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The Clerk’s Tale

Here biginneth the Tale of the Clerk of Oxenford.

Ther is, at the west syde of Itaille,

Doun at the rote of Vesulus the colde,

A lusty playne, habundant of vitaille,

Wher many a tour and toun thou mayst biholde,      

That founded were in tyme of fadres olde,

And many another delitable sighte,

And Saluces this noble contree highte.

A markis whylom lord was of that londe,

As were his worthy eldres him bifore;

And obeisant and redy to his honde

Were alle his liges, bothe lasse and more.

Thus in delyt he liveth, and hath don yore,

Biloved and drad, thurgh favour of fortune,

Bothe of his lordes and of his commune.

Therwith he was, to speke as of linage,

The gentilleste y-born of Lumbardye,

A fair persone, and strong, and yong of age,

And ful of honour and of curteisye;

Discreet y-nogh his contree for to gye, 

Save in somme thinges that he was to blame,    

And Walter was this yonge lordes name.

I blame him thus, that he considereth noght

In tyme cominge what mighte him bityde,

But on his lust present was al his thoght, 

As for to hauke and hunte on every syde;

Wel ny alle othere cures leet he slyde,

And eek he nolde, and that was worst of alle,

Wedde no wyf, for noght that may bifalle.

Only that point his peple bar so sore,

That flokmele on a day they to him wente,    

And oon of hem, that wysest was of lore,

Or elles that the lord best wolde assente

That he sholde telle him what his peple mente,

Or elles coude he shewe wel swich matere,    

He to the markis seyde as ye shul here.

‘O noble markis, your humanitee

Assureth us and yeveth us hardinesse,

As ofte as tyme is of necessitee

That we to yow mowe telle our hevinesse; 

Accepteth, lord, now for your gentillesse,

That we with pitous herte un-to yow pleyne,

And lete your eres nat my voys disdeyne.

Al have I noght to done in this matere

More than another man hath in this place,    

Yet for as muche as ye, my lord so dere,

Han alwey shewed me favour and grace,

I dar the better aske of yow a space

Of audience, to shewen our requeste,

And ye, my lord, to doon right as yow leste.    

For certes, lord, so wel us lyketh yow 

And al your werk and ever han doon, that we

Ne coude nat us self devysen how

We mighte liven in more felicitee,

Save o thing, lord, if it your wille be,

That for to been a wedded man yow leste,

Than were your peple in sovereyn hertes reste.

Boweth your nekke under that blisful yok

Of soveraynetee, noght of servyse,

Which that men clepeth spousaille or wedlok; 

And thenketh, lord, among your thoghtes wyse, 

How that our dayes passe in sondry wyse;

For though we slepe or wake, or rome, or ryde,

Ay fleeth the tyme, it nil no man abyde.

And though your grene youthe floure as yit, 

In crepeth age alwey, as stille as stoon,

And deeth manaceth every age, and smit

In ech estaat, for ther escapeth noon:

And al so certein as we knowe echoon

That we shul deye, as uncerteyn we alle

Been of that day whan deeth shal on us falle. 

Accepteth than of us the trewe entente,

That never yet refuseden your heste,

And we wol, lord, if that ye wol assente,

Chese yow a wyf in short tyme, atte leste, 

Born of the gentilleste and of the meste

Of al this lond, so that it oghte seme

Honour to god and yow, as we can deme.

Deliver us out of al this bisy drede,

And tak a wyf, for hye goddes sake; 

For if it so bifelle, as god forbede, 

That thurgh your deeth your linage sholde slake,

And that a straunge successour sholde take

Your heritage, o! wo were us alyve!

Wherfor we pray you hastily to wyve.’

Hir meke preyere and hir pitous chere

Made the markis herte han pitee.

‘Ye wol,’ quod he, ‘myn owene peple dere,

To that I never erst thoghte streyne me.

I me reioysed of my libertee, 

That selde tyme is founde in mariage;

Ther I was free, I moot been in servage.

But nathelees I see your trewe entente,

And truste upon your wit, and have don ay;

Wherfor of my free wil I wol assente 

To wedde me, as sone as ever I may.

But ther-as ye han profred me to-day

To chese me a wyf, I yow relesse

That choys, and prey yow of that profre cesse.

For god it woot, that children ofte been

Unlyk her worthy eldres hem bifore;

Bountee comth al of god, nat of the streen

Of which they been engendred and y-bore;

I truste in goddes bountee, and therfore

My mariage and myn estaat and reste

I him bitake; he may don as him leste.

Lat me alone in chesinge of my wyf,

That charge up-on my bak I wol endure;

But I yow preye, and charge up-on your lyf,

That what wyf that I take, ye me assure

To worshipe hir, whyl that hir lyf may dure, 

In word and werk, bothe here and everywhere,

As she an emperoures doghter were.

And forthermore, this shal ye swere, that ye

Agayn my choys shul neither grucche ne stryve; 

For sith I shal forgoon my libertee

At your requeste, as ever moot I thryve,

Ther as myn herte is set, ther wol I wyve;

And but ye wole assente in swich manere,

I prey yow, speketh na-more of this matere.’

With hertly wil they sworen, and assenten 

To al this thing, ther seyde no wight nay;

Bisekinge him of grace, er that they wenten,

That he wolde graunten hem a certein day

Of his spousaille, as sone as ever he may;

For yet alwey the peple som-what dredde

Lest that this markis no wyf wolde wedde.

He graunted hem a day, swich as him leste,

On which he wolde be wedded sikerly,

And seyde, he dide al this at hir requeste;

And they, with humble entente, buxomly,

Knelinge up-on her knees ful reverently

Him thanken alle, and thus they han an ende

Of hir entente, and hoom agayn they wende.

And heer-up-on he to his officeres 

Comaundeth for the feste to purveye,

And to his privee knightes and squyeres

Swich charge yaf, as him liste on hem leye;

And they to his comandement obeye,

And ech of hem doth al his diligence

To doon un-to the feste reverence. 

..

Explicit prima pars. 

Incipit secunda pars.

..

Noght fer fro thilke paleys honurable

Ther-as this markis shoop his mariage,

Ther stood a throp, of site delitable,

In which that povre folk of that village

Hadden hir bestes and hir herbergage,

And of hir labour took hir sustenance

After that the erthe yaf hem habundance.

Amonges thise povre folk ther dwelte a man

Which that was holden povrest of hem alle;    

But hye god som tyme senden can

His grace in-to a litel oxes stalle:

Ianicula men of that throp him calle.

A doghter hadde he, fair y-nogh to sighte,

And Grisildis this yonge mayden highte.

But for to speke of vertuous beautee,

Than was she oon the faireste under sonne;

For povreliche y-fostred up was she,

No likerous lust was thurgh hir herte y-ronne;

Wel ofter of the welle than of the tonne

She drank, and for she wolde vertu plese,

She knew wel labour, but non ydel ese.

But thogh this mayde tendre were of age,

Yet in the brest of hir virginitee

Ther was enclosed rype and sad corage;

And in greet reverence and charitee

Hir olde povre fader fostred she;

A fewe sheep spinning on feeld she kepte,

She wolde noght been ydel til she slepte.

And whan she hoomward cam, she wolde bringe      

Wortes or othere herbes tymes ofte,

The whiche she shredde and seeth for hir livinge,

And made hir bed ful harde and no-thing softe;

And ay she kepte hir fadres lyf on-lofte

With everich obeisaunce and diligence

That child may doon to fadres reverence.

Up-on Grisilde, this povre creature,

Ful ofte sythe this markis sette his yë

As he on hunting rood paraventure;

And whan it fil that he mighte hir espye, 

He noght with wantoun loking of folye 

His yën caste on hir, but in sad wyse

Up-on hir chere he wolde him ofte avyse,

Commending in his herte hir wommanhede,

And eek hir vertu, passing any wight 

Of so yong age, as wel in chere as dede.

For thogh the peple have no greet insight

In vertu, he considered ful right

Hir bountee, and disposed that he wolde

Wedde hir only, if ever he wedde sholde.

The day of wedding cam, but no wight can    

Telle what womman that it sholde be;

For which merveille wondred many a man,

And seyden, whan they were in privetee,

‘Wol nat our lord yet leve his vanitee?

Wol he nat wedde? allas, allas the whyle!

Why wol he thus him-self and us bigyle?’

But natheles this markis hath don make

Of gemmes, set in gold and in asure,

Broches and ringes, for Grisildis sake, 

And of hir clothing took he the mesure 

By a mayde, lyk to hir stature,

And eek of othere ornamentes alle

That un-to swich a wedding sholde falle.

The tyme of undern of the same day

Approcheth, that this wedding sholde be;

And al the paleys put was in array,

Bothe halle and chambres, ech in his degree;

Houses of office stuffed with plentee

Ther maystow seen of deyntevous vitaille,    

That may be founde, as fer as last Itaille.

This royal markis, richely arrayed,

Lordes and ladyes in his companye,

The whiche unto the feste were y-prayed,

And of his retenue the bachelrye, 

With many a soun of sondry melodye,

Un-to the village, of the which I tolde,

In this array the righte wey han holde.

Grisilde of this, god woot, ful innocent,

That for hir shapen was al this array,

To fecchen water at a welle is went,

And cometh hoom as sone as ever she may.

For wel she hadde herd seyd, that thilke day

The markis sholde wedde, and, if she mighte,

She wolde fayn han seyn som of that sighte. 

She thoghte, ‘I wol with othere maydens stonde,

That been my felawes, in our dore, and see

The markisesse, and therfor wol I fonde

To doon at hoom, as sone as it may be,

The labour which that longeth un-to me;

And than I may at leyser hir biholde,

If she this wey un-to the castel holde.’

And as she wolde over hir threshfold goon,

The markis cam and gan hir for to calle;

And she sette doun hir water-pot anoon

Bisyde the threshfold, in an oxes stalle,

And doun up-on hir knees she gan to falle,

And with sad contenance kneleth stille

Til she had herd what was the lordes wille.

This thoghtful markis spak un-to this mayde 

Ful sobrely, and seyde in this manere,

‘Wher is your fader, Grisildis?’ he sayde,

And she with reverence, in humble chere,

Answerde, ‘lord, he is al redy here.’

And in she gooth with-outen lenger lette, 

And to the markis she hir fader fette.

He by the hond than took this olde man,

And seyde thus, whan he him hadde asyde,

‘Ianicula, I neither may ne can

Lenger the plesance of myn herte hyde.

If that thou vouche-sauf, what-so bityde,

Thy doghter wol I take, er that I wende,

As for my wyf, un-to hir lyves ende.

Thou lovest me, I woot it wel, certeyn,

And art my feithful lige man y-bore;

And al that lyketh me, I dar wel seyn

It lyketh thee, and specially therfore

Tel me that poynt that I have seyd bifore,

If that thou wolt un-to that purpos drawe,

To take me as for thy sone-in-lawe?’

This sodeyn cas this man astoned so, 

That reed he wex, abayst, and al quaking

He stood unnethes seyde he wordes mo,

But only thus: ‘lord,’ quod he, ‘my willing

Is as ye wole, ne ayeines your lyking

I wol no-thing; ye be my lord so dere;

Right as yow lust governeth this matere.’

‘Yet wol I,’ quod this markis softely,

‘That in thy chambre I and thou and she

Have a collacion, and wostow why?

