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diff --git a/2953.txt b/2953.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb2de8a --- /dev/null +++ b/2953.txt @@ -0,0 +1,4869 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Venetian Years: Military Career +by Jacques Casanova de Seingalt + +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.org + + +Title: Venetian Years: Military Career + The Memoirs Of Jacques Casanova De Seingalt 1725-1798 + +Author: Jacques Casanova de Seingalt + +Release Date: October 30, 2006 [EBook #2953] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VENETIAN YEARS: MILITARY CAREER *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +MEMOIRS OF JACQUES CASANOVA de SEINGALT 1725-1798 + +VENETIAN YEARS, Volume 1c--MILITARY CAREER + +THE RARE UNABRIDGED LONDON EDITION OF 1894 TRANSLATED BY ARTHUR MACHEN TO +WHICH HAS BEEN ADDED THE CHAPTERS DISCOVERED BY ARTHUR SYMONS. + + + + +MILITARY CAREER + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +I Renounce the Clerical Profession, and Enter the Military +Service--Therese Leaves for Naples, and I Go to Venice--I Am Appointed +Ensign in the Army of My Native Country--I Embark for Corfu, and Land at +Orsera to Take a Walk + +I had been careful, on my arrival in Bologna, to take up my quarters at a +small inn, so as not to attract any notice, and as soon as I had +dispatched my letters to Therese and the French officer, I thought of +purchasing some linen, as it was at least doubtful whether I should ever +get my trunk. I deemed it expedient to order some clothes likewise. I was +thus ruminating, when it suddenly struck me that I was not likely now to +succeed in the Church, but feeling great uncertainty as to the profession +I ought to adopt, I took a fancy to transform myself into an officer, as +it was evident that I had not to account to anyone for my actions. It was +a very natural fancy at my age, for I had just passed through two armies +in which I had seen no respect paid to any garb but to the military +uniform, and I did not see why I should not cause myself to be respected +likewise. Besides, I was thinking of returning to Venice, and felt great +delight at the idea of shewing myself there in the garb of honour, for I +had been rather ill-treated in that of religion. + +I enquired for a good tailor: death was brought to me, for the tailor +sent to me was named Morte. I explained to him how I wanted my uniform +made, I chose the cloth, he took my measure, and the next day I was +transformed into a follower of Mars. I procured a long sword, and with my +fine cane in hand, with a well-brushed hat ornamented with a black +cockade, and wearing a long false pigtail, I sallied forth and walked all +over the city. + +I bethought myself that the importance of my new calling required a +better and more showy lodging than the one I had secured on my arrival, +and I moved to the best inn. I like even now to recollect the pleasing +impression I felt when I was able to admire myself full length in a large +mirror. I was highly pleased with my own person! I thought myself made by +nature to wear and to honour the military costume, which I had adopted +through the most fortunate impulse. Certain that nobody knew me, I +enjoyed by anticipation all the conjectures which people would indulge in +respecting me, when I made my first appearance in the most fashionable +cafe of the town. + +My uniform was white, the vest blue, a gold and silver shoulder-knot, and +a sword-knot of the same material. Very well pleased with my grand +appearance, I went to the coffee-room, and, taking some chocolate, began +to read the newspapers, quite at my ease, and delighted to see that +everybody was puzzled. A bold individual, in the hope of getting me into +conversation, came to me and addressed me; I answered him with a +monosyllable, and I observed that everyone was at a loss what to make of +me. When I had sufficiently enjoyed public admiration in the coffee-room, +I promenaded in the busiest thoroughfares of the city, and returned to +the inn, where I had dinner by myself. + +I had just concluded my repast when my landlord presented himself with +the travellers' book, in which he wanted to register my name. + +"Casanova." + +"Your profession, if you please, sir?" + +"Officer." + +"In which service?" + +"None." + +"Your native place?" + +"Venice." + +"Where do you come from?" + +"That is no business of yours." + +This answer, which I thought was in keeping with my external appearance, +had the desired effect: the landlord bowed himself out, and I felt highly +pleased with myself, for I knew that I should enjoy perfect freedom in +Bologna, and I was certain that mine host had visited me at the instance +of some curious person eager to know who I was. + +The next day I called on M. Orsi, the banker, to cash my bill of +exchange, and took another for six hundred sequins on Venice, and one +hundred sequins in gold after which I again exhibited myself in the +public places. Two days afterwards, whilst I was taking my coffee after +dinner, the banker Orsi was announced. I desired him to be shewn in, and +he made his appearance accompanied my Monsignor Cornaro, whom I feigned +not to know. M. Orsi remarked that he had called to offer me his services +for my letters of exchange, and introduced the prelate. I rose and +expressed my gratification at making his acquaintance. "But we have met +before," he replied, "at Venice and Rome." Assuming an air of blank +surprise, I told him he must certainly be mistaken. The prelate, thinking +he could guess the reason of my reserve, did not insist, and apologized. +I offered him a cup of coffee, which he accepted, and, on leaving me, he +begged the honour of my company to breakfast the next day. + +I made up my mind to persist in my denials, and called upon the prelate, +who gave me a polite welcome. He was then apostolic prothonotary in +Bologna. Breakfast was served, and as we were sipping our chocolate, he +told me that I had most likely some good reasons to warrant my reserve, +but that I was wrong not to trust him, the more so that the affair in +question did me great honour. "I do not know," said I, "what affair you +are alluding to." He then handed me a newspaper, telling me to read a +paragraph which he pointed out. My astonishment may be imagined when I +read the following correspondence from Pesaro: "M. de Casanova, an +officer in the service of the queen, has deserted after having killed his +captain in a duel; the circumstances of the duel are not known; all that +has been ascertained is that M. de Casanova has taken the road to Rimini, +riding the horse belonging to the captain, who was killed on the spot." + +In spite of my surprise, and of the difficulty I had in keeping my +gravity at the reading of the paragraph, in which so much untruth was +blended with so little that was real, I managed to keep a serious +countenance, and I told the prelate that the Casanova spoken of in the +newspaper must be another man. + +"That may be, but you are certainly the Casanova I knew a month ago at +Cardinal Acquaviva's, and two years ago at the house of my sister, Madame +Lovedan, in Venice. Besides the Ancona banker speaks of you as an +ecclesiastic in his letter of advice to M. Orsi:" + +"Very well, monsignor; your excellency compels me to agree to my being +the same Casanova, but I entreat you not to ask me any more questions as +I am bound in honour to observe the strictest reserve." + +"That is enough for me, and I am satisfied. Let us talk of something +else." + +I was amused at the false reports which were being circulated about me, +and, I became from that moment a thorough sceptic on the subject of +historical truth. I enjoyed, however, very great pleasure in thinking +that my reserve had fed the belief of my being the Casanova mentioned in +the newspaper. I felt certain that the prelate would write the whole +affair to Venice, where it would do me great honour, at least until the +truth should be known, and in that case my reserve would be justified, +besides, I should then most likely be far away. I made up my mind to go +to Venice as soon as I heard from Therese, as I thought that I could wait +for her there more comfortably than in Bologna, and in my native place +there was nothing to hinder me from marrying her openly. In the mean time +the fable from Pesaro amused me a good deal, and I expected every day to +see it denied in some newspaper. The real officer Casanova must have +laughed at the accusation brought against him of having run away with the +horse, as much as I laughed at the caprice which had metamorphosed me +into an officer in Bologna, just as if I had done it for the very purpose +of giving to the affair every appearance of truth. + +On the fourth day of my stay in Bologna, I received by express a long +letter from Therese. She informed me that, on the day after my escape +from Rimini, Baron Vais had presented to her the Duke de Castropignano, +who, having heard her sing, had offered her one thousand ounces a year, +and all travelling expenses paid, if she would accept an engagement as +prima-donna at the San Carlo Theatre, at Naples, where she would have to +go immediately after her Rimini engagement. She had requested and +obtained a week to come to a decision. She enclosed two documents, the +first was the written memorandum of the duke's proposals, which she sent +in order that I should peruse it, as she did not wish to sign it without +my consent; the second was a formal engagement, written by herself, to +remain all her life devoted to me and at my service. She added in her +letter that, if I wished to accompany her to Naples, she would meet me +anywhere I might appoint, but that, if I had any objection to return to +that city, she would immediately refuse the brilliant offer, for her only +happiness was to please me in all things. + +For the first time in my life I found myself in need of thoughtful +consideration before I could make up my mind. Therese's letter had +entirely upset all my ideas, and, feeling that I could not answer it a +once, I told the messenger to call the next day. + +Two motives of equal weight kept the balance wavering; self-love and love +for Therese. I felt that I ought not to require Therese to give up such +prospects of fortune; but I could not take upon myself either to let her +go to Naples without me, or to accompany her there. On one side, I +shuddered at the idea that my love might ruin Therese's prospects; on the +other side, the idea of the blow inflicted on my self-love, on my pride, +if I went to Naples with her, sickened me. + +How could I make up my mind to reappear in that city, in the guise of a +cowardly fellow living at the expense of his mistress or his wife? What +would my cousin Antonio, Don Polo and his dear son, Don Lelio Caraffa, +and all the patricians who knew me, have said? The thought of Lucrezia +and of her husband sent a cold shiver through me. I considered that, in +spite of my love for Therese, I should become very miserable if everyone +despised me. Linked to her destiny as a lover or as a husband, I would be +a degraded, humbled, and mean sycophant. Then came the thought, Is this +to be the end of all my hopes? The die was cast, my head had conquered my +heart. I fancied that I had hit upon an excellent expedient, which at all +events made me gain time, and I resolved to act upon it. I wrote to +Therese, advising her to accept the engagement for Naples, where she +might expect me to join her in the month of July, or after my return from +Constantinople. I cautioned her to engage an honest-looking +waiting-woman, so as to appear respectably in the world, and, to lead +such a life as would permit me to make her my wife, on my return, without +being ashamed of myself. I foresaw that her success would be insured by +her beauty even more than by her talent, and, with my nature, I knew that +I could never assume the character of an easy-going lover or of a +compliant husband. + +Had I received Therese's letter one week sooner, it is certain that she +would not have gone to Naples, for my love would then have proved +stronger than my reason; but in matters of love, as well as in all +others, Time is a great teacher. + +I told Therese to direct her answer to Bologna, and, three days after, I +received from her a letter loving, and at the same time sad, in which she +informed me that she had signed the engagement. She had secured the +services of a woman whom she could present as her mother; she would reach +Naples towards the middle of May, and she would wait for me there till +she heard from me that I no longer wanted her. + +Four days after the receipt of that letter, the last but one that Therese +wrote me, I left Bologna for Venice. Before my departure I had received +an answer form the French officer, advising me that my passport had +reached Pesaro, and that he was ready to forward it to me with my trunk, +if I would pay M. Marcello Birna, the proveditore of the Spanish army, +whose address he enclosed, the sum of fifty doubloons for the horse which +I had run away with, or which had run away with me. I repaired at once to +the house of the proveditore, well pleased to settle that affair, and I +received my trunk and my passport a few hours before leaving Bologna. But +as my paying for the horse was known all over the town, Monsignor Cornaro +was confirmed in his belief that I had killed my captain in a duel. + +To go to Venice, it was necessary to submit to a quarantine, which had +been adhered to only because the two governments had fallen out. The +Venetians wanted the Pope to be the first in giving free passage through +his frontiers, and the Pope insisted that the Venetians should take the +initiative. The result of this trifling pique between the two governments +was great hindrance to commerce, but very often that which bears only +upon the private interest of the people is lightly treated by the rulers. +I did not wish to be quarantined, and determined on evading it. It was +rather a delicate undertaking, for in Venice the sanitary laws are very +strict, but in those days I delighted in doing, if not everything that +was forbidden, at least everything which offered real difficulties. + +I knew that between the state of Mantua and that of Venice the passage +was free, and I knew likewise that there was no restriction in the +communication between Mantua and Modena; if I could therefore penetrate +into the state of Mantua by stating that I was coming from Modena, my +success would be certain, because I could then cross the Po and go +straight to Venice. I got a carrier to drive me to Revero, a city +situated on the river Po, and belonging to the state of Mantua. + +The driver told me that, if he took the crossroads, he could go to +Revero, and say that we came from Mantua, and that the only difficulty +would be in the absence of the sanitary certificate which is delivered in +Mantua, and which was certain to be asked for in Revero. I suggested that +the best way to manage would be for him to say that he had lost it, and a +little money removed every objection on his part. + +When we reached the gates of Revero, I represented myself as a Spanish +officer going to Venice to meet the Duke of Modena (whom I knew to be +there) on business of the greatest importance. The sanitary certificate +was not even demanded, military honours were duly paid to me, and I was +most civilly treated. A certificate was immediately delivered to me, +setting forth that I was travelling from Revero, and with it I crossed +the Po, without any difficulty, at Ostiglia, from which place I proceeded +to Legnago. There I left my carrier as much pleased with my generosity as +with the good luck which had attended our journey, and, taking +post-horses, I reached Venice in the evening. I remarked that it was the +and of April, 1744, the anniversary of my birth, which, ten times during +my life, has been marked by some important event. + +The very next morning I went to the exchange in order to procure a +passage to Constantinople, but I could not find any passenger ship +sailing before two or three months, and I engaged a berth in a Venetian +ship called, Our Lady of the Rosary, Commander Zane, which was to sail +for Corfu in the course of the month. + +Having thus prepared myself to obey my destiny, which, according to my +superstitious feelings, called me imperiously to Constantinople, I went +to St: Mark's Square in order to see and to be seen, enjoying by +anticipation the surprise of my acquaintances at not finding me any +longer an abbe. I must not forget to state that at Revero I had decorated +my hat with a red cockade. + +I thought that my first visit was, by right, due to the Abbe Grimani. The +moment he saw me he raised a perfect shriek of astonishment, for he +thought I was still with Cardinal Acquaviva, on the road to a political +career, and he saw standing before him a son of Mars. He had just left +the dinner-table as I entered, and he had company. I observed amongst the +guests an officer wearing the Spanish uniform, but I was not put out of +countenance. I told the Abbe Grimani that I was only passing through +Venice, and that I had felt it a duty and a pleasure to pay my respects +to him. + +"I did not expect to see you in such a costume." + +"I have resolved to throw off the garb which could not procure me a +fortune likely to satisfy my ambition." + +"Where are you going?" + +"To Constantinople; and I hope to find a quick passage to Corfu, as I +have dispatches from Cardinal Acquaviva." + +"Where do you come from now?" + +"From the Spanish army, which I left ten days ago." + +These words were hardly spoken, when I heard the voice of a young +nobleman exclaiming; + +"That is not true." + +"The profession to which I belong," I said to him with great animation, +"does not permit me to let anyone give me the lie." + +And upon that, bowing all round, I went away, without taking any notice +of those who were calling me back. + +I wore an uniform; it seemed to me that I was right in showing that +sensitive and haughty pride which forms one of the characteristics of +military men. I was no longer a priest: I could not bear being given the +lie, especially when it had been given to me in so public a manner. + +I called upon Madame Manzoni, whom I was longing to see. She was very +happy to see me, and did not fail to remind me of her prediction. I told +her my history, which amused her much; but she said that if I went to +Constantinople I should most likely never see her again. + +After my visit to Madame Manzoni I went to the house of Madame Orio, +where I found worthy M. Rosa, Nanette, and Marton. They were all greatly +surprised, indeed petrified at seeing me. The two lovely sisters looked +more beautiful than ever, but I did not think it necessary to tell them +the history of my nine months absence, for it would not have edified the +aunt or pleased the nieces. I satisfied myself with telling them as much +as I thought fit, and amused them for three hours. Seeing that the good +old lady was carried away by her enthusiasm, I told her that I should be +very happy to pass under her roof the four or five weeks of my stay in +Venice, if she could give me a room and supper, but on condition that I +should not prove a burden to her or to her charming nieces. + +"I should be only too happy," she answered, "to have you so long, but I +have no room to offer you." + +"Yes, you have one, my dear," exclaimed M. Rosa, "and I undertake to put +it to rights within two hours." + +It was the room adjoining the chamber of the two sisters. Nanette said +immediately that she would come downstairs with her sister, but Madame +Orio answered that it was unnecessary, as they could lock themselves in +their room. + +"There would be no need for them to do that, madam," I said, with a +serious and modest air; "and if I am likely to occasion the slightest +disturbance, I can remain at the inn." + +"There will be no disturbance whatever; but forgive my nieces, they are +young prudes, and have a very high opinion of themselves:" + +Everything being satisfactorily arranged, I forced upon Madame Orio a +payment of fifteen sequins in advance, assuring her that I was rich, and +that I had made a very good bargain, as I should spend a great deal more +if I kept my room at the inn. I added that I would send my luggage, and +take up my quarters in her house on the following day. During the whole +of the conversation, I could see the eyes of my two dear little wives +sparkling with pleasure, and they reconquered all their influence over my +heart in spite of my love for Therese, whose image was, all the same, +brilliant in my soul: this was a passing infidelity, but not inconstancy. + +On the following day I called at the war office, but, to avoid every +chance of unpleasantness, I took care to remove my cockade. I found in +the office Major Pelodoro, who could not control his joy when he saw me +in a military uniform, and hugged me with delight. As soon as I had +explained to him that I wanted to go to Constantinople, and that, +although in uniform, I was free, he advised me earnestly to seek the +favour of going to Turkey with the bailo, who intended to leave within +two months, and even to try to obtain service in the Venetian army. + +His advice suited me exactly, and the secretary of war, who had known me +the year before, happening to see me, summoned me to him. He told me that +he had received letters from Bologna which had informed him of a certain +adventure entirely to my honour, adding that he knew that I would not +acknowledge it. He then asked me if I had received my discharge before +leaving the Spanish army. + +"I could not receive my discharge, as I was never in the service." + +"And how did you manage to come to Venice without performing quarantine?" + +"Persons coming from Mantua are not subject to it." + +"True; but I advise you to enter the Venetian service like Major +Pelodoro." + +As I was leaving the ducal palace, I met the Abbe Grimani who told me +that the abrupt manner in which I had left his house had displeased +everybody. + +"Even the Spanish officer?" + +"No, for he remarked that, if you had truly been with the army, you could +not act differently, and he has himself assured me that you were there, +and to prove what he asserted he made me read an article in the +newspaper, in which it is stated that you killed your captain in a duel. +Of course it is only a fable?" + +"How do you know that it is not a fact?" + +"Is it true, then?" + +"I do not say so, but it may be true, quite as true as my having been +with the Spanish army ten days ago." + +"But that is impossible, unless you have broken through the quarantine." + +"I have broken nothing. I have openly crossed the Po at Revero, and here +I am. I am sorry not to be able to present myself at your excellency's +palace, but I cannot do so until I have received the most complete +satisfaction from the person who has given me the lie. I could put up +with an insult when I wore the livery of humility, but I cannot bear one +now that I wear the garb of honour." + +"You are wrong to take it in such a high tone. The person who attacked +your veracity is M. Valmarana, the proveditore of the sanitary +department, and he contends that, as nobody can pass through the cordon, +it would be impossible for you to be here. Satisfaction, indeed! Have you +forgotten who you are?" + +"No, I know who I am; and I know likewise that, if I was taken for a +coward before leaving Venice, now that I have returned no one shall +insult me without repenting it." + +"Come and dine with me." + +"No, because the Spanish officer would know it." + +"He would even see you, for he dines with me every day." + +"Very well, then I will go, and I will let him be the judge of my quarrel +with M. Valmarana." + +I dined that day with Major Pelodoro and several other officers, who +agreed in advising me to enter the service of the Republic, and I +resolved to do so. "I am acquainted," said the major, "with a young +lieutenant whose health is not sufficiently strong to allow him to go to +the East, and who would be glad to sell his commission, for which he +wants one hundred sequins. But it would be necessary to obtain the +consent of the secretary of war." "Mention the matter to him," I replied, +"the one hundred sequins are ready." The major undertook the commission. + +In the evening I went to Madame Orio, and I found myself very comfortably +lodged. After supper, the aunt told her nieces to shew me, to my room, +and, as may well be supposed, we spent a most delightful night. After +that they took the agreeable duty by turns, and in order to avoid any +surprise in case the aunt should take it into her head to pay them a +visit, we skilfully displaced a part of the partition, which allowed them +to come in and out of my room without opening the door. But the good lady +believed us three living specimens of virtue, and never thought of +putting us to the test. + +Two or three days afterwards, M. Grimani contrived an interview between +me and M. Valmarana, who told me that, if he had been aware that the +sanitary line could be eluded, he would never have impugned my veracity, +and thanked me for the information I had given him. The affair was thus +agreeably arranged, and until my departure I honoured M. Grimani's +excellent dinner with my presence every day. + +Towards the end of the month I entered the service of the Republic in the +capacity of ensign in the Bala regiment, then at Corfu; the young man who +had left the regiment through the magical virtue of my one hundred +sequins was lieutenant, but the secretary of war objected to my having +that rank for reasons to which I had to submit, if I wished to enter the +army; but he promised me that, at the end of the year, I would be +promoted to the grade of lieutenant, and he granted me a furlough to go +to Constantinople. I accepted, for I was determined to serve in the army. + +M. Pierre Vendramin, an illustrious senator, obtained me the favour of a +passage to Constantinople with the Chevalier Venier, who was proceeding +to that city in the quality of bailo, but as he would arrive in Corfu a +month after me, the chevalier very kindly promised to take me as he +called at Corfu. + +A few days before my departure, I received a letter from Therese, who +informed me that the Duke de Castropignano escorted her everywhere. "The +duke is old," she wrote, "but even if he were young, you would have no +cause for uneasiness on my account. Should you ever want any money, draw +upon me from any place where you may happen to be, and be quite certain +that your letters of exchange will be paid, even if I had to sell +everything I possess to honour your signature." + +There was to be another passenger on board the ship of the line on which +I had engaged my passage, namely, a noble Venetian, who was going to +Zante in the quality of counsellor, with a numerous and brilliant +retinue. The captain of the ship told me that, if I was obliged to take +my meals alone, I was not likely to fare very well, and he advised me to +obtain an introduction to the nobleman, who would not fail to invite me +to share his table. His name was Antonio Dolfin, and he had been +nicknamed Bucentoro, in consequence of his air of grandeur and the +elegance of his toilet. Fortunately I did not require to beg an +introduction, for M. Grimani offered, of his own accord, to present me to +the magnificent councillor, who received me in the kindest manner, and +invited me at once to take my meals at his table. He expressed a desire +that I should make the acquaintance of his wife, who was to accompany him +in the journey. I called upon her the next day, and I found a lady +perfect in manners, but already of a certain age and completely deaf. I +had therefore but little pleasure to expect from her conversation. She +had a very charming young daughter whom she left in a convent. She became +celebrated afterwards, and she is still alive, I believe, the widow of +Procurator Iron, whose family is extinct. + +I have seldom seen a finer-looking man, or a man of more imposing +appearance than M. Dolfin. He was eminently distinguished for his wit and +politeness. He was eloquent, always cheerful when he lost at cards, the +favourite of ladies, whom he endeavoured to please in everything, always +courageous, and of an equal temper, whether in good or in adverse +fortune. + +He had ventured on travelling without permission, and had entered a +foreign service, which had brought him into disgrace with the government, +for a noble son of Venice cannot be guilty of a greater crime. For this +offence he had been imprisoned in the Leads--a favour which destiny kept +also in reserve for me. + +Highly gifted, generous, but not wealthy, M. Dolfin had been compelled to +solicit from the Grand Council a lucrative governorship, and had been +appointed to Zante; but he started with such a splendid suite that he was +not likely to save much out of his salary. Such a man as I have just +portrayed could not make a fortune in Venice, because an aristocratic +government can not obtain a state of lasting, steady peace at home unless +equality is maintained amongst the nobility, and equality, either moral +or physical, cannot be appreciated in any other way than by appearances. +The result is that the man who does not want to lay himself open to +persecution, and who happens to be superior or inferior to the others, +must endeavour to conceal it by all possible means. If he is ambitious, +he must feign great contempt for dignities; if he seeks employment, he +must not appear to want any; if his features are handsome, he must be +careless of his physical appearance; he must dress badly, wear nothing in +good taste, ridicule every foreign importation, make his bow without +grace, be careless in his manner; care nothing for the fine arts, conceal +his good breeding, have no foreign cook, wear an uncombed wig, and look +rather dirty. M. Dolfin was not endowed with any of those eminent +qualities, and therefore he had no hope of a great fortune in his native +country. + +The day before my departure from Venice I did not go out; I devoted the +whole of the day to friendship. Madame Orio and her lovely nieces shed +many tears, and I joined them in that delightful employment. During the +last night that I spent with both of them, the sisters repeated over and +over, in the midst of the raptures of love, that they never would see me +again. They guessed rightly; but if they had happened to see me again +they would have guessed wrongly. Observe how wonderful prophets are! + +I went on board, on the 5th of May, with a good supply of clothing, +jewels, and ready cash. Our ship carried twenty-four guns and two hundred +Sclavonian soldiers. We sailed from Malamacca to the shores of Istria +during the night, and we came to anchor in the harbour of Orsera to take +ballast. I landed with several others to take a stroll through the +wretched place where I had spent three days nine months before, a +recollection which caused me a pleasant sensation when I compared my +present position to what it was at that time. What a difference in +everything--health, social condition, and money! I felt quite certain +that in the splendid uniform I was now wearing nobody would recognize the +miserable-looking abbe who, but for Friar Stephano, would have +become--God knows what! + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +An Amusing Meeting in Orsera--Journey to Corfu--My Stay in +Constantinople--Bonneval--My Return to Corfu--Madame F.