| sig: [A1] | |||
|
The fyftene Ioyes of maryage. |
|||
| sig: [A1v] | |||
| sig: [A2] | |||
| SOmer passed / and wynter well begone | |||
| The dayes shorte / the darke nyghtes longe | |||
| Haue taken season / and bryghtnes of the sonne bryghtnes] brynghtnes 1509 | |||
| Is lytell sene / and small byrdes songe | |||
| 5 | Seldon is herde / in feldes or wodes ronge | ||
| All strength and ve[r]tue / of trees and herbes sote vertue] ventue 1509 | |||
| Dyscendynge be / from croppe in-to the rote | |||
| And euery creature by course of kynde | |||
| For socoure draweth to that countre and place | |||
| 10 | Where for a tyme / they may purchace and fynde | ||
| Conforte and rest / abydynge after grace | |||
| That clere Appolo with bryghtnes of his face | |||
| Wyll sende / whan lusty ver shall come to towne | |||
| And gyue the grounde / of grene a goodly gowne | |||
| 15 | And Flora goddesse bothe of whyte and grene | ||
| Her mantell large / ouer all the erthe shall sprede | |||
| Shewynge her-selfe / apparayled lyke a quene | |||
| As well in feldes / wodes / as in mede | |||
| Hauynge so ryche a croune vpon her hede | |||
| 20 | The whiche of floures / shall be so fayre and bryght | ||
| That all the worlde / shall take therof a lyght | |||
| So now it is / of late I was desyred | |||
| Out of the [f]renche to drawe a lytell boke frenche] trenche 1509drawe ='translate'; see OED s.v. draw v, 19 | |||
| Of .xv. Ioyes / of whiche though I were hyred | |||
| 25 | I can not tell / and yet I vndertoke | ||
| This entrepryse / with a full pyteous loke | |||
| Remembrynge well / the case that [I] stode in I] 1509 omits | |||
| Lyuynge in hope / this wynter to begyn | |||
| Some Ioyes to fynde that be in maryage | |||
| sig: [A2v] | |||
| 30 | For in my youth / yet neuer acquayntaunce | ||
| Had of them but now in myn olde aege | |||
| I trust my-selfe / to forther and auaunce | |||
| If that in me / there lacke no suffysaunce | |||
| Whiche may dyspleasyr / clerely set a_parte | |||
| 35 | I wante but all / that longeth to that arte | ||
| Yet wyll I speke / though I may do no more | |||
| Fully purposynge / in all these Ioyes to trete | |||
| Accordynge to my purpose made tofore | |||
| All-be-it so / I can not well forgete | |||
| 40 | The payne / trauayle / besynes and hete | ||
| That some men haue after they wedded be | |||
| Because theyr wyues / want humylyte | |||
| Who shall I pray / to helpe me to endyte | |||
| Cupyde or Uenus / whiche haue me in dysdayne | |||
| 45 | And for my feblenes / in grete dyspyte | ||
| For yeres passed / may not retorne agayne | |||
| Now may I speke / and shewe in wordes playne | |||
| Whan youth is gone / and comen is stoupynge age | |||
| Then worldly Ioyes / must go on pylgrymage | |||
| 50 | If I sholde praye / vnto ymeneus | ||
| The god of weddynge / to helpe me in this charge | |||
| Then wyll he bydde me go to Morp[h]eus Morpheus] Morpleus 1509 | |||
| The god of slepe / for he hath wayes large | |||
| Whiche with his rodde of leed dooth stere his barge | |||
| 55 | To brynge forthe age / vnto his slepy caue | ||
| Pray hym of rest / and nothynge elles craue | |||
| I knowe ryght well / it is but vanyte | |||
| All worldly Ioye / medled with bytternes | |||
| sig: A3 | |||
| Therfore these fayned goddes I lete them be | |||
| 60 | And me betake to god / whose stedfastnes | ||
| May neuer fayle / neyther his sothfastnes | |||
| Besechynge hym / that for his moders sake | |||
| He wyll me teche [t]his lytell boke to make this] his 1509 | |||
| And with good-wyll I shall me soone apply | |||
| 65 | This treatyse out of frenche to translate | ||
| of .xv. Ioyes / and yf I myght therby | |||
| Purchace but one / my-selfe though it be late | |||
| I wolde be gladde / for olde paynes I hate | |||
| Trustynge to Ioye / now somwhat in myn aege | |||
| 70 | As dooth a byrde that syngeth in a cage | ||
| Now to th'effecte of this translacyon | |||
| With grete desyre shortly w[y]ll I procede wyll] well 1509 | |||
| But speke I must / by protestacyon | |||
| Touchynge this mater / or elles gode forbede | |||
| 75 | Whome I beseche lowely to be my spede | ||
| Praynge also / eche other maner wyght | |||
| Take no dyspleasure with my wordes lyght | |||
|
Here endeth the prologue of the translatoure. |
|||
|
And the prohemye of the auctour begynneth. |
|||
| MYn auctour wryteth in this prohemye | |||
| That many men / haue trauayled here-tofore | |||
| To shewe by reason and auctoryte | |||
| That it is grete wytte / and wysdome more | |||
| 5 | For euery maner wyght / of woman bore | ||
| To lyue in fraunchyse / at his lyberte | |||
| Than seruaunt to hym-selfe / and thrall to be | |||
| sig: [A3v] | |||
| Without constraynt / but of his neclygence | |||
| His wyll to folowe / and his vnclene delyte | |||
| 10 | As lusty folke in theyr adolescence | ||
| Haue suche desyre / and so grete appetyte | |||
| On Uenus brydle / for to champe and byte | |||
| Tyll they with loue be stryken to the herte | |||
| Wherby full oft[ /] they suffre paynes smerte full oft /] full / oft 1509 | |||
| 15 | Unto whose reason / and opynyon | ||
| It may be sayd / and answered thus agayne | |||
| Man hath no good wytte ne entencyo[n] | |||
| In his yonge tyme / whan nature dooth cons[t]rayne constrayne] conssrayne 1509 | |||
| Sauynge in Ioyes / and delytes vayne | |||
| 20 | Of this frayle worlde vnsure and transytory | ||
| None other thynge is in his memory | |||
| As thus whan men in youth couragyous | |||
| With fre-wyll endewed and lustynes | |||
| Of theyr desyre / and mynde outragyous | |||
| 25 | Withouten nede / but of theyr folysshenes | ||
| Frome wele to wo / frome Ioye to heuynes | |||
| Conuey them-selfe / from all theyr lyberte | |||
| Nothynge content with theyr felycyte | |||
| For where-as they may frely ryde or go | |||
| 30 | And at theyr choyse / dysporte them ouer-all | ||
| I you ensure these yonge-men wyll not so | |||
| Whan they leest wene / than sodanly they fall | |||
| And vnconstrayned make theyr bodyes thrall | |||
| Lyke to a wyght that in-to pryson depe | |||
| 35 | Without cause / all hastely dooth crepe | ||
| So do they oft for lacke of kyndely wytte | |||
| sig: [A4] | |||
| And whan they be within this pryson strayte | |||
| The gayler cometh and fast the dore dooth shytte | |||
| Whiche is of yren stronge / and in a wayte wayte ='a state of watchfulnes or expectation'; see OED s.v. wait n, 4 | |||
| 40 | He lyeth oft / for drede that thrugh desayte | ||
| By nyght or day some sholde escape out | |||
| Ryght besyly he pryeth all about | |||
| He barreth dores / and maketh sure all the lockes | |||
| The stronge boltes / the fettres and the chayne | |||
| 45 | He sercheth well / the holes and the stockes | ||
| That wo be they / that lyeth in the payne | |||
| And out therof / they shall not go agayne | |||
| But euer endure / in wepynge care and sorowe | |||
| For good ne prayer / shall them neuer borowe | |||
| 50 | And specyally men may call hym assoted | ||
| Ferre frome reason / of wysdome desolate | |||
| That thus his tyme mysse_vsed hath and doted | |||
| Whan he had herde / suche prysoners but late | |||
| Wepynge waylynge / and with them-selfe debate | |||
| 55 | Lyenge in pryson / as he hath passed by | ||
| And put hym-selfe therin so folysshely | |||
| This auctour sayth / by-cause mankynde delyteth | |||
| Alway to haue fraunchyse and lyberte | |||
| Without the whiche / nature of man dyspyteth | |||
| 60 | Ryght thus in playne wordes speketh he | ||
| That many lordes grete / the whiche haue be | |||
| And lordshyppes haue be loste and ouerthrowe | |||
| For takynge fredomes frome theyr subgets lowe | |||
| He sheweth eke in maner semblable | |||
| 65 | That grete cytees / with many an-other toune | ||
| And comyn people of mynde vnreasonable | |||
| sig: [A4v] | |||
| Haue ben dystroyed / and sodaynly cast doune | |||
| Agaynst theyr prynces / takynge opynyon | |||
| Desyrynge fredomes / mo than here-tofore | |||
| 70 | Theyr elders had / and thus they haue be lore | ||
| By reason wherof / batayles grete and werre | |||
| Haue ben / and many folkes also slay[n]e | |||
| Syth Ihesus deyed / was neuer thynge bought derre | |||
| Whan poore subgettes on foly wyll [at]tayne attayne] pretayne 1509 | |||
| 75 | Agaynst theyr prynce / or elles theyr souerayne | ||
| To moue maters / not beynge obedy[ent] obedyent] obedynge 1509 | |||
| Suche by the lawe ben execute and shent | |||
| Somtyme the noble realme and men of Fraunce | |||
| Exempte were / and vtterly made fre | |||
| 80 | By theyr grete / prowes and valyaunce | ||
| Of the emperours / of Rome the cyte | |||
| As of trybutes / for whiche batayles haue be | |||
| Betwene them / and the Romayns longe ago | |||
| In whiche dayes I fynde it happed so | |||
| 85 | Upon a tyme / for cause that they ne were | ||
| Of fraunce in puyssaunce / able to withstonde | |||
| The grete army and the myghty powere | |||
| Of an emperour entred in theyr londe | |||
| But for-as-moche / as they ne wolde be bonde | |||
| 90 | Them were leuer go from that regyon | ||
| Than to remayne vnder subgeccyon | |||
| Seruynge this emperour / and trybute pay | |||
| So of hygh courage / and theyr grete nobles | |||
| All sodaynly / these nobles wente away | |||
| 95 | Conquerynge countrees / suche was theyr worthynes | ||
| sig: [A5] | |||
| And afterwarde retorned neuertheles | |||
| Home to theyr lande / in grete prospery[t]e prospery[t]e: letter broken | |||
| Whiche they tyll now haue holde in lyberte | |||
| Unto theyr owne vse / prouffyte and auayle prouffyte: =profit | |||
| 100 | Wherfore folkes of many a nacyon | ||
| Lyuynge in seruage / constreyned with trauayle | |||
| Desyred to haue theyr habytacyon | |||
| In fraunce / and there vnder domynacyon | |||
| To lyue in wele / lyberte / and rest | |||
| 105 | Wherby it grewe / somtyme the noblest | ||
| Realme of the worlde / that knowen were or founde. | |||
| Moost fayre in buyldynge / and inhabyte best | |||
| The whiche in treasure / and scyence dyde habounde | |||
| Then for-asmoche / as they be fre at leest | |||
| 110 | Prudent in fayth / in lyuynge holyest | ||
| They sholde theyr subgets / in fraunchyse kepe and vse | |||
| After theyr lawe / and neuer to refuse | |||
| Ageynst all trouthe / and inconuenyent | |||
| It is certayne / and nothynge charytable | |||
| 115 | God knoweth well / the lorde omnypotent | ||
| A man to haue / a custome reasonable | |||
| Onely for hym-selfe / ryght prouffytable | |||
| And for his neyghboure / vse it other-wyse | |||
| Suche vsage sholde / all well-dysposed men dyspyse | |||
| 120 | Herof it groweth that lyberte is lost | ||
| In people voyde / of reason and scyence | |||
| And thus vyces and synnes reygneth most | |||
| Some gyue to vertues lytell reuerence | |||
| Wherin to god / do they ryght grete offence | |||
| sig: [A5v] | |||
| 125 | The comyn-wele / in generalyte | ||
| All men sholde loue of perfyte charyte | |||
| Why it is thus / a man may reason make | |||
| Who loueth not his wele pertyculerly | |||
| Hath but a lytell wytte I vndertake | |||
| 130 | Whan he may haue a prouffyte syngulerly | ||
| Hurtynge none other creature therby | |||
| And wyll not helpe hym-selfe whan he [s]o may [s]o: letter broken | |||
| But wylfully dooth cast his grace away | |||
| A fole is he / that wyttynge wyll go | |||
| 135 | In-to a caue / a dyche / or elles a pytte | ||
| Whiche is aboue / bothe narowe and strayte also | |||
| And all within / full wyde and depe it is | |||
| So that whan he therin / is fall and shytte | |||
| Out may he not / for there he must abyde | |||
| 140 | As wylde bestes do in forestes syde | ||
| Trapped and taken / ryght so this cr[e]ature creature] crature 1509Crature is a possible spelling of creature, but in this text the word is regularly spelled 'creature' (6x). | |||
| In lyke wyse / thrugh his owne neclygence | |||
| Is in the dyche / where-as he must endure | |||
| Lyke as these bestes / whiche gladly wolde go thens | |||
| 145 | Sekynge the wayes with all theyr delygence | ||
| Out to auoyde / but so it wyll not be | |||
| Tyme is not then / forth of the dyche to fle | |||
| Thus one may say / and therupon conclude | |||
| By suche as in-to maryage be brought | |||
| 150 | And herupon to make a symylytude | ||
| Unto the fysshe whiche hath his pasture sought pasture ='food' | |||
| And in a lepe / that is of twygges wrought | |||
| Is take / and out can not escape ne twynne twynne ='escape'; see OED s.v. twin v1, 2b | |||
| sig: [A6] | |||
| But euer dwell / and tary styll therinne | |||
| 155 | The fysshe that swymmeth in the ryuer clere | ||
| As it shall fall hym ofte by aduenture | |||
| To rayle aboute / in places here and there rayle ='wander, roam'; see OED s.v. rail v5 | |||
| Fyndeth this lepe / the whiche withoute mesure | |||
| Beholdeth he with all his besy cure | |||
| 160 | And he therin / the fysshes and the bayte | ||
| Dooth se / supposynge well in his consayte | |||
| They be in Ioye and pleasure at theyr lust | |||
| And all aboute the lepe he gooth rounde | |||
| With grete desyre / hauynge a veray trust | |||
| 165 | To come to them / and whan that he hath founde | ||
| The entre / in he gooth gladde and Iocounde | |||
| And to the shynynge bayte / he hyeth faste | |||
| Wherof anone / he taketh his repaste | |||
| To go agayne / he thynketh but a Iape | |||
| 170 | Forthe of the lepe / assaynge besyly | ||
| A way to fynde / how he therout may scape | |||
| And thens departe / to other company | |||
| He boreth with his byll all hastely byll ='snout'; see OED s.v. bill n2, 2 | |||
| His besynes / and laboure is in waste | |||
| 175 | Abyde a whyle / he shall for all his haste | ||
| Therin to dwell in wo and heuynes | |||
| And where-as he hath demed certaynly | |||
| Afore to haue had Ioye / and lustynes | |||
| There shall he passe his tyme ryght heuely | |||
| 180 | By men it falleth thus moost comenly | ||
| That put them in-to maryage all-day | |||
| Experyence wyll wytnesse as I say | |||
| sig: [A6v] | |||
| Though it so be / that folkes se before | |||
| These wedded men / within the lepe enclosed | |||
| 185 | In poynt to droune and drenche / yet not therfore | ||
| Wyll they forbere / ne tyll they be innosed innosed ='choked (with a bone)'; see OED s.v. enose v | |||
| As houndes be of bones / it is supposed | |||
| There is not one / by other can be ware | |||
| Tyll they be take / and holden in the snare | |||
| 190 | Thus what by foly / fortune or destene | ||
| A man may se the people euery day | |||
| Demeane themselfe / forsakynge lyberte | |||
| And shortely after that repenteth they | |||
| Desyrynge it to haue / but they ne may | |||
| 195 | At ony tyme / vnto suche grace attayne | ||
| And all to late / for them is to complayne | |||
| Moche more herof / myn auctoure dooth declare | |||
| In his prologue / or that he wyll begyn | |||
| To shewe these .xv. Ioyes / but I must spare | |||
| 200 | By losse of tyme / there is nothynge to wynne | ||
| But pouerte / vnthryftynes / and synne | |||
| Wherfore in wordes rude to make an ende | |||
| And of these Ioyes to wryte now I entende | |||
| Some men do call these Ioyes sorowes grete | |||
| 205 | But yet they take them well in pacyence | ||
| For of necessyte they must forgete | |||
| The care / trouble / forowe / payne and offence | |||
| The whiche they suffre at the reuerence at the reuerence of ='for the sake of' | |||
| Of theyr wyues / whiche they may not forsake | |||
| 210 | And though they oft / mysse_vse theyr eloquence | ||
| Lytell regarde therto a man sholde take | |||
|
¶Here endeth the proheme of the auctour. |
|||
| sig: [A7] | |||
|
And here begynneth the fyrst Ioye of maryage |
|||
| THe fyrst Ioy of maryage is this | |||
| As whan a man of tender yeres is | |||
| Flourynge in youth / pleasaunt fresshe and gay | |||
| Then in this worlde / nothynge may hym dysmay. | |||
| 5 | Ne other mynde / desyre nor appetyte | ||
| sig: [A7v] | |||
| Conforte / lykynge / pleasure / Ioye / ne delyte | |||
| Hath he except / how he may tye his poyntes | |||
| To cause his hose / to syt well on his Ioyntes | |||
| And make his vysage / and his lymmes fayre | |||
| 10 | He brussheth oft his goune / and other gayre | ||
| His hede he combeth smothe ryght as hym lyketh | |||
| Wherof the heres / pruneth he and pyketh pyketh ='picks', a collateral form of the verb | |||
| And maketh hym as clenly as he can | |||
| That folke may say / there gooth a goodly man | |||
| 15 | So wyll he synge / daunce / and balades make | ||
| And vpon hym / mo entrepryses take | |||
| That he can do / or may atchyeue perchaunce atchyeue: =achieve | |||
| Thynkynge therby / hym-selfe so to enhaunce | |||
| The fayrest creature / that he can espye | |||
| 20 | He wyll beholde / with ryght a lusty eye | ||
| As vysynge well / where he suche one may fynde vysynge ='regarding closely, observing'; see OED s.v. vise v, 5. There may be a case for emending 'as vysynge' to advysynge or avysynge, 'considering' (see OED s.v. advise v, 3). | |||
| A Ioly[u]et accordynge to his mynde Ioly[u]et= 'gay or pretty little creature'; see OED s.v. jolyvet n | |||
| And whan he hath her fast in his demayne | |||
| Ioyous he is / ryght mery / gladde and fayne | |||
| 25 | For paraduenture so the case may stande | ||
| That by his faders / or his moders lande | |||
| Or by theyr other goodes he may mayntene | |||
| His Ioly[u]ets / and go ryght well besene | |||
| Lyuynge in rest and ease habundauntly | |||
| 30 | Beholdynge other folkes certaynly | ||
| In-to the bonde of maryage ybrought | |||
| Than in his mynde he casteth and his thought | |||
| Lyke as the fysshe behelde the lepe / so he | |||
| Demeth / these wedded men in blysse be | |||
| 35 | Hauynge the bayte / and pasture at theyr wyll | ||
| Wherof they may / theyr appetyte fulfyll | |||
| Ryght well he seeth the bea[ut]e of theyr wyues beaute] beatute 1509 | |||
| Supposynge that they haue so mery lyues | |||
| sig: [A8] | |||
| With them so well appoynted and arayed | |||
| 40 | For whiche the sely husbande hath not payed | ||
| It may so be percase / at many season | |||
| Some folke wyll say / and shewe this man by reason | |||
| That so her owne fader / or her moder | |||
| Her hath arayed / and demeth he none oder | |||
| 45 | And so this yonge-man / torneth hym aboute | ||
| The lepe / wherin of wedded a route | |||
| Enclosed be / and thenne he dooth enquere | |||
| Of maryage / a lytell here and there | |||
| Soone here-vpon / aryseth suche a wynde | |||
| 50 | And smoke / that he therof is made so blynde | ||
| That he vnware / in-to the lepe is cast | |||
| Wherin he shall be kepte and holden fast | |||
| And where-as he was wonte in tyme afore | |||
| To synge and daunce / that may well be forbore | |||
| 55 | Of poyntes byenge / purses / or thynges lyke | ||
| Herof shall he not nede / whyles he may pyke | |||
| Upon the bayte / tyll he therof be full | |||
| His besynes may cause hym to be dull | |||
| Now Ioyeth he a whyle / and hym delyteth | |||
| 60 | To do pleasaunce / ryght well he hym acquyteth | ||
| Newly so entred / in-to the foresayd gin | |||
| And for a tyme nothynge dysmayed therin | |||
| Supposynge out to go / but there yet styll | |||
| He must abyde / and dwell maugre his wyll | |||
| 65 | And to repent / there is no tyme ne houre | ||
| For with the swete mete / the sauces soure | |||
| Contynuaunce wyll cause hym to assay | |||
| Syth he can not escape by ony way | |||
| And for to put his wyfe in suche degre | |||
| 70 | As appertayneth of necessyte | ||
| It hym behoueth honeste to saue | |||
| sig: [A8v] | |||
| And [s]o may be / his wyfe an herte may haue so] lo 1509 | |||
| Ryght good / desyrynge to be fresshe and gay | |||
| For peraduenture / she this other day | |||
| 75 | Was at a feest / where she dyde well aduyse | ||
| Women of her degre / all otherwyse | |||
| Than she / appoynted / clothed / and arayde | |||
| Within her mynde / than to her-selfe she sayde | |||
| That by her byrthe / she ought as well as they | |||
| 80 | To be apparayled and in as good arey | ||
| So she compaceth / castynge in her mynd. | |||
| The day and houre / out craftely to fynde | |||
| To her good-man / this mater to declare | |||
| But her entent to shewe / yet wyll she spare | |||
| 85 | Tyll she with hym / at nyght be gone to bedde | ||
| For there these wyues trust well to be spedde | |||
| Of suche petycyons / as they requyre | |||
| Accordynge to theyr wylles and desyre | |||
| Whan that this wyfe / in bedde is layde thus | |||
| 90 | Sadly she sayth / for loue of cryst_Ihesus | ||
| Syr lete me be in rest / for euyll at ease | |||
| I am / and he whiche gladly wolde her please | |||
| Answereth and sayth / tell me wherfore it is | |||
| That greueth you / she sayth grete cause ywys | |||
| 95 | Haue I / for ye care nothynge what I saye | ||
| Or shewe to you / in ernest or in playe | |||
| He sayeth than / why speke ye in suche a wyse | |||
| By god and all his sayntes in paradyse | |||
| She sayth / no myster it is that ye it knewe | |||
| 100 | For whan I speke to you but wordes fewe | ||
| Lytell accompt therof or rekenynge | |||
| Ye make certayne / demynge for other thynge | |||
| Suche wordes I haue / and yet it is not so | |||
| Whiche causeth me / oft-tymes to be wo | |||
| sig: B1 | |||
| 105 | Truly sayth he ye shall tell your dysease | ||
| Than answereth she / syr syth it may you please | |||
| Forsothe I shall you tell / this is the cas | |||
| This other daye at suche a feest I was | |||
| The whiche in trouth / me pl[e]ased nothynge wele pleased] plased 1509pl[e]ased: plased is a possible form, but is found only here in this text. | |||
| 110 | And wherfore I shall tell you euery-dele | ||
| Whan I there was / I thynke it veryly | |||
| There was no wyfe arayed soo symply | |||
| Though she were neuer of soo lowe degre | |||
| As I was than / ye may byleue well me | |||
| 115 | How-be-it syr / surely I saye not this | ||
| For praysynge of my-selfe / but soo it is | |||
| I thanke god of his mercy and grace thanke] thaynke 1509 | |||
| That I am comen / of as good a place | |||
| As ony gentylwoman that was there | |||
| 120 | I me reporte / to suche as knowen where reporte ='appeal'; see OED s.v. report v, 6 | ||
| My lygnage and myn ancestres but late lygnage: =lineage | |||
| Abydynge were / and for myn owne estate | |||
| This saye I not / sauynge I am ashamed | |||
| That ye or elles / my kynne shall be defamed | |||
| 125 | Nothynge care I / of clothynge what I haue | ||
| So that alwaye / your honour ye may saue | |||
| And than sayth he / in what estate were they | |||
| At thylke feest / now tell me I you praye | |||
| Now by my trouth / syth ye wyll knowe algate | |||
| 130 | She sayth / there was not one in her estate | ||
| Egall to me / but she a newe gowne had | |||
| And was than better besene and clad | |||
| Of what clothe were / these gownes sayth he | |||
| Of scarlet fyne / of grene or perce sayth she perce ='blue, bluish-grey (material)'; see OED s.v. perse 2 | |||
| 135 | Furred ryght wele / with menyuer or gray | ||
| With traynes longe / and sleues large / so they | |||
| Had eke of rede / or grene / all gyrdelles good | |||
| sig: [B1v] | |||
| Hangynge vnto the grounde / and by the rode | |||
| Theyr gownes were made of the newest gyse | |||
| 140 | And of the best maner / one coude deuyse | ||
| But there had I vpon my weddynge-gowne | |||
| Well ouer-worne / and of the olde facyon | |||
| Whiche ouer-lytell / and to shorte for me | |||
| Is waxen as ye may perceyue and se | |||
| 145 | For I am growen more / syth it was made | ||
| Than at my maryage / whan I it hade | |||
| For whan I gyuen was to you alone | |||
| I was but yonge and lytell of persone | |||
| And so moche wasted am I now for payne | |||
| 150 | Whiche I of late haue had / that in certayne | ||
| I seme now wele a moder for to be | |||
| To her that myght be moder vnto me | |||
| And in good fayth so sore asshamed was I | |||
| Whan that I was amonge this company | |||
| 155 | That I ne coude ne durste make countenaunce | ||
| And yet had I more payne and dyspleasaunce | |||
| Whan that a lady there / of suche a place | |||
| Afore them all wolde saye vnto my face | |||
| Gre[t]e shame it was my clothes were so bad Gre[t]e: letter broken | |||
| 160 | And wondred why that I no better had | ||
| For whiche they toke to me but lytell hede | |||
| Unneth they turne them wolde / so god me spede | |||
| Towarde me / saue of theyr gentylnesse | |||
| Of very pyte and of lowelynesse | |||
| 165 | The good-man than her husbande answered tho | ||
| Ye knowe ryght wele that we haue moche to do | |||
| Wherfore my loue now herken what I saye | |||
| Remembre ye the same tyme and the daye | |||
| Whan in-to maryage we entred were | |||
| 170 | Plente of money / plate or other gere | ||
| sig: B2 | |||
| We had but small / ryght wele herof ye knowe | |||
| For whiche your-selfe ye may suppose and trowe | |||
| That it [b]ehoueth vs now for to bye behoueth] hehoueth 1509 | |||
| Beddes and other thynges hastelye | |||
| 175 | And at this tyme syluer ne golde in store | ||
| Lytell [h]aue we how-be-it ferthermore [h]aue: letter broken | |||
| Yet must we bye / for wynnynge and encres | |||
| Kyne and other catelles neuertheles | |||
| In suche a place / for our prouysyon | |||
| 180 | Also this other daye there fell adown | ||
| The pygnon of our hous / for couerture pygnon ='battlement, pinnacle, or gable'; see OED s.vv. pinion n2, pignon n2, cop n, 1a (1611) | |||
| It lacketh / wherfore dame I you assure | |||
| Made must it be in haast of very nede | |||
| And also other maters for to spede | |||
| 185 | I haue / for whiche grete money shall I spende | ||
| Or I may brynge my werkes to an ende | |||
| And ouer this certes within shorte space | |||
| Unto th'assyse holden at suche a place | |||
| For me to go it is well necessary | |||
| 190 | Bycause of suche a plee I may not tarye | ||
| That for your londe I haue to pursue there | |||
| Of whiche as yet I may saye this and swere | |||
| I haue had lytell prouffyte or auayle | |||
| But spende my goodes / laboure and trauayle | |||
| 195 | A syr she sayd / now wote I well that ye | ||
| None other-wyse can speke but repreue me | |||
| Of my landes / this may I not abyde | |||
| And in her bedde / vnto that other syde | |||
| All hastely she turneth with a grone | |||
| 200 | Sayenge / for goddes loue let me alone | ||
| For neuer shall I speke to you agayne | |||
| What deuyll sayth this man why do ye playne | |||
| And are so wroth / without cause resonable | |||
| sig: [B2v] | |||
| I am not syr / she sayth / ne yet culpable | |||
| 205 | Though ye but lytell had / whan ye me toke | ||
| For dyuers to me spake / that I forsoke | |||
| Of .xx. places / whiche wolde noo good craue | |||
| So that they myght onely my body haue | |||
| In maryage withouten golde or rente | |||
| 210 | My person was to them suffycyente | ||
| But so it was / that ye ofte came and wente | |||
| And many a messenger vnto me sente | |||
