The Confession of Gluttony  ****   Piers Plowman B Passus 5 ****  Translated E.T. Donaldson

Text Box: And after all his excess he had • such a head 
He slept Saturday and Sunday • till the sun went to rest. 
Then waked he of his winking • and wiped his eyes; 
The first word that he said • was: `Where is the bowl?' 
His wife began to reproach him • for how wickedly he lived, 
And Repentance right so • rebuked him that time: 
`As thou with words and works • hast wrought evil in thy life, 
Shrive thee and be shamed therefore • and show it with thy mouth.' 
`I, Glutton,' quoth the wretch • 'confess me guilty, 
That I have trespassed with my tongue • I can not tell how oft: 
Sworn "by God's soul and • "so help me, God and his saints," 
Where there was no need • over nine hundred times. 
And surfeited me at supper • and sometimes at noon, 
That I, Glutton, threw it up • ere I'd gone a mile 
And spilt what might be spared • and spent on some hungry one. 
Over-delicately on fasting-days • drunken and eaten, 
And sometimes sat so long I • slept and ate together. 
For love of tales dined I • in taverns to drink more, 
And hurried to meat ere noon • when fasting-days were.' 
`This shewing of shrift,' quoth Repentance • 'shall merit to thee.' 
Began Glutton to cry • and great dole to make 
For his evil life • that he had so lived; 
And vowed to fast • `for hunger as for thirst 
Shall never fish on Friday • digest in my womb, 
Till Abstinence mine aunt • hath given me leave; 
And yet have I hated her • all my life long.
Text Box: They could not in their conscience • agree on a value, 
Till Robin the roper • arose for the truth 
And named himself umpire • to avoid a debate 
And to settle this business • betwixt them three. 
Hickey the hostler • he had the cloak, 
In covenant that Clement • should the cup fill 
And have Hick hostler's hood • and hold himself served; 
And whoso sooner repented • should arise after 
And give to Sir Glutton • a gallon of ale. 
There was laughing and lowering • and `Let go the cup!' 
They sat so till evensong • singing now and then, 
Till Glutton had gulped down • a gallon and a gill. 
His guts 'gan to grumble • like two greedy sows; 
He pissed a pot-full • in a paternoster-while; 
And blew with the bugle • at his backbone's end, 
That all hearing that horn • held their nose after 
And wished it were stopped up • with a wisp of furze. 
He could neither step nor stand • before he had his staff; 
Then began he to go • like a gleeman's bitch, 
Sometimes aside • sometimes astern 
As whoso layeth lines • for to snare fowl. 
And when he drew to the door • then dimmed his eyes; 
He stumbled on threshold • and fell to the earth. 
Clement the cobbler • caught him by the middle 
For to lift him aloft • and laid him on his knees; 
Glutton was a great lout • and lumpish to lift 
And coughed up a caudle • in Clement's lap: 
No hound is so hungry • in Hertfordshire 
Dare lap up those leavings • so unlovely they smelt. 
With all the woe of this world • his wife and his wench
Bare him home to his bed and • brought him therein.
 


Now beginneth Glutton · for to go to shrift
And carries him to kirk-ward · his fault there to show.
But Betty the brewster · bade him good-morrow
And asked of him with that · whitherward he would.

`To holy church,' quoth he · `for to hear mass,
And after will be shriven · and then sin no more.'

`Gossip, I've good ale,' quoth she · 'Glutton, wilt thou try it?'

`Hast thou aught in thy bag? · Any hot spices?'

`I have pepper and peony · and a pound too of garlic,
And a farthing's worth of fennel-seed · for fasting days.'

Then goeth Glutton in · and great oaths come after.
Cis the shoe-seller · sat on the bench,
Wat the game-keeper · and his wife too,
Tim the tinker · and two of his prentices,
Hick the horsedealer · and Hugh the needle-seller,
Clarice of Cock lane · and the clerk of the church,
Davy the ditcher · and a dozen other;
Sir Piers the priest · and Pernel of Flanders,
A fiddler, a rat-catcher · the street sweeper of Chepe,
A roper, a riding-man · and Rose the dish-seller,
Godfrey of Garlickithe · and Griffith the Welshman,
And old-clothesmen a heap · early in the morning
Give Glutton with glad cheer · good ale for himself.

Clement the cobbler · cast off his cloak
And named it for sale · at the `new fair' game.
Hick the horse dealer · heaved his hood after
And bade Bart the butcher · be on his side.
There were chapmen chosen · the goods to appraise;
Whoso hath the hood · should have amends for the cloak.
Two rose up quickly · and whispered together
And priced these pennyworths · apart by themselves.




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