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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE KNIGHT'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Iamque domos patrias, Scithice post aspera gentis
- Prolia, laurigero, etc.
- -STATIUS, Theb., XII, 519.
-
- Once on a time, as old tales tell to us,
- There was a duke whose name was Theseus:
- Of Athens he was lord and governor,
- And in his time was such a conqueror
- That greater was there not beneath the sun.
- Full many a rich country had he won;
- What with his wisdom and his chivalry
- He gained the realm of Femininity,
- That was of old time known as Scythia.
- There wedded he the queen, Hippolyta,
- And brought her home with him to his country.
- In glory great and with great pageantry,
- And, too, her younger sister, Emily.
- And thus, in victory and with melody,
- Let I this noble duke to Athens ride
- With all his armed host marching at his side.
- And truly, were it not too long to hear,
- I would have told you fully how, that year,
- Was gained the realm of Femininity
- By Theseus and by his chivalry;
- And all of the great battle that was wrought
- Where Amazons and the Athenians fought;
- And how was wooed and won Hippolyta,
- That fair and hardy queen of Scythia;
- And of the feast was made at their wedding,
- And of the tempest at their home-coming;
- But all of that I must for now forbear.
- I have, God knows, a large field for my share,
- And weak the oxen, and the soil is tough.
- The remnant of the tale is long enough.
- I will not hinder any, in my turn;
- Let each man tell his tale, until we learn
- Which of us all the most deserves to win;
- So where I stopped, again I'll now begin.
- This duke of whom I speak, of great renown,
- When he had drawn almost unto the town,
- In all well-being and in utmost pride,
- He grew aware, casting his eyes aside,
- That right upon the road, as suppliants do,
- A company of ladies, two by two,
- Knelt, all in black, before his cavalcade;
- But such a clamorous cry of woe they made
- That in the whole world living man had heard
- No such a lamentation, on my word;
- Nor would they cease lamenting till at last
- They'd clutched his bridle reins and held them fast.
- "What folk are you that at my home-coming
- Disturb my triumph with this dolorous thing?"
- Cried Theseus. "Do you so much envy
- My honour that you thus complain and cry?
- Or who has wronged you now, or who offended?
- Come, tell me whether it may be amended;
- And tell me, why are you clothed thus, in black?"
- The eldest lady of them answered back,
- After she'd swooned, with cheek so deathly drear
- That it was pitiful to see and hear,
- And said: "Lord, to whom Fortune has but given
- Victory, and to conquer where you've striven,
- Your glory and your honour grieve not us;
- But we beseech your aid and pity thus.
- Have mercy on our woe and our distress.
- Some drop of pity, of your gentleness,
- Upon us wretched women, oh, let fall!
- For see, lord, there is no one of us all
- That has not been a duchess or a queen;
- Now we are captives, as may well be seen:
- Thanks be to Fortune and her treacherous wheel,
- There's none can rest assured of constant weal.
- And truly, lord, expecting your return,
- In Pity's temple, where the fires yet burn,
- We have been waiting through a long fortnight;
- Now help us, lord, since it is in your might.
- "I, wretched woman, who am weeping thus,
- Was once the wife of King Capaneus,
- Who died at Thebes, oh, cursed be the day!
- And all we that you see in this array,
- And make this lamentation to be known,
- All we have lost our husbands at that town
- During the siege that round about it lay.
- And now the old Creon, ah welaway!
- The lord and governor of Thebes city,
- Full of his wrath and all iniquity,
- He, in despite and out of tyranny,
- To do the dead a shame and villainy,
- Of all our husbands, lying among the slain,
- Has piled the bodies in a heap, amain,
- And will not suffer them, nor give consent,
- To buried be, or burned, nor will relent,
- But sets his dogs to eat them, out of spite."
- And on that word, at once, without respite,
- They all fell prone and cried out piteously:
- "Have on us wretched women some mercy,
- And let our sorrows sink into your heart!"
- This gentle duke down from his horse did start
- With heart of pity, when he'd heard them speak.
- It seemed to him his heart must surely break,
- Seeing them there so miserable of state,
- Who had been proud and happy but so late.
- And in his arms he took them tenderly,
- Giving them comfort understandingly:
- And swore his oath, that as he was true knight,
- He would put forth so thoroughly his might
- Against the tyrant Creon as to wreak
- Vengeance so great that all of Greece should speak
- And say how Creon was by Theseus served,
- As one that had his death full well deserved.
- This sworn and done, he no more there abode;
- His banner he displayed and forth he rode
- Toward Thebes, and all his host marched on beside;
- Nor nearer Athens would he walk or ride,
- Nor take his ease for even half a day,
- But onward, and in camp that night he lay;
- And thence he sent Hippolyta the queen
- And her bright sister Emily, I ween,
- Unto the town of Athens, there to dwell
- While he went forth. There is no more to tell.
- The image of red Mars, with spear and shield,
- So shone upon his banner's snow-white field
- It made a billowing glitter up and down;
- And by the banner borne was his pennon,
- On which in beaten gold was worked, complete,
- The Minotaur, which he had slain in Crete.
- Thus rode this duke, thus rode this conqueror,
- And in his host of chivalry the flower,
- Until he came to Thebes and did alight
- Full in the field where he'd intent to fight.
- But to be brief in telling of this thing,
- With Creon, who was Thebes' dread lord and king,
- He fought and slew him, manfully, like knight,
- In open war, and put his host to flight;
- And by assault he took the city then,
- Levelling wall and rafter with his men;
- And to the ladies he restored again
- The bones of their poor husbands who were slain,
- To do for them the last rites of that day.
- But it were far too long a tale to say
- The clamour of great grief and sorrowing
- Those ladies raised above the bones burning
- Upon the pyres, and of the great honour
- That Theseus, the noble conqueror,
- Paid to the ladies when from him they went;
- To make the story short is my intent.
- When, then, this worthy duke, this Theseus
- Had slain Creon and won Thebes city thus,
- Still on the field he took that night his rest,
- And dealt with all the land as he thought best.
- In searching through the heap of enemy dead,
- Stripping them of their gear from heel to head,
- The busy pillagers could pick and choose,
- After the battle, what they best could use;
- And so befell that in a heap they found,
- Pierced through with many a grievous, bloody wound,
- Two young knights lying together, side by side,
- Bearing one crest, wrought richly, of their pride,
- And of those two Arcita was the one,
- The other knight was known as Palamon.
- Not fully quick, nor fully dead they were,
- But by their coats of arms and by their gear
- The heralds readily could tell, withal,
- That they were of the Theban blood royal,
- And that they had been of two sisters born.
- Out of the heap the spoilers had them torn
- And carried gently over to the tent
- Of Theseus; who shortly had them sent
- To Athens, there in prison cell to lie
- For ever, without ransom, till they die.
- And when this worthy duke had all this done,
- He gathered host and home he rode anon,
- With laurel crowned again as conqueror;
- There lived he in all joy and all honour
- His term of life; what more need words express?
- And in a tower, in anguish and distress,
- Palamon and Arcita, day and night,
- Dwelt whence no gold might help them to take flight.
- Thus passed by year by year and day by day,
- Till it fell out, upon a morn in May,
- That Emily, far fairer to be seen
- Than is the lily on its stalk of green,
- And fresher than is May with flowers new
- (For with the rose's colour strove her hue,
- I know not which was fairer of the two),
- Before the dawn, as was her wont to do,
- She rose and dressed her body for delight;
- For May will have no sluggards of the night.
- That season rouses every gentle heart
- And forces it from winter's sleep to start,
- Saying: "Arise and show thy reverence."
- So Emily remembered to go thence
- In honour of the May, and so she rose.
- Clothed, she was sweeter than any flower that blows;
- Her yellow hair was braided in one tress
- Behind her back, a full yard long, I guess.
- And in the garden, as the sun up-rose,
- She sauntered back and forth and through each close,
- Gathering many a flower, white and red,
- To weave a delicate garland for her head;
- And like a heavenly angel's was her song.
- The tower tall, which was so thick and strong,
- And of the castle was the great donjon,
- (Wherein the two knights languished in prison,
- Of whom I told and shall yet tell, withal),
- Was joined, at base, unto the garden wall
- Whereunder Emily went dallying.
- Bright was the sun and clear that morn in spring,
- And Palamon, the woeful prisoner,
- As was his wont, by leave of his gaoler,
- Was up and pacing round that chamber high,
- From which the noble city filled his eye,
- And, too, the garden full of branches green,
- Wherein bright Emily, fair and serene,
- Went walking and went roving up and down.
- This sorrowing prisoner, this Palamon,
- Being in the chamber, pacing to and fro,
- And to himself complaining of his woe,
- Cursing his birth, he often cried "Alas!"
- And so it was, by chance or other pass,
- That through a window, closed by many a bar
- Of iron, strong and square as any spar,
- He cast his eyes upon Emilia,
- And thereupon he blenched and cried out "Ah!"
- As if he had been smitten to the heart.
- And at that cry Arcita did up-start,
- Asking: "My cousin, why what ails you now
- That you've so deathly pallor on your brow?
- Why did you cry out? Who's offended you?
- For God's love, show some patience, as I do,
- With prison, for it may not different be;
- Fortune has given this adversity.
- Some evil disposition or aspect
- Of Saturn did our horoscopes affect
- To bring us here, though differently 'twere sworn;
- But so the stars stood when we two were born;
- We must endure it; that, in brief, is plain."
- This Palamon replied and said again:
- "Cousin, indeed in this opinion now
- Your fancy is but vanity, I trow.
- It's not our prison that caused me to cry.
- But I was wounded lately through the eye
- Down to my heart, and that my bane will be.
- The beauty of the lady that I see
- There in that garden, pacing to and fro,
- Is cause of all my crying and my woe.
- I know not if she's woman or goddess;
- But Venus she is verily, I guess."
- And thereupon down on his knees he fell,
- And said: "O Venus, if it be thy will
- To be transfigured in this garden, thus
- Before me, sorrowing wretch, oh now help us
- Out of this prison to be soon escaped.
- And if it be my destiny is shaped,
- By fate, to die in durance, in bondage,
- Have pity, then, upon our lineage
- That has been brought so low by tyranny."
- And on that word Arcita looked to see
- This lady who went roving to and fro.
- And in that look her beauty struck him so
- That, if poor Palamon is wounded sore,
- Arcita is as deeply hurt, and more.
- And with a sigh he said then, piteously:
- "The virgin beauty slays me suddenly
- Of her that wanders yonder in that place;
- And save I have her pity and her grace,
- That I at least may see her day by day,
- I am but dead; there is no more to say."
- This Palamon, when these words he had heard,
- Pitilessly he watched him, and answered:
- "Do you say this in earnest or in play?"
- "Nay," quoth Arcita, "earnest, now, I say!
- God help me, I am in no mood for play!"
- Palamon knit his brows and stood at bay.
- "It will not prove," he said, "to your honour
- After so long a time to turn traitor
- To me, who am your cousin and your brother,
- Sworn as we are, and each unto the other,
- That never, though for death in any pain,
- Never, indeed, till death shall part us twain,
- Either of us in love shall hinder other,
- No, nor in any thing, O my dear brother;
- But that, instead, you shall so further me
- As I shall you. All this we did agree.
- Such was your oath and such was mine also.
- You dare not now deny it, well I know.
