THE PROLOGUE. 
By that the Manciple his tale had ended, 
The sunne from the south line was descended 
So lowe, that it was not to my sight 
Degrees nine-and-twenty as in height. 
Four of the clock it was then, as I guess, 
For eleven foot, a little more or less, 
My shadow was at thilke time, as there, 
Of such feet as my lengthe parted were 
In six feet equal of proportion. 
Therewith the moone's exaltation,*                          *rising 
*In meane* Libra, gan alway ascend,              *in the middle of* 
As we were ent'ring at a thorpe's* end.                  *village's 
For which our Host, as he was wont to gie,*                 *govern 
As in this case, our jolly company, 
Said in this wise; 'Lordings every one, 
Now lacketh us no more tales than one. 
Fulfill'd is my sentence and my decree; 
I trow that we have heard of each degree.* from each class or rank 
Almost fulfilled is mine ordinance; in the company 
I pray to God so give him right good chance 
That telleth us this tale lustily. 
Sir Priest,' quoth he, 'art thou a vicary?*                  *vicar 
Or art thou a Parson? say sooth by thy fay.*                 *faith 
Be what thou be, breake thou not our play; 
For every man, save thou, hath told his tale. 
Unbuckle, and shew us what is in thy mail.*                 *wallet 
For truely me thinketh by thy cheer 
Thou shouldest knit up well a great mattere. 
Tell us a fable anon, for cocke's bones.' 
This Parson him answered all at ones; 
'Thou gettest fable none y-told for me, 
For Paul, that writeth unto Timothy, 
Reproveth them that *weive soothfastness,*          *forsake truth* 
And telle fables, and such wretchedness. 
Why should I sowe draff* out of my fist,             *chaff, refuse 
When I may sowe wheat, if that me list? 
For which I say, if that you list to hear 
Morality and virtuous mattere, 
And then that ye will give me audience, 
I would full fain at Christe's reverence 
Do you pleasance lawful, as I can. 
But, truste well, I am a southern man, 
I cannot gest,* rom, ram, ruf, <1> by my letter;        *relate stories 
And, God wot, rhyme hold I but little better. 
And therefore if you list, I will not glose,*        *mince matters 
I will you tell a little tale in prose, 
To knit up all this feast, and make an end. 
And Jesus for his grace wit me send 
To shewe you the way, in this voyage, 
Of thilke perfect glorious pilgrimage, <2> 
That hight Jerusalem celestial. 
And if ye vouchesafe, anon I shall 
Begin upon my tale, for which I pray 
Tell your advice,* I can no better say.                    *opinion 
But natheless this meditation 
I put it aye under correction 
Of clerkes,* for I am not textuel;                        *scholars 
I take but the sentence,* trust me well.            *meaning, sense 
Therefore I make a protestation, 
That I will stande to correction.' 
Upon this word we have assented soon; 
For, as us seemed, it was *for to do'n,*          *a thing worth doing* 
To enden in some virtuous sentence,*                     *discourse 
And for to give him space and audience; 
And bade our Host he shoulde to him say 
That alle we to tell his tale him pray. 
Our Hoste had. the wordes for us all: 
'Sir Priest,' quoth he, 'now faire you befall; 
Say what you list, and we shall gladly hear.' 
And with that word he said in this mannere; 
'Telle,' quoth he, 'your meditatioun, 
But hasten you, the sunne will adown. 
Be fructuous,* and that in little space;          *fruitful; profitable 
And to do well God sende you his grace
THE TALE. <1> 
[The Parson begins his 'little treatise' -(which, if given at 
length, would extend to about thirty of these pages, and which 
cannot by any stretch of courtesy or fancy be said to merit the 
title of a 'Tale') in these words: -] 
Our sweet Lord God of Heaven, that no man will perish, but 
will that we come all to the knowledge of him, and to the 
blissful life that is perdurable [everlasting], admonishes us by 
the prophet Jeremiah, that saith in this wise: 'Stand upon the 
ways, and see and ask of old paths, that is to say, of old 
sentences, which is the good way, and walk in that way, and ye 
shall find refreshing for your souls,' <2> &c. Many be the 
spiritual ways that lead folk to our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the 
reign of glory; of which ways there is a full noble way, and full 
convenable, which may not fail to man nor to woman, that 
through sin hath misgone from the right way of Jerusalem 
celestial; and this way is called penitence. Of which men should 
gladly hearken and inquire with all their hearts, to wit what is 
penitence, and whence it is called penitence, and in what 
manner, and in how many manners, be the actions or workings 
of penitence, and how many species there be of penitences, and 
what things appertain and behove to penitence, and what things 
disturb penitence. 
[Penitence is described, on the authority of Saints Ambrose, 
Isidore, and Gregory, as the bewailing of sin that has been 
wrought, with the purpose never again to do that thing, or any 
other thing which a man should bewail; for weeping and not 
ceasing to do the sin will not avail - though it is to be hoped 
that after every time that a man falls, be it ever so often, he may 
find grace to arise through penitence. And repentant folk that 
leave their sin ere sin leave them, are accounted by Holy Church 
sure of their salvation, even though the repentance be at the last 
hour. There are three actions of penitence; that a man be 
baptized after he has sinned; that he do no deadly sin after 
receiving baptism; and that he fall into no venial sins from day 
to day. 'Thereof saith St Augustine, that penitence of good and 
humble folk is the penitence of every day.' The species of 
penitence are three: solemn, when a man is openly expelled 
from Holy Church in Lent, or is compelled by Holy Church to 
do open penance for an open sin openly talked of in the 
country; common penance, enjoined by priests in certain cases, 
as to go on pilgrimage naked or barefoot; and privy penance, 
which men do daily for private sins, of which they confess 
privately and receive private penance. To very perfect penitence 
are behoveful and necessary three things: contrition of heart, 
confession of mouth, and satisfaction; which are fruitful 
penitence against delight in thinking, reckless speech, and 
wicked sinful works. 
