Ande quen þis Bretayn watz bigged bi
þis burn rych,
Bolde bredden þerinne, baret þat
lofden,
In mony turned tyme tene þat
wroȝten.
Mo ferlyes on þis folde han fallen
here oft
Þen in any oþer þat I wot, syn þat
ilk tyme.
Bot of alle þat here bult, of
Bretaygne kynges,
Ay watz Arthur þe hendest, as I haf
herde telle.
[folio 91v]
Forþi an aunter in erde I attle to
schawe,
Þat a selly in siȝt summe men hit
holden,
And an outtrage awenture of Arthurez
wonderez.
If ȝe wyl lysten þis laye bot on
littel quile,
I schal telle hit as-tit, as I in
toun herde,
As hit is stad and stoken
In stori stif and stronge,
In londe so hatz ben longe.
Þis kyng lay at Camylot vpon
Krystmasse
With mony luflych lorde, ledez of þe
best,
Rekenly of þe Rounde Table alle þo
rich breþer,
With rych reuel oryȝt and rechles
merþes.
Þer tournayed tulkes by tymez ful
mony,
Justed ful jolilé þise gentyle
kniȝtes,
Syþen kayred to þe court caroles to
make.
For þer þe fest watz ilyche ful
fiften dayes,
With alle þe mete and þe mirþe þat
men couþe avyse;
Such glaum ande gle glorious to
here,
Dere dyn vpon day, daunsyng on
nyȝtes,
Al watz hap vpon heȝe in hallez and
chambrez
With lordez and ladies, as leuest
him þoȝt.
With all þe wele of þe worlde þay
woned þer samen,
Þe most kyd knyȝtez vnder Krystes
seluen,
And þe louelokkest ladies þat euer
lif haden,
And he þe comlokest kyng þat þe
court haldes;
For al watz þis fayre folk in her
first age,
Kyng hyȝest mon of wylle;
Hit were now gret nye to neuen
So hardy a here on hille.
Tres Riche Heures du Duc de Berry, banquet
scene, tapestry scene of Trojan War, a fire is
blazing in the chimney behind the fire screen
Wyle Nw Ȝer watz so ȝep þat hit watz
nwe cummen,
Þat day doubble on þe dece watz þe
douth serued.
Fro þe kyng watz cummen with knyȝtes
into þe halle,
Þe chauntré of þe chapel cheued to
an ende,
Loude crye watz þer kest of clerkez
and oþer, [folio 92r]
Nowel nayted onewe, neuened ful
ofte;
And syþen riche forth runnen to
reche hondeselle,
Ȝeȝed ȝeres-ȝiftes on hiȝ, ȝelde hem
bi hond,
Debated busyly aboute þo giftes;
Ladies laȝed ful loude, þoȝ þay lost
haden,
And he þat wan watz not wrothe, þat
may ȝe wel trawe.
Alle þis mirþe þay maden to þe mete
tyme;
When þay had waschen worþyly þay
wenten to sete,
Þe best burne ay abof, as hit best
semed,
Whene Guenore, ful gay, grayþed in
þe myddes,
Dressed on þe dere des, dubbed al
aboute,
Smal sendal bisides, a selure hir
ouer
Of tryed tolouse, and tars tapites
innoghe,
Þat were enbrawded and beten wyth þe
best gemmes
Þat myȝt be preued of prys wyth
penyes to bye,
Þer glent with yȝen gray,
A semloker þat euer he syȝe
Bot Arthure wolde not ete til al
were serued,
He watz so joly of his joyfnes, and
sumquat childgered:
His lif liked hym lyȝt, he louied þe
lasse
Auþer to longe lye or to longe
sitte,
So bisied him his ȝonge blod and his
brayn wylde.
And also an oþer maner meued him eke
Þat he þurȝ nobelay had nomen, he
wolde neuer ete
Vpon such a dere day er hym deuised
were
Of sum auenturus þyng an vncouþe
tale,
Of sum mayn meruayle, þat he myȝt
trawe,
Of alderes, of armes, of oþer
auenturus,
Oþer sum segg hym bisoȝt of sum
siker knyȝt
To joyne wyth hym in iustyng, in
jopardé to lay,
Lede, lif for lyf, leue vchon
oþer,
As fortune wolde fulsun hom, þe
fayrer to haue.
Þis watz þe kynges countenaunce
where he in court were,
At vch farand fest among his fre
meny [folio 92v]
He stiȝtlez stif in stalle,
Much mirthe he mas withalle.
Thus þer stondes in stale þe stif
kyng hisseluen,
Talkkande bifore þe hyȝe table of
trifles ful hende.
There gode Gawan watz grayþed
Gwenore bisyde,
And Agrauayn a la dure mayn on þat
oþer syde sittes,
Boþe þe kynges sistersunes and ful
siker kniȝtes;
Bischop Bawdewyn abof biginez þe
table,
And Ywan, Vryn son, ette with
hymseluen.
Þise were diȝt on þe des and
derworþly serued,
And siþen mony siker segge at þe
sidbordez.
Þen þe first cors come with crakkyng
of trumpes,
Wyth mony baner ful bryȝt þat þerbi
henged;
Nwe nakryn noyse with þe noble
pipes,
Wylde werbles and wyȝt wakned lote,
Þat mony hert ful hiȝe hef at her
towches.
Dayntés dryuen þerwyth of ful dere
metes,
Foysoun of þe fresche, and on so
fele disches
Þat pine to fynde þe place þe peple
biforne
For to sette þe sylueren þat sere
sewes halden
Iche lede as he loued hymselue
Þer laght withouten loþe;
Ay two had disches twelue,
Good ber and bryȝt wyn boþe.
Now wyl I of hor seruise say yow no
more,
For vch wyȝe may wel wit no wont þat
þer were.
An oþer noyse ful newe neȝed biliue,
Þat þe lude myȝt haf leue liflode to
cach;
For vneþe watz þe noyce not a whyle
sesed,
And þe fyrst cource in þe court
kyndely serued,
Þer hales in at þe halle dor an
aghlich mayster,
On þe most on þe molde on mesure
hyghe;
Fro þe swyre to þe swange so sware
and so þik,
And his lyndes and his lymes so
longe and so grete, [folio 93r]
Half etayn in erde I hope þat he
were,
Bot mon most I algate mynn hym to
bene,
And þat þe myriest in his muckel þat
myȝt ride;
For of bak and of brest al were his
bodi sturne,
Both his wombe and his wast were
worthily smale,
And alle his fetures folȝande, in
forme þat he hade,
For wonder of his hwe men hade,
Set in his semblaunt sene;
He ferde as freke were fade,
Ande al grayþed in grene þis gome
and his wedes:
A strayte cote ful streȝt, þat stek
on his sides,
A meré mantile abof, mensked
withinne
With pelure pured apert, þe pane ful
clene
With blyþe blaunner ful bryȝt, and
his hod boþe,
Þat watz laȝt fro his lokkez and
layde on his schulderes;
Heme wel-haled hose of þat same,
Þat spenet on his sparlyr, and clene
spures vnder
Of bryȝt golde, vpon silk bordes
barred ful ryche,
And scholes vnder schankes þere þe
schalk rides;
And alle his vesture uerayly watz
clene verdure,
Boþe þe barres of his belt and oþer
blyþe stones,
Þat were richely rayled in his aray
clene
Aboutte hymself and his sadel, vpon
silk werkez.
Þat were to tor for to telle of
tryfles þe halue
Þat were enbrauded abof, wyth
bryddes and flyȝes,
With gay gaudi of grene, þe golde ay
inmyddes.
Þe pendauntes of his payttrure, þe
proude cropure,
His molaynes, and alle þe metail
anamayld was þenne,
Þe steropes þat he stod on stayned
of þe same,
And his arsounz al after and his
aþel skyrtes,
Þat euer glemered and glent al of
grene stones;
Þe fole þat he ferkkes on fyn of þat
ilke,
A grene hors gret and þikke,
A stede ful stif to strayne,
To þe gome he watz ful gayn.
Wel gay watz þis gome gered in
grene,
And þe here of his hed of his hors
swete.
Fayre fannand fax vmbefoldes his
schulderes;
A much berd as a busk ouer his brest
henges,
Þat wyth his hiȝlich here þat of his
hed reches
Watz euesed al vmbetorne abof his
elbowes,
Þat half his armes þer-vnder were
halched in þe wyse
Of a kyngez capados þat closes his
swyre;
Þe mane of þat mayn hors much to hit
lyke,
Wel cresped and cemmed, wyth knottes
ful mony
Folden in wyth fildore aboute þe
fayre grene,
Ay a herle of þe here, an oþer of
golde;
Þe tayl and his toppyng twynnen of a
sute,
And bounden boþe wyth a bande of a
bryȝt grene,
Dubbed wyth ful dere stonez, as þe
dok lasted,
Syþen þrawen wyth a þwong a þwarle
knot alofte,
Þer mony bellez ful bryȝt of brende
golde rungen.
Such a fole vpon folde, ne freke þat
hym rydes,
Watz neuer sene in þat sale wyth
syȝt er þat tyme,
He loked as layt so lyȝt,
Wheþer hade he no helme ne hawbergh
nauþer,
Ne no pysan ne no plate þat pented
to armes,
Ne no schafte ne no schelde to
schwue ne to smyte,
Bot in his on honde he hade a holyn
bobbe,
Þat is grattest in grene when
greuez ar bare,
And an ax in his oþer, a hoge and
vnmete,
A spetos sparþe to expoun in spelle,
quoso myȝt.
Þe lenkþe of an elnȝerde þe large
hede hade,
Þe grayn al of grene stele and of
golde hewen,
Þe bit burnyst bryȝt, with a brod
egge
As wel schapen to schere as scharp
rasores,
Þe stele of a stif staf þe sturne
hit bi grypte, [folio 94r]
Þat watz wounden wyth yrn to þe
wandez ende,
And al bigrauen with grene in
gracios werkes;
A lace lapped aboute, þat louked at
þe hede,
And so after þe halme halched ful
ofte,
Wyth tryed tasselez þerto tacched
innoghe
On botounz of þe bryȝt grene brayden
ful ryche.
Þis haþel heldez hym in and þe halle
entres,
Driuande to þe heȝe dece, dut he no
woþe,
Haylsed he neuer one, bot heȝe he
ouer loked.
Þe fyrst word þat he warp, 'Wher
is', he sayd,
'Þe gouernour of þis gyng? Gladly I
wolde
Se þat segg in syȝt, and with
hymself speke
To knyȝtez he kest his yȝe,
And reled hym vp and doun;
He stemmed, and con studie
Quo walt þer most renoun.
Ther watz lokyng on lenþe þe lude to
beholde,
For vch mon had meruayle quat hit
mene myȝt
Þat a haþel and a horse myȝt such a
hwe lach,
As growe grene as þe gres and grener
hit semed,
Þen grene aumayl on golde glowande
bryȝter.
Al studied þat þer stod, and stalked
hym nerre
Wyth al þe wonder of þe worlde what
he worch schulde.
For fele sellyez had þay sen, bot
such neuer are;
Forþi for fantoum and fayryȝe þe
folk þere hit demed.
Þerfore to answare watz arȝe mony
aþel freke,
And al stouned at his steuen and
stonstil seten
In a swoghe sylence þurȝ þe sale
riche;
As al were slypped vpon slepe so
slaked hor lotez
I deme hit not al for doute,
Bot let hym þat al schulde loute
Þenn Arþour bifore þe hiȝ dece þat
auenture byholdez,
And rekenly hym reuerenced, for rad
was he neuer,
And sayde, 'Wyȝe, welcum iwys to þis
place, [folio 94v]
Þe hede of þis ostel Arthour I hat;
Liȝt luflych adoun and lenge, I þe
praye,
And quat-so þy wylle is we schal wyt
after.'
'Nay, as help me,' quoþ þe haþel,
'he þat on hyȝe syttes,
To wone any quyle in þis won, hit
watz not myn ernde;
Bot for þe los of þe, lede, is lyft
vp so hyȝe,
And þy burȝ and þy burnes best ar
holden,
Stifest vnder stel-gere on stedes to
ryde,
Þe wyȝtest and þe worþyest of þe
worldes kynde,
Preue for to play wyth in oþer pure
laykez,
And here is kydde cortaysye, as I
haf herd carp,
And þat hatz wayned me hider, iwyis,
at þis tyme.
Ȝe may be seker bi þis braunch þat I
bere here
Þat I passe as in pes, and no plyȝt
seche;
For had I founded in fere in feȝtyng
wyse,
I haue a hauberghe at home and a
helme boþe,
A schelde and a scharp spere,
schinande bryȝt,
Ande oþer weppenes to welde, I wene
wel, als;
Bot for I wolde no were, my wedez ar
softer.
Bot if þou be so bold as alle burnez
tellen,
Þou wyl grant me godly þe gomen þat
I ask
And sayd, 'Sir cortays knyȝt,
If þou craue batayl bare,
Here faylez þou not to fyȝt.'
'Nay, frayst I no fyȝt, in fayth I
þe telle,
Hit arn aboute on þis bench bot
berdlez chylder.
If I were hasped in armes on a heȝe
stede,
Here is no mon me to mach, for
myȝtez so wayke.
Forþy I craue in þis court a
Crystemas gomen,
For hit is Ȝol and Nwe Ȝer, and here
ar ȝep mony:
If any so hardy in þis hous holdez
hymseluen,
Be so bolde in his blod, brayn in
hys hede,
Þat dar stifly strike a strok for an
oþer,
I schal gif hym of my gyft þys
giserne ryche,
Þis ax, þat is heué innogh, to
hondele as hym lykes, [folio 95r]
And I schal bide þe fyrst bur as
bare as I sitte.
If any freke be so felle to fonde
þat I telle,
Lepe lyȝtly me to, and lach þis
weppen,
I quit-clayme hit for euer, kepe hit
as his auen,
And I schal stonde hym a strok, stif
on þis flet,
Ellez þou wyl diȝt me þe dom to dele
hym an oþer
Now hyȝe, and let se tite
Dar any herinne oȝt say.'
If he hem stowned vpon fyrst,
stiller were þanne
Alle þe heredmen in halle, þe hyȝ
and þe loȝe.
Þe renk on his rouncé hym ruched in
his sadel,
And runischly his rede yȝen he reled
aboute,
Bende his bresed broȝez, blycande
grene,
Wayued his berde for to wayte quo-so
wolde ryse.
When non wolde kepe hym with carp he
coȝed ful hyȝe,
Ande rimed hym ful richly, and ryȝt
hym to speke:
'What, is þis Arthures hous,' quoþ
þe haþel þenne,
'Þat al þe rous rennes of þurȝ
ryalmes so mony?
Where is now your sourquydrye and
your conquestes,
Your gryndellayk and your greme, and
your grete wordes?
Now is þe reuel and þe renoun of þe
Rounde Table
Ouerwalt wyth a worde of on wyȝes
speche,
For al dares for drede withoute dynt
schewed!'
Wyth þis he laȝes so loude þat þe
lorde greued;
Þe blod schot for scham into his
schyre face
He wex as wroth as wynde,
So did alle þat þer were.
Þen stod þat stif mon nere,
Ande sayde, 'Haþel, by heuen, þyn
askyng is nys,
And as þou foly hatz frayst, fynde
þe behoues.
I know no gome þat is gast of þy
grete wordes;
Gif me now þy geserne, vpon Godez
halue,
And I schal bayþen þy bone þat þou
boden habbes.' [folio 95v]
Lyȝtly lepez he hym to, and laȝt at
his honde.
Þen feersly þat oþer freke vpon fote
lyȝtis.
Now hatz Arthure his axe, and þe
halme grypez,
And sturnely sturez hit aboute, þat
stryke wyth hit þoȝt.
Þe stif mon hym bifore stod vpon
hyȝt,
Herre þen ani in þe hous by þe hede
and more.
Wyth sturne schere þer he stod he
stroked his berde,
And wyth a countenaunce dryȝe he
droȝ doun his cote,
No more mate ne dismayd for hys mayn
dintez
Þen any burne vpon bench hade broȝt
hym to drynk
Gawan, þat sate bi þe quene,
To þe kyng he can enclyne:
'I beseche now with saȝez sene
'Wolde ȝe, worþilych lorde,' quoþ
Wawan to þe kyng,
'Bid me boȝe fro þis benche, and
stonde by yow þere,
Þat I wythoute vylanye myȝt voyde
þis table,
And þat my legge lady lyked not
ille,
I wolde com to your counseyl bifore
your cort ryche.
For me þink hit not semly, as hit is
soþ knawen,
Þer such an askyng is heuened so
hyȝe in your sale,
Þaȝ ȝe ȝourself be talenttyf, to
take hit to yourseluen,
Whil mony so bolde yow aboute vpon
bench sytten,
Þat vnder heuen I hope non haȝerer
of wylle,
Ne better bodyes on bent þer baret
is rered.
