| sig: A[1] | ||
| ¶A ryght delectable tratyse vpon a goodly Garlande or Chapelet of Laurell by mayster Skelton Poete laureat studyously dyuysed at Sheryfhotten_Castell. In þe foreste of galtres / where-in ar comprysyde many and dyuers solacyo[u]s and ryght pregnant allectyues of syngular pleasure / as more at large it doth apere in þe proces folowynge. | ||
| sig: [A1v] | ||
| Eterno mansura die dum sidera fulgent | ||
| Equora dumque tument hec laurea nostra virebit. | ||
| Hinc nostrum celebre et nomen referetur ad astra. | ||
| Vndique Skeltonis memorabitur alter adonis | ||
| sig: [A2] | ||
| ARectyng my syght towarde the zodyake. | ||
| The sygnes .xij. for to beholde a_farre | ||
| When mars retrogradant reuersyd his bak | ||
| Lorde of the yere in his orbucular | ||
| 5 | Put vp his sworde for he cowde make no warre | |
| and whan lucina plenar[l]y did shyne plenarly] plenary F, M | ||
| Scorpione ascendynge degrees twyse nyne | ||
| ¶In place alone then musynge in my thought | ||
| How all-thynge passyth as doth the somer flower | ||
| 10 | On euery halfe my reasons forthe I sought On] One F, On M | |
| How oftyn fortune varyeth in an howre | ||
| Now clere wether forthwith a stormy showre | ||
| All-thynge compassyd no perpetuyte | ||
| But now in welthe / now in aduersyte | ||
| 15 | ¶So depely drownyd I was in this dumpe | |
| Encraumpysshed so sore was my conceyte | ||
| That me to rest / I lent me to a stumpe | ||
| Of an oke / that somtyme grew full streyghte | ||
| A myghty tre and of a noble heyght | ||
| 20 | Whose bewte blastyd was with the boystors wynde | |
| His leuis loste / the sappe was frome the rynde | ||
| ¶Thus stode I in the frytthy forest of Galtres | ||
| Ensowkid with [s]ylt of the myry [w]ose sylt] fylt F, sylt M; wose] mose F, M | ||
| Where hartis belluyng embosyd with distres | ||
| ref.ed: 313 | ||
| 25 | Ran on the raunge so longe that I suppose | |
| Few men can tell where the hynde-calfe gose tell] telle now C | ||
| Faire fall that forster that so well can bate his hownde well] C omits | ||
| But of my purpose now torne we to the grownde purpose] proces C | ||
| ¶Whylis I stode musynge in this medytatyon | ||
| 30 | In slumbrynge I fell and halfe in a slepe | |
| sig: [A2v] | ||
| And whether it were of ymagynacyon | ||
| Or of humors superflue that often wyll crepe | ||
| In-to the brayne by drynkyng ouer depe | ||
| Or it procedyd of fatall persuacyon | ||
| 35 | I can not tell you what was the occasyon not tell] not wele tell C | |
| ¶But sodeynly at ones as I me aduysed | ||
| As one in a trans or in an extasy | ||
| I sawe a pauylyon wondersly disgysede | ||
| Garnysshed fresshe after my fantasy | ||
| 40 | Enhachyde with perle and stones preciously | |
| The grounde engrosyd and bet with bourne golde | ||
| That passynge goodly it was to be_holde | ||
| ¶Within that a prynces excellente of porte that] it C | ||
| But to recounte her ryche abylyment | ||
| 45 | And what estates to her did resorte | |
| Therto am I full insuffycyent | ||
| A goddesse inmortall she dyd represente | ||
| As I harde say Dame Pallas was her name | ||
| To whome supplyed the royall quene of fame | ||
|
¶The quene of Fame. To dame Pallas |
||
| 50 | PRynces moost pusant of hygh preemynence | |
| Renownyd lady a_boue the sterry heuyn | ||
| sig: A3 | ||
| All other transcendyng of very congruence | ||
| Madame regent of the scyence seuyn scyence] sciences M | ||
| To whos astate all noblenes most le[uen] leuen] lene F, C, le[u]en M | ||
| 55 | My supplycacyon to you I arrect | |
| Where-of I beseche you to tender the effecte | ||
| ¶Not vnremembered it is vnto your grace | ||
| How you gaue me a ryall commaundement you] ye M, C; a] in C | ||
| That in my courte skelton shulde haue a place | ||
| ref.ed: 314 | ||
| 60 | Bycause that he his tyme studyously hath spent he his tyme] his tyme he C | |
| In your seruyce: and to the accomplysshement. | ||
| Of your request: regestred is his name | ||
| Wt laureate tryumphe in the courte of fame | ||
| ¶But good madame the accustome and vsage | ||
| 65 | Of auncient poetis ye wote full wele hath bene | |
| Them-selfe to embesy with all there holl corage | ||
| So that there workis myght famously be sene | ||
| In figure wherof the[y] were [the] laurell grene they were the] the were they F, they were the M | ||
| But how it is skelton is wonder slake | ||
| 70 | And as we dare we fynde in hym grete lake grete] a M | |
| ¶For ne were onely he hath your promocyon | ||
| Out of my bokis full sone I shulde hym rase | ||
| But sith he hath tastid of the sugred pocioun | ||
| Of elyco[ni]s well: refresshid with your grace elyconis] elycoms F, Heliconis M | ||
| 75 | And wyll not endeuour hymselfe to purchase | |
| The fauour of ladys with wordis electe | ||
| It is sittynge that ye must hym correct | ||
|
¶Dame Pallas To the quene of Fame |
||
| THe sum of your purpose as we ar aduysid | ||
| Is that our seruaunt is sum-what to dull that] for that C | ||
| 80 | Wher in this answere for hym we haue comprisid | |
| How ryuers rin not tyll the spryng be full | ||
| Bete a dum mouthe than a brainles scull Bete] Better M, C | ||
| sig: [A3v] | ||
| For if he gloryously publisshe his matter | ||
| Then men wyll say how he doth but flatter | ||
| 85 | ¶And if so hym fortune to wryte true and plaine so] C omits | |
| As sumtyme he must vyces remorde | ||
| Then sum wyll say he hath but lyttill brayne | ||
| And how his wordes with reason wyll not accorde | ||
| Beware for wrytyng remayneth of recorde. | ||
| 90 | Displease not an hundreth for one mannes pleasure | |
| Who wryteth wysely hath a grete treasure | ||
| ¶Also to furnisshe better his excuse | ||
| Ouyde was bann[iss]hed for suche a skyll bannisshed] bannssihed F | ||
| And many mo whome I cowde enduce | ||
| ref.ed: 315 | ||
| 95 | Iuuenall was thret parde for to kyll | |
| For certayne enuectyfys: yet wrote he none ill certayne enuectyfys] that he enueiyd C | ||
| Sauynge he rubbid sum on the gall on] vpon M | ||
| It was not for hym to abyde the tryall abyde] byde C | ||
| ¶In generrall wordes I say not gretely nay | ||
| 100 | A poete somtyme may for his pleasure taunt | |
| Spekyng in paroblis how the fox the grey | ||
| The gander the gose: and þe hudge oliphaunt | ||
| Went with the pecok a_geyne the fesaunt | ||
| The lesarde came lepyng and sayd that he must | ||
| 105 | With helpe of the ram ley all in the dust | |
| ¶Yet dyuerse ther be industryous of reason ther] that C | ||
| Sum-what wolde gadder in there con[i]ecture coniecture] conuecture F, coniecture M | ||
| Of suche an endarkid chapiter sum season | ||
| How-be-it / it were harde to construe this lecture | ||
| 110 | Sophisticatid craftely is many a confecture | |
| A nother manes mynde diffuse is to expounde | ||
| Yet harde is to make but sum fawt be founde | ||
|
¶The quene of fame to dame Pallas. |
||
| ¶Madame with fauour of your benynge sufferaunce | ||
| sig: [A4] | ||
| Unto your grace then make I this motyue | ||
| 115 | Where-to made ye me hym to auaunce | |
| Unto the rowme of laureat promotyue | ||
| Or wherto shulde he haue the prerogatyue the] that C | ||
| But if he had made sum memoryall | ||
| Wherby he myght haue a name inmortall | ||
| 120 | ¶To pas the tyme in slowthfull ydelnes | |
| Of your royall palace it is not the gyse | ||
| But to do sumwhat iche man doth hym dres | ||
| For how shulde Cato els be callyd wyse | ||
| But that his bokis: whiche he did deuyse | ||
| 125 | Recorde the same: or why is had in mynde | |
| Plato: but for that he left wrytynge behynde that] C omits | ||
| ¶For men to loke on: Aristotille also | ||
| Of phylosophers callid the princypall | ||
| Olde diogenes with other many mo | ||
| ref.ed: 316 | ||
| 130 | Dymostenes that oratour royall | |
| That gaue eschines suche a cordyall That] Whiche C | ||
| That banisshed was he by his proposicyoun by] through M | ||
| Ageyne whome he cowde make no contradiccyoun | ||
|
¶Dame pallas to the quene of Fame |
||
| SOft my good syster and make there a pawse my good syster] goode my sister C | ||
| 135 | And was eschines: rebukid as ye say | |
| Remembre you wel[e]broken letter: poynt wele that clause | ||
| Wherfore then rasid ye not a_way | ||
| His name: or why is it I you praye | ||
| That he to your courte is goyng and commynge | ||
| 140 | Sith he is slaundred for defaut of konnyng | |
|
¶The quene of fame to dame Pallas. |
||
| ¶Madame your apposelle is wele inferrid | ||
| And at your auauntage quikly it is auauntage] auanuntage F | ||
| Towchid: and hard for to be barrid barrid] debarrid C | ||
| sig: [A4v] | ||
| Yet shall I answere your grace as in this | ||
| 145 | With your reformacion if I say a_mis | |
| For but if your bounte did me assure | ||
| Myne argument els koude not longe endure | ||
| ¶As towchyng that eschines is remembred | ||
| That he so sholde be: me semith it sittyng it] it is C | ||
| 150 | All-be-it grete parte he hath surrendred | |
| Of his onour: whos dissuasyue in wrytyng | ||
| To corage demostenes was moche excitynge | ||
| In settyng out fresshely his crafty persuacyon | ||
| From whiche eschines had none euacyon | ||
| 155 | ¶The cause why demostenes so famously is brutid | |
| Onely procedid for that he did outray | ||
| Eschines? whiche was not shamefully confutid | ||
| But of that famous oratour I say | ||
| Whiche passid all other: wherfore I may | ||
| 160 | Among my recordes suffer hym namyd | |
| For though he were venquesshid yet was he not shamyd. For] Sithe C | ||
| As ierome in his preamble frater ambrocius | ||
| Frome that I haue sayde in no poynt doth vary | ||
| ref.ed: 317 | ||
| Where-in he reporteth of the coragius Where-in] Where C | ||
| 165 | Wordes that were moch consolatory | |
| By eschines rehersed: to the grete glory | ||
| Of demostenes: that was his vtter foo | ||
| Few shall ye fynde or none that wyll do so | ||
|
¶Dame pallas to the quene of Fame |
||
| A Thanke to haue ye haue well deseruyd | ||
| 170 | Your mynde that can maynteyne so apparently | |
| But a grete parte yet ye haue reseruyd But a grete parte yet] Bot yit a grete parte C | ||
| Of that most folow then conseq[u]ently consequently] conseqently F | ||
| Or els ye demeane you inordinatly | ||
| For if ye laude hym whome honour hath opprest | ||
| sig: [A5] | ||
| 175 | Then he that doth worste is as good as the best | |
| ¶But whome that ye fauoure I se well hath a name | ||
| Be he neuer so lytell of substaunce | ||
| And whome ye loue not / ye wyll put to shame | ||
| Ye counterwey not euynly your balaunce | ||
| 180 | As wele foly as wysdome oft ye do avaunce ye do] tyme ye C | |
| For reporte ryseth many deuerse wayes For] not C | ||
| Sume be moche spokyn of for makynge of frays | ||
| ¶Some haue a name for thefte and brybery | ||
| Some be called crafty that can pyke a purse pyke] kit C | ||
| 185 | Some men be made of for the mokery the] their M | |
| Some carefull cokwoldes / some haue theyr wyues curs. | ||
| Some famous wetewoldis / and they be moche wurs | ||
| Some liddero[n]s / some losels / some noughty packis | ||
| Some facers / some bracers / some make great crackis some make] and sum make C | ||
| 190 | ¶Some dronken dastardis with their dry soules | |
| Some sluggyssh slouyns that slepe day and nyght | ||
| Ryot and reuell be in your courte-rowlis | ||
| Maintenaunce and mischefe theis be men of myght | ||
| Extorcyon is counted with you for a knyght | ||
| 195 | Theis people by me haue none assignement | |
| Yet they ryde and rinne from carlyll to kente they ryde and rinne] ryde they and ryn they C | ||
| ¶But lytell or nothynge ye shall here tell ye shall] shall ye C | ||
| Of them that haue vertue by reason of cunnyng | ||
| Whiche souerenly in honoure shulde excell | ||
| ref.ed: 318 | ||
| 200 | Men of suche maters make but mummynge but] but a C | |
| For wysdome and sadnesse be out a_sunnyng be out] be set out M, C | ||
| And suche of my seruauntes as I haue promotyd | ||
| One faute or other in them shalbe notyd | ||
| ¶Eyther they wyll say he is to wyse wyll] shall C | ||
| 205 | Or elles he can nought bot whan he is at scole | |
| Proue his wytt sayth he at cardes or dyce | ||
| sig: [A5v] | ||
| And ye shall well fynde he is a very fole well fynde] fynde wele C | ||
