Page:Gesta Romanorum - Swan - Wright - 2.djvu/351

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OF HEARING GOOD COUNSEL.
339

are fixed; and there he hath in such move the nature of the knight. But he takes these two moves in place of the queen[1].





TALE LXXXVII.

OF HEARING GOOD COUNSEL.

An archer, catching a little bird called a nightingale, was about to put her to death. But being gifted with language, she said to him, "What will it advantage you to kill me? I cannot satisfy your appetite. Let me go and I will give you three rules, from which you will derive great benefit, if you follow them accurately." Astonished at hearing the bird speak, he promised her liberty on the conditions she had stated. "Hear, then," said she,

  1. I cannot hope that I have translated this account of an obscure game quite intelligibly; but I was unwilling to omit it.