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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- HERE FOLLOW THE WORDS OF THE FRANKLIN
- TO THE SQUIRE, AND THE WORDS OF THE
- HOST TO THE FRANKLIN
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- In faith, sir squire, you have done well with it,
- And openly I praise you for your wit,"
- The franklin said, "Considering your youth,
- So feelingly you speak, sir, in good truth!
- In my opinion, there is none that's here
- In eloquence shall ever be your peer,
- If you but live; may God give you good chance
- And in all virtue send continuance!
- For, sir, your speech was great delight to me.
- I have a son, and by the Trinity
- I'd rather have, than twenty pounds in land,
- Though it were right now fallen to my hand,
- He were a man of such discretion shown
- As you, sir; fie on what a man may own,
- Unless the man have virtue therewithal.
- I've checked my son, and yet again I shall,
- For he toward virtue chooses not to wend;
- But just to play at dice, and gold to spend,
- And lose all that he has, is his usage.
- And he would rather talk with any page
- Than to commune with any gentle wight
- From whom he might, learn courtesy aright."
- "A straw for courtesy!" exclaimed our host;
- "What, franklin? Gad, sir, well you know, I trust,
- That each of you must tell us, at the least,
- A tale or two, or break his sworn behest."
- "I know it," said the franklin; "I am fain,
- And pray you all, you do not me disdain,
- Though to this man I speak a word or two."
- "Come, tell your tale, sir, without more ado."
- "Gladly, sir host," said he, "I will obey
- Your will, good host; now hearken what I say.
- For I'll not be contrary in any wise,
- At least so far as my wit shall suffice;
- I pray to God that it may please you; rough
- Though it may be, I'll know 'tis good enough.
-
-
-
- THE FRANKLIN'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- These ancient gentle Bretons, in their days,
- Of divers high adventures made great lays
- And rhymed them in their primal Breton tongue,
- The which lays to their instruments they sung,
- Or else recited them where joy might be;
- And one of them have I in memory,
- Which I shall gladly tell you, as I can.
- But, sirs, because I am an ignorant man,
- At my beginning must I first beseech
- You will excuse me for my vulgar speech;
- I never studied rhetoric, that's certain;
- That which I say, it must be bare and plain.
- I never slept on Mount Parnassus, no,
- Nor studied Marcus Tullius Cicero.
- Colours I know not, there's no doubt indeed,
- Save colours such as grow within the mead,
- Or such as men achieve with dye or paint.
- Colours of rhetoric I find but quaint;
- My spirit doesn't feel the beauty there.
- But if you wish, my story you shall hear."
-
-
- HERE ENDS THE FRANKLIN'S PROLOGUE
-
-
- THE FRANKLIN'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- In old Armorica, now Brittany,
- There was a knight that loved and strove, did he
- To serve a lady in the highest wise;
- And many a labour, many a great emprise
- He wrought for her, or ever she was won.
- For she was of the fairest under sun,
- And therewithal come of so high kindred
- That scarcely could this noble knight, for dread,
- Tell her his woe, his pain, and his distress.
- But at the last she, for his worthiness,
- And specially for his meek obedience,
- Had so much pity that, in consequence,
- She secretly was come to his accord
- To take him for her husband and her lord,
- Of such lordship as men have over wives;
- And that they might be happier in their lives,
- Of his free will he swore to her, as knight,
- That never in his life, by day or night,
- Would he assume a right of mastery
- Against her will, nor show her jealousy,
- But would obey and do her will in all
- As any lover of his lady shall;
- Save the name and show of sovereignty,
- Those would he have, lest he shame his degree
- She thanked him, and with a great humbleness
- She said: "Since, sir, of your own nobleness
- You proffer me to have so loose a rein
- Would God there never come between us twain,
- For any guilt of mine, a war or strife.
- Sir, I will be your humble, faithful wife,
- Take this as truth till heart break in my breast."
- Thus were they both in quiet and in rest.
- For one thing, sirs, I safely dare to say,
- That friends each one the other must obey
- If they'd be friends and long keep company.
- Love will not be constrained by mastery;
- When mastery 'comes, the god of love anon
- Beats his fair wings, and farewell! He is gone!
- Love is a thing as any spirit free;
- Women by nature love their liberty,
- And not to be constrained like any thrall,
- And so do men, if say the truth I shall.
- Observe who is most patient in his love,
- He is advantaged others all above.
- Patience is virtue high, and that's certain;
- For it does vanquish, as these clerks make plain,
- Things that oppression never could attain.
- One must not chide for trifles nor complain.
- Learn to endure, or else, so may I go,
- You'll have to learn it, whether you will or no.
- For in this world, it's certain, no one is
- Who never does or says sometimes amiss.
- Sickness, or woe, or what the stars have sent,
- Anger, or wine, or change of temperament
- Causes one oft to do amiss or speak.