For I wol axe if it hir wille be 

To be my wyf, and reule hir after me;

And al this shal be doon in thy presence,

I wol noght speke out of thyn audience.’

And in the chambre whyl they were aboute 

Hir tretis, which as ye shal after here,

The peple cam un-to the hous with-oute,

And wondred hem in how honest manere

And tentifly she kepte hir fader dere.

But outerly Grisildis wondre mighte,

For never erst ne saugh she swich a sighte. 

No wonder is thogh that she were astoned

To seen so greet a gest come in that place;

She never was to swiche gestes woned,

For which she loked with ful pale face.

But shortly forth this tale for to chace,

Thise are the wordes that the markis sayde

To this benigne verray feithful mayde.

‘Grisilde,’ he seyde, ‘ye shul wel understonde

It lyketh to your fader and to me 

That I yow wedde, and eek it may so stonde, 

As I suppose, ye wol that it so be.

But thise demandes axe I first,’ quod he,

‘That, sith it shal be doon in hastif wyse,

Wol ye assente, or elles yow avyse? 

I seye this, be ye redy with good herte

To al my lust, and that I frely may,

As me best thinketh, do yow laughe or smerte,

And never ye to grucche it, night ne day?

And eek whan I sey “ye,” ne sey nat “nay,” 

Neither by word ne frowning contenance; 

Swer this, and here I swere our alliance.’

Wondring upon this word, quaking for drede,

She seyde, ‘lord, undigne and unworthy

Am I to thilke honour that ye me bede;

But as ye wol your-self, right so wol I.

And heer I swere that never willingly

In werk ne thoght I nil yow disobeye,

For to be deed, though me were looth to deye.’

‘This is y-nogh, Grisilde myn!’ quod he. 

And forth he gooth with a ful sobre chere 

Out at the dore, and after that cam she,

And to the peple he seyde in this manere,

‘This is my wyf,’ quod he, ‘that standeth here.

Honoureth hir, and loveth hir, I preye,

Who-so me loveth; ther is na-more to seye.’

And for that no-thing of hir olde gere

She sholde bringe in-to his hous, he bad

That wommen sholde dispoilen hir right there;

Of which thise ladyes were nat right glad 

To handle hir clothes wher-in she was clad.    

But natheles this mayde bright of hewe

Fro foot to heed they clothed han al newe.

Hir heres han they kembd, that lay untressed

Ful rudely, and with hir fingres smale 

A corone on hir heed they han y-dressed,

And sette hir ful of nowches grete and smale;

Of hir array what sholde I make a tale?

Unnethe the peple hir knew for hir fairnesse,

Whan she translated was in swich richesse. 

This markis hath hir spoused with a ring

Broght for the same cause, and than hir sette

Up-on an hors, snow-whyt and wel ambling,

And to his paleys, er he lenger lette,

With Ioyful peple that hir ladde and mette, 

Conveyed hir, and thus the day they spende

In revel, til the sonne gan descende.

And shortly forth this tale for to chace,

I seye that to this newe markisesse

God hath swich favour sent hir of his grace, 

That it ne semed nat by lyklinesse 

That she was born and fed in rudenesse,

As in a cote or in an oxe-stalle,

But norished in an emperoures halle.

To every wight she woxen is so dere

And worshipful, that folk ther she was bore

And from hir birthe knewe hir yeer by yere,

Unnethe trowed they, but dorste han swore

That to Ianicle, of which I spak bifore,

She doghter nas, for, as by coniecture,

Hem thoughte she was another creature.

For thogh that ever vertuous was she,

She was encressed in swich excellence

Of thewes gode, y-set in heigh bountee,

And so discreet and fair of eloquence,

So benigne and so digne of reverence,

And coude so the peples herte embrace,

That ech hir lovede that loked on hir face.

Noght only of Saluces in the toun

Publiced was the bountee of hir name, 

But eek bisyde in many a regioun, 

If oon seyde wel, another seyde the same;

So spradde of hir heigh bountee the fame,

That men and wommen, as wel yonge as olde,

Gon to Saluce, upon hir to biholde.

Thus Walter lowly, nay but royally,

Wedded with fortunat honestetee,

In goddes pees liveth ful esily

At hoom, and outward grace y-nogh had he;

And for he saugh that under low degree 

Was ofte vertu hid, the peple him helde 

A prudent man, and that is seyn ful selde.

Nat only this Grisildis thurgh hir wit

Coude al the feet of wyfly hoomlinesse,

But eek, whan that the cas requyred it,

The commune profit coude she redresse.

Ther nas discord, rancour, ne hevinesse

In al that lond, that she ne coude apese,

And wysly bringe hem alle in reste and ese.

Though that hir housbonde absent were anoon,    

If gentil men, or othere of hir contree

Were wrothe, she wolde bringen hem atoon;

So wyse and rype wordes hadde she,

And Iugements of so greet equitee,

That she from heven sent was, as men wende, 

Peple to save and every wrong tamende.

Nat longe tyme after that this Grisild

Was wedded, she a doughter hath y-bore,

Al had hir lever have born a knave child.

Glad was this markis and the folk therfore; 

For though a mayde child come al bifore,

She may unto a knave child atteyne

By lyklihed, sin she nis nat bareyne.

..

Explicit secunda pars. 

Incipit tercia pars.

..

Ther fil, as it bifalleth tymes mo,

Whan that this child had souked but a throwe,

This markis in his herte longeth so

To tempte his wyf, hir sadnesse for to knowe,

That he ne mighte out of his herte throwe

This merveillous desyr, his wyf tassaye,

Needless, god woot, he thoughte hir for taffraye.      

He hadde assayed hir y-nogh bifore,

And fond hir ever good; what neded it

Hir for to tempte and alwey more and more?

Though som men preise it for a subtil wit,

But as for me, I seye that yvel it sit 

Tassaye a wyf whan that it is no nede,

And putten her in anguish and in drede.

For which this markis wroghte in this manere;

He cam alone a-night, ther as she lay,

With sterne face and with ful trouble chere, 

And seyde thus, ‘Grisild,’ quod he, ‘that day 

That I yow took out of your povre array,

And putte yow in estaat of heigh noblesse,

Ye have nat that forgeten, as I gesse.

I seye, Grisild, this present dignitee,

In which that I have put yow, as I trowe,

Maketh yow nat foryetful for to be

That I yow took in povre estaat ful lowe

For any wele ye moot your-selven knowe.

Tak hede of every word that I yow seye,

Ther is no wight that hereth it but we tweye. 

Ye woot your-self wel, how that ye cam here

In-to this hous, it is nat longe ago,

And though to me that ye be lief and dere,

Un-to my gentils ye be no-thing so; 

They seyn, to hem it is greet shame and wo

For to be subgets and ben in servage

To thee, that born art of a smal village.

And namely, sith thy doghter was y-bore,

Thise wordes han they spoken doutelees;

But I desyre, as I have doon bifore, 

To live my lyf with hem in reste and pees;

I may nat in this caas be recchelees.

I moot don with thy doghter for the beste,

Nat as I wolde, but as my peple leste. 

And yet, god wot, this is ful looth to me;

But nathelees with-oute your witing

I wol nat doon, but this wol I,’ quod he,

‘That ye to me assente as in this thing.

Shewe now your pacience in your werking

That ye me highte and swore in your village 

That day that maked was our mariage.’

Whan she had herd al this, she noght ameved

Neither in word, or chere, or countenaunce;

For, as it semed, she was nat agreved:

She seyde, ‘lord, al lyth in your plesaunce,

My child and I with hertly obeisaunce

Ben youres al, and ye mowe save or spille

Your owene thing; werketh after your wille.

Ther may no-thing, god so my soule save, 

Lyken to yow that may displese me; 

Ne I desyre no-thing for to have,

Ne drede for to lese, save only ye;

This wil is in myn herte and ay shal be.

No lengthe of tyme or deeth may this deface,    

Ne chaunge my corage to another place.’

Glad was this markis of hir answering,

But yet he feyned as he were nat so;

Al drery was his chere and his loking

Whan that he sholde out of the chambre go.    

Sone after this, a furlong wey or two, 

He prively hath told al his entente

Un-to a man, and to his wyf him sente.

A maner sergeant was this privee man,

The which that feithful ofte he founden hadde 

In thinges grete, and eek swich folk wel can

Don execucioun on thinges badde.

The lord knew wel that he him loved and dradde;

And whan this sergeant wiste his lordes wille,

In-to the chambre he stalked him ful stille. 

‘Madame,’ he seyde, ‘ye mote foryeve it me, 

Thogh I do thing to which I am constreyned;

Ye ben so wys that ful wel knowe ye

That lordes hestes mowe nat been y-feyned;

They mowe wel been biwailled or compleyned,    

But men mot nede un-to her lust obeye,

And so wol I; ther is na-more to seye.

This child I am comanded for to take’—

And spak na-more, but out the child he hente

Despitously, and gan a chere make

As though he wolde han slayn it er he wente.

Grisildis mot al suffren and consente;

And as a lamb she sitteth meke and stille,

And leet this cruel sergeant doon his wille.

Suspecious was the diffame of this man, 

Suspect his face, suspect his word also;

Suspect the tyme in which he this bigan.

Allas! hir doghter that she lovede so

She wende he wolde han slawen it right tho.

But natheles she neither weep ne syked, 

Consenting hir to that the markis lyked. 

But atte laste speken she bigan,

And mekely she to the sergeant preyde,

So as he was a worthy gentil man,

That she moste kisse hir child er that it deyde; 

And in her barm this litel child she leyde

With ful sad face, and gan the child to kisse

And lulled it, and after gan it blisse.

And thus she seyde in hir benigne voys,

‘Far weel, my child; I shal thee never see;

But, sith I thee have marked with the croys, 

Of thilke fader blessed mote thou be,

That for us deyde up-on a croys of tree.

Thy soule, litel child, I him bitake,

For this night shaltow dyen for my sake.’

I trowe that to a norice in this cas

It had ben hard this rewthe for to se;

Wel mighte a mooder than han cryed ‘allas!’

But nathelees so sad stedfast was she,

That she endured all adversitee, 

And to the sergeant mekely she sayde,

‘Have heer agayn your litel yonge mayde.

Goth now,’ quod she, ‘and dooth my lordes heste,

But o thing wol I preye yow of your grace,

That, but my lord forbad yow, atte leste

Burieth this litel body in som place

That bestes ne no briddes it to-race.’

But he no word wol to that purpos seye,

But took the child and wente upon his weye.

This sergeant cam un-to his lord ageyn,

And of Grisildis wordes and hir chere

He tolde him point for point, in short and playn,

And him presenteth with his doghter dere.

Somwhat this lord hath rewthe in his manere;

But nathelees his purpos heeld he stille,

As lordes doon, whan they wol han hir wille;

And bad his sergeant that he prively

Sholde this child ful softe winde and wrappe

With alle circumstances tendrely,

And carie it in a cofre or in a lappe; 

But, up-on peyne his heed of for to swappe,    

That no man sholde knowe of his entente,

Ne whenne he cam, ne whider that he wente;

But at Boloigne to his suster dere,

That thilke tyme of Panik was countesse,

He sholde it take, and shewe hir this matere,

Bisekinge hir to don hir bisinesse

This child to fostre in alle gentillesse;

And whos child that it was he bad hir hyde

From every wight, for oght that may bityde.    

