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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE WIFE OF BATH'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Experience, though no authority
- Were in this world, were good enough for me,
- To speak of woe that is in all marriage;
- For, masters, since I was twelve years of age,
- Thanks be to God Who is for aye alive,
- Of husbands at church door have I had five;
- For men so many times have wedded me;
- And all were worthy men in their degree.
- But someone told me not so long ago
- That since Our Lord, save once, would never go
- To wedding (that at Cana in Galilee),
- Thus, by this same example, showed He me
- I never should have married more than once.
- Lo and behold! What sharp words, for the nonce,
- Beside a well Lord Jesus, God and man,
- Spoke in reproving the Samaritan:
- 'For thou hast had five husbands,' thus said He,
- 'And he whom thou hast now to be with thee
- Is not thine husband.' Thus He said that day,
- But what He meant thereby I cannot say;
- And I would ask now why that same fifth man
- Was not husband to the Samaritan?
- How many might she have, then, in marriage?
- For I have never heard, in all my age,
- Clear exposition of this number shown,
- Though men may guess and argue up and down.
- But well I know and say, and do not lie,
- God bade us to increase and multiply;
- That worthy text can I well understand.
- And well I know He said, too, my husband
- Should father leave, and mother, and cleave to me;
- But no specific number mentioned He,
- Whether of bigamy or octogamy;
- Why should men speak of it reproachfully?
- Lo, there's the wise old king Dan Solomon;
- I understand he had more wives than one;
- And now would God it were permitted me
- To be refreshed one half as oft as he!
- Which gift of God he had for all his wives!
- No man has such that in this world now lives.
- God knows, this noble king, it strikes my wit,
- The first night he had many a merry fit
- With each of them, so much he was alive!
- Praise be to God that I have wedded five!
- Of whom I did pick out and choose the best
- Both for their nether purse and for their chest
- Different schools make divers perfect clerks,
- Different methods learned in sundry works
- Make the good workman perfect, certainly.
- Of full five husbands tutoring am I.
- Welcome the sixth whenever come he shall.
- Forsooth, I'll not keep chaste for good and all;
- When my good husband from the world is gone,
- Some Christian man shall marry me anon;
- For then, the apostle says that I am free
- To wed, in God's name, where it pleases me.
- He says that to be wedded is no sin;
- Better to marry than to burn within.
- What care I though folk speak reproachfully
- Of wicked Lamech and his bigamy?
- I know well Abraham was holy man,
- And Jacob, too, as far as know I can;
- And each of them had spouses more than two;
- And many another holy man also.
- Or can you say that you have ever heard
- That God has ever by His express word
- Marriage forbidden? Pray you, now, tell me.
- Or where commanded He virginity?
- I read as well as you no doubt have read
- The apostle when he speaks of maidenhead;
- He said, commandment of the Lord he'd none.
- Men may advise a woman to be one,
- But such advice is not commandment, no;
- He left the thing to our own judgment so.
- For had Lord God commanded maidenhood,
- He'd have condemned all marriage as not good;
- And certainly, if there were no seed sown,
- Virginity- where then should it be grown?
- Paul dared not to forbid us, at the least,
- A thing whereof his Master'd no behest.
- The dart is set up for virginity;
- Catch it who can; who runs best let us see.
- "But this word is not meant for every wight,
- But where God wills to give it, of His might.
- I know well that the apostle was a maid;
- Nevertheless, and though he wrote and said
- He would that everyone were such as he,
- All is not counsel to virginity;
- And so to be a wife he gave me leave
- Out of permission; there's no shame should grieve
- In marrying me, if that my mate should die,
- Without exception, too, of bigamy.
- And though 'twere good no woman flesh to touch,
- He meant, in his own bed or on his couch;
- For peril 'tis fire and tow to assemble;
- You know what this example may resemble.
- This is the sum: he held virginity
- Nearer perfection than marriage for frailty.
- And frailty's all, I say, save he and she
- Would lead their lives throughout in chastity.
- "I grant this well, I have no great envy
- Though maidenhood's preferred to bigamy;
- Let those who will be clean, body and ghost,
- Of my condition I will make no boast.
- For well you know, a lord in his household,
- He has not every vessel all of gold;
- Some are of wood and serve well all their days.
- God calls folk unto Him in sundry ways,
- And each one has from God a proper gift,
- Some this, some that, as pleases Him to shift.
- "Virginity is great perfection known,
- And continence e'en with devotion shown.
- But Christ, Who of perfection is the well,
- Bade not each separate man he should go sell
- All that he had and give it to the poor
- And follow Him in such wise going before.
- He spoke to those that would live perfectly;
- And, masters, by your leave, such am not I.
- I will devote the flower of all my age
- To all the acts and harvests of marriage.
- "Tell me also, to what purpose or end
- The genitals were made, that I defend,
- And for what benefit was man first wrought?
- Trust you right well, they were not made for naught.
- Explain who will and argue up and down
- That they were made for passing out, as known,
- Of urine, and our two belongings small
- Were just to tell a female from a male,
- And for no other cause- ah, say you no?
- Experience knows well it is not so;
- And, so the clerics be not with me wroth,
- I say now that they have been made for both,
- That is to say, for duty and for ease
- In getting, when we do not God displease.
- Why should men otherwise in their books set
- That man shall pay unto his wife his debt?
- Now wherewith should he ever make payment,
- Except he used his blessed instrument?
- Then on a creature were devised these things
- For urination and engenderings.
- "But I say not that every one is bound,
- Who's fitted out and furnished as I've found,
- To go and use it to beget an heir;
- Then men would have for chastity no care.
- Christ was a maid, and yet shaped like a man,
- And many a saint, since this old world began,
- Yet has lived ever in perfect chastity.
- I bear no malice to virginity;
- Let such be bread of purest white wheat-seed,
- And let us wives be called but barley bread;
- And yet with barley bread (if Mark you scan)
- Jesus Our Lord refreshed full many a man.
- In such condition as God places us
- I'll persevere, I'm not fastidious.
- In wifehood I will use my instrument
- As freely as my Maker has it sent.
- If I be niggardly, God give me sorrow!
- My husband he shall have it, eve and morrow,
- When he's pleased to come forth and pay his debt.
- I'll not delay, a husband I will get
- Who shall be both my debtor and my thrall
- And have his tribulations therewithal
- Upon his flesh, the while I am his wife.
- I have the power during all my life
- Over his own good body, and not he.
