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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Facino Cane, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
+
+
+Title: Facino Cane
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2004 [EBook #1737]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FACINO CANE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dagny, and John Bickers,
+
+
+
+
+ FACINO CANE
+
+ BY
+
+ HONORE DE BALZAC
+
+
+
+ Translated By
+ Clara Bell and others
+
+
+
+
+
+ FACINO CANE
+
+
+
+I once used to live in a little street which probably is not known to
+you--the Rue de Lesdiguieres. It is a turning out of the Rue
+Saint-Antoine, beginning just opposite a fountain near the Place de la
+Bastille, and ending in the Rue de la Cerisaie. Love of knowledge
+stranded me in a garret; my nights I spent in work, my days in reading
+at the Bibliotheque d'Orleans, close by. I lived frugally; I had
+accepted the conditions of the monastic life, necessary conditions for
+every worker, scarcely permitting myself a walk along the Boulevard
+Bourdon when the weather was fine. One passion only had power to draw
+me from my studies; and yet, what was that passion but a study of
+another kind? I used to watch the manners and customs of the Faubourg,
+its inhabitants, and their characteristics. As I dressed no better
+than a working man, and cared nothing for appearances, I did not put
+them on their guard; I could join a group and look on while they drove
+bargains or wrangled among themselves on their way home from work.
+Even then observation had come to be an instinct with me; a faculty of
+penetrating to the soul without neglecting the body; or rather, a
+power of grasping external details so thoroughly that they never
+detained me for a moment, and at once I passed beyond and through
+them. I could enter into the life of the human creatures whom I
+watched, just as the dervish in the _Arabian Nights_ could pass into
+any soul or body after pronouncing a certain formula.
+
+If I met a working man and his wife in the streets between eleven
+o'clock and midnight on their way home from the Ambigu Comique, I used
+to amuse myself by following them from the Boulevard du Pont aux Choux
+to the Boulevard Beaumarchais. The good folk would begin by talking
+about the play; then from one thing to another they would come to
+their own affairs, and the mother would walk on and on, heedless of
+complaints or question from the little one that dragged at her hand,
+while she and her husband reckoned up the wages to be paid on the
+morrow, and spent the money in a score of different ways. Then came
+domestic details, lamentations over the excessive dearness of
+potatoes, or the length of the winter and the high price of block
+fuel, together with forcible representations of amounts owing to the
+baker, ending in an acrimonious dispute, in the course of which such
+couples reveal their characters in picturesque language. As I
+listened, I could make their lives mine, I felt their rags on my back,
+I walked with their gaping shoes on my feet; their cravings, their
+needs, had all passed into my soul, or my soul had passed into theirs.
+It was the dream of a waking man. I waxed hot with them over the
+foreman's tyranny, or the bad customers that made them call again and
+again for payment.
+
+To come out of my own ways of life, to be another than myself through
+a kind of intoxication of the intellectual faculties, and to play this
+game at will, such was my recreation. Whence comes the gift? Is it a
+kind of second sight? Is it one of those powers which when abused end
+in madness? I have never tried to discover its source; I possess it, I
+use it, that is all. But this it behooves you to know, that in those
+days I began to resolve the heterogeneous mass known as the People
+into its elements, and to evaluate its good and bad qualities. Even
+then I realized the possibilities of my suburb, that hotbed of
+revolution in which heroes, inventors, and practical men of science,
+rogues and scoundrels, virtues and vices, were all packed together by
+poverty, stifled by necessity, drowned in drink, and consumed by
+ardent spirits.
+
+You would not imagine how many adventures, how many tragedies, lie
+buried away out of sight in that Dolorous City; how much horror and
+beauty lurks there. No imagination can reach the Truth, no one can go
+down into that city to make discoveries; for one must needs descend
+too low into its depths to see the wonderful scenes of tragedy or
+comedy enacted there, the masterpieces brought forth by chance.
