| sig: [A1] | |
The seuen sorowes that women haue when theyr husbandes be deade.
Compyled by Robert_Copland. |
|
| sig: [A1v] | |
|
¶The excuse of the Authour. |
|
| TO all archewyues I do pray instantly | |
| And to all wydowes of the seconde degree | |
| Me to excuse, that ignorantly | |
| Your wordes to wryth I haue taken on me wryth ='wrest, strain or pervert the meaning of ... deflect, misapply'; see OED s.v. writhe v1, 7. | |
| 5 | For suerly it is of no malignitie malignitie] malignitite 1565 |
| But only to comforte young wyues that haue | |
| Young louyng husbandes in their felicite | |
| How after their death they may them haue. | |
|
¶Prologue of Robert_Copland. |
|
|
¶Copland. |
|
| WHy should I muse suche tryfles for to wryte | |
| Or wanton toyes, but for the appetyte | |
| Of wandryng braynes, that seke for thynges new | |
| And do not reche if they be fals or trew. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| 5 | With what newes? or here ye any tidinges |
| Of the pope, of the Emperour, or of kynges | |
| Of martyn_Luther, or of the great Turke | |
| Of this and that, and how the world doth worke. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| So that the tongue must euer wagge and clatter | |
| 10 | And waste their wyndes, to medle of eche matter |
| Thus ben we prynters called on so fast | |
| That maruayle it is, how that our wittes can last. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| With haue ye the takyng of the Frenche kyng | |
| Or what conceytes haue ye of laughyng | |
| 15 | Haue ye the balade called maugh murre |
| Or bony wenche, or els go from my durre | |
| Col to me, or hey downe dery dery | |
| Or a my hert, or I pray you be mery. | |
| sig: A2 | |
|
Copland. |
|
| Thus if our heades forged were of brasse | |
| 20 | Yet should we wexe as dulle as any asse |
| And al of baggage nought worthe in substaunce | |
| But bokes of vertue haue none vtteraunce | |
| As thus, syr I haue a very proper boke | |
| Of morall wysdome please ye their-on to loke | |
| 25 | O[r] els a boke of comen consolation. Or] Of 1565 |
| [...............................] The rhyme-scheme indicates that a line is wanting here. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| Tusshe a straw man, what should I do therewith | |
| Hast thou a boke of the wydowe Edith | |
| That hath begyled so many with her wordes | |
| 30 | Or els suche a geest that is ful of bourdes |
| Let me se, I wyll yet waste a peny | |
| Upon suche thynges and if thou haue eny. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| How say ye by these, wyll ye bestowe a grote | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| Ye syr so muche? nay, that I shorowe my cote shorowe: =shrew | |
| 35 | A peny I trow is ynough on bokes |
| It is not so soone goten, as this worlde lokes | |
| By saynt Mary I cannot tell the brother | |
| Money euer goeth for one thyng or for other | |
| God helpe my fryende, this worlde is harde and kene | |
| 40 | They that haue it wyll not let it be sene |
| Haue ye not seene a prety geest in ryme | |
| Of the seuen sorowes that these women haue | |
| Whan that their husbandes been brought to graue. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| No I-fayth, I dyd neuer here ther-of. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| 45 | By God and it is a very propre scoffe |
| sig: [A2v] | |
| If it were prynted, it wyl be wel soulde | |
| I haue heard it or now, ful madly tolde. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| It may well be, but I wene I should gyt | |
| Displeasure of women if that I prynt it | |
| 50 | And that were I loth, for I haue alway |
| Defended them, and wyll to my last day. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| Ah ha, than I se ye be wel at ease | |
| Whan ye are afrayde women to displease. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| What nede me gette angre, if I may haue thanke | |
