The court sometimes flattered him with the return
of the royal favour if he would impeach his accomplices,
and sometimes threatened him with immediate destruction;
their threats and promises he along while disregarded,
but recollecting the ingratitude of his old friends,
and the miseries he had already suffered, he at last
made a confession, and according to the custom of
trials at that time, offered to prove the truth of
it by combat. What the consequence of this discovery
was to his accomplices, is uncertain, it no doubt
exposed him to their resentment, and procured him
the name of a traytor; but the king, who regarded him
as one beloved by his grandfather, was pleased to
pardon him. Thus fallen from a heighth of greatness,
our poet retired to bemoan the fickleness of fortune,
and then wrote his Testament of Love, in which are
many pathetic exclamations concerning the vicissitude
of human things, which he then bitterly experienced.
But as he had formerly been the favourite of fortune,
when dignities were multiplied thick upon him, so
his miseries now succeeded with an equal swiftness;
he was not only discarded by his majesty, unpensioned,
and abandoned, but he lost the favour of the duke
of Lancaster, as the influence of his wife’s
sister with that prince was now much lessened.
The duke being dejected with the troubles in which
he was involved, began to reflect on his vicious course
of life, and particularly his keeping that lady as
his concubine; which produced a resolution of putting
her out of his house, and he made a vow to that purpose.
Chaucer, thus reduced, and weary of the perpetual
turmoils at court, retired to Woodstock, to enjoy
a studious quiet; where he wrote his excellent treatise
of the Astrolabe; but notwithstanding the severe treatment
of the government, he still retained his loyalty,
and strictly enjoined his son to pray for the king.
As the pious resolutions of some people are often the
consequence of a present evil, so at the return of
prosperity they are soon dissipated. This proved
the case with the duke of Lancaster: his party
again gathered strength, his interest began to rise;
upon which he took again his mistress to his bosom,
and not content with heaping favours, honours, and
titles upon her, he made her his wife, procured an
act of parliament to legitimate her children, which
gave great offence to the duchess of Gloucester, the
countess of Derby, and Arundel, as she then was entitled
to take place of them. With her interest, Chaucer’s
also returned, and after a long and bitter storm,
the sun began to shine upon him with an evening ray;
for at the sixty-fifth year of his age, the king granted
to him, by the title of Delectus Armiger Noster, an
annuity of twenty marks per annum during his life,
as a compensation for the former pension his needy
circumstances obliged him to part with; but however
sufficient that might be for present support, yet
as he was encumbered with debts, he durst not appear
publickly till his majesty again granted him his royal
protection to screen him from the persecution of his
creditors; he also restored to him his grant of a
pitcher of wine daily, and a pipe annually, to be
delivered to him by his son Thomas, who that year
possessed the office of chief butler to the king.


