Part 47 (1/2)

35. Men love of proper kind newfangleness: Men, by their own -- their very -- nature, are fond of novelty, and p.r.o.ne to inconstancy.

36. Blue was the colour of truth, as green was that of inconstancy. In John Stowe's additions to Chaucer's works, printed in 1561, there is ”A balade whiche Chaucer made against women inconstaunt,” of which the refrain is, ”In stead of blue, thus may ye wear all green.”

37. Unless we suppose this to be a namesake of the Camballo who was Canace's brother -- which is not at all probable -- we must agree with Tyrwhitt that there is a mistake here; which no doubt Chaucer would have rectified, if the tale had not been ”left half-told,” One ma.n.u.script reads ”Caballo;” and though not much authority need be given to a difference that may be due to mere omission of the mark of contraction over the ”a,” there is enough in the text to show that another person than the king's younger son is intended. The Squire promises to tell the adventures that befell each member of Cambuscan's family; and in thorough consistency with this plan, and with the canons of chivalric story, would be ”the marriage of Canace to some knight who was first obliged to fight for her with her two brethren; a method of courts.h.i.+p,” adds Tyrwhitt, ”very consonant to the spirit of ancient chivalry.”

38. (Trancriber's note) In some ma.n.u.scripts the following two lines, being the beginning of the third part, are found: -

Apollo whirleth up his chair so high, Till that Mercurius' house, the sly...

THE FRANKLIN'S TALE.

THE PROLOGUE. <1>

”IN faith, Squier, thou hast thee well acquit, And gentilly; I praise well thy wit,”

Quoth the Franklin; ”considering thy youthe So feelingly thou speak'st, Sir, I aloue* thee, *allow, approve *As to my doom,* there is none that is here *so far as my judgment Of eloquence that shall be thy peer, goes*

If that thou live; G.o.d give thee goode chance, And in virtue send thee continuance, For of thy speaking I have great dainty.* *value, esteem I have a son, and, by the Trinity; *It were me lever* than twenty pound worth land, *I would rather*

Though it right now were fallen in my hand, He were a man of such discretion As that ye be: fy on possession, *But if* a man be virtuous withal. *unless I have my sone snibbed* and yet shall, *rebuked; ”snubbed.”

For he to virtue *listeth not t'intend,* *does not wish to But for to play at dice, and to dispend, apply himself*

And lose all that he hath, is his usage; And he had lever talke with a page, Than to commune with any gentle wight, There he might learen gentilless aright.”

Straw for your gentillesse!” quoth our Host.

”What? Frankelin, pardie, Sir, well thou wost* *knowest That each of you must tellen at the least A tale or two, or breake his behest.”* *promise ”That know I well, Sir,” quoth the Frankelin; ”I pray you have me not in disdain, Though I to this man speak a word or two.”

”Tell on thy tale, withoute wordes mo'.”

”Gladly, Sir Host,” quoth he, ”I will obey Unto your will; now hearken what I say; I will you not contrary* in no wise, *disobey As far as that my wittes may suffice.

I pray to G.o.d that it may please you, Then wot I well that it is good enow.

”These olde gentle Bretons, in their days, Of divers aventures made lays,<2> Rhymeden in their firste Breton tongue; Which layes with their instruments they sung, Or elles reade them for their pleasance; And one of them have I in remembrance, Which I shall say with good will as I can.

But, Sirs, because I am a borel* man, *rude, unlearned At my beginning first I you beseech Have me excused of my rude speech.

I learned never rhetoric, certain; Thing that I speak, it must be bare and plain.

I slept never on the mount of Parna.s.so, Nor learned Marcus Tullius Cicero.

Coloures know I none, withoute dread,* *doubt But such colours as growen in the mead, Or elles such as men dye with or paint; Colours of rhetoric be to me quaint;* *strange My spirit feeleth not of such mattere.

But, if you list, my tale shall ye hear.”

Notes to the Prologue to the Franklin's Tale

1. In the older editions, the verses here given as the prologue were prefixed to the Merchant's Tale, and put into his mouth.

Tyrwhitt was abundantly justified, by the internal evidence afforded by the lines themselves, in transferring them to their present place.

2. The ”Breton Lays” were an important and curious element in the literature of the Middle Ages; they were originally composed in the Armorican language, and the chief collection of them extant was translated into French verse by a poetess calling herself ”Marie,” about the middle of the thirteenth century. But though this collection was the most famous, and had doubtless been read by Chaucer, there were other British or Breton lays, and from one of those the Franklin's Tale is taken.

Boccaccio has dealt with the same story in the ”Decameron”

and the ”Philocopo,” altering the circ.u.mstances to suit the removal of its scene to a southern clime.

THE TALE.

In Armoric', that called is Bretagne, There was a knight, that lov'd and *did his pain* *devoted himself, To serve a lady in his beste wise; strove*

And many a labour, many a great emprise,* *enterprise He for his lady wrought, ere she were won: For she was one the fairest under sun, And eke thereto come of so high kindred, That *well unnethes durst this knight for dread,* *see note <1>*

Tell her his woe, his pain, and his distress But, at the last, she for his worthiness, And namely* for his meek obeisance, *especially Hath such a pity caught of his penance,* *suffering, distress That privily she fell of his accord To take him for her husband and her lord (Of such lords.h.i.+p as men have o'er their wives); And, for to lead the more in bliss their lives, Of his free will he swore her as a knight, That never in all his life he day nor night Should take upon himself no mastery Against her will, nor kithe* her jealousy, *show But her obey, and follow her will in all, As any lover to his lady shall; Save that the name of sovereignety That would he have, for shame of his degree.

She thanked him, and with full great humbless She saide; ”Sir, since of your gentleness Ye proffer me to have so large a reign, *Ne woulde G.o.d never betwixt us twain, As in my guilt, were either war or strife:* *see note <2>*

Sir, I will be your humble true wife, Have here my troth, till that my hearte brest.”* *burst Thus be they both in quiet and in rest.

For one thing, Sires, safely dare I say, That friends ever each other must obey, If they will longe hold in company.

Love will not be constrain'd by mastery.