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The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio,
translated by J. M. Rigg
Beginneth here the book called Decameron, otherwise Prince Galeotto, wherein are contained
one hundred novels told in ten days by seven ladies and three young men.
PROEM.
'Tis humane to have compassion on the afflicted; and as it shews well in all, so it is especially
demanded of those who have had need of comfort and have found it in others: among whom, if
any had ever need thereof or found it precious or delectable, I may be numbered; seeing that
from my early youth even to the present I was beyond measure aflame with a most aspiring
and noble love more perhaps than, were I to enlarge upon it, would seem to accord with
my lowly condition. Whereby, among people of discernment to whose knowledge it had come,
I had much praise and high esteem, but nevertheless extreme discomfort and suffering, not indeed
by reason of cruelty on the part of the beloved lady, but through superabundant ardour engendered
in the soul by ill-bridled desire; the which, as it allowed me no reasonable period of quiescence,
frequently occasioned me an inordinate distress. In which distress so much relief was afforded
me by the delectable discourse of a friend and his commendable consolations, that I entertain
a very solid conviction that to them I owe it that I am not dead. But, as it pleased
Him, who, being infinite, has assigned by immutable law an end to all things mundane,
my love, beyond all other fervent, and neither to be broken nor bent by any force of determination,
or counsel of prudence, or fear of manifest shame or ensuing danger, did nevertheless
in course of time abate of its own accord, in such wise that it has now left nought of
itself in my mind but that pleasure which it is wont to afford to him who does not adventure
too far out in navigating its deep seas; so that, whereas it was used to be grievous,
now, all discomfort being done away, I find that which remains to be delightful. But the
cessation of the pain has not banished the memory of the kind offices done me by those
who shared by sympathy the burden of my griefs; nor will it ever, I believe, pass from me
except by death. And as among the virtues gratitude is in my judgment most especially
to be commended, and ingratitude in equal measure to be censured, therefore, that I
show myself not ungrateful, I have resolved, now that I may call myself free, to endeavour,
in return for what I have received, to afford, so far as in me lies, some solace, if not
to those who succoured me, and who, perchance, by reason of their good sense or good fortune,
need it not, at least to such as may be apt to receive it.
And though my support or comfort, so to say, may be of little avail to the needy, nevertheless
it seems to me meet to offer it most readily where the need is most apparent, because it
will there be most serviceable and also most kindly received. Who will deny, that it should
be given, for all that it may be worth, to gentle ladies much rather than to men? Within
their soft bosoms, betwixt fear and shame, they harbour secret fires of love, and how
much of strength concealment adds to those fires, they know who have proved it. Moreover,
restrained by the will, the caprice, the commandment of fathers, mothers, brothers, and husbands,
confined most part of their time within the narrow compass of their chambers, they live,
so to say, a life of vacant ease, and, yearning and renouncing in the same moment, meditate
divers matters which cannot all be cheerful. If thereby a melancholy bred of amorous desire
make entrance into their minds, it is like to tarry there to their sore distress, unless
it be dispelled by a change of ideas. Besides which they have much less power to support
such a weight than men. For, when men are enamoured, their case is very different, as
we may readily perceive. They, if they are afflicted by a melancholy and heaviness of
mood, have many ways of relief and diversion; they may go where they will, may hear and
see many things, may hawk, hunt, fish, ride, play or traffic. By which means all are able
to compose their minds, either in whole or in part, and repair the ravage wrought by
the dumpish mood, at least for some space of time; and shortly after, by one way or
another, either solace ensues, or the dumps become less grievous. Wherefore, in some measure
to compensate the injustice of Fortune, which to those whose strength is least, as we see
it to be in the delicate frames of ladies, has been most niggard of support, I, for the
succour and diversion of such of them as love (for others may find sufficient solace in
the needle and the spindle and the reel), do intend to recount one hundred Novels or
Fables or Parables or Stories, as we may please to call them, which were recounted in ten
days by an honourable company of seven ladies and three young men in the time of the late
mortal pestilence, as also some canzonets sung by the said ladies for their delectation.
In which pleasant novels will be found some passages of love rudely crossed, with other
courses of events of which the issues are felicitous, in times as well modern as ancient:
from which stories the said ladies, who shall read them, may derive both pleasure from the
entertaining matters set forth therein, and also good counsel, in that they may learn
what to shun, and likewise what to pursue. Which cannot, I believe, come to pass, unless
the dumps be banished by diversion of mind. And if it so happen (as God grant it may)
let them give thanks to Love, who, liberating me from his fetters, has given me the power
to devote myself to their gratification.
End of Proem.
Day the First, the Introduction
Beginneth here the first day of the Decameron, in which, when the author has set forth, how
it came to pass that the persons, who appear hereafter, met together for interchange of
discourse, they, under the rule of Pampinea, discourse of such matters as most commend
themselves to each in turn.
As often, most gracious ladies, as I bethink me, how compassionate you are by nature one
and all, I do not disguise from myself that the present work must seem to you to have
but a heavy and distressful prelude, in that it bears upon its very front what must needs
revive the sorrowful memory of the late mortal pestilence, the course whereof was grievous
not merely to eyewitnesses but to all who in any other wise had cognisance of it. But
I would have you know, that you need not therefore be fearful to read further, as if your reading
were ever to be accompanied by sighs and tears. This horrid beginning will be to you even
such as to wayfarers is a steep and rugged mountain, beyond which stretches a plain most
fair and delectable, which the toil of the ascent and descent does but serve to render
more agreeable to them; for, as the last degree of joy brings with it sorrow, so misery has
ever its sequel of happiness. To this brief exordium of woe—brief, I say, inasmuch as
it can be put within the compass of a few letters—succeed forthwith the sweets and
delights which I have promised you, and which, perhaps, had I not done so, were not to have
been expected from it. In truth, had it been honestly possible to guide you whither I would
bring you by a road less rough than this will be, I would gladly have so done. But, because
without this review of the past, it would not be in my power to shew how the matters,
of which you will hereafter read, came to pass, I am almost bound of necessity to enter
upon it, if I would write of them at all.
I say, then, that the years of the beatific incarnation of the Son of God had reached
the tale of one thousand three hundred and forty-eight, when in the illustrious city
of Florence, the fairest of all the cities of Italy, there made its appearance that deadly
pestilence, which, whether disesminated by the influence of the celestial bodies, or
sent upon us mortals by God in His just wrath by way of retribution for our iniquities,
had had its origin some years before in the East, whence, after destroying an innumerable
multitude of living beings, it had propagated itself without respite from place to place,
and so, calamitously, had spread into the West.
In Florence, despite all that human wisdom and forethought could devise to avert it,
as the cleansing of the city from many impurities by officials appointed for the purpose, the
refusal of entrance to all sick folk, and the adoption of many precautions for the preservation
of health; despite also humble supplications addressed to God, and often repeated both
in public procession and otherwise, by the devout; towards the beginning of the spring
of the said year the doleful effects of the pestilence began to be horribly apparent by
symptoms that shewed as if miraculous.
Not such were they as in the East, where an issue of blood from the nose was a manifest
sign of inevitable death; but in men and women alike it first betrayed itself by the emergence
of certain tumours in the groin or the armpits, some of which grew as large as a common apple,
others as an egg, some more, some less, which the common folk called gavoccioli. From the
two said parts of the body this deadly gavocciolo soon began to propagate and spread itself
in all directions indifferently; after which the form of the malady began to change, black
spots or livid making their appearance in many cases on the arm or the thigh or elsewhere,
now few and large, now minute and numerous. And as the gavocciolo had been and still was
an infallible token of approaching death, such also were these spots on whomsoever they
shewed themselves. Which maladies seemed to set entirely at naught both the art of the
physician and the virtues of physic; indeed, whether it was that the disorder was of a
nature to defy such treatment, or that the physicians were at fault—besides the qualified
there was now a multitude both of men and of women who practised without having received
the slightest tincture of medical science—and, being in ignorance of its source, failed to
apply the proper remedies; in either case, not merely were those that recovered few,
but almost all within three days from the appearance of the said symptoms, sooner or
later, died, and in most cases without any fever or other attendant malady.
Moreover, the virulence of the pest was the greater by reason that intercourse was apt
to convey it from the sick to the whole, just as fire devours things dry or greasy when
they are brought close to it. Nay, the evil went yet further, for not merely by speech
or association with the sick was the malady communicated to the healthy with consequent
peril of common death; but any that touched the clothes of the sick or aught else that
had been touched or used by them, seemed thereby to contract the disease.
So marvellous sounds that which I have now to relate, that, had not many, and I among
them, observed it with their own eyes, I had hardly dared to credit it, much less to set
it down in writing, though I had had it from the lips of a credible witness.
I say, then, that such was the energy of the contagion of the said pestilence, that it
was not merely propagated from man to man, but, what is much more startling, it was frequently
observed, that things which had belonged to one sick or dead of the disease, if touched
by some other living creature, not of the human species, were the occasion, not merely
of sickening, but of an almost instantaneous death. Whereof my own eyes (as I said a little
before) had cognisance, one day among others, by the following experience. The rags of a
poor man who had died of the disease being strewn about the open street, two hogs came
thither, and after, as is their wont, no little trifling with their snouts, took the rags
between their teeth and tossed them to and fro about their chaps; whereupon, almost immediately,
they gave a few turns, and fell down dead, as if by poison, upon the rags which in an
evil hour they had disturbed.
In which circumstances, not to speak of many others of a similar or even graver complexion,
divers apprehensions and imaginations were engendered in the minds of such as were left
alive, inclining almost all of them to the same harsh resolution, to wit, to shun and
abhor all contact with the sick and all that belonged to them, thinking thereby to make
each his own health secure. Among whom there were those who thought that to live temperately
and avoid all excess would count for much as a preservative against seizures of this
kind. Wherefore they banded together, and, dissociating themselves from all others, formed
communities in houses where there were no sick, and lived a separate and secluded life,
which they regulated with the utmost care, avoiding every kind of luxury, but eating
and drinking very moderately of the most delicate viands and the finest wines, holding converse
with none but one another, lest tidings of sickness or death should reach them, and diverting
their minds with music and such other delights as they could devise. Others, the bias of
whose minds was in the opposite direction, maintained, that to drink freely, frequent
places of public resort, and take their pleasure with song and revel, sparing to satisfy no
appetite, and to laugh and mock at no event, was the sovereign remedy for so great an evil:
and that which they affirmed they also put in practice, so far as they were able, resorting
day and night, now to this tavern, now to that, drinking with an entire disregard of
rule or measure, and by preference making the houses of others, as it were, their inns,
if they but saw in them aught that was particularly to their taste or liking; which they were
readily able to do, because the owners, seeing death imminent, had become as reckless of
their property as of their lives; so that most of the houses were open to all comers,
and no distinction was observed between the stranger who presented himself and the rightful
lord. Thus, adhering ever to their inhuman determination to shun the sick, as far as
possible, they ordered their life. In this extremity of our city's suffering and tribulation
the venerable authority of laws, human and divine, was abased and all but totally dissolved,
for lack of those who should have administered and enforced them, most of whom, like the
rest of the citizens, were either dead or sick, or so hard bested for servants that
they were unable to execute any office; whereby every man was free to do what was right in
his own eyes.
Not a few there were who belonged to neither of the two said parties, but kept a middle
course between them, neither laying the same restraint upon their diet as the former, nor
allowing themselves the same license in drinking and other dissipations as the latter, but
living with a degree of freedom sufficient to satisfy their appetites, and not as recluses.
They therefore walked abroad, carrying in their hands flowers or fragrant herbs or divers
sorts of spices, which they frequently raised to their noses, deeming it an excellent thing
thus to comfort the brain with such perfumes, because the air seemed to be everywhere laden
and reeking with the stench emitted by the dead and the dying, and the odours of drugs.
Some again, the most sound, perhaps, in judgment, as they were also the most harsh in temper,
of all, affirmed that there was no medicine for the disease superior or equal in efficacy
to flight; following which prescription a multitude of men and women, negligent of all
but themselves, deserted their city, their houses, their estates, their kinsfolk, their
goods, and went into voluntary exile, or migrated to the country parts, as if God in visiting
men with this pestilence in requital of their iniquities would not pursue them with His
wrath wherever they might be, but intended the destruction of such alone as remained
within the circuit of the walls of the city; or deeming, perchance, that it was now time
for all to flee from it, and that its last hour was come.
Of the adherents of these divers opinions not all died, neither did all escape; but
rather there were, of each sort and in every place, many that sickened, and by those who
retained their health were treated after the example which they themselves, while whole,
had set, being everywhere left to languish in almost total neglect. Tedious were it to
recount, how citizen avoided citizen, how among neighbours was scarce found any that
shewed fellow-feeling for another, how kinsfolk held aloof, and never met, or but rarely;
enough that this sore affliction entered so deep into the minds of men and women, that
in the horror thereof brother was forsaken by brother, nephew by uncle, brother by sister,
and oftentimes husband by wife; nay, what is more, and scarcely to be believed, fathers
and mothers were found to abandon their own children, untended, unvisited, to their fate,
as if they had been strangers. Wherefore the sick of both sexes, whose number could not
be estimated, were left without resource but in the charity of friends (and few such there
were), or the interest of servants, who were hardly to be had at high rates and on unseemly
terms, and being, moreover, one and all, men and women of gross understanding, and for
the most part unused to such offices, concerned themselves no further than to supply the immediate
and expressed wants of the sick, and to watch them die; in which service they themselves
not seldom perished with their gains. In consequence of which dearth of servants and dereliction
of the sick by neighbours, kinsfolk and friends, it came to pass—a thing, perhaps, never
before heard of—that no woman, however dainty, fair or well-born she might be, shrank, when
stricken with the disease, from the ministrations of a man, no matter whether he were young
or no, or scrupled to expose to him every part of her body, with no more shame than
if he had been a woman, submitting of necessity to that which her malady required; wherefrom,
perchance, there resulted in after time some loss of modesty in such as recovered. Besides
which many succumbed, who with proper attendance, would, perhaps, have escaped death; so that,
what with the virulence of the plague and the lack of due tendance of the sick, the
multitude of the deaths, that daily and nightly took place in the city, was such that those
who heard the tale—not to say witnessed the fact—were struck dumb with amazement.
