At Alisandre1 he was when it was won; In Lettowe had he reyséd, and in Russe, When they were won; and in the Greaté Sea10 At mortal battles had he been fifteen, And foughten for our faith at Tramicene,11 And evermore he had a sovereign prise.15 And, though16 that he was worthy, 17 he was wise; He never yet no villany18 ne19 said, He was a very perfect gentle20 Knight. With him there was his son, a youngé Squire, With lockés crull, 21 as they were laid in press. Embroidered was he, as it were a mead 1 Alexandria was captured by Pierre de Lusignan, King of Cyprus, in 1365. ? Been set at the head of the table as the place of honour. 3 Service in Prussia with the Teutonic knights against the heathens of the Baltic countries formed a school of training for military men in these ages. 6 Grenada. Lithuania. 5 Travelled, (German, reise, a journey). Algeciras, in Andalusia, west of Gibraltar, taken from the Moorish king of Grenada in 1344. Supposed to be in Africa. 9 Layas in Armenia, and Satalia (ancient Attalia) in Caramania, were captured, the former in 1367, the latter 1352, by Pierre de Lusignan of Cyprus. 10 The Mediterranean. Or Tlemecen, the western province of Algiers: its chief town of the same name was formerly a great city, the capital of an independent kingdom. It is said to contain many Roman remains. 12 The inclosure for tournaments and judicial combats. 13 Same; retained in the Scottish dialect. 14 In Anatolia among the ruins of Miletus. 17 Of esteem in arms. 15 Praise. 16 As well as. 18 Anything unbecoming a gentleman." (Tyrwhitt., Villain, a peasant, a feu lal serf. 19 Double negatives form a common idiom in old English. 20 High born. 21 Curled. 22 Active, nimble. (Fr.) 23 Military service; (Fr. cheval, a horse): chevauchce signifies in French judges' circuit. Singing he was or fluting all the day: Joust, and eke dance, and well pourtray and write. THE FRANKLIN, A Frankélin was in this company. Well loved he by the morrow a sop in wine. An householder, and that a great was he: His bread, his ale, was always after one ;11 1 Elegantly: fair in its modern application implies mediocrity. 2 Indite, to write, ("what the muse or mind may dictate"); to dictate. The form indict seems now restricted to legal accusation, (Lat. indicium, accusation.) For the origin and application of indiction see Gibbon, Roman Empire, chap. xvii. To tilt in the tournament: some connect the term with the word justle; some with the Latin preposition juxta; others with justa, the Roman funeral rites, because combats formed a part of the ceremony. (Fr. jouster; Ital. giostrare.) Nightime: the termination tale seems to be the German word theil, a part, a deal. 5 This was part of the duty of a squire, who fulfilled for his master many of the offices now reckoned menial, as well as equipping him for the field, and rendering him assistance there or in the tournament. "There is exquisite beauty in offices like these, not the growth of servitude, not rendered with unwillingness or constraint, but the spontaneous acts of reverence and affection, performed by a servant of mind not less noble and free than that of his honoured and illustrious master." Godwin, Life of Chaucer. From frank, free; a proprietor who held his lands free of feudal services or payments. Day's eye is the alleged etymology. Comp. Horace, Epist. i. 4, 16. Fr. parfait, this is always the form in Chaucer. 10 St Julian is the patron saint of travellers. The Franklin is so hospitable he may be called the St Julian of his country. Alike in excellence and abundance. At one, in agreement: to atone, to set at one; to reconcile: hence to compensate for faults. 12 Furnished with wine. 13 This form is still used in Scottish poetry. With, from Anglo-Saxon withan, to join, signifies concomitancy; with, from wyrthen, to be, implies cause, instrumentality: within, (be in,) and without or withouten, (be out,) are formed from the latter. Were has the same origin; and worth, essence, hence value; worth is used in its original sense as an interjection: Wo worth the chace! wo worth the day! (Scott.) With, a willow twig, used for uniting or binding, (Judges xvi. 8);-Withers, the joints of a horse's shoulders. After the sundry seasons of the year 7 At sessions, there was he lord and sire, THE PARSON. A good man there was of religion And such he was yproved often sithes.14 Full loth were him15 to cursen for his tythes; Unto his pooré parishens about, Of his off 'ring16 and eke of his substànce: 1 According to. 2 A pike; from lupus (Lat.); the pike is the wolf of the waters. Horace, Sat. ii. 2, 31. Unless. It is alleged that there should be two words, but and bot; the former a preposition from the Anglo-Saxon verb be-utan (to be out), implying exception or privation: the latter a conjunction from the verb botan (to add, to supply), denoting addition; in Scottish poetry but is still used for without Now thou'rt turned out for a' thy trouble but house or hald. (Burns.) In Wickliffe's version of the Scripture, but is used in many passages where the modern version uses and-" But his disciples axiden him," &c. Luke viii. 9. "But that, that fell among thorns," &c. Luke viii. 14. "All sorts of instruments; of cookery, of war, of apparel." (Tyrwhitt.) 