|
With him there rode a noble PARDONER |
| Of Rouncival, his friend and his compeer; |
| Straight from the court of Rome had journeyed he. |
| Loudly he sang "Come hither, love, to me," |
675 | The summoner added a strong bass to his song; |
| No horn ever sounded half so strong. |
| This pardoner had hair as yellow as wax, |
| But smooth it hung as does a strike of flax; |
| In driplets hung his locks behind his head, |
680 | Down to his shoulders which they overspread; |
| But thin they dropped, these strings, all one by one. |
| He had no hood, it was for sport and fun, |
| Though it was packed in knapsack all the while. |
| It seemed to him he rode in latest style, |
685 | With unbound hair, except his cap, head all bare. |
| As shiny eyes he had as has a hare. |
| He had a fine Veronica sewed to his cap. |
| His knapsack lay before him in his lap, |
| Stuffed full with pardons brought from Rome all hot. |
690 | A voice he had that sounded like a goat. |
| No beard had he, nor ever should he have, |
| For smooth his face as he'd just had a shave; |
| I think he was a gelding or a mare. |
| But in his craft, from Berwick unto Ware, |
695 | Was no such pardoner of equal grace. |
| For in his bag he had a pillow-case |
| Of which he said, it was Our True Lady's veil: |
| He said he had a piece of the very sail |
| That good Saint Peter had, on time he sailed |
700 | Upon the sea, till Jesus him had hailed. |
| He had a latten cross set full of stones, |
| And in a bottle had he some pig's bones. |
| But with these relics, when he found on ride |
| Some simple parson dwelling in the countryside, |
705 | In that one day gathered more money |
| Than the parson in two months, that easy. |
| And thus, with flattery and equal japes, |
| He made the parson and the rest his apes. |
| But yet, to tell the whole truth at the last, |
710 | He was, in church, a fine ecclesiast. |
| Well could he read a lesson or a story, |
| But best of all he sang an offertory; |
| For he knew well that when that song was sung, |
| Then must he preach, and all with smoothened tongue. |
715 | To gain some silver, preferably from the crowd; |
| Therefore he sang so merrily and so loud. |