Everyman
messenger: I pray you all give your audience,
And hear this matter with reverence,
By figure a moral play:
The Summoning of Everyman called it is,
That of our lives and ending shows
How transitory we be all day.
This matter is wondrous precious,
But the intent of it is more gracious,
And sweet to bear away.
The story saith: Man, in the beginning,
Look well, and take good heed to the ending,
Be you never so gay!
Ye think sin in the beginning full sweet,
Which in the end causeth the soul to weep,
When the body lieth in clay.
Here shall you see how Fellowship and Jollity,
Both Strength, Pleasure, and Beauty,
Will fade from thee as flower in May.
For ye shall hear how our Heaven-King
Calleth Everyman to a general reckoning.
Give audience, and hear what he doth say.
[Exit]
GOD speaketh:
god: I perceive, here in my majesty,
How that all creatures be to me unkind,
Living without dread in worldly prosperity.
Of ghostly sight the people be so blind,
Drowned in sin, they know me not for their God;
In worldly riches is all their mind,
They fear not of my righteousness the sharp rod;
My law that I showed, when I for them died
They forget clean, and shedding of my blood red;
I hanged between two, it cannot be denied;
To get them life I suffered to be dead;
I healed their feet, with thorns hurt was my head.
I could do no more than I did, truly;
And now I see the people do clean forsake me.
They use the seven deadly sins damnable;
As pride, covetise, wrath, and lechery,
Now in the world be made commendable;
And thus they leave of angels the heavenly company.
Every man liveth so after his own pleasure,
And yet of their life they be nothing sure.
I see the more that I them forbear
The worse they be from year to year;
And that liveth appaireth fast.
Therefore I will, in all the haste,
Have a reckoning of every man's person;
For, and I leave the people thus alone
In their life and wicked tempests,
Verily they will become much worse than beasts;
For now one would by envy another up eat;
Charity they all do clean forget.
I hoped well that every man
In my glory should make his mansion,
And thereto I had them all elect;
But now I see, like traitors deject,
They thank me not for the pleasure that I to them meant,
Nor yet for their being that I them have lent.
I proffered the people great multitude of mercy,
And few there be that asketh it heartily;
They be so cumbered with worldly riches,
That needs on them I must do justice,
On every man living, without fear.
Where art thou, Death, thou mighty messenger?
[Enter DEATH]
death: Almighty God, I am here at your will,
Your commandment to fulfil.
god: Go thou to Everyman,
And show him, in my name,
A pilgrimage he must on him take,
Which he in no wise may escape;
And that he bring with him a sure reckoning
Without delay or any tarrying.
death: Lord, I will in the world go run overall,
And cruelly out search both great and small.
[Exit GOD]
Every man will I beset that liveth beastly
Out of God's laws, and dreadeth not folly.
He that loveth riches I will strike with my dart,
His sight to blind, and from heaven to depart--
Except that alms be his good friend--
In hell for to dwell, world without end.
Lo, yonder I see Everyman walking;
Full little he thinketh on my coming;
His mind is on fleshly lusts and his treasure;
And great pain it shall cause him to endure
Before the Lord, Heaven-King
[Enter EVERYMAN]
Everyman, stand still! Whither art thou going
Thus gaily? Hast thou thy Maker forgeet?
everyman: Why asketh thou?
Wouldst thou weet?
death: Yea, sir; I will show you:
In great haste I am sent to thee
From God, out of his Majesty.
everyman: What, sent to me?
death: Yea, certainly.
Though thou have forgot him here,
He thinketh on thee in the heavenly sphere,
As, ere we depart, thou shalt know.
everyman: What desireth God of me?
death: That shall I show thee:
A reckoning he will needs have
Without any longer respite.
everyman: To give a reckoning longer leisure I crave;
This blind matter troubleth my wit.
death: On thee thou must take a long journey;
Therefore thy book of count with thee thou bring;
For turn again thou cannot by no way.
And look thou be sure of thy reckoning,
For before God thou shalt answer, and show
Thy many bad deeds, and good but a few,
How thou hast spent thy life, and in what wise,
Before the Chief Lord of Paradise.
Have ado that we were in that way,
For weet thou well, thou shalt make none attornay.
everyman: Full unready I am such reckoning to give.
I know thee not. What messenger art thou?
death: I am Death, that no man dreadeth.
For every man I 'rest, and no man spareth;
For it is God's commandment
That all to me should be obedient.
everyman: O Death! thou comest when I had thee least in mind!
In thy power it lieth me to save,
Yet of my good will I give thee, if thou will be kind.
Yea, a thousand pound shalt thou have,
And defer this matter till another day.
death: Everyman, it may not be, by no way!
I set not by gold, silver, nor riches,
Nor by pope, emperor, king, duke, nor princes.
For, and I would receive gifts great,
All the world I might get;
But my custom is clean contrary.
I give thee no respite. Come hence, and not tarry.
everyman: Alas! shall I have no longer respite?
I may say Death giveth no warning.
To think on thee, it maketh my heart sick,
For all unready is my book of reckoning.
But twelve year and I might have abiding,
My counting-book I would make so clear,
That my reckoning I should not need to fear.
Wherefore, Death, I pray thee, for God's mercy,
Spare me till I be provided of remedy.
death: Thee availeth not to cry, weep, and pray;
But haste thee lightly that thou were gone that journay,
And prove thy friends if thou can.
For weet thou well the tide abideth no man;
And in the world each living creature
For Adam's sin must die of nature.
everyman: Death, if I should this pilgrimage take,
And my reckoning surely make,
Show me, for saint charity,
Should I not come again shortly?
death: No, Everyman; and thou be once there,
Thou mayst never more come here,
Trust me verily.
everyman: O gracious God, in the high seat celestial,
Have mercy on me in this most need!
Shall I have no company from this vale terrestrial
Of mine acquaintance that way me to lead?
death: Yea, if any be so hardy,
That would go with thee and bear thee company.
Hie thee that thou were gone to God's magnificence,
Thy reckoning to give before his presence.
What! weenest thou thy life is given thee,
And thy worldly goods also?
everyman: I had weened so, verily.
death: Nay, nay; it was but lent thee;
For, as soon as thou art go
Another a while shall have it, and then go therefro
Even as thou hast done.
Everyman, thou art mad! Thou hast thy wits five,
And here on earth will not amend thy life;
For suddenly I do come.
everyman: O wretched caitiff! whither shall I flee,
That I might 'scape this endless sorrow?
Now, gentle Death, spare me till tomorrow,
That I may amend me
With good advisement.
death: Nay, thereto I will not consent,
Nor no man will I respite,
But to the heart suddenly I shall smite
Without any advisement.
And now out of thy sight I will me hie;
See thou make thee ready shortly,
For thou mayst say this is the day
That no man living may 'scape away.
[Exit DEATH]
everyman: [alone] Alas! I may well weep with sighs deep.
Now have I no manner of company
To help me in my journey and me to keep;
And also my writing is full unready.
How shall I do now for to excuse me?
I would to God I had never be gete!
To my soul a full great profit it had be;
For now I fear pains huge and great.
The time passeth; Lord, help, that all wrought.
For though I mourn, it availeth nought.
The day passeth, and is almost ago;
I wot not well what for to do.
To whom were I best my complaint to make?
What and I to Fellowship thereof spake,
And showed him of this sudden chance,
For in him is all mine affiance?
We have in the world so many a day
Been good friends in sport and play.
I see him yonder, certainly.
I trust that he will bear me company;
Therefore to him will I speak to ease my sorrow.
Well met, good Fellowship, and good morrow!
FELLOWSHIP speaketh:
fellowship: Everyman, good morrow, by this day!
Sir, why lookest thou so piteously?
If any thing be amiss, I pray thee me say,
That I may help to remedy.
everyman: Yea, good Fellowship, yea,
I am in great jeopardy.
fellowship: My true friend, show to me your mind;
I will not forsake thee to thy life's end
In the way of good company.
everyman: That was well spoken, and lovingly.
fellowship: Sir, I must needs know your heaviness;
I have pity to see you in any distress;
If any have you wronged, ye shall revenged be,
Though I on the ground be slain for thee,
Though that I know before that I should die.
everyman: Verily, Fellowship, gramercy.
fellowship: Tush! by thy thanks I set not a stree
Show me your grief, and say no more.
everyman: If I my heart should to you break,
And then you to turn your mind from me,
And would not me comfort when ye hear me speak,
Then should I ten times sorrier be.
fellowship: Sir, I say as I will do indeed.
everyman: Then be you a good friend at need;
I have found you true herebefore.
fellowship: And so ye shall evermore;
For, in faith, and thou go to hell,
I will not forsake thee by the way!
everyman: Ye speak like a good friend; I believe you well.
I shall deserve it, and I may.
fellowship: I speak of no deserving, by this day!
For he that will say and nothing do
Is not worthy with good company to go;
Therefore show me the grief of your mind,
As to your friend most loving and kind.
everyman: I shall show you how it is:
Commanded I am to go a journay,
A long way, hard and dangerous,
And give a strait count without delay,
Before the high judge, Adonai.