| 55 | In faythe I can not se, but as madde a pranke |
| As soone wyl a man do as a woman | |
| Why should they be rayled and gested on than | |
| And to say soth it is but a fond apetyte | |
| To geste on women, or a_gainst them to wryte. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| 60 | That is truthe, if they be good and honest |
| But this is but a mery bourdyng Ieest | |
| Without reproufe, dishonesty or shame | |
| That in no wyse can appayre their good name. | |
|
Copland. |
|
| That is good, but haue ye any copy | |
| 65 | That a man myght enprynt it thereby |
| And whan I se it, than I wyll you tell. | |
| If that the matter be ordred yll or well. | |
|
Quidam. |
|
| I haue no boke, but yet I can you shewe | |
| The matter by herte, and that by wordes fewe | |
| 70 | Take your penne, and wryte as I do say |
| But yet of one thyng, hertely I you praye | |
| Amende the englysh somwhat if ye can. | |
| sig: [A3] | |
| And spel it true, for I shall tel the man | |
| By my soule ye prynters make such englyshe | |
| 75 | So yll spelled, so yll poynted, and so peuyshe |
| That scantly one can rede lynes tow can] cane 1565 | |
| But to fynde sentence, he hath ynough[e] to do ynoughe] ynought 1565 | |
| For in good fayth, yf I should say truthe | |
| In your craft to suffer, it is great ruthe | |
| 80 | Suche pochers to medle, and can not skyl pochers ='blotters, pokers'? See OED s.vv. poach v1, 2, poche v2, and see Erler, p. 113. |
| Of that they do, but doth al marre and spyl | |
| I ensure you, your wardeins ben therof to blame | |
| It hyndreth your gayne and hurteth your name | |
| Howe-be-it, it is al one to mee | |
| 85 | Whether ye thryue, or elles neuer thee. neuer] nenuer 1565 |
|
Copland |
|
| Wel brother. I can it not a_mende | |
| I wyl no man ther-of dyscommende | |
| I care no[t] greatly, so that I nowe and than not] no 1565 | |
| May get a peny as wel as I can | |
| 90 | Howe-be-it, in our crafte I knowe that there be |
| Connyng good worke-men, and that is to se | |
| In latyn and englysh, whiche they haue wrought | |
| Whose names appereth, where they be sought | |
| But to our purpose, nowe tourne we a_gayne | |
| 95 | And let me begyn to wryte a lyne or twayne. |
|
Quidam. |
|
| Wyth al my hert, but fyrst I pray you say | |
| Unto all women that I them hertely pray | |
| To haue me excused of thys homely dede | |
| And what I say, of themselfe take no hede | |
| sig: [A3v] | |
|
¶The fyrst sorowe. |
|
| THe fyrst sorowe that these women haue | |
| Is or theyr husbandes be layde in graue | |
| And that is duble in this maner wyse | |
| This man full sycke in deadly paynes lyse | |
| 5 | Many a daye, nygh to the houre of deth |
| His eyene dymmeth, and very shorte is his breth | |
| The flewme ratleth in his brest and throte | |
| His powlces beten, his tounge is roughe and hote | |
| Phisicions forsake him euery_chone | |
| 10 | Whan that they se his money almost gone |
| Than this pore woman that so [g]reatly toyled greatly] hreatly 1565 | |
| Wrappy[n]ge, and warminge with many a hand defoyled Wrappynge] Wrappyge 1565 | |
| Doth hym beholde, and seeth he wyll dye | |
| The holy candell she lyghteth hym by | |
| 15 | And so he lyeth consumyng to his ende |
| This wyfe then that busely doth hym tende | |
| sig: [A4] | |
| Seing hym lye to longe in that case | |
| Wyth droppes and markes in euery place | |
| Consyderyng her good, that is gretly spente | |
| 20 | And the candell well-nygh wasten and brent |
| She loketh on the candell wyth a dolefull gost | |
| Alas seyth she, thou arte gone almost | |
| Now shall I for_go thy company | |
| Whan thou arte gone, I ensure perfytely | |
| 25 | To my lyues [en]de I wyll haue no mo ende] nede 1565 |
| For thy sake, I haue the loued so | |
| Alas good woman full wo arte thou | |
| But what wylt thou do wyth hym now | |
| Bury hym, alas thou arte ther-to full loth | |