Penitence may be likened to a tree, having its root in contrition, 
biding itself in the heart as a tree-root does in the earth; out of 
this root springs a stalk, that bears branches and leaves of 
confession, and fruit of satisfaction. Of this root also springs a 
seed of grace, which is mother of all security, and this seed is 
eager and hot; and the grace of this seed springs of God, 
through remembrance on the day of judgment and on the pains 
of hell. The heat of this seed is the love of God, and the desire 
of everlasting joy; and this heat draws the heart of man to God, 
and makes him hate his sin. Penance is the tree of life to them 
that receive it. In penance or contrition man shall understand 
four things: what is contrition; what are the causes that move a 
man to contrition; how he should be contrite; and what 
contrition availeth to the soul. Contrition is the heavy and 
grievous sorrow that a man receiveth in his heart for his sins, 
with earnest purpose to confess and do penance, and never 
more to sin. Six causes ought to move a man to contrition: 1. 
He should remember him of his sins; 2. He should reflect that 
sin putteth a man in great thraldom, and all the greater the 
higher is the estate from which he falls; 3. He should dread the 
day of doom and the horrible pains of hell; 4. The sorrowful 
remembrance of the good deeds that man hath omitted to do 
here on earth, and also the good that he hath lost, ought to 
make him have contrition; 5. So also ought the remembrance of 
the passion that our Lord Jesus Christ suffered for our sins; 6. 
And so ought the hope of three things, that is to say, 
forgiveness of sin, the gift of grace to do well, and the glory of 
heaven with which God shall reward man for his good deeds. - 
All these points the Parson illustrates and enforces at length; 
waxing especially eloquent under the third head, and plainly 
setting forth the sternly realistic notions regarding future 
punishments that were entertained in the time of Chaucer:-] <3> 
Certes, all the sorrow that a man might make from the 
beginning of the world, is but a little thing, at retard of [in 
comparison with] the sorrow of hell. The cause why that Job 
calleth hell the land of darkness; <4> understand, that he calleth 
it land or earth, for it is stable and never shall fail, and dark, for 
he that is in hell hath default [is devoid] of light natural; for 
certes the dark light, that shall come out of the fire that ever 
shall burn, shall turn them all to pain that be in hell, for it 
sheweth them the horrible devils that them torment. Covered 
with the darkness of death; that is to say, that he that is in hell 
shall have default of the sight of God; for certes the sight of 
God is the life perdurable [everlasting]. The darkness of death, 
be the sins that the wretched man hath done, which that disturb 
[prevent] him to see the face of God, right as a dark cloud doth 
between us and the sun. Land of misease, because there be three 
manner of defaults against three things that folk of this world 
have in this present life; that is to say, honours, delights, and 
riches. Against honour have they in hell shame and confusion: 
for well ye wot, that men call honour the reverence that man 
doth to man; but in hell is no honour nor reverence; for certes 
no more reverence shall be done there to a king than to a knave 
[servant]. For which God saith by the prophet Jeremiah; 'The 
folk that me despise shall be in despite.' Honour is also called 
great lordship. There shall no wight serve other, but of harm 
and torment. Honour is also called great dignity and highness; 
but in hell shall they be all fortrodden [trampled under foot] of 
devils. As God saith, 'The horrible devils shall go and come 
upon the heads of damned folk;' and this is, forasmuch as the 
higher that they were in this present life, the more shall they be 
abated [abased] and defouled in hell. Against the riches of this 
world shall they have misease [trouble, torment] of poverty, and 
this poverty shall be in four things: in default [want] of treasure; 
of which David saith, 'The rich folk that embraced and oned 
[united] all their heart to treasure of this world, shall sleep in the 
sleeping of death, and nothing shall they find in their hands of 
all their treasure.' And moreover, the misease of hell shall be in 
default of meat and drink. For God saith thus by Moses, 'They 
shall be wasted with hunger, and the birds of hell shall devour 
them with bitter death, and the gall of the dragon shall be their 
drink, and the venom of the dragon their morsels.' And 
furthermore, their misease shall be in default of clothing, for 
they shall be naked in body, as of clothing, save the fire in 
which they burn, and other filths; and naked shall they be in 
soul, of all manner virtues, which that is the clothing of the soul. 
Where be then the gay robes, and the soft sheets, and the fine 
shirts? Lo, what saith of them the prophet Isaiah, that under 
them shall be strewed moths, and their covertures shall be of 
worms of hell. And furthermore, their misease shall be in default 
of friends, for he is not poor that hath good friends: but there is 
no friend; for neither God nor any good creature shall be friend 
to them, and evereach of them shall hate other with deadly hate. 
The Sons and the daughters shall rebel against father and 
mother, and kindred against kindred, and chide and despise each 
other, both day and night, as God saith by the prophet Micah. 
And the loving children, that whom loved so fleshly each other, 
would each of them eat the other if they might. For how should 
they love together in the pains of hell, when they hated each 
other in the prosperity of this life? For trust well, their fleshly 
love was deadly hate; as saith the prophet David; 'Whoso 
loveth wickedness, he hateth his own soul:' and whoso hateth 
his own soul, certes he may love none other wight in no 
manner: and therefore in hell is no solace nor no friendship, but 
ever the more kindreds that be in hell, the more cursing, the 
more chiding, and the more deadly hate there is among them. 
And furtherover, they shall have default of all manner delights; 
for certes delights be after the appetites of the five wits 
[senses]; as sight, hearing, smelling, savouring [tasting], and 
touching. But in hell their sight shall be full of darkness and of 
smoke, and their eyes full of tears; and their hearing full of 
waimenting [lamenting] and grinting [gnashing] of teeth, as 
saith Jesus Christ; their nostrils shall be full of stinking; and, as 
saith Isaiah the prophet, their savouring [tasting] shall be full of 
bitter gall; and touching of all their body shall be covered with 
fire that never shall quench, and with worms that never shall 
die, as God saith by the mouth of Isaiah. And forasmuch as they 
shall not ween that they may die for pain, and by death flee from 
pain, that may they understand in the word of Job, that saith, 
'There is the shadow of death.' Certes a shadow hath the 
likeness of the thing of which it is shadowed, but the shadow is 
not the same thing of which it is shadowed: right so fareth the 
pain of hell; it is like death, for the horrible anguish; and why? 