I am þe wakkest, I wot, and of wyt
feblest,
And lest lur of my lyf, quo laytes
þe soþe--
Bot for as much as ȝe ar myn em I
am only to prayse,
No bounté bot your blod I in my bodé
knowe;
And syþen þis note is so nys þat
noȝt hit yow falles,
And I haue frayned hit at yow fyrst,
foldez hit to me;
And if I carp not comlyly, let alle
þis cort rych
And syþen þay redden alle same
To ryd þe kyng wyth croun,
And gif Gawan þe game. [folio 96r]
Þen comaunded þe kyng þe knyȝt for
to ryse;
And he ful radly vpros, and ruchched
hym fayre,
Kneled doun bifore þe kyng, and
cachez þat weppen;
And he luflyly hit hym laft, and
lyfte vp his honde,
And gef hym Goddez blessyng, and
gladly hym biddes
Þat his hert and his honde schulde
hardi be boþe.
'Kepe þe, cosyn,' quoþ þe kyng, 'þat
þou on kyrf sette,
And if þou redez hym ryȝt, redly I
trowe
Þat þou schal byden þe bur þat he
schal bede after.'
Gawan gotz to þe gome with giserne
in honde,
And he baldly hym bydez, he bayst
neuer þe helder.
Þen carppez to Sir Gawan þe knyȝt in
þe grene,
'Refourme we oure forwardes, er we
fyrre passe.
Fyrst I eþe þe, haþel, how þat þou
hattes
Þat þou me telle truly, as I tryst
may.'
'In god fayth,' quoþ þe goode knyȝt,
'Gawan I hatte,
Þat bede þe þis buffet, quat-so
bifallez after,
And at þis tyme twelmonyth take at
þe an oþer
Wyth what weppen so þou wylt, and
wyth no wyȝ ellez
'Sir Gawan, so mot I þryue
Þis dint þat þou schal dryue.
'Bigog,' quoþ þe grene knyȝt, 'Sir
Gawan, me lykes
Þat I schal fange at þy fust þat I
haf frayst here.
And þou hatz redily rehersed, bi
resoun ful trwe,
Clanly al þe couenaunt þat I þe
kynge asked,
Saf þat þou schal siker me, segge,
bi þi trawþe,
Þat þou schal seche me þiself,
where-so þou hopes
I may be funde vpon folde, and foch
þe such wages
As þou deles me to-day bifore þis
douþe ryche.'
'Where schulde I wale þe,' quoþ
Gauan, 'where is þy place?
I wot neuer where þou wonyes, bi hym
þat me wroȝt,
Ne I know not þe, knyȝt, by cort ne
þi name.
Bot teche me truly þerto, and telle
me how þou hattes,
And I schal ware alle my wyt to
wynne me þeder, [folio 96v]
And þat I swere þe for soþe, and by
my seker traweþ.'
'Þat is innogh in Nwe Ȝer, hit nedes
no more',
Quoþ þe gome in þe grene to Gawan þe
hende;
'Ȝif I þe telle trwly, quen I þe
tape haue
And þou me smoþely hatz smyten,
smartly I þe teche
Of my hous and my home and myn owen
nome,
Þen may þou frayst my fare and
forwardez holde;
And if I spende no speche, þenne
spedez þou þe better,
For þou may leng in þy londe and
layt no fyrre--
Ta now þy grymme tole to þe,
And let se how þou cnokez.'
Quoþ Gawan; his ax he strokes.
Þe grene knyȝt vpon grounde grayþely
hym dresses,
A littel lut with þe hede, þe lere
he discouerez,
His longe louelych lokkez he layd
ouer his croun,
Let þe naked nec to þe note schewe.
Gauan gripped to his ax, and gederes
hit on hyȝt,
Þe kay fot on þe folde he before
sette,
Let him doun lyȝtly lyȝt on þe
naked,
Þat þe scharp of þe schalk
schyndered þe bones,
And schrank þurȝ þe schyire grece,
and schade hit in twynne,
Þat þe bit of þe broun stel bot on
þe grounde.
Þe fayre hede fro þe halce hit to þe
erþe,
Þat fele hit foyned wyth her fete,
þere hit forth roled;
Þe blod brayd fro þe body, þat
blykked on þe grene;
And nawþer faltered ne fel þe freke
neuer þe helder,
Bot styþly he start forth vpon styf
schonkes,
And runyschly he raȝt out, þere as
renkkez stoden,
Laȝt to his lufly hed, and lyft hit
vp sone;
And syþen boȝez to his blonk, þe
brydel he cachchez,
Steppez into stelbawe and strydez
alofte,
And his hede by þe here in his honde
haldez;
And as sadly þe segge hym in his
sadel sette
As non vnhap had hym ayled, þaȝ
hedlez he were
He brayde his bulk aboute, [folio
97r]
Þat vgly bodi þat bledde;
Moni on of hym had doute,
Bi þat his resounz were redde.

British Library, Cotton Nero A.x. fol. 94v
Green in the Middle Ages not only signified Nature
but also connotated pagan and magical material,
Chaucer associating green with both magic and
woodcrafts. Here, in the
Tres Roches Heures
for the month of May we see courtiers, especially
women, going into the country side, garbed in green.
For þe hede in his honde he haldez
vp euen,
Toward þe derrest on þe dece he
dressez þe face,
And hit lyfte vp þe yȝe-lyddez and
loked ful brode,
And meled þus much with his muthe,
as ȝe may now here:
'Loke, Gawan, þou be grayþe to go as
þou hettez,
And layte as lelly til þou me, lude,
fynde,
As þou hatz hette in þis halle,
herande þise knyȝtes;
To þe grene chapel þou chose, I
charge þe, to fotte
Such a dunt as þou hatz
dalt--disserued þou habbez
To be ȝederly ȝolden on Nw Ȝeres
morn.
Þe knyȝt of þe grene chapel men
knowen me mony;
Forþi me for to fynde if þou
fraystez, faylez þou neuer.
Þerfore com, oþer recreaunt be calde
þe behoues.'
With a runisch rout þe raynez he
tornez,
Halled out at þe hal dor, his hed in
his hande,
Þat þe fyr of þe flynt flaȝe fro
fole houes.
To quat kyth he becom knwe non þere,
Neuer more þen þay wyste from queþen
he watz wonnen.
At þat grene þay laȝe and grenne,
Ȝet breued watz hit ful bare
A meruayl among þo menne.
Þaȝ Arþer þe hende kyng at hert
hade wonder,
He let no semblaunt be sene, bot
sayde ful hyȝe
To þe comlych quene wyth cortays
speche,
'Dere dame, to-day demay yow neuer;
Wel bycommes such craft vpon
Cristmasse,
Laykyng of enterludez, to laȝe and
to syng,
Among þise kynde caroles of knyȝtez
and ladyez.
Neuer þe lece to my mete I may me
wel dres,
For I haf sen a selly, I may not
forsake.'
He glent vpon Sir Gawen, and gaynly
he sayde,
'Now, sir, heng vp þyn ax, þat hatz
innogh hewen'; [folio 97v]
And hit watz don abof þe dece on
doser to henge,
Þer alle men for meruayl myȝt on hit
loke,
And bi trwe tytel þerof to telle þe
wonder.
Þenne þay boȝed to a borde þise
burnes togeder,
Þe kyng and þe gode knyȝt, and kene
men hem serued
Of alle dayntyez double, as derrest
myȝt falle;
Wyth alle maner of mete and
mynstralcie boþe,
Wyth wele walt þay þat day, til
worþed an ende
For woþe þat þou ne wonde
Þis auenture for to frayn
Þat þou hatz tan on honde.
♫
Passus II

HIS hanselle
hatz Arthur of auenturus on fyrst
In ȝonge ȝer, for he
ȝerned ȝelpyng to here.
Thaȝ hym wordez were
wane when þay to sete wenten,
Now ar þay stoken of
sturne werk, stafful her hond.
Gawan watz glad to
begynne þose gomnez in halle,
Bot þaȝ þe ende be heuy
haf ȝe no wonder;
For þaȝ men ben mery in
mynde quen þay han mayn drynk,
A ȝere ȝernes ful ȝerne,
and ȝeldez neuer lyke,
Þe forme to þe fynisment
foldez ful selden.
Forþi þis Ȝol ouerȝede,
and þe ȝere after,
And vche sesoun serlepes
sued after oþer:
After Crystenmasse com
þe crabbed lentoun,
Þat fraystez flesch wyth
þe fysche and fode more symple;
Bot þenne þe weder of þe
worlde wyth wynter hit þrepez,
Colde clengez adoun,
cloudez vplyften,
Schyre schedez þe rayn
in schowrez ful warme,
Fallez vpon fayre flat,
flowrez þere schewen,
Boþe groundez and þe
greuez grene ar her wedez,
Bryddez busken to bylde,
and bremlych syngen
For solace of þe softe
somer þat sues þerafter
And blossumez bolne to
blowe
Ar herde in wod so
wlonk.
After þe sesoun of somer
wyth þe soft wyndez
Quen Zeferus syflez
hymself on sedez and erbez,
Wela wynne is þe wort
þat waxes þeroute,
When þe donkande dewe
dropez of þe leuez,
To bide a blysful blusch
of þe bryȝt sunne.
Bot þen hyȝes heruest,
and hardenes hym sone,
Warnez hym for þe wynter
to wax ful rype;
He dryues wyth droȝt þe
dust for to ryse,
Fro þe face of þe folde
to flyȝe ful hyȝe;
Wroþe wynde of þe welkyn
wrastelez with þe sunne,
Þe leuez lancen fro þe
lynde and lyȝten on þe grounde,
And al grayes þe gres
þat grene watz ere;
Þenne al rypez and rotez
þat ros vpon fyrst,
And þus ȝirnez þe ȝere
in ȝisterdayez mony,
And wynter wyndez aȝayn,
as þe worlde askez,
Watz cumen wyth wynter
wage;
Þen þenkkez Gawan ful
sone
Ȝet quyl Al-hal-day with
Arþer he lenges;
And he made a fare on
þat fest for þe frekez sake,
With much reuel and
ryche of þe Rounde Table.
Knyȝtez ful cortays and
comlych ladies
Al for luf of þat lede
in longynge þay were,
Bot neuer þe lece ne þe
later þay neuened bot merþe:
Mony ioylez for þat
ientyle iapez þer maden.
For aftter mete with
mournyng he melez to his eme,
And spekez of his
passage, and pertly he sayde,
'Now, lege lorde of my
lyf, leue I yow ask;
Ȝe knowe þe cost of þis
cace, kepe I no more
To telle yow tenez þerof
neuer bot trifel;
Bot I am boun to þe bur
barely to-morne
To sech þe gome of þe
grene, as God wyl me wysse.'
Þenne þe best of þe burȝ
boȝed togeder,
Aywan, and Errik, and
oþer ful mony, [folio 98v]
Sir Doddinaual de
Sauage, þe duk of Clarence,
Launcelot, and Lyonel,
and Lucan þe gode,
Sir Boos, and Sir
Byduer, big men boþe,
And mony oþer menskful,
with Mador de la Port.
Alle þis compayny of
court com þe kyng nerre
For to counseyl þe
knyȝt, with care at her hert.
Þere watz much derue
doel driuen in þe sale
Þat so worthé as Wawan
schulde wende on þat ernde,
To dryȝe a delful dynt,
and dele no more
Þe knyȝt mad ay god
chere,
And sayde, 'Quat schuld
I wonde?
Of destinés derf and
dere
What may mon do bot
fonde?'
He dowellez þer al þat
day, and dressez on þe morn,
Askez erly hys armez,
and alle were þay broȝt.
Fyrst a tulé tapit tyȝt
ouer þe flet,
And miche watz þe gyld
gere þat glent þeralofte;
Þe stif mon steppez
þeron, and þe stel hondelez,
Dubbed in a dublet of a
dere tars,
And syþen a crafty
capados, closed aloft,
Þat wyth a bryȝt
blaunner was bounden withinne.
Þenne set þay þe
sabatounz vpon þe segge fotez,
His legez lapped in stel
with luflych greuez,
With polaynez piched
þerto, policed ful clene,
Aboute his knez knaged
wyth knotez of golde;
Queme quyssewes þen,
þat coyntlych closed
His thik þrawen þyȝez,
with þwonges to tachched;
And syþen þe brawden
bryné of bryȝt stel ryngez
Vmbeweued þat wyȝ vpon
wlonk stuffe,
And wel bornyst brace
vpon his boþe armes,
With gode cowters and
gay, and glouez of plate,
And alle þe godlych gere
þat hym gayn schulde
His gold sporez spend
with pryde,
Gurde wyth a bront ful
sure
With silk sayn vmbe his
syde. [folio 99r]
When he watz hasped in
armes, his harnays watz ryche:
Þe lest lachet oþer
loupe lemed of golde.
So harnayst as he watz
he herknez his masse,
Offred and honoured at
þe heȝe auter.
Syþen he comez to þe
kyng and to his cort-ferez,
Lachez lufly his leue at
lordez and ladyez;
And þay hym kyst and
conueyed, bikende hym to Kryst.
Bi þat watz Gryngolet
grayth, and gurde with a sadel
Þat glemed ful gayly
with mony golde frenges,
Ayquere naylet ful nwe,
for þat note ryched;
Þe brydel barred aboute,
with bryȝt golde bounden;
Þe apparayl of þe
payttrure and of þe proude skyrtez,
Þe cropore and þe
couertor, acorded wyth þe arsounez;
And al watz rayled on
red ryche golde naylez,
Þat al glytered and
glent as glem of þe sunne.
Þenne hentes he þe
helme, and hastily hit kysses,
Þat watz stapled stifly,
and stoffed wythinne.
Hit watz hyȝe on his
hede, hasped bihynde,
Wyth a lyȝtly vrysoun
ouer þe auentayle,
Enbrawden and bounden
wyth þe best gemmez
On brode sylkyn borde,
and bryddez on semez,
As papiayez paynted
peruyng bitwene,
Tortors and trulofez
entayled so þyk
As mony burde þeraboute
had ben seuen wynter
Þe cercle watz more o
prys
Þat vmbeclypped hys
croun,
Þat boþe were bryȝt and
broun.
THEN þay schewed hym þe
schelde, þat was of schyr goulez
Wyth þe pentangel
depaynt of pure golde hwez.
He braydez hit by þe
bauderyk, aboute þe hals kestes,
Þat bisemed þe segge
semlyly fayre.
And quy þe pentangel
apendez to þat prynce noble
I am in tent yow to
telle, þof tary hyt me schulde:
Hit is a syngne þat
Salamon set sumquyle
In bytoknyng of trawþe,
bi tytle þat hit habbez, [folio 99v]
For hit is a figure þat
haldez fyue poyntez,
And vche lyne vmbelappez
and loukez in oþer,
And ayquere hit is
endelez; and Englych hit callen
Oueral, as I here, þe
endeles knot.
Forþy hit acordez to þis
knyȝt and to his cler armez,
For ay faythful in fyue
and sere fyue syþez
Gawan watz for gode
knawen, and as golde pured,
Voyded of vche vylany,
wyth vertuez ennourned
He ber in schelde and
cote,
As tulk of tale most
trwe
And gentylest knyȝt of
lote.
Fyrst he watz funden
fautlez in his fyue wyttez,
And efte fayled neuer þe
freke in his fyue fyngres,
And alle his afyaunce
vpon folde watz in þe fyue woundez
Þat Cryst kaȝt on þe
croys, as þe crede tellez;
And quere-so-euer þys
mon in melly watz stad,
His þro þoȝt watz in
þat, þurȝ alle oþer þyngez,
Þat alle his forsnes he
feng at þe fyue joyez
Þat þe hende heuen-quene
had of hir chylde;
At þis cause þe knyȝt
comlyche hade
In þe inore half of his
schelde hir ymage depaynted,
Þat quen he blusched
þerto his belde neuer payred.
Þe fyft fyue þat I
finde þat þe frek vsed
Watz fraunchyse and
felaȝschyp forbe al þyng,
His clannes and his
cortaysye croked were neuer,
And pité, þat passez
alle poyntez, þyse pure fyue
Were harder happed on
þat haþel þen on any oþer.
Now alle þese fyue
syþez, for soþe, were fetled on þis
knyȝt,
And vchone halched in
oþer, þat non ende hade,
And fyched vpon fyue
poyntez, þat fayld neuer,
Ne samned neuer in no
syde, ne sundred nouþer,
Withouten ende at any
noke I oquere fynde,
Whereeuer þe gomen
bygan, or glod to an ende.
Þerfore on his schene
schelde schapen watz þe knot
Ryally wyth red golde
vpon rede gowlez, [folio 100r]
Þat is þe pure
pentaungel wyth þe peple called
Now grayþed is Gawan
gay,
And laȝt his launce
ryȝt þore,
And gef hem alle goud
day,
He wende for euermore.
Sir Geoffrey Luttrell, The Luttrel
Psalter, British Library Add. MS 42130,
fol. 202v
He sperred þe sted with
þe spurez and sprong on his way,
So stif þat þe ston-fyr
stroke out þerafter.
Al þat seȝ þat semly
syked in hert,
And sayde soþly al same
segges til oþer,
Carande for þat comly:
'Bi Kryst, hit is scaþe
Þat þou, leude, schal be
lost, þat art of lyf noble!
To fynde hys fere vpon
folde, in fayth, is not eþe.
Warloker to haf wroȝt
had more wyt bene,
And haf dyȝt ȝonder dere
a duk to haue worþed;
A lowande leder of ledez
in londe hym wel semez,
And so had better haf
ben þen britned to noȝt,
Hadet wyth an aluisch
mon, for angardez pryde.
