| sig: [A1] | |
| ¶Here-after foloweth a lytell boke, whiche hath to name, why come ye nat to courte, compyled by mayster Skelton poete Laureate. | |
| sig: [A1v] [page blank in K, Kit, but woodcut in T] | |
| sig: [A2] | |
| Ringler, TP 2055, describes this as a carol and gives pub. details | |
| ¶All noble men of this take hede of this] R omits | |
| And beleue it as your Crede. | |
| TO hasty of sentence | |
| To ferce for none offence | |
| To scarce of your expence | |
| To large in neglygence | |
| ref.ed: 279 | |
| 5 | To slacke in recompence |
| To haute in excellence | |
| To lyght intellegence lyght] lyght of R | |
| And to lyght in credence | |
| Where these kepe resydence | |
| 10 | Reson is banysshed thence |
| And also dame prudence | |
| With sober sapyence | |
| All noble men .etc. | |
| ¶Than witho[u]t collusyon | |
| Marke well this conclusyon | |
| 15 | Through suche abusyon |
| And by suche Illusyon | |
| Unto great confusyon | |
| A noble man may fall | |
| And his honour appall | |
| 20 | And yf ye thynke this shall |
| Not rubbe you on the gall you] hym R | |
| Than the deuyll take all | |
| .etc. | |
| Hec vates ille, de quo loquntur mille | |
| sig: [A2v] | |
| K misnumbers as A2 | |
| ¶Why come ye nat to court? | |
| FOr age is a page | |
| For the courte full vnmete | |
| For age can nat rage | |
| 5 | Nor basse her swete swete |
| But whan age seeth that rage | |
| Dothe aswage and refrayne | |
| Than wyll age haue a corage | |
| To come to court agayne | |
| 10 | But |
| Helas / sage ouerage | |
| So madly decayes So] To T, Kit, M | |
| That age for dottage | |
| ref.ed: 280 | |
| Is reconed now-adayes reconed] recouered T, Kit, M | |
| 15 | Thus age a graunt domage a] Kit, M omit |
| Is nothynge set by | |
| And rage in a ####ab#### rerage | |
| Dothe rynne lamentably | |
| So | |
| 20 | That rage must make pyllage |
| To catche that catche may | |
| And with suche forage | |
| Hunte the boskage | |
| sig: [A3] | |
| That hartes wyll ronne away | |
| 25 | Bothe hartes and hyndes |
| With all good myndes | |
| Fare-well / than haue good day | |
| ¶Than haue good daye a ####ab#### dewe | |
| For defaute of rescew | |
| 30 | Some men may happely rew |
| And some theyr hedes mew some] T, Kit, M omit | |
| The tyme dothe fast ensew | |
| That bales begynne to brew | |
| I drede by swete Iesu | |
| 35 | This tale will be to trew |
| In faythe dycken thou krew | |
| In fayth dicken thou krew .etc. | |
| DIcken / thou krew doutlesse | |
| For trewly to expresse | |
| 40 | There hath ben moche excesse |
| With banketynge braynlesse | |
| With ryotynge rechelesse | |
| With gambaudynge thryftlesse | |
| With spende / and wast witlesse | |
| sig: [A3v] | |
| 45 | Treatinge of trewse restlesse |
| Pratynge for peace peaslesse | |
| The countrynge at Cales The] They K, T, Kit, M | |
| Wrang vs on the [m]ales males] wales K, T, Kit, M | |
| Chefe counselour was carlesse | |
| 50 | Gronynge grouchyng gracelesse |
| And to none entente | |
| ref.ed: 281 | |
| Our talwod is all brent | |
| Our fagottes are all spent | |
| We may blowe at the cole | |
| 55 | Our mare hath cast her fole |
| And mocke ha[t]h lost her sho hath] harh K | |
| What may she do ther-to | |
| An ende of an olde song | |
| Do ryght and do no wronge do no] no Kit, M | |
| 60 | As ryght as a rammes-horne |
| For thrifte is threde-bare worn | |
| Our shepe are shrewdly shorn | |
| And trouthe is all to ####ab#### torne | |
| Wysdom is laught to skorne | |
| 65 | Fauell is false forsworne |
| Iauell is nobly borne | |
| Hauell and Haruy hafter | |
| sig: [A4] | |
| Iack Trauell and Cole Crafter | |
| We shall here more herafter | |
| 70 | With pollynge and shauynge |
| With borowynge and crauyn[g]e crauynge] crauyne K | |
| With reuynge and rauynge | |
| With swerynge and starynge | |
| There vayleth no resonynge | |
| 75 | For wyll dothe rule all-thynge |
| Wyll / wyll / wyll / wyll / wyll | |
| He ruleth alway styll | |
| Good reason and good skyll | |
| They may garlycke pyll | |
| 80 | Cary sackes to the myll |
| Or pescoddes they may shyll | |
| Or elles go rost a stone | |
| There is no man but one | |
| That hathe the strokes alone | |
| 85 | Be it blacke or whight |
| All that he dothe is ryght | |
| As right as a Cammocke croked | |
| This byll well ouer-loked | |
| Clerely perceuye we may | |
| 90 | There went the hare away |
| sig: [A4v] | |
| The hare / the fox / the gray | |
| ref.ed: 282 | |
| The harte / the hynde / the buck | |
| God sende vs better luck | |
| ¶God sende vs better lucke .etc. | |
| 95 | Twit Andrewe / twit scot scot] scote K, Scot T, Kit, M |
| Ge heme / ge scour thy pot | |
| For we haue spente our shot | |
| We shall haue a tot-quot | |
| From the pope of Rome | |
| 100 | To weue all in one lome |
| A webbe of Lylse-Wulse | |
| Opus male dulce | |
| The deuyll kysse h[i]s cule his] hes K, his T, Kit, M | |
| For whyles he doth rule | |
| 105 | All is warse and warse |
| The deuyll kysse his arse | |
| For whether he blesse or curse | |
| It can not be moche worse | |
| From Baumberow to Bothombar Bothombar] bothambar T, Kit, M | |
| 110 | We haue cast vp our war |
| And mad a worthy trewse mad] made T, Kit, M | |
| With gup leuell-suse | |
| sig: [A5] | |
| Our mony madly lent lent] sent M | |
| And mor madly spent | |
| 115 | From Croydon in-to Kent into] to T, Kit, M |
| Wote ye whyther they went | |
| From wynchelsey to Rye | |
| And all nat worth a flye | |
| From wentbridge to Hull | |
| 120 | Our armye waxeth dull |
| With tourne all home agayne | |
| And neuer a scot slayne | |
| Yet the good erle of Surray | |
| The frenche-men he doth fray | |
| 125 | And vexeth them day by day |
| With all the power he may | |
| The french-men he hath faynted | |
| And mad theyr hertes attaynted | |
| Of cheualry he is the floure | |
| 130 | Our lorde be his soccoure |
| The french-men he hathe so mated | |
| ref.ed: 283 | |
