BIBLIOTHECA AUGUSTANA

 

Geoffrey Chaucer

1342/43 - 1400

 

The Canterbury Tales

 

Fragment VII

The Tale of Melibee

 

――――――――――――――――――――――――――

 

 

 

Heere bigynneth Chaucers

Tale of Melibee.

 

 

967

A yong man called melibeus, myghty and

967

Riche, bigat upon his wyf, that called was prudence,

968

a doghter which that called was sophie.

968

Upon a day bifel that he for his desport is

969

Went into the feeldes hem to pleye. His wyf

969

And eek his doghter hath he left inwith his hous,

970

Of which the dores weren faste yshette. Thre

970

Of his olde foes han it espyed, and setten laddres

970

To the walles of his hous, and by wyndowes

971

been entred, and betten his wyf,

971

And wounded his doghter with fyve mortal

972

woundes in fyve sondry places, – this is to

972

Seyn, in hir feet, in hire handes, in hir erys, in

972

Hir nose, and in hire mouth, – and leften hire

973

For deed, and wenten awey.

973

Whan melibeus retourned was in to his hous,

973

And saugh al this meschief, he, lyk a mad man,

974

Rentynge his clothes, gan to wepe and crie.

974

Prudence, his wyf, as ferforth as she dorste,

975

Bisoghte hym of his wepyng for to stynte; but

975

Nat forthy he gan to crie and wepen

975

Evere lenger the moore.

976

This noble wyf prudence remembred

976

Hire upon the sentence of ovide, in his book

976

That cleped is the remedie of love, where as

977

He seith he is a fool that destourbeth the

977

Mooder to wepen in the deeth of hire child,

978

Til she have wept hir fille as for a certein tyme;

978

And thanne shal man doon his diligence with

978

Amyable wordes hire to reconforte, and preyen

979

Hire of hir wepyng for to stynte. For which

979

Resoun this noble wyf prudence suffred hir

979

Housbonde for to wepe and crie as for a certein

980

Space; and whan she saugh hir tyme, she

980

Seyde hym in this wise: allas, my lord, quod

980

She, why make ye youreself for to be

981

Lyk a fool? for sothe it aperteneth nat

982

To a wys man to maken swich a sorwe.

982

Youre doghter, with the grace of god, shal

983

Warisshe and escape. And, al were it so that

983

She right now were deed, ye ne oughte nat, as

984

For hir deeth, youreself to destroye. Senek

984

Seith: the wise man shal nat take to greet disconfort

985

for the deeth of his children; but,

985

Certes, he sholde suffren it in pacience as wel

985

As he abideth the deeth of his owene

986

Propre persone. –

986

This melibeus answerde anon, and

986

Seyde, what man, quod he, sholde of his

986

Wepyng stente that hath so greet a cause for

987

To wepe? jhesu crist, oure lord, hymself

988

Wepte for the deeth of lazarus hys freend.

988

Prudence answerde: certes, wel I woot attempree

988

wepyng is no thyng deffended to hym

988

That sorweful is, amonges folk in sorwe, but it

989

Is rather graunted hym to wepe. The apostle

989

Paul unto the romayns writeth, – man shal rejoyse

989

with hem that maken joye, and wepen

990

With swich folk as wepen. – ut though attempree

990

wepyng be ygraunted, outrageous

991

wepyng certes is deffended.

991

Mesure of wepyng sholde be considered,

992

after the loore that techeth us senek:

992

– whan that thy frend is deed, – quod he, – lat

992

Nat thyne eyen to moyste been of teeris, ne

992

To muche drye; although the teeris come to

993

Thyne eyen, lat hem nat falle; and whan thou

993

Hast forgoon thy freend, do diligence to gete

993

Another freend; and this is moore wysdom than

993

For to wepe for thy freend which that thou has

994

Lorn, for therinne is no boote. – and therfore,

994

If ye governe yow by sapience, put awey sorwe

995

Out of youre herte. Remembre yow that

995

Jhesus syrak seith, – a man that is joyous and

995

Glad in herte, it hym conserveth florissynge

995

In his age; but soothly sorweful herte

996

Maketh his bones drye. – he seith eek

996

Thus, that sorwe in herte sleeth ful many

997

A man. Salomon seith that right as motthes

997

In shepes flees anoyeth to the clothes, and

997

The smale wormes to the tree, right so anoyeth

998

Sorwe to the herte. Wherfore us oghte, as wel

998

In the deeth of oure children as in the los of

999

Oure othere goodes temporels, have pacience.

999

Remembre yow upon the pacient job. Whan

999

He hadde lost his children and his temporeel

999

Substance, and in his body endured and receyved

999

ful many a grevous tribulacion, yet

1000

Seyde he thus: – oure lord hath yeve it me;

1000

Oure lord hath biraft it me; right as oure lord

1000

Hath wold, right so it is doon; blessed

1001

Be the name of oure lord! –

1001

To thise forseide thynges answerde

1001

Melibeus unto his wyf prudence: alle thy

1001

Wordes, quod he, been sothe, and therto profitable;

1001

but trewely myn herte is troubled with

1001

This sorwe so grevously that I noot what to

1002

Doone.

1002

Lat calle, quod prudence, thy trewe

1002

Freendes alle, and thy lynage whiche that been

1002

Wise. Telleth youre cas, and herkneth what

1002

They seye in conseillyng, and yow governe after

1003

Hire sentence. Salomon seith, – werk alle thy

1003

Thynges by conseil, and thou shalt never repente.

1004

Thanne, by the conseil of his wyf prudence,

1004

This melibeus leet callen a greet congregacion

1005

Of folk; as surgiens, phisiciens, olde folk and

1005

Yonge, and somme of his olde enemys reconsiled

1005

as by hir semblaunt to his love and

1006

Into his grace; and therwithal ther

1006

Coomen somme of his neighebores that

1006

Diden hym reverence moore for drede than for

1007

Love, as it happeth ofte. Ther coomen also

1007

Ful many subtille flatereres, and wise advocatz

1008

lerned in the lawe.

1008

And whan this folk togidre assembled weren,

1008

This melibeus in sorweful wise shewed hem his

1009

Cas. And by the manere of his speche it

1009

Semed that in herte he baar a crueel ire, redy

1009

To doon vengeaunce upon his foes, and sodeynly

1010

desired that the werre sholde bigynne;

1010

But nathelees, yet axed he hire conseil

1011

Upon this matiere. A surgien, by licence

1011

and assent of swiche as weren

1011

Wise, up roos, and to melibeus seyde as ye may

1012

Heere:

1012

Sire, quod he, as to us surgiens aperteneth

1012

that we do to every wight the beste that

1012

We kan, where as we been withholde, and to

1013

Oure pacientz that we do no damage; wherfore

1013

it happeth many tyme and ofte that whan

1013

Twey men han everich wounded oother, oon

1014

Same surgien heeleth hem bothe; wherfore

1014

Unto oure art it is nat pertinent to norice werre

1015

Ne parties to supporte. But certes, as to the

1015

Warisshynge of youre doghter, al be it so that

1015

She perilously be wounded, we shullen do so

1015

Ententif bisynesse fro day to nyght that with

1015

The grace of God she shal be hool and

1016

Sound as soone as is possible.

1016

Almoost right in the same wise the

1016

Phisiciens answerden, save that they seyden a

1017

Fewe woordes moore: that right as maladies

1017

Been cured by hir contraries, right so shul men

1018

Warisshe werre by vengeaunce.

1018

His neighebores ful of envye, his feyned

1018

Freendes that semeden reconsiled, and his flatereres

1019

maden semblant of wepyng, and empeireden

1019

and agreggeden muchel of this matiere

1019

in preisynge greetly melibee of myght, of

1019

Power, of richesse, and of freendes, despisynge

1020

The power of his adversaries, and seiden outrely

1020

that he anon sholde wreken hym on

1021

His foes, and bigynne werre.

1021

Up roos thanne an advocat that was

1021

Wys, by leve and by conseil of othere that were

1022

Wise, and seide: lordynges, the nede for

1022

Which we been assembled in this place is a ful

1023

Hevy thyng and an heigh matiere, by cause

1023

Of the wrong and of the wikkednesse that hath

1023

Be doon, and eek by resoun of the grete damages

1023

that in tyme comynge been possible to

1024

Fallen for this same cause, and eek by resoun

1024

Of the grete richesse and power of the parties

1025

Bothe; for the whiche resouns it were a

1026

Ful greet peril to erren in this matiere.

1026

Wherfore, melibeus, this is oure sentence:

1026

we conseille yow aboven alle thyng

1026

That right anon thou do thy diligence in

1026

Kepynge of thy propre persone in swich

1026

A wise that thou ne wante noon espie ne

1027

Wacche, thy persone for to save. And after

1027

That, we conseille that in thyn hous thou sette

1027

Sufficeant garnisoun so that they may as wel

1028

Thy body as thyn hous defende. But certes,

1028

For to moeve werre, ne sodeynly for to doon

1028

Vengeaunce, we may nat demen in so litel

1029

Tyme that it were profitable. Wherfore we

1029

Axen leyser and espace to have deliberacion in

1030

This cas to deme. For the commune proverbe

1030

Seith thus: – he that soone deemeth,

1031

Soone shal repente. – and eek men seyn

1031

That thilke juge is wys that soone under-

1032

Stondeth a matiere and juggeth by leyser; for

1032

Al be it so that alle tariyng be anoyful, algates it

1032

Is nat to repreve in yevynge of juggement ne

1032

In vengeance takyng, whan it is sufficeant

1033

And resonable. And that shewed oure lord

1033

Jhesu crist by ensample; for whan that the

1033

Womman that was taken in avowtrie was broght

1033

In his presence to knowen what sholde be doon

1033

With hire persone, al be it so that he wiste wel

1033

Hymself what that he wolde answere, yet ne

1033

Wolde he nat answere sodeynly, but he wolde

1033

Have deliberacion, and in the ground he wroot

1034

Twies. And thise causes weaxen deliberacioun,

1034

and we shal thanne, by the grace of

1034

God, conseille thee thyng that shal be profitable.

1035

n=11035>Up stirten thanne the yonge folk atones, and

1035

The mooste partie of that compaignye han

1035

Scorned this olde wise man, and bigonnen

1036

to make noyse, and seyden that

1036

Right so as, whil that iren is hoot, men

1036

Sholden smyte, right so men sholde wreken hir

1036

Wronges whil that they been fresshe and newe;

1036

And with loud voys they criden werre!

1037

Werre!

1037

Up roos tho oon of thise olde wise, and with

1037

His hand made contenaunce that men sholde

1038

Holden hem stille and yeven hym audience.

1038

Lordynges, quod he, ther is ful many a man

1038

That crieth – werre! werre! – that woot ful litel

1039

What werre amounteth. Werre at his bigynnyng

1039

hath so greet an entryng and so large, that

1039

Every wight may entre whan hym liketh, and

1040

Lightly fynde werre; but certes what ende

1040

That shal therof bifalle, it is nat light to

1041

Knowe. For soothly, whan that werre is

1041

Ones bigonne, ther is ful many a child

1041

Unborn of his mooder that shal sterve yong by

1041

Cause of thilke werre, or elles lyve in sorwe and

1042

Dye in wrecchednesse. And therfore, er that

1042

Any werre bigynne, men moste have greet conseil

1043

and greet deliberacion. And whan this

1043

Olde man wende to enforcen his tale by resons,

1043

Wel ny alle atones bigonne they to rise for to

1043

Breken his tale, and beden hym ful ofte his

1044

Wordes for to abregge. For soothly, he that

1044

Precheth to hem that listen nat heeren his

1045

Wordes, his sermon hem anoieth. For jhesus

1045

Syrak seith that musik in wepynge ia a noyous

1045

Thyng; this is to seyn: as muche availleth to

1045

Speken bifore folk to which his speche anoyeth,

1045

as it is to synge biforn hym that

1046

Wepeth. And whan this wise man

1046

Saugh that hym wanted audience, al

1047

Shamefast he sette hym doun agayn. For

1047

Salomon seith: ther as thou ne mayst have

1048

Noon audience, enforce thee nat to speke.

1048

I see wel, quod this wise man, that the commune

1048

proverbe is sooth, that – good conseil

1049

Wanteth whan it is moost nede. –

1049

Yet hadde this melibeus in his conseil many

1049

Folk that prively in his eere conseilled hym

1049

Certeyn thyng, and conseilled hym the contrarie

1050

in general audience.

1050

Whan melibeus hadde herd that the gretteste

1050

partie of his conseil weren accorded that

1050

He sholde maken werre, anoon he consented to

1050

Hir conseillyng, and fully affermed hire

1051

Sentence. Thanne dame prudence,

1051

Whan that she saugh how that hir

1051

Housbonde shoop hym for to wreken hym on

1051

His foes, and to bigynne werre, she in ful humble

1051

wise, whan she saugh hir tyme, seide to

1052

Hym thise wordes: my lord, quod she, I

1052

Yow biseche as hertely as I dar and kan, ne

1052

Haste yow nat to faste, and for alle gerdons, as

1053

Yeveth me audience. For piers alfonce seith,

1053

– whoso that dooth to thee oother good or harm,

1053

Haste thee nat to quiten it; for in this wise thy

1053

Freend wole abyde, and thyn anemy shal the

1054

Lenger lyve in drede. – the proverbe seith, – he

1054

Hasteth wel that wisely kan abyde, – and in

1055

Wikked haste is no profit.

1055

This melibee answerde unto his wyf prudence:

1055

I purpose nat, quod he, to werke by

1055

Thy conseil, for many causes and resouns.

