| sig: [C5v] | |
| ref.ed: 214 | |
Here-after foloweth the boke called
Elynour Rummynge
.
sig:
[C6]
¶The tunnyng of Elynour Rummyng. Per
Skelton Laureat.
|
|
| TEll you I chyll | |
| If that ye wyll | |
| A whyle be styll | |
| Of a comely gyll | |
| 5 | That dwelt on a hyll |
| But she is not gryll | |
| For she is somwhat sage | |
| And well worne in age | |
| For her vysage | |
| 10 | It woldt a ####ab#### swage |
| A mannes courage | |
| ¶Her lothely lere | |
| Is nothynge clere | |
| But vgly of chere | |
| 15 | Droupy and drowsy |
| Scuruy and lowsy | |
| ref.ed: 215 | |
| Her face all bowsy | |
| Comely crynklyd | |
| Woundersly wrynklyd | |
| 20 | Lyke a rost pygges-eare |
| Brystled with here | |
| ¶Her lewde lyppes twayne | |
| They slauer men sayne | |
| Lyke a ropy rayne | |
| 25 | A gummy glayre |
| sig: [C6v] | |
| She is vgly fayre | |
| Her nose somdele hoked | |
| And camously croked | |
| Neuer stoppynge | |
| 30 | But euer droppynge |
| Her skynne lose and slacke | |
| Greuyned lyke a sacke Greuyned] Grained D, M | |
| With a croked backe | |
| ¶Her eyen gowndy | |
| 35 | Are full vnsowndy |
| For they are blered | |
| And she gray-hered | |
| Iawed lyke a Ietty | |
| A man wolde haue pytty | |
| 40 | To se howe she is gumbed |
| Fyngered and thumbed | |
| Gently Ioynted | |
| Gresed and anoynted | |
| Up to the knockles | |
| 45 | The bones [of] her huckels of] L, K, D, M omit; huckels] buckels D, M |
| Lyke as they were with buckels Lyke as they were with buckels] D, M omit | |
| Togyder made fast | |
| Her youth is farre past | |
| Foted lyke a plane | |
| 50 | Legge[d] lyke a crane Legged] Legges L, K, D, M |
| And yet she wyll iet | |
| Lyke a Ioyly fet | |
| In her furred flocket | |
| And graye russet rocket | |
| 55 | With symper-the-cocket |
| Her huke of Lyncole-grene | |
| sig: [C7] | |
| It had ben hers I wene | |
| ref.ed: 216 | |
| More then fourty yere | |
| And so doth it apere doth it] it dothe D, M | |
| 60 | For the grene bare thredes For] And D, M |
| Loke lyke sere wedes | |
| Wyddered lyke hay | |
| The woll wor[n]e away | |
| And yet I dare saye | |
| 65 | She thynketh her-selfe gaye |
| Upon the holy-daye | |
| Whan she doth her aray | |
| And gyrdeth in her gytes | |
| Stytched and pranked with pletes | |
| 70 | Her kyrtell Brystowe-red |
| With clothes vpon her hed | |
| That wey a sowe of led That wey] That they wey K, D, M | |
| Wrythen in wonder wyse in] in a D, M | |
| After the sarasyns gyse | |
| 75 | With a whym-wham |
| Knyt with a trym-tram | |
| Upon her brayne-pan | |
| Lyke an Egypcyan | |
| Lapped about Lapped] Capped K, D, M | |
| 80 | Whan she goeth out |
| Her-selfe for to shewe | |
| She dryueth downe the dewe | |
| With a payre of heles | |
| As brode as two wheles | |
| 85 | She hobles as she gose she gose] a gose D, M |
| With her blanket hose | |
| Ouer the falowe | |
| sig: [C7v] | |
| Her shone smered wyth talowe | |
| Gresed vpon dyrt | |
| 90 | That baudeth her skyrt |
|
Primus passus |
|
| ¶And this comely dame | |
| I vnder ####ab#### stande her name | |
| Is Elynour Rummynge | |
| At home in her wonnynge | |
| 95 | And as men say |
| ref.ed: 217 | |
| She dwelt in Sothray | |
| In a certayne stede | |
| Bysyde Lederhede | |
| She is a tonnysh gyb | |
| 100 | The deuyll and she be syb. |
| ¶But to m[a]ke vp my tale make] mke L | |
| She breweth noppy ale | |
| And maketh there-of port-sale port-sale] pore sale K, D | |
| To trauellars / to tynkers | |
| 105 | To sweters / to swynkers |
| And all good ale-drynkers | |
| That wyll nothynge spare | |
| But drynke tyll they stare | |
| And brynge them-selfe bare | |
| 110 | With now away the mare |
| And let vs sley care | |
| As wyse as an hare | |
| ¶Come who-so wyll | |