for it paineth them ever as though they should die anon; but 
certes they shall not die. For, as saith Saint Gregory, 'To 
wretched caitiffs shall be given death without death, and end 
without end, and default without failing; for their death shall 
always live, and their end shall evermore begin, and their default 
shall never fail.' And therefore saith Saint John the Evangelist, 
'They shall follow death, and they shall not find him, and they 
shall desire to die, and death shall flee from them.' And eke Job 
saith, that in hell is no order of rule. And albeit that God hath 
created all things in right order, and nothing without order, but 
all things be ordered and numbered, yet nevertheless they that 
be damned be not in order, nor hold no order. For the earth 
shall bear them no fruit (for, as the prophet David saith, 'God 
shall destroy the fruit of the earth, as for them'): nor water shall 
give them no moisture, nor the air no refreshing, nor the fire no 
light. For as saith Saint Basil, 'The burning of the fire of this 
world shall God give in hell to them that be damned, but the 
light and the clearness shall be given in heaven to his children; 
right as the good man giveth flesh to his children, and bones to 
his hounds.' And for they shall have no hope to escape, saith 
Job at last, that there shall horror and grisly dread dwell without 
end. Horror is always dread of harm that is to come, and this 
dread shall ever dwell in the hearts of them that be damned. 
And therefore have they lost all their hope for seven causes. 
First, for God that is their judge shall be without mercy to them; 
nor they may not please him; nor none of his hallows [saints]; 
nor they may give nothing for their ransom; nor they have no 
voice to speak to him; nor they may not flee from pain; nor they 
have no goodness in them that they may shew to deliver them 
from pain. 
[Under the fourth head, of good works, the Parson says: -] 
The courteous Lord Jesus Christ will that no good work be lost, 
for in somewhat it shall avail. But forasmuch as the good works 
that men do while they be in good life be all amortised [killed, 
deadened] by sin following, and also since all the good works 
that men do while they be in deadly sin be utterly dead, as for to 
have the life perdurable [everlasting], well may that man that no 
good works doth, sing that new French song, J'ai tout perdu - 
mon temps et mon labour <5>. For certes, sin bereaveth a man 
both the goodness of nature, and eke the goodness of grace. 
For soothly the grace of the Holy Ghost fareth like fire, that 
may not be idle; for fire faileth anon as it forleteth [leaveth] its 
working, and right so grace faileth anon as it forleteth its 
working. Then loseth the sinful man the goodness of glory, that 
only is to good men that labour and work. Well may he be sorry 
then, that oweth all his life to God, as long as he hath lived, and 
also as long as he shall live, that no goodness hath to pay with 
his debt to God, to whom he oweth all his life: for trust well he 
shall give account, as saith Saint Bernard, of all the goods that 
have been given him in his present life, and how he hath them 
dispended, insomuch that there shall not perish an hair of his 
head, nor a moment of an hour shall not perish of his time, that 
he shall not give thereof a reckoning. 
[Having treated of the causes, the Parson comes to the manner, 
of contrition - which should be universal and total, not merely 
of outward deeds of sin, but also of wicked delights and 
thoughts and words; 'for certes Almighty God is all good, and 
therefore either he forgiveth all, or else right naught.' Further, 
contrition should be 'wonder sorrowful and anguishous,' and 
also continual, with steadfast purpose of confession and 
amendment. Lastly, of what contrition availeth, the Parson says, 
that sometimes it delivereth man from sin; that without it neither 
confession nor satisfaction is of any worth; that it 'destroyeth 
the prison of hell, and maketh weak and feeble all the strengths 
of the devils, and restoreth the gifts of the Holy Ghost and of all 
good virtues, and cleanseth the soul of sin, and delivereth it 
from the pain of hell, and from the company of the devil, and 
from the servage [slavery] of sin, and restoreth it to all goods 
spiritual, and to the company and communion of Holy Church.' 
He who should set his intent to these things, would no longer be 
inclined to sin, but would give his heart and body to the service 
of Jesus Christ, and thereof do him homage. 'For, certes, our 
Lord Jesus Christ hath spared us so benignly in our follies, that 
if he had not pity on man's soul, a sorry song might we all sing.' 
The Second Part of the Parson's Tale or Treatise opens with an 
explanation of what is confession - which is termed 'the 
second part of penitence, that is, sign of contrition;' whether it 
ought needs be done or not; and what things be convenable to 
true confession. Confession is true shewing of sins to the priest, 
without excusing, hiding, or forwrapping [disguising] of 
anything, and without vaunting of good works. 'Also, it is 
necessary to understand whence that sins spring, and how they 
increase, and which they be.' From Adam we took original sin; 
'from him fleshly descended be we all, and engendered of vile 
and corrupt matter;' and the penalty of Adam's transgression 
dwelleth with us as to temptation, which penalty is called 
concupiscence. 'This concupiscence, when it is wrongfully 
disposed or ordained in a man, it maketh him covet, by covetise 
of flesh, fleshly sin by sight of his eyes, as to earthly things, and 
also covetise of highness by pride of heart.' The Parson 
proceeds to shew how man is tempted in his flesh to sin; how, 
after his natural concupiscence, comes suggestion of the devil, 
that is to say the devil's bellows, with which he bloweth in man 
the fire of con cupiscence; and how man then bethinketh him 
whether he will do or no the thing to which he is tempted. If he 
flame up into pleasure at the thought, and give way, then is he 
all dead in soul; 'and thus is sin accomplished, by temptation, by 
delight, and by consenting; and then is the sin actual.' Sin is 
either venial, or deadly; deadly, when a man loves any creature 
more than Jesus Christ our Creator, venial, if he love Jesus 
Christ less than he ought. Venial sins diminish man's love to 
God more and more, and may in this wise skip into deadly sin; 
for many small make a great. 'And hearken this example: A 
great wave of the sea cometh sometimes with so great a 
violence, that it drencheth [causes to sink] the ship: and the 
same harm do sometimes the small drops, of water that enter 
through a little crevice in the thurrok [hold, bilge], and in the 
bottom of the ship, if men be so negligent that they discharge 
them not betimes. And therefore, although there be difference 
betwixt these two causes of drenching, algates [in any case] the 
ship is dreint [sunk]. Right so fareth it sometimes of deadly sin,' 
and of venial sins when they multiply in a man so greatly as to 
make him love worldly things more than God. The Parson then 
enumerates specially a number of sins which many a man 
peradventure deems no sins, and confesses them not, and yet 
nevertheless they are truly sins: - ] 
This is to say, at every time that a man eateth and drinketh more 
than sufficeth to the sustenance of his body, in certain he doth 
sin; eke when he speaketh more than it needeth, he doth sin; eke 
when he heareth not benignly the complaint of the poor; eke 
when he is in health of body, and will not fast when other folk 
fast, without cause reasonable; eke when he sleepeth more than 
needeth, or when he cometh by that occasion too late to church, 
or to other works of charity; eke when he useth his wife without 
sovereign desire of engendrure, to the honour of God, or for the 
intent to yield his wife his debt of his body; eke when he will not 
visit the sick, or the prisoner, if he may; eke if he love wife, or 
child, or other worldly thing, more than reason requireth; eke if 
he flatter or blandish more than he ought for any necessity; eke 
if he minish or withdraw the alms of the poor; eke if he apparail 
[prepare] his meat more deliciously than need is, or eat it too 
hastily by likerousness [gluttony]; eke if he talk vanities in the 
church, or at God's service, or that he be a talker of idle words 
of folly or villainy, for he shall yield account of them at the day 
of doom; eke when he behighteth [promiseth] or assureth to do 
things that he may not perform; eke when that by lightness of 
folly he missayeth or scorneth his neighbour; eke when he hath 
any wicked suspicion of thing, that he wot of it no 
soothfastness: these things, and more without number, be sins, 
as saith Saint Augustine. 
