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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE MERCHANT'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Of weeping and wailing, care and other sorrow
- I know enough, at eventide and morrow,"
- The merchant said, "and so do many more
- Of married folk, I think, who this deplore,
- For well I know that it is so with me.
- I have a wife, the worst one that can be;
- For though the foul Fiend to her wedded were,
- She'd overmatch him, this I dare to swear.
- How could I tell you anything special
- Of her great malice? She is shrew in all.
- There is a long and a large difference
- Between Griselda's good and great patience
- And my wife's more than common cruelty.
- Were I unbound, as may I prosperous be!
- I'd never another time fall in the snare.
- We wedded men in sorrow live, and care;
- Try it who will, and he shall truly find
- I tell the truth, by Saint Thomas of Ind,
- As for the greater part, I say not all.
- Nay, God forbid that it should so befall!
- "Ah, good sir host! I have been married, lad,
- These past two months, and no day more, by gad;
- And yet I think that he whose days alive
- Have been all wifeless, although men should rive
- Him to the heart, he could in no wise clear
- Tell you so much of sorrow as I here
- Could tell you of my spouse's cursedness."
- "Now," said our host, "merchant, so God you bless,
- Since you're so very learned in that art,
- Full heartily, I pray you, tell us part."
- "Gladly," said he, "but of my own fresh sore,
- For grief of heart I may not tell you more."
-
-
- HERE ENDS THE MERCHANT'S PROLOGUE
-
-
- THE MERCHANT'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Once on a time there dwelt in Lombardy
- One born in Pavia, a knight worthy,
- And there he lived in great prosperity;
- And sixty years a wifeless man was he,
- And followed ever his bodily delight
- In women, whereof was his appetite,
- As these fool laymen will, so it appears.
- And when he had so passed his sixty years,
- Were it for piety or for dotage
- I cannot say, but such a rapturous rage
- Had this knight to become a wedded man
- That day and night he did his best to scan
- And spy a place where he might wedded be;
- Praying Our Lord to grant to him that he
- Might once know something of that blissful life
- That is between a husband and his wife;
- And so to live within that holy band
- Wherein God first made man and woman stand.
- "No other life," said he, "is worth a bean;
- For wedlock is so easy and so clean
- That in this world it is a paradise."
- Thus said this ancient knight, who was so wise.
- And certainly, as sure as God is King,
- To take a wife, it is a glorious thing,
- Especially when a man is old and hoary;
- Then is a wife the fruit of wealth and glory.
- Then should he take a young wife and a fair,
- On whom he may beget himself an heir,
- And lead his life in joy and in solace,
- Whereas these bachelors do but sing "Alas!"'
- When they fall into some adversity
- In love, which is but childish vanity.
- And truly, it is well that it is so
- That bachelors have often pain and woe;
- On shifting ground they build, and shiftiness
- They find when they suppose they've certainness.
- They live but as a bird does, or a beast,
- In liberty and under no arrest,
- Whereas a wedded man in his high state
- Lives a life blissful, ordered, moderate,
- Under the yoke of happy marriage bound;
- Well may his heart in joy and bliss abound.
- For who can be so docile as a wife?
- Who is so true as she whose aim in life
- Is comfort for him, sick or well, to make?
- For weal or woe she will not him forsake.
- She's ne'er too tired to love and serve, say I,
- Though he may lie bedridden till he die.
- And yet some writers say it is not so,
- And Theophrastus is one such, I know.
- What odds though Theophrastus chose to lie?
- "Take not a wife," said he, "for husbandry,
- If you would spare in household your expense;
- A faithful servant does more diligence
- To keep your goods than your own wedded wife.
- For she will claim a half part all her life;
- And if you should be sick, so God me save,
- Your true friends or an honest serving knave
- Will keep you better than she that waits, I say,
- After your wealth, and has done, many a day.
- And if you take a wife to have and hold,
- Right easily may you become cuckold."
- This judgment and a hundred such things worse
- Did this man write, may God his dead bones curse!
- But take no heed of all such vanity.
- Defy old Theophrastus and hear me.
- A wife is God's own gift, aye verily;
- All other kinds of gifts, most certainly,
- As lands, rents, pasture, rights in common land,
- Or moveables, in gift of Fortune stand,
- And pass away like shadows on the wall.
- But, without doubt, if plainly speak I shall,
- A wife will last, and in your house endure
- Longer than you would like, peradventure.
- But marriage is a solemn sacrament;
- Who has no wife I hold on ruin bent;
- He lives in helplessness, all desolate,
- I speak of folk in secular estate.
- And hearken why, I say not this for naught:
- It's because woman was for man's help wrought.
- The High God, when He'd Adam made, all rude,
- And saw him so alone and belly-nude,
- God of His goodness thus to speak began:
- "Let us now make a help meet for this man,
- Like to himself." And then he made him Eve.
- Here may you see, and here prove, I believe,
- A wife is a man's help and his comfort,
- His earthly paradise and means of sport;
- So docile and so virtuous is she
- That they must needs live in all harmony.
- One flesh they are, and one flesh, as I guess,
- Has but one heart in weal and in distress.
- A wife! Ah, Holy Mary, ben'cite!
- How may a man have any adversity
- Who has a wife? Truly, I cannot say.
- The bliss that is between such two, for aye,
- No tongue can tell, nor any heart can think.
- If he be poor, why, she helps him to swink;
- She keeps his money and never wastes a deal;
- All that her husband wishes she likes well;
- She never once says "nay" when he says "yea."
- "Do this," says he; "All ready, sir," she'll say.
- O blissful state of wedlock, prized and dear,
- So pleasant and so full of virtue clear,
- So much approved and praised as fortune's peak,
- That every man who holds him worth a leek
- Upon his bare knees ought, through all his life,
- To give God thanks, Who's sent to him a wife;
- Or else he should pray God that He will send
- A wife to him, to last till his life's end.
- For then his life is set in certainness;
- He cannot be deceived, as I may guess,
- So that he act according as she's said;
- Then may he boldly carry high his head,
- They are so true and therewithal so wise;
- Wherefore, if you will do as do the wise,
- Then aye as women counsel be your deed.
