And deyde within a litel space. And thus his warisoun he took For the lady that he forsook.
Ladyes, I preye ensample taketh,
Ye that ayeins your love mistaketh : 1540 For if hir deeth be yow to wyte, God can ful wel your whyle quyte.
Whan that this lettre, of whiche I telle, Had taught me that it was the welle Of Narcisus in his beautee, I gan anoon withdrawe me,
Whan it fel in my remembraunce, That him bitidde swich mischaunce. The Welle.
But at the laste than thoughte I,
That scatheles, ful sikerly,
Peynted in the cristal there.
I mighte unto THE WELLE go.
Wherof shulde I abasshen so?
This is the mirour perilous,
In which the proude Narcisus Saw al his face fair and bright, That made him sith to lye upright. For who-so loke in that mirour, Ther may no-thing ben his socour That he ne shal ther seen som thing That shal him lede into †loving. Ful many a worthy man hath it Y-blent; for folk of grettest wit Ben sone caught here and awayted; Withouten respyt been they bayted. Heer comth to folk of-newe rage, Heer chaungeth many wight corage; Heer lyth no reed ne wit therto; For Venus sone, daun Cupido,
Hath sowen there of love the seed, That help ne lyth ther noon, ne reed, So cercleth it the welle aboute. His ginnes hath he set withoute Right for to cacche in his panteres These damoysels and bacheleres. Love will noon other bridde cacche, Though he sette either net or lacche. 1624 And for the seed that heer was sowen, This welle is cleped, as wel is knowen, The Welle of Love, of verray right, Of which ther hath ful many a wight Spoke in bokes dyversely. But they shulle never so verily Descripcioun of the welle here, No eek the sothe of this matere, As ye shulle, whan I have undo The craft that hir bilongeth to. Alway me lyked for to dwelle,
[Line 1705 is incomplete, as the sentence has no verb. Here the genuine portion ends. Line 1706 gives a false rime, and is by another hand.]
The botoun, more unto my pay
Than any other that I say,
And Love hadde gete him, in ta throwe, Another arowe into his bowe,
And for to shete gan him dresse;
He took an arowe ful sharply whet, And in his bowe whan it was set, He streight up to his ere drough The stronge bowe, that was so tough, And shet at me so wonder smerte, That through myn eye unto myn herte The takel smoot, and depe it wente. And ther-with-al such cold me hente, That, under clothes warme and softe, 1731 Sith that day I have chevered ofte. Whan I was hurt thus in [that] stounde, I fel doun plat unto the grounde. Myn herte failed and feynted ay, And long tyme [ther] a-swone I lay. But whan I com out of swoning, And hadde wit, and my feling, I was al maat, and wende ful wel Of blood have loren a ful gret del. But certes, the arowe that in me stood Of me ne drew no drope of blood, For-why I found my wounde al dreye. Than took I with myn hondis tweye The arowe, and ful fast out it plight, 1745 And in the pulling sore I sight.
So at the last the shaft of tree
Gan so depe in myn herte passe, That I it mighte nought arace; But in myn herte stille it stood, Al bledde I not a drope of blood. I was bothe anguissous and trouble For the peril that I saw double; I niste what to seye or do, Ne
gete a leche my woundis +to; For neithir thurgh gras ne rote, Ne hadde I help of hope ne bote. But to the botoun ever-mo Myn herte drew; for al my wo, My thought was in non other thing. For hadde it been in my keping,
It wolde have brought my lyf agayn. 1765 For +certeinly, I dar wel seyn, The sight only, and the savour, Alegged muche of my langour. Than gan I for to drawe me Toward the botoun fair to see;
The fresshe botoun so bright of hewe. 1790 Betir me were have leten be;
But it bihoved nedes me To don right as myn herte bad. For ever the body must be lad Aftir the herte; in wele and wo, Of force togidre they must go. But never this archer wolde fyne To shete at me with all his pyne, And for to make me to him mete.
The thridde arowe he gan to shete 1800 Whan best his tyme he mighte espye, The which was named Curtesye;
Inte myn herte it dide avale.
A-swone I fel, bothe deed and pale;
Long tyme I lay, and stired nought, 1805 Til I abraid out of my thought.