| By suche s[u]btyll maner crafte and mene | |||
| So that all other I refused clene | |||
| 215 | And had noo wyll / ony to haue but yow | ||
| For whiche grete blame and maulgre haue I now maulgre: =maugre, 'ill-will' | |||
| Bothe of my lorde / my fader be ye sure | |||
| And of my moder / out of all mesure mesure] mesures 1509 | |||
| Wherof I may haue hate and grete dysdayne | |||
| 220 | And syr this questyon I aske agayne | ||
| If ony woman / at this sayd feest there | |||
| In suche a wyse cladde or arayed were | |||
| As I beynge to me / in lyke estate | |||
| Nay syr not one / I was infortunate | |||
| 225 | Thyder to come / for by saynt Iohan I saye | ||
| The symplest gownes / that they gaue awaye | |||
| Unto theyr chamberers / were better cloth | |||
| Than is the gowne / whiche on my body goth | |||
| On [s]ondayes / or on the holy-daye [s]ondayes: letter broken | |||
| 230 | So wote I not herof / what is to saye | ||
| Moche people good out of this worlde departe | |||
| Wherof grete domage is / but for my parte | |||
| I saye / yf god were pleased I sholde decesse | |||
| To you it wolde be lytell heuynesse | |||
| 235 | For noo dyspleasure / wolde ye for me take | ||
| But hastely gete you an-other make | |||
| sig: B3 | |||
| By god sayth he / that is nothynge well sayd | |||
| Suche symple wordes / myght aparte be layd | |||
| For there is nothynge that I for you do | |||
| 240 | But wele ye ought to take regarde therto | ||
| Turne you to me / and what thynge ye lyke best | |||
| I shall perfourme / for goddes sake let me rest | |||
| Sayth she / now sothly nothynge a[yl]eth me ayleth] alyeth 1509 | |||
| And wolde our lorde / that in lyke caas were ye | |||
| 245 | But neuer shall ye touche me after this | ||
| No shall sayth he / no syr she sayth ywys | |||
| To make all wele / than thynketh he and sayth | |||
| If I were deed I knowe it by my fayth | |||
| Unto an-other / soone wolde ye maryed be | |||
| 250 | Nay syr by hym that dyed on a tree | ||
| Touchynge suche pleasure as I vnto this daye | |||
| Haue had in maryage / I swere and saye | |||
| Durynge my lyfe / that neuer mouth of man | |||
| Shall touche to myn / and she to wepe began | |||
| 255 | Sayenge these wordes / to god I make auow | ||
| If that I knewe to lyue here after yow | |||
| I sholde so deale / that I afore wolde go | |||
| The teeres fell downe fro her eyen two | |||
| Thus he demaundeth her with wordes fayre | |||
| 260 | All-be-it soo / she thynketh the contrayre | ||
| The good-man demeth than / he is all eased | |||
| But yet agayne / in mynde is he dyspleased | |||
| Supposynge / that of nature she is colde | |||
| Of body chast / and deale with no man wolde | |||
| 265 | Also he troweth that she hym loueth wele | ||
| Thus he in herte is eased euery-dele | |||
| Bycause he seeth her som-what wepe afore | |||
| He trusteth that she loueth hym the more | |||
| Wherof he hath a pyteous herte and mynde | |||
| sig: [B3v] | |||
| 270 | And can not be in rest tyll that he fynde | ||
| The wayes how he may her content and ease | |||
| All that he can / he dooth her for to please | |||
| In dyuers wyse / with laboure and trauayle | |||
| But all for nought / it may nothynge auayle | |||
| 275 | For she alwaye awayteth for to pyke | ||
| Upon the stroke that she afore dyde stryke | |||
| That is to saye / a newe gowne wolde she haue | |||
| The whiche for cruell stomocke nolde she craue | |||
| She passeth tyme / and no good wyll she do | |||
| 280 | But at suche houre as she was not wonte to | ||
| Up-ryseth she / and after all that daye | |||
| A cursed angry chere maketh she alwaye | |||
| And not one fayre worde than wyll she speke | |||
| So in her breste the malyce dooth she steke steke ='shut up, enclose'; see OED s.v. steek v1, 1 | |||
| 285 | Soone after this cometh the seconde nyght | ||
| That she to bedde must go as [it is] ryght it is] is it 1509 | |||
| With her good-man / and whan that she is layde | |||
| In bedde / than he whiche is not wele apayde | |||
| Beholdeth wele loketh and taketh kepe | |||
| 290 | On her to knowe / whether that she wake or slepe | ||
| He wele aduyseth yf her armes bothe | |||
| Be couered wele and surely with the clothe | |||
| And heleth them yf nede or mayster be mayster ='necessity'; see OED s.v. mister n1, 8 | |||
| Wherwith anone suche countenaunce maketh she | |||
| 295 | As thoughe she were out of her slepe awaked | ||
| Slepe ye sayth he / I thought ye had ben naked | |||
| Nay syr she sayd / what be ye not appeased | |||
| Sayth he / no syr myn herte is lytell eased | |||
| Syghynge sayth she I thanke god of his sounde sounde ='divine dispensation or ordinance'; see OED s.v. sand n1,1 | |||
| 300 | I haue y[n]oughe to lyue vpon the grounde | ||
| By god sayth he / dame we shall haue ynowe | |||
| Of worldly goodes / and nere to her he drowe | |||
| sig: [B4] | |||
| Sayenge I haue bethought me of a thynge | |||
| Ye shall be at my cosynnes weddynge | |||
| 305 | And ye shall haue ordeyned as goodly gere | ||
| For you as ony gentylwoma[n] there | |||
| Certes she sayth / all-thoughe ye saye the best | |||
| Of all this yere / I wyll go to no feest | |||
| Now by my fayth he sayth but yet ye shall | |||
| 310 | And what ye wyll demaunde haue gowne and all | ||
| What I demaunde she sayth / that is ryght nought | |||
| For syr so god me helpe that all hath wrought | |||
| I aske not to be Ioly for enuy | |||
| Gladde wolde I be forsothe yf neuer I | |||
| 315 | Out of your hous but vnto chyrche sholde passe | ||
| Maytns to here euensonge and masse | |||
| I saye it not ne yet no-wayes seche | |||
| Sauynge onely for suche vngoodly speche | |||
| As was amonges other whiche I knewe | |||
| 320 | By my gossyp / whome I fynde euer trewe | ||
| For she the wordes harde all openly | |||
| The whiche she shewed me full secretely | |||
| Than thynketh moche this poore newe-wedded man | |||
| And in his mynde to compace he began | |||
| 325 | Consyderynge in what caas that he stode | ||
| A newe husholde hauynge lytell gode | |||
| And moche to do he had by many a waye | |||
| Not purueyed wele grete sommes to paye | |||
| And fyfty scutes or syxty for this gowne | |||
| 330 | He must bestowe / and shortly laye it downe | ||
| And in his thought / cast a cheuysaunce | |||
| For there may be none other waye ne chaunce | |||
| But that this gowne nedely must be had | |||
| Wherwith and other gere she shall be clad | |||
| 335 | For he perceyued hath / by his aduyse | ||
| sig: [B4v] | |||
| His wyfe a woman is / bothe good and wyse | |||
| He thanketh god / the lorde of heuen-blysse | |||
| So fayre a Iuell / to gyue hym as she is | |||
| From one syde to an-other / he turneth ofte | |||
| 340 | In bedde he slepeth not though he lye softe | ||
| And it may happen soo / his wyfe this seeth | |||
| Whiche subtyll is / and she within her teeth | |||
| Wyll laughe / whan that she knoweth his conceyte | |||
| Whome she hath ouercome / with her deceyte | |||
| 345 | After this nyght / whan comen is the morowe | ||
| Aryseth vp this good-man full of sorowe | |||
| All ouercome with syghes / that he hath take | |||
| The nyght afore / for his good-wyues sake | |||
| And in auenture to the market gothe | |||
| 350 | With pawne or credence / for to by the clothe credence ='a document giving claim to credit'; see OED s.v. credence n, 4 | ||
| And straytly vnto marchauntes he hym byndeth | |||
| Or elles to them suche Iuelles as he fyndeth | |||
| Whether they be of syluer / or of golde | |||
| Whiche he somtyme had / of his fader olde | |||
| 355 | Then sell[et]h he / or elles .x. pounde or more selleth] sellteh 1509 | ||
| Of rente in mortgage layeth he therfore | |||
| Shortly this man / dooth so his maters spede | |||
| That he hath all suche thynges as in that nede | |||
| Wherwith he cometh home all spedyly | |||
| 360 | And to haue thanke he demeth veryly | ||
| She s[ey]nge this / made semblaunt hym before seynge] syenge 1509 | |||
| As though suche cost myght well haue ben forbore | |||
| And that nothynge / she sette by gowne ne gayre | |||
| That he home brought with hym for her repayre | |||
| 365 | Cursynge all them with tonge / and not with thought | ||
| That fyrst so grete estate and porte vp-brought | |||
| And whan she knewe that thynge was sure she sayd | |||
| To her good-man and hym besought and prayed | |||
| sig: C1 | |||
| He neuer sholde reproue her of the daye | |||
| 370 | That she had made hym spende for her araye | ||
| His money or his goodes / and neuermore | |||
| Her to rebuke / or elles vmbrayde therfore vmbrayde ='upbraid'; see OED s.v. umbraid v | |||
| For by the gowne set I nothynge she sayth | |||
| So that I may me kepe frome colde in fayth | |||
| 375 | And alway haue one peny in my purse | ||
| Whiche wyll suffyse to me though it were worse | |||
| Anone was made this gowne / and eke an hood | |||
| Also a gyrdell whiche was ryche and good | |||
| And now are comen the termes and the houres | |||
| 380 | Whan that he must content his credytoures | ||
| And this poore-man not able is to paye | |||
| Bycause his golde and syluer ben awaye | |||
| And lenger wyll they not forbere this man | |||
| But execute in all the haast they can | |||
| 385 | They curse on hym / and she the same perceyueth | ||
| And therof all the circumstaunce conceyueth | |||
| And perauenture afore this curse procede | |||
| Or elles after the lawe dooth hym forbede | |||
| In chyrche to be / wherfore his company | |||
| 390 | Men wyll eschewe and grudge all-vtterly | ||
| Hauynge dysdayne with hym to drynke and ete | |||
| And he but lytell hath and none can gete | |||
| Of money out of daunger hym to brynge daunger ='liability'; see OED s.v. danger n, 4 | |||
| God wote what Ioye he hath in his lyuynge | |||
| 395 | His wyfe goth cryenge in the hous aboute | ||
| Wherwith a noyse she maketh and a showte | |||
| And thus she sayth / ha cursed be the houre | |||
| That I was euer in my moders boure | |||
| Forth brought or borne / alas it had not happed | |||
| 400 | That in the cloth / wherin I was fyrst lapped | ||
| I had be buryed / for neuer so grete shame | |||
| sig: [C1v] | |||
| Betydde to ony woman ne dyffame | |||
| As to me and my kynne / now shall be layd | |||
| Alas I laboure sore / and fast she sayd | |||
| 405 | And all the laboure besynesse and cost | ||
| That I haue done of many a daye is lost | |||
| In twenty places or moo I had be maryed | |||
| If I so wolde / but lyke a fole I taryed | |||
| For where I myght grete honour and auayle | |||
| 410 | Haue had / and rychesse / therof now I fayle | ||
| I knowe how that theyr wyues be bysene | |||
| That wolde haue maryed me / whiche doth me [tene] tene] 1509 omits | |||
| And therfore haue I heuynesse and wo | |||
| That deth the lyfe nyll take my body fro | |||
| 415 | Thus she complayneth her withouten care | ||
| Of her husbande / or how the good-man fare | |||
| For hooly she hath sette her mynde vpon | |||
| Her owne estate / and shortely she is gon | |||
| Unto this maryage / and where she sholde | |||
| 420 | Haue thought vpon her husbande she ne wolde | ||
| But to this poore-man putteth all the wyte | |||
| Lyke as an hors that can bothe playne and byte | |||
| This woman dooth / and she is cause of all | |||
| For she this man hath made so bestyall | |||
| 425 | Somwhat for sorowe / or elles-wyse by playe | ||
| That well-nygh wasted is his wytte awaye | |||
| So that he wyll not vnderstonde ne knowe | |||
| That she is in defaute / wyll he not trowe | |||
| And though he se the maters euydent | |||
| 430 | Yet of necessytee he is content | ||
| But of the thought and sorowes to enquere | |||
| It is but waast / syth ye the causes here | |||
| Of this man whiche can neyther rest ne slepe | |||
| That thynketh euery houre and taketh kepe | |||
| sig: C2 | |||
| 435 | How that he may in ease this woman sette | ||
| And fynde some remedy to paye his dette | |||
| But yet is he more angry for his wyfe angry ='troubled, grieved'; see OED s.v. angry adj., 2 | |||
| Whiche curseth hym / than all that other stryfe | |||
| Thus soroweth he / in pouertee downe fall | |||
| 440 | And frome that payne recouer neuer shall | ||
| Prycked he is / but smarte can he none fele | |||
| That all is Ioye / to hym it semeth wele | |||
| Thus is this man within the lepe yclosed | |||
| And parauenture so he is dysposed | |||
| 445 | That he nothynge therof dooth hym repent | ||
| For yf that he out of the same were hent | |||
| Soone wolde he go agayne in-to that gynne | |||
| And all his payne and woo newly begynne | |||
| Yet sholde he neuer be in soo good cas | |||
| 450 | As he hath ben afore he maryed was | ||
| And there this poore-man shall vse his lyfe | |||
| Endynge his dayes in wretchednes and stryfe | |||
|
¶Thus endeth the fyrst Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynnes the seconde Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| sig: C2v] | |||
| AS for the seconde Ioye of maryage | |||
| It is whan that this wyfe of her courage | |||
| 455 | Feleth that she so rychely is arayed | ||
| In suche a wyse as here-tofore is sayd | |||
| And knoweth well ynough that she is fayre | |||
| Than wyll she go frome home to take the ayre | |||
| To many feestes and assembles eke | |||
| 460 | And also holy sayntes for to seke | ||
| On dyuers pylgrymages wyll she go | |||
| All-though the husbande be not pleased so | |||
| Her Iourney enterpryseth she to ryde | |||
| With her cosyon and gossyppes at a tyde cosyon: =cousin, here and twice below | |||
| 465 | And specyally for her kynnesmannes sake | ||
| Her pylg[rymage] deuoutly wyll she take pylg[rymage]: letters illegible | |||
| And perauenture yet it may soo be | |||
| That this man is as nyghe kynne vnto [m]e | |||
| As vnto her / but soo hym for to call | |||
| sig: C3 | |||
| 470 | Wonte and accustomed is she ouer-all | ||
| It may be thought for some entent or cause | |||
| She calleth hym soo / but ther I leue a clause clause ='close, conclusion'; see OED s.v. clause n, 3 | |||
| Her moder than seynge her besynesse | |||
| Cometh somtyme to this man I gesse | |||
| 475 | And as a woman can begynne to clatter | ||
| She say[t]h his herte to tycle and flatter say[t]h: letter broken | |||
| This foresayd man / her cosyn is of blode | |||
| For her to go with suche a company is good | |||
| And other-whyle the husbande is lothe | |||
| 480 | That she sholde go / sayth sadly by his othe | ||
| How he none horses hath ne other thynge | |||
| Her to conuey to feest or gaderynge | |||
| Than shall the gossyp or her cosyn saye | |||
| I am ryght lothe by god and by this daye | |||
| 485 | To go / for myn hous so god me spede | ||
| Moche thynge haue I to do of very nede | |||
| And were it not honour to you and me | |||
| Speke wolde I not as now so mote I the | |||
| For syr soo god me helpe I knowe it wele | |||
| 490 | Your wyfe to go is pleased neuer-a_dele | ||
| She is a woman leest that loueth waast | |||
| Of ony lyuynge / for euer she dooth haast | |||
| Homewarde whan she at ony place is oute | |||
| For your expence and charge she hath suche doute | |||
| 495 | So this good-man / whos wysdome is to seche | ||
| And sore abused with theyr flaterynge speche | |||
| Demaundeth who goth in this c[o]mpany company] campany 1509 | |||
| Of men and other / and she sayth certaynly | |||
| My cosyon and my godfader also | |||
| 500 | My god-moder / and many an-other mo | ||
| Your moder-in-lawe / whiche is your wyues moder | |||
| My good cosyn your wyfe / and dyuers other | |||
| sig: [C3v] | |||
| Also the wyues of suche a place in-dede | |||
| And your cosyn and hers haue ye no drede | |||
| 505 | Other there be mo / dwellynge in your strete | ||
| I dare well saye this company is mete | |||
| A kynges doughter for to be amonge | |||
| And be ye sure she wyll not tarye longe | |||
| Soo is this sely man on honoure sette | |||
| 510 | That in no wyse wyll he this vyage lette | ||
| And perauenture she that thus dooth speke | |||
| Shall haue a gowne or other thynges to breke | |||
| The mater that the persone may be playd persone ='character, part'; see OED s.v. person n, 1 | |||
| And thus it falleth ofte as it is sayd | |||
| 515 | He sayth this company is good and fayre | ||
| But she moche hath to do / and grete repayre | |||
| At home how-be-it / for to goo as than | |||
| She hath a lycence gyuen by this man | |||
| Whiche to her sayth / beware how by the dayes | |||
| 520 | Ye be demeaned trauaylynge on your wayes | ||
| Also take hede at nyght ye lodge you sure | |||
| And god you kepe frome euyll auenture | |||
| The good-wyfe than / whiche doth perceyue and here | |||
| That she hath leue / maketh countenaunce and chere | |||
| 525 | At home for to abyde yet had she leuer | ||
| Than forth to ryde / and from her home dysseuer | |||
| She sayth my loue this tyme no cause haue I | |||
| Out for to goo with suche a company | |||
| I praye you that I may not goo this season | |||
| 530 | Her cosyn than was nyghe herynge that reason | ||
| Answered and sayd / what cosyn ye shall goo | |||
| Your gentyll husband wyll that it be soo | |||
| The good-man than a lytell abacke doth drawe | |||
| And thus he sayth vnto his moder-in-lawe | |||
| 535 | Ne were it for the trust I haue in yow | ||
| sig: C4 | |||
| She sholde not go / this make I god auow The 1507 fragment begins at this point. | |||
| Ha my good-sone she sayth by heuen-kynge good-sone ='son-in-law'; see OED s.vv. good-son, good adj., D.2.b | |||
| That made this worlde / and euery other thynge | |||
| Ye may as surely and withouten drede | |||
| 540 | Suffre her to go as for to saye your crede | ||
| Thus they departe and on theyr waye be gone | |||
| And as they go / these wordes than sayth one | |||
| Unto an-other he hath some Ialousye | |||
| It semeth wele he dredeth Ieopardye | |||
| 545 | Thus is he mocked by these womens arte | ||
| For now come galauntes forth on euery parte | |||
| Whiche at the feest afore by auenture | |||
| This foresayd werke haue made and put in vre | |||
| And there awaytynge ben vpon theyr nede | |||
| 550 | For to conclude and so forth to procede | ||
| But how this wyfe now fested is and serued | |||
| For loue of her good-man all vndeserued | |||
| And god wote how she doth herselfe applye | |||
| To reuell daunce / and for to synge on hye | |||
| 555 | Also she maketh good and mery chere | ||
| But god wote how she prayseth her bedfere | |||
| The husbande lefte at home whyle she is oute | |||
| And seeth herselfe so praysed amonge the route | |||
| Certes these galauntes than her do aduyse | |||
| 560 | And se she is apparaylled in suche wyse | ||
| Perceyuynge well her chere and countenaunce | |||
| Shortely to he[r] eche one hym doth auaunce her] hex 1509, her 1507 | |||
| One profreth moche / an-o[t]her offreth more an-o[t]her: letter broken | |||
| Harde is to me the cause to tell wherfore | |||
| 565 | The Ioly chere the praty trotte and pace | ||
| With the demeanynge of a womans face demeanynge ='demeanour'; see OED s.v. demeaning vbl. n, 2 | |||
| Wyll gyue these louers cause and hardynesse | |||
| To sewe for grace vnto theyr worthynesse | |||
| sig: [C4v] | |||
| One to her wordes gracyous dooth saye | |||
| 570 | An-other cometh as nygh her as he may An other] And other 1509, An other 1507 | ||
| And setteth his fote a_lofte on hers playne | |||
| Eke by the honde quyckly he doth her strayne strayne ='clasp, squeeze'; see OED s.v. strain v1, 3 | |||
| Also an-other his loke casteth a_syde | |||
| Full pyteously and sharpely for a tyde | |||
| 575 | An-other than vnto her dooth presente | ||
| A dyamonde ryght fayre and oryente | |||
| Or elles a ryche rubye with a rynge | |||
| Whiche she receyueth with some other thynge | |||
| By whiche thynges may she well vnderstande | |||
| 580 | Of theyr entent / and fele it with her hande | ||
| If she haue ony reason brayne or wyt | |||
| And other-whyles by fortune happeth it | |||
| That frome her chayre alyght wyll she adown | |||
| To doo some werkes of deuocyon | |||
| 585 | Or vnto Uenus to doo sacrefyse | ||
| But how can I not saye ne in what wyse | |||
| This sely man at home in poore degree | |||
| Is made and brought vnto necessytee | |||
| For thylke estate that his wyfe doth pretende | |||
| 590 | The mater thus hath dryuen to an ende | ||
| And made her go to gaderynges and feestes | |||
| Amonge a wycked company of gestes | |||
| For vnto her they yolden be in trust | |||
| To haue theyr pleasures appetytes and lust | |||
| 595 | Upon none other thynge do they aweyte | ||
| But how they may doo this poore-man deceyte | |||
| The stroke wherof he hath without escape | |||
| Whiche comynly is called but a Iape | |||
| So he is causer of his propre shame | |||
| 600 | None other wyght therof is for to blame | ||
| And thus it happeth by contynuaunce | |||
| sig: [C5] | |||
| That what by sygnes speche or countenaunce | |||
| Trouth of the thynge wherof he was in doute | |||
| All openly reported is aboute | |||
| 605 | Wherby he falleth Ialouse in a rage | ||
| Out of the whiche there is no wyght so sage | |||
| That hym can moue / for who that feruently | |||
| Of woman feleth the cruell malady | |||
| There is no medycyne that may hym cure | |||
| 610 | The sekenesse is so sharpe without mesure | ||
| Than wyll he bete her bytterly and curse | |||
| Wherby the werkes maketh he moche worse werkes ='troubles'; see OED s.v. work n, 6 | |||
| For chastyce can he not by daye ne nyght | |||
| His wyfe but by his betynge maketh lyght | |||
| 615 | And hote the loue bytw[e]ne her and her frende bytwene] bytwne 1509, bytwene 1507 | ||
| Thus dryueth he the mater to an ende | |||
| And soo he other-whyles fortune may | |||
| One of her lymmes breke or kytte a_way | |||
| Wherby his castell or his pyle he loseth | |||
| 620 | Than as a mased beest he hym dysposyth | ||
| Withouten care and all he setteth at nought | |||
| Thus hath he founde the payne whiche he hath sought | |||
| And neuer after wyll she loue hym more | |||
| Bycause that he hath beten her so sore | |||
| 625 | But for to passe the tyme and make a shewe | ||
| And of fayre wordes speketh she but fewe | |||
| There this poore-man in turment payne and wo | |||
| Lyueth and yet he thynketh not so | |||
| And all these sorowes / he for Ioyes doth take | |||
| 630 | Soo in the lepe he is I vndertake | ||
| Enclosed depe / and yf he were withoute | |||
| Yet shortely wolde he in withouten doute | |||
| There vseth he his lyfe in paynes alwayes paynes] payne 1507 | |||
| And wretchedly / thus endeth he his dayes | |||
| sig: [C5v] | |||
|
Thus endeth the seconde Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the thyrde Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| 635 | ANother Ioye whiche named is the thrydde | ||
| Of maryage in no wyse may be hydde | |||
| The whiche I purpose shortely to d[e]clare declare] dclare 1509, declare 1507 | |||
| Accordynge to myn auctour and not spare | |||
| The whiche is whan man in youth doth wedde | |||
| 640 | A yonge mayde / and whan they bothe in bedde | ||
| Haue had theyr pleasures largely and desyre | |||
| And well aswaged is the brennynge fyre | |||
| The hoot heruest is well ouerblowe heruest ='autumn'; see OED s.v. harvest n, 1; ouerblowe ='past'; see OED s.v. overblow v1, 2 | |||
| As it with me and other is I trowe | |||
| 645 | Soone after this her bely doth aryse The 1507 fragment breaks off here. | ||
| sig: [C6] | |||
| And waxeth grete / as is the comyn gyse | |||
| Wherof the husbande alwaye hath the name | |||
| And perauenture he nothynge to blame | |||
| Is of the dede / for so it happeth ofte | |||
| 650 | As some men saye in preuy counseyll softe | ||
| And therat meryly wyll laughe or hum | |||
| But this is de secret[i]s mulierum secretis] secretes 1509 | |||
| The husbande than in-to suche thought doth fall | |||
| And turmentes that he ronne and trotte shall | |||
| 655 | To gete the wyfe all she shall nede | ||
| Forth on his Iourney swyftely doth he spede | |||
| And yf he tryppe or stomble by the waye | |||
| He may fall in the myre by nyght or daye | |||
| And grete auenture shall be yf he brynge | |||
| 660 | Uytaylles that may be good to her lykynge | ||
| All-thoughe he hath done neuer so grete payne | |||
| Whyles he was out / tyll he came home agayne | |||
| And ofte it happeth so that for suche mete | |||
| As comynly she vsed hath to ete | |||
| 665 | Bothe lust and appetyte from her do pas | ||
| Bycause her stomacke is not as it was | |||
| Than she desyreth to haue thynges straunge | |||
| And noueltees her dyete for to chaunge dyete] dyerte 1509 | |||
| For whiche this poore-man must trotte on fote | |||
| 670 | Or elles ryde there is none other bote | ||
| Bothe nyght and daye / to gete where he may fynde | |||
| Suche delycates as may content her mynde | |||
| And in this turment seuen yeres and more | |||
| Is this good-man / and yet she euermore | |||
| 675 | Nothynge wyll do but playe the wanton so | ||
| That therof pyte hath this husbande tho | |||
| Whiche of the hous alwaye the charge doth bere | |||
| And se all thynges well-ordred euery-where | |||
| sig: [C6v] | |||
| Erly to ryse / and late to goo to bedde | |||
| 680 | He must and se all maters be well spede | ||
| And on his husholde / after suche estate | |||
| As he is of remembreth he algate | |||
| Now dooth the tyme approche of trauaylynge | |||
| And she a chylde in-to the worlde shall brynge | |||
| 685 | God-faders than in haast / god-moders eke | ||
| As she wyll ordre / besyly to seke | |||
| He hath grete thought and out-goth in an hete | |||
| The nourysses and gossyppes for to gete | |||
| Whiche must her kepe of chylde whyle she lyeth in | |||
| 690 | What tyme his double sorowe dooth begyn | ||
| For so they drynke the wyne in euery houre | |||
| As in-to olde botes one dyde it poure | |||
| Now lyenge in her trauayle payne and wo | |||
| This wyfe auoweth twenty waye and mo | |||
| 695 | On pylgrymage to go for her good spede | ||
| To be put out of her grete payne and drede | |||
| This poore-man auoweth eke for to ryde | |||
| Unto all-halowes / and now on euery syde | |||
| The gossyppes come / and this good-man must gete | |||
| 700 | Suche vytayles as they may well drynke and ete | ||
| So that they may in suche a wyse be eased | |||
| As they shall holde them well content and pleased | |||
| This done / the wyfe and gossyppes talke togyder | |||
| And fast they carye in for drede of weder | |||
| 705 | All-be-it soo / this good-man hath the payne | ||
| That trauayle must in wynde snowe hayle or rayne | |||
| And whan he is forth passed on his waye | |||
| One of the gossyppes wyll these wordes saye | |||
| Alas my gossyp whiche now is withoute | |||
| 710 | An harde fytte hath / that am I out of doute fytte ='position of hardship or danger'; see OED s.v. fit n2, 2 | ||
| A foule and euyll weder now it is | |||
| sig: [C7] | |||
| No force an-other sayth so haue I blysse | |||
| He is ryght wele at ease / and so be we | |||
| But yf it fortune soo / somtyme that he | |||
