Troilus and Criseyde

Troilus and Criseyde
Author: Geoffrey Chaucer
Pages: 503,851 Pages
Audio Length: 6 hr 59 min
Languages: en

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BOOK III. Incipit prohemium tercii libri.

               O blisful light of whiche the bemes clere  1                Adorneth al the thridde hevene faire!                O sonnes lief, O Ioves doughter dere,                Plesaunce of love, O goodly debonaire,                In gentil hertes ay redy to repaire!                5                O verray cause of hele and of gladnesse,                Y-heried be thy might and thy goodnesse!                In hevene and helle, in erthe and salte see                Is felt thy might, if that I wel descerne;                As man, brid, best, fish, herbe and grene tree  10                Thee fele in tymes with vapour eterne.                God loveth, and to love wol nought werne;                And in this world no lyves creature,                With-outen love, is worth, or may endure.                Ye Ioves first to thilke effectes glade,  15                Thorugh which that thinges liven alle and be,                Comeveden, and amorous him made                On mortal thing, and as yow list, ay ye                Yeve him in love ese or adversitee;                And in a thousand formes doun him sente  20                For love in erthe, and whom yow liste, he hente.                Ye fierse Mars apeysen of his ire,                And, as yow list, ye maken hertes digne;                Algates, hem that ye wol sette a-fyre,                They dreden shame, and vices they resigne;  25                Ye do hem corteys be, fresshe and benigne,                And hye or lowe, after a wight entendeth;                The Ioyes that he hath, your might him sendeth.                Ye holden regne and hous in unitee;                Ye soothfast cause of frendship been also;  30                Ye knowe al thilke covered qualitee                Of thinges which that folk on wondren so,                Whan they can not construe how it may io,                She loveth him, or why he loveth here;                As why this fish, and nought that, comth to were.                35                 Ye folk a lawe han set in universe,                And this knowe I by hem that loveres be,                That who-so stryveth with yow hath the werse:                Now, lady bright, for thy benignitee,                At reverence of hem that serven thee,  40                Whos clerk I am, so techeth me devyse                Som Ioye of that is felt in thy servyse.                Ye in my naked herte sentement                Inhelde, and do me shewe of thy swetnesse.                —                Caliope, thy vois be now present,  45                For now is nede; sestow not my destresse,                How I mot telle anon-right the gladnesse                Of Troilus, to Venus heryinge?                To which gladnes, who nede hath, god him bringe!                Explicit prohemium Tercii Libri.                Incipit Liber Tercius.                 
                Lay al this mene whyle Troilus,  50                Recordinge his lessoun in this manere,                `Ma fey!'                 thought he, `Thus wole I seye and thus;                Thus wole I pleyne unto my lady dere;                That word is good, and this shal be my chere;                This nil I not foryeten in no wyse.'                 55                God leve him werken as he can devyse!                 And, lord, so that his herte gan to quappe,                Heringe hir come, and shorte for to syke!                 And Pandarus, that ledde hir by the lappe,                Com ner, and gan in at the curtin pyke,  60                And seyde, `God do bote on alle syke!                 See, who is here yow comen to visyte;                Lo, here is she that is your deeth to wyte.'                 Ther-with it semed as he wepte almost;                `A ha,' quod Troilus so rewfully,  65                `Wher me be wo, O mighty god, thow wost!                 Who is al there?                 I se nought trewely.'                 `Sire,' quod Criseyde, `it is Pandare and I.'                 `Ye, swete herte?                 Allas, I may nought ryse                To knele, and do yow honour in som wyse.'                 70                 And dressede him upward, and she right tho                Gan bothe here hondes softe upon him leye,                `O, for the love of god, do ye not so                To me,' quod she, `Ey!                 What is this to seye?                 Sire, come am I to yow for causes tweye;  75                First, yow to thonke, and of your lordshipe eke                Continuance I wolde yow biseke.'                 This Troilus, that herde his lady preye                Of lordship him, wex neither quik ne deed,                Ne mighte a word for shame to it seye,  80                Al-though men sholde smyten of his heed.                 But lord, so he wex sodeinliche reed,                And sire, his lesson, that he wende conne,                To preyen hir, is thurgh his wit y-ronne.                 Cryseyde al this aspyede wel y-nough,  85                For she was wys, and lovede him never-the-lasse,                Al nere he malapert, or made it tough,                Or was to bold, to singe a fool a masse.                 But whan his shame gan somwhat to passe,                His resons, as I may my rymes holde,  90                I yow wole telle, as techen bokes olde.                 In chaunged vois, right for his verray drede,                Which vois eek quook, and ther-to his manere                Goodly abayst, and now his hewes rede,                Now pale, un-to Criseyde, his lady dere,  95                With look doun cast and humble yolden chere,                Lo, the alderfirste word that him asterte                Was, twyes, `Mercy, mercy, swete herte!'                 And stinte a whyl, and whan he mighte out-bringe,                The nexte word was, `God wot, for I have,  100                As feyfully as I have had konninge,                Ben youres, also god so my sowle save;                And shal til that I, woful wight, be grave.                 And though I dar ne can un-to yow pleyne,                Y-wis, I suffre nought the lasse peyne.                 105                 `Thus muche as now, O wommanliche wyf,                I may out-bringe, and if this yow displese,                That shal I wreke upon myn owne lyf                Right sone, I trowe, and doon your herte an ese,                If with my deeth your herte I may apese.                 110                But sin that ye han herd me som-what seye,                Now recche I never how sone that I deye.'                 Ther-with his manly sorwe to biholde,                It mighte han maad an herte of stoon to rewe;                And Pandare weep as he to watre wolde,  115                And poked ever his nece newe and newe,                And seyde, `Wo bigon ben hertes trewe!                 For love of god, make of this thing an ende,                Or slee us bothe at ones, er that ye wende.'                 `I?                 What?'                 quod she, `By god and by my trouthe,  120                I noot nought what ye wilne that I seye.'                 `I?                 What?'                 quod he, `That ye han on him routhe,                For goddes love, and doth him nought to deye.'                 `Now thanne thus,' quod she, `I wolde him preye                To telle me the fyn of his entente;  125                Yet wist I never wel what that he mente.'                 `What that I mene, O swete herte dere?'                 Quod Troilus, `O goodly, fresshe free!                 That, with the stremes of your eyen clere,                Ye wolde som-tyme freendly on me see,  130                And thanne agreen that I may ben he,                With-oute braunche of vyce on any wyse,                In trouthe alwey to doon yow my servyse,                 `As to my lady right and chief resort,                With al my wit and al my diligence,  135                And I to han, right as yow list, comfort,                Under your yerde, egal to myn offence,                As deeth, if that I breke your defence;                And that ye deigne me so muche honoure,                Me to comaunden ought in any houre.                 140                 `And I to ben your verray humble trewe,                Secret, and in my paynes pacient,                And ever-mo desire freshly newe,                To serven, and been y-lyke ay diligent,                And, with good herte, al holly your talent  145                Receyven wel, how sore that me smerte,                Lo, this mene I, myn owene swete herte.'                 Quod Pandarus, `Lo, here an hard request,                And resonable, a lady for to werne!                 Now, nece myn, by natal Ioves fest,  150                Were I a god, ye sholde sterve as yerne,                That heren wel, this man wol no-thing yerne                But your honour, and seen him almost sterve,                And been so looth to suffren him yow serve.'                 With that she gan hir eyen on him caste  155                Ful esily, and ful debonairly,                Avysing hir, and hyed not to faste                With never a word, but seyde him softely,                `Myn honour sauf, I wol wel trewely,                And in swich forme as he can now devyse,  160                Receyven him fully to my servyse,                 `Biseching him, for goddes love, that he                Wolde, in honour of trouthe and gentilesse,                As I wel mene, eek mene wel to me,                And myn honour, with wit and besinesse  165                Ay kepe; and if I may don him gladnesse,                From hennes-forth, y-wis, I nil not feyne:                Now beeth al hool; no lenger ye ne pleyne.                 `But nathelees, this warne I yow,' quod she,                `A kinges sone al-though ye be, y-wis,  170                Ye shal na-more have soverainetee                Of me in love, than right in that cas is;                Ne I nil forbere, if that ye doon a-mis,                To wrathen yow; and whyl that ye me serve,                Cherycen yow right after ye deserve.                 175                 `And shortly, dere herte and al my knight,                Beth glad, and draweth yow to lustinesse,                And I shal trewely, with al my might,                Your bittre tornen al in-to swetenesse.                 If I be she that may yow do gladnesse,  180                For every wo ye shal recovere a blisse';                And him in armes took, and gan him kisse.                 Fil Pandarus on knees, and up his eyen                To hevene threw, and held his hondes hye,                `Immortal god!'                 quod he, `That mayst nought dyen,  185                Cupide I mene, of this mayst glorifye;                And Venus, thou mayst maken melodye;                With-outen hond, me semeth that in the towne,                For this merveyle, I here ech belle sowne.                 `But ho!                 No more as now of this matere,  190                For-why this folk wol comen up anoon,                That han the lettre red; lo, I hem here.                 But I coniure thee, Criseyde, and oon,                And two, thou Troilus, whan thow mayst goon,                That at myn hous ye been at my warninge,  195                For I ful wel shal shape youre cominge;                 `And eseth ther your hertes right y-nough;                And lat see which of yow shal bere the belle                To speke of love a-right!'                 ther-with he lough,                `For ther have ye a layser for to telle.'                 200                Quod Troilus, `How longe shal I dwelle                Er this be doon?'                 Quod he, `Whan thou mayst ryse,                This thing shal be right as I yow devyse.'                 With that Eleyne and also Deiphebus                Tho comen upward, right at the steyres ende;  205                And Lord, so than gan grone Troilus,                His brother and his suster for to blende.                 Quod Pandarus, `It tyme is that we wende;                Tak, nece myn, your leve at alle three,                And lat hem speke, and cometh forth with me.'                 210                 She took hir leve at hem ful thriftily,                As she wel coude, and they hir reverence                Un-to the fulle diden hardely,                And speken wonder wel, in hir absence,                Of hir, in preysing of hir excellence,  215                Hir governaunce, hir wit; and hir manere                Commendeden, it Ioye was to here.                 Now lat hir wende un-to hir owne place,                And torne we to Troilus a-yein,                That gan ful lightly of the lettre passe  220                That Deiphebus hadde in the gardin seyn.                 And of Eleyne and him he wolde fayn                Delivered been, and seyde that him leste                To slepe, and after tales have reste.                 Eleyne him kiste, and took hir leve blyve,  225                Deiphebus eek, and hoom wente every wight;                And Pandarus, as faste as he may dryve,                To Troilus tho com, as lyne right;                And on a paillet, al that glade night,                By Troilus he lay, with mery chere,  230                To tale; and wel was hem they were y-fere.                 Whan every wight was voided but they two,                And alle the dores were faste y-shette,                To telle in short, with-oute wordes mo,                This Pandarus, with-outen any lette,  235                Up roos, and on his beddes syde him sette,                And gan to speken in a sobre wyse                To Troilus, as I shal yow devyse:                 `Myn alderlevest lord, and brother dere,                God woot, and thou, that it sat me so sore,  240                When I thee saw so languisshing to-yere,                For love, of which thy wo wex alwey more;                That I, with al my might and al my lore,                Have ever sithen doon my bisinesse                To bringe thee to Ioye out of distresse,  245                 `And have it brought to swich plyt as thou wost,                So that, thorugh me, thow stondest now in weye                To fare wel, I seye it for no bost,                And wostow which?                 For shame it is to seye,                For thee have I bigonne a gamen pleye  250                Which that I never doon shal eft for other,                Al-though he were a thousand fold my brother.                 `That is to seye, for thee am I bicomen,                Bitwixen game and ernest, swich a mene                As maken wommen un-to men to comen;  255                Al sey I nought, thou wost wel what I mene.                 For thee have I my nece, of vyces clene,                So fully maad thy gentilesse triste,                That al shal been right as thy-selve liste.                 `But god, that al wot, take I to witnesse,  260                That never I this for coveityse wroughte,                But only for to abregge that distresse,                For which wel nygh thou deydest, as me thoughte.                 But, gode brother, do now as thee oughte,                For goddes love, and kep hir out of blame,  265                Sin thou art wys, and save alwey hir name.                 `For wel thou wost, the name as yet of here                Among the peple, as who seyth, halwed is;                For that man is unbore, I dar wel swere,                That ever wiste that she dide amis.                 270                But wo is me, that I, that cause al this,                May thenken that she is my nece dere,                And I hir eem, and trattor eek y-fere!                 `And were it wist that I, through myn engyn,                Hadde in my nece y-put this fantasye,  275                To do thy lust, and hoolly to be thyn,                Why, al the world up-on it wolde crye,                And seye, that I the worste trecherye                Dide in this cas, that ever was bigonne,                And she for-lost, and thou right nought y-wonne.                 280                 `Wher-fore, er I wol ferther goon a pas,                Yet eft I thee biseche and fully seye,                That privetee go with us in this cas;                That is to seye, that thou us never wreye;                And be nought wrooth, though I thee ofte preye  285                To holden secree swich an heigh matere;                For skilful is, thow wost wel, my preyere.                 `And thenk what wo ther hath bitid er this,                For makinge of avantes, as men rede;                And what mischaunce in this world yet ther is,  290                Fro day to day, right for that wikked dede;                For which these wyse clerkes that ben dede                Han ever yet proverbed to us yonge,                That "Firste vertu is to kepe tonge."                 `And, nere it that I wilne as now tabregge  295                Diffusioun of speche, I coude almost                A thousand olde stories thee alegge                Of wommen lost, thorugh fals and foles bost;                Proverbes canst thy-self y-nowe, and wost,                Ayeins that vyce, for to been a labbe,  300                Al seyde men sooth as often as they gabbe.                 `O tonge, allas!                 So often here-biforn                Hastow made many a lady bright of hewe                Seyd, "Welawey!                 The day that I was born!"                 And many a maydes sorwes for to newe;  305                And, for the more part, al is untrewe                That men of yelpe, and it were brought to preve;                Of kinde non avauntour is to leve.                 `Avauntour and a lyere, al is on;                As thus: I pose, a womman graunte me  310                Hir love, and seyth that other wol she non,                And I am sworn to holden it secree,                And after I go telle it two or three;                Y-wis, I am avauntour at the leste,                And lyere, for I breke my biheste.                 315                 `Now loke thanne, if they be nought to blame,                Swich maner folk; what shal I clepe hem, what,                That hem avaunte of wommen, and by name,                That never yet bihighte hem this ne that,                Ne knewe hem more than myn olde hat?                 320                No wonder is, so god me sende hele,                Though wommen drede with us men to dele.                 `I sey not this for no mistrust of yow,                Ne for no wys man, but for foles nyce,                And for the harm that in the world is now,  325                As wel for foly ofte as for malyce;                For wel wot I, in wyse folk, that vyce                No womman drat, if she be wel avysed;                For wyse ben by foles harm chastysed.                 `But now to purpos; leve brother dere,  330                Have al this thing that I have seyd in minde,                And keep thee clos, and be now of good chere,                For at thy day thou shalt me trewe finde.                 I shal thy proces sette in swich a kinde,                And god to-forn, that it shall thee suffyse,  335                For it shal been right as thou wolt devyse.                 `For wel I woot, thou menest wel, parde;                Therfore I dar this fully undertake.                 Thou wost eek what thy lady graunted thee,                And day is set, the chartres up to make.                 340                Have now good night, I may no lenger wake;                And bid for me, sin thou art now in blisse,                That god me sende deeth or sone lisse.'                 Who mighte telle half the Ioye or feste                Which that the sowle of Troilus tho felte,  345                Heringe theffect of Pandarus biheste?                 His olde wo, that made his herte swelte,                Gan tho for Ioye wasten and to-melte,                And al the richesse of his sykes sore                At ones fledde, he felte of hem no more.                 350                 But right so as these holtes and these hayes,                That han in winter dede been and dreye,                Revesten hem in grene, whan that May is,                Whan every lusty lyketh best to pleye;                Right in that selve wyse, sooth to seye,  355                Wax sodeynliche his herte ful of Ioye,                That gladder was ther never man in Troye.                 And gan his look on Pandarus up caste                Ful sobrely, and frendly for to see,                And seyde, `Freend, in Aprille the laste,  360                As wel thou wost, if it remembre thee,                How neigh the deeth for wo thou founde me;                And how thou didest al thy bisinesse                To knowe of me the cause of my distresse.                 `Thou wost how longe I it for-bar to seye  365                To thee, that art the man that I best triste;                And peril was it noon to thee by-wreye,                That wiste I wel; but tel me, if thee liste,                Sith I so looth was that thy-self it wiste,                How dorst I mo tellen of this matere,  370                That quake now, and no wight may us here?                 `But natheles, by that god I thee swere,                That, as him list, may al this world governe,                And, if I lye, Achilles with his spere                Myn herte cleve, al were my lyf eterne,  375                As I am mortal, if I late or yerne                Wolde it biwreye, or dorste, or sholde conne,                For al the good that god made under sonne;                 `That rather deye I wolde, and determyne,                As thinketh me, now stokked in presoun,  380                In wrecchednesse, in filthe, and in vermyne,                Caytif to cruel king Agamenoun;                And this, in alle the temples of this toun                Upon the goddes alle, I wol thee swere,                To-morwe day, if that thee lyketh here.                 385                 `And that thou hast so muche y-doon for me,                That I ne may it never-more deserve,                This knowe I wel, al mighte I now for thee                A thousand tymes on a morwen sterve.                 I can no more, but that I wol thee serve  390                Right as thy sclave, whider-so thou wende,                For ever-more, un-to my lyves ende!                 `But here, with al myn herte, I thee biseche,                That never in me thou deme swich folye                As I shal seyn; me thoughte, by thy speche,  395                That this, which thou me dost for companye,                I sholde wene it were a bauderye;                I am nought wood, al-if I lewed be;                It is not so, that woot I wel, pardee.                 `But he that goth, for gold or for richesse,  400                On swich message, calle him what thee list;                And this that thou dost, calle it gentilesse,                Compassioun, and felawship, and trist;                Departe it so, for wyde-where is wist                How that there is dyversitee requered  405                Bitwixen thinges lyke, as I have lered.                 `And, that thou knowe I thenke nought ne wene                That this servyse a shame be or Iape,                I have my faire suster Polixene,                Cassandre, Eleyne, or any of the frape;  410                Be she never so faire or wel y-shape,                Tel me, which thou wilt of everichone,                To han for thyn, and lat me thanne allone.                 `But, sith that thou hast don me this servyse                My lyf to save, and for noon hope of mede,  415                So, for the love of god, this grete empryse                Performe it out; for now is moste nede.                 For high and low, with-outen any drede,                I wol alwey thyne hestes alle kepe;                Have now good night, and lat us bothe slepe.'                 420                 Thus held him ech of other wel apayed,                That al the world ne mighte it bet amende;                And, on the morwe, whan they were arayed,                Ech to his owene nedes gan entende.                 But Troilus, though as the fyr he brende  425                For sharp desyr of hope and of plesaunce,                He not for-gat his gode governaunce.                 But in him-self with manhod gan restreyne                Ech rakel dede and ech unbrydled chere,                That alle tho that liven, sooth to seyne,  430                Ne sholde han wist, by word or by manere,                What that he mente, as touching this matere.                 From every wight as fer as is the cloude                He was, so wel dissimulen he coude.                 And al the whyl which that I yow devyse,  435                This was his lyf; with al his fulle might,                By day he was in Martes high servyse,                This is to seyn, in armes as a knight;                And for the more part, the longe night                He lay, and thoughte how that he mighte serve  440                His lady best, hir thank for to deserve.                 Nil I nought swere, al-though he lay softe,                That in his thought he nas sumwhat disesed,                Ne that he tornede on his pilwes ofte,                And wolde of that him missed han ben sesed;  445                But in swich cas men is nought alwey plesed,                For ought I wot, no more than was he;                That can I deme of possibilitee.                 But certeyn is, to purpos for to go,                That in this whyle, as writen is in geste,  450                He say his lady som-tyme; and also                She with him spak, whan that she dorste or leste,                And by hir bothe avys, as was the beste,                Apoynteden ful warly in this nede,                So as they dorste, how they wolde procede.                 