Whereby, practices contrary to the former habits of the citizens could hardly fail to
grow up among the survivors.
It had been, as to-day it still is, the custom for the women that were neighbours and of
kin to the deceased to gather in his house with the women that were most closely connected
with him, to wail with them in common, while on the other hand his male kinsfolk and neighbours,
with not a few of the other citizens, and a due proportion of the clergy according to
his quality, assembled without, in front of the house, to receive the corpse; and so the
dead man was borne on the shoulders of his peers, with funeral pomp of taper and dirge,
to the church selected by him before his death. Which rites, as the pestilence waxed in fury,
were either in whole or in great part disused, and gave way to others of a novel order. For
not only did no crowd of women surround the bed of the dying, but many passed from this
life unregarded, and few indeed were they to whom were accorded the lamentations and
bitter tears of sorrowing relations; nay, for the most part, their place was taken by
the laugh, the jest, the festal gathering; observances which the women, domestic piety
in large measure set aside, had adopted with very great advantage to their health. Few
also there were whose bodies were attended to the church by more than ten or twelve of
their neighbours, and those not the honourable and respected citizens; but a sort of corpse-carriers
drawn from the baser ranks, who called themselves becchini and performed such offices for hire,
would shoulder the bier, and with hurried steps carry it, not to the church of the dead
man's choice, but to that which was nearest at hand, with four or six priests in front
and a candle or two, or, perhaps, none; nor did the priests distress themselves with too
long and solemn an office, but with the aid of the becchini hastily consigned the corpse
to the first tomb which they found untenanted. The condition of the lower, and, perhaps,
in great measure of the middle ranks, of the people shewed even worse and more deplorable;
for, deluded by hope or constrained by poverty, they stayed in their quarters, in their houses,
where they sickened by thousands a day, and, being without service or help of any kind,
were, so to speak, irredeemably devoted to the death which overtook them. Many died daily
or nightly in the public streets; of many others, who died at home, the departure was
hardly observed by their neighbours, until the stench of their putrefying bodies carried
the tidings; and what with their corpses and the corpses of others who died on every hand
the whole place was a sepulchre.
It was the common practice of most of the neighbours, moved no less by fear of contamination
by the putrefying bodies than by charity towards the deceased, to drag the corpses out of the
houses with their own hands, aided, perhaps, by a porter, if a porter was to be had, and
to lay them in front of the doors, where any one who made the round might have seen, especially
in the morning, more of them than he could count; afterwards they would have biers brought
up, or, in default, planks, whereon they laid them. Nor was it once or twice only that one
and the same bier carried two or three corpses at once; but quite a considerable number of
such cases occurred, one bier sufficing for husband and wife, two or three brothers, father
and son, and so forth. And times without number it happened, that, as two priests, bearing
the cross, were on their way to perform the last office for some one, three or four biers
were brought up by the porters in rear of them, so that, whereas the priests supposed
that they had but one corpse to bury, they discovered that there were six or eight, or
sometimes more. Nor, for all their number, were their obsequies honoured by either tears
or lights or crowds of mourners; rather, it was come to this, that a dead man was then
of no more account than a dead goat would be to-day. From all which it is abundantly
manifest, that that lesson of patient resignation, which the sages were never able to learn from
the slight and infrequent mishaps which occur in the natural course of events, was now brought
home even to the minds of the simple by the magnitude of their disasters, so that they
became indifferent to them.
As consecrated ground there was not in extent sufficient to provide tombs for the vast multitude
of corpses which day and night, and almost every hour, were brought in eager haste to
the churches for interment, least of all, if ancient custom were to be observed and
a separate resting-place assigned to each, they dug, for each graveyard, as soon as it
was full, a huge trench, in which they laid the corpses as they arrived by hundreds at
a time, piling them up as merchandise is stowed in the hold of a ship, tier upon tier, each
covered with a little earth, until the trench would hold no more. But I spare to rehearse
with minute particularity each of the woes that came upon our city, and say in brief,
that, harsh as was the tenor of her fortunes, the surrounding country knew no mitigation;
for there—not to speak of the castles, each, as it were, a little city in itself—in sequestered
village, or on the open champaign, by the wayside, on the farm, in the homestead, the
poor hapless husbandmen and their families, forlorn of physicians' care or servants' tendance,
perished day and night alike, not as men, but rather as beasts. Wherefore, they too,
like the citizens, abandoned all rule of life, all habit of industry, all counsel of prudence;
nay, one and all, as if expecting each day to be their last, not merely ceased to aid
Nature to yield her fruit in due season of their beasts and their lands and their past
labours, but left no means unused, which ingenuity could devise, to waste their accumulated store;
denying shelter to their oxen, ***, sheep, goats, pigs, fowls, nay, even to their dogs,
man's most faithful companions, and driving them out into the fields to roam at large
amid the unsheaved, nay, unreaped corn. Many of which, as if endowed with reason, took
their fill during the day, and returned home at night without any guidance of herdsman.
But enough of the country! What need we add, but (reverting to the city) that such and
so grievous was the harshness of heaven, and perhaps in some degree of man, that, what
with the fury of the pestilence, the panic of those whom it spared, and their consequent
neglect or desertion of not a few of the stricken in their need, it is believed without any
manner of doubt, that between March and the ensuing July upwards of a hundred thousand
human beings lost their lives within the walls of the city of Florence, which before the
deadly visitation would not have been supposed to contain so many people! How many grand
palaces, how many stately homes, how many splendid residences, once full of retainers,
of lords, of ladies, were now left desolate of all, even to the meanest servant! How many
families of historic fame, of vast ancestral domains, and wealth proverbial, found now
no scion to continue the succession! How many brave men, how many fair ladies, how many
gallant youths, whom any physician, were he Galen, Hippocrates, or Æsculapius himself,
would have pronounced in the soundest of health, broke fast with their kinsfolk, comrades and
friends in the morning, and when evening came, supped with their forefathers in the other
world!
Irksome it is to myself to rehearse in detail so sorrowful a history. Wherefore, being minded
to pass over so much thereof as I fairly can, I say, that our city, being thus well-nigh
depopulated, it so happened, as I afterwards learned from one worthy of credit, that on
a Tuesday morning after Divine Service the venerable church of Santa Maria Novella was
almost deserted save for the presence of seven young ladies habited sadly in keeping with
the season. All were connected either by blood or at least as friends or neighbours; and
fair and of good understanding were they all, as also of noble birth, gentle manners, and
a modest sprightliness. In age none exceeded twenty-eight, or fell short of eighteen years.
Their names I would set down in due form, had I not good reason to withhold them, being
solicitous lest the matters which here ensue, as told and heard by them, should in after
time be occasion of reproach to any of them, in view of the ample indulgence which was
then, for the reasons heretofore set forth, accorded to the lighter hours of persons of
much riper years than they, but which the manners of to-day have somewhat restricted;
nor would I furnish material to detractors, ever ready to bestow their bite where praise
is due, to cast by invidious speech the least slur upon the honour of these noble ladies.
Wherefore, that what each says may be apprehended without confusion, I intend to give them names
more or less appropriate to the character of each. The first, then, being the eldest
of the seven, we will call Pampinea, the second Fiammetta, the third Filomena, the fourth
Emilia, the fifth we will distinguish as Lauretta, the sixth as Neifile, and the last, not without
reason, shall be named Elisa.
'Twas not of set purpose but by mere chance that these ladies met in the same part of
the church; but at length grouping themselves into a sort of circle, after heaving a few
sighs, they gave up saying paternosters, and began to converse (among other topics) on
the times.
So they continued for a while, and then Pampinea, the rest listening in silent attention, thus
began: "Dear ladies mine, often have I heard it said, and you doubtless as well as I, that
wrong is done to none by whoso but honestly uses his reason. And to fortify, preserve,
and defend his life to the utmost of his power is the dictate of natural reason in every
one that is born. Which right is accorded in such measure that in defence thereof men
have been held blameless in taking life. And if this be allowed by the laws, albeit on
their stringency depends the well-being of every mortal, how much more exempt from censure
should we, and all other honest folk, be in taking such means as we may for the preservation
of our life? As often as I bethink me how we have been occupied this morning, and not
this morning only, and what has been the tenor of our conversation, I perceive—and you
will readily do the like—that each of us is apprehensive on her own account; nor thereat
do I marvel, but at this I do marvel greatly, that, though none of us lacks a woman's wit,
yet none of us has recourse to any means to avert that which we all justly fear. Here
we tarry, as if, methinks, for no other purpose than to bear witness to the number of the
corpses that are brought hither for interment, or to hearken if the brothers there within,
whose number is now almost reduced to nought, chant their offices at the canonical hours,
or, by our weeds of woe, to obtrude on the attention of every one that enters, the nature
and degree of our sufferings. And if we quit the church, we see dead or sick folk carried
about, or we see those, who for their crimes were of late condemned to exile by the outraged
majesty of the public laws, but who now, in contempt of those laws, well knowing that
their ministers are a prey to death or disease, have returned, and traverse the city in packs,
making it hideous with their riotous antics; or else we see the refuse of the people, fostered
on our blood, becchini, as they call themselves, who for our torment go prancing about here
and there and everywhere, making mock of our miseries in scurrilous songs. Nor hear we
aught but: Such and such are dead; or, Such and such are dying; and should hear dolorous
wailing on every hand, were there but any to wail. Or go we home, what see we there?
I know not if you are in like case with me; but there, where once were servants in plenty,
I find none left but my maid, and shudder with terror, and feel the very hairs of my
head to stand on end; and turn or tarry where I may, I encounter the ghosts of the departed,
not with their wonted mien, but with something horrible in their aspect that appals me. For
which reasons church and street and home are alike distressful to me, and the more so that
none, methinks, having means and place of retirement as we have, abides here save only
we; or if any such there be, they are of those, as my senses too often have borne witness,
who make no distinction between things honourable and their opposites, so they but answer the
cravings of appetite, and, alone or in company, do daily and nightly what things soever give
promise of most gratification. Nor are these secular persons alone; but such as live recluse
in monasteries break their rule, and give themselves up to carnal pleasures, persuading
themselves that they are permissible to them, and only forbidden to others, and, thereby
thinking to escape, are become unchaste and dissolute. If such be our circumstances—and
such most manifestly they are—what do we here? what wait we for? what dream we of?
why are we less prompt to provide for our own safety than the rest of the citizens?
Is life less dear to us than to all other women? or think we that the bond which unites
soul and body is stronger in us than in others, so that there is no blow that may light upon
it, of which we need be apprehensive? If so, we err, we are deceived. What insensate folly
were it in us so to believe! We have but to call to mind the number and condition of those,
young as we, and of both sexes, who have succumbed to this cruel pestilence, to find therein
conclusive evidence to the contrary. And lest from lethargy or indolence we fall into the
vain imagination that by some lucky accident we may in some way or another, when we would,
escape—I know not if your opinion accord with mine—I should deem it most wise in
us, our case being what it is, if, as many others have done before us, and are still
doing, we were to quit this place, and, shunning like death the evil example of others, betake
ourselves to the country, and there live as honourable women on one of the estates, of
which none of us has any lack, with all cheer of festal gathering and other delights, so
long as in no particular we overstep the bounds of reason. There we shall hear the chant of
birds, have sight of verdant hills and plains, of cornfields undulating like the sea, of
trees of a thousand sorts; there also we shall have a larger view of the heavens, which,
however harsh to usward, yet deny not their eternal beauty; things fairer far for epe
to rest on than the desolate walls of our city. Moreover, we shall there breathe a fresher
air, find ampler store of things meet for such as live in these times, have fewer causes
of annoy. For, though the husbandmen die there, even as here the citizens, they are dispersed
in scattered homesteads, and 'tis thus less painful to witness. Nor, so far as I can see,
is there a soul here whom we shall desert; rather we may truly say, that we are ourselves
deserted; for, our kinsfolk being either dead or fled in fear of death, no more regardful
of us than if we were strangers, we are left alone in our great affliction. No censure,
then, can fall on us if we do as I propose; and otherwise grievous suffering, perhaps
death, may ensue. Wherefore, if you agree, 'tis my advice, that, attended by our maids
with al??? things needful, we sojourn, now on this, now on the other estate, and in such
way of life continue, until we see—if death should not first overtake us—the end which
Heaven reserves for these events. And I remind you that it will be at least as seemly in
us to leave with honour, as in others, of whom there are not a few, to stay with dishonour."
The other ladies praised Pampinea's plan, and indeed were so prompt to follow it, that
they had already begun to discuss the manner in some detail, as if they were forthwith
to rise from their seats and take the road, when Filomena, whose judgment was excellent,
interposed, saying: "Ladies, though Pampinea has spoken to most excellent effect, yet it
were not well to be so precipitate as you seem disposed to be. Bethink you that we are
all women; nor is there any here so young, but she is of years to understand how women
are minded towards one another, when they are alone together, and how ill they are able
to rule themselves without the guidance of some man. We are sensitive, perverse, suspicious,
pusillanimous and timid; wherefore I much misdoubt, that, if we find no other guidance
than our own, this company is like to break up sooner, and with less credit to us, than
it should. Against which it were well to provide at the outset." Said then Elisa: "Without
doubt man is woman's head, and, without man's governance, it is seldom that aught that we
do is brought to a commendable conclusion. But how are we to come by the men? Every one
of us here knows that her kinsmen are for the most part dead, and that the survivors
are dispersed, one here, one there, we know not where, bent each on escaping the same
fate as ourselves; nor were it seemly to seek the aid of strangers; for, as we are in quest
of health, we must find some means so to order matters that, wherever we seek diversion or
repose, trouble and scandal do not follow us."
While the ladies were thus conversing, there came into the church three young men, young,
I say, but not so young that the age of the youngest was less than twenty-five years;
in whom neither the sinister course of events, nor the loss of friends or kinsfolk, nor fear
for their own safety, had availed to quench, or even temper, the ardour of their love.
