BIBLIOTHECA AUGUSTANA

 

Geoffrey Chaucer

1342/43 - 1400

 

The Canterbury Tales

 

Fragment X

The Parson's Tale

 

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Heere bigynneth the

Persouns Tale..

 

 

75

Oure sweete lord God of hevene, that no

75

Man wole perisse, but wole that we comen alle

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Yo yhr knoweleche of hym, and to the blisful

76

lif that is perdurable, amonesteth us

76

By the prophete jeremie, that seith in thys

77

Wyse: stondeth upon the weyes, and seeth

77

And axeth of olde pathes (that is to seyn, of olde

78

Sentences) which is the goode wey. And wald

78

Eth in that wey, and ye shal fynde refresshynge

79

For youre soules, etc. Manye been the weyes

79

Espirituels that leden fold to oure lord jhesu

80

Crist, and to the regne of glorie. Of whiche

80

Weyes, ther is a ful noble wey and ful covenable,

80

which may nat fayle to man ne to womman

80

that thurgh synne hath mysgoon fro

81

The righte wey of jerusalem celestial; and

81

This wey is cleped penitence, of which man

81

Sholde gladly herknen and enquere with

82

His herte, to wyten what is penitence, and

82

Wheenes it is cleped penitence, and in how

82

Manye maners been the acciouns or werkynges

83

of penitence, and how manye speces

83

Ther been of penitence, and whiche thynges

83

Apertenen and bihoven to penitence, and

84

Whiche thynges destourben penitence.

84

Seint ambrose seith that penitence is the

84

Pleynynge of man for the gilt that he hath

84

Doon, and namoore to do any thyng for which

85

Hym oghte to pleyne. And som doctour seith.

85

Penitence is the waymentynge of man that

85

Sorweth for his synne, and pyneth hymself

86

for he hath mysdoon. Penitence,

86

With certeyne circumstances, is varray repentance

86

of a man that halt hymself in sorwe

87

And oother peyne for his giltes. and for he

87

Shal be verray penitent, he shal first biwaylen

87

The synnes that he hath doon, and stidefastly

87

Purposen in his herte to have shrift of mouthe,

88

And to doon satisfaccioun, and nevere to doon

88

Thyng for which hym oghte moore to biwayle

88

Or to compleyne, and to continue in goode

89

Werkes, or elles his repentance may nat availle.

89

For, as seith seint ysidre, he is a japere and

89

A gabbere, and no verray repentant, that eftsoone

89

dooth thyng for which hym oghte repente.

90

wepynge, and nat for to stynte to

91

Do synne, may nat avayle. But nathelees,

91

Men shal hope that every tyme that man

91

Falleth, be it never so ofte, that he may arise

91

Thurgh penitence, if he have grace; but certeinly

92

it is greet doute. For, as seith seint

92

Gregorie, unnethe ariseth he out of his synne,

93

That is charged with the charge of yvel usage.

93

And therfore repentant folk, that stynte for to

93

Synne, and forlete synne er that synne forlete

93

Hem, hooly chirche holdeth hem siker of hir

94

Savacioun. and he that synneth and verraily

94

Repenteth hym in his laste, hooly chirche yet

94

Hopeth his savacioun, by the grete mercy of

94

Oure lord jhesu crist, for his repentaunce; but

95

Taak the siker wey.

95

And now, sith I have declared yow what

95

Thyng is penitence, now shul ye understonde

95

That ther been three acciouns of penitence.

96

the firste is that if a man be baptized

97

after that he hath synned, seint augustyn

97

seith, but he be penytent for his olde

97

Synful lyf, he may nat bigynne the newe clene

98

Lif. For, certes, if he be baptized withouten

98

Penitence of his olde gilt, he receyveth the mark

98

Of baptesme, but nat the grace ne the remission

99

Of his synnes, til he have repentance verray.

99

Another defaute is this, that men doon deedly

100

Synne after that they han receyved baptesme.

100

The thridde defaute is that men fallen in

100

Venial synnes after hir baptesme, fro day

101

To day. Therof seith seint augustyn that

101

Penitence of goode and humble folk is the

102

Penitence of every day.

102

The speces of penitence been three. That

102

Oon of hem is solempne, another is commune,

103

And the thridde is privee. Thilke penance that

103

Is solempne is in two maneres; as to be put out

103

Of hooly chirche in-lente, for slaughtre of children

104

and swich maner thyng. Another is,

104

Whan a man hath synned openly, of which

104

Synne the fame is openly spoken in the contree,

104

and thanne hooly chirche by juggement

105

Destreyneth hym for to do open penaunce.

105

Commune penaunce is that preestes enjoynen

105

Men communly in certeyn caas, as for to goon

105

Peraventure naked in pilgrimages, or barefoot.

106

Prevee penaunce is thilke that men

106

Doon alday for privee synnes, of whiche we

107

Shryve us prively and receyve privee penaunce.

107

Now shaltow understande what is bihovely

107

And necessarie to verray perfit penitence. And

108

This stant on three thynges: contricioun of

108

Herte, confessioun of mouth, and satisfaction.

109

for which seith seint crisostomz

109

Penitence destreyneth a man to accepte benygnely

109

every peyne that hym is enjoyned,

109

With contricioun of herte, and shrift of mouth,

109

With satisfaccioun; and in werkynge of alle

110

Manere humylitee. And this is fruytful penitence

110

agayn three thinges in which we

111

Wratthe oure lord jhesu crist: this is to

111

Seyn, by delit in thynkynge, by reccheleesnesse

111

in spekynge, and by wikked synful werknyge.

112

and agayns thise wikkede giltes is penitence,

113

that may be likned unto a tree.

113

The roote of this tree is contricioun, that

113

Hideth hym in the herte of hym that is verray

113

Repentaunt, right as the roote of a tree gydeth

114

Hym in the erthe. Of the roote of contricioun

114

Spryngeth a stalke that bereth braunches and

114

Leves of confessioun, and fruyt of satisfaccioun.

115

for which crist seith in his gospel:

115

Dooth digne fruyt of penitence; for by this

115

Fruyt may men knowe this tree, and nat by the

115

Roote that is hyd in the herte of man, ne by the

115

Braunches, ne by the leves of confessioun.

116

and therfore oure lord jhesu

116

Crist seith thus: by the fruyt of hem shul

117

Ye knowen hem. Of this roote eek spryngeth

117

A seed of grace, the which seed is mooder of

118

Sikernesse, and this seed is egre and hoot. The

118

Grace of this seed spryngeth of God thurgh remembrance

118

of the day of doom and on the

119

Peynes of helle. Of this matere seith salomon

119

that in the drede of God man forleteth his

120

Synne. The heete of this seed is the love of

120

God, and the desiryng of the joye perdurable.

121

this heete draweth the herte

121

Of a man to god, and dooth hym haten his

122

Synne. For soothly ther is nothyng that savoureth

122

so wel to a child as the milk of his

122

Norice, ne nothyng is to hym moore abhomnyable

122

than thilke milk whan it is medled with

123

Oother mete. Right so the synful man that

123

Loveth his synne, hym semeth that it is to him

124

Moost sweete of any thyng; but fro that tyme

124

That he loveth sadly oure lord jhesu crist, and

124

Desireth the lif perdurable, ther nys to him no

125

Thyng moore abhomynable. For soothly the

125

Lawe of God is the love of god; for which

125

David the prophete seith: I have loved thy

125

Lawe, and hated wikkednesse and hate; he

125

That loveth God kepeth his lawe and his

126

Word. This tree saugh the prophete

126

Daniel in spirit, upon the avysioun of the

126

Kyng nabugodonosor, whan he conseiled hym

127

To do penitence. Penaunce is the tree of lyf

127

To hem that is receyven, and he that holdeth

127

Hym in verray penitence is blessed, after the

128

Sentence of solomon.

128

In this penitence or contricioun man shal

128

Understonde foure thynges; that is to seyn, what

128

Is contricioun, and whiche been the causes that

128

Moeven a man to contricioun, and how he

128

Sholde be contrit, and what contricioun availleth

129

to the soule. Thanne is it thus: that contricioun

129

is the verray sorwe that a man receyveth

129

in his herte for his synnes, with sad purpos

129

To shryve hum, and to do penaunce, and neveremoore

130

to do synne. And this sorwe shal

130

Been in this manere, as seith seint bernard: it

130

Shal been hevy and grevous, and ful sharp

131

And poynaunt in herte. First, for man

131

Hath agilt his lord and his creatour; and

131

Moore sharp and poynaunt, for he hath agilt hys

132

Fader celestial; and yet moore sharp and

132

Poynaunt, for he hath wrathed and agilt hym

132

That boghte hym, that with his precious blood

132

Hath delivered us fro the bondes of synne, and

132

Fro the crueltee of the deve, and fro the peynes

133

Of helle.

133

The causes that oghte moeve a man to contricioun

133

been sixe. First a man shal remembre

134

Hym of his synnes; but looke he that thilke

134

Remembraunce ne be to hym no delit by no

134

Qwy, but greet shame and sorwe for his gilt.

134

For job seith, synful men doon werkes worthy

135

Of confusioun. And therfore seith ezechie,

135

I wol remembre me alle the yeres of my

136

Lyf in bitternesse of myn herte. And

136

God seith in the apocalipse, remembreth

136

Yow fro whennes that ye been falle; for biforn

136

That tyme that ye synned, ye were the children

137

Of god, and lymes of the regne of god; but for

137

Youre synne ye been woxen thral, and foul, and

137

Membres of the feend, hate of aungels, sclaundre

137

of hooly chirche, and foode of the false

138

Serpent; prepetueel matere of the fir of helle:

138

And yet moore foul and abhomynable, for ye

138

Trespassen so ofte tyme as dooth the hound that

139

Retourneth to eten his spewyng. And yet be

139

Ye fouler for youre longe continuyng in synne

139

And youre synful usage, for which ye be roten

140

In yore synne, as a beest in the dong. Swiche

140

Manere of thoghtes maken a man to have shame

140

Of his synne, and no delit, as God seith by

141

The prophete ezechiel: ye shal remembre

141

yow of youre weyes, and they shuln

141

Displese yow. Soothly synnes been the weyes

142

That leden folk of helle.

142

The seconde cause that oghte make a man

142

To have desdeyn of synne is this: that, as seith

142

Seint peter, whoso that dooth synne is thral

142

Of synne; and synne put a man in greet thraldom.

143

and therfore seith the prophete ezechiel:

143

I wente sorweful in desdayn of mysekf.

143

Certes, wel oghte a man have desdayn of synne,

143

And withdrawe hym from that thraldom and

144

Vileynye. And lo, what seith seneca in this

144

Matere? he seith thus: though I wiste that

144

Neither God ne man ne sholde nevere knowe

145

It, yet wolde I have desdayn for to do synne.

145

And the same seneca also seith: I am born to

145

Gretter thynges that to be thral to my body,

146

Or than for to maken of my body a thral.

146

Ne a fouler thral may no man ne womman

146

Maken of his body that for to yeven his body

147

To synne. Al were it the fouleste cherl or the

147

Fouleste womman that lyveth, and leest of

147

~alue, yet is he thanne moore foul and moore

148

In servitute. Evere fro the hyer degree that

148

Man falleth, the moore is he thral, and moore

148

To God and to the world vile and abhomynable.

149

o goode god, wel oghte man have desdayn

149

of synne, sith that thurgh synne, ther he

150

Was free, now is he maked bonde. And therfore

150

seyth seint augustyn: if thou hast desdayn

150

of thy servant, if he agilte or synne, have

150

Thou thanne desdayn that thou thyself

151

Sholdest do synne. Tak reward of thy

152

Value, that thou ne be foul to thyself.

152

Allas! wel oghten they thanne have desdayn to

152

Been servauntz and thralles to synne, and soore

153

Been ashamed of hemself, that God of his

153

Endelees goodnesse hath set hem in heigh estaat,

153

or yeven hem wit, strenghte of body,

154

Heele, beautee, prosperitee, and boghte hem

154

Fro the deeth with his herte-blood. That they

154

So unkyndely, agayns his gentilesse, quiten hym

155

So vileynsly to slaughtre of hir owene soules.

155

O goode god, ye wommen that been of so greet

155

Beautee, remembreth yow of the proverbe

156

Of salomon. He seith: likneth a fair

156

Womman that is a fool of hire body lyk to

156

A ryng of gold that were in the groyn of a

157

Soughe. For right as a soughe wrotheth in

157

Everich ordure, so wroteth she hire beautee in

158

The stynkynge ordure of synne.

158

The thridde cause that oghte moeve a man

158

To contricioun is drede of the day of doom and

159

Of the horrible peynes of helle. For, as seint

159

Jerome seith, at every tyme that me remembreth

160

of the day of doom I quake; for whan

160

I ete or drynke, or what so that I do, evere

160

Semeth me that the trompe sowneth in

161

Myn ere: – riseth up, ye that been dede,

162

And cometh to the juggement. – o goode

162

God, muchel oghte a man to drede wich a

162

Juggement, ther as we shullen been alle, as

162

Seint poul seith, biforn the seete of oure lord

163

Jhesu crist; whereas he shal make a general

163

Congregacioun, whereas no man may been absent.

164

for certes there availleth noon essoyne

165

Ne excusacioun. And nat oonly that oure defautes

165

shullen be jugged, but eek that alle

166

Oure werkes shullen openly be knowe.

166

And as seith seint bernard, ther ne shal

166

No pledynge availle, ne no sleighte; we shullen

167

Yeven rekenynge of everich ydel word. Ther

167

Shul we han a juge that may nat been deceyved

167

ne corrput. And why? for, certes, alle

167

Oure thoghtes been discovered as to hym; ne

167

For preyere ne for meede he shal nat been corrupt.

168

and therfore seith salomon, the

168

Wratthe of God ne wol nat spare no wight, for

168

Prevere ne for yifte; and therfore, at the day

169

Of doom, ther nys noon hope to escape. Wherfore,

169

as seith seint anselm, ful greet angwyssh

170

shul the synful folk have at that tyme;

170

Ther shal the stierne and wrothe juge sitte

170

Above, and under hym the horrible pit of helle

170

Open to destroyen hym that moot biknowen his

170

Synnes, whiche synnes openly been shewed

171

Biforn God and biforn every creature;

171

And in the left syde mo develes that herte

171

May bithynke, for the harye and drawe the synful

172

soules to the peyne of helle; and withinne

172

The hertes of folk shall be bitynge conscience,

172

and withoute forth shal be the orld

173

Al brennynge. Whider shall thanne the

173

Wrecched synful man flee th hiden hym?

173

Certes, he may nat hyden hym; he moste come

174

Forth and shewen hym. For certes, as seith

174

Seint jerome, the erthe shal casten hym out

174

Of hym, and the see also, and the eyr also, that

174

Shal be ful of thonder-clappes and lightnynges.

175

now soothly, whoso wel remembreth

175

Hym of thise thynges, I gesse that his synne

175

Shal nat turne hym into delit, but to greet

176

Sorwe, for drede of the peyne of helle.

176

And therfore seith job to god: suffre,

176

Lord, that I may a while biwaille and wepe.

176

Er I go withoute returnyng to the derke lord,

177

Covered with the derknesse of deeth; to the

177

Lond of mysese and of derknesse, whereas is the

177

Shadwe of deeth; whereas ther is noon ordre or

177

Ordinaunce, but grisly drede that evere shal

178

Laste. Loo, heere may ye seen that job

178

Preyde repit a while, to biwepe and waille his

178

Trespas; for soothly oo day of respit is bettre

179

Than al the tresor of this world. And forasmuche

179

as a man may acquiten hymself biforn

179

God by penitence in this world, and nat by

179

Tresor, therfore sholde he preye to God to yeve

179

Hymrespit a while to biwepe and biwaillen

180

His trespas. For certes, al the sorwe that a

180

Man myghte make fro the bigynnyng of the

180

World nys but a litel thyng at regard of the

181

Sorwe of helle. The cause why that job

182

Clepeth helle the lond of derknesse; understondeth

182

that he clepeth it lond or erthe,

182

For it is stable, and nevere shal faille; derk,

182

For he that is in helle hath defaute of light material.

183

for certes, the derke light that shal

183

Come out of the fyr that evere shal brenne, shal

183

Furne hym al to peyne that is in helle; for it

183

Sheweth him to the horrible develes that hym

184

Tormenten. Covered with the derknesse of

184

Deeth, that is to seyn, that he that is in helle

184

Shal have defaute of the sighte of god; for

185

Certes, the sighte of God is the lyf perdurable.

185

The derknesse of deeth been the synnes that

185

The wrecched man hath doon, whiche that destourben

185

hym to see the face of god, right as

185

Dooth a derk clowde bitwixe us and the

186

Sonne. Lond of misese, by cause that

186

Ther been three maneres of defautes, agayn

186

Three thynges that folk of this world han in this

186

Present lyf, that is to seyn, honours, delices, and

187

Richesses. Agayns honour, have they in helle

188

Shame and confusioun. For wel ye woot that

188

Men clepen honour the reverence that man

188

Doth to man; but in helle is noon honour ne

188

Reverence. For certes, namoore reverence shal

189

Be doon there to a kyng than to a knave. For

189

Which God seith by the prophete jeremye,

189

Thilke folk that me despisen shul been in

190

Despit. Honour is eek cleped greet lordshipe;

190

Ther shal no wight serven other, but of harm

190

And torment. Honour is eek cleped greet dignytee

190

and heighnesse, but in helle shul

191

They been al fortroden of develes. And

191

God seith, the horrible develes shulle

191

Goon and comen upon the hevedes of the

191

Dampned folk. And this is for as muche as the

191

Hyer that they were in this present lyf, the

191

Moore shulle they been abated and defouled

192

In helle. Agayns the richesse of this world

192

Shul they han mysese of poverte, and this poverte

193

shal been in foure thynges: in defaute of

193

Tresor, of which that david seith, the riche

193

Folk, that embraceden and oneden al hire herte

193

To tresor of this world, shul slepe in the slepynge

193

of deeth; and nothyng ne shal they fynden

194

In hir handes of al hir tresor. And moore-over

194

the myseyse of helle shal been in defaute

195

Of mete and rinke. For God seith thus by

195

Moyses: they shul been wasted with hunger,

195

And the briddes of helle shul devouren hem

195

With bitter deeth, and the galle of the dragon

195

Shal been hire drynke, and the venym of

196

The dragon hire morsels. And forther

196

Over, hire myseyse shal been in defaute of

196

Clothyng; for they shulle be naked in body as

196

Of clothyng, save the fyr in which they bree

197

And othere filthes; and naked shul they been

197

Of soule, as of alle manere vertues, which that

197

Is the clothyng of the soule. Where been

197

Thannne the gaye robes, and the softe shetes,

198

And the smale shertes? loo, what seith god

198

Of hem by the prophete ysaye: that under hem

198

Shul been strawed motthes, and hire covertures

199

Shulle been of womres of helle. And forther

199

Over, hir myseyse shal been in defaute of

199

Freendes. For he nys nat povre that hath goode

200

Freendes; but there is no frend, for neither

200

God ne no creature shal been freend to hem,

200

And everich of hem shal haten oother

201

With deedly hat. The sones and the

201

Doghtren shullen rebellen agayns fader

201

And mooder, and kynrede agauns kynrede, and

201

Chiden and despisen everich of hem oother

201

Bothe day nad nyght, as God seith by the

202

Prophete michias. And the lovynge children,

202

That whilom loveden so flesshly everich oother,

202

Wolden everich of hem eten oother if they

203

Myghte. For how sholden they love hem togidre

203

in the peyne of helle, whan they hated

203

Everich of hem oother in the progenitee of this

204

Lyr? for truste wel, hir flesshly love was

204

Deedly hate, as seith the prophete david:

204

Whoso that loveth wikkednesse, he hateth his

205

Soule. And whoso hateth his owene soule,

205

Certes, he may love noon oother wight in

206

No manere. And therfore, in helle is no

206

Solas ne no freendshipe, but evere the

206

Moore flesshly kynredes that been in helle, the

206

Moore cursynges, the more chidynges, and the

207

Moore deedly hate ther is among hem. And

207

Forther over, they shul have defaute of alle

207

Manere delices. For certes, delices been after

207

The appetites of the fyve wittes, as sighte, herynge,

208

smellynge, savorynge, and touchynge.

208

But in helle hir sighte shal be ful of derknesse

208

And of smoke, and therfore ful of teeres; and

208

Hir herynge ful of waymentynge and of grynt

209

Ynge of teeth, as seith jhesu crist. Hir nose-

209

Thirles shullen be ful of stynkynge stynk; and

209

As seith ysaye the prophete, hir savoryng shal

210

Be ful of bitter galle; and touchynge of al hir

210

Body ycovered with fir that nevere shal

210

Quenche, and with wormes that nevere shul

210

Dyen, as God seith by the mouth of

211

Ysaye. And for as muche as they shul

211

Nat wene that they may dyen for peyne,

211

And by hir deeth flee fro peyne, that may they

211

Understonden by the word of job, that seith,

212

Ther as is the shadwe of deeth. Certes, a

212

Shadwe hath the liknesse of the thyng of which

212

It is shadwe, but shadwe is nat the same thyng

213

Of which it is shadwe. Right so fareth the

213

Peune of helle; it is lyk deeth for the horrible

213

Angwissh, and why? for it peyneth hem evere,

213

As though they sholde dye anon; but certes,

214

They shal nat dye. For, as seith seint gregorie,

214

to wrecche caytyves shal be deeth

214

Withoute deeth, adn end withouten ende, and

215

Defaute withoute failynge. For hir deeth shal

215

Alwey lyven, and hir ende shal everemo bigynne,

216

and hir defaute shal nat faille.

216

And therfore seith seint john the evaungelist:

216

they shullen folwe deeth, and they shul

216

Nat fynde hym; and they shul desiren to dye,

217

And deeth shal flee fro hem. And eek job

218

Seith that in helle is noon ordre of rule. And

218

Al be it so that God hath creat alle thynges

218

In right ordre, and no thyng withouten ordre,

218

But alle thynges been ordeyned and nombred;

218

yet, nathelees, they that been dampned

219

Been nothyng in ordre, ne holden noon ordre.

220

For the erthe ne shal bere hem no fruyt. For

220

As the prophete david seith, God shal destroie

220

The fruyt of the erthe as fro hem; ne water ne

220

Shal yeve hem no moisture, ne the eyr no

221

Refresshyng, ne fyr no light. For, as

221

Seith seint basilie, the brennynge of the

221

Fyr of this world shal God yeven in helle to hem

222

That been dampned, but the light and the cleernesse

222

shal be yeven in hevene to this childre;

222

Right as the goode man yeveth flessh to his

223

Children and bones to his houndes. And for

223

They shullen have noon hope to escape, seith

223

Seint job atte laste that ther shal horrour and

224

Grisly drede dwellen withouten ende. Horrour

224

is alwey drede of harm that is to come,

224

And this drede shal evere dwelle in the hertes

224

Of hem that been dampned. And therfore han

225

They lorn al hire hope, for sevene causes.