[No earthly man may eschew all venial sins; yet may he refrain 
him, by the burning love that he hath to our Lord Jesus Christ, 
and by prayer and confession, and other good works, so that it 
shall but little grieve. 'Furthermore, men may also refrain and 
put away venial sin, by receiving worthily the precious body of 
Jesus Christ; by receiving eke of holy water; by alms-deed; by 
general confession of Confiteor at mass, and at prime, and at 
compline [evening service]; and by blessing of bishops and 
priests, and by other good works.' The Parson then proceeds to 
weightier matters:- ] 
Now it is behovely [profitable, necessary] to tell which be 
deadly sins, that is to say, chieftains of sins; forasmuch as all 
they run in one leash, but in diverse manners. Now be they 
called chieftains, forasmuch as they be chief, and of them spring 
all other sins. The root of these sins, then, is pride, the general 
root of all harms. For of this root spring certain branches: as ire, 
envy, accidie <6> or sloth, avarice or covetousness (to common 
understanding), gluttony, and lechery: and each of these sins 
hath his branches and his twigs, as shall be declared in their 
chapters following. And though so be, that no man can tell 
utterly the number of the twigs, and of the harms that come of 
pride, yet will I shew a part of them, as ye shall understand. 
There is inobedience, vaunting, hypocrisy, despite, arrogance, 
impudence, swelling of hearte, insolence, elation, impatience, 
strife, contumacy, presumption, irreverence, pertinacity, vain- 
glory and many another twig that I cannot tell nor declare. . . .] 
And yet [moreover] there is a privy species of pride that waiteth 
first to be saluted ere he will salute, all [although] be he less 
worthy than that other is; and eke he waiteth [expecteth] or 
desireth to sit or to go above him in the way, or kiss the pax, 
<7> or be incensed, or go to offering before his neighbour, and 
such semblable [like] things, against his duty peradventure, but 
that he hath his heart and his intent in such a proud desire to be 
magnified and honoured before the people. Now be there two 
manner of prides; the one of them is within the heart of a man, 
and the other is without. Of which soothly these foresaid things, 
and more than I have said, appertain to pride that is within the 
heart of a man and there be other species of pride that be 
without: but nevertheless, the one of these species of pride is 
sign of the other, right as the gay levesell [bush] at the tavern is 
sign of the wine that is in the cellar. And this is in many things: 
as in speech and countenance, and outrageous array of clothing; 
for certes, if there had been no sin in clothing, Christ would not 
so soon have noted and spoken of the clothing of that rich man 
in the gospel. And Saint Gregory saith, that precious clothing is 
culpable for the dearth [dearness] of it, and for its softness, and 
for its strangeness and disguising, and for the superfluity or for 
the inordinate scantness of it; alas! may not a man see in our 
days the sinful costly array of clothing, and namely [specially] in 
too much superfluity, or else in too disordinate scantness? As to 
the first sin, in superfluity of clothing, which that maketh it so 
dear, to the harm of the people, not only the cost of the 
embroidering, the disguising, indenting or barring, ounding, 
paling, <8> winding, or banding, and semblable [similar] waste 
of cloth in vanity; but there is also the costly furring [lining or 
edging with fur] in their gowns, so much punching of chisels to 
make holes, so much dagging [cutting] of shears, with the 
superfluity in length of the foresaid gowns, trailing in the dung 
and in the mire, on horse and eke on foot, as well of man as of 
woman, that all that trailing is verily (as in effect) wasted, 
consumed, threadbare, and rotten with dung, rather than it is 
given to the poor, to great damage of the foresaid poor folk, 
and that in sundry wise: this is to say, the more that cloth is 
wasted, the more must it cost to the poor people for the 
scarceness; and furthermore, if so be that they would give such 
punched and dagged clothing to the poor people, it is not 
convenient to wear for their estate, nor sufficient to boot [help, 
remedy] their necessity, to keep them from the distemperance 
[inclemency] of the firmament. Upon the other side, to speak of 
the horrible disordinate scantness of clothing, as be these cutted 
slops or hanselines [breeches] , that through their shortness 
cover not the shameful member of man, to wicked intent alas! 
some of them shew the boss and the shape of the horrible 
swollen members, that seem like to the malady of hernia, in the 
wrapping of their hosen, and eke the buttocks of them, that fare 
as it were the hinder part of a she-ape in the full of the moon. 