- For every wrong one may not vengeance wreak;
- Conditions must determine temperance
- In all who understand good governance.
- And therefore did this wise and worthy knight,
- To live in quiet, patience to her plight,
- And unto him full truly did she swear
- That never should he find great fault in her.
- Here may men see an humble wise accord;
- Thus did she take her servant and her lord,
- Servant in love and lord in their marriage;
- So was he both in lordship and bondage;
- In bondage? Nay, but in lordship above,
- Since he had both his lady and his love;
- His lady truly, and his wife also,
- To which the law of love accords, we know.
- And when he was in this prosperity,
- Home with his wife he went to his country,
- Not far from Penmarch, where his dwelling was.
- And there he lived in bliss and all solace.
- Who could relate, save those that wedded be,
- The joy, the ease, and the prosperity
- That are between a husband and a wife?
- A year and more endured this blissful life,
- Until the knight, of whom I've spoken thus,
- Who at Kayrrud I was called Arviragus,
- Arranged to go and dwell a year or twain
- In England, which was then known as Britain,
- To seek in arms renown and great honour;
- For his desire was fixed in such labour;
- And there he lived two years (the book says thus).
- Now will I hold from this Arviragus,
- And I will speak of Dorigen his wife,
- Who loved her husband as her heart's own life.
- For all his absence wept she and she sighed,
- As noble wives do at a lone fireside.
- She mourned, watched, wailed, she fasted and complained;
- Desire for him so bound her and constrained,
- That all this wide world did she set at naught.
- Her friends, who knew her grief and heavy thought,
- Comforted her as they might do or say;
- They preached to her, they told her night and day
- That for no cause she killed herself, alas!
- And every comfort possible in this pass
- They gave to her, in all their busyness,
- To make her thus put by her heaviness.
- With passing time, as you know, every one,
- Men may so long with tools engrave a stone
- That thereon will some figure printed be.
- And so long did they comfort her that she
- Received at last, by hope and reason grown,
- Imprinted consolations as her own,
- Whereby her sorrow did somewhat assuage;
- She could not always live in such a rage.
- And, then, Arviragus, through all her care,
- Had sent her letters home, of his welfare.
- And that he would come speedily again;
- Otherwise had this sorrow her heart slain.
- Her friends saw that her grief began to slake,
- And prayed her on their knees, for dear God's sake,
- To come and wander in their company
- And drive away her gloomy fantasy.
- And finally she granted that request;
- For well she saw that it was for the best.
- Now stood her castle very near the sea,
- And often with her good friends wandered she
- For pleasure on the cliffs that reared so high,
- Whence she saw many a ship and barge go by,
- Sailing their courses where they wished to go;
- But that was part and parcel of her woe.
- For to herself full oft, "Alas!" said she,
- "Is there no ship, of many that I see,
- Will bring me home my lord? Then were my heart
- Recovered of its bitter pains that smart."
- At other times there would she sit and think,
- And cast her two eyes downward from the brink.
- But when she saw the grisly rocks all black,
- For very fear her heart would start aback
- And quake so that her feet would not sustain
- Her weight. Then on the grass she'd sit again
- And piteously upon the sea she'd stare,
- And say, with dull sighs on the empty air:
- "Eternal God, Who by Thy providence
- Leadest the world with a true governance,
- Idly, as men say, dost Thou nothing make;
- But, Lord, these grisly, fiendish rocks, so black,
- That seem but rather foul confusion thrown
- Awry than any fair world of Thine own,
- Aye of a perfect wise God and stable,
- Why hast Thou wrought this insane work, pray tell?
- For by this work, north, south, and west and east,
- There is none nurtured, man, nor bird, nor beast;
- It does no good, to my mind, but annoys.
- See'st Thou not, Lord, how mankind it destroys?
- A hundred thousand bodies of mankind
- Have died on rocks, whose names are not in mind,
- And man's a creature made by Thee most fair,
- After Thine image, as Thou didst declare.
- Then seemed it that Thou had'st great charity
- Toward mankind; but how then may it be
- That Thou hast wrought such means man to destroy,
- Which means do never good, but ever annoy?
- I know well, clerics gladly do attest,
- By arguments, that all is for the best,
- Though I can never the real causes know.'
- But O Thou God Who made'st the wind to blow,
- Keep Thou my lord! This is my argument;
- To clerks I leave disputing on what's meant.
- But O would God that all these rocks so black
- Were sunken down to Hell for my lord's sake!
- These rocks, they slay my very heart with fear."
- Thus would she say, with many a piteous tear.
- Her friends saw that to her it was no sport
- To wander by the sea, but discomfort;
- And so arranged to revel somewhere else.
- They led her along rivers and to wells,
- And such delightful places; and told fables,
- And danced, and played at chess, and played at tables.
