke of wommen to seyn ille,
Þat to translate it is ageyn my wille.
He haþ ay Ioye her honour to transuerse;
I am sory þat I mote reherse
Þe felle wordis in his boke y-founde.
To alle women I am so moche bounde:
Þei ben echon so goodly and so kynde,
I dar of hem nat sey[e]n þat I fynde
Of Guydo write þoruȝ-out Troye book;
For whan I radde it, for fer myn hert[e] quoke,
And verrailly my wittis gonne faille,
Whan I þer-of made rehersaille.
Liche his decert lat Guydo now be quit;
For ȝe schal here anon how þat he chit
Þe quene Eleyne, for cause þat sche went
With deuoute hert hir offring to present,
247
Þus, word by word, he seiþ to hir Expres:
Howe Quene Heleyne, aftire that she herd of Parys, hasted here to þe Temple.
O mortal harme, þat most is for to drede!A, fraude y-cast be sleiȝt of wommanhede,
Of euery wo, gynnyng, crop, and rote!
Ageyn[e]s whiche helpe may no bote.
Whan lust haþ dryue in her hert a nail,
Ay dedly venym sueth at þe tail,
Whiche no man haþ power to restreyne;
Recorde I take of þe quene Eleyne,
Þat hoot[e] brent, allas! in hir desires,
Of newe lust to dele with straungeris
Whom sche knewe nat, ne neuer saw a-forn,
Wher-þoruȝ, allas, ful many man was lorn,
Of cruel deth embracid in þe cheyne
With-oute pite! now, sey, þou quene Eleyne,
What gost or spirit, allas, haþ mevid þe,
Sool fro þi lord in swiche ryalte
Oute of þin house to gon among þe pres?
Whi were þou wery to liue at home in pes,
And wentist out straungeris for to se,
Takyng noon hed [vn-]to þin honeste?
Þou schust a kepte þi closet secrely,
And not haue passed out so folily
In þe abscence of þi lorde, allas!
Þou wer to wilful & rakil in þis cas
To sen aforn what schuld after swe;
For al to sone þou wer drawe out of mwe,
Þat koudist nat kepe at home þi boundis.
Þou wentist out as hare among [þe] houndis,
For to be cauȝt, of verray wilfulnes,
And þi desyre koudist not compesse;
For þou þi lust list nat to refreyne.
O many woman haþ kauȝt in a treyne
248
It sit hem bet hem siluen for to kepe
Clos in her chaumbre, and fleen occasioun:
For neuer schip schulde in pereil drown,
Nor skatre on rok, nor be with tempest rent,
Nor with Karibdis deuourid nor y-schent,
Nor gon to wrak with no wedris ille,
Ȝif it wer kepte in þe hauene stille.
For who wil not occasiouns eschewe,
Nor drediþ not pereil for to swe,
He most among, of necessite,
Or he be war, endure aduersite;
And who can nat hir fot fro trappis spare,
Lat hir be war or sche falle in þe snare:
For harme y-don to late is to compleine.
For ȝif whilom þe worþi quene Eleyne
Hir siluen had kepte at home in clos,
Of hir þer nadde ben so wikke a loos
Reported ȝit, grene, fresche, and newe;
Whos chaunce vnhappi eche man ouȝt[e] rewe,
Þat cause was of swiche destruccioun
Of many worþi, and confusioun
Of hir husbonde & many other mo
On Grekis syde, and [on] Troye also,
In þis story as ȝe schal after rede.
And so þis quene, as fast as sche may spede,
To þe temple hath þe wey[e] nome
Ful rially; and whan þat sche was come
Ful deuoutly with-Inne Cytheroun,
Made vn-to Venus hir oblacioun
In presence and siȝt of many on,
With many Iowel and many riche stoon.
And whan Parys had[de] þis espied,
To þe temple anon he haþ hym hyed,
Ful þriftely in al þe hast he myȝt;
And whan þat he had[de] first a siȝt
Of þe goodly, faire, fresche quene,
Cupidis dart, þat is whet so kene,
249
Þat for a-stonyed he nist[e] what to do,
So he merveileþ hir gret semlynes,
Hir womanhed, hir port, & hir fairnes:
For neuer a-forne [ne] wende he þat Nature
Koude haue made so faire a creature;
So aungillyk sche was of hir bewte,
So femynyn, so goodly on to se,
Þat he dempte, as by liklynes,
For hir bewte to be som goddes.
For his hert dide hym ay assure
Þat sche was no mortal creature—
So heuenly faire and so celestial
He þouȝt sche was in party & in al.
And considereth ful a-visely
Hir feturis in ordre by and by
Ententifly with-Inne in his resoun,
Euery þing by good inspeccioun:
Hir golden her, lik þe schene stremys
Of fresche Phebus with his briȝt[e] bemys,
Þe goodlyhed of hir fresche face,
So repleuished of bewte & of grace,
Euene ennwed with quiknes of colour
Of þe rose and þe lyllie flour,
So egaly, þat nouþer was to wyte
Þoruȝ noon excesse of moche nor to lite.
With-Inne þe cerclyng of hir eyen bryȝt
Was paradys compassid in hir siȝt,
Þat þoruȝ a brest þe bewte wolde perce.
And certeynly, ȝif I schal reherse
Hir schap, hir forme, and feturis by & by,
As Guydo doth by ordre ceryously,
From hed to foot, clerly to devise,
I han non englysche þat þer-to may suffyse;
It wil nat be, oure tonge is not lyke.
250
To sue his florischyng or his gey peynture,
For to discriue so fayre a creature;
For my colours ben to feble and feynt,
Þat nouþer can ennwe wel nor peint;
Eke I am nat a-queintid with no mwse
Of alle nyne: þer-fore I me excuse
To ȝou echon, nat al of necligence,
But for defaut only of eloquence,
And ȝou remitte to Guydo for to se
How he discriveth bi ordre hir bewte;
To take on me it were presumpcioun.
But I wil telle how Parys vp & doun
Goth in þe temple, and his eye cast
Toward Eleyne, & gan presen fast,
As he þat brent hote in Louys fyre,
Þat was enflawmed gretly be desyre.
And oft he chaungeþ countenaunce & chere,
And euer he neieth to hir ner and nere,
I-darted þoruȝ with hir eyen tweyne.
And ageynward þe fresche quene Eleyne
As hote brent in herte pryuely,
Al-be no man it outward koude espie;
For sche þouȝt sche had neuer aforn,
Of alle men þat euer ȝet wer born
Sey non so fair, nor like to hir plesaunce;
On hym to loke was hir sufficiaunce.
For in the temple sche toke hede of riȝt nouȝt,
But to compasse & castyn in hir þouȝt
How sche may cachen opportunyte
With hym to speke at good liberte:
Þis holly was al hir besynes.
For hym sche felt so inly gret distres,
Þat ofte sche chaungeþ countenaunce & hewe.
And Venus haþ marked hem of newe
With hir brondes fired by feruence,
And inflawmed be sodeyn influence,
251
And saue þe eye atwen was no message:
Eche on oþer so fixe haþ cast his siȝt,
Þat þei conseiue & wist[en] a-non riȝt
With-Inne hem silfe wat her hert[e] ment.
And nere to hir euer Parys went
To seke fully and gete occasioun,
Þat þei myȝt, by ful relacioun,
Her hertis conceit declare secrely.
And so bi-fel, þat Paris neiȝeþ nyȝe
To þe place wher þe quene Eleyne
Stood in her se; & þer atwen hem tweyne,
Þei broken out þe somme of al her hert,
And ȝaf Issu to her inward smerte.
But þis was don, list þei werne espied,
Whan þe peple was most occupied
In þe temple for to stare & gase,
Now her, now þer, as it wer a mase.
Þei kepte hem clos, þat no worde a-sterte;
Þer was no man þe tresoun myȝt aduerte
Of hem tweyn, ne what þei wolde mene;
But at þe last, Paris and þis quene
Concluded han, with schort avisement,
Fully þe fyn of her boþe entent,
And sette a purpos atwix hem in certeyn,
Whan þei cast for to mete ageyn.
But list men had to hem suspecioun,
Þei made an ende, with-oute more sermoun,
And depart, al-be þat þei wer loþe.
And sobirly a-noon þis Paris goth
Out of þe temple, his hert in euery part
Wounded þoruȝ-out with Louys fyry dart;
To his schippis he halt þe riȝt[e] way.
And þan anoon, in al þe hast he may,
Whan assemblid was his chiualrie,
On and oþer of his companye,
252
To-forn hem alle his tale þus he gan.
Howe Parys exortede his pepele for þe spoylynge of þe Tempyle of Venus within þe seid Ille of Citherea, fro whenes he karede to Troye al the Iewellys that he founde þerin.
“Sirs,” quod he, “schortly to expresse,Þe cause is kouþe to ȝour worþines,
Whi my fader in-to Grece vs sent;
For, as ȝe knowe, þe chef of his entent
Was to recuren his suster Exyoun
Out of þe hondis of kyng Thelamoun.
Þe whiche þing, for ouȝt I can espie,
Is impossible sothly in myn eye,
Be any weye, as fer as I can se,
He is so gret & strong in þis contre
Of his alyes about on euery syde,
And in hert so inly ful of pride,
To ȝeld hir vp he haþ nat but disdeyn,
Þer-of to trete it wer [nat] but in veyn.
Wherfore, þe best þat I can devise,
Sith our power may nat now suffise
To werreye hym in þis regioun—
We be nat egal of myȝt nor of renoun,
For lak of men with hym to holde a felde;
We may not semble with spere nor with schelde
Tencountren hym with al his multitude—
Wherfor, þe best þat I can conclude,
Is, sithe Fortune haþ vs hider brouȝt,
And þe goddes han eke for vs wrouȝt
So graciously to make vs for to londe
At Venus temple, fast[e] by þe stronde,
Whiche haboundeþ with ful gret riches
Of Grekis offeryng vnto þe goddes,
Be lond & se, fro many sondry port,
253
To þat place in worschip of Venus,
So þat þe wif of kyng Menelaus
Is þer present, ful riche & wel be-seyn—
And ȝif þat we by manhod myȝt atteyn
To rauisch hir, and þe temple spoyle,
And of her tresour chesen oute & coyle
Þe chef Iowellis, & chargen our somers
With gold & siluer, and take prisoneris,
And maugrey hem to our schippis bring
Þis same nyȝt with-oute tariyng,
We may nat faille, who-euer þat sey nay,
Ȝif ȝe assent, of a riche pray.
Wherfore, in hast þat ȝe ȝou redy make,
And euery man anon his harnes take,
And arme hym wel in his best array.”
And þei assent, with-oute more delay,
And in hir schippis þei bid[e] til at nyȝt,
Whan Phebus chare withdrawen had his liȝt
Vnder wawes, & sterris dide appere
On þe heuene with her stremys clere,
Or þe mone þat tyme dide rise,
Þei schop hem forþe in ful þrifty wyse,
The manly Troyans in steel armyd briȝt,
To þe temple holdyng her wey[e] riȝt.
For þei cast no longer for to tarie,
But prowdely entre [in] þe seintuarie,
In-to þe chapel callid Cytheroun,
With-oute reuerence or deuocioun
Don to Venus in hir oratorie;
For it was clene oute of her memorie,
Honour and drede & alle obseruaunce:
For fynally al her attendaunce,
As myn auctor sothly can diffyne,
Was to riȝt nouȝt but only to ravyne.
254
Riches & tresour þat was in þe londe,
Gold & siluer, stonys and Iowellis,
Reliques sacrid, þe holy eke vessels,
With-out abood oute of þe sacrarie,
And al y-fere to her schippis carye—
It is a wonder, to þenken on þe good!
Þei kille & sle al þat hem withstood—
It was a pite for to seen hem blede.
And many Greke þei to schip[pe] lede,
Þat after liveden in captiuite
Ful many ȝer in Troye þe cite.
And þer-whyles goth Paris to Eleyne,
And hir enbrasiþ in his armys tweyn,
Ful humblely & with gret reuerence,
In whom he fonde no maner resistence;
It sat hir nat, sche was so womanly,
For to Paris sche ȝalde hir outterly;
Hir hert in hap was ȝolde or sche cam þere,
Þerfor to ȝelde hir sche had lasse fere;
Sche can nat stryue, nor no woman scholde.
And he anon, as gentilnes[se] wolde,
Counforteþ hir as he best can or may,
And lad hir with hym, with-oute more delay,
To his schippes; and þer ful bysely
He sette wardis to kepe hir honestly,
Whil he returneþ to þe temple ageyn
To spoyle and robbe & to make al pleyn
Þoruȝ þe temple with his wallis wyde.
Now stood a castel faste þer be-syde,
I-stuffid wel with Grekysche sowdyours,
Þe whiche a-woke with noise of þe pilours
Þe same nyȝt, & gan make a schout;
And þer-with-al anoon þei issen out,
Armyd in stel, þe temple to reskewe,
And manfully after hem þei sewe.
255
With speris scharp & swerdis kene whet,
Þei ran I-fere as tigres al vnmylde,
Liche wode liouns or þis boris wylde;
Þer was no feynyng founden in her fiȝt,
Al-be þe felde departed nas a-riȝt,
For þe Troyans doubled hem in noumbre,
Þat outterly þe Grekis þei encombre,
And at meschef maden hem to fle,
Purswe after and cruelly hem sle
With-oute mercy to þe castel gate.
Ther was [no] reskvs, for þei com[e] late,
Of þis skarmysche, for þe fyn was deth;
Now her, now þer, þei ȝelden vp þe breth,
So myȝtely Troyans hem assaille,
Þat to withstond it wold[e] not availle:
For of manhod þei þe felde han wonne,
And after þat, cruelly be-gonne
In al hast to spoillen þe castel;
And to schip þei brouȝten euery-del,
Tresour & gold, & what þat þei may wynne,
And on þe morwe to seille þei be-gynne,
Stuffid with good, be þe Grekische se,
Toward þe costis of Troye þe cite.
Þe se was calm and fully at her wille,
Boþe of tempest and of stormys ille,
And clere also was þe briȝt[e] heuene,
Þat in space almost of dayes seuene
At a castel callid Tenedoun
Þei aryve vj myle fro þe toun;
And glad and liȝt þei to lond[e] went.
And after þat, I fynde, Parys sent
His messanger streiȝt vn-to þe kyng,
Þat hym enformeþ of his hom commyng;
Of her expleit he tolde hym euery-del.
256
Þat so manly þei han born hem oute,
And made puplisched in þe toun aboute
Þis tydynges with gret sollempnite,
To hiȝe & lowe, þoruȝ-oute þe cite,
Þat for Ioye þe most[e] and þe leste
For remembraunce halwe [and holde] a feste,
And þanke her goddes in ful humble wyse,
With obseruaunces and with sacrifyse
On her auteris, with gret deuocioun.
And al þis while, he at Tenedoun
Holdeth soiour with þe quene Eleyne,
Þe whiche gan ful rewfully compleyne
Hir vnkouþe lyf, to dwelle with straungers,
Al dissolat among[es] prisoners,
Fer sequestrid a-weye from hir contre,
Solitarie in captiuite.
Sche wepiþ & crieþ with a pitous chere;
Þe burbly wawes of hir eyen clere
Liche welle stremys by hir chekis reyne;
And for constreint of hir inward peyne
Ful ofte a day hir song was weylaway,
With sobbyng vois, þat sche so fer a-way
Departid is from hir Menelaus.
For whos absence in rage furious,
Hir lif sche hateþ & curseþ eke fortune;
And in þis wo sche euere doth contune
With-oute soiour, alwey more and more;
And for hir breþer Pollux & Castor,
And for þe loue of hir douȝter dere,
Now pale and grene sche wexeþ of hir cher,
Þat whilom was frescher for to sene
Þan þe lillye on his stalke grene.
Allas! chaunged is hir rosen hewe!
And euere in on hir wo encreseth newe,
257
For ay sche wept as sche to water wolde.
Til at þe last, in al hir heuynes,
Paris to hir com of gentilnes,
Hir to comforte and tapese hir rage—
He besyeth hym hir sorwes to aswage,
Seiyng to hir: “what may al þis mene,
Þat ȝe, allas, o goodly fresche quene,
List þus ȝour silfe in sorwyng disfigure?
I wonder gretly how ȝe may endure
So moche water causeles to schede,
Þat with wepyng han dewed so ȝour wede;
For liche a condut þe stremys renne doun,
Lik to a penaunt in contricioun
Ȝe ȝou disraye, allas, whi do ȝe so!
Lat be þis fare and lateth ouer go
Al ȝour wepyng, þouȝt, and heuynes,
And beth no more, my lady, in distres.
Makeþ an ende nowe of ȝour greuaunce,
For al þe ese, comfort, and plesance
Þat men may do, trusteþ ȝe schul haue.
It is but foly in sorwe þus to raue!
Let passe ouer alle þis scharp[e] schowres,
And here my trouþe: ȝe and alle ȝoures,
Of what ȝou list schal haue suffisaunce;
As ferforþe, and more habundaunce
Þan ȝe had among þe Grekis þere,
I ȝou ensure, and beth no þing in fere,
Þat I schal hold al þat I haue hiȝt,
On my trouþe, as I am trewe knyȝt,
In worde and dede with al myn hert entere.”
And sche anon, with a woful chere,
So as sche myȝt for sobbyng þo suffice,
Answerde ageyn in ful lawly wyse:
“I wot,” quod sche, “wher me be loth or lef,
Sith I am kauȝt & take at þis meschef,
258
I am so bounde, þat I most obeie,
Vnder ȝour daunger, þat I may nat fle,
In hold distreyned and captiuite.
Ȝe wote also, be nature, oute of drede,
Þat it ne longeth vn-to womanhede
In straunge soille to stryuen or rebelle;
An[d] namly þer, wher as hir querelle
Schal haue no fauour nor sustened be.
But ȝef ȝe list now to han pite
On me or myne, of ȝour goodlyhede,
Ȝe may of God disserue þank & mede,
Þat wil rewarde iustly alle þo
Þat comfort hem þat ben in care & wo.”
“Now lady myn,” þanne quod Parys,
“What þat may like or ben at ȝour devys,
Al schal be do, trusteth me riȝt wele;
For be my trouþe, as fer as I can fele,
In any þing þat may ȝou do plesaunce,
Ȝe schal it haue with al habundaunce:
Þis I ensure of heste not fallible;
Beth nat a-gaste, but fully beth credyble
To my wordis & hestis euerychon.”
And þer-with-al he lad hir riȝt anon
In-to a place of royal apparaille,
To comfort her, ȝif it wolde availle,
And secrely þer atwen hem two,
Þis Paris first, with-outen more a-do,
Spake vn-to hir & seyde: “lady dere,
I feyne nat, but speke of hert entere,
And þat I hope ȝe schal in dede fynde;
Wherfor, I pray, enprenteth in ȝour mynde
What I seie, and in ȝour remembraunce—
Þis is to seien, sith ȝe be puruyaunce
259
And Fortune eke wil þat it be so,
I dar afferme, pleinly for þe firste,
Þat þei disposed haue nat for ȝour wirst,
But for ȝour good, & so ȝe most it take.
Wherfor, I rede, to letyn ouer-shake
Al heuynes, and loke þat ȝe be
As glad and liȝt here in þis contre,
As þei ȝe werne in ȝour owne lond.
For feythfully I do ȝou to vndirstonde,
Ȝe schal haue here as moche habundance,
On euery part, with ful sufficiaunce
Of al þat may be to ȝou plesaunt:
For of o þing I dar make avaunt,
In þis contre, as it schal be founde,
Of al plente we passyn and habounde
More richely þan ȝoure Grekis ȝonder;
And þei ȝe ben from hem now assondre,
Out of þe lond þat callid is Achaye,
Ȝe haue no cause ȝow so to dismay,
Sith at worschip and more reuerence,
At more honour and gretter excellence
Ȝe schal be cherisched þan ȝe were a-fore.
And where ȝe pleine þat ȝe haue forbore
Ȝour owne lord and ben as now left sool,
For whom ȝe makyn al þis wo & dool,
Ȝe schal in haste be sette better at ese—
For certeynly, so it nat displese
Nor offende vn-to ȝour womanhede,
In stede of hym, I purpose, out of drede,
To wedde ȝou and ben ȝour trew[e] man,
To loue & serue in al þat euer I can,
With-oute feynyng, to my lyues ende,
And be to ȝou as lowly & as kynde,
As diligent and more laborious
Þan whilom was ȝoure Menelaus,
260
Hath here my trouth til tyme þat I deye.
And þauȝ þat I in wordis be but pleyn,
For loue of God, haueþ no disdeyn
Of my request, nor gruchiþ nat at al;
For, at þe lest, of þe stok royal
I am discendid & comme of as hiȝe blood
As Menelay, and of birþe as good;
And can in loue to ȝou be more trewe
Þan he was euer, and chaunge for no newe.
Wherfor, stynteþ þus to pleyn & wepe,
And late som comfor[t] in ȝour bosom crepe,
Ȝour wo apeseth, whiche is not worþe an hawe,
And som myrþe late in ȝour hert adawe:
Þis I beseche, and of womanhede
To my wordis for to takyn hede.”
“Allas,” quod sche, “how myȝt þis be-falle,
Þat haue left my frendis on & alle
In straunge lond, and am here but allone?
How schuld I þan but I made mone?
I haue no cause, God wot, for to pleye,
Nor my chekis for to kepe dreye
From salt[e] teris, allas! it wil nat be,
Þat can noon end of myn aduersite.
For in good feyth, it were aȝen[e]s kynde
So sodeynly to putten out of mynde
Þilke þing þat, for Ioye or smert,
In al þis world sitteþ nexte myn hert—
For whom, allas, so sore I am distreyned.
But, sith goddis han as now ordeyned
No bettre chaunce of hope vn-to me,
I can no more—I mote it take at gre
And humblely accepte also her sonde;
For I am feble her power to withstonde.
Wherfor, I schal ageyn my wil [now] stryue,
261
For to concente and lowly to admitte
Þilke þing [fro] whiche I may not flitte,
Maugre my wil, of necessite,
Fully to obeye what ȝe list do with me—
It wil nat helpe þauȝ I seide nay.”
And þus sche peyneth al þat [euere] sche may,
Lite and lite hir sorwe to aswage.
What schuld sche ay lyue in wo & rage,
To lese hir silfe, so tender a creature—
An hert of stel ne myȝt it not endure.
But ay of women þe maner & þe kynde,
Þat þei can nat of sorwe make an ende
Til þei be leiser han y-wept her fulle;
But at þe last, whan þei gynne dulle
To make sorwe, it happeþ hem as faste
Þat by grace þei sone it ouer caste
And liȝtly cache counfort of her smerte—
Þei be so tendre þat men may hem conuerte
From wo to Ioye, & þouȝt from hem disseuere.
Þer is no storme þat may lasten euere,
As clerkis wyse in bokis liste discerne;
Þing violent may nat be eterne;
For after stormys Phebus briȝter is.
And so be comfort & counseil of Parys,
Sche dawed is of hir olde sorwe:
For euene liche, as þe glade morwe,
Of kynde sweþ þe dirke, blake nyȝt,
So be processe hir hert[e] wexeþ liȝt,
And of her wepyng dried is þe welle,
Liche as þe story schal anon ȝou telle.
Howe Paris and Heleyne were ressavyde into Troye, of Pryamus and his lordys; and of þe soroweful lamentacyoun that Cassandra made when she sawe þe weddynge.
262
A-dawed was of hir drery peyne,
And þe wawes of hir heuy chere
On hir chekis gonne for to clere,
Paris, in herte fresche and amerous,
In haste haþ sent to kyng Priamus
For hors & men and oþer apparaille,
Clothes of gold ful noble of entaille,
Made for Eleyne & wrouȝt[e] for þe nonys
With riche perle & many sondri stonys,
A-geyn hir comyng in-to Troye toun.
And after þat, Parys fro Tenedoun
Schapeþ hym to lede hir in-to Troye;
And Priamus mette hem on þe weye
Ful ryally, as faste as he may hye,
With many a lord in his companye,
Ful many lady fresche & wel be-seyn,
And many mayde þat riden hem ageyn—
First estatis and after comwneris.
Now had Parys alle his prisoneris
Set be-forn in ordre tweyn & tweyne,
And he rood next with þe quene Eleyne,
And Dephebus vp-on þe toþer syde,
And his knyȝtes enviroun dide ride;
But nexte hym rood þe worþi Eneas
And þe Troyan, callid Pollidamas,
His meyne swyng eche in his degre
So gentilmanly, þat Ioye it was to se—
Eche from oþer kepyng a certeyn space.
And furþe þei ride but a soft[e] pace,
Til þat þe kyng hem mette sodeynly,
And hem receyveþ ful solempnely,
As he best coude, & goodly toke þe reyne
In-to his hond of þe quene Eleyne,
And hir conueyeþ furþe to his cite.
Gret was þe pres þat abood to se,
263
Þe schrille trumpettis wern y-reised loude—
Vp to þe skye goth þe blisful sown
Whan al þis peple entreþ in þe toun—
And many a-noþer diuers instrument,
Þat al to-forn in at þe gatis went,
In sondry wyse þat made melodie,
Þat to heren þe heuenly armonye
Be musik touchid vp-on string & corde,
So euen in on & iustly þei acorde,
It wold an hert rauische in-to Ioye.
And whan þei wern entred in-to Troye,
Amyd his paleys kyng Priamus a-liȝt;
And anoon, as fast as euere he myȝt,
In-to a chambre, riche & wel be-seye,
Þe quene Eleyne in hast he doth conueye,
Comaundyng with hert[e], wil, and þouȝt
His officers þat hir faile nouȝt
Of any þing þat sche can be-þinke.
Þe spicis partid, anoon þe wyn þei drink,
And þan þe kyng toke leue til soper,
And sche þer-whiles chaungeþ hir attir.
But of þe Ioye þat was in þe toun,
In eche place wher men went vp & doun,
I am to rude, sothly, al to wryte,
So moche in hert þe Troyans hem delite,
Þat saufe & sounde retourned is Parys—
Þei wende haue be for Ioye in paradis,
Þat he so wel spedde in his Iourne,
And hath nat on loste of his meyne,
Wher-of þei ben in hert[e] glad & liȝt.
And in al haste after þe nexte nyȝt,
As writ Guydo, with-oute tariyng long,
Erly on morwe, a-for þe larke songe,
In Pallas temple, as myn auctor seiþe,
Assured was be oþe & eke be feiþe
264
For euer-more to last a-twen hem tweyne,
Þe knot is knyt of þis sacrament.
And þis was don fully be thassent,
First of þe kyng, and also be thavis
Of al þe cite in fauour of Parys.
And so þe feste and gret solempnyte
Contwnyd was with moche ryalte,
Of þis weddyng in myrthe & solace,
Þorouȝ-oute þe toun be viii dayes space.
What schuld I write þe reuel or þe daunces,
Þe fresche array or þe countenaunces,
Þe stole touchis, þe lokis amerous,
Þe prevy gruchyng of hem þat wer Ielous,
Þe grete iustis, bordis, or tornay,
Amyd palastre with many sondry play,
Þe diuers coursis eke at euery feste,
Þe large plente don vn-to þe leste,
Þe straunge metis, þe manere of seruyse—
I haue noon englische al for to deuyse—
I passe ouer, for I was not þere.