- For thus the apostle told it unto me;
- And bade our husbands that they love us well.
- And all this pleases me whereof I tell."
- Up rose the pardoner, and that anon.
- "Now dame," said he, "by God and by Saint John,
- You are a noble preacher in this case!
- I was about to wed a wife, alas!
- Why should I buy this on my flesh so dear?
- No, I would rather wed no wife this year."
- "But wait," said she, "my tale is not begun;
- Nay, you shall drink from out another tun
- Before I cease, and savour worse than ale.
- And when I shall have told you all my tale
- Of tribulation that is in marriage,
- Whereof I've been an expert all my age,
- That is to say, myself have been the whip,
- Then may you choose whether you will go sip
- Out of that very tun which I shall broach.
- Beware of it ere you too near approach;
- For I shall give examples more than ten.
- Whoso will not be warned by other men
- By him shall other men corrected be,
- The self-same words has written Ptolemy;
- Read in his Almagest and find it there."
- "Lady, I pray you, if your will it were,"
- Spoke up this pardoner, "as you began,
- Tell forth your tale, nor spare for any man,
- And teach us younger men of your technique."
- "Gladly," said she, "since it may please, not pique.
- But yet I pray of all this company
- That if I speak from my own phantasy,
- They will not take amiss the things I say;
- For my intention's only but to play.
- "Now, sirs, now will I tell you forth my tale.
- And as I may drink ever wine and ale,
- I will tell truth of husbands that I've had,
- For three of them were good and two were bad.
- The three were good men and were rich and old.
- Not easily could they the promise hold
- Whereby they had been bound to cherish me.
- You know well what I mean by that, pardie!
- So help me God, I laugh now when I think
- How pitifully by night I made them swink;
- And by my faith I set by it no store.
- They'd given me their gold, and treasure more;
- I needed not do longer diligence
- To win their love, or show them reverence.
- They all loved me so well, by God above,
- I never did set value on their love!
- A woman wise will strive continually
- To get herself loved, when she's not, you see.
- But since I had them wholly in my hand,
- And since to me they'd given all their land,
- Why should I take heed, then, that I should please,
- Save it were for my profit or my ease?
- I set them so to work, that, by my fay,
- Full many a night they sighed out 'Welaway!'
- The bacon was not brought them home, I trow,
- That some men have in Essex at Dunmowe.
- I governed them so well, by my own law,
- That each of them was happy as a daw,
- And fain to bring me fine things from the fair.
- And they were right glad when I spoke them fair;
- For God knows that I nagged them mercilessly.
- "Now hearken how I bore me properly,
- All you wise wives that well can understand.
- "Thus shall you speak and wrongfully demand;
- For half so brazenfacedly can no man
- Swear to his lying as a woman can.
- I say not this to wives who may be wise,
- Except when they themselves do misadvise.
- A wise wife, if she knows what's for her good,
- Will swear the crow is mad, and in this mood
- Call up for witness to it her own maid;
- But hear me now, for this is what I said.
- "'Sir Dotard, is it thus you stand today?
- Why is my neighbour's wife so fine and gay?
- She's honoured over all where'er she goes;
- I sit at home, I have no decent clo'es.
- What do you do there at my neighbour's house?
- Is she so fair? Are you so amorous?
- Why whisper to our maid? Benedicite!
- Sir Lecher old, let your seductions be!
- And if I have a gossip or a friend,
- Innocently, you blame me like a fiend
- If I but walk, for company, to his house!
- You come home here as drunken as a mouse,
- And preach there on your bench, a curse on you!
- You tell me it's a great misfortune, too,
- To wed a girl who costs more than she's worth;
- And if she's rich and of a higher birth,
- You say it's torment to abide her folly
- And put up with her pride and melancholy.
- And if she be right fair, you utter knave,
- You say that every lecher will her have;
- She may no while in chastity abide
- That is assailed by all and on each side.
- "'You say, some men desire us for our gold,
- Some for our shape and some for fairness told:
- And some, that she can either sing or dance,
- And some, for courtesy and dalliance;
- Some for her hands and for her arms so small;
- Thus all goes to the devil in your tale.
- You say men cannot keep a castle wall
- That's long assailed on all sides, and by all.
- "'And if that she be foul, you say that she
- Hankers for every man that she may see;
- For like a spaniel will she leap on him
- Until she finds a man to be victim;
- And not a grey goose swims there in the lake
- But finds a gander willing her to take.
- You say, it is a hard thing to enfold
- Her whom no man will in his own arms hold.
- This say you, worthless, when you go to bed;
- And that no wise man needs thus to be wed,
- No, nor a man that hearkens unto Heaven.
- With furious thunder-claps and fiery levin
- May your thin, withered, wrinkled neck be broke:
- "'You say that dripping eaves, and also smoke,
- And wives contentious, will make men to flee
- Out of their houses; ah, benedicite!
- What ails such an old fellow so to chide?
- "'You say that all we wives our vices hide
- Till we are married, then we show them well;
- That is a scoundrel's proverb, let me tell!
- "'You say that oxen, asses, horses, hounds
- Are tried out variously, and on good grounds;
- Basins and bowls, before men will them buy,
- And spoons and stools and all such goods you try.
- And so with pots and clothes and all array;
- But of their wives men get no trial, you say,
- Till they are married, base old dotard you!
- And then we show what evil we can do.
- "'You say also that it displeases me
- Unless you praise and flatter my beauty,
- And save you gaze always upon my face
- And call me "lovely lady" every place;
- And save you make a feast upon that day
- When I was born, and give me garments gay;
- And save due honour to my nurse is paid
- As well as to my faithful chambermaid,
- And to my father's folk and his allies-
- Thus you go on, old barrel full of lies!
- "'And yet of our apprentice, young Jenkin,
- For his crisp hair, showing like gold so fine,
- Because he squires me walking up and down,
- A false suspicion in your mind is sown;
- I'd give him naught, though you were dead tomorrow.
- "'But tell me this, why do you hide, with sorrow,
- The keys to your strong-box away from me?
- It is my gold as well as yours, pardie.
- Why would you make an idiot of your dame?
- Now by Saint James, but you shall miss your aim,
- You shall not be, although like mad you scold,
- Master of both my body and my gold;
- One you'll forgo in spite of both your eyes;
- Why need you seek me out or set on spies?
- I think you'd like to lock me in your chest!