- So on a day, all in the morningtide,
- Unto a garden which was there beside,
- Wherein they'd given command that there should be
- Food and whatever else was necessary,
- They went for pleasure all the livelong day.
- And this was on the morning sixth of May,
- And May had painted with his soft warm showers
- This garden full of foliage and of flowers;
- And work of man's hand had so curiously
- Arrayed this lovely garden, truthfully,
- That never was another of such price,
- Unless it were the very Paradise.
- The scent of flowers and the fair fresh sight
- Would have made any heart dance for delight
- That e'er was born, unless too great sickness
- Or too great sorrow held it in distress;
- So full it was of beauty and pleasance.
- After their dinner all began to dance,
- And sing, also, save Dorigen alone,
- Who made alway her same complaint and moan.
- For him she saw not through the dancing go,
- Who was her husband and her love also.
- Nevertheless, she must a time abide,
- And with good hope held, let her sorrow slide.
- Amid these mazes, with the other men,
- There danced a squire before this Dorigen,
- That was more blithe, and prettier of array,
- In my opinion, than the month of May.
- He sang and danced better than any man
- That is, or was, since first the world began.
- Therewith he was, description to contrive,
- One of best conditioned men alive;
- Young, strong, right virtuous, and rich, and wise,
- And well beloved, and one to idealize.
- And briefly, if I tell the truth withal,
- Unknown to Dorigen- nay, least of all-
- This pleasant squire, servant to Queen Venus,
- The name of whom was this, Aurelius,
- Had loved her best of anyone alive
- Two years and more (since she did first arrive),
- But never dared he tell her of his state;
- Without a cup he drank his draught of fate.
- He had despaired, for nothing dared he say,
- Save that in songs he would somewhat betray
- His woe, as of a general complaint;
- He loved, but none loved him, though he went faint.
- Of such a subject made he many lays,
- Songs and complaints, rondels and virelays,
- How that he dared not his deep sorrow tell,
- But languished, as a fury does in Hell;
- And die he must, he said, as did Echo
- For her Narcissus, daring not tell her woe.
- In other manner than you hear me say
- Dared he not unto her his woe betray;
- Save that, perchance, there would be times at dances,
- Where young folk honoured all that makes romances,
- It may well be he looked upon her face
- In such wise as a man who sued for grace;
- But nothing knew she of his love's intent.
- Nevertheless it chanced, ere thence they went,
- Because it happened he was her neighbour,
- And was a man of worship and honour,
- And she had known him in the time of yore,
- They fell to talking; and so, more and more,
- Unto his purpose drew Aurelius,
- And when he saw his time addressed her thus:
- "Madam," said he, "by God Who this world made,
- So that I knew it might your sad heart aid,
- I would, that day when your Arviragus
- Went overseas, that I, Aurelius,
- Had gone whence never I should come again;
- For well I know. service is in vain.
- My guerdon is the breaking of my heart;
- Madam, have pity on my pains that smart;
- For with a word you may slay me or save,
- Here at your feet would God I found my grave!
- Time to say more, at present naught have I;
- Have mercy, sweet, or you will make me die!"
- So then she looked upon Aurelius:
- "Is this your will?" asked she, "And say you thus?
- Never before have I known what you meant.
- But since, Aurelius, I know your intent,
- By that same God Who gave me soul and life,
- Never shall I become an untrue wife
- In word or deed, so far as I have wit:
- I will remain his own to whom I'm knit;
- Take this for final answer as from me."
- But after that she said thus, sportively:
- "Aurelius," said she, "by God above,
- Yet would I well consent to be your love,
- Since I hear you complain so piteously,
- On that day when, from coasts of Brittany,
- You've taken all the black rocks, stone by stone,
- So that they hinder ship nor boat- I own,
- I say, when you have made the coast so clean
- Of rocks that there is no stone to be seen,
- Then will I love you best of any man;
- Take here my promise- all that ever I can."
- "Is there no other grace in you?" asked he.
- "No, by that Lord," said she, "Who has made me!
- For well I know that it shall ne'er betide.
- Let suchlike follies out of your heart slide.
- What pleasure can a man have in his life
- Who would go love another man's own wife,
- That has her body when he wishes it?"
- Deep sighs Aurelius did then emit;
- Woe was Aurelius when this he heard,
- And with a sorrowful heart he thus answered:
- "Madam," said he, "this were impossible!
- Then must I die a sudden death and fell."
- And with that word he turned away anon.
- Then came her other friends, and many a one,
- And in the alleys wandered up and down,
- And nothing knew of this decision shown,
- But suddenly began to dance anew
- Until the bright sun lost his golden hue;
- For the horizon had cut off his light;
- This is as much as saying, it was night.
- And home they went in joy and with solace,
- Except the wretch Aurelius, alas!
- He to his house went with a woeful heart;
- He saw he could not from his near death part.
- It seemed to him he felt his heart grow cold;
- Up toward Heaven his two hands did he hold,
- And on his bare knees did he kneel him down
- And in his raving said his orison.
