The Works of John Dryden, now first collected in eighteen volumes. Volume 12. John Dryden

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yolden up his breth,

      Than whan his name appalled is for age,

      For all foryetten is his vassalage:

      Than is it best as for a worthy fame,

      To dein whan a man is best of name.

      The contrary of all this is wilfulnesse.

      Why grutchen we? why have we hevinesse,

      That good Arcite, of chivalry the flour,

      Departed is, with dutee and honour,

      Out of this foule prison of this lif?

      Why grutchen here his cosin and his wif

      Of his welfare, that loven him so wel?

      Can he hem thank? nay, God wot, never a del,

      That both his soule and eke himself offend,

      And yet they mow her lustres not amend.

      What may I conclude of this longe serie,

      But after sorwe I rede us to be merie,

      And thanken Jupiter of all his grace;

      And er that we departen from this place,

      I rede that we make of sorwes two

      O parfit joye lasting evermo:

      And loketh now wher most sorwe is herein,

      Ther wol I firste amenden and begin.

      Sister, (quod he) this is my full assent,

      With all the avis here of my parlement,

      That gentil Palamon, your owen knight,

      That serveth you with will, and herte, and might,

      And ever hath don sin you first him knew,

      That ye shall of your grace upon him rew,

      And taken him for husbond and for lord:

      Lene me your hand, for this is oure accord.

      Let see now of your womanly pitee:

      He is a kinges brothers sone pardee;

      And though he were a poure bachelere,

      Sin he hath served you so many a yere,

      And had for you so gret adversite,

      It moste ben considered, leveth me,

      For gentil mercy oweth to passen right.

      Than sayed he thus to Palamon the knight;

      I trow their nedeth litel sermoning

      To maken you assenten to this thing.

      Cometh ner, and take your lady by the hond.

      Betwixen hem was maked anon the bond

      That highte matrimoine or mariage,

      By all the conseil of the baronage;

      And thus with alle blisse and melodie

      Hath Palamon ywedded Emelie;

      And God, that all this wide world hath wrought,

      Send him his love that hath it dere ybought.

      For now is Palamon in alle wele,

      Living in blisse, in richesse, and in hele,

      And Emilie him loveth so tendrely,

      And he hire serveth all so gentilly,

      That never was ther no word hem betwene

      Of jalousie, ne of non other tene.

      Thus endeth Palamon and Emelie;

      And God save all this fayre compagnie.

      THE NONNES PREESTES TALE

      A poure widewe, somdel stoupen in age,

      Was whilom dwelling in a narwe cotage

      Beside a grove stonding in a dale.

      This widewe, which I tell you of my tale,

      Sin thilke day that she was last a wif

      In patience led a ful simple lif,

      For litel was hire catel and hire rente;

      By husbondry of swiche as God hire sente

      She found hireself and eke hire doughtren two.

      Three large sowes had she, and no mo,

      Three kine, and eke a sheep that highte Malle;

      Ful sooty was hire boure and eke hire halle,

      In which she ete many a slender mele;

      Of poinant sauce ne knew she never a dele:

      No deintee morsel passed thurgh hire throte;

      Hire diete was accordant to hire cote:

      Repletion ne made hire never sike;

      Attempre diete was all hire physike,

      And exercise, and hertes suffisance;

      The goute let hire nothing for to dance,

      Ne apoplexie shente not hire hed:

      No win ne dranke she nyther white ne red:

      Hire bord was served most with white and black,

      Milk and broun bred, in which she fond no lack,

      Seinde bacon, and somtime an eye or twey,

      For she was as it were a manner dey.

      A yerd she had enclosed all about

      With stickes, and a drie diche without,

      In which she had a cok highte Chaunteclere,

      In all the land of crowing n'as his pere:

      His vois was merier than the mery orgon

      On masse daies that in the chirches gon:

      Wel sikerer was his crowing in his loge

      Than is a clok or any abbey orloge:

      By nature he knewe eche ascentioun

      Of the equinoctial in thilke toun,

      For whan degrees fiftene were ascended

      Than crew he that it might not ben amended.

      His combe was redder than the fin corall,

      Enbattelled as it were a castel wall;

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

      Like asure were his legges and his tone,

      His nailes whiter than the lily flour,

      And like the burned gold was his colour.

      This gentil cok had in his governance

      Seven hennes for to don all his plesance,

      Which were his susters and his paramoures,

      And wonder like to him as of coloures,

      Of which the fairest, hewed in the throte,

      Was cleped faire Damoselle Pertelote.

      Curteis she was, descrete and debonaire,

      And compenable, and bare hireself so faire,

      Sithen the day that she was sevennight old,

      That trewelich she hath the herte in hold

      Of Chaunteclere, loken in every lith;

      He loved hire so, that wel was him therwith:

      But swiche a joye it was to here hem sing,

      Whan that the brighte sonne gan to spring,

      In swete accord: my lefe is fare in lond.

      For thilke time, as I have understond,

      Bestes and briddes couden speke and sing.

      And so befell that in a dawening

      As Chaunteclere among his wives alle

      Sate on his perche that was in the halle,

      And

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