And faste than I avysed me
To drawe[n] out the shafte of tree;
But ever the heed was left bihinde
For ought I couthe pulle or winde, 1810 So sore it stikid whan I was hit,
That by no craft I might it flit; But anguissous and ful of thought,
I felte such wo, my wounde ay wrought, That somoned me alway to go
Toward the rose, that pleased me so; But I ne durste in no manere,
Bicause the archer was so nere.
For evermore gladly, as I rede,
Brent child of fyr hath muche drede. 1820 And, certis yit, for al my peyne,
Toward the roser fast I drow;
But thornes sharpe mo than y-now
Ther were, and also thistels thikke, 1835 And breres, brimme for to prikke, That I ne mighte gete grace The rowe thornes for to passe, To sene the roses fresshe of hewe, I must abide, though it me rewe, The hegge aboute so thikke was, That closid the roses in compas.
But o thing lyked me right wele; I was so nygh, I mighte fele Of the botoun the swote odour, And also see the fresshe colour; And that right gretly lyked me, That I so neer tit mighte see. Sich joye anoon therof hadde I, That I forgat my malady. To sene tit hadde I sich delyt, Of sorwe and angre I was al quit, And of my woundes that I had +thar; For no-thing lyken me might +mar Than dwellen by the roser ay, And thennes never to passe away. But whan a whyle I had be thar, The God of Love, which al to-shar
Upon the woundes that he had Through the body in my herte maad, To helpe hir sores, and to cure, And that they may the bet endure. But yit this arwe, withoute more, Made in myn herte a large sore, That in ful gret peyne I abood.
Now +softening with oynement; It softned here, and +prikked there, 1925 Thus ese and anger togider were.
The God of Love deliverly
Com lepand to me hastily, And seide to me, in gret rape,
'Yeld thee, for thou may not escape! 1930 May no defence availe thee here; Therfore I rede mak no daungere. If thou wolt yelde thee hastily, Thou shalt [the] rather have mercy. He is a fool in sikernesse, That with daunger or stoutnesse Rebellith ther that he shulde plese; In such folye is litel ese.
For though a man fer wolde seche, He shulde not finden, in certeyn, No sich answer of no vileyn; For sich a word ne mighte nought Isse out of a vilayns thought. Thou shalt not lesen of thy speche, For [to] thy helping wol I eche, And eek encresen that I may. But first I wol that thou obay
Fully, for thyn avauntage,
Be meek, wher thou must nedis bowe; To stryve ageyn is nought thy prowe. Come at ones, and have y-do, For I wol that it be so.
My lyf, my deth, is in your honde, I may not laste out of your bonde. Pleyn at your list I yelde me, Hoping in herte, that sumtyme ye Comfort and ese shulle me sende; Or ellis shortly, this is the ende, Withouten helthe I moot ay dure, But-if ye take me to your cure. Comfort or helthe how shuld I have, Sith ye me hurte, but ye me save? The helthe of +lovers moot be founde Wher-as they token firste hir wounde. And if ye list of me to make
Your prisoner, I wol it take Of herte and wil, fully at gree. Hoolly and pleyn I yelde me, Withoute feyning or feyntyse, To be governed by your empryse. Of you I here so much prys, I wol ben hool at your devys
Anon to do me here homage.
And sithe[n] kisse thou shalt my mouth, Which to no vilayn was never couth 2000 For to aproche it, ne for to touche; For sauf to cherlis I ne vouche That they shulle never neigh it nere. For curteys, and of fair manere, Wel taught, and ful of gentilnesse He muste ben, that shal me kisse, And also of ful high fraunchyse, That shal atteyne to that empryse. 'And first of o thing warne I thee, That peyne and gret adversitee He mot endure, and eek travaile, That shal me serve, withoute faile. But ther-ageyns, thee to comforte, And with thy servise to desporte, Thou mayst ful glad and joyful be So good a maister to have as me, And lord of so high renoun. I bere of Love the gonfanoun, Of Curtesye the banere ; For I am of the silf manere, Gentil, curteys, meek and free; That who [so] ever ententif be Me to honoure, doute, and serve, And also that he him observe Fro trespas and fro vilanye,
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