- For very woe out of his wits he fled.
- He knew not what he spoke, but thus he said;
- With mournful heart his plaint had he begun
- Unto the gods, and first unto the sun.
- He said: "Apollo, governor and god
- Of every plant, herb, tree, and flower in sod,
- That givest, according to thy declination,
- To each of them its time of foliation,
- All as thy habitation's low or high,
- Lord Phoebus, cast thy merciful bright eye
- On wretched Aurelius, who is lost and lorn.
- Lo, Lord! My lady has my swift death sworn,
- Without my guilt, save thy benignity
- Upon my dying heart have some pity!
- For well I know, Lord Phoebus, if you lest,
- You can thus aid me, save my lady, best.
- Now vouchsafe that I may for you devise
- A plan to help me, telling in what wise.
- "Your blessed sister, Lucina, serene,
- That of the sea is goddess chief and queen
- (Though Neptune is the deity in the sea,
- Yet empress set above him there is she).
- You know well, Lord, that just as her desire
- Is to be quickened and lighted by your fire,
- For which she follows you right busily,
- Just so the sea desires, and naturally,
- To follow her, she being high goddess
- Both of the sea and rivers, great and less.
- Wherefore, Lord Phoebus, this request I make-
- Without this miracle, my heart will break-
- That at the time of your next opposition,
- Which will be in the Lion, make petition
- To her that she so great a flood will bring
- That full five fathoms shall it over-spring
- The highest rock in Armoric Brittany;
- And let this flood endure two years for me;
- Then truly to my lady may I say:
- 'Now keep your word, the rocks are gone away.'
- "Lord Phoebus, do this miracle for me;
- Pray her she run no faster course, being free-
- I say, Lord, pray your sister that she go
- No faster course than you these next years two.
- Then shall she be even at the full alway,
- And spring-flood shall endure both night and day.
- And save she vouchsafe, Lord, in such manner
- To grant to me my sovereign lady dear,
- Pray her to sink, then, every rock far down
- Into that region dark and cold, her own,
- Under the earth, the place Pluto dwells in,
- Or nevermore shall I my lady win.
- Thy temple in Delphi will I, barefoot, seek;
- Lord Phoebus, see the tears upon my cheek,
- And on my pain be some compassion shown."
- And with that word in swoon he tumbled down,
- And for a long time lay there in a trance.
- His brother, who knew all his suppliance,
- Found him, and took him, and to bed him brought.
- Despairing in the torment of his thought,
- Let I this woeful fellow-creature lie,
- To choose, for all of me, to live or die.
- Arviragus, with health, in honour's hour,
- As he that was of chivalry the flower,
- Came home again, with other gentlemen.
- O happy are you now, my Dorigen,
- Who have your pleasant husband in your arms,
- The vigorous knight, the worthy man-at-arms,
- That loves you as he loves his own heart's life.
- Nothing he chose to question of his wife
- If any man had said, while he was out,
- Some words of love; of her he had no doubt.
- He tended not that way, it would appear,
- But danced and jousted, made for her good cheer;
- And thus in joy and bliss I let them dwell
- And of love-sick Aurelius will I tell.
- In weakness and in torment furious
- Two years and more lay wretched Aurelius
- Ere foot on earth he went- aye, even one;
- For comfort in this long time had he none,
- Save from his brother, who was a good clerk;
- He knew of all this woe and all this work.
- For to no other human, 'tis certain,
- Dared he his cause of illness to explain.
- In breast he kept more secret his idea
- Than did Pamphilius for Galatea.
- His breast was whole, with no wound to be seen,
- But in his heart there was the arrow keen.
- And well you know that of a sursanure
- In surgery is difficult the cure,
- Unless they find the dart or take it out.
- His brother wept, and long he sought about
- Till at the last he called to remembrance
- That while he was at Orleans in France-
- For many young clerks are all ravenous
- To read of arts that are most curious,
- And into every nook and cranny turn
- Particular strange sciences to learn-
- He thus recalled that once upon a day,
- At Orleans, while studying there, I say,
- A book of natural magic there he saw
- In a friend's room, a bachelor of law
- (Though he was there to learn another craft),
- Which book he'd privately on his desk left;
- And which book said much of the operations
- Touching the eight and twenty variations
- That designate the moon, and such folly
- As is, in our days, valued not a fly;
- For Holy Church provides us with a creed
- That suffers no illusion to mislead.
- And when this book came to his remembrance,
- At once, for joy, his heart began to dance,
- And to himself he said in privacy:
- "My brother shall be healed, and speedily;
- For I am sure that there are sciences
- Whereby men make divers appearances,
- Such as these prestidigitators play.
- For oft at feasts, have I well heard men say
- That jugglers, in a hall both bright and large,
- Have made come in there, water and a barge,
- And in the hall the barge rowed up and down.
