| sig: A1 | ||
| †Here begynnethe the glorious lyfe and passion of seint Albon prothomartyr of Englande / and also the lyfe and passion of saint Amphabel / whiche conuerted saint Albon to the fayth of Christe. | ||
| sig: [A1v] [page blank] | ||
| sig: [A2] | ||
| TO call Clio my dulnesse to redresse | ||
| With all systers dwellyng at Elicon | ||
| What myght auayle to wryte the perfytenes | ||
| Of the holy martyr slayne full yore agone | ||
| 5 | For Christis fayth / the holy man Albon | |
| Called of ryght through euery regyon | ||
| Prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| I not acqueynted with muses of Maro | ||
| Nor with metris of Lucan / nor Uirgile | ||
| 10 | Nor sugred deties of Tullius_Cicero | |
| Nor of Homerus to folowe the fresshe style | ||
| Croked to clymbe ouer so high a style | ||
| Or for to folowe the steppes aureate | ||
| Of Fraunces_Petrake the poete laureate | ||
| 15 | The golden trompet at the house of fame | |
| With full swyfte wynges of the pegasee | ||
| Hath full farre the kynghtly mannes name | ||
| Borne in Uerolame a famous olde citie | ||
| Knyghthode in Rome the cronycle who lyst se | ||
| 20 | And as I fynde this yonge lusty man And] Aand 1534 | |
| Toke fyrst order by Dyoclesyan | ||
| Whose lyfe to wryte / of wyt I am barayne | ||
| His high perfection curyously to tell | ||
| Dredyng my labour shulde be in vayne | ||
| 25 | That neuer dranke of Pegaseus well | |
| But for his goodnes so hyghly doth excell | ||
| I stande in hope his influence shall shyne | ||
| My tremblyng penne by grace to enlumyne | ||
| sig: [A2v] | ||
| In tender age this goodly yonge Albon | ||
| 30 | Borne as is sayde in Brutis_Albion | |
| A lordes sonne more lykely was there none | ||
| To marciall prowes by disposition | ||
| Whiche for his persone as made is mention | ||
| For conditions and hygh byrthe of blode | ||
| 35 | In great fauour of all the lande he stode | |
| And for that he in vertue dyd excell | ||
| Beloued and cherysshed of euery maner man | ||
| By kynge Seuerus myn auctor can well tell | ||
| Sent vnto Rome to Dioclesyan | ||
| 40 | With a yonge prince called Bassian | |
| They bothe tweyne as the statute bonde | ||
| To be made knyghtis of his owne honde | ||
| With them also went Amphybalus | ||
| There baptised by pope zepheryne | ||
| 45 | Lefte all the worlde and becam vertuous | |
| Of wylfull power folowed the doctryne | ||
| By whose teachyng and vertuous discipline | ||
| Blessed Albon as myn auctor sayth | ||
| Was afterwarde conuerted to our fayth | ||
| 50 | All his processe in order for to sette | |
| My purpose is / if I haue tyme and space | ||
| If ignorance not my style let | ||
| By influence only of goddes grace | ||
| The troubly mystes from me to enchace | ||
| 55 | Of rude langage / so that I may in-dede | |
| To write his lyfe and ceryously procede | ||
| sig: [A3] | ||
| Under supporte of this martyr benygne | ||
| My penne directe by meane of his prayer | ||
| The gracious stremes sent downe for a signe | ||
| 60 | Of his celestyall goodly eien clere | |
| To forther my labour and teache me the maner | ||
| Of his name to write and specifie | ||
| So as I can the ethymologie | ||
| This name Albanus by enterpretation | ||
| 65 | Compowned is of plente and of whytnes | |
| Plente he had in great perfection | ||
| Made whyte also with lylyes of clennesse | ||
| With whyte roses ment stable in theyr rudenesse | ||
| It was well sene that he stable stode | ||
| 70 | For Christis fayth / whan paynyms shed his blode | |
| Whiche two colours dyd neuer fade | ||
| Of these lylyes nor of these roses rede | ||
| In blessed Albon but euer ylyche glad | ||
| Within his bapteme the lylyes dyd sprede | ||
| 75 | The roses splayed whan he dyd shede | |
| His purpurate bloude spared for no deth | ||
| The storme abydyng tyll he yafe vp the breth | ||
| Thus was the chapelet made of red and whyte | ||
| Whyte for his clennes I haue so tolde aforne | ||
| 80 | To chese the red he dyd also delyte | |
| Whan from the chaffe was tryed whete-corne | ||
| In the holy martyr that hath the bront borne | ||
| Grayne of this frument was this man Albon | ||
| In the gospell remembred of seynt Iohn | ||
| sig: [A3v] | ||
| 85 | This chose greyne for Christ was mortified | |
| To get encrease of his eternall glorye | ||
| The frute grewe vp by fayth multiplied multiplied] multipliplied 1534 | ||
| Through meke sufferance he gate the victorie | ||
| A palme of conquest to be put in memorie | ||
| 90 | A lauret crowne by tryumphes many-folde | |
| For his merites set on his hede of golde | ||
| Nowe to this martyr crowned hygh in heuen | ||
| Deuoutly knelyng with humble and meke visage | ||
| Whiche syt so high aboue the sterres seuen | ||
| 95 | O blessed Albon / fro that celestiall stage | |
| Cast downe thy lyght to enlumyne my langage | ||
| Whiche of my-selfe am naked and bareyne | ||
| In this great nede thy fauour may be seyne | ||
| I haue no colours / but only blacke and whyte | ||
| 100 | Of longe or shorte wantyng proporcion | |
| Where ought doth fayle / I must beare the wyte | ||
| Golde nor asure / nor fresshe vermylyon | ||
| But with thy gracious supportation | ||
| In hope thou shalte conueye my penne and lede | ||
| 105 | To wryte thy lyfe / thus I wyll procede. | |
|
Explicit prologus. |
||
| sig: [A4] | ||
| Tyme remembred of olde antiquite | ||
| The same tyme whan Cesar Iulius | ||
| Was passed out of Rome the cite Was] Was was 1534 | ||
| Ouer the Alpeys in knyghthode famous | ||
| 5 | By assent of fortune notable and glorious | |
| This marciall man armed with plate and mayle | ||
| Had ouer_ryden the boundes of Itayle | ||
| Brought the countres through his hygh renowne | ||
| Magre theyr myght to stande in obeysance | ||
| 10 | And ben subiectes to them of Rome towne | |
| All Germany conquered in substance | ||
| Downe descendyng in-to the realme of Fraunce | ||
| Daunted theyr pryde / and after dyd ordeyne | ||
| With a great armye to ary[u]e vp in Briteyne | ||
| 15 | Twyes put of by recorde of Lucane | |
| At his arryuayle / of very force and myght | ||
| By the prowesse of Cassybylan | ||
| Touchyng the title were it wronge or ryght | ||
| Of the sayd Cesar / deme euery maner wyght | ||
| 20 | What that hym lust / for inconclusyon | |
| Cause of his entre / was false deuisyon | ||
| Amonge them-selfe / wherby he gat that londe | ||
| Made the Britons to be tributarie | ||
| To the Romayns by statute and by bonde | ||
| 25 | None so hardy / to be ther[t]o contrarye therto] therro 1534 | |
| Cause of this conquest / to wryte and not tarye | ||
| Was deuision / the cronycle ye may se | ||
| Betwene Cassybylan / and duke Androgee | ||
| sig: [A4v] | ||
| Ouermaistred was Brutus_Albion | ||
| 30 | By Iulyus sworde remembred in scripture | |
| Recorde the gospell where is deuision | ||
| Frowarde discention of case or auenture | ||
| That region may no whyle endure | ||
| In prosperite / for by discorde and tweyne | ||
| 35 | To subiection was brought all Bryteyne | |
| Whan Cesar was put in possessyon | ||
| Rather by force than by tytell or ryght | ||
| Ordent statutes in that regyon | ||
| And this was one / that no maner wyght | ||
| 40 | S[h]ulde in that londe receyue th'order of knyght Shulde] Sulde 1534 | |
| For worthynes / for mede / nor fauour | ||
| But by the handes of the emperour | ||
| And this was done / lest parauenture | ||
| Sondry persones enclothed with rudenes | ||
| 45 | Not disposed of blode nor of nature | |
| Shulde not presume of rurall boystousnes | ||
| Though he had strength and hardynes | ||
| To take vpon hym / what-euer that he be | ||
| The sacrament of knyghtly dignite | ||
| 50 | An-other cause in order to deuise | |
| Was / none suche shulde haue gouernance | ||
| Wherby he myght in many sondry wyse | ||
| Catche occasyon to make purueyance | ||
| By force of kynred / or strength of allyance | ||
| 55 | Through newe rebellyon in token worde or signe | |
| Agaynst the Romayns proudely to mali[gn]e maligne] malinge 1534, malygne L | ||
| sig: B1 | ||
| And in suche case / occasions to eschew | ||
| The prudent Romains / castyng all-thyng toforne | ||
| For comun profite / thought it was moost dew | ||
| 60 | Of high estate / nor low degree borne | |
| No man shulde / but if he were sworne | ||
| To the Romains / with hert / body / and might | ||
| Ay to be trew / that shulde be made a knight. | ||
| By a decree / concludyng in sentence | ||
| 65 | With faith assured / as the statute bonde | |
| First they shulde appere in the presence | ||
| Of th'emperour / sent thither of eche londe | ||
| Than take theyr othe / next by touche of honde | ||
| Toforne the goddes / assuraunce made of new | ||
| 70 | For life or dethe / to th'emperour to be trew | |
| This statute kept in euery region | ||
| Beynge subiect to Rome the citie / | ||
| Stretchynge theyr lordshyp and dominion | ||
| With theyr Imperiall marciall dignitie | ||
| 75 | Ouer the boundes of many countree | |
| So prouided by prudent policy | ||
| To them was subiect all worldly chiualry. | ||
| Hauynge all kyngdomes redy to theyr honde | ||
| Uoide of rebellion / whan they had ought a_do | ||
| 80 | A prince of knighthood they set in euery londe | |
| For gouernaunce. A stewarde eke also | ||
| Euery region to be ruled by hem two | ||
| In rightwisnes / lawes they dyd ordaine | ||
| From wilfull surfettes / the comons to restraine. | ||
| sig: [B1v] | ||
| 85 | First prouided of high discretion | |
| (As Argus-iyed in theyr inwarde intent) | ||
| To se there were no werre nor conspiration | ||
| Against the Emperour / neither thought nor ment. | ||
| To redresse all-thyng by iugement | ||
| 90 | These two estates / of prudence to attende | |
| At prime face all outrages to amende. | ||
| It hath ben sayn and writen here beforne | ||
| By olde expert Poesy / called doctrine | ||
| Without principles: Leest aboue the corne | ||
| 95 | The wede wex / ayenst good graine to maligne | |
| To late amonge is made a medicine | ||
| Whan that a sore wexith ded and corrumpable | ||
| For lacke of surgiens is waxen incurable. | ||
| Semblably / in kyngdomes and cities | ||
| 100 | Stormy troubles for to set aside | |
| Meued sodeinly amonge the comonties | ||
| At the begynnyng / in all haste to prouide | ||
| Them to reforme / no lenger to abide | ||
| For first meuers / as law and right obserued | ||
| 105 | Punysshe them duely / as they haue deserued. | |
| Like theyr desertes / receiue theyr rewarde | ||
| Cherisshe the trew / robbers to redresse | ||
| The prince of knightes / and also the stewarde | ||
| Ordeined were / by law of rightwisnesse | ||
| 110 | As the statute plainly dyd expresse / | |
| Like true Iuges / and kepers of the law | ||
| Of high prudence / all riot to withdraw. | ||
| sig: B2 | ||
| And the reporte of Cronicles that ben olde | ||
| Auctorised by great aduisement | ||
| 115 | As a Diademe / or a crowne of golde | |
| Is of a kynge called the ornament: | ||
| So to a prince doth long a garment | ||
| Frengid with golde / that people high and lowe | ||
| By that difference theyr stewarde might knowe. | ||
| 120 | The prince of knightes vsed a pallion | |
| For a prerogatife in especiall / | ||
| He and the Stewarde by election | ||
| Of th'emperour / in party and in all | ||
| Toke theyr charge / priuate and generall / | ||
| 125 | No man so hardy paine of dethe rebell | |
| Against theyr power to vsurpe no quarell. | ||
| That same tyme was reignyng in Britaine | ||
| Kyng Seuerus / a famouse knightly man | ||
| Who cast hym fully to do his busy paine | ||
| 130 | To please the Emperour Dioclesian | |
| Sent his sonne / named Bassian | ||
| With a thousande and fiue hondred yonge of age | ||
| Lordes sonnes / fresshe / and lusty of courage. | ||
| Som of this nombre were borne in Britaine | ||
| 135 | Some in wales / and some in Cornewalle / | |
| And amonge all / if I shal nat fame | ||
| There was one / of stature and entaile / | ||
| As ferre as kinde coulde her crafte preuaile | ||
| By her fauour / gaue to his person | ||
| 140 | A prerogatife to be set aloon. | |
| sig: [B2v] | ||
| A goodly man and but yonge of age / | ||
| A princes sonne of wales / as I fynde | ||
| Called Amphiball / gracious of visage | ||
| In whom there was non errour founde in kynde | ||
| 145 | By disposition / nought was left behynde / | |
| In myn Author / as it is compiled | ||
| To all languages his tongue was filed. | ||
| And for he was borne of high kynred | ||
| He was sent furth with notable apparaile | ||
| 150 | Like his estate / with many a riche wede | |
| Not forgettyng harnesse of plate and maile | ||
| Curiously forged / after moost fresshe entaile | ||
| As was moost likely in euery mannes sight | ||
| To them that shulde receiue the order of knight. | ||
| 155 | And while they were assembled euerichone | |
| It was a paradise / vpon hem to se / | ||
| Lyke as I fynde / amonge hem there was one | ||
| A lordes sonnes / excellyng in beautie | ||
| Borne in the citie of Uerolamy | ||
| 160 | Called Albanus / right semely of stature | |
| To all vertue disposed by nature. | ||
| The said Albon / by discent of lyne | ||
| Borne to be gentill of condition | ||
| By aspectes of grace / whiche is diuine | ||
| 165 | Predestinate by election | |
| For to be called of his region | ||
| Prothomartyr / whan he the faith hath take | ||
| And shed his blood for Iesu_Christes sake. | ||
| sig: [B3] | ||
| Gracious he was in euery mannes sight | ||
| 170 | Well beloued / and a likely man / | |
| With his felowship toke the way aright | ||
| Towarde Rome / rode with Bassian | ||
| Come to the presence of Dioclecian / | ||
| And for they weren so likely in shewynge | ||
| 175 | He passingly was glad of theyr cummynge. | |
| A chosen people / out_piked for the nones | ||
| Right well besene / and manly of theyr chere | ||
| Arayed in golde / perle / and precious stones | ||
| As princes children / souereigne and intere | ||
| 180 | Them demeanynge in porte and in maner | |
| That if it shall shortly be comprehended | ||
| In them was nothynge for to be amended. | ||
| This Briton people / likely for the werres | ||
| Stode in comparison amyd all nacions | ||
| 185 | As dothe the sonne amonge heuenly sterres | |
| Alike to theyr birthe weren theyr condicions | ||
| High blood requireth thrugh all nacions | ||
| To resemble in high or low parage | ||
| Fully accordynge / like to theyr lignage. | ||
| 190 | To high kynred longeth high noblesse | |
| On high mountaines stande Cedrysse grene | ||
| To princes children perteineth high prowesse | ||
| As amonge stones the Ruby is moost shene | ||
| The tarage of trees by the frute is sene: | ||
| 195 | Semblably / nature dyd so ordeine | |
| There to make knowen the blood of Britaine. | ||
| sig: [B3v] | ||
| Upon the Emperour this people (as I tolde) | ||
| Were awaityng / as they were of degree / | ||
| Beynge pope in those dayes olde | ||
| 200 | Zepherinus / whiche kept in Rome his see / | |
| And whan that he behelde the great beaute | ||
| Of this people that comen were of newe | ||
| Within hym-selfe / sore he gan to rew. | ||
| Musynge in his hert / thus he gan complaine | ||
| 205 | Full secretly with sighes lamentable / | |
| Halas (quod he) this people here of Britaine | ||
| In all theyr port and maners moost notable | ||
| So fresshe / so semely / and so honourable / | ||
| Halas ful ofte vpon the day he saith | ||
| 210 | Why stant this people in errour from our faith? | |
| The Pope / of ruthe and compassion | ||
| Considerynge with mercifull pitie: | ||
| Gan seke wayes / fyndynge occasion | ||
| To get leyser and oportunitie | ||
| 215 | How this people / excellyng in beautie | |
| Might by his labour / thrugh spirituall vertue | ||
| Receiue baptisme by grace of Christe_Ihesu. | ||
| The lorde aboue consideryng th'entent | ||
| Of zepheryn in especiall | ||
| 220 | Suche a grace to hym he hath sent | |
| By influence very celestiall | ||
| To further his purpose / that he hath Amphiball | ||
| In Christes faith / grounded by his saw | ||
| And conuerted vnto Christes law. | ||
| sig: [B4] | ||
| 225 | Amphibalus. as ye haue herde the case | |
| A semely man / god beyng then his guide | ||
| First by the pope / when he baptised was | ||
| Lefte his treasure / his pompe / and his pride | ||
| For Christes sake / with pouertie chose to abide | ||
| 230 | Forsoke the worlde / kept hym-selfe secree | |
| Of great perfection / lyued in pouerte | ||
| Other there weren that made no delayes | ||
| Of zepheryn / herynge his preachynge | ||
| To be baptised deuoutly in thoo dayes | ||
| 235 | But whan the rumour and the knowlegyng | |
| Cam to the Emperour / without more tarienge | ||
| Thrugh all the citie comaunded them be sought | ||
| To his presence / by force to be brought. | ||
| By londe and see / his ministers left nought | ||
| 240 | To serche hem out / but in no manere | |
| They were nat caught: but than cam to th e thought | ||
| Of Dioclecian / to worke as ye shall here | ||
| Them of Britaine / to make them to appere / | ||
| Upon a morow / when Phebus shone full bright | ||
| 245 | They of his hande to take order of knight | |
| Of antiquitie / as put is in memory: | ||
| When th'emperour shulde knightes make | ||
| They dyd assemble beside an oratory | ||
| That reised was / and bylt for martis sake / | ||
| 250 | In whose worshyp all night they shulde wake. | |
| The next morow / after the maner | ||
| At Phebus vprist / they shulde appere | ||
| sig: [B4v] | ||
| The oratory in compas rounde and large | ||
| Beside a temple of Bellona the goddesse | ||
| 255 | Where Dioclecian shulde giue first the charge | |
| Of hole assuraunce to auoide all doublenes | ||
| First to kepe theyr bodies in clennesse | ||
| For life or death / bothe in peace and werre | ||
| The comon profite of th'empire to preferre | ||
| 260 | Next this charge / th'emperour anon right | |
| In al his moost imperiall maiestie | ||
| Like theyr rightes girt them with swordes bright | ||
| So as they weren of state and of degree | ||
| Obseruaunces kept of authoritie | ||
| 265 | First chargynge them that they shulde entende | |
| Chiefly theyr goddes to worship and defende. | ||
| Of theyr temples to saue the liberties | ||
| Prestes of that law in right to make stronge | ||
| Wydowes / maidens / pore folke in cities | ||
| 270 | Suffre in no wise no man to do them wronge | |
| Appease debates that haue endured longe | ||
| For comun profite / as moost soueraine good | ||
| In theyr defence / redy to spende theyr blood. | ||
| Withdraw theyr hande from lucre and couetise | ||
| 275 | Specially to eschewen idlenes | |
| Pursue armes for knightly exercise | ||
| In causes knowen / grounded on rightwisnes | ||
| Gyue theyr Captaines suche trouthe and stablenes | ||
| And in suche case / rather knightly dye | ||
| 280 | Than theyr statutes to breke or disobey. | |
| sig: C1 | ||
| Of comon profite deuised an ymage | ||
| Called Knighthood / an arme of theyr defence | ||
| To holde vp trouthe / suffre non outrage | ||
| Cherishe the pore / do no violence / | ||
| 285 | After theyr wages / gouerne theyr expence | |
| Full assuraunce / made with mouth and hande | ||
| Susteine trouthe / bothe on see and lande. | ||
| Make prouidence that no derision | ||
| Fall vnwarely on high or low estate / | ||
| 290 | Whiche caused hath / great dissolution | |
| Made many a region to be infortunate / | ||
| For where as a strife continueth / or debate | ||
| By experience of many great citie | ||
| The light is eclipsed of theyr felicitie. | ||
| 295 | Of olde custome / knighthood toke none hede | |
| Unto theyr owne singuler auaile | ||
| Withdrew theyr hande from guerdon and fro mede | ||
| Wrought nothyng but by wyse counsaile | ||
| The hed of maters peysed with the taile | ||
| 300 | This is to saine / there shulde no Romaine knight | |
| Begyn no quarell / nor ende against right. | ||
| For the Romaines in theyr election. | ||
| Chose to that order / folke iust and stable | ||
| Manly of hert and of condition | ||
| 305 | Sober / nat hasty / feithfull / honourable | |
| For comon profite preued profitable | ||
| Benigne of porte / not proude / but debonaire | ||
| That worde and worke for nothynge be contraire | ||
| sig: [C1v] | ||
| Take no quarell grounded on falshed | ||
| 310 | Specially the pore not to oppresse | |
| Flee Tiranny / eschew blood to shed | ||
| Of innocentes by wilfull sturdynesse | ||
| Blood cryeth vengeaunce to god of rightwisnesse | ||
| Fals homicides / contrary to nature | ||
| 315 | God suffreth them no while for to endure | |
| All-thyng odible to euery gentill knight | ||
| Hatefull murder not support nor mainteine | ||
| Theyr office is / as they are bounde of right | ||
| Maidens / widowes / and pore folke to susteine | ||
| 320 | Fraude and extorcion anon while it is grene it] it it 1534 | |
| In knightly wise to serche out the offence | ||
| And chastice it by marciall violence. | ||
| Then tonge and hert by one accorde shall draw | ||
| On theyr promesse stedfastly to abide | ||
| 325 | Of antiquitie / Romains set a law | |
| To punisshe periury / spare non homicide | ||
| Represse of Tirauntes the vengeable pride | ||
| If nede fall / theyr life and blood to spende | ||
| The right of goddes and temples to defende | ||
| 330 | In token wherof / who toke th'order of knight | |
| This was the vsage of olde antiquitie | ||
| He shulde first be shaue of very right | ||
| Token to auoide all superfluitie | ||
| Of vicious lyuynge / and all dishonestie | ||
| 335 | Shauen away by vertuous diligence | |
| All olde outrages out of theyr consciences. | ||
| sig: C2 | ||
| They had of custome also this maner | ||
| Romaine knightes of yeres yonge and grene | ||
| To entre a bath of water cristall clere | ||
| 340 | From all ordures to wasshe theyr bodies clene | |
| Whiche bath / plainly it dyd mene / | ||
| As bokes olde / notably don expresse | ||
| Unto knighthode longeth all clennesse | ||
| First / specially by attemperaunce | ||
| 345 | Uoide all surfettes / lyue in sobernesse | |
| By prudence and vertuouse gouernaunce / | ||
| Mainteine trouthe / chastise all falsnesse | ||
| Restreine theyr courage from riotous excesse | ||
| Dishonest speche / and ribaudry to flee | ||
| 350 | Eschew auoutry / liue chaste like theyr degree. | |
| Clennesse longeth to euery gentill knight | ||
| As theyr bathyng dothe plainly specifie | ||
| Th[o]ugh theyr perfection / was made to Mars aright Though] Thrugh 1534, Thouh L | ||
| Whilom Romains by prudent policie | ||
| 355 | Had in custome theyr bodies to applie | |
| To serue Diana / that was the cast goddesse | ||
| That Uenus had with them non intruance. | ||
| Uenus / to vertues contrarious | ||
| Causeth in youth flesshely insolence | ||
| 360 | Giueth great occasion to folkes couragious | |
| Of theyr nature loueth riot and exspence | ||
| Withdraweth in knighthode marciall diligence | ||
| For whiche the bathe was made for a figure | ||
| To wasshe away of Uenus all ordure. | ||
| sig: [C2v] | ||
| 365 | If they be wedded / holde them to theyr wyues / | |
| If they be syngle / no woman to opresse | ||
| For in suche case began the blody striues | ||
| Betwene Troy and Grekes / the story berith witnesse | ||
| Caused many a knight to dye in distresse | ||
| 370 | For by th'auoutry of Paris and Eleine | |
| Grekes and Troyans theyr mischiefes dyd complaine | ||
| After this bath / tokened by chastite | ||
| Fully made faire / and voide of vnclennesse | ||
| With a white shirte he shulde clothed be | ||
| 375 | To signifie the chefe founderesse | |
| Of all vertues / that called is mekenes | ||
| Clene of entent / without whom certaine | ||
| All other vertues stande but bareine | ||
| For who-so lyst in bokes for to rede | ||
| 380 | Chaste in vertue / expert for to be | |
| Moost redy way is / his purpose for to spede | ||
| Set his foundacion vpon humilitie | ||
| She berith vp all / and hath the souereynte | ||
| Whose buildyng euer / the grounde if it be sought | ||
| 385 | Goeth euer vpwarde / and descendeth nought. | |
| As a shirt the body next doeth touche | ||
| With whose touche the body is nat offended | ||
| So mekenes (on authors I me auouche) | ||
| Among vertues is souereinly commended | ||
| 390 | She and pacience of one stocke be discendyd | |
| Yet in som case / reken nigh and ferre | ||
| Peace hath conqueryd more than hath the werre. | ||
| sig: [C3] | ||
| By prudent writyng and humble pacience | ||
| Kynge Dindinus was nat recheles | ||
| 395 | To notifie the surquidrous science | |
| Of Alisaunder / thrugh mekenes doubtles | ||
| To Brigmannus / mekenes brought in peas | ||
| Meke language appeasyd the rygour | ||
| Of this forsayd famous conquerour. | ||
| 400 | Whiche considered / the Romains vnderstode | |
| This noble vertue of humilitie | ||
| Was in some case nedefull to knighthode | ||
| Moost expedient to euery comontie | ||
| Them to preserue longe in prosperitie | ||
| 405 | Uery mekenes vsed in prudent wyse | |
| Is nat atwited with no cowardise | ||
| As to knighthode longeth gentilnes | ||
| Thyng appropried to his religion | ||
| Uoide of surfettes / founded on mekenes | ||
| 410 | As a lambe in chambre / in bataile a lion | |
| Where place and tyme gaue iust occasion | ||
| By manly suffraunce / benigne of face and chere | ||
| And play the lyon when tyme dothe require. | ||
| By the processe of theyr obseruaunces | ||
| 415 | Next the shirt of mekenes for more spede | |
| They had a custome / with sundry circumstaunces | ||
| Of high prowesse from hem to auoide drede | ||
| In a mantell / for to be clad of rede | ||
| To recompence the white shirt of mekenesse | ||
| 420 | With Martis colour / by knightly high prowesse. | |
| sig: [C3v] | ||
| This rede mantell / so as the mater stode | ||
| Touchyng the colour / dyd plainly specifie | ||
| They shulde nat drede for to spende theyr blode | ||
| For comon profite vpon any partie | ||
| 425 | By profession of theyr chiualrie | |
| For this cause to auoide all drede | ||
| They vsyd of custome a mantell of fyne rede | ||
| This colour rede / token of high prowesse | ||
| To susteine and holde vp trouthe and right | ||
| 430 | Nor entremete of wronges nor falsnesse | |
| For loue nor hate of no maner wight | ||
| To no party / for fauour cast theyr sight | ||
| Indifferent / stande egall as a lyne | ||
| By non occasion to wronge to decline | ||
| 435 | A thyng ferre of / fro knightly desires | |
| Straunge and forein to theyr professions | ||
| For to appere at cessions or at shires | ||
| By maintenaunce of fals extorcions | ||
| Or to supporte by theyr protections | ||
| 440 | Causes vnlefull / by brocage surmitted beforne | |
| To make Iurrours falsly to be forsworne. | ||
| A thynge (god wote) this day to moche abused | ||
| Experience in-dede as it is saine | ||
| They haue no colour of right to be excused | ||
| 445 | Saue to theyr client / the partie to susteine | |
| But if they had before ben wasshen clene | ||
| Bathyd as I said / in vertues also made faire | ||
| To suche places they shulde haue no repaire. | ||
| sig: [C4] | ||
| It is a maner of apostasie | ||
| 450 | A knight in peace to play the lion | |
| Nat accordynge vnto chiualrie | ||
| To draw his sworde / vsynge extorcion | ||
| The pore compleine for opression | ||
| A thyng contrary by signes manifolde | ||
| 455 | To them that were spores of golde | |
| Sporis of golde / rounde and sharpe to ride | ||
| So as golde is metall moost souereigne | ||
| Right so worshyp to knighthode is chief guide | ||
| To high noblesse / by manhode to attaine | ||
| 460 | A sworde also Romains dyd ordeyne | |
| In foure causes plainly to be draw | ||
| After the rightes of the paynym law. | ||
| As I tolde erste / the first for defence | ||
| Of theyr goddes / and next for the fraunchise | ||
| 465 | Of theyr temples / that no violence | |
| Be done to them in no maner wise | ||
| As ferre as theyr power and might may suffise | ||
| And the seconde / neuer to be present | ||
| Where dome shall passe of fals iugement | ||
| 470 | The thirde point / toforne as I haue tolde | |
| widowes / maidens / to helpe them in theyr might | ||
| Punysshe robbers / and tirauntes that ben bolde | ||
| To spoile the people by theyr frowarde might | ||
| This was vsed / when Albon was made knight | ||
| 475 | The last charge for a conclusion | |
| Neuer to bere armes against Rome towne. | ||
| sig: [C4v] | ||
| Other articles / mo than I can tell | ||
| Tolde and remembryd by Dioclecian | ||
| Notable in knighthode / by them that dyd excell | ||
| 480 | When th'emperour to dubbe hem first began | |
| Among other / the Briton Bassian | ||
| Son of Seuerus / in Britaine kynge | ||
| Gan thus abraide / his conceite declarynge. | ||
| My lorde (quod he) with supporte of your grace | ||
| 485 | Sithe it is pleasure to your magnificence | |
| As ye haue shewed / here present in this place | ||
