Back to top

The Simonie

THE SIMONIE: FOOTNOTES

1 Why war and vengeance and manslaughter has come into the land

2 Why animals are so starved, why wheat has become so expensive

3 You who will wait, listen and you will hear / The reason

4 The palace is off-limits to him, he dare not enter in

5 And though the pope bid him come in, yet shall he stand outside

6 He dare not show himself there for fear of being slain

7 If Simony should meet with him, he will challenge him

8 Even if he is such a clerk, if he comes without silver

9 Unless he sweats before he goes, all his journey is lost

10 Either he shall sing Si dedero [If I give], or he shall gain nothing at all

11 No matter how much of a scoundrel he is, his needs shall be taken care of

12 For Avarice and Simony have the world as their own

13 And because every clerk revealed the foul deeds of the other

14 Since Saint Thomas B Becket was slain and bereft of his crown

15 These other [churchmen] are too torpid, and feebly know how to operate

16 Some work for the king, and gather treasure in heaps

17 And the offices of generosity of Holy Church they allow to lie asleep

18 There are all too many of these, if it be God's will

19 Every [archdeacon] strives to work most cursedly

20 For as soon as a parson is dead and placed in the earth

21 Everybody nowadays may see that this is how it is

22 He ponders how he may most schemingly work

23 No poor person shall get along well there, not in the evening nor in the morning

24 A mirror and a kerchief to bind his crook with

25 But the bishop will be blamed that allowed things to happen this way

26 For although the bishop knows about it, who could attest to it

27 Who doesn't know a farthing's worth of wisdom, [and] with difficulty sings a mass

28 For I think it is just that a priest who is ignorant fares thus

29 He speaks good English, but he doesn't know what he said

30 Furnishes himself with a fun-loving wench of the latest fashion

31 Religion is in ill repute and fares worse and worse

32 His people are not welcome, whether they arrive early or late

33 The gate-keeper is commanded to detain them outside the gate

34 Unless he has [a] hood and furred cap, he is not esteemed

35 But indeed smugness in prosperity has blinded them all

36 And now the greatest part has gone to comfort and gluttony

37 Woe be to that one friar who cares to come there

38 You all know what I mean-- you who know anything good

39 He shall be helped very well to lead a wicked life

40 And bring a chest crammed full with roots and rinds / Worth nothing

41 It shall be an expensive leek, when all's said and done

42 He causes the wife to boil a capon and a slice of beef

43 As the order [of knighthood] requires as well as a friar

44 And now no knight will stay to speak churlish things

45 And thus knighthood is debased and has become wholly crippled

46 And thus knights are collected from non-noble blood

47 Those who should be like gentlemen are nothing like them

48 They walk off the beaten track, nor do they desist for slander

49 The fittest should remain at home for ten or twelve shillings

50 He would have little need to rob from such poor people

51 Among justices, sheriffs, escheators, and the chancellor, / and among lesser men

52 They buy lands and possessions, none may withstand them

53 And may truth be sent into this land, for treachery has endured too long

54 Every [bailiff and beadle] seeks how he may most oppress poor men

55 The poor men generally are summoned to the court of assizes

56 And speak a word or two on your behalf, and do little good for you

57 And when he turns his back on you, he makes a face at you

58 Everything they may acquire in this way they think they have won / With their reason

59 And once there were merchants who honorably bought and sold; / And now is that custom abrogated, and has not been observed for a long time

60 There was in England a game that lasted two years

61 That they would never cease until all the world should be accursed

62 In this way God can make scarcity where formerly there was plenty

63 And then their complexion paled, which before laughed so loudly

64 Who would not for kinship spare one relative or another

65 Pride urged them so vigorously that they never would have peace / Until they had created in this land such a rage

66 But while these great lords thus were thrown on a heap

67 We all know we are to blame for the lamentable situation that we are in

68 Then they themselves think they must fare the better, for they themselves need more

69 It is a pity to speak of it, whoever rightly dares to judge

70 And half of what they take from wretched poor men is stolen

71 He sweats many a drop of sweat, and no matter how hard he toils

72 One may for twelve pence at a court session do forty shilling's worth of wrong

73 These husbandmen curse and widows weep and cry to God for vengeance / Very soon

74 For all the problems must be attributed to lords who allow things to proceed in this way. / They should support the poor people, but they do nothing on their behalf

75 Of those who so scorn God and His followers, I can say no more

76 Yet those who come think that fraud yields the best results over time

77 But may the bones be burned of such fomenters of strife

78 So that we may know our sins with sorrow and oral confession / And always to serve God better, for of that I have now / Told you

THE SIMONIE: NOTES

1 Whii werre. In the Bodley MS (B) the equivalent of these opening lines occurs at lines 19-24. B opens with: "Lordyngis leve and dere, lisneþ to me a stounde / Of a new þefte that nwlich was yfounde," and continues for sixteen lines with text not found elsewhere.

9 Treuthe. Truth/Troth is personified in this stanza and the next. He/him in lines 10-11 and 15-18 refer to this personification. For the various meanings of this term in legal contexts, see Alford, Glossary, s.v. Treuthe.

18 shaken his berd. "challenge him"; or, perhaps, "cuckold him." See Whiting, Proverbs, § B118, and line 534 below.

24 Si dedero. Singing "Si dedero" (a venality satire trope) means, in effect, to pay the piper, to bribe; the sense is, "If I give, I receive; if I don't give, I receive nothing." See note to Addresses to the Commons line 21 (in Jakke Trewman's testimony). This trope also appears in the works of Rutebeuf. See Yunck, The Lineage of Lady Meed, p. 198.

38 Seint Thomas. Thomas à Becket, archbishop of Canterbury appointed by king Henry II, was assassinated in Canterbury cathedral in 1170. Henry II did public penance for his murder. Thomas was at first a popular saint, but by the later Middle Ages all classes came to venerate his memory and the site where he was struck down. Hence Canterbury became a major pilgrimage center and tourist attraction after Jerusalem, Rome, and St. James of Compostela.

45-47 Summe . . . Ful stille. The poet complains that clerks (once educated for holy orders) enter the civil bureaucracy for economic advantage, depriving the Church of their talents.

74 wid haukes and wid houndes. Hawking and hunting with hounds were symbols of the worldly, secular life. See line 2 of "Were beþ þey biforen vs weren" from The Sayings of St. Bernard (Index § 3310): "Houndes ladden and hauekes beren" (EL XIII, ed. Carleton Brown, p. 85); and Walter, of Chaucer's Clerk's Tale, who spends his time hawking and hunting (immersed in his "lust present") while neglecting his realm's welfare (IV.78-81). The author of The Simonie links parsons with avarice for benefices (lines 55-90) and priests with illicit sexual activity (lines 109-20).

88 rat on the rouwe-bible. Wordplay: he "reads on the ribible" (= rebeck, an early type of violin), with a pun on "Bible" ("and on other bok / No mo").

104-08 As bi a jay . . . no betir than a jay. With this might be compared Chaucer's description of the Summoner in the General Prologue of The Canterbury Tales:
A fewe termes hadde he, two or thre,
That he had lerned out of some decree--
No wonder is, he herde it al the day;
And eek ye knowen wel how that a jay
Kan clepen "Watte" as wel as kan the pope. (I.639-43)
See also UR 1-9 (about a chough rather than a jay), and Whiting, Proverbs, §§ J18, J19.