225

First, for god, that is hir juge, shal be withouten

225

mercy to hem; and they may nat plese

225

Hym ne noon of his halwes; ne they ne

226

May yeve no thyng for hir raunsoun; ne

226

They have no voys to speke to hym; ne

226

They may nat fle fro peyne; ne they have no

226

Goodnesse in hem, that they mowe shewe to

227

Delivere hem fro peyne. And therfore seith

227

Salomon: the wikked man dyeth, and whan

227

He is deed, he shal have noon hope to escape

228

Fro peyne. Whoso thanne wolde wel understande

228

thise peynes, and bithynke hym weel

228

That he hath deserved thilke peynes for his

228

Synnes, errtes, he sholde have moore talent to

228

Siken and to wepe, than for to syngen and to

229

Pleye. For, as that seith salomon, whoso

229

That hadde the science to knowe the peynes

229

That been establissed and ordeyned for synne,

230

He wolde make sorwe. Thilke science, as

230

Seith seint augustyn, maketh a man to

231

Waymenten in his herte.

231

The fourthe point that oghte maken a

231

Man to have contricion is the sorweful remembraunce

231

of the good that he hath left to

231

Doon heere in erthe, and eek the good that he

232

Hath lorn. Soothly, the goode werkes that he

232

Hath lost, outher they been the goode werkes

232

That he wroghte er he fel into deedly synne, or

232

Elles the goode werkes that he wroghte while

233

He lay in synne. Soothly, the goode werkes

233

That he dide biforn that he fil in synne been al

233

Mortefied and astoned and dulled by the ofte

234

Synnyng. The othere goode werkes, that he

234

Wroghte whil he lay in deedly synne, thei been

234

Outrely dede, as to the lyf perdurable in hevene.

235

thanne thikle goode werkes that been

235

Mortefied by ofte synnyng, whiche goode

235

Werkes he dide whil he was in charitee, ne

235

Mowe nevere quyken agayn withouten verray

236

penitence. And therof seith God by

236

The mouth of ezechiel, that if the rightful

236

Man returne agayn from his rightwisnesse and

237

Werke wikkednesse, shal he lyve? nay, for

237

Alle the goode werkes that he hath wroght ne

237

Shul nevere been in remembraunce, for he shal

238

Dyen in this synne. And upon thilke chapitre

238

Seith seint gregorie thus: that we shulle understonde

239

this principally; that whan we doon

239

Deedly synne, it is for noght thanne to rehercen

239

Or drawen into memorie the goode werkes that

240

We han wroght biforn. for certes, in the

240

Werkynge of the deedly synne, ther is no trust

240

To no good werk that we can doon biforn; that

240

Is to seyn, as for to have therby the lyf

241

Perdurable in hevene. But nathelees, the

241

Goode werkes quyken agayn, and comen

241

Agayn, and helpen, and availlen to have the

241

Lyf perdurable in hevene, whan we han contricioun.

242

but soothly, the goode werkes that

242

Men doon whil they been in deedly synne, for

242

As muche as they were doon in deedly synne,

243

They may nevere quyke agayn. For certes

243

Thyng that nevere hadde lyf may nevere quykene;

243

and nathelees, al be it that they ne availle

243

Noght to han the lyf perdurable, yet availlen

243

They to abregge of the peyne of helle, or elles

244

To geten temporal richesse, or elles that god

244

Wole the rather enlumyne and lightne the herte

245

Of the synful man to have repentaunce; and

245

Eek they availlen for to usen a man to doon

245

Goode werkes, that the feend have the

246

Lasse power of his soule. And thus the

246

Curteis lord jhesu crist ne wole that no

246

Good werk be lost; for in somwhat it shal

247

Availle. But, for as muche as the goode werkes

247

That men doon whil they been in good lyf been

247

Al mortefied by synne folwynge, and eek sith

247

That alle the goode werkes that men doon whil

247

They been in deedly synne been outrely dede as

248

For to have the lyf perdurable; wel may that

248

Man that no good werk ne dooth synge thilke

248

Newe frenshe song, jay tout perdu mon temps

249

Et mon labour. For certes, synne bireveth a

249

Man bothe goodnesse of nature and eek the

250

Goodnesse of grace. For soothly, the grace of

250

The hooly goost fareth lyk fyr, that may nat

250

Been ydel; for fyr fayleth anoon as it forleteth

250

His wirkynge, and right so grace fayleth

251

Anoon as it forleteth his werkynge. Then

251

Leseth the synful man the goodnesse of

251

Glorie, that oonly is bihight to goode men that

252

Labouren and werken. Wel may he be sory

252

Thanne, that oweth al his lif to God as longe

252

As he hath lyved, and eek as longe as he shal

252

Lyve, that no goodnesse ne hath to paye with

253

His dette to God to whom he oweth al his lyf.

253

For trust wel, he shal yeven acountes, as seith

253

Seint bernard, of alle the goodes that han be

253

Yeven hym in this present lyf, and how he hath

254

Hem despended; in so muche that ther shal

254

Nat perisse an heer of his heed, ne a moment

254

Of an houre ne shal nat perisse of his tyme, that

255

He ne shal yeve of it a rekenyng.

255

The fifthe thyng that oghte moeve a man to

255

Contricioun is remembrance of the passioun

255

That oure lord jhesu crist suffred for oure

256

Synnes. For, as seith seint bernard,

256

Whil that I lyve I shal have remembrance

256

of the travailles that oure lord crist

257

Suffred in prechyng; his werynesse in travaillyng,

257

his temptaciouns whan he fasted, his longe

257

Wakynges whan he preyde, hise teeres whan

258

That he weep for pitee of good peple; the

258

Wo and the shame and the filthe that men

258

Seyden to hym; of the foule spittyng that men

258

Spitte in his face, of the buffettes that men

258

Yaven hym, of the foule mowes, and of the repreves

259

that men to hym seyden; of the nayles

259

With whiche he was nayled to the croys, and

259

Of al the remenant of his passioun that he suffred

260

for my synnes, and no thyng for his gilt.

260

And ye shul understonde that in mannes synne

260

Is every manere of ordre or ordinaunce

261

Turned up-so-doun. For it is sooth that

261

God, and resoun, and sensualitee, and the

261

Body of man been so ordeyned that everich of

261

Thise foure thynges sholde have lordshipe over

262

That oother; as thus: God sholde have lordshipe

262

over resoun, and resoun over sensualitee,

263

And sensualitee over the body of man. But

263

Soothly, whan man synneth, al this ordre or

264

Ordinaunce is turned up-so-doun. And therfore,

264

thanne, for as muche as the resoun of man

264

Ne wol nat be subget ne obeisant to god, that

264

Is his lord by right, therfore leseth it the lordshipe

264

that it sholde have over sensualitee, and

265

Eek over the body of man. And why? for

265

Sensualitee rebelleth thanne agayns resoun,

265

And by that way leseth resoun the lordshipe

266

over sensualitee and over the body.

266

For right as resoun is rebel to god, right so

266

Is bothe sensualitee rebel to resoun and the

267

Body also. And certes this disordinaunce and

267

This rebellioun oure lord jhesu crist aboghte

267

Upon his precious body ful deere, and herkneth

268

In which wise. For as muche thanne as resoun

268

is rebel to god, therfore is man worthy

269

To have sorwe and to be deed. This suffred

269

Oure lord jhesu crist for man, after that he

269

Hadde be bitraysed of his disciple, and distreyned

269

and bounde, so that his blood brast

269

Out at every nayl of his handes, as seith seint

270

Augustyn. And forther over, for as muchel

270

As resoun of man ne wol nat daunte sensualitee

270

whan it may, therfore is man worthy to have

270

Shame; and this suffred oure lord jhesu

270

Crist for man, whan they spetten in his

271

Visage. And forther over, for as muchel

271

Thanne as the caytyf body of man is rebel

271

Bothe to resoun and to sensualitee, therfore is

272

It worthy the deeth. And this suffred oure

272

Lord jhesu crist for man upon the croys

272

Where as ther was no part of his body free

273

Withouten greet peyne and bitter passioun.

273

And al this suffred jhesu crist, that nevere

273

Forfeted. And therfore resonably may be seyd

273

Jhesu in this manere: to muchel am I

273

Peyned for the thynges that I nevere deserved,

273

And to muche defouled for shendshipe that

274

Man is worthy to have. And therfore may

274

The synful man wel seye, as seith seint bernard,

274

Acursed be the bitternesse of my synne, for

274

Which ther moste be suffred so muchel bitternesse.

275

for certes, after the diverse disordinaunces

275

of oure wikkednesses was the passioun

275

of jhesu crist ordeyned in diverse

276

Thynges, as thus. Certes, synful mannes

276

Soule is bitraysed of the devel by coveitise

276

Of temporeel prosperitee, and scorned by deceite

276

whan he cheseth flesshly delices; and yet

276

Is it tormented by inpacience of adversitee,

276

And bispet by servage and subjeccioun of

277

Synne; and atte laste it is slayn fynally. For

277

This disordinaunce of synful man was jhesu

277

Crist first bitraysed, and after that was he

277

Bounde, that cam for to unbynden us of synne

278

And peyne. Thanne was he byscorned, that

278

Oonly sholde han been honoured in alle thynges

279

And of alle thynges. Thanne was his visage,

279

That oghte be desired to be seyn of al mankynde,

279

in which visage aungels desiren to looke,

280

Vileynsly bispet. Thanne was he scourged,

280

That no thyng hadde agilt; and finally,

281

Thanne was he crucified and slayn.

281

Thanne was acompliced the word of ysaye,

281

He was wounded for oure mysdedes and defouled

282

for oure felonies. Now sith that jhesu

282

Crist took upon hymself the peyne of alle oure

282

Wikkednesses, muchel oghte synful man wepen

282

And biwayle, that for his synnes goddes sone

283

Of hevene sholde al this peyne endure.

283

The sixte thyng that oghte moeve a man to

283

Contricioun is the hope of three thynges; that

283

Is to seyn, foryifnesse of synne, and the yifte to

283

Grace wel for to do, and the glorie of hevene,

283

With which God shal gerdone man for his

284

Goode dedes. And for as muche as jhesu

284

Crist yeveth us thise yiftes of his largesse and

284

Of his sovereyn bountee, therfore is he cleped

285

Jhesus nazarenus rex judeorum. Jhesus is to

285

Seyn saveour or salvacioun, on whom men

285

Shul hope to have foryifnesse of synnes,

285

Which that is proprely salvacioun of

286

Synnes. And terfore seyde the aungel

286

To joseph, thou shalt clepen his name

287

Jhesus, that shal saven his peple of hir synnes.

287

And heerof seith seint peter: ther is noon

287

Oother name under hevene that is yeve to any

287

Man, by which a man may be saved, but oonly

288

Jhesus. Nazarenus is as muche for to seye as

288

Florisshynge, in which a man shal hope that

288

He that yeveth hym remissioun of synnes shal

288

Yeve hym eek grace wel for to do. For in the

288

Flour is hope of fruyt in tyme comynge, and in

288

Foryifnesse of synnes hope of grace wel for to

289

Do. I was atte dore of thyn herte, seith

289

Jhesus, and cleped for to entre. He that openeth

290

to me shal have foryifnesse of synne. I

290

Wol entre into hym by my grace, and soupe

290

With hym, by the goode werkes that he shal

290

Doon, whiche werkes been the foode of god;

290

And he shal soupe with me, by the grete

291

Joye that I shal yeven hym. Thus shal

291

Man hope, for his werkes of penaunce,

291

That God shal yeven hym his regne, as he bihooteth

292

hym in the gospel.

292

Now shal a man understonde in which manere

292

shal been his contricioun. I seye that it

292

Shal been universal and total. This is to seyn,

292

A man shal be verray repentaunt for alle his

292

Synnes that he hath doon in delit of his thoght;

293

For delit is ful perilous. For ther been two

293

Manere of consentynges: that oon of hem is

293

Cleped consentynge of affeccioun, whan a man

293

Is moeved to do synne, and deliteth hym longe

294

For to thynke on that synne; and his reson

294

Aperceyveth it wel that it is synne agayns the

294

Lawe of god, and yet his resoun refreyneth nat

294

His foul delit or talent, though he se wel apertly

294

That it is agayns the reverence of god. Although

294

his resoun ne consente noght to doon

295

That synne in dede, yet seyn somme doctours

295

That swich delit that dwelleth longe, it is

296

Ful perilous, al be it nevere so lite. And

296

Also a man sholde sorwe namely for al that

296

Evere he hath desired agayn the lawe of god

296

With perfit consentynge of his resoun; for therof

296

Is no doute, that it is deedly synne in consentynge.

297

for certes, ther is no deedly synne, that

297

It nas first in mannes thought, and after that

297

In his delit, and so forth into consentynge and

298

Into dede. Wherfore I seye that many men

298

Ne repenten hem nevere of swiche thoghtes and

298

Delites, ne nevere shryven hem of it, but oonly

299

Of the dede of grete synnes outward. Wherfore

299

I seye that swiche wikked delites and wikked

299

thoghtes been subtile bigileres of hem that

300

Shullen be dampned. Mooreover man oghte

300

To sorwe for his wikkede wordes as wel as for

300

His wikkede dedes. For certes, the repentaunce

300

Of a synguler synne, and nat repente of alle his

300

Ohter synnes, or elles repenten hym of alle his

300

Othere synnes, and nat of a synguler synne,

301

May nat availle. For certes, God almyghty

301

is al good; and therfore he foryeveth

302

al, or elles right noght. And heerof

303

Seith seint augustyn: I wot certeynly that

303

God is enemy to everich synnere; and how

303

Thanne, he that observeth o synne, shal he have

303

Foryifnesse of the remenaunt of his othere

304

Synnes? nay. And forther over, contrcioun

304

Sholde be wonder sorweful and angwissous;

304

And therfore yeveth hym God pleynly his

304

Mercy; and therfore, whan my soule was angwissous

304

withinne me, I hadde remembrance

305

Of God that my preyere myghte come to hym.

305

Forther over, contricioun moste be continueel,

305

And that man have stedefast purpos to shriven

305

Hum, and for to amenden hym of his

306

Lyf. For soothly, whil contricioun lasteth,

306

Man may evere have hope of foryifnesse;

306

And of this comth hate of synne, that destroyeth

306

synne, bothe in himself, and eek in oother

307

Folk, at his power. For which seith david:

307

Ye that loven god, hateth wikkednesse. For

307

Trusteth wel, to love God is for to love that he

308

Loveth, and hate that he hateth.

308

The laste thyng that men shal understonde

308

In contricioun is this: wherof avayleth contricioun.

308

I seye that somtyme contricioun delivereth

309

a man fro synne; of which that david

309

Seith, I seye, quod david (that is to seyn,

309

I purposed fermely) to shryve me, and thow,

310

Lord, relessedest my synne. And right so as

310

Contricion availleth noght withouten sad purpos

310

of shrifte, if man have oportunitee, right

310

So litel worth is shrifte or satisfaccioun

311

Withouten contricioun. And mooreover

311

Contricion destroyeth the prisoun of helle,

311

And maketh wayk and fieble alle the strengthes

311

Of the develes, and restoreth the yiftes of the

312

Hooly goost and of alle goode vertues; and

312

It clenseth the soule of synne, and delivereth

312

The soule fro the peyne of helle, and fro the

312

Compaignye of the devel, and fro the servage

312

Of synne, and restoreth it to alle goodes espirituels,

312

and to the compaignye and communyoun

313

Of hooly chirche. And forther over, it maketh

313

Hym that whilom was sone of ire to be sone

313

Of grace; and alle thise thynges been preved

314

By hooly writ. And therfore, he that wolde

314

Sette his entente to thise thynges, he were ful

314

Wys; for soothly he ne sholde nat thanne in al

314

His lyf have corage to synne, but yeven his body

314

And al his herte to the service of jhesu crist,

315

And therof doon hym hommage. For soothly

315

Oure sweete lord jhesu crist hath spared us

315

So debonairly in oure folies, that if he ne hadde

315

Pitee of mannes soule, a sory song we

316

Myghten alle synge.

 

Explicit prima pars Penitentie.

Et sequitur secunda pars eiusdem.

316

The seconde partie of penitence is confressioun,

317

that is signe of contricioun. Now shul

317

Ye understonde what is confessioun, and

317

Wheither it oghte nedes be doon or noon, and

317

Whiche thynges been covenable to verray confessioun.

318

First shaltow understonde that confessioun

319

Is verray shewynge of synnes to the preest.

319

This is to seyn verray, for he moste confessen

319

Hym of alle the condiciouns that bilongen to his

320

Synne, as ferforth as he kan. Al moot be seyd,

320

And no thyng excused ne hyd ne forwrapped,

320

And noght avaunte thee of thy goode

321

Werkes. And forther over, it is necessarie

321

to understonde whennes that synnes

321

Spryngen, and how they encreessen and whiche

322

They been.

322

Of the spryngynge of synnes seith seint paul

322

In this wise: that right as by a man synne entred

322

first into this world, and thurgh that synne

322

Deeth, right so thilke deeth entred into alle

323

Men that synneden. And this man was adam,

323

By whom synne entred into this world, whan

324

He brak the comaundementz of god. And

324

Therfore, he that first was so myghty that he

324

Sholde nat have dyed, bicam swich oon that he

324

Moste nedes dye, wheither he wolde or noon,

324

And al his progenye in this world, that in thilke

325

Man synneden. Looke that in th' estaat of innocence,

325

whan adam and eve naked weren

325

In paradys, and nothyng ne hadden shame

326

Of hir nakednesse, how that the serpent,

326

That was moost wily of alle othere beestes

326

That God hadde maked, seyde to the womman:

326

Why comaunded God to yow ye sholde nat

327

Eten of every tree in paradys? the womman

327

Answerde: of the fruyt, quod she, of the trees

327

In paradys we feden us, but soothly, of the

327

Fruyt of the tree that is in the myddel of paradys,

327

god forbad us for to ete, ne nat touchen

328

It, lest per aventure we sholde dyen. The

328

Serpent seyde to the womman: nay, nay, ye

328

Shul nat dyen of deeth; for sothe, God woot

328

That what day that ye eten therof, youre eyen

328

Shul opene, and ye shul been as goddes, knowynge

329

good and harm. The womman thanne

329

Saugh that the tree was good to feedyng, and

329

Fair to the eyen, and delitable to the sighte.

329

She took of the fruyt of the tree, and eet it,

329

And yaf to hire housbonde, and he eet, and

330

Anoon the eyen of hem bothe openeden. And

330

Whan that they knewe that they were naked,

330

They sowed of fige leves a maner of

331

Breches to hiden hire membres. There

331

May ye seen that deedly synne hath, first,

331

Suggestion of the feend, as sheweth heere by

331

The naddre; and afterward, teh delit of the

331

Flessh, as sheweth heere by eve; and after that,

331

The consentynge of resoun, as sheweth heere

332

By adam. For trust wel, though so were that

332

The feend tempted eve, that is to seyn, the

332

Flessh, and the flessh hadde delit in the beautee

332

Of the fruyt defended, yet certes, til that resoun,

332

That is to seyn, adam, consented to the etynge

332

Of the fruyt, yet stood he in th' estaat of innocence.

333

of thilke adam tooke we thilke wynne

333

Original; for of hym flesshly descended be we

333

Alle, and engendred of vile and corrupt mateere.

334

and whan the soule is put in oure body,

334

Right anon is contract original synne; and that

334

That was erst but oonly peyne of concupiscence,

335

is afterward bothe peyne and synne.

335

And therfore be we alle born sones of wratthe

335

And of dampnacioun perdurable, if it nere baptesme

335

that we receyven, which bynymeth us

335

The culpe. But for sothe, the peyne dwelleth

335

With us, as to temptacioun, which peyne

336

Highte concupiscence. And this concupiscence,

336

whan it is wrongfully disposed

336

Or ordeyned in man, it maketh hym coveite,

336

By coveitise of flessh, flesshly synne, by sighte

336

Of his eyen as to erthely thynges, and eek

337

Coveitise of hynesse by pride of herte.

337

Now, as for to speken of the firste coveitise,

337

That is concupiscence, after the lawe of oure

337

Membres, that weren lawefulliche ymaked and

338

By rightful juggement of god; I seye, forasmuche

338

as man is nat obeisaunt to god, that is

338

His lord, therfore is the flessh to hym disobeisaunt

338

thurgh concupiscence, whigh yet is

338

Cleped norrissynge, of synne and occasioun

339

Of synne. Therfore, al the while that a

339

Man hath in hym the peyne of concupiscence,

339

it is impossible but he be tempted

340

Somtime and moeved in his flessh to synne.

340

And this thyng may nat faille as longe

340

As he lyveth; it may wel wexe fieble and faille

340

By vertu of baptesme, and by the grace of

341

God thurgh penitence; but fully ne shal

341

It nevere quenche, that he ne shal som

341

Tyme be moeved in hymself, but if he were al

341

Refreyded by siknesse, or by malefice of sorcerie,

342

Or colde drynkes. For lo, what seith seint

342

Paul: the flessh coveiteth agayn the spirit, and

342

The spirit agayn the flessh; they been so contrarie

342

and so stryven that a man may nat alway

343

doon as he wolde. The same seint paul,

343

After his grete penaunce in water and in lond,

343

– in water by nyght and by day in greet peril

343

And in greet peyne; in lond, in famyne and

343

Thurst, in coold and cloothelees, and ones stoned

344

Almoost to the deeth,– yet seyde he, allas,

344

I caytyf man! who sahl delivere me fro the

345

Prisoun of my caytyf body? and seint jerome,

345

whan he longe tyme hadde woned in

345

Desert, where as he hadde no compaignye but

345

Of wilde beestes, where as he ne hadde no mete

345

But herbes, and water to his drynke, ne no bed

345

But the naked erthe, for which his flessh was

345

Blak as an ethiopeen for heete, and ny destroyed

346

for coold, yet seyde he that the

346

Brennynge of lecherie boyled in al his

347

Body. Wherfore I woot wel sykerly that they

347

Been deceyved that seyn that they ne be nat

348

Empted in hir body. Witnesse on seint jame

348

The apostel, that seith that every wight is

348

Tempted in his owene concupiscence; that is

348

To seyn, that everich of us hath matere and

348

Occasioun to be tempted of the norissynge of

349

Synne that is in his body. And therfore seith

349

Seint john the evaungelist: if that we seyn

349

That we be withoute synne, we deceyve us

350

Selve, and trouthe is nat in us.

350

Now hal ye understonde in what manere

350

That synne wexeth or encreesseth in man. The

350

Firste thyng is thilke norissynge of synne of

350

Which I spak biforn, thilke flesshly concupiscence.

351

and after that comth the

351

Subjeccioun of the devel, this is to seyn,

351

The develes bely, with which he bloweth in man

352

The fir of flesshly concupiscence. And after

352

That, a man bithynketh hym wheither he wol

352

Doon, or no, thilke thing to which he is

353

Tempted. And thanne, if that a man withstonde

353

and weyve the firste entisynge of his

353

Flessh and of the feend, thanne is it no synne;

353

And if it so be that he do nat so, thanne feeleth

354

he anoon a flambe of delit. And thanne

354

Is it good to be war, and kepen hym wel, or

354

Elles he wol falle anon into consentynge of

354

Synne; and thanne wol he do it, if he may have

355

Tyme and place. And of this matere seith

355

Moyses by the devel in this manere: the

355

Feend seith, – I wole chace and pursue the man

355

By wikked suggestioun, and I wole hente hym

355

By moevynge or stirynge of synne. And I wol

355

Departe my prise or my praye by deliberacioun,

355

And my lust shal been acompliced in delit.