- You should say: "Dear wife, go where you like best,
- Amuse yourself, I will believe no tales;
- You're my wife Alis true, and truth prevails."
- We love no man that guards us or gives charge
- Of where we go, for we will be at large.
- "'Of all men the most blessed may he be,
- That wise astrologer, Dan Ptolemy,
- Who says this proverb in his Almagest:
- "Of all men he's in wisdom the highest
- That nothing cares who has the world in hand."
- And by this proverb shall you understand:
- Since you've enough, why do you reck or care
- How merrily all other folks may fare?
- For certainly, old dotard, by your leave,
- You shall have cunt all right enough at eve.
- He is too much a niggard who's so tight
- That from his lantern he'll give none a light.
- For he'll have never the less light, by gad;
- Since you've enough, you need not be so sad.
- "'You say, also, that if we make us gay
- With clothing, all in costliest array,
- That it's a danger to our chastity;
- And you must back the saying up, pardie!
- Repeating these words in the apostle's name:
- "In habits meet for chastity, not shame,
- Your women shall be garmented," said he,
- "And not with broidered hair, or jewellery,
- Or pearls, or gold, or costly gowns and chic;"
- After your text and after your rubric
- I will not follow more than would a gnat.
- You said this, too, that I was like a cat;
- For if one care to singe a cat's furred skin,
- Then would the cat remain the house within;
- And if the cat's coat be all sleek and gay,
- She will not keep in house a half a day,
- But out she'll go, ere dawn of any day,
- To show her skin and caterwaul and play.
- This is to say, if I'm a little gay,
- To show my rags I'll gad about all day.
- "'Sir Ancient Fool, what ails you with your spies?
- Though you pray Argus, with his hundred eyes,
- To be my body-guard and do his best,
- Faith, he sha'n't hold me, save I am modest;
- I could delude him easily- trust me!
- "'You said, also, that there are three things- three-
- The which things are a trouble on this earth,
- And that no man may ever endure the fourth:
- O dear Sir Rogue, may Christ cut short your life!
- Yet do you preach and say a hateful wife
- Is to be reckoned one of these mischances.
- Are there no other kinds of resemblances
- That you may liken thus your parables to,
- But must a hapless wife be made to do?
- "'You liken woman's love to very Hell,
- To desert land where waters do not well.
- You liken it, also, unto wildfire;
- The more it burns, the more it has desire
- To consume everything that burned may be.
- You say that just as worms destroy a tree,
- Just so a wife destroys her own husband;
- Men know this who are bound in marriage band.'
- "Masters, like this, as you must understand,
- Did I my old men charge and censure, and
- Claim that they said these things in drunkenness;
- And all was false, but yet I took witness
- Of Jenkin and of my dear niece also.
- O Lord, the pain I gave them and the woe,
- All guiltless, too, by God's grief exquisite!
- For like a stallion could I neigh and bite.
- I could complain, though mine was all the guilt,
- Or else, full many a time, I'd lost the tilt.
- Whoso comes first to mill first gets meal ground;
- I whimpered first and so did them confound.
- They were right glad to hasten to excuse
- Things they had never done, save in my ruse.
- "With wenches would I charge him, by this hand,
- When, for some illness, he could hardly stand.
- Yet tickled this the heart of him, for he
- Deemed it was love produced such jealousy.
- I swore that all my walking out at night
- Was but to spy on girls he kept outright;
- And under cover of that I had much mirth.
- For all such wit is given us at birth;
- Deceit, weeping, and spinning, does God give
- To women, naturally, the while they live.
- And thus of one thing I speak boastfully,
- I got the best of each one, finally,
- By trick, or force, or by some kind of thing,
- As by continual growls or murmuring;
- Especially in bed had they mischance,
- There would I chide and give them no pleasance;
- I would no longer in the bed abide
- If I but felt his arm across my side,
- Till he had paid his ransom unto me;
- Then would I let him do his nicety.
- And therefore to all men this tale I tell,
- Let gain who may, for everything's to sell.
- With empty hand men may no falcons lure;
- For profit would I all his lust endure,
- And make for him a well-feigned appetite;
- Yet I in bacon never had delight;
- And that is why I used so much to chide.
- For if the pope were seated there beside
- I'd not have spared them, no, at their own board.
- For by my truth, I paid them, word for word.
- So help me the True God Omnipotent,
- Though I right now should make my testament,
- I owe them not a word that was not quit.
- I brought it so about, and by my wit,
- That they must give it up, as for the best,
- Or otherwise we'd never have had rest.
- For though he glared and scowled like lion mad,
- Yet failed he of the end he wished he had.
- "Then would I say: 'Good dearie, see you keep
- In mind how meek is Wilkin, our old sheep;
- Come near, my spouse, come let me kiss your cheek!
- You should be always patient, aye, and meek,
- And have a sweetly scrupulous tenderness,
- Since you so preach of old Job's patience, yes.
- Suffer always, since you so well can preach;
- And, save you do, be sure that we will teach
- That it is well to leave a wife in peace.
- One of us two must bow, to be at ease;
- And since a man's more reasonable, they say,
- Than woman is, you must have patience aye.
- What ails you that you grumble thus and groan?
- Is it because you'd have my cunt alone?
- Why take it all, lo, have it every bit;
- Peter! Beshrew you but you're fond of it!
- For if I would go peddle my belle chose,
- I could walk out as fresh as is a rose;
- But I will keep it for your own sweet tooth.
- You are to blame, by God I tell the truth.'
- "Such were the words I had at my command.
- Now will I tell you of my fourth husband.
- "My fourth husband, he was a reveller,
- That is to say, he kept a paramour;
- And young and full of passion then was I,
- Stubborn and strong and jolly as a pie.
- Well could I dance to tune of harp, nor fail
- To sing as well as any nightingale
- When I had drunk a good draught of sweet wine.
- Metellius, the foul churl and the swine,
- Did with a staff deprive his wife of life
- Because she drank wine; had I been his wife
- He never should have frightened me from drink;
- For after wine, of Venus must I think:
- For just as surely as cold produces hail,
- A liquorish mouth must have a lickerish tail.
- In women wine's no bar of impotence,
- This know all lechers by experience.
- "But Lord Christ! When I do remember me
- Upon my youth and on my jollity,
- It tickles me about my heart's deep root.
- To this day does my heart sing in salute
- That I have had my world in my own time.
- But age, alas! that poisons every prime,
- Has taken away my beauty and my pith;
- Let go, farewell, the devil go therewith!