| 30 | But though that she be neuer so wrothe |
| It must be done, and so this good woman | |
| Ordreth all thynges so well as she can | |
| For his buryenge, and other seruyce | |
| So cometh the prestes and other lykewyse | |
| 35 | As the mourners, and executours |
| Torche-berers, kynsfolke and neyghbours | |
| Than is the corps layd on the bere | |
| Or in a coffyn as the guyse is here | |
| Than this pore widow clothed all in blacke | |
| 40 | Of sorow be sure she doth nothyng lacke |
| From her chamber she cometh a_downe | |
| Than for great fere to fall in a swowne | |
| Upon her she bereth some confeccion | |
| As powder of peper, or a red onyon | |
| 45 | And wha[n] she cometh th[e]re þe corps doth lye there] thre 1565 |
| Her handes she wryngeth pyteously | |
| Out out alas, what shall I do forth-on | |
| Wolde god I were by thy graue anon | |
| This sorow is longe, what shal me now betyde | |
| 50 | I beseche Iesu thy soule in heauen may bide. |
| sig: [A4v] | |
|
¶The second sorow. |
|
| THe seconde sorow that these wyues do make | |
| Is whan .iiii. men the corps on them do take | |
| Toward the chyrche, and the prestes do syng | |
| This wofull wydow al-waye folowyng | |
| 55 | With bedes in hande, in mournynge-hood |
| God knoweth yf syghes do her any good | |
| Now thinketh she, here haue I much to do | |
| And haply thys wydowe hath a shorte sho | |
| That streyneth her toes, and doeth hurte her fote | |
| 60 | Than thynketh she, I be_shrew the hearte-rote |
| Of the horeson sowter, it greueth me so sowter ='shoemaker' | |
| And to the ch[u]rche we haue ferre to go churche] chrche 1565 | |
| Or els she is laced in her new blacke gowne | |
| That for straytnes she is lyke to swone | |
| 65 | Or els it may fortune so that she |
| Hath in her som lose infyrmyte | |
| sig: B1 | |
| Or els the wynde doth waste the waxe to sore | |
| And she knowes well that she must pay therfore | |
| But whan they nyghe vnto the churche be | |
| 70 | Who soroweth nowe: forsothe none but she |
| I can suppose, beyng so nere the place | |
| Where he must rest, this is a heuy case | |
| Who sygheth now, alas this pore woman | |
| For I am sure that she woulde be as than | |
| 75 | As farre homewarde, but she dothe take in worthe |
| This heuy chaunce, and wofully goeth forthe | |
| And to herselfe al pryuely doth saye | |
| What remedy all is wel on the waye | |
| Well-a_way, than sayd the executour | |
| 80 | That ledeth her, why make ye this dolour |
| I you ensure that ye do God displease | |
| So for to fare, but it were more ease | |
| For the soule, to saye som good oreyson | |
| Nothynge can helpe your lamentacyon | |
| 85 | Alas syr she sayeth, ye saye of certaynete |
| But yet my heart can not so serue me | |
| And therewithall she doeth wepe so fast | |
| That her heart tikleth as it would brast tikleth ='stirs with a thrill of pleasure'; see OED s.v. tickle v, 1. | |
| O kynde womane I blame the not at all | |
| 90 | Thou woulde hym haue in christen buryall |
| sig: [B1v] | |
|
¶The thyrd sorowe. |
|
| FOrth now than goeth this wofull creature | |
| To the thyrd sorowe. I may you well ensure | |
| In-to the chyrche and sytteth in a pewe | |
| Full often than chaungeth all her hewe | |
| 95 | For veray fayntnes, or is to harde enbraced |
| Would God sayth she that I were vnlaced | |
| Or els may chaunce with chylde that she go | |
| Of .x. wekes tyme, or haply of mo | |
| Or els some qualme may in her stomacke ryse | |
| 100 | As women haue in many dyuers wyse |
| But for all that this wydowe sytteth styll | |
| Puttyng herselfe all in goddes wyll | |
| Hearyng deuoutly the deuyne songe | |
| A Iesu mercy thys seruyce is longe | |
| 105 | And she is very sycke and would be thence |
| In fayth I had leuer tha[n] .xl. pence than] that 1565 | |
| She were awaye, so I myght her excuse | |
| sig: B2 | |
| But not so, she will her-selfe sadly vse | |
| Men shal not say that she would fayne be ryde | |