| Of your imperiall famous excellence | ||
| Singuler fauour / royall diligence | ||
| As greatest lorde / called on see and lande | ||
| 490 | To make vs knightes with your owne hande | |
| Lowly besechynge to condescende and se | ||
| Of your notable prudent policie | ||
| Graunt vs goodly of your high maieste | ||
| The first-fruites of your chiualry | ||
| 495 | Mars our patron / knightly to magnifie | |
| In your presence / with Iustes or tournay | ||
| Or som other famous marciall play | ||
| To haue in armes knightly exercise | ||
| Our grene youthe and courages to amende | ||
| 500 | To lerne the maner and the Romain guise | |
| In palestre / day by day to entende | ||
| So that ye lyst of grace to condiscende | ||
| Graunt vs fredom / and a place to assigne | ||
| Of your imperiall support moost benigne. | ||
| sig: D1 | ||
| 505 | The Emperour considerynge first theyr cheres | |
| Conde them great thanke for theyr knightly request | ||
| And commended greatly theyr desires | ||
| Set a day / and helde a royall feest | ||
| All nacions to come at the leest | ||
| 510 | As th'emperour freely dyd ordeine | |
| To haue adoo with knightes of Britaine. | ||
| With Romaine knightes / first they had ado | ||
| By commaundement of Dioclecian | ||
| Durynge the vtas / the story telleth so | ||
| 515 | Amonge all Albon that knightly man | |
| with his Cosyn called Bassian | ||
| Gree of the felde gyuen to them twaine | ||
| Among Romains and knightes of Britaine. | ||
| Of Ficulnius cam many a worthy knight | ||
| 520 | Of Spaigne / of Cipre and also of Sardine | |
| And of Almaine / in stele armed bright | ||
| Mars was present / the felde to enlumine | ||
| But among all / to the Briton line | ||
| The souerein price aboue euerichone | ||
| 525 | Was by heraldes giuen to Albon. | |
| His name worthy to be put in memory | ||
| He quit hym-selfe so like a manly knight | ||
| Graunted to hym the price and the victory | ||
| Thrugh his desert / of very trouthe and right | ||
| 530 | Called in Rome the lanterne and the light | |
| Of knightly prowes / and Phebus soueraine | ||
| Thrugh all Italie / and day-sterre of Britaine. | ||
| sig: [D1v] | ||
| Of blessed Albon / the armes in his shelde | ||
| Square on his shulders by antiquitie | ||
| 535 | Of fyne asure sothely was the felde | |
| Therin of golde depicte was a sautree | ||
| In whose story / at Leicester who list se | ||
| After his passion / as I affirme dare | ||
| In his cote-armour / kyng Offa sothely bare. | ||
| 540 | Of whose mynster he after was founder | |
| As the Cronicle maketh mencion | ||
| A manly knight / a noble gouernour | ||
| In his dayes / thrugh many a region | ||
| His name sprad / and his high renowne | ||
| 545 | Under these armes / as put is in memory | |
| In euery felde had alway the victory. | ||
| Aforne prouided (I trow of yore agoon) | ||
| By grace of god and heuenly influence | ||
| And by the merite of the glorious saint Albon | ||
| 550 | Had in knighthood marciall excellence | |
| And for to acquite hym by vertuouse prouidence | ||
| To this martir / called saint Albon | ||
| Of that minster laid the first stoon. | ||
| After whose hande / masons dyd wyrche | ||
| 555 | He bare the cost / of great deuocion | |
| The said armes he left vnto the chirche | ||
| This kyng Offa / as made is mencion | ||
| And finally / by myne opinion | ||
| By these armes / againe all that dothe them wrong | ||
| 560 | With helpe of Albon they shall be made stronge. | |
| sig: D2 | ||
| The felde of Asure betokeneth stedfastnes | ||
| The Sautree / lyke a crosse of saint Andrue | ||
| The colour heuenly shall giue them perfitnes | ||
| By the holy crosse / force in our lorde Iesu | ||
| 565 | From day to day / to encreas all in vertue | |
| The Prothomartir / theyr patron saint Albon | ||
| Shall them defende fro theyr mortall foon. | ||
| After these iustes and famous tournement | ||
| Fully accomplisshed / tolde here in sentence | ||
| 570 | Bassian / disposed in his entent | |
| To awaite a tyme of intiere diligence | ||
| Of the Emperour to aske goodly licence | ||
| With the Barons / beyng in Rome towne | ||
| Home to retourne to Brutes_Albiowne. | ||
| 575 | His request was graunted anon | |
| By Dioclecian / made non exception | ||
| Saue onely thus / he sayd that Albon | ||
| Shall not departe by no condicion / | ||
| To hym he had so great affection | ||
| 580 | For high noblesse and semelynes alone | |
| He shulde abyde / and awaite on his persone. | ||
| To Albon / egall in fayrnes | ||
| With Dioclecian / non so great as he / | ||
| Of manly force and hardynes | ||
| 585 | Famouse in knighthode / like Iudas_Machabe | |
| As Scipion / of prudent aduyse was he | ||
| Of chere benigne / discrete and vertuous | ||
| Gyuyng councell right sad and compendious. | ||
| sig: [D2v] | ||
| Mars in armes / with Mercury eloquent | ||
| 590 | Amonge Romaine knightes / rekened yonge and olde | |
| For whiche the Emperour by great aduisement | ||
| Of prouidence (toforne as I haue tolde) | ||
| Before all other / Albon he hath withholde | ||
| On hym to awaite / and abide day and night | ||
| 595 | Of his empire / as for moost worthy knight. | |
| Whan Bassian had his leue take | ||
| Of Dioclecian / with knightes of Britaine | ||
| The Emperour for Albons sake | ||
| At theyr departyng list nat for to faine | ||
| 600 | To make hem chere / and after in certaine | |
| For his pleasaunce / as saith the croniclere | ||
| Fully complete / Albon abode seuen yere. | ||
| This mean-while (myne author writeth thus) | ||
| When this prince was come home in-dede | ||
| 605 | Into his contree: A knight Carauseus | |
| Greatly disposed to kyll and blood to shede | ||
| Of the Romains gate licence (as I rede) | ||
| And of the Cenate by great auctorite | ||
| To be made keper of the Brittisshe see | ||
| 610 | Bassianus by iust succession | |
| At his comyng home to Britaine / anon right | ||
| Was crowned kynge of that region | ||
| His father dede / a full notable knight | ||
| Called Seuerus / whiche in the peoples sightes | ||
| 615 | Great fauour had / but Bassian in that Ile | |
| (The story saith) reigned but a while. | ||
| sig: [D3] | ||
| By Carauseus (of whome I tolde beforne) | ||
| This Bassian was slaine traitrously | ||
| Ceptre and crowne this yonge prince hath borne | ||
| 620 | Carauseus vsurpyng moost falsly | |
| To be crowned kynge of that party | ||
| Hauyng no title to the regally | ||
| But a fals traine of murder and tiranny | ||
| On Bassian thus when he was awroke | ||
| 625 | By intrusion the kyngdom vsurpynge | |
| To the Romains had his othe broke | ||
| And in Britaine toke vpon hym to be kynge | ||
| The Romaine tribute the whiche was hangynge | ||
| To th'emperour / he falsly can deny | ||
| 630 | Graunted also within Albany. | |
| To the pictes for to haue a dwellynge place | ||
| The whiche now is called Scotlonde | ||
| And from Rome they bode no longer space | ||
| A Cenatour cam downe with mighty honde | ||
| 635 | Called Allectus / the malice to withstande | |
| Of Carauseus with Romaine champions | ||
| Brought in nombre fully thre legions | ||
| This Carauseus in story as I fynde | ||
| Whiche traitrously had murdred Bassian | ||
| 640 | Slaine by Allectus / his name put out of mynde | |
| Romaine knightes / with many a manly man | ||
| For to accomplisshe theyr purpose they began | ||
| Brought Britons thrugh theyr renowne | ||
| Almoost by force vnto subiection. | ||
| sig: [D3v] | ||
| 645 | To theyr socour / hopynge it shulde auaile | |
| Against Romaines to make resistence / | ||
| Asclepeodot / duke of Cornewaile | ||
| They chose of new / to stande at defence | ||
| Whiche thrugh his manly knightly excellence | ||
| 650 | Slew Allectus of very force and might | |
| And put his felow Galles to the flight. | ||
| The proude Romains he dyd so encombre | ||
| They might afore hym abyde in no maner | ||
| He slew of them at London so great a nombre | ||
| 655 | Thrugh his knighthode / beside a ryuer / | |
| After whose name / as saith the Cronicler | ||
| Is called there as Romains did blede | ||
| Unto this day / walbroke as I rede. | ||
| In memory of that discomfiture | ||
| 660 | The noble Britons / after that bataile | |
| Of one assent / did theyr busy cure | ||
| The same day / armed in plate and maile | ||
| Proudly to chose the duke of Cornewaile | ||
| Asclepeodot / theyr purpose to attaine | ||
| 665 | To crowne hym kynge / and lorde of all Britaine. | |
| This mighty duke / knowynge theyr intent | ||
| Agreed well vnto theyr election / | ||
| To be crowned / that wolde he nat assent | ||
| But auctoritie from Rome were sent downe | ||
| 670 | By th'emperour to Brutes_Albion / | |
| For whiche / caused Dioclecian | ||
| To Britaine to sende Maximian. | ||
| sig: [D4] | ||
| The chefe cause in sothe of his cummynge | ||
| (With other maters that were collaterall) | ||
| 675 | Into that londe / was for to crowne hym kynge | |
| There for to reigne inhis estate royall | ||
| And Dioclecian in especiall / | ||
| Hath a conceite in the meane-while | ||
| with hym to sende Albon into that Ile. | ||
| 680 | Bothe for trust / plainly to deuise | |
| And to gouerne notably that londe | ||
| Parcell also to guerdon his seruise | ||
| For trouth in knighthod in Albon that he fonde | ||
| Ordeined hym / and made hym suraunce in honde | ||
| 685 | Prince of knightes / and stewarde soueraine | |
| Under Romains / thrugh all Britaine. | ||
| He sent hym thither also for that entent | ||
| For his wysdom and high discrecion | ||
| With Maximian for to be present | ||
| 690 | At this solempne coronacion | |
| Of Asclepeodot / lorde of that region | ||
| Albon as stewarde in that solempnitie | ||
| And prince of knightes receiue his dignitie. | ||
| By the byddyng of Dioclecian | ||
| 695 | Like custome vsed of antiquitie | |
| Make his othe to Maximian | ||
| As prince and stewarde of moost auctoritie | ||
| To th'emperour in his imperiall see | ||
| As he was bounde by statutes olde and new | ||
| 700 | For life or dethe / euer to be trew. | |
| sig: [D4v] | ||
| All thinges accomplished like as I haue tolde | ||
| Maximian retourned is againe | ||
| With a tribute thre thousande pounde in golde | ||
| Behynde of olde / denied of disdaine | ||
| 705 | Whiche was withdraw / the story saith certaine | |
| To the Romains / the tyme of Carauseus | ||
| A fals tiraunt / cruell and furious | ||
| Come into Rome when Maximian | ||
| Returned was with all his chiualry | ||
| 710 | That tyme the pope named Poncian | |
| That busy was on that other party | ||
| In Cecile and in Lombardy | ||
| By deuout teachynge / as myne author saith | ||
| To turne people vnto christes faith | ||
| 715 | In that time / made was non obstacle | |
| That yere in-dede / there was (as it was sene) | ||
| Thrugh christes law / turned by miracle | ||
| To the nombre of thousandes fully sixtene | ||
| The churche of christe / tender and very grene | ||
| 720 | When th'emperour hath the wonders same | |
| Was greatly meued of malice and disdaine | ||
| To christes faith had so great enuie | ||
| When that he saw to his confusion | ||
| The nombre of christen encreace and multiplie | ||
| 725 | Let call in haste by fals collusion | |
| All the lordes of that region | ||
| And all the Cenates afore hym to apere | ||
| At a certaine day to treat of this matere. | ||
| sig: [E1] | ||
| Echone assemblyd in his high presence | ||
| 730 | Byd cast theyr wyttes togyther / and take hede | |
| And faithfully do theyr diligence | ||
| In this mater theyr purpose for to spede | ||
| What was to done in so strait a nede | ||
| For thynges that toucheth the welthe of the citie | ||
| 735 | Must of wyse councell take first authoritie. | |
| For this mater / touched one and all | ||
| A thynge expedient for to be amended | ||
| Whiche to amende / first they dyd call | ||
| The pope in hast / that hath theyr lawe offendyd | ||
| 740 | And to this pointe they be all condescended | |
| To dampne hym by hasty iugement | ||
| And all christens that were of his assent. | ||
| Banysshe all christens out of Rome towne | ||
| And punysshe them by mortall crueltie | ||
| 745 | Not onely there / but in eche region | |
| With diuerse tourmentes / serched euery contree | ||
| This statute made in Rome the citie | ||
| Thrugh all the worlde a decree forthe sent | ||
| They to be slaine / and theyr bodies brent. | ||
| 750 | Spare no place / where men dyd them knowe | |
| But them pursue vpon eche partie | ||
| All theyr churches cast downe and ouerthrowe | ||
| Plaine wi t h the grounde / where men coude them espie | ||
| Thus stode our faith in mortall ieopardie | ||
| 755 | Of miscreauntes / foes to Christes law | |
| For drede of dethe that they haue them withdraw. | ||
| sig: [E1v] | ||
| Against them the painems were so stronge | ||
| Droue them for feare eche man fro his contree | ||
| And Amphiball that bare non armes of longe | ||
| 760 | Saue in knighthod of wilfull pouertie | |
| Contrained was with other for to flee | ||
| Paciently / with trauayle and with paine | ||
| Passynge the see / came into Britaine. | ||
| Conueyed he was by grace and vertue | ||
| 765 | In his repaire homewarde (as I rede) | |
| His safeconduite stronge in our lorde Ihesu | ||
| Who so trusteth hym / amys he may nat spede | ||
| The holy goost dyd his brydell lede | ||
| To Uerolamy / whiche of antiquitie | ||
| 770 | Was in Britaine a great famous citie. | |
|
Uerbi autores. |
||
| OF this place here nowe I am aduerted | ||
| Of this matier for to stynte a whyle | ||
| And to procede howe Albon was conuerted | ||
| To christen fayth the processe to compyle | ||
| 775 | The holy martyr directe shall my style | |
| To whose worshyp first I vndertoke | ||
| The translation of this lyttell boke | ||
| At the request and vertuous byddyng | ||
| Of my father th'abbot of that place | ||
| 780 | A clerke noble perfyte of lyuyng | |
| Hauyng in custome euery houre and space | ||
| To auoyde slouth and vertue to purchace | ||
| Lyke any Ampte all seasons of the yere | ||
| To gader grayne and stuffen his garner | ||
| sig: E2 | ||
| 785 | By whose notable compylations | |
| Illumyned is not only his gaye library | ||
| By also full diligent occupations | ||
| Agaynst ydlenes to all vertue contrary | ||
| Hat[h] set in order in his famous gra[n]ery Hath] Hat 1534, Hath L | ||
| 790 | A boke compyled rycher than golde in coffers | |
| Lyues of poetes and prudent philosophers | ||
| Of his name the Ethymologie | ||
| Is sayd of a[n] Home or stede of whete an] am 1534, an L | ||
| Of god prouyded doth clerely signifie | ||
| 795 | Whete-gle[n]es of the mouthe of th'olde poete | |
| Greyne / frute / and floure with rhetoriques swete | ||
| Of philosophers callyng to memory | ||
| Of his labour the laureat reportory | ||
| And as I sayde by his commaundement | ||
| 800 | I toke vpon me this translation | |
| First to compyle it in all my best entent | ||
| His famous knyghthode and renowne | ||
| And nowe to tell of his conuersation | ||
| To Christis lawe I cast me for to wryte | ||
| 805 | Folowynge the storye his passyon to endite | |
| To procede lyke as I am bounde | ||
| For to accomplysshe brefly in substance | ||
| This lyttell boke and call it the seconde | ||
| Of his martyrdome and meke suffraunce | ||
| 810 | And put aforne clerely in remembraunce | |
| Howe Amphiball as the cronycle sayth | ||
| Tourned Albon vnto Christis fayth | ||
| sig: [E2v] | ||
| Eche of them (by recorde of writynge) | ||
| Was plainely without others remembraunce | ||
| 815 | For Alban had lost the knowlegynge | |
| Of Amphabell / and all olde acqueintaunce | ||
| But by the meane of goddes ordynaunce | ||
| I wyll declare / as I am bounde of det | ||
| In Uerolamy / to tell how they met. | ||
| 820 | Plainly procede / as I vndertoke | |
| The residue to accomplysshe for his sake | ||
| Make here an ende of the first boke / | ||
| But now forsothe / my penne I fele quake | ||
| Uoide of all colour / saue of letters blake | ||
| 825 | In this processe my dulnesse to acquite | |
| The martirdome of Albon to endite. | ||
|
Finis. |
||
|
sig:
[E3]
¶Here begynneth the prologue of the secunde boke / treatynge of the conuersion of the blessed prothoma[r]tyrprothomartyr] prothomaptyr 1534 of Englande called Sainct
Albon.
|
||
| SO as Aurora parteth the derke night | ||
| Towarde the tyme of Phebus vprisynge | ||
| And Lucifer with agreable light | ||
| 830 | Bryngeth kalendes of a glad mornynge: | |
| So by ensample / the true lyuynge | ||
| Of olde tyme in saint Albon vsed | ||
| Caused the lorde whiche guerdoneth euery thynge | ||
| That the merites of hym were nat refused. | ||
| 835 | Euery thynge draweth to his nature | |
| Like as kynde gyueth heuenly influence | ||
| For to disposen euery creature | ||
| Some to profite / some to do offence | ||
| Some to encreace by perfite prouidence | ||
| 840 | Where vertue hath the dominacion | |
| Of god ordeined by intere diligence | ||
| That sensualitie be bridled with reason. | ||
| Amonge painems / Iues haue be saine | ||
| That vertue hath many of them gouerned | ||
| 845 | Taught by nature / wrought nothynge in vaine | |
| But as kynde / and reason hath vs lerned | ||
| Good graine from chaf was discerned | ||
| sig: [E3v] | ||
| Thus hath he proued in many a sondry place | ||
| Good from yuell / by them truely conserned | ||
| 850 | Recorde vpon Cornelly and on saynt Eustace | |
| Who taughte Troyan whylom to done ryghte | ||
| Whan the wydowe complayned her greuaunce | ||
| To her grefe th'emperour cast his sighte | ||
| Reason taught hym for all his great puissaunce | ||
| 855 | To her request to holde the balaunce | |
| Of ryghtwysenes to se though he were stronge | ||
| In her pouerte to perswade her perturbance | ||
| By egall dome he to redresse her wronge | ||
| The storye of olde it put in memorye | ||
| 860 | For ryghtwysenes in especiall | |
| Howe that Troyan by prayers of Gregorye | ||
| Was preserued from the paynes eternall | ||
| From dampnation and cloyster infernall | ||
| To exemplifie howe god taketh hede | ||
| 865 | Of his greattest power moste imperiall | |
| Of ryght and mercy acquiteth eche good dede | ||
| And to the purpose of my mattiere | ||
| Durynge his lyfe of great power and myght | ||
| This blessed Albon who so lyste to here | ||
| 870 | Though lyke a prince his power yafe great lyght | |
| Fostred trouthe / dyd wronge to no wyght | ||
| For whiche the lorde his hande hath nat wi t hdrawe | ||
| To call and clepe hym his owne chosen knyght | ||
| To be conuerted and turned to his lawe | ||
| sig: [E4] | ||
| 875 | His trouthe / his vertue / his natife gentylnes | |
| Of custome stable grounded in many wyse | ||
| Caused god of his mercifull goodnes | ||
| To [chese] this prince into his seruice chese] the 1534, chese L, the H | ||
| All fals ydols manly to despise | ||
| 880 | This choson cha[m]pyon borne of the breton [l]yne champyon] chapyon 1534, Chaumpion L; lyne] tyne 1534, lyne L | |
| This newe Tytan / whose beames dyd auise | ||
| Out of orient to lorde to enlemyne | ||
| Nowe hensforth shall be my processe | ||
| With gods helpe my penne to apply | ||
| 885 | Nowe in his tyme he keped ryghtwysenes | |
| And lyke a prince / howe he dyd hym gye | ||
| To set his citie vpon eche partie | ||
| In gouernaunce from ryght they not twynne | ||
| Under the reignes of prudent polycye | ||
| 890 | Whiche to reherse / thus I wyll begynne | |
|
¶Here endeth the prologe of the seconde boke. |
||
| sig: [E4v] | ||
| sig: F[1] | ||
|
¶Here begynneth the seconde boke of the glorious Prothomartyr saynt Albon / howe he was made gouernour of the citie of Uerolamye. |
||
| UNder the Romaynes chefe and principall | ||
| With great auise it lyked them to ordayne | ||
| By commyssyon and titell imperiall | ||
| Prince and stewarde th[ro]ughout all Bretayne throughout] thorughout 1534 | ||
| 895 | To chese Albon / whiche dyd first his payne | |
| Lyke a prince not slowe nor recheles | ||
| To auoyde all trouble / and rule the people in peas | ||
| By polecy he hath so prouyded | ||
| Set statutes so myghtye and so stronge | ||
| 900 | And his lawes so vertuously deuyded | |
| For common profyte to endure longe | ||
| That no man shulde do other wronge | ||
| And where he sawe innocentes oppressed | ||
| Set a payne in haste to be redressed | ||
| 905 | The ryche he made lyue to theyr estate | |
| Without extorcion do to the portayle | ||
| Repressed ryot suffered no debate | ||
| Idell people constrayned to trauayle | ||
| Aforne prouyded for plente of vitayle | ||
| 910 | Lyke his office with vertuous diligence | |
| By suffisaunce there were none indigence | ||
| sig: [F1v] | ||
| Beloued and drad with hygh and lowe degre | ||
| For frende nor foo declyned not fro trouth | ||
| The good hym loued for his benignite | ||
| 915 | The ryche drad hym / on the pore he had reuth | |
| Wronges to redresse there was in hym no slouth | ||
| In his domes stedfast as a wall | ||
| Not singuler founde nor yet parciall | ||
| Nature taught hym all vices for to flee | ||
| 920 | Lyke the lawes / to whiche he was bounde | |
| A chastiser of all dishoneste | ||
| Gafe neuer dome tyll trouthe were out founde | ||
| Nother to heuy / nother to iocounde | ||
| But as tyme and mater gaue hym occasyon | ||
| 925 | So was demened his disposition | |
| He had also of his acqueyntance | ||
| Foure vertues called Cardynall | ||
| The reine of his brydell led temperance | ||
| Ryghtwysenes with mercy ruled all | ||
| 930 | Trouthe to defende / and manhod marcyall | |
| By force also through hygh prowes | ||
| Spared not to chastise all falsenes | ||
| He coulde appese folke that lyste debate | ||
| Refourme all rancour where he coude it espye | ||
| 935 | Lyke a prince knyghtly he dyd hate | |
| Suche as coulde falsely forge and lye | ||
| Stopped his eares from all flaterye | ||
| To foren quarelles lyst yeue no credence | ||
| Tyll the partie come vnto audience | ||
| sig: [F2] | ||
| 940 | Enuious sclaunder [h]e punys[sh]ed rygorously he punysshed] be punyswed 1534, ponyssh L, he punysshid C, be punysshid P, H, be ponysshed T | |
| Compassed of malyce hatred and diffame | ||
| To double tonges euer he was enmye | ||
| Whiche to say yuell of custome haue no shame | ||
| And backbyters that haue theyr lyppes lame | ||
| 945 | To say well / this prince yonge and olde | |
| Uoyded all suche out of his householde | ||
| By discre[c]ion he coulde punysshe and spare discrecion] discreeion 1534, discrecion L | ||
| His harte ay voyde of all duplicite | ||
| Large of custome / to naked folke and bare | ||
| 950 | His gate ay open for hospitalite | |
| That if his vertues shulde rekened be | ||
| Here in this boke tolde from yonge age | ||
| I haue therto no connyng nor langage | ||
| [N]ot-withstandyng as I haue behyght Not] Oot 1534 | ||
| 955 | I wyll procede and not excuse me | |
| To declare howe god sawe to his knyght | ||
| The tyme rehersed / the date also parde | ||
| Whan Amphibalus entred the citie | ||
| Of Uerolamy tolde eke the occasion | ||
| 960 | Howe he and Albon met in the town | |
| Amphibalus entred the citie | ||
| Of auenture to seke herburgage | ||
| By the stretes vp and downe wente he | ||
| Lyke a pylgryme of chere and visage | ||
| 965 | Tyll it fell so he met in passage | |
| The noble prince playnely to conclude | ||
| Blessed Albon with a great multytude | ||
| sig: [F2v] | ||
| This myghty prince by great fortune | ||
| After custome vsed that tyme of olde | ||
| 970 | Amyd the citie walked in his estate | |
| In a garment frenged all with golde | ||
| Amphibalus vertuously made bolde | ||
| With humble chere and meke visage | ||
| Besought hym lowly to graunt hym herbergage | ||
| 975 | For whan that he on Albon cast his loke | |
| And hym behelde with euery circumstance | ||
| By longe auyse of hym good hede he toke | ||
| It fell anone into his remembrance | ||
| Full yore agone of his acqueyntance | ||
| 980 | Howe they in one of fortune dyd assent | |
| Out of Brytayn / and vnto Rome went | ||
| For gods sake this Amphibalus | ||
| Of herborgage can lowly hym require | ||
| To be receyued and take in-to his hous | ||
| 985 | Albon anone as the story doth vs lere | |
| Was in suche case straunge in no manere | ||
| Hauyng a custome to hye and lowe degree | ||
| Frely to graunt hospitalite | ||
| In-to his house hym goodly hath receyued | ||
| 990 | This symple clerke lyst no lenger tary | |
| His porte his chere benyngly receyued | ||
| Mynystred to hym all that was necessary | ||
| From Christis lawe though Albon dyd vary | ||
| Lyke a prince benyng and vertuous | ||
| 995 | Receyued hym full goodly into his hous | |
| sig: [F3] | ||
| Not after longe onely by goddes grace | ||
| Of knyghtly fauour sought oportunyte | ||
| To get a tyme / a leysour / and a space | ||
| To auoyde from hym his people and his mayne | ||
| 1000 | With this pylgryme alone for to be | |
| And secretely whan they were met in fere | ||
| To hym he sayde anone as yet shall here | ||
| By many signes and tokens that I can | ||
| Dyuers daungers straunge to recure | ||
| 1005 | In soth that ye be a christen man | |
| And of hardynes durst yourselfe assure | ||
| To put your body and lyfe in auenture | ||
| Amonge paynyms your persone to ieoparte | ||
| Without dethe howe myght ye departe | ||
| 1010 | Quod Amphibalus Christe_Iesus of his grace | |
| Of his mercy / be it that I haue deserued | ||
| From all daunger and euery peryllous place | ||
| Christe goddes sonne my body hath preserued | ||
| Ben my gyde / and my lyfe conserued | ||
| 1015 | To this citie brought me safe to preache | |
| His glorious lawe and his faythe to teache | ||
| Quod Albon than / howe may this [be] trewe be trewe] trewe 1534, be trewe L | ||
| What that he is I wolde fayne lere | ||
| The sonne of god / a straunge thynge and a newe | ||
| 1020 | Had god a sonne declare this mattiere | |
| Quod Amphiball / so ye lyst to here | ||
| Paciently / for nothyng wyll I spare | ||
| Curiously the trouthe to declare | ||
| sig: [F3v] | ||
| Amphibalus is entreated by reason | ||
| 1025 | On the gospell to grounde his processe | |
| And to confirme his disputation | ||
| Of holy writte he toke iustly wytnesse | ||
| Howe our beleue recordeth in sothnesse | ||
| Of god the father and god the sonne also | ||
| 1030 | This is our belefe take good hede therto | |
| The sonne moste perfyte and moste good | ||
| For mans helthe and saluation | ||
| Was incarnate and toke flesshe and blode | ||
| And semblably for shorte conclusyon | ||
| 1035 | Of his moste benigne consolation | |
| Ryght so as he firste made man in-dede | ||
| So come he downe to take our manhede | ||
| And as hym lyste of grace and of mercy | ||
| By his power / whiche that is deuine | ||
| 1040 | Ordayned maydens to lyue here parfytly | |
| So he agaynwarde playnly to determyne | ||
| Toke flesshe and bloude of a pure virgine | ||
| The tyme come there was none obstacle | ||
| But that he wroughte his maruaylous myracle | ||
| 1045 | The tyme approched of grace and gladnes | |
| Towarde sommer whan the lustye quene | ||
| Called Flora with motleis of swetenes | ||
| Clothed the soyle all in newe grene | ||
| And amerous Ueer / agayne the son-shyne | ||
| 1050 | By the cherysshynge of Apryll with his shores | |
| Bryngeth kalendes of May and of his flowres | ||
| sig: [F4] | ||
| So in the season heuenly and deuine | ||
| Of wynter stormes was passed all outrage | ||
| And in the rayne Phebus gan to shyne | ||
| 1055 | The same tyme to our great auauntage | |
| Downe from heuen was sent a message | ||
| Whiche concluded for our felicite | ||
| A braunche shulde sprynge out of iesse | ||
| This newe tydynge to Nasereth was sent | ||
| 1060 | And Gabrell come on his message | |
| The trynyte hole beinge in one assent | ||
| For to accomplysshe this gratious viage | ||
| The holy goste holdynge his passage | ||
| Downe descendyng ryght as any lyne | ||
| 1065 | In-to the breste of a pure virgyne | |
| Lyke as Luke in his gospell sayth | ||
| As is remembred in the same place | ||
| Whan Gabryell lowly gan abrayde | ||
| Mekely sayde: Hayle Mary full of grace | ||
| 1070 | Thou chosen of god euery houre and space | |
| The tabernable of the trinyte | ||
| Amonge all women blessed mote thou be | ||
| Whan she had herde the angell thus expresse | ||
| Troubled in his wordes of femynyte | ||
| 1075 | Thought in her-selfe of very chast clennesse | |
| This chosen myrrour of humylyte | ||
| This salutation / what it myght be | ||
| The angell seinge her aferde of womanhede | ||
| Sayd: O Mary haue herof no drede | ||
| sig: [F4v] | ||
| 1080 | Afore god thou hast founden grace | |
| Thou shalt conceyue a chylde in all clennesse | ||
| Of whose byrthe Bedleme shall be the place | ||
| As the gospell can bere herof wytnesse | ||
| And his name playnly to expresse | ||