1055

For certes, every wight wolde holde me

1056

Thanne a fool; this is to seyn, if I, for

1056

Thy conseillyng, wolde chaungen thynges

1056

That been ordeyned and affermed by so manye

1057

Wyse. Secoundely, I seye that alle wommen

1057

Been wikke, and noon good of hem alle. For – of

1057

A thousand men, – seith salomon, – I foond o

1057

Good man, but certes, of alle wommen, good

1058

Womman foond I nevere.– and also, certes,

1058

If I governed me by thy conseil, it sholde

1058

Seme that I hadde yeve to thee over me

1058

The maistrie; and God forbede that it so

1059

Weere! for jhesus syrak seith that – if the

1059

Wyf have maistrie, she is contrarious to hir

1060

Housbonde. – and salomon seith: – nevere in

1060

Thy lyf to thy wyf, ne to thy child, ne to

1060

Thy freend, ne yeve no power over thy-

1060

Self; for bettre it were that thy children aske

1060

Of thy persone thynges that hem nedeth, than

1060

Thou see thyself in the handes of thy

1061

Children. – and also if I wolde werke

1061

By thy conseillyng, certes, my conseil

1061

Moste som tyme be secree, til it were tyme

1061

That it moste be knowe, and this ne may noght

1062

Be. (car il est escript, la genglerie des

1062

Femmes ne puet riens celler fors ce qu' elle ne

1063

Scet. Apres, le philosophre dit, en mauvais

1063

Conseil les femmes vainquent les hommes: et

1063

Par ces raisons je ne dois point user de ton conseil.)

1064

n=11064>Whanne dame prudence, ful debonairly and

1064

With greet pacience, hadde herd al that hir

1064

Housbonde liked for to seye, thanne axed she

1064

Of hym licence for to speke, and seyde in this

1065

Wise: my lord, quod she, as to youre firste

1065

Resoun, certes it may lightly been answered.

1065

For I seye that it is no folie to chaunge conseil

1065

Whan the thyng is chaunged, or elles whan

1065

The thyng semeth ootherweyes than it

1066

Was biforn. And mooreover, I seye

1066

That though ye han sworn and bihight

1066

To perfourne youre emprise, and nathelees ye

1066

Weyve to perfourne thilke same emprise by

1066

Juste cause, men sholde nat seyn therfore that

1067

Ye were a liere ne forsworn. For the book

1067

Seith that – the wise man maketh no lesyng

1068

Whan he turneth his corage to the bettre. –

1068

And al be it so that youre emprise be establissed

1068

and ordeyned by greet multitude of folk,

1068

Yet that ye nat accomplice thilke ordinaunce,

1069

But yow like. For the trouthe of thynges and

1069

The profit been rather founden in fewe folk that

1069

Been wise and ful of resoun, than by greet multitude

1069

of folk ther every man crieth and clatereth

1069

what that hym liketh. Soothly swich multitude

1070

is nat hones. And as to the seconde

1070

Resoun, where as ye seyn that alle wommen

1070

Been wikke; save youre grace, certes ye despisen

1070

alle wommen in this wyse, and – he that

1070

Al despiseth, al displeseth, – as seith the

1071

Book. And senec seith that – whose

1071

Wole have sapience shal no man dispreyse,

1071

but he shal gladly techen the science

1072

That he kan withouten presumpcion or pride,

1072

And swiche thynges as he noght ne kan, he

1072

Shal nat been ashamed to lerne hem, and enquere

1073

of lasse folk than hymself. – and, sire,

1073

That ther hath been many a good womman,

1074

May lightly be preved. For certes, sire, oure

1074

Lord jhesu crist wolde nevere have descended

1074

To be born of a womman, if alle wommen hadden

1075

been wikke. And after that, for the grete

1075

Bountee that is in wommen, oure lord jhesu

1075

Crist, whan he was risen fro deeth to lyve,

1075

Appeered rather to a womman than to

1076

His apostles. And though that salomon

1076

seith that he ne foond nevere womman

1076

good, it folweth nat therfore that alle wommen

1077

ben wikke. For though that he ne foond

1077

No good womman, certes, many another man

1077

Hath founden many a womman ful good and

1078

Trewe. Or elles, per aventure, the entente of

1078

Salomon was this, that, as in sovereyn bounte,

1079

He foond no womman; this is to seyn, that ther

1079

Is no wight that hath sovereyn bountee save

1079

God allone, as he hymself recordeth in hys

1080

Evaungelie. For ther nys no creature so good

1080

That hym ne wanteth somwhat of the

1081

Perfeccioun of god, that is his makere.

1081

Youre thridde reson is this: ye seyn that

1081

If ye governe yow by my conseil, it sholde

1081

Seme that ye hadde yeve me the maistrie and

1082

The lordshipe over youre persone. Sire, save

1082

Youre grace, it is nat so. For if it so were that

1082

No man sholde be conseilled but oonly of hem

1082

That hadden lordshipe and maistrie of his persone,

1083

men wolden nat be conseilled so ofte.

1083

For soothly thilke man that asketh conseil of

1083

A purpos, yet hath he free choys wheither he

1084

Wole werke by that conseil or noon. And as

1084

To youre fourthe resoun, ther ye seyn that the

1084

Janglerie of wommen kan hyde thynges that

1084

They wot noght, as who seith that a womman

1085

Kan nat hyde that she woot; sire, thise wordes

1085

Been understonde of wommen that been

1086

Jangleresses and wikked; of whiche

1086

Wommen men seyn that thre thynges

1086

Dryven a man out of his hous, – that is to seyn,

1087

Smoke, droppyng of reyn, and wikked wyves,

1087

And of swiche wommen seith salomon that – it

1087

Were bettre dwelle in desert than with a woman

1088

that is riotous. – and sire, by youre leve,

1089

That am nat I; for ye han ful ofte assayed my

1089

Grete silence and my grete pacience, and eek

1089

How wel that I kan hyde and hele thynges that

1090

Men oghte secreely to hyde. And soothly, as

1090

To youre fifthe resoun, where as ye seyn that

1090

In wikked conseil wommen venquisshe men,

1090

God woot, thilke resoun stant heere in

1091

No stede. For understoond now, ye

1092

Asken conseil to do wikkednesse; and if

1092

Ye wole werken wikkednesse, and youre wif

1092

Restreyneth thilke wikked purpos, and overcometh

1093

yow by reson and by good conseil,

1093

Certes youre wyf oghte rather to be preised

1094

Than yblamed. Thus sholde ye understonde

1094

The philosophre that seith, – in wikked conseil

1095

Wommen venquisshen hir housbondes. – and

1095

Ther as ye blamen alle wommen and hir resouns,

1095

I shal shewe yow by manye ensamples

1095

That many a womman hath ben ful good, and

1095

Yet been, and hir conseils ful hoolsome

1096

And profitable. Eek som men han seyd

1096

That the conseillynge of wommen is

1097

Outher to deere, or elles to litel of pris. But al

1097

Be it so that ful many a womman is badde, and

1097

Hir conseil vile and noght worth, yet han men

1097

Founde ful many a good womman, and ful discret

1098

and wis in conseillynge. Loo, jacob, by

1098

Good conseil of his mooder rebekka, wan the

1098

Benysoun of ysaak his fader, and the lordshipe

1099

Over alle his bretheren. Judith, by hire good

1099

Conseil, delivered the citee of bethulie, in

1099

Which she dwelled, out of the handes of olofernus,

1099

that hadde it biseged and wolde have al

1100

Destroyed it. Abygail delivered nabal hir

1100

Housbonde fro david the kyng, that wolde

1100

Have slayn hym, and apaysed the ire of the

1100

Kyng by hir wit and by hir good conseillyng.

1101

hester, by hir good conseil,

1101

Enhaunced greetly the peple of God in

1102

The regne of assuerus the kyng. And the

1102

Same bountee in good conseillyng of many a

1103

Good womman may men telle. And mooreover,

1103

Whan oure lord hadde creat adam, oure

1104

Forme fader, he seyde in this wise: – it is nat

1104

Good to been a man alloone; make we to

1105

Hym an helpe semblable to hymself. – heere

1105

May ye se that if that wommen were nat

1105

Goode, and hir conseils goode and profitable,

1106

oure lord God of hevene wolde

1106

Nevere han wroght hem, ne called hem

1107

Help of man, but rather confusioun of man.

1107

And ther seyde oones a clerk in two vers,

1107

– What is bettre than gold? jaspre. What is

1108

Bettre than jaspre? wisedoom. And what is

1108

Better than wisedoom? womman. And what is

1109

Bettre than a good womman? nothyng. – and,

1109

Sire, by manye of othre resons may ye seen

1109

That manye wommen been goode, and hir

1110

Conseils goode and profitable. And therfore,

1110

sire, if ye wol triste to my conseil, I shal

1110

Restoore yow youre doghter hool and

1111

Sound. And eek I wol do to yow so

1111

Muche that ye shul have honour in this

1112

Cause.

1112

Whan melibee hadde herd the wordes of his

1113

Wyf prudence, he seyde thus: I se wel that

1113

The word of salomon is sooth. He seith that

1113

– Wordes that been spoken discreetly by ordinaunce

1113

been honycombes, for they yeven swetnesse

1113

to the soule and hoolsomnesse to the

1114

Body. – and, wyf, by cause of thy sweete

1114

Wordes, and eek for I have assayed and preved

1114

Thy grete sapience and thy grete trouthe, I wol

1115

Governe me by thy conseil in alle thyng.

1115

Now, sire, quod dame prudence, and syn

1115

Ye vouche sauf to been governed by my conseil,

1115

I wol enforme yow how ye shul governe

1115

Yourself in chesynge of youre conseillours.

1116

ye shul first in alle youre werkes

1116

Mekely biseken to the heighe God that

1117

He wol be youre conseillour; and shapeth yow

1117

To swich entente that he yeve yow conseil and

1118

Confort, as taughte thobie his sone: – at alle

1118

Tymes thou shalt blesse god, and praye hym

1118

To dresse thy weyes, and looke that alle thy

1119

Conseils been in hym for everemoore. – seint

1119

Jame eek seith: – if any of yow have nede of

1120

Sapience, axe it of god. – and afterward

1120

Thanne shul ye taken conseil in youreself, and

1120

Examyne wel youre thoghtes of swich thyng

1120

As yow thynketh that is bes for youre

1121

Profit. And thanne shul ye dryve fro

1121

Youre herte thre thynges that been contrariouse

1122

to good conseil; that is to seyn, ire,

1123

Coveitise, and hastifnesse.

1123

First, he that axeth conseil of hymself, certes

1123

He moste been withouten ire, for manye

1124

Causes. The firste is this: he that hath greet

1124

Ire and wratthe in hymself, he weneth alwey

1125

That he may do thyng that he may nat do.

1125

And secoundely, he that is irous and

1126

Wrooth, he ne may nat wel deme; and

1126

He that may nat wel deme, may nat wel

1127

Conseille. The thridde is this, that he that is

1127

Irous and wrooth, as seith senec, ne may nat

1128

Speke but blameful thynges, and with his

1128

Viciouse wordes he stireth oother folk to angre

1129

And to ire. And eek, sire, ye moste dryve

1130

Coveitise out of youre herte. For the aposthe

1130

seith that coveitise is roote of alle

1131

Harmes. And trust wel that a coveitous

1131

Man ne kan noght deme ne thynke, but

1132

Oonly to fulfille the ende of his coveitise; and

1132

Certes, that ne may nevere been accompliced;

1132

For evere the moore habundaunce that he hath

1133

Of richesse, the moore he desireth. And, sire,

1133

Ye moste also dryve out of youre herte hastifnesse;

1134

for certes, ye ne may nat deeme for

1134

The beste by a sodeyn thought that falleth in

1134

Youre herte, but ye moste avyse yow on it

1135

Ful ofte. For, as ye herde her biforn, the

1135

Commune proverbe is this, that – he that

1136

Soone deemeth, soone repenteth. – sire,

1137

Ye ne be nat alwey in lyk disposicioun;

1137

For certes, somthyng that somtyme semeth to

1137

Yow that it is good for to do, another tyme it

1138

Semeth to yow the contrarie.

1138

Whan ye han taken conseil in youreself, and

1138

Han deemed by good deliberacion swich thyng

1139

As yow semeth bes, thanne rede I yow that

1140

Ye kepe it secree. Biwrey nat youre conseil

1140

To no persone, but if so be that ye wenen

1140

Sikerly that thurgh youre biwreyyng youre

1140

Condicioun shal be to yow the moore profitable.

1141

for jhesus syrak seith, – neither

1141

To thy foo, ne to thy frend, discovere nat

1142

Thy secree ne thy folie; for they wol yeve yow

1142

Audience and lookynge and supportacioun in

1142

Thy presence, and scorne thee in thyn absence.

1143

– another clerk seith that – scarsly

1143

Shaltou fynden any persone that may kepe conseil

1144

secrely. – the book seith, – whil that thou

1144

Kepest thy conseil in thyn herte, thou kepest

1145

It in thy prisoun; and whan thou biwreyest

1145

Thy conseil to any wight, he holdeth

1146

Thee in his snare. – and therfore yow

1146

Is bettre to hyde youre conseil in youre

1146

Herte than praye him to whom ye han biwreyed

1146

Youre conseil that he wole kepen it cloos and

1147

Stille. For seneca seith: – if so be that thou

1147

Ne mayst nat thyn owene conseil hyde, how

1147

Darstou prayen any oother wight thy conseil

1148

Secrely to kepe? – but nathelees, if thou wene

1148

Sikerly that the biwreiyng of thy conseil to a

1148

Persone wol make thy condicion to stonden in

1148

The bettre plyt, thanne shaltou tellen hym thy

1149

Conseil in this wise. First thou shalt make no

1149

Semblant wheither thee were levere pees or

1149

Werre, or this or that, ne shewe hym nat thy

1150

Wille and thyn entente. for trust wel that

1150

Comunli thise conseillours been flatereres,

1151

namely the conseillours of grete

1152

Lordes; for they enforcen hem alwey

1152

Rather to speken plesante wordes, enclynynge

1152

To the lordes lust, than wordes that been trewe

1153

Or profitable. And therfore men seyn that the

1153

Riche man hath seeld good conseil, but if he

1154

Have it of hymself.

