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{{Inset Story | {{Inset Story | ||
|Has | |Has Summary='''The Foolish Nurse ('C'est Li Exemples de la Fole Norriche')''' | ||
In a land where, by law, the local lord seizes the property of anyone who dies without a male heir, a wealthy and childless old couple decide to find a boy to raise as their own. They find a poor woman who was 'betrothed' to a clergyman, and keep her in secret while the wife feigns pregnancy. When the woman gives birth, the couple pretend the baby is their son, and keep the poor woman on as his nurse. A few years later, word of the miracle of this elderly couple's child reaches the lord, and he comes to investigate. Upon seeing the child in the arms of the 'nurse', the lord notes their resemblance and grows suspicious. He gives the child a dagger and tells him to go to his 'mother', and tell her that she must decide which of the two of them should lose an eye. The wife, horrified, blinds herself rather than allow any harm to come to her 'son'. Her husband does the same. But when the lord asks the 'nurse' - the birth-mother - to follow suit, she refuses, saying that to do so would be foolishness. At the prompting of his advisor, the lord leaves, saying 'foolish is the nurse who loves more than the mother.' The son later goes on to gain wealth and power through cunning and deceit, and eventually, when the demands of his 'parents' become too onerous, he poisons them both. | In a land where, by law, the local lord seizes the property of anyone who dies without a male heir, a wealthy and childless old couple decide to find a boy to raise as their own. They find a poor woman who was 'betrothed' to a clergyman, and keep her in secret while the wife feigns pregnancy. When the woman gives birth, the couple pretend the baby is their son, and keep the poor woman on as his nurse. A few years later, word of the miracle of this elderly couple's child reaches the lord, and he comes to investigate. Upon seeing the child in the arms of the 'nurse', the lord notes their resemblance and grows suspicious. He gives the child a dagger and tells him to go to his 'mother', and tell her that she must decide which of the two of them should lose an eye. The wife, horrified, blinds herself rather than allow any harm to come to her 'son'. Her husband does the same. But when the lord asks the 'nurse' - the birth-mother - to follow suit, she refuses, saying that to do so would be foolishness. At the prompting of his advisor, the lord leaves, saying 'foolish is the nurse who loves more than the mother.' The son later goes on to gain wealth and power through cunning and deceit, and eventually, when the demands of his 'parents' become too onerous, he poisons them both. | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:42, 19 August 2024
The Foolish Nurse ('C'est Li Exemples de la Fole Norriche')
In a land where, by law, the local lord seizes the property of anyone who dies without a male heir, a wealthy and childless old couple decide to find a boy to raise as their own. They find a poor woman who was 'betrothed' to a clergyman, and keep her in secret while the wife feigns pregnancy. When the woman gives birth, the couple pretend the baby is their son, and keep the poor woman on as his nurse. A few years later, word of the miracle of this elderly couple's child reaches the lord, and he comes to investigate. Upon seeing the child in the arms of the 'nurse', the lord notes their resemblance and grows suspicious. He gives the child a dagger and tells him to go to his 'mother', and tell her that she must decide which of the two of them should lose an eye. The wife, horrified, blinds herself rather than allow any harm to come to her 'son'. Her husband does the same. But when the lord asks the 'nurse' - the birth-mother - to follow suit, she refuses, saying that to do so would be foolishness. At the prompting of his advisor, the lord leaves, saying 'foolish is the nurse who loves more than the mother.' The son later goes on to gain wealth and power through cunning and deceit, and eventually, when the demands of his 'parents' become too onerous, he poisons them both.
Critical Literature
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