| Twyse set hym a chare or reche hym a stol. Twyse] Twyshe M, C | ||
| To syt hym vpon / and rede iacke_a_thrummis bybille hym] C omits | ||
| 210 | For truly it were pyte that he sat ydle | |
|
¶The quene of Fame To dame Pallas |
||
| TO make repungnaunce agayne that ye haue sayde | ||
| Of very dwte it may not well accorde | ||
| But your benynge sufferaunce for my discharge I laid | ||
| For þat I wolde not with you fall at discorde | ||
| 215 | But yet I beseche your grace that good recorde good] C omits | |
| May be brought forth suche as can be founde | ||
| With laureat tryumphe why Skelton sholde be crownde | ||
| ¶For elles it were to great a derogacyon | ||
| Vnto your palas our noble courte of fame | ||
| 220 | That any man vnder supportacyon | |
| With-oute deseruynge shulde haue the best game | ||
| If he to the ample encrease of his name | ||
| Can lay any werkis that he hath compylyd | ||
| I am contente that he be not exylide be] be be | ||
| 225 | ¶Frome the laureat senate: by force of proscripcyon | |
| Or elles ye know well I can do no lesse | ||
| But I most bannysshe hym frome my iurydiccyon | ||
| As he that aquentyth hym with ydilnes | ||
| But if that he purpose to make a redresse | ||
| 230 | What he hath done let it be brought to syght | |
| Graunt my petycyon I aske you but ryght | ||
|
¶Dame Pallas To the quene of Fame |
||
| TO your request we be well condiscendid | ||
| Call forthe let se where is your clarionar | ||
| ref.ed: 319 | ||
| To blowe a blaste with his long breth extendid | ||
| 235 | Eolus your trumpet that k[n]owne is so farre that] whiche C | |
| That bararag blowyth in euery mercyall warre | ||
| sig: [A6] | ||
| Let hym blowe now that we may take a vewe a] the C | ||
| What poetis we haue at our retenewe | ||
| ¶To se if skelton wyll put hym-selfe in prease wyll] dare C | ||
| 240 | Amonge the thickeste of all the hole rowte | |
| Make noyse enoughe for claterars loue no peas | ||
| Let se my syster now spede you go a_boute you] C omits | ||
| Anone I sey this trumpet were founde out | ||
| And for no man hardely let hym spare | ||
| 245 | To blowe bararag tyll bothe his eyne stare bararag] bararag brag C | |
|
¶Skelton Poeta. |
||
| FOrth-with there rose amonge the thronge | ||
| A wonderfull noyse / and on euery syde | ||
| They presid in faste / some thought they were to longe | ||
| Sume were to hasty and wold no man byde | ||
| 250 | Some whispred some rownyd / some spake / and some cryde. | |
| With heuy[n]ge and shouynge haue in and haue oute | ||
| Some ranne the nexte way sume ranne a_bowte | ||
| ¶There was suyng to the quene of fame | ||
| He plucked hym backe / and he went a_fore | ||
| 255 | Nay holde thy tunge quod a nother let me haue the name | |
| Make rowme sayd a nother ye prese all to sore | ||
| Sume sayd holde thy peas thou getest here no more | ||
| A thowsande thowsande I sawe on a plumpe | ||
| With that I harde the noyse of a trumpe | ||
| 260 | ¶That longe-tyme blewe a full timorous blaste | |
| Lyke to the boryall wyndes whan they blowe | ||
| That towres / and townes / and trees downe caste | ||
| Droue clowdes to_gether lyke dryftis of snowe | ||
| The dredefull dinne droue all the rowte on a rowe | ||
| 265 | Some tremblid / some girnid / some gaspid / some gasid | |
| As people halfe peuysshe or men that were masyd | ||
| ¶Anone all was whyste as it were for the nonys | ||
| sig: [A6v] | ||
| And iche man stode gasyng and staryng vpon other | ||
| With that there come in wonderly at ones | ||
| ref.ed: 320 | ||
| 270 | A murmur of mynstrels / that suche a nother | |
| Had I neuer sene some softer some lowder | ||
| Orpheus the traciane herped meledyously | ||
| Weth amphion and other musis of archady | ||
| ¶Whos heuenly armony was so passynge sure | ||
| 275 | So truely proporsionyd and so well did gree | |
| So duly entunyd with euery mesure | ||
| That in the forest was none so great a tre | ||
| But that he daunced for ioye of that gle | ||
| The huge myghty okes them-selfe dyd auaunce | ||
| 280 | And lepe frome the hylles to lerne for to daunce | |
| ¶In-so-moche the stumpe where-to I me lente | ||
| Sterte all at ones an hundrethe fote backe | ||
| With that I sprange vp towarde the tent | ||
| Of noble dame Pallas wherof I spake | ||
| 285 | Where I sawe come after I wote full lytell lake | |
| Of a thousande poetes assembled to_geder | ||
| But phebus was formest of all that cam theder | ||
| ¶Of laurell-leuis a cronell on his hede | ||
| With heris encrisped yalowe as the golde encrisped] enscrisped F | ||
| 290 | Lamentyng daphnes whome with the darte of lede | |
| Cupyde hath stryken so that she ne wolde | ||
| Concente to phebus to haue his herte in holde | ||
| But for to preserue her maiden_hode clene maiden hode] maydenheed M | ||
| Transformyd was she in-to the laurell grene | ||
| 295 | ¶Meddelyd with mur[n]ynge the moost parte of his muse murnynge] murmynge F, murning M | |
| O thoughtfull herte was euermore his songe | ||
| Daphnes my derlynge why do you me refuse | ||
| Yet loke on me that louyd you haue so longe | ||
| Yet haue compassyon vpon my paynes stronge | ||
| sig: B[1] | ||
| 300 | He sange also how the tre as he did take | |
| Betwene his armes he felt her body quake | ||
| ¶Then he assurded in-to his exclamacyon his] this M | ||
| Unto Diana the goddes inmortall | ||
| O mercyles madame hard is your constellacyon | ||
| 305 | So close to kepe your cloyster virgynall | |
| Enhardid adyment the sement of your wall | ||
| Alas what ayle you to be so ouerthwhart | ||
| To bannysshe pyte out of a maydens harte | ||
| ref.ed: 321 | ||
| ¶Why haue the goddes shewyd me this cruelte | ||
| 310 | Sith I contryuyd first princyples medycynable | |
| I helpe all other of there infirmite | ||
| But now to helpe my-selfe I am not able | ||
| That profyteth all other is no-thynge profytable | ||
| Unto me / alas that herbe nor gr[e]s[se] gresse] gras F, gresse M | ||
| 315 | The feruent axes of loue can not represse | |
| ¶O fatall fortune what haue I offendid | ||
| Odious disdayne why raist thou me on this facyo[n] | ||
| But sith I haue lost now that I entended | ||
| And may not atteyne it by no medyacyon | ||
| 320 | Yet in remembraunce of daphnes transformacyon | |
| All famous poetis ensuynge after me | ||
| Shall were a garlande of the laurell-tre | ||
| ¶This sayd a great nowmber folowyd by and by | ||
| Of poetis laureat of many dyuerse nacyons | ||
| 325 | Parte of there names I thynke to specefye | |
| Fyrste olde Quintiliane with his decl[am]acyons declamacyons] declynacyons F, Declamations M | ||
| Theocritus with his bucolycall relacyons | ||
| Esiodus the Icono[mi]car Iconomicar] Icononucar F, M | ||
| And homerus the fresshe historiar | ||
| 330 | ¶Prynce of eloquence tullius_cicero | |
| With salusty a_geinst lucius_catelyne | ||
| sig: [B1v] | ||
| That wrote the history of iugurta also | ||
| Ouyde enshryned with the musis nyne | ||
| But blessed bacchus the pleasant god of wyne | ||
| 335 | Of closters engrosyd with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] droppes F, flotes M | |
| These orators and poetes refresshed there throtis | ||
| Lucan with stacius in Achilliedos this stanza is added in M | ||
| Percius presed forth with problemes diffuse | ||
| Uirgill the mantuan with his en[e]idos eneidos] enridos M | ||
| 340 | I[u]uenall satirray that men makythe to muse | |
| But blessed Bacchus the pleasant god of wyne | ||
| Of clusters engrosed with his ruddy flotes | ||
| These orators and Poetes refreshed their throtes | ||
| ¶There titus_lyuius hym-selfe dyd auaunce | ||
| 345 | With decadis historious whiche that he mengith | |
| With maters that amount the romayns in substaunce | ||
| Enyus that wrate of mercyall war at lengthe | ||
| ref.ed: 322 | ||
| But blessyd bachus potenciall god of strengthe | ||
| Of clusters engrosid with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] droppes F, dropes M | ||
| 350 | Theis orators and poetis refresshed there throtis | |
| ¶Aulus_Gelius that noble historiar | ||
| Orace also with his new poetry | ||
| Mayster Terence the famous co[mi]car comicar] conucar F, comicar M | ||
| With plautus that wrote full many a comody full] M omits | ||
| 355 | But blessyd bachus was in there company | |
| Of clusters engrosyd with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] dropis F, dropes M | ||
| Theis orators and poetis refresshed there throtis | ||
| ¶Senek full soberly wit[h] his tragedijs with] wit F | ||
| Boyce recounfortyd with his philosophy | ||
| 360 | And maxymyane with his madde ditijs | |
| How dotynge age wolde iape with yonge foly | ||
| But blessyd bachus most reuerent and holy | ||
| Of clusters engrosid with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] dropis F, dropes M | ||
| Theis orators and poetis refresshed there throtis | ||
| 365 | ¶There came Iohnn_bochas with his volumys grete | |
| Quintus_curs[i]us full craftely that wrate cursius] cursus F | ||
| Of Alexander / and macrobi[u]s that did trete | ||
| Of scipions dreme what was the treu probate | ||
| But blessyd bachus that neuer man forgate | ||
| 370 | Of clusters engrosed with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] dropis F, dropes M | |
| sig: [B2] | ||
| These orators and poetis refresshid ther throtis | ||
| ¶Pogge[u]s also that famous florentine | ||
| Mustred ther amonge them with many a mad tale | ||
| With a frere of fraunce men call sir gagwyne | ||
| 375 | That frow[n]yd on me full angerly and pale frownyd] frowmyd F | |
| But blessyd bachus that bote is of all bale | ||
| Of clusters engrosyd with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] dropis F, dropes M | ||
| Theis orators and poetis refresshid there throtis | ||
| ¶Plutarke and Petrarke two famous clarkis | ||
| 380 | Lucilius and valerius_maximus by name | |
| With vincencius in speculo that wrote noble warkis | ||
| Propercius and Pisandros poetis of noble fame | ||
| But blissed bachus that mastris oft doth frame | ||
| Of clusters engrosed with his ruddy [flotis] flotis] dropis F, dropes M | ||
| 385 | Theis notable poetis refresshid there throtis | |
| ref.ed: 323 | ||
| ¶And as I thus sadly amonge them auysid | ||
| I saw Gower that first garnisshed our englysshe rude | ||
| And maister Chaucer that nobly enterprysyd | ||
| How that our englysshe myght fresshely be [ennewed] ennewed] a meude F, ennewed M | ||
| 390 | The monke of Bury then after them ensuyd | |
| Dane Iohnn_lydgate theis englysshe poetis thre | ||
| As I ymagenyd repayrid vnto me | ||
| ¶To_geder in armes as brethern enbrasid | ||
| There apparell farre passynge beyonde that I can tell | ||
| 395 | Wt diamauntis and rubis there tabers were trasid tabers] taberdes M | |
| None so ryche stones in turkey to sell | ||
| Thei wantid nothynge but the laurell | ||
| And of there bounte they made me godely chere | ||
| In maner and forme as ye shall after here | ||
|
¶Mayster Gower. To Skelton. |
||
| 400 | ¶Brother Skelton your endeuorment | |
| So haue ye done that meretoryously | ||
| sig: [B2v] | ||
| Ye haue deseruyd to haue an enplement | ||
| In our collage aboue the sterry sky | ||
| By_cause that [ye] encrese and amplyfy ye] F omits, ye M | ||
| 405 | The brutid britons of brutus_albion | |
| That welny was loste when that we were gone welny] welnere M | ||
|
¶Poeta Skelton to Maister Gower. This heading and the following stanza are absent in F and are added here from M
|
||
| MAister Gower I haue nothyng deserued | ||
| To haue So laudabyle a commendacion | ||
| To yow thre this honor shalbe reserued | ||
| 410 | Arrectinge vnto your wyse examinacion | |
| How all that I do is vnder Refformation | ||
| For only the Substance of that I entend | ||
| Is glad to please and loth to offend. | ||
|
¶Mayster Chaucer To Skelton. |
||
| COunterwayng your besy delygence | ||
| 415 | Or that we beganne in the supplement | |
| Enforcid ar we you to recompence | ||
| ref.ed: 324 | ||
| Of all our hooll collage by the agreament | ||
| That we shall brynge you personally present | ||
| Of noble fame before the quenes grace | ||
| 420 | In whose court poynted is your place | |
|
¶Poeta Ske[l]ton Skelton] Sketon F answeryth.
