Showing posts with label Place: Italy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Place: Italy. Show all posts

Leland. Legends of Florence.

Today's free book is Legends of Florence by Charles Godfrey Leland. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Project Gutenberg, Internet Archive, Hathi Trust, and Google Books. There is also a free Kindle ebook from Amazon.



Table of Contents

The Three Horns of Messer Guicciardini
The Pills of the Medici
Furicchia, or the Egg-Woman of the Mercato Vecchio
The Lanterns of the Strozzi Palace
The Goblin of La Via Del Corno
Frate Giocondo, the Monk of Santa Maria Novella
The Legend of the Croce al Trebbio
The Two Fairies of the Well
The Story of the Via Delle Serve Smarrite
The Bronze Boar of the Mercato Nuovo
The Fairy of the Campanile, or the Tower of Giotto
The Goblin of the Tower Della Trinita, or the Porta San Niccolo
The Ghost of Michel Angelo
The Apparition of Dante
Legends of La Certosa
Legends of the Bridges in Florence
The Bashful Lover
La Fortuna
The Story of the Unfinished Palace
The Devil of the Mercato Vecchio
Seeing that All was Right
The Enchanted Cow of La Via Vacchereccia
The Witch of the Porta Alla Croce
The Column of Cosimo, or Della Santa Trinita
Legends of Or’ San Michele
The Witch of the Arno
Stories of San Miniato
The Frair’s Head of Santa Maria Maggiore—The Lady who Confessed for Everybody—Holy Relics
Biancone, the Giant Statue in the Signoria
The Red Goblin of the Bargello
Legends of San Lorenzo
Legends of the Piazza San Biagio
The Spirit of the Porta San Gallo
Story of the Podestà who was Long on his Journey
Legends of the Boboli Gardens: the Old Gardener, and the Two Statues and the Fairy
How La Via Della Mosca got its Name
The Roman Vase
The Unfortunate Priest
The Mysterious Fig-Tree
Il Palazzo Feroni
La Via Delle Belle DonneThe Wizard with Red Teeth
Orpheus and Eurydice
Intialo: the Spirit of the Haunting Shadow
Cain and his Worshippers

Mincieli. Tales, merry and wise (Italian)

Today's free book is Tales, merry and wise by Rose Laura Mincieli (1958) with illustrations by Kurt Werth. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi Trust (I have not checked for other online sources).



Table of Contents

Pidicino
Errato di Barletto
The Songstress and the Fairies
The Pot of Gold
The Wonderful Night
The Cavallino
Mece and His Merry Pranks
A Message for a Donkey
The Queen and the Golden Egg
The Merchant, Saint Michael, and the Devil
The Dog, the Cat, and the Mouse
The Inquiring Rabbit, or The Strongest Thing in the World
The Shepherd's Pipe
The Farmer and the Harvesters
The C \oat That Taught the Housewife
The Three Brothers
Dancing He Would Go
The Beacon Light
The Capricious Month
Written in the Stars
The Three Sisters and the Old Witch
Saint Crispin and the Old One


Steedman. Legends and stories of Italy

Today's free book is Legends and stories of Italy for children by Amy Steedman (1909) with illustrations by Katharine Cameron. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available to read online at Hathi Trust (I have not checked other online sources).

(illustration by Katharine Cameron)


Table of Contents

PART I—LEGENDS
The Legend of the Christmas Rose
The Merciful Knight
The Saint-Maid of Lucca
Saint Mark and the Fisherman
Domenica
The Legend of the Castellano
Stella Maris
The Angel and the Diavolo
Little Legends of the Madonna
The Little Countess

PART II—STORIES
Stellante
A Tale of the Epiphany
Marziale, the Robber Chief
The Angels' Robe
A Tale of Old Florence
The Story of the Empress Flavia


Lee. Decameron : Its sources and analogues

Today's free book is The Decameron : Its sources and analogues by A. Collingwood Lee (1909). The book provides a discussion of each of the stories in the Decameron, one by one.

The book is available at Hathi (I have not checked for other online sources).




Collodi. The Adventures of Pinocchio

Today's free book is The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi, translated by Carol Della Chiesa. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Project Gutenberg. There is also a free audiobook at LibriVox. You can get a free Kindle ebook from Amazon too!


