Novel IV
Novel IV
[Voice: panfilo]
[001] Dom Felice instructs Fra Puccio how to attain blessedness by doing a penance. Fra Puccio does the penance, and meanwhile Dom Felice has a good time with Fra Puccio's wife.
[002]
When
Filomena, having concluded her story, was silent, and
Dioneo had added a few honeyed phrases in praise of the lady's wit and
Filomena's closing prayer, the queen glanced with a smile to Pamfilo,
and said:
Now, Pamfilo, give us some pleasant trifle to speed our
delight.
That gladly will I,
returned forthwith Pamfilo, and
then:
[003]
Madam,
not a few there are that, while they
use their best endeavours to get themselves places in Paradise, do, by
inadvertence, send others thither: as did, not long ago, betide a fair
neighbour of ours, as you shall hear.
[004]
Hard by San Pancrazio there used to live, as I have heard tell,
a worthy man and wealthy, Puccio di Rinieri by name, who in later
life, under an overpowering sense of religion, became a tertiary of
the order of St. Francis, and was thus known as Fra Puccio. In
which spiritual life he was the better able to persevere that his
household consisted but of a wife and a maid, and having no need to
occupy himself with any craft, he spent no small part of his time at
church;
[005]
where, being a simple soul and slow of wit, he said his
paternosters, heard sermons, assisted at the mass, never missed lauds
(
i. e.
when chanted by the seculars), fasted and mortified his flesh;
nay--so
'twas whispered--he was of the Flagellants.
[006]
His wife, Monna
Isabetta by name, a woman of from twenty-eight to thirty summers,
still young for her age, lusty, comely and plump as a casolan
Reasons
many have I to know, Fra Puccio, that all thy desire is to become a
saint; but it seems to me that thou farest by a circuitous route,
whereas there is one very direct, which the Pope and the greater
prelates that are about him know and use, but will have it remain a
secret, because otherwise the clergy, who for the most part live by
alms, and could not then expect alms or aught else from the laity,
would be speedily ruined.
[013]
However, as thou art my friend, and hast
shewn me much honour, I would teach thee that way, if I were assured
that thou wouldst follow it without letting another soul in the world
hear of it.
[014]
Fra Puccio was now all agog to hear more of the matter,
and began most earnestly entreating Dom Felice to teach him the
way, swearing that without Dom Felice's leave none should ever
hear of it from him, and averring that, if he found it practicable, he
would certainly follow it.
[015]
I am satisfied with thy promises,
said
the monk,
and I will shew thee the way. Know then that the
holy doctors hold that whoso would achieve blessedness must do the
penance of which I shall tell thee; but see thou take me judiciously.
I do not say that after the penance thou wilt not be a sinner, as thou
art; but the effect will be that the sins which thou hast committed
up to the very hour of the penance will all be purged away and
thereby remitted to thee, and the sins which thou shalt commit
thereafter will not be written against thee to thy damnation, but will
be quit by holy water, like venial sins.
[016]
First of all then the penitent
must with great exactitude confess his sins when he comes to begin
the penance. Then follows a period of fasting and very strict
abstinence which must last for forty days, during which time he is to
touch no woman whomsoever, not even his wife.
[017]
Moreover, thou
must have in thy house some place whence thou mayst see the sky
by night, whither thou must resort at compline; and there thou must
have a beam, very broad, and placed in such a way, that, standing,
thou canst rest thy nether part upon it, and so, not raising thy feet
from the ground, thou must extend thy arms, so as to make a sort of
crucifix, and if thou wouldst have pegs to rest them on thou mayst;
and on this manner, thy gaze fixed on the sky, and never moving a
jot, thou must stand until matins.
[018]
And wert thou lettered, it were
proper for thee to say meanwhile certain prayers that I would give
thee; but as thou art not so, thou must say three hundred paternosters
and as many avemarias in honour of the Trinity; and thus
contemplating the sky, be ever mindful that God was the creator of
the heaven and the earth, and being set even as Christ was upon the
cross, meditate on His passion.