455                 But it was spoken in so short a wyse,                In swich awayt alwey, and in swich fere,                Lest any wyght devynen or devyse                Wolde of hem two, or to it leye an ere,                That al this world so leef to hem ne were  460                As that Cupido wolde hem grace sende                To maken of hir speche aright an ende.                 But thilke litel that they spake or wroughte,                His wyse goost took ay of al swich hede,                It semed hir, he wiste what she thoughte  465                With-outen word, so that it was no nede                To bidde him ought to done, or ought for-bede;                For which she thought that love, al come it late,                Of alle Ioye hadde opned hir the yate.                 And shortly of this proces for to pace,  470                So wel his werk and wordes he bisette,                That he so ful stood in his lady grace,                That twenty thousand tymes, or she lette,                She thonked god she ever with him mette;                So coude he him governe in swich servyse,  475                That al the world ne might it bet devyse.                 For-why she fond him so discreet in al,                So secret, and of swich obeisaunce,                That wel she felte he was to hir a wal                Of steel, and sheld from every displesaunce;  480                That, to ben in his gode governaunce,                So wys he was, she was no more afered,                I mene, as fer as oughte ben requered.                 And Pandarus, to quike alwey the fyr,                Was evere y-lyke prest and diligent;  485                To ese his frend was set al his desyr.                 He shof ay on, he to and fro was sent;                He lettres bar whan Troilus was absent.                 That never man, as in his freendes nede,                Ne bar him bet than he, with-outen drede.                 490                 But now, paraunter, som man wayten wolde                That every word, or sonde, or look, or chere                Of Troilus that I rehersen sholde,                In al this whyle un-to his lady dere;                I trowe it were a long thing for to here;  495                Or of what wight that stant in swich disioynte,                His wordes alle, or every look, to poynte.                 For sothe, I have not herd it doon er this,                In storye noon, ne no man here, I wene;                And though I wolde I coude not, y-wis;  500                For ther was som epistel hem bitwene,                That wolde, as seyth myn auctor, wel contene                Neigh half this book, of which him list not wryte;                How sholde I thanne a lyne of it endyte?                 But to the grete effect: than sey I thus,  505                That stonding in concord and in quiete,                Thise ilke two, Criseyde and Troilus,                As I have told, and in this tyme swete,                Save only often mighte they not mete,                Ne layser have hir speches to fulfelle,  510                That it befel right as I shal yow telle.                 That Pandarus, that ever dide his might                Right for the fyn that I shal speke of here,                As for to bringe to his hous som night                His faire nece, and Troilus y-fere,  515                Wher-as at leyser al this heigh matere,                Touching hir love, were at the fulle up-bounde,                Hadde out of doute a tyme to it founde.                 For he with greet deliberacioun                Hadde every thing that her-to mighte avayle  520                Forn-cast, and put in execucioun.                 And neither laft, for cost ne for travayle;                Come if hem list, hem sholde no-thing fayle;                And for to been in ought espyed there,                That, wiste he wel, an inpossible were.                 525                 Dredelees, it cleer was in the wind                Of every pye and every lette-game;                Now al is wel, for al the world is blind                In this matere, bothe fremed and tame.                 This timbur is al redy up to frame;  530                Us lakketh nought but that we witen wolde                A certein houre, in which she comen sholde.                 And Troilus, that al this purveyaunce                Knew at the fulle, and waytede on it ay,                Hadde here-up-on eek made gret ordenaunce,  535                And founde his cause, and ther-to his aray,                If that he were missed, night or day,                Ther-whyle he was aboute this servyse,                That he was goon to doon his sacrifyse,                 And moste at swich a temple alone wake,  540                Answered of Appollo for to be;                And first to seen the holy laurer quake,                Er that Apollo spak out of the tree,                To telle him next whan Grekes sholden flee,                And forthy lette him no man, god forbede,  545                But preye Apollo helpen in this nede.                 Now is ther litel more for to doone,                But Pandare up, and shortly for to seyne,                Right sone upon the chaunging of the mone,                Whan lightles is the world a night or tweyne,  550                And that the welken shoop him for to reyne,                He streight a-morwe un-to his nece wente;                Ye han wel herd the fyn of his entente.                 Whan he was come, he gan anoon to pleye                As he was wont, and of him-self to Iape;  555                And fynally, he swor and gan hir seye,                By this and that, she sholde him not escape,                Ne lengere doon him after hir to gape;                But certeynly she moste, by hir leve,                Come soupen in his hous with him at eve.                 560                 At whiche she lough, and gan hir faste excuse,                And seyde, `It rayneth; lo, how sholde I goon?'                 `Lat be,' quod he, `ne stond not thus to muse;                This moot be doon, ye shal be ther anoon.'                 So at the laste her-of they felle at oon,  565                Or elles, softe he swor hir in hir ere,                He nolde never come ther she were.                 Sone after this, to him she gan to rowne,                And asked him if Troilus were there?                 He swor hir, `Nay, for he was out of towne,'  570                And seyde, `Nece, I pose that he were,                Yow thurfte never have the more fere.                 For rather than men mighte him ther aspye,                Me were lever a thousand-fold to dye.'                 Nought list myn auctor fully to declare  575                What that she thoughte whan he seyde so,                That Troilus was out of town y-fare,                As if he seyde ther-of sooth or no;                But that, with-outen awayt, with him to go,                She graunted him, sith he hir that bisoughte  580                And, as his nece, obeyed as hir oughte.                 But nathelees, yet gan she him biseche,                Al-though with him to goon it was no fere,                For to be war of goosish peples speche,                That dremen thinges whiche that never were,  585                And wel avyse him whom he broughte there;                And seyde him, `Eem, sin I mot on yow triste,                Loke al be wel, and do now as yow liste.'                 He swor hire, `Yis, by stokkes and by stones,                And by the goddes that in hevene dwelle,  590                Or elles were him levere, soule and bones,                With Pluto king as depe been in helle                As Tantalus!'                 What sholde I more telle?                 Whan al was wel, he roos and took his leve,                And she to souper com, whan it was eve,  595                 With a certayn of hir owene men,                And with hir faire nece Antigone,                And othere of hir wommen nyne or ten;                But who was glad now, who, as trowe ye,                But Troilus, that stood and mighte it see  600                Thurgh-out a litel windowe in a stewe,                Ther he bishet, sin midnight, was in mewe,                 Unwist of every wight but of Pandare?                 But to the poynt; now whan that she was y-come                With alle Ioye, and alle frendes fare,  605                Hir em anoon in armes hath hir nome,                And after to the souper, alle and some,                Whan tyme was, ful softe they hem sette;                God wot, ther was no deyntee for to fette.                 And after souper gonnen they to ryse,  610                At ese wel, with hertes fresshe and glade,                And wel was him that coude best devyse                To lyken hir, or that hir laughen made.                 He song; she pleyde; he tolde tale of Wade.                 But at the laste, as every thing hath ende,  615                She took hir leve, and nedes wolde wende.                 But O, Fortune, executrice of wierdes,                O influences of thise hevenes hye!                 Soth is, that, under god, ye ben our hierdes,                Though to us bestes been the causes wrye.                 620                This mene I now, for she gan hoomward hye,                But execut was al bisyde hir leve,                At the goddes wil, for which she moste bleve.                 The bente mone with hir hornes pale,                Saturne, and Iove, in Cancro ioyned were,  625                That swich a rayn from hevene gan avale                That every maner womman that was there                Hadde of that smoky reyn a verray fere;                At which Pandare tho lough, and seyde thenne,                `Now were it tyme a lady to go henne!                 630                 `But goode nece, if I mighte ever plese                Yow any-thing, than prey I yow,' quod he,                `To doon myn herte as now so greet an ese                As for to dwelle here al this night with me,                For-why this is your owene hous, pardee.                 635                For, by my trouthe, I sey it nought a-game,                To wende as now, it were to me a shame.'                 Criseyde, which that coude as muche good                As half a world, tok hede of his preyere;                And sin it ron, and al was on a flood,  640                She thoughte, as good chep may I dwellen here,                And graunte it gladly with a freendes chere,                And have a thank, as grucche and thanne abyde;                For hoom to goon, it may nought wel bityde.'                 `I wol,' quod she, `myn uncle leef and dere,  645                Sin that yow list, it skile is to be so;                I am right glad with yow to dwellen here;                I seyde but a-game, I wolde go.'                 `Y-wis, graunt mercy, nece!'                 quod he tho;                `Were it a game or no, soth for to telle,  650                Now am I glad, sin that yow list to dwelle.'                 Thus al is wel; but tho bigan aright                The newe Ioye, and al the feste agayn;                But Pandarus, if goodly hadde he might,                He wolde han hyed hir to bedde fayn,  655                And seyde, `Lord, this is an huge rayn!                 This were a weder for to slepen inne;                And that I rede us sonE to biginne.                 `And nece, woot ye wher I wol yow leye,                For that we shul not liggen fer asonder,  660                And for ye neither shullen, dar I seye,                Heren noise of reynes nor of thondre?                 By god, right in my lyte closet yonder.                 And I wol in that outer hous allone                Be wardeyn of your wommen everichone.                 665                 `And in this middel chaumbre that ye see                Shal youre wommen slepen wel and softe;                And ther I seyde shal your-selve be;                And if ye liggen wel to-night, com ofte,                And careth not what weder is on-lofte.                 670                The wyn anon, and whan so that yow leste,                So go we slepe, I trowe it be the beste.'                 Ther nis no more, but here-after sone,                The voyde dronke, and travers drawe anon,                Gan every wight, that hadde nought to done  675                More in the place, out of the chaumber gon.                 And ever-mo so sternelich it ron,                And blew ther-with so wonderliche loude,                That wel neigh no man heren other coude.                 Tho Pandarus, hir eem, right as him oughte,  680                With women swiche as were hir most aboute,                Ful glad un-to hir beddes syde hir broughte,                And toke his leve, and gan ful lowe loute,                And seyde, `Here at this closet-dore with-oute,                Right over-thwart, your wommen liggen alle,  685                That, whom yow list of hem, ye may here calle.'                 So whan that she was in the closet leyd,                And alle hir wommen forth by ordenaunce                A-bedde weren, ther as I have seyd,                There was no more to skippen nor to traunce,  690                But boden go to bedde, with mischaunce,                If any wight was steringe any-where,                And late hem slepe that a-bedde were.                 But Pandarus, that wel coude eche a del                The olde daunce, and every poynt ther-inne,  695                Whan that he sey that alle thing was wel,                He thoughte he wolde up-on his werk biginne,                And gan the stewe-dore al softe un-pinne;                And stille as stoon, with-outen lenger lette,                By Troilus a-doun right he him sette.                 700                 And, shortly to the poynt right for to gon,                Of al this werk he tolde him word and ende,                And seyde, `Make thee redy right anon,                For thou shalt in-to hevene blisse wende.'                 `Now blisful Venus, thou me grace sende,'  705                Quod Troilus, `for never yet no nede                Hadde I er now, ne halvendel the drede.'                 Quod Pandarus, `Ne drede thee never a del,                For it shal been right as thou wilt desyre;                So thryve I, this night shal I make it wel,  710                Or casten al the gruwel in the fyre.'                 `Yit blisful Venus, this night thou me enspyre,'                Quod Troilus, `as wis as I thee serve,                And ever bet and bet shal, til I sterve.                 `And if I hadde, O Venus ful of murthe,  715                Aspectes badde of Mars or of Saturne,                Or thou combust or let were in my birthe,                Thy fader prey al thilke harm disturne                Of grace, and that I glad ayein may turne,                For love of him thou lovedest in the shawe,  720                I mene Adoon, that with the boor was slawe.                 `O Iove eek, for the love of faire Europe,                The whiche in forme of bole awey thou fette;                Now help, O Mars, thou with thy blody cope,                For love of Cipris, thou me nought ne lette;  725                O Phebus, thenk whan Dane hir-selven shette                Under the bark, and laurer wex for drede,                Yet for hir love, O help now at this nede!                 `Mercurie, for the love of Hierse eke,                For which Pallas was with Aglauros wrooth,  730                Now help, and eek Diane, I thee biseke                That this viage be not to thee looth.                 O fatal sustren, which, er any clooth                Me shapen was, my destene me sponne,                So helpeth to this werk that is bi-gonne!'                 735                 Quod Pandarus, `Thou wrecched mouses herte,                Art thou agast so that she wol thee byte?                 Why, don this furred cloke up-on thy sherte,                And folowe me, for I wol have the wyte;                But byd, and lat me go bifore a lyte.'                 740                And with that word he gan un-do a trappe,                And Troilus he broughte in by the lappe.                 The sterne wind so loude gan to route                That no wight other noyse mighte here;                And they that layen at the dore with-oute,  745                Ful sykerly they slepten alle y-fere;                And Pandarus, with a ful sobre chere,                Goth to the dore anon with-outen lette,                Ther-as they laye, and softely it shette.                 And as he com ayeinward prively,  750                His nece awook, and asked, `Who goth there?'                 `My dere nece,' quod he, `it am I;                Ne wondreth not, ne have of it no fere;'                And ner he com, and seyde hir in hir ere,                `No word, for love of god I yow biseche;  755                Lat no wight ryse and heren of oure speche.'                 `What!                 Which wey be ye comen, benedicite?'                 Quod she; `And how thus unwist of hem alle?'                 `Here at this secre trappe-dore,' quod he.                 Quod tho Criseyde, `Lat me som wight calle.'                 760                `Ey!                 God forbede that it sholde falle,'                Quod Pandarus, `that ye swich foly wroughte!                 They mighte deme thing they never er thoughte!                 `It is nought good a sleping hound to wake,                Ne yeve a wight a cause to devyne;  765                Your wommen slepen alle, I under-take,                So that, for hem, the hous men mighte myne;                And slepen wolen til the sonne shyne.                 And whan my tale al brought is to an ende,                Unwist, right as I com, so wol I wende.                 770                 `Now, nece myn, ye shul wel understonde,'                Quod he, `so as ye wommen demen alle,                That for to holde in love a man in honde,                And him hir "leef" and "dere herte" calle,                And maken him an howve above a calle,  775                I mene, as love an other in this whyle,                She doth hir-self a shame, and him a gyle.                 `Now wherby that I telle yow al this?                 Ye woot your-self, as wel as any wight,                How that your love al fully graunted is  780                To Troilus, the worthieste knight,                Oon of this world, and ther-to trouthe plyght,                That, but it were on him along, ye nolde                Him never falsen, whyle ye liven sholde.                 `Now stant it thus, that sith I fro yow wente,  785                This Troilus, right platly for to seyn,                Is thurgh a goter, by a prive wente,                In-to my chaumbre come in al this reyn,                Unwist of every maner wight, certeyn,                Save of my-self, as wisly have I Ioye,  790                And by that feith I shal Pryam of Troye!                 `And he is come in swich peyne and distresse                That, but he be al fully wood by this,                He sodeynly mot falle in-to wodnesse,                But-if god helpe; and cause why this is,  795                He seyth him told is, of a freend of his,                How that ye sholde love oon that hatte Horaste,                For sorwe of which this night shalt been his laste.'                 Criseyde, which that al this wonder herde,                Gan sodeynly aboute hir herte colde,  800                And with a syk she sorwfully answerde,                `Allas!                 I wende, who-so tales tolde,                My dere herte wolde me not holde                So lightly fals!                 Allas!                 Conceytes wronge,                What harm they doon, for now live I to longe!                 805                 `Horaste!                 Allas!                 And falsen Troilus?                 I knowe him not, god helpe me so,' quod she;                `Allas!                 What wikked spirit tolde him thus?                 Now certes, eem, to-morwe, and I him see,                I shal ther-of as ful excusen me  810                As ever dide womman, if him lyke';                And with that word she gan ful sore syke.                 `O god!'                 quod she, `So worldly selinesse,                Which clerkes callen fals felicitee,                Y-medled is with many a bitternesse!                 815                Ful anguisshous than is, god woot,' quod she,                `Condicioun of veyn prosperitee;                For either Ioyes comen nought y-fere,                Or elles no wight hath hem alwey here.                 `O brotel wele of mannes Ioye unstable!                 820                With what wight so thou be, or how thou pleye,                Either he woot that thou, Ioye, art muable,                Or woot it not, it moot ben oon of tweye;                Now if he woot it not, how may he seye                That he hath verray Ioye and selinesse,  825                That is of ignoraunce ay in derknesse?                 `Now if he woot that Ioye is transitorie,                As every Ioye of worldly thing mot flee,                Than every tyme he that hath in memorie,                The drede of lesing maketh him that he  830                May in no perfit selinesse be.                 And if to lese his Ioye he set a myte,                Than semeth it that Ioye is worth ful lyte.                 `Wherfore I wol deffyne in this matere,                That trewely, for ought I can espye,  835                Ther is no verray wele in this world here.                 But O, thou wikked serpent, Ialousye,                Thou misbeleved and envious folye,                Why hastow Troilus me mad untriste,                That never yet agilte him, that I wiste?'                 840                 Quod Pandarus, `Thus fallen is this cas.'                 `Why, uncle myn,' quod she, `who tolde him this?                 Why doth my dere herte thus, allas?'                 `Ye woot, ye nece myn,' quod he, `what is;                I hope al shal be wel that is amis,  845                For ye may quenche al this, if that yow leste,                And doth right so, for I holde it the beste.'                 `So shal I do to-morwe, y-wis,' quod she,                `And god to-forn, so that it shal suffyse.'                 `To-morwe?                 Allas, that were a fair!'                 quod he,  850                `Nay, nay, it may not stonden in this wyse;                For, nece myn, thus wryten clerkes wyse,                That peril is with drecching in y-drawe;                Nay, swich abodes been nought worth an hawe.                 `Nece, al thing hath tyme, I dar avowe;  855                For whan a chaumber a-fyr is, or an halle,                Wel more nede is, it sodeynly rescowe                Than to dispute, and axe amonges alle                How is this candele in the straw y-falle?                 A!                 Benedicite!                 For al among that fare  860                The harm is doon, and fare-wel feldefare!                 `And, nece myn, ne take it not a-greef,                If that ye suffre him al night in this wo,                God help me so, ye hadde him never leef,                That dar I seyn, now there is but we two;  865                But wel I woot, that ye wol not do so;                Ye been to wys to do so gret folye,                To putte his lyf al night in Iupertye.                 `Hadde I him never leef?                 By god, I wene                Ye hadde never thing so leef,' quod she.                 870                `Now by my thrift,' quod he, `that shal be sene;                For, sin ye make this ensample of me,                If I al night wolde him in sorwe see                For al the tresour in the toun of Troye,                I bidde god, I never mote have Ioye!                 875                 `Now loke thanne, if ye, that been his love,                Shul putte al night his lyf in Iupartye                For thing of nought!                 Now, by that god above,                Nought only this delay comth of folye,                But of malyce, if that I shal nought lye.                 880                What, platly, and ye suffre him in distresse,                Ye neither bountee doon ne gentilesse!'                 Quod tho Criseyde, `Wole ye doon o thing,                And ye therwith shal stinte al his disese?                 Have here, and bereth him this blewe ringe,  885                For ther is no-thing mighte him bettre plese,                Save I my-self, ne more his herte apese;                And sey my dere herte, that his sorwe                Is causeles, that shal be seen to-morwe.'                 `A ring?'                 quod he, `Ye, hasel-wodes shaken!                 890                Ye nece myn, that ring moste han a stoon                That mighte dede men alyve maken;                And swich a ring trowe I that ye have noon.                 Discrecioun out of your heed is goon;                That fele I now,' quod he, `and that is routhe;  895                O tyme y-lost, wel maystow cursen slouthe!                 `Wot ye not wel that noble and heigh corage                Ne sorweth not, ne stinteth eek for lyte?                 But if a fool were in a Ialous rage,                I nolde setten at his sorwe a myte,  900                But feffe him with a fewe wordes whyte                Another day, whan that I mighte him finde;                But this thing stant al in another kinde.                 `This is so gentil and so tendre of herte,                That with his deeth he wol his sorwes wreke;  905                For trusteth wel, how sore that him smerte,                He wol to yow no Ialouse wordes speke.                 And for-thy, nece, er that his herte breke,                So spek your-self to him of this matere;                For with o word ye may his herte stere.                 