|
||
| O Noble Chaucer whos pullisshyd eloquence | ||
| Oure englysshe rude so fresshely hath set out | ||
| That bounde ar we with all deu reuerence | ||
| Wt all our strength that we can brynge about | ||
| 425 | To owe to yow our seruyce / and more if we mowte | |
| But what sholde I say ye wote what I entende | ||
| Whiche glad am to please and loth to offende | ||
|
¶Mayster Lydgate. To Skelton. |
||
| SO am I preuentid of my brethern tweyne | ||
| In rendrynge to you thankkis meritory | ||
| 430 | That welny no-thynge there doth remayne welny] welnere M | |
| Wherwith to geue you my regraciatory | ||
| But that I poynt you to be prothonatory | ||
| Of fames court by all our holl assent | ||
| Auaunced by pallas to laurell preferment | ||
|
¶Poeta Skelton answeryth |
||
| 435 | ¶So haue ye me far passynge my meretis extollyd | |
| Mayster lidgate of your accustomable | ||
| sig: [B3] | ||
| Bownte / and so gloryously ye haue enrollyd | ||
| My name / I know well be_yonde that I am able | ||
| That but if my warkes therto be agreable | ||
| 440 | I am elles rebukyd of that I intende | |
| Which glad am to please and lothe to offende | ||
| ¶So finally when they had shewyd there deuyse | ||
| Under the forme as I sayd to_fore to_fore] before M | ||
| I made it straunge and drew bak ones or twyse | ||
| 445 | And euer they presed on me more and more | |
| Tyll at the last they forcyd me sore sore] so sore M | ||
| That with them I went where they wolde me brynge | ||
| Unto the pauylyon where pallas was syttyng | ||
| ref.ed: 325 | ||
| DAme Pallas commaundid that they shold me conuay | ||
| 450 | In-to the ryche palace of þe quene of fame | |
| There shal he here what she wyl to hym say wyl to hym] to hym will M | ||
| When he is callid to answere to his name | ||
| A cry anone forthwith she made proclame | ||
| All orators and poetis shulde thider go before | ||
| 455 | Wi[th] all the prese that there was lesse and more With] wiht F | |
| ¶Forth-with I say thus wa[n]drynge in my thought wandrynge] wadrynge F | ||
| How [far] it was or elles within what howris far] F, M omit | ||
| I can not tell you / but that I was brought | ||
| In-to a palace with turrettis and towris | ||
| 460 | Engolerid goodly with hallis and bowris Engolerid] Engalared M | |
| So curiously / so craftely / so connyngly wrowght | ||
| That all the worde I trowe and it were sought worde] worlde M | ||
| ¶Suche a nother there coude no man fynde | ||
| Wher-of partely I purpose to expounde | ||
| 465 | Whyles it remanyth fresshe in my mynde | |
| Wt turkis and grossolitis enpauyd was the grounde | ||
| Of birrall enbosid wer the pyllers rownde | ||
| Of Elephantis tethe were the palace gatis | ||
| sig: [B3v] | ||
| Enlosenged with many goodly platis | ||
| 470 | ¶Of golde entachid with many a precyous stone | |
| An hundred steppis mountyng to the halle | ||
| One of iasper a nother of whalis-bone | ||
| Of dyamauntis pointed was the wall the] the rokky M | ||
| The carpettis within and tappettis of pall | ||
| 475 | The chambres hangid with clothes of arace | |
| Enuawtyd with rubies the vawte was of this place | ||
| ¶Thus passid we forth walkynge vnto the pretory | ||
| Where þe postis wer enbulyoned with saphiris indy-blew | ||
| Englasid glittering with many a clere-story | ||
| 480 | Iacinctis and smaragdis out of the florthe they grew | |
| Unto this place all poetis there did sue | ||
| Wherin was set of fame the noble quene | ||
| All other transcendynge [the] most rychely besene the] F, M omit | ||
| ¶Under a gloryous cloth of astate | ||
| 485 | Fret all with orient perlys of garnate | |
| Encrownyd as empresse of all this wordly fate wordly] worldly M | ||
| So ryally / so rychely / so passyngly ornate | ||
| ref.ed: 326 | ||
| It was excedyng by_yonde the commowne rate | ||
| This hous enuyrowne was a myle a_bout | ||
| 490 | If .xij. were let in .xij. hundreth stode without | |
| ¶Then to this lady and souerayne of this palace | ||
| Of purseuantis ther presid in with many a dyuerse tale a] M omits | ||
| Some were of poyle and sum were of trace | ||
| Of lymerik / of loreine / of spayne of portyngale | ||
| 495 | Frome napuls / from nauern and from rounceuall | |
| Some from flaunders / sum from the se-coste | ||
| Some from the mayne-lande / some fro the frensche hoste | ||
| ¶With how doth / e north what tydyngis in / e sowth | ||
| The west is wyndy / the est is metely wele | ||
| 500 | It is harde to tell of euery mannes mouthe | |
| sig: [B4] | ||
| A slipper holde the taile is of an ele | ||
| And he haltith often that hath a kyby hele | ||
| Some shewid his salfecundight some shewid his charter salfecundight] safeconduct M; charter] chart M | ||
| Some lokyd full smothely and had a fals-quarter quarter] quart M | ||
| 505 | ¶With sir I pray you a lytyll tyne stande backe 'tyne': see 'tine', a. and sb. 6, OED | |
| And lette me come in to delyuer my lettre | ||
| A nother tolde how shyppes wente to wrak | ||
| There were many wordes smaller and gretter | ||
| With I as good as thou / I_fayth and no better | ||
| 510 | Some came to tell treuth / some came to lye | |
| Some c[a]me to flater / some came to spye came] come F, came M | ||
| ¶There were I say of all maner of sortis | ||
| Of dertmouth / of plummouth / of portismouth also | ||
| The burgeis / and the ballyuis of the .v. portis | ||
| 515 | With now let me come / and now let me go | |
| And all-tyme wandred I thus to and fro | ||
| Tyll at the last theis noble poetis thre | ||
| Unto me sayd / lo syr now ye may se | ||
| ¶Of this high courte the dayly besines | ||
| 520 | From you most we but not longe to tary | |
| Lo hither commyth a goodly maystres | ||
| Occupacyon famys regestary | ||
| Whiche shall be to you a sufferayne accessary | ||
| With syngular pleasurs to dryue a_way the tyme | ||
| 525 | And we shall se you ageyne or it be pryme | |
| ref.ed: 327 | ||
| ¶When they were past and wente forth on there way | ||
| This gentilwoman that callyd was by name | ||
| Occupacyon in ryght goodly aray | ||
| Came towarde me and smylid halfe in game | ||
| 530 | I sawe hir smyle and I then did the same I then] than I M | |
| With that on me she kest her goodly loke | ||
| Under her arme me-thought she hade a boke | ||
| sig: [B4v] | ||
|
¶Occupacyoun to Skelton. |
||
| Lyke as the larke vpon the somers day | ||
| Whan titan radiant burnisshith his bemis bryght | ||
| 535 | Mountith on hy with her melodious lay | |
| Of the sone-shyne engladid with the lyght | ||
| So am I supprysyd with pleasure and delyght | ||
| To se this howre now that I may say | ||
| How ye ar welcome to this court of aray | ||
| 540 | ¶Of your acqueintaunce I was in tymes past | |
| Of studyous doctryne when at the port-salu | ||
| [Ye] fyrste aryuyd whan broken was your mast Ye] The F, Ye M | ||
| Of worldly trust then did I you rescu | ||
| Your storme-dryuen shyppe I repared new | ||
| 545 | So well entakeled what wynde that euer blowe that] so M | |
| No stormy tempeste your barge shall ouer_throw | ||
| ¶Welcome to me as hertely as herte can thynke | ||
| Welcome to me with all my hole desyre | ||
| And for my sake spare neyther pen nor ynke | ||
| 550 | Be well assurid I shall a_quyte your hyre | |
| Your name recountynge be_yonde the lande of tyre | ||
| From sydony to the mount olympyan | ||
| Frome babill_towre to the hillis [C]aspian Caspian] Gaspian F, Caspian M | ||
|
¶Skelton poeta answeryth |
||
| I Thanked her moche of her most noble offer | ||
| 555 | Affyaunsynge her myne hole assuraunce | |
| For her pleasure to make a large profer | ||
| Enpryntyng her wordes in my remembraunce. | ||
| To owe her my seruyce with true perseueraunce | ||
| ref.ed: 328 | ||
| Come on with me she sayd let vs not stonde | ||
| 560 | And with that worde she toke me by the honde | |
| So passyd we forthe in-to the forsayd place | ||
| With suche communycacyon as came to our mynde | ||
| sig: C1 | ||
| And then she sayd whylis we haue tyme and space | ||
| To walke where we lyst / let vs somwhat fynde | ||
| 565 | To pas the tyme with / but let vs wast no wynde | |
| For ydle iangelers haue but lytill braine | ||
| Wordes be swordes and hard to call ageine | ||
| ¶In-to a felde she brought me wyde and large | ||
| Enwallyd aboute with the stony flint | ||
| 570 | Strongly enbateld moche costious of charge | |
| To walke on this walle she bed I sholde not stint | ||
| Go softly she sayd the stones be full glint | ||
| She went before and bad me take good holde | ||
| I sawe a thowsande yatis new and olde | ||
| 575 | ¶Then questionyd I her what thos yatis ment thos] these M | |
| Wherto she answeryd and breuely me tolde | ||
| How from the est vnto the occident | ||
| And from the sowth vnto the north so colde | ||
| Theis yatis she sayd which that ye beholde | ||
| 580 | Be issuis and portis from all maner of nacyons | |
| And seryously she shewyd me ther denominacyons | ||
| ¶They had wrytyng sum greke / sum ebrew | ||
| Some romaine letters as I vnderstode | ||
| Some were olde wryten / sum were writen new | ||
| 585 | Some carectis of caldy / sum frensshe was full good | |
| But one gate specyally where-as I stode | ||
| Had grauin in it of calcydony a capytall .A. | ||
| What yate call ye this / and she sayd Anglea yate] gate M | ||
| The beldynge therof was passynge commendable | ||
| 590 | Wheron stode a lybbard crownyd with golde and stones | |
| Terrible of countenaunce and passynge formydable | ||
| As quikly towchyd as it were flesshe and bones | ||
| As gastly that glaris as grimly that gronis | ||
| As fersly frownynge as he had ben fyghtyng | ||
| sig: [C1v] | ||
| 595 | And with his forme foote he shoke forthe this wrytyng | |
| ref.ed: 329 | ||
| Formidanda nimis Iouis vltima fulmina tollis | ||
| Vnguibus ire parat loca singula liuida curuis | ||
| Quam modo per phebes Nummos raptura celeno | ||
| Arma / lues / luctus / fel / vis / fraus barbara tellus | ||
| 600 | Mille modis erras odium tibi querere martis | |
| Spreto spineto cedat sali[un]ca roseto saliunca] salimica F, saliunca M Cacosinthicon ex industria | ||
| THen I me lent and loked ouer the wall | ||
| Innumerable people presed to euery gate | ||
| Shet were the gatis thei might wel knock and cal | ||
| 605 | And turne home ageyne for they cam al to late | |
| I her demaunded of them and ther astate | ||
| Forsothe quod she theys be has[k]ardis and rebawdis haskardis] hastardis F, haskardes M | ||
| Dysers / carders / tumblars with gambawdis | ||
| ¶Furdrers of loue with bawdry aqueinted | ||
| 610 | Brainles blenkardis that blow at the cole | |
| Fals forgers of mony for kownnage atteintid kownnage] coynnage M | ||
| Pope-holy ypocrytis as they were golde and hole | ||
| Powle-hatchettis that prate wyll at euery ale-pole wyll] well M | ||
| Ryot / reueler / railer / brybery theft | ||
