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The Decameron, The Author's Epilogue

[025] And who shall question but that yet others there are who will say that I have an evil tongue and venomous, because here and there I tell the truth about the friars? [026] Now for them that so say there is forgiveness, for that 'tis not to be believed but that they have just cause; seeing that the friars are good folk, and eschew hardship for the love of God, and grind intermittently, and never blab; and, were they not all a trifle malodorous, intercourse with them would be much more agreeable. [027] Nevertheless, I acknowledge that the things of this world have no stability, but are ever undergoing change; and this may have befallen my tongue, albeit, no great while ago, one of my fair neighbours--for in what pertains to myself I trust not my own judgment, but forgo it to the best of my power--told me 'twas the goodliest and sweetest tongue in the world; and in sooth, when this occurred, few of the said stories were yet to write; [028]nor, for that those who so tax me do it despitefully, am I minded to vouchsafe them any further answer.