910                 `Now have I told what peril he is inne,                And his coming unwist is to every wight;                Ne, pardee, harm may ther be noon, ne sinne;                I wol my-self be with yow al this night.                 Ye knowe eek how it is your owne knight,  915                And that, by right, ye moste upon him triste,                And I al prest to fecche him whan yow liste.'                 This accident so pitous was to here,                And eek so lyk a sooth, at pryme face,                And Troilus hir knight to hir so dere,  920                His prive coming, and the siker place,                That, though that she dide him as thanne a grace,                Considered alle thinges as they stode,                No wonder is, sin she dide al for gode.                 Cryseyde answerde, `As wisly god at reste  925                My sowle bringe, as me is for him wo!                 And eem, y-wis, fayn wolde I doon the beste,                If that I hadde grace to do so.                 But whether that ye dwelle or for him go,                I am, til god me bettre minde sende,  930                At dulcarnon, right at my wittes ende.'                 Quod Pandarus, `Ye, nece, wol ye here?                 Dulcarnon called is "fleminge of wrecches";                It semeth hard, for wrecches wol not lere                For verray slouthe or othere wilful tecches;  935                This seyd by hem that be not worth two fecches.                 But ye ben wys, and that we han on honde                Nis neither hard, ne skilful to withstonde.'                 `Thanne, eem,' quod she, `doth her-of as yow list;                But er he come, I wil up first aryse;  940                And, for the love of god, sin al my trist                Is on yow two, and ye ben bothe wyse,                So wircheth now in so discreet a wyse,                That I honour may have, and he plesaunce;                For I am here al in your governaunce.'                 945                 `That is wel seyd,' quod he, `my nece dere'                Ther good thrift on that wyse gentil herte!                 But liggeth stille, and taketh him right here,                It nedeth not no ferther for him sterte;                And ech of yow ese otheres sorwes smerte,  950                For love of god; and, Venus, I the herie;                For sone hope I we shulle ben alle merie.'                 This Troilus ful sone on knees him sette                Ful sobrely, right be hir beddes heed,                And in his beste wyse his lady grette;  955                But lord, so she wex sodeynliche reed!                 Ne, though men sholden smyten of hir heed,                She coude nought a word a-right out-bringe                So sodeynly, for his sodeyn cominge.                 But Pandarus, that so wel coude fele  960                In every thing, to pleye anoon bigan,                And seyde, `Nece, see how this lord can knele!                 Now, for your trouthe, seeth this gentil man!'                 And with that word he for a quisshen ran,                And seyde, `Kneleth now, whyl that yow leste,  965                Ther god your hertes bringe sone at reste!'                 Can I not seyn, for she bad him not ryse,                If sorwe it putte out of hir remembraunce,                Or elles that she toke it in the wyse                Of duetee, as for his observaunce;  970                But wel finde I she dide him this plesaunce,                That she him kiste, al-though she syked sore;                And bad him sitte a-doun with-outen more.                 Quod Pandarus, `Now wol ye wel biginne;                Now doth him sitte, gode nece dere,  975                Upon your beddes syde al there with-inne,                That ech of yow the bet may other here.'                 And with that word he drow him to the fere,                And took a light, and fond his contenaunce,                As for to loke up-on an old romaunce.                 980                 Criseyde, that was Troilus lady right,                And cleer stood on a ground of sikernesse,                Al thoughte she, hir servaunt and hir knight                Ne sholde of right non untrouthe in hir gesse,                Yet nathelees, considered his distresse,  985                And that love is in cause of swich folye,                Thus to him spak she of his Ialousye:                 `Lo, herte myn, as wolde the excellence                Of love, ayeins the which that no man may,                Ne oughte eek goodly maken resistence  990                And eek bycause I felte wel and say                Youre grete trouthe, and servyse every day;                And that your herte al myn was, sooth to seyne,                This droof me for to rewe up-on your peyne.                 `And your goodnesse have I founde alwey yit,  995                Of whiche, my dere herte and al my knight,                I thonke it yow, as fer as I have wit,                Al can I nought as muche as it were right;                And I, emforth my conninge and my might,                Have and ay shal, how sore that me smerte,  1000                Ben to yow trewe and hool, with a myn herte;                 `And dredelees, that shal be founde at preve.                 —                But, herte myn, what al this is to seyne                Shal wel be told, so that ye noght yow greve,                Though I to yow right on your-self compleyne.                 1005                For ther-with mene I fynally the peyne,                That halt your herte and myn in hevinesse,                Fully to sleen, and every wrong redresse.                 `My goode, myn, not I for-why ne how                That Ialousye, allas!                 That wikked wivere,  1010                Thus causelees is cropen in-to yow;                The harm of which I wolde fayn delivere!                 Allas!                 That he, al hool, or of him slivere,                Shuld have his refut in so digne a place,                Ther Iove him sone out of your herte arace!                 1015                 `But O, thou Iove, O auctor of nature,                Is this an honour to thy deitee,                That folk ungiltif suffren here iniure,                And who that giltif is, al quit goth he?                 O were it leful for to pleyne on thee,  1020                That undeserved suffrest Ialousye,                Of that I wolde up-on thee pleyne and crye!                 `Eek al my wo is this, that folk now usen                To seyn right thus, "Ye, Ialousye is love!"                 And wolde a busshel venim al excusen,  1025                For that o greyn of love is on it shove!                 But that wot heighe god that sit above,                If it be lyker love, or hate, or grame;                And after that, it oughte bere his name.                 `But certeyn is, som maner Ialousye  1030                Is excusable more than som, y-wis.                 As whan cause is, and som swich fantasye                With pietee so wel repressed is,                That it unnethe dooth or seyth amis,                But goodly drinketh up al his distresse;  1035                And that excuse I, for the gentilesse.                 `And som so ful of furie is and despyt                That it sourmounteth his repressioun;                But herte myn, ye be not in that plyt,                That thanke I god, for whiche your passioun  1040                I wol not calle it but illusioun,                Of habundaunce of love and bisy cure,                That dooth your herte this disese endure.                 `Of which I am right sory but not wrooth;                But, for my devoir and your hertes reste,  1045                Wher-so yow list, by ordal or by ooth,                By sort, or in what wyse so yow leste,                For love of god, lat preve it for the beste!                 And if that I be giltif, do me deye,                Allas!                 What mighte I more doon or seye?'                 1050                 With that a fewe brighte teres newe                Owt of hir eyen fille, and thus she seyde,                `Now god, thou wost, in thought ne dede untrewe                To Troilus was never yet Criseyde.'                 With that hir heed doun in the bed she leyde,  1055                And with the shete it wreigh, and syghed sore,                And held hir pees; not o word spak she more.                 But now help god to quenchen al this sorwe,                So hope I that he shal, for he best may;                For I have seyn, of a ful misty morwe  1060                Folwen ful ofte a mery someres day;                And after winter folweth grene May.                 Men seen alday, and reden eek in stories,                That after sharpe shoures been victories.                 This Troilus, whan he hir wordes herde,  1065                Have ye no care, him liste not to slepe;                For it thoughte him no strokes of a yerde                To here or seen Criseyde, his lady wepe;                But wel he felte aboute his herte crepe,                For every teer which that Criseyde asterte,  1070                The crampe of deeth, to streyne him by the herte.                 And in his minde he gan the tyme acurse                That he cam there, and that that he was born;                For now is wikke y-turned in-to worse,                And al that labour he hath doon biforn,  1075                He wende it lost, he thoughte he nas but lorn.                 `O Pandarus,' thoughte he, `allas!                 Thy wyle                Serveth of nought, so weylaway the whyle!'                 And therwithal he heng a-doun the heed,                And fil on knees, and sorwfully he sighte;  1080                What mighte he seyn?                 He felte he nas but deed,                For wrooth was she that shulde his sorwes lighte.                 But nathelees, whan that he speken mighte,                Than seyde he thus, `God woot, that of this game,                Whan al is wist, than am I not to blame!'                 1085                 Ther-with the sorwe so his herte shette,                That from his eyen fil there not a tere,                And every spirit his vigour in-knette,                So they astoned or oppressed were.                 The feling of his sorwe, or of his fere,  1090                Or of ought elles, fled was out of towne;                And doun he fel al sodeynly a-swowne.                 This was no litel sorwe for to see;                But al was hust, and Pandare up as faste,                `O nece, pees, or we be lost,' quod he,  1095                `Beth nought agast;' But certeyn, at the laste,                For this or that, he in-to bedde him caste,                And seyde, `O theef, is this a mannes herte?'                 And of he rente al to his bare sherte;                 And seyde, `Nece, but ye helpe us now,  1100                Allas, your owne Troilus is lorn!'                 `Y-wis, so wolde I, and I wiste how,                Ful fayn,' quod she; `Allas!                 That I was born!'                 `Ye, nece, wole ye pullen out the thorn                That stiketh in his herte?'                 quod Pandare;  1105                `Sey "Al foryeve," and stint is al this fare!'                 `Ye, that to me,' quod she, `ful lever were                Than al the good the sonne aboute gooth';                And therwith-al she swoor him in his ere,                `Y-wis, my dere herte, I am nought wrooth,  1110                Have here my trouthe and many another ooth;                Now speek to me, for it am I, Cryseyde!'                 But al for nought; yet mighte he not a-breyde.                 Therwith his pous and pawmes of his hondes                They gan to frote, and wete his temples tweyne,  1115                And, to deliveren him from bittre bondes,                She ofte him kiste; and, shortly for to seyne,                Him to revoken she dide al hir peyne.                 And at the laste, he gan his breeth to drawe,                And of his swough sone after that adawe,  1120                 And gan bet minde and reson to him take,                But wonder sore he was abayst, y-wis.                 And with a syk, whan he gan bet a-wake,                He seyde, `O mercy, god, what thing is this?'                 `Why do ye with your-selven thus amis?'                 1125                Quod tho Criseyde, `Is this a mannes game?                 What, Troilus!                 Wol ye do thus, for shame?'                 And therwith-al hir arm over him she leyde,                And al foryaf, and ofte tyme him keste.                 He thonked hir, and to hir spak, and seyde  1130                As fil to purpos for his herte reste.                 And she to that answerde him as hir leste;                And with hir goodly wordes him disporte                She gan, and ofte his sorwes to comforte.                 Quod Pandarus, `For ought I can espyen,  1135                This light, nor I ne serven here of nought;                Light is not good for syke folkes yen.                 But for the love of god, sin ye be brought                In thus good plyt, lat now non hevy thought                Ben hanginge in the hertes of yow tweye:'  1140                And bar the candele to the chimeneye.                 Sone after this, though it no nede were,                Whan she swich othes as hir list devyse                Hadde of him take, hir thoughte tho no fere,                Ne cause eek non, to bidde him thennes ryse.                 1145                Yet lesse thing than othes may suffyse                In many a cas; for every wight, I gesse,                That loveth wel meneth but gentilesse.                 But in effect she wolde wite anoon                Of what man, and eek where, and also why  1150                He Ielous was, sin ther was cause noon;                And eek the signe, that he took it by,                She bad him that to telle hir bisily,                Or elles, certeyn, she bar him on honde,                That this was doon of malis, hir to fonde.                 1155                 With-outen more, shortly for to seyne,                He moste obeye un-to his lady heste;                And for the lasse harm, he moste feyne.                 He seyde hir, whan she was at swiche a feste,                She mighte on him han loked at the leste;  1160                Not I not what, al dere y-nough a risshe,                As he that nedes moste a cause fisshe.                 And she answerde, `Swete, al were it so,                What harm was that, sin I non yvel mene?                 For, by that god that boughte us bothe two,  1165                In alle thinge is myn entente clene.                 Swich arguments ne been not worth a bene;                Wol ye the childish Ialous contrefete?                 Now were it worthy that ye were y-bete.'                 Tho Troilus gan sorwfully to syke,  1170                Lest she be wrooth, him thoughte his herte deyde;                And seyde, `Allas!                 Up-on my sorwes syke                Have mercy, swete herte myn, Cryseyde!                 And if that, in tho wordes that I seyde,                Be any wrong, I wol no more trespace;  1175                Do what yow list, I am al in your grace.'                 And she answerde, `Of gilt misericorde!                 That is to seyn, that I foryeve al this;                And ever-more on this night yow recorde,                And beth wel war ye do no more amis.'                 1180                `Nay, dere herte myn,' quod he, `y-wis.'                 `And now,' quod she, `that I have do yow smerte,                Foryeve it me, myn owene swete herte.'                 This Troilus, with blisse of that supprysed,                Put al in goddes hond, as he that mente  1185                No-thing but wel; and, sodeynly avysed,                He hir in armes faste to him hente.                 And Pandarus, with a ful good entente,                Leyde him to slepe, and seyde, `If ye ben wyse,                Swowneth not now, lest more folk aryse.'                 1190                 What mighte or may the sely larke seye,                Whan that the sperhauk hath it in his foot?                 I can no more, but of thise ilke tweye,                To whom this tale sucre be or soot,                Though that I tarie a yeer, som-tyme I moot,  1195                After myn auctor, tellen hir gladnesse,                As wel as I have told hir hevinesse.                 Criseyde, which that felte hir thus y-take,                As writen clerkes in hir bokes olde,                Right as an aspes leef she gan to quake,  1200                Whan she him felte hir in his armes folde.                 But Troilus, al hool of cares colde,                Gan thanken tho the blisful goddes sevene;                Thus sondry peynes bringen folk in hevene.                 This Troilus in armes gan hir streyne,  1205                And seyde, `O swete, as ever mote I goon,                Now be ye caught, now is ther but we tweyne;                Now yeldeth yow, for other boot is noon.'                 To that Criseyde answerde thus anoon,                `Ne hadde I er now, my swete herte dere,  1210                Ben yolde, y-wis, I were now not here!'                 O!                 Sooth is seyd, that heled for to be                As of a fevre or othere greet syknesse,                Men moste drinke, as men may often see,                Ful bittre drink; and for to han gladnesse,  1215                Men drinken often peyne and greet distresse;                I mene it here, as for this aventure,                That thourgh a peyne hath founden al his cure.                 And now swetnesse semeth more sweet,                That bitternesse assayed was biforn;  1220                For out of wo in blisse now they flete;                Non swich they felten, sith they were born;                Now is this bet, than bothe two be lorn!                 For love of god, take every womman hede                To werken thus, if it comth to the nede.                 1225                 Criseyde, al quit from every drede and tene,                As she that iuste cause hadde him to triste,                Made him swich feste, it Ioye was to sene,                Whan she his trouthe and clene entente wiste.                 And as aboute a tree, with many a twiste,  1230                Bitrent and wryth the sote wode-binde,                Gan eche of hem in armes other winde.                 And as the newe abaysshed nightingale,                That stinteth first whan she biginneth to singe,                Whan that she hereth any herde tale,  1235                Or in the hegges any wight steringe,                And after siker dooth hir voys out-ringe;                Right so Criseyde, whan hir drede stente,                Opned hir herte and tolde him hir entente.                 And right as he that seeth his deeth y-shapen,  1240                And deye moot, in ought that he may gesse,                And sodeynly rescous doth him escapen,                And from his deeth is brought in sikernesse,                For al this world, in swich present gladnesse                Was Troilus, and hath his lady swete;  1245                With worse hap god lat us never mete!                 Hir armes smale, hir streyghte bak and softe,                Hir sydes longe, fleshly, smothe, and whyte                He gan to stroke, and good thrift bad ful ofte                Hir snowish throte, hir brestes rounde and lyte;  1250                Thus in this hevene he gan him to delyte,                And ther-with-al a thousand tyme hir kiste;                That, what to done, for Ioye unnethe he wiste.                 Than seyde he thus, `O, Love, O, Charitee,                Thy moder eek, Citherea the swete,  1255                After thy-self next heried be she,                Venus mene I, the wel-willy planete;                And next that, Imeneus, I thee grete;                For never man was to yow goddes holde                As I, which ye han brought fro cares colde.                 1260                 `Benigne Love, thou holy bond of thinges,                Who-so wol grace, and list thee nought honouren,                Lo, his desyr wol flee with-outen winges.                 For, noldestow of bountee hem socouren                That serven best and most alwey labouren,  1265                Yet were al lost, that dar I wel seyn, certes,                But-if thy grace passed our desertes.                 `And for thou me, that coude leest deserve                Of hem that nombred been un-to thy grace,                Hast holpen, ther I lykly was to sterve,  1270                And me bistowed in so heygh a place                That thilke boundes may no blisse pace,                I can no more, but laude and reverence                Be to thy bounte and thyn excellence!'                 And therwith-al Criseyde anoon he kiste,  1275                Of which, certeyn, she felte no disese,                And thus seyde he, `Now wolde god I wiste,                Myn herte swete, how I yow mighte plese!                 What man,' quod he, `was ever thus at ese                As I, on whiche the faireste and the beste  1280                That ever I say, deyneth hir herte reste.                 `Here may men seen that mercy passeth right;                The experience of that is felt in me,                That am unworthy to so swete a wight.                 But herte myn, of your benignitee,  1285                So thenketh, though that I unworthy be,                Yet mot I nede amenden in som wyse,                Right thourgh the vertu of your heyghe servyse.                 `And for the love of god, my lady dere,                Sin god hath wrought me for I shal yow serve,  1290                As thus I mene, that ye wol be my stere,                To do me live, if that yow liste, or sterve,                So techeth me how that I may deserve                Your thank, so that I, thurgh myn ignoraunce,                Ne do no-thing that yow be displesaunce.                 1295                 `For certes, fresshe wommanliche wyf,                This dar I seye, that trouthe and diligence,                That shal ye finden in me al my lyf,                Ne wol not, certeyn, breken your defence;                And if I do, present or in absence,  1300                For love of god, lat slee me with the dede,                If that it lyke un-to your womanhede.'                 `Y-wis,' quod she, `myn owne hertes list,                My ground of ese, and al myn herte dere,                Graunt mercy, for on that is al my trist;  1305                But late us falle awey fro this matere;                For it suffyseth, this that seyd is here.                 And at o word, with-outen repentaunce,                Wel-come, my knight, my pees, my suffisaunce!'                 Of hir delyt, or Ioyes oon the leste  1310                Were impossible to my wit to seye;                But iuggeth, ye that han ben at the feste,                Of swich gladnesse, if that hem liste pleye!                 I can no more, but thus thise ilke tweye                That night, be-twixen dreed and sikernesse,  1315                Felten in love the grete worthinesse.                 O blisful night, of hem so longe y-sought,                How blithe un-to hem bothe two thou were!                 Why ne hadde I swich on with my soule y-bought,                Ye, or the leeste Ioye that was there?                 1320                A-wey, thou foule daunger and thou fere,                And lat hem in this hevene blisse dwelle,                That is so heygh, that al ne can I telle!                 But sooth is, though I can not tellen al,                As can myn auctor, of his excellence,  1325                Yet have I seyd, and, god to-forn, I shal                In every thing al hoolly his sentence.                 And if that I, at loves reverence,                Have any word in eched for the beste,                Doth therwith-al right as your-selven leste.                 1330                 For myne wordes, here and every part,                I speke hem alle under correccioun                Of yow, that feling han in loves art,                And putte it al in your discrecioun                To encrese or maken diminucioun  1335                Of my langage, and that I yow bi-seche;                But now to purpos of my rather speche.                 Thise ilke two, that ben in armes laft,                So looth to hem a-sonder goon it were,                That ech from other wende been biraft,  1340                Or elles, lo, this was hir moste fere,                That al this thing but nyce dremes were;                For which ful ofte ech of hem seyde, `O swete,                Clippe ich yow thus, or elles I it mete?'                 And, lord!                 So he gan goodly on hir see,  1345                That never his look ne bleynte from hir face,                And seyde, `O dere herte, may it be                That it be sooth, that ye ben in this place?'                 `Ye, herte myn, god thank I of his grace!'                 Quod tho Criseyde, and therwith-al him kiste,  1350                That where his spirit was, for Ioye he niste.                 This Troilus ful ofte hir eyen two                Gan for to kisse, and seyde, `O eyen clere,                It were ye that wroughte me swich wo,                Ye humble nettes of my lady dere!                 1355                Though ther be mercy writen in your chere,                God wot, the text ful hard is, sooth, to finde,                How coude ye with-outen bond me binde?'                 Therwith he gan hir faste in armes take,                And wel an hundred tymes gan he syke,  1360                Nought swiche sorwfull sykes as men make                For wo, or elles whan that folk ben syke,                But esy sykes, swiche as been to lyke,                That shewed his affeccioun with-inne;                Of swiche sykes coude he nought bilinne.                 