- Sometimes there seemed to come a grim lion;
- And sometimes flowers sprang as in a mead;
- Or vines with grapes both red and white indeed;
- Sometimes a castle built of lime and stone;
- And when they wished it disappeared anon.
- Thus seemed these things to be in each man's sight.
- "Now, then, conclude I thus, that if I might
- At Orleans some old school-fellow find,
- Who has these mansions of the moon in mind,
- Or other natural magic from above,
- He could well make my brother have his love.
- For with a mere appearance clerks may make
- It seem in man's sight that all rocks that break
- The seas of Brittany were banished, so
- That right above them ships might come and go,
- And in such wise endure a week or two;
- Then were my brother cured of all his woe.
- For she must keep the word she gave at feast.
- Or he'll have right to shame her, at the least."
- Why should I longer speak of this event?
- He to the bedside of his brother went,
- And urged him eagerly to get him gone
- To Orleans; he started up anon
- And forward on his way at once did fare
- In hope to be relieved of all his care.
- When they were come almost to that city,
- Perhaps two furlongs short of it, or three,
- A young clerk walking by himself they met,
- Who, in good Latin, heartily did greet,
- And after that he said a wondrous thing.
- "I know," said he, "the cause of your coming."
- And ere a farther foot the brothers went,
- He told them all the soul of their intent.
- This Breton clerk asked after school-fellows
- Whom he had known through former suns and snows;
- And he replied to this that dead they were,
- Whereat he wept, for sorrow, many a tear.
- Down from his horse Aurelius leaped anon,
- And onward with this wizard he was gone
- Home to his house, where he was put at case.
- To him there lacked no victuals that might please;
- So well appointed house as was that one
- Aurelius in life before saw none.
- He showed him, ere he went to supper here,
- Forests and parks full of the dim wild deer;
- There saw he harts of ten with their horns high,
- The greatest ever seen by human eye.
- He saw of them a hundred slain by hounds,
- And some with arrows bled, with bitter wounds.
- He saw, when vanished all were these wild deer,
- Some falconers by river flowing clear,
- Who with their hawks had many herons slain.
- And then he saw knights jousting on a plain;
- And after this he did him such pleasance
- That he showed him his lady in a dance
- Wherein he also joined, or so he thought.
- And when this master who this magic wrought
- Saw it was time, he clapped his two hands, lo!
- Farewell to all! the revels out did go.
- And yet they'd never moved out of the house
- While they saw all these sights so marvelous,
- But in his study, where his books would be,
- They had sat still, and no one but they three.
- Then unto him this master called his squire,
- And asked him thus: "Is supper ready, sir?
- Almost an hour it is, I'll undertake,
- Since I bade you our evening meal to make,
- When these two gentlemen came in with me
- Into my study, wherein my books be."
- "Sir," said this squire then, "when it pleases you
- It is all ready, though you will right now."
- "Then let us sup," said he, "for that is best;
- These amorous folk must sometime have some rest."
- After the supper they discussed, they three,
- What sum should this said master's guerdon be
- For moving all rocks Breton coasts contain
- From the Gironde unto the mouth of Seine.
- He played for time, and swore, so God him save,
- Less than a thousand he would not have,
- Nor eagerly for that would take it on.
- Aurelius, with blissful heart, anon
- Answered him thus: "Fig for a thousand pound!
- This great wide world, the which, men say, is round,
- I'd give it all, if I were lord of it.
- The bargain is concluded and we're knit.
- You shall be truly paid, sir, by my troth!
- But look you, for no negligence or sloth,
- Delay no longer than tomorrow morn."
- "Nay," said this clerk! "upon my faith I'm sworn."
- To bed went this Aurelius and undressed,
- And well-nigh all that night he had his rest;
- What of his labour and his hope of bliss
- The pain had left that woeful heart of his.
- Upon the morrow, when it was full day,
- To Brittany took they the nearest way,
- Aurelius, with this wizard at his side,
- And thus they came to where they would abide;
- And that was, as the books say, I remember,
- The cold and frosty season of December.
- Phoebus was old and coloured like pale brass,
- That in hot declination coloured was
- And shone like burnished gold with streamers bright;
- But now in Capricorn did he alight,
- Wherein he palely shone, I dare explain.
- The bitter frosts, with all the sleet and rain,
- Had killed the green of every garden-yard.
- Janus sat by the fire, with double beard,
- And drained from out his bugle horn the wine.
- Before him stood the brawn of tusked swine,
- And "Noel!" cried then every lusty man.
- Aurelius, in all that he could plan,
- Did to this master cheerful reverence,
- And prayed of him he'd use all diligence
- To bring him from his pains that so did smart,
- Or else with sword that he would slit his heart.