1154

And after that thou shalt considere thy

1155

Freendes and thyne enemys. And as touchynge

1155

thy freendes, thou shalt considere which

1155

Of hem been moost feithful and moost wise

1155

And eldest and most approved in conseillyng;

1156

and of hem shalt thou aske

1157

Thy conseil, as the caas requireth. I

1157

Seye that first ye shul clepe to youre conseil

1158

Youre freendes that been trewe. For salomon

1158

Seith that – right as the herte of a man deliteth in

1158

Savour that is soote, right so the conseil of trewe

1159

Freendes yeveth swetnesse to the soule – he

1159

Seith also, – ther may no thyng be likned to the

1160

Trewe freend; for certes gold ne silver ben nat

1160

So muche worth as the goode wyl of a

1161

Trewe freend. – and eek he seith that

1161

– A trewe freend is a strong deffense;

1161

Who so that it fyndeth, certes he fyndeth a

1162

Greet tresour. – thanne shul ye eek considere

1162

If that youre trewe freendes been discrete and

1162

Wise. For the book seith, – axe alwey thy conseil

1163

of hem that been wise. – and by this same

1163

Resoun shul ye clepen to youre conseil of youre

1163

Freendes that been of age, swiche as han seyn

1163

And been expert in manye thynges and been

1164

Approved in conseillynges. For the book seith

1164

That – in olde men is the sapience, and in longe

1165

Tyme the prudence. – and tullius seith that

1165

– Grete thynges ne been nat ay accompliced by

1165

Strengthe, ne by delivernesse of body, but by

1165

Good conseil, by auctoritee of persones, and by

1165

Science; the whiche thre thynges ne been nat

1165

Fieble by age, but certes they enforcen

1166

And encreescen day by day. – and

1166

Thanne shul ye kepe this for a general

1166

Reule: first shul ye clepen to youre conseil a

1167

Fewe of youre freendes that been especiale;

1167

For salomon seith, – manye freendes have thou,

1167

But among a thousand chese thee oon to be

1168

Thy conseillour. – for al be it so that thou first

1168

Ne telle thy conseil but to a fewe, thou mayst

1169

Afterward telle it to mo folk if it be nede. But

1169

Looke alwey that thy conseillours have thilke

1169

Thre condiciouns that I have seyd bifore, that

1169

Is to seyn, that they be trewe, wise, and of

1170

Oold experience. And werke nat alwey in

1170

Every nede by oon counseillour allone; for somtyme

1170

bihooveth it to been conseilled by

1171

Manye. For salomon seith, – salvacion

1171

Of thynges is where as ther been manye

1172

Conseillours. –

1172

Now, sith that I have toold yow of which

1172

Folk ye sholde been conseilled, now wol I

1173

Teche yow which conseil ye oghte to eschewe.

1173

First, ye shul eschue the conseillyng of fooles;

1173

For salomon seith, – taak no conseil of a fool,

1173

For he ne kan noght conseille but after his

1174

Owene lust and his affeccioun. – the book

1174

Seith that – the propretee of a fool is this: he

1174

Troweth lightly harm of every wight, and lightly

1175

Troweth alle bountee in hymself. – thou shalt

1175

Eek eschue the conseillyng of alle flatereres,

1175

Swiche as enforcen hem rather to preise youre

1175

Persone by flaterye than for to telle yow

1176

The soothfastnesse of thynges. Wherfore

1176

tullius seith, – amonges alle the

1176

Pestilences that been in freendshipe the gretteste

1176

is flaterie. – and therfore is it moore nede

1176

That thou eschue and drede flatereres than any

1177

Oother peple. The book seith, – thou shalt

1177

Rather drede and flee fro the sweete wordes of

1177

Flaterynge preiseres than fro the egre wordes

1178

Of thy freend that seith thee thy sothes. – salomon

1178

seith that – the wordes of a flaterere is a

1179

Snare to cacche with innocentz. – he seith also

1179

That – he that speketh to his freend wordes of

1179

Swetnesse and of plesaunce, setteth a net biforn

1180

his feet to cacche hym. – and therfore

1180

Seith tullius, – enclyne nat thyne eres to flatereres,

1180

ne taak no conseil of the wordes

1181

Of flaterye. – and caton seith, – avyse

1181

Thee wel, and eschue the wordes of swetnesse

1182

and of plesaunce. – and eek thou shalt

1182

Eschue the conseillyng of thyne olde enemys

1183

That been reconsiled. The book seith that – no

1183

Wight retourneth saufly into the grace of his

1184

Olde enemy. – and isope seith, – ne trust nat

1184

To hem to whiche thou hast had som tyme

1184

Werre or enemytee, ne telle hem nat thy

1185

Conseil. – and seneca telleth the cause why:

1185

– it may nat be. – seith he, – that where greet

1185

Fyr hath longe tyme endured, that ther

1185

Ne dwelleth som vapour of warmness.

1186

– and therfore seith salomon, – in

1187

Thyn olde foo trust nevere. – for sikerly,

1187

Though thyn enemy be reconsiled, and maketh

1187

thee chiere of hymylitee, and lowteth to

1188

Thee with his heed, ne trust hym nevere. For

1188

Certes he maketh thilke feyned humilitee moore

1188

For his profit than for any love of thy persone,

1188

By cause that he deemeth to have victorie over

1188

Thy persone by swich feyned contenance, the

1188

Which victorie he myghte nat have by strif or

1189

Werre. And peter alfonce seith, – make no

1189

Felawshipe with thyne olde enemys; for if thou

1189

Do hem bountee, they wol perverten it into

1190

Wikkednesse. – and eek thou most eschue

1190

The conseillyng of hem that been thy servantz

1190

and beren thee greet reverence, for

1190

Peraventure they seyn it moore for drede

1191

Than for love. And therfore seith a philosophre

1191

in this wise: ther is no wight

1191

Parfitly trewe to hym that he to soore dredeth.

1192

– and tullius seith, ther nys no myght

1192

So greet of any emperour that longe may endure,

1192

but if he have moore love of the peple

1193

Than drede. – thou shalt also eschue the conseiling

1193

of folk that been dronkelewe, for they

1194

Ne kan no conseil hyde. For salomon seith,

1194

– ther is no privetee ther as regneth dronkenesse.

1195

– ye shul also han in suspect the conseillyng

1195

of swich folk as conseille yow o thyng

1195

Prively, and conseille yow the contrarie

1196

Openly. For cassidorie seith that – it

1196

Is a manere sleighte to hyndre, whan he

1196

Sheweth to doon o thyng openly and werketh

1197

Prively the contrarie. – thou shalt also have

1197

In suspect the conseillyng of wikked folk, for

1197

The book seith, – the conseillyng of wikked folk

1198

Is alwey ful of fraude. – and david seith, – blisful

1198

is that man that hath nat folwed the con –

1199

Seilyng of shrewes. – thou shalt also eschue

1199

The conseillyng of yong folk, for hir conseil is

1200

Nat rype.

1200

Now, sire, sith I have shewed yow of

1200

Which folk ye shul take youre conseil, and of

1200

Which folk ye shul folwe the conseil,

1201

now wol I teche yow how ye shal

1201

Examyne youre conseil, after the doctrine

1202

of tullius. In the examynynge thanne

1202

Of youre conseillour ye shul considere manye

1203

Thynges. Alderfirst thou shalt considere that

1203

In thilke thyng that thou purposest, and upon

1203

What thyng thou wolt have conseil, that verray

1203

Trouthe be seyd and conserved; this is to seyn,

1204

Telle trewely thy tale. For he that seith fals

1204

May nat wel be conseilled in that cas of which

1205

He lieth. And after this thou shalt considere the

1205

Thynges that acorden to that thou purposest for

1205

To do by thy conseillours, if resoun accorde

1206

therto; and eek if thy myhgt may

1206

Atteine therto; and if the moore part and

1206

The bettre part of thy conseillours acorde therto,

1207

Or noon. Thanne shaltou considere what

1207

Thyng shal folwe of that conseillyng, as hate,

1207

Pees, werre, grace, profit, or damage, and

1208

Manye othere thynges. And in alle thise

1208

Thynges thou shalt chese the beste, and weyve

1209

Alle othere thynges. Thanne shaltow considere

1209

of what roote is engendred the matiere of

1209

Thy conseil, and what fruyt it may conceyve

1210

And engendre. Thou shalt eek considere

1210

Alle thise causes, fro whennes they been

1211

Sprongen. And whan ye han examyned

1211

youre conseil, as I have seyd, and

1211

Which partie is the bettre and moore profitable,

1211

and han approved it by manye wise folk

1212

And olde, thanne shaltou considere if thou

1212

Mayst parfourne it and maken of it a good

1213

Ende. For certes, resoun wol nat that any

1213

Man sholde bigynne a thyng, but if he myghte

1214

Parfourne it as hym oghte; ne no wight sholde

1214

Take upon hym so hevy a charge that he

1215

Myghte nat bere it. For the proverbe seith,

1215

– he that to muche embraceth, distreyneth

1216

litel. – and catoun seith, – assay

1216

To do swich thyng as thou hast power to

1216

Doon, lest that the charge oppresse thee so

1216

Soore that thee bihoveth to weyve thyng that

1217

Thou hast bigonne. – and if so be that thou

1217

Be in doute wheither thou mayst parfourne a

1217

Thing or noon, chese rather to suffre than bigynne.

1218

and piers alphonce seith, – if thou hast

1218

Myght to doon a thyng of which thou most

1219

Repente, it is bettre nay than ye. – this is

1219

To seyn, that thee is bettre holde thy tonge

1220

Stille than for to speke. Thanne may ye understonde

1220

by strenger resons that if thou hast

1220

Power to parfourne a werk of which thou shalt

1220

Repente, thanne is it bettre that thou suffre

1221

than bigynne. Wel seyn they that

1221

Defenden every wight to assaye a thyng

1221

Of which he is in doute wheither he may parfourne

1222

it or noon. And after, whan ye han

1222

Examyned youre conseil, as I have seyd biforn,

1222

And knowen wel that ye may parfourne youre

1222

Emprise, conferme it thanne sadly til it be at

1223

And ende.

1223

Now is it resoun and tyme that I shewe yow

1223

Whanne and wherfore that ye may chaunge

1224

Youre conseillours withouten youre repreve.

1224

Soothly, a man may chaungen his purpos and

1224

His conseil if the cause cesseth, or whan a newe

1225

Caas bitydeth. For the lawe seith that – upon

1225

Thynges that newely bityden bihoveth

1226

Newe conseil. – and senec seith, – if thy

1226

Conseil is comen to the eeris of thyn enemy,

1227

chaunge thy conseil. – thou matst also

1227

Chaunge thy conseil if so be that thou fynde

1227

That by errour, or by oother cause, harm or

1228

Damage may bityde. Also if thy conseil be

1228

Dishonest, or ellis cometh of dishonest cause,

1229

Chaunge thy conseil. For the lawes seyn that

1229

– alle bihestes that been dishoneste been of no

1230

Value – ; and eek if so be that it be inpossible,

1230

or may nat goodly be parfourned

1231

Or kept.

1231

And take this for a general reule, that

1231

Every conseil that is affermed so strongly that

1231

It may nat be chaunged for no condicioun that

1231

May bityde, I seye that thilke conseil is wikked.

1232

n=11232>This melibeus, whanne he hadde herd the

1232

Doctrine of his wyf dame prudence, answerde

1233

In this wyse: dame, quod he, as yet into

1233

This tyme ye han wel and covenably taught me

1233

As in general, how I shal governe me in the

1233

Chesynge and in the withholdynge of my conseillours.

1234

but now wolde I fayn that ye wolde

1235

Condescende in especial, and telle me how liketh

1235

yow, or what semeth yow, by oure conseillours

1235

that we han chosen in oure present

1236

nede.

1236

My lord, quod she, I biseke yow in al

1236

Humblesse that ye wol nat wilfully replie agayn

1236

My resouns, ne distempre youre herte, thogh I

1237

Speke thyng that yow displese. For God woot

1237

That, as in myn entente, I speke it for youre

1237

Beste, for youre honour, and for youre profite

1238

Eke. And soothly, I hope that youre benyngnytee

1239

wol taken it in pacience. Trusteth me

1239

Wel, quod she, that youre conseil as in this

1239

Caas ne sholde nat, as to speke properly, be

1239

Called a conseillyng, but a mocioun or a moevyng

1240

of folye, in which conseil ye han

1241

Erred in many a sondry wise.

1241

First and forward, ye han erred in

1242

Th' assemblynge of youre conseillours. For ye

1242

Sholde first have cleped a fewe folk to youre

1242

Conseil, and after ye myghte han shewed it

1243

To mo folk, if it hadde been nede. But certes,

1243

Ye han sodeynly cleped to youre conseil a greet

1243

Multitude of peple, ful chargeant and ful anoyous

1244

for to heere. Also ye han erred, for theras

1244

Ye sholden oonly have cleped to youre conseil

1245

Youre trewe frendes olde and wise. Ye han

1245

Ycleped straunge folk, yonge folk, false flatereres,

1245

And enemys reconsiled, and folk that

1246

Doon yow reverence withouten love.

1246

And ekk also ye have erred, for ye han

1246

Broght with yow to youre conseil ire, coveitise,

1247

And hastifnesse, the whiche thre thinges been

1247

Contrariouse to every conseil honest and profitable;

1248

the whiche thre thinges ye han nat

1248

Anientissed or destroyed hem, neither in youreself,

1249

ne in youre conseillours, as yow oghte.