115 croune . . . crok. "Crown of acolite for the crumpled crook" (?). The sense of the line seems to be that the "wantoune prestes" mock prelates, with perhaps an allusion to Christ's crown of thorns.

117 kembeth the croket. The croket is a rolled hair fashion introduced into the court of Henry III, which flourished into the late fourteenth century. See PlT line 306 and note.

118 newe jet. A phrase Chaucer uses for the Pardoner's dress: "Hym thoughte he rood al of the newe jet" (I.682). See MED s.v. get n.1 (a) and (b) and Above all thing thow arte a kyng 10 and note.

119 Sanz doute. A French phrase appropriate for courtly literature but highly ironic in this context.

120 clateren cumpelin. To "clatter [=make noise] compline" is a euphemism for their bedroom activity "whan the candel is oute." Compline is the last monastic hour of the day. In Malory, Lancelot clatters so loudly in his sleep after making love to Elayne, that Guenevere hears him in the next room and knows what has happened. The Gawain-poet uses the verb clatered to describe the noise of the ax being ground on the gryndelston (line 2201; cf. 731). MED cites this phrase as an example of compline sense 3: "Used humorously with reference to chatting and snoring." The other cited example is Chaucer's Reeve's Tale (I.4171).

121-22 thise abbotes . . . contrefeten knihtes. In the General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales Chaucer depicts the monk -- "A manly man, to been an abbot able" (I.167) -- as "An outridere, that lovede venerie [hunting]" (line 166).

123 religious. MS religiouns.

126 a-mis. Supplied in a different hand; so Wr and Br.

142-44 The porter . . . His men. On this motif of the hostile doorkeeper, see Beati qui esuriunt line 78 and note.

147 He hath forsake. Ironic, with a change of pronoun from "monekes" (line 145) and "Hii" (line 146) to "He" (line 147).

153 Where shal . . . leres? Compare Preste, Ne Monke, Ne Yit Chanoun: "I have lyved now fourty yers, / And fatter men about the neres / Yit sawe I never than are these frers" (lines 17-19). Compare also the Dominican friar in his refectory (mess hall): PPC lines 219-26.

183 Hit nis . . . louweth. "It is not only for the calf that the cow lows." That is, the cow moos for other reasons. On this phrase as proverbial, see Whiting, Proverbs, § C9.

193 officials. An official was "an officer subordinate to an archbishop or bishop, especially a bishop's chancellor, who presided over consistory court; a canon-law judge" (Alford, Glossary, s.v. Official).

195 Mak a present . . . dwelle. The dean was "a church official invested with juris-diction over a subdivision of an archdeaconry." Alford (Glossary, s.v. Dene) cites William Holdsworth's A History of English Law: "It was the duty of Rural Deans to report on the manners of the clergy and laity: this rendered them necessary attendants at the episcopal visitation . . . and gave them at one time a small jurisdiction." Of such local officials, Scott L. Waugh states: "The village represented the basic level of governance. For most people, the manorial court was the primary jurisdiction and the lord's officials the paramount authority. Chaucer's reeve, for example, was feared more than the plague by those beneath him. Church officials were equally dreaded, though less conspicuous. Responsible for supervising churches, priests, and parishioners, archdeacons and rural deans were hated for their hypocritical, corrupt meddling in villagers' lives, as Chaucer's Friar's Tale reveals. One or more constables were elected by the village and were responsible for keeping order. They watched suspicious persons, organized the pursuit of wrongdoers whenever the hue and cry was raised, arrested criminals, and seized felons' chattels." England in the Reign of Edward III (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), p. 154. The author of the Apocalipsis Goliae characterizes the dean as the "archdeacon's dog": "Decanus canis est archidiaconi" (Die Apokalypse des Golias, ed. Karl Strecker [Rome: Regenberg, 1928], stanza 49).

211 And yit ther is. In B this stanza is preceded by a stanza not found in the other MSS which reads (in Ross's transcription):
And as I seide first, hit is a gret mischaunce,
Þat þat synne reygnet so þorow þat synfol soffraunce.
Þe bischop feyneþ on his side and takeð a prive mede,
And sely denys and officialis dare not seie fore drede
To swiche.
Þus is Englond schent fore synne, sykerliche.
The three folios prior to the stanza are missing in B. 211-40 B follows these five stanzas on "false fisiciens" with a sixth stanza, not in A, which reads (Ross's transcription):
   
   
   
   
   
   
He maket hym merie þe ferst, as mery as he can,
And loke þat he fare wel his hors and his man.
A-morwe he taket þe uryne and schaket aen þe sonne.
"Dame," he seis, "drede þe not. Þe maister is wonne,"
And li[ket].
But þus he fereð a-wey þe silver and þe wif be skikket.
   
   
   
here
is delighted
plundered
C includes a version of the stanza.

221 And. So Wr and Br. MS ad.

228 Hit . . . i-wrouht. "It shall be expensive enough whan all is said and done." The phrase dere on a lek is reminiscent of a proverbial expression found in Chaucer: deere ynough a leek (CT VIII.795). The leek was thought to be worthless. See the note on this proverb in The Riverside Chaucer, ed. Benson, p. 949.

254 also wel as a frere. Knights should wear dress appropriate for their vocations, as do friars (or as friars should do).

264 is. So Wr and Br; lacking in MS but needed for the sense.

277 Godes soule . . . sworn. A reference to swearing on God and God's body. See the Pardoner's disquisition on swearing and oaths in the Pardoner's Tale VI.629-59.

280 contrefaiture, counterfeit quality. The false knight goes from a seemingly harmless imitation to outright sin such that he angers God and pays the devil most of all (line 282).

283-88 B follows this stanza with a unique stanza after which the arrangement of stanzas differs radically from A and P. The stanza reads in Ross's transcription and emendation:
   
   
   
   
   
   
Sily man to conterfeyte, fondist in his wise,
But litel fondyng is maket toward Godis service,
Where half þe bisnesse do to God þat is do to þe [fend],
To goderele al þe worle but Crist, my lef frend
                                             [and kynde],
Þe most deel of þe worle is blent, fore overal hit is [blynde].
devotion
devotion
   
profit; world; beloved
   
   
285 turmentours. A reference to the dress of Christ's tormentors in mystery plays, which were staged by clerks.

292 mot-hall. "The annals of Edward's reign are filled with complaints against the King's officers . . . . In 1321, a charge was leveled against Hugh Despenser the Younger, who put his own officers into the King's household, where he was chamberlain (Annales paulini, in Stubbs . . . , pp. 292-97). This might be the basis for the reference in A and P to the moot-hall in the chamber" (Ross, p. 183, note 81). For various uses of the moot hall in PP and other works, see Alford, Glossary, s.v. Mothalle.

294 i-whited. "Silvered," i.e., bribed, crossed with silver.

295 If the king. In this section on petty justices, the poet regards the king as a victim along with the poor. The king's army suffers through bribery in the conscription process; and he loses tax monies. This was a common complaint in fourteenth-century literature. See, e.g., Against the King's Taxes, a macaronic poem (Anglo-Norman French and Latin) from MS Harley 2253, lines 16-20, in Anglo-Norman Political Songs, ed. Isabel S. T. Aspin, Anglo-Norman Texts 11 (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1953), p. 109. See also note to lines 313-24 below.

