His friend said: tell me over the pact again. The wanderer told it over again. You say well, quoth the friend: ten byzantines I give back to you, and two hundred and ninety I keep for myself.
The pilgrim began to get angry. What kind of faith is this? You take away from me wrongfully what is mine.
The friend replied calmly: I do you no wrong, but if you think I do, let us go before the governors of the city. A law-suit ensued.
The Slave of Bari was the judge,[2] and heard both sides. He formulated the argument, and to him who held the money he said: give back the two hundred and ninety byzantines to the pilgrim, and the pilgrim must give you back the ten you [[63]]handed him. For the pact was so; what you want you will give to me. Therefore the two hundred and ninety which you want, give them to him, and the ten you do not want, take them.
[1] Ancient gold money of the Eastern Empire of about the same value as a ducat. It changed naturally in the course of the centuries. [↑]
[2] According to Malaspina, the Slave of the Bari was “an idiot or almost one, unlettered and unread, but of great natural talent, wit and wisdom”. Ambrosoli, on the contrary, asserts that he was a certain Michele Schiavo who was a Greek governor of Bari in the tenth century. [↑]