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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- PROLOGUE TO MELIBEUS
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- No more of this, for God's high dignity!"
- Exclaimed our host, "For you, sir, do make me
- So weary with your vulgar foolishness
- That, as may God so truly my soul bless,
- My two ears ache from all your worthless speech;
- Now may such rhymes the devil have, and each!
- This sort of thing is doggerel," said he.
- "Why so?" I asked, "Why will you hinder me
- In telling tales more than another man,
- Since I have told the best rhyme that I can?"
- "By God!" cried he, "now plainly, in a word,
- Your dirty rhyming is not worth a turd;
- You do naught else but waste and fritter time.
- Sir, in one word, you shall no longer rhyme.
- Let's see if you can use the country verse,
- Or tell a tale in prose- you might do worse-
- Wherein there's mirth or doctrine good and plain.'
- "Gladly," said I, "by God's sweet tears and pain,
- I will relate a little thing in prose
- That ought to please you, or so I suppose,
- For surely, else, you're contumelious.
- It is a moral tale, right virtuous,
- Though it is told, sometimes, in different wise
- By different folk, as I shall you apprise.
- As thus: You know that each evangelist
- Who tells the passion of Lord Jesus Christ
- Says not in all things as his fellows do,
- But, nonetheless, each gospel is all true.
- And all of them accord in their essence,
- Howbeit there's in telling difference.
- For some of them say more and some say less
- When they His piteous passion would express;
- I mean now Mark and Matthew, Luke and John;
- Yet, without doubt, their meaning is all one.
- And therefore, masters all, I do beseech,
- If you should think I vary in my speech,
- As thus: That I do quote you somewhat more
- Of proverbs than you've ever heard before,
- Included in this little treatise here,
- To point the morals out, as they appear,
- And though I do not quite the same words say
- That you have heard before, yet now, I pray,
- You'll blame me not; for in the basic sense
- You will not find a deal of difference
- From the true meaning of that tale polite
- After the which this happy tale I write.
- And therefore hearken now to what I say,
- And let me tell you all my tale, I pray."
-
-
- Explicit
-
-
- THE TALE OF MELIBEUS
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- A young man named Melibeus, mighty and rich, begot on Prudence,
- his wife, a daughter who was called Sophie.
- It happened one day that, for his amusement he went into the
- fields to play. His wife and daughter remained at home, the doors of
- his house being all fast shut and locked. But three of his old
- enemies, having spied out the state of things, set ladders to the wall
- of the house and entered therein by a window; and they beat the wife
- and wounded the daughter with five dangerous wounds in five
- different places; that is to say, in her feet, in her hands, in her
- ears, in her nose, and in her mouth; and they left her for dead and
- went away.
- When Melibeus returned to his house and saw all this mischief, he,
- like a madman, rending his clothes, began to weep and cry.
- Prudence his wife, so far as she dared, besought him to cease his
- weeping; nevertheless he wept and cried but the more.
- This noble wife Prudence remembered then the opinion of Ovid, in his
- book The Remedy for Love, wherein he says: "He is but a fool who
- interferes with the mother weeping for the death of her child, until
- she shall have wept her fill, and for a certain time; and only then
- may a man be diligent, with kind words, to comfort her, and pray her
- to forgo her tears." For which reason this noble wife Prudence
- suffered, her husband to weep and cry for a time; and when she saw her
- opportunity, she spoke to him. "Alas, my lord!" said she, "Why do
- you allow yourself to act like a fool? For truly it becomes not a wise
- man to show such sorrow. Your daughter, by grace of God, shall be
- healed and will recover. And were she dead even now, you ought not,
- for this, to destroy yourself. Seneca says: 'The wise man will not
- take too sorrowfully to heart the death of his children, but will
- suffer it with patience, just as he awaits the death of his own
- body.'"
- Melibeus answered, saying: "What man should cease his weeping who
- has so great a cause to weep? Jesus Christ Our Lord Himself wept for
- the death of His friend Lazarus."
- Prudence replied: "Indeed, well do I know that moderate weeping is
- not forbidden to anyone who sorrows, among sorrowing folk; but,
- rather, it is permitted him to weep. The Apostle Paul writes unto
- the Romans: 'Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them
- that weep.' But though a tempered weeping may be granted, excessive
- weeping certainly is forbidden. Moderation in grief should be
- considered, according to the teaching of Seneca. 'When your friend
- is dead,' says he, 'let not your eyes be too wet with tears, nor yet
- too dry; and though your tears rise to the eyes, let them not fall.'
- So, when you have given over your friend, be diligent in procuring
- another; and this is wiser than to weep for the friend who is lost;
- for therein is no profit. And therefore, if you govern yourself with
- wisdom, put away sorrow out of your heart. Remember how Jesus son of
- Sirach says: 'A joyous and glad heart makes a man flourish in his age;
- but truly a sorrowful heart drieth the bones.' He says also that
- sorrow hath killed many a man. Solomon says that as moths in the
- sheep's fleece annoy the clothes, and as small worms the tree, so
- sorrow annoys the heart. Wherefore we ought to be patient, not less
- for the death of our children than for the loss of worldly goods.
- "Remember the patient Job, when he had lost his children and his
- substance, and had in his body received and endured many a grievous
- tribulation, yet said he thus: 'The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
- away; blessed be the name of the Lord.'"
- To these things Melibeus answered, saying to Prudence his wife: "All
- your words are true, and likewise profitable, but verily my heart is
- troubled so grievously with this sorrow that I know not what to do."
- "Call, then," said Prudence, "all of your true friends and those
- of your kindred who are wise; tell them your trouble and hearken to
- what they say in council; and then govern yourself according to
- their advice. Says Solomon: 'Do nothing without advice, and thou shalt
- never repent.'"
- Then, upon the advice of his wife Prudence, Melibeus called together
- a great gathering of people, old and young; and some among them were
- surgeons and physicians; and some were of his old enemies who seemed
- to have become reconciled to him; and there came some of his
- neighbours who respected him more out of fear than of love, as often
- happens; there came also a great many subtle flatterers; and there
- were wise advocates learned in the law.
- And when all these folks were assembled together, Melibeus, with
- sorrowful words and mien, told them his trouble; and by the manner
- of his speech it appeared that in his heart he bore a savage anger,
- ready to take vengeance upon his foes, and was desirous that the war
- upon them should quickly come. Nevertheless, he asked their advice
- upon this matter. Then a surgeon, by leave and voice of all present
- who were wise, rose up and spoke to Melibeus as you shall hear.
- "Sir," said he, "as for us surgeons, it belongs to us that we do for
- everyone the best that we can, when we have been retained, and that we
- do no harm to our patients. Wherefore it happens, many times and
- oft, that when two men have wounded one another, the same surgeon
- heals them both. Therefore it does not become us to foment warfare nor
- to support factions. And certainly, as to the healing of your
- daughter, although she is dangerously wounded, we will be so
- attentive, by day and by night, that, with God's grace, she shall be
- made sound and whole again, and that as soon as may be possible."
- Almost in the same words the physicians answered, save that they
- added: "Just as diseases are cured by their contraries, so shall men
- cure war by vengeance."
- His neighbours, full of envy, his false friends who feigned to be
- reconciled to him, and his flatterers, made a semblance of weeping;
- and they greatly aggravated the matter by praising Melibeus,
- speaking of his might, his power, his wealth, and his friends, and
- disparaging the strength of his enemies; and they said outright,
- that very swiftly he should begin the war and wreak vengeance upon his
- foes.
- Then arose an advocate, a wise man, by leave and advice of others
- who were wise, and said: "Masters, the matter for which we are
- assembled here is a heavy thing, and a high, what with the wrong and
- wickedness that have been done, and by reason of the great evil that
- may follow hereafter from this same cause; and, too, by reason of
- the great wealth and power of both parties. For all of these reasons
- it were dangerous indeed to err in this matter. Wherefore, Melibeus,
- this is our judgment: we counsel you above all things, that, without
- delay, you take steps to guard your own person in such wise that you
- shall lack neither spy nor watchman. And we counsel, that in your
- house you establish a sufficient garrison, so that the house may be as
- well defended as you yourself. But, to say truth, as to initiating
- warfare in order to obtain a sudden revenge, we can give no opinion,
- in so short a time, on whether such a move will be profitable.
- Therefore we ask for leisure and time wherein to deliberate upon the
- matter more fully. For the common proverb runs 'Resolve in haste, in
- haste repent.' And besides, men hold that he is a wise judge who
- quickly understands a case and leisurely pronounces thereupon. For
- though delay may be annoying, nevertheless it is not to be blamed when
- it is a question of rendering just judgments, or of securing
- vengeance, when the delay is both sufficient and reasonable. And
- that was shown, in example, by Our Lord Jesus Christ. For when the
- woman taken in adultery was brought into His presence, in order to
- learn what He would have them to do with her, though He well knew what
- He would thereafter answer, yet would He not answer quickly, but
- deliberated; and He stooped down and wrote twice upon the ground.
- For all these reasons, we ask time in which to deliberate, and
- thereafter we will counsel you, by the grace of God, as to the most
- profitable course."
- Up started, then, all of the young folk, at once, and the greater
- part of them scorned the counsel of the old wise men; and they
- raised a clamour and said: that just as it is well to strike while the
- iron is hot, so should men wreak their vengeance while they are
- fresh in anger. And they all cried loudly, "War, war!"
- Upon this, one of the old wise ones arose, and with his hand
- commanding silence and attention, he said: "Masters, there is many a
- man to cry 'War, War!' who yet knows but little of the meaning of
- it. War, in the beginning, has so high an entrance, and so wide,
- that every man may enter when he pleases, and may find war easily. But
- truly, what the end of war shall be is not so easy to know. For when a
- war is once begun, many an unborn child shall die in the womb
- because of the strife, or else shall be born into sorrow and die in
- wretchedness. Therefore, ere any war begins, men should take much
- counsel together and act only after much deliberation."