Wherefore, I pray you, bear me company,
As ye have promised, in this journay.
fellowship: That is matter indeed. Promise is duty;
But, and I should take such a voyage on me,
I know it well, it should be to my pain.
Also it makes me afeard, certain.
But let us take counsel here as well as we can,
For your words would fear a strong man.
everyman: Why, ye said if I had need,
Ye would me never forsake, quick ne dead,
Though it were to hell, truly.
fellowship: So I said, certainly,
But such pleasures be set aside, the sooth to say.
And also, if we took such a journey,
When should we come again?
everyman: Nay, never again till the day of doom.
fellowship: In faith, then will not I come there!
Who hath you these tidings brought?
everyman: Indeed, Death was with me here.
fellowship: Now, by God that all hath bought,
If Death were the messenger,
For no man that is living today
I will not go that loath journay--
Not for the father that begat me!
everyman: Ye promised otherwise, pardie.
fellowship: I wot well I said so, truly;
And yet if thou wilt eat, and drink, and make good cheer,
Or haunt to women the lusty company,
I would not forsake you while the day is clear,
Trust me verily!
everyman: Yea, thereto ye would be ready;
To go to mirth, solace, and play,
Your mind will sooner apply
Than to bear me company in my long journey.
fellowship: Now, in good faith, I will not that way.
But and thou wilt murder, or any man kill,
In that I will help thee with a good will.
everyman: O, that is a simple advice indeed!
Gentle fellow, help me in my necessity;
We have loved long, and now I need;
And now, gentle Fellowship, remember me.
fellowship: Whether ye have loved me or no,
By Saint John, I will not with thee go.
everyman: Yet, I pray thee, take the labour, and do so much for me
To bring me forward, for saint charity,
And comfort me till I come without the town.
fellowship: Nay, and thou would give me a new gown,
I will not a foot with thee go;
But, and thou had tarried, I would not have left thee so.
And, as now, God speed thee in thy journey,
For from thee I will depart as fast as I may.
everyman: Whither away, Fellowship? Will you forsake me?
fellowship: Yea, by my fay, to God I betake thee.
everyman: Farewell, good Fellowship! For thee my heart is sore;
Adieu for ever! I shall see thee no more.
fellowship: In faith, Everyman, farewell now at the end!
For you I will remember that parting is mourning.
[Exit FELLOWSHIP]
everyman: Alack! shall we thus depart indeed
(Ah, Lady, help!) without any more comfort?
Lo, Fellowship forsaketh me in my most need.
For help in this world whither shall I resort?
Fellowship herebefore with me would merry make,
And now little sorrow for me doth he take.
It is said, "In prosperity men friends may find,
Which in adversity be full unkind.'
Now whither for succour shall I flee,
Sith that Fellowship hath forsaken me?
To my kinsmen I will, truly,
Praying them to help me in my necessity;
I believe that they will do so,
For kind will creep where it may not go.
I will go 'say, for yonder I see them,
Where be ye now my friends and kinsmen.
[Enter KINDRED and COUSIN]
kindred: Here be we now, at your commandment.
Cousin, I pray you show us your intent
In any wise, and not spare.
cousin: Yea, Everyman, and to us declare
If ye be disposed to go anywither,
For, weet you well, we will live and die togither.
kindred: In wealth and woe we will with you hold,
For over his kin a man may be bold.
everyman: Gramercy, my friends and kinsmen kind.
Now shall I show you the grief of my mind.
I was commanded by a messenger
That is a high king's chief officer;
He bade me go a pilgrimage, to my pain,
And I know well I shall never come again;
Also I must give a reckoning strait,
For I have a great enemy that hath me in wait,
Which intendeth me for to hinder.
kindred: What account is that which ye must render?
That would I know.
everyman: Of all my works I must show
How I have lived, and my days spent;
Also of ill deeds that I have used
In my time, sith life was me lent;
And of all virtues that I have refused.
Therefore I pray you go thither with me,
To help to make mine account, for saint charity.
cousin: What, to go thither? Is that the matter?
Nay, Everyman, I had liefer fast bread and water
All this five year and more.
everyman: Alas, that ever I was bore!
For now shall I never be merry
If that you forsake me.
kindred: Ah, sir, what ye be a merry man!
Take good heart to you, and make no moan.
But one thing I warn you, by Saint Anne,
As for me, ye shall go alone.
everyman: My Cousin, will you not with me go?
cousin: No, by our Lady! I have the cramp in my toe.
Trust not to me; for, so God me speed,
I will deceive you in your most need.
kindred: It availeth not us to 'tice.
Ye shall have my maid with all my heart;
She loveth to go to feasts, there to be nice,
And to dance, and abroad to start;
I will give her leave to help you in that journey,
If that you and she may agree.
everyman: Now show me the very effect of your mind.
Will you go with me, or abide behind?
kindred: Abide behind? Yea, that will I, and I may!
Therefore farewell till another day.
[Exit KINDRED]
everyman: How should I be merry or glad?
For fair promises men to me make,
But when I have most need, they me forsake.
I am deceived; that maketh me sad.
cousin: Cousin Everyman, farewell now,
For verily I will not go with you;
Also of mine own life an unready reckoning
I have to account; therefore I make tarrying.
Now God keep thee, for now I go.
[Exit COUSIN]
everyman: Ah, Jesus, is all come hereto?
Lo, fair words maketh fools fain;
They promise, and nothing will do, certain.
My kinsmen promised me faithfully
For to abide with me steadfastly,
And now fast away do they flee:
Even so Fellowship promised me.
What friend were best me of to provide?
I lose my time here longer to abide.
Yet in my mind a thing there is:
All my life I have loved riches;
If that my Good now help me might,
He would make my heart full light.
I will speak to him in this distress.
Where art thou, my Goods and riches?
goods: [within] Who calleth me? Everyman? What, hast thou haste?
I lie here in corners, trussed and piled so high,
And in chests I am locked so fast,
Also sacked in bags. Thou mayst see with thine eye.
I cannot stir; in packs low I lie.
What would ye have? Lightly me say.
everyman: Come hither, Goods, in all the haste thou may.
For of counsel I must desire thee.
[Enter GOODS]
goods: Sir, and ye in the world have sorrow or adversity,
That can I help you to remedy shortly.
everyman: It is another disease that grieveth me;
In this world it is not, I tell thee so.
I am sent for, another way to go,
To give a strait count general
Before the highest Jupiter of all;
And all my life I have had joy and pleasure in thee;
Therefore I pray thee go with me,
For, peradventure, thou mayst before God Almighty
My reckoning help to clean and purify:
For it is said ever among,
That money maketh all right that is wrong.
goods: Nay, Everyman; I sing another song,
I follow no man in such voyages;
For, and I went with thee,
Thou shouldst fare much worse for me;
For because on me thou did set thy mind,
Thy reckoning I have made blotted and blind,
That thine account thou cannot make truly;
And that hast thou for the love of me.
everyman: That would grieve me full sore,
When I should come to that fearful answer.
Up, let us go thither together.
goods: Nay, not so! I am too brittle, I may not endure;
I will follow no man one foot, be ye sure.
everyman: Alas, I have thee loved, and had great pleasure
All my life-days in goods and treasure.
goods: That is to thy damnation, without lesing!
For my love is contrary to the love everlasting.
But if thou had me loved moderately during,
As to the poor to give part of me,
Then shouldst thou not in this dolour be,
Nor in this great sorrow and care.
everyman: Lo, now was I deceived ere I was ware,
And all I may wite misspending of time.
goods: What, weenest thou that I am thine?
everyman: I had weened so.
goods: Nay, Everyman, I say no.
As for a while I was lent thee,
A season thou hast had me in prosperity.
My condition is man's soul to kill;
If I save one, a thousand I do spill;
Weenest thou that I will follow thee
From this world? Nay, verily.
everyman: I had weened otherwise.
goods: Therefore to thy soul Good is a thief;
For when thou art dead, this is my guise--
Another to deceive in the same wise
As I have done thee, and all to his soul's reprief.
everyman: O false Good, cursed thou be!
Thou traitor to God, that hast deceived me
And caught me in thy snare.
goods: Marry, thou brought thyself in care,
Whereof I am glad.
I must needs laugh, I cannot be sad.
everyman: Ah, Good, thou hast had long my heartly love;
I gave thee that which should be the Lord's above.
But wilt thou not go with me indeed?
I pray thee truth to say.
goods: No, so God me speed!
Therefore farewell, and have good day.
[Exit GOODS]
everyman: O, to whom shall I make my moan
For to go with me in that heavy journay?
First Fellowship said he would with me gone;
His words were very pleasant and gay,
But afterward he left me alone.
Then spake I to my kinsmen, all in despair,
And also thy gave me words fair,
They lacked no fair speaking,
But all forsook me in the ending.
Then went I to my Goods, that I loved best,
In hope to have comfort, but there had I least;
For my Goods sharply did me tell
That he bringeth many into hell.
