And the
latecomer
gets more from her,
Than I who have waited longest.
Than I who have waited longest.
Troubador Verse
Who ever did penance employ
Before he sinned? I tell you though,
The more I beg, the harsher she,
If she's not gentler soon with me,
There'll be a parting I would guess.
Yet it's good that she subjects me
To her whole will utterly,
For if she does wrong, and slowly,
The sooner she'll take pity;
For, or so the scriptures say,
Through good luck, a single day
May a whole century redress.
Lifelong, I'll never leave her,
As long as I'm hale and whole;
The flesh may go hang after
It has parted from the soul;
And though she is never hasty,
She'll get no blame from me,
If she makes amends, I'll bless.
Ah, sweet love, all my desire,
Fine, slim, neat your body stands,
Fresh complexion, subtle fire,
Whom God shaped in his hands!
I'll long for you forever,
No other gives me pleasure.
No other love do I profess.
Sweet and most gracious treasure,
May He who formed you in measure
Grant joy desired, now, in excess!
La douza votz ai auzida
The sweetest voice I have heard,
Of the woodland nightingale,
And into my heart has leapt its word
So that all the weight of care
And the evil blows love deals me,
Are soothed and softened sweetly.
And great good does it do me there,
Another's joy in my travail.
Of base life indeed is the man
Who with joy finds never a place,
Where love is no part of the plan
That drives his heart and his desire;
For all that exists with joy abounds,
Rings out, and with its song resounds:
Park, orchard, meadow, all the choir
Of heath, plain and woodland chase.
Alas for me, whom love forgets,
Who stray from the proper track;
A share of joy would be mine yet,
But sorrow it is that troubles me;
And I can find no place to rest,
For it turns all joy to bitterness.
And never think that I feel lightly,
If some courtesy I seem to lack.
A false and a wicked woman,
Of base birth, a foul traitress,
Betrayed herself and this man,
She cut the very stick that beat her.
Yet whenever she is arraigned
It is the man who gets the blame.
And the latecomer gets more from her,
Than I who have waited longest.
I had served her well and nobly,
Till she showed me a fickle heart;
And since she offers naught to me,
I'm a fool if I serve her more.
Service without recompense -
A Breton's hope has equal sense -
Makes a slave of a noble lord,
By custom and usage, set apart.
God grant him a foul fate
Who repeats men's idle chatter!
For love's joy were my estate
Were it not for the tellers of tales.
A fool treats his mistress cruelly,
I'll pardon her if she'll pardon me,
Liars they are, whom naught avails,
If they made me speak badly of her.
Corona, carry these verses for me
To Narbonne, there, to my lady;
Of perfection her life never fails,
And no man can speak badly of her.
Chantars no pot gaire valer
Singing proves merely valueless
If the song moves not from the heart,
Nor from the heart can song progress,
If it lacks noble love, heart's dream.
So of all songs mine reign supreme,
For with love's joy I seek to bind
Mouth, and eyes, and heart, and mind.
May God never grant me power
Not inspired by true love's art!
If I never knew how to gain its flower,
Without every day enduring pain,
I'd be of good heart still, that's plain,
And my joy is therefore more alive,
Since I'm of good heart, and for it I strive.
Through ignorance, the fools decry
Love, but that does it little hurt,
For Love will in no way fail, say I,
If it's a love that's not commonplace.
And that's not love, nor of its race,
But only has its form and name,
That loves nothing except for gain.
If I am to speak only what's true,
I know from where such errors start:
From those women who love men too
Only through greed: they are for hire.
Would I were false in this, a liar!
I speak of it, do I not, so harshly,
And yet that I lie not saddens me.