- Thus you are of my party, beyond doubt.
- And now you would all falsely go about
- To love my lady, whom I love and serve,
- And shall while life my heart's blood may preserve.
- Nay, false Arcita, it shall not be so.
- I loved her first, and told you all my woe,
- As to a brother and to one that swore
- To further me, as I have said before.
- For which you are in duty bound, as knight,
- To help me, if the thing lie in your might,
- Or else you're false, I say, and downfallen."
- Then this Arcita proudly spoke again:
- "You shall," he said, "be rather false than I;
- And that you're so, I tell you utterly;
- For par amour I loved her first, you know.
- What can you say? You know not, even now,
- Whether she is a woman or goddess!
- Yours is a worship as of holiness,
- While mine is love, as of a mortal maid;
- Wherefore I told you of it, unafraid,
- As to my cousin and my brother sworn.
- Let us assume you loved her first, this morn;
- Know you not well the ancient writer's saw
- Of 'Who shall give a lover any law?'
- Love is a greater law, aye by my pan,
- Than man has ever given to earthly man.
- And therefore statute law and such decrees
- Are broken daily and in all degrees.
- A man must needs have love, maugre his head.
- He cannot flee it though he should be dead,
- And be she maid, or widow, or a wife.
- And yet it is not likely that, in life,
- You'll stand within her graces; nor shall I;
- For you are well aware, aye verily,
- That you and I are doomed to prison drear
- Perpetually; we gain no ransom here.
- We strive but as those dogs did for the bone;
- They fought all day, and yet their gain was none.
- Till came a kite while they were still so wroth
- And bore the bone away between them both.
- And therefore, at the king's court, O my brother,
- It's each man for himself and not for other.
- Love if you like; for I love and aye shall;
- And certainly, dear brother, that is all.
- Here in this prison cell must we remain
- And each endure whatever fate ordain."
- Great was the strife, and long, betwixt the two,
- If I had but the time to tell it you,
- Save in effect. It happened on a day
- (To tell the tale as briefly as I may),
- A worthy duke men called Pirithous,
- Who had been friend unto Duke Theseus
- Since each had been a little child, a chit,
- Was come to visit Athens and visit
- His play-fellow, as he was wont to do,
- For in this whole world he loved no man so;
- And Theseus loved him as truly- nay,
- So well each loved the other, old books say,
- That when one died (it is but truth I tell),
- The other went and sought him down in Hell;
- But of that tale I have no wish to write.
- Pirithous loved Arcita, too, that knight,
- Having known him in Thebes full many a year;
- And finally, at his request and prayer,
- And that without a coin of ransom paid,
- Duke Theseus released him out of shade,
- Freely to go where'er he wished, and to
- His own devices, as I'll now tell you.
- The compact was, to set it plainly down,
- As made between those two of great renown:
- That if Arcita, any time, were found,
- Ever in life, by day or night, on ground
- Of any country of this Theseus,
- And he were caught, it was concerted thus,
- That by the sword he straight should lose his head.
- He had no choice, so taking leave he sped
- Homeward to Thebes, lest by the sword's sharp edge
- He forfeit life. His neck was under pledge.
- How great a sorrow is Arcita's now!
- How through his heart he feels death's heavy blow,
- He weeps, he wails, he cries out piteously;
- He thinks to slay himself all privily.
- Said he: "Alas, the day that I was born!
- I'm in worse prison, now, and more forlorn;
- Now am I doomed eternally to dwell
- No more in Purgatory, but in Hell.
- Alas, that I have known Pirithous!
- For else had I remained with Theseus,
- Fettered within that cell; but even so
- Then had I been in bliss and not in woe.
- Only the sight of her that I would serve,
- Though I might never her dear grace deserve,
- Would have sufficed, oh well enough for me!
- O my dear cousin Palamon," said he,
- "Yours is the victory, and that is sure,
- For there, full happily, you may endure.
- In prison? Never, but in Paradise!
- Oh, well has Fortune turned for you the dice,
- Who have the sight of her, I the absence.
- For possible it is, in her presence,
- You being a knight, a worthy and able,
- That by some chance, since Fortune's changeable.
- You may to your desire sometime attain.
- But I, that am in exile and in pain,
- Stripped of all hope and in so deep despair
- That there's no earth nor water, fire nor air,
- Nor any creature made of them there is
- To help or give me comfort, now, in this-
- Surely I'll die of sorrow and distress;
- Farewell, my life, my love, my joyousness!
- "Alas! Why is it men so much complain
- Of what great God, or Fortune, may ordain,
- When better is the gift, in any guise,
- Than men may often for themselves devise?
- One man desires only that great wealth
- Which may but cause his death or long ill-health.
- One who from prison gladly would be free,
- At home by his own servants slain might be.
- Infinite evils lie therein, 'tis clear;
- We know not what it is we pray for here.
- We fare as he that's drunken as a mouse;
- A drunk man knows right well he has a house,
- But he knows not the right way leading thither;
- And a drunk man is sure to slip and slither.
- And certainly, in this world so fare we;
- We furiously pursue felicity,
- Yet we go often wrong before we die.
- This may we all admit, and specially I,
- Who deemed and held, as I were under spell,
- That if I might escape from prison cell,
- Then would I find again what might heal,
- Who now am only exiled from my weal.
- For since I may not see you, Emily,
- I am but dead; there is no remedy."
- And on the other hand, this Palamon,
- When that he found Arcita truly gone,
- Such lamentation made he, that the tower
- Resounded of his crying, hour by hour.
- The very fetters on his legs were yet
- Again with all his bitter salt tears wet.
- "Alas!" said he, "Arcita, cousin mine,
- With all our strife, God knows, you've won the wine.
- You're walking, now, in Theban streets, at large,
- And all my woe you may from mind discharge.
- You may, too, since you've wisdom and manhood,
- Assemble all the people of our blood
- And wage a war so sharp on this city
- That by some fortune, or by some treaty,
- You shall yet have that lady to your wife
- For whom I now must needs lay down my life.
- For surely 'tis in possibility,
- Since you are now at large, from prison free,
- And are a lord, great is your advantage
- Above my own, who die here in a cage.
- For I must weep and wail, the while I live,
- In all the grief that prison cell may give,
- And now with pain that love gives me, also,
- Which doubles all my torment and my woe."
- Therewith the fires of jealousy up-start
- Within his breast and burn him to the heart
- So wildly that he seems one, to behold,
- Like seared box tree, or ashes, dead and cold.
- Then said he: "O you cruel Gods, that sway
- This world in bondage of your laws, for aye,
- And write upon the tablets adamant
- Your counsels and the changeless words you grant,
- What better view of mankind do you hold
- Than of the sheep that huddle in the fold?
- For man must die like any other beast,
- Or rot in prison, under foul arrest,
- And suffer sickness and misfortune sad,
- And still be ofttimes guiltless, too, by gad!
- "What management is in this prescience
- That, guiltless, yet torments our innocence?
- And this increases all my pain, as well,
- That man is bound by law, nor may rebel,
- For fear of God, but must repress his will,
- Whereas a beast may all his lust fulfill.
- And when a beast is dead, he feels no pain;
- But, after death, man yet must weep amain,
- Though in this world he had but care and woe:
- There is no doubt that it is even so.
- The answer leave I to divines to tell,
- But well I know this present world is hell.
- Alas! I see a serpent or a thief,
- That has brought many a true man unto grief,
- Going at large, and where he wills may turn,
- But I must lie in gaol, because Saturn,
- And Juno too, both envious and mad,
- Have spilled out well-nigh all the blood we had
- At Thebes, and desolated her wide walls.
- And Venus slays me with the bitter galls
- Of fear of Arcita, and jealousy."
- Now will I leave this Palamon, for he
- Is in his prison, where he still must dwell,
- And of Arcita will I forthwith tell.
- Summer being passed away and nights grown long,
- Increased now doubly all the anguish strong
- Both of the lover and the prisoner.
- I know not which one was the woefuller.
- For, to be brief about it, Palamon
- Is doomed to lie for ever in prison,
- In chains and fetters till he shall be dead;
- And exiled (on the forfeit of his head)
- Arcita must remain abroad, nor see,
- For evermore, the face of his lady.
- You lovers, now I ask you this question:
- Who has the worse, Arcita or Palamon?
- The one may see his lady day by day,
- But yet in prison must he dwell for aye.
- The other, where he wishes, he may go,
- But never see his lady more, ah no.
- Now answer as you wish, all you that can.
- For I will speak right on as I began.
-
- Explicit prima pars.
- Sequitur pars secunda.
-
- Now when Arcita unto Thebes was come,
- He lay and languished all day in his home,
- Since he his lady nevermore should see,
- But telling of his sorrow brief I'll be.
- Had never any man so much torture,
- No, nor shall have while this world may endure.
- Bereft he was of sleep and meat and drink,
- That lean he grew and dry as shaft, I think.
- His eyes were hollow and ghastly to behold,
- His face was sallow, all pale and ashen-cold,
- And solitary kept he and alone,
- Wailing the whole night long, making his moan.
- And if he heard a song or instrument,
- Then he would weep ungoverned and lament;
- So feeble were his spirits, and so low,
- And so changed was he, that no man could know
- Him by his words or voice, whoever heard.
- And in this change, for all the world he fared
- As if not troubled by malady of love,
- But by that humor dark and grim, whereof
- Springs melancholy madness in the brain,
- And fantasy unbridled holds its reign.
- And shortly, all was turned quite upside-down,
- Both habits and the temper all had known
- Of him, this woeful lover, Dan Arcite.
- Why should I all day of his woe indite?
- When he'd endured all this a year or two,
- This cruel torment and this pain and woe,
- At Thebes, in his own country, as I said,
- Upon a night, while sleeping in his bed,
- He dreamed of how the winged God Mercury
- Before him stood and bade him happier be.
- His sleep-bestowing wand he bore upright;
- A hat he wore upon his ringlets bright.
- Arrayed this god was (noted at a leap)
- As he'd been when to Argus he gave sleep.
- And thus he spoke: "To Athens shall you wend;
- For all your woe is destined there to end."
- And on that word Arcita woke and started.
- "Now truly, howsoever sore I'm smarted,"
- Said he, "to Athens right now will I fare;
- Nor for the dread of death will I now spare
- To see my lady, whom I love and serve;
- I will not reck of death, with her, nor swerve."
- And with that word he caught a great mirror,
- And saw how changed was all his old colour,
- And saw his visage altered from its kind.
- And right away it ran into his mind
- That since his face was now disfigured so,
- By suffering endured (as well we know),
- He might, if he should bear him low in town,
- Live there in Athens evermore, unknown,
- Seeing his lady well-nigh every day.
- And right anon he altered his array,
- Like a poor labourer in mean attire,
- And all alone, save only for a squire,
- Who knew his secret heart and all his case,
- And who was dressed as poorly as he was,
- To Athens was he gone the nearest way.
- And to the court he went upon a day,
- And at the gate he proffered services
- To drudge and drag, as any one devises.
- And to be brief herein, and to be plain,
- He found employment with a chamberlain
- Was serving in the house of Emily;
- For he was sharp and very soon could see
- What every servant did who served her there.
- Right well could he hew wood and water bear,
- For he was young and mighty, let me own,
- And big of muscle, aye and big of bone,
- To do what any man asked, in a trice.