CHAPTER 1. How it happened that Mastro Cherry, carpenter, found a piece of wood that wept and laughed like a child.
CHAPTER 2. Mastro Cherry gives the piece of wood to his friend Geppetto, who takes it to make himself a Marionette that will dance, fence, and turn somersaults.
CHAPTER 3. As soon as he gets home, Geppetto fashions the Marionette and calls it Pinocchio. The first pranks of the Marionette.
CHAPTER 4. The story of Pinocchio and the Talking Cricket, in which one sees that bad children do not like to be corrected by those who know more than they do.
CHAPTER 5. Pinocchio is hungry and looks for an egg to cook himself an omelet; but, to his surprise, the omelet flies out of the window.
CHAPTER 6. Pinocchio falls asleep with his feet on a foot warmer, and awakens the next day with his feet all burned off.
CHAPTER 7. Geppetto returns home and gives his own breakfast to the Marionette.
CHAPTER 8. Geppetto makes Pinocchio a new pair of feet, and sells his coat to buy him an A-B-C book.
CHAPTER 9. Pinocchio sells his A-B-C book to pay his way into the Marionette Theater.
CHAPTER 10. The Marionettes recognize their brother Pinocchio, and greet him with loud cheers; but the Director, Fire Eater, happens along and poor Pinocchio almost loses his life.
CHAPTER 11. Fire Eater sneezes and forgives Pinocchio, who saves his friend, Harlequin, from death.
CHAPTER 12. Fire Eater gives Pinocchio five gold pieces for his father, Geppetto; but the Marionette meets a Fox and a Cat and follows them.
CHAPTER 13. The Inn of the Red Lobster.
CHAPTER 14. Pinocchio, not having listened to the good advice of the Talking Cricket, falls into the hands of the Assassins.
CHAPTER 15. The Assassins chase Pinocchio, catch him, and hang him to the branch of a giant oak tree.
CHAPTER 16. The Lovely Maiden with Azure Hair sends for the poor Marionette, puts him to bed, and calls three Doctors to tell her if Pinocchio is dead or alive.
CHAPTER 17. Pinocchio eats sugar, but refuses to take medicine. When the undertakers come for him, he drinks the medicine and feels better. Afterwards he tells a lie and, in punishment, his nose grows longer and longer.
CHAPTER 18. Pinocchio finds the Fox and the Cat again, and goes with them to sow the gold pieces in the Field of Wonders.
CHAPTER 19. Pinocchio is robbed of his gold pieces and, in punishment, is sentenced to four months in prison.
CHAPTER 20. Freed from prison, Pinocchio sets out to return to the Fairy; but on the way he meets a Serpent and later is caught in a trap.
CHAPTER 21. Pinocchio is caught by a Farmer, who uses him as a watchdog for his chicken coop.
CHAPTER 22. Pinocchio discovers the thieves and, as a reward for faithfulness, he regains his liberty.
CHAPTER 23. Pinocchio weeps upon learning that the Lovely Maiden with Azure Hair is dead. He meets a Pigeon, who carries him to the seashore. He throws himself into the sea to go to the aid of his father.
CHAPTER 24. Pinocchio reaches the Island of the Busy Bees and finds the Fairy once more.
CHAPTER 25. Pinocchio promises the Fairy to be good and to study, as he is growing tired of being a Marionette, and wishes to become a real boy.
CHAPTER 26. Pinocchio goes to the seashore with his friends to see the Terrible Shark.
CHAPTER 27. The great battle between Pinocchio and his playmates. One is wounded. Pinocchio is arrested.
CHAPTER 28. Pinocchio runs the danger of being fried in a pan like a fish.
CHAPTER 29. Pinocchio returns to the Fairy's house and she promises him that, on the morrow, he will cease to be a Marionette and become a boy. A wonderful party of coffee-and-milk to celebrate the great event.
CHAPTER 30. Pinocchio, instead of becoming a boy, runs away to the Land of Toys with his friend, Lamp-Wick.
CHAPTER 31. After five months of play, Pinocchio wakes up one fine morning and finds a great surprise awaiting him.
CHAPTER 32. Pinocchio's ears become like those of a Donkey. In a little while he changes into a real Donkey and begins to bray.
CHAPTER 33. Pinocchio, having become a Donkey, is bought by the owner of a Circus, who wants to teach him to do tricks. The Donkey becomes lame and is sold to a man who wants to use his skin for a drumhead.
CHAPTER 34. Pinocchio is thrown into the sea, eaten by fishes, and becomes a Marionette once more. As he swims to land, he is swallowed by the Terrible Shark.
CHAPTER 35. In the Shark's body Pinocchio finds whom? Read this chapter, my children, and you will know.
CHAPTER 36. Pinocchio finally ceases to be a Marionette and becomes a boy.

Crane. Italian Popular Tales

Today's free book is Italian Popular Tales by Thomas Frederick Crane. You can find out more about this book in the Italian Popular Tales unit of the Myth-Folklore UnTextbook.

For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at the Project GutenbergInternet ArchiveSacred TextsHathi Books, and Google Books. You can get a free Kindle eBook from Amazon too. The links below are to the SurLaLune Fairy Tales edition.


The King of Love
Zelinda and the Monster
King Bean
The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird
The Fair Angiola
The Cloud
The Cistern
The Griffin
Cinderella
Fair Maria Wood
The Curse of the Seven Children
Oraggio and Bianchinetta
The Fair Fiorita
Bierde
Snow-White-Fire-Red
How the Devil Married Three Sisters
In Love with a Statue
Thirteenth
The Cobbler
Sir Fiorante, Magician
The Crystal Casket
The Stepmother
Water and Salt
The Love of the Three Oranges
The King Who Wanted a Beautiful Wife
The Bucket
The Two Humpbacks
The Story of Catherine and Her Fate
The Crumb in the Beard
The Fairy Orlanda
The Shepherd Who Made the King's Daughter Laugh
The Ass That Lays Money
Don Joseph Pear
Puss In Boots
Fair Brow
Lionbruno
The Peasant and the Master
The Ingrates
The Treasure

The Shepherd
The Three Admonitions
Vineyard I Was and Vineyard I Am
The Language of the Animals
The Mason and His Son
The Parrot: First Version
The Parrot: Second Version
The Parrot Which Tells Three Stories: Third Version
Truthful Joseph
The Man, the Serpent, and the Fox
The Lord, St. Peter, and the Apostles
The Lord, St. Peter, and the Blacksmith
In This World One Weeps and Another Laughs
The Ass
St. Peter and His Sisters
Pilate
The Story of Judas
Desperate Malchus
Malchus at the Column
The Story of Buttadeu
The Story of Crivoliu
The Story of St. James of Galicia
The Baker's Apprentice
Occasion
Brother Giovannone
Godfather Misery
Beppo Pipetta
The Just Man
Of a Godfather and a Godmother of
St. John Who Made Love