Then of myself I was ashamed,
And so I am worthy to be blamed;
Thus may I well myself hate.
Of whom shall I now counsel take?
I think that I shall never speed
Till that I go to my Good Deed.
But, alas, she is so weak
That she can neither go nor speak.
Yet will I venture on her now.
My Good Deeds, where be you?
[GOOD DEEDS speaks from the ground]
good deeds: Here I lie, cold in the ground.
Thy sins hath me sore bound,
That I cannot stere.
everyman: O Good Deeds! I stand in fear:
I must you pray of counsel,
For help now should come right well.
good deeds: Everyman, I have understanding
That ye be summoned account to make
Before Messias, of Jerusalem King;
And you do by me, that journey with you will I take.
everyman: Therefore I come to you my moan to make;
I pray you that ye will go with me.
good deeds: I would full fain, but I cannot stand, verily.
everyman: Why, is there anything on you fall?
good deeds: Yea, sir, I may thank you of all;
If ye had perfectly cheered me,
Your book of count full ready had be.
Look, the books of your works and deeds eke;
Ah, see how they lie under the feet,
To your soul's heaviness.
everyman: Our Lord Jesus help me!
For one letter here I cannot see.
good deeds: There is a blind reckoning in time of distress!
everyman: Good Deeds, I pray you, help me in this need,
Or else I am for ever damned indeed;
Therefore help me to make reckoning
Before the Redeemer of all thing,
That King is, and was, and ever shall.
good deeds: Everyman, I am sorry of your fall,
And fain would I help you, and I were able.
everyman: Good Deeds, your counsel I pray you give me.
good deeds: That shall I do verily;
Though that on my feet I may not go,
I have a sister that shall with you also,
Called Knowledge, which shall with you abide,
To help you to make that dreadful reckoning.
[Enter KNOWLEDGE]
knowledge: Everyman, I will go with thee, and be thy guide
In thy most need to go by thy side.
everyman: In good condition I am now in every thing,
And am wholly content with this good thing;
Thanked be God my Creator.
good deeds: And when she hath brought thee there,
Where thou shalt heal thee of thy smart,
Then go you with your reckoning and your Good Deeds together
For to make you joyful at heart
Before the blessed Trinity.
everyman: My Good Deeds, gramercy!
I am well content, certainly,
With your words sweet.
knowledge: Now go we together lovingly
To Confession, that cleansing river.
everyman: For joy I weep; I would we were there!
But, I pray you, give me cognition
Where dwelleth that holy man, Confession.
knowledge: In the house of salvation;
We shall find him in that place,
That shall us comfort, by God's grace.
[KNOWLEDGE conducts EVERYMAN to CONFESSION]
Lo, this is Confession. Kneel down and ask mercy,
For he is in good conceit with God almighty.
everyman: [Kneeling] O glorious fountain, that all uncleanness doth clarify,
Wash from me the spots of vice unclean,
That on me no sin may be seen.
I come, with Knowledge, for my redemption,
Redempt with hearty and full contrition;
For I am commanded a pilgrimage to take,
And great accounts before God to make.
Now, I pray you, Shrift, mother of salvation.
Help my Good Deeds for my piteous exclamation.
confession: I know your sorrow well, Everyman.
Because with Knowledge ye come to me,
I will you comfort as well as I can,
And a precious jewel I will give thee,
Called Penance, voider of adversity;
Therewith shall your body chastised be,
With abstinence, and perseverance in God's service.
Here shall you receive that scourge of me.
Which is penance strong that ye must endure
To remember thy Saviour was scourged for thee
With sharp scourges, and suffered it patiently;
So must thou ere thou 'scape that painful pilgrimage.
Knowledge, keep him in this voyage,
And by that time Good Deeds will be with thee.
But in any wise be siker of mercy,
For your time draweth fast. And ye will saved be,
Ask God mercy, and He will grant, truly.
When with the scourge of penance man doth him bind,
The oil of forgiveness then shall he find.
[Exit CONFESSION]
everyman: Thanked be God for his gracious work!
For now I will my penance begin;
This hath rejoiced and lighted my heart,
Though the knots be painful and hard within.
knowledge: Everyman, look your penance that ye fulfil,
What pain that ever it to you be;
And Knowledge shall give you counsel at will
How your account ye shall make clearly.
[EVERYMAN kneels]
everyman: O eternal God, O heavenly figure,
O way of righteousness, O goodly vision,
Which descended down in a Virgin pure
Because he would every man redeem,
Which Adam forfeited by his disobedience.
O blessed Godhead, elect and high Divine,
Forgive me my grievous offence:
Here I cry thee mercy in this presence.
O ghostly Treasure, O Ransomer and Redeemer,
Of all the world Hope and Conduiter
Mirror of joy, Foundator of mercy,
Which enlumineth heaven and earth thereby,
Hear my clamorous complaint, though it late be.
Receive my prayers, of thy benignity.
Though I be a sinner most abhominable,
Yet let my name be written in Moses' table.
O Mary, pray to the Maker of all thing,
Me for to help at me ending;
And save me from the power of my enemy,
For Death assaileth me strongly.
And, Lady, that I may be means of thy prayer
Of your Son's glory to be partner,
By the means of his Passion I it crave;
I beseech you, help my soul to save.
[He rises]
Knowledge, give me the scourge of penance;
My flesh therewith shall give acquittance.
I will now begin, if God give me grace.
knowledge: Everyman, God give you time and space.
Thus I bequeath you in the hands of our Saviour,
Now may you make your reckoning sure.
everyman: In the name of the Holy Trinity,
My body sore punished shall be.
[Scourges himself]
Take this, body, for the sin of the flesh!
Also thou delightest to go gay and fresh,
And in the way of damnation thou did me bring,
Therefore suffer now strokes of punishing.
Now of penance I will wade the water clear,
To save me from Purgatory, that sharp fire.
[GOOD DEEDS rises from the ground]
good deeds: I thank God, now I can walk and go,
And am delivered of my sickness and woe.
Therefore with Everyman I will go, and not spare;
His good works I will help him to declare.
knowledge: Now, Everyman, be merry and glad!
Your Good Deeds cometh now, ye may not be sad.
Now is your Good Deeds whole and sound,
Going upright upon the ground.
everyman: My heart is light, and shall be evermore.
Now will I smite faster than I did before.
good deeds: Everyman, pilgrim, my special friend,
Blessed be thou without end.
For thee is preparate the eternal glory.
Ye have me made whole and sound,
Therefore I will bide by thee in every stound.
everyman: Welcome, my Good Deeds; now I hear thy voice,
I weep for very sweetness of love.
knowledge: Be no more sad, but ever rejoice;
God seeth thy living in his throne above.
Put on this garment to thy behove
Which is wet with your tears,
Or else before God you may it miss,
When you to your journey's end come shall.
everyman: Gentle Knowledge, what do ye it call?
knowledge: It is the garment of sorrow;
From pain it will you borrow;
Contrition it is
That getteth forgiveness;
It pleaseth God passing well.
good deeds: Everyman, will you wear it for your heal?
[EVERYMAN puts on the garment of contrition]
everyman: Now blessed be Jesu, Mary's Son,
For now have I on true contrition.
And let us go now without tarrying;
Good Deeds, have we clear our reckoning?
good deeds: Yea, indeed I have it here.
everyman: Then I trust we need not fear.
Now, friends, let us not part in twain.
knowledge: Nay, Everyman, that will we not, certain.
good deeds: Yet must thou lead with thee
Three persons of great might.
everyman: Who should they be?
good deeds: Discretion and Strength they hight,
And thy Beauty may not abide behind.
knowledge: Also ye must call to mind
Your Five Wits as for your counsellors.
good deeds: You must have them ready at all hours.
everyman: How shall I get them hither?
knowledge: You must call them all together,
And they will hear you incontinent.
everyman: My friends, come hither and be present;
Discretion, Strength, my Five Wits, and Beauty.
Enter DISCRETION, STRENGTH, FIVE WITS and BEAUTY]
beauty: Here at your will we be all ready.
What will ye that we should do?
good deeds: That ye would with Everyman go,
And help him in his pilgrimage.
Advise you, will ye with him or not in that voyage?
strength: We will bring him all thither,
To his help and comfort, ye may believe me.
discretion: So will we go with him all together.
everyman: Almighty God loved may thou be!
I give thee laud that I have hither brought
Strength, Discretion, Beauty, and Five Wits. Lack I nought;
And my Good Deeds, with Knowledge clear,
All be in company at my will here.
I desire no more to my business.
strength: And I, Strength, will by you stand in distress,
Though thou would in battle fight on the ground.
five wits: And though it were through the world round,
We will not depart for sweet nor sour.
beauty: No more will I, unto death's hour,
Whatsoever thereof befall.
discretion: Everyman, advise you first of all;
Go with a good advisement and deliberation.
We all give you virtuous monition
That all shall be well.
everyman: My friends, hearken what I will tell:
I pray God reward you in his heavenly sphere.