| And theyr courage abated | |
| That they are but halfe-men | |
| Lyke foxes in theyr denne | |
| 135 | Lyke cankerd cowardes all |
| sig: [A5v] | |
| Lyke Urcheons in a stone wall urcheons] heons Kit, M | |
| They kepe them in theyr holdes | |
| Lyke hen-herted cokoldes | |
| ¶But yet they ouer-shote vs | |
| 140 | Wyth crownes and wyth Scut[u]s |
| Wyth Scutis and crownes of golde | |
| I drede we are bought and solde | |
| It is a wonders warke | |
| They shote all at one marke | |
| 145 | At the Cardynals-hat |
| Th[e]y shote all at that They] Thy K, They T, Kit, M | |
| Oute of theyr stronge townes | |
| They shote at him with crownes | |
| With crownes of golde enblased | |
| 150 | They make him so a ####ab#### mased |
| And his eyen so dased | |
| That he ne se can | |
| To know god nor man | |
| He is set so hye | |
| 155 | In his Ierarchy |
| Of frantycke frenesy | |
| And folysshe fantasy | |
| sig: [A6] | |
| That in the chambre of sterres | |
| All maters there he marres | |
| 160 | Clappyng his rod on the borde |
| No man dare speke a worde | |
| For he hathe all the sayenge | |
| With-out any renayenge | |
| He rolleth in his recordes | |
| 165 | He sayth / how saye ye my lordes |
| Is nat my reason good | |
| Good euyn good Robyn hode | |
| Some say yes. And some | |
| Syt styll / as they were dom | |
| 170 | Thus thwartyng ouer thom |
| He ruleth all the roste | |
| ref.ed: 284 | |
| With braggynge and with bost | |
| Borne vp on euery syde | |
| With pompe and with pryde | |
| 175 | With trompe vp Alleluya |
| For dame Philarger[y]a Philargerya] Philargera K, Philargerya T, Kit, M | |
| Hathe so his herte in holde | |
| He loueth nothyng but golde | |
| And Asmodeus of hell | |
| 180 | Maketh his membres swell |
| sig: [A6v] | |
| With Dalyda to mell | |
| That wanton damosell that] the M | |
| ¶Adew philosophia | |
| Adew Theologia | |
| 185 | Welcome dame Simonia |
| With dame Castrimergia | |
| To drynke and for to eate | |
| Swete ypocrus and swete-meate | |
| To kepe his flesshe chast | |
| 190 | In lent for a repast |
| He eateth c[a]pons stewed capons] copons K, Capons T, Kit, M | |
| Fesaunt / and partriche mewed | |
| Hennes / checkynges / and pygges | |
| He foynes and he frygges | |
| 195 | Spareth neither mayde ne wyfe |
| This is a postels lyfe | |
| Helas / my herte is sory | |
| To tell of vayne-glory | |
| But now vpon this story | |
| 200 | I wyll no further ryme |
| Tyll another tyme | |
| ¶Tyll another tyme .etc. | |
| sig: [A7] | |
| What newes what news | |
| Small newes that true is | |
| 205 | That be worth .ii. kues |
| But at the naked stewes | |
| I vnder ####ab#### stande how that | |
| The sygne of the Cardynall-hat | |
| That Inne is now shyt vp | |
| 210 | With gup hore gup / now gup |
| ref.ed: 285 | |
| Gup Guilliam Trauillian | |
| With iast you I say Iullian | |
| Wyll ye bere no coles | |
| A mayny of marefoles | |
| 215 | That occupy theyr holys |
| Full of pocky molys | |
| What here ye of Lancashyre | |
| They were nat payde their hyre | |
| They are fel as any fyre | |
| 220 | What here ye of Chesshyre |
| They haue layde all in the myre | |
| They grugyd and sayde | |
| Theyr wages were nat payde | |
| Some sayde they were afrayde | |
| 225 | Of the sco[t]tysshe hoost scottysshe] scortysshe K, Scottisshe T, Kit, Scottishe M |
| sig: [A7v] | |
| For all theyr crack and bost crack] crake Kit, T, M | |
| Wylde-fyre and thonder | |
| For all this worldly wonder | |
| A hundred myle a ####ab#### sonder | |
| 230 | They were / whan the[y] were next they] the K, they T, Kit, M |
| That is a trew text | |
| What here ye of the scottes | |
| They make vs all sottes | |
| Poppynge folysshe dawes | |
| 235 | They make vs to pyll strawes |
| They play their olde pranckes | |
| After huntley bankes | |
| At the streme of Banockes burne | |
| They dyd vs a shrewde turne | |
| 240 | Whan Edwarde of Karnaruan |
| Lost all his father wan all his] al that his T, all that his Kit, M | |
| ¶What here ye of the lorde Dakers | |
| He maketh vs Iacke rakers | |
| He sayes we ar but crakers | |
| 245 | He calleth vs England-men |
| Stronge-herted lyke an hen | |
| ref.ed: 286 | |
| For the scottes and he | |
| sig: [A8] | |
| To well they do agre | |
| With do thou for me | |
| 250 | And I shall do for the |
| Whyles the red hat doth endure | |
| He m[a]keth him-selfe cock-sure maketh] mketh K | |
| The red hat with his lure | |
| Bryngeth all thynges vnder cure | |
| 255 | But as the worlde now gose |
| What here ye of the lord Rose | |
| Nothynge to purpose | |
| Nat worth a cockly fose | |
| Their hertes be in thyr hose | |
| 260 | The erle of Northumberlande |
| Dare take nothynge on hande | |
| Our barons be so bolde | |
| In-to a mouse-hole they wolde | |
| Rynne away and crepe | |
| 265 | Lyke a mayny of shepe |
| Dare nat loke out at dur at] a Kit, M | |
| For drede of the mastyue cur | |
| For drede of the bochers dogge | |
| Wold wyrry them lyke an hogge | |
| 270 | For and this curre do gnar |
| sig: [A8v] | |
| They must stande all a ####ab#### far | |
| To holde vp their hande at the bar | |
| For all their noble blode | |
| He pluckes them by the hode | |
| 275 | And shakes them by the eare |
| And brynge[s] them in suche feare brynges] brynge K, bring T, bryng Kit, M | |
| He bayteth them lyke a bere | |
| Lyke an oxe or a bull | |
| Theyr wyttes he saith are dull | |
| 280 | He sayth they haue no brayne |
| Theyr astate to mayntayne | |
| And maketh them to bow theyr kne maketh them] make T, Kit, M | |
| Be ####ab#### fore his maieste | |
| ¶Iuges of the kynges lawes | |
| 285 | He countys them foles and dawes |
| ref.ed: 287 | |
| Sergyantes of the coyfe eke | |
| He sayth they are to seke | |
| In pletynge of theyr case | |
| At the commune place | |
| 290 | Or at the kynges benche |
| He wryngeth them suche a wrenche | |
| That all our lerned men | |
| sig: B1 | |