| 615 | Wt other condycyons that well myght be left | |
| ¶Sume fayne them-selfe folys and wolde be callyd wyse | ||
| Sum medelynge spyes by craft to grope thy mynde | ||
| Sum dysdanous dawcokkis that all men dispyse | ||
| Fals flaterers that fawne the and kurris of kynde | ||
| 620 | That speke fayre before the and shrewdly behynde | |
| Hither they come crowdyng to get them a name | ||
| But hailid they be homwarde with sorow and shame | ||
| ¶With that I herd gunnis russhe out at ones | ||
| Bowns / bowns / bowns / that all they out-cryde | ||
| 625 | It made sum lympe-legged and broisid there bones | |
| Sum were made peuysshe porisshly pynk-iyde | ||
| sig: [C2] | ||
| That euer more after by it they were aspyid | ||
| And one ther was there I wondred of his hap | ||
| For a gun-stone I say had all to_iaggid his cap to iaggid] to lagged M | ||
| 630 | ¶Raggid and daggid and cunnyngly cut | |
| The blaste of the brynston blew away his brayne | ||
| Masid as a marche-hare he ran lyke a scut | ||
| And sir amonge all me-thought I saw twaine | ||
| ref.ed: 330 | ||
| The one was a tumblar that afterwarde againe | ||
| 635 | Of a dysour a deuyl way grew a Ientilman | |
| Pers_prater the secund tha[t] quarillis beganne that] tha F, that M | ||
| ¶Wt a pellit of peuisshenes they had suche a stroke | ||
| That all þe dayes of ther lyfe shall styck by ther rybbis | ||
| Foo / foisty bawdias sum smellid of the smoke | ||
| 640 | I saw dyuers that were carijd away thens in cribbis | |
| Dasyng after dotrellis lyke drunkardis that dribbis | ||
| Theis titi[u]yllis with taumpinnis wer towchid and tappid | ||
| Moche mischefe I hyght you / amonge theem ther happid | ||
| SOmetyme as it semyth when þe mone-light | ||
| 645 | By meanys of a grosely endarkyd clowde | |
| Sodenly is eclipsid in the wynter night | ||
| In lyke maner of wyse a myst did vs shrowde | ||
| But wele may ye thynk I was no-thyng prowde | ||
| Of that auenturis whiche made me sore agast | ||
| 650 | In derkenes thus dwelt we tyll at the last | |
| ¶The clowdis gan to clere / þe myst was rarifijd | ||
| In an herber I saw brought where I was an] a an F | ||
| There birdis on the brere sange on euery syde | ||
| With alys ensandid about in compas | ||
| 655 | The bankis enturfid with singular solas | |
| Enrailid with rosers and vinis engrapid | ||
| It was a new comfort of sorowis escapid | ||
| ¶In the middis a coundight that coryously was cast | ||
| sig: [C2v] | ||
| With pypes of golde engusshing out stremes | ||
| 660 | Of cristall the clerenes theis waters far past | |
| Enswymmyng with rochis / barbellis / and bremis | ||
| Whose skales ensilured again the son-beames this line is added in M | ||
| Englisterd: that ioyous it was to be_holde | ||
| Then furthermore aboute me my syght I reuolde | ||
| 665 | ¶Where I saw growyng a goodly laurell-tre | |
| Enuerdurid with leuis contynually grene | ||
| Aboue in the top a byrde of araby | ||
| Men call a phenix: her wynges bytwene | ||
| She bet vp a fyre with the sparkis full kene | ||
| 670 | With braunches and bowghis of the swete olyue | |
| Whos flagraunt flower was chefe preseruatyue Oliua speciosa in campis | ||
| ref.ed: 331 | ||
| ¶Ageynst all infeccyons with cancour enflamyd cancour] rancour M | ||
| Ageynst all baratows broisiours of olde | ||
| It passid all bawmys that euer were namyd | ||
| 675 | Or gummis of saby so derely that be solde Quam excellentiam virtutis in oliua. | |
| There blew in that gardynge a soft piplyng colde | ||
| Enbrethyng of zepherus with his pleasant wynde | ||
| All frutis [and] flowris grew there in there kynde and] F omits, and M | ||
| ¶Dryades there daunsid vpon that goodly soile | ||
| 680 | Wit[h] the nyne muses pierides by name with] wit F | |
| Phillis and testalus ther tressis with oyle | ||
| Were newly enbybid: and rownd a_bout the same | ||
| Grene tre of laurell moche solacyous game | ||
| They made / with chapellettes and garlandes grene | ||
| 685 | And formest of all dame flora the quene | |
| ¶Of somer: so formally she fotid the daunce | ||
| There cintheus sat twynklyng vpon his harpe-stringis | ||
| And iopas his instrument did auaunce | ||
| The poemis and storis auncient inbryngis | ||
| 690 | Of athlas astrology and many noble thyngis | |
| Of wandryng of the mone / the course of the sun | ||
| sig: [C3] | ||
| Of men and of bestis and where-of they begone | ||
| ¶What thynge occasionyd the showris of rayne | ||
| Of fyre elementar in his supreme spere | ||
| 695 | And of that pole artike whiche doth remayne | |
| Behynde the taile of vrsa so clere | ||
| Of pliades he prechid with ther drowsy chere | ||
| Immoysturid with mislyng and ay droppyng dry | ||
| And where the two tr[i]ons a man shold a_spy trions] troons F, trions M | ||
| 700 | ¶And of the winter days that hy them so fast | |
| And of the wynter nyghtes that tary so longe | ||
| And of the somer days so longe that doth last | ||
| And of their shorte nyghtes / he browght in his songe | ||
| How wronge was no ryght / and ryght was no wronge | ||
| 705 | There was counteryng of carollis in meter and verse and] and in M | |
| So many: that longe it were to reherse | ||
|
¶Occupacyon. To Skelton. |
||
| HOw say ye: is this after your appetite | ||
| ref.ed: 332 | ||
| May this contente you and your mirry mynde | ||
| Here dwellith pleasure with lust and delyte | ||
| 710 | Contynuall comfort here ye may fynde | |
| Of welth and solace no-thynge left be_hynde | ||
| All-thynge conuenable here is cont[ry]uyd conuenable] conuenably M; contryuyd] contyruyd F | ||
| Where-with your spiritis may be reuyuid | ||
|
¶Poeta Skelton answeryth. |
||
| QUestionles no dowte of that ye say | ||
| 715 | Iupiter hym-selfe this lyfe myght endure | |
| This ioy excedith all wordly sport and play wordly] worldly M | ||
| Paradyce / this place is of syngular pleasure | ||
| O wele were hym that herof myght be sure | ||
| And here to inhabite / and ay for to dwell | ||
| 720 | But goodly maystres one thynge ye me tell | |
| sig: [C3v] | ||
|
¶Occupacyon. To Skelton. |
||
| OF your demawnd shew me the content | ||
| What it is and where-vpon it standis | ||
| And if there be in it any-thyng ment | ||
| Wherof the answere restyth in my handis | ||
| 725 | It shall be losyd ful sone out of the bandis | |
| Of sc[r]upulus dout: wherfore your mynde discharge scrupulus] scupulus F, scrupulus M | ||
| And of your wyll the plainnes shew at large | ||
|
¶Poeta Skelton answeryth. |
||
| I Thanke you goodly maystres to me most benynge | ||
| Yt of your bounte so well haue me assurid | ||
| 730 | But my request is not so great a thynge | |
| That I ne force what though it be discurid | ||
| I am not woundid but that I may be cured | ||
| I am not ladyn of liddyrnes wi[th] lumpis with] wiht F | ||
| As dasid doterdis that dreme in their dumpis | ||
|
¶Occupacyon. To Skelton |
||
| 735 | NOwe what ye mene I trow I coniect | |
| Gog gyue you good yere ye make me to smyle Gog] God M | ||
| ref.ed: 333 | ||
| Now b[y] your faith is not this th'effect by] be F, by M | ||
| Of your questyon ye make all this whyle | ||
| To vnderstande who dwellyth in yone pile yone] yonder C | ||
| 740 | And what blunderar is yonder that playth didil_diddil | |
| He fyndith fals mesuris out of his fonde fiddill fals mesuris out] owght fals mesuris C | ||
|
Interpolata / que industriosum Postulant interpretem / satira in vatis aduersarium. |
||
| ¶Tressis agasonis species prior: altera daui, | ||
| Aucupium culicis limis dum torquet ocellum. | ||
| Concipit / aligeras / rapit / [ap]petit / aspice muscas appetit] opetit F | ||
| 745 | Maia queque fouet: fouet aut que iuppiter aut que | |
| Frigida / saturnus / sol / mars venus algida luna Nota Alchimiam et .7. metalla. | ||
| sig: [C4] | ||
| Si tibi contingat verbo aut committere scripto | ||
| Quam sibi mox tacita sudant precordia culpa. | ||
| Hinc ruit in flammas: stimula[n]s hunc vrget et illum stimulans] stimulas F | ||
| 750 | Inuocat ad rixas / vanos tamen excitat ignes | |
| Labra mouens tacitus / rumpantur vt ilia Codro | ||
| 17. 4. 7. 2. 17. 5. 18. | ||
| 18. 19. 1. 19. 8. 5. 12. | ||
| HIs name for to know if that ye lyst | ||
| Enuyous_rancour truely he hight | ||
| Be ware of hym I warne you for and ye wist and] if M | ||
| 755 | How daungerous it were to stande in his lyght were to stande in his lyght] is to stop up his sight C | |
| Ye wolde not dele with hym thowgh that ye myght though] thought M, thowth C | ||
| For by his deuellysshe drift and graceles prouision | ||
| An hole reame he is able to set at deuysion | ||
| ¶For when he spekyth fayrest then thynketh he moost yll | ||
| 760 | Full gloryously can he glose thy mynde for to fele | |
| He wyll set men a_feightynge and s[y]t hym-selfe styll set men a feightynge] stir men to brawlyng C; syt] set F, syt M | ||
| And smerke lyke a smythy-kur [at] sperkes of steile at] os F, at M | ||
| [H]e can neuer leue warke whylis it is wele He] Ie F | ||
| To tell all his towchis it were to grete wonder | ||
| 765 | The deuyll of hell and he be seldome a_sonder | |
| THus talkyng we went forth in at a postern-gate forth] C omits | ||
| Turnyng on þe ryght hande by [a] windyng-stayre a] F omits, a M | ||
| She brought me to a goodly chaumber of astate to] into C | ||
| Where the noble cowntes of Surrey in a chayre | ||
| ref.ed: 334 | ||
| 770 | Sat honorably / to whome did repaire | |
| Of ladys [a beue] with all dew reuerence a beue] aboue F, a Beuy M | ||
| Syt downe fayre ladys and do your diligence | ||
| ¶Come forth Ientylwomen I pray you she sayd | ||
| I haue contryuyd for you a goodly warke | ||
| 775 | And who can worke beste now shall be a_sayde | |
| A cronell of lawrell with verduris light and darke | ||
| sig: [C4v] | ||
| I haue deuysyd for Skelton my clerke | ||
| For to his seruyce I haue suche regarde | ||
| That of our bownte we wyll hym rewarde | ||
| 780 | ¶For of all ladyes he hath the library | |
| Ther names recountyng in þe court of fame | ||
| Of all gentylwomen he hath the sc[r]uteny scruteny] scuteny F, scruteny M | ||
| In fames court reportynge the same | ||
| For yet of women he neuer sayd shame | ||
| 785 | But if they were counterfettes that women them call | |
| That list of there lewdnesse with hym for to brall | ||
| ¶With that the tappettis and carpettis were layd | ||
| Where-on theis ladys softly myght rest | ||
| The saumpler to sow on the lacis to enbraid | ||
| 790 | To weue in the stoule sume were full preste | |
| Wt slaijs / with tauellis / with hedellis well drest | ||
| The frame was browght forth with his weuyng-pin | ||
| God geue them good spede there warke to begin | ||
| ¶Sume to enbrowder put them in prese | ||
| 795 | Well gydyng ther glowtonn to kepe streit theyr sylk ther] the C | |
| Sum pirlyng of goldde theyr worke to encrese | ||