The first was called Pamfilo, the second Filostrato, and the third Dioneo. Very debonair and chivalrous
were they all; and in this troublous time they were seeking if haply, to their exceeding
great solace, they might have sight of their fair friends, all three of whom chanced to
be among the said seven ladies, besides some that were of kin to the young men. At one
and the same moment they recognised the ladies and were recognised by them: wherefore, with
a gracious smile, Pampinea thus began: "Lo, fortune is propitious to our enterprise, having
vouchsafed us the good offices of these young men, who are as gallant as they are discreet,
and will gladly give us their guidance and escort, so we but take them into our service."Whereupon
Neifile, crimson from brow to neck with the blush of modesty, being one of those that
had a lover among the young men, said: "For God's sake, Pampinea, have a care what you
say. Well assured am I that nought but good can be said of any of them, and I deem them
fit for office far more onerous than this which you propose for them, and their good
and honourable company worthy of ladies fairer by far and more tenderly to be cherished than
such as we. But 'tis no secret that they love some of us here; wherefore I misdoubt that,
if we take them with us, we may thereby give occasion for scandal and censure merited neither
by us nor by them." "That," said Filomena, "is of no consequence; so I but live honestly,
my conscience gives me no disquietude; if others asperse me, God and the truth will
take arms in my defence. Now, should they be disposed to attend us, of a truth we might
say with Pampinea, that fortune favours our enterprise." The silence which followed betokened
consent on the part of the other ladies, who then with one accord resolved to call the
young men, and acquaint them with their purpose, and pray them to be of their company. So without
further parley Pampinea, who had a kinsman among the young men, rose and approached them
where they stood intently regarding them; and greeting them gaily, she opened to them
their plan, and besought them on the part of herself and her friends to join their company
on terms of honourable and fraternal comradeship. At first the young men thought she did but
trifle with them; but when they saw that she was in earnest, they answered with alacrity
that they were ready, and promptly, even before they left the church, set matters in train
for their departure. So all things meet being first sent forward in due order to their intended
place of sojourn, the ladies with some of their maids, and the three young men, each
attended by a man-servant, sallied forth of the city on the morrow, being Wednesday, about
daybreak, and took the road; nor had they journeyed more than two short miles when they
arrived at their destination. The estate lay upon a little hill some distance from the
nearest highway, and, embowered in shrubberies of divers hues, and other greenery, afforded
the eye a pleasant prospect. On the summit of the hill was a palace with galleries, halls
and chambers, disposed around a fair and spacious court, each very fair in itself, and the goodlier
to see for the gladsome pictures with which it was adorned; the whole set amidst meads
and gardens laid out with marvellous art, wells of the coolest water, and vaults of
the finest wines, things more suited to dainty drinkers than to sober and honourable women.
On their arrival the company, to their no small delight, found their beds already made,
the rooms well swept and garnished with flowers of every sort that the season could afford,
and the floors carpeted with rushes. When they were seated, Dioneo, a gallant who had
not his match for courtesy and wit, spoke thus: "My ladies, 'tis not our forethought
so much as your own mother-wit that has guided us hither. How you mean to dispose of your
cares I know not; mine I left behind me within the citygate when I issued thence with you
a brief while ago. Wherefore, I pray you, either address yourselves to make merry, to
laugh and sing with me (so far, I mean, as may consist with your dignity), or give me
leave to hie me back to the stricken city, there to abide with my cares." To whom blithely
Pampinea replied, as if she too had cast off all her cares: "Well sayest thou, Dioneo,
excellent well; gaily we mean to live; 'twas a refuge from sorrow that here we sought,
nor had we other cause to come hither. But, as no anarchy can long endure, I who initiated
the deliberations of which this fair company is the fruit, do now, to the end that our
joy may be lasting, deem it expedient, that there be one among us in chief authority,
honoured and obeyed by us as our superior, whose exclusive care it shall be to devise
how we may pass our time blithely. And that each in turn may prove the weight of the care,
as well as enjoy the pleasure, of sovereignty, and, no distinction being made of sex, envy
be felt by none by reason of exclusion from the office; I propose, that the weight and
honour be borne by each one for a day; and let the first to bear sway be chosen by us
all, those that follow to be appointed towards the vesper hour by him or her who shall have
had the signory for that day; and let each holder of the signory be, for the time, sole
arbiter of the place and manner in which we are to pass our time."
Pampinea's speech was received with the utmost applause, and with one accord she was chosen
queen for the first day. Whereupon Filomena hied her lightly to a bay-tree, having often
heard of the great honour in which its leaves, and such as were deservedly crowned therewith,
were worthy to be holden; and having gathered a few sprays, she made thereof a goodly wreath
of honour, and set it on Pampinea's head; which wreath was thenceforth, while their
company endured, the visible sign of the wearer's sway and sovereignty.
No sooner was Queen Pampinea crowned than she bade all be silent. She then caused summon
to her presence their four maids, and the servants of the three young men, and, all
keeping silence, said to them: "That I may shew you all at once, how, well still giving
place to better, our company may flourish and endure, as long as it shall pleasure us,
with order meet and assured delight and without reproach, I first of all constitute Dioneo's
man, Parmeno, my seneschal, and entrust him with the care and control of all our household,
and all that belongs to the service of the hall. Pamfilo's man, Sirisco, I appoint treasurer
and chancellor of our exchequer; and be he ever answerable to Parmeno. While Parmeno
and Sirisco are too busy about their duties to serve their masters, let Filostrato's man,
Tindaro, have charge of the chambers of all three. My maid, Misia, and Filomena's maid,
Licisca, will keep in the kitchen, and with all due diligence prepare such dishes as Parmeno
shall bid them. Lauretta's maid, Chimera, and Fiammetta's maid, Stratilia we make answerable
for the ladies' chambers, and wherever we may take up our quarters, let them see that
all is spotless. And now we enjoin you, one and all alike, as you value our favour, that
none of you, go where you may, return whence you may, hear or see what you may, bring us
any tidings but such as be cheerful." These orders thus succinctly given were received
with universal approval. Whereupon Pampinea rose, and said gaily: "Here are gardens, meads,
and other places delightsome enough, where you may wander at will, and take your pleasure;
but on the stroke of tierce, let all be here to breakfast in the shade."
Thus dismissed by their new queen the gay company sauntered gently through a garden,
the young men saying sweet things to the fair ladies, who wove fair garlands of divers sorts
of leaves and sang love-songs.
Having thus spent the time allowed them by the queen, they returned to the house, where
they found that Parmeno had entered on his office with zeal; for in a hall on the ground-floor
they saw tables covered with the whitest of cloths, and beakers that shone like silver,
and sprays of broom scattered everywhere. So, at the bidding of the queen, they washed
their hands, and all took their places as marshalled by Parmeno. Dishes, daintily prepared,
were served, and the finest wines were at hand; the three serving-men did their office
noiselessly; in a word all was fair and ordered in a seemly manner; whereby the spirits of
the company rose, and they seasoned their viands with pleasant jests and sprightly sallies.
Breakfast done, the tables were removed, and the queen bade fetch instruments of music;
for all, ladies and young men alike, knew how to tread a measure, and some of them played
and sang with great skill: so, at her command, Dioneo having taken a lute, and Fiammetta
a viol, they struck up a dance in sweet concert; and, the servants being dismissed to their
repast, the queen, attended by the other ladies and the two young men, led off a stately carol;
which ended they fell to singing ditties dainty and gay. Thus they diverted themselves until
the queen, deeming it time to retire to rest, dismissed them all for the night. So the three
young men and the ladies withdrew to their several quarters, which were in different
parts of the palace. There they found the beds well made, and abundance of flowers,
as in the hall; and so they undressed, and went to bed.
Shortly after none the queen rose, and roused the rest of the ladies, as also the young
men, averring that it was injurious to the health to sleep long in the daytime. They
therefore hied them to a meadow, where the grass grew green and luxuriant, being nowhere
scorched by the sun, and a light breeze gently fanned them. So at the queen's command they
all ranged themselves in a circle on the grass, and hearkened while she thus spoke:
"You mark that the sun is high, the heat intense, and the silence unbroken save by the cicalas
among the olive-trees. It were therefore the height of folly to quit this spot at present.
Here the air is cool and the prospect fair, and here, observe, are dice and chess. Take,
then, your pleasure as you may be severally minded; but, if you take my advice, you will
find pastime for the hot hours before us, not in play, in which the loser must needs
be vexed, and neither the winner nor the onlooker much the better pleased, but in telling of
stories, in which the invention of one may afford solace to all the company of his hearers.
You will not each have told a story before the sun will be low, and the heat abated,
so that we shall be able to go and severally take our pleasure where it may seem best to
each. Wherefore, if my proposal meet with your approval—for in this I am disposed
to consult your pleasure—let us adopt it; if not, divert yourselves as best you may,
until the vesper hour."
The queen's proposal being approved by all, ladies and men alike, she added: "So please
you, then, I ordain, that, for this first day, we be free to discourse of such matters
as most commend themselves to each in turn." She then addressed Pamfilo, who sat on her
right hand, bidding him with a gracious air to lead off with one of his stories. And prompt
at the word of command, Pamfilo, while all listened intently, thus began:
End of Introduction of the First Day
The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio,
translated by J. M. Rigg
Day One The First Story
Ser Ciappelletto cheats a holy friar by a false confession, and dies; and, having lived
as a very bad man, is, on his death, reputed a saint, and called San Ciappelletto.
A seemly thing it is, dearest ladies, that whatever we do, it be begun in the holy and
awful name of Him who was the maker of all. Wherefore, as it falls to me to lead the way
in this your enterprise of storytelling, I intend to begin with one of His wondrous works,
that, by hearing thereof, our hopes in Him, in whom is no change, may be established,
and His name be by us forever lauded. 'Tis manifest that, as things temporal are all
doomed to pass and perish, so within and without they abound with trouble and anguish and travail,
and are subject to infinite perils; nor, save for the especial grace of God, should we,
whose being is bound up with and forms part of theirs, have either the strength to endure
or the wisdom to combat their adverse influences. By which grace we are visited and penetrated
(so we must believe) not by reason of any merit of our own, but solely out of the fulness
of God's own goodness, and in answer to the prayers of those who, being mortal like ourselves,
did faithfully observe His ordinances during their lives, and are now become blessed for
ever with Him in heaven. To whom, as to advocates taught by experience all that belongs to our
frailty, we, not daring, perchance, to present our petitions in the presence of so great
a Judge, make known our requests for such things as we deem expedient for us. And of
His mercy richly abounding to usward we have further proof herein, that, no keenness of
mortal vision being able in any degree to penetrate the secret counsels of the Divine
mind, it sometimes, perchance, happens, that, in error of judgment, we make one our advocate
before His Majesty, who is banished from His presence in eternal exile, and yet He to whom
nothing is hidden, having regard rather to the sincerity of our prayers than to our ignorance
or the banishment of the intercessor, hears us no less than if the intercessor were in
truth one of the blest who enjoy the light of His countenance. Which the story that I
am about to relate may serve to make apparent; apparent, I mean, according to the standard
of the judgment of man, not of God.
The story goes, then, that Musciatto Franzesi, a great and wealthy merchant, being made a
knight in France, and being to attend Charles Sansterre, brother of the King of France,
when he came into Tuscany at the instance and with the support of Pope Boniface, found
his affairs, as often happens to merchants, to be much involved in divers quarters, and
neither easily nor suddenly to be adjusted; wherefore he determined to place them in the
hands of commissioners, and found no difficulty except as to certain credits given to some
Burgundians, for the recovery of which he doubted whether he could come by a competent
agent; for well he knew that the Burgundians were violent men and ill-conditioned and faithless;
nor could he call to mind any man so bad that he could with confidence oppose his guile
to theirs. After long pondering the matter, he recollected one Ser Ciapperello da Prato,
who much frequented his house in Paris. Who being short of stature and very affected,
the French who knew not the meaning of Cepparello, but supposed that it meant the same as Cappello,
i. e. garland, in their vernacular, called him not Cappello, but Ciappelletto by reason
of his diminutive size; and as Ciappelletto he was known everywhere, whereas few people
knew him as Ciapperello. Now Ciappelletto's manner of life was thus. He was by profession
a notary, and his pride was to make false documents; he would have made them as often
as he was asked, and more readily without fee than another at a great price; few indeed
he made that were not false, and great was his shame when they were discovered. False
witness he bore, solicited or unsolicited, with boundless delight; and, as oaths were
in those days had in very great respect in France, he, scrupling not to forswear himself,
corruptly carried the day in every case in which he was summoned faithfully to attest
the truth. He took inordinate delight, and bestirred himself with great zeal, in fomenting
ill-feeling, enmities, dissensions between friends, kinsfolk and all other folk; and
the more calamitous were the consequences the better he was pleased. Set him on ***,
or any other foul crime, and he never hesitated, but went about it with alacrity; he had been
known on more than one occasion to inflict wounds or death by preference with his own
hands. He was a profuse blasphemer of God and His saints, and that on the most trifling
occasions, being of all men the most irascible. He was never seen at church, held all the
sacraments vile things, and derided them in language of horrible ribaldry. On the other
hand he resorted readily to the tavern and other places of evil repute, and frequented
them. He was as fond of women as a dog is of the stick: in the use against nature he
had not his match among the most abandoned. He would have pilfered and stolen as a matter
of conscience, as a holy man would make an oblation. Most gluttonous he was and inordinately
fond of his cups, whereby he sometimes brought upon himself both shame and suffering. He
was also a practised gamester and thrower of false dice. But why enlarge so much upon
him? Enough that he was, perhaps, the worst man that ever was born.