1365                 Sone after this they speke of sondry thinges,                As fil to purpos of this aventure,                And pleyinge entrechaungeden hir ringes,                Of which I can nought tellen no scripture;                But wel I woot, a broche, gold and asure,  1370                In whiche a ruby set was lyk an herte,                Criseyde him yaf, and stak it on his sherte.                 Lord!                 trowe ye, a coveitous, a wreccbe,                That blameth love and holt of it despyt,                That, of tho pens that he can mokre and kecche,  1375                Was ever yet y-yeve him swich delyt,                As is in love, in oo poynt, in som plyt?                 Nay, doutelees, for also god me save,                So parfit Ioye may no nigard have!                 They wol sey `Yis,' but lord!                 So that they lye,  1380                Tho bisy wrecches, ful of wo and drede!                 They callen love a woodnesse or folye,                But it shal falle hem as I shal yow rede;                They shul forgo the whyte and eke the rede,                And live in wo, ther god yeve hem mischaunce,  1385                And every lover in his trouthe avaunce!                 As wolde god, tho wrecches, that dispyse                Servyse of love, hadde eres al-so longe                As hadde Myda, ful of coveityse,                And ther-to dronken hadde as hoot and stronge  1390                As Crassus dide for his affectis wronge,                To techen hem that they ben in the vyce,                And loveres nought, al-though they holde hem nyce!                 Thise ilke two, of whom that I yow seye,                Whan that hir hertes wel assured were,  1395                Tho gonne they to speken and to pleye,                And eek rehercen how, and whanne, and where,                They knewe hem first, and every wo and fere                That passed was; but al swich hevinesse,                I thanke it god, was tourned to gladnesse.                 1400                 And ever-mo, whan that hem fel to speke                Of any thing of swich a tyme agoon,                With kissing al that tale sholde breke,                And fallen in a newe Ioye anoon,                And diden al hir might, sin they were oon,  1405                For to recoveren blisse and been at ese,                And passed wo with Ioye countrepeyse.                 Reson wil not that I speke of sleep,                For it accordeth nought to my matere;                God woot, they toke of that ful litel keep,  1410                But lest this night, that was to hem so dere,                Ne sholde in veyn escape in no manere,                It was biset in Ioye and bisinesse                Of al that souneth in-to gentilnesse.                 But whan the cok, comune astrologer,  1415                Gan on his brest to bete, and after crowe,                And Lucifer, the dayes messager,                Gan for to ryse, and out hir bemes throwe;                And estward roos, to him that coude it knowe,                Fortuna maior, than anoon Criseyde,  1420                With herte sore, to Troilus thus seyde: —                 `Myn hertes lyf, my trist and my plesaunce,                That I was born, allas!                 What me is wo,                That day of us mot make desseveraunce!                 For tyme it is to ryse, and hennes go,  1425                Or elles I am lost for evermo!                 O night, allas!                 Why niltow over us hove,                As longe as whanne Almena lay by Iove?                 `O blake night, as folk in bokes rede,                That shapen art by god this world to hyde  1430                At certeyn tymes with thy derke wede,                That under that men mighte in reste abyde,                Wel oughte bestes pleyne, and folk thee chyde,                That there-as day with labour wolde us breste,                That thou thus fleest, and deynest us nought reste!                 1435                 `Thou dost, allas!                 To shortly thyn offyce,                Thou rakel night, ther god, makere of kinde,                Thee, for thyn hast and thyn unkinde vyce,                So faste ay to our hemi-spere binde.                 That never-more under the ground thou winde!                 1440                For now, for thou so hyest out of Troye,                Have I forgon thus hastily my Ioye!'                 This Troilus, that with tho wordes felte,                As thoughte him tho, for pietous distresse,                The blody teres from his herte melte,  1445                As he that never yet swich hevinesse                Assayed hadde, out of so greet gladnesse,                Gan therwith-al Criseyde his lady dere                In armes streyne, and seyde in this manere: —                 `O cruel day, accusour of the Ioye  1450                That night and love han stole and faste y-wryen,                A-cursed be thy coming in-to Troye,                For every bore hath oon of thy bright yen!                 Envyous day, what list thee so to spyen?                 What hastow lost, why sekestow this place,  1455                Ther god thy lyght so quenche, for his grace?                 `Allas!                 What han thise loveres thee agilt,                Dispitous day?                 Thyn be the pyne of helle!                 For many a lovere hastow shent, and wilt;                Thy pouring in wol no-wher lete hem dwelle.                 1460                What proferestow thy light here for to selle?                 Go selle it hem that smale seles graven,                We wol thee nought, us nedeth no day haven.'                 And eek the sonne Tytan gan he chyde,                And seyde, `O fool, wel may men thee dispyse,  1465                That hast the Dawing al night by thy syde,                And suffrest hir so sone up fro thee ryse,                For to disesen loveres in this wyse.                 What!                 Holde your bed ther, thou, and eek thy Morwe!                 I bidde god, so yeve yow bothe sorwe!'                 1470                 Therwith ful sore he sighte, and thus he seyde,                `My lady right, and of my wele or wo                The welle and rote, O goodly myn, Criseyde,                And shal I ryse, allas!                 And shal I go?                 Now fele I that myn herte moot a-two!                 1475                For how sholde I my lyf an houre save,                Sin that with yow is al the lyf I have?                 `What shal I doon, for certes, I not how,                Ne whanne, allas!                 I shal the tyme see,                That in this plyt I may be eft with yow;  1480                And of my lyf, god woot, how that shal be,                Sin that desyr right now so byteth me,                That I am deed anoon, but I retourne.                 How sholde I longe, allas!                 Fro yow soiourne?                 `But nathelees, myn owene lady bright,  1485                Yit were it so that I wiste outrely,                That I, your humble servaunt and your knight,                Were in your herte set so fermely                As ye in myn, the which thing, trewely,                Me lever were than thise worldes tweyne,  1490                Yet sholde I bet enduren al my peyne.'                 To that Cryseyde answerde right anoon,                And with a syk she seyde, `O herte dere,                The game, y-wis, so ferforth now is goon,                That first shal Phebus falle fro his spere,  1495                And every egle been the dowves fere,                And every roche out of his place sterte,                Er Troilus out of Criseydes herte!                 `Ye he so depe in-with myn herte grave,                That, though I wolde it turne out of my thought,  1500                As wisly verray god my soule save,                To dyen in the peyne, I coude nought!                 And, for the love of god that us bath wrought,                Lat in your brayn non other fantasye                So crepe, that it cause me to dye!                 1505                 `And that ye me wolde han as faste in minde                As I have yow, that wolde I yow bi-seche;                And, if I wiste soothly that to finde,                God mighte not a poynt my Ioyes eche!                 But, herte myn, with-oute more speche,  1510                Beth to me trewe, or elles were it routhe;                For I am thyn, by god and by my trouthe!                 `Beth glad for-thy, and live in sikernesse;                Thus seyde I never er this, ne shal to mo;                And if to yow it were a gret gladnesse  1515                To turne ayein, soone after that ye go,                As fayn wolde I as ye, it were so,                As wisly god myn herte bringe at reste!'                 And him in armes took, and ofte keste.                 Agayns his wil, sin it mot nedes be,  1520                This Troilus up roos, and faste him cledde,                And in his armes took his lady free                An hundred tyme, and on his wey him spedde,                And with swich wordes as his herte bledde,                He seyde, `Farewel, mr dere herte swete,  1525                Ther god us graunte sounde and sone to mete!'                 To which no word for sorwe she answerde,                So sore gan his parting hir destreyne;                And Troilus un-to his palays ferde,                As woo bigon as she was, sooth to seyne;  1530                So hard him wrong of sharp desyr the peyne                For to ben eft there he was in plesaunce,                That it may never out of his remembraunce.                 Retorned to his real palais, sone                He softe in-to his bed gan for to slinke,  1535                To slepe longe, as he was wont to done,                But al for nought; he may wel ligge and winke,                But sleep ne may ther in his herte sinke;                Thenkinge how she, for whom desyr him brende,                A thousand-fold was worth more than he wende.                 1540                 And in his thought gan up and doun to winde                Hir wordes alle, and every countenaunce,                And fermely impressen in his minde                The leste poynt that to him was plesaunce;                And verrayliche, of thilke remembraunce,  1545                Desyr al newe him brende, and lust to brede                Gan more than erst, and yet took he non hede.                 Criseyde also, right in the same wyse,                Of Troilus gan in hir herte shette                His worthinesse, his lust, his dedes wyse,  1550                His gentilesse, and how she with him mette,                Thonkinge love he so wel hir bisette;                Desyring eft to have hir herte dere                In swich a plyt, she dorste make him chere.                 Pandare, a-morwe which that comen was  1555                Un-to his nece, and gan hir fayre grete,                Seyde, `Al this night so reyned it, allas!                 That al my drede is that ye, nece swete,                Han litel layser had to slepe and mete;                Al night,' quod he, `hath reyn so do me wake,  1560                That som of us, I trowe, hir hedes ake.'                 And ner he com, and seyde, `How stont it now                This mery morwe, nece, how can ye fare?'                 Criseyde answerde, `Never the bet for yow,                Fox that ye been, god yeve youre herte care!                 1565                God help me so, ye caused al this fare,                Trow I,' quod she, `for alle your wordes whyte;                O!                 Who-so seeth yow knoweth yow ful lyte!'                 With that she gan hir face for to wrye                With the shete, and wex for shame al reed;  1570                And Pandarus gan under for to prye,                And seyde, `Nece, if that I shal be deed,                Have here a swerd, and smyteth of myn heed.'                 With that his arm al sodeynly he thriste                Under hir nekke, and at the laste hir kiste.                 1575                 I passe al that which chargeth nought to seye,                What!                 God foryaf his deeth, and she al-so                Foryaf, and with hir uncle gan to pleye,                For other cause was ther noon than so.                 But of this thing right to the effect to go,  1580                Whan tyme was, hom til hir hous she wente,                And Pandarus hath fully his entente.                 Now torne we ayein to Troilus,                That resteles ful longe a-bedde lay,                And prevely sente after Pandarus,  1585                To him to come in al the haste he may.                 He com anoon, nought ones seyde he `nay,'                And Troilus ful sobrely he grette,                And doun upon his beddes syde him sette.                 This Troilus, with al the affeccioun  1590                Of frendes love that herte may devyse,                To Pandarus on knees fil adoun,                And er that he wolde of the place aryse,                He gan him thonken in his beste wyse;                An hondred sythe he gan the tyme blesse,  1595                That he was born, to bringe him fro distresse.                 He seyde, `O frend of frendes the alderbeste                That ever was, the sothe for to telle,                Thou hast in hevene y-brought my soule at reste                Fro Flegitoun, the fery flood of helle;  1600                That, though I mighte a thousand tymes selle,                Upon a day, my lyf in thy servyse,                It mighte nought a mote in that suffyse.                 `The sonne, which that al the world may see,                Saw never yet, my lyf, that dar I leye,  1605                So inly fayr and goodly as is she,                Whos I am al, and shal, til that I deye;                And, that I thus am hires, dar I seye,                That thanked be the heighe worthinesse                Of love, and eek thy kinde bisinesse.                 1610                 `Thus hastow me no litel thing y-yive,                Fo which to thee obliged be for ay                My lyf, and why?                 For thorugh thyn help I live;                For elles deed hadde I be many a day.'                 And with that word doun in his bed he lay,  1615                And Pandarus ful sobrely him herde                Til al was seyd, and than he thus answerde:                 `My dere frend, if I have doon for thee                In any cas, god wot, it is me leef;                And am as glad as man may of it be,  1620                God help me so; but tak now a-greef                That I shal seyn, be war of this myscheef,                That, there-as thou now brought art in-to blisse,                That thou thy-self ne cause it nought to misse.                 `For of fortunes sharpe adversitee  1625                The worst kinde of infortune is this,                A man to have ben in prosperitee,                And it remembren, whan it passed is.                 Thou art wys y-nough, for-thy do nought amis;                Be not to rakel, though thou sitte warme,                For if thou be, certeyn, it wol thee harme.                 1631                 `Thou art at ese, and holde the wel ther-inne.                 For also seur as reed is every fyr,                As greet a craft is kepe wel as winne;                Brydle alwey wel thy speche and thy desyr,  1635                For worldly Ioye halt not but by a wyr;                That preveth wel, it brest alday so ofte;                For-thy nede is to werke with it softe.'                 Quod Troilus, `I hope, and god to-forn,                My dere frend, that I shal so me bere,  1640                That in my gilt ther shal no thing be lorn,                Ne I nil not rakle as for to greven here;                It nedeth not this matere ofte tere;                For wistestow myn herte wel, Pandare,                God woot, of this thou woldest litel care.'                 1645                 Tho gan he telle him of his glade night,                And wher-of first his herte dredde, and how,                And seyde, `Freend, as I am trewe knight,                And by that feyth I shal to god and yow,                I hadde it never half so hote as now;  1650                And ay the more that desyr me byteth                To love hir best, the more it me delyteth.                 `I noot my-self not wisly what it is;                But now I fele a newe qualitee,                Ye, al another than I dide er this.'                 1655                Pandare answerde, and seyde thus, that he                That ones may in hevene blisse be,                He feleth other weyes, dar I leye,                Than thilke tyme he first herde of it seye.                 This is o word for al: this Troilus  1660                Was never ful to speke of this matere,                And for to preysen un-to Pandarus                The bountee of his righte lady dere,                And Pandarus to thanke and maken chere.                 This tale ay was span-newe to biginne,  1665                Til that the night departed hem a-twinne.                 Sone after this, for that fortune it wolde,                I-comen was the blisful tyme swete,                That Troilus was warned that he sholde,                Ther he was erst, Criseyde his lady mete;  1670                For which he felte his herte in Ioye flete;                And feythfully gan alle the goddes herie;                And lat see now if that he can be merie.                 And holden was the forme and al the wyse,                Of hir cominge, and eek of his also,  1675                As it was erst, which nedeth nought devyse.                 But playnly to the effect right for to go,                In Ioye and suerte Pandarus hem two                A-bedde broughte, whan that hem bothe leste,                And thus they ben in quiete and in reste.                 1680                 Nought nedeth it to yow, sin they ben met,                To aske at me if that they blythe were;                For if it erst was wel, tho was it bet                A thousand-fold, this nedeth not enquere.                 A-gon was every sorwe and every fere;  1685                And bothe, y-wis, they hadde, and so they wende,                As muche Ioye as herte may comprende.                 This is no litel thing of for to seye,                This passeth every wit for to devyse;                For eche of hem gan otheres lust obeye;  1690                Felicitee, which that thise clerkes wyse                Commenden so, ne may not here suffyse.                 This Ioye may not writen been with inke,                This passeth al that herte may bithinke.                 But cruel day, so wel-awey the stounde!                 1695                Gan for to aproche, as they by signes knewe,                For whiche hem thoughte felen dethes wounde;                So wo was hem, that changen gan hir hewe,                And day they goonnen to dispyse al newe,                Calling it traytour, envyous, and worse,  1700                And bitterly the dayes light they curse.                 Quod Troilus, `Allas!                 Now am I war                That Pirous and tho swifte stedes three,                Whiche that drawen forth the sonnes char,                Han goon som by-path in despyt of me;  1705                That maketh it so sone day to be;                And, for the sonne him hasteth thus to ryse,                Ne shal I never doon him sacrifyse!'                 But nedes day departe moste hem sone,                And whanne hir speche doon was and hir chere,  1710                They twinne anoon as they were wont to done,                And setten tyme of meting eft y-fere;                And many a night they wroughte in this manere.                 And thus Fortune a tyme ladde in Ioye                Criseyde, and eek this kinges sone of Troye.                 1715                 In suffisaunce, in blisse, and in singinges,                This Troilus gan al his lyf to lede;                He spendeth, Iusteth, maketh festeynges;                He yeveth frely ofte, and chaungeth wede,                And held aboute him alwey, out of drede,  1720                A world of folk, as cam him wel of kinde,                The fressheste and the beste he coude fynde;                 That swich a voys was of hym and a stevene                Thorugh-out the world, of honour and largesse,                That it up rong un-to the yate of hevene.                 1725                And, as in love, he was in swich gladnesse,                That in his herte he demede, as I gesse,                That there nis lovere in this world at ese                So wel as he, and thus gan love him plese.                 The godlihede or beautee which that kinde  1730                In any other lady hadde y-set                Can not the mountaunce of a knot unbinde,                A-boute his herte, of al Criseydes net.                 He was so narwe y-masked and y-knet,                That it undon on any manere syde,  1735                That nil not been, for ought that may betyde.                 And by the hond ful ofte he wolde take                This Pandarus, and in-to gardin lede,                And swich a feste and swich a proces make                Him of Criseyde, and of hir womanhede,  1740                And of hir beautee, that, with-outen drede,                It was an hevene his wordes for to here;                And thanne he wolde singe in this manere.                 `Love, that of erthe and see hath governaunce,                Love, that his hestes hath in hevene hye,  1745                Love, that with an holsom alliaunce                Halt peples ioyned, as him list hem gye,                Love, that knetteth lawe of companye,                And couples doth in vertu for to dwelle,                Bind this acord, that I have told and telle;  1750                 `That that the world with feyth, which that is stable,                Dyverseth so his stoundes concordinge,                That elements that been so discordable                Holden a bond perpetuely duringe,                That Phebus mote his rosy day forth bringe,  1755                And that the mone hath lordship over the nightes,                Al this doth Love; ay heried be his mightes!                 `That, that the see, that gredy is to flowen,                Constreyneth to a certeyn ende so                His flodes, that so fersly they ne growen  1760                To drenchen erthe and al for ever-mo;                And if that Love ought lete his brydel go,                Al that now loveth a-sonder sholde lepe,                And lost were al, that Love halt now to-hepe.                 `So wolde god, that auctor is of kinde,  1765                That, with his bond, Love of his vertu liste                To cerclen hertes alle, and faste binde,                That from his bond no wight the wey out wiste.                 And hertes colde, hem wolde I that he twiste                To make hem love, and that hem leste ay rewe  1770                On hertes sore, and kepe hem that ben trewe.'                 In alle nedes, for the tounes werre,                He was, and ay the firste in armes dight;                And certeynly, but-if that bokes erre,                Save Ector, most y-drad of any wight;  1775                And this encrees of hardinesse and might                Cam him of love, his ladies thank to winne,                That altered his spirit so with-inne.                 In tyme of trewe, on haukinge wolde he ryde,                Or elles hunten boor, bere, or lyoun;  1780                The smale bestes leet he gon bi-syde.                 And whan that he com rydinge in-to toun,                Ful ofte his lady, from hir window doun,                As fresh as faucon comen out of muwe,                Ful redy was, him goodly to saluwe.                 1785                 And most of love and vertu was his speche,                And in despyt hadde alle wrecchednesse;                And doutelees, no nede was him biseche                To honouren hem that hadde worthinesse,                And esen hem that weren in distresse.                 1790                And glad was he if any wight wel ferde,                That lover was, whan he it wiste or herde.                 For sooth to seyn, he lost held every wight                But-if he were in loves heigh servyse,                I mene folk that oughte it been of right.                 1795                And over al this, so wel coude he devyse                Of sentement, and in so unkouth wyse                Al his array, that every lover thoughte,                That al was wel, what-so he seyde or wroughte.                 And though that he be come of blood royal,  1800                Him liste of pryde at no wight for to chase;                Benigne he was to ech in general,                For which he gat him thank in every place.                 Thus wolde love, y-heried be his grace,                That Pryde, Envye, Ire, and Avaryce  1805                He gan to flee, and every other vyce.                 Thou lady bright, the doughter to Dione,                Thy blinde and winged sone eek, daun Cupyde;                Ye sustren nyne eek, that by Elicone                In hil Parnaso listen for to abyde,  1810                That ye thus fer han deyned me to gyde,                I can no more, but sin that ye wol wende,                Ye heried been for ay, with-outen ende!                 Thourgh yow have I seyd fully in my song                Theffect and Ioye of Troilus servyse,  1815                Al be that ther was som disese among,                As to myn auctor listeth to devyse.                 My thridde book now ende ich in this wyse;                And Troilus in luste and in quiete                Is with Criseyde, his owne herte swete.                 1820                 Explicit Liber Tercius.                  