And more over the wretched swollen members that they shew 
through disguising, in departing [dividing] of their hosen in 
white and red, seemeth that half their shameful privy members 
were flain [flayed]. And if so be that they depart their hosen in 
other colours, as is white and blue, or white and black, or black 
and red, and so forth; then seemeth it, by variance of colour, 
that the half part of their privy members be corrupt by the fire 
of Saint Anthony, or by canker, or other such mischance. And 
of the hinder part of their buttocks it is full horrible to see, for 
certes, in that part of their body where they purge their stinking 
ordure, that foul part shew they to the people proudly in despite 
of honesty [decency], which honesty Jesus Christ and his friends 
observed to shew in his life. Now as of the outrageous array of 
women, God wot, that though the visages of some of them 
seem full chaste and debonair [gentle], yet notify they, in their 
array of attire, likerousness and pride. I say not that honesty 
[reasonable and appropriate style] in clothing of man or woman 
unconvenable but, certes, the superfluity or disordinate scarcity 
of clothing is reprovable. Also the sin of their ornament, or of 
apparel, as in things that appertain to riding, as in too many 
delicate horses, that be holden for delight, that be so fair, fat, 
and costly; and also in many a vicious knave, [servant] that is 
sustained because of them; in curious harness, as in saddles, 
cruppers, peytrels, [breast-plates] and bridles, covered with 
precious cloth and rich bars and plates of gold and silver. For 
which God saith by Zechariah the prophet, 'I will confound the 
riders of such horses.' These folk take little regard of the riding 
of God's Son of heaven, and of his harness, when he rode upon 
an ass, and had no other harness but the poor clothes of his 
disciples; nor we read not that ever he rode on any other beast. 
I speak this for the sin of superfluity, and not for reasonable 
honesty [seemliness], when reason it requireth. And moreover, 
certes, pride is greatly notified in holding of great meinie 
[retinue of servants], when they be of little profit or of right no 
profit, and namely [especially] when that meinie is felonous 
[violent ] and damageous [harmful] to the people by hardiness 
[arrogance] of high lordship, or by way of office; for certes, 
such lords sell then their lordship to the devil of hell, when they 
sustain the wickedness of their meinie. Or else, when these folk 
of low degree, as they that hold hostelries, sustain theft of their 
hostellers, and that is in many manner of deceits: that manner of 
folk be the flies that follow the honey, or else the hounds that 
follow the carrion. Such foresaid folk strangle spiritually their 
lordships; for which thus saith David the prophet, 'Wicked 
death may come unto these lordships, and God give that they 
may descend into hell adown; for in their houses is iniquity and 
shrewedness, [impiety] and not God of heaven.' And certes, but 
if [unless] they do amendment, right as God gave his benison 
[blessing] to Laban by the service of Jacob, and to Pharaoh by 
the service of Joseph; right so God will give his malison 
[condemnation] to such lordships as sustain the wickedness of 
their servants, but [unless] they come to amendment. Pride of 
the table apaireth [worketh harm] eke full oft; for, certes, rich 
men be called to feasts, and poor folk be put away and rebuked; 
also in excess of divers meats and drinks, and namely [specially] 
such manner bake-meats and dish-meats burning of wild fire, 
and painted and castled with paper, and semblable [similar] 
waste, so that it is abuse to think. And eke in too great 
preciousness of vessel, [plate] and curiosity of minstrelsy, by 
which a man is stirred more to the delights of luxury, if so be 
that he set his heart the less upon our Lord Jesus Christ, certain 
it is a sin; and certainly the delights might be so great in this 
case, that a man might lightly [easily] fall by them into deadly 
sin. 
[The sins that arise of pride advisedly and habitually are deadly; 
those that arise by frailty unadvised suddenly, and suddenly 
withdraw again, though grievous, are not deadly. Pride itself 
springs sometimes of the goods of nature, sometimes of the 
goods of fortune, sometimes of the goods of grace; but the 
Parson, enumerating and examining all these in turn, points out 
how little security they possess and how little ground for pride 
they furnish, and goes on to enforce the remedy against pride - 
which is humility or meekness, a virtue through which a man 
hath true knowledge of himself, and holdeth no high esteem of 
himself in regard of his deserts, considering ever his frailty.] 
Now be there three manners [kinds] of humility; as humility in 
heart, and another in the mouth, and the third in works. The 
humility in the heart is in four manners: the one is, when a man 
holdeth himself as nought worth before God of heaven; the 
second is, when he despiseth no other man; the third is, when he 
recketh not though men hold him nought worth; the fourth is, 
when he is not sorry of his humiliation. Also the humility of 
mouth is in four things: in temperate speech; in humility of 
speech; and when he confesseth with his own mouth that he is 
such as he thinketh that he is in his heart; another is, when he 
praiseth the bounte [goodness] of another man and nothing 
thereof diminisheth. Humility eke in works is in four manners: 
the first is, when he putteth other men before him; the second is, 
to choose the lowest place of all; the third is, gladly to assent to 
good counsel; the fourth is, to stand gladly by the award 
[judgment] of his sovereign, or of him that is higher in degree: 
certain this is a great work of humility. 
