登陆注册
4717100000318

第318章

How Pantagruel went ashore in the island of Pope-Figland.

The next morning we arrived at the island of Pope-figs; formerly a rich and free people, called the Gaillardets, but now, alas! miserably poor, and under the yoke of the Papimen. The occasion of it was this:

On a certain yearly high holiday, and burgomaster, syndics, and topping rabbies of the Gaillardets chanced to go into the neighbouring island Papimany to see the festival and pass away the time. Now one of them having espied the pope's picture (with the sight of which, according to a laudable custom, the people were blessed on high-offering holidays), made mouths at it, and cried, A fig for it! as a sign of manifest contempt and derision. To be revenged of this affront, the Papimen, some days after, without giving the others the least warning, took arms, and surprised, destroyed, and ruined the whole island of the Gaillardets; putting the men to the sword, and sparing none but the women and children, and those too only on condition to do what the inhabitants of Milan were condemned to by the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa.

These had rebelled against him in his absence, and ignominiously turned the empress out of the city, mounting her a-horseback on a mule called Thacor, with her breech foremost towards the old jaded mule's head, and her face turned towards the crupper. Now Frederick being returned, mastered them, and caused so careful a search to be made that he found out and got the famous mule Thacor. Then the hangman by his order clapped a fig into the mule's jimcrack, in the presence of the enslaved cits that were brought into the middle of the great market-place, and proclaimed in the emperor's name, with trumpets, that whosoever of them would save his own life should publicly pull the fig out with his teeth, and after that put it in again in the very individual cranny whence he had draw'd it without using his hands, and that whoever refused to do this should presently swing for it and die in his shoes. Some sturdy fools, standing upon their punctilio, chose honourably to be hanged rather than submit to so shameful and abominable a disgrace; and others, less nice in point of ceremony, took heart of grace, and even resolved to have at the fig, and a fig for't, rather than make a worse figure with a hempen collar, and die in the air at so short warning.

Accordingly, when they had neatly picked out the fig with their teeth from old Thacor's snatch-blatch, they plainly showed it the headsman, saying, Ecco lo fico, Behold the fig!

By the same ignominy the rest of these poor distressed Gaillardets saved their bacon, becoming tributaries and slaves, and the name of Pope-figs was given them, because they said, A fig for the pope's image. Since this, the poor wretches never prospered, but every year the devil was at their doors, and they were plagued with hail, storms, famine, and all manner of woes, as an everlasting punishment for the sin of their ancestors and relations.

Perceiving the misery and calamity of that generation, we did not care to go further up into the country, contenting ourselves with going into a little chapel near the haven to take some holy water. It was dilapidated and ruined, wanting also a cover--like Saint Peter at Rome. When we were in, as we dipped our fingers in the sanctified cistern, we spied in the middle of that holy pickle a fellow muffled up with stoles, all under water, like a diving duck, except the tip of his snout to draw his breath.

About him stood three priests, true shavelings, clean shorn and polled, who were muttering strange words to the devils out of a conjuring book.

Pantagruel was not a little amazed at this, and inquiring what kind of sport these were at, was told that for three years last past the plague had so dreadfully raged in the island that the better half of it had been utterly depopulated, and the lands lay fallow and unoccupied. Now, the mortality being over, this same fellow who had crept into the holy tub, having a large piece of ground, chanced to be sowing it with white winter wheat at the very minute of an hour that a kind of a silly sucking devil, who could not yet write or read, or hail and thunder, unless it were on parsley or coleworts, and got leave of his master Lucifer to go into this island of Pope-figs, where the devils were very familiar with the men and women, and often went to take their pastime.

This same devil being got thither, directed his discourse to the husbandman, and asked him what he was doing. The poor man told him that he was sowing the ground with corn to help him to subsist the next year. Ay, but the ground is none of thine, Mr. Plough-jobber, cried the devil, but mine; for since the time that you mocked the pope all this land has been proscribed, adjudged, and abandoned to us. However, to sow corn is not my province; therefore I will give thee leave to sow the field, that is to say, provided we share the profit. I will, replied the farmer. I mean, said the devil, that of what the land shall bear, two lots shall be made, one of what shall grow above ground, the other of what shall be covered with earth. The right of choosing belongs to me; for I am a devil of noble and ancient race; thou art a base clown. I therefore choose what shall lie under ground, take thou what shall be above. When dost thou reckon to reap, hah? About the middle of July, quoth the farmer. Well, said the devil, I'll not fail thee then; in the meantime, slave as thou oughtest.

Work, clown, work. I am going to tempt to the pleasing sin of whoring the nuns of Dryfart, the sham saints of the cowl, and the gluttonish crew. Iam more than sure of these. They need but meet, and the job is done; true fire and tinder, touch and take; down falls nun, and up gets friar.