+
+I do not know how it is that I have kept the following story so long
+untold. It is one of the curious things that stop in the bag from
+which Memory draws out stories at haphazard, like numbers in a
+lottery. There are plenty of tales just as strange and just as well
+hidden still left; but some day, you may be sure, their turn will
+come.
+
+
+
+One day my charwoman, a working man's wife, came to beg me to honor
+her sister's wedding with my presence. If you are to realize what this
+wedding was like you must know that I paid my charwoman, poor
+creature, four francs a month; for which sum she came every morning to
+make my bed, clean my shoes, brush my clothes, sweep the room, and
+make ready my breakfast, before going to her day's work of turning the
+handle of a machine, at which hard drudgery she earned five-pence. Her
+husband, a cabinetmaker, made four francs a day at his trade; but as
+they had three children, it was all that they could do to gain an
+honest living. Yet I have never met with more sterling honesty than in
+this man and wife. For five years after I left the quarter, Mere
+Vaillant used to come on my birthday with a bunch of flowers and some
+oranges for me--she that had never a sixpence to put by! Want had
+drawn us together. I never could give her more than a ten-franc piece,
+and often I had to borrow the money for the occasion. This will
+perhaps explain my promise to go to the wedding; I hoped to efface
+myself in these poor people's merry-making.
+
+The banquet and the ball were given on a first floor above a wineshop
+in the Rue de Charenton. It was a large room, lighted by oil lamps
+with tin reflectors. A row of wooden benches ran round the walls,
+which were black with grime to the height of the tables. Here some
+eighty persons, all in their Sunday best, tricked out with ribbons and
+bunches of flowers, all of them on pleasure bent, were dancing away
+with heated visages as if the world were about to come to an end.
+Bride and bridegroom exchanged salutes to the general satisfaction,
+amid a chorus of facetious "Oh, ohs!" and "Ah, ahs!" less really
+indecent than the furtive glances of young girls that have been well
+brought up. There was something indescribably infectious about the
+rough, homely enjoyment in all countenances.
+
+But neither the faces, nor the wedding, nor the wedding-guests have
+anything to do with my story. Simply bear them in mind as the odd
+setting to it. Try to realize the scene, the shabby red-painted
+wineshop, the smell of wine, the yells of merriment; try to feel that
+you are really in the faubourg, among old people, working men and poor
+women giving themselves up to a night's enjoyment.
+
+The band consisted of a fiddle, a clarionet, and a flageolet from the
+Blind Asylum. The three were paid seven francs in a lump sum for the
+night. For the money, they gave us, not Beethoven certainly, nor yet
+Rossini; they played as they had the will and the skill; and every one
+in the room (with charming delicacy of feeling) refrained from finding
+fault. The music made such a brutal assault on the drum of my ear,
+that after a first glance round the room my eyes fell at once upon the
+blind trio, and the sight of their uniform inclined me from the first
+to indulgence. As the artists stood in a window recess, it was
+difficult to distinguish their faces except at close quarters, and I
+kept away at first; but when I came nearer (I hardly know why) I
+thought of nothing else; the wedding party and the music ceased to
+exist, my curiosity was roused to the highest pitch, for my soul
+passed into the body of the clarionet player.
+
+The fiddle and the flageolet were neither of them interesting; their
+faces were of the ordinary type among the blind--earnest, attentive,
+and grave. Not so the clarionet player; any artist or philosopher must
+have come to a stop at the sight of him.
+
+Picture to yourself a plaster mask of Dante in the red lamplight, with
+a forest of silver-white hair above the brows. Blindness intensified
+the expression of bitterness and sorrow in that grand face of his; the
+dead eyes were lighted up, as it were, by a thought within that broke
+forth like a burning flame, lit by one sole insatiable desire, written
+large in vigorous characters upon an arching brow scored across with
+as many lines as an old stone wall.