The rank and power of Musciatto Franzesi had long been this reprobate's mainstay, serving
in many instances to secure him considerate treatment on the part of the private persons
whom he frequently, and the court which he unremittingly, outraged. So Musciatto, having
bethought him of this Ser Cepparello, with whose way of life he was very well acquainted,
judged him to be the very sort of person to cope with the guile of the Burgundians. He
therefore sent for him, and thus addressed him: "Ser Ciappelletto, I am, as thou knowest,
about to leave this place for good; and among those with whom I have to settle accounts
are certain Burgundians, very wily knaves; nor know I the man whom I could more fitly
entrust with the recovery of my money than thyself. Wherefore, as thou hast nothing to
do at present, if thou wilt undertake this business, I will procure thee the favour of
the court, and give thee a reasonable part of what thou shalt recover." Ser Ciappelletto,
being out of employment, and by no means in easy circumstances, and about to lose Musciatto,
so long his mainstay and support, without the least demur, for in truth he had hardly
any choice, made his mind up and answered that he was ready to go. So the bargain was
struck. Armed with the power of attorney and the royal letters commendatory, Ser Ciappelletto
took leave of Messer Musciatto and hied him to Burgundy, where he was hardly known to
a soul. He set about the business which had brought him thither, the recovery of the money,
in a manner amicable and considerate, foreign to his nature, as if he were minded to reserve
his severity to the last. While thus occupied, he was frequently at the house of two Florentine
usurers, who treated him with great distinction out of regard for Messer Musciatto; and there
it so happened that he fell sick. The two brothers forthwith placed physicians and servants
in attendance upon him, and omitted no means meet and apt for the restoration of his health.
But all remedies proved unavailing; for being now old, and having led, as the physicians
reported, a disorderly life, he went daily from bad to worse like one stricken with a
mortal disease. This greatly disconcerted the two brothers; and one day, hard by the
room in which Ser Ciappelletto lay sick, they began to talk about him; saying one to the
other: "What shall we do with this man? We are hard bested indeed on his account. If
we turn him out of the house, sick as he is, we shall not only incur grave censure, but
shall evince a signal want of sense; for folk must know the welcome we gave him in the first
instance, the solicitude with which we have had him treated and tended since his illness,
during which time he could not possibly do aught to displease us, and yet they would
see him suddenly turned out of our house sick unto death. On the other hand he has been
so bad a man that he is sure not to confess or receive any of the Church's sacraments;
and dying thus unconfessed, he will be denied burial in church, but will be cast out into
some ditch like a dog; nay, 'twill be all one if he do confess, for such and so horrible
have been his crimes that no friar or priest either will or can absolve him; and so, dying
without absolution, he will still be cast out into the ditch. In which case the folk
of these parts, who reprobate our trade as iniquitous and revile it all day long, and
would fain rob us, will seize their opportunity, and raise a tumult, and make a raid upon our
houses, crying: 'A way with these Lombard dogs, whom the Church excludes from her pale;'
and will certainly strip us of our goods, and perhaps take our lives also; so that in
any case we stand to lose if this man die."
Ser Ciappelletto, who, as we said, lay close at hand while they thus spoke, and whose hearing
was sharpened, as is often the case, by his malady, overheard all that they said about
him. So he called them to him, and said to them: "I would not have you disquiet yourselves
in regard of me, or apprehend loss to befall you by my death. I have heard what you have
said of me and have no doubt that 'twould be as you say, if matters took the course
you anticipate; but I am minded that it shall be otherwise. I have committed so many offences
against God in the course of my life, that one more in the hour of my death will make
no difference whatever to the account. So seek out and bring hither the worthiest and
most holy friar you can find, and leave me to settle your affairs and mine upon a sound
and solid basis, with which you may rest satisfied." The two brothers had not much hope of the
result, but yet they went to a friary and asked for a holy and discreet man to hear
the confession of a Lombard that was sick in their house, and returned with an aged
man of just and holy life, very learned in the Scriptures, and venerable and held in
very great and especial reverence by all the citizens. As soon as he had entered the room
where Ser Ciappelletto was lying, and had taken his place by his side, he began gently
to comfort him: then he asked him how long it was since he was confessed. Whereto Ser
Ciappelletto, who had never been confessed, answered: "Father, it is my constant practice
to be confessed at least once a week, and many a week I am confessed more often; but
true it is, that, since I have been sick, now eight days, I have made no confession,
so sore has been my affliction." "Son," said the friar, "thou hast well done, and well
for thee, if so thou continue to do; as thou dost confess so often, I see that my labour
of hearkening and questioning will be slight." "Nay but, master friar," said Ser Ciappelletto,
"say not so; I have not confessed so often but that I would fain make a general confession
of all my sins that I have committed, so far as I can recall them, from the day of my birth
to the present time; and therefore I pray you, my good father, to question me precisely
in every particular just as if I had never been confessed. And spare me not by reason
of my sickness, for I had far rather do despite to my flesh than, sparing it, risk the perdition
of my soul, which my Saviour redeemed with His precious blood."
The holy man was mightily delighted with these words, which seemed to him to betoken a soul
in a state of grace. He therefore signified to Ser Ciappelletto his high approval of this
practice; and then began by asking him whether he had ever sinned carnally with a woman.
Whereto Ser Ciappelletto answered with a sigh: "My father, I scruple to tell you the truth
in this matter, fearing lest I sin in vain-glory." "Nay, but," said the friar, "speak boldly;
none ever sinned by telling the truth, either in confession or otherwise." "Then," said
Ser Ciappelletto, "as you bid me speak boldly, I will tell you the truth of this matter.
I am *** even as when I issued from my mother's womb." "Now God's blessing on thee,"
said the friar, "well done; and the greater is thy merit in that, hadst thou so willed,
thou mightest have done otherwise far more readily than we who are under constraint of
rule." He then proceeded to ask, whether he had offended God by gluttony. Whereto Ser
Ciappelletto, heaving a heavy sigh, answered that he had frequently so offended; for, being
wont to fast not only in Lent like other devout persons, but at least three days in every
week, taking nothing but bread and water, he had quaffed the water with as good a gusto
and as much enjoyment, more particularly when fatigued by devotion or pilgrimage, as great
drinkers quaff their wine; and oftentimes he had felt a craving for such dainty dishes
of herbs as ladies make when they go into the country, and now and again he had relished
his food more than seemed to him meet in one who fasted, as he did, for devotion. "Son,"
said the friar, "these sins are natural and very trifling; and therefore I would not have
thee burden thy conscience too much with them. There is no man, however holy he may be, but
must sometimes find it pleasant to eat after a long fast and to drink after exertion."
"O, my father," said Ser Ciappelletto, "say not this to comfort me. You know well that
I know, that the things which are done in the service of God ought to be done in perfect
purity of an unsullied spirit; and whoever does otherwise sins." The friar, well content,
replied: "Glad I am that thou dost think so, and I am mightily pleased with thy pure and
good conscience which therein appears; but tell me: hast thou sinned by avarice, coveting
more than was reasonable, or withholding more than was right?" "My father," replied Ser
Ciappelletto, "I would not have you disquiet yourself, because I am in the house of these
usurers: no part have I in their concerns; nay, I did but come here to admonish and reprehend
them, and wean them from this abominable traffic; and so, I believe, I had done, had not God
sent me this visitation. But you must know, that my father left me a fortune, of which
I dedicated the greater part to God; and since then for my own support and the relief of
Christ's poor I have done a little trading, whereof I have desired to make gain; and all
that I have gotten I have shared with God's poor, reserving one half for my own needs
and giving the other half to them; and so well has my Maker prospered me, that I have
ever managed my affairs to better and better account." "Well done," said the friar; "but
how? hast thou often given way to anger?" "Often indeed, I assure you," said Ser Ciappelletto.
"And who could refrain therefrom, seeing men doing frowardly all day long, breaking the
commandments of God and recking nought of His judgments? Many a time in the course of
a single day I had rather be dead than alive, to see the young men going after vanity, swearing
and forswearing themselves, haunting taverns, avoiding the churches, and in short walking
in the way of the world rather than in God's way." "My son," said the friar, "this is a
righteous wrath; nor could I find occasion therein to lay a penance upon thee. But did
anger ever by any chance betray thee into taking human life, or affronting or otherwise
wronging any?""Alas," replied Ser Ciappelletto, "alas, sir, man of God though you seem to
me, how come you to speak after this manner? If I had had so much as the least thought
of doing any of the things of which you speak, should I believe, think you, that I had been
thus supported or God? These are the deeds of robbers and such like evil men, to whom
I have ever said, when any I saw: 'Go, God change your heart.'" Said then the friar:
"Now, my son, as thou hopest to be blest of God, tell me, hast thou never borne false
witness against any, or spoken evil of another, or taken the goods of another without his
leave?""Yes, master friar," answered Ser Ciappelletto, "most true it is that I have spoken evil of
another; for I had once a neighbour who without the least excuse in the world was ever beating
his wife, and so great was my pity of the poor creature, whom, when he was in his cups,
he would thrash as God alone knows how, that once I spoke evil of him to his wife's kinsfolk."
"Well, well," said the friar, "thou tellest me thou hast been a merchant; hast thou ever
cheated any, as merchants use to do?" "I'faith, yes, master friar," said Ser Ciappelletto;
"but I know not who he was; only that he brought me some money which he owed me for some cloth
that I had sold him, and I put it in a box without counting it, where a month afterwards
I found four farthings more than there should have been, which I kept for a year to return
to him, but not seeing him again, I bestowed them in alms for the love of God." "This,"
said the friar, "was a small matter; and thou didst well to bestow them as thou didst."
The holy friar went on to ask him many other questions, to which he made answer in each
case in this sort. Then, as the friar was about to give him absolution, Ser Ciappelletto
interposed: "Sir, I have yet a sin to confess." "What?" asked the friar. "I remember," he
said, "that I once caused my servant to sweep my house on a Saturday after none; and that
my observance of Sunday was less devout than it should have been." "O, my son," said the
friar, "this is a light matter." "No," said Ser Ciappelletto, "say not a light matter;
for Sunday is the more to be had in honour because on that day our Lord rose from the
dead." Then said the holy friar: "Now is there aught else that thou hast done?" "Yes, master
friar," replied Ser Ciappelletto, "once by inadvertence I spat in the church of God."
At this the friar began to smile, and said: "My son, this is not a matter to trouble about;
we, who are religious, spit there all day long." "And great impiety it is when you so
do," replied Ser Ciappelletto, "for there is nothing that is so worthy to be kept from
all impurity as the holy temple in which sacrifice is offered to God." More he said in the same
strain, which I pass over; and then at last he began to sigh, and by and by to weep bitterly,
as he was well able to do when he chose. And the friar demanding: "My son, why weepest
thou?" "Alas, master friar," answered Ser Ciappelletto, "a sin yet remains, which I
have never confessed, such shame were it to me to tell it; and as often as I call it to
mind, I weep as you now see me weep, being well assured that God will never forgive me
this sin." Then said the holy friar: "Come, come, son, what is this that thou sayst? If
all the sins of all the men, that ever were or ever shall be, as long as the world shall
endure, were concentrated in one man, so great is the goodness of God that He would freely
pardon them all, were he but penitent and contrite as I see thou art, and confessed
them: wherefore tell me thy sin with a good courage." Then said Ser Ciappelletto, still
weeping bitterly: "Alas, my father, mine is too great a sin, and scarce can I believe,
if your prayers do not co-operate, that God will ever grant me His pardon thereof." "Tell
it with a good courage," said the friar; "I promise thee to pray God for thee." Ser Ciappelletto,
however, continued to weep, and would not speak, for all the friar's encouragement.
When he had kept him for a good while in suspense, he heaved a mighty sigh, and said: "My father,
as you promise me to pray God for me, I will tell it you. Know, then, that once, when I
was a little child, I cursed my mother;" and having so said he began again to weep bitterly.
"O, my son," said the friar, "does this seem to thee so great a sin? Men curse God all
day long, and He pardons them freely, if they repent them of having so done; and thinkest
thou He will not pardon thee this? Weep not, be comforted, for truly, hadst thou been one
of them that set Him on the Cross, with the contrition that I see in thee, thou wouldst
not fail of His pardon." "Alas! my father," rejoined Ser Ciappelletto, "what is this you
say? To curse my sweet mother that carried me in her womb for nine months day and night,
and afterwards on her shoulder more than a hundred times! Heinous indeed was my offence;
'tis too great a sin; nor will it be pardoned, unless you pray God for me."
The friar now perceiving that Ser Ciappelletto had nothing more to say, gave him absolution
and his blessing, reputing him for a most holy man, fully believing that all that he
had said was true. And who would not have so believed, hearing him so speak at the point
of death? Then, when all was done, he said: "Ser Ciappelletto, if God so will, you will
soon be well; but should it so come to pass that God call your blessed soul to Himself
in this state of grace, is it well pleasing to you that your body be buried in our convent?"
"Yea, verily, master friar," replied Ser Ciappelletto; "there would I be, and nowhere else, since
you have promised to pray God for me; besides which I have ever had a special devotion to
your order. Wherefore I pray you, that, on your return to your convent, you cause to
be sent me that very Body of Christ, which you consecrate in the morning on the altar;
because (unworthy though I be) I purpose with your leave to take it, and afterwards the
holy and extreme unction, that, though I have lived as a sinner, I may die at any rate as
a Christian." The holy man said that he was greatly delighted, that it was well said of
Ser Ciappelletto, and that he would cause the Host to be forthwith brought to him; and
so it was.
