Cover art for Balade by Geoffrey Chaucer
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Balade Lyrics

Hyd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere;
Ester, ley thou thy mekness al a-doun;
Hyd, Jonathas, al thy frendly manere;
Penalopee, and Marcia Catoun,
Mak of your wyfhod no comparisoun;
Hyde ye your beautes, Isoude and Eleyne,
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne.

Thy faire bodye, lat hit nat appere,
Lavyne; and thou, Lucresse of Rome toun,
And Polixene, that boghte love so dere,
Eek Cleopatre, with al thy passioun,
Hyde ye your trouthe in love and your renoun;
And thou, Tisbe, that hast for love swich peyne:
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne.

Herro, Dido, Laudomia, alle in-fere,
Eek Phyllis, hanging for thy Demophoun,
And Canace, espyed by thy chere,
Ysiphile, betrayed with Jasoun,
Mak of your trouthe in love no bost ne soun;
Nor Ypermistre or Adriane, ne pleyne;
Alceste is here, that al that may desteyne.

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Genius Annotation

This ballad is part of the prologue of The Legend of Good Women,
which was written in the 1380s. The Legend is a long, unfinished poem supposedly created to please the god of love, Queen Alceste, after she complained that Chaucer’s earlier poem, Troilus and Criseyde, presented women in a bad light, since Criseyde betrayed Troilus. The Legend presents the stories of ten virtuous poem. In the “Balade,” Chaucer lists two men and eighteen women of lasting fame, in order to flatter his queen by comparison.

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