But whan þis weddyng cam vn-to þe ere
Of Cassandra, and first it dide espie,
A þousand sithe “allas!” sche gan to crye
Of pitous wo with vntressid heris,
And seide þus al be-spreint with teris:
“O wrechid Troye, erryng in þis cas,
With-Inne þi silfe to suffre þis trespas,
For to concent vn-to swyche folye,
In sustenyng of foule auoutr[y]e,
Þat Paris schulde takyn vn-to wyve
Þe quene Eleyne whos husbond is alyve!
O woful Troye, to cruel is þi fate!
For to be war it is almost to late!
The tyme is come, þou schal[t] distroyed be!
For many fader schal his sone se
265
Amyd þe feld, þat wil him sore greue,
And many wif sore schal be-wepe
To se hir husbonde with large woundis depe
Girt þoruȝ þe body, pale, cold, & grene!
Allas, howe schal ȝe þe sorwe mow sustene!
A, wrecchid modris! how schal ȝe endure
To se ȝoure childre be cruel auenture
A-fore ȝou slayn with-oute remedie!—
It wil nat help, þouȝ ȝe clepe & crie.
A, moder myn, Eccuba, þe quene,
How schalt þou bide þe scharp[e] stoundis kene,
Þi worþi sones to sen a-for þe slawe,
And in þe feld by cruelte y-drawe!
A, blinde peple, of deth þou taxt non hede,
Why nylt þou werche [and] don after my rede,
And in þis cas more prudent ben & wys,
To take awey Eleyne from Parys,
As riȝt requireth, with-outen any more,
And to hir lord iustly hir restore?
What! trow[e] ȝe his þefte and cruel dede
Schal passe þus?—Nay! with-outen drede,
Þe swerd of vengaunce schal ful scharp[e] bite
For his offence, & we schal bere þe wyte—
Paleis & hous to seen, with-Inne a þrowe,
And touris hiȝe leide on þe erþe lowe!
Allas, allas! I seie to þe, Eleyne,
Vnhappy woman, causere of oure peyne,
Hard & vnȝely, and also graceles,
Vnwelful woman, disturber of oure pes,
Þou haste vs brouȝt in meschef & in were,
Kyndled a brond to sette vs alle a-fere!
Allas, þou art [þe] rote & grounde of al,
Of many drery fest[e] funeral
Þat schal be holde amonge vs in þis toun!”
266
Aboute ran in subbarbe and in strete,
And crieth euer, whom þat euer sche mete,
Ful ofte syþe: “allas and weillawey!”
Til Priamus, be-cause of hir affray,
And for þe noyse þat sche dide make,
With-oute more, anon he doth hir take
And bynd[e] fast, fetrid in presoun,
With-oute mercy or remyssioun.
Þei take noon hede to hir sadde trouþe,
Nor to hir wordis—it was þe more rouþe—
But schet hir vp in bondis gret & strong,
With-oute pite, where sche abidiþ longe.
And þus in prisoun a while I leue hir mourne,
And to [þe] Grekis I wil ageyn returne.
Of the sorowe that Kynge Menelay made when he herd that Parys had ravisshede his wyff; and of þe manly comforde and councele þat Agamenon gave hym for to revenge hym.
The vnhappy tyme & þe same whileÞat Fortune falsly gan to smyle
Vp-on Troyans & bad hem [to] be merye,
For whiche hiȝly þei gan her goddis herie,
Wenyng in Ioye to haue ben assured wele,
No þing aduerting þe turnyng of þe whele
Of hir þat lastiþ stable but a throwe—
Whan men most trust, sche can make a mowe,
Turne hir forhed, & hir face writhe,
(Suche Ioye sche haþe hir doubilnes to kiþe,
And to wrappe hir clernes vnder cloude),
Ageyn whos myȝt no man may hym schrowde—
Whan sche most flateriþ, þan sche is lest to trist:
For in her Ioye þe Troyans litel wist
What sche ment to her confusioun.
267
Wenden of Grekis haue geten ful recur
Of her damages, & euere to haue be sure
Þoruȝ þilke pray þat Parys had[de] wonne,
Þe wykke fame & rumor is y-ronne
With swyfte wynges, of al þat þei han wrouȝt.
To Menelay þe tydyngges wern [y-]brouȝt,
Whils he abood with Nestor at Pyra,
First of þe temple in Cyther[e]a,
How it was spoilled, & þe robberye
Of gold & tresour, & þe tyranye
Vp-on his men be Troyans execute,
Boþe of assaillyng & of al þe sute
Þat on Grekis þei made cruelly,
And how þat þei ne spared outterly
Man nor woman þat com in her weye,
Þat þei ne toke, & ladden as for praye
To her sch[i]ppes, and also of þe fyȝt
A-for þe castel, þat was on þe nyȝt.
And aldirlast he hereth of his wif,
Whom he louede as mykel as his lif—
More tendirly, God wot, a þousand folde.
For whom, astonyed, at hert he wexe as colde
As any ston, and paleth of his hewe.
His hertly wo so inly gan renewe,
Þat first whan he herde hir name sovne,
With-out[e] more anoon he fel a-swovne;
For he ne myȝt endure for to stonde,
Til duke Nestor toke hym by þe honde
And hym awoke of his dedly swowe.
“Allas,” quod he, “why haue I lost, & howe,
Mi lives lust, myn hertly suffisaunce!
A, com now deth and make of my greuance
Fully an ende with þi cruel dart,
Þat wounded am þoruȝ on euery parte—
Myn hert, also, korve in euery veyne
268
Þat be deuorcid fro me, weillawey!
Far-wel my Ioye, farwel myn olde pley!
Now han strangeris of ȝou pocessioun,
Whiche wil to me be ful confusioun.
Allas, I not how þei ȝou cherische or trete,
My faire Eleyne, þat wer to me so mete!
Now ȝe ar gon, pensifhed me slethe—
I may nat waite now but after dethe.”
And aftir þis, amyd of al his wo,
Þis Menelay schope hym for to go
To his regne, but litel þer be-syde;
He axeth hors & seide he wolde ride
Sool to compleyne of þat he felt hym greue.
But al þis while Nestor wil nat leue
To go with hym for consolacioun,
Of frendly riȝt hauyng compassioun,
Hym to comforte with al his ful[le] myȝt,
Ledyng with hym many worþi knyȝt
In-to þe regne of þis Menelaus.
Þan, first of al, þe story telleþ vs,
How þei sent for Agamenoun,
And for Castor to com to hym anoon,
And for Pollux, ȝif it myȝt[e] be;
And whan þei wer comen alle þre,
And saie her broþer in swiche meschef brouȝt,
Almost mordred wiþ his owne þouȝt,
With-oute abood þe wyse Agamenoun
To ȝif hym counforte & consolacioun
Dide his labour & diligence entere,
Seiyng to hym, riȝt as ȝe schal here:
“O broþer myn, what wo, what heuynes,
What dedly sorwe þus inly may oppres
Ȝour knyȝtly hert or trouble ȝoure manhede,
More furiously y-wis þan it is nede;
269
Ȝow for to sorwe and had cause why,
Ȝet, me semeth, by iuste prouidence,
Ȝe schulde sliȝly dissymble ȝoure offence—
Sith eche wiseman in his aduersite
Schulde feyne cher & kepen in secre
Þe inward wo þat bynt hym in distresse—
Be manly force rathest þer compesse
Þe sperit of Ire and malencolie,
Where þe peple it sonest myȝt espie.
It is a doctrine of hem þat be prudent,
Þat whan a man with furie is to-rent,
To feyne chere til tyme he se leyser
Þat [he] of vengaunce kyndle may þe fer;
For sorwe oute-schewid, ȝif I shal nat feine,
Who-so take hede, it doth þinges tweyne:
It causeth frendis for to siȝe sore,
And his enymyes to reioische more—
Þi frende in hert is sory of nature,
Þin enemy glad of þi mysaventure.
Wherfore, in hert, whan wo doth most abounde,
Feyne gladnes þin enmy to confounde,
And schewe in cher as þou rouȝtist nouȝt
Of þing þat is most greuous in þi þouȝt.
And wher þou hast most mater to compleyne,
Make þer good face & glad in port þe feine;
For in-to teris þouȝ þou al distille,
And rende þi silfe, as þou woldest þe spille,
It helpith nat to aleggen þi greuance:
For nouþer honour nor pursut of vengaunce,
With sorwe makyng mow ben execut—
Þouȝ it last ay, þer cometh þere-of no frut.
Men seyn how he þat can dissymble a wrong,
270
And who can ben peisible in his smerte,
It is a tokene he hath a manly herte,
Nat to wepen as wommen in her rage,
Whiche is contrarie to an hiȝe corage.
With word & wepyng for to venge oure peyne,
Be no menys to worschip to attayne;
Lat vs with swerde & nat with wordis fiȝt,
Oure tonge apese, be manhod preve oure myȝt:
Word is but wynde, & water þat we wepe,
And þouȝ þe tempest and þe flodis depe
Of þis two encresen euere-mo,
Þei may nat do but augmente oure wo—
And to oure foon, þer-of whan þei here,
Boþe of oure dool & oure heuy chere,
Al is to hem but encres of Ioye.
Wherfore, broþir, a while doþe a-coye
Þe cruel torment þat byndeþ ȝow so sore;
For in prouerbe it haþ ben said ful ȝore,
Þat þe prowes of a manly knyȝt
Is preued most in meschef, and his myȝt:
To ben assured in aduersite,
Strongly sustene what wo þat it be,
Nat cowardly his corage to submitte
In euery pereil, nor his honour flitte
Þoruȝ no dispeire, but hopen al-wey wel,
And haue a trust, trewe as any stel,
Tacheven ay what he take on honde.
For finally I do ȝou vndirstonde,
Þat of hym silfe who haþ good fantasie
To sette vp-on and putte in Iupartie,
What þat be-falle, [or] hap what hap[pe] may,
Takyng what chaunce wil turnen on his play,
The fyn of whiche gladly is victorie,
271
And tyme is now, to speke in wordis fewe,
O broþir myn, manhod for to schewe,
To pluk vp herte & ȝou to make strong;
And to venge ȝour damages & ȝoure wronge,
We schal echon help & leye to honde—
Kynges, dukes, and lordis of þis londe—
And attonys done oure besynes,
I ȝou behete, ȝour harmys to redresse.
And in dispit of whom þat euere vs lette,
We schal vs loge & oure tentis sette
Euene in þe felde a-fore Troye toun,
And leyne a sege to her distruccioun,
Al-be her-of I sette as now no day.
But, broþir, first, in al þe haste we may,
Lete make lettris, with-oute more sermoun,
To alle þe lordis of þis regioun,
Of þis mater touching ȝoure villenye,
To come to-gidre & schape remedie—
Þis is theffect of al þat I can seyn.”
And þus relessid somwhat of his peyne
Is Menelaus þoruȝ comfort of his broþer;
For whan he sawe it myȝt[e] ben noon oþer,
And of his tale þe kyng made an ende,
Þoruȝ-oute þe londe he dide his letteris sende,
First to his kyn and to his allye
To come to helpe hym of her curtesye.
And first of alle to Menelaus
Cam Achilles, and with hym Patroclus,
And alder-nexte stronge Diomede
And many an oþer to helpen in þis nede.
And alle echon, in open parlement,
Þei wer acordid ful by on assent
To be gouerned as Agamenoun
List to ordeyne in his discrecioun—
Of þis viage þei made hym gouernour,
272
Among hem alle þer was ful vnite
Vp-on Troyans avengid for to be,
And from þis purpos neuer to remewe.
But first, I fynde, Paris for to swe,
Þe viage toke þe worþi breþer tweyne,
Pollux and Castor, to recure Eleyne.
Ȝet neuer-þe-les, as somme bokis telle,
Þat þese kynges no lenger wolde dwelle,
But as fast as Paris was a-goon
Þei toke a schip and folweden a-noon,
With many worþi in her companye;
And dout[e]les, but ȝif bokis lye,
Þat or þei hadde sailed daies þre
To-Troye-ward in þe large se,
Þe tempest roos & wyndes dide awake,
Þe heuene dirke with þe cloudis blake,
Þat han þe day turned in-to nyȝt,
And briȝt[e] Phebus was myrked of his liȝt—
Þe fery leuene and stroke of þe þondre
Smote in þe mast & schiverid it a-sondre.
It was so dirke no liȝt myȝt adawe;
Þe see gan swelle with many sturdy wawe
Þat ryse on hiȝte, large as any mount,
And fille doun & swappid in þe frount
Evene of þe schip, & ploungid it ful lowe—
Now vp, now doun, for-cast & ouer-þrowe
Her schippes werne with tempest to & fro:
Þe fomy water grene, white, and blo
Of feruent boilyng, & as piche eke blak
With storme & wynde, þat al goth to wrake;
So hidously þe blastis at hem dryve,
Þat euery bord gan from oþer ryve,
And al is perschid, þer skapeþ nat a man,
But al attonys, as I reherse can,
Be dede & dreynt with tempest sodeynly—
273
Excepte þe breþre, whiche, as bokis telle,
Þe ton in heuene, þe toþer lowe in helle
Wer lordis made to abide eternaly.
And some feynyn in her poysy,
How þe goddis han hem deified
Hiȝe in heuene and y-stellyfied—
After her schippes wern y-go to wrake—
Þei were made sterris in þe ȝodyak,
And to þe signe transformed outterly,
Whiche of clerkis is callid Gemyny.
Þe whiche signe and constellacioun
Is to Mercurie hous and mansioun,
And is of kynde mene & masculyn,
In whiche þe Egle and also þe Dolphyn
Han her arisyng be reuolucioun;
þe tail also aboue of þe Dragoun
Is exaltat in þe þridde gre
Of Gemyny, whiche signe haþ most pouste
In hond & armys of man—out of doute—
Liche as Lucyna halt hir course aboute.
And in þis wyse wer þe breþre tweyne
To heuene rapt, as poetis feyne,
After þe tempest—ȝe gete no more of me—
For in þis wyse þe Grekis in þe see
An ende made, and þat ful rewfully:
Þis ernest first cam vnhappily
To hem echon, as gynnyng of her wo
And final chaunce to þe breþer two.
The descripcion of þe moste part of princes þat kame with þe Grekis for þe destruccyoun of Troye.
But for-as-moche as Dares FrigiusWas in his boke whilom corious
Þe forme of Troyens & Grekis to discryve,
274
Þe schap, þe forme, and complexioun,
Boþe of þe party of hem of Troye toun,
And of þe Grekis, be good avisement,
In tyme of trewe among hem as he went,
Seyng þe maner of her gouernaunce,
Her port, her chere, with euery circumstance,
Namly of þoo þat wer of hiȝe degre—
He nat for-gat color nor qualite,
Condiciouns, and also her stature—
Al to discrive Dares dide his cure,
In Grekysche tong, be-gynnyng at Eleyne,
Liche as to-forn ȝe han herde me seyne,
Of hir beute and hir semlynes
How ceryously Guydo doth expresse
(Saue he seide, in a litel space,
A strype þer was endelonge hir face,
Whiche, as he writ, be-cam hir wonder wel,
Embelyssching hir beute [e]uerydel,
Like as Dares makeþ discripcioun).
And first he seiþ how kyng Agamenoun
Was of good schap & hiȝe of his stature,
And myȝte in labour at þe best endure—
Vnpacient to lyuen in quiete,
He was to armys so egal and so mete—
Of colour white, & good proporcioun,
And flewmatik of his complexioun,
Discret and hardy, & wonder vertuous,
And of speche riȝt facundious,
And kowde him wel in euery þing demene.
But Menelay of stature was but mene,
Proporcioned atwixe schort and longe,
Worþi in armys, deliuere, & also strong,
And of corage and hert[e] vigerous,
Semly also, and ay more desyrous
To lyue in werre, rather þan in pees.
275
He was riȝt fair and of gret semlynes,
With hawborne her, crispyng for þiknes,
With eyen glawke, large, stepe, and grete,
And brod schuldrid, with brest ful square [and] mete,
Tendure in armys fel and coragous,
And of his loke wonder amerous,
Hiȝe of stature, and large of ȝiftes eke,
And more of strengþe þan any oþer Greke.
And to spende he sette litel charge,
He was of herte so plenteuous & large,
And in the feld passyng chiualrous.
And for to telle forþe of Tantalus,
Of sangwyn hewe, havyng moche of red,
Diuers eyed, ay mevyng in his hed,
Of huge makyng & also of gret strengþe,
Wel answeryng his brede to his lengþe,
Hatyng to stryve where he saw no nede,
Riȝt trewe of worde also, as I rede;
And neuere quarel wolde he take on honde
To fiȝt[e] fore, but he myȝt vndirstonde
Þat it were fully gronded vp-on riȝt,
And þanne he wolde quite him lik a knyȝt.
Oyleus Aiax was riȝt corpulent;
To be wel clad he sette al his entent;
In riche array he was ful corious,
Al-þeiȝe he were of body corsyous,
Of armys gret, with schuldris square & brode,
It was on hym al-most an hors[e] lode,
Hiȝe of stature & boistous in a prees,
And of his speche rude and rekkeles—
Ful many worde in ydel hym asterte,
And but a coward was [he] of his herte.
A-noþer Aiax, Thelamonivs,
Þer was also, discret & vertuous,
Wonder fair and semly to beholde,
276
In compas wyse, rounde as any spere;
And of mvsik was þer noon his pere,
Hauyng a vois ful of melodie,
Riȝt wel entvned as by armonye,
And was inventif for to counterfete
Instrumentis, boþe smale and grete,
In sondry wyse longyng to mvsik.
And for al þis, ȝet had he gret practik
In armys eke, & was a noble knyȝt—
No man more orpid nor hardier to fiȝt
Nor desyrous for to han victorie,
Devoide of pompe, hatyng al veyn glorie,
Al ydel laude, spent & blow in veyn.
Of Vlixes what schal I also seyn?—
Þat was so noble & worþi in his daies,
Ful of wyles and sleiȝty at assayes,
In menyng double and riȝt deceyueable,
To forge a lesyng also wonder able;
With face pleyn he coude make it towe,
Merie wordid, and but selde lowe,
In conseillynge discret & ful prudent,
And in his tyme þe moste elloquent,
And halpe to Grekis often in her nede.
And for to speken of worþi Diomede,
Ful wel compact & growe wel on lenþe,
Of sturdy port and famus eke of strenþe,
Large brestid, & fers also of fiȝt,
And deseyueable of what þat euer he hiȝt—
Hasty, testif, to smyte rek[e]les,
And medlif ay, and but selde in pes,
To his seruantis ful impacient,
And baratous wher þat euer he went,
For litel wroþe of dispocisioun,
277
And had in loue oft[e] sythes his part,
Brennynge at hert wiþ Cupides dart,
And specheles ful oft felt[e] soor.
What schal I seyn [eke] of duke Nestor?—
Of longe stature & wel compact with-al,
With kurbe schuldris & of myddel smal,
In hondis strong, with armys large & rounde,
In counseillyng prudent & wys y-founde;
Whos wordis werne sugrid with plesaunce,
Vp-on his frende hauyng ay remembraunce:
For of his trouþe he ne koude feyne,
But in anger he myȝt hym nat refreyne;
He was so fret wiþ malencolye,
Þat no man myȝt his Ire modefie,
Al-be it laste but a litel space—
Who coude hym suffre, anon it wolde pace,
Liȝtly it cam and liȝtly went a-way.
And Protheselavs was fresche of array,
Wonder semly & of gret bewte—
I trowe a fairer no man myȝt[e] se—
Of good stature and deliuere & liȝt,
No man more swyfte; & to speke of myȝt,
Of his makyng he was passyng strong,
Fers of corage & loth to take a wrong.
And to telle of Neptolonius,
He was of makyng wonder corsious,
Whos her was blak, schynyng as doþ get,
With eyen rounde, brood[e], stepe, and gret,
Large brestid, wiþ a risyng bak,
And in speche stamered whan he spak;
But in causes he coude medle wele,
And in þe lawe ful depe he dide fele,
For al his lust was be-set on plees.
But for to telle of Pallamydes,
Kyng Naulus sone, with-outen any wene,
278
Of manful hert, hardy in bataille,
And desirous his enmy to assaille—
Famylier, curteis, and tretable
In alle his dedis, & inli worschipable,
In ȝifyng large, & passyng of gret fame,
Of whos bounte ful wyde sprange þe name
In many londe, þe story telleþ þus.
And nexte, I fynde how Polydamvs,
Þe worþi Greke, was of gret þiknes,
Of wombe swolle, enbosid with fatnes,
Þat onneþe he myȝt him silfe sustene;
And ȝet of hert he was ful proude & kene,
Riȝt surquedous & ful of pensifnes,
And seld[e] glad, so þouȝt dide hym oppres.
But Machaon, lik as writ Guydo,
Of longe & schort was atwixe two,
Fel, proude, & fers, deuoyde of pacience,
And vengable, who hym dide offence;
And ȝit he was ballid as a cote,
On whos forhede, euene by þe rote,
Þe here was falle & wasted clene awey,
And selde or neuer he wolde slepe a-day.
And ouermore, to tellen of Cryseyde,
Mi penne stumbleþ, for longe or he deyde
My maister Chaucer dide his dilligence
To discryve þe gret excellence
Of hir bewte, and þat so maisterly,
To take on me it were but hiȝe foly,
In any wyse to adde more þer-to;
For wel I wot, anoon as I haue do,
Þat I in soth no þanke disserue may,
Be-cause þat he in writyng was so gay—
And but I write, I mote þe trouþe leue
Of Troye boke, and my mater breue
And ouer-passe and nat go by and by
As Guydo doþ in ordre ceryously.
279
Þoruȝe necligence or presumpcioun:
So am I sette euene amyddes tweyne!
Gret cause haue I & mater to compleyne
On Antropos & vp-on hir envie,
Þat brak þe þrede & made for to dye
Noble Galfride, poete of Breteyne,
Amonge oure englisch þat made first to reyne
Þe gold dewe-dropis of rethorik so fyne,
Oure rude langage only tenlwmyne.
To God I pray, þat he his soule haue,
After whos help of nede I most[e] crave,
And seke his boke þat is left be-hynde
Som goodly worde þer-in for to fynde,
To sette amonge þe crokid lynys rude
Whiche I do write; as, by similitude,
Þe ruby stant, so royal of renoun,
With-Inne a ryng of copur or latoun,
So stant þe makyng of hym, dout[e]les,
Among oure bokis of englische per[e]les:
Þei arn ethe knowe, þei ben so excellent;
Þer is no makyng to his equipolent;
We do but halt, who-so takeþ hede,
Þat medle of makyng, with-outen any drede.
Whan we wolde his stile counterfet,
We may al day oure colour grynde & bete,
Tempre our aȝour and vermyloun:
But al I holde but presumpcioun—
It folweþ nat, þerfore I lette be.
And first of al I wil excuse me
And procede as I haue be-gonne,
And þoruȝ his fauour certeyn, ȝif I konne,
Of Troye boke for to make an ende;
And þer I lefte ageyn I wil now wende,
Vn-to Cryseyde, and þouȝ to my socour
Of rethorik þat I haue no flour
Nor hewes riche, stonys nor perre—
280
Þoruȝ crafty speche to enbrovde with her sleve—
Ȝet for al þat, now I wil not leue,
But ben as bolde as Baiard is, þe blynde,
Þat cast no peril what wey[e] þat he fynde;
Riȝt so wil I stumble forþe of hede
For vnkonnyng, & take no better hede,
So as I can, hir bewte to discriue.
Þat was in soth of alle þo on-lyue
On þe fayrest, þis Calchas douȝter dere,
Þer-to of schap, of face, and of chere,
Þer myȝt[e] [be] no fairer creature:
To hiȝe nor lowe, but mene of stature—
Hir sonnysche her, liche Phebus in his spere,
Bounde in a tresse, briȝter þanne golde were,
Doun at hir bak, lowe doun be-hynde,
Whiche with a þrede of golde sche wolde bynde
Ful ofte syþe of a-custummaunce;
Þer-to sche hadde so moche suffisaunce
Of kyndes wirke, with-outen any were—
[And] Saue hir browes Ioyn[e]den y-fere,
No man koude in hir a lake espien.
And, ferþermore, to speken of hir eyen,
Þei wer so persyng, heuenly, & so clere,
Þat an herte [ne] myȝt hym silf[e] stere
Ageyn hir schynyng, þat þei nolde wounde
Þoruȝ-out a brest, God wot, & biȝonde.
Also sche was, for al hir semlynes,
Ful symple & meke, & ful of sobirnes,
Þe best norissched eke þat myȝt[e] be,
Goodly of speche, fulfilde of pite,
Facundious, and þer-to riȝt tretable,
And, as seiþ Guydo, in loue variable—
Of tendre herte & vnste[d]fastnes
281
And aftir þis, Dares doþe reherse
Amongis oþer, how þe kyng of Perce
Cam to Grekis with many worþi knyȝt
To helpe & furþere with al his ful[le] myȝt.
Þe whiche kyng was of stature longe,
And wonder fat and, as he writ, riȝt stronge;
Whos berd and her, reed as flawme of fire,
With eyen stepe, and feruent of desyre
To haue a-do, and sterne of chere & loke,
And ofte syþes of sodeyn Ire he quoke—
And had wertis plente in his face.
And þus Dares, schortly for to pace,
No more of Grekis writeþ, as I fynde,
But of Troyans for to make mynde,
Ceriously he doþe his stile dresse
Hem to discryue, as I schal expresse.
And first he seith how kyng Priamus
Was of his chere benigne and gracious,
Of hiȝe stature, with lymys sklender & longe,
Delityng moche in musik & in songe;
And specialy he was most desyrous
To heren songis þat wern amerous—
A semly man, and of gret hardynes,
And spake but lowe, as bokis vs expresse:
Devoide of drede, hatyng flaterye,
And alle þat koude ouþer glose or lye,
Trewe of his worde, & to euery wyȝt
He dide pleinly equite and riȝt;
For no mede hym list nat to decline,
And loued erly on morwe for to dyne.
In his tyme on þe worþiest
Of alle kynges, and he þat loued best
Worþi knyȝtes; & alle þat he knewe
Þat manful were and of hert[e] trewe,
He koude cherische, no man half so wele,
282
His grete fredam & largesse eke with al.
And of his sones, for to rekne hem alle,
Þe first of birþe, so as bokis telle,
Was worþi Ector, of knyȝthod spring & welle,
Flour of manhod, of strengþe per[e]les,
Sadde & discret & prudent neuere-þe-les,
Crop & rote, grounde of chiualrie,
Of cher demvre, and of curtesye
He was example—þer-to of sobirnes
A verray merour, & for his gentilnes
In his tyme þe most[e] renomed,
To reknen al, and of goodlyhed
Þe most[e] famus, [and] in pes & werre
Ferþest spoke of, boþe nyȝe & ferre.
On eche part he was so vertuous,
And to be loued þe most gracious,
Of brawn & bonys compact be mesure,
So wel breþid in armys to endure,
So wel parformed be proporcioun,
So quik, so lifly, and of most renoun,
So huge made, so wel growe on lengþe,
So wel complet for to haue gret strengþe,
Þat in þis worlde, ȝif I schal nat feyne,
Was neuer noon þat fully myȝt attayne
To þe prowes of þis worþi knyȝt,
To rekne his hert as wel as his myȝt.
And þer-wiþ-al so wys and avysee,
Þe low[l]iest eke of his degre
To riche & pore, and of wordis fewe.
