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    The Merchant's Tale

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    THE PROLOGUE.

    "Weeping and wailing, care and other sorrow,
    I have enough, on even and on morrow,"
    Quoth the Merchant, "and so have other mo',
    That wedded be; I trow* that it be so; *believe
    For well I wot it fareth so by me.
    I have a wife, the worste that may be,
    For though the fiend to her y-coupled were,
    She would him overmatch, I dare well swear.
    Why should I you rehearse in special
    Her high malice? she is *a shrew at all.* *thoroughly, in
    There is a long and large difference everything wicked*
    Betwixt Griselda's greate patience,
    And of my wife the passing cruelty.
    Were I unbounden, all so may I the,* *thrive
    I woulde never eft* come in the snare. *again
    We wedded men live in sorrow and care;
    Assay it whoso will, and he shall find
    That I say sooth, by Saint Thomas of Ind,
    As for the more part; I say not all, --
    God shielde* that it shoulde so befall. *forbid
    Ah! good Sir Host, I have y-wedded be
    These moneths two, and more not, pardie;
    And yet I trow* that he that all his life *believe
    Wifeless hath been, though that men would him rive* *wound
    Into the hearte, could in no mannere
    Telle so much sorrow, as I you here
    Could tellen of my wife's cursedness."* *wickedness

    "Now," quoth our Host, "Merchant, so God you bless,
    Since ye so muche knowen of that art,
    Full heartily I pray you tell us part."
    "Gladly," quoth he; "but of mine owen sore,
    For sorry heart, I telle may no more."

    Notes to the Prologue to the Merchant's Tale

    1. Though the manner in which the Merchant takes up the
    closing words of the Envoy to the Clerk's Tale, and refers to
    the patience of Griselda, seems to prove beyond doubt that
    the order of the Tales in the text is the right one, yet in
    some manuscripts of good authority the Franklin's Tale
    follows the Clerk's, and the Envoy is concluded by this
    stanza: --
    "This worthy Clerk when ended was his tale,
    Our Hoste said, and swore by cocke's bones
    'Me lever were than a barrel of ale
    My wife at home had heard this legend once;
    This is a gentle tale for the nonce;
    As, to my purpose, wiste ye my will.
    But thing that will not be, let it be still.'"

    In other manuscripts of less authority the Host proceeds, in
    two similar stanzas, to impose a Tale on the Franklin; but

    Tyrwhitt is probably right in setting them aside as spurious,
    and in admitting the genuineness of the first only, if it be
    supposed that Chaucer forgot to cancel it when he had
    decided on another mode of connecting the Merchant's with
    the Clerk's Tale.

    2. Saint Thomas of Ind: St. Thomas the Apostle, who was
    believed to have travelled in India.

    THE TALE.

    Whilom there was dwelling in Lombardy
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