356

I wol drawe my swerd in consentynge –

356

For certes, right as a swerd departeth a

356

Thyng in two peces, right so consentynge departeth

356

god fro man – and thanne wol I

356

Sleen hym with myn hand in dede of synne;

357

Thus seith the feend. For certes, thanne is

357

A man al deed in soule. And thus is synne

357

Acompliced by temptacioun, by delit, and by

357

Consentynge; and thanne is the synne cleped

358

Actueel.

358

For sothe, synne is in two maneres; outher

358

It is venial, or deedly synne. Soothly, whan

358

Man loveth any creature moore than jhesu

358

Crist oure creatour, thanne is it deedly synne.

358

And venial synne is it, if man love jhesu crist

359

Lasse than hym oghte. For sothe, the dede

359

Of this venial synne is ful perilous; for it

359

Amenuseth the love that men sholde han to

360

God moore and moore. And therfore, it a

360

Man charge hymself with manye swiche venial

360

Synnes, certes, but if so be that he somtyme

360

Descharge hym of hem by shrifte, they mowe

360

Ful lightly amenuse in hym al the love that

361

He hath to jhesu crist; and in this wise

361

Skippeth venial into deedly synne. For

361

Certes, the moore that a man chargeth his

361

Soule with venial synnes, the moore is he enclyned

362

to fallen into deedly synne. And therfore

362

lat us nat be necligent to deschargen us

362

Of venial synnes. For the proverbe seith that

363

Manye smale maken a greet. And herkne

363

This ensample. A greet wawe of the see comth

363

Som tyme with so greet a violence that it

363

Drencheth the ship. And the same harm doon

363

Som tyme the smale dropes of water, that entren

363

thurgh a litel crevace into the thurrok,

363

And in the botme of the ship, if men be so

363

Necligent that they ne descharge hem nat by

364

Tyme. And therfore, although ther be a difference

364

bitwixe thise two causes of drenchynge,

365

Algates the ship is dreynt. Right so fareth it

365

Somtyme of deedly synne, and of anoyouse

365

Veniale synnes, whan they multiplie in a man

365

So greetly that the love of thilke worldly

365

Thynges that he loveth, thurgh whiche he synneth

365

venyally, is as greet in his herte as

366

The love of god, or moore. And therfore,

366

the love of every thyng that is nat

366

Biset in god, ne doon principally for goddes

366

Sake, although that a man love it lasse than

367

God, yet is it venial synne; and deedly synne

367

Whan the love of any thyng weyeth in the

367

Herte of man as muchel as the love of god, or

368

Moore. Deedly synne, as seith seint augustyn,

368

is whan a man turneth his herte fro

368

God, which that is verray sovereyn bountee,

368

That may nat chaunge, and yeveth his herte

369

To thyng that may chaunge and flitte. And

369

Certes, that is every thyng save God of hevene.

369

For sooth is that if a man yeve his love, the

369

Which that he oweth al to God with al his

369

Herte, unto a creature, certes, as muche of his

369

Love as he yeveth to thilke creature, so muche

370

He bireveth fro god; and therfore dooth he

370

Synne. For he that is dettour to God ne yeldeth

370

nat to God al his dette, that is to seyn,

371

Al the love of his herte.

371

Now sith man understondeth generally

371

Which is venial synne, thanne is it covenable

371

To tellen specially of synnes whiche that many

371

A man peraventure ne demeth hem nat synnes,

371

And ne shryveth him nat of the same thynges,

372

And yet natheless they been synnes; soothly, as

372

Thise clerkes writen, this is to seyn, that at every

372

Tyme that a man eteth or drynketh moore than

372

Suffiseth to the sustenaunce of his body, in certein

373

he dooth synne. And eek whan he speketh

373

moore than it nedeth, it is synne. Eke

373

Whan he herkneth nat benignely the compleint

374

Of the povre; eke whan he is in heele of body,

374

And wol nat faste whan other folk faste, withouten

374

cause resonable; eke whan he slepeth

374

Moore than nedeth, or whan he comth by thilke

374

Enchesoun to late to chirche, or to othere werkes

375

Of charite; eke whan he useth his wyf, withouten

375

sovereyn desir of engendrure to the honour

375

of god, or for the entente to yelde to

376

His wyf the dette of his body; eke whan

376

He wol nat visite the sike and the prisoner,

376

If he may; eke if he love wyf or child, or oother

376

Worldly thyng, moore than resoun requireth;

376

Eke if he flatere or blandise moore than hym

377

Oghte for any necessitee; eke if he amenuse

377

Or withdrawe the almesse of the povre; eke if

377

He apparailleth his mete moore deliciously than

378

Nede is, or ete it to hastily by likerousnesse;

378

Eke if he tale vanytees at chirche or at goddes

378

Service, or that he be a talker of ydel wordes of

378

Folye or of vileynye, for he shal yelden acountes

379

Of it at the day of doom; eke whan he biheteth

379

or assureth to do thynges that he may nat

379

Perfourne; eke whan that he by lightnesse or

380

Folie mysseyeth or scorneth his neighebor;

380

Eke whan he hath any wikked suspecioun

380

Of thyng ther he ne woot of it no soothfastnesse:

381

thise thynges, and no withoute

381

nombre, been synnes, as seith seint

382

Augustyn.

382

Now shal men understonde that, al be it so

382

That noon erthely man may eschue alle venial

382

Synnes, yet may be refreyne hym by the brennynge

382

love that he hath to oure lord jhesu

382

Christ, and by preyeres and confessioun and

382

Othere goode werkes, so that it shal but litel

383

Greve. For, as seith seint augustyn, if a man

383

Love God in swich manere that al that evere he

383

Dooth is in the love of god, and for the love of

383

God, verraily, for he brenneth in the love of

384

God, looke, how muche that a drope of water

384

that falleth in a fourneys ful of fyr anoyeth

384

Or greveth, so muche anoyeth a venial synne

384

Unto a man that is perfit in the love of jhesu

385

Crist. Men may also refreyne venial synne

385

By receyvynge worthily of the precious

386

Body of jhesu crist; by receyvynge eek

386

Of booly water; by almesdede; by general

386

Confessioun of confiteor at masse and at complyn;

386

and by blessynge of bisshopes and of

387

Preestes, and by oothere goode werkes.

 

Explicit secunda pars Penitentie.

Sequitur de septem peccatis mortalibus et eorum

dependenciis, circumstanciis, et speciebus.

387

Now is it bihovely thyng to telle whiche

387

Been the sevene deedly synnes, this is to seyn,

387

Chiefaynes of synnes. Alle they renne in o

387

Lees, but in diverse manneres. Now been they

387

Cleped chieftaynes, for as muche as they been

388

Chief and spryng of alle othere synnes. Of

388

The roote of thise sevene synnes, thanne, is

388

Pride the general roote of alle harmes. For of

388

This roote spryngen certein braunches, as ire,

388

Envye, accidie or slewthe, avarice or coveitise

388

(to commune understondynge), glotonye, and

389

Lecherye. And everich of thise chief synnes

389

Hath his braunches and his twigges, as shal be

390

Declared in hire chapitres folwynge.

 

De Superbia.

390

And thogh so be that no man kan outerly

390

Telle the nombre of the twigges and of the

390

Harmes that cometh of pride, yet wol I shewe

390

A partie of hem, as ye shul understonde.

391

ther is inobedience, avauntynge,

391

ypocrisie, despit, arrogance, inpudence,

391

swellynge of herte, insolence, elacioun,

391

Inpacience, strif, contumacie, presumpcioun,

391

Irreverence, pertinacie, veyne glorie, and many

392

Another twig that I kan nat declare. Inobedient

392

is he that disobeyeth for despit to the comandementz

392

of god, and to his sovereyns, and

393

To his goostly fader. Avauntour is he that

393

Bosteth of the harm or of the bountee that he

394

Hath doon. Ypocrite is he that hideth to

394

Shewe hym swich as he is, and sheweth hym

395

Swich as he noght is. Despitous is he that

395

Hath desdeyn of his neighebor, that is to seyn, of

395

His evene-cristene, or hath despit to doon

396

That hym oghte to do. Arrogant is he

396

That thynketh that he hath thilke bountees

396

In hym that he hath noght, or weneth that he

396

Sholde have hem by his desertes, or elles he

397

Demeth that he be that he nys nat. Inpudent

397

Is he that for his pride hath no shame of his

398

Synnes. Swellynge of herte is whan a man rejoyseth

399

hym of harm that he hath doon. Insolent

399

is he that despiseth in his juggement alle

399

Othere folk, as to regatd of his value, and of his

399

Konnyng, and of his spekyng, and of his beryng.

400

elacioun is whan he ne may neither

401

Suffre to have maister ne felawe. Inpacient

401

is he that wol nat been ytaught ne

401

Undernome of his vice, and by strif werreieth

402

Troughe wityngly, and deffendeth his folye.

402

Contumax is he that thurgh his indignacioun

402

Is agayns everich auctoritee or power of hem

403

That been his sovereyns. Presumpcioun is whan

403

A man undertaketh an emprise that hym oghte

403

Nat do, or elles that he may nat do; and this

403

Is called surquidrie. Irreverence is whan men

403

Do nat honour there as hem oghte to doon,

404

And waiten to be reverenced. Pertinacie is

404

Whan man deffendeth his folie, and truseth to

405

Muchel to his owene wit. Veyneglorie is for

405

To have pompe and delit in his temporeel

405

Hynesse, and glorifie hym in this worldly

406

Estaat. Janglynge is whan a man speketh

406

To muche biforn folk, and clappeth as a

407

Mille, and taketh no keep what he seith.

407

And yet is ther a privee spece of pride, that

407

Waiteth first to be salewed er he wole salewe,

407

Al be be lasse worth than that oother is peraventure;

407

and eek he waiteth or desireth to

407

Sitte, or elles to goon above hym in the wey,

407

Or kisse pax, or been encensed, or goon to

408

Offryng biforn his neighebor, and swiche sem0

408

Blable thynges, agayns his duetee, peraventure,

408

But that he hath his herte and his entente in

408

Swich a proud desir to be magnified and honoured

409

biforn the peple.

409

Now been ther two maneres of pride: that

409

Oon of hem is withinne the herte of man, and

410

That oother is withoute. Of whiche, soothly,

410

Thise forseyde thynges, and no that I have

410

Seyd, apertenen to pride that is in the herte

410

Of man; and that othere speces of pride

411

Been withoute. But natheles that oon

411

Of thise speces of pride is signe of that

411

Oother, right as the gaye leefsel atte taverne

412

Is signe of the wyn that is in the celer. And

412

This is in manye thynges: as in speche and contenaunce,

412

and in outrageous array of clothyng.

413

for certes, if ther ne hadde be no synne

413

In clothyng, crist wolde nat so soone have

413

Noted and spoken of the clothyng of thilke

414

Riche man in the gospel. And as seith seint

414

Gregorie, that cprecious clothyng is cowpable

414

For the derthe of it, and for his softenesse, and

414

For his strangenesse and degisynesse, and for

414

The superfluitee, or for the inordinat scantnesse

415

Of it. Allas! may man nat seen, as in oure

415

Dayes, the synful costlewe array of clothynge,

415

And namely in to muche superfluite, or

416

Elles in to desordinat scantnesse?

416

As to the first synne, that is in superfluitee

416

of clothynge, which that maketh it so deere,

417

To harm of the peple; nat oonly the cost of

417

Embrowdynge, the degise endentynge or barrynge,

417

owndynge, palynge, wyndynge or bendynge,

418

and semblable wast of clooth in vanitee;

418

But ther is also costlewe furrynge in hir gownes,

418

So muche pownsonynge of chisels to maken

419

Holes, so muche daggynge of sheres; forthwith

419

the superfluitee in lengthe of the forseide

419

Gowens, trailynge in the dong and in the mire,

419

On horse and eek on foote, as wel of man as

419

Of womman, that al thilke trailyng is verraily

419

As in effect wasted, consumed, thredbare, and

419

Roten with donge, rather than it is yeven to the

419

Povre, to greet damage of the forseyde povre

420

Folk. And that in sondry wise; this is to seyn

420

That the moore that clooth is wasted, the moore

420

Moot it coste to the peple for the scarsnesse.

421

and forther over, if so be that

421

They wolde yeven swich pownsoned and

421

Dagged clothyng to the povre folk, it is

421

Nat convenient to were for hire estaat, ne suffisant

421

to beete hire necessitee, to kepe hem fro

422

The distemperance of the firmament. Upon

422

That oother side, to speken of the horrible disordiant

422

scantnesse of clothyng, as been thise

422

Kutted sloppes, or haynselyns, that thurgh hire

422

Shortnesse ne covere nat the shameful membres

423

of man, to wikked entente. Allas! somme

423

Of hem shewen the boce or hir shap, and the

423

Horrible swollen membres, that semeth lik the

423

Maladie of hirnia, in the wrappynge of hir

424

Hoses; and eek the buttokes of hem faren as

424

It were the hyndre part of a she-ape in the fulle

425

Of the moone. And mooreover, the wrecched

425

Swollen membres that they shewe thurgh disgisynge,

425

in departynge of hire hoses in whit and

425

Reed, semeth that half hir shameful privee

426

Membres weren flayne. And if so be that

426

They departen hire hoses in othere colours,

426

As is whit and blak, or whit and blew, or blak

427

And reed, and so forth, thanne semeth it, as

427

By variaunce of colour, that half the partie of

427

Hire privee membres were corrupt by the fir

427

Of seint antony, or by cancre, or by oother

428

Swich meschaunce. Of the hyndre part of hir

428

Buttokes, it is ful horrible for to see. For certes,

428

In that partie of hir body ther as they purgen

429

Hir stynkynge ordure, that foule partie shewe

429

They to the peple prowdly in despit of honestitee,

429

which honestitee that jhesu crist and

430

His freendes observede to shewen in hir lyve.

430

Now, as of the outrageous array of wommen,

430

God woot that though the visages of somme of

430

Hem seme ful chaast and debonaire, yet notifie

430

They in hire array of atyr likerousnesse and

431

Pride. I sey nat that honestitee in clothynge

431

of man or womman is uncovenable,

431

But certes the superfluitee or disordinat scantitee

432

of clothynge is reprevable. Also the synne

432

Of aornement or of apparaille is in thynges that

432

Apertenen to ridynge, as in to manye delicat

432

Horses that been hoolden for dlit, that been so

433

Faire, fatte, and costlewe; and also in many a

433

Vicious knave that is sustened by cause of hem,

433

And in to curious harneys, as in sadeles, in

433

Crouperes, peytrels, and bridles coverd

433

Precious clothyng, and riche barres and plates

434

Of gold and of silver. For which God seith

434

By zakarie the prophete, I wol confounde the

435

Rideres of swiche horses. This folk taken litel

435

Reward of the ridynge of goddes sone of hevene,

435

and of his harneys whan he rood upon

435

The asse, and ne hadde noon oother harneys

435

But the povre clother of his disciples; ne we ne

435

Rede nat that evere he rood on oother

436

Beest. I speke this for the synne of superfluitee,

436

and nat for resonable honestitee,

437

Whan reson it requireth. And forther over,

437

Certes, pride is greetly notified in holdynge of

437

Greet meynee, whan they be of litel profit or

438

Of right no profit; and namely whan that

438

Meynee is felonous and damageous to the peple

438

By hardynesse of heigh lordshipe or by wey of

439

Offices. For certes, swiche lordes sellen thanne

439

Hir lordshipe to the devel of helle, whanne they

440

Sustenen the wikkednesse of hir meynee. Or

440

Elles, whan this folk of lowe degree, as thilke

440

That holden hostelries, sustenen the thefte of

440

Hire hostilers, and that is in many manere

441

Of deceites. Thilke manere of folk been

441

The flyes that folwen the hony, or elles the

441

Houndes that folwen the careyne. Swich forseyde

442

folk stranglen spiritually hir lordshipes;

442

For which thus seith david the prophete: wikked

442

deeth moote come upon thilke lordshipes,

442

And God yeve that they moote descenden into

442

Helle al doun; for in hire houses been iniquitees

443

And shrewednesses, and nat God of hevene.

443

And certes, but if they doon amendement,

443

Right as God yaf his benysoun to (laban) by

443

The service of jacob, and to (pharao) by the

443

Service of joseph, right so God wol yeve his

443

Malisoun to swiche lordshipes as sustenen the

443

Wikkednesse of hir servauntz, but they come to

444

Amendement. Pride of the table appeereth

444

Eek ful ofte; for certes, riche men been cleped

444

To festes, and povre folk been put awey and rebuked.

445

also in excesse of diverse metes and

445

Drynkes, and namely swich manere bake-metes

445

And dissh-metes, brennynge of wilde fir and

445

Peynted and castelled with papir, and semblable

445

wast, so that it is abusioun for to

446

Thynke. And eek in to greet preciousnesse

446

of vessel and curiositee of mynstralcie,

446

by whiche a man is stired the moore to delices

447

of luxurie, if so be that he sette his herte

447

The lasse upon oure lord jhesu crist, certeyn it

447

Is a synne; and certeinly the delices myghte

447

Been so grete in this caas that man myghte

448

Lightly falle by hem into deedly synne. the

448

Especes that sourden of pride, soothly whan

448

They sourden of malice ymagined, avised, and

448

Forncast, or elles of usage, been deedly synnes,

449

It is no doute. and whan they sourden by

449

Freletee unavysed, and sodeynly withdrawen

449

Ayeyn, al been they grevouse synnes, I gesse

450

That they ne been nat deedly. now myghte

450

Men axe wherof that pride sourdeth and

450

Spryngeth, and I seye, somtyme it spryngeth

450

Of the goodes of nature, and somtyme of the

450

Goodes of fortune, and somtyme of the

451

Goodes of grace. Certes, the goodes of

451

Nature stonden outher in goodes of body

452

Or in goodes of soule. Certes, goodes of body

452

Been heele of body, strengthe, delivernesse,

453

Beautee, gentrice, franchise. Goodes of nature

453

of the soule been good wit, sharp understondynge,

453

subtil engyn, vertu natureel, good

454

Memorie. Goodes of fortune been richesse,

454

Hyghe degrees of lordshipes, preisynges of the

455

Peple. Goodes of grace been science, power

455

To suffre spiritueel travaille, benignitee, vertuous

455

contemplacioun, withstondynge of

456

Temptacioun, and semblable thynges. Of

456

Whiche forseyde goodes, certes it is a ful

456

Greet folye a man to priden hym in any of hem

457

Alle. Now as for to speken of goodes of nature,

457

God woot that somtyme we han hem in nature

458

As muche to oure damage as to oure profit.

458

As for to speken of heele of body, certes it

458

Passeth ful lightly, and eek it is ful ofte enchesoun

458

of the siknesse of oure soule. For, god

458

Woot, the flessh is a ful greet enemy to the

458

Soule; and therfore, the moore that the body

459

Is hool, the moore be we in peril to falle. Eke

459

For to pride hym in his strengthe of body, it

459

Is an heigh folye. For certes, the flessh coveiteth

459

agayn the spirit; and ay the moore strong

460

That the flessh is, the sorier may the soule be.

460

And over al this, strengthe of body and worldly

460

Hardynesse causeth ful ofte many a man to

461

Peril and meschaunce. Eek for to pride

461

Hym of his gentrie is ful greet folie; for

461

Ofte tyme the gentrie of the body binymeth

461

The gentrie of the soule; and eek we ben alle

461

Of o fader and of o mooder; and alle we been

461

Of o nature, roten and corrupt, bothe riche and

462

Povre. For sothe, o manere gentrie is for to

462

Preise, that apparailleth mannes corage with

462

Vertues and moralitees, and maketh hym cristes

463

Child. For truste wel that over what man that

463

Synne hath maistrie, he is a verray cherl to

464

Synne.

464

Now been ther generale signes of gentillesse,

464

As eschewynge of vice and ribaudye and servage

465

Of synne, in word, in werk, and contenaunce;

465

And usynge vertu, curteisye, and clennesse, and

465

To be liberal, that is to seyn, large by mesure;

465

For thilke that passeth mesure is folie and

466

Synne. Another is to remembre hym of

466

Bountee, that he of oother folk hath receyved.

467

another is to be benigne to his goode

467

Subetis; wherfore seith senek, ther is no

467

Thing moore covenable to a man of heigh estaat

468

than debonairetee and pitee. And therfore

468

thise flyes that men clepen bees, whan

468

They maken hir kyng, they chesen oon that

469

Hath no prikke wherwith he may stynge. Another

469

is, a man to have a noble herte and

469

A diligent, to attayne to heighe vertuouse

470

Thynges. Now certes, a man to pride hym in

470

The goodes of grace is eek an outrageous folie;

470

For thilke yifte of grace that sholde have turned

470

Hym to goodnesse and to medicine, turneth

470

Hym to venym and to confusioun, as seith

471

Seint gregorie. Certes also, whoso prideth

471

hym in the goodes of fortune, he is a

471

Ful greet fool; for somtyme is a man a greet

471

Lord by the morwe, that is a caytyf and a

472

Wrecche er it be nyght; and somtyme the

472

Richesse of a man is cause of his deth; somtyme

472

the delices of a man ben cause of the

473

Grevous maladye thurgh which he dyeth.

473

Certes, the commendacioun of the peple is

473

Somtyme ful fals and ful brotel for to triste;

474

This day they preyse, tomorwe they blame.

474

God woot, desir to have commendacioun eek

474

Of the peple hath caused deeth to many a bisy

475

Man.

 

Remedium contra peccatum Superbie

475

Now sith that so is that ye han understonde

475

What is pride, and whiche been the speces of it,

475

And whennes pride sourdeth and spryngeth,

476

now shul ye understonde which is

476

The remedie agayns the synne of pride;

477

And that is hymylitee, or mekenesse. That is

477

A vertu thurgh which a man hath verray

477

Knoweleche of hymself, and holdeth of hymself

477

no pris ne deyntee, as in regard of his

478

Desertes, considerynge evere his freletee. Now

478

Been ther three maneres of hymylitee: as humylitee

478

in herte; another hymylitee is in his

479

Mouth; the thridde in his werkes. The humilitee

479

in herte is in foure maneres. That oon is

479

Whan a man holdeth hymself as noght worth

479

Biforn God of hevene. Another is whan he ne

480

Despiseth noon oother man. The thridde is

480

Whan he rekketh nat, though men holde hym

480

Noght worth. The ferthe is whan he nys

481

Nat sory of his humiliacioun. Also the

481

Humilitee of mouth is in foure thynges: in

481

Attempree speche, and in humblesse of speche,

481

And whan he biknoweth with his owene mouth

481

That he is swich as hym thynketh that he is in

481

His herte. Another is whan he preiseth the

481

Bountee of another man, and nothyng therof

482

Amenuseth. Humilitee eek in werkes is in

482

Foure maneres. The firste is whan he putteth

482

Othere men biforn hym. The seconde is to

482

Chese the loweste place over al. The thridde

483

Is gladly to assente to good conseil. The

483

Ferthe is to stonde gladly to the award of his

483

Sovereyns, or of hym that is in hyer degree.