| 715 | Fayle of suche thynge as were vnto theyr paye | ||
| One of the gossyppes to the wyfe shall saye | |||
| Gossyp I meruayle moche / and so dooth all | |||
| This felawshyp / that it so is befall | |||
| And we haue wonder what it may amount | |||
| 720 | That your husbande doth make so lytell count | ||
| Of you or of your yonge chylde here in trouthe | |||
| A gentyll herte wolde pyte haue and routhe | |||
| Beholde it wele / conceyue what he wolde do | |||
| Yf ye had chyldren fyue or syxe yet mo | |||
| 725 | It doth appere he l[o]u[e]th you but lyte loueth] leuoth 1509 | ||
| Wherof bothe ye and we may haue dyspyte | |||
| Consydred where ye lust hym for to take Consydred ='considering' | |||
| He hath more honoure truely for your sake | |||
| Than euer ony of his lygnage bore | |||
| 730 | Haue had in dayes passed here-tofore | ||
| By god I saye / that is our lorde Ihesus | |||
| Rather than my husbande serued me thus | |||
| I had well leuer / eyther he were deed | |||
| Or elles that he none eye had in his heed | |||
| 735 | Than sayth an-other / gossyp fynde some bote | ||
| Let not this man thus cast you vnderfote | |||
| For he shall doo to you whan ye be layde | |||
| As moche agayne or more / now haue I sayde | |||
| An-other sayth / my cosyon I meruayle | |||
| 740 | Ye take no more regarde to your auayle | ||
| Consydred / ye be wyse of good lygnage | |||
| And he not lyke to you / though maryage | |||
| Hath coupled you and all men hygh and lowe | |||
| How ye hym suffre vnderstonde and knowe | |||
| sig: [C7v] | |||
| 745 | And he doth you so grete domage alwaye | ||
| Than doth the wyfe answere agayne and saye | |||
| Truely my dere gossyppes what is the best | |||
| To do as in this caas so haue I rest | |||
| Nothynge knowe I ne wayes fynde I can | |||
| 750 | To helpe my-selfe he is so euyll man | ||
| An euyll man he is / one of them sayth | |||
| But I shall tell you truely by my fayth | |||
| My gossyppes that be here / they knowe well whan | |||
| I was fyrst maryed to myn husbande than | |||
| 755 | Men sayd he was so dyuers of his wyll dyuers ='cruel, perverse'; see OED s.v. divers adj., 2 | ||
| That it was wonder but he wolde me kyll | |||
| By god my gossyp though he so were named | |||
| I thanke our lorde he is now ryght wele tamed | |||
| For he had leuer fall and breke his arme | |||
| 760 | Than me to do dyspleasure hurte or harme | ||
| But fyrst whan we togyder maryed were | |||
| To speke than he began with angry chere | |||
| And for to stryke as dooth a carlysshe mon carlysshe ='churlish'; see OED s.v. carlish adj. | |||
| But by the sacrament of god anon | |||
| 765 | Fast with my tethe I toke the brydell so | ||
| That he me bette no more but tymes two | |||
| Wherin he played the very fole and more | |||
| For after was I moche wors than before | |||
| And he hath tolde my gossyp sykerly | |||
| 770 | That he in me coude put no remedy | ||
| Now may I speke and do all that I wyll | |||
| And be it ryght or wronge vntrouth or skyll | |||
| Alwaye with me the last worde shall remayne | |||
| So whan he speketh I chekke hym vp agayne | |||
| 775 | There is no game lyke it / whiche is to playe | ||
| With players and put besynesse a_waye | |||
| For gossyp neuer man yet was so harde | |||
| sig: [C8] | |||
| I you e[n]sure but yf he be answarde | |||
| Well by his wyfe she shall soone make hym fre | |||
| 780 | And debonarye / yf that she wytty be debonarye: =debonary, an altered form of debonair | ||
| An-other sayth my cosyn be well ware | |||
| Ye speke to hym / and for no drede ye spare | |||
| Whan he cometh home / and saye the best ye can | |||
| And in this wyse / gouerned is this man | |||
| 785 | Than drynke they fast and saye saynt Iohnn to borowe | ||
| And take theyr leue vnto the nexte morowe | |||
| What tyme agayne they wyll retourne to se | |||
| The maner all / how she shall gouerned be | |||
| But whan this poore-man cometh home agayne | |||
| 790 | With vytaylles and with other thynge certayne | ||
| And seeth there is grete waast made in his hous | |||
| Of go[o]des and he is inly couetous goodes] goddes 1509 | |||
| Than [f]alleth he [in] heuynesse and payne falleth] salleth 1509; in] 1509 omits | |||
| For thought that hym doth by the herte constrayne | |||
| 795 | An houre or two by nyght he doth aryue | ||
| For he hath comen ferre to se his wyue | |||
| And for to vnderstonde yet ferthermore | |||
| How that she dooth / he coueyteth ryght sore | |||
| Whether she be hole / or how it with her is | |||
| 800 | In ony wyse to knowe wyll he not mys | ||
| One nyght frome home he dare not lodge withoute | |||
| Of his expence he hath suche fere and doute | |||
| In-to his hous with Ioye entred is he | |||
| And all his seruauntes there in theyr degre | |||
| 805 | Instructed be and taught in suche a wyse | ||
| Lyke as the good-wyfe lyst afore deuyse | |||
| For elles though neuer so good and true were thay | |||
| They sholde not tarye there well halfe a daye | |||
| Now he demaundeth how the good-wyfe doth | |||
| 810 | And therof wyll he vnderstonde the soth | ||
| sig: [C8v] | |||
| Than sayth her chamberer whiche dooth her kepe | |||
| Syr she is very seke and may not slepe | |||
| Syth ye departed hens ete myght she not | |||
| But lytell she amended is god wot | |||
| 815 | Than is this man all sorowfull and sadde | ||
| Whiche hath ben wette with reyne and harde-bestadde | |||
| For oftentyme by hym and other moo | |||
| Parauenture it may well happen soo | |||
| That he is faynte and his hors at assaye | |||
| 820 | For he hath passed by an euyll waye | ||
| And they percas of all the daye afore | |||
| Haue neyther dronke ne eten lasse ne more | |||
| And yet wyll not this poore-man ete a bytte | |||
| Tyll tyme that he may vnderstonde and wytte | |||
| 825 | How his wyfe dooth / and than the chamberere chamberere] chambrerere 1509 | ||
| Olde matrones / and the nouryse drawen nere | |||
| And seruauntes whiche enfourmed ben how they | |||
| After theyr charge shall them demeane alwey | |||
| They shewe theyr personages as they were wroth | |||
| 830 | Than wyll not he abyde / but vp he goth | ||
| In-to the chambre / comynge her agayne | |||
| And at his entre / softely she dooth playne | |||
| Upon the bedde afore her leneth he | |||
| Sayenge my best byloued how do ye | |||
| 835 | Ryght seke she sayth my lorde / and than he there | ||
| Demaundeth how in what a wyse and where | |||
| My loue sayth she / ye knowe well that of late | |||
| I am made feble / and in poore estate | |||
| Than answereth he to her as in this wyse | |||
| 840 | Haue ye not ordeyned so that some colyse colyse: =cullis, 'broth'; see OED s.v. cullis n1 | ||
| Of a fatte capon for you may be made | |||
| Now syr so god me helpe / ryght so I hadde | |||
| She sayth of late / but they it can not make | |||
| sig: D1 | |||
| In fayth quod he loue I shall vndertake | |||
| 845 | To make you one full well and holsomly | ||
| The whiche shall no man touche but ye and I | |||
| And ye shall ete it for the loue of me | |||
| She sayth my loue I wyll well it so be | |||
| This good-man than goth to the coke in hast | |||
| 850 | He stampeth fast and ordeyned her repast | ||
| Fast chydeth he / and sayth they be but bestes | |||
| For they can dyght no metes at requestes | |||
| Than hastely he dooth this soupynge bere soupynge ='broth'; see OED s.v. supping vbl. n1, 2 | |||
| Unto this wyfe / and whan he cometh there | |||
| 855 | With prayer he enforceth her to take | ||
| Somwhat therof and ete well for his sake | |||
| And so she dooth and sayth syr good it is | |||
| But so was not that they haue made or this | |||
| For it was nothynge worth a symple fle | |||
| 860 | And with that worde frome her departeth he | ||
| To souper / and adowne he dooth hym sette | |||
| And therupon the vytaylles be forth fette | |||
| None of the delycates that gossyppes ete | |||
| The daye afore / whiche were not for hym mete | |||
| 865 | Not perauenture of the messes chefe | ||
| He had but of the fragmentes and relefe | |||
| Wherof the olde wyues haue take theyr fyll | |||
| And god wote in what wyse they dranke theyrtyll | |||
| Thus was this wery man at souper fedde | |||
| 870 | Wherwith he is content and goth to bedde | ||
| All sobrely with heuynesse and sorowe | |||
| And whan that comen is the nexte morowe | |||
| Unto his wyfe he gooth / and in this wyse | |||
| He sayth / my loue tyme is ye awake and ryse | |||
| 875 | And go to masse for we so moche do spende | ||
| That all our money nygh is at an ende | |||
| sig: [D1v] | |||
| This cost is grete / we may not bere out it | |||
| And she answereth / a syr it is not yet | |||
| No-whyle syth I was layde / and so grete payne | |||
| 880 | I haue that yet I can not well sustayne | ||
| Myselfe / but now I wote it and byleue | |||
| Ye thyn[k]e it longe / and sore it doth you greue thynke] thynge 1509Although the emendation is called for here, thynge (=think) is used twice below as a rhyme-word. | |||
| That I ne laboure in the hous agayne | |||
| In suche a wyse as though I sholde be slayne | |||
| 885 | I vnderstonde it is your mynde and wyll | ||
| That i[n] this wyse I sholde my-selfe do kyll | |||
| Alas I se in tyme to come that I | |||
| Ryght moche shall haue to suffre certaynly | |||
| If that I sholde haue .x. or .xii. yet mo | |||
| 890 | Chyldren but god defende that it be so | ||
| For yf it myght hym please I wolde be gladde | |||
| That neuer one after this tyme I hadde | |||
| And please it to god that I more chylde haue neuer | |||
| But his commaundement be perfourmed euer | |||
| 895 | In me and all his wyll lowly obeyd | ||
| Ha sayd this man / alas what haue ye sayd | |||
| Ye mone yourselfe without cause or encheson | |||
| For I dare saye and make it good by re[a]son reason] reoson 1509 | |||
| Was neuer poore-man yet of myn estate | |||
| 900 | That suffre[d] hath soo moche as I of late suffred] suffre 1509 | ||
| Frome hens-forth-[o]n it shall me lyke and please on] in 1509 | |||
| That whan ye wyll ye aryse or take your ease | |||
| Than sayth she thus / my counseyll is that one | |||
| Go streyght vnto my gossyppes all anone | |||
| 905 | And saye to them they come no more to me | ||
| For I am euyll-dysposed in certaynte | |||
| My loue sayth he they shall come and haue all | |||
| Suche thynges as may them please in specyall | |||
| Syr than sayth she / no more let me be styll | |||
| sig: D2 | |||
| 910 | And do ye all thynges as it is your wyll | ||
| Than cometh a matrone with a wryngled face wryngled: =wrinkled, although this spelling variant is not recorded in OED s.v. wrinkled adj. (cf. thynge: =think) | |||
| An olde ke[m]pster with whome is lytell grace kempster] kepster 1509kempster ='wool-comber' | |||
| And to the good-man out her mynde doth breke | |||
| Pease syr she sayth / no mo suche wordes speke | |||
| 915 | For to a woman that is voyde of brayne | ||
| And feble / and so tender in certayne | |||
| Grete peryll is to speke so in her payne | |||
| And therwithall she draweth the courtayne | |||
| So doth this man lyue sorowfully alwayes | |||
| 920 | And wretchedly so shall he ende his dayes | ||
|
¶Here endeth the thyrde Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the fourth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| THe fourth Ioye of maryage to tell | |||
| Is as to go frome purgatorye to hell | |||
| sig: [D2v] | |||
| For it is whan he whiche hath maryed be | |||
| Kepynge an housholde after his degre | |||
| 925 | Where he hath dwelled styll .viii. yeres euen | ||
| And hath of yonge chyldren sy[x]e or seuen syxe] syre 1509 | |||
| Passynge full many an euyll nyght and daye | |||
| Unhappely as ye haue herde me saye | |||
| Wherof he hath had many an euyll ende | |||
| 930 | Thus is his youth gretely made colde and spende | ||
| And it were tyme for hym sore to repente | |||
| If that he coude / as synners sholde in lente | |||
| But of his hous whiche he must kepe algate | |||
| He is soo inly wery and soo mate | |||
| 935 | That what-someuer the wyfe wyll speke or do | ||
| Nought careth he / ne taketh hede therto | |||
| For he as harde and dull is as an asse | |||
| Whiche for no prycke ne sporre wyll faster passe | |||
| This poore-man doughters hath yet one or twayne | |||
| 940 | The whiche may fortune wolde be maryed fayne | ||
| They redy be and on the houre they tarye | |||
| Awaytynge fast who wyll come them to marye | |||
| They be in Ioye / and it may happen so | |||
| The man is poore / and lyueth in care and wo | |||
| 945 | Nygh moneyles / and hath no grete substaunce | ||
| For maryage to make his cheuysaunce | |||
| Also vnto his sones he must bye | |||
| His doughters and his other small meynye | |||
| Doublettes hosyn kyrtels and vytayle | |||
| 950 | And many an-other thynge withouten fayle | ||
| His sayd doughters he must repayre and kepe | |||
| All honestely and gaye / elles wyll they wepe | |||
| And for thre thynges this nedely must be done | |||
| One is bycause they may be asked sone | |||
| 955 | Of dyuers galauntes dwellynge them aboute | ||
| sig: D3 | |||
| An-other is withouten ony doute | |||
| All were it so that this good-man ne wolde | |||
| Yet so to be / for nothynge it ne sholde | |||
| For-why the wyfe hath passed the same waye | |||
| 960 | And she ne wyll it suffre by this daye | ||
| Also there is an-other reason why | |||
| Bycause they haue good myndes and hertes hye | |||
| And are accustomed to be fresshe and gay | |||
| For otherwyse wyll they not be ne may | |||
| 965 | And in auenture yf they otherwyse | ||
| Entred were / anone they wolde practyse | |||
| To haue theyr Ioly[u]ettes / for helpe and ease | |||
| But there an ende / of that I holde my pease | |||
| So is this man on euery parte dysmayd | |||
| 970 | These charges berynge / as afore is sayd | ||
| And perauenture soo he is bestadde | |||
| That symplely and poorely he is cladde | |||
| Of whiche araye yet careth he nothynge | |||
| So he may haue a passe-tyme and lyuynge passe-tyme ='occupation'; see OED s.v. pastime n, 1 | |||
| 975 | And this suffyseth well to hym alwaye | ||
| As to the fysshe doth in the lepe to playe | |||
| Whyles he may haue a tyme and suffraunce | |||
| Therin to lyue and languysshe [in] penaunce in] ni 1509 | |||
| And yet therby abbredged ben his dayes | |||
| 980 | So fareth it by suche a man alwayes | ||
| The whiche in-to the lepe of housholdynge | |||
| Is put where he shall suffre suche turmentynge | |||
| As I haue sayd / and other innumerable | |||
| And thus he seeth these thynges so chargeable | |||
| 985 | That all he sette at nought soo he lyue may | ||
| As doth an hors morfounded by the waye morfounded ='benumbed with cold' | |||
| Whiche none accompte doth set by sporre ne thynge | |||
| That may to hym be done in trauaylynge | |||
| sig: [D3v] | |||
| This notwithstondynge / wheder he wyll or not | |||
| 990 | Forth hym behoueth for to goo and trot | ||
| To gouerne londe and lyuelode whiche is his lyuelode: =livelihood | |||
| Ryght after suche estate as he of is | |||
| And perauenture he hath horses twayne | |||
| The whiche be lene and poore for lacke of grayne | |||
| 995 | And it soo fortune may he hath but one | ||
| Or yet not one / but forth he gooth anone | |||
| And .xx. myle or fourty from his place | |||
| He trauaylleth / within a lytell space | |||
| Unto the parlyament / or to th'assyse | |||
| 1000 | Where he hath for to sewe in dyuers wyse | ||
| For suche a cause / as other thynges amonge | |||
| Hath ben dependant in the lawe there longe | |||
| A payre of botes well of thre yeres olde | |||
| Or foure he hath to kepe his legges frome colde | |||
| 1005 | The whiche full ofte haue mended ben alowe | ||
| Ryght craftely for drede it sholde be knowe | |||
| So that parte whiche was somtyme on the kne | |||
| Amyddes the shynne must nedely vsed be | |||
| Full ofte they chaunged haue theyr former face | |||
| 1010 | And that hath brought them from aboue so bace | ||
| A rustye payre of sporres he hath eke | |||
| Wherof one of the rowelles be to seke | |||
| Also of .x. yeres olde he hath a gowne | |||
| Not of the newest gyse ne facyowne | |||
| 1015 | The whiche for drede that he sholde it appere appere: =appair, 'impair' | ||
| Excepte on hygh feestes he nolde it were | |||
| Or elles whan he frome home sholde go or ryde | |||
| All other tymes it was layde clene a_syde | |||
| The cause why it was of so olde a shappe | |||
| 1020 | May be for soo it fallen is by happe | ||
| That gownes be made all in a newe gyse | |||
| sig: [D4] | |||
| But this to hym dooth well ynoughe suffyse | |||
| And in his wayes yf that he se or here | |||
| Ony Instrumentes or playes ay they answere | |||
| 1025 | As semeth hym by sow[n]ynge in his ere sownynge] sowynge 1509 | ||
| Of his housholde bycause his mynde is there | |||
| He lyues harde and poorely by the wayes | |||
| So do his horses / and his page alwayes | |||
| Whiche page is all to_ragged and to_rent | |||
| 1030 | As pluto was that rode to parlyament | ||
| Upon his syde a rustye sworde and bad | |||
| He ware the whiche his mayster goten had | |||
| In flaunders at a bataylle / also he | |||
| Those bowges caryed that were wonte to be bowges ='bags'; see OED s.v. bouge n1,1 | |||
| 1035 | Ofte vsed to conueye bothe nygh and farre | ||
| His legge-harneys alwayes in tyme of warre | |||
| S[h]ortely to speke / he doth all that he may Shortely] Sortely 1509 | |||
| With lytell cost to trauayle by the waye | |||
| For he at home ynough hath for to spende | |||
| 1040 | Also these aduocates to hym offende offende ='assail'; see OED s.v. offend v, 5 | ||
| Sergeauntes gryffyers / and suche a companye gryffyers ='registrars, clerks, notaries'; see OED s.v. greffier n,1 | |||
| So largely take of hym that he doth hye | |||
| Homewarde as fast as he his hors can dryue | |||
| And perauenture whan he cometh to his wyue | |||
| 1045 | It is nygh the mornynge as the nyght | ||
| And whan he is at home he dooth alyght | |||
| Where he noo souper fynde can ne espye | |||
| Bycause his wyfe and other companye | |||
| Unto theyr beddes were gone som-what afore | |||
| 1050 | Or he came home / but he dare saye no more | ||
| But taketh all in pacyence and gree | |||
| For here-vnto accustomed hath he be | |||
| And yf it happe that he come in good houre | |||
| Wery and sadde with trauayle and laboure | |||
| sig: [D4v] | |||
| 1055 | Pensyfe heuy / and of his charges greued | ||
| Supposynge to be welcomed and releued | |||
| How-be-it many tymes he hath had | |||
| And he doth thynke ryght euyll chere and bad | |||
| The good-wyfe chydeth than and clappeth fast | |||
| 1060 | As though a tempest were or thonder-blast | ||
| Within the hous / and yf that this good-man | |||
| Lyst to commaunde / or bydde his seruauntes than | |||
| To gete hym ony-thynge that he wolde haue | |||
| There is not in his hous so lewde a knaue | |||
| 1065 | That maketh accompte therby ne wyll obey | ||
| So by theyr dame afore taught ben all they | |||
| Wherfore to speke he loseth tyme and payne | |||
| But she therwith be pleased in certayne | |||
| And yf his ladde in ony wyse demande | |||
| 1070 | Mete for hym-selfe / or for his hors prouande | ||
| He shall be checked and rebuked so | |||
| That he shall not dare speke suche wordes mo | |||
| Also this poore-man that is soo sage | |||
| Wyll make no noyse for hym ne for his page | |||
| 1075 | But taketh all in pacyence and sayth | ||
| Dame ye do well / and yours in good fayth | |||
| Therwith she answereth hym all hastely | |||
| Ye haue more lost and spent now folyly folyly ='foolishly'; see OED s.v. follily adv. | |||
| Than ye wyll wynne of all these yeres twaye | |||
| 1080 | I tolde you late in twenty deuylles waye | ||
| Ye sholde haue made our henhous close or now | |||
| A martron eten hath this tell I yow martron: =marten | |||
| Thre of myn olde hennes ye shall perceyue | |||
| What harme we haue therby / thus ye deceyue | |||
| 1085 | By god I knowe yf ye may lyue your age | ||
| Ye shall be poorest man of your lygnage | |||
| Fayre dame sayth he no mo suche wordes saye | |||
| sig: E1 | |||
| I haue ynough / and so shall haue alway | |||
| Our lorde I thanke / and yf it do hym please | |||
| 1090 | I am content / and thynke me well at ease | ||
| For of my kynred there ben full ryght good men | |||
| In your kynred / ha se now / sayth she then | |||
| By saynt Mary / I knowe not where they be | |||
| And at the leest I coude them neuer se | |||
| 1095 | Dame by my fayth he sayth / some be ryght gode | ||
| Of my lygnage / I wolde ye vnderstode | |||
| The whiche be worthe as moche or more than ye | |||
| What they / she sayth / be they lyke vnto me | |||
| Ye dame sayth he / nay syr by god sayth she | |||
| 1100 | I tell you well your dedes were but small | ||
| Without my frendes helpe in especyall | |||
| Now fayre dame / for goddes loue sayth he | |||
| Haue pacyence / and lete suche wordes be | |||
| Certes she sayth / yf that my frendes were here | |||
| 1105 | And you suche wordes had / they wolde answere suche] suche / 1509 | ||
| You well ynough / then he the mater feres | |||
| Leest it by her / sholde come vnto theyr eres | |||
| Wherfore to kepe all thynges in pacyence | |||
| No more sayth he / but resteth with sylence | |||
| 1110 | And here-with-all / begynneth for to wepe | ||
| A lytell chylde / that can not go but crepe | |||
| And she anone / a rodde taketh in her hande | |||
| And in dyspyte / of this good poore husbande | |||
| More than for other cause or chastysynge | |||
| 1115 | Upon the buttockes / she dooth it bete and dynge | ||
| This lytell babe / and than he sayth no more | |||
| Bete it fayre dame / and waxeth wrothe therfore | |||
| And she begynneth for to chyde and crye | |||
| In all the deuylles names of hell on hye | |||
| 1120 | To gouerne them / she sayth ye haue no payne | ||
| sig: [E1v] | |||
| They cost you nought / but I haue cause to playne | |||
| For alway vpon them I must attende | |||
| God gyue it shamefull deth / and euyll ende | |||
| Ha fayre dame sayth he / that is foule sayd | |||
| 1125 | With that the nouryce shortely dooth out-brayde | ||
| And sayth a syr / full lytell do ye knowe | |||
| The sorowe that here is amonge vs I trowe | |||
| And what payne that it were to you / yf ye | |||
| Sholde kepe and nourysshe them so as do we | |||
| 1130 | Now by my trouth / than sayth the chamberere | ||
| It is grete shame to you syr / wyll ye here / | |||
| For whan that you come home / we sholde be fayne | |||
| Of your comynge / but ye make noyse and playne | |||
| And all your hous / ye set in grete debate | |||
| 1135 | This man seynge this / and therwith is chekmate | ||
| How he on euery syde is prycked sore | |||
| And he can gete no remedy therfore | |||
| All wery gooth he souperles to bedde | |||
| And yf he soupe / god wote how he is fedde | |||
| 1140 | Or eased / after he to slepe dooth lye | ||
| And hereth all the nyght his chyldren crye | |||
| For wytyngly the nouryce and the moder | |||
| Do let them crye / they wyll it be none other | |||
| In grete dyspyte of hym whiche all the nyght | |||
| 1145 | Dooth passe in sorowe / vnto the dayes-lyght | ||
| All these tourmentes / he for Ioye dooth holde | |||
| For-why / none otherwyse he lyue ne wolde | |||
| Therfore he is / and alway shall abyde | |||
| In sorowe thought / and care on euery syde | |||
| 1150 | And wretchydly his dayes in payne and wo | ||
| He shall endure / and make an ende ryght so | |||
|
¶Here endeth the fourth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| sig: [E2] | |||
|
¶Here begynneth the fyfth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| OF mar[ya]ge for to declare or wryte maryage] marayge 1509 | |||
| The fyfth Ioye / now god wolde I were quyte | |||
| So lytell fruyte or pleasure stante therin | |||
| 1155 | That I am wery [h]alfe or I begyn halfe] falfe 1509 | ||
| Whiche is whan that the good-man whiche is maryed | |||
| Longe-tyme in trauayle hath / and wo taryed | |||
| And many a payne endured hath before | |||
| Whose youth is gretely ouer-drawen therfore ouer-drawen ='passed away'; see OED s.v. overdraw v, 2 | |||
| 1160 | And he is veray wery faynte and mate | ||
| But by auenture it may so be algate | |||
| He hath a wyfe more greter of lygnage | |||
| Then he / and eke more yonger of her aege | |||
| sig: [E2v] | |||
| The whiche be two grete and doutfull thynges | |||
| 1165 | To medle with / and namely in weddynges | ||
| For better none can do hym-selfe to waste | |||
| Than in these twayne / to lappe or put in haste | |||
| His body / and well vnderstonde it why | |||
| For two repungnaunce / they be truely repungnaunce: =repugnance, 'contradictions'' see OED s.v. repugnance n, 1 | |||
| 1170 | Wherfore agayne nature it were and ryght agayne] agaynge 1509 | ||
| They sholde accorde by daye or elles nyght | |||
| And other-whyles so is that he and she | |||
| Some chylde may haue / or elles that none there be | |||
| This not-withstandynge she is nothynge sette | |||
| 1175 | To payne / for-why / the good-man wyll not lette | ||
| But she be kepte in pleasure ease and wele | |||
| Wherfore he traueyleth / and dooth euery-dele | |||
| Whiche is to mayntene suche a Ioly state | |||
| And costyous / as she wyll kepe algate | |||
| 1180 | And yf she wolde haue thynge that there is not | ||
| That she may haue it / he wyll go or trote | |||
| For she wyll not make lower ne empeyre | |||
| Her lygnage by her dyete ne her geyre | |||
| The husbande taketh all this for honoure | |||
| 1185 | And thanketh god entyerly of that houre | ||
| In whiche he of his grace / her hath hym sent | |||
| So what she dooth or sayth he is content | |||
| And often-tyme it happeth at a tyde | |||
| Whan they begyn / to vercyfy or chyde vercyfy = 'argue', a jocular sense not recorded in OED s.v. versify v | |||
| 1190 | She sayth to hym by maner of manace | ||
| Ye knowe ryght well / of what an house or place | |||
| I comen am / and was not gyuen to the | |||
| A drabble or elles a dreuyll for to be drabble ='a dirty person'?, perhaps with suggestions of drab, 'slattern'. Only one, late, instance of drabble in this sense is recorded in OED s.v. drabble n (1789), but see s.v. drabble v, 'to muddy', for earlier forms. Dreuyll ='drudge, a servant doing menial work'; see OED s.v. drivel n1,1 | |||
| She sayth as soone / as I wyll sende or wryte | |||
| 1195 | Unto my kynne and frendes of this dyspyte | ||
| Anone they wyll come hyder for to se | |||
| sig: [E3] | |||
| The copytext has 'E.iiij.' | |||
| How I do here / and therfore dare not he | |||
| For ony cause / ones touche her with his hande | |||
| With staffe ne stycke / for all his goodes and lande | |||
| 1200 | Though [s]he with mouthe / grete wordes hath ysayd. she] he 1509 | ||
| As styll he is / and muet as a mayde | |||
| In bondage grete / me-semeth that he is | |||
| And so it may well be that she or this | |||
| Had by her frendes maryed ben aforne | |||
| 1205 | Unto a rycher man / and better borne | ||
