Novel IX
Novel IX
[Voice: lauretta]
[001] Bruno and Buffalmacco prevail upon Master Simone, a physician, to betake him by night to a certain place, there to be enrolled in a company that go the course. Buffalmacco throws him into a foul ditch, and there they leave him.
[002] When the ladies had made merry a while over the partnership in wives established by the two Sienese, the queen, who now, unless she were minded to infringe Dioneo's privilege, alone remained to tell, began on this wise:
[003] Fairly earned indeed, loving ladies, was the flout that Spinelloccio got from Zeppa. Wherefore my judgment jumps with that which Pampinea expressed a while ago, to wit, that he is not severely to be censured who bestows a flout on one that provokes it or deserves it; and as Spinelloccio deserved it, so 'tis my purpose to tell you of one that provoked it, for I deem that those from whom he received it, were rather to be commended than condemned. The man that got it was a physician, who, albeit he was but a blockhead, returned from Bologna to Florence in mantle and hood of vair.
[004]
'Tis matter of daily experience that our citizens come back to us
from Bologna, this man a judge, that a physician, and the other
a notary, flaunting it in ample flowing robes, and adorned with the
scarlet and the vair and other array most goodly to see; and how
far their doings correspond with this fair seeming, is also matter of
daily experience.
[005]
Among whom 'tis not long since Master Simone
da Villa, one whose patrimony was more ample than his knowledge,
came back wearing the scarlet and a broad stripe
Batolo.
[010]
Bruno, who had not needed to be much with him in order to
discover that this physician was but a dolt, had never such a jolly
time in palming off his strange stories upon him, while the physician,
on his part, was marvellously delighted with Bruno;
[011]
to whom, having
bidden him to breakfast, and thinking that for that reason he might
talk familiarly with him, he expressed the amazement with which
he regarded both him and Buffalmacco, for that, being but poor men,
they lived so lightheartedly, and asked him to tell him how they
managed.
[012]
At which fresh proof of the doctor's simplicity and
fatuity Bruno was inclined to laugh; but, bethinking him that
'twere best to answer him according to his folly, he said:
Master,
there are not many persons to whom I would disclose our manner
of life, but, as you are my friend, and I know you will not let it go
further, I do not mind telling you.
[013]
The fact is that my comrade
and I live not only as lightheartedly and jovially as you see, but
much more so; and yet neither our art, nor any property that we
possess, yields us enough to keep us in water: not that I would
have you suppose that we go a thieving: no, 'tis that we go the
course, and thereby without the least harm done to a soul we get all
that we need, nay, all that we desire; and thus it is that we live so
lightheartedly as you see.
[014]
Which explanation the doctor believing
none the less readily that he knew not what it meant, was lost in
wonder, and forthwith burned with a most vehement desire to know
what going the course might be, and was instant with Bruno to
expound it, assuring him that he would never tell a soul.
[015]
Alas!
Master,
said Bruno,
what is this you ask of me? 'Tis a mighty
great secret you would have me impart to you: 'twould be enough
to undo me, to send me packing out of the world, nay, into the very
jaws of Lucifer of San Gallo,
[016]
The Master gave the required assurance.
[017]
Whereupon:
You
are then to know,
quoth Bruno,
sweet my Master, that 'tis not
long since there was in this city a great master in necromancy, hight
Michael Scott, for that he was of Scotland, and great indeed was the
honour in which he was held by not a few gentlemen, most of whom
are now dead; and when the time came that he must needs depart
from Florence, he at their instant entreaty left behind him two
pupils, adepts both, whom he bade hold themselves ever ready to
pleasure those gentlemen who had done him honour.
[018]
And very
handsomely they did serve the said gentlemen in certain of their love
affairs and other little matters; and finding the city and the manners
of the citizens agreeable to them, they made up their minds to stay
here always, and grew friendly and very intimate with some of the
citizens, making no distinction between gentle and simple, rich or
poor, so only they were such as were conformable to their ways.