- Lo, how young Jacob, as these clerics read,
- About his hairless neck a kid's skin bound,
- A trick that Dame Rebecca for him found,
- By which his father's benison he won.
- Lo, Judith, as the ancient stories run,
- By her wise counsel she God's people kept,
- And Holofernes slew, while yet he slept.
- Lo, Abigail, by good advice how she
- Did save her husband, Nabal, when that he
- Should have been slain; and lo, Esther also
- By good advice delivered out of woe
- The people of God and got him, Mordecai,
- By King Ahasuerus lifted high.
- There is no pleasure so superlative
- (Says Seneca) as a humble wife can give.
- Suffer your wife's tongue, Cato bids, as fit;
- She shall command, and you shall suffer it;
- And yet she will obey, of courtesy.
- A wife is keeper of your husbandry;
- Well may the sick man wail and even weep
- Who has no wife the house to clean and keep.
- I warn you now, if wisely you would work,
- Love well your wife, as Jesus loves His Kirk.
- For if you love yourself, you love your wife;
- No man hates his own flesh, but through his life
- He fosters it, and so I bid you strive
- To cherish her, or you shall never thrive.
- Husband and wife, despite men's jape or play,
- Of all the world's folk hold the safest way;
- They are so knit there may no harm betide,
- Especially upon the good wife's side.
- For which this January, of whom I told,
- Did well consider in his days grown old,
- The pleasant life, the virtuous rest complete
- That are in marriage, always honey-sweet;
- And for his friends upon a day he sent
- To tell them the effect of his intent.
- With sober face his tale to them he's told;
- He said to them: "My friends, I'm hoar and old,
- And almost, God knows, come to my grave's brink;
- About my soul, now, somewhat must I think.
- I have my body foolishly expended;
- Blessed be God, that thing be amended!
- For I will be, truly, a wedded man,
- And that anon, in all the haste I can,
- Unto some maiden young in age and fair.
- I pray you for my marriage all prepare,
- And do so now, for I will not abide;
- And I will try to find one, on my side,
- To whom I may be wedded speedily.
- But for as much as you are more than I,
- It's better that you have the thing in mind
- And try a proper mate for me to find.
- "But of one thing I warn you, my friends dear,
- I will not have an old wife coming here.
- She shan't have more than twenty years, that's plain;
- Of old fish and young flesh I am full fain.
- Better," said he, "a pike than pickerel;
- And better than old beef is tender veal.
- I'll have no woman thirty years of age,
- It is but bean-straw and such rough forage.
- And these old widows, God knows that, afloat,
- They know so much of spells when on Wade's boat,
- And do such petty harm, when they think best,
- That with one should I never live at rest.
- For several schools can make men clever clerks;
- Woman in many schools learns clever works.
- But certainly a young thing men may guide,
- Just as warm wax may with one's hands be plied.
- Wherefore I tell you plainly, in a clause,
- I will not have an old wife, for that cause.
- For if it chanced I made that sad mistake
- And never in her could my pleasure take,
- My life I'd lead then in adultery
- And go straight to the devil when I die.
- No children should I then on her beget;
- Yet would I rather hounds my flesh should fret
- Than that my heritage descend and fall
- Into strange hands, and this I tell you all.
- I dote not, and I know the reason why
- A man should marry, and furthermore know I
- There speaks full many a man of all marriage
- Who knows no more of it than knows my page,
- Nor for what reasons man should take a wife.
- If one may not live chastely all his life,
- Let him take wife whose quality he's known
- For lawful procreation of his own
- Blood children, to the honour of God above,
- And not alone for passion or for love;
- And because lechery they should eschew
- And do their family duty when it's due;
- Or because each of them should help the other
- In trouble, as a sister shall a brother;
- And live in chastity full decently.
- But, sirs, and by your leave, that is not I.
- For, God be thanked, I dare to make a vaunt,
- I feel my limbs are strong and fit to jaunt
- In doing all man's are expected to;
- I know myself and know what I can do.
- Though I am hoar, I fare as does a tree
- That blossoms ere the fruit be grown; you see
- A blooming tree is neither dry nor dead.
- And I feel nowhere hoary but on head;
- My heart and all my limbs are still as green
- As laurel through the year is to be seen.
- And now that you have heard all my intent,
- I pray that to my wish you will assent."
- Then divers men to him diversely told,
- Of marriage, many an instance known of old.
- Some blamed it and some praised it, that's certain,
- But at the last, and briefly to make plain,
- Since altercation follows soon or late
- When friends begin such matters to debate,
- There fell a strife between his brothers two,
- Whereof the name of one was Placebo
- And verily Justinus was that other.
- Placebo said: "O January, brother,
- Full little need had you, my lord so dear,
- Counsel to ask of anyone that's here;
- Save that you are so full of sapience
- That you like not, what of your high prudence,
- To vary from the word of Solomon.
- This word said he to each and every one:
- 'Do everything by counsel,' thus said he,
- 'And then thou hast no cause to repent thee.'
- But although Solomon spoke such a word,
- My own dear brother and my proper lord,
- So truly may God bring my soul to rest
- As I hold your own counsel is the best.
- For, brother mine, of me take this one word,
- I've been a courtier all my days, my lord.
- And God knows well, though I unworthy be
- I have stood well, and in full great degree,
- With many lords of very high estate;
- Yet ne'er with one of them had I debate.
- I never contradicted, certainly;
- I know well that my lord knows more than I.
- Whate'er he says, I hold it firm and stable;
- I say the same, or nearly as I'm able.
- A full great fool is any Councillor
- That serves a lord of any high honour
- And dares presume to say, or else think it,
- His counsel can surpass his lordship's wit.
- Nay, lords are never fools, nay, by my fay;
- You have yourself, sir, showed, and here today,
- With such good sense and piety withal
- That I assent to and confirm it all,
- The words and the opinions you have shown.
- By God, there is no man in all this town,
- Or Italy, it better could have phrased;
- And Christ Himself your counsel would have praised
- And truthfully, it argues high courage
- In any man that is advanced in age
- To take a young wife; by my father's kin,
- A merry heart you've got beneath your skin?