- A year or two he was in this service,
- Page of the chamber of Emily the bright;
- He said "Philostrates" would name him right.
- But half so well beloved a man as he
- Was never in that court, of his degree;
- His gentle nature was so clearly shown,
- That throughout all the court spread his renown.
- They said it were but kindly courtesy
- If Theseus should heighten his degree
- And put him in more honourable service
- Wherein he might his virtue exercise.
- And thus, anon, his name was so up-sprung,
- Both for his deeds and sayings of his tongue,
- That Theseus had brought him nigh and nigher
- And of the chamber he had made him squire,
- And given him gold to maintain dignity.
- Besides, men brought him, from his own country,
- From year to year, clandestinely, his rent;
- But honestly and slyly it was spent,
- And no man wondered how he came by it.
- And three years thus he lived, with much profit,
- And bore him so in peace and so in war
- There was no man that Theseus loved more.
- And in such bliss I leave Arcita now,
- And upon Palamon some words bestow.
- In darksome, horrible, and strong prison
- These seven years has now sat Palamon,
- Wasted by woe and by his long distress.
- Who has a two-fold evil heaviness
- But Palamon? whom love yet tortures so
- That half out of his wits he is for woe;
- And joined thereto he is a prisoner,
- Perpetually, not only for a year.
- And who could rhyme in English, properly,
- His martyrdom? Forsooth, it is not I;
- And therefore I pass lightly on my way.
- It fell out in the seventh year, in May,
- On the third night (as say the books of old
- Which have this story much more fully told),
- Were it by chance or were it destiny
- (Since, when a thing is destined, it must be),
- That, shortly after midnight, Palamon,
- By helping of a friend, broke from prison,
- And fled the city, fast as he might go;
- For he had given his guard a drink that so
- Was mixed of spice and honey and certain wine
- And Theban opiate and anodyne,
- That all that night, although a man might shake
- This gaoler, he slept on, nor could awake.
- And thus he flees as fast as ever he may.
- The night was short and it was nearly day,
- Wherefore he needs must find a place to hide;
- And to a grove that grew hard by, with stride
- Of furtive foot, went fearful Palamon.
- In brief, he'd formed his plan, as he went on,
- That in the grove he would lie fast all day,
- And when night came, then would he take his way
- Toward Thebes, and there find friends, and of them pray
- Their help on Theseus in war's array;
- And briefly either he would lose his life,
- Or else win Emily to be his wife;
- This is the gist of his intention plain.
- Now I'll return to Arcita again,
- Who little knew how near to him was care
- Till Fortune caught him in her tangling snare.
- The busy lark, the herald of the day,
- Salutes now in her song the morning grey;
- And fiery Phoebus rises up so bright
- That all the east is laughing with the light,
- And with his streamers dries, among the greves,
- The silver droplets hanging on the leaves.
- And so Arcita, in the court royal
- With Theseus and his squire principal,
- Is risen, and looks on the merry day.
- And now, to do his reverence to May,
- Calling to mind the point of his desire,
- He on a courser, leaping high like fire,
- Is ridden to the fields to muse and play,
- Out of the court, a mile or two away;
- And to the grove, whereof I lately told,
- By accident his way began to hold,
- To make him there the garland that one weaves
- Of woodbine leaves and of green hawthorn leaves.
- And loud he sang within the sunlit sheen:
- "O May, with all thy flowers and all thy green,
- Welcome be thou, thou fair and freshening May:
- I hope to pluck some garland green today."
- And from his courser, with a lusty heart,
- Into the grove right hastily did start,
- And on a path he wandered up and down,
- Near which, and as it chanced, this Palamon
- Lay in the thicket, where no man might see,
- For sore afraid of finding death was be.
- He knew not that Arcita was so near:
- God knows he would have doubted eye and ear,
- But it has been a truth these many years
- That "Fields have eyes and every wood has ears."
- It's well for one to bear himself with poise;
- For every day unlooked-for chance annoys.
- And little knew Arcita of his friend,
- Who was so near and heard him to the end,
- Where in the bush lie sat now, keeping still.
- Arcita, having roamed and roved his fill,
- And having sung his rondel, lustily,
- Into a study fell he, suddenly,
- As do these lovers in their strange desires,
- Now in the trees, now down among the briers,
- Now up, now down, like bucket in a well.
- Even as on a Friday, truth to tell,
- The sun shines now, and now the rain comes fast,
- Even so can fickle Venus overcast
- The spirits of her people; as her day,
- Is changeful, so she changes her array.
- Seldom is Friday quite like all the week.
- Arcita, having sung, began to speak,
- And sat him down, sighing like one forlorn.
- "Alas," said he, "the day that I was born!
- How long, O Juno, of thy cruelty,
- Wilt thou wage bitter war on Thebes city?
- Alas! Confounded beyond all reason
- The blood of Cadmus and of Amphion;
- Of royal Cadmus, who was the first man
- To build at Thebes, and first the town began,
- And first of all the city to be king;
- Of his lineage am I, and his offspring,
- By true descent, and of the stock royal:
- And now I'm such a wretched serving thrall,
- That he who is my mortal enemy,
- I serve him as his squire, and all humbly.
- And even more does Juno give me shame,
- For I dare not acknowledge my own name;
- But whereas I was Arcita by right,
- Now I'm Philostrates, not worth a mite.
- Alas, thou cruel Mars! Alas, Juno!
- Thus have your angers all our kin brought low,
- Save only me, and wretched Palamon,
- Whom Theseus martyrs yonder in prison.
- And above all, to slay me utterly,
- Love has his fiery dart so burningly
- Struck through my faithful and care-laden heart,
- My death was patterned ere my swaddling-shirt.
- You slay me with your two eyes, Emily;
- You are the cause for which I now must die.
- For on the whole of all my other care
- I would not set the value of a tare,
- So I could do one thing to your pleasance!"
- And with that word he fell down in a trance
- That lasted long; and then he did up-start.
- This Palamon, who thought that through his heart
- He felt a cold and sudden sword blade glide,
- For rage he shook, no longer would he hide.
- But after he had heard Arcita's tale,
- As he were mad, with face gone deathly pale,
- He started up and sprang out of the thicket,
- Crying: "Arcita, oh you traitor wicked,
- Now are you caught, that crave my lady so,
- For whom I suffer all this pain and woe,
- And are my blood, and know my secrets' store,
- As I have often told you heretofore,
- And have befooled the great Duke Thesues,
- And falsely changed your name and station thus:
- Either I shall be dead or you shall die.
- You shall not love my lady Emily,
- But I will love her, and none other, no;
- For I am Palamon, your mortal foe.
- And though I have no weapon in this place,
- Being but out of prison by God's grace,
- I say again, that either you shall die
- Or else forgo your love for Emily.
- Choose which you will, for you shall not depart."
- This Arcita, with scornful, angry heart,
- When he knew him and all the tale had heard,
- Fierce as a lion, out he pulled a sword,
- And answered thus: "By God that sits above!
- Were it not you are sick and mad for love,
- And that you have no weapon in this place,
- Out of this grove you'd never move a pace,
- But meet your death right now, and at my hand.
- For I renounce the bond and its demand
- Which you assert that I have made with you.
- What, arrant fool, love's free to choose and do,
- And I will have her, spite of all your might!
- But in as much as you're a worthy knight
- And willing to defend your love, in mail,
- Hear now this word: tomorrow I'll not fail
- (Without the cognizance of any wight)
- To come here armed and harnessed as a knight,
- And to bring arms for you, too, as you'll see;
- And choose the better and leave the worse for me.
- And meat and drink this very night I'll bring,
- Enough for you, and clothes for your bedding.
- And if it be that you my lady win
- And slay me in this wood that now I'm in,
- Then may you have your lady, for all of me."
- This Palamon replied: "I do agree."
- And thus they parted till the morrow morn,
- When each had pledged his honour to return.
- O Cupido, that know'st not charity!
- O despot, that no peer will have with thee!
- Truly, 'tis said, that love, like all lordship,
- Declines, with little thanks, a partnership.
- Well learned they that, Arcite and Palamon.
- Arcita rode into the town anon,
- And on the morrow, ere the dawn, he bore,
- Secretly, arms and armour out of store,
- Enough for each, and proper to maintain
- A battle in the field between the twain.
- So on his horse, alone as he was born,
- He carried out that harness as he'd sworn;
- And in the grove, at time and place they'd set,
- Arcita and this Palamon were met.
- Each of the two changed colour in the face.
- For as the hunter in the realm of Thrace
- Stands at the clearing with his ready spear,
- When hunted is the lion, or the bear,
- And through the forest hears him rushing fast,
- Breaking the boughs and leaves, and thinks aghast.
- "Here comes apace my mortal enemy!
- Now, without fail, he must be slain, or I;
- For either I must kill him ere he pass,
- Or he will make of me a dead carcass"-
- So fared these men, in altering their hue,
- So far as each the strength of other knew.
- There was no "good-day" given, no saluting,
- But without word, rehearsal, or such thing,
- Each of them helping, so they armed each other
- As dutifully as he were his own brother;
- And afterward, with their sharp spears and strong,
- They thrust each at the other wondrous long.
- You might have fancied that this Palamon,
- In battle, was a furious, mad lion,
- And that Arcita was a tiger quite:
- Like very boars the two began to smite,
- Like boars that froth for anger in the wood.
- Up to the ankles fought they in their blood.
- And leaving them thus fighting fast and fell,
- Forthwith of Theseus I now will tell.
- Great destiny, minister-general,
- That executes in this world, and for all,
- The needs that God foresaw ere we were born,
- So strong it is that, though the world had sworn
- The contrary of a thing, by yea or nay,
- Yet sometime it shall fall upon a day,
- Though not again within a thousand years.
- For certainly our wishes and our fears,
- Whether of war or peace, or hate or love,
- All, all are ruled by that Foresight above.
- This show I now by mighty Theseus,
- Who to go hunting is so desirous,
- And specially of the hart of ten, in May,
- That, in his bed, there dawns for him no day
- That he's not clothed and soon prepared to ride
- With hound and horn and huntsman at his side.
- For in his hunting has he such delight,
- That it is all his joy and appetite
- To be himself the great hart's deadly bane:
- For after Mars, he serves Diana's reign.
- Clear was the day, as I have told ere this,
- When Theseus, compact of joy and bliss,
- With his Hippolyta, the lovely queen,
- And fair Emilia, clothed all in green,
- A-hunting they went riding royally.
- And to the grove of trees that grew hard by,
- In which there was a hart, as men had told,
- Duke Theseus the shortest way did hold.
- And to the glade he rode on, straight and right,
- For there the hart was wont to go in flight,
- And over a brook, and so forth on his way.
- This duke would have a course at him today,
- With such hounds as it pleased him to command.
- And when this duke was come upon that land,
- Under the slanting sun he looked, anon,
- And there saw Arcita and Palamon,
- Who furiously fought, as two boars do;
- The bright swords went in circles to and fro
- So terribly, that even their least stroke
- Seemed powerful enough to fell an oak;
- But who the two were, nothing did he note.
- This duke his courser with the sharp spurs smote,
- And in one bound he was between the two,
- And lugged his great sword out, and cried out: "Ho!
- No more, I say, on pain of losing head!
- By mighty Mars, that one shall soon be dead
- Who smites another stroke that I may see!