[019]
And to gratify these their friends they formed a company of perhaps
twenty-five men, to meet together at least twice a month in a place
appointed by them; where, when they are met, each utters his
desire, and forthwith that same night they accomplish it. Now
Buffalmacco and I, being extraordinarily great and close friends with
these two adepts, were by them enrolled in this company, and are
still members of it.
[020]
And I assure you that, as often as we are
assembled together, the adornments of the saloon in which we eat
are a marvel to see, ay, and the tables laid as for kings, and the
multitudes of stately and handsome servants, as well women as men,
at the beck and call of every member of the company, and the basins,
and the ewers, the flasks and the cups, and all else that is there for
our service in eating and drinking, of nought but gold and silver, and
therewithal the abundance and variety of the viands, suited to the
taste of each, that are set before us, each in due course, these too be
marvels.
[021]
'Twere vain for me to seek to describe to you the sweet
concord that is there of innumerable instruments of music, and the
tuneful songs that salute our ears; nor might I hope to tell you how
much wax is burned at these banquets, or compute the quantity of the
comfits that are eaten, or the value of the wines that are drunk.
[022]
Nor, my pumpkin o' wit, would I have you suppose that, when we
are there, we wear our common clothes, such as you now see me
wear; nay, there is none there so humble but he shews as an
emperor, so sumptuous are our garments, so splendid our trappings.
[023]
But among all the delights of the place none may compare with the
fair ladies, who, so one do but wish, are brought thither from every
part of the world. Why, you might see there My Lady of the
Barbanichs, the Queen of the Basques, the Consort of the Soldan,
the Empress of Osbech, the Ciancianfera of Nornieca, the Semistante
of Berlinzone, and the Scalpedra of Narsia.
[024]
But why seek to enumerate
them all? They include all the queens in the world, ay, even to
the Schinchimurra of Prester John, who has the horns sprouting out
of her nether end: so there's for you. Now when these ladies have
done with the wine and the comfits, they tread a measure or two,
each with the man at whose behest she is come, and then all go with
their gallants to their chambers.
[025]
And know that each of these
chambers shews as a very Paradise, so fair is it, ay, and no less
fragrant than the cases of aromatics in your shop when you are
pounding the cumin: and therein are beds that you would find more
goodly than that of the Doge of Venice, and 'tis in them we take
our rest;
[026]
and how busily they ply the treadle, and how lustily they
tug at the frame to make the stuff close and compact, I leave you to
imagine.
[027]
However, among the luckiest of all I reckon Buffalmacco
and myself; for that Buffalmacco for the most part fetches him the
Queen of France, and I do the like with the Queen of England, who
are just the finest women in the world, and we have known how to
carry it with them so that we are the very eyes of their heads.
[028]
So
I leave it to your own judgment to determine whether we have not
good cause to live and bear ourselves with a lighter heart than others,
seeing that we are beloved of two such great queens, to say nothing
of the thousand or two thousand florins that we have of them whenever
we are so minded.
[029]
Now this in the vulgar we call going the
course, because, as the corsairs prey upon all the world, so do we;
albeit with this difference, that, whereas they never restore their spoil,
we do so as soon as we have done with it.
[030]
So now, my worthy
Master, you understand what we mean by going the course; but
how close it behoves you to keep such a secret, you may see for
yourself; so I spare you any further exhortations.
[031]
The Master, whose skill did not reach, perhaps, beyond the treatment
of children for the scurf, took all that Bruno said for gospel,
and burned with so vehement a desire to be admitted into this company,
that he could not have longed for the
summum bonum
itself
with more ardour.
[032]
So, after telling Bruno that indeed 'twas no
wonder they bore them lightheartedly, he could scarce refrain from
asking him there and then to have him enrolled, albeit he deemed it
more prudent to defer his suit, until by lavishing honour upon him
he had gained a right to urge it with more confidence.