The sergeant gooth, and hath fulfild this thing;    

But to this markis now retourne we;

For now goth he ful faste imagining

If by his wyves chere he mighte see,

Or by hir word aperceyve that she 

Were chaunged; but he never hir coude finde

But ever in oon y-lyke sad and kinde.

As glad, as humble, as bisy in servyse,

And eek in love as she was wont to be,

Was she to him in every maner wyse;

Ne of hir doghter noght a word spak she. 

Non accident for noon adversitee

Was seyn in hir, ne never hir doghter name

Ne nempned she, in ernest nor in game.

..

Explicit tercia pars. 

Sequitur pars quarta.

..

In this estaat ther passed been foure yeer 

Er she with childe was; but, as god wolde,

A knave child she bar by this Walter,

Ful gracious and fair for to biholde.

And whan that folk it to his fader tolde,

Nat only he, but al his contree, merie 

Was for this child, and god they thanke and herie.      

Whan it was two yeer old, and fro the brest

Departed of his norice, on a day

This markis caughte yet another lest

To tempte his wyf yet ofter, if he may.

O needles was she tempted in assay!

But wedded men ne knowe no mesure,

Whan that they finde a pacient creature.

‘Wyf,’ quod this markis, ‘ye han herd er this,

My peple sikly berth our mariage, 

And namely, sith my sone y-boren is,

Now is it worse than ever in al our age.

The murmur sleeth myn herte and my corage;

For to myne eres comth the voys so smerte,

That it wel ny destroyed hath myn herte.

Now sey they thus, “whan Walter is agoon,

Then shal the blood of Ianicle succede

And been our lord, for other have we noon;”

Swiche wordes seith my peple, out of drede.

Wel oughte I of swich murmur taken hede; 

For certeinly I drede swich sentence,

Though they nat pleyn speke in myn audience.

I wolde live in pees, if that I mighte;

Wherfor I am disposed outerly,

As I his suster servede by nighte, 

Right so thenke I to serve him prively;

This warne I yow, that ye nat sodeynly

Out of your-self for no wo sholde outraye;

Beth pacient, and ther-of I yow preye.’

‘I have,’ quod she, ‘seyd thus, and ever shal,    

I wol no thing, ne nil no thing, certayn, 

But as yow list; noght greveth me at al,

Thogh that my doghter and my sone be slayn,

At your comandement, this is to sayn.

I have noght had no part of children tweyne    

But first siknesse, and after wo and peyne.

Ye been our lord, doth with your owene thing

Right as yow list; axeth no reed at me.

For, as I lefte at hoom al my clothing,

Whan I first cam to yow, right so,’ quod she, 

‘Left I my wil and al my libertee, 

And took your clothing; wherfor I yow preye,

Doth your plesaunce, I wol your lust obeye.

And certes, if I hadde prescience

Your wil to knowe er ye your lust me tolde, 

I wolde it doon with-outen necligence;

But now I woot your lust and what ye wolde,

Al your plesaunce ferme and stable I holde;

For wiste I that my deeth wolde do yow ese,

Right gladly wolde I dyen, yow to plese.

Deth may noght make no comparisoun

Un-to your love:’ and, whan this markis sey

The constance of his wyf, he caste adoun

His yën two, and wondreth that she may

In pacience suffre al this array. 

And forth he gooth with drery contenaunce,

But to his herte it was ful greet plesaunce.

This ugly sergeant, in the same wyse

That he hir doghter caughte, right so he,

Or worse, if men worse can devyse,

Hath hent hir sone, that ful was of beautee.    

And ever in oon so pacient was she,

That she no chere made of hevinesse,

But kiste hir sone, and after gan it blesse;

Save this; she preyed him that, if he mighte, 

Hir litel sone he wolde in erthe grave,

His tendre limes, delicat to sighte,

Fro foules and fro bestes for to save.

But she non answer of him mighte have.

He wente his wey, as him no-thing ne roghte; 

But to Boloigne he tendrely it broghte.

This markis wondreth ever lenger the more

Up-on hir pacience, and if that he

Ne hadde soothly knowen ther-bifore,

That parfitly hir children lovede she,

He wolde have wend that of som subtiltee,

And of malice or for cruel corage,

That she had suffred this with sad visage.

But wel he knew that next him-self, certayn,

She loved hir children best in every wyse.

But now of wommen wolde I axen fayn,

If thise assayes mighte nat suffyse?

What coude a sturdy housbond more devyse

To preve hir wyfhod and hir stedfastnesse,

And he continuing ever in sturdinesse?

But ther ben folk of swich condicioun,

That, whan they have a certein purpos take,

They can nat stinte of hir entencioun,

But, right as they were bounden to a stake,

They wol nat of that firste purpos slake. 

Right so this markis fulliche hath purposed   

To tempte his wyf, as he was first disposed.

He waiteth, if by word or contenance

That she to him was changed of corage;

But never coude he finde variance; 

She was ay oon in herte and in visage;

And ay the forther that she was in age,

The more trewe, if that it were possible,

She was to him in love, and more penible.

For which it semed thus, that of hem two

Ther nas but o wil; for, as Walter leste,

The same lust was hir plesance also,

And, god be thanked, al fil for the beste.

She shewed wel, for no worldly unreste

A wyf, as of hir-self, no-thing ne sholde

Wille in effect, but as hir housbond wolde.

The sclaundre of Walter ofte and wyde spradde,

That of a cruel herte he wikkedly,

For he a povre womman wedded hadde,

Hath mordred bothe his children prively.

Swich murmur was among hem comunly. 

No wonder is, for to the peples ere

Ther cam no word but that they mordred were.

For which, wher-as his peple ther-bifore

Had loved him wel, the sclaundre of his diffame    

Made hem that they him hatede therfore;

To been a mordrer is an hateful name.

But natheles, for ernest ne for game

He of his cruel purpos nolde stente;

To tempte his wyf was set al his entente.

Whan that his doghter twelf yeer was of age, 

He to the court of Rome, in subtil wyse

Enformed of his wil, sente his message,

Comaunding hem swiche bulles to devyse

As to his cruel purpos may suffyse, 

How that the pope, as for his peples reste,

Bad him to wedde another, if him leste.

I seye, he bad they sholde countrefete

The popes bulles, making mencioun

That he hath leve his firste wyf to lete, 

As by the popes dispensacioun,

To stinte rancour and dissencioun

Bitwixe his peple and him; thus seyde the bulle,

The which they han publiced atte fulle.

The rude peple, as it no wonder is, 

Wenden ful wel that it had been right so;

But whan thise tydinges cam to Grisildis,

I deme that hir herte was ful wo.

But she, y-lyke sad for evermo,

Disposed was, this humble creature,   

Thadversitee of fortune al tendure.

Abyding ever his lust and his plesaunce,

To whom that she was yeven, herte and al,

As to hir verray worldly suffisaunce;

But shortly if this storie I tellen shal,

This markis writen hath in special

A lettre in which he sheweth his entente,

And secrely he to Boloigne it sente.

To the erl of Panik, which that hadde tho

Wedded his suster, preyde he specially

To bringen hoom agayn his children two

In honurable estaat al openly.

But o thing he him preyede outerly,

That he to no wight, though men wolde enquere,

Sholde nat telle, whos children that they were,    

But seye, the mayden sholde y-wedded be

Un-to the markis of Saluce anon.

And as this erl was preyed, so dide he;

For at day set he on his wey is goon

Toward Saluce, and lordes many oon, 

In riche array, this mayden for to gyde; 

Hir yonge brother ryding hir bisyde.

Arrayed was toward hir mariage

This fresshe mayde, ful of gemmes clere;

Hir brother, which that seven yeer was of age, 

Arrayed eek ful fresh in his manere.

And thus in greet noblesse and with glad chere,

Toward Saluces shaping hir Iourney,

Fro day to day they ryden in hir wey.

..

Explicit quarta pars.

Sequitur quinta pars.

..

Among al this, after his wikke usage,

This markis, yet his wyf to tempte more

To the uttereste preve of hir corage,

Fully to han experience and lore

If that she were as stedfast as bifore,

He on a day in open audience

Ful boistously hath seyd hir this sentence:

‘Certes, Grisilde, I hadde y-nough plesaunce

To han yow to my wyf for your goodnesse,

As for your trouthe and for your obeisaunce,

Nought for your linage ne for your richesse; 

But now knowe I in verray soothfastnesse

That in gret lordshipe, if I wel avyse,

Ther is gret servitute in sondry wyse.

I may nat don as every plowman may;

My peple me constreyneth for to take

Another wyf, and cryen day by day;

And eek the pope, rancour for to slake,

Consenteth it, that dar I undertake;

And treweliche thus muche I wol yow seye,

My newe wyf is coming by the weye.

Be strong of herte, and voyde anon hir place, 

And thilke dower that ye broghten me

Tak it agayn, I graunte it of my grace;

Retourneth to your fadres hous,’ quod he;

‘No man may alwey han prosperitee;

With evene herte I rede yow tendure

The strook of fortune or of aventure.’

And she answerde agayn in pacience,

‘My lord,’ quod she, ‘I woot, and wiste alway

How that bitwixen your magnificence

And my poverte no wight can ne may

Maken comparison; it is no nay.

I ne heeld me never digne in no manere

To be your wyf, no, ne your chamberere.

And in this hous, ther ye me lady made— 

The heighe god take I for my witnesse,

And also wisly he my soule glade—

I never heeld me lady ne maistresse,

But humble servant to your worthinesse,

And ever shal, whyl that my lyf may dure, 

Aboven every worldly creature. 

That ye so longe of your benignitee

Han holden me in honour and nobleye,

Wher-as I was noght worthy for to be,

That thonke I god and yow, to whom I preye    

Foryelde it yow; there is na-more to seye.

Un-to my fader gladly wol I wende,

And with him dwelle un-to my lyves ende.

Ther I was fostred of a child ful smal,

Til I be deed, my lyf ther wol I lede

A widwe clene, in body, herte, and al.

For sith I yaf to yow my maydenhede,

And am your trewe wyf, it is no drede,

God shilde swich a lordes wyf to take

Another man to housbonde or to make.

And of your newe wyf, god of his grace

So graunte yow wele and prosperitee:

For I wol gladly yelden hir my place,

In which that I was blisful wont to be,

For sith it lyketh yow, my lord,’ quod she,

‘That whylom weren al myn hertes reste,

That I shal goon, I wol gon whan yow leste.

But ther-as ye me profre swich dowaire

As I first broghte, it is wel in my minde

It were my wrecched clothes, no-thing faire, 

The which to me were hard now for to finde.

O gode god! how gentil and how kinde

Ye semed by your speche and your visage

The day that maked was our mariage!

But sooth is seyd, algate I finde it trewe— 

For in effect it preved is on me— 

Love is noght old as whan that it is newe.

But certes, lord, for noon adversitee,

To dyen in the cas, it shal nat be

That ever in word or werk I shal repente 

That I yow yaf myn herte in hool entente.

My lord, ye woot that, in my fadres place,

Ye dede me strepe out of my povre wede,

And richely me cladden, of your grace.

To yow broghte I noght elles, out of drede, 

But feyth and nakednesse and maydenhede.

And here agayn my clothing I restore,

And eek my wedding-ring, for evermore.

The remenant of your Iewels redy be

In-with your chambre, dar I saufly sayn;

Naked out of my fadres hous,’ quod she,

‘I cam, and naked moot I turne agayn.