| To Elynoure on the hyll | |
| 115 | With fyll the cup fyll |
| And syt there by styll | |
| Erly and late | |
| sig: [C8] | |
| Thyther cometh Kate | |
| Cysly and Sare | |
| 120 | With theyr legges bare |
| And also theyr fete | |
| Hardely full vnswete | |
| With theyr heles dagged | |
| Theyr kyrtelles all to ####ab#### iagged | |
| 125 | Theyr smockes all to ####ab#### ragged |
| Wyth tytters and tatters | |
| Brynge dysshes and platters | |
| With all theyr myght runnynge | |
| To Elynour Rummynge | |
| 130 | To haue of her tunnynge |
| She leneth them on the same on] of D, M | |
| And thus begynneth the game | |
| Some wenches come vnlased vnlased] vnbrased D, M | |
| Some huswyues come vnbrased Some huswyues come vnbrased] D, M omit | |
| 135 | Wyth theyr naked pappes |
| That flyppes and flapp[e]s flappes] flapprs L | |
| ref.ed: 218 | |
| It wygges and it wagges | |
| Lyke tawny saffron-bagges | |
| A sorte of foule drabbes | |
| 140 | All scuruy with scabbes |
| Some be flybytten | |
| Some skewed as a kytten | |
| Some with a sho-clout | |
| Bynde theyr heddes a ####ab#### bout | |
| 145 | Some haue no herelace |
| Theyr lockes aboute theyr face | |
| Theyr tresses vntrust | |
| All full of vnlust | |
| sig: [C8v] | |
| Some loke strawry | |
| 150 | Some cawry-mawry |
| Full vntydy tegges | |
| Lyke rotten egges | |
| Suche a lewde sorte | |
| To Elynour resorte | |
| 155 | From tyde to tyde |
| A ####ab#### byde a ####ab#### byde | |
| And to you shall be tolde | |
| Howe hyr ale is solde | |
| To mawte and to molde | |
|
Secundus passus. |
|
| 160 | Some haue no mony |
| That thyder commy | |
| For theyr ale to pay | |
| That is a shreud aray | |
| Elynour swered nay | |
| 165 | Ye shall not bere awaye |
| Myne ale for nought Myne] My K, D, M | |
| By hym that me bought | |
| ¶With hey dogge hay | |
| Haue these hogges away hogges] dogges D, M | |
| 170 | With get me a staffe |
| The swyne eate my draffe | |
| Stryke the hogges with a clubbe | |
| They haue dronke vp my swyllyng-tubbe | |
| For be there neuer so moche prese | |
| 175 | These swyne go to the hye dese |
| ref.ed: 219 | |
| The sowe with her pygges | |
| The bore his tayle wrygges | |
| His rumpe also he frygges | |
| sig: D[1] | |
| Agaynst the hye benche | |
| 180 | With fo / ther is a stenche |
| Gather vp thou wenche | |
| Seest thou not what is fall | |
| Take vp dyrt and all dyrt] drit K, D, M | |
| And bere out of the hall | |
| 185 | God gyue it yll preuynge |
| Clenly as yuell cheuynge | |
| But let vs turne playne | |
| There we lefte agayne | |
| For as yll a patch as that | |
| 190 | The hennes ron in the mashfat |
| For they go to roust | |
| Streyght ouer the ale-Ioust | |
| And donge whan it commes | |
| In the ale-tunnes | |
| 195 | Than Elynour taketh |
| The mashe-bolle and shaketh | |
| The hennes donge awaye | |
| And skommeth it into a tray into] in D, M | |
| Where-as the yeest is | |
| 200 | With her maungy fystis |
| And somtyme she blennes | |
| The donge of her hennes | |
| And the ale togyder | |
| And sayth gossyp come hyder | |
| 205 | This ale shalbe thycker |
| And floure the more quycker | |
| For I may tell you | |
| I lerned it of a Iewe | |
| Whan I began to brewe | |
| sig: [D1v] | |
| 210 | And I haue found it trew |
| Drinke now whyle it is new | |
| And ye may it broke | |
| It shall make you loke | |
| Yonger than ye be | |
| 215 | Yeres two or thre |
| For ye may proue it by me | |
| ref.ed: 220 | |
| Behold she sayd and se | |
| How bright I am of ble | |
| Ich am not cast away | |
| 220 | That can my husband say |
| Whan we kys and play | |
| In lust and in lykyng | |
| He calleth me his whytyng | |
| His mullyng and his [m]ytyng mytyng] nytyng L, nyting K, nittinge D, nittine M | |
