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Book 1Incipit liber primus
God turne us every dreem to gode! For hit is wonder, be the rode, To my wit, what causeth swevens Either on morwes, or on evens; And why the effect folweth of somme, And of somme hit shal never come; Why that is an avisioun, And this a revelacioun, Why this a dreem, why that a sweven, And nat to every man liche even; Why this a fantom, these oracles, I noot; but who-so of these miracles The causes knoweth bet than I, Devyne he; for I certeinly Ne can hem noght, ne never thinke To besily my wit to swinke, To knowe of hir signifiaunce The gendres, neither the distaunce Of tymes of hem, ne the causes, For-why this more than that cause is; As if folkes complexiouns Make hem dreme of reflexiouns; Or ellis thus, as other sayn, For to greet feblenesse of brayn, By abstinence, or by seeknesse, Prison, stewe, or greet distresse; Or elles by disordinaunce Of naturel acustomaunce, That som man is to curious In studie, or melancolious, Or thus, so inly ful of drede, That no man may him bote bede; Or elles, that devocioun Of somme, and contemplacioun Causeth swiche dremes ofte; Or that the cruel lyf unsofte Which these ilke lovers leden That hopen over muche or dreden, That purely hir impressiouns Causeth hem avisiouns; Or if that spirites have the might To make folk to dreme a-night Or if the soule, of propre kinde Be so parfit, as men finde, That hit forwot that is to come, And that hit warneth alle and somme Of everiche of hir aventures Be avisiouns, or by figures, But that our flesh ne hath no might To understonden hit aright, For hit is warned to derkly; -- But why the cause is, noght wot I. Wel worthe, of this thing, grete clerkes, That trete of this and other werkes; For I of noon opinioun Nil as now make mensioun, But only that the holy rode Turne us every dreem to gode! For never, sith that I was born, Ne no man elles, me biforn, Mette, I trowe stedfastly, So wonderful a dreem as I The tenthe day dide of Decembre, The which, as I can now remembre, I wol yow tellen every del, |