The Harleian ms. 7334 of Chaucer's Canterbury tales. Ed. by Frederick J. Furnivall.

About this Item

Title
The Harleian ms. 7334 of Chaucer's Canterbury tales. Ed. by Frederick J. Furnivall.
Author
Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400.
Publication
London,: Pub. for the Chaucer society by N. Trübner & co.,
1885.
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/AGZ8246.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The Harleian ms. 7334 of Chaucer's Canterbury tales. Ed. by Frederick J. Furnivall." In the digital collection Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/AGZ8246.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 17, 2024.

Pages

Page 158

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[6-text p 132]
[The Proem]
incipit fabula /
O Hateful harm condicion of pouert [on] [folio 72a] Line 99 wiþ þurst wiþ cold wiþ honger so confoundyd To asken help it schameþ in þin hert If þou non aske wiþ neede so art þou woundyd That verray neede vnwrappeþ al þy woundes hyd Maugre þyn heed þou most for Indigence Or stele or begge or borwe þy dispence Line 105
Thow blamest crist and seyst ful bitterly Line 106 he mys departeþ riches temporal And þyn neyhebour þou wytes synfully And seyst þou hast to litel and he haþ al Line 109 Parfay seystow som tyme he rekne schal whan þat his tayl schal brennen in þe gleede For he nought helpeþ þe needful in his neede Line 112
HErkneþ what is þe sentens of þe wyse Line 113 Bet is to dye þan haue indigence Thy selue neyghebour wol þe despyse [folio 72b] If þou be pore far wel þy reuerence Line 116 Ȝet of þe wyse man tak þis sentence Alle þe dayes of pore men be wikke / Be war þerfore or þou come to þat prikke / Line 119
Ȝif þou be pore þy broþer hateþ þe Line 120 And alle þy frendes fleeþ fro þe allas O Riche marchaundȝ ful of wele be ȝe O noble prudent folk as in þis cas Line 123 Ȝoure bagges beþ nat fuld wiþ ambes aas But wiþ sys synk þat renneþ on ȝour chaunce At crystemasse wel mery may ȝe daunce Line 126

Page 159

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[6-text p 133] Line 126
Ȝe seeke land and see for ȝour wynnynges Line 127 As wyse folk as ȝe knowe alle þastates Of regnes / ȝe be fadres of tydynges Of tales boþe of pees and of debates / Line 130 I were right now of tales desolat Nere þat a marchaunt gon siþþen many a ȝere / Me taught a tale which ȝe schal after heere Line 133
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