--The False +Prince--I Run Away from Corfu--My Frolics at Casopo--I Surrender My self +a Prisoner--My Speedy Release and Triumph--My Success with Madame F. + +I affirm that a stupid servant is more dangerous than a bad one, and a +much greater plague, for one can be on one's guard against a wicked +person, but never against a fool. You can punish wickedness but not +stupidity, unless you send away the fool, male or female, who is guilty +of it, and if you do so you generally find out that the change has only +thrown you out of the frying-pan into the fire. + +This chapter and the two following ones were written; they gave at full +length all the particulars which I must now abridge, for my silly servant +has taken the three chapters for her own purposes. She pleaded as an +excuse that the sheets of paper were old, written upon, covered with +scribbling and erasures, and that she had taken them in preference to +nice, clean paper, thinking that I would care much more for the last than +for the first. I flew into a violent passion, but I was wrong, for the +poor girl had acted with a good intent; her judgment alone had misled +her. It is well known that the first result of anger is to deprive the +angry man of the faculty of reason, for anger and reason do not belong to +the same family. Luckily, passion does not keep me long under its sway: +'Irasci, celerem tamen et placabilem esse'. After I had wasted my time in +hurling at her bitter reproaches, the force of which did not strike her, +and in proving to her that she was a stupid fool, she refuted all my +arguments by the most complete silence. There was nothing to do but to +resign myself, and, although not yet in the best of tempers, I went to +work. What I am going to write will probably not be so good as what I had +composed when I felt in the proper humour, but my readers must be +satisfied with it they will, like the engineer, gain in time what they +lose in strength. + +I landed at Orsera while our ship was taking ballast, as a ship cannot +sail well when she is too light, and I was walking about when I remarked +a man who was looking at me very attentively. As I had no dread of any +creditor, I thought that he was interested by my fine appearance; I could +not find fault with such a feeling, and kept walking on, but as I passed +him, he addressed me: + +"Might I presume to enquire whether this is your first visit to Orsera, +captain?" + +"No, sir, it is my second visit to this city." + +"Were you not here last year?" + +"I was." + +"But you were not in uniform then?" + +"True again; but your questions begin to sound rather indiscreet." + +"Be good enough to forgive me, sir, for my curiosity is the offspring of +gratitude. I am indebted to you for the greatest benefits, and I trust +that Providence has brought you here again only to give me the +opportunity of making greater still my debt of gratitude to you." + +"What on earth have I done, and what can I do for you? I am at a loss to +guess your meaning." + +"Will you be so kind as to come and breakfast with me? My house is near +at hand; my refosco is delicious, please to taste it, and I will convince +you in a few words that you are truly my benefactor, and that I have a +right to expect that you have returned Orsera to load me with fresh +benefits." + +I could not suspect the man of insanity; but, as I could not make him +out, I fancied that he wanted to make me purchase some of his refosco, +and I accepted his invitation. We went up to his room, and he left me for +a few moments to order breakfast. I observed several surgical +instruments, which made me suppose that he was a surgeon, and I asked him +when he returned. + +"Yes, captain; I have been practising surgery in this place for twenty +years, and in a very poor way, for I had nothing to do, except a few +cases of bleeding, of cupping, and occasionally some slight excoriation +to dress or a sprained ankle to put to rights. I did not earn even the +poorest living. But since last year a great change has taken place; I +have made a good deal of money, I have laid it out advantageously, and it +is to you, captain, to you (may God bless you!) that I am indebted for my +present comforts." + +"But how so?" + +"In this way, captain. You had a connection with Don Jerome's +housekeeper, and you left her, when you went away, a certain souvenir +which she communicated to a friend of hers, who, in perfect good faith, +made a present of it to his wife. This lady did not wish, I suppose, to +be selfish, and she gave the souvenir to a libertine who, in his turn, +was so generous with it that, in less than a month, I had about fifty +clients. The following months were not less fruitful, and I gave the +benefit of my attendance to everybody, of course, for a consideration. +There are a few patients still under my care, but in a short time there +will be no more, as the souvenir left by you has now lost all its virtue. +You can easily realize now the joy I felt when I saw you; you are a bird +of good omen. May I hope that your visit will last long enough to enable +you to renew the source of my fortune?" + +I laughed heartily, but he was grieved to hear that I was in excellent +health. He remarked, however, that I was not likely to be so well off on +my return, because, in the country to which I was going, there was +abundance of damaged goods, but that no one knew better than he did how +to root out the venom left by the use of such bad merchandise. He begged +that I would depend upon him, and not trust myself in the hands of +quacks, who would be sure to palm their remedies upon me. I promised him +everything, and, taking leave of him with many thanks, I returned to the +ship. I related the whole affair to M. Dolfin, who was highly amused. We +sailed on the following day, but on the fourth day, on the other side of +Curzola, we were visited by a storm which very nearly cost me my life. +This is how it happened: + +The chaplain of the ship was a Sclavonian priest, very ignorant, insolent +and coarse-mannered, and, as I turned him into ridicule whenever the +opportunity offered, he had naturally become my sworn enemy. 'Tant de +fiel entre-t-il dans l'ame d'un devot!' When the storm was at its height, +he posted himself on the quarter-deck, and, with book in hand, proceeded +to exorcise all the spirits of hell whom he thought he could see in the +clouds, and to whom he pointed for the benefit of the sailors who, +believing themselves lost, were crying, howling, and giving way to +despair, instead of attending to the working of the ship, then in great +danger on account of the rocks and of the breakers which surrounded us. + +Seeing the peril of our position, and the evil effect of his stupid, +incantations upon the minds of the sailors whom the ignorant priest was +throwing into the apathy of despair, instead of keeping up their courage, +I thought it prudent to interfere. I went up the rigging, calling upon +the sailors to do their duty cheerfully, telling them that there were no +devils, and that the priest who pretended to see them was a fool. But it +was in vain that I spoke in the most forcible manner, in vain that I went +to work myself, and shewed that safety was only to be insured by active +means, I could not prevent the priest declaring that I was an Atheist, +and he managed to rouse against me the anger of the greatest part of the +crew. The wind continued to lash the sea into fury for the two following +days, and the knave contrived to persuade the sailors who listened to him +that the hurricane would not abate as long as I was on board. Imbued with +that conviction, one of the men, thinking he had found a good opportunity +of fulfilling the wishes of the priest, came up to me as I was standing +at the extreme end of the forecastle, and pushed me so roughly that I was +thrown over. I should have been irretrievably lost, but the sharp point +of an anchor, hanging along the side of the ship, catching in my clothes, +prevented me from falling in the sea, and proved truly my sheet-anchor. +Some men came to my assistance, and I was saved. A corporal then pointed +out to me the sailor who had tried to murder me, and taking a stout stick +I treated the scoundrel to a sound thrashing; but the sailors, headed by +the furious priest, rushed towards us when they heard his screams, and I +should have been killed if the soldiers had not taken my part. The +commander and M. Dolfin then came on deck, but they were compelled to +listen to the chaplain, and to promise, in order to pacify the vile +rabble, that they would land me at the first opportunity. But even this +was not enough; the priest demanded that I should give up to him a +certain parchment that I had purchased from a Greek at Malamocco just +before sailing. I had no recollection of it, but it was true. I laughed, +and gave it to M. Dolfin; he handed it to the fanatic chaplain, who, +exulting in his victory, called for a large pan of live coals from the +cook's galley, and made an auto-da-fe of the document. The unlucky +parchment, before it was entirely consumed, kept writhing on the fire for +half an hour, and the priest did not fail to represent those contortions +as a miracle, and all the sailors were sure that it was an infernal +manuscript given to me by the devil. The virtue claimed for that piece of +parchment by the man who had sold it to me was that it insured its lucky +possessor the love of all women, but I trust my readers will do me the +justice to believe that I had no faith whatever in amorous philtres, +talismans, or amulets of any kind: I had purchased it only for a joke. + +You can find throughout Italy, in Greece, and generally in every country +the inhabitants of which are yet wrapped up in primitive ignorance, a +tribe of Greeks, of Jews, of astronomers, and of exorcists, who sell +their dupes rags and toys to which they boastingly attach wonderful +virtues and properties; amulets which render invulnerable, scraps of +cloth which defend from witchcraft, small bags filled with drugs to keep +away goblins, and a thousand gewgaws of the same description. These +wonderful goods have no marketable value whatever in France, in England, +in Germany, and throughout the north of Europe generally, but, in +revenge, the inhabitants of those countries indulge in knavish practices +of a much worse kind. + +The storm abated just as the innocent parchment was writhing on the fire, +and the sailors, believing that the spirits of hell had been exorcised, +thought no more of getting rid of my person, and after a prosperous +voyage of a week we cast anchor at Corfu. As soon as I had found a +comfortable lodging I took my letters to his eminence the +proveditore-generale, and to all the naval commanders to whom I was +recommended; and after paying my respects to my colonel, and making the +acquaintance of the officers of my regiment, I prepared to enjoy myself +until the arrival of the Chevalier Venier, who had promised to take me to +Constantinople. He arrived towards the middle of June, but in the mean +time I had been playing basset, and had lost all my money, and sold or +pledged all my jewellery. + +Such must be the fate awaiting every man who has a taste for gambling, +unless he should know how to fix fickle fortune by playing with a real +advantage derived from calculation or from adroitness, which defies +chance. I think that a cool and prudent player can manage both without +exposing himself to censure, or deserving to be called a cheat. + +During the month that I spent in Corfu, waiting for the arrival of M. +Venier, I did not devote any time to the study, either moral or physical, +of the country, for, excepting the days on which I was on duty, I passed +my life at the coffee-house, intent upon the game, and sinking, as a +matter of course, under the adverse fortune which I braved with +obstinacy. I never won, and I had not the moral strength to stop till all +my means were gone. The only comfort I had, and a sorry one truly, was to +hear the banker himself call me--perhaps sarcastically--a fine player, +every time I lost a large stake. My misery was at its height, when new +life was infused in me by the booming of the guns fired in honour of the +arrival of the bailo. He was on board the Europa, a frigate of +seventy-two guns, and he had taken only eight days to sail from Venice to +Corfu. The moment he cast anchor, the bailo hoisted his flag of +captain-general of the Venetian navy, and the proveditore hauled down his +own colours. The Republic of Venice has not on the sea any authority +greater than that of Bailo to the Porte. The Chevalier Venier had with +him a distinguished and brilliant suite; Count Annibal Gambera, Count +Charles Zenobio, both Venetian noblemen of the first class, and the +Marquis d'Anchotti of Bressan, accompanied him to Constantinople for +their own amusement. The bailo remained a week in Corfu, and all the +naval authorities entertained him and his suite in turn, so that there +was a constant succession of balls and suppers. When I presented myself +to his excellency, he informed me that he had already spoken to the +proveditore, who had granted me a furlough of six months to enable me to +accompany him to Constantinople as his adjutant; and as soon as the +official document for my furlough had been delivered to me, I sent my +small stock of worldly goods on board the Europa, and we weighed anchor +early the next day. + +We sailed with a favourable wind which remained steady and brought us in +six days to Cerigo, where we stopped to take in some water. Feeling some +curiosity to visit the ancient Cythera, I went on shore with the sailors +on duty, but it would have been better for me if I had remained on board, +for in Cerigo I made a bad acquaintance. I was accompanied by the captain +of marines. + +The moment we set foot on shore, two men, very poorly dressed and of +unprepossessing appearance, came to us and begged for assistance. I asked +them who they were, and one, quicker than the other, answered; + +"We are sentenced to live, and perhaps to die, in this island by the +despotism of the Council of Ten. There are forty others as unfortunate as +ourselves, and we are all born subjects of the Republic. + +"The crime of which we have been accused, which is not considered a crime +anywhere, is that we were in the habit of living with our mistresses, +without being jealous of our friends, when, finding our ladies handsome, +they obtained their favours with our ready consent. As we were not rich, +we felt no remorse in availing ourselves of the generosity of our friends +in such cases, but it was said that we were carrying on an illicit trade, +and we have been sent to this place, where we receive every day ten sous +in 'moneta lunga'. We are called 'mangia-mayroni', and are worse off than +galley slaves, for we are dying of ennui, and we are often starving +without knowing how to stay our hunger. My name is Don Antonio Pocchini, +I am of a noble Paduan family, and my mother belongs to the illustrious +family of Campo San-Piero." + +We gave them some money, and went about the island, returning to the ship +after we had visited the fortress. I shall have to speak of that Pocchini +in a few years. + +The wind continued in our favour, and we reached the Dardanelles in eight +or ten days; the Turkish barges met us there to carry us to +Constantinople. The sight offered by that city at the distance of a +league is truly wonderful; and I believe that a more magnificent panorama +cannot be found in any part of the world. It was that splendid view which +was the cause of the fall of the Roman, and of the rise of the Greek +empire. Constantine the Great, arriving at Byzantium by sea, was so much +struck with the wonderful beauty of its position, that he exclaimed, +"Here is the proper seat of the empire of the whole world!" and in order +to secure the fulfilment of his prediction, he left Rome for Byzantium. +If he had known the prophecy of Horace, or rather if he had believed in +it, he would not have been guilty of such folly. The poet had said that +the downfall of the Roman empire would begin only when one of the +successors of Augustus bethought him removing the capital of the empire +to where it had originated. The road is not far distant from Thrace. + +We arrived at the Venetian Embassy in Pera towards the middle of July, +and, for a wonder, there was no talk of the plague in Constantinople just +then. We were all provided with very comfortable lodgings, but the +intensity of the heat induced the baili to seek for a little coolness in +a country mansion which had been hired by the Bailo Dona. It was situated +at Bouyoudere. The very first order laid upon me was never to go out +unknown to the bailo, and without being escorted by a janissary, and this +order I obeyed to the letter. In those days the Russians had not tamed +the insolence of the Turkish people. I am told that foreigners can now go +about as much as they please in perfect security. + +The day after our arrival, I took a janissary to accompany me to Osman +Pacha, of Caramania, the name assumed by Count de Bonneval ever since he +had adopted the turban. I sent in my letter, and was immediately shewn +into an apartment on the ground floor, furnished in the French fashion, +where I saw a stout elderly gentleman, dressed like a Frenchman, who, as +I entered the room, rose, came to meet me with a smiling countenance, and +asked me how he could serve the 'protege' of a cardinal of the Roman +Catholic Church, which he could no longer call his mother. I gave him all +the particulars of the circumstances which, in a moment of despair, had +induced me to ask the cardinal for letters of introduction for +Constantinople, and I added that, the letters once in my possession, my +superstitious feelings had made me believe that I was bound to deliver +them in person. + +"Then, without this letter," he said, "you never would have come to +Constantinople, and you have no need of me?" + +"True, but I consider myself fortunate in having thus made the +acquaintance of a man who has attracted the attention of the whole of +Europe, and who still commands that attention." + +His excellency made some remark respecting the happiness of young men +who, like me, without care, without any fixed purpose, abandon themselves +to fortune with that confidence which knows no fear, and telling me that +the cardinal's letter made it desirable that he should do something for +me, he promised to introduce me to three or four of his Turkish friends +who deserved to be known. He invited me to dine with him every Thursday, +and undertook to send me a janissary who would protect me from the +insults of the rabble and shew me everything worth seeing. + +The cardinal's letter representing me as a literary man, the pacha +observed that I ought to see his library. I followed him through the +garden, and we entered a room furnished with grated cupboards; curtains +could be seen behind the wirework; the books were most likely behind the +curtains. + +Taking a key out of his pocket, he opened one of the cupboards, and, +instead of folios, I saw long rows of bottles of the finest wines. We +both laughed heartily. + +"Here are," said the pacha, "my library and my harem. I am old, women +would only shorten my life but good wine will prolong it, or at least, +make it more agreeable. + +"I imagine your excellency has obtained a dispensation from the mufti?" + +"You are mistaken, for the Pope of the Turks is very far from enjoying as +great a power as the Christian Pope. He cannot in any case permit what is +forbidden by the Koran; but everyone is at liberty to work out his own +damnation if he likes. The Turkish devotees pity the libertines, but they +do not persecute them; there is no inquisition in Turkey. Those who do +not know the precepts of religion, say the Turks, will suffer enough in +the life to come; there is no need to make them suffer in this life. The +only dispensation I have asked and obtained, has been respecting +circumcision, although it can hardly be called so, because, at my age, it +might have proved dangerous. That ceremony is generally performed, but it +is not compulsory." + +During the two hours that we spent together, the pacha enquired after +several of his friends in Venice, and particularly after Marc Antonio +Dieto. I told him that his friends were still faithful to their affection +for him, and did not find fault with his apostasy. He answered that he +was a Mahometan as he had been a Christian, and that he was not better +acquainted with the Koran than he had been with the Gospel. "I am +certain," he added, "that I shall die-calmer and much happier than Prince +Eugene. I have had to say that God is God, and that Mahomet is the +prophet. I have said it, and the Turks care very little whether I believe +it or not. I wear the turban as the soldier wears the uniform. I was +nothing but a military man; I could not have turned my hand to any other +profession, and I made up my mind to become lieutenant-general of the +Grand Turk only when I found myself entirely at a loss how to earn my +living. When I left Venice, the pitcher had gone too often to the well, +it was broken at last, and if the Jews had offered me the command of an +army of fifty thousand men, I would have gone and besieged Jerusalem." + +Bonneval was handsome, but too stout. He had received a sabre-cut in the +lower part of the abdomen, which compelled him to wear constantly a +bandage supported by a silver plate. He had been exiled to Asia, but only +for a short time, for, as he told me, the cabals are not so tenacious in +Turkey as they are in Europe, and particularly at the court of Vienna. As +I was taking leave of him, he was kind enough to say that, since his +arrival in Turkey, he had never passed two hours as pleasantly as those +he had just spent with me, and that he would compliment the bailo about +me. + +The Bailo Dona, who had known him intimately in Venice, desired me to be +the bearer of all his friendly compliments for him, and M. Venier +expressed his deep regret at not being able to make his acquaintance. + +The second day after my first visit to him being a Thursday, the pacha +did not forget to send a janissary according to his promise. It was about +eleven in the morning when the janissary called for me, I followed him, +and this time I found Bonneval dressed in the Turkish style. His guests +soon arrived, and we sat down to dinner, eight of us, all well disposed +to be cheerful and happy. The dinner was entirely French, in cooking and +service; his steward and his cook were both worthy French renegades. + +He had taken care to introduce me to all his guests and at the same time +to let me know who they were, but he did not give me an opportunity of +speaking before dinner was nearly over. The conversation was entirely +kept up in Italian, and I remarked that the Turks did not utter a single +word in their own language, even to say the most ordinary thing. Each +guest had near him a bottle which might have contained either white wine +or hydromel; all I know is that I drank, as well as M. de Bonneval, next +to whom I was seated, some excellent white Burgundy. + +The guests got me on the subject of Venice, and particularly of Rome, and +the conversation very naturally fell upon religion, but not upon dogmatic +questions; the discipline of religion and liturgical questions were alone +discussed. + +One of the guests, who was addressed as effendi, because he had been +secretary for foreign affairs, said that the ambassador from Venice to +Rome was a friend of his, and he spoke of him in the highest manner. I +told him that I shared his admiration for that ambassador, who had given +me a letter of introduction for a Turkish nobleman, whom he had +represented as an intimate friend. He enquired for the name of the person +to whom the letter was addressed, but I could not recollect it, and took +the letter out of my pocket-book. The effendi was delighted when he found +that the letter was for himself. He begged leave to read it at once, and +after he had perused it, he kissed the signature and came to embrace me. +This scene pleased M. de Bonneval and all his friends. The effendi, whose +name was Ismail, entreated the pacha to come to dine with him, and to +bring me; Bonneval accepted, and fixed a day. + +Notwithstanding all the politeness of the effendi, I was particularly +interested during our charming dinner in a fine elderly man of about +sixty, whose countenance breathed at the same time the greatest sagacity +and the most perfect kindness. Two years afterwards I found again the +same features on the handsome face of M. de Bragadin, a Venetian senator +of whom I shall have to speak at length when we come to that period of my +life. That elderly gentleman had listened to me with the greatest +attention, but without uttering one word. In society, a man whose face +and general appearance excite your interest, stimulates strongly your +curiosity if he remains silent. When we left the dining-room I enquired +from de Bonneval who he was; he answered that he was wealthy, a +philosopher, a man of acknowledged merit, of great purity of morals, and +strongly attached to his religion. He advised me to cultivate his +acquaintance if he made any advances to me. + +I was pleased with his advice, and when, after a walk under the shady +trees of the garden, we returned to a drawing-room furnished in the +Turkish fashion, I purposely took a seat near Yusuf Ali. Such was the +name of the Turk for whom I felt so much sympathy. He offered me his pipe +in a very graceful manner; I refused it politely, and took one brought to +me by one of M. de Bonneval's servants. Whenever I have been amongst +smokers I have smoked or left the room; otherwise I would have fancied +that I was swallowing the smoke of the others, and that idea which is +true and unpleasant, disgusted me. I have never been able to understand +how in Germany the ladies, otherwise so polite and delicate, could inhale +the suffocating fumes of a crowd of smokers. + +Yusuf, pleased to have me near him, at once led the conversation to +subjects similar to those which had been discussed at table, and +particularly to the reasons which had induced me to give up the peaceful +profession of the Church and to choose a military life; and in order to +gratify his curiosity without losing his good opinion, I gave him, but +with proper caution, some of the particulars of my life, for I wanted him +to be satisfied that, if I had at first entered the career of the holy +priesthood, it had not been through any vocation of mine. He seemed +pleased with my recital, spoke of natural vocations as a Stoic +philosopher, and I saw that he was a fatalist; but as I was careful not +to attack his system openly, he did not dislike my objections, most +likely because he thought himself strong enough to overthrow them. + +I must have inspired the honest Mussulman with very great esteem, for he +thought me worthy of becoming his disciple; it was not likely that he +could entertain the idea of becoming himself the disciple of a young man +of nineteen, lost, as he thought, in a false religion. + +After spending an hour in examining me, in listening to my principles, he +said that he believed me fit to know the real truth, because he saw that +I was seeking for it, and that I was not certain of having obtained it so +far. He invited me to come and spend a whole day with him, naming the +days when I would be certain to find him at home, but he advised me to +consult the Pacha Osman before accepting his invitation. I told him that +the pacha had already mentioned him to me and had spoken very highly of +his character; he seemed much pleased. I fixed a day for my visit, and +left him. + +I informed M. de Bonneval of all that had occurred; he was delighted, and +promised that his janissary would be every day at the Venetian palace, +ready to execute my orders. + +I received the congratulations of the baili upon the excellent +acquaintances I had already made, and M. Venier advised me not to neglect +such friends in a country where weariness of life was more deadly to +foreigners than the plague. + +On the day appointed, I went early to Yusuf's palace, but he was out. His +gardener, who had received his instructions, shewed me every attention, +and entertained me very agreeably for two hours in doing the honours of +his master's splendid garden, where I found the most beautiful flowers. +This gardener was a Neapolitan, and had belonged to Yusuf for thirty +years. His manners made me suspect that he was well born and well +educated, but he told me frankly that he had never been taught even to +read, that he was a sailor when he, was taken in slavery, and that he was +so happy in the service of Yusuf that liberty would be a punishment to +him. Of course I did not venture to address him any questions about his +master, for his reserve might have put my curiosity to the blush. + +Yusuf had gone out on horseback; he returned, and, after the usual +compliments, we dined alone in a summerhouse, from which we had a fine +view of the sea, and in which the heat was cooled by a delightful breeze, +which blows regularly at the same hour every day from the north-west; and +is called the mistral. We had a good dinner; there was no prepared dish +except the cauroman, a peculiar delicacy of the Turks. I drank water and +hydromel, and I told Yusuf that I preferred the last to wine, of which I +never took much at that time. "Your hydromel," I said, "is very good, and +the Mussulmans who offend against the law by drinking wine do not deserve +any indulgence; I believe they drink wine only because it is forbidden." +"Many of the true believers," he answered, "think that they can take it +as a medicine. The Grand Turk's physician has brought it into vogue as a +medicine, and it has been the cause of his fortune, for he has captivated +the favour of his master who is in reality constantly ill, because he is +always in a state of intoxication." I told Yusuf that in my country +drunkards were scarce, and that drunkenness was a vice to be found only +among the lowest people; he was much astonished. "I cannot understand," +he said, "why wine is allowed by all religions, when its use deprives man +of his reason."