| 110 | Her sorowes shalbe womanly hyde |
| And in her prayers, herselfe occupy | |
| Ne were it so that the beggers cry | |
| On her so faste and let her for to pray | |
| With some good man haue these folke away | |
| 115 | I neuer sawe such folke, and so lewde |
| With stande at the dore knaues al be_shrewde | |
| Ye troble this woman, and it is no nede | |
| Come to_morowe and ye may haply spede | |
| Thus is thys woman troublously arayde | |
| 120 | Tyll that the last dyryge is sayde |
| And wyth the corps walketh to the pytte | |
| But than in-dede harde is to forgette | |
| Alas sayth she, all this busines | |
| [...............................] The rhyme-scheme indicates that a line is wanting here. | |
| 125 | N[o]we were me leuer for to die than ly[u]e N[o]we: letter obscuredlyue] lyfe 1565 |
| Now wyll I all my goodes away gyue | |
| The mantyll and ryng, now wyll I take | |
| Alas alas, now must I leue my make | |
| Fare-well my Ioye, thou art gone for euer | |
| 130 | Ah my pore herte in_sonder wyll sheuer |
| Ah fals death, why haste thou hym so slayne | |
| And leueth me here in thys most woful payne | |
| Thus nethelesse, this man is layde alowe | |
| And than þe priest earth vpon him doth throw | |
| 135 | She seyng that loketh full heuely |
| Upon the clerke, and wofully doth crye | |
| A good swete man, please it the trinite | |
| That I were layd vpryght vnder thee | |
| Whan this is done though it be to her payne | |
| 140 | As wofull as she went, she must go home agayne |
| sig: [B2v] | |
|
¶The fourth sorowe. |
|
| NOwe wofull wom[a]n Iesu be thy spede woman] women 1565 | |
| Harde is to knowe what lyfe thou wilt lede | |
| All this nyght, when I to [mynde thee] call mynde thee] me mynde 1565 | |
| With no more rest than a stone in a wall | |
| 145 | Now wyll thou consyder thy great coste |
| And howe thow hast a good husbande loste | |
| I meane thy bedfelowe, for he is gone | |
| Thus is a newe payne for to lye a_lone | |
| Now muse thou must, where thou wast wont to plai | |
| 150 | Yet for all this as sone as any day |
| Thou must a_rys and ouerse thy hous | |
| With come here, go there, as busy as a mous | |
| Bring this fetche that, [b]are this thens bare] care 1565 | |
| Walke hyther, renne thyther, be not long thens | |
| 155 | Go for hym, fetche her and desyre them |
| sig: B3 | |
| To go wyth me to the masse of Requiem | |
| Lo thus these women can not be out of care | |
| But what than yet wyl they nothyng spare | |
| To be quyte of thys charges, and what than? | |
| 160 | God haue mercy on hys soule good man |
| I am well a_payde that I haue brought to passe | |
| Thus far-forth, now let vs go to masse | |
| Beshorow me, yf I woulde take suche payne Beshorow: =beshrew | |
| On condicion to haue hym a_gayne | |
| 165 | Whan for thys, for that, one thyng and other |
| Fye on it Fye, I swere by godds mother | |
| Ye wyll not beleue what is the exspens | |
| For this .xl. shyllynges and for that .xl. pens pens] penens 1565 | |
| Here a noble, and there well-nyghe a pounde | |
| 170 | There goeth a grote, and there a shyllyng rounde |
| The prestes and clarkes, for the knyll and pyt knyll: =knell | |
| And other thynges, that I am wery of it | |
| Here is great sorow but what remedy | |
| Go we to church I pray you hartely | |
| 175 | I thinke this sorow wyl euer last |
| Mayde lay meate to fyre for our breke-fast | |
| A_gaynste we come home, wel wel maystresse | |
| Ye shal se me do al my busines | |
| To masse now is the widow on her way | |
| 180 | Deuoutly for her husband to pray |
| There doth she syt, god wat how sore mournynge | |
| Tyl that the tyme come of the offring | |
| Than for her husbande can not fro her mynde | |
| The most fayrest peny that she can fynde | |
| 185 | She taketh and [goeth] in-to the quere goeth] 1565 omits |
| Sayng softly that al the prestes may here | |
| Lokyng on the peny with wofull eye | |