[033]
He therefore
made more and more of him, had him to breakfast and sup with
him, and treated him with extraordinary respect. In short, such and
so constant was their intercourse that it seemed as though the Master
wist not how to live without Bruno.
[034]
As it went so well with him,
Bruno, to mark his sense of the honour done him by the doctor,
painted in his saloon a picture symbolical of Lent, and an Agnus
Dei at the entrance of his chamber, and an alembic over his front
door, that those who would fain consult him might know him from
other physicians, besides a battle of rats and mice in his little gallery,
which the doctor thought an extremely fine piece.
[035]
And from time
to time, when he had not supped with the Master, he would say to
him:
Last night I was with the company, and being a little tired
of the Queen of England, I fetched me the Gumedra of the great
Can of Tarisi.
[036]
Gumedra,
quoth the Master;
what is she?
I know not the meaning of these words.
[037]
Thereat, Master,
replied Bruno,
I marvel not; for I have heard tell that neither
Porcograsso nor Vannacena say aught thereof.
[038]
Thou wouldst say
Ippocrasso and Avicenna,
returned the Master.
[039]
I'faith I know
not,
quoth Bruno.
I as ill know the meaning of your words as
you of mine. But Gumedra in the speech of the great Can signifies
the same as Empress in ours. Ah! a fine woman you would find
her, and plenty of her! I warrant she would make you forget your
drugs and prescriptions and plasters.
[040]
And so, Bruno from time to
time whetting the Master's appetite, and the Master at length thinking
that by his honourable entreatment of him he had fairly made a
conquest of Bruno, it befell that one evening, while he held the light
for Bruno, who was at work on the battle of rats and mice, he
determined to discover to him his desire;
[041]
and as they were alone,
thus he spoke:
God knows, Bruno, that there lives not the man,
for whom I would do as much as for thee: why, if thou wast to bid
me go all the way from here to Peretola,
and forthwith he fell a
singing.
[046]
Bruno had such a mind to laugh, that he could scarce contain
himself; but still he kept a grave countenance; and, when the
Master had ended his song, and said:
How likes it thee?
[047]
he answered:
Verily, no lyre of straw could vie with you, so
artargutically
[048]
artagoticamente,
a word of
Boccaccio's own minting.
I warrant
thee,
returned the
Master,
thou hadst never believed it, hadst thou not heard me.
[049]
Ay, indeed, sooth sayst thou,
quoth Bruno.
[050]
And I have other
songs to boot,
said the Master;
but enough of this at present. Thou
must know that I, such as thou seest me, am a gentleman's son, albeit
my father lived in the contado; and on my mother's side I come of
the Vallecchio family. And as thou mayst have observed I have
quite the finest library and wardrobe of all the physicians in Florence.
[051]
God's faith! I have a robe that cost, all told, close upon a hundred
pounds in bagattines
[052]
Whereupon Bruno, repeating to himself, as
he had done many a time before, that the doctor was a very numskull:
Master,
quoth he,
shew a little more light here, and
have patience until I have put the finishing touches to the tails of these
rats, and then I will answer you.
[053]
So he finished the tails,
and then, putting on an air as if he were not a little embarrassed by
the request:
Master mine,
quoth he,
I should have great
things to expect from you; that I know: but yet what you ask of
me, albeit to your great mind it seems but a little thing, is a weighty
matter indeed for me; nor know I a soul in the world, to whom,
though well able, I would grant such a request, save to you alone:
and this I say not for friendship's sake alone, albeit I love you as I
ought, but for that your discourse is so fraught with wisdom, that 'tis
enough to make a beguine start out of her boots, much more, then, to
incline me to change my purpose; and the more I have of your
company, the wiser I repute you.
[054]
Whereto I may add, that, if for
no other cause, I should still be well disposed towards you for the
love I see you bear to that fair piece of flesh of which you spoke but
now.