--"All religions," I answered, "forbid excess in drinking +wine, and the crime is only in the abuse." I proved him the truth of what +I had said by telling him that opium produced the same results as wine, +but more powerfully, and consequently Mahomet ought to have forbidden the +use of it. He observed that he had never taken either wine or opium in +the course of his life. + +After dinner, pipes were brought in and we filled them ourselves. I was +smoking with pleasure, but, at the same time, was expectorating. Yusuf, +who smoked like a Turk, that is to say, without spitting, said,-- + +"The tobacco you are now smoking is of a very fine quality, and you ought +to swallow its balsam which is mixed with the saliva." + +"I suppose you are right; smoking cannot be truly enjoyed without the +best tobacco." + +"That is true to a certain extent, but the enjoyment found in smoking +good tobacco is not the principal pleasure, because it only pleases our +senses; true enjoyment is that which works upon the soul, and is +completely independent of the senses." + +"I cannot realize pleasures enjoyed by the soul without the +instrumentality of the senses." + +"Listen to me. When you fill your pipe do you feel any pleasure?" + +"Yes." + +"Whence does that pleasure arise, if it is not from your soul? Let us go +further. Do you not feel pleased when you give up your pipe after having +smoked all the tobacco in it--when you see that nothing is left but some +ashes?" + +"It is true." + +"Well, there are two pleasures in which your senses have certainly +nothing to do, but I want you to guess the third, and the most +essential." + +"The most essential? It is the perfume." + +"No; that is a pleasure of the organ of smelling--a sensual pleasure." + +"Then I do not know." + +"Listen. The principal pleasure derived from tobacco smoking is the sight +of a smoke itself. You must never see it go out of the bowl of your +pipe,--but only from the corner o your mouth, at regular intervals which +must not be too frequent. It is so truly the greatest pleasure connected +with the pipe, that you cannot find anywhere a blind man who smokes. Try +yourself the experiment of smoking a pipe in your room, at night and +without a light; you will soon lay the pipe down." + +"It is all perfectly true; yet you must forgive me if I give the +preference to several pleasures, in which my senses are interested, over +those which afford enjoyment only to my soul." + +"Forty years ago I was of the same opinion, and in forty years, if you +succeed in acquiring wisdom, you will think like me. Pleasures which give +activity to our senses, my dear son, disturb the repose of our soul--a +proof that they do not deserve the name of real enjoyments." + +"But if I feel them to be real enjoyments, it is enough to prove that +they are truly so." + +"Granted; but if you would take the trouble of analyzing them after you +have tasted them, you would not find them unalloyed." + +"It may be so, but why should I take a trouble which would only lessen my +enjoyment." + +"A time will come when you will feel pleasure in that very trouble." + +"It strikes me, dear father, that you prefer mature age to youth." + +"You may boldly say old age." + +"You surprise me. Must I believe that your early life has been unhappy?" + +"Far from it. It was always fortunate in good health, and the master of +my own passions; but all I saw in my equals was for me a good school in +which I have acquired the knowledge of man, and learned the real road to +happiness. The happiest of men is not the most voluptuous, but the one +who knows how to choose the highest standards of voluptuousness, which +can be found, I say again, not in the pleasures which excite our senses, +but in those which give greater repose to the soul." + +"That is the voluptuousness which you consider unalloyed." + +"Yes, and such is the sight of a vast prairie all covered with grass. The +green colour, so strongly recommended by our divine prophet, strikes my +eyes, and at the same moment I feel that my soul is wrapped up in a calm +so delightful that I fancy myself nearer the Creator. I enjoy the same +peace, the same repose, when I am seated on the banks of a river, when I +look upon the water so quiet, yet always moving, which flows constantly, +yet never disappears from my sight, never loses any of its clearness in +spite of its constant motion. It strikes me as the image of my own +existence, and of the calm which I require for my life in order to reach, +like the water I am gazing upon, the goal which I do not see, and which +can only be found at the other end of the journey." + +Thus did the Turk reason, and we passed four hours in this sort of +conversation. He had buried two wives, and he had two sons and one +daughter. The eldest son, having received his patrimony, had established +himself in the city of Salonica, where he was a wealthy merchant; the +other was in the seraglio, in the service of the Grand Turk and his +fortune was in the hands of a trustee. His daughter, Zelmi, then fifteen +years of age, was to inherit all his remaining property. He had given her +all the accomplishments which could minister to the happiness of the man +whom heaven had destined for her husband. We shall hear more of that +daughter anon. The mother of the three children was dead, and five years +previous to the time of my visit, Yusuf had taken another wife, a native +of Scio, young and very beautiful, but he told me himself that he was now +too old, and could not hope to have any child by her. Yet he was only +sixty years of age. Before I left, he made me promise to spend at least +one day every week with him. + +At supper, I told the baili how pleasantly the day had passed. + +"We envy you," they said, "the prospect you have before you of spending +agreeably three or four months in this country, while, in our quality of +ministers, we must pine away with melancholy." + +A few days afterwards, M. de Bonneval took me with him to dine at +Ismail's house, where I saw Asiatic luxury on a grand scale, but there +were a great many guests, and the conversation was held almost entirely +in the Turkish language--a circumstance which annoyed me and M. de +Bonneval also. Ismail saw it, and he invited me to breakfast whenever I +felt disposed, assuring me that he would have much pleasure in receiving +me. I accepted the invitation, and I went ten or twelve days afterwards. +When we reach that period my readers must kindly accompany me to the +breakfast. For the present I must return to Yusuf who, during my second +visit, displayed a character which inspired, me with the greatest esteem +and the warmest affection. + +We had dined alone as before, and, conversation happening to turn upon +the fine arts, I gave my opinion upon one of the precepts in the Koran, +by which the Mahometans are deprived of the innocent enjoyment of +paintings and statues. He told me that Mahomet, a very sagacious +legislator, had been right in removing all images from the sight of the +followers of Islam. + +"Recollect, my son, that the nations to which the prophet brought the +knowledge of the true God were all idolators. Men are weak; if the +disciples of the prophet had continued to see the same objects, they +might have fallen back into their former errors." + +"No one ever worshipped an image as an image; the deity of which the +image is a representation is what is worshipped." + +"I may grant that, but God cannot be matter, and it is right to remove +from the thoughts of the vulgar the idea of a material divinity. You are +the only men, you Christians, who believe that you see God." + +"It is true, we are sure of it, but observe that faith alone gives us +that certainty." + +"I know it; but you are idolators, for you see nothing but a material +representation, and yet you have a complete certainty that you see God, +unless you should tell me that faith disaffirms it." + +"God forbid I should tell you such a thing! Faith, on the contrary, +affirms our certainty." + +"We thank God that we have no need of such self-delusion, and there is +not one philosopher in the world who could prove to me that you require +it." + +"That would not be the province of philosophy, dear father, but of +theology--a very superior science." + +"You are now speaking the language of our theologians, who differ from +yours only in this; they use their science to make clearer the truths we +ought to know, whilst your theologians try to render those truths more +obscure." + +"Recollect, dear father, that they are mysteries." + +"The existence of God is a sufficiently important mystery to prevent men +from daring to add anything to it. God can only be simple; any kind of +combination would destroy His essence; such is the God announced by our +prophet, who must be the same for all men and in all times. Agree with me +that we can add nothing to the simplicity of God. We say that God is one; +that is the image of simplicity. You say that He is one and three at the +same time, and such a definition strikes us as contradictory, absurd, and +impious." + +"It is a mystery." + +"Do you mean God or the definition? I am speaking only of the definition, +which ought not to be a mystery or absurd. Common sense, my son, must +consider as absurd an assertion which substantiallv nonsensical. Prove to +me that three is not a compound, that it cannot be a compound and I will +become a Christian at once." + +"My religion tells me to believe without arguing, and I shudder, my dear +Yusuf, when I think that, through some specious reasoning, I might be led +to renounce the creed of my fathers. I first must be convinced that they +lived in error. Tell me whether, respecting my father's memory, I ought +to have such a good opinion of myself as to sit in judgement over him, +with the intention of giving my sentence against him?" + +My lively remonstrance moved Yusuf deeply, but after a few instants of +silence he said to me,-- + +"With such feelings, my son, you are sure to find grace in the eyes of +God, and you are, therefore, one of the elect. If you are in error, God +alone can convince you of it, for no just man on earth can refute the +sentiment you have just given expression to." + +We spoke of many other things in a friendly manner, and in the evening we +parted with the often repeated assurance of the warmest affection and of +the most perfect devotion. + +But my mind was full of our conversation, and as I went on pondering over +the matter, I thought that Yusuf might be right in his opinion as to the +essence of God, for it seemed evident that the Creator of all beings +ought to be perfectly simple; but I thought at the same time how +impossible it would be for me, because the Christian religion had made a +mistake, to accept the Turkish creed, which might perhaps have just a +conception of God, but which caused me to smile when I recollected that +the man who had given birth to it had been an arrant imposter. I had not +the slightest idea, however, that Yusuf wished to make a convert of me. + +The third time I dined with him religion was again the subject of +conversation. + +"Do you believe, dear father, that the religion of Mahomet is the only +one in which salvation can be secured?" + +"No, my dear son, I am not certain of it, and no man can have such a +certainty; but I am sure that the Christian religion is not the true one, +because it cannot be universal." + +"Why not?" + +"Because there is neither bread nor wine to be found in three-fourths of +the world. Observe that the precepts of the Koran can be followed +everywhere." + +I did not know how to answer, and I would not equivocate. + +"If God cannot be matter," I said, "then He must be a spirit?" + +"We know what He is not but we do not know what He is: man cannot affirm +that God is a spirit, because he can only realize the idea in an abstract +manner. God immaterial; that is the extent of our knowledge and it can +never be greater." + +I was reminded of Plato, who had said exactly the same an most certainly +Yusuf never read Plato. + +He added that the existence of God could be useful only to those who did +not entertain a doubt of that existence, and that, as a natural +consequence, Atheists must be the most miserable of men. God has made in +man His own image in order that, amongst all the animals created by Him, +there should be one that can understand and confess the existence of the +Creator. Without man, God would have no witness of His own glory, and man +must therefore understand that his first and highest duty is to glorify +God by practising justice and trusting to His providence. + +"Observe, my son, that God never abandons the man who, in the midst of +misfortunes, falls down in prayer before Him, and that He often allows +the wretch who has no faith in prayer to die miserably." + +"Yet we meet with Atheists who are fortunate and happy." + +"True; but, in spite of their tranquillity, I pity them because they have +no hope beyond this life, and are on a level with animals. Besides, if +they are philosophers, they must linger in dark ignorance, and, if they +never think, they have no consolation, no resource, when adversity +reaches them. God has made man in such a manner that he cannot be happy +unless he entertains no doubt of the existence of his Divine Creator; in +all stations of life man is naturally prone to believe in that existence, +otherwise man would never have admitted one God, Creator of all beings +and of all things." + +"I should like to know why Atheism has only existed in the systems of the +learned, and never as a national creed." + +"Because the poor feel their wants much more than the rich, There are +amongst us a great many impious men who deride the true believers because +they have faith in the pilgrimage to Mecca. Wretches that they are, they +ought to respect the ancient customs which, exciting the devotion of +fervent souls, feed religious principles, and impart courage under all +misfortunes. Without such consolation, people would give way to all the +excess of despair." + +Much pleased with the attention I gave to all he said, Yusuf would thus +yield to the inclination he felt to instruct me, and, on my side, feeling +myself drawn towards him by the charm which amiable goodness exerts upon +all hearts, I would often go and spend the day with him, even without any +previous invitation, and Yusuf's friendship soon became one of my most +precious treasures. + +One morning, I told my janissary to take me to the palace of Ismail +Effendi, in order to fulfil my promise to breakfast with him. He gave me +the most friendly welcome, and after an excellent breakfast he invited me +to take a walk in his garden. We found there a pretty summer-house which +we entered, and Ismail attempted some liberties which were not at all to +my taste, and which I resented by rising in a very abrupt manner. Seeing +that I was angry, the Turk affected to approve my reserve, and said that +he had only been joking. I left him after a few minutes, with the +intention of not visiting him again, but I was compelled to do so, as I +will explain by-and-by. + +When I saw M. de Bonneval I told him what had happened and he said that, +according to Turkish manners, Ismail had intended to give me a great +proof of his friendship, but that I need not be afraid of the offence +being repeated. He added that politeness required that I should visit him +again, and that Ismail was, in spite of his failing, a perfect gentleman, +who had at his disposal the most beautiful female slaves in Turkey. + +Five or six weeks after the commencement of our intimacy, Yusuf asked me +one day whether I was married. I answered that I was not; the +conversation turned upon several moral questions, and at last fell upon +chastity, which, in his opinion, could be accounted a virtue only if +considered from one point of view, namely, that of total abstinence, but +he added that it could not be acceptable to God; because it transgressed +against the very first precept He had given to man. + +"I would like to know, for instance," he said, "what name can be given to +the chastity of your knights of Malta. They take a vow of chastity, but +it does not mean that they will renounce women altogether, they renounce +marriage only. Their chastity, and therefore chastity in general, is +violated only by marriage; yet I observe that marriage is one of your +sacraments. Therefore, those knights of Malta promise not to give way to +lustful incontinence in the only case in which God might forgive it, but +they reserve the license of being lustful unlawfully as often as they +please, and whenever an opportunity may offer itself; and that immoral, +illicit license is granted to them to such an extent, that they are +allowed to acknowledge legally a child which can be born to them only +through a double crime! The most revolting part of it all is that these +children of crime, who are of course perfectly innocent themselves, are +called natural children, as if children born in wedlock came into the +world in an unnatural manner! In one word, my dear son, the vow of +chastity is so much opposed to Divine precepts and to human nature that +it can be agreeable neither to God nor to society, nor to those who +pledge themselves to keep it, and being in such opposition to every +divine and human law, it must be a crime." + +He enquired for the second time whether I was married; I replied in the +negative, and added that I had no idea of ever getting married. + +"What!" he exclaimed; "I must then believe that you are not a perfect +man, or that you intend to work out your own damnation; unless you should +tell me that you are a Christian only outwardly." + +"I am a man in the very strongest sense of the word, and I am a true +Christian. I must even confess that I adore women, and that I have not +the slightest idea of depriving myself of the most delightful of all +pleasures." + +"According to your religion, damnation awaits you." + +"I feel certain of the contrary, because, when we confess our sins, our +priests are compelled to give us absolution." + +"I know it, but you must agree with me that it is absurd to suppose that +God will forgive a crime which you would, perhaps, not commit, if you did +not think that, after confession, a priest, a man like you, will give you +absolution. God forgives only the repenting sinner." + +"No doubt of it, and confession supposes repentance; without it, +absolution has no effect." + +"Is onanism a crime amongst you?" + +"Yes, even greater than lustful and illegitimate copulation." + +"I was aware of it, and it has always caused me great surprise, for the +legislator who enacts a law, the execution of which is impossible, is a +fool. A man in good health, if he cannot have a woman, must necessarily +have recourse to onanism, whenever imperious nature demands it, and the +man who, from fear of polluting his soul, would abstain from it, would +only draw upon himself a mortal disease." + +"We believe exactly the reverse; we think that young people destroy their +constitutions, and shorten their lives through self-abuse. In several +communities they are closely watched, and are as much as possible +deprived of every opportunity of indulging in that crime." + +"Those who watch them are ignorant fools, and those who pay the watchers +for such a service are even more stupid, because prohibition must excite +the wish to break through such a tyrannical law, to set at nought an +interdiction so contrary to nature." + +"Yet it seems to me that self-abuse in excess must be injurious to +health, for it must weaken and enervate." + +"Certainly, because excess in everything is prejudicial and pernicious; +but all such excess is the result of our severe prohibition. If girls are +not interfered with in the matter of self-abuse, I do not see why boys +should be." + +"Because girls are very far from running the same risk; they do not lose +a great deal in the action of self-abuse, and what they lose does not +come from the same source whence flows the germinal liquid in men." + +"I do not know, but we have some physicians who say that chlorosis in +girls is the result of that pleasure indulged in to excess." + +After many such conversations, in which he seemed to consider me as +endowed with reason and talent, even when I was not of his opinion, Yusuf +Ali surprised me greatly one day by the following proposition: + +"I have two sons and a daughter. I no longer think of my sons, because +they have received their share of my fortune. As far as my daughter is +concerned she will, after my death, inherit all my possessions, and I am, +besides, in a position while I am alive to promote the fortune of the man +who may marry her. Five years ago I took a young wife, but she has not +given me any progeny, and I know to a certainty that no offspring will +bless our union. My daughter, whose name is Zelmi, is now fifteen; she is +handsome, her eyes are black and lovely like her mother's, her hair is of +the colour of the raven's wing, her complexion is animated alabaster; she +is tall, well made, and of a sweet disposition; I have given her an +education which would make her worthy of our master, the Sultan. She +speaks Greek and Italian fluently, she sings delightfully, and +accompanies herself on the harp; she can draw and embroider, and is +always contented and cheerful. No living man can boast of having seen her +features, and she loves me so dearly that my will is hers. My daughter is +a treasure, and I offer her to you if you will consent to go for one year +to Adrianople to reside with a relative of mine, who will teach you our +religion, our language, and our manners. You will return at the end of +one year, and as soon as you have become a Mussulman my daughter shall be +your wife. You will find a house ready furnished, slaves of your own, and +an income which will enable you to live in comfort. I have no more to say +at present. I do not wish you to answer me either to-day, or to-morrow, +or on any fixed day. You will give me your decision whenever you feel +yourself called upon by your genius to give it, and you need not give me +any answer unless you accept my offer, for, should you refuse it, it is +not necessary that the subject should be again mentioned. I do not ask +you to give full consideration to my proposal, for now that I have thrown +the seed in your soul it must fructify. Without hurry, without delay, +without anxiety, you can but obey the decrees of God and follow the +immutable decision of fate. Such as I know you, I believe that you only +require the possession of Zelmi to be completely happy, and that you will +become one of the pillars of the Ottoman Empire." + +Saying those words, Yusuf pressed me affectionately in his arms, and left +me by myself to avoid any answer I might be inclined to make. I went away +in such wonder at all I had just heard, that I found myself at the +Venetian Embassy without knowing how I had reached it. The baili thought +me very pensive, and asked whether anything was the matter with me, but I +did not feel disposed to gratify their curiosity. I found that Yusuf had +indeed spoken truly: his proposal was of such importance that it was my +duty, not only not to mention it to anyone, but even to abstain from +thinking it over, until my mind had recovered its calm sufficiently to +give me the assurance that no external consideration would weigh in the +balance and influence my decision. I had to silence all my passions; +prejudices, principles already formed, love, and even self-interest were +to remain in a state of complete inaction. + +When I awoke the next morning I began to think the matter over, and I +soon discovered that, if I wanted to come to a decision, I ought not to +ponder over it, as the more I considered the less likely I should be to +decide. This was truly a case for the 'sequere Deum' of the Stoics. + +I did not visit Yusuf for four days, and when I called on him on the +fifth day, we talked cheerfully without once mentioning his proposal, +although it was very evident that we were both thinking of it. We +remained thus for a fortnight, without ever alluding to the matter which +engrossed all our thoughts, but our silence was not caused by +dissimulation, or by any feeling contrary to our mutual esteem and +friendship; and one day Yusuf suggested that very likely I had +communicated his proposal to some wise friend, in order to obtain good +advice. I immediately assured him it was not so, and that in a matter of +so delicate a nature I thought I ought not to ask anybody's advice. + +"I have abandoned myself to God, dear Yusuf, and, full of confidence in +Him, I feel certain that I shall decide for the best, whether I make up +my mind to become your son, or believe that I ought to remain what I am +now. In the mean time, my mind ponders over it day and night, whenever I +am quiet and feel myself composed and collected. When I come to a +decision, I will impart it to you alone, and from that moment you shall +have over me the authority of a father." + +At these words the worthy Yusuf, his eyes wet with tears, placed his left +hand over my head, and the first two fingers of the right hand on my +forehead, saying: + +"Continue to act in that way, my dear son, and be certain that you can +never act wrongly." + +"But," I said to him, "one thing might happen, Zelmi might not accept +me." + +"Have no anxiety about that. My daughter loves you; she, as well as my +wife and her nurse, sees you every time that we dine together, and she +listens to you with pleasure." + +"Does she know that you are thinking of giving her to me as my wife?" + +"She knows that I ardently wish you to become a true believer, so as to +enable me to link her destiny to yours." + +"I am glad that your habits do not permit you to let me see her, because +she might dazzle me with her beauty, and then passion would soon have too +much weight in the scale; I could no longer flatter myself that my +decision had been taken in all the unbiased, purity of my soul." + +Yusuf was highly delighted at hearing me speak in that manner, and I +spoke in perfect good faith. The mere idea of seeing Zelmi caused me to +shudder. I felt that, if I had fallen in love with her, I would have +become a Mussulman in order to possess her, and that I might soon have +repented such a step, for the religion of Mahomet presented to my eyes +and to my mind nothing but a disagreeable picture, as well for this life +as for a future one. As for wealth, I did not think it deserved the +immense sacrifice demanded from me. I could find equal wealth in Europe, +without stamping my forehead with the shameful brand of apostasy. I cared +deeply for the esteem of the persons of distinction who knew me, and did +not want to render myself unworthy of it. Besides, I felt an immense +desire to obtain fame amongst civilized and polite nations, either in the +fine arts or in literature, or in any other honourable profession, and I +could not reconcile myself to the idea of abandoning to my equals the +triumph which I might win if I lived amongst them. It seemed to me, and I +am still of the same opinion, that the decision of wearing the turban +befits only a Christian despairing of himself and at the end of his wits, +and fortunately I was lost not in that predicament. My greatest objection +was to spend a year in Adrianople to learn a language for which I did not +feel any liking, and which I should therefore have learned but +imperfectly. How could I, at my age, renounce the prerogative, so +pleasant to my vanity, of being reputed a fine talker? and I had secured +that reputation wherever I was known. Then I would often think that +Zelmi, the eighth wonder of creation in the eyes of her father might not +appear such in my eyes, and it would have been enough to make me +miserable, for Yusuf was likely to live twenty years longer, and I felt +that gratitude, as well as respect, would never have permitted me to give +that excellent man any cause for unhappiness by ceasing to shew myself a +devoted and faithful husband to his daughter. Such were my thoughts, and, +as Yusuf could not guess them, it was useless to make a confidant of him. + +A few days afterwards, I dined with the Pacha Osman and met my Effendi +Ismail. He was very friendly to me, and I reciprocated his attentions, +though I paid no attention to the reproaches he addressed to me for not +having come to breakfast with him for such a long time. I could not +refuse to dine at his house with Bonneval, and he treated me to a very +pleasing sight; Neapolitan slaves, men and women, performed a pantomime +and some Calabrian dances. M. de Bonneval happened to mention the dance +called forlana, and Ismail expressing a great wish to know it, I told him +that I could give him that pleasure if I had a Venetian woman to dance +with and a fiddler who knew the time. I took a violin, and played the +forlana, but, even if the partner had been found, I could not play and +dance at the same time. + +Ismail whispered a few words to one of his eunuchs, who went out of the +room and returned soon with some message that he delivered to him. The +effendi told me that he had found the partner I wanted, and I answered +that the musician could be had