One Hundred Merrie and 
Delightsome Stories 
 
Project Gutenberg's One Hundred Merrie And Delightsome Stories, by 
Various This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: One Hundred Merrie And Delightsome Stories Les Cent 
Nouvelles Nouvelles 
Author: Various 
Editor: Antoine de la Salle 
Illustrator: Léon Lebèque 
Translator: Robert B. Douglas 
Release Date: June 13, 2006 [EBook #18575] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CENT 
NOUVELLES NOUVELLES *** 
 
Produced by David Widger
[Illustration: cover.jpg Cover] 
[Illustration: spines.jpg Spines] 
[Illustration: titlepage.jpg Titlepage] 
 
ONE HUNDRED MERRIE AND DELIGHTSOME STORIES 
Right Pleasaunte To Relate In All Goodly Companie By Way Of 
Joyance And Jollity 
LES CENT NOUVELLES NOUVELLES 
Now First Done Into The English Tongue By Robert B. Douglas 
Various Authors 
Edited by Antoine de la Salle 
Illustrated by Léon Lebèque 
Paris 
Charles Carrington 
13 Faubourg Montmartre 
1899 
 
CONTENTS 
INTRODUCTION 
STORY THE FIRST -- THE REVERSE OF THE MEDAL.
The first story tells of how one found means to enjoy the wife of his 
neighbour, whose husband he had sent away in order that he might 
have her the more easily, and how the husband returning from his 
journey, found his friend bathing with his wife. And not knowing who 
she was, he wished to see her, but was permitted only to see her back--, 
and then thought that she resembled his wife, but dared not believe it. 
And thereupon left and found his wife at home, she having escaped by a 
postern door, and related to her his suspicions. 
STORY THE SECOND -- THE MONK-DOCTOR. 
The second story, related by Duke Philip, is of a young girl who had 
piles, who put out the only eye he had of a Cordelier monk who was 
healing her, and of the lawsuit that followed thereon. 
STORY THE THIRD -- THE SEARCH FOR THE RING. 
Of the deceit practised by a knight on a miller's wife whom he made 
believe that her front was loose, and fastened it many times. And the 
miller informed of this, searched for a diamond that the knight's lady 
had lost, and found it in her body, as the knight knew afterwards: so he 
called the miller "fisherman", and the miller called him "fastener". 
STORY THE FOURTH -- THE ARMED CUCKOLD. 
The fourth tale is of a Scotch archer who was in love with a fair and 
gentle dame, the wife of a mercer, who, by her husband's orders 
appointed a day for the said Scot to visit her, who came and treated her 
as he wished, the said mercer being hid by the side of the bed, where he 
could see and hear all. 
STORY THE FIFTH -- The Duel with the Buckle-Strap. 
The fifth story relates two judgments of Lord Talbot. How a Frenchman 
was taken prisoner (though provided with a safe-conduct) by an 
Englishman, who said that buckle-straps were implements of war, and 
who was made to arm himself with buckle-straps and nothing else, and 
meet the Frenchman, who struck him with a sword in the presence of
Talbot. The other, story is about a man who robbed a church, and who 
was made to swear that he would never enter a church again. 
STORY THE SIXTH --THE DRUNKARD IN PARADISE. 
The sixth story is of a drunkard, who would confess to the Prior of the 
Augustines at the Hague, and after his confession said that he was then 
in a holy state and would die; and believed that his head was cut off 
and that he was dead, and was carried away by his companions who 
said they were going to bury him. 
STORY THE SEVENTH -- THE WAGGONER IN THE BEAR. 
Of a goldsmith of Paris who made a waggoner sleep with him and his 
wife, and how the waggoner dallied with her from behind, which the 
goldsmith perceived and discovered, and of the words which he spake 
to the waggoner. 
STORY THE EIGHTH -- TIT FOR TAT. 
Of a youth of Picardy who lived at Brussels, and made his master's 
daughter pregnant, and for that cause left and came back to Picardy to 
be married. And soon after his departure the girl's mother perceived 
the condition of her daughter, and the girl confessed in what state she 
was; so her mother sent her to the Picardian to tell him that he must 
undo that which he had done. And how his new bride refused then to 
sleep with him, and of the story she told him, whereupon he 
immediately left her and returned to his first love, and married her. 
STORY THE    
    
		
	
	
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