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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE PARSON'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- What time the manciple his tale had ended,
- The sun down from the south line had descended
- So low that he was not, unto my sight,
- Degrees full nine and twenty yet in height.
- Four of the clock it was then, as I guess:
- Four feet eleven, little more or less,
- My shadow was extended then and there,
- A length as if the shadow parted were
- In six-foot equal parts, as I have shown.
- Therewith the moon's high exaltation known,
- I mean the sign of Libra, did ascend
- As we were entering a village-end;
- Whereat our host, since wont to guide was he,
- As in this case, our jolly company,
- Said in this wise: "Now, masters, every one,
- We lack no tales except a single one.
- My judgment is fulfilled and my decree,
- I think that we have heard from each degree.
- Almost fulfilled is all my ordinance;
- I pray to God to give him right good chance
- Who tells to us this story pleasantly.
- Sir priest," he asked, "can you a vicar be?
- Are you a parson? Tell truth, by your fay!
- Be what you will, break not our jolly play;
- For every man, save you, has told his tale,
- Unbuckle, show us what is in your mail;
- For truly, I think, judging by your cheer,
- You should knit up a mighty matter here.
- Tell us a fable now, by Cock's dear bones!"
- This parson then replied to him at once:
- "You'll get no foolish fable told by me;
- For Paul, when writing unto Timothy,
- Reproves all those that veer from truthfulness
- And tell false fables and such wretchedness.
- Why should I sow chaff out of my own fist
- When I may sow good wheat, if I but list?
- But if, I say, you something wish to hear
- In which the moral virtues will appear,
- And if you now will give me audience,
- I will right gladly, in Christ's reverence,
- Give you such lawful pleasure as I can.
- But trust me, since I am a Southern man,
- I can't romance with 'rum, ram, ruff', by letter,
- And, God knows, rhyme I hold but little better;
- But if you wish the truth made plain and straight,
- A pleasant tale in prose I will relate
- To weave our feast together at the end.
- May Jesus, of His grace, the wit me send
- To show you, as we journey this last stage,
- The way of that most perfect pilgrimage
- To heavenly Jerusalem on high.
- And if you will vouchsafe, anon shall I
- Begin my tale, concerning which, I pray,
- Choose what you will, I can no better say.
- Yet this my meditation is, I own,
- Perhaps not free from errors to be shown
- By clerks, since I am not a learned man;
- I do but grasp the meaning as I can.
- Therefore, I do protest, I shall prepare
- To take what comes, and all correction bear."
- When he had spoken thus, we all agreed,
- For, as it seemed to us, 'twas right indeed
- To end with something virtuous in its sense,
- And so to give him time and audience.
- We bade our host that he to him convey
- The wish of all that he begin straightway.
- Our host, he had the very words for all.
- "Sir priest," said he, "may good to you befall!
- Say what you wish, and we will gladly hear."
- And after that he added, for his ear:
- "Tell us," he said, "your meditation grown,
- But pray make haste, the sun will soon be down;
- Be fruitful, tell us in a little space,
- And to do well God send to you His grace!"
- Explicit prohemium
-
-
- THE PARSON'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Jer. 6. State super vias et videte et interrogate de viis
- antiquis, que sit via bona; et ambulate in ea, et inuenietis
- refrigerium animabus vestris, &c.
-
- Our sweet Lord God of Heaven, Who will destroy no man, but would
- have all come unto the knowledge of Him and to the blessed life that
- is everlasting, admonishes us by the Prophet Jeremiah, who says
- thus: "Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths
- (that is to say, the old wisdom) where is the good way, and walk
- therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls," etc. Many are the
- spiritual ways that lead folk unto Our Lord Jesus Christ and to the
- Kingdom of Glory. Of which ways there is a right noble way and a
- proper one, which will not fail either man or woman who through sin
- has gone astray from the right way to the Heavenly Jerusalem; and this
- way is called penitence, as to which man should gladly hear and
- inquire with all his heart, in order that he may learn what
- penitence is, and why it is called penitence, and in how many ways
- penitence functions, and how many kinds of penitence there are, and
- what things appertain and are necessary to penitence, and what
- things hinder it.
- Saint Ambrose says that "penitence is the mourning of man for the
- sin that he has done, and the resolve to do no more anything for which
- he ought to mourn." And another doctor says: "Penitence is the
- lamenting of man, who sorrows for his sin and punishes himself because
- he has done amiss." Penitence, under certain circumstances, is the
- true repentance of a man that goes in sorrow and other pain for his
- misdeeds. And that he shall be truly penitent, he shall first regret
- the sins that he has done, and steadfastly purpose in his heart to
- make oral confession, and to do penance, and nevermore to do
- anything for which he ought to feel regret or to mourn, and to
- continue on good works; or else his repentance will avail him nothing.
- For, as says Saint Isidore: "He is a mocker and a liar and no true
- penitent who does again a thing for which he ought to repent."
- Weeping, when not accompanied by a refusal to sin, shall not avail.
- But, nevertheless, men should hope that every time a man falls, be
- it never so often, he may arise through penitence, if he have grace;
- but certainly there is great doubt of this. For, as Saint Gregory
- says: "With difficulty shall he arise out of sin who is burdened
- with the burden of evil habit." And therefore repentant folk, who keep
- from sin and abandon sin ere sin abandon them, Holy Church holds
- them to be sure of their salvation. And he that sins and verily
- repents in his last moments, Holy Church yet hopes for his
- salvation, what of the great mercy of Our Lord Jesus Christ, because
- of his repentance; but take you the certain way.
- And now, since I have declared unto you what penitence is, now shall
- you understand that there are three deeds required by penitence. The
- first deed is that a man be baptized after he has sinned. Saint
- Augustine says: "Save he be repentant for his former sinful life, he
- shall not begin to lead the new clean life." For truly, if he be
- baptized without repentance for his old offence, he receives the
- sign of baptism but not the grace nor the remission of his sins, until
- he have true repentance. Another defect is this, that men do deadly
- sin after they have received baptism. The third defect is that men
- fall into venial sins after their baptism, and from day to day.
- Thereof Saint Augustine says that "penitence of good and humble folk
- is the penitence of every day."
- The kinds of penitence are three. One of them is public, another
- is general, and the third is private. That form of penitence which
- is public is of two kinds: as to be expelled from Holy Church in Lent,
- for the slaughter of children and such-like things. Another is, when a
- man has sinned openly, of which sin the shame is openly spoken of in
- the community; and then Holy Church, by judgment rendered,
- constrains him to do open penance. Common or general penitence is when
- priests enjoin men collectively in certain cases, as, peradventure, to
- go naked on pilgrimages, or barefoot. Private penitence is that
- which men do continually for their sins, whereof we confess
- privately and receive a private penance.
- Now shall you understand what is necessary to a true and perfect
- penitence. And this stands upon three things: contrition of heart,
- confession by word of mouth, and restitution. As to which Saint John
- Chrysostom says: "Penitence constrains a man to accept cheerfully
- every pain that is put upon him, with contrition of heart and oral
- confession, with restitution; and in doing of all acts of humility."
- And this is a fruitful penitence for three things wherein we anger Our
- Lord Jesus Christ; that is to say, by delight in thinking, by
- recklessness in speaking, and by wicked sinful works. And over against
- these wicked offences is penitence, which may be likened unto a tree.
- The root of this tree is contrition, which hides itself away in
- the heart of him who is truly repentant, just as the root of another
- tree hides within the earth. From the root contrition springs a
- trunk that bears branches and leaves of confession and the fruit of
- penance, As to which Christ says in His gospel: "Bring forth therefore
- fruits meet for repentance." For by this fruit may men know this tree,
- and not by the root that is hidden in the heart of man, nor by the
- branches, nor by the leaves of confession. And therefore Our Lord
- Jesus Christ says thus: "By their fruits ye shall know them." From
- this root, too, springs a seed of grace, the which seed is the
- mother of security, and this seed is eager and hot. The grace of
- this seed springs from God, through remembrance of the day of doom and
- the pains of Hell. Of this matter says Solomon: "Fear the Lord, and
- depart from evil." The heat of this seed is the love of God and the
- desiring of the joy everlasting. This heat draws the heart of man unto
- God and causes him to hate his sin. For truly there is nothing that
- tastes so well to a child as the milk of its nurse, nor is there
- anything more abhorrent to it than this same milk when it is mingled
- with other food. just so, to the sinful man who loves his sin, it
- seems that it is sweeter than anything else; but from the time that he
- begins to love devoutly Our Lord Jesus Christ, and desires the life
- everlasting, there is to him nothing more abominable. For truly the
- law of God is the love of God; whereof David the prophet says: "Ye
- that love the Lord, hate evil." He that loves God keeps His law and
- His word. The Prophet Daniel saw this tree in spirit following upon
- the vision of King Nebuchadnezzar, when he counselled him to do
- penance. Penance is the tree of life to those who receive it, and he
- that holds himself in true penitence is blessed, according to the
- opinion of Solomon.
- In this penitence or contrition man shall understand four things,
- that is to say, what contrition is, and what the causes are that
- move a man to contrition, and how he should be contrite, and what
- contrition avails the soul. Then it is thus: that contrition is the
- real sorrow that a man receives within his heart for his sins, with
- firm purpose to confess them and to do penance and nevermore to do
- sin. And this sorrow shall be in this manner, as says Saint Bernard:
- "It shall be heavy and grievous and sharp and poignant in the
- heart." First, because man has offended his Lord and his Creator;
- and more sharp and poignant because he has offended his Heavenly
- Father; and yet more sharp and poignant because he has angered and
- offended Him Who redeemed him, Who with His precious blood has
- delivered us from the bonds of sin and from the cruelty of the Devil
- and from the pains of Hell.
- The causes that ought to move a man to contrition are six. First,
- a man should remember his sins, yet see to it that this same
- remembrance be not to him in any wise a delight, but only great
- shame and sorrow for his guilt. For Job says: that sinful men do
- things that ought to be confessed. And therefore Hezekiah says: "I
- will remember all the years of my life, in bitterness of heart." And
- God says in the Apocalypse: "Remember from whence thou art fallen."
- For before that time when first you sinned, you were the children of
- God and members of the Kingdom of God; but because of your sin you are
- become slavish and vile, and the children of the Fiend, hated of the
- angels, the slander of Holy Church, and food of the false serpent. You
- are perpetual fuel for the fire of Hell. And yet more vile and
- abominable, for you offend often and often, like the dog that
- returns to his vomit. And you are even yet more vile, for your long
- continuation in sin and your sinful habits, for which you are as
- filthy in your sin as a beast in its dung. Such thoughts cause a
- may, to take shame to himself for his sinning, and not delight, as God
- says by the Prophet Ezekiel: "Thou shalt remember thy ways and be
- ashamed." Truly, sins are the ways that lead folk unto Hell.
- The second reason why a man ought to have contempt for sin is
- this: that, as Saint Peter says, "He that sinneth is the slave of
- sin." And sin puts a man into deep thraldom. And thereupon the Prophet
- Ezekiel says: "I went sorrowfully, in abhorrence of myself." And
- truly, well ought a man to abhor sin and to release himself from
- that thraldom and degradation. And see what Seneca says about this
- matter. He says thus: "Though I knew that neither God nor man should
- ever be cognizant of it, yet would I disdain to commit a sin." And the
- same Seneca also says: "I am born to greater things than to be
- thrall to my body, or than to make of my body a thrall." Nor a viler
- thrall may man or woman make of his or her body than by giving that
- body over to sin. And were it the lowest churl, or the lowest woman,
- that lives, and the least worth, yet is he or she then more vile and
- more in servitude. Ever from the higher degree than man falls, the
- more is he enthralled, and by so much the more to God and to the world
- is he vile and abominable. O good God! Well ought a man to have
- disdain of sin; since, because of sin, whereas he was once free, now
- is he in bondage. And thereupon Saint Augustine says: "If thou have
- disdain for thy servant, if he offend or sin, have thou then disdain
- that thou shouldest do any sin." Have regard of your worth, that you
- be not foul unto yourself. Alas! Well ought they then to disdain to be
- servants and thralls to sin, and to be sorely ashamed of themselves,
- when God of His endless goodness has set them in high place, or
- given them understanding, bodily strength, health, beauty, prosperity,
- and redeemed them with His heart's blood, who now so unnaturally, in
- face of His nobleness, requite Him so vilely as to slaughter their own
- souls. O good God! You women, who are of so great beauty, remember the
- proverb of Solomon, who says: "A fair woman who is the fool of her
- body is like a gold ring in the snout of a sow." For just as a sow
- roots deep into every ordure, so does she root her beauty into the
- stinking filth of sin.
- The third cause that ought to move a man to contrition is fear of
- the day of doom and of the horrible pains of Hell. For as Saint Jerome
- says: "Every time that I remember the day of doom I quake; for when
- I eat or drink or do whatever thing, ever it seems to me that the
- trump sounds in my ear, bidding the dead arise and come to
- judgment." O good God! Greatly ought a man to fear such a judgment,
- "Where we shall be all," as Saint Paul says, "before the throne of Our
- Lord Jesus Christ." And there we shall compose a general congregation,
- whence no man shall absent himself. For truly there shall avail
- neither essoin nor excuse. And not only shall our faults be judged,
- but all our deeds shall openly be made known. As Saint Bernard says:
- "There shall no pleading avail, and no trickery; we shall give
- reckoning for every idle word." There shall we have a judge that
- cannot be corrupted or deceived. And why? Because, in truth, all our
- thoughts are known unto Him; nor for prayer nor for bribing shall He
- be corrupted. And therefore says Solomon: "The wrath of God will spare
- no one, either for prayer or gifts." Therefore, at the day of doom,
- there shall be no hope of escape. Wherefore, as says Saint Anselm:
- "Great anguish shall all sinful folk have at that time; there shall
- the stern and angry judge sit above, and under Him the horrible pit of
- Hell, open to destroy him who must acknowledge his sins, which sins
- shall be openly showed before God and before all creatures. And on the
- left side more devils than any heart can think, to harry and to draw
- the sinful souls to the punishment of Hell. And within the hearts of
- folk shall be the tearing of conscience and without shall be the world
- all burning. Whither then shall the wretched sinful man flee to hide
- himself? Certainly he shall not hide; he must come forth and show
- himself." For truly, as says Saint Jerome: "The earth shall cast him
- forth and the sea also; aye, and the air, which shall be filled with
- thunders and with lightnings." Now, indeed, whoso well thinks of these
- things, I suppose that his sin shall not be a delight within him,
- but a great sorrow, for fear of the pain of Hell. And therefore said
- Job to God: "Let me take comfort a little, before I go whence I
- shall not return, even to the land of darkness and the shadow of
- death; a land of darkness as darkness itself: and of the shadow of
- death, without any order, and where the light is as darkness." Lo,
- here may it be seen that Job prayed for respite to weep and to
- bewail his trespass; for indeed one day of respite is better than
- all the treasure of the world. And for as much as man may acquit
- himself before God by penitence in this world, and not by treasure,
- therefore should he pray to God to grant him respite for a while to
- weep and to bewail his sins. For truly, all the sorrow that a man
- might feel from the beginning of the world is but a little thing in
- comparison with the sorrows of Hell. As to the reason why Job called
- Hell the "land of darkness," it is to be understood that he called
- it "land" or "earth" because it is stable and never shall fail; "dark"
- because he that is in Hell lacks the materials for light. For truly
- the dark light that shall come out of the fire that burns for ever
- shall turn him all to pain who is in Hell; for it shall show unto
- him the horrible devils that torment him. "Covered with the darkness
- of death:" that is to say, that he who is in Hell shall lack the sight
- of God; for truly, to see God is life everlasting. "The darkness of
- death" is the sin which the wretched man has done, which hinders his
- seeing the face of God; just as does a cloud that comes between us and
- the sun. "Land of ill ease:" because there are three kinds of pains
- against three things that folk of the world have in this present life,
- that is to say, honours, delights, and riches. Over against honours
- they have in Hell shame and confusion. For well you know that men call
- "honour" the reverence that man gives to man; but in Hell is no honour
- or reverence. For indeed no more reverence shall be done there to a
- king than to a knave. As to which God says, by the Prophet Jeremiah:
- "They that scorn me shall be scorned." "Honour" is also called great
- lordship; but there no man shall serve another, save to his harm and
- torment. "Honour," again, subsists in great dignity and rank; but in
- Hell all they shall be trodden upon by devils. And God says: "The
- horrible devils shall go and come upon the heads of the damned." And
- this is because the higher they were in this life, the lower shall
- they lie and be defiled in Hell. Against the riches of this world
- shall they have the misery of poverty; and this poverty shall be of
- four kinds: lack of treasure, whereof David says: "They that trust
- in their wealth, boast themselves in the multitude of their riches,
- they shall sleep in the darkness of death, and nothing shall they find
- in their hands of all their treasure." And, moreover, the misery of
- Hell shall consist of lack of food and drink. For God says thus,
- through Moses: "They shall be wasted with hunger, and the birds of
- Hell shall devour them with bitter death, and the gall of the dragon
- shall be their drink, and the venom of the dragon their morsels." And,
- furthermore, their misery shall be for lack of clothing, for they
- shall be naked of body save for the fire wherein they burn, and for
- other filth; and naked shall they be of soul, devoid of all virtues,
- which are the clothing of the soul. Where shall be then the gay
- robes and the soft sheets and the soft shirts? Behold what God says by
- the prophet Isaiah: "Under them shall be strewed moths and their
- covering shall be of the worms of Hell." And still further, their
- misery shall lie in lack of friends; for he is not poor who has good
- friends; but there no friend; for neither God nor any other shall be
- friend to them, and each of them shall hate all others with a deadly
- hatred. "The sons and the daughters shall rebel against father and
- mother, and kindred against kindred, and each of them shall curse
- and despise the others," both day and night, as says God through the
- Prophet Micah. And the loving people that once loved each other so
- passionately, each of them would eat the other if he might. For how
- should they love in the torments of Hell who hated each other in the
- prosperity of this life? For trust it well, their carnal love was
- deadly hate; as says the Prophet David: "Whoso loveth wickedness
- hateth his own soul." And whoso hates his own soul, truly he may
- love no other, in any wise. And therefore, in Hell is no solace nor
- any friendship, but ever the more fleshly relationships there are in
- Hell, the more cursings and the more deadly hates there are among
- them. And, again, they shall lack every kind of pleasure; for truly,
- pleasures are according to the appetites of the five senses, sight,
- hearing, smell, taste, and touch. But in Hell their sight shall be
- full of darkness and of smoke, and therefore full of tears; and
- their hearing full of wailing and the gnashing of teeth, as says Jesus
- Christ; their nostrils shall be full of a stinking smell. And, as
- the Prophet Isaiah says, "their savouring shall be of bitter gall."
