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The Decameron

 The Decameron
type
TVTItem
 The Decameron
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The Decameron
 The Decameron
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TheDecameron
 The Decameron
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The Decameron is a classic work of Italian literature, written c. 1350-53 by Giovanni Boccaccio.In the midst of The Black Death, ten wealthy young Florentines—three men and seven women—decamp to a countryside villa with their retinue, and pass their days in storytelling, an attempt to reclaim a world that everywhere is dying. Over ten days they tell a hundred stories between them, full of generous aristocrats, clever tricks, toilet humor, lustful women, wicked churchmen and lots of illicit sex. Boccaccio himself steps out from the shadows twice (once in the introduction to the fourth day, once in the epilogue) to deliver impassioned, hilarious, self-deprecating, and (in the case of the epilogue) incredibly obscene defenses of his work.Famous stories include: Day 1, story 1: Ciapelletto, a notoriously wicked Italian Amoral Attorney and scoundrel who has been a murderer, forger, perjurer, and Depraved Homosexual (among many other things), falls terminally ill while on business in Belgium, where almost absolutely no-one knows him. His slightly less evil companions bring a monk from a nearby convent to hear his confessions and give him last rites. Ciappelletto proceeds to tell him the most ridiculous lies about his life and how holy he's been the whole time, while pretending to repent over venial sins. The monk, fooled by this feigned display of piety, gives a sermon on his life, and everyone reveres Ciapelletto as a saint and attributes miracles to him. Day 1, story 2: A Jew converts to Catholicism after seeing the corruption of Rome, reasoning that if Christianity can last and still spread even when its hierarchy is so sinful, the Holy Spirit must be its foundation. Day 3, story 1: Masetto da Lamporecchio feigns to be dumb to win a seat as a gardener in a convent. He ends up having sex with all of the nuns. Day 3, story 10: Long considered the most obscene and was censored or removed in translations for a significant period.note A non-Christian Tunisian girl (whether she is Jewish or Muslim is unclear and is in any case unimportant to the story) converts to Christianity as she hears the happiest way of life is to serve God. She travels far to find a monastery to teach her the ways of God but is rejected as it is feared that monks might lust after her. Eventually, she finds a young hermit to teach her and as he is overcome with lust for the beautiful girl, he thinks of a way to sleep with her. Long story short, the hermit calls his cock "the Devil" and her pussy "Hell", and he teaches her how to put the Devil back into Hell. She enjoys it so much she tires the hermit out and marries someone who doesn't subsist on limited food. Day 4, story 5: Lisabetta and the lowly Lorenzo love each other in secret, but her three brothers find out, lure Lorenzo away, and kill him. He appears to her in a dream and leads her to where his body is buried, and she cuts off his head and hides it in a jar of earth where she plants basil. Her brothers note her obsession with the jar and steal it away, and she dies of grief.Virgin Territory is loosely based on some of its tales, as is The Little Hours.
 The Decameron
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2023-11-21T20:31:22Z
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2023-11-21T20:31:22Z
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Dropped link to AnAesop: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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Dropped link to HistoricalDomainCharacter: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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 The Decameron / int_1111322f
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Far East
 The Decameron / int_1111322f
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Far East: The story of Mithridanes and Nathan (Day 10, story 3) takes place in "Cathay,"note What Europeans called China during Boccaccio's lifetime a little bit outside the capital (probably Khanbaliq, i.e., Beijing).
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Extreme Libido
 The Decameron / int_1b40fc16
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Extreme Libido: Alibech develops this shortly after having sex with Rustico, to the point of tiring him out.
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Those Two Guys
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Those Two Guys: Bruno and Buffalmacco in (Day 8, story 3), (Day 8, story 9), and (Day 9, story 3) are two pranksters who outwit such buffoons as Calandrino and Simone.
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Framing Device
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Framing Device: A group of wealthy young men and women pass the time by sharing stories while waiting out the Black Death in a deserted country villa.