Al your plesaunce wol I folwen fayn;

But yet I hope it be nat your entente

That I smoklees out of your paleys wente. 

Ye coude nat doon so dishoneste a thing,    

That thilke wombe in which your children leye

Sholde, biforn the peple, in my walking,

Be seyn al bare; wherfor I yow preye,

Lat me nat lyk a worm go by the weye. 

Remembre yow, myn owene lord so dere,

I was your wyf, thogh I unworthy were.

Wherfor, in guerdon of my maydenhede,

Which that I broghte, and noght agayn I bere,

As voucheth sauf to yeve me, to my mede,    

But swich a smok as I was wont to were, 

That I therwith may wrye the wombe of here

That was your wyf; and heer take I my leve

Of yow, myn owene lord, lest I yow greve.’

‘The smok,’ quod he, ‘that thou hast on thy bak,      

Lat it be stille, and ber it forth with thee.’

But wel unnethes thilke word he spak,

But wente his wey for rewthe and for pitee.

Biforn the folk hir-selven strepeth she,

And in hir smok, with heed and foot al bare, 

Toward hir fader hous forth is she fare.

The folk hir folwe wepinge in hir weye,

And fortune ay they cursen as they goon;

But she fro weping kepte hir yën dreye,

Ne in this tyme word ne spak she noon.    

Hir fader, that this tyding herde anoon,

Curseth the day and tyme that nature

Shoop him to been a lyves creature.

For out of doute this olde povre man

Was ever in suspect of hir mariage;

For ever he demed, sith that it bigan,

That whan the lord fulfild had his corage,

Him wolde thinke it were a disparage

To his estaat so lowe for talighte,

And voyden hir as sone as ever he mighte. 

Agayns his doghter hastilich goth he,

For he by noyse of folk knew hir cominge,

And with hir olde cote, as it mighte be,

He covered hir, ful sorwefully wepinge;

But on hir body mighte he it nat bringe.

For rude was the cloth, and more of age

By dayes fele than at hir mariage.

Thus with hir fader, for a certeyn space,

Dwelleth this flour of wyfly pacience,

That neither by hir wordes ne hir face 

Biforn the folk, ne eek in hir absence,

Ne shewed she that hir was doon offence;

Ne of hir heigh estaat no remembraunce

Ne hadde she, as by hir countenaunce.

No wonder is, for in hir grete estaat 

Hir goost was ever in pleyn humylitee; 

No tendre mouth, non herte delicaat,

No pompe, no semblant of royaltee,

But ful of pacient benignitee,

Discreet and prydeles, ay honurable,

And to hir housbonde ever meke and stable.

Men speke of Iob and most for his humblesse,

As clerkes, whan hem list, can wel endyte,

Namely of men, but as in soothfastnesse,

Thogh clerkes preyse wommen but a lyte,    

Ther can no man in humblesse him acquyte    

As womman can, ne can ben half so trewe

As wommen been, but it be falle of-newe.

..

[Pars Sexta.]

..

Fro Boloigne is this erl of Panik come,

Of which the fame up-sprang to more and lesse,      

And in the peples eres alle and some

Was couth eek, that a newe markisesse

He with him broghte, in swich pompe and richesse,

That never was ther seyn with mannes yë

So noble array in al West Lumbardye. 

The markis, which that shoop and knew al this, 

Er that this erl was come, sente his message

For thilke sely povre Grisildis;

And she with humble herte and glad visage,

Nat with no swollen thoght in hir corage,

Cam at his heste, and on hir knees hir sette,

And reverently and wysly she him grette.

‘Grisild,’ quod he, ‘my wille is outerly,

This mayden, that shal wedded been to me,

Receyved be to-morwe as royally 

As it possible is in myn hous to be.     

And eek that every wight in his degree

Have his estaat in sitting and servyse

And heigh plesaunce, as I can best devyse.

I have no wommen suffisaunt certayn

The chambres for tarraye in ordinaunce

After my lust, and therfor wolde I fayn

That thyn were al swich maner governaunce;

Thou knowest eek of old al my plesaunce;

Though thyn array be badde and yvel biseye, 

Do thou thy devoir at the leeste weye.’

‘Nat only, lord, that I am glad,’ quod she,

‘To doon your lust, but I desyre also

Yow for to serve and plese in my degree

With-outen feynting, and shal evermo. 

Ne never, for no wele ne no wo,

Ne shal the gost with-in myn herte stente

To love yow best with al my trewe entente.’

And with that word she gan the hous to dighte,

And tables for to sette and beddes make; 

And peyned hir to doon al that she mighte,    

Preying the chambereres, for goddes sake,

To hasten hem, and faste swepe and shake;

And she, the moste servisable of alle,

Hath every chambre arrayed and his halle.    

Abouten undern gan this erl alighte,

That with him broghte thise noble children tweye,

For which the peple ran to seen the sighte

Of hir array, so richely biseye;

And than at erst amonges hem they seye,

That Walter was no fool, thogh that him leste   

To chaunge his wyf, for it was for the beste.

For she is fairer, as they demen alle,

Than is Grisild, and more tendre of age,

And fairer fruit bitwene hem sholde falle,

And more plesant, for hir heigh linage;

Hir brother eek so fair was of visage,

That hem to seen the peple hath caught plesaunce,

Commending now the markis governaunce.—

Auctor. ‘O stormy peple! unsad and ever untrewe!       

Ay undiscreet and chaunging as a vane,    

Delyting ever in rumbel that is newe,

For lyk the mone ay wexe ye and wane;

Ay ful of clapping, dere y-nogh a Iane;

Your doom is fals, your constance yvel preveth, 

A ful greet fool is he that on yow leveth!’

Thus seyden sadde folk in that citee,

Whan that the peple gazed up and doun,

For they were glad, right for the noveltee,

To han a newe lady of hir toun. 

Na-more of this make I now mencioun;

But to Grisilde agayn wol I me dresse,

And telle hir constance and hir bisinesse.—

Ful bisy was Grisilde in every thing

That to the feste was apertinent; 

Right noght was she abayst of hir clothing,

Though it were rude and somdel eek to-rent.

But with glad chere to the yate is went,

With other folk, to grete the markisesse,

And after that doth forth hir bisinesse.

With so glad chere his gestes she receyveth, 

And conningly, everich in his degree,

That no defaute no man aperceyveth;

But ay they wondren what she mighte be

That in so povre array was for to see, 

And coude swich honour and reverence;

And worthily they preisen hir prudence.

In al this mene whyle she ne stente

This mayde and eek hir brother to commende

With al hir herte, in ful benigne entente, 

So wel, that no man coude hir prys amende. 

But atte laste, whan that thise lordes wende

To sitten doun to mete, he gan to calle

Grisilde, as she was bisy in his halle.

‘Grisilde,’ quod he, as it were in his pley,

‘How lyketh thee my wyf and hir beautee?’

‘Right wel,’ quod she, ‘my lord; for, in good fey,

A fairer say I never noon than she.

I prey to god yeve hir prosperitee;

And so hope I that he wol to yow sende

Plesance y-nogh un-to your lyves ende.

O thing biseke I yow and warne also,

That ye ne prikke with no tormentinge

This tendre mayden, as ye han don mo;

For she is fostred in hir norishinge 

More tendrely, and, to my supposinge,

She coude nat adversitee endure

As coude a povre fostred creature.’

And whan this Walter say hir pacience,

Hir glade chere and no malice at al,

And he so ofte had doon to hir offence,

And she ay sad and constant as a wal,

Continuing ever hir innocence overal,

This sturdy markis gan his herte dresse

To rewen up-on hir wyfly stedfastnesse. 

‘This is y-nogh, Grisilde myn,’ quod he,

‘Be now na-more agast ne yvel apayed;

I have thy feith and thy benignitee,

As wel as ever womman was, assayed,

In greet estaat, and povreliche arrayed.

Now knowe I, dere wyf, thy stedfastnesse,’— 

And hir in armes took and gan hir kesse.

And she for wonder took of it no keep;

She herde nat what thing he to hir seyde;

She ferde as she had stert out of a sleep, 

Til she out of hir masednesse abreyde.

‘Grisilde,’ quod he, ‘by god that for us deyde,

Thou art my wyf, ne noon other I have,

Ne never hadde, as god my soule save!

This is thy doghter which thou hast supposed 

To be my wyf; that other feithfully 

Shal be myn heir, as I have ay purposed;

Thou bare him in thy body trewely.

At Boloigne have I kept hem prively;

Tak hem agayn, for now maystow nat seye 

That thou hast lorn non of thy children tweye.

And folk that otherweyes han seyd of me,

I warne hem wel that I have doon this dede

For no malice ne for no crueltee,

But for tassaye in thee thy wommanhede, 

And nat to sleen my children, god forbede!    

But for to kepe hem prively and stille,

Til I thy purpos knewe and al thy wille.’

Whan she this herde, aswowne doun she falleth

For pitous Ioye, and after hir swowninge 

She bothe hir yonge children un-to hir calleth,

And in hir armes, pitously wepinge,

Embraceth hem, and tendrely kissinge

Ful lyk a mooder, with hir salte teres

She batheth bothe hir visage and hir heres. 

O, which a pitous thing it was to see

Hir swowning, and hir humble voys to here!

‘Grauntmercy, lord, that thanke I yow,’ quod she,

‘That ye han saved me my children dere!

Now rekke I never to ben deed right here; 

Sith I stonde in your love and in your grace,

No fors of deeth, ne whan my spirit pace!

O tendre, o dere, o yonge children myne,

Your woful mooder wende stedfastly

That cruel houndes or som foul vermyne

Hadde eten yow; but god, of his mercy,

And your benigne fader tendrely

Hath doon yow kept;’ and in that same stounde

Al sodeynly she swapte adoun to grounde.

And in her swough so sadly holdeth she 

Hir children two, whan she gan hem tembrace,

That with greet sleighte and greet difficultee

The children from hir arm they gonne arace.

O many a teer on many a pitous face

Doun ran of hem that stoden hir bisyde; 

Unnethe abouten hir mighte they abyde. 

Walter hir gladeth, and hir sorwe slaketh;

She ryseth up, abaysed, from hir traunce,

And every wight hir Ioye and feste maketh,

Til she hath caught agayn hir contenaunce. 

Walter hir dooth so feithfully plesaunce,

That it was deyntee for to seen the chere

Bitwixe hem two, now they ben met y-fere.

Thise ladyes, whan that they hir tyme say,

Han taken hir, and in-to chambre goon,

And strepen hir out of hir rude array,

And in a cloth of gold that brighte shoon,

With a coroune of many a riche stoon

Up-on hir heed, they in-to halle hir broghte,

And ther she was honoured as hir oghte.

Thus hath this pitous day a blisful ende,

For every man and womman dooth his might

This day in murthe and revel to dispende

Til on the welkne shoon the sterres light.

For more solempne in every mannes sight 

This feste was, and gretter of costage,

Than was the revel of hir mariage.

Ful many a yeer in heigh prosperitee

Liven thise two in concord and in reste,

And richely his doghter maried he

Un-to a lord, oon of the worthieste

Of al Itaille; and than in pees and reste

His wyves fader in his court he kepeth,

Til that the soule out of his body crepeth.

His sone succedeth in his heritage 

In reste and pees, after his fader day;

And fortunat was eek in mariage,

Al putte he nat his wyf in greet assay.

This world is nat so strong, it is no nay,

As it hath been in olde tymes yore, 

And herkneth what this auctour seith therfore.