- And as for touch, all the body shall be covered with "fire that
- never shall be quenched and with worms that never shall die," as God
- says by the mouth of Isaiah. And for as much as they shall not think
- that they may die of pain, and by death thus flee from pain, then
- may they understand the words of Job, who said, "There is the shadow
- of death." Certainly a shadow has the likeness of that whereof it is
- the shadow, but the shadow is not the substance. Just so it is with
- the pain of Hell; it is like unto death because of the horrible
- anguish. And why? Because it pains for ever, and as if they should die
- at every moment; but indeed they shall not die. For as Saint Gregory
- says: "To these wretched captives shall be given death without
- death, and end without end, and want without ceasing." And thereupon
- says Saint John the Evangelist: "They shall seek for death and they
- shall not find it; and they shall desire to die and death shall flee
- from them." And Job, also, says: "Death, without any order." And
- though it be that God has created all things in right order, and
- nothing at all without order, but all things are ordered and numbered;
- yet, nevertheless, they that are damned have no order, nor hold to any
- order. For the earth shall bear them no fruit. For, as the Prophet
- David says: "God shall destroy the fruits of the earth from them."
- No water shall give them moisture, nor the air refreshment, nor the
- fire a light. For, as Saint Basil says: "The burning of the fire of
- this world shall God send into Hell unto the damned souls there, but
- the light and the radiance thereof shall be given in Heaven unto His
- children"- just as the good man gives flesh to his children and
- bones to his dogs. And since they shall have no hope of escape,
- Saint Job says at the last that horror and grisly fear shall dwell
- there without end. Horror is always the fear of evil that is to
- come, and this fear shall dwell for ever in the hearts of the
- damned. And therefore have they lost all their hope, and for seven
- causes. First, because God their judge shall be without mercy to them;
- they may not please Him, nor may they please any of His saints; they
- can give nothing for their ransom; they shall have no voice
- wherewith to speak to Him; they cannot flee from pain; and they have
- no goodness within themselves which they might show to deliver them
- out of pain. And therefore says Solomon: "The wicked man dieth; and
- when he is dead he shall have no hope of escaping from pain."
- Whosoever, then, will well understand these pains, and bethink him
- well that he has deserved these very pains for his sins, certainly
- he shall have more longing to sigh and weep than ever to sing and
- play. For, as Solomon says: "Whoso shall have the wisdom to know the
- pains that have been established and ordained for the punishment of
- pain, he will feel sorrow." "This same knowledge," says Saint
- Augustine, "maketh a man to bewail within his heart."
- The fourth point that ought to cause a man to feel contrition is the
- unhappy memory of the good that he has left here on earth; also the
- good that he has lost. Truly, the good deeds that he has left are
- either those that he wrought before he fell into mortal sin, or the
- good deeds he did while he lived in sin. Indeed the good deeds he
- did before he fell into sin have been all deadened and stultified
- and rendered null and void by the repeated sinning. The other good
- deeds, which he wrought while he lay in mortal sin, they are utterly
- dead as to the effect they might have had on his life everlasting in
- Heaven. And then the same good deeds that have been rendered null by
- repeated sinning, which good works he wrought while he stood in a
- state of grace, shall never quicken again without an utter
- penitence. And thereof God says, by the mouth of Ezekiel: "If the
- righteous man shall turn again from his righteousness, and do
- wickedness, shall he live?" Nay, for all the good works that he has
- wrought shall never be held in memory, for he shall die in his sin.
- And thereupon, as to that same chapter, Saint Gregory says thus: "That
- we shall understand this principally: that when we do mortal sin it is
- for naught that we tell of or draw from memory the good works that
- we have wrought before." For, certainly, in the doing of mortal sin
- there is no trusting to the help of good that we have wrought
- before; that is to say, as it affects the everlasting life in
- Heaven. But notwithstanding this, the good deeds quicken again and
- return again, and help and are of avail in attaining the everlasting
- life in Heaven, when we have contrition. But indeed the good deeds
- that men do while they are in deadly sin, because they are done in
- deadly sin, shall never quicken again. For truly, that thing which
- never had life may never quicken; nevertheless, albeit these deeds
- avail nothing as to the perdurable life, yet they help to lighten
- the pains of Hell, or else to acquire temporal riches, or else,
- because of them, God will enlighten and illumine the heart of the
- sinful man to be repentant; and also they avail in accustoming a man
- to the doing of good deeds, to the end that the Fiend has less power
- over his soul. And thus the compassionate Lord Jesus Christ wills that
- no good work be utterly lost; for in somewhat it shall avail. But
- for as much as the good deeds that men do while they are in a state of
- grace are all stultified by sin ensuing; and, also, since all the good
- works that men do while they are in mortal sin are utterly dead, in so
- far as the life everlasting is concerned, well may that man who does
- no good work sing that new French song, J'ai tout perdu mon temps et
- mon labeur. For certainly, sin bereaves a man of both goodness of
- nature and the goodness of grace. For indeed the grace of the Holy
- Ghost is like fire, which cannot be idle; for fire fails anon as it
- forgoes its working, and even so does grace fail immediately it
- forsakes its work. Then loses the sinful man the goodness of glory,
- which is promised only to good men who suffer and toil. Well then
- may he sorrow, who owes all his life to God, as long as he has lived
- and as long as he shall live, and who yet has no goodness wherewith to
- repay his debt to God. For trust well, "he shall give account," as
- Saint Bernard says, "of all the good things that have been given him
- in this present life, and of how he has used them; in so much that
- there shall not perish a hair of his head, nor shall a moment of an
- hour perish of all his time, that he shall not be called upon to
- give a reckoning for."
- The fifth thing that ought to move a man to contrition is
- remembrance of the passion that Our Lord Jesus Christ suffered for our
- sins. For, as Saint Bernard says: "While I live I will keep in
- remembrance the travail that Our Lord Christ suffered in preaching;
- His weariness in travail; His temptations when He fasted; His long
- watchings when He prayed; His tears when He wept for pity of good
- people; the grievous and the shameful and the filthy things that men
- said of Him; the foul sputum that men spat into His face; the foul
- buffets that men gave Him; the foul grimaces and the chidings that men
- said; the nails wherewith He was nailed to the cross; and all the rest
- of His passion, which he suffered for my sins and not for his own
- guilt." And you shall understand that in man's sin is every order or
- ordinance turned upside-down. For it is true that God and reason and
- sensuality and the body of man have been so ordained and established
- that, of these four things, the next higher shall have lordship over
- the lower; as thus: God shall have lordship over reason, and reason
- over sensuality, and sensuality over the body of man. But, indeed,
- when man sins, all of this order or ordinance is turned upside-down.
- Therefore, then, for as much as the reason of man will not be
- subject to nor obedient to God, Who is man's Lord by right,
- therefore it loses the lordship that it should hold over sensuality
- and also over the body of man. And why? Because sensuality rebels then
- against reason; and in that way reason loses the lordship over
- sensuality and over the body. For just as reason is rebel to God, just
- so is sensuality rebel to reason, and the body also. And truly, this
- confusion and this rebellion Our Lord Jesus Christ suffered upon His
- precious body, and paid full dearly thus, and hear you now in what
- wise. For as much, then, as reason is rebel to God, therefore is man
- worthy to have sorrow and to die. This Our Lord Jesus Christ
- suffered for mankind after He had been betrayed by His disciple, and
- secured and bound "so that the blood burst out at every nail of His
- hands," as says Saint Augustine. Moreover, for as much as reason of
- man will not subdue sensuality when it may, therefore man is worthy of
- shame; and this suffered Our Lord Jesus Christ for man when they
- spat in His face. Furthermore, for as much, then, as the wretched body
- of man is rebel both to reason and to sensuality" therefore is it
- worthy of death. And this Our Lord Jesus Christ suffered for man
- upon the cross, where there was no part of His body free from great
- pain and bitter passion. And all this Jesus Christ suffered, Who never
- did any wrong. And therefore it may be reasonably said of Jesus
- thus: "Too much am I tortured for things the punishment of which I
- do not deserve, and too much disgraced for shame that belongs to man."
- And therefore may the sinful man well say, as says Saint Bernard:
- "Accursed be the bitterness of my sin, for which there must be
- suffered so much bitterness." For truly, according to the diverse
- discordances of our wickedness, was the passion of Jesus Christ
- ordained in divers ways, as thus. Certainly sinful man's soul is
- betrayed unto the Devil by covetousness of temporal prosperity, and
- scorned by deceit when he chooses carnal delights; and it is tormented
- by impatience under adversity, and spat upon by servitude and
- subjection to sin; and at the last it is slain for ever. For this
- confusion by sinful man was Jesus Christ first betrayed and afterwards
- bound, Who came to loose us from sin and pain. Then was He scorned,
- Who should have been only honoured in all things. Then was His face,
- which all mankind ought to have desired to look upon, since into
- that face angels desire to look, villainously spat upon. Then was He
- scourged, Who had done nothing wrong; and finally, then was He
- crucified and slain. So was accomplished the word of Isaiah: "He was
- wounded for our misdeeds and defiled for our felonies." Now, since
- Jesus Christ took upon Himself the punishment for all our
- wickedness, much ought sinful man to weep and to bewail that for his
- sins the Son of God in Heaven should endure all this pain.
- The sixth thing that ought to move a man to contrition is the hope
- of three things; that is to say, forgiveness of sin, and the gift of
- grace to do well, and the glory of Heaven, wherewith God shall
- reward a man for his good deeds. And for as much as Jesus Christ gives
- us these gifts of His largess and of His sovereign bounty, therefore
- is He called Iesus Nazarenus rex Iudeorum. Jesus means "saviour" or
- "salvation," in whom men shall hope to have forgiveness of sins, which
- is, properly, salvation from sins. And therefore said the angel to
- Joseph: "Thou shalt call His name Jesus, Who shall save His people
- from their sins." And thereof says Saint Peter: "There is no other
- name under Heaven given to any man, whereby a man may be saved, save
- only Jesus." Nazarenus is as much as to say "flourishing," wherein a
- man may hope that He Who gives him remission of sins shall give him
- also the grace to do well. For in the flower is hope of fruit in
- time to come; and in forgiveness of sins is hope of grace to do
- well. "Behold, I stand at the door and knock," says Jesus: "if any man
- hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will
- sup with him, and he with Me." That is to say, by the good works
- that he shall do, which good works are the food of God; "and he
- shall sup with Me"- by the great joy that I shall give him. Thus may
- man hope, for his deeds of penitence, that God shall allow him to
- enter His Kingdom, as is promised unto him in the gospel.
- Now shall a man understand in what manner shall be his contrition. I
- say, that it shall be universal and total; that is to say, a man shall
- be truly repentant for all the sins that he has done in delight of his
- thought; for delight is very dangerous. For there are two ways of
- acquiescence; one is called acquiescence of the affections, when a man
- is moved to do sin, and delights in long thinking thereon; and his
- reason well perceives that it is sin against the law of God, and yet
- his reason restrains not his foul delight or appetite, though he see
- well that it is opposed to the reverence that is due to God;
- although his reason consent not to do that sin in very deed, yet
- some doctors say that dwelling long on such delight is full dangerous,
- be it ever so little. And also a man should sorrow for all that he has
- ever desired against the law of God with perfect acquiescence of his
- reason; for there is no doubt of it, there is mortal sin in
- acquiescence. For truly, there is no mortal sin that was not first
- in man's thought, and after that in his delight, and so on unto
- acquiescence and unto deed. Wherefore I say, that many men never
- repent for such thoughts and delights, and never confess them, but
- only the actual performance of great sins. Wherefore I say that such
- wicked delights and wicked thoughts are subtle beguilers of those that
- shall be damned. Moreover, a man ought to sorrow for his wicked
- words as well as for his wicked deeds; for truly, the repentance for a
- single sin, unaccompanied by repentance for all other sins, or else
- repentance for all other sins and not for a single sin, shall not
- avail. For certainly God Almighty is all good; and therefore He
- forgives all or nothing. And thereupon says Saint Augustine: "I know
- certainly that God is the enemy of every sinner." And how then? He
- that continues to do one sin, shall he have forgiveness for the rest
- of his sins? No. Furthermore, contrition should be wondrous
- sorrowful and full of suffering; and for that God gives fully His
- mercy; and therefore, when my soul was suffering within me, I had
- remembrance of God, that my prayer might come unto Him. Moreover,
- contrition must be continual, and a man must keep and hold a steadfast
- purpose to shrive himself and to amend his way of life. For truly,
- while contrition lasts, man may continue to have hope of
- forgiveness; and of this comes hatred of sin, which destroys sin
- within himself and also in other folk, according to his ability. For
- which David says: "Ye that love God hate wickedness." For trust this
- well, to love God is to love what He loves and to hate what He hates.
- The last thing that man shall understand about contrition is this:
- What does contrition avail him? I say, that at times contrition
- delivers a man from sin; as to which David says: "I said I will
- confess my transgressions unto the Lord; and Thou forgavest the
- iniquity of my sin." And just as contrition nothing avails without
- firm purpose of shrift, if man have opportunity, just so shrift itself
- is of little worth without contrition. Moreover, contrition destroys
- the prison of Hell and makes weak and feeble all the strength of all
- the devils, and restores the gifts of the Holy Ghost and of all good
- virtues; and it cleanses the soul of sin, and delivers the soul from
- the pain of Hell and from the company of the Devil, and from the
- servitude of sin, and restores it unto all spiritual good and to the
- company and communion of Holy Church. And furthermore, it makes of him
- who was formerly the son of anger to be the son of grace; and all
- these things are proved by holy writ. And therefore he that would
- set his understanding to these things, he were full wise; for truly,
- he should not then, in all his life, have desire to sin, but should
- give his body and all his heart to the service of Jesus Christ, and do
- Him homage. For truly, Our sweet Lord Jesus Christ has spared us so
- graciously in our follies that, if He had not pity on man's soul, a
- sorry song indeed might all of us sing.
-
- Explicit prima pars penitentie;
- Et sequitur secunda pars eiusdem
-
- The second part of penitence is confession, which is the sign of
- contrition. Now shall you understand what confession is, and whether
- it ought to be used or not, and which things are necessary to true
- confession.
- First, you shall understand that confession is the true discovery of
- sins to the priest; I say "true," for a man must confess all the
- circumstances and conditions of his sin, in so far as he can. All must
- be told, and nothing excused or hidden, or covered up, and he must not
- vaunt his good deeds. And furthermore, it is necessary to understand
- whence his sins come, and how they increase, and what they are.
- Of the birth of sins, Saint Paul says thus: that "as by one man
- sin entered into the world, and death by sin;... so death passed
- upon all men, for that all have sinned." And this man was Adam, by
- whom sin entered into the world when he broke the commandment of
- God. And therefore, he that at first was so mighty that he should
- never have died became such a one as must needs die, whether he
- would or no; and all his progeny in this world, since they, in that
- man, sinned. Behold, in the state of innocence, when Adam and Eve were
- naked in Paradise, and had no shame for their nakedness, how that
- the serpent, which was the wiliest of all the beasts that God had
- made, said to the woman: "Yea, hath God said, ye shall not eat of
- every tree of the garden?" And the woman said unto the serpent: "We
- may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden: but of the fruit of
- the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, 'Ye shall
- not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die.'" And the
- serpent said unto the woman: "Ye shall not surely die: for God doth
- know, that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be
- opened; and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil." And when
- the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was
- pleasant to the eyes, and delectable in the sight, she took of the
- fruit thereof and did eat; and gave also unto her husband, and he
- did eat. And the eyes of them both were opened. And when they knew
- that they were naked, they sewed fig-leaves together into a kind of
- breeches to hide their members. There may you see that mortal sin
- had first suggestion from the Fiend, who is here figured by the
- serpent; and afterward the delight of the flesh, as shown here by Eve;
- and after that the acquiescence of reason, as is shown by Adam. For
- trust this well, though it were that the Fiend tempted Eve, that is to
- say, the flesh, and the flesh delighted in the beauty of the forbidden
- fruit, certainly until reason, that is, Adam, consented to the
- eating of the fruit, yet stood he in the state of innocence. From that
- same Adam caught we all that original sin; for we are all descended
- from him in the flesh, engendered of vile and corrupt matter. And when
- the soul is put into a body, immediately is contracted original sin;
- and that which was at first merely the penalty of concupiscence
- becomes afterwards both penalty and sin. And therefore are we all born
- the sons of wrath and of everlasting damnation, were it not for the
- baptism we receive, which washes away the culpability; but,
- forsooth, the penalty remains within us, as temptation, and that
- penalty is called concupiscence. When it is wrongly disposed or
- established in man, it makes him desire, by the lust of the flesh,
- fleshly sin; desire, by the sight of his eyes, earthly things; and
- desire high place, what of the pride of his heart.
