Geoffrey Chaucer
1342/43 - 1400
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The Canterbury Tales
Fragment VIIThe Shipman's Prologue
Text from the Tyrwhitt-Edition,not in the Robinson-Edition
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[The Shipmannes Prologue.]
[Our hoste upon his stirrops stode anonAnd saide; Good men, herkeneth everich on, | |
12905 | This was a thrifty tale for the nones.Sire parish preest, quod he, for Goddes bones,Tell us a tale, as was thy forward yore:I see wel that ye lerned men in loreCan mochel good, by Goddes dignitee. |
12910 | The Person him answerd, Benedicite!What eileth the man, so sinfully to swere?Our hoste answerd, O Jankin, be ye there?Now, good men, quod our hoste, herkneth to me.I smell a loller 1) in the wind, quod he. |
12915 | Abideth for Goddes digne passion,For we shul han a predication:This loller here wol prechen us somwhat.Nay by my fathers soule, that shal he nat,Sayde the Shipman, here shal he nat preche, |
12920 | He shal no gospel glosen here ne teche.We leven all in the gret God, quod he.He wolde sowen som difficultee,Or springen cockle in our clene corne.And therfore, hoste, I warne thee beforne, |
12925 | My joly body shal a tale telle,And I shal clinken you so mery a belle,That I shal waken all this compagnie:But it shal not ben of philosophie,Ne of physike, ne termes queinte of lawe |
12930 | Ther is but litel Latin in my mawe.]
―――――――― 1) The Lollard movement was a proto-Protestant Christian religious movement that existed from the mid-14th century until the 16th-century. Lollards were represented by the Roman Catholic Church as foxes dressed as monks or priests preaching to a flock of geese on misericords. (Wikipedia) |