Who knew euer any kyng
such counsel to take
As knyȝtez in
cauelaciounz on Crystmasse gomnez!'
Wel much watz þe warme
water þat waltered of yȝen,
When þat semly syre soȝt
fro þo wonez
Now ridez þis renk þurȝ
þe ryalme of Logres,
Sir Gauan, on Godez
halue, þaȝ hym no gomen þoȝt.
Oft leudlez alone he
lengez on nyȝtez
Þer he fonde noȝt hym
byfore þe fare þat he lyked.
Hade he no fere bot his
fole bi frythez and dounez,
Ne no gome bot God bi
gate wyth to karp,
Til þat he neȝed ful
neghe into þe Norþe Walez.
Alle þe iles of Anglesay
on lyft half he haldez,
And farez ouer þe fordez
by þe forlondez,
Ouer at þe Holy Hede,
til he hade eft bonk
In þe wyldrenesse of
Wyrale; wonde þer bot lyte [folio 100v]
Þat auþer God oþer gome
wyth goud hert louied.
And ay he frayned, as he
ferde, at frekez þat he met,
If þay hade herde any
karp of a knyȝt grene,
In any grounde
þeraboute, of þe grene chapel;
And al nykked hym wyth
nay, þat neuer in her lyue
Þay seȝe neuer no segge
þat watz of suche hwez
Þe knyȝt tok gates
straunge
His cher ful oft con
chaunge
Þat chapel er he myȝt
sene.
Mony klyf he ouerclambe
in contrayez straunge,
Fer floten fro his
frendez fremedly he rydez.
At vche warþe oþer water
þer þe wyȝe passed
He fonde a foo hym
byfore, bot ferly hit were,
And þat so foule and so
felle þat feȝt hym byhode.
So mony meruayl bi mount
þer þe mon fyndez,
Hit were to tore for to
telle of þe tenþe dole.
Sumwhyle wyth wormez he
werrez, and with wolues als,
Sumwhyle wyth wodwos,
þat woned in þe knarrez,
Boþe wyth bullez and
berez, and borez oþerquyle,
And etaynez, þat hym
anelede of þe heȝe felle;
Nade he ben duȝty and
dryȝe, and Dryȝtyn had serued,
Douteles he hade ben ded
and dreped ful ofte.
For werre wrathed hym
not so much þat wynter nas wors,
When þe colde cler water
fro þe cloudez schadde,
And fres er hit falle
myȝt to þe fale erþe;
Ner slayn wyth þe slete
he sleped in his yrnes
Mo nyȝtez þen innoghe in
naked rokkez,
Þer as claterande fro þe
crest þe colde borne rennez,
And henged heȝe ouer his
hede in hard iisse-ikkles.
Þus in peryl and payne
and plytes ful harde
Bi contray cayrez þis
knyȝt, tyl Krystmasse euen,
Þat ho hym red to ryde
[folio 101r]
And wysse hym to sum
wone.
Bi a mounte on þe morne
meryly he rydes
Into a forest ful dep,
þat ferly watz wylde,
Hiȝe hillez on vche a
halue, and holtwodez vnder
Of hore okez ful hoge a
hundreth togeder;
Þe hasel and þe haȝþorne
were harled al samen,
With roȝe raged mosse
rayled aywhere,
With mony bryddez
vnblyþe vpon bare twyges,
Þat pitosly þer piped
for pyne of þe colde.
Þe gome vpon Gryngolet
glydez hem vnder,
Þurȝ mony misy and myre,
mon al hym one,
Carande for his costes,
lest he ne keuer schulde
To se þe seruyse of þat
syre, þat on þat self nyȝt
Of a burde watz borne
oure baret to quelle;
And þerfore sykyng he
sayde, 'I beseche þe, lorde,
And Mary, þat is myldest
moder so dere,
Of sum herber þer heȝly
I myȝt here masse,
Ande þy matynez
to-morne, mekely I ask,
And þerto prestly I pray
my pater and aue
And cryed for his
mysdede,
He sayned hym in syþes
sere,
And sayde 'Cros Kryst
me spede!'
NADE he sayned hymself,
segge, bot þrye,
Er he watz war in þe wod
of a won in a mote,
Abof a launde, on a
lawe, loken vnder boȝez
Of mony borelych bole
aboute bi þe diches:
A castel þe comlokest
þat euer knyȝt aȝte,
Pyched on a prayere, a
park al aboute,
With a pyked palays
pyned ful þik,
Þat vmbeteȝe mony tre mo
þen two myle.
Þat holde on þat on syde
þe haþel auysed,
As hit schemered and
schon þurȝ þe schyre okez;
Þenne hatz he hendly of
his helme, and heȝly he þonkez
Jesus and sayn Gilyan,
þat gentyle ar boþe, [folio 101v]
Þat cortaysly had hym
kydde, and his cry herkened.
'Now bone hostel,' coþe
þe burne, 'I beseche yow ȝette!'
Þenne gerdez he to
Gryngolet with þe gilt helez,
And he ful chauncely
hatz chosen to þe chef gate,
Þat broȝt bremly þe
burne to þe bryge ende
Þe bryge watz breme
vpbrayde,
Þe ȝatez wer stoken
faste,
Þe wallez were wel
arayed,
Hit dut no wyndez
blaste.
Þe burne bode on blonk,
þat on bonk houed
Of þe depe double dich
þat drof to þe place;
Þe walle wod in þe water
wonderly depe,
Ande eft a ful huge heȝt
hit haled vpon lofte
Of harde hewen ston vp
to þe tablez,
Enbaned vnder þe
abataylment in þe best lawe;
And syþen garytez ful
gaye gered bitwene,
Wyth mony luflych loupe
þat louked ful clene:
A better barbican þat
burne blusched vpon neuer.
And innermore he behelde
þat halle ful hyȝe,
Towres telded bytwene,
trochet ful þik,
Fayre fylyolez þat
fyȝed, and ferlyly long,
With coruon coprounes
craftyly sleȝe.
Chalkwhyt chymnees þer
ches he innoȝe
Vpon bastel rouez, þat
blenked ful quyte;
So mony pynakle payntet
watz poudred ayquere,
Among þe castel carnelez
clambred so þik,
Þat pared out of papure
purely hit semed.
Þe fre freke on þe fole
hit fayr innoghe þoȝt,
If he myȝt keuer to com
þe cloyster wythinne,
To herber in þat hostel
whyl halyday lested,
He calde, and sone þer
com
On þe wal his ernd he
nome,
And haylsed þe knyȝt
erraunt.
'Gode sir,' quoþ Gawan,
'woldez þou go myn ernde
To þe heȝ lorde of þis
hous, herber to craue?' [folio 102r]
'Ȝe, Peter,' quoþ þe
porter, 'and purely I trowee
Þat ȝe be, wyȝe, welcum
to won quyle yow lykez.'
Þen ȝede þe wyȝe ȝerne
and com aȝayn swyþe,
And folke frely hym
wyth, to fonge þe knyȝt.
Þay let doun þe grete
draȝt and derely out ȝeden,
And kneled doun on her
knes vpon þe colde erþe
To welcum þis ilk wyȝ as
worþy hom þoȝt;
Þay ȝolden hym þe brode
ȝate, ȝarked vp wyde,
And he hem raysed
rekenly, and rod ouer þe brygge.
Sere seggez hym sesed by
sadel, quel he lyȝt,
And syþen stabeled his
stede stif men innoȝe.
Knyȝtez and swyerez
comen doun þenne
For to bryng þis buurne
wyth blys into halle;
Quen he hef vp his
helme, þer hiȝed innoghe
For to hent hit at his
honde, þe hende to seruen;
His bronde and his
blasoun boþe þay token.
Þen haylsed he ful
hendly þo haþelez vchone,
And mony proud mon þer
presed þat prynce to honour.
Alle hasped in his heȝ
wede to halle þay hym wonnen,
Þer fayre fyre vpon flet
fersly brenned.
Þenne þe lorde of þe
lede loutez fro his chambre
For to mete wyth menske
þe mon on þe flor;
He sayde, 'Ȝe ar welcum
to welde as yow lykez
Þat here is; al is yowre
awen, to haue at yowre wylle
'Graunt mercy,' quoþ
Gawayn,
'Þer Kryst hit yow
forȝelde.'
Ayþer oþer in armez con
felde.
Gawayn glyȝt on þe gome
þat godly hym gret,
And þuȝt hit a bolde
burne þat þe burȝ aȝte,
A hoge haþel for þe
nonez, and of hyghe eldee;
Brode, bryȝt, watz his
berde, and al beuer-hwed,
Sturne, stif on þe
stryþþe on stalworth schonkez,
Felle face as þe fyre,
and fre of hys speche;
And wel hym semed, for
soþe, as þe segge þuȝt,
To lede a lortschyp in
lee of leudez ful gode. [folio 102v]
Þe lorde hym charred to
a chambre, and chefly cumaundez
To delyuer hym a leude,
hym loȝly to serue;
And þere were boun at
his bode burnez innoȝe,
Þat broȝt hym to a bryȝt
boure, þer beddyng watz noble,
Of cortynes of clene
sylk wyth cler golde hemmez,
And couertorez ful
curious with comlych panez
Of bryȝt blaunner aboue,
enbrawded bisydez,
Rudelez rennande on
ropez, red golde ryngez,
Tapitez tyȝt to þe woȝe
of tuly and tars,
And vnder fete, on þe
flet, of folȝande sute.
Þer he watz dispoyled,
wyth spechez of myerþe,
Þe burn of his bruny and
of his bryȝt wedez.
Ryche robes ful rad
renkkez hym broȝten,
For to charge, and to
chaunge, and chose of þe best.
Sone as he on hent, and
happed þerinne,
Þat sete on hym semly
wyth saylande skyrtez,
Þe ver by his uisage
verayly hit semed
Welneȝ to vche haþel,
alle on hwes
Lowande and lufly alle
his lymmez vnder,
Þat a comloker knyȝt
neuer Kryst made
Wheþen in worlde he
were,
In felde þer felle men
foȝt.
A cheyer byfore þe
chemné, þer charcole brenned,
Watz grayþed for Sir
Gawan grayþely with cloþez,
Whyssynes vpon
queldepoyntes þat koynt wer boþe;
And þenne a meré mantyle
watz on þat mon cast
Of a broun bleeaunt,
enbrauded ful ryche
And fayre furred
wythinne with fellez of þe best,
Alle of ermyn in erde,
his hode of þe same;
And he sete in þat
settel semlych ryche,
And achaufed hym chefly,
and þenne his cher mended.
Sone watz telded vp a
tabil on trestez ful fayre,
Clad wyth a clene cloþe
þat cler quyt schewed,
Sanap, and salure, and
syluerin sponez. [folio 103r]
Þe wyȝe wesche at his
wylle, and went to his mete.
Seggez hym serued semly
innoȝe
Wyth sere sewes and
sete, sesounde of þe best,
Double-felde, as hit
fallez, and fele kyn fischez,
Summe baken in bred,
summe brad on þe gledez,
Summe soþen, summe in
sewe sauered with spyces,
And ay sawes so sleȝe
þat þe segge lyked.
Þe freke calde hit a
fest ful frely and ofte
Ful hendely, quen alle
þe haþeles rehayted hym at onez,
Þis penaunce now ȝe
take,
And eft hit schal
amende.'
Þat mon much merþe con
make,
For wyn in his hed þat
wende.
Þenne watz spyed and
spured vpon spare wyse
Bi preué poyntez of þat
prynce, put to hymseluen,
Þat he beknew cortaysly
of þe court þat he were
Þat aþel Arthure þe
hende haldez hym one,
Þat is þe ryche ryal
kyng of þe Rounde Table,
And hit watz Wawen
hymself þat in þat won syttez,
Comen to þat
Krystmasse, as case hym þen lymped.
When þe lorde hade
lerned þat he þe leude hade,
Loude laȝed he þerat, so
lef hit hym þoȝt,
And alle þe men in þat
mote maden much joye
To apere in his presense
prestly þat tyme,
Þat alle prys and prowes
and pured þewes
Apendes to hys persoun,
and praysed is euer;
Byfore alle men vpon
molde his mensk is þe most.
Vch segge ful softly
sayde to his fere:
'Now schal we semlych se
sleȝtez of þewez
And þe teccheles termes
of talkyng noble,
Wich spede is in speche
vnspurd may we lerne,
Syn we haf fonged þat
fyne fader of nurture.
God hatz geuen vus his
grace godly for soþe,
Þat such a gest as Gawan
grauntez vus to haue,
When burnez blyþe of his
burþe schal sitte
In menyng of manerez
mere [folio 103v]
Þis burne now schal vus
bryng,
Schal lerne of
luf-talkyng.'
Bi þat þe diner watz
done and þe dere vp
Hit watz neȝ at þe niyȝt
neȝed þe tyme.
Chaplaynez to þe
chapeles chosen þe gate,
Rungen ful rychely, ryȝt
as þay schulden,
To þe hersum euensong of
þe hyȝe tyde.
Þe lorde loutes þerto,
and þe lady als,
Into a cumly closet
coyntly ho entrez.
Gawan glydez ful gay and
gos þeder sone;
Þe lorde laches hym by
þe lappe and ledez hym to sytte,
And couþly hym knowez
and callez hym his nome,
And sayde he watz þe
welcomest wyȝe of þe worlde;
And he hym þonkked
þroly, and ayþer halched oþer,
And seten soberly samen
þe seruise quyle.
Þenne lyst þe lady to
loke on þe knyȝt,
Þenne com ho of hir
closet with mony cler burdez.
Ho watz þe fayrest in
felle, of flesche and of lyre,
And of compas and colour
and costes, of alle oþer,
And wener þen Wenore,
as þe wyȝe þoȝt.
Ho ches þurȝ þe chaunsel
to cheryche þat hende.
An oþer lady hir lad bi
þe lyft honde,
Þat watz alder þen ho,
an auncian hit semed,
And heȝly honowred with
haþelez aboute.
Bot vnlyke on to loke þo
ladyes were,
For if þe ȝonge watz
ȝep, ȝolȝe watz þat oþer;
Riche red on þat on
rayled ayquere,
Rugh ronkled chekez þat
oþer on rolled;
Kerchofes of þat on,
wyth mony cler perlez,
Hir brest and hir bryȝt
þrote bare displayed,
Schon schyrer þen snawe
þat schedez on hillez;
Þat oþer wyth a gorger
watz gered ouer þe swyre,
Chymbled ouer hir blake
chyn with chalkquyte vayles,
Hir frount folden in
sylk, enfoubled ayquere,
Toreted and treleted
with tryflez aboute, [folio 104r]
Þat noȝt watz bare of
þat burde bot þe blake broȝes,
Þe tweyne yȝen and þe
nase, þe naked lyppez,
And þose were soure to
se and sellyly blered;
A mensk lady on molde
mon may hir calle,
Hir body watz schort
and þik,
Hir buttokez balȝ and
brode,
Watz þat scho hade on
lode.
When Gawayn glyȝt on þat
gay, þat graciously loked,
Wyth leue laȝt of þe
lorde he lent hem aȝaynes;
Þe alder he haylses,
heldande ful lowe,
Þe loueloker he lappez a
lyttel in armez,
He kysses hir comlyly,
and knyȝtly he melez.
Þay kallen hym of
aquoyntaunce, and he hit quyk askez
To be her seruaunt
sothly, if hemself lyked.
Þay tan hym bytwene hem,
wyth talkyng hym leden
To chambre, to chemné,
and chefly þay asken
Spycez, þat vnsparely
men speded hom to bryng,
And þe wynnelych wyne
þerwith vche tyme.
Þe lorde luflych aloft
lepez ful ofte,
Mynned merthe to be
made vpon mony syþez,
Hent heȝly of his hode,
and on a spere henged,
And wayned hom to wynne
þe worchip þerof,
Þat most myrþe myȝt meue
þat Crystenmas whyle--
'And I schal fonde, bi
my fayth, to fylter wyth þe best
Er me wont þe wede, with
help of my frendez.'
Þus wyth laȝande lotez
þe lorde hit tayt makez,
For to glade Sir Gawayn
with gomnez in halle
Sir Gawen his leue con
nyme
On þe morne, as vch mon
mynez þat tyme
Þat Dryȝtyn for oure
destyné to deȝe watz borne,
Wele waxez in vche a won
in worlde for his sake;
So did hit þere on þat
day þurȝ dayntés mony: [folio 104v]
Boþe at mes and at mele
messes ful quaynt
Derf men vpon dece drest
of þe best.
Þe olde auncian wyf
heȝest ho syttez,
Þe lorde lufly her by
lent, as I trowe;
Gawan and þe gay burde
togeder þay seten,
Euen inmyddez, as þe
messe metely come,
And syþen þurȝ al þe
sale as hem best semed.
Bi vche grome at his
degré grayþely watz serued
Þer watz mete, þer watz
myrþe, þer watz much ioye,
Þat for to telle þerof
hit me tene were,
And to poynte hit ȝet I
pyned me parauenture.