+
+The old man was playing at random, without the slightest regard for
+time or tune. His fingers traveled mechanically over the worn keys of
+his instrument; he did not trouble himself over a false note now and
+again (a _canard_, in the language of the orchestra), neither did the
+dancers, nor, for that matter, did my old Italian's acolytes; for I
+had made up my mind that he must be Italian, and an Italian he was.
+There was something great, something too of the despot about this old
+Homer bearing within him an _Odyssey_ doomed to oblivion. The
+greatness was so real that it triumphed over his abject position; the
+despotism so much a part of him, that it rose above his poverty.
+
+There are violent passions which drive a man to good or evil, making
+of him a hero or a convict; of these there was not one that had failed
+to leave its traces on the grandly-hewn, lividly Italian face. You
+trembled lest a flash of thought should suddenly light up the deep
+sightless hollows under the grizzled brows, as you might fear to see
+brigands with torches and poniards in the mouth of a cavern. You felt
+that there was a lion in that cage of flesh, a lion spent with useless
+raging against iron bars. The fires of despair had burned themselves
+out into ashes, the lava had cooled; but the tracks of the flames, the
+wreckage, and a little smoke remained to bear witness to the violence
+of the eruption, the ravages of the fire. These images crowded up at
+the sight of the clarionet player, till the thoughts now grown cold in
+his face burned hot within my soul.
+
+The fiddle and the flageolet took a deep interest in bottles and
+glasses; at the end of a country-dance, they hung their instruments
+from a button on their reddish-colored coats, and stretched out their
+hands to a little table set in the window recess to hold their liquor
+supply. Each time they did so they held out a full glass to the
+Italian, who could not reach it for himself because he sat in front of
+the table, and each time the Italian thanked them with a friendly nod.
+All their movements were made with the precision which always amazes
+you so much at the Blind Asylum. You could almost think that they can
+see. I came nearer to listen; but when I stood beside them, they
+evidently guessed I was not a working man, and kept themselves to
+themselves.
+
+"What part of the world do you come from, you that are playing the
+clarionet?"
+
+"From Venice," he said, with a trace of Italian accent.
+
+"Have you always been blind, or did it come on afterwards--"
+
+"Afterwards," he answered quickly. "A cursed gutta serena."
+
+"Venice is a fine city; I have always had a fancy to go there."
+
+The old man's face lighted up, the wrinkles began to work, he was
+violently excited.
+
+"If I went with you, you would not lose your time," he said.
+
+"Don't talk about Venice to our Doge," put in the fiddle, "or you will
+start him off, and he has stowed away a couple of bottles as it is
+--has the prince!"
+
+"Come, strike up, Daddy Canard!" added the flageolet, and the three
+began to play. But while they executed the four figures of a square
+dance, the Venetian was scenting my thoughts; he guessed the great
+interest I felt in him. The dreary, dispirited look died out of his
+face, some mysterious hope brightened his features and slid like a
+blue flame over his wrinkles. He smiled and wiped his brow, that
+fearless, terrible brow of his, and at length grew gay like a man
+mounted on his hobby.
+
+"How old are you?" I asked.
+
+"Eighty-two."
+
+"How long have you been blind?"
+
+"For very nearly fifty years," he said, and there was that in his tone
+which told me that his regret was for something more than his lost
+sight, for great power of which he had been robbed.
+
+"Then why do they call you 'the Doge'?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, it is a joke. I am a Venetian noble, and I might have been a doge
+like any one else."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"Here, in Paris, I am Pere Canet," he said. "It was the only way of
+spelling my name on the register. But in Italy I am Marco Facino Cane,
+Prince of Varese."
+
+"What, are you descended from the great _condottiere_ Facino Cane,
+whose lands won by the sword were taken by the Dukes of Milan?"
+
+"_E vero_," returned he. "His son's life was not safe under the
+Visconti; he fled to Venice, and his name was inscribed on the Golden
+Book. And now neither Cane or Golden Book are in existence." His
+gesture startled me; it told of patriotism extinguished and weariness
+of life.