1249

Ye han erred also, for ye han shewed to youre

1249

Conseillours youre talent and youre affeccioun

1250

To make werre anon, and for to do vengeance.

1250

They han espied by youre wordes to

1251

What thyng ye been enclyned; and

1251

Therfore han they rather conseilled

1252

Yow to youre talent that to youre profit.

1252

Ye han erred also, for it semeth that yow

1252

Suffiseth to han been conseilled by thise

1253

Conseillours oonly, and with litel avys,

1253

Whereas in so greet and so heigh a nede

1253

It hadde been necessarie mo conseillours

1253

And moore deliberacion to parfourne youre emprise.

1254

ye han erred also, for ye ne han nat

1254

Examyned youre conseil in the forseyde manere,

1255

ne in due manere, as the caas requireth.

1255

Ye han erred also, for ye han maked no division

1255

bitwixe youre conseillours; this is to

1255

Seyn, bitwixen youre trewe freendes and

1256

Youre feyned conseillours; ne ye han

1256

Nat knowe the wil of youre trewe

1257

Freendes olde and wise; but ye han cast alle

1257

Hire wordes in an hochepot, and enclyned

1257

Youre herte to the moore part and to the gretter

1258

Nombre, and there been ye condescended.

1258

And sith ye woot wel that men shal alwey

1258

Fynde a gretter nombre of fooles than of wise

1259

Men, and therfore the conseils that been at

1259

Congregaciouns and multitudes of folk, there as

1259

Men take moore reward to the nombre than to

1260

The sapience of persones, ye se wel that in

1260

Swiche conseillynges fooles han the maistrie.

1261

Melibeus answerde agayn, and seyde,

1262

I graunte wel that I have erred; but there

1262

As thou hast toold me heerbiforn that he nys

1262

Nat to blame that chaungeth his conseillours in

1263

Certein caas and for certeine juste causes, I am

1263

Al redy to chaunge my conseillours right as thow

1264

Wolt devyse. The proverbe seith that – for

1264

To do synne is mannyssh, but certes for to persevere

1265

longe in synne is werk of the devel. –

1265

To this sentence answered anon dame

1266

Prudence, and seyde: examineth,

1266

Quod she, youre conseil, and lat us see

1266

The whiche of hem han spoken most resonably

1267

And taught yow best conseil. And for as

1267

Muche as that the examynacion is necessarie,

1267

Lat us bigynne at the surgiens and at the phisiciens,

1268

that first speeken in this matiere. I sey

1268

Yow that the surgiens and phisiciens han

1268

Seyd yow in youre conseil discreetly, as hem

1269

Oughte; and in hir speche seyden ful wisely

1269

That to the office of hem aperteneth to doon to

1269

Every wight honour and profit, and no wight

1270

For to anoye; and after hir craft to doon greet

1270

Diligence unto the cure of hem which

1271

That they han in hir governaunce.

1271

And, sire, right as they han answered

1272

Wisely and discreetly, right so rede I that they

1272

Been heighly and sovereynly gerdoned for hir

1273

Noble speche; and eek for they sholde do the

1273

Moore ententif bisynesse in the curacion of

1274

Youre doghter deere. For al be it so that they

1274

Been youre freendes, therfore shal ye nat suffren

1275

that they serve yow for noght, but ye

1275

Oghte the rather gerdone hem and shewe

1276

Hem youre largesse. And as touchynge

1276

The proposicioun which that the phisiciens

1277

encreesceden in this caas, this is to seyn.

1277

That in maladies that oon contrarie is warisshed

1278

By another contrarie, I wolde fayn knowe hou

1278

Ye understonde thilke text, and what is youre

1279

Sentence.

1279

Certes, quod melibeus, I understonde

1280

It in this wise: that right as they han

1280

Doon me a contrarie, right so sholde I

1281

Doon hem another. For right as they

1281

Han venged hem on me and doon me wrong,

1281

Right so shal I venge me upon hem and doon

1282

Hem wrong; and thanne have I cured oon contrarie

1283

by another.

1283

Lo, lo, quod dame prudence, how lightly

1283

Is every man enclined to his owene desir and

1284

To his owene plesaunce! certes, quod she,

1284

The wordes of the phisiciens ne sholde nat

1285

Han been understonden in thys wise. For

1285

Certes, wikkednesse is nat contrarie to wikkednesse,

1285

ne vengeance to vengeaunce, ne

1285

Wrong to wrong, but they been semblable.

1286

and therfore o vengeaucne is

1286

Nat warisshed by another vengeaunce,

1287

Ne o wroong by another wroong, but everich

1288

Of hem encreesceth and aggreggeth oother.

1288

But certes, the wordes of the phisiciens sholde

1289

Been understonden in this wise: for dood and

1289

Wikkednesse been two contraries, and pees and

1289

Werre, vengeaunce and suffraunce, discord and

1290

Accord, and manye othere thynges. But certes,

1290

Wikkednesse shal be warisshed by goodnesse,

1290

Discord by accord, werre by pees, and

1291

So forth of othere thynges. And heerto

1291

Accordeth seint paul the apostle in

1292

Manye places. He seith: – ne yeldeth nat

1292

Harm for harm, ne wikked speche for wikked

1293

Speche; but do wel to hym that dooth thee

1294

Harm, and blesse hym that seith to thee harm.

1294

And in manye othere places he amonesteth pees

1295

And accord. But now wol I speke to yow of

1295

The conseil which that was yeven to yow

1295

By the men of lawe and the wise

1296

Folk, that seyden alle by oon accord,

1297

As ye han herd bifore, that over alle

1297

Thynges ye shal doon youre diligence to kepen

1297

Youre persone and to warnestoore youre hous;

1297

And seyden also that in this caas yow oghten

1297

For to werken ful avysely and with greet deliberacioun.

1298

and, sire, as to the firste point, that

1299

Toucheth to the kepyng of youre persone, ye

1299

Shul understonde that he that hath werre

1299

Shal everemoore mekely and devoutly

1300

Preyen, biforn alle thynges, that jhesus

1300

Crist of his mercy wol han hym in his

1300

Proteccion and been his sovereyn helpyng at

1301

His nede. For certes, in this world ther is no

1301

Wight that may be conseilled ne kept sufficeantly

1301

Withouten the kepyng of oure lord jhesu

1302

Crist. To this sentence accordeth the prophete

1303

david, that seith, – if God ne kepe the

1304

Citee, in ydel waketh he that it kepeth. –

1304

Now, sire, thanne shul ye committe the kepyng

1304

of youre persone to youre trewe freendes,

1305

That been approved and yknowe, and

1305

Of hem shul ye axen help youre persone

1305

For to kepe. For catoun seith: – if thou hast

1306

Nede of help, axe it of thy freendes; for ther

1306

Nys noon so good a phisicien as thy trewe

1307

Freend. – and after this thanne shul ye kepe

1307

Yow fro alle straunge folk, and fro lyeres, and

1308

Have alwey in suspect hire compaignye. For

1308

Piers alfonce seith, – ne taak no compaignye by

1308

The weye of a straunge man, but if so be that

1309

Thou have knowe hym of a lenger tyme. And

1309

If so be that he falle into thy compaignye

1310

Paraventure, withouten thyn assent, enquere

1310

thanne as subtilly as thou mayst of

1310

His conversacion, and of his lyf bifore, and feyne

1310

Thy wey; seye that thou wolt thider as thou

1311

Wolt nat go; and if he bereth a spere, hoold

1311

Thee on the right syde, and if he bere a swerd,

1312

Hoold thee on the lift syde. – and after this

1312

Thanne shul ye kepe yow wisely from all swich

1312

Manere peple as I have seyd bifore, and hem

1313

And hir conseil eschewe. And after this

1314

Thanne shul ye kepe yow in swich manere

1314

That, for any presumpcion of youre strengthe,

1314

That ye ne dispise nat, ne accompte nat the

1314

Myght of youre adversarie so litel, that ye lete

1314

The kepyng of youre persone for youre

1315

Presumpcioun; for every wys man

1316

Dredeth his enemy. And salomon

1317

Seith: – weleful is he that of alle hath drede;

1317

For certes, he that thurgh the hardynesse of

1317

His herte, and thurgh the hardynesse of

1317

Hymself, hath to greet presumpcioun, hym shal

1318

Yvel bityde. – thanne shul ye everemoore contrewayte

1319

embusshementz and alle espiaille.

1319

For senec seith that – the wise man that

1320

Dredeth harmes, eschueth harmes, ne

1320

He ne falleth into perils that perils eschueth.

1321

– and al be it so that it seme that

1321

Thou art in siker place, yet shaltow alwey do

1322

Thy diligence in kepynge of thy persone; this

1322

Is to seyn, ne be nat necligent to kepe thy persone,

1322

nat oonly for thy gretteste enemys, but

1323

Fro thy leeste enemy. Senek seith: – a man

1323

That is well avysed, he dredeth his leste enemy.

1324

– ovyde seith that – the litel wesele

1324

Wol slee the grete bole and the wilde

1325

Hert. – and the book seith, – a litel

1325

Thorn may prikke a kyng ful soore, and

1326

An hound wol holde the wolde boor. – but

1326

Nathelees, I sey nat thou shalt be so coward

1327

That thou doute ther wher as is no drede. The

1327

Book seith that – somme folk han greet lust to

1327

Deceyve, but yet they dreden hem to be deceyved.

1328

– yet shaltou drede to been empoisoned,

1328

and kepe the from the compaignye of

1329

Scorneres. For the book seith, – with scorneres

1329

make no compaignye, but flee hire

1330

Wordes as venym. –

1330

Now, as to the seconde point, where

1330

As youre wise conseillours conseilled yow to

1331

Warnestoore youre hous with gret diligence,

1331

I wolde fayn knowe how that ye understonde

1332

Thilke wordes and what is youre sentence.

1332

Melibeus answerde, and seyde, certes, I understande

1332

it in this wise: that I shal warne –

1332

Stoore myn hous with toures, swiche as han

1332

Castelles and othere manere edifices, and armure,

1333

and artelries; by whiche thynges I may

1333

My persone and myn hous so kepen and deffenden

1333

that myne enemys shul been in drede

1334

Myn hous for to approche.

1334

To this sentence answerde anon prudence:

1334

Warnestooryng, quod she, of heighe toures

1334

And of grete edifices apperteyneth somtyme

1335

to pryde. And eek men make

1335

Heighe toures, and grete edifices with

1335

Grete costages and with greet travaille; and

1335

Whan that they been accompliced, yet be they

1335

Nat worth a stree, but if they be defended by

1336

Trewe freendes that been olde and wise. And

1336

Understoond wel that the gretteste and strongeste

1336

garnysoun that a riche man may have, as

1337

Wel to kepen his persone as his goodes, is

1337

That he be biloved with hys subgetz and with

1338

His neighebores. For thus seith tullius, that

1338

– ther is a manere garnysoun that no man may

1339

Vanquysse ne disconfite, and that is a lord to

1339

Be biloved of his citezeins and of his

1340

Peple. –

1340

Now, sire, as to the thridde point,

1340

Where as youre olde and wise conseillours

1340

Seyden that yow ne oghte nat sodeynly ne

1341

Hastily proceden in this nede, but that yow

1341

Oghte purveyen and apparaillen yow in this caas

1342

With greet diligence and greet deliberacioun;

1342

Trewely, I trowe that they seyden right wisely

1343

And right sooth. For tullius seith: – in every

1343

Nede, er thou bigynne it, apparaille thee with

1344

Greet diligence. – thanne seye I that in vengeance-

1344

takyng, in were, in bataille, and

1345

In warnestooryng, er thow bigynne, I

1345

Rede that thou apparaille thee therto,

1346

And do it with greet deliberacion. For tul

1346

Lius seith that – longe apparaillyng biforn the

1347

Bataille maketh short victorie. – and cassidorus

1347

seith, – the garnysoun is stronger, whan

1348

It is longe tyme avysed. –

1348

But now lat us speken of the conseil that

1348

Was accorded by youre neighebores, swiche

1349

As doon yow reverence withouten love,

1349

Youre olde enemys reconsiled, youre flatereres,

1350

that conseilled yow certeyne

1350

Thynges prively, and openly conseilleden

1351

Yow the contrarie; the yonge folk also, that

1351

Conseilleden yow to venge yow, and make

1352

Werre anon. And certes, sire, as I have seyd

1352

Biforn, ye han greetly erred to han cleped

1353

Swich manere folk to youre conseil, which

1354

Conseillours been ynogh repreved by the re

1355

Souns aforeseyd. But nathelees, lat us now

1355

Descende to the special. Ye shuln first

1356

Procede after the doctrine of tullius.