[019]
Then, when the matin-bell sounds,
thou mayst, if thou please, go to bed--but see that thou undress not--and
sleep; but in the morning thou must go to church, and hear
at least three masses, and say fifty paternosters and as many avemarias;
after which thou mayst with a pure heart do aught that thou hast
to do, and breakfast; but at vespers thou must be again at church,
and say there certain prayers, which I shall give thee in writing and
which are indispensable, and after compline thou must repeat thy
former exercise.
[020]
Do this, and I, who have done it before thee, have
good hope that even before thou shalt have reached the end of the
penance, thou wilt, if thou shalt do it in a devout spirit, have already
a marvellous foretaste of the eternal blessedness.
[021]
This,
said Fra
Puccio,
is neither a very severe nor a very long penance, and can
be very easily managed: wherefore in God's name I will begin on
Sunday.
[022]
And so he took his leave of Dom Felice, and went home,
and, by Dom Felice's permission, informed his wife of every particular
of his intended penance.
The lady understood very well what the monk meant by enjoining
him not to stir from his post until matins; and deeming it an
excellent device, she said that she was well content that he should do
this or aught else that he thought good for his soul; and to the end
that his penance might be blest of God, she would herself fast with
him, though she would go no further.
[023]
So they did as they had
agreed: when Sunday came Fra Puccio began his penance, and master
monk, by understanding with the lady, came most evenings, at the
hour when he was secure from discovery, to sup with her, always
bringing
with him abundance both of meat and of drink, and after slept
with her till the matin hour, when he got up and left her, and Fra
Puccio went to bed.
[024]
The place which Fra Puccio had chosen for
his penance was close to the room in which the lady slept, and only
separated from it by the thinnest of partitions; so that, the monk and
the lady disporting themselves with one another without stint or
restraint, Fra Puccio thought he felt the floor of the house shake a
little, and pausing at his hundredth paternoster, but without leaving
his post, called out to the lady to know what she was about.
[025]
The
lady, who dearly loved a jest, and was just then riding the horse of
St. Benedict or St. John Gualbert, answered:
I'faith, husband, I am
as restless as may be.
[026]
Restless,
said Fra Puccio,
how so? What
means this restlessness?
[027]
Whereto with a hearty laugh, for which
she doubtless had good occasion, the bonny lady replied:
What
means it? How should you ask such a question? Why, I have
heard you say a thousand times: 'Who fasting goes to bed, uneasy
lies his head.'
[028]
Fra Puccio, supposing that her wakefulness and
restlessness abed was due to want of food, said in good faith:
Wife,
I told thee I would have thee not fast; but as thou hast chosen to
fast, think not of it, but think how thou mayst compose thyself to
sleep; thou tossest about the bed in such sort that the shaking is felt
here.
[029]
That need cause thee no alarm,
rejoined the lady.
I
know what I am about; I will manage as well as I can, and do thou
likewise.
[030]
So Fra Puccio said no more to her, but resumed his
paternosters; and thenceforth every night, while Fra Puccio's penance
lasted, the lady and master monk, having had a bed made up for them
in another part of the house, did there wanton it most gamesomely,
the monk departing and the lady going back to her bed at one and
the same time, being shortly before Fra Puccio's return from his
nightly vigil.
[031]
The friar thus persisting in his penance while the lady
took her fill of pleasure with the monk, she would from time to time
say jestingly to him:
Thou layest a penance upon Fra Puccio
whereby we are rewarded with Paradise.
[032]
So well indeed did she
relish the dainties with which the monk regaled her, the more so by
contrast with the abstemious life to which her husband had long
accustomed her, that, when Fra Puccio's penance was done, she found
means to enjoy them elsewhere, and ordered her indulgence with
such discretion as to ensure its long continuance.
[033]
Whereby (that my
story may end as it began) it came to pass that Fra Puccio, hoping by
his penance to win a place for himself in Paradise, did in fact translate
thither the monk who had shewn him the way, and the wife who
lived with him in great dearth of that of which the monk in his
charity gave her superabundant largess.