| Full loth am I to depart fro the | |
| sig: [B3v] | |
| I can not blame her yf she were lothe to parte | |
| 190 | Wyth that she loueth wel with all her harte |
| Thus with her loue, sorowe, and kyndnesse | |
| The wydowe bydeth the residewe of the masse. | |
|
¶The fyfth sorowe. |
|
| THe fyfth sorowe is very dolorous | |
| As he is buried and the wyfe in hous | |
| 195 | Alone is left, and al her neyghbours gone |
| Styl museth she than makyng great mone | |
| Sayng, wo is me thys tyme for to se | |
| Now must I both husband, and wyfe be | |
| Yet what of that I may take such sorow | |
| 200 | Parauenture to dye or to_morowe |
| Nay let it be, for I wyl take no thought | |
| Sorow wyl ryght soone bryng me to nought | |
| Now syth he be gon, wel what remedy | |
| Other be wyddwes as wel as I | |
| sig: [B4] | |
| 205 | Than sytteth she sadly downe on the benche |
| What Ione I say, and called her wenche | |
| Come hyther Ione to me is your hous drest: | |
| I pray god gyue all chrysten soules good rest | |
| And with her knyfe bytwene her fyngers two | |
| 210 | She dalieth, waggyng it to-and-fro |
| With dydle dydle dydle, tyrle tyrle tyrle | |
| The brayne rennyth and ther-of no [f]erle ferle] terle 1565no ferly ='no wonder'; see OED s.v. ferly n, 1. | |
| As in suche a case, and than wyl requyre | |
| O sorowe great, more hote than the fyre | |
| 215 | Now is thys woman in greate fantasy |
| And no maruayle, yet hathe she no c[a]use whi cause] couse 1565 | |
| For haply he was vn-to her vnkynde | |
| But for al that as clene out of her mynd | |
| Of womanhed, and eke of her kyndnes her] here 1565 | |
| 220 | She dothe forget hys waywerde folyshnes |
| And dot[h]e performe the tenour of hys wyl dothe] dote 1565 | |
| And is in purpose hys mynd to fulfyl | |
| Remembrynge greatly how the pore soule is | |
| In great peryl, yf he haue left ought amysse | |
| 225 | And than a_gayne her owne selfe for to chere |
| Her mayde she calleth as I dyd saye ere | |
| Com hyther Ione and goo on my arande arande: =errand | |
| Goo and desire my gossyp Coplande | |
| My gosseyp Miles, and my g[o]ssip Susan gossip] gssip 1565 | |
| 230 | My gossip Stodarde, and my neybour An |
| The good-wyfe Rychardson, and the good-wyfe Gayes | |
| And to Peters [w]yfe, and pray them streyght-wayes wyfe] vyfe 1565 | |
| To do so moch as to come speke with me | |
| And whan thou hast done loke that thou hie the | |
| 235 | And take a pot and go to saint_Iohans_heade |
| For a quart of Muscadel and newe bread | |
| A couple of bounes or maunchettes newe bake maunchettes ='small loaves or rolls of the finest wheaten bread' | |
| sig: [B4v] | |
| For I promyse thee, my hert doth ake | |
| Anone maystresse sayth she as a good damsell | |
| 240 | And douth her message right fayre and well |
| And whan the gossyppes assembled be | |
| What chere goode gossyp, than sayeth she and she | |
| Be ye of good chere, and thanke god of all | |
| This worlde ye se, doth tourne lyke as a ball | |
| 245 | Now vp, and now downe, now to and now fro |
| Now myrth than Ioye, nowe care and than wo | |
| A good-man, god haue mercy on thy soule | |
| By my trouth whan I dyd her the bell tole | |
| My hert erned and I shall tell you why erned ='was affected with poignant grief or compassion'; see OED s.v. earn v3, 2. | |
| 250 | Ah good-man thou speke ful meryly |
| Thys day seuen-nyght and now thou art ful lowe | |
| Now by my faythe in al this strete I trowe | |
| Is not his felow in euery degree | |
| By my sowle yf ye wyll beleue me | |
| 255 | I trowe he wyll neuer out of my mynde |
| Surly gossyp he was euer kynde | |
| A Iesu howe he woulde you prayes | |
| His mynde was so occupyed alwayes | |
| On this worlde, in his myrth and his game | |
| 260 | I harde hym neuer no man defame |
| Ah gossyp, gossyp sayth thys wydow than | |
| Though I say it he was an honest man | |
| He left me so to dryue the wat a_way wat: Erler, p. 120, suggests an emendation to 'want'. | |