| Dare nat set theyr penne | |
| To plete a trew tryall | |
| 295 | With-in westmynster hall |
| In the Chauncery where he syttes | |
| But suche as he admyttes | |
| None so hardy to speke | |
| He sayth / thou huddy-peke | |
| 300 | Thy lernynge is to lewde |
| Thy tonge is nat well thewde | |
| To seke before our grace | |
| And openly in that place | |
| He rages and he raues | |
| 305 | And cals them cankerd knaues |
| Thus royally he dothe deale | |
| Under the kynges brode seale | |
| And in the checker he them cheks | |
| In the ster-chambre he noddis and beks | |
| 310 | And bereth him there so stowte |
| That no man dare rowte | |
| Duke / erle / baron nor lorde | |
| But to his sentence must accorde | |
| Whether he be knyght or squyre | |
| 315 | All men must folow his desyre must] M omits |
| sig: [B1v] | |
| What say ye of the scottysh kynge | |
| That is another thyng | |
| He is but an yonglyng | |
| A stal ####ab#### worthy stryplyng stalworthy] tall worthy Kit, M | |
| 320 | There is a whyspring and a whipling There] Her Kit, M |
| He shulde be hyder brought | |
| But and it were well sought | |
| I trow all wyll be nought | |
| Nat worth a shyttel-cocke | |
| 325 | Nor worth a sowre calstocke |
| ref.ed: 288 | |
| ¶There goth many a lye | |
| Of the duke of Albany | |
| That of shulde go his hede | |
| And brought in quycke or dede | |
| 330 | And all Scotlande owers |
| The mountena[u]nce of two houres | |
| But as some men sayne | |
| I drede of some false trayne | |
| Subtelly wrought shall be | |
| 335 | Under a fayned treatee |
| But with-in monethes thre | |
| Men may happely se | |
| sig: [B2] | |
| The trechery / and the prankes | |
| Of the Scottysshe bankes | |
| 340 | What here ye of Burgonyons |
| And the Spainyardes onyons | |
| They haue slain our Englisshmen | |
| Aboue threscore and ten | |
| For all youre amyte | |
| 345 | No better they agre |
| God saue my lorde Admyrell | |
| What here ye of Mutrell | |
| There-with I dare nat mell | |
| Yet what here ye tell | |
| 350 | Of our graunde counsell |
| I coulde say some-what | |
| But speke ye no more of that | |
| For drede of the red hat | |
| Take peper in the nose | |
| 355 | For than thyne heed of gose |
| Of by the harde arse | |
| But there is some trauarse | |
| Bytwene some and some | |
| That makys our syre to glum | |
| 360 | It is some-what wronge |
| sig: [B2v] | |
| That his berde is so longe | |
| He morneth in blacke clothynge | |
| ref.ed: 289 | |
| I pray god saue the kynge | |
| Where-euer he go or ryde | |
| 365 | I pray god be his gyde |
| Thus wyll I conclude my style | |
| And fall to rest a whyle | |
| ¶And so to rest a whyle .etc. | |
| ONes yet agayne | |
| 370 | Of you I wolde frayne |
| Why come ye nat to court | |
| To whyche court? | |
| To the kynges courte | |
| Or to Hampton court? | |
| 375 | Nay / to the kynges court |
| The kynges courte | |
| Shulde haue the excellence | |
| But Hampton court | |
| Hath the preemynence | |
| 380 | And yorkes place |
| With my lordes grace | |
| To whose magnifycence | |
| sig: [B3] | |
| Is all the conflewence | |
| Sutys and supplycacyons | |
| 385 | Embassades of all nacyons |
| Strawe for lawe conon | |
| Or for lawe common | |
| Or for lawe cyuyll | |
| It shall be as he wyll | |
| 390 | Stop at lawe tancrete |
| An [a]bstract or a concrete abstract] obstract K, T, Kit, M | |
| Be it soure be it swete | |
| His wysdome is so dyscrete | |
| That in a fume or an hete | |
| 395 | Wardeyn of the flete |
| Set hym fast by the fete | |
| And of his royall powre | |
| Whan him lyst to lowre | |
| Than haue him to the towre | |
| 400 | Saunz aulter remedy |
| Ha[u]e hym forthe by and by | |
| ref.ed: 290 | |
| To the marshalsy | |
| Or to the kynges benche | |
| He dyggeth so in the trenche | |
| 405 | Of the court royall |
| sig: [B3v] | |
| That he ruleth them all | |
| So he dothe vndermynde | |
| And suche sleyghtes dothe fynde | |
| That the kynges mynde | |
| 410 | By him is subuerted |
| And so streatly coarted | |
| In credensynge his tales | |
| That all is but nutshales | |
| That any other sayth | |
| 415 | He hath in him suche fayth |
| ¶Now / yet all this myght be | |
| Suffred / and taken in gre | |
| If that that he wrought | |
| To any good ende were brought | |
| 420 | But all he bringeth to nought |
| By god that me dere bought By] But M | |
| He bereth the [kyng] on hand kyng] dkeyng K, kyng T, king Kit, M | |
| That he must pyll his lande | |
| To make his cofers ryche | |
| 425 | But he laythe all in the dyche |
| And vseth suche abusyoun | |
| That in the conclusyoun | |
| sig: [B4] | |
| All commeth to confusyon | |
| Perceyue the cause why | |
| 430 | To tell the trouth playnly |
| He is so ambicyous | |
| So shamles / an[d] so vicyous and] an K, and T, Kit, M | |
| And so supersticyous | |
| And so moche obliuyous | |
| 435 | From whens that he came |
| That he falleth in-to Aci[d]iam into] in M; Acidiam] Acisiam K, T, Kit, M | |
| Whiche truly to expresse | |
| Is a forgetfulnesse | |
| Or wylfull blynd[n]esse | |
| 440 | Wherwith the Sodomites |
| ref.ed: 291 | |
| Lost theyr inward syghtes | |
| The gommoryans also | |
| Were brought to deedly wo | |
| As scrypture recordis | |
| 445 | A cecitate cordis |
| In the latyne synge we | |
| Lybera nos domine | |
| But this madde Amalecke | |
| Lyke to a mamelek a mamelek] Amamelek K, T, Kit M | |
| 450 | He regardeth lordes |
| sig: [B4v] | |
| No more than pot-shordes | |
| He is in suche elacyon | |
| Of his exaltacyon | |
| And the supportacyon | |
| 455 | Of our souerayne lorde |
| That god to recorde | |
| He ruleth all at wyll | |
| With-out reason or skyll | |
| How-be-it the primordyall the] they be Kit, M | |
| 460 | Of his wretched originall |
| And his base progeny | |
| And his gresy genealogy | |
| He came of the sank-royall | |
| Yt was cast out of a bochers stall | |
| 465 | ¶But how-euer he was borne |