The two brothers, who much misdoubted Ser Ciappelletto's power to deceive the friar,
had taken their stand on the other side of a wooden partition which divided the room
in which Ser Ciappelletto lay from another, and hearkening there they readily heard and
understood what Ser Ciappelletto said to the friar; and at times could scarce refrain their
laughter as they followed his confession; and now and again they said one to another:
"What manner of man is this, whom neither age nor sickness, nor fear of death, on the
threshold of which he now stands, nor yet of God, before whose judgment-seat he must
soon appear, has been able to turn from his wicked ways, that he die not even as he has
lived?" But seeing that his confession had secured the interment of his body in church,
they troubled themselves no further. Ser Ciappelletto soon afterwards communicated, and growing
immensely worse, received the extreme unction, and died shortly after vespers on the same
day on which he had made his good confession. So the two brothers, having from his own moneys
provided the wherewith to procure him honourable sepulture, and sent word to the friars to
come at even to observe the usual vigil, and in the morning to fetch the corpse, set all
things in order accordingly. The holy friar who had confessed him, hearing that he was
dead, had audience of the prior of the friary; a chapter was convened and the assembled brothers
heard from the confessor's own mouth how Ser Ciappelletto had been a holy man, as had appeared
by his confession, and were exhorted to receive the body with the utmost veneration and pious
care, as one by which there was good hope that God would work many miracles. To this
the prior and the rest of the credulous confraternity assenting, they went in a body in the evening
to the place where the corpse of Ser Ciappelletto lay, and kept a great and solemn vigil over
it; and in the morning they made a procession habited in their surplices and copes, with
books in their hands and crosses in front; and chanting as they went, they fetched the
corpse and brought it back to their church with the utmost pomp and solemnity, being
followed by almost all the folk of the city, men and women alike. So it was laid in the
church, and then the holy friar who had heard the confession got up in the pulpit and began
to preach marvellous things of Ser Ciappelletto's life, his fasts, his virginity, his simplicity
and guilelessness and holiness; narrating among other matters that of which Ser Ciappelletto
had made tearful confession as his greatest sin, and how he had hardly been able to make
him conceive that God would pardon him; from which he took occasion to reprove his hearers;
saying: "And you, accursed of God, on the least pretext, blaspheme God and His Mother,
and all the celestial court." And much beside he told of his loyalty and purity; and, in
short, so wrought upon the people by his words, to which they gave entire credence, that they
all conceived a great veneration for Ser Ciappelletto, and at the close of the office came pressing
forward with the utmost vehemence to kiss the feet and the hands of the corpse, from
which they tore off the cerements, each thinking himself blessed to have but a scrap thereof
in his possession; and so it was arranged that it should be kept there all day long,
so as to be visible and accessible to all. At nightfall it was honourably interred in
a marble tomb in one of the chapels, where on the morrow, one by one, folk came and lit
tapers and prayed and paid their vows, setting there the waxen images which they had dedicated.
And the fame of Ciappelletto's holiness and the devotion to him grew in such measure that
scarce any there was that in any adversity would vow aught to any saint but he, and they
called him and still call him San Ciappelletto, affirming that many miracles have been and
daily are wrought by God through him for such as devoutly crave his intercession.
So lived, so died Ser Cepperello da Prato, and came to be reputed a saint, as you have
heard. Nor would I deny that it is possible that he is of the number of the blessed in
the presence of God, seeing that, though his life was evil and depraved, yet he might in
his last moments have made so complete an act of contrition that perchance God had mercy
on him and received him into His kingdom. But, as this is hidden from us, I speak according
to that which appears, and I say that he ought rather to be in the hands of the devil in
hell than in Paradise. Which, if so it be, is a manifest token of the superabundance
of the goodness of God to usward, inasmuch as He regards not our error but the sincerity
of our faith, and hearkens unto us when, mistaking one who is at enmity with Him for a friend,
we have recourse to him, as to one holy indeed, as our intercessor for His grace. Wherefore,
that we of this gay company may by His grace be preserved safe and sound throughout this
time of adversity, commend we ourselves in our need to Him, whose name we began by invoking,
with lauds and reverent devotion and good confidence that we shall be heard.
End of Day One, The First Story
Day One, The Second Story
Abraham, a Jew, at the instance of Jehannot de Chevigny, goes to the court of Rome, and
having marked the evil life of the clergy, returns to Paris, and becomes a Christian.
Pamfilo's story elicited the mirth of some of the ladies and the hearty commendation
of all, who listened to it with close attention until the end. Whereupon the queen bade Neifile,
who sat next her, to tell a story, that the commencement thus made of their diversions
might have its sequel. Neifile, whose graces of mind matched the beauty of her person,
consented with a gladsome goodwill, and thus began:
Pamfilo has shewn by his story that the goodness of God spares to regard our errors when they
result from unavoidable ignorance; and in mine I mean to shew you how the same goodness,
bearing patiently with the shortcomings of those who should be its faithful witness in
deed and word, draws from them contrariwise evidence of His infallible truth; to the end
that what we believe we may with more assured conviction follow.
In Paris, gracious ladies, as I have heard tell, there was once a great merchant, a large
dealer in drapery, a good man, most loyal and righteous, his name Jehannot de Chevigny,
between whom and a Jew, Abraham by name, also a merchant, and a man of great wealth, as
also most loyal and righteous, there subsisted a very close friendship. Now Jehannot, observing
Abraham's loyalty and rectitude, began to be sorely vexed in spirit that the soul of
one so worthy and wise and good should perish for want of faith. Wherefore he began in a
friendly manner to plead with him, that he should leave the errors of the Jewish faith
and turn to the Christian verity, which, being sound and holy, he might see daily prospering
and gaining ground, whereas, on the contrary, his own religion was dwindling and was almost
come to nothing. The Jew replied that he believed that there was no faith sound and holy except
the Jewish faith, in which he was born, and in which he meant to live and die; nor would
anything ever turn him therefrom. Nothing daunted, however, Jehannot some days afterwards
began again to ply Abraham with similar arguments, explaining to him in such crude fashion as
merchants use the reasons why our faith is better than the Jewish. And though the Jew
was a great master in the Jewish law, yet, whether it was by reason of his friendship
for Jehannot, or that the Holy Spirit dictated the words that the simple merchant used, at
any rate the Jew began to be much interested in Jehannot's arguments, though still too
staunch in his faith to suffer himself to be converted. But Jehannot was no less assiduous
in plying him with argument than he was obstinate in adhering to his law, insomuch that at length
the Jew, overcome by such incessant appeals, said: "Well, well, Jehannot, thou wouldst
have me become a Christian, and I am disposed to do so, provided I first go to Rome and
there see him whom thou callest God's vicar on earth, and observe what manner of life
he leads and his brother cardinals with him; and if such it be that thereby, in conjunction
with thy words, I may understand that thy faith is better than mine, as thou hast sought
to shew me, I will do as I have said: otherwise, I will remain as I am a Jew." When Jehannot
heard this, he was greatly distressed, saying to himself: "I thought to have converted him;
but now I see that the pains which I took for so excellent a purpose are all in vain;
for, if he goes to the court of Rome and sees the iniquitous and foul life which the clergy
lead there, so far from turning Christian, had he been converted already, he would without
doubt relapse into Judaism." Then turning to Abraham he said: "Nay, but, my friend,
why wouldst thou be at all this labour and great expense of travelling from here to Rome?
to say nothing of the risks both by sea and by land which a rich man like thee must needs
run. Thinkest thou not to find here one that can give thee baptism? And as for any doubts
that thou mayst have touching the faith to which I point thee, where wilt thou find greater
masters and sages therein than here, to resolve thee of any question thou mayst put to them?
Wherefore in my opinion this journey of thine is superfluous. Think that the prelates there
are such as thou mayst have seen here, nay, as much better as they are nearer to the Chief
Pastor. And so, by my advice thou wilt spare thy pains until some time of indulgence, when
I, perhaps, may be able to bear thee company." The Jew replied: "Jehannot, I doubt not that
so it is as thou sayst; but once and for all I tell thee that I am minded to go there,
and will never otherwise do that which thou wouldst have me and hast so earnestly besought
me to do." "Go then," said Jehannot, seeing that his mind was made up, "and good luck
go with thee;" and so he gave up the contest because nothing would be lost, though he felt
sure that he would never become a Christian after seeing the court of Rome. The Jew took
horse, and posted with all possible speed to Rome; where on his arrival he was honourably
received by his fellow Jews. ]He said nothing to any one of the purpose for which he had
come; but began circumspectly to acquaint himself with the ways of the Pope and the
cardinals and the other prelates and all the courtiers; and from what he saw for himself,
being a man of great intelligence, or learned from others, he discovered that without distinction
of rank they were all sunk in the most disgraceful lewdness, sinning not only in the way of nature
but after the manner of the men of ***, without any restraint of remorse or shame,
in such sort that, when any great favour was to be procured, the influence of the courtesans
and boys was of no small moment. Moreover he found them one and all gluttonous, wine-bibbers,
drunkards, and next after lewdness, most addicted to the shameless service of the belly, like
brute beasts. And, as he probed the matter still further, he perceived that they were
all so greedy and avaricious that human, nay Christian blood, and things sacred of what
kind soever, spiritualities no less than temporalities, they bought and sold for money; which traffic
was greater and employed more brokers than the drapery trade and all the other trades
of Paris put together; open simony and gluttonous excess being glosed under such specious terms
as "arrangement" and "moderate use of creature comforts," as if God could not penetrate the
thoughts of even the most corrupt hearts, to say nothing of the signification of words,
and would suffer Himself to be misled after the manner of men by the names of things.
Which matters, with many others which are not to be mentioned, our modest and sober-minded
Jew found by no means to his liking, so that, his curiosity being fully satisfied, he was
minded to return to Paris; which accordingly he did. There, on his arrival, he was met
by Jehannot; and the two made great cheer together. Jehannot expected Abraham's conversion
least of all things, and allowed him some days of rest before he asked what he thought
of the Holy Father and the cardinals and the other courtiers. To which the Jew forthwith
replied: "I think God owes them all an evil recompense: I tell thee, so far as I was able
to carry my investigations, holiness, devotion, good works or exemplary living in any kind
was nowhere to be found in any clerk; but only lewdness, avarice, gluttony, and the
like, and worse, if worse may be, appeared to be held in such honour of all, that (to
my thinking) the place is a centre of diabolical rather than of divine activities. To the best
of my judgment, your Pastor, and by consequence all that are about him devote all their zeal
and ingenuity and subtlety to devise how best and most speedily they may bring the Christian
religion to nought and banish it from the world. And because I see that what they so
zealously endeavour does not come to pass, but that on the contrary your religion continually
grows, and shines more and more clear, therein I seem to discern a very evident token that
it, rather than any other, as being more true and holy than any other, has the Holy Spirit
for its foundation and support. For which cause, whereas I met your exhortations in
a harsh and obdurate temper, and would not become a Christian, now I frankly tell you
that I would on no account omit to become such. Go we then to the church, and there
according to the traditional rite of your holy faith let me receive baptism." Jehannot,
who had anticipated a diametrically opposite conclusion, as soon as he heard him so speak,
was the best pleased man that ever was in the world. So taking Abraham with him to Notre
Dame he prayed the clergy there to baptise him. When they heard that it was his own wish,
they forthwith did so, and Jehannot raised him from the sacred font, and named him Jean;
and afterwards he caused teachers of great eminence thoroughly to instruct him in our
faith, which he readily learned, and afterwards practised in a good, a virtuous, nay, a holy
life.
End of Day One, The Second Story
Day One, The Third Story
Melchisedech, a Jew, by a story of three rings averts a great danger with which he was menaced
by Saladin.
When Neifile had brought her story to a close amid the commendations of all the company,
Filomena, at the queen's behest, thus began:
The story told by Neifile brings to my mind another in which also a Jew appears, but this
time as the hero of a perilous adventure; and as enough has been said of God and of
the truth of our faith, it will not now be inopportune if we descend to mundane events
and the actions of men. Wherefore I propose to tell you a story, which will perhaps dispose
you to be more circumspect than you have been wont to be in answering questions addressed
to you. Well ye know, or should know, loving gossips, that, as it often happens that folk
by their own folly forfeit a happy estate and are plunged in most grievous misery, so
good sense will extricate the wise from extremity of peril, and establish them in complete and
assured peace. Of the change from good to evil fortune, which folly may effect, instances
abound; indeed, occurring as they do by the thousand day by day, they are so conspicuous
that their recital would be beside our present purpose. But that good sense may be our succour
in misfortune, I will now, as I promised, make plain to you within the narrow compass
of a little story.
Saladin, who by his great valour had from small beginnings made himself Soldan of Egypt,
and gained many victories over kings both Christian and Saracen, having in divers wars
and by divers lavish displays of magnificence spent all his treasure, and in order to meet
a certain emergency being in need of a large sum of money, and being at a loss to raise
it with a celerity adequate to his necessity, bethought him of a wealthy Jew, Melchisedech
by name, who lent at usance in Alexandria, and who, were he but willing, was, as he believed,
able to accommodate him, but was so miserly that he would never do so of his own accord,
nor was Saladin disposed to constrain him thereto. So great, however, was his necessity
that, after pondering every method whereby the Jew might be induced to be compliant,
at last he determined to devise a colourably reasonable pretext for extorting the money
from him. So he sent for him, received him affably, seated him by his side, and presently
said to him: "My good man, I have heard from many people that thou art very wise, and of
great discernment in divine things; wherefore I would gladly know of thee, which of the
three laws thou reputest the true law, the law of the Jews, the law of the Saracens,
or the law of the Christians?" The Jew, who was indeed a wise man, saw plainly enough
that Saladin meant to entangle him in his speech, that he might have occasion to harass
him, and bethought him that he could not praise any of the three laws above another without
furnishing Saladin with the pretext which he sought. So, concentrating all the force
of his mind to shape such an answer as might avoid the snare, he presently lit on what
he sought, saying: "My lord, a pretty question indeed is this which you propound, and fain
would I answer it; to which end it is apposite that I tell you a story, which, if you will
hearken, is as follows: If I mistake not, I remember to have often heard tell of a great
and rich man of old time, who among other most precious jewels had in his treasury a
ring of extraordinary beauty and value, which by reason of its value and beauty he was minded
to leave to his heirs for ever; for which cause he ordained, that, whichever of his
sons was found in possession of the ring as by his bequest, should thereby be designate
his heir, and be entitled to receive from the rest the honour and homage due to a superior.