- Do in this matter at your own behest,
- For, finally, I hold that for the best."
- Justinus, who sat still and calm, and heard,
- Right in this wise Placebo he answered:
- "Now, brother mine, be patient, so I pray;
- Since you have spoken, hear what I shall say.
- For Seneca, among his words so wise,
- Says that a man ought well himself advise
- To whom he'll give his chattels or his land.
- And since I ought to know just where I stand
- Before I give my wealth away from me,
- How much more well advised I ought to be
- To whom I give my body; for alway
- I warn you well, that it is not child's play
- To take a wife without much advisement.
- Men must inquire, and this is my intent,
- Whether she's wise, or sober, or drunkard,
- Or proud, or else in other things froward,
- Or shrewish, or a waster of what's had,
- Or rich, or poor, or whether she's man-mad.
- And be it true that no man finds, or shall,
- One in this world that perfect is in all,
- Of man or beast, such as men could devise;
- Nevertheless, it ought enough suffice
- With any wife, if so were that she had
- More traits of virtue that her vices bad;
- And all this leisure asks to see and hear.
- For God knows I have wept full many a tear
- In privity, since I have had a wife.
- Praise whoso will a wedded man's good life,
- Truly I find in it, but cost and care
- And many duties, of all blisses bare.
- And yet, God knows, my neighbours round about,
- Especially the women, many a rout,
- Say that I've married the most steadfast wife,
- Aye, and the meekest one there is in life.
- But I know best where pinches me my shoe.
- You may, for me, do as you please to do;
- But take good heed, since you're a man of age,
- How you shall enter into a marriage,
- Especially with a young wife and a fair.
- By Him Who made the water, earth, and air,
- The youngest man there is in all this rout
- Is busy enough to bring the thing about
- That he alone shall have his wife, trust me.
- You'll not be able to please her through years three,
- That is to say, to give all she desires.
- A wife attention all the while requires.
- I pray you that you be not offended."
- "Well?" asked this January, "And have you said?
- A straw for Seneca and your proverbs!
- I value not a basketful of herbs
- Your schoolmen's terms; for wiser men than you,
- As you have heard, assent and bid me do
- My purpose now. Placebo, what say ye?"
- "I say it is a wicked man," said he,
- "That hinders matrimony, certainly."
- And with that word they rose up, suddenly,
- Having assented fully that he should
- Be wedded when he pleased and where he would.
- Imagination and his eagerness
- Did in the soul of January press
- As he considered marriage for a space.
- Many fair shapes and many a lovely face
- Passed through his amorous fancy, night by night.
- As who might take mirror polished bright
- And set it in the common market-place
- And then should see full many a figure pace
- Within the mirror; just in that same wise
- Did January within his thought surmise
- Of maidens whom he dwelt in town beside.
- He knew not where his fancy might abide.
- For if the one have beauty of her face,
- Another stands so in the people's grace
- For soberness and for benignity,
- That all the people's choice she seems to be;
- And some were rich and had an evil name.
- Nevertheless, half earnest, half in game,
- He fixed at last upon a certain one
- And let all others from his heart be gone,
- And chose her on his own authority;
- For love is always blind and cannot see.
- And when in bed at night, why then he wrought
- To portray, in his heart and in his thought,
- Her beauty fresh and her young age, so tender,
- Her middle small, her two arms long and slender,
- Her management full wise, her gentleness,
- Her womanly bearing, and her seriousness.
- And when to her at last his choice descended,
- He thought that choice might never be amended.
- For when he had concluded thus, egad,
- He thought that other men had wits so bad
- It were impossible to make reply
- Against his choice, this was his fantasy.
- His friends he sent to, at his own instance,
- And prayed them give him, in this wise, pleasance,
- That speedily they would set forth and come:
- He would abridge their labour, all and some.
- He need not more to walk about or ride,
- For he'd determined where he would abide.
- Placebo came, and all his friends came soon,
- And first of all he asked of them the boon
- That none of them an argument should make
- Against the course he fully meant to take;
- "Which purpose pleasing is to God," said he,
- "And the true ground of my felicity."
- He said there was a maiden in the town
- Who had for beauty come to great renown,
- Despite the fact she was of small degree;
- Sufficed him well her youth and her beauty.
- Which maid, he said, he wanted for his wife,
- To lead in ease and decency his life.
- And he thanked God that he might have her, all,
- That none partook of his bliss now, nor shall.
- And prayed them all to labour in this need
- And so arrange that he'd fail not, indeed;
- For then, he said, his soul should be at case.
- "And then," said he, "there's naught can me displease,
- Save one lone thing that sticks in my conscience,
- The which I will recite in your presence.
- "I have," said he, "heard said, and long ago,
- There may no man have perfect blisses two,
- That is to say, on earth and then in Heaven.
- For though he keep from sins the deadly seven,
- And, too, from every branch of that same tree,
- Yet is there so complete felicity
- And such great pleasure in the married state
- That I am fearful, since it comes so late,
- That I shall lead so merry and fine a life,
- And so delicious, without woe and strife,
- That I shall have my heaven on earth here.
- For since that other Heaven is bought so dear,
- With tribulation and with great penance,
- How should I then, who live in such pleasance,
- As all these wedded men do with their wives,
- Come to the bliss where Christ Eternal lives?
- This is my fear, and you, my brothers, pray
- Resolve for me this problem now, I say."
- Justinus, who so hated this folly,
- Answered anon in jesting wise and free;
- And since he would his longish tale abridge,
- He would no old authority allege,
- But said: "Sir, so there is no obstacle
- Other than this, God, of high miracle
- And of His mercy, may so for you work
- That, ere you have your right of Holy Kirk,
- You'll change your mind on wedded husband's life,
- Wherein you say there is no woe or strife.
- And otherwise, God grant that there be sent
- To wedded man the fair grace to repent
- Often, and sooner than a single man!
- And therefore, sir, this is the best I can:
- Despair not, but retain in memory,
- Perhaps she may your purgatory be!
- She may be God's tool, she may be God's whip;
- Then shall your spirit up to Heaven skip
- Swifter than does an arrow from the bow!