+
+"But if you were once a Venetian senator, you must have been a wealthy
+man. How did you lose your fortune?"
+
+"In evil days."
+
+He waved away the glass of wine handed to him by the flageolet, and
+bowed his head. He had no heart to drink. These details were not
+calculated to extinguish my curiosity.
+
+As the three ground out the music of the square dance, I gazed at the
+old Venetian noble, thinking thoughts that set a young man's mind
+afire at the age of twenty. I saw Venice and the Adriatic; I saw her
+ruin in the ruin of the face before me. I walked to and fro in that
+city, so beloved of her citizens; I went from the Rialto Bridge, along
+the Grand Canal, and from the Riva degli Schiavoni to the Lido,
+returning to St. Mark's, that cathedral so unlike all others in its
+sublimity. I looked up at the windows of the Casa Doro, each with its
+different sculptured ornaments; I saw old palaces rich in marbles, saw
+all the wonders which a student beholds with the more sympathetic eyes
+because visible things take their color of his fancy, and the sight of
+realities cannot rob him of the glory of his dreams. Then I traced
+back a course of life for this latest scion of a race of condottieri,
+tracking down his misfortunes, looking for the reasons of the deep
+moral and physical degradation out of which the lately revived sparks
+of greatness and nobility shone so much the more brightly. My ideas,
+no doubt, were passing through his mind, for all processes of
+thought-communications are far more swift, I think, in blind people,
+because their blindness compels them to concentrate their attention. I
+had not long to wait for proof that we were in sympathy in this way.
+Facino Cane left off playing, and came up to me. "Let us go out!" he
+said; his tones thrilled through me like an electric shock. I gave him
+my arm, and we went.
+
+Outside in the street he said, "Will you take me back to Venice? Will
+you be my guide? Will you put faith in me? You shall be richer than
+ten of the richest houses in Amsterdam or London, richer than
+Rothschild; in short, you shall have the fabulous wealth of the
+_Arabian Nights_."
+
+The man was mad, I thought; but in his voice there was a potent
+something which I obeyed. I allowed him to lead, and he went in the
+direction of the Fosses de la Bastille, as if he could see; walking
+till he reached a lonely spot down by the river, just where the bridge
+has since been built at the junction of the Canal Saint-Martin and the
+Seine. Here he sat down on a stone, and I, sitting opposite to him,
+saw the old man's hair gleaming like threads of silver in the
+moonlight. The stillness was scarcely troubled by the sound of the
+far-off thunder of traffic along the boulevards; the clear night air
+and everything about us combined to make a strangely unreal scene.
+
+"You talk of millions to a young man," I began, "and do you think that
+he will shrink from enduring any number of hardships to gain them? Are
+you not laughing at me?"
+
+"May I die unshriven," he cried vehemently, "if all that I am about to
+tell you is not true. I was one-and-twenty years old, like you at this
+moment. I was rich, I was handsome, and a noble by birth. I began with
+the first madness of all--with Love. I loved as no one can love
+nowadays. I have hidden myself in a chest, at the risk of a dagger
+thrust, for nothing more than the promise of a kiss. To die for Her
+--it seemed to me to be a whole life in itself. In 1760 I fell in love
+with a lady of the Vendramin family; she was eighteen years old, and
+married to a Sagredo, one of the richest senators, a man of thirty,
+madly in love with his wife. My mistress and I were guiltless as
+cherubs when the _sposo_ caught us together talking of love. He was
+armed, I was not, but he missed me; I sprang upon him and killed him
+with my two hands, wringing his neck as if he had been a chicken. I
+wanted Bianca to fly with me; but she would not. That is the way with
+women! So I went alone. I was condemned to death, and my property was
+confiscated and made over to my next-of-kin; but I had carried off my
+diamonds, five of Titian's pictures taken down from their frames and
+rolled up, and all my gold.
