In the gardens were in addition to cabbage, salads and uncooked fruits. Often, these plots of land were joined to the vine, or more frequently, to the orchard. This combination fruit and vegetables, even if it was not widespread, is very peculiar, so it's worth looking through the eye of the novels. The collection of bags
fruit appears only marginally and is almost never on the tables of the main characters; the statement is valid for both noble and families more modest. The only fruit that stands out with bullying in the novel is the fig tree. In CXVIII a priest orders a servant to collect the figs that are located on a tree in his garden, but he eats the most delicate and delivery to those insipid pastor:
"Giogoli to the parish, near Florence A short time ago, was a parish priest, who had a servant, who almost anything to him face proper, unto the cook. As of September, and having a beautiful garden in its own petard fig tree, and had many beautiful figs in the morning rain to that servant says:
- It 'Take off that basket, and goes' to the fig tree, I There's very beautiful I saw yesterday, and recamene.
The maid took the basket and went to that fig tree, and salendovi upward, seeing very beautiful and very pengiglianti of those who had a tear, you used to put them in your mouth, it seemed that he had to make a revenge, and cogliea when, for her eating one of those events so the figs that had tears, said:
- Do not weep, no, you do not eat sir -, and swallowed it, and if a thousand had eaten figs with that tear in each said: - Do not weep, no, do not eat sir -, and he manicavaselo.
used to put them in the basket figs Tortoni, or with the mouth open, that's just averebbono eat the pigs, and take it to rain ;[...]"
First, the presence in the garden of a fig tree confirms the above-mentioned assertion: some fruit trees in the gardens was though it was small and probably negligible amount. Without doubt, the fig tree was a supplementary resource to the diet of farmers, from September onwards, when the fruits were ripe, they indulge in the real bellyfuls. Because apparently, figs should be appreciated, the priest seems eager to taste them while the servant goes so greedy as to jeopardize his job! [...]
fruit appears only marginally and is almost never on the tables of the main characters; the statement is valid for both noble and families more modest. The only fruit that stands out with bullying in the novel is the fig tree. In CXVIII a priest orders a servant to collect the figs that are located on a tree in his garden, but he eats the most delicate and delivery to those insipid pastor:
"Giogoli to the parish, near Florence A short time ago, was a parish priest, who had a servant, who almost anything to him face proper, unto the cook. As of September, and having a beautiful garden in its own petard fig tree, and had many beautiful figs in the morning rain to that servant says:
- It 'Take off that basket, and goes' to the fig tree, I There's very beautiful I saw yesterday, and recamene.
The maid took the basket and went to that fig tree, and salendovi upward, seeing very beautiful and very pengiglianti of those who had a tear, you used to put them in your mouth, it seemed that he had to make a revenge, and cogliea when, for her eating one of those events so the figs that had tears, said:
- Do not weep, no, you do not eat sir -, and swallowed it, and if a thousand had eaten figs with that tear in each said: - Do not weep, no, do not eat sir -, and he manicavaselo.
used to put them in the basket figs Tortoni, or with the mouth open, that's just averebbono eat the pigs, and take it to rain ;[...]"
First, the presence in the garden of a fig tree confirms the above-mentioned assertion: some fruit trees in the gardens was though it was small and probably negligible amount. Without doubt, the fig tree was a supplementary resource to the diet of farmers, from September onwards, when the fruits were ripe, they indulge in the real bellyfuls. Because apparently, figs should be appreciated, the priest seems eager to taste them while the servant goes so greedy as to jeopardize his job! [...]
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