- I hope to God, hereafter you shall know
- That there is none so great felicity
- In marriage, no nor ever shall there be,
- To keep you from salvation that's your own,
- So that you use, with reason that's well known,
- The charms of your wife's body temperately,
- And that you please her not too amorously,
- And that you keep as well from other sin.
- My tale is done now, for my wit is thin.
- Be not deterred hereby, my brother dear"-
- (But let us pass quite over what's said here.
- The wife of Bath, if you have understood,
- Has treated marriage, in its likelihood,
- And spoken well of it in little space)-
- "Fare you well now, God have you in His grace."
- And with that word this Justin and his brother
- Did take their leave, and each of them from other.
- For when they all saw that it must needs be,
- They so arranged, by sly and wise treaty,
- That she, this maiden, who was Maia hight,
- As speedily indeed as ever she might,
- Should wedded be unto this January.
- I think it were too long a time to tarry
- To tell of deed and bond between them, and
- The way she was enfeoffed of all his land;
- Or to hear tell of all her rich array.
- But finally was come the happy day
- When to the church together they two went,
- There to receive the holy sacrament.
- Forth came the priest with stole about his neck,
- Saying of Rebecca and Sarah she should reck
- For wisdom and for truth in her marriage;
- And said his orisons, as is usage,
- And crossed them, praying God that He should bless,
- And made all tight enough with holiness.
- Thus are they wedded with solemnity,
- And at the feast are sitting, he and she,
- With other worthy folk upon the dais.
- All full of joy and bliss the palace gay is,
- And full of instruments and viandry,
- The daintiest in all of Italy.
- Before them played such instruments anon
- That Orpheus or Theban Amphion
- Never in life made such a melody.
- With every course there rose loud minstrelsy,
- And never Joab sounded trump, to hear,
- Nor did Theodomas, one half so clear
- At Thebes, while yet the city hung in doubt.
- Bacchus the wine poured out for all about,
- And Venus gaily laughed for every wight.
- For January had become her knight,
- And would make trial of his amorous power
- In liberty and in the bridal bower;
- And with her firebrand in her hand, about
- Danced she before the bride and all the rout.
- And certainly I dare right well say this,
- That Hymenaeus, god of wedded bliss,
- Ne'er saw in life so merry a married man.
- Hold thou thy peace, thou poet Marcian
- Who tellest how Philology was wed
- And how with Mercury she went to bed,
- And of the sweet songs by the Muses sung.
- Too slight are both thy pen and thy thin tongue.
- To show aright this wedding on thy page.
- When tender youth has wedded stooping age,
- There is such mirth that no one may it show;
- Try it yourself, and then you well will know
- Whether I lie or not in matters here.
- Maia, she sat there with so gentle cheer,
- To look at her it seemed like faery;
- Queen Esther never looked with such an eye
- Upon Ahasuerus, so meek was she.
- I can't describe to you all her beauty;
- But thus much of her beauty I can say,
- That she was like the brightening morn of May,
- Fulfilled of beauty and of all pleasance.
- January was rapt into a trance
- With each time that he looked upon her face;
- And in his heart her beauty he'd embrace,
- And threatened in his arms to hold her tight,
- Harder than Paris Helen did, that night.
- But nonetheless great pity, too, had he
- Because that night she must deflowered be;
- And thought: "Alas! O tender young creature!
- Now would God you may easily endure
- All my desire, it is so sharp and keen.
- I fear you can't sustain it long, my queen.
- But God forbid that I do all I might!
- And now would God that it were come to night,
- And that the night would last for ever- oh,
- I wish these people would arise and go."
- And at the last he laboured all in all,
- As best he might for Manners there in hall,
- To haste them from the feast in subtle wise.
- Time came when it was right that they should rise;
- And after that men danced and drank right fast,
- And spices all about the house they cast;
- And full of bliss and joy was every man,
- All but a squire, a youth called Damian,
- Who'd carved before the knight full many a day.
- He was so ravished by his Lady May
- That for the very pain, as madman would,
- Almost he fell down fainting where he stood.
- So sore had Venus hurt him with her brand,
- When she went dancing, bearing it in hand.
- And to his bed he took him speedily;
- No more of him just at this time say I.
- I'll let him weep his fill, with woe complain,
- Until fresh May have ruth upon his pain.
- O parlous fire that in the bedstraw breeds!
- O foe familiar that his service speeds!
- O treacherous servant, false domestic who
- Is most like adder in bosom, sly, untrue,
- God shield us all from knowing aught of you!
- O January, drunk of pleasure's brew
- In marriage, see how now your Damian,
- Your own trained personal squire, born your man,
- Wishes and means to do you villainy.
- God grant that on this household foe you'll spy!
- For in this world no pestilence is worse
- Than foe domestic, constantly a curse.
- When traversed has the sun his are of day,
- No longer may the body of him stay
- On the horizon, in that latitude.
- Night with his mantle, which is dark and rude,
- Did overspread the hemisphere about;
- And so departed had this joyous rout
- From January, with thanks on every side.
- Home to their houses happily they ride,
- Whereat they do what things may please them best,
- And when they see the time come, go to rest.
- Soon after that this hasty January
- Would go to bed, he would no longer tarry.
- He drank of claret, hippocras, vernage,
- All spiced and hot to heighten his love's rage;
- And many an aphrodisiac, full and fine,
- Such as the wicked monk, Dan Constantine,
- Has written in his book De Coitu
- Not one of all of them he did eschew.
- And to his friends most intimate, said he:
- "For God's love, and as soon as it may be,
- Let all now leave this house in courteous wise."
- And all they rose, just as he bade them rise.
- They drank good-night, and curtains drew anon;
- The bride was brought to bed, as still as stone;
- And when the bed had been by priest well blessed,
- Out of the chamber everyone progressed.
- And January lay down close beside
- His fresh young May, his paradise, his bride.
- He soothed her, and he kissed her much and oft,
- With the thick bristles of his beard, not soft,
- But sharp as briars, like a dogfish skin,
- For he'd been badly shaved ere he came in.
- He stroked and rubbed her on her tender face,
- And said: "Alas! I fear I'll do trespass
- Against you here, my spouse, and much offend
- Before the time when I will down descend.