| That I am bounde for hym dayly to pray | |
| 265 | For_by thys syluere and wyne in this cuppe For_by ='besides, not to mention' |
| And therewith she made a soppe | |
| Saynge gossyppes my hert is so sore | |
| That I care not whyche ende doth go a_fore | |
| And therewyth putteth it in-to her mouthe | |
| 270 | And swere by hym that dyed in the southe |
| sig: C1 | |
| There was neuer sorow, wo nor smerte | |
| That euer dyd go more nerer my herte | |
| Alacke good woman, take it not so heuyly | |
| Sayth her gossyppes, lest that ye dye | |
| 275 | Now he is gone, there is no better reede |
| [...............................] The rhyme-scheme indicates that a line is wanting here. | |
| Thus this wydowe they comfort euery day | |
| The best they can, to dryue her care a_way | |
|
¶The syxte sorowe. |
|
| Now hath thys wydow, thanked be Iesu | |
| 280 | Performed the b[u]riyng, as to her is due |
| Sadly and wysely me nede not to tell | |
| She hath behaued her ther-in so well | |
| That I dare sweare if it chaunce her a_gayne | |
| She can it do with lesse coste and payne | |
| 285 | But for all that she is to hym so kynde |
| Tha[t] she wyl not forget his monethes minde That] Thao 1565monethes minde ='mass at one month's anniversary of death' (Erler). | |
| sig: [C1v] | |
| Nor his ann[i]uersary at the yeres ende anniuersary] annuuersary 1565 | |
| She doth so well that eche doth her commende her] here 1565 | |
| She renneth not hourly fro house to hous | |
| 290 | But kepeth home as duly as a mous |
| Erly she ryseth and lyeth downe late | |
| And laboureth sore to kepe her estate | |
| Walkyng sadly in towne and strete | |
| Without acquayntaunce of them that she mete | |
| 295 | And somtyme hereth how folke doth [h]er prayes her] der 1565 |
|
Unus |
|
| Se ye yonder wydowe that goeth that wayes | |
| I ensuer you she is a sadde woman | |
| By my trouth if I were a sengle man | |
| If I had fourty pounde and fourty there-by | |
| 300 | I could fynde in my herte to make her lady. |
|
Alyus. |
|
| Ye but I pray you is she of any substaunce | |
| That would make a man any fortheraunce. | |
|
Unus |
|
| Ye by sa[y]nt Mary I holde her well at ease saynt] sant 1565 | |
| I tell you if that ye coulde her please | |
| 305 | Or haue her good-wyll than were it cocke cocke ='leader, best example'? See OED s.v. cock n1, 7, and Erler, p. 120, n. 305. |
| For better it were to haue her in her smocke | |
| Than som other that hath more good | |
| It is a great treasure to haue womanhood. | |
|
Alius. |
|
| That is truth, but I shall tell you one thyng | |
| 310 | Many that been so smothe in their goyng |
| Been also shrewed as is the deuell of hell | |
| And neuer cease, but euer fyght and yell | |
| Euer vnquiet, and alway chyde and brall | |
| And that freteth a man both herte and gall | |
| 315 | And many tymes in-stede of fleshe or fyshe |
| sig: C2 | |
| A dede-mannes head is serued in a dyshe | |
| And he ther-with is made so very mate | |
| That hous and profite he doth in maner hate | |
| For I haue herde a hundred tymes and mo | |
| 320 | That wyues and smoke cause men there hous to for_go |
|
Unus |
|
| He that is afrayde to treade on the grasse | |
| Through medowes I counsell hym not to passe | |
| He must aduenture that suche a thyng wyll haue suche] shuche 1565 | |
| Often he for_goeth, that fereth for to craue | |
| 325 | Thus been these wowers euer in greate doubt |
| That sumtyme do bryng ther mater so a_bout | |
| That they went to haue God by the cote | |
| And haue the dyuel fast a_bout the throte | |
| As I haue herde say I wote not what it meaneth | |
| 330 | The matter goeth not as some folke weneth |
| But what of that, we must forth-on procede | |
| To our wydowe, Iesu be oure spede | |
| She lyueth so well and so honestly | |
| That all her knowledge woweth her company all her knowledge woweth her company ='all her acquaintance courts her company'. | |
