CXXV
AFTER the lapse of a few days, the castellan, who now believed that I was at large and free, succumbed to his disease and departed this life. In his ro remained his brother, Messer Antonio Ugolini, who had informed the deceased governor that I was duly released. Fr what I learned, this Messer Antonio received cmission fr the Pope to let me occupy that cmodious prison until he had decided what to do with me.
Messer Durante of Brescia, wh I have previously mentioned, engaged the soldier (formerly druggist of Prato) to administer se deadly liquor in my food; the poison was to work slowly, producing its effect at the end of four or five months. They resolved on mixing pounded diamond with my victuals. Now the diamond is not a poison in any true sense of the word, but its incparable hardness enables it, unlike ordinary stones, to retain very acute angles. When every other stone is pounded, that extreme sharpness of edge is lost; their fragments becing blunt and rounded. The diamond alone preserves its trenchant qualities; wherefore, if it chances to enter the stach together with food, the peristaltic motion needful to digestion brings it into contact with the coats of the stach and the bowels, where it sticks, and by the action of fresh food forcing it farther inwards, after se time perforates the ans. This eventually causes death. Any other sort of stone or glass mingled with the food has not the power to attach itself, but passes onward with the victuals.
『加入书签,方便阅读』