- But tell me now what manner of men ye be
- That are so hardy as to fight out here
- Without a judge or other officer,
- As if you-rode in lists right royally?"
- This Palamon replied, then, hastily,
- Saying: "O Sire, what need for more ado?
- We have deserved our death at hands of you.
- Two woeful wretches are we, two captives
- That are encumbered by our own sad lives;
- And as you are a righteous lord and judge,
- Give us not either mercy or refuge,
- But slay me first, for sacred charity;
- But slay my fellow here, as well, with me.
- Or slay him first; for though you learn it late,
- This is your mortal foe, Arcita- wait!-
- That from the land was banished, on his head.
- And for the which he merits to be dead.
- For this is he who came unto your gate,
- Calling himself Philostrates- nay, wait!-
- Thus has he fooled you well this many a year,
- And you have made him your chief squire, I hear:
- And this is he that loves fair Emily.
- For since the day is come when I must die,
- I make confession plainly and say on,
- That I am that same woeful Palamon
- Who has your prison broken, viciously.
- I am your mortal foe, and it is I
- Who love so hotly Emily the bright
- That I'll die gladly here within her sigh!
- Therefore do I ask death as penalty,
- But slay my fellow with the same mercy,
- For both of us deserve but to be slain."
- This worthy duke presently spoke again,
- Saying: "This judgment needs but a short session:
- Your own mouth, aye, and by your own confession,
- Has doomed and damned you, as I shall record.
- There is no need for torture, on my word.
- But you shall die, by mighty Mars the red!"
- But then the queen, whose heart for pity bled,
- Began to weep, and so did Emily
- And all the ladies in the company.
- Great pity must it be, so thought they all,
- That ever such misfortune should befall:
- For these were gentlemen, of great estate,
- And for no thing, save love, was their debate.
- They saw their bloody wounds, so sore and wide,
- And all cried out- greater and less, they cried:
- "Have mercy, lord, upon us women all!"
- And down upon their bare knees did they fall,
- And would have kissed his feet there where he stood,
- Till at the last assuaged was his high mood;
- For soon will pity flow through gentle heart.
- And though he first for ire did shake and start,
- He soon considered, to state the case in brief,
- What cause they had for fighting, what for grief;
- And though his anger still their guilt accused,
- Yet in his reason he held them both excused;
- In such wise: he thought well that every man
- Will help himself in love, if he but can,
- And will himself deliver from prison;
- And, too, at heart he had compassion on
- Those women, for they cried and wept as one,
- And in his gentle heart he thought anon,
- And softly to himself he said then: "Fie
- Upon a lord that will have no mercy,
- But acts the lion, both in word and deed,
- To those repentant and in fear and need,
- As well as to the proud and pitiless man
- That still would do the thing that he began!
- That lord must surely in discretion lack
- Who, in such case, can no distinction make,
- But weighs both proud and humble in one scale."
- And shortly, when his ire was thus grown pale,
- He looked up to the sky, with eyes alight,
- And spoke these words, as he would promise plight:
- "The god of love, ah benedicite!
- How mighty and how great a lord is he!
- Against his might may stand no obstacles,
- A true god is he by his miracles;
- For he can manage, in his own sweet wise,
- The heart of anyone as he devise.
- Lo, here, Arcita and this Palamon,
- That were delivered out of my prison,
- And might have lived in Thebes right royally,
- Knowing me for their mortal enemy,
- And also that their lives lay in my hand;
- And yet their love has wiled them to this land,
- Against all sense, and brought them here to die!
- Look you now, is not that a folly high?
- Who can be called a fool, except he love?
- And see, for sake of God who sits above,
- See how they bleed! Are they not well arrayed?
- Thus has their lord, the god of love, repaid
- Their wages and their fees for their service!
- And yet they are supposed to be full wise
- Who serve love well, whatever may befall!
- But this is yet the best jest of them all,
- That she for whom they have this jollity
- Can thank them for it quite as much as me;
- She knows no more of all this fervent fare,
- By God! than knows a cuckoo or a hare.
- But all must be essayed, both hot and cold,
- A man must play the fool, when young or old;
- I know it of myself from years long gone:
- For of love's servants I've been numbered one.
- And therefore, since I know well all love's pain,
- And know how sorely it can man constrain,
- As one that has been taken in the net,
- I will forgive your trespass, and forget,
- At instance of my sweet queen, kneeling here,
- Aye, and of Emily, my sister dear.
- And you shall presently consent to swear
- That nevermore will you my power dare,
- Nor wage war on me, either night or day,
- But will be friends to me in all you may;
- I do forgive this trespass, full and fair."
- And then they swore what he demanded there,
- And, of his might, they of his mercy prayed,
- And he extended grace, and thus he said:
- "To speak for royalty's inheritress,
- Although she be a queen or a princess,
- Each of you both is worthy, I confess,
- When comes the time to wed: but nonetheless,
- I speak now of my sister Emily,
- The cause of all this strife and jealousy-
- You know yourselves she may not marry two,
- At once, although you fight or what you do:
- One of you, then, and be he loath or lief,
- Must pipe his sorrows in an ivy leaf.
- That is to say, she cannot have you both,
- However jealous one may be, or wroth.
- Therefore I put you both in this decree,
- That each of you shall learn his destiny
- As it is cast; and hear, now, in what wise
- The word of fate shall speak through my device.
- "My will is this, to draw conclusion flat,
- Without reply, or plea, or caveat
- (In any case, accept it for the best),
- That each of you shall follow his own quest,
- Free of all ransom or of fear from me;
- And this day, fifty weeks hence, both shall be
- Here once again, each with a hundred knights,
- Armed for the lists, who stoutly for your rights
- Will ready be to battle, to maintain
- Your claim to love. I promise you, again,
- Upon my word, and as I am a knight,
- That whichsoever of you wins the fight,
- That is to say, whichever of you two
- May with his hundred, whom I spoke of, do
- His foe to death, or out of boundary drive,
- Then he shall have Emilia to wive
- To whom Fortune gives so fair a grace.
- The lists shall be erected in this place.
- And God so truly on my soul have ruth
- As I shall prove an honest judge, in truth.
- You shall no other judgment in me waken
- Than that the one shall die or else be taken.
- And if you think the sentence is well said,
- Speak your opinion, that you're well repaid.
- This is the end, and I conclude hereon."
- Who looks up lightly now but Palamon?
- Who leaps for you but Arcita the knight?
- And who could tell, or who could ever write
- The jubilation made within that place
- Where Theseus has shown so fair a grace?
- But down on knee went each one for delight
- And thanked him there with all his heart and might,
- And specially those Thebans did their part.
- And thus, with high hopes, being blithe of heart,
- They took their leave; and homeward did they ride
- To Thebes that sits within her old walls wide.
-
- Explicit secunda pars.
- Sequitur pars tercia.
-
- I think that men would deem it negligence
- If I forgot to tell of the expense
- Of Theseus, who went so busily
- To work upon the lists, right royally;
- For such an amphitheatre he made,
- Its equal never yet on earth was laid.
- The circuit, rising, hemmed a mile about,
- Walled all of stone and moated deep without.
- Round was the shape as compass ever traces,
- And built in tiers, the height of sixty paces,
- That those who sat in one tier, or degree,
- Should hinder not the folk behind to see.
- Eastward there stood a gate of marble white.
- And westward such another, opposite.
- In brief, no place on earth, and so sublime,
- Was ever made in so small space of time;
- For in the land there was no craftsman quick
- At plane geometry or arithmetic,
- No painter and no sculptor of hard stone,
- But Theseus pressed meat and wage upon
- To build that amphitheatre and devise.
- And to observe all rites and sacrifice,
- Over the eastern gate, and high above,
- For worship of Queen Venus, god of love,
- He built an altar and an oratory;
- And westward, being mindful of the glory
- Of Mars, he straightway builded such another
- As cost a deal of gold and many a bother.
- And northward, in a turret on the wall,
- Of alabaster white and red coral,
- An oratory splendid as could be,
- In honour of Diana's chastity,
- Duke Theseus wrought out in noble wise.
- But yet have forgot to advertise
- The noble carvings and the portraitures,
- The shapes, the countenances, the figures
- That all were in these oratories three.
- First, in the fane of Venus, one might see,
- Wrought on the wall, and piteous to behold,
- The broken slumbers and the sighing cold,
- The sacred tears and the lamenting dire,
- The fiery throbbing of the strong desire,
- That all love's servants in this life endure;
- The vows that all their promises assure;
- Pleasure and hope, desire, foolhardiness,
- Beauty, youth, bawdiness, and riches, yes,
- Charms, and all force, and lies, and flattery,
- Expense, and labour; aye, and Jealousy
- That wore of marigolds a great garland
- And had a cuckoo sitting on her hand;
- Carols and instruments and feasts and dances,
- Lust and array, and all the circumstances
- Of love that I may reckon or ever shall,
- In order they were painted on the wall,
- Aye, and more, too, than I have ever known.
- For truly, all the Mount of Citheron,
- Where Venus has her chief and favoured dwelling,
- Was painted on that wall, beyond my telling,
- With all the gardens in their loveliness.
- Nor was forgot the gate-guard Idleness,
- Nor fair Narcissus of the years long gone,
- Nor yet the folly of King Solomon,
- No, nor the giant strength of Hercules,
- Nor Circe's and Medea's sorceries,
- Nor Turnus with his hardy, fierce courage,
- Nor the rich Croesus, captive in his age.
- Thus may be seen that wisdom, nor largess,
- Beauty, nor skill, nor strength, nor hardiness,
- May with Queen Venus share authority;
- For as she wills, so must the whole world be.
- Lo, all these folk were so caught in her snare
- They cried aloud in sorrow and in care.
- Here let suffice examples one or two,
- Though I might give a thousand more to you.
- The form of Venus, glorious as could be,
- Was naked, floating on the open sea,
- And from the navel down all covered was
- With green waves, bright as ever any glass.
- A citole in her small right hand had she,
- And on her head, and beautiful to see,
- A garland of red roses, sweet smelling,
- Above her swirled her white doves, fluttering.
- Before her stood her one son, Cupido,
- Whose two white wings upon his shoulders grow;
- And blind he was, as it is often seen;
- A bow he bore, and arrows bright and keen.
- Why should I not as well, now, tell you all
- The portraiture that was upon the wall
- Within the fane of mighty Mars the red?
- In length and breadth the whole wall was painted
- Like the interior of that grisly place,
- The mighty temple of great Mars in Thrace,
- In that same cold and frosty region where
- Mars to his supreme mansion may repair.
- First, on the wall was limned a vast forest
- Wherein there dwelt no man nor any beast,
- With knotted, gnarled, and leafless trees, so old
- The sharpened stumps were dreadful to behold;
- Through which there ran a rumbling, even now,
- As if a storm were breaking every bough;
- And down a hill, beneath a sharp descent,
- The temple stood of Mars armipotent,
- Wrought all of burnished steel, whereof the gate
- Was grim like death to see, and long, and strait.
- And therefrom raged a wind that seemed to shake
- The very ground, and made the great doors quake.
- The northern light in at those same doors shone,
- For window in that massive wall was none
- Through which a man might any light discern.
- The doors were all of adamant eterne,
- Rivetted on both sides, and all along,
- With toughest iron; and to make it strong,
- Each pillar that sustained this temple grim
- Was thick as tun, of iron bright and trim.