Now hearken, all that be here,
For I will make my testament
Here before you all present:
In alms half my good I will give with my hands twain
In the way of charity, with good intent,
And the other half still shall remain
In queath to be returned there it ought to be.
This I do in despite of the fiend of hell,
To go quit out of his peril
Ever after and this day.
knowledge: Everyman, hearken what I say;
Go to Priesthood, I you advise,
And receive of him in any wise
The holy sacrament and ointment together;
Then shortly see ye turn again hither;
We will all abide you here.
five wits: Yea, Everyman, hie you that ye ready were.
There is no emperor, king, duke, nor baron,
That of God hath commission
As hath the least priest in the world being;
For of the blessed sacraments pure and benign
He beareth the keys, and thereof hath the cure
For man's redemption--it is ever sure--
Which God for our soul's medicine
Gave us out of his heart with great pine
Here in this transitory life, for thee and me.
The blessed sacraments seven there be:
Baptism, confirmation, with priesthood good,
And the sacrament of God's precious flesh and blood,
Marriage, the holy extreme unction, and penance.
These seven be good to have in remembrance,
Gracious sacraments of high divinity.
everyman: Fain would I receive that Holy Body
And meekly to my ghostly father I will go.
five wits: Everyman, that is the best that ye can do.
God will you to salvation bring,
For priesthood exceedeth all other thing;
To us Holy Scripture they do teach,
And converteth man from sin, heaven to reach;
God hath to them more power given,
Than to any angel that is in heaven.
With five words he may consecrate
God's body in flesh and blood to make,
And handleth his Maker between his hands.
The priest bindeth and unbindeth all bands,
Both in earth and in heaven.
Thou ministers all the sacraments seven;
Though we kissed thy feet, thou were worthy;
Thou art surgeon that cureth sin deadly:
No remedy we find under God
But all only priesthood.
Everyman, God gave priests that dignity,
And setteth them in his stead among us to be;
Thus be they above angels in degree.
[Exit EVERYMAN]
knowledge: If priests be good, it is so, surely.
But when Jesus hanged on the cross with great smart,
There he gave out of his blessed heart
The same sacrament in great torment:
He sold them not to us, that Lord omnipotent.
Therefore Saint Peter the Apostle doth say
That Jesu's curse hath all they
Which God their Saviour do buy or sell,
Or they for any, money do take or tell.
Sinful priests giveth the sinners example bad;
Their children sitteth by other men's fires, I have heard;
And some haunteth women's company
With unclean life, as lusts of lechery.
These be with sin made blind.
five wits: I trust God no such may we find.
Therefore let us priesthood honour,
And follow their doctrine for our soul's succour.
We be their sheep, and they shepherds be
By whom we all be kept in surety.
Peace, for yonder I see Everyman come,
Which hath made true satisfaction.
good deeds: Methink it is he indeed.
[Re-enter EVERYMAN]
everyman: Now Jesu be your alder speed.
I have received the sacrament for my redemption,
And then mine extreme unction:
Blessed be all they that counselled me to take it!
And now, friends, let us go without longer respite;
I thank God that ye have tarried so long.
Now set each of you on this rood your hand,
And shortly follow me.
I go before, there I would be;
God be our guide.
strength: Everyman, we will not from you go,
Till ye have done this voyage long.
discretion: I, Discretion, will bide by you also.
knowledge: And though its pilgrimage is never so strong,
I will never part you fro.
strength: Everyman, I will be as sure by thee
As ever I did by Judas Maccabee.
[They go together to the grave]
everyman: Alas! I am so faint I may not stand,
My limbs under me doth fold.
Friends, let us not turn again to this land,
Not for all the world's gold;
For into this cave must I creep,
And turn to earth, and there to sleep.
beauty: What, into this grave? Alas!
everyman: Yea, there shall you consume, more and less.
beauty: And what, should I smother here?
everyman: Yea, by my faith, and never more appear.
In this world live no more we shall,
But in heaven before the highest Lord of all.
beauty: I cross out all this; adieu, by Saint John!
I take my tap in my lap and am gone.
everyman: What, Beauty whither will ye?
beauty: Peace! I am deaf. I look not behind me,
Not and thou would give me all the gold in thy chest.
[Exit BEAUTY]
everyman: Alas, whereto may I trust?
Beauty goeth fast away from me;
She promised with me to live and die.
strength: Everyman, I will thee also forsake and deny.
Thy game liketh me not at all.
everyman: Why then, ye will forsake me all!
Sweet Strength, tarry a little space!
strength: Nay, sir, by the rood of grace!
I will hie me from thee fast,
Though thou weep till thy heart to-brast.
everyman: Ye would ever bide by me, ye said.
strength: Yea, I have you far enough conveyed.
Ye be old enough, I understand,
Your pilgrimage to take on hand.
I repent me that I hither came.
everyman: Strength, you to displease I am to blame;
Yet promise is debt, this ye well wot.
strength: In faith, I care not.
Thou art but a fool to complain;
You spend your speech and waste your brain.
Go, thrust thee into the ground.
[Exit STRENGTH]
everyman: I had weened surer I should you have found.
He that trusteth in his Strength
She him deceiveth at the length.
Both Strength and Beauty forsaketh me;
Yet they promised me fair and lovingly.
discretion: Everyman, I will after Strength be gone;
As for me, I will leave you alone.
everyman: Why, Discretion, will ye forsake me?
discretion: Yea, in faith, I will go from thee,
For when Strength goeth before
I follow after evermore.
everyman: Yet, I pray thee, for the love of the Trinity,
Look in my grave once piteously.
discretion: Nay, so nigh will I not come.
Farewell, every one!
[Exit DISCRETION]
everyman: O all thing faileth, save God alone--
Beauty, Strength, and Discretion;
For when Death bloweth his blast,
They all run from me full fast.
five wits: Everyman, my leave now of thee I take;
I will follow the other, for here I thee forsake.
everyman: Alas, then may I wail and weep,
For I took you for my best friend.
five wits: I will no longer thee keep;
Now farewell, and there an end.
[Exit FIVE WITS]
everyman: O Jesu, help! All hath forsaken me!
good deeds: Nay, Everyman; I will bide with thee,
I will not forsake thee indeed;
Thou shalt find me a good friend at need.
everyman: Gramercy, Good Deeds! Now may I true friends see.
They have forsaken me, every one;
I loved them better than my Good Deeds alone.
Knowledge, will ye forsake me also?
knowledge: Yea, Everyman, when ye to Death shall go;
But not yet, for no manner of danger.
everyman: Gramercy, Knowledge, with all my heart.
knowledge: Nay, yet I will not from hence depart
Till I see where ye shall become.
everyman: Methink, alas, that I must be gone
To make my reckoning and my debts pay,
For I see my time is nigh spent away.
Take example, all ye that this do hear or see,
How they that I loved best do forsake me,
Except my Good Deeds that bideth truly.
good deeds: All earthly things is but vanity:
Beauty, Strength, and Discretion do man forsake,
Foolish friends and kinsmen, that fair spake--
All fleeth save Good Deeds, and that am I.
everyman: Have mercy on me, God most mighty;
And stand by me, thou Mother and Maid, holy Mary.
good deeds: Fear not: I will speak for thee.
everyman: Here I cry God mercy.
good deeds: Short our end, and minish our pain.
Let us go and never come again.
everyman: Into thy hands, Lord, my soul I commend.
Receive it, Lord, that it be not lost.
As thou me boughtest, so me defend,
And save me from the fiinds boast,
That I may appear with that blessed host
That shall be saved at the day of doom.
In manus tuas--of mights most
For ever--commendo spiritum meum.
[EVERYMAN and GOOD DEEDS descend into the grave]
knowledge: Now hath he suffered that we all shall endure;
The Good Deeds shall make all sure.
Now hath he made ending.
Methinketh that I hear angels sing,
And make great joy and melody
Where Everyman's soul received shall be.
angel: [within] Come, excellent elect spouse to Jesu!
Hereabove thou shalt go
Because of thy singular virtue.
Now the soul is taken the body fro,
Thy reckoning is crystal clear.
Now shalt thou into the heavenly sphere,
Unto the which all ye shall come
That liveth well before the day of doom.
[Exit KNOWLEDGE. Enter DOCTOR]
doctor: This memorial men may have in mind;
Ye hearers, take it of worth, old and young,
And forsake Pride, for he deceiveth you in the end,
And remember Beauty, Five Wits, Strength, and Discretion,
They all at the last do Everyman forsake,
Save his Good Deeds there doth he take.
But beware, for and they be small
Before God, he hath no help at all.
None excuse may be there for Everyman.
Alas, how shall he do then?
For, after death, amends may no man make,
For then mercy and pity doth him forsake.
If his reckoning be not clear when he doth come,
God will say, Ite, maledicti, in ignem aeternum.
And he that hath his account whole and sound,
High in heaven he shall be crowned;
Unto which place God bring us all thither,
That we may live body and soul together.
Thereto help the Trinity!