This storie is seyd, nat for that wyves sholde

Folwen Grisilde as in humilitee,

For it were importable, though they wolde;

But for that every wight, in his degree,

Sholde be constant in adversitee

As was Grisilde; therfor Petrark wryteth

This storie, which with heigh style he endyteth.

For, sith a womman was so pacient

Un-to a mortal man, wel more us oghte

Receyven al in gree that god us sent;

For greet skile is, he preve that he wroghte.

But he ne tempteth no man that he boghte,

As seith seint Iame, if ye his pistel rede;

He preveth folk al day, it is no drede, 

And suffreth us, as for our excercyse,

With sharpe scourges of adversitee

Ful ofte to be bete in sondry wyse;

Nat for to knowe our wil, for certes he,

Er we were born, knew al our freletee;

And for our beste is al his governaunce;

Lat us than live in vertuous suffraunce.

..

– – –

..

But o word, lordinges, herkneth er I go:—

It were ful hard to finde now a dayes

In al a toun Grisildes three or two; 

For, if that they were put to swiche assayes, 

The gold of hem hath now so badde alayes

With bras, that thogh the coyne be fair at yë,

It wolde rather breste a-two than plye.

For which heer, for the wyves love of Bathe, 

Whos lyf and al hir secte god mayntene

In heigh maistrye, and elles were it scathe,

I wol with lusty herte fresshe and grene

Seyn yow a song to glade yow, I wene,

And lat us stinte of ernestful matere:— 

Herkneth my song, that seith in this manere. 

..

Lenvoy de Chaucer.

..

Grisilde is deed, and eek hir pacience,

And bothe atones buried in Itaille;

For which I crye in open audience,

No wedded man so hardy be tassaille

His wyves pacience, in hope to finde

Grisildes, for in certein he shall faille!

O noble wyves, ful of heigh prudence,

Lat noon humilitee your tonge naille,

Ne lat no clerk have cause or diligence

To wryte of yow a storie of swich mervaille 

As of Grisildis pacient and kinde;

Lest Chichevache yow swelwe in hir entraille!

Folweth Ekko, that holdeth no silence,

But evere answereth at the countretaille; 

Beth nat bidaffed for your innocence,

But sharply tak on yow the governaille.

Emprinteth wel this lesson in your minde

For commune profit, sith it may availle.

Ye archewyves, stondeth at defence,

Sin ye be stronge as is a greet camaille;

Ne suffreth nat that men yow doon offence.

And sclendre wyves, feble as in bataille,

Beth egre as is a tygre yond in Inde;

Ay clappeth as a mille, I yow consaille. 

Ne dreed hem nat, do hem no reverence;

For though thyn housbonde armed be in maille,

The arwes of thy crabbed eloquence

Shal perce his brest, and eek his aventaille;

In Ialousye I rede eek thou him binde,

And thou shalt make him couche as dooth a quaille.

If thou be fair, ther folk ben in presence

Shew thou thy visage and thyn apparaille;

If thou be foul, be free of thy dispence,

To gete thee freendes ay do thy travaille;

Be ay of chere as light as leef on linde,

And lat him care, and wepe, and wringe, and waille!

Here endeth the Clerk of Oxonford his Tale.

Here beginneth the Tale of the Clerk of Oxford.

  There is, at the west side of Itail,

Down at the root of Visulus the cold,

A lusty plain, abundant of victual,

Where many a tower and town thou mayst behold,

That founded were in time of fathers old,

And many another delightable sight,

And Saluzzo this noble country hight.

A marquis whilom lord was of that land,

As were his worthy elders him before;

And obeisant and ready to his hand

Were all his lieges, both less and more.

Thus in delight he liveth, and hath done yore,

Beloved and dread, through favour of fortune,

Both of his lords and of his common.

Therewith he was, to speak as of lineage,

The gentlest y-born of Lombardy,

A fair person, and strong, and young of age,

And full of honour and of courtesy;

Discreet enough his country for to guy,

Save in some things that he was to blame,

And Walter was this young lord’s name.

I blame him thus, that he considered naught

In time coming what might him betide,

But on his lust present was all his thought,

As for to hawk and hunt on every side;

Well nigh all other cares let he slide,

And eke he nould, and that was worst of all,

Wed no wife, for naught that may befall.

Only that point his people bear so sore

That flockmeal on a day they to him went,

And one of ’em, that wisest was of lore,

Or else that the lord best would assent

That he should tell him what his people meant,

Or else could he show well such matter,

He to the marquis said as ye shall hear.

“O noble marquis, your humanity

Assureth us and giveth us hardiness,

As oft as time is of necessity

That we to you may tell our heaviness;

Accepteth, lord, now of your gentilesse,

That we with piteous heart unto you ’plain,

And let your ears not my voice disdain.

All have I naught to do in this matter

More than another man hath in this place,

Yet for as much as ye, my lord so dear,

Have alway showed me favour and grace,

I dare the better ask of you a space

Of audience, to showen our request,

And ye, my lord, to do right as you lest.

 For certes, lord, so well us liketh you

And all your work, and ever have done, that we

Ne could not us self devisen how

We might liven in more felicity,

Save one thing, lord, if it your will be,

That for to be a wedded man you lest,

Then were your people in sovereign hearts rest.

Boweth your neck under that blissful yoke

Of sovereignty, not of service,

Which that men clepe spousal or wedlock;

And thinketh, lord, among your thoughts wise,

How that our days pass in sundry wise;

For though we sleep or wake, or roam, or ride,

As fleeth the time, it nill no man abide.

And though your green youth flower as yet,

In creepeth age alway, as still as stone,

And death menaceth every age, and smite

In each estate, for there escapeth none:

And all so certain as we know each one

That we shall die, as uncertain we all

Be of that day when death shall on us fall.

Accepteth then of us the true intent,

That never yet refuseden your hest;

And we will, lord, if that ye will assent,

Choose you a wife in short time, at least,

Born of the gentlest and of the most

Of all this land, so that it ought seem

Honour to god and you, as we can deem.

Deliver us out of all this busy dread,

And take a wife, for high god’s sake;

For if it so befell, as god forbid,

That through your death your line should slake,

And that a strange successor should take

Your heritage, o! woe were us alive!

Wherefore we pray you hastily to wive.”

Their meek prayer and their piteous cheer

Make the marquis’ heart have pity.

“Ye will,” quoth he, “mine own people dear,

To that I never erst thought ’strain me.

I me rejoice of my liberty,

That seld time is found in marriage;

There I was free, I mote been in servage.

But natheless I see your true intent,

And trust upon your wit, and have done aye;

Wherefore of my free will I will assent

To wed me, as soon as ever I may.

But there as ye have proffered me today

To choose me a wife, I you release

That choice, and pray you of that proffer cease.

For god it wot, that children oft been

Unlike their worthy elders ’em before;

Bounty cometh all of god, not of the strain

Of which they be engendered and y-bore;

I trust in god’s bounty, and therefore

My marriage and mine estate and rest

I him betake; he may do as him lest.

Let me alone in choosing of my wife,

That charge upon my back I will endure;

But I you pray, and charge upon your life,

That wife that I take, ye me assure

To worship her, while that her life may dure,

In word and work, both here and everywhere,

As she an emperor’s daughter were.

And furthermore, this shall ye swear, that ye

Against my choice shall neither grouch ne strive;

For sith I shall forgone my liberty

At your request, as ever mote I thrive,

There as mine heart is set, there will I wive;

And but ye will assent in such manner,

I pray you, speaketh no more of this matter.”

 With hearty will they sworen, and assenten

To all this thing, there said no wight nay;

Beseeching him of grace, ere that they wenten,

That he would granten ’em a certain day

Of his spousal, as soon as ever he may;

For yet alway the people somewhat dread

Lest that the marquis no wife would wed.

He granted ’em a day, such as him lest,

On which he would be wedded sickerly,

And said, he did all this at their request;

And they, with humble intent, buxomly,

Kneeling upon their knees full reverently,

Him thanken all; and thus they have an end

Of their intent, and home again they wend.

And hereupon he to his officers

Commandeth for the feast to purvey,

And to his privy knights and squires

Such charge gave, as him list on ’em lay;

And they to his commandment obey,

And each of ’em doth all his diligence

To do unto the feast reverence.

..

Explicit prima pars.

Incipit secunda pars.

..

Not far from thilk palace honourable

There as this marquis shape his marriage,

There stood a thorp, of sight delightable,

In which that povre folk of that village

Hadden their beasts and their harbourage,

And of their labour took their sustenance

After that the earth gave ’em abundance.

Amongst these povre folk there dwelt a man

Which that was holden povrest of ’em all;

But high god sometime senden can

His grace unto a little ox’s stall:

Janicula men of that thorp him call.

A daughter had he, fair enough to sight,

And Grisildis this young maiden hight.

But for to speak of virtuous beauty,

Then was she one the fairest under sun;

For povrely y-fostered up was she,  

No lickerous lust was through her heart y-run.

Well ofter of the well than of the tun

She drank, and for she would virtue please,

She knew well labour, but no idle ease.

But though this maid tender were of age,

Yet in the breast of her virginity

There was enclosed ripe and staid courage;

And in great reverence and charity

Her old povre father fostered she;

A few sheep spinning on field she kept;

She would not be idle till she slept.

And when she homeward came, she would bring

Worts or other herbs times oft,

The which she shred and seeth for her living,

And made her bed full hard and nothing soft;

And aye she kept her father’s life on-loft

With everich obeisance and diligence

That child may do to father’s reverence.

Upon Grisilde, this povre creature,

Full oft sithe this marquis set his eye   

As he on hunting rode peradventure;

And when it fell that he might him espy,

He naught with wanton looking of folly

His eyen cast on her, but in staid wise

Upon her cheer he would him oft advise,

Commending in his heart her womanhood,

And eke her virtue, ’passing any wight

Of so young age, as well in cheer as deed.

For though the people have no great insight

In virtue, he considered full right

Her bounty, and disposed that he would

Wed her only, if ever he wed should.

The day of wedding came, but no wight can

Tell what woman that it should be;

For which marvel wondered many a man,

And saiden, when they were in privity,

“Will not our lord yet leave his vanity?

Will he not wed? alas, alas the while!

Why will he thus himself and us beguile?”

But natheless this marquis hath done make

Of gems, set in gold and in azure,

Brooches and rings, for Grisildis’ sake,

And of her clothing took he the measure 

By a maid, like to her stature,

And eke of other ornaments all

That unto such a wedding should fall.

The time of undern of the same day  

Approacheth, that this wedding should be;

And all the palace put was in array,

Both hall and chambers, each in his degree;

Houses of office stuffed with plenty

There mayst thou see of dainteous victual, 

That may be found, as far as last Itail.

This royal marquis, richly arrayed,

Lords and ladies in his company,

The which that to the feast weren y-prayed,

And of his retinue the bachelry,

Which many a sound of sundry melody,

Unto the village, of the which I told,

In this array the right way have hold.

Grisilde of this, god wot, full innocent,

That for her shapen was all this array,

To fetchen water at a well is went,

And cometh home as soon as ever she may.

For well she had heard said, that thilk day

The marquis should wed, and if she might,

She would fain have seen some of that sight.

She thought, “I will with other maidens stand,

That be my fellows, in our door, and see

The marquisess, and therefore will I find

To do at home, as soon as it may be,

The labour which that ’longeth unto me;

And then I may at leisure her behold,

If she this way unto the castle hold.”