| Men wolde haue the lesse scorne | |
| If he coulde consyder | |
| His byrth and rowme to ####ab#### geder | |
| And call to his mynde | |
| 470 | How noble and how kynde |
| To him he hathe founde | |
| Our souereyne lorde / chyfe grounde | |
| sig: [B5] | |
| Of all this prelacy | |
| And set hym nobly | |
| 475 | In great auctoryte |
| Out from a low degre | |
| Whiche he can nat se | |
| For he was parde | |
| No doctor of deuinyte | |
| ref.ed: 292 | |
| 480 | Nor doctor of the law |
| Nor of none other saw | |
| But a poore maister of arte | |
| God wot had lytell parte | |
| Of the Quatriuials | |
| 485 | Nor yet of triuials |
| Nor of philosophy | |
| Nor of Philology | |
| Nor of good pollycy | |
| Nor of astronomy | |
| 490 | Not acquaynted worth a fly |
| With honorable Haly | |
| Nor with royall Ptholomy | |
| Nor with Albumasar | |
| To treate of any star | |
| 495 | Fyxt or els mobyll |
| sig: [B5v] | |
| His latyne tonge dothe hobbyll | |
| He doth but cloute and cobbill | |
| In Tullis faculte | |
| Called humanyte | |
| 500 | Yet proudly he dare pretende |
| How no man can him amende | |
| But haue ye nat harde this | |
| How an one-eyed man is | |
| Well-syghted / when | |
| 505 | He is amonge blynde men |
| ¶Than our processe for to stable | |
| This man was full vnable | |
| To reche to suche degre | |
| Had nat our prynce be | |
| 510 | Royall Henry the eyght |
| Take him in suche conceyght | |
| That he set him on heyght | |
| In exemplyfyenge | |
| Great Alexander the kynge | |
| 515 | In writynge as we fynde |
| Whiche of his royall mynde | |
| And of his noble pleasure | |
| sig: [B6] | |
| Transcendynge out of mesure | |
| Thought to do a thynge | |
| ref.ed: 293 | |
| 520 | That perteyneth to a kyn[g]e |
| To make vp one of nought | |
| A[n]d made to him be brought | |
| A wretched poore man | |
| Whiche his lyuenge wan | |
| 525 | With plantyng of lekes |
| By the dayes and by the wekes | |
| And of this poore vassall | |
| He made a kynge royall | |
| And gaue him a realme to rule | |
| 530 | That occupyed a showell |
| A mattoke / and a spade | |
| Before that he was made | |
| A kynge / as I haue tolde | |
| And ruled as he wolde | |
| 535 | Suche is a kynges power |
| To make with-in an hower | |
| And worke suche a myracle | |
| That shall be a spectacle | |
| Of renowme and worldly fame | |
| 540 | In lykewyse now the same |
| sig: [B6v] | |
| Cardynall / is promoted | |
| Yet with lewde condicyons cotyd cotyd] noted Kit, M | |
| As herafter ben notyd | |
| Presumcyon and vayne-glory | |
| 545 | Enuy / wrath / and lechery |
| Couetys / and glotony | |
| Slouthfull to do good | |
| Now frantick / now starke wode | |
| Shulde this man of suche mode | |
| 550 | Rule the swerde of myght |
| How can he do ryght | |
| For he wyll as sone smyght | |
| His frende / as his fo | |
| A prouerbe longe a ####ab#### go | |
| 555 | ¶Set vp a wretche on hye |
| In a trone triumphantlye | |
| Make him a great astate | |
| And he wyll play checke-mate | |
| With ryall maieste | |
| ref.ed: 294 | |
| 560 | Counte him-selfe as good as he |
| A prelate potencyall | |
| To rule vnder Bellyall | |
| sig: [B7] | |
| As ferce and as cruell | |
| As the fynd of hell | |
| 565 | His seruauntes menyall |
| He doth reuyle and brall | |
| Lyke Mahounde in a play | |
| No man dare him withsay | |
| He hath dispyght and scorne | |
| 570 | At them that be well borne |
| He rebukes them and rayles | |
| Ye horsons / ye vassayles | |
| Ye knaues / ye churles sonnys | |
| Ye rebads nat worth two plummis | |
| 575 | Ye raynbetyn beggers reiagged |
| Ye recrayed ruffyns all ragged | |
| With stowpe thou hauell | |
| Rynne thou iauell | |
| Thou peuysshe pye pecked | |
| 580 | Thou losell longe-necked |
| Thus dayly they be decked | |
| Taunted and checked | |
| That they are so wo | |
| They wot not whether to go | |
| 585 | No man dare come to the speche |
| sig: [B7v] | |
| Of this gentell Iack breche | |
| Of what estate he be | |
| Of spirituall dygnyte | |
| Nor duke of hye degre | |
| 590 | Nor Marques / erle / nor lorde |
| Whiche shrewdly doth accorde | |
| Thus he borne so base | |
| All noble men shulde out-face | |
| His countynaunce lyke a kayser | |
| 595 | My lorde is nat at layser |
| Syr ye must tary a stounde | |
| Tyll better layser be founde | |
| And syr / ye must daunce attendaunce | |
| And take pacient sufferaunce | |
| 600 | For my lordes grace |
| ref.ed: 295 | |
| Hath nowe no tyme nor space | |
| To speke with you / as yet | |
| ¶And thus they shall syt | |
| Chuse them syt or flyt | |
| 605 | Stande / walke / or ryde |
| And his layser a ####ab#### byde | |
| Parchaunce halfe a yere | |
| And yet neuer the nere | |
| sig: [B8] | |
| This daungerous dowsypere | |
| 610 | Lyke a kynges pere |
| And within this .xvi. yere | |
| He wolde haue ben ryght fayne | |
| To haue ben a chapleyne | |
| And haue taken ryght gret payne | |
| 615 | With a poore knyght |
| What-soeuer he hyght | |
| The chefe of his owne counsell | |
| They can nat well tell | |
| Whan they with hym shulde mell | |
| 620 | He is so fyers and fell |
| He rayles and he ratis | |
| He calleth them doddy-patis | |
| He grynnes and he gapis | |
| As it were Iack napis | |
| 625 | Suche a madde bedleme |
| For to rewle this reame | |
| It is a wonders case wonders] wonderous Kit, M | |
| That the kynges grace | |
| Is toward hym so mynded | |
| 630 | And so farre blynded |
| That he can nat parceyue | |
| sig: [B8v] | |
| How he doth hym disceyue | |
| I dought lest by Sorsery | |
| Or suche other loselry | |
| 635 | As wychecraft / or charmyng |
| For he is the kynges derlyng | |
| And his swete hart-rote | |
| And is gouerned by this mad kote And] M omits | |
| For what is a man the better | |
| 640 | For the kynges letter |
| ref.ed: 296 | |
| For he wyll tere it a ####ab#### sonder | |
| Wherat moche I wonder | |