| 1085 | Thou shalt hym name of moste vertue | |
| Whan he is borne and call hym Iesu | ||
| Howe may this be sayde this glorious mayde | ||
| That knowe no man in wyll dede nor thought | ||
| Th'angell than vnto Mary sayde | ||
| 1090 | As I toforne haue the tydynges brought | |
| By the holy goste this myracle shalbe wrought | ||
| The vertue also of hym that syt highest | ||
| Shall ouershadowe and lyght into thy brest | ||
| For that lorde that shall of the be borne | ||
| 1095 | As thynge moste holy men shall hym call | |
| The son of god / as prophetes wrote beforne | ||
| Suche heuenly grace is vpon the fall | ||
| By a prerogatyue aboue women all | ||
| With lyght surmountyng aboue the sterres seuen | ||
| 1100 | This message I haue brought the from heuen | |
| Quod Mary fulfylled be th[y] wyll thy] the 1534, thi L | ||
| After the worde / which thou hast brought vnto me | ||
| Beholde this handmayde / and this humble ancille | ||
| This was her answere with all humylyte | ||
| 1105 | Thoo god was pleased with her virginite | |
| Yet was that lorde / doctours beare wytnesse | ||
| Pleased more with her deuoute mekenes | ||
| sig: G[1] | ||
| Thus hath a mayde through her perfytnes | ||
| To beare her lorde graciously deserued | ||
| 1110 | A chosen doughter by her pure clennes | |
| To beare her father / her chastite concerued | ||
| By her merytes that were to her reserued | ||
| As I sayde erst by a prerogatyue | ||
| She amonge women was mayden mother and wyfe | ||
| 1115 | To god a mayde to fulfyll his wyll | |
| And to the lorde a seruant by mekenes | ||
| Doughter and mother / and eke faythful ancyll | ||
| Whiche to remembre hath brought gostly gladnes | ||
| Of all welfare / our daungers to represse | ||
| 1120 | Aforne by recorde of prophetes in substaunce | |
| Us to defende agayne all mortall greuaunce | ||
| For whiche dere host sith it may auayle | ||
| To my doctrine yeueth hartily credence | ||
| God hath me sent to teache you and counsayle | ||
| 1125 | So that ye lust with humble diligence | |
| Become his knyght and do hym reuerence | ||
| Obeye his lawe and his preceptes all | ||
| Taketh good hede to you what shall befall | ||
| His fayth to you shall gyue so great vertue | ||
| 1130 | That blynde folke ye shall make for to see | |
| By inuocation only of Christe_Iesu | ||
| Delyuer the people from all aduersite | ||
| Leprous folke / and tho that lame be | ||
| To be made clene / and make them go vpryght | ||
| 1135 | And euery sykenes recouer thrugh his myght | |
| sig: [G1v] | ||
| Ye shall escape by his prouydence | ||
| All myscheues to you that ben contrary | ||
| Lyue longe tyme / go free from pestilence | ||
| From Christis fayth / if that ye wyll not vary | ||
| 1140 | To graunt your askynge the lorde shall not tary | |
| But at last or ye hens wende | ||
| By martyrdome ye shall make an ende | ||
| By martyrdome ye shall ende your lyfe | ||
| And blessedly from this worlde shall passe | ||
| 1145 | Out of all trouble and transitory stryfe | |
| Whiche day by day / doth you here manasse | ||
| Thrugh Christis myght and influence of grace | ||
| Ye shall to god / to your great auantage | ||
| By meke suffraunce make your passage | ||
| 1150 | This was chefe cause and grounde of my commyng | |
| Sent by Iesu vnto this towne | ||
| As a bedyll to brynge you tydyng | ||
| Howe by his myghty visitation | ||
| Ye shall endure payne and passyon | ||
| 1155 | For Christis fayth in his moste pacient wyse | |
| As knyght and martyr chosen to his seruice | ||
| That is his wyll ye shall fynde in-dede | ||
| To recompence the great humanyte | ||
| Whiche ye haue vsed of fredome and manhede | ||
| 1160 | To indigent folke and people in pouerte | |
| And specially for hospitalite | ||
| With other dedes in nombre called seuen | ||
| Dedes of mercy registred nowe in heuen | ||
| sig: [G2] | ||
| To fede the pore / whiche had no vitayle | ||
| 1165 | And to viset folkes in prison | |
| Receyue them that herburgh dyd fayle | ||
| Bedred folkes that lay in myschiefe downe | ||
| Comforte the syke mynystre them foysowne | ||
| Parte with them of that they had nede | ||
| 1170 | And bury them that laye in myschefe dede | |
| To his seruantes / and all that ye haue mynystred | ||
| Cronycled ben in the heuenly consistory | ||
| In his boke perpetually registred | ||
| Eche good dede the lorde hath in memory | ||
| 1175 | It to guerdon with a palme of victorie | |
| Perpetually with hym to reigne in ioye | ||
| Greatter conquest than was the sege of Troye | ||
| Sith ye your handes haue not withdrawe | ||
| From hospitalite pore folkes for to fede | ||
| 1180 | Whyle ye haue lyued in this paynym lawe | |
| Causes of the poore to promote and to spede | ||
| God forgetteth not to quite your mede | ||
| If this be done after ye be baptised | ||
| A double palme for you shalbe deuysed | ||
| 1185 | Lyke a prince in moste knyghty wyse | |
| Albon obeyed with entiere diligence | ||
| All these wordes gan wysely aduertise | ||
| Answerynge these wordes in sentence | ||
| What maner worshyp / what maner reuerence | ||
| 1190 | Shall I do than whan I am withdrawe | |
| From ydolatry / and turned to Christis lawe | ||
| sig: [G2v] | ||
| Amphibalus yafe answere to Albon | ||
| Ye must beleue and in no doubte be | ||
| There is no god in this worlde but one | ||
| 1195 | The father / the sonne / the holy gost these thre | |
| Ioyned in one by perfyte vnite | ||
| The foundation as I can well preue | ||
| Firste article and grounde of our beleue | ||
| This fayth in soth shall clerely you directe | ||
| 1200 | If that you lyst gyue therto credence | |
| All olde errours to auoyde and correcte | ||
| If ye so done with humble reuerence | ||
| I dare affirme and conclude in sentence | ||
| That your begynnyng to god is acceptable | ||
| 1205 | And to your soule treasure moste profytable | |
| Of the father the power eternall | ||
| Of the sonne souerain sapience | ||
| Of the holy gost in especiall | ||
| Grace dothe procede by vertuous prouidence | ||
| 1210 | And to descryue the magnificence | |
| Of all the thre / called thre and one | ||
| Undeuided / they neuer asonder gone | ||
| And if ye lyste vnto this lawe tourne | ||
| Of his most digne imperiall maieste | ||
| 1215 | He shall you make with hym to soiourne | |
| This blessed lorde / this blessed trinite | ||
| Where ioye is euer and all felicite | ||
| Tofore whose face eternally lastynge | ||
| Thre Ierarchies one Osanna synge | ||
| sig: [G3] | ||
| 1220 | Of this matiere be nothyng in doute | |
| Set asyde all ambiguyte | ||
| Forsake your mawmettes / and all that false route | ||
| For they be made of metall / stone / and tree | ||
| Whiche may not helpe nor forther in no degree | ||
| 1225 | Saturne / Iupiter / Mars / and Appollo | |
| With the false goddessis Dyana and Iune | ||
| Though they haue eares / in trouth they may not here | ||
| With eien great / of lokyng they do fayle | ||
| They be forged in golde and stones clere | ||
| 1230 | Who calleth to them they may nothyng auayle | |
| Nowe dere host forsake all this rascayle | ||
| As I haue sayde / and do in Christ delyte | ||
| And he by grace shall make you perfyte | ||
| A large space Albon kepte hym close | ||
| 1235 | Fayned in maner as he had disdayne | |
| From his place in great hast arose | ||
| Yet or he went he gan to fayne | ||
| Ye be not wyse your doctrine is in vayne | ||
| If it were wyst ye were in this citie | ||
| 1240 | Ye shulde endure full great aduersitie | |
| For your sake there shulde be practysed | ||
| Dyuers tourmentes for your destruction | ||
| For your blasphemye cruelly chastised | ||
| Without fauour or remyssyon | ||
| 1245 | At the last for shorte conclusyon | |
| Your heed smyten of / without grace | ||
| If ye were knowne or founden in this place | ||
| sig: [G3v] | ||
| In this mater I can none other fele | ||
| For your persone somwhat I stande in doute | ||
| 1250 | You ben here / yet I shall counsayle | |
| And you preserue that no man shall take hede | ||
| Of your consayte / nor what ye mene in-dede | ||
| And with that worde / out of the place he goth | ||
| Sheweth a chere lyke as he had bene wroth | ||
| 1255 | By grace of god and fauour of fortune | |
| All that he sayde was done with reuerence | ||
| Of gentylnes he was not importune | ||
| Suffered all-thynge with humble pacience | ||
| Albeit so / he gafe no full credence | ||
| 1260 | To his doctrine of thynges whiche he tolde | |
| Stode in doute / what partie he shulde holde | ||
| Albon in hast thought for the best | ||
| Whan Lucyna shone full shene and bryght | ||
| With slepe oppressed for to take his rest | ||
| 1265 | Amphibalus satte all that longe nyght | |
| Upon his knees as gods owne knyght | ||
| For loue of Albon with great deuotion | ||
| Makyng full mekely his orison | ||
| To whose prayer of grace god toke kepe | ||
| 1270 | And lyste to consydre his affection | |
| And in this whyle as Albon lay and slepe | ||
| The same nyght he had a vision | ||
| Straunge and dyuers by manyfolde reason | ||
| And wonder fer from his intelligence | ||
| 1275 | What it ment or what was the sentence | |
| sig: [G4] | ||
| Towarde morowe whan Albon dyd abrayde | ||
| Out of his slepe / and Phebus shone full shene | ||
| Gan to maruayle / and no worde he sayde | ||
| Touchyng his dreame / newe fresshe and grene | ||
| 1280 | Understode not what it shulde mene | |
| Rose vp in haste / and to the pylgryme went | ||
| Besechyng hym to declare what it ment | ||
| My frende quod he / if all-thynge be trewe | ||
| Whiche ye haue preached of Christ and of his lawe | ||
| 1285 | Dyuers maruayles vnknowne straunge and newe | |
| Shewed to me this nyght or it can dawe | ||
| I you beseche your witte ye nat withdrawe | ||
| For to declare the exposition | ||
| Whan I haue tolde you myn auision | ||
| 1290 | The whiche truly as I reherce can | |
| Lokyng vp to the heuenly mansion | ||
| Me-thought sothly that I sawe a man | ||
| From that place to this worlde come down | ||
| Of whose beautie was no comparysown | ||
| 1295 | Eke me-thought of boystrous folke and rude | |
| He was beset with a great multitude | ||
| This people enuious and frowarde of entent | ||
| As it semed of malyce and hatered | ||
| With many a sondry fell turment | ||
| 1300 | With sharpe scourges made his sydes blede | |
| Bounde his handes / I toke therof good hede | ||
| And on a crosse they hynge hym vp full blyue | ||
| With spere and nayles they yafe him woundes fyue | ||
| sig: [G4v] | ||
| Naked he was / body / fote / and hondes | ||
| 1305 | On length and brede drawen with great peyne | |
| By the constreynt of myghty stronge bondes | ||
| Drawen a_sonder was euery narfe and veyne | ||
| With a sharpe spere his herte clouen in twene | ||
| Persed he was so depe and profounde | ||
| 1310 | That bloude and water ranne out of that wounde | |
| With a reede spere they raught I toke hede | ||
| To gyue hym drynke / eysell mengled with gall | ||
| A crowne of thorne set vpon his heed | ||
| And amonge his cruell paynes all | ||
| 1315 | Kynge of iewes in scorne they hym call | |
| And in despite malycyously cryenge | ||
| Of Iewery saluted hym as kynge | ||
| As me-thought they greately dyd offende | ||
| To make all his body so for to blede | ||
| 1320 | And from the crosse downe bad hym discende | |
| If that he were gods sonne in-dede | ||
| His skynne to_rent / all blody was his wede | ||
| Lyke a meke lambe / myne herte dyd agryse | ||
| To se hym turment in so cruell wyse | ||
| 1325 | After these paynes greuous and intollerable | |
| And all his hydous mortall tourmentry | ||
| With a great voyce pitous and lamentable | ||
| Upon the poynte / whan he shulde die | ||
| To his father thus he gan to crye | ||
| 1330 | In to thyne handes father I commende | |
| My goste / my spirite / and thus he made an ende | ||
| sig: H[1] | ||
| And with that crye as he yafe vp the gost | ||
| From the crosse his body they toke downe | ||
| Lyke well-stremes vpon euery coost | ||
| 1335 | His grene woundes shed out great foyson | |
| Of blody droppes / and for a conclusyon | ||
| Of all his paynes / his body was anone | ||
| Closed and ensealed vnder a great stone | ||
| And whyle that he wi t h stronge honde was kept close | ||
| 1340 | Maruayle of maruayles most I can maruayle | |
| The deed body / to lyfe agayne rose | ||
| Maugre the knyghtes with all plate and mayle | ||
| A soden slombre theyr hedes dyd assayle | ||
| An angell moste souerayne of delyte | ||
| 1345 | I sawe appere / and he was clothed in whyte | |
| Amonge other maruayles there was one | ||
| Whiche I behelde in myne auision | ||
| Out of his graue closed with a stone | ||
| He rose vp lyke a stronge champyon | ||
| 1350 | With open eien I had aspection | |
| Of all this thyng no parte lefte behynde | ||
| From poynt to poynt all marked in my mynde | ||
| Rad nor songen amonge the Brytons layes | ||
| Was neuer herde so soote an heuenly sowne | ||
| 1355 | After the nombre full of forty dayes | |
| Folowed after the resurrection | ||
| To the tyme of his assention | ||
| What multytude of angels all in fere | ||
| Conueyde hym aboue the sterres clere | ||
| sig: [H1v] | ||
| 1360 | I sawe this thyng and knewe it wel ynowe | |
| By a maner vncouth apparence | ||
| The garmentes whytter than mylke or snowe | ||
| Of all th'angels that dyd hym reuerence | ||
| This was theyr songe and refret in sentence | ||
| 1365 | Blessed be the father / blessed mote he be | |
| The sonne eke blessed in his humanyte | ||
| These vncouth tydynges I sawe them in my slepe | ||
| And many other thynges mo withall | ||
| Secrete thynges I toke of them good kepe | ||
| 1370 | Not to be shewed to no man mortall | |
| And he tolde vnto Amphibell all | ||
| Whan he a_woke in full humble entent | ||
| Besechyng hym to declare what it ment | ||
| Whiche thynges to here greatly was delyted | ||
| 1375 | Within hym-selfe of spirituall gladnes | |
| Saw that his herte was of god visited | ||
| And full deuoutly a crosse he gan forth dresse | ||
| Lo here quod he / this token beareth wytnesse | ||
| Of all the signes clere as the sonne-beame | ||
| 1380 | That were vnto you shewed in your dreame | |
| The man whiche to you dyd appere | ||
| Sent from heuen so faire and glorious | ||
| He was the same as I shall you lere | ||
| My blessed lorde / myn owne lorde Christ_Iesus | ||
| 1385 | Most benyng / moste meke and most vertuous | |
| Whiche on a crosse suffred passion | ||
| As ye sawe clerely in your auision | ||
| sig: [H2] | ||
| Only by mercy by his gratious aduise | ||
| Of the trespas to make redemption | ||
| 1390 | Touchyng the aple / whiche in paradise | |
| Adam ate of by false suggestion | ||
| Of a serpent to great confusion | ||
| Fyrst of hym-selfe / nexte of all his lyne | ||
| Tyll Christis passyon / that was our medycyne | ||
| 1395 | Agayne Adam the serpent was so wode | |
| To staunche his venym was founde none obstacle | ||
| Tyll on the crosse Christ_Iesu spende his blode | ||
| A medycyne / bawme / and chyefe triacle | ||
| Lycour of lycours / dystyllyng by myracle | ||
| 1400 | From the cundytes of Christis woundes fyue | |
| Man to restore ayen from deth to lyue | ||
| Whose blessed passyon is our restauratyfe | ||
| Helth and diffence of moste excellence | ||
| To asswage the bolynge of our mortall stryfe | ||
| 1405 | Bawme imperyall agaynst fendes violence | |
| The phylosophre celestiall queynt essence | ||
| To all welfare mankynde to restore | ||
| Helpeth all sykenesses / whan leches can no more | ||
| Our leche / our ypocras / our gostely galyene | ||
| 1410 | Our samson called that venquisshed the lyon | |
| Our myghty champyon the famous stronge Achilles | ||
| That bare vp heuen for our saluation | ||
| Hye on the crosse makyng our raunson | ||
| He that ye sawe was the same man | ||
| 1415 | In your auision that ouercame Sathan | |
| sig: [H2v] | ||
| The multytude that aboue hym stoode | ||
| Were false iewes / his deth immagynyng | ||
| Of cursed malyce / nayled hym to the roode | ||
| Lyst not receyue his gratious comyng | ||
| 1420 | Of theyr prophetes refused the wrytyng | |
| Knewe not theyr lorde / but as folke aduersary | ||
| For his goodnes / were to hym contrary | ||
| Mercyfull Iesu gayn deth to stynte our stryfe | ||
| Lyst suffre deth / from deth to make vs free | ||
| 1425 | Uenquisshed deth / with deth to brynge in lyfe | |
| Whan lyfe was slayne an_high vpon a tree | ||
| Forbode frute / brought immortalyte | ||
| By a rounde aple was caused all this losse | ||
| By frute refourmed / that henge vpon the crosse | ||
| 1430 | Let me I praye you haue veray knowlegyng | |
| By your discrete faythfull diligence | ||
| As ye that ben experte in many a thyng | ||
| What obseruaunce / what due reuerence | ||
| Unto the father and his magnificence | ||
| 1435 | To the holy goost / tell on fyrste of those two | |
| And to the sonne / what seruice shall I do | ||
| Whan Amphabell gan playnely to aduertise | ||
| His faythfull askyng with all humylyte | ||
| Gan reioyse in many sondry wyse | ||
| 1440 | This Albon where as he stode free | |
| Was godly moued to aske of these thre | ||
| By god enspired conceyued of reason | ||
| Only of grace came this question | ||
| sig: [H3] | ||
| Thanked god / and goodly gan hym dresse | ||
| 1445 | To comforte the trewe affection | |
| Of blessed Albon / and truely to expresse | ||
| Hym to quite for shorte conclusyon | ||
| Of his demaunde made a solution | ||
| His conceytes discretely to appese | ||
| 1450 | Thus he sayde to set his herte in ease | |
| These thre persones / whiche ye haue named here | ||
| The father the sonne the holy goste these thre | ||
| Ben sothfastly lyke as ye shall here | ||
| Truste me ryght well on god in trinite | ||
| 1455 | Ioyned in one by perfyte vnite | |
| Beleue this iustly / and your wyttes dresse | ||
| For lyfe or deth / this article to confesse | ||
| This is my fayth / and I beleue thus | ||
| Quod blessed Albon with all humylyte | ||
| 1460 | There is no god but my lorde Iesus | |
| Whiche that come downe from his fathers see | ||
| Mekely to take our humanyte | ||
| For our helth and our saluation | ||
| Lyst of his mercy to suffre passyon | ||
| 1465 | He with the father the holy goste these thre | |
| Amphibalus rehersyng vnto Albon | ||
| They be all one god by perfyte vnite | ||
| And other god in all the worlde is none | ||
| And this belefe loke ye not forgone | ||
| 1470 | This worde ofte rehersed in sentence | |
| Albon fell downe with deuoute reuerence | ||
| sig: [H3v] | ||
| Toforne the crosse / and with great repentance | ||
| And sayde: O lorde Iesu on my mysdede | ||
| O Iesu mercy / receyue my penaunce | ||
| 1475 | Whiche on the crosse lyst for my sake to blede | |
| And on his knees fast he gan hym spede | ||
| With contryte herte / great to god a_lofte | ||
| With wepyng teares the crosse he kyssed ofte | ||
| With all his membres hath hym applyed | ||
| 1480 | As on the crosse Christ had be present | |
| And he with hym whan he was crucyfyed | ||
| So of hole herte Albon was dilygent | ||
| His face his eien with teares all be_sprent | ||
| This penitent his langour for to lysse | ||
| 1485 | Was euer busye Christis fote to kysse | |
| His bytter teares from his eyen tweyne | ||
| Lyke a christall well encreasyng at a floode | ||
| Albon ay busy to make the water reyne | ||
| To myngle his wepyng with Christis owne blode | ||
| 1490 | I mene the wounde grauen in the roode | |
| Upon the crosse that was to hym shewed | ||
| Of drery sobbyng the carectes all bedewed | ||
| By grace enspired this Albon gan hym drawe | ||
| To take the order of religion | ||
| 1495 | Of Christis fayth and bynde hym to that lawe | |
| With wyll and herte and hole affection | ||
| And secretely made his professyon | ||
| To Christe_Iesu tyme and houre deuysed | ||
| By Amphibalus whan he was baptysed | ||
| sig: [H4] | ||
| 1500 | With humble herte this was the langage | |
| Of holy Albon quod he I here forsake | ||
| The pompe of Sathan / and all his baronage | ||
| And all the power of the vggely fendes blake | ||
| My soule and body to Iesus I betake | ||
| 1505 | Whiche for mankynde dyed it is no nay | |
| Thus I beleue / and rose the thyrde day | ||
| Quod Amphibalus with a glad visage | ||
| Be stronge of fayth our lorde is holde with the | ||
| He wyll not fayle to confyrme your corage | ||
| 1510 | By tokens shewed of his beningnyte | |
| In especiall reporteth this of me | ||
| To other aforne you as I reherse can | ||
| That they were taught / they lerned it of man | ||
| But your langage excellyng in vertue | ||
| 1515 | Experience hath yeue you knowlegyng | |
| By reuelation of our lorde Iesu | ||
| Whiche to you hath declared euery thyng | ||
| His byrth / his passyon / his vprysyng | ||
| Of all this thyng lyke as ye had in syght | ||
| 1520 | To call you to hym to be his chosen knyght | |
| Whiche me semeth ought ynough suffice | ||
| With the surplus of your auision | ||
| To you expouned the maner and the gyse | ||
| Of Christis fayth with full instruction | ||
| 1525 | Mekely of herte with supportation | |
| At my request your highnes not ye greue | ||
| For to departe goodly to yeue me leue | ||
| sig: [H4v] | ||
| I am meued of veray conscience | ||
| Other contrees to preache Christis lawe | ||
| 1530 | I hope to you it shall do none offence | |
| For a season though I me withdrawe | ||
| It is a by-worde / and a full olde sawe | ||
| Whiche hath be sayd / syth gone many a yere | ||
| Frendes alway / may not ben in fere | ||
| 1535 | Frendes quod Albon neuer depart asonder | |
| Ioyned in vertue and knyt by grace | ||
| Though one be here and a nother yonder | ||
| Theyr hertes ben one euery houre and space | ||
| In god combined / ther parteth them no place | ||
| 1540 | Of one wyll aye in that they haue to done | |
| Of whiche I praye / departeth not so sone | ||
| To abyde a weke ye may do me great ease | ||
| By your doctryne to haue instruction | ||
| My lorde Iesu howe shall I hym please | ||
| 1545 | With ryght hole herte and true affection | |
| To serue hym duely lyke my profession | ||
| And in his fayth wherin I moste delyte | ||
| With your teachyng that I may be perfyte | ||
| Amphibalus knowyng his entent | ||
| 1550 | Lyst in no wyse denye his askyng | |
| The longe nyght they to_gether spent | ||
| Only in prayer and deuoute praysyng | ||
| For out of syght they chose theyr abydyng | ||
| From noyse of folke they gan them-selfe withdraw | ||
| 1555 | And all that whyle they spake of Christis law | |
| sig: I[1] | ||
| Of Christis fayth and of his religion | ||
| Was theyr fayth and theyr dalyance | ||
| Amonge to god they mayde theyr orison | ||
| Them to defende from fendes accombrance | ||
| 1560 | In this whyle god yafe them sory chaunce | |
| A cursed paynym of malyce and enuie | ||
| Where they met the place he dyd espie | ||
| To auoyde them of comforte and refuge | ||
| This paynym aforsayd of malyce lyst not space | ||
| 1565 | For to accuse them bothe vnto the iudge | |
| Of theyr metyng the maner to declare | ||
| And moreouer yuell mote he fare | ||
| Of malycyous frowarde cursednes | ||
| The iuge he set a_fyre with wodenes | ||
| 1570 | With enuious sturdy violence | |
| Through the citie they serched were and sought | ||
| And commaunded to appere in the presence | ||
| Toforne the iuge both two to be brought | ||
| The towne serched / but they founde them nought | ||
| 1575 | Blessed Albon meued of corage | |
| To kepe his maister and saue hym from damage | ||
| Upon a nyght before the dawnyng | ||
| This blessed Albon his maister gan conueye | ||
| With heuy chere most pituously wepyng | ||
| 1580 | Out of the citie brought hym on the waye | |
| At the departyng fared as they wolde dye | ||
| So were theyr hertes ioyned in one cheyne | ||
| Not lyke to twynne / tyl deth departe them in twayne | ||
| sig: [I1v] | ||
| O faythfull loue standyng in suche a state | ||
| 1585 | By resemblaunce in comparyson | |
| As whylome dyd Dauyd and Ionathas | ||
| Maugre kyng Saules persecution | ||
| Faynyng was none nor dissimulation | ||
| Lyke to endure playnly to termyne | ||
| 1590 | Tyll Antropos theyr lyues tryed atwyne | |
| Theyr loue more sad stable and vertous | ||
| In comparyson than the poetes made | ||
| Of Pyrothe or of Thedeus | ||
| Of Horestes / outher of Pylade | ||
| 1595 | Fresshe for a season / that wolde sone fade | |
| As whylome dyd the loue of Achylles | ||
| And Patroclus slayne amyd the prees | ||
| Whan that Ector the Troyan champyon | ||
| Slowe Patroclus for his frowardnes | ||
| 1600 | Maugre Achylles for all his high renown | |
| To exemplifie there is no stablenes | ||
| In worldly loue / but chaunge and doublenes | ||
| Be it of blode kynne or alye | ||
| Without vertue all standeth in ieoperdye | ||
| 1605 | Of these tweyne the loue was a nother | |
| By enterchaungyng / betwene them set a lawe | ||
| Albon to abyde and to dye for his brother | ||
| Amphibalus his presens to withdrawe | ||
| In theyr hertes the feruence dyd adawe | ||
| 1610 | Of perfyte loue to endure longe | |
| As Salamon writeth / that loue as deth is stronge | ||
| sig: [I2] | ||
| In all suche case the loue maketh hertes bolde | ||
| And by ensample that loue auoydeth drede | ||
| Albon for loue toke his cloth of golde | ||
| 1615 | And lyke a prince lyst to chaunge his wede | |
| Of entier herte he gan it for to sprede | ||
| Ouer the shulders of Amphiball anone | ||
| The houre whan they atwynne shulde gone | ||
| From all his fone he iustly was assured | ||
| 1620 | Who that euer had on this clothe of golde | |
| Tyll he the place fully haue recured | ||
| To stande at large aforne as I haue tolde | ||
| Thus with sobbyng and wepyng manyfolde | ||
| God suffered them a_sondry to deuyde | ||
| 1625 | Forsoke them not but was theyr bothes gyde | |
| A symple sclauenne fortorne and threde-bare | ||
| Of Amphabals a full olde garment | ||
| This noble prince Albon lyst not spare | ||
| To cast vpon hym though it were all to_rent | ||
| 1630 | So hole to Christe was set all his entent | |
| And in his pouert to shewe that he was playne | ||
| To his Tygurry returned home agayne | ||
| Amphibalus northwarde to his passage | ||
| Chere of herte / god to be his gyde | ||
| 1635 | For a tyme to eschewe the cruell rage | |
| Of paynyms as fortune lyst prouyde | ||
| But holy Albon dyd the bront abyde | ||
| To lyue and dye as goddis champyon | ||
| Christ bare his standerd / the crosse was his penon | ||
| sig: [I2v] | ||
| 1640 | His sodayn chaunce he helde it was no losse | |
| Forsoke ryches toke hym to pouerte | ||
| His treasure was to knele aforne the crosse | ||
| His hertie ioye and his felicite | ||
| And for a whyle thus I let hym be | ||
| 1645 | In his prayers / and tel I wyll in-dede | |
| Howe his enemyes agaynst hym procede | ||
| There was a statute proclaymed in the towne | ||
| Who that wolde not do no reuerence | ||
| Unto theyr goddes / nor mekely knele downe | ||
| 1650 | In-to theyr fyre for to cast ensence | |
| He shulde anone by cruell violence | ||
| Be take and layde vpon an aulter bounde | ||
| Toforne theyr goddes and flayne wi t h many a wounde | ||
| Of his body to make sacrifice | ||
| 1655 | Superstitious was this oblation | |
| Whiche of newe paynyms gan practise | ||
| Agayne the doctryne and predication | ||
| By Amphybalus brought into the towne | ||
| By the iudge set in ordynaunce | ||
| 1660 | On hym and Albon fyrst to do vengeance | |
| So to punysshe one and one by rowe | ||
| Without mercy or longe auisement | ||
| To blessed Albon this statute was well knowe | ||
| Bothe of theyr dome and cruell iugement | ||
| 1665 | And ay this prince / stable in his entent | |
| Made stronge in god / for lyfe or deth tendure | ||
| The lordes hande / and his auenture | ||
| sig: [I3] | ||
| Whan somer floures blowed whyte and redde | ||
| And were in theyr highest lusty fresshe season | ||
| 1670 | And fyry Phebus / from the crabbes hedde | |
| Toke his passage towarde the lyon | ||
| At Uerolamy / in that royall towne | ||
| The same tyme paynyms haue auerted | ||
| To Christis fayth / howe Albon was conuerted | ||
| 1675 | For whiche agaynst hym so obstynate they stode | |
| Lyke wylde boores or tygyrs in theyr rage | ||
| Uengeable of herte furyous and wode | ||
| Malancoly and pale of theyr visage | ||
| And all the nyght with cursed fell langage | ||
| 1680 | Gan to manace lyke wolfes rauenous | |
| This blessed Albon and Amphibalus | ||
| The darke tydes of the cloudy nyght | ||
| Withdrough theyr shadowes and their skyes blake | ||
| And Lucyfer gan shewe his beames bryght | ||
| 1685 | And Aurora hath the bedde forsake | |
| Of fyry Titan and her leue take | ||
| And Phebus Chariot draweth vp wi t h flego[n]te | ||
| And gan illumyne all the Oriso[n]te | ||
| The holsome bawme gan in meddowes flete | ||