easily, if he would send a note to the +Venetian Embassy, which was done at once. The Bailo Dona sent one of his +men who played the violin well enough for dancing purposes. As soon as +the musician was ready, a door was thrown open, and a fine looking woman +came in, her face covered with a black velvet mask, such as we call +moretta in Venice. The appearance of that beautiful masked woman +surprised and delighted every one of the guests, for it was impossible to +imagine a more interesting object, not only on account of the beauty of +that part of the face which the mask left exposed, but also for the +elegance of her shape, the perfection of her figure, and the exquisite +taste displayed in her costume. The nymph took her place, I did the same, +and we danced the forlana six times without stopping. + +I was in perspiration and out of breath, for the foylana is the most +violent of our national dances; but my beautiful partner stood near me +without betraying the slightest fatigue, and seemed to challenge me to a +new performance. At the round of the dance, which is the most difficult +step, she seemed to have wings. I was astounded, for I had never seen +anyone, even in Venice, dance the forlana so splendidly. After a few +minutes rest, rather ashamed of my feeling tired, I went up to her, and +said, 'Ancora sei, a poi basta, se non volete vedermi a morire.' She +would have answered me if she had been able, but she wore one of those +cruel masks which forbid speech. But a pressure of her hand which nobody +could see made me guess all I wanted to know. The moment we finished +dancing the eunuch opened the door, and my lovely partner disappeared. + +Ismail could not thank me enough, but it was I who owed him my thanks, +for it was the only real pleasure which I enjoyed in Constantinople. I +asked him whether the lady was from Venice, but he only answered by a +significant smile. + +"The worthy Ismail," said M. de Bonneval to me, as we were leaving the +house late in the evening, "has been to-day the dupe of his vanity, and I +have no doubt that he is sorry already for what he has done. To bring out +his beautiful slave to dance with you! According to the prejudices of +this country it is injurious to his dignity, for you are sure to have +kindled an amorous flame in the poor girl's breast. I would advise you to +be careful and to keep on your guard, because she will try to get up some +intrigue with you; but be prudent, for intrigues are always dangerous in +Turkey." + +I promised to be prudent, but I did not keep my promise; for, three or +four days afterwards, an old slave woman met me in the street, and +offered to sell me for one piaster a tobacco-bag embroidered in gold; and +as she put it in my hand she contrived to make me feel that there was a +letter in the bag. + +I observed that she tried to avoid the eyes of the janissary who was +walking behind me; I gave her one piaster, she left me, and I proceeded +toward Yusuf's house. He was not at home, and I went to his garden to +read the letter with perfect freedom. It was sealed and without any +address, and the slave might have made a mistake; but my curiosity was +excited to the highest pitch; I broke the seal, and found the following +note written in good enough Italian: + +"Should you wish to see the person with whom you danced the forlana, take +a walk towards evening in the garden beyond the fountain, and contrive to +become acquainted with the old servant of the gardener by asking her for +some lemonade. You may perchance manage to see your partner in the +forlana without running any risk, even if you should happen to meet +Ismail; she is a native of Venice. Be careful not to mention this +invitation to any human being." + +"I am not such a fool, my lovely countrywoman," I exclaimed, as if she +had been present, and put the letter in my pocket. But at that very +moment, a fine-looking elderly woman came out of a thicket, pronounced my +name, and enquired what I wanted and how I had seen her. I answered that +I had been speaking to the wind, not supposing that anyone could hear me, +and without any more preparation, she abruptly told me that she was very +glad of the opportunity of speaking with me, that she was from Rome, that +she had brought up Zelmi, and had taught her to sing and to play the +harp. She then praised highly the beauty and the excellent qualities of +her pupil, saying that, if I saw her, I would certainly fall in love with +her, and expressing how much she regretted that the law should not allow +it. + +"She sees us at this very moment," she added, "from behind that green +window-blind, and we love you ever since Yusuf has informed us that you +may, perhaps, become Zelmi's husband." + +"May I mention our conversation to Yusuf?" I enquired. + +"No." + +Her answering in the negative made me understand that, if I had pressed +her a little, she would have allowed me to see her lovely pupil, and +perhaps it was with that intention that she had contrived to speak to me, +but I felt great reluctance to do anything to displease my worthy host. I +had another reason of even greater importance: I was afraid of entering +an intricate maze in which the sight of a turban hovering over me made me +shudder. + +Yusuf came home, and far from being angry when he saw me with the woman, +he remarked that I must have found much pleasure in conversing with a +native of Rome, and he congratulated me upon the delight I must have felt +in dancing with one of the beauties from the harem of the voluptuous +Ismail. + +"Then it must be a pleasure seldom enjoyed, if it is so much talked of?" + +"Very seldom indeed, for there is amongst us an invincible prejudice +against exposing our lovely women to the eyes of other men; but everyone +may do as he pleases in his own house: Ismail is a very worthy and a very +intelligent man." + +"Is the lady with whom I danced known?" + +"I believe not. She wore a mask, and everybody knows that Ismail +possesses half a dozen slaves of surpassing beauty." + +I spent a pleasant day with Yusuf, and when I left him, I ordered my +janissary to take me to Ismail's. As I was known by his servants, they +allowed me to go in, and I proceeded to the spot described in the letter. +The eunuch came to me, informed me that his master was out, but that he +would be delighted to hear of my having taken a walk in the garden. I +told him that I would like a glass of lemonade, and he took me to the +summerhouse, where I recognized the old woman who had sold me the +tobacco-pouch. The eunuch told her to give me a glass of some liquid +which I found delicious, and would not allow me to give her any money. We +then walked together towards the fountain, but he told me abruptly that +we were to go back, as he saw three ladies to whom he pointed, adding +that, for the sake of decency, it was necessary to avoid them. I thanked +him for his attentions, left my compliments for Ismail, and went away not +dissatisfied with my first attempt, and with the hope of being more +fortunate another time. + +The next morning I received a letter from Ismail inviting me to go +fishing with him on the following day, and stating that he intended to +enjoy the sport by moonlight. I immediately gave way to my suppositions, +and I went so far as to fancy that Ismail might be capable of arranging +an interview between me and the lovely Venetian. I did not mind his being +present. I begged permission of Chevalier Venier to stop out of the +palace for one night, but he granted it with the greatest difficulty, +because he was afraid of some love affair and of the results it might +have. I took care to calm his anxiety as much as I could, but without +acquainting him with all the circumstances of the case, for I thought I +was wise in being discreet. + +I was exact to the appointed time, and Ismail received me with the utmost +cordiality, but I was surprised when I found myself alone with him in the +boat. We had two rowers and a man to steer; we took some fish, fried in +oil, and ate it in the summer-house. The moon shone brightly, and the +night was delightful. Alone with Ismail, and knowing his unnatural +tastes, I did not feel very comfortable for, in spite of what M. de +Bonneval had told me, I was afraid lest the Turk should take a fancy to +give me too great a proof of his friendship, and I did not relish our +tete-a-tete. But my fears were groundless. + +"Let us leave this place quietly," said Ismail, "I have just heard a +slight noise which heralds something that will amuse us." + +He dismissed his attendants, and took my hand, saying, + +"Let us go to a small room, the key of which I luckily have with me, but +let us be careful not to make any noise. That room has a window +overlooking the fountain where I think that two or three of my beauties +have just gone to bathe. We will see them and enjoy a very pleasing +sight, for they do not imagine that anyone is looking at them. They know +that the place is forbidden to everybody except me." + +We entered the room, we went to the window, and, the moon shining right +over the basin of the fountain, we saw three nymphs who, now swimming, +now standing or sitting on the marble steps, offered themselves to our +eyes in every possible position, and in all the attitudes of graceful +voluptuousness. Dear reader, I must not paint in too vivid colours the +details of that beautiful picture, but if nature has endowed you with an +ardent imagination and with equally ardent senses, you will easily +imagine the fearful havoc which that unique, wonderful, and enchanting +sight must have made upon my poor body. + +A few days after that delightful fishing and bathing party by moonlight, +I called upon Yusuf early in the morning; as it was raining, I could not +go to the garden, and I went into the dining-room, in which I had never +seen anyone. The moment I entered the room, a charming female form rose, +covering her features with a thick veil which fell to the feet. A slave +was sitting near the window, doing some tambour-work, but she did not +move. I apologized, and turned to leave the room, but the lady stopped +me, observing, with a sweet voice, that Yusuf had commanded her to +entertain me before going out. She invited me to be seated, pointing to a +rich cushion placed upon two larger ones, and I obeyed, while, crossing +her legs, she sat down upon another cushion opposite to me. I thought I +was looking upon Zelmi, and fancied that Yusuf had made up his mind to +shew me that he was not less courageous than Ismail. Yet I was surprised, +for, by such a proceeding, he strongly contradicted his maxims, and ran +the risk of impairing the unbiased purity of my consent by throwing love +in the balance. But I had no fear of that, because, to become enamoured, +I should have required to see her face. + +"I suppose," said the veiled beauty, "that you do not know who I am?" + +"I could not guess, if I tried." + +"I have been for the last five years the wife of your friend, and I am a +native of Scio. I was thirteen years of age when I became his wife." + +I was greatly astonished to find that my Mussulman philosopher had gone +so far as to allow me to converse with his wife, but I felt more at ease +after I had received that information, and fancied that I might carry the +adventure further, but it would be necessary to see the lady's face, for +a finely-dressed body, the head of which is not seen, excites but feeble +desires. The fire lighted by amorous desires is like a fire of straw; the +moment it burns up it is near its end. I had before me a magnificent +appearance, but I could not see the soul of the image, for a thick gauze +concealed it from my hungry gaze. I could see arms as white as alabaster, +and hands like those of Alcina, 'dove ne nodo appasisce ne vena accede', +and my active imagination fancied that all the rest was in harmony with +those beautiful specimens, for the graceful folds of the muslin, leaving +the outline all its perfection, hid from me only the living satin of the +surface; there was no doubt that everything was lovely, but I wanted to +see, in the expression of her eyes, that all that my imagination created +had life and was endowed with feeling. The Oriental costume is a +beautiful varnish placed upon a porcelain vase to protect from the touch +the colours of the flowers and of the design, without lessening the +pleasure of the eyes. Yusuf's wife was not dressed like a sultana; she +wore the costume of Scio, with a short skirt which concealed neither the +perfection of the leg nor the round form of the thigh, nor the voluptuous +plump fall of the hips, nor the slender, well-made waist encompassed in a +splendid band embroidered in silver and covered with arabesques. Above +all those beauties, I could see the shape of two globes which Apelles +would have taken for the model of those of his lovely Venus, and the +rapid, inequal movement of which proved to me that those ravishing +hillocks were animated. The small valley left between them, and which my +eyes greedily feasted upon, seemed to me a lake of nectar, in which my +burning lips longed to quench their thirst with more ardour than they +would have drunk from the cup of the gods. + +Enraptured, unable to control myself, I thrust my arm forward by a +movement almost independent of my will, and my hand, too audacious, was +on the point of lifting the hateful veil, but she prevented me by raising +herself quickly on tiptoe, upbraiding me at the same time for my +perfidious boldness, with a voice as commanding as her attitude. + +"Dost thou deserve," she said, "Yusuf's friendship, when thou abusest the +sacred laws of hospitality by insulting his wife?" + +"Madam, you must kindly forgive me, for I never had any intention to +insult you. In my country the lowest of men may fix his eyes upon the +face of a queen." + +"Yes, but he cannot tear off her veil, if she chooses to wear it. Yusuf +shall avenge me." + +The threat, and the tone in which it was pronounced, frightened me. I +threw myself at her feet, and succeeded in calming her anger. + +"Take a seat," she said. + +And she sat down herself, crossing her legs with so much freedom that I +caught a glimpse of charms which would have caused me to lose all control +over myself if the delightful sight had remained one moment longer +exposed to my eyes. I then saw that I had gone the wrong way to work, and +I felt vexed with myself; but it was too late. + +"Art thou excited?" she said. + +"How could I be otherwise," I answered, "when thou art scorching me with +an ardent fire?" + +I had become more prudent, and I seized her hand without thinking any +more of her face. + +"Here is my husband," she said, and Yusuf came into the room. We rose, +Yusuf embraced me, I complimented him, the slave left the room. Yusuf +thanked his wife for having entertained me, and offered her his arm to +take her to her own apartment. She took it, but when she reached the +door, she raised her veil, and kissing her husband she allowed me to see +her lovely face as if it had been done unwittingly. I followed her with +my eyes as long as I could, and Yusuf, coming back to me, said with a +laugh that his wife had offered to dine with us. + +"I thought," I said to him, "that I had Zelmi before me." + +"That would have been too much against our established rules. What I have +done is not much, but I do not know an honest man who would be bold +enough to bring his daughter into the presence of a stranger." + +"I think your wife must be handsome; is she more beautiful than Zelmi?" + +"My daughter's beauty is cheerful, sweet, and gentle; that of Sophia is +proud and haughty. She will be happy after my death. The man who will +marry her will find her a virgin." + +I gave an account of my adventure to M. de Bonneval, somewhat +exaggerating the danger I had run in trying to raise the veil of the +handsome daughter of Scio. + +"She was laughing at you," said the count, "and you ran no danger. She +felt very sorry, believe me, to have to deal with a novice like you. You +have been playing the comedy in the French fashion, when you ought to +have gone straight to the point. What on earth did you want to see her +nose for? She knew very well that she would have gained nothing by +allowing you to see her. You ought to have secured the essential point. +If I were young I would perhaps manage to give her a revenge, and to +punish my friend Yusuf. You have given that lovely woman a poor opinion +of Italian valour. The most reserved of Turkish women has no modesty +except on her face, and, with her veil over it, she knows to a certainty +that she will not blush at anything. I am certain that your beauty keeps +her face covered whenever our friend Yusuf wishes to joke with her." + +"She is yet a virgin." + +"Rather a difficult thing to admit, my good friend; but I know the +daughters of Scio; they have a talent for counterfeiting virginity." + +Yusuf never paid me a similar compliment again, and he was quite right. + +A few days after, I happened to be in the shop of an Armenian merchant, +looking at some beautiful goods, when Yusuf entered the shop and praised +my taste; but, although I had admired a great many things, I did not buy, +because I thought they were too dear. I said so to Yusuf, but he remarked +that they were, on the contrary, very cheap, and he purchased them all. +We parted company at the door, and the next morning I received all the +beautiful things he had bought; it was a delicate attention of my friend, +and to prevent my refusal of such a splendid present, he had enclosed a +note stating that, on my arrival in Corfu, he would let me know to whom +the goods were to be delivered. He had thus sent me gold and silver +filigrees from Damascus, portfolios, scarfs, belts, handkerchiefs and +pipes, the whole worth four or five hundred piasters. When I called to +thank him, I compelled him to confess that it was a present offered by +his friendship. + +The day before my departure from Constantinople, the excellent man burst +into tears as I bade him adieu, and my grief was as great as his own. He +told me that, by not accepting the offer of his daughter's hand, I had so +strongly captivated his esteem that his feelings for me could not have +been warmer if I had become his son. When I went on board ship with the +Bailo Jean Dona, I found another case given to me by him, containing two +quintals of the best Mocha coffee, one hundred pounds of tobacco leaves, +two large flagons filled, one with Zabandi tobacco, the other with +camussa, and a magnificent pipe tube of jessamine wood, covered with gold +filigrane, which I sold in Corfu for one hundred sequins. I had not it in +my power to give my generous Turk any mark of my gratitude until I +reached Corfu, but there I did not fail to do so. I sold all his +beautiful presents, which made me the possessor of a small fortune. + +Ismail gave me a letter for the Chevalier de Lezze, but I could not +forward it to him because I unfortunately lost it; he presented me with a +barrel of hydromel, which I turned likewise into money. M. de Bonneval +gave me a letter for Cardinal Acquaviva, which I sent to Rome with an +account of my journey, but his eminence did not think fit to acknowledge +the receipt of either. Bonneval made me a present of twelve bottles of +malmsey from Ragusa, and of twelve bottles of genuine scopolo--a great +rarity, with which I made a present in Corfu which proved very useful to +me, as the reader will discover. + +The only foreign minister I saw much in Constantinople was the lord +marshal of Scotland, the celebrated Keith, who represented the King of +Prussia, and who, six years later was of great service to me in Paris. + +We sailed from Constantinople in the beginning of September in the same +man-of-war which had brought us, and we reached Corfu in fourteen days. +The Bailo Dona did not land. He had with him eight splendid Turkish +horses; I saw two of them still alive in Gorizia in the year 1773. + +As soon as I had landed with my luggage, and had engaged a rather mean +lodging, I presented myself to M. Andre Dolfin, the proveditore-generale, +who promised me again that I should soon be promoted to a lieutenancy. +After my visit to him, I called upon M. Camporese, my captain, and was +well received by him. My third visit was to the commander of galleases, +M. D---- R-----, to whom M. Antonio Dolfin, with whom I had travelled from +Venice to Corfu, had kindly recommended me. After a short conversation, +he asked me if I would remain with him with the title of adjutant. I did +not hesitate one instant, but accepted, saying how deeply honoured I felt +by his offer, and assuring him that he would always find me ready to +carry out his orders. He immediately had me taken to my room, and, the +next day, I found myself established in his house. I obtained from my +captain a French soldier to serve me, and I was well pleased when I found +that the man was a hairdresser by trade, and a great talker by nature, +for he could take care of my beautiful head of hair, and I wanted to +practise French conversation. He was a good-for-nothing fellow, a +drunkard and a debauchee, a peasant from Picardy, and he could hardly +read or write, but I did not mind all that; all I wanted from him was to +serve me, and to talk to me, and his French was pretty good. He was an +amusing rogue, knowing by heart a quantity of erotic songs and of smutty +stories which he could tell in the most laughable manner. + +When I had sold my stock of goods from Constantinople (except the wines), +I found myself the owner of nearly five hundred sequins. I redeemed all +the articles which I had pledged in the hands of Jews, and turned into +money everything of which I had no need. I was determined not to play any +longer as a dupe, but to secure in gambling all the advantages which a +prudent young man could obtain without sullying his honour. + +I must now make my readers acquainted with the sort of life we were at +that time leading in Corfu. As to the city itself, I will not describe +it, because there are already many descriptions better than the one I +could offer in these pages. + +We had then in Corfu the 'proveditore-generale' who had sovereign +authority, and lived in a style of great magnificence. That post was then +filled by M. Andre Dolfin, a man sixty years of age, strict, headstrong, +and ignorant. He no longer cared for women, but liked to be courted by +them. He received every evening, and the supper-table was always laid for +twenty-four persons. + +We had three field-officers of the marines who did duty on the galleys, +and three field-officers for the troops of the line on board the +men-of-war. Each galeass had a captain called 'sopracomito', and we had +ten of those captains; we had likewise ten commanders, one for each +man-of-war, including three 'capi di mare', or admirals. They all +belonged to the nobility of Venice. Ten young Venetian noblemen, from +twenty to twenty-two years of age, were at Corfu as midshipmen in the +navy. We had, besides, about a dozen civil clerks in the police of the +island, or in the administration of justice, entitled 'grandi offciali di +terra'. Those who were blessed with handsome wives had the pleasure of +seeing their houses very much frequented by admirers who aspired to win +the favours of the ladies, but there was not much heroic love-making, +perhaps for the reason that there were then in Corfu many Aspasias whose +favours could be had for money. Gambling was allowed everywhere, and that +all absorbing passion was very prejudicial to the emotions of the heart. + +The lady who was then most eminent for beauty and gallantry was Madame +F----. Her husband, captain of a galley, had come to Corfu with her the +year before, and madam had greatly astonished all the naval officers. +Thinking that she had the privilege of the choice, she had given the +preference to M. D---- R-----, and had dismissed all the suitors who +presented themselves. M. F---- had married her on the very day she had +left the convent; she was only seventeen years of age then, and he had +brought her on board his galley immediately after the marriage ceremony. + +I saw her for the first time at the dinner-table on the very day of my +installation at M. D---- R-----'s, and she made a great impression upon +me. I thought I was gazing at a supernatural being, so infinitely above +all the women I had ever seen, that it seemed impossible to fall in love +with her She appeared to me of a nature different and so greatly superior +to mine that I did not see the possibility of rising up to her. I even +went so far as to persuade myself that nothing but a Platonic friendship +could exist between her and M. D---- R-----, and that M. F---- was quite +right now not to shew any jealousy. Yet, that M. F---- was a perfect fool, +and certainly not worthy of such a woman. The impression made upon me by +Madame F---- was too ridiculous to last long, and the nature of it soon +changed, but in a novel manner, at least as far as I was concerned. + +My position as adjutant procured me the honour of dining at M. +D---- R-----'s table, but nothing more. The other adjutant, like me, an +ensign in the army, but the greatest fool I had ever seen, shared that +honour with me. We were not, however, considered as guests, for nobody +ever spoke to us, and, what is more, no one ever honoured us with a look. +It used to put me in a rage. I knew very well that people acted in that +manner through no real contempt for us, but it went very hard with me. I +could very well understand that my colleague, Sanzonio, should not +complain of such treatment, because he was a blockhead, but I did not +feel disposed to allow myself to be put on a par with him. At the end of +eight or ten days, Madame F----, not having con descended to cast one +glance upon my person, began to appear disagreeable to me. I felt piqued, +vexed, provoked, and the more so because I could not suppose that the +lady acted in that manner wilfully and purposely; I would have been +highly pleased if there had been premeditation on her part. I felt +satisfied that I was a nobody in her estimation, and as I was conscious +of being somebody, I wanted her to know it. At last a circumstance +offered itself in which, thinking that she could address me, she was +compelled to look at me. + +M. D---- R---- having observed that a very, very fine turkey had been +placed before me, told me to carve it, and I immediately went to work. I +was not a skilful carver, and Madame F----, laughing at my want of +dexterity, told me that, if I had not been certain of performing my task +with credit to myself, I ought not to have undertaken it. Full of +confusion, and unable to answer her as my anger prompted, I sat down, +with my heart overflowing with spite and hatred against her. To crown my +rage, having one day to address me, she asked me what was my name. She +had seen me every day for a fortnight, ever since I had been the adjutant +of M. D---- R----; therefore she ought to have known my name. Besides, I +had been very lucky at the gaming-table, and I had become rather famous +in Corfu. My anger against Madame F was at its height. + +I had placed my money in the hands of a certain Maroli, a major in the +army and a gamester by profession, who held the faro bank at the +coffee-house. We were partners; I helped him when he dealt, and he +rendered me the same office when I held the cards, which was often the +case, because he was not generally liked. He used to hold the cards in a +way which frightened the punters; my manners were very different, and I +was very lucky. Besides I was easy and smiling when my bank was losing, +and I won without shewing any avidity, and that is a manner which always +pleases the punters. + +This Maroli was the man who had won all my money during my first stay in +Corfu, and finding, when I returned, that I was resolved not to be duped +any more, he judged me worthy of sharing the wise maxims without which +gambling must necessarily ruin all those who meddle with it. But as +Maroli had won my confidence only to a very slight extent, I was very +careful. We made up our accounts every night, as soon as playing was +over; the cashier kept the capital of the bank, the winnings were +divided, and each took his share away. Lucky at play, enjoying good +health and the friendship of my comrades, who, whenever the opportunity +offered, always found me generous and ready to serve them, I would have +been well pleased with my position if I had been a little more considered +at the table of M. D---- R-----, and treated with less haughtiness by his +lady who, without any reason, seemed disposed to humiliate me. My +self-love was deeply hurt, I hated her, and, with such a disposition of +mind, the more I admired the perfection of her charms, the more I found +her deficient in wit and intelligence. She might have made the conquest +of my heart without bestowing hers upon me, for all I wanted was not to +be compelled to hate her, and I could not understand what pleasure it +could be for her to be detested, while with only a little kindness she +could have been adored. I could not ascribe her manner to a spirit of +coquetry, for I had never given her the slightest proof of the opinion I +entertained of her beauty, and I could not therefore attribute her +behaviour to a passion which might have rendered me disagreeable in her +eyes; M. D---- R---- seemed to interest her only in a very slight manner, +and as to her husband, she cared nothing for him. In short, that charming +woman made me very unhappy, and I was angry with myself because I felt +that, if it had not been for the manner in which she treated me, I would +not have thought of her, and my vexation was increased by the feeling of +hatred entertained by my heart against her, a feeling which until then I +had never known to exist in me, and the discovery of which overwhelmed me +with confusion. + +One day a gentleman handed me, as we were leaving the dinner-table, a +roll of gold that he had lost upon trust; Madame F---- saw it, and she +said to me very abruptly,-- + +"What do you do with your money?" + +"I keep it, madam, as a provision against possible losses." + +"But as you do not indulge in any expense it would be better for you not +to play; it is time wasted." + +"Time given to pleasure is never time lost, madam; the only time which a +young man