484

Certein, this is a greet werk of hymylitee.

 

Sequitur de Invidia.

484

After pride wol I speken of the foule synne

484

Of envye, which that is, as by the word of the philosophre,

484

sorwe of oother mannes prosperitee;

484

And after the word of seint augustyn, it is sorwe

484

Of oother mennes wele, and joye of othere

485

Mennes harm. This foule synne is platly

485

Agayns the hooly goost. Al be it so that every

485

Synne is agayns the hooly goost, yet nathelees,

485

For as muche as bountee aperteneth proprely to

485

The hooly goost, and envye comth proprely

485

Of malice, therfore it is proprely agayn the

486

Bountee of the hooly goost. Now hath

486

Malice two speces; that is to seyn, ahrdnesse

486

of herte in wikkednesse, or elles the flessh

486

Of man is so blynd that he considereth nat that

486

He is in synne, or rekketh nat that he is in synne,

487

Which is the hardnesse of the devel. That

487

Oother spece of malice is whan a man werreyeth

487

trouthe, whan he woot that it is trouthe;

487

And eek whan he werreyeth the grace that god

487

Hath yeve to his neighebor; and al this is by

488

Envye. Certes, thanne is envye the worste

488

Synne that is. For soothly, alle othere synnes

489

Been somtyme oonly agayns o special vertu;

489

But certes, envye is agayns alle vertues and

489

Agayns alle goodnesses. For it is sory of alle

489

The bountees of his neighebor, and in this manere

490

it is divers from alle othere synnes. For

490

Wel unnethe is ther any synne that it ne hath

490

Som delit in itself, save oonly envye, that

491

Evere hath in itself angwissh and sorwe.

491

The speces of envye been thise. Ther is

491

First, sorwe of oother mannes goodnesse and

491

Of his prosperitee; and prosperitee is kyndely

491

Matere of joye; thanne is envye a synne agayns

492

Kynde. The seconde spece of envye is joye

492

Of oother mannes harm; and that is proprely

492

Lyk to the devel, that evere rejoyseth hym of

493

Mannes harm. Of thise two speces comth bakbityng;

493

and this synne of bakbityng or detraccion

493

hath certeine speces, as thus. Som man

494

Preiseth his neighebor by a wikked entente;

494

For he maketh alwey a wikked knotte atte laste

494

Ende. Alwey he maketh a but atte laste ende,

494

That is digne of moore blame, than worth is al

495

The preisynge. The seconde spece is that if a

495

Man be good, and dooth or seith a thing to

495

Good entente, the bakbitere wol turne al thilke

495

Goodnesse up-so-doun to his shrewed entente.

496

the thridde is to amenuse the

497

Bountee of his neighebor. The fourthe

497

Spece of bakbityng is this, that if men speke

497

Goodnesse of a man, thanne wol the bakbitere

497

Seyn, parfey, swich a man is yet bet than he;

498

In dispreisynge of hym that men preise. The

498

Fifte spece is this, for to consente gladly and

498

Herkne gladly to the harm that men speke of

498

Oother folk. This synne is ful greet, and ay

498

Encreesseth after the wikked entente of the

500

bakbitere. After bakbityng cometh gruchchyng

500

or murmuracioun; and somtyme it

500

Spryngeth of inpacience agayns god, and som-tyme

501

agayns man. Agayn God it is, whan

501

A man gruccheth agayn the peyne of helle, or

501

Agayns poverte, or los of catel, or agayn reyn

501

Or tempest; or elles gruccheth that shrewes

501

Han prosperitee, or elles for the goode

502

Men han adversitee. And alle thise

502

Thynges sholde man suffre paciently, for

502

They comen by the rightful juggement and

503

Ordinaunce of god. Somtyme comth grucching

503

of avarice; as judas grucched agayns the

503

Magdaleyne, whan she enoynted the heved of

503

Oure lord jhesu crist with hir precious oynement.

504

this manere murmure is swich as whan

504

Man gruccheth of goodnesse that hymself

504

Dooth, or that oother folk doon of hir owene

505

Catel. Somtyme comth murmure of pride; as

505

Whan simon the pharisse gruchched agayn the

505

Magdaleyne, whan she approched to jhesu

506

Crist, and weep at his feet for hire synnes.

506

And somtyme grucchyng sourdeth of envye;

506

Whan men discovereth a mannes harm that

506

Was pryvee, or bereth hym on hond

507

Thyng that is fals. Murmure eek is ofte

507

Amonges servauntz that grucceh whan hir

508

Sovereyns bidden hem doon leveful thynges;

508

And forasmuche as they dar nat openly withseye

508

the comaundementz of hir sovereyns, yet

508

Wol they seyn harm, and grucche, and murmure

509

prively for verray despit; whiche wordes

509

Men clepen the develes pater noster, though

509

So be that the devel ne hadde nevere pater

509

Noster, but that lewed folk yeven it swich a

510

Name. Somtyme it comth of ire or pive hate,

510

That norisseth rancour in herte, as afterward I

511

Shal declare. Thanne cometh eek bitternesse

511

Of herte, thurgh which bitternesse every good

511

Dede of his neighebor semeth to hym bitter

512

and unsavory. Thanne cometh discord,

512

that unbyndeth alle manere of

512

Freendshipe. Thanne comth scornynge of his

513

Neighebor, al do he never so weel. Thanne

513

Comth accusynge, as whan man seketh occasioun

513

to anoyen his neighebor, which that is

513

Lyk the craft of the devel, that waiteth bothe

514

Nyght and day to accusen us alle. Thanne

514

Comth malignitee, thurgh which a man anoyeth

515

his neighebor prively, if he may; and if

515

He noght may, algate his wikked wil ne shal

515

Nat wante, as for to brennen his hous pryvely,

515

Or empoysone or sleen his beestes, and semblable

516

thynges.

 

Remedium contra peccatum Invidie.

516

Now wol I speke of remedie agayns this

516

Foule synne of envye. First is the love of god

516

Principal, and lovyng of his neighebor as hymself;

516

for soothly, that oon ne may nat been

517

Withoute that oother. And truste wel that

517

In the name of thy neighebor thou shalt

517

Understonde the name of thy brother; for certes

517

Alle we have o fader flesshly, and o mooder,

517

That is to seyn, adam and eve; and eek o fader

518

Espiritueel, and that is God of hevene. Thy

518

Neighebor artow holden for to love, and wilne

518

Hym alle goodnesse; and therfore seith god,

518

Love thy neighebor as thyselve, that is to

519

Seyn, to salvacioun bothe of lyf and of soule.

519

And mooreover thou shalt love hym in word,

519

And in benigne amonestynge and chastisynge,

519

And conforten hym in his anoyes, and preye for

520

Hym with al thyn herte. And in dede thou

520

Shalt love hym in swich wise that thou shalt

520

Doon to hym in charitee as thou woldest that

521

It were doon to thyn owene persone. And

521

Therfore thou ne shalt doon hym no damage

521

In wikked word, ne harm in his body, ne in

521

His catel, ne in his soule, by entissyng of

522

Wikked ensample. Thou shalt nat desiren

522

His wyf, ne none of his thynges. Understoond

522

eek that in the name of neighebor is

523

Comprehended his enemy. Certes, man shal

523

Loven his enemy, by the comandement of god,

524

And soothyly thy freend shaltow love in god.

524

I seye, thyn enemy shaltow love for goddes

524

Sake, by his comandement. For if it were reson

524

That man sholde haten his enemy, for so he

524

God nolde nat receyven us to his love that been

525

His enemys. Agayns three manere of wronges

525

That his enemy dooth to hym, he shal doon

526

Three thynges, as thus. Agayns hate and rancour

526

of herte, he shal love hym in herte.

526

Agayns chidyng and wikkede wordes, he shal

526

Preye for his enemy. Agayns the wikked dede

526

Of his enemy, he shal doon hym bountee.

527

for crist seith: loveth youre enemys,

527

and preyeth for hem that speke yow

527

Harm, and eek for hem that yow chacen and

527

Pursewen, and dooth bountee to hem that yow

527

Haten. Loo, thus comaundeth us oure lord

528

Jhesu crist to do to oure enemys. For smoothly,

528

Nature dryveyh us to loven oure freends, and

528

Parfey, oure enemys han moore nede to love

528

That oure freendes; and they that moore nede

529

Have, certes to hem shal men doon goodnesse;

529

And certes, in thilke dede have we remembraunce

529

of the love of jhesu crist that deyde

530

For his enemys. And in as muche as thilke

530

Love is the moore grevous to perfourne, so

530

Muche is the moore gret the merite; and therfore

530

the lovynge of oure enemy hath confounded

531

the venym of the devel. For right

531

As the devel is disconfited by humylitee, right

531

So is he wounded to the deeth by love of

532

Oure enemy. Certes, thanne is love the

532

Medicine that casteth out the venym of

533

Envye fro mannes herte. The speces of this

533

Paas shullen be moore largely declared in hir

534

Chapitres folwynge.

 

Sequitur de Ira.

534

After envye wol I discryven the synne

534

Ire. For soothly, whoso hath envye upon his

534

Neighebor, anon he wole comunly fynde hym

534

A matere of wratthe, in word or in dede, agayns

535

Hym to whom he hath envye. And as wel

535

Comth ire of pride, as of envye; for soothly,

536

He that is proud or envyous is lightly wrooth.

536

This synne of ire, after the discryvyng of

536

Seint augustyn, is wikked wil to been

537

Avenged by word, or by dede. Ire, after

537

The philosophre, is the fervent blood of

537

Man yquyked in his herte, thurgh which he

538

Wole harm to hym that he hateth. For certes,

538

The herte of man, by eschawfynge and moevynge

538

of his blood, wexeth so trouble that he is

539

Out of alle juggement of resoun. But ye shal

539

Understonde that ire is in two maneres; that

539

Oon of hem is good, and that oother is wikked.

540

the goode ire is by jalousie of goodnesse,

540

thurgh which a man is wrooth with wikkednesse

540

and agayns wikkednesse; and therfore

541

seith a wys man that ire is bet than pley.

541

This ire is with debonairetee, and it is wrooth

541

Withouten bitternesse; nat wrooth agayns the

541

Man, but wrooth with the mysdede of the man,

541

As seith the prophete david, irasciminI

542

Et nolite peccare. Now understondeth

542

That wikked ire is in two maneres; that is

542

To seyn, sodeyn ire or hastif ire, withouten

543

Avisement and consentynge of resoun. The

543

Menyng and the sens of this is, that the resoun

543

Of a man ne consente nat to thilke sodeyn ire;

544

And thanne is it venial. Another ire is ful

544

Wikked, that comth of felonie of herte avysed

544

And cast biforn, with wikked wil to do vengeance,

544

and therto his resoun consenteth; and

545

Soothly this is deedly synne. This ire is so

545

Displesant to God that it troubleth his hous,

545

And chaceth the hooly goost out of mannes

545

Soule, and wasteth and destroyeth the liknesse

545

Of god, that is to seyn, the vertu that is in

546

Mannes soule, and put in hym the liknesse

546

Of the devel, and bynymeth the man fro

547

God, that is his rightful lord. This ire

547

Is a ful greet plesaunce to the devel; for

547

It is the develes fourneys, that is eschawfed

548

With the fir of helle. For certes, right so as

548

Fir is moore mighty to destroyen erthely thynges

548

Than any oother element, right so ire is myghty

549

To destroyen alle spiritueel thynges. Looke how

549

That fir of smale gleedes, that been almost dede

549

Under asshen, wollen quike agayn whan they

549

Been touched with brymstoon; right so ire wol

549

Everemo quyken agayn, whan it is touched by

550

The pride that is covered in mannes herte.

550

For certes, fir ne may nat comen out of no

550

Thyng, but if it were first in the same thyng

550

Natureely, as fir is drawen out of flyntes with

551

Steel. And right so as pride is ofte tyme matere

551

of ire, right so is rancour norice and

552

Kepere of ire. Ther is a maner tree, as

552

Seith seint ysidre, that whan men maken

552

Fir of thilke tree, and covere the coles of

552

With asshen, soothly the fir of it wol lasten

553

A yeer or moore. And right so fareth it

553

Rancour; whan it is ones conceyved in the

553

Hertes of som men, certein, it wol lasten peraventure

553

from oon estre day unto another

554

Estre day, and moore. But certes, thilke man

555

Is ful fer fro the mercy of God al thilke while.

555

In this forseyde develes fourneys ther forgen

555

Three shrewes: pride, that ay bloweth and encreesseth

555

the fir by chidynge and wikked

556

Wordes; thanne stant envye, the holdeth the

556

Hoote iren upon the herte of man with a

557

Peire of longe toonges of long rancour;

557

And thanne stant the synne of contumelie,

557

Or strif and cheeste, and batereth and forgeth

558

By vileyns reprevynges. Certes, this cursed

558

Synne annoyeth bothe to the man hymself and

558

Eek to his neighebor. For soothly, almoost al

558

The harm that any man dooth to his neighebor

559

Comth of wratthe. For certes, outrageous

559

Wratthe dooth al that evere the devel hym

559

Comaundeth; for he ne spareth neigher crist ne

560

His sweete mooder. And in his outrageous anger

560

and ire, allas! allas! ful many oon at that

560

Tyme feeleth in his herte ful wikkedly, bothe

561

Of crist and eek of alle his halwes. Is nat this

561

A cursed vice? yis, certes. Allas! it bynymeth

561

From man his wit and his resoun, and al his debonaire

561

lif espiritueel that sholde kepen his

562

Soule. Certes, it bynymeth eek goddes

562

Due lordshipe, and that is mannes soule,

562

And the love of his neighebores. It stryveth

562

Eek alday agayn trouthe. It reveth hym the

563

Quiete of his herte, and subverteth his soule.

563

Of ire comen thise stynkynge engendrures:

563

First, hate, that is oold wratthe; discord, thurgh

563

Which a man forsaketh his olde freend that he

564

Hath loved ful longe; and thanne cometh

564

Werre, and every manere of wrong that man

565

Dooth to his neighebor, in body or in catel.

565

Of this cursed synne of ire cometh eek manslaughtre.

565

and understonde wel that homycide,

565

That is manslaughtre, is in diverse wise. Som

565

Manere of homycide is spiritueel, and som is

566

Bodily. Spiritueel manslaughtre is in sixe

566

Thynges. First by hate, as seith seint john:

566

He that hateth his brother is an homycide.

567

homycide is eek by babkbitynge,

567

Of whiche bakbiteres seith salomon that

567

They han two swerdes with whiche they sleen

567

Hire neighebores. For soothly, as wikke is to

568

Bynyme his good name as his lyf. Homycide is

568

Eek in yevynge of wikked conseil by fraude;

568

As for to yeven conseil to areysen wrongful

569

Custumes and taillages. Of whiche seith salomon:

569

leon rorynge and bere hongry been like

569

To the crueel lordshipes in witholdynge or

569

Abreggynge of the shepe (or the hyre), or of

569

The wages of sevauntz, or elles in usure, or

570

In withdrawynge of the almesse of povre folk.

570

For which the wise man seith, fedeth hym that

570

Almoost dyeth for honger; for soothly, but if

570

Thow feede hym, thou sleest hym; and alle thise

571

Been deedly synnes. Bodily manslaughtre is,

571

Whan thow sleest him with thy tonge in oother

571

Manere; as whan thou comandest to sleen a

571

Man, or elles yevest hym conseil to sleen

572

A man. Manslaughtre in dede is in foure

572

Maneres. That oon is by lawe, right as a

572

Justice dampneth hym that is coupable to the

572

Deeth. But lat the justice be war that he do

572

It rightfully, and that he do it nat for delit to

573

Spille blood, but for kepynge of rightwisnesse.

573

Another homycide is that is doon for necessitee,

573

As whan o man sleeth another is his defendaunt,

573

and that he ne may noon ootherwise escape

574

from his owene deeth. But certeinly if

574

He may escape withouten slaughtre of his adversarie,

574

and sleeth hym, he dooth synne and

575

He shal bere penance as for deedly synne.

575

Eek if a man, by caas or aventure, shete an arwe,

575

Or caste a stoon, with which he sleeth a man,

576

He is homycide. Eek if a womman by necligence

576

overlyeth hire child in hir slepyng,

577

It is homycide and deedly synne. Eek

577

Whan man destourbeth concepcioun of a

577

Child, and maketh a womman outher bareyne

577

By drynkynge venenouse herbes thurgh which

577

She may nat conceyve, or sleeth a child by

577

Drynkes wilfully, or elles putteth certeine material

577

thynges in hire secree places to slee the

578

Child, or elles dooth unkyndely synne, by

578

Which man or womman shedeth hire nature

578

In manere or in place ther as a child may nat

578

Be conceived, or elles if a woman have conceyved,

578

and hurt hirself and sleeth the child,

579

Yet is it homycide. What seye we eek of

579

Wommen that mordren hir children for drede

579

Of worldly shame? certes, an horrible homicide.

580

homycide is eek if a man approcheth

580

To a womman by desir of lecherie, thurgh which

580

The child is perissed, or elles smyteth a womman

580

Wityngly, thurgh which she leseth hir child.

580

Alle thise been homycides and horrible deedly

581

Synnes. Yet comen ther of ire manye mo

581

Synnes, as wel in word as in thoght and in

581

Dede; as he that arretteth upon god, or blameth

581

god of thyng of which he is hymself

581

Gilty, or despiseth God and alle his halwes, as

581

Doon thise cursede hasardours in diverse

582

Contrees. This cursed synne doon they,

582

Whan they feelen in hir herte ful wikkedly

583

Of God and of his halwes. Also whan they

583

Treten unreverently the sacrement of the auter,

583

Thilke synne is so greet that unnethe may it

583

Been releessed, but that the mercy of god

583

Passeth alle his werkes; it is so greet, and he

584

So benigne. Thanne comth of ire attry angre.

584

Whan a man is sharply amonested in his shrifte

585

To forleten his synne, thanne wole he be anfry,

585

and answeren hokerly and angrily, and

585

Deffended or excusen his synne by unstedefastnesse

585

of his flessh; or elles he dide it for

585

To holde compaignye with his felawes; or elles,

586

He seith, the feend enticed hym; or elles he

586

Dide it for his youthe; or elles his compleccioun

586

is so corageous that he may nat forbere;

586

Or elles it is his destinee, as he seith, unto a

586

Certein age; or eles, he seith, it cometh hym

586

Of gentillesse of his auncestres; and semblable

587

thynges. Alle thise manere of folk

587

So wrappen hem in hir synnes that they ne

587

Wol nat delivere hemself. For soothly, no wight

587

That excuseth hym wilfully of his synne may

587

Nat been delivered of his synne, til that he

588

Mekely biknoweth his synne. After this,

588

Thanne cometh sweryng, that is expres agayn

588

The comandement of god; and this bifalleth

589

Ofte of anger and of ire. God seith: thow

589

Shalt nat take the name of thy lord God in

589

Veyn or in ydel. Also oure lord jhesu crist

590

Weith, by the word of seint mathew, ne wol

590

Ye nat swere in alle manere; neither by hevene,

590

for it is goddes trone; ne by erthe, for

590

It is the bench of his feet; ne by jerusalem,

590

For it is the citee of a greet kyng; ne by thyn

590

Heed, for thou mayst nat make an heer whit

591

Ne blak. But seyeth by youre word – ye, he, –

591

And – nay, nay – ; and what that is moore, it

592

Is of yvel, – thus seith crist. For cristes

592

Sake, ne swereth nat so synfully in dismembrynge

592

of crist by soule, herte, bones, and

592

Body. For certes, it semeth that ye thynke that

592

The cursede jewes ne dismembred nat ynough

592

The preciouse persone of crist, but ye dismembre

593

hym moore. And if so be that the lawe

593

Compelle yow to swere, thanne rule yow after

593

The lawe of God in youre sweriyng, as seith

593

Jeremye, quarto capitulo: thou shalt kepe

593

Three condicions: thou shalt swere in trouthe,

594

In doom, and in rightwisnesse. This is to

594

Seyn, thou shalt swere sooth; for every lesynge

594

Is agayns crist. For crist is verray trouthe.

594

And thynk wel this, that every greet swerere

594

Nat compedded lawefully to swere, the wounde

594

Shal nat departe from his hous whil he useth

595

Swich unleveful swerying. Thou shalt sweren

595

Eek in doom, whan thou art constreyned by thy

596

Domesman to witnessen the trouthe. Eek thow

596

Shalt nat swere for envye, ne for favour, ne for

596

Meede, but for rightwisnesse, for declaracioun

596

Of it, to the worshipe of God and helpyng

597

Of thyne evene-cristene. And therefore

597

Every man that taketh goodes name in

597

Ydel, or falsly swereth with his mouth, or elles

597

Taketh on hym the name of crist, to be called

597

A cristen man, and lyveth agayns cristed lyvynge

597

and his techynge, alle they taken goddes

598

Name in ydel. Looke eek what seint peter

598

Seith, actuum, quarto, non est aliud nomen sub

598

Celo, etc., ther nys noon oother name, seith

598

Seint peter, under hevene yeven to men, in

598

Which they mowe be saved; that is to seyn,

599

But the name of jhesu crist. Take kep eek

599

How precious is the name of crist, as seith

599

Seint paul, ad philipenses, secundo, in nomine

599

Jhesu, etc., that in the name of jhesu every

599

Knee of hevenely creatures, or erthely, or of helle

599

Sholde bowe; for it is so heigh and so worshipful

599

that the cursede feend in helle sholde tremblen

600

to heeren it ynempned. Thanne semeth

600

It that men that sweren so horribly by his

600

Blessed name, that they despise it moore

600

Booldely that dide the cursede jewes, or elles

600

The devel, that trembleth whan he heereth his

601

Name.

601

Now certes, sith that sweryng, but if it

601

Be lawefully doon, is so heighly deffended,

601

Muche worse is forsweryng falsly, and yet

602

Nedelees.

602

What seye we eek of hem that deliten

602

Hem in sweryng, and holden it a gentrie or a

602

Manly dede to swere grete others? and what

602

Of hem that of verray usage ne cesse nat to

602

Swere grete othes, al be the cause nat worth

603

A straw? certes, this is horrible synne. Swerynge

603

sodeynly withoute avysement is eek a

604

Synne. But lat us go now to thilke horrible

604

Sweryng of adjuracioun and conjuracioun, as

604

Doon thise false enchauntours or nigromanciens

604

in bacyns ful of water, or in a bright

604

Swerd, in a cercle, or in a fir, or in a shulderboon

605

of a sheep. I kan nat seye but that they

605

Doon cursedly and dampnably agayns crist and

606

Al the feith of hooly chirche.

606

What seye we of hem that bileeven on divynailes,

606

as by flight or by noyse of briddes, or

606

Of beestes, or by sort, by nigromancie, by dremes,

606

By chirkynge of dores, or crakkynge of houses,

606

By gnawynge of rattes, and swich manere

607

Wrecchednesse? certes, al this thyng is

607

Deffended by God and by hooly chirche.

