#  John Gower on Astronomy 

 



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*Use the glossary in* The Riverside Chaucer *for words not glossed in the margins; see also [a note on Gower's spellings](/pages/note-gowers-spelling).*

***Confessio Amantis*, Book VII, 625-1506**

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The science of Astronomie   
I thinke forto specefie,   
Withoute which, to telle plein,   
Alle othre science is in vein   
Toward the scole of erthli thinges:   
For as an Egle with his winges   
Fleth above alle that men finde,   
So doth this science in his kinde.   
  
Benethe upon this Erthe hiere  
Of alle thinges the matiere,   
As tellen ous thei that ben lerned,  
Of thing above it stant governed,   
That is to sein of the Planetes.   
The cheles bothe and ek the hetes  
The chances of the world also,   
That we fortune clepen so,   
Among the mennes nacion   
Al is thurgh constellacion,   
  
Wherof that som man hath the wele,   
And som man hath deseses fele   
In love als wel as othre thinges;   
The stat of realmes and of kinges   
In time of pes, in time of werre   
It is conceived of the Sterre:   
And thus seith the naturien  
Which is an Astronomien.   
  
Bot the divin seith otherwise,  
That if men weren goode and wise   
And plesant unto the godhede,   
Thei scholden noght the sterres drede;   
For o man, if him wel befalle,   
Is more worth than ben thei alle   
Towardes him that weldeth al.   
Bot yit the lawe original,   
Which he hath set in the natures,   
Mot worchen in the creatures,   
That therof mai be non obstacle,   
Bot if it stonde upon miracle   
Thurgh preiere of som holy man.   
  
And forthi, so as I began   
To speke upon Astronomie,   
As it is write in the clergie,  
To telle hou the planetes fare,   
Som part I thenke to declare,   
Mi Sone, unto thin Audience.   
  
Astronomie is the science   
Of wisdom and of hih connynge,  
Which makth a man have knowlechinge   
Of Sterres in the firmament,   
Figure, cercle and moevement   
Of ech of hem in sondri place,   
And what betwen hem is of space,   
Hou so thei moeve or stonde faste,   
Al this it telleth to the laste.   
  
Assembled with Astronomie   
Is ek that ilke Astrologie  
The which in juggementz acompteth   
Th'effect, what every sterre amonteth,   
And hou thei causen many a wonder   
To tho climatz that stonde hem under.  
And forto telle it more plein,   
These olde philosphres sein   
That Orbis, which I spak of err,  
Is that which we fro th'erthe a ferr  
Beholde, and firmament it calle,   
In which the sterres stonden alle,   
Among the whiche in special   
Planetes sefne principal  
Ther ben, that mannes sihte demeth,   
Bot th'orizonte, as to ous semeth.   
  
And also ther ben signes tuelve,   
Whiche have her cercles be hemselve  
Compassed in the zodiaque,   
In which thei have here places take.   
And as thei stonden in degre,   
Here cercles more or lasse be,   
Mad after the proporcion   
Of th'erthe, whos condicion   
Is set to be the foundement   
To sustiene up the firmament.   
And be this skile a man mai knowe,   
The more that thei stonden lowe,   
The more ben the cercles lasse;  
That causeth why that some passe   
Here due cours tofore an other.   
  
Bot nou, mi lieve dere brother,   
As thou desirest forto wite   
What I finde in the bokes write,   
To telle of the planetes sevene,   
Hou that thei stonde upon the hevene   
And in what point that thei ben inne,   
Tak hiede, for I wol beginne,   
So as the Philosophre tauhte   
To Alisandre and it betauhte,   
Wherof that he was fulli tawht   
Of wisdom, which was him betawht.   
  
Benethe alle othre stant the Mone,  
The which hath with the See to done:   
Of flodes hihe and ebbes lowe   
Upon his change it schal be knowe;  
And every fissh which hath a schelle   
Mot in his governance duelle,   
To wexe and wane in his degre,   
As be the Mone a man mai se;   
And al that stant upon the grounde   
Of his moisture it mot be founde.   
Alle othre sterres, as men finde,   
Be schynende of here oghne kinde   
Outake only the monelyht,  
Which is noght of himselve bright,   
Bot as he takth it of the Sonne.   
And yit he hath noght al fulwonne  
His lyht, that he nys somdiel derk;   
Bot what the lette is of that werk  
In Almageste it telleth this:   
The Mones cercle so lowe is,   
Wherof the Sonne out of his stage   
Ne seth him noght with full visage,   
For he is with the ground beschaded,   
So that the Mone is somdiel faded   
And may noght fully schyne cler.   
  