303 for-pinched, to-toilled, and to-twiht. Wr glosses these colorful terms as "pinched to pieces," "laboured away," and "twitted away" respectively. The idea, as in Taxe Has Tenet Us Alle, is that "The kyng therof hade smalle" (line 3).

309 girles. Although the word need not denote females, but only youth, here the signification seems to mean "young females."

313-24 Topos of the "king's ignorance." See Truthe, Reste, and Pes note to lines 45-46.

321 Thurfte him . . . ner. "Should he dare not seek wealth so far away, he might find it nearer to hand." This seems to be a criticism of Edward II's foreign policy.

325 come he . . . pore: no matter how poor he was before assuming high office.

328 ben inserted above the line with a karat. Wr and Br print in brackets.

330 Theih pleien . . . wele. "They use the king's silver for their own pleasures, and produce wood, or tallies, instead of contributing to the prosperity of the people" (Wr).

337-38 baillifs and bedeles . . . greve. See also Beati qui esuriunt line 111 and note; Song of the Husbandman lines 37-56 and note to line 13; and Gode Spede the Plough line 37. For an account of an early fourteenth-century bailiff charged with bedeviling tenants, see the case of the poor tenants of Bocking manor, who drew up a petition of grievance against John le Doo, bailiff who, by not agreeing to customary fines (amercements), "of his own conceit, increased their burdens twofold or even threefold and by such means has vexed the tenants and brought them to destruction, against all reason and the Great Charter that Holy Church ought to uphold." As quoted in Dobson, The Peasants' Revolt of 1381, p. 79.

345 He wole . . . hod. "He will take forty pence to put on his hood," i.e., to begin his official duties.

355-60 And sumtime . . . i-smite. Ross mentions "numerous contemporary complaints against tradesmen's offences," including "the King's ordinances which were directed against certain tradesmen, notably brewers, whose prices were too high" (p. 186, note 111).

362 That he . . . haft. That he is somewhat loose in the handle, i.e., unstable, unreliable. See MED s.v. haft (b). Whiting identifies the phrase as proverbial (Proverbs, § H10). C reads: "That he nis a party lose in the haft" (line 140); B "Þat he is more þan halfendel los in þe haft" (line 211).

363-65 For falsnesse . . . Ne in herte. These traditional sentiments about the failure of truth in the modern era are reminiscent of Chaucer's short poems "Truth," "Gentilesse," and especially "Lak of Stedfastnesse."

366 And tharfore . . . smerte. C "For sothe thei nyl sese ar God make hem to smert"; B "Þerfore is no wonþer þow al þe worle smerte."

373-78 So that . . . muchele miht. Although complaints against the weather were widespread in Latin and vernacular verse, this verse paragraph may allude to "the terrible storms and shortages of 1315-16" (see Ross's quotations from contemporary chroniclers on pp. 186-87, note 119).

382 sustenaunce. So A and B; C frute.

384 i-liche wicke. B "unwrast and wikke."

385-90 Lacking in C and B.

385-86 Men . . . betre. The idea in these lines (and in the verse paragraph) is that people have become too proud in times of plenty. Langland develops this idea in Piers Plowman passus 5 and 6 (B text). It is also a prominent feature of Wynnere and Wastoure. C omits this stanza.

391-96 C concludes with this stanza, whose final four lines read: "Whan bestes beth i-storve and corne waxeth dere, / And honger and pestilence in ech lond, as e mow ofte here / Overal; -- / But if we amende us, it will wel wers befal. Explicit" (lines 465-68).

392 a derthe. Perhaps a reference to the great famine of 1315. For the importance of famines in literature and history, see R. W. Frank, "The 'Hungry Gap,' Crop Failure, and Famine: The Fourteenth-Century Agricultural Crisis and Piers Plowman," in Yearbook of Langland Studies 4 (1990), 87-104.

409 Tho. Although there is no large letter in A, in B the scribe left a space for a large letter in the equivalent stanza. Ross comments: "MS leaves a space here for a large capital which was never added. The scribe evidently felt that this stanza marked a divisional point in the poem, as indeed it does. The Auchinleck MS offers corresponding lines once again, beginning with this stanza" (p. 189).

415 astint. So Wr and Br; MS astin. B a stynt (line 283).

469 assisours. An assizer was "one of those who constituted the assize or inquest, whence the modern jury originated; a sworn recognitor (OED)" (Alford, Glossary, s.v. Sisour). Alford cites PP B.20.161: "Hir sire was a Sysour þat neuere swoor truþe, / Oon Tomme two-tonge, atteynt at each a queste [inquest]"; and Jacob's Well: "False cysourys gon vp-on qwestys, & puttyn a man fro his ryt thrugh a false verdyte, & wytnessen aens trewthe."

hundred. An administrative division of a county containing one hundred homesteads and having its own court.

476 A ceases with this line. Lines 465-end are supplied from B and checked against Ross's transcription.

483 breth (= bread). The scribe of B regularly spells final -d as þ (-th). See also wretchethe, wretched, line 486; a-paith, apaid, line 500; methe, meed, line 507; lewthe, lewd (=ignorant), line 525; wikketh, wicked, line 531; blisseth bloth, blessed blood, line 541.

494 mercyment. Says Skeat in his note to Piers Plowman B 1.159: "Blount, in his Law Dict., says -- 'There is a difference between amerciaments and fines: these [i.e. the latter], as they are taken for punishments, are punishments certain, which grow expressly from some statute; but amerciaments are arbitrarily imposed by affeerors."' Alford defines Merciment as "A penalty imposed 'at the mercy' of the court (as distinct from a statutory fine), an amercement." See Glossary, s.v. Merciment.

495 at a. B: ata.

schillingwerd. B: schilligwerd. Ross emends to schilli[n]werd.

496 han. Ross mistranscribes as him. Have and hað are the more common forms of the verb to have in B, but see lines 508 and 525 where han is the recurrent form in B. See also lines 13, 30, 241, 394, 428, 445, 446, 496.

497 at mele. B: at m. Ross's emendation to suit the rhyme. The phrase is ambiguous and could mean "on such occasions," or "for their supper," with a pun reaching back to what "bakers" and "brewers" provide.

514 The words of this are blotted after with.

517-40 These lines appear as the antepenultimate and the penultimate stanzas of B. Ross in his edition transposes these stanzas to his lines 325-60. I retain the lines according to their position in B because they seem to develop the thought of the previous stanzas.

534 See note to line 18.

536 for hunger . . . strecchen. The meaning seems to be that they achieve death because of hunger (after first lying down in the street like beggars). See MED s.v. strecchen 5 (c).
 