- But nonetheless, consider this," said he,
- "There is no workman, whosoe'er he be,
- That may work well, if he works hastily;
- This will be done at leisure, perfectly.
- It makes no difference how long we two play;
- For in true wedlock were we tied today;
- And blessed be the yoke that we are in,
- For in our acts, now, we can do no sin.
- A man can do no sin with his own wife,
- Nor can he hurt himself with his own knife;
- For we have leave most lawfully to play."
- Thus laboured he till came the dawn of day;
- And then he took in wine a sop of bread,
- And upright sat within the marriage bed,
- And after that he sang full loud and clear
- And kissed his wife and made much wanton cheer.
- He was all coltish, full of venery,
- And full of chatter as a speckled pie.
- The slackened skin about his neck did shake
- The while he sang and chanted like a crake.
- But God knows what thing May thought in her heart
- When up she saw him sitting in his shirt,
- In his nightcap, and with his neck so lean;
- She valued not his playing worth a bean.
- Then said he thus: "My rest now will I take;
- Now day is come, I can no longer wake."
- And down he laid his head and slept till prime.
- And afterward, when saw he it was time,
- Up rose this January; but fresh May,
- She kept her chamber until the fourth day,
- As custom is of wives, and for the best.
- For every worker sometime must have rest,
- Or else for long he'll certainly not thrive,
- That is to say, no creature that's alive,
- Be it of fish, or bird, or beast, or man.
- Now will I speak of woeful Damian,
- Who languished for his love, as you shall hear;
- I thus address him in this fashion here.
- I say: "O hapless Damian, alas!
- Answer to my demand in this your case,
- How shall you to your lady, lovely May,
- Tell all your woe? She would of course say 'Nay.'
- And if you speak, she will your state betray;
- God be your help! I can no better say."
- This lovesick Damian in Venus' fire
- So burned, he almost perished for desire;
- Which put his life in danger, I am sure;
- Longer in this wise could he not endure;
- But privily a pen-case did he borrow
- And in a letter wrote he all his sorrow,
- In form of a complaint or of a lay,
- Unto his fair and blooming Lady May.
- And in a purse of silk hung in his shirt,
- He put the poem and laid it next his heart.
- The moon, which was at noon of that same day
- Whereon this January wedded May
- Half way through Taurus, had to Cancer glided,
- So long had Maia in her chamber bided.
- As is the custom among nobles all.
- A bride shall not eat in the common hall
- Until four days, or three days at the least,
- Have fully passed; then let her go to feast.
- On the fourth day, complete from noon to noon,
- After the high Mass had been said and done,
- In hall did January sit with May
- As fresh as is the fair bright summer day.
- And so befell it there that this good man
- Recalled to mind his squire, this Damian,
- And said: "Why holy Mary! How can it be
- That Damian attends not here on me?
- Is he sick always? How may this betide?"
- His other squires, who waited there beside,
- Made the excuse that he indeed was ill,
- Which kept him from his proper duties still;
- There was no other cause could make him tarry.
- "That is a pity," said this January,
- "He is a gentle squire, aye, by my truth!
- If he should die, it were great harm and ruth;
- As wise and secret, and discreet is he
- As any man I know of his degree;
- Therewith he's manly and he's serviceable,
- And to become a useful man right able.
- But after meat, as soon as ever I may,
- I will myself go visit him, with May,
- To give him all the comfort that I can."
- And for that word they blessed him, every man,
- Because, for goodness and his gentleness,
- He would so go to comfort, in sickness,
- His suffering squire, for 'twas a gentle deed.
- "Dame," said this January, "take good heed
- That after meat, you, with your women all,
- When you have gone to chamber from this hall,
- That all you go to see this Damian;
- Cheer him a bit, for he's a gentleman;
- And tell him that I'll come to visit him
- After I've rested- a short interim;
- And get this over quickly, for I'll bide
- Awake until you sleep there at my side."
- And with that word he raised his voice to call
- A squire, who served as marshal of his hall,
- And certain things he wished arranged were told.
- This lovely May then did her straight way hold,
- With all her women, unto Damian.
- Down by his bed she sat, and so began
- To comfort him with kindly word and glance.
- This Damian, when once he'd found his chance,
- In secret wise his purse and letter, too,
- Wherein he'd said what he aspired to,
- He put into her hand, with nothing more,
- Save that he heaved a sigh both deep and sore,
- And softly to her in this wise said he:
- "Oh, mercy! Don't, I beg you, tell on me;
- For I'm but dead if this thing be made known."
- This purse she hid in bosom of her gown
- And went her way; you get no more of me.
- But unto January then came she,
- Who on his bedside sat in mood full soft.
- He took her in his arms and kissed her oft,
- And laid him down to sleep, and that anon.
- And she pretended that she must be gone
- Where you know well that everyone has need.
- And when she of this note had taken heed,
- She tore it all to fragments at the last
- And down the privy quietly it cast.
- Who's in brown study now but fair fresh May?
- Down by old January's side she lay,
- Who slept, until the cough awakened him;
- He prayed her strip all naked for his whim;
- He would have pleasure of her, so he said,
- And clothes were an incumbrance when in bed,
- And she obeyed him, whether lief or loath.
- But lest these precious folk be with me wroth,
- How there he worked, I dare not to you tell;
- Nor whether she thought it paradise or hell;
- But there I leave them working in their wise
- Till vespers rang and they must needs arise.
- Were it by destiny or merely chance,
- By nature or some other circumstance,
- Or constellation's sign, that in such state
- The heavens stood, the time was fortunate
- To make request concerning Venus' works
- (For there's a time for all things, say these clerks)
- To any woman, to procure her love,
- I cannot say; but the great God above,
- Who knows there's no effect without a cause,
- He may judge all, for here my voice withdraws.
- But true it is that this fair blooming May
- Was so affected and impressed that day
- For pity of this lovesick Damian,
- That from her heart she could not drive or ban
- Remembrance of her wish to give him ease.
- "Certainly," thought she, "whom this may displease
- I do not care, for I'd assure him now
- Him with my love I'd willingly endow,
- Though he'd no more of riches than his shirt."