Bot what man under his pouer   
Is bore, he schal his places change   
And seche manye londes strange:   
And as of this condicion   
The Mones disposicion   
Upon the lond of Alemaigne  
Is set, and ek upon Bretaigne,   
Which nou is cleped Engelond;   
For thei travaile in every lond.   
  
Of the Planetes the secounde  
Above the Mone hath take his bounde,   
Mercurie, and his nature is this,   
That under him who that bore is,   
In boke he schal be studious   
And in wrytinge curious,   
And slouh and lustles to travaile  
In thing which elles myhte availe:   
He loveth ese, he loveth reste,   
So is he noght the worthieste;   
Bot yit with somdiel besinesse   
His herte is set upon richesse.   
And as in this condicion,   
Th'effect and disposicion   
Of this Planete and of his chance   
Is most in Burgoigne and in France.   
  
Next to Mercurie, as wol befalle,  
Stant that Planete which men calle   
Venus, whos constellacion   
Governeth al the nacion   
Of lovers, wher thei spiede or non,  
Of whiche I trowe thou be on:   
Bot whiderward thin happes wende,   
Schal this planete schewe at ende,   
As it hath do to many mo,   
To some wel, to some wo.   
  
And natheles of this Planete   
The moste part is softe and swete;   
For who that therof takth his berthe,   
He schal desire joie and merthe,   
Gentil, courteis and debonaire,   
To speke his wordes softe and faire,   
Such schal he be be weie of kinde,   
And overal wher he may finde   
Plesance of love, his herte boweth   
With al his myht and there he woweth.   
He is so ferforth Amourous,   
He not what thing is vicious   
Touchende love, for that lawe   
Ther mai no maner man withdrawe,   
The which venerien is bore   
Be weie of kinde, and therefore   
Venus of love the goddesse   
Is cleped: bot of wantounesse   
The climat of hir lecherie   
Is most commun in Lombardie.  
  
Next unto this Planete of love  
The brighte Sonne stant above,   
Which is the hindrere of the nyht   
And forthrere of the daies lyht,   
As he which is the worldes ye,   
Thurgh whom the lusti compaignie   
Of foules be the morwe singe,   
The freisshe floures sprede and springe,   
The hihe tre the ground beschadeth,   
And every mannes herte gladeth.   
And for it is the hed Planete,   
Hou that he sitteth in his sete,   
Of what richesse, of what nobleie,   
These bokes telle, and thus thei seie.   
  
Of gold glistrende Spoke and whiel   
The Sonne his carte hath faire and wiel,   
In which he sitt, and is coroned   
With brighte stones environed;   
Of whiche if that I speke schal,   
Ther be tofore in special   
Set in the front of his corone   
Thre Stones, whiche no persone   
Hath upon Erthe, and the ferste is   
Be name cleped Licuchis;   
That othre tuo be cleped thus,   
Astrices and Ceramius.   
In his corone also behinde,   
Be olde bokes as I finde,   
Ther ben of worthi Stones thre   
Set ech of hem in his degre:   
Wherof a Cristall is that on,   
Which that corone is set upon;   
The seconde is an Adamant;   
The thridde is noble and avenant,   
Which cleped is Ydriades.   
And over this yit natheles   
Upon the sydes of the werk,   
After the wrytinge of the clerk,   
Ther sitten fyve Stones mo:   
The smaragdine is on of tho,   
Jaspis and Elitropius   
And Dendides and Jacinctus.   
Lo, thus the corone is beset,   
Wherof it schyneth wel the bet;   
And in such wise his liht to sprede   
Sit with his Diademe on hede   
The Sonne schynende in his carte.   
  