| Than he / and in a hygher state be sette | |||
| If that in her had ben no faute ne lette | |||
| But for there was before some lytell Iape | |||
| That in her yought fortuned for to scape yought: =youth, although the usual spelling in this text is youth(e) | |||
| 1210 | To cole her thryst / as dyuers folkes well trowe thryst: =thirst | ||
| She had not elles ben maryed hafe so lowe hafe: =half, although the usual spelling in this text is halfe | |||
| Wherof the husbande had no knowlegynge | |||
| Or perauenture he hath herde some-thynge | |||
| But this good-man / of suche fayth and beleue | |||
| 1215 | Is made / that this thynge lytell dooth hym greue | ||
| For he hath herde it sayde / and sworne or then sworne] soworne 1509 | |||
| Of many folkes / and of ryght good men | |||
| That all suche cursed langage was contryued | |||
| Agaynst his wyfe / and he the same beleued | |||
| 1220 | They saye it is bostynges and auauntes | ||
| Made by the meanes of Ioly fr[e]sshe galauntes fresshe] frsshe 1509 | |||
| And other sklaundrers that speketh shame | |||
| Of women good / and falsely them defame | |||
| Whan they togyders in the stretes walke | |||
| 1225 | Thus of good men and women wyll they talke | ||
| What tyme that they nothynge may elles do | |||
| Unthryftely thus speke they euer mo | |||
| Wherin god wote / grete synne do they and wronges | |||
| In suche vngoodly wyse to vse theyr tonges | |||
| sig: [E3v] | |||
| 1230 | And yf so be this wyfe beholde and se | ||
| Her husbande beynge in so lowe degre | |||
| That he all Ioye hath lefte / dysporte and playe | |||
| Thynkynge to make a cheuysaunce some waye | |||
| Upon her lande / or elles it may befall | |||
| 1235 | Of cheuysaunce he hath ynough at all | ||
| And is a very nygarde / and a chynche chynche='niggard, miser'; see OED s.v. chinch n2 | |||
| That wyll not frely spende / but spare and pynche | |||
| The whiche no pleasaunt thynge is to the wyfe | |||
| That purposeth to lyue a lusty lyfe | |||
| 1240 | Bycause that she in seasons of the yere | ||
| Wyll haue these noueltees / though they be dere | |||
| As well in vytayle / gounes as atyre | |||
| G[yr]dels and other thynges at her desyre Gyrdels] Grydels 1509 | |||
| Lyke as she seeth her felawes vse and were | |||
| 1245 | At feestes and daunces euery-where | ||
| There-as her cosyns / and her gossyppes be | |||
| And with an-other man / that alwayes she | |||
| Useth to call her cosyn euermo | |||
| And peraduenture yet he is not so | |||
| 1250 | Also somtymes well it fortune may | ||
| That for the grete pleasures ease and play | |||
| She hath / and seeth in many a sundry wyse | |||
| Dysdayne her husbande she wyll and dyspyse | |||
| And make a frende / suche as she wyll desyre | |||
| 1255 | Her h[u]sbande then / in water or in fyre husbande] hasbande 1509 | ||
| May lye / for she wyll loue hym neuermore | |||
| Som folke wolde deme she were to blame therfore | |||
| But ye must take the mater otherwyse | |||
| For all is longe vpon his couytyse | |||
| 1260 | And he is sadde / and in perplexyte | ||
| But she is lyght / and in prosperyte | |||
| Not entred into thought ne negardy | |||
| sig: [E4] | |||
| She is but yonge / and so she wyll apply | |||
| Her youthe in pleasure / lustes and delyte | |||
| 1265 | Aege is not mete vnto her appetyte | ||
| So louynge is she / to her loue and kynde | |||
| That to suche place / as she demeth hym to fynde | |||
| Ofte wyll she take / her Iourney forthe and walke | |||
| Or secretely / and softly forthe wyll she stalke | |||
| 1270 | Unto her frende / that lusty is and fresshe | ||
| For veray loue her lymmes to refresshe | |||
| And it may happen many tymes that she | |||
| Sauynge her worshyp / seldon may hym se | |||
| Then for to speke her good name and honoure | |||
| 1275 | Her messenger she sendeth at an houre | ||
| That he shall come / and se her hastely | |||
| The whiche is done ryght well and honestly | |||
| Soone after this / whan comen is the nyght | |||
| And this good-man and she withouten lyght | |||
| 1280 | Be layde in bedde / and he somwhat wolde play | ||
| With her / whose mynde is with her frende a_way | |||
| This gentyll galaunt / whome of .viii. days and mo | |||
| She hath not seen / and yet it may be so | |||
| That on the morowe he wyll come for his wage | |||
| 1285 | All hote and hasty / hongry in a rage | ||
| For perauenture he hath suche a tatche tatche ='bad habit'?, 'distinctive quality'? '(means of) attachment'? See OED s.vv. tache n1, 2, 3, tache n2, 1c | |||
| That he hath morned sore / and keped watche | |||
| Bothe in the gardyns / also in the strete | |||
| And they ne myght yet of longe-tymes mete | |||
| 1290 | Ne speke togyder / but on the morowe whan | ||
| This man shall come / he wyll be hasty than | |||
| His appetyte and honger to aswage | |||
| Grete and wonder is / to speke of his courage | |||
| And it may fortune otherwyse I trowe | |||
| 1295 | That they haue had leyser ynough to knowe | ||
| sig: [E4v] | |||
| And [d]o suche pleasure / as a man may thynke do] so 1509 | |||
| But I dare neyther speke ne loke but wynke | |||
| Myn auctour wryteth / but so wyll not I | |||
| That she demeaneth her ryght wantonly | |||
| 1300 | He sayth an hondred thynges she can make | ||
| That toucheth loue / for her good frendes sake toucheth] toucheteth 1509 | |||
| And many a token wyll she shewe and sygne | |||
| Of loue / the whiche I can not well deuyne loue /] loue / / 1509 | |||
| She maketh eke melancolyes amonge melancolyes ='expressions of tender or pensive sadness'; see OED s.v. melancholy n, 3d | |||
| 1305 | Whiche to her husbande made she not of longe | ||
| Also her loue dooth besynes and payne | |||
| To do her pleasure / as he can agayne | |||
| So many praty Iapes he wyll begyn | |||
| That she grete Ioye / and conforte hath therin | |||
| 1310 | And those suche maner Iapes ben or playe | ||
| That wedded men can not / ne wyll assaye | |||
| And yf the[y] can / afore or that they wedde they] the 1509 | |||
| Those they forbere / and set at nought in bedde | |||
| Wherfore to shewe it to a wyfe or teche | |||
| 1315 | The whiche more able is to rede or preche | ||
| Then for to lerne percase moche more than he | |||
| The good-wyfe can in her necessyte | |||
| Therfore he wyll not teche her in that guyse | |||
| For she / than he more connynge is and wyse | |||
| 1320 | Now whan this wyfe / her loue hath at her wyll | ||
| And they haue tyme / and leaser to fulfyll | |||
| Theyr appetytes / suche Ioyes as they shewe | |||
| To_gyder / men haue herde of but a fewe | |||
| For there no wyght is / that can tell or saye | |||
| 1325 | The pleasure that haue ben betwene them twaye | ||
| And so she hath had suche dysporte and spede | |||
| That nothynge prayseth she her husbandes dede | |||
| After the whiche pleasures / Ioye and game | |||
| sig: [E5] | |||
| As grete delyte / and pleasure taketh the dame | |||
| 1330 | Of her good-man / as one that tasteth wyne | ||
| Whiche hath reboyled / and wyll neuer fyne reboyled 'fermented a second time'; see OED s.v. reboil v1, 1. Fyne ='become clear or pure' ; see OED s.v. fine v3, 2 | |||
| After he hath dronke good wyne or ypocras ypocras] yopocras 1509ypocras: =hippocras, 'spiced wine' | |||
| And otherwhyle yet / thus may stande the case | |||
| A drynker good whiche hath a feruent thyrste | |||
| 1335 | And drynketh small and musty wynes fyrste | ||
| He thynketh them good ynough / his thyrst so grete | |||
| Is / and the dryenes of his mouthe and hete | |||
| But after he therof hath dronke his fyll | |||
| He fyndeth a cursed tarage and an yll tarage ='taste, flavour'; see OED s.v. tarage n1 | |||
| 1340 | And yf that he sholde drawe agayne and taste | ||
| Yet though he myght / he nolde vnto it haste | |||
| But in defaute of better w[y]ne it were wyne] wene 1509 | |||
| Ryght so knowe ye that this good-wyfe dooth here | |||
| The whiche her louer / alway hath at nede | |||
| 1345 | At her desyres / suche maters for to spede | ||
| And taketh a taste somtyme at request | |||
| Of her husbande / for lacke of her good gest | |||
| To passe the tyme and dryue the nyght a_waye | |||
| But otherwhyle / whan he hath luste to playe | |||
| 1350 | And she not so / she sayth lete me be styll | ||
| Abyde / and towardes mornynge do your wyll | |||
| Nay certes dame / so wyll I not sayth he | |||
| Wherfore I pray you / torne you vnto me | |||
| Nay loue she sayth / by god and by saynt Ma[ry]e Marye] Mayre 1509 | |||
| 1355 | Ye shall do me grete pleasure for to tarye | ||
| Unto the morowe / and then he torneth awaye | |||
| And dare not touche her ne no mo wordes saye | |||
| So all the nyght / he lyeth styll in rest | |||
| And slepeth metely well at her request | |||
| 1360 | Then this good-wyfe / that on her loue dooth thynge | ||
| Not carynge whyder her husbande flete or synge The rhyme-words in this couplet, thynge (=think) and synge (=sink), are perhaps cast in this form for humorous effect; but see below, where thynge (=think) and drynke are made to rhyme. | |||
| sig: [E5v] | |||
| Entendeth for to se vpon the morne | |||
| Her owne loue / whome she hath longe forborne | |||
| Sayth to her-selfe / for she is not alone | |||
| 1365 | My husbande shall not yet touche my persone | ||
| Tomorowe / and therfore erly she arose | |||
| A[n]d lefte her husbande / routynge in the nose routynge ='snoring'; see OED s.v rout v1 | |||
| And maketh suche a countenaunce as she | |||
| A houswyfe good / and houssholder sholde be | |||
| 1370 | And peraduenture the husbande is in bedde | ||
| Whyles that his wyfes m[a]ters is well spedde | |||
| By her good loue / and she hath her desyre | |||
| And he content is / with his wage and hyre | |||
| Thus all that day / she is so well apayde | |||
| 1375 | That neyther seruaunt nedeth she ne mayde | ||
| In euery place / so ordreth she the house | |||
| And skyppeth aboute / as q[u]yckely as a [m]ouse | |||
| She clappeth to the doores and the wykket | |||
| And is as mery as it were a crykket | |||
| 1380 | And somtyme it may fortune other-wyse | ||
| Whan that she wyll not frome her bedde a_ryse | |||
| But lyke a wanton or nycet play nycet ='a wanton girl'; see OED s.v. nysot n | |||
| Then wyll she playne / a lytell afore the day | |||
| And this good-man dooth aske her what she eyleth | |||
| 1385 | In trouthe she sayth / I thynke my herte me feyleth | ||
| Within my syde / I haue so grete a payne | |||
| And in my bely whiche do me sore constrayne | |||
| That it is meruayle / but as Cryst me saue | |||
| I deme syr that the same sykenes I haue | |||
| 1390 | The whiche wonte was afore-tyme me to take | ||
| And namely whan I ouermoche dyde wake | |||
| Torne you to me sayth he I you requyre | |||
| By god sayth she / I am as hote as fyre | |||
| For this nyght haue I had so sore a fytte | |||
| sig: [E6] | |||
| 1395 | That lytell haue I slepte / or nothynge yet | ||
| Then this good-man her clepeth with his arme | |||
| And feleth well that she is very warme | |||
| He sayth then / trouth now saye ye certaynly | |||
| But she hath other maner malady | |||
| 1400 | Of feuers / than that she wyll tell or shewe | ||
| For peraduenture / this false wyle shrewe | |||
| Thought that she was with her loue in her dreme | |||
| Whiche made the swetynge frome her body streme | |||
| Then this good-man / her felynge in this hete | |||
| 1405 | Dooth couer her frome wynde / lest that the swete | ||
| Sholde inwarde passe / all sodaynly or drynke drynke ='be absorbed'? This sense is not recorded in OED s.v. drink v1. | |||
| Whiche were a peryllous thynge as he dooth thynge thynge: =think | |||
| To her sayth he / dame kepe you well and sure | |||
| Lye styll in bedde / whyle your swete dooth endure | |||
| 1410 | And I shall cause suche werkes to be doone | ||
| As nedefull is / and vp he ryseth soone | |||
| Perchaunce withouten fyre or candell-lyght | |||
| Some-what afore the day / within the nyght | |||
| And whan he so is vp all hastely | |||
| 1415 | He maketh a fyre for her / whiche easely | ||
| Lyeth in her bedde / and laugheth by her-selfe | |||
| That in the derke / he walketh lyke an elfe | |||
| An-other tyme / yf this good-man play wolde | |||
| With her / as I here-tofore haue tolde | |||
| 1420 | She well excuseth her / in suche a wyse | ||
| Full ofte / as ye haue herde me late deuyse | |||
| To scape away / euer wyll she fynde a mene | |||
| For she his dede / not prayseth worthe a bene | |||
| And yet hath he / gret besynes ywysse | |||
| 1425 | At many a tyme / her for to coll and kysse | ||
| But god wote how she is eased therfore | |||
| If she be suche one / as is sayd tofore | |||
| sig: [E6v] | |||
| Unto this man / the good-wyfe wyll say thus | |||
| I wolde that it myght please our lorde Ihesus | |||
| 1430 | Ye neuermore sholde doo / ne yet assay | ||
| Suche thynges as ye or this haue herde me say | |||
| Ye sholde forbere / and how what wolde [ye] not ye] yet 1509 | |||
| Do it your-selfe sayth he / nay god it wot | |||
| Sayth she / for yf that ye suche thynge wolde spare | |||
| 1435 | Bothe ye and I sholde moche the better fare | ||
| If I had knowen this or ye dyde me wedde | |||
| I neuer wolde haue gone vnto mannes bedde | |||
| What saye ye dame / now speketh this good-man | |||
| For what encheson dyde ye mary than | |||
| 1440 | I note quod she / but whan I was a mayde note: =ne wote | ||
| So as my fader and my moder sayde | |||
| I dyde / and thought she spake suche wordes waste | |||
| Yet peraduenture afore she toke a taste | |||
| What thynge is this to say / the good-man sayth | |||
| 1445 | I founde you neuer afore this by my fayth | ||
| To say the trouthe in your entencyon | |||
| But alway fast in this opynyon | |||
| I wote not by my soule she sayth my loue | |||
| This knoweth well the myghty lorde aboue | |||
| 1450 | Ne were it not / for your pleasure alone | ||
| Now neuer wolde I do it by saynt Ihone | |||
| This man well eased is / as god it wolde | |||
| And to hym-selfe he sayth / my wyfe is colde | |||
| Wherof he maketh none accompte ne tale | |||
| 1455 | And peraduenture she is whyte or pale | ||
| Of nature feble / and complexcyon | |||
| But he hath her / in his subieccyon | |||
| And her he clepeth / and he kysseth so | |||
| That all his pleasure / hath he or she go | |||
| 1460 | And this good-wyfe / whiche for the tyme is there | ||
| sig: [E7] | |||
| Thynketh on other thynges and elles-where | |||
| She wolde she were / and god wote heuely | |||
| Is she content / but well and womanly | |||
| She kepeth her [s]kyll / and dooth hym as moche good skyll] kyll 1509 | |||
| 1465 | As cast a stone agaynst a pyece of wood | ||
| For helpe hym-selfe / can he not ne socoure | |||
| And she nothynge is gladde of his laboure | |||
| How-be-it other dyde ryght well afore | |||
| And she asyde turneth her chere therfore | |||
| 1470 | A lytell / for that tyme / so stant the cas | ||
| For this is not / the good wyne ypocras | |||
| Whiche she afore at other tymes had | |||
| This dooth her sore anoye / for it is bad | |||
| My loue she sayth / ye make me all a fole | |||
| 1475 | Better it were for you vpon a stole | ||
| To sytte / and of suche besynes you rest | |||
| This good-man whiche all taketh for the best | |||
| Kepeth hym as well / and derely as he may | |||
| That he of longe-tyme wyll by no way | |||
| 1480 | Do her dyspleasure / trespace or offence | ||
| The payne he dooth endure with pacyence | |||
| He doubteth [s]ore the good-wyfe to dysplease [s]ore: letter broken | |||
| And so he resteth / somwhat for his ease | |||
| For he beleueth well / that of the game | |||
| 1485 | Nothynge she wolde / in ony wyse attaine | ||
| So putteth he hym-selfe in suche dotage | |||
| That he supposeth well it were domage | |||
| To her complexyon she is so lowe | |||
| And symple eke suche wordes for to knowe | |||
| 1490 | Bycause percase / that lately of her hewe | ||
| She is dyscoloured in a maner newe | |||
| Wherfore the mater better he beleueth | |||
| And it may fortune after thus it preueth | |||
| sig: [E7v] | |||
| That this good-wyfe a goune or other thynge | |||
| 1495 | Of her husbande wolde haue to her lykynge | ||
| She knoweth well by his condycyon | |||
| Whan tyme is best to make a mocyon | |||
| Aduysynge in her mynde hym to begyle | |||
| To haue all her desyre / and on this wyle | |||
| 1500 | Remembreth she / that whan they and no mo | ||
| In chambre be / and it dooth fortune so | |||
| That they in pleasures and delytes be | |||
| And in her mynde / she dooth perceyue and se | |||
| That he with some-thynge wolde haue to do | |||
| 1505 | Then wyll she put her good-wyll ther-vnto | ||
| And to make hym suche dalyaunce and chere | |||
| That it is meruaylous to tell or here | |||
| For-why / a woman lerned in that arte | |||
| A thousande thynges newe vpon her parte | |||
| 1510 | Can do / to make good chere and dalyaunce | ||
| To whome she lust / suche is the guyse of fraunce | |||
| So in this dede the good-man is well eased | |||
| For he is not accustomed to be pleased | |||
| With so good maner chere / and contenaunce | |||
| 1515 | She clepeth hym with all the cyrcumstaunce | ||
| And on the vysage / kysseth she hym ofte | |||
| Where-as she lyketh / with her lyppes softe | |||
| Then this good-man in this maner dooth say | |||
| I deme ye wyll aske some-thynge by my fay | |||
| 1520 | Of me / and she sayth nay my frende as now | ||
| Nothynge but make good chere I craue of yow | |||
| For yf it pleased god / I wolde deuyse | |||
| To haue none other Ioye ne paradyse | |||
| Than euermore bytwene your armes twayne | |||
| 1525 | To be / wherby exyled were my payne | ||
| Truely my loue / and also god me saue | |||
| sig: [E8] | |||
| None other blysse wolde I desyre to haue | |||
| For my mouthe touched not ne neuer shall | |||
| No mannes mouthe / but yours in specyall | |||
| 1530 | Sauynge your cosyns and myn / well may ye wyt. | ||
| And not but whan ye lyst to commaunde it | |||
| Syr I beleue so gracyous and swete | |||
| There is no man as ye / ne to me mete | |||
| My loue sayth he / yf it a squyre were | |||
| 1535 | I wolde beleue you for to be your fere | ||
| By god she sayth / whan ones I dyde you se By] By / 1509 | |||
| Ferre of / the same syght so rauyshed me | |||
| And yet I dyde you but beholde a lyte | |||
| Than ye had all myn herte / loue and delyte | |||
| 1540 | I wolde haue had none other by my choys | ||
| Though it had ben the dolphyn of vyennoys | |||
| I thynke almyghty god / wyll it so be | |||
| That I shall lyue with you / and you with me | |||
| For-why / my fader and my moder bothe | |||
| 1545 | Dyspleased were with me / and wonder wrothe | ||
| Bycause to haue suche one I nolde accorde | |||
| But neuer wolde I by our blyssed lorde | |||
| Though that one wolde haue slayne me with a knyfe | |||
| Yet thought I euer for to be your wyfe | |||
| 1550 | And I ne knowe what thynge that this may be | ||
| Sauynge I thynke it is our destyne | |||
| Than dooth this man his pleasure as hym lyketh | |||
| And she is yelden therwithall and pyketh | |||
| A countenaunce and sayth / now wote ye what | |||
| 1555 | I wyll demaunde / my loue refuse not that | ||
| To promyse me I you beseche and pray | |||
| The good-man sayth / I wyll it not denay | |||
| Yf that it be suche thynge as I may do | |||
| Ryght well dysposed wyll I be therto | |||
| sig: [E8v] | |||
| 1560 | My loue she sayth / the wyfe of suche a man | ||
| A furred goune with myneuers had on | |||
| This other daye / and yf that I durst craue | |||
| I wolde praye you / that suche one I may haue | |||
| Syr by my soule / for pryde or for enuy | |||
| 1565 | I saye it not / ne for to be Ioly | ||
| But for-by_cause syr / that I thynke ye be | |||
| As able as her husbande to kepe me | |||
| And of more su[b]staunce / yf I sholde not lye substaunce] sustaunce 1509 | |||
| To maynteyne me / bothe well and honestlye | |||
| 1570 | And she is not to make comparyson | ||
| That knowe ye well / as vnto my person | |||
| Ne syr yet to haue honoure / pray[s]e or laude prayse] praye 1509 | |||
| I saye it not for gyle / deceyte / ne fraude | |||
| But for this woman hath so grete a pryde | |||
| 1575 | I wolde be gladde that she layde it asyde | ||
| And for none other thynge so haue I blys | |||
| Than this good-man / whiche perauenture is | |||
| A grete nygarde / thynketh in his entente | |||
| That she of gounes hath suffycyente | |||
| 1580 | And so a whyle he resteth in a thought | ||
| And sayth my loue yf that it be well sought | |||
| Haue ye not gounes ynowe you to suffyse | |||
| Of dyuers sortes furred in goodly wyse | |||
| Yes syr she sayth / for yf I but a goune | |||
| 1585 | Had and no mo / though it were a russet broune | ||
| I wolde not recke / and yet it were grete shame | |||
| Than sayth this man / now care ye not good dame | |||
| Now lete them speke / and talke ynough with sorowe | |||
| For we of them / nothynge do begge ne borowe | |||
| 1590 | By god ye saye the trouthe / but wyll ye here | ||
| I am not lyke vnto a chamberere | |||
| Of theyrs / and not so well cladde ne besene | |||
| sig: F1 | |||
| As is my syster / ne as other bene | |||
| And yet of yeres / more olde I am than she | |||
| 1595 | Whiche is a foule / and an euyll thynge to se | ||
| Then peraduenture / wyll this man consent | |||
| That shortely she shall haue all her entent | |||
| And what she wyll desyre in suche a rage | |||
| Whiche vnto hym / is nothynge but domage | |||
| 1600 | For whan that her demaunde / and her request | ||
| She hath / for to be fresshe than is she prest | |||
| To go where feestes / and these daunces be | |||
| Wherof no maner prouffyte geteth he | |||
| Peraduenture she shall her dresse and paynt | |||
| 1605 | And haue so lytell vertue and restraynt | ||
| That she in suche vnthryfty wyse shall preue | |||
| And neuer man suppose wolde ne beleue | |||
| And yf this gowne her please not / wyll ye knowe | |||
| She hath an-other loue / ye may well trowe | |||
| 1610 | Whiche peraduenture hath no ryches grete | ||
| And is a galaunt fresshe / and can not gete | |||
| More than to holde / and may[n]tene his degre mayntene] maytene 1509 | |||
| And therfore soone / aduyse herselfe dooth she | |||
| Upon an-other galaunt / stoute and gay | |||
| 1615 | The whiche a dyamounde this other day | ||
| Whan that she was / at suche a maner feste | |||
| Unto her wolde haue gyuen as a geste geste: =jest, 'notable deed'? See OED s.v. jest n1 | |||
| And sent vnto her / by her chamberere | |||
| Well twenty scutes / in his best manere | |||
| 1620 | Or thyrty / but so soone she ne them toke | ||
| How-be-it / she gaue a goodly loke | |||
| All-though she gretely / dyde refuse as than | |||
| Wherby suche comforte / toke this gentylman | |||
| That he spake to her chamberere agayne | |||
| 1625 | Whome he met goynge / towarde a fountayne | ||
| sig: [F1v] | |||
| Or elles-where / and to her thus he sayde | |||
| O Iane my veray loue / come hyder mayde | |||
| I haue to speke some thynges with you now | |||
| Well syr sayth she / whan that it pleaseth you | |||
| 1630 | Good Iane he sayth / ye knowe ryght well the loue | ||
| That I vnto your maystresse haue / aboue | |||
| All other creatures / now I you pray | |||
| Tell me yf ye haue herde her of me say | |||
| Ony wordes / syr by my fayth sayth she | |||
| 1635 | Nothynge certayne / but good and honeste | ||
| And she wolde you none euyll / hurte ne harme | |||
| With that he taketh her softely by the arme | |||
| Saynge good Iane my loue remembre me | |||
| That I to her may recommaunded be | |||
| 1640 | And in good faythe here a goune I you gyue | ||
| With all my herte / and seruyce whyle I lyue | |||
| Now certes sayth the chamberere agayne | |||
| That redy is to take the goune and fayne | |||
| Whiche he to her presenteth as I say | |||
| 1645 | Syr I wyll not receyue it by no way | ||
| By god sayth he fayre Iane / but yet ye shall | |||
| It is god wote / a symple gyfte at all | |||
| And then he sayth vnto the chamberere | |||
| I pray you that to_morowe I may here | |||
| 1650 | Some newes of you / and thus god be your guyde | ||
| Fare-well syth ye / no lenger may abyde | |||
| Than to her maystres streyght she gooth / and sayth | |||
| Folkes haue I founde / in good poynt by my fayth | |||
| What be they sayth her maystresse / tell me now | |||
| 1655 | The same it is / the whiche ryght well ye know | ||
| And he as yet / is in good cas and plyte | |||
| For he is taken / with the feuers whyte | |||
| In suche a wyse / that what is best to do | |||
| sig: [F2] | |||
| He knoweth not / loue dooth constrayne hym so | |||
| 1660 | The wyfe sayth than / a goodly man he is | ||
| And gracyous / ye say full sothe ywys | |||
| The chamberere than sayth for in my dayes | |||
| Suche one I neuer knewe at all assayes | |||
| He is moost fayre full ryche / and well yshape | |||
| 1665 | Moost true of loue withouten deceyte or Iape | ||
| And he can do ynough / his loue to please | |||
| A lady myght / with hym be well at ease | |||
| O Iane she sayth / by god I can not haue | |||
| No suche thynges of myn husbande as I craue | |||
| 1670 | And yet yf he me hate / he playeth the fole | ||
| For we shall brynge hym / in-to an-other scole | |||
| By god my Iane / I haue so loued longe | |||
| This gentylman / though I haue kepte my tonge | |||
| That to none other / coude I gyue myn herte | |||
| 1675 | So am I take / that I can not asterte | ||
| And this grete foly is / by god aboue | |||
| For ony woman thus to sette her loue | |||
| On ony man / that in this worlde is here | |||
| And I shall tell you why / Iane wyll ye here | |||
| 1680 | For whan these men / on women lordes be | ||
| All sod[a]ynly in moost necessyte sodaynly] sodoynly 1509While sodoynly (=suddenly) is a possible form, the usual spelling in this text is sodaynly. | |||
| Causeles the[y] wyll forsake them and betraye they] theo 1509 | |||
| And therof make / a tryfle or playe | |||
| Then cometh this galaunt or that other parte | |||
| 1685 | And to the chamberere he speketh a_parte | ||
| Saynge in this maner / with handes vp | |||
| Togyder Ioyned / close as ony cup | |||
| My fayre loue Iane / ryght humbly I you pray | |||
| Tha[t] ye wyll do / and helpe all that ye may Tha[t]: letter broken | |||
| 1690 | So that my werke ye well achyeue and spede | ||
| And I shall neuer fayle you at your nede | |||
| sig: [F2v] | |||
| So ye my maystresse / shall be euermo | |||
| Then answereth she / and sayth yf I myght so | |||
| Syr for your loue / I wolde speke what I myght | |||
| 1695 | B[u]t neuer medled I by day ne nyght | ||
| Of thynges suche / alas my loue sayth he | |||
| What shall I do / for goddes loue counceyle me | |||
| By god she sayth / best is for you to speke | |||
| Your-selfe / and vnto her your stomacke breke | |||
| 1700 | All well to poynte / the mater comen is | ||
| For of her husbande / hath she late or this | |||
| A goune desyred / onely but of clothe | |||