+
+"I went to Milan, no one molested me, my affair in nowise interested
+the State.--One small observation before I go further," he continued,
+after a pause, "whether it is true or no that the mother's fancies at
+the time of conception or in the months before birth can influence her
+child, this much is certain, my mother during her pregnancy had a
+passion for gold, and I am the victim of a monomania, of a craving for
+gold which must be gratified. Gold is so much of a necessity of life
+for me, that I have never been without it; I must have gold to toy
+with and finger. As a young man I always wore jewelry, and I carried
+two or three hundred ducats about me wherever I went."
+
+He drew a couple of gold coins from his pocket and showed them to me
+as he spoke.
+
+"I can tell by instinct when gold is near. Blind as I am, I stop
+before a jeweler's shop windows. That passion was the ruin of me; I
+took to gambling to play with gold. I was not a cheat, I was cheated,
+I ruined myself. I lost all my fortune. Then the longing to see Bianca
+once more possessed me like a frenzy. I stole back to Venice and found
+her again. For six months I was happy; she hid me in her house and fed
+me. I thought thus deliciously to finish my days. But the Provveditore
+courted her, and guessed that he had a rival; we in Italy can feel
+that. He played the spy upon us, and surprised us together in bed,
+base wretch. You may judge what a fight for life it was; I did not
+kill him outright, but I wounded him dangerously.
+
+"That adventure broke my luck. I have never found another Bianca; I
+have known great pleasures; but among the most celebrated women at the
+court of Louis XV. I never found my beloved Venetian's charm, her
+love, her great qualities.
+
+"The Provveditore called his servants, the palace was surrounded and
+entered; I fought for my life that I might die beneath Bianca's eyes;
+Bianca helped me to kill the Provveditore. Once before she had refused
+flight with me; but after six months of happiness she wished only to
+die with me, and received several thrusts. I was entangled in a great
+cloak that they flung over me, carried down to a gondola, and hurried
+to the Pozzi dungeons. I was twenty-two years old. I gripped the hilt
+of my broken sword so hard, that they could only have taken it from me
+by cutting off my hand at the wrist. A curious chance, or rather the
+instinct of self-preservation, led me to hide the fragment of the
+blade in a corner of my cell, as if it might still be of use. They
+tended me; none of my wounds were serious. At two-and-twenty one can
+recover from anything. I was to lose my head on the scaffold. I
+shammed illness to gain time. It seemed to me that the canal lay just
+outside my cell. I thought to make my escape by boring a hole through
+the wall and swimming for my life. I based my hopes on the following
+reasons.
+
+"Every time that the jailer came with my food, there was light enough
+to read directions written on the walls--'Side of the Palace,' 'Side
+of the Canal,' 'Side of the Vaults.' At last I saw a design in this,
+but I did not trouble myself much about the meaning of it; the actual
+incomplete condition of the Ducal Palace accounted for it. The longing
+to regain my freedom gave me something like genius. Groping about with
+my fingers, I spelled out an Arabic inscription on the wall. The
+author of the work informed those to come after him that he had loosed
+two stones in the lowest course of masonry and hollowed out eleven
+feet beyond underground. As he went on with his excavations, it became
+necessary to spread the fragments of stone and mortar over the floor
+of his cell. But even if jailers and inquisitors had not felt sure
+that the structure of the building was such that no watch was needed
+below, the level of the Pozzi dungeons being several steps below the
+threshold, it was possible gradually to raise the earthen floor
+without exciting the warder's suspicions.
+
+"The tremendous labor had profited nothing--nothing at least to him
+that began it. The very fact that it was left unfinished told of the
+unknown worker's death. Unless his devoted toil was to be wasted for
+ever, his successor must have some knowledge of Arabic, but I had
+studied Oriental languages at the Armenian Convent. A few words
+written on the back of the stone recorded the unhappy man's fate; he
+had fallen a victim to his great possessions; Venice had coveted his
+wealth and seized upon it. A whole month went by before I obtained any
+result; but whenever I felt my strength failing as I worked, I heard
+the chink of gold, I saw gold spread before me, I was dazzled by
+diamonds.--Ah! wait.
