Novel IV
Novel IV
[Voice: neifile]
[001] Chichibio, cook to Currado Gianfigliazzi, owes his safety to a ready answer, whereby he converts Currado's wrath into laughter, and evades the evil fate with which Currado had threatened him.
[002] Lauretta being now silent, all lauded Nonna to the skies; after which Neifile received the queen's command to follow suit, and thus began:
[003] Albeit, loving ladies, ready wit not seldom ministers words apt and excellent and congruous with the circumstances of the speakers, 'tis also true that Fortune at times comes to the aid of the timid, and unexpectedly sets words upon the tongue, which in a quiet hour the speaker could never have found for himself: the which 'tis my purpose to shew you by my story.
[004]
Currado Gianfigliazzi, as the eyes and ears of each of you
may
bear witness, has ever been a noble citizen of our city, open-handed
and magnificent, and one that lived as a gentleman should with
hounds and
hawks, in which, to say nothing at present of more
important matters, he
found unfailing delight.
[005]
Now, having one
day hard by Peretola despatched a
crane with one of his falcons,
finding it young and plump, he sent it to
his excellent cook, a
Venetian, Chichibio by name, bidding him roast it
for supper and
make a dainty dish of it.
[006]
Chichibio, who looked, as he was,
a
very green-head, had dressed the crane, and set it to the fire and was
cooking it carefully,
[007]
when, the bird being all but roasted, and the
fumes
of the cooking very strong, it so chanced that a girl, Brunetta
by name,
that lived in the same street, and of whom Chichibio was
greatly
enamoured, came into the kitchen, and perceiving the smell
and
seeing the bird, began coaxing Chichibio to give her a thigh.
[008]
By way of
answer Chichibio fell a singing:
You get it not from
me, Madam
Brunetta, you get it not from me.
[009]
Whereat Madam
Brunetta was offended,
and said to him:
By God, if thou givest
it me not, thou shalt never
have aught from me to pleasure thee.
In short there was not a little
altercation; and in the end Chichibio,
fain not to vex his mistress, cut
off one of the crane's thighs, and
gave it to her.
[010]
So the bird was set
before Currado and some strangers
that he had at table with him, and
Currado, observing that it had but
one thigh, was surprised, and sent for
Chichibio, and demanded of
him what was become of the missing thigh.
Whereto the mendacious
Venetian answered readily:
The crane, Sir, has
but one thigh and
one leg.
[011]
What the devil?
rejoined Currado in
a rage:
so the
crane has but one thigh and one leg? thinkst thou I
never saw crane
before this?
[012]
But Chichibio continued:
'Tis even so
as I say,
Sir; and, so please you, I will shew you that so it is in the
living
bird.
[013]
Currado had too much respect for his guests to pursue
the
topic; he only said:
Since thou promisest to shew me in the
living
bird what I have never seen or heard tell of, I bid thee do so
to-morrow,
and I shall be satisfied, but if thou fail, I swear to thee
by the body of
Christ that I will serve thee so that thou shalt ruefully
remember my name
for the rest of thy days.
[014]
No more was said of the matter that
evening, but on the morrow,
at daybreak, Currado, who had by no means
slept off his wrath, got
up still swelling therewith, and ordered his
horses, mounted Chichibio
on a hackney, and saying to him:
We shall
soon see which of us
lied yesternight, thou or I,
set off with him for
a place where there
was much water, beside which there were always cranes
to be seen
about dawn.
[015]
Chichibio, observing that Currado's ire was
unabated,
and knowing not how to bolster up his lie, rode by Currado's
side
in a state of the utmost trepidation, and would gladly, had he been
able, have taken to flight; but, as hemight not, he glanced, now
ahead,
now aback, now aside, and saw everywhere nought but cranes
standing on two
feet.
[016]
However, as they approached the river, the
very first thing they saw
upon the bank was a round dozen of cranes
standing each and all on one
foot, as is their wont, when asleep.
Which Chichibio presently pointed out
to Currado, saying:
Now
may you see well enough, Sir, that 'tis true as
I said yesternight, that
the crane has but one thigh and one
leg; mark but how they stand
over there.
[017]
Whereupon Currado:
Wait,
quoth he,
and I
will shew thee that they have each thighs
and legs twain.
So,
having drawn a little nigher to them, he
ejaculated,
Ohio!
Which
caused the cranes to bring each the other
foot to the ground, and,
after hopping a step or two, to take to flight.
Currado then turned
to Chichibio, saying:
How now, rogue? art satisfied
that the
bird has thighs and legs twain?
[018]
Whereto Chichibio, all but
beside
himself with fear, made answer:
Ay, Sir; but you cried not,
oho! to our crane of yestereve: had you done so, it would have
popped its
other thigh and foot forth, as these have done.
[019]
Which
answer Currado
so much relished, that, all his wrath changed to jollity
and laughter:
Chichibio,
quoth he,
thou art right, indeed I
ought to have so
done.
[020] Thus did Chichibio by his ready and jocund retort arrest impending evil, and make his peace with his master.