visible outside of it, ran all around it; and
then by similar canals into every part of the
garden, gathering together finally in that part
of it where from the beautiful garden it escaped,
and thence descending limpid to the plain, and before
reaching it, with great force and not a little advantage
to the master, turned two mills. To see this
garden, its beautiful orderliness, the plants
and the fountain with the brooks running from
it, was so pleasing to the ladies and the three
youths that all commenced to declare that if
Paradise could be found on earth, they could not conceive
what other form than that of this garden could be
given to it, nor what beauty could be added to
it. Wandering happily about it, twining
from the branches of various trees beautiful
garlands, hearing everywhere the songs of maybe twenty
kinds of birds as it were in contest with each other,
they became aware of another charm of which, to
the others being added, they had not taken note:
they saw the garden full of a hundred varieties
of beautiful animals, and pointing them out one
to the other, on one side ran out rabbits, on
another hares, here lying roe-deer and there feeding
stags, and besides these many other kinds of harmless
beasts, each one going for his pleasure as if
domesticated, wandering at ease; all which, beyond
the other pleasures, added a greater pleasure.
And when, seeing this or that, they had gone
about enough, the tables being set around the beautiful
fountain, first singing six songs and dancing six
dances, as it pleased the Queen, they went to
eat, and being with great and well-ordered service
attended, and with delicate and good dishes,
becoming gayer they arose and renewed music and
song and dance, until the Queen on account of
the increasing heat judged that whoever liked should
go to sleep. Of whom some went, but others,
conquered by the beauty of the place, would not
go, but remained, some to read romances, some
to play at chess and at tables, while the others
slept. But when passed the ninth hour, they arose,
and refreshing their faces with the fresh water,
they came to the fountain, and in their customary
manner taking their seats, waited for the beginning
of the story-telling on the subject proposed
by the Queen.”
Of the character of the Novelle I have need to say
little: they were the shaping of the time, and
made consonant with its tastes, and nobody was then
disturbed by their tone. Some are indelicate to
modern taste, and some have passed into the classics
of all time. The story of ‘Griselda’;
that of ‘The Stone of Invisibility,’ put
into shape by Irving; ‘Frederick of the Alberighi
and his Falcon’; ‘The Pot of Basil’;
and ’The Jew Abraham, Converted to Christianity
by the Immorality of the Clergy,’ are stories
which belong to all subsequent times, as they may
have belonged to the ages before. Those who know
what Italian society was then, and in some places
still is, will be not too censorious, judging lightness