The Groomsman
The Parrish Priest of San Marcuola
The Gentleman Who Kicked a Skull
The Gossips of St. John
Saddaedda
Mr. Attentive
The Story of the Barber
Don Firriulieddu
Little Chick-Pea
Pitidda
The Sexton's Nose
The Cock and the Mouse
Godmother Fox
The Cat and the Mouse
A Feast Day
The Three Brothers
Buchettino
The Three Goslings
The Cock
The Cock and That Wished to Become Pope
The Goat and the Fox
The Ant and the Mouse
The Cook
The Thoughtless Abbot
Bastianelo
Christmas
The Wager
Scissors They Were
The Doctor's Apprentice
Firrazzanu's Wife and the Queen
Giufa and the Plaster Statue
Giufa and the Judge
The Little Omelet
Eat, My Clothes!
Giufa's Exploits
The Fool
Uncle Capriano
Peter Fullone and the Egg
The Clever Peasant
The Clever Girl
Crab
Pepper-Corn

Faulkner. Italian Fairy Tales

Today's free book is Italian Fairy Tales by Georgene Faulkner with illustrations by Frederic Richardson. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi Trust and Google Books.


The Three Geese and the Wolf
The Good Cat
The Month of March
Cinderella
The Booby

Basile. Stories from the Pentamerone

Today's free book is Stories from the Pentamerone (of Giambattista Basile), edited by E. F. Strange from John Edward Taylor's translation and illustrated by Warwick Goble. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at  Project Gutenberg and Hathi Trust. There is also a free audiobook at LibriVox.



1. How the Tales came to be told (text)
2. The Myrtle (text)
3. Peruonto (text)
4. Vardiello (text)
5. The Flea (text)
6. Cenerentola (text)
7. The Merchant (text)
8. Goat-Face (text)
9. The Enchanted Doe (text)
10. Parsley (text)
11. The Three Sisters (text)
12. Violet (text)
13. Pippo (text)
14. The Serpent (text)
15. The She-Bear (text)
16. The Dove (text)
17. Cannetella (text)
18. Corvetto (text)
19. The Booby (text)
20. The Stone in the Cock's Head (text)
21. The Three Enchanted Princes (text)
22. The Dragon (text)
23. The Two Cakes (text)
24. The Seven Doves (text)
25. The Raven (text)
26. The Months (text)
27. Pintosmalto (text)
28. The Golden Root (text)
29. Sun, Moon, and Talia (text)
30. Nennillo and Nennella (text)
31. The Three Citrons (text)
32. Conclusion (text)

Champney. Romance of the Italian Villas

Today's free book is Romance of the Italian Villas (Northern Italy) by Elizabeth W. Champney. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at  Internet Archive, Hathi Trust, and Google Books.


The Villa of the Leopard
The Lair of the White Devil
The Frescoes of Villa Lemmi
Villas of the Medici
Ilaria: a Legend of Two Villas
Allegro
The Borromeo Tapestries
The Real Thing
The Ring of the Twisted Serpent
How Sordello the Sllver-tongued Became Sordello of the Iron Hand
The Amber Empress
The Ghosts of Giacomelli
The Scarlet Scarf
Homeless Ghosts and Haunted Habitations

Busk. Roman Legends: Fables and Folklore

Today's free book is Roman Legends: A Collection of the Fables and Folklore of Rome by R. H. Busk. This a beautiful book about Italian folklore, not ancient Rome.

For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Project Gutenberg, Internet Archive, Hathi Trust, and Google Books.


Filagranata
The Three Love-Oranges (I Tre Merangoli di Amore)
Palombelletta
La Cenorientola
Vaccarella
Giuseppe L’Ebreo
The King who goes out to Dinner
The Pot of Marjoram (Il Vaso di Persa)
The Pot of Rue (Il Vaso di Ruta)
King Otho
Maria Wood (Maria di Legno)
Second Version
Third Version
La Candeliera
The Two Hunchbacked Brothers
The Dark King (Il Rè Moro)
Monsu Mostro
The Enchanted Rose Tree
Scioccolone
Twelve Feet of Nose (Dodici Palmi di Naso)
A Yard of Nose (Mezza Canna di Naso)
The Chicory-seller and the Enchanted Princess
The Transformation-Donkey
Signor Lattanzio
How Cajusse was Married

When Jesus Christ Wandered on Earth (Eight Tales)
Pietro Baillardo (Three Tales)
S. Giovanni Bocca D’oro (Three Tales)
Don Giovanni
The Penance of San Giuliano
The Pilgrims
Santa Verdana
San Sidoro
The Fishpond of St. Francis (La Pescheria di San Francesco)
St. Anthony (Five Tales)
St. Margaret of Cortona
St. Theodora
Nun Beatrice
Padre Filippo (Eleven Tales)
The Pardon of Asisi
Padre Vincenzo (Three Tales)
Padre Fontanarosa (Three Tales)
S. Giuseppe Labre (Three Tales)
The Twelve Words of Truth

The Dead Man in the Oak-Tree
The Dead Man’s Letter
The White Soul
The White Serpent
The Procession of Velletri
Smaller Ghost and Treasure Stories and Family and Local Traditions (Thirteen Tales)
Sciarra Colonna
Donna Olimpia
The Munificence of Prince Borghese
‘Pope Joan’ (La Papessa)
Giacinta Marescotti
Pasquino (Two Tales)
Cècingùlo
The Wooing of Cassandro
I Cocorni
The Beautiful Englishwoman
The Englishman
The Marriage of Signor Cajusse
The Daughter of Count Lattanzio
Bellacuccia
The Satyr
The Satyrs
Amadea
The King of Portugal