1356

Certes, the trouthe of this matiere, or of

1357

This conseil, nedeth nat diligently enquere;

1357

For it is wel wist whiche they been that han

1358

Doon to yow this trespas and vileynye, and

1358

How manye trespassours, and in what manere

1358

They han to yow doon al this wrong and al this

1359

Vileynye. And after this, thanne shul ye examyne

1359

the seconde condicion which that the

1360

Same tullius addeth in this matiere. For tullius

1360

put a thyng which that he clepeth

1361

– consentynge – ; this is to seyn, who been

1361

They, and which been they and how

1361

Manye, that consenten to thy conseil in thy

1362

Wilfulnesse to doon hastif vengeance. And

1362

Lat us considere also who been they, and how

1362

Manye been they, and whiche been they, that

1363

Consenteden to youre adversaries. And certes,

1363

As to the first poynt, it is wel knowen whiche

1363

Folk been they that consenteden to youre hastif

1364

Wilfulnesse; for trewely, alle tho that conseilleden

1364

yow to maken sodeyn were ne been nat

1365

Youre freendes. Lat us now considere whiche

1365

Been they that ye holde so greetly youre

1366

Freendes as to youre persone. For al

1366

Be it so that ye be myghty and riche,

1367

Certes ye ne been but allone, for certes ye ne

1368

Han no child but a doghter, ne ye ne han

1368

Brotheren, ne cosyns germayns, ne noon oother

1369

Neigh kynrede, wherfore that youre enemys

1369

For drede wholde stinte to plede with yow, or

1370

To destroye youre persone. Ye knowen also

1370

That youre richesses mooten been dispended

1371

in diverse parties, and whan

1371

That every wight hath his part, they ne

1371

Wollen taken but litel reward to venge thy

1372

Deeth. But thyne enemys been thre, and they

1372

Han manie children, bretheren, cosyns, and

1373

Oother ny kynrede. And though so were that

1373

Thou haddest slayn of hem two or tree, yet

1373

Dwellen ther ynowe to wreken hir deeth and

1374

To sle thy persone. And though so be that

1374

Youre kynrede be moore siker and stedefast

1375

Than the kyn of youre adversarie, yet nathelees

1375

youre kynrede nys but a fer kynrede;

1376

they been but litel syb to yow,

1376

And the kyn of youre enemys been ny

1376

Syb to hem. And certes, as in that, hir condicioun

1377

is bet than youres. Thanne lat us considere

1377

also if the conseillung of hem that conseilleden

1377

yow to taken sodeyn bengeaunce,

1378

Wheither it accorde to resoun. And certes, ye

1379

Knowe wel – nay. – for, as by right and resoun,

1379

Ther may no man taken vengeance on no wight

1380

But the juge that hath the jurisdiccioun of it,

1380

Whan it is graunted hym to take thilke vengeance

1380

hastily or attemprely, as the lawe

1381

Requireth. And yet mooreover of thilke

1381

Word that tullius clepeth – consentynge,

1382

– thou shalt considere if thy myght and

1382

Thy power may consenten and suffise to thy

1383

Wilfulnesse and to thy conseillours. And certes

1384

Thou mayst wel seyn that – nay. – for sikerly,

1384

as for to speke proprely, we may do

1384

No thyng, but oonly swich thyng as we may

1385

Doon rightfully. And certes rightfully ne mowe

1385

Ye take no vengeance, as of youre

1386

Propre auctoritee. Thanne mowe ye

1386

Seen that youre power ne consenteth

1387

Nat, ne accordeth nat, with youre wilfulnesse.

1387

Lat us now examyne the thridde point, that

1388

Tullius clepeth – consequent. – thou shal understonde

1388

that the vengeance that thou purposest

1389

for to take is the consequent; and

1389

Therof folweth another vengeaunce, peril, and

1389

Werre, and othere damages withoute nombre,

1390

Of whiche we be nat war, as at this tyme.

1390

And as touchynge the fourthe point,

1391

That tullius clepeth – engendrynge, –

1391

Thou shalt considere that this wrong

1391

Which that is doon to thee is engendred of the

1392

Hate of thyne enemys, and of the vengeance-

1392

Takynge upon that wolde engendre another

1392

Vengeance, and muchel sorwe and wastynge

1393

Of richesses, as I seyde.

1393

Now, sire, as to the point that tullius clepeth

1394

– causes, – which that is the laste point, thou

1394

Shalt understonde that the worng that thou hast

1395

Receyved hath certeine causes, whiche that

1395

Clerkes clepen oriens and efficiens, and causa

1395

Longinqua and causa propinqua, this is

1396

To seyn, the fer cause and the ny cause.

1396

The fer cause is almyghty god, that is

1397

Cause of alle thynges. The neer cause is thy

1399

Thre enemys. the cause accidental was hate.

1399

The cause material been the fyve woundes of

1400

Thy doghter. The cause formal is the manere

1400

Of hir werkynge that broghten laddres

1401

And cloumben in at thy wyndowes.

1401

The cause final was for to sle thy doghter.

1402

it letted nat in as muche as in hem was.

1402

But for to speken of the fer cause, as to what

1402

Ende they shul come, or what shal finally bityde

1402

Of hem in this caas, ne kan I nat deeme but

1403

By conjectynge and by supposynge. For we

1403

Shul suppose that they shul come to a wikked

1404

Ende, by cause that the book of decrees seith,

1404

– seelden, or with greet peyne, been causes

1404

Ybroght to good ende whanne they been baddely

1405

bigonne. –

1405

Now, sire, if men wolde axe me why that

1405

God suffred men to do yow this vileynye, certes,

1405

I kan nat wel answere, as for no soothfastnesse.

1406

for th' apostle seith that – the

1406

Sciences and the juggementz of oure

1407

Lord God almyghty been ful depe; ther may

1407

No man comprehende ne serchen hem suffisantly.

1408

– nathelees, by certeyne presumpciouns

1409

and conjectynges, I holde and bileeve

1409

That god, which that is ful of justice and of

1409

Rightwisnesse, hath suffred this bityde by juste

1410

Cause resonable.

1410

Thy name is melibee, this is to seyn,

1411

– a man that drynketh hony. – thou hast

1411

Ydronke so muchel hony of sweete temporeel

1411

richesses, and delices and honours of

1412

This world, that thou art dronken, and hast

1413

Forgeten jhesu crist thy creatour. Thou ne

1413

Hast nat doon to hym swich honour and reverence

1414

as thee oughte, ne thou ne hast nat

1414

Wel ytaken kep to the wordes of ovide, that

1415

Seith, – under the hony of the goodes of

1415

The body is hyd the venym that sleeth

1416

The soule – and salomon seith, – if thou

1416

Hast founden hony, ete of it that suffiseth;

1417

for if thou ete of it out of mesure, thou

1418

Shalt spewe, – and be nedy and povre. And

1418

Peraventure crist hath thee in despit, and hath

1418

Turned awey fro thee his face and his eeris of

1419

Misericorde; and also he hath suffred that thou

1419

Hast been punysshed in the manere that thow

1420

Hast ytrespassed. Thou hast doon

1421

Synne agayn oure lord crist; for certes,

1421

The three enemys of mankynde, that is to

1422

Seyn, the flessh, the feend, and the world,

1422

Thou hast suffred hem entre in to thyn herte

1423

Wilfully by the wyndowes of thy body, and

1423

Hast nat defended thyself suffisantly agayns

1423

Hire assautes and hire temptaciouns, so that they

1424

Han wounded thy soule in fyve places; this is

1424

To seyn, the deedly synnes that been entred into

1425

Thyn herte by thy fyve wittes. And in the

1425

Same manere oure lord crist hath woold and

1425

Suffred that thy three enemys been entred

1426

into thyn house by the wyndowes,

1426

And han ywounded thy doghter in the

1427

Forseyde manere.

1427

Certes, quod melibee, I se wel that ye

1427

Enforce yow muchel by wordes to overcome

1427

Me in swich manere that I shal nat venge me

1428

Of myne enemys, shewynge me the perils and

1428

The yveles that myghten falle of this vengeance.

1429

but whoso wolde considere in alle

1429

Vengeances the perils and yveles that myghte

1430

Sewe of vengeance-takynge, a man wolde

1430

Nevere take vengeance, and that were

1431

Harm; for by the vengeance-takynge

1431

Been the wikked men dissevered fro the

1432

Goode men, and they that han wyl to do wikkednesse

1432

restreyne hir wikked purpos, whan

1432

They seen the punyssynge and chastisynge of

1433

The trespassours.

1433

(et a ce respont dame prudence, certes,

1433

Dist elle, je t' ottroye que de vengence vient

1434

Molt de maulx et de biens; mais vengence

1434

N' appartient pas a un chascun fors seulement

1434

Aux juges et a ceulx qui ont la juridicion sur

1435

Les malfaitteurs.) and yet seye I moore, that

1435

Right as singuler persone synneth in

1436

Takynge vengeance of another man,

1436

Right so synneth the juge if he do no

1437

Vengeance of hem that it han disserved. For

1437

Senec seith thus: – that maister, – he seith, – is

1438

Good that proveth shrewes. – and as cassidore

1438

seith, – a man dredeth to do outrages

1438

Whan he woot and knoweth that it despleseth

1439

To the juges and the sovereyns. – and another

1439

Seith, – the juge that dredeth to do right, maketh

1440

men shrewes. – and seint paul the apostle

1440

seith in his epistle, whan he writeth unto

1440

The romayns, that – the juges beren nat

1441

The spere withouten cause, but they

1441

Beren it to punysse the shrewes and mysdoers,

1442

and for to defende the goode men. If ye

1442

Wol thanne take vengeance of youre enemys, ye

1442

Shul retourne or have youre recours to the juge

1443

That hath the jurisdiccion upon hem, and he

1443

Shal punysse hem as the lawe axeth and requireth.

1444

A! quod melibee, this vengeance liketh

1445

Me no thyng. I bithenke me now and take

1445

Heede how fortune hath norissed me fro my

1445

Childhede, and hath holpen me to passe

1446

Many a stroong paas. Now wol I assayen

1446

hire, trowynge, with goddes help,

1446

That she shal helpe me my shame for to

1447

Venge.

1447

Certes, quod prudence, if ye wol werke

1447

By conseil, ye shul nat assaye fortune by

1448

No wey, ne ye shul nat lene or bowe unto

1449

Hire, after the word of senec; for – thynges that

1449

Been folily doon, and that been in hope of

1450

Fortune, shullen nevere come to good ende. –

1450

And, as the same senec seith, – the moore cleer

1450

And the moore shynyng that fortune is, the

1450

Moore brotil and the sonner broken she

1451

Is – . Trusteth nat in hire, for she nys

1452

Nat stidefast ne stable; for whan thow

1452

Trowest to be moost seur or siker of hire help,

1453

She wol faille thee and deceyve thee. And

1453

Where as ye seyn that fortune hath norissed

1454

Yow fro youre childhede, I seye that in so

1454

Muchel shul ye the lasse truste in hire and in

1455

Hir wit. For senec seith, – what man that is

1455

Norissed by fortune, she maketh hym

1456

A greet fool. – now thanne, syn ye desire

1456

and axe vengeance, and the vengeance

1456

that is doon after the lawe and bifore

1457

The juge ne liketh yow nat, and the vengeance

1457

That is doon in hope of fortune is perilous and

1458

Uncertein, thanne have ye noon oother remedie

1458

but for to have youre recours unto the sovereyn

1458

juge that vengeth alle vileynyes and

1459

Wronges. And he shal venge yow after that

1460

Hymself witnesseth, where as he seith, – leveth

1460

the vengeance to me, and I shal

1461

Do it. –

1461

Melibee answerde, if I ne venge me

1462

Nat of the vileynye that men han doon to me,

1462

I sompne or warne hem that han doon to me

1462

That vileynye, and alle othere, to do me another

1463

Vileynye. For it is writen, – if thou take no

1463

Vengeance of an oold vileynye, thou sompnest

1464

Thyne adversaries to do thee a newe vileynye. –

1464

And also for my suffrance men wolden do

1464

Me so muchel vileynye that I myghte neither

1465

Bere it ne susteene, and so sholde I

1466

Been put and holden overlowe. For

1466

Men seyn, – in muchel suffrynge shul

1466

Manye thynges falle unto thee whiche thou

1467

Shalt nat mowe suffre. –

1467

Certes, quod prudence, I graunte yow

1468

That over – muchel suffraunce is nat good. But

1468

Yet ne folweth it nat therof that every persone

1468

To whom men doon vileynye take of it vengeance;

1469

for that aperteneth and longeth al

1469

Oonly to the juges, for they shul venge the

1470

Vileynyes and injuries. And therfore tho two

1470

Auctoritees that ye han seyd above been

1471

Oonly understonden in the juges. For

1471

Whan they suffren over-muchel the

1471

Wronges and the vileynyes to be doon withouten

1472

punysshynge, the sompne nat a man

1472

Al oonly for to do newe wronges, but they

1473

Comanden it. Also a wys man seith that the

1473

Juge that correcteth nat the synnere comandeth

1474

and biddeth hym do synne. – and the juges

1474

And sovereyns myghten in hir land so muchel

1475

Suffre of the shrewes and mysdoeres that they

1475

Sholden, by swich suffrance, by proces of

1475

Tyme wexen of swich power and myght that

1475

They sholden putte out the juges and the

1476

Sovereyns from hir places, and atte laste

1477

Maken hem lesen hire lordshipes.

1477

But lat us now putte that ye have leve to

1478

Venge yow. I seye ye been nat of myght and

1479

Power as now to venge yow; for if ye wole

1479

Maken comparisoun unto the myght of youre

1479

Adversaries, ye shul fynde in manye thynges

1479

That I have shewed yow er this that hire condicion

1480

is bettre than youres. And therfore

1480

Seye I that it is good as now that ye suffre

1481

and be pacient.