| 225 | His nobbes and his conny |
| His swetyng and his honny | |
| With bas my prety bonny | |
| Thou art worth good and monny | |
| This make I my falyre fonny | |
| 230 | Tyll that he dreme and dronny |
| For after all our sport | |
| Than wyll he rout and s[n]ort | |
| Than swetely togither we ly Than swetely] Thus swete X | |
| As two pygges in a sty. | |
| 235 | ¶To cease me semeth best |
| And of this tale to rest | |
| And for to leue this letter | |
| Bicause it is no better | |
| And bicause it is no swetter | |
| 240 | We wyll no farther ryme |
| sig: D2 | |
| Of it / at this tyme | |
| But we wyll turne playne | |
| Where we left agayne | |
|
Tertius passus |
|
| ¶In-stede of coyne and monny | |
| 245 | Some brynge her a conny |
| And some a pot with honny | |
| Some a salt / and some a spone | |
| Some their hose some their shon[e] shone] shon L | |
| Some ranne a good trot | |
| 250 | With a skellet or a pot |
| Some fyll theyr pot full | |
| Of good Lemster woll | |
| An huswyfe of trust | |
| Whan she is a ####ab#### thrust | |
| ref.ed: 221 | |
| 255 | Suche a webbe can spyn |
| Her thryfte is full thyn | |
| ¶Some go streyght thyder | |
| Be it slaty or slyder | |
| They holde the hye-waye | |
| 260 | They [c]are not what men saye care] eare L |
| Be that as be maye | |
| Some lothe to be espyde | |
| Some start in at the backesyde | |
| Ouer the hedge and pale | |
| 265 | And all for the good al[e] ale] all L, ale K, D, M |
| ¶Some renne tyll they swete | |
| Brynge wyth them malte or whete | |
| And dame Elynour entrete | |
| To byrle them of the best | |
| 270 | Than cometh an-other gest |
| sig: [D2v] | |
| She swered by the rode of Rest | |
| Her lyppes are so drye | |
| Without drynke she must dye | |
| Therefore fyll it by and by | |
| 275 | And haue here a pecke of ry |
| ¶Anone cometh another | |
| As drye as the other | |
| And with her doth brynge | |
| Mele / salte / or other thynge | |
| 280 | Her hernest gyrdle / her weddynge-rynge hernest] haruest D, X |
| To pay for her scot | |
| As cometh to her lot | |
| Some bryngeth her husbandis hood | |
| Bycause the ale is good | |
| 285 | Another brought her his cap |
| To offer to the ale-tap | |
| With flaxe and with towe | |
| And some brought sowre dowe | |
| With hey and with howe | |
| 290 | Syt we downe a ####ab#### rowe |
| And drynke tyll we blowe | |
| And pype tyrly-tyrlowe | |
| Some layde to pledge | |
| Theyr hatchet and theyr wedge | |
| ref.ed: 222 | |
| 295 | Theyr hekell and theyr rele |
| Theyr rocke / theyr spynny[n]g-whele spynnyng] spynnyg L | |
| And some went so narrowe | |
| They layde to pledge theyr wharrowe | |
| Theyr rybskyn and theyr spyndell | |
| 300 | Theyr nedell and theyr thymbell |
| Here was scant thryft | |
| sig: D3 | |
| Whan they made suche shyft | |
| ¶Theyr thrust was so great | |
| They asked neuer for mete | |
| 305 | But drynke styll drynke |
| And let the cat wynke | |
| Let vs wasshe our gommes | |
| From the drye crommes | |
|
Quartus passus |
|
| ¶Some for very nede | |
| 310 | Layde downe a skeyne of threde |
| And some a skeyne of yarne | |
| Some brought from the barne | |
| Both Benes and Pease | |
| Small chaffer doth ease | |
| 315 | Sometyme / now and than |
| Another there was that ran | |
| With a good brasse pan | |
| Her colour was full wan | |
| She ran in all the hast | |
| 320 | Unbrased and vnlast |
| Tawny swart and sallowe sallowe] swallowe K, D, M | |
| Lyke a cake of tallowe | |
| I swere by all-hallowe | |
| It was a sta[l]e to take stale] stare L, K, D, M, stale X | |
| 325 | The deuyll in a brake |
| ¶And than came haltyng Ione | |
| And brought a gambone | |
| Of bakon that was resty | |
| But lorde as she was testy | |
| 330 | Angry as a waspy |