[The Parson proceeds to treat of the other cardinal sins, and 
their remedies: (2.) Envy, with its remedy, the love of God 
principally and of our neighbours as ourselves: (3.) Anger, with 
all its fruits in revenge, rancour, hate, discord, manslaughter, 
blasphemy, swearing, falsehood, flattery, chiding and reproving, 
scorning, treachery, sowing of strife, doubleness of tongue, 
betraying of counsel to a man's disgrace, menacing, idle words, 
jangling, japery or buffoonery, &c. - and its remedy in the 
virtues called mansuetude, debonairte, or gentleness, and 
patience or sufferance: (4.) Sloth, or 'Accidie,' which comes 
after the sin of Anger, because Envy blinds the eyes of a man, 
and Anger troubleth a man, and Sloth maketh him heavy, 
thoughtful, and peevish. It is opposed to every estate of man - 
as unfallen, and held to work in praising and adoring God; as 
sinful, and held to labour in praying for deliverance from sin; 
and as in the state of grace, and held to works of penitence. It 
resembles the heavy and sluggish condition of those in hell; it 
will suffer no hardness and no penance; it prevents any 
beginning of good works; it causes despair of God's mercy, 
which is the sin against the Holy Ghost; it induces somnolency 
and neglect of communion in prayer with God; and it breeds 
negligence or recklessness, that cares for nothing, and is the 
nurse of all mischiefs, if ignorance is their mother. Against 
Sloth, and these and other branches and fruits of it, the remedy 
lies in the virtue of fortitude or strength, in its various species of 
magnanimity or great courage; faith and hope in God and his 
saints; surety or sickerness, when a man fears nothing that can 
oppose the good works he has under taken; magnificence, when 
he carries out great works of goodness begun; constancy or 
stableness of heart; and other incentives to energy and laborious 
service: (5.) Avarice, or Covetousness, which is the root of all 
harms, since its votaries are idolaters, oppressors and enslavers 
of men, deceivers of their equals in business, simoniacs, 
gamblers, liars, thieves, false swearers, blasphemers, murderers, 
and sacrilegious. Its remedy lies in compassion and pity largely 
exercised, and in reasonable liberality - for those who spend on 
'fool-largesse,' or ostentation of worldly estate and luxury, 
shall receive the malison [condemnation] that Christ shall give 
at the day of doom to them that shall be damned: (6.) Gluttony; 
- of which the Parson treats so briefly that the chapter may be 
given in full: - ] 
After Avarice cometh Gluttony, which is express against the 
commandment of God. Gluttony is unmeasurable appetite to eat 
or to drink; or else to do in aught to the unmeasurable appetite 
and disordered covetousness [craving] to eat or drink. This sin 
corrupted all this world, as is well shewed in the sin of Adam 
and of Eve. Look also what saith Saint Paul of gluttony: 
'Many,' saith he, 'go, of which I have oft said to you, and now 
I say it weeping, that they be enemies of the cross of Christ, of 
which the end is death, and of which their womb [stomach] is 
their God and their glory;' in confusion of them that so savour 
[take delight in] earthly things. He that is usant [accustomed, 
addicted] to this sin of gluttony, he may no sin withstand, he 
must be in servage [bondage] of all vices, for it is the devil's 
hoard, [lair, lurking-place] where he hideth him in and resteth. 
This sin hath many species. The first is drunkenness, that is the 
horrible sepulture of man's reason: and therefore when a man is 
drunken, he hath lost his reason; and this is deadly sin. But 
soothly, when that a man is not wont to strong drink, and 
peradventure knoweth not the strength of the drink, or hath 
feebleness in his head, or hath travailed [laboured], through 
which he drinketh the more, all [although] be he suddenly 
caught with drink, it is no deadly sin, but venial. The second 
species of gluttony is, that the spirit of a man waxeth all 
troubled for drunkenness, and bereaveth a man the discretion of 
his wit. The third species of gluttony is, when a man devoureth 
his meat, and hath no rightful manner of eating. The fourth is, 
when, through the great abundance of his meat, the humours of 
his body be distempered. The fifth is, forgetfulness by too much 
drinking, for which a man sometimes forgetteth by the morrow 
what be did at eve. In other manner be distinct the species of 
gluttony, after Saint Gregory. The first is, for to eat or drink 
before time. The second is, when a man getteth him too delicate 
meat or drink. The third is, when men take too much over 
measure [immoderately]. The fourth is curiosity [nicety] with 
great intent [application, pains] to make and apparel [prepare] 
his meat. The fifth is, for to eat too greedily. These be the five 
fingers of the devil's hand, by which he draweth folk to the sin. 
Against gluttony the remedy is abstinence, as saith Galen; but 
that I hold not meritorious, if he do it only for the health of his 
body. Saint Augustine will that abstinence be done for virtue, 
and with patience. Abstinence, saith he, is little worth, but if 
[unless] a man have good will thereto, and but it be enforced by 
patience and by charity, and that men do it for God's sake, and 
in hope to have the bliss in heaven. The fellows of abstinence be 
temperance, that holdeth the mean in all things; also shame, that 
escheweth all dishonesty [indecency, impropriety], sufficiency, 
that seeketh no rich meats nor drinks, nor doth no force of [sets 
no value on] no outrageous apparelling of meat; measure 
[moderation] also, that restraineth by reason the unmeasurable 
appetite of eating; soberness also, that restraineth the outrage of 
drink; sparing also, that restraineth the delicate ease to sit long 
at meat, wherefore some folk stand of their own will to eat, 
because they will eat at less leisure. 
