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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE SUMMONER'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- High in his stirrups, then, the summoner stood;
- Against the friar his heart, as madman's would,
- Shook like very aspen leaf, for ire.
- "Masters," said he, "but one thing I desire;
- I beg of you that, of your courtesy,
- Since you have heard this treacherous friar lie,
- You suffer it that I my tale may tell!
- This friar he boasts he knows somewhat of Hell,
- And God He knows that it is little wonder;
- Friars and fiends are never far asunder.
- For, by gad, you have oftentimes heard tell
- How such a friar was snatched down into Hell
- In spirit, once, and by a vision blown;
- And as an angel led him up and down
- To show the pains and torments that there were,
- In all the place he saw no friar there.
- Of other folk he saw enough in woe;
- And to the angel then he questioned so:
- "'Now, sir,' said he, 'have friars such a grace
- That none of them shall come into this place?'
- "'Nay,' said the angel, 'millions here are thrown!'
- And unto Sathanas he led him down.
- "'And now has Sathanas,' said he, 'a tail
- Broader than of a galleon is the sail.
- Hold up thy tail, thou Sathanas!' said he,
- "'Show forth thine arse and let the friar see
- Where is the nest of friars in this place!'
- And ere one might go half a furlong's space,
- Just as the bees come swarming from a hive,
- Out of the Devil's arse-hole there did drive
- Full twenty thousand friars in a rout,
- And through all Hell they swarmed and ran about.
- And came again, as fast as they could run,
- And in his arse they crept back, every one.
- He clapped his tail to and then lay right still.
- This friar, when he'd looked at length his fill
- Upon the torments of that sorry place,
- His spirit God restored, of His high grace,
- Into his body, and he did awake;
- Nevertheless for terror did he quake
- So was the Devil's arse-hole in his mind,
- Which is his future home, and like in kind.
- God save all but this cursed friar here;
- My prologue ends thus; to my tale give ear.
-
-
- HERE ENDS THE PROLOGUE OF THE SUMMONER'S TALE
-
-
- THE SUMMONER'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Masters, there is in Yorkshire, as I guess,
- A marshy region that's called Holderness,
- Wherein there went a limiter about
- To preach, and to beg too, beyond a doubt.
- And so befell that on a day this friar
- Had preached in church in his own manner dire,
- And specially, and above everything,
- Incited he the people, by preaching,
- To trentals, and to give, for God's own sake,
- The means wherewith men might new churches make,
- That there the services of God might flower,
- And not to them who waste and wealth devour,
- Nor where there's no necessity to give,
- As to the monks, who easily may live-
- Thanks be to God!- and need no wealth to gain.
- "Trentals," said he, "deliver from their pain
- The souls of friends who're dead, the old and young,
- Yea, even when they have been hastily sung;
- Not that I hold as frivolous and gay,
- A priest who only sings one mass a day.
- "Act quickly now," said he, "their souls redeem,
- For hard it is, with spikes and hooks, I deem,
- To be so torn, aye, or to burn or bake;
- Now speed you all to this, for Christ's own sake!"
- And when this friar had said all that he meant,
- With cui cum patre on his way he went.
- When folk in church had given at his behest,
- He went his way, no longer would he rest,
- With scrip and ferruled staff and skirts tucked high;
- In every house he went to peer and pry,
- And beg for flour and cheese, or else for corn.
- His fellow had a staff was tipped with horn,
- A set of tablets all of ivory,
- And stylus that was polished elegantly,
- And wrote the names down always as he stood,
- Of those that gave him anything of good,
- As if for them he later meant to pray.
- "Give us of wheat or malt or rye," he'd say,
- "A bushel; or a God's cake; or some cheese;
- We may not choose, so give us what you please;
- Give us God's halfpenny or a mass-penny,
- Or give us of your brawn, if you have any;
- A small piece of your blanket, my dear dame,
- Our sister dear, lo, here I write your name;
- Bacon or beef, or such thing as you find."
- A sturdy menial went these two behind-
- The servant of their host- and bore a sack,
- And what men gave them, laid it on his back.
- And when they'd left the house, why, then anon
- He planed away the names of folk, each one,
- That he before had written on his tables;
- And thus he served them mockeries and fables.
- ("Nay, there you lie, you summoner!" cried the friar.
- "Peace, for Christ's Mother's sake, call no one liar!"
- Our host said. "Tell your tale, nor spare at all."
- "So thrive I," said this summoner, "that I shall.")