1481

Forthermoore, ye knowen wel that

1481

After the comune sawe, – it is a woodnesse a

1481

Man to stryve with a strenger or a moore

1482

Myghty man than he is hymself; and for to

1482

Stryve with a man of evene strengthe, that is

1482

To seyn, with as strong a man as he is, it is

1483

Peril; and for to stryve with a weyker man, it

1484

Is folie. – and therfore sholde a man flee stryvynge

1485

as muchel as he myghte. For salomon

1485

Seith, – it is a greet worshipe to a man to

1486

Kepen hym fro noyse and stryf. – and

1486

If it so bifalle or happe that a man of

1486

Gretter myght and strengthe than thou art do

1487

Thee grevaunce, studie and bisye thee rather

1487

To stille the same grevaunce than for to venge

1488

Thee. For senec seith that – he putteth hym in

1488

Greet peril that stryveth with a gretter man

1489

Than he is hymself. – and catoun seith, – if a

1489

Man of hyer estaat or degree, or moore myghty

1489

Than thou, do thee anoy or grevaunce, suffre

1490

Hym; for he that oones hath greved thee,

1490

May another tyme releeve thee and

1491

Helpe. – yet sette I caas, ye have bothe

1492

Myght and licence for to venge yow, I

1492

Seye that ther be ful manye thynges that shul

1493

Restreyne yow of vengeance-takynge, and

1493

Make yow for to enclyne to suffre, and for to

1493

Han pacience in the wronges that han been

1494

Doon to yow. First and foreward, if ye wole

1494

Considere the defautes that been in youre

1495

Owene persone, for whiche defautes God hath

1495

Suffred yow have this tribulacioun, as I

1496

Have seyd yow heer-biforn. For the

1496

Poete seith that – we oghte paciently

1496

Taken the tribulacions that comen to us, whan

1496

We thynken and consideren that we han disserved

1497

to have hem. – and seint gregorie

1497

Seith that – whan a man considereth wel the

1498

Nombre of his defautes and of his synnes, the

1498

Peynes and the tribulaciouns that he suffreth

1499

Semen the lesse unto hym; and in as muche

1499

As hym thynketh his synnes moore hevy and

1500

Grevous, in so muche semeth his peyne

1501

The lighter and the esier unto hym. –

1501

Also ye owen to enclyne and bowe youre

1501

Herte to take the pacience of oure lord jhesu

1502

Crist, as seith seint peter in his epistles.

1502

Jhesu crist, – he seith, – hath suffred for us and

1502

Yeven ensample to every man to folwe and

1503

Sewe hym; for he dide nevere synne, ne nevere

1504

cam ther a vileyns word out of his mouth.

1504

Whan men cursed hym, he cursed hem noght;

1504

And whan men betten hym, he manaced hem

1505

Noght. – also the grete pacience which the

1505

Seintes that been in paradys han had in tribulaciouns

1505

that they han ysuffred, withouten

1506

Hir desert or gilt, oghte muchel stiren

1507

Yow to pacience. Forthermoore ye

1508

Sholde enforce yow to have pacience, considerynge

1508

that the tribulaciouns of this world but

1508

Litel while endure, and soone passed been and

1509

Goon, and the joye that a man seketh to have

1509

By pacience in tribulaciouns is perdurable,

1510

After that the apostle seith in his epistle. The

1510

Joye of god, he seith, is perdurable,

1511

That is to seyn, everelastynge. Also

1511

Troweth and bileveth stedefastly that he

1511

Nys nat wel ynorissed, ne wel ytaught, that kan

1511

Nat have pacience, or wol nat receyve pacience.

1512

for salomon seith that – the doctrine

1513

And the wit of a man is knowen by pacience. –

1513

And in another place he seith that – he that is

1514

Pacient governeth hym by greet prudence. –

1514

And the same salomon seith, – the angry and

1514

Wrathful man maketh noyses, and the pacient

1515

Man atempreth hem and stilleth. – he seith

1515

Also, – it is moore worth to be pacient

1516

Than for to be right strong; and he

1516

That may have the lordshipe of his

1516

Owene herte is moore to preyse than he that

1517

By his force or strengthe taketh grete citees. –

1517

And therfore seith seint jame in his epistle that

1518

– pacience is a greet vertu of perfeccioun. –

1518

Certes, quod melibee, I graunte yow,

1518

Dame prudence, that pacience is greet vertu

1519

Of perfeccioun; but every man may nat have

1520

The perfeccioun that ye seken; ne I nam

1521

Nat of the nombre of right parfite men,

1521

For myn herte may nevere been in pees

1522

Unto the tyme it be venged. And al be it so

1522

That it was greet peril to myne enemys to do

1523

Me a vileynye in takynge vengeance upon me,

1523

Yet tooken they noon heede of the peril, but

1524

Fulfilleden hir wikked wyl and hir corage.

1524

And therfore me thynketh men oghten nat

1524

Repreve me, though I putte me in a litel peril

1525

For to venge me, and though I do a greet

1525

Excesse, that is to seyn, that I venge

1526

Oon outrage by another.

1526

A, quod dame prudence, ye seyn

1527

Youre wyl and as yow liketh, but in no caas

1527

Of the world a man sholde nat doon outrage

1528

Ne excesse for to vengen hym. For cassidore

1528

Seith that – as yvele dooth he that vengeth hym

1529

By outrage as he that dooth the outrage. – and

1529

Therfore ye shul venge yow after the ordre of

1529

Right, that is to seyn, by the lawe, and noght

1530

By excesse ne by outrage. And also, if ye

1530

Wol venge yow of the outrage of youre adversaries

1530

in oother manere than right comandeth,

1531

ye synne. And therfore seith senec

1531

That – a man shal nevere vengen shrewednesse

1532

by shrewednesse. – and if ye seye that

1532

Right axeth a man to defenden violence by violence,

1533

and fightyng by fightyng, certes ye seye

1533

Sooth, whan the defense is doon anon withouten

1533

intervalle or withouten tariyng or delay,

1534

for to deffenden hym and nat for to

1535

Vengen hym. And it bihoveth that a man

1535

Putte swich attemperance in his deffense

1536

that men have no cause ne matiere

1536

to repreven hym that deffendeth

1536

Hym of excesse and outrage, for ellis were it

1537

Agayn resoun. Pardee, ye knowen wel that

1537

Ye maken no deffense as now for to deffende

1538

Yow, but for to venge yow; and so seweth

1538

It that ye han no wyl to do youre dede attemprely.

1539

and therfore me thynketh that pacience

1539

is good; for salomon seith that – he that

1540

Is nat pacient shal have a greet harm. –

1540

Certes, quod melibee, I graunte yow that

1540

Whan a man is inpacient and wrooth, of that

1540

That toucheth hym noght and that aperteneth

1540

Nat unto hym, though it harme hym, it

1541

Is no wonder. For the lawe seith that

1541

– he is coupable that entremetteth hym or

1541

Medleth with swych thyng as aperteneth nat

1542

Unto hym. – and salomon seith that – he that

1542

Entremetteth hym of the noyse or strif of another

1542

man is lyk to hym that taketh an hound

1543

By the eris. – for right as he that taketh a

1543

Straunge hound by the eris is outherwhile biten

1544

With the hound, right in the same wise is it

1544

Resoun that he have harm that by his inpacience

1544

medleth hym of the noyse of another

1545

Man, wheras it aperteneth nat unto hym. But

1545

Ye knowen wel that this dede, that is to seyn,

1545

My grief and my disese, toucheth me

1546

Right ny. And therfore, though I be

1547

Wrooth and inpacient, it is no merveille.

1547

And, savynge youre grace, I kan nat seen that it

1547

Myghte greetly harme me though I tooke vengeaunce.

1548

for I am richer and moore myghty

1549

Than myne enemys been; and wel knowen ye

1549

That by moneye and by havynge grete possessions

1549

been alle the thynges of this world governed.

1550

and salomon seith that – alle

1551

Thynges abeyen to moneye. –

1551

Whan prudence hadde herd hir housbonde

1551

avanten hym of his richesse and of his

1551

Moneye, dispreisynge the power of his adversaries,

1552

she spak, and seyde in this wise:

1552

Certes, deere sire, I graunte yow that ye been

1553

Riche and myghty, and that the richesses been

1553

Goode to hem that han wel ygeten hem and wel

1554

Konne usen hem. For right as the body of a

1554

Man may nat lyven withoute the soule, namoore

1555

May it lyve withouten temporeel goodes. And

1555

By richesses may a man gete hym grete

1556

Freendes. And therfore seith pamphilles:

1556

– if a net – herdes doghter, – seith

1556

He, – be riche, she may chesen of a thousand

1557

Men which she wol take to hir housbonde;

1557

For, of a thousand men, oon wol nat forsaken

1558

Hire ne refusen hire. – and this pamphilles

1558

Seith also: – if thow be right happy – that is to

1558

Seyn, if thou be right riche – thou shalt fynde

1559

A greet nombre of felawes and freendes. And

1559

If thy fortune change that thou wexe povre,

1560

Farewel freendshipe and felaweshipe; for thou

1560

Shalt be alloone withouten any compaignye,

1560

But if it be the compaignye of povre

1561

Folk. – and yet seith this pamphilles

1561

Moreover that – they that been thralle and

1561

Bonde of lynage shullen been maad worthy and

1562

Noble by the richesses. – and right so as by

1562

Richesses ther comen manye goodes, right so

1562

By poverte come ther manye harmes and

1563

Yveles. For greet poverte constreyneth a man

1564

To do manye yveles. And therfore clepeth

1565

Cassidore poverte the mooder of ruyne, that

1565

Is to seyn, the mooder of overthrowynge

1566

Or fallynge doun. And therfore seith

1566

Piers alfonce: – oon of the gretteste adversitees

1567

of this world is whan a free man by

1567

Kynde or of burthe is constreyned by poverte

1568

To eten the almesse of his enemy, – and the

1568

Same seith innocent in oon of his bookes. He

1568

Seith that – sorweful and myshappy is the condicioun

1569

of a povre beggere; for if he axe nat

1570

His mete, he dyeth for hunger; and if he axe,

1570

He dyeth for shame; and algates necessitee

1571

constreyneth hym to axe. – and

1571

Seith salomon that – bet it is to dye than

1572

For to have swich poverte. – and as the same

1572

Salomon seith, – bettre it is to dye of bitter deeth

1573

Than for to lyven in swich wise. – by thise

1573

Resons that I have seid unto yow, and by manye

1574

Othere resons that I koude seye, I graunte yow

1574

That richesses been goode to hem that geten

1574

Hem wel, and to hem that wel usen tho richesses.

1575

and therfore wol I shewe yow hou ye

1575

Shul have yow and how ye shul bere yow in

1575

Gaderynge of richesses, and in what

1576

Manere ye shul usen hem.

1576

First, ye shul geten hem withouten

1576

Greet desir, by good leyser, sokyngly and nat

1577

Over-hastily. For a man that is to desirynge

1577

To gete richesses abaundoneth hym first to

1578

Thefte, and to alle othere yveles; and therfore

1578

seith salomon, – he that hasteth hym to

1579

Bisily to wexe riche shal be noon innocent. –

1579

He seith also that – the richesses that hastily cometh

1579

to a man, soone and lightly gooth and

1580

Passeth fro a man; but that richesse that

1580

Cometh litel and litel, wexeth alwey and

1581

Multiplieth. – and, sire

1581

Richesses by youre wit and by youre

1582

Travaille unto youre profit; and that withouten

1583

Wrong or hamr doynge to any oother persone.

1583

For tha lawe seith that – ther maketh no man

1583

Himselven riche, if he do harm to another

1584

Wight. – this is to seyn, htat nature deffendeth

1584

and fordedeth by right that no man make

1584

Hymself riche unto the harm of another persone.

1585

and tulliur seith that – no sorwe, ne no

1585

Drede of deeth, ne no thyng that may

1586

Falle unto a man, is so muchel agayns

1586

Nature as a man to encressen his owene

1587

Profit to the harm of another man. And

1587

Though the grete man and the myghty men

1588

Geten richesses moore lightly than thou, yet

1588

Shaltou nat been ydel ne slow to do thy profit,

1589

For thou shalt in alle wise flee ydelnesse. – for

1589

Salomon seith that – ydelnesse techeth a man to

1590

Do manye yveles. – and the same salomon

1590

Seith that – he that travailleth and bisieth

1591

Hym to tilien his land, shal eten breed;

1591

But he that is ydel and casteth hym to

1591

No bisynesse ne occupacioun, shal falle into

1592

Poverte, and dye for hynger. – and he that is

1592

Ydel and slow kan nevere fynde covenable

1593

Tyme for to doon his profit. For ther is a

1593

Versifiour seith that – the ydel man excuseth hym

1593

In wynter by cause of the grete coold, and in

1594

Somer by enchesoun of the greete heete. – for

1594

Thise causes seith caton, – waketh and enclyneth

1594

nat yow over – muchel for to slepe, for overmuchel

1594

reste norisseth and causeth manye

1595

Vices. – and therfore seith seint jerome,

1595

– dooth somme goode dedes that the devel,

1595

Which is oure enemy, ne fynde yow nat

1596

Unocupied. – for the devel ne taketh

1596

Nat lightly unto his werkynge swiche as

1597

He fyndeth occupied in goode werkes.

1597

Thanne thus, in getynge richesses, ye mosten

1598

Flee ydelnesse. And afterward, ye shul use

1598

The richesses which ye have geten by youre wit

1599

And by youre travaille, in swich a manere that

1599

Men holde yow nat to scars, ne to sparynge, ne

1599

To fool-large, that is to seyen, over-large a

1600

Spendere. For right as men blamen an avaricious

1600

man by cause of his scarsetee and

1601

Chyncherie, in the same wise is he to

1602

Blame that spendeth over-largely. And

1602

Therfore seith caton: – use, – he seith, – thy richesses

1603

that thou hast geten in swich a manere

1603

That men have no matiere ne cause to calle

1604

The neither wrecche ne chynche; for it is a

1604

Greet shame to a man to have a povere herte

1605

And a riche purs. – he seith also: – the goodes

1605

That thou hast ygeten, use hem by mesure, –

1605

That is to seyn, spende hem mesurably;

1606

for they that folily wasten and

1607

Despenden the goodes that they han,

1607

What they han namoore propre of hir owene,

1607

They shapen hem to take the goodes of another

1608

Man. I seye thanne that ye shul fleen avarice;

1609

usynge youre richesses in swich manere

1609

That men seye nat that youre richesses been

1610

Yburyed, but that ye have hem in

1611

Youre myght and in youre weeldynge.

