Poetry. John Skelton

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Poetry - John Skelton

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      I wayle, I wepe, I sobbe, I sigh ful sore

      The dedely fate, the dolefulle desteny

      Of hym that is gone, alas, without restore,

      Of the bloud royall descending nobelly;

      Whose lordshyp doutles was slayne lamentably

      Thorow treson, again him compassed and wrought,

      Trew to his prince in word, in dede, and thought.

      Of heuenly poems, O Clyo, calde by name

      In the colege of Musis goddes hystoriall,

      Adres thé to me, whiche am both halt and lame 10

      In elect vteraunce to make memoryall!

      To thé for souccour, to thé for helpe I call,

      Mine homely rudnes and dryghnes to expell

      With the freshe waters of Elyconys well.

      Of noble actes aunciently enrolde

      Of famous pryncis and lordes of astate,

      By thy report ar wont to be extold,

      Regestringe trewly euery formare date;

      Of thy bountie after the vsuall rate

      Kyndell in me suche plenty of thy nobles, 20

      These sorowfulle dites that I may shew expres.

      In sesons past, who hath herde or sene

      Of formar writyng by any presidente

      That vilane hastarddis in their furious tene,

      Fulfylled with malice of froward entente,

      It may be regestrede of shamefull recorde.

      So noble a man, so valiaunt lord and knyght,

      At his commaundement which had both day and nyght

      Knyghtes and squyers, at euery season when

      He calde vpon them, as meniall houshold men:

      To slo their owne lord? God was not in their mynd.

      And were not they to blame, I say, also,

      To suffre him slayn of his mortall fo?

      Fled away from hym, let hym ly in the dust;

      They bode not till the reckenyng were discust: 40

      What shuld I flatter? what shuld I glose or paint?

      Fy, fy for shame, their hartes were to faint.

      In England and Fraunce which gretly was redouted,

      Of whom both Flaunders and Scotland stode in drede,

      To whom great estates obeyed and lowted,

      A mayny of rude villayns made hym for to blede;

      He was their bulwark, their paues, and their wall,

      Yet shamfully they slew hym; that shame mot them befal!

      I say, ye comoners, why wer ye so stark mad? 50

      What frantyk frensy fyll in your brayne?

      Where was your wit and reson ye should haue had?

      What wilful foly made yow to ryse agayne

      Your naturall lord? alas, I can not fayne:

      Ye armyd you with will, and left your wit behynd;

      He was your chefteyne, your shelde, your chef defence,

      Redy to assyst you in euery time of nede;

      Your worshyp depended of his excellence:

      Alas, ye mad men, to far ye did excede; 60

      Your hap was vnhappy, to ill was your spede:

      What moued you againe him to war or to fyght?

      The ground of his quarel was for his souerain lord,

      The well concerning of all the hole lande,

      Demandyng suche duties as nedes most acord

      To the ryght of his prince, which shold not be withstand;

      For whose cause ye slew him with your owne hand:

      But had his noble men done wel that day,

      Ye had not bene able to haue sayd hym nay. 70

      But ther was fals packing, or els I am begylde;

      How be it the mater was euydent and playne,

      For if they had occupied their spere and their shilde,

      But men say they wer lynked with a double chaine,

      And held with the comones vnder a cloke,

      Which kindeled the wild fyr that made al this smoke.

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