Now marke, for here
begynneth
the revell: This thampion flew x longe myle levell,
To a fayre castell of lyme and stone, For strength I know nat suche a one, Whiche stode upon a hyll full hye,
At fote wherof a ryver ranne bye,
So depetyll chaunce had it forbyden,
*Well might the regent there have ryden.
To a fayre castell of lyme and stone, For strength I know nat suche a one, Whiche stode upon a hyll full hye,
At fote wherof a ryver ranne bye,
So depetyll chaunce had it forbyden,
*Well might the regent there have ryden.
Dodsley - Select Collection of Old Plays - v1
Mark well thys relyke here whipper,
My frends” unfayned, here” slypper
Of one the seven slepers sure”.
Doutlesse thys kys shall you great pleasure;
For these two dayes shall ease you, That none other savours shall displease you.
Poticary. All these two dayes nay, these two ere;
For also savours that may come here Can be no worse; for worde,
One the seven slepers trode torde.
Pedler. Syr, me thynketh your devocyon but
smal.
Pardoner. Small! mary me thynketh hath none at all.
Poticary. What the devyll care what thinke Shall prayse relykes when they stynke?
Pardoner. Heer eye toth the great Turke. Whose eyes ones sette thys pece worke, May happely lese parte his eye-syght,
But nat tyll blynde out ryght.
Poticary. What ever any other man seeth,
have devocyon unto” Turkes teeth For although never sawe greter,
Yet me thynketh have sene many better.
frendes] freend, edit. 1569. One the seven slepers
said have lived Being commanded
here] this, 1569.
sure. ] These seven slepers are the time the emperor Decian.
Ephesus
sacrifice according the Pagan manner,
mount Ceylon, where they fell asleep, and
they fled
continued
according
the emperor Theodosian, who, being informed this extraordinary event, came from Constantinople see them, and satisfy himself
the truth the relation. Having communicated him the several circumstances their case, they all, the Legenda Aurea
cave
that state 372 years, asserted some, though
others only 208 years. They awoke the reign
expresses “enclyned theyr hedes
“spyrites the commaundement “deyed. ” See Legenda Aurea, 196.
these thys, 1st edit.
th’erth, and rendred their our Lorde Jesu Cryst, and soo
- 114 to, 1st edit.
at it,
tointo of no
of
of
in to at I
so
is
be
as
of
to *
all
of
*
of a
142 140 to
I of all
to to
by : of he all is in ye a
of
.
I
I he be be
an at it inbe of a do
ofto aon be
to
as is
in 1 so is of ofIa a
is 2.
**
THE FouR P's. 81
Pardoner. Here is a box ful of humble bees,
That stonge Eve as she sat on her knees, Tastynge the frute to her forbydden.
Who kysseth the bees within this hydden,
Shall have as muche pardon of ryght, As for any relyke he kyst thys nyght.
Palmer. Syr, I will kysse them with
my herte. Poticary. Kysse them agayne, and take my parte,
For am nat woorthy: may, lette be,
Those bees that stonge Eve shall nat stynge me.
Pardoner. Good frendes, have yet here” thys glas,
Which the drynke the weddynge was Adam and Eve undoutedly.
honor this relyke devoutly, Although thurste whyt the lesse,
Yet shal) drynke the more, doubtlesse:
*
well, good Kysse relyke ;
[After whyche drynkynge
stande your hede Poticary. Ye mary, now presens thys the rest
shall mete
on your fete.
con" you thanke”;
blanke.
Wolde God thys relyke had come rather:
that father. Suche the payne that palmers take,
kysse the pardon bowle for the drynke sake. holy yeste, that loketh full sowr and stale,
goddes body, helpe me cuppe The more beholde” the, the more
The oftener kysse the, the more lyke But sins kysse the devoutely,
ale. thurste
burste.
Hyre me” and helpe me with drynke tyll dye. What, muche prayeing and lytell spede
Ye, knoweth whan nede
Pardoner.
yet, edit. 1569.
147 con you thanke. ] See note vol. II.
146 can, 1st edit.
Gammer Gurton's Needle,
beholde] see, edit. 1569.
Hyre hear me, and afterwards we meet with this line,
“But answered you, and geven you hyring. ” vot, Is - G
e
C.
in
*148 145
orTo Ino soIis on
I
me is
II
of on yeye no
-
I be as
4.
34 to
to a
be
so
I is2
to of :
r
all
it
so
at
I
ye
I as ye
If Of ye
*
82 TIIE Four P's.
Tosende folkes drynke; but by saynt Antony,
I wene he hath sent you to muche redy. ] Poticary. have never the more for the,
thy relykes ryches me; thy selfe, excepte they
More benefycyall then can se.
Rycher one boxe this tryacle “9, Then thy relykes, that myrakell.
thou haddest prayed but halfe muche me, As have prayed thy relykes and the,
Nothynge concernynge myne occupacion,
But streyght shulde have wrought one” operation:
Then Nor
And value
So here lyeth muche rychesse
have boxe rebarb here, Whiche deynty dere.
pas you ace,
lytell space. So helpe me god, and hollydam,
Of this wolde not geve To the beste frende have Though wolde give me
For thoughthe stomake
dram
Englande's grounde,
pounde. abhor, pourget you clene from the color;
And maketh your stomake sore walter,
That shall never come the halter.
Pedler. Then that medycyn soverayn thinge,
To preserve Poticary.
ever Here have
man from hangynge.
wyll taste but thys crome that see, hanged never truste me.
diapompholicus,
-
speciall oyntement,
For fistela for Thys oyntement
doctours discuse, canker:
evenshot anker; tryacle] theriaca, remedy against poison.
Blount.
The word triacle also not used for *
unfrequently indeed any kind infallible powerful medicine.
one] in, 1st edit.
The word no addition, but found
Thys oyntement even shot anker. ] ought read sheet anchor. The sheet anchor
ship, and the last refuge mariners; for when that fails take hold the ground, the vessel left the mercy
balsam,
So) Addition. both the old
should suppose the largest belonging
A. It *I If to * * ** If
aI
to a I a as all tobe
yeye isinis of Ihe
isso bea as If
is
isa isa
ye is
I
to
ofI no
of
is
an
do
isof or If
of
I
I
or
to
do a it it xxin is
as
as
in nobeto isis ato soall
at isI in
of theto
we * or
ye -
C. a ”
to
THE Four P’s. + 83
For this medecyn to helpeth one and other,
Or bringeth them in case that they nede no other. sHere is a syrapus de Byzansis,
To lytell thynge is inough of this;
For even the weyght of one scryppall,
Shall 1* make you as strong as a cryppull. Here are other, as diosfialios,
Diagalanga and sticados,
Blanka, manna, diospoliticon, Mercury sublyme, and . netridaticon; Pellitory, and arsefetita;
Cassy, and colloquintita.
[These be" the thynges that breke Betwene manne's sycknes and his lyfe.
stryfe From payne these shall you delever,
And set you even Here medecyn Whiche comenly
reste for ever. molyke the same;
called thus name, Alkakengy,
Alikakabus
goodly thynge for dogges that "mangy.
Suche these medycymes, that can
dogge
! Nat one thynge here partycularly,
But worketh universally;
For doth me muche good when sell
the byers that taste smell
Helpe
wel man.
Now syns my medycyns And one operacion
speciall, generall,
ever they shall, that ryches am principall;
And redy worke when
any rewarde may entreat ye,
besech your masshyp good "me,
marmelade, Sofyne that you may dyg with spade.
Pedler. Syr, thanke you, but your rewarde nat the thynge that regarde:
And shall have boxe
storm. The sheet anchor was called and by the French maitresse ancre.
medecyn] oyntment, edit. 1569. be] are, edit. 1569.
to] unto, edit. 1569.
the ancients, anchora sacra
Wil,
be] are, edit. 1569.
