e world with stable feith / varieth acordable
chaungynges
//
?
?
Chaucer - Boethius
_
(Boeth. , lib. iii. pr. 2. )
[Footnote I-8: The Harl. MS. reads _not nat_, to the confusion of
the metre. ]
[Footnote I-9: = ne wot nat = knows not. ]
III. THE CHAIN OF LOVE.
The firste moevere of the cause above,
Whan he first made the fayre cheyne of love,
Gret was theffect, and heigh was his entente;
Wel wist he why, and what therof he mente;
_For with that faire cheyne of love he bond
The fyr, the watir, the eyr, and eek the lond
In certeyn boundes, that they may not flee. _
(_Knightes Tale_, p. 92. )
That ?
e world with stable feith / varieth acordable chaungynges //
? at the contraryos qualite of element? holden amonge hem self
aliaunce perdurable / ? at phebus the sonne with his goldene
chariet / bryngeth forth the rosene day / ? at the mone hath
commaundement ouer the nyhtes // whiche nyhtes hesperus the eue
sterre hat[h] browt // ? at ? e se gredy to flowen constreyneth with
a certeyn ende hise floodes / so ? at it is nat l[e]ueful to
strechche hise brode termes or bowndes vp-on the erthes // ? at is
to seyn to couere alle the erthe // Al this a-cordaunce of thinges
is bownden with looue / ? at gouerneth erthe and see / and [he]
hath also commaundement? to the heuenes / and yif this looue
slakede the brydelis / alle thinges ? at now louen hem to-gederes /
wolden maken a batayle contynuely and stryuen to fordoon the
fasoun of this worlde / the which they now leden in acordable
feith by fayre moeuynges // this looue halt to-gideres poeples /
ioygned with an hooly bond / and knytteth sacrement of maryages of
chaste looues // And loue enditeth lawes to trewe felawes // O
weleful weere mankynde / yif thilke loue ? at gouerneth heuene
gouerned yowre corages /.
(_Chaucer's Boethius_, bk. ii. met.
(Boeth. , lib. iii. pr. 2. )
[Footnote I-8: The Harl. MS. reads _not nat_, to the confusion of
the metre. ]
[Footnote I-9: = ne wot nat = knows not. ]
III. THE CHAIN OF LOVE.
The firste moevere of the cause above,
Whan he first made the fayre cheyne of love,
Gret was theffect, and heigh was his entente;
Wel wist he why, and what therof he mente;
_For with that faire cheyne of love he bond
The fyr, the watir, the eyr, and eek the lond
In certeyn boundes, that they may not flee. _
(_Knightes Tale_, p. 92. )
That ?
e world with stable feith / varieth acordable chaungynges //
? at the contraryos qualite of element? holden amonge hem self
aliaunce perdurable / ? at phebus the sonne with his goldene
chariet / bryngeth forth the rosene day / ? at the mone hath
commaundement ouer the nyhtes // whiche nyhtes hesperus the eue
sterre hat[h] browt // ? at ? e se gredy to flowen constreyneth with
a certeyn ende hise floodes / so ? at it is nat l[e]ueful to
strechche hise brode termes or bowndes vp-on the erthes // ? at is
to seyn to couere alle the erthe // Al this a-cordaunce of thinges
is bownden with looue / ? at gouerneth erthe and see / and [he]
hath also commaundement? to the heuenes / and yif this looue
slakede the brydelis / alle thinges ? at now louen hem to-gederes /
wolden maken a batayle contynuely and stryuen to fordoon the
fasoun of this worlde / the which they now leden in acordable
feith by fayre moeuynges // this looue halt to-gideres poeples /
ioygned with an hooly bond / and knytteth sacrement of maryages of
chaste looues // And loue enditeth lawes to trewe felawes // O
weleful weere mankynde / yif thilke loue ? at gouerneth heuene
gouerned yowre corages /.
(_Chaucer's Boethius_, bk. ii. met.