- The flour is gone, there is no more to tell,
- The bran, as best I may, must I now sell;
- But yet to be right merry I'll try, and
- Now will I tell you of my fourth husband.
- "I say that in my heart I'd great despite
- When he of any other had delight.
- But he was quit by God and by Saint Joce!
- I made, of the same wood, a staff most gross;
- Not with my body and in manner foul,
- But certainly I showed so gay a soul
- That in his own thick grease I made him fry
- For anger and for utter jealousy.
- By God, on earth I was his purgatory,
- For which I hope his soul lives now in glory.
- For God knows, many a time he sat and sung
- When the shoe bitterly his foot had wrung.
- There was no one, save God and he, that knew
- How, in so many ways, I'd twist the screw.
- He died when I came from Jerusalem,
- And lies entombed beneath the great rood-beam,
- Although his tomb is not so glorious
- As was the sepulchre of Darius,
- The which Apelles wrought full cleverly;
- 'Twas waste to bury him expensively.
- Let him fare well. God give his soul good rest,
- He now is in the grave and in his chest.
- "And now of my fifth husband will I tell.
- God grant his soul may never get to Hell!
- And yet he was to me most brutal, too;
- My ribs yet feel as they were black and blue,
- And ever shall, until my dying day.
- But in our bed he was so fresh and gay,
- And therewithal he could so well impose,
- What time he wanted use of my belle chose,
- That though he'd beaten me on every bone,
- He could re-win my love, and that full soon.
- I guess I loved him best of all, for he
- Gave of his love most sparingly to me.
- We women have, if I am not to lie,
- In this love matter, a quaint fantasy;
- Look out a thing we may not lightly have,
- And after that we'll cry all day and crave.
- Forbid a thing, and that thing covet we;
- Press hard upon us, then we turn and flee.
- Sparingly offer we our goods, when fair;
- Great crowds at market for dearer ware,
- And what's too common brings but little price;
- All this knows every woman who is wise.
- "My fifth husband, may God his spirit bless!
- Whom I took all for love, and not riches,
- Had been sometime a student at Oxford,
- And had left school and had come home to board
- With my best gossip, dwelling in our town,
- God save her soul! Her name was Alison.
- She knew my heart and all my privity
- Better than did our parish priest, s'help me!
- To her confided I my secrets all.
- For had my husband pissed against a wall,
- Or done a thing that might have cost his life,
- To her and to another worthy wife,
- And to my niece whom I loved always well,
- I would have told it- every bit I'd tell,
- And did so, many and many a time, God wot,
- Which made his face full often red and hot
- For utter shame; he blamed himself that he
- Had told me of so deep a privity.
- "So it befell that on a time, in Lent
- (For oftentimes I to my gossip went,
- Since I loved always to be glad and gay
- And to walk out, in March, April, and May,
- From house to house, to hear the latest malice),
- Jenkin the clerk, and my gossip Dame Alis,
- And I myself into the meadows went.
- My husband was in London all that Lent;
- I had the greater leisure, then, to play,
- And to observe, and to be seen, I say,
- By pleasant folk; what knew I where my face
- Was destined to be loved, or in what place?
- Therefore I made my visits round about
- To vigils and processions of devout,
- To preaching too, and shrines of pilgrimage,
- To miracle plays, and always to each marriage,
- And wore my scarlet skirt before all wights.
- These worms and all these moths and all these mites,
- I say it at my peril, never ate;
- And know you why? I wore it early and late.
- "Now will I tell you what befell to me.
- I say that in the meadows walked we three
- Till, truly, we had come to such dalliance,
- This clerk and I, that, of my vigilance,
- I spoke to him and told him how that he,
- Were I a widow, might well marry me.
- For certainly I say it not to brag,
- But I was never quite without a bag
- Full of the needs of marriage that I seek.
- I hold a mouse's heart not worth a leek
- That has but one hole into which to run,
- And if it fail of that, then all is done.
- "I made him think he had enchanted me;
- My mother taught me all that subtlety.
- And then I said I'd dreamed of him all night,
- He would have slain me as I lay upright,
- And all my bed was full of very blood;
- But yet I hoped that he would do me good,
- For blood betokens gold, as I was taught.
- And all was false, I dreamed of him just- naught,
- Save as I acted on my mother's lore,
- As well in this thing as in many more.
- "But now, let's see, what was I going to say?
- Aha, by God, I know! It goes this way.
- "When my fourth husband lay upon his bier,
- I wept enough and made but sorry cheer,
- As wives must always, for it's custom's grace,
- And with my kerchief covered up my face;
- But since I was provided with a mate,
- I really wept but little, I may state.
- "To church my man was borne upon the morrow
- By neighbours, who for him made signs of sorrow;
- And Jenkin, our good clerk, was one of them.
- So help me God, when rang the requiem
- After the bier, I thought he had a pair
- Of legs and feet so clean-cut and so fair
- That all my heart I gave to him to hold.
- He was, I think, but twenty winters old,
- And I was forty, if I tell the truth;
- But then I always had a young colt's tooth.
- Gap-toothed I was, and that became me well;
- I had the print of holy Venus' seal.
- So help me God, I was a healthy one,
- And fair and rich and young and full of fun;
- And truly, as my husbands all told me,
- I had the silkiest quoniam that could be.
- For truly, I am all Venusian
- In feeling, and my brain is Martian.
- Venus gave me my lust, my lickerishness,
- And Mars gave me my sturdy hardiness.
- Taurus was my ascendant, with Mars therein.
- Alas, alas, that ever love was sin!
- I followed always my own inclination
- By virtue of my natal constellation;
- Which wrought me so I never could withdraw
- My Venus-chamber from a good fellow.
- Yet have I Mars's mark upon my face,
- And also in another private place.
- For God so truly my salvation be
- As I have never loved for policy,
- But ever followed my own appetite,
- Though he were short or tall, or black or white;
- I took no heed, so that he cared for me,
- How poor he was, nor even of what degree.
- "What should I say now, save, at the month's end,
- This jolly, gentle, Jenkin clerk, my friend,
- Had wedded me full ceremoniously,
- And to him gave I all the land in fee
- That ever had been given me before;
- But, later I repented me full sore.
- He never suffered me to have my way.
- By God, he smote me on the ear, one day,
- Because I tore out of his book a leaf,
- So that from this my ear is grown quite deaf.
