Itinerary
84
Chapter LXXII. Ñ
How our starving men fought at the oven.
Wherever it was known that
bread was baking at the oven, there was
a concourse of the people crying out and saying, ÒHere is money; we will
give what price you please, so that you give us plenty of bread.Ó For each
asked to be served first, offering a price in exchange for bread, and each
violently struggling to snatch from the others what they had not yet
received, and perhaps never would. But as often
as it happened that any of
the rich bought much bread, then arose mourning, and sorrow, and
clamour among the poor, united in one voice of wailing, when they saw
that quantity of bread carried away by the rich, which, if distributed in
portions, might have done good to the poor as far as it would go. They
eagerly offered the price of the bread
at the will of the seller; but, because
any moderate quantity was not enough for so great a multitude, there
arose frequent and angry disputes, quarrels, contentions, jealousies, and
sometimes fights around the oven which contained the bread and they
contended for it like dogs before they were sure of obtaining it. O, then, the
voice of the people, cursing the perfidy of the marquis, for he cared not for
the wretchedness of a perishing people!
Chapter LXXIII. Ñ
How they gnawed and ate up dirty bones which had been
already gnawed by dogs.
But who can write or set forth how great their misery was how great
the general suffering, when some were seen from the pressure of famine
running about like rabid dogs and snatching up bones that had been
gnawed by dogs for three days together, and sucking and licking them
when there was nothing on them to be gnawed, not because they did them
any good, but because they gratified
the imagination with the
remembrance of flesh? What need we add to these horrors? The enemy,
harassing them by constant attacks from both sides, when they slew them
suddenly,were held less terrible than the violence of so great a famine; for
the former put an end to their lives and their miseries by the edge of the
sword and at once, whereas by the famine they pined away in lengthened