[Symonye and Covetise, or On the Evil Times of Edward II]

(Auchinleck MS fols. 328r-334v; and MS Bodley 48 fols. 325v-331r)

   
   
   
   
5   
   
   
   
   
   
10   
   
   
   
   
   
15   
   
   
   
   
   
20   
   
   
   
   
   
25   
   
   
   
   
30   
   
   
   
   
   
35   
   
   
   
   
   
40   
   
   
   
   
   
45   
   
   
   
   
   
50   
   
   
   
   
   
55   
   
   
   
   
60   
   
   
   
   
   
65   
   
   
   
   
   
70   
   
   
   
   
   
75   
   
   
   
   
   
80   
   
   
   
   
   
85   
   
   
   
   
90   
   
   
   
   
   
95   
   
   
   
   
   
100   
   
   
   
   
   
105   
   
   
   
   
   
110   
   
   
   
   
   
115   
   
   
   
   
120   
   
   
   
   
   
125   
   
   
   
   
   
130   
   
   
   
   
   
135   
   
   
   
   
   
140   
   
   
   
   
   
145   
   
   
   
   
150   
   
   
   
   
   
155   
   
   
   
   
   
160   
   
   
   
   
   
165   
   
   
   
   
   
170   
   
   
   
   
   
175   
   
   
   
   
180   
   
   
   
   
   
185   
   
   
   
   
   
190   
   
   
   
   
   
195   
   
   
   
   
   
200   
   
   
   
   
   
205   
   
   
   
   
210   
   
   
   
   
   
215   
   
   
   
   
   
220   
   
   
   
   
   
225   
   
   
   
   
   
230   
   
   
   
   
   
235   
   
   
   
   
240   
   
   
   
   
   
245   
   
   
   
   
   
250   
   
   
   
   
   
255   
   
   
   
   
   
260   
   
   
   
   
   
265   
   
   
   
   
270   
   
   
   
   
   
275   
   
   
   
   
   
280   
   
   
   
   
   
285   
   
   
   
   
   
290   
   
   
   
   
   
295   
   
   
   
   
300   
   
   
   
   
   
305   
   
   
   
   
   
310   
   
   
   
   
   
315   
   
   
   
   
   
320   
   
   
   
   
   
325   
   
   
   
   
330   
   
   
   
   
   
335   
   
   
   
   
   
340   
   
   
   
   
   
345   
   
   
   
   
   
350   
   
   
   
   
   
355   
   
   
   
   
360   
   
   
   
   
   
365   
   
   
   
   
   
370   
   
   
   
   
   
375   
   
   
   
   
   
380   
   
   
   
   
   
385   
   
   
   
   
390   
   
   
   
   
   
395   
   
   
   
   
   
400   
   
   
   
   
   
405   
   
   
   
   
   
410   
   
   
   
   
   
415   
   
   
   
   
420   
   
   
   
   
   
425   
   
   
   
   
   
430   
   
   
   
   
   
435   
   
   
   
   
   
440   
   
   
   
   
   
445   
   
   
   
   
450   
   
   
   
   
   
455   
   
   
   
   
   
460   
   
   

   
   
465   
   
   
   
   
   
470   
   
   
   
   
   
475   
   
   
   
   
480   
   
   
   
   
   
485   
   
   

   
   
490   
   
   
   
   
   
495   
   
   
   
   
   
500   
   
   
   
   
   
505   
   
   
   
   
510   
   
   
   
   
   
515   
   
   
   
   
   
520   
   
   
   
   
   
525   
   
   
   
   
   
530   
   
   
   
   
   
535   
   
   
   
   
540   
   
   
   
   
   
545   
   
   
   
Whii werre and wrake in londe and manslauht is i-come, 1
Whii hungger and derthe on eorthe the pore hath undernome,
Whii bestes ben thus storve, whii corn hath ben so dere, 2
Ye that wolen abide, listneth and ye mowen here
   The skile.3
I nelle liyen for no man, herkne who so wile.
   
God greteth wel the clergie, and seith theih don amis,
And doth hem to understonde that litel treuthe ther is;
For at the court of Rome, ther Treuthe sholde biginne,
Him is forboden the paleis, dar he noht com therinne 4
   For doute;
And thouh the Pope clepe him in, yit shal he stonde theroute. 5
   
Alle the Popes clerkes han taken hem to red,
If Treuthe come amonges hem, that he shal be ded.
There dar he noht shewen him for doute to be slain, 6
Among none of the cardinaus dar he noht be sein,
   For feerd,
If Symonie may mete wid him he wole shaken his berd. 7
   
Voiz of clerk is sielde i-herd at the court of Rome;
Ne were he never swich a clerk, silverles if he come, 8
Though he were the wiseste that evere was i-born,
But if he swete ar he go, al his weye is lorn 9
   I-souht,
Or he shal singe Si dedero, or al geineth him noht. 10
   
For if there be in countré an horeling, a shrewe,
Lat him come to the court hise nedes for to shewe,
And bring wid him silver and non other wed,
Be he nevere so muchel a wrecche, hise nedes sholden be spede 11
   Ful stille,
For Coveytise and Symonie han the world to wille. 12
   
And erchebishop and bishop, that ouhte for to enquere
Off alle men of Holi Churche of what lif theih were,
Summe beth foles hemself, and leden a sory lif,
Therfore doren hii noht speke for rising of strif
   Thurw clerkes,
And that everich biwreied other of here wrecchede werkes. 13
   
But certes Holi Churche is muchel i-brouht ther doune,
Siththen Seint Thomas was slain and smiten of his croune. 14
He was a piler ariht to holden up Holi Churche,
Thise othere ben to slouwe, and feintliche kunnen worche, 15
   I-wis;
Therfore in Holi Churche hit fareth the more amis.
   
But everi man may wel i-wite, who so take yeme,
That no man may wel serve tweie lordes to queme.
Summe beth in ofice wid the king, and gaderen tresor to hepe, 16   
And the fraunchise of Holi Churche hii laten ligge slepe 17
   Ful stille;
Al to manye ther beth swiche, if hit were Godes wille. 18
   
And thise ersedeknes that ben set to visite Holi Churche,
Everich foundeth hu he may shrewedelichest worche; 19
He wol take mede of that on and that other,
And late the parsoun have a wyf, and the prest another,
   At wille:
Coveytise shal stoppen here mouth, and maken hem al stille.
   
For sone so a parsoun is ded and in eorthe i-don, 20
Thanne shal the patroun have giftes anon;
The clerkes of the cuntré wolen him faste wowe,
And senden him faire giftes and presentes i-nowe,
   And the bishop;
And there shal Symonye ben taken bi the cop.
   
Coveytise upon his hors he wole be sone there,
And bringe the bishop silver, and rounen in his ere
That alle the pore that ther comen, on ydel sholen theih worche,
For he that allermost may give, he shal have the churche,
   I-wis.
Everich man nu bi dawe may sen that thus hit is. 21
   
And whan this newe parsoun is institut in his churche,
He bithenketh him hu he may shrewedelichest worche; 22
Ne shal the corn in his berne ben eten wid no muis,
But hit shal ben i-spended in a shrewede huis;
   If he may,
Al shal ben i-beten out or Cristemesse day.
   
And whan he hath i-gadered markes and poundes,
He priketh out of toune wid haukes and wid houndes
Into a straunge contré, and halt a wenche in cracche;
And wel is hire that first may swich a parsoun kacche
   In londe.
And thus theih serven the chapele, and laten the churche stonde.
   
He taketh al that he may, and maketh the churche pore,
And leveth thare behinde a theef and an hore,
A serjaunt and a deie that leden a sory lif;
Al so faire hii gon to bedde as housebonde and wif,
   Wid sorwe.
Shal there no pore lif fare the bet nouther on even ne on morwe. 23
   
And whan he hath the silver of wolle and of lomb,
He put in his pautener an honne and a komb,
A myrour and a koeverchef to binde wid his crok, 24
And rat on the rouwe-bible and on other bok
   No mo;
But unthank have the bishop that lat hit so go. 25
   
For thouh the bishop hit wite, that hit bename kouth, 26
He may wid a litel silver stoppen his mouth;
He medeth wid the clerkes, and halt forth the wenche,
And lat the parish for-worthe - the devel him adrenche
   For his werk!
And sory may his fader ben, that evere made him clerk.
   