| 335 | Fro the tauerne, daunces, and common playes playes] players 1565 |
| And wanton maygames, she kepe[th] her alwaies kepeth] kepeht 1565 | |
| Pleasaunt pylgrymages, wylsdon and Crome | |
| She seketh not, but tarieth styll at home | |
| So chaunceth it, that on a festfulday festfulday ='festival day'; see OED s.v. feastful adj. | |
| 340 | Whan that folke wandred [t]o pastyme and play to] co 1565 |
| This woman at home hath a delyte to be | |
| Saufe to the dore no farther walketh she | |
| And on thresholde fortuneth to syt | |
| Than som neyghbour happeneth to se it | |
| 345 | And to her cometh to pastyme and to talke |
| For she no lust hath, a_brode as than to walke | |
| With good euen fayre wydowe, how do ye today | |
| sig: [C2v] | |
| Well I thanke you as a lone woman may | |
| That hath great charges, and but smal counsel | |
| 350 | Wel neyghbour sayth he, al-thyng shal be wel |
| Thanked be God ye be out of det | |
| God haue his soule that hath you so well set | |
| Ye nede not to sequester vnder the bysshoppe | |
| And that is sene by [y]our warehous and shoppe your] our 1565 | |
| 355 | And I am sure there is muche owyng you |
| Mary sayth she I can not shew you how | |
| For he occupied muche more without | |
| Than within, and that causeth me dout | |
| How to get inwarde that other men haue | |
| 360 | And I am ashamed on them for to craue |
| For all my sorow, payne, and thought | |
| Is for to gather, that to hym was aught | |
| For he was fre, and lent it here and there | |
| To them that would b[o]rowe euery-where borowe] browe 1565 | |
| 365 | How-be-it, yet for his owne sowle sake |
| Here and there somwhat I wyll ay take | |
| As they may paye, for I wyll none trouble | |
| For I ensure you, though that it were double | |
| I set not by it, but I wyll haue all ryght | |
| 370 | As nyghe as I can of euery wyght |
| For what by tayle, by wrytyng and by score | |
| I am ryght sure ther is ought me more | |
| Than I wyl say, and that they would maruayle | |
| One can not lyue with scoryng on the taile | |
| 375 | No ywys neybour, and that you know full wel |
| As wel as I, me nede not ther-of for to tell | |
| For it is a new thyng for to take in hand | |
| To order all thynges right as it shoulde stande | |
| For one that is but lytle wount ther-to wount: =wont | |
| 380 | No remedy but it must nedes be do |
| sig: C3 | |
| But how-be-it I shall tell you what | |
| If I coulde wel rule and guyde all that | |
| Without the dore as I can that with-in can] cane 1565 | |
| I would not care therfore scantly a pyn | |
| 385 | But or it be longe, neyghbour I trust |
| It shall be ordred par[t]ly as I lust par[t]ly: letter broken | |
| Ye, ye, neyghbour sayth he I dare trust your wit | |
| That well ynough ye wyll puruey for it | |
| And what I can do ye shall fynde me redy | |
| 390 | Whan that ye nede, both late and erly |
| And fare you well I take my leue as now | |
| Neyghbour she sayth, [I] pray god thanke you. | |
|
¶The .vii. sorowe. |
|
| T[H]is laste sorow, yf any sorow be This] TOis 1565 | |
| Is so the wydow of her cha[ri]te charite] chairte 1565 | |
| 395 | Now must perfourme her husbandes intent |
| sig: [C3v] | |
| Touching his wyll, his mynde and testament testament] testtament 1565 | |
| And so she doth, as nygh as she can | |
| So that no-where ther is any man | |
| That can demaunde of ryght and duty | |
| 400 | But she them pleaseth well and honestly |
| So that her name is so wel spredde | |
| That many delyteth her for to wedde | |
| Wouers com with many a proude offre | |
| Some with loue, and other som with proffre | |
| 405 | Som come gayly, and all in pleasure |
| Som come poorely wyth countenaunce demure | |
| Som launcheth mony largely fro theyr powches | |
| Some sheweth rynges, Ieweles, and riche owches | |
| Some sendeth her a tok[en] or a Capon token] tokne 1565 | |