| 1690 | Amonge the flowres and holsome leues grene | |
| The syluer dewe gan the soile to wete | ||
| Lyke perles rounde as any christall shene | ||
| Whan nature of worldly thynges the quene | ||
| Ordeyned a day of fresshenes plentous | ||
| 1695 | Whan Albon was beseged in his hous | |
| sig: [I3v] | ||
| The paynyms gan make theyr-selfe stronge | ||
| This noble prince Albon to pursewe | ||
| Upon that houre whan the larkes songe | ||
| In theyr leden and gan the day salewe | ||
| 1700 | Theyr purpose was specially to sewe | |
| Amphibalus but that he was gon | ||
| In-stede of hym they fyll vpon Albon | ||
| Aforne the crosse they founde hym knelyng | ||
| In his prayer and they vpon hym went | ||
| 1705 | He rose vp and made no taryeng | |
| And the great multytude that the iuge sent | ||
| Fell vpon hym and lyke wolfes hym rent | ||
| In theyr furyous mortall fell deluge | ||
| They hym present anon afore the iuge | ||
| 1710 | Meke as a lambe of porte and chere benynge | |
| To done his batayle / lyke Christis owne knyght | ||
| His banner was his standerde and his signe | ||
| The crosse of Iesu / whiche he bare vpryght | ||
| Magre paynyms in theyr alder syght | ||
| 1715 | Lyke a champyon agayn them to warrye | |
| Under that penon cast hym to lyue and dye | ||
| God was with hym to susteyn his partie | ||
| Stedfast of herte / hardy as a lyon | ||
| Put his lyfe for Christ in ieopertye | ||
| 1720 | Of body naked / trouthe was his habergon | |
| His shelde was fayth / his sworde and his burdon | ||
| His spere his pollar / surer than stele to endure | ||
| Was only hope / the victorie to recure | ||
| sig: [I4] | ||
| His sabbatons set on grounde of trouthe | ||
| 1725 | And his greues forged with stabilnes | |
| And his polayns plyant without slouthe | ||
| And his quisshews borne vp with high prowesse | ||
| A payre of curesse / closed with ryghtwysenesse | ||
| And his vauntbrace was truste that went beforne | ||
| 1730 | Rerebrace of charyte / which myght not be forlorne | |
| Gloues of plate to beare of and defende | ||
| Was true affection medled with the dede | ||
| A large pauice greatly to commende | ||
| Of trewe meanyng to auoyde away all drede | ||
| 1735 | And thus in trouthe who-so lyst take hede | |
| All in vertues enarmed for defence | ||
| With a cote-armour aboue of pacience | ||
| Charyte was chefe of his counsayle | ||
| Taught hym the maner / agayn his cruell fone | ||
| 1740 | Howe that he shulde do to his great auayle | |
| Enter in-to the felde / and knygh[t]ly to gone knyghtly] knyghly 1534, knyhtly L | ||
| All that it so were / that he was but alone | ||
| His banner splayed / full erly on the morowe | ||
| Grace was his guyde with saynt Iohnn to borowe | ||
| 1745 | Fyrst he was led by mortall violence | |
| Drawe and torne in moste cruell wyse | ||
| The holy crosse vp borne for his defence | ||
| And brought he was to do sacrifice | ||
| Unto theyr ydols / but he them dyd dispise | ||
| 1750 | Asclypiodot the iuge there present | |
| And all the citie gathered of entent | ||
| sig: [I4v] | ||
| This goddes knyght holdyng the crosse in honde | ||
| Inuisible by vertue of that signe | ||
| And paynyms that aboute hym stonde | ||
| 1755 | Cruell and cursed agayn hym gan malygne | |
| Though they were there borne of one lyne | ||
| The iuge troubled whan that he toke hede | ||
| Of Christis crosse / and had in maner drede | ||
| Albon alway this prince full notable | ||
| 1760 | Stode ay vpryght with loke moste coragious | |
| Euer of one herte / as any centre stable | ||
| The crosse afforne banner most gloryous | ||
| Moste agreable and moste victorious | ||
| And fyrste of all the story doth vs lere | ||
| 1765 | Of his maister / the iudge of hym dyd enquere | |
| And asked of hym to what partie he was gone | ||
| By his sleyght and his vncouth wyle | ||
| Whiche dispysed theyr goddes euery_chone | ||
| Come of nowe theyr citie to begyle | ||
| 1770 | At whose wordes Albon stynt a whyle | |
| And sayde at last with sobre countenaunce | ||
| He was departed by goddes ordynaunce | ||
| Quod the iuge where-euer that he be | ||
| Either embesyled or els set a_syde | ||
| 1775 | Touchyng the fayth that he hath taughte to the | |
| And therin ben thy maister and thy guyde | ||
| And is nowe fledde / and durst not a_byde | ||
| By his doctryne a reason full notable | ||
| His preachyng is nought or he is not stable | ||
| sig: K[1] | ||
| 1780 | I trowe he wolde haue come to presence | |
| If in his fayth had be no varyance | ||
| Other some remors of his conscience | ||
| Hath cast his herte in newe repentance | ||
| If he had had in his fayth constance | ||
| 1785 | Lyke a maister he shulde nat haue gone | |
| And his disciple in myschefe leaue alone | ||
| In this doctryne as to myne entent | ||
| There is disceyte vnder some falsenes | ||
| Or in his teachyng he is fraudolent | ||
| 1790 | Whiche the brought in so great wodenes | |
| To forsake thy treasure and ryches | ||
| Of all our goddes in so frowarde wyse | ||
| Of wylfulnes / and malyce them to dispise | ||
| Thou standist nowe in a ful perlous poynt | ||
| 1795 | The clerke hath brought the in so great a snare | |
| And set thy reason so farre out of ioynt | ||
| And made thy wyt so naked and so bare | ||
| That thou arte pleynly to declare | ||
| In Christis cause / and so from our fayth to erre | ||
| 1800 | Agayne all our goddes to begyn mortall warre | |
| Whiche thynge consydered / as it is skylle and ryght | ||
| And egally paysed in balaunce | ||
| Wronge to do them by any maner wyght | ||
| Nother by fauour / frendshyp / nor suffraunce | ||
| 1805 | May not passe without great vengeaunce | |
| Upon blasphemy the lawe doth ordeyne | ||
| Agayn the goddes / deth to be theyr peyne | ||
| sig: [K1v] | ||
| Unto a foole thou gafe hasty credence | ||
| And by his foly he hath the begyled | ||
| 1810 | Fyrst to the goddes / thou dost no reuerence | |
| Of despite wylte not be reconsyled | ||
| Thou farest as a man whiche is vnabyled | ||
| Stondyng as nowe from grace desolate | ||
| Uyle and abiecte out of thyne olde estate | ||
| 1815 | In suche case eche man may be disceyued | |
| By suche false foren information | ||
| But nowe thyne errour is clery apperceyued | ||
| So by counsell / for thy saluation | ||
| Or thou incurre the indignation | ||
| 1820 | And or iugement by rygour the manace | |
| Forsake that secte / fall downe and axe grace | ||
| To thyne estate thou mayst thus be restored | ||
| With humble herte / do them sacrifyce | ||
| And thy treasure and thy ryches shalbe mored | ||
| 1825 | And encreased in many a sondry wyse | |
| To great worshyp / and sodeynly aryse | ||
| Of townes / castels / lorde we shall the make | ||
| So thou wylte the fayth of Christe forsake | ||
| Of herte and thought very indiuisybel | ||
| 1830 | Albone stode hole and kept his grounde and place | |
| The iuges promysse flateryng and fallybel | ||
| Boystous threatnynges / wi t h whiche he gan manace | ||
| Uoyde of drede / of one chere / and one face | ||
| This manly prince / this hardy knyght Albon | ||
| 1835 | Stode betwene bothe / stable as any stone | |
| sig: [K2] | ||
| To the iuge sayde as ye shall here | ||
| Thy manaces nor promys of pleasance | ||
| In frowarde speche / nor thy frownyng chere | ||
| Shall me not meue on poynt from my constaunce | ||
| 1840 | In Christ_Iesu / is hole my suffisance | |
| For me lyst not here longe processe to deuise | ||
| Thy golde thy treasure thy goddes I despise | ||
| And where thou hast my maister eke accused | ||
| Of inconstance and duplicite | ||
| 1845 | Be ryght well sure god hath hym excused | |
| That he dyd / the counsell come of me | ||
| He fled not god wote for feare of the | ||
| I was assented to kepe hym absence | ||
| And elles he had come to audience | ||
| 1850 | From the trouthe me lyst not to declyne | |
| All thy wordes be sayde but in vayne | ||
| Of my maister / I confesse the doctryne | ||
| For lyfe nor deth / neuer to turne agayne | ||
| From Christis fayth / whiche standeth in certeyne | ||
| 1855 | For it causeth folkes lame to go vpryght | |
| And folkes blynde to recure theyr syght | ||
| This fayth so hole infyxed is in my mynde | ||
| Unto me more precious and more dere | ||
| Than all the stones / that comen out of Inde | ||
| 1860 | Or all the ryches that thou rehersyst here | |
| Golde or treasure / rekened all in feare | ||
| Worldly worshyps / pompe or veynglorye | ||
| To fayth compared be thynges transytorye. | ||
| sig: [K2v] | ||
| This faythe in god maketh me so ryche and stronge | ||
| 1865 | All worldely good for it I do despise | |
| What shulde lenger drawe the alonge | ||
| To false goddes in no maner of wyse | ||
| I wyll not do worshyp nor sacrifise | ||
| Echon ben false and haue nother wit nor mynde | ||
| 1870 | Ye that serue them be very mad or blynde | |
| Most deceyuable whan a man hath nede | ||
| Ben your goddes with all your mawmetrye | ||
| It hath ben proued aforne in my kynred | ||
| And many other borne of myn allye | ||
| 1875 | All suche rascayle of purpose I defye | |
| False and faylyng of olde tyme and newe | ||
| To all theyr seruauntes of custome most vntrewe | ||
| I cast neuer with them to haue a_do | ||
| Nor make fyre vpon theyr aulteris | ||
| 1880 | This is myn answere take good hede therto | |
| Nor none ensence cast in theyr senseres | ||
| Nor knele aforne them this .C.M. yeres | ||
| This is in somme for one worde and all | ||
| My last wyll and answere fynall. | ||
| 1885 | With this answere ther rose vp a sodeyn crye | |
| Noyse of the people clamour and wepyng | ||
| Aboute the martyr they wente busylye | ||
| Lyke wodemen vpon hym gauryng | ||
| He herde all theyr speche / spake agayn nothyng | ||
| 1890 | The iuges manace / the peoples violence | |
| He suffred all / and kept his pacience | ||
| sig: [K3] | ||
| The people agayne hym vengeable and cruell | ||
| Unto theyr temples brought hym anone ryght | ||
| By violence they gan hym to compell | ||
| 1895 | To theyr goddes to offre and to set vp lyght | |
| Blessed Albon as goddes owne knyght | ||
| Stable of herte / and hole in his entent | ||
| To sacrifice wolde neuer assent | ||
| The people then in theyr furyous hete | ||
| 1900 | By the iewes cruell commaundement | |
| They strypte hym fyrst / and with scourges bete | ||
| Tyll his body and skynne was all to_rent | ||
| But he with glad chere sufferde his torment | ||
| His eien vplyfte / to god began abrayde | ||
| 1905 | And to the lorde deuoutly thus he sayde | |
| Lorde god quod he kepe myn inwarde thought | ||
| Graunt of thy grace in my greuous payne | ||
| Pacience / that I ne grudge nought | ||
| Of thy mercy O Iesu not disdeyne | ||
| 1910 | My freyle flesshe / from murmour to restreyne | |
| Syth that my wyll stant hole without stryfe | ||
| To the to offre my soule and eke my lyfe | ||
| Remembre the lorde on thy seruant Albone | ||
| For nother flody stormes / wynde / nor reyne | ||
| 1915 | May hurte that house bylte on stable stone | |
| And semblably it is full selde seyne | ||
| Who byldeth in Christe / byldeth not in veyne | ||
| Syth my byldyng stant holy in thy grace | ||
| Suffre not my wyll remeue from this place | ||
| sig: [K3v] | ||
| 1920 | My voyce / my tonge / my wyll fully record | |
| All of assent without excepcion | ||
| For lyfe for dethe they neuer shall discord | ||
| But thou Iesu madest our redemption | ||
| Nowe by the vertue of thy passyon | ||
| 1925 | O blessed lorde graunt me constance | |
| Amonge the paynes hole wyll and meke suffrance | ||
| Whyles the martyr was scourged and bete | ||
| This was his voyce / on Christ_Iesu to cry | ||
| To call his helpe wolde neuer lete | ||
| 1930 | Nother for smerte / nor paynfull tormentrye | |
| Unto paynyms lawe / he wolde neuer applye | ||
| Nother for manace rebuke nor rygour | ||
| For fayre speche / for promysse nor fauour | ||
| Lyke a dyamande he wolde not be broke | ||
| 1935 | Nor restreyned from his olde constance | |
| From Christis fayth they myght not reuoke | ||
| With all theyr fayned wordes of pleasance | ||
| Than was he put vnder gouernance | ||
| Of the iuge / as a lambe amonge houndes | ||
| 1940 | Full syxe wekes not to passe his boundes | |
| Duryng this tyme the boke maketh mention | ||
| He streytly kept of moo than one or twayne | ||
| Lyke a martyr holde in streyte pryson | ||
| Myght not reche further than his cheyne | ||
| 1945 | The elementes his wronges gan to compleyne | |
| In theyr maner agaynst natures lawe | ||
| Theyr benefytes of kynde to withdrawe | ||
| sig: [K4] | ||
| Upon the erthe / on herbe / grasse / nor floure | ||
| On all these thre was no dewe sene | ||
| 1950 | The grounde to cherysshe come nother rayne nor shoure | |
| For no moisture fell vpon the grene | ||
| Flora slepte / that is the floures quene | ||
| Eolus the smothe wyndes softe | ||
| All this whyle enspired not alofte | ||
| 1955 | The erthe scaldeth with the feruence of the sonne | |
| Hete on nyghtes was intollerable | ||
| There grewe no frute / the skyes were so donne | ||
| Greynes come none / vplande was not erable | ||
| Thus by a maner complaynt lamentable | ||
| 1960 | Heuen and erthe complayned them of ryght | |
| The iniurie done vnto goddes knyght | ||
| The people playned for lackyng of vitayle | ||
| Demed it cause of some sorsery | ||
| That Th'elementis lyst to holde a batayle | ||
| 1965 | For Christis knyght to holde vp his partye | |
| Agayne myscreantes with theyr tormentrye | ||
| Magre theyr malyce to make the martyr stronge | ||
| To shewe by signes the paynyms dyd him wronge | ||
| Astlepeodet syttyng as iuge than | ||
| 1970 | Though he to Albon had great hatered | |
| Yet bicause of Dioclesyan | ||
| To slee the martyr durst not procede | ||
| Tyll he had sent letters as I rede | ||
| To th'emperour rehersyng howe Albon | ||
| 1975 | Forsaken had theyr goddes euery_chone | |
| sig: [K4v] | ||
| Enformyng hym of his obstinacy | ||
| Howe all theyr goddes he set also at nought | ||
| And howe theyr power pleynly he doth defye | ||
| And was made christen of herte wyll and thought | ||
| 1980 | And hath also subtylly wayes thought | |
| The peoples hertes from our goddes withdrawe | ||
| In theyr despyte to folowe a newe lawe | ||
| But the great and kynde famylyaryte | ||
| Whiche Albon had with the emperour | ||
| 1985 | Bycause also of his great dignite | |
| And of his kynne had so great fauour | ||
| That the iudge drad for to do rygour | ||
| Upon this prince of deth or cruelte | ||
| Tyll from the emperour he had auctorite | ||
| 1990 | And but there done great execution | |
| By hygh aduise of all the hole empire | ||
| To punysshe all tho from false rebellyon | ||
| Whiche to destroye your goddes so desyre | ||
| With whiche letters the emperour set a fyre | ||
| 1995 | Abode no lenger / but hastyly gan ordeyne | |
| To sende his felowe downe into Brytayne | ||
| And in great hast the story telleth expresse | ||
| Dioclesyan hath sent a great power | ||
| With Maxymyan called Herculesse | ||
| 2000 | Into Braytayne to serche out the mattier | |
| Wher that any were founde farre or nere | ||
| Of Christis fayth to sleyne euerychone | ||
| Without mercy / except only Albon | ||
| sig: L[1] | ||
| His lyfe to saue by a condition | ||
| 2005 | If to theyr sectes he wolde agayne restore | |
| From Christis loore / turne his opinion | ||
| Of theyr goddes / the sta[tu]tes to support statutes] stantes 1534, statutis L, statute P | ||
| To Dioclesyan that they may report | ||
| Howe that Albon doth hym sore repent | ||
| 2010 | To Christis fayth / that he dyd assent | |
| Made hym promyse / so that he wolde turnen | ||
| To theyr idols / with fayned fayre langage | ||
| Amonge with thretninges they dayly him adiuren | ||
| To peruerte his herte and his corage | ||
| 2015 | But euer ylyche of chere and of visage | |
| Betwen fyre and water / now harde now blandysshyng | ||
| From his constance they myght hym neuer bryng | ||
| Lyke a stronge towre bylte on a hygh mountayne | ||
| Toke none hede of theyr monitions | ||
| 2020 | Stode in our fayth so stable and so certayne | |
| Theyr ryche promysse of castels and of towns | ||
| With many lordshyps in dyuers regyons | ||
| He set at nought / by grace and by vertue | ||
| His grounde to stable he abode in Christ_Iesue | ||
| 2025 | Than by precepte of Dioclesyan | |
| If he not chaunge for fayrenes nor for drede | ||
| The charge was yeuen to Maxymyan | ||
| By iugement and dome to taken hede | ||
| To assigne a knyght to smyten of his hede | ||
| 2030 | Suche one as had in knyghthode hygh renoune | |
| Shulde on this prince done executioune | ||
| sig: [L1v] | ||
| This was so commaunded by sentence | ||
| Of the emperour that Amphibalus | ||
| If he were take by notable violence | ||
| 2035 | Without mercy shulde be serued thus | |
| By iugement cruell and furyous | ||
| Made naked fyrst and to a stake bounde | ||
| At his nauyll made a large wounde | ||
| He compelled amonge the cruell route | ||
| 2040 | At the nauyll his bowels to be take | |
| And his guttes serched rounde aboute | ||
| Lyke a long rope tyed to a stake | ||
| And of his lyfe so an ende make | ||
| And at laste voyde of all pytye | ||
| 2045 | Smyte of his heed by furyous cruelty. | |
| This was the dome touchyng the tormentes | ||
| Of blessed Albon and Amphibalus | ||
| Falsely concluded in the iugementes | ||
| Of Maxymyan / myn auctor telleth thus | ||
| 2050 | With Asclepeodet wode and contraryus | |
| In that citie bothe two there present | ||
| In Uerolamy / whiche yafe this iugement | ||
| The citezyns gathered enuiron | ||
| For this matter with great diligence | ||
| 2055 | Bothe of London and many other towne | |
| Of iugement to here that sentence | ||
| Youen vpon Albon in open audience | ||
| Under these wordes put in remembrance | ||
| As ye shall here rehersed in substaunce | ||
| sig: [L2] | ||
| 2060 | Tyme of the emperour Dioclesyan | |
| Whan he stode hyest in his maiestie | ||
| At Uerolamy the story tell can | ||
| Whan Albon was lorde of that citie | ||
| Tho days called for his dignitie | ||
| 2065 | Recorde of cronycles / whiche lyst not feyne | |
| Prince of knyghtes and stewarde of Bretayne | ||
| Duryng his lyfe to haue possession | ||
| All his power aforne hath be practysed | ||
| But nowe for he by false rebellyon | ||
| 2070 | Of wylfulnes and malyce hath despysed | |
| Beforne these dayes by antiquite deuised | ||
| The olde worshyps notable and famous | ||
| Done to Iubyter Appollo and Uenus | ||
| For whiche cause let euery man take hede | ||
| 2075 | Lyke as the lawe concludeth of ryght | |
| By iugement in hast he to be dede | ||
| His hede smyten of fyrst in the peoples syght | ||
| By the handes of some olde worthy knyght | ||
| Bycause the martyr was of high renowne | ||
| 2080 | There shulde a knyght done execution | |
| By dome also after whan he were deed | ||
| The place assigned by sorte or auenture | ||
| From the body / whan parted was the heed | ||
| The corps there shulde haue his sepulture | ||
| 2085 | Passyng an-other priuate creature | |
| There to be grauen the body with the heed | ||
| Ioyned to_gether in a great chest of leed | ||
| sig: [L2v] | ||
| With hym buryed his crosse and his sclaueyne | ||
| A large tombe for a memoryall | ||
| 2090 | This was the dome of the iuges tweyne | |
| In Uerolame citie full royall | ||
| To auenge theyr goddes infernall | ||
| Upon Albon whan they dyd deme | ||
| Agayne theyr lawes for a false blaspheme | ||
| 2095 | Dempte he was cause of mysauenture | |
| That theyr landes brought forth no grayne | ||
| The benefytes withdrawen of nature | ||
| To cherisshe theyr frute come noder dew nor reyne | ||
| By sodeyn vengeance as ye haue herde me seyne | ||
| 2100 | Diuersely theyr sorowes were made double | |
| To fynde the cause what made all this trouble | ||
| Either it come by some frowarde aduenture | ||
| By wytchecrafte or by sorcery | ||
| Whiche so longe vpon them doth endure | ||
| 2105 | Either by artmagyke or by nygramancy | |
| Eche dempt after his fantasy | ||
| Within the citie they sayd eke many one | ||
| It come for vengeance of saynt Albone | ||
| With this sodeyn vnware aduersite | ||
| 2110 | Itroubled was all the regyon | |
| Of Uerolamy the greattest of that citie | ||
| Made amonge them a conuocation | ||
| Of all the countre / citie / borough / and towne | ||
| The wysest come downe from eche partie | ||
| 2115 | Agaynst this myschefe to shape a remedye | |
| sig: [L3] | ||
| Amonge them-selfe cast a prouydence | ||
| Wronge that was don to Albon in that towne | ||
| Agaynst trouthe and good conscience | ||
| Of this myschefe / was chefe occasyon | ||
| 2120 | And by assent to relece his prison | |
| Theyr aduersite so myght be amended | ||
| By meane of hym / to whom they had offended | ||
| Barefote and bare whan that he was take | ||
| Lyke a prisoner brought to theyr presence | ||
| 2125 | Of this matter a counsell they gan make | |
| Dempt of reason in hym was none offence | ||
| For at them-selfe began the violence | ||
| And he stode quite in theyr opinion | ||
| Of his iniury hauyng compassyon | ||
| 2130 | They consydered his blode and his kynred | |
| His alyaunce and his hygh noblesse | ||
| For they stode a parcell in great drede | ||
| All the citie troubled with heuynesse | ||
| To se theyr lorde brought in suche distresse | ||
| 2135 | Causyng that citie and that famous towne | |
| To stande in rumour and great discention | ||
| Seinge theyr stewarde that was so noble a knight | ||
| And a man fre-borne of that citie | ||
| His famous lyne downe descendyng ryght | ||
| 2140 | From the Romayns of olde antiquite | |
| By comparyson the cronycle who lyst se | ||
| The stocke conueyed of hym that was so good | ||
| First from Troyans and from Romayn blode | ||
| sig: [L3v] | ||
| Fyrst from the partye / for to speake of Troye | ||
| 2145 | He had with Ector magnanimyte | |
| Of whose noblesse all Brytayne may haue ioye | ||
| Sad a[s] Scipion voyde of duplicitie as] a 1534, as L | ||
| And Uerolamy that famous olde citie | ||
| May well reioyse / renewed euer in lyche | ||
| 2150 | With his relyques that it is made so ryche | |
| And to reherse of his conditions | ||
| A ryghtfull prince in all his gouernance | ||
| In hym was neuer founde occasyons | ||
| Of frowarde meanyng / nor double varyance | ||
| 2155 | Neuer ment to no man displeasance | |
| Peysed all this / alas voyde of refuge | ||
| Nowe lyke a thefe he stande aforne the iuge | ||
| But to refourme his byrth and lyberte | ||
| The chefe of the citie dyd theyr busy payne | ||
| 2160 | This noble prince amonge them to go free | |
| From bonde or fetters / or noyse of any chayne | ||
| But therupon the martyr gan complayne | ||
| Within hym-selfe leste suche noyse and sown | ||
| In any wyse shulde let his passyon | ||
| 2165 | That kynde of mercy / whiche they dyd hym shewe | |
| Of his paynes by a maner of allegeaunce | ||
| The martyr dempt to speake in wordes fewe | ||
| It was to hym moste odious vengeaunce | ||
| For his desyre and his herty pleasance | ||
| 2170 | Was only this shorte processe to make | |
| To suffre dethe only for Christis sake | ||
| sig: [L4] | ||
| With herty sobbyng profounde and depe | ||
| Towarde heuen mekely he kept his syght | ||
| Of inwarde constreynt pitously can wepe | ||
| 2175 | The crosse aforne hym deuoutly helde vpryght | |
| Cryenge to Iesu haue mercy on thy knyght | ||
| Let not the tende by no collusyon | ||
| Stere the people to let my passyon | ||
| To the people turnyng his knyghtly face | ||
| 2180 | Sayd vnto them of herte and hole corage | |
| Your fayned fauour your dissymuled grace | ||
| May in this case do me none auauntage | ||
| Fully disposed to perfourme my viage | ||
| Forto accomplysshe lyke as I haue begon | ||
| 2185 | In Christ_Iesu my tryumphe may be won | |
| Syth I am redy for to endure payne | ||
| Of my free wyll why suffre ye so longe | ||
| Of my desyre I desyre moste souerayne | ||
| For Christis sake to endure paynes stronge | ||
| 2190 | My martyrdome / why do ye so prolonge | |
| In your entent agayne me ye do erre | ||
| That I do couet so longe to differre | ||
| I maruayle howe ye may susteyne | ||
| Of neglygence so longe to abyde | ||
| 2195 | Whyle the martyr is newe fresshe and grene | |
| Execution for to set a_syde | ||
| Loke your statutes and therupon prouyde | ||
| Unto your goddes reporteth how that I | ||
| Of all the worlde am theyr most ennemy | ||
| sig: [L4v] | ||
| 2200 | Syth they be wrought of men that ben mortall | |
| Unworthy preued to beare any dignitie | ||
| But forged ydols of stones and metall | ||
| Falsely vsurped agayne the deyte | ||
| Foles do wronge to knele vpon theyr knee | ||
| 2205 | For who calleth to them they yeue none audience | |
| Domme as a stocke / voyde of intelligence | ||
| A fole is he amonge foles all | ||
| To a blynde stocke / that kneleth to haue syght | ||
| And so is he that doth for strength call | ||
| 2210 | To hym that hath no power nor no myght | |
| Can not discerne betwene darkenes and lyght | ||
| Large-lypped wordes haue they none | ||
| Of tonge m[uete] / as any stocke or stone muete] meued 1534, mewet L | ||
| O fruteles hope / O false trust dispayred | ||
| 2215 | O vanyte / O rudenes detestable | |
| O apparence with manhode foule appared | ||
| O ignorance passyng abhomynable | ||
| O Idolaters of corage most vnstable | ||
| Why worshyp ye in your conceytes blynde | ||
| 2220 | Cursed mawmets / th a t haue nother wyt nor mynde | |
| They be proued worse of condition | ||
| Lasse of power sothely than be ye | ||
| Of worldly thynges ye haue inspection | ||
| They haue great eien yet they may not se | ||
| 2225 | Boistous handes / they fele nothyng parde | |
| Theyr armes longe they make no diffence | ||
| With theyr defe eares may haue none audience | ||
| sig: M[1] | ||
| What thynge is worse than yeue the souereynte | ||
| Of your handwarke to forge fals ymages | ||
| 2230 | Defe blynde and dombe / vnto whose deyte | |
| Though ye call ay afforne theyr visages | ||
| They knowe nothyng th'entent of your langages | ||
| Of all fyue wyttes they be so defectyfe | ||
| What causeth this / but lacke of soule and lyfe | ||
| 2235 | For howe myght he verrayle in-dede | |
| Without felyng of ioye or heuynes | ||
| Restore to lyfe folkes that ben deed | ||
| Or make them hole that playne of theyr sykenes | ||
| For all distresse disceyte or doublenes | ||
| 2240 | Of worldely myscheues sought on eche partie | |
| Was fyrst brought in by false ydolatrye | ||
| A man that hath memory of reason | ||
| Whom god hath made lyke to his ymage | ||
| Is foule blent in his discretion | ||
| 2245 | To fals ydols to knele or do homage | |
| Wo be to them ruyne and damage | ||
| Trouble myschyefe vnto one and all | ||
| To suche mawmettry that for helpe call | ||
| Whan the paynyms herde and vnderstode | ||
| 2250 | That they myght not remoue his conscience | |
| From Christ_Iesu that dyed vpon the rode | ||
| For fayre nor foule / for fauour nor violence | ||
| To do by theyr counsell and all of one sentence | ||
| A place assigned lyke theyr opinion | ||
| 2255 | Shulde at Holmehurst suffre his passyon | |
| sig: [M1v] | ||
| In theyr opinion by controuersye | ||
| Stode at debate as they were applyed | ||
| What maner deth Albon shulde dye | ||
| Whiche hath theyr goddes and theyr secte denyed | ||
| 2260 | Some of a crosse wolde haue hym crucyfyed | |
| Other there were / that dyd in malice raue | ||
| Wolde haue hym quicke karued in his graue | ||
| Some also aforne or he were deed | ||
| Of false enuie and furyous wodenes | ||
| 2265 | Wolde haue his eien out of his heed | |
| That he shulde in myschefe of blyndnes | ||
| All desolate and abiecte in darkenes | ||
| Folowe his maister with his eien blynde | ||
| Of auenture tyll he myght hym fynde | ||
| 2270 | Echeon concludyng that he shall be deed | |
| And fynally thus was theyr iugement | ||
| Lad to Holmehurst there smyte of his heed | ||
| The cruell iuges with paynyms of assent | ||
| Lyke a lambe / monges wolfes all to_rent | ||
| 2275 | Towarde his dethe and pitous passyon | |
| In cheynes bounde led hym through the towne | ||
| No fauour shewed lettyng nor obstacle | ||
| But cruell rygour voyde of all pitie | ||
| Lyke as men gone to some vncouth spectacle | ||
| 2280 | People come downe his martyrdome to se | |
| The iuge alone lefte in the citie | ||
| Lyke turmentours this was theyr furyous cry | ||
| Out of this towne drawe forth our ennemy | ||
| sig: [M2] | ||
| By experience at eye ye may deme | ||
| 2285 | Lyke his desert so foloweth hym his chaunce | |
| To our goddes moste odious blaspheme | ||
| Grounde and gynnyng of our sodeyn greuance | ||
| On whom they lyst to shewe theyr vengeance | ||
| This was theyr noyse far from all reason | ||
| 2290 | As they hym lad towarde his passyon | |
| There was so great concors of folkes aboute | ||