- This subtle clerk such ruth had for this man,
- That night and day he sped about his plan,
- To wait the proper time for his conclusion;
- That is to say, the time to make illusion,
- By such devices of his jugglery
- (I understand not this astrology)
- That she and everyone should think and say
- That all the Breton rocks were gone away,
- Or else that they were sunken underground.
- So at the last the proper time he found
- To do his tricks and all his wretchedness
- Of such a superstitious wickedness.
- For his Toletan Tables forth he brought,
- All well corrected, and he lacked in naught,
- The years collected nor the separate years,
- Nor his known roots, nor any other gears,
- As, say, his centres and his argument,
- And his proportionals convenient
- In estimating truly his equations.
- The eighth sphere showed him in his calculations
- How far removed was Alnath, passing by,
- From head of that fixed Aries on high,
- That in the ninth great sphere considered is;
- Right cleverly he calculated this.
- When he the moon's first mansion thus had found,
- The rest proportionally he could expound;
- And knew the moon's arising-time right well,
- And in what face and term, and all could tell;
- This gave him then the mansion of the moon-
- He worked it out accordingly right soon,
- And did the other necessary rites
- To cause illusions and such evil sights
- As heathen peoples practised in those days.
- Therefore no longer suffered he delays,
- But all the rocks by magic and his lore
- Appeared to vanish for a week or more.
- Aurelius, who yet was torn by this,
- Whether he'd gain his love or fare amiss,
- Awaited night and day this miracle;
- And when he knew there was no obstacle,
- That vanished were these black rocks, every one,
- Down at the master's feet he fell anon
- And said: "I, woeful wretch, Aurelius,
- Thank you, my lord, and Lady mine Venus,
- That have so saved me from my dreadful care."
- And to the temple straightway did he fare,
- Whereat he knew he should his lady see.
- And when he saw his opportunity,
- With fluttering heart and with an humble cheer
- He greeted thus his sovereign lady dear.
- "My own dear lady," said this woeful man,
- "Whom I most fear and love best, as I can,
- And whom, of all this world, I'd not displease,
- Were it not that for you I've such unease
- That I must die here at your feet anon,
- I would not tell how I am woebegone;
- But I must either die or else complain;
- You slay me, for no crime, with utter pain.
- But on my death, although you have no ruth,
- Take heed now, ere you break your promised troth
- Repent you, for die sake of God above,
- Ere me you slay, because it's you I love.
- For well you know your promise apposite;
- Not that I challenge aught, of my own right,
- In you, my sovereign lady, save your grace;
- But in a garden, in a certain place,
- You know right well what you did promise me;
- And in my hand you plighted troth," said he,
- "To love me best, God knows you promised so,
- Howe'er I may unworthy be thereto.
- Madam, I say it for your honour's vow
- More than to save my heart's dear life right now;
- I have done all that you commanded me;
- And if you will, you may well go and see.
- Do as you please, but hold your word in mind,
- For quick or dead, as you do, me you'll find;
- In you lies all, to make me live or die,
- But well I know the rocks are vanished, aye!"
- He took his leave, and she astounded stood,
- In all her face there was no drop of blood;
- She never thought to have come in such a trap.
- "Alas!" said she, "that ever this should hap!
- For thought I never, by possibility,
- That such prodigious marvel e'er might be!
- It is against the way of all nature."
- And home she went, a sorrowful creature.
- For utter terror hardly could she go,
- She wept, she wailed throughout a day or so,
- And swooned so much 'twas pitiful, to see;
- But why this was to not a soul told she;
- For out of town was gone Arviragus.
- But to her own heart spoke she, and said thus,
- With her face pale and with a heavy cheer,
- All her complaint, as you'll hereafter hear:
- "Of thee," she cried, "O Fortune, I complain,
- That, unaware, I'm bound within thy chain;
- From which to go, I know of no succour
- Save only death, or else my dishonour;
- One of these two I am compelled to choose.
- Nevertheless, I would far rather lose
- My life than of my body come to shame,
- Or know myself untrue, or lose my name;
- By death I know it well, I may be freed;
- Has there not many a noble wife, indeed,
- And many a maiden slain herself- alas!-
- Rather than with her body do trespass?
- "Yes, truly, lo, these stories bear witness;
- When Thirty Tyrants, full of wickedness,
- Had Phido slain in Athens, at a feast,
- They gave command his daughters to arrest,
- And had them brought before them, for despite,
- All naked, to fulfill their foul delight,
- And in their father's blood they made them dance
- Upon the pavement- God give them mischance!
- For which these woeful maidens, full of dread,
- Rather than they should lose their maidenhead,
- Unseen they all leaped down into a well
- And drowned themselves therein, as old books tell.
- "They of Messina did require and seek
- From Lacedaemon fifty maids to take,
- On whom they would have done their lechery;
- But there was none of all that company
- Who was not slain, and who with good intent
- Preferred not death rather than give consent
- To be thus ravished of her maidenhead.
