Chese for vs both, I yow praie : And what as euer that ye saie, Right as ye woll, so woll I.
My lorde, she saide, grant mercy For of this worde, that ye now saine That ye haue made me soueraine My destnye is ouerpassed,
That neuer here after shall be lassed My beautee whiche that I nowe haue, Tyll I be take in to my graue. Both night and daie, as I am nowe, I shall alwey be suche to you. The kynges doughter of Cecile I am, and fell but sith a while, As I was with my father late, That my stepmother for an hate, Whiche towarde me she hath begonne, Forshope me, till I had wonne
The loue, and the soueraintee Of what knight, that in his degree All other passeth of good name: And as men saine, ye ben the same, The deed proueth it is so. Thus am I yours for euermo.
Omnia scire putat, sed se presumptio nescit, Nec sibi consimile quem putat esse parem. Qui magis astutus reputat se vincere bellum, In laqueos Veneris forcius ipse cadit.
Sepe (cupido virum, sibi qui presumit, amantem Fallit, et in vacuas spes redit ipsa vias.
Hic loquitur de tercia species suberbie, que presumpcio dicitur, cuius naturam primo secundum vitium confessor simpliciter declarat.
SURQUEDRIE is thilke vice
Of pride, whiche the thirde office Hath in his courte, and will not knowe The trouth, till it ouerthrowe
Upon his fortune and his grace
Cometh, Had I wiste, full ofte a place. For he doth all his thynge by gesse, And voideth all sikernesse.
None other counsell good bym semeth But suche, as him selfe demeth. For in suche wise as he compasseth, His witte alone all other passeth, And is with pride so through sought, That he all other set at nought, And weneth of him seluen so, That suche as he is, there be no mo. And thus he wolde beare a price So faire, so semely, nor so wise Abouen all other, and nought for thy He saith not ones graunt mercy
To god, whiche all grace sendeth : So that his wittes he despendeth Upon him selfe as though there were No god, whiche might auaile there : But all vpon his owne witte
He stant, till he fall in the pitte So ferre, that he maie not arise.
TOUCHEND as of enuious brood I wote not one of all good. But netheles suche as thei bee, Yet there is one, and that is hee, Whiche cleped is Detraction, And to confirme his action, He hath withholde Malebouche, Whose tonge nother pill ne crouche Maie hire, so that he pronounce A pleine good worde without frounce: Where behynde a mans backe
For though he preise, he fint some lacke, Whiche of his tale is ay the laste, That all the price shall ouercaste. And though there be no cause why, Yet woll he iangle, not for thy As he whiche hath the herauldie Of hem, that vsen for to lie.
Hic tractat Confessor super quarta specie inuidie, que Dissimulacio dicitur, cuius vultus quanto maioris amicicie apparenciam osten. dit, tanto subtilioris doli fallacias ad decipiendum mens magina
Or fals Semblant I shall tell, Aboue all other it is the well,
Out of the whiche deceite floweth. There is no man so wise, that knoweth, Of thilke floode, whiche is the tide, Ne howe he shulde hym seluen guide To take saufe passage there: And yet the wynde to mans ere Is softe, and as it semeth oute, It maketh clere weder all aboute. But though it seme, it is not so. For fals Semblant hath euer mo Of his counsaile in companie The derke vntrewe hypocrisie, Whose worde discordeth to his thought. For thy thei ben to gyder brought Of one couine, of one housholde, As it shall after this be tolde. of fals Semblant it nedeth nought To tell of olde ensamples ought. For all daie in experience A man maie see thilke euidence Of fayre wordes, whiche he hereth: But yet the barge enuie stereth,
And halt it euer fro the londe, Whiche fals Semblant with ore in honde It roweth, and woll not arriue
But let it on the waues driue
In great tempest, and great debate, Wherof that loue and his estate Empeireth: And therfore I rede My sonne that thou flee and drede This vice and what that other seyn Let thy semblant be trewe and plein. For fals Semblant is thilke vice, Whiche neuer was without office, Where that enuie thinketh to gile He shall be for that ilke while Of priue counsayle messagere. For whan his semblant is moste clere, Than is he moste derke in his thought: Though men him se thei know him nought, But as it sheweth in the glas
Thynge, whiche therin neuer was: So sheweth it in his visage,
That neuer was in his courage.
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