- But when this old man thought to reinforce his words with reasons,
- then well-nigh all the younger folk arose and began to heckle him
- and to break up his argument, bidding him cut short his remarks. For
- indeed, he that preaches to those who have ears but hear not, makes of
- himself a nuisance. As Jesus son of Sirach says: "A tale out of season
- is as musick in mourning." Which is to say, it avails as much to speak
- to folk to whom the speech is annoying as to sing before one who
- weeps. And when this wise man understood that he lacked an audience,
- he sat down again, much confused. For Solomon says: "When there is
- none will hear thee, cease to speak." "I see well," said this wise
- man, "that the proverb says truth, which runs, 'Good counsel is
- wanting when it is most needed.'"
- Again, Melibeus had in his council many men who said one thing in
- his private ear and spoke otherwise in general audience.
- When Melibeus heard that the greater part of his councillors were
- agreed on war, straightway he showed himself in accord with them and
- confirmed their judgment. Then Dame Prudence, seeing that her
- husband shaped his course for war and revenge, humbly and after biding
- her time, said to him: "My lord, I beseech you as earnestly as I
- dare and can, that you go not too hastily in this matter; and for your
- own good give me a hearing. For Petrus Alfonsus says: 'And if one
- man do to another any good or any evil, let there be no haste to repay
- it in kind; for then will the friend remain friendly, while the
- enemy shall but the longer fear.' The proverb has it: 'He hastens well
- who wisely can delay.' And in foolish haste there is no profit."
- This Melibeus answered Prudence his wife: "I purpose not to work
- by your counsel, for many causes and reasons. For truly every man
- would then take me for a fool; by which I mean: if I by your advising,
- should change things that have been ordained and confirmed by so
- many wise men. Secondly, I say that all women are evil and none
- good. 'Behold, this have I found (saith the Preacher), counting one by
- one, to find out the account; which yet my soul seeketh, but I found
- not: one man among a thousand have I found; but a woman among all
- those have I not found.' And certainly, if I were to be governed by
- your counsel, it would appear as if I had given over to you my
- sovereignty; and may God forbid that such a thing should ever be.
- For Jesus son of Sirach says: 'A woman, if she maintain her husband,
- is full of anger, impudence,' and much reproach.' And Solomon says:
- 'Give not thy son and wife, thy brother and friend, power over thee
- while thou livest, and give not thy goods to another: lest it repent
- thee, and thou entreat for the same again. As long as thou livest
- and hast breath in thee, give not thyself over to any. For better it
- is that thy children should seek to thee, than that thou shouldest
- stand to their courtesy.' And also, if I were to work according to
- your counselling, certain it is that my counsels must be kept secret
- until the proper time to make them known; and this could not thus
- be. For it is written that 'The chattering of women can conceal
- nothing except that which they do not know.' Furthermore, the
- philosopher says: 'In evil counsel women surpass men.' And for all
- these reasons I will not follow your advice."
- When Dame Prudence, very affably and with great patience, had
- heard all that her husband chose to say, then she asked of him leave
- to speak, and said: "My lord, as to your first reason, surely it may
- readily be answered. For I say that it is no folly to over-rule
- counsel when circumstances are changed, or when the cause appears
- otherwise than at the first. And, moreover, I say that though you have
- sworn and warranted to perform your enterprise, nevertheless, should
- you refuse for just cause to perform it, men will not therefore say
- that you are a liar and forsworn. For the book says that the wise
- man deals not falsely when he changes his first purpose for a better
- one. And although your undertaking be ordained and established by a
- great many men, yet you need not accomplish it, unless you like. For
- the truth of things, and the profit thereof, are found rather among
- a few folk who are wise and reasonable than among the multitude, where
- every man cries and gabbles as he likes. Truly such a crowd is not
- worthy of honour. As to the second reason, wherein you say that all
- women are evil, then certainly, saving your grace, you must despise
- all women by so saying; and he that despises all displeases all, as
- the book says. And Seneca says that 'Whoso has sapience will not any
- man dispraise; but he will gladly impart such knowledge as he can, and
- that without presumption and pride. And for such things as he knows
- not, he will not be ashamed to inquire of and learn from lesser folk.'
- And, sir, that there has been many a good woman may be easily
- proved. For certainly, sir, Our Lord Jesus Christ would never have
- condescended to be born of a woman if all women had been evil. And
- thereafter, for the great worth that is in women, Our Lord Jesus
- Christ, when He had risen from death unto life, appeared to a woman,
- rather than to His disciples. And although Solomon says that he
- never found good in any woman, it follows not, therefore, that all
- women are wicked. For, though he may never have found a good woman,
- surely many another man has found full many a woman to be both good
- and true. Or perchance Solomon's meaning was this: that so far as
- the highest virtue is concerned, he found no such woman; which is to
- say, that there is no one who has sovereign goodness and worth, save
- God alone, as He Himself has caused to be recorded in His gospels. For
- there is no creature so good that he is not somehow wanting in the
- perfection of God, Who is his Maker. Your third reason is this: You
- say that if you were to be governed by my counsel, it should appear as
- if you had given over to me the mastery and sovereignty of your
- person. Sir, saving your presence, it is not so. For, if it were true,
- then, in order that no man should ever be advised, save by those who
- had mastery over his person, men could not so often be advised. For
- truly, every man who asks counsel concerning any purpose yet retains
- his freedom to choose whether he will or will not proceed by that
- counselling. And as to your fourth reason, wherein you say that the
- chattering of women can hide things of the which they are not aware,
- as one might say that a woman cannot hide what she knows- sir, these
- words are only to be understood of women who are both evil and
- gossipy; of which women men say that three things will drive a man out
- of his own house: smoke, and the dripping of rain, and a wicked
- wife. And further, of such women, Solomon says: 'It were better to
- dwell in a corner of the housetop than with a brawling woman in a wide
- house.' And, sir, by your leave, that I am not; for you have often
- enough tested my ability to keep silence, and tried my patience, and
- even how I can hide and conceal matters that men ought to keep secret.
- And, in good truth, as to your fifth reason, wherein you say that in
- evil counsel women surpass men, God knows that this reason has no
- standing here. For understand now, you ask counsel to do wickedness;
- and if your will is to work wickedness, and your wife restrains such
- an ill purpose and overcomes you by reason and good counsel given,
- then, certainly, your wife ought rather to be praised than blamed.
- Thus should you understand the saw of the philosopher who says that in
- evil counsel women surpass their husbands. And whereas you blame all
- women and their reasonings, I will show you, by many examples, that
- many women have been good and are yet, and have given counsel both
- wholesome and profitable. True, some men have said that the advice
- of women is either too dear or too cheap in price. But, be it that
- many a woman is bad, and her counsel vile and worthless, yet men
- have found many a good woman, full wise and full discreet in giving
- counsel. Behold how Jacob, by following the good advice of his
- mother Rebecca, won the blessing of Isaac, his father, and came to
- authority over all his brethren. Judith, by her good counsel,
- delivered the city of Bethulia, wherein she dwelt, out of the hands of
- Holofernes, who besieged it and who would have completely destroyed
- it. Abigail delivered her husband Nabal from David the king, who would
- have slain him, and appeased the anger of the king by her wit and good
- advising. Esther, by her good counsel, greatly exalted the people of
- God in the reign of King Ahasuerus. And men may tell much of the
- same excellence of good advice in many a good woman. Moreover, when
- Our Lord had created Adam, our forefather, he said thus: 'It is not
- good that the man should be alone: I will make him a help meet for
- him.' Here you may see that, if women were not good, and their
- counsels good and profitable, Our Lord God of Heaven would never
- have wrought them, nor called them the help of man, but, rather, the
- confusion of man. And once a writer said, in two verses: 'What is
- better than gold? Jasper. What is better than jasper? Wisdom. What
- is better than wisdom? Woman. And what is better than woman? Nothing.'
- And, sir, by many other examples you may see that women are good and
- their counselling both good and profitable. And thereupon, sir, if you
- will trust to my advice, I will restore to you your daughter whole and
- sound. And moreover, I will do for you so much that you shall come out
- of this affair with honour."
- When Melibeus had listened to the words of his wife Prudence, he
- said: "I see well that the word of Solomon is true. He says, 'Pleasant
- words are as a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and health to the
- bones.' And, wife, because of your sweet words, and because, moreover,
- I have tried and proved your great wisdom and your great truthfulness,
- I will be governed in all things by your counsels."
- "Now, sir," said Dame Prudence, "since you give yourself to be
- governed by my advice, I will tell you how to choose your councillors.
- You shall first, in all your works, meekly pray to the high God that
- He will be your adviser, and you shall mould your understanding in
- such wise that He may give you counsel and comfort, as Tobit taught
- his son, that is to say: 'Bless the Lord thy God always, and desire of
- Him that thy ways may be directed and that all thy paths and
- counsels may prosper.' And look to it that all your counsels are in
- Him for evermore. Saint James, also, says: 'If any of you lack wisdom,
- let him ask of God.' And after that, then shall you take counsel
- within yourself, and examine well your thoughts, concerning all things
- that seem to be the best for your own profit. And then shall you drive
- from your heart three things that are opposed to the following of good
- counsel, and they are anger, and covetousness, and hastiness.
- "First, he that takes counsel within himself, certainly he must be
- free from anger, and this for many reasons. The first one is this:
- He that has great ire and wrath within himself thinks always that he
- is capable of doing things that he cannot do. Secondly, he that is
- angry and full of wrath cannot think or judge well, and he that cannot
- judge well cannot well advise. The third reason is this: That 'He that
- is angry,' as says Seneca, 'can speak only to berate and blame.' And
- thus with his vicious words he drives others into a like state.
- "And too, sir, you must drive covetousness out of your heart. For
- the Apostle says that 'The love of money is the root of all evil.'