154 Shall]
edit. 1569.
”***
Is
I IfSo As A
S. by 136
it
a to
or Iby
;
ye inallita is in bea
all
to
or
I I as as is at a no
I so as
ofbesobe a so it,
I it.
be
all
if,
84
THE Fou R P's.
I muste and wyll be indifferent. Wherfore procede in your intente.
Poticary. Nowe yf I wyst thys wysh no synne, I wolde to God I myght begynne.
Pardoner. I am content that thou lye fyrste.
* Now let us here of all thy lyes,
Palmer. Even so am I; now
say thy
worste. fewyst * can.
The greatest lye thou mayst devyse.
And in the wordes thou
Poticary. Forsoth, ye be
Pedler. There sayde ye muche, but yet no lye. Pardoner. Now lye ye bothe, by our lady.
Thou lyest in bost of hys honestie, And he hath lyed in affyrminge the.
Poticary. Yf we both lye, and ye say true,
Then of these lies your parte adew: And if ye wyn, make none avaunt, For you are sure of one servaunte.
an honest man.
You may perceyve the wordes He taketh your mashyp but for But who tolde truthe" lyed
gave,
knave. dede,
That wyll knowe *we procede. Syr, after that fyrste began
To prayse you for honest man,
When affyrmed for lye”,
Now, your fayth, speke even truely; Thought your affyrmacyion true?
Palmer. Ye mary, for woldeye knewe,
thynke my selfe honest man.
Poticary. What thought the contrary than?
Pardoner. that thynke from trouth
Policary. And what
now] and, 1st edit.
your mushyp) i. e. your mastership.
truthe] true, 1st edit.
for tolye) for lie, edit. 1569.
your] our, 1st edit.
thought Poticary. And thought
Pardoner.
god that dyed.
be] you are, edit. 1569.
or] ere, edit. 1569.
sayde the contrary, dyd nat vary.
my wordes? lyed.
“1°1"**
I
II
no
yeof
I In *I
16"
I, *ye by
ye in
in
a he
so
an
it an
I no or1% yll
II S.
or
by
byye ye
TIIE FouR P's. 85
Nowe have you twayne eche for hym selfe layde,
That none hath lyed, but bothe true sayd And twayne none hath denyed,
But bothe affyrmed that have lyed. Now syns bothe ye" the trouth confes, "How that Ilyed, doo bear witnes. That twain may soon agree,
And that the lyer the wynner must be, Who coulde provyde suche evydens,
have done this pretens?
Me thymketh this mater sufficient cause you gyve judgement;
And gyve me the mastrye,
For perceyve these knaves can nat lye.
Palmer. Though neyther" yet had lyed,
untryed;
For yet we have vysed nothynge,
But answered you, and geven you hyring.
Pedler. Therfore have devysed one waye, Wherby thre your mindes may saye.
For eche you one tale shall tell,
And whiche you telleth most mervell,
Yet what we can
And most unlikest
true,
Shall most prevayle, what ever ensew. Poticary. set mervaylynge,
mervaylouse thynge. And though dede nat true,
Yet suer the most parte shall new. dyd cure longer ago,
But
Then shall here
Anno domini millesimo, woman yonge and fayre,
On
That never have sene
God save all women that lyknes. This wanton had the fallen syknes,
gayre.
none] one, edit. 1569. yel your, 1st edit. How, &c. ] First edition reads,
And that we both my lye
That twayne thre newther] nother, 1st edit.
from, 1st edit.
witnes, one agree.
unlikest] unlyke, 1st, edit.
110* ** of
I To As aI
of us
us in
of
70 a so
a be '99 all to
I deis
so *
*
be
of us as
ina
as yeto
of all
of I ye do
of us
'so
no
in yeIf of
to
in
be on be
I
:
86 THE Fou R P's
Whiche by dissent came lynyally, For her mother had it naturally: Wherfore this woman to recure,
It was more harde ye may be sure.
But though I boste my crafte is suche, That in suche thynges I can do muche:
How ofte she fell were muche to reporte,
But her hed so gydy and her helys so shorte, That with the twynglynge of an eye,
Downe wolde she falle evyn by and by.
But or she wolde aryse agayne,
shewed muche practyse muche my payne.
For the tallest man within thys towne
Could "* nat with ease have broken her swowne.
Although for lyfe dyd nat doute her,
Yet dyd take more paines” about her, Then wolde take with my owne syster.
Syr,
the last gave her thrust thampyon
glyster: her tewell,
heevy
And bad her kepe for
But knew there 174° was
That sure was wolde nat tary:
cary,
vice. —A tewel (tuyau tuyal, Fr. ) pipe; and the sake continuing the metaphor) for bore
his Mechanick Exercises, defines the tewel smith's forge into which the nose the bellows
here used (for caliber. Moxon,
be that pipe introduced; and
jewell;
or] ere, edit. 1569.
17* Could] Shulde, 1st edit. paines] payme, 1st edit.
trust thampyon her tewell The allusion gunnery. Thampion (tampon, Fr. bung, cork, plug wood) now writ
ten tompion, and signifies the stopper with which the mouths
cannon are closed up, prevent the admission rain, sea water, whereby their charges might rendered incapable ser
Ms. fragment, said written Sir Francis Drake, con cerning the stores one the ships under his command,
“master shippe passinge while the court lay theare, and
“meaning (as the manner is) with sayle and shot honour “place, unadvisedly gave fire piece charged with stone
“stede tampion, which lightinge the Quene's house “ranne throughe chamber, and did further harme. ”
applied gun.
word tewel
Lambarde's Dictionarium Topographicum Historicum, 129.
said, “It happened the reigne Quene Marye, that
a
of itI to or a it
to by
a in
a
it
is In a
I I
in
a to ofbe
to in
it
in in
'7*
I II atII
of of is of aaa
'7'
a S. of is or to
no
on of
a be
'7°
&
to
is or
of
to
by
to
to
a to
p. of or
in inthe the the a
of
is of is
is
'7" 17
a
I
THE Four P's. 87
For where gonpouder is ones fyerd,
The Thampyon wyll no lenger be hyerd :
Whiche was well sene in tyme of thys chaurice, For when I had charged this ordynaunce, Sodeynly, as it had thonder'd,
Even at a clap losed her bumberd 17°.
Now marke, for here begynneth the revell: This thampion flew x longe myle levell,
To a fayre castell of lyme and stone, For strength I know nat suche a one, Whiche stode upon a hyll full hye,
At fote wherof a ryver ranne bye,
So depetyll chaunce had it forbyden,
*Well might the regent there have ryden.
But when this thatmpyon at this 77 castle did lyght,
It put the castel so farre to flyght,
That downe they came eche upon other,
No stone lefte standynge by goddes mother,
But rolled downe so faste the hyll In suche a nomber, and so dyd fyll
From botom to bryme, from shore to shore, Thys foresayd ryver, so depe before,
Our antiquary writes like one unacquainted with his subject, no man, I believe, ever talked of charging a gun with a tampion ; neither would the said tampion (consisting of a piece of hard oak)
have done much less mischief than a stone, if pointed f-rom the Thames at the Queen's Palace at Greenwich. S.
17* there] Addition in the 2d edit.
bumberd] piece ordnance.
Wellmyght the regent there have ruden] The Regent was one
the largest ships war the time King Henry the Eighth.
the fourth year his reign, Sir Thomas Knevet, master the horse, and Sir John Carew, Devonshire, were appointed captains
her, and company with several others she was sent fight the French fleet near 13rest haven. An action accordingly ensued, and the Regent grappled with French Carrick, which would
have been taken had not her falling into the hands room. This communicating
gunner board the vessel, prevent
the English, set fire the powder
the flames both ships, they shared
the same fate together, being both burnt. On the part the
French 900 men were lost; and that the English more than
700. See Hall's Chronicle, tempore Henry VIII. fol. 21, '77 this] thys castell lyght, 1st edit.
on
in
A
on of
a to
S.
of
to
to
of
In of
of on
of
of
to
a
of of in
of
of
*17*
88
THE Fou R r's.