Vn-to alle suche chere he koude schewe,
Of his presence þat glad was euery wyȝt,
Whan þei at leyser hadde of him a siȝt;
He was so benygne to hem of þe toun,
And to his enmyes lyk a fers lyoun
He koude hym schewe, whan it was to do;
283
To rekene al his labour, half endure:
For þe story doth vs pleyn assure
Þat he was neuer wery in bataille,
Nor feint in hert his fomen to assaille.
Of alle good I fynde he was þe beste;
Prowes & vertu in him wer sette at reste
So passyngly, þat neuer was ne schal
Noon bore of modir to be perigal
To hym of manhod nor of chiualrie:
For alle he passed, but ȝif bokis lye,
In whom Nature was no þing to wyte,
Saue in his tonge he was let a lite;
And, as som auctours make mencioun,
He was sangwyn of complexioun.
And, ferþermore, his broþer Dephebus,
Lik as I fynde, and also Elenus,
Were liche Priam, þat sothly of hem þre
Was hard tespien any diuersyte
Of schap, of forme, or of countenaunce,
Saue of age, þer was no variaunce:
Her fader olde and þei wer ȝong & liȝt.
And Dephebus was a worþi knyȝt,
And had in armys fame & excellence;
And Elenus in clergie and science
Was wel expert, & toke but litel hede
Of alle þe werre, knyȝthod, nor manhede.
But Troylus schortly ȝif I schal discryve,
Þer was of hert non manlier on lyue,
Nor more likly in armys to endure:
Wel woxe on heiȝte and of good stature,
Ȝong, fresche, & lusty, hardy as a lyoun,
Deliuere and strong as any champioun,
And perigal of manhod and of dede
He was to any þat I can of rede
284
For to fulfille þat longeþ to a knyȝt.
Þe secunde Ector for his worþines
He callid was, and for his hiȝe prowes
Duryng þe werre, he bare hym ay so wel;
Þer-to in loue as trewe as any stele,
Secre and wys, stedefast of corage,
Þe most[e] goodly also of visage
Þat myȝt[e] be, and benigne of cher,
With-oute chaunge, & of on hert entere.
He was alwey feithful, iust, & stable,
Perseueraunt, and of wil inmvtable
Vp-on what þing he onys set his herte,
Þat doubilnes myȝt hym nat peruerte—
In his dedis he was so hool and pleyn;
But on his foon, þe sothe for to seyn,
He was so fers þei myȝt him nat withstonde
Whan þat he hilde his bloodly swerde on hond:
Vn-to [þe] Grekis deth and confusioun,
To hem of Troye shelde and proteccioun;
And his knyȝthod schortly to acounte,
Þer myȝt in manhod no man him surmounte,
Þoruȝ þe worlde þouȝ men wolde seke,
To reknen al, Troyan nouþer Greke,
Noon so namyd of famus hardynes,
As bokis olde of hym bere witnes,
Excepte Ector, þer was nat swiche anoþer.
And aftir hym, to speken of his broþer,
I mene Paris, most passyng of bewte,
Þat in þis worlde no man myȝt[e] se,
In verray soþe, a more semly knyȝt;
For as I rede, þat he, be title of riȝt,
Of fairnes bare awey þe flour—
With lokkis ȝelwe lik gold were of colour.
285
Hauyng in hunting a [ful] gret appetite;
And as Dares likith hym discryue,
Þe best archer on þer-of a-lyve;
And of his hond was eke a noble knyȝt,
A manly [man], deliuere and of good myȝt;
And in þe werre preued wel he was.
And, as I rede, þe Troyan Eneas,
As myn auctor listeth to endite,
Was wel brested and of body lite,
And bare in Troye wonder gret estat;
In his werkis discret and temperat,
And hadde a fame of passyng elloquence,
Wys of counseil and of gret sapience,
Most renomed also of lettrure,
Delytyng moche in bokis & scripture,
And euere glad, boþe of port & chere,
Sterne of his loke, with persyng eyen clere.
And amonge alle dwellyng in þe toun,
To speke of goodys and pocessioun,
Of castels and towres gret plente,
I fynde, soþely, þat noon in þat cite
Ne myȝt atteyne vn-to his reches;
And hadde also, for al his worþines,
Of gold and mebles passing gret tresour.
And his felawe, he, dawn Anthenor,
Was sclendre & longe, & of gret dalyaunce,
And circumspect in al his gouernaunce,
Wel be-louyd also of Priamus,
And of wordis wonder copious,
Resownyng ay in-to myrþe and pley.
And he was Iapyng al þe longe day
Among his feris and in companye,
So driely þat no man myȝt espie,
So sobir he was in his contenaunce,
286
To here hym talke, whan þat he was glad;
And, al-be-it þat he of port was sad,
Ȝit al his speche ful of bourdis was.
And his sone, callid Pollydamas,
Was lik his fader of stature & of mak,
I-thewed wel, þat þer was no lak
In his persone, gentil and riȝt trewe,
Wonder strong and pale also of hewe,
And to Ire sterid sodeynly,
Al-be in wordis he kept hym couertly—
But al his hete passe wolde anoon.
And to telle of kyng Meryon,
Large brestid, & of his makyng al
Þe best[e] compact and þe most[e] tal
Of schap and forme þat men koude fynde,
And so wel parformed vp by kynde,
Þat non was lik to hym, nyȝe nor fer:
His lokkis ȝelwe, & crispyng was his her—
Stille of his port, and gentil with to play,
And inly strong maystries for to assay;
Wonder curteis, to no wiȝt dispitous,
And wrouȝt in armys dedis meruelous,
As in þis boke her-after schal be sene.
Nowe after hym, to Eccuba þe quene,
Lik þe story, my style y mote encline—
Whos lymys alle dide more decline
To schap of man þan to womanhede,
As seith Guydo; but in werke and dede
Sche was in soth þe most[e] womanly,
Þe best avised, and most prudently
In hir dedis koude hir silfe gouerne,
Þat mannys with myȝt[e] nat discerne
To fynde a bet, dout[e]les, þan sche—
So trewe example of femynyte
Sche was in soþe, and to euery wiȝt
287
To pore also pitous and merciable,
And vn-to nedy wonder charitable.
Þe wif of Ector, hir douȝter in lawe,
After hir lore mochel dide drawe,
Andronomecha, þe feiþful trewe wyf,
So good, so iust, þe whiche in al hir lyf
In honeste dide hir moste delite—
Longe of hir schap, with brestis faire & whyte,
With rody chekis, ennewed by mesure,
With persyng eyen, of angelik figure—
Lik gold hir tressis, & rosyn lippis rede
I-liche fresche, of colour no þing dede.
Þer-to sche was of chere þe goodlieste
To riche & pore, and spake alwey þe beste
Of euery wiȝt, ay helping what sche myȝt,
Þat no man trist went out of hir siȝt;
And ouer þis, euery gentil-man
Sche forþre wolde in al þat euer sche can,
And gladly euer dide hir dilligence
To gete grace to hem þat dide offence:—
Þis was hir vsage and condicioun,
Sche was so ful of compassioun
Þat women alle myȝten of hir lere.
And Cassandra, hir ovne douȝter dere,
Was of stature wonder wommanly,
Of colour white, and þer-with riȝt semly
(Saue in her face in soundri places were
Many wertys growyng here & þere);
And al hir Ioy and felicite
Was to kepe hir virginite;
And freelte þat wommen han of kynde,
Þoruȝ vertu moral sche put out of mynde,
Of alle foly fleyng occasioun;
And ay in studie & contemplacioun
288
And specially of astronomye;
Of prophesye a spirit had[de] sche;
And somme men seyn sche was on of þe þre,
Of þe women þat Cebile bare þe name,
Of whom þe renoun floureth & þe fame
Vn-to þis day, and is as ȝet but grene.
And for to telle of ȝong[e] Pollicene,
And discriue hir bewte vp and doun,
It were in soþe a presumpcioun
To take on me now so gret a þing,
To clymbe so hiȝe & passe my konnyng,
Siþen Nature in forgyng of þis mayde,
Hir konnyng al outterly assaied
To make hir fair aboue eche creature,
And seide proudly: “se how I, Nature,
Whan [þat] me list, enbelissche can my wirke:
Liche as Phebus among þe cloudis dirke
Is passyng clere, so in comparisoun,
I can my wirke and operacioun
Riȝt as me list adourne & make fair,
So peint & florische, it schal nat apeire;
And my colours so craftily dispose,
Of þe lillie and þe fresche rose,
And so ennew þat þei schal nat fade,
But ay ben on; and in þis wyse I made
My dere douȝter, ȝe wite whom I mene,
Þe ȝonge, fresche, faire Policene,
A-skans þat non can þis crafte but I!”
Þus in hir wirke bosted outerly
Nature hir silf, whan sche þis maide wrouȝt,
As sche þat fully in hir hert[e] þouȝt
Abouen alle oþer to maken hir excelle,
And of bewte to be þe verray welle.
And þer-with-al in schap nor [in] stature
Ne was no lak, I dar ȝou wel assure;
And God aboue ȝaf hir souereynte
In alle thewes, and wolde sche scholde be
289
With folsomnes of al goodlyhede,
So passyngly, þat it wer ydelnes
Me to preswme by and by texpresse
Hir beute al, it wer a vayn travail;
For wel I wote myn englische wolde faile,
In whiche mater to talke felyn[g]ly,
Who-euere it can, certeyn it am nat I.
Þerfore I passe, & streȝt now wil I go
To my mater; for Dares of no mo
In al his boke maketh mencioun
Of hem of Grece nor of Troye toun:
In special he putte no mo in mynde
Þan ȝe haue herde, saue, as ȝe schal fynde
In þis story, whan it cometh þer-to,
Of hir knyȝthod & who þat best hath do,
Lastyng þe sege, þe maner euerydel.
And riȝt anon to scharp[e] my poyntel
I wil me dresse, þis story to entrete,
Of al þe werre to telle ȝou þe grete.
Here folowynge is declarede the grete noumbre of shippes that the Grekys assamblede in the havene of Athenes, bysidis a grete navye that kame to them whene þay wer at Troye.
The tyme neiȝeþ aftir þis nat ȝore,Þat breme wynter with his frostis hore
Gan taswagen of his bitter colde;
Whan Appollo passid was þe holde
Of þe signe þat we calle Aquarie,
And in þe Fissche, fer in Februarie
I-ronne was to-ward þe Ariete;
And þat sesoun, with his feynt[e] hete,
On hillis hiȝe gan his bemys smyte,
Makyng þe snow with faire flakis whyte
In-to water kyndely relente,
Whiche from aboue to þe valey went,
290
Þe grene mede gan to ouerflowe,
And þe yis gan stoundemele distille
Doun fro þe hil þe brokis for to fille
With fomy stremys of þe wawes smale,
By broke bankis as þei dide avale;
Whan lusty ver, with his ȝonge grene,
Is recounforted by þe sonne schene,
Whiche lite and lite his hewes ay amendeþ,
Vp in his spere as Titan vp ascendeth;
Whan Marche aprocheþ, & branchis oueral
Gynne buddyn out, & þe equinoccial
Of wer is halwed, þe sesoun amerous,
Whan þe Grekis, proude & coraious,
With hool þe flour of her chiualrie
Assemblid werne, & holly her navie
In þe hauene þat was most of fame,
And of Atthenes þat tyme bare the name,
Y-gaddred was, by assent echon
Towardis Troye to seilen & to gon—
So gret [a] noumbre, þat syth þe world began,
Is nat remembrid of no maner man,
Þat to-gidre in a companye
Was met y-fere so passyng a navye
Of manly men, who so liste take hede,
In þis story as ȝe schal after rede.
And by and by to make discripcioun,
Myn auctor telleth howe Agamenoun,
Þe worþi kyng, an hundrid schippis brouȝt
With worþi knyȝtis stuffid as hem ouȝt;
And Menelaus, on whom lay most [þe] charge,
Hath with him brouȝt sixti schipes large
Out of his londe þat callid is Sparten;
And from Boece, ful of manly men,
Cam fifty schipes, þe story telleþ þus,
With Prothenor and with Archelaus;
And from þe lond, callid Sycomenye,
291
Of þe duke þat hiȝte Achalapus,
With whom was eke, ful fresche & desirous,
Helymux þe erle, þe worþi knyȝt;
And fifty schipes, ena[r]med for to fyȝt,
With him brouȝt þe kyng Epistrofus,
Only with helpe of kyng Cedyus;
And Thelamoun, whom Aiax som men calle,
Ful renomed, for to reknen alle,
Hath fifty schipes brouȝt to þis Iourne
From Solemyne, his royal chef cyte,
With erlis, dukis, & many worþi knyȝt,
Eueryche of hem in stele armyd briȝt.
And duke Teuter, with Amphiacus,
Erl Darion, and noble Theseus—
Þis ilke foure, ful worþi of renoun,
In þis viage cam with Thelamoun.
And olde Nestor, cruel of hert & þouȝt,
Oute of Pilon haþ fifty schipes brouȝt.
Þe kyng of Daymes, þat ful worþi was,
And eke þe kyng þat hiȝt also Thoas
Brouȝten with hem in her companye
An C schipes knyȝtly for to guye;
And Thelamoun, y-callid Cilleus,
Þat was in armys fel & dispitous,
With him brouȝt from his londe so ferre
Sixe & þritty schipes for þe werre.
Amphimacus & kyng Polibete
Þritti schipes brouȝt[e] to þe flete
From Calcedoyne; and Meryoun, þe kyng,
Wiþ Ydumeus hadde in her ledyng
Foure score schipes with hem oute of Crete;
And Vlixes wiþ Grekys dide mete
With fifti schipes stuffid oute of Trace,
Towardis Troye proudly for to pace.
Duke Mellyus, ful of manly men,
292
And, ouermore, þe duke Perotacus
And þe duke namyd Prothisalus,
To þe hauene þat callid was Athene,
Brouȝt fifty schipes, enarmid briȝt & schene,
From Philiarcha, þe strong myȝty Ile.
And Methaon, as Guydo doth compile,
Wiþ his broþer Polidris also,
From her contre Trycianyco,
Brouȝt xxiiti schipes, as I fynde;
And from Phices, as it is made mynde,
With Achilles cam fifti ful by noumbre;
And from Rodon, Troyens to encombre,
Cam xxti schippis with kyng Thelap[ol]us;
And with þe duke þat hiȝt Antipus,
Oute of þe londe þat Hesida men calle,
Of whiche þe folke be nyȝe cherlis alle,
With sail crossyd ageyn þe briȝt[e] heuene,
In noumbre cam schipes eke eleuene;
And with hem was, of name ful famus,
Þe worþi duke, callid Amphymacus.
And Polibethes, þe strong myȝti kyng,
Fifty schipis brouȝt at his comyng,
Oute of Richa, þe noble regioun;
And with þis kyng, ful worþi of renoun,
Was Losius þe duke, eke as I rede;
And, as I fynde, þe noble Diomede,
Of schipis grete (I speke of no smal barge)
Hath with hym brouȝt from Calidoyn & Arge
Foure score in noumbre, sothely þis no tale;
And Thelemus and myȝti Euryale,
Two manly men & in armys sage,
Wiþ Diomede cam in þis viage.
And Polyphebus brouȝt[e] schipis seuene,
293
And Prothoylus, as I can specefie,
Brouȝt fifty schipis vn-to [t]his navie
From Demenesa, þe myȝti regioun;
And Carpenor, as made is mencioun,
Brouȝt fifti eke from Capadie his contre,
A gret provynce, of whiche kyng was he.
Trearyus, of Beysa lord and kyng,
Brouȝt xxiiti also in his comyng;
And finally, ȝif I schal nat lye,
Ful many schip was in þis navie—
Mo þan Guydo maketh rehersaile,
Toward Troye with Grekis for to saile.
For as Omer in his discripcioun
Of Grekysche schipis makeþ mencioun,
Schortly affermyng, þat man was neuer borne
Þat swych a noumbre of schippis saw to-forne—
Countid þe schipis þat Palamydes
Brouȝt with hym her noumbre to encrese—
Þat whan þese lordis a-forn-seid euerychon,
Kynges, dukes, and erlis alle in on
Assemblid wern, wiþ-outen any wene,
Afore þe hauene þat callid is Athene,
Þe famous kyng, grete Agamenoun,
So wys, so worþi, & of so hiȝe renoun,
As he þat was prince and gouernour
Of Grekis hoste, anon dide his labour,
His besy cure and wakir dilligence,
By hiȝe avis and inward prouidence
To delibre wysly in þis nede
What were to do or þat he procede
In þis mater, castyng vp and doun
And reuoluyng of hiȝe discrecioun,
Þat he may so begynnen þat þe ende
294
Holly her purpos þoruȝ no rakilnes,
Ne þoruȝ noon hast, with-oute avisenes,
So þat þei may a-forn so wysely se,
Þat finally in felicite
Þei may acomplische her purpos in certeyn.
And so þis kyng, vp-on a large pleyn,
Out of þe cite but litel fro þe stronde,
With his lordis wil for no þing wonde
To haue a conseil, þis wyse Agamenoun,
Makyng a-noon a convocacioun
Of swyche as wern most gret in special,
He sittyng first in his se royal,
And his lordis eueryche in his se,
Like as þei wern of hiȝe or low degre;
And al tumulte stinted, and silence
Was þoruȝ þe pres, to ȝif hym audyence,
Þanne he anon, in ful sobre wyse,
Began his tale, as I schal deuyse.
Howe prudently Agamenon coragyde his lordys ageyns the Troyans.
“Sirs,” quod he, “I praye ȝou takeþ hede,Þat be so noble and so renomed
Boþe of wisdam and of worþines,
Of manhode eke and of hiȝe prowes,
Þat of knyȝthod þe report & þe fame
Þoruȝ-oute þe world reboundeþ to ȝour name:
For dout[e]les þe flour of chiualrie
Men may now fynde in þis companye;
For who sawe euer of manly men y-fere,
To-gidre met, as þer ben now here—
So ȝonge, so fresche, so coraious also,
295
Or so likly, sith þe worlde began,
With-oute raskaile so many knyȝtly man,
Of kynges, dukes, and many anoþer lorde,
As be now here of wil & on accorde,
And of on hert assemblid in þis place,
Þat ȝif Fortune & goddis, of her grace
Be nat be-hinde oure Iourne to apreve,
We may nat faille oure purpos to acheve:
For, I deme hym pleynly in a rage,
Or wers þan wod, þat durste þis viage
In any wyse perturben, or preswme
To take ageyn vs, ouþer to asswme
Be myȝt on hym of malys to excite
Our worþines—wer it neuer so lyte—
Vs to prouoke to Ire, or doon offence,
Þat we ne schulde, be mortal recompense,
Aquyte his mede, as it liþe in oure myȝt,
Þat han among vs so many a worþi knyȝt—
Amongis whiche an hundrid & ȝit mo
I koude chese able for to go,
Be manly force & knyȝtly suffysance,
To take on hym for to do vengaunce
Vp-on Troyans be hym silf allone—
For whiche þat we be gadrid now echone—
Þat with his meyne were sufficient
To execute þe somme of his entent
And it acomplische in felicite—
Þe cause, I mene, for whiche þat alle we
Assemblid ben, boþe hiȝe and lowe.
And with al þis, to ȝou is nat vnknowe
Howe schamefully Troyens han vs grevid,
Prouokid vs & wilfully y-mevid
296
Of wrongis don, with al oure force & myȝt.
Wherfore, lete vs be on assent & wille,
Settyn to han, as it is riȝt and skylle,
Redres to fynde of þat we now compleyne,
And of oon herte done oure besy peyne
Vp-on Troyens a werre for to make.
And I suppose, we schul hem so a-wake,
Þat þei schal lerne, or we þen[ne]s wende,
To remembre to þe worldes ende
How þei her-after schal dur take on honde
For to preswme in Grece more to londe,
Or to be bolde while þei haue lif or space
Ageyn[es] Grekis more for to trespace:
For whos offence, as who seyþe do but late,
With-Inne oure herte, with so brennyng hate,
Þe feruent hete and þe gredy Ire
Fro day to day so settiþ vs a-fire,
Þat it reneweþ þe constreynt of oure peyne
So inwardly, ȝif I schal nat feyne,
We mote of resoun of so hiȝe greuaunce
Our silf enforce for to do vengaunce,
As riȝt requireth, and oure iust[e] sorwe
Compelleth vs, boþe eve and morwe,
On Troyans oure harmes to be-wreke.
And for to stop tonges þat so speke
To oure repref and to oure vilenye,
We most attonys schape remedie,
Þat oure foon hen[ne]s-forþe may drede
For to do wers to vs, as God forbede,
In tyme commyng, ȝif þoruȝ oure pacience
We liȝtly suffre her importable offence
To passe forþe, and take of it noon hede.
Sith neuer ȝit of Grekis koude I rede,
Þat any man dide repref to her name,
Þat iustly myȝt rebounde to her schame,
With-oute þis, þat þei it quitte ageyn
297
Þat no man myȝt of hem seyn or þis
In any wyse or report a-mys.
Ne we schal nat dissymulen in þis cas,
With cher oppressed, nor with dredful face
To lete slyde or liȝtly ouer-go
Þe grete offencis þat were so late do,
Whiche wolde turne vn-to vs and ours
To gret reprefe, & to oure successoures
In tyme comyng, & schamefully be spoke,
How þat Grekis durste nat be wroke
Vp-on her foon—þe whiche may nat be,
I ȝou ensure, sith þat alle we
Ben of oon wil to reforme oure wrong,
And þer-with-al so myȝty & so strong,
Þat who is he þat koude in brede & lengþe
A-riȝt reherse our power & our strengþe,
Or who durste euer oure worþines assaile
Þat he ne schulde, with-oute any faile,
Repente in hert, or at þe ende rewe—
Saue Troyans, þis oþer day of newe,
Of wilfulnes, in a foly rage
In-to oure londe maden a viage,
Vnwar of vs, & with her praye hom went;
Þe whiche þei schal ful hastily repent,
For her trespas and gret offencioun:
For al þe worlde knoweþ vp and doun,
But late agon how Grekis but a fewe
Vp-on Troyens her power dide schewe
And slowe her kyng, callid Lamedoun,
Fadir to Priam, now kyng of þat toun,
And fordide touris and cite,
And with hem ladde in captiuite,
From Grekis swerde swiche as hem list spare,
Þat among vs in seruitude and care
Compleyne her harme whiche may nat be recurid.
298
Ageyn vs alle to holden chaumpartye,
Þat han so worþi in oure companye;
For it is likly a þousand to acheue
Þat four or five so liȝtly myȝt[e] preue.
And ȝit o þing aferme wel I dar,
Of oure comyng Troyens ar wel war
And don her labour & her dilligence
Ageyn[e]s vs to make resistence
With al her myȝt—I knowe it oute of doute—
And gadre frendis in contres al aboute
To helpen hem & strengþe hem in her nede,
Vs to wiþstonde, ȝif þei myȝt[e] spede.
But finally, o þing I consaille,
From þis hauene or we ferþer saille,
Þat we may be þe more fortunat,
Of oon assent to make ambassiat,
And prudently, or we ferþer wende,
In-to Delos in al hast þat we sende—
Whiche is an yle a litel here be-syde—
More discretly our Iourne to provide,
Þat we may han þe better hap & grace
Of Appollo, patroun of þat place—
To haue of hym, ȝif þat we may spede,
Fynal answer in þis grete nede
Of oure expleyt how þat it schal falle,
Ȝif it so be ȝe wil assenten alle
To þis conseil, þe meste and eke þe leste.”
And þei echon þouȝten for þe beste
To condiscende to þis conclusioun
With-outen any contradiccioun;
And alle attonys, with-outen any drede,
Þei prayse his counseil & his wyse rede;
And þer-vp-on, discretly, as þei ouȝte,
As seiþe þe stori, euene þus þei wrouȝt.
299
Howe Agamenon, by þe avyce of al þe princes of Grece, sent Achilles and Pirodus into Delphos, to haue answere of Apollo, whidere thay shulde haue þe victory of þe Troyens or no. And here-aftire is declarid, howe ydolatrye and fals godes had ther bygynnenge; And how Calchas kam to þe same Ille.
After þe tyme þat AgamenounConcludid haþ fully his resoun,
As ȝe han herde, & his sentence fyned,
Þe Grekis ben of herte ful enclined,
And with o vois acordid pleynly þus,
Þat Achilles and also Pirrodus,
For comoun profit, sith[en] þei wer sage,
Schal take on hem þe charge of þis message,
To Appollo for answere for to goon;
And to schip þei hem haste anoon
And seile furþe be þe large se
Toward Delphos, and in prosperite
Þei ben aryued & I-com to londe.
Þe whiche Ile, as I vndirstonde,
And as myn auctor seith, with-oute les,
Haueth his syyt amonge[s] Cyclades,
Wher men with rokkis haue so moche a-do,
Amyd þe see callid Elespontico.
Of whiche Ile to make discripcioun,
I mote a while make digressioun
Fro my mater, as myn auctor doth;
For in þis Ile, Ysidorus in soth
Reherseþ pleynly how Latona, þe quene,
Appollo firste, and Diane þe schene
I-childid haþe, by Iubiter her lord,
Whan he and Iuno wer[e]n at discord—
As writ Ovide—for a litel while.
And so by-fil, in þis litel Ile
Þer was a temple whilom dedicat
300
In his worschipe, of olde fundacioun,
Þat was honoured with grete deuocioun,
Be-cause Appollo with his bemys clere,
After þe flood, firste þere dide appere
To schewe his hornys, raþer þere & sone,
And Diane eke, þat callid is þe mone.
Of whiche schewyng þis Ile bereþ þe name
In-to þis day, þat is of so grete fame—
Only be aperyng of þis ilke tweyne:
For Delos is in Greke no more to seyne
Þan a schewyng or an apparence.
And þus be-gan þe grete reuerence
To Appollo first, and þe honour eke
To hym y-do of so many Greke,
And to his suster þat callid is Dyane,
Þe pale mone, þat can so wexe and wane,
And callid is of paynymys a goddesse,
Þat whilom was in wode an hunteresse.
And þis lady, with þe sonne her broþer,
Of þis Ile haue lordschip & non oþer,
Only for þei at her natiuite
Schewid her liȝt firste in þat contre.
Þe whiche Ile Grekis also calle
Ortigia, in her language alle,
Be-cause curlews wer þer first I-seyn:
For Ortigias is no more to seyn
Þan a curlew, in grew, I vndirstonde;
For þei were firste engendrid in þat londe.
And Appollo is callid eke Tytan,
Þat in his tyme so moche worschip wan,
Longe to-forne or he was made a sterre,
With Iubiter whan þat he hilde werre.
And he also y-callyd is Phebus,
301
For of Pheton he hadde þe victorie
Whan he him slowȝ, to his encres of glorie—
Þe grete serpent here in erþe lowe—
Wiþ his arwis and his myȝti bowe.
Of whiche conquest þe gret[e] god Cupide
Had envie, and euene þoruȝ þe syde
He woundid hym, depe to þe herte
With þe arwe of golde, þat made him sore smerte.
And of Pheton, þat Phebus made fyne,
Com Phetonysses, þat konne so devine—
I mene women þat ben devyneresses
Þoruȝ dede men, þis false sorceresses,
As oon whilom reisede Samuel
For loue of Saule, þe Byble can ȝou telle.
And in his temple large, longe, and olde,
Þer was a statue al of purid golde,
Ful gret and hiȝe, & of huge weiȝte,
And þer-in was, þoruȝ þe deuels sleiȝte,
A spirit vnclene, be false illusioun,
Þat ȝaf answere to euery questioun—
Nat þe ydole, dovmbe as stok or stoon.