- Why should I then hold dying in such dread?
- "Lo, too, the tyrant Aristoclides,
- Who loved a maiden called Stimphalides.
- Whenas her father had been slain by night,
- Unto Diana's temple she took flight
- And grasped the image in her two hands so
- That from this image would she not let go.
- No one could tear her hands from that embrace
- Till she was slaughtered in that self-same place.
- Now since these maidens showed such scorn outright
- Of being defiled to make man's foul delight,
- Well ought a wife rather herself to slay
- Than be defiled, I think, and so I say.
- "What shall I say of Hasdrubal's fair wife,
- Who in Carthage bereft herself of life?
- For when she saw that Romans won the town,
- She took her children all and leaped right down
- Into the fire, choosing thus to die
- Before a Roman did her villainy.
- "Did not Lucretia slay herself- alas!-
- At Rome, when she so violated was
- By Tarquin? For she thought it was a shame
- Merely to live when she had lost her name.
- "The seven maidens of Miletus, too,
- Did slay themselves, for very dread and woe,
- Rather than men of Gaul should on them press.
- More than a thousand stories, as I guess,
- Could I repeat now of this matter here.
- "With Abradates slain, his wife so dear
- Herself slew, and she let her red blood glide
- In Abradates' wounds so deep and wide,
- And said: 'My body, at the least, I say,
- No man shall now defile,' and passed away.
- "Why should I of more instances, be fain?
- Since that so many have their bodies slain
- Rather than that they should dishonoured be?
- I will conclude it better is for me
- To slay myself than be dishonoured thus.
- I will be true unto Arviragus,
- Or else I'll slay myself in some manner,
- As did Demotion's virgin daughter dear
- Because she would not violated be.
- "O Cedasus, it rouses great pity
- To read of how your daughters died, alas!
- That slew themselves in such another case.
- "As great a pity was it, aye and more,
- That a fair Theban maid, for Nicanor,
- Did slay herself in such a kind of woe.
- "Another Theban maiden did also;
- For one of Macedonia her had pressed,
- And she, by death, her maidenhead redressed.
- "What shall I say of Nicerates' wife,
- Who, for like cause, bereft herself of life?
- "How true, too, was to Alcibiades
- His love, who chose to drain death to the lees
- And would not let his corpse unburied be!
- Lo, what a wife was Alcestis," said she.
- "What says Homer of good Penelope?
- The whole of Hellas knew her chastity.
- "Pardieu, of Laodamia they wrote thus,
- That when at Troy was slain Protesilaus,
- No longer would she live after his day.
- "The same of noble Portia may I say;
- Without her Brutus could she no wise live,
- To whom in youth her whole heart she did give.
- "The perfect wifehood of Artemisia
- Was honoured throughout all old Caria.
- "O Teuta, queen! Your wifely chastity,
- To all wives may a very mirror be.
- The same thing may I say of Bilia,
- Of Rhodogune and of Valeria."
- Thus Dorigen went on a day or so,
- Purposing ever that to death she'd go.
- But notwithstanding, upon the third night
- Home came Arviragus, this worthy knight,
- And asked her why it was she wept so sore.
- And thereat she began to weep the more.
- "Alas!" cried she, "that ever I was born!
- Thus have I said," quoth she, "thus have I sworn"-
- And told him all, as you have heard before;
- It needs not to re-tell it to you more.
- This husband, with glad cheer, in friendly wise,
- Answered and said as I shall you apprise:
- "Is there naught else, my Dorigen, than this?"
- "Nay, nay," said she, "God help me, as it is
- This is too much, though it were God's own will."
- "Yea, wife," said he, "let sleep what's lying still;
- It may be well with us, perchance, today.
- But you your word shall hold to, by my fay!
- As God may truly mercy have on me,
- Wounded to death right now I'd rather be,
- For sake of this great love of you I have,
- Than you should not your true word keep and save.
- Truth is the highest thing that man may keep."
- But with that word began he then to weep,
- And said: "I you forbid, on pain of death,
- That ever, while to you last life and breath,
- To anyone you tell this adventure.
- As I best may, I will my woe endure,
- Nor show a countenance of heaviness,
- That folk no harm may think of you, or guess."
- And then he called a squire and a maid:
- "Go forth anon with Dorigen," he said,
- "And bring her to a certain place anon."
- They took their leave and on their way were gone.
- But nothing knew of why she thither went
- Nor would he to a soul tell his intent.
- Perhaps a lot of you will certainly
- Hold him a wicked man that wilfully
- Put his wife's honour thus in jeopardy;
- Hearken the tale, ere you upon her cry.
- She may have better luck than you suppose;
- And when you've heard all, let your judgment close.
- This squire I've told you of, Aurelius,
- Of Dorigen he being so amorous,
- Chanced, as it seems, his lady fair to meet
- In middle town, right in the busiest street,
- As she was going forth, as you have heard,
- Toward the garden where she'd pledged her word.
