The Decameron, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 573 pages of information about The Decameron, Volume II.

The Decameron, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 573 pages of information about The Decameron, Volume II.
has been never so thick a fall of snow, and ’tis yet snowing; and then I will wait as long as you please.”  “Alas! sweet my love,” quoth the lady, “that I may not, for this door makes such a din, when one opens it, that my brother would be sure to hear, were I to let thee in; but I will go tell him to get him gone, and so come back and admit thee.”  “Go at once, then,” returned the scholar, “and prithee, see that a good fire be kindled, that, when I get in, I may warm myself, for I am now so chilled through and through that I have scarce any feeling left.”  “That can scarce be,” rejoined the lady, “if it be true, what thou hast so protested in thy letters, that thou art all afire for love of me:  ’tis plain to me now that thou didst but mock me.  I now take my leave of thee:  wait and be of good cheer.”

So the lady and her lover, who, to his immense delight, had heard all that passed, betook them to bed; however, little sleep had they that night, but spent the best part of it in disporting themselves and making merry over the unfortunate scholar, who, his teeth now chattering to such a tune that he seemed to have been metamorphosed into a stork, perceived that he had been befooled, and after making divers fruitless attempts to open the door and seeking means of egress to no better purpose, paced to and fro like a lion, cursing the villainous weather, the long night, his simplicity, and the perversity of the lady, against whom (the vehemence of his wrath suddenly converting the love he had so long borne her to bitter and remorseless enmity) he now plotted within himself divers and grand schemes of revenge, on which he was far more bent than ever he had been on forgathering with her.

Slowly the night wore away, and with the first streaks of dawn the maid, by her mistress’s direction, came down, opened the door of the courtyard, and putting on a compassionate air, greeted Rinieri with:—­“Foul fall him that came here yestereve; he has afflicted us with his presence all night long, and has kept thee a freezing out here:  but harkye, take it not amiss; that which might not be to-night shall be another time:  well wot I that nought could have befallen that my lady could so ill brook.”  For all his wrath, the scholar, witting, like the wise man he was, that menaces serve but to put the menaced on his guard, kept pent within his breast that which unbridled resentment would have uttered, and said quietly, and without betraying the least trace of anger:—­“In truth ’twas the worst night I ever spent, but I understood quite well that the lady was in no wise to blame, for that she herself, being moved to pity of me, came down here to make her excuses, and to comfort me; and, as thou sayst, what has not been to-night will be another time:  wherefore commend me to her, and so, adieu!” Then, well-nigh paralysed for cold, he got him, as best he might, home, where, weary and fit to die for drowsiness, he threw himself on his bed, and fell into a deep sleep, from which he awoke to find that

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The Decameron, Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.