[055]
But this I must tell you: 'tis not in my power to do as you
would have me in this matter; but, though I cannot myself do the
needful in your behalf, if you will pledge your faith, whole and solid
as may be, to keep my secret, I will shew you how to go about it
for yourself, and I make no doubt that, having this fine library and
the other matters you spoke of a while ago, you will compass your
end.
[056]
Quoth then the Master:
Nay, but speak freely; I see
thou dost yet scarce know me, and how well I can keep a secret.
There were few things that Messer Guasparruolo da Saliceto did,
when he was Podestà of Forlinpopoli, that he did not confide to me,
so safe he knew they would be in my keeping: and wouldst thou
be satisfied that I say sooth? I assure you I was the first man whom
he told that he was about to marry Bergamina: so there's for thee.
[057]
Well and good,
said Bruno,
if such as he confided in you, well
indeed may I do the like. Know, then, that you will have to proceed
on this wise: Our company is governed by a captain and a
council of two, who are changed every six months: and on the
calends without fail Buffalmacco will be captain, and I councillor:
'tis so fixed: and the captain has not a little power to promote the
admission and enrolment of whomsoever he will: wherefore, methinks,
you would do well to make friends with Buffalmacco and
honourably entreat him:
[058]
he is one that, marking your great wisdom,
will take a mighty liking to you forthwith; and when you have just
a little dazzled him with your wisdom and these fine things of yours,
you may make your request to him; and he will not know how to
say no--I have already talked with him of you, and he is as well
disposed to you as may be--and having so done you will leave the
rest to me.
[059]
Whereupon:
Thy words are to me for an exceeding
great joy,
quoth the Master:
and if he be one that loves to
converse with sages, he has but to exchange a word or two with
me, and I will answer for it that he will be ever coming to see me;
for so fraught with wisdom am I, that I could furnish a whole city
therewith, and still remain a great sage.
[060] Having thus set matters in train, Bruno related the whole affair, point by point, to Buffalmacco, to whom it seemed a thousand years till he should be able to give Master Noodle that of which he was in quest. [061] The doctor, now all agog to go the course, lost no time, and found no difficulty, in making friends with Buffalmacco, and fell to entertaining him, and Bruno likewise, at breakfast and supper in most magnificent style; while they fooled him to the top of his bent, for, being gentlemen that appreciated excellent wines and fat capons, besides other good cheer in plenty, they were inclined to be very neighbourly, and needed no second bidding, but, always letting him understand that there was none other whose company they relished so much, kept ever with him.
[062]
However, in due time the Master asked of Buffalmacco that
which he had before asked of Bruno. Whereat Buffalmacco feigned
to be not a little agitated, and turning angrily to Bruno, made a
great pother about his ears, saying:
By the Most High God of
Pasignano I vow I can scarce forbear to give thee that over the head
that should make they nose fall about thy heels, traitor that thou art,
for 'tis thou alone that canst have discovered these secrets to the
Master.
[063]
Whereupon the Master interposed with no little vigour,
averring with oaths that 'twas from another source that he had gotten
his knowledge; and Buffalmacco at length allowed himself to be
pacified by the sage's words.
[064]
So turning to him:
Master,
quoth
he,
'tis evident indeed that you have been at Bologna, and have
come back hither with a mouth that blabs not, and that 'twas on no
pippin, as many a dolt does, but on the good long pumpkin that you
learned your A B C; and, if I mistake not, you were baptized on a
Sunday;
[066]
He
would have said more, but the doctor, turning to Bruno, broke in
with:
Ah! what it is to consort and converse with the wise!
Who but this worthy man would thus have read my mind through
and through? Less quick by far to rate me at my true worth wast
thou. But what said I when thou toldst me that Buffalmacco
delighted to converse with sages? Confess now; have I not kept
my word?
[067]
Verily,
quoth Bruno,
you have more than kept
it.