And if the parsoun have a prest of a clene lyf,
That be a god consailler to maiden and to wif,
Shal comen a daffe and putte him out for a litel lasse,
That can noht a ferthing worth of god, unnethe singe a masse 27
   But ille.
And thus shal al the parish for lac of lore spille.
   
For riht me thinketh hit fareth bi a prest that is lewed, 28
As bi a jay in a kage, that himself hath bishrewed:
God Engelish he speketh, ac he wot nevere what; 29
No more wot a lewed prest in boke what he rat
   Bi day.
Thanne is a lewed prest no betir than a jay.
   
But everi man may wel i-wite, bi the swete Rode,
Ther beth so manye prestes, hii ne muwe noht alle be gode.
And natheles thise gode men fallen oft in fame,
For thise wantoune prestes that pleien here nice game,
   Bi nihte,
Hii gon wid swerd and bokeler as men that wode fihte.
   
Summe bereth croune of acolite for the crumponde crok,
And ben ashamed of the merke the bishop hem bitok;
At even he set upon a koife, and kembeth the croket,
Adihteth him a gay wenche of the newe jet, 30
   Sanz doute;
And there hii clateren cumpelin whan the candel is oute.
   
And thise abbotes and priours don agein here rihtes;
Hii riden wid hauk and hound, and contrefeten knihtes.
Hii sholde leve swich pride, and ben religious.
And nu is pride maister in everich ordred hous;
   I-wis,
Religioun is evele i-holde and fareth the more a-mis. 31
   
For if there come to an abey to pore men or thre,
And aske of hem helpe par seinte charité,
Unnethe wole any don his ernde other yong or old,
But late him coure ther al day in hunger and in cold,
   And sterve,
Loke what love ther is to God, whom theih seien that hii serve!
   
But there come another and bringe a litel lettre,
In a box upon his hepe, he shal spede the betre;
And if he be wid eny man that may don the abot harm,
He shal be lad into the halle, and ben i-mad full warm
   Aboute the mawe.
And Godes man stant ther-oute - sory is that lawe!
   
Thus is God nu served thurwout religioun;
There is He al to sielde i-sein in eny devocioun.
His meyné is unwelcome, comen hii erliche or late; 32
The porter hath comaundement to holde hem widoute the gate, 33
   In the fen.
Hu mihte theih loven that Loverd, that serven thus His men?
   
This is the penaunce that monekes don for ure Lordes love:
Hii weren sockes in here shon, and felted botes above.
He hath forsake for Godes love bothe hunger and cold;
But if he have hod and cappe fured, he nis noht i-told 34
   In covent;
Ac certes wlaunknesse of wele hem hath al ablent. 35
   
Religioun was first founded duresce for to drie,
And nu is the moste del i-went to eise and glotonie. 36
Where shal men nu finde fattere or raddere of leres?
Or betre farende folk than monekes, chanons, and freres?
   In uch toun
I wot non eysiere lyf than is religioun.
   
Religioun wot, red I, uch day what he shal don.
He ne carez noht to muche for his mete at non;
For hous-hire ne for clothes he ne carez noht;
But whan he cometh to the mete, he maketh his mawe touht
   Off the beste;
And anon therafter he fondeth to kacche reste.
   
And yit there is another ordre, Menour and Jacobin,
And freres of the Carme, and of Seint Austin,
That wolde preche more for a busshel of whete
Than for to bringe a soule from helle out of the hete
   To rest.
And thus is coveytise loverd bothe est and west.
   
If a pore man come to a frere for to aske shrifte,
And ther come a ricchere and bringe him a gifte,
He shal into the freitur and ben i-mad ful glad,
And that other stant theroute, as a man that were mad
   In sorwe.
Yit shal his ernde ben undon til that other morwe.
   
And if there be a riche man that evel hath undernome,
Thanne wolen thise freres al day thider come;
And if hit be a pore lyf in poverte and in care,
Sorwe on that o frere that kepeth come thare 37
   Ful loth;
Alle wite ye, gode men, hu the gamen goth.
   
And if the riche man deie that was of eny mihte,
Thanne wolen the freres for the cors fihte.
Hit nis noht al for the calf that kow louweth,
Ac hit is for the grene gras that in the medewe grouweth
   So god.
Alle wite ye what I mene, that kunnen eny god. 38
   
For als ich evere brouke min hod under min hat,
The frere wole to the direge, if the cors is fat.
Ac bi the feith I owe to God, if the cors is lene,
He wole wagge aboute the cloistre and kepen hise fet clene
   In house.
Hu mihte theih faire forsake that hii ne ben coveytouse?
   
And officials and denes that chapitles sholden holde,
Theih sholde chastise the folk, and theih maken hem bolde.
Mak a present to the den ther thu thenkest to dwelle,
And have leve longe i-nouh to serve the fend of helle
   To queme.
For have he silver, of sinne taketh he nevere yeme.
   
If a man have a wif, and he ne love hire noht,
Bringe hire to the constorie ther treuthe sholde be souht,
And bringge tweye false wid him and him self the thridde,
And he shal ben to-parted so faire as he wole bidde
   From his wif.
He shal ben holpen wel i-nouh to lede a shrewede lyf. 39
   
And whan he is thus i-deled from his rihte spouse,
He taketh his neiheboures wif and bringeth hire to his house;
And whiles he hath eny silver the clerkes to sende,
He may holde hire at his wille to his lives ende
   Wid unskile;
And but that be wel i-loked, curs in here bile.
   
And yit ther is another craft that toucheth the clergie,
That ben thise false fisiciens that helpen men to die;
He wole wagge his urine in a vessel of glaz,
And swereth that he is sekere than evere yit he was,
   And sein,
"Dame, for faute of helpe, thin housebonde is neih slain."
   
Thus he wole afraien al that ther is inne,
And make many a lesing, silver for to winne.
Ac afterward he fondeth to comforte the wif,
And seith, "Dame, for of thin I wole holde his lyf,"
   And liye,
Thouh he wite no more than a gos wheither he wole live or die.
   
Anon he wole biginne to blere the wives eighe;
He wole aske half a pound to bien spicerie.
The viii shillinges sholen up to the win and the ale,
And bringe rotes and rindes bret ful a male
   Off noht; 40
Hit shal be dere on a lek, whan hit is al i-wrouht. 41
   
He wole preisen hit i-nohw, and sweren, as he were wod,
For the king of the lond the drink is riche and god;
And geve the gode man drinke a god quantité,
And make him worse than he was - evele mote he the,
   That clerk,
That so geteth the silver, and can noht don his werk!
   
He doth the wif sethe a chapoun and piece beof, 42
Ne tit the gode man noht therof, be him nevere so leof;
The best he piketh up himself, and maketh his mawe touht,
And geveth the gode man soupe, the lene broth that nis noht
   For seke;
That so serveth eny man, Godes curs in his cheke!
   
And thilke that han al the wele in freth and in feld,
Bothen eorl and baroun and kniht of o sheld,
Alle theih beth i-sworn Holi Churche holde to rihte.
Therfore was the ordre mad for Holi Churche to fihte,
   Sanz faille;
And nu ben theih the ferste that hit sholen assaile.
   