607

For which they been acursed, til they come

607

To amendement, that on swich filthe setten hire

608

Bileeve. Charmes for woundes or maladie of

608

Men or of beestes, if they taken any effect, it

608

May be peraventure that God suffreth it, for

608

Folk sholden yeve the moore feith and reverence

609

to his name.

609

Now wol I speken of lesynges, which generally

609

is fals signyficaunce of word, in entente to

610

Deceyven his evene-cristene. Som lesynge is

610

Of which ther comth noon avantage to no wight;

610

And som lesynge turneth to the ese and profit

610

Of o man, and to disese and damage of another

611

Man. Another lesynge is for to saven his lyf

611

Of his catel. Another lesynge comth of delit

611

For to lye, in which delit they wol forge a

611

Long tale, and peynten it with alle circumstaunces,

611

where al the ground of the tale

612

Is fals. Som lesynge comth, for he wole

612

Sustene his word; and som lesynge comth

612

Of reccheleesnesse withouten avisement; and

613

Semblable thynges.

613

Lat us now touche the vice of flaterynge,

613

Which ne comth nat gladly but for drede or

614

For coveitise. Flaterye is generally wrongful

614

Preisynge. Flatereres been the develes norices,

614

That norissen his children with milk losengerie.

615

for sothe, salomon seith that flaterie

615

Is wors than detraccioun. For somtyme detraccion

615

maketh an hauteyn man be the moore

615

Humble, for he dredeth detraccion; but certes

615

Flaterye, that maketh a man to enhauncen his

616

Herte and his contenance. Flatereres been

616

The develes enchauntours; for they make a

616

Man to wene of hymself be lyk that he nys

617

Nat lyk. They been lyk to judas that bitraysen

617

a man to sellen hym to his enemy,

618

That is to the devel. Flatereres been the develes

619

chapelleyns, that syngen evere placebb.

619

I rekene flaterie in the vices of ire; for ofte

619

Tyme, if o man be wrooth with another, thanne

619

Wole he flatere som wight to sustene hym in his

620

Querele.

620

Speke we now of swich cursynge as comth

620

Of irous herte. Malisoun generally may be

620

Seyd every maner power of harm. Swich cursynge

620

bireveth man fro the regne of god, as

621

Seith seint paul. and ofte tyme swiche cursynge

621

wrongfully retorneth agayn to hym that

621

Curseth, as a bryd that retorneth agayn to

622

His owene nest. And over alle thyng men

622

Oghten eschewe to cursen hir children,

622

And yeven to the devel hire engendrure, as

622

Ferforth as in hem is. Certes, it is greet peril

623

And greet synne.

623

Lat us thanne speken of chidynge and reproche,

623

whiche been ful grete woundes in

623

Mannes herte, for they unsowen the semes of

624

Freendshipe in mannes herte. For certes, unnethes

624

may a man pleynly been accorded with

624

Hym that hath hym openly revyled and repreved

624

and disclaundred. This ia a ful grisly

625

Synne, as crist seith in the gospel. And taak

625

Kep now, that he that repreveth his neighebor,

625

Outher he repreveth hym by som harm of peyne

625

That he hath on his body, as mesel, croked

626

Harlot, or by som synne that he dooth. Now

626

If he repreve hym by harm of peyne, thanne

626

Turneth the repreve to jhesu crist, for peyne

626

Is sent by the rightwys sonde of god, and

626

By his suffrance, be it meselrie, or maheym,

627

or maladie. And if he repreve hym

627

Uncharitably of synne, as thou holour,

627

Thou dronkelewe harlot, and so forth, thanne

627

Aperteneth that to the rejoysynge of the devel,

628

That evere hath joyde that men doon synne.

628

And certes, chidynge may nat come but out

628

Of a vileyns herte. For after the habundance

629

Of the herte speketh the mouth ful ofte. And

629

Ye shul understonde that looke, by the wey,

629

Whan any man shal chastise another, that he

629

Be war from chidynge or reprevynge. For

629

Trewely, but he be war, he may ful lightly

629

Quyken the fir of angre and of wratthe, which

629

That he sholde quenche, and peraventure sleeth

629

Hym, which that he myghte chastise with benignitee.

630

for as seith salomon, the amyable

630

Tonge is the tree of lyf, that is to seyn, of lyf

630

Espiritueel; and soothly, a deslavee tonge sleeth

630

Spirites of hym that repreveth and eek of

631

Hym that is repreved. Loo, what seith seint

631

Augustyn: ther is nothyng so lyk the develes

631

Child as he that ofte chideth. Seint paul seith

631

Eek, the servant of God bihoveth nat to

632

Chide. And how that chidynge be a

632

Vileyns thyng bitwixe alle manere folk,

632

Yet is it certes moost uncovenable bitwixe a

632

Man and his wyf; for there is nevere reste. And

632

Wherfore seith salomon, an hous that is uncovered

632

and droppynge, and a chidynge wyf,

633

Been lyke. A man that is in a droppynge

633

Hous in manye places, though he eschewe the

633

Droppynge in a place, it droppeth on hym in

633

Another place. So fareth it by a chydynge wyf;

633

But shc chide hym in o place, she wol chide

634

Hym in another. And therfore, bettre is a

634

Morsel of breed with joye than an hous ful of

635

Delices with chidynge, seith salomon. Seint

635

Paul seith: oye wommen, be ye subgetes to

635

Youre housbondes as bihoveth in god, and ye

635

Men loveth youre wyves. Add colossenses,

636

Tertio.

636

Afterward speke we of scornynge, which is

636

A wikked synne, and namely whan he

637

Scorneth a man for his goode werkes.

637

For certes, swiche scorneres faren lyk the

637

Foule tode, that may nat endure to smelle the

638

Soote savour of the vyne whanne it florissheth.

638

Thise scorneres been partyng felawes with the

638

Devel; for they han joye whan the devel wynneth,

639

and sorwe whan he leseth. They been

639

Adversaries of jhesu crist, for they haten that

640

He loveth, that is to seyn, salvacioun of soule.

640

Speke we now of wikked conseil; for he that

640

Wikked conseil yeveth is a traytour. For he deceyveth

640

hym that trusteth in hym, ut achitofel

640

Ad absolonem. But nathelees, yet is his wikked

641

Conseil first agayn hymself for, as seith the

641

Wise man, every fals lyvynge hath this propertee

641

in hymself, that he that wole anoye

642

Another man, he anoyeth first hymself.

642

And men shul understonde that man shal

642

Nat taker his conseil of fals folk, ne of angry

642

Folk, or grevous folk, ne of folk that lovern

642

Specially to muchel hir owene profit, ne to

642

Muche worldly folk, namely in conseilynge of

643

Soules.

643

Now comth the synne of hem that sowen

643

And maken discord amounges folk, which is a

643

Synne that crist hateth outrely. And no wonder

644

is; for he deyde for to make concord. And

644

Moore shame do they to crist, than dide they

644

That hym crucifiede; for God loveth bettre that

644

Freendshipe be amonges folk, than he dide his

644

Owene body, the which that he yaf for unitee.

644

Therfore been they likned to the devel, that

645

Evere is aboute to maken discord.

645

Now comth the synne of double tonge;

645

Swiche as speken faire byforn folk, and wikkedly

645

bihynde; or elles they maken semblant

645

As though they speeke of good entencioun, or

645

Elles in game and pley, and yet they speke of

646

Wikked entente.

646

Now comth biwreying of conseil, thurgh

646

Which a man is defamed; certes, unnethe

647

May be restoore the damage.

647

Now comth manace, that is an open

647

Folye; for he that ofte manaceth, he threteth

648

Moore than he may perfourne ful ofte tyme.

648

Now cometh ydel wordes, that is withouten

648

Profit of hym that speketh tho wordes, and eek

648

Of hym that herkneth tho wordes. Or elles ydel

648

Wordes been tho that been nedelees, or withouten

649

entente of natureel profit. And al be it

649

That ydel wordes been somtyme venial synne,

649

Yet sholde men douten hem, for we shul yeve

650

Rekenynge of hem bifore god.

650

Now comth janglynge, that may nat been

650

Withoute synne. And, as seith salomon, it is

651

A sygne a apert folye. And therfore a phI

651

Losophre seyde, whan men axed hym how that

651

Men sholde plese the peple, and he answerde

651

Do manye goode werkes, and spek fewe

652

Jangles.

652

After this comth the synne of japeres,

652

That been the develes apes; for they maken

652

Folk to laughe at hire japerie as folk doon at

652

The gawdes of an ape. Swiche japes deffendeth

653

seint paul. Looke how that vertuouse

653

Wordes and hooly conforten hem that travaillen

653

In the service of crist, right so conforten the

653

Vileyns wordes and knakkes of japeris hem that

654

Travaillen in the service of the devel. Thise

654

Been the synnes that comen of the tonge that

655

Comen of ire and of ohtere synnes mo.

 

Sequitur remedium contra peccatum Ire.

655

The remedie agayns ire is a vertu that men

655

Clepen mansuetude, that is debonairette; and

655

Eek another vertu, that men callen pacience or

656

Suffrance.

656

Debonairetee withdraweth and refreyneth the

656

Stirynges and the moevynges of mannes corage

656

In his herte, in swich manere that they ne

657

Skippe nat out by angre ne by ire. Suffrance

657

suffreth swetely alle the anoyaunces

657

And the wronges that men doon to man outward.

658

seint jerome seith thus of debonairetee,

658

That it dooth noon harm to no wight ne seith;

658

Ne for noon harm that men doon or seyn, he

659

Ne eschawfeth nat agayns his resoun. This

659

Vertu somtyme comth of nature; for, as seith

659

The philosophre, a man is a quyk thyng, by

659

Nature debonaire and tretable to goodnesse;

659

But whan debonairetee is enformed of grace,

660

Thanne is it the moore worth.

660

Pacience, that is another remedie agayns iro,

660

Is a vertu that suffreth swetely every mannes

660

Goodnesse, and is nat wrooth for noon harm

661

That is doon to hym. The philosophre seith

661

That pacience is thilke vertu that suffreth

661

Debonairely alle the outrages of adversitee

662

And every wikked word. This vertu maketh

662

a man lyk to god, and maketh hym

662

Goddes owene deere child, as seith grist. This

662

Vertu disconfiteth thyn enemy. And therfore

662

Seith the wise man. If thow wolt venquysse

663

Thyn enemy, lerne to suffre. And thou shalt

663

Understonde that man suffreth foure manere of

663

Grevances in outward thynges, agayns the

663

Whiche foure he moot have foure manere of

664

Paciences.

664

The firste grevance is of wikkede wordes.

664

Thilke suffrede jhesu crist withouten grucchyng,

664

ful paciently, whan the jewes despised

665

And repreved hym ful ofte. Suffre thou therfore

665

paciently; for the wise man seith, if thou

665

Stryve with a fool, though the fool be wrooth

665

Or though he laughe, algate thou shalt have no

666

Reste. That oother grevance outward is to

666

Have damage of thy catel. Theragayns suffred

666

crist ful paciently, whan he was despoyled

666

Of al that he hadde in this lyf, and that nas

667

But his clothes. The thridde grevance is a

667

Man to have harm in his body. That suffred

668

crist ful paciently in al his passioun. The

668

Fourthe grevance is in outrageous labour in

668

Werkes. Wherfore I seye that folk that maken

668

Hir servantz to travaillen to grevously, or out

668

Of tyme, as on haly dayes, soothly they do greet

669

Synne. Heer-agayns suffred crist ful paciently

669

And taughte us pacience, whan he baar upon

669

His blissed shulder the croys upon which e

670

Sholde suffren despitous deeth. Heere man

670

Men lerne to be pacient; for certes noght oonly

670

Cristen men been pacient, for love of jhesu

670

Crist, and for gerdoun of the blisful lyf that

670

Is perdurable, but certes, the olde payens that

670

Nevere were cristene, commendeden and useden

671

the vertu of pacience.

671

A philosophre upon a tyme, that wolde have

671

Beten his disciple for his grete trespas, for

671

Which he was greetly amoeved, broghte

672

A yerde to scoure with the child; and

672

Whan this child saugh the yerde, he seyde

672

To his maister, what thenke ye do?? I wol

672

Bete thee, quod the maister, for thy correccioun.

673

for sothe, quod the child, ye

673

Oghten first correcte youreself, that han lost

674

Al youre pacience for the gilt of a child.

674

For sothe, quod the maister al wepynge,

674

Thow seyst sooth. Have thow the yerde, my

674

Deere sone, and correcte me for myn impacience.

675

of pacience comth obedience, thurgh

675

Which a man is obedient to crist and to alle

675

Hem to whiche he oghte to been obedient in

676

Crist. And understond wel that obedience is

676

Perfit, whan that a man dooth gladly and

676

Hastily, with good herte entierly, al that

677

He sholde do. Obedience generally is to

677

Perfourne the doctrine of God and of his

677

Sovereyns, to whiche hym oghte to ben obeisaunt

678

in alle rightwisnesse.

 

Sequitur de Accidia.

678

After the synne of envye and of ire, now

678

Wol I speken of the synne of accidie. For

678

Envye blyndeth the herte of a man, and ire

678

Troubleth a man, and accidie maketh hym

679

Hevy, thoghtful, and wraw. Envye and ire

679

Maker bitternesse in herte, which bitternesse

679

Is mooder of accidie, and bynymeth hym the

679

Love of alle goodnesse. Thanne is accidie the

679

Angwissh of troubled herte; and seint augustyn

679

Seith, it is anoy of goodnesse and ioye of

680

Harm. Certes, this is a dampnable synne;

680

For it dooth worng to jhesu crist, in as muche

680

As it bynymeth the service that men oghte doon

681

To crist with alle diligence, as seith salomon.

681

But accidie dooth no swich diligence. He

681

Dooth alle thyng with anoy, and with wrawnesse,

681

slaknesse, and excusacioun, and with

681

Ydelnesse, and unlust; for which the book seith,

681

Acursed be he that dooth the service of

682

God necligently. thanne is accidie enemy

682

to everich estaat of man; for certes,

683

The estaat of man is in three maneres. outher

683

It is th,estaat of innocence, as was th,estaat of

683

Adam biforn that he fil into synne;in which

683

Estaat he was holden to wirche as in heriynge

684

And adowrynge of god. another estaat is the

684

Estaat of synful men, in which estaat men been

684

Holden to laboure in preiynge to God for

684

Amendement of hire synnes, and that he wole

685

Graunte hem to arysen out of hir symmes. another

685

estaat is th,estaat of grace; in which estaat

685

He is holden to werkes of penitence. And certes,

685

To alle thise thynges is accidie enemy and contrarie,

686

for he lovethno bisynesse at al. now

686

Certes, this foule synne, accidie, is eek a ful

686

Greet enemy to the liflode of the body; for it

686

Ne hath no purveaunce agayn temporeel necessitee;

686

For it forsleweth and forsluggeth and

686

Destroyeth alle goodes temporeles by

687

Reccheleesnesse.

687

the fourthe thyng is that accidie is lyk

687

Hem that been in the peyne of helle, by cause

687

Of hir slouthe and of hire hevynesse; for they

687

That been dampned been so bounde that they

688

Ne may neither wel do ne wel thynke. Of

688

Accidie comth first, that a man is anoyed and

688

Encombred for to doon any goodnesse, and

688

Maketh that God hath abhomynacion of swich

689

Accidie, as seith seint john.

689

now comth slouthe, that wol nat suffre

689

Noon hardnesse ne no penaunce. For soothly,

689

Slouthe is so tendre and so delicaat, as seith

689

Salomon, that he wol nat suffre noon hardnesse

689

Ne penaunce, and therfore he shendeth al that

690

He dooth. agayns this roten-herted synne of

690

Accidie and slouthe sholde men exercise hemself

690

To doon goode werkes, and manly and vertuously

690

Cacchen corage wel to doon, thynkynge

690

That oure lord jhesu crist quiteth every good

691

Dede, be it never so lite. usage of labour is

691

A greet thyng, for it maketh, as seith seint bernard,

691

The laborer to have stronge armes and

691

Harde synwes; and slouthe maketh hem

692

Feble and tendre. thanne comth drede

692

To bigynne to werke anye goode werkes.

692

For certes, he that is enclyned to synne, hym

692

Thynketh it is so greet an emprise for to undertake

693

To doon werkes of goodnesse, and

693

Casteth in his herte that the circumstances of

693

Goodnesse been so grevouse and so chargeaunt

693

For to suffre, that he dar nat undertake to do

694

Werkes of goodnesse, as seith seint gregorie.

694

now comth wanhope, that is despeir of the

694

Mercy of god, that comth somtyme of to muche

694

Outrageous sorwe, and somtyme of to muche

694

Drede, ymaginynge that he hath doon so muche

694

Synne that it wol nat availlen hym, though

695

He wolde repenten hym and forsake synne;

695

Thurgh which despeir or drede he abaundoneth

695

Al his herte to every maner synne, as seith

696

Seint augustin. which dampnable synne, if

696

That it continue unto his ende, it is cleped

697

Synnyng in the hooly goost. this horrible

697

Synne is so perilous that he that is

697

Despeired, ther nys no felonye ne no synne that

698

He douteth for to do; as shewed wel by judas.

698

Certes, aboven alle synnes thanne is this synne

699

Moost displesant to crist, and moost adversarie.

699

Soothly, he that despeireth hym is lyk

699

The coward champious recreant, that seith,

699

Creant withoute nede, allas! akkas! bedekes us

700

He recreant and nedelees despeired. certes,

700

The mercy of God is evere redy to the penitent,

701

And is aboven alle his werkes. allas! kan a

701

Man nat bithynke hym on the gospel of seint

701

Luc, 15, where as crist seith that as wel shal

701

Ther be joye in hevene upon a synful man that

701

Dooth penitence, as upon nynty and nyne

702

Rightful men that neden no penitence.

702

Looke forther, in the same gospel, the joye

702

And the feeste of the goode man that hadde

702

Lost his sone, whan his sone with repentaunce

703

Was retourned to his fader. kan they nat remembren

703

Hem eek that, as seith seint luc, 23,

703

How that the theef that was hanged bisyde

703

Jhesu crist, seyde – lord, remembre of me,

704

Whan thow comest into thy regne? for

704

Sothe, seyde crist, I seye to thee, to-day

705

Shaltow been with me in paradys. certes,

705

Ther is noon so horrible synne of man that it

705

Ne may in his lyf be destroyed by penitence,

705

Thurgh vertu of the passion and of the deeth

706

Of crist. allas! what nedeth man thanne to

706

Been despeired, sith that his mercy so redy

707

Is and large? axe and have. thanne cometh

707

Sompnolence, that is, sloggy slombrynge,

707

Which maketh a man be hevy and dul

707

In body and in soule; and this synne comth

708

Of slouthe. and certes, the tyme that, by eey

708

Of resoun, men sholde nat slepe, that is by the

709

Morwe, but if ther were cause resonable. for

709

Soothly, the morwe tyde is moost covenable a

709

Man to seye his preyeres, and for to thynken on

709

God, and for to honoure god, and to yeven

709

Almesse to the povre that first cometh in the

710

Name of crist. lo, what seith salomon –

710

Whoso wolde by the morwe awaken and

711

Seke me, he shal fynde. thanne cometh necligence,

711

Or reccheleesnesse, that rekketh of

711

No thyng. And how that ignoraunce be

711

Mooder of alle harm, certes, necligence

712

Is the norice. necligence ne dooth no

712

Fors, whan he shal doon a thyng, wheither

713

He do it weel or baddely

713

of the remedie of thise two synnes, as seith

713

The wise man, that he that dredeth god, he

714

Spareth nat to doon that him oghte doon.

714

And he that loveth god, he wol doon diligence

714

To plese God by his werkes, and abaundone

715

Hymself, with al his myght, wel for to doon.

715

Thanne comth ydelnesse, that is the yate of alle

715

Harmes. An ydel man is lyk to a place that hath

715

No walles; the develes may entre on every syde,

715

Or sheten at hym at discovert, by temptacion

716

On every syde. this ydelnesse is the thurrok

716

Of alle wikked and vileyns thoghtes, and of

717

Alle jangles, trufles, and of alle ordure.

717

Certes, the hevene is yeven to hem that

717

Wol labourn, and nat to ydel folk. Eek david

717

Seith that they ne been nat in the labour of

717

Men, ne they shul nat been whipped with men,

718

That is to seyn, in purgatorie. certes, thanne

718

Semeth it, they shul be tormented with the

719

Devel in helle, but if they doon penitence.

719

thanne comth the synne that men clepen

719

Tarditas, as whan a man is to laterede or tariynge,

719

Er he wole turne to god; and certes, that

719

Is a greet folie. He is lyk to hym that falleth in

720

The dych, and wol nat arise. and this vice

720

Comth of a fals hope, that he thynketh that he

721

Shal lyve longe; but that hope faileth ful ofte.

721

thanne comth lachesse; that is he, that

721

Whan he biginneth any good werk, anon he

721

Shal forleten it and stynten; as doon they that

721

Han any wight to governe, and ne taken of

721

Hym namoore kep, anon as they fynden

722

Any contrarie or any anoy. thise been

722

The newe sheepherdes that leten hir sheep

722

Wityngly go renne to the wolf that is in the

723

Breres, or do no fors of hir owene governaunce.

723

Of this comth poverte and destruccioun, bothe

723

Of spiritueel and temporeel thynges. Thanne

723

Comth a manere cooldnesse, that freseth al th

724

Herte of a man. thanne comth devoccioun,

724

Thurgh which a man is so blent, as seith seint

724

Bernard, and hath swich languour in soule that

724

He may neither rede ne singe in hooly chirche,

724

Ne heere ne thynke of no devoioun, ne travaille

724

With his handes in no good werk, that it nys

725

Hym unsavory and al apalled. thanne wexeth

725

He slough and slombry, and soone wol be

725

Wrooth, and soone is enclyned to hate and to

726

Envye. thanne comth the synne of worldly

726

Sorwe, swich as is cleped tristicia, that

727

Sleeth man, as seith seint paul. for

727

Certes, swich sorwe werketh to the deeth

727

Of the soule and of the body also; for therof

728

Comth that a man is anoyed of his owene lif.

728

Wherfore swich sorwe shorteth ful ofte the lif

728

Of man, er that his tyme be come by wey of

729

Kynde.

 

Remedium contra peccatum Accidie.

729

Agayns this horrible synne of accidie, an

729

The branches of the same, ther is a vertu that

729

Is called fortitudo or strentthe, that is an affeccioun

729

Thurgh which a man despiseth anoyouse

730

Thinges. this vertu is so myghty and so vigerous

730

That it dar withstonde myghtily and wisely

730

Kepen hymself fro perils that been wikked, and

731

Wrastle agayn the assautes of the devel. for

731

It enhaunceth and enforceth the soule, right as

731

Accidie abateth it and maketh it fieble. For this

731

Fortitudo may endure by long suffraunce

732

The travailles that been covenable.