| Wt fingers smale and handis whyte as mylk whyte] as white M | ||
| With reche me that skane of tewly sylk | ||
| And wynde me that botowme of such an hew an] a C | ||
| 800 | Grene / rede / tawny / whyte / purpill and blew whyte] whyght blak C | |
| ¶Of broken warkis wrought many a goodly thyng | ||
| In castyng / in turnynge / in florisshyng of flowris | ||
| With burris rowth and bottons surffillyng | ||
| In nedill-wark raysyng byrdis in bowris byrdis in bowris] bothe birddis and bowres C | ||
| 805 | With vertu enbesid all tymes and howris | |
| And truly of theyr bownte thus were they bent | ||
| To worke me this chapelet by goode aduysemente | ||
| ref.ed: 335 | ||
| sig: D[1] | ||
|
¶Occupacyon. To Skelton. |
||
| BEholde and se in your aduertysement | ||
| How theis ladys and gentylwomen all | ||
| 810 | For your pleasure do there endeuourment | |
| And for your sake how fast to warke they fall. | ||
| To your remembraunce wherfore ye must call | ||
| In goodly wordes plesauntly comprysid | ||
| That for them some goodly conseyt be deuysid | ||
| 815 | ¶With proper captacyons of beneuolence | |
| Ornatly pullysshid after your faculte | ||
| Sith ye must nedis afforce it by pretence | ||
| Of your professyoun vnto vmanyte | ||
| Commensyng your proces after there degre | ||
| 820 | To iche of them rendryng thankis commendable | |
| With sentence fructuous and termes couenable | ||
|
¶Poeta Skelton answeryth. |
||
| AUaunsynge my-selfe sum thanke to deserue | ||
| I me determynyd for to sharpe my pen | ||
| Deuoutly arrectyng my prayer to mynerue | ||
| 825 | She to vowche_safe me to informe and ken | |
| To mercury also hertely prayed I then | ||
| Me to supporte to helpe and to assist | ||
| To gyde and to gouerne my dredfull tremlyng fist | ||
| ¶As a mariner that amasid is in a stormy rage amasid] masid C | ||
| 830 | Hardly be_stad and driuen is to hope and] C omits | |
| Of that the tempe[st]ous wynde wyll a_swage tempestous] tempeous F, tempestous M, tempestuows C | ||
| In trust wherof comforte his hart doth grope | ||
| From the anker he kuttyth the gabyll-rope | ||
| Committyth all to god and lettyth his shyp ryde | ||
| 835 | So I beseke ihesu now to be my gyde | |
| sig: [D1v] | ||
|
¶To the ryght noble countes of Surrey |
||
| ¶After all duly ordred obeisaunce =Ringler TP 68 | ||
| In humble wyse as lowly as I may | ||
| Unto you madame I make reco[nu]saunce reconusaunce] recounsaunce F | ||
| My lyfe endurynge I shall both wryte and say | ||
| ref.ed: 336 | ||
| 840 | Recount / reporte / reherse with-out delay | |
| The passynge bounte of your noble astate | ||
| Of honour and worshyp which hath the formar date | ||
| ¶Lyke to argyua by iust resemblaunce | ||
| The noble wyfe of polimites kynge | ||
| 845 | Prudent rebecca of whome remembraunce | |
| The byble makith / with whos chast lyuynge | ||
| Your nobl[e] demenour is counterwayng noble] noblr F | ||
| Whos passynge bounte / and ryght noble astate | ||
| Of honour and worship it hath the formar date | ||
| 850 | ¶The noble pamphila quene of þe grekis londe | |
| Habillimentis royall founde out industriously | ||
| Thamer also wrought with her goodly honde | ||
| Many diuisis passynge curyously | ||
| Whome ye represent and exemplify | ||
| 855 | Whos passynge bounte and ryght noble astate | |
| Of honour and worship it hath the formar date | ||
| ¶As dame thamarys whiche toke the kyng of perce | ||
| Cirus by name as wrytith the story | ||
| Dame agrippina also I may reherse | ||
| 860 | Of ientyll corage the p[er]fight m[e]mory perfight] profight F | |
| So shall your name endure perpetually | ||
| Whos passyng bounte and ryght noble astate | ||
| Of honour and worship it hath the formar date | ||
|
¶To my lady elisabeth_howarde |
||
| ¶To be your remembrauncer madame I am bounde =Ringler TP 2012 | ||
| 865 | Lyke to aryna maydenly of porte | |
| sig: [D2] | ||
| Of vertu and konnyng the well and perfight grounde and] C omits | ||
| Whome dame nature as wele I may reporte | ||
| Hath fresshely enbewtid with many a goodly sorte | ||
| Of womanly feturis / whos florysshyng tender age | ||
| 870 | Is lusty to loke on plesaunte demure and sage | |
| ¶Goodly creisseid: fayrer than polexene | ||
| For to enuyue pandarus appetite | ||
| Troilus I trowe if that he had you sene | ||
| In you he wolde haue set his hole delight | ||
| 875 | Of all your bewte I suffyce not to wryght | |
| ref.ed: 337 | ||
| But as I sayd your florisshinge tender age | ||
| Is lusty to loke on plesaunt demure and sage | ||
|
¶To my lady mirriell_howarde |
||
| MI litell lady I may not leue behinde =Ringler TP 1166 | ||
| But to do you seruyce nedis now I must to do you] do her C | ||
| 880 | Beninge curteyse of ientyll harte and mynde | |
| Whom fortune and fate playnly haue discust. | ||
| Longe to enioy plesure delyght and lust | ||
| The enbuddid blossoms of roses rede of hew The enbuddid blossoms of] Enbuddid blossome with C | ||
| With lillis whyte your bewte doth renewe With lillis] The lylly C | ||
| 885 | ¶Compare you I may to cidippes the mayd | |
| That of aconcyus whan she founde the byll | ||
| In her bosome / lorde how she was afrayd how] C omits | ||
| The ruddy shamefastnes in her vysage fyll | ||
| Whiche maner of abasshement became her not yll | ||
| 890 | Right so madame the roses redde of hew | |
| With lillys whyte your bewte dothe renewe | ||
|
¶To my lady ann_dakers of the sowth |
||
| ZEuxes that enpicturid fare elene the quene =Ringler TP 2345 | ||
| You to deuyse his crafte were to seke | ||
| And if apelles your countenaunce had sene | ||
| 895 | Of porturature which was the famous greke | |
| sig: [D2v] | ||
| He coude not deuyse the lest poynt of your cheke | ||
| Princes of yowth and flowre of goodly porte | ||
| Vertu / conyng / solace / pleasure / comforte | ||
| ¶Paregall in honour vnto penolepe | ||
| 900 | That for her trowth is in remembraunce had | |
| Fayre dijanira surm[o]wntynge in bewte surmowntynge] surmewntynge F | ||
| Demure diana womanly and sad | ||
| Whos lusty lokis make heuy hartis glad | ||
| Princes of youth and flowre of goodly porte | ||
| 905 | Vertu / connyng / solace / pleasure / comforte | |
|
¶To mastres margery_wentworthe. |
||
| ¶With margerain ientyll | ||
| The flowre of goodly_hede | ||
| ref.ed: 338 | ||
| Enbrowdred þe mantill | ||
| Is of your maydenh[e]de maydenhede] maydenhode F | ||
| 910 | ¶Plainly I can not glose. =Ringler TP 1469 | |
| Ye be as I deuyne | ||
| The praty primrose | ||
| The goodly columbyne. | ||
| ¶With margerain iantill | ||
| 915 | The flowre of goodly_hede | |
| Enbrawderyd the mantyll | ||
| Is of yowre maydenhede | ||
| ¶Benynge corteise and meke | ||
| Wt wordes well deuysid | ||
| 920 | In you who list to seke | |
| Be vertus well comprysid | ||
| ¶With margerain iantill | ||
| The flowre of goodlyhede | ||
| Enbrawderid the mantill | ||
| 925 | Is of yowr maydenhede | |
|
¶To mastres margaret_tylney. |
||
| I you assure =Ringler TP 816 | ||
| Ful wel I know | ||
| My besy cure | ||
| To yow I owe | ||
| 930 | Humbly and low | |
| Commendynge me | ||
| To yowre bownte | ||
| ¶As machareus | ||
| Fayre canace | ||
| 935 | So I / iwys | |
| Endeuoure me | ||
| Yowr name to se | ||
| It be enrolde | ||
| Writtin with golde | ||
| 940 | ¶Phedra ye may | |
| Wele represent | ||
| Intentyfe ay | ||
| ref.ed: 339 | ||
| And dylygent | ||
| No tyme myspent | ||
| sig: [D3] | ||
| 945 | Wherfore delyght | |
| I haue to whryght | ||
| ¶Of margarite | ||
| Perle orient | ||
| L[o]de-sterre of lyght Lodesterre] Lede sterre F | ||
| 950 | Moche relucent | |
| Madame regent | ||
| I may you call | ||
| Of vertuows all | ||
|
¶To maystres Iane_blenner_haiset. |
||
| ¶What though my penne / wax faynt =Ringler TP 2139 | ||
| 955 | and hath smale lust to paint | |
| Yet shall there [be] no restraynt be] F, M omit | ||
| Cause me to cese | ||
| Amonge this prese | ||
| For to encrese | ||
| 960 | Yowre goodly name | |
| ¶I wyll my-selfe applye | ||
| Trust me ententifly | ||
| Yow for to stellyfye | ||
| And so obserue. | ||
| 965 | That ye ne swarue | |
| For to deserue. | ||
| Inmortall fame Inmortall] The courte of C | ||
| ¶Sith mistres iane_haiset | ||
| Smale flowres helpt to sett | ||
| 970 | In my goodly chapelet | |
| Therfore I render of her the memory. | ||
| Vnto þe legend of fare laodomi | ||
|
¶To maystres Isabell_pennell |
||
| ¶By saynt mary my lady =Ringler TP 288 | ||
| Your mammy and your dady | ||
| 975 | Brought forth a godely babi | |
| ref.ed: 340 | ||
| ¶My mayden Isabell | ||
| Reflaring rosabell | ||
| The flagrant camamell | ||
| ¶The ruddy rosary | ||
| 980 | The souerayne rosemary | |
| The praty strawbery | ||
| ¶The columbyne þe nepte | ||
| The ieloffer well set | ||
| The propre vyolet | ||
| 985 | ¶Envwyd your colowre your] her C | |
| Is lyke the dasy flowre | ||
| After the aprill showre | ||
| ¶Sterre of the morow gray | ||
| The blossom on the spray | ||
| 990 | The fresshest flowre of may. | |
| ¶Maydenly demure | ||
| Of womanhode the lure | ||
| Wherfore I make you sure I make you sure] I yow assure C | ||
| ¶It were an heuenly helth | ||
| 995 | It were an endeles welth | |
| A lyfe for god hym-selfe | ||
| ¶To here this nightingale | ||
| Amonge þe byrdes smale | ||
| Warbelynge in the vale | ||
| 1000 | Dug / dug / Iug / Iug. | |
| Good yere and good luk | ||
| Wt chuk / chuk / chuk / chuk. | ||
| sig: [D3v] | ||
|
¶To maystres margaret_Hussey |
||
| ¶Mirry margaret | ||
| As mydsomer flowre | ||
| 1005 | Ientill as fawcoun | |
| Or hawke of the towre | ||
| ¶Wt solace and gladnes =Ringler TP 2304 | ||
| Moche mirthe and no madnes | ||
| ref.ed: 341 | ||
| All good and no badnes | ||
| 1010 | So ioyously | |
| So maydenly | ||
| So womanly | ||
| Her demenyng | ||
| In euery-thynge | ||
| 1015 | Far / far passynge | |
| That I can endyght | ||
| Or suffyce to wryght | ||
| Of mirry margarete | ||
| As mydsomer flowre | ||
| 1020 | Ientyll as fawcoun | |
| Or hawke of the towre | ||
| ¶As pacient and as styll | ||
| And as full of good wyll | ||
| As fayre Isaphill fayre] the fayre C | ||
| 1025 | Colyaunder | |
| Swete pomaunder | ||
| Good cassaunder | ||
| Stedfast of thought | ||
| Wele made / wele wrought | ||
| 1030 | Far may be sought | |
| Erst that ye can fynde that] than C | ||
| So corteise so kynde | ||
| As mirry margarete | ||
| This midsomer flowre This] The C | ||
| 1035 | Ientyll as fawcoun | |
| Or hawke of the towre | ||
|
¶To mastres Geretrude_statham |
||
| Though ye wer hard-hertyd =Ringler TP 1977 | ||
| And I with you thwartid | ||
| With wordes that smartid | ||
| 1040 | Yet nowe doutles ye geue me cause | |
| This line is set out as two lines in F | ||
| To wryte of you this goodli clause | ||
| Maistres geretrude | ||
| With womanhode endude | ||
| Wt vertu well renwde | ||