The Two Friars
The Preface of a Franciscan
The Lenten Preacher
Ass or Pig
The Seven Clodhoppers
The Little Bird
The Devil who took to Himself a Wife
The Root
The Queen and the Tripe-seller
The Bad-tempered Queen (La Regina Cattiva)
The Simple Wife (La Sposa Cece) (Two Versions)
The Foolish Woman (La Donna Mattarella) (Two Versions)
The Booby (Il Tonto)
The Gluttonous Girl (La Ragazza Golosa)
The Greedy Daughter (La Figlia Ghiotta)
The Old Miser
The Miserly Old Woman
The Beggar and the Chick-Pea (Il Poverello Del Cece)
Doctor Grillo
Nina
The Good Grace of the Hunchback (La Buona Grazia Del Gobbo)
The Value of Salt
The Princess and the Gentleman
The Happy Couple (I Sposi Felici)
Una Camera di Locanda
The Countess’s Cat
Why Cats and Dogs always Quarrel
The Cats who Made their Master Rich

Rigg. The Decameron by Boccaccio

Today's free book is The Decameron by Boccaccio, translated by J. M. Rigg. You can find out more about this book in the Decameron unit of the Myth-Folklore UnTextbook.

For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Project GutenbergInternet Archive, Hathi Books, and Google Books. There is also a free audiobook at LibriVox. You can get a free Kindle eBook from Amazon too!

In addition there is an excellent presentation of this text at Brown University's Decameron Web.



- FIRST DAY -

NOVEL I. - Ser Ciappelletto cheats a holy friar by a false confession, and dies; and, having lived as a very bad man, is, on his death, reputed a saint, and called San Ciappelletto.

NOVEL II. - Abraham, a Jew, at the instance of Jehannot de Chevigny, goes to the court of Rome, and having marked the evil life of clergy, returns to Paris, and becomes a Christian.

NOVEL III. - Melchisedech, a Jew, by a story of three rings averts a danger with which he was menaced by Saladin.

NOVEL IV. - A monk lapses into a sin meriting the most severe punishment, justly censures the same fault in his abbot, and thus evades the penalty.

NOVEL V. - The Marchioness of Monferrato by a banquet of hens seasoned with wit checks the mad passion of the King of France.

NOVEL VI. - A worthy man by an apt saying puts to shame the wicked hypocrisy of the religious.

NOVEL VII. - Bergamino, with a story of Primasso and the Abbot of Cluny, finely censures a sudden access of avarice in Messer Cane della Scala.

NOVEL VIII. - Guglielmo Borsiere by a neat retort sharply censures avarice in Messer Ermino de' Grimaldi.

NOVEL IX. - The censure of a Gascon lady converts the King of Cyprus from a churlish to an honourable temper.

NOVEL X. - Master Alberto da Bologna honourably puts to shame a lady who sought occasion to put him to shame in that he was in love with her.

- SECOND DAY -

NOVEL I. - Martellino pretends to be a paralytic, and makes it appear as if he were cured by being placed upon the body of St. Arrigo. His trick is detected; he is beaten and arrested, and is in peril of hanging, but finally escapes.

NOVEL II. - Rinaldo d'Asti is robbed, arrives at Castel Guglielmo, and is entertained by a widow lady; his property is restored to him, and he returns home safe and sound.

NOVEL III. - Three young men squander their substance and are reduced to poverty. Their nephew, returning home a desperate man, falls in with an abbot, in whom he discovers the daughter of the King of England. She marries him, and he retrieves the losses and re-establishes the fortune of his uncles.

NOVEL IV. - Landolfo Ruffolo is reduced to poverty, turns corsair, is captured by Genoese, is shipwrecked, escapes on a chest full of jewels, and, being cast ashore at Corfu, is hospitably entertained by a woman, and returns home wealthy.

NOVEL V. - Andreuccio da Perugia comes to Naples to buy horses, meets with three serious adventures in one night, comes safe out of them all, and returns home with a ruby.

NOVEL VI. - Madam Beritola loses two sons, is found with two kids on an island, goes thence to Lunigiana, where one of her sons takes service with her master, and lies with his daughter, for which he is put in prison. Sicily rebels against King Charles, the son is recognized by the mother, marries the master's daughter, and, his brother being discovered, is reinstated in great honour.

NOVEL VII. - The Soldan of Babylon sends one of his daughters overseas, designing to marry her to the King of Algarve. By divers adventures she comes in the space of four years into the hands of nine men in divers place. At last she is restored to her father, whom she quits again in the guise of a virgin, and, as was at first intended, is married to the King of Algarve.

NOVEL VIII. - The Count of Antwerp, labouring under a false accusation, goes into exile. He leaves his two children in different places in England, and takes service in Ireland. Returning to England an unknown man, he finds his sons prosperous. He serves as a groom in the army of the King of France; his innocence is established, and he is restored to his former honours.

NOVEL IX. - Bernabo of Genoa, deceived by Ambrogiuolo, loses his money and commands his innocent wife to be put to death. She escapes, habits herself as a man, and serves the Soldan. She discovers the deceiver, and brings Bernabo to Alexandria, where the deceiver is punished. She then resumes the garb of a woman, and with her husband returns wealthy to Genoa.

NOVEL X. - Paganino da Monaco carries off the wife of Messer Ricciardo di Chinzica, who, having learned where she is, goes to Paganino and in a friendly manner asks him to restore her. He consents, provided she be willing. She refuses to go back with her husband. Messer Ricciardo dies, and she marries Paganino.