wastes is that which is consumed in weariness, because when he +is a prey to ennui he is likely to fall a prey to love, and to be +despised by the object of his affection." + +"Very likely; but you amuse yourself with hoarding up your money, and +shew yourself to be a miser, and a miser is not less contemptible than a +man in love. Why do you not buy yourself a pair of gloves?" + +You may be sure that at these words the laughter was all on her side, and +my vexation was all the greater because I could not deny that she was +quite right. It was the adjutant's business to give the ladies an arm to +their carriages, and it was not proper to fulfil that duty without +gloves. I felt mortified, and the reproach of avarice hurt me deeply. I +would a thousand times rather that she had laid my error to a want of +education; and yet, so full of contradictions is the human heart, instead +of making amends by adopting an appearance of elegance which the state of +my finances enabled me to keep up, I did not purchase any gloves, and I +resolved to avoid her and to abandon her to the insipid and dull +gallantry of Sanzonio, who sported gloves, but whose teeth were rotten, +whose breath was putrid, who wore a wig, and whose face seemed to be +covered with shrivelled yellow parchment. + +I spent my days in a continual state of rage and spite, and the most +absurd part of it all was that I felt unhappy because I could not control +my hatred for that woman whom, in good conscience, I could not find +guilty of anything. She had for me neither love nor dislike, which was +quite natural; but being young and disposed to enjoy myself I had become, +without any wilful malice on her part, an eye-sore to her and the butt of +her bantering jokes, which my sensitiveness exaggerated greatly. For all +that I had an ardent wish to punish her and to make her repent. I thought +of nothing else. At one time I would think of devoting all my +intelligence and all my money to kindling an amorous passion in her +heart, and then to revenge myself by treating her with contempt. But I +soon realized the impracticability of such a plan, for even supposing +that I should succeed in finding my way to her heart, was I the man to +resist my own success with such a woman? I certainly could not flatter +myself that I was so strong-minded. But I was the pet child of fortune, +and my position was suddenly altered. + +M. D---- R---- having sent me with dispatches to M. de Condulmer, captain +of a 'galeazza', I had to wait until midnight to deliver them, and when I +returned I found that M. D---- R---- had retired to his apartment for the +night. As soon as he was visible in the morning I went to him to render +an account of my mission. I had been with him only a few minutes when his +valet brought a letter saying that Madame F----'s adjutant was waiting +for an answer. M. D---- R---- read the note, tore it to pieces, and in his +excitement stamped with his foot upon the fragments. He walked up and +down the room for a little time, then wrote an answer and rang for the +adjutant, to whom he delivered it. He then recovered his usual composure, +concluded the perusal of the dispatch sent by M. de Condulmer, and told +me to write a letter. He was looking it over when the valet came in, +telling me that Madame F---- desired to see me. M. D---- R---- told me that +he did not require my services any more for the present, and that I might +go. I left the room, but I had not gone ten yards when he called me back +to remind me that my duty was to know nothing; I begged to assure him +that I was well aware of that. I ran to Madame F-----'s house, very eager +to know what she wanted with me. I was introduced immediately, and I was +greatly surprised to find her sitting up in bed, her countenance flushed +and excited, and her eyes red from the tears she had evidently just been +shedding. My heart was beating quickly, yet I did not know why. + +"Pray be seated," she said, "I wish to speak with you." + +"Madam," I answered, "I am not worthy of so great a favour, and I have +not yet done anything to deserve it; allow me to remain standing." + +She very likely recollected that she had never been so polite before, and +dared not press me any further. She collected her thoughts for an instant +or two, and said to me: + +"Last evening my husband lost two hundred sequins upon trust at your faro +bank; he believed that amount to be in my hands, and I must therefore +give it to him immediately, as he is bound in honour to pay his losses +to-day. Unfortunately I have disposed of the money, and I am in great +trouble. I thought you might tell Maroli that I have paid you the amount +lost by my husband. Here is a ring of some value; keep it until the 1st +of January, when I will return the two hundred sequins for which I am +ready to give you my note of hand." + +"I accept the note of hand, madam, but I cannot consent to deprive you of +your ring. I must also tell you that M. F---- must go himself to the bank, +or send some one there, to redeem his debt. Within ten minutes you shall +have the amount you require." + +I left her without waiting for an answer, and I returned within a few +minutes with the two hundred ducats, which I handed to her, and putting +in my pocket her note of hand which she had just written, I bowed to take +my leave, but she addressed to me these precious words: + +"I believe, sir, that if I had known that you were so well disposed to +oblige me, I could not have made up my mind to beg that service from +you." + +"Well, madam, for the future be quite certain that there is not a man in +the world capable of refusing you such an insignificant service whenever +you will condescend to ask for it in person." + +"What you say is very complimentary, but I trust never to find myself +again under the necessity of making such a cruel experiment." + +I left Madame F-----, thinking of the shrewdness of her answer. She had +not told me that I was mistaken, as I had expected she would, for that +would have caused her some humiliation: she knew that I was with M. +D---- R---- when the adjutant had brought her letter, and she could not +doubt that I was aware of the refusal she had met with. The fact of her +not mentioning it proved to me that she was jealous of her own dignity; +it afforded me great gratification, and I thought her worthy of +adoration. I saw clearly that she could have no love for M. D---- R-----, +and that she was not loved by him, and the discovery made me leap for +joy. From that moment I felt I was in love with her, and I conceived the +hope that she might return my ardent affection. + +The first thing I did, when I returned to my room, was to cross out with +ink every word of her note of hand, except her name, in such a manner +that it was impossible to guess at the contents, and putting it in an +envelope carefully sealed, I deposited it in the hands of a public notary +who stated, in the receipt he gave me of the envelope, that he would +deliver it only to Madame F-----, whenever she should request its +delivery. + +The same evening M. F---- came to the bank, paid me, played with cash in +hand, and won some fifty ducats. What caused me the greatest surprise was +that M. D---- R---- continued to be very gracious to Madame F----, and +that she remained exactly the same towards him as she used to be before. +He did not even enquire what she wanted when she had sent for me. But if +she did not seem to change her manner towards my master, it was a very +different case with me, for whenever she was opposite to me at dinner, +she often addressed herself to me, and she thus gave me many +opportunities of shewing my education and my wit in amusing stories or in +remarks, in which I took care to blend instruction with witty jests. At +that time F---- had the great talent of making others laugh while I kept a +serious countenance myself. I had learnt that accomplishment from M. de +Malipiero, my first master in the art of good breeding, who used to say +to me,-- + +"If you wish your audience to cry, you must shed tears yourself, but if +you wish to make them laugh you must contrive to look as serious as a +judge." + +In everything I did, in every word I uttered, in the presence of Madame +F----, the only aim I had was to please her, but I did not wish her to +suppose so, and I never looked at her unless she spoke to me. I wanted to +force her curiosity, to compel her to suspect nay, to guess my secret, +but without giving her any advantage over me: it was necessary for me to +proceed by slow degrees. In the mean time, and until I should have a +greater happiness, I was glad to see that my money, that magic talisman, +and my good conduct, obtained me a consideration much greater than I +could have hoped to obtain either through my position, or from my age, or +in consequence of any talent I might have shewn in the profession I had +adopted. + +Towards the middle of November, the soldier who acted as my servant was +attacked with inflammation of the chest; I gave notice of it to the +captain of his company, and he was carried to the hospital. On the fourth +day I was told that he would not recover, and that he had received the +last sacraments; in the evening I happened to be at his captain's when +the priest who had attended him came to announce his death, and to +deliver a small parcel which the dying man had entrusted to him to be +given up to his captain only after his death. The parcel contained a +brass seal engraved with ducal arms, a certificate of baptism, and a +sheet of paper covered with writing in French. Captain Camporese, who +only spoke Italian, begged me to translate the paper, the contents of +which were as follows: + +"My will is that this paper, which I have written and signed with my own +hand, shall be delivered to my captain only after I have breathed my +last: until then, my confessor shall not make any use of it, for I +entrust it to his hands only under the seal of confession. I entreat my +captain to have me buried in a vault from which my body can be exhumed in +case the duke, my father, should request its exhumation. I entreat him +likewise to forward my certificate of baptism, the seal with the armorial +bearings of my family, and a legal certificate of my birth to the French +ambassador in Venice, who will send the whole to the duke, my father, my +rights of primogeniture belonging, after my demise, to the prince, my +brother. In faith of which I have signed and sealed these presents: +Francois VI. Charles Philippe Louis Foucaud, Prince de la Rochefoucault." + +The certificate of baptism, delivered at St. Sulpice gave the same names, +and the title of the father was Francois V. The name of the mother was +Gabrielle du Plessis. + +As I was concluding my translation I could not help bursting into loud +laughter; but the foolish captain, who thought my mirth out of +place, hurried out to render an account of the affair to the +proveditore-generale, and I went to the coffee-house, not doubting for +one moment that his excellency would laugh at the captain, and that the +post-mortem buffoonery would greatly amuse the whole of Corfu. + +I had known in Rome, at Cardinal Acquaviva's, the Abbe de Liancourt, +great-grandson of Charles, whose sister, Gabrielle du Plessis, had been +the wife of Francois V., but that dated from the beginning of the last +century. I had made a copy from the records of the cardinal of the +account of certain circumstances which the Abbe de Liancourt wanted to +communicate to the court of Spain, and in which there were a great many +particulars respecting the house of Du Plessis. I thought at the same +time that the singular imposture of La Valeur (such was the name by which +my soldier generally went) was absurd and without a motive, since it was +to be known only after his death, and could not therefore prove of any +advantage to him. + +Half an hour afterwards, as I was opening a fresh pack of cards, the +Adjutant Sanzonio came in, and told the important news in the most +serious manner. He had just come from the office of the proveditore, +where Captain Camporese had run in the utmost hurry to deposit in the +hands of his excellency the seal and the papers of the deceased prince. +His excellency had immediately issued his orders for the burial of the +prince in a vault with all the honours due to his exalted rank. Another +half hour passed, and M. Minolto, adjutant of the proveditore-generale, +came to inform me that his excellency wanted to see me. I passed the +cards to Major Maroli, and went to his excellency's house. I found him at +supper with several ladies, three or four naval commanders, Madame F----, +and M. D---- R-----. + +"So, your servant was a prince!" said the old general to me. + +"Your excellency, I never would have suspected it, and even now that he +is dead I do not believe it." + +"Why? He is dead, but he was not insane. You have seen his armorial +bearings, his certificate of baptism, as well as what he wrote with his +own hand. When a man is so near death, he does not fancy practical +jokes." + +"If your excellency is satisfied of the truth of the story, my duty is to +remain silent." + +"The story cannot be anything but true, and your doubts surprise me." + +"I doubt, monsignor, because I happen to have positive information +respecting the families of La Rochefoucault and Du Plessis. Besides, I +have seen too much of the man. He was not a madman, but he certainly was +an extravagant jester. I have never seen him write, and he has told me +himself a score of times that he had never learned." + +"The paper he has written proves the contrary. His arms have the ducal +bearings; but perhaps you are not aware that M. de la Rochefoucault is a +duke and peer of the French realm?" + +"I beg your eminence's pardon; I know all about it; I know even more, for +I know that Francois VI. married a daughter of the house of Vivonne." + +"You know nothing." + +When I heard this remark, as foolish as it was rude, I resolved on +remaining silent, and it was with some pleasure that I observed the joy +felt by all the male guests at what they thought an insult and a blow to +my vanity. An officer remarked that the deceased was a fine man, a witty +man, and had shewn wonderful cleverness in keeping up his assumed +character so well that no one ever had the faintest suspicion of what he +really was. A lady said that, if she had known him, she would have been +certain to find him out. Another flatterer, belonging to that mean, +contemptible race always to be found near the great and wealthy of the +earth, assured us that the late prince had always shewn himself cheerful, +amiable, obliging, devoid of haughtiness towards his comrades, and that +he used to sing beautifully. "He was only twenty-five years of age," said +Madame Sagredo, looking me full in the face, "and if he was endowed with +all those qualities, you must have discovered them." + +"I can only give you, madam, a true likeness of the man, such as I have +seen him. Always gay, often even to folly, for he could throw a +somersault beautifully; singing songs of a very erotic kind, full of +stories and of popular tales of magic, miracles, and ghosts, and a +thousand marvellous feats which common-sense refused to believe, and +which, for that very reason, provoked the mirth of his hearers. His +faults were that he was drunken, dirty, quarrelsome, dissolute, and +somewhat of a cheat. I put up with all his deficiences, because he +dressed my hair to my taste, and his constant chattering offered me the +opportunity of practising the colloquial French which cannot be acquired +from books. He has always assured me that he was born in Picardy, the son +of a common peasant, and that he had deserted from the French army. He +may have deceived me when he said that he could not write." + +Just then Camporese rushed into the room, and announced that La Veleur +was yet breathing. The general, looking at me significantly, said that he +would be delighted if the man could be saved. + +"And I likewise, monsignor, but his confessor will certainly kill him +to-night." + +"Why should the father confessor kill him?" + +"To escape the galleys to which your excellency would not fail to send +him for having violated the secrecy of the confessional." + +Everybody burst out laughing, but the foolish old general knitted his +brows. The guests retired soon afterwards, and Madame F-----, whom I had +preceded to the carriage, M. D---- R---- having offered her his arm, +invited me to get in with her, saying that it was raining. It was the +first time that she had bestowed such an honour upon me. + +"I am of your opinion about that prince," she said, "but you have +incurred the displeasure of the proveditore." + +"I am very sorry, madam, but it could not have been avoided, for I cannot +help speaking the truth openly." + +"You might have spared him," remarked M. D---- R-----, "the cutting jest +of the confessor killing the false prince." + +"You are right, sir, but I thought it would make him laugh as well as it +made madam and your excellency. In conversation people generally do not +object to a witty jest causing merriment and laughter." + +"True; only those who have not wit enough to laugh do not like the jest." + +"I bet a hundred sequins that the madman will recover, and that, having +the general on his side, he will reap all the advantages of his +imposture. I long to see him treated as a prince, and making love to +Madame Sagredo." + +Hearing the last words, Madame F-----, who did not like Madame Sagredo, +laughed heartily, and, as we were getting out of the carriage, M. +D---- R---- invited me to accompany them upstairs. He was in the habit of +spending half an hour alone with her at her own house when they had taken +supper together with the general, for her husband never shewed himself. +It was the first time that the happy couple admitted a third person to +their tete-a-tete. I felt very proud of the compliment thus paid to me, +and I thought it might have important results for me. My satisfaction, +which I concealed as well as I could, did not prevent me from being very +gay and from giving a comic turn to every subject brought forward by the +lady or by her lord. + +We kept up our pleasant trio for four hours; and returned to the mansion +of M. D---- R---- only at two o'clock in the morning. It was during that +night that Madame F---- and M. D---- R---- really made my acquaintance. +Madame F---- told him that she had never laughed so much, and that she had +never imagined that a conversation, in appearance so simple, could afford +so much pleasure and merriment. On my side, I discovered in her so much +wit and cheerfulness, that I became deeply enamoured, and went to bed +fully satisfied that, in the future, I could not keep up the show of +indifference which I had so far assumed towards her. + +When I woke up the next morning, I heard from the new soldier who served +me that La Valeur was better, and had been pronounced out of danger by +the physician. At dinner the conversation fell upon him, but I did not +open my lips. Two days afterwards, the general gave orders to have him +removed to a comfortable apartment, sent him a servant, clothed him, and +the over-credulous proveditore having paid him a visit, all the naval +commanders and officers thought it their duty to imitate him, and to +follow his example: the general curiosity was excited, there was a rush +to see the new prince. M. D---- R---- followed his leaders, and Madame +Sagredo, having set the ladies in motion, they all called upon him, with +the exception of Madame F----, who told me laughingly that she would not +pay him a visit unless I would consent to introduce her. I begged to be +excused. The knave was called your highness, and the wonderful prince +styled Madame Sagredo his princess. M. D---- R---- tried to persuade me to +call upon the rogue, but I told him that I had said too much, and that I +was neither courageous nor mean enough to retract my words. The whole +imposture would soon have been discovered if anyone had possessed a +peerage, but it just happened that there was not a copy in Corfu, and the +French consul, a fat blockhead, like many other consuls, knew nothing of +family trees. The madcap La Valeur began to walk out a week after his +metamorphosis into a prince. He dined and had supper every day with the +general, and every evening he was present at the reception, during which, +owing to his intemperance, he always went fast asleep. Yet, there were +two reasons which kept up the belief of his being a prince: the first was +that he did not seem afraid of the news expected from Venice, where the +proveditore had written immediately after the discovery; the second was +that he solicited from the bishop the punishment of the priest who had +betrayed his secret by violating the seal of confession. The poor priest +had already been sent to prison, and the proveditore had not the courage +to defend him. The new prince had been invited to dinner by all the naval +officers, but M. D---- R---- had not made up his mind to imitate them so +far, because Madame F---- had clearly warned him that she would dine at +her own house on the day he was invited. I had likewise respectfully +intimated that, on the same occasion, I would take the liberty of dining +somewhere else. + +I met the prince one day as I was coming out of the old fortress leading +to the esplanade. He stopped, and reproached me for not having called +upon him. I laughed, and advised him to think of his safety before the +arrival of the news which would expose all the imposture, in which case +the proveditore was certain to treat him very severely. I offered to help +him in his flight from Corfu, and to get a Neapolitan captain, whose ship +was ready to sail, to conceal him on board; but the fool, instead of +accepting my offer, loaded me with insults. + +He was courting Madame Sagredo, who treated him very well, feeling proud +that a French prince should have given her the preference over all the +other ladies. One day that she was dining in great ceremony at M. +D---- R-----'s house, she asked me why I had advised the prince to run +away. + +"I have it from his own lips," she added, "and he cannot make out your +obstinacy in believing him an impostor." + +"I have given him that advice, madam, because my heart is good, and my +judgment sane." + +"Then we are all of us as many fools, the proveditore included?" + +"That deduction would not be right, madam. An opinion contrary to that of +another does not necessarily make a fool of the person who entertains it. +It might possibly turn out, in ten or twelve days, that I have been +entirely mistaken myself, but I should not consider myself a fool in +consequence. In the mean time, a lady of your intelligence must have +discovered whether that man is a peasant or a prince by his education and +manners. For instance, does he dance well?" + +"He does not know one step, but he is the first to laugh about it; he +says he never would learn dancing." + +"Does he behave well at table?" + +"Well, he doesn't stand on ceremony. He does not want his plate to be +changed, he helps himself with his spoon out of the dishes; he does not +know how to check an eructation or a yawn, and if he feels tired he +leaves the table. It is evident that he has been very badly brought up." + +"And yet he is very pleasant, I suppose. Is he clean and neat?" + +"No, but then he is not yet well provided with linen." + +"I am told that he is very sober." + +"You are joking. He leaves the table intoxicated twice a day, but he +ought to be pitied, for he cannot drink wine and keep his head clear. +Then he swears like a trooper, and we all laugh, but he never takes +offence." + +"Is he witty?" + +"He has a wonderful memory, for he tells us new stories every day." + +"Does he speak of his family?" + +"Very often of his mother, whom he loved tenderly. She was a Du Plessis." + +"If his mother is still alive she must be a hundred and fifty years old." + +"What nonsense!" + +"Not at all; she was married in the days of Marie de Medicis." + +"But the certificate of baptism names the prince's mother, and his +seal--" + +"Does he know what armorial bearings he has on that seal?" + +"Do you doubt it?" + +"Very strongly, or rather I am certain that he knows nothing about it." + +We left the table, and the prince was announced. He came in, and Madame +Sagredo lost no time in saying to him, "Prince, here is M. Casanova; he +pretends that you do not know your own armorial bearings." Hearing these +words, he came up to me, sneering, called me a coward, and gave me a +smack on the face which almost stunned me. I left the room very slowly, +not forgetting my hat and my cane, and went downstairs, while M. +D---- R---- was loudly ordering the servants to throw the madman out of +the window. + +I left the palace and went to the esplanade in order to wait for him. The +moment I saw him, I ran to meet him, and I beat him so violently with my +cane that one blow alone ought to have killed him. He drew back, and +found himself brought to a stand between two walls, where, to avoid being +beaten to death, his only resource was to draw his sword, but the +cowardly scoundrel did not even think of his weapon, and I left him, on +the ground, covered with blood. The crowd formed a line for me to pass, +and I went to the coffee-house, where I drank a glass of lemonade, +without sugar to precipitate the bitter saliva which rage had brought up +from my stomach. In a few minutes, I found myself surrounded by all the +young officers of the garrison, who joined in the general opinion that I +ought to have killed him, and they at last annoyed me, for it was not my +fault if I had not done so, and I would certainly have taken his life if +he had drawn his sword. + +I had been in the coffee-house for half an hour when the general's +adjutant came to tell me that his excellency ordered me to put myself +under arrest on board the bastarda, a galley on which the prisoners had +their legs in irons like galley slaves. The dose was rather too strong to +be swallowed, and I did not feel disposed to submit to it. "Very good, +adjutant," I replied, "it shall be done." He went away, and I left the +coffee-house a moment after him, but when I reached the end of the +street, instead of going towards the esplanade, I proceeded quickly +towards the sea. I walked along the beach for a quarter of an hour, and +finding a boat empty, but with a pair of oars, I got in her, and +unfastening her, I rowed as hard as I could towards a large caicco, +sailing against the wind with six oars. As soon as I had come up to her, +I went on board and asked the carabouchiri to sail before the wind and to +take me to a large wherry which could be seen at some distance, going +towards Vido Rock. I abandoned the row-boat, and, after paying the master +of the caicco generously, I got into the wherry, made a bargain with the +skipper who unfurled three sails, and in less than two hours we were +fifteen miles away from Corfu. The wind having died away, I made the men +row against the current, but towards midnight they told me that they +could not row any longer, they were worn out with fatigue. They advised +me to sleep until day-break, but I refused to do so, and for a trifle I +got them to put me on shore, without asking where I was, in order not to +raise their suspicions. It was enough for me to know that I was at a +distance of twenty miles from Corfu, and in a place where nobody could +imagine me to be. The moon was shining, and I saw a church with a house +adjoining, a long barn opened on both sides, a plain of about one hundred +yards confined by hills, and nothing more. I found some straw in the +barn, and laying myself down, I slept until day-break in spite of the +cold. It was the 1st of December, and although the climate is very mild +in Corfu I felt benumbed when I awoke, as I had no cloak over my thin +uniform. + +The bells begin to toll, and I proceed towards the church. The +long-bearded papa, surprised at my sudden apparition, enquires whether I +am Romeo (a Greek); I tell him that I am Fragico (Italian), but he turns +his back upon me and goes into his house, the door of which he shuts +without condescending to listen to me. + +I then turned towards the sea, and saw a boat leaving a tartan lying at +anchor within one hundred yards of the island; the boat had four oars and +landed her passengers. I come up to them and meet a good-looking Greek, a +woman and a young boy ten or twelve years old. Addressing myself to the +Greek, I ask him whether he has had a pleasant passage, and where he +comes from. He answers in Italian that he has sailed from Cephalonia with +his wife and his son, and that he is bound for Venice; he had landed to +hear mass at the Church of Our Lady of Casopo, in order to ascertain +whether his father-in-law was still alive, and whether he would pay the +amount he had promised him for the dowry of his wife. + +"But how can you find it out?" + +"The Papa Deldimopulo will tell me; he will communicate faithfully the +oracle of the Holy Virgin." I say nothing and follow him into the church; +he speaks to the priest, and gives him some money. The papa says the +mass, enters the sanctum sanctorum, comes out again in a quarter of an +hour, ascends the steps of the altar, turns towards his audience, and, +after meditating for a minute and stroking his long beard, he delivers +his oracle in a dozen words. The Greek of Cephalonia, who certainly could +not boast of being as wise as Ulysses, appears very well pleased, and +gives more money to the impostor. We leave the church, and I ask him +whether he feels satisfied with the oracle. + +"Oh! quite satisfied. I know now that my father-in-law is alive, and that +he will pay me the dowry, if I consent to leave my child with him. I am +aware that it is his fancy and I will give him the boy." + +"Does the papa know you?" + +"No; he is not even acquainted with my name." + +"Have you any fine goods on board your tartan?" + +"Yes; come and breakfast with me; you can see all I have." + +"Very willingly." + +Delighted at hearing that oracles were not yet defunct, and satisfied +that they will endure as long as there are in this world simple-minded +men and deceitful, cunning priests, I follow the good man, who took me to +his tartan and treated me to an excellent breakfast. His