Allusions in Art
- Golden Cup in Decameron
We see this novella in the works of various artists. Bernardino Mei, for example, made a painting of Ghismunda holding the golden cup with the poison in one hand and the heart of Guiscardo in the other. William Hogarth chose to depict a tragic moment as well, as can be deduced from the title Sigismunda mourning over the heart of Guiscardo.
Painters are not the only ones to have been inspired by this novella. Film directors Paolo and Vittorio Taviani included it in their selection of stories from the Decameron in their film Maraviglioso Boccaccio. In general the film is true to the novella, but there is one key element which is particularly present in the film: the cup is not made of gold, instead it is worthfully because the cup is handmade by Guiscardo himself, so it is of special value to Ghismunda. At the same time, it serves as a premonition, because at a certain moment in the film she wants to drink from it, when she notices a moth at the bottom. This might indicate that this cup will play a part in the death of Ghismunda, containing the poison that will kill her.
There is still another adaptation of the novella, this time regarding an Elizabethan theater play by the gentlemen of the Inner Temple, called The Tragedy of Tancred and Gismund or Gismond of Salerne, and published at the end of the 16th century by Robert Wilmot.
Leaving the arts and focusing our attention on the universe, we can find that there is an asteroid named after the famous protagonist of this novella: 492 Gismonda!