Geoffrey Chaucer

Troilus and Criseyde


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to wrye, at hem he gan to smyle.

       And seyde, `Lord, so ye live al in lest, 330

       Ye loveres! For the conningest of yow,

       That serveth most ententiflich and best,

       Him tit as often harm ther-of as prow;

       Your hyre is quit ayein, ye, god wot how!

       Nought wel for wel, but scorn for good servyse; 335

       In feith, your ordre is ruled in good wyse!

       `In noun-certeyn ben alle your observaunces,

       But it a sely fewe poyntes be;

       Ne no-thing asketh so grete attendaunces

       As doth youre lay, and that knowe alle ye; 340

       But that is not the worste, as mote I thee;

       But, tolde I yow the worste poynt, I leve,

       Al seyde I sooth, ye wolden at me greve!

       `But tak this, that ye loveres ofte eschuwe,

       Or elles doon of good entencioun, 345

       Ful ofte thy lady wole it misconstrue,

       And deme it harm in hir opinioun;

       And yet if she, for other enchesoun,

       Be wrooth, than shalt thou han a groyn anoon:

       Lord! wel is him that may be of yow oon!' 350

       But for al this, whan that he say his tyme,

       He held his pees, non other bote him gayned;

       For love bigan his fetheres so to lyme,

       That wel unnethe un-to his folk he fayned

       That othere besye nedes him destrayned; 355

       For wo was him, that what to doon he niste,

       But bad his folk to goon wher that hem liste.

       And whan that he in chaumbre was allone,

       He doun up-on his beddes feet him sette,

       And first be gan to syke, and eft to grone, 360

       And thoughte ay on hir so, with-outen lette,

       That, as he sat and wook, his spirit mette

       That he hir saw a temple, and al the wyse

       Right of hir loke, and gan it newe avyse.

       Thus gan he make a mirour of his minde, 365

       In which he saugh al hoolly hir figure;

       And that he wel coude in his herte finde,

       It was to him a right good aventure

       To love swich oon, and if he dide his cure

       To serven hir, yet mighte he falle in grace, 370

       Or elles, for oon of hir servaunts pace.

       Imagininge that travaille nor grame

       Ne mighte, for so goodly oon, be lorn

       As she, ne him for his desir ne shame,

       Al were it wist, but in prys and up-born 375

       Of alle lovers wel more than biforn;

       Thus argumented he in his ginninge,

       Ful unavysed of his wo cominge.

       Thus took he purpos loves craft to suwe,

       And thoughte he wolde werken prively, 380

       First, to hyden his desir in muwe

       From every wight y-born, al-outrely,

       But he mighte ought recovered be therby;

       Remembring him, that love to wyde y-blowe

       Yelt bittre fruyt, though swete seed be sowe. 385

       And over al this, yet muchel more he thoughte

       What for to speke, and what to holden inne,

       And what to arten hir to love he soughte,

       And on a song anoon-right to biginne,

       And gan loude on his sorwe for to winne; 390

       For with good hope he gan fully assente

       Criseyde for to love, and nought repente.

       And of his song nought only the sentence,

       As writ myn autour called Lollius,

       But pleynly, save our tonges difference, 395

       I dar wel sayn, in al that Troilus

       Seyde in his song, lo! every word right thus

       As I shal seyn; and who-so list it here,

       Lo! next this vers, he may it finden here.

       Cantus Troili.

       `If no love is, O god, what fele I so? 400

       And if love is, what thing and whiche is he!

       If love be good, from whennes comth my wo?

       If it be wikke, a wonder thinketh me,

       Whenne every torment and adversitee

       That cometh of him, may to me savory thinke; 405

       For ay thurst I, the more that I it drinke.

       `And if that at myn owene lust I brenne,

       Fro whennes cometh my wailing and my pleynte?

       If harme agree me, wher-to pleyne I thenne?

       I noot, ne why unwery that I feynte. 410

       O quike deeth, O swete harm so queynte,

       How may of thee in me swich quantitee,

       But-if that I consente that it be?

       `And if that I consente, I wrongfully

       Compleyne, y-wis; thus possed to and fro, 415

       Al sterelees with inne a boot am I

       A-mid the see, by-twixen windes two,

       That in contrarie stonden ever-mo.

       Allas! what is this wonder maladye?

       For hete of cold, for cold of hete, I deye.' 420

       And to the god of love thus seyde he

       With pitous voys, `O lord, now youres is

       My spirit, which that oughte youres be.

       Yow thanke I, lord, that han me brought to this;

       But whether goddesse or womman, y-wis, 425

       She be, I noot, which that ye do me serve;

       But as hir man I wole ay live and sterve.

       `Ye stonden in hire eyen mightily,

       As in a place un-to youre vertu digne;

       Wherfore, lord, if my servyse or I 430

       May lyke yow, so beth to me benigne;

       For myn estat royal here I resigne

       In-to hir hond, and with ful humble chere

       Bicome hir man, as to my lady dere.'

       In him ne deyned sparen blood royal 435

       The fyr of love, wher-fro god me blesse,

       Ne him forbar in no degree, for al

       His vertu or his excellent prowesse;

       But held him as his thral lowe in distresse,

       And brende him so in sondry wyse ay newe, 440

       That sixty tyme a day he loste his hewe.

       So muche, day by day, his owene thought,

       For lust to hir, gan quiken and encrese,

       That every other charge he sette at nought;

       For-thy ful ofte, his hote fyr to cese, 445

       To seen hir goodly