Love makes gentlemen even of boors, whether noble or villain, is the constant moral of mediaeval story, and love turns Robin into a champion of decency.
 Henry Adams, Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres (1904). copy citation

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Author Henry Adams
Source Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres
Topic decency love
Date 1904
Language English
Reference
Note
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/4584/pg4584-images.html

Context

“sends him on errands, to bring the pipers or drive away the wolf; and what is most to our purpose, uses him to make the other peasants decent. Walter and Baldwin and Hugh are coarse, and their idea of wit is to shock the women or make Robin jealous. Love makes gentlemen even of boors, whether noble or villain, is the constant moral of mediaeval story, and love turns Robin into a champion of decency. When, at last, Walter, playing the jongleur, begins to repeat a particularly coarse fabliau, or story in verse, Robin stops him short— Ho, Gautier, je n'en voeil plus! fi! Dites, seres vous tous jours teus!” source