cargo consisted +of cotton, linen, currants, oil, and excellent wines. He had also a stock +of night-caps, stockings, cloaks in the Eastern fashion, umbrellas, and +sea biscuits, of which I was very fond; in those days I had thirty teeth, +and it would have been difficult to find a finer set. Alas! I have but +two left now, the other twenty-eight are gone with other tools quite as +precious; but 'dum vita super est, bene est.' I bought a small stock of +everything he had except cotton, for which I had no use, and without +discussing his price I paid him the thirty-five or forty sequins he +demanded, and seeing my generosity he made me a present of six beautiful +botargoes. + +I happened during our conversation to praise the wine of Xante, which he +called generoydes, and he told me that if I would accompany him to Venice +he would give me a bottle of that wine every day including the +quarantine. Always superstitious, I was on the point of accepting, and +that for the most foolish reason-namely, that there would be no +premeditation in that strange resolution, and it might be the impulse of +fate. Such was my nature in those days; alas; it is very different now. +They say that it is because wisdom comes with old age, but I cannot +reconcile myself to cherish the effect of a most unpleasant cause. + +Just as I was going to accept his offer he proposes to sell me a very +fine gun for ten sequins, saying that in Corfu anyone would be glad of it +for twelve. The word Corfu upsets all my ideas on the spot! I fancy I +hear the voice of my genius telling me to go back to that city. I +purchase the gun for the ten sequins, and my honest Cephalonian, admiring +my fair dealing, gives me, over and above our bargain, a beautiful +Turkish pouch well filled with powder and shot. Carrying my gun, with a +good warm cloak over my uniform and with a large bag containing all my +purchases, I take leave of the worthy Greek, and am landed on the shore, +determined on obtaining a lodging from the cheating papa, by fair means +or foul. The good wine of my friend the Cephalonian had excited me just +enough to make me carry my determination into immediate execution. I had +in my pockets four or five hundred copper gazzette, which were very +heavy, but which I had procured from the Greek, foreseeing that I might +want them during my stay on the island. + +I store my bag away in the barn and I proceed, gun in hand, towards the +house of the priest; the church was closed. + +I must give my readers some idea of the state I was in at that moment. I +was quietly hopeless. The three or four hundred sequins I had with me did +not prevent me from thinking that I was not in very great security on the +island; I could not remain long, I would soon be found out, and, being +guilty of desertion, I should be treated accordingly. I did not know what +to do, and that is always an unpleasant predicament. It would be absurd +for me to return to Corfu of my own accord; my flight would then be +useless, and I should be thought a fool, for my return would be a proof +of cowardice or stupidity; yet I did not feel the courage to desert +altogether. The chief cause of my decision was not that I had a thousand +sequins in the hands of the faro banker, or my well-stocked wardrobe, or +the fear of not getting a living somewhere else, but the unpleasant +recollection that I should leave behind me a woman whom I loved to +adoration, and from whom I had not yet obtained any favour, not even that +of kissing her hand. In such distress of mind I could not do anything +else but abandon myself to chance, whatever the result might be, and the +most essential thing for the present was to secure a lodging and my daily +food. + +I knock at the door of the priest's dwelling. He looks out of a window +and shuts it without listening to me, I knock again, I swear, I call out +loudly, all in vain, Giving way to my rage, I take aim at a poor sheep +grazing with several others at a short distance, and kill it. The +herdsman begins to scream, the papa shows himself at the window, calling +out, "Thieves! Murder!" and orders the alarm-bell to be rung. Three bells +are immediately set in motion, I foresee a general gathering: what is +going to happen? I do not know, but happen what will, I load my gun and +await coming events. + +In less than eight or ten minutes, I see a crowd of peasants coming down +the hills, armed with guns, pitchforks, or cudgels: I withdraw inside of +the barn, but without the slightest fear, for I cannot suppose that, +seeing me alone, these men will murder me without listening to me. + +The first ten or twelve peasants come forward, gun in hand and ready to +fire: I stop them by throwing down my gazzette, which they lose no time +in picking up from the ground, and I keep on throwing money down as the +men come forward, until I had no more left. The clowns were looking at +each other in great astonishment, not knowing what to make out of a +well-dressed young man, looking very peaceful, and throwing his money to +them with such generosity. I could not speak to them until the deafening +noise of the bells should cease. I quietly sit down on my large bag, and +keep still, but as soon as I can be heard I begin to address the men. The +priest, however, assisted by his beadle and by the herdsman, interrupts +me, and all the more easily that I was speaking Italian. My three +enemies, who talked all at once, were trying to excite the crowd against +me. + +One of the peasants, an elderly and reasonable-looking man, comes up to +me and asks me in Italian why I have killed the sheep. + +"To eat it, my good fellow, but not before I have paid for it." + +"But his holiness, the papa, might choose to charge one sequin for it." + +"Here is one sequin." + +The priest takes the money and goes away: war is over. The peasant tells +me that he has served in the campaign of 1716, and that he was at the +defence of Corfu. I compliment him, and ask him to find me a lodging and +a man able to prepare my meals. He answers that he will procure me a +whole house, that he will be my cook himself, but I must go up the hill. +No matter! He calls two stout fellows, one takes my bag, the other +shoulders my sheep, and forward! As we are walking along, I tell him,-- + +"My good man, I would like to have in my service twenty-four fellows like +these under military discipline. I would give each man twenty gazzette a +day, and you would have forty as my lieutenant." + +"I will," says the old soldier, "raise for you this very day a body-guard +of which you will be proud." + +We reach a very convenient house, containing on the ground floor three +rooms and a stable, which I immediately turned into a guard-room. + +My lieutenant went to get what I wanted, and particularly a needlewoman +to make me some shirts. In the course of the day I had furniture, +bedding, kitchen utensils, a good dinner, twenty-four well-equipped +soldiers, a super-annuated sempstress and several young girls to make my +shirts. After supper, I found my position highly pleasant, being +surrounded with some thirty persons who looked upon me as their +sovereign, although they could not make out what had brought me to their +island. The only thing which struck me as disagreeable was that the young +girls could not speak Italian, and I did not know Greek enough to enable +me to make love to them. + +The next morning my lieutenant had the guard relieved, and I could not +help bursting into a merry laugh. They were like a flock of sheep: all +fine men, well-made and strong; but without uniform and without +discipline the finest band is but a herd. However, they quickly learned +how to present arms and to obey the orders of their officer. I caused +three sentinels to be placed, one before the guardroom, one at my door, +and the third where he could have a good view of the sea. This sentinel +was to give me warning of the approach of any armed boat or vessel. For +the first two or three days I considered all this as mere amusement, but, +thinking that I might really want the men to repel force by force, I had +some idea of making my army take an oath of allegiance. I did not do so, +however, although my lieutenant assured me that I had only to express my +wishes, for my generosity had captivated the love of all the islanders. + +My sempstress, who had procured some young needlewomen to sew my shirts, +had expected that I would fall in love with one and not with all, but my +amorous zeal overstepped her hopes, and all the pretty ones had their +turn; they were all well satisfied with me, and the sempstress was +rewarded for her good offices. I was leading a delightful life, for my +table was supplied with excellent dishes, juicy mutton, and snipe so +delicious that I have never tasted their like except in St. Petersburg. I +drank scopolo wine or the best muscatel of the Archipelago. My lieutenant +was my only table companion. I never took a walk without him and two of +my body-guard, in order to defend myself against the attacks of a few +young men who had a spite against me because they fancied, not without +some reason, that my needlewomen, their mistresses, had left them on my +account. I often thought while I was rambling about the island, that +without money I should have been unhappy, and that I was indebted to my +gold for all the happiness I was enjoying; but it was right to suppose at +the same time that, if I had not felt my purse pretty heavy, I would not +have been likely to leave Corfu. + +I had thus been playing the petty king with success for a week or ten +days, when, towards ten o'clock at night I heard the sentinel's +challenge. My lieutenant went out, and returned announcing that an +honest-looking man, who spoke Italian, wished to see me on important +business. I had him brought in, and, in the presence of my lieutenant, he +told me in Italian: + +"Next Sunday, the Papa Deldimopulo will fulminate against you the +'cataramonachia'. If you do not prevent him, a slow fever will send you +into the next world in six weeks." + +"I have never heard of such a drug." + +"It is not a drug. It is a curse pronounced by a priest with the Host in +his hands, and it is sure to be fulfilled." + +"What reason can that priest have to murder me?" + +"You disturb the peace and discipline of his parish. You have seduced +several young girls, and now their lovers refuse to marry them." + +I made him drink, and thanking him heartily, wished him good night. His +warning struck me as deserving my attention, for, if I had no fear of the +'cataramonachia', in which I had not the slightest faith, I feared +certain poisons which might be by far more efficient. I passed a very +quiet night, but at day-break I got up, and without saying anything to my +lieutenant, I went straight to the church where I found the priest, and +addressed him in the following words, uttered in a tone likely to enforce +conviction: + +"On the first symptom of fever, I will shoot you like a dog. Throw over +me a curse which will kill me instantly, or make your will. Farewell!" + +Having thus warned him, I returned to my royal palace. Early on the +following Monday, the papa called on me. I had a slight headache; he +enquired after my health, and when I told him that my head felt rather +heavy, he made me laugh by the air of anxiety with which he assured me +that it could be caused by nothing else than the heavy atmosphere of the +island of Casopo. + +Three days after his visit, the advanced sentinel gave the war-cry. The +lieutenant went out to reconnoitre, and after a short absence he gave me +notice that the long boat of an armed vessel had just landed an officer. +Danger was at hand. + +I go out myself, I call my men to arms, and, advancing a few steps, I see +an officer, accompanied by a guide, who was walking towards my dwelling. +As he was alone, I had nothing to fear. I return to my room, giving +orders to my lieutenant to receive him with all military honours and to +introduce him. Then, girding my sword, I wait for my visitor. + +In a few minutes, Adjutant Minolto, the same who had brought me the order +to put myself under arrest, makes his appearance. + +"You are alone," I say to him, "and therefore you come as a friend. Let +us embrace." + +"I must come as a friend, for, as an enemy, I should not have enough men. +But what I see seems a dream." + +"Take a seat, and dine with me. I will treat you splendidly." + +"Most willingly, and after dinner we will leave the island together." + +"You may go alone, if you like; but I will not leave this place until I +have the certainty, not only that I shall not be sent to the 'bastarda', +but also that I shall have every satisfaction from the knave whom the +general ought to send to the galleys." + +"Be reasonable, and come with me of your own accord. My orders are to +take you by force, but as I have not enough men to do so, I shall make my +report, and the general will, of course, send a force sufficient to +arrest you." + +"Never; I will not be taken alive." + +"You must be mad; believe me, you are in the wrong. You have disobeyed +the order I brought you to go to the 'bastarda; in that you have acted +wrongly, and in that alone, for in every other respect you were perfectly +right, the general himself says so." + +"Then I ought to have put myself under arrest?" + +"Certainly; obedience is necessary in our profession." + +"Would you have obeyed, if you had been in my place?" + +"I cannot and will not tell you what I would have done, but I know that +if I had disobeyed orders I should have been guilty of a crime:" + +"But if I surrendered now I should be treated like a criminal, and much +more severely than if I had obeyed that unjust order." + +"I think not. Come with me, and you will know everything." + +"What! Go without knowing what fate may be in store for me? Do not expect +it. Let us have dinner. If I am guilty of such a dreadful crime that +violence must be used against me, I will surrender only to irresistible +force. I cannot be worse off, but there may be blood spilled." + +"You are mistaken, such conduct would only make you more guilty. But I +say like you, let us have dinner. A good meal will very likely render you +more disposed to listen to reason." + +Our dinner was nearly over, when we heard some noise outside. The +lieutenant came in, and informed me that the peasants were gathering in +the neighbourhood of my house to defend me, because a rumour had spread +through the island that the felucca had been sent with orders to arrest +me and take me to Corfu. I told him to undeceive the good fellows, and to +send them away, but to give them first a barrel of wine. + +The peasants went away satisfied, but, to shew their devotion to me, they +all fired their guns. + +"It is all very amusing," said the adjutant, "but it will turn out very +serious if you let me go away alone, for my duty compels me to give an +exact account of all I have witnessed." + +"I will follow you, if you will give me your word of honour to land me +free in Corfu." + +"I have orders to deliver your person to M. Foscari, on board the +bastarda." + +"Well, you shall not execute your orders this time." + +"If you do not obey the commands of the general, his honour will compel +him to use violence against you, and of course he can do it. But tell me, +what would you do if the general should leave you in this island for the +sake of the joke? There is no fear of that, however, and, after the +report which I must give, the general will certainly make up his mind to +stop the affair without shedding blood." + +"Without a fight it will be difficult to arrest me, for with five hundred +peasants in such a place as this I would not be afraid of three thousand +men." + +"One man will prove enough; you will be treated as a leader of rebels. +All these peasants may be devoted to you, but they cannot protect you +against one man who will shoot you for the sake of earning a few pieces +of gold. I can tell you more than that: amongst all those men who +surround you there is not one who would not murder you for twenty +sequins. Believe me, go with me. Come to enjoy the triumph which is +awaiting you in Corfu. You will be courted and applauded. You will +narrate yourself all your mad frolics, people will laugh, and at the same +time will admire you for having listened to reason the moment I came +here. Everybody feels esteem for you, and M. D---- R---- thinks a great +deal of you. He praises very highly the command you have shewn over your +passion in refraining from thrusting your sword through that insolent +fool, in order not to forget the respect you owed to his house. The +general himself must esteem you, for he cannot forget what you told him +of that knave." + +"What has become of him?" + +"Four days ago Major Sardina's frigate arrived with dispatches, in which +the general must have found all the proof of the imposture, for he has +caused the false duke or prince to disappear very suddenly. Nobody knows +where he has been sent to, and nobody ventures to mention the fellow +before the general, for he made the most egregious blunder respecting +him." + +"But was the man received in society after the thrashing I gave him?" + +"God forbid! Do you not recollect that he wore a sword? From that moment +no one would receive him. His arm was broken and his jaw shattered to +pieces. + +"But in spite of the state he was in, in spite of what he must have +suffered, his excellency had him removed a week after you had treated him +so severely. But your flight is what everyone has been wondering over. It +was thought for three days that M. D---- R---- had concealed you in his +house, and he was openly blamed for doing so. He had to declare loudly at +the general's table that he was in the most complete ignorance of your +whereabouts. His excellency even expressed his anxiety about your escape, +and it was only yesterday that your place of refuge was made known by a +letter addressed by the priest of this island to the Proto-Papa Bulgari, +in which he complained that an Italian officer had invaded the island of +Casopo a week before, and had committed unheard-of violence. He accused +you of seducing all the girls, and of threatening to shoot him if he +dared to pronounce 'cataramonachia' against you. This letter, which was +read publicly at the evening reception, made the general laugh, but he +ordered me to arrest you all the same." + +"Madame Sagredo is the cause of it all." + +"True, but she is well punished for it. You ought to call upon her with +me to-morrow." + +"To-morrow? Are you then certain that I shall not be placed under +arrest?" + +"Yes, for I know that the general is a man of honour." + +"I am of the same opinion. Well, let us go on board your felucca. We will +embark together after midnight." + +"Why not now?" + +"Because I will not run the risk of spending the night on board M. +Foscari's bastarda. I want to reach Corfu by daylight, so as to make your +victory more brilliant." + +"But what shall we do for the next eight hours?" + +"We will pay a visit to some beauties of a species unknown in Corfu, and +have a good supper." + +I ordered my lieutenant to send plenty to eat and to drink to the men on +board the felucca, to prepare a splendid supper, and to spare nothing, as +I should leave the island at midnight. I made him a present of all my +provisions, except such as I wanted to take with me; these I sent on +board. My janissaries, to whom I gave a week's pay, insisted upon +escorting me, fully equipped, as far as the boat, which made the adjutant +laugh all the way. + +We reached Corfu by eight o'clock in the morning, and we went alongside +the 'bastarda. The adjutant consigned me to M. Foscari, assuring me that +he would immediately give notice of my arrival to M. D---- R-----, send my +luggage to his house, and report the success of his expedition to the +general. + +M. Foscari, the commander of the bastarda, treated me very badly. If he +had been blessed with any delicacy of feeling, he would not have been in +such a hurry to have me put in irons. He might have talked to me, and +have thus delayed for a quarter of an hour that operation which greatly +vexed me. But, without uttering a single word, he sent me to the 'capo di +scalo' who made me sit down, and told me to put my foot forward to +receive the irons, which, however, do not dishonour anyone in that +country, not even the galley slaves, for they are better treated than +soldiers. + +My right leg was already in irons, and the left one was in the hands of +the man for the completion of that unpleasant ceremony, when the adjutant +of his excellency came to tell the executioner to set me at liberty and +to return me my sword. I wanted to present my compliments to the noble M. +Foscari, but the adjutant, rather ashamed, assured me that his excellency +did not expect me to do so. The first thing I did was to pay my respects +to the general, without saying one word to him, but he told me with a +serious countenance to be more prudent for the future, and to learn that +a soldier's first duty was to obey, and above all to be modest and +discreet. I understood perfectly the meaning of the two last words, and +acted accordingly. + +When I made my appearance at M. D---- R-----'s, I could see pleasure on +everybody's face. Those moments have always been so dear to me that I +have never forgotten them, they have afforded me consolation in the time +of adversity. If you would relish pleasure you must endure pain, and +delights are in proportion to the privations we have suffered. M. +D---- R---- was so glad to see me that he came up to me and warmly +embraced me. He presented me with a beautiful ring which he took from his +own finger, and told me that I had acted quite rightly in not letting +anyone, and particularly himself, know where I had taken refuge. + +"You can't think," he added, frankly, "how interested Madame F---- was in +your fate. She would be really delighted if you called on her +immediately." + +How delightful to receive such advice from his own lips! But the word +"immediately" annoyed me, because, having passed the night on board the +felucca, I was afraid that the disorder of my toilet might injure me in +her eyes. Yet I could neither refuse M. D---- R-----, nor tell him the +reason of my refusal, and I bethought myself that I could make a merit of +it in the eyes of Madame F---- I therefore went at once to her house; the +goddess was not yet visible, but her attendant told me to come in, +assuring me that her mistress's bell would soon be heard, and that she +would be very sorry if I did not wait to see her. I spent half an hour +with that young and indiscreet person, who was a very charming girl, and +learned from her many things which caused me great pleasure, and +particularly all that had been said respecting my escape. I found that +throughout the affair my conduct had met with general approbation. + +As soon as Madame F---- had seen her maid, she desired me to be shewn in. +The curtains were drawn aside, and I thought I saw Aurora surrounded with +the roses and the pearls of morning. I told her that, if it had not been +for the order I received from M. D---- R---- I would not have presumed to +present myself before her in my travelling costume; and in the most +friendly tone she answered that M. D---- R-----, knowing all the interest +she felt in me, had been quite right to tell me to come, and she assured +me that M. D---- R----- had the greatest esteem for me. + +"I do not know, madam, how I have deserved such great happiness, for all +I dared aim at was toleration." + +"We all admired the control you kept over your feelings when you +refrained from killing that insolent madman on the spot; he would have +been thrown out of the window if he had not beat a hurried retreat." + +"I should certainly have killed him, madam, if you had not been present." + +"A very pretty compliment, but I can hardly believe that you thought of +me in such a moment." + +I did not answer, but cast my eyes down, and gave a deep sigh. She +observed my new ring, and in order to change the subject of conversation +she praised M. D---- R----- very highly, as soon as I had told her how he +had offered it to me. She desired me to give her an account of my life on +the island, and I did so, but allowed my pretty needlewomen to remain +under a veil, for I had already learnt that in this world the truth must +often remain untold. + +All my adventures amused her much, and she greatly admired my conduct. + +"Would you have the courage," she said, "to repeat all you have just told +me, and exactly in the same terms, before the proveditore-generale?" + +"Most certainly, madam, provided he asked me himself." + +"Well, then, prepare to redeem your promise. I want our excellent general +to love you and to become your warmest protector, so as to shield you +against every injustice and to promote your advancement. Leave it all to +me." + +Her reception fairly overwhelmed me with happiness, and on leaving her +house I went to Major Maroli to find out the state of my finances. I was +glad to hear that after my escape he had no longer considered me a +partner in the faro bank. I took four hundred sequins from the cashier, +reserving the right to become again a partner, should circumstances prove +at any time favourable. + +In the evening I made a careful toilet, and called for the Adjutant +Minolto in order to pay with him a visit to Madame Sagredo, the general's +favourite. With the exception of Madame F---- she was the greatest beauty +of Corfu. My visit surprised her, because, as she had been the cause of +all that had happened, she was very far from expecting it. She imagined +that I had a spite against her. I undeceived her, speaking to her very +candidly, and she treated me most kindly, inviting me to come now and +then to spend the evening at her house. + +But I neither accepted nor refused her amiable invitation, knowing that +Madame F---- disliked her; and how could I be a frequent guest at her +house with such a knowledge! Besides, Madame Sagredo was very fond of +gambling, and, to please her, it was necessary either to lose or make her +win, but to accept such conditions one must be in love with the lady or +wish to make her conquest, and I had not the slightest idea of either. +The Adjutant Minolto never played, but he had captivated the lady's good +graces by his services in the character of Mercury. + +When I returned to the palace I found Madame F---- alone, M. +D---- R---- being engaged with his correspondence. She asked me to sit +near her, and to tell her all my adventures in Constantinople. I did so, +and I had no occasion to repent it. My meeting with Yusuf's wife pleased +her extremely, but the bathing scene by moonlight made her blush with +excitement. I veiled as much as I could the too brilliant colours of my +picture, but, if she did not find me clear, she would oblige me to be +more explicit, and if I made myself better understood by giving to my +recital a touch of voluptuousness which I borrowed from her looks more +than from my recollection, she would scold me and tell me that I might +have disguised a little more. I felt that the way she was talking would +give her a liking for me, and I was satisfied that the man who can give +birth to amorous desires is easily called upon to gratify them it was the +reward I was ardently longing for, and I dared to hope it would be mine, +although I could see it only looming in the distance. + +It happened that, on that day, M. D---- R---- had invited a large company +to supper. I had, as a matter of course, to engross all conversation, and +to give the fullest particulars of all that had taken place from the +moment I received the order to place myself under arrest up to the time +of my release from the 'bastarda'. M. Foscari was seated next to me, and +the last part of my narrative was not, I suppose, particularly agreeable +to him. + +The account I gave of my adventures pleased everybody, and it was decided +that the proveditore-generale must have the pleasure of hearing my tale +from my own lips. I mentioned that hay was very plentiful in Casopo, and +as that article was very scarce in Corfu, M. D---- R---- told me that I +ought to seize the opportunity of making myself agreeable to the general +by informing him of that circumstance without delay. I followed his +advice the very next day, and was very well received, for his excellency +immediately ordered a squad of men to go to the island and bring large +quantities of hay to Corfu. + +A few days later the Adjutant Minolto came to me in the coffee-house, and +told me that the general wished to see me: this time I promptly obeyed +his commands. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +Progress of My Amour--My Journey to Otranto--I Enter the Service of +Madame F.