| She began to yane and gaspy began] gan X | |
| sig: [D3v] | |
| And bad Elynour go bet | |
| And fyll in good met met] meate D, M | |
| ref.ed: 223 | |
| It was dere that was far fet | |
| 335 | ¶Another brought a spycke |
| Of a bacon-flycke | |
| Her tonge was very quycke | |
| But she spake som-what thycke | |
| Her felowe dyd stammer and stut | |
| 340 | But she was a foule slut |
| For her mouth fomyd | |
| And her bely groned | |
| Ione sayde she / had eten a fyest | |
| By Chryst sayde she thou lyest | |
| 345 | I haue as swete a breth |
| As thou wyth shamefull deth | |
| ¶Than Elynour sayde / ye calettes | |
| I shall breke your palettes | |
| Wytho[u]t ye now cease | |
| 350 | And so was made the dronken peace |
| Than thydder came dronken Ales | |
| And she was full of tales | |
| Of tydynges in wales | |
| And of saynte Iames in Gales | |
| 355 | And of the Portyngales |
| Wyth lo gossyp I ####ab#### wys | |
| Thus and thus it is | |
| There hath ben greate war | |
| Betwene Temple bar | |
| 360 | And the crosse in chepe |
| And there came an hepe | |
| Of mylstones in a route | |
| sig: D4 | |
| She [spake] thus in her snout spake] speketh L, K, speaketh D, M | |
| Sneuelyng in her nose | |
| 365 | As though she had the pose |
| Lo here is an olde typpet | |
| And ye wyll gyue me a syppet | |
| Of your stale ale | |
| God sende you good sale | |
| 370 | And as she was dr[y]nkynge drynkynge] drnkynge L |
| She fyll in a wynkynge | |
| With a barly hood | |
| She pyst where she stood | |
| Than began she to wepe | |
| ref.ed: 224 | |
| 375 | And forth-with fell on slepe |
| Elyno[u]r toke her vp | |
| And blessed her with a cup | |
| Of newe ale in cornes | |
| Ales founde therin no thornes | |
| 380 | But supped it vp at ones |
| She founde therein no bones bones] bornes D | |
|
Quintus passus. |
|
| Nowe in cometh another rabell | |
| First one with a ladell | |
| Another with a cradell | |
| 385 | And with a syde-sadell |
| And there began a fabell | |
| A clatterynge and a babell babell] batell X | |
| Of [a] foles fylly a] L, K, D, M omit; fylly] silly M | |
| That had a fole w[i]th wylly with] wfth L | |
| 390 | With iast you / and gup gylly |
| She coulde not lye stylly | |
| Then came in a ge[n]et | |
| sig: [D4v] | |
| And sware by saynt Benet | |
| I dranke not this sennet | |
| 395 | A draught to my pay |
| Elynour I the pray | |
| Of thyne ale let vs assaye | |
| And haue here a pylche of graye | |
| I were skynnes of conny | |
| 400 | That causeth I loke so donny |
| Another than dyd hyche her hyche] hye X | |
| And brought a pottell-pycher | |
| A tonnell / and a bottell | |
| But she had lost the stoppell | |
| 405 | She cut of her sho-sole |
| And stopped there with the hole | |
| ¶Amonge all the blommer | |
| Another brought a skommer | |
| A fryenge-pan and a slyce | |
| 410 | Elynour made the pryce |
| For god ale eche whyt | |
| ¶Than sterte in made kyt made] mad K, D, M | |
| ref.ed: 225 | |
| That had lytell wyt | |
| She semed somdele seke | |
| 415 | And brought a peny-cheke brought] brought vp D, M |
| To dame Elynour | |
| For a draught of [her] lycour her] L, K, D, M omit | |
| ¶Than Margery mylke ducke | |
| Her kyrtell she dyd vptucke | |
| 420 | An y[n]che aboue her kne |
| Her legges that ye myght se ye] he X | |
| But they were sturdy and stubbed stubbed] stubbled K, D, M | |
| Myghty pestels and clubbed | |
| sig: D5 | |
| As fayre and as whyte | |
| 425 | As the fote of a kyte |
| She was somwhat foule | |
| Croke-ne[bb]ed lyke an oule Croke nebbed] Croke necked L, K, D, M | |
| And yet she brought her fees | |
| A cantell of Essex chese | |
| 430 | Was well a fote thycke |
| Full of magottes quycke | |
| It was huge and greate | |
| And myghty stronge meate | |