| Now suche a hoddy-poule | |
| So boldely dare controule | |
| 645 | And so malapertly withstande |
| The kynges owne hande | |
| And settys nat by it a myte | |
| He sayth the kynge doth wryte | |
| And writeth he wottith nat what wottith] wot T, Kit, M | |
| 650 | And yet for all that |
| The kynge his clemency | |
| Despensyth with his demensy | |
| ¶But what his grace doth thinke | |
| sig: C1 | |
| I haue no pen nor inke | |
| 655 | That therwith can mell |
| But wele I can tell | |
| How Frauncis Petrarke | |
| That moche noble clerke | |
| Wryteth how Charlemayn | |
| 660 | Coude nat him-selfe refrayne |
| But was rauysht with a rage | |
| Of a lyke dotage | |
| But how that came aboute | |
| Rede ye the story oute | |
| 665 | And ye shall fynde surely |
| It was by nycromansy | |
| By carectes and coniuracyon | |
| Under a certayne constellacion | |
| And a certayne fumygacion | |
| 670 | Under a stone on a golde ryng |
| Wrought to Charlemayn the king | |
| Whiche constrayned him forcebly | |
| For to loue a certayne body | |
| Aboue all other inordinatly | |
| 675 | This is no fable nor no lye |
| At Acon it was brought to pas | |
| sig: [C1v] | |
| As by myne auctor tried it was | |
| But let mi masters mathematical | |
| Tell you the rest / for me they shal | |
| ref.ed: 297 | |
| 680 | They haue the full intellygence |
| And dare vse the experyens | |
| In there [a]bsolute consciens absolute] obsolute K, T, Kit, M | |
| To pract[iq]ue suche abolete sciens practique] practyue K, practique, T, Kit, M | |
| For I abhore to smatter | |
| 685 | Of one so deuyllysshe a matter |
| But I wyll make further relacion | |
| Of this Isagogicall colation | |
| How maister Gaguine the crownycler | |
| Of the feytis of war | |
| 690 | That were done in Fraunce |
| Maketh remembraunce | |
| How kynge Lewes of late | |
| Made vp a great astate | |
| Of a poore wretchid man | |
| 695 | Wherof moche care began |
| Iohannes Balua was his name | |
| Myne auctor writeth the same | |
| Promoted was he | |
| To a Cardynalles dygnyte | |
| sig: [C2] | |
| 700 | By Lewes the kyng a ####ab#### foresayd |
| With hym so wele apayd | |
| That he made him his chauncelar | |
| To make all / or to mar | |
| And to rule as hym lyst | |
| 705 | Tyll he cheked at the fyst |
| And agayne all reason | |
| Commyted open trayson | |
| And against his lorde souerayn | |
| Wherfore he suffred payn | |
| 710 | Was hedyd / drawen / and quarterd |
| And dyed stynkingly marterd | |
| ¶Lo yet for all that | |
| He ware a cardynals-hat | |
| In hym was small fayth | |
| 715 | As myne auctor sayth |
| Nat for that I mene | |
| Such a casuelte shulde be sene | |
| Or suche chaunce shulde fall | |
| Unto our cardynall | |
| ref.ed: 298 | |
| 720 | All-myghty god I trust |
| Hath for him dyscust | |
| That of force he must | |
| sig: [C2v] | |
| Be faythfull / trew / and iust | |
| To our most royall kynge | |
| 725 | Chefe rote of his makynge |
| Yet it is a wyly mouse | |
| That can bylde his dwellinge-house | |
| With-in the cattes eare | |
| Withouten drede or feare | |
| 730 | It is a nyce reconynge |
| To put all the gouernynge | |
| All the rule of this lande | |
| In-to one mannys hande | |
| One wyse mannys hede | |
| 735 | May stande somwhat in stede |
| But the wyttys of many wyse | |
| Moche better can deuyse | |
| By theyr cyrcumspection | |
| And theyr sad dyrection | |
| 740 | To cause the commune-weale |
| Longe to endure in heale | |
| Christ kepe king Henry the eyght | |
| From trechery and dysceyght | |
| And graunt him grace to know | |
| 745 | The faucon from the crow |
| sig: [C3] | |
| The wolfe from the lam | |
| From whens that mastyfe cam | |
| Let him neuer confounde | |
| The gentyll greyhownde | |
| 750 | Of this matter the grownde |
| Is easy to expounde | |
| And soone may be perceyuid | |
| How the worlde is conueyed | |
| ¶But harke my frende one worde | |
| 755 | In ernest or in borde |
| Tell me nowe in this stede | |
| Is maister Mewtas dede | |
| The kynges frenshe secretary | |
| And his vntrew aduersary | |
| ref.ed: 299 | |
| 760 | For he sent in writynge |
| To Fraunces the french ky[n]g | |
| Of our maisters counsel in euerithing | |
| That was a peryllous rekeny[n]g rekenyng] rekenyg K | |
| ¶Nay nay / he is nat dede | |
| 765 | But he was so payned in the hede |
| That he shall neuer ete more bred | |
| sig: [C3v] | |
| Now he is gone to another stede | |
| With a bull vnder lead | |
| By way of commissyon | |
| 770 | To a straunge iurisdictyon |
| Called Dymingis dale | |
| Farre by ####ab#### yonde Portyngale | |
| And hathe his pas-port to pas | |
| Ultra sauromatas | |
| 775 | To the deuyll syr Sathanas |
| To Pluto and syr Bellyall | |
| The deuyls vycare-generall | |
| And to his college conuentuall | |
| As well calodemonyall | |
| 780 | As to cacademonyall |
| To puruey for our Cardynall | |
| A palace pontifycall | |
| To kepe his court prouyncyall | |
| Upon artycles iudicyall | |
| 785 | To contende and to stryue |
| For his prerogatyue | |
| With-in that consystory | |
| To make sommons peremtory | |
| Be ####ab#### fore some prothonetory | |
| sig: [C4] | |
| 790 | Imperyall or papall |
| Upon this matter mistycall | |
| I haue told you part / but nat all | |
| Herafter perchaunce I shall | |
| Make a larger memoryall larger] large M | |
| 795 | And a further rehersall |
| And more paper I thinke to blot | |
| To the court why I cam not | |
| Desyring you aboue all-thynge | |
| To kepe you from laughynge | |
| ref.ed: 300 | |
| 800 | Whan ye fall to redynge |
| Of this wanton scrowle | |
| And pray for Mewtas sowle | |
| For he is well past and gone | |
| That wolde god euerychone | |
| 805 | Of his affynyte |
| Were gone as well as he | |
| Amen / amen / say ye | |
| Of your in ####ab#### ward charyte. | |
| Amen. | |
| 810 | ¶Of your inward charyte. |
| IT were great rewth | |
| For wrytynge of trewth | |
| sig: [C4v] | |