- Along he went from house to house, till he
- Came to a house where he was wont to be
- Refreshed more than in hundred places round.
- And sick the goodman of the place he found;
- Bedridden on a couch he prostrate lay.
- "Deus hic," said he. "Thomas, my friend, good day,"
- Said he, this friar, courteously and soft.
- "Thomas," said he, "may God repay you! Oft
- Have I sat on this bench and fared right well.
- Here have I eaten many a merry meal."
- And from the bench he drove away the cat,
- And laid down there his steel-tipped staff and hat
- And his scrip, too, and sat him softly down.
- His fellow had gone walking into town,
- With the said menial, to a hostelry
- Wherein he thought that very night to lie.
- "O my dear master," whispered this sick man,
- "How have you fared since this month March began?
- "I've seen you not this fortnight, aye or more."
- "God knows," said he, "that I have toiled full sore;
- And very specially for your salvation
- Have I said precious prayers, and at each station,
- And for our other friends, whom may God bless!
- I have today been to your church, at Mass,
- And preached a sermon after my poor wit,
- Not wholly from the text of holy writ,
- For that is hard and baffling in the main;
- And therefore all its meaning I'll explain.
- Glosing's a glorious thing, and that's certain,
- For letters kill, as scholars say with pain.
- Thus have I taught them to be charitable,
- And spend their money reasonably, as well.
- And there I saw your dame- ah, where is she?"
- "Yonder within the yard I think she'll be,"
- Said this sick man, "and she will come anon."
- "Eh, master! Welcome be you, by Saint John!"
- Exclaimed the wife. "How fare you, heartily?"
- The friar arose, and that full courteously,
- And her embraced within his two arms narrow,
- And kissed her sweetly, chirping like a sparrow
- With his two lips. "Ah, dame," said he, "right well
- As one that is your servant, let me tell,
- Thanks be to God Who gave you soul and life,
- For saw I not this day so fair a wife
- In all the congregation, God save me!"
- "Yea, God correct all faults, sir," answered she,
- "But you are always welcome, by my fay!"
- "Many thanks, dame, this have I found alway.
- But of your innate goodness, by your leave,
- I'd beg of you, be cross or grieve
- If I with Thomas speak a little now.
- These curates are right negligent and slow
- In searching tenderly into conscience.
- To preach confession is my diligence,
- And I do study Peter's words and Paul's.
- I walk and fish for Christian persons' souls
- To yield to Jesus Christ His increment;
- To spread His gospel is my whole intent."
- "Now, by your leave, O my dear sir," said she,
- "Berate him well, for Holy Trinity.
- He is as crabbed as an old pismire,
- Though he has everything he can desire.
- Though him I cover at night, and make him warm,
- And lay my leg across him, or my arm,
- He grunts and groans like our old boar in sty
- And other sport- just none from him have I.
- I cannot please him, no, in any case."
- "O Thomas, je vous dis, Thomas, Thomas!
- This is the Fiend's work, this must be amended,
- Anger's a thing that makes High God offended,
- And thereof will I speak a word or two."
- "Now, master," said the wife, "before I go,
- What will you eat? I will about it scoot."
- "Now, dame," said he then, "je vous dis, sans doute,
- Had I of a fat capon but the liver,
- And of your soft white bread naught but a sliver,
- And after that a pig's head well roasted
- (Save that I would no beast for me were dead),
- Then had I with you plain sufficiency.
- I am a man of little gluttony.
- My spirit has its nourishment in the Bible.
- My body is so inured and so pliable
- To watching, that my appetite's destroyed.
- I pray you, lady, be you not annoyed
- Though I so intimately my secret show;
- By God, I would reveal it to but few."
- "Now, sir," said she, "but one word ere I go;
- My child has died within this fortnight- oh,
- Soon after you left town last, it did die."
- "His death saw I by revelation, aye,"
- Replied this friar, "at home in dormitory
- Less than an hour, I dare say, ere to glory,
- After his death, I saw him borne in bliss
- In vision mine, may God me guide in this!
- So did our sexton and infirmarian,
- Who have been true friars fifty years, each man;
- And may now, God be thanked for mercy shown,
- Observe their jubilee and walk alone.
- And I rose up and did my brothers seek,
- With many a tear down trickling on my cheek,
- And without noise or clashing of the bells;
- Te deum was our song and nothing else,
- Save that to Christ I said an orison,
- And thanked Him for the vision he had shown
- For, sir and dame, trust me full well in all,
- Our orisons are more effectual,
- And more we see of Christ's own secret things
- Than folk of the laity, though they were kings.
