English Poetry I: From Chaucer to Gray.
The Harvard Classics. 1909–14.
Traditional Ballads
32. A Gest of Robyn Hode
The Second FytteNow is the knight gone on his way;
This game hym thought full gode;
Whanne he loked on Bernesdale
He blessyd Robyn Hode.
On Scarlok, Much and Johnn,
He blessyd them for the best company
That ever he in come.
To Lytel Johan gan he saye,
‘To-morrowe I must to Yorke toune
To Saynt Mary abbay.
Foure hundred pounde I must pay;
And but I be there upon this nyght
My londe is lost for ay.’
There he stode on grounde,
‘This day twelfe moneth came a knyght
And borowed foure hondred pounde.
Upon his londe and fee;
But he come this ylkë day
Disherited shall he be.’
The day is not yet ferre gone;
And lay it downe anone.
In Englonde is his ryght,
And suffreth honger and colde
And many a sory nyght.
‘So to have his londe;
And ye be so lyght of your consyence,
Ye do to hym moch wronge.’
‘By God and Saynt Rycharde’;
With that cam in a fat-heded monke,
The heygh selerer.
‘By God that bought me dere,
And we shall have to spende in this place
Foure hondred pounde by yere.’
Stertë forthe full bolde,
The highe justyce of Englonde
The abbot there dyde holde.
Had taken into theyr honde
Holy all the knyghtes det,
To put that knyght to wronge.
The abbot and his meynë
‘But he come this ylkë day
Disherited shall he be.’
‘I dare well undertake’;
But in sorowe tymë for them all
The knyght came to the gate.
Untyll his meynë:
‘Now put on your symple wedes
That ye brought fro the see.’
They came to the gates anone;
The porter was redy hymselfe
And welcomed them everychone.
‘My lorde to mete is he,
And so is many a gentyll man,
For the love of the.’
‘By God that madë me,
Here be the best coresed hors
That ever yet sawe I me.
‘That eased myght they be’;
‘They shall not come therin,’ sayd the knyght,
‘By God that dyed on a tre.’
In that abbotes hall;
The knyght went forth and kneled downe,
And salued them grete and small.
‘I am come to holde my day’:
The fyrst word that the abbot spake,
‘Hast thou brought my pay?’
‘By God that maked me’;
‘Thou art a shrewed dettour,’ sayd the abbot;
‘Syr justyce, drynke to me.
‘But thou haddest brought thy pay?’
‘For God,’ than sayed the knyght,
‘To pray of a lenger daye.’
‘Londe gettest thou none’:
‘Now, good syr justyce, be my frende
And fende me of my fone!’
‘Both with cloth and fee’:
‘Now, good syr sheryf, be my frende!’
‘Nay, for God,’ sayd he.
For thy curteysë,
And holde my londës in thy honde
Tyll I have made the gree!
And trewely serve the,
Tyll ye have foure hondred pounde
Of money good and free.’
‘By God that dyed on a tree,
Get thy londe where thou may,
For thou getest none of me.’
‘That all this worldë wrought,
But I have my londe agayne,
Full dere it shall be bought.
Leve us well to spede!
For it is good to assay a frende
Or that a man have nede.’
And vylaynesly hym gan call;
‘Out,’ he sayd, ‘thou false knyght,
Spede the out of my hall!’
‘Abbot, in thy hal;
False knyght was I never,
By God that made us all.’
To the abbot sayd he,
‘To suffre a knyght to knele so longe,
Thou canst no curteysye.
Full ferre than have I be,
And put myself as ferre in prees
As ony that ever I see.’
‘And the knyght shall make a releyse?
And elles dare I safly swere
Ye holde never your londe in pees.’
The justice sayd, ‘Gyve hym two’;
‘Nay, be God,’ sayd the knyght,
‘Ye get not my land so.
Yet were ye never the nere;
Shal there never be myn heyre
Abbot, justice ne frere.’
Tyll a table rounde,
And there he shoke oute of a bagge
Even four hundred pound.
‘Which that thou lentest me;
Had thou ben curtes at my comynge,
I would have rewarded thee.’
For all his ryall fare;
He cast his hede on his shulder,
And fast began to stare.
‘Sir justice, that I toke the.’
‘Not a peni,’ said the justice,
‘Bi God, that dyed on tree.’
Now have I holde my daye;
Now shall I have my londe agayne,
For ought that you can saye.’
Awaye was all his care,
And on he put his good clothynge
The other he lefte there.
As men have told in tale;
His lady met hym at the gate,
At home in Verysdale.
‘Syr, lost is all your good?’
‘Be mery, dame,’ sayd the knyght,
‘And pray for Robyn Hode,
He holpe me out of tene;
Ne had be his kyndënesse,
Beggers had we bene.
He is served of his pay;
The god yoman lent it me
As I cam by the way.’
The sothe for to saye,
Tyll he had got four hundred pound,
Al redy for to pay.
The strynges well ydyght,
An hundred shefe of arowes gode,
The hedys burneshed full bryght;
With pecok well idyght,
Inocked all with whyte silver;
It was a semely syght.
Well harnessed in that stede,
And hym selfe in that same suite,
And clothed in whyte and rede.
And a man ledde his male,
And reden with a lyght songe
Unto Bernysdale.
And there taryed was he,
And there was all the best yemen
Of all the west countree.
A whyte bulle up i-pyght,
A grete courser, with sadle and brydil,
With golde burnyssht full bryght.
A pype of wyne, in fay;
What man that bereth hym best i-wys
The pryce shall bere away.
And best worthy was he,
And for he was ferre and frembde bested,
Slayne he shulde have be.
In place where that he stode;
He sayde that yoman shulde have no harme,
For love of Robyn Hode.
An hundreth folowed hym free,
With bowes bent and arowes sharpe,
For to shende that companye.
To wete what he wolde say;
He toke the yeman bi the hande,
And gave hym al the play.
There it lay on the molde,
And bad it shulde be set a broche,
Drynkë who so wolde.
Tyll that play was done;
So longe abode Robyn fastinge
Thre houres after the none.