Decameron. 2

by Giovanni Boccaccio

Other authorsEmil Giljam
Paper Book, 1928

Status

Available

Call number

853

Tags

Publication

Malmö : Världslitteraturen, 1928

Description

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: NOVEL IV. Ricciardo Manardi is found by Messer Lizio da Valbona -with his daughter, 'whom he marries, and remains at peace with her father. In silence Elisa received the praise bestowed on her story by her fair companions; and then the queen called for a. story from Filostrato, who with a laugh began on this wise: ?Chidden have I been so often and by so many of you for the sore burden, which I laid upon you, of discourse harsh and meet for tears, that, as some compensation for such annoy, I deem myself bound to tell you somewhat that may cause you to laugh a little: wherefore my story, which will be of the briefest, shall be of a love, the course whereof, save for sighs and a brief passage of fear mingled with shame, ran smooth to a happy consummation. Know then, noble ladies, that 'tis no long time since there dwelt in Romagna a right worthy and courteous knight, Messer Lizio da Valbona by name, who was already verging upon old age, when, as it happened, there was born to him of his wife, Madonna Giacomina, adaughter, who, as she grew up, became the fairest and most debonair of all the girls of those parts, and, for that she was the only daughter left to them, was most dearly loved and cherished by her father and mother, who guarded her with most jealous care, thinking to arrange some great match for her. Now there was frequently in Messer Lizio's house, and much in his company, a fine, lusty young man, one Ricciardo de' Manardi da Brettinoro, whom Messer Lizio and his wife would as little have thought of mistrusting as if he had been their own son: who, now and again taking note of the damsel, that she was very fair and graceful, and in bearing and behaviour mostcommendable, and of marriageable age, fell vehemently in love with her, which love he was very careful to c...… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Helenliz
Review of Volume 2
Pretty much the same as Volume 1.
The surmise is quite simple, 10 people in plague riven Florence decide to decamp to the country and isolate themselves from the contagion. To while away the time, on each day they each tell a story. This volume held 6 days and so 60 stories,
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without the details of how they arrived here. The discussion on ending the isolation was remarkably short, after a total of 15 days away from the city.
I'm fairly sure that I've read some of these stories before in different guises. The one about the students and the miller's wife & daughter for certain was familiar, as was the king who takes a low born wife and takes their children away before turning her out.
Based on completing this, I still think that Chaucer did it better.
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