- We live in poverty and abstinence
- And laymen live in riches and expense
- Of meat and drink, and in their gross delight.
- This world's desires we hold in great despite.
- Dives and Lazarus lived differently,
- And different recompense they had thereby.
- Whoso would pray, he must fast and be clean,
- Fatten his soul and keep his body lean.
- We fare as says the apostle; clothes and food
- Suffice us, though they be not over-good.
- The cleanness and the fasting of us friars
- Result in Christ's accepting all our prayers.
- "Lo, Moses forty days and forty nights
- Fasted before the mightiest God of mights
- Spoke with him on the Mountain of Sinai.
- With empty belly, fasting long, say I,
- Received he there the law that had been writ
- By God's hand; and Elias (you know of it)
- On Mount Horeb, ere he had any speech
- With the High God, Who is our spirits' leech,
- He fasted long and deep his contemplation.
- "Aaron, who ruled the temple of his nation,
- And all the other great priests, every one,
- When they into the temple would be gone
- To pray there for the folk and do their rites.
- They would not drink of that which man excites
- And makes him drunk or stirs in any way,
- But there in abstinence they'd watch and pray
- Lest they should die- to what I say take heed!-
- Were they not sober when they prayed, indeed.
- Beware my words. No more! for it suffices.
- Our Lord Christ, as the holy writ apprises,
- Gave us example of fasting and of prayers.
- Therefore we mendicants, we simple friars,
- Are sworn to poverty and continence,
- To charity, meekness, and abstinence,
- To persecution for our righteousness,
- To weeping, pity, and to cleanliness.
- And therefore may you see that all our prayers-
- I speak of us, we mendicants, we friars-
- Are to the High God far more acceptable
- Than yours, with all the feasts you make at table.
- From Paradise, if I am not to lie,
- Was man chased out because of gluttony;
- And chaste was man in Paradise, that's plain.
- "But hear now, Thomas, lest I speak in vain.
- I have no text for it, I must admit,
- But by analogy the words will fit,
- That specially our sweet Lord Christ Jesus
- Spoke of the begging friars when He said thus:
- 'Blest are the poor in spirit.' So said He,
- And so through all the gospel may you see
- Whether the Word fit better our profession
- Or theirs, the monks', who swim in rich possession,
- Fie on their pomp and on their gluttony!
- And for their lewdness do I them defy.
- "It seems to me they're like Jovinian,
- Fat as a whale and waddling as a swan;
- As full of wine as bottle in the spence.
- Their prayers are always of great reverence,
- When they for souls that psalm of David say:
- 'Cor meum eructavit- bouf!'- that way!
- Who follow Christ's Word going on before
- But we who are so humble, chaste, and poor,
- And doers of God's Word, not hearers, merely?
- As falcons rise to heaven, just so clearly
- Spring up into the air the holy prayers
- Of charitable and chaste and toiling friars
- Make their way upward into God's ears two.
- Thomas, O Thomas! As I ride or go,
- And by that lord whom all we call Saint Yve,
- Were you not brother to us, you'd not thrive!
- In our chapter we pray both day and night
- To Christ, that He will send you health and might
- To move about again, and speedily."
- "'God knows," said he, "nothing thereof feel I;
- So help me Christ as I, these last few years,
- Have spent on divers friars, it appears,
- Full many a pound; and I'm no better yet.
- Truly my wealth have I almost upset.
- Farewell my gold! for it has slipped away."
- The friar replied: "Ah, Thomas, so you say!
- But why need you to different friars reach?
- Why should he need, who has a perfect leech,
- To call in other leeches from the town?
- Your trouble from your fickleness has grown.
- Think you that I, or at least our convent,
- Could not suffice to pray? That's what I meant.
- Thomas, your feeble joke's not worth a tittle;
- Your illness lasts because you've given too little.
- '"Ah, give that convent bushels four of oats!'
- 'Ah, give that convent four and twenty groats!'
- 'Ah, give that friar a penny and let him go!'
- "Nay, nay, Thomas, the thing should not be so!
- What is a farthing worth, when split twelve ways?
- A thing in its integrity displays
- Far greater strength than does a unit scattered.
- Thomas, by me you shall not here be flattered;
- You would you had our labour all for naught.
- But the High God, Who all this world has wrought,
- Says that the workman's worthy of his hire.
- Thomas! Naught of your treasure I desire
- As for myself, but that all our convent
- To pray for you is always diligent,
- And also to build up Christ's holy kirk.