--A Fortunate Excoriation + +The room I entered was full of people. His excellency, seeing me, smiled +and drew upon me the attention of all his guests by saying aloud, "Here +comes the young man who is a good judge of princes." + +"My lord, I have become a judge of nobility by frequenting the society of +men like you." + +"The ladies are curious to know all you have done from the time of your +escape from Corfu up to your return." + +"Then you sentence me, monsignor, to make a public confession?" + +"Exactly; but, as it is to be a confession, be careful not to omit the +most insignificant circumstance, and suppose that I am not in the room." + +"On the contrary, I wish to receive absolution only from your excellency. +But my history will be a long one." + +"If such is the case, your confessor gives you permission to be seated." + +I gave all the particulars of my adventures, with the exception of my +dalliance with the nymphs of the island. + +"Your story is a very instructive one," observed the general. + +"Yes, my lord, for the adventures shew that a young man is never so near +his utter ruin than when, excited by some great passion, he finds himself +able to minister to it, thanks to the gold in his purse." + +I was preparing to take my leave, when the majordomo came to inform me +that his excellency desired me to remain to supper. I had therefore the +honour of a seat at his table, but not the pleasure of eating, for I was +obliged to answer the questions addressed to me from all quarters, and I +could not contrive to swallow a single mouthful. I was seated next to the +Proto-Papa Bulgari, and I entreated his pardon for having ridiculed +Deldimopulo's oracle. "It is nothing else but regular cheating," he said, +"but it is very difficult to put a stop to it; it is an old custom." + +A short time afterwards, Madame F---- whispered a few words to the +general, who turned to me and said that he would be glad to hear me +relate what had occurred to me in Constantinople with the wife of the +Turk Yusuf, and at another friend's house, where I had seen bathing by +moonlight. I was rather surprised at such an invitation, and told him +that such frolics were not worth listening to, and the general not +pressing me no more was said about it. But I was astonished at Madame +F----'s indiscretion; she had no business to make my confidences public. +I wanted her to be jealous of her own dignity, which I loved even more +than her person. + +Two or three days later, she said to me, + +"Why did you refuse to tell your adventures in Constantinople before the +general?" + +"Because I do not wish everybody to know that you allow me to tell you +such things. What I may dare, madam, to say to you when we are alone, I +would certainly not say to you in public." + +"And why not? It seems to me, on the contrary, that if you are silent in +public out of respect for me, you ought to be all the more silent when we +are alone." + +"I wanted to amuse you, and have exposed myself to the danger of +displeasing you, but I can assure you, madam, that I will not run such a +risk again." + +"I have no wish to pry into your intentions, but it strikes me that if +your wish was to please me, you ought not to have run the risk of +obtaining the opposite result. We take supper with the general this +evening, and M. D---- R----- has been asked to bring you. I feel certain +that the general will ask you again for your adventures in +Constantinople, and this time you cannot refuse him." + +M. D---- R---- came in and we went to the general's. I thought as we were +driving along that, although Madame F---- seemed to have intended to +humiliate me, I ought to accept it all as a favour of fortune, because, +by compelling me to explain my refusal to the general; Madame F---- had, +at the same time, compelled me to a declaration of my feelings, which was +not without importance. + +The 'proveditore-generale' gave me a friendly welcome, and kindly handed +me a letter which had come with the official dispatches from +Constantinople. I bowed my thanks, and put the letter in my pocket: but +he told me that he was himself a great lover of news, and that I could +read my letter. I opened it; it was from Yusuf, who announced the death +of Count de Bonneval. Hearing the name of the worthy Yusuf, the general +asked me to tell him my adventure with his wife. I could not now refuse, +and I began a story which amused and interested the general and his +friends for an hour or so, but which was from beginning to end the work +of my imagination. + +Thus I continued to respect the privacy of Yusuf, to avoid implicating +the good fame of Madame F----, and to shew myself in a light which was +tolerably advantageous to me. My story, which was full of sentiment, did +me a great deal of honour, and I felt very happy when I saw from the +expression of Madame F----'s face that she was pleased with me, although +somewhat surprised. + +When we found ourselves again in her house she told me, in the presence +of M. D---- R-----, that the story I had related to the general was +certainly very pretty, although purely imaginary, that she was not angry +with me, because I had amused her, but that she could not help remarking +my obstinacy in refusing compliance with her wishes. Then, turning to M. +D---- R-----, she said, + +"M. Casanova pretends that if he had given an account of his meeting with +Yusuf's wife without changing anything everybody would think that I +allowed him to entertain me with indecent stories. I want you to give +your opinion about it. Will you," she added, speaking to me, "be so good +as to relate immediately the adventure in the same words which you have +used when you told me of it?" + +"Yes, madam, if you wish me to do so." + +Stung to the quick by an indiscretion which, as I did not yet know women +thoroughly, seemed to me without example, I cast all fears of displeasing +to the winds, related the adventure with all the warmth of an impassioned +poet, and without disguising or attenuating in the least the desires +which the charms of the Greek beauty had inspired me with. + +"Do you think," said M. D---- R---- to Madame F-----, "that he ought to +have related that adventure before all our friends as he has just related +it to us?" + +"If it be wrong for him to tell it in public, it is also wrong to tell it +to me in private." + +"You are the only judge of that: yes, if he has displeased you; no, if he +has amused you. As for my own opinion, here it is: He has just now amused +me very much, but he would have greatly displeased me if he had related +the same adventure in public." + +"Then," exclaimed Madame F----, "I must request you never to tell me in +private anything that you cannot repeat in public." + +"I promise, madam, to act always according to your wishes." + +"It being understood," added M. D---- R-----, smiling, "that madam +reserves all rights of repealing that order whenever she may think fit." + +I was vexed, but I contrived not to show it. A few minutes more, and we +took leave of Madame F----. + +I was beginning to understand that charming woman, and to dread the +ordeal to which she would subject me. But love was stronger than fear, +and, fortified with hope, I had the courage to endure the thorns, so as +to gather the rose at the end of my sufferings. I was particularly +pleased to find that M. D---- R---- was not jealous of me, even when she +seemed to dare him to it. This was a point of the greatest importance. + +A few days afterwards, as I was entertaining her on various subjects, she +remarked how unfortunate it had been for me to enter the lazzaretto at +Ancona without any money. + +"In spite of my distress," I said, "I fell in love with a young and +beautiful Greek slave, who very nearly contrived to make me break through +all the sanitary laws." + +"How so?" + +"You are alone, madam, and I have not forgotten your orders." + +"Is it a very improper story?" + +"No: yet I would not relate it to you in public." + +"Well," she said, laughing, "I repeal my order, as M. D---- R---- said I +would. Tell me all about it." + +I told my story, and, seeing that she was pensive, I exaggerated the +misery I had felt at not being able to complete my conquest. + +"What do you mean by your misery? I think that the poor girl was more to +be pitied than you. You have never seen her since?" + +"I beg your pardon, madam; I met her again, but I dare not tell you when +or how." + +"Now you must go on; it is all nonsense for you to stop. Tell me all; I +expect you have been guilty of some black deed." + +"Very far from it, madam, for it was a very sweet, although incomplete, +enjoyment." + +"Go on! But do not call things exactly by their names. It is not +necessary to go into details." + +Emboldened by the renewal of her order, I told her, without looking her +in the face, of my meeting with the Greek slave in the presence of +Bellino, and of the act which was cut short by the appearance of her +master. When I had finished my story, Madame F---- remained silent, and I +turned the conversation into a different channel, for though I felt +myself on an excellent footing with her, I knew likewise that I had to +proceed with great prudence. She was too young to have lowered herself +before, and she would certainly look upon a connection with me as a +lowering of her dignity. + +Fortune which had always smiled upon me in the most hopeless cases, did +not intend to ill-treat me on this occasion, and procured me, on that +very same day, a favour of a very peculiar nature. My charming ladylove +having pricked her finger rather severely, screamed loudly, and stretched +her hand towards me, entreating me to suck the blood flowing from the +wound. You may judge, dear reader, whether I was long in seizing that +beautiful hand, and if you are, or if you have ever been in love, you +will easily guess the manner in which I performed my delightful work. +What is a kiss? Is it not an ardent desire to inhale a portion of the +being we love? Was not the blood I was sucking from that charming wound a +portion of the woman I worshipped? When I had completed my work, she +thanked me affectionately, and told me to spit out the blood I had +sucked. + +"It is here," I said, placing my hand on my heart, "and God alone knows +what happiness it has given me." + +"You have drunk my blood with happiness! Are you then a cannibal?" + +"I believe not, madam; but it would have been sacrilege in my eyes if I +had suffered one single drop of your blood to be lost." + +One evening, there was an unusually large attendance at M. D---- R-----'s +assembly, and we were talking of the carnival which was near at hand. +Everybody was regretting the lack of actors, and the impossibility of +enjoying the pleasures of the theatre. I immediately offered to procure a +good company at my expense, if the boxes were at once subscribed for, and +the monopoly of the faro bank granted to me. No time was to be lost, for +the carnival was approaching, and I had to go to Otranto to engage a +troop. My proposal was accepted with great joy, and the +proveditore-generale placed a felucca at my disposal. The boxes were all +taken in three days, and a Jew took the pit, two nights a week excepted, +which I reserved for my own profit. + +The carnival being very long that year, I had every chance of success. It +is said generally that the profession of theatrical manager is difficult, +but, if that is the case, I have not found it so by experience, and am +bound to affirm the contrary. + +I left Corfu in the evening, and having a good breeze in my favour, I +reached Otranto by day-break the following morning, without the oarsmen +having had to row a stroke. The distance from Corfu to Otranto is only +about fifteen leagues. + +I had no idea of landing, owing to the quarantine which is always +enforced for any ship or boat coming to Italy from the east. I only went +to the parlour of the lazaretto, where, placed behind a grating, you can +speak to any person who calls, and who must stand behind another grating +placed opposite, at a distance of six feet. + +As soon as I announced that I had come for the purpose of engaging a +troupe of actors to perform in Corfu, the managers of the two companies +then in Otranto came to the parlour to speak to me. I told them at once +that I wished to see all the performers, one company at a time. + +The two rival managers gave me then a very comic scene, each manager +wanting the other to bring his troupe first. The harbour-master told me +that the only way to settle the matter was to say myself which of the two +companies I would see first: one was from Naples, the other from Sicily. +Not knowing either I gave the preference to the first. Don Fastidio, the +manager, was very vexed, while Battipaglia, the director of the second, +was delighted because he hoped that, after seeing the Neapolitan troupe, +I would engage his own. + +An hour afterwards, Fastidio returned with all his performers, and my +surprise may be imagined when amongst them I recognized Petronio and his +sister Marina, who, the moment she saw me, screamed for joy, jumped over +the grating, and threw herself in my arms. A terrible hubbub followed, +and high words passed between Fastidio and the harbour-master. Marina +being in the service of Fastidio, the captain compelled him to confine +her to the lazaretto, where she would have to perform quarantine at his +expense. The poor girl cried bitterly, but I could not remedy her +imprudence. + +I put a stop to the quarrel by telling Fastidio to shew me all his +people, one after the other. Petronio belonged to his company, and +performed the lovers. He told me that he had a letter for me from +Therese. I was also glad to see a Venetian of my acquaintance who played +the pantaloon in the pantomime, three tolerably pretty actresses, a +pulcinella, and a scaramouch. Altogether, the troupe was a decent one. + +I told Fastidio to name the lowest salary he wanted for all his company, +assuring him that I would give the preference to his rival, if he should +ask me too much. + +"Sir," he answered, "we are twenty, and shall require six rooms with ten +beds, one sitting-room for all of us, and thirty Neapolitan ducats a day, +all travelling expenses paid. Here is my stock of plays, and we will +perform those that you may choose." + +Thinking of poor Marina who would have to remain in the lazaretto before +she could reappear on the stage at Otranto, I told Fastidio to get the +contract ready, as I wanted to go away immediately. + +I had scarcely pronounced these words than war broke out again between +the manager-elect and his unfortunate competitor. Battipaglia, in his +rage, called Marina a harlot, and said that she had arranged beforehand +with Fastidio to violate the rules of the lazaretto in order to compel me +to choose their troupe. Petronio, taking his sister's part, joined +Fastidio, and the unlucky Battipaglia was dragged outside and treated to +a generous dose of blows and fisticuffs, which was not exactly the thing +to console him for a lost engagement. + +Soon afterwards, Petronio brought me Therese's letter. She was ruining +the duke, getting rich accordingly, and waiting for me in Naples. + +Everything being ready towards evening, I left Otranto with twenty +actors, and six large trunks containing their complete wardrobes. A light +breeze which was blowing from the south might have carried us to Corfu in +ten hours, but when we had sailed about one hour my cayabouchiri informed +me that he could see by the moonlight a ship which might prove to be a +corsair, and get hold of us. I was unwilling to risk anything, so I +ordered them to lower the sails and return to Otranto. At day-break we +sailed again with a good westerly wind, which would also have taken us to +Corfu; but after we had gone two or three hours, the captain pointed out +to me a brigantine, evidently a pirate, for she was shaping her course so +as to get to windward of us. I told him to change the course, and to go +by starboard, to see if the brigantine would follow us, but she +immediately imitated our manoeuvre. I could not go back to Otranto, and I +had no wish to go to Africa, so I ordered the men to shape our course, so +as to land on the coast of Calabria, by hard rowing and at the nearest +point. The sailors, who were frightened to death, communicated their +fears to my comedians, and soon I heard nothing but weeping and sobbing. +Every one of them was calling earnestly upon some saint, but not one +single prayer to God did I hear. The bewailings of scaramouch, the dull +and spiritless despair of Fastidio, offered a picture which would have +made me laugh heartily if the danger had been imaginary and not real. +Marina alone was cheerful and happy, because she did not realize the +danger we were running, and she laughed at the terror of the crew and of +her companions. + +A strong breeze sprang up towards evening, so I ordered them to clap on +all sail and scud before the wind, even if it should get stronger. In +order to escape the pirate, I had made up my mind to cross the gulf. We +took the wind through the night, and in the morning we were eighty miles +from Corfu, which I determined to reach by rowing. We were in the middle +of the gulf, and the sailors were worn out with fatigue, but I had no +longer any fear. A gale began to blow from the north, and in less than an +hour it was blowing so hard that we were compelled to sail close to the +wind in a fearful manner. The felucca looked every moment as if it must +capsize. Every one looked terrified but kept complete silence, for I had +enjoined it on penalty of death. In spite of our dangerous position, I +could not help laughing when I heard the sobs of the cowardly scaramouch. +The helmsman was a man of great nerve, and the gale being steady I felt +we would reach Corfu without mishap. At day-break we sighted the town, +and at nine in the morning we landed at Mandrachia. Everybody was +surprised to see us arrive that way. + +As soon as my company was landed, the young officers naturally came to +inspect the actresses, but they did not find them very desirable, with +the exception of Marina, who received uncomplainingly the news that I +could not renew my acquaintance with her. I felt certain that she would +not lack admirers. But my actresses, who had appeared ugly at the +landing, produced a very different effect on the stage, and particularly +the pantaloon's wife. M. Duodo, commander of a man-of-war, called upon +her, and, finding master pantaloon intolerant on the subject of his +better-half, gave him a few blows with his cane. Fastidio informed me the +next day that the pantaloon and his wife refused to perform any more, but +I made them alter their mind by giving them a benefit night. + +The pantaloon's wife was much applauded, but she felt insulted because, +in the midst of the applause, the pit called out, "Bravo, Duodo!" She +presented herself to the general in his own box, in which I was +generally, and complained of the manner in which she was treated. The +general promised her, in my name, another benefit night for the close of +the carnival, and I was of course compelled to ratify his promise. The +fact is, that, to satisfy the greedy actors, I abandoned to my comedians, +one by one, the seventeen nights I had reserved for myself. The benefit I +gave to Marina was at the special request of Madame F----, who had taken +her into great favour since she had had the honour of breakfasting alone +with M. D---- R---- in a villa outside of the city. + +My generosity cost me four hundred sequins, but the faro bank brought me +a thousand and more, although I never held the cards, my management of +the theatre taking up all my time. My manner with the actresses gained me +great kindness; it was clearly seen that I carried on no intrigue with +any of them, although I had every facility for doing so. Madame +F---- complimented me, saying that she had not entertained such a good +opinion of my discretion. I was too busy through the carnival to think of +love, even of the passion which filled my heart. It was only at the +beginning of Lent, and after the departure of the comedians, that I could +give rein to my feelings. + +One morning Madame F---- sent, a messenger who, summoned me to her +presence. It was eleven o'clock; I immediately went to her, and enquired +what I could do for her service. + +"I wanted to see you," she said, "to return the two hundred sequins which +you lent me so nobly. Here they are; be good enough to give me back my +note of hand." + +"Your note of hand, madam, is no longer in my possession. I have +deposited it in a sealed envelope with the notary who, according to this +receipt of his, can return it only to you." + +"Why did you not keep it yourself?" + +"Because I was afraid of losing it, or of having it stolen. And in the +event of my death I did not want such a document to fall into any other +hands but yours." + +"A great proof of your extreme delicacy, certainly, but I think you ought +to have reserved the right of taking it out of the notary's custody +yourself." + +"I did not forsee the possibility of calling for it myself." + +"Yet it was a very likely thing. Then I can send word to the notary to +transmit it to me?" + +"Certainly, madam; you alone can claim it." + +She sent to the notary, who brought the himself. + +She tore the envelope open, and found only a piece of paper besmeared +with ink, quite illegible, except her own name, which had not been +touched. + +"You have acted," she said, "most nobly; but you must agree with me that +I cannot be certain that this piece of paper is really my note of hand, +although I see my name on it." + +"True, madam; and if you are not certain of it, I confess myself in the +wrong." + +"I must be certain of it, and I am so; but you must grant that I could +not swear to it." + +"Granted, madam." + +During the following days it struck me that her manner towards me was +singularly altered. She never received me in her dishabille, and I had to +wait with great patience until her maid had entirely dressed her before +being admitted into her presence. + +If I related any story, any adventure, she pretended not to understand, +and affected not to see the point of an anecdote or a jest; very often +she would purposely not look at me, and then I was sure to relate badly. +If M. D---- R---- laughed at something I had just said, she would ask what +he was laughing for, and when he had told her, she would say it was +insipid or dull. If one of her bracelets became unfastened, I offered to +fasten it again, but either she would not give me so much trouble, or I +did not understand the fastening, and the maid was called to do it. I +could not help shewing my vexation, but she did not seem to take the +slightest notice of it. If M. D---- R---- excited me to say something +amusing or witty, and I did not speak immediately, she would say that my +budget was empty, laughing, and adding that the wit of poor M. Casanova +was worn out. Full of rage, I would plead guilty by my silence to her +taunting accusation, but I was thoroughly miserable, for I did not see +any cause for that extraordinary change in her feelings, being conscious +that I had not given her any motive for it. I wanted to shew her openly +my indifference and contempt, but whenever an opportunity offered, my +courage would forsake me, and I would let it escape. + +One evening M. D---- R---- asking me whether I had often been in love, I +answered, + +"Three times, my lord." + +"And always happily, of course." + +"Always unhappily. The first time, perhaps, because, being an +ecclesiastic, I durst not speak openly of my love. The second, because a +cruel, unexpected event compelled me to leave the woman I loved at the +very moment in which my happiness would have been complete. The third +time, because the feeling of pity, with which I inspired the beloved +object, induced her to cure me of my passion, instead of crowning my +felicity." + +"But what specific remedies did she use to effect your cure?" + +"She has ceased to be kind." + +"I understand she has treated you cruelly, and you call that pity, do +you? You are mistaken." + +"Certainly," said Madame F----, "a woman may pity the man she loves, but +she would not think of ill-treating him to cure him of his passion. That +woman has never felt any love for you." + +"I cannot, I will not believe it, madam." + +"But are you cured?" + +"Oh! thoroughly; for when I happen to think of her, I feel nothing but +indifference and coldness. But my recovery was long." + +"Your convalescence lasted, I suppose, until you fell in love with +another." + +"With another, madam? I thought I had just told you that the third time I +loved was the last." + +A few days after that conversation, M. D---- R---- told me that Madame +F---- was not well, that he could not keep her company, and that I ought +to go to her, as he was sure she would be glad to see me. I obeyed, and +told Madame F---- what M. D---- R---- had said. She was lying on a sofa. +Without looking at me, she told me she was feverish, and would not ask me +to remain with her, because I would feel weary. + +"I could not experience any weariness in your society, madam; at all +events, I can leave you only by your express command, and, in that case, +I must spend the next four hours in your ante-room, for M. D--- R---- has +told me to wait for him here." + +"If so, you may take a seat." + +Her cold and distant manner repelled me, but I loved her, and I had never +seen her so beautiful, a slight fever animating her complexion which was +then truly dazzling in its beauty. I kept where I was, dumb and as +motionless as a statue, for a quarter of an hour. Then she rang for her +maid, and asked me to leave her alone for a moment. I was called back +soon after, and she said to me, + +"What has become of your cheerfulness?" + +"If it has disappeared, madam, it can only be by your will. Call it back, +and you will see it return in full force." + +"What must I do to obtain that result?" + +"Only be towards me as you were when I returned from Casopo. I have been +disagreeable to you for the last four months, and as I do not know why, I +feel deeply grieved." + +"I am always the same: in what do you find me changed?" + +"Good heavens! In everything, except in beauty. But I have taken my +decision." + +"And what is it?" + +"To suffer in silence, without allowing any circumstance to alter the +feelings with which you have inspired me; to wish ardently to convince +you of my perfect obedience to your commands; to be ever ready to give +you fresh proofs of my devotion." + +"I thank you, but I cannot imagine what you can have to suffer in silence +on my account. I take an interest in you, and I always listen with +pleasure to your adventures. As a proof of it, I am extremely curious to +hear the history of your three loves." + +I invented on the spot three purely imaginary stories, making a great +display of tender sentiments and of ardent love, but without alluding to +amorous enjoyment, particularly when she seemed to expect me to do so. +Sometimes delicacy, sometimes respect or duty, interfered to prevent the +crowning pleasure, and I took care to observe, at such moments of +disappointment, that a true lover does not require that all important +item to feel perfectly happy. I could easily see that her imagination was +travelling farther than my narrative, and that my reserve was agreeable +to her. I believed I knew her nature well enough to be certain that I was +taking the best road to induce her to follow me where I wished to lead +her. She expressed a sentiment which moved me deeply, but I was careful +not to shew it. We were talking of my third love, of the woman who, out +of pity, had undertaken to cure me, and she remarked, + +"If she truly loved you, she may have wished not to cure you, but to cure +herself." + +On the day following this partial reconciliation, M. F----, her husband, +begged my commanding officer, D---- R-----, to let me go with him to +Butintro for an excursion of three days, his own adjutant being seriously +ill. + +Butintro is seven miles from Corfu, almost opposite to that city; it is +the nearest point to the island from the mainland. It is not a fortress, +but only a small village of Epirus, or Albania, as it is now called, and +belonging to the Venetians. Acting on the political axiom that "neglected +right is lost right," the Republic sends every year four galleys to +Butintro with a gang of galley slaves to fell trees, cut them, and load +them on the galleys, while the military keep a sharp look-out to prevent +them from escaping to Turkey and becoming Mussulmans. One of the four +galleys was commanded by M. F---- who, wanting an adjutant for the +occasion, chose me. + +I went with him, and on the fourth day we came back to Corfu with a large +provision of wood. I found M. D---- R---- alone on the terrace of his +palace. It was Good Friday. He seemed thoughtful, and, after a silence of +a few minutes, he spoke the following words, which I can never forget: + +"M. F-----, whose adjutant died yesterday, has just been entreating me to +give you to him until he can find another officer. I have told him that I +had no right to dispose of your person, and that he, ought to apply to +you, assuring him that, if you asked me leave to go with him, I would not +raise any objection, although I require two adjutants. Has he not +mentioned the matter to you?" + +"No, monsignor, he has only tendered me his thanks for having accompanied +him to Butintro, nothing else." + +"He is sure to speak to you about it. What do you intend to say?" + +"Simply that I will never leave the service of your excellency without +your express command to do so." + +"I never will give you such an order." + +As M. D---- R---- was saying the last word, M. and Madame F---- came in. +Knowing that the conversation would most likely turn upon the subject +which had just been broached, I hurried out of the room. In less than a +quarter of an hour I was sent for, and M. F---- said to me, +confidentially, + +"Well, M. Casanova, would you not be willing to live with me as my +adjutant?" + +"Does his excellency dismiss me from his service?" + +"Not at all," observed M. D---- R----, "but I leave you the choice." + +"My lord, I could not be guilty of ingratitude." + +And I remained there standing, uneasy, keeping my eyes on the ground, not +even striving to conceal my mortification, which was, after all, very +natural in such a position. I dreaded looking at Madame F----, for I knew +that she could easily guess all my feelings. An instant after, her +foolish husband coldly remarked that I should certainly have a more +fatiguing service with him than with M. D---- R----, and that, of course, +it was more honourable to serve the general governor of the galeazze than +a simple sopra-committo. I was on the point of answering, when Madame +F---- said, in a graceful and easy manner, "M. Casanova is right," and she +changed the subject. I left the room, revolving in my mind all that had +just taken place. + +My conclusion was that M. F---- had asked M. D---- R---- to let me go with +him at the suggestion of his wife, or, at least with her consent, and it +was highly flattering to my love and to my vanity. But I was bound in +honour not to accept the post, unless I had a perfect assurance that it +would not be disagreeable to my present patron. "I will accept," I said +to myself, "if M. D---- R---- tells me positively that I shall please him +by doing so. It is for M. F to make him say it." + +On the same night I had the honour of offering my arm to Madame +F---during the procession which takes place in commemoration of the death +of our Lord and Saviour, which was then attended on foot by all the +nobility. I expected she would mention the matter, but she did not. My +love was in despair, and through the night I could not close my eyes. I +feared she had been offended by my refusal, and was overwhelmed with +grief. I passed the whole of the next day without breaking my fast, and +did not utter a single word during the evening reception. I felt very +unwell, and I had an attack of fever which kept me in bed on Easter +Sunday. I was very weak on the Monday, and intended to remain in my room, +when a messenger from Madame F---- came to inform me that she wished to +see me. I told the messenger not to say that he had found me in bed, and +dressing myself rapidly I hurried to her house. I entered her room, pale, +looking very ill: yet she did not enquire after my health, and kept +silent a minute or two, as if she had been trying to recollect what she +had to say to me. + +"Ah! yes, you are aware that our adjutant is dead, and that we want to +replace him. My husband, who has a great esteem for you, and feels that +M. D---- R---- leaves you perfectly free to make your choice, has taken +the singular fancy that you will come, if I ask you myself to do us that +pleasure. Is he mistaken? If you would come to us, you would have that +room." + +She was pointing to a room adjoining the chamber in which she slept, and +so situated that, to see her in every part of her room, I should not even +require to place myself at the window. + +"M. D---- R-----," she continued, "will not love you less, and as he will +see you here every day, he will not be likely to forget his interest in +your welfare. Now, tell me, will you come or not?" + +"I wish I could, madam, but indeed I cannot." + +"You cannot? That is singular. Take a seat, and tell me what there is to +prevent you, when, in accepting my offer, you are sure to please M. +D---- R---- as well as us." + +"If I were certain of it, I would accept immediately; but all I have +heard from his lips was that he left me free to make a choice." + +"Then you are afraid to grieve him, if you come to us?" + +"It might be, and for nothing on earth...." + +"I am certain of the contrary." + +"Will you be so good as to obtain that he says so to me himself?" + +"And then you will come?" + +"Oh, madam! that very minute!" + +But the warmth of my exclamation might mean a great deal, and I turned my +head round so as not to embarrass her. She asked me to give her her +mantle to go to church, and we went out. As we were going down the +stairs, she placed her ungloved hand upon mine. It was the first time +that she had granted me such a favour, and it seemed to me a good omen. +She took off her hand, asking me whether I was feverish. "Your hand," she +said, "is burning." + +When we left the church, M. D---- R-----'s carriage happened to pass, and +I assisted her to get in, and as soon as she had gone, hurried to my room +in order to breathe freely and to enjoy all the felicity which filled my +soul; for I no longer doubted her love for me, and I knew that, in this +case, M. D---- R---- was not likely to refuse her anything. + +What is love? I have read plenty of ancient verbiage on that subject, I +have read likewise most of what has been said by modern writers, but +neither all that has been said, nor what I have thought about it, when I +was young and now that I am no longer so, nothing, in fact, can make me +agree that love is a trifling vanity. It is a sort of madness, I grant +that, but a madness over which philosophy is entirely powerless; it is a +disease to which man is exposed at all times, no matter at what age, and +which cannot be cured, if he is attacked by it in his old age. Love being +sentiment which cannot be explained! God of all nature!