| | For this ye know well, tho' I would in lie, In women is all truth and steadfastness; For in good faith, I never of them sie But much worship, bounty, and gentleness, Right coming, fair, and full of meekéness, Good, and glad, and lowly, I you ensure, Is this goodly and angelic creature . And if it hap a man be in disease, She doth her business and her full pain, With all her might him to comfort and to please, Iffrom his disease him she might restrain: In word ne deed, I wis, she woll not faine; With all her might she doth her business To bring him out of his heaviness . Lo, here what gentleness these women have If we could know it for our rudéness! How busy they be us to keep and save Both in hele and also in sicknéss, And always right sorry for our distress! In evéry manner thus show they ruth, That in them is all goodness and all truth .
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Of course we do. But why in the name of goodness we men have done so little about this knowledge, and left it until so late, perhaps constitutes a commentary on our lack of understanding of ourselves.
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We have been scared and we have been confused, and we have had to live within the framework of the male-dominated society into which we have been born. Something of the truth of Chaucer's words every man knowswhich is a good point of departure on the rewarding journey of learning to know morewhy Chaucer wrote a Legend of Good Women but no Legend of Good Men . And in ''Tales of Melibeus," in The Canterbury Tales (1380?), he asks the rhetorical question, "What is better than wisdom. Woman. And what is better than a good woman," And answers, "No-thing." We are with Chaucer. Men can help women, and women can help men. Men should help women; women will help men, anyway.
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