- Thomas! If you will learn the way to work,
- Of building up of churches you may find
- (If it be good) in Thomas' life, of Inde.
- You lie here, full of anger and of ire,
- Wherewith the Devil set your heart afire,
- And you chide here this hapless innocent,
- Your wife, who is so meek and so patient.
- And therefore, Thomas, trust me if you please,
- Scold not your wife, who tries to give you ease;
- And bear this word away now, by your faith,
- Touching this thing, lo what the wise man saith:
- 'Within thy house do not the lion play,
- Oppress thy subjects in no kind of way,
- Nor cause thine equals and thy friends to flee.'
- And Thomas, yet again I charge you, be
- Wary of her that in your bosom sleeps;
- Beware the serpent that so slyly creeps
- Under the grass and stings so treacherously.
- Beware, my son, and hear this patiently,
- That twenty thousand men have lost their lives
- For quarrelling with their sweet ones, and their wives.
- Now, since you have so holy and meek a wife,
- Why need you, Thomas, so to stir up strife?
- There is, indeed, no serpent so cruel,
- When man treads on his tail, nor half so fell,
- As woman is when she is filled with ire;
- Vengeance is then the whole of her desire.
- Anger's a sin, one of the deadly seven,
- Abominable unto the God of Heaven;
- And it is sure destruction unto one.
- This every vulgar vicar or parson
- Can say, how anger leads to homicide.
- Truth, anger's the executant of pride.
- I could of anger tell you so much sorrow
- My tale should last until it were tomorrow.
- And therefore I pray God both day and night,
- An ireful man, God send him little might!
- It is great harm and truly great pity
- To set an ireful man in high degree.
- "For once there was an ireful potentate,
- (As Seneca says) and while he ruled the state,
- Upon a day out riding went knights two,
- And as Dame Fortune willed it, it was so
- That one of them came home, and one did not.
- Anon that knight before the judge was brought,
- Who said thus: 'Sir, you have your fellow slain,
- For which I doom you to the death, amain.'
- And to another knight commanded he,
- 'Go lead him to his death, so I charge ye.'
- It happened, as they went along their way,
- Toward the place where he must die that day,
- They met the knight that men had thought was dead
- Then thought they, it were best not go ahead,
- And so led both unto the judge again.
- They said: 'O lord, this knight, he has not slain
- His fellow; for he stands here sound, alive.'
- 'You shall die then,' he cried, 'so may I thrive!
- That is to say, you shall all die, all three!'
- And then to the first knight 'twas thus said he:
- 'I doomed you, and therefore you must be dead.
- And you, also, must needs now lose your head,
- Since you're the causing of your fellow's end.'
- And then on the third knight did he descend:
- 'You have not done what I ordained should be!'
- And thus he did away with all the three.
- "Ireful Cambyses was a drunkard too,
- And much delighted dirty deeds to do.
- And so befell, a lord of his household,
- Who loved all moral virtue, we are told,
- Said on a day, when they were talking, thus:
- 'A lord is lost if he be too vicious;
- And drunkenness is foul thing to record
- Of any man, and specially of a lord.
- There is full many an eye and many an ear
- Waiting upon a lord, nor knows he where.
- For God's dear love, sir, drink more moderately;
- Wine causes man to lose, and wretchedly,
- His mind, and his limbs' usage, every one.'
- "'The opposite you'll see,' said he, 'anon;
- And you'll prove, by your own experience,
- That wine does not to men such foul offence.
- There is no wine can rob me of my might
- Of hand or foot, nor yet of my eyesight!'
- And for despite he drank much wine the more,
- A hundred times, than he had drunk before;
- And then anon this ireful wicked wretch
- Sent one this knight's young son to go and fetch,
- And ordered that before him he should stand.
- And suddenly he took his bow in hand,
- And drew the string thereof up to his ear,
- And with an arrow slew the child right there.
- 'Now tell me whether I've sure hand, or none!'
- He said, 'And are my might and mind all gone?
- Has wine deprived me of my good eyesight?'
- "How shall I tell the answer of the knight?
- His son was slain, there is no more to say.
- Beware, therefore, with lords look how you play.
- But sing placebo, and 'I shall, if I can,'
- Unless it be unto a helpless man.
- To a poor man men should his vices tell,
- But to a lord, no, though he go to Hell.
- "Lo, ireful Cyrus, that great Persian king,
- Destroyed the river Gyndes at its spring,
- Because a horse of his was drowned therein
- When he went forth old Babylon to win.