1611

For a wys man repreveth the avaricious

1612

Man, and seith thus in two vers: – wherto and

1612

Why burieth a man his goodes by his grete

1612

Avarice, and knoweth wel that nedes moste

1613

He dye? for deeth is the ende of every man

1614

As in this present lyf. – and for what cause or

1614

Enchesoun joyneth he hym or knytteth he hym

1615

So faste unto his goodes that alle hise wittes

1615

Mowen nat disseveren hym or departen

1616

Hym from his goodes, and knoweth

1616

Wel, or oghte knowe, that whan he is

1616

Deed he shal no thyng bere with hym out of

1617

This world? and therfore seith seint austyn

1618

That – the avaricious man is likned unto helle,

1618

That the moore it swelweth. The moore desir it

1619

Hath to swelwe and devoure. – and as wel as

1619

Ye wolde eschewe to be called an avaricious

1620

Man or chynche, as wel sholde ye kepe yow

1620

And governe yow in swich a wise that

1621

Men calle yow nat fool-large. Therfore

1621

seith tullius: – the goodes, – he seith,

1621

– of thyn hous ne sholde nat been hyd ne kept

1621

So cloos, but that they myghte been opened

1622

By pitee and debonairetee; – that is to seyn, to

1623

Yeven part to hem that han greet nede; – ne

1623

Thy goodes shullen nat been so opene to been

1624

Every mannes goodes. – afterward, in getynge

1624

Of youre richesses and in usynge hem, ye shul

1625

Alwey have thre thynges in youre herte, that

1625

Is to seyn, oure lord god, conscience,

1626

And good name. First, ye shul have

1627

God in youre herte, and for no richesse

1627

Ye shullen do no thyng which may in any

1627

Manere displese god, that is youre creator

1628

And makere. For after the word of salomon,

1628

– it is bettre to have a litel good with the love

1629

Of god, than to have muchel good and tresour,

1630

and lese the love of his lord god. And

1630

The prophete seith that – bettre it is to been

1630

A good man and have litel good and

1631

Tresour, than to been holden a shrewe

1632

And have grete richesses. – and yet seye

1632

I ferthermoore, that ye sholde alwey doon youre

1633

Bisynesse to gete yow richesses, so that ye

1634

Gete hem with good conscience. And th' apostle

1634

seith that – ther nys thyng in this world

1634

Of which we sholden have so greet joye as

1634

Whan oure conscience bereth us good witnesse.

1635

– and the wise man seith, – the substance

1635

of a man is ful good, whan synne

1636

Is nat in mannes conscience. – afterward,

1636

in getynge of youre richesses and

1637

In usynge of hem, yow moste have greet bisynesse

1637

and greet diligence that youre goode

1638

Name be alwey kept and conserved. For salomon

1638

seith that – bettre it is an moore it availleth

1638

a man to have a good name, than for

1639

To have grete richesses. – and therfore he

1639

Seith in another place, – do greet diligence,

1639

Seith salomon, – in kepyng of thy freend and

1640

Of thy goode name; for it shal lenger abide

1640

With thee than any tresour, be it never

1641

So precious. – and certes he sholde nat

1641

Be called a gentil man that after god

1641

And good conscience, alle thynges left, ne

1641

Dooth his diligence and bisynesse to kepen his

1642

Goode name. And cassidore seith that – it is

1642

Signe of a gentil herte, whan a man loveth and

1643

Desireth to han a good name. – and therfore

1643

Seith seint austyn that – ther been two thynges

1644

That arn necessarie and nedefulle, and that

1645

Is good conscience and good loos; that is to

1645

Seyn, good conscience to thyn owene persone

1645

Inward, and good loos for thy neighebor

1646

Outward. – and he that trusteth hym so

1647

Muchel in his goode conscience that he

1647

Displeseth, and setteth at noght his goode

1647

Name or loos, and rekketh noght though he

1647

Kepe nat his goode neam, nys but a crueel

1648

Cherl.

1648

Sire, now have I shewed yow how ye shul

1648

Do in getynge richesses, and how ye shullen

1649

Usen hem, and I se wel that for the trust

1649

That ye han in youre richesses ye wole moeve

1650

Werre and bataille. I conseille yow that ye

1650

Bigynne no were in trust of youre richesses,

1650

For thay ne suffisen noght werres to

1651

Mayntene. And therfore seith a philosophre,

1651

hthat man that desireth and

1651

Wole algates han werre, shal nevere have suffisaunce;

1652

for the richer that he is, the gretter

1652

Despenses moste he make, if he wole have worshipe

1653

and victorei. – and salomon seith that

1653

– the gretter richesses that a man hath, the mo

1654

Despendours he hath. – and, deere sire, al be

1654

It so that for youre richesses ye mowe have

1655

Muchel folk, yet bihoveth it nat, ne it is nat

1655

Good, to bigynne werre, whereas ye mowe in

1655

Oother manere have pees unto youre

1656

Worshipe and profit. For the victorie

1656

Of batailles that been in this world lyth

1656

Nat in greet nombre or multitude of the peple,

1657

Ne in the vertu of man, but it lith in the wyl

1658

And in the hand of oure lord God almyghty.

1658

And therfore judas machabeus, which was

1659

Goddes knyght, whan he sholde fighte agayn

1659

His adversarie that hadde a gretter nombre and

1659

A gretter multitude of folk and strenger than

1660

Was this peple of machabee, yet he reconforted

1660

his litel compaignye, and seyde

1661

Right in this wise: – als lightly, – quod

1661

He, – may oure lord God almyghty yeve

1662

Victorie to a fewe folk as to many folk; for the

1662

Victorie of a bataile comth nat by the grete

1663

Nombre of peple, but it cometh from oure

1664

Lord God of hevene. – and, deere sire, for as

1664

Muchel is ther is no man certein if he be

1664

Worthy that God yeve hym victorie, (ne plus

1664

Que il est certain se il est digne de l' amour de

1665

Dieu), or naught, after that salomon seith,

1665

Therfore every man sholde greetly drede

1666

Werres to bigynne. And by cause that

1667

In batailles fallen manye perils, and

1667

Happeth outher while that as soone is the grete

1668

Man slayn as the litel man; and as it is writen

1668

In the seconde book of kynges, – the dedes of

1668

Batailles been aventurouse and nothyng certeyne,

1669

for as lightly is oon hurt with a spere

1670

As another; – and for ther is gret peril in

1670

Werre; therfore sholde a man flee and eschue

1670

Werre, in as muchel as a man may

1671

Goodly. For salomon seith, – he that

1672

Loveth peril shal falle in peril –

1672

After that dame prudence hadde spoken in

1673

This manere, melibee answerde, and seyde:

1673

I see wel, dame prudence, that by youre faire

1673

Wordes, and by youre resouns that ye han

1673

Shewed me, that the werre liketh yow no

1674

Thyng; but I have nat yet herd youre conseil,

1675

How I shal do in this nede.

1675

Certes, quod she, I conseille yow that ye

1675

Accorde with youre adversaries and that

1676

Ye have pees with he. For seint jame

1676

Seith in his epistles that – by concord and

1677

Pees the smale richesses wexen grete, and by

1677

Debaat and discord the grete richesses fallen

1678

Doun. – and ye knowen wel that oon of the

1678

Gretteste and moost sovereyn thyng that is in

1679

This world is unytee and pees. And therfore

1679

Seyde oure lord jhesu crist to his apostles in

1680

This wise: – wel happy and blessed been they

1680

That loven and purchacen pees, for they

1681

Been called children of god. –

1681

A, quod melibee, now se I wel that

1682

Ye loven nat myn honour ne my worshipe.

1682

Ye knowen wel that myne adversaries han

1682

Bigonnen this debaat and bryge by hire outrage,

1683

and ye se wel that they ne requeren ne

1683

Preyen me nat of pees, ne they asken nat to be

1684

Reconsiled. Wol ye thanne that I go and meke

1684

Me and obeye me to hem, and crie hem

1685

Mercy? for sothe, that were nat my

1686

Worshipe. For right as men seyn that

1686

– over-greet hoomlynesse engendreth dispreisynge,

1686

– so fareth it by to greet hymylitee

1687

Or mekenesse.

1687

Thanne bigan dame prudence to maken

1688

Semblant of wratthe, and seyde: certes, sire,

1688

Sauf youre grace, I love youre honour and youre

1688

Profit as I do myn owene, and evere have

1689

Doon; ne ye, ne noon oother, seyn nevere

1690

The contrarie. And yit if I hadde seyd that

1690

Ye sholde han purchaced the pees and the

1690

Reconsilacioun, I ne hadde nat muchel

1691

Mystaken me, ne seyd amys. For the

1691

Wise man seith, – the dissensioun bigynneth

1691

by another man, and the reconsilyng bygynneth

1692

by thyself. – and the prophete seith,

1693

– flee shrewednesse and do goodnesse; seke

1694

Pees and folwe it, as muchel as in thee is. –

1694

Yet seye I nat that ye shul rather pursue to

1694

Youre adversaries for pees than they shuln to

1695

Yow. For I knowe wel that ye been so hard-

1695

Herted that ye wol do no thyng for

1696

Me. And salomon seith, – he that hath

1696

Over-hard an herte, atte laste he shal

1697

Myshappe and mystyde. –

1697

Whanne melibee hadde herd dame prudence

1697

Maken semblant of wratthe, he seyde in this

1698

Wise: dame, I prey yow that ye be nat displesed

1699

of thynges that I seye, for ye knowe

1699

Wel that I am angrey and wrooth, and that is

1700

No wonder; and they that been wrothe witen

1700

Nat wel what they don, ne what they

1701

Seyn. Therfore the prophete seith that

1702

– troubled eyen han no cleer sighte. – but

1702

Seyeth and conseileth me as yow liketh, for I

1703

Am redy to do right as ye wol desire; and if

1703

Ye repreve me of my folye, I am the moore

1704

Holden to love yow and to preyse yow. For

1704

Salomon seith that – he that repreveth hym

1705

That dooth folye, he shal fynde gretter grace

1705

Than he that deceyveth hym by sweete

1706

Wordes. –

1706

Thanne seide dame prudence, I

1706

Make no semblant of wratthe ne anger, but

1707

For youre grete profit. For salomon seith,

1707

– he is moore worth that repreveth or chideth

1707

A fool for his folye, shewynge hym semblant

1708

Of wratthe,than he that supporteth hym and

1708

Preyseth hym in his mysdoynge, and laugheth

1709

At his folye. – and this same salomon seith

1709

Afterward that – by the sorweful visage of a

1709

Man, – that is to seyn by the sory and hevy contenaunce

1710

of a man, – the fool correcteth

1711

And amendeth hymself. –

1711

Thanne seyde melibee, I shal nat

1711

Koone answere to so manye faire resouns as ye

1712

Putten to me and shewen. Seyeth shorthly

1712

Youre wyl and youre conseil, and I am al redy

1713

To fulfille and parfourne it.

1713

Thanne dame prudence discovered al hir

1714

Wyl to hym, and seyde, I conseille yow,

1714

Quod she, aboven alle thynges, that ye make

1715

Pees bitwene God and yow; and beth

1716

Reconsiled unto hym and to his grace.

1716

For, as I have seyd yow heer biforn, god

1716

Hath suffred yow to have this tribulacioun and

1717

Disese for youre synnes. And if ye do as I sey

1717

Yow, God wol sende youre adversaries unto

1718

Yow, and maken hem fallen at youre feet,

1718

Redy to do youre wyl and youre comande –

1719

Mentz. For salomon seith, – whan the condicioun

1720

of man is plesaunt and likynge to god,

1720

He chaungeth the hertes of the mannes adversaries

1720

and constreyneth hem to biseken

1721

hym of pees and of grace. – and

1721

I prey yow lat me speke with youre adversaries

1722

in privee place; for they shul nat

1722

Knowe that it be of youre wyl or of youre adsent.

1723

and thanne, whan I knowe hir wil and

1723

Hire entente, I may conseille yow the moore

1724

Seurely.

1724

Dame, quod melibee, dooth youre wil and

1725

Youre likynge; for I putte me hoolly in

1726

Youre disposicioun and ordinaunce.

1726

Thanne dame prudence, whan she

1726

Saugh the goode wyl of hir housbonde, delibered

1727

and took avys in hirself, thinkinge how

1727

She myghte brynge this nede unto a good conclusioun

1728

and to a good ende. And whan she

1728

Saugh hir tyme, she sente for thise adversaries

1729

To come unto hire into a pryvee place, and

1729

Shewed wisely unto hem the grete goodes that

1730

Comen of pees, and the grete harmes

1731

And perils that been in werre; and

1731

Seyde to hem in a goodly manere hou

1732

That hem oughten have greet repentaunce of

1732

The injurie and wrong that they hadden doon

1732

To melibee hir lord, and unto hire, and to hire

1733

Doghter.

1733

And whan they herden the goodliche wordes

1734

Of dame prudence, they weren so supprised

1734

And ravysshed, and hadden so greet joye of

1735

Hire that wonder was to telle. A, lady, quod

1735

They, ye han shewed unto us the blessynge

1735

Of swetnesse, after the sawe of david the

1736

Prophete; for the reconsilynge which

1736

We been nat worthy to have in no manere,

1737

but we oghte requeren it with greet contricioun

1738

and humylitee, ye of youre grete

1739

Goodnesse have presented unto us. Now se

1739

We wel that the science and the konnynge

1740

Of salomon is ful trewe. For he seith that

1740

– sweete wordes multiplien and encreescen

1740

Freendes, and maken shrewes to be debonaire

1741

and meeke. –

1741

Certes, quod they, we putten oure

1741

Dede and al oure matere and cause al hooly in

1742

Youre goode wyl and been redy to obeye to

1742

The speche and comandement of my lord melibee.