- Stubborn I was as is a lioness,
- And with my tongue a very jay, I guess,
- And walk I would, as I had done before,
- From house to house, though I should not, he swore.
- For which he oftentimes would sit and preach
- And read old Roman tales to me and teach
- How one Sulpicius Gallus left his wife
- And her forsook for term of all his life
- Because he saw her with bared head, I say,
- Looking out from his door, upon a day.
- "Another Roman told he of by name
- Who, since his wife was at a summer-game
- Without his knowing, he forsook her eke.
- And then would he within his Bible seek
- That proverb of the old Ecclesiast
- Where he commands so freely and so fast
- That man forbid his wife to gad about;
- Then would he thus repeat, with never doubt:
- 'Whoso would build his whole house out of sallows,
- And spur his blind horse to run over fallows,
- And let his wife alone go seeking hallows,
- Is worthy to be hanged upon the gallows.'
- But all for naught, I didn't care a haw
- For all his proverbs, nor for his old saw,
- Nor yet would I by him corrected be.
- I hate one that my vices tells to me,
- And so do more of us- God knows!- than I.
- This made him mad with me, and furiously,
- That I'd not yield to him in any case.
- "Now will I tell you truth, by Saint Thomas,
- Of why I tore from out his book a leaf,
- For which he struck me so it made me deaf.
- "He had a book that gladly, night and day,
- For his amusement he would read alway.
- He called it 'Theophrastus' and 'Valerius',
- At which book would he laugh, uproarious.
- And, too, there sometime was a clerk at Rome,
- A cardinal, that men called Saint Jerome,
- Who made a book against Jovinian;
- In which book, too, there was Tertullian,
- Chrysippus, Trotula, and Heloise
- Who was abbess near Paris' diocese;
- And too, the Proverbs of King Solomon,
- And Ovid's Art, and books full many a one.
- And all of these were bound in one volume.
- And every night and day 'twas his custom,
- When he had leisure and took some vacation
- From all his other worldly occupation,
- To read, within this book, of wicked wives.
- He knew of them more legends and more lives
- Than are of good wives written in the Bible.
- For trust me, it's impossible, no libel,
- That any cleric shall speak well of wives,
- Unless it be of saints and holy lives,
- But naught for other women will they do.
- Who painted first the lion, tell me who?
- By God, if women had but written stories,
- As have these clerks within their oratories,
- They would have written of men more wickedness
- Than all the race of Adam could redress.
- The children of Mercury and of Venus
- Are in their lives antagonistic thus;
- For Mercury loves wisdom and science,
- And Venus loves but pleasure and expense.
- Because they different dispositions own,
- Each falls when other's in ascendant shown.
- And God knows Mercury is desolate
- In Pisces, wherein Venus rules in state;
- And Venus falls when Mercury is raised;
- Therefore no woman by a clerk is praised.
- A clerk, when he is old and can naught do
- Of Venus' labours worth his worn-out shoe,
- Then sits he down and writes, in his dotage,
- That women cannot keep vow of marriage!
- "But now to tell you, as I started to,
- Why I was beaten for a book, pardieu.
- Upon a night Jenkin, who was our sire,
- Read in his book, as he sat by the fire,
- Of Mother Eve who, by her wickedness,
- First brought mankind to all his wretchedness,
- For which Lord Jesus Christ Himself was slain,
- Who, with His heart's blood, saved us thus again.
- Lo here, expressly of woman, may you find
- That woman was the ruin of mankind.
- "Then read he out how Samson lost his hairs,
- Sleeping, his leman cut them with her shears;
- And through this treason lost he either eye.
- "Then read he out, if I am not to lie,
- Of Hercules, and Deianira's desire
- That caused him to go set himself on fire.
- "Nothing escaped him of the pain and woe
- That Socrates had with his spouses two;
- How Xantippe threw piss upon his head;
- This hapless man sat still, as he were dead;
- He wiped his head, no more durst he complain
- Than 'Ere the thunder ceases comes the rain.'
- "Then of Pasiphae, the queen of Crete,
- For cursedness he thought the story sweet;
- Fie! Say no more- it is an awful thing-
- Of her so horrible lust and love-liking.
- "Of Clytemnestra, for her lechery,
- Who caused her husband's death by treachery,
- He read all this with greatest zest, I vow.
- "He told me, too, just when it was and how
- Amphiaraus at Thebes lost his life;
- My husband had a legend of his wife
- Eriphyle who, for a brooch of gold,
- In secrecy to hostile Greeks had told
- Whereat her husband had his hiding place,
- For which he found at Thebes but sorry grace.
- "Of Livia and Lucia told he me,
- For both of them their husbands killed, you see,
- The one for love, the other killed for hate;
- Livia her husband, on an evening late,
- Made drink some poison, for she was his foe.
- Lucia, lecherous, loved her husband so
- That, to the end he'd always of her think,
- She gave him such a, philtre, for love-drink,
- That he was dead or ever it was morrow;
- And husbands thus, by same means, came to sorrow.
- "Then did he tell how one Latumius
- Complained unto his comrade Arrius
- That in his garden grew a baleful tree
- Whereon, he said, his wives, and they were three,
- Had hanged themselves for wretchedness and woe.
- 'O brother,' Arrius said, 'and did they so?
- Give me a graft of that same blessed tree
- And in my garden planted it shall be!'
- "Of wives of later date he also read,
- How some had slain their husbands in their bed
- And let their lovers shag them all the night
- While corpses lay upon the floor upright.
- And some had driven nails into the brain
- While husbands slept and in such wise were slain.
- And some had given them poison in their drink.
- He told more evil than the mind can think.
- And therewithal he knew of more proverbs
- Than in this world there grows of grass or herbs.
- 'Better,' he said, 'your habitation be
- With lion wild or dragon foul,' said he,
- 'Than with a woman who will nag and chide.'
- 'Better,' he said, 'on the housetop abide
- Than with a brawling wife down in the house;
- Such are so wicked and contrarious
- They hate the thing their husband loves, for aye.'
- He said, 'a woman throws her shame away
- When she throws off her smock,' and further, too:
- 'A woman fair, save she be chaste also,
- Is like a ring of gold in a sow's nose.'
- Who would imagine or who would suppose
- What grief and pain were in this heart of mine?
- "And when I saw he'd never cease, in fine,
- His reading in this cursed book at night,
- Three leaves of it I snatched and tore outright
- Out of his book, as he read on; and eke
- I with my fist so took him on the cheek
- That in our fire he reeled and fell right down.