- Now, to speak of the first desire, that is, concupiscence, according
- to the law for our sexual parts, which were lawfully made and by
- rightful word of God; I say, for as much as man is not obedient to
- God, Who is his Lord, therefore is the flesh disobedient to Him,
- through concupiscence, which is also called the nourishing of and
- the reason for sin. Therefore all the while that a man has within
- himself the penalty of concupiscence, it is impossible but that he
- will be sometimes tempted and moved in his flesh to do sin. And this
- shall not fail so long as he lives; it may well grow feeble and remote
- by virtue of baptism and by the grace of God through penitence; but it
- shall never be fully quenched so that he shall never be moved within
- himself, unless he be cooled by sickness or my maleficence of
- sorcery or by opiates. For behold what Saint Paul says: "The flesh
- lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh: and
- these are contrary, the one to the other; so that ye cannot do the
- things, that ye would." The same Saint Paul, after his great penance
- on water and on land (on water by night and by day, in great peril and
- in great pain; on land in famine, in thirst, in cold, and naked, and
- once stoned almost unto death), yet said he: "O wretched man that I
- am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" And Saint
- Jerome, when he had long lived in the desert, where he had no
- company but that of wild beasts, where he had no food but herbs,
- with only water to drink, and no bed but the naked earth, for which
- his flesh was black as an Ethiopian's with heat and well-nigh
- destroyed with cold, yet said he that the heat of lechery boiled
- through all his body. Wherefore I know well and surely that they are
- deceived who say that they are never tempted in the flesh. Witness
- Saint James the apostle, who says that everyone is tempted in his
- own concupiscence. That is to say, each of us has cause and occasion
- to be tempted by the sin that is nourished in the body. And
- thereupon says Saint John the Evangelist: "If we say that we have no
- sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us."
- Now shall you understand in what manner sin waxes or increases in
- man. The first thing to be considered is this same nurturing of sin,
- whereof I spoke before, this same fleshly concupiscence. And after
- that comes the subjection to the Devil, that is to say, the Devil's
- bellows, wherewith he blows into man the fire of concupiscence. And
- after that a man bethinks himself whether he will do, or not, the
- thing to which he is tempted. And then, if a man withstand and put
- aside the first enticement of his flesh and the Fiend, then it is no
- sin; and if it be that he do not, he feels anon a flame of delight.
- And then it is well to be wary, and to guard himself, else he will
- fall anon into acquiescence to sin; and then he will do it, if he have
- time and place. And of this matter Moses says that the Devil says
- thus: "I will pursue, I will overtake, I will divide the spoil; my
- lust shall be satisfied upon them; I will draw my sword, my hand shall
- destroy them." For certainly, just as a sword may part a thing in
- two pieces, just so acquiescence separates God from man. "And then
- will I slay him in his sinful deed." Thus says the Fiend. For truly,
- then is a man dead in soul. And thus is sin accomplished by temptation
- and by acquiescence; and then is the sin called actual.
- Forsooth, sin is of two kinds; it is either venial or mortal sin.
- Verily, when man loves any creature more than he loves Jesus Christ
- our Creator, then is it mortal sin. And venial sin it is if a man love
- Jesus Christ less than he ought. Forsooth the effect of this venial
- sin is very dangerous; for it diminishes more and more the love that
- man should have for God. And therefore, if a man charge himself with
- many such venial sins, then certainly, unless he discharge them
- occasionally by shriving, they may easily lessen in him all the love
- that he has for Jesus Christ; and in this wise venial sin passes
- over into mortal sin. Therefore let us not be negligent in ridding
- ourselves of venial sins. For the proverb has it: "Mony a mickle mak's
- a muckle." And hear this example. A huge wave of the sea comes
- sometimes with so great violence that it sinks a ship. And the same
- harm is caused sometimes by the small drops of water that enter
- through the little opening in the seam into the bilge of the ship,
- if men be so negligent that they do not discharge it in time. And
- therefore, though there be a difference between these two ways of
- sinking, nevertheless the ship is sunk. Just so it is sometimes with
- mortal sin, and with vexatious venial sins when they multiply in a man
- so greatly that the worldly things he loves, for which he venially
- sins, have grown as great in his heart as the love for God, or
- greater. And therefore, the love for everything that is not fixed or
- rooted in God, or done principally for than he love God's sake, though
- a man love it less. God, yet is it venial sin; and it is mortal sin
- when the love for anything weighs in the heart of man as much as the
- love for God, or more. "Mortal sin," as Saint Augustine says, "is when
- a man turns his heart from God, Who, is the truly sovereign goodness
- and may not change, and gives his heart unto things that may change
- and pass away." And true it is that if a man give his love, the
- which he owes all to God, with all his heart, unto a creature, then
- certainly so much of his love as he gives unto the said creature he
- takes away from God; and thereby does he sin. For he, who is debtor to
- God, yields not unto God all of his debt, which is to say, all the
- love of his heart.
- Now since man understands generally what venial sin is, it is
- fitting to tell especially of sins which many a man perhaps holds
- not to be sins at all, and for which he shrives not himself; yet,
- nevertheless, they are sins. Truly, as clerics write, every time a man
- eats or drinks more than suffices for the sustenance of his body, it
- is certain that he thereby sins. And, too, when he speaks more than it
- is necessary it is sin. Also, when he hears not benignly the complaint
- of the poor. Also, when he is in health of body and will not fast when
- other folk fast, and that without a reasonable excuse. Also, when he
- sleeps more than he needs, or when he comes, for that reason, too late
- to church, or to other places where works of charity are done. Also,
- when he enjoys his wife without a sovereign desire to procreate
- children to the honour of God, or when he does it without intention to
- yield to his wife the duty of his body. Also, when he will not visit
- the sick and the imprisoned, if he may do so. Also, if he love wife or
- child or any other worldly thing more than reason requires. Also, if
- he flatter or blandish more than, of necessity, he ought. Also, if
- he diminish or withdraw his alms to the poor. Also, if he prepare
- his food more delicately than is needful, or eat it too hastily or too
- greedily. Also, if he talk about vain and trifling matters in a church
- or at God's service, or if he be a user of idle words of folly or of
- obscenity; for he shall yield up an accounting of it at the day of
- doom. Also, when he promises or assures one that he will do what he
- cannot perform. Also, when he, through thoughtlessness or folly,
- slanders or scorns his neighbour. Also, when he suspects a thing to be
- evil when he has no certain knowledge of it. These things, and more
- without number, are sins, as Saint Augustine says.
- Now shall men understand that while no earthly man may avoid all
- venial sins, yet may he keep them down by the burning love that he has
- to Our Lord Jesus Christ, and by prayer and confession, and by other
- good deeds. For, as Saint Augustine says: "If a man love God in such
- manner that all that he ever does is done in the love of God, and
- truly for the love of God, because he burns with the love of God:
- behold, then, how much a drop of water falling in a furnace harms or
- proves troublesome; and just so much vexes the venial sin a man who is
- perfect in the love of Christ." Men may also keep down venial sins
- by receiving deservingly the precious body of Jesus Christ; also by
- receiving holy water; by almsgiving; by general confession of
- confiteor at mass and at compline; and by the blessings of bishops and
- of priests, and by other good works.
-
-
- Explicit secunda pars penitentie
- Sequitur de septem peccatis mortalibus
- et eorum dependenciis
- Circumstanciis et speciebus
-
- Now it is a needful thing to tell which are the mortal sins, that is
- to say, the principal sins; they are all leashed together, but are
- different in their ways. Now they are called principal sins because
- they are the chief sins and the trunk from which branch all others.
- And the root of these seven sins is pride, which is the general root
- of all evils; for from this root spring certain branches, as anger,
- envy, acedia or sloth, avarice (or covetousness, for vulgar
- understanding), gluttony, and lechery. And each of these principal
- sins has its branches and its twigs, as shall be set forth and
- declared in the paragraphs following.
-
- DE SUPERBIA
-
- And though it be true that no man can absolutely tell the number
- of the twigs and of the evil branches that spring from pride, yet will
- I show forth a number of them, as you shall understand. There are
- disobedience, boasting, hypocrisy, scorn, arrogance, impudence,
- swelling of the heart, insolence, elation, impatience, strife,
- contumacy, presumption, irreverence, obstinacy, vainglory; and many
- another twig that I cannot declare. Disobedient is he that disobeys
- for spite the commandments of God, of his rulers, and of his spiritual
- father. Braggart is he that boasts of the evil or the good that he has
- done. Hypocrite is he that hides his true self and shows himself
- such as he is not. Scorner is he who has disdain for his neighbour,
- that is to say, for his fellow Christian, or who scorns to do that
- which he ought to do. Arrogant is he who thinks he has within
- himself those virtues which he has not, or who holds that he should so
- have them as his desert; or else he deems that he is that which he
- is not. Impudent is he who, for his pride's sake, has no shame for his
- sins. Swelling of heart is what a man has when he rejoices in evil
- that he has done. Insolent is he that despises in his judgments all
- other folk in comparing theirs with his worth, and with his
- understanding, and with his conversation, and with his bearing. Elated
- is he who will suffer neither a master nor a peer. Impatient is he who
- will not be taught nor reproved for his vice, and who, by strife,
- knowingly wars on truth and defends his folly. Contumax is he who,
- because of his indignation, is against all authority or power or those
- that are his rulers. Presumption is when a man undertakes an
- enterprise that he ought not to attempt, or one which he cannot
- accomplish; and that is called over-confidence. Irreverence is when
- men do not show honour where they ought, and themselves wait to be
- reverenced. Obstinacy is when man defends his folly and trusts too
- much in his own judgment. Vainglory is delight in pomp and temporal
- rank, and glorification in this worldly estate. Chattering is when men
- speak too much before folk, clattering like a mill and taking no
- care of what they say.
- And then there is a private species of pride that waits to be
- saluted before it will salute, albeit the one who has it is of less
- worth than is the other, perchance; also, when he attends services
- in church he desires to sit, or else to go, before his neighbour in
- the aisle, or to kiss the pax before him, or to be censed before
- him, or to make offering before his neighbour, and similar things; all
- against his necessity, peradventure, save that in his heart and his
- will is such proud desire to be magnified and honoured before the
- people.
- Now there are two kinds of pride; one of them lies within the
- heart of man, and the other lies without. Whereof, truly, these
- aforesaid things, and more than I have named, appertain to that
- pride which is within the heart of man; for that other species of
- pride lies without. But notwithstanding, one of these species of pride
- is a sign of the existence of the other, just as the fresh bush at the
- tavern door is a sign of the wine that is in the cellar. And this
- second kind of pride shows itself in many ways: as in speech and
- bearing, and in extravagant array of clothing; for truly, if there had
- been no sin in clothing, Christ would not have noted and spoken of the
- clothing of that rich man in the gospel. And, as Saint Gregory says,
- that same precious clothing is culpable for the glory and beauty of
- it, and for its softness. and for its strange new modes, and its
- fantastic ornamentation, and for its superfluity, and for the
- inordinate scantiness of it. Alas! May not men see, in our days, the
- sinfully costly array of clothing, especially in the matter of
- superfluity, or else in inordinate scantiness?
- As to the first sin, it lies in the superfluity of clothing, which
- makes cloth so dear, to the harm of the people; not only the cost of
- embroidering, the elaborate notching or barring, the waved lines,
- the stripes, the twists, the diagonal bars, and similar waste of cloth
- in vanity; but there is also the costly furring of gowns, so much
- perforating with scissors to make holes, so much slashing with shears;
- and then the superfluity in length of the aforesaid gowns, trailing in
- the dung and in the mire, a-horseback and afoot, as well of man's
- clothing as of woman's, until all this trailing verily, in its effect,
- wastes, consumes, makes threadbare and rotten with dung the
- superfluity that rather should be given unto the poor; to the great
- harm of the aforesaid poor. And that in sundry wise: this is to say,
- the more that cloth is wasted, the more it costs the people because of
- its scarcity; and furthermore, if they would give such perforated
- and slashed clothing to the poor folk, it would not be suitable for
- their wearing, what of their state, nor sufficient to help their
- necessity to keep themselves from the fury of the elements. On the
- other hand, to speak of the horrible inordinate scantiness of
- clothing, let us notice these short-cut smocks or jackets, which,
- because of their shortness, cover not the shameful members of man,
- to the wicked calling of them to attention. Alas! Some of them show
- the very boss of their penis and the horrible pushed-out testicles
- that look like the malady of hernia in the wrapping of their hose; and
- the buttocks of such persons look like the hinder parts of a she-ape
- in the full of the moon. And moreover, the hateful proud members
- that they show by the fantastic fashion of making one leg of their
- hose white and the other red, make it seem that half their shameful
- privy members are flayed. And if it be that they divide their hose
- in other colours, as white and black, or white and blue, or black
- and red, and so forth, then it seems, by variation of colour, that the
- half of their privy members are corrupted by the fire of Saint
- Anthony, or by cancer, or by other such misfortune. As to the hinder
- parts of their buttocks, the thing is horrible to see. For, indeed, in
- that part of their body where they purge their stinking ordure, that
- foul part they proudly show to the people in despite of decency, which
- decency Jesus Christ and His friends observed in their lives. Now,
- as to the extravagant array of women, God knows that though the
- faces of them seem chaste and gentle, yet do they advertise, by
- their attire, their lickerousness and pride. I say not that a moderate
- gaiety in clothing is unseemly, but certainly the superfluity or
- inordinate scantiness of clothing is reprehensible. Also, the sin of
- adornment or apparel lies in things that appertain to riding, as in
- too many fine horses that are kept for delight, that are so fair, fat,
- and costly; in many a vicious knave who is kept because of them; in
- too curious harness, as saddles, cruppers, poitrels, and bridles
- covered with precious caparison and rich, and with bars and plates
- of gold and silver. As to which God says by Zechariah the prophet:
- "I will confound the riders of such horses." These folk have but
- little regard for the riding of God of Heaven's Son and of His
- trappings, when He rode upon the ass and had no other caparison than
- the poor cloaks of His disciples; nor do we read that ever He rode
- upon any other beast. I say this against the sin of superfluity, and
- not against reasonable display when the occasion requires it. And
- further, certainly pride is greatly shown in keeping up a great
- household, when such servants are of little profit, or of no profit.
- And this is especially so when such an array of servants is
- mischievous and injurious to the people, by the insolence of high rank
- or by way of office. For truly, such lords sell then their lordships
- to the Devil of Hell when they sustain the wickedness of their
- following. And when folk of low degree, as those that keep and run
- hostelries, sustain the thievery of their servants, which is done in
- many ways. This kind of folk are the flies that seek honey or the dogs
- that seek carrion. Such folk strangle spiritually their lordships;
- as to which thus says David the prophet: "Wicked death shall come upon
- such masters, and God will give that they descend into Hell; for in
- their houses are iniquities and evil deeds." And God of Heaven is
- not there. And truly, unless they mend their ways, just as God gave
- His blessing to Laban for the service of Jacob and to Pharaoh for
- the service of Joseph, just so will God give His curse to such
- lordships as sustain the wickedness of their servants, unless they
- shall make amendment. Pride of the table is often seen; for truly,
- rich men are bidden to feasts and poor folk are turned away and
- rebuked. The sin of pride lies also in excess of divers meats and
- drinks; and especially in certain baked meats and made-dishes, burning
- with spirituous liquors and decorated and castellated with paper,
- and in similar waste; so that it is scandalous to think upon. And also
- in too great preciousness of vessels and in curious instruments of
- minstrelsy, whereby a man is stirred the more to the delights of
- luxury; if it be that he thereby sets his heart the less upon Jesus
- Christ, certainly it is a sin; and certainly the delights might be
- so great in this case that a man could easily fall thereby into mortal
- sin. The varieties of sin that arise out of pride, truly, when they
- arise with malice imagined, advised, and aforethought, or from
- habit, are mortal sins, and of that there is no doubt. And when they
- arise out of frailty, unadvisedly and suddenly, and are quickly
- withdrawn again, albeit they are grievous sins, I think that they
- are not mortal. Now might men ask, whence pride arises and takes its
- being, and I say: sometimes it springs out of the good things of
- nature, and sometimes from the benefits of Fortune, and sometimes from
- the good of grace itself. Certainly the good things of nature
- consist of either physical wellbeing or riches of the soul.
- Certainly physical wellbeing consists of the weal of the body, as
- strength, activity, beauty, good blood, and generous candour. The
- benefits of nature to the soul are good wit, keen understanding,
- clever talent, natural virtue, and good memory. The benefits of
- Fortune are riches, high rank. and the people's praise. The good of
- grace consists of knowledge, power to suffer spiritual travail,
- benignity, virtuous contemplation, ability to withstand temptation,
- and similar things. Of which aforesaid things, certainly it is great
- folly in a man when he permits himself to be proud of any of them.
- As for the benefits of nature, God knows that sometimes we receive
- them naturally as much to our detriment as to our profit. As, to
- take bodily health, certainly it passes away lightly enough, and
- moreover it is often the reason for the wickedness of the soul; for
- God knows that the flesh is a great enemy to the soul; and
- therefore, the more sound the body is, the more are we in danger of
- falling into sin. Also, to feel pride in the strength of one's body is
- a great folly; for certainly the flesh lusts for that which is
- detrimental to the spirit, and ever the stronger the flesh is, the
- sorrier must the soul be: and above all this, strength of body and
- worldly boldness bring a man often into danger of mischance. Also,
- to be proud of his gentility is a great folly; for often the gentility
- of the body debases the gentility of the soul; and furthermore, we are
- all of "One father and one mother; and we are of one nature, rotten
- and corrupt, both the rich and the poor. Forsooth, but one kind of
- gentility is praiseworthy, and that it is which clothes a man's
- heart with virtue and morality and makes of him Christ's child. For
- trust this well, that over whatsoever man sin has gained the
- mastery, that man is a very serf to sin.
