The Legend of Good Women/The Legend of Hypermnestra
Appearance
The Legend of Hypermnestra
[edit]In Grece whylom weren brethren two, | |
Of whiche that oon was called Danao, | |
That many a sone hath of his body wonne, | |
As swiche false lovers ofte conne. | |
Among his sones alle ther was oon | |
That aldermost he lovede of everichoon. | |
And whan this child was born, this Danao | |
Shoop him a name, and called him Lino. | |
2570 | That other brother called was Egiste, |
That was of love as fals as ever him liste, | |
And many a doghter gat he in his lyve; | |
Of which he gat upon his righte wyve | |
A doghter dere, and dide her for to calle | |
Ypermistra, yongest of hem alle; | |
The whiche child, of her nativitee, | |
To alle gode thewes born was she, | |
As lyked to the goddes, or she was born, | |
That of the shefe she sholde be the corn; | |
2580 | The Wirdes, that we clepen Destinee, |
Hath shapen her that she mot nedes be | |
Pitouse, sadde, wyse, and trewe as steel; | |
And to this woman hit accordeth weel. | |
For, though that Venus yaf her greet beautee, | |
With Iupiter compouned so was she | |
That conscience, trouthe, and dreed of shame, | |
And of her wyfhood for to kepe her name, | |
This, thoughte her, was felicitee as here. | |
And rede Mars was, that tyme of the yere, | |
2590 | So feble, that his malice is him raft, |
Repressed hath Venus his cruel craft; | |
What with Venus and other oppressioun | |
Of houses, Mars his venim is adoun, | |
That Ypermistra dar nat handle a knyf | |
In malice, thogh she sholde lese her lyf. | |
But natheles, as heven gan tho turne, | |
To badde aspectes hath she of Saturne, | |
That made her for to deyen in prisoun, | |
As I shal after make mencioun. | |
2600 | To Danao and Egistes also -- |
Al-thogh so be that they were brethren two, | |
For thilke tyme nas spared no linage -- | |
Hit lyked hem to maken mariage | |
Betwix Ypermistra and him Lino, | |
And casten swiche a day hit shal be so; | |
And ful acorded was hit witterly; | |
The array is wroght, the tyme is faste by. | |
And thus Lino hath of his fadres brother | |
The doghter wedded, and eche of him hath other. | |
2610 | The torches brennen and the lampes brighte, |
The sacrifices been ful redy dighte; | |
Thencena out of the fyre reketh sote, | |
The flour, the leef is rent up by the rote | |
To marken garlands and corounes hye; | |
Ful is the place of soun of minstralcye, | |
Of songes amorous of mariage, | |
As thilke tyme was the pleyn usage. | |
And this ws in the paleys of Egiste, | |
That in his hous was lord, right as him liste; | |
2620 | And thus the day they dryven to an ende; |
The frendes taken leve, and hoom they wende. | |
The night is come, the bryd shal go to bedde; | |
Egiste to his chambre faste him spedde, | |
And privily he let his doghter calle. | |
Whan that the hous was voided of hem alle, | |
He loked on his doghter with glad chere, | |
And to her spak, as ye shul after here. | |
"My righte doghter, tresor of myn herte! | |
Sin first that day that shapen was my sherte, | |
2630 | Or by the fatal sustren had my dom, |
So ny myn herte never thing me com | |
As thou, myn Ypermistra, doghter dere! | |
Tak heed what I thy fader sey thee here, | |
And werk after thy wyser ever-mo. | |
For alderfirste, doghter, I love thee so | |
That al the world to me nis half so leef; | |
Ne I nolde rede thee to thy mischeef | |
For al the gode under the colde mone; | |
And what I mene, hit shal be seid right sone, | |
2640 | With protesacioun, as in this wyse, |
That, but thou do as I shal thee devyse, | |
Thou shalt be deed, by him that al hath wroght! | |
At shorte wordes, thou nescapest noght | |
Out of my paleys, or that thou be deed, | |
But thou consente and werke after my reed; | |
Tak this to thee for ful conclusioun." | |
This Ypermistra caste her eyen doun, | |
And quook as dooth the leef of aspe grene; | |
Deed wex her hewe, and lyk as ash to sene, | |
2650 | And seyde, "lord and fader, al your wille, |
After my mighte, god wot, I shal fulfille, | |
So hit to me be no confusioun." | |
"I nil," quod he, "have noon excepcioun;" | |
And out he caughte a knyf, as rasour kene; | |
"Hyd this," quod he, "that hit be nat y-sene; | |
And, whan thyn husbond is to bedde y-go, | |
Whyl that he slepeth, cut his throte a-two. | |
For in my dremes hit is warned me | |
How that my nevew shal my bane be, | |
2660 | But whiche I noot, wherfor I wol be siker. |
Yif thou sey nay, we two shul have a biker | |
As I have seyd, by him that I have sworn." | |
This Ypermistra hath ny her wit forlon; | |
And, for to passen harmles of that place, | |
She graunted him; ther was non other grace. | |
And therwith-al a costrel taketh he, | |
And seyde, "herof a draught, or two or three, | |
Yif him to drinke, whan he goth to reste, | |
And he shal slepe as longe as ever thee leste, | |
2670 | The narcotiks and opies been so stronge: |
And go thy wey, lest that him thinke longe." | |
Out comth the bryd, and with ful sober chere, | |
As is of maidens ofte the manere, | |
To chambre is broght with revel and with songe, | |
And shortly, lest this tale be to longe, | |
This Lino and she ben sone broght to bedde; | |
And every wight out at the dore him spedde. | |
The night is wasted, and he fel a-slepe; | |
Ful tenderly beginneth she to wepe. | |
2680 | She rist her up, and dredfully she quaketh, |
As doth the braunche that Zephirus shaketh, | |
And husht were alle in Argon that citee. | |
As cold as any frost now wexeth she; | |
For pite by the herte her streyneth so, | |
And dreed of death doth her so moche wo, | |
That thryes doun she fil in swiche a were. | |
She rist her up, and shakereth heer and there, | |
And on her handes faste loketh she. | |
"Allas! and shul my handes blody be? | |
2690 | I am a maid, and, as by my nature, |
And by my semblant and by my vesture, | |
Myn handes been nat shapen for a knyf, | |
As for to reve no man fro his lyf. | |
What devil have I with the knyf to do? | |
And shal I have my throte corve a-two? | |
Than shal I blede, allas! And me beshende; | |
And nedes cost this thing mot have an ende; | |
Or he or I mot nedes lese our lyf. | |
Now certes," quod she, "sin I am his wyf, | |
2700 | And hath my feith, yit is it bet for me |
For to be deed in wyily honestee | |
Than be a traitour living in my shame. | |
Be as be may, for ernest or for game, | |
He shal awake, and ryse and go his way | |
Out at this goter, or that hit be day!" -- | |
And weep ful tenderly upon his face, | |
And in her armes gan him to embrace, | |
And him she roggeth and awaketh softe; | |
And at the window leep he fro the lofte | |
2710 | Whan she hath warned him, and doon him bote. |
This Lino swifte was, and light of fote, | |
And from his wyf he ran a ful good pas. | |
This sely woman is so wayk, allas! | |
And helples so, that, or that she fer wente, | |
Her cruel fader dide her for to hente. | |
Allas! Lino! why art thou so unkinde? | |
Why ne haddest thou remembred in thy minde | |
To taken her, and lad her forth with thee? | |
For, what she saw that goon awey was he, | |
2720 | And that she mighte nat so faste go, |
Ne folwen him, she sette her doun right tho, | |
Til she was caught and fetered in prisoun. | |
This tale is seid for this conclusioun.... |