| Whiche he denayed her / and she is wrothe | |||
| I counceyle you / to_morowe that ye be | |||
| 1705 | Tymely at chyrche / where-as ye may her se | ||
| And whan it happeth you / with her to mete | |||
| So as it lyketh you / ye may her grete | |||
| There may ye shewe / your mater and entent | |||
| And suche as ye wyll / gyue to her present | |||
| 1710 | All-be-it so / that she it wyll not take | ||
| Yet more she wyll you prayse I vndertake | |||
| Your largesse and your bounte shall she se | |||
| Alas my loue / me leuer were that she | |||
| Take it that I wyll gyue her / than refuse | |||
| 1715 | Now syr sayth Iane / she wyll make her excuse | ||
| But I shall say you / what thynge ye shall do | |||
| After that ye / haue offred her vnto | |||
| That thynge the whiche / ye wolde her gyue in-dede | |||
| And she refuse it / than your cause to spedde | |||
| 1720 | Delyuer it to me / and at the lest | ||
| To cause her take it / I shall do my best | |||
| For I anone / can knowe her mynde and fele fele ='sense, understanding, knowledge'; see OED s.v. feel n, 2b | |||
| Now truely gentyll Iane / ye say ryght wele | |||
| Then gooth the chamberere / in Crystes name | |||
| sig: F3 | |||
| 1725 | And whan she cometh home / she sayth madame | ||
| A longe tyme it is / yf it you please | |||
| Or that some folke be brought to hertes-ease | |||
| And who is that good Iane / tell me anone | |||
| Ywys m[a]dame / ye knowe the same mon madame] medame 1509 | |||
| 1730 | What do away / I pray you tell me how | ||
| It is fayre Iane / what tydynge with you now | |||
| Certes madame / he wyll not fayle to_morowe | |||
| In chyrche to speke with you / and all his sorowe | |||
| Unto you wyll he shewe / so as he can | |||
| 1735 | Ye may be sure / he is a gentylman | ||
| But well and wysely / gouerne you alway | |||
| And make it straunge / so as ye goodly may | |||
| Not ouer-moche of straungenes ne dysdayne | |||
| Use may ye not / but so betwene twayne | |||
| 1740 | Demeane yo[u] womanly / in hope that grace | ||
| Therof shall growe within a lytell space | |||
| Upon the morowe this wyfe gooth to kyrke | |||
| As whan a thynge shall be / nedes must it wyrke | |||
| So dooth this galaunt / whiche thre houres and more | |||
| 1745 | In good deuocyon god wote afore | ||
| Passeth the tyme / and draweth to a place | |||
| Where he the holy-water / in her face | |||
| May cast / and for to kepe all-thynge frome shame | |||
| He vnto other women dooth the same | |||
| 1750 | The whiche with her / be present than and there | ||
| And they thanken hym in theyr best maner | |||
| But this poore-man / wolde do them more seruyce | |||
| If he so myght / and dooth hym well aduyse | |||
| That this good-wyfe / styll resteth in her sete | |||
| 1755 | Lyuynge in hope / some grace of her to gete | ||
| And sayth his bedes demeanynge hym with-all | |||
| As swetely as an ymage in a wall | |||
| sig: [F3v] | |||
| And god wote / she is dressed proprely | |||
| After her power / whiche he well dooth espy | |||
| 1760 | Beholdynge how she kneleth in her pewe | ||
| So well apparayled / with so fresshe a hewe | |||
| And vnto her / anone he draweth nere | |||
| Where at theyr leyser / they do speke in fere | |||
| But nothynge wyll she say / but herkeneth styll | |||
| 1765 | Unto the tyme / that he hath spoken his wyll | ||
| Ne nothynge of hym / then wyll she receyue | |||
| But so she answereth hym / that he perceyue | |||
| May well / that she hym loueth peramoure peramoure: =paramour, 'amorously' | |||
| And that she dredeth not / but dyshonoure | |||
| 1770 | Wherof he is well eased / and ago ago ='departed'; see OED s.v. ago v, 3 | ||
| Frome her / and frome the chamberere also | |||
| And so he walketh forthe his stacyon | |||
| Then entren they in-to collacyon | |||
| That is to wete / the maystresse and her mayde | |||
| 1775 | Remembrynge well / suche wordes as were sayd | ||
| And shortely / so conclude vpon theyr dede | |||
| How that theyr werke / they may perfourme and spede | |||
| And then the chamberere sayth secretely | |||
| Madame I knowe well / he hath grete enuy | |||
| 1780 | To speke to me but I wyll to hym say | ||
| That ye nothynge for hym / by ony way | |||
| Wyll do / and therfore wrothe I wyll me make | |||
| For pure pyte / the whiche I on hym take | |||
| And I shall to hym say / our syre is out | |||
| 1785 | So he at nyght may come withouten doute | ||
| Into your chambre secretely I trowe | |||
| I shall hym let / as though ye dyde not knowe | |||
| And I shall shewe as I were wrothe / wherfore | |||
| He shall you pray / well better and th[e] more th[e]: letter illegible | |||
| 1790 | And syth he afterwarde / shall lenger tary | ||
| sig: [F4] | |||
| The same thynge I wyll do brynge and cary | |||
| Whiche he wolde gyue you / for I knowe that he | |||
| To_morowe wyll delyuer it to me | |||
| And I to hym shall say / so god me saue | |||
| 1795 | That ye it neyther / wyll receyue ne haue | ||
| And whan it happeth shall / that after soone | |||
| The proces and the actes be well doone | |||
| Wherfore the goune / he gyueth you in rewarde | |||
| The whiche afore he put in-to my warde | |||
| 1800 | Then ye therfore / shall chyde me fast and blame | ||
| Afore hym / saynge / damoysell fye for shame | |||
| Wherfore dyde ye / this thynge with you retayne | |||
| Why wolde not ye delyuer it agayne | |||
| But how-someuer it come to passe / knowe ye | |||
| 1805 | That I shall put all-thynge in certaynte | ||
| For some there be that haue ryght many a wyle | |||
| Wherby innumerable they begyle | |||
| Of women good / and neuer can be styll | |||
| Now Iane / frome this daye forwarde do your wyll | |||
| 1810 | Forthe gooth this galaunt than / and so dooth mete | ||
| The chamberere / somdele without the strete | |||
| And asketh her / what newes she hath brought | |||
| Of her maystresse / by god sayth she ryght nought | |||
| I haue her founde / so daungerous and straunge | |||
| 1815 | That sore I drede shame wyll make her to chaunge | ||
| But for-because I medled haue so ferre | |||
| Thynkynge no tyme is / lenger to deferre | |||
| This mater / I shall say you what is best | |||
| That ye may do / to brynge your mynde in rest | |||
| 1820 | Thyder shall ye go this nyght to werke and spede | ||
| Your maters / and yet haue I so grete drede | |||
| That she wyll to her hus[b]ande me accuse husbande] husande 1509 | |||
| Or to her frendes / but I thynke and muse | |||
| sig: [F4v] | |||
| That yf she wyll receyue / suche thynges as ye | |||
| 1825 | To her wolde gyue / your dede soone spedde shall be | ||
| And yet by god / I shall proue and assay | |||
| To cause her take it shortely yf I may | |||
| For well it is / at poynt to brynge aboute | |||
| The mater / for her husbande ryden out | |||
| 1830 | Is now / and hath denyed her vtterly | ||
| A goune / wherof she hath so grete enuy | |||
| That it is meruayle / and this galaunt tho | |||
| Twenty scutes / or thyrty / elles mo | |||
| Delyuereth vnto her / and Iane sayth than | |||
| 1835 | By god ye be an honourable man | ||
| But well ye se / how I aduyse me | |||
| And yet I drede that troubled shall I be | |||
| For neuer dyde I thus / for man or now | |||
| As I for you haue done / I make auowe | |||
| 1840 | And wyll ye knowe / how grete daungere that I | ||
| Haue put me in / and I shall tell you why | |||
| For yf so be / that knowen were one worde | |||
| That ony-thynge I sholde do by our lorde | |||
| Herin / I sholde haue euer suche a blame | |||
| 1845 | That euer after / myght I loke for shame euer] neuer 1509 | ||
| But for-bycause I truste you perfytely | |||
| I shall me put / in this grete Ieoperdy | |||
| Knowynge that she / you loueth well at all | |||
| And that our syre is out / wherfore ye shall | |||
| 1850 | This same nyght / come fayre and honestly | ||
| Unto her chambre / and I secretely | |||
| Wyll let you in / for neyther barre ne locke | |||
| Shall cause you eyther / for to call or knocke | |||
| And thus at .xii. houres within the nyght | |||
| 1855 | Ye must walke in the derke withouten lyght | ||
| For that tyme sadly / dooth she slepe alway | |||
| sig: [G]1 | |||
| The copytext has 'F.j.' | |||
| And there is but a lytell chylde in fay | |||
| To her in bedde than shall ye go and lye | |||
| For I can se / none other remedy | |||
| 1860 | And peraduenture your dede shall be good | ||
| Now whan a man / all naked is by the rode | |||
| In bedde with her / that naked is and bare | |||
| A full grete thynge it is and she vnware | |||
| And whan she seeth none other choys ne rede | |||
| 1865 | As styll she lyeth then / as she were dede | ||
| So sore she dredeth shame and vylany | |||
| That in the derke she may not se to crye | |||
| For though she answere straungely on the day | |||
| At suche a sodayne countre she ne may countre ='encounter'; see OED s.v. counter n1 | |||
| 1870 | O Iane my loue / this gentyll galaunt sayth | ||
| I neuer shall haue peny by my fayth | |||
| But ye therof that one halfe and well more | |||
| Shall haue alway / so wele ye do therfore | |||
| Whan nyght shall come the galaunt gothe a_pace | |||
| 1875 | As Iane hym hath / aduysed to the place place] pleace 1509 | ||
| And she vnto her maystresse secretely | |||
| Hath shewed all the processe manerly | |||
| And whan this galaunt comen is and crepte | |||
| In-to the bedde / she letteth as she slepte letteth ='waits, holds back'? See OED s.v. let v2, 2 | |||
| 1880 | This galaunt there / her shortely doth embras | ||
| Then starteth she and sayth / who is there alas | |||
| My loue sayth he / no more for it is I | |||
| A by the sacrament of god I crye | |||
| She sayth it shall not come to passe yet so | |||
| 1885 | And thynketh for to call / on Iane whiche tho | ||
| No worde to her agayne answerde or sayd | |||
| Ha now I se it wele / I am betrayed | |||
| Myn auctor sayth / the[y] fyght togyder bothe they] the 1509 | |||
| In dyuers wyse / and she is passynge wrothe | |||
| sig: [G1v] | |||
| 1890 | And fast she panteth / bothe for fere and yre | ||
| Wh[ic]he is as angrye / as the brennynge fyre Whiche] Whcihe 1509 | |||
| And sore abasshed of this rekenynge | |||
| Ye may well knowe / it is a pyteous thynge | |||
| A woman onely whan she lacketh helpe | |||
| 1895 | No more of strength is then a lytell whelpe | ||
| But yf it had not ben for drede of shame | |||
| More hyghe she wold haue cryed in goddes name | |||
| Then she dyde than but all was for the best | |||
| That she to saue her honoure so dyde rest | |||
| 1900 | Was neuer fythyll / shalmeulx / pype ne rote fythyll: =fiddle; shalmeulx: =shawm | ||
| That better dyde accorde in euery note | |||
| Of musyk / or in gemetrye then they gemetrye: =geometry | |||
| Whiche enterpryse / gode tyme agayne to play | |||
| Thus for the husbande that tyme beynge o[u]te | |||
| 1905 | Ryght well to poynt the werke they brynge aboute | ||
| Now hath this wyfe the gowne that was denayed | |||
| By her good-man / and she is wele apayed | |||
| And for-bycause he nolde it to her gyue | |||
| It shall cost hym full dere yf she may lyue | |||
| 1910 | All-be-it so that he in tymes afore | ||
| Wele more then it was w[or]the hath payed therfore worthe] wrothe 1509 | |||
| And this good-wyfe / all thynges to excuse | |||
| And bycause no wyght herof sholde muse | |||
| Her moder wyll she cause with dylygence | |||
| 1915 | This goune to gyue her in his presence | ||
| All [d]oubtes to auoyde that he may haue doubtes] boubtes 1509 | |||
| Thus honestly she can her worshyp saue | |||
| And she her moder maketh to byleue | |||
| That this clothe she hath bought as she can preu[e] preu[e]: letter illegible | |||
| 1920 | Of those lytell thynges whiche she solde | ||
| Wherof her husbande yet she neuer tolde | |||
| So he therof dothe vnderstonde no dele | |||
| sig: [G2] | |||
| Or parauenture he may knowe it wele | |||
| And so it happeth ofte with her and mo | |||
| 1925 | After this goune another cometh also | ||
| That is to wyte / a newe thynge must be had | |||
| For her that she / may honestly be clad | |||
| Also of gyrdels harneysed two or thre | |||
| Of syluer-gylte / elles angry wyll she be | |||
| 1930 | Or other thynges / wherof her husbande than | ||
| Wyll be as sore dyspleased as he can | |||
| The whiche is veray melancolyous | |||
| Or lyke to Naball auarycyous | |||
| As I haue sayd afore / and he dothe doubte | |||
| 1935 | Or narowly he pryeth [a]nd loketh oute | ||
| So that he wele perceyue[d] hathe some-thynge perceyued] perceyue 1509 | |||
| Wherin he toke no pleasure nor lykynge | |||
| Or vnto hym it hathe be tolde or shewed | |||
| O[f] her good loue / this galaunt all beshrewed Of] Or 1509 | |||
| 1940 | By some fast frende of his this hath he knowen | ||
| For at longe rennynge out it shall be blowen | |||
| Then entreteth he in rage of Ialousy | |||
| And putteth hym in-to an agony | |||
| Anone he maketh semblaunt to go oute | |||
| 1945 | And cometh at nyght / starynge all aboute | ||
| Full sodaynly supposynge in his mynde | |||
| Oute of araye some folkes to fynde | |||
| The whiche is not so easely to be done | |||
| Then hydeth he hym in his chambre sone | |||
| 1950 | And by auenture / some-thynge dothe espye | ||
| Wherfore he chydeth and she can wele replye | |||
| She feleth that she wylye is and sage | |||
| And that she comen is of good lygnage | |||
| This sely man remembreth hym agayne | |||
| 1955 | Of his frendes how they haue spoken playne | ||
| sig: [G2v] | |||
| So they in ryot and grete debate | |||
| And sorowe and care / shall rest vpon his pate | |||
| For Ioyes shall he neuer haue in-dede | |||
| Fro that tyme forth / but euer gnawe and fede | |||
| 1960 | On heuynesse / and euer amonge alye alye] a lye 1509alye: =ally, 'kin, relatives' | ||
| Shall cast be in the vysage prately cast: ='set'(?), although OED s.vv. cast v, cast ppl. adj. do not record this sense; prately: =prettily, 'considerably; see OED s.v. prettily adv., 3 | |||
| His cheuysaunce / shall lessen sodaynly | |||
| Also his pore body shall be drye | |||
| So shall he cesse of werkes and besynesse | |||
| 1965 | And neuer lyue in wele nor lustynesse | ||
| Thus closed in the lepe / abyde shall he | |||
| These paynes takynge for prosperyte | |||
| For yf that he this lepe were not within | |||
| Yet neuer wolde he / tary rest ne blynne | |||
| 1970 | Unto the tyme that he therto myght crepe | ||
| And put hym-selfe in-to the same more depe | |||
| Thus he ne wolde that otherwyse he were | |||
| Ryght so this poore-man / as ye may here | |||
| Shall euer languysshe in captyuyte | |||
| 1975 | And depe within the lepe shall barred be | ||
| So wretche[d]ly his dayes shall he ende wretchedly] wretchely 1509 | |||
| Fro suche auenture god vs all defende | |||
|
¶Here endeth the fyfth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the syxte Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| sig: G3 | |||
| THe syxte Ioye of maryage it is so | |||
| That he whiche was wedded longe ago | |||
| 1980 | Endured hath the trauayles / and the payne | ||
| As I afore haue sayd / all or certayne | |||
| Of them / and hath a wyfe especyall | |||
| Dyuers of her condycyons at all | |||
| A veray subtyll fal[s]e and wyle shrewe false] falfe 1509 | |||
| 1985 | She is / as I here-after shall you shewe | ||
| Cautelous wylfull / and eke malycyous Cautelous ='deceitful, wily' | |||
| Frowarde / wanton / nyce and dysdaynous | |||
| And her husbande a good man is and playne | |||
| The whiche her loueth well / and she agayne | |||
| 1990 | Loueth hym I trowe / wherfore alway he | ||
| sig: [G3v] | |||
| So as he may by possybylyte | |||
| Dothe vnto her / all pleasures that he can | |||
| For she of body is a good woman | |||
| How-be-it holly her entencyon | |||
| 1995 | Is sette so fast and her oppynyon | ||
| That euer by some crafte or subtyllyte | |||
| Fayle wyll she not to haue the soueraynte | |||
| And of her husbande werkes wyll she knowe | |||
| Wheder he of his degree be hyghe or lowe | |||
| 2000 | So wyll she medle ofte answere and speke | ||
| Yf myster be / and many maters breke | |||
| Suche is of her the dysposycyon | |||
| And after nature the condycyon | |||
| Of all wyues / what husbandes so they haue | |||
| 2005 | Or at leest / the maystrye wyll they craue | ||
| For tho this wyfe be wele and wante ryȜt nought | |||
| Yet euer wyll she set her mynde and thought | |||
| To brynge her husbande / into wo and care | |||
| And make hym thynke and muse / euyll fare | |||
| 2010 | And otherwhyles it may fortune so | ||
| That he and she in chambre and no mo | |||
| Be all the nyght and som-what of the daye | |||
| In theyr delytes Ioye dysporte and playe | |||
| And they togyder kysse and make good che[re] che[re]: letters illegible | |||
| 2015 | But he aryseth fyrst that theyr dynere | ||
| May redy be / and also he must thynke | |||
| O[n] other thynges mo then mete and drynke On] Oo 1509 | |||
| The hous aboute and whan tyme is to dyne | |||
| He calleth her but she wyll not enclyne | |||
| 2020 | Unto his speche but sendeth downe anone | ||
| Her lytell chylde or of her seruauntes one | |||
| Whiche vnto hym then shall these wordes saye | |||
| Syr in good fayth she wyl not dyne to_daye | |||
| sig: [G4] | |||
| Wele sayth the good-man / go agayne in hast | |||
| 2025 | And byd her come anone to this repast | ||
| Then gothe the seruaunt or the chylde and sayth | |||
| My mayster byddeth you come now by my fayth | |||
| To dyner sone for he wyll nothynge eate | |||
| Tyll ye be come and set with hym at mete | |||
| 2030 | Go say to hym I wyll not dyne sayth she | ||
| Upon whiche answere streyght to her gothe he | |||
| And sayth to her what ayleth you my dere | |||
| She speketh not / wherfore he draweth nere | |||
| And sayth what chere my loue and is dysmayde | |||
| 2035 | How-be-it he hath sene suche pagentes playde | ||
| Afore that tyme / but for request ne worde | |||
| That can be sayd she nyll go to the borde | |||
| But playe ryght so / and perchaunce in no wyse | |||
| Wyll dyne that day for thynge he can deuyse | |||
| 2040 | Another tyme / vnder her arme a_syde | ||
| He ledeth her as thoughe she were a bryde | |||
| And they to dyner go / but colde is all | |||
| The vytaylles on the table grete and small | |||
| For so longe hath she [c]aused them to tarye caused] saused 1509 | |||
| 2045 | Thus often-tymes wyll she do contra[ry]e contrarye] contrayre 1509 | ||
| To reason / and suche countenaunce and chere | |||
| With maners wyll she make at her dynere | |||
| That no-thynge wyll she ete / ne bytte | |||
| For whiche so dull and mate he is of wytte | |||
| 2050 | And lyke a mased beest for wele the more | ||
| He loueth her / and hath her dere therfore | |||
| For suche melancolyes she dothe hym gyue | |||
| In thought and heuynesse to cause hym lyue | |||
| Wherin ryght wele she dothe and cunnyngly | |||
| 2055 | Syth he wyll suffre it so curteysly | ||
| For-why a woman for to gete the grace | |||
| sig: [G4v] | |||
| Of hym whome she hath bounden in her lace | |||
| Hath not to do / syth that he loueth her wele | |||
| With herte / body / mynde and euery-dele | |||
| 2060 | And dooth her all the pleasures that he may | ||
| Her nedeth not / with suche one for to play | |||
| But she must set her thought holy to gete | |||
| The loue of hy[m] / the whiche her doo[t]h foryete doo[t]h: letter broken; foryete: =forget | |||
| And by her setteth / none accompte ne tale | |||
| 2065 | She sholde assay to make suche one auale | ||
| Unto her hande by chere and countenaunce | |||
| By pleasaunt speche / with all the cyrcumstaunce | |||
| A fayre dede / she thynketh to haue wrought | |||
| Whan she her husbande / in-to care hath brought | |||
| 2070 | It happeth otherwhyle this man gooth out | ||
| Her werkes / and his besynes about | |||
| And whan he homewarde dooth retorne agayne | |||
| With hym he bryngeth of his frendes twayne | |||
| In-to his hous / bycause he hath to do | |||
| 2075 | With them / or elles ryght well it may be so | ||
| That they of hym haue perfyte cognysaunce | |||
| Or elles they be of his acquayntaunce | |||
| Whan he without is / as is sayd before | |||
| His yoman or his page / he sendeth afore | |||
| 2080 | Unto his wyfe / and prayeth her hertely | ||
| For to make redy / well and honestly | |||
| The houses all about / and other thynge houses= 'sets of rooms (occupied by one tenant or family)'? See OED s.v. house n1, 1b | |||
| For suche frendes as he wolde with hym brynge | |||
| Bycause to them / he gretely is beholde | |||
| 2085 | Also he prayeth her hastely that she wolde | ||
| Ordayne vytayles to make them well at ease | |||
| For what he can / he wyll do them to please | |||
| And he with them percase hath for to do | |||
| Now gooth this messenger his wyfe vnto | |||
| sig: [G5] | |||
| 2090 | And salueth her and sayth / madame truely salueth ='salutes'; see OED s.v. salue v | ||
| My mayster cometh / and in his company | |||
| Two of his frendes / men of good estate | |||
| For to be lodged here this nyght algate | |||
| Wherfore he prayeth you ryght specyally | |||
| 2095 | To se the souper dyght be / and redy | ||
| And she dooth answere saynge / what haue I | |||
| And do with feestes / or of his company with] with / 1509 | |||
| Why cometh he not hym-selfe to se it dyght | |||
| I wote not sayeth the seruau[n]te by thys lyght | |||
| 2100 | But thus to say / he hath commaunded me | ||
| Tho[u] arte accursed knaue by god / sayth she | |||
| This felawe than holdeth his peas anone | |||
| And she in-to a chambre is agone | |||
| Suche one she is / whiche dooth none otherwyse | |||
| 2105 | And wors is / she hath a praty guyse | ||
| For all the seruauntes here and there about | |||
| Bothe one and other / shortely she sendeth out she] she / 1509 | |||
| And ouer this / yf chamberere there be | |||
| Or of her doughters / one / or two / or thre | |||
| 2110 | The whiche at home abyde / be taught how they | ||
| Unto the good-man of the house shall say | |||
| Whan he cometh home / and now he comen is | |||
| And calleth vpon a doughter fyrst of his | |||
| Or elles a chamberere / and sayth is all | |||
| 2115 | Thynges redy made / the whiche we nede shall | ||
| In fayth she sayth / my maystresse is full seke | |||
| Your seruauntes and your meyny be to seke | |||
| And certaynly as yet / nothynge is done | |||
| Wherwith the good-man waxeth angry soone | |||
| 2120 | How-be-it / bothe his frendes forth-withall | ||
| He bryngeth them curteysly in-to the hall | |||
| Or in-to other places elles-where | |||
| sig: [G5v] | |||
| As they be of estate / and fyndeth there | |||
| Nothynge redy for to make them gladde Nothynge] Nothynges 1509 | |||
| 2125 | It is no nede to aske / yf he be sadde | ||
| For perauenture his frendes whiche he brought | |||
| Perceyue ryght wele enpryntynge in theyr thought | |||
| That where he sente his seruaunt or his page | |||
| Afore vnto his wyfe on his massage massage: =message | |||
| 2130 | They myght wele thynke that his commaundement | ||
| Was not so sure as acte of parl[ya]ment parlyament] parlayment 1509 | |||
| This good-man then dothe call his folkes on hye | |||
| But none of them he fynde can nor espye | |||
| Excepte a pore knaue or elles a mayde | |||
| 2135 | That nought can do / and then he in a brayde | ||
| Gothe to his wyues chambre sodaynly | |||
| And [to her] speketh hygh and hastely to her] her to 1509 | |||
| Wherfore haue ye not done I you demaunde | |||
| As by my messagere I dyde comaunde | |||
| 2140 | A syr she sayth so many thynges ye | ||
| Commaunde / that by the holy trynyte | |||
| One shall not vnderstande ne knowe wele how | |||
| What for to do / o saynt Mary now | |||
| Then sayth this man / clawynge fast his hede | |||
| 2145 | Now of this worlde / the moost vngodely dede | ||
| And euyll haue ye done and vncurteysly | |||
| Se here the folkes / that I moost specyally | |||
| Am bounde vnto / how may I do therto | |||
| Sayth she / what wolde ye syr that I sholde do | |||
| 2150 | Now with your cosyns moche to do haue we | ||
| It sheweth wele an vnwyse man be ye | |||
| Do as ye wyll after your guyse for I | |||
| Care not therof a rysshe / nor yet a fly | |||
| Fayre dame sayth he I you demaunde wherfore | |||
| 2155 | Ye haue sente out / your seruauntes here-tofore | ||
| sig: [G6] | |||
| Knewe I quod she / that ye suche besynesse | |||
| Had [t]ake[n] on hande / how-be-it neuerthelesse taken] dakeu 1509 | |||
| She sente them forthe / in dyspyte wyttyngly | |||
| Of this good-man / afore all by and by | |||
| 2160 | Then he the whiche wyll suffre and obeye | ||
| Unto her faute / dothe no mo wordes saye | |||
| But fro her gothe with care and heuy chere | |||
| For parauenture suche his gestes were | |||
| That he had leuer / an hondreth scutes and more | |||
| 2165 | Haue spente but she / nothynge dothe care therfore | ||
| She hath hym sene and knoweth he wyll not byte | |||
| And that afore he was not wonte to smyte | |||
| Shortly to speke he torneth hym aboute | |||
| And of his folkes gadreth in a route | |||
| 2170 | Suche as he fyndeth and dothe the best he can | ||
| Towelles of werke he demaundeth than Towelles of werke ='ornamented table-napkins'; see OED s.vv. towel n, 1a, work n, 15 | |||
| Fayre / fyne / whyte and other naperye-ware | |||
| Of dyapre and byddeth that they none spare dyapre: =diaper, 'the name of a textile fabric'; see OED s.v. diaper n, 1 | |||
| And table-clothes or they to souper go | |||
| 2175 | But of the good-wyfe / he is answerde so | ||
| Towaylles she sayth ryght good and fyne there be Towaylles: =towels | |||
| And for moche better men / in theyr degre | |||
| Then be these folkes / and of as good a place | |||
| They gete none other as euer haue I grace | |||
| 2180 | These other clothes in vessels ben to stepe | ||
| As wasshynge-tubbes / layed in the water depe | |||
| How-be-it for the towaylles I say not this | |||
| For erly haue I lost the kayes ywys | |||
| Of the dores / se how the chamberere | |||
| 2185 | Dothe seke them besyly bothe here and there | ||
| And of the bedde she torneth to and fro | |||
| The strawe / also the good-wyfe thus sayth tho | |||
| I wote not what I haue done of late so bad | |||
| sig: [G6v] | |||
| My wytte and eke my heed is made so madde | |||
| 2190 | With besynes / and mased is my brayne | ||
| That where for to renne / I ne wote certayne | |||
| Truely sayth he /I am begyled wele | |||
| The coffres shall I breke now euery-dele | |||
| A fayre thynge do ye than / the good-wyfe sayth | |||
| 2195 | And I shall tary with you by my fayth | ||
| I wolde ye had them all in pyeces broken | |||
| So that they neuer sholde be shytte ne loken | |||
| Suche thynge somtyme a man may do in haste | |||
| That afterwarde he shall repent the waste | |||
| 2200 | Than how to do / he knoweth not what is best | ||
| But for all this / he is in peas and rest | |||
| Supposynge that she sheweth hym the trouthe | |||
| And forth-with-all / without ony slouthe | |||
| Unto the table go they for to suppe | |||