Hii brewen strut and stuntise there as sholde be pes;
Hii sholde gon to the Holi Lond and maken there her res,
And fihte there for the Croiz, and shewe the ordre of knihte,
And awreke Jhesu Crist wid launce and speir to fihte
   And sheld;
And nu ben theih liouns in halle, and hares in the feld.
   
Knihtes sholde weren weden in here manere,
After that the ordre asketh also wel as a frere. 43
Nu ben theih so degysed and diverseliche i-diht,
Unnethe may men knowe a gleman from a kniht,
   Wel neih;
So is mieknesse driven adoun, and pride is risen on heih.
   
Thus is the ordre of kniht turned up-so-doun,
Also wel can a kniht chide as any skolde of a toun.
Hii sholde ben also hende as any levedi in londe,
And for to speke alle vilanie nel nu no kniht wonde 44
   For shame;
And thus knihtshipe is acloied and waxen al fot-lame. 45
   
Knihtshipe is acloied and deolfulliche i-diht;
Kunne a boy nu breke a spere, he shal be mad a kniht.
And thus ben knihtes gadered of unkinde blod, 46
And envenimeth that ordre that shold be so god
   And hende;
Ac o shrewe in a court many man may shende.
   
And nu nis no squier of pris in this middel erd,
But if that he bere a babel and a long berd,
And swere Godes soule, and vuwe to God and hote;
But sholde he for everi fals uth lese kirtel or kote,
   I leve,
He sholde stonde starc naked twye o day or eve.
   
Godes soule is al day sworn, the knif stant a-strout,
And thouh the botes be torn, yit wole he maken hit stout;
The hod hangeth on his brest, as he wolde spewe therinne,
Ac shortliche al his contrefaiture is colour of sinne,
   And bost,
To wraththe God and paien the fend hit serveth allermost.
   
A newe taille of squierie is nu in everi toun:
The raye is turned overthuert that sholde stonde adoun.
Hii ben degised as turmentours that comen from clerkes plei;
Hii ben i-laft wid pride, and cast nurture awey
   In diche;
Gentille men that sholde ben, ne beth hii none i-liche. 47
   
And justises, shirreves, meires, baillifs, if I shal rede aricht,
Hii kunnen of the faire day make the derke niht;
Hii gon out of the heie wey, ne leven hii for no sklaundre, 48
And maken the mot-hall at hom in here chaumbre,
   Wid wouh;
For be the hond i-whited, it shal go god i-nouh.
   
If the king in his werre sent after mihti men,
To helpe him in his nede, of sum toun .ix. or .x.,
The stiffeste sholden bileve at hom for .x. shillinges or .xii., 49
And sende forthe a wrecche that may noht helpe himselve
   At nede.
Thus is the king deceyved, and pore men shent for mede.
   
And if the king in his lond maketh a taxacioun,
And everi man is i-set to a certein raunczoun,
Hit shal be so for-pinched, to-toilled, and to-twiht,
That halvendel shal gon in the fendes fliht
   Off helle.
Ther beth so manye parteners may no tunge telle.
   
A man of .xl. poundes-worth god is leid to .xii. pans rounde;
And also much paieth another that poverte hath brouht to grounde,
And hath an hep of girles sittende aboute the flet.
Godes curs moten hii have, but that be wel set
   And sworn,
That the pore is thus i-piled, and the riche forborn!
   
Ac if the king hit wiste, I trowe he wolde be wroth,
Hou the pore beth i-piled, and hu the silver goth;
Hit is so deskatered bothe hider and thidere,
That halvendel shal ben stole ar hit come togidere,
   And acounted;
An if a pore man speke a word, he shal be foule afrounted.
   
Ac were the king wel avised, and wolde worche bi skile,
Litel nede sholde he have swiche pore to pile; 50
Thurfte him noht seke tresor so fer, he mihte finde ner,
At justices, at shirreves, cheiturs, and chaunceler,
   And at les; 51
Swiche mihte finde him i-nouh, and late pore men have pes.
   
For who so is in swich ofice, come he nevere so pore,
He fareth in a while as thouh he hadde silver ore;
Theih bien londes and ledes, ne may hem non astonde. 52
What sholde pore men ben i-piled, when swiche men beth in londe
   So fele?
Theih pleien wid the kinges silver, and breden wod for wele.
   
Ac shrewedeliche for sothe hii don the kinges heste;
Whan everi man hath his part, the king hath the leste,
Everi man is aboute to fille his owen purs;
And the king hath the leste part, and he hath al the curs,
   Wid wronge.
And sende treuthe into this lond, for tricherie dureth to longe. 53
   
And baillifs and bedeles under the shirreve,
Everich fondeth hu he may pore men most greve. 54
The pore men beth over al somouned on assise; 55
And the riche sholen sitte at hom, and ther wole silver rise
   To shon.
Godes curs moten hii have, but that be wel don!
   
And countours in benche that stondeth at the barre,
Theih wolen bigile the in thin hond, but if thu be warre.
He wole take .xl. pans for to doun his hod,
And speke for the a word or to, and don the litel god, 56
   I trouwe.
And have he turned the bak, he makketh the a mouwe. 57
   
Attourneis in cuntré theih geten silver for noht;
Theih maken men biginne that they nevere hadden thouht.
And whan theih comen to the ring, hoppe if hii kunne.
Al that theih muwen so gete, al thinketh hem i-wonne
   Wid skile. 58
Ne triste no man to hem, so false theih beth in the bile.
   
And sumtime were chapman that treweliche bouhten and solde;
And nu is thilke assise broke, and nas noht yore holde.
Chaffare was woned to be meintened wid treuthe,
And nu is al turned to treccherie, and that is muchel reuthe
   To wite,
That alle manere godnesse is thus adoun i-smite.
   
Unnethe is nu eny man that can eny craft
That he nis a party los in the haft;
For falsnesse is so fer forth over al the londe i-sprunge, 59
That wel neih nis no treuthe in hond, ne in tunge,
   Ne in herte.
And tharfore nis no wonder thouh al the world it smerte.
   
Ther was a gamen in Engelond that durede yer and other: 60
Erliche upon the Monenday uch man bishrewed other;
So longe lastede that gamen among lered and lewed
That nolde theih nevere stinten, or al the world were bishrewed, 61
   I-wis.
And therfore al that helpe sholde fareth the more amis.
   
So that for that shrewedom that regneth in the lond,
I drede me that God us hath for-laft out of His hond,
Thurw wederes that he hath i-sent cold and unkinde.
And yit ne haveth no man of Him the more minde
   Ariht;
Unnethe is any man aferd of Godes muchele miht.
   
God hath ben wroth wid the world, and that is wel i-sene;
For al that whilom was murthe is turned to treie and tene.
He sente us plenté i-nouh, suffre whiles we wolde,
Off alle manere sustenaunce grouwende upon mode
   So thicke;
And evere ageines His godnesse we weren i-liche wicke.
   
Men sholde noht sumtime finde a boy for to bere a lettre,
That wolde eten eny mete, but it were the betre.
For beof ne for bakoun, ne for swich stor of house,
Unnethe wolde eny don a char, so were theih daungerouse
   For wlanke;
And siththen bicom ful reulich that thanne weren so ranke.
   