- Now there are general signs of gentility; as the eschewing of vice
- and ribaldry and servitude to sin, in word, in deed, and in conduct;
- and as the practising of virtue, courtesy, and purity, and being
- generous, which is to say, bounteous within measure; for that which
- goes beyond a reasonable measure is folly and sin. Another such sign
- is, when a man remembers and bears in mind the good that he has
- received from others. Another is, to be benign to his good
- inferiors; wherefore, as Seneca says: "There is nothing more
- becoming a man of high estate than kindliness, courtesy, and pity. And
- therefore the flies that men call bees, when they make their king,
- they choose one that has no prick wherewith he may sting." Another is,
- for a man to have a good heart and a diligent, to attain to high
- virtuous things. Now truly, for a man to pride himself on the gifts of
- grace is also an extravagant folly; for these same gifts of grace that
- should have turned him to goodness and to alleviation, turn him to
- venom and confusion, as says Saint Gregory. Certainly, also, whoso
- prides himself on the benefits of Fortune, he is a full great fool;
- for sometimes a man is a great lord at morning who is a captive and
- a wretch ere it be night; and sometimes the wealth of a man is the
- cause of his death; sometimes the pleasures of a man cause the
- grievous malady whereof he dies. Certainly the people's commendation
- is sometimes false enough and brittle enough to trust; today they
- praise, tomorrow they blame. God knows, desire to have commendation of
- the people has caused death to many a busy man.
-
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM SUPERBIE
-
- Now, since it has come to pass that you have understood what pride
- is, and what the species of it are, and whence pride arises and
- springs, now you shall understand what is the remedy for the sin of
- pride, and that is, humility or meekness. That is a virtue whereby a
- man may come to have a true knowledge of himself, and whereby he
- will hold himself to be of no price or value in regard to his deserts,
- but will be considering ever his frailty. Now there are three kinds of
- humility: as humility of heart, and another humility is of the
- mouth, and the third is in a man's works. The humility of heart is
- of four kinds: one is, when a man holds himself to be of nothing worth
- before God in Heaven. Another is, when he despises no other man. The
- third is, when he recks not though men hold him as nothing worth.
- The fourth is when he is not sorry for his humiliation. Also, the
- humility of the mouth is of four kinds: temperate speech, meek speech,
- and when a man acknowledges with his own mouth that he is as he thinks
- himself to be, in his heart. Another is, when he praises the
- goodness of another man and nothing thereof belittles. Humility in
- deeds is in four manners: the first is, when a man puts other men
- before him. The second is, to choose the lowest place of all for
- himself. The third is, gladly to assent to good counsel. The fourth
- is, to abide gladly by the decision of his rulers, or of him that is
- of higher rank; certainly this is a great work of humility.
-
-
- SEQUITUR DE INUIDIA
-
- After pride I will speak of the foul sin of envy, which is,
- according to the word of the philosopher, sorrow for other men's
- prosperity; and according to the word of Saint Augustine, it is sorrow
- for other men's weal and joy for other men's harm. This foul sin is
- flatly against the Holy Ghost. Be it that every sin is in opposition
- to the Holy Ghost, yet, nevertheless, for as much as goodness
- appertains properly to the Holy Ghost and envy springs by nature out
- of malice, therefore is it especially against the goodness of the Holy
- Ghost. Now malice has two species, that is to say, a heart hardened in
- wickedness, or else the flesh of man is so blind that he does not
- consider himself to be in sin, or he cares not that he is in sin,
- which is the hardihood of the Devil. The other kind of malice is, when
- a man wars against the truth, knowing that it is truth. Also, when
- he wars against the grace that God has given to his neighbour; and all
- this is envy. Certainly, then, envy is the worst sin there is. For
- truly, all other sins are sometime against only one special virtue;
- but truly, envy is against all virtues and against all goodnesses; for
- it is sorry for all the virtues of its neighbour; and in this way it
- differs from all other sins. For hardly is there any sin that has
- not some delight in itself, save only envy, which ever has of itself
- but anguish and sorrow. The kinds of envy are these: there is,
- first, sorrow for other men's goodness and prosperity; and
- prosperity being naturally a thing for joy, then envy is a sin against
- nature. The second kind of envy is joy in other men's harm; and this
- is naturally like the Devil, who always rejoices in man's harm. From
- these two species comes backbiting; and this sin of backbiting, or
- detraction, has certain forms, as thus. A man praises his neighbour
- with a wicked intention, for he puts always a wicked twist into it
- at the end. Always he puts a "but" in at the end, which implies more
- blame than all the praise is worth. The second form is, when a man
- is good and does or says a thing to good intent, the backbiter turns
- all this goodness upside-down to his own evil end. The third is, to
- belittle the goodness of a neighbour. The fourth form of backbiting is
- this: that if a man say good of a man, then the backbiter says,
- "Faith, such or such a man is better than he," in disparagement of him
- that men praise. The fifth form is this, to assent gladly and listen
- gladly to the evil that folk speak of others. This sin is a great one;
- and it grows according to the wicked endeavours of the backbiter.
- After backbiting comes grumbling or murmuring; and sometimes it
- springs from impatience with God, and sometimes with man. Impatience
- with God it is when the man grumbles against the pains of Hell, or
- against poverty, or loss of chattels, or against rain or tempest; or
- else complains that scoundrels prospers or else that good men have
- adversity. And all these things should men suffer patiently, for
- they come by the right judgment and ordinance of God. Sometimes
- grumbling comes of avarice; as Judas complained of the Magdalen when
- she anointed the head of Our Lord Jesus Christ with her precious
- ointment. This murmuring is such as when a man grumbles at good that
- he himself has done, or that other folk do with their wealth.
- Sometimes murmuring comes of pride; as when Simon the Pharisee
- murmured against the Magdalen when she approached Jesus Christ and
- wept at His feet for her sins. And sometimes grumbling arises out of
- envy; as when men discover a man's secret weakness, or swear of him
- a thing that is false. Murmuring, too, is often found among
- servants, who grumble when their masters bid them to do lawful things;
- and for as much as they dare not openly gainsay the commands of
- their masters, yet do they speak evilly of them and grumble and murmur
- privately, for very spite; which words men call the Devil's
- Paternoster, though the Devil never had a Paternoster, save that
- vulgar folk give these murmurings that name. Sometimes grumbling comes
- of anger or privy hate, that nurtures rancour in its heart, as I shall
- hereafter set forth. Then comes bitterness of heart, through which
- bitterness every good deed of one's neighbour seems to one to be but
- bitter and unsavoury. Then comes discord, which undoes all friendship.
- Then comes spite, as when a man seeks occasion to annoy his neighbour,
- though he do never so well. Then comes accusation, as when a man seeks
- occasion to offend his neighbour, which is like the guile of the
- Devil, who watches both night and day to accuse us all. Then comes
- malignity, through which a man annoys his neighbour privately, if he
- may; and if he may not, then nevertheless his wicked will shall not
- want for means to harm him, as by burning his house, or poisoning or
- slaying his beasts, and suchlike things.
-
-
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM INUIDIE
-
- Now will I speak of the remedy for this foul sin of envy. First,
- is the love of God, and the love of one's neighbour as one's self; for
- indeed the one cannot be without the other. And trust well, that by
- the name of your neighbour you are to understand your brother; for
- certainly all of us have one fleshly father and one mother, that is to
- say, Adam and Eve; and even one spiritual father, and that is God in
- Heaven. Your neighbour you are bound to love and to wish all good
- things; and thereunto God says, "Love thy neighbour as thyself."
- That is to say, to the salvation both of life and soul. Moreover,
- you shall love him in word, and in benign admonition and in
- chastening; and comfort him in his vexations, and pray for him with
- all your heart. And you shall love him in deed and in such wise that
- you shall charitably do unto him as you would that it were done unto
- yourself. And therefore you shall do him no damage by wicked words,
- nor any harm in his body, nor in his goods, nor in his soul by the
- enticement of wicked example. You shall not covet his wife, nor any
- of, his things. Understand also that in the word neighbour is included
- his enemy. Certainly man shall love his enemy, by the commandment of
- God; and truly, your friend shall you love in God. I say, you shall
- love your enemy for God's sake, and by His commandment. For if it were
- reasonable that a man should hate his enemies, then God would not
- receive us into His love, when we are His enemies. For three kinds
- of wrong that his enemy may do to a man, he shall do three things in
- return, thus: for hate and rancour, he shall love him in heart. For
- chiding and wicked words, he shall pray for his enemy. And for the
- wicked deed of his enemy, he shall do him kindness. For Christ says:
- "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them and
- pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you." Lo,
- thus Our Lord Jesus Christ commands that we do to our enemies. For
- indeed, nature drives us to love our enemies, and, faith, our
- enemies have more need for love than our friends; and they that have
- more need, truly to them men ought to do good; and truly, in the
- deed thereof have we remembrance of the love of Jesus Christ Who
- died for His enemies. And in so much as that same love is the harder
- to feel and to show, in that much is the merit the greater; and
- therefore the loving of our enemy has confounded the venom of the
- Devil. For just as the Devil is discomfited by humility, so is he
- wounded to the death by love for our enemy. Certainly, then, love is
- the medicine that purges the heart of man of the poison of envy. The
- kinds of this degree of sin will be set forth more at large in the
- paragraphs following.
-
- SEQUITUR DE IRA
-
- After envy will I describe the sin of anger. For truly, whoso has
- envy of his neighbour will generally find himself showing anger, in
- word or in deed, against him whom he envies. And anger comes as well
- from pride as from envy; for certainly, he that is proud or envious is
- easily angered.
- This sin of anger, according to Saint Augustine, is a wicked
- determination to be avenged by word or by deed. Anger, according to
- the philosopher, is the hot blood of man quickened in his heart,
- because of which he wishes to harm him whom he hates. For truly, the
- heart of man, by the heating and stirring of his blood, grows so
- disturbed that he is put out of all ability to judge reasonably. But
- you shall understand that anger manifests itself in two manners; one
- of them is good, the other bad. The good anger is caused by zeal for
- goodness, whereof a man is enraged by wickedness and against
- wickedness; and thereupon a wise man says that "Anger is better than
- play." This anger is gentle and without bitterness; not felt against
- the man, but against the misdeed of the man, as the Prophet David
- says: Irascimini et nolite peccare. Now understand, that wicked
- anger is manifested in two manners, that is to say, sudden or hasty
- anger, without the advice and counsel of reason. The meaning and the
- sense of this is, that the reason of man consents not to this sudden
- anger, and so it is venial. Another anger is full wicked, which
- comes of sullenness of heart, with malice aforethought and with wicked
- determination to take vengeance, and to which reason assents; and
- this, truly, is mortal sin. This form of anger is so displeasing to
- God that it troubles His house and drives the Holy Ghost out of
- man's soul, and wastes and destroys the likeness of God, that is to
- say, the virtue that is in man's soul; and it puts within him the
- likeness of the Devil, and takes the man away from God, his rightful
- Lord. This form of anger is a great joy to the Devil; for it is the
- Devil's furnace, heated with the fire of Hell. For certainly, just
- as fire is the mightiest of earth engines of destruction, just so
- ire is mightiest to destroy things spiritual. Observe how a fire of
- smouldering coals, almost extinct under the ashes, will quicken
- again when touched by brimstone; just so will anger quicken again when
- it is touched by the pride that lies hidden in man's heart. For
- certainly fire cannot come from nothing, but must first be naturally
- dormant within a thing, as it is drawn out of flints with steel. And
- just as pride is often the matter of which anger is made, just so is
- rancour the nurse and keeper of anger. There is a kind of tree, as
- Saint Isidore says, which, when men make a fire of the wood of it, and
- then cover over the coals with ashes, truly the embers will live and
- last a year or more. And just so fares it with rancour; when it is
- once conceived in the hearts of some men, certainly it will last,
- perchance, from one Easter-day to another Easter-day, and longer.
- But truly, such men are very far from the mercy of God all that while.
- In this aforesaid Devil's furnace there are forged three evils:
- pride that ever fans and increases the fire by chiding and wicked
- words. Then stands up envy and holds the hot iron upon the heart of
- man with a pair of long tongs of abiding rancour. And then stands up
- the sin of contumely, or strife and wrangling, and strikes and hammers
- with villainous reproaches. Certainly, this cursed sin injures both
- the man who does it and his neighbour. For truly, almost all the
- harm that any man does to his neighbour comes from wrath. For
- certainly, outrageous wrath does all that the Devil orders; for it
- spares neither Christ nor His Sweet Mother. And in his outrageous
- anger and ire, alas! full many a one at that time feels in his heart
- right wickedly, both as to Christ and as to His saints. Is not this
- a cursed vice? Yes, certainly. Alas! It takes from man his wit and his
- reason and all the kindly spiritual life that should guard his soul.
- Certainly, it takes away also God's due authority, and that is man's
- soul and the love of his neighbour. It strives always against truth,
- also. It bereaves him of the peace of his heart and subverts his soul.
- From anger come these stinking engenderings: first hate, which is
- old wrath; discord, by which a man forsakes his old friend whom he has
- long loved. And then come strife and every kind of wrong that man does
- to his neighbour, in body or in goods. Of this cursed sin of anger
- comes manslaughter also. And understand well that homicide,
- manslaughter, that is, is of different kinds. Some kinds of homicide
- are spiritual, and some are bodily. Spiritual manslaughter lies in six
- things. First, hate; and as Saint John says: "He that hateth his
- brother committeth homicide." Homicide is also accomplished by
- backbiting; and of backbiters Solomon says that "They have two
- swords wherewith they slay their neighbours." For truly, it is as
- wicked to take away a man's good name as his life. Homicide consists
- also in the giving of wicked counsel deceitfully, as in counselling
- one to levy wrongful duties and taxes. And Solomon says that cruel
- masters are like roaring lions and hungry bears, in withholding or
- diminishing the wages (or the hire) of servants; or else in usury;
- or in withholding alms from poor folk. As to which the wise man
- says: "Feed him who is dying of hunger." For indeed, unless you feed
- him, you slay him; and all these are mortal sins. Bodily homicide is
- when you slay a man with your tongue is some manner; as when you
- give command to slay a man, or else counsel him to the slaying of
- another. Homicide, in deed is in four manners. One is by law; as
- when a judge condemns a culpable man to death. But let the judge
- take care that he do it rightfully, and that he do it not for
- delight in the spilling out of blood, but only for the doing of
- justice. Another kind of homicide is that which is done by
- necessity, as when one man slays another in his own defence, and
- when he may not otherwise escape his own death. But certainly, if he
- may escape without killing his adversary, and yet slays him, he
- commits sin, and he shall bear the punishment for mortal sin. Also, if
- a man by force of circumstances, or by chance, shoot an arrow or
- cast a stone with which he kill a man, he commits homicide. Also, if a
- woman negligently overlie her child in her sleep, it is homicide and
- mortal sin. Also, when a man interferes with the conception of a
- child, and makes a woman barren by the drinking of poisonous drugs,
- whereby she cannot conceive, or slays an unborn child deliberately, by
- drugs or by the introduction of certain substances into her secret
- parts with intent to slay the child; or does any unnatural sin whereby
- man or woman spill his or her fluid in such manner or in such place as
- a child cannot be conceived; or if a woman, having conceived, so
- hurt herself that she slays her child, it is homicide. What do we
- say of women that murder their children for dread of worldly shame?
- Certainly, such a one is called a horrible homicide. Homicide it is,
- also, if a man approach a woman by desire of lechery, through the
- accomplishing of which her child is killed in the womb, or strike a
- woman knowingly in such manner that she is caused to miscarry and lose
- her child. All these constitute homicide and are horrible mortal sins.
- Besides' there come from anger many more sins, as well of word as of
- thought and of deed; as that of accusing God of, or blaming God for, a
- thing of which a man is himself guilty; or despising God and all His
- saints, as do wicked gamblers in divers countries. They do this cursed
- sin when they feel in their heart a great wickedness toward God and
- His saints. Also, they do it when they treat irreverently the
- sacraments of the altar, and then the sin is so great that scarcely
- may it be forgiven, save that the mercy of God passes all His works;
- it is so great and He is so benign. Then comes of anger, venomous
- anger; when a man is sharply admonished after confession to forgo
- his sin, then will he be angry and will answer scornfully and angrily,
- and will defend or excuse his sin as the result of the weakness of his
- flesh; or else he did it to keep the good will of his fellows, or
- else, he'll say, the Fiend enticed him; or else he did it because of
- his youth, or else his temperament is so mettled that he could not
- forbear; or else it was his destiny, as he says, until a certain
- age; or else, he says, it comes to him out of the breeding of his
- ancestors; and suchlike things. All this kind of folk so wrap
- themselves in their sins that they will not deliver themselves. For
- truly, no man that excuses himself for his sin may be shriven of it
- until he meekly acknowledges it. After this, then comes swearing,
- which is expressly against the commandment of God; and this comes
- often of anger and ire. God says: "Thou shalt not take the name of the
- Lord thy God in vain." Also, Our Lord Jesus Christ says, through Saint
- Matthew: "Nolite iurare omnino: neither by Heaven; for it is God's
- throne: nor by the earth; for it is His footstool: neither by
- Jerusalem; for it is the city of the great King. Neither shalt thou
- swear by thy head, because thou canst not make one hair white or
- black: but let your communication be, yea, yea, nay; for whatsoever is
- more than these, cometh of evil." For Christ's sake, swear not so
- sinfully, thus dismembering Christ by soul, heart, bones, and body.
- For indeed it seems that you think that the cursed Jews did not
- dismember enough the precious body of Christ, since you dismember
- Him even more. And if it be that the law compel you to swear, then
- be governed by the rule of the law in your swearing, as Jeremiah says,
- quarto capitulo: "Iurabis, in veritate, in iudicio et in iusticia:
- thou shalt swear, the Lord liveth, in truth, in judgment, and in
- righteousness." That is to say, you shall swear truth, for every lie
- is against Christ. For Christ is utter truth. And think well on
- this, that every great swearer, not by law compelled to swear, the
- plague will not depart from his house while he continues to indulge in
- such forbidden swearing. You shall swear for the sake of justice also,
- when you are constrained by your judge to bear witness to the truth.