- There saw I first the dark imagining
- Of felony, and all the compassing;
- And cruel anger, red as burning coal;
- Pickpurses, and the dread that eats the soul;
- The smiling villain, hiding knife in cloak;
- The farm barns burning, and the thick black smoke;
- The treachery of murder done in bed;
- The open battle, with the wounds that bled;
- Contest, with bloody knife and sharp menace;
- And loud with creaking was that dismal place.
- The slayer of himself, too, saw I there,
- His very heart's blood matted in his hair;
- The nail that's driven in the skull by night;
- The cold plague-corpse, with gaping mouth upright
- In middle of the temple sat Mischance,
- With gloomy, grimly woeful countenance.
- And saw I Madness laughing in his rage;
- Armed risings, and outcries, and fierce outrage;
- The carrion in the bush, with throat wide carved;
- A thousand slain, nor one by plague, nor starved.
- The tyrant, with the spoils of violent theft;
- The town destroyed, in ruins, nothing left.
- And saw I burnt the ships that dance by phares,
- The hunter strangled by the fierce wild bears;
- The sow chewing the child right in the cradle;
- The cook well scalded, spite of his long ladle.
- Nothing was lacking of Mars' evil part:
- The carter over-driven by his cart,
- Under a wheel he lay low in the dust.
- There were likewise in Mars' house, as needs must,
- The surgeon, and the butcher, and the smith
- Who forges sharp swords and great ills therewith.
- And over all, depicted in a tower,
- Sat Conquest, high in honour and in power,
- Yet with a sharp sword hanging o'er his head
- But by the tenuous twisting of a thread.
- Depicted was the death of Julius,
- Of Nero great, and of Antonius;
- And though at that same time they were unborn,
- There were their deaths depicted to adorn
- The menacing of Mars, in likeness sure;
- Things were so shown, in all that portraiture,
- As are fore-shown among the stars above,
- Who shall be slain in war or dead for love.
- Suffice one instance from old plenitude,
- I could not tell them all, even if I would.
- Mars' image stood upon a chariot,
- Armed, and so grim that mad he seemed, God wot;
- And o'er his head two constellations shone
- Of stars that have been named in writings known.
- One being Puella, and one Rubeus.
- This god of armies was companioned thus:
- A wolf there was before him, at his feet,
- Red-eyed, and of a dead man he did eat.
- A cunning pencil there had limned this story
- In reverence of Mars and of his glory.
- Now to the temple of Diana chaste,
- As briefly as I can, I'll pass in haste,
- To lay before you its description well.
- In pictures, up and down, the wall could tell
- Of hunting and of modest chastity.
- There saw I how Callisto fared when she
- (Diana being much aggrieved with her)
- Was changed from woman into a she-bear,
- And after, made into the lone Pole Star;
- There was it; I can't tell how such things are.
- Her son, too, is a star, as men may see.
- There saw I Daphne turned into a tree
- (I do not mean Diana, no, but she,
- Peneus' daughter, who was called Daphne)
- I saw Actaeon made a hart all rude
- For punishment of seeing Diana nude;
- I saw, too, how his fifty hounds had caught
- And him were eating, since they knew him not.
- And painted farther on, I saw before
- How Atalanta hunted the wild boar;
- And Meleager, and many another there,
- For which Diana wrought him woe and care.
- There saw I many another wondrous tale
- From which I will not now draw memory's veil.
- This goddess on an antlered hart was set,
- With little hounds about her feet, and yet
- Beneath her perfect feet there was a moon,
- Waxing it was, but it should wane full soon.
- In robes of yellowish green her statue was,
- She'd bow in hand and arrows in a case.
- Her eyes were downcast, looking at the ground.
- Where Pluto in his dark realm may be found.
- Before her was a woman travailing,
- Who was so long in giving birth, poor thing,
- That pitifully Lucina did she call,
- Praying, "Oh help, for thou may'st best of all!"
- Well could he paint, who had this picture wrought,
- With many a florin he'd his colours bought,
- But now the lists were done, and Theseus,
- Who at so great cost had appointed thus
- The temples and the circus, as I tell,
- When all was done, he liked it wondrous well.
- But hold I will from Theseus, and on
- To speak of Arcita and Palamon.
- The day of their return is forthcoming,
- When each of them a hundred knights must bring
- The combat to support, as I have told;
- And into Athens, covenant to uphold,
- Has each one ridden with his hundred knights,
- Well armed for war, at all points, in their mights.
- And certainly, 'twas thought by many a man
- That never, since the day this world began,
- Speaking of good knights hardy of their hands,
- Wherever God created seas and lands,
- Was, of so few, so noble company.
- For every man that loved all chivalry,
- And eager was to win surpassing fame,
- Had prayed to play a part in that great game;
- And all was well with him who chosen was.
- For if there came tomorrow such a case,
- You know right well that every lusty knight
- Who loves the ladies fair and keeps his might,
- Be it in England, aye or otherwhere,
- Would wish of all things to be present there
- To fight for some fair lady. Ben'cite!
- 'Twould be a pleasant goodly sight to see!
- And so it was with those with Palamon.
- With him there rode of good knights many a one;
- Some would be armoured in a habergeon
- And in a breastplate, under light jupon;
- And some wore breast-and back-plates thick and large;
- And some would have a Prussian shield, or targe;
- Some on their very legs were armoured well,
- And carried axe, and some a mace of steel.
- There is no new thing, now, that is not old.
- And so they all were armed, as I have told,
- To his own liking and design, each one.
- There might you see, riding with Palamon,
- Lycurgus' self, the mighty king of Thrace;
- Black was his beard and manly was his face.
- The eyeballs in the sockets of his head,
- They glowed between a yellow and a red.
- And like a griffon glared he round about
- From under bushy eyebrows thick and stout.
- His limbs were large, his muscles hard and strong.
- His shoulders broad, his arms both big and long,
- And, as the fashion was in his country,
- High in a chariot of gold stood he,
- With four white bulls in traces, to progress.
- Instead of coat-of-arms above harness,
- With yellow claws preserved and bright as gold,
- He wore a bear-skin, black and very old.
- His long combed hair was hanging down his back,
- As any raven's feather it was black:
- A wreath of gold, arm-thick, of heavy weight,
- Was on his head, and set with jewels great,
- Of rubies fine and perfect diamonds.
- About his car there circled huge white hounds,
- Twenty or more, as large as any steer,
- To hunt the lion or the antlered deer;
- And so they followed him, with muzzles bound,
- Wearing gold collars with smooth rings and round.
- A hundred lords came riding in his rout,
- All armed at point, with hearts both stern and stout
- With Arcita, in tales men call to mind,
- The great Emetreus, a king of Ind,
- Upon a bay steed harnessed all in steel,
- Covered with cloth of gold, all diapered well,
- Came riding like the god of arms, great Mars.
- His coat-of-arms was cloth of the Tartars,
- Begemmed with pearls, all white and round and great.
- Of beaten gold his saddle, burnished late;
- A mantle from his shoulders hung, the thing
- Close-set with rubies red, like fire blazing.
- His crisp hair all in bright ringlets was run,
- Yellow as gold and gleaming as the sun.
- His nose was high, his eyes a bright citrine,
- His lips were full, his colouring sanguine.
- And a few freckles on his face were seen,
- None either black or yellow, but the mean;
- And like a lion he his glances cast.
- Not more than five-and-twenty years he'd past.
- His beard was well beginning, now, to spring;
- His voice was as a trumpet thundering.
- Upon his brows he wore, of laurel green,
- A garland, fresh and pleasing to be seen.
- Upon his wrist he bore, for his delight,
- An eagle tame, as any lily white.
- A hundred lords came riding with him there,
- All armed, except their heads, in all their gear,
- And wealthily appointed in all things.
- For, trust me well, that dukes and earls and kings
- Were gathered in this noble company
- For love and for increase of chivalry.
- About this king there ran, on every side,
- Many tame lions and leopards in their pride.
- And in such wise these mighty lords, in sum,
- Were, of a Sunday, to the city come
- About the prime, and in the town did light.
- This Theseus, this duke, this noble knight,
- When he'd conducted them to his city,
- And quartered them, according to degree,
- He feasted them, and was at so much pains
- To give them ease and honour, of his gains,
- That men yet hold that never human wit,
- Of high or low estate, could better it.
- The minstrelsy, the service at the feast,
- The great gifts to the highest and the least,
- The furnishings of Theseus, rich palace,
- Who highest sat or lowest on the dais,
- What ladies fairest were or best dandling,
- Or which of them could dance the best, or sing,
- Or who could speak most feelingly of love,
- Or what hawks sat upon the perch above,
- Or what great hounds were lying on the floor-
- Of all these I will make no mention more;
- But tell my tale, for that, I think, is best;
- Now comes the point, and listen if you've zest.
- That Sunday night, ere day began to spring,
- When Palamon the earliest lark heard sing,
- Although it lacked two hours of being day,
- Yet the lark sang, and Palamon sang a lay.
- With pious heart and with a high courage
- He rose, to go upon a pilgrimage
- Unto the blessed Cytherea's shrine
- (I mean Queen Venus, worthy and benign).
- And at her hour he then walked forth apace
- Out to the lists wherein her temple was,
- And down he knelt in manner to revere,
- And from a full heart spoke as you shall hear.
- "Fairest of fair, O lady mine, Venus,
- Daughter of Jove and spouse to Vulcanus,
- Thou gladdener of the Mount of Citheron,
- By that great love thou borest to Adon,
- Have pity on my bitter tears that smart
- And hear my humble prayer within thy heart.
- Alas! I have no words in which to tell
- The effect of all the torments of my hell;
- My heavy heart its evils can't bewray;
- I'm so confused I can find naught to say.
- But mercy, lady bright, that knowest well
- My heart, and seest all the ills I feel,
- Consider and have ruth upon my sore
- As truly as I shall, for evermore,
- Well as I may, thy one true servant be,
- And wage a war henceforth on chastity.
- If thou wilt help, thus do I make my vow,
- To boast of knightly skill I care not now,
- Nor do I ask tomorrow's victory,
- Nor any such renown, nor vain glory
- Of prize of arms, blown before lord and churl,
- But I would have possession of one girl,
- Of Emily, and die in thy service;
- Find thou the manner how, and in what wise.
- For I care not, unless it better be,
- Whether I vanquish them or they do me,
- So I may have my lady in my arms.
- For though Mars is the god of war's alarms,
- Thy power is so great in Heaven above,
- That, if it be thy will, I'll have my love.
- In thy fane will I worship always, so
- That on thine altar, where'er I ride or go,
- I will lay sacrifice and thy fires feed.
- And if thou wilt not so, O lady, cede,
- I pray thee, that tomorrow, with a spear,
- Arcita bear me through the heart, just here.
- For I'll care naught, when I have lost my life,
- That Arcita may win her for his wife.
- This the effect and end of all my prayer,
- Give me my love, thou blissful lady fair."
- Now when he'd finished all the orison,
- His sacrifice he made, this Palamon,
- Right piously, with all the circumstance,
- Albeit I tell not now his observance.
- But at the last the form of Venus shook
- And gave a sign, and thereupon he took
- This as acceptance of his prayer that day.
- For though the augury showed some delay,
- Yet he knew well that granted was his boon;
- And with glad heart he got him home right soon.