And forto lede him swithe and smarte   
After the bryhte daies lawe,   
Ther ben ordeined forto drawe   
Foure hors his Char and him withal,   
Wherof the names telle I schal:   
Eritheus the ferste is hote,   
The which is red and schyneth hote,   
The seconde Acteos the bryhte,   
Lampes the thridde coursier hihte,   
And Philogeus is the ferthe,   
That bringen lyht unto this erthe,   
And gon so swift upon the hevene,   
In foure and twenty houres evene   
The carte with the bryhte Sonne   
Thei drawe, so that overronne   
Thei have under the cercles hihe   
Al Middelerthe in such an hye.   
  
And thus the Sonne is overal   
The chief Planete imperial,   
Above him and benethe him thre:   
And thus betwen hem regneth he,   
As he that hath the middel place   
Among the Sevene, and of his face   
Be glade alle erthly creatures,   
And taken after the natures   
Here ese and recreacion.   
  
And in his constellacion   
Who that is bore in special,   
Of good will and of liberal   
He schal be founde in alle place,   
And also stonde in mochel grace   
Toward the lordes forto serve   
And gret profit and thonk deserve.   
And over that it causeth yit   
A man to be soubtil of wit   
To worche in gold, and to be wys   
In every thing which is of pris.   
Bot forto speken in what cost   
Of al this erthe he regneth most   
As for wisdom, it is in Grece,   
Wher is apropred thilke spiece.   
  
Mars the Planete bataillous  
Next to the Sonne glorious   
Above stant, and doth mervailes   
Upon the fortune of batailes.   
The conquerours be daies olde   
Were unto this planete holde:   
Bot who that his nativite   
Hath take upon the proprete   
Of Martes disposicioun   
Be weie of constellacioun,   
He schal be fiers and folhastif   
And desirous of werre and strif.   
Bot forto telle redely   
In what climat most comunly   
That this planete hath his effect,   
Seid is that he hath his aspect   
Upon the holi lond so cast,   
That there is no pes stedefast.   
  
Above Mars upon the hevene,  
The sexte Planete of the sevene,   
Stant Jupiter the delicat,   
Which causeth pes and no debat.   
For he is cleped that Planete   
Which of his kinde softe and swete   
Attempreth al that to him longeth;   
And whom this planete underfongeth   
To stonde upon his regiment,   
He schal be meke and pacient   
And fortunat to Marchandie  
And lusti to delicacie   
In every thing which he schal do.   
  
This Jupiter is cause also   
Of the science of lyhte werkes,   
And in this wise tellen clerkes   
He is the Planete of delices.   
Bot in Egipte of his offices   
He regneth most in special:   
For ther be lustes overal   
Of al that to this lif befalleth;   
For ther no stormy weder falleth,   
Which myhte grieve man or beste,   
And ek the lond is so honeste   
That it is plentevous and plein,   
Ther is non ydel ground in vein;   
And upon such felicite   
Stant Jupiter in his degre.   
  
The heyeste and aboven alle  
Stant that planete which men calle   
Saturnus, whos complexion   
Is cold, and his condicion   
Causeth malice and crualte   
To him the whos nativite   
Is set under his governance.   
For alle hise werkes ben grevance   
And enemy to mannes hele,  
In what degre that he schal dele.   
His climat is in Orient,  
Wher that he is most violent.   
  
Of the Planetes by and by,   
Hou that thei stonde upon the Sky,   
Fro point to point as thou myht hiere,   
Was Alisandre mad to liere.   
Bot overthis touchende his lore,   
Of thing that thei him tawhte more   
Upon the scoles of clergie   
Now herkne the Philosophie.   
  
He which departeth dai fro nyht,  
That on derk and that other lyht,   
Of sevene daies made a weke,   
A Monthe of foure wekes eke   
He hath ordeigned in his lawe,   
Of Monthes tuelve and ek forthdrawe   
He hath also the longe yeer.   
And as he sette of his pouer   
Acordant to the daies sevene   
Planetes Sevene upon the hevene,   
As thou tofore hast herd devise,   
To speke riht in such a wise,   
To every Monthe be himselve   
Upon the hevene of Signes tuelve   
He hath after his Ordinal   
Assigned on in special,  
Wherof, so as I schal rehersen,   
The tydes of the yer diversen.   
Bot pleinly forto make it knowe   
Hou that the Signes sitte arowe,   
Ech after other be degre   
In substance and in proprete   
The zodiaque comprehendeth   
Withinne his cercle, as it appendeth.   
  