- And, trust me, a covetous man cannot judge correctly, nor can he think
- well, save only to the furtherance of his covetousness; and that, in
- truth, can never really be accomplished, because the richer he
- becomes, the greater desire has he for yet a larger abundance.
- "And, sir, you must drive hastiness out of your inmost heart. For
- certain it is that you cannot hold to be best the sudden thought
- that comes into your heart, but you must weigh it and advise upon
- it. For, as you have heard before, the common proverb has it that he
- who resolves in haste soon repents. Sir, you are not always in like
- mood and of a like disposition; for surely that which at one time
- seems good to you, at another appears to be quite the contrary.
- "When you have taken counsel within yourself, and have, after due
- deliberation, deemed such, or such, a thing to be for the best,
- then, I advise you, keep it secret. Reveal not your intentions to
- any person, save to such as you may certainly know will be of help
- to render your position more tenable through such revelation. For
- Jesus son of Sirach says 'Whether it be to a friend or a foe, talk not
- of other men's lives; and if thou canst without offense, reveal them
- not. For he heard and observed thee, and when time cometh he will hate
- thee.' And another writer says: 'Hardly shalt thou find one person who
- can keep secrets.' The Book says: 'While thou dost keep thy counsel in
- thine own heart, thou keepest it imprisoned; and when thou revealest
- it to anyone, he holdeth thee imprisoned.' And therefore it is
- better that you hide your thoughts within your own heart, than pray to
- him to whom you have told them that he will be close and keep silence.
- For Seneca says: 'If thou canst not keep thine own counsel, how darest
- thou beg of another that he will do so?' But, nevertheless, if you
- deem certainly that the revealing of your secret to anyone will better
- your condition, then tell it to him in this wise. First, you shall
- give no indication whether you prefer peace or war, or this or that,
- and show him not your determination and intent; for, trust me,
- councillors are commonly flatterers, especially the councillors of
- great lords. For they are at pains always to speak pleasantly,
- inclining toward the lord's desire, rather than to use words that are,
- in themselves, true and profitable. And therefore men say that the
- rich man rarely receives good counsel, save as he has it from himself.
- And after that, you shall consider your friends and your enemies.
- Touching your friends, you must consider which of them are most old
- and faithful, and wisest, and most approved in counselling. And of
- them shall you ask advice, as the event requires.
- "I say that first you must call into council such of your friends as
- are true. For Solomon says: 'Ointment and perfume rejoice the heart;
- so doth the sweetness of a man's friend by hearty counsel.' He says
- also: 'Nothing doth countervail a faithful friend, and his
- excellency is invaluable.' For certain it is that neither gold nor
- silver are worth so much as the goodwill of a true friend. Again he
- says: 'A faithful friend is a strong defence: and he that hath found
- such an one hath found a treasure.'
- "Then, too, shall you consider whether your real friends are
- discreet and wise. For the Book says: 'Stand in the multitude of the
- elders, and cleave unto him that is wise.' And for this reason you
- should call to your council, of your friends that have arrived at a
- proper age, those who have seen and experienced many. things, and
- who have been approved in parliaments. For the Book says: 'With the
- ancient is wisdom; and in length of days understanding.' And Tullius
- says: 'Great things are not accomplished by strength and activity of
- body, but by counsel, authority, and knowledge; and these things do
- not become enfeebled with age, but rather grow stronger and increase
- day after day.'
- "And then you shall keep this for a general rule. First, you shall
- call to your council but a few of your most special friends. For
- Solomon says: 'Have thou many friends, but of a thousand choose but
- one to be thy councillor.' And although you should, at the first, tell
- your secrets to but a few, afterward you may tell them to others, if
- there be need. But look to it always that your councillors have the
- three attributes that I have mentioned, namely: that they are true,
- wise, and experienced. And act not always, and in every need, by the
- advice of one councillor alone; for sometimes it is well to have the
- advice of many. Says Solomon: 'Without counsel purposes are
- disappointed: but in the multitude of councillors they are
- established.'
- "Now that I have told you of the sort of folk by whom you should
- be counselled, I will teach you which sort of counsel you ought to
- eschew. First, you shall avoid the counselling of fools. For Solomon
- says: 'Consult not with a fool, for he cannot keep counsel.' It is
- said in a book that the characteristic of a fool is this: he readily
- believes evil of everyone. and as readily believes all good of
- himself. You shall also eschew the counselling of all flatterers, such
- as force themselves rather to praise your person than to tell you
- the truth about things.
- "Wherefore Tullius says, that of all the pestilences of
- friendship, the greatest is flattery. And so it is more needful that
- you eschew and fear flatterers than any other kind of men. The Book
- says that one should rather flee from and fear the sweet words of
- flatterers than the earnest words of the friend who tells one the
- truth. Solomon says that the words of a flatterer are a snare
- wherewith to catch innocents. He says also, that he who speaks sweet
- words to his friend, sets before his feet a net to catch him. And
- therefore says Tullius Cicero: 'Incline not thine ears to
- flatterers, nor take counsel of flattering words.' And Cato says:
- 'Be well advised, and avoid sweet and pleasant words.' And you must
- also eschew the counsels of such of your former enemies as have become
- reconciled to you. The Book says that no one can safely trust to the
- goodwill of a former enemy. And Aesop says: 'Trust not to those with
- whom you have been sometime at war or in enmity, neither tell them
- of your intentions.' And Seneca tells us the reason for this. 'It
- may not be,' says he, 'that, where fire has long existed there shall
- remain no vapour of heat.' And thereto says Solomon: 'The kisses of an
- enemy are deceitful.' For, certainly, though your enemy may be
- reconciled, and appear before you in all humility, and bow his head to
- you, you should never trust him. Surely he feigns this humility more
- for his advantage than for any love of you; for he thinks to gain some
- victory over you by such feigning, the which he could not gain by
- strife of open war. And Petrus Alfonsus says: 'Have no fellowship with
- ancient foes; for if you do good to them, they will pervert it into
- evil.' And, too, you must eschew the advice of those who are your
- own servants and bear themselves toward you with all reverence; for
- perchance they speak more out of fear than for love. And therefore
- says a philosopher thus: 'There is no one perfectly true to him of
- whom he is afraid.' And Tullius says: 'There is no power of any
- emperor, fitted to endure, save it be founded more in the love of
- the people than in the fears.' You must also avoid the counselling
- of drunkards; for they can retain nothing. Solomon says that there
- is no secrecy where drunkenness reigns. You should also suspect the
- counsels of such as advise you privately to one thing and to a
- contrary thing in public. For Cassiodorus says that it is but an
- artifice to hinder when a man does one thing openly and its contrary
- in private. You should also hold suspect the counselling of the
- wicked. For the Book says that the advice of the wicked is always full
- of fraud. And David says that he is a happy man who has I not followed
- the counselling of villains. You should also avoid and shun the advice
- of the young; for their judgments are not mature.
- "And. now, sir, that I have shown you as to the folk from whom you
- may take counsel, and what counsel you may accept and follow, now will
- I teach you how that counsel should be examined, according to the
- doctrines of Tullius. In bringing a councillor to the test, you must
- consider many things. First, you should consider that, in this very
- thing that you purpose, and upon which you are in need of advice, only
- the truth may be told; that is to say, state your case truthfully. For
- he that lies or prevaricates may not well be counselled, at least in
- so far as he has deceived. And after this, you must consider the
- things that agree with your purpose in council; whether reason
- agrees therewith; and whether you have power to attain your purpose;
- and whether the major and the better part of your council agree with
- it. Then shall you consider the probable result of acting upon all
- your advices: as hate, peace, war, honour, gain, loss, and many
- other things. And in all these things you must choose the best and
- avoid all else. Then must you take into consideration the root whereof
- is grown the matter of your counselling, and what fruit it may
- engender. Then, too, you shall consider all of the causes and
- examine into the causes of causes. And when you have examined your
- counselling as I have outlined to you, and have determined which
- part of it is the better and more profitable, and have found it to
- be approved by many wise and elderly men: then shall you consider
- whether you have power to carry it to a good end. For surely reason
- will not permit a man to begin a thing, save he carry it through as he
- should. Nor should anyone take upon himself a burden so heavy that
- he cannot bear it. For says the proverb: He that too much embraces,
- confines but little. And Cato says: 'Attempt only what thou hast power
- to do, lest the great task so oppress thee that it shall behoove
- thee to forgo that which thou hast begun.' And if it be that you are
- in doubt whether you can perform a thing, choose rather to suffer than
- to begin. For Petrus Alfonsus says: 'If you have power to do any thing
- which you must later regret, it is better to say nay than yea.' That
- is to say, it is better to keep silence than to speak. Then may you
- apprehend, and for stronger reasons, that if you have the ability to
- carry out any work whereof it is likely that later you must repent,
- then it is better to suffer it to remain undone than to begin it. Well
- do they speak who forbid a man to attempt a thing of which he has
- doubt of his ability to perform it. And afterward, when you have
- thoroughly examined your counsels, as I have set forth, and are
- convinced that you can carry through your enterprise to its goal,
- conform to it, then, gravely and carefully to the end.
- 'Now it is time that I instruct you when and for what you may change
- your intention without reproach. For truly a man may change purpose
- and plan when the cause for them is removed, or when a new condition
- arises. For the law says that new conditions demand new counsels.
- And Seneca says: 'If thy plan be come to the ears of thine enemy,
- change thy plan.' You may also change your plan if it develops that,
- through error or for other reason, harm will ensue from following
- it. Also, if your counselling is dishonest, or comes of a false
- premise, change your plan. For the laws provide that all dishonest
- mandates are invalid. And plans may be altered if they are
- impossible of fulfilment, or may not well be performed.
- "And take this for a general rule: That every counsel that is so
- rigorously established that it cannot be altered, for any condition
- that may arise, I say that counsel is vicious."