That who lyste nowe to walke thereto, May wade it over and wet no shoo. So was thys castell layd wyde open,
That every man myght se the token.
But in a good houre maye these wordes be. spoken
After the thampyon the walles was wroken, And pece pece peces broken.
And she delyvered, with suche violens,
Ofall her inconveniens,
left her good helth and luste;
And she doth contynew, truste.
Pedler. Syr, your cure can nothynge tell;
But your" purpose have sayd well.
Pardoner. Well, syr, then marke what can say
pardoner many day, And done greater cures gostely,
have ben
dyd bodely.
Namely thys one, whiche shall here,
Of one departed within thys seven yere, frende myne, and lykewyse
To her agayne was frendly who fell syke sodeynly,
That dede she was even and by, And never spake with preste nor clerke,
Then ever
whyt thys holy warke; For was thens, coulde nat be,
Nor had
say she asked for me.
bethought me howe thys chaunced,
have heven avaunced So many soules me but straungers,
And coude nat kepe my frende from daungers,
Yet harde
But when And that
daungerously, For her soule helth especyally;
these] this, edit. 1569.
your] our, 1st. edit. line,
The edit. 1569 has this
“And done more cures ghostely. ”
But she
C.
I
* *9'78
A I
to III no so of he a of dy
in
by
:
so
it of
in
to to
so
* as
by
:
ye
a
ye II
-
* ,.
II
I
17°
to
so
in
on
Wherto they sayd, she came nat here
Then ferd I muche it was nat well; Alas, thought I, she is in hell;
THE Fou R P's. 89
That was the thynge that greved me soo, That nothynge could release my woo, Tyll I had tryed even out of hande,
In what estate her soule dyd stande. For whiche tryall, shorte tale to make,
I toke thys journey for her sake.
Geve ear, for here begynneth the story:
From hens I went to purgatory,
And toke with me thys gere in my fyste,
Wherby I may do there what I lyste. I knocked and was let in quyckly:
But Lorde, how lowe the soules made curtesy; And I to every soule agayne
* Dyd gyve a beck them to retayne,
And axed them thys question than,
If that the soule of suche a woman Dyd late amonge them there appere 2
For with her lyfe I was so acqueynted, That sure I thought she was mat saynted.
With thys it chaunced me to snese;
Christe helpe, quoth a soule that ley for his fees. Those wordes, quoth I, thou shalt mat lees;
Then with these pardons of degrees, payed his tole and set hym quyght,
That strayt heaven toke his flyght,
hell that nyght, myght;
And from thens help this wonan
Nat who sayth
But the waye
And fyrst the devyll that kept the gate
came, and spake after this rate.
All hayle, syr devyll, and made lowe curtesy: Welcome, quoth he, thus smillyngly.
Dyd gyve cations has that
beck them retayne] beck among other signifi salutation with the head. So, Shaks
S.
authorite,
entreate.
peare’s Timon
“A serving becks, and jutting out bums. ”
Athens thus] thys, 1st edit.
”
*
I
To
I
of to to a
of of: a
ofby to
A of
in
to *
yf I
he
so all
byas
I
90 THE FOUR P's.
He knew me well, and I at laste
Remembred him syns longe time paste: For as good happe wolde have it chaunce,
T*his devyll and I were of olde acqueyntaunce;
oft, play corpus Cristi, For in the of
He hath playd the devyll at Coventry. By acqueyntaunce and my behavoure, He shewed me ryght frendly favoure,
And sayd
make my returne the shorter,
this devyll, good mayster porter,
olde love, lye your power, Helpe me speke with my lorde and your. Be sure, quoth he, tongue can tell,
For
What tyme thou coudest have come well:
thys daye lucyfer fell, Whiche our festywall hell,
Nothynge unreasonable craved thys day, That shall hell have any may.
But yet ware thou come natin,
Tyll tyme thou may “thy pasporte wyn.
Under seale, and the devyls hande ample wyse, shall here;
began: Lucyfere,
For oft, the play corpus Cristi,
For
Wherfore stand styll, and will wyt", Yf can get thy save condyt.
He taryed nat, but shortely gat
Thus
He . . . '. . . '#o Coventry. ] “sion the monasteries, this city
“Before the
suppres CoventRY) was very “famous for the pageants that were play'd therein upon Corpus “Christi day (this one their ancient faires), which occasioning
“very great confluence people thither from far and pear, was “small benefit thereto; which pageants being acted with mighty
“state and reverence the friers this house, had theaters “the several scenes very large and high, placed upon wheels, and
“drawn all the eminent parts the city, for the better advan
“tage spectators, and contained the story “ment, composed old English rithme, “ancient Ms. entitled, Ludus Corporis Christi,
the New Testa appeareth
Ludus Coventrie, Bibl. Cotton. (sub Effigie Vesp. 9). ” Dugdale's War
wickshire,
on] Add the edit. may] maist, edit, 1569.
116.
wytj Mr. Dodsley has writc.
*** ** as
of of it p. to #
as
all to his to
“ in
*In I
I
in
in
as ye
no yf it
by of
2d ofof
18"
D.
(i. e.
it
oras of
at it,
so
by an
for
no
of
of
I
in
in
in is
be in
is on to
to
to
THE Fou R P's. Q1
By the power of god chyese devyll of hell, To all the devyls that there do dwell,
And every of them we sende gretynge, Under streyght charge and commaundynge,
That they aydynge and assystent be To suche a Pardoner, and named me, So that he may at lybertie
Passe save without any to jeopardy, Tyll that he be from us extyncte,
And clerely out of helle's precincte. And hys pardons to kepe in savegarde;
We wyll they lye in the porter's warde. Gevyn in the formes of our palys,
In our highe courte of maters of malys, Suche a day and yere of our reyne.
God save the devyll, quoth I, amain”. I truste thys wrytynge to be sure:
Then put thy truste, quod he, in euer”
Syns thou art sure to take no harme.
Thys devyll and I walket arme in arme, So farre, tyll he had brought me thyther,
Where the devylls hell togyther Stode ray, suche apparell
for that day there metely fell.
Theyr hornes well gylt, theyr clowes full clene,
Theyr taylles wel kempt, and, wene,
With sothery butter theyr bodyes anoynted;
never sawe devylls well appoynted The mayster devyll sat his jacket,
And the soules were playinge racket.
None other rackettes they hadde Save every soule good fyre brand; Wherwith they played pretely, That Lucyfer laughed merely;
hande,
any] hys, 1st edit. amain] for playne, 1st edit.
euer] cure, edit. 1569. Porrex,
See note Ferrex and this vol.
sothery. ]
well appointed] See Note The Ordinary, vol.
Sweet fresh made from the old word sote.
18 to
187
'90 **
188**
I all
As
or
C. X.
in at
*.
12 to
in
as I
so
in
a
1” so
in
of
in all a
92 THE FouR P's.
And the resedew the feends", *Did laugh thereat ful wel like freends. But my frende sawe whyt,
Nor durst not axe for her
Anone this rout was brought silens, And usher brought presens *Of Lucyfer: then lowe, wel
knelyd, whiche well alowde,
That thus beckte, and saynt Antony
He smyled me well favouredly,
Bendynge his browes brode Shakynge hys eares ruged
Rolynge his eyes rounde
barne durres, burres;
two bushels;
Flastynge the fyre out Gnashinge hys teeth
his nose thryls; vaynglorously,
yet.
could,
That me thought tyme fall Wherwith tolde, shall tell.
plesant pycture! prince
flatery,
hell! fashyon abominable,
Feutred”
And syns that inestimable For me prayse the worthyly,
prayse, unworthy
To geve the prays, besechynge the
leve
To heare my sewte, and then
graunt the thynge shorte, thys wolde
feends] frendes, 1st edit.