- THIRD DAY -

NOVEL I. - Masetto da Lamporecchio feigns to be dumb, and obtains a gardener's place at a convent of women, who with one accord make haste to lie with him.

NOVEL II. - A groom lies with the wife of King Agilulf, who learns the fact, keeps his own counsel, finds out the groom and shears him. The shorn shears all his fellows, and so comes safe out of the scrape.

NOVEL III. - Under cloak of confession and a most spotless conscience, a lady, enamoured of a young man, induces a booby friar unwittingly to provide a means to the entire gratification of her passion.

NOVEL IV. - Dom Felice instructs Fra Puccio how to attain blessedness by doing a penance. Fra Puccio does the penance, and meanwhile Dom Felice has a good time with Fra Puccio's wife.

NOVEL V. - Zima gives a palfrey to Messer Francesco Vergellesi, who in return suffers him to speak with his wife. She keeping silence, he answers in her stead, and the sequel is in accordance with his answer.

NOVEL VI. - Ricciardo Minutolo loves the wife of Filippello Fighinolfi, and knowing her to be jealous, makes her believe that his own wife is to meet Filippello at a bagnio on the ensuing day; whereby she is induced to go thither, where, thinking to have been with her husband, she discovers that she has tarried with Ricciardo.

NOVEL VII. - Tedaldo, being in disfavour with his lady, departs from Florence. He returns thither after a while in the guise of a pilgrim, has speech of his lady, and makes her sensible of her fault. Her husband, convicted of slaying him, he delivers from peril of death, reconciles him with his brothers, and thereafter discreetly enjoys his lady.

NOVEL VIII. Ferondo, having taken a certain powder, is interred for dead; is disinterred by the abbot, who enjoys his wife; is put in prison and taught to believe that he is in purgatory; is then resuscitated, and rears as his own a boy begotten by the abbot upon his wife.

NOVEL IX. - Gillette of Narbonne cures the King of France of a fistula, craves for spouse Bertrand de Roussillon, who marries her against his will, and hies him in despite to Florence, where, as he courts a young woman, Gillette lies with him in her stead, and has two sons by him; for which cause he afterwards takes her into favour and entreats her as his wife.

NOVEL X. - Alibech turns hermit, and is taught by Rustico, a monk, how the Devil is put in hell. She is afterwards conveyed thence, and becomes the wife of Neerbale.

- FOURTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - Tancred, Prince of Salerno, slays his daughter's lover, and sends her his heart in a golden cup: she pours upon it a poisonous distillation, which she drinks and dies.

NOVEL II. - Fra Alberto gives a lady to understand that she is beloved of the Angel Gabriel, in whose shape he lies with her sundry times; afterward, for fear of her kinsmen, he flings himself forth of her house, and finds shelter in the house of a poor man, who on the morrow leads him in the guise of a wild man into the piazza, where, being recognized, he is apprehended by his brethren and imprisoned.

NOVEL III. - Three young men love three sisters, and flee with them to Crete. The eldest of the sisters slays her lover for jealousy. The second saves the life of the first by yielding herself to the Duke of Crete. Her lover slays her, and makes off with the first: the third sister and her lover are charged with the murder, are arrested and confess the crime. They escape death by bribing the guards, flee destitute to Rhodes, and there in destitution die.

NOVEL IV. - Gerbino, in breach of the plighted faith of his grandfather, King Guglielmo, attacks a ship of the King of Tunis to rescue thence his daughter. She being slain by those aboard the ship, he slays them, and afterwards he is beheaded.

NOVEL V. - Lisabetta's brothers slay her lover: he appears to her in a dream, and shews her where he is buried: she privily disinters the head, and sets it in a pot of basil, whereon she daily weeps a great while. The pot being taken from her by her brothers, she dies not long after.

NOVEL VI. - Andreuola loves Gabriotto: she tells him a dream that she has had; he tells her a dream of his own, and dies suddenly in her arms. While she and her maid are carrying his corpse to his house, they are taken by the Signory. She tells how the matter stands, is threatened with violence by the Podesta, but will not brook it. Her father hears how she is bested, and, her innocence being established, causes her to be set at large; but she, being minded to tarry no longer in the world, becomes a nun.

NOVEL VII. - Simona loves Pasquino; they are together in a garden, Pasquino rubs a leaf of sage against his teeth, and dies; Simona is arrested, and, with intent to shew the judge how Pasquino died, rubs one of the leaves of the same plant against her teeth, and likewise dies.

NOVEL VIII. - Girolamo loves Salvestra: yielding to his mother's prayers he goes to Paris; he returns to find Salvestra married; he enters her house by stealth, lays himself by her side, and dies; he is borne to the church, where Salvestra lays herself by his side, and dies.

Nova IX. - Sieur Guillaume de Roussillon slays his wife's paramour, Sieur Guillaume de Cabestaing, and gives her his heart to eat. She, coming to wit thereof, throws herself from a high window to the ground, and dies, and is buried with her lover.

NOVEL X. - The wife of a leech, deeming her lover, who has taken an opiate, to be dead, puts him in a chest, which, with him therein, two usurers carry off to their house. He comes to himself, and is taken for a thief; but, the lady's maid giving the Signory to understand that she had put him in the chest which the usurers stole, he escapes the gallows, and the usurers are mulcted in moneys for the theft of the chest.

- FIFTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - Cimon, by loving, waxes wise, wins his wife Iphigenia by capture on the high seas, and is imprisoned at Rhodes. He is delivered by Lysimachus; and the twain capture Cassandra and recapture Iphigenia in the hour of their marriage. They flee with their ladies to Crete, and having there married them, are brought back to their homes.

