Page:Gesta Romanorum - Swan - Wright - 2.djvu/180

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
168
OF WOMEN WHO BETRAY SECRETS.


TALE XLV.

OF WOMEN, WHO NOT ONLY BETRAY SECRETS, BUT LIE FEARFULLY.

There were two brothers, of whom one was a layman and the other a parson. The former had often heard his brother declare that there never was a woman who could keep a secret[1]. He had a mind to put his maxim to the test in the person of his own wife, and one night he addressed her in the following manner: "My dear wife, I have a secret to communicate to you, if I were certain that it would remain so. Should you divulge it, it would cause me the greatest uneasiness and vexation." "My lord," answered his wife, "fear

  1. In this scandalous story, the monks seemed to have introduced the Parson for the sake of conveying a species of wisdom which accords ill with his situation. But they were great monopolizers.