Did, &c. ] First edition reads,
crave;
good And
The soule
Delivered "hens, and me remitted.
And thys doynge though nat quyt, Yet
one which hyther
have: flytted,
some parte shall deserve
Dyd laugh full well togyther lyke frendes. Qf Lucifer, &c. ] First edition reads,
Then
'94 Feutred
feutre—garnir grown with grass.
feutre. —To stuff with felt. Feutré d'herbe, over -
Lucyfer low coude.
fashyon abominable] Feutrer, Fr. —faire
Delivered] Deliver, edit. 1569. shall] wil, edit. 1569.
19°
So
inin to of
I of
*
asas in
* ** S.
IOI
to de in
of
beto
in
I
an
de
as I
as
OIso asas so of
I
” to
is as
as
he
I
it,
al II be is
of to
as by asin asno
to
by all
all
to of
to
be I
onhe
THE Fou R P's. 93
As thus: I am a pardoner,
And over soules as controller,
Thorough out the erth my power doth stande, Where many a soule lyeth on my hande,
That spede in maters as I use them,
As I receyve them or refuse them. Wherby, what tyme thy pleasure
I”shall requyte any part thys,
. devyll thyther, The leste here that can come
Shall chose soule and brynge him hyther. Ho", ho, quoth the devyll, we are well pleased;
What hys name thou woldest have eased
Nay, quoth My comynge What
Now by our honour, sayd Lucyfer,
No devyll hell shall withholde her; And thou woldest have twenty mo, Wert not for justyce, they shulde goo.
good evyll, for she devyll.
her quoth thou whoorson”? Forsooth quoth Margery Coorson.
devylls within thys den
do with two women,
the charge we have besyde
For we Have more
Then with
Wherfore
Aply thy pardons women so, That unto us there come no mo.
thou our frende wyll tryed,
To my beste promysed
Which have kepte, for thys day”, heven
othe;
the fayth goth
procure Ten women one man, be sure. Then Lucyfer my leve toke,
And streyght unto the mayster coke was hadde, into the kechyn,
For Margerie's offyce was therin.
Ye] 1st edit.
And properly, the meaning being that the Pardoner
requite part this favour whenever
* Hol. Nowe, 1st edit.
the,
we] edit. 1569.
ready shall the devil's pleasure.
whoorson] horyson, 1st edit.
day] dayes,
1st edit.
*1 . " w
it be
* of .
I At '97
is to
I, ofIdo allyf is
to
yfallto“” in I,
a
to I
I isbe
I Ias
do by
he or
of
is,
it to a
be
:
\
?
94 THE Fou R P's.
All thyngs handled there discretely, For every soule bereth offyce metely:
Woiche myght be sene to se her syt So bysely turnynge of the spyt.
For many a spyt here hath she turned,
And many a good spyt hath she burned :
And many a spyt ful hoth hath rosted, Before t*he meat coulde be halfe rosted
dede,
And how the soules therin dyd synge; And how we were brought the gate, And how we toke our leve therat,
Be suer lacke tyme sufferyth nat
To reherse the xx parte that, Wherfore thys tale conclude brevely. Thys woman thanked me chyefly.
That she was ryd thys endles deth,
And we departed newmarket heth.
And that any man mynde her,
Who lyste seke her, there shalle fynde her,
Pedler. Syr, have sought her wunderous” well,
And or
I toke her then fro the spy with spede.
the meate were halfe rosted in
But when she sawe thys brought to pas, To tell the joy wherin she was;
And of the devylls, for joy how they
Did rore her delyvery,
And how the cheynes hell dydrynge,
And where founde her
To here the chaunce had “in hell,
finde were great peril". perilous”;
Palmer. But parte
His tale muche muche more mervaylous:
sayde the devylls complayne,
As where
That women put them
suche payne.
croked and crabbed, wayward and wrabbed”,
wayward and wrabbed] suppose wrabbed - word coined for the sake of rhime.
Be theyr condicions Frowardly fashonde,
20: or] ere.
-
*wunderous] wonders, 1st edit. had] founde,
edit. 295 perill parell, 1st edit. perilous] parellous, 1st edit.
tell,
S. I
is
so to all ye doon
of to
in
”
I
*
as ye
of
*0% to
he
be a
1st
so
heis
ye to ye
all
yfso ye
at all of
in
to
THE Fou R P's.
So farre in devision, and sturrynge suchestryfe,
95
That the devylls wery *theyr
effect he tolde for
Whereby muche marvell me ensueth,
That women hell suche shrewes can be,
cristendom, but have ben thorough,
And this wolde shulde understande, have sene women hundred thousande:
And oft with them have longe tyme taried
Yet places where have ben, "Of the women that have sene,
This *
life. trueth.
never sawe nor knewe
gentyll
And here
Yet have sene many myse,
And many woman the whyle.
Nat one good cytye, towne nor borough
Policary. By the masse, there
Pardoner. never harde greater,
great lye.
our Lady
farre se.
my conscyens, Any one woman out paciens,
Pedler. greater! nay, knowe any great?
Palmer. Syr, whether that lose get,
For my parte jndgement shall prayd. Pardoner. And desyer hath sayd.
Poticary. Procede, and shall
Pedler. Then shall nat judgment these thre eche mannes tale
obeyed. delayd,
Poole's churche yarde were set
sale, some mannes hande that hath the sleyghte,
shulde sure sell these tales weyght: they wey, they worth,
For
But whiche weyth beste,
that now forth. the tale that dyd tell,
mynde, and yours
sawe the mater metely,
Syr,
bere And
lyed
This] Thus, edit. 1569.
taried] maryed, 1st edit. will rhime to the line
well: bothe well and discretely
“And with them have long tyme taried”
and probable that line has here dropped out ending with maryed, which the word the oldest the two editions.
for edit. 1569. observed that there
it is
asinall as yeye
all in
all
is
oft
AI
a so
in
in
be Itto in to
of be
C.
no
*So *10
I
HeIn In Of all
I
In
- soyfIyeI av
is
209
of,
as
yeas I a by hebe is onbebe oryea
as of I
ye be of I I in a as
by so
"o
all I I in
96 THE Four P's.
Yet were your lyes with the lest, truste me; For yf ye had said ye had made
Ten tampyons out ten women's tayles, Ten tymes ten myle ten castles jayles, And fild ten ryvers ten tymes depe,
ten that whiche your castell stones dyd kepe ten tymes had bodely
purgatory; And ten tymes many out hell:
Yet, these ten bonnes coulde right well, Ten tymes sooner that have beleved,
Then the tenth parte that hath meved
Poticary. Two knaves before lacketh knaves fvve:
Or
Fet ten soules out
Then and then one, and bothe knaves alyve. Then two, and then two, and threat cast,
Thou knave, and thou knave, and thou knave Nay knave, try me nomber,
wyll knavishly you accomber”.
Your mynde your pryvy tythe,
For ten me thynketh your wyt lythe.
Now ten tymes beseche hym that hye syttes,
laste.
Thy wives Then ten
commaundementes may serch thy wittes. my tordes ten thy teth,
-
Now ten tymes beseech hym that hye syttes,
Thy wives ten commaundementes may serch thy five wyttes. ] Eleanor, The Second Part King Henry VI. A. 1. says,
“I’d set my ten commandments your face. ” - Ten Commandments seem have been cant terms for the nails
thy nose, whiche every man seth wolde
And ten
And twentie tymes ten, this wyshe That thou haddest been hanged
For thou goest about wyll thou knowe
Fet soules, &c. , Spenser, and Shakspeare.
ten yere olde: slave;
make me
am gentleman knave.
fetch'd. The word used Tusser,
See also Note 73 Gammer Gurton's Needle, vol. II. accomber] overcome. See Note God's Promises, 21.
the hands.
