William Langland

Here you will find the Long Poem Piers Plowman The Prologue (B-Text) of poet William Langland

Piers Plowman The Prologue (B-Text)

In a somer sesun, whon softe was the sonn{.e},
 I schop me into a shroud, as I a scheep wer{.e};
 In habite as an hermite unholy of werk{.e}s
 Wente I wyde in this world wondr{.e}s to her{.e};
 Bote in a May{.e}s morwnynge on Malverne hull{.e}s
 Me bifel a ferly, of fairie, me-thought{.e}.

 I was wery, forwandr{.e}d, and went{.e} me to rest{.e}
 Undur a brod banke bi a bourn{.e} sid{.e};
 And as I lay and leon{.e}de and lok{.e}de on the watr{.e}s,
 I slumbr{.e}de in a slepynge, hit swy{.e}d so muri{.e}.
 Thenne gon I meeten a mervelous sweven,
 That I was in a wilderness{.e}, wuste I never wher{.e};
 And as I beheold into the est an heigh to the sonn{.e},
 I sauh a tour on a toft, try{.e}lyche i-maket;
 A deop dal{.e} bineoth{.e}, a dungun ther-inn{.e},
 With deop dich and derk and dredful of sight{.e}.
 A feir feld full of folk fond I ther bitwen{.e},
 Of all{.e} maner of men, the mene and the rich{.e},
 Worchinge and wandringe as the world asketh.

 Summ{.e} putten hem to the plough, pleiden ful selden{.e},
 In settynge and in sowyng{.e} swonken ful hard{.e},
 And wonnen that theos wasturs with glotonye distruen.
 And summ{.e} putten hem to pruid{.e}, apparaylden hem ther-after,
 In cuntenaunce of clothing{.e} comen disgisid.
 To preyer{.e}s and to penaunc{.e} putten hem mony{.e},
 For love of ur Lord liv{.e}den ful streit{.e},
 In hop{.e} for to hav{.e} hevene-rich{.e} bliss{.e};
 As ancr{.e}s and hermyt{.e}s that holdeth hem in heor{.e} cell{.e}s,
 Coveyt{.e} not in cuntré to cairen about{.e},
 For non likerous lyflod{.e} heor{.e} licam to ples{.e}.
 And summ{.e} chosen chaffar{.e} to cheeven the bettr{.e},
 As hit semeth to ur{.e} sight{.e} that such{.e} men thryveth;
 And summ{.e}, murthh{.e}s to maken as munstrals cunn{.e},
 And get{.e} gold with her{.e} gle, giltles, I trow{.e}.
 Bote japers and jangelers, Judas children,
 Founden hem fantasy{.e}s and fool{.e}s hem maaden,
 And habbeth wit at heor{.e} will{.e} to worchen yif hem lust{.e}.
 That Poul precheth of hem, I dar not preoven heer{.e};
Qui loquitur turpiloquium he is Lucifer{.e}s hyn{.e}.
 Bidders and beggers faste aboute eoden,
 Til heor bagg{.e}s and heore balies weren bretful i-crommet;
 Feyneden hem for heor{.e} food{.e}, foughten att{.e} al{.e};
 In glotony{.e}, God wot, gon heo to bedd{.e},
 And ryseth up with ribaudy{.e} this roberd{.e}s knav{.e}s;
 Sleep and sleughth{.e} suweth hem ever{.e}.

 Pilgrimes and palmers plihten hem togeder{.e}s
 For to sech{.e} Seint Jam{.e} and seint{.e}s at Room{.e};
 Wenten forth in heor{.e} wey with mony wys{.e} tal{.e}s,
 And hedden lev{.e} to lyen al heor{.e} lyf aftir.
 Ermyt{.e}s on an hep with hokid{.e} stav{.e}s,
 Wenten to Walsyngham and her{.e} wenchis after;
 Gret{.e} lobr{.e}s and long{.e} that loth weor{.e} to swynk{.e}
 Clotheden hem in cop{.e}s to beo knowen for bretheren;
 And summ{.e} schopen hem to hermyt{.e}s heore es{.e} to hav{.e}.

 I fond there frer{.e}s, all the foure ordr{.e}s,
 Prechinge the pepl{.e} for profyt of heor{.e} womb{.e}s,
 Glosynge the Gospel as hem good liketh,
 For covetyse of cop{.e}s construeth hit ill{.e};
 For monye of this maistr{.e}s mowen clothen hem at lyking,
 For moneye and heor{.e} marchaundi{.e} meeten togeder{.e};
 Sethth{.e} Charité hath be chapmon, and cheef to schriven lord{.e}s,
 Mony ferly{.e}s han bifall{.e} in a few{.e} yer{.e}s.
 But Holychirche and heo hold{.e} bet togeder{.e},
 The most{.e} mischeef on mold{.e} is mountyng up fast{.e}.

 Ther prechede a pardoner, as he a prest wer{.e},
 And brought forth a bull{.e} with bisschop{.e}s sel{.e}s,
 And seid{.e} that himself might{.e} asoylen hem all{.e}
 Of falsnesse and fastinge and of vouw{.e}s i-broken.
 The lewed{.e} men levide him wel and lik{.e}de his spech{.e},
 And comen up knelyng{.e} to kissen his bull{.e};
 He bonch{.e}de hem with his brevet and bler{.e}d heore eiyen,
 And raught{.e} with his rag{.e}mon ring{.e}s and broch{.e}s.
 Thus ye yiveth our{.e} gold glotonis to helpen!
 And leveth hit to losels that lecherie haunten.
 Weor{.e} the bisschop i-blesset and worth bothe his er{.e}s,
 His sel shulde not be sent to deceyv{.e} the pepl{.e}.
 It is not al bi the bisschop that the boy{.e} precheth,
 Bote the parisch prest and the pardoner part{.e} the selver
 That the por{.e} peple of the parisch schulde have yif that heo ne weor{.e},
 Person{.e}s and parisch prest{.e}s playneth to heor{.e} bisschops,
 That heor{.e} parisch hath ben por{.e} sethth{.e} the pestilenc{.e} tym{.e},
 To have a lycence and lev{.e} at Londun to dwell{.e},
 To sing{.e} ther for simony{.e}, for selver is swet{.e}.

 Ther hovide an hundret in houv{.e}s of selk{.e},
 Serjauns hit semid{.e} to serven att{.e} barr{.e};
 Pleden for p