| 1045 | ¶I wyll that ye shall be | |
| In all benyngnyte | ||
| ref.ed: 342 | ||
| Lyke to dame pasiphe | ||
| For nowe dowtles ye geue me cause | ||
| This line is set out as two lines in F | ||
| To wryte of yow this goodly clause | ||
| 1050 | Maistres geretrude | |
| With womanhode endude | ||
| With vertu well renude | ||
| ¶Partly by your councell. | ||
| Garnisshed with lawrell | ||
| 1055 | Was my fresshe coronell | |
| Wherfore doutles ye geue me cause | ||
| This line is set out as two lines in F | ||
| To wryte of you this goodly clause | ||
| Maistres geretrude | ||
| With womanhode endude | ||
| sig: [D4] | ||
| 1060 | With vertu well renude | |
|
¶To maystres Isabell_knyght |
||
| BUt if I sholde aquyte your kyndnes =Ringler TP 280 | ||
| Els saye ye myght | ||
| That in me were grete blyndnes | ||
| I for to be so myndles | ||
| 1065 | And cowde not wryght | |
| Of Isabell_knyght | ||
| ¶It is not my custome nor my gyse | ||
| To leue be_hynde | ||
| Her that is bothe womanly and wyse womanly] maydenly C | ||
| 1070 | And specyally which glad was to deuyse | |
| The menes to fynde | ||
| To please my mynde | ||
| ¶In helpyng to warke my laurell grene | ||
| With sylke and golde | ||
| 1075 | Galathea the made well besene | |
| Was neuer halfe so fayre as I wene | ||
| Whiche was extolde | ||
| A thowsande-folde | ||
| ¶By maro the mantuan prudent | ||
| 1080 | Who list to rede | |
| But and I had leyser competent | ||
| I coude shew you suche a presedent you] C omits | ||
| ref.ed: 343 | ||
| In very dede | ||
| Howe ye excede | ||
|
¶Occupacyon. To Skelton. |
||
| 1085 | ¶With_drawe your hande the tyme passis fast | |
| Set on your hede this laurell whiche is wrought | ||
| Here you not eolus for you blowyth a blaste you] ye C | ||
| I dare wele saye that ye and I be sought | ||
| Make no delay for now ye must be brought | ||
| 1090 | Before my ladys grace the quene of fame | |
| Where ye must breuely answere to your name | ||
| sig: [D4v] | ||
|
¶Skelton Poeta. |
||
| CAstyng my syght the chambre aboute | ||
| To se how duly ich thyng in ordre was | ||
| Towarde / e dore as we were comyng oute | ||
| 1095 | I sawe maister newton sit with his compas | |
| His plummet / his pensell / his spectacles [of] glas of] with F, M | ||
| Dyuysynge in pycture by his industrious wit | ||
| Of my laurell the proces euery whitte | ||
| ¶Forthwith vpon this as it were in a thought | ||
| 1100 | Gower / Chawcer / Lydgate theis thre | |
| Before remembred me curteisly brought me curteisly] kurteisly me C | ||
| In-to that place where-as they left me | ||
| Where all the sayd poetis sat in there degre | ||
| But when they sawe my lawrell rychely w[r]ought wrought] whought F | ||
| 1105 | All other besyde were counterfete they thought All ... counterfete] that they ware were counterfettis C | |
| ¶In comparyson of that whiche I ware | ||
| Sume praysed the perle some the stones bryght | ||
| Wele was hym that there-vpon myght stare | ||
| Of this warke they had so great delyght | ||
| 1110 | The silke the golde the flowris fresshe to syght | |
| They seyd my lawrell was the goodlyest | ||
| That euer they saw / and wrought it was the best | ||
| ¶In her astate there sat the noble quene | ||
| Of fame / perceyuynge how that I was cum | ||
| 1115 | She wonderyd me-thou[g]ht at my laurell grene me thought] me thouhht F | |
| ref.ed: 344 | ||
| She loked hawtly and gaue on me a glum | ||
| There was amonge them no worde then but mum There] Thhere F; amonge them no worde] not a worde amonge them C | ||
| For eche man herkynde what she wolde to me say wolde to me] to me wold C | ||
| Wherof in substaunce I brought this away | ||
|
¶The quene of fame To S[k]elton Skelton] Selton F .
|
||
| 1120 | ¶My frende sith ye ar before [us] here present us] hus F | |
| To answere vnto this noble audyence | ||
| sig: E[1] | ||
| Of that shalbe resonde you ye must be content you] M omits | ||
| And for-asmoche as by the hy pretence | ||
| That ye haue now by the preemynence by the] thorow C | ||
| 1125 | Of laureat triumphe: your place is here reseruyd triumphe] promocioun C | |
| We wyll vnderstande how ye haue it deseruyd | ||
|
Skelton poeta to the quene of fame |
||
| Ryght high and myghty princes of astate | ||
| In famous glory all other transcendyng | ||
| Of your bounte the accustomable rate | ||
| 1130 | Hath bene full often and yet is entendyng | |
| To all [that to] reason is condiscendyng that to] tho that F, that to M | ||
| But if hastyue credence by mayntenance of myght | ||
| Fortune to stande betwene you and the lyght | ||
| ¶But suche euydence I thynke for to enduce for to] for me to C | ||
| 1135 | And so largely to lay for myne indempnite | |
| That I trust to make myne excuse | ||
| Of what charge so-euer ye lay ageinst me | ||
| For of my bokis parte ye shall se | ||
| Whiche in your recordes I know well be enrolde | ||
| 1140 | And so occupacyon your regester me tolde | |
| ¶Forth-with she commaundid I shulde take my place | ||
| Caliope poynted me where I shulde sit | ||
| With that oc[c]upacioun presid in a_pace occupacioun] octupacioun F | ||
| Be mirry she sayd be not aferde a whit | ||
| 1145 | Your discharge here vnder myne arme is it | |
| So then commaundid she was vpon this | ||
| To shew her boke: and she sayd here it is | ||
| ref.ed: 345 | ||
|
¶The quene of fame to occupacioun. |
||
| YOwre boke of remembrauns we will now that ye rede boke] bokes F, boke M | ||
| If ony recordis in noumbyr can be founde | ||
| 1150 | What skelton hath compilid and wryton in-dede | |
| Rehersyng by ordre and what is the grownde | ||
| sig: [E1v] | ||
| Let se now for hym how ye can expounde | ||
| For in owr courte ye wote wele his name can not ryse | ||
| But if he wryte oftenner than ones or twyse | ||
|
¶Skelton Poeta. |
||
| 1155 | ¶With that of the boke losende were the claspis | |
| The margent was illumynid all with golden railles | ||
| And byse: enpicturid with gressoppes and waspis | ||
| Wt butterfllyis and fresshe pecoke taylis | ||
| Enflorid with flowris and slymy snaylis | ||
| 1160 | Enuyuid picturis well towchid and quikly | |
| It wolde haue made a man hole þat had be ryght sekely | ||
| ¶To be_holde how it was garnysshyd and bounde | ||
| Encouerde ouer with golde of tissew fyne | ||
| The claspis and bullyons were worth a thousande pounde | ||
| 1165 | Wt balassis and charbuncles the borders did shyne | |
| With aurum musicum euery other lyne | ||
| Was wrytin: and so she did her spede | ||
| Occupacyoun inmediatly to rede | ||
|
¶Occupacyoun redith and expoundyth sum parte of Skeltons bokes and baladis with ditis of plesure in-asmoche as it were to longe a proces to reherse all by name þat he hath compylyd.etc. |
||
| OF your oratour and poete laureate | ||
| 1170 | Of Englande his workis here they begynne | |
| In primis the boke of honorous astate | ||
| Item the boke how men shulde fle synne | ||
| Item royall demenaunce worshyp to wyn[n]e wynne] wyne F | ||
| Item the boke to speke well or be styll | ||
| 1175 | Item to lerne you [t]o dye when ye wyll to] do F, to M Honor est benefactiue operacionis signum Aristotiles : diuerte a malo et fac bonum. pso nobilis est ille quem nobilitat sua virtus. cassianus proximus ille deo qui scit racion e tacere. cato mors vltima linea rerum horac | |
| ¶Of vertu also the souerayne enterlude | ||
| The boke of þe rosiar: prince arturis creacyoun | ||
| ref.ed: 346 | ||
| The false fayth that now goth which dayly is renude virtuti omnia parent salust: Nusquam tuta fides. virgilius . | ||
| sig: [E2] | ||
| Item his diologgis of ymagynacyoun | ||
| 1180 | Item a[u]tomedon of loues meditacyoun automedon] antomedon F, M, C | |
| Item new gramer in englysshe compylyd | ||
| Item bowche of courte where drede was be_gyled res est solliciti plena timoris amor. Ouid Si vacet vsus quem penes. etc Horace: | ||
| ¶His commedy achademios callyd by name | ||
| Of tullis familiars the translacyoun | ||
| 1185 | Item good aduysement that brainles doth blame | |
| The recule ageinst gaguyne of the frenshe nacyoun | ||
| Item the popi[n]gay that hath in commendacyoun | ||
| Ladyes and gentylwomen suche as deseruyd | ||
| And suche as be counterfettis they be reseruyd Non est timor dei ante oculos eorum. spalmo. concedat laurea lingue. Tullius Fac cum consilio et in eternum non peccabis Salamon | ||
| 1190 | ¶And of soueraynte a noble pamphelet | |
| And of magnyfycence a notable mater | ||
| How cownterfet_cowntenaunce of the new get | ||
| Wt crafty_conueyaunce dothe smater and flater | ||
| And cloked_collucyoun is brought in to clater | ||
| 1195 | Wt courtely_abusyoun: who pryntith it wele in mynde | |
| Moche dowblenes of the worlde therin he may fynde Non mihi sit modulo rustica papilio. Uates / Dominare in virtute tua. pso. mag nificauit eum in conspectu / regum. sapienc. Fugere pudor verumque fidesque In quorum subiere locum fraudesque dolique. Insidieque et / vis et amor. scileratus habendi. ouid. | ||
| ¶Of manerly margery maystres mylke_and_ale margery maystres] maistres Margery M | ||
| To her he wrote many maters of myrthe | ||
| Yet thoughe [I] say it ther_by lyith a tale I] ye F, I M | ||
| 1200 | For margery wynshed and breke her hinder girth | |
| Lor[de] how she made moche of her gentyll birth Lorde] Lor F, Lorde M | ||
| Wt gingirly go gingerly her tayle was made of hay | ||
| Go she neuer so gingirly her honesty is gone a_way Filia babilonis misera. Psalmo. | ||
| ¶Harde to make ought of that is nakid nought De nihilo nihil fit. Aristotiles | ||
| 1205 | This fustiane maistres and this giggisse gase | |
| Wonder is to wryte what wrenchis she wrowght | ||
| To face out her foly with a midsomer mase | ||
| Wt pitche she patchid her pitcher shuld not crase | ||
| It may wele ryme but shroudly it doth accorde | ||
| 1210 | To pyke out honesty of suche a potshorde Le plus displeysant pleiser puent. | |
| sig: [E2v] | ||
|
¶Patet per versus. |
||
| ¶Hinc puer hic natus: vir coniugis hinc spoliatus | ||
| Iure thori: est: fetus deli de sanguine cretus | ||
| Hinc magis extollo quod erit puer alter apollo | ||
| Si queris qualis: meretrix castissima talis Nota. | ||
| 1215 | ¶Et relis et ralis? et reliqualis | |
| ref.ed: 347 | ||
| A good herynge of thes olde talis | ||
| Fynde no mo suche fro wanflete to walis | ||
| Et reliqua. omelia de diuersis tractatibus | ||
| OF my ladys grace at the contemplacyoun | ||
| Owt of frenshe in-to englysshe prose | ||
| 1220 | Of mannes lyfe the peregrynacioun Apostolus. non habemus hic ciuitatem manentem sed futuram perquerimus. | |
| He did translate / enterprete and disclose | ||
| The tratyse of the triumphis of the rede rose | ||
| Where-in many storis ar breuely contayned | ||
| That vnremembred longe-tyme remayned Notat bellum cornubiense quod in campistribus et in patencioribus vastisque solitudinibus prope Grenewiche gestum est. | ||
