Note: 'True love' in verse two, is fins amor, noble love, the
troubadour
ideal.
Troubador Verse
Only she my heart can please,
Who makes me sigh all day long,
So at night my sleep is gone,
Not that I desire to sleep.
She, the slender dainty one,
True heart, does true speech employ.
If I were brought to her stronghold,
Prisoned by her in some tower,
And daily ate my morsel sour,
Happily I'd there grow old,
If my desire she granted me!
She should try to do no wrong:
If she made me yearn too long,
Neither life nor death I'd see:
Life for me as good as done,
While there with death I'd sadly toy.
Pel doutz chan que? l rossinhols fai
To the sweet song of the nightingale,
At night when I am half-asleep,
I wake possessed by joy complete,
Contemplating love and thinking;
For this is my greatest need, to be
Forever filled with joy and sweetly,
And in joy begin my singing.
Who seeks to know the joy I feel,
If such joy were heard and seen,
All other joy but slight would seem
Compared with mine: vast in its being.
Others preen and chatter wildly,
Claim to be blessed, rich and nobly,
With 'true love': I've twice the thing!
When I admire her body hale
Well-formed, in all respects I mean,
Her courtesy and her sweet speech,
For all my praise I yet gain nothing;
Though I took a year completely
I could not paint her truthfully
So courtly is she, of sweet forming.
You who think that I can't fail,
Not realising her spirit keen
Is open and is friendly, even
Yet her body is far from being,
Know, the best messenger I see
From her is my own reverie,
That recalls her fairest seeming.
Lady, I'm yours, today, every day,
In your service my self I'll keep,
Sworn, and pledged to you complete,
As I have been always in everything.
And as you are first of joys to me,
So the last joy too you will be,
As long as I'm still living.
I know not when I'll see you again;
But I am grieved and sad to leave.
For you I spurned (don't now harm me,
I beg of you) the court and king,
Now I will serve you there entirely,
Among the knights, among the ladies,
All sweet, true, and humble beings.
Huguet, my messenger, go, kindly
Sing my song and sing it freely,
To the Norman Queen go warbling.
Note: 'True love' in verse two, is fins amor, noble love, the troubadour ideal.
La rossinhols s'esbaudeya
The nightingale sings happily
Hard by the blossom on the bough,
And I am taken by such envy
I can't help but sing any how;
Knowing not what or whom either,
For I love not I, nor another.
Such effort I make that this will prove
Good verse too, though I'm not in love!
They gain more from love who pay
Court by deceiving, in their pride,
Than he who humbly makes his way,
And ever the suppliant does abide,
For Amor has no love for the man
Who is honest and noble as I am.
My loss is all the more complete,
That I am not false nor use deceit.
But as the bough bends beneath
The tempest that makes it sway,
I did to her my whole will bequeath,
She who assails me every way.
So she maddens and destroys me,
Sunk to low-born acts, completely,
Yet I'll give her my eyes to blind,
If any wrong she in me can find.
She often accuses me and tries me,
And lays false charges now, at will,
Yet whenever she acts vilely
All the fault's laid at my door still!
She quietly makes sport of me,
With her own faults damning me!
Truly they say, and it's my belief:
'All are my brothers! ' cries the thief.
No man who sees her and has faith
In her sweet looks, her lovely eyes;
Could ever believe, in any way
Her heart is evil: her mind, it lies:
But waters that slide calmly by
Drown more than those that roar and sigh.
They deceive who seem so fair,
Oh, be wary of the debonair.
From every place she might be
I absent myself most carefully,
And so as not her form to see
I pass, eyes closed, and nervously.
So he follows Love, who avoids it,
And it pursues the man who flees it.
But I'm determined to pass it by,
Till I see it again in my lady's eye.