The ferste of whiche natheles  
Be name is cleped Aries,   
Which lich a wether of stature   
Resembled is in his figure.   
And as it seith in Almageste,   
Of Sterres tuelve upon this beste   
Ben set, wherof in his degre   
The wombe hath tuo, the heved hath thre,   
The Tail hath sevene, and in this wise,   
As thou myht hiere me divise,   
Stant Aries, which hot and drye   
Is of himself, and in partie   
He is the receipte and the hous  
Of myhty Mars the bataillous.   
And overmore ek, as I finde,   
The creatour of alle kinde   
Upon this Signe ferst began   
The world, whan that he made man.   
And of this constellacioun   
The verray operacioun   
Availeth, if a man therinne   
The pourpos of his werk beginne;   
For thanne he hath of proprete   
Good sped and gret felicite.   
  
The tuelve Monthes of the yeer   
Attitled under the pouer   
Of these tuelve Signes stonde;   
Wherof that thou schalt understonde   
This Aries on of the tuelve   
Hath March attitled for himselve,  
Whan every bridd schal chese his make,   
And every neddre and every Snake  
And every Reptil which mai moeve,   
His myht assaieth forto proeve,   
To crepen out ayein the Sonne,   
Whan Ver his Seson hath begonne.   
  
Taurus the seconde after this  
Of Signes, which figured is   
Unto a Bole, is dreie and cold;   
And as it is in bokes told,   
He is the hous appourtienant  
To Venus, somdiel descordant.  
This Bole is ek with sterres set,   
Thurgh whiche he hath hise hornes knet   
Unto the tail of Aries,   
So is he noght ther sterreles.   
Upon his brest ek eyhtetiene   
He hath, and ek, as it is sene,   
Upon his tail stonde othre tuo.   
His Monthe assigned ek also   
Is Averil, which of his schoures  
Ministreth weie unto the floures.   
  
The thridde signe is Gemini,  
Which is figured redely   
Lich to tuo twinnes of mankinde,   
That naked stonde; and as I finde,   
Thei be with Sterres wel bego:   
The heved hath part of thilke tuo   
That schyne upon the boles tail,   
So be thei bothe of o parail;  
But on the wombe of Gemini   
Ben fyve sterres noght forthi,   
And ek upon the feet be tweie,   
So as these olde bokes seie,   
That wise Tholomeus wrot.  
His propre Monthe wel I wot   
Assigned is the lusti Maii,  
Whanne every brid upon his lay   
Among the griene leves singeth,   
And love of his pointure stingeth   
After the lawes of nature   
The youthe of every creature.   
  
Cancer after the reule and space  
Of Signes halt the ferthe place.   
Like to the crabbe he hath semblance,   
And hath unto his retienance   
Sextiene sterres, wherof ten,   
So as these olde wise men   
Descrive, he berth on him tofore,   
And in the middel tuo be bore,   
And foure he hath upon his ende.   
Thus goth he sterred in his kende,  
And of himself is moiste and cold,   
And is the propre hous and hold  
Which appartieneth to the Mone,  
And doth what longeth him to done.   
The Monthe of Juin unto this Signe  
Thou schalt after the reule assigne.   
  
The fifte Signe is Leo hote,  
Whos kinde is schape dreie and hote,   
In whom the Sonne hath herbergage.  
And the semblance of his ymage   
Is a leoun, which in baillie   
Of sterres hath his pourpartie:  
The foure, which as Cancer hath   
Upon his ende, Leo tath  
Upon his heved, and thanne nest  
He hath ek foure upon his brest,   
And on upon his tail behinde,   
In olde bokes as we finde.   
His propre Monthe is Juyl be name,  
In which men pleien many a game.   
  
After Leo Virgo the nexte  
Of Signes cleped is the sexte,   
Wherof the figure is a Maide;   
And as the Philosophre saide,   
Sche is the welthe and the risinge,  
The lust, the joie and the likinge   
Unto Mercurie: and soth to seie   
Sche is with sterres wel beseie,   
Wherof Leo hath lent hire on,   
Which sit on hih hir heved upon,   
Hire wombe hath fyve, hir feet also   
Have other fyve: and overmo   
Touchende as of complexion,   
Be kindly disposicion   
Of dreie and cold this Maiden is.   
And forto tellen over this   
Hir Monthe, thou schalt understonde,   
Whan every feld hath corn in honde   
And many a man his bak hath plied,   
Unto this Signe is Augst applied.  
  