- Lo, pity soon wells up in gentle heart.
- Here may you see what generosity
- In women is when they advise closely.
- Perhaps some tyrant (for there's many a one)
- Who has a heart as hard as any stone,
- Would well have let him die within that place
- Much rather than have granted him her grace;
- And such would have rejoiced in cruel pride,
- Nor cared that she were thus a homicide.
- This gentle May, fulfilled of all pity,
- With her own hand a letter then wrote she
- In which she granted him her utmost grace;
- There was naught lacking now, save time and place
- Wherein she might suffice to ease his lust:
- For all should be as he would have it, just;
- And when she'd opportunity on a day,
- To visit Damian went this lovely May,
- And cleverly this letter she thrust close
- Under his pillow, read it if he chose.
- She took him by the hand and hard did press,
- So secretly that no one else could guess,
- And bade him gain his health, and forth she went
- To January, when for her he sent.
- Up rose this Damian upon the morrow,
- For gone was all his sickness and his sorrow.
- He combed himself and preened his feathers smooth,
- He did all that his lady liked, in sooth;
- And then to January went as low
- As ever did a hound trained to the bow.
- He was so pleasant unto every man
- (For craft is everything for those who can),
- That everyone was fain to speak his good;
- And fully in his lady's grace he stood.
- Thus Damian I leave about his need
- And forward in my tale I will proceed.
- Some writers hold that all felicity
- Stands in delight, and therefor, certainly,
- This noble January, with all his might,
- Honourably, as does befit a knight,
- Arranged affairs to live deliciously.
- His housing, his array, as splendidly
- Befitted his condition as a king's.
- Among the rest of his luxurious things
- He built a garden walled about with stone;
- So fair a garden do I know of none.
- For, without doubt, I verily suppose
- That he who wrote The Romance of the Rose
- Could not its beauty say in singing wise;
- Nor could Priapus' power quite suffice,
- Though he is god of gardens all, to tell
- The beauty of that garden, and the well
- Which was beneath the laurel always green.
- For oftentimes God Pluto and his queen,
- Fair Proserpine and all her faery
- Disported there and made sweet melody
- About that well, and danced there, as men told.
- This noble knight, this January old,
- Such pleasure had therein to walk and play,
- That none he'd suffer bear the key, they say.
- Save he himself; for of the little wicket
- He carried always the small silver clicket
- With which, as pleased him, he'd unlock the gate.
- And when he chose to pay court to his mate
- In summer season, thither would he go
- With May, his wife, and no one but they two;
- And divers things that were not done abed,
- Within that garden there were done, 'tis said.
- And in this manner many a merry day
- Lived this old January and young May.
- But worldly pleasure cannot always stay,
- And January's joy must pass away.
- O sudden chance, O Fortune, thou unstable,
- Like to the scorpion so deceptive, able
- To flatter with thy mouth when thou wilt sting;
- Thy tail is death, through thine envenoming.
- O fragile joy! O poison sweetly taint!
- O monster that so cleverly canst paint
- Thy gifts in all the hues of steadfastness
- That thou deceivest both the great and less!
- Why hast thou January thus deceived,
- That had'st him for thine own full friend received?
- And now thou hast bereft him of his eyes,
- For sorrow of which in love he daily dies.
- Alas! This noble January free,
- In all his pleasure and prosperity,
- Is fallen blind, and that all suddenly.
- He wept and he lamented, pitifully;
- And therewithal the fire of jealousy
- Lest that his wife should fall to some folly,
- So burned within his heart that he would fain
- Both him and her some man had swiftly slain.
- For neither after death nor in his life
- Would he that she were other's love or wife,
- But dress in black and live in widow's state,
- Lone as the turtle-dove that's lost her mate.
- But finally, after a month or twain,
- His grief somewhat abated, to speak plain;
- For when he knew it might not elsewise be,
- He took in patience his adversity,
- Save, doubtless, he could not renounce, as done,
- His jealousy, from which he never won.
- For this his passion was so outrageous
- That neither in his hall nor other house
- Nor any other place, not ever, no,
- He suffered her to ride or walking go,
- Unless he had his hand on her alway;
- For which did often weep this fresh young May,
- Who loved her Damian so tenderly
- That she must either swiftly die or she
- Must have him as she willed, her thirst to slake;
- Biding her time, she thought her heart would break.
- And on the other side this Damian
- Was now become the most disconsolate man
- That ever was; for neither night nor day
- Might he so much as speak a word to May
- Of his desire, as I am telling here,
- Save it were said to January's ear,
- Who never took his blind hand off her, no.
- Nevertheless, by writing to and fro
- And secret signals, he knew what she meant;
- And she too knew the aim of his intent.
- O January, what might it now avail
- Could your eyes see as far as ships can sail?
- For it's as pleasant, blind, deceived to be
- As be deceived while yet a man may see.
- Lo, Argus, who was called the hundred-eyed,
- No matter how he peered and watched and pried,
- He was deceived; and God knows others to
- Who think, and firmly, that it is not so.
- Oblivion is peace; I say no more.
- This lovely May, of whom I spoke before,
- In warm wax made impression of the key
- Her husband carried, to the gate where he
- In entering his garden often went.
- And Damian, who knew all her intent,
- The key did counterfeit, and privately;
- There is no more to say, but speedily
- Some mischief of this latch-key shall betide,
- Which you shall hear, if you but time will bide.
- O noble Ovid, truth you say, God wot!
- What art is there, though it be long and hot,
- But Love will find it somehow suits his turn?
- By Pyramus and Thisbe may men learn;
- Though they were strictly kept apart in all,
- They soon accorded, whispering through a wall,
- Where none could have suspected any gate.
- But now to purpose: ere had passed: days eight,
- And ere the first day of July, befell
- That January was under such a spell,
- Through egging of his wife, to go and play
- Within his garden, and no one but they,
- That on a morning to this May said he:
- "Rise up, my wife, my love, my lady free;
- The turtle's voice is heard, my dove so sweet;
- The winter's past, the rain's gone, and the sleet;
- Come forth now with your two eyes columbine!
- How sweeter are your breasts than is sweet wine!