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Accidental Pornomancer
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Accidental Pornomancer: Alatiel becomes the sex slave or the wife of eight men before being reunited with her fiancé. (Day 2, story 7)
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Bed Trick
 The Decameron / int_2e206837
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Bed Trick: Frequently, and with many different outcomes - a woman is tricked into having an affair with another man and decides she prefers him to her husband (Day 3, story 6); a woman tricks a suitor into having sex with a maid and humiliates him (Day 8, story 4); a case of mistaken identity makes a woman think quickly to come up with a cover story (Day 9, story 6); a palace worker impersonates the king, sleeps with his wife and gets away with it by shaving the heads of the palace staff (Day 3, story 2); a man, as a favour to his love-sick best friend, tricks his fiancée into consummating a union with the latter instead (Day 10, story 8).
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Sex Dressed
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Sex Dressed: The abbess in Day 9, Story 2 unwittingly put on her night guest's pants instead of her veil upon hearing that one of the nuns has a lover. The nun who was caught points this out to the abbess as she scolded her.
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Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
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(Day 9, story 7) has a man named Talano d'Imolese dream that his wife is attacked by a savage wolf. He tries to warn her, but she ignores him. The dream comes true.
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I Call Him "Mister Happy"
 The Decameron / int_31c87ac
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I Call Him "Mister Happy": Rustico's "The Devil" and Alibech's "Hell" in Day 3, story 10.
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Please Kill Me if It Satisfies You
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Please Kill Me if It Satisfies You: Nathan is willing to be killed by his rival. (Day 10, story 3)
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Out-Gambitted
 The Decameron / int_362bdb30
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Out-Gambitted: It happens to some of the characters (e.g., Tofano in Day 7, story 4 is outwitted by his own wife).
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Mister Seahorse
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Mister Seahorse: Calandrino is the victim of an attempt by his two friends to believe he's pregnant. It works--he's just that stupid. Then he buys an expensive medicine to abort. (Day 9, story 3)
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Hormone-Addled Teenager
 The Decameron / int_3b27cf16
comment
Hormone-Addled Teenager: Surprised? The storytellers are all in their late teens or early-to-mid twenties. They are essentially unsupervised. An inordinate proportion of the stories either involve sex or hint strongly at sex. And there is much subtext indicating that each of the three guys is trying to get into at least one of the girls' pants (or in Dioneo's case, it would appear that he's trying to get into all of their pants). So no wonder there's so much fucking in the stories.
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Flat Character
 The Decameron / int_3d5c5deb
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Flat Character: The ten storytellers. Or so many readers think; some scholars think there's a lot more to them than meets the eye.
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Secret Test of Character
 The Decameron / int_3f7a958b
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Secret Test of Character: For years, the Marquis of Saluzzo tests his wife's patience and obedience by mistreating her, pretending to kill both their children and dump her for a twelve-year-old girl. (Day 10, Story 10)
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 The Decameron / int_40cbee83
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Wretched Hive
 The Decameron / int_40cbee83
comment
Wretched Hive: At least, that's how Boccaccio views Venice, "where the scum of the earth can always find a welcome." (Day 4, story 2)
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"Not If They Enjoyed It" Rationalization
 The Decameron / int_40e993f4
comment
"Not If They Enjoyed It" Rationalization: Every time someone (both genders) rapes somebody or impersonates a spouse or a lover to have sex with somebody else, you can expect the story to try to make the fact that the victim enjoyed it work as a justification.
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Happily Ever After
 The Decameron / int_41271766
comment
Happily Ever After: The theme for Day 5 is that a pair of lovers survive calamities or misfortunes and attain a state of happiness.
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Distinguishing Mark
 The Decameron / int_4668be6f
comment
Distinguishing Mark: Teodoro is recognized by a strawberry-shaped birthmark (Day 5, story 7).