And þus þe peple, deceyued euerychon,
Were by þe fend brouȝt in gret errour,
To done worschip & swyche false honour,
With sacrifise & cursed mawmentrie.
And in þis wyse began ydolatrie,
As in þis place to tellen I me caste,
And how longe it abode and laste,
Compendiously I purpose to discryve—
Gynnyng & ende, as ȝe schal here blyve,
Wiþ-outen any ambyguite.
For at þe birþe and natiuite
Of Crist Iesu, at þe incarnacioun,
Alle þe ydoles brast and fel[le] doun,
And vanisched, & wer brouȝt to nouȝt,
302
Þoruȝ his malis & cruelte horrible,
As holy writ recordeþ & þe Bible.
For whiche pursut and persecucioun,
Þer dide apere, be a visioun,
An holy angel to Ioseph as he slep,
And bad hym ryse & also taken kep
Vn-to þe childe, and also to Marie,
And goon his way, or Herode him espye,
In-to Egypt, þe grete regioun,
Lik as þe gospel makeþ mencioun.
And riȝt anoon, as he cam to londe,
Þer was non ydole vp-riȝt myȝt[e] stonde,
But to-schiuerede vn-to pecis smale—
Þis holy writ, pleinly, and no tale,
As was recorded first of Isaie,
How þat oure lorde on an esy skye
Ascende schulde & holde furþe his weye
Toward Egypt, & þer-wiþ schulde deye
Al mawmetrie, and no lenger duelle.
But as þe Iewes recorde of Ysmael,
Þat he was first þat mawmetrie fonde,
And made of clay an ydole with his honde,
And as peynymys write & tellen vs
Þat aldirfirst was Promotheus
Þat fond ydolis, schortly to conclude;
For simulacrum cometh of similitude—
Þat is no þing pleynly but liknes
Made after man, his ymage to expresse,
Vn-to whiche paynymys in her guyse,
With false honour & cursyd sacrifise,
Be-gonne first þis ryt for drede of man.
And somme seyn, how Belus first began
Swiche fals[e] worschip & suche mawmetrie,
In her bokis as clerkis specefie,
Þat of Assirie was lord & gouernour,
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Þat Nynus hiȝt, an ymage dide make
To be worschipte only for his sake—
Al of brent gold, be fals affeccioun,
And sette it vp for consolacioun,
And for a mynde and a memorial,
Vn-to þe whiche, with hert[e], wil, and al,
Of ygnoraunce and of fleschly love
He dide honour, as to God above,
In his templis, most of excellence,
And made his peple to do reuerence,
And seide in heuene he was deified,
Þat of no man durst[e] be denyed.
Til after sone but a lytel whyle,
A wickid spirit, folkis to be-gyle,
In þis ydole entrid to abyde,
And ȝaf answer vp-on euery side
To þe peple of what him list demaunde;
And þei ageyn, what he wil commaunde
Obeye fully—þe folke of al Assirie—
Whiche vn-to God dide gret Iniurie,
Makyng þe peple in suche errour falle.
And somme Belus & somme Bel hym calle,
And somme Balym & somme Belphegor,
And fil in errour alwey more & more—
And Belȝebub he named was also,
Whiche name is made of wordis two:
Of Bel & ȝebub, þat þus signefie—
For Bel is god, and ȝebub is a flye—
Þan Belȝebub to-gidre specefies,
Ioyned in on, þe grete god of flyes.
And of þis feyned fals ydolatrie
Gan al þe worlde worschip mawmetrie;
For somme Satorn “god of goddis alle”
Gan in her errour falsly for to calle,
Þat was whilom þe myȝti kyng of Crete,
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Þat in heuene haþ so large a spere.
And as poetis in her fablis lere,
Þat he be-forn, þoruȝ his sapience,
Sawe in his dyvyne providence
Howe a sone schulde of hym discende,
And of Iuno þe goddesse, as he wende,
Þat schulde hym pleinly from his regne expelle
And suffren him no lenger for to duelle
In his kyngdam, whan he com to age—
Wher-of Satorn fil in swiche a rage,
Þat he wil schape remedie þer-fore,
Byddyng his wyf, þat whan þe childe wer bore
Þat sche to hym schulde it bring a-noon,
In stede wher-of to hym sche brouȝt a ston—
To saue hir chylde sche dide hir besynes—
And þis Satorn, þoruȝ his gredynes,
Þe ston deuoureþ in his malencolye.
And þus Satorn, but ȝif bokis lye,
Hadde sonys þre, a douȝter, & no mo:
Iubiter, Neptunus, and Pluto.
But Iubiter grattest was of name,
Most renomed & worþiest of fame
Among paynyms, as it is verefied;
For þei so hiȝe han hym magnyfied,
Þat þei hym calle “god of fire & eyr,”
Nexte to Satorne borne for to be heyr.
And nexte to hym, in bokis as I rede,
Is god of bataille, myȝti Mars þe rede;
And nexte Appollo, so cler, so schene & briȝt,
Þe daies eye & voider of þe nyȝt,
Cherischer of frut, of herbe, flour, & corne—
Þe whiche god, liche as is seid a-forne,
In Delos is worschipte and honoured.
And after, Venus, þat often haþ socoured
Many louere, þe faire, lusty quene,
And hem alleggid of hir woundis grene,
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As sche þat is goddes of many lond,
And al þe worlde haþe in hir demeyne
Fast enbracid in hir firy cheyne—
I mene þe lady þat callid is Venus.
And nexte in ordre is Mercuryus,
Þat in speche hath most excellence
Of rethorik and sugrid elloquence;
Of musik, songe, and of armonye
He hath lordschipe and hool þe regalye.
Nexte þe mone, þat wexe can & wane,
Callid Lucyna and also eke Dyane,
Þat in Delos hath hir mansioun,
Lik as to-forn is maked mencioun—
Now ful of liȝt, now hornyd pale is sche,
Lady of chaunge and mutabilite,
Þat selde in on halt hir any tyme;
And so fare þei þat ben born in hir clyme,
Þat ay delite in þingis þat ben newe,
Whos hert is clad in many sondry hewe,
So þei be diuers in her affecciouns.
And in þis wyse, in sondri regiouns,
Of mawmetrie is þe venym ronne,
Lik as clerkis wel deuyse konne:
For, as I fynde, þe Mawricyens
Worschip Iulam, and Egypciens
Honouren Ysis, after her konnyng,
Whilom douȝter of Ynachus þe kyng,
Þat tauȝt hem first hir lond to ere & sowe,
And also lettris for to rede and knowe,
And in lettrure to sette her besynes—
For whiche þing þei calle hir a goddes.
And Iubiter honoured is in Crete,
Where he whilom hilde his souereyn sete,
And on hem leyde many diuers charge,
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And he was lord of eyr, of lond, & see,
His royal kyngdam deuidyng in-to þre:
In þe hiest hym silfe doth contune,
And hool þe se he ȝaf vn-to Neptune,
And laste þe erþe, to holde his se royal,
He ȝaf to Pluto, þat god is infernal;
And alderlast, whan he was stellified,
Þis Iubiter was moste magnified
Of hem of Crete, a-bouten ouer al,
To whom þei made for a memorial
A large tombe and a statue a-lofte,
And hym honoured in her ritis ofte
With encens and oþer sacrifice.
And of þis mater ferþer to deuise,
Þe Latynys wiþ besy dilligence
In her rytis dide reuerence
To þe goddis—ȝif it be credible—
I-callid fawny, þat ben Invisible,
And han her duellyng in þe wodis grene,
Al-be þat men her figure may nat sene.
And of Romeyns ferþer to devine,
Þei most in honour han hir god Quyryne,
Þe whiche whilom, as bokis tellen vs,
Amongis hem was callid Romulus,
Þat bilt[e] first þe wallis of þe toun;
And from an hirde he cam to swiche renoun
Þoruȝ his manhod & his worþines.
Þe spere of whom, as bokis seyn expresse,
As he þe hed picched in þe grounde,
It gan anon, lik as it is founde,
To florische & floure & buddyn by myracle,
And of nature had[de] noon obstacle
To wexe grene with fresche blomys newe.
And for þe manhod þat men in hym knewe,
For his knyȝthod and his grete fame,
Þe worþi knyȝtes of Rome bare þe name
After hym, & were querytes callid,
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Amonge þe goddis, and y-deifyed.
And þus Romeyns han hym glorified,
As for her god, with gold & gret expencis.
And, as I rede, þe Athenyenses
Of hool[e] herte chosen for to serue
To þe goddes þat callid is Mynerue,
And Pallas eke, wiþ hir cristal schelde,
Þat with Neptunus evene amyd þe felde
Helde chaumpartye, with wommen on hir syde;
And he with men, ful sirquedous in pride,
Defendiþ hym for ȝeving of þe name
Of Athenes, a cite most of fame—
Þis to seyn, wheþer he or sche
Schulde of riȝt name þe cite—
Til it be-fil, as þei gonne stryue,
Sodeynly þer sprang a fair olyue
For Pallas part, grene & fair blosmyng,
And þer ageyn, a welle gan to springe
For hym Pluto, with water, large & depe,
Of whiche þing Appollo toke good kepe,
Whiche in his dom was nat rek[e]les;
And for þe olyve tokeneþ loue & pes,
Water trouble, contek, werre, and strif,
He ȝaf sentence anon diffynytif,
How Pallas schulde, þat callid is Mynerve,
Þe palme pleynly of þis strif disserue.
And sche anon ȝaf name to þe toun,
And callid it, be hiȝe discrecioun,
Athenes, þe whiche in special
Is to seyn, a cite in-mortal:
For wisdam first þer be-gan to floure.
And for þis skille, þis cite dide honour
Miȝty Pallas, goddesse of science,
And had hir ay moste in reuerence.
And þei of Pave, in al her regioun,
Worschip moste þe quene of Cytheroun—
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Of whom aforne somwhat I dide expresse—
And in hir temple, ful solempnely,
Þei sette hir hiest; & moste richely
With gold and aȝure hir statue þei do peint,
And oþer colours þat may neuer feynt,
And set hir vp in þe hiȝest se
Of all þe temple þat al men may se;
And sche stant nakid in a wawy se,
Abouten hir with goddesse þre,
Þat be assygned with besy attendaunce
To a-waite on hir & don hir obseruaunce.
And floures fresche, blewe, rede, and white
Ben hir aboute, þe more for to delyte;
And on hir hed sche haþ a chap[e]let
Of rosys rede, ful plesauntly y-set,
And from þe hed doun vn-to hir foot
With sondry gommys & oynementis soot
Sche is enoynt, swetter for to smelle;
And enviroun, as poetis telle,
Ben douvys whyte fleyng, & eke sparwis,
And be-syde Cupide with his arwys—
Hir blinde sone—for to hurte and dere,
And loseth ofte & smyt he wot not where,
As he mote nede, be-cause he is blynde.
And þus honouryd & most had in mynde
Amonge þis peple is Venus þe goddesse.
And Naxyens don her besynesse
To serue Bachus, þe myȝti god of wyn,
Whos licour is moste precious and fyn
To recomfort hertis and to glade,
And to refresche hewes þat ben fade
In facis pale, and makiþ wittis scharp,
Losnyth tongis, & doth hem loude carp,
And causeth hem to walke at liberte,
And to discure þing þat was secre
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For w[h]er as wyn hath domynacioun,
No secrenesse may be kepte in mewe.
And somme of hem þat Bachus serue & sewe,
Amonge to hym haue swiche deuocioun
Þat þei som while ar voide of al resoun,
Hasty and wood, & wiþ-oute al drede;
And somme also so toty in her hede
Þat þei are voide of power & of myȝt,
And haue no foot for to stonde vp-riȝt.
And ȝit þei ben as chargaunt as a pye,
Pale cherid, wiþ a glasy eye,
Ful of resoun til his wynde be spent:
For man or woman þat is vinolent
Is verreyly a beste vnresonable,
And, to my dom, I holde hym eke vnable
To ben acceptid in any companye,
Whan þat her tonge wadeth on þe lye,
Þat þei ne may brynge forth a worde.
And þus Bachus, þe stronge myȝty lorde,
Ful ofte causeth folkis for to erre,
To debate, & to make werre
Of hastynes, wher as is no nede.
Wherfore it is wisdam þat men drede
His sliȝty werkyng, or þei falle in þe snare;
And feble braynys be mesour for to spare
Or þei vnwarly arestid ben & take,
And or Bachus make hem for to schake
In a fevere wers þan tercyen—
Ȝiffe it of custom be quotidien,
Alterat with Bachus myȝty Iows—
And afferde of tornyng of þe hous,
And for-dreynt on þe drye lond,
Whan he hath lost boþe foot & hond,
And with a strawe pleyeth like an ape,
And deuoutly gynneth for to gape,
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As he had on an hevy cappe of led.
And who þat be of þis condicioun,
He entre may þe religioun
Of myȝti Bachus, for abilite.
Þe which[e] lord hath þe souereynte
Boþe of hony and of mylke þer-to,
And of bawme, þat is so riche also,
And lordschip haþe of hiȝe power devyne
Boþe of grapis and of euery vyne,
To ȝif hem norissching by his influence.
Of whom þe honour and þe reuerence
Is reysed most, as I vndirstond,
Among wynteris in euery maner lond,
Be-cause he is to hem so gracious.
And þei of Lewne worschip Wlcanus,
Þe god of fyre, Iubiter[i]s smyth;
Þe whiche forgiþ on his blak[e] stith
Þe gret[e] þonder, hidous & horrible,
And þe levenys, þat whilom be visible
In-to þe west, oute of þe orient,
And gasteth vs with his dredeful dent—
Þis smotry smyth, þis swart[e] Vlcanus,
Þat whylom was in herte so Ialous
Toward Venus, þat was his weddid wyf,
Wher-of þer roos a dedly mortal stryfe
Whan he with Mars gan hir first espie,
Of hiȝe malis & cruel fals envie,
Þoruȝ þe schynyng of Phebus bemys briȝt,
Liggyng a-bedde with Mars her owne knyȝt.
For whiche in hert he brent as any glede,
Makyng þe sklaundre al abrood to sprede,
And gan þer-on falsly for to mwse—
As God forbede þat any man accuse
For so litel any woman euere:
Where loue is set, hard is to disseuere;
For þouȝ þei don swyche þing of gentilles,
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Liste þat þou be to wommen odyous—
And ȝit þis smyȝt, þis false Wlcanus,
Al-be þat he hadde hem þus espied,
Among peynyms ȝit was he deified;
And for þat he so falsely hem a-woke,
I haue hym set laste of al my boke
Amonge þe goddis of fals mawmetrie.
And in þis wyse gan ydolatrie,
As ȝe han herde, þoruȝ oppiniouns
Of peple erryng in her affecciouns—
Þat al is fals, who þe trouthe cerche:
For by techyng of al holy chirche,
Þe holy doctryne and tradiciouns,
We schal dispise swiche oppiniouns,
Whiche of þe fende wer founde nat of late.
For whan angelis in hevene wer create,
He þat of alle hadde prelacye—
Of whom þe prophete callid Ysaie
Writeþ riȝt þus: how þe cedris grene
Of paradys wer nat so fair to sene,
Planys nor fir in heiȝte, soþe to seyn,
To his hiȝnesse myȝt[e] nat atteyne,
Nor al þe tres, so delicioūs,
Of paradys were nat so precioūs,
Nouþer in siȝt nor in semlynes
To ben egal to hym in fairnes;
But þo[r]uȝ his pride & his surquedie,
Whan he seide to God, þat sit so hiȝe,
He wil be like, and also set his se
Hiȝe in þe northe, passyng his degre,
He was cast doun with alle his legiouns
From þe faire hevenly mansiouns,
Al sodeynly in-to þe pitte of helle,
Perpetuely þer for to duelle.
Of whom was seide, whan he fil so ferre:
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From þe myddis of þe stonys briȝt,
Þat ben so percynge & fyry of her liȝt,
Þat whilom wer for þi gret briȝtnes
Callid Lucyfer,”—of whom Crist seiþ expresse
In his gospel, how he sawe fro hevene
Sathan discende, lik þe fyry leuene—
Þe olde serpent, þat is so lowe falle,
Whom Hebrei in her tonge [c]alle
Be-mowþe, þat doth in latyn plein expresse
A beste rude, ful of cursednesse—
Þe vile serpent, he, Leuyathan,
Whom Ysidre wel discriue can,
Whiche of kynde is euere conuersaunt
In wellis trouble, & haueþ most his haunt
Amongis watris in þe large see;
Of whom seiþ Dauid, lik as ȝe may se,
In þe sauter makyng mencioun
Of þe snake, þe monstruous dragoun,
Ful of venym, and of harde grace,
Whiche in þe se, large & gret of space,
With foule addris haþe his mansioun,
Vn-to mankynde to doon illusioun—
Whom whilom sawe þe holy monke Brandan,
As he seiled by þe occian,
Þrowe & deiect, in a pet horrible,
More foule and hidous þan it is credible,
Þer to abide, þis tortuose serpent,
Vn-to þe day pleinly of Iugement,
Þat of malis envied so mankynde.
Whiche with his gynnes & sleiȝtes, as I finde,
Cam to oure fadir first in paradys;
And to deceyve þe bet at his devys,
More couertly, þis werme in his passage
Toke of a serpent þe liknes & ymage—
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Like a mayde, & hath þe resemblaunce
Of a womman, as recordeth Bede,
In his deceytis raþer for to spede—
I mene þe hed only, and nat ellis:
For be-hynde, so as clerkis tellis,
Like a serpent of wombe, bak, & taile
He was whan he gan hem to assaile;
And towarde Eue whan he gan to glide,
He first enqueriþ, as he hir toke a-side,
Why God for-bad hem etyn of þe tree,
Whiche ȝif þei ete, sothly schulde be
Like to goddis, knowyng good & ille.
And riȝt furþe-with, as þei gan fullfille
Þe fendis heste, her eyen were vnclosid,
And for her gilt sodeynly deposid
From paradys in-to wrechidnes,
To liuen in labour, sorwen, & distres.
And þus þe fend, first whan þat he toke
Forme of a snake & a woman loke,
And made þe tonge in hir hed to meve,
By fals engyn mankynde for to greve,
So as he doth in hem þat be travailled,
With wicked spirites vexid & assailled,
To meve her tongis falsly oute to breke
In-to blasfemye, what þing þat þei speke—
Þe same serpent, he Levyathan,
Contynvyng ay falsly as he gan
In cursid ydoles dovmbe, defe, & blynde,
Ful ofte spekith be spirites, as I fynde,
Whiche ar but fendis, Dauid writ certeyn,
Þe goddis alle, whom folkis so in veyn
Honour with ritis superstycious,
As whilom was Appollo Delphicus,
Liche as to-forn ȝe han herde deuise,
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And, as I trowe, þe verray cause why,
Þat myn auctor rehersith by and by
Grounde & gynnynge of ydolatrie—
Þis þe cause, for ouȝt I can espie,
For þat he sawe þe mater was nat knowe
I-liche wel, boþe to hiȝe and lowe;
Par aventure ȝou to do plesaunce,
He hath þe grounde put in remembraunce
Of false goddis & of mawmetrie,
And moste for hem þat can no poisye,
And to þe story resorteþ sone ageyn,
How Achilles, as ȝe han herde me seyn,
And Pirrodus han þe weye y-nome
To þe temple, and þider ben I-come
To han answere of her embassatrie,
Of gret Appollo, whiche may nat lye.
Of the answere that Appollo gave, as welle to fals Bisshope Calchas, as to Achylles.
Of þe prestis þei han her counseil take,In þe temple to preyen and to wake
Til þei may fynde, vn-to þere entent
To haue answere at hour conuenient
To her purpos and leiser opportune.
And of on herte so longe þei contune
In praying, fastynge, and oblacions,
Wiþ sacrifyse and sondry orisons,
To-fore þe god awayting alwey faste,
Til he to hem answerid at þe laste
Wiþ softe vois and seide: “Achilles,” twye,
“Home to Grekis fast[e] þat þou hye,
Fro whom þou were hidir to me sent,
And seye hem sothly þe somme of her entent
Schal be fulfilled, with-oute wordis mo,
And how þat þei schal to Troye go,
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But at þe last, with-outen any faille,
At ten ȝere day, þei wynne schal þe toun
And bringe it pleynly to distruccioun—
Wal and touris schal falle to ruyne;
And with al þis, her purpos for to fyne,
Kyng Priamus and Eccuba his wyf
And her sonys, in þis mortal stryf
Schal þer be slayn, broþer after broþer:
Þis is þe fyn, for it may be non oþer;
For þer schal non eskapen in þe place,
But swiche as Grekis likeþ vn-to grace
Of verray rouþe and of mercy take—
Þis al and som, & þus an ende I make.”
Of whiche answere Achilles glad & liȝt
Was in his herte, & with al his myȝt
Þankiþ Appollo of þis blisful ewer;
And soudeynly, of sort or aventure,
Þe silfe tyme be-fil a wonder þing:
For out of Troye, fro Priamus þe kyng,
Was sent a bischop for þe same caas
To haue answere, whos name was Calchas.
And he cam in, sool wiþ-outen prees,
Þe same hour while þat Achilles
Was þer present, a man of gret science—
I mene Calchas—& had experience
Specyally of calculacioun,
Of sort also and divinacioun,
And lernyd was in astronomye.
And whan þat he his tyme dide espie
To haue answere most conuenyent
Of Appollo, like to his entent,
As to-fore makid is memorie,
He entrid is in þe oratorie,
Doyng his ritys & his obseruances,
Like þe custom with þe circumstaunces,
And besely gan to knele and praye,
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And to þe god crie & calle stronge;
And for Appollo wolde him nat prolonge,
Sodeynly his answere gan atame,
And seide: “Calchas,” twies be his name,
“Be riȝt wel war þat þou ne turne ageyn
To Troye toun, for þat wer but in veyn;
For finally, lerne þis of me,
In schort tyme it schal distroyed be—
Þis is in soth, whiche may nat be denyed,
Wherfor I wil þat þou be allyed
Wiþ þe Grekis, and with Achilles go
To hem anon; my wil is it be so:
For þei schal han, as I haue disposid,
Victorie & honour, þat may nat be deposid;
For it is fatal and ne may nat varie,
And þou to hem schalt be necessarie
In conseillyng and in ȝevinge red,
And be riȝt helpyng to her good[e] sped.”
And with þat worde roos him vp Calchas,
And to Achilles he went an esy pace,
And whan þat he cam to his presence,
With gret honour & moche reuerence
He was reseyuyd, like to his estat;
And after sone þei [were] confederat,
Swor to-gidre be bonde & assuraunce
To ben al on, wiþ-oute variaunce;
And þanne in hast þei to-gidre goon
To her schipes, & schope hem furþe anon,
With Pirrodus goyng by her syde.
Þei hale vp anker and no lenger bide,
But seile furþe, Calchas & þei tweyne,
Toward Grece—hem nedeth nat compleine
On wynde nor wawe—til þei arived be
At Athenes, þat stood vp-on þe se,
A large cite of olde fundacioun;
And Achilles to kyng Agamenoun
Hath Calchas brouȝt and also Pirrodus.
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Assemblid wern, þei to-gidre wente
To-fore þe kyng, & Calchas represente
To alle þe lordis, and no lenger dwelle.
And riȝt anoon Achilles gan to telle
With-oute abood, in Delos how þei mette
To-fore Appollo, where þei answer fette,
And how þe god hath pleinly determyned
Þe Grekis purpos, how it schal be fyned
Vp-on Troyens, and bad Calchas also
In no wyse þat he to Troye go,
But wiþ Grekis þat he abide stille,
Til þei her purpos fynally fulfille.
Of whiche þing þe Grekis, glad of chere,
Calchas accepte with herte ful entere
For on of hem, confederat be bonde,
To ben al on on water & on londe,
Wiþ-outen chaunge or any variance—
Þe oþe is made & put in remembraunce;
And þei ageyn fully hym assure
To cherisschen hym whil her lif may dure,
For wel or wo, and so þei made an ende,
And after parte & to her loggyng wende.
Til on þe morwe, after þe sterry nyȝt,
Whan Aurora was gladid with þe liȝt
Of Phebus bemys, þe Grekis vp aryse,
And to her goddis with many sacrifice
Þei don honour in what þei can or may,
And deuoutly holdyng a feste day,
After her ritis, meynt with love & drede,
In remembraunce of þe good[e] spede,
And of þe answer þat gooddis han hem sent,
So agreable vn-to her entent,
By Pirrodus and by Achilles.
And aftir þis, amongis alle þe prees,
Is Calchas come to-fore Agamenoun,
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Lik her estatis, eche in his place dewe,
And humblely gan hem to salue
Vp-on his knees with sobre contenaunce,
And prayde hem, it be no displesance
To stynt a while and ȝif hym audience.
And riȝt anoon, as makid was silence
Amonge hem alle, Calchas gan abreide,
And euene þus ful sobirly he seide:
How fals Calchas of Troy was conveyede to þe presences of þe prinses of Grece, and howe he innaturelly exortyde them to make mortal were vpon his kynge and kynrede, as folowith.
“O sirs,” quod he, “and my lordis dere,Kynges, princes, & dukis þat ben here,
So noble echon, worþi, and famus,
And eke so manly and so vertuus,
Which in þis place be now here present,
Is nat þe fyn & chef of [ȝ]oure entent,
And cause, also, why þat ȝe echon
Assemblid ben to Troye for to goon
Wiþ þis power and þis grete strengþe—
Your purpos is to longe drawe a lengþe
And differrid furthe fro day to day
To ȝour damage, platly þis no nay;
For to longe ȝe soiowre in þis Ile.
And trowe ȝe nat þat Priam in þis while
Hath his espies among ȝou preuily—
I wote it wel, I saie ȝou feithfully—
To knowe þe fyn of ȝoure gouernance,
And he þer-whiles may make puruyaunce
Hym to diffende, while ȝe in ydel reste!
Me semeth, sothly, ȝe do nat for þe beste:
319
Gret harme may falle, certeyn þis no nay is.
I preue it þus: for pleynly while þat ȝe
To ȝoure enmyes graunt[e] liberte
Hem to purueye, þei may with myȝti honde
Enforcen hem ȝour power to wiþ-stonde
Wiþ her frendis and her alliance,
And at leiser make her ordynaunce.
It is foly þat ȝe so differre,
Sith ȝe be redy, for to make a werre
On ȝoure enmyes, with euery circumstance;
For no þing may a quarel so avaunce
As hasty swt, it wil þe scharper bite—
Þe Iren hoot, tyme is for to smyte;
And nat abide til þat it be colde:
For nouþer þanne it plie wil nor folde.
Goth, set vp-on, alle of oon acorde,
And to schip anoon with-Inne borde
Enhasteþ ȝou, for tyme is to remewe,
Wiþ al ȝour myȝt ȝour quarel to pursewe
Ageyn[e]s hem, þat han to ȝow trespassid.
How many daies ben of somer passid,
And many moneth ronne & ouer-slide!
And Titan ofte with his chare hath ryde
From est to west, and in þe wawes depe
His stremys baþed, whil ȝe han leyn a-slepe
And spent ȝour tyme in þis place þus,
Whil þat þe wynde, callid Ȝephirus,
Benignely enspired hath on lofte
Thatempre eyr, þe wedir fair & softe,
Þe calme see from wawis stille and pleyn,
Whil ȝe waste ȝoure daies here in veyn—
Þat whan ȝour foon her-to taken hede,
Þei wil suppose þat it be for drede,
And be more bolde to sette of ȝow but lite.