--bitter and sweet +feeling! Love!--charming monster which cannot be fathomed! God who, in +the midst of all the thorns with which thou plaguest us, strewest so many +roses on our path that, without thee, existence and death would be united +and blended together! + +Two days afterwards, M. D---- R-----, told me to go and take orders from +M. F---- on board his galley, which was ready for a five or six days' +voyage. I quickly packed a few things, and called for my new patron who +received me with great joy. We took our departure without seeing madam, +who was not yet visible. We returned on the sixth day, and I went to +establish myself in my new home, for, as I was preparing to go to M. +D---- R-----, to take his orders, after our landing, he came himself, and +after asking M. F---- and me whether we were pleased with each other, he +said to me, + +"Casanova, as you suit each other so well, you may be certain that you +will greatly please me by remaining in the service of M. F." + +I obeyed respectfully, and in less than one hour I had taken possession +of my new quarters. Madame F---- told me how delighted she was to see that +great affair ended according to her wishes, and I answered with a deep +reverence. + +I found myself like the salamander, in the very heart of the fire for +which I had been longing so ardently. + +Almost constantly in the presence of Madame F----, dining often alone +with her, accompanying her in her walks, even when M. D---- R---- was not +with us, seeing her from my room, or conversing with her in her chamber, +always reserved and attentive without pretension, the first night passed +by without any change being brought about by that constant intercourse. +Yet I was full of hope, and to keep up my courage I imagined that love +was not yet powerful enough to conquer her pride. I expected everything +from some lucky chance, which I promised myself to improve as soon as it +should present itself, for I was persuaded that a lover is lost if he +does not catch fortune by the forelock. + +But there was one circumstance which annoyed me. In public, she seized +every opportunity of treating me with distinction, while, when we were +alone, it was exactly the reverse. In the eyes of the world I had all the +appearance of a happy lover, but I would rather have had less of the +appearance of happiness and more of the reality. My love for her was +disinterested; vanity had no share in my feelings. + +One day, being alone with me, she said, + +"You have enemies, but I silenced them last night." + +"They are envious, madam, and they would pity me if they could read the +secret pages of my heart. You could easily deliver me from those +enemies." + +"How can you be an object of pity for them, and how could I deliver you +from them?" + +"They believe me happy, and I am miserable; you would deliver me from +them by ill-treating me in their presence." + +"Then you would feel my bad treatment less than the envy of the wicked?" + +"Yes, madam, provided your bad treatment in public were compensated by +your kindness when we are alone, for there is no vanity in the happiness +I feel in belonging to you. Let others pity me, I will be happy on +condition that others are mistaken." + +"That's a part that I can never play." + +I would often be indiscreet enough to remain behind the curtain of the +window in my room, looking at her when she thought herself perfectly +certain that nobody saw her; but the liberty I was thus guilty of never +proved of great advantage to me. Whether it was because she doubted my +discretion or from habitual reserve, she was so particular that, even +when I saw her in bed, my longing eyes never could obtain a sight of +anything but her head. + +One day, being present in her room while her maid was cutting off the +points of her long and beautiful hair, I amused myself in picking up all +those pretty bits, and put them all, one after the other, on her +toilettable, with the exception of one small lock which I slipped into my +pocket, thinking that she had not taken any notice of my keeping it; but +the moment we were alone she told me quietly, but rather too seriously, +to take out of my pocket the hair I had picked up from the floor. +Thinking she was going too far, and such rigour appearing to me as cruel +as it was unjust and absurd, I obeyed, but threw the hair on the +toilet-table with an air of supreme contempt. + +"Sir, you forget yourself." + +"No, madam, I do not, for you might have feigned not to have observed +such an innocent theft." + +"Feigning is tiresome." + +"Was such petty larceny a very great crime?" + +"No crime, but it was an indication of feelings which you have no right +to entertain for me." + +"Feelings which you are at liberty not to return, madam, but which hatred +or pride can alone forbid my heart to experience. If you had a heart you +would not be the victim of either of those two fearful passions, but you +have only head, and it must be a very wicked head, judging by the care it +takes to heap humiliation upon me. You have surprised my secret, madam, +you may use it as you think proper, but in the meantime I have learned to +know you thoroughly. That knowledge will prove more useful than your +discovery, for perhaps it will help me to become wiser." + +After this violent tirade I left her, and as she did not call me back +retired to my room. In the hope that sleep would bring calm, I undressed +and went to bed. In such moments a lover hates the object of his love, +and his heart distils only contempt and hatred. I could not go to sleep, +and when I was sent for at supper-time I answered that I was ill. The +night passed off without my eyes being visited by sleep, and feeling weak +and low I thought I would wait to see what ailed me, and refused to have +my dinner, sending word that I was still very unwell. Towards evening I +felt my heart leap for joy when I heard my beautiful lady-love enter my +room. Anxiety, want of food and sleep, gave me truly the appearance of +being ill, and I was delighted that it should be so. I sent her away very +soon, by telling her with perfect indifference that it was nothing but a +bad headache, to which I was subject, and that repose and diet would +effect a speedy cure. + +But at eleven o'clock she came back with her friend, M. D---- R-----, and +coming to my bed she said, affectionately, + +"What ails you, my poor Casanova?" + +"A very bad headache, madam, which will be cured to-morrow." + +"Why should you wait until to-morrow? You must get better at once. I have +ordered a basin of broth and two new-laid eggs for you." + +"Nothing, madam; complete abstinence can alone cure me." + +"He is right," said M. D---- R-----, "I know those attacks." + +I shook my head slightly. M. D---- R---- having just then turned round to +examine an engraving, she took my hand, saying that she would like me to +drink some broth, and I felt that she was giving me a small parcel. She +went to look at the engraving with M. D---- R-----. + +I opened the parcel, but feeling that it contained hair, I hurriedly +concealed it under the bed-clothes: at the same moment the blood rushed +to my head with such violence that it actually frightened me. I begged +for some water, she came to me, with M. D---- R-----, and then were both +frightened to see me so red, when they had seen me pale and weak only one +minute before. + +Madame F---- gave me a glass of water in which she put some Eau des carmes +which instantly acted as a violent emetic. Two or three minutes after I +felt better, and asked for something to eat. Madame F---- smiled. The +servant came in with the broth and the eggs, and while I was eating I +told the history of Pandolfin. M. D---- R---- thought it was all a +miracle, and I could read, on the countenance of the charming woman, +love, affection, and repentance. If M. D---- R---- had not been present, +it would have been the moment of my happiness, but I felt certain that I +should not have long to wait. M. D---- R---- told Madame F---- that, if he +had not seen me so sick, he would have believed my illness to be all +sham, for he did not think it possible for anyone to rally so rapidly. + +"It is all owing to my Eau des carmes," said Madame F-----, looking at +me, "and I will leave you my bottle." + +"No, madam, be kind enough to take it with you, for the water would have +no virtue without your presence." + +"I am sure of that," said M. D---- R-----, "so I will leave you here with +your patient." + +"No, no, he must go to sleep now." + +I slept all night, but in my happy dreams I was with her, and the reality +itself would hardly have procured me greater enjoyment than I had during +my happy slumbers. I saw I had taken a very long stride forward, for +twenty-four hours of abstinence gave me the right to speak to her openly +of my love, and the gift of her hair was an irrefutable confession of her +own feelings. + +On the following day, after presenting myself before M. F----, I went to +have a little chat with the maid, to wait until her mistress was visible, +which was not long, and I had the pleasure of hearing her laugh when the +maid told her I was there. As soon as I went in, without giving me time +to say a single word, she told me how delighted she was to see me looking +so well, and advised me to call upon M. D---- R-----. + +It is not only in the eyes of a lover, but also in those of every man of +taste, that a woman is a thousand times more lovely at the moment she +comes out of the arms of Morpheus than when she has completed her toilet. +Around Madame F---- more brilliant beams were blazing than around the sun +when he leaves the embrace of Aurora. Yet the most beautiful woman thinks +as much of her toilet as the one who cannot do without it--very likely +because more human creatures possess the more they want. + +In the order given to me by Madame F---- to call on M. D---- R-----, I saw +another reason to be certain of approaching happiness, for I thought +that, by dismissing me so quickly, she had only tried to postpone the +consummation which I might have pressed upon her, and which she could not +have refused. + +Rich in the possession of her hair, I held a consultation with my love to +decide what I ought to do with it, for Madame F----, very likely in her +wish to atone for the miserly sentiment which had refused me a small bit, +had given me a splendid lock, full a yard and a half long. Having thought +it over, I called upon a Jewish confectioner whose daughter was a skilful +embroiderer, and I made her embroider before me, on a bracelet of green +satin, the four initial letters of our names, and make a very thin chain +with the remainder. I had a piece of black ribbon added to one end of the +chain, in the shape of a sliding noose, with which I could easily +strangle myself if ever love should reduce me to despair, and I passed it +round my neck. As I did not want to lose even the smallest particle of so +precious a treasure, I cut with a pair of scissors all the small bits +which were left, and devoutly gathered them together. Then I reduced them +into a fine powder, and ordered the Jewish confectioner to mix the powder +in my presence with a paste made of amber, sugar, vanilla, angelica, +alkermes and storax, and I waited until the comfits prepared with that +mixture were ready. I had some more made with the same composition, but +without any hair; I put the first in a beautiful sweetmeat box of fine +crystal, and the second in a tortoise-shell box. + +From the day when, by giving me her hair, Madame F---- had betrayed the +secret feelings of her heart, I no longer lost my time in relating +stories or adventures; I only spoke to her of my cove, of my ardent +desires; I told her that she must either banish me from her presence, or +crown my happiness, but the cruel, charming woman would not accept that +alternative. She answered that happiness could not be obtained by +offending every moral law, and by swerving from our duties. If I threw +myself at her feet to obtain by anticipation her forgiveness for the +loving violence I intended to use against her, she would repulse me more +powerfully than if she had had the strength of a female Hercules, for she +would say, in a voice full of sweetness and affection, + +"My friend, I do not entreat you to respect my weakness, but be generous +enough to spare me for the sake of all the love I feel for you." + +"What! you love me, and you refuse to make me happy! It is impossible! it +is unnatural. You compel me to believe that you do not love me. Only +allow me to press my lips one moment upon your lips, and I ask no more." + +"No, dearest, no; it would only excite the ardour of your desires, shake +my resolution, and we should then find ourselves more miserable than we +are now." + +Thus did she every day plunge me in despair, and yet she complained that +my wit was no longer brilliant in society, that I had lost that +elasticity of spirits which had pleased her so much after my arrival from +Constantinople. M. D---- R-----, who often jestingly waged war against me, +used to say that I was getting thinner and thinner every day. Madame +F---- told me one day that my sickly looks were very disagreeable to her, +because wicked tongues would not fail to say that she treated me with +cruelty. Strange, almost unnatural thought! On it I composed an idyll +which I cannot read, even now, without feeling tears in my eyes. + +"What!" I answered, "you acknowledge your cruelty towards me? You are +afraid of the world guessing all your heartless rigour, and yet you +continue to enjoy it! You condemn me unmercifully to the torments of +Tantalus! You would be delighted to see me gay, cheerful, happy, even at +the expense of a judgment by which the world would find you guilty of a +supposed but false kindness towards me, and yet you refuse me even the +slightest favours!" + +"I do not mind people believing anything, provided it is not true." + +"What a contrast! Would it be possible for me not to love you, for you to +feel nothing for me? Such contradictions strike me as unnatural. But you +are growing thinner yourself, and I am dying. It must be so; we shall +both die before long, you of consumption, I of exhausting decline; for I +am now reduced to enjoying your shadow during the day, during the night, +always, everywhere, except when I am in your presence." + +At that passionate declaration, delivered with all the ardour of an +excited lover, she was surprised, deeply moved, and I thought that the +happy hour had struck. I folded her in my arms, and was already tasting +the first fruits of enjoyment. . . . The sentinel knocked twice! . . . Oh! +fatal mischance! I recovered my composure and stood in front of her. . . . +M. D---- R---- made his appearance, and this time he found me in so +cheerful a mood that he remained with us until one o'clock in the +morning. + +My comfits were beginning to be the talk of our society. M. D---- R-----, +Madame F----, and I were the only ones who had a box full of them. I was +stingy with them, and no one durst beg any from me, because I had said +that they were very expensive, and that in all Corfu there was no +confectioner who could make or physician who could analyse them. I never +gave one out of my crystal box, and Madame F. remarked it. I certainly +did not believe them to be amorous philtre, and I was very far from +supposing that the addition of the hair made them taste more delicious; +but a superstition, the offspring of my love, caused me to cherish them, +and it made me happy to think that a small portion of the woman I +worshipped was thus becoming a part of my being. + +Influenced perhaps by some secret sympathy, Madame F. was exceedingly +fond of the comfits. She asserted before all her friends that they were +the universal panacea, and knowing herself perfect mistress of the +inventor, she did not enquire after the secret of the composition. But +having observed that I gave away only the comfits which I kept in my +tortoise-shell box, and that I never eat any but those from the crystal +box, she one day asked me what reason I had for that. Without taking time +to think, I told her that in those I kept for myself there was a certain +ingredient which made the partaker love her. + +"I do not believe it," she answered; "but are they different from those I +eat myself?" + +"They are exactly the same, with the exception of the ingredient I have +just mentioned, which has been put only in mine." + +"Tell me what the ingredient is." + +"It is a secret which I cannot reveal to you." + +"Then I will never eat any of your comfits." + +Saying which, she rose, emptied her box, and filled it again with +chocolate drops; and for the next few days she was angry with me, and +avoided my company. I felt grieved, I became low-spirited, but I could +not make up my mind to tell her that I was eating her hair! + +She enquired why I looked so sad. + +"Because you refuse to take my comfits." + +"You are master of your secret, and I am mistress of my diet." + +"That is my reward for having taken you into my confidence." + +And I opened my box, emptied its contents in my hand, and swallowed the +whole of them, saying, "Two more doses like this, and I shall die mad +with love for you. Then you will be revenged for my reserve. Farewell, +madam." + +She called me back, made me take a seat near her, and told me not to +commit follies which would make her unhappy; that I knew how much she +loved me, and that it was not owing to the effect of any drug. "To prove +to you," she added, "that you do not require anything of the sort to be +loved, here is a token of my affection." And she offered me her lovely +lips, and upon them mine remained pressed until I was compelled to draw a +breath. I threw myself at her feet, with tears of love and gratitude +blinding my eyes, and told her that I would confess my crime, if she +would promise to forgive me. + +"Your crime! You frighten me. Yes, I forgive you, but speak quickly, and +tell me all." + +"Yes, everything. My comfits contain your hair reduced to a powder. Here +on my arm, see this bracelet on which our names are written with your +hair, and round my neck this chain of the same material, which will help +me to destroy my own life when your love fails me. Such is my crime, but +I would not have been guilty of it, if I had not loved you." + +She smiled, and, bidding me rise from my kneeling position, she told me +that I was indeed the most criminal of men, and she wiped away my tears, +assuring me that I should never have any reason to strangle myself with +the chain. + +After that conversation, in which I had enjoyed the sweet nectar of my +divinity's first kiss, I had the courage to behave in a very different +manner. She could see the ardour which consumed me; perhaps the same fire +burned in her veins, but I abstained from any attack. + +"What gives you," she said one day, "the strength to control yourself?" + +"After the kiss which you granted to me of your own accord, I felt that I +ought not to wish any favour unless your heart gave it as freely. You +cannot imagine the happiness that kiss has given me." + +"I not imagine it, you ungrateful man! Which of us has given that +happiness?" + +"Neither you nor I, angel of my soul! That kiss so tender, so sweet, was +the child of love!" + +"Yes, dearest, of love, the treasures of which are inexhaustible." + +The words were scarcely spoken, when our lips were engaged in happy +concert. She held me so tight against her bosom that I could not use my +hands to secure other pleasures, but I felt myself perfectly happy. After +that delightful skirmish, I asked her whether we were never to go any +further. + +"Never, dearest friend, never. Love is a child which must be amused with +trifles; too substantial food would kill it." + +"I know love better than you; it requires that substantial food, and +unless it can obtain it, love dies of exhaustion. Do not refuse me the +consolation of hope." + +"Hope as much as you please, if it makes you happy." + +"What should I do, if I had no hope? I hope, because I know you have a +heart." + +"Ah! yes. Do you recollect the day, when, in your anger, you told me that +I had only a head, but no heart, thinking you were insulting me grossly!" + +"Oh! yes, I recollect it." + +"How heartily I laughed, when I had time to think! Yes, dearest, I have a +heart, or I should not feel as happy as I feel now. Let us keep our +happiness, and be satisfied with it, as it is, without wishing for +anything more." + +Obedient to her wishes, but every day more deeply enamoured, I was in +hope that nature at last would prove stronger than prejudice, and would +cause a fortunate crisis. But, besides nature, fortune was my friend, and +I owed my happiness to an accident. + +Madame F. was walking one day in the garden, leaning on M. D---- R-----'s +arm, and was caught by a large rose-bush, and the prickly thorns left a +deep cut on her leg. M. D---- R---- bandaged the wound with his +handkerchief, so as to stop the blood which was flowing abundantly, and +she had to be carried home in a palanquin. + +In Corfu, wounds on the legs are dangerous when they are not well +attended to, and very often the wounded are compelled to leave the city +to be cured. + +Madame F---- was confined to her bed, and my lucky position in the house +condemned me to remain constantly at her orders. I saw her every minute; +but, during the first three days, visitors succeeded each other without +intermission, and I never was alone with her. In the evening, after +everybody had gone, and her husband had retired to his own apartment, M. +D---- R---- remained another hour, and for the sake of propriety I had to +take my leave at the same time that he did. I had much more liberty +before the accident, and I told her so half seriously, half jestingly. +The next day, to make up for my disappointment, she contrived a moment of +happiness for me. + +An elderly surgeon came every morning to dress her wound, during which +operation her maid only was present, but I used to go, in my morning +dishabille, to the girl's room, and to wait there, so as to be the first +to hear how my dear one was. + +That morning, the girl came to tell me to go in as the surgeon was +dressing the wound. + +"See, whether my leg is less inflamed." + +"To give an opinion, madam, I ought to have seen it yesterday." + +"True. I feel great pain, and I am afraid of erysipelas." + +"Do not be afraid, madam," said the surgeon, "keep your bed, and I answer +for your complete recovery." + +The surgeon being busy preparing a poultice at the other end of the room, +and the maid out, I enquired whether she felt any hardness in the calf of +the leg, and whether the inflammation went up the limb; and naturally, my +eyes and my hands kept pace with my questions.... I saw no inflammation, +I felt no hardness, but... and the lovely patient hurriedly let the +curtain fall, smiling, and allowing me to take a sweet kiss, the perfume +of which I had not enjoyed for many days. It was a sweet moment; a +delicious ecstacy. From her mouth my lips descended to her wound, and +satisfied in that moment that my kisses were the best of medicines, I +would have kept my lips there, if the noise made by the maid coming back +had not compelled me to give up my delightful occupation. + +When we were left alone, burning with intense desires, I entreated her to +grant happiness at least to my eyes. + +"I feel humiliated," I said to her, "by the thought that the felicity I +have just enjoyed was only a theft." + +"But supposing you were mistaken?" + +The next day I was again present at the dressing of the wound, and as +soon as the surgeon had left, she asked me to arrange her pillows, which +I did at once. As if to make that pleasant office easier, she raised the +bedclothes to support herself, and she thus gave me a sight of beauties +which intoxicated my eyes, and I protracted the easy operation without +her complaining of my being too slow. + +When I had done I was in a fearful state, and I threw myself in an +arm-chair opposite her bed, half dead, in a sort of trance. I was looking +at that lovely being who, almost artless, was continually granting me +greater and still greater favours, and yet never allowed me to reach the +goal for which I was so ardently longing. + +"What are you thinking of?" she said. + +"Of the supreme felicity I have just been enjoying." + +"You are a cruel man." + +"No, I am not cruel, for, if you love me, you must not blush for your +indulgence. You must know, too, that, loving you passionately, I must not +suppose that it is to be a surprise that I am indebted for my happiness +in the enjoyment of the most ravishing sights, for if I owed it only to +mere chance I should be compelled to believe that any other man in my +position might have had the same happiness, and such an idea would be +misery to me. Let me be indebted to you for having proved to me this +morning how much enjoyment I can derive from one of my senses. Can you be +angry with my eyes?" + +"Yes." + +"They belong to you; tear them out." + +The next day, the moment the doctor had gone, she sent her maid out to +make some purchases. + +"Ah!" she said a few minutes after, "my maid has forgotten to change my +chemise." + +"Allow me to take her place." + +"Very well, but recollect that I give permission only to your eyes to +take a share in the proceedings." + +"Agreed!" + +She unlaced herself, took off her stays and her chemise, and told me to +be quick and put on the clean one, but I was not speedy enough, being too +much engaged by all I could see. + +"Give me my chemise," she exclaimed; "it is there on that small table." + +"Where?" + +"There, near the bed. Well, I will take it myself." + +She leaned over towards the table, and exposed almost everything I was +longing for, and, turning slowly round, she handed me the chemise which I +could hardly hold, trembling all over with fearful excitement. She took +pity on me, my hands shared the happiness of my eyes; I fell in her arms, +our lips fastened together, and, in a voluptuous, ardent pressure, we +enjoyed an amorous exhaustion not sufficient to allay our desires, but +delightful enough to deceive them for the moment. + +With greater control over herself than women have generally under similar +circumstances, she took care to let me reach only the porch of the +temple, without granting me yet a free entrance to the sanctuary. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Venetian Years: Military Career +by Jacques Casanova de Seingalt + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VENETIAN YEARS: MILITARY CAREER *** + +***** This file should be named 2953.txt or 2953.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/5/2953/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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