1743

and therfore, deere and benygne lady,

1743

We preien yow and biseke yow as mekely as we

1744

Konne and mowen, that it lyke unto youre

1744

Grete goodnesse to fulfillen in dede youre goodliche

1745

wordes. For we consideren and knowelichen

1745

that we han offended and greved

1746

My lord melibee out of mesure, so ferforth

1746

that we be nat of power to maken

1747

His amendes. And therfore we oblige and

1747

Bynden us and oure freendes for to doon al

1748

His wyl and his comandementz. But peraventure

1748

he hath swich hevynesse and swich wratthe

1749

To us – ward, by cause of oure offense, that he

1749

Wole enjoyne us swich a peyne as we mowe

1750

Nat bere ne susteene. And therfore, noble

1750

Lady, we biseke to youre wommanly

1751

Pitee to taken swich avysement in this

1751

Nede that we, ne oure freendes, be nat

1752

Desherited ne destroyed thurgh oure folye.

1752

Certes, quod prudence, it is an hard

1753

Thyng and right perilous that a man putte

1753

Hym al outrely in the arbitracioun and juggement,

1753

and in the myght and power of his enemys.

1754

for salomon seith, – leeveth me, and

1754

Yeveth credence to that I shal seyn: I seye, –

1754

Quod he, – ye peple, folk and governours of

1755

Hooly chirche, to thy sone, to thy wyf,

1756

To thy freend, ne to thy broother, ne

1756

Yeve thou nevere myght ne maistrie of

1757

Thy body whil thou lyvest. – now sithen he

1757

Deffendeth that man sholde nat yeven to his

1757

Broother ne to his freend the myght of his

1758

Body, by a strenger resoun he deffendeth and

1758

Forbedeth a man to yeven hymself to his enemy.

1759

and nathelees I conseille you that ye

1760

Mystruste nat my lord, for I woot wel and

1760

Knowe verraily that he is debonaire and

1761

Meeke, large, curteys, and nothyng desirous

1762

ne coveitous of good ne richesse.

1762

For ther nys nothyng in this world that he

1763

Desireth, save oonly worshipe and honour.

1763

Forthermoore I knowe wel and am right seur

1763

That he shal nothyng doon in this nede withouten

1764

my conseil; and I shal so werken in this

1764

Cause that, by the grace of oure lord god, ye

1765

Shul been reconsiled unto us.

1765

Thanne seyden they with o voys, worshipful

1765

lady, we putten us and oure goodes

1766

Al fully in youre wil and disposicioun,

1766

And been redy to comen, what day that

1766

It like unto youre noblesse to lymyte us or assigne

1767

us, for to maken oure obligacioun and

1767

Boond as strong as it liketh unto youre goodnesse,

1768

that we mowe fulfille the wille of yow

1769

And of my lord melibee.

1769

Whan dame prudence hadde herd the answeres

1769

of thise men, she bad hem goon agayn

1770

Prively; and she retourned to hir lord melibee,

1770

and tolde hym how she foond his

1771

Adversaries ful repentant, knowelechynge

1771

ful lowely hir synnes and trespas,

1772

And how they were redy to suffren al peyne,

1772

Requirynge and preiynge hym of mercy and

1773

Pitee.

1773

Thanne seyde melibee: he is wel worthy

1773

To have pardoun and foryifnesse of his synne.

1774

That excuseth nat his synne, but knowelecheth

1775

It and repenteth hym, axinge indulgence. For

1775

Senec seith, ther is the remissioun and

1776

Foryifnesse, where as the confessioun is – ;

1776

For confessioun is neighebor to innocence.

1777

and he seith in another place that – he

1777

That hath shame of his synne and knowlecheth

1777

It, is worthy remissioun. – and therfore I assente

1778

and conferme me to have pees; but it

1778

Is good that we do it nat withouten the assent

1779

And wyl of oure freendes.

1779

Thanne was prudence right glad and joyeful,

1780

and seyde: certes, sire, quod

1781

She, ye han wel and goodly answered;

1781

For right as by the conseil, assent, and

1781

Help of youre freendes ye han been stired to

1782

Venge yow and maken werre, right so withouten

1782

hire conseil shul ye nat accorden yow

1783

Ne have pees with youre adversaries. For the

1783

Lawe seith: – ther nys no thyng so good by wey

1783

Of kynde as a thyng to be unbounde by hym

1784

That it was ybounde. –

1784

And thanne dame prudence, withouten delay

1784

or tariynge, sente anon hire messages for

1784

Hire kyn, and for hire olde freendes which

1785

That were trewe and wyse, and tolde hem

1785

By ordre in the presence of melibee al this mateere

1785

as it is aboven expressed and declared,

1786

and preyden hem that they

1786

Wolde yeven hire avys and conseil what

1787

Best were to doon in this nede. And whan

1787

Melibees freendes hadde taken hire avys and

1788

Deliberacioun of the forseide mateere, and

1788

Hadden examyned it by greet bisynesse and

1789

Greet diligence, they yave ful conseil for to

1790

Have pees and reste, and that melibee sholde

1790

Receyve with good herte his adversaries

1791

To foryifnesse and mercy.

1791

And whan dame prudence hadde herd

1791

The assent of hir lord melibee, and the conseil

1792

of his freendes accorde with hire wille

1793

And hire entencioun, she was wonderly glad

1794

In hire herte, and seyde: ther is an old

1794

Proverbe, quod she, seith that – the goodnesse

1795

that thou mayst do this day, do it,

1795

And abide nat ne delaye it nat til tomorwe.

1796

– and therfore I conseille that

1796

Ye sende youre messages, swiche as been

1797

Discrete and wise, unto youre adversaries,

1798

Tellynge hem on youre bihalve that if they

1799

Wole trete of pees and of accord, that they

1799

Shape hem withouten delay or tariyng to comen

1800

Unto us. Which thyng parfourned was

1801

In dede. And whanne thise trespassours

1801

and repentynge folk of hire folies,

1802

That is to seyn, the adversaries of melibee,

1802

Hadden herd what thise messagers seyden unto

1803

Hem, they weren right glad and joyeful, and

1804

Answereden ful mekely and benignely, yeldynge

1804

graces and thankynges to hir lord melibee

1805

and to al his compaignye; and shopen

1805

Hem withouten delay to go with the messagers,

1805

And obeye to the comandement of hir

1806

Lord melibee.

1806

And right anon they tooken hire wey

1807

To the court of melibee, and tooken with hem

1807

Somme of hire trewe freendes to maken feith

1808

For hem and for to been hire borwes. And

1808

Whan they were comen to the presence of

1809

Melibee, he seyde hem thise wordes: it standeth

1809

thus, quod melibee, and sooth it is, that

1810

Ye, causelees and withouten skile and

1811

Resoun, han doon grete injuries and

1811

Wronges to me and to my wyf prudence,

1812

And to my doghter also. For ye han entred

1813

Into myn hous by violence, and have doon

1813

Swich outrage that alle men knowen wel that

1814

Ye have disserved the deeth. And therfore

1815

Wol I knowe and wite of yow wheither ye

1815

Wol putte the punyssement and the chastisynge

1815

And the vengeance of this outrage in the wyl

1815

Of me and of my wyf prudence, or ye

1816

Wol nat?

1816

Thanne the wiseste of hem thre answerde

1817

for hem alle, and seyde, sire, quod

1817

He, we knowen wel that we been unworthy

1817

To comen unto the court of so greet a lord and

1818

So worthy as ye been. For we han so greetly

1818

Mystaken us, and han offended and agilt in

1819

Swich a wise agayn youre heigh lordshipe,

1820

That trewely we han disserved the deeth. But

1820

Yet, for the grete goodnesse and debonairetee

1820

That al the world witnesseth of youre

1821

Persone, we submytten us to the excellence

1821

and benignitee of youre gracious

1822

Lordshipe, and been redy to obeie to alle youre

1823

Comandementz; bisekynge yow that of youre

1823

Merciable pitee ye wol considere oure grete

1824

Repentaunce and lowe submyssioun, and

1824

Graunten us foryevenesse of oure outrageous

1825

Trespas and offense. For wel we knowe that

1825

Youre liberal grace and mercy strecchen hem

1825

Ferther into goodnesse than doon oure outrageouse

1825

giltes and trespas into wikkednesse,

1826

al be it that cursedly and

1826

Dampnablely we han agilt agayn youre

1827

Heigh lordshipe.

1827

Thanne melibee took hem up fro the ground

1828

Ful benignely, and receyved hire obligaciouns

1828

And hir boondes by hire othes upon hire plegges

1829

And borwes, and assigned hem a certeyn day

1830

To retourne unto his court, for to accepte and

1830

Receyve the sentence and juggement that

1830

Melibee wolde comande to be doon on

1831

Hem by the causes aforeseyd. Whiche

1831

Thynges ordeyned, every man retourned

1832

To his hous.

1832

And whan that dame prudence saugh hir

1833

Tyme, she freyned and axed hir lord melibee

1833

What vengeance he thoughte to taken of his

1834

Adversaries.

1834

To which melibee answerde, and seyde:

1834

Certes, quod he, I thynke and purpose me

1835

Fully to desherite hem of al that evere they

1835

Han, and for to putte hem in exil for

1836

Evere.

1836

Certes, quod dame prudence, this

1836

Were a crueel sentence and muchel agayn resoun.

1837

for ye been riche ynough, and han

1838

No nede of oother mennes good; and ye

1838

Myghte lightly in this wise gete yow a coveitous

1839

name, which is a vicious thyng, and

1840

Oghte been eschued of every good man. For

1840

After the sawe of the word of the apostle,

1841

– coveitise is roote of alle harmes. –

1841

And therfore it were bettre for yow to

1841

Lese so muchel good of youre owene, than for

1842

To taken of hir good in this manere; for bettre

1842

it is to lesen good with worshipe, than it

1843

Is to wynne good with vileynye and shame.

1843

And everi man oghte to doon his diligence and

1844

His bisynesse to geten hym a good name.

1844

And yet shal he nat oonly bisie hym in kepynge

1845

of his good name, but he shal also enforcen

1845

hym alwey to do somthyng by

1846

Which he may renovelle his good name.

1846

For it is writen that – the olde good loos

1846

Or good name of a man is soone goon and

1847

Passed, whan it is nat newed ne renovelled. –

1847

And as touchynge that ye seyn ye wole exile

1848

Youre adversaries, that thynketh me muchel

1849

Agayn resoun and out of mesure, considered

1849

The power that they han yeve yow upon hemself.

1850

and it is writen that – he is worthy

1850

To lesen his privilege, that mysuseth the

1850

Myght and the power that is yeven

1851

Hym. – and I sette cas ye myghte enjoyne

1851

hem that peyne by right and by

1853

Lawe, which I trowe ye mowe nat do, I seye

1853

Ye mighte nat putten it to execucioun peraventure,

1854

and thanne were it likly to retourne

1855

To the werre as it was biforn. And therfore,

1855

If ye wole that men do yow obeisance,

1856

Ye moste deemen moore curteisly; this

1856

Is to seyn, ye moste yeven moore esy sentences

1857

and juggementz. For it is writen that

1857

– he that moost curteisly comandeth, to hym

1858

Men moost obeyen. – and therfore I prey yow

1858

That in this necessitee and in this nede ye caste

1859

Yow to overcome youre herte. For senec seith

1859

That – he that overcometh his herte, overcometh

1860

Twies. – and tullius seith: – ther is no

1861

Thyng so comendable in a greet lord as

1861

Whan he is debonaire and meeke, and

1862

Appeseth him lightly. – and I prey yow that ye

1863

Wole forbere now to do vengeance, in swich

1863

A manere that youre goode name may be kept

1864

And conserved, and that men mowe have

1864

Cause and mateere to preyse yow of pitee and

1865

Of mercy, and that ye have no cause to

1866

Repente yow of thyng that ye doon.

1866

For senec seith, – he overcometh in an

1866

Yvel manere that repenteth hym of his victorie.

1867

– wherfore I pray yow, lat mercy been in

1868

Youre herte, to th' effect and entente that

1868

God almighty have mercy on yow in his laste

1869

Juggement. For seint jame seith in his epistle:

1869

– juggement withouten mercy shal be doon

1870

To hym that hath no mercy of another wight. –

1870

Whanne melibee hadde herd the grete skiles

1870

And resouns of dame prudence, and hire

1871

Wise informaciouns and techynges, his

1871

Herte gan enclyne to the wil of his wif,

1872

Considerynge hir trewe entente, and conformed

1872

hym anon, and assented fully to werken

1873

After hir conseil; and thonked god, of whom

1873

Procedeth al vertu and alle goodnesse, that

1874

Hym sente a wyf of so greet discrecioun. And

1874

Whan the day cam that his adversaries sholde

1875

Appieren in his presence, he spak unto

1876

Hem ful goodly, and seyde in this wyse:

1876

Al be it so that of youre pride and heigh

1876

Presumpcioun and folie, and of youre necligence

1877

and unkonnynge, ye have mysborn yow

1878

And trespassed unto me, yet for as muche as

1879

I see and biholde youre grete humylitee, and

1879

That ye been sory and repentant of youre

1880

Giltes, it constreyneth me to doon yow

1881

Grace and mercy. Wherfore I receyve

1882

Yow to my grace, and foryeve yow outrely

1882

alle the offenses, injuries, and wronges that

1883

Ye have doon agayn me and myne, to this

1883

Effect and to this ende that God of his endelees

1884

mercy wole at the tyme of oure diynge

1884

Foryeven us oure giltes that we han trespassed

1885

To hym in this wrecched world. For doutelees,

1885

if we be sory and repentant of the synnes

1885

And giltes which we han trespassed in

1886

The sighte of oure lord god, he is so

1887

Free and so merciable that he wole foryeven

1888

us oure giltes, and bryngen us to the

1888

Blisse that nevere hath ende. Amen.