NOVEL II. - Gostanza loves Martuccio Gomito, and hearing that he is dead, gives way to despair, and hies her alone aboard a boat, which is wafted by the wind to Susa. She finds him alive in Tunis, and makes herself known to him, who, having by his counsel gained high place in the king's favour, marries her, and returns with her wealthy to Lipari.

NOVEL III. - Pietro Boccamazza runs away with Agnolella, and encounters a gang of robbers: the girl takes refuge in a wood, and is guided to a castle. Pietro is taken, but escapes out of the hands of the robbers, and after some adventures arrives at the castle where Agnolella is, marries her, and returns with her to Rome.

NOVEL IV. - Ricciardo Manardi is found by Messer Lizio da Valbona with his daughter, whom he marries, and remains at peace with her father.

NOVEL V. - Guidotto da Cremona dies leaving a girl to Giacomino da Pavia. She has two lovers in Faenza, to wit, Giannole di Severino and Minghino di Mingole, who fight about her. She is discovered to be Giannole's sister, and is given to Minghino to wife.

NOVEL VI. - Gianni di Procida, being found with a damsel that he loves, and who had been given to King Frederic, is bound with her to a stake, so to be burned. He is recognized by Ruggieri dell' Oria, is delivered, and marries her.

NOVEL VII. - Teodoro, being enamoured of Violante, daughter of Messer Amerigo, his lord, gets her with child, and is sentenced to the gallows; but while he is being scourged thither, he is recognized by his father, and being set at large, takes Violante to wife.

NOVEL VIII. - Nastagio degli Onesti, loving a damsel of the Traversari family, by lavish expenditure gains not her love. At the instance of his kinsfolk he hies him to Chiassi, where he sees a knight hunt a damsel and slay her and cause her to be devoured by two dogs. He bids his kinsfolk and the lady that he loves to breakfast. During the meal the said damsel is torn in pieces before the eyes of the lady, who, fearing a like fate, takes Nastagio to husband.

NOVEL IX. - Federigo degli Alberighi loves and is not loved in return: he wastes his substance by lavishness until nought is left but a single falcon, which, his lady being come to see him at his house, he gives her to eat: she, knowing his case, changes her mind, takes him to husband and makes him rich.

NOVEL X. - Pietro di Vinciolo goes from home to sup: his wife brings a boy into the house to bear her company: Pietro returns, and she hides her gallant under a hen-coop: Pietro explains that in the house of Ercolano, with whom he was to have supped, there was discovered a young man bestowed there by Ercolano's wife: the lady thereupon censures Ercolano's wife: but unluckily an ass treads on the fingers of the boy that is hidden under the hen-coop, so that he cries for pain: Pietro runs to the place, sees him, and apprehends the trick played on him by his wife, which nevertheless he finally condones, for that he is not himself free from blame.

- SIXTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - A knight offers to carry Madonna Oretta a horseback with a story, but tells it so ill that she prays him to dismount her.

NOVEL II. - Cisti, a baker, by an apt speech gives Messer Geri Spina to know that he has by inadvertence asked that of him which he should not.

NOVEL III. - Monna Nonna de' Pulci by a ready retort silences the scarce seemly jesting of the Bishop of Florence.

NOVEL IV. - Chichibio, cook to Currado Gianfigliazzi, owes his safety to a ready answer, whereby he converts Currado's wrath into laughter, and evades the evil fate with which Currado had threatened him.

NOVEL V. - Messer Forese da Rabatta and Master Giotto, the painter, journeying together from Mugello, deride one another's scurvy appearance.

NOVEL VI. - Michele Scalza proves to certain young men that the Baronci are the best gentlemen in the world and the Maremma, and wins a supper.

NOVEL VII. - Madonna Filippa, being found by her husband with her lover, is cited before the court, and by a ready and jocund answer acquits herself, and brings about an alteration of the statute.

NOVEL VIII. - Fresco admonishes his niece not to look at herself in the glass, if 'tis, as she says, grievous to her to see nasty folk.

NOVEL IX. - Guido Cavalcanti by a quip meetly rebukes certain Florentine gentlemen who had taken him at a disadvantage.

NOVEL X. - Fra Cipolla promises to shew certain country-folk a feather of the Angel Gabriel, in lieu of which he finds coals, which he avers to be of those with which St. Lawrence was roasted.

- SEVENTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - Gianni Lotteringhi hears a knocking at his door at night: he awakens his wife, who persuades him that 'tis the bogey, which they fall to exorcising with a prayer; whereupon the knocking ceases.

NOVEL II. - Her husband returning home, Peronella bestows her lover in a tun; which, being sold by her husband, she avers to have been already sold by herself to one that is inside examining it to set if it be sound. Whereupon the lover jumps out, and causes the husband to scour the tun for him, and afterwards to carry it to his house.

NOVEL III. - Fra Rinaldo lies with his gossip: her husband finds him in the room with her; and they make him believe that he was curing his godson of worms by a charm.

NOVEL IV. - Tofano one night locks his wife out of the house: she, finding that by no entreaties may she prevail upon him to let her in, feigns to throw herself into a well, throwing therein a great stone. Tofano hies him forth of the house, and runs to the spot: she goes into the house, and locks him out, and hurls abuse at him from within.

NOVEL V. - A jealous husband disguises himself as a priest, and hears his own wife's confession: she tells him that she loves a priest, who comes to her every night. The husband posts himself at the door to watch for the priest, and meanwhile the lady brings her lover in by the roof, and tarries with him.