- Then he got up as does a wild lion,
- And with his fist he struck me on the head,
- And on the floor I lay as I were dead.
- And when he saw how limp and still I lay,
- He was afraid and would have run away,
- Until at last, out of my swoon I made:
- 'Oh, have you slain me, you false thief?' I said,
- 'And for my land have you thus murdered me?
- Kiss me before I die, and let me be.'
- "He came to me and near me he knelt down,
- And said: 'O my dear sister Alison,
- So help me God, I'll never strike you more;
- What I have done, you are to blame therefor.
- But all the same forgiveness now I seek!'
- And thereupon I hit him on the cheek,
- And said: 'Thief, so much vengeance do I wreak!
- Now will I die; I can no longer speak!'
- But at the last, and with much care and woe,
- We made it up between ourselves. And so
- He put the bridle reins within my hand
- To have the governing of house and land;
- And of his tongue and of his hand, also;
- And made him burn his book, right then, oho!
- And when I had thus gathered unto me
- Masterfully, the entire sovereignty,
- And he had said: 'My own true wedded wife,
- Do as you please the term of all your life,
- Guard your own honour and keep fair my state'-
- After that day we never had debate.
- God help me now, I was to him as kind
- As any wife from Denmark unto Ind,
- And also true, and so was he to me.
- I pray to God, Who sits in majesty,
- To bless his soul, out of His mercy dear!
- Now will I tell my tale, if you will hear."
- BEHOLD THE WORDS
- BETWEEN THE SUMMONER,
- AND THE FRIAR
-
- The friar laughed when he had heard all this.
- "Now dame," said he, "so have I joy or bliss
- This is a long preamble to a tale!"
- And when the summoner heard this friar's hail,
- "Lo," said the summoner, "by God's arms two!
- A friar will always interfere, mark you.
- Behold, good men, a housefly and a friar
- Will fall in every dish and matters higher.
- Why speak of preambling; you in your gown?
- What! Amble, trot, hold peace, or go sit down;
- You hinder our diversion thus to inquire."
- "Aye, say you so, sir summoner?" said the friar,
- "Now by my faith I will, before I go,
- Tell of a summoner such a tale, or so,
- That all the folk shall laugh who're in this place'
- "Otherwise, friar, I beshrew your face,"
- Replied this summoner, "and beshrew me
- If I do not tell tales here, two or three,
- Of friars ere I come to Sittingbourne,
- That certainly will give you cause to mourn,
- For well I know your patience will be gone."
- Our host cried out, "Now peace, and that anon!"
- And said he: "Let the woman tell her tale.
- You act like people who are drunk with ale.
- Do, lady, tell your tale, and that is best."
- "All ready, sir," said she, "as you request,
- If I have license of this worthy friar."
- "Yes, dame," said he, "to hear you's my desire."
-
-
- HERE THE WIFE OF BATH ENDS HER PROLOGUE
-
-
- THE TALE OF THE WIFE OF BATH
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- Now in the olden days of King Arthur,
- Of whom the Britons speak with great honour,
- All this wide land was land of faery.
- The elf-queen, with her jolly company,
- Danced oftentimes on many a green mead;
- This was the old opinion, as I read.
- I speak of many hundred years ago;
- But now no man can see the elves, you know.
- For now the so-great charity and prayers
- Of limiters and other holy friars
- That do infest each land and every stream
- As thick as motes are in a bright sunbeam,
- Blessing halls, chambers, kitchens, ladies' bowers,
- Cities and towns and castles and high towers,
- Manors and barns and stables, aye and dairies-
- This causes it that there are now no fairies.
- For where was wont to walk full many an elf,
- Right there walks now the limiter himself
- In noons and afternoons and in mornings,
- Saying his matins and such holy things,
- As he goes round his district in his gown.
- Women may now go safely up and down,
- In every copse or under every tree;
- There is no other incubus, than he,
- And would do them nothing but dishonour.
- And so befell it that this King Arthur
- Had at his court a lusty bachelor
- Who, on a day, came riding from river;
- And happened that, alone as she was born,
- He saw a maiden walking through the corn,
- From whom, in spite of all she did and said,
- Straightway by force he took her maidenhead;
- For which violation was there such clamour,
- And such appealing unto King Arthur,
- That soon condemned was this knight to be dead
- By course of law, and should have lost his head,
- Peradventure, such being the statute then;
- But that the other ladies and the queen
- So long prayed of the king to show him grace,
- He granted life, at last, in the law's place,
- And gave him to the queen, as she should will,
- Whether she'd save him, or his blood should spill.
- The queen she thanked the king with all her might,
- And after this, thus spoke she to the knight,
- When she'd an opportunity, one day:
- "You stand yet," said she, "in such poor a way
- That for your life you've no security.
- I'll grant you life if you can tell to me
- What thing it is that women most desire.
- Be wise, and keep your neck from iron dire!
- And if you cannot tell it me anon,
- Then will I give you license to be gone
- A twelvemonth and a day, to search and learn
- Sufficient answer in this grave concern.
- And your knight's word I'll have, ere forth you pace,
- To yield your body to me in this place."
- Grieved was this knight, and sorrowfully he sighed;
- But there! he could not do as pleased his pride.
- And at the last he chose that he would wend
- And come again upon the twelvemonth's end,
- With such an answer as God might purvey;
- And so he took his leave and went his way.
- He sought out every house and every place
- Wherein he hoped to find that he had grace
- To learn what women love the most of all;
- But nowhere ever did it him befall
- To find, upon the question stated here,
- Two, persons who agreed with statement clear.
- Some said that women all loved best riches,
- Some said, fair fame, and some said, prettiness;
- Some, rich array, some said 'twas lust abed
- And often to be widowed and re-wed.
- Some said that our poor hearts are aye most eased
- When we have been most flattered and thus pleased
- And he went near the truth, I will not lie;
- A man may win us best with flattery;
- And with attentions and with busyness
- We're often limed, the greater and the less.
- And some say, too, that we do love the best
- To be quite free to do our own behest,
- And that no man reprove us for our vice,
- But saying we are wise, take our advice.
- For truly there is no one of us all,
- If anyone shall rub us on a gall,
- That will not kick because he tells the truth.
- Try, and he'll find, who does so, I say sooth.
- No matter how much vice we have within,
- We would be held for wise and clean of sin.