Bot ȝet I wot þat Wawen
and þe wale burde
Such comfort of her
compaynye caȝten togeder
Þurȝ her dere dalyaunce
of her derne wordez,
Wyth clene cortays carp
closed fro fylþe,
Þat hor play watz
passande vche prynce gomen,
Much pypyng þer
repayres;
And þay two tented
þayres.
Much dut watz þer
dryuen þat day and þat oþer,
And þe þryd as þro
þronge in þerafter;
Þe ioye of sayn Jonez
day watz gentyle to here,
And watz þe last of þe
layk, leudez þer þoȝten.
Þer wer gestes to go
vpon þe gray morne,
Forþy wonderly þay woke,
and þe wyn dronken,
Daunsed ful dreȝly wyth
dere carolez.
At þe last, when hit
watz late, þay lachen her leue,
Vchon to wende on his
way þat watz wyȝe stronge.
Gawan gef hym god day,
þe godmon hym lachchez,
Ledes hym to his awen
chambre, þe chymné bysyde,
And þere he draȝez hym
on dryȝe, and derely hym þonkkez
Of þe wynne worschip þat
he hym wayued hade,
As to honour his hous on
þat hyȝe tyde,
And enbelyse his burȝ
with his bele chere:
'Iwysse sir, quyl I
leue, me worþez þe better [folio 105r]
Þat Gawayn hatz ben my
gest at Goddez awen fest.'
'Grant merci, sir,' quoþ
Gawayn, 'in god fayth hit is yowrez,
Al þe honour is your
awen--þe heȝe kyng yow ȝelde!
And I am wyȝe at your
wylle to worch youre hest,
As I am halden þerto, in
hyȝe and in loȝe,
Þe lorde fast can hym
payne
To holde lenger þe
knyȝt;
Then frayned þe freke
ful fayre at himseluen
Quat derue dede had hym
dryuen at þat dere tyme
So kenly fro þe kyngez
kourt to kayre al his one,
Er þe halidayez holly
were halet out of toun.
'For soþe, sir,' quoþ þe
segge, 'ȝe sayn bot þe trawþe,
A heȝe ernde and a hasty
me hade fro þo wonez,
For I am sumned myselfe
to sech to a place,
I ne wot in worlde
whederwarde to wende hit to fynde.
I nolde bot if I hit
negh myȝt on Nw Ȝeres morne
For alle þe londe inwyth
Logres, so me oure lorde help!
Forþy, sir, þis enquest
I require yow here,
Þat ȝe me telle with
trawþe if euer ȝe tale herde
Of þe grene chapel,
quere hit on grounde stondez,
And of þe knyȝt þat hit
kepes, of colour of grene.
Þer watz stabled bi
statut a steuen vus bytwene
To mete þat mon at þat
mere, ȝif I myȝt last;
And of þat ilk Nw Ȝere
bot neked now wontez,
And I wolde loke on þat
lede, if God me let wolde,
Gladloker, bi Goddez
sun, þen any god welde!
Forþi, iwysse, bi ȝowre
wylle, wende me bihoues,
Naf I now to busy bot
bare þre dayez,
And me als fayn to falle
feye as fayly of myyn ernde.'
Þenne laȝande quoþ þe
lorde, 'Now leng þe byhoues,
For I schal teche yow to
þat terme bi þe tymez ende,
Þe grene chapayle vpon
grounde greue yow no more;
Bot ȝe schal be in yowre
bed, burne, at þyn ese,
Quyle forth dayez, and
ferk on þe fyrst of þe ȝere, [folio
105v]
And cum to þat merk at
mydmorn, to make quat yow likez
Dowellez whyle New
Ȝeres daye,
And rys, and raykez
þenne,
Mon schal yow sette in
waye,
Hit is not two myle
henne.'
Þenne watz Gawan ful
glad, and gomenly he laȝed:
'Now I þonk yow
þryuandely þurȝ alle oþer þynge,
Now acheued is my
chaunce, I schal at your wylle
Dowelle, and ellez do
quat ȝe demen.'
Þenne sesed hym þe syre
and set hym bysyde,
Let þe ladiez be fette
to lyke hem þe better.
Þer watz seme solace by
hemself stille;
Þe lorde let for luf
lotez so myry,
As wyȝ þat wolde of his
wyte, ne wyst quat he myȝt.
Þenne he carped to þe
knyȝt, criande loude,
'Ȝe han demed to do þe
dede þat I bidde;
Wyl ȝe halde þis hes
here at þys onez?'
'Ȝe, sir, for soþe,'
sayd þe segge trwe,
'Whyl I byde in yowre
borȝe, be bayn to ȝowre hest.'
'For ȝe haf trauayled,'
quoþ þe tulk, 'towen fro ferre,
And syþen waked me wyth,
ȝe arn not wel waryst
Nauþer of sostnaunce ne
of slepe, soþly I knowe;
Ȝe schal lenge in your
lofte, and lyȝe in your ese
To-morn quyle þe
messequyle, and to mete wende
When ȝe wyl, wyth my
wyf, þat wyth yow schal sitte
And comfort yow with
compayny, til I to cort torne;
Gauayn grantez alle
þyse,
Hym heldande, as þe
hende.
'Ȝet firre,' quoþ þe
freke, 'a forwarde we make:
Quat-so-euer I wynne in
þe wod hit worþez to yourez,
And quat chek so ȝe
acheue chaunge me þerforne.
Swete, swap we so, sware
with trawþe,
Queþer, leude, so lymp,
lere oþer better.'
'Bi God,' quoþ Gawayn þe
gode, 'I grant þertylle, [folio 106r]
And þat yow lyst for to
layke, lef hit me þynkes.'
'Who bryngez vus þis
beuerage, þis bargayn is maked':
So sayde þe lorde of þat
lede; þay laȝed vchone,
Þay dronken and
daylyeden and dalten vntyȝtel,
Þise lordez and ladyez,
quyle þat hem lyked;
And syþen with Frenkysch
fare and fele fayre lotez
Þay stoden and stemed
and stylly speken,
Kysten ful comlyly and
kaȝten her leue.
With mony leude ful lyȝt
and lemande torches
Vche burne to his bed
watz broȝt at þe laste,
Recorded couenauntez
ofte;
Þe olde lorde of þat
leude
Cowþe wel halde layk
alofte.
♫
Passus
III

ul
erly bifore þe day þe folk
vprysen,
Gestes þat
go wolde hor gromez þay
calden,
And þay
busken vp bilyue blonkkez to
sadel,
Tyffen her
takles, trussen her males,
Richen hem
þe rychest, to ryde alle
arayde,
Lepen vp
lyȝtly, lachen her brydeles,
Vche wyȝe on
his way þer hym wel lyked.
Þe leue
lorde of þe londe watz not
þe last
Arayed for
þe rydyng, with renkkez ful
mony;
Ete a sop
hastyly, when he hade herde
masse,
With bugle
to bent-felde he buskez
bylyue.
By þat any
daylyȝt lemed vpon erþe
He with his
haþeles on hyȝe horsses
weren.
Þenne þise
cacheres þat couþe cowpled
hor houndez,
Vnclosed þe
kenel dore and calde hem
þeroute,
Blwe bygly
in buglez þre bare mote;
Braches
bayed þerfore and breme
noyse maked;
And þay
chastysed and charred on
chasyng þat went,
A hundreth
of hunteres, as I haf herde
telle,
Couples
huntes of kest; [folio 106v]
At þe fyrst
quethe of þe quest quaked þe
wylde;
Der drof in
þe dale, doted for drede,
Hiȝed to þe
hyȝe, bot heterly þay were
Restayed
with þe stablye, þat stoutly
ascryed.
Þay let þe
herttez haf þe gate, with þe
hyȝe hedes,
Þe breme
bukkez also with hor brode
paumez;
For þe fre
lorde hade defende in
fermysoun tyme
Þat þer
schulde no mon meue to þe
male dere.
Þe hindez
were halden in with hay! and
war!
Þe does
dryuen with gret dyn to þe
depe sladez;
Þer myȝt mon
se, as þay slypte, slentyng
of arwes--
At vche
wende vnder wande wapped a
flone--
Þat bigly
bote on þe broun with ful
brode hedez.
What! þay
brayen, and bleden, bi
bonkkez þay deȝen,
And ay
rachches in a res radly hem
folȝes,
Hunterez
wyth hyȝe horne hasted hem
after
Wyth such a
crakkande kry as klyffes
haden brusten.
What wylde
so atwaped wyȝes þat
schotten
Watz al
toraced and rent at þe
resayt,
Bi þay were
tened at þe hyȝe and taysed
to þe wattrez;
Þe ledez
were so lerned at þe loȝe
trysteres,
And þe
grehoundez so grete, þat
geten hem bylyue
And hem
tofylched, as fast as frekez
myȝt loke,
Ful oft con
launce and lyȝt,
And drof
þat day wyth joy
Thus to þe
derk nyȝt.

Gaston Phebus,
Livre dou
Chasse
Þus laykez þis lorde by
lynde-wodez euez,
And Gawayn
þe god mon in gay bed lygez,
Lurkkez quyl
þe daylyȝt lemed on þe
wowes,
Vnder
couertour ful clere,
cortyned aboute;
And as in
slomeryng he slode, sleȝly
he herde
A littel dyn
at his dor, and dernly vpon;
And he heuez
vp his hed out of þe cloþes,
[folio 107r]
A corner of
þe cortyn he caȝt vp a
lyttel,
And waytez
warly þiderwarde quat hit be
myȝt.
Hit watz þe
ladi, loflyest to beholde,
Þat droȝ þe
dor after hir ful dernly and
stylle,
And boȝed
towarde þe bed; and þe burne
schamed,
And layde
hym doun lystyly, and let as
he slepte;
And ho
stepped stilly and stel to
his bedde,
Kest vp þe
cortyn and creped withinne,
And set hir
ful softly on þe bed-syde,
And lenged
þere selly longe to loke
quen he wakened.
Þe lede lay
lurked a ful longe quyle,
Compast in
his concience to quat þat
cace myȝt
Meue oþer
amount--to meruayle hym
þoȝt,
Bot ȝet he
sayde in hymself, 'More
semly hit were
To aspye
wyth my spelle in space quat
ho wolde.'
Þen he
wakenede, and wroth, and to
hir warde torned,
And vnlouked
his yȝe-lyddez, and let as
hym wondered,
And sayned
hym, as bi his saȝe þe sauer
to worthe,
with hande.

British Library, Cotton Nero
A.x, fol. 129r
Wyth chynne
and cheke ful swete,
Boþe quit
and red in blande,
Wyth lyppez
smal laȝande.
'God moroun,
Sir Gawayn,' sayde þat gay
lady,
'Ȝe ar a
sleper vnslyȝe, þat mon may
slyde hider;
Now ar ȝe
tan as-tyt! Bot true vus may
schape,
I schal
bynde yow in your bedde, þat
be ȝe trayst':
Al laȝande
þe lady lanced þo bourdez.
'Goud
moroun, gay,' quoþ Gawayn þe
blyþe,
'Me schal
worþe at your wille, and þat
me wel lykez,
For I ȝelde
me ȝederly, and ȝeȝe after
grace,
And þat is
þe best, be my dome, for me
byhouez nede':
And þus he
bourded aȝayn with mony a
blyþe laȝter.
'Bot wolde
ȝe, lady louely, þen leue me
grante,
And deprece
your prysoun, and pray hym
to ryse,
I wolde boȝe
of þis bed, and busk me
better;
I schulde
keuer þe more comfort to
karp yow wyth.' [folio 107v]
'Nay for
soþe, beau sir,' sayd þat
swete,
'Ȝe schal
not rise of your bedde, I
rych yow better,
I schal
happe yow here þat oþer half
als,
And syþen
karp wyth my knyȝt þat I
kaȝt haue;
For I wene
wel, iwysse, Sir Wowen ȝe
are,
Þat alle þe
worlde worchipez quere-so ȝe
ride;
Your honour,
your hendelayk is hendely
praysed
With lordez,
wyth ladyes, with alle þat
lyf bere.
And now ȝe
ar here, iwysse, and we bot
oure one;
My lorde and
his ledez ar on lenþe faren,
Oþer burnez
in her bedde, and my burdez
als,
Þe dor
drawen and dit with a derf
haspe;
And syþen I
haue in þis hous hym þat al
lykez,
I schal ware
my whyle wel, quyl hit
lastez,
Your
seruaunt be, and
schale.'
'In god
fayth,' quoþ Gawayn, 'gayn
hit me þynkkez,
Þaȝ I be not
now he þat ȝe of speken;
To reche to
such reuerence as ȝe reherce
here
I am wyȝe
vnworþy, I wot wel myseluen.
Bi God, I
were glad, and yow god þoȝt,
At saȝe oþer
at seruyce þat I sette myȝt
To þe
plesaunce of your prys--hit
were a pure ioye.'
'In god
fayth, Sir Gawayn,' quoþ þe
gay lady,
'Þe prys and
þe prowes þat plesez al
oþer,
If I hit
lakked oþer set at lyȝt, hit
were littel daynté;
Bot hit ar
ladyes innoȝe þat leuer wer
nowþe
Haf þe,
hende, in hor holde, as I þe
habbe here,
To daly with
derely your daynté wordez,
Keuer hem
comfort and colen her carez,
Þen much of
þe garysoun oþer golde þat
þay hauen.
Bot I louue
þat ilk lorde þat þe lyfte
haldez,
I haf hit
holly in my honde þat al
desyres,
Scho made
hym so gret chere, [folio
108r]
Þat watz so
fayr of face,
Þe knyȝt
with speches skere
'Madame,'
quoþ þe myry mon, 'Mary yow
ȝelde,
For I haf
founden, in god fayth, yowre
fraunchis nobele,
And oþer ful
much of oþer folk fongen bi
hor dedez,
Bot þe
daynté þat þay delen, for my
disert nys euen,
Hit is þe
worchyp of yourself, þat
noȝt bot wel connez.'
'Bi Mary,'
quoþ þe menskful, 'me þynk
hit an oþer;
For were I
worth al þe wone of wymmen
alyue,
And al þe
wele of þe worlde were in my
honde,
And I
schulde chepen and chose to
cheue me a lorde,
For þe
costes þat I haf knowen vpon
þe, knyȝt, here,
Of bewté and
debonerté and blyþe
semblaunt,
And þat I
haf er herkkened and halde
hit here trwee,
Þer schulde
no freke vpon folde bifore
yow be chosen.'
'Iwysse,
worþy,' quoþ þe wyȝe, 'ȝe
haf waled wel better,
Bot I am
proude of þe prys þat ȝe put
on me,
And, soberly
your seruaunt, my souerayn I
holde yow,
And yowre
knyȝt I becom, and Kryst yow
forȝelde.'
Þus þay
meled of muchquat til
mydmorn paste,
And ay þe
lady let lyk as hym loued
mych;
Þe freke
ferde with defence, and
feted ful fayre--
'Þaȝ I were
burde bryȝtest', þe burde in
mynde hade.
Þe lasse luf
in his lode for lur þat he
soȝt
Þe dunte
þat schulde hym deue,
And nedez
hit most be done.
Þe lady
þenn spek of leue,
Þenne ho gef
hym god day, and wyth a
glent laȝed,
And as ho
stod, ho stonyed hym wyth
ful stor wordez:
'Now he þat
spedez vche spech þis
disport ȝelde yow!
Bot þat ȝe
be Gawan, hit gotz in
mynde.'
'Querfore?'
quoþ þe freke, and freschly
he askez,
Ferde lest
he hade fayled in fourme of
his castes;
Bot þe burde
hym blessed, and 'Bi þis
skyl' sayde: [folio 108v]
'So god as
Gawayn gaynly is halden,
And
cortaysye is closed so clene
in hymseluen,
Couth not
lyȝtly haf lenged so long
wyth a lady,
Bot he had
craued a cosse, bi his
courtaysye,
Bi sum towch
of summe tryfle at sum talez
ende.'
Þen quoþ
Wowen: 'Iwysse, worþe as yow
lykez;
I schal
kysse at your comaundement,
as a knyȝt fallez,
And fire,
lest he displese yow, so
plede hit no more.'
Ho comes
nerre with þat, and cachez
hym in armez,
Loutez
luflych adoun and þe leude
kyssez.
Þay comly
bykennen to Kryst ayþer
oþer;
Ho dos hir
forth at þe dore withouten
dyn more;
And he
ryches hym to ryse and rapes
hym sone,
Clepes to
his chamberlayn, choses his
wede,
Boȝez forth,
quen he watz boun, blyþely
to masse;
And þenne he
meued to his mete þat
menskly hym keped,
And made
myry al day, til þe mone
rysed,
Watz neuer
freke fayrer fonge
Bitwene two
so dyngne dame,
Much solace
set þay same.
And ay þe
lorde of þe londe is lent on
his gamnez,
To hunt in
holtez and heþe at hyndez
barayne;
Such a sowme
he þer slowe bi þat þe sunne
heldet,
Of dos and
of oþer dere, to deme were
wonder.
Þenne fersly
þay flokked in folk at þe
laste,
And quykly
of þe quelled dere a querré
þay maked.
Þe best
boȝed þerto with burnez
innoghe,
Gedered þe
grattest of gres þat þer
were,
And didden
hem derely vndo as þe dede
askez;
Serched hem
at þe asay summe þat þer
were,
Two fyngeres
þay fonde of þe fowlest of
alle.