732

this vertu hath manye speces; and the

732

Firste is cleped magnanimitee, that is to seyn,

732

Greet corage. For certes, ther bihoveth greet

732

Corage agains accidie, lest that it ne swolwe

732

The soule by the synne of sorwe, or destroye it

733

By wanhope. this vertu maketh folk to undertake

733

Harde thynges and grevouse thynges,

734

By hir owene wil, wisely and resonably. and

734

For as muchel as the devel fighteth agayns a

734

Man moore by queyntise and by sleighte than

734

By strengthe, therfore men shal withstonden

735

Hym by wit and by resoun and by discrecioun.

735

Thanne arn ther the vertues of feith and hope

735

In God and in his seintes, to acheve and acomplice

735

The goode werkes in the whiche he purposeth

736

Fermely to continue. thanne comth

736

Seuretee or sikernesse; and that is whan a man

736

Ne douteth no travaille in tyme comynge of

737

The goode werkes that a man hath bigonne.

737

Thanne comth magnificence, that

737

Is to seyn, whan a man dooth and perfourneth

737

Grete werkes of goodnesse; and that

737

Is the ende why that men sholde do goode

737

Werkes, for in the acomplissynge of grete goode

738

Werkes lith the grete gerdoun. thanne is ther

738

Constaunce, that is, stablenesse of corage; and

738

This sholde been in herte by stedefast feith,

738

And in mouth, and in berynge, and in chiere,

739

And in dede. eke ther been mo speciale remedies

739

Against accidie in diverse werkes, and

739

In consideracioun of the peynes of helle and

739

Of the joyes of hevene, and in the trust of the

739

Grace of the holy goost, that wole yeve hym

740

Myght to perfourne his goode entente.

 

Sequitur de Avaricia.

740

After accidie wol I speke of avarice and of

740

Coveitise, of which synne seith seint paul that

740

The roote of alle harmes is coveitise. Ad

741

Thimotheum sexto. for soothly, whan the

741

Herte of a man is confounded in itself and

741

Troubled, and that the soule hath lost the confort

741

Of god, thanne seketh he an ydel solas

742

Of worldly thynges.

742

avarice, after the descripcioun of seint

742

Augustyn, is a likerousnesse in herte to have

743

Erthely thynges. som oother folk seyn that

743

Avarice is for to purchacen manye erthely

743

Thynges, and no thyng yeve to hem that han

744

Nede. and understoond that avarice ne stant

744

Nat oonly in lond ne catel, but somtyme in

744

Science and in glorie, and in every manere

745

Of outrageous thyng is avarice and coveitise.

745

And the difference bitwixe avarice and coveitise

745

Is this – coveitise is for to coveite swiche

745

Thynges as thou hast nat; and avarice is for

745

To withholde and kepe swiche thynges as thou

746

Hast, withoute rightful nede. soothly, this

746

Avarice is a synne that is ful dampnable;

746

For al hooly writ curseth it, and speketh agayns

746

That vice; for it dooth wrong to jhesu

747

Crist. for it bireveth hym the love that

747

Men to hym owen, and turneth it bakward

748

Agayns alle resoun, and maketh that the avaricious

748

Man hath moore hope in his catel than

748

In jhesu crist, and dooth moore observance in

748

Kepynge of his tresor than he dooth to the

749

Service of jhesu crist. and therfore seith

749

Seint paul ad ephesios, quinto, that an avaricious

750

Man is in the thraldom of ydolatrie.

750

what difference is bitwixe an ydolastre and

750

An avaricious man, but that an ydolastre, per

750

Aventure, ne hath but o mawmet or two, and

750

The avaricious man hath manye? for certes,

751

Every floryn in his cofre is his mawmet. and

751

Certes, the synne of mawmettrie is the firste

751

Thyng that God deffended in the ten comaundementz

751

As bereth witnesse in exodi capitulo

752

Vicesimo. thou shalt have no false

752

Goddes bifore me, ne thou shalt make to

752

Thee no grave thyng. Thus is an avaricious

752

Man, that loveth his tresor biforn god, an

753

Ydolastre, thurgh this cursed synne of avarice.

753

Of coveitise comen thise harde lordshipes,

753

Thurgh whiche men been distreyned by taylages,

753

Custumes, and cariages, moore than hire

753

Duetee or resoun is. And eek taken they of

753

Hire bonde-men amercimentz, whiche myghten

753

Moore resonably ben cleped extorcions than

754

Amercimentz. of whiche amercimentz and

754

Raunsonynge of boonde-men somme hordes stywards

754

Seyn that it is ryghtful, for as muche as

754

A cherl hath no temporeel thyng that it ne is his

755

Lordes, as they seyn. but certes, thise lordshipes

755

Doon wrong that bireven hire bondefolk

755

Thynges that they nevere yave hem. Augustinus,

756

De civitate, libro nono. sooth is

756

That the condicioun of thraldom and the firste

756

Cause of thraldom is for synne. Genesis,

757

Nono.

757

thus may ye seen that the gilt disserveth

758

Thraldom, but nat nature. Wherfore thise

758

Lordes ne sholde nat muche glorifien hem in

758

Hir lordshipes, sith that by natureel condicion

758

They been nat lordes over thralles, but that

759

Thraldom comth first by the desert of synne.

759

And forther over, ther as the lawe seith that

759

Temporeel goodes of boonde-folk been the

759

Goodes of hir lordeshipes, ye, that is for to understonde,

759

The goodes of the emperour, to deffenden

759

Hem in hir right, but nat for to robben

760

Hem ne reven hem. and therfore seith

760

Seneca, thy prudence sholde lyve benignely

761

With thy thralles. thilke that thou clepest

761

Thy thralles been goddes peple; for humble

761

Folk been cristes freendes; they been contubernyal

762

With the lord.

762

thynk eek that of swich seed as cherles

762

Spryngen, of swich seed spryngen lordes. As

763

Wel may the cherl be saved as the lord. the

763

Same deeth that taketh the cherl, swich deeth

763

Taketh the lord. Wherfore I rede, do right so

763

With the cherl, as thou woldest that thy lord

764

Dide with thee, if thou were in his plit. every

764

Synful man is a cherl to synne. I rede thee,

764

Certes, that thou, lord, werke in swich wise

764

With thy cherles that they rather love thee than

765

Drede. I woot wel ther is degree above degree,

765

As reson is; and skile is that men do hir devoir

765

Ther as it is due; but certes, extorcions and

766

Despit of youre underlynges is dampnable.

766

and forther over, understoond wel that thise

766

Conquerours or tirauntz maken ful ofte thralles

766

Of hem that been born of as roial blood as

767

Been they that hem conqueren. this

767

Name of thraldom was nevere erst kowth,

767

Til that noe seyde that his sone canaan sholde

768

Be thral to his bretheren for his synne. what

768

Seye we thanne of hem that pilen and doon

768

Extorcions to hooly chirche? certes, the swerd

768

That men yeven first to a knyght, whan he is

768

Newe dubbed, signifieth that he sholde deffenden

768

Hooly chirche, and nat robben it ne

769

Pilen it; and whoso dooth is traitour to crist.

769

And, as seith seint augustyn, they been the

769

Develes wolves that stranglen the sheep of

770

Jhesu crist; and doon worse than wolves.

770

For soothly, whan the wolf hath ful his wombe,

770

He styntheth to strangle sheep. But soothly, the

770

Pilours and destroyours of the godes of hooly

770

Chirche no do nat so, for they ne stynte nevere

771

To pile. now as I have seyd, sith so is that

771

Synne was first cause of thraldom, thanne is it

771

Thus, that thilke tyme that al this world was

771

In synne, thanne was al this world in thraldom

772

And subjeccioun. but certes, sith the

772

Time of grace cam, God ordeyned that som

772

Folk sholde be moore heigh in estaat and in

772

Degree, and som folk moore lough, and that

772

Everich sholde be served in his estaat and in

773

His degree. and therfore in somme contrees,

773

Ther they byen thralles, whan they han turned

773

Hem to the feith, they maken hire thralles free

773

Out of thraldom. And therfore, certes, the lord

773

Oweth to his man that the man oweth to his

774

Lord. the pope calleth hymself servant of the

774

Servantz of god; but for as muche as the estaat

774

Of hooly chirche ne myghte nat han be,

774

Ne the commune profit myghte nat han be kept,

774

Ne pees and rest in erthe, but if God hadde

774

Ordeyned that som men hadde hyer degree and

775

Som men lower, therfore was sovereyntee ordeyned,

775

To kepe and mayntene and deffenden

775

Hire underlynges or hire subgetz in resoun, as

775

Ferforth as it lith in hire power, and nat to destroyen

776

Hem ne confounde. wherfore I seye

776

That thilke lordes that been lyk wolves, that

776

Devouren the possessiouns or the catel of povre

777

Folk wrongfully, withouten mercy or mesure,

777

They shul receyven, by the same

777

Mesure that they han mesured to povre

777

Folk, the mercy of jhesu crist, but if it be

778

Amended. now comth deciete bitwixe marchaunt

778

And marchant. And thow shalt understonde

778

That marchandise is in manye maneres;

778

That oon is bodily, and that oother is goostly;

778

That oon is honest and leveful, and that oother

779

Is deshonest and unleveful. of thilke bodily

779

Marchandise that is leveful and honest is this –

779

That, there as God hath ordeyned that a regne

779

Or a contree is suffisaunt to hymself, thanne is

779

It honest and leveful that of habundaunce of

779

This contree, that men helpe another contree

780

That is moore needy. and therfore ther moote

780

Been marchantz to bryngen fro that o contree

781

To that oother hire marchandises. that oother

781

Marchandise, that men haunten with fraude and

781

Trecherie and deceite, with lesynges and

782

False othes, is cursed and dampnable. espiritueel

782

Marchandise is proprely symonue,

782

That is, ententif desir to byen thyng espiritueel,

782

That is, thyng that aperteneth to the seintuarie

783

Of God and to cure of the soule. this desir,

783

If so be that a man do his diligence to parfournen

783

It, al be it that his desir ne take noon

783

Effect, yet is it to hym a deedly synne; and if

784

He be ordred, he is irreguler. certes symonye

784

Is cleped of simon magus, that wolde han

784

Boght for temporeel catel the yifte that god

784

Hadde yeven, by the hooly goost, to seint

785

Peter and to the apostles. and therfore understoond

785

That bothe he that selleth and he that

785

Beyeth thynges espirituels been cleped symonyals,

785

Be it by catel, be it by procurynge, or

785

By flesshly preyere of his freendes, flesshly

786

Freendes, or espiritueel freendes. flesshly in

786

Two maneres; as by kynrede, or othere freendes.

786

Soothly, if they praye for hym that is nat

786

Worthy and able, it is symonye, if he take the

786

Benefice; and if he be worthy and able,

787

Ther nys noon. that oother manere is

787

Whan men or wommen preyen for folk to

787

Avauncen hem, oonly for wikked flesshly affeccioun

787

That they han unto the persone; and

788

That is foul symonye. but certes, in service,

788

For which men yeven thynges espirituels unto

788

Hir servauntz, it moot been understonde that the

788

Service moot been honest, and elles nat; and

788

Eek that it be withouten bargaynynge, and that

789

The persone be able. for, as seith seint damasie,

789

Alle the synnes of the world, at regard

789

Of this synne, arn as thyng of noght. For it

789

Is the gretteste synne that may be, after the

790

Synne of lucifer and antecrist. for by this

790

Synne God forleseth the chirche and the soule

790

That he boghte with his precious blood, by hem

790

That yeven chirches to hem that been nat

791

Digne. for they putten in theves that stelen

791

The soules of jhesu crist and destroyen his

792

Patrimoyne. by swiche undigne preestes

792

And curates han lewed men the lasse reverence

792

Of the sacramentz of hooly chirche; and

792

Swiche yeveres of chirches putten out the children

792

Of crist, and putten into the chirche the

793

Develes owene sone. they sellen the soules

793

That lambes sholde kepen to the wolf that strangleth

793

Hem. And therfore shul they nevere han

793

Part of the pasture of lambes, that is the blisse

794

Of hevene. now comth hasardrie with his

794

Apurtenaunces, as tables and rafles, of which

794

Comth deceite, false othes, chidynges, and alle

794

Ravynes, blasphemynge and reneiynge of god,

794

And hate of his neighebores, wast of goodes,

795

Mysspendynge of tyme, and somtyme manslaughtre.

795

Certes, hasardours ne mowe nat

795

Been withouten greet synne whiles they haunte

796

That craft. of avarice comen eek lesynges,

796

Thefte, fals witnesse, and false othes. And ye

796

Shul understonde that thise been grete synnes,

796

And expres agayn the comaundementz of /h3>

797

God, as I have seyd. fals witnesse is in

797

Word and eek in dede. In word, as for to

797

Bireve thy neighebores goode name by thy fals

797

Witnessyng, or bireven hym his catel or his

797

Heritage by thy fals witnessyng, whan thou for

797

Ire, or for meede, or for envye, berest fals

797

Witnesse, or accusest hym or excusest hym by

797

Thy fals witnesse, or elles excusest thyself

798

Falsly. ware yow, questemongeres and notaries!

798

Certes, for fals witnessyng was susanna

798

In ful gret sorwe and peyne, and many another

799

Mo. the synne of thefte is eek expres agayns

799

Goddes heeste, and that in two maneres, corporeel

800

Or spiritueel. corporeel, as for to take

800

Thy neighebores catel agayn his wyl, be it by

801

Force or by sleighte, be it by met or by mesure;

801

By stelyng eek of false enditementz upon

801

Hym, and in borwynge of thy neighebores catel,

801

In entente nevere to payen it agayn, and

802

Semblable thynges. espiritueel thefte is

802

Sacrilege, that is to seyn, hurtynge of hooly

802

Thynges, or of thynges sacred to crist, in two

802

Maneres – by reson of the hooly place, as

803

Chirches or chirche-hawes, for which every

803

Vileyns synne that men doon in swiche places

803

May be cleped sacrilege, or every violence in

803

The semblable places; also, they that withdrawen

803

Falsly the rightes that longen to hooly

804

Chirche. and pleynly and generally, sacrilege

804

Is to reven hooly thyng fro hooly place, or unhooly

804

Thyng out of hooly place, or hooly thing

805

Out of unhooly place.

 

Relevacio contra peccatum Avarice.

805

Now shul ye understonde that the releevynge

805

Of avarice is misericorde, and pitee largely

805

Taken. And men myghten axe why that misericorde

806

And pitee is releevynge of avarice.

806

Certes, the avricious man sheweth no pitee ne

806

Misericorde to the nedeful man, for he deliteth

806

Hym in the kepynge of his tresor, and nat

806

In the rescowynge ne releevynge of his evene-cristen.

807

And therfore speke I first of misericorde.

807

Thanne is misericorde, as seith

807

The philosophre, a vertu by which the corage

807

Of a man is stired by the mysese of hym

808

That is mysesed. upon which misericorde

808

Folweth pitee in parfournynge of charitable

809

Werkes of misericorde. and certes, thise

809

Thynges moeven a man to the misericorde of

809

Jhesu crist, that he yaf hymself for oure gilt,

809

And suffred deeth for misericorde, and forgay

810

Us oure originale synnes, and therby relessed

810

Us fro the peynes of helle, and amenused the

810

Peynes of purgatorie by penitence, and yeveth

810

Grace wel to do, and atte laste the blisse of

811

Hevene. the speces of misericorde been, as

811

For to lene and for to yeve, and to foryeven

811

And relesse, and for to han pitee in herte

811

And compassioun of the meschief of his evene-cristene,

811

And eek to chastise, there as nede

812

Is. another manere of remedie agayns

812

Avarice is resonable largesse; but soothly,

812

Heere bihoveth the consideracioun of the grace

812

Of jhesu crist, and of his temporeel goodes,

812

And eek of the goodes perdurables, that crist

813

Yaf to us; and to han remembrance of the

813

Deeth that he shal receyve, he noot whanne,

813

Where, ne how; and eek that he shal forgon al

813

That he hath, save oonly that he hath despended

814

In goode werkes.

814

but for as muche as som folk been unmesurable,

814

Men oghten eschue fool-largesse, that

815

Men clepen wast. certes, he that is fool-large

815

Ne yeveth nat his catel, but he leseth iis catel.

815

Soothly, what thyng that he yeveth for veyne

815

Glorie, as to mynstrals and to folk, for to beren

815

His renoun in the world, he hath synne therof,

816

And noon almesse. certes, he leseth foule his

816

Good, that ne seketh with the yifte of his

817

Good nothyng but synne. he is lyk to an

817

Hors that seketh rather to drynken drovy

817

Or trouble water than for to drynken water of

818

The clere welle. and for as muchel as they

818

Yeven ther as they sholde nat yeven, to hem

818

Aperteneth thilke malisoun that crist shal

818

Yeven at the day of doom to hem that shullen

819

Been dampned.

 

Sequitur de Gula.

819

After avarice comth glotonye, which is expres

819

Eek agayn the comandement of god. Glotonye

819

Is unmesurable appetit toete or to drynke,

819

Or elles to doon ynogh to the unmesurable appetit

819

And desordeynee coveitise to eten or to

820

Drynke. this synne corrumped al this world,

820

As is wel shewed in the synne of adam and of

821

Eve. Looke eek what seith saint paul, of glotonye –

821

Manye, seith seint paul, goon, of

821

Whiche I have ofte seyd to yow, and now I

821

Seye it wepynge, that been the enemys of the

821

Croys of crist; of whiche the ende is deeth, and

821

Of whiche hire wombe is hire god, and hire

821

Glorie in confusioun of hem that so savouren

822

Erthely thynges. he that is

822

Usaunt to this synne of glotonye, he ne

822

May no synne withstonde. He moot been in

822

Servage of alle vices, for it is the develes hoord

823

Ther he hideth hym and resteth. this synne

823

Hath manye speces. The firste is dronkenesse,

823

That is the horrible sepulture of mannes resoun;

823

And therfore, whan a man is dronken, he hath

824

Lost his resoun; and this is deedly synne. but

824

Soothly, whan that a man is nat wont to strong

824

Drynke, and peraventure ne knoweth nat the

824

Strengthe of the drynke, or hath feblesse in his

824

Heed, or hath travailed, thurgh which he drynketh

824

The moore, al be he sodeynly caught with

825

Drynke, it is no deedly synne, but venyal. the

825

Seconde spece of glotonye is that the spirit

825

Of a man wexeth al trouble, for dronkenesse

826

Bireveth hym the discrecioun of his wit. the

826

Thridde spece of glotonye is whan a man devoureth

826

His mete, and hath no rightful

827

Manere of etynge. the fourthe is whan,

827

Thurgh the grete habundaunce of his mete,

828

The humours in his body been distempred. the

828

Fifthe is foryetelnesse by to muchel drynkynge;

828

For which somtymee a man foryeteth er the

828

Morwe what he dide at even, or on the nyght

829

Biforn.

829

in oother manere been distinct the speces of

829

Glotonye, after seint gregorie. The firste is

829

For to ete biforn tyme to ete. The seconde is

829

Whan a man get hym to delicaat mete or

830

Drynke. the thridde is whan men taken to

830

Muche over mesure. The fourthe is curiositee,

830

With greet entente to maken and apparaillen

831

His mete. The fifthe is for to eten to gredily.

831

Thise been the fyve fyngres of the develes

831

Hand, by whiche he draweth folk to

832

Synne.

 

Remedium contra peccatum Gule.

832

Agayns glotonye is the remedie abstinence,

832

As seith galien; but that holde I nat meritorie,

832

If he do it oonly for the heele of his body.

832

Seint augustyn wole that abstinence be doon

833

For vertu and with pacience. abstinence,

833

He seith, is litel worth, but if a man have good

833

Wil therto, and but it be enforced by pacience

833

And by charitee, and that men doon it for

833

Godes sake, and in hope to have the blisse of

834

Hevene.

834

The felawes of abstinence been attemperaunce,

834

that holdeth the meene in alle thynges;

834

Eek shame, that aschueth alle deshonestee; surfisance,

834

that seketh no riche metes ne drynkes,

834

Ne dooth no fors of to outrageous appariailynge

835

of mete; mesure also, that restreyneth

835

By resoun the deslavee appetit of etynge; sobrenesse

835

also, that restreyneth the outrage of

836

Drynke; sparynge also, that restreyneth the

836

Delacaat ese to sitte longe at his mete and

836

Softely, wherfore some folk stonden of

837

Hir owene wyl to eten at the lasse leyser.

 

Sequitur de Luxuria.

837

After glotonye thanne comth lecherie, for

837

Thise two synnes been so ny cosyns that ofte

838

Tyme they wol nat departe. God woot, this

838

Synne is ful displesaunt thyng to god; for he

838

Seyde hymself, do no lecherie. And therfore

838

he putte grete peynes agayns this synne

839

In the olde lawe. If waomman thral were taken

839

In this synne, she sholde be beten with staves

839

To the deeth; and if she were a gentil womman,

839

She sholde be slayn with stones; and if she

839

Were a bisshoppes doghter, she sholde been

840

Brent, by goddes comandement. Forther

840

Over, by the synne of lecherie God dreynte

840

Al the world at the diluge. And after that he

840

Brente fyve citees with thonder-leyt, and sak

841

Hem into helle.

841

Now lat us speke thanne of thilke stynkynge

841

Synne of lecherie that men clepe avowtrie of

841

Wedded folk, that is to seyn, if that oon of

842

Hem be wedded, or elles bothe. Seint john

842

Seith that avowtiers shullen been in helle,

842

In a stank brennynge of fyr and of brymston;

842

In fyr, for hire lecherye; in brymston, for the

843

Stynk of hire ordure. Certes, the brekynge of

843

This sacrement is an horrible thyng. It was

843

Maked of God hymself in paradys, and confermed

843

by jhesu crist, as witnesseth seint

843

Mathew in the gospel: a man shal lete fader

843

And mooder, and taken hym to his wif, and

844

They shullen be two in o flesh. This sacrement

844

bitokneth the knyttynge togidre of crist

845

And of hooly chirche. And nat oonly that god

845

Forbad avowtrie in dede, but eek he comanded

845

That thou sholdest nat coveite thy neighebores

846

Wyf. In this heeste, seith seint augustyn,

846

Is forboden alle manere coveitise to doon lecherie.

846

lo, what seith seint mathew in the gospel,

846

that whose seeth a womman to coveitise

846

Of his lust, he hath doon lecherie with hire

847

In his herte. Heere may ye seen that

847

Nat oonly the dede of this synne is forboden,

848

but eek the desire to doon that synne.

848

This cursed synne anoyeth grevousliche hem

848

That it haunten. And first to hire soule, for he

848

Obligeth it to synne and to peyne of deeth that

849

Is perdurable. Unto the body anoyeth it grevously

849

also, for it dreyeth hym, and wasteth him,

849

And shent hym, and of his blood he maketh sacrifice

849

to the feend of helle. It wasteth eek his

850

Catel and his substaunce. And certes, if it be

850

A foul thyng a man to waste his catel on wommen,

850

yet is it a fouler thyng whan that, for

850

Swich ordure, wommen dispenden upon men

851

Hir catel and substaunce. This synne, as seith

851

The prophete, bireveth man and womman hir

851

Goode fame and al hire honour; and it is ful

851

Plesaunt to the devel, for therby wynneth

852

He the mooste partie of this world. And

852

Right as a marchant deliteth hym moost in

852

Chaffare that he hath moost avantage of, right

853

So deliteth the fend in this ordure.