BOOK IV. Incipit Prohemium Liber Quartus.

                 But al to litel, weylaway the whyle,                Lasteth swich Ioye, y-thonked be Fortune!                  That semeth trewest, whan she wol bygyle,                And can to foles so hir song entune,                That she hem hent and blent, traytour comune;  5                And whan a wight is from hir wheel y-throwe,                Than laugheth she, and maketh him the mowe.                  From Troilus she gan hir brighte face                Awey to wrythe, and took of him non hede,                But caste him clene out of his lady grace,  10                And on hir wheel she sette up Diomede;                For which right now myn herte ginneth blede,                And now my penne, allas!                  With which I wryte,                Quaketh for drede of that I moot endyte.                  For how Criseyde Troilus forsook,  15                Or at the leste, how that she was unkinde,                Mot hennes-forth ben matere of my book,                As wryten folk through which it is in minde.                  Allas!                  That they sholde ever cause finde                To speke hir harm; and if they on hir lye,  20                Y-wis, hem-self sholde han the vilanye.                  O ye Herines, Nightes doughtren three,                That endelees compleynen ever in pyne,                Megera, Alete, and eek Thesiphone;                Thou cruel Mars eek, fader to Quiryne,  25                This ilke ferthe book me helpeth fyne,                So that the los of lyf and love y-fere                Of Troilus be fully shewed here.                  Explicit prohemium.                  Incipit Quartus Liber.                  Ligginge in ost, as I have seyd er this,                The Grekes stronge, aboute Troye toun,  30                Bifel that, whan that Phebus shyning is                Up-on the brest of Hercules Lyoun,                That Ector, with ful many a bold baroun,                Caste on a day with Grekes for to fighte,                As he was wont to greve hem what he mighte.                  35                 Not I how longe or short it was bitwene                This purpos and that day they fighte mente;                But on a day wel armed, bright and shene,                Ector, and many a worthy wight out wente,                With spere in hond and bigge bowes bente;  40                And in the herd, with-oute lenger lette,                Hir fomen in the feld anoon hem mette.                  The longe day, with speres sharpe y-grounde,                With arwes, dartes, swerdes, maces felle,                They fighte and bringen hors and man to grounde,  45                And with hir axes out the braynes quelle.                  But in the laste shour, sooth for to telle,                The folk of Troye hem-selven so misledden,                That with the worse at night homward they fledden.                  At whiche day was taken Antenor,  50                Maugre Polydamas or Monesteo,                Santippe, Sarpedon, Polynestor,                Polyte, or eek the Troian daun Ripheo,                And othere lasse folk, as Phebuseo.                  So that, for harm, that day the folk of Troye  55                Dredden to lese a greet part of hir Ioye.                  Of Pryamus was yeve, at Greek requeste,                A tyme of trewe, and tho they gonnen trete,                Hir prisoneres to chaungen, moste and leste,                And for the surplus yeven sommes grete.                  60                This thing anoon was couth in every strete,                Bothe in thassege, in toune, and every-where,                And with the firste it cam to Calkas ere.                  Whan Calkas knew this tretis sholde holde,                In consistorie, among the Grekes, sone  65                He gan in thringe forth, with lordes olde,                And sette him there-as he was wont to done;                And with a chaunged face hem bad a bone,                For love of god, to don that reverence,                To stinte noyse, and yeve him audience.                  70                 Thanne seyde he thus, `Lo!                  Lordes myne, I was                Troian, as it is knowen out of drede;                And, if that yow remembre, I am Calkas,                That alderfirst yaf comfort to your nede,                And tolde wel how that ye sholden spede.                  75                For dredelees, thorugh yow, shal, in a stounde,                Ben Troye y-brend, and beten doun to grounde.                  `And in what forme, or in what maner wyse                This town to shende, and al your lust to acheve,                Ye han er this wel herd it me devyse;  80                This knowe ye, my lordes, as I leve.                  And for the Grekes weren me so leve,                I com my-self in my propre persone,                To teche in this how yow was best to done;                 `Havinge un-to my tresour ne my rente  85                Right no resport, to respect of your ese.                  Thus al my good I loste and to yow wente,                Wening in this you, lordes, for to plese.                  But al that los ne doth me no disese.                  I vouche-sauf, as wisly have I Ioye,  90                For you to lese al that I have in Troye,                 `Save of a doughter, that I lafte, allas!                  Slepinge at hoom, whanne out of Troye I sterte.                  O sterne, O cruel fader that I was!                  How mighte I have in that so hard an herte?                  95                Allas!                  I ne hadde y-brought hir in hir sherte!                  For sorwe of which I wol not live to morwe,                But-if ye lordes rewe up-on my sorwe.                  `For, by that cause I say no tyme er now                Hir to delivere, I holden have my pees;  100                But now or never, if that it lyke yow,                I may hir have right sone, doutelees.                  O help and grace!                  Amonges al this prees,                Rewe on this olde caitif in destresse,                Sin I through yow have al this hevinesse!                  105                 `Ye have now caught and fetered in prisoun                Troians y-nowe; and if your willes be,                My child with oon may have redempcioun.                  Now for the love of god and of bountee,                Oon of so fele, allas!                  So yeve him me.                  110                What nede were it this preyere for to werne,                Sin ye shul bothe han folk and toun as yerne?                  `On peril of my lyf, I shal nat lye,                Appollo hath me told it feithfully;                I have eek founde it be astronomye,  115                By sort, and by augurie eek trewely,                And dar wel seye, the tyme is faste by,                That fyr and flaumbe on al the toun shal sprede;                And thus shal Troye turne to asshen dede.                  `For certeyn, Phebus and Neptunus bothe,  120                That makeden the walles of the toun,                Ben with the folk of Troye alwey so wrothe,                That thei wol bringe it to confusioun,                Right in despyt of king Lameadoun.                  By-cause he nolde payen hem hir hyre,  125                The toun of Troye shal ben set on-fyre.'                  Telling his tale alwey, this olde greye,                Humble in speche, and in his lokinge eke,                The salte teres from his eyen tweye                Ful faste ronnen doun by eyther cheke.                  130                So longe he gan of socour hem by-seke                That, for to hele him of his sorwes sore,                They yave him Antenor, with-oute more.                  But who was glad y-nough but Calkas tho?                  And of this thing ful sone his nedes leyde  135                On hem that sholden for the tretis go,                And hem for Antenor ful ofte preyde                To bringen hoom king Toas and Criseyde;                And whan Pryam his save-garde sente,                Thembassadours to Troye streyght they wente.                  140                 The cause y-told of hir cominge, the olde                Pryam the king ful sone in general                Let here-upon his parlement to holde,                Of which the effect rehersen yow I shal.                  Thembassadours ben answered for fynal,  145                Theschaunge of prisoners and al this nede                Hem lyketh wel, and forth in they procede.                  This Troilus was present in the place,                Whan axed was for Antenor Criseyde,                For which ful sone chaungen gan his face,  150                As he that with tho wordes wel neigh deyde.                  But nathelees, he no word to it seyde,                Lest men sholde his affeccioun espye;                With mannes herte he gan his sorwes drye.                  And ful of anguissh and of grisly drede  155                Abood what lordes wolde un-to it seye;                And if they wolde graunte, as god forbede,                Theschaunge of hir, than thoughte he thinges tweye,                First, how to save hir honour, and what weye                He mighte best theschaunge of hir withstonde;  160                Ful faste he caste how al this mighte stonde.                  Love him made al prest to doon hir byde,                And rather dye than she sholde go;                But resoun seyde him, on that other syde,                `With-oute assent of hir ne do not so,  165                Lest for thy werk she wolde be thy fo,                And seyn, that thorugh thy medling is y-blowe                Your bother love, there it was erst unknowe.'                  For which he gan deliberen, for the beste,                That though the lordes wolde that she wente,  170                He wolde lat hem graunte what hem leste,                And telle his lady first what that they mente.                  And whan that she had seyd him hir entente,                Ther-after wolde he werken also blyve,                Though al the world ayein it wolde stryve.                  175                 Ector, which that wel the Grekes herde,                For Antenor how they wolde han Criseyde,                Gan it withstonde, and sobrely answerde: —                `Sires, she nis no prisoner,' he seyde;                `I noot on yow who that this charge leyde,  180                But, on my part, ye may eft-sone hem telle,                We usen here no wommen for to selle.'                  The noyse of peple up-stirte thanne at ones,                As breme as blase of straw y-set on fyre;                For infortune it wolde, for the nones,  185                They sholden hir confusioun desyre.                  `Ector,' quod they, `what goost may yow enspyre                This womman thus to shilde and doon us lese                Daun Antenor?                  — a wrong wey now ye chese —                 `That is so wys, and eek so bold baroun,  190                And we han nede to folk, as men may see;                He is eek oon, the grettest of this toun;                O Ector, lat tho fantasyes be!                  O king Priam,' quod they, `thus seggen we,                That al our voys is to for-gon Criseyde;'  195                And to deliveren Antenor they preyde.                  O Iuvenal, lord!                  Trewe is thy sentence,                That litel witen folk what is to yerne                That they ne finde in hir desyr offence;                For cloud of errour let hem not descerne  200                What best is; and lo, here ensample as yerne.                  This folk desiren now deliveraunce                Of Antenor, that broughte hem to mischaunce!                  For he was after traytour to the toun                Of Troye; allas!                  They quitte him out to rathe;  205                O nyce world, lo, thy discrecioun!                  Criseyde, which that never dide hem skathe,                Shal now no lenger in hir blisse bathe;                But Antenor, he shal com hoom to toune,                And she shal out; thus seyden here and howne.                  210                 For which delibered was by parlement                For Antenor to yelden out Criseyde,                And it pronounced by the president,                Al-theigh that Ector `nay' ful ofte preyde.                  And fynaly, what wight that it with-seyde,  215                It was for nought, it moste been, and sholde;                For substaunce of the parlement it wolde.                  Departed out of parlement echone,                This Troilus, with-oute wordes mo,                Un-to his chaumbre spedde him faste allone,  220                But-if it were a man of his or two,                The whiche he bad out faste for to go,                By-cause he wolde slepen, as he seyde,                And hastely up-on his bed him leyde.                  And as in winter leves been biraft,  225                Eche after other, til the tree be bare,                So that ther nis but bark and braunche y-laft,                Lyth Troilus, biraft of ech wel-fare,                Y-bounden in the blake bark of care,                Disposed wood out of his wit to breyde,  230                So sore him sat the chaunginge of Criseyde.                  He rist him up, and every dore he shette                And windowe eek, and tho this sorweful man                Up-on his beddes syde a-doun him sette,                Ful lyk a deed image pale and wan;  235                And in his brest the heped wo bigan                Out-breste, and he to werken in this wyse                In his woodnesse, as I shal yow devyse.                  Right as the wilde bole biginneth springe                Now here, now there, y-darted to the herte,  240                And of his deeth roreth in compleyninge,                Right so gan he aboute the chaumbre sterte,                Smyting his brest ay with his festes smerte;                His heed to the wal, his body to the grounde                Ful ofte he swapte, him-selven to confounde.                  245                 His eyen two, for pitee of his herte,                Out stremeden as swifte welles tweye;                The heighe sobbes of his sorwes smerte                His speche him refte, unnethes mighte he seye,                `O deeth, allas!                  Why niltow do me deye?                  250                A-cursed be the day which that nature                Shoop me to ben a lyves creature!'                  But after, whan the furie and the rage                Which that his herte twiste and faste threste,                By lengthe of tyme somwhat gan asswage,  255                Up-on his bed he leyde him doun to reste;                But tho bigonne his teres more out-breste,                That wonder is, the body may suffyse                To half this wo, which that I yow devyse.                  Than seyde he thus, `Fortune!                  Allas the whyle!                  260                What have I doon, what have I thus a-gilt?                  How mightestow for reuthe me bigyle?                  Is ther no grace, and shal I thus be spilt?                  Shal thus Criseyde awey, for that thou wilt?                  Allas!                  How maystow in thyn herte finde  265                To been to me thus cruel and unkinde?                  `Have I thee nought honoured al my lyve,                As thou wel wost, above the goddes alle?                  Why wiltow me fro Ioye thus depryve?                  O Troilus, what may men now thee calle  270                But wrecche of wrecches, out of honour falle                In-to miserie, in which I wol biwayle                Criseyde, allas!                  Til that the breeth me fayle?                  `Allas, Fortune!                  If that my lyf in Ioye                Displesed hadde un-to thy foule envye,  275                Why ne haddestow my fader, king of Troye,                By-raft the lyf, or doon my bretheren dye,                Or slayn my-self, that thus compleyne and crye,                I, combre-world, that may of no-thing serve,                But ever dye, and never fully sterve?                  280                 `If that Criseyde allone were me laft,                Nought roughte I whider thou woldest me stere;                And hir, allas!                  Than hastow me biraft.                  But ever-more, lo!                  This is thy manere,                To reve a wight that most is to him dere,  285                To preve in that thy gerful violence.                  Thus am I lost, ther helpeth no defence!                  `O verray lord of love, O god, allas!                  That knowest best myn herte and al my thought,                What shal my sorwful lyf don in this cas  290                If I for-go that I so dere have bought?                  Sin ye Cryseyde and me han fully brought                In-to your grace, and bothe our hertes seled,                How may ye suffre, allas!                  It be repeled?                  `What I may doon, I shal, whyl I may dure  295                On lyve in torment and in cruel peyne,                This infortune or this disaventure,                Allone as I was born, y-wis, compleyne;                Ne never wil I seen it shyne or reyne;                But ende I wil, as Edippe, in derknesse  300                My sorwful lyf, and dyen in distresse.                  `O wery goost, that errest to and fro,                Why niltow fleen out of the wofulleste                Body, that ever mighte on grounde go?                  O soule, lurkinge in this wo, unneste,  305                Flee forth out of myn herte, and lat it breste,                And folwe alwey Criseyde, thy lady dere;                Thy righte place is now no lenger here!                  `O wofulle eyen two, sin your disport                Was al to seen Criseydes eyen brighte,  310                What shal ye doon but, for my discomfort,                Stonden for nought, and wepen out your sighte?                  Sin she is queynt, that wont was yow to lighte,                In veyn fro-this-forth have I eyen tweye                Y-formed, sin your vertue is a-weye.                  315                 `O my Criseyde, O lady sovereyne                Of thilke woful soule that thus cryeth,                Who shal now yeven comfort to the peyne?                  Allas, no wight; but when myn herte dyeth,                My spirit, which that so un-to yow hyeth,  320                Receyve in gree, for that shal ay yow serve;                For-thy no fors is, though the body sterve.                  `O ye loveres, that heighe upon the wheel                Ben set of Fortune, in good aventure,                God leve that ye finde ay love of steel,  325                And longe mot your lyf in Ioye endure!                  But whan ye comen by my sepulture,                Remembreth that your felawe resteth there;                For I lovede eek, though I unworthy were.                  `O olde, unholsom, and mislyved man,  330                Calkas I mene, allas!                  What eyleth thee                To been a Greek, sin thou art born Troian?                  O Calkas, which that wilt my bane be,                In cursed tyme was thou born for me!                  As wolde blisful Iove, for his Ioye,  335                That I thee hadde, where I wolde, in Troye!'                  A thousand sykes, hottere than the glede,                Out of his brest ech after other wente,                Medled with pleyntes newe, his wo to fede,                For which his woful teres never stente;  340                And shortly, so his peynes him to-rente,                And wex so mat, that Ioye nor penaunce                He feleth noon, but lyth forth in a traunce.                  Pandare, which that in the parlement                Hadde herd what every lord and burgeys seyde,  345                And how ful graunted was, by oon assent,                For Antenor to yelden so Criseyde,                Gan wel neigh wood out of his wit to breyde,                So that, for wo, he niste what he mente;                But in a rees to Troilus he wente.                  350                 A certeyn knight, that for the tyme kepte                The chaumbre-dore, un-dide it him anoon;                And Pandare, that ful tendreliche wepte,                In-to the derke chaumbre, as stille as stoon,                Toward the bed gan softely to goon,  355                So confus, that he niste what to seye;                For verray wo his wit was neigh aweye.                  And with his chere and loking al to-torn,                For sorwe of this, and with his armes folden,                He stood this woful Troilus biforn,  360                And on his pitous face he gan biholden;                But lord, so often gan his herte colden,                Seing his freend in wo, whos hevinesse                His herte slow, as thoughte him, for distresse.                  This woful wight, this Troilus, that felte  365                His freend Pandare y-comen him to see,                Gan as the snow ayein the sonne melte,                For which this sorwful Pandare, of pitee,                Gan for to wepe as tendreliche as he;                And specheles thus been thise ilke tweye,  370                That neyther mighte o word for sorwe seye.                  But at the laste this woful Troilus,                Ney deed for smert, gan bresten out to rore,                And with a sorwful noyse he seyde thus,                Among his sobbes and his sykes sore,  375                `Lo!                  Pandare, I am deed, with-outen more.                  Hastow nought herd at parlement,' he seyde,                `For Antenor how lost is my Criseyde?'                  This Pandarus, ful deed and pale of hewe,                Ful pitously answerde and seyde, `Yis!                  380                As wisly were it fals as it is trewe,                That I have herd, and wot al how it is.                  O mercy, god, who wolde have trowed this?                  Who wolde have wend that, in so litel a throwe,                Fortune our Ioye wolde han over-throwe?                  385                 `For in this world ther is no creature,                As to my doom, that ever saw ruyne                Straungere than this, thorugh cas or aventure.                  But who may al eschewe, or al devyne?                  Swich is this world; for-thy I thus defyne,  390                Ne trust no wight to finden in Fortune                Ay propretee; hir yeftes been comune.                  `But tel me this, why thou art now so mad                To sorwen thus?                  Why lystow in this wyse,                Sin thy desyr al holly hastow had,  395                So that, by right, it oughte y-now suffyse?                  But I, that never felte in my servyse                A frendly chere or loking of an ye,                Lat me thus wepe and wayle, til I dye.                  `And over al this, as thou wel wost thy-selve,  400                This town is ful of ladies al aboute;                And, to my doom, fairer than swiche twelve                As ever she was, shal I finde, in som route,                Ye, oon or two, with-outen any doute.                  For-thy be glad, myn owene dere brother,  405                If she be lost, we shal recovere another.                  `What, god for-bede alwey that ech plesaunce                In o thing were, and in non other wight!                  If oon can singe, another can wel daunce;                If this be goodly, she is glad and light;  410                And this is fayr, and that can good a-right.                  Ech for his vertu holden is for dere,                Bothe heroner and faucon for rivere.                  `And eek, as writ Zanzis, that was ful wys,                "The newe love out chaceth ofte the olde;"  415                And up-on newe cas lyth newe avys.                  Thenk eek, thy-self to saven artow holde;                Swich fyr, by proces, shal of kinde colde.                  For sin it is but casuel plesaunce,                Som cas shal putte it out of remembraunce.                  420                 `For al-so seur as day cometh after night,                The newe love, labour or other wo,                Or elles selde seinge of a wight,                Don olde affecciouns alle over-go.                  