See also Mr. Steevens's Note the above passage.
My frends” unfayned, here” slypper
Of one the seven slepers sure”.
Doutlesse thys kys shall you great pleasure;
For these two dayes shall ease you, That none other savours shall displease you.
Poticary. All these two dayes nay, these two ere;
For also savours that may come here Can be no worse; for worde,
One the seven slepers trode torde.
Pedler. Syr, me thynketh your devocyon but
smal.
Pardoner. Small! mary me thynketh hath none at all.
Poticary. What the devyll care what thinke Shall prayse relykes when they stynke?
Pardoner. Heer eye toth the great Turke. Whose eyes ones sette thys pece worke, May happely lese parte his eye-syght,
But nat tyll blynde out ryght.
Poticary. What ever any other man seeth,
have devocyon unto” Turkes teeth For although never sawe greter,
Yet me thynketh have sene many better.
frendes] freend, edit. 1569. One the seven slepers
said have lived Being commanded
here] this, 1569.
sure. ] These seven slepers are the time the emperor Decian.
Ephesus
sacrifice according the Pagan manner,
mount Ceylon, where they fell asleep, and
they fled
continued
according
the emperor Theodosian, who, being informed this extraordinary event, came from Constantinople see them, and satisfy himself
the truth the relation. Having communicated him the several circumstances their case, they all, the Legenda Aurea
cave
that state 372 years, asserted some, though
others only 208 years. They awoke the reign
expresses “enclyned theyr hedes
“spyrites the commaundement “deyed. ” See Legenda Aurea, 196.
these thys, 1st edit.
th’erth, and rendred their our Lorde Jesu Cryst, and soo
- 114 to, 1st edit.
at it,
tointo of no
of
of
in to at I
so
is
be
as
of
to *
all
of
*
of a
142 140 to
I of all
to to
by : of he all is in ye a
of
.
I
I he be be
an at it inbe of a do
ofto aon be
to
as is
in 1 so is of ofIa a
is 2.
**
THE FouR P's. 81
Pardoner. Here is a box ful of humble bees,
That stonge Eve as she sat on her knees, Tastynge the frute to her forbydden.
Who kysseth the bees within this hydden,
Shall have as muche pardon of ryght, As for any relyke he kyst thys nyght.
Palmer. Syr, I will kysse them with
my herte. Poticary. Kysse them agayne, and take my parte,
For am nat woorthy: may, lette be,
Those bees that stonge Eve shall nat stynge me.
Pardoner. Good frendes, have yet here” thys glas,
Which the drynke the weddynge was Adam and Eve undoutedly.
honor this relyke devoutly, Although thurste whyt the lesse,
Yet shal) drynke the more, doubtlesse:
*
well, good Kysse relyke ;
[After whyche drynkynge
stande your hede Poticary. Ye mary, now presens thys the rest
shall mete
on your fete.
con" you thanke”;
blanke.
Wolde God thys relyke had come rather:
that father. Suche the payne that palmers take,
kysse the pardon bowle for the drynke sake. holy yeste, that loketh full sowr and stale,
goddes body, helpe me cuppe The more beholde” the, the more
The oftener kysse the, the more lyke But sins kysse the devoutely,
ale. thurste
burste.
Hyre me” and helpe me with drynke tyll dye. What, muche prayeing and lytell spede
Ye, knoweth whan nede
Pardoner.
yet, edit. 1569.
147 con you thanke. ] See note vol. II.
146 can, 1st edit.
Gammer Gurton's Needle,
beholde] see, edit. 1569.
Hyre hear me, and afterwards we meet with this line,
“But answered you, and geven you hyring. ” vot, Is - G
e
C.
in
*148 145
orTo Ino soIis on
I
me is
II
of on yeye no
-
I be as
4.
34 to
to a
be
so
I is2
to of :
r
all
it
so
at
I
ye
I as ye
If Of ye
*
82 TIIE Four P's.
Tosende folkes drynke; but by saynt Antony,
I wene he hath sent you to muche redy. ] Poticary. have never the more for the,
thy relykes ryches me; thy selfe, excepte they
More benefycyall then can se.
Rycher one boxe this tryacle “9, Then thy relykes, that myrakell.
thou haddest prayed but halfe muche me, As have prayed thy relykes and the,
Nothynge concernynge myne occupacion,
But streyght shulde have wrought one” operation:
Then Nor
And value
So here lyeth muche rychesse
have boxe rebarb here, Whiche deynty dere.
pas you ace,
lytell space. So helpe me god, and hollydam,
Of this wolde not geve To the beste frende have Though wolde give me
For thoughthe stomake
dram
Englande's grounde,
pounde. abhor, pourget you clene from the color;
And maketh your stomake sore walter,
That shall never come the halter.
Pedler. Then that medycyn soverayn thinge,
To preserve Poticary.
ever Here have
man from hangynge.
wyll taste but thys crome that see, hanged never truste me.
diapompholicus,
-
speciall oyntement,
For fistela for Thys oyntement
doctours discuse, canker:
evenshot anker; tryacle] theriaca, remedy against poison.
Blount.
The word triacle also not used for *
unfrequently indeed any kind infallible powerful medicine.
one] in, 1st edit.
The word no addition, but found
Thys oyntement even shot anker. ] ought read sheet anchor. The sheet anchor
ship, and the last refuge mariners; for when that fails take hold the ground, the vessel left the mercy
balsam,
So) Addition. both the old
should suppose the largest belonging
A. It *I If to * * ** If
aI
to a I a as all tobe
yeye isinis of Ihe
isso bea as If
is
isa isa
ye is
I
to
ofI no
of
is
an
do
isof or If
of
I
I
or
to
do a it it xxin is
as
as
in nobeto isis ato soall
at isI in
of theto
we * or
ye -
C. a ”
to
THE Four P’s. + 83
For this medecyn to helpeth one and other,
Or bringeth them in case that they nede no other. sHere is a syrapus de Byzansis,
To lytell thynge is inough of this;
For even the weyght of one scryppall,
Shall 1* make you as strong as a cryppull. Here are other, as diosfialios,
Diagalanga and sticados,
Blanka, manna, diospoliticon, Mercury sublyme, and . netridaticon; Pellitory, and arsefetita;
Cassy, and colloquintita.
[These be" the thynges that breke Betwene manne's sycknes and his lyfe.
stryfe From payne these shall you delever,
And set you even Here medecyn Whiche comenly
reste for ever. molyke the same;
called thus name, Alkakengy,
Alikakabus
goodly thynge for dogges that "mangy.
Suche these medycymes, that can
dogge
! Nat one thynge here partycularly,
But worketh universally;
For doth me muche good when sell
the byers that taste smell
Helpe
wel man.
Now syns my medycyns And one operacion
speciall, generall,
ever they shall, that ryches am principall;
And redy worke when
any rewarde may entreat ye,
besech your masshyp good "me,
marmelade, Sofyne that you may dyg with spade.
Pedler. Syr, thanke you, but your rewarde nat the thynge that regarde:
And shall have boxe
storm. The sheet anchor was called and by the French maitresse ancre.
medecyn] oyntment, edit. 1569. be] are, edit. 1569.
to] unto, edit. 1569.
the ancients, anchora sacra
Wil,
be] are, edit. 1569.
154 Shall]
edit. 1569.
”***
Is
I IfSo As A
S. by 136
it
a to
or Iby
;
ye inallita is in bea
all
to
or
I I as as is at a no
I so as
ofbesobe a so it,
I it.
be
all
if,
84
THE Fou R P's.