| For the deuyll to eate | |
| 435 | It was tart and punyete |
| Another sorte of sluttes | |
| Some brought walnuttes | |
| Some apples / some peres | |
| Some brought theyr clyppyng-sheres | |
| 440 | Some brought this and that |
| Some brought I wote nere what | |
| Some brought theyr husbands hat | |
| Some podynges and lynkes | |
| Some trypes that stynkes stynkes] stynges K | |
| 445 | ¶But of all this thronge |
| One came them amonge | |
| She semed halfe a leche | |
| And began to preche | |
| Of the tewsday in the weke | |
| 450 | Whan the mare doth keke |
| Of the vertue of an vnset leke | |
| Of her husbandes breke | |
| ref.ed: 226 | |
| With the feders of a quale | |
| She could to burdeo[u] sayle burdeou] burde on L, K, bourde on D, M | |
| sig: [D5v] | |
| 455 | And with good ale-barme |
| She could make a charme | |
| To helpe with-all a stytch | |
| She semed to be a wytch | |
| Another brought two goslynges | |
| 460 | That were noughty froslynges |
| She brought them in a wallet She] Some D, M | |
| She was a cumly callet | |
| The goslenges were vntyde | |
| Elynor began to chyde | |
| 465 | They be wretchockes thou hast brought They] The D |
| They are shyre shakyng nought | |
|
Se[xt]us Sextus] Secundus L, K, D, Sextus M passus.
|
|
| ¶Maude Ruggy / thyther skypped | |
| She was vgly-hypped | |
| And vgly thycke-lypped | |
| 470 | Like an onyon syded |
| Lyke tan ledder hyded | |
| She had her so guyded | |
| Betwene the cup and the wall | |
| That she was there-with-all | |
| 475 | In-to a palsey fall |
| With that her hed shaked | |
| And her handes quaked | |
| Ones hed wold haue aked | |
| To se her naked | |
| 480 | She dranke so of the dr[e]gges dregges] dragges L, K, D, dregges M |
| The dropsy was in her legges | |
| Her face glystryng lyke glas | |
| All foggy fat she was | |
| She had also the gout | |
| sig: [D6] | |
| 485 | In all her ioyntes about |
| Her breth was soure and stale | |
| And smelled all of ale | |
| Such a bedfellaw | |
| Wold make one cast his craw | |
| 490 | But yet for all that |
| She dranke on the mash-fat | |
| ref.ed: 227 | |
| There came an old rybybe | |
| She halted of a kybe | |
| And had broken her shyn | |
| 495 | At the threshold comyng in |
| And fell so wyde open | |
| That one might se her token | |
| The deuyll there-on be wroken | |
| What nede all this be spoken | |
| 500 | She yelled lyke a calfe |
| Ryse vp on gods halfe | |
| Sayd Elynour Rummyng | |
| I be ####ab#### shrew the for thy cummyng | |
| And as she at her dyd p[lu]ck And] D, M omit; pluck] pulck L | |
| 505 | Quake / quake / sayd the duck |
| In that lampatrams lap | |
| With fy / couer thy shap thy] the K, D, M | |
| With sum flyp-flap | |
| God gyue it yll hap | |
| 510 | Sayd Elynour / for shame |
| Lyke an honest dame | |
| Up she stert / halfe lame | |
| And skantly could go | |
| For payne and for wo | |
| 515 | ¶In came another dant |
| sig: [D6v] | |
| With a gose and a gant | |
| She had a wyde wesant wyde] wyse K | |
| She was nothynge plesant | |
| Necked lyke an Olyfa[n]t | |
| 520 | It was a bullyfant |
| A gredy cormerant | |
| Another brought her garlyke-heddes | |
| Another brought her bedes | |
| Of Iet or of cole | |
| 525 | To offer to the ale-pole |
| Some brought a wymble | |
| Some brought a thymble | |
| Some brought a sylke lace | |
| Some brought a pyncase | |
| 530 | Some her husbandes gowne |
| Some a pyllowe of downe | |
| Some of the napery | |
| ref.ed: 228 | |
| And all this shyfte they make | |
| For the good ale sake | |
| 535 | ¶A strawe sayde Bele stande vtter |
| For we haue egges and butter | |
| And of pygeons a payre | |
| ¶Than sterte forth a fysgygge | |
| And she brought a bore-pygge | |