Syþen þay
slyt þe slot, sesed þe
erber,
Schaued wyth
a scharp knyf, and þe schyre
knitten;
Syþen rytte
þay þe foure lymmes, and
rent of þe hyde,
Þen brek þay
þe balé, þe bowelez out
token [folio 109r]
Lystily for
laucyng þe lere of þe knot;
Þay gryped
to þe gargulun, and grayþely
departed
Þe wesaunt
fro þe wynt-hole, and walt
out þe guttez;
Þen scher
þay out þe schulderez with
her scharp knyuez,
Haled hem by
a lyttel hole to haue hole
sydes.
Siþen
britned þay þe brest and
brayden hit in twynne,
And eft at
þe gargulun bigynez on
þenne,
Ryuez hit vp
radly ryȝt to þe byȝt,
Voydez out
þe avanters, and verayly
þerafter
Alle þe
rymez by þe rybbez radly þay
lance;
So ryde þay
of by resoun bi þe rygge
bonez,
Euenden to
þe haunche, þat henged alle
samen,
And heuen
hit vp al hole, and hwen hit
of þere,
And þat þay
neme for þe noumbles bi
nome, as I trowe,
Bi þe byȝt
al of þe þyȝes
Þe lappez
þay lance bihynde;
To hewe hit
in two þay hyȝes,
Boþe þe hede
and þe hals þay hwen of
þenne,
And syþen
sunder þay þe sydez swyft
fro þe chyne,
And þe
corbeles fee þay kest in a
greue;
Þenn þurled
þay ayþer þik side þurȝ bi
þe rybbe,
And henged
þenne ayþer bi hoȝez of þe
fourchez,
Vche freke
for his fee, as fallez for
to haue.
Vpon a felle
of þe fayre best fede þay
þayr houndes
Wyth þe
lyuer and þe lyȝtez, þe
leþer of þe paunchez,
And bred
baþed in blod blende
þeramongez.
Baldely þay
blw prys, bayed þayr
rachchez,
Syþen fonge
þay her flesche, folden to
home,
Strakande
ful stoutly mony stif motez.
Bi þat þe
daylyȝt watz done þe douthe
watz al wonen
Into þe
comly castel, þer þe knyȝt
bidez
Wyth blys
and bryȝt fyr bette.
Þe lorde is
comen þertylle;
When Gawayn
wyth hym mette
Þer watz
bot wele at wylle. [folio
109v]
Thenne
comaunded þe lorde in þat
sale to samen alle þe meny,
Boþe þe
ladyes on loghe to lyȝt with
her burdes
Bifore alle
þe folk on þe flette, frekez
he beddez
Verayly his
venysoun to fech hym
byforne,
And al godly
in gomen Gawayn he called,
Techez hym
to þe tayles of ful tayt
bestes,
Schewez hym
þe schyree grece schorne
vpon rybbes.
'How payez
yow þis play? Haf I prys
wonnen?
Haue I
þryuandely þonk þurȝ my
craft serued?'
'Ȝe iwysse,'
quoþ þat oþer wyȝe, 'here is
wayth fayrest
Þat I seȝ
þis seuen ȝere in sesoun of
wynter.'
'And al I
gif yow, Gawayn,' quoþ þe
gome þenne,
'For by
acorde of couenaunt ȝe craue
hit as your awen.'
'Þis is
soth,' quoþ þe segge, 'I say
yow þat ilke:
Þat I haf
worthyly wonnen þis wonez
wythinne,
Iwysse with
as god wylle hit worþez to
ȝourez.'
He hasppez
his fayre hals his armez
wythinne,
And kysses
hym as comlyly as he couþe
awyse:
'Tas yow
þere my cheuicaunce, I
cheued no more;
I wowche hit
saf fynly, þaȝ feler hit
were.'
'Hit is
god,' quoþ þe godmon, 'grant
mercy þerfore.
Hit may be
such hit is þe better, and
ȝe me breue wolde
Where ȝe wan
þis ilk wele bi wytte of
yorseluen.'
'Þat watz
not forward,' quoþ he,
'frayst me no more.
For ȝe haf
tan þat yow tydez, trawe non
oþer
Þay laȝed,
and made hem blyþe
Wyth lotez
þat were to lowe;
To soper
þay ȝede as-swyþe,
And syþen by
þe chymné in chamber þay
seten,
Wyȝez þe
walle wyn weȝed to hem oft,
And efte in
her bourdyng þay bayþen in
þe morn
To fylle þe
same forwardez þat þay
byfore maden:
Wat chaunce
so bytydez hor cheuysaunce
to chaunge,
What nwez so
þay nome, at naȝt quen þay
metten.
Þay acorded
of þe couenauntez byfore þe
court alle; [folio 110r]
Þe beuerage
watz broȝt forth in bourde
at þat tyme,
Þenne þay
louelych leȝten leue at þe
last,
Vche burne
to his bedde busked bylyue.
Bi þat þe
coke hade crowen and cakled
bot þryse,
Þe lorde
watz lopen of his bedde, þe
leudez vchone;
So þat þe
mete and þe masse watz
metely delyuered,
Þe douthe
dressed to þe wod, er any
day sprenged,
Heȝ with
hunte and hornez
Þurȝ
playnez þay passe in space,
Vncoupled
among þo þornez
SONE þay
calle of a quest in a ker
syde,
Þe hunt
rehayted þe houndez þat hit
fyrst mynged,
Wylde wordez
hym warp wyth a wrast noyce;
Þe howndez
þat hit herde hastid þider
swyþe,
And fellen
as fast to þe fuyt, fourty
at ones;
Þenne such
a glauer ande glam of
gedered rachchez
Ros, þat þe
rocherez rungen aboute;
Hunterez hem
hardened with horne and wyth
muthe.
Þen al in a
semblé sweyed togeder,
Bitwene a
flosche in þat fryth and a
foo cragge;
In a knot bi
a clyffe, at þe kerre syde,
Þer as þe
rogh rocher vnrydely watz
fallen,
Þay ferden
to þe fyndyng, and frekez
hem after;
Þay
vmbekesten þe knarre and þe
knot boþe,
Wyȝez, whyl
þay wysten wel wythinne hem
hit were,
Þe best þat
þer breued watz wyth þe
blodhoundez.
Þenne þay
beten on þe buskez, and bede
hym vpryse,
And he
vnsoundyly out soȝt seggez
ouerþwert;
On þe
sellokest swyn swenged out
þere,
Long sythen
fro þe sounder þat siȝed for
olde,
For he watz
breme, bor alþer-grattest,
Ful grymme
quen he gronyed; þenne
greued mony,
For þre at
þe fyrst þrast he þryȝt to
þe erþe,
And sparred
forth good sped boute spyt
more.
Þise oþer
halowed hyghe! ful hyȝe, and
hay! hay! cryed, [folio
110v]
Haden hornez
to mouþe, heterly rechated;
Mony watz þe
myry mouthe of men and of
houndez
Þat buskkez
after þis bor with bost and
wyth noyse
Ful oft he
bydez þe baye,
And maymez
þe mute inn melle;
He hurtez
of þe houndez, and þay
Ful ȝomerly
ȝaule and ȝelle.
Schalkez to
schote at hym schowen to
þenne,
Haled to hym
of her arewez, hitten hym
oft;
Bot þe
poyntez payred at þe pyth
þat pyȝt in his scheldez,
And þe
barbez of his browe bite non
wolde--
Þaȝ þe
schauen schaft schyndered in
pecez,
Þe hede
hypped aȝayn were-so-euer
hit hitte.
Bot quen þe
dyntez hym dered of her
dryȝe strokez,
Þen,
braynwod for bate, on burnez
he rasez,
Hurtez hem
ful heterly þer he forth
hyȝez,
And mony
arȝed þerat, and on lyte
droȝen.
Bot þe lorde
on a lyȝt horce launces hym
after,
As burne
bolde vpon bent his bugle he
blowez,
He rechated,
and rode þurȝ ronez ful þyk,
Suande þis
wylde swyn til þe sunne
schafted.
Þis day wyth
þis ilk dede þay dryuen on
þis wyse,
Whyle oure
luflych lede lys in his
bedde,
Gawayn
grayþely at home, in gerez
ful ryche
Ho commes to
þe cortyn, and at þe knyȝt
totes.
Sir Wawen
her welcumed worþy on fyrst,
And ho hym
ȝeldez aȝayn ful ȝerne of
hir wordez,
Settez hir
softly by his syde, and
swyþely ho laȝez,
And wyth a
luflych loke ho layde hym
þyse wordez:
'Sir, ȝif ȝe
be Wawen, wonder me þynkkez,
Wyȝe þat is
so wel wrast alway to god,
And connez
not of compaynye þe costez
vndertake, [folio 111r]
And if mon
kennes yow hom to knowe, ȝe
kest hom of your mynde;
Þou hatz
forȝeten ȝederly þat
ȝisterday I taȝtte
Bi
alder-truest token of talk
þat I cowþe.'
'What is
þat?' quoþ þe wyghe, 'Iwysse
I wot neuer;
If hit be
sothe þat ȝe breue, þe blame
is myn awen.'
'Ȝet I kende
yow of kyssyng,' quoþ þe
clere þenne,
'Quere-so
countenaunce is couþe quikly
to clayme;
Þat bicumes
vche a knyȝt þat cortaysy
vses.'
'Do way,'
quoþ þat derf mon, 'my dere,
þat speche,
For þat
durst I not do, lest I
deuayed were;
If I were
werned, I were wrang,
iwysse, ȝif I profered.'
'Ma fay,'
quoþ þe meré wyf, 'ȝe may
not be werned,
Ȝe ar stif
innoghe to constrayne wyth
strenkþe, ȝif yow lykez,
Ȝif any were
so vilanous þat yow devaye
wolde.'
'Ȝe, be
God,' quoþ Gawayn, 'good is
your speche,
Bot þrete is
vnþryuande in þede þer I
lende,
And vche
gift þat is geuen not with
goud wylle.
I am at your
comaundement, to kysse quen
yow lykez,
Ȝe may lach
quen yow lyst, and leue quen
yow þynkkez,
And comlyly
kysses his face,
Much speche
þay þer expoun
Of druryes
greme and grace.
'I woled wyt
at yow, wyȝe,' þat worþy þer
sayde,
'And yow
wrathed not þerwyth, what
were þe skylle
Þat so ȝong
and so ȝepe as ȝe at þis
tyme,
So cortayse,
so knyȝtyly, as ȝe ar knowen
oute--
And of alle
cheualry to chose, þe chef
þyng alosed
Is þe lel
layk of luf, þe lettrure of
armes;
For to telle
of þis teuelyng of þis trwe
knyȝtez,
Hit is þe
tytelet token and tyxt of
her werkkez,
How ledes
for her lele luf hor lyuez
han auntered,
Endured for
her drury dulful stoundez,
And after
wenged with her walour and
voyded her care,
And broȝt
blysse into boure with
bountees hor awen--
And ȝe ar
knyȝt comlokest kyd of your
elde, [folio 111v]
Your worde
and your worchip walkez
ayquere,
And I haf
seten by yourself here sere
twyes,
Ȝet herde I
neuer of your hed helde no
wordez
Þat euer
longed to luf, lasse ne
more;
And ȝe, þat
ar so cortays and coynt of
your hetes,
Oghe to a
ȝonke þynk ȝern to schewe
And teche
sum tokenez of trweluf
craftes.
Why! ar ȝe
lewed, þat alle þe los
weldez?
Oþer elles
ȝe demen me to dille your
dalyaunce to herken?
I com hider
sengel, and sitte
To lerne at
yow sum game;
Dos, techez
me of your wytte,
Whil my
lorde is fro hame.'
'In goud
fayþe,' quoþ Gawayn, 'God
yow forȝelde!
Gret is þe
gode gle, and gomen to me
huge,
Þat so worþy
as ȝe wolde wynne hidere,
And pyne yow
with so pouer a mon, as play
wyth your knyȝt
With
anyskynnez countenaunce, hit
keuerez me ese;
Bot to take
þe toruayle to myself to
trwluf expoun,
And towche
þe temez of tyxt and talez
of armez
To yow þat,
I wot wel, weldez more slyȝt
Of þat art,
bi þe half, or a hundreth of
seche
As I am,
oþer euer schal, in erde þer
I leue,
Hit were a
folé felefolde, my fre, by
my trawþe.
I wolde
yowre wylnyng worche at my
myȝt,
As I am
hyȝly bihalden, and euermore
wylle
Be seruaunt
to yourseluen, so saue me
Dryȝtyn!'
Þus hym
frayned þat fre, and fondet
hym ofte,
For to haf
wonnen hym to woȝe, what-so
scho þoȝt ellez;
Bot he
defended hym so fayr þat no
faut semed,
Ne non euel
on nawþer halue, nawþer þay
wysten
Þay laȝed
and layked longe;
At þe last
scho con hym kysse,
Hir leue
fayre con scho fonge
And went
hir waye, iwysse.
Then ruþes
hym þe renk and ryses to þe
masse, [folio 112r]
And siþen
hor diner watz dyȝt and
derely serued.
Þe lede with
þe ladyez layked alle day,
Bot þe lorde
ouer þe londez launced ful
ofte,
Swez his
vncely swyn, þat swyngez bi
þe bonkkez
And bote þe
best of his brachez þe
bakkez in sunder
Þer he bode
in his bay, tel bawemen hit
breken,
And madee
hym mawgref his hed for to
mwe vtter,
So felle
flonez þer flete when þe
folk gedered.
Bot ȝet þe
styffest to start bi
stoundez he made,
Til at þe
last he watz so mat he myȝt
no more renne,
Bot in þe
hast þat he myȝt he to a
hole wynnez
Of a rasse
bi a rokk þer rennez þe
boerne.
He gete þe
bonk at his bak, bigynez to
scrape,
Þe froþe
femed at his mouth vnfayre
bi þe wykez,
Whettez his
whyte tuschez; with hym þen
irked
Alle þe
burnez so bolde þat hym by
stoden
To nye hym
on-ferum, bot neȝe hym non
durst
He hade
hurt so mony byforne
Þat al þuȝt
þenne ful loþe
Be more
wyth his tusches torne,
Þat breme
watz and braynwod bothe,
Tres Riches Heures du Duc
de Berry, December,
Boar Hunt
Til þe knyȝt
com hymself, kachande his
blonk,
Syȝ hym byde
at þe bay, his burnez
bysyde;
He lyȝtes
luflych adoun, leuez his
corsour,
Braydez out
a bryȝt bront and bigly
forth strydez,
Foundez fast
þurȝ þe forth þer þe felle
bydez.
Þe wylde
watz war of þe wyȝe with
weppen in honde,
Hef hyȝly þe
here, so hetterly he fnast
Þat fele
ferde for þe freke, lest
felle hym þe worre.
Þe swyn
settez hym out on þe segge
euen,
Þat þe burne
and þe bor were boþe vpon
hepez
In þe
wyȝtest of þe water; þe
worre hade þat oþer,
For þe mon
merkkez hym wel, as þay
mette fyrst,
Set sadly þe
scharp in þe slot euen,
Hit hym vp
to þe hult, þat þe hert
schyndered,
And he
ȝarrande hym ȝelde, and
ȝedoun þe water [folio 112v]
A hundreth
houndez hym hent,
Þat bremely
con hym bite,
Burnez him
broȝt to bent,
And doggez
to dethe endite.
There watz
blawyng of prys in mony
breme horne,
Heȝe
halowing on hiȝe with
haþelez þat myȝt;
Brachetes
bayed þat best, as bidden þe
maysterez
Of þat
chargeaunt chace þat were
chef huntes.
Þenne a wyȝe
þat watz wys vpon wodcraftez
To vnlace
þis bor lufly bigynnez.
Fyrst he
hewes of his hed and on hiȝe
settez,
And syþen
rendez him al roghe bi þe
rygge after,
Braydez out
þe boweles, brennez hom on
glede,
With bred
blent þerwith his braches
rewardez.
Syþen he
britnez out þe brawen in
bryȝt brode cheldez,
And hatz out
þe hastlettez, as hiȝtly
bisemez;
And ȝet hem
halchez al hole þe haluez
togeder,
And syþen on
a stif stange stoutly hem
henges.
Now with þis
ilk swyn þay swengen to
home;
Þe bores hed
watz borne bifore þe burnes
seluen
Þat him
forferde in þe forþe þurȝ
forse of his honde
In halle
hym poȝt ful longe;
He calde,
and he com gayn
His feez
þer for to fonge.
Þe lorde ful
lowde with lote and laȝter
myry,
When he seȝe
Sir Gawayn, with solace he
spekez;
Þe goude
ladyez were geten, and
gedered þe meyny,
He schewez
hem þe scheldez, and schapes
hem þe tale
Of þe
largesse and þe lenþe, þe
liþernez alse
Of þe were
of þe wylde swyn in wod þer
he fled.
Þat oþer
knyȝt ful comly comended his
dedez,
And praysed
hit as gret prys þat he
proued hade,
For suche a
brawne of a best, þe bolde
burne sayde,
Ne such
sydes of a swyn segh he
neuer are.