After Virgo to reknen evene  
Libra sit in the nombre of sevene,   
Which hath figure and resemblance   
Unto a man which a balance  
Berth in his hond as forto weie:   
In boke and as it mai be seie,   
Diverse sterres to him longeth,   
Wherof on hevede he underfongeth  
Ferst thre, and ek his wombe hath tuo,   
And doun benethe eighte othre mo.   
This Signe is hot and moiste bothe,   
The whiche thinges be noght lothe   
Unto Venus, so that alofte   
Sche resteth in his hous fulofte,  
And ek Saturnus often hyed  
Is in this Signe and magnefied.   
His propre Monthe is seid Septembre,  
Which yifth men cause to remembre,   
If eny Sor be left behinde   
Of thing which grieve mai to kinde.   
  
Among the Signes upon heighte  
The Signe which is nombred eighte   
Is Scorpio, which as feloun   
Figured is a Scorpioun.   
Bot for al that yit natheles   
Is Scorpio noght sterreles;   
For Libra granteth him his ende   
Of eighte sterres, wher he wende,   
The whiche upon his heved assised   
He berth, and ek ther ben divised   
Upon his wombe sterres thre,   
And eighte upon his tail hath he.   
Which of his kinde is moiste and cold   
And unbehovely manyfold;   
He harmeth Venus and empeireth,  
Bot Mars unto his hous repeireth,  
Bot war whan thei togedre duellen.   
His propre Monthe is, as men tellen,   
Octobre, which bringth the kalende  
Of wynter, that comth next suiende.  
  
The nynthe Signe in nombre also,  
Which folweth after Scorpio,   
Is cleped Sagittarius,   
The whos figure is marked thus,   
A Monstre with a bowe on honde:   
On whom that sondri sterres stonde,   
Thilke eighte of whiche I spak tofore,   
The whiche upon the tail ben bore   
Of Scorpio, the heved al faire   
Bespreden of the Sagittaire;  
And eighte of othre stonden evene   
Upon his wombe, and othre sevene   
Ther stonde upon his tail behinde.   
And he is hot and dreie of kinde:   
To Jupiter his hous is fre,  
Bot to Mercurie in his degre,   
For thei ben noght of on assent,   
He worcheth gret empeirement.  
This Signe hath of his proprete   
A Monthe, which of duete   
After the sesoun that befalleth   
The Plowed Oxe in wynter stalleth;   
And fyr into the halle he bringeth,   
And thilke drinke of which men singeth,   
He torneth must into the wyn;   
Thanne is the larder of the swyn;   
That is Novembre which I meene,  
Whan that the lef hath lost his greene.   
  
The tenthe Signe dreie and cold,  
The which is Capricornus told,   
Unto a Got hath resemblance:   
For whos love and whos aqueintance   
Withinne hise houses to sojorne   
It liketh wel unto Satorne,  
Bot to the Mone it liketh noght,  
For no profit is there wroght.   
This Signe as of his proprete   
Upon his heved hath sterres thre,   
And ek upon his wombe tuo,   
And tweie upon his tail also.   
Decembre after the yeeres forme,  
So as the bokes ous enforme,   
With daies schorte and nyhtes longe   
This ilke Signe hath underfonge.   
  
Of tho that sitte upon the hevene  
Of Signes in the nombre ellevene   
Aquarius hath take his place,   
And stant wel in Satornes grace,   
Which duelleth in his herbergage,  
Bot to the Sonne he doth oultrage.  
This Signe is verraily resembled   
Lich to a man which halt assembled  
In eyther hand a water spoute,   
Wherof the stremes rennen oute.   
He is of kinde moiste and hot,   
And he that of the sterres wot   
Seith that he hath of sterres tuo   
Upon his heved, and ben of tho   
That Capricorn hath on his ende;   
And as the bokes maken mende,  
That Tholomeus made himselve,  
He hath ek on his wombe tuelve,   
And tweie upon his ende stonde.   
Thou schalt also this understonde,   
The frosti colde Janever,  
Whan comen is the newe yeer,   
That Janus with his double face   
In his chaiere hath take his place   
And loketh upon bothe sides,   
Somdiel toward the wynter tydes,   
Somdiel toward the yeer suiende,   
That is the Monthe belongende   
Unto this Signe, and of his dole   
He yifth the ferste Primerole.  
  