| The multytude gan alway to multiplie | ||
| Of paynyms contagious was the route | ||
| The grounde so full on euery partie | ||
| 2295 | Men myght vnneth any space espie | |
| To stande vpon / myn auctor lyst not feyne | ||
| Whan blessed Albon was led towarde his peyne | ||
| The feruent hete of the sommer sonne | ||
| Hath with his streames / the soile so clad and brent | ||
| 2300 | Up in the lyon as his course hath ronne | |
| With his brennyng the grounde was almost shent | ||
| Under the fete where as the people went | ||
| The soyle so hote of sodeyn auenture | ||
| For enchaufynge they myght not endure | ||
| 2305 | Lastynge this hete / whan Phebus shone so clere | |
| The people in nombre waxed more then lasse | ||
| Tyll that they come to a great ryuere | ||
| Whose sturdy wawis wolde not suffre them passe | ||
| The great depenes gan them to manasse | ||
| 2310 | The brydge streite / the people so great and huge | |
| That many one were dreynt in that diluge | ||
| sig: [M2v] | ||
| Great preace of people downe to the water cam | ||
| The ryuer depe / the brydge narowe and small | ||
| They that coude ouer the ryuer swam | ||
| 2315 | Who that coude not turned ouer as a ball | |
| The comberous preace caused many a fall | ||
| The noyse was great the rumour and complaynt | ||
| In his passage of people that was dreynt | ||
| Fauour was none of brother vnto brother | ||
| 2320 | They were so busy to passe the ryuer | |
| In that great pryde eche man oppressed other | ||
| To passe the brydge there was so great daungere | ||
| The hete importable that tyme of the yere | ||
| Caused many one / whiche on the brydge stode | ||
| 2325 | For great fayntnes / to fall in-to the flode | |
| This great myschefe whan Albon gan beholde | ||
| Moued of mercy and of compassyon | ||
| With wepyng eyen as they water wolde | ||
| Unto the erthe fyll on his knees downe | ||
| 2330 | His loke vpcast with great deuotion | |
| Towarde heuen makyng his prayere | ||
| To Christ_Iesu sayde as ye shall here | ||
| O lorde Iesu out of whose blessed syde | ||
| Whan thou for man were nayled on the rode | ||
| 2335 | Through whose herte / there dyd a spere glyde | |
| At whiche wounde ranne water out and blode | ||
| O blessed lorde moste mercyfull and good | ||
| So as I sawe in myn auisyon | ||
| Out of thyn herte two lycours ranne adown | ||
| sig: [M3] | ||
| 2340 | That is to say / red bloud and water clere | |
| Those two lycours of our redemption | ||
| At my request drye vp this ryuer | ||
| Staunche the floode and here myn oryson | ||
| And take this people vnder thy protection | ||
| 2345 | Suffre that they with dry fete may wende | |
| Of my passyon to se an ende | ||
| And whyls the teares from his eien ranne | ||
| Downe by his chekes on eche partie | ||
| By deuout prayer of this holy man | ||
| 2350 | All sodeynly the ryuer was made drye | |
| The flode staunched and vanysshed as a skye | ||
| He neded not the maner out to serche | ||
| Whan god by grace lyst any thynge to werche | ||
| For he that made maugre Pharao | ||
| 2355 | The people of Israell passe the red see | |
| With drye fete / the same lorde euen so | ||
| Was that Albon kneled vpon his knee | ||
| Prayeng the lorde of grace and pitie | ||
| Graunt the people to haue inspection | ||
| 2360 | And passe the ryuer to sen his passyon | |
| An vncouth maruayle / a gracious myracle | ||
| Folkes drounde / lowe at the bottom sayne | ||
| With goddes myght / where may be none obstacle | ||
| The ryuer drye / founde was agayne | ||
| 2365 | Uoyde of moysture / smothe was and playne | |
| Of the holy martyr / the vertue alway mored | ||
| Folke aforne drownde / to lyfe were restored | ||
| sig: [M3v] | ||
| No token of deth was in theyr faces sayne | ||
| But quicke and lyuely to euery mannes syght | ||
| 2370 | These great myracles notable in certayne | |
| Fyrst of the ryuer / dryed by goddes myght | ||
| All this consydered the selfe-same knyght | ||
| Whiche was assigned for to do vengeaunce | ||
| On blessed Albon / fyll in repentance | ||
| 2375 | The same knyght astonyed and aferde | |
| Whiche through Albon towarde his passyon | ||
| Of god visited / cast away his swerde | ||
| Afore the martyr / mekely kneled adowne | ||
| And vnto god made his confessyon | ||
| 2380 | Besechyng Albon of comforte and socour | |
| In humble wyse beknowyng his errour | ||
| Seruant of god / O blessed man Albon | ||
| Thy god only / is very god certayne | ||
| There is no god sothly but he alon | ||
| 2385 | All other goddes bere here name in veyne | |
| By the myracles / whiche that I haue seyne | ||
| I dare affirme / the trouth it doth well preue | ||
| He is very god / on whom that I beleue | ||
| I wote ryght wele he is myghty and is good | ||
| 2390 | For in a moment / through his magnyfycence | |
| At thy request voyded hath the flood | ||
| As lorde of lordes moste digne of reuerence | ||
| None lyke to hym of power and potence | ||
| Whiche on this erthe as souerayne lorde and kynge | ||
| 2395 | Passyng all other / doth maruayles in werchynge | |
| sig: [M4] | ||
| Set all a_syde the dede beareth wytnes | ||
| Of no collusyon nor of no false apparaunce | ||
| Of godly myght shewyng his greatnes | ||
| Ryght as it is in very existence | ||
| 2400 | For whiche I aske of all olde neglygence | |
| Mercy / and pray for my trespace | ||
| O glorious martyr / that lorde to do me grace | ||
| There is no lorde / but only Christe_Iesus | ||
| He is my lorde and I wyll be his knyght | ||
| 2405 | Whiche made these stremes to departe thus | |
| A great myracle wrought in the peoples syght | ||
| His power is great / and he is moste of myght | ||
| All fals goddes here I do forsake | ||
| And to his mercy all holy I me take | ||
| 2410 | This knyght by grace thus sodeynly conuerted | |
| The name of whom was Araclius | ||
| Whiche thynge whan paynyms haue aduerted | ||
| They fell vpon hym as wolfes dispitous | ||
| Touchyng the ryuer / sayd it was not thus | ||
| 2415 | It weren theyr goddes and none other wyght | |
| That wrought this myracle by theyr great myght | ||
| Our myghty goddes most famous and most good | ||
| Of theyr benyngne gracious influence | ||
| They haue auoyded this ryuer and this flood | ||
| 2420 | Of whose secretes we haue experience | |
| And in effecte full notable euidence | ||
| Whiche for our sake / if it be well sought | ||
| For our passage this myracle haue we wrought | ||
| sig: [M4v] | ||
| For to accomplysshe that we haue begon | ||
| 2425 | Agayn our moste enemy lyke to our entention | |
| Our god most myghty the fyry feruent sonne | ||
| With his great hete and beames yuyronne | ||
| Hath rauysshed with a shorte conclusyon | ||
| This gloryous Phebus with his streames clere | ||
| 2430 | The watry moysture of this great ryuere | |
| They haue consydered our great deuotion | ||
| Whiche we haue towarde theyr deyte | ||
| Howe we labour for execution | ||
| Agayne theyr moste ennemy founde in the citie | ||
| 2435 | But for hynder theyr magnanymytie | |
| Though thou in contrary accordyst with Albon | ||
| Hast an opinion agaynst vs euerychone | ||
| Thus was theyr langage and theyr dalyance | ||
| Of hatefull malyce agaynst this trewe knyght | ||
| 2440 | With great rebukes for his repentance | |
| Fyll vpon hym lyke wolfes anone ryght | ||
| And called hym in all the peoples syght | ||
| To theyr goddes he was a fals blaspheme | ||
| Worthy to dye / of malyce thus they deme | ||
| 2445 | Ranne vpon hym with paynes full vncouth | |
| Of great malyce they had vnto Albon | ||
| Fyrst they smyten the tethe out of his mouthe | ||
| And there they brake his bones euerychone | ||
| Without wounde membre was lefte none | ||
| 2450 | Of mynde of herte alway hole he stode | |
| For in his brest the fayth of Christe abode | ||
| sig: N[1] | ||
| Only by grace he had this auantage | ||
| In his belefe so holy dyd he stande | ||
| Whiche for his fayth myght suffre no damage | ||
| 2455 | Kepte his promyse / whiche he toke in hande | |
| He lefte halfe deed lyeng vpon the strande | ||
| Fro wycke or worse / fro cryme to cryme in-dede | ||
| Lyke homycydes the paynyms gan procede | ||
| With broke bones / this pytous wounded knyght | ||
| 2460 | Was on the stronde lefte with deedly chere | |
| Pale of hewe / myght not syt vpryght | ||
| As the story in order doth vs lere | ||
| By many a stubbe and many a sharpe brere | ||
| Barefote they led hym / voyde of compassyon | ||
| 2465 | This blessed Albon towardes his passyon | |
| That he was bare the traces were well seyne well] welll 1534 | ||
| For with his blode the soile was dyed redde | ||
| Made his passage towarde a hygh mounteyne | ||
| Through sharpe stones / [s]quare as speres hedde square] quare 1534, squar L | ||
| 2470 | Thus entreated aforne or he was deed | |
| Without wepyng / what erthely creature | ||
| Myght se a prince / suche deadly payne endure | ||
| Stedfast of herte his trust wolde neuer fayle | ||
| Grounded in god and in his fayth so stable | ||
| 2475 | Goth vp the hyll to accomplysshe his batayle | |
| And there were people veryly innumerable | ||
| The sonne was hote / the hete importable | ||
| In poynt almost with feruence and with dust | ||
| To slee the people with a sodeyn thurst | ||
| sig: [N1v] | ||
| 2480 | Constrayned with hete gan cry eche one | |
| Of cursed malyce and great malyncoly | ||
| Upon the martyr made assaute anone | ||
| And sayde through his magyke and his sorcery | ||
| That they were lyke through mortall thurst to dye | ||
| 2485 | Agaynst whose deedly furyous cruelte | |
| Blessed Albon gan shewe his charyte | ||
| To pray for them that dyd hym moste turment | ||
| This was his custome and his olde vsage | ||
| With hole herte and humble trewe entent | ||
| 2490 | Prayed god with teares in his visage | |
| Of this myschefe to stynt the great rage | ||
| That the people shulde in no degre | ||
| Bicause of hym to suffre aduersyte | ||
| O lorde quod he / for thy heuenly empire | ||
| 2495 | Lyke as thou arte most myghty of pusance | |
| Thy smothe wynde by grace let enspire | ||
| Called zepherus to do them allegeance | ||
| This rygours eyre with dewe of attemperance | ||
| Betwene hote and colde set a meane in-dede | ||
| 2500 | Or thou do vengeance mercy may procede | |
| Of this myschefe ordeyne a relece | ||
| Without vengeance suffre people gone | ||
| That whylom madest thy seruant Moyses | ||
| With his yerde to smyte vpon a drye stone | ||
| 2505 | At whose touchyng come water out anone | |
| Nowe gracious lorde with newe stremes fresshe | ||
| On this hyll these people do refresshe | ||
| sig: [N2] | ||
| Thy gratious mercy from them do not expelle | ||
| Of blessed Albon rehersed this prayer | ||
| 2510 | At his fete anone sprange vp a well | |
| Full plentous with cristall stremes clere | ||
| A wonders thynge / and a maruaylous to here | ||
| From a drye hyll of moystyr voyde at all | ||
| To se spryng a well clerer than cristall | ||
| 2515 | Of whiche water there was so great foyson | |
| And of that sprynge so gracious habundance | ||
| That from aboue there came a ryuer downe | ||
| This holsom streme was of so great pleasaunce | ||
| To staunche theyr thurst founde ther suffisance | ||
| 2520 | The hete aswaged the people out of dispeyre dispeyre] dispreyre 1534 | |
| By goddes grace so temperate was the eyre | ||
| Thus was the people refresshed at theyr lust | ||
| By the holy martyr mercyfull and good | ||
| Yet of false malyce they had a frowarde thurst | ||
| 2525 | In theyr corages lyke furyous folke and wode | |
| Agayne nature for to shede blode | ||
| The blode of hym / whiche in theyr disease | ||
| By his prayer theyr myschefe dyd appese | ||
| Theyr thurste was staunched / they were refresshed wele | ||
| 2530 | But a false thurst of malyce and hatered | |
| In theyr desyres / was staunched neuer a dele | ||
| They were besye the blys_full blode to shed | ||
| Of hym that holpe them in great nede | ||
| Lyke blasphemous / makyng a false obstacle | ||
| 2535 | Gaue vnto the sonne thanke for this myracle | |
| sig: [N2v] | ||
| With voyce vpraysed falsely they began | ||
| Thus they sayde of outragyous clamour | ||
| Praysyng and laude be to you the sonne | ||
| Whiche in this myschefe hath be our sauiour | ||
| 2540 | Staunched our thurst / with his gracious lycour | |
| By his beames moste fresshe and clere shynyng | ||
| Us to releue made a well vp spryng. | ||
|
Uerba translatoris |
||
| O people vnkynde blynded with fals errour | ||
| O frowarde people / rude / dull / and obstinate | ||
| 2545 | O beastiall folke / forthest from all sauour | |
| Of grace and vertue / o people infortunate | ||
| In your conceyte / o folke moste indurate | ||
| That god hath shewed for loue of Albon | ||
| Ye gyfe thankes to ymages made of stone | ||
| 2550 | O most vnhappy / o people vngratious | |
| Worse than beastis / o voyde of all reason | ||
| O cruell tygrys / o wolfes furyous | ||
| O folysshe asses / dull of discretion | ||
| Falsely to deme in your opinion | ||
| 2555 | Thynge that Albon by grace of god hath wonne | |
| Ye yefe the laude other to sterre or sonne | ||
| Ye set a_syde the southfast sonne of lyfe | ||
| The sonne of grace that doth all the worlde gye | ||
| Whiche may you saue agayn all mortall stryfe | ||
| 2560 | To all our sores may do best remedy | |
| Ye do great wronge for to defye | ||
| This worldly sonne from temporall bryghtnes | ||
| And to forsake the sonne of ryghtwysenes | ||
| sig: [N3] | ||
| Lyke false blasphemus forsoke your creature | ||
| 2565 | And do worshyp to a creature | |
| The sonne of lyfe may clyppis no shoure | ||
| Whose heuenly beames by recorde of scripture | ||
| Yeueth lyght of grace to euery creature | ||
| But ye arne frowarde his influence to take | ||
| 2570 | And for your ydols his lordshyps to forsake | |
| What may auayle Iupiter or Saturne | ||
| Or cruell Mars / that causeth stryfe or warre | ||
| Or worldely Phebus / th a t one day doth her soiurne | ||
| The nyght cometh on / the lyght is fro you farre | ||
| 2575 | And eke your Uenus / called the day-sterre | |
| All these rekened in your mad wodenesse | ||
| Called of your custome goddes and goddesse | ||
| God that this day shewed here | ||
| To magnifie his gloryous knyght Albon | ||
| 2580 | With a fresshe well / and dryed the ryuer | |
| Reken vp your goddes and forget neuer one | ||
| Of these myracles / forsoth his parte is none | ||
| A fole is he that of them dothe retche | ||
| Sith vnto suche thing their power may not stretche | ||
| 2585 | Of theyr power me lyst no more to entreate | |
| Whiche leadeth men vnto theyr dampnation | ||
| Mars nor Iupiter / nor Phebus with his hete | ||
| May do no fauour nor mytigation | ||
| Agayne the myschefe lyke your opinion | ||
| 2590 | The sayde myracles were wrought by vertue | |
| For loue of Albon by grace of Christ_Iesue | ||
| sig: [N3v] | ||
| Your disc[r]etions ben to foule blent discretions] disctetions 1534 | ||
| Your conceyt derke / and false in your opinion | ||
| Magre your mawmettes in all my best entent | ||
| 2595 | I woll procede with hole affection | |
| To accomplysshe vp the holy passyon | ||
| Of seynt Albon by grace of his fauour | ||
| In his translation folowyng myn auctour. | ||
| After these myracles shewed at the well | ||
| 2600 | A gracious treasure a yefte of great price | |
| Lyke here-toforne as ye haue herde me tell | ||
| Yet for all that folowyng theyr olde auice | ||
| The people abode styll in theyr malyce | ||
| From the mounteyne / cast not for to wende | ||
| 2605 | Of the martyr tyll they haue made an ende | |
| Fyrst hent his lockes that were longe and large | ||
| Malycyously bounde them to a stake | ||
| Chose out a knyght / and on hym layde the charge | ||
| That in all hast he shulde hym redy make | ||
| 2610 | And a sworde sherpe in his hande take | |
| And they hym bad hauyng of god no drede | ||
| With a great stroke to smyte of his hede | ||
| The hede hynge styll / the body fell to grounde | ||
| His crosse also all besprent with blode | ||
| 2615 | Kepte for a relyque / whan it was after founde | |
| Maugre paynyms contagious and wode | ||
| For amonges them secretely there stode | ||
| A christen man / the whiche toke kepe | ||
| The sayde crosse deuoutly for to kepe | ||
| sig: [N4] | ||
| 2620 | This turmentour this cursed paynym knyght | |
| He that smote of the hede of saynt Albon | ||
| By vengeance he hath lost his syght | ||
| Bothe his eien fyll from his hede anone | ||
| Without recure his worldly ioye was gone | ||
| 2625 | Whiche fyrste was glad to make the martyr blede | |
| Lyke his disceyt deserued hath his mede | ||
| This wounded knyght / whiche in the valey abode | ||
| Araclius as ye haue herde me deuise | ||
| The deth of Albon whan he vnderstode | ||
| 2630 | Whiche for feblenes myght not aryse | |
| Gan peyne hym-selfe in full pitous wyse | ||
| Amonge paynyms as he myght hym kepe | ||
| With honde and fote vpon the hylle to crepe | ||
| Upon the monition of the same knyght | ||
| 2635 | Aforsayd hym-selfe on hande and fote to gone | |
| The iuge hym met and spake to hym thus ryght | ||
| Thou that hast so many a broke bone | ||
| Clymbe vp fast and praye to thyn Albone | ||
| Ceasse not / but crye vpon hym sore | ||
| 2640 | Thy broke bones and woundes to restore | |
| Fyrst of all renne to hym and take hede | ||
| To be made hole of thyne infirmyte | ||
| Vnto the body / ioyne agayne the hede | ||
| And in al hast thou shalte recured be | ||
| 2645 | From all sykenes and aduersyte | |
| And after that do thy busy cure | ||
| To ordeyne for his sepulture | ||
| sig: [N4v] | ||
| And syth thou arte a knyght of his doctryne | ||
| Let se what he may nowe do the auayle | ||
| 2650 | To make the hole by crafte of medycyne | |
| Call vnto hym fast / and loke that thou not fayle | ||
| And thou shalte fynde an vnkouth meruayle | ||
| If thou not cesse vpon hym for to crye | ||
| Agaynst all sykenes / thou shalte fynde remedye | ||
| 2655 | This maymed knyght yafe good audience | |
| To that the iuge sayde in derysyon | ||
| All set in fyre with sodeyn hote feruence | ||
| Gan to abrayde of great deuotion | ||
| I truste quod he of hole affection | ||
| 2660 | Only by vertue / and merytes of Albon | |
| God vnto helthe me may restore anone | ||
| Through his power and his magnyfycence | ||
| The eternall lorde may by his great myght | ||
| By the prayer and mercyfull clemence | ||
| 2665 | Of hym that is his maister / and he his knyght | |
| I that am lame to make me go vpryght | ||
| And these wordes sayde / with great loue and drede | ||
| So as he myght crope vp to the hede | ||
| With great deuotion he gan the heed embrace | ||
| 2670 | To the heed he brought it anone ryght | |
| All bedewed with wepyng was his face | ||
| Of wofull herte to se that pytous syght | ||
| That holy prince albon Christis owne knyght | ||
| By whose meryte / whan he crepte on the grounde | ||
| 2675 | All sodeynly he rose vp hole and sounde | |
| sig: O[1] | ||
| And whan he was restored agayne to his strength | ||
| He yafe praysyng laude and reuerence | ||
| With humble chere fyll prostrate in length | ||
| Thankyng god of entier diligence | ||
| 2680 | And in the peoples open audience | |
| Seased not saynt Albon for to prayse | ||
| For loue of whom Christ_Iesu dyd hym rayse | ||
| His force agaynst Christe made hym to recure | ||
| The people present myght se and knowe | ||
| 2685 | Than he deuoutly made a sepulture | |
| Gadryng stones lyenge on a rowe | ||
| Layed the martyr in the grounde downe lowe | ||
| And all a_lofte his labour was wele sene | ||
| He couered it with torues fresshe and grene | ||
| 2690 | Wherof paynyms had great enuie | |
| Whan they behelde howe the same knyght | ||
| Restored was and hole in eche partye | ||
| So sodeynly to his force and myght | ||
| Wherof astonyed was euery man and wyght | ||
| 2695 | Thought in them-selfe it was agayn nature | |
| A brosed man so soone for to recure | ||
| Agayne this knyght they toke theyr consayle | ||
| Amonge them gan his deth conspyre | ||
| Thought it shulde be to them great auayle | ||
| 2700 | To slee this man they were so set a_fyre | |
| His hasty deth so greately they desyre | ||
| Some sayd that he had in his entent | ||
| Some wychecrafte or some experiment | ||
| sig: [O1v] | ||
| Some other sayde in theyr iugement | ||
| 2705 | Lyke theyr owne false immagynatyfe | |
| This was wrought by inchauntement | ||
| Or by some magyke had a preseruatyfe | ||
| Not to be slayne with dagger / sworde / nor knyfe | ||
| But so were / the story doth remembre | ||
| 2710 | That he were hew in peces euery membre | |
| Amonge them-selfe was great controuersy | ||
| And eche of them gan his verdyte shewe | ||
| Tyll it befell of malyce and enuye | ||
| Fals paynyms in nombre not a fewe | ||
| 2715 | In peces smale / haue hym all to_hewe | |
| Of his recuryng hauyng no maner of drede | ||
| All of one assent they smote of his hede | ||
| This blessed knyght as the story sayth | ||
| Stode alway in one in his perseuerance | ||
| 2720 | Of wyll / of herte / stedfast in the fayth | |
| Lyst not chaunge for turment nor penance | ||
| To holy Albon egall inconstance | ||
| As he was made felowe of his victorye | ||
| So is he nowe partable of his glorye | ||
| 2725 | After all this vengeable cruelte | |
| And all this mortall furyous violence | ||
| For to go home agayne to theyr citie | ||
| To all the people the iuge yafe lycence | ||
| At theyr departyng all of one sentence | ||
| 2730 | And with one voyce / homwarde as they resorte | |
| Theyr langage was as the story doth reporte | ||
| sig: [O2] | ||
| Wo that iuge that doth none equite | ||
| Wo be to hym that doth no ryghtwysenes | ||
| And wo to hym that can haue no pitie | ||
| 2735 | Wo to that iuge gouerned with wodenes | |
| And wo to hym that of false hastynes | ||
| Worketh vpon wyll by false collusyon | ||
| Without tytle of trouthe or of reason | ||
| This was the noyse the rumour and the crye | ||
| 2740 | Whan they departed home from the mountayne | |
| Trouthe wyll out magre fals enuie | ||
| Ryghtwysenes may not be hyd it is certayne | ||
| As for a tyme it may be ouerlayne | ||
| By ensample as passed is the daungere | ||
| 2745 | Of stormy weders / Phebus is most clere | |
| Our gracious lorde Iesu most benyngne | ||
| Whiche all gouerneth by eternall myght | ||
| Lyst to shewe many a gracious sygne | ||
| Folowyng vpon the selfe-same nyght | ||
| 2750 | After the passyon of his blessed knyght | |
| Out of whose tombe was sene an heuenly streme | ||
| Assendyng vpwarde bryght as the sonne-beame | ||
| The same tyme whan folkes to bed went | ||
| Ouer the citie / this bryght streme gan shyne | ||
| 2755 | Last all the nyght no man knewe what it ment | |
| Upwarde erecte ryght as any lyne | ||
| The people sawe / howe it dyd enlumyne | ||
| The longe nyght as god dyd ordayne | ||
| To all four partes stretchyng of Bretayne | ||
| sig: [O2v] | ||
| 2760 | With this vncouth maruaylous myracle | |
| Was sene and herde duryng all the nyght | ||
| People gathered to loke vpon that spectacle | ||
| Betwene ioye and drede / reioysyng of that lyght | ||
| As they coude discerne and knowe of ryght | ||
| 2765 | This was the ditie / which in that lyght was songe | |
| As folowyng is wrytten in latyn tonge | ||
| Albanus vir egregius martir extat gloriosus | ||
| And were there sene assendyng vp and downe | ||
| In the celestiall glorious bryght skye | ||
| Heuenly angels that made noyse and sowne | ||
| 2770 | With this refret in this armonye | |
| Let vs with songe vpreyse and magnyfye | ||
| The laude of Albon notable and glorious | ||
| This day with martyrs made victorious | ||
| Albanus vir egregius martyr extat gloriosus | ||
| This songe was herde by reporte through th e towne | ||
| 2775 | And remembred vpon eche partie | |
| For a synguler commendation | ||
| Of hym that was prince of his chyualrye | ||
| Stewarde of Bretons to gouerne them and gye | ||
| Whose synguler laude and tryumphe glorious | ||
| 2780 | This day with martyrs is made vic[t]orious victorious] viccorious 1534 | |
| Albanus vir egregius martyr extat gloriosus | ||
| sig: [O3] | ||
| This noble prince of Brutis_Albion | ||
| Hath suffered deth and mortall turmentrye | ||
| Stable of herte this Christis champyon | ||
| Hauynge dispite of all idolatrye | ||
| 2785 | This blessed martyr crowned aboue so hygh | |
| With angels songe so[o]te and melodious soote] soete 1534, soote L | ||
| This day with martyrs is made victorious | ||
| Albanus vir egregius martyr extat gloriosus. | ||
| O prothomartyr full famous of renown | ||
| Amonge paynyms hauyng the maistrye | ||
| 2790 | To be cause grounde and destruction | |
| In Uerolamy of all false mawmettrye | ||
| Thy lyfe for Christe hath put in ieopartye | ||
| For whiche this day with songe melodyous | ||
| Thou arte with martyrs made victorious | ||
| 2795 | Be vnto that citie supportour and patron | |
| Kepe them from sorowe / sykenes / and malady | ||
| From pestilence and yll infection | ||
| And of theyr ennemyes represse all tyrannye | ||
| Whiche be fraunchised with the regallye | ||
| 2800 | Of thy presens / o martyr glorious | |
| With all that longeth to the and to thyn hous | ||
| And blessed martyr most lowly I the requere | ||
| Whiche abydest in the heuenly mantion | ||
| With laurer crowned aboue the sterres clere | ||
| 2805 | Only of mercy to haue compassyon | |
| If ought be sayde in this translation There is a leaf missing (O3v and O4) | ||
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| 2820 | [ ] | |
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| 2825 | [ ] | |
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| 2830 | [ ] | |
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| sig: [O4v] | ||
| sig: P[1] | ||
|
¶Here begynneth the thyrde boke / whiche telleth of the conuersion of many of the paynims vnto the fayth. And also of the martyrdome of holy Amphibalus / whiche conuerted saynt Albon to the fayth of Christe. whiche Amphibalus was the princes sonne of wales. |
||
| Myracles shewed / and maruayles many-folde | ||
| This blessed martyr for to magnyfye | ||
| As here-toforne ye haue herde me tolde | ||
| 2840 | The nyght illumyned with the golden skye | |
| Songe of angels with heuenly armony | ||
| The people astonyed tremblyng in the derke | ||
| To se howe Christ lyst for the martyr werke | ||
| But on your brest remembre your trespas | ||
| 2845 | To th'erth fall prostrate downe | |
| Prayeth to the lorde for to do you grace | ||
| Of your offence and transgression | ||
| Or that he take vengeance on your towne | ||
| Trusteth playnly / whether ye be wrothe or fayne | ||
| 2850 | All this wrought for hym that ye haue slayne | |
| This lyght from heuen / whiche th a t is descended | ||
| For Albon shewed / and the golden skye | ||
| Let vs repent of that we haue offended | ||
| Of our trespas mercy to Iesu crye | ||
| 2855 | And forsake all ydolatrye | |
| Takyng ensample all by one accorde | ||
| Of this martyr that whylome was our lorde | ||
| sig: [P1v] | ||
| We may consydre a thyng agaynst nature | ||
| Howe the nyght with her derke derkenesse | ||
| 2860 | Passyng reason of any creature | |
| Is by myracle turned to bryghtnesse | ||
| Of angels herde a melodious swetnes | ||
| And all-thynge brefely to comprehende | ||
| For the merytes of Albon to commende | ||
| 2865 | Maugre mawmettes / whiche can but disceyue | |
| Impotent and very feble of myght | ||
| By experience as ye conceyue | ||
| Bryghter than day hath made the derke nyght | ||
| To declare the merytes of his knyght | ||
| 2870 | Playnly to shewe lyght of his perfytenes | |
| Whiche may nat be clypsed by no foreyn derkenes | ||
| Agayne this lorde / whiche is moste of myght | ||
| We haue erred in our opinion | ||
| And done vnto hym great wronge and vnryght | ||
| 2875 | To make our fayth and our professyon | |
| To fals idols / whiche in this royall towne | ||
| We haue so longe in our paynem wyse | ||
| As idolatres do frowarde seruice | ||
| Let vs nowe dampne all suche errour | ||
| 2880 | And forsake with entier diligence | |
| All false goddes / whiche may do no socour | ||
| To theyr seruantes present nor absence | ||
| Wherfore let vs nowe clere our conscience | ||
| And axe forgyfenes of our lorde Iesu | ||
| 2885 | Whiche hath in Albon shewed so great vertue | |
| sig: [P2] | ||
| Let vs not tary / but in all hast we can | ||
| Go seche meanes for our saluation | ||
| In dyuers countres to fynde vp the man | ||
| Whiche by his labour and predication | ||
| 2890 | Conuerted Albon in the same towne | |
| To Christis fayth / that martyr moste benyngne | ||
| This nyght declared by many an vnkouth signe | ||
| From our rytes and ceremonyes olde | ||
| And false errours enclypsed with darkenes | ||
| 2895 | Done to mawmettes / with whom we were wi t hholde | |