Þenne
hondeled þay þe hoge hed, þe
hende mon hit praysed,
[folio 113r]
And let
lodly þerat þe lorde for to
here.
'Now,
Gawayn,' quoþ þe godmon,
'þis gomen is your awen
Bi fyn
forwarde and faste, faythely
ȝe knowe.'
'Hit is
sothe,' quoþ þe segge, 'and
as siker trwe
Alle my get
I schal yow gif agayn, bi my
trawþe.'
He hent þe
haþel aboute þe halse, and
hendely hym kysses,
And
eftersones of þe same he
serued hym þere.
'Now ar we
euen,' quoþ þe haþel, 'in
þis euentide
Of alle þe
couenauntes þat we knyt,
syþen I com hider,
Þe lorde
sayde, 'Bi saynt Gile,
Ȝe ar þe
best þat I knowe!
Such
chaffer and ȝe drowe.'
Þenne þay
teldet tablez trestes
alofte,
Kesten
cloþen vpon; clere lyȝt
þenne
Wakned bi
woȝez, waxen torches;
Seggez sette
and serued in sale al
aboute;
Much glam
and gle glent vp þerinne
Aboute þe
fyre vpon flet, and on fele
wyse
At þe soper
and after, mony aþel songez,
As coundutes
of Krystmasse and carolez
newe
With al þe
manerly merþe þat mon may of
telle,
And euer
oure luflych knyȝt þe lady
bisyde.
Such
semblaunt to þat segge semly
ho made
Wyth stille
stollen countenaunce, þat
stalworth to plese,
Þat al
forwondered watz þe wyȝe,
and wroth with hymseluen,
Bot he nolde
not for his nurture nurne
hir aȝaynez,
Bot dalt
with hir al in daynté,
how-se-euer þe dede turned
Quen þay
hade played in halle
As longe as
hor wylle hom last,
To chambre
he con hym calle,
And to þe
chemné þay past.
Ande þer þay
dronken, and dalten, and
demed eft nwe
To norne on
þe same note on Nwe Ȝerez
euen;
Bot þe knyȝt
craued leue to kayre on þe
morn,
For hit watz
neȝ at þe terme þat he to
schulde. [folio 113v]
Þe lorde hym
letted of þat, to lenge hym
resteyed,
And sayde,
'As I am trwe segge, I siker
my trawþe
Þou schal
cheue to þe grene chapel þy
charres to make,
Leude, on Nw
Ȝerez lyȝt, longe bifore
pryme.
Forþy þow
lye in þy loft and lach þyn
ese,
And I schal
hunt in þis holt, and halde
þe towchez,
Chaunge wyth
þe cheuisaunce, bi þat I
charre hider;
For I haf
fraysted þe twys, and
faythful I fynde þe.
Now "þrid
tyme þrowe best" þenk on þe
morne,
Make we mery
quyl we may and mynne vpon
joye,
For þe lur
may mon lach when-so mon
lykez.'
Þis watz
grayþely graunted, and
Gawayn is lenged,
Bliþe broȝt
watz hym drynk, and þay to
bedde ȝeden
Sir Gawayn
lis and slepes
Ful stille
and softe al niȝt;
Þe lorde
þat his craftez kepes,
After messe
a morsel he and his men
token;
Miry watz þe
mornyng, his mounture he
askes.
Alle þe
haþeles þat on horse schulde
helden hym after
Were boun
busked on hor blonkkez
bifore þe halle ȝatez.
Ferly fayre
watz þe folde, for þe forst
clenged;
In rede
rudede vpon rak rises þe
sunne,
And ful
clere costez þe clowdes of
þe welkyn.
Hunteres
vnhardeled bi a holt syde,
Rocheres
roungen bi rys for rurde of
her hornes;
Summe fel in
þe fute þer þe fox bade,
Traylez ofte
a traueres bi traunt of her
wyles;
A kenet
kyres þerof, þe hunt on hym
calles;
His felaȝes
fallen hym to, þat fnasted
ful þike,
Runnen forth
in a rabel in his ryȝt fare,
And he
fyskez hem byfore; þay
founden hym sone,
And quen þay
seghe hym with syȝt þay sued
hym fast,
Wreȝande hym
ful weterly with a wroth
noyse;
And he
trantes and tornayeez þurȝ
mony tene greue,
Hauilounez,
and herkenez bi heggez ful
ofte. [folio 114r]
At þe last
bi a littel dich he lepez
ouer a spenne,
Stelez out
ful stilly bi a strothe
rande,
Went haf
wylt of þe wode with wylez
fro þe houndes;
Þenne watz
he went, er he wyst, to a
wale tryster,
Þer þre þro
at a þrich þrat hym at ones,
And stifly
start on-stray,
Thenne watz
hit list vpon lif to lyþen
þe houndez,
When alle þe
mute hade hym met, menged
togeder:
Suche a
sorȝe at þat syȝt þay sette
on his hede
As alle þe
clamberande clyffes hade
clatered on hepes;
Here he watz
halawed, when haþelez hym
metten,
Loude he
watz ȝayned with ȝarande
speche;
Þer he watz
þreted and ofte þef called,
And ay þe
titleres at his tayl, þat
tary he ne myȝt;
Ofte he watz
runnen at, when he out
rayked,
And ofte
reled in aȝayn, so Reniarde
watz wylé.
And ȝe he
lad hem bi lagmon, þe lorde
and his meyny,
On þis maner
bi þe mountes quyle
myd-ouer-vnder,
Whyle þe
hende knyȝt at home holsumly
slepes
Withinne þe
comly cortynes, on þe colde
morne.
Bot þe lady
for luf let not to slepe,
Ne þe
purpose to payre þat pyȝt in
hir hert,
Bot ros hir
vp radly, rayked hir þeder
In a mery
mantyle, mete to þe erþe,
Þat watz
furred ful fyne with fellez
wel pured,
No hwef goud
on hir hede bot þe haȝer
stones
Trased
aboute hir tressour be
twenty in clusteres;
Hir þryuen
face and hir þrote þrowen al
naked,
Hir brest
bare bifore, and bihinde
eke.
Ho comez
withinne þe chambre dore,
and closes hit hir after,
Wayuez vp a
wyndow, and on þe wyȝe
callez,
And radly
þus rehayted hym with hir
riche wordes,
'A! mon,
how may þou slepe, [folio
114v]
Þis morning
is so clere?'
He watz in
drowping depe,
Bot þenne
he con hir here.
In dreȝ
droupyng of dreme draueled
þat noble,
As mon þat
watz in mornyng of mony þro
þoȝtes,
How þat
destiné schulde þat day dele
hym his wyrde
At þe grene
chapel, when he þe gome
metes,
And bihoues
his buffet abide withoute
debate more;
Bot quen þat
comly com he keuered his
wyttes,
Swenges out
of þe sweuenes, and swarez
with hast.
Þe lady
luflych com laȝande swete,
Felle ouer
his fayre face, and fetly
hym kyssed;
He welcumez
hir worþily with a wale
chere.
He seȝ hir
so glorious and gayly
atyred,
So fautles
of hir fetures and of so
fyne hewes,
Wiȝt
wallande joye warmed his
hert.
With smoþe
smylyng and smolt þay smeten
into merþe,
Þat al watz
blis and bonchef þat breke
hem bitwene,
Much wele
þen watz þerinne;
Gret perile
bitwene hem stod,
Nif Maré of
hir knyȝt mynne.
For þat
prynces of pris depresed hym
so þikke,
Nurned hym
so neȝe þe þred, þat nede
hym bihoued
Oþer lach
þer hir luf, oþer lodly
refuse.
He cared for
his cortaysye, lest craþayn
he were,
And more for
his meschef ȝif he schulde
make synne,
And be
traytor to þat tolke þat þat
telde aȝt.
'God
schylde,' quoþ þe schalk,
'þat schal not befalle!'
With
luf-laȝyng a lyt he layd hym
bysyde
Alle þe
spechez of specialté þat
sprange of her mouthe.
Quoþ þat
burde to þe burne, 'Blame ȝe
disserue,
Ȝif ȝe luf
not þat lyf þat ȝe lye
nexte,
Bifore alle
þe wyȝez in þe worlde
wounded in hert,
Bot if ȝe
haf a lemman, a leuer, þat
yow lykez better,
And folden
fayth to þat fre, festned so
harde [folio 115r]
Þat yow
lausen ne lyst--and þat I
leue nouþe;
And þat ȝe
telle me þat now trwly I
pray yow,
For alle þe
lufez vpon lyue layne not þe
soþe
Þe knyȝt
sayde, 'Be sayn Jon,'
And smeþely
con he smyle,
'In fayth I
welde riȝt non,
Ne non wil
welde þe quile.'
'Þat is a
worde,' quoþ þat wyȝt, 'þat
worst is of alle,
Bot I am
swared for soþe, þat sore me
þinkkez.
Kysse me now
comly, and I schal cach
heþen,
I may bot
mourne vpon molde, as may
þat much louyes.'
Sykande ho
sweȝe doun and semly hym
kyssed,
And siþen ho
seueres hym fro, and says as
ho stondes,
'Now, dere,
at þis departyng do me þis
ese,
Gif me
sumquat of þy gifte, þi
gloue if hit were,
Þat I may
mynne on þe, mon, my
mournyng to lassen.'
'Now
iwysse,' quoþ þat wyȝe, 'I
wolde I hade here
Þe leuest
þing for þy luf þat I in
londe welde,
For ȝe haf
deserued, for soþe, sellyly
ofte
More rewarde
bi resoun þen I reche myȝt;
Bot to dele
yow for drurye þat dawed bot
neked,
Hit is not
your honour to haf at þis
tyme
A gloue for
a garysoun of Gawaynez
giftez,
And I am
here an erande in erdez
vncouþe,
And haue no
men wyth no malez with
menskful þingez;
Þat mislykez
me, ladé, for luf at þis
tyme,
Iche tolke
mon do as he is tan, tas to
non ille
'Nay, hende
of hyȝe honours,'
Quoþ þat
lufsum vnder lyne,
'Þaȝ I hade
noȝt of yourez,
Ȝet schulde
ȝe haue of myne.'
Ho raȝt hym
a riche rynk of red golde
werkez,
Wyth a
starande ston stondande
alofte
Þat bere
blusschande bemez as þe
bryȝt sunne;
Wyt ȝe wel,
hit watz worth wele ful
hoge.
Bot þe renk
hit renayed, and redyly he
sayde, [folio 115v]
'I wil no
giftez, for Gode, my gay, at
þis tyme;
I haf none
yow to norne, ne noȝt wyl I
take.'
Ho bede hit
hym ful bysily, and he hir
bode wernes,
And swere
swyfte by his sothe þat he
hit sese nolde,
And ho soré
þat he forsoke, and sayde
þerafter,
'If ȝe renay
my rynk, to ryche for hit
semez,
Ȝe wolde not
so hyȝly halden be to me,
I schal gif
yow my girdel, þat gaynes
yow lasse.'
Ho laȝt a
lace lyȝtly þat leke vmbe
hir sydez,
Knit vpon
hir kyrtel vnder þe clere
mantyle,
Gered hit
watz with grene sylke and
with golde schaped,
Noȝt bot
arounde brayden, beten with
fyngrez;
And þat ho
bede to þe burne, and
blyþely bisoȝt,
Þaȝ hit
vnworþi were, þat he hit
take wolde.
And he nay
þat he nolde neghe in no
wyse
Nauþer golde
ne garysoun, er God hym
grace sende
To acheue to
þe chaunce þat he hade
chosen þere.
'And
þerfore, I pray yow,
displese yow noȝt,
And lettez
be your bisinesse, for I
bayþe hit yow neuer
I am derely
to yow biholde
Bicause of
your sembelaunt,
And euer in
hot and colde
To be your
trwe seruaunt.'
'Now forsake
ȝe þis silke,' sayde þe
burde þenne,
'For hit is
symple in hitself? And so
hit wel semez.
Lo! so hit
is littel, and lasse hit is
worþy;
Bot who-so
knew þe costes þat knit ar
þerinne,
He wolde hit
prayse at more prys,
parauenture;
For quat
gome so is gorde with þis
grene lace,
While he hit
hade hemely halched aboute,
Þer is no
haþel vnder heuen tohewe hym
þat myȝt,
For he myȝt
not be slayn for slyȝt vpon
erþe.'
Þen kest þe
knyȝt, and hit come to his
hert
Hit were a
juel for þe jopardé þat hym
iugged were:
When he
acheued to þe chapel his
chek for to fech,
Myȝt he haf
slypped to be vnslayn, þe
sleȝt were noble. [folio
116r]
Þenne he
þulged with hir þrepe and
þoled hir to speke,
And ho bere
on hym þe belt and bede hit
hym swyþe--
And he
granted and hym gafe with a
goud wylle--
And bisoȝt
hym, for hir sake, disceuer
hit neuer,
Bot to lelly
layne fro hir lorde; þe
leude hym acordez
Þat neuer
wyȝe schulde hit wyt,
iwysse, bot þay twayne
He þonkked
hir oft ful swyþe,
Ful þro
with hert and þoȝt.
Ho hatz
kyst þe knyȝt so toȝt.
Thenne
lachchez ho hir leue, and
leuez hym þere,
For more
myrþe of þat mon moȝt ho not
gete.
When ho watz
gon, Sir Gawayn gerez hym
sone,
Rises and
riches hym in araye noble,
Lays vp þe
luf-lace þe lady hym raȝt,
Hid hit ful
holdely, þer he hit eft
fonde.
Syþen
cheuely to þe chapel choses
he þe waye,
Preuély
aproched to a prest, and
prayed hym þere
Þat he wolde
lyste his lyf and lern hym
better
How his
sawle schulde be saued when
he schuld seye heþen.
Þere he
schrof hym schyrly and
schewed his mysdedez,
Of þe more
and þe mynne, and merci
besechez,
And of
absolucioun he on þe segge
calles;
And he
asoyled hym surely and sette
hym so clene
As domezday
schulde haf ben diȝt on þe
morn.
And syþen he
mace hym as mery among þe
fre ladyes,
With comlych
caroles and alle kynnes
ioye,
As neuer he
did bot þat daye, to þe derk
nyȝt,
Vche mon
hade daynté þare
Of hym, and
sayde, 'Iwysse,
Þus myry he
watz neuer are,
Syn he com
hider, er þis.'
Now hym
lenge in þat lee, þer luf
hym bityde!
Ȝet is þe
lorde on þe launde ledande
his gomnes.
He hatz
forfaren þis fox þat he
folȝed longe;
As he sprent
ouer a spenne to spye þe
schrewe, [folio 116v]
Þer as he
herd þe howndes þat hasted
hym swyþe,
Renaud com
richchande þurȝ a roȝe
greue,
And alle þe
rabel in a res ryȝt at his
helez.
Þe wyȝe watz
war of þe wylde, and warly
abides,
And braydez
out þe bryȝt bronde, and at
þe best castez.
And he
schunt for þe scharp, and
schulde haf arered;
A rach rapes
hym to, ryȝt er he myȝt,
And ryȝt
bifore þe hors fete þay fel
on hym alle,
And woried
me þis wyly wyth a wroth
noyse.
Þe lorde
lyȝtez bilyue, and lachez
hym sone,
Rased hym
ful radly out of þe rach
mouþes,
Haldez heȝe
ouer his hede, halowez
faste,
And þer
bayen hym mony braþ houndez.
Huntes hyȝed
hem þeder with hornez ful
mony,
Ay
rechatande aryȝt til þay þe
renk seȝen.
Bi þat watz
comen his compeyny noble,
Alle þat
euer ber bugle blowed at
ones,
And alle
þise oþer halowed þat hade
no hornes;
Hit watz þe
myriest mute þat euer men
herde,
Þe rich rurd
þat þer watz raysed for
Renaude saule
Hor houndez
þay þer rewarde,
Her hedez
þay fawne and frote,
And syþen
þay tan Reynarde,
And tyruen
of his cote.

Gaston Phebus,
Li Livre
dou chasse, dogs
And þenne
þay helden to home, for hit
watz nieȝ nyȝt,
Strakande
ful stoutly in hor store
hornez.
Þe lorde is
lyȝt at þe laste at hys lef
home,
Fyndez fire
vpon flet, þe freke
þer-byside,
Sir Gawayn
þe gode, þat glad watz
withalle,
Among þe
ladies for luf he ladde much
ioye;
He were a
bleaunt of blwe þat bradde
to þe erþe,
His surkot
semed hym wel þat softe watz
forred,
And his hode
of þat ilke henged on his
schulder,
Blande al of
blaunner were boþe al
aboute.
He metez me
þis godmon inmyddez þe
flore,
And al with
gomen he hym gret, and
goudly he sayde,
'I schal
fylle vpon fyrst oure
forwardez nouþe, [folio
117r]
Þat we
spedly han spoken, þer
spared watz no drynk.'
Þen acoles
he þe knyȝt and kysses hym
þryes,
As sauerly
and sadly as he hem sette
couþe.
'Bi Kryst,'
quoþ þat oþer knyȝt, 'Ȝe
cach much sele
In
cheuisaunce of þis chaffer,
ȝif ȝe hade goud chepez.'