- The garden is enclosed and walled about;
- Come forth, my white spouse, for beyond all doubt
- You have me ravished in my heart, O wife!
- No fault have I found in you in my life.
- Come forth, come forth, and let us take our sport;
- I chose you for my wife and my comfort."
- Such were the lewd old words that then used he;
- To Damian a secret sign made she
- That he should go before them with his clicket;
- This Damian then opened up the wicket,
- And in he slipped, and that in manner such
- That none could see nor hear; and he did crouch
- And still he sat beneath a bush anon.
- This January, blind as is a stone,
- With Maia's hand in his, and none else there,
- Into his garden went, so fresh and fair,
- And then clapped to the wicket suddenly.
- "Now, wife," said he, "here's none but you and I,
- And you're the one of all that I best love.
- For by that Lord Who sits in Heaven above,
- Far rather would I die upon a knife
- Than do offence to you, my true, dear wife!
- For God's sake how I did choose you out,
- And for no love of money, beyond doubt,
- But only for the love you roused in me.
- And though I am grown old and cannot see,
- Be true to me, and I will tell you why.
- Three things, it's certain, shall you gain thereby;
- First, Christ's dear love, and honour of your own,
- And all my heritage of tower and town;
- I give it you, draw deeds to please you, pet;
- This shall be done tomorrow ere sunset.
- So truly may God bring my soul to bliss,
- I pray you first, in covenant, that we kiss.
- And though I'm jealous, yet reproach me not.
- You are so deeply printed in my thought
- That, when I do consider your beauty
- And therewith all the unlovely age of me,
- I cannot, truly, nay, though I should die,'
- Abstain from being in your company,
- For utter love; of this there is no doubt.
- Now kiss me, wife, and let us walk about."
- This blooming May, when these words she had heard,
- Graciously January she answered,
- But first and foremost she began to weep.
- "I have also," said she, "a soul to keep,
- As well as you, and also honour mine,
- And of my wifehood that sweet flower divine
- Which I assured you of, both safe and sound,
- When unto you that priest my body bound;
- Wherefore I'll answer you in this manner,
- If I may by your leave, my lord so dear.
- I pray to God that never dawns the day
- That I'll not die, foully as woman may,
- If ever I do unto my kin such shame,
- And likewise damage so my own fair name,
- As to be false; and if I grow so slack,
- Strip me and put me naked in a sack
- And in the nearest river let me drown.
- I am a lady, not a wench of town.
- Why speak you thus? Men ever are untrue,
- And woman have reproaches always new.
- No reason or excuse have you, I think,
- And so you harp on women who hoodwink."
- And with that word she saw where Damian
- Sat under bush; to cough then she began,
- And with her slender finger signs made she
- That Damian should climb into a tree
- That burdened was with fruit, and up he went;
- For verily he knew her full intent,
- And understood each sign that she could make,
- Better than January, her old rake.
- For in a letter she had told him all
- Of how he should proceed when time should fall.
- And thus I leave him in the pear-tree still
- While May and January roam at will.
- Bright was the day and blue the firmament,
- Phoebus his golden streamers down has sent
- To gladden every flower with his warmness.
- He was that time in Gemini, I guess,
- And but a little from his declination
- Of Cancer, which is great Jove's exaltation.
- And so befell, in that bright morning-tide,
- That in this garden, on the farther side,
- Pluto, who is the king of Faery,
- With many a lady in his company,
- Following his wife, the fair Queen Proserpine,
- Each after other, straight as any line
- (While she was gathering flowers on a mead,
- In Claudian you may the story read
- How in his grim car he had stolen her)-
- This king of Faery sat down yonder
- Upon a turfen bank all fresh and green,
- And right anon thus said he to his queen.
- "My wife," said he, "there may no one say nay;
- Experience proves fully every day
- The treason that these women do to man.
- Ten hundred thousand stories tell I can
- To show your fickleness and lies. Of which,
- O Solomon wise, and richest of the rich,
- Fulfilled of sapience and worldly glory,
- Well worth remembrance are thy words and story
- By everyone who's wit, and reason can.
- Thus goodness he expounds with praise of man:
- 'Among a thousand men yet found I one,
- But of all women living found I none.'
- "Thus spoke the king that knew your wickedness;
- And Jesus son of Sirach, as I guess,
- Spoke of you seldom with much reverence.
- A wild-fire and a rotten pestilence
- Fall on your bodies all before tonight!
- Do you not see this honourable knight,
- Because, alas! he is both blind and old,
- His own sworn man shall make him a cuckold;
- Lo, there he sits, the lecher, in that tree.
- Now will I grant, of my high majesty,
- Unto this old and blind and worthy knight,
- That he shall have again his two eyes' sight,
- Just when his wife shall do him villainy;
- Then shall he know of all her harlotry,
- Both in reproach to her and others too."
- "You shall," said Proserpine, "if will you so;
- Now by my mother's father's soul, I swear
- That I will give her adequate answer,
- And all such women after, for her sake;
- That, though in any guilt caught, they'll not quake,
- But with a bold face they'll themselves excuse,
- And bear him down who would them thus accuse.
- For lack of answer none of them shall die.
- Nay, though a man see things with either eye,
- Yet shall we women brazen shamelessly
- And weep and swear and wrangle cleverly,
- So that you men shall stupid be as geese.
- What do I care for your authorities?
- "I know well that this Jew, this Solomon
- Found fools among us women, many a one,
- But though he never found a good woman,
- Yet has there found full many another man
- Women right true, right good, and virtuous
- Witness all those that dwell in Jesus' house;
- With martyrdom they proved their constancy.
- The Gesta Romanorum speak kindly
- Of many wives both good and true also.
- But be not angry, sir, though it be so
- That he said he had found no good woman,
- I pray you take the meaning of the man;
- He meant that sovereign goodness cannot be.
- Except in God, Who is the Trinity.
- "Ah, since of very God there is but one,
- Why do you make so much of Solomon?
- What though he built a temple for God's house?
- What though he were both rich and glorious?
- So built he, too, a temple to false gods,
- How could he with the Law be more at odds?