- Three hours unequal after Palamon
- To Venus' temple at the lists had gone,
- Up rose the sun and up rose Emily,
- And to Diana's temple did she hie.
- Her maidens led she thither, and with them
- They carefully took fire and each emblem,
- And incense, robes, and the remainder all
- Of things for sacrifice ceremonial.
- There was not one thing lacking; I'll but add
- The horns of mead, as was a way they had.
- In smoking temple, full of draperies fair,
- This Emily with young heart debonnaire,
- Her body washed in water from a well;
- But how she did the rite I dare not tell,
- Except it be at large, in general;
- And yet it was a thing worth hearing all;
- When one's well meaning, there is no transgression;
- But it is best to speak at one's discretion.
- Her bright hair was unbound, but combed withal;
- She wore of green oak leaves a coronal
- Upon her lovely head. Then she began
- Two fires upon the altar stone to fan,
- And did her ceremonies as we're told
- In Statius' Thebaid and books as old.
- When kindled was the fire, with sober face
- Unto Diana spoke she in that place.
- "O thou chaste goddess of the wildwood green,
- By whom all heaven and earth and sea are seen,
- Queen of the realm of Pluto, dark and low,
- Goddess of maidens, that my heart dost know
- For all my years, and knowest what I desire,
- Oh, save me from thy vengeance and thine ire
- That on Actaeon fell so cruelly.
- Chaste goddess, well indeed thou knowest that I
- Desire to be a virgin all my life,
- Nor ever wish to be man's love or wife.
- I am, thou know'st, yet of thy company,
- A maid, who loves the hunt and venery,
- And to go rambling in the greenwood wild,
- And not to be a wife and be with child.
- I do not crave the company of man.
- Now help me, lady, since thou may'st and can,
- By the three beings who are one in thee.
- For Palamon, who bears such love to me,
- And for Arcita, loving me so sore,
- This grace I pray thee, without one thing more,
- To send down love and peace between those two,
- And turn their hearts away from me: so do
- That all their furious love and their desire,
- And all their ceaseless torment and their fire
- Be quenched or turned into another place;
- And if it be thou wilt not show this grace,
- Or if my destiny be moulded so
- That I must needs have one of these same two,
- Then send me him that most desires me.
- Behold, O goddess of utter chastity,
- The bitter tears that down my two cheeks fall.
- Since thou art maid and keeper of us all,
- My maidenhead keep thou, and still preserve,
- And while I live a maid, thee will I serve."
- The fires blazed high upon the altar there,
- While Emily was saying thus her prayer,
- But suddenly she saw a sight most quaint,
- For there, before her eyes, one fire went faint,
- Then blazed again; and after that, anon,
- The other fire was quenched, and so was gone.
- And as it died it made a whistling sound,
- As do wet branches burning on the ground,
- And from the brands' ends there ran out, anon,
- What looked like drops of blood, and many a one;
- At which so much aghast was Emily
- That she was near dazed, and began to cry,
- For she knew naught of what it signified;
- But only out of terror thus she cried
- And wept, till it was pitiful to hear.
- But thereupon Diana did appear,
- With bow in hand, like any right huntress,
- And said: "My daughter, leave this heaviness.
- Among the high gods it has been affirmed,
- And by eternal written word confirmed,
- That you shall be the wife of one of those
- Who bear for you so many cares and woes;
- But unto which of them may not tell.
- I can no longer tarry, so farewell.
- The fires that on my altar burn incense
- Should tell you everything, ere you go hence,
- Of what must come of love in this your case."
- And with that word the arrows of the chase
- The goddess carried clattered and did ring,
- And forth she went in mystic vanishing;
- At which this Emily astonished was,
- And said she then: "Ah, what means this, alas!
- I put myself in thy protection here,
- Diana, and at thy disposal dear."
- And home she wended, then, the nearest way.
- This is the purport; there's no more to say.
- At the next hour of Mars, and following this,
- Arcita to the temple walked, that is
- Devoted to fierce Mars, to sacrifice
- With all the ceremonies, pagan-wise.
- With sobered heart and high devotion, on
- This wise, right thus he said his orison.
- "O mighty god that in the regions cold
- Of Thrace art honoured, where thy lordships hold,
- And hast in every realm and every land
- The reins of battle in thy guiding hand,
- And givest fortune as thou dost devise,
- Accept of me my pious sacrifice.
- If so it be that my youth may deserve,
- And that my strength be worthy found to serve
- Thy godhead, and be numbered one of thine,
- Then pray I thee for ruth on pain that's mine.
- For that same pain and even that hot fire
- Wherein thou once did'st burn with deep desire,
- When thou did'st use the marvelous beauty
- Of fair young wanton Venus, fresh and free,
- And had'st her in thine arms and at thy will
- (Howbeit with thee, once, all the chance fell ill,
- And Vulcan caught thee in his net, whenas
- He found thee lying with his wife, alas!)-
- For that same sorrow that was in thy heart,
- Have pity, now, upon my pains that smart.
- I'm young, and little skilled, as knowest thou,
- With love more hurt and much more broken now
- Than ever living creature was, I'm sure;
- For she who makes me all this woe endure,
- Whether I float or sink cares not at all,
- And ere she'll hear with mercy when I call,
- I must by prowess win her in this place;
- And well I know, too, without help and grace
- Of thee, my human strength shall not avail
- Then help me, lord, tomorrow not to fail,
- For sake of that same fire that once burned thee,
- The which consuming fire so now burns me;
- And grant, tomorrow, I have victory.
- Mine be the toil, and thine the whole glory!
- Thy sovereign temple will I honour most
- Of any spot, and toil and count no cost
- To pleasure thee and in thy craft have grace,
- And in thy fane my banner will I place,
- And all the weapons of my company;
- And evermore, until the day I die,
- Eternal fire shalt thou before thee find.
- Moreover, to this vow myself I bind:
- My beard, my hair that ripples down so long,
- That never yet has felt the slightest wrong
- Of razor or of shears, to thee I'll give,
- And be thy loyal servant while I live.
- Now, lord, have pity on my sorrows sore;
- Give me the victory. I ask no more."
- With ended prayer of Arcita the young,
- The rings that on the temple door were hung,
- And even the doors themselves, rattled so fast
- That this Arcita found himself aghast.
- The fires blazed high upon the altar bright,
- Until the entire temple shone with light;
- And a sweet odour rose up from the ground;
- And Arcita whirled then his arm around,
- And yet more incense on the fire he cast,
- And did still further rites; and at the last
- The armour of God Mars began to ring,
- And with that sound there came a murmuring,
- Low and uncertain, saying: "Victory!"
- For which he gave Mars honour and glory.
- And thus in joy and hope, which all might dare,
- Arcita to his lodging then did fare,
- Fain of the fight as fowl is of the sun.
- But thereupon such quarrelling was begun,
- From this same granting, in the heaven above,
- 'Twixt lovely Venus, goddess of all love,
- And Mars, the iron god armipotent,
- That Jove toiled hard to make a settlement;
- Until the sallow Saturn, calm and cold,
- Who had so many happenings known of old,
- Found from his full experience the art
- To satisfy each party and each part.
- For true it is, age has great advantage;
- Experience and wisdom come with age;
- Men may the old out-run, but not out-wit.
- Thus Saturn, though it scarcely did befit
- His nature so to do, devised a plan
- To quiet all the strife, and thus began:
- "Now my dear daughter Venus," quoth Saturn,
- "My course, which has so wide a way to turn,
- Has power more than any man may know.
- Mine is the drowning in sea below;
- Mine is the dungeon underneath the moat;
- Mine is the hanging and strangling by the throat;
- Rebellion, and the base crowd's murmuring,
- The groaning and the private poisoning,
- And vengeance and amercement- all are mine,
- While yet I dwell within the Lion's sign.
- Mine is the ruining of all high halls,
- And tumbling down of towers and of walls
- Upon the miner and the carpenter.
- I struck down Samson, that pillar shaker;
- And mine are all the maladies so cold,
- The treasons dark, the machinations old;
- My glance is father of all pestilence.
- Now weep no more. I'll see, with diligence,
- That Palamon, who is your own true knight,
- Shall have his lady, as you hold is right.
- Though Mars may help his man, yet none the less
- Between you two there must come sometime peace,
- And though you be not of one temperament,
- Causing each day such violent dissent,
- I am your grandsire and obey your will;
- Weep then no more, your pleasure I'll fulfill."
- Now will I cease to speak of gods above,
- Of Mars and Venus, goddess of all love,
- And tell you now, as plainly as I can,
- The great result, for which I first began.
-
- Explicit tercia pars.
- Sequitur pars quarta.
-
- Great was the fete in Athens on that day,
- And too, the merry season of the May
- Gave everyone such joy and such pleasance
- That all that Monday they'd but joust and dance,
- Or spend the time in Venus' high service.
- But for the reason that they must arise
- Betimes, to see the heralded great fight,
- All they retired to early rest that night.
- And on the morrow, when that day did spring,
- Of horse and harness, noise and clattering,
- There was enough in hostelries about.
- And to the palace rode full many a rout
- Of lords, bestriding steeds and on palfreys.
- There could you see adjusting of harness,
- So curious and so rich, and wrought so well
- Of goldsmiths' work, embroidery, and of steel;
- The shields, the helmets bright, the gay trappings,
- The gold-hewn casques, the coats-of-arms, the rings,
- The lords in vestments rich, on their coursers,
- Knights with their retinues and also squires;
- The rivetting of spears, the helm-buckling,
- The strapping of the shields, and. thong-lacing-
- In their great need, not one of them was idle;
- The frothing steeds, champing the golden bridle,
- And the quick smiths, and armourers also,
- With file and hammer spurring to and fro;
- Yeoman, and peasants with short staves were out,
- Crowding as thick as they could move about;
- Pipes, trumpets, kettledrums, and clarions,
- That in the battle sound such grim summons;
- The palace full of people, up and down,
- Here three, there ten, debating the renown
- And questioning about these Theban knights,
- Some put it thus, some said, "It's so by rights."
- Some held with him who had the great black beard,
- Some with the bald-heads, some with the thick haired;
- Some said, "He looks grim, and he'll fight like hate;
- He has an axe of twenty pound in weight."
- And thus the hall was full of gossiping
- Long after the bright sun began to spring.
- The mighty Theseus, from sleep awakened
- By songs and all the noise that never slackened,
- Kept yet the chamber of this rich palace,
- Till the two Theban knights, with equal grace
- And honour, were ushered in with flourish fitting.
- Duke Theseus was at a window sitting,
- Arrayed as he were god upon a throne.
- Then pressed the people thitherward full soon,
- To see him and to do him reverence,
- Aye, and to hear commands of sapience.
- A herald on a scaffold cried out "Ho!"
- Till all the people's noise was stilled; and so,
- When he observed that all were fallen still,
- He then proclaimed the mighty ruler's will.
- "The duke our lord, full wise and full discreet,
- Holds that it were but wanton waste to meet
- And fight, these gentle folk, all in the guise
- Of mortal battle in this enterprise.
- Wherefore, in order that no man may die,
- He does his earlier purpose modify.
- No man, therefore, on pain of loss of life,
- Shall any arrow, pole-axe, or short knife
- Send into lists in any wise, or bring;
- Nor any shortened sword, for point-thrusting,
- Shall a man draw, or bear it by his side.