I muste and wyll be indifferent. Wherfore procede in your intente.
Poticary. Nowe yf I wyst thys wysh no synne, I wolde to God I myght begynne.
Pardoner. I am content that thou lye fyrste.
* Now let us here of all thy lyes,
Palmer. Even so am I; now
say thy
worste. fewyst * can.
The greatest lye thou mayst devyse.
And in the wordes thou
Poticary. Forsoth, ye be
Pedler. There sayde ye muche, but yet no lye. Pardoner. Now lye ye bothe, by our lady.
Thou lyest in bost of hys honestie, And he hath lyed in affyrminge the.
Poticary. Yf we both lye, and ye say true,
Then of these lies your parte adew: And if ye wyn, make none avaunt, For you are sure of one servaunte.
an honest man.
You may perceyve the wordes He taketh your mashyp but for But who tolde truthe" lyed
gave,
knave. dede,
That wyll knowe *we procede. Syr, after that fyrste began
To prayse you for honest man,
When affyrmed for lye”,
Now, your fayth, speke even truely; Thought your affyrmacyion true?
Palmer. Ye mary, for woldeye knewe,
thynke my selfe honest man.
Poticary. What thought the contrary than?
Pardoner. that thynke from trouth
Policary. And what
now] and, 1st edit.
your mushyp) i. e. your mastership.
truthe] true, 1st edit.
for tolye) for lie, edit. 1569.
your] our, 1st edit.
thought Poticary. And thought
Pardoner.
god that dyed.
be] you are, edit. 1569.
or] ere, edit. 1569.
sayde the contrary, dyd nat vary.
my wordes? lyed.
“1°1"**
I
II
no
yeof
I In *I
16"
I, *ye by
ye in
in
a he
so
an
it an
I no or1% yll
II S.
or
by
byye ye
TIIE FouR P's. 85
Nowe have you twayne eche for hym selfe layde,
That none hath lyed, but bothe true sayd And twayne none hath denyed,
But bothe affyrmed that have lyed. Now syns bothe ye" the trouth confes, "How that Ilyed, doo bear witnes. That twain may soon agree,
And that the lyer the wynner must be, Who coulde provyde suche evydens,
have done this pretens?
Me thymketh this mater sufficient cause you gyve judgement;
And gyve me the mastrye,
For perceyve these knaves can nat lye.
Palmer. Though neyther" yet had lyed,
untryed;
For yet we have vysed nothynge,
But answered you, and geven you hyring.
Pedler. Therfore have devysed one waye, Wherby thre your mindes may saye.
For eche you one tale shall tell,
And whiche you telleth most mervell,
Yet what we can
And most unlikest
true,
Shall most prevayle, what ever ensew. Poticary. set mervaylynge,
mervaylouse thynge. And though dede nat true,
Yet suer the most parte shall new. dyd cure longer ago,
But
Then shall here
Anno domini millesimo, woman yonge and fayre,
On
That never have sene
God save all women that lyknes. This wanton had the fallen syknes,
gayre.
none] one, edit. 1569. yel your, 1st edit. How, &c. ] First edition reads,
And that we both my lye
That twayne thre newther] nother, 1st edit.
from, 1st edit.
witnes, one agree.
unlikest] unlyke, 1st, edit.
110* ** of
I To As aI
of us
us in
of
70 a so
a be '99 all to
I deis
so *
*
be
of us as
ina
as yeto
of all
of I ye do
of us
'so
no
in yeIf of
to
in
be on be
I
:
86 THE Fou R P's
Whiche by dissent came lynyally, For her mother had it naturally: Wherfore this woman to recure,
It was more harde ye may be sure.
But though I boste my crafte is suche, That in suche thynges I can do muche:
How ofte she fell were muche to reporte,
But her hed so gydy and her helys so shorte, That with the twynglynge of an eye,
Downe wolde she falle evyn by and by.
But or she wolde aryse agayne,
shewed muche practyse muche my payne.
For the tallest man within thys towne
Could "* nat with ease have broken her swowne.
Although for lyfe dyd nat doute her,
Yet dyd take more paines” about her, Then wolde take with my owne syster.
Syr,
the last gave her thrust thampyon
glyster: her tewell,
heevy
And bad her kepe for
But knew there 174° was
That sure was wolde nat tary:
cary,
vice. —A tewel (tuyau tuyal, Fr. ) pipe; and the sake continuing the metaphor) for bore
his Mechanick Exercises, defines the tewel smith's forge into which the nose the bellows
here used (for caliber. Moxon,
be that pipe introduced; and
jewell;
or] ere, edit. 1569.
17* Could] Shulde, 1st edit. paines] payme, 1st edit.
trust thampyon her tewell The allusion gunnery. Thampion (tampon, Fr. bung, cork, plug wood) now writ
ten tompion, and signifies the stopper with which the mouths
cannon are closed up, prevent the admission rain, sea water, whereby their charges might rendered incapable ser
Ms. fragment, said written Sir Francis Drake, con cerning the stores one the ships under his command,
“master shippe passinge while the court lay theare, and
“meaning (as the manner is) with sayle and shot honour “place, unadvisedly gave fire piece charged with stone
“stede tampion, which lightinge the Quene's house “ranne throughe chamber, and did further harme. ”
applied gun.
word tewel
Lambarde's Dictionarium Topographicum Historicum, 129.
said, “It happened the reigne Quene Marye, that
a
of itI to or a it
to by
a in
a
it
is In a
I I
in
a to ofbe
to in
it
in in
'7*
I II atII
of of is of aaa
'7'
a S. of is or to
no
on of
a be
'7°
&
to
is or
of
to
by
to
to
a to
p. of or
in inthe the the a
of
is of is
is
'7" 17
a
I
THE Four P's. 87
For where gonpouder is ones fyerd,
The Thampyon wyll no lenger be hyerd :
Whiche was well sene in tyme of thys chaurice, For when I had charged this ordynaunce, Sodeynly, as it had thonder'd,
Even at a clap losed her bumberd 17°.
Now marke, for here begynneth the revell: This thampion flew x longe myle levell,
To a fayre castell of lyme and stone, For strength I know nat suche a one, Whiche stode upon a hyll full hye,
At fote wherof a ryver ranne bye,
So depetyll chaunce had it forbyden,
*Well might the regent there have ryden.
But when this thatmpyon at this 77 castle did lyght,
It put the castel so farre to flyght,
That downe they came eche upon other,
No stone lefte standynge by goddes mother,
But rolled downe so faste the hyll In suche a nomber, and so dyd fyll
From botom to bryme, from shore to shore, Thys foresayd ryver, so depe before,
Our antiquary writes like one unacquainted with his subject, no man, I believe, ever talked of charging a gun with a tampion ; neither would the said tampion (consisting of a piece of hard oak)
have done much less mischief than a stone, if pointed f-rom the Thames at the Queen's Palace at Greenwich. S.
17* there] Addition in the 2d edit.
bumberd] piece ordnance.
Wellmyght the regent there have ruden] The Regent was one
the largest ships war the time King Henry the Eighth.
the fourth year his reign, Sir Thomas Knevet, master the horse, and Sir John Carew, Devonshire, were appointed captains
her, and company with several others she was sent fight the French fleet near 13rest haven. An action accordingly ensued, and the Regent grappled with French Carrick, which would
have been taken had not her falling into the hands room. This communicating
gunner board the vessel, prevent
the English, set fire the powder
the flames both ships, they shared
the same fate together, being both burnt. On the part the
French 900 men were lost; and that the English more than
700. See Hall's Chronicle, tempore Henry VIII. fol. 21, '77 this] thys castell lyght, 1st edit.
on
in
A
on of
a to
S.
of
to
to
of
In of
of on
of
of
to
a
of of in
of
of
*17*
88
THE Fou R r's.