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Sexy Soaked Shirt
 The Decameron / int_47b152f9
comment
Sexy Soaked Shirt: Day 10, story 6. The twin daughters of Messer Neri degli Uberti, dressed demurely in white dresses, go fully clothed into their father's fishing pool to catch fish for a banquet Messer Neri is hosting for King Charles I the Oldnote He wasn't especially old, but he did win his crown at about 40; this story is set at most a few years after the 1266 Battle of Benevento that put him on the throne of Naples and his court. The king and his courtiersnote Including his chief advisor, who for history nerds was the son of Simon de Montfort were charmed by the girls when they walked in from the house, but absolutely captivated once they emerged from the water.
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Butt-Monkey
 The Decameron / int_47fea76b
comment
Butt-Monkey: Calandrino is a recurring character, and in every story where he appears, he ends up falling for some ridiculous prank played on him by his "friends." He never sees through their plans, since his intelligence is so low that he might trip on it.
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Black Comedy Rape
 The Decameron / int_4c851777
comment
Black Comedy Rape: Apparently, Alibech does this to Rustico in (Day 3, story 10).
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Downer Ending
 The Decameron / int_4e3d253b
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Downer Ending: The theme for Day 4 is that a character ends up suffering misfortune, although the second tale has a comedic tone and the person who suffers is an Asshole Victim.
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 The Decameron / int_533fd3f5
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Wearing It All Wrong
 The Decameron / int_533fd3f5
comment
Wearing It All Wrong: Day 9, Story 2 is about an abbess who was woken up at night with a report that one of her nuns harbors a lover. She catches the girl red-handed, assembles everyone, and starts lecturing her about what a terrible and unforgivable sin this is... until the nun politely points out that upon being woken up, the abbess put on her head not the required headdress, but her own night guest's pants. The abbess hurries to change the tone of her lecture to one of forgiveness and the difficulties of resisting temptation.
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Corrupt Church
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Corrupt Church: Very frequently referenced in his stories. Perhaps the most famous example is the story of Abraham, a Jew, converting to the Christian faith despite AND because of the corruption he witnessed firsthand, saying that any organization that has managed to withstand this much corruption for so long must have the Holy Spirit holding it together.
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Domestic Abuse
 The Decameron / int_590eb583
comment
Domestic Abuse: According to Day 9, story 9, beating your wife will scare her into submission. A less sympathetic example of a domestic abuser would be Calandrino in (Day 8, story 3). In it, he collects stones. As soon as his wife catches him in their house, he beats her up until she is black and blue! Boccaccio points out that in this instance, he is more at fault than she because he did not warn her beforehand.
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Incompatible Orientation
 The Decameron / int_5a365ed2
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Incompatible Orientation: Pietro, a Depraved Homosexual whose wife is pretty much The Beard. (Day 5, story 10). Pietro's wife ends up sharing her lover with him.
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A Wizard Did It
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A Wizard Did It: An Eden garden in winter (Day 10, story 5) and teleportation of a man from Saladin's palace to Pavia (Day 10, story 9).
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Covered in Gunge
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Covered in Gunge: Day 8, story 9 has Bruno and Buffalmacco cast a physician named Simone into a filthy ditch and leave him there.
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Suicide by Cop
 The Decameron / int_73328e84
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Suicide by Cop: Attempted by Gisippe accusing himself of a murder he did not commit (Day 10, story 8).
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Violence Really Is the Answer
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Violence Really Is the Answer: (Day 9, story 9) teaches that you must beat your wife if she is obstinate. Ouch!
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Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking
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Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: Ciapelletto's List of Transgressions includes blasphemy, sacrilege, inciting violence, and many felonies such as assault, robbery, and murder, but concludes by noting that he's known to use loaded dice.
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Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves
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Rewarded as a Traitor Deserves: Ciuriaci, after killing his master the prince of Morea on the Duke of Athens' orders. (Day 2, story 7)
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Sympathetic Adulterer
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Sympathetic Adulterer: Lots of them, generally involving a woman cheating on a much older husband and it often the case that the woman is an Impoverished Patrician and the husband a Nouveau Riche.