The son, to whom he bequeathed the ring, left it in like manner to his descendants, making
the like ordinance as his predecessor. In short the ring passed from hand to hand for
many generations; and in the end came to the hands of one who had three sons, goodly and
virtuous all, and very obedient to their father, so that he loved them all indifferently. The
rule touching the descent of the ring was known to the young men, and each aspiring
to hold the place of honour among them did all he could to persuade his father, who was
now old, to leave the ring to him at his death. The worthy man, who loved them all equally,
and knew not how to choose from among them a sole legatee, promised the ring to each
in turn, and in order to satisfy all three, caused a cunning artificer secretly to make
other two rings, so like the first, that the maker himself could hardly tell which was
the true ring. So, before he died, he disposed of the rings, giving one privily to each of
his sons; whereby it came to pass, that after his decease each of the sons claimed the inheritance
and the place of honour, and, his claim being disputed by his brothers, produced his ring
in witness of right. And the rings being found so like one to another that it was impossible
to distinguish the true one, the suit to determine the true heir remained pendent, and still
so remains. And so, my lord, to your question, touching the three laws given to the three
peoples by God the Father, I answer: Each of these peoples deems itself to have the
true inheritance, the true law, the true commandments of God; but which of them is justified in
so believing, is a question which, like that of the rings, remains pendent." The excellent
adroitness with which the Jew had contrived to evade the snare which he had laid for his
feet was not lost upon Saladin. He therefore determined to let the Jew know his need, and
did so, telling him at the same time what he had intended to do, in the event of his
answering less circumspectly than he had done.
Thereupon the Jew gave the Soldan all the accommodation that he required, which the
Soldan afterwards repaid him in full. He also gave him most munificent gifts with his lifelong
amity and a great and honourable position near his person.
End of Day One, The Third Story
Day One, The Fourth Story A monk lapses into a sin meriting the most
severe punishment, justly censures the same fault in his abbot, and thus evades the penalty.
The silence which followed the conclusion of Filomena's tale was broken by Dioneo, who
sate next her, and without waiting for the queen's word, for he knew that by the rule
laid down at the commencement it was now his turn to speak, began on this wise:
Loving ladies, if I have well understood the intention of you all, we are here to afford
entertainment to one another by story-telling; wherefore, provided only nought is done that
is repugnant to this end, I deem it lawful for each (and so said our queen a little while
ago) to tell whatever story seems to him most likely to be amusing. Seeing, then, that we
have heard how Abraham saved his soul by the good counsel of Jehannot de Chevigny, and
Melchisedech by his own good sense safe-guarded his wealth against the stratagems of Saladin,
I hope to escape your censure in narrating a brief story of a monk, who by his address
delivered his body from imminent peril of most severe chastisement.
In the not very remote district of Lunigiana there flourished formerly a community of monks
more numerous and holy than is there to be found to-day, among whom was a young brother,
whose vigour and lustihood neither the fasts nor the vigils availed to subdue. One afternoon,
while the rest of the confraternity slept, our young monk took a stroll around the church,
which lay in a very sequestered spot, and chanced to espy a young and very beautiful
girl, a daughter, perhaps, of one of the husbandmen of those parts, going through the fields and
gathering herbs as she went. No sooner had he seen her than he was sharply assailed by
carnal concupiscence, insomuch that he made up to and accosted her; and (she hearkening)
little by little they came to an understanding, and unobserved by any entered his cell together.
Now it so chanced that, while they fooled it within somewhat recklessly, he being overwrought
with passion, the abbot awoke and passing slowly by the young monk's cell, heard the
noise which they made within, and the better to distinguish the voices, came softly up
to the door of the cell, and listening discovered that beyond all doubt there was a woman within.
His first thought was to force the door open; but, changing his mind, he returned to his
chamber and waited until the monk should come out.
Delightsome beyond measure though the monk found his intercourse with the girl, yet was
he not altogether without anxiety. He had heard, as he thought, the sound of footsteps
in the dormitory, and having applied his eye to a convenient aperture had had a good view
of the abbot as he stood by the door listening. He was thus fully aware that the abbot might
have detected the presence of a woman in the cell. Whereat he was exceedingly distressed,
knowing that he had a severe punishment to expect; but he concealed his vexation from
the girl while he busily cast about in his mind for some way of escape from his embarrassment.
He thus hit on a novel stratagem which was exactly suited to his purpose. With the air
of one who had had enough of the girl's company he said to her: "I shall now leave you in
order that I may arrange for your departure hence unobserved. Stay here quietly until
I return." So out he went, locking the door of the cell, and withdrawing the key, which
he carried straight to the abbot's chamber and handed to him, as was the custom when
a monk was going out, saying with a composed air: "Sir, I was not able this morning to
bring in all the faggots which I had made ready, so with your leave I will go to the
wood and bring them in." The abbot, desiring to have better cognisance of the monk's offence,
and not dreaming that the monk knew that he had been detected, was pleased with the turn
matters had taken, and received the key gladly, at the same time giving the monk the desired
leave. So the monk withdrew, and the abbot began to consider what course it were best
for him to take, whether to assemble the brotherhood and open the door in their presence, that,
being witnesses of the delinquency, they might have no cause to murmur against him when he
proceeded to punish the delinquent, or whether it were not better first to learn from the
girl's own lips how it had come about. And reflecting that she might be the wife or daughter
of some man who would take it ill that she should be shamed by being exposed to the gaze
of all the monks, he determined first of all to find out who she was, and then to make
up his mind. So he went softly to the cell, opened the door, and, having entered, closed
it behind him. The girl, seeing that her visitor was none other than the abbot, quite lost
her presence of mind, and quaking with shame began to weep. Master abbot surveyed her from
head to foot, and seeing that she was fresh and comely, fell a prey, old though he was,
to fleshly cravings no less poignant and sudden than those which the young monk had experienced,
and began thus to commune with himself: "Alas! why take I not my pleasure when I may, seeing
that I never need lack for occasions of trouble and vexation of spirit? Here is a fair ***,
and no one in the world to know. If I can bring her to pleasure me, I know not why I
should not do so. Who will know? No one will ever know; and sin that is hidden is half
forgiven; this chance may never come again; so, methinks, it were the part of wisdom to
take the boon which God bestows." So musing, with an altogether different purpose from
that with which he had come, he drew near the girl, and softly bade her to be comforted,
and besought her not to weep; and so little by little he came at last to show her what
he would be at. The girl, being made neither of iron nor of adamant, was readily induced
to gratify the abbot, who after bestowing upon her many an embrace and kiss, got upon
the monk's bed, where, being sensible, perhaps, of the disparity between his reverend portliness
and her tender youth, and fearing to injure her by his excessive weight, he refrained
from lying upon her, but laid her upon him, and in that manner disported himself with
her for a long time. The monk, who had only pretended to go to the wood, and had concealed
himself in the dormitory, no sooner saw the abbot enter his cell than he was overjoyed
to think that his plan would succeed; and when he saw that he had locked the door, he
was well assured thereof. So he stole out of his hiding-place, and set his eye to an
aperture through which he saw and heard all that the abbot did and said. At length the
abbot, having had enough of dalliance with the girl, locked her in the cell and returned
to his chamber. Catching sight of the monk soon afterwards, and supposing him to have
returned from the wood, he determined to give him a sharp reprimand and have him imprisoned,
that he might thus secure the prey for himself alone. He therefore caused him to be summoned,
chid him very severely and with a stern countenance, and ordered him to be put in prison. The monk
replied trippingly: "Sir, I have not been so long in the order of St. Benedict as to
have every particular of the rule by heart; nor did you teach me before to-day in what
posture it behoves the monk to have intercourse with women, but limited your instruction to
such matters as fasts and vigils. As, however, you have now given me my lesson, I promise
you, if you also pardon my offence, that I will never repeat it, but will always follow
the example which you have set me."
The abbot, who was a shrewd man, saw at once that the monk was not only more knowing than
he, but had actually seen what he had done; nor, conscience-stricken himself, could he
for shame mete out to the monk a measure which he himself merited. So pardon given, with
an injunction to bury what had been seen in silence, they decently conveyed the young
girl out of the monastery, whither, it is to be believed, they now and again caused
her to return.
End of Day One, The Fourth Story
Day One, The Fifth Story
The Marchioness of Monferrato by a banquet of hens seasoned with wit checks the mad passion
of the King of France.
The story told by Dioneo evoked at first some qualms of shame in the minds of the ladies,
as was apparent by the modest blush that tinged their faces: then exchanging glances, and
scarce able to refrain their mirth, they listened to it with half-suppressed smiles. On its
conclusion they bestowed upon Dioneo a few words of gentle reprehension with intent to
admonish him that such stories were not to be told among ladies. The queen then turned
to Fiammetta, who was seated on the grass at her side, and bade her follow suit; and
Fiammetta with a gay and gracious mien thus began:
The line upon which our story-telling proceeds, to wit, to shew the virtue that resides in
apt and ready repartees, pleases me well; and as in affairs of love men and women are
in diverse case, for to aspire to the love of a woman of higher lineage than his own
is wisdom in man, whereas a woman's good sense is then most conspicuous when she knows how
to preserve herself from becoming enamoured of a man, her superior in rank, I am minded,
fair my ladies, to shew you by the story which I am now to tell, how by deed and word a gentlewoman
both defended herself against attack, and weaned her suitor from his love.
The Marquis of Monferrato, a paladin of distinguished prowess, was gone overseas as gonfalonier
of the Church in a general array of the Christian forces. Whose merits being canvassed at the
court of Philippe le Borgne, on the eve of his departure from France on the same service,
a knight observed, that there was not under the stars a couple comparable to the Marquis
and his lady; in that, while the Marquis was a paragon of the knightly virtues, his lady
for beauty and honour was without a peer among all the other ladies of the world. These words
made so deep an impression on the mind of the King of France that, though he had never
seen the lady, he fell ardently in love with her, and, being to join the armada, resolved
that his port of embarcation should be no other than Genoa, in order that, travelling
thither by land, he might find a decent pretext for visiting the Marchioness, with whom in
the absence of the Marquis he trusted to have the success which he desired; nor did he fail
to put his design in execution. Having sent his main army on before, he took the road
himself with a small company of gentlemen, and, as they approached the territory of the
Marquis, he despatched a courier to the Marchioness, a day in advance, to let her know that he
expected to breakfast with her the next morning. The lady, who knew her part and played it
well, replied graciously, that he would be indeed welcome, and that his presence would
be the greatest of all favours. She then began to commune with herself, what this might import,
that so great a king should come to visit her in her husband's absence, nor was she
so deluded as not to surmise that it was the fame of her beauty that drew him thither.
Nevertheless she made ready to do him honour in a manner befitting her high degree, summoning
to her presence such of the retainers as remained in the castle, and giving all needful directions
with their advice, except that the order of the banquet and the choice of the dishes she
reserved entirely to herself. Then, having caused all the hens that could be found in
the country-side to be brought with all speed into the castle, she bade her cooks furnish
forth the royal table with divers dishes made exclusively of such fare. The King arrived
on the appointed day, and was received by the lady with great and ceremonious cheer.
Fair and noble and gracious seemed she in the eyes of the King beyond all that he had
conceived from the knight's words, so that he was lost in admiration and inly extolled
her to the skies, his passion being the more inflamed in proportion as he found the lady
surpass the idea which he had formed of her. A suite of rooms furnished with all the appointments
befitting the reception of so great a king, was placed at his disposal, and after a little
rest, breakfast-time being come, he and the Marchioness took their places at the same
table, while his suite were honourably entertained at other boards according to their several
qualities. Many courses were served with no lack of excellent and rare wines, whereby
the King was mightily pleased, as also by the extraordinary beauty of the Marchioness,
on whom his eye from time to time rested. However, as course followed course, the King
observed with some surprise, that, though the dishes were diverse, yet they were all
but variations of one and the same fare, to wit, the pullet. Besides which he knew that
the domain was one which could not but afford plenty of divers sorts of game, and by forewarning
the lady of his approach, he had allowed time for hunting; yet, for all his surprise, he
would not broach the question more directly with her than by a reference to her hens;
so, turning to her with a smile, he said: "Madam, do hens grow in this country without
so much as a single ***?" The Marchioness, who perfectly apprehended the drift of the
question, saw in it an opportunity, sent her by God, of evincing her virtuous resolution;
so casting a haughty glance upon the King she answered thus: "Sire, no; but the women,
though they may differ somewhat from others in dress and rank, are yet of the same nature
here as elsewhere." The significance of the banquet of pullets was made manifest to the
King by these words, as also the virtue which they veiled. He perceived that on a lady of
such a temper words would be wasted, and that force was out of the question. Wherefore,
yielding to the dictates of prudence and honour, he was now as prompt to quench, as he had
been inconsiderate in conceiving, his unfortunate passion for the lady; and fearing her answers,
he refrained from further jesting with her, and dismissing his hopes devoted himself to
his breakfast, which done, he disarmed suspicion of the dishonourable purpose of his visit
by an early departure, and thanking her for the honour she had conferred upon him, and
commending her to God, took the road to Genoa.
End of Day One, The Fifth Story
Day One, The Sixth Story A worthy man by an apt saying puts to shame
the wicked hypocrisy of the religious.
When all had commended the virtue of the Marchioness and the spirited reproof which she administered
to the King of France, Emilia, who sate next to Fiammetta, obeyed the queen's behest, and
with a good courage thus began:
My story is also of a reproof, but of one administered by a worthy man, who lived the
secular life, to a greedy religious, by a jibe as merry as admirable.
Know then, dear ladies, that there was in our city, not long ago, a friar minor, an
inquisitor in matters of heresy, who, albeit he strove might and main to pass himself off
as a holy man and tenderly solicitous for the integrity of the Christian Faith, as they
all do, yet he had as keen a scent for a full purse as for a deficiency of faith. Now it
so chanced that his zeal was rewarded by the discovery of a good man far better furnished
with money than with sense, who in an unguarded moment, not from defect of faith, but rather,
perhaps, from excess of hilarity, being heated with wine, had happened to say to his boon
companions, that he had a wine good enough for Christ Himself to drink. Which being reported
to the inquisitor, he, knowing the man to be possessed of large estates and a well-lined
purse, set to work in hot haste, "*** gladiis et fustibus," to bring all the rigour of the
law to bear upon him, designing thereby not to lighten the load of his victim's misbelief,
but to increase the weight of his own purse by the florins, which he might, as he did,
receive from him. So he cited him to his presence, and asked him whether what was alleged against
him were true. The good man answered in the affirmative, and told him how it had happened.