- This Melibeus, when he had heard all the doctrines of his wife, Dame
- Prudence, answered her thus: "Dame, so far you have well and agreeably
- taught me, in a general way, how I should govern myself in the
- choosing and in the rejecting of councillors. But now I would fain
- have you descend to the particular, and tell me how you like them
- and how they appear to you- I mean, the councillors who have been
- already chosen in the present need."
- "My lord," said she, "I beg of you, in all humility, that you will
- not wilfully object to my reasons, nor allow anger to enter your
- heart, even though I should say things that must displease you. For
- God knows that, as for my intention, I speak to your best interest,
- your honour, and your advantage. And, truly, I hope that your
- benignity will take it all in patience. Trust me, your counselling
- in this case should not be called counselling, properly speaking,
- but only a motion to do folly; and you have erred in many ways.
- "First and foremost, you have erred in the method and manner of
- assembling your councillors. For you should have called, at first, but
- a few, and thereafter, had there arisen a need, you might have
- called in more. But, indeed, you have suddenly called into council a
- great multitude of persons, all very burdensome and all very
- tiresome to hear. Also, you have erred thus: whereas you should have
- called into council only your true friends, elderly and wise, you have
- gathered here many strange men, and young men, false flatterers,
- reconciled enemies, and men who do you reverence without love.
- Again, you have erred in that you have brought with you into council
- anger, covetousness, and hastiness, the which three things are
- antagonistic to every honest and profitable parliament; nor have you
- voided nor destroyed them, either in yourself or in your
- councillors, as you ought to have done. You have erred, again, in that
- you have revealed your wishes to your councillors, and your desire
- to make war and obtain vengeance; they have learned from your speeches
- the thing toward which you incline. Therefore, they have advised you
- agreeably to your wishes, rather than to your profit. You have
- erred, also, in that it appears to have sufficed you to be
- counselled by these councillors only, and with little advising;
- whereas, in so great and high a matter, it was really encumbent upon
- you to have procured more councillors and to have deliberated longer
- upon the means of performing your enterprise. Again you have erred,
- for you have not examined and tested your council in the manner
- aforesaid, nor in any manner required by the cause. You have erred,
- again, in that you have made no division between your councillors;
- that is to say, between your true friends and your feigned; nor have
- you learned the desire of your true friends, the elderly and wise of
- them; but you have cast the words of every man into a hotchpot, and
- you have then inclined your heart toward the majority, and upon that
- side have you stooped to folly. And since you well know that men
- must always exhibit, in any gathering, a greater number of fools
- than of wise heads, therefore in those councils composed of large
- numbers, where rather is considered the will of the majority than
- the wisdom of individuals, you may see easily enough that in such
- cases the fools must have the mastery."
- Melibeus answered her again, saying: "I grant that I have erred; but
- since you have already told me that he is not to blame who changes
- councillors under certain conditions and for just causes, I stand
- ready to change mine, just as you shall prompt. The proverb runs: To
- err is human, but to persist in sin is the work of the devil."
- To this replied. Dame Prudence: "Examine your council, and let us
- see which of them have spoken most reasonably and given the best
- advice. And since such an examination is necessary, let us begin
- with the surgeons and physicians who spoke the first in this cause.
- I say that the surgeons and physicians have spoken discreetly, as they
- should; and they wisely spoke when they said that to their
- profession belongs the duty of dealing honourably with every man,
- and to his profit, and to harm no one; and, according to their
- skill, to set diligently about the healing of those under their
- care. And sir, since they have answered wisely and discreetly, I
- advise that they be richly and nobly rewarded for their noble
- speech, and, too, that they may be the more attentive to the healing
- of your dear daughter. For, though they are your friends, you must not
- suffer it that they serve you for nothing; you ought, indeed, but
- the more to reward them and to give them largess. And, touching the
- proposition that the physicians introduced into this case, namely,
- that, in diseases, the thing is cured by its contrary, I would fain
- learn how you understand that saying and what is your opinion of it."
- "Indeed," said Melibeus, "I understand it thus: That just as they
- have done me an injury, so should I do them another. For just as
- they have revenged themselves upon me, and have thereby done me a
- wrong, so shall I now take my revenge and do them a wrong. And then
- shall I have cured one contrary by another."
- "Lo, lo," exclaimed Dame Prudence, "how easily is every man inclined
- toward his own desire and to the securing of his own pleasure!
- Surely the words of the physicians should not have been interpreted in
- this sense. For, indeed, wickedness is not the contrary of wickedness,
- nor is vengeance of vengeance, nor wrong of wrong; but they are
- their likenesses. And therefore one vengeance is not to be cured by
- another vengeance, nor one wrong by another wrong; but, rather, each
- of them fructifies and engenders upon the other. But the words of
- the physicians should be understood in this wise: good and evil are
- opposites, and peace and war, revenge and forgiveness, discord and
- concord, and many others. But, certainly, wickedness shall be cured by
- goodness, discord by concord, war by peace, and so on of other things.
- And with this Saint Paul the Apostle accords in many places. Says
- he: 'See that none render evil for evil unto any man; but ever
- follow that which is good, both among yourselves, and to all men.' And
- in many other places he admonishes to peace and harmony.
- "But now will I speak of the counselling that was given by the
- lawyers and suchlike wise men, who were all of one accord, as you
- heard: to the effect that, above all else, you should be diligent in
- guarding your person and in garrisoning and provisioning your house.
- And they held, also, that in these matters you ought to act
- advisedly and after much deliberation. Sir, as to the first point,
- which touches upon the safety of your person, you must understand that
- he who is at war should meekly and devoutly pray, above all things,
- that Jesus Christ, of His great mercy, will keep him under His
- protection and be his sovereign and very present help in time of need.
- For assuredly, in this world there is no man who can be safeguarded by
- advice, save and except he be within the keeping of Our lord Jesus
- Christ. With this opinion agrees the prophet David, who says:
- 'Except the Lord keep the city, the watchman wakes but in vain.' Now
- then, sir, you shall commit the guarding of your person to your true
- friends, approved and well known; for of them only should you ask such
- help. For Cato says: 'If thou hast need of aid, ask it of thy friends;
- for there is no physician so valuable as thy true friend.' And
- hereafter you must keep always from all strange folk, and from
- liars, and hold them always suspect. For Petrus Alfonsus says:
- 'Never take company of a strange man, on the way, unless it is that
- you have known him longer than the present moment. And if it be that
- he fall in with you by accident, and without your assent, inquire
- then, as subtly as you may, into his conversation and into his life,
- and do you dissemble for yourself; say that you are going where you do
- not intend to go; and if he carry a spear, walk upon the right side of
- him, and if he bear a sword, walk on his left.' And hereafter shall
- you wisely hold yourself verily aloof from the sorts of people I
- have described, and eschew both them and their counsel. And you
- shall not presume so much upon your strength that you are led to
- despise and hold as naught the might of your adversary, thus
- endangering your person by this presumption; for every wise man
- fears his enemy. And Solomon says that it is well for him that
- suspects all others; for verily he that, because of the courage of his
- heart and the strength of his body, presumes too much upon them- him
- shall evil befall. Then, you should guard always against all
- ambushments and all espionage. For Seneca says: 'The wise man that
- fears danger avoids danger; he does not fall into peril who peril
- shuns.' And though it may seem that you are secure in a place, yet
- shall you be always upon your guard; that is to say, be not
- negligent either before your greatest enemy or, your least. Seneca
- says: 'A man that is well advised dreads his weakest foe.' Ovid says
- that the little weasel may kill the great bull and the wild hart.
- And the Book says that a little thorn may sorely prick a great king;
- and that a hound will hold the wild boar. But, nevertheless, I do
- not say that you are to be so cowardly as to be afraid where there
- is no just cause for fear. It is said in a book that some folk have
- a great wish to deceive, who yet fear deception. But you shall fear
- poisoning, and withhold yourself from the company of scoffers. For the
- Book says that with the scoffer one should have no fellowship, and
- should avoid his words as venom.
- "Now, as to the second point, wherein your wise councillors have
- advised you to provision and garrison your house, I would know how you
- understand their words, and what is your opinion of them."
- Melibeus answered and said: "Verily, I understand them in this wise:
- that I am to equip my house with towers, such as castles have, and
- other such buildings, and with armour and with artilleries; by means
- of which I may keep my house and may so defend and keep my person that
- my enemies will not dare to approach me."
- To this judgment Prudence then replied: "The garrisoning,
- provisioning, and equipping of high towers is sometimes but the
- pandering to pride. And it sometimes happens that even when men
- build high towers and great fortresses, at much cost and with untold
- labour, when they are completed they are not worth a straw, unless
- they be defended by true friends, who are both old and wise. And
- understand well that the greatest and strongest garrison a, powerful
- man may have, as well to defend his person as his property, is the
- love of his vassals and his neighbours. For Tullius says that there is
- a kind of garrison which no man can vanquish or disperse, and that
- is the love of a lord's own citizens and people.
- "Now, sir, as to the third point, whereof your older and wiser
- councillors averred that you ought not suddenly and hastily to proceed
- in this matter, but that you should provide for and array yourself
- with great diligence and after much careful thought, indeed I think
- that they spoke wisely and truthfully. For Tullius says: 'In every
- act, or ever thou begin it, array thyself with great diligence.' Then,
- say I, in seeking vengeance, in war, in battle, and in making
- arrangements, before you begin you must thoroughly prepare yourself
- and do it with much forethought. For Tullius says that a swift victory
- is the result of long preparation. And Cassiodorus says that the
- garrison is the stronger for being well prepared.
- "But let us now speak of the counsel that was given by your
- neighbours, those who do you reverence without love; by your old
- reconciled enemies; by your flatterers who counselled you privately to
- certain things and openly to quite others; and by the younger men,
- also, who advised a speedy taking of vengeance and an immediate
- opening of hostilities. And certainly, sir, as I have said before, you
- were greatly in error in calling such folk into your council; such
- councillors are sufficiently discredited by the reasons hitherto
- adduced. But, nonetheless, let us descend to the particular. You
- should first proceed after the teaching of Tullius. Certainly the
- truth of this matter, or of this counselling, needs no long inquiry.