- And some folk say that great delight have we
- To be held constant, also trustworthy,
- And on one purpose steadfastly to dwell,
- And not betray a thing that men may tell.
- But that tale is not worth a rake's handle;
- By God, we women can no thing conceal,
- As witness Midas. Would you hear the tale?
- Ovid, among some other matters small,
- Said Midas had beneath his long curled hair,
- Two ass's ears that grew in secret there,
- The which defect he hid, as best he might,
- Full cunningly from every person's sight,
- And, save his wife, no one knew of it, no.
- He loved her most, and trusted her also;
- And he prayed of her that to no creature
- She'd tell of his disfigurement impure.
- She swore him: Nay, for all this world to win
- She would do no such villainy or sin
- And cause her husband have so foul a name;
- Nor would she tell it for her own deep shame.
- Nevertheless, she thought she would have died
- Because so long the secret must she hide;
- It seemed to swell so big about her heart
- That some word from her mouth must surely start;
- And since she dared to tell it to no man,
- Down to a marsh, that lay hard by, she ran;
- Till she came there her heart was all afire,
- And as a bittern booms in the quagmire,
- She laid her mouth low to the water down:
- "Betray me not, you sounding water blown,"
- Said she, "I tell it to none else but you:
- Long ears like asses' has my husband two!
- Now is my heart at ease, since that is out;
- I could no longer keep it, there's no doubt."
- Here may you see, though for a while we bide,
- Yet out it must; no secret can we hide.
- The rest of all this tale, if you would hear,
- Read Ovid: in his book does it appear.
- This knight my tale is chiefly told about
- When what he went for he could not find out,
- That is, the thing that women love the best,
- Most saddened was the spirit in his breast;
- But home he goes, he could no more delay.
- The day was come when home he turned his way;
- And on his way it chanced that he should ride
- In all his care, beneath a forest's side,
- And there he saw, a-dancing him before,
- Full four and twenty ladies, maybe more;
- Toward which dance eagerly did he turn
- In hope that there some wisdom he should learn.
- But truly, ere he came upon them there,
- The dancers vanished all, he knew not where.
- No creature saw he that gave sign of life,
- Save, on the greensward sitting, an old wife;
- A fouler person could no man devise.
- Before the knight this old wife did arise,
- And said: "Sir knight, hence lies no travelled way.
- Tell me what thing you seek, and by your fay.
- Perchance you'll find it may the better be;
- These ancient folk know many things," said she.
- "Dear mother," said this knight assuredly,
- "I am but dead, save I can tell, truly,
- What thing it is that women most desire;
- Could you inform me, I'd pay well your hire."
- "Plight me your troth here, hand in hand," said she,
- "That you will do, whatever it may be,
- The thing I ask if it lie in your might;
- And I'll give you your answer ere the night."
- "Have here my word," said he. "That thing I grant."
- "Then," said the crone, "of this I make my vaunt,
- Your life is safe; and I will stand thereby,
- Upon my life, the queen will say as I.
- Let's see which is the proudest of them all
- That wears upon her hair kerchief or caul,
- Shall dare say no to that which I shall teach;
- Let us go now and without longer speech."
- Then whispered she a sentence in his ear,
- And bade him to be glad and have no fear.
- When they were come unto the court, this knight
- Said he had kept his promise as was right,
- And ready was his answer, as he said.
- Full many a noble wife, and many a maid,
- And many a widow, since they are so wise,
- The queen herself sitting as high justice,
- Assembled were, his answer there to hear;
- And then the knight was bidden to appear.
- Command was given for silence in the hall,
- And that the knight should tell before them all
- What thing all worldly women love the best.
- This knight did not stand dumb, as does a beast,
- But to this question presently answered
- With manly voice, so that the whole court heard:
- "My liege lady, generally," said he,
- "Women desire to have the sovereignty
- As well upon their husband as their love,
- And to have mastery their man above;
- This thing you most desire, though me you kill
- Do as you please, I am here at your will."
- In all the court there was no wife or maid
- Or widow that denied the thing he said,
- But all held, he was worthy to have life.
- And with that word up started the old wife
- Whom he had seen a-sitting on the green.
- "Mercy," cried she, "my sovereign lady queen!
- Before the court's dismissed, give me my right.
- 'Twas I who taught the answer to this knight;
- For which he did plight troth to me, out there,
- That the first thing I should of him require
- He would do that, if it lay in his might.
- Before the court, now, pray I you, sir knight,"
- Said she, "that you will take me for your wife;
- For well you know that I have saved your life.
- If this be false, say nay, upon your fay!"
- This knight replied: "Alas and welaway!
- That I so promised I will not protest.
- But for God's love pray make a new request.
- Take all my wealth and let my body go."
- "Nay then," said she, "beshrew us if I do!
- For though I may be foul and old and poor,
- I will not, for all metal and all ore
- That from the earth is dug or lies above,
- Be aught except your wife and your true love."
- "My love?" cried he, "nay, rather my damnation!
- Alas! that any of my race and station
- Should ever so dishonoured foully be!"
- But all for naught; the end was this, that he
- Was so constrained he needs must go and wed,
- And take his ancient wife and go to bed.
- Now, peradventure, would some men say here,
- That, of my negligence, I take no care
- To tell you of the joy and all the array
- That at the wedding feast were seen that day.
- Make a brief answer to this thing I shall;
- I say, there was no joy or feast at all;
- There was but heaviness and grievous sorrow;
- For privately he wedded on the morrow,
- And all day, then, he hid him like an owl;
- So sad he was, his old wife looked so foul.
- Great was the woe the knight had in his thought
- When he, with her, to marriage bed was brought;
- He rolled about and turned him to and fro.
- His old wife lay there, always smiling so,
- And said: "O my dear husband, ben'cite!
- Fares every knight with wife as you with me?
- Is this the custom in King Arthur's house?
- Are knights of his all so fastidious?
- I am your own true love and, more, your wife;
- And I am she who saved your very life;
- And truly, since I've never done you wrong,
- Why do you treat me so, this first night long?
- You act as does a man who's lost his wit;
- What is my fault? For God's love tell me it,
- And it shall be amended, if I may."
- "Amended!" cried this knight, "Alas, nay, nay!
- It will not be amended ever, no!
- You are so loathsome, and so old also,
- And therewith of so low a race were born,
- It's little wonder that I toss and turn.
- Would God my heart would break within my breast!"
- "Is this," asked she, "the cause of your unrest?"
