We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

Decameron Tenth Day, Ninth Story Summary

Saladin and Messer Torello

Intro

  • Storyteller: Panfilo
  • Panfilo follows Filomena's story so that Dioneo can go last.
  • He wants to use his story to reinforce Filomena's ideas of friendship. These days, you won't find too many people like those guys Titus and Gisippus. 
  • The moral? Be nice, because karma.

Story

  • Panfilo sets his story during the Third Crusade (about 1189, led by Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa).
  • Saladin, the legendary Sultan of Babylon, disguises himself as a merchant and tours Europe to scout out the countries of the Christian crusaders coming to destroy him.
  • On their way to Pavia, he and his companions run into a gentleman called Torello.
  • Torello is so impressed by the merchants that he arranges, with a little deception, for them to stay at his country home.
  • Saladin and Torello admire each other.
  • Saladin speaks Italian, so he's able to converse freely with Torello.
  • Torello thinks Saladin is the finest guy ever and wants to impress the "merchant" even more, so he sends a message to his wife in the city of Pavia asking her to prepare a little something for his guests.
  • Torello pretends to bring them to the finest inn in Pavia, but really he's bringing them to his own mansion.
  • Saladin doesn't know what to make of this guy. He's so generous that he can't be for real.
  • When they get to town, his wife has set up a feast with lots of VIPs to entertain the merchants.
  • Saladin's kind of exasperated. He's trying to be under the radar and Torello isn't having it.
  • Torello's wife gives Saladin and his companions two sumptuous robes apiece as parting gifts.
  • Torello himself replaces their old, tired horses with new ones.
  • Saladin suspects that Torello sees through his disguise. Otherwise, why would an ordinary citizen go through the trouble of entertaining merchants as if they were emperors?
  • He tells his companions that he's never met anyone like Torello before.
  • As they're saying their goodbyes, Torello tells Saladin that he can't believe his new friends are merchants.
  • Saladin replies that one day, he'll prove the "quality of his merchandise" to Torello. What could that mean?
  • Saladin also promises himself that he'll repay Torello's kindness if he survives the coming wars.
  • He returns home and makes plans to fight the Crusaders.
  • Torello makes plans to join the Crusade. His wife is not happy.
  • He tells her that if he doesn't return in a year, a month, and a day, and if she doesn't have proof that he's alive, she should re-marry.
  • She gives him a ring so that in case she should die, it would remind him of her.
  • Torello makes it as far as Acre, but the crusading troops are afflicted with an epidemic of fever and Saladin captures everyone else.
  • Torello hides his identity to protect himself, and gets a job training hawks. He's so good at it that Saladin makes him his personal falconer.
  • So here's the problem with disguises: you don't recognize a good friend when you see him.
  • Saladin never learns Torello's name. He calls him "the Christian."
  • Torello tries without luck to escape. He manages to get a letter off to his wife by way of some Italian emissaries.
  • Eventually, Saladin recognizes a certain expression on Torello's face. But Torello insists that he's just a poor man.
  • (ISHO, we'd fess up ASAP and hope to be saved.)
  • Saladin devises a test: he lays out all of his robes and asks Torello if he recognizes any of them.
  • Torello says that two of them remind him of robes his wife once gave to some merchants.
  • Saladin hugs him and tells him that now "he will prove the quality of his merchandise."
  • Saladin entertains Torello as his equal and Torello kind of likes it. He totally forgets about his wife and his promise to her.
  • OTOH, he believes that his letter has been delivered.
  • It hasn't.
  • Also, another Torello, a Provençal nobody who was with the Crusaders, had died. Everybody thought it our Torello.
  • Word gets back to his wife that Torello's dead. Her family pressures her to re-marry.
  • Torello finally gets word that the ship carrying his letter sank. The deadline he'd given his wife is fast approaching. Now he wants to die for reals.
  • But Saladin tells him to cheer up. He's got an ace up his sleeve.
  • He gets his conjurer to make an enchanted bed that will fly Torello home in an instant.
  • Wow—we want one of those. Beam us up, Saladin.
  • Saladin wants Torello to stay and rule with him—a political version of bromance. He's also bummed that he can't send Torello back to Pavia in style.
  • So he decks out the bed as much as he can (read that however you like) and dresses Torello in funky, expensive eastern clothes.
  • At departure time, Saladin is grieved that he can't go with his friend and begs Torello to come back to him or at least to write.
  • Then he "enfolds [Torello] tenderly in his arms."
  • Torello's given a sleeping potion to make the transport smooth, kind of like Ripley and crew in "Alien."
  • Saladin places a crown with a gift tag to Torello's wife on it, a ring on Torello's finger, a sword by his side and other precious things around him.
  • Torello zips away and wakes up in the church near his home, where his uncle's the abbot.
  • He scares the bejeebers out of the clergy, who are under the impression that he's dead.
  • Now he has to crash his wife's wedding, which is taking place that day.
  • No one recognizes him. Torello decides to reveal himself to his wife at her wedding feast.
  • He pretends that it's a custom of his country for the bride to ask a valued guest to drink wine from her cup and for the guest to send it back so she can drink the last drops.
  • So he gets the cup from her and slips her ring into the dregs.
  • When she recognizes it, she knocks over the table and claims him as her true husband.
  • Torello reclaims her from her new bridegroom. She takes off her crown and new wedding ring and replaces them with the ring and the crown from Saladin.
  • And of course, they live happily ever after. Nothing further is said about Saladin, however.