登陆注册
20095400000009

第9章 MASSIMILLA DONI(8)

The old ape sits on my knee, takes his instrument,--he plays fairly well,--he produces the notes, and I try to imitate them. Then, when the long-sought-for moment comes when it is impossible to distinguish in the body of sound which is the note on the violin and which proceeds from my throat, the old man falls into an ecstasy, his dim eyes light up with their last remaining fires, he is quite happy and will roll on the floor like a drunken man.

"That is why he pays Genovese such a price. Genovese is the only tenor whose voice occasionally sounds in unison with mine. Either we really do sing exactly together once or twice in an evening, or the Duke imagines that we do; and for that imaginary pleasure he has bought Genovese. Genovese belongs to him. No theatrical manager can engage that tenor without me, nor have me to sing without him. The Duke brought me up on purpose to gratify that whim; to him I owe my talent, my beauty,--my fortune, no doubt. He will die of an attack of perfect unison. The sense of hearing alone has survived the wreck of his faculties; that is the only thread by which he holds on to life. A vigorous shoot springs from that rotten stump. There are, I am told, many men in the same predicament. May Madonna preserve them!

"You have not come to that! You can do all you want--all I want of you, I know."

Towards morning the Prince stole away and found Carmagnola lying asleep across the door.

"Altezza," said the gondolier, "the Duchess ordered me to give you this note."

He held out a dainty sheet of paper folded into a triangle. The Prince felt dizzy; he went back into the room and dropped into a chair, for his sight was dim, and his hands shook as he read:--

"DEAR EMILIO:--Your gondola stopped at your palazzo. Did you not know that Cataneo has taken it for la Tinti? If you love me, go to-night to Vendramin, who tells me he has a room ready for you in his house. What shall I do? Can I remain in Venice to see my husband and his opera singer? Shall we go back together to Friuli?

Write me one word, if only to tell me what the letter was you tossed into the lagoon.

"MASSIMILLA DONI."

The writing and the scent of the paper brought a thousand memories back to the young Venetian's mind. The sun of a single-minded passion threw its radiance on the blue depths come from so far, collected in a bottomless pool, and shining like a star. The noble youth could not restrain the tears that flowed freely from his eyes, for in the languid state produced by satiated senses he was disarmed by the thought of that purer divinity.

Even in her sleep Clarina heard his weeping; she sat up in bed, saw her Prince in a dejected attitude, and threw herself at his knees.

"They are still waiting for the answer," said Carmagnola, putting the curtain aside.

"Wretch, you have undone me!" cried Emilio, starting up and spurning Clarina with his foot.

She clutched it so lovingly, her look imploring some explanation,--the look of a tear-stained Samaritan,--that Emilio, enraged to find himself still in the toils of the passion that had wrought his fall, pushed away the singer with an unmanly kick.

"You told me to kill you,--then die, venomous reptile!" he exclaimed.

He left the palace, and sprang into his gondola.

"Pull," said he to Carmagnola.

"Where?" asked the old servant.

"Where you will."

The gondolier divined his master's wishes, and by many windings brought him at last into the Canareggio, to the door of a wonderful palazzo, which you will admire when you see Venice, for no traveler ever fails to stop in front of those windows, each of a different design, vying with each other in fantastic ornament, with balconies like lace-work; to study the corners finishing in tall and slender twisted columns, the string-courses wrought by so inventive a chisel that no two shapes are alike in the arabesques on the stones.

How charming is that doorway! how mysterious the vaulted arcade leading to the stairs! Who could fail to admire the steps on which ingenious art has laid a carpet that will last while Venice stands,--a carpet as rich as if wrought in Turkey, but composed of marbles in endless variety of shapes, inlaid in white marble. You will delight in the charming ornament of the colonnades of the upper story,--gilt like those of a ducal palace,--so that the marvels of art are both under your feet and above your head.

What delicate shadows! How silent, how cool! But how solemn, too, was that old palace! where, to delight Emilio and his friend Vendramin, the Duchess had collected antique Venetian furniture, and employed skilled hands to restore the ceilings. There, old Venice lived again.