- For we know well who they are that have done to you this injury and
- this villainy, and how many offenders there are, and in what manner
- they have wrought against you this wrong and harm. And after this,
- then shall you examine the second condition which this same Tullius
- added. For Tullius puts forth a condition which he calls
- 'complying,' by which he means: who they are, and how many of them,
- that complied with your wishes to do hasty vengeance on your
- enemies, as you expressed it in council. And let us consider, also,
- who they are and how many, that complied with the wishes of your
- adversaries. As to the first group, it is well known who they are that
- complied with your hasty wilfulness; for truly all those who
- counselled you to make a sudden war are not your friends. Let us now
- consider who they are that you hold so steadfastly to be friends of
- your person. For though you are a mighty man, and a rich, true it is
- that you do but stand alone. For you have no child, save a daughter;
- nor have you any brothers, or cousins, or other near kinsmen for the
- dread of whom your enemies might forgo treating with you or attempting
- to destroy your person. You know also that your wealth, when
- apportioned out, will be distributed to a few men not closely
- related to you; and when each of them shall have received his share,
- then he will have but little incentive to avenge your death. But
- your enemies are three, and they have many children, brothers,
- cousins, and other near kinsmen; and though it were that you had slain
- two or three of them, yet, there should remain enough to avenge
- those deaths by killing you. And though it were that your own
- kindred are true and more steadfast than those of your enemies, yet,
- nevertheless, your own kinsmen are but distantly related to you,
- whereas the kinsmen of your adversaries are closely sib to them.
- And, certainly, as for that, their condition is better than yours.
- Then let us consider, also, whether the advice of those who urged
- you to a sudden vengeance accords with reason. Certainly you know here
- that the answer is nay. For you know well that there is no man who may
- take vengeance upon anyone, save the judge who has proper
- jurisdiction, and when it has been to him to take such vengeance,
- hastily or slowly, as the law requires. And, moreover, as to that same
- word which Tullius calls 'complying,' you should consider whether your
- might and power may consent to comply with your wilfulness and that of
- your councillors. And, surely, to that also you must answer no. For
- indeed, properly speaking, we should do nothing save such things as we
- may do rightfully. And, in truth, rightfully you may take no vengeance
- as of your own authority. Thus you may see that your power does not
- rightfully consent to comply with your wilfulness. Let us now
- examine the third point, which Tullius calls the 'consequence.' You
- must understand that the vengeance which you purpose is the
- consequence. And from that follows another vengeance, another peril,
- and another war, and further injuries and damages without number
- whereof we are not at this time aware. And, touching the fourth point,
- which Tullius calls 'engendering,' you should consider that this wrong
- done to you was engendered of the hate of your enemies; and of the
- vengeance taken on that evil would be begotten another vengeance,
- and therewithal much sorrow and wastage of wealth, as I have pointed
- out.
- "Now, sir, as to the point which Tullius calls 'causes,' which is
- the last point to consider, you must understand that the wrong that
- has been done you had certain causes, the which scholars call Oriens
- and Efficens, and Causa longinqua and Causa propinqua, which is to
- say, the ultimate cause and the proximate cause. The ultimate cause is
- Almighty God, Who is the Cause of all things. The proximate cause is
- your three enemies. The accidental cause is hate. The material cause
- is the five wounds of your daughter. The formal cause is the method of
- their working who brought ladders and climbed in at your windows.
- The final cause was the wish to slay your daughter; it hindered them
- not, in so far as they did their best. But, to speak now of the
- ultimate cause, as to what end they shall reach, or what shall finally
- betide your enemies in this case, I cannot judge, save in conjecture
- and supposition. Yet we may suppose that they shall come to an evil
- end, for the Book of Decrees says: 'Seldom, and only with great
- pain, are causes brought to a good end, when they have been badly
- begun.'
- "Now, sir, if men ask me why God has suffered men to do this
- villainy, certainly I can answer nothing in any reliable language. For
- the Apostle says that the wisdom and the judgments of Our Lord God
- Almighty are very deep, whereof no man may comprehend anything, nor
- search into them. Nevertheless, by certain presumptions and
- conjecturings, I hold and believe that God, Who is justice and
- righteousness, has permitted this villainy upon a just and
- reasonable cause.
- "Your name is Melibee, which is to say, a man who drinks honey.
- You have drunk so much of the sweet honey of mundane riches and
- delights and honours that you are intoxicated therewith, and have
- forgotten Jesus Christ, your Creator: you have not honoured Him as you
- should have done, nor have you showed Him a proper reverence. Nor have
- you well observed those words of Ovid, who says: 'Under the honey of
- the good things of the flesh is hidden the venom that slays the soul.'
- And Solomon says that if you have found honey, eat of it only a
- sufficiency; for if you eat of it overmuch, you shall vomit, and so be
- again hungry and in want. And perchance Christ holds you in scorn, and
- has turned away His face from you, and shut up the ears of His
- mercy; and also He has suffered it that you have been punished in that
- manner in which you have sinned. You have sinned against Our Lord
- Christ; for, certainly, those three enemies of mankind, the world, the
- flesh, and the devil, you have wilfully suffered to enter into your
- heart through the windows of your body, and you have not
- sufficiently defended yourself against their assaults and temptations,
- so that they have wounded your soul in five different places; that
- is to say, the deadly sins that have entered into your heart through
- your five senses. In the same manner Our Lord Christ has willed and
- permitted it that your three enemies have entered your house through
- the windows thereof, and have wounded your daughter in the manner
- whereof you know."
- "Certainly," said Melibeus, "I see well that you so strengthen
- your arguments that I shall not revenge myself upon my enemies,
- showing me thus the perils and the evils that may result from this
- taking of vengeance. But if everyone were to consider, in every
- revenge, the dangers and ills that might ensue therefrom, no man would
- ever take vengeance, and that would be harmful; for by
- vengeance-taking the wicked are set apart from the good men. And
- they that have the will to do wickedly restrain their evil purpose
- when they see the punishment and chastisement of other wrongdoers."
- To this replied Dame Prudence: "Surely," said she, "I grant that
- much good and much evil come of vengeance; but vengeance-taking does
- not belong to everyone, but only to judges and such as have a proper
- jurisdiction and authority over wrongdoers. And I say, further, that
- just as an individual sins in wreaking vengeance upon another man,
- so sins the judge if he does not fully exact payment from those who
- have deserved to be punished. For Seneca says: 'That is a good
- master who convicts criminals.' And as Cassiodorus says: 'A man
- shrinks from crime when he understands and knows that it angers the
- judges and the sovereigns.' And yet another says: 'The judge who fears
- to deal justly makes criminals of men.' And Saint Paul the apostle
- says in his Epistle to the Romans that not without reason are the
- fasces borne before the magistrates. For they are borne to punish
- criminals and miscreants, and for the security of good and just men.
- If, then, you would have revenge upon your enemies, you should turn to
- and have recourse unto the judge having a proper jurisdiction over
- them; and he will punish them as the law demands and requires."
- "Ah!" exclaimed Melibeus. "This idea of vengeance is no longer to my
- liking. I remember, now, how Fortune has nourished me from my
- childhood, helping me over many a difficult place. I give heed to
- this; and now will I make trial of her again, believing that, with
- God's help, she will aid me to avenge my shame."
- "Indeed," said Prudence, "if you will act according to my advice,
- you shall not make trial of Fortune in any way; you shall not bow down
- before her. For, to quote Seneca: 'Things done foolishly and in the
- hope of Fortune, shall never come to any good end.' And as the same
- Seneca says: 'The clearer and the more shining Fortune appears, the
- more brittle she is and the more easily broken.' Trust not in her, for
- she is neither steadfast nor stable; for when you believe yourself
- to be most secure and most certain of her help, she will deceive and
- fail you. And whereas you say that Fortune has nourished you from your
- childhood, I say that by so much the less should you trust now to
- her and to her ingenuity. For Seneca says: 'As for the man who is
- nursed by Fortune, she will make of him a great fool.' Now then, since
- you desire and demand vengeance, and since the sort of vengeance
- that is to be had according to law and before a judge is not to your
- taste, and since the vengeance that is attempted in reliance upon
- Fortune is dangerous and uncertain, then remains to you no other
- remedy than to have recourse unto the sovereign. Judge Who punishes
- all villainies and avenges all wrongs. And He will avenge you, as He
- Himself promises, for 'Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord.'"
- Melibee answered: "If I do not revenge myself for the injury that
- men have done to me, I invite and advertise to those who have
- injured me, and to all others, that they are free to do me another
- wrong. For it is written: 'If thou take no revenge for an old
- injury, thou invitest thine enemies to do thee a new evil.' And
- also, what of my sufferance, men would do to me so much of villainy
- that I could neither endure it nor sustain it; and I should be held in
- contempt. For men say: 'In patient sufferance shall many things happen
- to one, the which one may not grin and bear.'
- "Certainly," said Prudence, "I grant you that too much of sufferance
- is not a good thing; but yet it follows not therefrom that every
- person to whom men do a rascality may take vengeance for it; for
- that is the duty of and belongs only to the proper judges. Wherefore
- the two authorities that you have quoted are only to be understood
- as speaking to and of the judges; for when they suffer overmuch that
- wrong and crime remain unpunished, they not only invite new injury and
- wrong, but they command that they be done. Also a wise man says:
- 'The judge who does not chasten the sinner, bids him to sin again.'
- And it is conceivable that the judges and sovereigns of any realm
- might show so much leniency to criminals and evil-doers that, from
- such sufferance, in process of time, they might so wax in power as
- to turn out the judges and the monarchs from their places, and thus,
- at last, deprive them of the mastery.
- "But now let us assume that you have a proper leave to avenge
- yourself. I say that you have not now the power to avenge yourself.