For tho God seih that the world was so over gart,
He sente a derthe on eorthe, and made hit ful smarte.
A busshel of whete was at foure shillinges or more,
And so men mihte han i-had a quarter noht yore
   I-gon;
So can God make wane, ther rathere was won. 62
   
And thanne gan bleiken here blé, that arst lowen so loude, 63
And to waxen al hand-tame that rathere weren so proude.
A mannes herte mihte blede for to here the crie
Off pore men that gradden, "Allas, for hungger I die
   Up rihte!"
This auhte make men aferd of Godes muchele miht.
   
And after that ilke wante com eft wele i-nouh,
And plenté of alle gode grouwende on uch a bouh.
Tho god yer was agein i-come, and god chep of corn,
Tho were we also muchele shrewes, as we were beforn,
   Or more.
Also swithe we forgeten His wreche and His lore.
   
Tho com ther another sorwe that spradde over al the lond.
A thusent winter ther bifore com nevere non so strong.
To binde alle the mene men in mourning and in care
The orf deiede al bidene, and maden the lond al bare
   So faste.
Com nevere wrecche into Engelond that made men more agaste.
   
And tho that qualm was astint of beste that bar horn,
Tho sente God on eorthe another derthe of corn,
That spradde over al Engelond bothe north and south,
And made seli pore men afingred in here mouth
   Ful sore;
And yit unnethe any man dredeth God the more.
   
And wid that laste derthe com ther another shame,
That ouhte be god skile maken us alle tame.
The fend kidde his maistri, and arerede a strif,
That everi lording was bisi to sauve his owen lyf,
   And his good.
God do bote theron, for His blessede blod!
   
Gret nede hit were to bidde that the pes were brouht,
For the lordinges of the lond, that swich wo han i-wrouht,
That nolde spare for kin that o kosin that other; 64
So the fend hem prokede uch man to mourdren other
   Wid wille,
That al Engelond i-wis was in point to spille.
   
Pride prikede hem so faste, that nolde theih nevere have pes
Ar theih hadden in this lond maked swich a res 65
That the beste blod of the lond shamliche was brouht to grounde,
If hit betre mihte a ben; allas, the harde stounde
   Bitid,
That of so gentille blod i-born swich wreche was i-kid.
   
Allas, that evere sholde hit bifalle that in so litel a throwe,
Swiche men sholde swich deth thole, and ben i-leid so lowe.
Off eorles ant of barouns baldest hii were;
And nu hit is of hem bicome riht as theih nevere ne were
   I-born.
God loke to the soules, that hii ne be noht lorn!
   
Ac whiles thise grete lordinges thus han i-hurled to hepe, 66
Thise prelatz of Holi Churche to longe theih han i-slepe.
Al to late theih wakeden, and that was muchel reuthe;
Theih weren ablent wid coveytise, and mihte noht se the treuthe
   For mist.
Theih dradden more here lond to lese, than love of Jhesu Crist.
   
For hadde the clergie harde holden to-gidere,
And noht flecched aboute nother hider ne thidere,
But loked where the treuthe was, and there have bileved,
Thanne were the barnage hol, that nu is al to-dreved
   So wide.
Ac certes Engelond is shent thurw falsnesse and thurw pride.
   
Pride hath in his paunter kauht the heie and the lowe,
So that unnethe can eny man God Almihti knowe.
Pride priketh aboute, wid nithe and wid onde;
Pes and love and charité hien hem out of londe
   So faste
That God wole for-don the world we muwe be sore agaste.
   
Alle wite we wel it is oure gilt, the wo that we beth inne; 67
But no man knoweth that hit is for his owen sinne.
Uch man put on other the wreche of the wouh;
But wolde uch man renczake himself, thanne were al wel i-nouh
   I-wrouht.
But nu can uch man demen other, and himselve nouht.
   
And thise assisours that comen to shire and to hundred,
Damneth men for silver, and that nis no wonder.
For whan the riche justise wol do wrong for mede,
Thanne thinketh hem theih muwen the bet, for theih ham more nede 68
   To winne.
Ac so is al this world ablent, that no man douteth sinne.
   
But bi seint Jame of Galice, that many man hath souht,
The pilory and the cucking-stol beth i-mad for noht,
Fore whenne is al a-contith and y-cast to the hepe,
Bred and ale is the derer and nevere the beter chepe
   Fore that.
So is trecherie a-bove, and treuthe is al tosquat.
   
Hit is rewthe to speke therof, ho-so right durste deme: 69
Of bedeles and of bayleffes that hath the townes to yeme,
That suffer such falsnesse reyne in breth and ale,
And thow the pouer hem pleyne, ne mow they get no bale,
   I wen,
And haulf is stole that they take of wretchethe pouer men. 70
   
A sely workman in a toun that lyve in trewthe fre
And hath a wif or children, peraunter to or thre,
He sueteth many a suetes drope, and swynk he never so sore 71
Alday fore a peny or fore a peny more,
   Be cas,
At eve whan he setteth hit, half is stole alas!
   
Thes bakers and this brewers beth so bolde in here yifte
That fore a litel mercyment or fore a symple gifte,
On may fore xij d. at a court do xlti schillingwerd schame, 72
But how so ever hit falle, the pouer han al the grame
   At mele.
Now God amende pouermen that can wel dight and dele.
   
That riot reyneth now in londe everiday more and more,
The lordis beth wel a-paith therwith and lisneth to here lore,
But of the pouer mannes harm, therof is now no speche.
This bondes warien and widous wepen and crie to God for wreche
   So fast, 73
How myghte hit be but such men mystymeth ate last.
   
Fore al is long on lordis that suffre thus hit go.
They scholde mayntene the porayle, and they do noght therto, 74
But take methe and sle the fole in as moche as they may.
The pore han her purgatorie; the riche kepe her day
   In helle.
That so scorneth God and Hise, can I non other telle. 75
   
How myghte hit be but God hem wreke of schame that never doth
That clerk ne knyght, hie ne lowe, loveth right no soth.
Now noght this sely chepmen in that they bye or selle
Or with hepe or with croc . . .
   Of gyle.
Yit thynket hem that cometh with wrong yeldeth best the wile. 76
   
But crafty Kyng of kende that ever set al thyng,
He sey how al misfarde and how they ledde the kyng.
He sente bote of bale and awrak here deth,
But thus seth men falsnesse, how hit to grounde geth
   On ende.
Fore hit may never be les, that wrong wil hom wende.
   
But covetise overcombreth so al that now lyve
That ho-so were riche ynow and hadde aght to gyve,
He may han at his wille the lewthe and the clerk,
And make a fals fondement and schende al the werk
   At anes.
But such baret breweres, ybrent be here bones! 77
   
That fore alle the hard happes that God on erthe schewes,
Unnethe is eny the warrer that ne wile be schrewes.
Flaterers and fals, wikketh and unwrast,
Of al the wreche that is come, be we noght agast
   Ne aferd;
And therfore hath this schamnesse thus schak us be the berd.
   
But alther ferst grevaunce fel to the pouer wrecchen
That lay doun be the strete - for hunger dethe they strecchen.
On men fel the ferst wo: such was here hap,
And seththe on the riche cam the after-clap
   Fol sore.
And yit is to drede ther wile come more.
   
But Lord, fore that blisseth bloth that ran out of Thi side,
Graunt us rightfol lif to lede wile we here abide,
So that we mow oure giltis knowe with sorwe and schrifte of mouthe,
And ever to serve God the bet, for that I haf yow seith nowthe
   Y-told, 78
And come to Hym that fore us was to the Jwes sold.
   