- He caused the river to become so small
- That women could go wading through it all.
- "Lo, what said he whose teaching all commend?
- 'An angry man take never for a friend,
- Nor with a madman walk along the way,
- Lest you repent.' There is no more to say.
- "Now, Thomas, my dear brother, leave your ire;
- You shall find me as just as is a squire.
- Hold not the Devil's knife against your heart;
- Your anger does too sorely burn and smart;
- But show me all, now, in confession, son."
- "Nay," said the sick man, "by Saint Simeon!
- I have been shriven today by my curate;
- I have him told the whole truth of my state;
- There's no more need to speak of it," said he,
- "Save as I please, of my humility."
- "Then give me of your gold to build our cloister,"
- Said he, "for many a mussel and an oyster,
- When other men have been well at their ease,
- Have been our food, that building should not cease,
- And yet, God knows, is finished nothing more
- Than the foundation, while of all the floor
- There's not a tile yet laid to call our own;
- By God, we owe full forty pounds for stone!
- Now help, Thomas, for Him that harried Hell!
- Else must we turn about and our books sell.
- And if you laymen lack our high instruction,
- Then will the world go all to its destruction.
- For whoso shall deny us right to live,
- So may God save me, Thomas, by your leave,
- He'll have deprived the whole world of the sun.
- For who can teach and work as we have done?
- And that's not been for little time," said he;
- "Elias and Elisha used to be
- Friars, you'll find the scriptures do record,
- And beggars too, thanks be to the good Lord!
- Now, Thomas, help for holy charity!"
- And down he went then, kneeling on one knee.
- This sick man, he went well-nigh mad for ire;
- He would have had that friar set afire
- For the hypocrisy that he had shown.
- "Such things as I possess and are my own,"
- Said he, "those may I give you and no other.
- You tell me that I am as your own brother?"
- "Yea, truly," said the friar, "trust me well;
- I gave your wife a letter with our seal."
- "That's well," said he, "and something will I give
- Unto your holy convent while I live,
- And right anon you'll have it in your hand,
- On this condition only, understand,
- That you divide it so, my own dear brother,
- That every friar shall have as much as other.
- This shall you swear upon the faith you own,
- And without fraud or cavil, be it known."
- "I swear it," said this friar, "on my faith!"
- And on the sick man's laid his hand therewith.
- "Lo, hear my oath! In me shall truth not lack."
- "Now then, come put your hand right down my back,"
- Replied this man, "and grope you well behind;
- For underneath my buttocks shall you find
- A thing that I have hid in privity."
- "Ah," thought the friar, "this shall go with me!"
- And down he thrust his hand right to the cleft,
- In hope that he should find there some good gift.
- And when the sick man felt the friar here
- Groping about his hole and all his rear,
- Into his hand he let the friar a fart.
- There is no stallion drawing loaded cart
- That might have let a fart of such a sound.
- The friar leaped up as with wild lion's bound:
- "Ah, treacherous churl," he cried, "by God's own bones,
- I'll see that he who scorns me thus atones;
- You'll suffer for this fart- I'll find a way!"
- The servants, who had heard all this affray,
- Came leaping in and chased the friar out;
- And forth he scowling went, with angry shout,
- And found his fellow, where he'd left his store.
- He glared about as he were some wild boar;
- He ground and gnashed his teeth, so wroth was he.
- He quickly sought the manor, there to see
- The lord thereof, whose honour was the best,
- And always to the friar he confessed;
- This worthy man was lord of that village.
- The friar came, as he were in a rage,
- Where sat the lord at dinner at his board.
- And hardly could the friar speak a word,
- Till at the last he said, "God be with ye!"
- This lord looked up and said then, "Ben'cite!
- What, Friar John! What kind of world is this?
- I see right well that something is amiss.
- You look as if the wood were full of thieves,
- Sit down, and tell me what it is that grieves,
- And it shall be amended, if I may."
- "I have," said he, "insulted been today-
- May God reward you!- down in your village.
- And in this world is not so poor a page
- As would not feel the insult, if 'twere thrown
- At him, that I have suffered in your town.
- Yet nothing grieves me in this matter more
- Than that this peasant, with his long locks hoar,
- Has thus blasphemed our holy convent too."
- "Now, master," said his lordship, "I pray you-"
- "No master, sir," said he, "but servitor,
- Though true, I had in school such honour, sir.
- But rabbi- God's not pleased that men so call
- Us, in the public square or your wide hall."
- "No matter," said he, "tell me all your grief."