+
+"One night my blunted steel struck on wood. I whetted the fragment of
+my blade and cut a hole; I crept on my belly like a serpent; I worked
+naked and mole-fashion, my hands in front of me, using the stone
+itself to gain a purchase. I was to appear before my judges in two
+days' time, I made a final effort, and that night I bored through the
+wood and felt that there was space beyond.
+
+"Judge of my surprise when I applied my eye to the hole. I was in the
+ceiling of a vault, heaps of gold were dimly visible in the faint
+light. The Doge himself and one of the Ten stood below; I could hear
+their voices and sufficient of their talk to know that this was the
+Secret Treasury of the Republic, full of the gifts of Doges and
+reserves of booty called the Tithe of Venice from the spoils of
+military expeditions. I was saved!
+
+"When the jailer came I proposed that he should help me to escape and
+fly with me, and that we should take with us as much as we could
+carry. There was no reason for hesitation; he agreed. Vessels were
+about to sail for the Levant. All possible precautions were taken.
+Bianca furthered the schemes which I suggested to my accomplice. It
+was arranged that Bianca should only rejoin us in Smyrna for fear of
+exciting suspicion. In a single night the hole was enlarged, and we
+dropped down into the Secret Treasury of Venice.
+
+"What a night that was! Four great casks full of gold stood there. In
+the outer room silver pieces were piled in heaps, leaving a gangway
+between by which to cross the chamber. Banks of silver coins
+surrounded the walls to the height of five feet.
+
+"I thought the jailer would go mad. He sang and laughed and danced and
+capered among the gold, till I threatened to strangle him if he made a
+sound or wasted time. In his joy he did not notice at first the table
+where the diamonds lay. I flung myself upon these, and deftly filled
+the pockets of my sailor jacket and trousers with the stones. Ah!
+Heaven, I did not take the third of them. Gold ingots lay underneath
+the table. I persuaded my companion to fill as many bags as we could
+carry with the gold, and made him understand that this was our only
+chance of escaping detection abroad.
+
+"'Pearls, rubies, and diamonds might be recognized,' I told him.
+
+"Covetous though we were, we could not possibly take more than two
+thousand livres weight of gold, which meant six journeys across the
+prison to the gondola. The sentinel at the water gate was bribed with
+a bag containing ten livres weight of gold; and as far as the two
+gondoliers, they believed they were serving the Republic. At daybreak
+we set out.
+
+"Once upon the open sea, when I thought of that night, when I
+recollected all that I had felt, when the vision of that great hoard
+rose before my eyes, and I computed that I had left behind thirty
+millions in silver, twenty in gold, and many more in diamonds, pearls,
+and rubies--then a sort of madness began to work in me. I had the gold
+fever.
+
+"We landed at Smyrna and took ship at once for France. As we went on
+board the French vessel, Heaven favored me by ridding me of my
+accomplice. I did not think at the time of all the possible
+consequences of this mishap, and rejoiced not a little. We were so
+completely unnerved by all that had happened, that we were stupid, we
+said not a word to each other, we waited till it should be safe to
+enjoy ourselves at our ease. It was not wonderful that the rogue's
+head was dizzy. You shall see how heavily God has punished me.
+
+"I never knew a quiet moment until I had sold two-thirds of my
+diamonds in London or Amsterdam, and held the value of my gold dust in
+a negotiable shape. For five years I hid myself in Madrid, then in
+1770 I came to Paris with a Spanish name, and led as brilliant a life
+as may be. Then in the midst of my pleasures, as I enjoyed a fortune
+of six millions, I was smitten with blindness. I do not doubt but that
+my infirmity was brought on by my sojourn in the cell and my work in
+the stone, if, indeed, my peculiar faculty for 'seeing' gold was not
+an abuse of the power of sight which predestined me to lose it. Bianca
+was dead.
