The Decameron - Giovanni Boccaccio


Renaissance Man by Joan Acocella - "In 1348, the Black Death, the most devastating epidemic in European history, swept across the continent. Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-75), at the beginning of his famous Decameron, describes its effects on his city, Florence. Many people just dropped dead in the street. Others died in their houses, often unattended by their families. Husbands and wives, fearing infection, sat and prayed in separate rooms. Mothers walked away from their children and closed the door. In the words of a new translation of the Decameron (Norton), by Wayne A. Rebhorn, a specialist in Renaissance literature at the University of Texas, the Florentines carried
the bodies of the recently deceased out of their houses and put them down by the front doors, where anyone passing by, especially in the morning, could have seen them by the thousands. . . . When all the graves were full, enormous trenches were dug in the cemeteries of the churches, into which the new arrivals were put by the hundreds, stowed layer upon layer like merchandise in ships, each one covered with a little earth, until the top of the trench was reached.
Shops stood empty. Churches shut down. An estimated sixty per cent of the population of Florence and the surrounding countryside died."
New Yorker
W.W. Norton: The Decameron
Decameron Web
W - The Decameron
amazon: The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, Wayne A. Rebhorn

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