'Ȝe, of þe
chepe no charg,' quoþ chefly
þat oþer,
'As is
pertly payed þe chepez þat I
aȝte.'
'Mary,'
quoþ þat oþer mon, 'myn is
bihynde,
For I haf
hunted al þis day, and noȝt
haf I geten
Bot þis
foule fox felle--þe fende
haf þe godez!--
And þat is
ful pore for to pay for
suche prys þinges
As ȝe haf
þryȝt me here þro, suche þre
cosses
'I þonk
yow, bi þe rode',
And how þe
fox watz slayn
He tolde
hym as þay stode.
With merþe
and mynstralsye, with metez
at hor wylle,
Þay maden as
mery as any men moȝten--
With laȝyng
of ladies, with lotez of
bordes
Gawayn and
þe godemon so glad were þay
boþe--
Bot if þe
douthe had doted, oþer
dronken ben oþer.
Boþe þe mon
and þe meyny maden mony
iapez,
Til þe
sesoun watz seȝen þat þay
seuer moste;
Burnez to
hor bedde behoued at þe
laste.
Þenne loȝly
his leue at þe lorde fyrst
Fochchez þis
fre mon, and fayre he hym
þonkkez:
'Of such a
selly soiorne as I haf hade
here,
Your honour
at þis hyȝe fest, þe hyȝe
kyng yow ȝelde!
I ȝef yow me
for on of yourez, if
yowreself lykez,
For I mot
nedes, as ȝe wot, meue
to-morne,
And ȝe me
take sum tolke to teche, as
ȝe hyȝt,
Þe gate to
þe grene chapel, as God wyl
me suffer
To dele on
Nw Ȝerez day þe dome of my
wyrdes.'
'In god
fayþe,' quoþ þe godmon,
'wyth a goud wylle
Al þat euer
I yow hyȝt halde schal I
redé.'
Þer asyngnes
he a seruaunt to sett hym in
þe waye, [folio 117v]
And coundue
hym by þe downez, þat he no
drechch had,
For to ferk
þurȝ þe fryth and fare at þe
gaynest
Þe lorde
Gawayn con þonk,
Such
worchip he wolde hym weue.
Þe knyȝt
hatz tan his leue.
With care
and wyth kyssyng he carppez
hem tille,
And fele
þryuande þonkkez he þrat hom
to haue,
And þay
ȝelden hym aȝayn ȝeply þat
ilk;
Þay bikende
hym to Kryst with ful colde
sykyngez.
Syþen fro þe
meyny he menskly departes;
Vche mon þat
he mette, he made hem a
þonke
For his
seruyse and his solace and
his sere pyne,
Þat þay wyth
busynes had ben aboute hym
to serue;
And vche
segge as soré to seuer with
hym þere
As þay hade
wonde worþyly with þat wlonk
euer.
Þen with
ledes and lyȝt he watz ladde
to his chambre
And blyþely
broȝt to his bedde to be at
his rest.
Ȝif he ne
slepe soundyly say ne dar I,
For he hade
muche on þe morn to mynne,
ȝif he wolde,
Let hym
lyȝe þere stille,
He hatz
nere þat he soȝt;
And ȝe wyl
a whyle be stylle
I schal
telle yow how þay wroȝt.
♫
Passus
IV

OW
neȝez þe Nw
Ȝere, and þe
nyȝt passez,
Þe
day dryuez to þe
derk, as Dryȝtyn
biddez;
Bot
wylde wederez of
þe worlde wakned
þeroute,
Clowdes
kesten kenly þe
colde to þe
erþe,
Wyth
nyȝe innoghe of
þe norþe, þe
naked to tene;
Þe
snawe snitered
ful snart, þat
snayped þe
wylde;
Þe
werbelande wynde
wapped fro þe
hyȝe,
And
drof vche dale
ful of dryftes
ful grete.
Þe
leude lystened
ful wel þat leȝ
in his bedde,
Þaȝ
he lowkez his
liddez, ful
lyttel he
slepes;
Bi
vch kok þat crue
he knwe wel þe
steuen. [folio
118r]
Deliuerly
he dressed vp,
er þe day
sprenged,
For
þere watz lyȝt
of a laumpe þat
lemed in his
chambre;
He
called to his
chamberlayn, þat
cofly hym
swared,
And
bede hym bryng
hym his bruny
and his blonk
sadel;
Þat oþer ferkez
hym vp and
fechez hym his
wedez,
And
grayþez me Sir
Gawayn vpon a
grett wyse.
Fyrst
he clad hym in
his cloþez þe
colde for to
were,
And
syþen his oþer
harnays, þat
holdely watz
keped,
Boþe
his paunce and
his platez,
piked ful clene,
Þe
ryngez rokked of
þe roust of his
riche bruny;
And
al watz fresch
as vpon fyrst,
and he watz fayn
þenne
Wypped ful wel
and wlonk;
Þe burne bede
bryng his blonk.
Whyle
þe wlonkest
wedes he warp on
hymseluen--
His
cote wyth þe
conysaunce of þe
clere werkez
Ennurned
vpon veluet,
vertuus stonez
Aboute
beten and
bounden,
enbrauded semez,
And
fayre furred
withinne wyth
fayre pelures--
Ȝet
laft he not þe
lace, þe ladiez
gifte,
Þat
forgat not
Gawayn for gode
of hymseluen.
Bi
he hade belted
þe bronde vpon
his balȝe
haunchez,
Þenn
dressed he his
drurye double
hym aboute,
Swyþe
sweþled vmbe his
swange swetely
þat knyȝt
Þe
gordel of þe
grene silke, þat
gay wel bisemed,
Vpon
þat ryol red
cloþe þat ryche
watz to schewe.
Bot
wered not þis
ilk wyȝe for
wele þis gordel,
For
pryde of þe
pendauntez, þaȝ
polyst þay were,
And
þaȝ þe
glyterande golde
glent vpon
endez,
Bot
for to sauen
hymself, when
suffer hym
byhoued,
To
byde bale
withoute dabate
of bronde hym to
were
He þonkkez ofte
ful ryue. [folio
118v]
Thenne
watz Gryngolet
grayþe, þat gret
watz and huge,
And
hade ben
soiourned
sauerly and in a
siker wyse,
Hym
lyst prik for
poynt, þat
proude hors
þenne.
Þe wyȝe wynnez
hym to and wytez
on his lyre,
And
sayde soberly
hymself and by
his soth swerez:
'Here
is a meyny in
þis mote þat on
menske þenkkez,
Þe
mon hem
maynteines, ioy
mot þay haue;
Þe
leue lady on
lyue luf hir
bityde;
Ȝif
þay for charyté
cherysen a gest,
And
halden honour in
her honde, þe
haþel hem ȝelde
Þat
haldez þe heuen
vpon hyȝe, and
also yow alle!
And
ȝif I myȝt lyf
vpon londe lede
any quyle,
I
schuld rech yow
sum rewarde
redyly, if I
myȝt.'
Þenn
steppez he into
stirop and
strydez alofte;
His
schalk schewed
hym his schelde,
on schulder he
hit laȝt,
Gordez
to Gryngolet
with his gilt
helez,
And
he startez on þe
ston, stod he no
lenger
His haþel on
hors watz þenne,
Þat bere his
spere and
launce.
'Þis kastel to
Kryst I kenne':
He gef hit ay
god chaunce.
The
brygge watz
brayde doun, and
þe brode ȝatez
Vnbarred
and born open
vpon boþe halue.
Þe
burne blessed
hym bilyue, and
þe bredez
passed--
Prayses
þe porter bifore
þe prynce
kneled,
Gef
hym God and goud
day, þat Gawayn
he saue--
And
went on his way
with his wyȝe
one,
Þat
schulde teche
hym to tourne to
þat tene place
Þer
þe ruful race he
schulde resayue.
Þay
boȝen bi bonkkez
þer boȝez ar
bare,
Þay
clomben bi
clyffez þer
clengez þe
colde.
Þe
heuen watz
vphalt, bot vgly
þer-vnder;
Mist
muged on þe mor,
malt on þe
mountez,
Vch
hille hade a
hatte, a
myst-hakel huge.
Brokez
byled and breke
bi bonkkez
aboute,
Schyre
schaterande on
schorez, þer þay
doun schowued.
[folio 119r]
Wela
wylle watz þe
way þer þay bi
wod schulden,
Til
hit watz sone
sesoun þat þe
sunne ryses
Þay were on a
hille ful hyȝe,
Þe quyte snaw
lay bisyde;
'For
I haf wonnen yow
hider, wyȝe, at
þis tyme,
And
now nar ȝe not
fer fro þat note
place
Þat
ȝe han spied and
spuryed so
specially after;
Bot
I schal say yow
for soþe, syþen
I yow knowe,
And
ȝe ar a lede
vpon lyue þat I
wel louy,
Wolde
ȝe worch bi my
wytte, ȝe worþed
þe better.
Þe
place þat ȝe
prece to ful
perelous is
halden;
Þer
wonez a wyȝe in
þat waste, þe
worst vpon erþe,
For
he is stiffe and
sturne, and to
strike louies,
And
more he is þen
any mon vpon
myddelerde,
And
his body bigger
þen þe best
fowre
Þat
ar in Arþurez
hous, Hestor,
oþer oþer.
He
cheuez þat
chaunce at þe
chapel grene,
Þer
passes non bi
þat place so
proude in his
armes
Þat
he ne dyngez hym
to deþe with
dynt of his
honde;
For
he is a mon
methles, and
mercy non vses,
For
be hit chorle
oþer chaplayn
þat bi þe chapel
rydes,
Monk
oþer masseprest,
oþer any mon
elles,
Hym
þynk as queme
hym to quelle as
quyk go
hymseluen.
Forþy
I say þe, as
soþe as ȝe in
sadel sitte,
Com
ȝe þere, ȝe be
kylled, may þe
knyȝt rede,
Trawe
ȝe me þat
trwely, þaȝ ȝe
had twenty lyues
He hatz wonyd
here ful ȝore,
On bent much
baret bende,
'Forþy,
goude Sir
Gawayn, let þe
gome one,
And
gotz away sum
oþer gate, vpon
Goddez halue!
Cayrez
bi sum oþer
kyth, þer Kryst
mot yow spede,
And
I schal hyȝ me
hom aȝayn, and
hete yow fyrre
[folio 119v]
Þat
I schal swere bi
God and alle his
gode halȝez,
As
help me God and
þe halydam, and
oþez innoghe,
Þat
I schal lelly
yow layne, and
lance neuer tale
Þat
euer ȝe fondet
to fle for freke
þat I
wyst.'
'Grant merci',
quoþ Gawayn, and
gruchyng he
sayde:
'Wel
worth þe, wyȝe,
þat woldez my
gode,
And
þat lelly me
layne I leue wel
þou woldez.
Bot
helde þou hit
neuer so holde,
and I here
passed,
Founded
for ferde for to
fle, in fourme
þat þou tellez,
I
were a knyȝt
kowarde, I myȝt
not be excused.
Bot
I wyl to þe
chapel, for
chaunce þat may
falle,
And
talk wyth þat
ilk tulk þe tale
þat me lyste,
Worþe
hit wele oþer
wo, as þe wyrde
lykez
To stiȝtel, and
stad with staue,
Ful wel con
Dryȝtyn schape
His seruauntez
for to saue.'
'Mary!'
quoþ þat oþer
mon, 'now þou so
much spellez,
Þat
þou wylt þyn
awen nye nyme to
þyseluen,
And
þe lyst lese þy
lyf, þe lette I
ne kepe.
Haf
here þi helme on
þy hede, þi
spere in þi
honde,
And
ryde me doun þis
ilk rake bi ȝon
rokke syde,
Til
þou be broȝt to
þe boþem of þe
brem valay;
Þenne
loke a littel on
þe launde, on þi
lyfte honde,
And
þou schal se in
þat slade þe
self chapel,
And
þe borelych
burne on bent
þat hit kepez.
Now
farez wel, on
Godez half,
Gawayn þe noble!
For
alle þe golde
vpon grounde I
nolde go wyth
þe,
Ne
bere þe
felaȝschip þurȝ
þis fryth on
fote fyrre.'
Bi
þat þe wyȝe in
þe wod wendez
his brydel,
Hit
þe hors with þe
helez as harde
as he myȝt,
Lepez
hym ouer þe
launde, and
leuez þe knyȝt
þere
'Bi Goddez
self,' quoþ
Gawayn,
'I wyl nauþer
grete ne grone;
To Goddez wylle
I am ful bayn,
And to hym I haf
me tone.' [folio
120r]
Thenne
gyrdez he to
Gryngolet, and
gederez þe rake,
Schowuez
in bi a schore
at a schaȝe
syde,
Ridez
þurȝ þe roȝe
bonk ryȝt to þe
dale;
And þenne he
wayted hym
aboute, and
wylde hit hym
þoȝt,
And
seȝe no syngne
of resette
bisydez nowhere,
Bot
hyȝe bonkkez and
brent vpon boþe
halue,
And
ruȝe knokled
knarrez with
knorned stonez;
Þe
skwez of þe
scowtes skayned
hym þoȝt.
Þenne
he houed, and
wythhylde his
hors at þat
tyde,
And
ofte chaunged
his cher þe
chapel to seche:
He
seȝ non suche in
no syde, and
selly hym þoȝt,
Saue,
a lyttel on a
launde, a lawe
as hit were;
A
balȝ berȝ bi a
bonke þe brymme
bysyde,
Bi
a forȝ of a
flode þat ferked
þare;
Þe
borne blubred
þerinne as hit
boyled hade.
Þe
knyȝt kachez his
caple, and com
to þe lawe,
Liȝtez
doun luflyly,
and at a lynde
tachez
Þe
rayne and his
riche with a
roȝe braunche.
Þenne
he boȝez to þe
berȝe, aboute
hit he walkez,
Debatande
with hymself
quat hit be
myȝt.
Hit
hade a hole on
þe ende and on
ayþer syde,
And
ouergrowen with
gresse in glodes
aywhere,
And
al watz holȝ
inwith, nobot an
olde caue,
Or
a creuisse of an
olde cragge, he
couþe hit noȝt
deme
'We! Lorde,'
quoþ þe gentyle
knyȝt,
'Wheþer þis be
þe grene
chapelle?
Þe dele his
matynnes telle!

British Library,
Cotton Nero A.x,
fol. 129v
'Now
iwysse,' quoþ
Wowayn, 'wysty
is here;
Þis
oritore is vgly,
with erbez
ouergrowen;
Wel
bisemez þe wyȝe
wruxled in grene
Dele
here his
deuocioun on þe
deuelez wyse.
Now
I fele hit is þe
fende, in my
fyue wyttez,
Þat
hatz stoken me
þis steuen to
strye me here.
Þis
is a chapel of
meschaunce, þat
chekke hit
bytyde!
Hit
is þe corsedest
kyrk þat euer I
com inne!'
[folio 120v]
With
heȝe helme on
his hede, his
launce in his
honde,
He
romez vp to þe
roffe of þe roȝ
wonez.
Þene herde he of
þat hyȝe hil, in
a harde roche
Biȝonde
þe broke, in a
bonk, a wonder
breme noyse,
Quat!
hit clatered in
þe clyff, as hit
cleue schulde,
As
one vpon a
gryndelston hade
grounden a syþe.
What!
hit wharred and
whette, as water
at a mulne;
What!
hit rusched and
ronge, rawþe to
here.
Þenne
'Bi Godde,' quoþ
Gawayn, 'þat
gere, as I
trowe,
Is
ryched at þe
reuerence me,
renk, to mete
Let God worche!
"We loo"--
Hit helppez me
not a mote.
Thenne
þe knyȝt con
calle ful hyȝe:
'Who
stiȝtlez in þis
sted me steuen
to holde?
For
now is gode
Gawayn goande
ryȝt here.
If
any wyȝe oȝt
wyl, wynne hider
fast,
Oþer
now oþer neuer,
his nedez to
spede.'
'Abyde',
quoþ on on þe
bonke abouen
ouer his hede,
'And
þou schal haf al
in hast þat I þe
hyȝt ones.'
Ȝet
he rusched on
þat rurde rapely
a þrowe.
And
wyth quettyng
awharf, er he
wolde lyȝt;
And
syþen he keuerez
bi a cragge, and
comez of a hole,
Whyrlande
out of a wro
wyth a felle
weppen,
A
denez ax nwe
dyȝt, þe dynt
with to ȝelde,
With
a borelych bytte
bende by þe
halme,
Fyled
in a fylor,
fowre fote
large--
Hit
watz no lasse bi
þat lace þat
lemed ful
bryȝt--
And
þe gome in þe
grene gered as
fyrst,
Boþe
þe lyre and þe
leggez, lokkez
and berde,
Saue
þat fayre on his
fote he foundez
on þe erþe,
Sette
þe stele to þe
stone, and
stalked bysyde.
When
he wan to þe
watter, þer he
wade nolde,
He
hypped ouer on
hys ax, and
orpedly strydez,
Bremly
broþe on a bent
þat brode watz
aboute,
Sir
Gawayn þe knyȝt
con mete,
He ne lutte hym
noþyng
lowe;
Þat oþer sayde,
'Now, sir swete,
Of steuen mon
may þe trowe.'