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Villain with Good Publicity
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Villain with Good Publicity: The friar gives a sermon about Ciapelletto's supposed sanctity, completely unaware that the latter feigned contrition for his sins.
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Naughty Nuns
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Naughty Nuns: In a couple of the stories. One story from night 9 contains a nun having sex with her lover, being discovered by the abbess who just had sex with her own lover (as evidenced by her accidentally wearing his pants, and not her habit, on her head).
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Villain Protagonist
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Villain Protagonist: Ciapelletto (Day 1, story 1) is a Consummate Liar, Friar Alberto (Day 4, story 2) is an Asshole Victim, and Cimon (Day 5, story 1) kidnaps the woman he loves.
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National Stereotypes
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National Stereotypes: Several stories note stereotypes associated with various Italian regions. For instance, people from Sienna were supposedly stupid and all Venetians are greedy and corrupt (because Venice was a rival of Boccaccio's city-state, Florence).
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Samus Is a Girl
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Samus Is a Girl: The abbot is the princess of England (Day 2, story 3), Sicurano the sailor (Day 2, story 9).
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Polyamory
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Polyamory: After sleeping with each other's wives, two men agree to share them freely. (Day 8, Story 8)
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Dirty Old Monk
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comment
Dirty Old Monk: At least half of all clergymen in the stories are also shameless leches.
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Dreaming of Things to Come
 The Decameron / int_af7d483f
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Dreaming of Things to Come: (Day 4, story 6): Andreuola dreams that a dark and terrible thing is clutching at her lover Gabriotto. The next day, Gabriotto dies in Andreuola's arms. (Day 9, story 7) has a man named Talano d'Imolese dream that his wife is attacked by a savage wolf. He tries to warn her, but she ignores him. The dream comes true.
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Fate Worse than Death
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Fate Worse than Death: A lady rejected her knight suitor and rejoiced when he killed himself. She's sentenced to be hunted and killed by him, eaten by his dogs and brought back to life every Friday for the same amount of years than the months she was cruel to him. This frightens Nastagio's love so much she finally agrees to marry him. (Day 5, story 8)
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Spoof Aesop
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Spoof Aesop: The final story of Day 10, which is about the wonders of magnanimity, tells the tale of Griselda, a woman so patient and generous that she smilingly puts up with her husband apparently murdering their children, and who only ever requests of him that he not kick her out of their house naked. It turns out her husband was only testing her and she gets everything back because she was so "magnanimous" as to never tell him what a colossal asshole he was being...but the absolute over-the-top horror of what she's willing to go through is clearly meant to be ridiculous, and Dioneo caps off the story by saying Griselda is unrealistic and it would've served her husband right if she dumped him and got a new lover instead.
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Death by Despair
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Death by Despair: Girolamo and his lover die after he discovers that Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder.
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Take That!
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Take That!: Boccaccio really hated corrupt clergymen. And Venetians. There is story after story after story of corrupt or hypocritical clergymen, who fool around like rock stars while pretending to keep their vows of celibacy.
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Hypocritical Humor
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Hypocritical Humor: Day 9, Story 2 is about an abbess who was awakened at night with a report that one of her nuns harbors a lover. She catches the girl red-handed, assembles everyone, and starts lecturing her about what a terrible and unforgivable sin this is... until the nun politely points out that upon being woken up, the abbess put on her head not the required headdress, but her own night guest's pants. The abbess hurries to change the tone of her lecture to one of forgiveness and the difficulties of resisting temptation.
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Horrible Judge of Character
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Horrible Judge of Character: It is very clear that Ciapelletto is a man who lived a criminal life, even lying about having lived a life of sanctity and faking contrition for his sins when confessing to the friar. However, the friar is completely hoodwinked, and he goes on to preach about Ciapelleto's supposed sanctity.