- Nor shall knight against opponent ride,
- Save one full course, with any sharp-ground spear;
- Unhorsed, a man may thrust with any gear.
- And he that's overcome, should this occur,
- Shall not be slain, but brought to barrier,
- Whereof there shall be one on either side;
- Let him be forced to go there and abide.
- And if by chance the leader there must go,
- Of either side, or slay his equal foe,
- No longer, then, shall tourneying endure.
- God speed you; go forth now, and lay on sure.
- With long sword and with maces fight your fill.
- Go now your ways; this is the lord duke's will."
- The voices of the people rent the skies,
- Such was the uproar of their merry cries:
- "Now God save such a lord, who is so good
- He will not have destruction of men's blood!"
- Up start the trumpets and make melody.
- And to the lists rode forth the company,
- In marshalled ranks, throughout the city large,
- All hung with cloth of gold, and not with serge.
- Full like a lord this noble duke did ride,
- With the two Theban knights on either side;
- And, following, rode the queen and Emily,
- And, after, came another company
- Of one and other, each in his degree.
- And thus they went throughout the whole city,
- And to the lists they came, all in good time.
- The day was not yet fully come to prime
- When throned was Theseus full rich and high,
- And Queen Hippolyta and Emily,
- While other ladies sat in tiers about.
- Into the seats then pressed the lesser rout.
- And westward, through the gate of Mars, right hearty,
- Arcita and the hundred of his party
- With banner red is entering anon;
- And in that self-same moment, Palamon
- Is under Venus, eastward in that place,
- With banner white, and resolute of face.
- In all the world, searching it up and down,
- So equal were they all, from heel to crown,
- There were no two such bands in any way.
- For there was no man wise enough to say
- How either had of other advantage
- In high repute, or in estate, or age,
- So even were they chosen, as I guess.
- And in two goodly ranks, they did then dress.
- And when the name was called of every one,
- That cheating in their number might be none,
- Then were the gates closed, and the cry rang loud:
- "Now do your devoir, all you young knights proud!"
- The heralds cease their spurring up and down;
- Now ring the trumpets as the charge is blown;
- And there's no more to say, for east and west
- Two hundred spears are firmly laid in rest;
- And the sharp spurs are thrust, now, into side.
- Now see men who can joust and who can ride!
- Now shivered are the shafts on bucklers thick;
- One feels through very breast-bone the spear's prick;
- Lances are flung full twenty feet in height;
- Out flash the swords like silver burnished bright.
- Helmets are hewed, the lacings ripped and shred;
- Out bursts the blood, gushing in stern streams red.
- With mighty maces bones are crushed in joust.
- One through the thickest throng begins to thrust.
- There strong steeds stumble now, and down goes all.
- One rolls beneath their feet as rolls a ball.
- One flails about with dub, being overthrown,
- Another, on a mailed horse, rides him down.
- One through the body's hurt, and haled, for aid.
- Spite of his struggles, to the barricade,
- As compact was, and there he must abide;
- Another's captured by the other side.
- At times Duke Theseus orders them to rest,
- To eat a bite and drink what each likes best.
- And many times that day those Thebans two
- Met in the fight and wrought each other woe;
- Unhorsed each has the other on that day.
- No tigress in the vale of Galgophey,
- Whose little whelp is stolen in the light,
- Is cruel to the hunter as Arcite
- For jealousy is cruel to Palamon;
- Nor in Belmarie, when the hunt is on
- Is there a lion, wild for want of food,
- That of his prey desires so much the blood
- As Palamon the death of Arcite there.
- Their jealous blows fall on their helmets fair;
- Out leaps the blood and makes their two sides red.
- But sometime comes the end of every deed;
- And ere the sun had sunk to rest in gold,
- The mighty King Emetreus did hold
- This Palamon, as he fought with Arcite,
- And made his sword deep in the flesh to bite;
- And by the force of twenty men he's made,
- Unyielded, to withdraw to barricade.
- And, trying hard to rescue Palamon,
- The mighty King Lyburgus is borne down;
- And King Emetreus, for all his strength,
- Is hurled out of the saddle a sword's length,
- So hits out Palamon once more, or ere
- (But all for naught) he's brought to barrier.
- His hardy heart may now avail him naught;
- He must abide there now, being fairly caught
- By force of arms, as by provision known.
- Who sorrows now but woeful Palamon,
- Who may no more advance into the fight?
- And when Duke Theseus had seen this sight,
- Unto the warriors fighting, every one,
- He cried out: "Hold! No more! For it is done!
- Now will I prove true judge, of no party.
- Theban Arcita shall have Emily,
- Who, by his fortune, has her fairly won."
- And now a noise of people is begun
- For joy of this, so loud and shrill withal,
- It seems as if the very lists will fall.
- But now, what can fair Venus do above?
- What says she now? What does this queen of love
- But weep so fast, for thwarting of her will,
- Her tears upon the lists begin to spill.
- She said: "Now am I shamed and over-flung."
- But Saturn said: "My daughter, hold your tongue.
- Mars has his will, his knight has all his boon,
- And, by my head, you shall be eased, and soon."
- The trumpeters and other minstrelsy,
- The heralds that did loudly yell and cry,
- Were at their best for joy of Arcita.
- But hear me further while I tell you- ah!-
- The miracle that happened there anon.
- This fierce Arcita doffs his helmet soon,
- And mounted on a horse, to show his face,
- He spurs from end to end of that great place,
- Looking aloft to gaze on Emily;
- And she cast down on him a friendly eye
- (For women, generally speaking, go
- Wherever Fortune may her favor show)
- And she was fair to see, and held his heart.
- But from the ground infernal furies start,
- From Pluto sent, at instance of Saturn,
- Whereat his horse, for fear, began to turn
- And leap aside, all suddenly falling there;
- And Arcita before he could beware
- Was pitched upon the ground, upon his head,
- And lay there, moving not, as he were dead,
- His chest crushed in upon the saddle-bow.
- And black he lay as ever coal, or crow,
- So ran the surging blood into his face.
- Anon they carried him from out that place,
- With heavy hearts, to Theseus' palace.
- There was his harness cut away, each lace,
- And swiftly was he laid upon a bed,
- For he was yet alive and some words said,
- Crying and calling after Emily.
- Duke Theseus, with all his company,
- Is come again to Athens, his city,
- With joyous heart and great festivity.
- And though sore grieved for this unhappy fall,
- He would not cast a blight upon them all.
- Men said, too, that Arcita should not die,
- But should be healed of all his injury.
- And of another thing they were right fain,
- Which was, that of them all no one was slain,
- Though each was sore, and hurt, and specially one
- Who'd got a lance-head thrust through his breastbone.
- For other bruises, wounds and broken arms,
- Some of them carried salves and some had charms;
- And medicines of many herbs, and sage
- They drank, to keep their limbs from hemorrhage.
- In all of which this duke, as he well can,
- Now comforts and now honours every man,
- And makes a revelry the livelong night
- For all these foreign lords, as was but right.
- Nor was there held any discomfiting,
- Save from the jousts and from the tourneying.
- For truly, there had been no cause for shame,
- Since being thrown is fortune of the game;
- Nor is it, to be led to barrier,
- Unyielded, and by twenty knights' power,
- One man alone, surrounded by the foe,
- Driven by arms, and dragged out, heel and toe,
- And with his courser driven forth with staves
- Of men on foot, yeomen and serving knaves-
- All this imputes to one no kind of vice,
- And no man may bring charge of cowardice.
- For which, anon, Duke Theseus bade cry,
- To still all rancour and all keen envy,
- The worth, as well of one side as the other,
- As equal both, and each the other's brother;
- And gave them gifts according to degree,
- And held a three days' feast, right royally;
- And then convoyed these kings upon their road
- For one full day, and to them honour showed.
- And home went every man on his right way.
- There was naught more but "Farewell" and "Good-day."
- I'll say no more of war, but turn upon
- My tale of Arcita and Palamon.
- Swells now Arcita's breast until the sore
- Increases near his heart yet more and more.
- The clotted blood, in spite of all leech-craft,
- Rots in his bulk, and there is must be left,
- Since no device of skillful blood-letting,
- Nor drink of herbs, can help him in this thing.
- The power expulsive, or virtue animal
- Called from its use the virtue natural,
- Could not the poison void, nor yet expel.
- The tubes of both his lungs began to swell,
- And every tissue in his breast, and down,
- Is foul with poison and all rotten grown.
- He gains in neither, in his strife to live,
- By vomiting or taking laxative;
- All is so broken in that part of him,
- Nature Tetains no vigour there, nor vim.
- And certainly, where Nature will not work,
- It's farewell physic, bear the man to kirk!
- The sum of all is, Arcita must die,
- And so he sends a word to Emily,
- And Palamon, who was his cousin dear;
- And then he said to them as you shall hear.
- "Naught may the woeful spirit in my heart
- Declare one point of how my sorrows smart
- To you, my lady, whom I love the most;
- But I bequeath the service of my ghost
- To you above all others, this being sure
- Now that my life may here no more endure.
- Alas, the woe! Alas, the pain so strong
- That I for you have suffered, and so long!
- Alas for death! Alas, my Emily!
- Alas, the parting of our company!
- Alas, my heart's own queen! Alas, my wife!
- My soul's dear lady, ender of my life!
- What is this world? What asks a man to have?
- Now with his love, now in the cold dark grave
- Alone, with never any company.
- Farewell, my sweet foe! O my Emily!
- Oh, take me in your gentle arms, I pray,
- For love of God, and hear what I will say.
- "I have here, with my cousin Palamon,
- Had strife and rancour many a day that's gone,
- For love of you and for my jealousy.
- May Jove so surely guide my soul for me,
- To speak about a lover properly,
- With all the circumstances, faithfully-
- That is to say, truth, honour, and knighthood,
- Wisdom, humility and kinship good,
- And generous soul and all the lover's art-
- So now may Jove have in my soul his part
- As in this world, right now, I know of none
- So worthy to be loved as Palamon,
- Who serves you and will do so all his life.
- And if you ever should become a wife,
- Forget not Palamon, the noble man."
- And with that word his speech to fail began,
- For from his feet up to his breast had come
- The cold of death, making his body numb.
- And furthermore, from his two arms the strength
- Was gone out, now, and he was lost, at length.
- Only the intellect, and nothing more.
- Which dwelt within his heart so sick and sore,
- Began to fail now, when the heart felt death,
- And his eyes darkened, and he failed of breath.
- But on his lady turned he still his eye,
- And his last word was, "Mercy, Emily!"
- His spirit changed its house and went away.
- As I was never there, I cannot say
- Where; so I stop, not being a soothsayer;
- Of souls here naught shall I enregister;
- Nor do I wish their notions, now, to tell
- Who write of them, though they say where they dwell.
- Arcita's cold; Mars guides his soul on high;
- Now will I speak forthwith of Emily.
- Shrieked Emily and howled now Palamon,
- Till Theseus his sister took, anon,
- And bore her, swooning, from the corpse away.
- How shall it help, to dwell the livelong day
- In telling how she wept both night and morrow?
- For in like cases women have such sorrow,
- When their good husband from their side must go,
- And, for the greater part, they take on so,
- Or else they fall into such malady
- That, at the last, and certainly, they die.