The splendor was not merely noble, it was instructive. The archaeologist would have found there such models of perfection as the middle ages produced, having taken example from Venice. Here were to be seen the original ceilings of woodwork covered with scrolls and flowers in gold on a colored ground, or in colors on gold, and ceilings of gilt plaster castings, with a picture of many figures in each corner, with a splendid fresco in the centre,--a style so costly that there are not two in the Louvre, and that the extravagance of Louis XIV. shrunk from such expense at Versailles. On all sides marble, wood, and silk had served as materials for exquisite workmanship.

Emilio pushed open a carved oak door, made his way down the long, vaulted passage which runs from end to end on each floor of a Venetian palazzo, and stopped before another door, so familiar that it made his heart beat. On seeing him, a lady companion came out of a vast drawing-room, and admitted him to a study where he found the Duchess on her knees in front of a Madonna.

He had come to confess and ask forgiveness. Massimilla, in prayer, had converted him. He and God; nothing else dwelt in that heart.

The Duchess rose very unaffectedly, and held out her hand. Her lover did not take it.

"Did not Gianbattista see you, yesterday?" she asked.

"No," he replied.

同类推荐
  • 苌楚斋五笔

    苌楚斋五笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 庄氏史案

    庄氏史案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 炙膏肓腧穴法

    炙膏肓腧穴法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 菩萨戒本

    菩萨戒本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 丁晋公谈录

    丁晋公谈录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 九转战神

    九转战神

    紫阳大陆,武道为尊,前世学生穿越附身在一名废材少爷身上,偶得父亲留下一胸坠,开始了他璀璨的一生。一朝武脉冲破,洗耻辱,得奇功,集诸天之能,成就逆天脱尘路。“美女,功法,宝贝,我来啦!”
  • 都市位面霸主

    都市位面霸主

    某个扑街作者在捡到位面穿越神器这项厉害的金手指后,逆袭高帅富,低调赚钱发展泡妞开公司直至带领人类进入星辰大海的故事.........
  • 天上掉下来了一碗稀饭

    天上掉下来了一碗稀饭

    他--花花公子,是谁也不敢轻易得罪的人。但一个从没见过世面的小女生却出现在他的面前。本是两个世界的人却在不可能的时间中相遇......
  • 我的心在你世界搁了浅

    我的心在你世界搁了浅

    每一个孤单的孩子,都是散落在天涯最美的花。新晋青春作者素之烟,特别书写失孤少女的边缘爱情她是一艘被遗忘的小船,漂泊在艰难的尘世里失孤是一生无法抚平的残酷,被爱是世界上最无望的奢侈,颠沛流离的青春,寻找一个柔软的心尖搁浅,等日出日暮,潮涨潮升……
  • 少主滚开别挡老娘的道

    少主滚开别挡老娘的道

    凤箫离,雪雾老头最不成气武功最差的弟子。腹黑狡诈,聪明机警,疯疯癫癫。计划偷跑,竟然被一人另加一堆黑衣人杀进来?喂喂喂!你们打架就不会选地方?紫凛,紫凤岭中身份尊贵王者之气的少主。冷峻狂傲,翻云覆雨,偶尔抽风。这女人的武功怎么打得这么诡异,要形没形,要力没力,简称猥琐!打跑了一堆黑衣人?有意思!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 折煞凤凰:废材七小姐

    折煞凤凰:废材七小姐

    身穿青色玄衣男子从队伍的人群中走了出来,“在下不知道姑娘芳名,日后有个念想好做答谢”楚欣月倾城一笑“楚欣月”欣月,欣月,原来你现在叫欣月,不过我更喜欢你曾经的名字,阿雅我找你该有四百多年了吧……
  • 声声嫚

    声声嫚

    人虫虐恋,本为一朝宿敌,却擦出爱情的火花,两人到底会如何抉择?
  • 绝琴仙尊

    绝琴仙尊

    为了爱情放弃一切,为了爱情穿越到了另一大陆,他杨天在另一大陆遇上了同一女子,为她付出了一切的一切,甚至生命。。。。。。
  • 血炼天地

    血炼天地

    天长地久。天地所以能长且久者,以其不自生,故能长生天道之下,万物皆在那命运之下,轮回之中,不得挣脱。本是平凡少年,却不甘命运束缚,欲集天地气运,夺大道本源。终,屹立于众生之巅...然而.......(这不是武侠,这不是种马,这不是爽文。)
  • 无上帝朝

    无上帝朝

    以一个小村子起步,逐渐成长为雄霸一方的大城池,甚至是帝朝!村子——镇子——小城——大城——重城……