England's Antiphon by George MacDonald
page 34 of 387 (08%)
page 34 of 387 (08%)
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Plough-man's Crede_. Both are written after the fashion of the
Anglo-Saxon poetry, and not after the fashion of the Anglo-Norman, of which distinction a little more presently. Its object is to contrast the life and character of the four orders of friars with those of a simple Christian. There is considerable humour in the working plan of the poem. A certain poor man says he has succeeded in learning his A B C, his Paternoster, and his Ave Mary, but he cannot, do what he will, learn his Creed. He sets out, therefore, to find some one whose life, according with his profession, may give him a hope that he will teach him his creed aright. He applies to the friars. One after another, every order abuses the other; nor this only, but for money offers either to teach him his creed, or to absolve him for ignorance of the same. He finds no helper until he falls in with Pierce the Ploughman, of whose poverty he gives a most touching description. I shall, however, only quote some lines of _The Believe_ as taught by the Ploughman, and this principally to show the nature of the versification: Leve thou on our Lord God, that all the world wroughté; _believe._ Holy heaven upon high wholly he formed; And is almighty himself over all his workés; And wrought as his will was, the world and the heaven; And on gentle Jesus Christ, engendered of himselven, His own only Son, Lord over all y-knowen. * * * * * With thorn y-crowned, crucified, and on the cross diéd; And sythen his blessed body was in a stone buried; _after that._ And descended adown to the dark hellé, |
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