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Page:Gesta Romanorum - Swan - Hooper.djvu/388

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304
GESTA ROMANORUM.

porter. This produced an exposure of his arms by which it became manifest that he was leprous. The fourth penny was therefore laid claim to; and the scuffle continuing, revealed a rupture, which eiititled him to a fifth. Thus, a fellow unjustly refusing to pay a rightful demand of one penny was necessitated, much against his inclination, to pay five.[1]

APPLICATION.

My beloved, the emperor is Christ. The porter is any prelate, or discreet confessor; the city is the world. The diseased man is a sinner.


TALE CLVIII.

OF THE SOUL'S IMMORTALITY.

There was once discovered at Rome an uncorrupted body, taller than the wall of the city, on which the following words were inscribed:—"Pallas, the son of Evander. whom the lance of a crooked soldier slew, is interred here." A candle burned at his head, which neither water nor wind could extinguish, until air was admitted through a hole made with the point of a needle beneath the flame. The wound of which this giant had died was four feet and a half long. Having been killed after the overthrow of Troy, he had remained in his tomb two thousand two hundred and forty years.

APPLICATION.

My beloved, the giant is Adam, who was formed free from all corruption. The wound of which he died is transgression of the divine command. The burning candle is eternal punishment, extinguished by means of a needle—that is, by the passion of Christ.

  1. This tale is in Alphonsus, and the Cento Novelle Antiche. Nov. 50.