- Infinite were the sorrows and the tears
- Of all old folk and folk of tender years
- Throughout the town, at death of this Theban;
- For him there wept the child and wept the man;
- So great a weeping was not, 'tis certain,
- When Hector was brought back, but newly slain,
- To Troy. Alas, the sorrow that was there!
- Tearing of cheeks and rending out of hair.
- "Oh why will you be dead," these women cry,
- "Who had of gold enough, and Emily?"
- No man might comfort then Duke Theseus,
- Excepting his old father, AEgeus,
- Who knew this world's mutations, and men's own.
- Since he had seen them changing up and down,
- Joy after woe, and woe from happiness:
- He showed them, by example, the process.
- "Just as there never died a man," quoth he,
- "But he had lived on earth in some degree,
- Just so there never lived a man," he said,
- "In all this world, but must be sometime dead.
- This world is but a thoroughfare of woe,
- And we are pilgrims passing to and fro;
- Death is the end of every worldly sore."
- And after this, he told them yet much more
- To that effect, all wisely to exhort
- The people that they should find some comfort.
- Duke Theseus now considered and with care
- What place of burial he should prepare
- For good Arcita, as it best might be,
- And one most worthy of his high degree.
- And at the last concluded, hereupon,
- That where at first Arcita and Palamon
- Had fought for love, with no man else between,
- There, in that very grove, so sweet and green,
- Where he mused on his amorous desires
- Complaining of love's hot and flaming fires,
- He'd make a pyre and have the funeral
- Accomplished there, and worthily in all.
- And so he gave command to hack and hew
- The ancient oaks, and lay them straight and true
- In split lengths that would kindle well and burn.
- His officers, with sure swift feet, they turn
- And ride away to do his whole intent.
- And after this Duke Theseus straightway sent
- For a great bier, and had it all o'er-spread
- With cloth of gold, the richest that he had.
- Arcita clad he, too, in cloth of gold;
- White gloves were on his hands where they did fold;
- Upon his head a crown of laurel green,
- And near his hand a sword both bright and keen.
- Then, having bared the dead face on the bier,
- The duke so wept, 'twas pitiful to hear.
- And, so that folk might see him, one and all,
- When it was day he brought them to the hall,
- Which echoed of their wailing cries anon.
- Then came this woeful Theban, Plamon,
- With fluttery beard and matted, ash-strewn hair,
- All in black clothes wet with his tears; and there,
- Surpassing all in weeping, Emily,
- The most affected of the company.
- And so that every several rite should be
- Noble and rich, and suiting his degree,
- Duke Theseus commanded that they bring
- Three horses, mailed in steel all glittering,
- And covered with Arcita's armour bright.
- Upon these stallions, which were large and white,
- There rode three men, whereof one bore the shield.
- And one the spear he'd known so well to wield;
- The third man bore his Turkish bow, nor less
- Of burnished gold the quiver than harness;
- And forth they slowly rode, with mournful cheer,
- Toward that grove, as you shall further hear.
- The noblest Greeks did gladly volunteer
- To bear upon their shoulders that great bier,
- With measured pace and eyes gone red and wet,
- Through all the city, by the wide main street,
- Which was all spread with black, and, wondrous high,
- Covered with this same cloth were houses nigh.
- Upon the right hand went old AEgeus,
- And on the other side Duke Theseus,
- With vessels in their hands, of gold right fine,
- All filled with honey, milk, and blood, and wine;
- And Palamon with a great company;
- And after that came woeful Emily,
- With fire in hands, as use was, to ignite
- The sacrifice and set the pyre alight.
- Great labour and full great apparelling
- Went to the service and the fire-making,
- For to the skies that green pyre reached its top,
- And twenty fathoms did the arms out-crop,
- That is to say, the branches went so wide.
- Full many a load of straw they did provide.
- But how the fire, was made to climb so high;
- Or what names all the different trees went by.
- As oak, fir, birch, asp, alder, poplar, holm,
- Willow, plane, ash, box, chestnut, linden, elm,
- Laurel, thorn, maple, beech, yew, dogwood tree,
- Or how they were felled, sha'n't be told by me.
- Nor how the wood-gods scampered up and down,
- Driven from homes that they had called their own,
- Wherein they'd lived so long at ease, in peace,
- The nymphs, the fauns, the hamadryades;
- Nor how the beasts, for fear, and the birds, all
- Fled, when that ancient wood began to fall;
- Nor how aghast the ground was in the light,
- Not being used to seeing the sun so bright;
- Nor how the fire was started first with straw,
- And then with dry wood, riven thrice by saw,
- And then with green wood and with spicery,
- And then with cloth of gold and jewellery,
- And garlands hanging with full many a flower,
- And myrrh, and incense, sweet as rose in bower;
- Nor how Arcita lies among all this,
- Nor what vast wealth about his body is;
- Nor how this Emily, as was their way,
- Lighted the sacred funeral fire, that day,
- Nor how she swooned when men built up the fire,
- Nor what she said, nor what was her desire;
- No, nor what gems men on the fire then cast,
- When the white flame went high and burned so fast;
- Nor how one cast his shield, and one his spear,
- And some their vestments, on that burning bier,
- With cups of wine, and cups of milk, and blood,
- Into that flame, which burned as wild-fire would;
- Nor how the Greeks, in one huge wailing rout,
- Rode slowly three times all the fire about,
- Upon the left hand, with a loud shouting,
- And three times more, with weapons clattering,
- While thrice the women there raised up a cry;
- Nor how was homeward led sad Emily;
- Nor how Arcita burned to ashes cold;
- Nor aught of how the lichwake they did hold
- All that same night, nor how the Greeks did play
- Who, naked, wrestled best, with oil anointed,
- Nor who best bore himself in deeds appointed.
- I will not even tell how they were gone
- Home, into Athens, when the play was done;
- But briefly to the point, now, will I wend
- And make of this, my lengthy tale, an end.
- With passing in their length of certain years,
- All put by was the mourning and the tears
- Of Greeks, as by one general assent;
- And then it seems there was a parliament
- At Athens, upon certain points in case;
- Among the which points spoken of there was
- The ratifying of alliances
- That should hold Thebes from all defiances.
- Whereat this noble Theseus, anon,
- Invited there the gentle Palamon,
- Not telling him what was the cause, and why;
- But in his mourning clothes, and sorrowfully,
- He came upon that bidding, so say I.
- And then Duke Theseus sent for Emily.
- When they were seated and was hushed the place,
- And Theseus had mused a little space,
- Ere any word came from his full wise breast,
- His two eyes fixed on whoso pleased him best,
- Then with a sad face sighed he deep and still,
- And after that began to speak his will.
- "The Primal Mover and the Cause above,
- When first He forged the goodly chain of love,
- Great the effect, and high was His intent;
- Well knew He why, and what thereof He meant;
- For with that goodly chain of love He bound
- The fire, the air, the water, and dry ground
- In certain bounds, the which they might not flee;
- That same First Cause and Mover," then quoth he,
- "Has stablished in this base world, up and down,
- A certain length of days to call their own
- For all that are engendered in this place,
- Beyond the which not one day may they pace,
- Though yet all may that certain time abridge;
- Authority there needs none, I allege,
- For it is well proved by experience,
- Save that I please to clarify my sense.
- Then may men by this order well discern
- This Mover to be stable and eterne.
- Well may man know, unless he be a fool,
- That every part derives but from the whole.
- For Nature has not taken his being
- From any part and portion of a thing,
- But from a substance perfect, stable aye,
- And so continuing till changed away.
- And therefore, of His Wisdom's Providence,
- Has He so well established ordinance
- That species of all things and all progressions,
- If they'd endure, it must be by successions,
- Not being themselves eternal, 'tis no lie:
- This may you understand and see by eye.
- "Lo now, the oak, that has long nourishing
- Even from the time that it begins to spring,
- And has so long a life, as we may see,
- Yet at the last all wasted is the tree.
- "Consider, too, how even the hard stone
- Under our feet we tread each day upon
- Yet wastes it, as it lies beside the way.
- And the broad river will be dry some day.
- And great towns wane; we see them vanishing.
- Thus may we see the end to everything.
- "Of man and woman just the same is true:
- Needs must, in either season of the two,
- That is to say, in youth or else in age,
- All men perish, the king as well as page;
- Some in their bed, and some in the deep sea,
- And some in the wide field- as it may be;
- There's naught will help; all go the same way. Aye,
- Then may I say that everything must die.
- Who causes this but Jupiter the King?
- He is the Prince and Cause of everything,
- Converting all back to that primal well
- From which it was derived, 'tis sooth to tell.
- And against this, for every thing alive,
- Of any state, avalls it not to strive.
- "Then is it wisdom, as it seems to me,
- To make a virtue of necessity,
- And calmly take what we may not eschew,
- And specially that which to all is due.
- Whoso would balk at aught, he does folly,
- And thus rebels against His potency.
- And certainly a man has most honour
- In dying in his excellence and flower,
- When he is certain of his high good name;
- For then he gives to friend, and self, no shame.
- And gladder ought a friend be of his death
- When, in much honour, he yields up his breath,
- Than when his name's grown feeble with old age;
- For all forgotten, then, is his courage.
- Hence it is best for all of noble name
- To die when at the summit of their fame.
- The contrary of this is wilfulness.
- Why do we grumble? Why have heaviness
- That good Arcita, chivalry's fair flower,
- Is gone, with honour, in his best-lived hour.
- Out of the filthy prison of this life?
- Why grumble here his cousin and his wife
- About his welfare, who loved them so well?
- Can he thank them? Nay, God knows, not! Nor tell
- How they his soul and their own selves offend,
- Though yet they may not their desires amend.
- "What may I prove by this long argument
- Save that we all turn to merriment,
- After our grief, and give Jove thanks for grace.
- And so, before we go from out this place,
- I counsel that we make, of sorrows two
- One perfect joy, lasting for aye, for you;
- And look you now, where most woe is herein,
- There will we first amend it and begin.
- "Sister," quoth he, "you have my full consent,
- With the advice of this my Parliament,
- That gentle Palamon, your own true knight,
- Who serves you well with will and heart and might,
- And so has ever, since you knew him first-
- That you shall, of your grace, allay his thirst
- By taking him for husband and for lord:
- Lend me your hand, for this is our accord.
- Let now your woman's pity make him glad.
- For he is a king's brother's son, by gad;
- And though he were a poor knight bachelor,
- Since he has served you for so many a year,
- And borne for you so great adversity,
- This ought to weigh with you, it seems to me,
- For mercy ought to dominate mere right."
- Then said he thus to Palamon the knight:
- "I think there needs but little sermoning
- To make you give consent, now, to this thing.
- Come near, and take your lady by the hand."
- Between them, then, was tied that nuptial band,
- Which is called matrimony or marriage,
- By all the council and the baronage.
- And thus, in all bliss and with melody,
- Has Palamon now wedded Emily.
- And God Who all this universe has wrought,
- Send him His love, who has it dearly bought.
- For now has Palamon, in all things, wealth,
- Living in bliss, in riches, and in health;
- And Emily loved him so tenderly,
- And he served her so well and faithfully,
- That never word once marred their happiness,
- No jealousy, nor other such distress.
- Thus ends now Palamon and Emily;
- And may God save all this fair company! Amen.
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- HERE ENDS THE KNIGHT'S TALE
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