- Also, you shall swear not for envy, nor for favour, nor for reward,
- but for righteousness; for the declaring of it to the honour of God
- and the helping of your fellow Christian. And therefore, every man
- that takes God's name in vain, or falsely swears by word of mouth,
- or takes upon him the name of Christ that he may be called a Christian
- man, and who lives not in accordance with Christ's example of living
- and with His teaching, all they take God's name in vain. Behold,
- too, what Saint Peter says, Actuum, quarto capitulo: "Non est aliud
- nomen sub celo, etc. There is none other name under Heaven given among
- men whereby we must be saved." That is to say, save the name of
- Jesus Christ. Take heed also how in the precious name of Christ, as
- Saint Paul says ad Philipensess secundo: "In nomine Iesu, etc. In
- the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in Heaven, and
- things in earth, and things under the earth." For it is so high and so
- worshipful that the cursed Fiend in Hell must tremble to hear it
- named.
- Then it appears that men who swear so horribly by His blessed name
- despise Him more boldly than all the cursed Jews, or even than the
- Devil, who trembles when he hears His name.
- Now, certainly, since swearing, unless it be lawfully done, is so
- strictly forbidden, much worse is false swearing, and it is needless.
- What shall we say of those that delight in swearing and hold it
- for an act of the gentry, or a manly thing, to swear great oaths?
- And what of those that, of very habit, cease not to swear great oaths,
- though the reason therefor be not worth a straw? Certainly this is a
- horrible sin. Swearing suddenly and thoughtlessly is also a sin. But
- let us pass now to that horrible swearing of adjuration and
- conjuration, as do these false enchanters or necromancers in basins
- full of water, or in a bright sword, in a circle, or in a fire, or
- in a shoulder-bone of a sheep. I can say nothing, save that they do
- wickedly and damnably against Christ and all the faith of Holy Church.
- What shall we say of those that believe in divinations, as by the
- flying or the crying of birds, or of beasts, or by chance, by
- geomancy, by dreams, by creaking of doors, by cracking of houses, by
- gnawing of rats; and such kinds of wickedness? Certainly, all these
- things are forbidden by God and by all Holy Church. For which they are
- accursed, until they repent and mend their ways, who set their beliefs
- in such filth. Charms against wounds or maladies in men or in
- beasts, if they have any effect, it may be, peradventure, that God
- permits it that folk shall have the more faith in Him and the more
- reverence unto His name.
- Now will I speak of lying, which generally is the using of words
- in false signification with intent to deceive one's fellow
- Christian. Some lying there is whereof there comes no advantage to
- anyone; and some lying is done for the ease and profit of one man, and
- to the uneasiness and damage of another man. Another kind of lying
- is done to save one's life or chattels. Another kind of lying is
- born of mere delight in lying, for which delight they will fabricate a
- long tale and adorn it with all circumstances, where all the
- groundwork of the tale is false. Some lying is done because one
- would maintain his previous word; and some lying is done out of
- recklessness, without forethought; and for similar reasons.
- Let us now touch upon the vice of flattering, which comes not gladly
- from the heart, but for fear or for covetousness. Flattery is
- generally unearned praise. Flatterers are the Devil's nurses, who
- nurse his children with the milk of adulation. Forsooth, as Solomon
- says, "Flattery is worse than detraction." For sometimes detraction
- causes a haughty man to be more humble, for he fears detraction; but
- certainly flattery- that causes a man to exalt his heart and his
- bearing. Flatterers are the Devil's enchanters, for they cause a man
- to think of himself that he is like what he is not like. They are like
- Judas who betrayed God; for these flatterers betray a man in order
- to sell him out to his enemy, that is, to the Devil. Flatterers are
- the Devil's chaplains, that continually sing Placebo. I reckon
- flattery among the vices of anger; for oftentimes, if one man be
- enraged at another, then will he flatter some other to gain an ally in
- his quarrel.
- Let us speak now of such cursing as comes from an angry heart.
- Execration generally may be said to embrace every kind of evil. Such
- cursing deprives a man of the Kingdom of God, as says Saint Paul.
- And oftentimes such cursing returns again upon the head of him that
- curses, like a bird that returns again to its own nest. And above
- all things men ought to eschew the cursing of their children, and
- the giving to the Devil of their progeny, so far as they may;
- certainly it is a great danger and a great sin.
- Let us now speak of chiding and reproaching, which are great evils
- in man's heart; for they rip up the seams of friendship in man's
- heart. For truly, a man can hardly be reconciled with him that has
- openly reviled and slandered him. This is a terrible sin, as Christ
- says in the gospel. And note now that he who reproaches his neighbour,
- either he reproaches him for some painful evil that he has in his
- body, as with "leper" or "hunchbacked scoundrel," or by some sin
- that he does. Now, if he reproach him for a painful evil, then the
- reproach is turned upon Jesus Christ; for pain is sent, as the
- righteous giving of God, and by His permission, be it of leprosy or
- malady or bodily imperfection. And if he reproach him uncharitably for
- sin, as with "you whoremonger," "you drunken scoundrel," and so forth,
- then that appertains to the rejoicing of the Devil, who is ever
- rejoiced when men sin. And truly, chiding may not come, save out of
- a sinful heart. For according to the abundance of what is in the heart
- the mouth speaks. And you shall understand that when any man would
- correct another, let him beware of chiding or reproaching. For
- truly, save he beware, he may easily quicken the fire of anger and
- wrath, which he should quench, and perhaps will slay him whom he might
- have corrected gently. For, as Solomon says, "the amiable tongue is
- the tree of life," which is to say, of the spiritual life; and in
- sooth, a foul tongue drains the vital forces of him that reproaches,
- and also of him that is reproached. Behold what Saint Augustine
- says: "There is nothing so like the Devil's child as he that chideth."
- Saint Paul says, too: "The servant of the Lord must not strive." And
- though bickering be a sinful thing as between all kinds of folk,
- certainly it is most unsuitable between a man and his wife; for
- there is never rest there. Thereupon Solomon says: "A continual
- dropping in a very rainy day, and a contentious woman, are alike." A
- man who is in a house, the roof whereof leaks in many places, though
- he avoid the dripping in one place, it finds him in another; and so
- fares he who has a chiding wife. If she cannot scold him in one place,
- she will scold him in another. And therefore, "Better is a dinner of
- herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith," says
- Solomon. Saint Paul says: "Wives, submit yourselves unto your
- husbands, as it is fit in the Lord. Husbands, love your wives, and
- be not bitter against them." Ad Colossensess, tertio.
- After that, let us speak of scorn, which is a wicked sin; especially
- when one scorns a man for his good works. For truly, such scorners are
- like the foul toad, which cannot bear to smell the sweet odour of
- the vine when it blossoms. These scorners are fellowpartakers with the
- Devil; for they rejoice when the Devil wins and sorrow when he
- loses. They are adversaries of Jesus Christ; for they hate what He
- loves, that is to say, the salvation of souls.
- Now will we speak of wicked counsel; for he that gives wicked
- counsel is a traitor. For he deceives him that trusts in him, ut
- Achitofel ad Absolonem. Nevertheless, his wicked counsel first harms
- himself. For, as the wise man says, every false person living has
- within himself this peculiarity, that he who would harm another
- harms first himself. And men should understand that they should take
- counsel not of false folk, nor of angry folk, nor of vexatious folk
- nor of folk that love too much their own advantage, nor of too worldly
- folk, especially in the counselling of souls.
- Now comes the sin of those that sow discord amongst folk, which is a
- sin that Christ utterly hates; and no wonder. For He died to establish
- concord on earth. And more shame do they do to Christ than did those
- that crucified Him; for God loves better that friendliness be among
- men than He loved His own body, the which He gave for the sake of
- unity. Therefore they are like the Devil, who ever goes about to
- make discord.
- Now comes the sin of the double-tongued; such as speak fairly before
- folk, and wickedly behind; or they make a semblance of speaking with
- good intention, or in jest and play, and yet they speak with evil
- intention.
- Now comes betraying of confidence, whereby a man is defamed:
- truly, the damage so done may scarcely be repaired.
- Now comes menacing, which is an open folly; for he that often
- menaces, he often threatens more than he can perform.
- Now come idle words, which sin is without profit to him that
- speaks and also to him that listens. Or else idle words are those that
- are needless, or without an aim toward any profit. And although idle
- words are at times but a venial sin, yet men should distrust them; for
- we shall have to account for them before God.
- Now comes chattering, which cannot occur without sin. And, as
- Solomon says, "It is a sin of manifest folly." And therefore a
- philosopher said, when men asked him how to please the people: "Do
- many good deeds and chatter but little."
- After this comes the sin of jesters, who are the Devil's apes. For
- they make folk laugh at their buffoonery, as they do at the pranks
- of an ape. Such clownings were forbidden by Saint Paul. Behold how
- virtuous and holy words give comfort to those that labour in the
- service of Christ; just so the sinful words and tricks of jesters
- and jokers comfort those that travail in the service of the Devil.
- These are the sins that come by way of the tongue, and from anger
- and many other sins.
-
-
- SEQUITUR REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM IRE
-
- The remedy for anger is a virtue which men call mansuetude, which is
- gentleness; and even another virtue which men call patience or
- tolerance.
- Gentleness withholds and restrains the stirrings and the urgings
- of man's impetuosity in his heart in such manner that it leaps not out
- in anger or in ire. Tolerance suffers sweetly all the annoyances and
- wrongs that men do to men bodily. Saint Jerome says thus of
- gentleness, that "it does harm to no one, nor says harm; nor for any
- harm that men do or say does it chafe against reason." This virtue
- is sometimes naturally implanted; for, as says the philosopher: "A man
- is a living thing, by nature gentle and tractable to goodness; but
- when gentleness is informed of grace, then is it worth the more."
- Patience, which is another remedy against anger, is a virtue that
- suffers sweetly man's goodness, and is not wroth for harm done to
- it. The philosopher says that "patience is that virtue which suffers
- meekly all the outrages of adversity and every wicked word." This
- virtue makes a man god-like and makes him God's own dear child, as
- Christ says. This virtue discomfits one's enemy. And thereupon the
- wise man says: "If thou wilt vanquish thy enemy, learn to endure." And
- you shall understand that man suffers four kinds of grievances from
- outward things, against the which he must have four kinds of patience.
- The first grievance is of wicked words; this suffered Jesus Christ
- without grumbling, and patiently, when the Jews many times
- reproached Him and showed how they despised Him. Suffer patiently,
- therefore, for the wise man says: "If thou strive with a fool,
- though the fool be wroth or though he laugh, nevertheless thou shalt
- have no rest." Another outward grievance is to suffer damage in
- one's chattels. In that Christ endured patiently when He was despoiled
- of all that He had in the world, that being His clothing.
- The third grievance is for a man to suffer injury in his body. That,
- Christ endured full patiently throughout all His passion. The fourth
- grievance is in extravagant labour. Wherefore I say that folk who make
- their servants labour too grievously, or out of the proper time, as on
- holidays, truly they do great sin. Thereof endured Christ full
- patiently, and taught us patience when He bore upon His blessed
- shoulder the cross whereon He was to suffer a pitiless death. Hereof
- may men learn to be patient; for certainly, not only Christian men
- should be patient for love of Jesus Christ, and for the reward of
- the blessed life everlasting, but even the old pagans, who never
- were Christians, commended and practised the virtue of patience.
- Upon a time a philosopher would have beaten a disciple for his great
- misdoing, at which the philosopher had been much annoyed; and he
- brought a rod wherewith to scourge the youth; and when the youth saw
- the rod he said to his master: "What do you intend to do?" "I will
- beat you," said the master, "for your correction." "Forsooth," said
- the youth, "you ought first to correct yourself who have lost all your
- patience at the offence of a child." "Forsooth," said the master,
- weeping, "you say truth; take the rod yourself, my dear son, and
- correct me for my impatience." From patience comes obedience,
- whereby a man becomes obedient to Christ and to all to whom he owes
- obedience in Christ. And understand well that obedience is perfect
- when a man does gladly and speedily, with entire good heart, all
- that he should do. Obedience, generally, is to put into practice the
- doctrine of God and of man's masters, to whom he ought to be humble in
- all righteousness.
-
- SEQUITUR DE ACCIDIA
-
- After the sins of envy and of anger, now will I speak of the sin
- of acedia, or sloth. For envy blinds the heart of a man and anger
- troubles a man; and acedia makes him heavy, thoughtful, and peevish.
- Envy and anger cause bitterness of heart; which bitterness is the
- mother of acedia, and takes from a man the love of all goodness.
- Then is acedia the anguish of a troubled heart; and Saint Augustine
- says: "It is the sadness of goodness and the joy of evil." Certainly
- this is a damnable sin; for it wrongs Jesus Christ in as much as it
- lessens the service that men ought to give to Christ with due
- diligence, as says Solomon. But sloth has no such diligence; it does
- everything sadly and with peevishness, slackness, and false
- excusing, and with slovenliness and unwillingness; for which the
- Book says: "Accursed be he that serveth God negligently." Then
- acedia is the enemy to every state of man; for indeed the state of man
- is in three degrees. One is the state of innocence, as was the
- condition of Adam before he fell into sin; in which state he was
- maintained to praise and adore his God. Another state is the condition
- of sinful men wherein they are obliged to labour in praying to God for
- the amendment of their sins. Another state is the condition of
- grace, in which condition man is bound to acts of penitence; and
- truly, to all these things acedia is the enemy and the opposite. For
- it loves no busyness at all. Now certainly this foul sin of acedia
- is also a great enemy to the livelihood of the body; for it makes no
- provision for temporal necessity; for it wastes, and it allows
- things to spoil, and it destroys all worldly wealth by its
- carelessness.
- The fourth thing is that acedia is like those who are in the pain of
- Hell, because of their sloth and their sluggardliness; for those
- that are damned are so bound that they may neither do well nor think
- well. First of all, from the sin of acedia it happens that a man is
- too sad and hindered to be able to do anything good, wherefore God
- abominates acedia, as says Saint John.
- Then comes that kind of sloth that will endure no hardship nor any
- penance. For truly, sloth is so tender and so delicate, as Solomon
- says, that it will endure no hardship or penance, and therefore it
- spoils everything that it attempts to do. To combat this
- rotten-hearted sin of acedia or sloth, men should be diligent to do
- good works and manfully and virtuously to come by the determination to
- do well; remembering that Our Lord Jesus Christ rewards every good
- deed, be it ever so little. The habit of labour is a great thing; for,
- as Saint Bernard says, it gives the labourer strong arms and hard
- thews, whereas sloth makes them feeble and tender. Then arises the
- dread of beginning to do any good deeds; for certainly, he that is
- inclined toward sin, he thinks it is so great an enterprise to start
- any works of goodness, and tells himself in his heart that the
- circumstances having to do with goodness are so wearisome and
- burdensome to endure, that he dare not undertake any such works, as
- says Saint Gregory.
- Now enters despair, which is despair of the mercy of God, and
- comes sometimes of too extravagant sorrows and sometimes of too
- great fear: for the victim imagines that he has done so much sin
- that it will avail him not to repent and forgo sin; because of which
- fear he abandons his heart to every kind of sin, as Saint Augustine
- says. This damnable sin, if it be indulged to the end, is called
- sinning in the Holy Ghost. This horrible sin is so dangerous that,
- as for him that is so desperate, there is no felony or sin that he
- hesitates to do; as was well showed by Judas. Certainly, then, above
- all other sins, this sin is most displeasing to Christ, and most
- hateful. Truly he that grows so desperate is like the cowardly and
- recreant combatant that yields before he is beaten, and when there
- is no need. Alas, alas! Needlessly is he recreant and needlessly in
- despair. Certainly the mercy of God is always available to every
- penitent, and this is the greatest of all God's works. Alas! Cannot
- a man bethink him of the gospel of Saint Luke, 15, wherein Christ
- says: "Joy shall be in Heaven over one sinner that repenteth more than
- over ninety and nine just persons which need no repentance." Behold
- further, in the same gospel, the joy of and the feast given by the
- good man who had lost his son, when his son, repentant, returned to
- his father. Can they not remember, also, that, as Saint Luke says,
- XXIII capitulo, the thief who was hanged beside Jesus Christ said:
- "Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy Kingdom." "Verily,"
- said Christ, "I say unto thee, today shalt thou be with me in
- Paradise." Certainly, there is no such horrible sin of man that it may
- not be, in his lifetime, destroyed by penitence, by virtue of the
- passion and the death of Jesus Christ. Alas! Why then need a man
- despair, since mercy is so ready and so great? Ask, and it shall be
- given unto you. Then enters somnolence, that is to say, sluggish
- slumbering, which makes a man heavy and dull in body and in soul;
- and this sin comes from sloth. And truly, the time that a man should
- not sleep, in all reason, is the early morning, unless there be a
- reasonable necessity. For verily the morningtide is most suitable
- for a man to say his prayers, and to meditate on God and to honour
- God, and to give alms to the poor person who first asks in the name of
- Christ. Behold what Solomon says: "Whoso would awake in the dawn and
- seek me, me shall he find." Then enters negligence, or carelessness,
- that recks of nothing. And if ignorance is the mother of all evil,
- certainly then negligence is the nurse. Negligence cares not, when
- it must do a thing, whether it be well done or badly.
- As to the remedies for these two sins, as the wise man says: "He
- that fears God spares not to do that which he ought." And he that
- loves God, he will be diligent to please God by his works, and will
- exert himself, with all his might, to do well. Then enters idleness,
- which is the gate to all evils. An idle man is like a house that has
- no walls; the devils may enter on every side and shoot at him, he
- being thus unprotected, and tempt him on every side. This idleness
- is the sink of all wicked and villainous thoughts, and of all idle
- chattering, and trifles, and of all filthiness. Certainly Heaven is
- for those that labour, and not for idle folk. Also, David says:
- "They are not among the harvest of men and they shall not be
- threshed with men," which is to say, in Purgatory. Certainly, then, it
- appears that they shall be tormented by the Devil in Hell, unless they
- soon repent.
- Then enters the sin that men call tarditas, which is when a man is
- too tardy or too long-tarrying before he turns unto God; and certainly
- this is a great folly. He is like one that falls in the ditch and will
- not arise. And this vice comes of a false hope whereunder a man
- comes to think that he shall live long; but that hope full often fails
- him.
