The Canterbury Tales/Source/The Prioress's Tale: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{work}}<poem> THE PRIORESS'S TALE. THE PROLOGUE. "WELL said, by *corpus Domini,"* quoth our Host; *the Lord's body* "Now longe may'st thou saile by the coast, Thou gentle...")
 
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With face pale, in dread and busy thought,
27. Teuta: Queen of Illyria, who, after her husband's death,
She hath at school and elleswhere him sought,
made war on and was conquered by the Romans, B.C 228.
Till finally she gan so far espy,
That he was last seen in the Jewery.
 
With mother's pity in her breast enclosed,
28. At this point, in some manuscripts, occur thefollowing two
She went, as she were half out of her mind,
lines: --
To every place, where she hath supposed
"The same thing I say of Bilia,
By likelihood her little child to find:
Of Rhodegone and of Valeria."
And ever on Christ's mother meek and kind
She cried, and at the laste thus she wrought,
Among the cursed Jewes she him sought.
 
She freined,* and she prayed piteously *asked* <11>
29. Bound: prepared; going. To "boun" or "bown" is a good
To every Jew that dwelled in that place,
old word, whence comes our word "bound," in the sense of "on
To tell her, if her childe went thereby;
the way."
They saide, "Nay;" but Jesus of his grace
Gave in her thought, within a little space,
That in that place after her son she cried,
Where he was cast into a pit beside.
 
O greate God, that preformest thy laud
30. That from his lust yet were him lever abide: He would
By mouth of innocents, lo here thy might!
rather do without his pleasure.
This gem of chastity, this emeraud,* *emerald
And eke of martyrdom the ruby bright,
Where he with throat y-carven* lay upright, *cut
He Alma Redemptoris gan to sing
So loud, that all the place began to ring.
 
The Christian folk, that through the streete went,
31. Such apparence: such an ocular deception, or apparition --
In came, for to wonder on this thing:
more properly, disappearance -- as the removal of the rocks.
And hastily they for the provost sent.
He came anon withoute tarrying,
And heried* Christ, that is of heaven king, *praised
And eke his mother, honour of mankind;
And after that the Jewes let* he bind. *caused
 
With torment, and with shameful death each one
32. The same question is stated a the end of Boccaccio's version
The provost did* these Jewes for to sterve** *caused **die
of the story in the "Philocopo," where the queen determines in
That of this murder wist, and that anon;
favour of Aviragus. The question is evidently one of those
He woulde no such cursedness observe* *overlook
which it was the fashion to propose for debate in the mediaeval
Evil shall have that evil will deserve;
"courts of love."
Therefore with horses wild he did them draw,
And after that he hung them by the law.
 
The child, with piteous lamentation,
Was taken up, singing his song alway:
And with honour and great procession,
They crry him unto the next abbay.
His mother swooning by the biere lay;
Unnethes* might the people that were there *scarcely
This newe Rachel bringe from his bier.
 
Upon his biere lay this innocent
Before the altar while the masses last';* *lasted
And, after that, th' abbot with his convent
Have sped them for to bury him full fast;
And when they holy water on him cast,
Yet spake this child, when sprinkled was the water,
And sang, O Alma redemptoris mater!
 
This abbot, which that was a holy man,
As monkes be, or elles ought to be,
This younger child to conjure he began,
And said; "O deare child! I halse* thee, *implore <12>
In virtue of the holy Trinity;
Tell me what is thy cause for to sing,
Since that thy throat is cut, to my seeming."
 
"My throat is cut unto my necke-bone,"
Saide this child, "and, as *by way of kind,* *in course of nature*
I should have died, yea long time agone;
But Jesus Christ, as ye in bookes find,
Will that his glory last and be in mind;
And, for the worship* of his mother dear, *glory
Yet may I sing O Alma loud and clear.
 
"This well* of mercy, Christe's mother sweet, *fountain
I loved alway, after my conning:* *knowledge
And when that I my life should forlete,* *leave
To me she came, and bade me for to sing
This anthem verily in my dying,
As ye have heard; and, when that I had sung,
Me thought she laid a grain upon my tongue.
 
"Wherefore I sing, and sing I must certain,
In honour of that blissful maiden free,
Till from my tongue off taken is the grain.
And after that thus saide she to me;
'My little child, then will I fetche thee,
When that the grain is from thy tongue take:
Be not aghast,* I will thee not forsake.'" *afraid
 
This holy monk, this abbot him mean I,
His tongue out caught, and took away the grain;
And he gave up the ghost full softely.
And when this abbot had this wonder seen,
His salte teares trickled down as rain:
And groff* he fell all flat upon the ground, *prostrate, grovelling
And still he lay, as he had been y-bound.
 
The convent* lay eke on the pavement *all the monks
Weeping, and herying* Christ's mother dear. *praising
And after that they rose, and forth they went,
And took away this martyr from his bier,
And in a tomb of marble stones clear
Enclosed they his little body sweet;
Where he is now, God lene* us for to meet. *grant
 
O younge Hugh of Lincoln!<13> slain also
With cursed Jewes, -- as it is notable,
For it is but a little while ago, --
Pray eke for us, we sinful folk unstable,
That, of his mercy, God so merciable* *merciful
On us his greate mercy multiply,
For reverence of his mother Mary.
 
 
Notes to the Prioress's Tale
 
 
1. Tales of the murder of children by Jews were frequent in the
Middle Ages, being probably designed to keep up the bitter
feeling of the Christians against the Jews. Not a few children
were canonised on this account; and the scene of the misdeeds
was laid anywhere and everywhere, so that Chaucer could be at
no loss for material.
 
2. This is from Psalm viii. 1, "Domine, dominus noster,quam
admirabile est nomen tuum in universa terra."
 
3. "Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast Thou
ordained strength." -- Psalms viii. 2.
 
4. The ghost that in thee light: the spirit that on thee alighted;
the Holy Ghost through whose power Christ was conceived.
 
5. Jewery: A quarter which the Jews were permitted to inhabit;
the Old Jewry in London got its name in this way.
 
6. St. Nicholas, even in his swaddling clothes -- so says the
"Breviarium Romanum" --gave promise of extraordinary virtue
and holiness; for, though he sucked freely on other days, on
Wednesdays and Fridays he applied to the breast only once, and
that not until the evening.
 
7. "O Alma Redemptoris Mater," ("O soul mother of the
Redeemer") -- the beginning of a hymn to the Virgin.
 
8. Antiphonere: A book of anthems, or psalms, chanted in the
choir by alternate verses.
 
9. Souded; confirmed; from French, "soulde;" Latin, "solidatus."
 
10. "And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and
before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn
that song but the hundred and forty and four thousand, which
were redeemed from the earth.
These are they which were not defiled with women; for they are
virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he
goeth. These were redeemed from among men, being the
firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb."
-- Revelations xiv. 3, 4.
 
11. Freined: asked, inquired; from Anglo-Saxon, "frinan,"
"fraegnian." Compare German, "fragen."
 
12. Halse: embrace or salute; implore: from Anglo-Saxon
"hals," the neck.
 
14 A boy said to have been slain by the Jews at Lincoln in 1255,
according to Matthew Paris. Many popular ballads were made
about the event, which the diligence of the Church doubtless
kept fresh in mind at Chaucer's day.
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