The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer - HTML preview

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The Clerk's Tale

 

THE PROLOGUE.

 

"SIR Clerk of Oxenford," our Hoste said,

"Ye ride as still and coy, as doth a maid

That were new spoused, sitting at the board:

This day I heard not of your tongue a word.

I trow ye study about some sophime:*                          *sophism

But Solomon saith, every thing hath time.

For Godde's sake, be of *better cheer,*                *livelier mien*

It is no time for to study here.

Tell us some merry tale, by your fay;*                           *faith

For what man that is entered in a play,

He needes must unto that play assent.

But preache not, as friars do in Lent,

To make us for our olde sinnes weep,

Nor that thy tale make us not to sleep.

Tell us some merry thing of aventures.

Your terms, your coloures, and your figures,

Keep them in store, till so be ye indite

High style, as when that men to kinges write.

Speake so plain at this time, I you pray,

That we may understande what ye say."

 

This worthy Clerk benignely answer'd;

"Hoste," quoth he, "I am under your yerd,*                      *rod <1>

Ye have of us as now the governance,

And therefore would I do you obeisance,

As far as reason asketh, hardily:*                      *boldly, truly

I will you tell a tale, which that I

Learn'd at Padova of a worthy clerk,

As proved by his wordes and his werk.

He is now dead, and nailed in his chest,

I pray to God to give his soul good rest.

Francis Petrarc', the laureate poet,<2>

Highte* this clerk, whose rhetoric so sweet                *was called

Illumin'd all Itale of poetry,

As Linian <3> did of philosophy,

Or law, or other art particulere:

But death, that will not suffer us dwell here

But as it were a twinkling of an eye,

Them both hath slain, and alle we shall die.

"But forth to tellen of this worthy man,

That taughte me this tale, as I began,

I say that first he with high style inditeth

(Ere he the body of his tale writeth)

A proem, in the which describeth he

Piedmont, and of Saluces <4> the country,

And speaketh of the Pennine hilles high,

That be the bounds of all West Lombardy:

And of Mount Vesulus in special,

Where as the Po out of a welle small

Taketh his firste springing and his source,

That eastward aye increaseth in his course

T'Emilia-ward, <5> to Ferraro, and Venice,

The which a long thing were to devise.*                       *narrate

And truely, as to my judgement,

Me thinketh it a thing impertinent,*                       *irrelevant

Save that he would conveye his mattere:

But this is the tale, which that ye shall hear."

 

THE TALE.<1>

 

*Pars Prima.*                                              *First Part*

There is, right at the west side of Itale,

Down at the root of Vesulus<2> the cold,

A lusty* plain, abundant of vitaille;*            *pleasant **victuals

There many a town and tow'r thou may'st behold,

That founded were in time of fathers old,

And many another delectable sight;

And Saluces this noble country hight.

 

A marquis whilom lord was of that land,

As were his worthy elders* him before,                      *ancestors

And obedient, aye ready to his hand,

Were all his lieges, bothe less and more:

Thus in delight he liv'd, and had done yore,*                     *long

Belov'd and drad,* through favour of fortune,       *held in reverence

Both of his lordes and of his commune.*                    *commonalty

 

Therewith he was, to speak of lineage,

The gentilest y-born of Lombardy,

A fair person, and strong, and young of age,

And full of honour and of courtesy:

Discreet enough his country for to gie,*                   *guide, rule

Saving in some things that he was to blame;

And Walter was this younge lordes name.

I blame him thus, that he consider'd not

In time coming what might him betide,

But on his present lust* was all his thought,                *pleasure

And for to hawk and hunt on every side;

Well nigh all other cares let he slide,

And eke he would (that was the worst of all)

Wedde no wife for aught that might befall.

 

Only that point his people bare so sore,

That flockmel* on a day to him they went,                   *in a body

And one of them, that wisest was of lore

(Or elles that the lord would best assent

That he should tell him what the people meant,

Or elles could he well shew such mattere),

He to the marquis said as ye shall hear.

 

"O noble Marquis! your humanity

Assureth us and gives us hardiness,

As oft as time is of necessity,

That we to you may tell our heaviness:

Accepte, Lord, now of your gentleness,

What we with piteous heart unto you plain,*               *complain of

And let your ears my voice not disdain.

 

"All* have I nought to do in this mattere                    *although

More than another man hath in this place,

Yet forasmuch as ye, my Lord so dear,

Have always shewed me favour and grace,

I dare the better ask of you a space

Of audience, to shewen our request,

And ye, my Lord, to do right *as you lest.*          *as pleaseth you*

 

"For certes, Lord, so well us like you

And all your work, and ev'r have done, that we

Ne coulde not ourselves devise how

We mighte live in more felicity:

Save one thing, Lord, if that your will it be,

That for to be a wedded man you lest;

Then were your people *in sovereign hearte's rest.*        *completely

 

"Bowe your neck under the blissful yoke

Of sovereignty, and not of service,

Which that men call espousal or wedlock:

And thinke, Lord, among your thoughtes wise,

How that our dayes pass in sundry wise;

For though we sleep, or wake, or roam, or ride,

Aye fleeth time, it will no man abide.

 

"And though your greene youthe flow'r as yet,

In creepeth age always as still as stone,

And death menaceth every age, and smit*                        *smiteth

In each estate, for there escapeth none:

And all so certain as we know each on