- For if you will compare your own with the power and might of your
- adversaries, you shall find, in many ways, as I have previously
- pointed out, that their condition is better than yours. And
- therefore say I that it is well, as for this time, to suffer your
- injuries in patience.
- "Furthermore, you know well the common saw: It is madness in a man
- to strive with one who is stronger than himself; and to strive with
- a man of even strength is dangerous; but to strive with a weaker man
- is foolish. And for this reason a man should avoid all strife, in so
- far as he may. For Solomon says that it is to a man's honour if he
- withhold himself from noise and strife. And if it so happen that a man
- of greater power or strength does you an injury, make it your business
- to study how to stop the pain of it, rather than how to avenge it. For
- Seneca says: 'He puts himself into great peril who strives with a
- greater than himself.' And Cato says: 'If a man of higher degree or
- estate, or one more mighty than thou do thee an annoyance or
- grievance, tolerate him; for he that once has grieved thee, at another
- time he may relieve and help.' Yet I am assuming that you have both
- the power and the license to avenge yourself. I say, nevertheless,
- that there are very many things which ought to constrain you to
- withhold your punishment, and make you rather incline toward
- sufferance and to have patience under whatever may have been done to
- you. First and foremost, if you will, consider the faults in your
- own person, for which defects God has permitted that you have this
- tribulation, as I said before. For the poet says that we ought
- patiently to endure the tribulations that come to us when we think
- upon and well consider that we have deserved them. And Saint Gregory
- says: 'When a man considers well the multitude of his faults and sins,
- the trials and tribulations that he suffers will seem but the
- lighter to be borne; and just in so much as he holds his sins to be
- the more heavy and grievous, in so much will seem his pains the
- lighter and the easier to be borne.' Also, you ought to incline and
- bow down your heart to observe and learn the patience of Our Lord
- Jesus Christ, as Saint Peter says in his Epistle. 'Jesus Christ,' he
- says, 'hath suffered for us, and hath given example to every man to
- follow Him and to pray unto Him; for He did never sin, nor ever came
- there a vicious word out of His mouth; when men cursed Him, he
- cursed them not, and when men belaboured Him with blows, He would
- not menace them.' Also, the great patience which the saints in
- Paradise showed in bearing the tribulations of this world, and all
- without their deserving or their guilt- this ought greatly to prompt
- you to patience. Furthermore, you should enforce patience upon
- yourself when you consider that the tribulations of this world can but
- a little while endure, being soon over and ended. But the happiness
- that a man looks to receive by bearing tribulations patiently is
- perdurable, as the apostle says in his Epistle. 'The joy of God,' he
- says, 'is perdurable.' Which is to say, it is everlasting. Also,
- hold and believe steadfastly that he is neither well bred nor well
- taught who cannot have patience, or will not receive training in
- patience. For Solomon says that the belief and the knowledge of a
- man are known by his patience. And in another place he says that he
- who is patient will govern himself prudently. And this same Solomon
- says that the angry and wrathful man is noisy, while the patient man
- moderates and quiets noise. He says, also, that it is better to be
- patient than to be very strong; and he that governeth his own heart is
- more praiseworthy than he that taketh a city. And thereto says Saint
- James in his Epistle: 'Let patience have her perfect work.'"
- "Surely," said Melibeus, "I will grant you, Dame Prudence, that
- patience is a great virtue of perfection; but every man may not attain
- to the perfection that you seek; nor am I of the number of perfect
- men, for my heart will never find peace until I have revenged
- myself. And though it was dangerous to my enemies to do me an injury
- in taking vengeance upon me, yet took they no heed of their own peril,
- but fulfilled their evil purpose. And therefore it seems to me that
- men ought not to find fault with me if I incur a little peril in
- taking vengeance, even though I go to great excess, that is to say,
- that I avenge one outrage with another."
- "Ah," said Dame Prudence, "you speak out of your purpose as you
- desire it to happen; but never in this world should any man commit
- an outrage or go to excess to obtain his vengeance. For Cassiodorus
- says: 'As much evil does he who avenges himself by outrage as did he
- who first committed outrage.' And therefore you must avenge yourself
- in an orderly manner, and rightfully, that is to say, according to
- law, and not by excess nor by outrage. For if you avenge yourself in
- any other way, you sin. And thereupon Seneca says: 'A man must not
- avenge villainy with villainy.' If you say that right demands that a
- man defend himself violently against violence, and fightingly
- against fighting, certainly you speak but the truth, when the fighting
- is done immediately, without interval of tarrying or delay, and simply
- for defence and not for vengeance. And it behooves a man that he
- conduct his defence with such moderation that men will have no cause
- to accuse him of excess and outrage; for otherwise the thing were
- unreasonable. By God, you know well that you are not now defending
- yourself, but are going to revenge yourself; and so it follows that
- you have no wish to do your deed with moderation. That is why I hold
- that patience would be good for you. For Solomon says: 'He that is not
- patient shall endure great evil.'
- "Certainly," said Melibeus, "I grant you that when a man is
- impatient and wroth because of that which touches him not, and in no
- way concerns him, if he be harmed thereby it is not to be wondered at.
- For the law provides that he is culpable who interferes or meddles
- with what does not concern him. And Solomon says that he who
- interferes in the strife of other men is like one who seizes a hound
- by the ears. For just as he who takes a strange dog by the ears is
- likely to be bitten, just so is it reasonable to suppose that he may
- be injured who, by his impatience, meddles in the strife of other men,
- when it does not concern him. But you know well that this deed, that
- is to say, my grief and unrest, touches me closely. Therefore, if I am
- angry and impatient, it is no marvel. And, saving your presence, I
- cannot see wherein it can greatly harm me if I wreak my revenge: for I
- am richer and stronger than are my enemies. And well do you know
- that with money and great possessions are governed all the matters
- of this world. Solomon says that all things obey great wealth."
- When Prudence had heard her husband boast thus of his possessions
- and money, despising the power of his enemies, she answered and
- said: "Surely, dear sir, I grant that you are mighty and rich, and
- that wealth is a good thing for those who have acquired it honestly
- and know well how to use it. For just as the body of man cannot live
- without the soul, neither can it exist without worldly goods. And by
- means of riches a man may acquire powerful friends. Thereupon says
- Pamphilius: 'If a cowherd's daughter be rich, she may make choice of a
- thousand men, which she will take for her husband; for, of a thousand,
- not one will forsake or refuse her.' And this Pamphilius also says:
- 'If thou be very happy, that is to say, if thou be very rich, thou
- shalt find a great many comrades and friends. And if thy fortune
- change, so that thou become poor, then farewell fellowship and
- friendship; for thou shalt be left alone, without any company, save it
- be the company of the poor.' And still further says Pamphilius: 'Those
- who are thralls and born of bondmen's blood shall be made worthy and
- noble by wealth.' And just as from riches come many good things, so
- from poverty come many ills and evils. For deep poverty forces a man
- into evil deeds. Therefore Cassiodorus calls poverty the 'mother of
- ruin,' which is to say, the mother of overthrowing or of falling down.
- And thereupon says Petrus Alfonsus: 'One of the greatest adversities
- of this world is when a man free by kindred and birth is constrained
- by poverty to eat of the alms of his enemy.' And the same thing is
- said by Innocent in one of his books, for he says: 'Sorrowful and
- unhappy is the condition of the poor beggar; for if he beg not his
- food, he dies of hunger; and if he beg it, he dies of shame; and yet
- necessity constrains him to beg.' And thereupon Solomon says that it
- is better to die than to live in poverty. And this same Solomon says
- that it is better to die the bitter death than to live in such wise.
- For these reasons that I have given, and for many others that I
- could adduce, I grant you that riches are good for those who have well
- acquired them, and for those who use them well. And therefore will I
- show you how you should bear yourself in acquiring wealth, and how you
- should use it.
- "First, you should get it without any great desire, and leisurely,
- and gradually, and not over eagerly. For the man who is too desirous
- of gathering riches abandons himself first to theft and to all other
- evils. And thereupon says Solomon: 'A merchant shall hardly keep
- himself from doing wrong, and a huckster shall not be freed from sin.'
- He says also: 'The wealth that cometh hastily unto a man goeth soon
- and passeth lightly away from him; but the wealth that cometh by a
- little and a little waxeth alway and multiplieth.' And, sir, you shall
- acquire riches by your wisdom and by your labour to your own profit;
- and that without wronging or doing harm to any other person. For the
- law provides that no man shall legally become rich who injures another
- in the process; that is to say, that Nature forbids, and rightfully,
- that a man acquire wealth at another's expense. And Tullius says:
- 'No sorrow, no fear of death, nay nothing that may befall a man, is so
- much against Nature as for a man to increase and take his profit at
- the expense of another. And though the great man and the mighty man
- acquire riches more easily than thou, yet be not idle nor slow in
- gaining thine own profit; for thou must, in all things, avoid
- idleness.' For Solomon says that idleness teaches a man to do many
- evil things. And the same Solomon says that he that labours and busies
- himself to till his land shall eat bread; but he that is given over to
- idleness and has no business or occupation shall fall into poverty and
- die of hunger. And he that is idle and slow can never find a
- convenient time wherein to transact his business. For there is a
- versifier who says: 'The lazy man excuses himself in winter because of
- the great cold, and in summer because of the great heat.' For these
- reasons Cato says: 'Wake, and be not overly inclined toward sleep; for
- a superfluity of rest causes and nourishes many vices.' And
- thereupon says Saint Jerome: 'Do some good deeds, that the Devil,
- our Enemy, find you not unoccupied. For the Devil takes not easily
- into his service those whom he finds occupied in good deeds.'