| Of ignorance by consuete rudenes | ||
| And to directe and clarifye our blyndnes | ||
| From all errour and ydolatrye | ||
| The best way that I can espie | ||
| 2900 | By these myracles / whiche Christ_Iesu hath wrought | |
| For loue of Albon the same nyght | ||
| That his maister may in hast be sought | ||
| For it is lykely accordyng wele to ryght | ||
| Syth god hath shewed suche myracle for his knyght | ||
| 2905 | He that was cause of his conuersion | |
| Myght best prouyde for our saluation | ||
| I mene as thus in very equite | ||
| Syth god in Albon hath shewed suche vertue | ||
| His maister shulde haue great auctoritie | ||
| 2910 | That was sent hym by grace of Christ_Iesu | |
| To put our doubte at a playne issue | ||
| By myracles declaryng newe and newe | ||
| His maisters teachyng faythfull was and trewe | ||
| sig: [P2v] | ||
| All that people beinge in presence | ||
| 2915 | Of god enspired as by one assent | |
| With one voyce commendyng that sentence | ||
| Gafe the fauour in all theyr best entent | ||
| Toke theyr way by great auisement | ||
| Towarde wales and sought on euery syde | ||
| 2920 | Serchyng the countre where he shulde abyde | |
| Of whose preachyng notable was the fame | ||
| Both in his lyuyng and perfyte holynes | ||
| Full glad they were / whan they herde his name | ||
| And towardes hym fast they gan them dresse | ||
| 2925 | As the story playnly beareth wytnesse | |
| Came by grace where he dyd teache | ||
| The worde of god / and to the people preche | ||
| And full deuoutly vpon hym they abode | ||
| Hauyng aforne hym ryght great audience | ||
| 2930 | As they come to hym / euen as he stode | |
| And hym saluted with great reuerence | ||
| Greatly reioysyng of his deuoute presence | ||
| Offered to hym or they ferther gone | ||
| The same crosse he yafe vnto Albon | ||
| 2935 | The whiche crosse was newly sprent with blode | |
| Whan he for Christ suffered passyon | ||
| By whiche token ful well he vnderstode | ||
| That he was slayne / fell on his knees downe | ||
| Kyssyng the crosse with great deuotion | ||
| 2940 | In his armes with teares all be_reyned | |
| That holy relyque full swetely he hath streyned | ||
| sig: [P3] | ||
| He thanked god with deuout obseruance | ||
| And that martyrs humble pacience | ||
| This newe people with deuoute attendance | ||
| 2945 | Whiche was come to yefe hym audience | |
| All at ones with full great reuerence | ||
| And herte contrite knelyng on theyr knees | ||
| Forsoke theyr ydols and olde vanytees | ||
| Theyr myspent tyme to them was great losse | ||
| 2950 | To all vertue an odious spectacle | |
| Tyll tyme they were marked with the crosse | ||
| In theyr forhede by grace and myracle | ||
| With that victorious tryumphall signacle | ||
| And folowyng on / lyke theyr fyrst entent | ||
| 2955 | Receyued of baptisme the holy sacrament | |
| Within a whyle the fame went abrode | ||
| Farre about in story as I rede | ||
| Dyuers countres of this thynge howe it stode | ||
| Tyll at last the noyse gan sprede | ||
| 2960 | Of Uerolamy / howe verely in-dede | |
| Citezyns theyr goodes haue forsake | ||
| A full great nombre / and theyr iourney take | ||
| To folowe the traces of Amphibalus | ||
| A newe preacher straunge and foreyne | ||
| 2965 | Theyr olde rytes false and superstitious | |
| They haue renounsed and holde al that ben vayne | ||
| They haue also of very high disdayne | ||
| From them abiecte / myn aucter lyst not lye | ||
| All theyr ydols and false mawmettrye | ||
| sig: [P3v] | ||
| 2970 | Whan the rumour was come vnto the citie | |
| They were troubled / hauyng great maruayle | ||
| What it ment or what it shulde be | ||
| At prime face lyke a great dissauayle | ||
| To comen profyte they dempt in theyr counsayle | ||
| 2975 | It was full lyke theyr citie to encombre | |
| Enquered fyrst what fayled of theyr nombre | ||
| In theyr rolles were a thousande founde | ||
| And theyr names entytled euerychone | ||
| A thynge lykely the citie to confounde | ||
| 2980 | But remedy ordeyned were anone | |
| That suche a nombre by assent were gone | ||
| By great auise cast it was dewe | ||
| A myghty thyng tho folke to pursewe | ||
| And with stronge hande serched out the rote | ||
| 2985 | Of this matter in hope it shulde auayle | |
| They gathered them on horsebacke and on fote | ||
| And gan ordeyne a myghty stronge batayle | ||
| Of sondry folke armed in plate and mayle | ||
| Agaynst fugytifes gon out of the cite | ||
| 2990 | And on Amphibalus auenged for to be | |
| Of whose persone so notable was the fame | ||
| Through all wales and contres enuiron | ||
| That the report of his good name | ||
| Gan to encrease thorough all the regyon | ||
| 2995 | Of his doctrine and predication | |
| Whiche through wales shone lyke a lode-sterre | ||
| Them to directe / which in our fayth doth erre | ||
| sig: [P4] | ||
| Tho folke that were come to hym of newe | ||
| From Uerolamy his preachyng for to here | ||
| 3000 | Lyke a doctour in Christis fayth most trewe | |
| Receyued them with all his herte entiere | ||
| Enformed them and taught them the maniere | ||
| Of Christis lawe with busy diligence | ||
| And they were glad to abyde in his presence | ||
| 3005 | Lytell and lytell in he gan them drawe | |
| To catche fayth and sauour in his doctryne | ||
| Of hole herte forsoke the paynyms lawe | ||
| And with great wyll theyr corage dyd enclyne | ||
| So to perseuer / and so theyr lyfe to fyne | ||
| 3010 | In Christis lawe as folke that lyst not tary | |
| So for to abyde and neuer more to vary | ||
| Other there were / whiche gan pursewe | ||
| The sayde people of malyce and of hate | ||
| This newe doctrine of Christis transmewe | ||
| 3015 | Whiche come vpon armed with mayle and plate | |
| Sent from that citie of purpose to debate | ||
| Agaynst them / whiche that for Christis sake | ||
| Fayth of paynyms vnwarely hath forsake | ||
| Folowed after with rumour noyse and sowne | ||
| 3020 | To fall vpon them with sodeyn auenture | |
| Serchyng in wales aboute towne and towne | ||
| Of Amphibalus the presence to recure | ||
| Whiche lyke a clerke grounded in scripture | ||
| To that people at reuerence of our lorde | ||
| 3025 | Stode amonges them / and preached goddes worde | |
| sig: [P4v] | ||
| And one there was for anger almost wode | ||
| That brake fyrst out shewyng his conceyte | ||
| To Amphibalus amonge them as he stode | ||
| Wherof that people was all and hole receyte | ||
| 3030 | O thou quod he grounde of all disceyte | |
| Rote of fraude / falsenes / and trechery | ||
| To all our goddes traytour and ennemye | ||
| That thou hast done thou mayst it not forsake | ||
| Of frowarde contempte malyciously practised | ||
| 3035 | Agaynst our goddes a quarell for to take | |
| Theyr lawes olde presumptously dispised | ||
| As these people contagiously disguysed | ||
| To great damage of vs and of our cite | ||
| Whiche trust me well shall not vnpunysshed be | ||
| 3040 | It is no doubte it shall not abyde longe | |
| Of theyr iniury and theyr godly greuance | ||
| As they be moste myghty and most stronge | ||
| They sodenly shall take on the vengeance | ||
| But if thou wylte eschewe theyr pusance | ||
| 3045 | Fyrst do repent the / to fynde them more tretable | |
| And seche a meane to make them mercyfull | ||
| Fyrst of all do thy busynesse | ||
| Of theyr great ire to appese the rancour | ||
| Afore these people / shewe outwarde thy mekenes | ||
| 3050 | To louse the bondes / whiche by thy labour | |
| Thou hast them brought in full great errour | ||
| Be so besy agayne with faythfull attendance | ||
| Them to counsell to fall in repentance | ||
| sig: Q[1] | ||
| Gyfe them counsell and make them to assent | ||
| 3055 | With herte and body no daunger for to make | |
| To axe mercy and sore repent | ||
| Or sodeyn vengeance be on them take | ||
| Of that they haue our goddes forsake | ||
| For this no doubte but it be done in-dede | ||
| 3060 | We shall agayne them vengeably procede | |
| For if they stande in theyr fyrst errour | ||
| As they began frowarde and obstynate | ||
| They shall of mercy fynde no fauour | ||
| Without exception of high or lowe estate | ||
| 3065 | But lyke as people most infortunate | |
| Dye vpon the sworde take this for full sentence | ||
| As is concluded by martyall violence | ||
| Yet there was one supprised with feruence | ||
| Of Christis lawe stedfast in the fayth | ||
| 3070 | Whiche had bothe connyng and eloquence | |
| And for his maister holy wryt he laythe | ||
| To th'ylke paynym euen thus he saythe | ||
| Our lorde god / whiche called is Iesu | ||
| Shall be this day our refuge and vertue | ||
| 3075 | And our chefe helpe in tribulation | |
| Whiche shall percase shewe some myracle | ||
| By his most myghty domination | ||
| Therfore these folke an vnkouth spectacle | ||
| That there ayen shalbe none obstacle | ||
| 3080 | Through goddes myght and mercyfull goodnes | |
| Some man to sa[ue] of his sodeyn sykenes saue] samc 1534, save L | ||
| sig: [Q1v] | ||
| Our maister here whom that ye repreue | ||
| In Christis name to shewe an euidence | ||
| From all myschefe some syke man to releue | ||
| 3085 | Whiche lyeth outraged by mortall violence | |
| But to declare the magnyfycence | ||
| Of Christe_Iesu anone without more | ||
| To helth agayne suche one he shall restore | ||
| Not in couert but in your alther syght | ||
| 3090 | We haue suche trust in his parfy[t]nesse parfytnesse] parfynesse 1534 | |
| Fro whose doctryne as we haue be hyght | ||
| We shall not chaunge for deth not distresse | ||
| Without faynyng or any doublenesse | ||
| Your counsellyng in Christis holy name | ||
| 3095 | Folowe his teachyng and to do the same | |
| Ye threte fast to maken vs aferde | ||
| But god alone he is our defence | ||
| Iesu is stronge agayne spere and swerde | ||
| Under whose pauise of parfyte pacience | ||
| 3100 | We shall abyde concludyng in sentence | |
| We forsake all false ydolatrye | ||
| And for Christis sake redy for to dye | ||
| Fauour of blode nor none allyaunce | ||
| Cherysshyng of treasure nor promyse of kynred | ||
| 3105 | Experte kynred nor none acqueyntance | |
| Fayre behestes / manaces nor hatered | ||
| All set asyde both loue and drede | ||
| The fayth of Christ of hole herte we haue take | ||
| All false ydols and mawmettes we forsake | ||
| sig: [Q2] | ||
| 3110 | Of this answere the paynyms almost wode | |
| Lyke tygrys fell / vengeable as lyons | ||
| Of innocentes to shede the christen blode | ||
| With sharpe swerdes lyke rauenous felons | ||
| They kyll and slee of all conditions | ||
| 3115 | As hongry wolfes in theyr beastiall rage | |
| Whithout exception of olde or yonge of age | ||
| The father ther-agayn all skylle and ryght | ||
| Of his sonne toke his deadly wounde | ||
| Brother and brother was slayne in that fyght | ||
| 3120 | And with theyr speres / that were square and rounde | |
| Theyr nygh cosyns were glad to confounde | ||
| There was none spared of blode nor kynred | ||
| Without mercy eche others blode to shed | ||
| Of aged folke there was no reuerence | ||
| 3125 | In that vnkyndly sodeyn cruell shoure | |
| Myddell age / nor age of innocence | ||
| Nor blode of blode lyst knowe his neybour | ||
| Nor none to other lyst shewe his fauour | ||
| Echon were slayne the story telleth thus | ||
| 3130 | And were conuerted by Amphibalus | |
| Frowarde tyrantes that this people sleeth | ||
| Most mercyles with pollar swerde and knyfe | ||
| Eche preased in aforne other towarde the deth | ||
| So ame[r]ous was that charytable stryfe amerous] ametous 1534, amorous L | ||
| 3135 | Lyke folke that were glad to lese theyr lyfe | |
| Of one corage and of one pacience | ||
| To dye for Christe / so hole was theyr feruence | ||
| sig: [Q2v] | ||
| Amonge these holy seyntes euerychone | ||
| That forsoke theyr towne and theyr cite | ||
| 3140 | There was none lefte alyue but one | |
| Of all that come Amphibalus to see | ||
| Whiche by occasyon of his infirmyte | ||
| Abode behynde feble and impotent | ||
| Whiche at theyr dyenge myght not be present | ||
| 3145 | Whan Amphibalus sawe them all deed | |
| Lyggyng in the felde / turned vp-set-downe | ||
| With pitous chere sawe theyr woundes blede | ||
| Of wofull herte and compassyon | ||
| Deuoutly made his commendation | ||
| 3150 | Prayenge Iesu with voyce full pytously | |
| On all tho soules to haue mercy | ||
| At Lychefelde fyll all this auenture | ||
| This great slaughter and made is mention | ||
| Of whiche slaughter recorde of olde scripture | ||
| 3155 | By dayes olde named was the towne | |
| This worde Lychefelde by interpretation | ||
| Is to say in that tonge as I rede | ||
| A felde that lyeth full of bodyes deed | ||
| There these martyrs suffered passyon | ||
| 3160 | Of one corage and of one stablenes | |
| The paynyms in theyr opinion | ||
| Most obstinate in theyr cursednes | ||
| Made a vowe in theyr wodenes | ||
| Neuer to eate for none occasyon | ||
| 3165 | Tyll Amphibalus were brought to theyr towne | |
| sig: [Q3] | ||
| Lyke wodemen they about hym ryde | ||
| The holy man playnly to declare | ||
| With speres wounded body backe and syde | ||
| Went aforne them with his fete all bare | ||
| 3170 | The more vngoodly / they dyd with hym fare | |
| The more the martyr with chere and visage | ||
| Patiently suffred theyr owne outrage | ||
| To hym they had frowarde fell langage | ||
| The stone weye dyd hym great duresse | ||
| 3175 | And though that he felte in his passage | |
| Under his fete / constreynt of great sharpenes | ||
| Mytygation of all his heuynes | ||
| Was whan he the place dyd approche | ||
| Where Albon lay graue vnder a roche | ||
| 3180 | The homecydes of whom to_forne I tolde | |
| Had in this whyle a maner repentance | ||
| Bakwarde amonge as they gan beholde | ||
| The people slayne of theyr allyance | ||
| By theyr owne furyous gouernance | ||
| 3185 | For they them-selfe lyke folke that were wode | |
| The slaug[h]ter made vpon theyr owne blode slaughter] slaugter 1534 | ||
| Lokyng behinde fyrst whan they toke hede and beheld | ||
| There owne brethern cosyns and kynred | ||
| By theyr handes lay slayne in the felde | ||
| 3190 | They gan to wepe / to se theyr woundes blede | |
| This same tyme or they toke any hede | ||
| They founde a man that lay lanquisshyng | ||
| Upon the felde moste pitous compleynyng | ||
| sig: [Q3v] | ||
| This syke man with a full deadly face | ||
| 3195 | For great constreynt of his malady | |
| Sawe Amphibalus forby shulde passe | ||
| With deadly voyce gan to hym crye | ||
| Seruant of god do me socour or I dye | ||
| For Iesu sake lowly I the requere | ||
| 3200 | To helpe his seruant that lyeth in myschefe here | |
| For by the callyng of his holy name | ||
| I haue suche trust in Christ_Iesu and the | ||
| Though I lye here impotent and lame | ||
| By thy merytes thou mayst helpe me | ||
| 3205 | To be made hole of this infyrmyte | |
| Maugre paynyms / that can about hym prece | ||
| Of this clamour wolde not he sece | ||
| In his prayer he doth alway continue | ||
| Suche fayth he had in his opinion | ||
| 3210 | Paynyms sawe he was importune | |
| And so stable in his action | ||
| Hadden in disdeyne and in derysion | ||
| His great noyse / but magre her felnesse | ||
| He arose vp hole of all his olde sykenesse | ||
| 3215 | This seke man that lay bounde in payne | |
| Of olde sykenesse greuous and importable | ||
| By Amphibalus lay bounde in a chayne | ||
| Was made all hole / and of his lymmes stable | ||
| This can the lorde whiche is most mercyable | ||
| 3220 | Of syke folkes here theyr complayntes | |
| And worche myracles for his holy sayntes | ||
| sig: [Q4] | ||
| This myracle gracious and vnkouth | ||
| Fyrst of this man releued of his sykenesse | ||
| The deth of the martyrs gan spry[n]ge northe and southe | ||
| 3225 | Of theyr wylfull sufferance wi t h mekenes | |
| Homwarde agayne paynyms gan them dresse | ||
| But this myracle whan they dyd auerte | ||
| They were greatly astonyed in theyr herte | ||
| Amonge them-selfe they brake openly | ||
| 3230 | Though they to Christ were contraryous | |
| Of this myracle wrought sodenly | ||
| They spared not playnly to say thus | ||
| The god of christen is great and maruaylous | ||
| Great is his vertue the deed beareth wytnesse | ||
| 3235 | To heale a man so sone in his sykenes | |
| As they tolde erst / paynyms at last | ||
| Wonder desyrous towarde your contre | ||
| They rode armed and began to hye fast | ||
| And sped them so that they myght se | ||
| 3240 | The crested walles of theyr citie | |
| As they thought that tyme for the best | ||
| After labour a whyle for to rest | ||
| They were oppressed wi t h hunger and with thurst | ||
| For that tyme lyst no forther for to ryde | ||
| 3245 | And eche one of them folowyng theyr owne lust | |
| Chose his grounde a certayne home to abyde | ||
| Their shelde theyr speres set them downe a_syde | ||
| Them to refresshe layser they haue founde | ||
| Whyles Amphibalus lay in his feters bounde | ||
| sig: [Q4v] | ||
| 3250 | The turmentours refreshed at the best | |
| As I haue tolde after theyr werynesse | ||
| The holy martyr myght haue no pece nor rest | ||
| Bounden in chaynes by full great duresse | ||
| In his most labour and greattest distresse | ||
| 3255 | Maugre paynyms whan he a layser caught | |
| To his most foone the worde of god he taught | ||
| This meane-whyle th a t all this thyng was wrought | ||
| As ye haue herde come tydyng to the towne | ||
| Howe Amphibalus was to the citie brought | ||
| 3260 | Maister vnto Albon / as made is mention | |
| At whose entrynge great people there come downe | ||
| Thought in them-selfe all theyr heuynesse | ||
| By his comyng was turned in-to gladnes | ||
| Dempte amonge them bothe one and all | ||
| 3265 | The matyre had standyng other-wyse | |
| Howe Amphibalus from Christis fayth was fall | ||
| Of that lawe lefte all his olde emprise | ||
| Come to theyr goddes to do sacrifice | ||
| All theyr frendes with them were repayrde | ||
| 3270 | Of whom toforne they dispayred | |
| The beastiall folke supposed in certayne | ||
| Howe all the people that went by assent | ||
| To Amphibalus were come home agayne | ||
| By force of them / that were for them sent | ||
| 3275 | But they fayled foule in theyr entent | |
| For through the towne the noyse went anone | ||
| Lyke as it was / howe they were deed euerychone | ||
| sig: R[1] | ||
| Agayne Christis of malyce set a_fyre | ||
| Homecydes turmentours that dyd this cruell dede | ||
| 3280 | Whiche fyll vpon them in theyr cruell ire | |
| Tho that made the martyrs for to blede | ||
| Of indignation and of great hatered | ||
| The selfe-same made relation | ||
| Of theyr slaughter through verolamy towne | ||
| 3285 | The fathers wepte with sorowfull syghes great | |
| Whan they herde theyr sonnes were deed | ||
| Pytous mothers theyr sobbyng can not let | ||
| Whose watrye eien with wepyng made red | ||
| Through the citie bothe in lengthe and brede | ||
| 3290 | Wydowes maydens ran with theyr here to_torne | |
| That so sode[n]ly haue theyr frendes lorne | ||
| Suche pitous wepyng I trowe not ther was | ||
| At the brennyng of the famous Ilyon | ||
| In Troye whan the stede of brasse | ||
| 3295 | was by sleyght compassed of Synon | |
| For through euery strete of Uerolamy towne | ||
| This noyse was herde deedly and mortall | ||
| Lyke as men synge at feastes funerall | ||
| In theyr most wofull lamentation | ||
| 3300 | They said amonge them with hygh and low estate | |
| The tyme is come of our destruction | ||
| Cite of citezyns forsake and desolate | ||
| Most outragyous and most disconsolate | ||
| To be noted of furyous fell hatered | ||
| 3305 | Blode agayn blode so felly to procede | |
| sig: [R1v] | ||
| For our defence we haue nowe none excuse | ||
| Folke infortunate by deuision | ||
| We shall from hensforth be called the refuge | ||
| As folke abiecte of euery nacion | ||
| 3310 | So importable is our confusyon | |
| That we be lyke neuer to fynde grace | ||
| Amonge no folke to shewe ons grace | ||
| We can nor may our-seluen acquite | ||
| For our excuse a reason for to make | ||
| 3315 | But here-after that folkes wyll vs a_wyte | |
| Our kynne our blode theyr goddes haue forsake | ||
| On whom vengeance so mortally was take | ||
| In straunge countre so playnly to descryue | ||
| Amonge also / that none was lefte alyue | ||
| 3320 | Alas alas vnburyed in the felde | |
| Cast out to the beastes that walke in pasture | ||
| Kynne agayne kynne in armes bare on shelde | ||
| An hatefull warre / a warre agayne nature | ||
| whiche lye nowe deed without sepulture | ||
| 3325 | So late done it may not be socoured | |
| Of foule and beast a pray to be deuoured | ||
| Alas our ioye is turned in-to dispayre | ||
| The staffe broke of our vnweldy age | ||
| Our harpe troubled / our fortune is not fayre | ||
| 3330 | Frowarde to vs she turneth her visage | |
| Wo to that man that with his langage | ||
| Caused Albon our goddes to forsake | ||
| And magre them / the fayth of Christ to take | ||
| sig: [R2] | ||
| Whiche hath alas perturbed the cite | ||
| 3335 | Brought our welfare to desolation | |
| Grounde and gynnyng of this mortalite | ||
| Of our alyes and citezyns of the towne | ||
| Whose bodies nowe lyen vpsetdowne | ||
| O myghty goddes of power immortall | ||
| 3340 | Defende the people of our cite royall | |
| To our request your eares downe enclyne | ||
| Take vengeance vpon our enemy | ||
| Whiche is cause of our mortall ruyne | ||
| And of our myschefe the rote fynally | ||
| 3345 | Reuenge your wronge ye that be most myghty | |
| On hym that causeth / that we be seke and grone | ||
| Let the vengeance rebounde on his persone | ||
| Of their plaintes and of their wofull clamours | ||
| They seased not lyke folkes most vengeable | ||
| 3350 | Tyll it fyll so that turmentours | |
| Perceyued well they were not treatable | ||
| Howe theyr sorowe was intollerable | ||
| Of compassyon lyst no lenger spare | ||
| Of all this thynge the trouthe to declare | ||
| 3355 | All sodeynly they began to abrayde | |
| Theyr deedly sorowes and playntes to refrayne | ||
| Of the most worthy of the towne they sayde | ||
| O citezyns / why lyst ye so complayne | ||
| Leue your wepyng / your teares doth restraynt | ||
| 3360 | For by report of vs that were present | |
| Uoyde of disceyte or meanyng fraudolent | ||
| sig: [R2v] | ||
| Ye haue more cause of gladnesse than wepyng | ||
| And greatter matter of consolation | ||
| Than of distresse or of complaynyng | ||
| 3365 | For if the grounde be sought out by reason | |
| Touchyng your frendes slaughter and passyon | ||
| Ye haue more grounde vs lyst not for to fayne | ||
| For to be glad / than for theyr deth to p[l]ayne playne] prayne 1534, pleyn L | ||
| By sondry tokens that were contemplatyfe | ||
| 3370 | Of signes shewed / the deed beareth wytnes | |
| Theyr deth was entred in-to euerlastyng lyfe | ||
| Ende of sorowe concluded on gladnes | ||
| From this darke valey went vp to bryghtnes | ||
| Where day departed is from the nyght | ||
| 3375 | And bryght Phebus leseth neuer his lyght | |
| It is accordyng full well to nature | ||
| A man to wepe for frendes that be dede | ||
| But agaynwarde by recorde of scripture | ||
| For Christis sake / who lyst his blode to shede | ||
| 3380 | A thousande-folde shall receyue his mede | |
| And for his lyfe / whiche is but transytory | ||
| Eternally to abyde and lyue in glory | ||
| Where is no complaynt / nor no parte of sorowe | ||
| But euerlastyng gladnesse in that place | ||
| 3385 | Ilyche newe both at eue and at morowe | |
| From wo to ioye from sobbyng to solace | ||
| Wher deth hath lost his power to manace | ||
| Fye on dispeyre / for dethe to make stryfe | ||
| Where ioye foloweth of euerlastyng lyfe | ||
| sig: [R3] | ||
| 3390 | Dethe in this worlde shulde not be complayned | |
| Of them that passe from worldely vanite | ||
| Suche as by grace and mercy haue attayned | ||
| With Christ to reigne in his eternall see | ||
| Where ioye is euer and all felicite | ||
| 3395 | And for suche folke mydday eue and morowe | |
| It were wodenes for to make sorowe | ||
| Ye be bounde playnly to conclude | ||
| To thanke god for frendes that ye mysse | ||
| Whiche hath chose so great a multitude | ||
| 3400 | Of this citie / and brought them vnto blysse | |
| Of ioye perpetuall they may neuer mysse | ||
| Makyng a chaunge from this temporall | ||
| For th'ylke lyfe aboue celestiall | ||
| Take hede hereto / and yeueth good audience | ||
| 3405 | Of thynge that we shall make rehersale | |
| And it imprenteth in your aduertence | ||
| Touchyng your frendes slayne in batayle | ||
| Whom that we dyd so mortally assayle | ||
| All this consydered to complayne ye do wronge | ||
| 3410 | As ye shall knowe paraunter or ought longe | |
| Aforne rehersed the same turmentours | ||
| With a great othe present there all the towne | ||
| To them not only / but to theyr successours | ||
| To be reported through all that regyon | ||
| 3415 | Maden there open protestation | |
| Touchyng this mater they cast to expresse | ||
| Shall haue no touche nor spot of falsenesse | ||
| sig: [R3v] | ||
| They gan theyr matter brefly to conclude | ||
| Touchyng the story to all theyr entent | ||
| 3420 | In Uerolamy to all the multitude | |
| Of great and small beinge there present | ||
| Rehersyng fyrst howe that they were sent | ||
| With myghty honde to all contres enuiron | ||
| To seke theyr frendes / were fled from the towne | ||
| 3425 | Under these wordes spake for theyr partie | |
| By your byddyng we went as ye wel knowe | ||
| With force and armys / serchyng to espie | ||
| To north wales in countres high and lowe | ||
| Tyll it fell so within a lyttell throwe | ||
| 3430 | Lad by fortune / we founde them euerychone | |
| With hym that whylom was maister to Albon | ||
| Out of this citie they were fled and gone | ||
| Some that were full nygh of your allye | ||
| Upon the maister abydyng of Albon | ||
| 3435 | We founde eke gethered a great company | |
| And of Pectis we dyd also espie | ||
| With walsemen of newe that were drawe | ||
| And conuerted vnto christen lawe | ||
| By th'ylke clerke that all these thynges wrought | ||
| 3440 | From whom they wolde departe in no maner | |
| Amonge all / our kynred out we sought | ||
| Toke them aparte / and with full frendly chere | ||
| With fayre speche requestes and prayere | ||
| Maynte with manassis / and softnesse of langage | ||
| 3445 | From that doctryne to reuoke theyr corage | |
| sig: [R4] | ||
| But euer they stode in suche obstinacy | ||
| On hym abydyng eche houre and moment | ||
| By theyr answere rather for to dye | ||
| All of accorde and echeone of assent | ||
| 3450 | Lyst in no wyse folowe our entent | |
| Whan we myght not our purpose recure | ||
| We lefte our tretes and toke our armour | ||
| Of whiche they were not astonyed nor aferde | ||
| For Christis sake / eche redyer than other | ||
| 3455 | Who myght fyrst renne vnder the swerde | |
| In theyr metyng brother slayne of brother | ||
| There was suche prese it myght be non other | ||
| For Christis sake echon were fayne | ||
| For a prerogatyue / who myght fyrst be slayne | ||
| 3460 | Upon the sonne / whiche was the father heyre | |
| The father shewed most cruell violence | ||
| Whiche in nature was nother good nor fayre | ||
| The sonne also voyde of all beneuolence | ||
| To his father dyd no maner of reuerence | ||
| 3465 | There was no mercy / but marciall outerage | |
| Without exception of olde or yonge of age | ||
| Pacience was captayne in the felde | ||
| Of them that suffered deth for Christis sake | ||
| Theyr spere was hope / mekenes was theyr shelde | ||
| 3470 | Other defence they lyst not for to make | |
| In th'ylke quarell / whiche they had take | ||
| Lyst not departe tyll spent was theyr blode | ||
| Whiche on the playn ran large as a flode | ||
| sig: [R4v] | ||
| The lorde that sytteth aboue the sterres clere | ||
| 3475 | Saugh and behelde the great pacience | |
| Of his knyghtes / whose blode lyke a ryuere | ||
| Ran in the felde by mortall violence | ||
| Whom to comforte of his magnificence | ||
| The heuen all open to shewe his great vertue | ||
| 3480 | Sayd vnto them that blessed lorde Iesu | |
| Cometh vp to me my knyghtes most entere | ||
| Proued in batayle ryght victorious | ||
| Assendeth vp aboue the sterres clere | ||
| My gate is open and redy is my house | ||
| 3485 | Agayne your comyng most ryche and glorious | |
| With tryumphe that neuer shall disseuer | ||
| And with a palme that shall lasten euer | ||
| O Paradyse / o chosen citezyns | ||
| For your notable tryumphall prowesse | ||
| 3490 | Makyng your clayme as very denzyns | |
| There to abyde your knyghtly nobylnes | ||
| To spende your blode / was shewed no scarsenesse | ||
| For me to suffre deth by great outrage | ||