'Gawayn,'
quoþ þat grene
gome, 'God þe
mot loke!
Iwysse
þou art welcom,
wyȝe, to my
place,
And
þou hatz tymed
þi trauayl as
truee mon
schulde,
And
þou knowez þe
couenauntez kest
vus bytwene:
At
þis tyme
twelmonyth þou
toke þat þe
falled,
And
I schulde at þis
Nwe Ȝere ȝeply
þe quyte.
And
we ar in þis
valay verayly
oure one;
Here
ar no renkes vs
to rydde, rele
as vus likez.
Haf
þy helme of þy
hede, and haf
here þy pay.
Busk
no more debate
þen I þe bede
þenne
When
þou wypped of my
hede at a wap
one.'
'Nay,
bi God,' quoþ
Gawayn, 'þat me
gost lante,
I
schal gruch þe
no grwe for grem
þat fallez.
Bot
styȝtel þe vpon
on strok, and I
schal stonde
stylle
And
warp þe no
wernyng to worch
as þe lykez,
He lened with þe
nek, and lutte,
And schewed þat
schyre al bare,
And lette as he
noȝt dutte;
For drede he
wolde not dare.
THEN
þe gome in þe
grene grayþed
hym swyþe,
Gederez
vp hys grymme
tole Gawayn to
smyte;
With
alle þe bur in
his body he ber
hit on lofte,
Munt
as maȝtyly as
marre hym he
wolde;
Hade
hit dryuen adoun
as dreȝ as he
atled,
Þer
hade ben ded of
his dynt þat
doȝty watz euer.
Bot
Gawayn on þat
giserne glyfte
hym bysyde,
As
hit com glydande
adoun on glode
hym to schende,
And
schranke a lytel
with þe
schulderes for
þe scharp yrne.
Þat
oþer schalk wyth
a schunt þe
schene
wythhaldez,
And
þenne repreued
he þe prynce
with mony prowde
wordez:
'Þou
art not Gawayn,'
quoþ þe gome,
'þat is so goud
halden,
Þat
neuer arȝed for
no here by hylle
ne be vale,
[folio 121v]
And
now þou fles for
ferde er þou
fele harmez!
Such
cowardise of þat
knyȝt cowþe I
neuer
here.
Nawþer fyked I
ne flaȝe, freke,
quen þou
myntest,
Ne
kest no
kauelacion in
kyngez hous
Arthor.
My
hede flaȝ to my
fote, and ȝet
flaȝ I neuer;
And
þou, er any
harme hent,
arȝez in hert;
Wherfore
þe better burne
me burde be
called
Quoþ Gawayn, 'I
schunt onez,
Bot þaȝ my hede
falle on þe
stonez,
'Bot
busk, burne, bi
þi fayth, and
bryng me to þe
poynt.
Dele
to me my
destiné, and do
hit out of
honde,
For
I schal stonde
þe a strok, and
start no more
Til
þyn ax haue me
hitte: haf here
my trawþe.'
'Haf
at þe þenne!'
quoþ þat oþer,
and heuez hit
alofte,
And
waytez as
wroþely as he
wode were.
He
myntez at hym
maȝtyly, bot not
þe mon rynez,
Withhelde
heterly his
honde, er hit
hurt myȝt.
Gawayn
grayþely hit
bydez, and glent
with no membre,
Bot
stode stylle as
þe ston, oþer a
stubbe auþer
Þat
raþeled is in
roché grounde
with rotez a
hundreth.
Þen
muryly efte con
he mele, þe mon
in þe grene:
'So,
now þou hatz þi
hert holle,
hitte me bihous.
Halde
þe now þe hyȝe
hode þat Arþur
þe raȝt,
And
kepe þy kanel at
þis kest, ȝif
hit keuer may.'
Gawayn
ful gryndelly
with greme þenne
sayde:
'Wy!
þresch on, þou
þro mon, þou
þretez to longe;
I
hope þat þi hert
arȝe wyth þyn
awen seluen.'
'For
soþe,' quoþ þat
oþer freke, 'so
felly þou
spekez,
I
wyl no lenger on
lyte lette þin
ernde
Þenne tas he hym
stryþe to
stryke,
And frounsez
boþe lyppe and
browe;
No meruayle þaȝ
hym myslyke
He
lyftes lyȝtly
his lome, and
let hit doun
fayre [folio
122r]
With
þe barbe of þe
bitte bi þe bare
nek;
Þaȝ he homered
heterly, hurt
hym no more
Bot
snyrt hym on þat
on syde, þat
seuered þe hyde.
Þe
scharp schrank
to þe flesche
þurȝ þe schyre
grece,
Þat
þe schene blod
ouer his
schulderes schot
to þe erþe;
And
quen þe burne
seȝ þe blode
blenk on þe
snawe,
He
sprit forth
spenne-fote more
þen a spere
lenþe,
Hent
heterly his
helme, and on
his hed cast,
Schot
with his
schulderez his
fayre schelde
vnder,
Braydez
out a bryȝt
sworde, and
bremely he
spekez--
Neuer
syn þat he watz
burne borne of
his moder
Watz
he neuer in þis
worlde wyȝe half
so blyþe--
'Blynne,
burne, of þy
bur, bede me no
mo!
I
haf a stroke in
þis sted
withoute stryf
hent,
And
if þow rechez me
any mo, I redyly
schal quyte,
And
ȝelde ȝederly
aȝayn--and þerto
ȝe tryst--
Bot on stroke
here me fallez--
Þe couenaunt
schop ryȝt so,
Fermed in
Arþurez hallez--
And þerfore,
hende, now hoo!'
The
haþel heldet hym
fro, and on his
ax rested,
Sette
þe schaft vpon
schore, and to
þe scharp lened,
And
loked to þe
leude þat on þe
launde ȝede,
How
þat doȝty,
dredles, deruely
þer stondez
Armed,
ful aȝlez: in
hert hit hym
lykez.
Þenn
he melez muryly
wyth a much
steuen,
And
wyth a rynkande
rurde he to þe
renk sayde:
'Bolde
burne, on þis
bent be not so
gryndel.
No
mon here
vnmanerly þe
mysboden habbez,
Ne
kyd bot as
couenaunde at
kyngez kort
schaped.
I
hyȝt þe a strok
and þou hit
hatz, halde þe
wel payed;
I
relece þe of þe
remnaunt of
ryȝtes alle
oþer.
Iif
I deliuer had
bene, a boffet
paraunter
I
couþe wroþeloker
haf waret, to þe
haf wroȝt anger.
Fyrst
I mansed þe
muryly with a
mynt one,
And
roue þe wyth no
rof-sore, with
ryȝt I þe
profered [folio
122v]
For þe forwarde
þat we fest in
þe fyrst nyȝt,
And
þou trystyly þe
trawþe and trwly
me haldez,
Al
þe gayne þow me
gef, as god mon
schulde.
Þat
oþer munt for þe
morne, mon, I þe
profered,
Þou
kyssedes my
clere wyf--þe
cossez me
raȝtez.
For
boþe two here I
þe bede bot two
bare myntes
Þenne þar mon
drede no waþe.
At þe þrid þou
fayled þore,
And þerfor þat
tappe ta þe.
'For
hit is my wede
þat þou werez,
þat ilke wouen
girdel,
Myn
owen wyf hit þe
weued, I wot wel
for soþe.
Now
know I wel þy
cosses, and þy
costes als,
And
þe wowyng of my
wyf: I wroȝt hit
myseluen.
I
sende hir to
asay þe, and
sothly me
þynkkez
On
þe fautlest
freke þat euer
on fote ȝede;
As
perle bi þe
quite pese is of
prys more,
So
is Gawayn, in
god fayth, bi
oþer gay
knyȝtez.
Bot
here yow lakked
a lyttel, sir,
and lewté yow
wonted;
Bot
þat watz for no
wylyde werke, ne
wowyng nauþer,
Bot
for ȝe lufed
your lyf; þe
lasse I yow
blame.'
Þat
oþer stif mon in
study stod a
gret whyle,
So
agreued for
greme he gryed
withinne;
Alle
þe blode of his
brest blende in
his face,
Þat
al he schrank
for schome þat
þe schalk
talked.
Þe
forme worde vpon
folde þat þe
freke meled:
'Corsed
worth cowarddyse
and couetyse
boþe!
In
yow is vylany
and vyse þat
vertue
disstryez.'
Þenne
he kaȝt to þe
knot, and þe
kest lawsez,
Brayde
broþely þe belt
to þe burne
seluen:
'Lo!
þer þe falssyng,
foule mot hit
falle!
For
care of þy
knokke cowardyse
me taȝt
To
acorde me with
couetyse, my
kynde to
forsake,
Þat
is larges and
lewté þat longez
to knyȝtez.
Now
am I fawty and
falce, and ferde
haf ben euer
Of
trecherye and
vntrawþe: boþe
bityde sorȝe
I biknowe yow,
knyȝt, here
stylle,
Letez me
ouertake your
wylle
And efte I schal
be ware.'
Thenn
loȝe þat oþer
leude and
luflyly sayde:
'I
halde hit
hardily hole, þe
harme þat I
hade.
Þou
art confessed so
clene, beknowen
of þy mysses,
And
hatz þe penaunce
apert of þe
poynt of myn
egge,
I
halde þe polysed
of þat plyȝt,
and pured as
clene
As
þou hadez neuer
forfeted syþen
þou watz fyrst
borne;
And
I gif þe, sir,
þe gurdel þat is
golde-hemmed,
For
hit is grene as
my goune. Sir
Gawayn, ȝe maye
Þenk
vpon þis ilke
þrepe, þer þou
forth þryngez
Among
prynces of prys,
and þis a pure
token
Of
þe chaunce of þe
grene chapel at
cheualrous
knyȝtez.
And
ȝe schal in þis
Nwe Ȝer aȝayn to
my wonez,
And
we schyn reuel
þe remnaunt of
þis ryche fest
Þer laþed hym
fast þe lorde
And sayde: 'With
my wyf, I wene,
Þat watz your
enmy kene.'
'Nay,
for soþe,' quoþ
þe segge, and
sesed hys helme,
And
hatz hit of
hendely, and þe
haþel þonkkez,
'I
haf soiorned
sadly; sele yow
bytyde,
And
he ȝelde hit yow
ȝare þat ȝarkkez
al menskes!
And
comaundez me to
þat cortays,
your comlych
fere,
Boþe
þat on and þat
oþer, myn
honoured ladyez,
Þat
þus hor knyȝt
wyth hor kest
han koyntly
bigyled.
Bot
hit is no ferly
þaȝ a fole
madde,
And
þurȝ wyles of
wymmen be wonen
to sorȝe,
For
so watz Adam in
erde with one
bygyled,
And
Salamon with
fele sere, and
Samson
eftsonez--
Dalyda
dalt hym hys
wyrde--and
Dauyth þerafter
Watz
blended with
Barsabe, þat
much bale þoled.
Now
þese were
wrathed wyth her
wyles, hit were
a wynne huge
To luf hom wel,
and leue hem
not, a leude þat
couþe. [folio
123v]
For
þes wer forne þe
freest, þat
folȝed alle þe
sele
Exellently
of alle þyse
oþer, vnder
heuenryche
And alle þay
were biwyled
With wymmen þat
þay vsed.
Me þink me burde
be excused.
'Bot
your gordel',
quoþ Gawayn,
'God yow
forȝelde!
Þat
wyl I welde wyth
guod wylle, not
for þe wynne
golde,
Ne
þe saynt, ne þe
sylk, ne þe syde
pendaundes,
For
wele ne for
worchyp, ne for
þe wlonk
werkkez,
Bot
in syngne of my
surfet I schal
se hit ofte,
When
I ride in
renoun, remorde
to myseluen
Þe
faut and þe
fayntyse of þe
flesche crabbed,
How
tender hit is to
entyse teches of
fylþe;
And
þus, quen pryde
schal me pryk
for prowes of
armes,
Þe
loke to þis
luf-lace schal
leþe my hert.
Bot
on I wolde yow
pray, displeses
yow neuer:
Syn
ȝe be lorde of
þe ȝonder londe
þer I haf lent
inne
Wyth
yow wyth
worschyp--þe
wyȝe hit yow
ȝelde
Þat
vphaldez þe
heuen and on hyȝ
sittez--
How
norne ȝe yowre
ryȝt nome, and
þenne no more?'
'Þat
schal I telle þe
trwly,' quoþ þat
oþer þenne,
'Bertilak
de Hautdesert I
hat in þis
londe.
Þurȝ
myȝt of Morgne
la Faye, þat in
my hous lenges,
And
koyntyse of
clergye, bi
craftes wel
lerned,
Þe
maystrés of
Merlyn mony hatz
taken--
For
ho hatz dalt
drwry ful dere
sumtyme
With
þat conable
klerk, þat
knowes alle your
knyȝtez
Weldez non so
hyȝe hawtesse
Þat ho ne con
make ful tame--
'Ho
wayned me vpon
þis wyse to your
wynne halle
For
to assay þe
surquidré, ȝif
hit soth were
Þat rennes of þe
grete renoun of
þe Rounde Table;
Ho
wayned me þis
wonder your
wyttez to reue,
[folio 124r]
For
to haf greued
Gaynour and gart
hir to dyȝe
With
glopnyng of þat
ilke gome þat
gostlych speked
With
his hede in his
honde bifore þe
hyȝe table.
Þat
is ho þat is at
home, þe auncian
lady;
Ho
is euen þyn
aunt, Arþurez
half-suster,
Þe
duches doȝter of
Tyntagelle, þat
dere Vter after
Hade
Arþur vpon, þat
aþel is nowþe.
Þerfore
I eþe þe, haþel,
to com to þyn
aunt,
Make
myry in my hous;
my meny þe
louies,
And
I wol þe as wel,
wyȝe, bi my
faythe,
As
any gome vnder
God for þy grete
trauþe.'
And
he nikked hym
naye, he nolde
bi no wayes.
Þay
acolen and
kyssen and
kennen ayþer
oþer
To
þe prynce of
paradise, and
parten ryȝt þere
To þe knygez
burȝ buskez
bolde,
And þe knyȝt in
þe enker-grene
Whiderwarde-so-euer
he wolde.
Wylde
wayez in þe
worlde Wowen now
rydez
On
Gryngolet, þat
þe grace hade
geten of his
lyue;
Ofte
he herbered in
house and ofte
al þeroute,
And
mony aventure in
vale, and
venquyst ofte,
Þat
I ne tyȝt at þis
tyme in tale to
remene.
Þe
hurt watz hole
þat he hade hent
in his nek,
And
þe blykkande
belt he bere
þeraboute
Abelef
as a bauderyk
bounden bi his
syde,
Loken
vnder his lyfte
arme, þe lace,
with a knot,
In
tokenyng he watz
tane in tech of
a faute.

Gaston Phebus,
Livre
dou Chasse,
knots
And
þus he commes to
þe court, knyȝt
al in sounde.
Þer
wakned wele in
þat wone when
wyst þe grete
Þat
gode Gawayn watz
commen; gayn hit
hym þoȝt.
Þe
kyng kyssez þe
knyȝt, and þe
whene alce,
And
syþen mony syker
knyȝt þat soȝt
hym to haylce,
Of
his fare þat hym
frayned; and
ferlyly he
telles,
Biknowez alle þe
costes of care
þat he hade,
Þe
chaunce of þe
chapel, þe chere
of þe knyȝt,
[folio 124v]
Þe
luf of þe ladi,
þe lace at þe
last.
Þe
nirt in þe nek
he naked hem
schewed
Þat
he laȝt for his
vnleuté at þe
leudes hondes
He tened quen he
schulde telle,
He groned for
gref and grame;
Þe blod in his
face con melle,
When he hit
schulde schewe,
for schame.

British Library,
Cotton Nero A.x,
fol. 130r
'Lo! lorde,'
quoþ þe leude,
and þe lace
hondeled,
'Þis
is þe bende of
þis blame I bere
in my nek,
Þis
is þe laþe and
þe losse þat I
laȝt haue
Of
couardise and
couetyse þat I
haf caȝt þare;
Þis
is þe token of
vntrawþe þat I
am tan inne,
And
I mot nedez hit
were wyle I may
last;
For
mon may hyden
his harme, bot
vnhap ne may
hit,
For
þer hit onez is
tachched twynne
wil hit neuer.'
Þe
kyng comfortez
þe knyȝt, and
alle þe court
als
Laȝen
loude þerat, and
luflyly acorden
Þat
lordes and ladis
þat longed to þe
Table,
Vche
burne of þe
broþerhede, a
bauderyk schulde
haue,
A
bende abelef hym
aboute of a
bryȝt grene,
And
þat, for sake of
þat segge, in
swete to were.
For
þat watz acorded
þe renoun of þe
Rounde Table,
And
he honoured þat
hit hade
euermore after,
As
hit is breued in
þe best boke of
romaunce.
Þus
in Arthurus day
þis aunter
bitidde,
Þe
Brutus bokez
þerof beres
wyttenesse;
Syphen
Brutus, þe bolde
burne, boȝed
hider fyrst,
After
þe segge and þe
asaute watz
sesed at Troye,
Mony aunterez
here-biforne
Now þat here þe
croun of þorne,
He bryng vus to
his blysse! AMEN.