TALE XCVIII.
OF CONCILIATING GOD WHILST WE HAVE OPPORTUNITY.
The Romans had an ancient custom, that when they besieged a castle or city, they lighted a single candle of a certain length; and as long as it burnt, they were prepared to receive overtures of peace, however vile the proposer. But after it was consumed they exercised the severest justice upon their enemies, nor could any one then be redeemed even by the sacrifice of all he was worth.[1]
APPLICATION.
My beloved, God thus treats sinners. For the soul, when beset by vices, has an opportunity of procuring peace as long as the light of life burns.
TALE XCIX.
OF CHRIST'S MANLY CONTEXT AND VICTORY.
In the reign of Cæsar there lived a noble and valiant knight, who once rode by a certain forest, and beheld a serpent engaging with a toad.[2] The latter obtained the mastery; which when the knight saw, he assisted the serpent; and grievously wounding the toad, reduced it to seek safety in flight. But the conqueror was also affected by the toad's venom. The knight turned homeward, and for a long time lay sick of his wound. At last he made his will and prepared himself for death. Now, as he reclined near the fire, utterly hopeless of life, the
- ↑ This apologue is very similar to Tale XCVI.
- ↑ "The stories, perhaps fabulous, of the serpent fighting with his inveterate enemy, the weasel, who eats me before the attack begins; and of the serpent fighting with, and being killed by the spider, originate from Pliny, Nat. Hist. x. 84, xx. 13."—Warton