And, for thy part, thou shalt have oon of tho  425                To abrigge with thy bittre peynes smerte;                Absence of hir shal dryve hir out of herte.'                  Thise wordes seyde he for the nones alle,                To helpe his freend, lest he for sorwe deyde.                  For douteles, to doon his wo to falle,  430                He roughte not what unthrift that he seyde.                  But Troilus, that neigh for sorwe deyde,                Tok litel hede of al that ever he mente;                Oon ere it herde, at the other out it wente:                 But at the laste answerde and seyde, `Freend,  435                This lechecraft, or heled thus to be,                Were wel sitting, if that I were a feend,                To traysen hir that trewe is unto me!                  I pray god, lat this consayl never y-thee;                But do me rather sterve anon-right here  440                Er I thus do as thou me woldest lere.                  `She that I serve, y-wis, what so thou seye,                To whom myn herte enhabit is by right,                Shal han me holly hires til that I deye.                  For, Pandarus, sin I have trouthe hir hight,  445                I wol not been untrewe for no wight;                But as hir man I wol ay live and sterve,                And never other creature serve.                  `And ther thou seyst, thou shalt as faire finde                As she, lat be, make no comparisoun  450                To creature y-formed here by kinde.                  O leve Pandare, in conclusioun,                I wol not be of thyn opinioun,                Touching al this; for whiche I thee biseche,                So hold thy pees; thou sleest me with thy speche.                  455                 `Thow biddest me I sholde love an-other                Al freshly newe, and lat Criseyde go!                  It lyth not in my power, leve brother.                  And though I mighte, I wolde not do so.                  But canstow pleyen raket, to and fro,  460                Netle in, dokke out, now this, now that, Pandare?                  Now foule falle hir, for thy wo that care!                  `Thow farest eek by me, thou Pandarus,                As he, that whan a wight is wo bi-goon,                He cometh to him a pas, and seyth right thus,  465                "Thenk not on smert, and thou shalt fele noon."                  Thou most me first transmuwen in a stoon,                And reve me my passiounes alle,                Er thou so lightly do my wo to falle.                  `The deeth may wel out of my brest departe  470                The lyf, so longe may this sorwe myne;                But fro my soule shal Criseydes darte                Out never-mo; but doun with Proserpyne,                Whan I am deed, I wol go wone in pyne;                And ther I wol eternaly compleyne  475                My wo, and how that twinned be we tweyne.                  `Thow hast here maad an argument, for fyn,                How that it sholde a lasse peyne be                Criseyde to for-goon, for she was myn,                And live in ese and in felicitee.                  480                Why gabbestow, that seydest thus to me                That "him is wors that is fro wele y-throwe,                Than he hadde erst non of that wele y-knowe?"                  `But tel me now, sin that thee thinketh so light                To chaungen so in love, ay to and fro,  485                Why hastow not don bisily thy might                To chaungen hir that doth thee al thy wo?                  Why niltow lete hir fro thyn herte go?                  Why niltow love an-other lady swete,                That may thyn herte setten in quiete?                  490                 `If thou hast had in love ay yet mischaunce,                And canst it not out of thyn herte dryve,                I, that livede in lust and in plesaunce                With hir as muche as creature on-lyve,                How sholde I that foryete, and that so blyve?                  495                O where hastow ben hid so longe in muwe,                That canst so wel and formely arguwe?                  `Nay, nay, god wot, nought worth is al thy reed,                For which, for what that ever may bifalle,                With-outen wordes mo, I wol be deed.                  500                O deeth, that endere art of sorwes alle,                Com now, sin I so ofte after thee calle,                For sely is that deeth, soth for to seyne,                That, ofte y-cleped, cometh and endeth peyne.                  `Wel wot I, whyl my lyf was in quiete,  505                Er thou me slowe, I wolde have yeven hyre;                But now thy cominge is to me so swete,                That in this world I no-thing so desyre.                  O deeth, sin with this sorwe I am a-fyre,                Thou outher do me anoon yn teres drenche,  510                Or with thy colde strook myn hete quenche!                  `Sin that thou sleest so fele in sondry wyse                Ayens hir wil, unpreyed, day and night,                Do me, at my requeste, this servyse,                Delivere now the world, so dostow right,  515                Of me, that am the wofulleste wight                That ever was; for tyme is that I sterve,                Sin in this world of right nought may I serve.'                  This Troilus in teres gan distille,                As licour out of alambyk ful faste;  520                And Pandarus gan holde his tunge stille,                And to the ground his eyen doun he caste.                  But nathelees, thus thoughte he at the laste,                `What, parde, rather than my felawe deye,                Yet shal I som-what more un-to him seye:'  525                 And seyde, `Freend, sin thou hast swich distresse,                And sin thee list myn arguments to blame,                Why nilt thy-selven helpen doon redresse,                And with thy manhod letten al this grame?                  Go ravisshe hir ne canstow not for shame!                  530                And outher lat hir out of toune fare,                Or hold hir stille, and leve thy nyce fare.                  `Artow in Troye, and hast non hardiment                To take a womman which that loveth thee,                And wolde hir-selven been of thyn assent?                  535                Now is not this a nyce vanitee?                  Rys up anoon, and lat this weping be,                And kyth thou art a man, for in this houre                I wil be deed, or she shal bleven oure.'                  To this answerde him Troilus ful softe,  540                And seyde, `Parde, leve brother dere,                Al this have I my-self yet thought ful ofte,                And more thing than thou devysest here.                  But why this thing is laft, thou shalt wel here;                And whan thou me hast yeve an audience,  545                Ther-after mayst thou telle al thy sentence.                  `First, sin thou wost this toun hath al this werre                For ravisshing of wommen so by might,                It sholde not be suffred me to erre,                As it stant now, ne doon so gret unright.                  550                I sholde han also blame of every wight,                My fadres graunt if that I so withstode,                Sin she is chaunged for the tounes goode.                  `I have eek thought, so it were hir assent,                To aske hir at my fader, of his grace;  555                Than thenke I, this were hir accusement,                Sin wel I woot I may hir not purchace.                  For sin my fader, in so heigh a place                As parlement, hath hir eschaunge enseled,                He nil for me his lettre be repeled.                  560                 `Yet drede I most hir herte to pertourbe                With violence, if I do swich a game;                For if I wolde it openly distourbe,                It moste been disclaundre to hir name.                  And me were lever deed than hir defame,  565                As nolde god but-if I sholde have                Hir honour lever than my lyf to save!                  `Thus am I lost, for ought that I can see;                For certeyn is, sin that I am hir knight,                I moste hir honour levere han than me  570                In every cas, as lovere oughte of right.                  Thus am I with desyr and reson twight;                Desyr for to destourben hir me redeth,                And reson nil not, so myn herte dredeth.'                  Thus wepinge that he coude never cesse,  575                He seyde, `Allas!                  How shal I, wrecche, fare?                  For wel fele I alwey my love encresse,                And hope is lasse and lasse alwey, Pandare!                  Encressen eek the causes of my care;                So wel-a-wey, why nil myn herte breste?                  580                For, as in love, ther is but litel reste.'                  Pandare answerde, `Freend, thou mayst, for me,                Don as thee list; but hadde ich it so hote,                And thyn estat, she sholde go with me;                Though al this toun cryede on this thing by note,  585                I nolde sette at al that noyse a grote.                  For when men han wel cryed, than wol they roune;                A wonder last but nyne night never in toune.                  `Devyne not in reson ay so depe                Ne curteysly, but help thy-self anoon;  590                Bet is that othere than thy-selven wepe,                And namely, sin ye two been al oon.                  Rys up, for by myn heed, she shal not goon;                And rather be in blame a lyte y-founde                Than sterve here as a gnat, with-oute wounde.                  595                 `It is no shame un-to yow, ne no vyce                Hir to with-holden, that ye loveth most.                  Paraunter, she mighte holden thee for nyce                To lete hir go thus to the Grekes ost.                  Thenk eek Fortune, as wel thy-selven wost,  600                Helpeth hardy man to his enpryse,                And weyveth wrecches, for hir cowardyse.                  `And though thy lady wolde a litel hir greve,                Thou shalt thy pees ful wel here-after make,                But as for me, certayn, I can not leve  605                That she wolde it as now for yvel take.                  Why sholde than for ferd thyn herte quake?                  Thenk eek how Paris hath, that is thy brother,                A love; and why shaltow not have another?                  `And Troilus, o thing I dar thee swere,  610                That if Criseyde, whiche that is thy leef,                Now loveth thee as wel as thou dost here,                God helpe me so, she nil nat take a-greef,                Though thou do bote a-noon in this mischeef.                  And if she wilneth fro thee for to passe,  615                Thanne is she fals; so love hir wel the lasse.                  `For-thy tak herte, and thenk, right as a knight,                Thourgh love is broken alday every lawe.                  Kyth now sumwhat thy corage and thy might,                Have mercy on thy-self, for any awe.                  620                Lat not this wrecched wo thin herte gnawe,                But manly set the world on sixe and sevene;                And, if thou deye a martir, go to hevene.                  `I wol my-self be with thee at this dede,                Though ich and al my kin, up-on a stounde,  625                Shulle in a strete as dogges liggen dede,                Thourgh-girt with many a wyd and blody wounde.                  In every cas I wol a freend be founde.                  And if thee list here sterven as a wrecche,                A-dieu, the devel spede him that it recche!'                  630                 This Troilus gan with tho wordes quiken,                And seyde, `Freend, graunt mercy, ich assente;                But certaynly thou mayst not me so priken,                Ne peyne noon ne may me so tormente,                That, for no cas, it is not myn entente,  635                At shorte wordes, though I dyen sholde,                To ravisshe hir, but-if hir-self it wolde.'                  `Why, so mene I,' quod Pandarus, `al this day.                  But tel me than, hastow hir wil assayed,                That sorwest thus?'                  And he answerde, `Nay.'                  `Wher-of artow,' quod Pandare, `than a-mayed,  640                That nost not that she wol ben y-vel apayed                To ravisshe hir, sin thou hast not ben there,                But-if that Iove tolde it in thyn ere?                  `For-thy rys up, as nought ne were, anoon,  645                And wash thy face, and to the king thou wende,                Or he may wondren whider thou art goon.                  Thou most with wisdom him and othere blende;                Or, up-on cas, he may after thee sende                Er thou be war; and shortly, brother dere,  650                Be glad, and lat me werke in this matere.                  `For I shal shape it so, that sikerly                Thou shalt this night som tyme, in som manere,                Com speke with thy lady prevely,                And by hir wordes eek, and by hir chere,  655                Thou shalt ful sone aperceyve and wel here                Al hir entente, and in this cas the beste;                And fare now wel, for in this point I reste.'                  The swifte Fame, whiche that false thinges                Egal reporteth lyk the thinges trewe,  660                Was thorugh-out Troye y-fled with preste winges                Fro man to man, and made this tale al newe,                How Calkas doughter, with hir brighte hewe,                At parlement, with-oute wordes more,                I-graunted was in chaunge of Antenore.                  665                 The whiche tale anoon-right as Criseyde                Had herd, she, which that of hir fader roughte,                As in this cas, right nought, ne whanne he deyde,                Ful bisily to Iuppiter bisoughte                Yeve hem mischaunce that this tretis broughte.                  670                But shortly, lest thise tales sothe were,                She dorste at no wight asken it, for fere.                  As she that hadde hir herte and al hir minde                On Troilus y-set so wonder faste,                That al this world ne mighte hir love unbinde,  675                Ne Troilus out of hir herte caste;                She wol ben his, whyl that hir lyf may laste.                  And thus she brenneth bothe in love and drede,                So that she niste what was best to rede.                  But as men seen in toune, and al aboute,  680                That wommen usen frendes to visyte,                So to Criseyde of wommen com a route                For pitous Ioye, and wenden hir delyte;                And with hir tales, dere y-nough a myte,                These wommen, whiche that in the cite dwelle,  685                They sette hem doun, and seyde as I shal telle.                  Quod first that oon, `I am glad, trewely,                By-cause of yow, that shal your fader see.'                  A-nother seyde, `Y-wis, so nam not I,                For al to litel hath she with us be.'                  690                Quod tho the thridde, `I hope, y-wis, that she                Shal bringen us the pees on every syde,                That, whan she gooth, almighty god hir gyde!'                  Tho wordes and tho wommanisshe thinges,                She herde hem right as though she thennes were;  695                For, god it wot, hir herte on other thing is,                Although the body sat among hem there.                  Hir advertence is alwey elles-where;                For Troilus ful faste hir soule soughte;                With-outen word, alwey on him she thoughte.                  700                 Thise wommen, that thus wenden hir to plese,                Aboute nought gonne alle hir tales spende;                Swich vanitee ne can don hir non ese,                As she that, al this mene whyle.                  brende                Of other passioun than that they wende,  705                So that she felte almost hir herte deye                For wo, and wery of that companye.                  For which no lenger mighte she restreyne                Hir teres, so they gonnen up to welle,                That yaven signes of the bitter peyne  710                In whiche hir spirit was, and moste dwelle;                Remembring hir, fro heven unto which helle                She fallen was, sith she forgoth the sighte                Of Troilus, and sorowfully she sighte.                  And thilke foles sittinge hir aboute  715                Wenden, that she wepte and syked sore                By-cause that she sholde out of that route                Departe, and never pleye with hem more.                  And they that hadde y-knowen hir of yore                Seye hir so wepe, and thoughte it kindenesse,  720                And eche of hem wepte eek for hir destresse;                 And bisily they gonnen hir conforten                Of thing, god wot, on which she litel thoughte;                And with hir tales wenden hir disporten,                And to be glad they often hir bisoughte.                  725                But swich an ese ther-with they hir wroughte                Right as a man is esed for to fele,                For ache of heed, to clawen him on his hele!                  But after al this nyce vanitee                They took hir leve, and hoom they wenten alle.                  730                Criseyde, ful of sorweful pitee,                In-to hir chaumbre up wente out of the halle,                And on hir bed she gan for deed to falle,                In purpos never thennes for to ryse;                And thus she wroughte, as I shal yow devyse.                  735                 Hir ounded heer, that sonnish was of hewe,                She rente, and eek hir fingres longe and smale                She wrong ful ofte, and bad god on hir rewe,                And with the deeth to doon bote on hir bale.                  Hir hewe, whylom bright, that tho was pale,  740                Bar witnes of hir wo and hir constreynte;                And thus she spak, sobbinge, in hir compleynte:                 `Alas!'                  quod she, `out of this regioun                I, woful wrecche and infortuned wight,                And born in corsed constellacioun,  745                Mot goon, and thus departen fro my knight;                Wo worth, allas!                  That ilke dayes light                On which I saw him first with eyen tweyne,                That causeth me, and I him, al this peyne!'                  Therwith the teres from hir eyen two  750                Doun fille, as shour in Aperill ful swythe;                Hir whyte brest she bet, and for the wo                After the deeth she cryed a thousand sythe,                Sin he that wont hir wo was for to lythe,                She mot for-goon; for which disaventure  755                She held hir-self a forlost creature.                  She seyde, `How shal he doon, and I also?                  How sholde I live, if that I from him twinne?                  O dere herte eek, that I love so,                Who shal that sorwe sleen that ye ben inne?                  760                O Calkas, fader, thyn be al this sinne!                  O moder myn, that cleped were Argyve,                Wo worth that day that thou me bere on lyve!                  `To what fyn sholde I live and sorwen thus?                  How sholde a fish with-oute water dure?                  765                What is Criseyde worth, from Troilus?                  How sholde a plaunte or lyves creature                Live, with-oute his kinde noriture?                  For which ful oft a by-word here I seye,                That "rotelees, mot grene sone deye."                  770                 `I shal don thus, sin neither swerd ne darte                Dar I non handle, for the crueltee,                That ilke day that I from yow departe,                If sorwe of that nil not my bane be,                Than shal no mete or drinke come in me  775                Til I my soule out of my breste unshethe;                And thus my-selven wol I do to dethe.                  `And, Troilus, my clothes everichoon                Shul blake been, in tokeninge, herte swete,                That I am as out of this world agoon,  780                That wont was yow to setten in quiete;                And of myn ordre, ay til deeth me mete,                The observaunce ever, in your absence,                Shal sorwe been, compleynte, and abstinence.                  `Myn herte and eek the woful goost ther-inne  785                Biquethe I, with your spirit to compleyne                Eternally, for they shal never twinne.                  For though in erthe y-twinned be we tweyne,                Yet in the feld of pitee, out of peyne,                That hight Elysos, shul we been y-fere,  790                As Orpheus and Erudice, his fere.                  `Thus, herte myn, for Antenor, allas!                  I sone shal be chaunged, as I wene.                  But how shul ye don in this sorwful cas,                How shal youre tendre herte this sustene?                  795                But herte myn, for-yet this sorwe and tene,                And me also; for, soothly for to seye,                So ye wel fare, I recche not to deye.'                  How mighte it ever y-red ben or y-songe,                The pleynte that she made in hir distresse?                  800                I noot; but, as for me, my litel tonge,                If I discreven wolde hir hevinesse,                It sholde make hir sorwe seme lesse                Than that it was, and childishly deface                Hir heigh compleynte, and therfore I it pace.                  805                 Pandare, which that sent from Troilus                Was to Criseyde, as ye han herd devyse,                That for the beste it was accorded thus,                And he ful glad to doon him that servyse,                Un-to Criseyde, in a ful secree wyse,  810                Ther-as she lay in torment and in rage,                Com hir to telle al hoolly his message,                 And fond that she hir-selven gan to trete                Ful pitously; for with hir salte teres                Hir brest, hir face, y-bathed was ful wete;  815                The mighty tresses of hir sonnish heres,                Unbroyden, hangen al aboute hir eres;                Which yaf him verray signal of martyre                Of deeth, which that hir herte gan desyre.                  Whan she him saw, she gan for sorwe anoon  820                Hir tery face a-twixe hir armes hide,                For which this Pandare is so wo bi-goon,                That in the hous he mighte unnethe abyde,                As he that pitee felte on every syde.                  For if Criseyde hadde erst compleyned sore,  825                Tho gan she pleyne a thousand tymes more.                  And in hir aspre pleynte than she seyde,                `Pandare first of Ioyes mo than two                Was cause causinge un-to me, Criseyde,                That now transmuwed been in cruel wo.                  830                Wher shal I seye to yow "wel come" or no,                That alderfirst me broughte in-to servyse                Of love, allas!                  That endeth in swich wyse?                  `Endeth than love in wo?                  Ye, or men lyeth!                  And alle worldly blisse, as thinketh me.                  835                The ende of blisse ay sorwe it occupyeth;                And who-so troweth not that it so be,                Lat him upon me, woful wrecche, y-see,                That my-self hate, and ay my birthe acorse,                Felinge alwey, fro wikke I go to worse.                  840                 `Who-so me seeth, he seeth sorwe al at ones,                Peyne, torment, pleynte, wo, distresse.                  Out of my woful body harm ther noon is,                As anguish, langour, cruel bitternesse,                A-noy, smert, drede, fury, and eek siknesse.                  845                I trowe, y-wis, from hevene teres reyne,                For pitee of myn aspre and cruel peyne!                  '                 `And thou, my suster, ful of discomfort,'                Quod Pandarus, `what thenkestow to do?                  Why ne hastow to thy-selven som resport,  850                Why woltow thus thy-selve, allas, for-do?                  Leef al this werk and tak now hede to                That I shal seyn, and herkne, of good entente,                This, which by me thy Troilus thee sente.'                  Torned hir tho Criseyde, a wo makinge  855                So greet that it a deeth was for to see: —                `Allas!'                  quod she, `what wordes may ye bringe?                  What wol my dere herte seyn to me,                Which that I drede never-mo to see?                  Wol he have pleynte or teres, er I wende?                  860                I have y-nowe, if he ther-after sende!'                  She was right swich to seen in hir visage                As is that wight that men on bere binde;                Hir face, lyk of Paradys the image,                Was al y-chaunged in another kinde.                  865                The pleye, the laughtre men was wont to finde                On hir, and eek hir Ioyes everychone,                Ben fled, and thus lyth now Criseyde allone.                  Aboute hir eyen two a purpre ring                Bi-trent, in sothfast tokninge of hir peyne,  870                That to biholde it was a dedly thing,                For which Pandare mighte not restreyne                The teres from his eyen for to reyne.                  But nathelees, as he best mighte, he seyde                From Troilus thise wordes to Criseyde.                  875                 `Lo, nece, I trowe ye han herd al how                The king, with othere lordes, for the beste,                Hath mad eschaunge of Antenor and yow,                That cause is of this sorwe and this unreste.                  But how this cas doth Troilus moleste,  880                That may non erthely mannes tonge seye;                For verray wo his wit is al aweye.                  `For which we han so sorwed, he and I,                That in-to litel bothe it hadde us slawe;                But thurgh my conseil this day, fynally,  885                He somwhat is fro weping now with-drawe.                  And semeth me that he desyreth fawe                With yow to been al night, for to devyse                Remede in this, if ther were any wyse.                  `This, short and pleyne, theffect of my message,  890                As ferforth as my wit can comprehende.                  For ye, that been of torment in swich rage,                May to no long prologe as now entende;                And her-upon ye may answere him sende.                  And, for the love of god, my nece dere,  895                So leef this wo er Troilus be here.'                  `Gret is my wo,' quod she, and sighte sore,                As she that feleth dedly sharp distresse;                `But yet to me his sorwe is muchel more,                That love him bet than he him-self, I gesse.                  900                Allas!                  For me hath he swich hevinesse?                  Can he for me so pitously compleyne?                  Y-wis, his sorwe doubleth al my peyne.                  `Grevous to me, god wot, is for to twinne,'                Quod she, `but yet it hardere is to me  905                To seen that sorwe which that he is inne;                For wel wot I, it wol my bane be;                And deye I wol in certayn,' tho quod she;                `But bidde him come, er deeth, that thus me threteth,                Dryve out that goost which in myn herte beteth.'                  910                 Thise wordes seyd, she on hir armes two                Fil gruf, and gan to wepe pitously.                  Quod Pandarus, `Allas!                  Why do ye so,                Syn wel ye woot the tyme is faste by,                That he shal come?                  Arys up hastely,  915                That he yow nat biwopen thus ne finde,                But ye wol have him wood out of his minde!                  `For wiste he that ye ferde in this manere,                He wolde him-selve slee; and if I wende                To han this fare, he sholde not come here  920                For al the good that Pryam may despende.                  For to what fyn he wolde anoon pretende,                That knowe I wel; and for-thy yet I seye,                So leef this sorwe, or platly he wol deye.                  `And shapeth yow his sorwe for to abregge,  925                And nought encresse, leve nece swete;                Beth rather to him cause of flat than egge,                And with som wysdom ye his sorwes bete.                  What helpeth it to wepen ful a strete,                Or though ye bothe in salte teres dreynte?                  930                Bet is a tyme of cure ay than of pleynte.                  `I mene thus; whan I him hider bringe,                Sin ye ben wyse, and bothe of oon assent,                So shapeth how distourbe your goinge,                Or come ayen, sone after ye be went.                  935                Wommen ben wyse in short avysement;                And lat sen how your wit shal now avayle;                And what that I may helpe, it shal not fayle.'                  `Go,' quod Criseyde, `and uncle, trewely,                I shal don al my might, me to restreyne  940                From weping in his sighte, and bisily,                Him for to glade, I shal don al my peyne,                And in myn herte seken every veyne;                If to this soor ther may be founden salve,                It shal not lakken, certain, on myn halve.'                  945                 Goth Pandarus, and Troilus he soughte,                Til in a temple he fond him allone,                As he that of his lyf no lenger roughte;                But to the pitouse goddes everichone                Ful tendrely he preyde, and made his mone,  950                To doon him sone out of this world to pace;                For wel he thoughte ther was non other grace.                  And shortly, al the sothe for to seye,                He was so fallen in despeyr that day,                That outrely he shoop him for to deye.                  955                For right thus was his argument alwey:                He seyde, he nas but loren, waylawey!                  `For al that comth, comth by necessitee;                Thus to be lorn, it is my destinee.                  `For certaynly, this wot I wel,' he seyde,  960                `That for-sight of divyne purveyaunce                Hath seyn alwey me to for-gon Criseyde,                Sin god seeth every thing, out of doutaunce,                And hem disponeth, thourgh his ordenaunce,                In hir merytes sothly for to be,  965                As they shul comen by predestinee.                  `But nathelees, allas!                  Whom shal I leve?                  For ther ben grete clerkes many oon,                That destinee thorugh argumentes preve;                And som men seyn that nedely ther is noon;  970                But that free chois is yeven us everichoon.                  O, welaway!                  So sleye arn clerkes olde,                That I not whos opinion I may holde.                  `For som men seyn, if god seth al biforn,                Ne god may not deceyved ben, pardee,  975                Than moot it fallen, though men hadde it sworn,                That purveyaunce hath seyn bifore to be.                  Wherfor I seye, that from eterne if he                Hath wist biforn our thought eek as our dede,                We have no free chois, as these clerkes rede.                  980                 `For other thought nor other dede also                Might never be, but swich as purveyaunce,                Which may not ben deceyved never-mo,                Hath feled biforn, with-outen ignoraunce.                  For if ther mighte been a variaunce  985                To wrythen out fro goddes purveyinge,                Ther nere no prescience of thing cominge;                 `But it were rather an opinioun                Uncerteyn, and no stedfast forseinge;                And certes, that were an abusioun,  990                That god shuld han no parfit cleer witinge                More than we men that han doutous weninge.                  But swich an errour up-on god to gesse                Were fals and foul, and wikked corsednesse.                  `Eek this is an opinioun of somme  995                That han hir top ful heighe and smothe y-shore;                They seyn right thus, that thing is not to come                For that the prescience hath seyn bifore                That it shal come; but they seyn that therfore                That it shal come, therfore the purveyaunce  1000                Wot it biforn with-outen ignoraunce;                 `And in this manere this necessitee                Retorneth in his part contrarie agayn.                  For needfully bihoveth it not to be                That thilke thinges fallen in certayn  1005                That ben purveyed; but nedely, as they seyn,                Bihoveth it that thinges, whiche that falle,                That they in certayn ben purveyed alle.                  `I mene as though I laboured me in this,                To enqueren which thing cause of which thing be;  1010                As whether that the prescience of god is                The certayn cause of the necessitee                Of thinges that to comen been, pardee;                Or if necessitee of thing cominge                Be cause certeyn of the purveyinge.                  1015                 `But now ne enforce I me nat in shewinge                How the ordre of causes stant; but wel wot I,                That it bihoveth that the bifallinge                Of thinges wist biforen certeynly                Be necessarie, al seme it not ther-by  1020                That prescience put falling necessaire                To thing to come, al falle it foule or faire.                  `For if ther sit a man yond on a see,                Than by necessitee bihoveth it                That, certes, thyn opinioun soth be,  1025                That wenest or coniectest that he sit;                And ferther-over now ayenward yit,                Lo, right so it is of the part contrarie,                As thus; (now herkne, for I wol not tarie):                 `I seye, that if the opinioun of thee  1030                Be sooth, for that he sit, than seye I this,                That he mot sitten by necessitee;                And thus necessitee in either is.                  For in him nede of sittinge is, y-wis,                And in thee nede of sooth; and thus, forsothe,  1035                Ther moot necessitee ben in yow bothe.                  `But thou mayst seyn, the man sit not therfore,                That thyn opinioun of sitting soth is;                But rather, for the man sit ther bifore,                Therfore is thyn opinioun sooth, y-wis.                  1040                And I seye, though the cause of sooth of this                Comth of his sitting, yet necessitee                Is entrechaunged, bothe in him and thee.                  `Thus on this same wyse, out of doutaunce,                I may wel maken, as it semeth me,  1045                My resoninge of goddes purveyaunce,                And of the thinges that to comen be;                By whiche reson men may wel y-see,                That thilke thinges that in erthe falle,                That by necessitee they comen alle.                  1050                 `For al-though that, for thing shal come, y-wis,                Therfore is it purveyed, certaynly,                Nat that it comth for it purveyed is:                Yet nathelees, bihoveth it nedfully,                That thing to come be purveyed, trewely;  1055                Or elles, thinges that purveyed be,                That they bityden by necessitee.                  `And this suffyseth right y-now, certeyn,                For to destroye our free chois every del.                  —                But now is this abusion, to seyn,  1060                That fallinge of the thinges temporel                Is cause of goddes prescience eternel.                  Now trewely, that is a fals sentence,                That thing to come sholde cause his prescience.                  `What mighte I wene, and I hadde swich a thought,  1065                But that god purveyth thing that is to come                For that it is to come, and elles nought?                  So mighte I wene that thinges alle and some,                That whylom been bifalle and over-come,                Ben cause of thilke sovereyn purveyaunce,  1070                That for-wot al with-outen ignoraunce.                  `And over al this, yet seye I more herto,                That right as whan I woot ther is a thing,                Y-wis, that thing mot nedefully be so;                Eek right so, whan I woot a thing coming,  1075                So mot it come; and thus the bifalling                Of thinges that ben wist bifore the tyde,                They mowe not been eschewed on no syde.'                  Than seyde he thus, `Almighty Iove in trone,                That wost of al this thing the soothfastnesse,  1080                Rewe on my sorwe, or do me deye sone,                Or bring Criseyde and me fro this distresse.'                  And whyl he was in al this hevinesse,                Disputinge with him-self in this matere,                Com Pandare in, and seyde as ye may here.                  1085                 `O mighty god,' quod Pandarus, `in trone,                Ey!                  Who seigh ever a wys man faren so?                  Why, Troilus, what thenkestow to done?                  Hastow swich lust to been thyn owene fo?                  What, parde, yet is not Criseyde a-go!                  1090                Why list thee so thy-self for-doon for drede,                That in thyn heed thyn eyen semen dede?                  `Hastow not lived many a yeer biforn                With-outen hir, and ferd ful wel at ese?                  Artow for hir and for non other born?                  1095                Hath kinde thee wroughte al-only hir to plese?                  Lat be, and thenk right thus in thy disese.                  That, in the dees right as ther fallen chaunces,                Right so in love, ther come and goon plesaunces.                  `And yet this is a wonder most of alle,  1100                Why thou thus sorwest, sin thou nost not yit,                Touching hir goinge, how that it shal falle,                Ne if she can hir-self distorben it.                  Thou hast not yet assayed al hir wit.                  A man may al by tyme his nekke bede  1105                Whan it shal of, and sorwen at the nede.                  `For-thy take hede of that that I shal seye;                I have with hir y-spoke and longe y-be,                So as accorded was bitwixe us tweye.                  And ever-mor me thinketh thus, that she  1110                Hath som-what in hir hertes prevetee,                Wher-with she can, if I shal right arede,                Distorbe al this, of which thou art in drede.                  `For which my counseil is, whan it is night,                Thou to hir go, and make of this an ende;  1115                And blisful Iuno, thourgh hir grete mighte,                Shal, as I hope, hir grace un-to us sende.                  Myn herte seyth, "Certeyn, she shal not wende;"                And for-thy put thyn herte a whyle in reste;                And hold this purpos, for it is the beste.'                  1120                 This Troilus answerde, and sighte sore,                `Thou seyst right wel, and I wil do right so;'                And what him liste, he seyde un-to it more.                  And whan that it was tyme for to go,                Ful prevely him-self, with-outen mo,  1125                Un-to hir com, as he was wont to done;                And how they wroughte, I shal yow telle sone.                  Soth is, that whan they gonne first to mete,                So gan the peyne hir hertes for to twiste,                That neither of hem other mighte grete,  1130                But hem in armes toke and after kiste.                  The lasse wofulle of hem bothe niste                Wher that he was, ne mighte o word out-bringe,                As I seyde erst, for wo and for sobbinge.                  Tho woful teres that they leten falle  1135                As bittre weren, out of teres kinde,                For peyne, as is ligne aloes or galle.                  So bittre teres weep nought, as I finde,                The woful Myrra through the bark and rinde.                  That in this world ther nis so hard an herte,  1140                That nolde han rewed on hir peynes smerte.                  But whan hir woful wery gostes tweyne                Retorned been ther-as hem oughte dwelle,                And that som-what to wayken gan the peyne                By lengthe of pleynte, and ebben gan the welle  1145                Of hire teres, and the herte unswelle,                With broken voys, al hoors for-shright, Criseyde                To Troilus thise ilke wordes seyde:                 `O Iove, I deye, and mercy I beseche!                  Help, Troilus!'                  And ther-with-al hir face  1150                Upon his brest she leyde, and loste speche;                Hir woful spirit from his propre place,                Right with the word, alwey up poynt to pace.                  And thus she lyth with hewes pale and grene,                That whylom fresh and fairest was to sene.                  1155                 This Troilus, that on hir gan biholde,                Clepinge hir name, (and she lay as for deed,                With-oute answere, and felte hir limes colde,                Hir eyen throwen upward to hir heed),                This sorwful man can now noon other reed,  1160                But ofte tyme hir colde mouth he kiste;                Wher him was wo, god and him-self it wiste!                  He rist him up, and long streight he hir leyde;                For signe of lyf, for ought he can or may,                Can he noon finde in no-thing on Criseyde,  1165                For which his song ful ofte is `weylaway!'                  But whan he saugh that specheles she lay,                With sorwful voys and herte of blisse al bare,                He seyde how she was fro this world y-fare!                  So after that he longe hadde hir compleyned,  1170                His hondes wrong, and seyde that was to seye,                And with his teres salte hir brest bireyned,                He gan tho teris wypen of ful dreye,                And pitously gan for the soule preye,                And seyde, `O lord, that set art in thy trone,  1175                Rewe eek on me, for I shal folwe hir sone!'                  She cold was and with-outen sentement,                For aught he woot, for breeth ne felte he noon;                And this was him a preignant argument                That she was forth out of this world agoon;  1180                And whan he seigh ther was non other woon,                He gan hir limes dresse in swich manere                As men don hem that shul be leyd on bere.                  And after this, with sterne and cruel herte,                His swerd a-noon out of his shethe he twighte,  1185                Him-self to sleen, how sore that him smerte,                So that his sowle hir sowle folwen mighte,                Ther-as the doom of Mynos wolde it dighte;                Sin love and cruel Fortune it ne wolde,                That in this world he lenger liven sholde.                  1190                 Thanne seyde he thus, fulfild of heigh desdayn,                `O cruel Iove, and thou, Fortune adverse,                This al and som, that falsly have ye slayn                Criseyde, and sin ye may do me no werse,                Fy on your might and werkes so diverse!                  1195                Thus cowardly ye shul me never winne;                Ther shal no deeth me fro my lady twinne.                  `For I this world, sin ye han slayn hir thus,                Wol lete, and folowe hir spirit lowe or hye;                Shal never lover seyn that Troilus  1200                Dar not, for fere, with his lady dye;                For certeyn, I wol bere hir companye.                  But sin ye wol not suffre us liven here,                Yet suffreth that our soules ben y-fere.                  `And thou, citee, whiche that I leve in wo,  1205                And thou, Pryam, and bretheren al y-fere,                And thou, my moder, farwel!                  For I go;                And Attropos, make redy thou my bere!                  And thou, Criseyde, o swete herte dere,                Receyve now my spirit!'                  wolde he seye,  1210                With swerd at herte, al redy for to deye                 But as god wolde, of swough ther-with she abreyde,                And gan to syke, and `Troilus' she cryde;                And he answerde, `Lady myn Criseyde,                Live ye yet?'                  and leet his swerd doun glyde.                  1215                `Ye, herte myn, that thanked be Cupyde!'                  Quod she, and ther-with-al she sore sighte;                And he bigan to glade hir as he mighte;                 Took hir in armes two, and kiste hir ofte,                And hir to glade he dide al his entente;  1220                For which hir goost, that flikered ay on-lofte,                In-to hir woful herte ayein it wente.                  But at the laste, as that hir eyen glente                A-syde, anoon she gan his swerd aspye,                As it lay bare, and gan for fere crye,  1225                 And asked him, why he it hadde out-drawe?                  And Troilus anoon the cause hir tolde,                And how himself ther-with he wolde have slawe.                  For which Criseyde up-on him gan biholde,                And gan him in hir armes faste folde,  1230                And seyde, `O mercy, god, lo, which a dede!                  Allas!                  How neigh we were bothe dede!                  `Thanne if I ne hadde spoken, as grace was,                Ye wolde han slayn your-self anoon?'                  quod she.                  `Ye, douteless;' and she answerde, `Allas!                  1235                For, by that ilke lord that made me,                I nolde a forlong wey on-lyve han be,                After your deeth, to han been crouned quene                Of al the lond the sonne on shyneth shene.                  `But with this selve swerd, which that here is,  1240                My-selve I wolde han slayn!'                  — quod she tho;                `But ho, for we han right y-now of this,                And late us ryse and streight to bedde go                And there lat ys speken of oure wo.                  For, by the morter which that I see brenne,  1245                Knowe I ful wel that day is not fer henne.'                  Whan they were in hir bedde, in armes folde,                Nought was it lyk tho nightes here-biforn;                For pitously ech other gan biholde,                As they that hadden al hir blisse y-lorn,  1250                Biwaylinge ay the day that they were born.                  Til at the last this sorwful wight Criseyde                To Troilus these ilke wordes seyde: —                 `Lo, herte myn, wel wot ye this,' quod she,                `That if a wight alwey his wo compleyne,  1255                And seketh nought how holpen for to be,                It nis but folye and encrees of peyne;                And sin that here assembled be we tweyne                To finde bote of wo that we ben inne,                It were al tyme sone to biginne.                  1260                 `I am a womman, as ful wel ye woot,                And as I am avysed sodeynly,                So wol I telle yow, whyl it is hoot.                  Me thinketh thus, that nouther ye nor I                Oughte half this wo to make skilfully.                  1265                For there is art y-now for to redresse                That yet is mis, and sleen this hevinesse.                  `Sooth is, the wo, the whiche that we ben inne,                For ought I woot, for no-thing elles is                But for the cause that we sholden twinne.                  