Amen, say ye, for saint charity.
And hear this matter with reverence,
By figure a moral play:
The Summoning of Everyman called it is,
That of our lives and ending shows
How transitory we be all day.
This matter is wondrous precious,
But the intent of it is more gracious,
And sweet to bear away.
The story saith: Man, in the beginning,
Look well, and take good heed to the ending,
Be you never so gay!
Ye think sin in the beginning full sweet,
Which in the end causeth the soul to weep,
When the body lieth in clay.
Here shall you see how Fellowship and Jollity,
Both Strength, Pleasure, and Beauty,
Will fade from thee as flower in May.
For ye shall hear how our Heaven-King
Calleth Everyman to a general reckoning.
Give audience, and hear what he doth say.
[Exit]
GOD speaketh:
god: I perceive, here in my majesty,
How that all creatures be to me unkind,
Living without dread in worldly prosperity.
Of ghostly sight the people be so blind,
Drowned in sin, they know me not for their God;
In worldly riches is all their mind,
They fear not of my righteousness the sharp rod;
My law that I showed, when I for them died
They forget clean, and shedding of my blood red;
I hanged between two, it cannot be denied;
To get them life I suffered to be dead;
I healed their feet, with thorns hurt was my head.
I could do no more than I did, truly;
And now I see the people do clean forsake me.
They use the seven deadly sins damnable;
As pride, covetise, wrath, and lechery,
Now in the world be made commendable;
And thus they leave of angels the heavenly company.
Every man liveth so after his own pleasure,
And yet of their life they be nothing sure.
I see the more that I them forbear
The worse they be from year to year;
And that liveth appaireth fast.
Therefore I will, in all the haste,
Have a reckoning of every man's person;
For, and I leave the people thus alone
In their life and wicked tempests,
Verily they will become much worse than beasts;
For now one would by envy another up eat;
Charity they all do clean forget.
I hoped well that every man
In my glory should make his mansion,
And thereto I had them all elect;
But now I see, like traitors deject,
They thank me not for the pleasure that I to them meant,
Nor yet for their being that I them have lent.
I proffered the people great multitude of mercy,
And few there be that asketh it heartily;
They be so cumbered with worldly riches,
That needs on them I must do justice,
On every man living, without fear.
Where art thou, Death, thou mighty messenger?
[Enter DEATH]
death: Almighty God, I am here at your will,
Your commandment to fulfil.
god: Go thou to Everyman,
And show him, in my name,
A pilgrimage he must on him take,
Which he in no wise may escape;
And that he bring with him a sure reckoning
Without delay or any tarrying.
death: Lord, I will in the world go run overall,
And cruelly out search both great and small.
[Exit GOD]
Every man will I beset that liveth beastly
Out of God's laws, and dreadeth not folly.
He that loveth riches I will strike with my dart,
His sight to blind, and from heaven to depart--
Except that alms be his good friend--
In hell for to dwell, world without end.
Lo, yonder I see Everyman walking;
Full little he thinketh on my coming;
His mind is on fleshly lusts and his treasure;
And great pain it shall cause him to endure
Before the Lord, Heaven-King
[Enter EVERYMAN]
Everyman, stand still! Whither art thou going
Thus gaily? Hast thou thy Maker forgeet?
everyman: Why asketh thou?
Wouldst thou weet?
death: Yea, sir; I will show you:
In great haste I am sent to thee
From God, out of his Majesty.
everyman: What, sent to me?
death: Yea, certainly.
Though thou have forgot him here,
He thinketh on thee in the heavenly sphere,
As, ere we depart, thou shalt know.
everyman: What desireth God of me?
death: That shall I show thee:
A reckoning he will needs have
Without any longer respite.
everyman: To give a reckoning longer leisure I crave;
This blind matter troubleth my wit.
death: On thee thou must take a long journey;
Therefore thy book of count with thee thou bring;
For turn again thou cannot by no way.
And look thou be sure of thy reckoning,
For before God thou shalt answer, and show
Thy many bad deeds, and good but a few,
How thou hast spent thy life, and in what wise,
Before the Chief Lord of Paradise.
Have ado that we were in that way,
For weet thou well, thou shalt make none attornay.
everyman: Full unready I am such reckoning to give.
I know thee not. What messenger art thou?
death: I am Death, that no man dreadeth.
For every man I 'rest, and no man spareth;
For it is God's commandment
That all to me should be obedient.
everyman: O Death! thou comest when I had thee least in mind!
In thy power it lieth me to save,
Yet of my good will I give thee, if thou will be kind.
Yea, a thousand pound shalt thou have,
And defer this matter till another day.
death: Everyman, it may not be, by no way!
I set not by gold, silver, nor riches,
Nor by pope, emperor, king, duke, nor princes.
For, and I would receive gifts great,
All the world I might get;
But my custom is clean contrary.
I give thee no respite. Come hence, and not tarry.
everyman: Alas! shall I have no longer respite?
I may say Death giveth no warning.
To think on thee, it maketh my heart sick,
For all unready is my book of reckoning.
But twelve year and I might have abiding,
My counting-book I would make so clear,
That my reckoning I should not need to fear.
Wherefore, Death, I pray thee, for God's mercy,
Spare me till I be provided of remedy.
death: Thee availeth not to cry, weep, and pray;
But haste thee lightly that thou were gone that journay,
And prove thy friends if thou can.
For weet thou well the tide abideth no man;
And in the world each living creature
For Adam's sin must die of nature.
everyman: Death, if I should this pilgrimage take,
And my reckoning surely make,
Show me, for saint charity,
Should I not come again shortly?
death: No, Everyman; and thou be once there,
Thou mayst never more come here,
Trust me verily.
everyman: O gracious God, in the high seat celestial,
Have mercy on me in this most need!
Shall I have no company from this vale terrestrial
Of mine acquaintance that way me to lead?
death: Yea, if any be so hardy,
That would go with thee and bear thee company.
Hie thee that thou were gone to God's magnificence,
Thy reckoning to give before his presence.
What! weenest thou thy life is given thee,
And thy worldly goods also?
everyman: I had weened so, verily.
death: Nay, nay; it was but lent thee;
For, as soon as thou art go
Another a while shall have it, and then go therefro
Even as thou hast done.
Everyman, thou art mad! Thou hast thy wits five,
And here on earth will not amend thy life;
For suddenly I do come.
everyman: O wretched caitiff! whither shall I flee,
That I might 'scape this endless sorrow?
Now, gentle Death, spare me till tomorrow,
That I may amend me
With good advisement.
death: Nay, thereto I will not consent,
Nor no man will I respite,
But to the heart suddenly I shall smite
Without any advisement.
And now out of thy sight I will me hie;
See thou make thee ready shortly,
For thou mayst say this is the day
That no man living may 'scape away.
[Exit DEATH]
everyman: [alone] Alas! I may well weep with sighs deep.
Now have I no manner of company
To help me in my journey and me to keep;
And also my writing is full unready.
How shall I do now for to excuse me?
I would to God I had never be gete!
To my soul a full great profit it had be;
For now I fear pains huge and great.
The time passeth; Lord, help, that all wrought.
For though I mourn, it availeth nought.
The day passeth, and is almost ago;
I wot not well what for to do.
To whom were I best my complaint to make?
What and I to Fellowship thereof spake,
And showed him of this sudden chance,
For in him is all mine affiance?
We have in the world so many a day
Been good friends in sport and play.
I see him yonder, certainly.
I trust that he will bear me company;
Therefore to him will I speak to ease my sorrow.
Well met, good Fellowship, and good morrow!
FELLOWSHIP speaketh:
fellowship: Everyman, good morrow, by this day!
Sir, why lookest thou so piteously?
If any thing be amiss, I pray thee me say,
That I may help to remedy.
everyman: Yea, good Fellowship, yea,
I am in great jeopardy.
fellowship: My true friend, show to me your mind;
I will not forsake thee to thy life's end
In the way of good company.
everyman: That was well spoken, and lovingly.
fellowship: Sir, I must needs know your heaviness;
I have pity to see you in any distress;
If any have you wronged, ye shall revenged be,
Though I on the ground be slain for thee,
Though that I know before that I should die.
everyman: Verily, Fellowship, gramercy.
fellowship: Tush! by thy thanks I set not a stree
Show me your grief, and say no more.
everyman: If I my heart should to you break,
And then you to turn your mind from me,
And would not me comfort when ye hear me speak,
Then should I ten times sorrier be.
fellowship: Sir, I say as I will do indeed.
everyman: Then be you a good friend at need;
I have found you true herebefore.
fellowship: And so ye shall evermore;
For, in faith, and thou go to hell,
I will not forsake thee by the way!
everyman: Ye speak like a good friend; I believe you well.
I shall deserve it, and I may.
fellowship: I speak of no deserving, by this day!
For he that will say and nothing do
Is not worthy with good company to go;
Therefore show me the grief of your mind,
As to your friend most loving and kind.
everyman: I shall show you how it is:
Commanded I am to go a journay,
A long way, hard and dangerous,
And give a strait count without delay,
Before the high judge, Adonai.