Explicit Symonye and Covetise
(see note)
famine; earth; seized
   
   
   
won't lie; listen whoever
   
they do wrong
fidelity
where; originate (see note)
   
fear
   
   
have decided
   
   
cardinals; seen
fear
(see note)
   
Voice; seldom heard
   
   
   
   
(see note)
   
fornicator; rascal
   
pledge
   
discreetly
   
   
archbishop
Of; they
are fools themselves; lead
they dare say nothing
Because of
   
   
indeed; much
(see note)
stout pillar
   
In truth
it goes worse
   
know; takes heed
the pleasure of two lords
(see note)
   
Very dormantly
   
   
archdeacons
   
bribes from one (person) or
permit
   
their; silent
   
   
   
court; woo
aplenty
   
head
   
   
whisper; ear
in vain; they
most of all
For sure
   
   
installed
   
barn; by; mice
cursed house
   
before
   
gathered
rides; with; (see note)
foreign; holds; bed
well for her
   
   
   
   
whore
dairymaid
they
   
   
   
wool; lamb
snare; whetstone
   
reads; ribible; (see note)
No other (book)
   
   
   
   
takes bribes; supports
go to ruin; drown
pains
father be
   
   
good advisor
fool; less
   
   
lack; teaching; be destroyed
   
   
cursed; (see note)
   
reads
   
   
   
know; Cross
they may not
nevertheless
their foolish
   
They walk around; shield
   
crumpled; (see note)
gave them
cap; combs the locket; (see note)
(see note)
Without doubt; (see note)
"recite compline"; (see note)
   
act contrary to their rights; (see note)
   
(see note)
now; every
Indeed
(see note)
   
two poor
by Saint Charity
Scarcely; errand whether
cower
die
   
   
   
hip; prosper
abbot
   
stomach
   
   
   
too seldom seen
   
(see note)
   
Lord
   
monks; our
They wear; shoes
(see note)
   
   
   
   
hardship; bear
   
ruddier complected [men]; (see note)
better off
each town
no more comfortable
   
read; each
too; noon
   
stomach taut
From the best [food]
tries to nap
   
Minorites; Dominicans
Carmelites; Austins
preach; wheat
heat
   
lord; east
   
confession
   
refectory
stands outside
   
errand; unfulfilled
   
undertaken
continually
anxiety
   
loath
   
   
die; power
fight over the body
(see note)
meadow
good
   
   
as I; hold
funeral; body
   
move; clean
   
   
   
deans; chapters; (see note)
They
dean where; (see note)
enough
pleasure
heed
   
   
consistory court where
two false people with
divorced
   
   
   
parted; lawful
her
   
maintain her
Without just cause
unless; well-looked after; their
   
(see note)
physicians
wave; glass
sicker
   
lack; almost
   
alarm; those who
lie
But; tries
for you; preserve
lie; (see note)
knows; goose
   
deceive the wife
buy spices
eight; pay for
   
   
(see note)
   
enough; mad
good
   
may he ill prosper
   
   
   
   
touches; glad (lief)
stomach taut
isn't
For a sick person
   
   
woodland
one shield
   
   
Without fail
   
   
strife and foolishness
their assault
knighthood
avenge
   
   
   
clothes
(see note)
clothed; arrayed
Scarcely; minstrel
Almost
meekness; high
   
upside down
town scolder
polite; lady
   
   
(see note)
   
hindered; grievously disposed
If a boy knows how
   
poisons
gracious
one churl; ruin
   
worth; middle earth
Unless; wears; bauble
vow; promise
oath; tunic
believe
twice a
   
sticks out; (see note)
boots; strut around
vomit
(see note)
   
most of all
   
style; (see note)
raiment; crosswise
(see note)
have abandoned
In a ditch
   
   
sheriffs; mayors
They know how
   
hall of justice; (see note)
evil
(see note)
   
war; (see note)
nine; ten
   
   
   
ruined; bribery
   
   
assigned; amount
belabored; reproached; (see note)
one half
Of
partakers
   
goods; pence
   
floor; (see note)
   
   
robbed; indulged
   
But; knew it; (see note)
robbed
scattered around
half; stolen before
accounted for
wickedly attacked
   
reason
   
Need; near; (see note)
   
   
let; peace
   
(see note)
rudder
   
Why; (see note)
many
(see note)
   
But cursedly; bidding
least
   
   
Unjustly
   
   
beadles; (see note)
   
   
   
To be shown
may
   
accountants
unless; beware
forty; (see note)
   
   
   
   
Attorneys; doing nothing
   
   
   
   
   
   
widespread; (see note)
   
Trade; wont
great pity
   
struck down
   
knows any
(see note)
(see note)
tongue
   
injure; (see note)
   
   
Early; Monday; cursed
   
   
   
   
   
cursedness; (see note)
dismissed us
weather; unnatural
   
   
great
   
   
once; vexation; sorrow
   
Of; growing; earth; (see note)
   
equally wicked; (see note)
   
servant; (see note)
eat any food unless
beef; pork; provisions
labor; disinclined
pride
pitiful; arrogant
   
when; saw; proud; (see note)
famine; painful; (see note)
   
not long
Ago
   
   
   
earlier
hear
Of; complain
   
ought to
   
scarcity; abundance
growing on every bough
When; market for wheat
Then; scoundrels
   
Quickly; punishment; teaching
   
Then; sorrow; (see note)
thousand
hardened
cattle died straightaway
   
wretchedness
   
when; plague; ceased; (see note)
   
   
simple; hungry
   
   
   
famine
reason; obedient
displayed; mounted
save
property
provide a remedy
   
pray
   
   
prodded; murder
Wilfully
So that; about to die
   
they would not
baronage united ; separated
shamefully
have been; time
Came about
devastation; shown
   
short a time
suffer
earls; barons; boldest
   
   
look after; lost
   
   
too
great pity
blinded
   
feared; lose
   
held close together
wavered
   
   
   
ruined
   
trap; high
   
rides; with discord; envy
Peace; hasten
   
destroy; must; afraid
   
   
   
Each; blame; wickedness
scrutinize
   
judge
   
(see note)
is no
peaceful justice; bribery
   
prosper
Just; blinded; fears
   
   
(see note)
reckoned
more expensive
   
utterly put down
   
   
beadles; manage
rain; bread; (see note)
though; poor; redress
believe
   
   
simple
by chance two
   
   
By chance
puts it down
   
their bribery
fee; (see note)
(see note)
happens; have; harm; (see note)
On such occasions (or, For supper); (see note)
poor men; dig; delve
   
wanton behavior reigns
get satisfaction
   
   
   
are ruined at the end
   
   
   
bribes; slay
have their suffering
   
   
   
punish them
nor truth
simple merchants
(see note)
   
   
   
nature; ordained; (see note)
saw; went wrong
remedy of destruction; avenged
perished
   
comes home to roost
   
overwhelms
whoever; anything
have; ignorant man
foundation; ruin
At once
   
   
tough circumstances
warier; scoundrels
wicked; frail
misery
   
shame; beard; (see note)
   
first; wretches
(see note)
their fortune
   
grievous
it may be feared
   
blessed blood
lead while
   
   
   
on our behalf; Jews
   
   
   


Go To Above All Thing Thou Arte a Kyng

Return To The Table of Contents