| 1225 | The duke of yorkis creauncer whan skelton was | |
| Now henry the .viij. kyng of englonde | ||
| A tratyse he deuysid and browght it to pas | ||
| Callid speculum principis to bere in his honde | ||
| Therin to rede and to vnderstande | ||
| 1230 | All the demenour of princely astate | |
| To be our kyng of god preordinate Erudemini qui i[u]dicatis terram. pso. | ||
| ¶Also the tunnynge of elinour_rummyng | ||
| Wt colyn_clowt / iohnn_iue / with ioforth_iack | ||
| To make suche trifels it asketh sum konnyng | ||
| 1235 | In honest myrth parde requyreth no lack Quis stabit mecum aduersus operantes iniquitatem. pso: | |
| The whyte apperyth the better for the black | ||
| And after conueyauns as the world goos | ||
| It is no foly to vse the walshemannys hoos Arrident melius seria picta iocis. In fabulis isopi | ||
| The vmblis of venyson / the botell of wyne | ||
| 1240 | To fayre maistres anne that shuld haue be sent Implentur veteris bacchi pinguisque ferine. virgilius | |
| sig: [E3] | ||
| He wrate therof many a praty lyne | ||
| Where it became and whether it went | ||
| And how that it was wantonly spent | ||
| The balade also of the mustarde tarte | ||
| 1245 | Suche problemis to paynt it longyth to his arte Aut prodesse volunt aut delectare poete Horace: | |
| ¶Of one adame_all_a_knaue late dede and gone | ||
| Dormiat in pace / lyke a dormows | ||
| He wrate an epitaph for his graue-stone | ||
| Wt wordes deuoute and sentence agerdows | ||
| 1250 | For he was euer ageynst goddis hows | |
| All his delight was to braule a[n]d to barke | ||
| Ageynst holy chyrche the preste and the clarke Adam adam vbi es. genesis / Resp vbi nulla requies vbi nullus ordo sed sempiternus horror inhabitat. Iob | ||
| ref.ed: 348 | ||
| ¶Of phillip_sparow the lamentable fate | ||
| The dolefull desteny and the carefull chaunce | ||
| 1255 | Dyuysed by skelton after the funerall rate | |
| Yet sum there be there-with that take greuaunce | ||
| And grudge ther-at with frownyng countenaunce | ||
| But what of that: hard it is to please all men | ||
| Who list amende it let hym set to his penne Etenim passer inuenit sibi domum. spalmo. | ||
| 1260 | ¶For the gyse now-a-days | |
| Of sum iang[e]lyng iays iangelyng] iangrlyng F | ||
| Is to discommende | ||
| Yt they can not amende | ||
| Though they wolde spende | ||
| 1265 | All the wittis they haue | |
| ¶What ayle them to depraue | ||
| Phillippe_sparows graue | ||
| His dirige: her commendacioun | ||
| Can be no derogacyoun | ||
| 1270 | But myrth and consolacyoun | |
| Made by protestacyoun | ||
| No man to myscontent | ||
| With phillippis enteremente | ||
| ¶Alas that goodly mayd | ||
| 1275 | Why shulde she be afrayd | |
| Why shulde she take shame | ||
| That her goodly name | ||
| Honorably reportid | ||
| Shulde be set and sortyd | ||
| 1280 | To be matriculate | |
| With ladyes of astate | ||
| ¶I coniure þe phillip_sparow | ||
| By hercules that hell did harow | ||
| And with a venomows arow | ||
| 1285 | Slew of the epidawris | |
| sig: [E3v] | ||
| One of the centawris | ||
| ¶Or onocentauris | ||
| Or hippocentaurus | ||
| By whos myght and maine | ||
| 1290 | An hart was slayne | |
| Wt hornnis twayne | ||
| Of glitteryng golde | ||
| ref.ed: 349 | ||
| And the apples of golde | ||
| Of hesperides with_holde | ||
| 1295 | And with a dragon kepte | |
| That neuer-more slepte | ||
| By merciall strength | ||
| He wan at length | ||
| ¶And slew gerione | ||
| 1300 | With thre bodys in one | |
| With myghty corrage | ||
| Adauntid the rage | ||
| Of a lyon sauage. | ||
| Of diomedis stabyll | ||
| 1305 | He brought out a rabyll | |
| Of coursers and rounsis | ||
| Wit[h] lepes and bounsis with] wit F | ||
| ¶And with myghty luggyng | ||
| Wrastelynge and tuggyng | ||
| 1310 | He pluckid the bull | |
| By the hornid scull | ||
| And offred to cornucopia | ||
| And so forthe per cetera | ||
| ¶Also by hecates powre powre] bowre M | ||
| 1315 | In plutos gastly towre | |
| ¶By the vgly eumenides. | ||
| Yt neuer haue rest nor ease | ||
| ¶By the venemows serpent | ||
| That in hell is neuer brente | ||
| 1320 | In ler[n]a the grekis fen | |
| That was engendred then | ||
| ¶By chemeras flamys | ||
| And all the dedely namys | ||
| Of infernall posty infernall] infernalll F | ||
| 1325 | Where soulis fry and rosty | |
| ¶By the stigiall flode | ||
| And the stremes wode | ||
| Of cochitos bottumles well | ||
| By the feryman of hell | ||
| 1330 | ¶Caron with his berde hore | |
| That rowyth with a rude ore | ||
| And with his frownsid fortop. | ||
| Gydith his bote with a prop | ||
| ref.ed: 350 | ||
| ¶I coniure phillippe and call | ||
| 1335 | In þe name of kyng saull | |
| Primo regum expres | ||
| He bad the phitones | ||
| To witche-craft her to dres | ||
| And by her abusiouns | ||
| 1340 | And damnable illusiouns | |
| Of meruelous conclusiouns. | ||
| And by her supersticiouns | ||
| Of wonderfull condiciouns Of] And M | ||
| She raysed vp in that stede | ||
| 1345 | Samuell that was dede | |
| ¶But whether it were so | ||
| He were idem in numero | ||
| The selfe-same samuell | ||
| How-be-it to saull he did tell | ||
| sig: [E4] | ||
| 1350 | The phillisti[n]is shulde hym askry phillistinis] phillistimis F | |
| And the next day he shulde dye | ||
| I wyll m[y]-selfe discharge my selfe] me selfe F | ||
| To letterd men at large | ||
| ¶But phillip I coniure the | ||
| 1355 | Now by theys names thre | |
| Diana in the woddis grene | ||
| Luna that so bryght doth shene | ||
| Proserpina in hell | ||
| That thou shortely tell | ||
| 1360 | And shew now vnto me | |
| What the cause may be | ||
| Of this p[er]plexyte perplexyte] proplexyte F, perplexite M | ||
| ¶Inferias phillippe tuas scroupe pulcra Iohanna | ||
| Instanter pe[t]iit: cur nostri carminis illam petiit] peciit F | ||
| 1365 | Nunc pudet: est sero: minor est: infamia vero Phillyppe answeryth. | |
| THen such that haue disdaynyd | ||
| And of this worke complaynyd | ||
| I pray god they be paynyd | ||
| No wors [than] is contaynyd than] and F, than M | ||
| 1370 | In verses two or thre | |
| That folowe as ye may se | ||
| ¶Luride cur liuor volucris pia funera damnas | ||
| Talia te rapiant rapiunt que fata volucrem. | ||
| Est tamen inuidia mors tibi continua | ||
| ref.ed: 351 | ||
| 1375 | THe gruntyng [and the] groynninge [of the] gronnyng swyne and the] a F, and the M; of the] F omits, of the M | |
| Also the mur[n]yng of the mapely-rote murnyng] murmyng F, Mournyng M | ||
| How the grene couerlet sufferd grete pine | ||
| Whan the flye-net was set for to catche a cote | ||
| Strake one with a birdbolt to the hart-rote | ||
| 1380 | Also a deuoute prayer to moyses hornis | |
| Metrifyde merely / medelyd with s[c]or[n]is scornis] stormis F, scornes M Porcus se ingurgitat ceno et luto se immergit guarinus_veronenc. et sicut oportorium mutabis eos et m utabuntur. pso .C. Exultabuntur cor[n]ua iusti. spalmo | ||
| sig: [E4v] | ||
| ¶Of paiauntis that were played in ioyows_garde | ||
| He wrate of a muse throw a mud wall | ||
| How a do cam trippyng in at the rere-warde | ||
| 1385 | But lorde how the parker was wroth with-all Tanquam parieti inclinato et macerie depulse spalmo. | |
| And of castell_aungell the fenestrall | ||
| Glittryng and glistryng and gloryously glasid | ||
| It made sum mens eyn: dasild and dasid Militat omnis amans et habet sua castra cupido. ouid. | ||
| ¶The repete of the recule of rosamundis bowre | ||
| 1390 | Of his pleasaunt paine there and his glad distres Introduxit me in cubuculum suum. cant. | |
| In plantynge and pluckynge a propre ieloffer-flowre | ||
| But how it was sum were to recheles | ||
| Not-withst[a]ndynge it is remedeles withstandynge] withstnndynge F | ||
| What myght she say: what myght he do therto | ||
| 1395 | Though iak sayd nay: yet mok there loste her sho Os fatue ebullit stultitiam. cant. | |
| ¶How than lyke a man he wan the barbican | ||
| With a sawte of solace at the longe last Audaces fortuna iuuat. Uirgilius | ||
| The colour dedely swarte blo and wan | ||
| Of exione h[is] l[i]mbis dede and past his limbis] her lambis F, her lambe is M | ||
| 1400 | The cheke and the nek but a shorte cast | |
| In fortunis fauour euer to endure | ||
| No man lyuyng he sayth can be sure nescia me[n]s hominum sortis / fatique futuri. Uirgilius | ||
| ¶How dame minerua first found þe olyue tre: she red Oleeque minerua inuentrix. georgicorum. | ||
| And plantid it there where neuer before was none: vnshred it there where] yet wher M | ||
| 1405 | An hynde vnhurt hit by casuelte: not bled | |
| Recouerd whan the forster was gone: and sped | ||
| The hertis of the herd began for to grone: and fled | ||
| The howndes began to yerne and to quest: and dred | ||
| Wt litell besynes standith moche rest: in bed Atque agmina cerui puluerulenta glomerant. eneid .4. | ||
| 1410 | ¶His epitomis of the myller and his ioly make due molantes in pistrino vno assumetur altera relinquetur. isaias | |
| How her ble was bryght as blossom on the spray | ||
| A wanton wenche and wele coude bake a cake | ||
| The myllar was loth to be out of the way Foris vasta / | ||
| ref.ed: 352 | ||
| sig: F1 | ||
| But yet for all that be as be may bit eum timor. et intus prauor. pso. | ||
| 1415 | Whether he rode to swa[ff]hamm or to some swaffhamm] swasshamm F, M | |
| The millar durst not leue his wyfe at home | ||
| Wt wofully arayd and shamefully betrayd wofully] wofuflly F, wofully M | ||
| Of his makyng deuoute medytacyons | ||
| Vexilla regis he deuysid to be displayd | ||
| 1420 | Wt sacris solempniis and other contemplacyouns Opera que ego facio ipsa perhibent testimonium de me In euang .etc. | |
| That in them comprisid consyderacyons | ||
| Thus passyth he the tyme both nyght and day | ||
| Sumtyme with sadnes sumtyme with play | ||
| ¶Though galiene and diascorides | ||
| 1425 | With ipocras and mayster auycen | |
| By there phesik doth many a man ease Honora medicum propter necessitatem creauit eum altissimus .etc. | ||
| And though albumasar can / e enforme and ken | ||
| What constellacions ar good or bad for men Superiores laciones influunt in corpora / subiecta et disposita .etc. | ||
| Yet whan the rayne rayneth and / e gose wynkith | ||
| 1430 | Lytill wotith / e goslyng what / e gose thynkith Nota. | |
| ¶He is not wyse ageyne / e streme that stryuith | ||
| Dun is in / e myre dame reche me my spur | ||
| Ne[des] must he rin that the deuyll dryuit[h] Nedes] Nededes F; dryuith] dryuit FThis line and the one following are transposed in F | ||
| When the stede is stolyn spar the stable-dur Spectatum admisse risuz teneatis amor Horace. | ||
| 1435 | A ientyll hownde shulde neuer play the kur | |
| It is sone aspyed where the thorne prikkith | ||
| And wele wotith the cat whos berde she likkith ¶Nota. | ||