Wherefore, I pray you, bear me company,
As ye have promised, in this journay.
fellowship: That is matter indeed. Promise is duty;
But, and I should take such a voyage on me,
I know it well, it should be to my pain.
Also it makes me afeard, certain.
But let us take counsel here as well as we can,
For your words would fear a strong man.
everyman: Why, ye said if I had need,
Ye would me never forsake, quick ne dead,
Though it were to hell, truly.
fellowship: So I said, certainly,
But such pleasures be set aside, the sooth to say.
And also, if we took such a journey,
When should we come again?
everyman: Nay, never again till the day of doom.
fellowship: In faith, then will not I come there!
Who hath you these tidings brought?
everyman: Indeed, Death was with me here.
fellowship: Now, by God that all hath bought,
If Death were the messenger,
For no man that is living today
I will not go that loath journay--
Not for the father that begat me!
everyman: Ye promised otherwise, pardie.
fellowship: I wot well I said so, truly;
And yet if thou wilt eat, and drink, and make good cheer,
Or haunt to women the lusty company,
I would not forsake you while the day is clear,
Trust me verily!
everyman: Yea, thereto ye would be ready;
To go to mirth, solace, and play,
Your mind will sooner apply
Than to bear me company in my long journey.
fellowship: Now, in good faith, I will not that way.
But and thou wilt murder, or any man kill,
In that I will help thee with a good will.
everyman: O, that is a simple advice indeed!
Gentle fellow, help me in my necessity;
We have loved long, and now I need;
And now, gentle Fellowship, remember me.
fellowship: Whether ye have loved me or no,
By Saint John, I will not with thee go.
everyman: Yet, I pray thee, take the labour, and do so much for me
To bring me forward, for saint charity,
And comfort me till I come without the town.
fellowship: Nay, and thou would give me a new gown,
I will not a foot with thee go;
But, and thou had tarried, I would not have left thee so.
And, as now, God speed thee in thy journey,
For from thee I will depart as fast as I may.
everyman: Whither away, Fellowship? Will you forsake me?
fellowship: Yea, by my fay, to God I betake thee.
everyman: Farewell, good Fellowship! For thee my heart is sore;
Adieu for ever! I shall see thee no more.
fellowship: In faith, Everyman, farewell now at the end!
For you I will remember that parting is mourning.
[Exit FELLOWSHIP]
everyman: Alack! shall we thus depart indeed
(Ah, Lady, help!) without any more comfort?
Lo, Fellowship forsaketh me in my most need.
For help in this world whither shall I resort?
Fellowship herebefore with me would merry make,
And now little sorrow for me doth he take.
It is said, "In prosperity men friends may find,
Which in adversity be full unkind.'
Now whither for succour shall I flee,
Sith that Fellowship hath forsaken me?
To my kinsmen I will, truly,
Praying them to help me in my necessity;
I believe that they will do so,
For kind will creep where it may not go.
I will go 'say, for yonder I see them,
Where be ye now my friends and kinsmen.
[Enter KINDRED and COUSIN]
kindred: Here be we now, at your commandment.
Cousin, I pray you show us your intent
In any wise, and not spare.
cousin: Yea, Everyman, and to us declare
If ye be disposed to go anywither,
For, weet you well, we will live and die togither.
kindred: In wealth and woe we will with you hold,
For over his kin a man may be bold.
everyman: Gramercy, my friends and kinsmen kind.
Now shall I show you the grief of my mind.
I was commanded by a messenger
That is a high king's chief officer;
He bade me go a pilgrimage, to my pain,
And I know well I shall never come again;
Also I must give a reckoning strait,
For I have a great enemy that hath me in wait,
Which intendeth me for to hinder.
kindred: What account is that which ye must render?
That would I know.
everyman: Of all my works I must show
How I have lived, and my days spent;
Also of ill deeds that I have used
In my time, sith life was me lent;
And of all virtues that I have refused.
Therefore I pray you go thither with me,
To help to make mine account, for saint charity.
cousin: What, to go thither? Is that the matter?
Nay, Everyman, I had liefer fast bread and water
All this five year and more.
everyman: Alas, that ever I was bore!
For now shall I never be merry
If that you forsake me.
kindred: Ah, sir, what ye be a merry man!
Take good heart to you, and make no moan.
But one thing I warn you, by Saint Anne,
As for me, ye shall go alone.
everyman: My Cousin, will you not with me go?
cousin: No, by our Lady! I have the cramp in my toe.
Trust not to me; for, so God me speed,
I will deceive you in your most need.
kindred: It availeth not us to 'tice.
Ye shall have my maid with all my heart;
She loveth to go to feasts, there to be nice,
And to dance, and abroad to start;
I will give her leave to help you in that journey,
If that you and she may agree.
everyman: Now show me the very effect of your mind.
Will you go with me, or abide behind?
kindred: Abide behind? Yea, that will I, and I may!
Therefore farewell till another day.
[Exit KINDRED]
everyman: How should I be merry or glad?
For fair promises men to me make,
But when I have most need, they me forsake.
I am deceived; that maketh me sad.
cousin: Cousin Everyman, farewell now,
For verily I will not go with you;
Also of mine own life an unready reckoning
I have to account; therefore I make tarrying.
Now God keep thee, for now I go.
[Exit COUSIN]
everyman: Ah, Jesus, is all come hereto?
Lo, fair words maketh fools fain;
They promise, and nothing will do, certain.
My kinsmen promised me faithfully
For to abide with me steadfastly,
And now fast away do they flee:
Even so Fellowship promised me.
What friend were best me of to provide?
I lose my time here longer to abide.
Yet in my mind a thing there is:
All my life I have loved riches;
If that my Good now help me might,
He would make my heart full light.
I will speak to him in this distress.
Where art thou, my Goods and riches?
goods: [within] Who calleth me? Everyman? What, hast thou haste?
I lie here in corners, trussed and piled so high,
And in chests I am locked so fast,
Also sacked in bags. Thou mayst see with thine eye.
I cannot stir; in packs low I lie.
What would ye have? Lightly me say.
everyman: Come hither, Goods, in all the haste thou may.
For of counsel I must desire thee.
[Enter GOODS]
goods: Sir, and ye in the world have sorrow or adversity,
That can I help you to remedy shortly.
everyman: It is another disease that grieveth me;
In this world it is not, I tell thee so.
I am sent for, another way to go,
To give a strait count general
Before the highest Jupiter of all;
And all my life I have had joy and pleasure in thee;
Therefore I pray thee go with me,
For, peradventure, thou mayst before God Almighty
My reckoning help to clean and purify:
For it is said ever among,
That money maketh all right that is wrong.
goods: Nay, Everyman; I sing another song,
I follow no man in such voyages;
For, and I went with thee,
Thou shouldst fare much worse for me;
For because on me thou did set thy mind,
Thy reckoning I have made blotted and blind,
That thine account thou cannot make truly;
And that hast thou for the love of me.
everyman: That would grieve me full sore,
When I should come to that fearful answer.
Up, let us go thither together.
goods: Nay, not so! I am too brittle, I may not endure;
I will follow no man one foot, be ye sure.
everyman: Alas, I have thee loved, and had great pleasure
All my life-days in goods and treasure.
goods: That is to thy damnation, without lesing!
For my love is contrary to the love everlasting.
But if thou had me loved moderately during,
As to the poor to give part of me,
Then shouldst thou not in this dolour be,
Nor in this great sorrow and care.
everyman: Lo, now was I deceived ere I was ware,
And all I may wite misspending of time.
goods: What, weenest thou that I am thine?
everyman: I had weened so.
goods: Nay, Everyman, I say no.
As for a while I was lent thee,
A season thou hast had me in prosperity.
My condition is man's soul to kill;
If I save one, a thousand I do spill;
Weenest thou that I will follow thee
From this world? Nay, verily.
everyman: I had weened otherwise.
goods: Therefore to thy soul Good is a thief;
For when thou art dead, this is my guise--
Another to deceive in the same wise
As I have done thee, and all to his soul's reprief.
everyman: O false Good, cursed thou be!
Thou traitor to God, that hast deceived me
And caught me in thy snare.
goods: Marry, thou brought thyself in care,
Whereof I am glad.
I must needs laugh, I cannot be sad.
everyman: Ah, Good, thou hast had long my heartly love;
I gave thee that which should be the Lord's above.
But wilt thou not go with me indeed?
I pray thee truth to say.
goods: No, so God me speed!
Therefore farewell, and have good day.
[Exit GOODS]
everyman: O, to whom shall I make my moan
For to go with me in that heavy journay?
First Fellowship said he would with me gone;
His words were very pleasant and gay,
But afterward he left me alone.
Then spake I to my kinsmen, all in despair,
And also thy gave me words fair,
They lacked no fair speaking,
But all forsook me in the ending.
Then went I to my Goods, that I loved best,
In hope to have comfort, but there had I least;
For my Goods sharply did me tell
That he bringeth many into hell.