And as she would over her threshold gon,

The marquis came and ’gan her for to call;

And she set down her water pot anon,

Beside the threshold, in an ox’s stall,

And down upon her knees she ’gan to fall,

And with staid countenance kneeleth still,

Till she had heard what was the lord’s will.  

This thoughtful marquis spake unto the maid

Full soberly, and said in this manner,

“Where is your father, Grisildis?” he said.

And she with reverence, in humble cheer,

Answered, “lord, he is already here.”

And in she goeth withouten longer let,

And to the marquis she her father fet’.

He by the hand then took this old man,

And said thus, when he him had aside:

“Janicula, I neither may ne can

Longer the pleasance of mine heart hide.

If that thou vouchsafe, what so betide,

Thy daughter will I take, ere that I wend,

As for my wife, unto her life’s end. 

Thou lovest me, I wot it well, certain,

And art my faithful liege-man y-bore;

And all that liketh me, I dare well sayn

It liketh thee, and specially therefore

Tell me that point that I have said before,

If that thou wilt unto the purpose draw,

To take me as for thy son-in-law?”

This sudden case this man a-stoned so   

That red he wax; abashed, and all quaking

He stood unneths said he words mo’, 

But only thus: “lord,” quoth he, “my willing

Is as ye will, ne against your liking

I will nothing; ye be my lord so dear;

Right as you lust governeth this matter.”

“Yet will I,” quoth this marquis softly,

“That in thy chamber I and thou and she

Have a colloquy, and wist thou why?

For I will ask if it her will be

To be my wife, and rule her after me.

And all this shall be done in thy presence;

I will not speak out of thine audience.”

And in the chamber while they were about

Their treatise, which as ye shall after hear,

The people came unto the house without,

And wondered ’em in how honest manner

And ’tentively she kept her father dear.

But outrightly Grisildis wonder might,

For never erst ne saw she such a sight.

No wonder is though that she were a-stoned

To see so great a guest come in that place;

She never was to such guests woned,

For which she looked with full pale face.

But shortly forth this matter for to chase,

These are the words that the marquis said

To this benign very faithful maid:

“Grisilde,” he said, “ye shall well understand

It liketh to your father and to me

That I you wed, and eke it may so stand

As I suppose, ye will that it so be.

But these demands ask I first,” quoth he,

“That, sith it shall be done in hasty wise,   

Will ye assent, or else you advise?

say this, be ye ready with good heart

To all my lust, and this I freely may,

As me best thinketh, do you laugh or smart,

And never ye to grouch it, night or day?

And eke when I say ‘yea,’ ne say not ‘nay,’

Neither by word ne frowning countenance;

Swear this, and here I swear our allegiance.”

Wondering upon this word, quaking for dread,

She said, “lord, undigne and unworthy  

Am I to thilk honour that ye me bede;  

But as ye will yourself, right so will I.

And here I swear that never willingly 

In work ne thought I nill you disobey,

For to be dead, though me were loath to die.”

“This is enough, Grisilde mine,” quoth he.

And forth he goeth with a full sober cheer

Out at the door, and after that came she,

And to the people he said in this manner,

“This is my wife,” quoth he, “that standeth here.

Honoureth her, and loveth her, I pray,

Whoso me loveth; there is no more to say.”

And for that no thing of her old gear

She should bring into his house, he bade

That women should despoilen her right there; 

Of which these ladies were not right glad

To handle her clothes wherein she was clad.

But natheless, this maid bright of hue

From foot to head they clothed have all new.

Her hairs have they combed, that lay untressed

Full rudely, and with their fingers small

A crown on her head they have y-dressed,

And set her full of brooches great and small;

Of her array what should I make a tale?

Unneth the people her knew for her fairness,

When she translated was in such richesse.

This marquis hath her spoused with a ring

Brought for the same cause, and then her set

Upon an horse, snow-white and well ambling.

And to his palace, ere he longer let,

With joyful people that her led and met,

Conveyed her; and thus the day they spend

In revel, till the sun ’gan descend.

And shortly forth this tale for to chase,

say that to this new marquisess

God hath such favour sent her of his grace,

That it ne seemed not by likeliness

That she was born and fed in rudeness,

As in a cote or in an ox-stall,

But nourished in an emperor’s hall.

To every wight she waxen is so dear

And worshipful, that folk there she was bore,

And from her birth knew her year by year,

Unneth trowed they, but durst have swore,

That to Janicle, of which I spake before,

She daughter nas, for, as by conjecture,

’Em thought she was another creature.

For though that ever virtuous was she, 

She was increased in such excellence

Of thews good, y-set in high bounty,   

And so discreet and fair of eloquence,

So benign and so digne of reverence,

And could so the people’s heart embrace,

That each her loved that looked on her face.

Not only of Saluzzo in the town

Publiced was the bounty of her name,

But eke beside in many a region,

If one said well, another said the same;

So spread of her high bounty the fame,

That men and women, as well young as old,

Gon to Saluzzo, upon her to behold.

Thus Walter lowly, nay but royally,

Wedded with fortunate honesty,

In god’s peace liveth full easily

At home, and outward grace enough had he;

And for he saw that under low degree

Was oft virtue hid, the people him held

A prudent man, and this is seen full seld’.

Not only this Grisildis through her wit

Could at the feet of wifely homeliness,

But eke, when that the case required it,

The common profit could she redress.

There nas discord, rancor, ne heaviness

In all that land, that she ne could appease,

And wisely bring ’em all in rest and ease.

Though that her husband absent were anon,

If gentle men, or other of her country

Were wroth, she would bringen ’em atone;

So wise and ripe words had she,

And judgements of so great equity,

That she from heaven sent was, as men wend,

People to save and every wrong t’ammend.

Not long time after that this Grisild

Was wedded, she a daughter hath y-bore,

All had her liefer have born a knave child.

Glad was this marquis and the folk therefore;

For though a maid child come all before,

She may unto a knave child attain

By likelihood, since she nis not barren.

..

Explicit secunda pars.

Incipit tercia pars.

..

There fell, as it befalleth times mo’,

When that this child had sucked but a throw,

This marquis in his heart longed so

To tempt his wife, her staidness for to know,   

That he ne might out of his heart throw

This marvellous desire, his wife t’assay,

Needless, god wot, he thought her for t’affray.

He had assayed her enough before,

And found her ever good; what needed it

Her for to tempt and alway more and more?

Though some men praise it for a subtle wit,

But as for me, I say that evil it sit

T’assay a wife when that it is no need,

And putten her in anguish and in dread.

For which the marquis wrought in this manner:

He came alone a-night, there as she lay,

With stern face and with full trouble cheer,

And said thus: “Grisild,” quoth he, “that day

That I you took out of your povre array,

And put you in estate of high nobleness,

Ye have not that forgotten, as I guess.

say, Grisild, this present dignity,

In which I have put you, as I trow,

Maketh you not forgetful for to be

That I you took in povre estate full low

For any weal ye mote yourselfen know.

Take heed of every word that I you say,

There is no wight that heareth it but we tway.

Ye wot yourself well, how that ye came here

Into this house, it is not long ago,

And though to me that ye be lief and dear,

Unto my gentles ye be nothing so;

They sayn, to ’em it is great shame and woe

For to be subjects and be in servage

To thee, that born art of a small village.

And namely, sith thy daughter was y-bore,

These words have they spoken doubtless;

But I desire, as I have done before,

To live my life with ’em in rest and peace;

I may not in this case be reckless.

I mote do with thy daughter for the best,

Not as I would, but as my people lest.

And yet, god wot, this is full loath to me;

But natheless without your witing

I will not do; but this will I,” quoth he,

“That ye to me assent as in this thing.

Show now your patience in your working

That ye me hight and swore in your village

That day that maked was our marriage.”

When she had heard all this, she naught a-moved

Neither in word, or cheer, or countenance,

For, as it seemed, she was not aggrieved:

She said, “lord, all lieth in your pleasance,

My child and I with hearty obeisance

Be yours all, and ye may save or spill

Your own thing; worketh after your will.

There may no thing, god so my soul save, 

Liken to you that may displease me;

Ne I desire no thing for to have,

Ne dread for to lose, save only ye;

This will is in my heart and aye shall be.

No length of time or death may this deface,

Ne change my courage to another place.”

Glad was the marquis of her answering,

But yet he feigned as he were not so;

All dreary was his cheer and his looking

When that he should out of the chamber go.

Soon after this, a furlong way or two,

He privily hath told all his intent

Unto a man, and to his wife him sent.

A manner sergeant was this privy man,

The which that faithful oft he founden had

In things great, and eke such folk well can

Do execution on things bad.

The lord knew well that he him loved and dread;

And when this sergeant wist his lord’s will,

Into the chamber he stalked him full still.

“Madame,” he said, “ye mote forgive it me,

Though I do nothing to which I am constrained;

Ye be so wise that full well know ye

That lord’s hests may not be y-feigned;

They may well be bewailed or complained,

But men mote need unto their lust obey,

And so will I; there is no more to say.

This child I am commanded for to take”—

And spake no more, but out the child he hent

Despitously, and ’gan a cheer make  

As though he would have slain it ere he went.

Grisildis mote all sufferen and all consent;

And as a lamb she sitteth meek and still,

And let this cruel sergeant do his will.

Suspicious was the defame of this man,

Suspect his face, suspect his word also;

Suspect the time in which he this began.

Alas! her daughter that she loved so

She wend he would have slain it right tho.

But natheless she neither wept nor sighed,

Consenting her to that the marquis liked.

But at last to speaken she began,

And meekly she to the sergeant prayed,

So as he was a worthy gentle man,

That she must kiss her child ere that it died;

And in her barm this little child she laid   

With full staid face, and ’gan the child to kiss,

And lulled it, and after ’gan it bless.

And thus she said in her benign voice,

“Farewell, my child; I shall thee never see;

But, sith I thee have marked with the cross,

Of thilk father blessed mote thou be,

That for us died upon a cross of tree.

Thy soul, little child, I him betake,

For this night shalt thou dien for my sake.”

trow that to a nourish in this case,  

It had been hard this ruth for to see;

Well might a mother then have cried “alas!”

But natheless so staid steadfast was she,

That she endured all adversity,

And to the sergeant meekly she said,

“Have here again your little young maid.

Goeth now,” quoth she, “and doeth my lord’s hest;

But one thing will I pray you of your grace,

That, but my lord forbade you, at least

Burieth this little body in some place

That beasts ne no birds it to-race.”   

But he no word will to that purpose say,

But took the child and went upon his way.

This sergeant came unto his lord again,

And of Grisildis’ words and her cheer

He told him point for point, in short and plain,

And him presenteth with his daughter dear.

Somewhat this lord hath ruth in his manner;

But natheless his purpose held he still,

As lords do, when they will have their will;

And bade his sergeant that he privily

Should this child soft wind and wrap

With all circumstances tenderly,

And carry it in a coffer or in a lap;

But, upon pain his head off for to swap,

That no man should know of his intent,

Ne whence he came, ne whither that he went;

But at Bologna to his sister dear,

That thilk time of Panik was countess,

He should it take and show her this matter,

Beseeching her to do her business

This child to foster in all gentilesse;

And whose child that it was he bade her hide

From every wight, for ought that may betide.