| 2205 | Of fresshe pypes / then to fyll the cuppe pypes ='wine-casks'; see OED s.v. pipe n2, 2 | ||
| Grete nede it were for wyne wherof they spende | |||
| Gooth lowe / and draweth fast vnto an ende | |||
| And it as now / is neyther good ne able | |||
| Well for to serue these gentylmen at table | |||
| 2210 | And though that he byd one for to go | ||
| He geteth none / bycause she wyll not so | |||
| And as for these fruyte or other thynge | |||
| At his commaundement / or elles byddynge | |||
| None can be had / for yf he wyll them haue | |||
| 2215 | Unto his neyghboure he must sende his knaue | ||
| Afore the table his page and theyrs stande | |||
| And them amonge they compte and vnderstande | |||
| Seynge the wyues cursed loke and chere | |||
| They say by_cause our maysters comen ben here | |||
| 2220 | The wyfe is wrothe but after souper then | ||
| Tyme dooth approche that these good gentylmen | |||
| sig: [G7] | |||
| Shall go to bedde / and this man dothe entrete | |||
| His wyfe for shetes whyte / but he can gete | |||
| None good ne fyne / bycause erly that day | |||
| 2225 | Afore the good-wyfe lost hath euery kay | ||
| Hedshetes wolde he haue / and pylowes whyte | |||
| And she them kepeth frome his ghestes quyte ghestes: =guests | |||
| In comen shetes so all that nyght they ly | |||
| But erly in the mornynge hastely | |||
| 2230 | These frendes aryse / and homwarde them auaunce | ||
| Whiche haue wele knowen the wyues countenaunce | |||
| Theyr pages by the waye haue comynynge | |||
| Wherof the mannes page made rekenynge | |||
| To them afore and laughen by the way | |||
| 2235 | Nothynge content the whiche togyder say | ||
| They wyll not theder come agayne of longe | |||
| Suche comenynge these pages haue amonge | |||
| Better had ben this good-man to haue lost | |||
| Moche of his good then to haue ben theyr host | |||
| 2240 | And so to brynge them theder to his shame | ||
| Wherof the wyfe all holly was to blame | |||
| The same morowe / I meruayle moche sayth he | |||
| Unto his wyfe / o benedycyte | |||
| Of your maners / for-why I knowe not how | |||
| 2245 | I shall demeane or gouerne me with yow demeane ='conduct (myself)'; see OED s.v. demean v1, 1 | ||
| A[u]e maria / with me is moche to do | |||
| She sayth. I nourysshe chekyns duckes pygges also | |||
| And euermore I laboure and I spynne | |||
| And do all that I may some-thynge to wynne | |||
| 2250 | Yet can I not one houre haue on the day | ||
| Of rest ne ease / and ye trauayle alway | |||
| Aboute nothynge / but euer wast and spende | |||
| And of our goodes destroye and make an ende | |||
| Upon suche men with whiche I nothynge haue | |||
| sig: [G7v] | |||
| 2255 | To do / thus ye wyll neyther gete ne saue | ||
| With them sayth he / yes these good men be they | |||
| That bothe vs helpe / anoye or hyndre may | |||
| Then sadly he remembreth in his mynde | |||
| How that his wyfe so gentyll is and kynde | |||
| 2260 | That whan a galaunt cometh he dothe thynke | ||
| Anone she wyll cause hym to ete and drynke | |||
| And vpon hym no good thynge shall be spared | |||
| Wherfore to her hath [he] sayd and declared he] 1509 omits | |||
| That he wyll not this galaunt come more there | |||
| 2265 | And thervppon he byddeth her forbere | ||
| To drawe hym to her hous / for he nothynge | |||
| There hath to do / and she sayth I shall brynge | |||
| Hym whan me lust and cause him to come ynne | |||
| Wherwith gret noyse bytwene them doth begynne | |||
| 2270 | The good-man angrye then these wordes sayth | ||
| Wherin he sheweth wele the fole he playeth | |||
| Now by the sacrament of god yf I | |||
| After this tyme can fynde or elles espye | |||
| He with you speke / I shall make you more wrothe | |||
| 2275 | Then euer ye were / all be you leue or lothe | ||
| Now by my fayth she sayth nothynge I recke | |||
| All-thoughe he were hye hanged by the necke | |||
| B[u]t now I se ryght wele / it is full sothe | |||
| A good woman the whiche no synnes dothe | |||
| 2280 | Shall haue as moche reproue / and more dyffame | ||
| Then she that whiche dothe wyckednes attayne | |||
| She sayth yf that I suche a woman were | |||
| Whiche dyde her gouerne euyll in manere | |||
| I had no nede then for to be dysmayde | |||
| 2285 | For moche better she had done she sayde | ||
| Then I now do / and thus he and the wyue | |||
| Togyder make a noyse / and so they stryue | |||
| sig: [G8] | |||
| This in auenture / by the malyce grete This: =thus | |||
| Of hym or her / in suche a fume and hete | |||
| 2290 | They fall / that they wyll not togyder ly | ||
| Of longe-tymes in this melancoly | |||
| And that it is / that she desyreth sore sore] sores 1509 | |||
| For this squyer / of whome he spake afore | |||
| Shall perauenture come within the nyght | |||
| 2295 | In at the backe dore out of his syght | ||
| Or elles clyme in at a wyndowe hye | |||
| And to the wyues bed go secretely | |||
| Not for to synne / ne do her hurte ne harme | |||
| But in her good-mannes stede to kepe her warme | |||
| 2300 | For of her bodye she was good and trewe | ||
| As it is sayd afore / or elles of_newe | |||
| Myn auctor varyeth somwhat in his tale | |||
| And taketh a k[u]kko for the nyghtyngale | |||
| After all this the thynge is well appeased | |||
| 2305 | And for-bycause the good-wyfe shall be pleased | ||
| This good-man dothe begynne her for to flatre | |||
| And she can suffre hym to speke and clatre | |||
| For euer wolde a woman flatred be | |||
| And lyghtly / troweth it in certaynte | |||
| 2310 | Yf it in praysynge be of her godenesse godenesse: =goodness | ||
| Of beaute bounte / or of gentylnesse or of] or of / 1509 | |||
| Thus passeth he the tyme tyll at the laste | |||
| His wyfe he fyndeth somtyme spekynge faste | |||
| Unto this forsayd squyre in his place | |||
| 2315 | Or in the chyrche / or elles-where as she was | ||
| At suche a feest and in-to Ialousye | |||
| He entreth in his mynde / more feruentlye | |||
| Then euer a_dayes afore he dyde | |||
| By meane wherof so now it is betyde | |||
| 2320 | Of worldly Ioye he dothe hymselfe defayte defayte ='deprive'; see OED s.v. defeat v, 7b | ||
| sig: [G8v] | |||
| And entreth in-to thought and awayte thought] the thought 1509 | |||
| He lyeth and requereth subtylly requereth ='seeks'? See OED s.v. require v, 9 | |||
| Her to espye or take with some foly | |||
| Wherin he playeth the very fole alwaye | |||
| 2325 | Bycause the noble herte of man ne maye | ||
| Ne ought of womens werkes to enquere | |||
| For yf he sholde / the faute knowe and here | |||
| Ones of his wyfe / he myght fall in suche plyte | |||
| That medecyne neuer sholde hym hele ne quyte | |||
| 2330 | And then his shame / he sercheth in his mynde | ||
| Enquerynge fast and he the same doth fynde | |||
| Good reason is that he endure therby | |||
| The shame whiche he afore sought besyly | |||
| As in this case I counte hym cast-away | |||
| 2335 | And lost / for on his body and goodes alway | ||
| Grete peryll renneth and aege cometh hym vpon | |||
| So is he folysshe lyke a beestly man | |||
| In euery-thynge by reason of the play | |||
| And he within the lepe I dare well say | |||
| 2340 | Yclosed is / in sorowe and heuynesse | ||
| Whiche he doth take / for Ioye and gladnesse | |||
| Seynge that he / ne wolde but it were so | |||
| Thus shall he dwell in paynes euermo | |||
| And so shall ende his dayes wretchydly | |||
| 2345 | Syth he wyll fynde / none other remedy | ||
|
¶Here endeth the .vi. Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the .vii. Ioye of maryage |
|||
| sig: H1 | |||
| THe .vii. Ioye of maryage to knowe | |||
| Is as I fynde it wryten on the rowe | |||
| Whan that somtyme / the man whiche maryed is | |||
| Hathe founde a wyfe / as I haue sayd or this | |||
| 2350 | Whiche is a felowe good / at euery season | ||
| And neuer wyll refuse nor forsake reason | |||
| Whan it is profered her / but knowe ye may | |||
| Thoughe she be good / as ye haue herde me say | |||
| And of her body chast or otherwyse | |||
| 2355 | Yet euer hathe she suche maner guyse | ||
| The whiche a rule is named generall | |||
| In maryage and vsed ouerall | |||
| For euery wyfe byleueth verayly | |||
| And holdeth this oppynyon stedfastly | |||
| 2360 | That her husbande the weykest creature | ||
| And moost wretche is and leest werke may endure. werke ='trouble, affliction' | |||
| As in regarde / vnto the secrete crafte | |||
| Of all other whiche in the worlde be lafte lafte: =left | |||
| And so it happeth ofte / and hathe ben sene | |||
| 2365 | That whan a yonge lusty man and grene | ||
| Dothe marye hym vnto a good true mayde | |||
| And they theyr pleasures take and be apayde | |||
| In suche a wyse that maruayle is to here | |||
| And take all that he may within a yere | |||
| 2370 | Of theyr dysporte / or elles in two or thre | ||
| Or mo in dyuers wyse so may it be | |||
| Wherby theyr youthe is greatly waxen colde | |||
| But yet the good-wyfe by an hundreth-folde | |||
| Her wasteth not so moche / as dothe the man | |||
| 2375 | In no maner for she so wysely can | ||
| Her body kepe / fro besynesse and payne | |||
| With laboure wyll she not herselfe constrayne | |||
| Nor yet with pensyfnesse to saye the sothe | |||
| sig: [H1v] | |||
| With care ne sorowe / so as the good-man dothe | |||
| 2380 | And though they dyde but play / and make solace | ||
| Yet wolde she not waste in so shorte a space | |||
| As her good-man dothe in this secrete playe | |||
| Wherwith then he / she bettre may awaye | |||
| But trouthe it is / whan women chyldre bere | |||
| 2385 | And they be grete / lyuynge in drede and fere | ||
| Whan they drawe nere theyr tyme of chyldes-byrthe | |||
| They suffre peynes grete withouten myrthe | |||
| Myn auctor sayth that it is to accounte | |||
| To mannes peyne / the whiche all dothe surmounte | |||
| 2390 | He sayth the husbande[s] peynes be wele more husbandes] husbande 1509 | ||
| The whiche must thynke / and care all thynges fore | |||
| Aboute his housholde / as he hathe to do | |||
| He suffreth anger trouble peyne and wo | |||
| But of the sorowe / and the anguysshe grete | |||
| 2395 | Of chyldes-byrthe / all dothe he clene forgete | ||
| How-be-it many wordes dooth he speke | |||
| Whiche in his brest he myght well shyt and steke | |||
| For I wyll not those wordes put in ryme | |||
| But holde my tongue / and speke whan it is tyme | |||
| 2400 | He sayth these husbandes besy be to gete | ||
| But wyues do no good / but drynke and ete | |||
| And after this it falleth saunce-fayle | |||
| That for suche thoughtes / labours and trauayle | |||
| The husbande gretely wasted is and spent | |||
| 2405 | Wherfore his mynde he setteth and entent | ||
| Some elles-where / applyenge not the game | |||
| More then of custome / for to please our dame | |||
| And also yf he wolde the fayte assay fayte: =feat | |||
| For lacke of power / perchaunce he ne may | |||
| 2410 | Perfourme his appetyte / desyre and wyll | ||
| Wherfore as in that cace / he holdeth hym styll | |||
| sig: [H2] | |||
| But this good-wyfe / yet leueth not the crafte | |||
| Her luste / ne courage be not her byrafte | |||
| As hotte she is as euer she was before | |||
| 2415 | And so it is that he may do no more | ||
| Thenne for-be_cause / her lyueree / and her fee | |||
| Of her delytes dayly mynysshed be | |||
| Whiche she was wont to haue of her good-mon | |||
| In noyse ryot bothe they falle anone | |||
| 2420 | Lyke as her leuere / mynyssheth lyte and lyte leuere: = livery, 'provision, allowance' | ||
| They so begynne to gren as they wolde byte | |||
| And though this lyuere / wyll her not suffyce | |||
| Yet euyll dothe she not / for she is wyse | |||
| But she ne leueth of deme / that he | |||
| 2425 | In power is / moche wors thenne other be | ||
| And she the more bel[e]ueth it by reason beleueth] belueth 1509 | |||
| Because afore she neuer in her season | |||
| Non other man / but hym onely assayed | |||
| Of whome she neyther was content ne payed | |||
| 2430 | And he to her was in_suffycyente | ||
| Without her lyuere ofte she came and wente | |||
| And yet by reason / and the ordynaunce | |||
| of holy chirche / it is a suffysaunce | |||
| One man vnto one woman to be knyt | |||
| 2435 | But other-whyle / the wyfe wyll Ieoparde it | ||
| For to assaye of other / two or thre | |||
| Yf they so symple as her husbande be symple ='weak, feeble'; see OED s.v. simple adj., 7a | |||
| And thenne she whiche / that crafte so dare assaye | |||
| Parauenture beleueth it alwaye | |||
| 2440 | More certaynly thenne she hathe done afore | ||
| And suche a felawe taketh she therfore | |||
| That of the crafte / the whiche she dothe begynne | |||
| But yf it be for drede / she may not blynne | |||
| Or elles / with plente / she be satysfyed | |||
| sig: [H2v] | |||
| 2445 | She wyll not be content / ne pacyfyed | ||
| For whan this felawe cometh happyly | |||
| He is enfamyned wherfore meruaylously enfamyned: =enfamined, 'starved of sex'? Such a sense is not recorded in OED s.v. enfamine. | |||
| Dothe he / and she her husbande thynketh on | |||
| Reputynge hym / a veray semple mon | |||
| 2450 | And of ryght lytell power she byleueth | ||
| The better for so surely she it preueth The phrase 'better for' is probably an anticipatory error (see line 2453). | |||
| For suche thynges as somtyme cometh by stelthe | |||
| Is better for a sykely wyues helthe | |||
| Then suche as she at home hathe but a lyte | |||
| 2455 | Hauynge therto no lust nor appetyte | ||
| And thus she is in fast byleue and sure | |||
| Experyence alwaye dothe her assure | |||
| And sometyme so fortuneth it that she | |||
| Another gossyp / whiche hathe maryed be | |||
| 2460 | And knoweth reason / whan it is to her shewed | ||
| Good in her maners beynge and wele thewed | |||
| The whiche byleueth eke that her husbande | |||
| As dothe that other / for she can vnderstande | |||
| And parauenture she hathe taken assaye | |||
| 2465 | Of other mo as ye haue herde me saye | ||
| Wherof wele gretter is the werke and dede | |||
| Then of the good-man hauynge lytell mede | |||
| Whiche gyueth not hym-selfe to so grete payne | |||
| For-why he knoweth wele / that for certayne | |||
| 2470 | Nyghe hym alwaye good plente shall he fynde | ||
| But knowe ye wele / that many me[n] by kynde | |||
| Use contrary to this that women do | |||
| For surely they byleuen euermo | |||
| What maner women so they haue and wedde | |||
| 2475 | They be moost wyse / and best for them in bedde | ||
| Of all other / but this rule otherwhyle | |||
| Do fayle / and that is by deceyte and gyle | |||
| sig: [H3] | |||
| Amonge rybauldes lyuynge in despeyre | |||
| To whome no wytte ne reason dothe repayre | |||
| 2480 | Ofte it is sene / that maryed men wyll prayse | ||
| The maners of theyr wyues and vpreyse | |||
| And euery vertue whiche they in them fynde vertue] verture 1509 | |||
| They shewe supposynge / surely in theyr mynde | |||
| That better women / be there none then they | |||
| 2485 | Ne lyke to them none can be founde they saye | ||
| In goodnesse ferre all other they excede | |||
| Suche appetyte to them haue they at nede | |||
| Thus dothe myn auctor speke of wedded men | |||
| And forth-withall thus he declereth then | |||
| 2490 | Saynge / that gladly ofte it hathe ben sene | ||
| Than whan a woman / hathe a wydowe bene | |||
| Then shortely to another wyll she marye | |||
| And otherwhyles she nyll abyde ne tarye | |||
| A moneth but she wyll her wedde agayne | |||
| 2495 | For to assaye and proue in certayne | ||
| Yf that another of his power be | |||
| So symple in his werkes as was he | |||
| The whiche out of this worlde of late is past | |||
| And thus in wedlocke she is bounden fast | |||
| 2500 | Wherin she kepeth neyther trouthe ne fayth | ||
| But wasteth folyly myn auctor sayth | |||
| Loseth and gyueth moche goodes awaye | |||
| For whiche her husbande many a wery daye | |||
| Hath had in l[a]boure / or that they haue ben goten laboure] loboure 1509 | |||
| 2505 | After his degree / but all hathe she forgoten | ||
| By many maner wayes dothe she spende | |||
| As well vpon her lemman / or her frende | |||
| As olde baudes / and on her confessour | |||
| A frere-prechour / or elles a lymatour | |||
| 2510 | Whiche yerely hathe of her a pensyon | ||
| sig: [H3v] | |||
| For she of hym hathe absolucyon | |||
| Suche folkes haue grete power of the pope | |||
| For to absoyle / enserche / and for to grope grope ='make examination of, probe (the conscience, etc.)'; see OED s.v. grope v, 4c | |||
| The conscyence of wydowes and of wyues | |||
| 2515 | And them to teche how they shall lede theyr lyues | ||
| This man her husbande on the other syde | |||
| As warely / as he can dothe hym gyde | |||
| Withouten grete expence or elles coste | |||
| And casteth accompte / what he hath wonne or loste | |||
| 2520 | Of marchaundyses / after suche degree | ||
| As he is of / and shortly fyndeth he | |||
| That in his godes he gothe faste abakke | |||
| And knoweth well ynough there is grete lakke | |||
| Thenne he to syghe / and sorowe dothe begynne | |||
| 2525 | And whan that he / his compter is withynne compter ='counting-house'? See OED s.v. counter n3, 5 | ||
| Unto his wyfe / the whiche he loueth more | |||
| Thenne that he dothe hym-selfe he speketh therfore | |||
| And thus he sayth myn owne loue verayment | |||
| I knowe not how our goodes be waste or spent | |||
| 2530 | Or where they be become I can not telle | ||
| Golde or syluer wherwith / we bye and selle | |||
| Wyne corne / and other marchaundyse | |||
| And yet alwaye I take hede and aduyse | |||
| The beest wyse that I can loke or espye beest: =best | |||
| 2535 | And haue to euery-thynge / as good an eye | ||
| As is possyble vnto me to haue | |||
| Oure goodes for to gouerne rule and saue | |||
| So that one gowne / that good is for my corce | |||
| I dare not haue / A syr she sayth no force | |||
| 2540 | And whan that he is / in a secrete place | ||
| Unto his wyfe he speketh / this percase | |||
| Truely / but late it hathe be shewed to me | |||
| Some wordes whiche dyspleasaunt to me be | |||
| sig: [H4] | |||
| By god my loue ryght so it dooth appere | |||
| 2545 | For of longe-tyme ye haue made euyll chere | ||
| She sayth / I haue ben sore affrayed and dradde | |||
| That ye some hurte or heuynesse haue hadde | |||
| Or that some of your frendes had ben past | |||
| To god / or had ben kepte in pryson fast | |||
| 2550 | With englysshe-men / ytake at some affray | ||
| Nay nothynge so / but moche wors than ye do say | |||
| It is / Aue maria sayth she than | |||
| If it please you / tell me good gentylman | |||
| What thynge it is / fayne wolde I that I knewe | |||
| 2555 | Certes sayth he / my faythfull frende and true | ||
| Hath shewed me / that suche one maynteneth yow | |||
| And other thynges he hath sayd ynow | |||
| Then she begynneth for to crosse and blis | |||
| And many meruayles maketh she of this | |||
| 2560 | Demurely she begynneth for to smyle | ||
| My loue she sayth / m[a]ke no wors chere a_whyle | |||
| Of all my synnes / as quyte I wolde I were | |||
| And eke towarde almyghty god as clere | |||
| As I of hym am / and she therwithall | |||
| 2565 | Her handes lyfteth / and letteth them fall | ||
| Upon her heed / and sayth myn owne herte dere | |||
| By this all-onely wyll I not now swere | |||
| But to the deuyll gyue I all at ones | |||
| Under my handes / all-be-it flesshe and bones | |||
| 2570 | If euer mannes mouthe yet touched myne | ||
| Except your mouthe / your kynnesmen and cosyne | |||
| And neuer but at your commaundement | |||
| The whiche ye knowe was but in good entent | |||
| Fy / fy sayth she / what maner is it | |||
| 2575 | I am ryght gladde that ye do me to wit | ||
| I doubted it had ben some other thynge | |||
| sig: [H4v] | |||
| But now I knowe from whens cometh this lesynge | |||
| And all these wordes vnto you shewed of_newe | |||
| But for what cause wolde god that ye knewe | |||
| 2580 | He hathe it sayd to you for by my fayth | ||
| Ryght sore abass[h]ed wolde ye be she sayth abasshed] abassed 1509 | |||
| For so moche as he maketh hym your good frende | |||
| But I ryght well am eased in my mynde | |||
| For he awaked hathe / the slepynge catte | |||
| 2585 | My loue sayth he now tell me what is that | ||
| Syr care ye not therof she sayth but lyte | |||
| An-other tyme I shall do you to wyte | |||
| Truely sayth he I wyll knowe it anone | |||
| By god my loue ye be an hasty mon hasty] hastly 1509 | |||
| 2590 | She sayth I was ryght wrothe be_cause that ye | ||
| Made hym to come so ofte for to be | |||
| Within youre hous / but I forb[o]re to saye forbore] forbere 1509 | |||
| Be_cause that ye loued hym so well alwaye | |||
| Tell me sayth he / certes my loue as now | |||
| 2595 | She sayth no nede it is to tell it you | ||
| I praye you she[we] it me so as it is shewe] she 1509 | |||
| He sayth. And she thenne swetely dothe hym kysse | |||
| And clyp saynge my dere loue and myn lorde | |||
| Ha that false traytour whiche make wolde dyscorde | |||
| 2600 | Bytwexte vs tweyne / and do you euyll or gryfe | ||
| God gyue hym veray vengeaunce and myschyefe | |||
| Tell me my loue sayth he / what maner wyght | |||
| He is that thus wolde do / and what he hyght | |||
| Now in good fayth my lorde whome I loue beste | |||
| 2605 | Aboue all thynges that in this worlde do reste | ||
| That false traytour and that sclaunderour | |||
| Hathe prayed me to be his paramoure | |||
| The whiche ye trust and louen so entyer | |||
| This hathe he ben aboute more thenne two yere | |||
| 2610 | But I alwayes haue hym full well refused | ||
| sig: I1 | |||
| With grete payne / and maners that I vsed | |||
| And whan he came in-to your hous ye thought | |||
| It for your loue had ben / but it was nought your] your your 1509 | |||
| For with his false flatterynge wordes gay | |||
| 2615 | He came for no cause / but you to betray | ||
| Ne neuer ceased he tyll tyme that I | |||
| Say[d th]at I wolde tell you it certaynly Sayd that] Sayhd tat 1509 | |||
| Nothynge herof to me was charge ne cure | |||
| For of my-selfe alway was I so sure | |||
| 2620 | And though I suche vnthryfty maners hate | ||
| Yet wolde I not make noyse wrathe ne debate | |||
| Betwene you thus and hym / me-thought no nede | |||
| It was / bycause I kepte hym from the dede | |||
| Alas there was no faute in hym truely | |||
| 2625 | For to haue done you shame and velony | ||
| A saynt Mary sayth the good-man tho | |||
| He is a traytoure that I trusted so | |||
| For neuer had I of hym ony doute | |||
| By god she sayth / yf he come in and oute | |||
| 2630 | And that I knowe that he dooth with you speke | ||
| Or dele then vp / our housholde may we breke | |||
| For after that I shall none with you holde | |||
| If ye so do / for syluer ne for golde | |||
| She sayth / in fayth ye nede not me to garde | |||
| 2635 | I am suffycyent myselfe to warde | ||
| If it please god / I wyll not now begyn | |||
| Agaynst his lawes to do / or vse a synne | |||
| With handes Ioyned / to god almyght I pray | |||
| That fyre frome heuen aboue descende may | |||
| 2640 | And brenne my body all to nought and spyl | ||
| Well rather than I sholde be in suche wyll | |||
| Then she clepeth hym in her armes twaye | |||
| And sayth my lorde / herken what I saye | |||
| sig: [I1v] | |||
| Ouer-false I were / yf I sholde euyll do | |||
| 2645 | To you that be so fayre and good therto | ||
| For what I wyll / my loue ye wyll the same | |||
| But yf I loued you well I were to blame | |||
| I wyll that ye so god me saue and mende | |||
| Your hous frome hym forbede wolde and defende | |||
| 2650 | With whome your frende / me falsely hath accused | ||
| And you deceyued thus / and sore abused | |||
| How-be-it frely do I gyue or sell | |||
| My soule vnto the foulest fende of hell | |||
| If euer he to me spake lesse or more | |||
| 2655 | But notwithstandynge yet by cryst therfore | ||
| I wyll not that he come in place where I | |||
| Shall happen for to be in company | |||
| Than she to wepe began ryght tenderly | |||
| And this good-man appeased her spedely | |||
| 2660 | Promysynge her with othes grete that he | ||
| Wolde kepe and holde all thynges whiche that she | |||
| Afore had sayd / excepte he nolde defende | |||
| This felawe frome his house / and there an ende | |||
| All-be-it in his herte with some remors | |||
| 2665 | He shall be charged sore / but yet no force | ||
| For so it happeth in conclusyon | |||
| That suche dyspleasure and deuysyon | |||
| Betwene hym and his frende herof dooth fall | |||
| That he the gretest ennemy of all | |||
| 2670 | To hym shall be / the whiche for loue hym tolde | ||
| Hath all the trouthe / whome he beleue ne wolde | |||
| So this good-man a veray beest is made | |||
| Suche Ioyes of the husholde he hath had | |||
| And in the lepe he is yclosed depe | |||
| 2675 | Out of the whiche he shall not lyghtly crepe | ||
| And this good-wyfe moche better in her guyse | |||
| sig: [I2] | |||
| Shall do / then euer she dyde or coude deuyse | |||
| And neuer man of her shall tell hym thynge | |||
| For he wyll not beleue suche rekenynge | |||
| 2680 | And he the whiche this velony hath done | ||
| The best beloued frende shall be then sone | |||
| That he shall haue / and thus aege hym vpon | |||
| Shortely dooth fall / and pouerte anone | |||
| Wherwith perchaunce so sore he may be greued | |||
| 2685 | That neuer after shall he be releued | ||
| Suche is the pleasure / whiche this man hath founde | |||
| Within the lepe / and yet folkes on the grounde | |||
| Wyll speke to hym after theyr fantasy | |||
| One sayth of hym / thus as he passeth by | |||
| 2690 | He is good Iohan / an-other maketh a shewe | ||
| With his fynger / an-other vnthryfty shrewe | |||
| Sayth that it is grete domage for to se | |||
| This sely man in suche perplexyte | |||
| An-other sayth / no force of hym in fay | |||
| 2695 | It is nothynge but good ryght of the play play ='sexual activity'? | ||
| So lyueth he / with payne in pacyence | |||
| And all these sorowes dooth hym none offence | |||
| The whiche for Ioyes alwaye taketh he | |||
| Bycause he wyll that it none other be | |||
| 2700 | So shall he euermore dwell in dystres | ||
| And ende his dayes in payne and wretchednes | |||
|
¶Here endeth the seuenth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the eyght Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| sig: [I2v] | |||
| UNto the .viii. Ioye syth I must go | |||
| Of maryage / knowe ye that it is so | |||
| As whan a man suche meane hath founde and skyft skyft ='artifice'; see OED s.v. skift n1 | |||
| 2705 | Thus he vnware in-to the lepe is l[y]ft lyft] left 1509 | ||
| Wherin he hath had grete felycyte | |||
| Takynge his pleasures / yeres two or thre | |||
| And hath so besy ben to repe and sowe | |||
| That well the hote heruest is ouerblowe | |||
| 2710 | Then other mennes werke wyll he assay | ||