| 410 | Som sendeth her wyne, other sendeth venyson |
| And all for to kendle, and set her hert on fire | |
| To cause her to bowe, and folow ther desyre | |
| But this wydow as stedfast as a wall | |
| As she well can, thanketh them greatly all | |
| 415 | Excusyng her as she can do full well |
| For certayne causes more that I can tell | |
| How-be-it perchaunce that she woulde fayne | |
| But she casteth in her mynde a_gayne | |
| Yf I should wedde and holde me vnto one | |
| 420 | That myght fortune all this chere were gone |
| Me-thynke I lede a metely mery lyfe | |
| Whiche I should not yf that I w[e]re a wyfe were] whre 1565 | |
| To bed I go and ryse whan I wyll | |
| All that I do is reason and skyll | |
| 425 | I commaunde other but none commandeth me |
| And eke I stande at myne owne liberte | |
| How-be-it I do note in consyence consyence] consynence 1565 | |
| Whether to wedde or lyue in continence | |
| sig: [C4] | |
| For I am yonge, and may the worlde increase | |
| 430 | And vnto me it is full harde to cease |
| The wanton delyte, that younge women haue | |
| And ferthermore my good name for to saue | |
| For the resorte that here do com dayly | |
| I take suche thought, and so muche care that I | |
| 435 | Wote not well in what estate to a_byde |
| For yf a yonge-man shoulde me betide | |
| That were to sharpe, or hath no worldli shifte | |
| Than myght I say a_dew farewel my thryfte | |
| And yf I sholde hym in any wyse contra[r]y contrary] contray 1565 | |
| 440 | Than myght perchaunce that we two shoulde vari |
| [And so me bete, saying olde wyddred hore | |
| In the deuyls name, peke thee out at the dore] The two preceding lines are transposed in the copytext. | |
| Or lay to pledge suche as I haue, or sell | |
| Yet had I leuer neuer with none to mell | |
| 445 | Yf he be olde and a waywarde wyght |
| He is yll to please, eyther day or nyght | |
| Euer hummyng at thys thyng and that | |
| And alway chydyng, and wotes not for what | |
| And yf he fall ones in ialowsy | |
| 450 | The deuyl than troubleth his fantasy |
| Thus I ne wote by god and by my soule | |
| How that I may now me-selfe controule | |
| He that I had, me-thought was very yll | |
| But yf god pleased I wolde I had hym styll | |
| 455 | So than this wydow her-selfe to comforte |
| Unto a frende of hers dothe resorte | |
| With her neyghbours, and goynge b[y] the way by] be 1565 | |
| They chaunce to walke ouer an olde cawsay cawsay= 'pavement'; see OED s.v. causey n5. | |
| Whiche is to_broke, and the pauement tore | |
| 460 | Than taketh she vp her clothes a_fore |
| For fylyng, rememberyng her husbandes entent | |
| sig: [C4v] | |
| Thai euer a_mended that broken pauement | |
| Saynge our lorde Iesu graunt hym his grace | |
| That was wont to lay stones in this place | |
| 465 | But if that I may lyue an-other yere |
| They shalbe layde as well as euer they were | |
| Ah true wydowe, so true, louyng and kynde | |
| Thy husbandes dedes be not fro thy mynde | |
| Now all true wydowes as ye do entende | |
| 470 | In all [y]our sorowes Chryst you comforte sende. your] our 1565 |
|
¶Finis. deo laus et honor. |
|
|
Lenuoy of .R._Copland |
|
| GO lytle quayre, god gyue the wel to sayle | |
| To that good sheppe, ycleped Bertelet sheppe: =ship | |
| For through it thou mayst the more preuayle | |
| Agaynst the rockes, that blyndly ben yset | |
| 5 | Up-on the land thy substaunce for to fret |
| And from all nacyo[n]s, if that it be thy lot | |
| Lest thou be hurt, medle not with a Scot. | |
| ¶And to thy readers, as custome is to say | |
| Do thy deuoyr, but to wydowes chefely | |
| 10 | Desyringe them to take it as in play |
| For that to do, was myne entent truely | |
| Desyryng them to accept my fantasy | |
| And to a_mende thyne englyshe where is nede | |
| For to pastime myne intent was in-dede. | |
|
¶Explicit |
|
| ¶Imprented at London in Lothburi ouer agaynste Sainct_Margarytes_church by me Wyllyam_Copland. |