The Legend of Good Women/The Legend of Cleopatra
Appearance
The Legend of Cleopatra
[edit]580 | After the deeth of Tholomee the king, |
That al Egipte hadde in his governing, | |
Regned his quene Cleopataras; | |
Til on a tyme befel ther swiche a cas, | |
That out of Rome was sent a senatour, | |
For to conqueren regnes and honour | |
Unto the toun of Rome, as was usaunce, | |
To have the world unto her obeisaunce; | |
And, sooth to seye, Antonius was his name. | |
So fil hit, as Fortune him oghte a shame | |
590 | Whan he was fallen in prosperitee, |
Rebel unto the toun of Rome is he. | |
And over al this, the suster of Cesar, | |
He lafte hir falsly, er that she was war, | |
And wolde algates han another wyf; | |
For whiche he took with Rome and Cesar stryf. | |
Natheles, for-sooth, this ilke senatour | |
Was a ful worthy gentil werreyour, | |
And of his deeth hit was ful greet damage. | |
But love had broght this man in swiche a rage, | |
600 | And him so narwe bounden in his las, |
Al for the love of Cleopataras, | |
That al the world he sette at no value. | |
Him thoughte, nas to him no thing so due | |
As Cleopatras for to love and serve; | |
Him roghte nat in armes for to sterve | |
In the defence of hir, and of hir right. | |
This noble quene eek lovede so this knight, | |
Through his desert, and for his chivalrye; | |
As certeinly, but-if that bokes lye, | |
610 | He was, of persone and of gentilesse, |
And of discrecioun and hardinesse, | |
Worthy to any wight that liven may. | |
And she was fair as is the rose in May. | |
And, for to maken shortly is the beste, | |
She wex his wyf, and hadde him as hir leste. | |
The wedding and the feste to devyse, | |
To me, that have y-take swiche empryse | |
Of so many a storie for to make, | |
Hit were to long, lest that I sholde slake | |
620 | Of thing that bereth more effect and charge; |
For men may overlade a ship or barge; | |
And forthy to theffect than wol I skippe, | |
And al the remenant, I wol lete hit slippe. | |
Octovian, that wood was of this dede, | |
Shoop him an ost on Antony to lede | |
Al-outerly for his destruccioun, | |
With stoute Romains, cruel as leoun; | |
To ship they wente, and thus I let hem saile. | |
Antonius was war, and wol nat faile | |
630 | To meten with thise Romains, if he may; |
Took eek his reed, and bothe, upon a day, | |
His wyf and he, and al his ost, forth wente | |
To shippe anoon, no lenger they ne stente; | |
And in the see hit happed hem to mete -- | |
Up goth the trompe -- and for to shoute and shete, | |
And peynen hem to sette on with the sonne. | |
With grisly soun out goth the grete gonne, | |
And heterly they hurtlen al at ones, | |
And fro the top doun cometh the grete stones. | |
640 | In goth the grapnel so ful of crokes |
Among the ropes, and the shering-hokes. | |
In with the polax presseth he and he; | |
Behind the mast beginneth he to flee, | |
And out agayn, and dryveth him over-borde; | |
He stingeth him upon his speres orde; | |
He rent the sail with hokes lyke a sythe; | |
He bringeth the cuppe, and biddeth hem be blythe; | |
He poureth pesen upon the hacches slider; | |
With pottes ful of lym they goon to-gider; | |
650 | And thus the longe day in fight they spende |
Til, at the laste, as every thing hath ende, | |
Anthony is shent, and put him to the flighte, | |
And al his folk to-go, that best go mighte. | |
Fleeth eek the queen, with al her purpre sail, | |
For strokes, which that wente as thikke as hail; | |
No wonder was, she mighte hit nat endure. | |
And what that Anthony saw that aventure, | |
"Allas!" quod he, "the day that I was born! | |
My worshipe in this day thus have I lorn!" | |
660 | And for dispeyr out of his witte he sterte, |
And roof him-self anoon through-out the herte | |
Er that he ferther wente out of the place. | |
His wyf, that coude of Cesar have no grace, | |
To Egipte is fled, for drede and for distresse; | |
But herkneth, ye that speke of kindenesse. | |
Ye men, that falsly sweren many an ooth | |
That ye wol dye, if that your love be wrooth, | |
Heer may ye seen of women whiche a trouthe! | |
This woful Cleopatre hath mad swich routhe | |
670 | That ther nis tonge noon that may hit telle. |
But on the morwe she wol no lenger dwelle, | |
But made hir subtil werkmen make a shryne | |
Of alle the rubies and the stones fyne | |
In al Egipte that she coude espye; | |
And putte ful the shryne of spycerye, | |
And leet the cors embaume; and forth she fette | |
This dede cors, and in the shryne hit shette. | |
And next the shryne a pit than doth she grave; | |
And alle the serpents that she mighte have, | |
680 | She putte hem in that grave, and thus she seyde: |
"Now, love, to whom my sorweful herte obeyde | |
So ferforthly that, fro that blisful houre | |
That I yow swor to been al frely youre, | |
I mene yow, Antonius my knight! | |
That never waking, in the day or night, | |
Ye nere out of myn hertes remembraunce | |
For wele or wo, for carole or for daunce; | |
And in my-self this covenant made I tho, | |
That, right swich as ye felten, wele or wo, | |
690 | As ferforth as hit in my power lay, |
Unreprovable unto my wyfhood ay, | |
The same wolde I felen, lyf or deeth. | |
And thilke covenant, whyl me lasteth breeth, | |
I wol fulfille, and that shal wel be sene; | |
Was never unto hir love a trewer quene." | |
And with that word, naked, with ful good herte, | |
Among the serpents in the pit she sterte, | |
And ther she chees to han hir buryinge. | |
Anoon the neddres gonne hir for to stinge, | |
700 | And she hir deeth receyveth, with good chere, |
For love of Antony, that was hir so dere: -- | |
And this is storial sooth, hit is no fable. | |
Now, er I finde a man thus trewe and stable, | |
And wol for love his deeth so freely take, | |
I pray god lat our hedes never ake! | |
Explicit Legenda Cleopatrie, Martiris. |