- And he was going gardenward also;
- For he was always watching when she'd go
- Out of her house to any kind of place.
- But thus they met, by chance perhaps or grace;
- And he saluted her with good intent,
- And asked her, now, whither it was she went.
- And she replied, as if she were half mad:
- "Unto the garden, as my husband bade,
- My promise there to keep, alas, alast"
- Aurelius then pondered on this case,
- And in his heart he had compassion great
- On her and her lamenting and her state,
- And on Arviragus, the noble knight,
- Who'd bidden her keep promise, as she might,
- Being so loath his wife should break with truth;
- And in his heart he gained, from this, great ruth,
- Considering the best on every side,
- That from possession rather he'd abide
- Than do so great a churlish grievousness
- Against free hearts and all high nobleness;
- For which, and in few words, he told her thus:
- "Madam, say to your lord Arviragus
- That since I see his noble gentleness
- To you, and since I see well your distress,
- That he'd have rather shame (and that were ruth)
- Than you to me should break your word of truth,
- I would myself far rather suffer woe
- Than break apart the love between you two.
- So I release, madam, into your hand,
- And do return, discharged, each surety and
- Each bond that you have given and have sworn,
- Even from the very time that you were born.
- My word I pledge, I'll ne'er seek to retrieve
- A single promise, and I take my leave
- As of the truest and of the best wife
- That ever yet I've known in all my life.
- Let every wife of promises take care,
- Remember Dorigen, and so beware!
- Thus can a squire perform a gentle deed
- As well as can a knight, of that take heed."
- Upon her bare knees did she thank him there,
- And home unto her husband did she fare,
- And told him all, as you have heard it said;
- And be assured, he was so pleased and glad
- That 'twere impossible of it to write.
- What should I further of this case indite?
- Arviragus and Dorigen his wife
- In sovereign happiness led forth their life.
- Never did any anger come between;
- He cherished her as if she were a queen;
- And she to him was true for evermore.
- Of these two folk you get from me no more.
- Aurelius, whose wealth was now forlorn,
- He cursed the time that ever he was born;
- "Alas!" cried he, "Alas! that I did state
- I'd pay fine gold a thousand pounds by weight
- To this philosopher! What shall I do?
- I see no better than I'm ruined too.
- All of my heritage I needs must sell
- And be a beggar; here I cannot dwell
- And shame all of my kindred in this place,
- Unless I gain of him some better grace.
- And so I'll go to him and try, today,
- On certain dates, from year to year, to pay,
- And thank him for his princely courtesy;
- For I will keep my word, and I'll not lie."
- With sore heart he went then to his coffer,
- And took gold unto this philosopher,
- The value of five hundred pounds, I guess,
- And so besought him, of his nobleness,
- To grant him dates for payment of the rest,
- And said: "Dear master, I may well protest
- I've never failed to keep my word, as yet;
- For certainly I'll pay my entire debt
- To you, however after I may fare,
- Even to begging, save for kirtle, bare.
- But if you'd grant, on good security,
- Two years or three of respite unto me,
- Then all were well; otherwise must I sell
- My heritage; there is no more to tell."
- Then this philosopher soberly answered
- And spoke in. this wise, when these words he'd heard:
- "Have I not fairly earned my promised fee?"
- "Yes, truly, you have done so, sir," said he.
- "Have you not bad the lady at your will?"
- "No, no," said he, and sighed, and then was still.
- "What was the reason? Tell me if you can."
- Aurelius his tale anon began,
- And told him all, as you have heard before;
- It needs not I repeat it to you more.
- He said: "Arviragus, of nobleness,
- Had rather die in sorrow and distress
- Than that his wife were to her promise false."
- He told of Dorigen's grief, too, and how else
- She had been loath to live a wicked wife
- And rather would that day have lost her life,
- And that her troth she swore through ignorance:
- "She'd ne'er before heard of such simulance;
- Which made me have for her such great pity.
- And just as freely as he sent her me,
- As freely sent I her to him again.
- This is the sum, there's no more to explain."
- Then answered this philosopher: "Dear brother,
- Each one of you has nobly dealt with other.
- You are a squire, true, and he is a knight,
- But God forbid, what of His blessed might,
- A clerk should never do a gentle deed
- As well as any of you. Of this take heed!
- "Sir, I release to you your thousand pound,
- As if, right now, you'd crept out of the ground
- And never, before now, had known of me.
- For, sir, I'll take of you not one penny
- For all my art and all my long travail.
- You have paid well for all my meat and ale;
- It is enough, so farewell, have good day!"
- And took his horse and went forth on his way.
- Masters, this question would I ask you now:
- Which was most generous, do you think, and how.
- Pray tell me this before you farther wend.
- I can no more, my tale is at an end.
-
- HERE IS ENDED THE FRANKLIN'S TALE