同类推荐
  • 大乘玄论

    大乘玄论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 体仁要术

    体仁要术

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 李文忠公选集

    李文忠公选集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 穆天子传

    穆天子传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Marble Faun

    The Marble Faun

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 万古兑换系统

    万古兑换系统

    少年叶凌,偶得万古以来最为强大的兑换系统,一路开挂,吊打一切!只有想不到,没有做不到!敌人趴下,众生,在我脚下!
  • 荷花深处

    荷花深处

    谁是幕后主谋?谁策划了惨案?谁是武功天下第一?谁得了天下第一剑?谁是亲生父母?谁最终掌握了皇权?究竟是兄妹之情,还是有夫妻之缘?阅尽了爱恨情仇悲欢离合,终知道荷花深处别有洞天。
  • 革宋

    革宋

    天下非赵氏天下,乃华夏之天下。吾起兵,也非夺回赵氏江山,而是要光复华夏江山。
  • 名门嫡女策:桃花撞了腰

    名门嫡女策:桃花撞了腰

    推荐新文文:《世家女》他如莲,一池碧水才能衬得他高雅亭直。他似凌霄,步步为营璨于高处。但譬如高原陆地不生莲花,卑湿淤泥乃生此花,我不是竹蔓,配不得那一抹青衫,我也不是那牡丹富贵种子,能种入那宫阙深处。你当明白,天涯海角之处,九山云外之间,你在哪儿,我便在哪儿。我不求神仙眷侣般逍遥美景,亦不求华阙宸寰里桂殿兰宫,我只愿你一生安好,可以让我随着你,倾心微笑。——题记木佳死了,因为梦见了自己的色狼小矮子变态上司把自己吃了。木佳又活了,带着前生的记忆成了代郡木府三房嫡女——木灵语。既然穿了,那么……我XXOO你大爷的,让暴风雨来得更猛烈些吧!可是,可是……为什么爷爷奶奶爹爹娘亲姑姑舅舅甚至老祖宗都打定了主意要她跟近亲结婚?那会生出畸形儿的啊……还好,她还有十几年的时间,可以长大……【秦慕枫】——她哭了吗?——是,很伤心,很难过。——她痛苦吗?——你说呢?——她……有什么打算吗?——没有,她只是哭。——你去多多安慰她。——为什么你不去?——我?你觉得可能么?【慕容清】——语儿,你会后悔的。我慕容清,绝对会让你后悔的!——你问我为什么?很简单,权力,才是握在手里,唯一的武器。【秦慕杉】——你不需要这样做,你不欠我的,但若你这样做了,我到死都不会安心。——我知道你有多不舍,我也不舍。可是语儿,就算隔了千山万水,他依旧念着你,而你,又何尝不念着他。【张端睿】——咱们算是臭味相投吧?反正你不嫌弃我风流多情的,我也勉强能接受你不守妇道。要不,咱们就将就将就,凑一对儿得了?——语语,做哥哥的,很心疼。【岑耀祖】——小表妹,喏,给你,纸鸢。——我是军人,当然要报效朝廷,征战沙场,说不准哪一天就死在那儿了,或许连尸骨都没留下。语语你说过,“死得其所”,如果真的有那么一天,你要记得以我为傲,因为我为自己的理想,奉献了我的一生。【尚崇文】——诗曰:窈窕淑女,君子……啊!你敲我作甚?——书、呆、子!你能不能正常点儿说话?——非也,这是圣人之言,子曰……你去哪儿?——女子曰:干你屁事!【慕容漓】——如果有困难,记得来找我。——我不会帮他,但也不会拉他的后腿。他是天生的王者,大兴的命运可能就在他的手上。木灵语,他为了胜利,牺牲了很多,你要体谅。增加几个片段ORZ~~~【片段一】
  • 余生陪你仰望天空

    余生陪你仰望天空

    一场梦,一段人生。当在梦境与现实徘徊时的迷茫。那个在梦中抛下她的人终究还是在原地等她了。
  • 穿越之囧妃逆袭盛宠

    穿越之囧妃逆袭盛宠

    混了18年,好不容易做了点对社会有用的公道事,想要救人,结果人没救成,把自己给搭上了,命运啊~,为何这么惨?什么?穿越到古代了?面对着重来一次的人生,那么这次我一定要好好活,为自己而活,让那些自以为自己高人一等的人逐个付出代价……
  • 胡适讲国学

    胡适讲国学

    胡适先生是我国现代著名的学者。其对国学的通彻见解,让他人恐之不及。《大师讲国学文库:胡适讲国学》全面收录了胡适先生精华的国学理论,结集了多篇胡适先生在国学领域的不同文章,其内容更是涉及诸子百家、文学等多个领域,为读者更好地了解国学理论提供了很好的借鉴与参考。
  • 卓异记

    卓异记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 世事浮沉,我心悠然

    世事浮沉,我心悠然

    20出头的年轻女孩,一直希望得到很多很多爱。渴望被爱,所以没有底线去爱别人,常常飞蛾扑火,遍体鳞伤。其实如果没有爱,很多钱也是好的,如果两者都没有,那么庆幸还有健康,还有很多可以摔跤的时光。这本书告诉你,怎样得到很多爱,或是得到很多钱,或者什么都不要,无欲则刚。世事浮沉,大浪淘沙,身边的人来了又走,我们都变了,不变的是越来越丰盈的心,可以悠然去看世事变迁、云卷云舒。
  • 你最应该知道的欧洲史

    你最应该知道的欧洲史

    本书共分四大章,从古典时期希腊、罗马文明之火娓娓道来,讲述欧洲这块古老、神奇的土地上演绎的种种。在这里面,有发明的喜悦,有战争的痛苦,也有令人敬佩的哲人、英雄,当然也有令人痛恨的战争的发动者。所有的一切都留在历史的长河里,但我们依然能触摸。我们精心编写这本书,就是让读者在了解历史的同时,能从中收获到一些东西。