853

This is that oother hand of the devel with

853

Fyve fyngres to cacche the peple to his vileynye.

854

the firste fynger is the fool lookynge

854

Of the fool womman and of the fool man, that

854

Sleeth, right as the basilicok sleeth folk by the

854

Venym of his sighte; for the coveitise of eyen

855

Folweth the coveitise of the herte. The seconde

855

fynger is the vileyns touchynge in wikkede

855

manere. And therfore seith salomon that

855

Whoso toucheth and handleth a womman, he

855

Fareth lyk hym that handleth the scorpioun that

855

Styngeth and sodeynly sleeth thurgh his envenymynge;

855

as whoso toucheth warm pych,

856

It shent his fyngres. The thridde is foule

856

Wordes, that fareth lyk fyr, that right anon

857

Brenneth the herte. The fourthe fynger

857

Is the kissynge; and trewely he were a

857

Greet fool that wolde kisse the mouth of a

858

Brennynge oven or of a fourneys. And moore

858

Fooles been they that kissen in vileynye, for

858

That mouth is the mouth of helle; and namely

858

Thise olde dotardes holours, yet wol they kisse,

859

Though they may nat do, and smatre hem.

859

Certes, they been lyk to houndes; for an hound,

859

Whan he comth by the roser or by othere

859

(bushes), though he may nat pisse, yet wole

859

He heve up his leg and make a contenaunce

860

To pisse. And for that many man weneth that

860

He may nat synne, for no likerousnesse that

860

He dooth with his wyf, certes, that opinion is

860

Fals. God woot, a man may sleen hymself with

860

His owene knyf, and make hymselve dronken

861

Of his owene tonne. Certes, be it wyf, be it

861

Child, or any worldly thyng that he loveth biforn

861

god, it is his mawmet, and he is an

862

Ydolastre. Man sholde loven hys wyf by

862

Discrecioun, paciently and atemprely; and

863

Thanne is she as though it were his suster. The

863

Fifthe fynger of the develes hand is the stynkynge

864

dede of leccherie. Certes, the fyve fyngres

864

of glotonie the feend put in the wombe

864

Of a man, and with his fyve fingres of lecherie

864

he gripeth hym by the reynes, for to

865

Throwen hym into the fourneys of helle. Ther

865

As they shul han the fyr and the wormes that

865

Evere shul lasten, and wepynge and wailynge

865

Sharp hunger and thurst, and grymnesse of

865

Develes, that shullen al totrede hem without

866

Repit and withouten ende. Of leccherie, as

866

I seyde, sourden diverse speces, as fornicacioun,

866

That is bitwixe man and womman that been

866

Nat maried; and this is deedly synne, and

867

Agayns nature. Al that is enemy and destruccioun

868

to nature is agayns nature.

868

Parfay, the resoun of a man telleth eek hym

868

Wel that is is deedly synne, for as muche as

868

God forbad leccherie. And seint paul yeveth

868

Hem the regne that nys dewe to no wight but

869

To hem that doon deedly synne. Another

869

Synne of leccherie is to bireve a mayden of

869

Hir maydenhede, for he that so dooth, certes,

869

He casteth a mayden out of the hyeste degree

870

That is in this present lif, and bireveth hir

870

Thilke percious fruyt that the book clepeth the

870

Hundred fruyt. I ne kan seye it noon oother-wewyes

870

in englissh, but in latyn it highte centesimus

871

fructus. Certes, he that so dooth is

871

Cause of manye damages and vileynyes, mo

871

Than any man kan rekene; right as he somtyme

871

Is cause of alle damages that beestes don in

871

The feeld, that breketh the hegge or the closure,

871

Thurgh which he destroyeth that may nat

872

Been restoored. For certes, namoore may

872

Maydenhede be restoored than a arm that

872

Is smyten fro the body may retourne agany to

873

Wexe. She may have mercy, this woot I wel,

873

If she do penitence; but nevere shal it be that

874

She nas corrupt. And al be it so that I have

874

Spoken somwhat of avowtrie, it is good to

874

Shewen mo perils that longen to avowtrie, for

875

To eschue that foule synne. Avowtrie in latyn

875

Is for to seyn, approchynge of oother mannes

875

Bed, thurgh which tho that whilom weren a

875

Flessh abowndone hir bodyes to othere persones.

876

of this synne, as seith the wise man,

876

Folwen manye harmes. First, brekynge of feith;

876

And certes, in feith is the keye of cristendom.

877

and whan that feith is broken

877

And lorn, soothly cristendom stant veyn

878

And withouten fruyt. This synne is eek a

878

Thefte; for thefte generally is for to reve a

879

Wight his thyng agayns his wille. Certes, this

879

Is the fouleste thefte that may be, whan a

879

Womman steleth hir body from hir housbonde,

879

And yeveth it to hire holour to defoulen hire;

879

And steleth hir soule fro crist, and yeveth it to

880

The devel. This is a fouler thefte than for to

880

Breke a chirche and stele the chalice; for thise

880

Avowtiers breken the temple of God spiritually

880

And stelen the vessel of grace, that is the body

880

And the soule, for which crist shal destroyen

881

Hem, as seith seint paul. Soothly, of this

881

Thefte douted gretly joseph, whan that his

881

Lordes wyf preyed hym of vileynye, whan he

881

Seyde, lo, my lady, how my lord hath take

881

To me under my warde al that he hath in this

881

World, ne no thyng of his thynges is out of

881

My power, but oonly ye, that been his

882

Wyf. And how sholde I thanne do this

882

Wikkednesse, and synne so horribly agayns

882

God and agayns my lord? God it forbeede!

883

Allas! al to litel is swich trouthe now yfounde.

883

The thridde harm is the filthe thurgh which

883

They breken the comandement of god, and defoulen

883

the auctour of matrimoyne, that is

884

Crist. For certes, in so muche as the sacrement

884

of mariage is so noble and so digne, so

884

Muche is it gretter synne for to breken it; for

884

God made mariage in paradys, in the estaat of

884

Innocence, to multiplye mankynde to the service

885

of god. And therfore is the brekynge

885

Therof the moore grevous; of which brekynge

885

Comen false heires ofte tyme, that wrongfully

885

Ocupien folkes heritages. And therfore wol

885

Crist putte hem out of the regne of hevene, that

886

Is heritage to goode folk. Of this brekynge

886

Comth eek ofte tyme that folk unwar wedden

886

Or synnen with hire owene kynrede, and

886

Namely thilke harlotes that haunten bordels

886

Of thise fool wommen, that mowe be likned to

886

A commune gong, where as men purgen

887

Hire ordure. What seve we eek of putours

887

that lyven by the horrible synne of

887

Putrie, and constreyne wommen to yelden hem

887

A certeyn rente of hire bodily puterie, ye,

887

Somtyme of his owene wyf or his child, as

887

Doon thise bawdes? certes, thise been cursede

888

Synnes. Understoond eek that avowtrie is set

888

Gladly in the ten comandementz bitwixe thefte

888

And manslaughtre; for it is the gretteste thefte

888

That may be, for it is thefte of body and of

889

Soule. and it is lyk to homycide, for it herveth

889

atwo and breketh atwo hem that first were

889

Maked o flessh. And therfore, by the olde lawe

890

Of god, they sholde by slayn. But nathelees,

890

By the lawe of jhesu crist, that is lawe of pitee,

890

Whan he seyde to the womman that was

890

Founden in avowtrie, and sholde han been slayn

890

With stones, after the wyl of the jewes, as was

890

Hir lawe, go, quod jhesu crist, and have

890

Namoore wyl to synne, or, wille namoore

891

To do synne. Soothly the vengeaunce of

891

Avowtrie is awarded to the peynes of helle,

891

But if so be that it be destourbed by penitence.

892

yet been ther mo speces of this

892

Cursed synne; as whan that oon of hem

892

Is religious, or elles bothe; or of folk that been

892

Entred into ordre, as subdekne, or dekne, or

892

Preest, or hospitaliers. And evere the hyer that

893

He is in ordre, the gretter is the synne. The

893

Thynges that gretly agreggen hire synne is the

893

Brekynge of hire avow of chastitee, whan they

894

Receyved the ordre. And forther over, sooth

894

Is that hooly ordre is chief of al the tresorie of

894

Good, and his especial signe and mark of chastitee,

894

to shewe that they been joyned to chastitee,

894

which that is the moost precious lyf that

895

Is. And thise ordred folk been specially titled

895

To god, and of the special meignee of god,

895

For which, whan they doon deedly synne, they

895

Been the special traytours of God and of his

895

Peple; for they lyven of the peple, to preye for

896

.,the peple, and whike they been suche traitours,

896

Here preyer avayleth nat to the peple.

896

Preestes been aungels, as by the dignitee of hir

896

Mysterye; but for sothe, seint paul seith that

896

Sathanas transformeth hym in an aungel

897

Of light. Soothly, the preest that haunteth

897

deedly synne, he may be likned to the

897

Aungel of derknesse transformed in the aungel

897

Of light. He semeth aungel of light, but for

898

Sothe he is aungel of derknesse. Swiche

898

Preestes been the sones of helie, as sweweth

898

In the book of kynges, that they weren the

899

Sones of belial, that is, the devel. Belial is to

899

Seyn, withouten juge; and so faren they; hem

899

Thynketh they been free, and han no juge, namoore

899

than hath a free bole that taketh which

900

Cow that hym liketh in the town. So faren

900

They by wommen. For right as a free bole is

900

Ynough for al a toun, right so is a wikked preest

900

Corrupcioun ynough for al a parisshe, or for al

901

A contree. Thise preestes, as seith the book,

901

Ne konne nat the mysterie of preesthod to the peple,

901

ne God ne knowe they nat. They ne helde

901

Hem nat apayd, as seith the book, os soden

901

Flessh that was to hem offred, but they

902

Tooke by force the flessh that is rawe.

902

Certes, so thise shrewes ne holden hem nat

902

Apayed of roosted flessh and sode flessh, with

902

Which the peple feden hem in greet reverence,

902

But they wole have raw flessh of folkes wyves

903

And hir doghtres. And certes, thise wommen

903

That consenten to hire harlotrie doon greet

903

Wrong to crist, and to hooly chirche, and alle

903

Halwes, and to alle soules; for they bireven alle

903

Thise hym that sholde worshipe crist and hooly

904

Chirche, and preye for cristene soules. And

904

Therfore han swiche preestes, and hire lemmanes

904

eek that consenten to hir leccherie, the

904

Malisoun of al the court cristien, til they come

905

To amendement. The thridde spece of avowtrie

905

is somtyme bitwixe a man and his wyf, and

905

That is whan they take no reward in hire assemblynge

905

but oonly to hire flesshly delit, as

906

Seith seint jerome, and ne rekken of nothyng

906

but that they been assembled; by cause

906

That they been maried, al is good ynough,

907

As thynketh to hem. But in swich folk

907

Hath the devel power, as seyde the aungel

907

Raphael to thobie, for in hire assemblynge

907

They putten jhesu crist out of hire herte, and

908

Yeven hemself to alle ordure. The fourthe

908

Spece is the assemblee of hem that been of

908

Hire kynrede, or of hem that been of oon affynytee,

908

or elles with hem with whiche hir fadres

908

Or hir kynrede han deled in the synne of lecherie.

908

this synne maketh hem lyk to houndes,

909

That taken no kep to kynrede. And certes, parentele

909

is in two maneres, outher goostly or

909

Flesshly; goostly, as for to deelen with his god-sibbes.

910

for right so as he that engendreth a

910

Child is his flesshly fader, right so in his god-fader

910

his fader espiritueel. For which a womman

910

may in no lasse synne assemblen with

910

Hire godsib than with hire owene flesshly

911

Brother. The fifthe spece is thilke abhomynable

911

synne, of which that no man unnethe

911

Oghte speke ne write; nathelees it is

912

Openly reherced ib holy writ. This cursednesse

912

doon men and wommen in

912

Diverse entente and in diverse manere; but

912

Though that hooly writ speke of horrible synne,

912

Certes hooly writ may nat been defouled, namoore

912

than the sonne that shyneth on the

913

Mixne. Another synne aperteneth to leccherie,

913

That comth in slepynge, and this synne cometh

913

Ofte to hem that been maydenes, and eek to hem

913

That been corrupt; and this synne men clepen

914

Polucioun, that comth in foure maneres. Somtyme

914

of langwissynge of body, for the humours

914

Been to ranke and to habundaunt in the body

914

Of man; somtyme of infermetee, for the fieblesse

914

Of the vertu retentif, as phisik maketh mencion;

915

Somtyme for surfeet of mete and drynke; and

915

Somtyme of vileyns thoghtes that been enclosed

915

In mannes mynde whan he gooth to slepe,

915

Which may nat been withoute synne; for which

915

Men moste kepen hem wisely, or elles may men

916

Synnen ful grevously.

 

Remedium contra peccatum Luxurie.

916

Now comth the remedie agayns leccherie,

916

And that is generally chastitee and continence,

916

that restreyneth alle the desordeynee

916

Moevynges that comen of flesshly talentes.

917

and evere the gretter merite shal

917

He han, that moost restreyneth the wikkede

917

eschawfynges of the ardour of this synne.

917

And this is in two maneres, that is to seyn,

917

Chastitee in mariage, and chastitee of widwehod.

918

now shaltow understonde that matrimoyne

918

is leefful assemblynge of man and of

918

Womman that receyven by vertu of the sacrement

918

the boond thurgh which they may nat

918

Be departed in al hir lyf, that is to seyn, whil

919

That they lyven bothe. This, as seith the book,

919

Is a ful greet sacrement. God maked it, as I

919

Have seyd, in paradys, and wolde hymself be

920

Born in mariage. And for to halwen mariage

920

He was at a weddynge, where as he turned water

920

into wyn; which was the firste miracle that

921

He wroghte in erthe biforn his disciples.

921

Trewe effect of mariage clenseth fornicacioun

921

And replenysseth hooly chirche of good lynage;

921

For that is the ende of mariage; and it chaungeth

921

deedly synne into venial synne bitwixe hem

921

That been ywedded, and maketh the hertes al

921

Oon of hem that been ywedded, as wel as

922

The bodies. This is verray mariage, that

922

Was establissed by god, er that synne bigan,

922

whan natureel lawe was in his right poynt

922

In paradys; and it was ordeyned that o man sholde

922

Have but o womman, and o womman but o man,

923

As seith seint augustyn, by manye resouns.

923

First, for mariage is figured bitwixe crist

923

And holy chirche. And that oother is for a

923

Man is heved of a womman; algate, by ordinaunce

924

it sholde be so. For if a womman

924

Hadde mo men that oon, thanne sholde she

924

Have moo hevedes than oon, and that were an

924

Horrible thyng biforn god; and eek a womman

924

Ne myghte nat plese to many folk at oones.

924

And also ther ne sholde nevere be pees ne

924

Reste amonges hem; for everich wolde axen his

925

Owene thyng. And forther over, no man ne

925

Sholde knowe his owene engendrure, ne who

925

Sholde have his heritage; and the womman

925

Sholde been the lasse biloved fro the tyme that

926

She were conjoynt to many men.

926

Now comth how that a man sholde bere

926

Hym with his wif, and namely in two

926

Thynges, that is to seyn, in suffraunce and

926

Reverence, as shewed crist whan he made

927

First womman. For he ne made hire nat

927

Of the heved of adam, for she sholde nat

928

Clayme to greet lordshipe. For ther as the

928

Womman hath the maistrie, she maketh to

928

Muche desray. Ther neden none ensamples of

928

This; the experience of day by day oghte suffise.

929

also, certes, God ne made nat womman

929

Of the foot of adam, for she ne sholde nat

929

Been holden to lowe; for she kan nat paciently

929

Suffre. But God made womman of the ryb of

929

Adam, for womman sholde be felawe unto

930

Man. Man sholde bere hym to his wyf in

930

Feith, in trouthe, and in love, as seith seint

930

Paul, that a man sholde loven his wyf as crist

930

Loved hooly chirche, that loved it so wel

930

That he deyde for it. So sholde a man for his

931

Wyf, if it were nede.

931

Now how that a womman sholde be subget

931

to hire housbonde, that telleth seint

932

Peter. First, in obedience. And eek as

932

Seith the decree, a womman that is wyf,

932

As longe as she is a wyf, she hath noon auctoritee

932

to swere ne to bere witnesse withoute leve

932

Of hir housbonde, that is hire lord; algate, he

933

Sholde be so by resoun. She sholde eek serven

933

Hym in alle honestee, and been attempree of

933

Hire array. I woot wel that they sholde setten

933

Hire entente to plesen hir housbondes, but nat

934

By hire queyntise of array. Seint jerome

934

Seith that wyves that been apparailled in silk

934

And in precious purpre ne mowe nat clothen

934

Hem in jhesu crist. Loke what seith seint

935

John eek in thys matere? seint gregorie eek

935

Seith that no wight seketh precious array but

935

Oonly for veyne glorie, to been honoured the

936

Moore biforn the peple. It is a greet folye,

936

A womman to have a fair array outward

937

And in hirself be foul inward. A wyf

937

Sholde eek be mesurable in lookynge and

937

In berynge and in lawghynge, and discreet

938

In alle hire wordes and hire dedes. And

938

Aboven alle worldy thyng she sholde loven hire

938

Houbonde with al hire herte, and to hym be

939

Trewe of hir body. So sholde an housbonde

939

Eek be to his wyf. For sith that al the body

939

Is the housbondes, so sholde hire herte been,

939

Or elles ther is bitwixe hem two, as in that,

940

No parfit mariage. Thanne shal men understonde

940

that for thre thynges a man and his wyf

940

Flesshly mowen assemble. The firste is in entente

940

of engendrure of children to the service

940

Of god; for certes that is the cause final of

941

Matrimoyne. Another cause is to yelden everich

941

of hem to oother the dette of hire bodies;

941

For neither of hem hath power of his owene

941

Body. The thridde is for to eschewe leccherye

941

and vileynye. The ferthe is for sothe

942

Deedly synne. As to the firste, it is mertorie;

942

the seconde also, for, as seith the

942

Decree, that she hath merite of chastitee that

942

Yeldeth to hire housbonde the dette of hir body,

942

Ye, though it be agayn hir likynge and the lust

943

Of hire herte. The thridde manere is venyal

943

Synne; and, trewely, scarsly may ther any of

943

Thise be withoute venial synne, for the corrupcion

944

and for the delit. The fourthe manere

944

Is for to understonde, as if they assemble oonly

944

For amorous love and for noon of the foreseyde

944

Causes, but for to accomplice thilke brennynge

944

Delit, they rekke nevere how ofte. Soothly it

944

Is deedly synne; and yet, with sorwe, somme

944

Folk wol peynen hem moore to doon than to

945

Hire appetit suffiseth.

945

The seconde manere of chastitee is for to

945

Been a clene wydewe, and eschue the embracynges

945

of man, and desiren the embracynge of

946

Jhesu crist. Thise been tho that han been

946

Wyves and han forgoon hire housbondes, and

946

Eek wommen that han doon leccherie and

947

Been releeved by penitence. And certes,

947

If that a wyf koude kepen hire al chaast

947

By licence of hir housbonde, so that she yeve

947

Nevere noon occasion that he agilte, it were

948

To hire a greet merite. Thise manere wommen

948

that observen chastitee moste be clene

948

In herte as wel as in body and in though, and

948

Mesurable in clothynge and in contenaunce;

948

And been abstinent in etynge and drynkynge,

948

In spekynge, and in dede. They been the vessel

948

or the boyste of the blissed magdelene, that

949

Fulfilleth hooly chirche of good odour. The

949

Thridde manere of chastitee is virginitee, and

949

It bihoveth that she be hooly in herte and clene

949

Of body. Thanne is she spouse to jhesu crist,

950

And she is the lyf of angeles. She is the preisynge

950

of this world, and she is as thise martirs

950

In egalitee; she hath in hire that tonge may

951

Nat telle ne herte thynke. Virginitee baar

951

Oure lord jhesu crist, and virgine was

952

Hymselve.

952

another remedie agayns leccherie is specially

952

to withdrawen swiche thynges as yeve

952

Occasion to thilke vileynye, as ese, etynge, and

952

Drynkynge. For certes, whan the pot boyleth

952

Strongly, the beste remedie is to withdrawe the

953

Fyr. slepynge longe in greet quiete is eek

954

A greet norice to leccherie.

954

Another remedie agayns leccherie is that a

954

Man or a womman eschue the compaignye of

954

Hem by whiche he douteth to be tempted; for

954

Al be it so that the dede be withstonden, yet

955

Is ther greet temptacioun. Soothly, a whit

955

Wal, although it ne brenne noght fully by

955

Stikynge of a candele, yet is the wal blak of

956

The leyt. Ful ofte tyme I rede that no man

956

Truste in his owene perfeccioun, but he be

956

Stronger than sampson, and hoolier than

957

David, and wiser than salomon.

957

Now after that I have declared yow, as

957

I kan, the sevene deedly synnes, and somme

957

Of hire braunches and hire remedies, soothly,

957

If I koude, I wolde telle yow the ten comandementz.

958

but so heigh a doctrine I lete to divines.

958

nathelees, I hope to god, they been

959

Touched in this tretice, everich of hem alle.

 

Sequitur secunda pars Penitencie.

959

Now for as muche as the seconde partie of

959

Penitence stant in confessioun of mouth, as I

959

Bigan in the firste chapitre, I seye, seint augustyn

960

seith: synne is every word and every

960

Dede, and al that men coveiten, agayn the lawe

960

Of jhesu crist; and this is for to synne in herte,

960

In mouth, and in dede, by thy fyve wittes, that

960

Been sighte, herynge, smellynge, tastynge or

961

Savourynge, and feelynge. Now is it good

961

To understonde the circumstances that

962

Agreggen muchel every synne. Thou

962

Shalt considere what thow art that doost

962

The synne, wheither thou be male or femele,

962

Yong or oold, gentil or thral, free or servant,

962

Hool or syk, wedded or sengle, ordred or unordred,

963

wys or fool, clerk or seculeer; if she

963

Be of thy kynrded, bodily of goostly, or noon;

963

If any of thy kynrede have synned with hire,

964

Or noon; and manye mo thinges.

964

Another circumstaunce is this: wheither it

964

Be doon in fornicacioun or in avowtrie or noon;

964

Incest or noon; mayden or noon; in manere of

964

Homicide or noon; horrible grete synnes or

964

Smale; and how longe thou hast continued in

965

Synne. The thridde circumstaunce is the

965

Place ther thou hast do synne; wheither in

965

Oother mennes hous or in thyn owene; in feeld

965

Or in chirche or in chirchehawe; in chirche

966

Dedicaat or noon. For if the chirche be

966

Halwed, and man or womman spille his kynde

966

Inwith that place, by wey or synne or by wikked

966

temptacioun, the chirche is entredited

967

Til it be reconsiled by the bysshop. And

967

The preest sholde be enterdited that dide

967

Swich a vileynye; to terme of al his lif he sholde

967

Namoore synge masse, and if he dide, he sholde

967

Doon deedly synne at every time that he so

968

Songe masse. The fourthe circumstaunce is

968

By whiche mediatours, or by whiche messagers,

968

as for enticement, or for consentement to

968

Bere compaignye with felaweshipe; for many

968

A swecche, for to bere compaignye, wol go to

969

The devel of helle. Wherfore they that eggen

969

Or consenten to the synne been parteners of

969

The synne, and of the dampnacioun of the synnere.

