The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. III. (of V.) eBook

Margaret of Navarre (Sicilian queen)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. III. (of V.).

The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. III. (of V.) eBook

Margaret of Navarre (Sicilian queen)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. III. (of V.).
5 Evidently Olite and Tafalla, the former at thirty and the latter at twenty-seven miles from Pamplona.  The two towns were commonly called la flor de Navarra.  King John doubtless intended sojourning at the summer palaces which his predecessor Carlos the Noble had built at either locality, and which were connected, it is said, by a gallery a league in length.  Some ruins of these palaces still exist.  —­Ed.

He therefore went to lodge in the street in which she lived, where he hired an old house, badly built of timber.  About midnight he set fire to it, and the alarm, which spread through the whole town, reached the rich man’s house.  He asked from the window where the fire was, and hearing that it was in the house of the Lord of Avannes, immediately hastened thither with all his servants.  He found the young lord in the street, clad in nothing but his shirt, whereat in his deep compassion he took him in his arms, and, covering him with his own robe, brought him home as quickly as possible, where he said to his wife, who was in bed—­

“Here, sweetheart, I give this prisoner into your charge.  Treat him as you would treat myself.”

As soon as he was gone, the Lord of Avannes, who would gladly have been treated like a husband, sprang lightly into the bed, hoping that place and opportunity would bring this discreet lady to a different mind; but he found the contrary to be the case, for as he leaped into the bed on one side, she got out at the other.  Then, putting on her dressing-gown, she came up to the head of the bed and spoke as follows—­

“Did you think, my lord, that opportunity could influence a chaste heart?  Nay, just as gold is tried in the furnace, so a chaste heart becomes stronger and more virtuous in the midst of temptation, and grows colder the more it is assailed by its opposite.  You may be sure, therefore, that had I been otherwise minded than I professed myself to be, I should not have wanted means, to which I have paid no heed solely because I desire not to use them.  So I beg of you, if you would have me preserve my affection for you, put away not merely the desire but even the thought that you can by any means whatever make me other than I am.”

While she was speaking, her women came in, and she commanded a collation of all kinds of sweetmeats to be brought; but the young lord could neither eat nor drink, in such despair was he at having failed in his enterprise, and in such fear lest this manifestation of his passion should cost him the familiar intercourse that he had been wont to have with her.

Having dealt with the fire, the husband came back again, and begged the Lord of Avannes to remain at his house for the night.  This he did, but in such wise that his eyes were more exercised in weeping than in sleeping.  Early in the morning he went to bid them farewell, while they were still in bed; and in kissing the lady he perceived that she felt more pity for the offence than anger against the offender, and thus was another brand added to the fire of his love.  After dinner, he set out for Taffares with the King; but before leaving he went again to take yet another farewell of his good father and the lady who, after her husband’s first command, made no difficulty in kissing him as her son.

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The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. III. (of V.) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.