| Digne amonge martyrs / come take your heritage | ||
| 3495 | The amerous fayre of feruent desyres | |
| In your conquest of most souereyne price | ||
| Haue gyue you title to be possessioners | ||
| Eternally to clayme lyke your auise | ||
| Abydyng space in the heuenly paradise | ||
| 3500 | To be registred fre from all worldly stryfe | |
| With the holy martyrs in the boke of lyfe | ||
| sig: S[1] | ||
| From this worlde we saugh them flee to heuen | ||
| By many signes whiche that dyd appere | ||
| From deth to lyfe / aboue the sterres seuen | ||
| 3505 | We stode astonyed beholdyng the manere | |
| Howe Christe_Iesu with a benyngne chere | ||
| Lyst to receyue into his regyon | ||
| These holy martyrs of Uerolamy towne | ||
| In these nombre of martyrs that were founde | ||
| 3510 | Full nyne hundred and nynty rekened clene | |
| And nyne therto slayne with many a wounde | ||
| Of whose blode / as it was well sene | ||
| All in-to redde stayned was the grene | ||
| The flode so great of blode that come downe lowe | ||
| 3515 | That one from another no man coude knowe | |
| They lay so oppressed vnder the horse fete | ||
| No man myght haue very knowlegyng | ||
| The blody streme dyd ouer_flowe and flete | ||
| Theyr deedly faces vpon the grounde lyggyng | ||
| 3520 | But sodenly there fell a wonders thyng | |
| Eche from other only by goddes grace | ||
| Was thorough the felde knowen by the face | ||
| By the prayer of Amphibalus | ||
| Of the deed bodyes with woundes grene | ||
| 3525 | A great myracle the story telleth thus | |
| Theyr woundes hole that no carectes were sene | ||
| Ioyned together and souded eke so clene | ||
| A straunge syght / a syght of great delyte | ||
| The blody streme as mylke ranne all whyte | ||
| sig: [S1v] | ||
| 3530 | Thus by prayer of one ryghtfull man | |
| Of theyr woundes fyrst fearefull and terryble | ||
| There was no carecte as we reherse can | ||
| By apperance that outwarde was visible | ||
| For vnto god nothyng is impossyble | ||
| 3535 | For they that were mangled and disfourmed | |
| By grace and prayer sodeynly were refourmed | ||
| The people frowarde in theyr opinion | ||
| Seing this myracle and were there present | ||
| By a contraryous exposition | ||
| 3540 | Sayd aye the worst in theyr false iugement | |
| And vengably echon of assent | ||
| Of false malyce dyd theyr busy cure | ||
| To denye them theyr kyndly sepulture | ||
| But cast them to beastis of malyce and disdayne | ||
| 3545 | To suche as weren disposed to rauyne | |
| Without reuerence lyke an olde carayne | ||
| They agayne them so felly gan maligne | ||
| But Christe_Iesus most gracious and benygne | ||
| To preserue his martyrs by myracle | ||
| 3550 | Agayne paynyms haue shewed an obstacle | |
| A wolfe come downe with sturdy violence | ||
| Terryble of loke and furyous of chere | ||
| Agayne beastis wylde to make resystence | ||
| Towarde the seintes that they came no nere | ||
| 3555 | An egle also with persyng eien clere | |
| Houyng alofte / as all men behelde | ||
| Fro touche of foule / kepte all day the felde | ||
| sig: [S2] | ||
| Wherof Pictis greatly gan maruayle | ||
| They of wales had a maner of drede | ||
| 3560 | Thought in them-selues these tokens may not fayle | |
| It cometh of god and of no mans dede | ||
| And of reason whan they toke hede | ||
| Fyrst of the wolfe and of the egle alofte | ||
| Stode astonyed and gan to wonder ofte | ||
| 3565 | It is appropred to the wolfe of nature | |
| As clerkes say mannes flesshe to attame | ||
| Amonge all caryns where they may it recure | ||
| They most reioyse / and therof haue most game | ||
| But he that maketh wylde beastis tame | ||
| 3570 | Daunteth serpentes / whiche on grounde lowe crepe | |
| Hath made a wolfe his martyrs for to kepe | ||
| From all beastis disposed to rauyne | ||
| By his myracle and gracious worchyng | ||
| And by his power heuenly and deuine | ||
| 3575 | Of later date he yafe eke the kepyng | |
| Of blessed Edmonde / mayde / martyr / and kyng | ||
| Unto a wolfe the heed most vertuous | ||
| It to preserue from beastis rauenous | ||
| In this myracle / who can vnderstande | ||
| 3580 | To be noted is great conuenience | |
| Of martyrs / whiche were with violent hande | ||
| Slayne for the fayth by humble pacience | ||
| And th'ylke martyrs / whiche made no resistence | ||
| So were slayne for Christ / as it is founde | ||
| 3585 | At Lychefelde / with many a blody wounde | |
| sig: [S2v] | ||
| Folowyng the ensample / these martyrs euerychon | ||
| For Christ deth sufferyng and full great payne | ||
| Of theyr prince / that called was Albon | ||
| In his tyme stewarde of Brytayne | ||
| 3590 | As I trust these noble princes twayne | |
| Edmonde and Albon / these ioyned two | ||
| Shall saue this lande in that we haue to do | ||
| This kynges banner of assure is the felde | ||
| Therin of golde be crownes thre | ||
| 3595 | The same campe beareth Albon in his shylde | |
| Bete in the myddes of golde a fresshe sawtre | ||
| Agayn our enmyes / whan they together be | ||
| In one assembled / shall make our partye stronge | ||
| Magre all tho that wolde done vs wronge | ||
| 3600 | Of est Englande kynge and champyon | |
| Blessed Edmonde shall his baner sprede | ||
| The prince of knyghtes in Brutis_Albion | ||
| And prothomartyr shall vs helpe at nede | ||
| A thousande martyrs that theyr blode shede | ||
| 3605 | For Christis fayth / slayne at Lychefelde | |
| Shall vs defende with spere sworde and shelde | ||
| These tokens sene / the paynems gan to sease | ||
| Of theyr pursute and furyous wodenesse | ||
| And by myracle they sodenly gan to prease | ||
| 3610 | To kysse the relyques / on knees gan them dresse | |
| With many signes and tokens of mekenesse | ||
| And where afore as they began to maligne | ||
| They shewed them-selfe most goodly and benygne | ||
| sig: [S3] | ||
| Theyr olde malyce / and theyr frowarde disdeyne | ||
| 3615 | Hauyng the matters fyrst in derysyon | |
| From that conceyte they turned be agayne | ||
| And caught in theyr herte a newe opinion | ||
| Them to worshyp with great deuocion | ||
| Gafe thankyng to god / and were therof full fayne | ||
| 3620 | That suche a nombre in that lande was slayne | |
| Of holy martyrs and holowed with theyr blode | ||
| Whiche thynge to put in token of victorie | ||
| Perpetually they thought that it was good | ||
| Theyr nombre and names to set in memorie | ||
| 3625 | Whiche fro this lyfe fleynge and transitorie | |
| Be nowe translated / where they may not mysse | ||
| Eternally with Christ to reigne in blysse | ||
| Whan the turmentours had theyr tales tolde | ||
| Ryght as it fell in order of euery thynge | ||
| 3630 | Of Uerolamy the people yonge and olde | |
| Present there that tyme / herde all theyr talkynge | ||
| The more partye lefte theyr wepynge | ||
| For by reporte only of theyr langage | ||
| Of theyr sorowe / the constraynt gan to swage | ||
| 3635 | They gan the lorde to magnifie and prayse | |
| And to reioyse the glorie of theyr kynred | ||
| Whiche by grace he lyste so hygh vprayse | ||
| By mertyrdome theyr precious blode to blede | ||
| For his sake dye without any drede | ||
| 3640 | All with one voyce at ones in sentence | |
| This was theyr noyse with deuoute reuerence | ||
| sig: [S3v] | ||
| Great is that god / greatest and glorious | ||
| Aboue all goddes of most magnificence | ||
| That maketh his seruantes so victorious | ||
| 3645 | To gette so great tryumphe by theyr meke pacience | |
| And by his myghty imperyall influence | ||
| This lorde Iesu most gracious and benigne | ||
| Shewed in theyr deth so many an vncouth signe | ||
| Theyr grene woundes terryble to beholde | ||
| 3650 | With sherpe swerdes seuered ferre a_sonder | |
| For lacke of blode / whan they were sterke and colde | ||
| One parte there / and an other parte yonder | ||
| The redde blode / this was a great wonder | ||
| Turned to mylke whyte as openly was sayne | ||
| 3655 | Theyr woundes large hath souded newe agayne | |
| He may be called a leche veryly | ||
| Whiche hath practised so hygh a medycyne | ||
| Suche mortall hurtes to cure them sodeynly | ||
| Whose royall bawme is heuenly and deuine | ||
| 3660 | Galiene coude not imagyne | |
| Nor ypocras duryng all theyr lyues | ||
| Suche consoudes nor suche senatiues | ||
| The vertue shewed and power glorious | ||
| Of Christ_Iesu by great experience | ||
| 3665 | And of his martyr blessed Amphibalus | |
| That day declared by notable euidence | ||
| By whose prayer they beinge in presence | ||
| These myracles / who so lyst take hede | ||
| The same day accomplysshed were in-dede | ||
| sig: [S4] | ||
| 3670 | Whiche thyng remembred the iuge was nygh wode | |
| Whose sodeyn ire no wyght coude appese | ||
| Great preace about in the place ther stode | ||
| They of this matyr felte so great disease | ||
| But for he cast hym fynally to please | ||
| 3675 | The paynyms in his malencoly | |
| Distraught of rancour thus he gan to cry | ||
| Howe longe shall we endure or susteyne | ||
| This great iniury / sclaunder / and clamour | ||
| Let vs serche out what it shulde mene | ||
| 3680 | This hatefull noyse and furyous romour | |
| But I wote well grounde of this errour | ||
| That this clerke / whiche not yore agon | ||
| As ye wele knowe was maister to saynt Albon | ||
| Whose doctrine / if it were vertuous | ||
| 3685 | Or come of god as ye reporte and say | |
| He shulde not haue demeaned hym thus | ||
| So great a nombre suffre for to dye | ||
| Of innocentes that dyd his lust obeye | ||
| But it is lyke I do well apperceyue | ||
| 3690 | This clerke was busye the people to disseyue | |
| By some false crafte of incantation | ||
| Or by some sotell and straunge experience | ||
| Folke forto blynde by some illusyon | ||
| Or by collusyon of false apparence | ||
| 3695 | Lyke as it were soth in existence | |
| With some coniurison or some charme made of new | ||
| A thynge that is nought to shewe as it were trew | ||
| sig: [S4v] | ||
| For by his compassed false deception | ||
| The worthyest borne of this cite | ||
| 3700 | Haue ben perysshed / as made is mention | |
| And brought to nought by great aduersite | ||
| Wherupon I make a newe decree | ||
| Payne of deth yeuyng this sentence | ||
| To the bochers / who that yeueth credence | ||
| 3705 | That all other therby may be aferde | |
| By playne ensample of theyr punysshon | ||
| Where they be founde go vnto the swerde | ||
| Without mercy of any remyssyon | ||
| And after this he sent for all the towne | ||
| 3710 | Hygh estates and lowe dyd do call | |
| And whan they come he sayde to them all | ||
| Let vs procede and werken fynally | ||
| And therunto set an ordinance | ||
| All of asse[nt] vpon our ennemy assent] Asseus 1534, assent L | ||
| 3715 | As we are bounde take on hym vengeance | |
| That euery man gan hym-selfe auaunce | ||
| With suche weapyn playnly as they founde | ||
| Sworde / knyfe / dagger / or what come first to hande | ||
| So great people out of wales come than | ||
| 3720 | In theyr furyous rage and cruelte | |
| That there was lefte vnnethes any man | ||
| Whiche that abode within the citie | ||
| Eche cryed on other / go we hense let se | ||
| Who that can fyrst make hym-selfe stronge | ||
| 3725 | To be auenged vpon our great wronge | |
| sig: T[1] | ||
| Theyr goinge out was to the north partye | ||
| A medeled people of folkes nyse and rude | ||
| That no man coude remembre fynally | ||
| The great nombre nor the multitude | ||
| 3730 | All the citie playnly to conclude | |
| Was almost voyde myn auctor tell can | ||
| Lefte alone of woman chylde and man | ||
| Amonge the bochers and turmentours stronge | ||
| One was marked aforne in that passage | ||
| 3735 | Whiche that thought his felowes abode longe | |
| Ranne forth fast to get hym auantage | ||
| And lyke a wolfe in his cruell rage | ||
| Stynt [n]euer tyll that he founde | ||
| The place where Amphibalus was bounde | ||
| 3740 | Lyke a bocher persed his entrayles | |
| This homycyde that ranne afore the route | ||
| Raffe his nauyll and toke out his bowelles | ||
| And at a stake / whiche that stode without | ||
| Tyed lyke ropes euyn rounde about | ||
| 3745 | And with a scurge the martyr he gan make | |
| In sercle wyse to go aboute the stake | ||
| By the grace of god in his sufferyng | ||
| Felly assayled with many a great turment | ||
| Shewed no token of sorowe nor grudgyng | ||
| 3750 | But alway one stable in his entent | |
| Tyll his bowels were rased out and rent | ||
| With turmentours in theyr cruell rage | ||
| He chaunged no chere of loke nor visage | ||
| sig: [T1v] | ||
| Two turmentours accorsed all theyr lyues | ||
| 3755 | Amphibalus set vp for a signe | |
| And cast at hym swerde dagger spere and knyues | ||
| And euer the more agayne hym they dyd maligne | ||
| The more they founde hym gracious and benigne | ||
| A pronosticke maruaylous in nature | ||
| 3760 | Saue goddes grace howe he myght endure | |
| To wonder vpon a merueylous myracle | ||
| Was sene that day in peoples syght | ||
| Howe this martyr vp set for a spectacle | ||
| So longe lyued agayne natures ryght | ||
| 3765 | His blode was spent and lost was all his myght | |
| And his humedite called radicall | ||
| In synewes and ioyntes wasted was at all | ||
| His soule his spirite his goostly remembrance | ||
| Stode in theyr strength of spirituall swetnes | ||
| 3770 | His heuenly feruence / his charite in substance | |
| Appalled not by no foren duresse | ||
| Fors bore his baner agayne his mortall feblenes | ||
| To preue this texte / sayd ago full longe | ||
| Howe persed loue / as any deth is stronge | ||
| 3775 | O bodely force feble to stande vpryght | |
| After his flesshely disposition | ||
| In goostly strength lyke Hercules of myght | ||
| For vertuous noblesse egall to Sampson | ||
| Proued this day in Brutis_Albion | ||
| 3780 | Was Amphibalus / with whom who lyst aduerte | |
| Was nothyng lefte / saue only tonge and herte | ||
| sig: [T2] | ||
| In his herte as longe as ther was lyfe | ||
| He ceased not gods worde to preache | ||
| Grace was guyde / and trouthe his preseruatife | ||
| 3785 | Fayth bare vp all / charite was his leche | |
| His tonge enspired the people for to teache | ||
| His body feble / his membres impotent | ||
| Yet tonge and herte were of one assent | ||
| His herte stronge stable as a dyamant | ||
| 3790 | Fayth had of stele forged his ymage | |
| His hope in god was so perseuerant | ||
| Dispayre in hym myght haue none auantage | ||
| For his gracious influent langage | ||
| And by myracles in hym shewed than | ||
| 3795 | That day to Christ was turned many a man | |
| His doctrine fyxe in his remembrance | ||
| Most souerently than gan therin delyte | ||
| Let theyr ydols go vnto a myschaunce | ||
| Whiche myght them nother helpe nor profyte | ||
| 3800 | God with his grace lyst them to visite | |
| Of one assent / gan them redy to make | ||
| After his counsell the fayth of Christ to take | ||
| They were compuncte and maden theyr prayer | ||
| With repentance and voyce most lamentable | ||
| 3805 | To graunt them parte of that he suffered there | |
| Touchyng his passyon greuous and importable | ||
| In that ioye / whiche is perdurable | ||
| Touchyng the syghtes that they had sene | ||
| Therof by grace to put them in certene | ||
| sig: [T2v] | ||
| 3810 | Lyke as theyr trust and theyr perfyte beleue | |
| Was in Iesu of herte thought and dede | ||
| With hole affection that it shall them not greue | ||
| For Christes sake theyr blode in hast to blede | ||
| They stode so hole hauyng of deth no drede | ||
| 3815 | In theyr opinion our fayth to magnyfye | |
| That they dispised all ydolatrye | ||
| Theyr prince and iuge the whyle in presence stode | ||
| Lyke a man fall in-to a franesye | ||
| Uoyde of reason and as a tyrant wode | ||
| 3820 | Commaunded all his turmentours to hye | |
| Without exception of lowe or hygh partye | ||
| To kyll and sleye and no mercy take | ||
| That haue theyr goddes of dispite forsake | ||
| They preased in the martyr to encombre | ||
| 3825 | Lyke gredy wolfes or tygrys of assent | |
| They slough that day a thousande full in nombre | ||
| For to obeye his fell commandement | ||
| Amphibalus beinge ther present | ||
| Whiche in sp[i]rite besyly gan entende spirite] sptrite 1534 | ||
| 3830 | To Christ_Iesu theyr soules to commende | |
| A cruell paynem stoute indurate and bolde | ||
| Spake to the martyr of hatefull cruelte | ||
| Whiche of the citie other newe or olde | ||
| In any wyse hath trespased agayne the | ||
| 3835 | Whiche hast caused theyr great aduersite | |
| These innocent people in so shorte a whyle | ||
| With thy traynes and sleyghtes to begyle | ||
| sig: [T3] | ||
| Our statutes and lawes thou hast foyled | ||
| By occasyon of thy parlous langage | ||
| 3840 | And our citie most cruelly spoyled | |
| Of her people bothe olde and yonge of age | ||
| Cause of theyr losse and mortall damage | ||
| And thou aforne them forwounded to the deth | ||
| Stondest in poynt to yelde vp thy brethe | ||
| 3845 | In suche disioynt thou mayst not recure | |
| Dissentrayled bounden to a stake | ||
| And our goddes thou hast aboue measure | ||
| Felly prouoked vengeance on the to take | ||
| Yet and thou woldest repent and forsake | ||
| 3850 | Thy Christis secte and fro thy fayth withdrawe | |
| And of hole herte turne to our lawe | ||
| Worshyp our god / whom thou hast offended | ||
| And be in wyll to do so no more | ||
| Of thyn hurtes thou myghtest be amended | ||
| 3855 | And axe grace as I haue tolde before | |
| To helth agayne they myght wele restore | ||
| Thy woundes greuous / whiche seme incurable | ||
| Make them full hole they be so merciable | ||
| Upon wretches benyngnly to rewe | ||
| 3860 | Suche as lyst falle in theyr grace | |
| And wyll repent lowly and be trewe | ||
| Aske mercy of theyr olde trespas | ||
| They may not fayle within a lyttell space | ||
| To be accepte wounded halte and lame | ||
| 3865 | By my counsell do thy-selfe the same | |
| sig: [T3v] | ||
| Whiche standest nowe as a spectacle | ||
| Afforne the people / whiche haue them in disdeyne | ||
| Praye our goddes to shewe some myracle | ||
| By theyr power that it may be sene | ||
| 3870 | That thou maiste be restored newe agayne | |
| To that mercy / and afterwardes be assured | ||
| Of all thy woundes for to be recured | ||
| If thou thus do they wyll be gracious | ||
| To modifie theyr vengable violence | ||
| 3875 | Let be thou paynym / quod Amphibalus | |
| Feble is theyr myght and mortall in sentence | ||
| In thy langage thou dost great offence | ||
| To yefe laude worshyp or praysyng | ||
| To fals ydoles that haue no seing | ||
| 3880 | For they be voyde of grace and all vertue | |
| Haue nother tyme nor immaginatyfe | ||
| There is no god but my lorde Iesu | ||
| That deed bodyes restoreth agayne to lyfe | ||
| He is my helth and my restoratife | ||
| 3885 | All your goddes of whiche nowe ye tell | |
| Ben but fendes that suffre payne in hell | ||
| Them to prayse and worshyp ye be blynde | ||
| For depe in hell is theyr abydyng | ||
| Ye do great wronge them to haue in mynde | ||
| 3890 | Whiche euer endure in complaynt and wepyng | |
| And were tyrantes here in theyr lyuyng | ||
| And of false drede toke theyr originall | ||
| To be defied knowyng they be mortall | ||
| sig: [T4] | ||
| In hell is nowe theyr habitation | ||
| 3895 | Perpetually ordeyned to abyde | |
| Of your false goddes the commemoration | ||
| Is holden therwith all theyr pompe and pride | ||
| With fyre beset on euery syde | ||
| Whiche neuer is queynte of infernall feruence | ||
| 3900 | Nor the worme deed of theyr conscience | |
| All they that serue them in theyr lyue | ||
| Shall of theyr paynes be with them partable | ||
| Out of charyte folke that lyst to stryue | ||
| False aduoutrers / detractours detestable | ||
| 3905 | And homycydes most abhomyn[a]ble abhomynable] abhomynb le 1534 | |
| That weren or ben here of theyr assent | ||
| Haue and shall haue parte of theyr turment | ||
| Lyke theyr desertes they must haue theyr mede | ||
| And thou paynym shalte haue thy parte in payne | ||
| 3910 | For thy false errour but thou repent in-dede | |
| Shalte eke with them I tell the in certeyne | ||
| Ben embrased in a fyrye chayne | ||
| With Sathan stocked amyd the smokes blake | ||
| But if thou wylte thy mawmettry forsake | ||
| 3915 | Forsake the ryghtes of false ydolatry | |
| Thy secte thyn errour of olde vanyte | ||
| Dispayre the not / for great is the mercy | ||
| Of Christe_Iesu / whiche wyll accepte the | ||
| With all other that here present be | ||
| 3920 | So that they wyll of fayth and hole entent | |
| Receyue of baptisme the holy sacrament | ||
| sig: [T4v] | ||
| Fyrst of baptisme the vertue to deuise | ||
| Lyke as it is grounded in scripture | ||
| It wassheth away / who so lyst aduertise | ||
| 3925 | Of mannes synne all fylthe and all odure | |
| Causeth a man all grace to recure | ||
| Openeth heuen as sayen these clerkes | ||
| Forsaketh sathan and all his mortall workes | ||
| Tho that were children of perdition | ||
| 3930 | Under the fende by synne and wretchednes | |
| By grace of baptisme as made is mention | ||
| Our fayth receyued standeth in sykernesse | ||
| Flete to the grace and doth your busynesse | ||
| As I to_forne haue to you deuised | ||
| 3935 | Forsake your goddes / and beth in hast baptised | |
| Water of baptisme doth synnes puryfye | ||
| Water of confort and consolation | ||
| Clenseth the fylthe of all ydolatrye | ||
| Originall well of our sa[l]uation saluation] sauation 1534 | ||
| 3940 | Condite and ryuer of our redemption | |
| Called in scripture water regeneratyfe | ||
| Whiche restoreth a man vnto gostly lyfe | ||
| It is the heed-springe and the gostly streme | ||
| Whiche conueyeth a man to paradise | ||
| 3945 | Ryuer and porte vnto Ierusalem | |
| Of all ryuers this ryuer beareth the price | ||
| As to folkes that be prudent and wyse | ||
| Suche as wasshe them in this holsome ryuer | ||
| Auoydeth from them all infernall daunger | ||
| sig: U[1] | ||
| 3950 | And scoureth away all venym serpentyne | |
| And spottis blacke called originall | ||
| By grace causeth / whiche that is deuine | ||
| Renewyng men to be celestiall | ||
| And for a conclusion in this mater fynall | ||
| 3955 | To forsake your goddes / whiche may do you no goode | |
| By my counsell be bathed in this flode | ||
| The streme therof shall glad your citie | ||
| And race away the rust of olde outrages | ||
| And with a flowe of all prosperite | ||
| 3960 | Renewe both your herte and your corages | |
| And you preserue from infernall damages | ||
| Ye stande free cheseth nowe of tweyne | ||
| Eternall lyfe / or euerlastyng peyne | ||
| After these notable exhortations | ||
| 3965 | Grounded on fayth and perfyte charyte | |
| The paynyms lyke tygrys or lyons | ||
| In theyr hasty furyous cruelte | ||
| Fyllen vpon the martyr bounde to a tree | ||
| On eche syde assayled hym at ones | ||
| 3970 | With rounde kalyons and with sharpe stones | |
| A great myracle / god lyst that day to shewe | ||
| And this martyr lyke goddes champyon | ||
| Beset all aboute with paynyms not a fewe | ||
| Stode aye vpryght / no partye downe | ||
| 3975 | Stable in prayer and in orison | |
| Erecte to god / not turnyng north ne southe | ||
| The worde of god neuer out of his mouthe | ||
| sig: [U1v] | ||
| Saue the word of god / and his grace was impossible | ||
| To abyde that bronte / where he had force or might | ||
| 3980 | In soule and spirite stondyng inuisible | |
| The eien vp lyfte of his inwarde syght | ||
| Towarde heuen Phebus was neuer so bryght | ||
| At mydsomer in his myd-day spere | ||
| As he sawe Iesu in the heuen appere | ||
| 3985 | On the ryght syde of his father dere | |
| Fyne of his tryumphe / and of his turmentry | ||
| Herde of angels with sugred notes clere | ||
| Celestiall songe / whiche in theyr melody | ||
| Gan prayse the lorde / and there he gan espy | ||
| 3990 | His blessed Albon clad in purple wede | |
| Token of Christ he lyst his blode to blede | ||
| To that martyr amonge martyrs all | ||
| Of trust assured whylom betwene them twayne | ||
| Amphibalus for helpe began to call | ||
| 3995 | O blessed Albon that sufferdist great payne | |
| For Christis sake of mercy not disdeyne | ||
| To pray Iesu that lyst for vs to dye | ||
| To sende his angels my iournay to conueye | ||
| That cruel Sathan trouble not my passage | ||
| 4000 | Nor that his malyce may clayme in me no ryght | |
| By the martyr rehersed his langage | ||
| Come two angels from heuen with great lyght | ||
| This voyce eke herde in all the peoples syght | ||
| There as he stode bounden to a stake | ||
| 4005 | Upon the poynt to dye for goddes sake | |
| sig: [U2] | ||
| O Amphibalus after thy deuise | ||
| With thy disciple glorious prince Albon | ||
| Thou shalte this day be in paradyse | ||
| Ryght in erthe as ye were both one | ||
| 4010 | With your triumphe ye shall together gone | |
| And with your palmes ye shall be in glorie | ||
| with a tytle of euerlastyng victorie | ||
| Amonge martyrs receyue this your mede | ||
| Lyke your deserte of eternall guerdon | ||
| 4015 | A crowne of golde / and a purple wede | |
| Forged with saintes in the heuenly mansion | ||
| Lyke to rubies most souerayne of renowne | ||
| Albon and thou perpetually shall shyne | ||
| In Uerolamy the citie to enlumyne | ||
| 4020 | In this whyle two angels downe descende | |
| To the holy martyr for his gostly socoure | ||
| On his soule benyg[n]ly to attende benygnly] benygly 1534 | ||
| Whytter than snowe or any lyly-floure | ||
| His gost conueyeng vnto the heuenly towre | ||
| 4025 | Paynyms this tyme bydyng in the felde | |
| Greatly abasshed / whan they this thynge behelde | ||
| Herder of herte than flynt or any stone | ||
| After his spirite was borne vp to heuen | ||
| Turmentours in theyr malyce ay one | ||
| 4030 | Feruent in fyry ire as any beuen | |
| Lyke as iewes fell vpon saynt Steuen | ||
| So were they busy of hatefull cursednesse | ||
| The deed body with stones to oppresse | ||
| sig: [U2v] | ||
| They had the martyr in so great disdayne | ||
| 4035 | After his deth gan make a newe affray | |
| That no memory shulde of hym be sayne | ||
| Upon the grounde where that he lay | ||
| Safe ther was one / whiche that stole awaye | ||
| The deed corps / and dyd his busy cure | ||
| 4040 | Most secretely to make his sepulture | |
| He was christen the man whiche dyd his payne | ||
| The deed corps to close it in the grounde | ||
| In secrete wyse tyll Iesu lyst ordeyne | ||
| And prouide a tyme that he may be founde | ||
| 4045 | Whiche for the fayth suffered many a wounde | |
| And this done by grace for the nones | ||
| Maugre all tho that cast on hym stones | ||
| Dukes erles and lordes of the towne | ||
| Were ouer_come almost with fastyng | ||
| 4050 | Amonge paynyms rose a discention | |
| That wolde haue had the body in kepyng | ||
| Whiche had auowed in theyr out-goynge | ||
| To brynge the martyr by othe and surete | ||
| Other quicke or deed home to theyr cite | ||
| 4055 | Amonge them-selfe of vengeance gan to stryue | |
| With swordes drawe fell at deuision | ||
| By their promyse outher deed or a_lyue | ||
| To brynge the martyr with them to the towne | ||
| Whiche were vnworthy to haue possession | ||
| 4060 | Of suche a treasure tyll god lyst shape a tyme | |
| Of gracious chaunge to sende a newe pryme | ||
| sig: [U3] | ||
| Agayne theyr promyse god made an obstacle | ||
| Whan they of newe began the martyr to manace | ||
| The body was besyled by myracle | ||
| 4065 | And eke buryed in a secrete place | |
| There to abyde tyll god lyst of his grace | ||
| As I sayde erste this treasure of renowne | ||
| May be founde to glad with all the towne | ||
| Thus whan the paynims had shewed theyr vttrance | ||
| 4070 | Of the martyr the doctrine hole forsake | |
| God vpon them dyd openly vengance | ||
| All theyr lymmes and membres gan to shake | ||
| With a palsey theyr tonges were eke take | ||
| With whiche membre afforne in many wyse | ||
| 4075 | The fayth of Christ they lyst falsely to dispise | |
| The handes touched of these homicydes | ||
| Impotent of power and of myght | ||
| Theyr bodyes vnweldy backe eke and sydes | ||
| Their legges faltred for to stande vpryght | ||
| 4080 | Theyr mouthes stode wronge / a_gogle stode theyr syght | |
| Eche membre and ioynt out of order stode | ||
| And theyr iuge also sodenly waxe wode | ||
| Hondes to godwarde whan they be vengable | ||
| Feete that ranne of custome for damage | ||
| 4085 | Cruell eien / whiche be not merciable | |
| Mortall tonges that dampne men in theyr rage | ||
| By detraction / mouthes for false langage | ||
| Lyke theyr desertes of olde who lyst remembre | ||
| God of his ryght gan punysshe euery membre | ||
| sig: [U3v] | ||
| 4090 | The eighe for lokyng receyue his guerdon | |