- "Sir," said this friar, "an odious mischief
- Was this day done to my order and me,
- And so, per consequens, to each degree
- Of Holy Church, may God it soon amend!"
- "Sir," said the lord, "the story I attend.
- As my confessor, pray your wrath control;
- Salt of the earth are you- the savour whole.
- For love of God, I beg you patience hold;
- Tell me your grievance."
- And anon he told
- As you have heard before, you know well what.
- The lady of the house right silent sat
- Till she had heard all that the friar said:
- "Eh, by God's Mother," cried she, "Blessed Maid!
- Is there aught else? A point that we did miss?"
- "Madam," asked he, "what do you think of this?"
- "What do I think?" she asked, "So God me speed,
- I say, a churl has done a churlish deed.
- What should I say? May God desert him! See-
- Why his sick head is full of vanity.
- The man, no doubt, is more or less insane."
- "Madam," said he, "I will not lie or feign:
- If otherwise I cannot vengeance wreak,
- I will defame him wheresoe'er I speak,
- This false blasphemer who has dared charge me
- Thus to divide what won't divided be,
- To every man alike, and with mischance!"
- The lord sat still as he were in a trance,
- And in his mind he rolled it up and down:
- "How had this churl imagination grown
- To pose so fine a problem to the friar?
- I never heard the like, or I'm a liar;
- I think the devil stuck it in his mind.
- And in arithmetic did no man find,
- Before this day, such puzzling question shown.
- Who could be able, now, to make it known
- How every man should have an equal part
- Of both the sound and savour of a fart?
- O scrupulous proud churl, beshrew his face!
- Lo, sirs," this lord said then, with hard grimace,
- "Who ever heard of such a thing ere now?
- To every man alike? But tell me how!
- Why it's impossible, it cannot be!
- Exacting churl, God give him never glee!
- The rumbling of a fart, and every sound,
- Is but the air's reverberation round,
- And ever it wastes, by little and little, away.
- There is no man can judge, aye, by my fay,
- Whether it were divided equally.
- Behold, my church And yet how cursedly
- To my confessor has he made this crack!
- I hold him surely a demoniac!
- Now eat your meat and let the churl go play,
- Let him go hang himself, the devil's way!"
- Now the lord's squire stood ready near the board
- To carve his meat, and he heard, word for word,
- All of the things that I to you have said.
- "My lord," said he, "be not ill pleased indeed;
- For I could tell, for cloth to make a gown,
- To you, sir friar, so you do not frown,
- How this said fart evenly doled could be
- Among your fellows, if the thing pleased me."
- "Tell," said the lord, "and you shall have anon
- Cloth for a gown, by God and by Saint John!"
- "My lord," said he, "when next the weather's fair,
- And there's no wind to stir the quiet air,
- Let someone bring a cartwheel to this hall,
- But see there are no missing spokes at all.
- Twelve spokes a cartwheel has, sir, commonly.
- And bring me then twelve friars, and know you why?
- Because a convent's thirteen, as I guess.
- The present confessor, for his worthiness,
- He shall complete the tale of this convent.
- Then shall they all kneel down, by one assent,
- And at each spoke's end, in this manner, sire,
- Let the nose be laid firmly of a friar.
- Your noble sir confessor, whom God save,
- Shall hold his nose upright beneath the nave.
- Then shall this churl, with belly stiff and taut
- As any tabour- let him here be brought;
- And set him on the wheel of this same cart,
- Upon the hub, and make him let a fart.
- And you shall see, on peril of my life,
- With proof so clear that there shall be no strife,
- That equally the sound of it will wend,
- And the stink too, to each spoke's utter end;
- Save that this worthy man, your confessor,
- Because he is a man of great honour,
- Shall have first fruits, as reasonable it is;
- The noble custom of all friars is this,
- The worthy men of them shall be first served;
- And certainly this has he well deserved.
- He has today taught us so much of good,
- With preaching in the pulpit where he stood,
- That for my part I gladly should agree,
- He might well have the first smell of farts three,
- And so would all his convent, generously,
- He bears himself so well and holily."
- The lord, the lady, and each man, save the friar,
- Agreed that Jenkin spoke, as classifier,
- As well as Euclid or as Ptolemy.
- Touching the churl, they said that subtlety
- And great wit taught him how to make his crack.
- He was no fool, nor a demoniac.
- And Jenkin by this means has won a gown.
- My tale is done, we're almost into town.
- HERE ENDS THE SUMMONER'S TALE
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