970

The fifthe circumstaunce is how manye

970

Tymes that he hath synne, if it be in his mynde,

971

And how ofte that he hath falle. For he that

971

Ofte talleth in synne, he despiseth the mercy

971

Of god, and encreesseth hys synne, and is unkynde

971

to crist; and he wexeth the moore

971

Fieble to withstonde synne, and synneth

972

The moore lightly, and the latter ariseth,

972

And is the moore eschew for to shryven

973

Hym, and namely, to hym that is his confessour.

973

For which that folk, whan they falle agayn in

973

Hir olde folies, outher they forleten hir olde

973

Confessours ol outrely, or eles they departen

973

Hir shrift in diverse places; but soothly, swich

973

Departed shrift deserveth no mercy of God of

974

His synnes. The sixte sircumstaunce is why

974

That a man synneth, as by which temptacioun;

974

And if hymself procure thilke temptacioun, or by

974

The excitynge of oother folk; or if he synne

974

With a womman by force, or by hire owene

975

Assent; of if the womman, maugree hir hed,

975

Hath been afforced, or noon. This shal she

975

Telle: for coveitise, or for poverte, and if it was

975

Hire procurynge, or noon; and swich manere

976

Harneys. The seventhe circumstaunce is in

976

What manere he hath doon his synne, or how

976

That she hath suffred that folk han doon

977

To hire. And the same shal the man telle

977

Pleynly with alle circumstaunces; and

977

Wheither he hath synned with comune bordel

978

Wommen, or noon; or doon his synne in hooly

978

Tymes, or noon; in fastyng tymes, or noon; or

979

Biforn his shrifte, or after his latter shrifte;

979

And hath peraventure broken therfore his penance

979

enjoyned; by whos help and whos conseil;

980

By sorcerie or craft; al moste be toold. Alle

980

Thise thynges, after that they been grete or

980

Smale, engreggen the conscience of man. And

980

Eek the preest, that is thy juge, may the bettre

980

Been avysed of his juggement in yevynge of

980

Thy penaunce, and that is after thy contricioun.

981

for understond wel that after tyme

981

That a man hath defouled his baptesme by

981

Synne, if he wole come to salvaciou, ther is

981

Noon other wey but by penitence and

982

Shrifte and satisfaccioun; and namely by

982

The two, if ther be a confessour to which

982

He may shriven hym, and the thridde, if he

983

Have lyf to parfournen it.

983

Thanne shal man looke and considere that

983

If he wole maken a trewe and a profitable confessioun,

984

ther moste be foure condiciouns.

984

First, it moot been in sorweful bitternesse of

984

Herte, as seyde the kyng ezechias to god: I

984

Wol remembre me alle the yeres of my lif in

985

Bitternesse of myn herte. This condicioun of

985

Bitternesse hath fyve signes. The firste is that

985

Confessioun moste be shamefast, nat for to coyere

985

ne hyden his synne, for he hath agilt his

986

God and defouled his soule. And herof seith

986

Seint augustyn: the herte tavailleth for

986

Shame of his synne; and for he hath greet

986

Shamefastnesse, he is digne to have greet

987

Mercy of god. Swich was the confessioun

987

of the publican that wolde nat heven

987

Up his eyen to hevene, for he hadde offended

987

God of hevene; for which shamefastnesse he

988

Hadde anon the mercy of god. And therof

988

Seith seint augustyn that swich shamefast folk

989

Been next foryevenesse and remissioun. Another

989

signe is humylitee in confessioun; of

989

Which seith seint peter,~humbleth yow under

989

The myght of god. The hond of God is

989

Myghty in confessiou, for therby God foryeveth

989

thee thy synnes, for he allone hath the

990

Power. And this humylitee shal been in herte,

990

And in signe outward; for right as he hath humylitee

990

to God in his herte, right so sholde he

990

Humble his body outward to the preest, that

991

Sit in goddes place. For which in no manere,

991

sith that crist is sovereyn, and the preest

991

Meene and mediatour bitwixe crist and the

991

Synnere, and the synnere is the laste by

992

Wey of resoun, thanne sholde nat the

992

Synnere sitte as heighe as his confessour,

992

But knele biforn hym or at his feet, but if maladie

992

destourbe it. For he shal nat taken kep

992

Who sit there, but in whos place that he sitteth.

993

a man that hath trespased to a lord,

993

And comth for to axe mercy and maken his accord,

993

and set him doun anon by the lord, men

993

Wolde holden hym outrageous, and nat worthy

994

So soone for to have remissioun ne mercy. The

994

Thridde signe is how that thy shrift sholde

994

Be ful of teeris, if man may, and if man may

994

Nat wepe with his bodily eyen, lat hym wepe

995

In herte. Swich was the confession of seint

995

Peter, for after that he hadde forsake jhesu

996

Crist, he wente out and weep ful bitterly.

996

The fourthe signe is that he ne lette nat

997

For shame to shewen his confessioun.

997

Swich was the confessioun of the magdalene,

997

that ne spared, for no shame of hem

997

That weren atte feeste, for to go to oure lord

998

Jhesu crist and biknowe to hym hire synne.

998

The fifthe signe is that a man or a womman

998

Be obeisant to receyven the penaunce that hym

998

Is enjoyned ofr his synnes, for certes, jhesu

998

Crist, for the giltes of o man, was obedient to

999

The deeth.

999

The seconde condicion of verray confession

999

Is that it be hastily doon. For certes, if a man

999

Hadde a deedly wounde, evere the lenger that

999

He taried to warisshe hymself, the moore wolde

999

It corrupte and haste hym to his deeth; and

999

Eek the wounde wolde be the wors for to

1000

Heele. And right so fareth synne that longe

1001

Tyme is in a man unshewed. Certes, a man

1001

Oghte hastily shewen his synnes for manye

1001

Causes; as for drede of deeth, that cometh ofte

1001

Sodeynly, and no certeyn what tyme it shal be,

1001

Ne in what place; and eek the drecchynge

1002

of o synne draweth in another; and

1002

Eek the lenger that he tarieth, the ferther

1002

He is fro crist. And if he abide to his laste day,

1002

Scarsly may he shryven hym or remembre hym

1002

Of his synnes or repenten hym, for the grevous

1003

Maladie of his deeth. And for as muche as he

1003

Ne hath nat in his lyf herkned jhesu crist

1003

Whanne he hath spoken, he shal crie to jhesu

1003

Crist at his laste day, and scarsly wol he

1004

Herkne hym. And understond that this condicioun

1004

moste han foure thunges. Thi shrift

1004

Moste be purveyed bifore and avysed; for

1004

Wikked haste dooth no profit; and that a man

1004

Konne shryve hym of his synnes, be it of pride,

1004

Or of envye, and so forth with the speces and

1005

Circumstances; and that he have comprehended

1005

in hys mynde the nombre and the

1005

Greetnesse of his synnes, and how longe that

1006

He hath leyn in synne; and eek that he be

1006

Contrit of his synnes, and in stidefast purpos,

1006

By the grace of god, nevere eft to falle in

1006

Synne; and eek that he drede and countrewaite

1006

Hymself, that he fle the occasiouns of

1007

Synne to whiche he is enclyned. Also

1007

Thou shalt shryve thee of alle thy synnes

1007

To o man, and nat a parcel to o man and a parcel

1007

to another; that is to understonde, in entente

1007

To departe thy confessioun, as for shame of

1008

Drede; for it nys but stranglynge of thy soule.

1008

For certes jhesu crist is entierly al good; in

1008

Hym nys noon imperfeccioun; and therfore

1009

Outher he foryeveth al parfitly or never a deel.

1009

I seye nat that if thow be assigned to the penitauncer

1009

for certein synne, that thow art bounde

1009

To shewen hym al the remenaunt fo thy synnes,

1009

Of whiche thow hast be shryven of thy curaal,

1009

But if it like to thee of thyn humylitee; this is

1010

No departynge of shrifte. Ne I seye nat, ther

1010

As I speke of divisioun of confessioun, that

1010

If thou have licence for to shryve thee to a discreet

1010

and an honest preest, where thee liketh,

1010

And by licence of thy curaat, that thow ne

1010

Mayst wel shryve thee to him al alle thy

1011

Synnes. But lat no blotte be bihynde; lat no

1011

Synne been untoold, as fer as thow hast

1012

Remembraunce. And whan thou shalt be

1012

Shryven to thy curaat, telle hym eek alle

1012

The synnes that thow hast doon syn thou were

1012

Last yshryven; this is no wikked entente of divisioun

1013

of shrifte.

1013

Also the verray shrifte axeth certeine condiciouns.

1013

first, that thow shryve thee by thy

1013

Free wil, noght constreyned, ne for shame of

1013

Folk, ne for maladie, ne swich thynges. For

1013

It is resoun that he that trespaseth by his free

1013

Wyl, that by his free wyl he confesse his trespas;

1014

and that noon oother man telle his synne

1014

But he hymself; ne he shal nat nayte ne denye

1014

His synne, ne wratthe hym agayn the preest

1015

For his amonestynge to lete synne. The seconde

1015

condicioun is that thy shrift be laweful,

1015

That is to seyn, that thow that shryvest thee,

1015

And eek the preest that hereth thy confessioun,

1016

Been verraily in the feith of hooly chirche;

1016

And that a man ne be nat despeired of the

1017

Mercy of jhesu crist, as caym or judas.

1017

And eek a man moot accusen hymself of

1017

His owene trespas, and nat another; but he

1017

Shal blame and wyten hymself and his owene

1018

Malice of his synne, and noon oother. But

1018

Nathelees, if that another man be occasioun or

1018

Enticere of his synne, or the estaat of a persone

1018

be swich thurgh which his synne is

1018

Agregged, or elles that he may nat pleynly

1018

Shryven hym but he telle the persone with

1019

Which he hath synned, thanne may he telle it,

1019

So that his entente ne be nat to bakbite the

1019

Persone, but oonly to declaren his confessioun.

1020

Thou ne shalt nat eek make no lesynges in

1020

Thy confessioun, for humylitee, peraventure, to

1020

Seyn that thou hast doon synnes of whiche

1021

Thow were nevere gilty. For seint augustyn

1021

Seith, if thou, by cause of thyn hymylitee,

1021

Makest lesynges on thyself, though thow ne

1021

Were nat in synne biforn, yet artow thanne

1022

In synne thurgh thy lesynges. Thou

1022

Most eek shewe thy synne by thyn owene

1022

Propre mouth, but thow be woxe dowmb, and

1022

Nat by no lettre; for thow that hast doon the

1023

Synne, thou shalt have the shame therfore.

1023

Thow shalt nat eek peynte thy confessioun by

1023

Faire subtile wordes, to covere the moore thy

1023

Synne; for thanne bigilestow thyself, and nat

1023

The preest. Thow most tellen it platly, be it

1024

Nevere so foul ne so horrible. Thow shalt

1024

Eek shryve thee to a preest that is discreet to

1024

Conseille thee; and eek thou shalt nat shryve

1024

Thee for veyne glorie, ne for ypocrisye, ne for no

1024

Cause but oonly for the doute of jhesu crist and

1025

The heele of thy soule. Thow shalt nat eek

1025

Renne to the preest sodeynly to tellen hym

1025

Lightly thy synne, as whoso telleth a jape or

1026

A tale, but avysely and with greet devocioun.

1026

And generally, shryve thee ofte. If thou

1027

Ofte falle, ofte thou arise by confessioun.

1027

And though thou shryve thee ofter than

1027

Ones of synne of which thou hast be shryven,

1027

It is the moore merite. And, as seith seint

1027

Augustyn, thow shalt have the moore lightly

1027

Relessyng and grace fo god, bothe of synne and

1028

Of peyne. And certes, oones a yeere atte leeste

1028

Wey it is laweful for to been housled; for certes,

1029

Oones a yeere alle thynges renovellen.

 

Explicit secunda pars Penitencie.

Sequitur tercia pars eiusdem.

1029

Now have I toold yow of verray confessioun,

1030

that is the seconde partie of penitence.

1030

The thridde partie of penitence is satisfaccioun,

1030

and that stant moost generally in almesse

1031

and in bodily peyne. Now been ther thre

1031

Manere of almesse: contricion of herte, where

1031

A man offreth hymself to god; another is to

1031

Han pitee of defaute of his neighebores; and the

1031

Thridde is in yevynge of good conseil and comfort,

1031

goostly and bodily, where men han nede,

1031

And namely in sustenaunce of mannes

1032

Foode. And tak kep that a man hath

1032

Nede of thise thinges generally: he hath

1032

Nede of foode, he hath nede of clothyng

1032

and herberwe, he hath nede of charitable

1032

conseil and visitynge in prisone and

1033

In maladie, and sepulture of his dede body.

1033

And if thow mayst nat visite the nedeful

1033

with thy persone, visite hym by thy

1034

Message and by thy yiftes. Thise been general

1034

almesses or werkes of chritee of hem that

1034

Han temporeel richesses or discrecioun in conseilynge.

1034

of thise werkes shaltow heren at the

1035

Day of doom.

1035

Thise almesses shaltow doon of thyne owene

1035

Propre thynges, and hastily and prively, if

1036

Thow mayst. But nathelees, if thow mayst

1036

Ant doon it prively, thow shalt nat forbere to

1036

Doon almesse though men seen it, so that it

1036

Be nat doon for thank of the world, but

1037

Oonly for thank of jhesu crist. For, as

1037

Witnesseth seint mathew, capitulo quinto,

1037

A citee may nat been hyd that is set on a

1037

Montayne, ne men lighte nat a lanterne and

1037

Put it under a busshel, but men sette it on a

1037

Candle-stikke to yeve light to the men in the

1038

Hous. Right so shal youre light lighten bifore

1038

Men, that they may seen youre goode werkes,

1039

And glorifie youre fader that is in hevene.

1039

Now as to speken of bodily peyne, it stant

1039

In preyeres, in wakynges, in fastynges, in vertuouse

1040

techynges of orisouns. And ye shul

1040

Understonde that orisouns or preyeres is for to

1040

Seyn a pitous wyl of herte, that redresseth it

1040

In God and expresseth it by word outward, to

1040

Remoeven harmes and to han thynges espiritueel

1040

and durable, and somtyme temporele

1040

Thynges; of whiche orisouns, certes, in the

1040

Orison of the pater noster hath jhesu crist enclosed

1041

moost thynges. Certes, it is privyleged

1041

of thre thynges in his dignytee, for

1041

Which it is moore digne than any oother

1041

Preyere; for that jhesu crist hymself

1042

Maked it; and it is short, for it sholde

1042

Be koud the moore lightly, and for to

1042

Withholden it the moore esily in herte, and

1043

Helpen hymself the ofter with the orisoun,

1043

And for a man sholde be the lasse wery to

1043

Seyen it, and for a man may nat excusen hym

1043

To lerne it, it is so short and so esy; and for it

1044

Comprehendeth in it self alle goode preyeres.

1044

The exposicioun of this hooly preyere, that is

1044

So excellent and digne, I bitake to thise maistres

1044

of theologie, save thus muchel wol I seyn;

1044

That whan thow prayest that God sholde for

1044

Yeve thee thy giltes as thou foryevest hem that

1044

Agilten to thee, be ful wel war that thow ne

1045

Be nat out of charitee. This hooly orison

1045

Amenuseth eek venyal synne, and therfore it

1046

Aperteneth specially to penitence.

1046

This preyere moste be trewely seyd, and in

1046

Verray feith, and that men preye to God ordinatly

1046

and discreetly and devoutly; and alwey

1046

A man shal putten his wyl to be subget to

1047

The wille of god. This orisoun moste eek

1047

Been seyd with greet humblesse and ful

1047

Pure; honestly, and nat to the anoyaunce of

1047

Any man or womman. It moste eek been continued

1048

with the werkes of chritee. It avayleth

1048

eek agayn the vices of the soule; for, as

1048

Seith seint jerome, by fastynge been saved the

1048

Vices of the flessh, and by preyere the vices of

1049

The soule.

1049

After this, thou shalt understonde that bodily

1049

peyne stant in wakynge; for jhesu crist

1049

Seith, waketh and preyeth, that ye ne entre

1050

In wikked temptacioun. Ye shul understanden

1050

also that fastynge stant in thre thynges:

1050

In forberynge of bodily mete and drynke, and

1050

In forberynge of worldly jolitee, and in forberynge

1050

of deedly synne; this is to seyn, that a

1050

Man shal kepen hym fro deedly synne with al

1051

His might.

1051

And thou shalt understanden eek that god

1051

Ordeyned fastynge, and to fastynge appertenen

1052

foure thinges: largenesse to

1052

Povre folk; gladnesse of herte espiritueel,

1052

Nat to been angry ne anoyed, ne grucche for

1052

He fasteth; and also resonable houre for to ete;

1052

Ete by mesure; that is for to seyn, a man shal

1052

Nat ete in untyme, ne sitte the lenger at his

1053

Table to ete for he fasteth.

1053

Thanne shaltow understonde that bodily

1053

Peyne stant in disciplyne or techynge, by word,

1053

Or by writynge, or in ensample; also in werynge

1053

of heyres, or of stamyn, or of haubergeons

1053

on hire naked flessh, for cristes sake,

1054

And swiche manere penances. But war thee

1054

Wel that swiche manere penaunces on thy

1054

Flessh ne make nat thyn herte bitter or angry

1054

Or anoyed of thyself; for bettre is to caste awey

1054

Thyn heytre, that for to caste awey the swetenesse

1055

of jhesu crist. And therfore seith seint

1055

Paul, clothe yow, as they that been chosen

1055

Of god, in herte of misericorde, debonairetee,

1055

Suffraunce, and swich manere of clothynge;

1055

Of whiche jhesu crist is moore apayed than

1056

Of heyres, or haubergeouns, or hauberkes.

1056

Thanne is discipline eek in knokkynge of

1056

Thy brest, in scourgynge with yerdes, in

1057

Knelynges, in tribulaciouns, in suffrynge

1057

Paciently wronges that been doon to thee,

1057

And eek in pacient suffraunce of maladies, or

1057

Lesynge of worldly catel, or of wyf, or of child,

1058

Or othere freendes.

1058

Thanne shaltow understonde whiche thynges

1058

Destourben penaunce; and this is in foure

1058

Maneres, that is, drede, shame, hope, and wanhope,

1059

that is, desperacion. And for to speke

1059

First of drede; for which he weneth that he

1060

May suffre no penaunce; ther-agayns is remedie

1060

for to thynke that bodily penaunce is but

1060

Short and litel at regard of the peyne of helle,

1060

That is so crueel and so long that it lasteth

1061

Withouten ende.

1061

Now again the shame that a man hath to

1061

Shryven hym, and namely thise ypocrites that

1061

Wolden been holden so parfite that they

1062

Han no nede to shryven hem; agayns that

1062

Shame sholde a man thynke that, by wey

1062

Of resoun, that he that hath nat been shamed

1062

To doon foule thinges, certes hym oghte nat

1062

Been ashamed to do faire thynges, and that is

1063

Confessiouns. A man sholde eek thynke that

1063

God seeth and woot alle his thoghtes and alle

1063

His werkes; to hym may no thyng been hyd

1064

Ne covered. Men sholden eek remembren

1064

Hem of the shame that is to come at the day

1064

Of doom to hem that been nat penitent and

1065

Shryven in this present lyf. For alle the

1065

Creatures in hevene, in erthe, and in helle

1065

Shullen seen apertly al that they hyden in this

1066

World.

1066

Now for to speken of the hope of hem that

1066

Been necligent and slowe to shryven

1067

Hem, that stant in two maneres. That

1067

Oon is that he hopeth for to lyve longe

1067

And for to purchacen muche richesse for his

1067

Delit, and thanne he wol shryven hym; and

1067

As he seith, hym semeth thanne tymely

1068

Ynough to come to shrifte. Another is of

1069

Surquidrie that he hath in cristes mercy.

1069

Agayns the firste vice, he shal thynke that oure

1069

Life is in no sikernesse, and eek that alle the

1069

Richesses in this world ben in aventure, and

1070

Passen as a shadwe on the wal; and , as seith

1070

Seint gregorie, that it aperteneth to the grete

1070

Righwisnesse of God that nevere shal the peyne

1070

Stynte of hem that nevere wolde withdrawen

1070

Hem fro synne, hir thankes, but ay continue

1070

In synne; for thilke perpetueel wil to do synne

1071

Shul they han perpetueel peyne.

1071

Wanhope is in two maneres; the firste wanhope

1071

is in the mercy of crist; that oother is

1071

That they thynken that they ne myghte

1072

That longe persevere in goodnesse. The

1072

Firste wanhope comth of that he demeth

1072

That he hath synned so greetly and so ofte,

1072

And so longe leyn in synne, that he shal

1073

Nat be saved. Certes, agayns that cursed wanhope

1073

sholde he thynke that the passion of jhesu

1073

Crist is moore strong for to bynde than

1074

Synne is strong for to bynde. agayns the

1074

Seconde wanhope he shal thynke that as ofte

1074

As he falleth he may arise agayn by penitence.

1074

And though he never so longe have leyn in

1074

Synne, the mercy of crist is alwey redy to receiven

1075

hym to mercy. Agayns the wanhope

1075

That he demeth that he sholde nat longe persevere

1075

in goodnesse, he shal thynke that the

1075

Feblesse of the devel may nothyng doon, but

1076

If men wol suffren hym; and eek he shal han

1076

Strengthe of the help of god, and of al hooly

1076

Chirche, and of the proteccioun of aungels,

1077

if hym list.

1077

Thanne shal men understonde what is

1077

The fruyt of penaunce; and, after the word of

1077

Jhesu crist, it is the endelees blisse of hevene,

1078

ther joye hath no contrarioustee of wo

1078

Ne grevaunce; ther alle harmes been passed

1078

Of this present lyf; ther as is the sikernesse fro

1078

The peyne of helle; ther as is the blisful compaignye

1078

that rejoysen hem everemo, everich of

1079

Otheres joye; ther as the body of man, that

1079

Whilom was foul and derk, is moore cleer than

1079

The sonne; ther as the body, that whilom was

1079

Syk, freele, and fieble, and mortal, is inmortal,

1079

And so strong and so hool that ther may no

1080

Thyng apeyren it; ther as ne is neither hunger,

1080

thurst, ne coold, but every soule replenyssed

1080

with the sighte of the parfit knowynge

1081

Of god. This blisful regne may men purchace

1081

by poverte espiritueel, and the glorie by

1081

Lowenesse, the plentee of joye by hunger and

1081

Thurst, and the reste by travaille, and the

1082

Lyf by deeth and mortificacion of synne.

 

Heere is ended the

Persouns Tale.