- By gad, clean as his name you whitewash, sir,
- He was a lecher and idolater;
- And in old age the True God he forsook.
- And if that God had not, as says the Book,
- Spared him for father David's sake, he should
- Have lost his kingdom sooner than he would.
- I value not, of all the villainy
- That you of women write, a butterfly.
- I am a woman, and needs must I speak,
- Or else swell up until my heart shall break.
- For since he said we gossip, rail, and scold,
- As ever may I my fair tresses hold,
- I will not spare, for any courtesy,
- To speak him ill who'd wish us villainy."
- "Dame," said this Pluto, "be no longer wroth;
- I give it up; but since I swore my oath
- That I would give to him his sight again,
- My word shall stand, I warn you that's certain.
- I am a king, it suits me not to lie."
- "And I," said she, "am queen of Faery.
- Her answer shall she have, I undertake;
- No further talk hereof let us two make.
- Forsooth, I will not longer be contrary."
- Now let us turn again to January,
- Who in the garden with his lovely May
- Sang, and that merrier than the popinjay,
- "I love you best, and ever shall, I know."
- And so about the alleys did he go
- Till he had come at last to that pear-tree
- Wherein this Damian sat right merrily
- On high, among the young leaves fresh and green.
- This blooming May, who was so bright of sheen,
- Began to sigh, and said: "Alas, my side!
- Now, sir," said she, "no matter what betide,
- I must have some of these pears that I see,
- Or I may die, so much I long," said she,
- "To eat some of those little pears so green.
- Help, for Her love Who is of Heaven Queen!
- I tell you well, a woman in my plight
- May have for fruit so great an appetite
- That she may die if none of it she have."
- "Alas!" said he, "that I had here a knave
- That could climb up, alas, alas!" said he,
- "That I am blind."
- "Yea, sir, no odds," said she,
- "If you'd but grant me, and for God's dear sake,
- That this pear-tree within your arms you'd take
- (For well I know that you do not trust me),
- Then I could climb up well enough," said she,
- "So I my foot might set upon your back."
- "Surely," said he, "thereof should be no lack,
- Might I so help you with my own heart's blood."
- So he stooped down, and on his back she stood,
- And gave herself a twist and up went she.
- Ladies, I pray you be not wroth with me;
- I cannot gloze, I'm an uncultured man.
- For of a sudden this said Damian
- Pulled up her smock and thrust both deep and long.
- And when King Pluto saw this awful wrong,
- To January he gave again his sight,
- And made him see as well as ever he might.
- And when he thus had got his sight again,
- Never was man of anything so fain.
- But since his wife he thought of first and last,
- Up to the tree his eyes he quickly cast,
- And saw how Damian his wife had dressed
- In such a way as cannot be expressed,
- Save I should rudely speak and vulgarly:
- And such a bellowing clamour then raised he
- As does a mother when her child must die:
- "Out! Help! Alas! Oh, help me!" he did cry,
- "Outlandish, brazen woman, what do you do?"
- And she replied: "Why, sir, and what ails you?
- Have patience, and do reason in your mind
- That I have helped you for your two eyes blind.
- On peril of my soul, I tell no lies,
- But I was taught that to recover eyes
- Was nothing better, so to make you see,
- Than struggle with a man up in a tree.
- God knows I did it with a good intent."
- "Struggle!" cried he, "but damme, in it went!
- God give you both a shameful death to die!
- He banged you, for I saw it with my eye,
- Or may they hang me by the neck up, else!"
- "Then is," said she, "my medicine all false;
- For certainly, if you could really see,
- You would not say these cruel words to me;
- You catch but glimpses and no perfect sight."
- "I see," said he, "as well as ever I might-
- Thanks be to God!- and with my two eyes, too,
- And truth, I thought he did that thing to you."
- "You are bewildered still, good sir," said she,
- "Such thanks I have for causing you to see;
- Alas!" she cried, "that ever I was so kind!"
- "Now, dame," said he, "put all this out of mind.
- Come down, my dear, and if I have missaid,
- God help me if I'm not put out indeed.
- But by my father's soul, I thought to have seen
- How Damian right over you did lean
- And that your smock was pulled up to his breast."
- "Yes, sir," said she, "you may think as seems best;
- But, sir, a man that wakens out of sleep,
- He cannot suddenly take note and keep
- Of any thing, or see it perfectly,
- Until he has recovered verily;
- Just so a man that blinded long has been,
- He cannot say that suddenly he's seen
- So well, at first, when sight is new to him,
- As later, when his sight's no longer dim.
- Until your sight be settled for a while,
- There may full many a thing your mind beguile.
- Beware, I pray you, for, by Heaven's King,
- Full many a man thinks that he sees a thing,
- And it is other quite than what it seems.
- And he that misconstrues, why, he misdeems."
- And with that word she leaped down from the tree.
- This January, who is glad but he?
- He kissed her and he hugged her much and oft,
- And on her belly stroked and rubbed her soft,
- And home to palace led her, let me add.
- And now, good men, I pray you to be glad.
- For here I end my tale of January;
- God bless us, and His Mother, Holy Mary!
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- HERE ENDS THE MERCHANT'S TALE OF JANUARY
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- EPILOGUE
- TO THE MERCHANT'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
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- Eh! By God's mercy!" cried our host. Said he:
- "Now such a wife I pray God keep from me!
- Behold what tricks, and lo, what subtleties
- In women are. For always busy as bees
- Are they, us simple men thus to deceive,
- And from the truth they turn aside and leave;
- By this same merchant's tale it's proved, I feel,
- But, beyond doubt, as true as any steel
- I have a wife, though poor enough she be;
- But of her tongue a babbling shrew is she,
- And she's a lot of other vices too.
- No matter, though, with this we've naught to do.
- But know you what? In secret, be it said,
- I am sore sorry that to her I'm wed.
- For if I should up-reckon every vice
- The woman has, I'd be a fool too nice,
- And why? Because it should reported be
- And told her by some of this company;
- Who'd be the ones, I need not now declare,
- Since women know the traffic in such ware;
- Besides, my wit suffices not thereto
- To tell it all; wherefore my tale is through."
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- HERE ENDS THE EPILOGUE
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