| 540 | The fleshe there-of was ranke |
| And her brethe strongely stanke | |
| Yet or she went she dranke | |
| And gat her great thanke | |
| Of Elynour for her ware | |
| 545 | That she thyder bare |
| To pay for her share | |
| sig: [D7] | |
| Nowe truly to my thynkynge | |
| This is a solempne drynkynge | |
|
Septimus passus |
|
| ¶Soft quod one hyght Sybbyll hyght] high D, M | |
| 550 | And let me with you bybyll |
| She sat downe in the place | |
| With a sory face | |
| Whey-wormed about | |
| Garnysshed was her s[n]out | |
| 555 | With here and there a puscull |
| Lyke a scabbyd muscull | |
| This ale sayd she is noppy | |
| Let vs syppe and soppy | |
| And not spyll a droppy | |
| 560 | For so mote I hoppy |
| It coleth well my croppy croppy] coppy D, M | |
| ¶Dame Elyno[u]r sayde she | |
| Haue here is for me | |
| A clout of London pynnes | |
| 565 | And with that she begynnes |
| The pot to her plucke | |
| And dranke a good lucke | |
| She swynged vp a quarte swynged] swinge M | |
| At ones for her parte | |
| 570 | Her paunche was so puffed |
| ref.ed: 229 | |
| And so with ale stuffed | |
| Had she not hyed a ####ab#### pace | |
| She had defoyled the place | |
| ¶Tha[n] began the sporte | |
| 575 | Amonge that dronken sorte |
| Dame Elynour sayde they | |
| sig: [D7v] | |
| Lende here a cocke of hey | |
| To make all-thynge cleane | |
| Ye wote well what we meane | |
| 580 | ¶But syr amonge all |
| That sate in that hall | |
| There was a prycke-me-denty | |
| Sat lyke a seynty | |
| And began to paynty | |
| 585 | As though she wolde faynty |
| She made it as koye | |
| As a lege-[de]-moy lege de moy] lege moy L, K, lege demoy D, M | |
| She was not halfe so wyse | |
| As she was peuysshe nyse | |
| 590 | She sayde neuer a worde |
| But rose from the borde | |
| And called for our dame | |
| Elynour by name | |
| We supposed I ####ab#### wys | |
| 595 | That she rose to pys |
| But the very grounde | |
| Was for to compound | |
| With Elynour in the spence | |
| To paye for her expence | |
| 600 | I haue no penny nor grote |
| To pay[e] sayde she / god wote paye] payc L | |
| For wasshyng of my throte | |
| But my bedes of amber | |
| Bere them to your chamber | |
| 605 | ¶Than Elynour dyd them hyde |
| Within her beddes-syde | |
| But some than sate ryght sad | |
| sig: [D8] | |
| That nothynge had | |
| There of their awne | |
| 610 | Neyther gelt nor pawne |
| ref.ed: 230 | |
| Suche were there menny | |
| That had not a penny | |
| But whan they shulde walke | |
| Were fayne with a chalke | |
| 615 | To score on the balke |
| Or score on the tayle | |
| God gyue it yll hayle | |
| For my fyngers ytche fyngers] fynger K | |
| I haue wrytten to mytche | |
| 620 | Of this mad mummy[n]ge mummynge] mummyge L |
| Of Elynour Rummynge | |
| Thus endeth the gest | |
| Of this worthy fest. | |
|
Q[u]od Skelton Laureat. |
|
|
¶La[u]r[e]ati Laureati] Laurrati L
Skeltonidis in despectu malignantium disticon.
|
|
| QUamuis insanis / quamuis marcescis inanis | |
| Inuidi cantam[u]s / hec loca plena [i]ocis iocis] locis L, K, D, M | |
| ¶Bien men souuient. | |
| OMnes (feminas que uel nimis bibule sunt / uel que sordida labe squaloris / aut qua spurca feditatis macula / aut verbosa loqua[c]itateloquacitate] loquatitate L notantur) Poeta inuitat ad audiendum hunc libellum. etc. | |
| sig: [D8v] | |
| Ebria / squalida / sordida femina / prodiga verbis | |
| Huc currat / properet veniat sua gesta libellus | |
| Iste volutabit: pean sua plectra sonando | |
| Materiam risus cantabit carmine rauco | |
| Finis. Quod Skelton Laureat. | |
| ¶Thus endethe these lytell workes compyled by mayster Skelton Poet Laureat. And prynted by Rychard Lant / for Henry Tab / dwellyng in Poules churche-yard at the sygne of Iudith |