| No man at base ne barres may sporte alway base ne barres ='the game of "prisoner's base" or "chevy"'; see OED s.vv. base n2 ; prisoner's bars, base; bar n1, 17 | |||
| And peraduenture he hath had greuaunce | |||
| Ynough of trouble / and of dyspleasaunce | |||
| Wherof enfebled gretely than is he | |||
| sig: I3 | |||
| 2715 | So that regarde taketh he none to fle | ||
| Perchaunce his wyfe / hath chyldren thre or mo | |||
| And grete with chylde agayne she gooth also | |||
| But she more seke is or this chylde be borne | |||
| Than she of all these other was beforne | |||
| 2720 | Wherfore the good-man is in thought and drede | ||
| To gete her suche thynge as she must haue nede | |||
| But this good-man / dooth his auowes make | |||
| To dyuers holy sayntes for her sake | |||
| And also she auoweth in that houre | |||
| 2725 | Unto our blessyd lady of Rochemadoure | ||
| So happeth it / as god wyll after this | |||
| And saynt Mary that she delyuered is | |||
| Of suche a fayre chylde and goodly thynge | |||
| As myght be well the sone vnto a kynge | |||
| 2730 | She lyeth longe in bed / now in this wyse | ||
| The gossyppes to her come / as is the guyse | |||
| And maketh [a riote / and mery syttynge] vp a riote / and mery syttynge] arete / andtt mery syynge 1509 | |||
| Where besely gooth rounde about the cup | |||
| And so it falleth she hath two or thre | |||
| 2735 | Gossyppes / the whiche abyde with her / and be | ||
| Within the house to rule merely | |||
| With her / and gossyp in her company | |||
| And so shall peraduenture be that they | |||
| May talke of tryf[f]les / whiche I wyll not say tryffles] tryftles 1509 | |||
| 2740 | And more goodes spende they in suche wyse | ||
| Then for to fynde the housholde wolde suffyse | |||
| The newe tyme approcheth her / and she | |||
| Is puryfyed with solempnyte | |||
| Unto the feldes then / to roue and playe | |||
| 2745 | She and her gossyppes take the ryde-waye ryde-waye ='bridle-path' | ||
| Where-as they speke to go on pylgrymage | |||
| And fast they entrepryse for theyr vyage | |||
| sig: [I3v] | |||
| For what thynge so the husbande hath to do | |||
| They care nothynge / ne haue regarde therto | |||
| 2750 | Then this good-wyfe of whome we speke of now | ||
| Sayth to her gossyppes I wote neuer how | |||
| I may haue lycence to performe this dede | |||
| And they her answere saynge haue no drede | |||
| Good gentyll gossyp / for we haue no doubte | |||
| 2755 | But ye shall brynge your purpose well aboute | ||
| And we shall go and vs dysporte togyder | |||
| Whan god w[y]ll [s]ende tyme and merye weder wyll] well 1509[s]ende: letter broken | |||
| Now haue they entreprysed as I saye | |||
| This forsayd vyage and departe awaye | |||
| 2760 | One frome an-other a myle two or more | ||
| And thenne this wyfe of whome we spake afore | |||
| Cometh to her hous. And whan she draweth nere | |||
| Unto her housbande she maketh euyll chere | |||
| And he is lately comen frome the towne | |||
| 2765 | Or elles frome other werkes and setteth downe | ||
| And her demaundeth how it with her is | |||
| Ha syr sayth she I am ryght wrothe ywys | |||
| Our lytell chylde is euyll at ease and seke | |||
| Wherof the good-man is as angrye eke | |||
| 2770 | And sorowfull and cometh it to see | ||
| Whan he it seeth / the teres falle in his eye | |||
| For pure pytye / and thenne cometh nyght vpon | |||
| And whan they be in secrete place allone | |||
| The wyfe begynneth for to sygh and saye | |||
| 2775 | Truely my loue ye me forgete alwaye | ||
| And how sayth he thynke ye not on sayth she | |||
| Whan that I was in grete infyrmyte | |||
| Of our yonge chylde / and that I made auowe | |||
| Unto our lady of rochemadoure / and nowe | |||
| 2780 | Therof it semeth ye take lytell hede | ||
| sig: [I4] | |||
| O god he sayth / my loue ye knowe what nede | |||
| Ther is / and how moche that I haue to do | |||
| Good syr she sayth. I put case it be so | |||
| Yet neuer shall I be at ease ne gladde | |||
| 2785 | By god tyll I this pylgrymage haue made | ||
| And by my fayth because we do not seke | |||
| These sayntes therfore is oure chylde so seke | |||
| My loue sayth he god knoweth well your good-wyll | |||
| And myn also. Ha syr she sayth be styll | |||
| 2790 | For certaynly yf it please god and you | ||
| I wyll accordynge vnto myn auowe | |||
| Go with my cosyns and my gossyppes als | |||
| Unto our lady I wyll not be fals | |||
| Then this good-man the mater myndeth sore | |||
| 2795 | And peraduenture hath not all in store | ||
| That to this vyage sholde be requysyte | |||
| Accordynge to his wyfes appetyte | |||
| Now is he brought to suche encombraunce | |||
| That nedely must he make a cheuysaunce must he] must he must he 1509 | |||
| 2800 | Of horses / and perchaunce for them shall paye | ||
| A certayne hyre to trauayle by the waye | |||
| After suche porte / estate or elles degre | |||
| As he is / and it behoueth that she | |||
| A newe gowne haue to ryde in honestly | |||
| 2805 | And peraduenture in that company | ||
| A gentyll galaunt is the whiche shall do | |||
| With ryght good-wyll some seruyce her vnto | |||
| Also this good-man percase with her gothe | |||
| On pylgrymage all be he neuer so wrothe | |||
| 2810 | Yf he so do / moche better were that tyde | ||
| For hym at home to tary or abyde | |||
| Alway so sore she wyll hym ch[y]de or chekke ch[y]de: letter illegible | |||
| That he shall bere the stones vpon his nekke | |||
| sig: [I4v] | |||
| And neuer can she be content ne fayne | |||
| 2815 | But whan that he hath hurte myschefe or payne | ||
| Now in that Iourney / as she sytteth softe | |||
| Upon the horse she her complayneth ofte | |||
| Anone she sayth / one styrope is to longe | |||
| An-other is to shorte and lacketh a thonge | |||
| 2820 | Also she sayth / her horse dooth trotte to sore | ||
| And eke to harde / and she is seke therfore | |||
| Then frome her horse she must alyght anone | |||
| And she agayne shall sette be hym vpon | |||
| This good-man then / for he shall not be ydle | |||
| 2825 | Ouer suche a brydge / must lede her by the brydle | ||
| Or elles a peryllous path / or a narowe way | |||
| And whan they come be frome this Iourney | |||
| If he therby haue had wele or dysporte | |||
| That it of her longe / she wyll reporte | |||
| 2830 | And yf that ony losse / or euyll fall | ||
| She chydeth and sayth / on hym it is longe all | |||
| So thus and otherwyse his goodes waste | |||
| His housholde eke / and his expence in haste | |||
| Then mynysshed be / and she sayth hym beforne | |||
| 2835 | How by his chyldren whiche that she hath borne | ||
| She gretly wasted is / and this man so | |||
| Yclosed is within the lepe also | |||
| In sorowes grete / and paynes sharpe and sore | |||
| And taketh them for Ioyes euermore | |||
| 2840 | In whiche alway he shall be and remayne | ||
| And wretchedly his dayes ende in payne | |||
|
¶Here endeth the eyght Ioye of maryage |
|||
| sig: [I5] | |||
|
¶Here begynneth the nynth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| THe nynthe Ioye of maryage is when | |||
| One of these yonge lusty and fresshe men | |||
| Is put in-to the pryson or the lepe | |||
| 2845 | Of husbandry and can not go ne lepe | ||
| Out of the same / and grete pleasure hath hadde | |||
| Whiche newely hath be founde in dayes gladde | |||
| And peraduenture euyll is his wyfe | |||
| As many be / wherby aryseth stryfe | |||
| 2850 | And he a man is of good gouernaunce | ||
| The whiche none euyll suffre wyll perchaunce | |||
| How-be-it dyuers argumentes haue bene | |||
| And otherwhyles strokes them betwene | |||
| So in suche warre / well thyrty [yeres] or more yeres] 1509 omits | |||
| 2855 | They haue contynued / and ye may knowe therfore | ||
| sig: [I5v] | |||
| He hath had moche to suffre and sustayne | |||
| For so may be that he hath had certayne | |||
| Grete parte of sorowes / and aduersytees | |||
| The whiche afore be sayd / in theyr degrees | |||
| 2860 | And many other suche as ben conteyned | ||
| Here-after in this lytell boke vnfayned | |||
| But neuerthelesse / he dooth remayne alway | |||
| Uyctoryous / what-euer she do or say | |||
| And hath not ben in shame and velony | |||
| 2865 | Though moche to suffre he hath had therby | ||
| And for to thynke vpon bycause that he | |||
| Perchau[n]ce hath doughters fayre / wel two or thre Perchaunce] Perchauce 1509 | |||
| Whiche wysely he hath maryed here and there | |||
| To put them out of Ieoperdy and fere | |||
| 2870 | So happeth it that in a lytell space | ||
| Suche fortune hath this sely man and grace | |||
| That for the euyll nyghtes and the dayes | |||
| And colde whiche he hath taken many wayes | |||
| A cheuysaunce to make / this man dooth fall | |||
| 2875 | In sekenes of the goute / then forth-withall | ||
| Or elles for aege / he is vnweldy so | |||
| That he can neyther vp-aryse ne go | |||
| And whan that he is set in suche a place | |||
| As he shall in remayne his lyfes space | |||
| 2880 | In euyll maner tourned is the chaunce | ||
| For than the warre is ended and dystaunce dystaunce ='discord, dissension'; see OED s.v. distance n, 1 | |||
| And wors it is for dyuers tymes a daye | |||
| Of veray hate she wyll vnto hym saye | |||
| She is ryght well assured in certayne | |||
| 2885 | How for his synnes / he hath all that payne | ||
| And one may thynke / whan she afore hym is | |||
| Thus wyll he to her say / my loue ywys | |||
| Ye be the thynge that I owe best to loue | |||
| sig: [I6] | |||
| Of all the worlde / excepte our lorde aboue | |||
| 2890 | And ye also of dutye ben ybounde | ||
| To loue me moost of all that lyue on grounde | |||
| But wyte ye well / my loue that it is so | |||
| Some thynges be / that folkes vnto me do do] dos 1509 | |||
| Wherwith I am not well contente sayth he | |||
| 2895 | Ye knowe of ryght I am and so shall be | ||
| The lorde and mayster of this house whyles I | |||
| May lyue / but yet folkes do not lyke truely | |||
| To me / for yf that I a poore-man were | |||
| Whiche sholde go fetche his brede bothe ferre and nere | |||
| 2900 | Men wolde not do to me as is done now | ||
| And ye my loue may vnderstanden how | |||
| That I haue done grete payne and dylygence | |||
| To make a cheuysaunce for our expence | |||
| Your doynges to sustayne / and your estate | |||
| 2905 | And all our chyldren whiche to me of late | ||
| Behaue them-selfe full symply as ye se | |||
| Ha what wolde ye that one sholde do sayth she | |||
| To you is doone the best we can or may | |||
| And ye wote not what we demaunde or say | |||
| 2910 | Now sayth this man / holde your peas good dame | ||
| And kepe your tonge in rest for worldly shame | |||
| The sone also to hym dooth speke and rayle | |||
| So what this good-man sayth may not auayle | |||
| And thus she and the sone departe hym fro | |||
| 2915 | His herytage emperynge euermo | ||
| And for the good-man / no prouysyon | |||
| Is made / and thus they in conclusyon | |||
| Agre and make accorde bytwene them bothe | |||
| That neuer creature / whiche cometh or gothe | |||
| 2920 | Shall with hym speke / and then the sone anon | ||
| The gouernaunce presume wyll hym vpon | |||
| sig: [I6v] | |||
| And take the rule more than he dyde afore | |||
| And well content his moder is therfore | |||
| For she so dooth supporte hym and may[n]tene mayntene] maytene 1509 | |||
| 2925 | Also they make well euery man to wene | ||
| That he is fall in-to a frenesy | |||
| Or is retorned to his Infancy | |||
| Thus vnto euery wyght sayth she and he | |||
| And this good-man must take it all in gre | |||
| 2930 | For other remedy none may be hadde | ||
| Amonge them so harde he is bestadde | |||
| And as to me I well beleue certayne | |||
| This is one of the gretest erthely payne | |||
| And sorowe / that on the grounde a man may fele | |||
| 2935 | Thus this good-man his penaunce dooth ryght wele | ||
| And so shall be in mornynge euermore | |||
| Endynge his dayes wretchedly and sore | |||
| Cursynge the tyme that in the lepe he came | |||
| To be enclosed / and in this wyse made tame | |||
|
¶Here endeth the nynth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here beg[y]nneth begynneth] begnneth 1509 the tenth Ioye of maryage.
|
|||
| sig: [I7] | |||
| 2940 | THe tenthe Ioye of maryage to wyte | ||
| Is as I fynde it in a boke ywryte | |||
| Whan that he whiche in-to the lepe is brought | |||
| Bycause that he hath sene so as he thought | |||
| Other fysshes them baynynge in the same baynynge ='bathing'; see OED s.v. bain v | |||
| 2945 | Whiche to his demynge / had a mery game | ||
| And so he trauayled hath tyll tyme he | |||
| In-to the lepe hath founde the ryght entre | |||
| And one may say that he by subtylte | |||
| Made was to come / in-to that gynne and be | |||
| 2950 | Of maryage / lyke as a fouler olde | ||
| These byrdes taketh in the wynter colde | |||
| With other byrdes whiche he afore hath had | |||
| sig: [I7v] | |||
| And for that feate hathe them well taught and made / | |||
| And bereth them about vpon his backe | |||
| 2955 | Within his panyer or elles a sacke | ||
| Whiche with a threde be teyed by the fote | |||
| For to remayne there is none other bote | |||
| Moche eased were these poore byrdes yf they | |||
| Myght be at lyberte and fle away | |||
| 2960 | As other do frome a ryuer or a dyke | ||
| Unto an-other where they myght fede / and pyke | |||
| Of euery maner vytayle / for them mete | |||
| Whan other se these byrdes by the fete | |||
| Yteyed fast / they haste vnto the gynne | |||
| 2965 | And sodaynly they be taken therin | ||
| But yf it be some wyle byrdes that haue | |||
| Experyence them to preserue and saue | |||
| Frome suche daungere / and wysely can beware | |||
| Surely to kepe them frome the nette or snare | |||
| 2970 | For they in tyme afore haue herde and sene | ||
| Of other byrdes whiche in that case haue bene | |||
| This notwithstandynge they that w[e]dded are wedded] wydded 1509 | |||
| Of whiche we shewe the passe-tyme and declare | |||
| Haue them aduysed of this crafte / and they | |||
| 2975 | But lytell euyll thought in it alway | ||
| Or elles percase without aduyse in haste | |||
| In-to the gynne one hath his body caste | |||
| Where-as in Ioyes demed he to tary | |||
| Neuerthelesse / he fyndeth the contrary | |||
| 2980 | And otherwhyles it may fortune so | ||
| That for suche thynges as shewed are them to | |||
| By totelers or flatterers that vse totelers ='whisperers, gossips'; see OED s.v. tuteler n | |||
| To cause d[i]scorde / and falsely folke acc[u]se discorde] descorde 1509 | |||
| The wyfe shall neuer-more for erthely thynge | |||
| 2985 | Her husbande loue / vnto her last endynge | ||
| sig: [I8] | |||
| Then wyll she saye vnto her moder thus | |||
| Or to [her] cosyn / by our lorde Ihesus her] our 1509 | |||
| Whan I with hym in bedde am layde adoune | |||
| His flesshe it stynketh lyke a caryoune | |||
| 2990 | And he to her shall neuer pl[ea]sure do pleasure] plaesure 1509 | ||
| Ne loue / but euer lyue in malyce so | |||
| And ofte it happeth / many men that he | |||
| In suche estate / of hyghe and lowe degre | |||
| And women bothe yet wyll they not lyue chaste | |||
| 2995 | But ease them-selfe by other meanes in haste | ||
| And whan that she a whyle hath ben away | |||
| With her good loue / for to dysporte and play | |||
| And largely hath her parte had of the game | |||
| Then her to kepe frome velony and shame | |||
| 3000 | Some of her frendes good / wyll she entrete | ||
| Peace with her moder shortely for to gete | |||
| The whiche by coloure / and craftely can saye | |||
| That she within her house hath ben alwaye | |||
| The poore doughter pryuely is gone | |||
| 3005 | For she so sore her dredde / that her good-mon | ||
| Wolde her haue bet / as he hath doone or than | |||
| Wherfore vnto her moders house she ranne | |||
| And he hathe wonder where that she may be | |||
| But so it was that afterwardes he | |||
| 3010 | Within her moders house / soone dooth her fynde | ||
| To whome he speketh with an hasty mynde | |||
| What deuyll brought the hyder / and for why | |||
| Departed thou frome home so sodaynly | |||
| Syr by our lorde she sayth / for drede that ye | |||
| 3015 | Withouten cause / sore wolde haue stryken me | ||
| Then sayth the moder / certes me were leuer | |||
| That ye sone / and my doughter sholde dysseu[er] dysseuer] dysseu 1509 | |||
| And that ye leue her here with me to kepe | |||
| sig: [I8v] | |||
| Then for to bete her alway tyll she wepe | |||
| 3020 | For I knowe well / my doughter hath not done | ||
| Defaute to you / but ye be angry sone | |||
| Beholde this mater / loke theron and se | |||
| If she of euyll gouernaunce had be | |||
| She had be lost / but ye may se here | |||
| 3025 | Frome shame and mysrule for to kepe her clere | ||
| Streyght vnto me she came / for she ne had | |||
| None other helpe / wherof ye may be glad | |||
| And she by ryght / her may repente and rewe | |||
| That she to you / hath ben so kynde and trwe trwe: =true | |||
| 3030 | And it may fortune otherwhyles that they | ||
| Demaunde to be departed by some wey | |||
| Wherfore the husbande dooth accuse the wyfe | |||
| And she agayne / as sharpe as swerde or knyfe | |||
| Unto the husbande quyckely dooth the same | |||
| 3035 | Ye may be sure / her tonge shall not be lame | ||
| So are they in the lepe / and wolde be out | |||
| But so it may not be withouten doute | |||
| It is no tyme them to repente / for-why | |||
| Then is none other way ne remedy | |||
| 3040 | Afore the lawe / faste do they plede theyr cause | ||
| And by theyr aduocates shewe many a clause | |||
| But otherwhyle allegge they no cause why | |||
| They sholde haue theyr entente so hastely | |||
| Than sayth the Iuge ryght playnly in Iugement | |||
| 3045 | Unto them thus by good aduysement | ||
| The lawe it wyll that ye togyder holde | |||
| In company your lyues and housholde | |||
| And here-vnto the Iuge them dooth aduyse | |||
| But so to do / yet be they not so wyse | |||
| 3050 | For-why / suche goodes as they hadde afore | ||
| They haue mysse_vsed euyll spente and lore | |||
| sig: K1 | |||
| And yet they be not werye but endure | |||
| In theyr oppynyons stydfaste and sure While stydfaste is a possible form, the commoner spelling stedfast occurs twice in this text. | |||
| So mokke and skorne them folkes ferre and nere | |||
| 3055 | Whiche of the mater / vnderstande or here | ||
| And other-whyles / causes reasonnable | |||
| One dooth alledge / and thynges acceptable | |||
| For whiche the Iuge departeth them a_sondre | |||
| All-be-it so that folkes vpon it wondre | |||
| 3060 | Thenne one of them or other folysshely | ||
| Wyll vse them-selfe in lyuynge vycyousely | |||
| Some-tyme the woman gothe fro t[ow]ne to towne towne] twone 1509 | |||
| And in-to the mennys chambres vp and downe | |||
| Where she her pleasures taketh of the game | |||
| 3065 | And parauenture he wyll do the same | ||
| Supposynge they ben at theyr lyberte | |||
| Out of the lepe of maryage and free | |||
| But yet be they in wors cas thenne before | |||
| And thus this man hym wasteth more and more | |||
| 3070 | Of what astate so-euer that he be astate: =estate | ||
| And in the same maner / wasteth she | |||
| For neuer after maye they wedde agayne | |||
| Durynge theyr lyues by the lawes playne | |||
| Of fraunce but yet in englonde other-wyse | |||
| 3075 | They vse and haue a custome and a gyse | ||
| Whiche is an-other for to take and wedde | |||
| Man or woman / where best they can be spedde | |||
| Men thynke in fraunce / suche shamed be for euer | |||
| As in that wyse contynue and perse[uer] perseuer] perserue 1509 | |||
| 3080 | And namely yf they be of hyghe parentage | ||
| Borne or descended / fro a good lynage | |||
| For parauenture a galaunt openly | |||
| Within his hous shall kepe her shame_fully | |||
| So shall he be within the lepe adowne | |||
| sig: [K1v] | |||
| 3085 | In sorowe care and l[a]mentacyon lamentacyon] lementacyon 1509 | ||
| Where he alwaye in paynes and dystresse | |||
| Shall lyue and ende his dayes in wretchednesse | |||
|
¶Here endeth the .x. Ioye of maryage |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the .xi. Ioye of maryage |
|||
| THe .xi. Ioye of maryage to saye | |||
| Is whan a yonge lusty man and gaye | |||
| 3090 | A gentyll ioly galaunt wyll go oute | ||
| For his dysporte / the countrees hym aboute | |||
| Into ryght many places all the yere | |||
| And in especyall he wyll go where | |||
| sig: [K2] | |||
| These ladyes and the gentylwomen be | |||
| 3095 | After th'estate condycyon or degree | ||
| That he is of / and for that he is yonge | |||
| And amerous / he preceth them amonge preceth: =presses | |||
| No charge hathe he of ony other thynge | |||
| So that he may contynue his lyuynge | |||
| 3100 | In pleasures whiche by nyghtes and by dayes | ||
| Ryght many profres maketh and assayes | |||
| And yf it fortune so that he may fynde | |||
| A lady or a gentylwoman kynde | |||
| With whome he hathe some-thynge to do or say | |||
| 3105 | His mynde and wyll applyeth he alway | ||
| And dothe his best / her for to please and serue | |||
| To that entente he may her grace deserue | |||
| And somtyme cometh he in suche place | |||
| Where-as a mayde he fyndeth fayre of face | |||
| 3110 | And parauenture not so grete is he | ||
| Of lygnage / ne of noble as is she | |||
| And for that she so goodly is and fayre | |||
| These supplyauntes somtyme to her repayre | |||
| And them amonge one is that dothe entrete | |||
| 3115 | Her for to haue / and profereth gyftes grete | ||
| Whome she but lyte refuseth or denyeth | |||
| For euery gentylwoman her applyeth | |||
| The whiche debonayre is and hathe pyte | |||
| Compassyon to haue in that degree | |||
| 3120 | On suche as them / humbly beseche and praye | ||
| In goodly wyse / they ought not to denaye | |||
| Yf theyr petycyon be resonnable | |||
| Withouten vylonye / a[nd hon]ourable a[nd hon]ourable: letters illegible | |||
| Torne we agayne to this fayre damoysell | |||
| 3125 | That of her maners somwhat I may tell | ||
| Of her conceytes and dysposycyon | |||
| sig: [K2v] | |||
| Whiche by constraynt or elles oppressyone | |||
| Of suche a poore felowe is forlayne forlayne ='deprived of (her) chastity'; see OED s.v. forlain ppl. a, 1 | |||
| And neuer shall she fynde ne gete agayne | |||
| 3130 | That she hathe lost / for where she was a mayde | ||
| So hathe this homely felowe her betrayde homely ='familiar, intimate'; see OED s.v. homely adj., 2 | |||
| That she is grete with chylde / the whiche her dame | |||
| Perceyueth wele / for she knoweth of the gam[e] gam[e]: letter illegible | |||
| And in that crafte she wylye is and f[a]lse false] felse 1509 | |||
| 3135 | For so it fortune may / that she hathe alse | ||
| Somtyme ben / in lyke condycyon | |||
| The better can she fynde prouysyon | |||
| And neuer shall this felowe touche her more | |||
| Nor come to her as he was wonte before | |||
| 3140 | The wyfe this mater wyll / so rule and gyde | ||
| This counseyll kepynge closse on euery syde closse: =close | |||
| All thynges muste be taken as they be | |||
| Of reason / wysedome / and necessyte | |||
| This poore damoseyll with chylde / is grete | |||
| 3145 | Which of conceyuynge / hathe the tyme foryete | ||
| For of herselfe knoweth she but lyte | |||
| How she was brought in-to suche case and plyte | |||
| And she nothynge knoweth of that arte nothynge] nothynges 1509 | |||
| Ne what it is she toke so lytell parte | |||
| 3150 | But yf it please our lorde god she shall knowe | ||
| How sedes groweth after they be sowe | |||
| The moder auyseth wele and seeth her hewe | |||
| Whiche knoweth the olde testament and newe | |||
| And calleth her in-to a secrete place | |||
| 3155 | She sayth come hyder with an euyll grace | ||
| Haue I not sayd to the afore this houre | |||
| That thou hast lost thy worshyp and honoure | |||
| To do as thou hast done thus folyly | |||
| But whan a thynge is done what remedye | |||
| sig: [K3] | |||
| 3160 | That thou arte grete with chylde I knowe it wele / | ||
| Tell me the trouthe and drede the neuer-a_dele | |||
| Now fayre moder I wote not as ye saye | |||
| To tell you trouthe wheder it be so or naye | |||
| Then sayth the moder / it semeth me alwaye | |||
| 3165 | Whan that the morowe cometh euery daye | ||
| I here the coughe / and pytously forbrake forbrake ='retch, vomit'? See OED s.v. brake v6, 'to spue, vomit' | |||
| And dyuers other countenaunces make | |||
| Now truely so it is she sayth madame | |||
| Ha sayth her moder holde thy pease for shame | |||
| 3170 | Thou arte with chylde / tell it not all aboute | ||
| Ne to none erthely persone breke it out | |||
| And alwaye take a good respecte and hede | |||
| To do as I the shall commaunde and bede | |||
| Madame so shall I do in euery-thynge | |||
| 3175 | And lowely you obeye / and your byddynge | ||
| The moder then sayth to her doughter tho | |||
| Hast thou not sene so often come and go | |||
| In-to our hous suche a yonge squyer ofte | |||
| And she sayth yes madame with wordes softe | |||
| 3180 | Now then aduyse the wele for in certayne | ||
| To_morowe heder wyll he come agayne | |||
| Then take good hede that thou make hym good chere | |||
| In godly wyse and in thy best manere | |||
| And whan that other gentylmen and me | |||
| 3185 | Thou seest togyder talke / then cast an eye | ||
| On hym alwaye / and this good moder so | |||
| Her doughter techeth wele how she shall do | |||
| Also I the commaunde and charge yf he | |||
| Of ony maner thynges speke to the | |||
| 3190 | Herken hym wele / and answere curteysly | ||
| And swetely rule thy speche and manerly | |||
| And yf he speke of loue / or thynges lyke | |||
| sig: [K3v] | |||
| Thenne otherwhyles softely gyue a syke | |||
| And thanke hym hertyly / but say ywys | |||
| 3195 | Thou knowest not yet / what maner thynge loue is | ||
| Ne it to lerne / thou wylte not the apply | |||
| Rule and demeane the well and womanly | |||
| And golde or syluer yf he proffre the | |||
| Thenne take it not in hast / but herken me | |||
| 3200 | Yf he the proffre Iuell crosse or rynge | ||
| Gyrdell bracelet owche or other thynge | |||
| Refuse it gracyouesely / but at the last | |||
| Yf he it often offre the and fast | |||
| Receyue it thenne / in goodly wyse and take | |||
| 3205 | For loue of hym / saynge that for his sake | ||
| Thou wyll it kepe / thy[n]kynge no vyllonye thynkynge] thykynge 1509 | |||
| Shame ne deceyte / that shall ensue therby ensue] ensuye 1509 | |||
| And whan he taketh leue of the to go | |||
| Thenne hym demaunde or he departe the fro | |||
| 3210 | Yf one shall see hym hastyly agayne | ||
| Wherof say that / thou wolde be glad and fayne | |||
| H[e]re is this galaunt come whiche shall be cast Here] Htre 1509 | |||
| Ynto the lepe / and therin holden fast | |||
| For-why the dame wyll cause hym for to wedde | |||
| 3215 | Her doughter sone / and with her do to bedde | ||
| Yf that she can by ony caste or wyle caste] carste 1509 | |||
| This galaunt she porposeth to be_gyle | |||