NOVEL VI. - Madonna Isabella has with her Leonetto, her accepted lover, when she is surprised by one Messer Lambertuccio, by whom she is beloved: her husband coming home about the same time, she sends Messer Lambertuccio forth of the house drawn sword in hand, and the husband afterwards escorts Leonetto home.

NOVEL VII. - Lodovico discovers to Madonna Beatrice the love that he bears her: she sends Egano, her husband, into a garden disguised as herself, and lies with Lodovico; who thereafter, being risen, hies him to the garden and cudgels Egano.

NOVEL VIII. - A husband grows jealous of his wife, and discovers that she has warning of her lover's approach by a piece of pack-thread, which she ties to her great toe a nights. While he is pursuing her lover, she puts another woman in bed in her place. The husband, finding her there, beats her, and cuts off her hair. He then goes and calls his wife's brothers, who, holding his accusation to be false, give him a rating.

NOVEL IX. - Lydia, wife of Nicostratus, loves Pyrrhus, who to assure himself thereof, asks three things of her, all of which she does, and therewithal enjoys him in presence of Nicostratus, and makes Nicostratus believe that what he saw was not real.

NOVEL X. - Two Sienese love a lady, one of them being her gossip: the gossip dies, having promised his comrade to return to him from the other world; which he does, and tells him what sort of life is led there.

- EIGHTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - Gulfardo borrows moneys of Guasparruolo, which he has agreed to give Guasparruolo's wife, that he may lie with her. He gives them to her, and in her presence tells Guasparruolo that he has done so, and she acknowledges that 'tis true.

NOVEL II. - The priest of Varlungo lies with Monna Belcolore: he leaves with her his cloak by way of pledge, and receives from her a mortar. He returns the mortar, and demands of her the cloak that he had left in pledge, which the good lady returns him with a gibe.

NOVEL III. - Calandrino, Bruno and Buffalmacco go in quest of the heliotrope beside the Mugnone. Thinking to have found it, Calandrino gets him home laden with stones. His wife chides him: whereat he waxes wroth, beats her, and tells his comrades what they know better than he.

NOVEL IV. - The rector of Fiesole loves a widow lady, by whom he is not loved, and thinking to lie with her, lies with her maid, with whom the lady's brothers cause him to be found by his Bishop.

NOVEL V. - Three young men pull down the breeches of a judge from the
Marches, while he is administering justice on the bench.
NOVEL VI. - Bruno and Buffalmacco steal a pig from Calandrino, and induce him to essay its recovery by means of pills of ginger and vernaccia. Of the said pills they give him two, one after the other, made of dog-ginger compounded with aloes; and it then appearing as if he had had the pig himself, they constrain him to buy them off, if he would not have them tell his wife.

NOVEL VII. - A scholar loves a widow lady, who, being enamoured of another, causes him to spend a winter's night awaiting her in the snow. He afterwards by a stratagem causes her to stand for a whole day in July, naked upon a tower, exposed to the flies, the gadflies, and the sun.

NOVEL VIII. - Two men keep with one another: the one lies with the other's wife: the other, being ware thereof, manages with the aid of his wife to have the one locked in a chest, upon which he then lies with the wife of him that is locked therein.

NOVEL IX. - 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.

NOVEL X. - A Sicilian woman cunningly conveys from a merchant that which he has brought to Palermo; he, making a shew of being come back thither with far greater store of goods than before, borrows money of her, and leaves her in lieu thereof water and tow.

- NINTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - Madonna Francesca, having two lovers, the one Rinuccio, the other Alessandro, by name, and loving neither of them, induces the one to simulate a corpse in a tomb, and the other to enter the tomb to fetch him out: whereby, neither satisfying her demands, she artfully rids herself of both.

NOVEL II. - An abbess rises in haste and in the dark, with intent to surprise an accused nun abed with her lover: thinking to put on her veil, she puts on instead the breeches of a priest that she has with her: the nun, espying her headgear, and doing her to wit thereof, is acquitted, and thenceforth finds it easier to forgather with her lover.

NOVEL III. - Master Simone, at the instance of Bruno and Buffalmacco and Nello, makes Calandrino believe that he is with child. Calandrino, accordingly, gives them capons and money for medicines, and is cured without being delivered.

NOVEL IV. - Cecco, son of Messer Fortarrigo, loses his all at play at Buonconvento, besides the money of Cecco, son of Messer Angiulieri, whom, running after him in his shirt and crying out that he has robbed him, he causes to be taken by peasants: he then puts on his clothes, mounts his palfrey, and leaves him to follow in his shirt.

NOVEL V. - Calandrino being enamoured of a damsel, Bruno gives him a scroll, averring that, if he but touch her therewith, she will go with him: he is found with her by his wife, who subjects him to a most severe and vexatious examination.

NOVEL VI. - Two young men lodge at an inn, of whom the one lies with the host's daughter, his wife by inadvertence lying with the other. He that lay with the daughter afterwards gets into her father's bed and tells him all, taking him to be his comrade. They bandy words: whereupon the good woman, apprehending the circumstances, gets her to bed with her daughter, and by divers apt words re-establishes perfect accord.

NOVEL VII. - Talano di Molese dreams that a wolf tears and rends all the neck and face of his wife: he gives her warning thereof, which she heeds not, and the dream comes true.

NOVEL VIII. - Biondello gulls Ciacco in the matter of a breakfast: for which prank Ciacco is cunningly avenged on Biondello, causing him to be shamefully beaten.

NOVEL IX. - Two young men ask counsel of Solomon; the one, how he is to make himself beloved, the other, how he is to reduce an unruly wife to order. The King bids the one to love, and the other to go to the Bridge of Geese.