| Any man shulde be | |
| In perplexyte | |
| 815 | Of dyspleasure |
| For I make you sure | |
| Where trouth is abhorde | |
| It is a playne recorde | |
| That there wantys grace | |
| 820 | In whose place |
| Dothe occupy | |
| Full vngracyously | |
| Fals flatery flatery] flatteryng R | |
| Fals t[re]chery trechery] terchery K, trechery T, Kit, M | |
| 825 | Fals brybery |
| Subtyle Sym Sly Sym Sly] Symonye R | |
| With madde foly | |
| For who can best lye best] R omits | |
| He is best set by best] most R | |
| 830 | Than farewell to the |
| Welthfull felycite Welthfull] Welthe full of R | |
| For prosperyte | |
| Away than wyll fle | |
| Than must we agre | |
| 835 | With pouerte |
| sig: [C5] | |
| For mysery | |
| With penury | |
| Myserably | |
| And wretchydly | |
| ref.ed: 301 | |
| 840 | Hath made askrye |
| And outcry outcry] doute cry R | |
| Folowynge the chase | |
| To dryue away grace | |
| Yet sayst thou per ####ab#### case | |
| 845 | We can lacke no grace |
| For my lordes grace | |
| And my ladies grace | |
| With trey duse ase | |
| And ase in the face | |
| 850 | Some haute and some base |
| Some daunce the trace | |
| Euer in one case | |
| Marke me that chase me] well R | |
| In the tennys play | |
| 855 | For synke quater trey |
| Is a tall man tall] toll R | |
| He rod / but we ran rod but we] rode not but he R | |
| Hay-the-gye and the gan | |
| sig: [C5v] | |
| The gray gose is no swan no] a R | |
| 860 | The waters wax wan |
| And beggers they ban | |
| And they cursed datan they cursed] the course R | |
| De tribu dan | |
| That this warke began | |
| 865 | Palam / et clam |
| With Balak and Balam | |
| ¶The golden ram | |
| Of flemmynge dam | |
| Sem / Iapheth / or cam? | |
| 870 | But howe comme to pas |
| Your cupbord that was | |
| Is tourned to glasse | |
| From syluer to brasse | |
| From golde to pewter | |
| 875 | Or els to a newter |
| To copper / to tyn | |
| To lede or / alcumyn | |
| A goldsmyth your mayre | |
| But the chefe of your fayre | |
| 880 | Myght stande nowe by potters Myght] Most R |
| ref.ed: 302 | |
| sig: [C6] | |
| And such as sell trotters | |
| Pytchars / potshordis potshordis] pouchers R | |
| This shrewdly accordis | |
| To be a copborde for lordys | |
| 885 | My lorde now and syr knyght now] R omits |
| Good euyn and good nyght | |
| For now syr Trestram | |
| Ye must weare bukram | |
| Or canues of Cane | |
| 890 | For sylkes are wane |
| Our royals that shone | |
| Our nobles are gone | |
| Amonge the Burgonyons | |
| And spanyardes onyons | |
| 895 | And the Flanderkyns |
| Gyll swetis and Cate spynnys Cate] R omits | |
| They are happy that wynnys | |
| But Englande may well say | |
| Fye on this wynnyng all-way this] R omits | |
| 900 | Now nothynge / but pay pay |
| With laughe and lay downe | |
| Borowgh / cyte / and towne | |
| Good Sprynge of Lanam | |
| sig: [C6v] | |
| Must counte what became | |
| 905 | Of his clothe-makynge |
| He is at suche takynge | |
| Though his purse wax dull | |
| He must tax for his wull | |
| By nature of a newe writ | |
| 910 | My lordys grace nameth it |
| A quia non satisfacit | |
| In the spyght of his tethe | |
| He must pay a ####ab#### gayne | |
| A thousande or twayne | |
| 915 | Of his golde in store |
| And yet he payde before | |
| [An] hunderd pounde and more An] And K, An T, Kit, M | |
| Whiche pyncheth him sore | |
| My lordis grace wyll brynge | |
| 920 | Downe this hye Sprynge |
| ref.ed: 303 | |
| And brynge it so lowe | |
| It shall nat euer flowe nat euer flowe] neuer ouer flowe R | |
| ¶Suche a prelate I trowe | |
| Were worthy to rowe | |
| 925 | Thorow the streytes of Marock of] T, Kit, M omit |
| sig: [C7] | |
| To the gybbet of Baldock | |
| He wolde dry vp the stremys | |
| Of .ix. kinges realmys | |
| All ryuers and wellys | |
| 930 | All waters that swellys |
| For with vs he so mellys | |
| That within Englande dwellys | |
| I wolde he were somwhere ellys | |
| For els by and by | |
| 935 | He wyll drynke vs so drye so] R omits |
| And suck vs so nye | |
| That men shall scantly | |
| Haue peny or halpeny | |
| God saue his noble grace | |
| 940 | And graunt him a place |
| Endlesse to dwell | |
| With the deuyll of hell | |
| For and he were there | |
| We nede neuer feere nede neuer] nedyd neuer to R | |
| 945 | Of the fendys blake |
| For I vnder ####ab#### take | |
| He wolde so brag and crake | |
| That he wolde than make | |
| sig: [C7v] | |
| The deuyls to quake | |
| 950 | To shudder and to shake |
| Lyke a fyer-drake fyer] fyrye R | |
| And with a cole-rake | |
| Brose them on a brake Brose] Bruse T, Kit, M | |
| And bynde them to a stake | |
| 955 | And set hell on fyer hell] all R |
| At his owne desyer | |
| He is suche a grym syer | |
| And suche a potestolate And] And make R | |
| And suche a potestate potestate] prostrate R | |
| ref.ed: 304 | |
| 960 | That he wolde breke the braynes |
| Of Lucyfer in his chaynes Lucyfer] Lucyfers K, Lucyfer T, Lucifer Kit, M | |
| And rule them echone | |
| In Lucyfers trone | |
| I wolde he were gone | |
| 965 | For amonge vs is none |
| That ruleth / but he alone | |
| With-out all good reason | |
| And all out of season | |
| For Folam peason | |
| 970 | With him be nat geson |
| They growwe very ranke | |
| sig: [C8] | |
| Upon euery banke | |
| Of his herbers grene | |
| With my lady bryght and shene | |
| 975 | Of theyr game it is sene |
| They play nat all clene | |
| And it be as I wene | |
| ¶But as touchynge dystrectyon dystrectyon] dyscrecyon M, R, distrection T, Kit | |
| With sober dyrectyon | |
| 980 | He kepeth them in subiectyon |
| [Non] can haue protectyon Non can haue] They can haue no K, T, Kit, M, Non can haue R | |
| To rule nor to guyde | |
| But all must be tryde | |
| And abyde the correctyon | |
| 985 | Of his wylfull affectyon his] him T, Kit, M |
| For as for wytte | |
| The deuyll spede whitte | |
| But braynsyk and braynlesse | |