Trusteþ for soþe, for I wil me quite
320
And þinke how ȝe han þe goddis founde
Her-toward benigne and fortunat,
Ȝoure honour savid in hiȝe and lowe estaat,
And so schal forþe, ȝif ȝou[r] ingratitude
Prouoke hem nat ȝoure purpos to delude,
Wilfully to slouþen ȝoure fortune:
No wondir is, þouȝ þei nat contune
Towardis ȝow for to schewe hir grace.
Wherfore I rede, hen[ne]s þat ȝe passe,
And schapeþ ȝou no lenger to lyn here,
But whil þe wedir is so fair & clere,
And lusty somer abideþ in his hete
Or wynter com with his reynys wete,
And whil þe sesoun is so fresche & grene
(I speke of hert, platly as I mene)
For ȝour expleit and ȝour alder ese
(Wher it so be, I anger ȝou or plese)
Þat forþe in haste to schip[pe] þat ȝe wende—
I can no more, my tale is at an ende.”
And alle attonys þei ben condescendid
To his avis, & han it wel commendid;
And in al hast, Agamenoun þe grete—
Þe lusty tyme and þe sesoun swete
Hastyng þe Grekis, boþen hiȝe & lowe—
Made a trompet to schipward to blowe;
And þei echon his biddyng dide obeie,
And to her schippes þei goon þe riȝt[e] weye
With-oute abood—þei wil no lenger dwelle.
What schulde I more of þe noumbre telle
Of her schippis, sith ȝe han herde a-fore?—
It nedeth nat reherse it any more;
I can nat se what it myȝt availe.
But furþe þei dresse hem & be-gan to saile;
And þis is soth, pleynly & no wene,
So gret a navie was neuer ȝit y-sene
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Þe wynde was good, þat þei wer nat let
On her weye first whan þei be-gonne;
But after sone gan þe schene sonne
Þe clerenes chaunge of his briȝt[e] face;
And dymme cloudis gan his liȝt embrace;
And sodeynly, in ful owgly wyse,
Þe heuen dirke & þe wynde gan ryse;
Þe hidous þonder & þe leuene clere
Smet in þe mast, briȝt as any fere;
And þe blaknes of þe smoky rayn
Blindeth þe eyr, þat no þing may be seyn;
And þe wawes gan to ryse a-lofte,
And in her schippes falle no þing softe,
But plounge a-doun and in her toppis smyte,
Þat hem þouȝt þei want[e] but a lite
To haue be ded, in þe silfe stounde:
Til Calchas hath by his crafte y-founde
Þe cause of al, [and] with his orisouns,
Wiþ his charmys and incantac[i]ouns
Made sodeynly þe tempest to apese,
And with his crafte don hem riȝt gret ese.
For he fonde oute þe cause of euerydel,
How Diane liked no þing wel
Þat þe Grekis durst[e] take on honde
To be [so] bolde to parte fro þe stronde
In-to þe se, in any maner wyse,
And do to hir no maner sacrifise,
Nouþer offre to-forn or þat þei goth:
For whiche þing þe goddes is so wroth
Toward Grekis, seyling in þe se,
Þat þei echon wend haue drownyd be.
Til at þe last, kyng Agamenoun
Hath be counseil and informacioun
Of wyse Calchas made sette vp to londe,
In-to an Ile, and fast his schippes bonde.
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In whiche he fonde vnwarly in his siȝte
A litel temple and an oratorie,
Founded of olde & made in memorie
Of Diane, to whiche anoon he wente
Ful deuoutly his offeryng to presente,
And quemyd hir with his oblaciouns,
And lay þer long in his orisouns,
After þe rytis vsid in his lawe,
Til þat he sawe þe tempest gan a-dawe.
But some bokis make mencioun
Touching þis þing, þat Agamenoun,
As Ovide reherseth in his boke,—
How þis kyng his owne douȝter toke,
Effigenya, benigne of face and chere,
And endelong vppon þe autere
Þis maide he laide, dispoiled of her wede,
To-fore Dyane to maken hir to blede,
To fyn only þat he þe heuenly quene
With blood þat was Innocent & clene
Apese myȝt, and quemen of hir rage.
And þe goddes gracius of visage
Hath mercy meint with hir magnificence,
To suffre a maide ful of Innocence
Gilt[e]les in her temple slawe,
Hath be miracle a-waye hir body drawe,
And conservid from al anoye & smerte,
And in hir stede vnwarly cast an herte,
By deth of whom, as bokys make mynde,
Agamenoun first gan grace fynde
In þe goddes for to modyfye
Hir cruel Ire: and clere gan þe skye,
Þe se wexe calme, and þe wedir fair;
And Phebus eke, to glade with þe eyr,
Gan schewe newe, & his bemys cast
In-to þe se; and þe kyng as fast
Vn-to schip repeired is a-geyn,
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Lady & quene of wayes and passage;
And goddes is callid of viage,
After sentence and oppinioun
Of hem þat werke be calculacioun,
And ȝeue her domys by astronomye.
And most of al þei hir magnifye
In þe tenþe and þe twelþe house;
For þer sche is, þei sei, most gracious,
Best fortuned, cler or in hir schade,
Ȝif sche haue counfort of aspectis glade
Of planetis stondyng in good state—
I mene swiche as be fortunat
To viage or Iourne for to make.
Howe the Grekis destroyede the Castel callede Sarabona as þey saylede towarde Troye, and it dispoylede.
And swiche tyme Agamenoun hath takeHis happy weye schipped for to be;
And in good hour he taken haþe þe se
With þe Grekis, þe wedir agreable;
And Eolus hath maked acceptable
Wynde and eyr, hoolly at her wylle,
Nouþer to loude, pleynly, nor to stille,
But in a mene so merie made blowe,
Þat þei atteyn, in a litel þrowe,
To certeyn boundis of Troye þe cite,
Vn-to a castel, þat stood vp-on þe se,
Riȝt wonder strong, þouȝ it wer but lite,
Þe name of whiche, þouȝ Dares not ne write—
I mene Dares callyd Frigyus—
Ȝet oþer auctours rehersen sothly þus,
Sarobona þat it was y-callid,
Rounde aboute diched & wel wallid,
With hiȝe touris rounde, square, and wyde;
Þe se went vnder, and faste þer be-side
324
At whiche, pleinly, þe Grekis wil nat faile
With her power myȝtely to aryve,
Maugre alle þo þat þer ageyn[es] stryue—
Þei myȝt[e] wel, for it was nat denyed,
Only excepte þat þei wer espied
Of hem allone þat in þe castel dwelle.
Þe whiche anoon, as þei herde telle
Of her commyng, proudly in þe berde
With hem to mete were no þing a-ferde,
But issen oute, doun vn-to þe stronde,
In purpos only to letten hem for to londe
With al her myȝt, ȝif it wolde availle.
But þe Grekis so proudly hem assaille
Þat þei ne myȝt in her diffence endure:
For wher-as þei wendyn haue be sure,
Demyng þe Grekis pleinly of þe se
Forweried and feynted hadde be,
Wiþ longe seilyng parbraked & forbroke—
Wherfor þe[i] cast on hem to haue be wroke
Al sodeinly, and settyn on of hede,
And putte hem silf in auenture & drede
Of rakilnes, vn-avisely.
Wher-of to hem ful vnhappily
It be-fil whan þei þe Grekis mette
With speris longe & swerdis scharpe whette,
Eche on oþer manhod for to schewe.
But, for cause Troyans were so fewe,
To issen oute þei dide folily;
Þe felde was nat partid egally:
For þe Grekis wern Innumerable,
Þat hem to mete þe Troyans wern nat able—
For þat tyme þei myȝt[e] nat suffice:
Þei toke on hem so passyng hiȝe emprise—
And ȝit þei nolde for no þing hem withdrawe
Til þei were wounded and y-slawe,
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Now here, now þere, bor doun cruelly,
Merciles, as Guydo doth reporte,
Þat hem behoveth hom ageyn resorte
Of verray nede and necessite.
And alle attonys gonne for to fle—
I mene swiche as were lefte alyve—
To þe castel þei hasten hem ful blive;
For þei ne myȝt no lenger holde felde
Ageyns Grekis, with spere nor with schelde:
Þei were to feble, schortly to conclude,
To abide so gret a multitude.
And as þei fle, þe Grekis a gret pas
Ne cesse nat to swen on þe chas,
Ful hastely to þe castel gate,
And entren in, and by cruel fate
Þei kille & sle boþen hiȝe & lowe;
Þei spare noon, ne list no wiȝt to knowe
Of non estat, but felly hem oppresse;
And what þei fond, gold & eke richesse,
Vn-to schip þei cariden anoon;
And of þe castel þei left nat a stoon
Aboue a-noþer, but turnen vp so doun
Boþe wal & tour & þe chefe dongoun,
Þat no þing stood, so þei vnder-myne.
Howe Agamenon layde his Oste byfore Thenedoun, a stronge Castele vj myle fro Troye, the which he wan, and it bet to þe grounde; and aftire þat, agally made distribucyoun of the godys.
And whan al was brouþt vn-to ruyne,Grekis anoon to her schippes haste
Of on assent, and purpos as faste,
With-oute abood, of o wille and herte,
Fro þat hauene pleynly to diuerte,
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A strong castel, whiche fro Troye toun
In distaunce but sixe myle stood,
Ful of tresour, of riches, and of good,
Repleuysched of alle habundaunce.
And whan þat þei with her ordinaunce
I-seiled han, boþe sauf and sounde,
And fro þe se taken han þe grounde,
To her plesaunce wonder agreable,
And of syȝt a place delitable,
Holsom of eyr, þe soil riȝt fair & grene,
And lusty playnes goodly on to sene,
And was also habundaunt of vitaille,
Repleuesched of al þat may availle
To hosteiyng and to soudyours—
For firste þe lond, ful of fresche flours,
Was plenteuous boþe of corn & greyne,
Of wyn & frute, þat no þing ley bareyn,
Of best and foules passingly plente—
And fast[e] by stood also þe se,
Ful habundaunt of fysches, as I fynde,
After þe sesoun of euery maner kynde.
And whan þat þei which Inne þe castel were
Þe Grekis seie londen from a-fere,
With-oute abood þei arme hem & wente oute,
And vppon hem make an hydous schout,
Stuffyng þe castel with meine strong be-hynde,
And toke her wey, in Guydo as I fynde,
Toward her foon, & knyȝtly set vp-on.
And riȝt furþe-with Grekis eke anoon
Mette with hem vp-on þe toþer syde,
Ful surquedous and riȝt ful of pride,
Clenly armyd in harneis al of stel,
Fresche arayed and be-seye so wel
For þe felde, as þikke as swarme of ben—
On eche syde men may beholde & sen,
327
Til at þe last þei metten hond of honde,
And assemble with square speris grounde,
And hurtle I-fere, with many blody wounde.
Þer was no “gooday,” nor no saluyng,
But strokis felle, þat men herde rynge
On basenettis þe strokis rounde aboute
So cruelly þat þe fire sprange oute
Among þe tuftis brode, briȝt, & schene
Of foil of gold & feþres white & grene.
Eke in-to brestes percid many schelde,
And besagus flen a-brood þe felde,
And many a man lyn þat mortal stounde
Ful dedly pale, lowe be þe grounde,
With face gruf & blody stremys wyde.
And aldermost vp-on þe Grekis syde
Þe slauȝtre was and þe discounfiture,
So myȝtely Troyens dide endure.
Til at þe last, for þei were so fewe,
With multitude þe Grekis on hem hewe:
For mo þan fourty wer ageyn[e]s on,
Of verray force abak þei most[e] gon,
No þing for lak of manhod, I dar seyn,
But for so many han hem ouerleyn,
Þei may no lenger in þe felde soiourne,
But to her castel hom ageyn retourne
In ful gret haste, swiche as myȝt eskape
Away a-live; and somme of hem for rape
And drede of deth taken hem to fliȝt
On horse bak to Troye toun ful riȝt—
No wonder was þouȝ þei hast[e] fast;
For to þe gatis þe chas of Grekis last,
So cruelly after þei purswe.
And somme of hem þat myȝt[e] nat remewe
On Troye side, for-weried of fiȝt,
328
Now here, now þere, whom þei myȝt atteyne,
Þer may no raunsoun nor no mercy geyne
Of noon estat, wiþ-oute excepcioun.
And after þat, vn-to Tenedoun
Þe Grekis went, and it be-set aboute,
Þat Troyan noon myȝt eskapen oute.
And whan þei had þe bolewerkis wonne,
To skale þe wal after þei be-gonne,
And made assaut manfully and ofte.
And Troyens, as þei stood a-lofte,
Putte hem of, þat entre þei ne myȝt,
With cast of stoon and quarel[e]s briȝt,
With bowe turkeys & schot of arblasteris,
And her gonners stondynge at corners,
Wiþ lym also, and cast of wylde fyre,
Of Irous hate ful hot in her desire,
Lik manly men hem silf[e] þei diffende.
And ay þe Grekis, as þei vp ascende,
Cruelly þei putte to þe grounde;
Til þei with-oute an ordinaunce han founde,
What with gynnys deuised for þe nonys,
And gonnys grete, for to cast[e] stonys,
Bent to þe touris, riȝt as any lyne,
And large sowis lowe for to myne—
And somme of hem vp-on þe wallis gon,
Þat were so þikke made of lyme & ston;
And to entre þei many wayes seke,
Sette her bastiles and her hurdois eke
Rounde aboūte to þe harde wal,
And skalyng ladderis for sautis marcial
Þei gan vp cast, wiþ hokis for to holde.
And vp ascende þe sturdy Grekis bolde,
Til Troyens from þe crestis caste
Þe grete stonys, whil þei wolde laste,
329
And wonder manly dide her besynes
In her diffence, and made hem plounge lowe
With caste of quarel, & with schoot of bowe
Þoruȝ olietis, that of necessite
Þei put hem of, it may noon oþer be,
And broke her neckis & her schulder bonys,
As þei falle, with þe square stonys,
And leyen ded, pitous pale of hew.
But Grekis ay gan her saut renewe,
Wiþ multitude Troyens to assaille,
To withstonde þat þei gan [to] faille
And wexe feble, for reskus cam þer non;
And so of force þe Grekis ben y-gon
Þoruȝ þe wallys whan þei han hem broke,
And on Troyens so cruelly be wroke,
Þat fynally þei lefte noon alyue,
But sle and kylle; and after þat as blive,
On þe wallis her baners þei han set,
And ȝonge & olde—it myȝt[e] be no bet—
Al goth to wrak vp-on Troye side.
And after þat, þei nyl no lenger byde,
But tresour, gold, & what þat þei may fynde
Þei cast on hepe, & to-gydre bynde,
And made spoile of al þat was with-Inne;
And þanne in haste þe wallis þei be-gynne—
Pynacle & tour, and also þe dongoun
To brenne & hewe, and to bete doun;
And with þe soil þei made al euene & pleyn.
And with gret pray anoon þei went a-geyn
To her schippes, glad & liȝt of chere,
Whan þat þe fuyr with his flawmes clere
Þe castel had conswmyd & y-brent.
And after þat, avise and prudent,
330
Lete make anon a convocacioun
Of þe Grekis, & bad þei schuld[e] bringe
Gold and tresour, with-oute more tariyng,
With al þe pray þei wan at Tenedoun,
To his presence, for þis conclusioun:
Þat he may make destribucioun
Amongis hem, with-oute excepcioun,
Like her decert—vn-to pore & riche
He departiþ to euery man y-liche,
But moste to swiche as dide best disserue,
For to hym silf hym list no þing conserue;
For he hath leuer hertis þan þe good,
Of swiche as had spent her owne blood
So manfully þe castel for to wynne:
For who þat can with larges first be-gynne,
Ne failleþ nat after wel to spede
Þoruȝ help of men, whan þat he haþ nede:
For loue folweþ fredam comounly.
And after þis, þe kyng lete make a crye,
Þat alle þe kynges & lordis of his hoste,
Dukis, erlys com from euery coste,
The nexte morwe to-forn hym to apere.
Þe nyȝt y-passed, Phebus gan to clere
Her emyspyrie, aftir þe larke song,
Whan þat þe kyng, among þe Grekis strong,
Vp-on þe pleyn, in his se royal,
And fast[e] by, most chef & principal
Of his lordis were set in her degre—
And whan þe kyng sawe oportunyte,
Þat þer was made silence euerywhere,
His liges stondyng enviroun here & þere,
Þe kyng of chere sadde & eke Iocounde,
As he þat was of speche ful facounde,
Be-gan his tale with sobre contenaunce,
Þeffect of whiche was þis in substaunce:
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Howe Agamenon rememberde al his princes of the vngodely answeres that Anthenor had of them when he desyerd to haue had restitucyoun of Exiona, wherupon they sent Vlixes and Dyomede to Priamus, to haue restitucioun of quene Heleyne.
“Sirs,” quod he, “ful worþi of degre,Of verray riȝt and necessite
We be compelled, boþe hiȝe & lowe,
With al oure myȝt, liche as ȝe wel knowe,
To redresse a þing þat is amys:
For þoruȝ þe world, as it reportid is,
We ben of force, of power, & of myȝt,
Of worþines in euery wiȝttes syȝt
Most renomed & most worschipable,
And I-dempte & Iuged for most able
Of alle peples, & likliest to stonde
For to parforme what we take on honde,
Who þat euere grucche[þ] or sey[þ] nay.
Ȝit, me semeth, ȝif it be to ȝour pay,
Þilke power most is acceptable
Vn-to goddis, & lengest stondeþ stable,
Þat is deuoide of surquidie & pride;
For it is kouþe vppon euery syde,
In eche lond, boþe of oon and alle,
How many harmys & grevis han be-falle
Þoruȝ rancour only, pride, & wilfulnes,
So importable, as I coude expresse,
Þat þoruȝ pride þer is don offence;
Þe hiȝe goddis make resistence
To alle þo þat be surquedous,
Whiche is a vice so contrarius
Þat it may in no place abide.
And in good feith, manhood is no pride:
For who þat hath any acqueintaunce,
Ouþer by frenschip or by alyaunce,
With a prowde man, to be confederat
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He nedis muste, what-euer þat he be,
To many oþer of necessite
Be lothsom first, enmy & contraire;
For no þing may a man so moche apaire
As pride, in soth, in hiȝe or lowe degre.
Wherfore, I rede pleinly how þat we
Þis foule vice oute of our hert arrace,
Þat our quarel may haue þe more grace;
And specially þat oure dedis alle
Conveied ben, how-euer þat it falle,
Be riȝtwesnesse more þan volunte:
For ȝif trouþe oure sothfast guyde be,
Vs to directe by his riȝtful lyne,
Þan oure quarel schal ay in honour schine
And contvne in ful felicite.
And, ferþermore, þis knowen alle ȝe,
How we ar come for to do vengaunce,
With oure frendschip and oure alliance,
Vp-on Priam for wrongis don of olde
By hym and hyse, as I haue ofte tolde;
And here-vp-on we han his grounde I-take,
And some of his maked to a-wake
With manful honde, & his castellis strong
I-bete doun, þat stonden haue so longe,
And take þere þe riches þat we founde,
And slawe his men with many blody wounde,
And harmys mo don in his contre,
Þat I wot wel, ȝif her enmyte
Was vn-to vs gret & moche a-fore,
I dar seie now it is in double more;
Þat ȝif þat þei avenged myȝt[e] be
On vs echon, anon ȝe schulde se
Her gret Ire, so cruel & so huge,
Ben execute with-oute more refuge.
And ȝit, in soth, I wote þei han espied
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Of hem as ȝit, I dar seyn outterly,
Þei are wel war þat we ar fast[e] by;
And ouer-more, þis wote I wel also,
Of þe harmys þat we han hem do,
Þe whiche as ȝit ben but fresche & grene,
Ȝif þei wer strong & myȝti to sustene,
A werre on vs anon þei wolde gynne.
And ȝit þe cite whiche þei ben Inne
Is wallid strong & tourid rounde aboute,
Þat þei wene fully, oute of doute,
With þe meyne þat þei haue gadrid Inne
Of her alies, þat we schal nat wynne
Of hem but smal in werre nor in strif:
For he in sothe hath a prerogatyf
And a-vauntage, þat in his contre
Hym silfe diffendith; namly, ȝif þat he
Be stuffid strong of frendis hym be-side,
And of allies, where he doth abyde;
Like as þe rauen, with his feþeres blake,
With-Inne his nest wil ofte tyme make
Ageyn þe faukon—gentil of nature—
Ful harde diffence whil[e]s he may dure,
Or þat he be venquissched & outtraied.
And ȝit som while þe faukon is delaied,
Whils þe raven be-syde his nest doþ fle,
With-Inne his couert at his liberte;
As euery foule is froward to arest,
For to be daunted in his owne nest.
And ȝit þis wordis to ȝou I nat sey
In any wyse to putten in affray
Ȝoure knyȝtly hertis, so manly & so stable,
Nor þat to ȝou it schulde be doutable,
But þe Troiens þat we schal confounde,
And her cite, in whiche þei habounde,
334
And þei & alle þat ben hem among
Schal finally consumpt[e] be with deth,
Þoruȝ Grekis swerde ȝelden vp þe breth.
But þe cause, with-outen any drede,
Why I seye þus, is þat ȝe take hede,
For any pride or presumpcioun,
To aduerte in ȝoure discrecioun
So prudently, þat resoun in þis nede
For any hast may oure bridel lede,
And so ordeyn, or we hen[ne]s wende,
Þat laude & pris aftir in þe ende
May be reported, as I haue deuised:
For many man þat hath nat ben avised,
In his pursut, for lak of prouidence
To sen to-forn in his aduertence
What schulde falle, to deth it haþ him brouȝt:
Swiche wilful hast wer good to be þoȝt
Of vs a-forn be examynacioun,
And wel deduct by reuolucioun
Of þingkyng ofte, þat we nat repente.
And first remembriþ how þat Priam sente
To vs but late only for Exyoun,
Þat is ȝit holde of kyng Thelamoun,
Whiche was of vs, with-oute avisement,
Vndiscretly denyed by assent;
Whiche hath to vs be non avauntage,
But grounde & rote of ful gret damage.
For ȝif þat we, þoruȝ wys purviaunce,
Of hir had maked delyueraunce,
Þe harmys grete had[de] ben eschewed,
Þat aftir wern of Parys so pursewed
In the temple of Cytherea,
Þat bilded is be-side Cirrea—
Þe tresour gret, also, þat he hadde,
And Iowellis þat he wiþ hym ladde
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Þe slauȝtre of men, and þe heuynes
Þat ȝit is made for þe quene Eleyne
Þoruȝ-oute Grece, & þe gret[e] peyne
Of Menelay—al had ben vnwrouȝt
Ȝif we had[de] seyn þis in oure þouȝt
Wisely aforn, and Exyoun restored.
Þan had nat þe harmys be so morid
On vs echon, in verray sothfastnes,
Nor spent oure labour so in ydelnes,
Tresour nor good wasted so in veyn,
Nor come so fer for to fecche ageyn
Þe quene Eleyne, with costis importable,
With-oute harmys, now in-eschuable:
And for al þis, ȝit ne wite we,
Wheþer to Ioye or aduersite
Þe þing schal turne þat we be aboute,
Sith ofte sithe dependent & in doute
Is fatal þing, vnsiker & vnstable,
And fro þe gynnyng ofte variable
Þe ende is seyn: Fortune can transmewe
Hir gery cours; & þerfore, to eschewe
Þe harmys likly possible [for] to falle,
My conseil is, here among ȝow alle,
Vp-on trauail traueil to eschewe,
In þis mater or we ferþer swe,
To Priamus, with-outen any more,
To sende first ageyn [for] to restore
Þe quene Eleyne, as riȝt & resoun is,
And oþer harmys don eke be Parys,
Aftir his trespas & offencioun
Iustly to make restitucioun.
Þan may we alle in worschip & honour
Retournen hom, wiþ-oute more labour,
Ȝif þei assent to don as we require;
And oure axyng ȝif hem list nat here,
But folily, of her wilfulnes
336
Is double assured on a siker grounde,
By iust[e] title Troyens to confounde.
Wiþ þinges two we schal ben vnder-piȝt:
First oure power, borne vp with our riȝt,
Schal for vs fiȝt our quarel to dareyne,
In balaunce to weye atwixe vs tweyne
To fyn þat we schal be more excusid;
For þei to-forn han wilfully refusid
Oure iust proferes made to hem a-fore;
And we schal be þoruȝ þe world, þer-fore,
With-oute spot of trespace or of blame,
Of mysreport in hyndring of our name,
Wher þei of foly schal y-noted be,
Of wilful wodnes, pleinly, wher þat we
Schal stond[e] fre oure power for to vse;
And euery man schal vs wel excuse,
Þouȝ þat we doon execucioun
Be takyng vengaunce for her offencioun
Of man and childe, of eche sect and age,
Þat schal of deth holde þe passage,
And be þe swerd, with-outen mercy, pace,
Oon and oþer,—þer is no better grace.
But ȝit to-forn, I conseil takeþ hede
Þat ȝe to hem al[le] mesour bede:
Þis hold I best and most sikirnes;
And werketh now be good avisenes
Among ȝour silf, and no lenger tarie.”
To whiche conseil some wern contrarie
And variaunt to þis oppinioun,
Saue þei þat wer of moste discrecioun
Assentid ben pleinly to þis ende,
And chosen han to Priam for to sende
Amongis hem then bassiat to spede,
Wyse Vlixes & worþi Dyamede.
Þe whiche anon gan hem redy make,
337
Toward Troye, as any lyne riȝt,
Whan þe sone schon ful schene & briȝt,
Holdyng þe cours of his fyry spere
In mydday arke, wonder briȝt & clere,
And gilt eche hil, vale, pleyn, & roche
With his bemys, whan þei did aproche
To þe wallis & gatis of þe toun.
And in þei goon with-oute noyse or sown,
Ful wel be-seyn, & in her port hem hadde
Riȝt manfully; and þe wey hem ladde
To þe paleis, streiȝt as any lyne—
Hem nedeth nat a-side to decline,
But in-to a courte large, wyde, & square.
And þei ful knyȝtly for no wyȝt wolde spare
Vn-to theffect manly to procede
To don her charge, with-oute fere or drede;
For þe entre was to hem not refusid:
For þo dayes paraunter was nat vsid
To haue [no] conduit for embassatrie;
Þe custom was to no man to denye,
As I suppose, entre nor passage,
Ȝif it so wer he come for massage.
Howe wyse Vlixes and Dyomede enterde Ryale Ylion, of the which they marvelde when the byhelde þe beldynge.
And in þis court, bilt so rially,Whan þei come, þei merveil ful gretly
Þe rial siȝt of so huge strengþe,
So wel co[m]plete boþe in brede & lengþe;
For þei nat had in her lif to-fore
Seyn noon so fayr; and ȝit þei wondre more—
In-to þe paleis as þei to-gidre goon,
Þat pauyd was al of Iasper stoon—
338
On whiche to loke hem þoȝt it dide hem good,
Musing wher it wer artificial,
Erect or set by magik natural,
Or by engyne of werkmen corious,
Þoruȝ sotil craftis supersticious,
Or oþer werke of nygromauncye,
Or profond castyng of philosophie
Be apparence or illusioun,
Ouþer by craft of incantacioun:
Vp & doun þei casten in her mynde,
Out by resoun ȝif þei koude fynde
Rote & gronde of þis wondir wirke;
But þe trouþe was to hem so dirke,
Þat in her wit, þouȝ þei longe trace,
Þe pryvite þei can nat oute compasse,
To conseyue how it was possible.