"Then," said our most holy and devout inquisitor of St. John Goldenbeard,"then hast thou made
Christ a wine-bibber, and a lover of rare vintages, as if He were a sot, a toper and
a tavern-haunter even as one of you. And thinkest thou now by a few words of apology to pass
this off as a light matter? It is no such thing as thou supposest. Thou hast deserved
the fire; and we should but do our duty, did we inflict it upon thee." With these and the
like words in plenty he upbraided him, bending on him meanwhile a countenance as stern as
if Epicurus had stood before him denying the immortality of the soul. In short he so terrified
him that the good man was fain to employ certain intermediaries to anoint his palms with a
liberal allowance of St. John Goldenmouth's grease, an excellent remedy for the disease
of avarice which spreads like a pestilence among the clergy, and notably among the friars
minors, who dare not touch a coin, that he might deal gently with him. And great being
the virtue of this ointment, albeit no mention is made thereof by Galen in any part of his
Medicines, it had so gracious an effect that the threatened fire gave place to a cross,
which he was to wear as if he were bound for the emprise over seas; and to make the ensign
more handsome the inquisitor ordered that it should be yellow upon a black ground. Besides
which, after pocketing the coin, he kept him dangling about him for some days, bidding
him by way of penance hear mass every morning at Santa Croce, and afterwards wait upon him
at the breakfast-hour, after which he was free to do as he pleased for the rest of the
day. All which he most carefully observed; and so it fell out that one of these mornings
there were chanted at the mass at which he assisted the following words of the Gospel:
You shall receive an hundredfold and shall possess eternal life. With these words deeply
graven in his memory, he presented himself, as he was bidden, before the inquisitor, where
he sate taking his breakfast, and being asked whether he had heard mass that morning, he
promptly answered: "Yes, sir." And being further asked: "Heardest thou aught therein, as to
which thou art in doubt, or hast thou any question to propound?" the good man responded:
"Nay indeed, doubt have I none of aught that I heard; but rather assured faith in the verity
of all. One thing, however, I heard, which caused me to commiserate you and the rest
of you friars very heartily, in regard of the evil plight in which you must find yourselves
in the other world." "And what," said the inquisitor, "was the passage that so moved
thee to commiserate us?" "Sir," rejoined the good man, "it was that passage in the Gospel
which says: You shall receive an hundredfold." "You heard aright," said the inquisitor; "but
why did the passage so affect you?" "Sir," replied the good man, "I will tell you. Since
I have been in attendance here, I have seen a crowd of poor folk receive a daily dole,
now of one, now of two, huge tureens of swill, being the refuse from your table, and that
of the brothers of this convent; whereof if you are to receive an hundredfold in the other
world, you will have so much that it will go hard but you are all drowned therein."
This raised a general laugh among those who sat at the inquisitor's table, whereat the
inquisitor, feeling that their gluttony and hypocrisy had received a home-thrust, was
very wroth, and, but that what he had already done had not escaped censure, would have instituted
fresh proceedings against him in revenge for the pleasantry with which he had rebuked the
baseness of himself and his brother friars; so in impotent wrath he bade him go about
his business and shew himself there no more.
End of Day One, The Sixth Story
Day One, The Seventh Story Bergamino, with a story of Primasso and the
Abbot of Cluny, finely censures a sudden access of avarice in Messer Cane della Scala.
Emilia's charming manner and her story drew laughter and commendation from the queen and
all the company, who were much tickled by her new type of crusader. When the laughter
had subsided, and all were again silent, Filostrato, on whom the narration now fell, began on this
wise:
A fine thing it is, noble ladies, to hit a fixed mark; but if, on the sudden appearance
of some strange object, it be forthwith hit by the bowman, 'tis little short of a miracle.
The corrupt and filthy life of the clergy offers on many sides a fixed mark of iniquity
at which, whoever is so minded, may let fly, with little doubt that they will reach it,
the winged words of reproof and reprehension. Wherefore, though the worthy man did well
to censure in the person of the inquisitor the pretended charity of the friars who give
to the poor what they ought rather to give to the pigs or throw away, higher indeed is
the praise which I accord to him, of whom, taking my cue from the last story, I mean
to speak; seeing that by a clever apologue he rebuked a sudden and unwonted access of
avarice in Messer Cane della Scala, conveying in a figure what he had at heart to say touching
Messer Cane and himself; which apologue is to follow.
Far and wide, almost to the ends of the earth, is borne the most illustrious renown of Messer
Cane della Scala, in many ways the favoured child of fortune, a lord almost without a
peer among the notables and magnificoes of Italy since the time of the Emperor Frederic
II. Now Messer Cane, being minded to hold high festival at Verona, whereof fame should
speak marvellous things, and many folk from divers parts, of whom the greater number were
jesters of every order, being already arrived, Messer Cane did suddenly (for some cause or
another) abandon his design, and dismissed them with a partial recompense. One only,
Bergamino by name, a speaker ready and polished in a degree credible only to such as heard
him, remained, having received no recompense or congé, still cherishing the hope that
this omission might yet turn out to his advantage. But Messer Cane was possessed with the idea
that whatever he might give Bergamino would be far more completely thrown away than if
he had tossed it into the fire; so never a word of the sort said he or sent he to him.
A few days thus passed, and then Bergamino, seeing that he was in no demand or request
for aught that belonged to his office, and being also at heavy charges at his inn for
the keep of his horses and servants, fell into a sort of melancholy; but still he waited
a while, not deeming it expedient to leave. He had brought with him three rich and goodly
robes, given him by other lords, that he might make a brave show at the festival, and when
his host began to press for payment he gave him one of the robes; afterwards, there being
still much outstanding against him, he must needs, if he would tarry longer at the inn,
give the host the second robe; after which he began to live on the third, being minded
to remain there, as long as it would hold out, in expectation of better luck, and then
to take his departure. Now, while he was thus living on the third robe, it chanced that
Messer Cane encountered him one day as he sate at breakfast with a very melancholy visage.
Which Messer Cane observing, said, rather to tease him than expecting to elicit from
him any pleasant retort: "What ails thee, Bergamino, that thou art still so melancholy?
Let me know the reason why." Whereupon Bergamino, without a moment's reflection, told the following
story, which could not have fitted his own case more exactly if it had been long premeditated.
"My lord, you must know that Primasso was a grammarian of great eminence, and excellent
and quick beyond all others in versifying; whereby he waxed so notable and famous that,
albeit he was not everywhere known by sight, yet there were scarce any that did not at
least by name and report know who Primasso was. Now it so happened that, being once at
Paris in straitened circumstances, as it was his lot to be most of his time by reason that
virtue is little appreciated by the powerful, he heard speak of the Abbot of Cluny, who,
except the Pope, is supposed to be the richest prelate, in regard of his vast revenues, that
the Church of God can shew; and marvellous and magnificent things were told him of the
perpetual court which the abbot kept, and how, wherever he was, he denied not to any
that came there either meat or drink, so only that he preferred his request while the abbot
was at table. Which when Primasso heard, he determined to go and see for himself what
magnificent state this abbot kept, for he was one that took great delight in observing
the ways of powerful and lordly men; wherefore he asked how far from Paris was the abbot
then sojourning. He was informed that the abbot was then at one of his places distant
perhaps six miles; which Primasso concluded he could reach in time for breakfast, if he
started early in the morning. When he had learned the way, he found that no one else
was travelling by it, and fearing lest by mischance he should lose it, and so find himself
where it would not be easy for him to get food, he determined to obviate so disagreeable
a contingency by taking with him three loaves of bread—as for drink, water, though not
much to his taste, was, he supposed, to be found everywhere. So, having disposed the
loaves in the fold of his tunic, he took the road and made such progress that he reached
the abbot's place of sojourn before the breakfast-hour. Having entered, he made the circuit of the
entire place, observing everything, the vast array of tables, and the vast kitchen well-appointed
with all things needful for the preparation and service of the breakfast, and saying to
himself: "In very truth this man is even such a magnifico as he is reported to be." While
his attention was thus occupied, the abbot's seneschal, it being now breakfast-time, gave
order to serve water for the hands, which being washen, they sat them all down to breakfast.
Now it so happened that Primasso was placed immediately in front of the door by which
the abbot must pass from his chamber into the hall; in which, according to rule of his
court, neither wine, nor bread, nor aught else drinkable or eatable was ever set on
the tables before he made his appearance and was seated. The seneschal, therefore, having
set the tables, sent word to the abbot, that all was now ready, and they waited only his
pleasure. So the abbot gave the word, the door of his chamber was thrown open, and he
took a step or two forward towards the hall, gazing straight in front of him as he went.
Thus it fell out that the first man on whom he set eyes was Primasso, who was in very
sorry trim. The abbot, who knew him not by sight, no sooner saw him, than, surprised
by a churlish mood to which he had hitherto been an entire stranger, he said to himself:
"So it is to such as this man that I give my hospitality;" and going back into the chamber
he bade lock the door, and asked of his attendants whether the vile fellow that sate at table
directly opposite the door was known to any of them, who, one and all, answered in the
negative. Primasso waited a little, but he was not used to fast, and his journey had
whetted his appetite. So, as the abbot did not return, he drew out one of the loaves
which he had brought with him, and began to eat. The abbot, after a while, bade one of
his servants go see whether Primasso were gone. The servant returned with the answer:
"No, sir, and (what is more) he is eating a loaf of bread, which he seems to have brought
with him.""Be it so then," said the abbot, who was vexed that he was not gone of his
own accord, but was not disposed to turn him out; "let him eat his own bread, if he have
any, for he shall have none of ours today." By and by Primasso, having finished his first
loaf, began, as the abbot did not make his appearance, to eat the second; which was likewise
reported to the abbot, who had again sent to see if he were gone. Finally, as the abbot
still delayed his coming, Primasso, having finished the second loaf, began upon the third;
whereof, once more, word was carried to the abbot, who now began to commune with himself
and say: "Alas! my soul, what unwonted mood harbourest thou to-day? What avarice? what
scorn? and of whom? I have given my hospitality, now for many a year, to whoso craved it, without
looking to see whether he were gentle or churl, poor or rich, merchant or cheat, and mine
eyes have seen it squandered on vile fellows without number; and nought of that which I
feel towards this man ever entered my mind. Assuredly it cannot be that he is a man of
no consequence, who is the occasion of this access of avarice in me. Though he seem to
me a vile fellow, he must be some great man, that my mind is thus obstinately averse to
do him honour." Of which musings the upshot was that he sent to inquire who the vile fellow
was, and learning that he was Primasso, come to see if what he had heard of his magnificent
state were true, he was stricken with shame, having heard of old Primasso's fame, and knowing
him to be a great man. Wherefore, being zealous to make him the amend, he studied to do him
honour in many ways; and after breakfast, that his garb might accord with his native
dignity, he caused him to be nobly arrayed, and setting him upon a palfrey and filling
his purse, left it to his own choice, whether to go or to stay. So Primasso, with a full
heart, thanked him for his courtesy in terms the amplest that he could command, and, having
left Paris afoot, returned thither on horseback."
Messer Cane was shrewd enough to apprehend Bergamino's meaning perfectly well without
a gloss, and said with a smile: "Bergamino, thy parable is apt, and declares to me very
plainly thy losses, my avarice, and what thou desirest of me. And in good sooth this access
of avarice, of which thou art the occasion, is the first that I have experienced. But
I will expel the intruder with the bâton which thou thyself hast furnished." So he
paid Bergamino's reckoning, habited him nobly in one of his own robes, gave him money and
a palfrey, and left it for the time at his discretion, whether to go or to stay.
End of Day One, The Seventh Story
Day One, The Eighth Story Guglielmo Borsiere by a neat retort sharply
censures avarice in Messer Ermino de' Grimaldi.
Next Filostrato was seated Lauretta, who, when the praises bestowed on Bergamino's address
had ceased, knowing that it was now her turn to speak, waited not for the word of command,
but with a charming graciousness thus began:
The last novel, dear gossips, prompts me to relate how a worthy man, likewise a jester,
reprehended not without success the greed of a very wealthy merchant; and though the
burden of my story is not unlike the last, yet, perchance, it may not on that account
be the less appreciated by you, because it has a happy termination.
Know then that in Genoa there dwelt long ago a gentleman, who was known as Messer Ermino
de' Grimaldi, and whose wealth, both in lands and money, was generally supposed to be far
in excess of that of any other burgher then in Italy; and as in wealth he was without
a rival in Italy, so in meanness and avarice there was not any in the entire world, however
richly endowed with those qualities, whom he did not immeasurably surpass, insomuch
that, not only did he keep a tight grip upon his purse when honour was to be done to another,
but in his personal expenditure, even upon things meet and proper, contrary to the general
custom of the Genoese, whose wont is to array themselves nobly, he was extremely penurious,
as also in his outlay upon his table. Wherefore, not without just cause, folk had dropped his
surname de' Grimaldi, and called him instead Messer Ermino Avarizia. While thus by thrift
his wealth waxed greater and greater, it so chanced that there came to Genoa a jester
of good parts, a man debonair and ready of speech, his name Guglielmo Borsiere, whose
like is not to be found to-day, when jesters (to the great reproach be it spoken of those
that claim the name and reputation of gentlemen) are rather to be called ***, being without
courtly breeding, and formed after the coarse pattern of the basest of churls. And whereas
in the days of which I speak they made it their business, they spared no pains, to compose
quarrels, to allay heart-burnings, between gentlemen, or arrange marriages, or leagues
of amity, ministering meanwhile relief to jaded minds and solace to courts by the sprightly
sallies of their wit, and with keen sarcasm, like fathers, censuring churlish manners,
being also satisfied with very trifling guerdons; nowadays all their care is to spend their
time in scandal-mongering, in sowing discord, in saying, and (what is worse) in doing in
the presence of company things churlish and flagitious, in bringing accusations, true
or false, of wicked, shameful or flagitious conduct against one another; and in drawing
gentlemen into base and nefarious practices by sinister and insidious arts. And by these
wretched and depraved lords he is held most dear and best rewarded whose words and deeds
are the most atrocious, to the great reproach and scandal of the world of to-day; whereby
it is abundantly manifest that virtue has departed from the earth, leaving a degenerate
generation to wallow in the lowest depths of vice.