- "Yes, truly," said he, "and no wonder 'tis."
- "Now, sir," said she, "I could amend all this,
- If I but would, and that within days three,
- If you would bear yourself well towards me.
- "But since you speak of such gentility
- As is descended from old wealth, till ye
- Claim that for that you should be gentlemen,
- I hold such arrogance not worth a hen.
- Find him who is most virtuous alway,
- Alone or publicly, and most tries aye
- To do whatever noble deeds he can,
- And take him for the greatest gentleman.
- Christ wills we claim from Him gentility,
- Not from ancestors of landocracy.
- For though they give us all their heritage,
- For which we claim to be of high lineage,
- Yet can they not bequeath, in anything,
- To any of us, their virtuous living,
- That made men say they had gentility,
- And bade us follow them in like degree.
- "Well does that poet wise of great Florence,
- Called Dante, speak his mind in this sentence;
- Somewhat like this may it translated be:
- 'Rarely unto the branches of the tree
- Doth human worth mount up: and so ordains
- He Who bestows it; to Him it pertains.'
- For of our fathers may we nothing claim
- But temporal things, that man may hurt and maim
- "And everyone knows this as well as I,
- If nobleness were implanted naturally
- Within a certain lineage, down the line,
- In private and in public, I opine,
- The ways of gentleness they'd alway show
- And never fall to vice and conduct low.
- "Take fire and carry it in the darkest house
- Between here and the Mount of Caucasus,
- And let men shut the doors and from them turn;
- Yet will the fire as fairly blaze and burn
- As twenty thousand men did it behold;
- Its nature and its office it will hold,
- On peril of my life, until it die.
- "From this you see that true gentility
- Is not allied to wealth a man may own,
- Since folk do not their deeds, as may be shown,
- As does the fire, according to its kind.
- For God knows that men may full often find
- A lord's son doing shame and villainy;
- And he that prizes his gentility
- In being born of some old noble house,
- With ancestors both noble and virtuous,
- But will himself do naught of noble deeds
- Nor follow him to whose name he succeeds,
- He is not gentle, be he duke or earl;
- For acting churlish makes a man a churl.
- Gentility is not just the renown
- Of ancestors who have some greatness shown,
- In which you have no portion of your own.
- Your own gentility comes from God alone;
- Thence comes our true nobility by grace,
- It was not willed us with our rank and place
- "Think how noble, as says Valerius,
- Was that same Tullius Hostilius,
- Who out of poverty rose to high estate.
- Seneca and Boethius inculcate,
- Expressly (and no doubt it thus proceeds),
- That he is noble who does noble deeds;
- And therefore, husband dear, I thus conclude:
- Although my ancestors mayhap were rude,
- Yet may the High Lord God, and so hope I,
- Grant me the grace to live right virtuously.
- Then I'll be gentle when I do begin
- To live in virtue and to do no sin.
- "And when you me reproach for poverty,
- The High God, in Whom we believe, say I,
- In voluntary poverty lived His life.
- And surely every man, or maid, or wife
- May understand that Jesus, Heaven's King,
- Would not have chosen vileness of living.
- Glad poverty's an honest thing, that's plain,
- Which Seneca and other clerks maintain.
- Whoso will be content with poverty,
- I hold him rich, though not a shirt has he.
- And he that covets much is a poor wight,
- For he would gain what's all beyond his might,
- But he that has not, nor desires to have,
- Is rich, although you hold him but a knave.
- "True poverty, it sings right naturally;
- Juvenal gaily says of poverty:
- 'The poor man, when he walks along the way,
- Before the robbers he may sing and play.'
- Poverty's odious good, and, as I guess,
- It is a stimulant to busyness;
- A great improver, too, of sapience
- In him that takes it all with due patience.
- Poverty's this, though it seem misery-
- Its quality may none dispute, say I.
- Poverty often, when a man is low,
- Makes him his God and even himself to know.
- And poverty's an eye-glass, seems to me,
- Through which a man his loyal friends may see.
- Since you've received no injury from me,
- Then why reproach me for my poverty.
- "Now, sir, with age you have upbraided me;
- And truly, sir, though no authority
- Were in a book, you gentles of honour
- Say that men should the aged show favour,
- And call him father, of your gentleness;
- And authors could I find for this, I guess.
- "Now since you say that I am foul and old,
- Then fear you not to be made a cuckold;
- For dirt and age, as prosperous I may be,
- Are mighty wardens over chastity.
- Nevertheless, since I know your delight,
- I'll satisfy your worldly appetite.
- "Choose, now," said she, "one of these two things, aye,
- To have me foul and old until I die,
- And be to you a true and humble wife,
- And never anger you in all my life;
- Or else to have me young and very fair
- And take your chance with those who will repair
- Unto your house, and all because of me,
- Or in some other place, as well may be.
- Now choose which you like better and reply."
- This knight considered, and did sorely sigh,
- But at the last replied as you shall hear:
- "My lady and my love, and wife so dear,
- I put myself in your wise governing;
- Do you choose which may be the more pleasing,
- And bring most honour to you, and me also.
- I care not which it be of these things two;
- For if you like it, that suffices me."
- "Then have I got of you the mastery,
- Since I may choose and govern, in earnest?"
- "Yes, truly, wife," said he, "I hold that best."
- "Kiss me," said she, "we'll be no longer wroth,
- For by my truth, to you I will be both;
- That is to say, I'll be both good and fair.
- I pray God I go mad, and so declare,
- If I be not to you as good and true
- As ever wife was since the world was new.
- And, save I be, at dawn, as fairly seen
- As any lady, empress, or great queen
- That is between the east and the far west,
- Do with my life and death as you like best.
- Throw back the curtain and see how it is."
- And when the knight saw verily all this,
- That she so very fair was, and young too,
- For joy he clasped her in his strong arms two,
- His heart bathed in a bath of utter bliss;
- A thousand times, all in a row, he'd kiss.
- And she obeyed his wish in everything
- That might give pleasure to his love-liking.
- And thus they lived unto their lives' fair end,
- In perfect joy; and Jesus to us send
- Meek husbands, and young ones, and fresh in bed,
- And good luck to outlive them that we wed.
- And I pray Jesus to cut short the lives
- Of those who'll not be governed by their wives;
- And old and querulous niggards with their pence,
- And send them soon a mortal pestilence!
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- HERE ENDS THE WIFE OF BATH'S TALE
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