| ¶With marione_clarione sol lucerne | ||
| Graund iuir: of this frenshe prouerbe olde | ||
| 1440 | How men were wonte for to discerne | |
| By candelmes day what wedder shuld holde Lumen ad reuelacionem gencium. pso. .Clxxv. | ||
| But marione_clarione was caught with a colde colde a colde colde] a colde colde anglice a cokwolde F, a colde M | ||
| and all ouercast with cloudis vnkynde | ||
| This goodly flowre with stormis was vntwynde | ||
| sig: [F1v] | ||
| 1445 | This ieloffer ientyll / this rose this lylly-flowre Uelut rosa vel lilium O pulcherrima mulierium .etc Cantat ecclesia. | |
| This prime-rose pereles / this propre vyolet | ||
| This columbyne clere and fresshest of coloure This line and the one following are transposed in F, M | ||
| This delycate dasy / this strawbery pretely set | ||
| Wt frowarde frostis alas was all to_fret | ||
| 1450 | But who may haue a more vngra[c]yous lyfe a] M omits; vngracyous] vngraryous F | |
| Than a chyldis birde and a knauis wyfe | ||
| ref.ed: 353 | ||
| ¶Thynke what ye wyll | ||
| Of this wanton byll | ||
| By mary_gipcy | ||
| 1455 | Quod scripsi scripsi Notate verba signate misteria. Gregori. | |
| ¶Uxor tua sicut vitis | ||
| Habetis in custodiam | ||
| Custodite sicut scitis | ||
| Secundum lucam .etc. | ||
| 1460 | ¶Of the bone-homs of a_shrige besyde barkamstede | |
| That goodly place to skelton moost kynde | ||
| Where the sank-royall is crystes blode so rede | ||
| Where-vpon he metrefyde after his mynde | ||
| A pleasaunter place than a_shrige is harde were to fynde were] where F, were M | ||
| 1465 | As skelton rehersith with wordes few and playne | |
| In his disti[ch]on made on verses twaine distichon] distincyon F, Distichon M | ||
| ¶Fraximus in cli[u]o: frondetque viret sine viro. | ||
| Non est sub diuo: similis sine flumine viuo. ¶Nota: Penuriam aque / nam canes ibi. hauriunt ex puteo altissimo | ||
| ¶The nacyoun of folys he left not behynde | ||
| 1470 | Item apollo that whirllid vp his chare | |
| That made sum to [snurre] and snuf in the wynde snurre] surt F, snurre M | ||
| It made them to skip to stampe and to stare | ||
| Whiche if they be happy haue cause to be ware | ||
| In ryming and raylyng with hym for to mell | ||
| 1475 | For drede and he lerne them there A.B.C. to spell Stultorum infinitus est numerus .etc. ecclesia Factum est cum apollo esset corinthi. actus apostolorum Stimules sub pectore vertit apollo. Uirgilius | |
|
¶Poeta Skelton. |
||
| WIth that I stode vp halfe sodenly a_frayd | ||
| Suppleyng to fame I besought her grace | ||
| And that it wolde please her full tenderly I prayd | ||
| Owt of her bokis apollo to rase | ||
| sig: [F2] | ||
| 1480 | Nay sir she sayd: what so in this place | |
| Of our noble courte is ones spoken owte | ||
| It must nedes after rin all the worlde a_boute Fama repleta malis per virilis euolat alis .etc. | ||
| ¶God wote theis wordes made me full sad | ||
| And when that I sawe it wolde no better be | ||
| 1485 | But that my peticyon wolde not be had | |
| What shulde I do but take it in gre | ||
| For by iuppiter and his high mageste | ||
| ref.ed: 354 | ||
| I did what I cowde to scrape out the scrollis scrape] scarpe M | ||
| Apollo to rase out of her ragman-rollis Ego quidem suz pauli ego apollo. corum. | ||
| 1490 | ¶Now here-of it erkith me lenger to wryte | |
| To occupacyon I wyll agayne resorte Malo me galathea petit lasci[u]a puella. virgilius. | ||
| Whiche red[d]e on still as it cam to her syght redde] rede F, redde M | ||
| Rendrynge my deuisis I made in disporte | ||
| Of the mayden of kent callid counforte | ||
| 1495 | Of louers testamentis and of there wanton wyllis | |
| And how iollas louyd goodly phillis Nec si muneribus certes concedet iollas .2. bucol.. | ||
| ¶Diodorus_siculus of my translacyon | ||
| Out of fresshe latine in-to owre englysshe playne | ||
| R[e]countyng commoditis of many a straunge nacyon Recountyng] Rcountyng F Mille hominum species et rerum discolor vsus horace. | ||
| 1500 | Who redyth it ones wolde rede it agayne | |
| Sex volumis engrosid to_gether it doth containe | ||
| But when of the laurell she made rehersall | ||
| All orators and poetis with other grete and smale | ||
| ¶A thowsande thowsande I trow to my dome | ||
| 1505 | Triumpha triumpha they cryid all aboute Millia millium et decies millies centena millia .etc. apocalipsis. Uite senatum laureati possident. ecclesiastica. Cauite. | |
| Of trumpettis and clariouns the noyse went to rome | ||
| The starry heuyn me-thought shoke with the showte | ||
| The grownde gronid and tremblid þe noyse was so stowte | ||
| The quene of fame commaundid shett fast þe boke | ||
| 1510 | And ther-with sodenly out of my dreme I woke dreme] slepe M | |
| sig: [F2v] | ||
| ¶My mynde of the grete din was somdele amasid | ||
| I wypid myne eyne for to make them clere | ||
| Then to the heuyn sperycall vpwarde I gasid | ||
| Where I saw Ianus with his double chere | ||
| 1515 | Makynge his almanak for the new yere | |
| He turnyd his tirikkis his voluell ran fast | ||
| Good luk this new yere the olde yere is past | ||
| Meus tibi sit consulta petis: sic consule menti | ||
| Emula sit iani retro speculetur et ante Uates. | ||
|
¶ Skelton[i]s Skeltonis] Skeltonts F; alloquitur] alloquium F, alloquitur M alloqui[tur] Librum suum.
|
||
| ITe britannorum lux: O radiosa britannum | ||
| Carmina nostra pium vestrum celebrate catullum . | ||
| ¶Dicite Skeltonis Vester adonis erat. | ||
| ref.ed: 355 | ||
| ¶Dicite Skeltonis Vester homerus erat. | ||
| 5 | ¶Barbara cum lactio pariter iam currite versu. | |
| Et licet est verbo pars maxima texta britanno. britanno] britannno F | ||
| ¶Non magis incompta: Nostra thalya patet. | ||
| ¶Est magis inculta: Nec mea caliope. | ||
| ¶Nec vos peniteat liuoris tela subire. | ||
| 10 | Nec vos peniteat rabiem tolerare caninam. | |
| ¶Nam maro dissimiles Non tulit ille minas. | ||
| ¶Immunis nec enim Musa nasonis erat. | ||
| sig: [F3] | ||
|
¶Lenuoy. |
||
| GO litill quaire | ||
| Demene you faire | ||
| Take no dispare | ||
| Though I you wrate | ||
| 5 | After this rate. | |
| In engly[ss]he letter englysshe] englyflhe F | ||
| ¶So moche the better | ||
| Welcome shall ye | ||
| To sum men be | ||
| 10 | For latin warkis | |
| Be good for clerkis | ||
| ¶Yet now and then | ||
| Sum latin men | ||
| May happely loke | ||
| 15 | Vpon your boke | |
| And so procede. | ||
| In you to rede | ||
| That so in-dede | ||
| Your fame may sprede | ||
| 20 | In length and brede | |
| ¶But then I drede then] that M | ||
| Ye shall haue nede. Ye] You M | ||
| You for to spede | ||
| To harnnes bryght | ||
| 25 | By force of myght | |
| Ageyne enuy | ||
| And obloquy | ||
| And wote ye why | ||
| ¶Not for to fyght | ||
| ref.ed: 356 | ||
| 30 | Ageyne dispyght | |
| Nor to derayne | ||
| Batayle agayne | ||
| Scornfull disdayne | ||
| Nor for to chyde | ||
| 35 | Nor for to hyde | |
| You cowardly | ||
| ¶But curteisly | ||
| That I haue pende. | ||
| For to deffend | ||
| 40 | Vnder the banner | |
| Of all good manner | ||
| Vnder proteccyon | ||
| Of sad correccyon | ||
| With toleracyon | ||
| 45 | And supportacyon | |
| Of reformacyon | ||
| If th[e]y can spy they] thy F, they M | ||
| Circumspectly | ||
| Any worde defacid | ||
| 50 | That myght be rasid | |
| ¶Els ye shall pray | ||
| Them that ye may | ||
| Contynew still | ||
| With there good wyll | ||
| sig: [F3v] | ||
|
Ad serenissimam maiestatem regiam, pariter cum domi[n]o Cardinali legato a latere honorificatissimo .etc. This heading and the following 16 lines of verse are missing in F and supplied from M
|
||
| Perge liber, celebrem pronus regem Venerar | ||
| Henricum octauum, resonans sua praemia laudis. | ||
| Cardineum dominum pariter Venerando salutes, | ||
| Legatum a latere et fiat memor ipse precare, | ||
| 5 | Prebende, quam promiset mihi credere quondam. | |
| Meque suum referas pignus sperare salutis | ||
| Inter spemque metum. | ||
| Twene hope and drede | ||
| My lyfe I lede | ||
| 10 | But of my spede | |
| Small sekernes. line set to right of stanza | ||
| ref.ed: 357 | ||
| Howe-be-it I rede | ||
| Both worde and dede | ||
| Should be agrede | ||
| 15 | In noblenes. line set to right of stanza | |
| Or els .andc. | ||
|
¶Admonet Skeltonis: omnes arbores dare locum viridi lauro Iuxta genus suum. |
||
| FRaxinus in siluis: altis In montibus Orn[us]. Ornus] Orni F, ornus M | ||
| Populus in fluuiis Abies patulissima Fagus. | ||
| Lenta Salix platanus pinguis ficulnea ficus | ||
| Glandifera et Quercus / pirus / esculus ardua pinus. | ||
| 5 | Balsamus exudans: oleaster / oliua minerue. | |
| Iunip[e]rus Buxus: lentiscus cuspide lenta. Iuniperus] Iunipirus F | ||
| Botrigera et domino vitis gratissima Baccho | ||
| Ilex et sterilis / labrusta perosa colonis | ||
| Mollibus exudans frag[r]ancia thura Sabeis. fragrancia] fragancia F | ||
| 10 | Thus: redolens arabis pariter notissima mirrha | |
| Et vos o corili fragiles: Humilesque mirice. | ||
| Et vos o Cedri redolentes vos quoque mirti. | ||
| Arboris omne genus viridi concedite Lauro. | ||
| ¶Prennees En gre [The Laurelle] The Laurelle] F omits, The Laurelle M | ||
| sig: [F4] | ||
|
¶En parl[e]ment parlement] parlament F, Parlement M A Paris.
|
||
| IUstice est morte | ||
| Et veryte sommielle | ||
| Droit et raison | ||
| Sont alez aux pardon[s] pardons] pardonn F, pardons M | ||
| 5 | ¶Lez deux premiers | |
| Nul ne les resuelle | ||
| Et lez derniers | ||
| Sount corrumpus par dons. | ||
|
¶Out of frenshe in-to latyn. |
||
| ¶Abstulit atra dies astream : Cana fides sed | ||
| 10 | Sompno pressa iacet: Ius iter arripuit. | |
| ¶Et secum racio proficiscens limite longo | ||
| Nemo duas primas euigilare para | ||
| ref.ed: 358 | ||
| ¶Atque duo postrema ab[s]unt. et [mun]era tantum absunt] abiunt F, absunt M; munera] numera F, M | ||
| Impediunt: nequiunt quod remeare domum. | ||
|
¶Owt of latyne in-to Englysshe. |
||
| 15 | ¶Iustyce now is dede =Ringler TP 1004 | |
| Trowth with a drowsy hede | ||
| As heuy as the lede | ||
| Is layd down to slepe | ||
| And takith no kepe takith] bidythe M | ||
| 20 | ¶and ryght is ouer the fallows ouer the fallows] euer fallow M | |
| Gone to seke hallows | ||
| Wt reason to_gether | ||
| No man can tell whether | ||
| ¶No man wyll vndertake | ||
| 25 | The first twayne to wake | |
| ¶And the twayne last | ||
| Be with_holde so fast | ||
| Wt mony as men sayne | ||
| They can not come agayne | ||
| ¶A grant tort | ||
| Foy dort. | ||
| sig: [F4v] | ||
| ¶Here endith a ryght delectable tratyse vpon a goodly garlonde or chapelet of laurell dyuysed by mayster Skelton Poete laureat. | ||
| ¶Inpryntyd by me Rycharde_faukes dwelly[n]gdwellyng] dwellydg F in duram_rent or els in Powlis chyrche-yarde at the sygne o f the A.B.C. The yere of our lorde god .M.CCCCC.xxiij. The .iij. day of Octobre. | ||