- "Thus, then, in getting riches, you must avoid idleness. And
- afterward you shall use the wealth, which you have acquired by your
- knowledge and by your labour, in such manner that men will not hold
- you to be too stingy, or too sparing, or too foolishly generous,
- that is to say, too great a spendthrift. For just as men blame an
- avaricious man for his meanness and penuriousness, in the same wise is
- he to be blamed that spends too freely. Thereupon says Cato: 'Use
- the wealth which thou hast acquired in such manner that men shall have
- no reason to call thee either wretch or niggard; for it is shameful
- for a man to have a poor heart and a rich purse.' He says also: 'Use
- the wealth, which thou hast measureably.' That is to say, spend it
- within measure; for those who foolishly spend and waste what riches
- they have, when they have no longer any property of their own,
- scheme then to take that of another man. I say, then, that you shall
- flee avarice; using your riches in such manner that men shall not
- say that you have buried them, but that you hold them in your power
- and at your wielding. For a wise man reproves an avaricious man
- thus, in two verses: 'Wherefore and why does a man bury his wealth, of
- his great avarice, when he knows well that he must needs die; for
- death is the end of every man in this present life? And for what cause
- or occasion does he join or knit himself so closely to his goods
- that all his wit may not dissever or part him therefrom; when he
- knows, or ought to know, that when he is dead he shall have borne with
- him nothing at all from this world? Thereupon says Saint Augustine:
- 'The avaricious man is like unto Hell; for the more it swallows the
- more desire has it to swallow and devour.' And just as you would
- hate to be called an avaricious man, or a stingy, just so should you
- govern yourself that men will not call you a spendthrift. Therefore
- says Tullius: 'The riches of thy house should not be hid, nor should
- they be kept so closely that they may not be opened by pity and good
- will.' That is to say, in order to give a part to those in need.
- 'But yet thy wealth should not be so openly exposed as to become the
- goods of every man.' Afterward, in getting your wealth and in using
- it, you should have always three things in mind, that is to say, Our
- Lord God, conscience, and your own good name. First, you have God in
- your heart, and for the sake of no riches at all should you do
- anything which may in any manner displease God, Who is your Creator
- and Maker. For, after the word of Solomon: Better it is to have little
- and therewith the love of God, than great riches and treasure and
- the loss of God's love thereby. And the prophet says that it is better
- to be held for a good man and to have but little of the wealth and
- treasure of this world, than to be held for a villain and have great
- riches. And yet say I still, that you should always do your business
- in the gathering of wealth so that you gather it with a good
- conscience. And the apostle says that there is not anything in all
- this world whereof a man should have so great a joy as when his
- conscience bears a good witness unto himself. And the wise man says
- that the substance a man has is righteous when sin lies not upon the
- conscience of that man. Afterward, in gathering your riches and in the
- using them, you must busy yourself and be diligent to observe that
- your good name be kept and conserved. For Solomon says: 'A good name
- is rather to be chosen than great riches.' And thereupon he says
- elsewhere: 'Do thy diligence in keeping of thy friend and of thine own
- good name; for these shall abide longer than any treasure, be it never
- so precious.' And surely he should not be called a good man who, after
- God and his own conscience, in all things else is not diligent in
- the business of maintaining his good name. Cassiodorus says: 'It is
- a sign of a good heart in a man when he loves and desires to have
- and to keep an honoured name.' And thereupon says Saint Augustine:
- 'Two things there be which are necessary and needful, and they are:
- good conscience and a good name; that is to say, a good conscience for
- the sake of thy soul, and a good name for the sake of thy
- neighbour.' And he who will trust so much in his own good conscience
- that he recks not of displeasing and setting at naught the value of
- his neighbour's opinion of his good name, and cares nothing if he keep
- not his good name toward his neighbour- he is but a boor.
- "My lord, now have I showed you how you should act in acquiring
- riches, and how you should employ them; and well I understand that,
- because of the faith you rest in your wealth you will move toward
- war and battle. I counsel you that you begin no war upon faith in
- the continuance of your wealth; for your wealth is not sufficient to
- maintain war. Wherefore says a philosopher: 'He who intrigues for
- and will always have war, shall never have sufficient funds; for the
- richer he is, the more must his expenses be, always providing he wants
- respect and victory.' And Solomon says that the greater a man's riches
- the more leeches hang upon him. And, dear sir, though because of
- your wealth you may have many followers, yet it behooves you not,
- nor is it a good thing, to initiate a war when you may have a peace,
- and that to your own honour and profit. For victory in battle in
- this world lies not in a great multitude of people, neither lies it in
- the virtue of man; but it lies alone within the will and in the
- hands of Our Lord God Almighty. And therefore Judas Maccabeus, God's
- own knight, when called upon to fight against an adversary greatly
- superior in numbers and stronger than his own people, comforted his
- little army, saying: 'As easily may Our Lord God Almighty give victory
- unto a few as unto a multitude; for the fortune of war lieth not in
- numbers, but cometh solely from Our Lord God of Heaven.' And, dear
- sir, for as much as there is no man certain whether he be worthy
- that God give him the victory, any more than he can be certain whether
- he is worthy of the love of God, therefore Solomon says that every man
- should greatly fear to begin a war. Also, in battle, many perils
- befall, and many chances of evil, and therein is a great man as easily
- slain as a poor; and thereupon is it written in the Second Book of the
- Kings that the issue of battle is all at chance and is not to be known
- beforehand; for as easily hurt with a spear is one man as any other.
- And since there lies great peril in war, therefore should a man flee
- and eschew warfare, in so far as he may with honour. For Solomon says:
- 'He that liveth by the sword shall perish by the sword.'"
- After Dame Prudence had spoken in this manner, Melibeus answered and
- said: "I see well, Dame Prudence, that by your fair words and by the
- reasons you have adduced before me, you are not in favour of war;
- but I have not yet heard you advise as to what course I ought to
- pursue in this extremity."
- "Certainly," quoth she, "I counsel you that you accord with your
- adversaries, and that you have peace with them. For Saint James says
- in his Epistle that by concord and peace little fortunes grow great,
- and by discord and warfare are great fortunes brought low. And well
- you know that one of the greatest things there is in all this world is
- unity and peace. Wherefore says Our Lord Jesus Christ in this wise
- to His disciples: 'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be
- called the children of God.'"
- "Ah," said Melibee, "now do I see well that you love neither my
- honour nor my reputation. You know well that my adversaries have begun
- this quarrel and contention by their outrage; and you see well that
- they neither require nor ask peace from me, nor even do they ask to be
- reconciled. Will you, then, that I go and show myself meek and make
- myself humble before them, and cry mercy of them? Forsooth that were
- not to my honour. For just as men say that too much familiarity breeds
- contempt, so fares it with overmuch humility or meekness."
- Then began Dame Prudence to make a show of wrath, and she said:
- "Certainly, sir, saving your grace, I love your honour and your profit
- as I do my own, and so have I ever; nor have you or any other hitherto
- said anything to the contrary. And yet, if I had said that you
- should have bought a peace and a reconciliation, I had not been much
- mistaken nor said very far amiss. For the wise man says that
- dissension begins with another, but reconciliation with oneself. And
- the prophet says: 'Flee evil and do good; seek peace and follow it.'
- Yet say I not that you shall rather sue to your enemies than they to
- you; for well I know that you are so hard-hearted that you will do
- nothing for me. And Solomon says that he that is too hard of heart
- shall in the end have evil fortune."
- When Melibee had heard Dame Prudence show anger thus, he said:
- "Dame, I pray you that you be not displeased at things I say, for
- you know well that I am in my angry mood, and that it is no wonder;
- and that those who are angry cannot judge well of what they say or do.
- Wherefore the prophet says: 'The troubled eyes have no clear sight.'
- But speak to and counsel me as you like; for I am ready to do as you
- wish; and if you reprove me for my folly I am but bound the more to
- love you and praise you. For Solomon says that he that reproves him
- who has done a folly shall have more grace than he that deceives him
- with sweet words."
- Then said Dame Prudence: "I make no show of wrath or anger save
- for your great profit. For Solomon says that more worth is he who
- reproves and chides a fool for his folly than is he that supports
- him and praises him and laughs at his foolishness. And this same
- Solomon says that by the sorrowful visage of a man (that is to say, by
- the sorry and heavy countenance of a man) the fool corrects and amends
- himself."
- Then said Melibee: "I shall not know how to answer so many fair
- and good reasons as you show and lay before me. Speak out briefly your
- counsel and your wish, for I am ready to fulfill and to perform it."
- Then Dame Prudence showed him all her wish and desire, saying: "I
- counsel you, above all things, that you make peace with God and become
- reconciled to Him and to His grace. For, as I have heretofore said,
- God has suffered you to have this tribulation and unrest because of
- your sins. And if you do as I tell you to do, God will send your
- adversaries unto you and make them fall at your feet, ready to do your
- will and to obey your commands. For Solomon says that when the
- condition of a man is pleasant and to God's liking, He changes the
- hearts of that man's enemies and constrains them to seek peace of him,
- and grace. And I pray you, let me have private speech with your
- adversaries; for they shall not know that it is done with your
- consent. And then, when I have learned their whole intent and will,
- I may the more surely counsel you."
- "Dame," quoth Melibee, "do your whole will and whatsoever pleases
- you. For I put myself entirely at your disposal and command."
- Then Dame Prudence, when she saw the goodwill of her husband,
- deliberated and took advice of herself how she might bring this
- whole matter to a good end. And when she saw her time, she sent for
- these adversaries to come to her privately; and truly showed them
- the great good to be gained from peace and the great harms and dangers
- that are in war, and told them in a gracious manner that they ought to
- be repentant for the injury and wrong they had done to Melibee, her
- lord, and to herself, and to her daughter.
- And when they heard the gracious words of Dame Prudence they were so
- taken by surprise and so ravished with delight of her, that it was
- wonderful to tell. "Ah, lady," they said, "you have showed us the
- 'blessings of sweetness' in the words of David the prophet; for the
- reconciliation we are in no way worthy of, though we ought but in
- the greater contrition and humility to ask it- this, of your goodness,
- you have offered to us. Now see we well that the wisdom and
- knowledge of Solomon are true indeed, for he says that sweet words
- multiply and increase friends and cause villains to become courteous
- and humble.