- Then comes laziness; that is when a man begins any work and anon
- forgoes it and holds his hand; as do those who have anyone to govern
- and who take no care of him as soon as they find any difficulty or
- annoyance. These are the modern shepherds who knowingly allow their
- sheep to run to the wolf in the briers, or have no care for their
- governing. Of this come poverty and the destruction of both
- spiritual and temporal things. Then comes a kind of dull coldness that
- freezes the heart of man. Then comes lack of devotion, whereby a man
- is so blinded, as Saint Bernard says, and has such languor of soul,
- that he may not read or sing in holy church, nor hear or think of
- anything devout, nor toil with his hands at any good work, without the
- labour being unsavoury and vapid to him. Then he grows slow and
- slumbery, and is easily angered and is easily inclined toward hate and
- envy. Then comes the sin of worldly sorrow, such as is called
- tristicia, which slays men, as Saint Paul says. For, verily, such
- sorrow works the death of the soul and of the body also; for thereof
- it comes to pass that a man is bored by his own life. Wherefore such
- sadness full often shortens a man's life before his time has naturally
- come.
-
-
-
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM ACCIDIE
-
- Against this horrible sin of acedia, and the branches thereof, there
- is a virtue that is called fortitudo or strength; that is, a force
- of character whereby a man despises annoying things. This virtue is so
- mighty and so vigorous that it dares to withstand sturdily, and wisely
- to keep itself from dangers that are wicked, and to wrestle against
- the assaults of the Devil. For it enhances and strengthens the soul,
- just as acedia reduces it and makes it feeble. For this fortitudo
- can endure, by long suffering, the toils that are fitting.
- This virtue has many species; and the first is called magnanimity,
- which is to say, great-heartedness. For certainly a great heart is
- needed against acedia, lest it swallow up the soul by the sin of
- sadness, or destroy it by despair. This virtue causes folk to
- undertake hard things, or grievous things, of their own initiative,
- wisely and reasonably. And for as much as the Devil fights a man
- more by craft and by trickery than by strength, therefore men may
- withstand him by wit and by reason and by discretion. Then there are
- the virtues of faith and of hope in God and in His saints, to
- achieve and accomplish the good works in which one firmly purposes
- to continue. Then comes security and certainness; and that is when a
- man shall not doubt, in time to come. the value of the toil of the
- good works that he has begun. Then comes munificence, which is to say,
- that virtue whereby a man performs great works of goodness that he has
- begun; and that is the goal to reach which men should do good works;
- for in the doing of great good works lies the great reward. Then there
- is constancy, that is, stability of purpose, and this should be
- evidenced in heart by steadfast faith, and in word and in attitude and
- in appearance and in deed. Also, there are other special remedies
- against acedia or sloth, in divers works, and in consideration of
- the pains of Hell and of the joys of Heaven, and in faith in the grace
- of the Holy Ghost, that will give to a man the strength wherewith to
- perform his good purpose.
-
- SEQUITUR DE AVARICIA
-
- After acedia I will speak of avarice and of covetousness, of which
- sin Saint Paul says that "The love of money is the root of all
- evil:" ad Timotheum, sexto capitulo. For verily, when the heart of a
- man is confounded within itself, and troubled, and when the soul has
- lost the comforting of God, then seeks a man a vain solace in
- worldly things.
- Avarice, according to the description of Saint Augustine, is the
- eagerness of the heart to have earthly things. Others say that avarice
- is the desire to acquire earthly goods and give nothing to those
- that need. And understand that avarice consists not only of greed
- for land and chattels, but sometimes for learning and for glory, and
- for every kind of immoderate thing. And the difference between avarice
- and covetousness is this. Covetousness is to covet such things as
- one has not; and avarice is to keep and withhold such things as one
- has when there is no need to do so. Truly, this avarice is a sin
- that is very damnable; for all holy writ condemns it and inveighs
- against that vice; for it does wrong to Jesus Christ. For it takes
- away from Him the love that men owe to Him and turns it backward,
- and this against all reason; and it causes that an avaricious man
- has more hope in his chattels than in Jesus Christ and is more
- diligent in the guarding and keeping of his treasure than in the
- service of Jesus Christ. And therefore Saint Paul says, ad Ephesios,
- quinto, that "this ye know, that no... covetous man, who is an
- idolater, hath any inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and of God."
- What difference is there between an idolater and an avaricious
- man, save that an idolater, peradventure, has but one idol and the
- avaricious man has many? For verily, every florin in his coffer is his
- idol. And certainly the sin of idolatry is the first thing that God
- forbids in the ten commandments, as witnesses Exodi, capitulo XX:
- "Thou shalt have no other gods before me, thou shalt not make unto
- thee any graven image." Thus an avaricious man, who loves his treasure
- more than God, is an idolater, by reason of this cursed sin of
- avarice. Of covetousness come these hard exactions whereunder men
- are assessed and made to pay taxes, rents, and payments in lieu of
- service, more than duty requires or reason demands. Also, they take
- from their serfs amercements that might more reasonably be called
- extortions than amercements. As to which amercements and fines of
- serfs, some lords' stewards say that it is just, because a churl has
- no temporal thing that does not belong to his lord, or so they say.
- But certainly these lordships do wrong that take away from their serfs
- things that they never gave them, Augustinus de Civitate, libro
- nono. The truth is that the condition of serfdom is a sin: Genesis,
- quinto.
- Thus may you see that man's sin deserves thralldom, but man's origin
- does not. Wherefore these lords should not greatly glorify
- themselves in their lordships, since by natural condition, or
- origin, they are not lords of thralls; but thralldom came into being
- first as the desert of sin. And furthermore, whereas the law says that
- the temporal effects of bondmen are the property of their lords,
- verily, by that is to be understood, the property of the emperor,
- who defends them in their rights, but who has no right to rob or to
- plunder them. And thereupon says Seneca: "Thy prudence should cause
- thee to live benignly with thy slaves." Those whom you call your serfs
- are God's people; for humble folk are Christ's friends; they are at
- home in the house of the Lord.
- Think, also, that such seed as churls come from, from such seed come
- the lords. As easily may the churl be saved as the lord. The same
- death that takes the churl takes the lord. Wherefore I advise you to
- do unto your churl as you would that your lord should do unto you,
- if you were in the churl's plight. Every sinful man is a serf to
- sin. I advise you, verily, that you, lord, act in such wise with
- your serfs that they shall rather love you than fear. I know well that
- there is degree above degree, and that this is reasonable; and
- reasonable it is that men should pay their duty where it is due;
- but, certainly, extortions and contempt for underlings is damnable.
- And furthermore, understand well that conquerors or tyrants often
- make thralls of those who were born of as royal blood as those who
- have conquered. This word of thralldom was unknown until Noah said
- that his grandson Canaan should be servant to his brethren for his
- sin. What say we then of those that plunder and extort money from Holy
- Church? Certainly, the sword which men give to a knight when he is
- dubbed, signifies that he should defend Holy Church and not rob or
- pillage it; and whoever does so is a traitor to Christ. And, as
- Saint Augustine says: "They are the Devil's wolves that pull down
- the sheep of Jesus Christ." And they do worse than wolves. For
- truly, when the wolf has filled his belly, he ceases to kill sheep.
- But truly, the plunderers and destroyers of God's Holy Church do not
- so, for they never cease to pillage. Now, as I have said, since it was
- because sin was the first cause of thralldom, then it stands thus:
- that all the while all the world was in sin, it was in thralldom and
- subjection. But certainly, since the time of grace came, God
- ordained that some folk should be higher in rank and state and some
- folk lower, and that each should be served according to his rank and
- his state. And therefore, in some countries, where they buy slaves,
- when they have converted them to the faith, they set their slaves free
- from slavery. And therefore, certainly, the lord owes to his man
- that which the man owes to his lord. The pope calls himself servant of
- the servants of God; but in as much as the estate of Holy Church might
- not have come into being, nor the common advantage kept, nor any peace
- and rest established on earth, unless God had ordained that some men
- should have higher rank and some lower: therefore was sovereignty
- ordained to guard and maintain and defend its underlings or its
- subjects within reason and so far as lies in its power, and not to
- destroy or to confound them. Wherefore, I say that those lords that
- are like wolves, that devour the wealth or the possessions of poor
- folk wrongfully, without mercy or measure, they shall receive, by
- the same measure that they have used toward poor folk, the mercy of
- Jesus Christ, unless they mend their ways. Now comes deceit between
- merchant and merchant. And you shall understand that trade is of two
- kinds; the one is material and the other is spiritual. The one is
- decent and lawful and the other is indecent and unlawful. Of this
- material trade, that which is decent and lawful is this: that where
- God has ordained that a kingdom or a country is sufficient unto
- itself, then it is decent and lawful that of the abundance of this
- country men should help another country that is more needy. And
- therefore there are permitted to be merchants to bring from the one
- country to the other their merchandise. That other trade, which men
- barter with fraud and treachery and deceit, with lies and with false
- oaths, is accursed and damnable. Spiritual trade is properly simony,
- which is earnest desire to buy spiritual things, that is to say,
- things that appertain to the sanctuary of God and to the cure of the
- soul. This desire, if it be that man is diligent in accomplishing
- it, even though his desire have no effect, yet it is a deadly sin; and
- if he be ordained he sins against his orders. Simony is named for
- Simon Magus, who would have bought, with temporal wealth, the gift
- that God had given, by the Holy Ghost, to Saint Peter and to the other
- apostles. And therefore you should understand that both he that buys
- and he that sells spiritual things are called simonists; be it by
- means of chattels, or by entreaty, or by fleshly asking of his
- friends- fleshly friends or spiritual friends. Fleshly friends are
- of two kinds, as kindred and other friends. Truly, if they ask for one
- who is not worthy and able, it is simony if he take the benefice;
- but if he be worthy and able, it is not. The other kind is when a
- man or woman asks folk to advance him or her, only for wicked
- fleshly affection that they may have for that person, and that is vile
- simony. But certainly, in that service for which men give spiritual
- things unto their servants, it must be understood that the service
- is honest; and also that it be done without bargaining, and that the
- person be able. For, as Saint Damasus says: "All the sins of the
- world, compared to this sin, are as naught." For it is the greatest
- sin that may be done, after that of Lucifer and Antichrist. For by
- this sin God loses the Church and the soul that He bought with His
- precious blood, because of those who give churches to those who are
- not worthy. For they put in thieves, who steal souls from Jesus Christ
- and destroy His patrimony. By reason of such unworthy priests and
- curates have ignorant men the less reverence for the sacraments of
- Holy Church; and such givers of churches put out the children of
- Christ and put in the Devil's own sons. They sell the souls that
- they watch over as lambs to the wolf that rends them. And therefore
- they shall never have any part in the pasture of lambs, that is, the
- bliss of Heaven. Now comes hazardry with its appurtenances, such as
- backgammon and raffles; whence come deceit, false oaths, chidings, and
- hatred for one's neighbours, waste of wealth, mis-spending of time,
- and sometimes homicide. Certainly, hazarders cannot be without great
- sin while they continue to practise their craft. Of avarice come
- also lying, theft, false witnessing, and false oaths. And you must
- understand that these are great sins, expressly against the
- commandments of God, as I have said. False witnessing lies in word and
- also in deed. In word, as by taking away your neighbour's good name by
- bearing false witness against him, or by depriving him of his chattels
- or his heritage by such false witnessing when you, for anger or
- reward, bear false witness or accuse him by your false witnessing,
- or else when you falsely excuse yourself. Beware, you jurymen and
- notaries! Certainly, by false witness, was Susanna in great sorrow and
- pain, as have been many others. The sin of theft is also expressly
- against God's command, and that of two kinds, corporal and
- spiritual. Corporal, as taking your neighbour's chattels against his
- will, be it by force or by fraud, be it by short lineal measure or
- by short measure of capacity. By secret swearing, and, of false
- indictments against him, and by borrowing your neighbour's goods
- with intent never to return them, and by similar things. Spiritual
- theft is sacrilege, that is to say, injuring of holy things, or of
- things sacred to Christ, and is of two kinds; by reason of the fact
- that it is a holy place, as a church or a churchyard, every vile sin
- that men do in such places may be called sacrilege, or every
- violence done in such places. Also they who withhold what of right
- belongs to Holy Church are guilty of sacrilege. And plainly and
- generally, sacrilege is to steal a holy thing from a holy place, or an
- unholy thing from a holy place, or a holy thing from an unholy place.
-
- REVELACIO CONTRA PECCATUM AVARICIE
-
- Now shall you understand that the relief for avarice is mercy and
- pity in large doses. And men might ask why mercy and pity relieve
- avarice. Certainly, the avaricious man shows no pity nor any mercy
- to the needy man; for he delights in keeping his treasure and not in
- the rescuing or relieving of his fellow Christian. And therefore
- will I speak first of mercy. Mercy, as the philosopher says, is a
- virtue whereby the feelings of a man are moved by the trouble of him
- that is in trouble. Upon which mercy follows pity and performs
- charitable works of mercy. And certainly, these things impel a man
- to the mercy of Jesus Christ- that He gave Himself for our sins, and
- suffered death for the sake of mercy, and forgave us our original
- sins; and thereby released us from the pains of Hell and lessened
- the pains of Purgatory by means of penitence, and gives us grace to do
- good, and, at the last, gives us the bliss of Heaven. The kinds of
- mercy are: to lend, and to give, and to forgive, and to set free,
- and to have pity in heart and compassion on the tribulations of
- one's fellow Christian, and also, to chasten, as need may be.
- Another kind of remedy for avarice is reasonable largess; and truly,
- here it behooves one to give consideration to the grace of Jesus
- Christ, and to one's temporal wealth, and also to the perdurable
- wealth that Christ gave to us; and to remember the death that he shall
- receive, he knows not when, where, or how, and also that he must forgo
- all, that he has, save only that which he has invested in good works.
- But for as much as some folk are immoderate, men ought to avoid
- foolish largess, which men call waste. Certainly, he that is
- prodigal gives not his wealth, but loses his wealth. Truly, that which
- he gives out of vainglory, as to minstrels and to followers, in
- order to have his renown carried about the world, he does sin
- thereby rather than gives alms. Certainly, he shamefully loses his
- wealth who seeks in the gift thereof nothing but sin. He is like a
- horse that chooses rather to drink muddy or turbid water than the
- clear water of a well. And for as much as they give where they
- should not give, to them belongs that cursing which Christ will give
- at the day of doom to those that shall be damned.
-
- SEQUITUR DE GULA
-
- After avarice comes gluttony, which also is entirely against the
- commandment of God. Gluttony is immoderate appetite to eat or to
- drink, or else to yield to the immoderate desire to eat or to drink.
- This sin corrupted all this world, as is well shown by the sin of Adam
- and Eve. Read, also, what Saint Paul says of gluttony: "For many walk,
- of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that
- they are the enemies of the cross of Christ: whose end is destruction,
- whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in their shame, who
- mind earthly things." He that is addicted to this sin of gluttony
- may withstand no other sin. He may even be in the service of all the
- vices, for it is in the Devil's treasure house that he hides himself
- and rests. This sin has many species. The first is drunkenness,
- which is the horrible sepulture of man's reason; and therefore, when a
- man is drunk he has lost his reason; and this is deadly sin. But
- truly, when a man is not used to strong drink, and perhaps knows not
- the strength of the drink, or is feeble-minded, or has toiled, for
- which reason he drinks too much, then, though he be suddenly caught by
- drink, it is not deadly sin, but venial. The second kind of gluttony
- is when the spirit of man grows turbid for drunkenness has robbed
- him of the discretion of his wit. The third kind of gluttony is when a
- man devours his food and has no correct manner of eating. The fourth
- is when, through the great abundance of his food, the humours in his
- body become distempered. The fifth is, forgetfulness caused by too
- much drinking, whereby sometimes a man forgets before the morning what
- he did last evening, or the night before.
- In another manner are distinguished the kinds of gluttony, according
- to Saint Gregory. The first is, eating before it is time to eat. The
- second is when a man gets himself too delicate food or drink. The
- third is when men eat too much, and beyond measure. The fourth is
- fastidiousness, with great attention paid to the preparation and
- dressing of food. The fifth is to eat too greedily. These are the five
- fingers of the Devil's hand wherewith he draws folk into sin.
-
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM GULE
-
- Against gluttony abstinence is the remedy, as Galen says; but I hold
- that to be not meritorious if he do it only for the health of his
- body. Saint Augustine will have it that abstinence should be practised
- for the sake of virtue and with patience. Abstinence, he says, is
- little worth unless a man have a good will thereto, and save it be
- practised in patience and charity and that men do it for God's sake
- and in hope of the bliss of Heaven.
- The companions of abstinence are temperance, which follows the
- middle course in all things; and shame, which eschews all indecency;
- and sufficiency, which seeks after no rich foods and drinks and
- cares nothing for too extravagant dressing of meats. Measure, also,
- which restrains within reason the unrestrained appetite for eating;
- sobriety, also, which restrains the luxurious desire to sit long and
- softly at meat, and because of which some folk, of their own will,
- stand, in order to spend less time at eating.
-
- SEQUITUR DE LUXURIA
-
- After gluttony, then comes lechery; for these two sins are such
- close cousins that oftentimes they will not be separated. God knows,
- this sin is unpleasing to God; for He said Himself, "Do no lechery."
- And therefore He imposed great penalties against this sin in the old
- law. If a bondwoman were taken in this sin, she should be beaten to
- death with rods. And if she were a woman of quality, she should be
- slain with stones. And if she were a bishop's daughter, she should
- be burnt, by God's commandment. Furthermore, for the sin of lechery,
- God drowned all the world by the deluge. And after that He burned five
- cities with thunderbolts and sank them into Hell.