The tuelfthe, which is last of alle  
Of Signes, Piscis men it calle,   
The which, as telleth the scripture,   
Berth of tuo fisshes the figure.   
So is he cold and moiste of kinde,   
And ek with sterres, as I finde,   
Beset in sondri wise, as thus:   
Tuo of his ende Aquarius   
Hath lent unto his heved, and tuo   
This Signe hath of his oghne also   
Upon his wombe, and over this   
Upon his ende also ther is   
A nombre of twenty sterres bryghte,   
Which is to sen a wonder sighte.   
Toward this Signe into his hous  
Comth Jupiter the glorious,   
And Venus ek with him acordeth  
To duellen, as the bok recordeth.   
The Monthe unto this Signe ordeined   
Is Februer, which is bereined,  
And with londflodes in his rage  
At Fordes letteth the passage.  
  
Nou hast thou herd the proprete   
Of Signes, bot in his degre   
Albumazar yit over this   
Seith, so as therthe parted is   
In foure, riht so ben divised   
The Signes tuelve and stonde assised,   
That ech of hem for his partie   
Hath his climat to justefie.  
Wherof the ferste regiment   
Toward the part of Orient   
From Antioche and that contre   
Governed is of Signes thre,   
That is Cancer, Virgo, Leo:   
And toward Occident also   
From Armenie, as I am lerned,   
Of Capricorn it stant governed,   
Of Pisces and Aquarius:   
And after hem I finde thus,   
Southward from Alisandre forth  
Tho Signes whiche most ben worth   
In governance of that doaire,  
Libra thei ben and Sagittaire   
With Scorpio, which is conjoint  
With hem to stonde upon that point:   
Constantinople the Cite,   
So as the bokes tellen me,   
The laste of this division   
Stant untoward Septemtrion,  
Wher as be weie of pourveance   
Hath Aries the governance   
Forth with Taurus and Gemini.   
  
Thus ben the Signes propreli   
Divided, as it is reherced,   
Wherof the londes ben diversed.   
Lo thus, mi Sone, as thou myht hiere,   
Was Alisandre mad to liere   
Of hem that weren for his lore.   
  
But nou to loken overmore,   
Of othre sterres hou thei fare   
I thenke hierafter to declare,   
So as king Alisandre in youthe   
Of him that suche thinges couthe   
Enformed was tofore his yhe   
Be nyhte upon the sterres hihe.   
   
  
  
  
  
  
  


  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[ASTRONOMY\]**  
  
**As they tell us**  
  
  
**chills**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**theologian**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**regions (earth or sky)**  
  
  
**the celestial sphere**  
**from afar**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**their by themselves**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The Moon\]**  
  
  
**his = its**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**completely won**  
  
**obstacle**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**slow without desire**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Venus\]**  
  
  
  
**whether they succeed**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The Sun\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[THE SIGNS\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Aries, the Ram\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of March\]**  
  
**adder**  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Taurus, the Bull\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of April\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Cancer, the Crab\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**nature**  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of June\]**  
  
  
  
  
**\[The house of the Sun\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of July\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The house of Mercury\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of August\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**receives, has**  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The house of Venus and Saturn\]**  
  
  
**\[The month of Spetember\]**  
  
  
  
  
**\[Scorpio, the Scorpion\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**unless \[The house of Mars\]**  
  
  
**\[The month of October\]**  
**following**  
  
**\[Sagittarius, Monstrous Archer\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Capricorn, the Goat\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The 'fall' of the Moon\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[The month of December\]**  
  
  
  
  
**\[Aquarius, the Aater Bearer\]**  
  
  
  
**\[The house of Saturn\]**  
**\[The 'fall' of the Sun\]**  
  
**gathered, taken**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
**\[Pisces, the Fish\]**  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  






\[*Now follows a section on the fifteen stars, VII.1281-1438, and a section on the authors of the science of Astronomy, VII.1439-92.*\]

Text adapted from: *The English Works of John Gower*, ed. G. C. Macaulay, EETS e.s. 81-82. London. 1900-01.