[068]
Then, addressing Buffalmacco:
Ah!
cried the Master,
what hadst thou said, hadst thou seen me at Bologna, where there
was none, great or small, doctor or scholar, but was devoted to me,
so well wist I how to entertain them with my words of wisdom.
[069]
Nay more; let me tell thee that there was never a word I spoke but
set every one a laughing, so great was the pleasure it gave them.
And at my departure they all deplored it most bitterly, and would
have had me remain, and by way of inducement went so far as to
propose that I should be sole lecturer to all the students in medicine
that were there; which offer I declined, for that I was minded to
return hither, having vast estates here, that have ever belonged to
my family; which, accordingly, I did.
[070]
Quoth then Bruno to
Buffalmacco:
How shews it, now, man? Thou didst not believe
me when I told thee what he was. By the Gospels there is never a
physician in this city that has the lore of ass's urine by heart as he
has: verily, thou wouldst not find his like between here and the
gates of Paris. Now see if thou canst help doing as he would have
thee.
[071]
'Tis even as Bruno says,
observed the doctor,
but I am
not understood here. You Florentines are somewhat slow of wit.
Would you could see me in my proper element, among a company
of doctors!
[072]
Whereupon:
Of a truth, Master,
quoth Buffalmacco,
your lore far exceeds any I should ever have imputed to
you; wherefore, addressing you as 'tis meet to address a man of your
wisdom, I give you disjointedly to understand that without fail I will
procure your enrolment in our company.
[073]
After this promise the honours lavished by the doctor upon the
two men grew and multiplied; in return for which they diverted
themselves by setting him a prancing upon every wildest chimera in
the world; and promised, among other matters, to give him by way
of mistress, the Countess of Civillari,
Mature
my gherkin,
quoth Buffalmacco,
she is indeed a very great lady,
and few houses are there in the world in which she has not some
jurisdiction; nay, the very Friars Minors, to say nought of other
folk, pay her tribute to the sound of the kettle-drum.
[075]
And I may
tell you that, when she goes abroad, she makes her presence very
sensibly felt, albeit for the most part she keeps herself close: however,
'tis no great while since she passed by your door one night on
her way to the Arno to bathe her feet and get a breath of air; but
most of her time she abides at Laterina.
[078]
The doctor, who had been born and bred at Bologna, and understood
not their words, found the lady quite to his mind; and shortly
afterwards the painters brought him tidings of his election into the
company.
[079]
Then came the day of the nocturnal gathering, and the
doctor had the two men to breakfast; and when they had breakfasted,
he asked them after what manner he was to join the company.
[080]
Whereupon:
Lo, now, Master,
quoth Buffalmacco,
you have
need of a stout heart; otherwise you may meet with some let, to
our most grievous hurt; and for what cause you have need of this
stout heart, you shall hear.
[081]
You must contrive to be to-night about
the hour of first sleep on one of the raised tombs that have been
lately placed outside of Santa Maria Novella; and mind that you
wear one of your best gowns, that your first appearance may impress
the company with a proper sense of your dignity, and also because,
as we are informed, for we were not present at the time, the
Countess, by reason that you are a gentleman, is minded to make you
a Knight of the Bath at her own charges.
[082]
So you will wait there,
until one, whom we shall send, come for you: who, that you may
know exactly what you have to expect, will be a beast black and
horned, of no great size; and he will go snorting and bounding
amain about the piazza in front of you, with intent to terrify you;
but, when he perceives that you are not afraid, he will draw nigh you
quietly, and when he is close by you, then get you down from the
tomb, fearing nothing; and, minding you neither of God nor of the
saints, mount him, and when you are well set on his back, then fold
your arms upon your breast, as in submission, and touch him no
more.
[083]
Then, going gently, he will bear you to us; but once mind
you of God, or the saints, or give way to fear, and I warn you, he
might give you a fall, or dash you against something that you would
find scarce pleasant; wherefore, if your heart misgives you, you were
best not to come, for you would assuredly do yourself a mischief, and
us no good at all.