- "Certainly," said they, "we will put our actions and all our
- matter and cause wholly in your good keeping; and we stand ready to
- obey the word and command of Lord Melibee. Therefore, dear and
- benign lady, we pray and beseech you, as humbly as we can, that it
- shall please you, in your great goodness, to fulfill your goodly words
- in deeds; for we consider and acknowledge that we have offended and
- grieved Lord Melibee beyond measure; so far indeed that it lies not
- within our power to make him any amends. Therefore we obligate and
- bind ourselves and our friends to do whatsoever he commands. But
- perchance he has for us such a heaviness of wrath, what of our
- offense, that he will impose upon us so great a pain of punishment
- that we shall not be able to bear it. And therefore, noble lady, we
- beseech you of your womanly pity to take such advisement in this
- need that we, and our friends, shall not be disinherited and destroyed
- because of our folly."
- "Certainly," said Prudence, "it is a hard thing, and a dangerous,
- for a man to put himself utterly into the arbitrament and judgment and
- into the might and power of his enemies. For Solomon says: 'Give not
- thy son and wife, thy brother and friend, power over thee while thou
- livest, and give not thy goods to another: lest it repent thee, and
- thou entreat for the same again. As long as thou livest and hast
- breath in thee, give not thyself over to any.' Now, since he
- counsels that a man give not even to a brother or a friend the
- power. over his body, by a stronger reason he forbids a 'man to give
- himself over to his enemy. Nevertheless, I counsel you that you
- mistrust not my lord. For I know well and truly that he is kindly
- and meek, large-hearted, courteous, and nothing desirous nor
- covetous of goods and riches. For there is nothing in all the world
- that he desires, save only respect and honour. Furthermore, I know
- well and am right sure that he will do nothing in this case without my
- counsel. And I shall so work therein that, by the grace of Our Lord
- God, you shall be reconciled unto us."
- Then said they with one voice: "Worshipful lady, we put ourselves
- and our property all fully at your command and disposal; and we are
- ready to come, upon whatever day is agreeable to your goodness, to
- make and give our obligation and bond, and that as strong as your
- goodness may desire: all that we may fulfill your will and that of
- Lord Melibee."
- When Dame Prudence had heard the answers of these men, she sent them
- away again, secretly. And she returned to Lord Melibee and reported to
- him how she had found these adversaries ready to suffer pain and
- punishment, praying him, however, for mercy and pity.
- "Then," said Melibee, "he is well worthy of pardon and to have his
- sins forgiven who excuses not his crime but acknowledges it and
- repents, asking indulgence. For Seneca says: 'There is the remission
- and the forgiveness where confession is.' For confession is
- neighbour to innocence. And he says in another place: 'He that is
- ashamed for his sin and acknowledges it, is worthy of remission.'
- Therefore I assent to peace; but it is best that we do this with the
- advice and consent of our friends."
- Then was Dame Prudence right glad and joyful, and she said:
- "Certainly, sir, you have well answered. For just as by the counsel,
- assent, and help of your friends you have been stirred to avenge
- yourself and go to war, just so you should not, without their consent,
- accord and make peace with your adversaries. For the law says:
- "There is nothing so good in kind as that a thing shall be unbound
- by him by whom it was bound."
- And then Dame Prudence, without delay or tarrying, sent messengers
- for their kindred and for their old friends who were true and wise,
- and told them in detail and in order, in the presence of Melibee,
- all of this matter, as it has been here expressed and declared; and
- she prayed them that they would advise and counsel what best were to
- be done in this need. And when Melibee's friends had taken their
- advices in this said matter, and had examined into it with
- diligence, they gave their counsel for peace and rest; and that
- Melibee should receive, with good heart, the prayers of his
- adversaries for forgiveness and mercy.
- And when Dame Prudence had heard the assent of her lord, Melibee,
- and the counsel of these friends, how they accorded with her will
- and intention, she was wonderfully glad of heart; and she said: "There
- is an old proverb which advises that the goodness you may do this day,
- do it; and delay it not until the morrow. Therefore I counsel you that
- you send wise and discreet messengers to your adversaries, bidding
- them that, if they are still minded to treat with you of peace and
- concord, they come hither to us without delay or tarrying."
- Which thing was done. And when these trespassers and repentant folk,
- that is to say, the adversaries of Melibeus, had heard the messengers'
- words, they were right glad and joyful, and they replied full meekly
- and favourably, yielding grace and giving thanks to their Lord Melibee
- and to all his party; and they made ready, without delay, to accompany
- the messengers in obedience to the command of Lord Melibee.
- Soon, then, they took their way toward Melibee's court, and they
- took with them some of their true friends to stand as sureties for
- them, and as hostages. And when they were come into the presence of
- Melibee, he spoke to them as follows: "It stands thus, and true it is,
- that you, without just cause, and without right or reason, have done
- great injury and wrong to me, to my wife Prudence, and to my
- daughter also. For you have entered my house with violence, and you
- did such outrage here that all men know well enough that you have
- fully deserved death; therefore do I ask of you whether you will leave
- the punishment, the chastisement, and the vengeance of this thing to
- me and to my wife Prudence? Or will you not?"
- Then the wisest of these three answered for all of them, saying:
- "Sir, we know well that we are unworthy to come into the court of so
- great and so worthy a lord as you are. For we have so greatly erred,
- and have offended guiltily in such wise against your lordship, that
- verily we have been deserving of death. But yet, for the great
- goodness and kindness that all the world witnesses in your person,
- we submit ourselves to the excellence and benignity of your gracious
- lordship, and stand ready to obey all your commands, beseeching you,
- that of your mercy and pity you will consider our great repentance and
- humble submission, and will grant us forgiveness for our outrageous
- trespass and offence. For well we know that your liberal grace and
- mercy reach out farther into goodness than reach our outrageous guilts
- and trespasses into wickedness; and this despite the fact that we have
- wickedly and damnably offended against your high lordship."
- Then Melibee took them benignly up from the ground, and received
- their obligations and bonds, by their oaths, and their pledges and
- sureties and hostages, and assigned a day for their reappearance
- before his court to receive and accept his sentence and judgment,
- the which he should impose; and after this, each man returned to his
- own home.
- And when Dame Prudence saw her opportunity, she asked her lord,
- Melibee, what vengeance he purposed taking on these adversaries.
- To which Melibee replied: "Surely I think and fully purpose to
- confiscate all that they have and to strip them out of their
- inheritances, and then to send them into perpetual banishment."
- "Certainly," said Dame Prudence, "that were a cruel sentence and
- much against reason. For you are rich enough, and have no need of
- other men's property. And you could easily in this way acquire a
- name for covetousness, which is a vicious thing and ought to be
- avoided by every good man. For, after the word of the apostle,
- covetousness is the root of all evil. Therefore were it better for you
- to lose an equal property of your own than to take theirs from them in
- this manner. For better it is to lose goods with honour than to win
- them by villainy and shame. And every man ought to be diligent about
- getting and keeping a good name. And he should not only busy himself
- with the keeping of a good name, but he should impose upon himself the
- constant task of renewing it. For it is written that 'The good fame or
- good name of a man is soon passed and forgotten, unless it be
- renewed.' And touching what you say, that you will exile your
- adversaries, that seems to me much against reason and out of all
- measure, considering how they have placed themselves within your
- power. And it is written that 'He deserves to lose his privilege who
- abuses and misuses the might and the power that are given to him.' And
- I submit that, even if you might impose upon them that pain by right
- and by law, which I think that you could not, I say that you might not
- be able to put it into execution, by some chance, and then were you as
- likely to fall again into war as you were before. Therefore, if you
- would have men render you obedience, you must judge more
- courteously, that is to say, you must give more easy sentences. For it
- is written that 'He who most courteously commands, men most readily
- obey.' Therefore I pray you that in this need you contrive to
- conquer your own heart. For Seneca says: 'He that overcomes his own
- heart, conquers twice.' And Tullius says: 'There is nothing so
- commendable in a great lord as when he is kindly and meek and easily
- satisfied.' And I pray you that you will forgo your vengeance in
- this manner, in order that your good name may be kept and preserved;
- and that men may have cause and reason to praise you for pity and
- for mercy, and that you yourself shall not have cause to repent for
- what you have done. For Seneca says: 'He conquers but evilly who
- repents of his victory.' Wherefore, I pray you, let there be mercy
- in your mind and in your heart, to the end that God Almighty may
- have mercy upon you at His last judgment. For Saint James says in
- his Epistle: 'For he shall have judgment without mercy, who hath
- showed no mercy.'"
- When Melibee had heard the great arguments and reasons of Dame
- Prudence, and her wise information and teaching, his heart began to
- incline toward the desire of his wife, considering her true intent;
- and he conformed his will to hers and assented fully to her
- counselling. And he thanked God, from Whom proceeds all virtue and
- goodness, that He had sent him a wife of so very great discretion.
- And when the day arrived for his adversaries to appear before him,
- he spoke to them kindly, in this wise: "Howbeit that of your pride and
- presumption and folly, and in your negligence and ignorance, you
- have borne yourselves badly and have trespassed against me, yet for as
- much as I see and behold your great humility and that you are sorry
- and repentant for your crimes, it constrains me to show you grace
- and mercy. Therefore do I receive you into my grace and forgive you
- utterly all the offences, injuries, and wrongs that you have done
- against me and mine; to this effect and to this end: that God of His
- endless mercy will, at our dying day, forgive us our sins that we have
- sinned against Him in this wretched world. For doubtless, if we be
- sorry and repentant for the sins and crimes which we have committed in
- the sight of Our Lord, He is so free and so merciful He will forgive
- us our guilt and bring us into His everlasting bliss. Amen."
-
-
- HERE ENDS CHAUCER'S TALE OF MELIBEE
- AND OF DAME PRUDENCE
-