- Let us speak, then, of that stinking sin of lechery that men call
- adultery of wedded folk, which is to say, if one of them be wedded, or
- both. Saint John says that adulterers shall be in Hell "in the lake
- which burneth with fire and brimstone"- in the fire for the lechery,
- in brimstone for the stink of their filthiness. Certainly, the
- breaking of this sacrament is a horrible thing; it was ordained by God
- Himself in Paradise, and confirmed by Jesus Christ, as witness Saint
- Matthew in the gospel: "For this cause shall a man leave father and
- mother, and shall cleave to his wife; and they twain shall be one
- flesh." This sacrament betokens the knitting together of Christ and of
- Holy Church. And not only did God forbid adultery in deed, but also He
- commanded that "thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife." This
- behest, says Saint Augustine, contains the forbidding of all desire to
- do lechery. Behold what Saint Matthew says in the gospel: "Whosoever
- looketh on a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery with her
- already in his heart." Here you may see that not only the doing of
- this sin is forbidden, but also the desire to do that sin. This
- accursed sin grievously troubles those whom it haunts. And first, it
- does harm to the soul; for it constrains it to sin and to the pain
- of everlasting death. Unto the body it is a tribulation also, for it
- drains it, and wastes and ruins it, and makes of its blood a sacrifice
- to the Field of Hell; also it wastes wealth and substance. And
- certainly, if it be a foul thing for a man to waste his wealth on
- women, it is a yet fouler thing when, for such filthiness, women spend
- on men their wealth and their substance. This sin, as says the
- prophet, robs man and woman of good name and of all honour; and it
- gives great pleasure to the Devil, for thereby won he the greater part
- of the world. And just as a merchant delights most in that trading
- whereof he reaps the greater gain, just so the Fiend delights in
- this filth.
- This is the Devil's other hand, with five fingers to catch the
- people into his slavery. The first finger is the foolish interchange
- of glances between the foolish woman and the foolish man, which
- slays just as the basilisk slays folk by the venom of its sight; for
- the lust of the eyes follows the lust of the heart. The second
- finger is vile touching in wicked manner; and thereupon Solomon says
- that he who touches and handles a woman fares like the man that
- handles the scorpion which stings and suddenly slays by its poisoning;
- even as, if any man touch warm pitch, it defiles his fingers. The
- third is vile words, which are like fire, which immediately burns
- the heart. The fourth finger is kissing; and truly he were a great
- fool who would kiss the mouth of a burning oven or of a furnace. And
- the more fools they are who kiss in vileness; for that mouth in the
- mouth of Hell; and I speak specifically of these old dotard
- whoremongers, who will yet kiss though they cannot do anything, and so
- taste them. Certainly they are like dogs, for a dog, when he passes
- a rosebush, or other bushes, though he cannot piss, yet will he
- heave up his leg and make an appearance of pissing. And as for the
- opinion of many that a man cannot sin for any lechery he does with his
- wife, certainly that opinion is wrong. God knows, a man may slay
- himself with his own knife, and make himself drunk out of his own tun.
- Certainly, be it wife, be it child, or any worldly thing that a man
- loves more than he loves God, it is his idol, and he is an idolater.
- Man should love his wife with discretion, calmly and moderately; and
- then she is as it were his sister. The fifth finger of the Devil's
- hand is the stinking act of lechery. Truly, the five fingers of
- gluttony the Fiend thrusts into the belly of a man, and with his
- five fingers of lechery he grips him by the loins in order to throw
- him into the furnace of Hell; wherein he shall have the fire and the
- everlasting worms, and weeping and wailing, sharp hunger and thirst,
- and horror of devils that shall trample all over him, without
- respite and without end. From lechery, as I said, spring divers
- branches; as fornication, which is between man and woman who are not
- married; and this is deadly sin and against nature. All that is an
- enemy to and destructive of nature is against nature. Faith, the
- reason of a man tells him well that it is mortal sin, since God
- forbade lechery. And Saint Paul gives him over to that kingdom which
- is the reward of no man save those who do mortal sin. Another sin of
- lechery is to bereave a maiden of her maidenhead; for he that so does,
- certainly, he casts a maiden out of the highest state in this
- present life and he bereaves her of that precious fruit that the
- Book calls "the hundred fruit." I can say it in no other way in
- English, but in Latin it is called centesimus fructus. Certainly, he
- that so acts is the cause of many injuries and villainies, more than
- any man can reckon; just as he sometimes is cause of all damage that
- beasts do in the field, who breaks down the hedge or the fence, just
- so does the seducer destroy that which cannot be restored. For
- truly, no more may a maidenhead be restored than an arm that has
- been smitten from the body may return thereto to grow again. She may
- have mercy, this I know well, if she does penance, but it shall
- never again be that she is uncorrupted. And though I have spoken
- somewhat of adultery, it is well to show forth more dangers that
- come of adultery, in order that men may eschew that foul sin.
- Adultery, in Latin, means to approach another man's bed, by reason
- of which those that once were one flesh abandon their bodies to
- other persons. Of this sin, as the wise man says, follow many evils.
- First, breaking of faith; and certainly, in faith lies the key to
- Christianity. And when faith is broken and lost, truly, Christianity
- stands barren and without fruit. This sin is also a theft; for theft
- commonly is to deprive a person of his own thing against his will.
- Certainly this is the vilest thievery that can be when a woman
- steals her body from her husband and gives it to her lecher to
- defile her; and steals her soul from Christ and gives it to the Devil.
- This is a fouler theft than to break into a church and steal the
- chalice; for these adulterers break into the temple of God spiritually
- and steal the vessel of grace, that is, the body and the soul, for
- which Christ will destroy them, as Saint Paul says. Truly, of this
- theft Joseph was much afraid when his master's wife besought him to
- lie with her, and he said: "Behold, my master wotteth not what is with
- me in the house, and he hath committed all that he hath to my hand:
- there is none greater in this house than I; neither hath he kept any
- thing from me but thee, because thou art his wife: how then can I do
- this great wickedness and sin against God?" Alas! All too little is
- such truth encountered nowadays. The third evil is the filth whereby
- they break the commandment of God and defame the Author of
- matrimony, Who is Christ. For certainly, in so far as the sacrament of
- marriage is so noble and honourable, so much the more is it a sin to
- break it; for God established marriage in Paradise, in the state of
- innocence, in order to multiply mankind to the service of God. And
- therefore is the breaking thereof the more grievous. Of which breaking
- come oftentimes false heirs, that wrongfully inherit. And therefore
- will Christ put them out of the Kingdom of Heaven, which is the
- heritage of good folk. From this breaking it happens oftentimes, also,
- that people wed or sin with their own kindred; and specially the
- loose-livers who haunt the brothels of prostitutes, who may be likened
- to a common privy wherein men purge themselves of their ordure. What
- shall we say, also, of whoremasters who live by the horrible sin of
- prostitution, yea, sometimes by the prostitution of their own wives
- and children, as do pimps and procurers? Certainly these are
- accursed sins. Understand also that adultery is fitly placed in the
- ten commandments between theft and homicide; for it is the greatest
- theft that can be, being theft of' body and of soul. And it is like
- homicide, for it cuts in twain and breaks asunder those that were made
- one flesh, and therefore, by the old law of God, adulterers should
- be slain. But nevertheless, by the law of Jesus Christ, which is a law
- of pity, He said to the woman who was taken in adultery and should
- have been slain with stones, according to the will of the Jews, as was
- their law: "Go," said Jesus Christ, "and have no more will to sin," or
- "will no more to do sin." Truly, the punishment of adultery is given
- to the torment of Hell, unless it be that it is hindered by penitence.
- And there are yet more branches of this wicked sin; as when one of
- them is a religious, or else both; or folk who have entered orders, as
- a sub-deacon, or deacon, or priest, or hospitaller. And ever the
- higher that he is in orders, the greater is the sin. The thing that
- greatly aggravates their sin is the breaking of the vow of chastity,
- taken when they received the order. And furthermore, the truth is that
- the office of a holy order is chief of all the treasury of God, and
- His special sign and mark of chastity, to show that those who have
- entered it are joined to chastity, which is the most precious kind
- of life there is. And these folk in orders are specially dedicated
- to God, and are of the special household of God; for which, when
- they do deadly sin, they are especially traitors to God and to His
- people; for they live on the people in order to pray for the people,
- and while they are such traitors their prayers avail the people
- nothing at all. Priests are angels, by reason of the dignity of
- their ministry; but forsooth, as Saint Paul says: "Satan himself is
- transformed into an angel of light." Truly, the priest that resorts to
- mortal sin, he may be likened to the angel of darkness transformed
- into the angel of light; he seems an angel of light, but, forsooth, he
- is an angel of darkness. Such priests are the sons of Eli, as is shown
- in the Book of the Kings, that they were the sons of Belial, that
- is, the Devil. Belial means, "without judge"; and so fare they; they
- think they are free and have no judge, any more than has a free bull
- that takes whatever cow pleases him on the farm. So act they with
- women. For just as a free bull is enough for all a farm, just so is
- a wicked priest corruption enough for all a parish, or for all a
- county. These priests, as the Book says, teach not the functions of
- priesthood to the people, and they know not God; they held
- themselves but ill satisfied, as the Book says, with the flesh that
- was boiled and offered to them and took by force the flesh that was
- raw. Certainly, so these scoundrels hold themselves not pleased with
- roasted flesh and boiled flesh, with which the people feed them in
- great reverence, but they will have the raw flesh of laymen's wives
- and of their daughters. And certainly these women that give assent
- to their rascality do great wrong to Christ and to Holy Church and all
- saints and all souls; for they bereave all these of him that should
- worship Christ and Holy Church and pray for Christian souls. And
- therefore such priests and their lemans also, who give assent to their
- lechery, have the cursing of all the Christian court, until they
- mend their ways. The third kind of adultery is sometimes practised
- between a man and his wife; and that is when they have no regard to
- their union, save only for their fleshly delight, as says Saint
- Jerome; and care for nothing but that they are come together;
- because they are married, it is all well enough, as they think. But
- over such folk the Devil has power, as said the Angel Raphael to
- Tobias; for in their union they put Jesus Christ out of mind and
- give themselves to all filthiness. The fourth kind is the coming
- together of those that are akin, or of those that are related by
- marriage, or else of those whose fathers or other kindred have had
- intercourse in the sin of lechery; this sin makes them like dogs
- that pay no heed to relationship. And certainly, kinship is of two
- kinds, either spiritual or carnal; spiritual, as when one lies with
- one's sponsor. For just as he that engenders a child is its fleshly
- father, just so is his godfather his spiritual father. For which
- reason a woman is in no less sin when she lies carnally with her
- godfather or her godson than she would be in if she coupled with her
- own fleshly brother. The fifth kind is that abominable sin whereof a
- man ought scarcely to speak or write, notwithstanding it is openly
- discussed in holy writ. This wickedness men and women do with divers
- intentions and in divers manners; but though holy writ speaks of
- such horrible sin, holy writ cannot be defiled, any more than can
- the sun that shines upon the dunghill. Another form of sin
- appertains to lechery, and that comes often to those who are virgin
- and also to those who are corrupt; and this sin men call pollution,
- which comes in four ways. Sometimes it is due to laxness of the
- body; because the humours are too rank and abundant in the body of
- man. Sometimes it is due to infirmity; because of the weakness of
- the retentive virtue, as is discussed in works on medicine.
- Sometimes it is due to a surfeit of food and drink. And sometimes it
- comes from base thoughts that were enclosed in man's mind when he fell
- asleep; which thing may not happen without sin. Because of this, men
- must govern themselves wisely, or else they may fall into grievous
- sin.
-
-
-
- REMEDIUM CONTRA PECCATUM LUXURIE
-
- Now comes the remedy for lechery, and that is, generally, chastity
- and continence, which restrain all the inordinate stirrings that
- come of fleshly desires. And ever the greater merit shall he have
- who restrains the wicked enkindlings of the ordure of this sin. And
- this is of two kinds, that is to say, chastity in marriage and
- chastity in widowhood. Now you shall understand that matrimony is
- the permitted coming together of man and of woman, who receive, by
- virtue of the sacrament, the bond of union from which they may not
- be freed in all their life, that is to say, while they both live.
- This, says the Book, is a very great sacrament. God established it, as
- I have said, in Paradise, and had Himself born into wedlock. And to
- sanctify marriage, He attended a wedding, where He turned water into
- wine, which, was the first miracle that He wrought on earth before His
- disciples. The true result of marriage is the cleansing of fornication
- and the replenishing of Holy Church with believers of good lineage;
- for that is the end of marriage; and it changes deadly sin to venial
- sin between those who are wedded, and makes one the hearts of them, as
- well as the bodies. This is true marriage, which was established by
- God ere sin began, when natural law occupied its rightful position
- in Paradise; and it was ordained that one man should have but one
- woman, and one woman but one man, as Saint Augustine says, and, that
- for many reasons.
- First, because marriage figures the union between Christ and Holy
- Church. And another is, because the man is the head of the woman; at
- any rate it has been so ordained by ordinance. For if a woman had more
- men than one, then should she have more heads than one, and that
- were a horrible thing before God; and also, a woman could not please
- too many folk at once. And also, there should never be peace or rest
- among them; for each would demand his own thing. And furthermore, no
- man should know his own get, nor who should inherit his property;
- and the woman should be the less beloved from the time that she were
- joined with many men.
- Now comes the question, How should a man conduct himself toward
- his wife? and specifically in two things, that is to say, in tolerance
- and reverence, as Christ showed when He first made woman. For He
- made her not of the head of Adam, because she should not claim to
- exercise great lordship. For wherever the woman has the mastery she
- causes too much disorder; there are needed no instances of this. The
- experience of every day ought to suffice. Also, certainly, God did not
- make woman of the foot of Adam, because she should not be held in
- too great contempt; for she cannot patiently endure: but God made
- woman of the rib of Adam, because woman should be a companion to
- man. Man should conduct himself toward his wife in faith, in truth,
- and in love; as Saint Paul says: "Husbands, love your wives, even as
- Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for it." So should a
- man give himself for his wife, if there be need.
- Now how a woman should be subject to her husband, that is told by
- Saint Peter. First, by obedience. And also, as says the law, a woman
- who is a wife, as long as she is a wife, has no authority to make oath
- or to bear witness without the consent of her husband, who is her
- lord; in any event he should be so, in reason. She should also serve
- him in all honour. and be modest in her dress. I know well that they
- should resolve to please their husbands, but not by the finery of
- their array. Saint Jerome says that wives who go apparelled in silk
- and in precious purple cannot clothe themselves in Jesus Christ. Also,
- what says Saint John on this subject? Saint Gregory, also says that
- a person seeks precious array only out of vainglory, to be honoured
- the more before the crowd. It is a great folly for a woman to have a
- fair outward appearance and inwardly to be foul. A wife should also be
- modest in glance and demeanour and in conversation, and discreet in
- all her words and deeds. And above all worldly things she should
- love her husband with her whole heart, and be true to him of her body;
- so, also, should a husband be to his wife. For since all the body is
- the husband's, so should her heart be, or else there is between
- them, in so far as that is concerned, no perfect marriage. Then
- shall men understand that for three things a man and his wife may have
- carnal coupling. The first is with intent to procreate children to the
- service of God, for certainly, that is the chief reason for matrimony.
- Another is, to pay, each of them to the other, the debt of their
- bodies, for neither of them has power over his own body. The third is,
- to avoid lechery and baseness. The fourth is, indeed, deadly sin. As
- for the first, it is meritorious; the second also, for, as the law
- says, she has the merit of chastity who pays to her husband the debt
- of her body, aye, though it be against her liking and the desire of
- her heart. The third is venial sin, and truly, hardly any of these
- unions may be without venial sin, because of the original sin and
- because of the pleasure. As to the fourth, be it understood that if
- they couple only for amorous love and for none of the aforesaid
- reasons, but merely to accomplish that burning pleasure, no matter how
- often, truly it is a mortal sin; and yet (with sorrow I say it) some
- folk are at pains to do it more and oftener than their appetite really
- demands.
- The second kind of chastity is to be a clean widow and eschew the
- embraces of man and desire the embrace of Jesus Christ. These are
- those that have been wives and have lost their husbands, and also
- women that have fornicated and have been relieved by penitence. And
- truly, if a wife could keep herself always chaste with leave and
- license of her husband, so that she should thereby give him never an
- occasion to sin, it were a great merit in her. These women that
- observe chastity must be clean in heart as well as in body and in
- thought, and modest in dress and demeanour; and be abstinent in eating
- and drinking, in speech and in deed. They are the vessel or the box of
- the blessed Magdalen, which fills Holy Church with good odour. The
- third kind of chastity is virginity, and it behooves her to be holy in
- heart and clean of body; then is she the spouse of Christ and she is
- the beloved of the angels. She is the honour of this world, and she is
- the equal of martyrs; she has within her that which tongue may not
- tell nor the heart think. Virginity bore Our Lord Jesus Christ, and
- virgin was He Himself.
- Another remedy for lechery is, specially to withhold oneself from
- such things as give rise to this baseness; as ease, and eating and
- drinking: for certainly, when the pot boils furiously, the best
- measure is to withdraw it from the fire. Sleeping long in great
- security from disturbance is also a nurse to lechery.
- Another remedy for lechery is, that a man or woman eschew the
- company of those by whom he expects to be tempted; for though it be
- that the act itself is withstood, yet there is great temptation. Truly
- a white wall, though it burn not from the setting of a candle near it,
- yet shall the wall be made black by the flame. Often and often I
- counsel that no man trust in his own perfection, save he be stronger
- than Samson and holier than David and wiser than Solomon.
- Now, since I have expounded to you, as best I could, the seven
- deadly sins, and some of their branches, and their remedies, truly, if
- I could, I would tell you of the ten commandments. But so high a
- doctrine I leave to the divines. Nevertheless, I hope to God that they
- have been touched upon in this treatise, each of them all.