This sergeant goeth, and hath fulfilled this thing;

But to the marquis now return we;

For now goeth he full fast imagining

If by his wife’s cheer he might see,

Or by her word a-perceive that she

Were changed; but he never her could find

But ever in one alike staid and kind.

As glad, as humble, as busy in service,

And eke in love as she was wont to be,

Was she to him in every manner wise;

Ne of her daughter not a word spake she.

No accident for no adversity

Was seen in her, ne never her daughter name

Ne named she, in earnest nor in game.

..

Explicit tercia pars.

Sequitur pars quarta.

..

In this state there passed be four year

Ere she with child was; but, as god would,

A knave child she bear by this Walter,

Full gracious and fair for to behold.

And when that folk it to his father told,

Not only he, but all his country, merry

Was for this child, and god they thank and hery 

When it was two years old, and from the breast

Departed of his nourish, on a day  

This marquis caught yet another lest

To tempt his wife yet ofter, if he may.

O needless was she tempted in assay!

But wedded men ne know no measure,

When that they find a patient creature.

Wife,” quoth this marquis, “ye have heard ere this,

My people sickly beareth our marriage,

And namely, sith my son y-born is;

Now is it worse than ever in all our age.

The murmur slayeth mine heart and my courage;

For to mine ears cometh the voice so smart,

That it well nigh destroyed hath mine heart.

Now say they thus: ‘when Walter is a-gone,

Then shall the blood of Janicle succeed

And be our lord, for other have we none.’

Such words saith my people, out of dread.

Well ought I of such murmur taken heed,

For certainly I dread such sentence,

Though they not plain speak in mine audience.

I would live in peace, if that I might;

Wherefore I am disposed outrightly,

As I his sister served by night,

Right so think I to serve him privily;

This warn I you, that ye not suddenly

Out of yourself for no woe should outray;  

Beeth patient, and thereof I you pray.”

“I have,” quoth she, “said thus, and ever shall,

I will nothing, ne nill nothing, certain,

But as you list; naught grieveth me at all,

Though that my daughter and my son be slain,

At your commandment, this is to sayn.

I have not had no part of children twain

But first sickness, and after woe and pain.

Ye be our lord; doeth with your own thing

Right as you list; asketh no rede at me.

For as I left at home all my clothing,

When I first came to you, right so,” quoth she,

“Left all my will and all my liberty,

And took your clothing; wherefore I you pray,

Doeth your pleasance, I will your lust obey.

And certes, if I had prescience

Your will to know ere ye your lust me told,

I would it do withouten negligence;

But now I wot your lust and what ye would,

All your pleasance firm and stable I hold;

For wist I that my death would do you ease,

Right gladly would I dien, you to please.

Death may not make no comparison

Unto your love:” and, when this marquis say

The constance of his wife, he cast a-down

His eyen two, and wondereth that she may

In patience suffer all this array.

And forth he goeth with dreary countenance,

But to his heart it was full great pleasance.

This ugly sergeant, in the same wise

That he her daughter caught, right so he,

Or worse, if men worse can devise,

Hath hent her son, that full was of beauty. 

And ever in one so patient was she,

That she no cheer made of heaviness,

But kissed her son, and after ’gan it bless;

Save this, she prayed him that, if he might,

Her little son he would in earth grave,

His tender limbs, delicate to sight,

From fowls and from beasts for to save.

But she no answer of him might have.

He went his way, as him no thing ne rought;

But to Bologna he tenderly it brought.

This marquis wondereth, ever longer the more

Upon her patience, and if that he

Ne had soothly known therebefore

That perfectly her children loved she,

He would have wend that of some subtlety,

And of malice, or for cruel courage,

That she had suffered this with staid visage.

But well he knew that next himself, certain,

She loved her children best in every wise.

But now of women would I asken fain,

If these assays might not suffice?

What could a sturdy husband more devise

To prove her wifehood and her steadfastness,

And he continuing ever in sturdiness?

But there be folk of such condition,

That, when they have a certain purpose take,

They can not stint of their intention,

But, right as they were bounden to a stake,

They will not of that first reason slake.

Right so this marquis fully hath purposed

To tempt his wife, as he was first disposed.

He waiteth, if by word or countenance

That she to him was changed of courage;

But never could he find variance;

She was aye one in heart and in visage;

And aye the further that she was in age,

The more true, if that it were possible,

She was to him in love, and more penible.

For which it seemed thus, that of ’em two

There nas but one will, for, as Walter lest,

The same lust was her pleasance also,

And, god be thanked, all fell for the best.

She showed well, for no worldly unrest

A wife, as of herself, nothing ne should

Will in effect, but as her husband would.

The slander of Walter oft and wide spread,

That of a cruel heart he wickedly,

For he a povre woman wedded had,

Hath murdered both his children privily.

Such murmur was among ’em commonly.

No wonder is, for to the people’s ear

There came no word but that they murdered were.

For which, whereas his people there before

Had loved him well, the slander of his defame

Made ’em that they him hated therefore;

To be a murderer is an hateful name.

But natheless, for earnest ne for game

He of his cruel purpose nould stint;

To tempt his wife was set all his intent.

When that his daughter twelve year was of age,

He to the court of Rome, in subtle wise

Informed of his will, sent his message,

Commanding ’em such bulls to devise

As to his cruel purpose may suffice,

How that the pope, as for his people’s rest,

Bade him to wed another, if him lest.

say, he had that they should counterfeit

The pope’s bulls, making mention

That he hath leave his first wife to let,

As by the pope’s dispensation,

To stint rancor and dissention

Betwixt his people and him; thus said the bull,

The which they have publiced at full.

The rude people, as it no wonder is,

Wenden full well that it had been right so;

But when these tidings came to Grisildis,

I deem that her heart was full woe.

But she, alike staid for evermo’,

Disposed was, this humble creature,

The adversity of fortune all t’endure.

Abiding ever his lust and his pleasance,

To whom that she was given, heart and all,

As to her very worldly sufficience;

But shortly if this story I tellen shall,

This marquis written hath in special

A letter, in which he showeth his intent,

And secrely he to Bologna it sent.

To the earl of Panik, which that had tho

Wedded his sister, prayed he specially

To bringen home again his children two

In honourable state all openly.

But one thing he him prayed outrightly,

That he no wight, though men would enquire,

Should not tell, whose children that they were,

But say, the maiden should y-wedded be,

Unto the marquis of Saluzzo anon.

And as this earl was prayed, so did he;

For at day set he on his way is gone

Toward Saluzzo, and lords many one,

In rich array, this maiden for to guide;

Her younger brother riding her beside.

Arrayed was toward her marriage

This fresh maid, full of gems clear;

Her brother, which that seven year was of age,

Arrayed eke full fresh in his manner.

And thus in great nobleness and with glad cheer,

Toward Saluzzo shaping their journey,

From day to day they riden in their way.

..

Explicit quarta pars.

Sequitur quinta pars.

..

Among all this, after his wick usage,

This marquis, yet his wife to tempt more

To the utmost proof of her courage,

Fully to have experience and lore

If that she were as steadfast as before,

He on a day in open audience

Full boisterously hath said her this sentence:

“Certes, Grisilde, I had enough pleasance

To have you to my wife for your goodness,

As for your truth and for your obeisance,

Not for your lineage ne for your richesse;

But now know I in very soothfastness

That in great lordship, if I well advise,

There is great servitude in sundry wise.

I may not do as every ploughman may;

My people me constraineth for to take

Another wife, and cryen day by day;

And eke the pope, rancour for to slake,

Consenteth it, that dare I undertake;

And truly thus much I will you say,

My new wife is coming by the way.

Be strong of heart, and void anon her place,

And thilk dower that ye broughten me

Take it again, I grant it of my grace;

Returneth to your father’s house,” quoth he;

“No man may alway have prosperity;

With even heart I rede you t’endure

The stroke of fortune or of adventure.”

And she answered again in patience,

“My lord,” quoth she, “I wot, and wist alway

How that betwixten your magnificence

And my povert’ no wight can ne may

Maken comparison; it is no nay.

I ne held me never digne in no manner

To be your wife, no, ne your chamberer.

And in this house, there ye me lady made—

The high god take I for my witness,

And also wisely he my soul glade—

I never held me lady ne mistress,

But humble servant to your worthiness,

And ever shall, while that my life may dure,

Aboven every worldly creature.

That ye so long of your benignity

Have holden me in honour and noblay,

Whereas I was not worthy for to be,

That thank I God and you, to whom I pray

Foryield it you, there is no more to say

Unto my father gladly will I wend,

And with him dwell unto my live’s end.

There I was fostered of a child full small,

Till I be dead, my life there will I lead

A widow clean, in body, heart, and all.

For sith I gave to you my maidenhead,   

And am your true wife, it is no dread,

God shield such a lord’s wife to take

Another man to husband or to make.

And of your new wife, god of his grace

So grant you weal and prosperity:

For I will gladly yielden her my place,

In which that I was blissful wont to be,

For sith it liketh you, my lord,” quoth she,

“That whilom weren all mine heart’s rest,

That I shall go, I will go when you lest.

But there as ye me proffer such dower

As I first brought, it is well in my mind

It were my wretched clothes, nothing fair,

The which to me were hard now for to find.

O good god! how gentle and how kind

Ye seemed by your speech and your visage

The day that maked was our marriage!

But sooth is said, algate I find it true—  

For in effect it proved is on me—

Love is not old as when that it is new.

But certes, lord, for no adversity,

To dien in the case, it shall not be

That ever in word or work I shall repent

That I you gave mine heart in whole intent.

My lord, ye wot that, on my father’s place,

Ye did me strip out of my povre wed,

And richly me cladden, of your grace.

To you brought I naught else, out of dread,

But faith and nakedness and maidenhead.

And here again my clothing I restore,

And eke my wedding ring, for evermore.

The remnant of your jewels ready be

Inwith your chamber, dare I safely sayn;

Naked out of my father’s house,” quoth she,

“I came, and naked mote I turn again.

All your pleasance will I followen fain;

But yet I hope it be not your intent

That I smockless out of your palace went.

Ye could not do so dishonest a thing,

That thilk womb in which your children lay

Should, before the people, in my walking,

Be seen all bare; wherefore I you pray,

Let me not like a worm go by the way.

Remember you, mine own lord so dear,

I was your wife, though I unworthy were.

Wherefore, in guerdon of my maidenhead,

Which that I brought, and naught again I bear,

As voucheth safe to give me, to my meed,

But such a smock as I was wont to wear,

That I therewith may wrye the womb of her

That was your wife; and here take I my leave

Of you, mine own lord, lest I you grieve.”

“The smock,” quoth he, “that thou hast on thy back,

Let it be still, and bear it forth with thee.”

But well unneths thilk word he spake,   

But went his way, for ruth and for pity.

Beforn the folk herselfen strippeth she, 

And in her smock, with head and foot all bare,

Toward her father house forth is she fare.

The folk her follow weeping in her way,

And fortune aye they cursen as they gon;

But she from weeping kept her eyen dry,

Ne in this time word ne spake she none.

Her father, that this tiding heard anon,

Curseth the day and time that nature

Shape him to be a live’s creature.

For out of doubt this old povre man

Was ever in suspect of her marriage;

For ever he deemed, sith that it began,

That when the lord fulfilled had his courage,

Him would think it were a disparage

To his estate so low for t’alight,

And voiden her as soon as ever he might.