That who lyste nowe to walke thereto, May wade it over and wet no shoo. So was thys castell layd wyde open,
That every man myght se the token.
But in a good houre maye these wordes be. spoken
After the thampyon the walles was wroken, And pece pece peces broken.
And she delyvered, with suche violens,
Ofall her inconveniens,
left her good helth and luste;
And she doth contynew, truste.
Pedler. Syr, your cure can nothynge tell;
But your" purpose have sayd well.
Pardoner. Well, syr, then marke what can say
pardoner many day, And done greater cures gostely,
have ben
dyd bodely.
Namely thys one, whiche shall here,
Of one departed within thys seven yere, frende myne, and lykewyse
To her agayne was frendly who fell syke sodeynly,
That dede she was even and by, And never spake with preste nor clerke,
Then ever
whyt thys holy warke; For was thens, coulde nat be,
Nor had
say she asked for me.
bethought me howe thys chaunced,
have heven avaunced So many soules me but straungers,
And coude nat kepe my frende from daungers,
Yet harde
But when And that
daungerously, For her soule helth especyally;
these] this, edit. 1569.
your] our, 1st. edit. line,
The edit. 1569 has this
“And done more cures ghostely. ”
But she
C.
I
* *9'78
A I
to III no so of he a of dy
in
by
:
so
it of
in
to to
so
* as
by
:
ye
a
ye II
-
* ,.
II
I
17°
to
so
in
on
Wherto they sayd, she came nat here
Then ferd I muche it was nat well; Alas, thought I, she is in hell;
THE Fou R P's. 89
That was the thynge that greved me soo, That nothynge could release my woo, Tyll I had tryed even out of hande,
In what estate her soule dyd stande. For whiche tryall, shorte tale to make,
I toke thys journey for her sake.
Geve ear, for here begynneth the story:
From hens I went to purgatory,
And toke with me thys gere in my fyste,
Wherby I may do there what I lyste. I knocked and was let in quyckly:
But Lorde, how lowe the soules made curtesy; And I to every soule agayne
* Dyd gyve a beck them to retayne,
And axed them thys question than,
If that the soule of suche a woman Dyd late amonge them there appere 2
For with her lyfe I was so acqueynted, That sure I thought she was mat saynted.
With thys it chaunced me to snese;
Christe helpe, quoth a soule that ley for his fees. Those wordes, quoth I, thou shalt mat lees;
Then with these pardons of degrees, payed his tole and set hym quyght,
That strayt heaven toke his flyght,
hell that nyght, myght;
And from thens help this wonan
Nat who sayth
But the waye
And fyrst the devyll that kept the gate
came, and spake after this rate.
All hayle, syr devyll, and made lowe curtesy: Welcome, quoth he, thus smillyngly.
Dyd gyve cations has that
beck them retayne] beck among other signifi salutation with the head. So, Shaks
S.
authorite,
entreate.
peare’s Timon
“A serving becks, and jutting out bums. ”
Athens thus] thys, 1st edit.
”
*
I
To
I
of to to a
of of: a
ofby to
A of
in
to *
yf I
he
so all
byas
I
90 THE FOUR P's.
He knew me well, and I at laste
Remembred him syns longe time paste: For as good happe wolde have it chaunce,
T*his devyll and I were of olde acqueyntaunce;
oft, play corpus Cristi, For in the of
He hath playd the devyll at Coventry. By acqueyntaunce and my behavoure, He shewed me ryght frendly favoure,
And sayd
make my returne the shorter,
this devyll, good mayster porter,
olde love, lye your power, Helpe me speke with my lorde and your. Be sure, quoth he, tongue can tell,
For
What tyme thou coudest have come well:
thys daye lucyfer fell, Whiche our festywall hell,
Nothynge unreasonable craved thys day, That shall hell have any may.
But yet ware thou come natin,
Tyll tyme thou may “thy pasporte wyn.
Under seale, and the devyls hande ample wyse, shall here;
began: Lucyfere,
For oft, the play corpus Cristi,
For
Wherfore stand styll, and will wyt", Yf can get thy save condyt.
He taryed nat, but shortely gat
Thus
He . . . '. . . '#o Coventry. ] “sion the monasteries, this city
“Before the
suppres CoventRY) was very “famous for the pageants that were play'd therein upon Corpus “Christi day (this one their ancient faires), which occasioning
“very great confluence people thither from far and pear, was “small benefit thereto; which pageants being acted with mighty
“state and reverence the friers this house, had theaters “the several scenes very large and high, placed upon wheels, and
“drawn all the eminent parts the city, for the better advan
“tage spectators, and contained the story “ment, composed old English rithme, “ancient Ms. entitled, Ludus Corporis Christi,
the New Testa appeareth
Ludus Coventrie, Bibl. Cotton. (sub Effigie Vesp. 9). ” Dugdale's War
wickshire,
on] Add the edit. may] maist, edit, 1569.
116.
wytj Mr. Dodsley has writc.
*** ** as
of of it p. to #
as
all to his to
“ in
*In I
I
in
in
as ye
no yf it
by of
2d ofof
18"
D.
(i. e.
it
oras of
at it,
so
by an
for
no
of
of
I
in
in
in is
be in
is on to
to
to
THE Fou R P's. Q1
By the power of god chyese devyll of hell, To all the devyls that there do dwell,
And every of them we sende gretynge, Under streyght charge and commaundynge,
That they aydynge and assystent be To suche a Pardoner, and named me, So that he may at lybertie
Passe save without any to jeopardy, Tyll that he be from us extyncte,
And clerely out of helle's precincte. And hys pardons to kepe in savegarde;
We wyll they lye in the porter's warde. Gevyn in the formes of our palys,
In our highe courte of maters of malys, Suche a day and yere of our reyne.
God save the devyll, quoth I, amain”. I truste thys wrytynge to be sure:
Then put thy truste, quod he, in euer”
Syns thou art sure to take no harme.
Thys devyll and I walket arme in arme, So farre, tyll he had brought me thyther,
Where the devylls hell togyther Stode ray, suche apparell
for that day there metely fell.
Theyr hornes well gylt, theyr clowes full clene,
Theyr taylles wel kempt, and, wene,
With sothery butter theyr bodyes anoynted;
never sawe devylls well appoynted The mayster devyll sat his jacket,
And the soules were playinge racket.
None other rackettes they hadde Save every soule good fyre brand; Wherwith they played pretely, That Lucyfer laughed merely;
hande,
any] hys, 1st edit. amain] for playne, 1st edit.
euer] cure, edit. 1569. Porrex,
See note Ferrex and this vol.
sothery. ]
well appointed] See Note The Ordinary, vol.
Sweet fresh made from the old word sote.
18 to
187
'90 **
188**
I all
As
or
C. X.
in at
*.
12 to
in
as I
so
in
a
1” so
in
of
in all a
92 THE FouR P's.
And the resedew the feends", *Did laugh thereat ful wel like freends. But my frende sawe whyt,
Nor durst not axe for her
Anone this rout was brought silens, And usher brought presens *Of Lucyfer: then lowe, wel
knelyd, whiche well alowde,
That thus beckte, and saynt Antony
He smyled me well favouredly,
Bendynge his browes brode Shakynge hys eares ruged
Rolynge his eyes rounde
barne durres, burres;
two bushels;
Flastynge the fyre out Gnashinge hys teeth
his nose thryls; vaynglorously,
yet.
could,
That me thought tyme fall Wherwith tolde, shall tell.
plesant pycture! prince
flatery,
hell! fashyon abominable,
Feutred”
And syns that inestimable For me prayse the worthyly,
prayse, unworthy
To geve the prays, besechynge the
leve
To heare my sewte, and then
graunt the thynge shorte, thys wolde
feends] frendes, 1st edit.