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Magical Jew
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Magical Jew: The novel was written during The Renaissance, when this trope was common, and features two characters of this type. First, there is the wise Jew Abraham who travels to the Vatican and criticizes the corruption there, essentially becoming the author's mouthpiece. Second, there is the Jewish money lender Melchisedech, who is asked by a Sultan which of the three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, or Islam) is true, and answers with a parable about the three rings, one of which is precious and the other two are fake, but nobody knows which is which.
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Did I Mention It's Christmas?
 The Decameron / int_d0c30f35
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Did I Mention It's Christmas?: (Day 7, story 5) is set on Christmas Day and involves a husband who is suspicious about his wife.
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Blasphemous Boast
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Blasphemous Boast: (Day 1, story 6) has a drunken man claim that his wine is "good enough for Christ himself."
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Unusual Euphemism
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Unusual Euphemism: "Putting the Devil back into Hell" (Day 3, story 10). This is why this tale was not translated in earlier English translations of the Decameron.
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All Women Are Lustful
 The Decameron / int_e41a9801
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All Women Are Lustful: Masetto states "While farmers generally allow one rooster for ten hens, ten men are scarcely sufficient to service one woman" after he manages to sleep with every single nun in the convent. (Day 3, story 1) In general, the theme that women need sex, and if you don't sleep with your wife it's your own fault if she takes a lover, crops up a lot.
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Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder
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Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder: Girolamo, after two years, comes back to find his lover married to another man, and she completely forgot about him. He dies after failing to win her back and she dies from remorse.
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Exact Words
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Exact Words: Ciapelletto doesn't have to lie when the monk asks him whether he has ever fornicated with women...
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In Which a Trope Is Described
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In Which a Trope Is Described: The tales' titles consist of brief summaries of their plots.
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Cartwright Curse
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Cartwright Curse: Alatiel. Six of her eight lovers die (often being murdered one after the other). (Day 2, story 7)
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Malicious Misnaming
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Malicious Misnaming: (Day 4, story 2) in which Pampinea, who tells the story, refers to Lisetta as, among other things, "Lady Numbskull," "Lady Birdbrain," and "Lady Noodle."
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You Have Waited Long Enough
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You Have Waited Long Enough: Torello arrives just in time when his wife is about to remarried after he had been declared dead (Day 10, story 9).
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Female Misogynist
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Female Misogynist: The female storytellers. They start off planning their trip out of Florence by saying that they have to bring some men along because as women, they're too fickle, silly, and quarrelsome to make it on their own. It is Emilia who narrates the infamous "Salomon and the Bridge" tale (Day 9, story 9), about the necessity of beating your wife brutally to make her show complete obedience.
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Brainless Beauty
 The Decameron / int_f26d5e66
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Brainless Beauty: Cesca (Day 6, story 8) is told not to look at her face in the mirror lest she sees nasty folk. Lisetta da Quirino (Day 4, story 2) is easily fooled by Friar Alberto, who claims that he's the Archangel Gabriel so he can sleep with her. Cimone before falling in love with Iphigenia (Day 5, story 1).
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Dude, She's Like in a Coma
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Dude, She's Like in a Coma: Messer Gentile hugs and kisses his lover's corpse, just to find out her heart is still beating. (Day 10, story 4).
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The Decameron

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Decameron
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A Love to Dismember / int_450e2d16
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Accidental Pornomancer / int_450e2d16
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Bed Trick / int_450e2d16
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Dirty Old Monk / int_450e2d16
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How Unscientific! / int_450e2d16
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I Call Him "Mister Happy" / int_450e2d16
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Magical Jew / int_450e2d16
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Sexual Euphemism / int_450e2d16
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Sexy Soaked Shirt / int_450e2d16
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The Late Middle Ages / int_450e2d16
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Wearing It All Wrong / int_450e2d16