| Wytles and rechelesse | |
| 990 | Careles and shamlesse Careles] Marcyles R |
| Thriftles and gracelesse | |
| To ####ab#### gether are bended bended] wendyd R | |
| And so condyscended | |
| sig: [C8v] | |
| That the commune-welth | |
| 995 | Shall neuer haue good helth |
| But tatterd and tuggyd tatterd] taxed R | |
| Raggyd / and ruggyd | |
| Shauyn and shorne | |
| And all threde-bare worne | |
| ref.ed: 305 | |
| 1000 | Suche gredynesse |
| Suche nedynesse | |
| Myserablenesse | |
| With wretchydnesse | |
| Hath brought in dystresse in] muche R | |
| 1005 | And moche heuy[n]esse |
| And great dolowre dolowre] dullness R | |
| Englande the flowre Englande] To Englande R | |
| Of relucent honowre | |
| In olde commemoracion | |
| 1010 | Most royall Englyssh nacion |
| Now all is out of facion | |
| Almost in desolation | |
| I speke by protestacion | |
| God of his miseracyon | |
| 1015 | Send better reformacyon |
| Lo / for to do shamfully Lo] Soo R | |
| sig: D1 | |
| He iugeth it no foly | |
| But to wryte of his shame | |
| He sayth we ar to blame | |
| 1020 | What a frensy is this |
| No shame to do amys | |
| And yet he is a ####ab#### shamed | |
| To be shamfully named named] name M | |
| And ofte prechours be blamed ofte] the R | |
| 1025 | Bycause they haue proclamed |
| His madnesse by writynge | |
| His symplenesse resytynge | |
| Remordynge and bytynge | |
| With chydyng and with flytynge flytynge] fiting Kit, M, fliting T | |
| 1030 | Shewynge him goddis lawis |
| He calleth the prechours dawis | |
| ¶And of holy scriptures sawis | |
| He counteth them for gygawis | |
| And putteth them to sylence | |
| 1035 | And with wordis of vyolence |
| Lyke Pharao / voyde of grace | |
| Dyd Moyses sore manase sore] R omits | |
| And Aron sore he thret | |
| sig: [D1v] | |
| The worde of god to let worde] wordis R; to] he R | |
| ref.ed: 306 | |
| 1040 | This maumet in lyke wyse |
| Against the churche doth ryse | |
| The prechour he dothe dyspyse | |
| With craky[n]ge in suche wyse crakynge] crakyyge K | |
| So braggynge all with bost | |
| 1045 | That no prechour almost |
| Dare speke for his lyfe | |
| Of my lordis grace / nor his wyfe | |
| For he hath suche a bull | |
| He may take whom he wull | |
| 1050 | And as many as him lykys him] he R |
| May ete pigges in lent for pikys | |
| After the sectes of heretykis | |
| For in lent he wyll ete wyll] doeth R | |
| All maner of flesshe-mete | |
| 1055 | That he can onywhere gete |
| With other abusyons grete | |
| Wherof for to trete for] Kit, M omit | |
| It wolde make the deuyll to swete It wolde make the deuyll to swete] Ye deuyll wold swete R | |
| For all priuileged places | |
| 1060 | He brekes and defaces |
| All placis of relygion | |
| sig: [D2] | |
| He hathe them in derisyon | |
| And makith suche prouisyon | |
| To dryue them at diuisyon | |
| 1065 | And fynally in conclusyon |
| To bringe them to confusyon | |
| Saint Albons to recorde | |
| Wherof this vngracyous lorde | |
| Hathe made him-selfe abbot | |
| 1070 | Against their wylles god wot |
| All this he dothe deale | |
| Under strength of the great seale In R, this line and the preceding one read: Under the strenght of the greate seale: Thys now he dothe meale | |
| And by his legacy | |
| Whiche madly he dothe apply | |
| 1075 | Unto an extrauaga[n]cy |
| Pyked out of all good lawe of] M omits | |
| With reasons that ben rawe | |
| Yet whan he toke first his hat first] R omits | |
| He said he knew what was what | |
| ref.ed: 307 | |
| 1080 | All iustyce he pretended |
| All thynges sholde be a ####ab#### mended | |
| All wronges he wolde redresse | |
| All iniuris he wolde represse | |
| All periuris he wolde oppresse | |
| sig: [D2v] | |
| 1085 | And yet this gracelesse elfe gracelesse] ungratyous R |
| He is periured him-selfe | |
| As playnly it dothe appere | |
| Who lyst to enquere | |
| In the regestry | |
| 1090 | Of my lorde of Cantorbury |
| To whom he was professed | |
| In thre poyntes expressed | |
| The fyrst to do him reuerence | |
| The seconde to owe hym obedy[e]nce obedyence] obedynce K | |
| 1095 | The thirde with hole affectyon |
| To be vnder his subiectyon | |
| But now he maketh obiectyon But] And R; obiectyon] dyrectyon R | |
| Under the protectyon | |
| Of the kynges great seale great] brode R | |
| 1100 | That he setteth neuer a deale |
| By his former othe | |
| Whether god be pleased or wroth | |
| He makith so proude pretens | |
| That in his equipolens | |
| 1105 | He i[u]gyth him equiualent him] hymselfe R; equiualent] equypolent R |
| With god omnipotent | |
| But yet beware the rod | |
| sig: D3 | |
| And the stroke of god. | |
| The apostyll Peter apostyll] wholly apostle R | |
| 1110 | Had [but on] pore myter but on] a K, T, Kit, M |
| And a poore cope | |
| Whan he was creat pope | |
| First in Antioche | |
| He dyd neuer approche | |
| 1115 | Of Rome to the see |
| Weth suche dygnyte | |
| Saynt Dunstane what was he | |
| Nothynge he sayth lyke to we to we] to mee T, to me Kit, M, we R | |
| There is a dyuersyte | |
| ref.ed: 308 | |
| 1120 | By ####ab#### twene him and me |
| We passe hym in degre | |
| As legatus a latere | |
| Ecce sacerdos magnus | |
| That wyll hed vs and hange vs | |
| 1125 | And str[e]itly strangle vs streitly] strcitly K |
| And he may fange vs And] That Kit, M | |
| Decre and de[cr]etall decretall] deecetall K, decretall T, M, decretal Kit, | |
| Constytucyon prouincyall | |
| Nor no lawe canonicall | |
| 1130 | Shall let the preest pontyficall |
| sig: [D3v] | |
| To syt in causa sanguinis | |
| Nowe god amende that is a ####ab#### mys | |
| For I suppose that he is | |
| Of Ieremy the whyskynge rod | |
| 1135 | The flayle / the scourge The flayle] R omits |
| Of almighty god | |
| This Naman Sirus Sirus] tyrus R | |
| So fell and so irous | |
| So full of male[n]coly | |
| 1140 | With a flap afore his eye afore] before Kit, M, R |