NOVEL X. - Dom Gianni at the instance of his gossip Pietro uses an enchantment to transform Pietro's wife into a mare; but, when he comes to attach the tail, Gossip Pietro, by saying that he will have none of the tail, makes the enchantment of no effect.

- TENTH DAY -

NOVEL I. - A knight in the service of the King of Spain deems himself ill requited. Wherefore the King, by most cogent proof, shews him that the blame rests not with him, but with the knight's own evil fortune; after which, he bestows upon him a noble gift.

NOVEL II. - Ghino di Tacco, captures the Abbot of Cluny, cures him of a disorder of the stomach, and releases him. The abbot, on his return to the court of Rome, reconciles Ghino with Pope Boniface, and makes him prior of the Hospital.

NOVEL III. - Mitridanes, holding Nathan in despite by reason of his courtesy, journey with intent to kill him, and falling in with him unawares, is advised by him how to compass his end. Following his advice, he finds him in a copse, and recognizing him, is shame-stricken, and becomes his friend.

NOVEL IV. - Messer Gentile de' Carisendi, being come from Modena, disinters a lady that he loves, who has been buried for dead. She, being reanimated, gives birth to a male child; and Messer Gentile restores her, with her son, to Niccoluccio Caccianimico, her husband.

NOVEL V. - Madonna Dianora craves of Messer Ansaldo a garden that shall be as fair in January as in May. Messer Ansaldo binds himself to a necromancer, and thereby gives her the garden. Her husband gives her leave to do Messer Ansaldo's pleasure: he, being apprised of her husband's liberality, releases her from her promise; and the necromancer releases Messer Ansaldo from his bond, and will tale nought of his.

NOVEL VI. - King Charles the Old, being conqueror, falls in love with a young maiden, and afterward growing ashamed of his folly bestows her and her sister honourably in marriage.

NOVEL VII. - King Pedro, being apprised of the fervent love borne him by Lisa, who thereof is sick, comforts her, and forthwith gives her in marriage to a young gentleman, and having kissed her on the brow, ever after professes himself her knight.

NOVEL VIII. - Sophronia, albeit she deems herself wife to Gisippus, is wife to Titus Quintius Fulvus, and goes with him to Rome, where Gisippus arrives in indigence, and deeming himself scorned by Titus, to compass his own death, avers that he has slain a man. Titus recognizes him, and to save his life, alleges that 'twas he that slew the man: whereof he that did the deed being witness, he discovers himself as the murderer. Whereby it comes to pass that they are all three liberated by Octavianus; and Titus gives Gisippus his sister to wife, and shares with him all his substance.

NOVEL IX. - Saladin, in guise of a merchant, is honourably entreated by Messer Torello. The Crusade ensuing, Messer Torello appoints a date, after which his wife may marry again: he is taken prisoner, and by training hawks comes under the Soldan's notice. The Soldan recognizes him, makes himself known to him, and entreats him with all honour. Messer Torello falls sick, and by magic arts is transported in a single night to Pavia, where his wife's second marriage is then to be solemnized, and being present thereat, is recognized by her, and returns with her to his house.

NOVEL X. - The Marquis of Saluzzo, overborne by the entreaties of his vassals, consents to take a wife, but, being minded to please himself in the choice of her, takes a husbandman's daughter. He has two children by her, both of whom he makes her believe that he has put to death. Afterward, feigning to be tired of her, and to have taken another wife, he turns her out of doors in her shift, and brings his daughter into the house in guise of his bride; but, finding her patient under it all, he brings her home again, and shews her her children, now grown up, and honours her, and causes her to be honoured, as Marchioness.




Kline. Dante's Divine Comedy

Today's free book is Dante: The Divine Comedy, translated by Tony Kline. You can find out more about this book in the Dante's Inferno unit of the Myth-Folklore UnTextbook.

For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

Tony Kline, the translator, has generously made his work available to read for free online: Dante: The Divine Comedy.



Inferno
Cantos I-VII (Virgil, Circles I-IV, Paolo & Francesca, Ciacco)
Cantos VIII-XIV (Circles V-VII, Farinata, Pier delle Vigne, Capaneus)
Cantos XV-XXI (Brunetto Latini, Geryon, Circle VIII, Manto)
Cantos XXII-XXVIII (Vanni Fucci, Ulysses, G. Da Montefeltro, B. De Born)
Cantos XXIX-XXXIV (Griffolino, The Giants, Circle IX, Ugolino, Satan)

Purgatorio
Cantos I-VII (Casella, Manfred, La Pia, Buonconte, Sordello )
Cantos VIII-XIV (The Gate, Nino, Oderisi, Salvani, Sapia, G. Del Duca)
Cantos XV-XXI (Free Will, Nature of Love, Adrian, Hugh Capet,Statius)
Cantos XXII-XXVIII (Forese, Bonagiunta, Souls, Guinicelli, Arnaut, Matilda)
Cantos XXIX-XXXIII (The Divine Pageant, Beatrice, Lethe, Eunoë)

Paradiso
Cantos I-VII (The Moon, Piccarda, Mercury, Justinian, Romeo)
Cantos VIII-XIV (Venus, Cunizza, Folco, The Sun, Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventura, Dominic, Francis, Solomon, Mars)
Cantos XV-XXI (Cacciaguida, Florence, Jupiter, The Eagle, Saturn, Peter Damian )
Cantos XXII-XXVIII (Benedict, Gabriel, Peter, Paul, James, John, Angels)
Cantos XXIX-XXXIII (The Empyrean, The River, The Rose, Bernard, The Virgin, The Final Vision)