[At great length the Parson then points out the many varieties of 
the sin of (7.) Lechery, and its remedy in chastity and 
continence, alike in marriage and in widowhood; also in the 
abstaining from all such indulgences of eating, drinking, and 
sleeping as inflame the passions, and from the company of all 
who may tempt to the sin. Minute guidance is given as to the 
duty of confessing fully and faithfully the circumstances that 
attend and may aggravate this sin; and the Treatise then passes 
to the consideration of the conditions that are essential to a true 
and profitable confession of sin in general. First, it must be in 
sorrowful bitterness of spirit; a condition that has five signs - 
shamefastness, humility in heart and outward sign, weeping with 
the bodily eyes or in the heart, disregard of the shame that 
might curtail or garble confession, and obedience to the penance 
enjoined. Secondly, true confession must be promptly made, for 
dread of death, of increase of sinfulness, of forgetfulness of 
what should be confessed, of Christ's refusal to hear if it be put 
off to the last day of life; and this condition has four terms; that 
confession be well pondered beforehand, that the man 
confessing have comprehended in his mind the number and 
greatness of his sins and how long he has lain in sin, that he be 
contrite for and eschew his sins, and that he fear and flee the 
occasions for that sin to which he is inclined. - What follows 
under this head is of some interest for the light which it throws 
on the rigorous government wielded by the Romish Church in 
those days -] 
Also thou shalt shrive thee of all thy sins to one man, and not a 
parcel [portion] to one man, and a parcel to another; that is to 
understand, in intent to depart [divide] thy confession for shame 
or dread; for it is but strangling of thy soul. For certes Jesus 
Christ is entirely all good, in him is none imperfection, and 
therefore either he forgiveth all perfectly, or else never a deal 
[not at all]. I say not that if thou be assigned to thy penitencer 
<9> for a certain sin, that thou art bound to shew him all the 
remnant of thy sins, of which thou hast been shriven of thy 
curate, but if it like thee [unless thou be pleased] of thy 
humility; this is no departing [division] of shrift. And I say not, 
where I speak of division of confession, that if thou have license 
to shrive thee to a discreet and an honest priest, and where thee 
liketh, and by the license of thy curate, that thou mayest not 
well shrive thee to him of all thy sins: but let no blot be behind, 
let no sin be untold as far as thou hast remembrance. And when 
thou shalt be shriven of thy curate, tell him eke all the sins that 
thou hast done since thou wert last shriven. This is no wicked 
intent of division of shrift. Also, very shrift [true confession] 
asketh certain conditions. First, that thou shrive thee by thy 
free will, not constrained, nor for shame of folk, nor for malady 
[sickness], or such things: for it is reason, that he that 
trespasseth by his free will, that by his free will he confess his 
trespass; and that no other man tell his sin but himself; nor he 
shall not nay nor deny his sin, nor wrath him against the priest 
for admonishing him to leave his sin. The second condition is, 
that thy shrift be lawful, that is to say, that thou that shrivest 
thee, and eke the priest that heareth thy confession, be verily in 
the faith of Holy Church, and that a man be not despaired of the 
mercy of Jesus Christ, as Cain and Judas were. And eke a man 
must accuse himself of his own trespass, and not another: but he 
shall blame and wite [accuse] himself of his own malice and of 
his sin, and none other: but nevertheless, if that another man be 
occasion or else enticer of his sin, or the estate of the person be 
such by which his sin is aggravated, or else that be may not 
plainly shrive him but [unless] he tell the person with which he 
hath sinned, then may he tell, so that his intent be not to 
backbite the person, but only to declare his confession. Thou 
shalt not eke make no leasings [falsehoods] in thy confession 
for humility, peradventure, to say that thou hast committed and 
done such sins of which that thou wert never guilty. For Saint 
Augustine saith, 'If that thou, because of humility, makest a 
leasing on thyself, though thou were not in sin before, yet art 
thou then in sin through thy leasing.' Thou must also shew thy 
sin by thine own proper mouth, but [unless] thou be dumb, and 
not by letter; for thou that hast done the sin, thou shalt have the 
shame of the confession. Thou shalt not paint thy confession 
with fair and subtle words, to cover the more thy sin; for then 
beguilest thou thyself, and not the priest; thou must tell it 
plainly, be it never so foul nor so horrible. Thou shalt eke shrive 
thee to a priest that is discreet to counsel thee; and eke thou 
shalt not shrive thee for vain-glory, nor for hypocrisy, nor for 
no cause but only for the doubt [fear] of Jesus' Christ and the 
health of thy soul. Thou shalt not run to the priest all suddenly, 
to tell him lightly thy sin, as who telleth a jape [jest] or a tale, 
but advisedly and with good devotion; and generally shrive thee 
oft; if thou oft fall, oft arise by confession. And though thou 
shrive thee oftener than once of sin of which thou hast been 
shriven, it is more merit; and, as saith Saint Augustine, thou 
shalt have the more lightly [easily] release and grace of God, 
both of sin and of pain. And certes, once a year at the least way, 
it is lawful to be houseled, <10> for soothly once a year all 
things in the earth renovelen [renew themselves]. 
[Here ends the Second Part of the Treatise; the Third Part, 
which contains the practical application of the whole, follows 
entire, along with the remarkable 'Prayer of Chaucer,' as it 
stands in the Harleian Manuscript:-] 
De Tertia Parte Poenitentiae. [Of the third part of penitence] 
Now have I told you of very [true] confession, that is the 
second part of penitence: The third part of penitence is 
satisfaction, and that standeth generally in almsdeed and bodily 
pain. Now be there three manner of almsdeed: contrition of 
heart, where a man offereth himself to God; the second is, to 
have pity of the default of his neighbour; the third is, in giving 
of good counsel and comfort, ghostly and bodily, where men 
have need, and namely [specially] sustenance of man's food. 
And take keep [heed] that a man hath need of these things 
generally; he hath need of food, of clothing, and of herberow 
[lodging], he hath need of charitable counsel and visiting in 
prison and malady, and sepulture of his dead body. And if thou 
mayest not visit the needful with thy person, visit them by thy 
message and by thy gifts. These be generally alms or works of 
charity of them that have temporal riches or discretion in 
counselling. Of these works shalt thou hear at the day of doom. 
This alms shouldest thou do of thine own proper things, and 
hastily [promptly], and privily [secretly] if thou mayest; but 
nevertheless, if thou mayest not do it privily, thou shalt not 
forbear to do alms, though men see it, so that it be not done for 
thank of the world, but only for thank of Jesus Christ. For, as 
witnesseth Saint Matthew, chap. v., 'A city may not be hid that 
is set on a mountain, nor men light not a lantern and put it 
under a bushel, but men set it on a candlestick, to light the men 
in the house; right so shall your light lighten before men, that 
they may see your good works, and glorify your Father that is 
in heaven.' 
