V.

Also remenbre the of Percyvale,[[152]] |f. 11.|

Whos name is knowen ouer alle

Throwghowte the worlde, both soft and hard,

The swyffte hors Pegasus afterward.

He roode hyme through the eyre flyyng,

And Andromeda in hys goyng

Fro the bellue[[153]] he hyr delyueryd

And wyth his streynght hir from hym revede,

As a ryght good errant myghtty knyghte

Brought hyr ageyne to hir kyne ful ryght.

Thys dede in yowre mynde loke that it holde,

For a good knyght shuld kepe that is bolde

Thys wey, if that he will haue exprese

Wyrchip, which is mych better than ryches.

Hys shynnynge shelde than loke thou opon,

The which haue euer ouercome many one.

Wythe his fauchon loke that thou arme the,

Both strong and stedefast than shalt thou be.

And because that it is acordyng thyng[[154]] for a good knyght to haue wirchip and reuerence, we shalle make a fygure aftyr the maner of poietis. Percevale was a ful worthi knyght and whan[[155]] many reaumes, and the name off the grete lande of Perce come of hyme. And poyetis seide that he roode the hors that flawe in the eyre, the which was called Pegasus; and that is to vnderstonde a goode name, the which flyeth through the eyre. He bare in his honde a fauchon or a glayve; the whiche is seide for the grete multytude of peple that were discomfyte by hym in maney batayles. He delyueryd Andromeda from the bellue; this was a kynggys doghter, the which he delyuered from a monstre of the see, the which by the sentence of the godes shulde a[[156]] deuoured hire. This is to vndirstonde that alle knyghtes shulde socovre women that hade nede of there socoure. This Percivale and the hors |f. 12.| the which fleeth[[157]] may[[158]] be notede for the good name that a goode knyghte shulde haue and gete by hys good desertes; and there shuld he ryde, that is to seye, that hys goode name shulde be borne in all contrees. And Aristotile seyth that a good name of a man maketh a name shynnyng to the worlde and agreable in presence of princes.

The cheualerours sperit shulde desyre a goode name among the felachipe of the seyntis of heuen gotten by his goode desertes. The good hors Pegasus that [beareth][[159]] hyme shall be his good angel, the which shall make good reporte off hyme at the day of dome. Andromeda that shal be delyuered, it is his sowle, the which he delyueres fro the feend of hell by the ouercomyng off synne. And that a man on the same maner wyse shuld wylne to haue a good name in this worlde to the plesaunce of God and not for vayne glorie, Seynt Austin seyth in the Booke of Correccion[[160]] that “ii. thyngges be necessarie to beleve wele,[[161]] that is to sey, good conscience and good name, conscience for feyth,[[162]] good name for his neyburwe; and [w]ho so trostyth in conscience and dyspiteth a good name, he is cruel”; for it is a synge of a nobyll corage to loue the wele of a good name. And to this purpoise seyth the wyse man, “Curam habe [de bono nomine, magis enim permanebit tibi quam mille thesauri preciosi”].[[163]]