Then of myself I was ashamed,
And so I am worthy to be blamed;
Thus may I well myself hate.
Of whom shall I now counsel take?
I think that I shall never speed
Till that I go to my Good Deed.
But, alas, she is so weak
That she can neither go nor speak.
Yet will I venture on her now.
My Good Deeds, where be you?
[GOOD DEEDS speaks from the ground]
good deeds: Here I lie, cold in the ground.
Thy sins hath me sore bound,
That I cannot stere.
everyman: O Good Deeds! I stand in fear:
I must you pray of counsel,
For help now should come right well.
good deeds: Everyman, I have understanding
That ye be summoned account to make
Before Messias, of Jerusalem King;
And you do by me, that journey with you will I take.
everyman: Therefore I come to you my moan to make;
I pray you that ye will go with me.
good deeds: I would full fain, but I cannot stand, verily.
everyman: Why, is there anything on you fall?
good deeds: Yea, sir, I may thank you of all;
If ye had perfectly cheered me,
Your book of count full ready had be.
Look, the books of your works and deeds eke;
Ah, see how they lie under the feet,
To your soul's heaviness.
everyman: Our Lord Jesus help me!
For one letter here I cannot see.
good deeds: There is a blind reckoning in time of distress!
everyman: Good Deeds, I pray you, help me in this need,
Or else I am for ever damned indeed;
Therefore help me to make reckoning
Before the Redeemer of all thing,
That King is, and was, and ever shall.
good deeds: Everyman, I am sorry of your fall,
And fain would I help you, and I were able.
everyman: Good Deeds, your counsel I pray you give me.
good deeds: That shall I do verily;
Though that on my feet I may not go,
I have a sister that shall with you also,
Called Knowledge, which shall with you abide,
To help you to make that dreadful reckoning.
[Enter KNOWLEDGE]
knowledge: Everyman, I will go with thee, and be thy guide
In thy most need to go by thy side.
everyman: In good condition I am now in every thing,
And am wholly content with this good thing;
Thanked be God my Creator.
good deeds: And when she hath brought thee there,
Where thou shalt heal thee of thy smart,
Then go you with your reckoning and your Good Deeds together
For to make you joyful at heart
Before the blessed Trinity.
everyman: My Good Deeds, gramercy!
I am well content, certainly,
With your words sweet.
knowledge: Now go we together lovingly
To Confession, that cleansing river.
everyman: For joy I weep; I would we were there!
But, I pray you, give me cognition
Where dwelleth that holy man, Confession.
knowledge: In the house of salvation;
We shall find him in that place,
That shall us comfort, by God's grace.
[KNOWLEDGE conducts EVERYMAN to CONFESSION]
Lo, this is Confession. Kneel down and ask mercy,
For he is in good conceit with God almighty.
everyman: [Kneeling] O glorious fountain, that all uncleanness doth clarify,
Wash from me the spots of vice unclean,
That on me no sin may be seen.
I come, with Knowledge, for my redemption,
Redempt with hearty and full contrition;
For I am commanded a pilgrimage to take,
And great accounts before God to make.
Now, I pray you, Shrift, mother of salvation.
Help my Good Deeds for my piteous exclamation.
confession: I know your sorrow well, Everyman.
Because with Knowledge ye come to me,
I will you comfort as well as I can,
And a precious jewel I will give thee,
Called Penance, voider of adversity;
Therewith shall your body chastised be,
With abstinence, and perseverance in God's service.
Here shall you receive that scourge of me.
Which is penance strong that ye must endure
To remember thy Saviour was scourged for thee
With sharp scourges, and suffered it patiently;
So must thou ere thou 'scape that painful pilgrimage.
Knowledge, keep him in this voyage,
And by that time Good Deeds will be with thee.
But in any wise be siker of mercy,
For your time draweth fast. And ye will saved be,
Ask God mercy, and He will grant, truly.
When with the scourge of penance man doth him bind,
The oil of forgiveness then shall he find.
[Exit CONFESSION]
everyman: Thanked be God for his gracious work!
For now I will my penance begin;
This hath rejoiced and lighted my heart,
Though the knots be painful and hard within.
knowledge: Everyman, look your penance that ye fulfil,
What pain that ever it to you be;
And Knowledge shall give you counsel at will
How your account ye shall make clearly.
[EVERYMAN kneels]
everyman: O eternal God, O heavenly figure,
O way of righteousness, O goodly vision,
Which descended down in a Virgin pure
Because he would every man redeem,
Which Adam forfeited by his disobedience.
O blessed Godhead, elect and high Divine,
Forgive me my grievous offence:
Here I cry thee mercy in this presence.
O ghostly Treasure, O Ransomer and Redeemer,
Of all the world Hope and Conduiter
Mirror of joy, Foundator of mercy,
Which enlumineth heaven and earth thereby,
Hear my clamorous complaint, though it late be.
Receive my prayers, of thy benignity.
Though I be a sinner most abhominable,
Yet let my name be written in Moses' table.
O Mary, pray to the Maker of all thing,
Me for to help at me ending;
And save me from the power of my enemy,
For Death assaileth me strongly.
And, Lady, that I may be means of thy prayer
Of your Son's glory to be partner,
By the means of his Passion I it crave;
I beseech you, help my soul to save.
[He rises]
Knowledge, give me the scourge of penance;
My flesh therewith shall give acquittance.
I will now begin, if God give me grace.
knowledge: Everyman, God give you time and space.
Thus I bequeath you in the hands of our Saviour,
Now may you make your reckoning sure.
everyman: In the name of the Holy Trinity,
My body sore punished shall be.
[Scourges himself]
Take this, body, for the sin of the flesh!
Also thou delightest to go gay and fresh,
And in the way of damnation thou did me bring,
Therefore suffer now strokes of punishing.
Now of penance I will wade the water clear,
To save me from Purgatory, that sharp fire.
[GOOD DEEDS rises from the ground]
good deeds: I thank God, now I can walk and go,
And am delivered of my sickness and woe.
Therefore with Everyman I will go, and not spare;
His good works I will help him to declare.
knowledge: Now, Everyman, be merry and glad!
Your Good Deeds cometh now, ye may not be sad.
Now is your Good Deeds whole and sound,
Going upright upon the ground.
everyman: My heart is light, and shall be evermore.
Now will I smite faster than I did before.
good deeds: Everyman, pilgrim, my special friend,
Blessed be thou without end.
For thee is preparate the eternal glory.
Ye have me made whole and sound,
Therefore I will bide by thee in every stound.
everyman: Welcome, my Good Deeds; now I hear thy voice,
I weep for very sweetness of love.
knowledge: Be no more sad, but ever rejoice;
God seeth thy living in his throne above.
Put on this garment to thy behove
Which is wet with your tears,
Or else before God you may it miss,
When you to your journey's end come shall.
everyman: Gentle Knowledge, what do ye it call?
knowledge: It is the garment of sorrow;
From pain it will you borrow;
Contrition it is
That getteth forgiveness;
It pleaseth God passing well.
good deeds: Everyman, will you wear it for your heal?
[EVERYMAN puts on the garment of contrition]
everyman: Now blessed be Jesu, Mary's Son,
For now have I on true contrition.
And let us go now without tarrying;
Good Deeds, have we clear our reckoning?
good deeds: Yea, indeed I have it here.
everyman: Then I trust we need not fear.
Now, friends, let us not part in twain.
knowledge: Nay, Everyman, that will we not, certain.
good deeds: Yet must thou lead with thee
Three persons of great might.
everyman: Who should they be?
good deeds: Discretion and Strength they hight,
And thy Beauty may not abide behind.
knowledge: Also ye must call to mind
Your Five Wits as for your counsellors.
good deeds: You must have them ready at all hours.
everyman: How shall I get them hither?
knowledge: You must call them all together,
And they will hear you incontinent.
everyman: My friends, come hither and be present;
Discretion, Strength, my Five Wits, and Beauty.
Enter DISCRETION, STRENGTH, FIVE WITS and BEAUTY]
beauty: Here at your will we be all ready.
What will ye that we should do?
good deeds: That ye would with Everyman go,
And help him in his pilgrimage.
Advise you, will ye with him or not in that voyage?
strength: We will bring him all thither,
To his help and comfort, ye may believe me.
discretion: So will we go with him all together.
everyman: Almighty God loved may thou be!
I give thee laud that I have hither brought
Strength, Discretion, Beauty, and Five Wits. Lack I nought;
And my Good Deeds, with Knowledge clear,
All be in company at my will here.
I desire no more to my business.
strength: And I, Strength, will by you stand in distress,
Though thou would in battle fight on the ground.
five wits: And though it were through the world round,
We will not depart for sweet nor sour.
beauty: No more will I, unto death's hour,
Whatsoever thereof befall.
discretion: Everyman, advise you first of all;
Go with a good advisement and deliberation.
We all give you virtuous monition
That all shall be well.
everyman: My friends, hearken what I will tell:
I pray God reward you in his heavenly sphere.