Now as to speak of bodily pain, it is in prayer, in wakings, 
[watchings] in fastings, and in virtuous teachings. Of orisons ye 
shall understand, that orisons or prayers is to say a piteous will 
of heart, that redresseth it in God, and expresseth it by word 
outward, to remove harms, and to have things spiritual and 
durable, and sometimes temporal things. Of which orisons, 
certes in the orison of the Pater noster hath our Lord Jesus 
Christ enclosed most things. Certes, it is privileged of three 
things in its dignity, for which it is more digne [worthy] than 
any other prayer: for Jesus Christ himself made it: and it is 
short, for [in order] it should be coude the more lightly, [be 
more easily conned or learned] and to withhold [retain] it the 
more easy in heart, and help himself the oftener with this orison; 
and for a man should be the less weary to say it; and for a man 
may not excuse him to learn it, it is so short and so easy: and 
for it comprehendeth in itself all good prayers. The exposition 
of this holy prayer, that is so excellent and so digne, I betake 
[commit] to these masters of theology; save thus much will I 
say, when thou prayest that God should forgive thee thy guilts, 
as thou forgivest them that they guilt to thee, be full well ware 
that thou be not out of charity. This holy orison aminisheth 
[lesseneth] eke venial sin, and therefore it appertaineth specially 
to penitence. This prayer must be truly said, and in very faith, 
and that men pray to God ordinately, discreetly, and devoutly; 
and always a man shall put his will to be subject to the will of 
God. This orison must eke be said with great humbleness and 
full pure, and honestly, and not to the annoyance of any man or 
woman. It must eke be continued with the works of charity. It 
availeth against the vices of the soul; for, assaith Saint Jerome, 
by fasting be saved the vices of the flesh, and by prayer the 
vices of the soul 
After this thou shalt understand, that bodily pain stands in 
waking [watching]. For Jesus Christ saith 'Wake and pray, that 
ye enter not into temptation.' Ye shall understand also, that 
fasting stands in three things: in forbearing of bodily meat and 
drink, and in forbearing of worldly jollity, and in forbearing of 
deadly sin; this is to say, that a man shall keep him from deadly 
sin in all that he may. And thou shalt understand eke, that God 
ordained fasting; and to fasting appertain four things: largeness 
[generosity] to poor folk; gladness of heart spiritual; not to be 
angry nor annoyed nor grudge [murmur] for he fasteth; and also 
reasonable hour for to eat by measure; that is to say, a man 
should not eat in untime [out of time], nor sit the longer at his 
meal for [because] he fasteth. Then shalt thou understand, that 
bodily pain standeth in discipline, or teaching, by word, or by 
writing, or by ensample. Also in wearing of hairs [haircloth] or 
of stamin [coarse hempen cloth], or of habergeons [mail-shirts] 
<11> on their naked flesh for Christ's sake; but ware thee well 
that such manner penance of thy flesh make not thine heart 
bitter or angry, nor annoyed of thyself; for better is to cast away 
thine hair than to cast away the sweetness of our Lord Jesus 
Christ. And therefore saith Saint Paul, 'Clothe you, as they that 
be chosen of God in heart, of misericorde [with compassion], 
debonairte [gentleness], sufferance [patience], and such manner 
of clothing,' of which Jesus Christ is more apaid [better 
pleased] than of hairs or of hauberks. Then is discipline eke in 
knocking of thy breast, in scourging with yards [rods], in 
kneelings, in tribulations, in suffering patiently wrongs that be 
done to him, and eke in patient sufferance of maladies, or losing 
of worldly catel [chattels], or of wife, or of child, or of other 
friends. 
Then shalt thou understand which things disturb penance, and 
this is in four things; that is dread, shame, hope, and wanhope, 
that is, desperation. And for to speak first of dread, for which 
he weeneth that he may suffer no penance, thereagainst is 
remedy for to think that bodily penance is but short and little at 
the regard of [in comparison with] the pain of hell, that is so 
cruel and so long, that it lasteth without end. Now against the 
shame that a man hath to shrive him, and namely [specially] 
these hypocrites, that would be holden so perfect, that they 
have no need to shrive them; against that shame should a man 
think, that by way of reason he that hath not been ashamed to 
do foul things, certes he ought not to be ashamed to do fair 
things, and that is confession. A man should eke think, that God 
seeth and knoweth all thy thoughts, and all thy works; to him 
may nothing be hid nor covered. Men should eke remember 
them of the shame that is to come at the day of doom, to them 
that be not penitent and shriven in this present life; for all the 
creatures in heaven, and in earth, and in hell, shall see apertly 
[openly] all that he hideth in this world. 
Now for to speak of them that be so negligent and slow to 
shrive them; that stands in two manners. The one is, that he 
hopeth to live long, and to purchase [acquire] much riches for 
his delight, and then he will shrive him: and, as he sayeth, he 
may, as him seemeth, timely enough come to shrift: another is, 
the surquedrie [presumption <12>] that he hath in Christ's 
mercy. Against the first vice, he shall think that our life is in no 
sickerness, [security] and eke that all the riches in this world be 
in adventure, and pass as a shadow on the wall; and, as saith St 
Gregory, that it appertaineth to the great righteousness of God, 
that never shall the pain stint [cease] of them, that never would 
withdraw them from sin, their thanks [with their goodwill], but 
aye continue in sin; for that perpetual will to do sin shall they 
have perpetual pain. Wanhope [despair] is in two manners [of 
two kinds]. The first wanhope is, in the mercy of God: the other 
is, that they think they might not long persevere in goodness. 
The first wanhope cometh of that he deemeth that he sinned so 
highly and so oft, and so long hath lain in sin, that he shall not 
be saved. Certes against that cursed wanhope should he think, 
that the passion of Jesus Christ is more strong for to unbind, 
than sin is strong for to bind. Against the second wanhope he 
shall think, that as oft as he falleth, he may arise again by 
penitence; and though he never so long hath lain in sin, the 
mercy of Christ is always ready to receive him to mercy. 
Against the wanhope that he thinketh he should not long 
persevere in goodness, he shall think that the feebleness of the 
devil may nothing do, but [unless] men will suffer him; and eke 
he shall have strength of the help of God, and of all Holy 
Church, and of the protection of angels, if him list. 
Then shall men understand, what is the fruit of penance; and 
after the word of Jesus Christ, it is the endless bliss of heaven, 
where joy hath no contrariety of woe nor of penance nor 
grievance; there all harms be passed of this present life; there as 
is the sickerness [security] from the pain of hell; there as is the 
blissful company, that rejoice them evermore each of the other's 
joy; there as the body of man, that whilom was foul and dark, is 
more clear than the sun; there as the body of man that whilom 
was sick and frail, feeble and mortal, is immortal, and so strong 
and so whole, that there may nothing apair [impair, injure] it; 
there is neither hunger, nor thirst, nor cold, but every soul 
replenished with the sight of the perfect knowing of God. This 
blissful regne [kingdom] may men purchase by poverty spiritual, 
and the glory by lowliness, the plenty of joy by hunger and 
thirst, the rest by travail, and the life by death and mortification 
of sin; to which life He us bring, that bought us with his 
precious blood! Amen.                
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem
 
                    