For to þe eye as it was visible,
In verray soth, with-outen any fable,
To mannys hond so it was palpable;
Of whiche þe stok, of Guydo as is tolde,
In sothfastnes was of purid gold,
Whiche schon as briȝt as þe somer sonne
To enlumyne þinges þat wer donne;
And þe body as a mast was riȝt,
Proporcioned most goodly to þe siȝt,
Substancial, & of huge strengþe;
And xii cubites þe body was of lengþe;
And þe crop, rounde & large of brede;
And in compas gan so florische & sprede,
Þat al þe pleyn aboute enviroun,
With þe bowis was schadowed vp & doun.
Þe riche braunchis and þe levis faire,
Tweyne & tweyne Ioyned as a payre—
Oon of gold, anoþer of siluer schene,
339
Some rede and some saphirhewed.
And euery day þe blomys wer renewed;
And þe blosmys, with many sondri swt;
For stonys ynde it bare in stede of frut,
As seith Guydo—I can no ferþer telle.
Howe Vlixes and Diomede, withoute dewe reverence purposed þere Embassayte in þe presence of Priamus. And here ye shule se þe birthe of Eneas, and howe Agamenoun sent Achyle, and Thelefus to the Ille of Messay for an eyede of vitaile.
And þe Grekis wil no lenger dwelle,But hilde her wey be many sondri went
To parforme þe fyne of her entent,
Til þei atteyne þe chambour principal,
Wher Priamus in his se royal,
Like his estat, in ful knyȝtly wyse
Saat, [and] aboute, ful prudent & ful wyse,
His lordis alle in setis hym be-syde—
Whan þe Grekis, surquedous of pride,
With sterne chere & froward countenaunce,
As þei þat hadde litel remembraunce
Of gentilles nor of curtesye—
For, as Guydo doth pleynly specefye,
Entryng in þei taken han her place
In thoposyt of þe kynges face,
And sette hem doun, with-oute more sermoun,
Any obeiyng or salutacioun,
Worschip, honour, or any reuerence
Done to þe kyng, for al his excellence,
In preiudyce of al gentilles.
And þan anon Vlixes gan expres
Cause of her comyng to kyng Priamus,
With-oute abood seiyng euene þus,
Not forberyng presence of þe kyng:
340
Þouȝ we to þe do non honour dew,
In oure comyng þe for to salue,
Sith it ne longeth, in soþ, as þinkeþ me,
Wher rancour is & hertly enmyte
Of dedly hate, with salutaciouns,
Or wiþ feyned fals affecciouns
For to schewe, wher hertis ben a-fire:
For naturelly no man schal desyre
Of his enmye þe helthe nor welfare.
And platly now me list nat for to spare
Schortly to schewe þe fyn of our entent,
Liche as we haue in commaundement
In oure message from Agamenoun,
Þe noble kyng, most worþi of renoun,
Whiche vs hath sent, þer is no more to seyn,
Now vn-to þe for þe quene Eleyne,
Þat was rauissched oute of Grekis lond,
And brout to Troye be force of myȝti hond,
Ageynes riȝt, and by violence.
Wherfore, schortly, with-out more offence,
We iustly axe, with-out more demaunde,
Þat þou anon riȝtfully comaunde
To Menelay þat sche be sent ageyn;
And with al þis, we axe nat in veyn
Þat þou make restitucioun
Of wrongis don in þat regioun,
Of pilfres grete, slauȝtre, & robberye,
By Paris don of wilful tyrannye,
Whiche is þi sone, and by þe sustenyd,
And in his errour wrongfully mayntenyd.
Wherfore, come of and fully condescende,
With-oute grucching, þese wrongis to amende:
For so þou maist best þe goddis queme,
Liche as þou myȝt in þi resoun deme,
341
For ȝif so be, þat þou now dispise
To execute þat I haue tolde þe here,
Trust me riȝt wel, a lessoun þou schalt lere,
Whiche þou and þine schal aftir sore rewe,
With-oute feynyng þou schalt fynde trewe,
Þat, but ȝif þou a better ende make,
Cruel vengaunce schal on þe be take;
And finally, what schulde I to þe feyne,
Þe force of deth þis quarel schal dareyne
Vp-on þe and vp-on al þi blod,
Raunsomles outher of gold or good.
And questionles, reporte þis of me,
Þat mercyles þis riche strong cite
Schal doun be bete and y-layd ful lowe,
Wal & toures also ouerthrowe.
Þis al and som; be now wel avised
Þat oure axyng of þe be nat dispised,
But wisly werke & do as I haue seid.”
And sodeinly kyng Priamus abreide,
Of hasty Ire he myȝt[e] nat abide,
Of þe Grekis whan he sawe þe pride,
Þe grete outrage and presumpcioun—
Wiþ-oute abode or deliberacioun,
To Vlixes anon he gan out breke,
And [vn-]to hym euene þus to speke:
“I wondre gretly in myn aduertence,
Beyng astonyed how ȝe in my presence
So vngoodly dar make þis demaunde,
Like as ȝe had power to comaunde
And me constreyne ȝour biddyng to obeye,
And I for fere durste nat wiþ-seye
No maner þing þat ȝe axen here,
Nor contrarie what þat ȝe requere;
Wher-of sothly in hert I am amevid,
And of ȝour þretis inwardely a-grevid,
342
Þat ȝe ar bold so me to excite,
And vilenly myn honour to prouoke
On ȝoure wordis for to ben awroke.
But for al þis, trusteþ me riȝt wel,
I wil nat passe my boundis neuer-a-del,
Nor þe raþer, schortly at þe ende,
To ȝour axynge in no þing condescende;
For considerid þe fyn of ȝour entent,
It wer nat syttyng nor conuenient
A kyng to graunte ȝour axyng, þouȝ þat he
Stood in meschef and captiuite,
With-oute recure to outtraunce brouȝte.
It were outrage, pleinly, to be þouȝte,
To axe of hym þat ȝe axe of me!
And sothly, ȝit, I suppose nat þat ȝe
Acomplissching may so moche availle
As ȝe han seid; for platly ȝe schal faille
Of ȝour purpos, I seie, & God to-forne,
Maugre ȝoure myȝt, þouȝ ȝe had it sworne:
For ȝoure request, in euery wyȝtis siȝt,
Wanteth a grond, boþe of trouþe & riȝt—
Þat axe of me satisfaccioun!—
And were ȝoure silfe first occasioun,
Whan ȝe slowe my fader Lamedoun
And his liges, & brenten eke his toun,
And many harmys, ȝif þei wern [out] souȝt,
On hym and hyse causeles ȝe wrouȝt,
Þat it were longe al for to reherse—
Which day be day þoruȝ myn hert[e] perse—
My suster eke, callid Exyoun,
Ȝe ladde a-weye oute of þis regioun,
Þe whiche is nat vn-to hir worþines
I-tretid like, nor aftir gentillesse.
And for al þis ȝe wolde a-mendis haue
Wrongly of me, þat whilom for to saue
Al þing in pees & to stynte werre,
To ȝou sente in-to Grece ferre
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Of whiche sond ȝe had but disdeyn,
And cruelly and in vngoodly wyse
My massanger ȝe gonne to dispise,
Þat he vnneþe myȝt eskape away
Out of Grece—ȝe knowe it is no nay—
Of ȝou he had so vngoodly chere.
And in good feith, me list nat now to here
Ȝoure request, nor ȝeven audience
To ȝour axyng, for ȝour gret offence;
For leuer I hadde, schortly, for to deye,
Þan condescende to ouȝt þat ȝe seye:
For I wil fully, for conclusioun,
Þat it be knowe to Agamenoun,
Þat we haue leuer—þis is dout[e]les—
Fynally his werre þan his pees,
Sith ȝe to me han don so gre[t] trespace.
And, by my trouþe, in þis silf[e] place
Cruelly anon ȝe schulde deye,
But for þe offis of embassatrie
Ageyn[e]s deth is fully ȝour diffence,
Þat be so bolde, with-oute reuerence,
In my presence so to þrete or speke—
Trust me riȝt [wel], it schuld anon be wreke!
Wherfore, in hast, with-out wordis mo,
My conseil is, þat ȝe ben a-go
Out of my siȝt, and voideþ þis cite;
For þus it stant: whiles I ȝou se,
In myn herte may entre no gladnes,
Þe fret of Ire put me in swiche distres,
Þat, in good feith, I may it nat sustene,
So importune is þe rage and tene
Þat inwardely bynt me for þe while.”
And Dyamedes þo be-gan to smyle,
And seid anon þus vn-to þe kyng:
“Ȝif it so be þat þou of oure comyng
In þin hert hast so moche peyne
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And art þerwith so inly set a-fyre,
Þan schaltow neuere ben with-oute Ire
In al þi lif, nor deuoide of wo,
Siþen þou hast so many cruel fo
Of Grekis now entrid in þi lond—
An hundrid þousand almost at þin hond,
Ageyn whos myȝt þou maist þe nat assure
To resiste, pleynly, nor endure,
Consydred wel how þat þei be strong,
As þou schalt wit, paraunter, or ouȝt longe,
So manly men & so wel arrayed,
Expert in armys, and of old assaied,
Þat no diffence may ageyn hem vaille.
And wite eke wel, þat þou maist nat faille
Be deth of swerde of her hond to deye,
And alle þine—þer is no more to seye—
Þouȝ it so be, proudly þat þou speke,
And with þi tonge, only to be wreke,
Affermyst more þan þou maist acheue:
Bettre it were swiche wordes leue,
And to wys counseil take bettre hede.”
But þan in haste ageyn þis Dyamede,
Surquedous and most ful of pride,
Þer rose vp some be þe kynges syde
With swerdis drawe, & on hym han falle
And al to-hew, þer amonge hem alle,
Of hasty Ire brennyng as þe glede;
Til Priamus gan to taken hede,
And roos hym vp, seyng þis dissese,
And manfully þis rage gan appese,
Hem diffendyng vp-on deth & life,
Þat non of hem be hardy in þis strife
Þenbassatours to harmen or to greue:—
“For þouȝ a fool his foly wil nat leue
To presume to speke vnkonnyngly,
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And [þouȝ] þat he happe doon offence
Þoruȝ foly speche, for lak of sapience,
To a wysman ne longeþ, soth to seyn,
To take hede or to speke a-geyn:
For as to a fole it is pertynent
To schewe his foly, riȝt so convenient
Is to þe wyse, softly, with suffraunce,
In al his port to haue tolleraunce.
For to folis longeth kyndely,
With-oute a-vis to speke folily,
Vndiscretly his menyng to fulfille,
Where a wysman schal heryn & be stylle
Til he se tyme, and haue pacience,
And dyssymule in his aduertence
Þe rage of folis þat last but a þrowe:
For be his tonge a fole is ofte knowe;
And leuer I hadde, I do ȝou wel assure,
In my persone damage to endure,
Þanne to suffre any messanger
In my court, of ȝow þat ben here,
To han a wronge, ouþer grete or lite—
Þe swerde of rancour may nat alwey bite,
To do vengaunce for a þing of nouȝt.
For ofte it falleth a wrong is wrouȝt:
For litel excesse folweþ gret reprefe;
And hast is ay medlid with meschefe.
Wherfore, I bidde þat ȝe sitte doun,
And in no wyse, of presumpcioun,
Attempteþ nat, in no maner wyse,
Be signe or worde more for to dispise
Þembassatours from þe Grekis sent,
But late hem frely declaren her entent,
And ȝe þer-whiles kepe ȝour lippes clos.”
And sodeinly þanne Eneas aros,
Whiche nexte þe kyng hadde þan his se,
So inwardly with rancour fret was he,
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And seid[e]: “sir, so ȝe nat disdeyne
Þat I schal seyn, me semeth þat it is
Wel a-cordyng, whan oon haþ seid amys
And reklesly spoken vn-avised,
Of his foly þat he be chastysed,
Þat oþer may exaumple by hym take,
To be wel war swiche noise & cry to make,
And specially in open audience
So toffende ȝour royal excellence!
And sothly ȝit, I wot wel þat I myȝt
So me gouerne, pleynly, in ȝoure siȝt,
Of hastynes with-oute avisement,
Þat I schulde by ȝour commaundement
Þe deth disserue for my gret offence.
And trewly ȝit, ne wer [for] ȝoure presence,
On þis tweyne þat han so I-spoke,
With-oute abood I schuld anoon be wroke:
For it wer worþi & riȝt wel sittyng,
Whan þat a fool in presence of a kyng
Is bolde or hardy of presumpcioun
To take on hym of indiscrecioun
Þing to reherse, concludyng in sentence
Preiudice of ȝoure magnificence,
Þat he were tauȝt bettre to gouerne
His large tonge, to konne bet discerne
Whan he schal speke or whan ben in pes,
To suffren hym to renne out of les,
As doth he þis þat spoken haþ so large.
Wherfor, in hast, I conseil hym & charge,
With-oute abood, or any wordis mo,
Out of ȝoure siȝt anon he be ago,
For it is best to don as I hym rede.”
To whom anon ful proudly, Dyomede,
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To Eneas, þat for Ire quoke,
Answerde ageyn with wordis but a fewe,
And seide: “sir, þi speche doþe wel schewe,
What so þou be, þat þou art riȝt wys.
Wel is þat kyng, þat doþe be þin avys,
Or hath þe nyȝe of conseil for to be;
For he ne may erre in no degre—
Þat art so riȝtful in þi Iugement,
Of wilfulnes, wiþ-oute avisement,
To cause a lord his boundis for to pace.
So wolde God, in som oþer place
Þat I myȝt, be fauour of Fortune,
Metyn wiþ þe at leiser oportune,
Like my desire, þat canst so wel endite—
I nolde faile þi labour for to quyte,
And þe to þanke for þi gentil chere,
Whiche so knyȝtly þou hast vs schewed here—
Trust wel þer-to: I haue þer-of no drede!”
And þo Vlixes of þis Dyomede
Gan interrupte his wordis prudently,
And to hym seide ful avisely
Þat it was best to stynten & be stille.
“And now we know fully al þi wille,”
Quod Vlixes ful manly to þe kyng,
“We wil gon hens, with-oute [more] tariyng,
Out of þi siȝt to Agamenoun,
And make to hym pleyn relacioun
Of þin answere, in ordre by and by.”
And to hors þei went sodeynly,
And in schort tyme so hast hem on her weye,
Þat þei be come, þer is no more to seie,
Wher þe kyng sat in his tentorie;
And worde by worde, as cam to memorie,
Þei reherse þe substaunce euery-del,
Wher-of þe Grekis like no þing wel,
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As be report of þe embassatrye,
Saf only þis: outerly procede,
Howe þei hem schal gouernen in þis nede
Ageyn[es] Troyen[s], of necessite;
For þei wel wot it may noon oþer be,
And assentid, boþe in wille and dede:
To purveye hem fast[e] þei hem spede,
In þis story as ȝe schal aftir fynde.
But or þat I make þer-of mynde,
I most a while of Eneas endyte,
As myn auctor list of hym to write:
Þe whiche, soþely, as bokis seyn, he was,
Þis manly Troyan, þis famus Eneas,
Anchises sone, of gret worþ[i]nes,
Whilom gete of Venus þe goddes,
Conquerour of many regioun.
Whan Troye was brouȝt to destruccioun,
He went his weye by þe large se,
Callid Tirene, & sailyng forþe goþe he
Be many cost & many narow passage,
Many daunger, til in-to Cartage
He rivid is, and þus gan to saille
To þe conquest of þe gret Ytaille;
And so to Rome he hath þe wey[e] take.
Of whos of-spryng, as auctour[e]s make,
Cam Augustus Cesar, þe Emperour,
Þat was whilom so noble a conqueror,
Þat his renoun to þis day doth schyne.
And of Enee, themperour Iustyne,
In his boke, callid Autentikes,
Ful pleynly writ þer in þe rubrikes:
Þat aftir Cesar, so as Sesares
Be named ȝit, riȝt so Eneades,
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Whiche fro Troye comen was so fere
Vn-to Ytaille. And of þis Eneas,
As I haue tolde, Cesar discendid was
Doun lyne riȝt, ful manly & royal,
Þat first in Rome be septer imperial,
Maugre her myȝt, had[de] gouernaunce,
And of wisdam sette in gouernaunce
Comoun þinges touchyng þe cite.
And to procede ferþer of Enee,
Holly his lyf & knyȝthod by & by
Ȝif þat ȝe list to rede Ceriously,
Ȝe may se al, ful awtentik of style,
In Eneydos compiled of Virgile:
Al-be it so, þat þis noble clerke
Was graue a-forn or complet was his werk,
As bokes olde make mencioun.
But now ageyn to Agamenoun,
With-oute more, my stile I wil retourne.
Howe Achilles enterde the Ille of Messay, where Teutram was kynge, whom Achilles gave his dethes wounde. And howe Teutram resyngnede his kingdam to Thelaphus, for the affeccyon that he had to Archules, which was his Fadere, and of olde tyme made him kynge of þat Ille.
Þe whiche kyng wil no more soiourneIn þis mater delayes for to make,
But in al hast he hath his counseil take
Of his lordis, beyng þo present,
And swyche as wer nat, he haþ after sent
For oon & alle: erlis, dukis, kynges,
And seid[e], “sirs, amongis oþer þinges
To our Iourne þat be necessarie,
My counseil is, no lenger þat we tarie,
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By oon assent, with prudent purvyaunce,
Þat aldirfirste we schape for vitaille,
With-oute whiche noon host may availle
To parforme a Iourne þriftely.
Wherfor I rede, here but fast[e] by,
Ȝif it to ȝow be likyng and plesaunce,
In-to an Ile ful of habondaunce,
Callid Messa, þat we sende anoon.”
And, at a worde, assentid euerychon.
Þei chosen han worþi Achilles
And Thelefus, þe sone of Hercules,
To execute þis purpos fynally,
Wiþ many worþi in her company
I-chosen oute þoruȝ þe hoste anoon
Wiþ Achilles to Messa for to gon.
In whiche lond, riche and plenteuous,
Regned a kyng, worþi and famous,
Þat Teutran hiȝt; whiche in tranquillite,
With-oute werre or aduersite,
Had holde his septer & his royal sete
In þis Ile, so plesaunt and so mete—
Al-be þat some sein þis litel Ile
To þe kyngdam longeth of Cecile,
And hath his name ȝouen of plente,
After Messane, an huge gret cite,
Ful plenteuous, boþe on se and lond.
Þe whiche kyngdam, as I vndirstonde,
Is seide Messana, of Messes in latyn,
Þoruȝ habondaunce of frut, corn, & wyn,
At tharyuaille on her pleyn[e]s large,
Wher þei ar wont [for] to stuf and charge
Marchaunt schippes of straunge fer contre,
Þat þider saile by þe large se
To fecche vitaille, ay fro ȝer to ȝer,
Fro many cost of londis fer and ner,
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And eke also, as bokis can deuise,
And as Guydo [ful] pleinly telleth vs,
Þat of a kyng, callid Messanus,
Þis contre first of Messa toke þe name,
Þat in his tyme was of ful gret fame,
Passyng riche and wonder plenteuous.
But of al þis, Dares Frigius
In his boke makeþ no mencioun,
But schortly telleth, in conclusioun,
How Achilles, and Thelefus also,
To Messana ben to-gidre go
With þre þousand of Grekis chosen oute,
Most manly men amongis al her route.
Þe whiche as fast as þei gan to londe,
And þe kyng gan to vndirstonde
Of her comyng, [he] is descendid doun
With alle þe worþi of his regioun,
On hors and fote, in stel armyd briȝt,
Ageyn[e]s Grekis manfully to fiȝt,
Hem to deuoide, pleinly, ȝif he can.
And sodeinly þus þe skarmus gan
Atwixe Grekis and her mortal foon,
On ouþer part þat þer was many oon
Slayn and hurt, & to þe deþ y-woundid,
Euere vnlikly þer-of to be soundid;
For oþer trete was noon hem betwene,
But swerdis scharp & speris square & kene:
Now here, now þere, þat þei go to gronde;
For euery man his fo for to confounde
His labour dide & his besynes.
And þouȝ Grekis, þoruȝ her worþines,
Had on her foon moche londe I-wonne,
Ȝit to resort after þei begonne;
And merveil noon, be-cause þat her foon
352
For þe tyme it may noon oþer be—
Til Achilles gan be-holde and se
Þe mortal slauȝter vp-on Grekis side,
Turnyng þe bak, with woundis large & wyde;
Of hasty rancour chaunge gan his blood,
And for Ire furious and wood,
Whan he be-hilde his men lese her lond,
He with þe swerde þat he hilde in his hond
Made weie, killeth, and bare doun;
And in þe felde like a ferse lyoun
He ferde in soth, whan his men wer slaw,
Makyng his foon bakward to withdraw,
And his Grekis so manly recounforte,
Þat maugre hem he made hem to resorte.
And who þat euere in his weye stood,
With-oute mercy he kylleþ in his mood,
Þat geyneþ nat in his cruelte;
For dout[e]les, nadde his manhod be,
His passyng renoun and his worþines,
His knyȝthod eke, and his hiȝe prowes,
Þe Grekis had þat day finally
Venquissched be, with-oute remedie;
But þoruȝ his helpe þei recuren al:
For Achilles, sturdy as a wal,
Gan cerche scheltrouns & her rengis brake,
To-fore whos face his fomen go to wrake.
And aldirlast, whan he gan espie
Teutran þe kyng, þoruȝ his chiualrie
Diffende hym silf lik a worþi knyȝt,
And as a lioun bern hym in his fiȝt,
Now her, now þer, Grekis so oppresse—
Þis Achilles, of cruel hardynesse,
Nolde cesse in his pursewyng
Þoruȝ þe wardis, til he cam to þe kyng,
Of manly force, stout, & ful of pride,
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Ageyn whos myȝt no þing myȝt availe.
And of Teutran first þe aventaile
He raced haþe, & rent þe mail a-sonder,
And al to-hewe—þat it was a wonder
To considre þat day his cruelte.
And after þat, al to-broke hath he
His basenet, with many cruel wounde,
Of verray myȝt smet þe kyng to grounde;
And in al haste he maked hath no let,
Of his hed to rende his basenet,
And merciles for to do vengaunce,
His arme he gan on heiȝte to avaunce,
Fully in purpos þat he schal be ded,
And raunsomles gan amyn at his hed
With blody swerde, & dispitous herte,
Castyng pleinly he schal hym nat asterte—
In his Ire he was so furious.
But of fortune it be-fil riȝt þus,
Þat Thelephus, þe ȝong[e], lusty knyȝt,
Casuely þer-of had a syȝt,
And of Achille þe maner ful behilde:
Þe stroke anoon he bare vp with his schelde,
And gan Achilles mekely for to preye
To han pite so to done hym deye,
Sith he lay wonded almost to þe deth,
Brouȝt to þe point to ȝelden vp þe breth,
Beseching hym, for his benignite,
Of manly rouþe & knyȝtly eke pite,
With-drawe his hond & to don hym grace,
And graunt hym lyf for a litel space:
“Sith euery knyȝt schulde of gentilles
His enmy spare, whan he is in distres,
To outtraunce brouȝt, & specialy whan he
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To whom Achille, feruent in his Ire,
As he þat was of rancour set a-fyre,
Answerde ageyn: “what list þe so to praye
For hym þat nolde of pride our wyl obeye,
But folily, of vngoodlyhede,
Gan a werre, where as was no nede,
Of disdeyn and indignacioun,
Havynge a trust of presumpcion
In his manhod, whiche myȝt him nat avaylle
Ageyn[e]s Grekis to holden a bataille,
As it is preuid pleynly in þe ende,
Al oþer-wyse schortly þan he wende.
For in þe dyche iustly he is falle,
Whiche he made of malis for vs alle,
Wher we of wil nor entencioun
Ȝaf vn-to hym noon occasioun,
Vp-on no syde, platly, fer nor ner,
Nor mynystrede to hym no mater,
Nor to his londe mente no damage—
But hym silfe, grounde of al þis rage—
With-oute offence don to hym of vs.”
And efte ageyn ȝonge Thelephus
Humblely requerid of Achille,
Of knyȝtly rouȝþe his axyng to fulfille,
And to han mercy on hym in þis caas.
“For with my fader þis kyng whilom was,”
Quod Thelefus, “be bond confederat,
Whiche lithe now here al disconsolat,
Exspectaunt only, with a dedly face,
Vp-on þe hour whan his gost schal pace,
Þoruȝ-girt, allas! with many mortal wounde;
And for cause I haue in hym founde
A-fore þis tyme ful gret kyndenes—
For of manhod and of gentilles,
In þe boundis of his regioun
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Whilom as I casuely gan ride,
Schewed in soþe, vp-on euery side,
Ful ryal chere and gret humanyte,
Þat I am bounde of verray du[e]te
To remembre & to han in mynde;
And dout[e]les, ellis I were vnkynde,
Which after wolde my name foule atwite,
And for þat I parcel wolde hym quyte,
I ȝou beseche of respit of his lif.”
And Achilles, with-outen any stryf,
Delyuered hath, þe story telleth þus,
Teutran frely vn-to Thelefus,
Wheþer hym list to sauen or to spille.
And whan þat he hadde hym at his wille,
He considrede by hys woundis grene,
Þat were so mortal, sothly, & so kene,
Of verray nede þat he muste dye—
Þer was no geyn nor no remedye,
Nor availle may no medycyne.
Þe hour whan Phebus westward gan declyne,
And þe bataille brouȝt was to an ende,
While þe Grekis to her schippes wende,
Þe mene whyle, Teutran for þe peyne
Of his woundis gan more & more compleyne,
With-oute staunche so pitously þei blede:
His officeris fast[e] gan hem spede,
In a liter, maked ful ryal,
Toward his paleis & dongoun principal
To carien hym softe and esely;
And at his prayer, ful benignely,
Thelefus and also Achilles
Conveied hym amongis al þe pres,
Til he was brouȝt þer as him list to be;
And þei reseyuid, like to his degre,
[Ful] Ryally þe kyng, ay languysschinge,
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And myȝt[e] nat lenger drawe alengþe
His woful lif, so weyk was [he] of strengþe,
Þat his spirit muste algatis wende.
And he in haste made for to sende
For Achilles and for Thelefus;
And whan þei cam, he seide [vn-]to hem þus:
“Sirs,” quod he, “ful worþi of degre,
Helpe and honour with longe prosperite
Be vn-to ȝow, and good auenture
Al þe while [þat] ȝour lif may dure;
And specially to þe, o Thelephus,
Whiche hast to me ben so gracious,
Of gentilles, in my peynes stronge,
Only of grace my lif for to prolonge—
But deth, allas! I may nat nowe eschewe,
Nor his swerde on no parte remewe,
With-oute recur knyt in bitter bondis,
Vp-on þe brinke falle of Fatis hondis,
Of my lif al fully in dispeir,
Whiche of my body neuer myȝt haue eyr
After my day, by successioun,
To gouerne þis litel regioun,
Whiche like[ly] is to stonde dissolat
Of gouernaunce, and disconsolat,
Whiche þat I wan with ful gret trauaille;
And to þis day, with werre and bataille,
I haue it kept, as ȝe wel knowe echon,
And defendid from alle maner foon,
With-oute loos, ȝeris her-to-forne.
