Poetry. John Skelton

Poetry - John Skelton


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pas a peny to a pounde!

      Now, wolde to God, thou wolde leye money downe!

      Lorde, how that I wolde caste it full rounde!

      Ay, in my pouche a buckell I haue founde;

      The armes of Calyce, I haue no coyne nor crosse!

      I am not happy, I renne ay on the losse.

      Now renne muste I to the stewys syde, 400

      To wete yf Malkyn, my lemman, haue gete oughte:

      I lete her to hyre, that men maye on her ryde,

      By Goddis sydes; syns I her thyder broughte,

      She hath gote me more money with her tayle

      Than hath some shyppe that into Bordews sayle.

      Had I as good an hors as she is a mare,

      Who rydeth on her, he nedeth not to care,

      For she is trussed for to breke a launce; 410

      To her wyll I nowe all my pouerte lege;

      DREDE.

      Gone is this knaue, this rybaude foule and leude;

      He ran as fast as euer that he myghte:

      Dysdayne I sawe with Dyssymulacyon

      Standynge in sadde communicacion. 420

      But there was poyntynge and noddynge with the hede,

      And many wordes sayde in secrete wyse;

      They wandred ay, and stode styll in no stede:

      Me thoughte, alwaye Dyscymular dyde deuyse;

      I dempte and drede theyr talkynge was not good.

      Anone Dyscymular came where I stode.

      Than in his hode I sawe there faces tweyne;

      That one was lene and lyke a pyned goost,

      And to me warde as he gan for to coost,

      Whan that he was euen at me almoost,

      I sawe a knyfe hyd in his one sleue,

      Wheron was wryten this worde, Myscheue.

      And in his other sleue, me thought, I sawe

      A spone of golde, full of hony swete,

      And on that sleue these wordes were wrete,

      A false abstracte cometh from a fals concrete:

      His hode was syde, his cope was roset graye: 440

      DYSSYMULATION.

      How do ye, mayster? ye loke so soberly:

      As I be saued at the dredefull daye,

      It is a perylous vyce, this enuy:

      Alas, a connynge man ne dwelle maye

      But as for that, connynge hath no foo

      Saue hym that nought can, Scrypture sayth soo.

      By that lytel connynge that I haue: 450

      Ye be malygned sore, I you ensure;

      But ye haue crafte your selfe alwaye to saue:

      It is grete scorne to se a mysproude knaue

      With a clerke that connynge is to prate:

      Lete theym go lowse theym, in the deuylles date!

      For all be it that this longe not to me,

      Yet on my backe I bere suche lewde delynge:

      Ryghte now I spake with one, I trowe, I see;

      But, what, a strawe! I maye not tell all thynge.

      By God, I saye there is grete herte brennynge 460

      I wolde eche man were as playne as I;

      I hate this faynynge, fye vpon it, fye!

      A man can not wote where to be come:

      I dare not speke, we be so layde awayte,

      For all our courte is full of dysceyte.

      Now, by saynte Fraunceys, that holy man and frere, 470

      Were I as you, I wolde ryde them full nere;

      And, by my trouthe, but yf an ende they make,

      Yet wyll I saye some wordes for your sake,

      That shall them angre, I holde thereon a grote;

      For some shall wene be hanged by the throte.

      I haue a stoppynge oyster in my poke,

      Truste me, and yf it come to a nede:

      But I am lothe for to reyse a smoke,

      Yf ye coude be otherwyse


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