-
- DE CONFESSIONE
-
- Now, for as much as the second part of penitence deals in oral
- confession, as I said in the first paragraph hereof, I say that
- Saint Augustine says: Sin is every word and every deed and all that
- men covet against the law of Jesus Christ; and that is, to sin in
- heart, in word, and in deed by one's five senses, which are sight,
- hearing, smell, taste or savour, and feeling. Now it is well to
- understand that which greatly aggravates every sin. You should
- consider what you are that do the sin, whether you are male or female,
- young or old, noble or thrall, free or servant, healthy or ailing,
- wedded or single, member of a religious order or not, wise or foolish,
- clerical or secular; whether she is of your kindred, bodily or
- spiritual, or not; whether any of your kindred has sinned with her, or
- not; and many other things.
- Another circumstance is this: whether it be done in fornication,
- or in adultery, or otherwise; incest, or not; maiden, or not; in
- manner of homicide, or not; horrible great sins, or small; and how
- long you have continued in sin. The third circumstance is the place
- where you have done the sin; whether in other men's houses, or your
- own; in field, or in church or churchyard; in a dedicated church, or
- not. For if the church be consecrated, and man or woman spill seed
- within that place, by way of sin or by wicked temptation, the church
- is interdicted till it be reconciled by the bishop; and the priest
- that did such a villainy, for the term of all his life, should
- nevermore sing mass; and if he did, he should do deadly sin every time
- that he so sang mass. The fourth circumstance is, what go-betweens, or
- what messengers, are sent for the sake of enticement, or to gain
- consent to bear company in the affair; for many a wretch, for the sake
- of companionship, will go to the Devil of Hell. Wherefore those that
- egg on to or connive for the sin are partners, in the sin, and shall
- partake of the damnation of the sinner. The fifth circumstance is, how
- many times has he sinned, if it be in his memory, and how often he has
- fallen. For he that falls often in sin, he despises the mercy of
- God, and increases his sin, and is ungrateful to Christ; and he
- grows the more feeble to withstand sin, and sins the more lightly, and
- the more slowly rises out of sin, and is the more reluctant to be
- shriven, especially by his own confessor. For the which reasons,
- when folk fall again into their old follies, either they avoid their
- old confessors altogether, or else they make parts of confession in
- divers places; but truly, such divided confessions deserve no mercy of
- God for one's sins. The sixth circumstance is, why a man sins, as by
- way of what sort of temptation; and whether he himself procured that
- temptation, or whether it came by the incitement of other folk; or
- whether he sin by forcing a woman or by her consent: or, if the sinner
- be a woman, despite all her efforts were she forced or not- this shall
- she tell; and whether for greed of gain or for stress of poverty,
- and whether it was of her own procuring, or not; and all such
- trappings. The seventh circumstance is, in what manner he has done his
- sin, or how she has suffered men to do it unto her. And the same shall
- the man tell fully, with all the circumstances; and whether he has
- sinned with common brothel-women, or not; or has done his sin in
- holy times, or not; in fasting times, or not; or before confession, or
- after his last shriving; and whether he has, peradventure, broken
- therefor his enjoined penance; by whose help and by whose counsel;
- by sorcery or cunning: all must be told. All these things, according
- as they are great or small, burden the conscience of a man. And,
- too, that the priest who is your judge shall be the better advised
- to his judgment in giving, you penance, that is, according to your
- contrition. For understand well that after a man has defiled his
- baptism by sin, if he would gain salvation, there is no other way than
- by penitence and shrift and penance; and specifically by the two, if
- there be a confessor to shrive him; and by the third if he live to
- perform it.
- Then shall a man reflect and consider that if he will make a true
- and profitable confession, there must be four conditions. First, it
- must be in sorrowful bitterness of heart, as said King Hezekiah to
- God: "I will remember all the days of my life in bitterness of heart."
- This condition of bitterness has five signs. The first is, that
- confession must be shamefaced, not to cover up nor to hide sin, for
- the sinner has offended his God and defiled his soul. And thereof
- Saint Augustine says: "The heart suffers for the shame of its sin."
- And if he has a great sense of shame, he is worthy of great mercy from
- God. Such was the confession of the publican who would not lift up his
- eyes to Heaven, for he had offended God in Heaven; for which
- shamefacedness he received straightway the mercy of God. And thereof
- says Saint Augustine that such shamefaced folk are near to forgiveness
- and remission. Another sign is humility in confession; of which
- Saint Peter says "Humble thyself beneath the might of God." The hand
- of God is mighty in confession, for thereby God forgives you your
- sins; for He alone has the power. And this humility shall be of the
- heart, and shall be manifested outwardly; for just as he has
- humility to God in his heart, just so should he humble his body
- outwardly to the priest that sits in God's place. Since Christ is
- sovereign and the priest is means and mediator between Christ and
- the sinner, and the sinner is the last, in reason, the sinner should
- nowise sit as high as his confessor, but should kneel before him, or
- at his feet, unless infirmity hinder it. For he shall care not who
- sits there, but only in whose place he sits. A man who has offended
- a lord, and who comes to ask mercy and to be at peace again, and who
- should sit down at once by the lord's side- men would hold him to be
- presumptuous and not worthy so soon to have remission or mercy. The
- third sign is, your confession should be made in tears, if a man can
- weep; and if a man cannot weep with his fleshly eyes, let him weep
- in his heart. Such was the confession of Saint Peter; for after he had
- forsaken Jesus Christ he went out and wept full bitterly. The fourth
- sign is, when the sinner forgoes not for shame to make his confession.
- Such was the confession of the Magdalen, who did not spare, for any
- shame before those who were at the feast, to go to Our Lord Jesus
- Christ and acknowledge to Him her sins. The fifth sign is, that a
- man or woman shall obediently receive the penace that is imposed for
- the sins; for certainly, Jesus Christ, for the sins of a man, was
- obedient unto death.
- The second condition of true confession is that it be speedily done;
- for truly, if a man had a dangerous wound, the longer he waited to
- cure himself the more would it fester and hasten him toward his death;
- and also the wound would be but the harder to heal. And it is even
- so with sin that is long carried in a man unconfessed. Certainly a man
- ought to confess his sins without delay, for many reasons; as, for
- fear of death, which often comes suddenly and whereof no man can
- ever be certain when it will come or in what place; and also the
- prolonging of one sin draws a man into another; and further, the
- longer he delays the farther he is from Christ. And if he live until
- his last day, scarcely then may he shrive himself or then remember his
- sins, or repent of them, because of the grievous malady about to cause
- his death. And for as much as he has not in his life hearkened unto
- Jesus Christ when He has spoken, he shall cry to Jesus Christ at the
- last and scarcely will He hear him. And understand that this condition
- must have four elements. Your shrift must be considered in advance and
- well advised upon, for wicked haste gives no profit; and that a man
- shall be able to make confession of all of his sins, be they of pride,
- or of envy, and so forth, according to the kind and the circumstances;
- and that he shall have comprehended in his mind the number and the
- greatness of his sins; and how long he has lain in sin; and also
- that he shall be contrite for his sins, and have a steadfast purpose
- that never again, by the grace of God, shall he fall into sin; and
- also that he fear and keep watch upon himself, so that he shall flee
- the occasions whereof he is tempted to sin. And you shall also
- shrive yourself of all your sins to one man, and not of some of them
- to one man and some to another; when, it is to be understood, the
- intention is to split up your shriving out of shame or fear; for
- this is but the strangling of your soul. For indeed, Jesus Christ is
- wholly good; there is no imperfection in Him; and therefore He
- perfectly forgives all, or nothing. I do not say that if you are
- sent to the director for a certain sin you are bound to show unto
- him all the rest of your sins, whereof you have been shriven by your
- own curate, save and except you wish to do so out of humility; for
- this does not constitute dividing your shrift. Nor do I say, in
- speaking of divided confession, that if you have leave to shrive
- yourself to a discreet and honest priest, where you wish to do so
- and by leave of your curate, that you may not as well shrive
- yourself to him of all your sins. But let no blot remain behind, let
- no sin be untold, so far as you have remembrance of them. And when you
- shall be shriven by your curate, tell him as well all of the sins that
- you have done since last you were shriven; and then this will be no
- wicked intention to divide confession.
- Also, true confession asks certain other conditions. First, that you
- shrive yourself of your free will, not by constraint, nor for shame,
- nor for illness, nor for any such things; for it is only reasonable
- that he who trespassed of his own free will shall as freely confess
- it, and that no other man tell his sin, but that he himself do it, nor
- shall he withhold or deny his sin, nor allow himself to become angry
- at the priest for admonishing him to leave sin. Another condition is
- that your shrift be lawful; that is to say, that you, who shrive
- yourself, and also the priest who hears your confession, be verily
- of the faith of Holy Church; and that a man be not deprived of hope of
- the mercy of Jesus Christ, as was Cain or Judas. And also a man must
- himself accuse himself for his own trespass, and not another; but he
- shall blame and reproach himself and his own malice for his sin, and
- not another; nevertheless, if another man be the occasion for or
- enticer to his sin, or the state of a person be such that because of
- that person the sin is aggravated, or else if he cannot fully shrive
- himself without telling of the person with whom he has sinned; then he
- may tell; so that the intention be not to backbite such a person,
- but only to declare fully the confession.
- Also you shall tell no lies in your confession; as to seem humble,
- perchance, in saying that you have done sins whereof you were never
- guilty. For Saint Augustine says: if thou, by reason of thy
- humility, liest against thyself, though thou wast not in sin before,
- yet art thou then in sin because of thy lying. You must also confess
- your sin with your own mouth, unless you grow dumb. and not by letter;
- for you have done the sin and you shall have the shame thereof.
- Also, you shall not embellish your confession with fair and subtle
- words, the more to cover up the sin; for then you beguile yourself and
- not the priest; you must tell it plainly, be it ever so foul or so
- horrible. You shall also shrive yourself to a priest that is
- discreet in counselling you, and moreover, you shall not shrive
- yourself for vainglory, nor hypocritically, nor for any cause other
- than the fear of Jesus Christ and the well-being of your soul. Also,
- you shall not run suddenly to the priest to tell him lightly of your
- sin, as one would tell a jest or a tale, but advisedly and with
- great devotion. And, generally speaking, shrive yourself often. If you
- fall often, then you rise by confession. And though you shrive
- yourself more than once of sin. for which you have been already
- shriven, it is the more merit. And, as Saint Augustine says, you shall
- thereby the more easily obtain release from and the grace of God, both
- as to sin and punishment. And certainly, once a year, at the least, it
- is lawful to receive the Eucharist, for truly, once a year all
- things are renewed.
-
- Explicit secunda pars penitencie;
- et sequitur tercia pars eiusdem,
- de satisfaccione
-
- Now have I told you of true confession, which is the second part
- of penitence. The third part of penitence is expiation; and that is
- generally achieved through alms-giving and bodily pain. Now there
- are three kinds of alms-givings: contrition of heart, where a man
- offers himself to God; another is, to have pity on the weaknesses of
- one's neighbours; and the third is, the giving of good counsel,
- spiritual and material, where men have need of it, and especially in
- the procuring of men's food. And take note that a man has need of
- these things, generally; he has need of food, he has need of
- clothing and shelter, he has need of charitable counsel, and of
- visiting in prison and in illness, and sepulture for his dead body.
- And if you cannot visit the needy in person, visit him by your message
- and by your gifts. These are general almsgivings, or works of charity,
- by those who have temporal riches or discretion in counselling. Of
- these works you shall hear at the day of doom.
- These alms-doings shall you do with your own proper things, and
- without delay, and privately, if you can; but nevertheless, if you
- cannot do it privately, you shall not forbear to do such works
- though men may see you, so long as they be done not for the world's
- approbation, but for the pleasing of Jesus Christ. For take witness of
- Saint Matthew, capitulo quinto: "A city that is set on a hill cannot
- be hid. Neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel, but
- on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the
- house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good
- works, and glorify your Father which is in Heaven."
- Now, to speak of bodily pain, it consists of prayers, of vigils,
- of fasts, of virtuous teaching of orisons. And you shall understand
- that orisons or prayers consist of a pious will of the heart that
- has made amends to God and expresses itself by spoken word, asking for
- the removal of evils and to obtain things spiritual and durable, as
- well as temporal things, sometimes; of which orisons, truly, in the
- prayer of the paternoster has Christ included most things.
- Certainly, it is invested with three things pertaining to His dignity,
- wherefore it is more dignified than any other prayer; Jesus Christ
- made it Himself; and it is short, so that it may be learned the more
- easily, and be held the more easily in the heart of memory, that man
- may the oftener help himself by repeating the prayer; and in order
- that a man may the less grow weary of saying it, and that he may not
- excuse himself from learning it; it is so short and so easy; and
- because it comprises within itself all good prayers. The expounding of
- this holy prayer I commit to these masters of theology; save that thus
- much will I say: that, when you pray that God forgive your
- trespasses as you forgive those that trespass against you, beware that
- you are not uncharitable. This holy orison diminishes each venial sin,
- and therefore it appertains specially to penitence.
- This prayer must be truly said and in utter faith, in order that men
- may pray to God ordinately and discreetly and devoutly; and always a
- man shall subject his own will to the will of God. This prayer must
- also be said with great humility and all innocently; honourably and
- not to the annoyance of any man or woman. It must also be followed
- by works of charity. It is of avail also even against the vices of the
- soul; for, as Saint Jerome says, "By fasting we are saved from the
- vices of the flesh, and by prayer from the vices of the soul."
- After the foregoing you shall understand that bodily pain lies in
- vigils; for Jesus Christ says, "Watch and pray, that ye enter not into
- temptation." You shall understand, also, that fasting stands in
- three things; in the forgoing of material food and drink, and in
- forgoing worldly pleasures, and in forgoing the doing of mortal sin;
- this is to say, that a man shall guard himself from deadly sin with
- all his might.
- And you shall understand, also, that God ordained fasting; and to
- fasting pertain four things: Largess to poor folk, gladness of the
- spiritual heart in order not to be angry or vexed, nor to grumble
- because you fast; and also reasonable hours wherein to eat moderately;
- that is to say, a man shall not eat out of season, nor sit and eat
- longer at his table because he has fasted.
- Then you shall understand that bodily pain lies in disciplining or
- teaching, by word or by writing, or by example. Also, in wearing
- shirts of hair or coarse wool, or habergeons next the naked flesh, for
- Christ's sake, and such other kinds of penance. But beware that such
- kinds of penance on your flesh do not make your heart bitter or
- angry or vexed with yourself; for it is better to cast away your
- hair shirt than to cast away the security of Jesus Christ. And
- therefore Saint Paul says: "Clothe yourselves as those that are the
- chosen of. God, in heart of mercy, gentleness, long-suffering, and
- such manner of clothing." Whereof Jesus Christ is more pleased than of
- hair shirts, or habergeons, or hauberks.
- Then, discipline lies also in beating of the breast, in scourging
- with rods, in kneelings, in tribulations, in suffering patiently the
- wrongs that are done unto one, and also in patient endurance of'
- illnesses, or losing of worldly chattels, or of wife or of child or
- other friends.
- Then shall you understand which things hinder penance; and these are
- four, that is to say, fear, shame, hope, and despair. And, to speak
- first of fear, since a man sometimes thinks that he cannot endure
- penance, against this thought may be set, as remedy, the thought
- that such bodily penance is short and mild compared with the pain of
- Hell, which is so cruel and so long that it lasts for ever.
- Now against the shame that a man has in confession, and especially
- of these hypocrites that would be held so perfect that they have no
- need for shrift- against that shame should a man think, and reasonably
- enough, that he who has not been ashamed to do foul things,
- certainly he ought not to be ashamed to do fair things, and of such is
- confession. A man should also think that God sees and knows all his
- thoughts and all his deeds; from Him nothing may be hidden nor
- covered. Men should even bear in mind the shame that is to come at the
- day of judgment to those who are not penitent and shriven in this
- present life. For all the creatures on earth and in Hell shall
- openly behold all that sinners hide in this world.
- Now to speak of the hope of those who are negligent and slow in
- shriving themselves- that is of two sorts. The one is, that he hopes
- to live long and to acquire riches for his delight, and then he will
- shrive himself; and as he tells himself, it seems to him that it
- will then be time enough to go to confession. Another is the
- over-confidence that he has in Christ's mercy. Against the first
- vice he shall think, that our life is in no security; and also that
- all the riches in this world are at hazard, and pass as does a
- shadow on the wall. And, as Saint Gregory says, it is part of the
- great righteousness of God that never shall the torment cease of those
- that would never withdraw themselves willingly from sin, but have
- always continued in sin; because, for the perpetual will to sin,
- they shall have perpetual torment.
- Despair is of two sorts: the first is of the mercy of Christ; the
- other is the thought of sinners that they cannot long persevere in
- goodness. The first despair comes of the thought that he has sinned so
- greatly and so often, and has lain so long in sin, that he shall not
- be saved. Certainly, against that accursed despair should be set the
- thought that the passion of Jesus Christ is stronger to loose than sin
- is strong to bind. Against the second despair, let him think that as
- often as he falls he may rise again by penitence. And though he may
- have lain in sin ever so long, the mercy of Christ is ever ready to
- receive him into grace. Against that form of despair wherein he
- deems that he should not long persevere in goodness, he shall think
- that the feebleness of the Devil can do nothing unless men allow him
- to; and also that he shall have strength of the help of God and of all
- Holy Church and of the protection of angels, if he will.
- Then shall men understand what is the fruit of penance; and
- according to the word of Jesus Christ, it is the endless bliss of
- Heaven, where joy has no opposite of woe or grievance, where all evils
- of this present life are past; wherein is security from the torments
- of Hell; wherein is the blessed company that rejoices evermore, each
- of the others joy; wherein the body of man, that formerly was foul and
- dark, is more bright than the sun; wherein the body, that lately was
- ailing, frail, and feeble, and mortal, is immortal, and so strong
- and so whole that nothing may impair it; wherein is no hunger nor
- thirst, nor cold, but every soul is replenished with the ability to
- perceive the perfect knowing of God. This blessed Kingdom may man
- acquire by poverty of spirit, and the glory of humbleness, and the
- plenitude of joy by hunger and thirst, and the ease and rest by
- labour, and life by death and the mortification of sin.
-
- HERE ENDS THE PARSON'S TALE
-