Against his daughter hastily goeth he,

For he by noise of folk knew her coming,

And with her old coat, as it might be,

He covered her, full sorrowfully weeping;

But on her body might he it not bring,

For rude was the cloth, and more of age

By days fell than at her marriage.

Thus with her father, for a certain space,

Dwelleth this flower of wifely patience,

That neither by her words ne her face

Before the folk, ne eke in her absence,

Ne showed she that her was done offence;

Ne of her high state no remembrance

Ne had she, as by her countenance.

No wonder is, for in her great estate

Her ghost was ever in plain humility;

No tender mouth, no heart delicate,

No pomp, no semblance of royalty,

But full of patient benignity,

Discreet and prideless, aye honourable,

And to her husband ever meek and stable.

Men speak of Job and most for his humbleness,

As clerks, when ’em list, can well indite,

Namely of men, but as in soothfastness,

Though clerks praise women but a lite,

There can no man in humbleness him acquit

As women can, ne can be half so true

As women be, but it befall of new.

..

[Pars Sexta.]

..

From Bologna is this earl of Panik come,

Of which the fame up sprang to more and less,

And to the peoples’ ears all and some

Was couth eke, that a new marquisess   

He with him brought, in such pomp and richesse,

That never was there seen with man’s eye

So noble array in all West Lombardy.

The marquis, which that shape and knew all this,

Ere that this earl was come, sent his message

For thilk seely povre Grisildis;   

And she with humble heart and glad visage,

Not with no swollen thought in her courage,

Came at his hest, and on her knees her set,

And reverently and wisely she him gret.

“Grisild,” quoth he, “my will is outrightly

This maiden, that shall wedded be to me,

Received be tomorrow as royally

As it possible is in mine house to be.

And eke that every wight in his degree

Have his estate in sitting and service

And high pleasance, as I can best devise.

I have no women sufficient certain

The chambers for t’array in ordinance

After my lust, and therefore would I fain

That thine were all such manner governance;

Thou knowest eke of old all my pleasance;

Though thine array be bad and evil besay,

Do thou thy devoir at the least way.”

“Not only, lord, that I am glad,” quoth she,

“To do your lust, but I desire also

You for to serve and please in my degree

Withouten feinting, and shall evermo’;

Ne never, for no weal ne no woe,

Ne shall the ghost within mine heart stint

To love you best with all my true intent.”

And with that word she ’gan the house to dight,

And tables for to set, and beds make;

And pained her to do all that she might,

Praying the chamberers, for god’s sake,

To hasten ’em, and fast sweep and shake;

And she, the most servicable of all,

Hath every chamber arrayed and his hall.

Abouten undern ’gan this earl alight, 

That with him brought these noble children tway,

For which the people ran to see the sight

Of their array, so richly besay 

And then at erst amongst ’em they say,

That Walter was no fool, though that him lest

To change his wife, for it was for the best.

For she is fairer, as they deemen all,

Than is Grisild, and more tender of age,

And fairer fruit between ’em should fall,

And more pleasant, for her high lineage;

Her brother eke so fair was of visage

That ’em to see the people hath caught pleasance,

Commending now the marquis’ governance.—

  “O stormy people! unstaid and ever untrue!

Aye undiscreet and changing as a vane!

Delighting ever in rumour that is new,

For like the moon aye wax ye and wane;

Aye full of clapping, dear enough a jane;

Your doom is false, your constance evil proveth,

A full great fool is he that on you ’lieveth.”

Thus saiden staid folk in that city,

When that the people gazed up and down,

For they were glad, right for the novelty,

To have a new lady of their town.

No more of this make I now mention,

But to Grisilde again will I me ’dress,

And tell her constance and her busyness.—

Full busy was Grisilde in every thing

That to the feast was appurtenant;

Right naught was she abashed of her clothing, 

Though it were rude and somedeal eke to-rent.

But with glad cheer to the gate is went,

With other folk, to greet the marquisess,

And after that doeth forth her business.

With so glad cheer his guests she receiveth,

And cunningly, everich in his degree,

That no default no man a-perceiveth,   

But aye they wonderen what she might be

That in so povre array was for to see,

And could such honour and reverence;

And worthily they praisen her prudence.

In all this meanwhile she ne stint

This maid and eke her brother to commend

With all her heart, in full benign intent,

So well, that no man could her price amend.

But at last, when that these lords wend

To sitten down to meat, he ’gan to call

Grisilde, as she was busy in his hall.

“Grisilde,” quoth he, as it were in his play,

“How liketh thee my wife and her beauty?”

“Right well,” quoth she, “my lord; for, in good fay,

A fairer saw I never none than she.

I pray to god give her prosperity;

And so hope I that he will to you send

Pleasance enough unto your lives end.

One thing beseech I you, and warn also,

That ye ne prick with no tormenting

This tender maiden, as ye have done mo’;

For she is fostered in her nourishing 

More tenderly, and, to my supposing,

She could not adversity endure

As could a povre fostered creature.”

And when this Walter saw her patience,

Her glad cheer and no malice at all,

And he so oft had done to her offence,

And she aye staid and constant as a wall,

Continuing ever her innocence overall,

This sturdy marquis ’gan his heart ’dress

To ruen upon her wifely steadfastness.

“This is enough, Grisilde mine,” quoth he,

“Be now no more aghast ne evil apaid 

I have thy faith and thy benignity,

As well as ever woman was, assayed,

In great estate and povrely arrayed.

Now know I, dear wife, thy steadfastness,”—

And her in arms took and ’gan her kiss.

And she for wonder took of it no keep;

She heard not what thing he to her said;

She faired as she had start out of a sleep,

Till she out of her ’mazedness abraid.

“Grisilde,” quoth he, “by god that for us died,

Thou art my wife, ne none other I have,

Ne never had, as god my soul save!

This is thy daughter which thou hast supposed

To be my wife; that other faithfully

Shall be mine heir, as I have aye purposed;

Thou bear him in thy body truly.

At Bologna have I kept ’em privily;

Take ’em again, for now mayest thou not say

That thou hast lorn none of thy children tway 

And folk that otherwise have said of me,

I warn ’em well that I have done this deed

For no malice ne for no cruelty,

But for t’assay in thee thy womanhood,

And not to slayen my children, god forbid!

But for to keep ’em privily and still,

Till I thy purpose knew and all thy will.”

When she this heard, a-swoon down she falleth

For piteous joy, and after her swooning

She both her young children to her calleth,

And in her arms, piteously weeping,

Embaceth ’em, and tenderly kissing

Full like a mother, with her salt tears

She bathed both her visage and her hairs.

O, which a piteous thing it was to see

Her swooning, and her humble voice to hear!

“Grant mercy, lord, that thank I you,” quoth she,

“That ye have saved me my children dear!

Now reck’ I never to be dead right here;

Sith I stand in your love and in your grace,

No force of death, ne when my spirit pace!

O tender, o dear, o young children mine,

Your woeful mother wend steadfastly

That cruel hounds or some foul vermin 

Had eaten you; but god, of his mercy,

And your benign father tenderly

Hath done you kept,” and in that same stound

All suddenly she swept a-down to ground.

And in her sough so staidly holdeth she

Her children two, when she ’gan ’em t’embrace,

That with great sleight and great difficulty

The children from her arm they gon a-race.

O many a tear on many a piteous face 

Down ran of ’em that stooden her beside;

Unneth abouten her might they abide.  

Walter her gladdeth and her sorrow slaketh;

She riseth up, amazed, from her trance,

And every wight her joy and feast maketh,

Till she hath caught again her countenance.

Walter her doeth so faithfully pleasance,

That it was dainty for to see the cheer 

Betwixt ’em two, now they be met y-fair.

These ladies, when that they their time say,

Have taken her and into chamber gone,

And strippen her out of her rude array,

And in a cloth of gold that bright shone,

With a crown of many a rich stone

Upon her head, they into hall her brought,

And there was she honoured as her ought.

Thus hath this piteous day a blissful end,

For every man and woman doeth his might

This day in mirth and revel to expend

Till on the welkin shone the stars light.

For more solemn in every man’s sight 

This feast was, and greater of costage,

Than was the revel of their marriage.

Full many a year in high prosperity

Liven these two in concord and in rest,

And richly her daughter married he 

Unto a lord, one of the worthiest

Of all Itail; and then in peace and rest

His wife’s father in his court he keepeth,

Till that the soul out of his body creepeth.

His son succeedeth on his heritage

In rest and peace, after his father day,

And fortunate was eke in marriage,

All put he not his wife in great assay.

This world is not so strong, it is no nay,

As it hath been in old times yore,

And harkneth what this author saith therefore.

This story is said, not for that wives should

Followen Grisilde as in humility,

For it were importable, though they would;

But for that every wight, in his degree,

Should be constant in adversity

As was Grisilde; therefore Petrarch writeth

This story, which with high style he inditeth.

For, sith a woman was so patient

Unto a mortal man, well more us ought 

Receiven all in ’gree that god us sent;

For great skill is, he prove that he wrought.   

But he ne tempteth no man that he bought,

As saith saint Jame, if ye his ’pistle read;

He proveth folk all day, it is no dread,

And suffereth us, as for our exercise,

With sharp scourges of adversity

Full oft to be beat in sundry wise;

Not for to know our will, for certes he,

Ere we were born, knew all our frailty;

And for our best is all his governance;

Let us then live in virtuous sufferance.

..

– – – 

..

But one word, lordings, harkneth ere I go:—

It were full hard to find nowadays 

In all a town Grisildis three or two;

For if that they were put to such assays,

The gold of ’em hath now so bad alloys

With brass, that though the coin be fair at eye,

It would rather burst a-two than ply.

For which here, for the wife’s love of Bath—

Whose life and all her sect god maintain

In high mastery, and else were it scathe,

I will with lusty heart fresh and green

Sing you a song to glad you, I ween,

And let us stint of earnestful matter: –

Harkeneth my song, that saith in this manner.

..

L’envoy de Chaucer.

..

Grisilde is dead, and eke her patience,

And both at once buried in Itail;

For which I cry in open audience,

No wedded man so hardy be t’assail

His wife’s patience, in hope to find

Grisildes, for in certain he shall fail!

O noble wives, full of high prudence,

Let no humility your tongue nail,

Ne let no clerk have cause or diligence

To write of you a story of such marvail

As of Grisildis patient and kind;

Lest Chichevache you swallow in her entrail!

Followeth Echo, that holdeth no silence,

But ever answereth at the countertail 

Beeth not bedaffed for your innocence,

But sharply take on you the governail.  

Imprinteth well this lesson in your mind,

For common profit, sith it may avail.  

Ye archwives, standeth at defence,

Since ye be strong as is a great camaille;

Ne suffreth not that men you do offence.

And slender wives, feeble as in battaille,

Both eager as is a tiger yond in Inde;

Aye clappeth as a mill, I you counsaille.

Ne dread ’em not; do ’em no reverence;

For though thine husband armed be in mail,

The arrows of thy crabbed eloquence

Shall pierce his breast and eke his aventail;

In jealousy I rede eke thou him bind,

And thou shall make him couch as doth a quail.

If thou be fair, there folk be in presence

Show thou thy visage and thine apparaille;

If thou be foul, be free of thy dispense,

To get thee friends aye do thy travail;

Be aye of cheer as light as leaf on lind,

And let him care, and weep, and wring, and wail!

Here endeth the Clerk of Oxford his Tale.