[084]
Quoth then the doctor:
You know me not
as yet; 'tis perchance because I wear the gloves and the long robe
that you misdoubt me. Ah! did you but know what feats I have
done in times past at Bologna, when I used to go after the women
with my comrades, you would be lost in amazement.
[085]
God's faith!
on one of those nights there was one of them, a poor sickly creature
she was too, and stood not a cubit in height, who would not come
with us; so first I treated her to many a good cuff, and then I took
her up by main force, and carried her well-nigh as far as a cross-bow
will send a bolt,
[086]
and so caused her, willy-nilly, come with us. And
on another occasion I mind me that, having none other with me but
my servant, a little after the hour of Ave Maria, I passed beside the
cemetery of the Friars Minors, and, though that very day a woman
had been there interred, I had no fear at all. So on this score you
may make your minds easy; for indeed I am a man of exceeding
great courage and prowess.
[087]
And to appear before you with due
dignity, I will don my scarlet gown, in which I took my doctor's
degree, and it remains to be seen if the company will not give me a
hearty welcome, and make me captain out of hand.
[088]
Let me once
be there, and you will see how things will go; else how is it that
this countess, that has not yet seen me, is already so enamoured of
me that she is minded to make me a Knight of the Bath? And
whether I shall find knighthood agreeable, or know how to support
the dignity well or ill, leave that to me.
[089]
Whereupon:
Well
said, excellent well said,
quoth Buffalmacco:
but look to it you
disappoint us not, either by not coming or by not being found, when
we send for you; and this I say, because 'tis cold weather, and you
medical gentlemen take great care of your health.
[090]
God forbid,
replied the doctor,
I am none of your chilly folk; I fear not the
cold: 'tis seldom indeed, when I leave my bed a nights, to answer
the call of nature, as one must at times, that I do more than throw
a pelisse over my doublet; so rest assured that I shall be there.
[091]
So they parted; and towards nightfall the Master found a pretext
for leaving his wife, and privily got out his fine gown, which in due
time he donned, and so hied him to the tombs, and having perched
himself on one of them, huddled himself together, for 'twas mighty
cold, to await the coming of the beast.
[092]
Meanwhile Buffalmacco,
who was a tall man and strong, provided himself with one of those
dominos that were wont to be worn in certain revels which are now
gone out of fashion; and enveloped in a black pelisse turned inside
out, shewed like a bear, save that the domino had the face of a devil,
and was furnished with horns:
[093]
in which guise, Bruno following
close behind to see the sport, he hied him to the piazza of Santa
Maria Novella. And no sooner wist he that the Master was on
the tomb, than he fell a careering in a most wild and furious manner
to and fro the piazza, and snorting and bellowing and gibbering like
one demented,
[094]
insomuch that, as soon as the Master was ware of him,
each several hair on his head stood on end, and he fell a trembling
in every limb, being in sooth more timid than a woman, and wished
himself safe at home: but as there he was, he strove might and
main to keep his spirits up, so overmastering was his desire to see the
marvels of which Bruno and Buffalmacco had told him.
[095]
However,
after a while Buffalmacco allowed his fury to abate, and came quietly
up to the tomb on which the Master was, and stood still. The
Master, still all of a tremble with fear, could not at first make up his
mind, whether to get on the beast's back, or no;
[096]
but at length,
doubting it might be the worse for him if he did not mount the
beast, he overcame the one dread by the aid of the other, got down
from the tomb, saying under his breath:
God help me!
and
seated himself very comfortably on the beast's back; and then, still
quaking in every limb, he folded his arms as he had been bidden.
[097]
Buffalmacco now started, going on all-fours, at a very slow pace,
in the direction of Santa Maria della Scala, and so brought the
Master within a short distance of the Convent of the Ladies of Ripoli.