1270                Considered al, ther nis no-more amis.                  But what is thanne a remede un-to this,                But that we shape us sone for to mete?                  This al and som, my dere herte swete.                  `Now that I shal wel bringen it aboute  1275                To come ayein, sone after that I go,                Ther-of am I no maner thing in doute.                  For dredeles, with-inne a wouke or two,                I shal ben here; and, that it may be so                By alle right, and in a wordes fewe,  1280                I shal yow wel an heep of weyes shewe.                  `For which I wol not make long sermoun,                For tyme y-lost may not recovered be;                But I wol gon to my conclusioun,                And to the beste, in ought that I can see.                  1285                And, for the love of god, for-yeve it me                If I speke ought ayein your hertes reste;                For trewely, I speke it for the beste;                 `Makinge alwey a protestacioun,                That now these wordes, whiche that I shal seye,  1290                Nis but to shewe yow my mocioun,                To finde un-to our helpe the beste weye;                And taketh it non other wyse, I preye.                  For in effect what-so ye me comaunde,                That wol I doon, for that is no demaunde.                  1295                 `Now herkneth this, ye han wel understonde,                My goinge graunted is by parlement                So ferforth, that it may not be with-stonde                For al this world, as by my Iugement.                  And sin ther helpeth noon avysement  1300                To letten it, lat it passe out of minde;                And lat us shape a bettre wey to finde.                  `The sothe is, that the twinninge of us tweyne                Wol us disese and cruelliche anoye.                  But him bihoveth som-tyme han a peyne,  1305                That serveth love, if that he wol have Ioye.                  And sin I shal no ferthere out of Troye                Than I may ryde ayein on half a morwe,                It oughte lesse causen us to sorwe.                  `So as I shal not so ben hid in muwe,  1310                That day by day, myn owene herte dere,                Sin wel ye woot that it is now a trewe,                Ye shal ful wel al myn estat y-here.                  And er that truwe is doon, I shal ben here,                And thanne have ye bothe Antenor y-wonne  1315                And me also; beth glad now, if ye conne;                 `And thenk right thus, "Criseyde is now agoon,                But what!                  She shal come hastely ayeyn;"                And whanne, allas?                  By god, lo, right anoon,                Er dayes ten, this dar I saufly seyn.                  1320                And thanne at erste shul we been so fayn,                So as we shulle to-gederes ever dwelle,                That al this world ne mighte our blisse telle.                  `I see that ofte, ther-as we ben now,                That for the beste, our counseil for to hyde,  1325                Ye speke not with me, nor I with yow                In fourtenight; ne see yow go ne ryde.                  May ye not ten dayes thanne abyde,                For myn honour, in swich an aventure?                  Y-wis, ye mowen elles lite endure!                  1330                 `Ye knowe eek how that al my kin is here,                But-if that onliche it my fader be;                And eek myn othere thinges alle y-fere,                And nameliche, my dere herte, ye,                Whom that I nolde leven for to see  1335                For al this world, as wyd as it hath space;                Or elles, see ich never Ioves face!                  `Why trowe ye my fader in this wyse                Coveiteth so to see me, but for drede                Lest in this toun that folkes me dispyse  1340                By-cause of him, for his unhappy dede?                  What woot my fader what lyf that I lede?                  For if he wiste in Troye how wel I fare,                Us neded for my wending nought to care.                  `Ye seen that every day eek, more and more,  1345                Men trete of pees; and it supposed is,                That men the quene Eleyne shal restore,                And Grekes us restore that is mis.                  So though ther nere comfort noon but this,                That men purposen pees on every syde,  1350                Ye may the bettre at ese of herte abyde.                  `For if that it be pees, myn herte dere,                The nature of the pees mot nedes dryve                That men moste entrecomunen y-fere,                And to and fro eek ryde and gon as blyve  1355                Alday as thikke as been flen from an hyve;                And every wight han libertee to bleve                Where-as him list the bet, with-outen leve.                  `And though so be that pees ther may be noon,                Yet hider, though ther never pees ne were,  1360                I moste come; for whider sholde I goon,                Or how mischaunce sholde I dwelle there                Among tho men of armes ever in fere?                  For which, as wisly god my soule rede,                I can not seen wher-of ye sholden drede.                  1365                 `Have here another wey, if it so be                That al this thing ne may yow not suffyse.                  My fader, as ye knowen wel, pardee,                Is old, and elde is ful of coveityse,                And I right now have founden al the gyse,  1370                With-oute net, wher-with I shal him hente;                And herkeneth how, if that ye wole assente.                  `Lo, Troilus, men seyn that hard it is                The wolf ful, and the wether hool to have;                This is to seyn, that men ful ofte, y-wis,  1375                Mot spenden part, the remenant for to save.                  For ay with gold men may the herte grave                Of him that set is up-on coveityse;                And how I mene, I shal it yow devyse.                  `The moeble which that I have in this toun  1380                Un-to my fader shal I take, and seye,                That right for trust and for savacioun                It sent is from a freend of his or tweye,                The whiche freendes ferventliche him preye                To senden after more, and that in hye,  1385                Whyl that this toun stant thus in Iupartye.                  `And that shal been an huge quantitee,                Thus shal I seyn, but, lest it folk aspyde,                This may be sent by no wight but by me;                I shal eek shewen him, if pees bityde,  1390                What frendes that ich have on every syde                Toward the court, to doon the wrathe pace                Of Priamus, and doon him stonde in grace.                  `So what for o thing and for other, swete,                I shal him so enchaunten with my sawes,  1395                That right in hevene his sowle is, shal he mete!                  For al Appollo, or his clerkes lawes,                Or calculinge avayleth nought three hawes;                Desyr of gold shal so his sowle blende,                That, as me lyst, I shal wel make an ende.                  1400                 `And if he wolde ought by his sort it preve                If that I lye, in certayn I shal fonde                Distorben him, and plukke him by the sleve,                Makinge his sort, and beren him on honde,                He hath not wel the goddes understonde.                  1405                For goddes speken in amphibologyes,                And, for o sooth they tellen twenty lyes.                  `Eek drede fond first goddes, I suppose,                Thus shal I seyn, and that his cowarde herte                Made him amis the goddes text to glose,  1410                Whan he for ferde out of his Delphos sterte.                  And but I make him sone to converte,                And doon my reed with-inne a day or tweye,                I wol to yow oblige me to deye.'                  And treweliche, as writen wel I finde,  1415                That al this thing was seyd of good entente;                And that hir herte trewe was and kinde                Towardes him, and spak right as she mente,                And that she starf for wo neigh, whan she wente,                And was in purpos ever to be trewe;  1420                Thus writen they that of hir werkes knewe.                  This Troilus, with herte and eres spradde,                Herde al this thing devysen to and fro;                And verraylich him semed that he hadde                The selve wit; but yet to lete hir go  1425                His herte misforyaf him ever-mo.                  But fynally, he gan his herte wreste                To trusten hir, and took it for the beste.                  For which the grete furie of his penaunce                Was queynt with hope, and ther-with hem bitwene  1430                Bigan for Ioye the amorouse daunce.                  And as the briddes, whan the sonne is shene,                Delyten in hir song in leves grene,                Right so the wordes that they spake y-fere                Delyted hem, and made hir hertes clere.                  1435                 But natheles, the wending of Criseyde,                For al this world, may nought out of his minde;                For which ful ofte he pitously hir preyde,                That of hir heste he might hir trewe finde,                And seyde hire, `Certes, if ye be unkinde,  1440                And but ye come at day set in-to Troye,                Ne shal I never have hele, honour, ne Ioye.                  `For al-so sooth as sonne up-rist on morwe,                And, god!                  So wisly thou me, woful wrecche,                To reste bringe out of this cruel sorwe,  1445                I wol my-selven slee if that ye drecche.                  But of my deeth though litel be to recche,                Yet, er that ye me cause so to smerte,                Dwel rather here, myn owene swete herte!                  `For trewely, myn owene lady dere,  1450                Tho sleightes yet that I have herd yow stere                Ful shaply been to failen alle y-fere.                  For thus men seyn, "That oon thenketh the bere,                But al another thenketh his ledere."                  Your sire is wys, and seyd is, out of drede,  1455                "Men may the wyse at-renne, and not at-rede."                  `It is ful hard to halten unespyed                Bifore a crepul, for he can the craft;                Your fader is in sleighte as Argus yed;                For al be that his moeble is him biraft,  1460                His olde sleighte is yet so with him laft,                Ye shal not blende him for your womanhede,                Ne feyne a-right, and that is al my drede.                  `I noot if pees shal ever-mo bityde;                But, pees or no, for ernest ne for game,  1465                I woot, sin Calkas on the Grekis syde                Hath ones been, and lost so foule his name,                He dar no more come here ayein for shame;                For which that weye, for ought I can espye,                To trusten on, nis but a fantasye.                  1470                 `Ye shal eek seen, your fader shal yow glose                To been a wyf, and as he can wel preche,                He shal som Grek so preyse and wel alose,                That ravisshen he shal yow with his speche,                Or do yow doon by force as he shal teche.                  1475                And Troilus, of whom ye nil han routhe,                Shal causeles so sterven in his trouthe!                  `And over al this, your fader shal despyse                Us alle, and seyn this citee nis but lorn;                And that thassege never shal aryse,  1480                For-why the Grekes han it alle sworn                Til we be slayn, and doun our walles torn.                  And thus he shal yow with his wordes fere,                That ay drede I, that ye wol bleve there.                  `Ye shul eek seen so many a lusty knight  1485                A-mong the Grekes, ful of worthinesse,                And eche of hem with herte, wit, and might                To plesen yow don al his besinesse,                That ye shul dullen of the rudenesse                Of us sely Troianes, but-if routhe  1490                Remorde yow, or vertue of your trouthe.                  `And this to me so grevous is to thinke,                That fro my brest it wol my soule rende;                Ne dredeles, in me ther may not sinke                A good opinioun, if that ye wende;  1495                For-why your faderes sleighte wol us shende.                  And if ye goon, as I have told yow yore,                So thenk I nam but deed, with-oute more.                  `For which, with humble, trewe, and pitous herte,                A thousand tymes mercy I yow preye;  1500                So reweth on myn aspre peynes smerte,                And doth somwhat, as that I shal yow seye,                And lat us stele away bitwixe us tweye;                And thenk that folye is, whan man may chese,                For accident his substaunce ay to lese.                  1505                 `I mene this, that sin we mowe er day                Wel stele away, and been to-gider so,                What wit were it to putten in assay,                In cas ye sholden to your fader go,                If that ye mighte come ayein or no?                  1510                Thus mene I, that it were a gret folye                To putte that sikernesse in Iupertye.                  `And vulgarly to speken of substaunce                Of tresour, may we bothe with us lede                Y-nough to live in honour and plesaunce,  1515                Til in-to tyme that we shal ben dede;                And thus we may eschewen al this drede.                  For everich other wey ye can recorde,                Myn herte, y-wis, may not ther-with acorde.                  `And hardily, ne dredeth no poverte,  1520                For I have kin and freendes elles-where                That, though we comen in oure bare sherte,                Us sholde neither lakke gold ne gere,                But been honured whyl we dwelten there.                  And go we anoon, for, as in myn entente,  1525                This is the beste, if that ye wole assente.'                  Criseyde, with a syk, right in this wyse                Answerde, `Y-wis, my dere herte trewe,                We may wel stele away, as ye devyse,                And finde swich unthrifty weyes newe;  1530                But afterward, ful sore it wol us rewe.                  And help me god so at my moste nede                As causeles ye suffren al this drede!                  `For thilke day that I for cherisshinge                Or drede of fader, or of other wight,  1535                Or for estat, delyt, or for weddinge,                Be fals to yow, my Troilus, my knight,                Saturnes doughter, Iuno, thorugh hir might,                As wood as Athamante do me dwelle                Eternaly in Stix, the put of helle!                  1540                 `And this on every god celestial                I swere it yow; and eek on eche goddesse,                On every Nymphe and deite infernal,                On Satiry and Fauny more and lesse,                That halve goddes been of wildernesse;  1545                And Attropos my threed of lyf to-breste                If I be fals; now trowe me if thow leste!                  `And thou, Simoys, that as an arwe clere                Thorugh Troye rennest ay downward to the see,                Ber witnesse of this word that seyd is here,  1550                That thilke day that ich untrewe be                To Troilus, myn owene herte free,                That thou retorne bakwarde to thy welle,                And I with body and soule sinke in helle!                  `But that ye speke, awey thus for to go  1555                And leten alle your freendes, god for-bede,                For any womman, that ye sholden so,                And namely, sin Troye hath now swich nede                Of help; and eek of o thing taketh hede,                If this were wist, my lif laye in balaunce,  1560                And your honour; god shilde us fro mischaunce!                  `And if so be that pees her-after take,                As alday happeth, after anger, game,                Why, lord!                  The sorwe and wo ye wolden make,                That ye ne dorste come ayein for shame!                  1565                And er that ye Iuparten so your name,                Beth nought to hasty in this hote fare;                For hasty man ne wanteth never care.                  `What trowe ye the peple eek al aboute                Wolde of it seye?                  It is ful light to arede.                  1570                They wolden seye, and swere it, out of doute,                That love ne droof yow nought to doon this dede,                But lust voluptuous and coward drede.                  Thus were al lost, y-wis, myn herte dere,                Your honour, which that now shyneth so clere.                  1575                 `And also thenketh on myn honestee,                That floureth yet, how foule I sholde it shende,                And with what filthe it spotted sholde be,                If in this forme I sholde with yow wende.                  Ne though I livede un-to the worldes ende,  1580                My name sholde I never ayeinward winne;                Thus were I lost, and that were routhe and sinne.                  `And for-thy slee with reson al this hete;                Men seyn, "The suffraunt overcometh," pardee;                Eek "Who-so wol han leef, he lief mot lete;"  1585                Thus maketh vertue of necessitee                By pacience, and thenk that lord is he                Of fortune ay, that nought wol of hir recche;                And she ne daunteth no wight but a wrecche.                  `And trusteth this, that certes, herte swete,  1590                Er Phebus suster, Lucina the shene,                The Leoun passe out of this Ariete,                I wol ben here, with-outen any wene.                  I mene, as helpe me Iuno, hevenes quene,                The tenthe day, but-if that deeth me assayle,  1595                I wol yow seen with-outen any fayle.'                  `And now, so this be sooth,' quod Troilus,                `I shal wel suffre un-to the tenthe day,                Sin that I see that nede it moot be thus.                  But, for the love of god, if it be may,  1600                So lat us stele prively away;                For ever in oon, as for to live in reste,                Myn herte seyth that it wol been the beste.'                  `O mercy, god, what lyf is this?'                  quod she;                `Allas, ye slee me thus for verray tene!                  1605                I see wel now that ye mistrusten me;                For by your wordes it is wel y-sene.                  Now, for the love of Cynthia the shene,                Mistrust me not thus causeles, for routhe;                Sin to be trewe I have yow plight my trouthe.                  1610                 `And thenketh wel, that som tyme it is wit                To spende a tyme, a tyme for to winne;                Ne, pardee, lorn am I nought fro yow yit,                Though that we been a day or two a-twinne.                  Dryf out the fantasyes yow with-inne;  1615                And trusteth me, and leveth eek your sorwe,                Or here my trouthe, I wol not live til morwe.                  `For if ye wiste how sore it doth me smerte,                Ye wolde cesse of this; for god, thou wost,                The pure spirit wepeth in myn herte,  1620                To see yow wepen that I love most,                And that I moot gon to the Grekes ost.                  Ye, nere it that I wiste remedye                To come ayein, right here I wolde dye!                  `But certes, I am not so nyce a wight  1625                That I ne can imaginen a wey                To come ayein that day that I have hight.                  For who may holde thing that wol a-way?                  My fader nought, for al his queynte pley.                  And by my thrift, my wending out of Troye  1630                Another day shal torne us alle to Ioye.                  `For-thy, with al myn herte I yow beseke,                If that yow list don ought for my preyere,                And for the love which that I love yow eke,                That er that I departe fro yow here,  1635                That of so good a comfort and a chere                I may you seen, that ye may bringe at reste                Myn herte, which that is at point to breste.                  `And over al this I pray yow,' quod she tho,                `Myn owene hertes soothfast suffisaunce,  1640                Sin I am thyn al hool, with-outen mo,                That whyl that I am absent, no plesaunce                Of othere do me fro your remembraunce.                  For I am ever a-gast, for-why men rede,                That "love is thing ay ful of bisy drede."                  1645                 `For in this world ther liveth lady noon,                If that ye were untrewe, as god defende!                  That so bitraysed were or wo bigoon                As I, that alle trouthe in yow entende.                  And douteles, if that ich other wende,  1650                I nere but deed; and er ye cause finde,                For goddes love, so beth me not unkinde.'                  To this answerde Troilus and seyde,                `Now god, to whom ther nis no cause y-wrye,                Me glade, as wis I never un-to Criseyde,  1655                Sin thilke day I saw hir first with ye,                Was fals, ne never shal til that I dye.                  At shorte wordes, wel ye may me leve;                I can no more, it shal be founde at preve.'                  `Graunt mercy, goode myn, y-wis,' quod she,  1660                `And blisful Venus lat me never sterve                Er I may stonde of plesaunce in degree                To quyte him wel, that so wel can deserve;                And whyl that god my wit wol me conserve,                I shal so doon, so trewe I have yow founde,  1665                That ay honour to me-ward shal rebounde.                  `For trusteth wel, that your estat royal                Ne veyn delyt, nor only worthinesse                Of yow in werre, or torney marcial,                Ne pompe, array, nobley, or eek richesse,  1670                Ne made me to rewe on your distresse;                But moral vertue, grounded upon trouthe,                That was the cause I first hadde on yow routhe!                  `Eek gentil herte and manhod that ye hadde,                And that ye hadde, as me thoughte, in despyt  1675                Every thing that souned in-to badde,                As rudenesse and poeplish appetyt;                And that your reson brydled your delyt,                This made, aboven every creature,                That I was your, and shal, whyl I may dure.                  1680                 `And this may lengthe of yeres not for-do,                Ne remuable fortune deface;                But Iuppiter, that of his might may do                The sorwful to be glad, so yeve us grace,                Er nightes ten, to meten in this place,  1685                So that it may your herte and myn suffyse;                And fareth now wel, for tyme is that ye ryse.'                  And after that they longe y-pleyned hadde,                And ofte y-kist, and streite in armes folde,                The day gan ryse, and Troilus him cladde,  1690                And rewfulliche his lady gan biholde,                As he that felte dethes cares colde,                And to hir grace he gan him recomaunde;                Wher him was wo, this holde I no demaunde.                  For mannes heed imaginen ne can,  1695                Ne entendement considere, ne tonge telle                The cruel peynes of this sorwful man,                That passen every torment doun in helle.                  For whan he saugh that she ne mighte dwelle,                Which that his soule out of his herte rente,  1700                With-outen more, out of the chaumbre he wente.                  Explicit Liber Quartus.