| The tonge for speakyng taketh his salarie | ||
| Bloud wrongefully shede requireth of reason | ||
| Hastly vengance though it a whyle tary | ||
| Murder homycyde / which be to god contrary | ||
| 4095 | Deth of martyrs / slaughter of innocentes | |
| Cryeth vengeance to god in their tourmentes | ||
| Specially all the turmentours | ||
| That were assented for to flee Albon | ||
| Faded away as dewe on sommer floures | ||
| 4100 | And come to nought almost euerychone | |
| The mynde of the martyr abode alway in one | ||
| And day by day the great laude and glorie | ||
| Gan more and more encrease of victorie | ||
| The sade vengeance no whyle was conseled | ||
| 4105 | Nor the great noyse of theyr aduersite | |
| Take vpon paynems wolde not be healed | ||
| Theyr trouble and rumour was not kepte secrete | ||
| For drede of whiche the chiefe of theyr citie | ||
| Medled with grace as the story sayth | ||
| 4110 | Were all at ones turned to Christis fayth | |
| sig: [U4] | ||
| With ryght hole herte and full deuout humblenesse | ||
| From theyr olde secte they gan away declyne | ||
| Gan prayse the lorde for his ryghtwysnesse | ||
| And some by grace heuenly and deuine | ||
| 4115 | By influence that dyd vpon hym shyne | |
| Lefte all the worlde treasure and substance | ||
| And to Rome went for to do penance | ||
| And by grace of our lorde Christ_Iesu | ||
| They renounced all theyr olde errour | ||
| 4120 | And sawe in theyr goddes there was no vertue | |
| Helpe at nede conforte nor socour | ||
| But all at ones with diligent labour | ||
| Of false ydols forsoke the sacryfyce | ||
| Become christen in most humble wyse | ||
| 4125 | Myracles shewed and vertous doctrine | |
| Of Amphibalus with vertous diligence | ||
| Grace annexed whiche dyd on them shyne | ||
| Caused the citie of all theyr olde offence | ||
| To axe mercy and with hole diligence | ||
| 4130 | Theyr false goddes of new they haue dispysed | |
| And moste mekely by grace were baptised | ||
| sig: [U4v] | ||
| And so longe continued/ tyll at the last | ||
| By a rurall person/ disciple of pelagiane | ||
| His hereticall doctrine/ longe tyme begon & past | ||
| 4135 | Newly renewed and fast toke rote agayne | |
| Peruerted the people of this Brutis_Britayne | ||
| And specially in this citie of olde Uerolamy | ||
| Moche increased this doctrine of infamy | ||
| Wherwith sore troubled was all the hole clergy | ||
| 4140 | Not stronge inough/ by lernyng and prudence | |
| These olde errours to refourme & rectify | ||
| But glad to sende for helpe and defence | ||
| To the clergy of Fraunce/ to be theyr assistence | ||
| Where assembled a counsell of clergy in generall | ||
| 4145 | To prouide remedy for this myschefe in speciall | |
| Lastely concluded by the hole counsell | ||
| Sent vnto Uerolamy two auncient clerkes | ||
| In lernyng and vertue/ ryght famous and excell | ||
| The one called Germayne a myrrour in good warkes | ||
| 4150 | Confounder of heretykes/ & all fyry sparkes | |
| Of scismaticall doctrine/ by gostly influence | ||
| He was consecrate bysshop of Antisiodorence | ||
| And Lupus the bysshop of Trecassinensis | ||
| In this holy iournay/ with hym was associate | ||
| 4155 | And came to this citie of Uerolaminensis | |
| Where the people peruerted/ were greuously insensate | ||
| And from the trewe fayth/ crokedly abrogate | ||
| By th'ereticall doctrine of the erroneus person | ||
| Declared to the people with deuylysshe illusion | ||
| sig: X[1] | ||
| 4160 | Good people afore this tyme/ of feruent deuocion | |
| For recours of pylgryms/ had builded an oratory | ||
| Ouer the tombe and corps/ of holy saynt Albon | ||
| Wheder these bysshops of blessed memory | ||
| Came and made prayer to the martyr instantly | ||
| 4165 | That he for them in theyr batayle and conflycte | |
| Wolde be meane to god/ the heretyke to conuicte | ||
| Theyr prayer to god/ by the martyr preferred | ||
| As proueth the sequele/ was ryght acceptable | ||
| For than the heretikes/ day ne tyme deferred | ||
| 4170 | Was clerely conuicte of theyr errours detestable | |
| And reduced to grace/ by treuthe infallable | ||
| By Lupe and Germane in playne disputation | ||
| Renounsyng theyr errours/ made abiuration | ||
| Than for that grace/ gyuen them in especiall | ||
| 4175 | Of god by meane of the martyrs intercessyon | |
| To his tombe they returned/ with hert & mynd effectual | ||
| Redoublyng theyr prayer with humble deuocion | ||
| For the great tryumphe/ and vtter subiection | ||
| That th'enmyes of god/ had susteyned that day | ||
| 4180 | Exhortyng the people/ to laude god and praye | |
| And mekely on theyr knees/ with all dew reuerence | ||
| Uncouered the tombe/ where the corps lay | ||
| There founde the reliques in state and essence | ||
| All-though he had layne ther many a longe day | ||
| 4185 | And of the same reliques they toke no parte away | |
| But of th'erth all blody saint Germane toke a porcion | ||
| To bere aboute with hym of feruent deuotion | ||
| sig: [X1v] | ||
| And for the same in full recompence | ||
| A cophyn enclosed with relyques many one | ||
| 4190 | Of all th'apostels/ and martyrs with reuerence | |
| Whiche he gathered in places where he had gone | ||
| There he them offered to blessed saynt Albon | ||
| For a perpetuall memory of that his acte and dede | ||
| And to all pylgryms to haue rewarde and mede | ||
| 4195 | Than departed Germayne and his felowe Lupus | |
| Into theyr owne countres there to remayne | ||
| Within foure yeres after/ agayne it happened thus | ||
| Newly to sprynge/ th'eresyes of pelagyane | ||
| Than the clergy sent of newe for saynt Germayne | ||
| 4200 | Who hastely graunted to come and discusse | |
| All doutes associate/ with holy Seuerus | ||
| Who breuely confounded and brought to vtterance | ||
| All th'eretykes to theyr shame and confusyon | ||
| That done they retourned agayne into Fraunce | ||
| 4205 | The people delyuered from deuyllysshe illusion | |
| Albeit shortely after/ theyr former abusyon | ||
| Returned theyr myndes and brought in appostacy | ||
| Theyr god forgettyng to laude and magnifie | ||
| And all that was done by the greuous occasyon | ||
| 4210 | Of the furyous saxons/ and theyr pagan ryte | |
| For after that they had in this lande made inuasion | ||
| Chur[c]hes and clergy they distroyed quite Churches] Churhes 1534 | ||
| To adnull Christis lawe was all theyr delyte | ||
| And compell the christen to theyr false ydolatry | ||
| 4215 | In suche miserable lyfe was all theyr felicite | |
| sig: [X2] | ||
| Thus by them all this region in maner peruerted | ||
| From Christis fayth/ and holy saynt Albon | ||
| The chapell and tombe decayed and subuerted | ||
| Token or knowlege there was lefte none | ||
| 4220 | Deuotion and prayer forgotten and gone | |
| Tyll god of his goodnes and mercyfull pitie | ||
| Wold reuele his sayntes/ to the laude of his deite | ||
| Thus duryng this tyme thre hundred yere & mo | ||
| The hertes of the people all derke & obumbrate | ||
| 4225 | From the fayth of Christ was clerely lost and go | |
| Worshyppyng ydols of power adnychilate | ||
| By longe continuance accustomed and vsed | ||
| That good and trew doctrine/ they vtterly refused | ||
| Th'ylke holy saynt Albon/ to the godhed directed | ||
| 4230 | His deuoute prayer/ his countrey to reconcile | |
| To Christis owne fayth/ all heresyes reiected | ||
| With errours and scismes/ from them put in exile | ||
| The disceytes of the deuyll/ hath them longe begyle | ||
| To abate and suppresse/ to the christen releue | ||
| 4235 | And to all heretikes shame and repreue | |
| His prayer well herde/ god hath prouyde | ||
| A captayne/ a ruler/ a prince of great pleasance | ||
| Ouer this contre/ to reigne rule and gye | ||
| Discended of blode from royall aliance | ||
| 4240 | That by goddes helpe shortly made purueyance | |
| These fautes to redresse/ by grace as he may | ||
| This noble deuoute prince called kynge Offa | ||
| sig: [X2v] | ||
| It happed that this kyng than beinge at Bygging | ||
| Besydes wynslowe his owne maner place | ||
| 4245 | Callyng to memory all his former lyuyng | |
| How by the blody swerd his peace he had purchace | ||
| Compuncte by contrition callyng for grace | ||
| Besought god on his knees/ with feruent deuocion | ||
| Some knowlege to haue of his synnes remyssyon | ||
| 4250 | Than sodenly in the chapel came a maruelous light | |
| Inflamed the king with a swete [fra]graunt odour fragraunt] fraragraunt 1534 | ||
| The kynge fyrst astonyed/ to se it so bryght | ||
| Than after co[n]forted gaue laude prayse & honour conforted] coforted 1534 | ||
| To that only god/ grounde of all socour | ||
| 4255 | And set fast in hym/ his trust and confidence | |
| Dayly to serue hym/ with all dewe reuerence | ||
| This kynge then lyinge in the citie of Bath | ||
| Halfe slepyng in a slombre appered an angell | ||
| Shewyng that of god suche fauour he hath | ||
| 4260 | And also commaundement as he dyd than tell | |
| All scismes and heresyes/ from the contre t'expell | ||
| He shulde perceyue with all diligence anone | ||
| To translate the reliques of holy saynt albon | ||
| The kyng or this tyme of the pope had purhcased | ||
| 4265 | That Lychefelde shulde be/ th'archebysshops see | |
| Wherby Canterbury was greatly defaced | ||
| But for that tyme there was no remedy | ||
| All whiche I omyt and returne to our story | ||
| Howe and by whom was done this translation | ||
| 4270 | Of archebysshop and bysshops with feruent deuocion | |
| sig: [X3] | ||
| After that the angell at Bathe had thus appered | ||
| Of this prothomartyr Albon / made the kyng relacion | ||
| He called Humbertus/ whome he had than arered | ||
| Archebysshop of Lychefeld/ and made declaration | ||
| 4275 | Of th'angelles commandement/ for the translation | |
| Of this holy martyr/ than the bysshop anon-ryght | ||
| Obeyed and prepared therto with all his myght | ||
| Accompanyed with suffraganes/ two he had than | ||
| Theyr names to recount/ I let ouer_passe | ||
| 4280 | The kyng & they to Uerolamy/ with many noble men | |
| Accompaned/ came reuerently to the same place | ||
| Where as a fyrye pyllour bryghtly shynynge was | ||
| Ouer the tombe & place/ where as lay saynt Albon | ||
| By whiche token/ they founde the cophyn anone | ||
| 4285 | They toke vp the bones with all humble deuotion | |
| And bare them to the church with ympnes and songe | ||
| The kynge and his nobles folowed the processyon | ||
| Where many fayre myracle was done than amonge | ||
| The relyques enclosed in a shryne great and longe | ||
| 4290 | Of syluer and golde set with great ryches | |
| Thus with all solempnite/ endeth this busynes | ||
| Not without myracles as the story doth vs teache | ||
| They that were blynde/ recured haue theyr syghte | ||
| The domme also was restored to theyr speche | ||
| 4295 | Folkes lame and podagryd/ went than vpryght | |
| Lepres made clene/ by prayer of this knyght | ||
| And palatyke folke/ as the story doth remembre | ||
| And all other diseased/ were hole in euery membre | ||
| sig: [X3v] | ||
| Be glad and mery/ thy title riche and goode | ||
| 4300 | Londe of brytane called brutes_Albion | |
| Whiche art inbaumed/ with the purple bloode | ||
| Of blessed saint Albon/ prince of that region | ||
| And specyally O noble and ryall towne | ||
| Of verelamy/ reioyce and be iocounde | ||
| 4305 | So riche a treasure/ is in thy boundes founde. | |
| Richer treasure/ more worthy to be commended | ||
| Moche better then in Troy/ was euer Palladion | ||
| For on thy soyle/ of newe is discendyd | ||
| A celestiall dew/ of grace and all fosion | ||
| 4310 | And specially by/ angelicall reuelation | |
| Whiche on thy londe/ of newe dothe rebounde | ||
| That blessed Albon/ is in thy boundes founde. | ||
| Hector whylom/ was Troyans Champion | ||
| And Haniball protector of Cartago | ||
| 4315 | Marchus_Maluius/ saued Rome towne | |
| The capitolie/ conserued frome dammage | ||
| And in britayne nowe in more lattre age | ||
| Of holy Albon when the corps was founde | ||
| Made in that region all thinges to habounde. | ||
| 4320 | Kynge Offa as I sayd/ hauynge this vision | |
| Whiche of saynt Albon/ was patron and founder | ||
| By myracles shewed/ for his good deuocion | ||
| The place where was hyd/ this ryche treasure | ||
| He with cost and diligent laboure | ||
| 4325 | Lett call to_gedre/ of diuers regions | |
| Most cunninge maysters of wryghtes & masons. | ||
| sig: [X4] | ||
| To buylde the churche/ of blessed saint Albon | ||
| Indowed the same/ with londes and possession | ||
| So that in all Britayne/ lyke to that is none | ||
| 4330 | Replenished with people/ of saynt benettes profession | |
| Almost .viii.C. yere continued in succession | ||
| Takynge fyrst auctorite/ as the hystorie telle can | ||
| Graunted by bulles of pope Adriane. | ||
| After went hym-selfe/ this noble worthy kynge | ||
| 4335 | Of great deuotion to Rome the ryall citie | |
| Spared no cost/ tyll he in euery-thynge | ||
| Had of his purpose graunt and autoritie | ||
| Priuileges/ fredomes/ and liberties | ||
| By the pope then/ confirmed to that place | ||
| 4340 | For loue of saint Albon with many especial grace. | |
| By auctoritie/ as ye haue hard deuysed | ||
| He had his askynge/ by power spirituall | ||
| And for his part/ to be more auctorised | ||
| He hath annexed his power in especyall | ||
| 4345 | With all liberties and fraunchies full ryall | |
| Perpetually bound yt in brede and in lenght | ||
| In honour of saint Albon / to stonde in his strenght | ||
| O Uerolamy as I haue tolde beforne | ||
| O famous olde citie/ amonge all nations | ||
| 4350 | Whiche in thy boundes/ hadst suche a prince borne | |
| Notable in knyghthode/ with all conditions | ||
| Of hygh prowes/ by manyfold reasons | ||
| Wordy by vertu and by ryall lyen | ||
| To be in degre/ aboue all the worthies nyen. | ||
| sig: [X4v] | ||
| 4355 | He that whylom was busy to compyle | |
| This noble historie/ trewly of entent | ||
| In latyn tonge to directe his style | ||
| Ryght as he sawe/ so was he diligent | ||
| It to conuey/ bicause he was present | ||
| 4360 | Yet lyst he not I suppose of mekenes | |
| Tell what he was nor his name expresse | ||
| To hym-selfe/ he gaue none other name | ||
| After the story/ as I reherse can | ||
| Excepte he wrote of drede/ and of honest shame | ||
| 4365 | He wolde be called as he wrote than | |
| Of all wretches the symplest man | ||
| Of other name as by his wrytyng | ||
| To vs he lefte no maner knowlegyng | ||
| Saue he of trust and good confydence | ||
| 4370 | Whiche that abode in his opinion | |
| There shulde come in great reuerence | ||
| Tyme commyng folke of religio[n] | ||
| Specially to Uerolamy towne | ||
| Whiche that shulde do theyr busy payne | ||
| 4375 | The fayth of Christe/ for to preache in Britayne | |
| Than shall the trouthe be openly knawe | ||
| Whan the errour is loused and vnbounde | ||
| Of paynyms and Christis worde be sawe | ||
| Thorowe all the londe/ false ydols to confounde | ||
| 4380 | Than to theyr hartes/ gladnes shall rebounde | |
| That vseth our fayth/ whan Iesu lyst by grace | ||
| Of his infinite mercy/ a tyme to purchase | ||
| sig: Y[1] | ||
| This same man/ of full trewe intent | ||
| Whiche busy was/ this story to endite | ||
| 4385 | Unto the see of Rome/ with the boke he went | |
| By great aduise his purpose to acquite | ||
| And fynally lyke as he doth playnly wryte | ||
| All false goddes and ydols to forsake | ||
| Baptisme to receyue and Christis fayth to take | ||
| 4390 | And as I haue tolde/ this boke with hym he brought | |
| To be sene ouer with meke and lowe subiection | ||
| To all that courte/ and humbly he besought | ||
| Our lorde Christe_Iesu with deuoute intention | ||
| After theyr dewe and full examynation | ||
| 4395 | Called to recorde this story made of newe | |
| Lyke as he wrote that euery worde was trewe | ||
| This boke accomplysshed/ notable and famous | ||
| Of hym that was in Brutis_Albion | ||
| Called prothomartyr most vertuous | ||
| 4400 | That for Christ suffered passion | |
| That yere accompted of his translation | ||
| Fro Christis byrthe and his natiuite | ||
| Fully seuen hundreth nynty yere and thre. | ||
| Nowe perfyte reders/ that dyuers stories hath sene | ||
| 4405 | Marke well the tymes/ of this here expressed | |
| Whan that saynt Albon by the paynyms kene | ||
| For Christis fayth/ from this lyfe was suppressed | ||
| The commyng of saynt Germayn for errours to be | ||
| After all these/ the tyme of his inuention | ||
| 4410 | Done by kynge Offa/ with his holy translation | |
| sig: [Y1v] | ||
| CC.lxxxx.iii. yeres of our lorde Christ_Iesu | ||
| The reigne of Dioclesyon the .xix. yere | ||
| Christis holy fayth to reuyue and renewe | ||
| Suffred saynt Albon/ the story doth appere | ||
| 4415 | Maximiane & Asclipiodot/ both his iuges were | |
| It was in the seconde yere/ of the pope Gaius | ||
| That holy saynt Albon was martyred thus | ||
| Than one hundreth & one yere after his passion | ||
| Began fyrst th'eresies of false pelagyane | ||
| 4420 | Which was .CCCC.iiii. yeres/ by iust computation | |
| After that Christ/ had take our nature humayne | ||
| The .xiiii. yere of the Brittisshe kynge Graciane | ||
| In the .iii. yere of the fyrst Anastacious | ||
| And the .xvi. yere of th'emperour Theodosius | ||
| 4425 | Foure hundred and forty/ of our lorde .ix. yeres mo | |
| And in the fyrst yere of Uortigern the kynge | ||
| And the fyfte yere of the fyrst pope Leo | ||
| Theodose the seconde emperour than beinge | ||
| In his .xxi. yere after iust rekenynge | ||
| 4430 | Saynt Germayn come fyrst/ and lupus also | |
| To distroye th'eresies/ that were begon tho | ||
| C.xliii. yeres by iuste computation | ||
| After his passion/ thus come saynt Germayn | ||
| And forty and two yere without variation | ||
| 4435 | After the fyrst tyme of the falce pelagian | |
| Yet within fyue yeres saynt Germayn come agayn | ||
| As is shewed before/ with holy Seuerus | ||
| All former heresies by grace to discus | ||
| sig: [Y2] | ||
| CCC.xliii. yeres after saynt Germayne | ||
| 4440 | Whiche was seuen hundreth/ lxxx. & .xiii. yere | |
| Of our lorde Iesu/ as stories doth determyne | ||
| That th'angell at Bath/ to kyng Offa dyd appere | ||
| To translate saynt Albon/ with all heuenly chere | ||
| The fyrst Adrian pope/ the .vi. Constantine th'emperour | ||
| 4445 | Whan this translation was done with all honour | |
| Perceyue nowe good reders/ & gyue true iugement | ||
| Betwene the monkes of Colen/ & of the blessed albon | ||
| The Coloners wryteth after theyr entent | ||
| To cause the pylgryms to withdrawe theyr deuotion | ||
| 4450 | From Uerolamy/ & to folowe theyr affection | |
| Sayinge that they haue the very body | ||
| To theyr shame and rebuke/ defendyng suche foly | ||
| And to proue theyr intent/ playnely they say | ||
| That these heresyes of false pelagiane | ||
| 4455 | Began in the reigne of noble kynge Offa | |
| And also in the tyme of pope Adrian | ||
| Affyrmyng that than shuld come in Germayne | ||
| And with hym Lupus/ a clerke of great substance | ||
| And all th'eresyes were brought than to vttrance | ||
| 4460 | And so by Germayn/ were brought vnto Rauenus | |
| The body of saynt Albon/ and there th'emperour | ||
| Ualentiniane/ he was nobly receyued than | ||
| And also the body/ with all godly honour | ||
| Where Germayn sore vexed with a mortall dolour | ||
| 4465 | Departed this lyfe and vale of all misery | |
| To th'eternall lyfe/ in the celestiall glory | ||
| sig: [Y2v] | ||
| After whose deth th'emperours mother | ||
| Placida by name/ as Coloners doth say | ||
| To Rome brought this body/ she with many other | ||
| 4470 | With all dewe reuerence/ there abode many a day | |
| Tyll Otto th'emperour/ with his mother Theophana | ||
| Brought it to Colen/ to th'archebysshop Brunon | ||
| In-to the monastery of holy Panthaleon | ||
| Also at the tyme of this translation in-dede | ||
| 4475 | Adrian was pope/ and that they confesse | |
| And whan Ualentiniane/ to th'empyre dyd procede | ||
| Liberious was pope/ in his .xii. yere doutlesse | ||
| As diuerse Historiographers/ playnly do expresse | ||
| So that of the sees spirituall nor temporall | ||
| 4480 | Agreeth with theyr accomptes/ after theyr memoriall | |
| They say also the body is yet incorrupt | ||
| From th'yes vpwarde/ they haue in possession | ||
| Whiche saiynge me semeth of trouthe be interrupte | ||
| Onles they wyll graunt any vnsemyng diuision | ||
| 4485 | Of a corporall body to be cut in perticion | |
| Yet I can not knowe what parte they shulde haue | ||
| For kynge Offa founde nothyng/ but the bones in his graue | ||
| They say also that kyng Offa & saynt Germayne | ||
| Was bothe at one tyme/ at this translation | ||
| 4490 | Whan th'erisies was destroyde of false pelagian | |
| In whose tymes is a great alteration | ||
| Who lust accompt by iust compotation | ||
| Shall fynde .CCC. yeres .xliiii. also | ||
| That kynge Offa came after saynt Germayn was go | ||
| sig: Y[3] [wrongly printed as 'y.ii.'] | ||
| 4495 | They say also that th'emperour Ualentiniane | |
| Shulde mete .s. Germain/ whan he came to Rauenne | ||
| Whiche can not be trewe/ but all spoken in vayne | ||
| For CCC.lxvi. was the yeres of our lorde than | ||
| Whan Ualentiniane fyrste began to reigne | ||
| 4500 | That was .lxxx.iii. yeres before that Germayne | |
| Came to distroye th'eresies of pelagiane. | ||
| Therfore good bretherne of holy saynt Benet | ||
| Monkes of Colen leue this your bablyng | ||
| Ye be so ferre hense/ in-dede ye can not let | ||
| 4505 | Ony deuoute persons/ for to do theyr offryng | |
| I wyll not denie/ but your vntrewe surmysyng | ||
| May brynge some people/ pucyll and innocent | ||
| For lacke of trewe knowlege/ in a wrong iugement | ||
| But they that be lerned can rede as well as ye | ||
| 4510 | Conferre histories/ and also accompte the yeres | |
| Can well perceyue howe craftely ye do flye | ||
| From trouthe/ th'istories so playnly apperes | ||
| And are not they accursed that false wytnesse beares | ||
| And specyally in writing/ to the derogation | ||
| 4515 | Of theyr bretherne in god of a ####trans#### nother nation | |
| Remembre ye ware in Englande but late | ||
| With the .vii. Henry that myghty ryall kynge | ||
| Where couertly ye sought meanes with many a noble estate | ||
| To staye & aide you in this vntrewe lesing | ||
| 4520 | But ye durst not abyde th'ende of the rekenyng | |
| For feare of afterclappes that myght haue ensued | ||
| Ye [were] afrayde to drynke of suche as ye brewed were] where 1534 | ||
| sig: [Y3v] | ||
| Wherfore reduce your-selfe/ false wrytynge reuoke | ||
| Knowlege your offence/ of wyll more than dede | ||
| 4525 | For if ye continue/ ye shall haue but a mocke | |
| Men knoweth howe ye can in ony wyse procede | ||
| But if that other ye loue god or drede | ||
| Folowe the trouthe/ so shall ye do best | ||
| And in lytle medlynge/ ye shall fynde moche rest. | ||
| 4530 | O blessed Albon/ o martyr most benigne | |
| Called of Brytons stewarde most notable | ||
| Prince of knyghtholde preued by many a signe | ||
| In all thy workes iust prudent and treatable | ||
| And in thy domes ryghtfull and mercyable | ||
| 4535 | Be in oure paueye/ shelde of protection | |
| O prothomartyr of Brutes_Albion | ||
| Let all thy seruauntes grace and mercy fynde | ||
| Whiche that call to the in myschefe and distresse | ||
| And haue thy passion and martyrdome in mynde | ||
| 4540 | Agayn frowarde ennemyes & all frowarde duresse | |
| Of thy benigne mercyfull goodnes | ||
| Them to defende be thou theyr champion | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| Syth thou arte named gracious benigne & good | ||
| 4545 | The fyrste also/ whiche that in Britayne | |
| Suffred paynems to shede thy gentyll blode | ||
| For Christes faith to die and suffre peyne | ||
| O glorious prince of mercy not disdeyne | ||
| To here the prayers and deuoute orison | ||
| 4550 | Of all thy seruauntes in Brutis_Albion | |
| sig: [Y4] | ||
| Thou were a myrrour and of mercy and pitie | ||
| Haddest a custome here in this worlde lyuyng | ||
| To cherysshe pylgrymes and heldest hospitalite | ||
| All poure folke and strangers refresshyng | ||
| 4555 | Graunt our requestes for loue of th'ylke kynge | |
| Called kynge Offa whiche had a vision | ||
| Where thou were buryed in Brutis_Albion | ||
| Lyke a prince of ryght thou muste entende | ||
| To forther all them that lyue in thy seruyce | ||
| 4560 | All theyr greu[e]s and mischefes to amende greues] greuous 1534, greves P | |
| And by thy prayer a pathe for hym deuyse | ||
| To lyue in vertue and vices to despise | ||
| By thy most knyghtly mediacion | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutes_Albion | ||
| 4565 | For his sake haue in remembraunce | |
| To all thy seruauntes to do succoure | ||
| Whiche of deuocion to do the pleasaunce | ||
| Was in thy chyrche chef bylder and foundour | ||
| Of thy liberties royall protector | ||
| 4570 | There brought in fyrst men of religion | |
| One th ####elidede;eldest Abbeys in Brutes_Albion #### | ||
| Amonge all other remembre that place | ||
| It to preserue in longe prosperite | ||
| Where thou arte shryned to grete encrece of grace | ||
| 4575 | As there protectour ageyne all aduersitie | |
| And [eu]er haue mynde vpon ther citie euer] doer 1534, euer P | ||
| Whiche is made famous by thy passion | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion. | ||
| sig: [Y4v] | ||
| To the cite be patron prince and guyde | ||
| 4580 | In thy seruice make them diligent | |
| With longe felicite on the other syde | ||
| Conserue thyn Abbot and thy deuout couent | ||
| Syth they are bounde of herte and hole entent | ||
| Euer the to serue by theyr profession | ||
| 4585 | O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | |
| And specially pray/ for our most riall prince | ||
| Our redouted lord/ and most gracious souerayne | ||
| Most victorious kinge/ our sheld and our defence | ||
| Both kinge & Emperour/ within all this Britane | ||
| 4590 | Defender of the faith/ of Irlonde lorde & captaine | |
| Henry the .viii. surmountyng in renowne | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| Pray for his spouse/ his louynge lady dere | ||
| His riall quene Anna/ notable and famous | ||
| 4595 | Indowed with grace/ and vertu without pere | |
| Pray for oure princes/ that she may be prosperous | ||
| Elizabeth by name/ both beautifull and gracious | ||
| Pray that theyr issue/ haue fortunate succession | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutus_Albion | ||
| 4600 | Pray for princes that this londe gouerne | |
| To rule the people by prudent policie | ||
| Pray for the chyrche that lyke a clere lanterne | ||
| By good ensample ther subiectes for to gye | ||
| And pray also that the chiualrie | ||
| 4605 | May holde vpryght agaynste falce extorcion | |
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| sig: [Z1] | ||
| Praye for marchantes and artificers | ||
| To encrease by vertue in theyr busynesse | ||
| That there be founde no fraude in theyr desyres | ||
| 4610 | So that false lucre haue none encreasse | |
| By thy prayer do also represse | ||
| All tyranny and all false extorcion | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| And with these o martyr glorious | ||
| 4615 | Syth thy prayer may so moche auayle | |
| Pray to the lorde aboue most gracious | ||
| Agayne indigence to sende inough of vitayle | ||
| And specially pray for the porayll | ||
| Them to releue with plenty and foyson | ||
| 4620 | O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | |
| Noble prince most soueraigne and entier | ||
| Corne frute and grayne to encrease and multiplie | ||
| Blessed Albon praye for the labourer | ||
| To plough and carte theyr handes so to applie | ||
| 4625 | That grace may so gouerne them and gye | |
| To great increase gyue all this region | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion | ||
| All these estates remembred in substance | ||
| Ioyne them in vertue by perfyte charyte | ||
| 4630 | Lyke a prince take them in gouernance | |
| And them preserue from all aduersyte | ||
| Set peace amonge them and vertuous vnite | ||
| All where nowe reigneth pride and deuision | ||
| O prothomartyr of Brutis_Albion. | ||
|
Finis. |
||
| sig: [Z1v] | ||
| ¶Here endeth the glorious lyfe and passyon of seint Albon prothomartyr of Englande/ and also the lyfe & passyon of saynt Amphabell/ whiche conuerted saynt Albon to the faith of Christe. whose lyues were translated out of frenche and laten in-to Englisshe/ by Iohnn_Lydgate monke of Bury/ and now lately put in print/ at request of Robert_Catton/ abbot of th'exempte monasterye of saynt albon. The .xxvi. yere of our soueraigne lorde kyng Henry the eyght. And in the yere of our lorde God .M.D.xxx.iiii. |