+
+"At this time I had fallen in love with a woman to whom I thought to
+link my fate. I had told her the secret of my name; she belonged to a
+powerful family; she was a friend of Mme. du Barry; I hoped everything
+from the favor shown me by Louis XV.; I trusted in her. Acting on her
+advice, I went to London to consult a famous oculist, and after a stay
+of several months in London she deserted me in Hyde Park. She had
+stripped me of all that I had, and left me without resource. Nor could
+I make complaint, for to disclose my name was to lay myself open to
+the vengeance of my native city; I could appeal to no one for aid, I
+feared Venice. The woman put spies about me to exploit my infirmity. I
+spare you a tale of adventures worthy of Gil Blas.--Your Revolution
+followed. For two whole years that creature kept me at the Bicetre as
+a lunatic, then she gained admittance for me at the Blind Asylum;
+there was no help for it, I went. I could not kill her; I could not
+see; and I was so poor that I could not pay another arm.
+
+"If only I had taken counsel with my jailer, Benedetto Carpi, before I
+lost him, I might have known the exact position of my cell, I might
+have found my way back to the Treasury and returned to Venice when
+Napoleon crushed the Republic--
+
+"Still, blind as I am, let us go back to Venice! I shall find the door
+of my prison, I shall see the gold through the prison walls, I shall
+hear it where it lies under the water; for the events which brought
+about the fall of Venice befell in such a way that the secret of the
+hoard must have perished with Bianca's brother, Vendramin, a doge to
+whom I looked to make my peace with the Ten. I sent memorials to the
+First Consul; I proposed an agreement with the Emperor of Austria;
+every one sent me about my business for a lunatic. Come! we will go to
+Venice; let us set out as beggars, we shall come back millionaires. We
+will buy back some of my estates, and you shall be my heir! You shall
+be Prince of Varese!"
+
+My head was swimming. For me his confidences reached the proportions
+of tragedy; at the sight of that white head of his and beyond it the
+black water in the trenches of the Bastille lying still as a canal in
+Venice, I had no words to answer him. Facino Cane thought, no doubt,
+that I judged him, as the rest had done, with a disdainful pity; his
+gesture expressed the whole philosophy of despair.
+
+Perhaps his story had taken him back to happy days and to Venice. He
+caught up his clarionet and made plaintive music, playing a Venetian
+boat-song with something of his lost skill, the skill of the young
+patrician lover. It was a sort of _Super flumina Babylonis_. Tears
+filled my eyes. Any belated persons walking along the Boulevard
+Bourdon must have stood still to listen to an exile's last prayer, a
+last cry of regret for a lost name, mingled with memories of Bianca.
+But gold soon gained the upper hand, the fatal passion quenched the
+light of youth.
+
+"I see it always," he said; "dreaming or waking, I see it; and as I
+pace to and fro, I pace in the Treasury, and the diamonds sparkle. I
+am not as blind as you think; gold and diamonds light up my night, the
+night of the last Facino Cane, for my title passes to the Memmi. My
+God! the murderer's punishment was not long delayed! _Ave Maria_," and
+he repeated several prayers that I did not heed.
+
+"We will go to Venice!" I said, when he rose.
+
+"Then I have found a man!" he cried, with his face on fire.
+
+I gave him my arm and went home with him. We reached the gates of the
+Blind Asylum just as some of the wedding guests were returning along
+the street, shouting at the top of their voices. He squeezed my hand.
+
+"Shall we start to-morrow?" he asked.
+
+"As soon as we can get some money."
+
+"But we can go on foot. I will beg. I am strong, and you feel young
+when you see gold before you."
+
+Facino Cane died before the winter was out after a two months'
+illness. The poor man had taken a chill.
+
+
+
+PARIS, March 1836.
+
+
+
+ ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Cane, Marco-Facino
+ Massimilla Doni
+
+Vendramini, Marco
+ Massimilla Doni
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Facino Cane, by Honore de Balzac
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