Did, &c. ] First edition reads,
crave;
good And
The soule
Delivered "hens, and me remitted.
And thys doynge though nat quyt, Yet
one which hyther
have: flytted,
some parte shall deserve
Dyd laugh full well togyther lyke frendes. Qf Lucifer, &c. ] First edition reads,
Then
'94 Feutred
feutre—garnir grown with grass.
feutre. —To stuff with felt. Feutré d'herbe, over -
Lucyfer low coude.
fashyon abominable] Feutrer, Fr. —faire
Delivered] Deliver, edit. 1569. shall] wil, edit. 1569.
19°
So
inin to of
I of
*
asas in
* ** S.
IOI
to de in
of
beto
in
I
an
de
as I
as
OIso asas so of
I
” to
is as
as
he
I
it,
al II be is
of to
as by asin asno
to
by all
all
to of
to
be I
onhe
THE Fou R P's. 93
As thus: I am a pardoner,
And over soules as controller,
Thorough out the erth my power doth stande, Where many a soule lyeth on my hande,
That spede in maters as I use them,
As I receyve them or refuse them. Wherby, what tyme thy pleasure
I”shall requyte any part thys,
. devyll thyther, The leste here that can come
Shall chose soule and brynge him hyther. Ho", ho, quoth the devyll, we are well pleased;
What hys name thou woldest have eased
Nay, quoth My comynge What
Now by our honour, sayd Lucyfer,
No devyll hell shall withholde her; And thou woldest have twenty mo, Wert not for justyce, they shulde goo.
good evyll, for she devyll.
her quoth thou whoorson”? Forsooth quoth Margery Coorson.
devylls within thys den
do with two women,
the charge we have besyde
For we Have more
Then with
Wherfore
Aply thy pardons women so, That unto us there come no mo.
thou our frende wyll tryed,
To my beste promysed
Which have kepte, for thys day”, heven
othe;
the fayth goth
procure Ten women one man, be sure. Then Lucyfer my leve toke,
And streyght unto the mayster coke was hadde, into the kechyn,
For Margerie's offyce was therin.
Ye] 1st edit.
And properly, the meaning being that the Pardoner
requite part this favour whenever
* Hol. Nowe, 1st edit.
the,
we] edit. 1569.
ready shall the devil's pleasure.
whoorson] horyson, 1st edit.
day] dayes,
1st edit.
*1 . " w
it be
* of .
I At '97
is to
I, ofIdo allyf is
to
yfallto“” in I,
a
to I
I isbe
I Ias
do by
he or
of
is,
it to a
be
:
\
?
94 THE Fou R P's.
All thyngs handled there discretely, For every soule bereth offyce metely:
Woiche myght be sene to se her syt So bysely turnynge of the spyt.
For many a spyt here hath she turned,
And many a good spyt hath she burned :
And many a spyt ful hoth hath rosted, Before t*he meat coulde be halfe rosted
dede,
And how the soules therin dyd synge; And how we were brought the gate, And how we toke our leve therat,
Be suer lacke tyme sufferyth nat
To reherse the xx parte that, Wherfore thys tale conclude brevely. Thys woman thanked me chyefly.
That she was ryd thys endles deth,
And we departed newmarket heth.
And that any man mynde her,
Who lyste seke her, there shalle fynde her,
Pedler. Syr, have sought her wunderous” well,
And or
I toke her then fro the spy with spede.
the meate were halfe rosted in
But when she sawe thys brought to pas, To tell the joy wherin she was;
And of the devylls, for joy how they
Did rore her delyvery,
And how the cheynes hell dydrynge,
And where founde her
To here the chaunce had “in hell,
finde were great peril". perilous”;
Palmer. But parte
His tale muche muche more mervaylous:
sayde the devylls complayne,
As where
That women put them
suche payne.
croked and crabbed, wayward and wrabbed”,
wayward and wrabbed] suppose wrabbed - word coined for the sake of rhime.
Be theyr condicions Frowardly fashonde,
20: or] ere.
-
*wunderous] wonders, 1st edit. had] founde,
edit. 295 perill parell, 1st edit. perilous] parellous, 1st edit.
tell,
S. I
is
so to all ye doon
of to
in
”
I
*
as ye
of
*0% to
he
be a
1st
so
heis
ye to ye
all
yfso ye
at all of
in
to
THE Fou R P's.
So farre in devision, and sturrynge suchestryfe,
95
That the devylls wery *theyr
effect he tolde for
Whereby muche marvell me ensueth,
That women hell suche shrewes can be,
cristendom, but have ben thorough,
And this wolde shulde understande, have sene women hundred thousande:
And oft with them have longe tyme taried
Yet places where have ben, "Of the women that have sene,
This *
life. trueth.
never sawe nor knewe
gentyll
And here
Yet have sene many myse,
And many woman the whyle.
Nat one good cytye, towne nor borough
Policary. By the masse, there
Pardoner. never harde greater,
great lye.
our Lady
farre se.
my conscyens, Any one woman out paciens,
Pedler. greater! nay, knowe any great?
Palmer. Syr, whether that lose get,
For my parte jndgement shall prayd. Pardoner. And desyer hath sayd.
Poticary. Procede, and shall
Pedler. Then shall nat judgment these thre eche mannes tale
obeyed. delayd,
Poole's churche yarde were set
sale, some mannes hande that hath the sleyghte,
shulde sure sell these tales weyght: they wey, they worth,
For
But whiche weyth beste,
that now forth. the tale that dyd tell,
mynde, and yours
sawe the mater metely,
Syr,
bere And
lyed
This] Thus, edit. 1569.
taried] maryed, 1st edit. will rhime to the line
well: bothe well and discretely
“And with them have long tyme taried”
and probable that line has here dropped out ending with maryed, which the word the oldest the two editions.
for edit. 1569. observed that there
it is
asinall as yeye
all in
all
is
oft
AI
a so
in
in
be Itto in to
of be
C.
no
*So *10
I
HeIn In Of all
I
In
- soyfIyeI av
is
209
of,
as
yeas I a by hebe is onbebe oryea
as of I
ye be of I I in a as
by so
"o
all I I in
96 THE Four P's.
Yet were your lyes with the lest, truste me; For yf ye had said ye had made
Ten tampyons out ten women's tayles, Ten tymes ten myle ten castles jayles, And fild ten ryvers ten tymes depe,
ten that whiche your castell stones dyd kepe ten tymes had bodely
purgatory; And ten tymes many out hell:
Yet, these ten bonnes coulde right well, Ten tymes sooner that have beleved,
Then the tenth parte that hath meved
Poticary. Two knaves before lacketh knaves fvve:
Or
Fet ten soules out
Then and then one, and bothe knaves alyve. Then two, and then two, and threat cast,
Thou knave, and thou knave, and thou knave Nay knave, try me nomber,
wyll knavishly you accomber”.
Your mynde your pryvy tythe,
For ten me thynketh your wyt lythe.
Now ten tymes beseche hym that hye syttes,
laste.
Thy wives Then ten
commaundementes may serch thy wittes. my tordes ten thy teth,
-
Now ten tymes beseech hym that hye syttes,
Thy wives ten commaundementes may serch thy five wyttes. ] Eleanor, The Second Part King Henry VI. A. 1. says,
“I’d set my ten commandments your face. ” - Ten Commandments seem have been cant terms for the nails
thy nose, whiche every man seth wolde
And ten
And twentie tymes ten, this wyshe That thou haddest been hanged
For thou goest about wyll thou knowe
Fet soules, &c. , Spenser, and Shakspeare.
ten yere olde: slave;
make me
am gentleman knave.
fetch'd. The word used Tusser,
See also Note 73 Gammer Gurton's Needle, vol. II. accomber] overcome. See Note God's Promises, 21.
the hands.
See also Mr. Steevens's Note the above passage.