But recurles of ȝore I hadde it lorne,
Ne had I had helpe and eke socour
Of Hercules, þe grete conquerour,
Þat whilom was fader of Thelephus—
So strong, so myȝti, and so chiualrous—
Be whos manhod & whos hardynes,
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Whiche day be day is newe of memorie,
Of al my foon I hadde þe victorie:
He daunted hem and made hem so a-ferde,
Only by rigour of his scharp[e] swerde,
Þat finally, þoruȝ his manlihede
He made me þis regne to possede,
Maugre her myȝt, in pes and in quiete,
With septre and crowne in my royal sete,
Þat noon of hem, til þat he was ded,
Hardy was to lyften vp þe hed
Ageyn[e]s me, to speke in wordis fewe.”
Wher-by I may fully declare and schewe
By euydence, þat þis litel Ile
Is pertynent and longeth to Secile,
Wher Hercules for a memorial
Sette pilers in his conquest royal,
Whan he had ride and go so fere,
And of Columpna ȝit þe name bere,
After hym callid Herculea—
Þouȝ somme seyn þei hote Herracula,
Þe name chaungyng by corrupcioun.
Þe whiche londe was whilom mansioun
To þe peple of wilde Barbarie;
Þe whiche kyngdam for to magnifie,
Frederik, sothly, þe secunde,
Of gold and good passyngly habounde,
Þat chose was to ben Emperour
Of Rome toun, and myȝti gouernour,
And whilom eke was kyng of Secile—
Whiche made reise in þat large Ile
A myȝti tour, hiȝe and þikke of wal,
As seyth Guydo, for a memorial
To putte his name longe in remembraunce;
And for þe soil was to his plesaunce,
With floures fresche of many sondry hewe,
In somme bokis þe lond was namyd newe
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For his fairnes, “þe lusty newe lond.”
But Teutran ay lyggyng in his peyne,
As he þat fast[e] gan þe hour atteyne
Of cruel deth, a-forn his lordis alle
He made in haste Thelefus to calle
To his presence, and with a mortal chere
Seide openly, þat alle myȝten here:
“My sone,” quod he, “now þat I schal passe
Out of þis worlde—for geyn[e] may no grace
My lif to saue, þoruȝ no mannys myȝt—
But for be-cause of equite and riȝt
I am compelled, iustly in sentence,
To declare clerly my conscience
To-fore my deth, heryng al þis pres—
Þis to seyn, þi fader Hercules,
Þe wyse worþi, and þat knyȝtly man,
Whilom þis lond þoruȝ his conquest wan;
Þe whiche only of his goodlyhede,
As he þat was þe stok of manlyhede,
Toke vn-to me, by commyssioun,
Þe gouernaunce of þis regioun,
Of his fre wille, with hool þe regallye,
And nolde hym silf þe crowne occupie;
And sothly, ȝit his riȝt was nat þe lasse.
For loue of whom, now þat I schal passe,
With al thentent of my laste wil,
To þe I graunte, as it is riȝt and skil,
As verray eyer iustly to succede,
Longe in honour þer þi lif to lede,
Makynge here a protestacioun,
Þat in ful tokene of confirmacioun
Þis is þe wil, finally, of myn herte,
Fro þe whiche no man may diuerte
Vp-on no side, nor outterly declyne.
For first my wil and discent of lyne
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Fro whiche þing no mortal man may gon:
For þis desire, last of my langour,
Þat þou playnly be my successour;
And finally, þus I conclude and deme,
Þat vn-to þe septre and dyademe
Deliuered be, wiþ euery circumstaunce.”
But al his wil, for more assuraunce,
He made write in his testament,
Þe fyn concludyng of his last entent.
And after þat, he ful pitously
Telephus besouȝt[e] hertely,
Of manly rouþe & knyȝtly gentilles
To done his deuer and his besynes,
After his deth, liche his estat royal,
To halwe and holde þe feste funeral
Solempnely, and þe exequies do.
And sodeynly, with-oute wordis mo,
Þe kyng Teutran ȝeldeþ vp þe gost,
And went his wey, I not in-to what cost—
I can nat deme of swiche mystyhede.
And whan Parchas broken han þe þred
On þe rokke, and he was forþe his way,
Þan Telefus, out of marbil gray
Coriously a tombe made kerue,
Þe dede cors þer-in to conserue
Ful richely; and a-boue þe graue
An Epithaphie anoon he dide graue,
In his honour pleinly to expresse
His knyȝthod boþe, and [his] worþines,
And how his gost & he wer deuocid—
Wiþ lettris riche of gold aboue enbocid
Rounde aboute wonder corious,
On his tombe, þat seide pleinly þus:
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Howe Kenge Teutram was buryede in A riche Epethaphye graven with sotele vers.
“Here lyth Teutran þe kyng, dout[e]les,Whilom slawe of cruel Achilles,
Þat his septre and þe regalie
Holy ȝaf, whiche no man may denye,
To Thelefus, sone of Hercules,
Whiche in his tombe resteþ now in pes.”
Whan þis parformyd was in euery þing,
And Thelefus was crowned in-to kyng,
And hiȝe and low, al be on assent,
Hadde openly in a parlement
Made feith to hym and y-don homage
Lik to her degrees, as þei wern of age,
And with hool hert, in al þer best entent,
Be othe assurid and be sacrament,
As trew[e] liges reseived hym for kyng,
Þan Achilles, with-oute more tariyng,
Whan al was sette in pes & gouernaunce,
With-oute gruchyng or any variaunce,
To her schippes anoon he made carie
Euery þing þat was necessarie
To þe Grekis, corn, frute, and vitaille,
Flesche or fysche, or what þat myȝt availle
To hosteyng, or helpe hem in her nede—
Doun to þe see al he dide lede,
Fully her vessel for to stuf & lade.
And Thelefus after þis he made
Stille in þe boundis of his regioun
For to abide, for þis conclusioun:
Þat þoruȝ his helpe & his dilligence,
Besynes and discret prouidence,
Ageyn al meschef and al skarscite,
Whan þei nede, he myȝt her socour be—
Al-be þat he, liche as seith Guydo,
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But he abod, sothly for þe beste,
Be bond assured fully and beheste
In euery þing Grekis to releue.
And þan in haste Achilles toke his leue
Of Thelefus, and gan anon to saille,
Alle his schippes stuffid wiþ vitaille,
Toward Grekis, as made is mencioun;
And in schort tyme he at Tenedoun
Aryued is, and taken hath þe grounde
With alle his knyȝtis, boþe heil & sounde.
And aftir þis, to Agamenoun
He made first ful relacioun
Of his expleyt, lik as it was falle,
In þe presence of his lordis alle,
Sitting enviroun many worþi knyȝt.
And first, in Messa, he telleþ of þe fiȝt,
Whan þei entre, & of her wolcommyng;
And ceriously, he tolde eke of þe kyng
Þat Teutran hiȝt, & pleinly also how
Achilles amyd þe felde hym slowe,
And or his deth, how he of hool entent
Fully ordeyned in his testament
Thelefus also to ben his heyr.
Al þis he tolde, & eke of his repeire
Vn-to þe se, and eke of þe vitaille,
And Thelefus, how he wil nat faille
To senden hem al þat may hem plese—
Of whiche þing þe Grekis in gret ese
Were brouȝt of hert, & lyke wonder wel,
Whan Achilles had tolde hem euerydel,
And gretly preise his hiȝe prouidence,
His manhod boþe, & his sapience,
In his oute-beyng þat he bare hym so.
And aftir þis Achilles is go
To his loggyng, a litel þer be-syde,
Where his knyȝtes vp-on hym abyde,
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And hym reseyue as longeþ to a kyng,
Where he a-bood & restid hym a while.
But for Guydo declineþ here his stile
From þe Grekis to hem of Troye toun,
I muste also make digressioun,
Of myn auctor þe steppis for to sewe,
Like as it is conuenient & dewe
To my mater, sith he is my guyde,
And for a while Grekis sette a-side,
And reherse how Dares Frigius
In Troye boke declareth vn-to vs,
And ceriously maketh mensioun
Of þe lordis þat cam to Troye toun
To helpe hem manly in her diffence,
Ageyn Grekis to make resistence
With ordinaunce of many diuerce þinges—
Þer cam to hem erlis, dukis, kynges,
As in Dares pleinly is made mynde,
Redeth his boke & þer ȝe may it fynde.
Here folowyngly be rehersed the namys of þe kyngis that kame to help the Cite of Troye.
And aldirfirst, I rede how þat heSpecially speketh of kynges þre,
Ful manly men, & also of gret fame—
Al-be þat he reherseth nat þe name
Of her kyndammys—ȝit he writeþ þus:
Þe first of hem was callid Pandarus,
And as I rede, Thabor þe secounde,
Þe þridde Andastrus, liche as it is founde;
And as Guydo liste to specifie,
Þre þousand knyȝtes in her companye,
And manly men þei were euerychon.
And from an Ile, callid Coloson,
Liche as Dares liketh to expresse,
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Kynges foure; of whiche þe first[e] was,
As he writ, I-named Carias,
And þe secounde hiȝt Ymasyus,
Nestor þe þride, þe fourþe Amphimacus;
And fiue þousand worþi knyȝtes alle
Þer cam with hem manly for to falle
Vp-on þe Grekis in helping of þe toun.
And from an Ile of ful gret renoun,
Callid Lycye, cam þe kyng Glaucoun,
And wiþ hym brouȝt his sone Sparedoun,
A noble knyȝt, in armys ful famous,
And was allyed to kyng Priamus;
And þre þousand, ȝif I schal nat feyne,
Þer cam of knyȝtes with þese lordis tweyne.
And from Larisse, a riche lond also,
As I fynde, þer cam kynges two;
And hem to quite manly, as þei ouȝte,
A þousand knyȝtes þei to Troye brouȝte.
And from a kyngdam named Lycaoun,
Caphemus, a kyng of grete renoun,
Brouȝt with hym, as Dares bereþ witnes,
A þousand knyȝtes of gret worþines.
And fiue hundrid, Dares telleþ vs,
Cam with Hupon and wiþ Epedus,
Manly knyȝtes, in platis siluer briȝt.
And with hym eke a kyng þat Remus hiȝt
Brouȝt þre þousand to Troye many mile
From Tabaria his large myȝti Ile;
And dukis foure, with al her chiualry,
And erlis eyȝte cam in his companye,
Hauyng in armys gret experience;
And alle þei bare, with-oute difference,
Her men & þei, whan þei wer in þe felde,
Þe chef of gold eueryche in his scheld,
Wherby þe kyng, & holy his meyne,
Among hem alle knowe myȝt[e] be,
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And from Trace kyng Pilex, by his name—
Fro þilke Trace þat is most excellent,
Whiche in þe plage of þe oriente
Haueth his syyt—from whiche þis myȝti king
A þousand knyȝtes brouȝt at his comyng;
And as myn auctor recordeth eke also,
An hundrid knyȝtes ben to Troye go
Wiþ Alcamus, a duke eke ful famus,
Þat cam with Pilex, Guydo writeth þus,
Troyans to helpe in her grete nede.
And fro Panonye, soth[ly] as I rede,
Cam Pretemissus, þe noble werriour,
Lord of þat lond, kyng and gouernour,
And duke Stupex with him eke he hadde,
And of knyȝtes a þousand þat he ladde
Toward[es] Troye from his regioun.
And as þe stori makeþ mencioun,
Þat Ile stant moste be wyldernes,
And be wodis of plenteuous þiknes,
Growyng þer-in ful many diuerse tre,
And moste is forest þat men þere may se;
For þei þer bilde howses but a fewe;
And in þat lond ful diuersly hem schewe
Many liknes, queint and monstruous,
Bestis vnkouþe, to siȝt[e] meruelous,
Stoundemele, as bi apparence,
By illusioun fals in existence,
Wonder gastful, pleynly, for to sene:
For diuerse goddis of þe wodis grene
Appere þere, called Satiry,
Bycornys eke, fawny and incuby,
Þat causen ofte men to falle in rage;
And of þis lond þe peple is ful sauage,
Hardy knyȝtes, furious & wood,
And desyrous ay to scheden blood,
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Wiþ dart & spere, perellous to mete,
For þei cast euen as any lyne.
And from an Ile þat named was Botyne,
In gret array to Troye þe cite,
Like as I fynde, þer cam dukis þre:
Þe first of hem callid Anphimvs,
Samvs þe secounde, þe þridde Forcynus,
And as seith Dares, whiche list nat lye,
Twelue hundrid knyȝtes in her companye.
And fro Bitvnye, as made is remembraunce,
Þe riche lond, þat hath swiche habundaunce
Of spicis, gommys, frutis, corn, & wyn,
Holsom rotis, ryndis, riche and fyn,
Wonder vnkouþe and precious also,
Out of whiche Ile þer cam kynges two,
Ful knyȝtly men, in armes desyrous—
Kyng Boetes and Episterus,
And with hem brouȝt to Troye from so ferre
A þousand knyȝtes arrayed for þe werre.
And fro þe lond callid Pafogonye,
Whiche seuerid is from al companye,
As bokis seyn þat ben historial,
Vnder þe plage þat is oriental
Set so fer, as made is rehersaille,
Þat fewe or noon to þat lond trauaille,
For þer to come is almost impossible,
For whiche þat lond is callid Invisible,
Be-cause only of his remocioun;
And ȝit it is a riche regioun,
Of gold & siluer also, and of stonys,
And habondaunt of plente for þe nonys,
It is so ful of tresour and of good,
And hath his syyt on þe riche flood
I-namyd Tygre, nat fer from Eufrates,
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Fro whiche lond, in stel armyd clene,
A þousand knyȝtes cam with Philymene,
Þe worþi kyng, whos scheldis, out of drede,
Wern of querboyl, in Guydo as I rede,
With gold depeint & fret with stonys riche,
Þat in þis world I trowe wer non liche,
Out of þe flodis chose be devis,
Whiche han her cours out of paradys—
Þe whiche kyng, a geaunte of stature,
And of makyng passyng al mesure,
Strong and deliuere also, as I fynde.
And fro þe lond þat marchiþ vp-on Ynde,
Kyng Porses cam with many knyȝtly man;
And he also, þat with his hond hym wan
So moche honour, þe noble Meryon,
And his brother callid Sygamon,
Whiche from þe lond of her subieccioun,
Of dukis, erlis, & knyȝtes of renoun,
Þre þousand brouȝt, alle in platis schene,
With speris rounde, whet ful square & kene—
From Ethiopie cam þis noble route.
And fro þe kyngdam also, out of doute,
Þat Teremo of Dares callid is,
Cam þe kyng, ful prudent & ful wis,
Þe manly man namyd Theseus,
And eke his sone þat hiȝt Archilagus,
A þousand knyȝtes in her companye;
And Theseus ful nyȝe was of alye
To Priamus, by discent of blood.
And kynges tweyne, passynge riche of good,
And renomyd of knyȝthod as be fame—
Al-be þat Guydo rehersiþ nat hir name—
Ȝet in þis story he makiþ mencioun,
Þat from Agresta, þe litel Regioun,
A þousand knyȝtes þei brouȝt vn-to Troye,
Grekis pride to daunten and acoye;
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And from þe lond be-ȝonde Amaȝonys,
Lissynya, þe kyng Epistrophus,
So wys, so worþi, and inly vertuous,
Passynge of counseil and discreccioun,
And with al þis, ful worþi of renoun
He preved was also, in special,
And in þe artis callid liberal
He lernyd was, and expert a-riȝt,
Nat-withstondyng he was a worþi knyȝt,
In werre & pes manful & riȝt sage,
Al-be þat he was ronne fer in age—
And as þe stori makeþ rehersaille,
A þousand knyȝtes clad in plate & mail,
To Troye toun, I fynde, þat he ladde;
And with hym, Guydo seith, he hadde
A wonder archer, of siȝt merueilous,
Of forme & schap in maner monstruous:
For lik myn auctor as I reherse can,
Fro þe nauele vpward he was man,
And lower doun lik an hors y-schapid;
And þilke parte þat after man was makid,
Of skyn was blak & rowe as eny bere,
Couerid with here from colde hym for to were,
Passynge foul and horrible of siȝt,
Whos eyen were spark[e]ling as briȝt
As a fourneis with his rede leuene,
Or þe liȝtnyng þat comeþ doun fro heuene,
Dredful of loke, and red as fire of chere.
And, as I rede, he was a good archere;
And with his bowe, boþe at eue & morwe,
Vp-on Grekis he wrouȝt moche sorwe,
And gasted hem with many hidous loke,
So sterne he was þat many of hem quoke
Whan þei hym saw, so ogly & horrible,
And more lothsom þan it is credible,
Þat many on hath wonded to þe deth,
368
On Grekis side, as ȝe schal after here.
And in þis wyse assemblid ben y-fere
Kynges, dukis, and erlis of renoun,
From sondri londis with-Inne Troye toun,
Þat be gadred & come fro so ferre,
As seith Dares, to helpe hem in þis werre—
Þat wer in noumbre, as he maketh mynde,
Two and þritty þousand, as I fynde,
Of worþi knyȝtes and lordis of estate,
Þat sith þe worlde was formyd & creat,
Ne was nat seyn, I trowe, in o cite
To-gidre assemblid of so hiȝe degre,
Nor of knyȝtes so gret a multitude.
And ȝit þis Dares, sothly to conclude,
In his boke maketh of hem no mynde,
Þat cam to Troye out of smaller Ynde,
Nouþer of hem, most famus of renoun,
Þat wer with Priam born of Troye toun—
Þat finally, ȝif it be trewly souȝt,
Siþen þe hour þat þis world was wrouȝt,
I dar afferme, vndir Phebus spere
So many worþi wer nat met I-fere
Of manly men, flouryng in lustines,
So fresche, so ȝonge, and as by liklynes,
In euery point, of schap and of array
For to do wel, sothly þis no nay,
Who list considere vp-on ouþer side.
For þoruȝ þe world, wher men go or ride,
Þe flour of knyȝthod & of worþines,
Of chiualrie, and of hiȝe prowes
Assemblid was with-outen & with-Inne,
Fully assentid a werre to be-gynne.
Wherfore, ȝe listers, taketh now good hede,
Þat ȝow delite in þis boke to rede:
First for how litel [þat] þis werre gan,
369
Hath lost his lif in meschef pitously;
And ȝit no man can be war þer-by—
Almost for nouȝt was þis strif be-gonne:
And who list loke, þei han no þing wonne
But only deth, allas, þe harde stounde!
So many knyȝt cauȝt his deþes wounde
Wiþ-oute recure or any remedie.
And for a woman, ȝif I schal nat lye,
Gan al þis strif, it was þe more pite,
Þat so gret meschef or aduersite
Of mortal slauȝter euer schulde tyde!
Bet had ben to haue set a-side
Swiche quarellis, dere I-now amyte,
To haue lete passid or þe vengaunce bite:
For wisdam wer to cast a-forn and se
Ȝif swiche sclaundris myȝt eschewed be
Or þe venym gonne for to ripe;
For þow[ȝ] þat men with hornys blowe & pipe
Whan an hous is fired in his hete,
Of þe sparkle to late is to trete,
Þat causid al: wherfore, at þe gynnyng
Þe remedie is put of euery þing,
As euery wiȝt may deme in his resoun.
Howe the worthy kynge Pallamydes, the secunde parsone of þe Grekes, kame with thirtye shippes to Thenedone, in helpynge of the Grekes. And howe þe famous manful knyght, Dyomede, provokede them to departe fro Thenadon, and to Arryve in þe playne afore Troye.
And whil þe Grekis lay at Tenedoun,Hem to refresche & to reste in pes,
370
Wiþ þritti schipes out of Grekis lond,
Stuffid with knyȝtes, ful worþi of her hond,
Þe beste chose of al his regioun,
Arived is vp at Tenedoun.
Wher-of Grekis whan þei hadde a siȝt,
Reioyschyng hem, wer riȝt glad & liȝt,
Havyng rewarde [vn-]to his worþines,
Where þei a-forn hadde had heuynes
For his absence þat he was so longe;
And some of hem grucchid at him strong,
For he nat kepte his moustre at Athene.
But for to schewe þat he was al clene
Of any spot in his conscience,
Ful manfully, in open audience,
Liche a knyȝt he gan hym silf excuse,
Stoppyng alle þo þat þer-on list to muse,
Of his absence schewyng þe cause whi,
Þat for siknes and sodeyn maladie
He was constreyned his presence to withdrawe.
And for þei sawe þat siknes haþ no lawe,
Þei hilde excused fully his absence;
And for he was of most reuerence,
Among Grekis to no wiȝt þe secounde,
And was also ful wys & eke habounde
Of gold and good, avise & prudent,
Þat what-so-euere he set on his entent,
Knyȝtly & wysly he wolde it wel acheue,
And what he gan he ne wolde leue,
Maugre his foon, in no maner wyse,
Til þat he sawe a fyn of his emprise,
And for he was most of oppinioun
Amongis Grekis, and reputacioun,
Þei hym besouȝt þat he wold[e] be
Of her conseil, avisely to se
What wer to do in euery maner þing.
371
Benygnely of his gentilles.
And Grekis þan dide her besynes
To procede, with-oute more delay,
Hem to enhaste, in al þat euer þei may,
To gynne a sege and differre it nouȝt.
And sondri weies þei cerched han & souȝt
In her wittes, how fro Tenedoun
Þei may remewe towarde Troye toun,
From þe hauene wher her schippes be.
And somme þouȝt most comodite,
For most expleit, be niȝt priuely
Toward Troye, þat stod fast[e] by,
Proudly to saille with her schipes alle.
And somme seide, gret peril myȝt[e] falle,
Toward niȝt for to take þe se,
List with dirknes þei ennoysed be
In her passage, knowyng not þe way,
Wher-of gret harme after falle may—
And þus diuers of oppinioun,
Procedyng nat to no conclusioun:
For in effect her purpos nat ne held,
But stille lyn, ay loggid in þe felde,
Like as þei had entriked be with drede,
Til on a day, worþi Dyomede,
Of þe Grekis seyng þe cowardyse,
Euene þus his conseil gan deuyse:
“Sirs,” quod he, “þat be now here present,
Ȝif þat ȝe list, alle be oon assent,
Goodly considre, aduertyng prudently
What I schal seyn to-fore ȝow openly,
Whiche of knyȝthod han so noble a name,
Sothly me semeth, we ouȝten han gret schame,
Whiche holde oure silfe so myȝti & so strong,
And in þis lond soiourned han so longe—
Niȝe al þis ȝere—and dursten in no wyse
Remewen hens, for verray cowardyse—
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But to oure foon graunted folily,
Euene at her lust, space & liberte
To make hem strong, and oportunyte
Vs to withstond, pleinly, at þe hond—
And so þei wiln, ȝe may wel vndirstond.
For day be day, to oure confusioun,
Þay haue souȝt wayes, ful wisly vp & doun,
To gete hem help in þe mene space,
And hem enforced aboute in euery place,
Her round cite with barreis & with palis,
Her wallis maskued, and ageyn oure skalis—
Trusteþ þer-on—made gret ordinaunce.
And with al þis, of oure gouernaunce
Þei han espied, seyng þat for drede
We han noon hert manly to procede
In oure purpous to hold with hem werre;
And ay þe more þei se þat we differre,
Þe more þei wiln cacchen hardynes
Vs to resiste with al her besines.
Also I se, and trust it verrailly,
Þat ȝif we had afore-hand manfully,
As we began, knyȝtly furþe contunyd,
Oure Iourne hadde better be fortunyd:
Ȝif sodeynly with strong & myȝti honde,
Þei vnavised, we had in-to her londe
With-oute abood afore þis tyme ariued,
Of whiche [a] while we must be depriued
And delaied, where first with victorie,
To oure honour, with þe palme of glorie
We myȝt sothly, nad[de] ben oure slouþe,
Our wil complisched, þis þe pleyn[e] trouþe:
Wher maugre vs, or we to lond aryue,
With strong diffence þei wil ageyn vs striue,
And put vs of or we þe stronde wynne.
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Þe more, in soth, for me list nat lye,
We put oure silfe echon in iupartye—
What schulde I feyn or fage fro þe trouþe?
For oure tariyng & oure coward slouþe
Ar likly after to tourne vs to gret sorwe:
Wherfor, erly to-morwe by þe morwe,
My conseil is, oure ankres vp to pulle,
In þis mater no lenger þat we dulle,
But to enarme oure schipes for þe werre;
And at þe vprist of þe morwe sterre,
Late vs ordeyn, with knyȝtly apparaille
Out of þis hauene with þe wynde to saile,
Of manful hert & lusti fresche corage,
Our cours holdyng & our riȝt passage
Toward Troye, & londen horpidly,
What-euere falle: for trusteþ sikerly,
With-out skarmusche we may nat ariue;
For þei fro Troye descende wil as blyue,
Lik manly men, to mete vs in þe berde.
But for al þat, lat vs nat ben a-ferde,
But voide drede, & manhod set a-fore,
Þat cowardyse entre at no bore
For to astone þe manhod of oure herte.”
And with þat word, þe Grekis gan aduerte
Þe manly conseil of þis Diamede,
And in effect to procede in dede
Vn-to þe point, & for no þing spare,
And in what wyse, anoon I schal declare.
Howe the Grekes londede in the playne afor [Troye], and howe the Troyans gave theme batayle at the stronde: in whos meteynge were slayne mony A worthy knygh[t] and others.
374
Or Phebus vprist, longe or it was prime,
Whan it be-gan ful merily to dawe,
Þe Grekis host to schipward gonne drawe
With manly hert, fully deuoyde of drede,
Only þoruȝ comfort of þis Diomede.
But aldirfirst, anoon as þei a-wake,
Þe lordis wysely han her counseil take
And concludid among hem euerychon,
Whiche of her schipes schuld[e] formest gon,
And on þe se howe þei schulde hem guye,
So to ariue þat no man hem espie:
Þis was deuised at a certeyn marke.
Þe nyȝt passid, at singyng of þe larke,
Grekis be schippid with-out more tariyng,
Boþe hiȝe and low, in [þe] daw[e]nyng;
And first a-forne, an hundrid schipes of tour,
Stuffid with many worþi werriour,
Gan proudly saille, as þei had in charge;
And þe baners, brode, briȝt, and large,
Were splaied out vp-on euery side:
And þei departe þe fomy wawes wyde,
Þat to siȝt whelmen vp so grene.
And next [to] hem, for werre enarmyd clene,
A-noþer hundrid folwe fast[e] by,
Whiche bare her sailles passingly proudly,
In whiche þer was ful many worþi knyȝt,
Armyd in mail & in platis briȝt.
And after folweþ hoolly her nauye,
Þat as I trowe, swiche a companye
Of worþi knyȝtes & lordis of degre
Was neuer a-forne seyn vp-on þe se.
And Eolus was to hem fortunat;
And eke Neptune made no debat
375
Þatempre wedir ful mery to hem dawes,
Þat in a tyde, as þei seille riȝt,
Of Troye toun þei cauȝt anoon a siȝt,
Wher-of in hert ful glad & liȝt þei ben.
But whan Troyans first her schippes sen
So proudly saille a litel fro þe stronde,
And sawe how þei cast hem for to lond,
Þei bood no more, but arme hem hastily
In plate and mail & Iakkis richely,
With Irous hert—and þat was don anon—
And toke her hors, & forþe in hast þei goon
Out at þe ȝatis & made no tariyng:
For þei nabide prince, duke, nor kyng,
Nor oþer lord to guye hem or gouerne,
But hast hem forþe, so many and so ȝerne,
Þoruȝ-oute þe felde so gret a multitude.