Now hearken, all that be here,
For I will make my testament
Here before you all present:
In alms half my good I will give with my hands twain
In the way of charity, with good intent,
And the other half still shall remain
In queath to be returned there it ought to be.
This I do in despite of the fiend of hell,
To go quit out of his peril
Ever after and this day.
knowledge: Everyman, hearken what I say;
Go to Priesthood, I you advise,
And receive of him in any wise
The holy sacrament and ointment together;
Then shortly see ye turn again hither;
We will all abide you here.
five wits: Yea, Everyman, hie you that ye ready were.
There is no emperor, king, duke, nor baron,
That of God hath commission
As hath the least priest in the world being;
For of the blessed sacraments pure and benign
He beareth the keys, and thereof hath the cure
For man's redemption--it is ever sure--
Which God for our soul's medicine
Gave us out of his heart with great pine
Here in this transitory life, for thee and me.
The blessed sacraments seven there be:
Baptism, confirmation, with priesthood good,
And the sacrament of God's precious flesh and blood,
Marriage, the holy extreme unction, and penance.
These seven be good to have in remembrance,
Gracious sacraments of high divinity.
everyman: Fain would I receive that Holy Body
And meekly to my ghostly father I will go.
five wits: Everyman, that is the best that ye can do.
God will you to salvation bring,
For priesthood exceedeth all other thing;
To us Holy Scripture they do teach,
And converteth man from sin, heaven to reach;
God hath to them more power given,
Than to any angel that is in heaven.
With five words he may consecrate
God's body in flesh and blood to make,
And handleth his Maker between his hands.
The priest bindeth and unbindeth all bands,
Both in earth and in heaven.
Thou ministers all the sacraments seven;
Though we kissed thy feet, thou were worthy;
Thou art surgeon that cureth sin deadly:
No remedy we find under God
But all only priesthood.
Everyman, God gave priests that dignity,
And setteth them in his stead among us to be;
Thus be they above angels in degree.
[Exit EVERYMAN]
knowledge: If priests be good, it is so, surely.
But when Jesus hanged on the cross with great smart,
There he gave out of his blessed heart
The same sacrament in great torment:
He sold them not to us, that Lord omnipotent.
Therefore Saint Peter the Apostle doth say
That Jesu's curse hath all they
Which God their Saviour do buy or sell,
Or they for any, money do take or tell.
Sinful priests giveth the sinners example bad;
Their children sitteth by other men's fires, I have heard;
And some haunteth women's company
With unclean life, as lusts of lechery.
These be with sin made blind.
five wits: I trust God no such may we find.
Therefore let us priesthood honour,
And follow their doctrine for our soul's succour.
We be their sheep, and they shepherds be
By whom we all be kept in surety.
Peace, for yonder I see Everyman come,
Which hath made true satisfaction.
good deeds: Methink it is he indeed.
[Re-enter EVERYMAN]
everyman: Now Jesu be your alder speed.
I have received the sacrament for my redemption,
And then mine extreme unction:
Blessed be all they that counselled me to take it!
And now, friends, let us go without longer respite;
I thank God that ye have tarried so long.
Now set each of you on this rood your hand,
And shortly follow me.
I go before, there I would be;
God be our guide.
strength: Everyman, we will not from you go,
Till ye have done this voyage long.
discretion: I, Discretion, will bide by you also.
knowledge: And though its pilgrimage is never so strong,
I will never part you fro.
strength: Everyman, I will be as sure by thee
As ever I did by Judas Maccabee.
[They go together to the grave]
everyman: Alas! I am so faint I may not stand,
My limbs under me doth fold.
Friends, let us not turn again to this land,
Not for all the world's gold;
For into this cave must I creep,
And turn to earth, and there to sleep.
beauty: What, into this grave? Alas!
everyman: Yea, there shall you consume, more and less.
beauty: And what, should I smother here?
everyman: Yea, by my faith, and never more appear.
In this world live no more we shall,
But in heaven before the highest Lord of all.
beauty: I cross out all this; adieu, by Saint John!
I take my tap in my lap and am gone.
everyman: What, Beauty whither will ye?
beauty: Peace! I am deaf. I look not behind me,
Not and thou would give me all the gold in thy chest.
[Exit BEAUTY]
everyman: Alas, whereto may I trust?
Beauty goeth fast away from me;
She promised with me to live and die.
strength: Everyman, I will thee also forsake and deny.
Thy game liketh me not at all.
everyman: Why then, ye will forsake me all!
Sweet Strength, tarry a little space!
strength: Nay, sir, by the rood of grace!
I will hie me from thee fast,
Though thou weep till thy heart to-brast.
everyman: Ye would ever bide by me, ye said.
strength: Yea, I have you far enough conveyed.
Ye be old enough, I understand,
Your pilgrimage to take on hand.
I repent me that I hither came.
everyman: Strength, you to displease I am to blame;
Yet promise is debt, this ye well wot.
strength: In faith, I care not.
Thou art but a fool to complain;
You spend your speech and waste your brain.
Go, thrust thee into the ground.
[Exit STRENGTH]
everyman: I had weened surer I should you have found.
He that trusteth in his Strength
She him deceiveth at the length.
Both Strength and Beauty forsaketh me;
Yet they promised me fair and lovingly.
discretion: Everyman, I will after Strength be gone;
As for me, I will leave you alone.
everyman: Why, Discretion, will ye forsake me?
discretion: Yea, in faith, I will go from thee,
For when Strength goeth before
I follow after evermore.
everyman: Yet, I pray thee, for the love of the Trinity,
Look in my grave once piteously.
discretion: Nay, so nigh will I not come.
Farewell, every one!
[Exit DISCRETION]
everyman: O all thing faileth, save God alone--
Beauty, Strength, and Discretion;
For when Death bloweth his blast,
They all run from me full fast.
five wits: Everyman, my leave now of thee I take;
I will follow the other, for here I thee forsake.
everyman: Alas, then may I wail and weep,
For I took you for my best friend.
five wits: I will no longer thee keep;
Now farewell, and there an end.
[Exit FIVE WITS]
everyman: O Jesu, help! All hath forsaken me!
good deeds: Nay, Everyman; I will bide with thee,
I will not forsake thee indeed;
Thou shalt find me a good friend at need.
everyman: Gramercy, Good Deeds! Now may I true friends see.
They have forsaken me, every one;
I loved them better than my Good Deeds alone.
Knowledge, will ye forsake me also?
knowledge: Yea, Everyman, when ye to Death shall go;
But not yet, for no manner of danger.
everyman: Gramercy, Knowledge, with all my heart.
knowledge: Nay, yet I will not from hence depart
Till I see where ye shall become.
everyman: Methink, alas, that I must be gone
To make my reckoning and my debts pay,
For I see my time is nigh spent away.
Take example, all ye that this do hear or see,
How they that I loved best do forsake me,
Except my Good Deeds that bideth truly.
good deeds: All earthly things is but vanity:
Beauty, Strength, and Discretion do man forsake,
Foolish friends and kinsmen, that fair spake--
All fleeth save Good Deeds, and that am I.
everyman: Have mercy on me, God most mighty;
And stand by me, thou Mother and Maid, holy Mary.
good deeds: Fear not: I will speak for thee.
everyman: Here I cry God mercy.
good deeds: Short our end, and minish our pain.
Let us go and never come again.
everyman: Into thy hands, Lord, my soul I commend.
Receive it, Lord, that it be not lost.
As thou me boughtest, so me defend,
And save me from the fiinds boast,
That I may appear with that blessed host
That shall be saved at the day of doom.
In manus tuas--of mights most
For ever--commendo spiritum meum.
[EVERYMAN and GOOD DEEDS descend into the grave]
knowledge: Now hath he suffered that we all shall endure;
The Good Deeds shall make all sure.
Now hath he made ending.
Methinketh that I hear angels sing,
And make great joy and melody
Where Everyman's soul received shall be.
angel: [within] Come, excellent elect spouse to Jesu!
Hereabove thou shalt go
Because of thy singular virtue.
Now the soul is taken the body fro,
Thy reckoning is crystal clear.
Now shalt thou into the heavenly sphere,
Unto the which all ye shall come
That liveth well before the day of doom.
[Exit KNOWLEDGE. Enter DOCTOR]
doctor: This memorial men may have in mind;
Ye hearers, take it of worth, old and young,
And forsake Pride, for he deceiveth you in the end,
And remember Beauty, Five Wits, Strength, and Discretion,
They all at the last do Everyman forsake,
Save his Good Deeds there doth he take.
But beware, for and they be small
Before God, he hath no help at all.
None excuse may be there for Everyman.
Alas, how shall he do then?
For, after death, amends may no man make,
For then mercy and pity doth him forsake.
If his reckoning be not clear when he doth come,
God will say, Ite, maledicti, in ignem aeternum.
And he that hath his account whole and sound,
High in heaven he shall be crowned;
Unto which place God bring us all thither,
That we may live body and soul together.
Thereto help the Trinity!
Amen, say ye, for saint charity.
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