The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer - HTML preview

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The Nun's Priest's Tale

 

THE PROLOGUE.

 

"Ho!" quoth the Knight, "good sir, no more of this;

That ye have said is right enough, y-wis,*                *of a surety

And muche more; for little heaviness

Is right enough to muche folk, I guess.

I say for me, it is a great disease,*   *source of distress, annoyance

Where as men have been in great wealth and ease,

To hearen of their sudden fall, alas!

And the contrary is joy and great solas,*            *delight, comfort

As when a man hath been in poor estate,

And climbeth up, and waxeth fortunate,

And there abideth in prosperity;

Such thing is gladsome, as it thinketh me,

And of such thing were goodly for to tell."

 

"Yea," quoth our Hoste, "by Saint Paule's bell.

Ye say right sooth; this monk hath clapped* loud;               *talked

He spake how Fortune cover'd with a cloud

I wot not what, and als' of a tragedy

Right now ye heard: and pardie no remedy

It is for to bewaile, nor complain

That that is done, and also it is pain,

As ye have said, to hear of heaviness.

Sir Monk, no more of this, so God you bless;

Your tale annoyeth all this company;

Such talking is not worth a butterfly,

For therein is there no sport nor game;

Therefore, Sir Monke, Dan Piers by your name,

I pray you heart'ly, tell us somewhat else,

For sickerly, n'ere* clinking of your bells,      *were it not for the

That on your bridle hang on every side,

By heaven's king, that for us alle died,

I should ere this have fallen down for sleep,

Although the slough had been never so deep;

Then had your tale been all told in vain.

For certainly, as these clerkes sayn,

Where as a man may have no audience,

Nought helpeth it to telle his sentence.

And well I wot the substance is in me,

If anything shall well reported be.

Sir, say somewhat of hunting, <1> I you pray."

 

"Nay," quoth the Monk, "I have *no lust to play;*     *no fondness for

Now let another tell, as I have told."                         Jesting*

Then spake our Host with rude speech and bold,

And said unto the Nunne's Priest anon,

"Come near, thou Priest, come hither, thou Sir John, <2>

Tell us such thing as may our heartes glade.*                 *gladden

Be blithe, although thou ride upon a jade.

What though thine horse be bothe foul and lean?

If he will serve thee, reck thou not a bean;

Look that thine heart be merry evermo'."

 

"Yes, Host," quoth he, "so may I ride or go,

But* I be merry, y-wis I will be blamed."                      *unless

And right anon his tale he hath attamed*                *commenced <3>

And thus he said unto us every one,

This sweete priest, this goodly man, Sir John.

 

THE TALE. <1>

 

A poor widow, *somedeal y-stept* in age,           *somewhat advanced*

Was whilom dwelling in a poor cottage,

Beside a grove, standing in a dale.

This widow, of which I telle you my tale,

Since thilke day that she was last a wife,

In patience led a full simple life,

For little was *her chattel and her rent.*  *her goods and her income*

By husbandry* of such as God her sent,             *thrifty management

She found* herself, and eke her daughters two.              *maintained

Three large sowes had she, and no mo';

Three kine, and eke a sheep that highte Mall.

Full sooty was her bow'r,* and eke her hall,                   *chamber

In which she ate full many a slender meal.

Of poignant sauce knew she never a deal.*                         *whit

No dainty morsel passed through her throat;

Her diet was *accordant to her cote.*    *in keeping with her cottage*

Repletion her made never sick;

Attemper* diet was all her physic,                           *moderate

And exercise, and *hearte's suffisance.*        *contentment of heart*

The goute *let her nothing for to dance,*         *did not prevent her

Nor apoplexy shente* not her head.               from dancing* *hurt

No wine drank she, neither white nor red:

Her board was served most with white and black,

Milk and brown bread, in which she found no lack,

Seind* bacon, and sometimes an egg or tway;                     *singed

For she was as it were *a manner dey.*      *kind of day labourer* <2>

A yard she had, enclosed all about

With stickes, and a drye ditch without,

In which she had a cock, hight Chanticleer;

In all the land of crowing *n'as his peer.*        *was not his equal*

His voice was merrier than the merry orgon,*                *organ <3>

On masse days that in the churches gon.

Well sickerer* was his crowing in his lodge,           *more punctual*

Than is a clock, or an abbay horloge.*                      *clock <4>

By nature he knew each ascension

Of th' equinoctial in thilke town;

For when degrees fiftene were ascended,

Then crew he, that it might not be amended.

His comb was redder than the fine coral,

Embattell'd <5> as it were a castle wall.

His bill was black, and as the jet it shone;

Like azure were his legges and his tone;*                         *toes

His nailes whiter than the lily flow'r,

And like the burnish'd gold was his colour,

This gentle cock had in his governance

Sev'n hennes, for to do all his pleasance,

Which were his sisters and his paramours,

And wondrous like to him as of colours.

Of which the fairest-hued in the throat

Was called Damoselle Partelote,

Courteous she was, discreet, and debonair,

And companiable,* and bare herself so fair,                   *sociable

Since the day that she sev'n night was old,

That truely she had the heart in hold

Of Chanticleer, locked in every lith;*                            *limb

He lov'd her so, that well was him therewith,

But such a joy it was to hear them sing,

When that the brighte sunne gan to spring,

In sweet accord, *"My lefe is fare in land."* <6>            *my love is

For, at that time, as I have understand,                  gone abroad*

Beastes and birdes coulde speak and sing.

 

And so befell, that in a dawening,

As Chanticleer among his wives all