Amongis whom were no folkis rude,
But manly men, & þriftily beseyn,
So clenly armyd on þe large pleyn,
Þat whan Grekis gan hem first beholde,
Of þe noumbre her hert[e] gan to colde:
For þer was noon so manly hem amonge,
So ȝong, so fresche, so hardy, nor so strong,
Of hiȝe estat nor of lowe degre,
Þat he ne was astonied for to se
Þe hardy Troyans so proudly doun descende
To lette Grekis þat þei nat ascende,
Þat þei wist and conceive outterly
Þer was no mene to arive by,
But only deth, or manly for to fiȝt,
Or cowardly take hem to þe fliȝt—
For oþer conduit pleinly noon þer was
But scharp[e] swerdis & speris in þis cas.
Til sodeinly þe hardy ferse kyng,
376
Formest of alle, an hundrid schipes ladde,
Gan hasten hym for Ire þat he hadde,
Talondid first, ȝif it wold haue be,
Ta met with hem so gret desire had he.
But swyche a wynde gan in þe seil[e] driue
Of his schipis, whan he schope tariue,
Þat he vnwarly smet vp-on þe londe,
On þe gettis and þe drye sonde,
Þat his schippes schyuered al a-sondre,
And some dreint, to-broken here & ȝondre,
And deuourid of þe wawy se,
Þat it was rouþe and pite for to se—
For but of harde þer myȝte noon eskape.
And whiles some wer besy for to take
Þe drie lond, with mvd and filþe y-lade,
Troyens of hem ful cruel slauȝter made;
Maugre her myȝt, Grekis so constreyned,
Þat with her blood þe wawis wer [y-]steyned,
So mortally, þat sothly to be-holde,
Amonge þe sonde, pale, ded, and colde
Þe Grekis lyn, with woundis fresche & grene;
And al þe eyr with schot of arowis kene
I-schadwed was, þat Phebus bemys briȝt
Vp-on þe soille was dirked of his liȝt.
And new alwey Troyens hem assaille,
Þat to Grekis pleinly þis ryvaille
So mortal was & so infortunat,
So vnwelful and disconsolat,
So vndisposid þoruȝ infelicite,
Þat, I trowe, neuere out of no se
Ne cam noon host of mor harde to londe.
But for al þat, Grekis nolde wonde,
For lyf nor deth, manly to arive.
And so befil, of auenture as blyue,
Þe hundrid schipes þat next aftir sew,
377
Ben entrid in, and hast[e] nat to faste,
And strike sail and her ankris caste,
For þe werre strongly enbatailled,
In her londyng list þei wern assailled.
And wisly first þei sette her arblasteris
And her gonners & her best archeris,
With pauiseris for to goon aforn,
Knyȝtly to londe, þouȝ Troyens had sworn
Þe contrarie, proudly hem to lette;
Ȝet for al þat, fersly vp þei sette.
The Grekysshe schot made hem to with-drawe,
And many of hem on þe lond ley slawe,
Þat maugre hem þe stronde þei recure;
And swiche as myȝt most manfully endure
Wer set aforn, til þei þe lond han take.
And al attonys swiche assaut þei make
Vp-on Troyens; and þo be-gan þe fiȝt,
Whan Prothesilaus, þe noble worþi knyȝt,
Wonder lifly & riȝt passyng strong,
With þe Grekis entrid in among
Þe hardy Troyens, & euer[y]-wher hem souȝt;
For he of armes merueilles on hem wrouȝt
Þilke day þoruȝ his worþines,
Þat many Troyan he brouȝt in distresse—
Wher he went þei felt[e] ful vnsofte,
Þoruȝ whos manhod Grekis wern a-lofte.
For þilke day, ne hadde his knyȝthood be,
Þe Grekis hadde in gret aduersite
Be venquisched by fatal puruyaunce,
And fynally brouȝt vn-to vttraunce,
I-putte a-bak, pleinly þis no lye.
But what availleþ al his chiualrie,
His worþines, or his fers corage—
What myȝt it helpe or do avauntage,
Sith seuene þousand Grekis had a-do
378
It merueil was how þei myȝt endure
In any wyse þe stronde to recure,
Or so fewe [for] to holde a felde.
But in hem silf o þing þei behelde,
Ful prudently, whiche þat ȝaue hem hert;
Þat þei saw þei myȝt[e] nat asterte
To eskape alyue ȝif þei wolde fle:
For at her bak was no þing but þe se,
And to-forn hem an host so gret & huge
Þat oþir way was þer no refuge,
But deye attonys or fiȝt manfully.
Wherfor þei caste & schope hem ful knyȝtly,
Lik manly men, her lyues to iuparte
Þan cowardly from her foon departe,
To lese her grounde & drenchyn in þe se.
And þus as long as it wolde be,
Grekis diffende hem fer aboue her myȝt,
Al-be þat many wer kylled in þis fiȝt,
Þat þe stremys of þe rede blood
Ran on þe sonde, large as any flood,
So cruelly Troyens on hem sette
With spere and swerde, [ful] scharp[e] grounde & whet,
Þat rouþe was and pite for to þinke,
Til þei almost drof hem to þe brinke,
Wher þe Grekis, in meschef & distresse,
In gret anguysch & passyng werines
Hem silfe diffende, maat & ful wery,
Wher þei schulde haue perschid outerly,
Recurles, in soth, for euermore,
Nadde Archelaus and worþi Prothenor
From her schipes aryued vn-to londe,
Of sodeyn hap with hem for to stonde.
And ȝit þei had ful gret aduersite
For to ariue, þoruȝ þe cruelte
Of þe Troyens; but ȝit þe lond þei wynne.
379
Ageyn her foon to stonden at diffence
With manly force and gret violence;
And þo encreseth þe blody werre newe,
Þat al þe soil depeynt was with þe hewe,
Þat first was grene, turned in-to red,
On eche side so many on lay ded
Vp-on þe grounde, of his lif depriued.
But duke Nestor is sodeynly aryued
With his knyȝtes, felle and ful Irous,
And of hert riȝt malencolyous,
With his speris, archeris oute a-syde,
He entrid in, sterne & ful of pride.
With swerd and axe, grounde scharpe & kene,
Þei ran y-fere & mette vp-on þe grene;
And hokid arowis alwey flen among,
And schaftis schiuere, to-braste, & torne wrong;
And with her tolys, stelyd & wel whet,
Þe long[e] day þei han to-gidre met.
And þe slauȝter new alwey began,
On euery half, of many worþi man,
With woundys large, fel, & dispitous:
For Prothenor and kyng Archelaus
With swerdis stif among þe rengis kerue,
Whiche many Troyan made for to sterue—
Þei were þat day so passyng[ly] Irous,
And hem to auenge inly desyrous,
Neuer cessyng in her pursewyng.
And to releue hem, Alagus þe kyng
I-londid is, and eke kyng Athalus,
Whiche on Troyens werne ful envious,
Brennyng of Ire as þe fyry glede,
And vp-on hem, of verray olde hattrede,
With her knyȝtes sodeinly be falle;
And in her Ire, bitterer þan galle,
380
And of assent dide her besines
Maugre hem bakward to resort
Amyd þe feld, as I can report—
Þer was no choys, so þei wer constreyned
Of verray force, & of manhod peyned
To withdrawe, to her confusioun.
Here were faste devyces founde in Armes.
But þanne in hast, doun fro Troye toun,Of worþi knyȝtes freschely armyd new,
With diuises of many sondri hewe,
With-out abood, schortly to conclude,
Þer cam doun so gret a multitude,
Eche his armys depeint vp-on his schelde,
Þat in her comyng gletereth al þe felde
Of her armwre and þe sonne briȝt;
And whan þat þei wer entrid in-to fiȝt,
Grekis metyng, felly be envie,
Þei set vp-on, fret wiþ malencolie,
With swiche a wille, of hert[e] an[d] corage,
Wiþ swiche furie in her mortal rage,
Þat vntacord was noon oþer mene,
But slauȝtre and deth hem to go betwene,
Þoruȝ strok of axe, of dagger, & of spere,
Þat of force coact þe Grekis were
To retourne bakward to þe stronde.
To whos rescus anoon þer cam to londe
Þe kyng Vlixes with his hool navie,
And ful knyȝtly, with his chiualrie,
Towardis Troyens enhasteþ him anoon;
And of on herte þe Grekis with him goon,
And her corage hooly þei reswme,
And gan her foon felly to conswme
Vn-to þe deth, her damage to revenge,
381
Of vnmanhod, so wel þei han hem born,
To quite ageyn her harmys do be-forn.
At whiche tyme, lik a ferse lyoun
Among[es] Troyens renging vp and doun,
Vlixes went with his swerde in honde:
He kylleth, sleth, & knyȝtly gan to fonde,
Þilk[e] day lyk a man be founde;
And her & þer, with many mortal wounde,
Vp-on Troyens he wrouȝt al þis wrak,
Hem beryng doun on fote and hors[e]-bak,
In his Ire his strokis wer so kene.
At whiche tyme worþi Philomene,
Lord & kyng of Pafogonye,
Whan he behild, wiþ his companye,
So many Troyan of Vlixes slawe,
Towardis hym anon he gan him drawe
On hors[e]-bak, with a spere rounde,
Out of his sadil bar hym to þe grounde;
But Vlixes ros vp anon riȝt,
Takyng his hors, lik a manly knyȝt;
Þe whiche anon as Philomene haþ seyn,
Toke eft a spere and rod to hym ageyn
So myȝtely, and with swiche violence,
Þat finally þer geyneth no diffence,
But þat he smet him evene þoruȝ þe scheld,
þe whiche fley a-sondre in þe feld;
And þoruȝ his platis, with-outen any fail,
Þe sperehed ran, & rested in þe mail,
Þat forged was of steel ful schene & briȝt,
Whiche to perce þe sperehed had no myȝt,
So trewly made was þe haberioun;
But with þat strok Vlixes was bore doun
Ȝet eft ageyn; but he vp ros anon,
Whiche of his stroke harme ne felt[e] non,
382
And Philomene he ȝaf swiche a wounde,
With al þe myȝt of his armys tweyne,
Of Irous herte, with so gret a peyne,
Þat þoruȝ his schelde, boþe plate & mail,
He smet hym vp þoruȝ his aventail,
In-to þe gorge þat þe strok gan glide,
Þat from his hors he fil doun a-side,
Ful perlously piȝte vp-on his hed,
His knyȝtes wenyng sothly he were ded.
Whiche toke hym vp & leyde him on a scheld,
And bar him hom in hast out of þe feld,
With gret daunger or þei myȝt hym wynne,
Þoruȝ þe Grekis with her lord to twynne.
And for Troyens supposid sykerly
Þat Philomene, with-oute remedye,
Had be ded, þei wer astonyed alle:
Þat ȝif þis cas þat day nad[de] falle
Of Philomene, Grekis on þe stronde
Hadde be outtraied, ariving vp to londe,
Þoruȝ þe knyȝthod—þis is dout[e]les—
Of Philomene, whom þat Vlixes
Vnhorsed hath with a mortal wounde,
In knyȝtly wyse Troyens to confounde—
Wher-of þei wer astonyd euerychon.
But Thoas þanne and Agamenoun,
Of Grekis host lord & Emperour,
Ariued is vn-to her socour
Wiþ al his knyȝtes, and Menelaus,
And eke þe worþi Thelamonyus,
Callid Aiax, is to lond[e] come;
And þei at leyser han her hors [y-]nome,
While oþer Grekis Troyens occupie,
So[re] fiȝtyng, and þei gan fast[e] hye
Toward[es] hem, makyng no delay;
Al on a frussche, in al þe hast þei may,
383
With herte envious, vp-on hors[e]-bak.
Þer myȝt[e] men þe worþi knyȝtes se
On her stedis eche at oþer flee
With stif swerdis, schaftis gret & rounde,
With hedis square, þe pointis kene grounde—
Þer myȝt[e] men, in her furious tene,
Se many knyȝtes ded vp-on þe grene!
But most þe slauȝter and confusioun
Fil þilk[e] tyme of hem of þe toun:
Þe Grekis wern so myȝti & so strong.
And in þe feld þis contvneth long,
Til Prothesilaus, þe strong myȝti kyng,
Whiche al þe day in skarmusche & fiȝtyng
Ful lik a kynȝt had occupied be
Ageyn[e]s Troyens, in his cruelte,
Of manhod only and of wo[r]þines,
Of auenture, in his werynes
Hym to refresche & to taken eyr,
And to abreth hym, makyd his repeir
To þe stronde, where he dide ariue:
Wher as him þouȝt, his hert[e] gan to ryue
Of cruel Ire and also of pite,
Þat he kauȝt, only for to se
His men lyn slayn endelong þe stronde,
And some of hem comynge vp to londe,
Dreint in þe se among þe flodis depe.
For whiche þing he gan anoon to wepe
Ful pitously, al wer it nat espied,
Whos woful eyne myȝt[e] nat be dreyed
For þe constreynt which sat so nyȝe his hert.
Til at þe last, among his peynys smert,
So cruel Ire gan his hert enbrace,
Þat sodeynly with a dispitous face,
With-out abood, þouȝt[e] how þat he
384
Or finally attonis with hem deye.
And on his stede he toke þe riȝt[e] weye
Toward his foon, ful Irous in his rage;
And lyne riȝt he holdiþ his passage,
Swift as grehond þat renneþ oute of lees;
And where he saw þat þer was grettest pres,
He preseþ þoruȝ, amiddis of þe feld;
And with þe swerd whiche in his hond he held,
Þat ground[e] was to keruen and to bite,
Ful mortally a-boute hym he gan smyte,
Þat Troyens myȝt hym not asterte.
Some he riveth evene to þe herte,
And some he woundeth, sothly, to þe deth,
And some he made to ȝelden vp þe breth,
And he vnhorseþ somme cruelly;
And whom he mette þat day, outterly,
From his hors he made hym to alyȝte:
For where he rood þei fled out of his siȝt,
And his presence as þe deth eschewe;
But euere in on, he gan aftir sewe
In his chaas, as a wood lyoun.
Þis pley he pleyeth with hem of þe toun,
Til Perseus, of Ethiope kyng,
From þe cite com sodeinly ridyng
Wiþ many knyȝt & many lifly man;
At whos comyng of new[e] þer be-gan
A fresche skarmusch, furious & wood,
Þat many Greke þat day lost his blood,
So fel assaut Troyens on hem make.
And among hem þe Ethiopes blake
So manly bar hem, fiȝtyng here & þere,
Þat wher Troyens wern a-forn in fere,
Remounted ben and of new assurid;
385
And made hem lese also moche ageyn
As þei to-forn wonnen on þe pleyn:
For þei so hool & so myȝtily
Kept hem to-gidre, and so avisely
Gouerned hem, with pavis, spere, and schelde,
Þat Grekis werne compelled in þe felde,
Maugre who gruccheþ, of necessite,
To þe stronde bakward for to flee,
Almost dispeired, maat and confortles.
But in þat while, kyng Palamydes
To her rescus cam to a-ryvaille,
And lusty fresche entriþ in bataille
Wiþ his knyȝtes & his hool meyne,
Takyng her hors fast[e] by þe se;
And ful proudly enbusched al attonys,
With spere & swerd grounde for þe nonys,
By conveying of her worþi kyng,
Han so oppressid at her in-comyng
Þe manly Troyens, þat it was a wondre
To sen hem lyn, slay[e]n here and ȝondre.
And þis contuneþ til among þe pres
Of auenture þat Pallamydes,
Brennyng ay in his furious hete,
Amid þe feld happeþ for to mete
A worþi knyȝt callyd Sygamoun,
Whiche broþer was to [þe] kyng Menoun,
Nevew also, as Guydo doth reherse,
Þis manly man, to þe kyng of Perse,
Whiche Grekis had þat day sore oppresed
By his knyȝthod, as it is expresid:
For he Grekis by his worþines
Had ofte brouȝt in ful gret distres
Þe same day, to his grete encres.
But of fortune, allas, Pallamydes,
As I ȝow told, hath in þe feld hym met,
And with a spere, square & scharp[e] whette,
386
He rood at hym & smet him þoruȝ þe syde.
And with þat last dedly fatal wounde,
From his stede he bare hym to þe grounde;
And on þe pleyn, of his blood al red,
Pallamydes lefte hym pale and ded,
Amongis hem þat of Troye were;
And furþe he rood, & bare doun here & þere
Al þat euere in his weye stood—
He was on hem so furious & wood—
Maugre Troyens to-forn him on þe pleyn,
Made resorte to þe wal ageyn,
His manly knyȝtes, alwey fast[e] by,
On his awaytyng ful en[ten]tifly
Redy to hond at euery gret emprise.
But þo began þe noise to arise,
Þe woful clamour and þe pitus crie
Of hem of Troye, þe whiche outterly
Ageyn[es] Grekis myȝt[e] nat sustene;
Þe mortal swerd was so scharp & kene
Of þe noble worþi famous knyȝt,
Pallamydes, þat with his gret myȝt
Þe long[e] day hath y-born hym so
Ageyn his foon, and so knyȝtly do,
In his persone, þoruȝ his hie renoun,
[Þat] Chased hath almost to þe toun
Troyens echon, manly made to fle.
Þe noise of whom is entrid þe cite,
Þe hidous crie and þe mortal schout,
Wher-of amevid, Hector isseth out
Furiously, in al þe hast he can,
Þe sone of Mars, þis knyȝt, þis manly man,
Of alle worþi ȝit þe worþiest
Þat euere was, and þe hardiest.
For as Phebus with his bemys clere
387
Excellyng all in stel armyd briȝt,
On whom it was a verray heuenly siȝt:
For it was he, þat, boþe nyȝe & ferre,
Of worþines was þe lode-sterre.
Þe whiche whan he entrid in-to feld,
Liche as I rede, bare þat day a schelde,
Þe feld of whiche was of purid gold
With þre lyouns, in story as is told,
Of whos colour is made no mencioun;
But, as I fynde by discripcioun,
Þei wer passaunt, ȝif I report ariȝt,
Born on þe brest of þis Troyan kniȝt,
Þat was þe ground & rote of hiȝe prowes
And flour acounted of al worþines.
Þe whiche so manly, with-out more abood,
Amongis his knyȝtes to þe Grekis rood,
So like a man, þat þei in his comyng
Astonyd wern, as he gan in þring
Amonges hem, whiche killeth doun & sleth,
And whom he mette þer was nat but deth.
A-forn his swerd Grekis go to wrak;
And her wardis of knyȝtly force he brak,
And maugre hem seuered hem assondre,
And bare al doun, ridyng here and ȝondre.
And casuelly he meteth in his way
Prothesilaus, whiche al þe longe day
Had sore fouȝte ageynes hem of Troy
And slaw alle [þo] þat come in his woye,
Þis hardy knyȝt, þis worþi, ferse kyng,
Whiche on Troyens was euer purswyng—
He to hem had so hertly gret envye.
Þe whiche þing whan Hector gan espie,
And of his knyȝthod gan to taken hed,
Towardis hym he gan to reyne his stede;
And lyne riȝt of hasty Ire he rood,
388
He rof his hed, þoruȝ his bas[e]net,
With swiche a myȝt þat his strok nas let
By force of maille nor of þikke plate:
But finally, by ful mortal fate,
Þe swerd of Hector, þoruȝ nerf, bon, & veyne,
Þis worþi kyng parted haþ on tueyne;
For outterly, þer geyneth noon armvre
Ageyn þe strok of Hector to endure—
But þat þis kyng, so ful of worþines,
Strong & myȝty, and of gret hardines,
Receyved hath his last[e] fatal wounde,
And lith now ded, parted on þe grounde.
And Hector furthe among þe Grekis ryt;
And who-so-euer þat his strok abit,
Refute was non nor diffence but deth;
And many Greke þilke day he slethe:
For whiche of hem in his wey[e] stood,
His scharp[e] swerd he baþid in his blood,
Þat also fer as þei myȝt hym se,
As þe deth, from his swerd þei fle—
So mortal vengaunce up-on hem he wroȝt.
And many Greke at his felaw souȝt,
And gan enquere what he myȝt[e] be;
For al her lyue þei koude neuer se
Non so knyȝtly haue hym in bataile,
And pleynly dempte, as be supposaile,
It was Hector, þe noble werriour,
Whiche of knyȝthod may bere aweye þe flour
Among alle þat euer ȝit were born:
For þer nas Greke þat hym may stond a-forn;
Of alle þat day he gan hem so enchase
To þe strond, euene a-form his face—
For þei ne durst his mortal st[r]ook abide.
And whan he had vppon euery syde
Þe Grekis chacid to þe wawy se,
Wounded & maat, in gret aduersite,
389
Lik Mars him silf, hom to Troy is goon.
At whos partyng, Grekis eft preswme
Manly a-geyn her hertis to reswme,
And of newe her fomen for to assaille,
And to iupart, ȝif it wolde availle,
Lif & deth to setten at outtraunce
On Fortune, ȝif sche wolde avaunce
Her part ageyn in recure of þe felde,
And hem enforce, with myȝt of spere & scheld,
To wynne ageyn on Troyens, ȝif þei may,
Anon forþe-with, and make no delay.
For heiȝt[e] tyme sithen þei be-gonne
Þe feld þei han þat day lost & wonne,
Lyke as Fortune list to don hir cure,
Vp or down for to turne hir ewre:
For as hir whele went aboute rounde,
Riȝt so þat day þei wan & lost her grounde.
But specialy þei wer most dismaied
Whan Hector cam, whiche haþ hem so outra[i]ed
Þoruȝ his knyȝthod, whiche made her hertis riue,
And to resorte where þei dide aryue.
And þis contuneth, maugre al her myȝt,
While in þe feld was þis Troyan knyȝt,
Til Phebus chare gan to westre doun,
Þat he repeyred is in-to þe toun,
Whiche hadde Grekis wrouȝt aforn ful ille.
But nowe þe hardy, cruel, ferse Achille
Ariued is with his knyȝtes alle,
Mirundones whom men are wont to calle,
Whiche from þe se takyn han þe pleyn.
At whos commyng Grekis han a-geyn
Þe feld recured, & put hem silf in pres,
Only þoruȝ helpe of hardy Achilles,
Whiche is so felly Troyens falle vppon,
390
For þre þowsand in stel armyd briȝt
With hym he brouȝt, redy for to fiȝt,
Knyȝtes echon, ful worþi of renoun,
Whiche with Achille, Grekis champioun,
Han merciles in her cruelte
Slayn many Troyan out of þe cite.
Þei wer so feruent in her mortal Ire,
So envious of hate to desyre
Newe & newe for to schede her blood;
For Achilles þouȝt it dide hym good
With his swerde Troyan blood to schede,
And on þe soil to sen hem lyn & blede,
Routh[e]les in his malencolye.
For he to hem hath so hoot envie,
With-oute her deth þat it may nat quenche;
And he his swerd ful depe made drenche
Þe long[e] day in Troyanysche blood,
And baþid it as it were in a flood,
Whiche forgid was & I-whet so kene,
Þat many ryuer, sothly, on þe grene
Ran her and þer of her hortis sore,
And with his knyȝtes, alwey more & more
Pursewed hem, a-forn him as þei fle
To þe wallis of Troye þe cite,
Wher þei made a ful pitous cry.
And in þis while, I finde in þe story,
Þe Grekis host holy is arived,
Like in Guydo as it is descrived,
Of men of armys swyche a multitude,
And of knyȝtes, schortly to conclude,
Þat from her schipes of newe londed be,
Þat Troyens astonyd wer to se;
And abaisched þei gan wexen alle.
For sodeynly þei gan on hem falle,
On euery halfe, passyngly gret pres;
391
With his swerd made her sydes rede:
For her & þer lay þe bodyes dede,
And woundid some at entre of þe gate,
And knyȝtly þere with hem [he] gan debate,
And furiously þis fel cruel knyȝt
Þe children slowe in her fadris siȝt,
Þat to be-holde it was ful gret pite.
And ȝit þe slauȝter gretter had[de] be,
With-out noumbre of hem of þe toun,
Perpetuelly to her confusioun,
Likly for euer to haue be ouer-come,
Ȝif Troylus nadde vn-to reskus come,
Ȝong, fresche, & lusty, & inly desyrous,
With whom cam eke Paris & Dephebus
And many worþi her party to socure;
So þat Grekis þo ne myȝt endure
Ageynes hem to stonden at diffence,
For al her pride, no[r] make resistence,
Worþi Troylus so wel þat tyme hym quitte.
For þis in soth, what Greke þat he hitte,
Ouþer he maymeth or he made deye:
Wherfor, as deth, þei fledde out of his weye.
And Achilles with his company—
For it was nyȝt—homward gan him hiȝe
Toward Grekis, with glorie & gret honour;
And þei reseyve hym like a conquerour,
Þat he with hem hath so wel I-met;
And þei of Troye han her gatis schet,
And made hem strong þoruȝ-out al þe toun.
Of the pichenge of the Grekes felde; and howe Agamenon reysid his tentes, pavelons, & mansyons.
392
I-cerched hath a place couenable,
Whiche hym þouȝt was most agreable,
Be liklihede, and most conuenient
For euery lord for to sette his tent.
And in a feld of ful large space,
Most competent as for logging place,
In due siyt sette fro þe cite,
Eche lord was signed wher he schuld[e] be;
And gan anon ordeyne mansiouns,
Pycche her tentis and papilliouns;
And swyche as myȝt no tentori[e]s haue
From storm & reyn hem silf[e] for to saue,
Þei deuised oþer habitacles,
Tugurries & smale receptacles
To schroude hem in; & al þe nyȝt also,
From her schipes þei had moche ado,
Or þei myȝt han her hors to londe,
And to ordeyn wher þei schuld[e] stonde.
And þei also besy were to carye
Other þinges þat wer necessarie
And nedefully vn-to a sege longe;
And eke þei made teye her schipes strong
Fer in þe depes, and her ankris caste.
And of assent, þei besied hem ful fast
For to conferme of on entencioun
To sette a sege vn-to Troye toun,
And þer-vppon, by bond assured faste,
For to abide while her lyf may laste,
Fynally with-oute repentaunce.
And prudently þei made her ordinaunce,
As þei best coude: al þe long[e] nyȝt
Þei bet her fryes, which brent wonder liȝt;
And at a space deuided fro þe fyres,
393
And rounde aboute wher her loggyng was,
Þei palyd hem al þe feld compas.
And to acheue þe fyn of her purpos,
Þei felly wrouȝt, & kept hem silf ay clos.
And þe kyng, þat no tresoun falle,
Lete make wache with-oute his tentis alle,
Of hem þat had rested hem a-fore;
And his mynstrales he made ouer-more,
As seith Guydo, al þe longe nyȝt
To kepe her tides to-fore þe fyres briȝt,
Myrely to sowne her instrumentis.
And hem he made restyn in her tentis,
Þat had a-forn wery ben of fyȝt,
And in þe se wer feinted of her myȝt;
And oþer eke he made in her armvre
Awaite wisly ageyn al aventure,
Þat no deceit wer founde on no syde.
And þus þis kyng knyȝtly gan prouide
In his avis þat no þing hym eskape;
And al þe nyȝt I finde he dide wake,
Til on þe morwe, þat þe rowes rede
Of Phebus chare gonne for to sprede.
And þus eche þing disposid as it ouȝt,
I wil procede to telle how þei wrouȝt,
Ceriously with-outyn and with-Inne,
With ȝoure support þe þridde [boke] be-gynne.
[Explicit liber Secundus Incipit liber Tercius]
Lydgate's Troy Book | ||