5 Never moved, fixed. Representative in parliament for the county. 8 A purse. A knife, usually worn at the girdle. • Warton takes this term to mean coroner; it is spelt also comptour, (French, comp teur,) and may mean accountant or steward of the hundred to which he belonged. 10 Probably a middling landholder. Skinner says from parischon, ecclesiastes; Barb. Lat. parœcianus, i. c. pastor of the parish. In low Latin it is persona, ecclesiæ rector, ruler or rector of the church. persona, because by his person the church, which is an invisible body, is represented. Blackstone." Richardson. 12 A scholar; the clergy being the only depositories of the arts of reading and writing in the dark ages. 13 Used adverbially. 14 Times; German, zeit, modern English, tide; also sith, sithence, since. 15 Would he have been: analogous to methinks, meseems, "him listeth," &c. The construction might perhaps be analysed into "he were to himself." 16 Of the revenue received at the "offertory" in the service of the mass. 17 Sufficiency; (French). Wide was his parish-houses far asunder, The farthest in his parish much and lite,1 And lette his sheep accumbered in the mire, 10 Him would he snibben13 sharply for the nonés :14 The most distant of his parishioners, great and small. 2 Gave. 3 Low, ignorant, unlearned; hence having the qualities that naturally spring from that condition. Acts xvii. 5. Hearne says, "the laity, laymen, the illiterate." To become morally and religiously worse. 3 Exercise care in his office. "An endowment for the payment of a priest to sing mass, agreeably to the appointment of the founder; there were 35 of these in St Paul's." 7 Withheld from his duties by other attachments. Despiteful, angry to excess. 8 John x. 12. 10 This word has the sense of disdainful, proud, as well as worthy. (Lat. dignus.) 11 Were it. 12 Though, or granting. 13 Check, reprove, scold; snub, snap, sneap are other forms; "an envious sneaking frost."-Shakesp. Love's Labour Lost. 14 This word is written nonce, nones, nanes; corruptly, according to a well known tendency in English to attach the n of the indefinite article to words beginning with a vowel, for once, ones, anes; for a (n) once, i. e. for a purpose or occasion; sometimes the initial has been detached from the word and attached to the article, as a nadder, a numpire, a nauger; written an adder, an umpire, an auger. 15 Nor or not. 16 Spices, disguise, corruption in food. But Christés love and his apostles twelve THE THRACIAN TEMPLE OF MARS. REPRESENTED, IN PAINTING ON THE WALLS OF THE BUILT TO MARS BY THESEUS, IN THE ORATORY" "KNIGHT'S TALE." FIRST on the wall was painted a forest, 8 Of stubbés sharp and hidöus to behold; The northern light in at the door shone, Through which men mighten any light discern. Was tonné-great,13 of iron bright and sheen.14 1 This beautiful picture of a good clergyman has been modernized and amplified by Dryden; but the simple colouring of Chaucer is more appropriate to the patriarchal character than the gorgeous hues of Dryden's versification. Compare also "the Clergyman" in Goldsmith's Deserted Village." 2 Dwelleth; (won, to dwell, is familiar in Scotch); wont, habit, custom. (Ang. Sax. wunian. German, wonen.) 3 Rough; knarr or gnarr is a hard knot in a tree. Chaucer has this word in the sense of snarling, or chiding. Short thick stocks; stub is any thing stopped, (sc. in growth); a remnant; to stuð, to eradicate, to remove a stub; stubble, the diminutive, applied to corn shortened by cutting. The word and its cognates appear in many languages;—(Lat. stipula, stipes. Gr. TUTOS, a stump.) "So the next parson stubbed and burnt it."-Swift. 5 Hidous, pilous, for hideous, piteous, &c. 6 A stupefying noise; from Ang. Sax. swig-an, to be amazed, according to Tooke, who connects swoon with it. 7 Brest, burst; bren, burn; thurg, through; this analogy is very frequent. 8 Declivity. Eneid, ii. 425; an epithet also of Minerva :-and of warriors. 0 Burnished; (Fr. brunir, to polish); having the brightness of burning flame. 11 Apparently war and impetuosity; vise is supposed to be a corruption. 12 Eternal adamant composed his throne."-Pope. The diamond; applied to any hard rock, to steel; (from Greek a, a, privative, and dauw, damao, I subdue). Pliny assigns its indestructibility as originating this derivation.-Phn. xxxvi. 4. The properties of the magnet were attributed to the diamond.-Chaucer, Assembly of Fowls, stanza 22. "Adamantine rock."-Milton, Par. Lost, ii. 646. "Mail, adamantean proof."—Id. Sams. Agon. 134. 15 Of the circur.ference of a tun. 14 Adj. and noun. Byron uses it as a verb; "sheening far."-(Childe Harold.) The adj. is also sheeny; same with shine, shiny. |