| Men wene that he is pocky wene that] say R | |
| Or els his surgions they lye | |
| For as far as the[y] can spy they] the K, thei T, they Kit, M | |
| By the craft of surgery | |
| 1145 | It is manus domini |
| And yet this proude Antiochus | |
| He is so ambicious | |
| So elate / and so vicious | |
| And so cruell-hertyd | |
| 1150 | That he wyll nat be conuertyd That] R omits |
| For he setteth god a ####ab#### part | |
| He is nowe so ouerthwart nowe] R omits | |
| And so payned with pangis | |
| sig: [D4] | |
| That all his trust hangis trust] harte R | |
| 1155 | In Balthasor / whiche heled |
| Domingos nose / that was wheled was] R omits | |
| That Lumberdes nose meane I | |
| That standeth yet a ####ab#### wrye | |
| It was nat heled alderbest | |
| 1160 | It standeth somwhat on the west |
| I meane Domy[n]go Lomelyn | |
| ref.ed: 309 | |
| That was wont to wyn | |
| Moche money of the kynge | |
| At the cardys and haserdynge | |
| 1165 | Balthasor that helyd domingos [n]ose nose] pose M |
| From the puskylde pocky pose puskylde] pusky R; pose] nose Kit | |
| Now with his gummys of araby gummys] gynnys R | |
| Hath promised to hele our cardinals eye | |
| Yet sum surgions put a dout | |
| 1170 | Lest he wyll put it clene out |
| And make him lame of his neder limmes | |
| God sende him sorowe for his sinnes | |
| Some men myght aske a question aske] make R | |
| By whose suggesty[o]n suggestyon] suggestyrn K, subiectyon R | |
| 1175 | I toke on hand this warke |
| Thus boldly for to barke | |
| sig: [D4v] | |
| And men lyst to harke | |
| And my wordes marke | |
| I wyll answere lyke a clerke | |
| 1180 | For trewly and vnfayned |
| I am forcebly constrayned | |
| At Iuuynals request | |
| To wryght of this glorious gest glorious] gromys R | |
| Of this vayne-gloryous best | |
| 1185 | His fame to be encrest |
| At euery solempne feest | |
| Quia difficile est | |
| Satiram non scribere? | |
|
Contra quendam doctorem suum calumpniatorem K omits this heading, but it is added in R
|
|
| Now mayster doctor / howe say ye | |
| What-soeuer your name be | |
| What though ye be namelesse | |
| Ye shall nat escape blamelesse escape] be R | |
| 5 | Nor yet shall scape shamlesse shall] R omits |
| Mayster doctor in your degre | |
| Your-selfe madly ye ouer ####ab#### se | |
| Blame Iuuinall and blame nat me | |
| Maister doctor d[ecretor]um decretorum] diricum K, T, Kit, M, decretoum R | |
| 10 | Omne / animi vicium. etc. |
| ref.ed: 310 | |
| As Iuuinall dothe recorde | |
| sig: [D5] | |
| A small defaute in a great lorde | |
| A lytell cryme in a great astate | |
| Is moche more inordinate | |
| 15 | And more horyble to beholde horyble] dyshonorable R |
| Than any other a thousand-folde any] yn any R | |
| Ye put to blame ye wot nere whom nere] nott R | |
| Ye may weare a cockes-come | |
| Your fonde hed in your furred hode in your] yn a R | |
| 20 | Holde ye your tong ye can no goode ye your] your R |
| And at more conuenyent tyme | |
| I may fortune for to ryme | |
| Som-what of your madnesse | |
| For small is your sadnesse | |
| 25 | To put any man in lack |
| And say yll behynde his back | |
| And my wordes marke truly And my wordes marke truly] and espetyally to make a lye R | |
| That ye can nat byde thereby | |
| For Smigma non est sinamomum | |
| 30 | But de absentibus nil nisi bonum |
| Complayne or do what ye wyll | |
| Of your complaynt it shall nat skyl | |
| This is the tenor of my byl | |
| A daucock ye be / and so shalbe styll. | |
| sig: [D5v] | |
|
¶Sequitur epitoma De morbilloso Thoma Nec non obsceno De poliphemo. etc. |
|
| POrro perbelle dissimmulatum | |
| Illud pandulphum tantum legatum | |
| Tam formidatum nuper prelatum | |
| Ceu / Naman sirum nunc elongatum | |
| 5 | In solitudine iam commoratum |
| Neapolitano morbo grauatum | |
| Malagmate / Cataplasmat[e] st[r]atum Cataplasmate stratum] Cataplasmati statum K, T, Kit, M | |
| Pharmac[o]pol[e] ferro foratum Pharmacopole] Pharmacapoli K, Pharmacopoly T, Pharma copoli Kit, M | |
| Nihilo magis alleniatum | |
| 10 | Nihilo melius aut medicatum |
| Relictis famulis ad famulatum | |
| Quo tollatur infamia | |
| Sed maior patet insania | |
| A modo ergo Ganea | |
| 15 | Abhoreat ille Ganeus |
| Dominus male Creticus | |
| Aptius Dictus Tetricus | |
| Phanaticus freneticus | |
| sig: [D6] | |
| Graphicus sicut Metricus | |
| 20 | Autumat. |
| HOc genus dictamini | |
| Non eg[e]t examinis eget] egit K, T, Kit, M | |
| In centiloquio nec centimetro | |
| Honorati | |
| 25 | Grammatici |
| Mauri. | |
|
¶Decastic[h]on Decastichon] Decasticon K, T, Kit, M virulentum in galeratum / Licaonta marinum .etc.
|
|
| PRogh dolor / ecce maris lupus et nequissimus. vrsus | |
| Carnificis vitulus Britonumque bubulcus iniquus | |
| Conflatus / vitulus / vel Oreb / vel Salmana / vel zeb. | |
| Carduus / et crudelis Asaphque Datan reprobatus | |
| 5 | Blandus et Acchitiphel / regis scelus omne Britannum |
| Ecclesias / qui namque Thomas confundit vbique | |
| Non sacer iste / Thomas / sed duro corde / Goleas | |
| Quem gestat Mulus sathane cacet (obsecro culus | |
| Fundens Aspaltum (precor hunc versum lege cautum) | |
| 10 | Asperius nichil est misero quum surget in altum. |
|
¶Apostropha a[d] ad] an K, T, Kit, M
Londini ciues (citanto mulum asino aureo galerato) in occursum a[selli]aselli] aguile K, T, Kit, M .etc.
|
|
| EX[c]itat e[n] asinus mulum (mirabile / visu) Excitat] Exitat K, T, Kit, M | |
| Calcibus: O vestro ciues occurite Asello. | |
| Qui regnum regemque regit qui vestra gubernat | |
| Predia diuitias / nummos gasas spoliando. | |
| ¶Dixit, alludens / immo illudens parodoxam de asino aureo galerato ,xxxiiii. | |
| Hec vates ille / de quo lo[qun]tur mille loquntur] lounqtur K, loquntur T, Kit, M | |
| sig: [D7] | |
| ¶Imprinted at london by me Richard kele dwelling in the powltry at the longe shop vnder saynt myldredes chyrch. | |
| sig: [D7v] | |