But reverting to the point at which I started, wherefrom under stress of just indignation
I have deviated somewhat further than I intended, I say that the said Guglielmo was had in honour,
and was well received by all the gentlemen of Genoa; and tarrying some days in the city,
heard much of the meanness and avarice of Messer Ermino, and was curious to see him.
Now Messer Ermino had heard that this Guglielmo Borsiere was a man of good parts, and, notwithstanding
his avarice, having in him some sparks of good breeding, received him with words of
hearty greeting and a gladsome mien, and conversed freely with him and of divers matters, and
so conversing, took him with other Genoese that were of his company to a new and very
beautiful house which he had built, and after shewing him over the whole of it, said to
him: "Now, Messer Guglielmo, you have seen and heard many things; could you suggest to
me something, the like of which has not hitherto been seen, which I might have painted here
in the saloon of this house?" To which ill-judged question Guglielmo replied: "Sir, it would
not, I think, be in my power to suggest anything the like of which has never been seen, unless
it were a sneeze or something similar; but if it so please you, I have something to suggest,
which, I think, you have never seen." "Prithee, what may that be?" said Messer Ermino, not
expecting to get the answer which he got. For Guglielmo replied forthwith: "Paint Courtesy
here;" which Messer Ermino had no sooner heard, than he was so stricken with shame that his
disposition underwent a complete change, and he said: "Messer Guglielmo, I will see to
it that Courtesy is here painted in such wise that neither you nor any one else shall ever
again have reason to tell me that I have not seen or known that virtue." And henceforward
(so enduring was the change wrought by Guglielmo's words) there was not in Genoa, while he lived,
any gentleman so liberal and so gracious and so lavish of honour both to strangers and
to his fellow-citizens as Messer Ermino de' Grimaldi
End of Day One, The Eighth Story
Day One, The Ninth Story
The censure of a Gascon lady converts the King of Cyprus from a churlish to an honourable
temper.
Except Elisa none now remained to answer the call of the queen, and she without waiting
for it, with gladsome alacrity thus began:
Bethink you, damsels, how often it has happened that men who have been obdurate to censures
and chastisements have been reclaimed by some unpremeditated casual word. This is plainly
manifest by the story told by Lauretta; and by mine, which will be of the briefest, I
mean further to illustrate it; seeing that, good stories, being always pleasurable, are
worth listening to with attention, no matter by whom they may be told.
'Twas, then, in the time of the first king of Cyprus, after the conquest made of the
Holy Land by Godfrey de Bouillon, that a lady of Gascony made a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulchre,
and on her way home, having landed at Cyprus, met with brutal outrage at the hands of certain
ruffians. Broken-hearted and disconsolate she determined to make her complaint to the
king; but she was told that it would be all in vain, because so spiritless and fainèant
was he that he not only neglected to avenge affronts put upon others, but endured with
a reprehensible tameness those which were offered to himself, insomuch that whoso had
any ill-humour to vent, took occasion to vex or mortify him. The lady, hearing this report,
despaired of redress, and by way of alleviation of her grief determined to make the king sensible
of his baseness. So in tears she presented herself before him and said: "Sire, it is
not to seek redress of the wrong done me that I come here before you: but only that, so
please you, I may learn of you how it is that you suffer patiently the wrongs which, as
I understand, are done you; that thus schooled by you in patience I may endure my own, which,
God knows, I would gladly, were it possible, transfer to you, seeing that you are so well
fitted to bear them." These words aroused the hitherto sluggish and apathetic king as
it were from sleep. He redressed the lady's wrong, and having thus made a beginning, thenceforth
meted out the most rigorous justice to all that in any wise offended against the majesty
of his crown.
End of Day One, The Ninth Story
Day One, The Tenth Story
Master Alberto da Bologna honourably puts to shame a lady who sought occasion to put
him to shame in that he was in love with her.
After Elisa had done, it only remained for the queen to conclude the day's story-telling,
and thus with manner debonair did she begin:
As stars in the serene expanse of heaven, as in spring-time flowers in the green pastures,
so, honourable damsels, in the hour of rare and excellent converse is wit with its bright
sallies. Which, being brief, are much more proper for ladies than for men, seeing that
prolixity of speech, when brevity is possible, is much less allowable to them; albeit (shame
be to us all and all our generation) few ladies or none are left to-day who understand aught
that is wittily said, or understanding are able to answer it. For the place of those
graces of the spirit which distinguished the ladies of the past has now been usurped by
adornments of the person; and she whose dress is most richly and variously and curiously
dight, accounts herself more worthy to be had in honour, forgetting, that, were one
but so to array him, an *** would carry a far greater load of finery than any of them,
and for all that be not a whit the more deserving of honour. I blush to say this, for in censuring
others I condemn myself. Tricked out, bedecked, bedizened thus, we are either silent and impassive
as statues, or, if we answer aught that is said to us, much better were it we had held
our peace. And we make believe, forsooth, that our failure to acquit ourselves in converse
with our equals of either sex does but proceed from guilelessness; dignifying stupidity by
the name of modesty, as if no lady could be modest and converse with other folk than her
maid or laundress or bake-house woman; which if Nature had intended, as we feign she did,
she would have set other limits to our garrulousness. True it is that in this, as in other matters,
time and place and person are to be regarded; because it sometimes happens that a lady or
gentleman thinking by some sally of wit to put another to shame, has rather been put
to shame by that other, having failed duly to estimate their relative powers. Wherefore,
that you may be on your guard against such error, and, further, that in you be not exemplified
the common proverb, to wit, that women do ever and on all occasions choose the worst,
I trust that this last of to-day's stories, which falls to me to tell, may serve you as
a lesson; that, as you are distinguished from others by nobility of nature, so you may also
shew yourselves separate from them by excellence of manners.
There lived not many years ago, perhaps yet lives, in Bologna, a very great physician,
so great that the fame of his skill was noised abroad throughout almost the entire world.
Now Master Alberto (such was his name) was of so noble a temper that, being now nigh
upon seventy years of age, and all but devoid of natural heat of body, he was yet receptive
of the flames of love; and having at an assembly seen a very beautiful widow lady, Madonna
Malgherida de' Ghisolieri, as some say, and being charmed with her beyond measure, was,
notwithstanding his age, no less ardently enamoured than a young man, insomuch that
he was not well able to sleep at night, unless during the day he had seen the fair lady's
lovely and delicate features. Wherefore he began to frequent the vicinity of her house,
passing to and fro in front of it, now on foot now on horseback, as occasion best served.
Which she and many other ladies perceiving, made merry together more than once, to see
a man of his years and discretion in love, as if they deemed that this most delightful
passion of love were only fit for empty-headed youths, and could not in men be either harboured
or engendered. Master Alberto thus continuing to haunt the front of the house, it so happened
that one feast-day the lady with other ladies was seated before her door, and Master Alberto's
approach being thus observed by them for some time before he arrived, they complotted to
receive him and shew him honour, and then to rally him on his love; and so they did,
rising with one accord to receive him, bidding him welcome, and ushering him into a cool
courtyard, where they regaled him with the finest wines and comfits; which done, in a
tone of refined and sprightly banter they asked him how it came about that he was enamoured
of this fair lady, seeing that she was beloved of many a fine gentleman of youth and spirit.
Master Alberto, being thus courteously assailed, put a blithe face on it, and answered: "Madam,
my love for you need surprise none that is conversant with such matters, and least of
all you that are worthy of it. And though old men, of course, have lost the strength
which love demands for its full fruition, yet are they not therefore without the good
intent and just appreciation of what beseems the accepted lover, but indeed understand
it far better than young men, by reason that they have more experience. My hope in thus
old aspiring to love you, who are loved by so many young men, is founded on what I have
frequently observed of ladies' ways at lunch, when they trifle with the lupin and the leek.
In the leek no part is good, but the head is at any rate not so bad as the rest, and
indeed not unpalatable; you, however, for the most part, following a depraved taste,
hold it in your hand and munch the leaves, which are not only of no account but actually
distasteful. How am I to know, madam, that in your selection of lovers, you are not equally
eccentric? In which case I should be the man of your choice, and the rest would be cast
aside." Whereto the gentle lady, somewhat shame-stricken, as were also her fair friends,
thus made answer: "Master Alberto, our presumption has received from you a most just and no less
courteous reproof; but your love is dear to me, as should ever be that of a wise and worthy
man. And therefore, saving my honour, I am yours, entirely and devotedly at your pleasure
and command." This speech brought Master Alberto to his feet, and the others also rising, he
thanked the lady for her courtesy, bade her a gay and smiling adieu, and so left the house.
Thus the lady, not considering on whom she exercised her wit, thinking to conquer was
conquered herself: against which mishap you, if you are discreet, will ever be most strictly
on your guard.
End of Day One, The Tenth Story
Day One, The Conclusion of The Decameron
As the young ladies and the three young men finished their story-telling the sun was westering
and the heat of the day in great measure abated. Which their queen observing, debonairly thus
she spoke: "Now, dear gossips, my day of sovereignty draws to a close, and nought remains for me
to do but to give you a new queen, by whom on the morrow our common life may be ordered
as she may deem best in a course of seemly pleasure; and though there seems to be still
some interval between day and night, yet, as whoso does not in some degree anticipate
the course of time, cannot well provide for the future; and in order that what the new
queen shall decide to be meet for the morrow may be made ready beforehand, I decree that
from this time forth the days begin at this hour. And so in reverent submission to Him,
in whom is the life of all beings, for our comfort and solace we commit the governance
of our realm for the morrow into the hands of Queen Filomena, most discreet of damsels."
So saying she arose, took the laurel wreath from her brow, and with a gesture of reverence
set it on the brow of Filomena, whom she then, and after her all the other ladies and the
young men, saluted as queen, doing her due and graceful homage.
Queen Filomena modestly blushed a little to find herself thus invested with the sovereignty;
but, being put on her mettle by Pampinea's recent admonitions, she was minded not to
seem awkward, and soon recovered her composure. She then began by confirming all the appointments
made by Pampinea, and making all needful arrangements for the following morning and evening, which
they were to pass where they then were. Whereupon she thus spoke: "Dearest gossips, though,
thanks rather to Pampinea's courtesy than to merit of mine, I am made queen of you all;
yet I am not on that account minded to have respect merely to my own judgment in the governance
of our life, but to unite your wisdom with mine; and that you may understand what I think
of doing, and by consequence may be able to amplify or curtail it at your pleasure, I
will in few words make known to you my purpose. The course observed by Pampinea to-day, if
I have judged aright, seems to be alike commendable and delectable; wherefore, until by lapse
of time, or for some other cause, it grow tedious, I purpose not to alter it. So when
we have arranged for what we have already taken in hand, we will go hence and enjoy
a short walk; at sundown we will sup in the cool; and we will then sing a few songs and
otherwise divert ourselves, until it is time to go to sleep. To-morrow we will rise in
the cool of the morning, and after enjoying another walk, each at his or her sweet will,
we will return, as to-day, and in due time break our fast, dance, sleep, and having risen,
will here resume our story-telling, wherein, methinks, pleasure and profit unite in superabundant
measure. True it is that Pampinea, by reason of her late election to the sovereignty, neglected
one matter, which I mean to introduce, to wit, the circumscription of the topic of our
story-telling, and its preassignment, that each may be able to premeditate some apt story
bearing upon the theme; and seeing that from the beginning of the world Fortune has made
men the sport of divers accidents, and so it will continue until the end, the theme,
so please you, shall in each case be the same; to wit, the fortune of such as after divers
adventures have at last attained a goal of unexpected felicity."
The ladies and the young men alike commended the rule thus laid down, and agreed to follow
it. Dioneo, however, when the rest had done speaking, said: "Madam, as all the rest have
said, so say I, briefly, that the rule prescribed by you is commendable and delectable; but
of your especial grace I crave a favour, which, I trust, may be granted and continued to me,
so long as our company shall endure; which favour is this: that I be not bound by the
assigned theme if I am not so minded, but that I have leave to choose such topic as
best shall please me. And lest any suppose that I crave this grace as one that has not
stories ready to hand, I am henceforth content that mine be always the last." The queen,
knowing him to be a merry and facetious fellow, and feeling sure that he only craved this
favour in order that, if the company were jaded, he might have an opportunity to recreate
them by some amusing story, gladly, with the consent of the rest, granted his petition.
She then rose, and attended by the rest sauntered towards a stream, which, issuing clear as
crystal from a neighbouring hill, precipitated itself into a valley shaded by trees close
set amid living rock and fresh green herbage. Bare of foot and arm they entered the stream,
and roving hither and thither amused themselves in divers ways till in due time they returned
to the palace, and gaily supped. Supper ended, the queen sent for instruments of music, and
bade Lauretta lead a dance, while Emilia was to sing a song accompanied by Dioneo on the
lute.
Accordingly Lauretta led a dance, while Emilia with passion sang the following song:
So fain I am of my own loveliness, I hope, nor think not e'er
The weight to feel of other amorousness. When in the mirror I my face behold,
That see I there which doth my mind content, Nor any present hap or memory old
May me deprive of such sweet ravishment. Where else, then, should I find such blandishment
Of sight and sense that e'er My heart should know another amorousness?
Nor need I fear lest the fair thing retreat, When fain I am my solace to renew;
Rather, I know, 'twill me advance to meet, To pleasure me, and shew so sweet a view
That speech or thought of none its semblance true
Paint or conceive may e'er, Unless he burn with ev'n such amorousness.
Thereon as more intent I gaze, the fire Waxeth within me hourly more and more,
Myself I yield thereto, myself entire, And foretaste have of what it hath in store,
And hope of greater joyance than before, Nay, such as ne'er
None knew; for ne'er was felt such amorousness.
This ballade, to which all heartily responded, albeit its words furnished much matter of
thought to some, was followed by some other dances, and part of the brief night being
thus spent, the queen proclaimed the first day ended, and bade light the torches, that
all might go to rest until the following morning; and so, seeking their several chambers, to
rest they went.
End of Day One, Conclusion