[098]
Now, in that quarter there were divers trenches, into which the
husbandmen of those parts were wont to discharge the Countess of
Civillari, that she might afterwards serve them to manure their land.
[099]
Of one of which trenches, as he came by, Buffalmacco skirted the
edge, and seizing his opportunity, raised a hand, and caught the
doctor by one of his feet, and threw him off his back and head-foremost
right into the trench, and then, making a terrific noise and
frantic gestures as before, went bounding off by Santa Maria della
Scala towards the field of Ognissanti, where he found Bruno, who
had betaken him thither that he might laugh at his ease; and there
the two men in high glee took their stand to observe from a distance
how the bemired doctor would behave.
[100]
Finding himself in so loathsome
a place, the Master struggled might and main to raise himself
and get out; and though again and again he slipped back, and
swallowed some drams of the ordure, yet, bemired from head to foot,
woebegone and crestfallen, he did at last get out, leaving his hood
behind him. Then, removing as much of the filth as he might with
his hands, knowing not what else to do, he got him home, where,
by dint of much knocking, he at last gained admittance;
[101]
and scarce
was the door closed behind the malodorous Master, when Bruno and
Buffalmacco were at it, all agog to hear after what manner he would
be received by his wife. They were rewarded by hearing her give
him the soundest rating that ever bad husband got.
[102]
Ah!
quoth
she,
fine doings, these! Thou hast been with some other woman,
and wast minded to make a brave shew in thy scarlet gown. So I
was not enough for thee! not enough for thee forsooth, I that might
content a crowd! Would they had choked thee with the filth in
which they have soused thee; 'twas thy fit resting-place. Now, to
think that a physician of repute, and a married man, should go by
night after strange women!
[103]
Thus, and with much more to the
like effect, while the doctor was busy washing himself, she ceased
not to torment him until midnight.
[104]
On the morrow, Bruno and Buffalmacco, having painted their
bodies all over with livid patches to give them the appearance of
having been thrashed, came to the doctor's house, and finding that
he was already risen, went in, being saluted on all hands by a foul
smell, for time had not yet served thoroughly to cleanse the house.
[105]
The doctor, being informed that they were come to see him,
advanced to meet them, and bade them good morning. Whereto
Bruno and Buffalmacco, having prepared their answer, replied:
[106]
No good morning shall you have from us: rather we pray God to
give you bad years enough to make an end of you, seeing that there
lives no more arrant and faithless traitor. 'Tis no fault of yours, if
we, that did our best to honour and pleasure you, have not come by
a dog's death;
[107]
your faithlessness has cost us to-night as many sound
blows as would more than suffice to keep an ass a trotting all the
way from here to Rome; besides which, we have been in peril of
expulsion from the company in which we arranged for your enrolment.
[108]
If you doubt our words, look but at our bodies, what a state
they are in.
And so, baring their breasts they gave him a glimpse
of the patches they had painted there, and forthwith covered them
up again.
[109]
The doctor would have made them his excuses, and
recounted his misfortunes, and how he had been thrown into the
trench. But Buffalmacco broke in with:
Would he had thrown
you from the bridge into the Arno! Why must you needs mind
you of God and the saints? Did we not forewarn you?
[110]
God's
faith,
returned the doctor,
that did I not.
[111]
How?
quoth
Buffalmacco,
you did not? You do so above a little; for he that
we sent for you told us that you trembled like an aspen, and knew not
where you were. You have played us a sorry trick; but never
another shall do so; and as for you, we will give you such requital
thereof as you deserve.
[112]
The doctor now began to crave their
pardon, and to implore them for God's sake not to expose him to
shame, and used all the eloquence at his command to make his peace
with them. And if he had honourably entreated them before, he
thenceforth, for fear they should publish his disgrace, did so much
more abundantly, and courted them both by entertaining them at his
table and in other ways. And so you have heard how wisdom is
imparted to those that get it not at Bologna.