| For he moche hathe / of herytage and rent | |||
| And is / but symple and an Innocent | |||
| 3220 | Now cometh he this damoysell to see | ||
| In hast for ouer-wele at ease is he | |||
| Ryght many galauntes bent haue theyr engyn[e] engyn[e]: letter illegible | |||
| To take this damoysell / and vndermyne vndermyne ='persuade or win over by subtle means'; see OED s.v. undermine v, 5 | |||
| The lady taketh a squyer by the hande | |||
| 3225 | Or elles a knyght and other sytte or stande | ||
| sig: [K4] | |||
| Whiche Ioyeously togyder talke and rayle | |||
| This galaunt eke draweth to the damoysayle | |||
| And by the hande he dothe her take and holde | |||
| Sayenge fayre damoysell good god it wolde | |||
| 3230 | That ye my thought wele knewe and vnderstode | ||
| And how may I she sayth for any gode | |||
| Knowe it / but yf ye wyll it to me saye | |||
| What do ye thynke suche thynges as ye ne may | |||
| Telle me / nay by my fayth I wolde that ye | |||
| 3235 | Knewe it so that It were not sayd by me | ||
| Truely she sayth and laugheth pratyly | |||
| Ye telle a thynge to me / so meruaylousely | |||
| Whiche to be done it is as / in_possyble | |||
| As for to cause an horse walke in_vysyble | |||
| 3240 | Yf it had lyked you this g[a]launt sayth galaunt] glaunt 1509 | ||
| And no dyspleasyr taken in good fayth | |||
| I wolde haue playnely shewed you my thought | |||
| Now syr sayth she telle on and spare it nought | |||
| So moche of you knowe I that by the rode | |||
| 3245 | Ye wyll not say / ne shewe thynge / but all gode | ||
| Maystresse he sayth / ye knowe ryght welle that I | |||
| Am but a poore gentylman for-why | |||
| I wote I am vnworthy / and vnable | |||
| To be youre loue / or with you compaygnable | |||
| 3250 | For ye be gentyll fayre and gracyouse | ||
| And of all vertues full and beauteuouse beauteuouse: =beauteous | |||
| And yf it pleased you to do to me | |||
| Suche honour that your louer I myght be | |||
| I durst ma[k]e myn avaunt that with good-wylle make] maste 1509 | |||
| 3255 | I sholde do all the pleasyrs you vntylle | ||
| That any man / by possybylyte | |||
| May to his lady do in soueraynte | |||
| I shall you serue / and eke your honour kepe | |||
| sig: [K4v] | |||
| More thenne myn owne whether ye wake or slepe | |||
| 3260 | Graunt mercy syr thenne sayth this damoysell | ||
| But for the loue of god speke neueradell | |||
| Of suche thynges vnto me after this | |||
| For I knowe not what maner thynge loue is | |||
| Ne yet I wyll not lerne it ferthermore | |||
| 3265 | For it is not doctryne ne the lore | ||
| The whiche my moder hathe me taught alwaye | |||
| Thenne sayth this squyer damoysell in fay | |||
| My fayre lady of whome ye speke is good | |||
| But I wolde not yet that she vnderstode | |||
| 3270 | Suche thynges as be sayd be_twexte vs twaye | ||
| A syr she sayth yf you I haue herde saye | |||
| This other daye / that ye sholde maryed be | |||
| Wherof I maruayle and ye come to me | |||
| And speke suche ydell wordes / and thenne he | |||
| 3275 | Sayth damoysell O benedycyte | ||
| Now by my faythe yf that it please yowe | |||
| I shall neuer other wedde I make auowe | |||
| Whyle that I lyue / so that ye wyll me take | |||
| As for youre seruaunt and I vndertake | |||
| 3280 | That with my seruyce ye shall be contente | ||
| What wolde ye haue me deshonoured and shente | |||
| She sayth / nay yet me leuer were to dye | |||
| Sayth he / thenne for to do you vyllonye | |||
| For godes loue be styll and speke no more godes] goodes 1509 | |||
| 3285 | Herof and I shall tell you syr wherfore | ||
| Yf that / my moder it perceyue or wytte my] my / 1509 | |||
| I shall destroyed be I knowe wele it | |||
| And parauenture the moder maketh a sygne | |||
| That of her spekynge she shall cesse and fyne | |||
| 3290 | And thenne this galaunt gyueth her a rynge | ||
| Under her hande or elles some other thynge | |||
| sig: L1 | |||
| Saynge to her / fayre lady I you pray | |||
| Take this and kepe it / for my loue alway | |||
| Certes sayth she I wyll not take no | |||
| 3295 | Alas my loue he sayth / why saye ye so | ||
| I pray you hertely / and in her hande | |||
| He putteth it agayne so as they stande | |||
| And she it taketh and sayth / this I receyue | |||
| To haue your loue as you may well perceyue | |||
| 3300 | Without thought of thynge / but all honoure | ||
| I take wytenesse vnto my sauyoure | |||
| The lady of that house thus speketh then | |||
| In curteyse wyse vnto the gentyll-men | |||
| To_morowe must I go with goddes grace | |||
| 3305 | Unto a blyssed lady of suche a place | ||
| On pylgrymage to suche a toune here-by | |||
| Truely madame they say / ryght vertuously | |||
| And well ye speke / and forth-withall they go | |||
| To souper / and this galaunt euermo | |||
| 3310 | Anenst this damoysell is put or set | ||
| That he to her may talke withouten let | |||
| And she so well can make her personage | |||
| In suche a wyse / that he halfe in a rage | |||
| With loue is take of her that was so bryght | |||
| 3315 | And beauteuous as semed to his syght | ||
| The morowe cometh this company must ryde | |||
| On pylgrymage / and lenger not abyde | |||
| And all men say they can not se ne fynde | |||
| An horse amonge them all that bereth behynde | |||
| 3320 | Excepte this galauntes horse there by saynt loy | ||
| Wherof grete pleasure taketh he and Ioy | |||
| For one the damoysell behynde his backe | |||
| Dooth sette vpon his horse / and he no lacke | |||
| Fyndeth therin / and she clyppeth hym fast | |||
| sig: [L1v] | |||
| 3325 | To holde her on the horse / that he ne cast | ||
| Her doune / and god wote therwith he is eased | |||
| As an hauke whiche hathe an heron seased | |||
| Now draweth he nyghe the lepe withouten bote | |||
| They do this foresayd vyage god it wote | |||
| 3330 | With perfyte mynde / and good entencyon | ||
| And home retorne / as made is mencyon | |||
| Where merely / they set them doune to mete | |||
| With suche vytayles as they can fynde and gete | |||
| And after mete the lady fayre and well | |||
| 3335 | Gooth to her chambre / and this damoysell | ||
| To whome she sayth / whan thou spekest with this man | |||
| Say vnto hym as sadly as thou can | |||
| That there is one / whiche spoken hath to the | |||
| Of maryage but thou ne wylte accorded be | |||
| 3340 | As yet / and yf he offre the to take | ||
| Thanke hym / and say that he must meanes make | |||
| To me / and put the mater to my wyll | |||
| And that I do therin thou shalte fulfyll | |||
| On my behalfe / and say that there is none | |||
| 3345 | Lyuynge in this worlde I excepte not one | ||
| That thou louest halfe so wele in certaynte | |||
| As hym / so as may stande with honeste | |||
| And all they after walketh twayne and twayne | |||
| Togyder arme in arme to the gardeyne | |||
| 3350 | Where-as amonge the herbes / and the floures | ||
| They smell and taste the holsom swete odoures | |||
| And playenge take the floures by the stalke | |||
| Whiche to theyr nose they put so as they walk[e] walk[e]: letter illegible | |||
| One taketh a gelofer or vyolere gelofer: =gillyflower; vyolere: perhaps a nonce-form of violet | |||
| 3355 | An-other plucketh of the eglentere eglentere] englentere 1509eglentere: = eglatere, 'eglantine'; see OED s.v. eglentere n | ||
| And euery one of them as they espye | |||
| Take herbe or floure after theyr fantasye | |||
| sig: [L2] | |||
| This galaunt squyre with the doughter gothe | |||
| And telleth her euery-thynge / but she is wrothe | |||
| 3360 | Alas she sayth / speke no more so for I | ||
| Shall yf ye do / forsake your company | |||
| What wolde ye do me-semeth ye suppose | |||
| To cause me / myn honoure for to lose | |||
| Haue ye not herde of late dayes ysayde | |||
| 3365 | That one to mary me hath spoke and prayde | ||
| Now by my soule he sayth I can not blame | |||
| Hym / though to mary you / he wolde attame attame ='undertake'; see OED s.v. attame v, 4 | |||
| But I thynke that of myn habylyte | |||
| I am as good in value as is he | |||
| 3370 | And eke as able / seruyce you to do | ||
| As is the man of whome that ye speke so | |||
| Now by my fayth she sayth than with a syke | |||
| I wolde that he were to your persone lyke | |||
| Graunt mercy fayre damoysell he sayth | |||
| 3375 | For of your grete curteysy in fayth | ||
| Well more than I am worthy / ye me prayse | |||
| But ye myn honoure gretely may vp-rayse | |||
| Yf ye wolde take me as your man to grace | |||
| To do you seruyce all my lyues space | |||
| 3380 | And she sayth syr graunt mercy therwithall | ||
| This must be spoken in especyall | |||
| Unto my fader sadly and my moder | |||
| And to my kynne / and frendes dyuers oder | |||
| Than sayth he thus / yf I myght knowe that they | |||
| 3385 | Sholde be content / I wold bothe speke and prey | ||
| A syr she sayth / beware that ye ne saye | |||
| That ye to me haue spoken by ony way | |||
| For rather wolde I suffre dethe than ye | |||
| Sholde ony wordes shewe of preuyte | |||
| 3390 | That hathe be sayd in ony maner wyse | ||
| sig: [L2v] | |||
| Bytwene vs twayne / nay that is not my guyse | |||
| Sayth he / whiche to the moder speketh soone | |||
| And as god wolde in suche poynte was the moone | |||
| Whan he vnto the moder made request | |||
| 3395 | That he all his desyre had at the leest | ||
| For she and other haue them trouthes plyght | |||
| And peraduenture caused them at nyght | |||
| Togyder / for to lye in bedde and slepe | |||
| Now is this poore squyre plonged depe | |||
| 3400 | Within the lepe / and spedely they make | ||
| The weddynge / for this gentylwomans sake | |||
| And hastely they do this mater spede | |||
| Bycause her frendes haue grete doute and drede | |||
| Leste ony let may come in this matere | |||
| 3405 | For in the wynde the weder was clere | ||
| The nyght is come after they be wedde | |||
| This damoysell with man must go to bedde | |||
| And knowe ye wele / the olde wyle dame | |||
| Wyll teche her doughter / somwhat of the game | |||
| 3410 | How she ryght maydenly shall her demeane | ||
| As though she were an holy vyrgyn cleane | |||
| Myn auctour sayth her moder dooth her teche | |||
| That whan her husbande wyll vnto her reche | |||
| She shall for drede tremble / quake and crye | |||
| 3415 | And hym withstande / and how that she shall lye | ||
| In many maner wyse as sholde a mayde | |||
| Upon the nyght whan she fyrst is assayde | |||
| Also the moder dooth her well enfourme | |||
| How she shall her demeane / and in what fourme | |||
| 3420 | Whan that this galaunt her wolde enforce or stryke | ||
| Also sodaynly than shall she sterte and syke | |||
| As though she w[e]re cast in colde water depe were] wrre 1509 | |||
| Up to the brestes / also she shall wepe | |||
| sig: L3 | |||
| But in conclusyon as to the dede | |||
| 3425 | She playneth metely wele whan she must nede | ||
| And yet the fader and the moder bothe | |||
| For loue and pyte angry be and wrothe | |||
| Whiche that they haue vpon theyr doughter yonge | |||
| Supposynge that this man hath doone her wronge | |||
| 3430 | And causes them in presence to be brought | ||
| Now hath this squyre founde that he hath sought | |||
| Here may ye se one of the gretest payne | |||
| For she whiche with a ladde hath ben forlayne | |||
| Or monethes thre may passe and come aboute | |||
| 3435 | Shall haue a baby lapped in a cloute | ||
| Of tymes a_go then Ioyes and pleasaunce | |||
| To heuynes be tourned and penaunce | |||
| And peraduenture he shall her after bete | |||
| And manace curse and chyde with wordes grete | |||
| 3440 | And neuer after shall good housholde kepe | ||
| So in the lepe he put is for to stepe | |||
| And out therof he neuer shall departe | |||
| Of sorowe and heuynes he shall haue parte | |||
| And euer-more abyde shall in dystres | |||
| 3445 | Endynge his dayes in care and wretchednes | ||
|
¶Here endeth the enleue[n]th enleuenth] enleueth 1509 | |
||
|
¶Here begynneth the twelfth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
| sig: [L3v] | |||
| THe twelfth Ioye of maryage for to say | |||
| Is whan a yonge-man by many a day | |||
| In suche a maner comen hath and gone | |||
| That he in-to the lepe hath founde anone | |||
| 3450 | The streyght entre / and also ferthermore | ||
| He hath her founde whome he demaunded sore | |||
| And he some other myght percas haue had | |||
| But for no-thynge he wolde / and he is glad | |||
| Of this / for as hym semeth he hath sete | |||
| 3455 | His loue so wele / that no man coude do bete | ||
| And that he was so happy her to fynde | |||
| Whiche so good is / and mete vnto his mynde | |||
| And peraduenture suche a man is he | |||
| sig: [L4] | |||
| As by her councell wyll well ruled be | |||
| 3460 | So that whan ony wyght hath for to do | ||
| With hym / he sayth I shall go speke vnto | |||
| The good-wyfe of our house / and yf she wyll | |||
| It shall be doone / and yf so be she nyll | |||
| In no wyse shall the mater take effecte | |||
| 3465 | As pleaseth her she wyll graunt or reiecte | ||
| And here it cometh to the poynte anone | |||
| I put the case he be a gentylmon | |||
| And that his prynce an army do prepare | |||
| With whiche he is commaunded for to fare | |||
| 3470 | Then yf the wyfe it wyll forthe shall he go | ||
| And yf she do replye / he shall not so | |||
| Unto the wyfe / thus may he say perchaunce | |||
| My loue I must me spedely auaunce | |||
| Streyght to the kynges army well arayed | |||
| 3475 | And she shall say syr / be ye not afrayed | ||
| What wyll ye go and cause you to be slayne | |||
| How sholde we do yf ye come not agayne | |||
| Ye thynke but lyte what shall become of me | |||
| And in good poynt / than sholde your chyldren be | |||
| 3480 | But shortely for to speke / yf it her please | ||
| He shall go forthe / and somtyme for her ease | |||
| Of hym the hous she can delyuer clene | |||
| Whan that her lyketh best / here what I mene | |||
| For whyder it pleaseth her hym out to sende | |||
| 3485 | He shall go quyckely forthe / and there an ende | ||
| Unto suche sayntes as she auowe hath made | |||
| Whiche to perfourme for her he wyll be glade | |||
| And whyder that it be wynde / snowe hayle or rayne | |||
| Upon her byddynge shall he go certayne | |||
| 3490 | And so may be a galaunt herynge this | ||
| The whiche her lemman or her louer is | |||
| sig: [L4v] | |||
| And knoweth the entres of the house about | |||
| Well vnderstandynge that this man is out | |||
| Desyrynge with her for to speke and talke | |||
| 3495 | Withouten taryenge wyll to her walke | ||
| For lenger in no wyse may he abyde | |||
| But on the nyght / whan come is the tyde | |||
| In-to her house he entreth secretely | |||
| And where-as the good-man was wonte to ly | |||
| 3500 | This homely galaunt boldely lyeth hym doune | ||
| Whiche hath god wote a grete deuocyon | |||
| For to accomplysshe his desyres and wyll | |||
| And this good-wyfe her kepeth close and styll | |||
| The whiche dysdeyneth for to crye or call | |||
| 3505 | Ryght well in pacyence she taketh all | ||
| For whan some woman seeth a man dooth take | |||
| Grete payne and labour onely for her sake | |||
| Of pyte neuer wyll she hym refuse | |||
| And though that she sholde deye he shall her vse | |||
| 3510 | She hath a bowe that by her standeth bent | ||
| And he artyllery that must be spent | |||
| It happeth ofte he in the house abydeth | |||
| And in a corner preuyly hym hydeth | |||
| Whan that a lytell dogge dooth at hym bay | |||
| 3515 | And yf the good-man / what is that wyll say | ||
| The wyfe wyll answere / syr it is a ratte | |||
| That he dooth barke / or elles at the catte | |||
| For ofte-tymes afore he hath doone so | |||
| Thus wyll she say with many wordes mo | |||
| 3520 | So shortly for to speke this man is trapped | ||
| And in the lepe he closed is and lapped | |||
| She maketh hym the chyldren for to bere | |||
| Whan they wolde play / and dady here and there dady ='toddle'; see OED s.v. dade v | |||
| Also she causeth hym to take and holde | |||
| sig: [L5] | |||
| 3525 | Her spyndell and the thredes to vnfolde | ||
| Upon the saterday / whan she dooth rele rele: =reel, 'to wind thread on a reel'; see OED s.v. reel v2, 1 | |||
| And she wyll chyde yf he do not wele | |||
| Now hath he founde a thynge whiche he hath sought | |||
| And vpon hym newly dooth fall a thought | |||
| 3530 | For warre begynneth in that regyon | ||
| And euery man vnto the strongest toune | |||
| Wyll drawe that he can fynde to saue his lyfe | |||
| But he at home abyde must with his wyfe | |||
| And may not leue her wherfore he perchaunce | |||
| 3535 | Is take prysoner / and grete fynaunce | ||
| Then must he pay / or elles in pryson dwell | |||
| This can this man of care and sorowe tell This: =thus? | |||
| Whiche in his husholde-kepynge he hath founde | |||
| For nyght and day he must trotte on the grounde | |||
| 3540 | Uytayles to gete / or for some other nede | ||
| And shortly for to say so dooth he spede | |||
| That his poore body neuer shall haue rest | |||
| Unto the tyme he put be in his chest | |||
| Then falleth he in sykenes and in aege | |||
| 3545 | Wherby with hym is past lust and courage | ||
| Well lesse than pray[s]ed shall he be alway praysed] prayed 1509 | |||
| And lyke a foule couer be cast away foule couer ='wrapper'? | |||
| Whiche is not w[or]the to occupy that crafte worthe] wrothe 1509 | |||
| So is all Ioye and pleasure hym beraft | |||
| 3550 | The wyfe hath doughters two or thre or mo | ||
| Whiche wolde be maryed / and they be not so | |||
| Wherfore they prayse this good-man but a lyte | |||
| But haue hym in dysdayne / and grete dyspyte | |||
| In-to the goute he falleth seke and sore | |||
| 3555 | And helpe hymselfe so shall he neuer-more | ||
| For euyll paynes suche as he hath had | |||
| Whiche with his wyfe / hath thus ben ouerlad | |||
| sig: [L5v] | |||
| Than may this poore-man his synnes wepe | |||
| Within the lepe / where he is closed depe | |||
| 3560 | Out of the whiche he neuer shall departe | ||
| But styll remayne / and euer take his parte | |||
| Of Ioyes suche as be in maryage | |||
| Whiche he from youth hath founde vnto his aege | |||
| And yet hym fallen is more heuynesse | |||
| 3565 | For he ne dare cause for to synge a messe | ||
| Ne make his last wyll and testament | |||
| But yf his wyfe ther-vnto wyll consent | |||
| For he to her so buxome is and bonde | |||
| That body and soule he putteth in her hande | |||
| 3570 | Thus vsyth he his lyfe in languysshynge | ||
| Alway / and eke a sorowfull endynge | |||
| He shall sustayne and wretchedly his dayes | |||
| This man shall ende withouten myrth or playes | |||
| And all is the cause of his good-wyfe | |||
| 3575 | That causeth hym so to be caytyfe | ||
|
¶Here endeth the twelfth Ioye of maryage. |
|||
|
¶Here begynneth the .xiii. Ioye of maryage |
|||
| sig: [L6] | |||
| THe .xiii. Ioye of maryage is so | |||
| That whan that he whiche wedde is also | |||
| Within the lepe hathe ben and dwelled there | |||
| With his good-wyfe well syxe or seuen yere | |||
| 3580 | Or elles peraduenture more or lesse | ||
| The certaynte wherof I do but gesse | |||
| And demeth he is sure by his aduyse | |||
| That he hath founde a woman good and wyse | |||
| With whome he rested hath in grete pleasaunce | |||
| 3585 | And he a gentylman may be perchaunce | ||
| Whiche for to gete hym worshyp and honoure | |||
| Wolde put hym forthe / to do his best deuoure | |||
| Then to his wyfe he wyll declare and say | |||
| sig: [L6v] | |||
| My loue I must ryde out on my Iourney | |||
| 3590 | To suche a londe nyghe to the realme of fraunce | ||
| Where I may wynne grete fame and valyaunce | |||
| And she therwith ofte wolde hym clyppe and kys | |||
| Wepynge and syghynge / and say O what is thys | |||
| Alas my loue wyll ye departe so soone | |||
| 3595 | Leuynge me here with all this charge to doone | ||
| And in no wyse ye vnderstande certayne | |||
| If ones or neuer ye shall come home agayne | |||
| Bothe nyght and daye she dooth vpon her syde | |||
| All that she can to cause hym to abyde | |||
| 3600 | My loue sayth he. I must of veray nede | ||
| This Iourney take on me how so I spede | |||
| Or elles shall I lese / bothe the fees and wage | |||
| All that I haue and eke myn herytage | |||
| The whiche I holde / and with goddes grace | |||
| 3605 | I shall come home agayne in lytell space | ||
| And in aduenture he gooth ouer the se | |||
| With suche a prynce or in a grete arme | |||
| To gete hym honoure / or for chyualry | |||
| So of this wyfe than taketh he congye | |||
| 3610 | Whiche maketh all the dole that one can make | ||
| At suche departynge for her husbandes sake | |||
| For yf he be suche one as loueth honour | |||
| There is no wyfe loue ne peramour | |||
| That frome the dede of armes may hym holde | |||
| 3615 | If he an hardy persone be and bolde | ||
| Turne we agayne to this noble man anone | |||
| The whiche vpon his vyage forthe is gone | |||
| And vnto god he recommaundeth all | |||
| His wyfe and his chyldren in especyall | |||
| 3620 | It happeth that he ouer the see gooth clere | ||
| And where his ennemyes are he draweth nere | |||
| sig: [L7] | |||
| His fortune may so by aduenture vary | |||
| That yeres thre or foure he shall out-tary | |||
| How he is deed the wyfe than hath herde say | |||
| 3625 | Wherof she maketh sorowes nyght and day | ||
| So grete that for to here it is meruayle | |||
| But alway may she not so wepe and wayle | |||
| For blyssed be god / she dooth appece at last appece: =appease, 'calm (herself)' | |||
| And so it happeth that she is maryed fast | |||
| 3630 | Unto an-other man / and dooth forgete | ||
| Her olde husbande / and all the Ioyes grete | |||
| And loue / that she vnto hym bare in her mynde | |||
| Here may ye se / that she can torne and wynde | |||
| For now the solace and the pleasures olde | |||
| 3635 | And feruent loue with her be waxen colde | ||
| Whiche to her husbande she was wonte to make | |||
| And reason why / for she a newe hath take | |||
| The folkes then / suche as afore haue sene | |||
| The maner of the delynge them bytwene | |||
| 3640 | Sayth that this newe man she loueth more | ||
| Than that she dyde her husbande here-tofore | |||
| But so it is as fortune dooth constrayne | |||
| Her other husbande cometh home agayne | |||
| Whiche olde and feble growen is to se | |||
| 3645 | For alway at his pleasure was not he | ||
| And whan he to his countree draweth nere | |||
| Of newes hastely he dooth enquere | |||
| Bothe of his wyfe / and of his chyldren all | |||
| Grete doute he hath / how it is with them all | |||
| 3650 | Supposynge they be deed or elles greued | ||
| Some otherwyse whiche he wolde were releued | |||
| And prayeth god them for to saue and kepe | |||
| Full pytously well nye in poynte to wepe | |||
| And it may happen well in the same houre | |||
| sig: [L7v] | |||
| 3655 | That this man prayed deuoutly [for socoure] for socoure] foro socure 1509 | ||
| He whiche the wyfe so wedded late agayne | |||
| Enbraceth her fast in his armes twayne | |||
| Than hereth he how that they maryed were | |||
| But how he pleased is suche newes to here | |||
| 3660 | I trowe the sorowe of Abraham and the payne | ||
| Was not so grete / whiche his sone sholde haue slayne | |||
| Ne yet the sorowe of Iacob and his sone | |||
| To his were lyke / ne none vnder the sonne | |||
| For Tantalus whiche cheyned lyeth in hell | |||
| 3665 | Can not of greter payne and sorowe tell | ||
| Than this poore-man whiche dooth hym-selfe so cast | |||
| In suche a sorowe as shall endure and last | |||
| Perpetuelly / whiche he shall not recure | |||
| Ne yet forgete / but in the same endure | |||
| 3670 | And other-whyle the chyldren haue grete shame | ||
| To se theyr moder / brought in suche defame | |||
| And neuer shall they mary one ne other | |||
| Of many a yere / for mysrule of the mother | |||
| It fortune may / somtyme that in batayle | |||
| 3675 | As it dooth oft / some man dooth not preuayle | ||
| But at a skarmysshe / slayne is cruelly | |||
| Or in a felde myn auctour sayth / for-why | |||
| Ofte happeth it / that he whiche hath the ryght | |||
| Shall vaynquysshed be / or elles put vnto flyght | |||
| 3680 | I put case that this man gooth to his wyfe | ||
| And in his yre wyll make debate and stryfe | |||
| With her and with her husbande wedded newe | |||
| Now what a vengeaunce herof may ensewe | |||
| He cometh home with swerdes sharpe and bryght | |||
| 3685 | And peraduenture late within the nyght | ||
| Whiche fyndeth them togyder bothe in bedde | |||
| Than swereth he by the blode that Ihesus bledde | |||
| sig: [L8] | |||
| They shall be slayne withouten ony remedy | |||
| And they aryse bothe all hastely | |||
| 3690 | Afore that he the doores can vp-breke | ||
| And ryght pyteously to hym dooth speke | |||
| Alas my loue she sayth / what do ye now | |||
| I wende ye had ben deed I make auow | |||
| By many a man it hath ben shewed and sayd | |||
| 3695 | That ye were slayne and in your graue ylayde | ||
| But for that I wolde knowe the certaynte | |||
| I was vnmaryed more than yeres thre | |||
| And suche a sorowe made I nyght and day | |||
| That all my wytte and reason fyll away | |||
| 3700 | Helples I was / longe-tyme in wo and care | ||
| And god it wote full euyll dyde I fare | |||
| That ye were deed / eche man sayd out of doute | |||
| And I ne coude well brynge the worlde aboute | |||
| Wherfore my frendes aduysed me to mary | |||
| 3705 | And so I dyde / for what cause sholde I tary | ||
| Ye neuer sente me worde / how that ye dyde | |||
| But ye alway your counceyle fro me hyde | |||
| And as this wyly woman stode and talked | |||
| The newly wedded husbande / softely stalked | |||
| 3710 | And toke a bowe in hande / and dyde it bende | ||
| And boldly sayd / he wolde his place defende | |||
| Than sayd the wyfe vnto her husbandes bothe | |||
| Good gentyll syrs / yf ye wolde not be wrothe | |||
| But well agre / I trust you bothe to please | |||
| 3715 | My-selfe / and you at euery tyme well ease | ||
| The olde husbande thus knowynge of theyr dede | |||
| Departeth sodaynly for he must nede | |||
| With shame ynough / and hasteth hym away | |||
| And they within the house fast laugh and play | |||
| 3720 | And after this so seke he is and sadde | ||
| sig: [L8v] | |||
| That he within a whyle is waxen madde | |||
| Wherfore I say / he that may fortune so | |||
| As dyde this man whiche wolde for honour go | |||
| The way in-to the lepe of maryage | |||
| 3725 | Streyght hath he founde as byrde into the cage | ||
| How-be-it he afore was not so wyse | |||
| Of so grete Ieoperdyes to take aduyse | |||
| So shall he lede his lyfe and hym enable | |||
| To be a fole / and mete to bere the bable | |||
| 3730 | And at the last in paynes greuously | ||
| He shall his dayes ende / and wretchedly | |||
|
¶Here endeth the .xiii. Ioye of maryage. |
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